The Exeter Advocate, 1921-1-6, Page 6Trng Children to Obey,- i other ingredients. Have the iron verY
One a the heme problems thet lel hot end grease it with plenty ef lard;
continually in the thoughts of mothers! do not use butter. Drop one table"'
lW how to, train eltildren te ohee, All! sPoonful of the batter into eaelt seetion
reethera—and fathers, too—realize! of the iron, cover the eakes and turn
itow much cheertul obedienee on tht4 them helekbt D° .not mix the batte
part of ehitiren saVee et. inotheesi too thiek-
nerves and streugth, and the peace etf, Corn Pudding -1 tan Of corn (pre -
mind of the whole househeed. Ilene ferably golderi bantam), yolk of two -•M'
trying it is for mothers day after daydeggs, I teasPeon salt a Pinch of eathe er,e, end add uve, quaeht et ettd sesti. snake. half hearse wallowing in illtny, I edltorral that hetcalled a daily -news- entirely -uncalled for and vulgar an
their ehildren to obey When fret, tablespoon of butter* I, green PePPero peer let° it few ()maces Of al nie, etagnant tater, eatieg nothing but I PaPer, Late ort evening' of the follow', ° ill?olotrs• The general 401Isensue o
when Paris men ought to show tide
to preaeh and plead. and try to get enne Pelnlert 2 vtil) of rich Milkx 11N -eater. 'When the liquid is quite geld
Alec Pothe,rton , .
time, wad often eating their owe hind, 1anri 14ie curt veiee a
tem meat, fightang or sleeping an the ! ne.41,F In,on, , hie telephene. bell rang, Mon was that the tune had coma
1 young. man thet he was tett of plate
tnateee, no headway, or that mattera dish and beat the yolk a the-egg5
apocen tor-oui7 to Ami that they are Drain the eorn, pleee it in
go from bad to worse; Father tomes,
home to be igreeted usualay with, i yolk, the butter, the salt and the eays
lightly. Add to the corn the milk the 3.. When 1 w e- the s
a baking tee/ of alcohol and, two cif ether, Batt
' sired te remove grintee sleets or gene- '
tle and eork tightl t Wh "t " 4
any renevate a garment, teeet a_ swamps of the Galt States. They mat opened, eny etae, d, we area going, 0 up-stenrs m the rear a .Mrs,
There are tattle' IsSee alligatora here er7Trbeti
°Me t °Iles 1111°°. 11°4 l'llm the tees 'comes off on the tweetiethe, Ate; inBtilutlin Ondet cheap, stuffy lite bed-
' I I •
him oyer to the sliote toea..t room . . ouse
"John did tide, and "Mary did that," =le pepper. Then chop the green tienid wee ap iy with 4 :::4c '."‘"" Carefully gradat and Itept in lotalhave the same beach- of male old Mather' Scheel street ;hoarding e
and there seeraz to be no hope in sight. pepper and add that, Bake the dish '
The need of every home in which in a hot oven WW1 it is of the consist -
there are etteeeen is eeeerful and eat eney a eustard and browned on the
ne day returns .aucl
brings us the petty' round
a irritating concerns and
duties., Help us to play the
man. geler US to perform
them Vial. laughter and
kind faces. Let cheerfui-
ness abound with industry.
Give ,to go blithely an
our business all this day;
bring us to our resting
beds, weary and eontent
a d undishonored; and
grant us in the end the -gift
Q f, sleep.
IHow would you like to be the nun
An Alligator Farrn.
witu the bucket and stick stending
=Mg IAIIIith'eas of creeping cannibals?
hie IS the owoer anti manager of the
etraugest of the many strange farms
around. Los Angeles, the alligator
rm.
'Ills is a little pleee—only aboeut two
e'es—and the teew erop each year it
not large nuMbers, but it ie. exceed-
ingly valuable. •A laigh fence sur- zee
rounds the farm and the visiters must I lett
each pay a quarter to get fin but a is I pABT f Paris read these lines that night
well worth the uloney, tor never did it was early an .A.kra that Joe Dicksi with varied emotions. -A few people
' we leare do muck in eue-half beer. started the nom eetteetenue streek as being fuerty. Others- shook
thettglue you ere with u$ tte I tell yell four-page, boiler -plate etteseye with their heads, and mid there was we
about these frightful createree, halt its four 43" five -columns of local and thing fumy about it. The poem, wa
TIiE MOSSBACK
He Teaches the Rattle -Brain a Few Fine Points of Small-
ToWn Newspaper Ethics.
By WILLIA.IYI DUDLEY PBLLEY,
.;- fenced in by stout wile, each group "lathee on thet "board if I ean sage le there vsas one pereon who read those
cloth and rinse With clear water. When: basing its (ma
fast-eolered dress goods are to be iyptua pond under the euea, And by the belp of this paper I know lines that night with a pale face, and
staid Ottediettee—not the -cringing,' top- This Pudding is
obedience that strings :from fear but
follows r.:atarally from bah% On the Islealentillk, 1 tehOPo011 a twt, it table -1 ______st .
influeece, but too often its
that cheerful, willing obedience that;; J°Inisd.' Cake -2 esPs a 'ail" eern wash them and rinse thoroughly.
lives of. Adults habit has a
vo$sibiattea, water, then scald the corn meal with LIntelnPted Rigitteahlsne5S, and moat ns their taila to $trtivo their what the Diclex boy
powerful, spoon of butter, watwe lard, Boil the ,
stitute for pota.toes. an exeellent sub,
ments ao this water for a few minutes. they care uot what the meat ii. 1.10 4eg'41.actrattled to de nay beat sa fo.r ”.paper fluttered down tothe straw mat -
pailful or soft water, soak the gar.- The keeper has a dangerous job for Ilt°11114eghs•;71 41°81513'4°m with 114111Tiler 4124 44" burning' blistelln 4e14' It W"
for they cannot move forward swittlf But Alec dia ,t, - . h t . 1 rmeixtca
takes care to stand in front of them though sometimes e obtidtee, ' : .
trees becaese wallow they at": c. an. We're going aftr that u_po, n whose heart theli" eentilnent fel/
- -11 give
a boosetittlnielles SI:1AZ ffeeav= IT gr7ntfars7irmtd
Dicks boy dubiously, "al- qtuaJIVI41.4w. hsVr..11,10._nil'b_e_, er got s
little Miss Lasher, The offensive nevire.,
washed., add a cupful of the, fluid 0 a meo. ,
in the tieing of Children are over-' it; the amount ef water thAt the meal Wherever ft 10,et or students, gaol. preY aed weep it into their eavoruous
tooltece i takes up muse determine hew meet ered ihe% day Lorton% as was tee ,meeths. Nor does ite venture into the thi"ialyrorrs dwtokoxyoeclare to start solne-,
Perhaps the eeperieurte a the wife' wattv, to use. A little Invsre thmt "e topic 0 conversation, The arreet had fields where the bigeeet 'gators are. "Get out ycnxr
equal quantity Of raeol is taken Place ear. and few of the fel. The eggs, are the size awl chap° of ptedrinctollriatlhesteytelumas and dip douiptiottiLvoitmonol:
of a eavel officer who had to eor:front" esPhtn 103 an
the problem of training her two ehil-:, f ftor average. Heat the milk and add il lows had witaesse4 It' Iitlu-Y Vander. ht41'S eggs' aucl these are 1)Ismed by
eition, Show up eur scheols for what
he mother -alligator in the centre ot a
dreu, aged six an n four, without the it t° the meal unta Yon an drop th040 UP Was alle Or those wIle d131'they're worth. Nothing you can say
helpof her lumbar., will be useful to ' hatter easilY from a spoon; then add, "It gave me a eense of sudelted en nen, Meof ditlld d
rand Taatte er ito will be too stroug to euit me, Go
our readers. She asked herself the..., the butter and the salt. Drop teaeous sea, he told liammond and Gray wb1011 File he4Ps up, The warmth of
question, What makes men and women ftlis'a the hatter on a hot, wee.greastt when the enbeet WAS brought AID title nith bathes them. t°11"thle"re was a, lot more talk, and final -
work and eget and save and saerieeei ed gri4die and brown the cakes on both later' "I had th° same feeling °nee'
and pray? Her answer was, The hope: sidiesh. As Y°11 finish frying eaell hatehl wh4HI the nen tau" a etlaPle °f "ad mu" ilave s'Ime to 131°1° their 41.5'
Neel been atinking plays complete. and this `Urn)," es.
of reward in some form, whether it be, Q4 eahes' place them in A pan in th0 rata In the well
1 from up at the eaten. The water woe. tablisbed fourteen years ago, supplies
:oven and let there brown a little more.
riehes or power or life everlatting.
Teen wet. not, see said to herself, 4.-..j They should be so thick that the sides e4 clean. but it was foul. and we didn't utooY• Very many people buy them
are crisp though the eentres remain! Illlew it. 'That's the way with Lorton, for pets or the oddity of the thing, mad
Pin the PoirhiPle of a hope a reT.-4.4,, ugh! It disgusts me:" prices of the live oues vary' according
to traimne the ehtlOren in 14;,..bits of' sat' to the eine One must be six or eight
1.. g qeroldeal Joi6nnvenIre 0 eups of corn 1.14uPz".-14's word$ eame slowly* as
cherfel ob'edierace? What; shoal tee , t s — --- - a - - --- ---- if he were tetteaue there gut as be years eltl Iletere Its skin is worth any.
reward be? Pennies for eaeings meal. tO tableepoon of butter, water,. talked: "I understand from Perrlek thing as leather tor the lamps on the
stamps, en eeeetteioe to leo, teettee, a 1 teaspeoe a salt. Boil the v.-ater ur.dli aua shurvt,they both mom in chu,k back are just soft cartilage at first,
eon. tart eo. a hoe:tette, a deh, to aul.. , scold the cern meal with it, ellowieg„ n41_41401 14ertretes term Dula were
thing ttza seemed werrbY. I) ' i harden into hone gradually.
overdue. Derrick tells me Lorton has '44
I 4' eel Add the salt ,
She mnile (ant il ehart. iter ereda ehild, "44.4 °. Ill " ' e alld i beea on the edge ever elnee be enter -
,e, butter. Then spread' the batter itt,,t ed e9nege. several um" be Iles Wings of War the Fariner''s
showing' the days of the week. Wei the
various thitsge in which they meet lulttered Pulls alli 531e lt tu a 'hut uven1 dropped out of the boarding house for
often disobeeetit for half an hour. The jellraV4ke a fortnight or longer and boarded Wm- Friend,
dang to the way ate winch,
Get in) when vaned, and withoutlavy4orule.ssr;realectri t. hetet, spread' ,Nery thin.;
reIse.
self on next to nothing. Shafer says
that Lorton invariably apologized to
it resembles wafers. when thick, corn'
Wesla tare! dress quieltly euti br-ash iteake, In either ease if it does mt• WS callers about the fire's being down,
the teeth. but that 'down' Wee Its normal con -
brown sufficiently in half an lumir,/1 dition--to save fuel.
Tidy up room. brown it under the gas flame a few "Lorton said that Ile took the twen-
Eat dinner quietly.
Come in wh,ert minutes more. ty-dollar bill out ot Morris' desk, con -
Hominy Souffie-2 cups of c fidently expecting that be should be
General obedience.
I coolca holuillhh teaslloon anit, 1 able to replace it before :Startle dia.
Eat ettpper and brush the teeth, tablespoon of melted butter, 14 cup of
Sao tampers and go quietly to bet •
rach milk, 3 eggs. Separate the yolk
If the child. performed those duties and the white of the eggs and beat the
eerfeetly he reeeived a red cross or a
red titer for each one, whiela =tele. it
possible for bin to get eight red sthrs
every day. If, however, be failed in
any matter, the another put down a' ents, polar the whole lute a buttered! virtue had better not be forward about
black hall—and a Week hall teak away, 'baking dish and thalte it for twenty or condemning Lorton.
two stars. thirty minutes in a hot oven. Serve "I came across two words in a book
Fer every fate :ea stare the rewani ;he disk at once. I was reading the other evening: 'wa-
wa: a vent. One red cross was equal Economy flmeolate Cake—Mil eups tempted righteousness.' Isn't ours
to l'xn red stem At the end of the of browr sugar, cup of teem. !i that kind so far as money Is concern-
scorr wcs added up an the, text of seer (mom, 1 tabiespon of ed? Has any one ot ul ever known,
ynn:es or other rewares were given vanila, 2 generous teaspoon* of letkingi what it was to nced a twenty -dollar
With eopropeiete aerenlOnleS. powder, 2 eggs, 1 tablespoon of st4fen- bill—need it badly enough. to be Ivor -
The tiaitiren were always, present ed fat, id cup of 'water, 114 teaspoon lied for days over not having it? If
-ellen the red stars, red erosees or of soda, 2ht villas of flour, a Pineb of we haven't, we oughtn't to judge the
black ea:Is were awarded, They were salt. Separate the Yolk and the white follow wbo has. We don't know what
we should do If we were in his place.
Untempted righteousness is good fn
its way, but It isn't qualified to sit in
Judgment on a fellow who has. borne
the brunt—and gone down."
"1 see, Hammond," said Vanderlip.
The newest Idea. for agriculture is
an ah -plane equipped, for the plantiug
of the farmer's field with seed. It has
system ot perforated metal tubes,
id crosswise on the wings, out ot
bleb. the seed is forced by air eras-
ure created by the flight of the plane.
This kind of flying machine, as de-
ribed by Popular Mechanise, is built
tor slow speed, with a roomy fuselage
wept her heartache out there an ,
darkness with no elle to See.
At eight o'clotk that night Sum Hod
came baok front supper. Ile found
l'inkie Price ia the office with that
evening's copy of the "esteemed. but
loathed contemporarY" SPeeed out be-
fore him. The high-school reporter
relinquished his copy to his employer,
and Sant at down at the exchange
table and read the whole attack
But yond nk he put up all the throyea9"h ;eV, eaTe112117'
cause ha went en your notes, to got plant that he did when he worked in
tyoaeuned rtcaNnifet,bia paper," 44ttellg;" be swore sorrowfully,
plilro°4teesYtetad. tsltiaer etutt bet ".Teet's dotng the same thing in his own
control of this vrint And 310 here, He's malting fun at the expense
of people who can't hat back. And—
Wa—got--to—sto,
For teverals minutes rsat smoking,
and etaring up at the art gallery.
Then he said:
gong to make Joe meet Mee
'Asher face to face, and toch hirn
hasn't, Joe. All oar savings—seven
hundred dollars' werth them—have
gone intosthia paper, And sometimes,
.Toe, it lotelts as if WO stand tre lose
theue'l Iter voice ended in A whiner.
know it, Wan," he replied. "But
1 eau't talk back just none—not with
the zesteed of those notes filling due el enaesde,eorh:rt,4°,04nt'ese hels?:44gaateleetell irtenanlee:
arnou thdeestljetnotYinefptilhuirr fret tep4uteseanlyt and ask Miss Leeher to step over to
committee in." the 'Telegraph' ofilee. When. you've
got her heeded' here, run acres,* the
heel committee oat and put Aledh
And be sat down with his legs under 'street and WI Joe Dicks that the
his typewrite; and tddried in senne pa- Mossback thinks kladlY toward hirll
e; nud lighted bit ,eipe, and stared, and wants to talk with him about an
intotthei wail space in front itIllertallt Matter. Leave the rest t4).
of bim. 'mod
naves aa a Tuesday, wednesday "Yes, sir," milt the boy, and off he
4
evening his paper came out with a big started"
broadside of wood type attacking the Pinkie turned into School Street,
board members. in earnest. He 'celled and not far Seem the orator he over -
Paris' attention to the fact that three took Broken Jona%
of them had fornele relatives teaching "That's a dirty, rotten thing in to,
covered the theft. It seems he'd bad that prothdes tapacity for a large in the pal' li I H f
ac se oo a e re erred tet night's 'Blade' About such As Mafia
a rather urgent reminder that morn- quantity of grain. On each trip it the feet that judge Farmer acted as LasIletin 'll'ecla"d the IllulellbaelC' 44 la
ing that bis bills must be paid within plants a. row thirty-six feet wale. ehairman because at lout control f
e
vialtini Angie for the first time in
'fourteen year, to ask her 'shall
punch his fresh young head for that
poetry."
Pinkie smiled to himself. Together
they waited on the piazza, a moment
later, for Mrs. Matters to answer the
belkehiets up in lier room," announc-
ed' the portly landlady. "You two can
oome in the parlor, if you'll wipe your
:feet careful. ril eall her." *
The two went into the front room,
and found seats an the out -of -style
red -plush parlor chairs.
(Contieued in next issue.)
yolk lightly. Then mix the hominy.. a specified time That doesn't excuse Ing only a few feet above the ground, schaore money in his hands, and there -
the milk, the, yolk, the salt and the the theft, of course. It was a foolish it eic.cts tin seed with sullicient fore into the judge's bank. He accus-
butter. Beat the white of the eggsi and criminal aet, but a fellow who bas ,velocity to bury it to the requisite ed Sant Hod--whora he dia not call by
stiff, fold that Into the ether ingredl- never bad any elicit strain on his depth in loose, prepared soil. name, but alwaye as the Mossback—of
At the end et each wieg-tip there is :lel -
ne represented* there because it
henefitted hts tinted fortunes. Last
a tube to throw down a thin stream at
wblte lime, marltbag the line of the
planted belt. In practice only one
tube would be used at a time, the
other being Out off. By this means
It should be practicable to plant one
mare mile, or 040 acres, in six hours, old teller an udge Ferrules bank, Who
flying forty miles an hour and allow- had been eursed with an incorrigible
In one minute at each end of the field I son. And that night, when the "Blude"
appeared on our streets, the liars and
to turn and get lined up with the wbite double-dealers and villains and seoun-
marken drels and thievas andl swindlers gatle
With a solvtng capacity of 1,000 ered together in knots and were wroth
acres a day, one machine could ade- —exeeedingly wroth.
(mutely serve a large grain -growing "He ougbt to be run out of town!"
district, working eitlaer on the co- snapped Jeff Turner of the Paris hard -
operative basis or by contract. ware store. "I wouldn't advertise in
this belly little handbill if he gave me
the space for nuthint"
But, aside from a few telephone
call -dawns which the boy should have
estimated at a better worth, nothing
came .of their wrath. Twenty-four
eleettes namely micreeted in the of the eggs; then add the yolk to the
41art, sod their disappointment was sugar, be the mixture well and add
hitter on receiving a black hall. the salt and the fat. Boil the water
The, another reports., after several and smooth the -cocoa, in it; add the
menthe of testing the system, that it soda and the vanila to the oream; mix
has been a great eating in words and the flour with the baking powder and
work and nervous tension. The chit- Nellie the white of one egg lightly. Mix putting out an impulsive hand, and
dren are happier, for they have sonte- all the ingredients; then bake thel Hammond winced under the grip.
thing to work for. They have a goal dough in two layers. To make a hell- "You're right. Untempted ighteous-
in and strive for it earnestly. ; ed icing, beat the remaining white of ness—the eat sort that's never had
to take hard knocks—isn't an article
egg; then rnix one cupful of stager
Winter Diet. with a little water and a pinch to boast of" of
*OM
We ecquire a certain amount of cream of tartar and 'boil the tnixture
coarse food, such as cern, to keep the
digestion in order. Here are five re-
sipes. based en corn products, that are
delidous as well as healthful:
Hominy Waffles ---3 eggs, 2 eups of
milk, let teaspoons of baking powder,
lard, lie eups of tooked hominy, 1 tea-
spoon ot salt, 1 elms of flour. Sep-
arate the yolk and the white of the
eggs; beat the yolk and add to it the
hominy, the milk and the salt; then
add the llour and the baking powder,
sifted together. Whip the -white of
the eggs stiff and fold that in with the
"Urtknown.”
until you earl spin it 'to a thread. Pour
it slowly into the beaten white of egg, An unknown British soldier -was
whip the whole until it begins to form buried in Westminster Abbey on the
grains, and spread it 'between the lay- second anniversary at _Armistice Day.
ers and en the top of the rake. The Eingewas the sole mourner.
Good Clsening Fluid.
Keep till's on hand. It is said to
have originated in the British navy
and is in general use among both sol-
diers and sailors:
Cut four ounces of cestile soap into
a quart of soft water and heat it until
the soap is melted. Remove from the
Successful Authors at Play
Sir A Conan Doyle: although ap-
parently believes in the astral body,
has e pair of fists which are by no
means spiritual. In fact, the 'creator
of Rodney Stone, that best of all box-
ing and prize -fighting yarns, is him-
self no mean exponent ot the "noble
art of self-defence."
But the originator of Sherlock
Holmes. Is -the Admirable Crichton of
literary eportstnen, for he has travel-
led the world over, is a daring moun-
tain climber, ten make as pretty a
eut through thu slips at Lords as many
a professional cricketer, and has
scored a good many eenturies in his
time, can make even the best of lawn
tennis players sit up and take notice;
is an indefatigable moterist is a diffi-
cult man to follow across country with
the hounds, and ca, And his way both
into and out oe a bunker as well as
most amateur goirers.
The greatest traveller amoagst
modern novelists was poor Zack Lan-
doll; now that he ii gone, the man
who gave Caxtain Kettle --C. J. Cut-
eliffe the world, probably
holds premrer place. If there is any
corner of rills old earthhe has not
been into, any desert, or mountain
range, or great river he has not seen,
any wild beast he has not shot, then
someone should call upon him and till
hen of his omission, and he will sure-
ly include it in his next trip,' seeing
that he reckons to do a pretty regular
ten thousand miles a year ---except
when there's a world -war on.
He believes that a novelist who
wants to write "live" stuff, needs to
see "live" places. posaesses a fine
collection of hunting trophies.
TWO of Britain's best-knowie writers
are at their best iii a yaele--Sir
Arthur Quiller -Couch, tbe famous "Q"
of "Dead Manta Rock," anu John Oxen -
ham. Both these men are very much
at home on silt water or fresh, for
they are as handy with an oar -as Avila
a sail.
Probably the leait sporty of literary
/nee, are Rudyard Kipling, Sir James
Barrie, and. George Bernard Shaw.
The author of "Mary Rose" is, how-
ever, fairly useful with, a bat, and has
often taken part in matches as -a ea
presentative of tee Press, whi,JSt few
men have "moll died" abqut eenettry
lanes on a bike more tban the &her
two distinguished:Teen.
In old, old Westminster's sacred pile
there lies,
In calna" ripose, with peasant, prince
and peer,
A man unknown to fame, yet laid to
rest
Witi alt the prayers of a broad Em-
pire blest,
And on wliose grave a king has drop-
ped a tear.
His claim to lie within tb.at holy fane
Is just, and none will him deny a place
'Midst all the noblest of old England's
dead, • -
Who gave her laws, who noble armies
led,' • .•
Who sang sweet songs for all the Bri-
tish race. -
Not his the glory of the soulful bard;
Not his the glory of an honored
grave;
He was-, a Warefor• true, yet did not
lead •
A gallant army at his eountry's need;
He was but one oe the unnumbered
brave. .
No single land e'au clailn, him for its
own
No land can say that he is truly theirS,
He was an, Empire son, loyal ane true; As each small tender bud that grows,
He came at tnipire's call her will to
A.non may turri to beauteous rose,
ece So each kind action serves to prove
And Britain neer forgets the son she The fragrant soul:of human love.
beats
a sacred tie
but not least, e staidethat old Peter
Whipple had no Witness on it because
Peter's children -were in the state re-
form *school. Just what be hoped to
gain by that last elm.. is vague. But it
was a cruel ash at Peter, the kindly
The Habit of Giving Your
Best.
How much better you feel when
you are consmous of gavmg your best,. hones later the "Blade" came out
!Ivan, pitifully devoid of any advertis-
unreservedly, of flinging your life out
in helpfulness, in inspiration and en -1 - •
me but Alec Potherton's and a few
of Ins sore -head friends who were slat-
eouragement wherever you go. What' ed for the board themselves.
In three -column heads and foUrteen-
point type, it "tore to pieces" old Pro-
fessor Hale's record as a public in-
struttor and superintendent of the
schools. It called attention to the fact
that the professor had eeceived his
education some forgotten neadeniy
around: Civil War time, and demanded
to know whether Paris meet tolerate
life. But unfortunately, most. of us inch outsof-date methods in its schools
do not open up ourselves to the world, as the old professor advocated. One
very much. We are toe selfish to fling; by one, it reviewed the old man's in.
ourselves out, to show the hest that is efficiencies and eitortcomings, most of
in us, as we go °along. We envy the the material supplied by Alec Pother -
ton, until it made poor•old 'man Hale
Pother -
person who has this faculty, of fling -
out something between a wife -beater
Ing out, best, the edema, the rich-
, and a horsethief of the deepest dye.
ness of his life, just as the rose flings
.0 In the baek of his store, that night,
Out its sweetness its. beauty, t every Alec read the stuff through, winced
passerby, withotit r-eeerve. It is a a couple of times, pulled oat his "Laws
wonderful art and if everybody would of Business," 'end tried to find the
do if what a wondayird world this detail .of the law of libel --but eventu-
would be. ailly tailed Joe up on the tellephone-and
. •
'Fling out your best this year. Don't ootgratulated hen an language eta -
hold it in. Don't carry your heist teen inches' highe, Then, lowering his
things to the grave, give them to the vdfrieer he -
wotld. Now, go after 'em for employing
a bunch of t-entale-hasemens on their
"I May Not Pass This Way teaching fgrCe. -
The boy went to it. And among
other things, in boxed rules en his
Again.
front page, he printed this exquisite
"I may not pass this way again," efersel of propaganda:
Let this'thought burn in heart and Our school board is a wondrous_thing
brain, Of skirts and beards and moss and
So shall we live hot all in vain, fears,
The Rule of Three is still in force,
Who may not pass this way again.
Our schoolrna'ams get their jebe
through tears. ,
To get a place at teaching school
In our town since this, board began
Is nota case of "normal sehool,"
But "miss your chance to catch a
man.
To know your job to handle kids
To teach them modem things—no
chance!
Our school board's special -love is ital..
The fraved-out ends of -past sro-
an hafinite satisfaction there is hi, feel-
ing that we are helping somebody,
that we strew our ways with flowers
because we know that we shall never
go along the same road again, that we
make everybody with whom we have
come in contact 'feel a little better—
this is the way to get the most out of
So ere we leave Otis passing, show, .
Sleep on, brave heart!
Where all are wanderers to and fro,
that binds
Let eacle life's path a record he,
Still closer all the links of Etur re's
Unbroken to eternity.
chain,
God. give us faith and strength to still Of man's trtic hrotherhoOcl to man,
pursue , Pranied ii the great Creetor'e plan,
'Tile path of honor and his will to do; With tilose erho followee in His rain,
eild keep unstained the Emiere's Who may not pass this way again.
- broad domain. a :*
So then,' -you girls whose faces pisin
Kill all your'hapes of borne and kids,'
Dan't lose your nerve—our taxes will
'Sortie, day fat .6 -at your sparse old
Montague Mason, , Mlrlard'.s, Liniment RelieveS,Cottis, etc.
Platinum Field;sich.
of
Are
Platinum, wbich was worth $9 an
ounce not very teeny years 'ago,
fetches $1.10 an ounce today, or more,
than five times as much as ,gold.
It is said to bave been first discover"
ed In Columbia by a Spaniard named.
Antonio lifiloa. For a long time there,
after sninera in Columbia, ending it
commonly associated with gold, threw
the platinum away. Recently seven-,
teen pounds of it were recovered from
the foundation of an old building in
the Quibdo district, tho site rat whielt
was an ancient refuse dump.
The present high price of platinum
Is largely due to 'the falling oft of aute,
plies from Russia, which has been the
principal produCer. But the mining ot,
the metal in Columbia.has been great-
ly stimulated thereby. "
The metal in Columbia is found
chiefly along the Atrato River and the -
Cauca Valley south to the .border of •
Ecuador. The Atrato is -300 miles long
(two-thirds of it navigable by 'steam-
ers) and empties ieto the Gulf of
Darien by fifteeneritexths. '
"
I-iomes Under the .Sea.
Houses," streets, theatres, picture '
palaces, etc., buried under the sea, are
reminiscent , of Jules., Verne.' A moc
dern wizard, Mr. E. B. Calthrop, who. _
designed the 'Admiralty mystery!
towers, one of wheila was recently
moved to the Solent, may be respone
sible for this miracle says a, London
newspaper. •
- It' has been suggested that a Iarge
submarine hotel and theatre be built
at Itythe, 'the sameprinciple it Is as-,
sinned being used as in the case of the
naval towera. •
The inventor putts forward yet are
other interestirig suggestion, Es
plans an artificial island home under-
neath the Waves, some Miles out from,
the GoOdwin Sands, The burden oe
the , conventional householder--raies,
and taxes, customs, dues, licensing
restrictions, etc.—could not apply, he -
contends, to such island colonists. '
Minard's Liniment for Burns, etc,
COARSE, SALT
N SALT
Balk collate
,
,TenteNto SALT WORK8
C.JCUFP 6 TORONTO