The Exeter Times, 1923-2-22, Page 2"A Financial
Courtship"
A little beoltlet which
tells in an interesting
Se simple hi its
language that a school-
girl cotild 'understand it,
all about irivestmentsof
all kinds, bonds, mart -
and atoeks.
Even to experienced
investors, this little
etory, woven into a
charming romance, con-
tains many valuable
pointers on invest-
ments.
The booklet w.11be
wailed free to any on on
aq:lest.
Ratzth1shaat.1822
ottawa
New York
A /AO'
-ourtrs
VglAi'" ROLU,
IP
colnp&IT.nthr
LJMCfl
JAlailS OCt
iNeesreariate SF.C1.17:111S$.
remora -a elee Latta:set race
arn
293Bay st.
Toronto
Af
cULIMJTEDi
Montreal
Lorttlen Eng.
At.
BY KATHARINE SUSANNAH PRICHARD
Copyright by Hoddw vend Stoughton.
CHAPTER XXXVI.—(Contal.) bo,eas contempt, the blazing amaze-
ment of his eyes. He sank into a chair,
covering his face with his hands.
---
CHAPTER XXXVII.
Deircire and the black boy drove,
their straggling head into the stock -1
yard in the narrow bush clearing,'
walled by trees, an hour or two before
Steve watched in the room beside
Davey.
His shrunken, crippledlimbs ached.
His head sank on his breast. He droop-
ed and 'slept forgetfully. The School-
mastea- strode the length of the kit -
then. The fire smouldeeed low. He
threw some wood on it. .The crackling,
flames flashed. and played -freakishlea
across the room. He wondered if
Conal would come—where he was. The
hours passed. There was no sound .cn.
sign of late riders from the Wirree.
He opened the door of the hut. The
night was very still. Only a mopoke
called plaintively in the distance.
There was a stir in the ream in
which Davey was sleeping, Farael
heard Steve's voice in startled and
sleepy protest The door opened,
Davey stood an the threshold, his eyes
with a d'earious brightness in them.
"What have you done about those
ealves?" he asked, hie -voice quick and
'We are going to let 'ern go," Steve
gasped. "You go- back and lie down
now, Davey." •
-"You can't do that with the
rands on them." leas in
ey. "I'm all right now.
T. can take them to the Valley. It's a
bit of luck 1VPLaughlin hasn't turned
up yet. P'raps I upset his calculations
and MeNabas. He's net so fond
of gettini a move on, Johnny Mae.
Might 've guessed I'd got a notion he
was going to be busy *hen I went
sound asking for Conal. Thought we'd
give hini the slip anyway and he'd
save himself the trouble of coming!"
. He laughed a little unsteadily. "Think
I'll get the calves along to the Valley,
all the same."
'The Schoolmaster took his ann.
"Go and lie down, Davey," he said.
If you go wandering about like tide,
youal brin.g on the bleeding again,
esd es, Deirdre--'
"Where is she?" His eyes flew
searching the room for her.
"She"—it seemed difficult to say—
"She has gene down to, the Valley, so
it'll be all right," he said.
Davey turned -towards the door.
"Den't be a fool, Davey!" The
Scheoltreaster intercepted him.
Davey pushed him'aside.
He strode into the stable yard as
thou -gat nothirig had happened to die -
able him. A moment later the School-
master heard the rattle of hoofs on:
the road.
Every fibre of him shivered at the
Lift Off with Fingers
Doesn't airrt a bit t Drop
alfeeezone" on an achltig corn, inettaet-
that eQr'n stops hertIng, thea abart-
you bit it rifsht eft 'with, Begone
ay! .
Wee druggist etale a tiny bottle of
Freezene" fea a goy cants, au6eLent
emore 6ye17 bard cern, vat corn
rnb berwoOn tIso towp arid titc cab
tiYi ltirt irritaitton.
The stock -yards which Corial .ha
put up at the end of 'Narrow Valle
were invisible to any but those who
knew the winding track that led over
the brow of the hill and- through the
heavy timber on the spur, to the old
hut at the foot of it. Tedder' was pull-
.
ing the rails of the outer -yard into
place and Deirdre was going towards
the hut, Socks -at her heels, his bridle
over her arm, when a 'horseman rode
which they had: come.
out of the opening into the valley, byl
She recognized the red -horse, but
did not knOwthat it was Davey riding
till he was almost level, and droppir.g
to his feet. ' He sviayed against the.
horeseaeasidee elute:eat aiaaa" rearisa'
e O11 xek :ronhr hue
She threw liensela aeross lain, sob,
bing brokenly. Pressing her face close
to his, She leent over hire murmur/ea
ara re-aan' o vevive lum with e
breeehleee agony of grief and tender-,
iteee:
"Olb OQ1O baelc to mei Oh, you will
not die. You will net die and leave
she moaned. "Delecire, that loves
You. Your sweetheart, DaVey I"
The cry died @w.
In her frenzy sale had, not heard the
door open. Searle with anguieli, she
laid her head against Devey's rtiU
one She' reit rether than saw that
someene was there in the hatt behind
her. She turned. Coma was -eta/idling
th the doorway.
She shared at him. I -Ie might have
been an apparition, ,so strange he,Ilook-
ed, there in tile doorway, with the
gainer/0ring night behind bite. There
wee some,thipee strickee, aehast, about
him. He gazed at her as the tragile
woe pf her face were a revelation to
him. ,
"He's dead—and it's you 'that have
killed him Conal" she staia at lenetli
"You—love----him Deirdee?" Copal
asked,
So slow mad dreal7 their voices
were that they seemed to be talking
In their sleep. '
"Yea," she mid, "and it's my heart
that's dead with him." -
N
ror.to /.1ospita1 or Incur.
ables, in sfilliatiori witir Bellevue. and
HOSpitai8; Nev -York City,
offer,s a, three years'. Course of .Train -
•to actin& weirten, having the re-
quired edueation, and desirous of be-
coming. nurses; This Hospital has
adopted the eight-hour system. • The
pupils receive uniformo of the School,
s. nortthy alidwance end travelltnif
ceaensea to and trot New 'Y'orirr, Plor
further informatiori a,pply to the
,superintendent.
- -•
how much 1 want you to lo'v'e me
again."
She laughed softly.
go"rh)(301nYeouieretTieeixicbare'tr fhici-os'mv we to
to-
gether,..and how we used. to trot Lass
up the, hillisid'ens to make her poor old
sideas go like bellows. and yore showed
inc how to blow Miele' egg, and Jess
tbeeianidd
i‘dsLIleie\eNggat:e:L
Her at a little lady to ba -°w*
I. voice ran on with, a brooklike
, "la you'd come back, we totild. }lave
all those times again, Davey, she
t 'whispered, looking down into ihae face
beneath hers.
Just when there: was the iaainteit
shinuner of dawn in the dint windnws,
a fluttering breath claught her face.
I She put the spirit to his lips again.
So, chafing his hands and calling him,
with tearful and eager l'ttle cries, she
led him as a mother leads a child just
learning to walla from the valley Of
the shadows.
Davey openel his eyes. They dwelt
on her with a deep, serene gaze. She
smiled and went on preening tto hntt,
haft singing, half sighing that beguil-
ing little melody of tenderness and
entreaty. VSrannth came back- to him.
His breath fell regularly and sweetly.
Deirdre took the sheepskins out of the
bunk and put them under him on the
floor.
He slept., A faint smile on hie
mouth, his hand sought hers, the fin-
gers curled round it. She satesvatala
ing, him, a rnist of awe and joy and
tharadedness gathering in her eyes
becauseit seemed to her that a min,
aele had been accomplished that night
In Narrow Valley hut.
(To be continued.)
"I didn't know you felt like that—'
about him, Deirdre," Conal said, a
huMble, awkward air about hini.
That it was Davey lay there dead
did not eeem to trouble him, It was
of Deirdre he was thinking in a mazed,'
.dazed way, and the thing she had
said to him.
"You've done what no wo:man could
forgive you, Coml." A vibrating Pas-
sion had come to her voice. "I never
want to see you again as long as I
Eve,"
Cohal stared at her a moment; then*
he swung heavily out of the hut into
the yard. He had the gait of a;
drunken man. She heard him stumble
over something in the yard, strike his
head against a post. Then the sound
of his horse's hoof -beats in the clear-
ing died.
Deirdre looked down at the still
figure beside her. In spate of what she
had saki she 'could not believe that
Davey was dead—that all that young
strong body would not move again,
that Davey's eyes would not open and
look at her with tie -eager, question-
ing glance she bad known. Something
of the hoarier of his stillness had -pass-
ed; she enoletened .lais hps weth the
spirit. Putting her anus round him
she gathered him up against her, put
his head on her bosom and leaned ever
Dye Faded Sweater
Sicir4 Draperies
in Diamond Dyes
Every' "Dian -fond Dyes" package
tselis hosf to dye or tint any worn,
faded. garment or drapery a new rich
crooning softly, as though hecolorthatwill not streak, spot, fade,
d were asleep. She beguiled heeself by or run. Perfect b.onie dyeing le guar-
a shaineone to bring
the brutes' but you," he said weekly
"rearne—seen as I knew."
Deirdre put her arm oat to him
They walked, slowly towards the hut
Davey became weaker. She drew the
horses- by their reins behind them
keeping her eyes on him. The ground
rocked under his feet.
"We're just there—another minute
and it'll be all eight," she said, and
called Teddy.
He had seen. Davey Cameron's red
horse coming into the clearing, and
ran no to her, chattering with fright
at the sight of Davey's hmp figure.
"Put the horses up in the shed --
leave the ss..ddleis on," she said quickly.
You go back, tell boss—cows all
right—Davey vevy sick man, here."
Although an hour earlier nothing
would have induced the bey to brave
the darkness alone, it was not many
moments before he was up on his
weedy, half -wild nag and streaking
away towards the cover of the trees
and the threetallike track which wound
uphill along the spur.
Deirdre opened the door of the hut,
Davey took a •slp or two trite it and fell
forever& She set the brushwood on
the hearbh and threw some
beeeken branches over it to make a
blaze, There was no stir in Davey
when she knelt beside him, and a pool
of blood ley on the floor where he had
fallen.
She ran out of doors for water. In
the aerni-darlmess Of the lint, it was
&Monk to find anything to prit water
tn, but there was a pannikm near the
water barrel and she filled that at'td
tore plieces, of calieo from her petti-
coat to bathe his wound.
Groping along the shelves near the
fireplace she aoutal the end of a thick
rush and tallow eandle, She did not
light it at firat because the fire had
sprung up and was lighting the room,
shoed -lig The meagre egeipment, the
branding irens and, a isaddle flung
down in -a corner, a bunk against_ the
wall with a couple of sheepskins over
It, a table with two or three pallid -
kilns wieb a black bottle on it. There
was a dn,in of some phat in the bat -
tile. She poured it carefully into a
palmikin and held it to Davey's lips.
His immobility"frightened her. She
lit the candle and held it close to his
face. Under the leapiag yellow flames
ft had the mask -like stillnel,s and pal-
er of deatla
"Davey! Davey!" she screamed with
terror, creeping up beside his heavy,
etill Vody.
"Oh, you mustn't dic, Davey --you
neuetn't!" Even as she gobbed, she
thought he eves, deed.
She, put the eleast en his lip.s again,
afah, rye dome all that
that know to a6, Won't you look at
DaVey? My heart's breaking,
sayeng that he was only asleep and
would, waken presently.
"What a long time it is," she mur-
mured. Do you remember, Davey
dear, the night before father and I
went away, and I ran over the pacle
dock to the corner of the road to see
you? I was angel -7 you had gone away
without wanting to see me, yourself
. . You kissed me and I kissed you,
and I promised to come back and be
your sweetheart and we'd be /untried
some day. . . . And the birds laughed,
And the red -runners were out by the
read, There was a beautiful sunset,
and it got dark soon. You said it was
me you. loved and not Jessie. Then I
went away . . . and it has never been
the same eince. But it will be
when you are well and I ban tell you
anteed with Diamond Dyes even if you
have never dyed beforo. Just tell your
druggist whether the material you
wish to dye Is *eel or silk, or whether
it lelineti, cotton, or -mimed goods. For
fifty-one years millions of women have
been using "Diamond Dyes" to add
years, of wear ea, theie old, shabby,
waists., skirts, dreseee, coats, sweaters,
stockings, draperies, hangings, every-
thing!
'Removes Tight Can Lids.
A tool has. been in -vented to remove
.tight fitting milk can:lids without dam-
aging tleeni., , .
: ;
Mlnarcrs Linirnent,for Coughs &, Cods.
,
out t
Dialies You Will Like.
Lileerty raisin bread -1 cup butter -
rank, 1 egg, 1 cup voliale wheat flour,
1 cup corn meal, 1 tsp. salt, % cup
sugar, % tsp. baldng powder, 1 eup
seedless raisins (floured), % tap sada
(with 1 'bleep. flour). Mix and sift dry
ingredients. Add well -beaten egg,
buttermilk, and shortening. Blend
well. Add raisins. Beat vigorously,
Bake in a shallow pan for 30 minutes.
Bran muffins -1 cup flour, I tbsp.
shortening (melted), 1 tsp. salt, 1 tsp.
soda, 3A to 2 cups sour milk, 2 cups
clean bran, ea cup ;seeded raisins and
ehaPPed nuts, 14 to % cup sweetening.
Sift tegether the flour, salt and soda
andmix vaith this the bran. Add; to-
., . ... .,
1 gether the Sweetening, mellted shor-
ening and part of the milk; then miX
with the dry materials. Add the
1 raisins and n.u.ts dusted with flour,
and enough milk to form a batter of
such consistency that it will drop but
net pour from a epeon. Bake in
greased Muffin pans about one-half
hour.
Excelleet lemon inincerncat—l4 cep
I .shortening, 2 large lemons, 1 tsp.
powdered cinnamon, 4 apples, 1 tsp.
powdered ginger, 2 cups -currants, 1
tap. salt, % cup chopped eat legate, %
pound chopped and candied lemon
peel, % tsp. powdetecl allspice, % tsp.
grated nutmeg, 1% enps sugar, 3/4 tap.
powdered cloves, % cup seedectraisies.
Extract juice Irani lemons end: remove
pipe. Now put lernene into saucepan,
cover with cold water, and boil until
lemon feels' quite teeder, Change Water
at lease's twice, draiii and poitrid peel to
a paste, add apples (cored, peeled and
chopped), lemon peel, shortening, cur-
rante, raisine, salterepicee, lemon juice,
eat -meats and -sugar. Put into a jar
and cover, This mincemeat is excel- i
lent for pies anti tarta, Sufficient foie
fotir 'facet All measurements are level, i
Down town Veal Stew -1'1h poundel
leae -veal, 4 tbstp. vinegar, aa tsp.
groped elovee, 2 tsp. ltorsieracliela %
- .
'You've not gone DaVey 7 You ,
wouldn't 1611,-Ve me, W4 IXI!,), Deirdre.,
away' aweetheart, that's ` with ton!
Won't you look at nee? , Weiat
oii open yeeir eyes? 1 emit bear it—,
If. yeti don't speelc, to hity,"
"lactirey!" lhq eattglet bile hy the
letealtier, alriep him Toughly. "1
Yen't lat; you go/. 1 won't let you diel"
he exited,
exweersa.tsaer
8,111
Home
Treat inent
rtl,PilePaY, Pits arid.
Nervous .r.tisorders,
lh Thensa.nde of let-
ters from Flattener'
U511'5 , -Scud for
free boohlot. •
..tint.son, Remedy Co, of (lanada,
2011 Yr lige 5 t, Toron f.,")h t,
tsp. ground -cinnamon:, seasoning of
salt arid: peppe.r, 1/2- Cnie seeded ',pashas,
buttered bread crumbs.:Place the veal,
which has been cut into- inch pieces, in
a casserole and 'Stew elowly so that it
will cook in ets own .juice without
burning. When it is nearly done, ,acid
the vinegar, raisins, cloves, cinnamon,
horse -radish and staeaniteg of salt and
pepper. Thicken talli zauce with the
Puttered bread crumbs.
Date salad -1 cup &bee, 1 cu P diced
celery, 2 tbs.p. seeded raj:eine, 1-3 cup
cheese (grated Amer:), 3 tbsp. walnut
meats, % cup boiled dressing. Mix
together the cheese elect _the chopped
nut ruea.ts ,and raisins. ,Stuff the dates
wig]; this and allow to stand for sev-
eral Vie'iltS. Slice the dates dice a
cupful of celery and add all to the
deessing, Mixing thoroughly., Serve
In nests of lettuce. An "egtiall
quan-
tit-y of sweet or min- ereane may be
combined; with the dressing if desired,
Fruit tapioca—% cup pearl tapioca,
14 cup almonds, 212a cease cold -water,
-
%. tsp. salt, 1 inch etiele eirmamon, 1/4,
cup sugar, % cup currant jelly, 14- cup
citron, 14 cues sherry avine or fruit
juice, 17.;,, cup seeded raisins..Soak
tapioca in cold Water over night or
for several hours. Cook in seine water
in double boiler with sa t an ; cinna-
mon until tomnspareut. ReMoVe from
range and add currant jelly, sherry
wine or fruit juice, ale -loads (blaneh-
ed and shredded), reisine (cut in
pieces) and citron(cut in thin slices).
Sweeten to taste. Turit into a ;carving
dish; -cool elightly, and ZeI'Ve with thin
cream..
The Child Bern Deaf.
It is bard to sea which is the great-
er handicap to a ohila, total blindness
Or totaa deafnee,s. Poeta/lately, neither
congenital deafness nor. deafneee ac-
quieecl in infancy from any disease ex-
Cepit Men in giti whi eh destroys the
nervous mechaniem, of sound -wave ap-
preei a Lion, is, ever toiai.Though,sitf-
feters may hear no ordinary, sotmds
at a distance of. Mere then a feev
inolie«, from the oat almest all of them '
tdn h e a r_-werd's spolen• clearly an inch
or tWo away.
People who leave to do with the I
education of dela" el-aka:eh usually '
cleasify them according to the age tit
thecleafeciee begen: these who
exe born derif, in whielt geoup are in -
- 'tided thosc who Iseeome deaf befow
acquiring eaeach and iatelligemee;
those Nebo become deaf between the
ages Of tax alid sixteen; and 010,Ei.:1,Nfla
beceme deaf aa'aer the age of sack:eel-a
Children of Me firSt elan will grow
up to ,he deal. -mutes unleas taken in,
hand early and taught by eelentille
methods to articulate. Members of
the family rahould speak to them loud
and distirretly eloee to the ear, . The
whole family must be made to realize
that herb le ,an opportuaity to do great
good, and that, eithey te!'fi,y,bly refuse
to take the troulelo to speak loud aad
distinct:1Y, the' Child will .groa," UP With
the enorrneusly greater handicap of
ineibility to talk properly—and they
will be responsible for hie condition
just as lima as II theY hail eat out his
tongue!
Those wile become deaf during
eeleciel age will lietve leerned to speak,
but if neglectesi will never learn tho
speech of eclueated adults' arid may
even forget much that they have ac -
mixed. These who become deaf 'after
sixteen or seventeen aro in the class
of the adult deaf glad must in general
lock to themselves to ,aegaire hew
ra •
ea•aeae,
knoveledge and to retain what they
already possess.
give your diges-
flea a Qlcatek" with
VtritIGLEYS.
sound teeth, a good
appetite awl proper
d2alestion megtn DaUCU
to your iteal.
tvral GLCY'S
iteEper all MRS:
Work — a pleasant„
11)D46tEtefifteleaRI-oli-lx-airap-up.
vp4 •,,,,,.*gt
4
Tips to Canna Growers.
muchmore
ti-ful plants 12 1 ttlieniellY1). eTa11-11;
bulbs do best if theyare growing well
before being set out, They are heat
and Will not grow to amount
eas anything if planted while the soil
is cold. If.,e-tarthd in pots or flats and
allowed to get a good start they will
make blooming plants just:that much
sooner. A canna clump is increasing
in Size all the time while growing.
Each flowering stalk sends eat two
side ahoots, with eyes at their end, as
soon as the parent_ shoot is well
lieuneleed on its way, so this increase
in sige Is pretty rapid, -The more of
these side shoots I can get:to bloom-
ing size the more fibwers I have The
plant evill keep on sending up bloom-
ing stalks and f °rifling new eyes until
frost stops it. Itfolkers that even
a little start ahead of the time you
can get the bulbs to grew outside,
which:is not earlier than you plant the
started plants., will make your Calnlf:lp
much more effectifa during the whale
,bleaming season. It is not that it
makes thern kelittle earlier, but that
It makes them -correspondingly niore
beautiful for the whole summer after
they begin blooming. ,
Cannes are so hardy and so easy to
start land transplant that you clo not
'have to pamper them any. I have
placed a clump en the ,gro,und where
there was a fair light and warmth, and
watered it well, and the new shoots'
- I -
HAIRDRESSIEG
TORONTO HAIRDRESSING ACADEMY
offers unueuai opportunities for ladiell
Wishing to learn all branches of Hear -
dressing and Beauty Culture. Complete,
or • Part Courses. Export instructors,
Comfortable School. Easy tennis. write
for Booltlet.
Qlfl .avnicuzl noan wont:roma
-rII'....=7=V:gZZgrrdff
ee • •
PoPultir Stories Founa d
Fact
fiave ,yoit el,' et thought hew, ave flre
got those wonderful stories that are
shown on the atage---"Motlier Gootaes",
"}Iunapty Dumpty," "Jack Horner,"
and all the rest of then?
Many of them areentirely' fanelfal,
bat *there are eupaezed to be blirsc,i191.1,
things that 'really happened, and tradi-
tion in -teem- easee pints cut the 5pbix,
where theee legends took, plae�.,
A number .of ye± will amve stien the
stone on iligligitte Hill, marking tho
"spotwhere plek Whittington sat and
heard t.he bells of London ,toWn: sing
"Turn again,,Whittingten, thrice ,
or of Dencion. Town." But theourietis •
thing is. tibrat the Sir Richard Wiaitting,
ton who is supposed to have been thp
original aDick". was feur times Lora
May'or, ansi, as, far as is known, never
had a 'cat,
.The flea! Robin Hood. •
. „
SoMe of you will perhaps'have visit
ed •Kirltleas HalI, near Doncaster,
where that famous hero of pantomime,
Robin Hood, is said to thave been bled
•
to 'death by a "faithless nun, and near
by you will, perhaps, have seen th
started at once, and soon were sturdy.
I divided the clump when they had
leaves eighteen inches ao/ig on many
of the ahootei I justcut them apart
so each plant had some Deets and a
piece of the rizora on it. It went on
griming avithoat showing 'any serious
check. I prefer, though, to out the
bulbs out When dormant, and pot up
in four -inch. pots, and then' shake them
out and plant -When the tftne comes.
I sometimes have had plants two feet
way.—Agnes Hilco.
alinard's 1-Intinent for Burns & Scalds
Pre.
vents
chapped
tP hands, •.
crackedlips,
Makes your
skinsoft,white,
clear and smooth.
DRUGGISTS SELL ZT
STO.ILE
;11
not
Buiin
--easavatanein, 4e:easier,
',44"gk
`.
i 5k.:,„_•;11;-:,%-,--
.. 6.
52
51
That tender, almost juicy
cake with the rare flavor of
delicious raisins and piquant
spice.
That rich, fruity luscious
cake that doesn't cruMble and
. dry out.
- The kind that you have
always liked—thekind you
mean when you say k f ruit
Cake."
- yoti. can buy new ----get
Just the kind you like --and
save baking at. home.
These plinnp, tender, Juicy,
for cake. Taste the cake you
gtheitn-asnisdinnseeed. saisins are !deal
You'll enjoy fade celte more
often when you can -secure suek
sid d cake r
Mail coupon for free bo'Ok of
tested recipes suggesting 'scores
of other,litiscious raisin foods,
Just ask your bake shop or
confectioner for it—the cake
that's made with
Sup -Maid liki4i1Siti.Crowers
Ca-oiteralitm Orgatizatiot$ Co mpris,iog'14,000 °rower eniktri
DEPT. N-53341, FassNo, CAUFORNIA.
Blue Package
105
LS t1 .m3 {Centel Wfl
CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT
_tiar.:^IVERM licdaha GrOwers,
Dept. N-,5313-11,Fresno; California.,
' Please send me copy of your feee, boolz,
"Recipes with Raisins,"
Setutetree. .
Perlee.
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grave, where, according to tradition
thefamoueottlaw is buried,
Theexact sPot was, of course,
chosen by an arrow shot froin the near
,by Hall when Robin realized that. he
Was, dying. There are people, how
ever, who scoff, and. say an arrow
could notposibly have been , shot so
great a distance, but, hovel...tholes% the
-
matter has been never ,Properly set-
tle:a. 'either way. . As isa epitaph form-
erly on the grave
"Hereunderneath this .little atone
Lies .Robett,,Earl of 'Huntington,
No areher was as he sa'aoecl,
And people ca.11ed hint Robin Hood."
Another fainous, pantomime' heTo le
Robinson, Crusoe, and perhapS his tale
Is as eloselY founded on fact us, any
of the Christmas; stage stoiqee.
The original Crusoe was ii,ained
Alesca.nder Selkirk, and it Was whilst
serving as a sailing master that he
committed some breach of the ship's
regulations, for which the captain put
him ashore an the Island of Juan Fer-
nandez, off the .Chilia,n coast, and left
aim to hie fate. There he eernained
lave years, until he was rescued by a
Captain Rogers and brought back to
,
England, „
-"Mother' Goose" Is another panto-
mime with a good deal of truth be-
hind it. There once lived in Boston a
widow who had six ebildeen. In tinre
she married Isaac Goose, a man with
tem -children. ,With so many children,
she, of -course, '.`didn't know what to
clop" hence the rhyme and the well-
known pantonlime.
thereignnigis'ofre13e,Huntreya ytici.haA"t
that time a certain abbot—wfshed to
send the title deeds of senile property
to the king. , -
A; in..those,ttys,41.-o4,-vett-e--tho ra44:4--
e df edsetue
InwaitahIurgoebbpeizii,,tthheichdevraeO.: 4
entrusted to John Harner. But, dee,
pite this bare, the deeds never reached
tae King, for, as you -know, Jack
Horner: ---
"Put in a thumb
And pulled out a plumb (the title
deeds), '
Ancl"'said,, 'What a good boy am L' "
In support of this story it is inter
es.ting to know that the estate to
wctoalailief sie.e,htrliioes. Horner.
e n tnlfeordt6uend.,:tewere ey how wi.,
18 'still owned by a famil
dIrny
ever, they "say that their estate WaS
bought from Henry VIII., ansi that
theee, never was such a pie as' des-
cribed in the story. So what are we
:to believe? -
Watch Your Lip.
It Is the bustam to judge the chan .
. ,
atter of:persoas withwhom one coiner
cantactaby looking: closely at -tb.eir.
-6-Tee,' encl.:the. etfeighteetse, or other.
wise, of their glaneee.
Few people'realize the importance
of the lips. as a -guide to character.
I-Iusband-seekers should beware -of a
tendency' to lotaiiiiiacrimeacee
mouth' &dope -nothing aavarna eit :en
-
of a worrying, grizzling 'temperament,
more thae.tleat. Yet to much of an up.
_
ward ourve denotes frivolity.
Very •red, thin lips denote cruelty; .
an underlip which 'hag' too, full an out
ward '.roll-derco.tae; Lack -Of corignience;. '
wbilo Wheii a mouth is long and thin)•
with the,.,11ne litatwee4 the lips clear
cut and aria, its owner Is usually meta
bid, selfish, and /laminating. *
The happy inedium Id raouths should
have straight lips, not 'too thin, but ox
symnietriaal fullnees anti with a slight
upward inclination at the corucrsto
denote -merriment. Should,thlsp
Wand earire be roacly,,to.dimple.deeply
oil provocation, thisdenotes,- a quic:k*
power: of repartee taut a ready bat net ,
male-tibialoie of
,
Getting His Owe Deck:
Jones-, whlbo buying a ti,eleet for a
music -ball how, was rudely. ,brushed
aside by three flappers, who got their
ticitots before
to luck "would liave, it, he was g
:a 'ticket, for the, seat next • to tiles
copied by thegirl.s,
Atter seVeral turns a comeidl
pea.recl 6.elteci the audience: "'
. .
there ate any- girls pmsent who could.
learn to love
3-01.',.4,44 was quick to ao,la.eatace'eppor.
t•ertity, '
"Will you let me out, please
'eaVtateeetiureen tho' girls reere,
then si, down again,
:The alidleireo rotifed,'Itit 120 ollE
n
ttait Jones, '
BD..;