The Clinton News Record, 1922-4-20, Page 6esPRIL imeitc-,)vEs
OUR PIES
MYSTERY OP THE
GREEN RAY
By William Le Queux
teeeieeeeeee-eeeee.ee—eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee.eeeeueeeee'ieeeeee-eeeeeeeeeeeieeeee
CHAPTER 'XVI.--(Oonthl.) eing to his instruCtions-e-for y th e
O. eouyse, you know -what I have: thee he had enbirely 'recovered h $
come to speak aueee, eyfr, F,wart,"[equanimiter—and handed it to him.
Nilderman began at once. "You must As, I did so I .happenecl to look in
lave thought nay conduet this after -I the direction of the small table ha -
1 ooll was very strange—You eini side him. . Myra's Japanese papa .-
eportemanlike, to say the leest," knife was -etill there, but the /idiot
"Oh, I don't know/ I replied ase bed heart „simek illOre than an, in h
Ightly as I could• "It was a very 1 into the 'mahogany top of the tablo.
strange etifair, and ib eather celled for I turned avea qu y , with 'a laugh-
ing remark to Myra, which did, not
seem to raise any suimicion at the
time; though I have no recollection
noev wh.at, it was I seill.
A ' few moments afterwards I
(miebly and, tin.o,stentablously slipped
out of the voem. Surely'hthere. could
be no d011ht &bent it 110W, The W1101e
thing was obvious. .1•Dederman had
notieed the paper, jumped .to the con -
elusion. that we suspected everything,
and in the sudden acedsg Of baffled
rnge had picked up the' paper -knife
and stabbed it. into the table, •
There was only one peesible:eeasen
for that--Hilderm'an was ap ettesaY.
In that case, I thought, 'he has come
here to try and iind Oa how much
we know and to keep an eye on us.
Possibly he might beattempting to
all that I should. Buteny idea proved keep as there so that Fuller could
to be a bad one and nothing cable of g•et tip to ' some 'satanic trick else"
it. So here I am to ask you 11 you
havc learned anything or have any-
thing to suggest." •
"I'm afraid we're more at a loss
than eVer now," reed:witted. "The
further 'we get with this thing the
less we ,eeein to know about it, un-
feetunately." '
Bildern-len was exceedingly ,sympa-
eiheeic, and thoegh he mude numerous
suggestions he was as puzzled as we
-were ourselves. I had s•onie difficulty
in defining his 'attitude. We knew so
0111ell as was ,suf.fieient eth hang his
eriend "Fullee," but 1 ,could :rot make
up my mind whether, he really was a
friend of von Guernstein's ay not. It
was a small thing that decided eme.
On, an occasional table beside- the
American ley a steel paper -knife; a
Japanese affair, with a carved handle
and a yeey sharp blde. Hilderman
picked up the knife and toyed Will it,
"I should be carefueal with that, 11,r.
Hilderman," I advis. "That is ea
wolf in: eiheep's, elothiim.; it's exeeede
ingly eharp."
eOle, yes!" cried- Myra. "If you
telean my payee -knife, it ought, not
oreaelY to be used as a papereknife
al•l, the point is like a needle. I mnst
. put *it away or hang it up ' as an
ornamene
'. Tea American laeglied and laid the
• knife down again en- the table, and
wo resumed our discussion. Both Den-
nis and I knew that we 'mug be Very
caveful to conceal -our suepleions. but
at. the' same time we did our best to
-reach spine sort of donclusion -with
-regard to IIilderman himself.
'"And, I suppoee, until :you- have
.scarched ,Ab.out the eSadelle,nehe re -
•marked, "you will .he,nougurther 011
stranqe conduct of one sort or an -
you must Lave thought it
cowardly to run away 'as quickly as
I could,' he insisted.
"It eves some time befove we evert
noticed you had left us," I langh&l,
"and then, I confess, I couldn't make
out where you hacl got- to or why
you have gone."• -
"As a matter of last We were
Tether seared," Donnie ,put in. "We
Searched for you ',Mettle river." •
"It -•sounde a very 'cowardly confee-
.sion , to make," Hilderman admitted,
"but I went back to thelanding-stage,
got into' my boat, and cleared off as
quiekly 'as I could. I must ask you
.to believe that I was un.der the inn
Pression that it would he best f07, US
tO W110 stole Miss McLeod's' dog.
It seems to me that the,dog was;taken
by the man who Wished te conceal an
illicit ebil, and the green flash) or
'green ray, or whetever, you call it, is
-simple a inanifestitibn of some
eteange electrical combination in the
"I'm afraid We shall have to leave
it at that,', 3 eaid.with son -elaborate
sigh of -regret. • r,-
"Not when you have Mr..Burnhernes
distinguished pewees, •ofededuction to
nelietUetope.eueelyt Mr. ,Ewart?" ,aid
Hilderman; and waieed fee! me answer,.
"Flukes - ane no very consistent
el fear," Dennis supplied 'him
readily, "and'eif, ev,e, axe 'to make 'arry
progl,`eggs we Shall hardly haye time
for idle --opeeniation." • ' 1
eportune might ecceetinue to favor
• you,"hthe Amerecanepergisted. "Don't
you thiek it'e worth ttleing?.•!. •
‘..rm •afraid not,"..seicItDennis, with
eeleugh that addedeeinpliegis and eon-
viebion to his etatement.
"By the way," Myra suggested, "I
don't know if anybody would care for
a 'whisky or s.otla or anything, I won't
have drinks served in here, but if
anybody would like one, you know
where everything is, Ron. I. always
eey if anyone wants a drink in mer
den they can go, and get it and then
T know' they really like being in the
den. Y01.1 see I'm a woman, Mr.
iiildernian,". she laughed,
"I must say I think the idea of ee-
feeshment would not' enter the head of
anyone 'here who had the pleasure of
your company here, Mise'IVItLeocl; un-
less you suggested it youreell."
We laughed at ,the rather heavy
eempliment, .and I went into the din-
leg-roem to' fetch the decanters,
se phone med. glasses,
"I'll help you to' get Ithenah called
Deneie, end followed •me -out of the
TOG .
'Well?" I asked as goon as we
1'.' ached the other aroom. "What do
you make of it?"
"Uni. nob three," Dennis admitted.
"I'm puzzled. I shouldn't be surpris-
ed 11 he turned out to be a Govan-
ment secret service man keeping 0511
eyd on Fuller-v,on-Guernetem, and
• thet when he has quite made tip his
enol that the mystery og .the green
ray- is connected with his own- busi,
ness he will -show his hand.
"Something of t110 501110 soot oc-
curred to Garnesk," I said, "Well, at
:present we'd 'better aveid suspicion
and go back: befote he thinke wa'ee
leilding a committee meeting."
So ( led. the wdy to the .len. 1 was
walking eatefully and slowly, became
I Web tInaconstorned -to cetrying teaye
of glasees andelings, aria etslsocquent-
ly 1, made nu noise.. I puelied the door
open -with my „shoulder, Dermie dol -
lowing with, a couple of syphone, and
ae, I did so I ehanced to glance up -
In a large mirror which hung over
the fireplaee I Saw the eeflection 01
Ilfideernan'e fade, knitted in A 1101'00
froven, gazing intently at female objeet
which wag otitside my view. Myre
ume talking, thmigh what she wee
saying I. did toe notice. I went into
the room and mit the tray on elle big
teble, tied ne I filled the glaseee I
leekid ecend chsually to see what
Ilildemeen had been looltine et Ly-
ing en the ecife oe whiele Myra was
eitlilIg •wes the copy of the Piriuree,
ore e o1 1,lie nage 1117071507,
wheee. I decided, to act at once. I
turned' back to the eden and put my
head roiled the clothe • ,
"Will. you 'people' excuse Me foe a
„bit?" I .said ,lightly. , "The General
wants me." Andwith thit I, left
them. I had alreoet" asked Hildeabjsan
not go till I caine back Lbnt I Was
afraid it Might sound'euspicious. to
.acute ears. I &Melly Jenew „What
to do., ,1 'should haye diked to lave
:been mbhe-to speak .-with Dennis, if
onlY foe 7001170017.•I am
'quite ready -to -confess that just then
I would have gleen .all I pogseseed
for ton minutes! conversation 'with
'my friend.. Letole quietly out of the
house, and ,thought. furiously.
If Hilderman wanted . to keep us
from spying 011 Fuller, where. was
Fuller? Would I be wiser to wait
and try to keep an eye on.Hilderman;
or was my best Plan to ignote`him.
and try andlocate his Guinan friend?
I decided on. the latter course. / went
back and wrote -a short note to Den.-
ids and &lipped it inatcle,..his cap./
'I'm convinced they are both
enemies. Take care of ;Myra. • I may
bout all night Don't let her worry
about me; I may not be beck •for some
time, but I shall come back all
thire for any friend,:knowing
that sooner Or later he would find it,
and went down to -the landiegestage.
The...Baltimore II, and . Myra's boat,
The jenny .Spinner, were drawn op
alongside,, and1 realized that if I
took the Jenny I Should be ,raising
Hilderman's, suspittone at enee. An-
ohereel a little way out was another
smell motoitaboat—thee first :elle 'Gen-
eral heid--e•Whieh.hlyiev had else Called
after a trout fly—the Goett-a-Bonelhu
—though the, play noon words was
lat on- 'heat people. , The beat was
still in conetane use, and:Angus anti
Hamigh eientinualay, went into Mallaig
and Glenelg in it to collect. parcels
and.. go On. I ran to .the petrol shed,
and got three 'tins of Shell, put them
inthe dinghy and .mished out .to the
Bondlui, eliinbed on board, •Sounded
the' tank, filled it ley, and started ,out
aeroggethe Loch.. Ieceneenly plead ,my
an'eciety to . get well out Of sight and
-hearing' before, ''Hilelerman 'Should
think. �f leaeringethe,liouSe, an ex-
.
ease for -my lamentable thoughtlesg-
ti
imps, on this occasion. Indeed, it
was ,not till long. afterward -s that,. I
reiilitecl I had forgotten to arichoe the
dinghy, and I left it, 'just ab it was,
to drift out te sea on the tide.
I 'made all the pace I, could and
'reached the other eide in about twenty
minutes. I was 'sadly equipped -for
ari -'adventurous expedition! I bad
no flask .st
to stain me, lineage of 'need,
no weapon in case r. eheuld be halted
to defend myself; was wearing a
dinner-jeoket, no hat, and a pair of
thin patent -leather pumpg!
I ran the boat right in -shore, heed-
less of the ,datiger to the propeller,
in a email sandeecove round the point,
se that 3 was hidden from Glesnahin-
Me. Then I realized that I hail been
to little too 'precipitalrd 'in my depar-
ture: There was no andlum-Chain
board, And the paintht eves admin.'
ably , suited for' neakinge-faet to pier -
heads and landingeetages at high tide,
but was nothing. like long enough to
eligible• me to make the craft secure
on Shore liewever, I dragged het as
far up as r'could, and prayed that 'I
might be able to return before the bide
,eangd ht her lip ancarried her awaY,
In those eiretunstances I ehould have
been stranded in the enemy's country,
by no means a pleasinU' peoepect!
Having 'done' the beet) I could for
Alyra's inotor-bOat, I made' my way
round the hill,. 'climbing cautiously
upwards all thti
e me, my dinner -jacket
carefully buttoned in ease a- gleaen
of moonlight on my ehirt front sheedd
give me away at a critical' moment.
It was a rocky and difficult (Simla and
I a0011 regretted that I had not taken
the bridle path to Glasnabinnie and
made my Wey 'boldly up the bed -of
the burn. However, it was tea 1,515 tO
41011 1/5017, and eventually, after one
or two false 10:0118 And Ste 111hlee,-1
eucceeded 111 veaching a epot front
which I could obtain a gook view of
,flie hut. No, there was no light there,
no sign of movement at all. I cle,cicled
ie work Trier Way round to the other
01110 And then, if continued to get no
'satisfection, th descend to the !mine.
The tyleclows of the hut, or smaking-
tooth, as the reader will no doubt re-
member, extended :to whole length of
the structure; and eurely, I thpogreq,
it, there were05 light in the plaee117
Would 1*11±11)111 to be Vale, 'I edged
round 01.0 l'aCt of a stoOP 01110111tionfidered hereee the stream betvveert
the tWo' 10115: getting' myeelf seaked
above the 11750±5 air I did se, anti
erotiche(1 among the heather on the
other eidb of the bending, No, there
WAS. no one there, theetfince Wee de -
Alerted, / Amen mei peered
it.ieut me, 1101011101017)1777iintentle,
(To be eelliiimed.)
1410 fehrr.SteVirif (1101,0
I 7.,)i074.- ;ri.-
Whero 61, Pound's Not a
It a 140aaarParamtt*antod.. Walat out 01-1
meet ton of oeal end Ship it by wvos
tho top of a Mountain 10,000 feet
high, VIC htrYer en the ineunteinetcy,
Woigling it on ite arrival, would find
It a hit fel-torte-even though none of
It woo 'opined out Oni the way up,
Suppose that the man on tiee ration-
taineliop veld ilor the coal with an ex-
act ounce og gold, weighed out on the
epet The recipient, on getting beak
to the foot of the mountain, would
find, if his scales were delieately cor-
rect, 'that his gold weighed a trifle
•
01000 than art 0111150.
Thinis„loso weight as they go 'up.
They lose at the ride of a millionth
part ef their weight for eveey een feet
of ascent. The reesen why is easily
elndeastoed;,it is becenee the force of
gravity lessens.with altitede.
But it should he' Made clew:. Chet
the coal, end the gold likeivise, would
have to he weighed by a spring bol-
a/we in order to slime the decrease 'or
increase in weight. A pan balance
shows only relative vveight; the spring
balance gives the absolute weight.
A (hunk of iron that; weighs a
pound in Termite will weigh more than
a pound at the North Pole. The weight
of tiny -thing is greater by one tWO-
hUtidCerdth at. the North Pole—or at
the South Pole—than a t the Equator.
That is because it is thirteen miles
nearer to the centre of the earth', and
also for the reason that at the Equa-
tor, where'the revolution of the glob
carrieg its crueb erouird at a speed of
a thousand miles an hour, centrifugal
force tends to throw thiegs oft, then,
by rendering them in effect lighter.
To prove 'this- proposition in actual
Practice one Would have to ule a
spring balance for the reason I have
aireadY given. And it i$ obviate that
a maker of vetch lealances,If he would
'have them 'exact, should construct
them with „reference to the latitudes
in which they are to be employed.
If an enterprising, citizen of io „de
Janeiro were to make a trip to Aretic
Alaska and buy gold,ein.st, weighing it
with a spring balance brought with
him from his home city, he would find
when he got hack that he had less of
the yellow stuff then he paid 1-01'.
—W. B.
Dye Old Wrap, Skirt,
Sweater,— Curtains,
in Diamond Dyes
Daeli'Package of "Diamond Dyes"'
contales dieeetione so simple any yo-
,
man can dye or tint her old. worn,
fdtled things new: Even if -She\ has
never dyed 'nacre, she can put a rich,
fadefese color into shabby, skirts,
drees.es, waists, coats, stockings, sweat -
ere, coverings, draperies, hailing's,
everything! Buy Diamond Dyes—no
other kind—then perfect home dyeing
Is guaranteed. Just tell your drag -
gist whether the material you wisit to
.dye is wool or sine, or whether it -is
cotton, 'or mixed goods. Dia-
xnend Dyes nevee streak, repot, fade,
or run.
Tree Planting in the West.
-The civic (Uithoritlea of ..,algary are
aiming to have 10,000 trees, planted
in the perks and on the streets ot that
city .in 1932. ' Other cities and towna
en the prairies have, also planned tree,
planting, compaigne,. This planting or
trees in turban communitieg, aleng
with the millions oe Lhees now being
planted on prairie fatins, will In a few
years make a great change In the as;
pect of the Prairie Provinces,
Buddhists of Tibet make use of
pnayer-wheele--eilindere inscribed
with saered forinulae. By • Causing
these to revolve, worshippers are SW-
pose71. to gain merit and help to secure
their 'desires.
0014340
OrIttefivadt6
• Uhe School Wachs
The yeoman lunch kits are a great
advantage where it is impossible or
blePreetieal ±0 seeve hot 151101AAS,
thildren need at least one hot drink
or clleh for tench, Theee kite.
usuelly have removable Aluminum
teaye for salads, pudding er'PresSrVes.
However, if this $ore of lunch, kit Is
not available, folding fibre Neel) 'boxes
may be procured ISM a email 'sine.
Lunch eloths 00 nePkin5 SIA5tait pf
fe0111130, he provided, Palma napkins
may he used for the purpose, They
are Mexpensive ai01 leseen the work
0/1 W55111103'. •
WO keep , celd eream, yeseline
and similar small jarg fOr Packing Plie.
lunch boxee. They "make excellent re-
ceptgeles for cueterd, saiMe, preseeves,
salads and puddings," the screw 'tops
prevenCing ale contents from epilling,
Small -sized eliuninum salt and pap,
per ehakers are handy. "and eat Mit
. • , .-
LOAVOS of bread. baked 'in baking
powder eons or other tall cans; are
.exeellent for sandwiches. They take
but little extra timo to9inake ens' are
alvvays a delight to the children. Little
individual pans,' shaped like, bread
pang'but smaller, nay be obtained at,
any five and ten cent store or at a
variety store. Cakes baked in these
are handier to pack than elioes of
cake and do not crumble • so easily,
little chicken or Moat pies may also
be made in4 them.
A little variety in food should, bc
afforded froni day to day, as c, &LIM
soon tires of the same food prepared
in the same wr03.. The main part of
the lunch should, of course, be the
saildWiches. Two varietiee of the,se
ghould be 'prepared, These need not
necessarily have meat filling as there
are other foods more easily' digested
by the eowing boy. or girl, than -meat.
Hard-hoiled egge" Are an oltrstandby
with many mothers. • Boiled for :the
usual length of time these are exceed-
ingly hard to digest. Deering 'the first
half honr of the boiling they beceme
tough, It is at this stage that they
are generally taken from the The,
They should be boiledrar about two
liours, t the end of which time ;they
are tender and as easily digested is
though- softbeiled. 1 Mashed fine With
a fork aed seasoned to taste with salt,
popper amicream, they' make fins bll-
ing for pandevichei. • .
',An unusual sandwich may be pre-
.
pared' by chopping nuts and seedless
raisins together, mopten, with cream
ad spread between lightly buttered
slices of bread. • _
Brown bread cut isi thin slices, 1101-
tered, s'preticliewith maehed beans
and salad deeeping; makes an unusual
.and subsitantril sandwich.
Brown bread spread.. with peanut
butter and some kind of a tart fruit
jam is else &Mmes.
.. Many other delightful and unusual
fillings will suggest themselves it yen
give,a little thought to the seehject"
• .,Erft-over cake icing May be used
as sandwich filling between square
crackers. ' •
Next. in importance to the sandwich,
comes the:vegetable or Oiled. Salmon,
potato, cabbage, corn or apple may
be used, Here is wbere the little jars
come into play.
Potatoes are good, and %else 0071-
vendent° to' carry if baked in the shell.
Select large., smooth potatoes' for th:s
purpose. Bake until soft, themtake
from the oven,' „Split lengthwise and
remove' the- potato • from tlie shell.
Mash ee'ell and, season- to etairte, Put
back in the thells and -'put dots -if but-
ter over the top. Brown lightly in the
oven. ,
Last, but net leieeie eoraes the dee-
sert;; Tide ehould consiet of eeke„
eookie$, very oeeasionally mane kind
of, pie, and fruit ef some kind,
• Capealeee or' calcee baked in muffle
'or gem pelts do not dry out so quickly
as alices of cake, Plain oh eolered
Ili:meant candy may be melted, to 105
the little cakes, The carely may be
put in a bowl aed Set ever the tee-
.ketele.. When melted, ellp the, tops or
.the calce$ in; They will harden quiekly
and what is left of' the Icing may be
kePt fer the pext timo. '
Oatmeal cookies and cookies with
raisin filling' are a pleesent change
from, the usual raolaseee, cream OT
drop cookies.
Tiny pies baked. shallow gem
P01110 are Mee and eee handier to parry
then Piecea pf larger Pies.
Appl(1a 170511)to ibe the ;favorite
fruit tor scheel lunches, A heedful
of raieins aro a weleorne change.
Overwork.
A housekeeyer Who is overworked
often says, "3 know that,I am doing
too -Much, but I must keep going, for
when I try. 'th stop I feel W51'85. ' She
does' not realize that Shell a condi-
tion is a danger signal. She "feels
worse" because when the "speeding
up" ceases the oversupply of Mood
that has been directed toward certain
nerve' eentred is -tvithcirawn- to repair
wasted tissues, Though she feels "let
down". when the process of recopera,
ition.,,sets.-in, she is really on the road
to recovery.
The exhaostien caused by overwork
is often augmented by ibrabi-fag. PDT
example, -women who have hectnne
overtired from the care ofa house
often needlessly ackl.to the burden by
dwelling upon the detall-s of the
housework. While they are doing the.
washing -they keep thinking about the
big ironing that.they will have to do
next, a -ad while they are ironing they
worry ;about the work for, •sonie other
day. They' need, to learn to make
some kinds .oS. week eae Automatic as
possible. Beds' should,be made, lamps
,filled and disbes washed as mechanic-
ally as you can do these -things
out neglecting the 'work.
rf. there ois -mending to do inth
evening, somesmember' of the familfel
should read, aloud, and thus divert the
mind' of -the mender froin what has
become.elradgerye A hospital" patient
told her nurse thatshe had sat alone
for hours mending her . husbancPs
stockings and those of- the hired men
until she felt that sh•e oould "ne'ver
bake another stitch." When she re-
turned to changed conditions at ho'
hothe the 'task. became a, pleasure.
• 'Women 'who haye always had
leisure may suggest. "Why did , she
not let 'her work go, and rest ?" Some
:physicians advese filet way out ed
thedifficulty, with the trite remark,
"Y,our health is worth More thah any-
thingeele.e." ,But bay women realite
'that to "let the work go" for . long
w‘hen there I'S 110 !help to be had only
'increases ,the burden later on and
intikeS the mountain adenost
Mountable.. Breakdown can •he avoid-
ed only by learning how to • Work
eteadily -without wasting energy. •
The ,annual flow of tho Mississippi
carries to the sea about 400,060,000
tone of solid matter.
The grounds'01Buckingham Palace
extend over about forty acres, about
five 01 whielt'are oecupied by a minia-
ture lake. ,
' The' quahtity of focelmeeeesatielora
wellegrown child of over thirteen years
,og,age Is the eame ae that needed ger
a grown-up person lightly eceeepied.'
It's a
DOUBLE
• .=-Pepper,naint
jacket over Pep.
verinint gum.
151,
for 5c
Candy jacket: judt "melts
in your inotith" then you
getthe delectable gum center.
And with Wrigley's three old
• standbys also affording friendly
aid to teeth, throat, breath,
appetite and. digestion.
Soothing, thirst.,
quenching. Making
the next cigar taste
better.
• Humor in ,Transformed
„
Librarians in ptiblic libtarie$ have
some curious experiences in •dealing
with :youthful Patrons: Some ef :the
teeniest mestelices that .Children ntake
are so natural :that'ItheY recur 4444
and again., The demand ger l'Three,
Mosquitoes" (peenotmeed "Siteeteirs"
of &tiro) by ,Duinde a :perennial
'snaree. Of joy! .Young Canada iS all
tdo familiar. with ',mosquitoes; and
whether Or not it 'cupyiesta that mug.-
keteetie are, an aerial' 7foree of. the
Same nature, it frequently pronounces
the name at if it diet.. • '
Books that take their, titles fro:na.
proper'netneee - of :places., °herpes -err
herolliel •undergo semi:: odd• thane,
ferinatiene. . The hoer whe wanted
"Trim Bele" reeeived Iymehoe after
lrlbbls 'deltiik; 'the girl Who 'asked itrii•
'Martha Fumaywiteti"
have had to vvait long even if she' had
tti add "by Clunks
Dickens," whereupon she :was Proinlat-
9Y. handed ,Marblie: '"Robin
Cierueci"inelcidieuse ooMbination•L‘.
Viras ireadiliethiterpretede velimieinquired
for by st sanalfeon-Ofeeuneferidtalyuieho
was'not yet familia; with Cetigoe.and
1401 010000 Frielayi but who ,was quite
-.....:NATTo.N..T-Othq.,piNg •'IJ CANA
A
Univerpitie,s to Follow the RailrOhd in Binding Eat and Wet Together
'Mend in hand with the material
rowth bf Canada, 'with the oXteneien
of bele population, reed' the develop;
irent of her natural resources, moves
orward the durrent of hee intellet-
ual and 'spiritual Ilfe. The ince of
nen and women htelieee, adventnrous
pieit. end.' indomitable eourage are
11510.1170 01.415015h, are not the !tied that
Ir.& (iota:ea. With the merely material
!liege 051 lite, Canitthee pioneers of a
htle wane ego were '''.01111g 111111 11,11
£60 010:01.15, arid c,ia linen who dream.
11 dreams, and theht Skins and (laugh..
ere 715 010 1050 gifted, Their breaden.
For 'the Cause of INTational Unity
ing horieen new inceide$ .01 new World developed only when the avenuea of , provincial institution's. Threagh these
ef mental and spiritual effort, la which Demiclian thought move erest and west !scholarships a conetant etreara of tlie
1,hee, in turn, must he pioneers. The aa do theee of trade. 'This le thee brightest and mat amblekeue of weal:
realize.tion ogrthie fact has become tt -thought that lies behind the recerfE ern university studentg win be en'.
IiVMg force in the fine tiniversitiee --(1(mat1ou by the C,P.R. of three ttiv, abied to eyelid ,ecme am in Pastern
that are already doing .a great work at 'nal ,geliolarebips of the value of $500 , Canada anti thug. become familiar with
Winnineg, Eilineetme, and 50.110101015each to Parente Univerelty for the.! 'methods ±51 1)10 aura thought there. As
and Vancouver, 3'urp6to of inducing graduathe of :stated by Mr, re: Beatty, Presided
• In the making of the Caleediab niu Weetorit Collegee, -00 0011111 le10 thef' r, at the Canadian Paciile itailway, in
tien ero' far, evennee teapsport and a tudiee ti thal, great, Canadian centre itls lattee te Rohr .1 5113000101:,,communiention have worked_ 10105,7100±learning, • , Preeleeet nt Parente Univereity, an
-
completion of the strectere the roue- • The onivetsii lee et Weetern C.00,la tvouncing tar, 5101111 '13) 01 the three,
(lilt:Ion steno O& which waS Cho Aet oc aro growing faet, 111011. etieelere ol $,4,1ularh3o;i: tnorank,raf, is one
Dominion, 37511070tion, Canada's na- itritrnation 1.1 1t571),a 10 011 etr'geetw. the': will obvioaaly he a 011)15510, not
tioltal 0111 Ly 10 tounaed And ?Os tered r)y bsg numbor ot , -111171,110110111.7, but Mete to the
the polittear end physical 1114110 tiiAt 1, to enteue 11100 e,hreie. ,te Eve Mi. ('1111017)17)11771 77 whielt they tvall atter.
bind 0151 111113 west, but it can be fully yoxta the eirge 10010 pw;11h:o01 Lunt,' tivo,"
•
• .
familiar with the reune of his famous
fellow countryman,...'"A Sick Family's
Robins" Was quickly guessed to mean
on, ,T old friends ...the SWISS PaMily
/69)/118011. No did it take much
thought to translate "Sw:ieral on a
Peak" into Peveril of the- Peak; and
the 'young resider May have been no
less. satisfied with his choke, even -
though ',it proved riot to be the tile
01 molintaineerin.geadvenbure he doubt-
less expected. • .
• But it took ,a-cievcr librarian to clis-
coverein "DaerreY de ender!' that seri-
ous• gem of English- literature, Daniel
Deronda, and after, theediscovery was
made' to explain convincingly to the
youngster who hal. asked for it that
he.cotrld not peeeilily want it. 1 -le had
chanced b hear an adored _teacher;
Wile was ale.° an athlete, nientio'n it to
another teacher 05 11 highly interesting
book; and he had naturally aesumed
• that the interegling Dannywas a won-
der in pome form of athletics. ,
t'ought meet tike he was a
pitcher," -ho admitted sorrowfully,,
"but it .wouldri!,t 'ef jolted me none if,
he'd played football., Q1' wrestled, or
been an All-round star, at a track ineet,'
00 raced a car, or flew a machine;
mast ally kind of wonder would have
milted me 011 right. But ithe ain't a
Wonder at all, and his name ain't'
Danny-; he ain't the boy I t'ought be
was, and I sure don't want him.
Gimlet Treasure Teland instead."
Can'Carelessness Be Cured?
Expeeiments earried out bo. test the,
. mental 'effects of -1080 eof-'sleeP have,
revealed the remarkable fact that
there are two distinct phases of fati-,
gue,
• The first is one of stimulus, under
which work Is done rather better than
• under normal menclitiena. Then. foie,
lows a phase, of much longer aura-.
then in which the body makes good 181
losses—a period characterized by gen-
eral 104 of a.ccuracy, power of con-
centration, and retentiveneesa iT'here
is, however, no sense og fatigue dur-
ing this phase—quite the reverse.
What is 'ettlied carelessness is often
doe to this geeond stage of fatigue.
Whea a man knows be is fatigued, he
naturally taltee excessive ptecautions,
but when the second stage comes
along, he doesnot feel tired, and con-
pequently carelessness steps in
Seine of the fainous woekers ef the
woeld seem to be, able to work ab -
Dannelly long hems an4 liereealmeeme
ally long lives. Possibly their bodies
supply naturally oi fatigue anti -toxin.
There is a fortune awaiting 'the
SCielltiSt who discovers an anti -toxin
to mire carelessness'!
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