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The Clinton News Record, 1921-7-21, Page 6, The ,.`zecret o the Synopsis of Later i_a_ Jtars. bart was t easy in has mint ,Ind ' Dartin, in possess,on of Dartigny was fat' from boing sail=find that a,ll it tou,d b . e .felt convinced '4VflB AS ..i 0. � (• fox silence fortune, has t IIs i to 1 s31 ns U i s to a vu. 1 I Y money, On birthday. Be xerto x that i,t some ve naneuunderbowl v orh ,m 1 lost Was inn n 1" a nice or 6 a gtyos her. flu, Dnxtrirtty locket. Steila's w s r o .y no ag mother recognizos the dost it bears Dalthn i;ho inatter had taken too firm the same that an ring handed rthold on the so)laitar t.brain forr himAs 1 l think of emir able 'to ]et L dro i. r . to ] it U aU o ] nothsr l f fol ret i.uidi law)] from rain ,S la 5 1 1, , g the long .lost Sylvia D ut,sny, Ila put the notes he had tottcal down, together with the snap of OHAPTER XV,—(Corlt'd,) paper picked'up in, Mortimer Terrace, ply Robert Baxenter stopped suddenly. fat a largo onveiope ..nd 1 , rer i it in Into his mind had, come rho first t lixs pt reet ease It was d aYl hL when ]•lout ertto' doubt, tho]list susr]- healast rose to paeTtrs far t 1 . Von that tile owner of lddtcbuY lie crossed blind the vAndow anA t looked Towers was not nil that he claimed to P rhs be,.. Why had the man lied to him? aver the river, The sun had not dls- lf he had, seen &6'a in the "l'rine0's" persedl the mists, but above his herd pantomine, his statement; t.r Robevt—Ilnveskiumise owas rfs gllue orio detday, an:l that when he same to the Strand of- tg The solicitor Leaned on the sill and rice was 11ds first visit to London--•-! I r in bi • !breaths o - the delicious d eav f e o not claimed• g fad Why had be ] o ,vas se, y the inheritance before? Imorning Air. Curiously enough, he slid mot fes] rice the Ila that had asa- Suppcs•e in some Tway Dartin had ed had been so fold, o fat b, d with Obtained, knowledge of the document;: penned by old Adam Baxenter? interest, that fatigue seemed to have Could his late cousin have so farlp'assed him by. His eye3 reamed with forgctten himself- as to htv. shown .a languid interest fromi point to pol-of it to anyone? But Robert laxeiv weld of the scene belerw him—the vivid pat. the man that Halbert had b,i,n, and cafes of ,young green against tile, old that; to hint, the family trust must• grAy of masonry, the scarlet of,.ger- have been a fetish •anal' sacred to his amuans In the flower beds of the gar- b n r dens; the opal,tinted Sxil•rey shore —ars l tlae worn°t. is yet, to wine "- ' ,Ff% � �� . /� ��/ ,�{I�y�iW,1gI1 !Gt ((ll ^gin., n �i %,.I. a v B- I „ I i',1rr r -/ h I ' I ;. a nI ry o I � J I I i •`Z V I r r u , - I t ��Lr, y / I o . I /. ! I , Ill u I.-, .. J J. - jp,��,!,,� Ir II I •-� I II I III 0U 0 l t o i!�II OO U D I I U I 9 u 11 9 -u, J ,ce 0 O U O wain `Q P f ,. f/// "�� ,l . ala . . l — I / -,rte �. \ . , i" el •i- o r.- ---- — " ° °dirisil,I] wall ehi]nttc5s, from one or Posabilfties crowded thickly upon two of which than spirals of .males _--'- - ___ the solicitor. There was t mires to were -now curling lazily into the still with Havexton had brit another two Bab _.. expda;in savary—Havertan—rho. lies of lilililthtBabyhood of B Chimpanzee. it d t months k t ti h f i The e nose oshunting trucks came mons o run, anby s wording Dartin exp cousin..• murder, perhaps, We have good roarer to look upon had its explanation 'hidden somewhere ,aiclearly to him Tows the Waterloo could not well be sat aside without a ilia great apes with a keen interest; in.the maze of recent happenings. He termdzins. barge monetary sucriiice; after its looked out now for a cab; he would There'came to him also the harsh eanclus•ion- Stella hoped she would inasmuch as they are believed by mie get ho and aiarsbal bis facts on I'alsinking of buckets and- the tarn of nevei• see the inside of a theatre again many to be near relatives of ours, i r i o Paper. How lucky it was that he had i7]ammers on wood. Looking down,—exceat from the oche side f the dna famous naturalist has declared not declined the .week -end at Adder- Robert saw that the workmen hailbe. footlights. that presumably the gorilla would in iiury Towers. I Igun their daily toil on the erection' of It was on Friday morning that Re- the course of time develop Into a kind Far close upon ars hour after Robert Is new hotel on the earner site be- 'bort foumld the reply to his cablegram of man were it not that. he is doomed bad, reached Graven- street he - sat ,at, neath..him..A.,hoarding, had been built Awaiting him when he entered his of- to early extinction, .being already a bis deal:, setting down with legal pre -'111) round 'the demolished houses, a five. His Canadian,Correspondent stat` rare animal. vision his arra of facets. As,'hg_7potel s,trltetui•e of bo -arils gay. witll posters. ed that he was still pursuing his in the couvietionythat.ell was,not�as. it; Robert 'found himself gaain; at a quinas and, was writing at length by The. same might doubtless, be said should be grew ,upon• ,Ili rt, and that i gaudly pirtm!o •of a . spick-and-span, the next mail, of the chimpanzee, Who, like_the gari4,, flit: antecedents-. o1 -friend Dartin caPed.,highly colored •final•,. cutting her way . The- ,cable simply started thata la, Is thought to: be .descend&a from for immediate attention.. The, tTi, m through the ' gentle .waves. of . a, very gentleman of the name of Baptiste the same original ancestry as our Train Canada had -at-times- sbown abhxe sea. On the •borizon a brilliant Dartin, arrh;edl ole the S. S. Touraine own. In future centuries bones at. knowledge of I,ond'on Siad. it, �v.av'sI•otange sun vras.•throw:ng.. out his rays- from Havre in February of last year, these manlike apes will be regarded which had not always ibeen,toRobert's and the man saw that those rays and had left for London by the An- by naturalists as•,relles of-inestimablethinking, that of one •newbv arrived l Nvere woven into a single word_• 'Can- coria, which sailed from Quebec an l pre lcalen' e' M In the nxetropolis. Many little re-lada", . I June d. As far as Mr. T.e Page was It is most unfortunate that the goril• memtiaancesy trivial fn themselves, but .Ilse must have been looking fixedly aware, he was previously unkno:vn in In and ehamBanzee cannot be bred in vrhf ii in the Light of later events bad at it for sonie minutes 'before he dis- the Dominion, Ha was sold at the captivity, in much as thereby their a new sd.gniflcance, crowded nnom •lihn. I covered that a meaning was being I hotel to be a man of rather dissolute species might be reserved. Occa- aixanenly 'c,�iJ .?m'an nut down his sulU consciously conveyed]' to his brain l ll^'•"�" and else who possessc:l but fety 7 g P pen and pulled out a r[Tawei in the'ft-axn the aatrve.•t' ;&inept on the board- friends. sionally they are captured in baby desk before hint. From an envelope ing,' Camels—of course, Dartin came Robert sat with the shin of paper hood, but they do not long Survive, he tool: a square of .folded paper—I from Camada; he 'lied wi)tten from a hanging limply Ili his hands, from usually dying of consumption or diges- the scrap which Cantle bad picked u'p hotel in Quell", and in a flash the the wall old Adam Baxenter looked tive trouble. A young gorilla in the in the room in Mortimer Terrace. It mail leaning from the winalow saw down upon hint, and now the other New York Zoo could be persuaded to had lain forgotten in U1]e old man's that much useful knowledge might be falicicd that he had read reproach ]n eat nothing but the inner coating of 1 h n gained the tainted eyes. Ile left his chair) pceket for mentis before he had found arced Tonin ,careful inquiries made in 1 banatna skins, and after a few months it and ,tad given it to his employe•. I the 13ominiO,i, and nervously fell to p acing up anal• it passed away. It'centained a fevr words only, and His'firin had'had many dealings with down the carpeted room, IIis gas- pe appeared to ire the notes of the score Canadian houses and Robert rcmem_ picions took on a more defi13 gbape Two chimpanzees have been born in h read and] re-x`ead the message. captivity—one or theta recently at the of some game. heist that in . •nebec was A solicitor , as e Q Robert hoodl daliatad long with flim= to wltont 13axentei• dC Sons had been of Dartin had not Iaentioirerl to him the Zoo in Aow York. It ti^as curiously self as. to whether+ lie should, she* service but a few months back, Robert) he knew Paris; mare, Robert seemed like It human baby, with brown eyes, this piece of evidence to the author- le•_`t his pliee by the window, and seat to remember the man had distinctly I and hair parted in tho middle as neat- ities, and, had decided not to. In this Ing himself again at his desk cont- sold he had never been Ili mance.I ly as, if with a comb. A guard found Ile knew he was. acting wrongly, ])tit posed a long cablegram addressed to Why, too, should be spend the time the mother lying on her back in the ire felt that no useful object was to be Mr. Adolph Le Pae Nassau street between February and June in Que- 1 xPage. cage, holding her newborn Iittle one v l on 'I i had come teas served dry reapenang old wounds. of Fla Quebec, e which he asked that gentle. • hoe? He must ]ave s I wbas arrival ba -d 'llot'iieen so soon lcn•ew. Loo, that Ilnbort, deal' old Tai- man to be so good' as to make ironer-ifor putting: ori the claiming of the in- ( e t low that he always hail 'bean, would ies as to the antecedents and, move- heritance. I expected), while the. father squatted have been the last to desire it. merits of a certain Mr, Baptiste Dar- Whatever game it was that the some yards away, seemingly Indiifer- Not Robert alone, but all thel tin who was staying at the Dominion owner cf Adderbury Towers was play- cots Bundles of fresh straw were pro mamlbers of the Buxonter fnntily had' Hotel on or about the 2nd of, June in Ing, it *was certainly not altogether a vlded, with which she promptly pro- ouffered by the notoriety of the ors.. the previous• year. straight one. Rabort thought of, and I seeded to make herself and child core - For weeks their offices and their The cablegram when finished was a bitterly resented', the many ways an Portable. homes had been open to the calls of formidable affair, as the sender did which Dartin had deceived' hili, and Suzette the moth r -ate bar bneals ' h' in then @, v rs mind, h a vet m. n e registered 'n - •lie , •i s nd rite i Incessant question- ,officials and tt •i i v h i t risk f man i t q not tvxs to run he s o g Sregularly, but always with an aye on r I - :t be at n thin _lout] a h r that o iodise Ings of the palter, and tile s Robert told; by use e a code. eMr.sp Le Page Stas g �bcr baby. When it`, cried she would himisilf that, after all,- tiro sex+ap of; not a regular correspondent of the lowed to stand fn his way of probing' Paper would only set these men at firms and: Robert hoped] by sending his the secret to the bottom. stop, listen and run 'to it quickly, ar- wax:k again and very likely lead to message in the easiest anal fullest It might not altogether be playing ranging its bed for greater comfort. nothing. tnainler to raceive a reply of sorts the game, on his part, to spy upon the Then she would laugh. If it kept ou He took the piece of paper now and, before the and of the week, when he man whose hospitality he was about to crying she would life and try to soothe opened it eagerly, placing be'+sidc it;wou'ld• be leaving for -Itis visit to the accept, but for Stella's salve, and for it in her arms'.. Dardn's lett:eT of invatiation, The' subject of his inquiries. the salve of right, he could not afford • Though she 'tried • to nurse her off - handwriting had saddonly become oil Sleep seemed more than ever out of to be nice.in choosing the weapons spring; she was unable to give it awry importance to ]tint. As he, scanned, if, ilio question, now that the sun Was with which to fight Mr. Baptiste Dar nourishment, and so the poor little he hreatlied a little sigh of. disappoint -full, up and sending his- golden shafts tin. If there was any fraud, then it creature gradually washed away, It menta . 1 • should be met with fraud if -need be. R%oever had s•arawled the fow, into' the cosy apartments. Robert By 7 o'clock that evening he would be ''right have been saved if it could have could ]'tear JotiSctt in the tiny dressing been dealt with llke` a human infamt wards ,and numerals that Were bdOTei room preparing the bath, and a thrill at Adderbury Towers; he would enter him, it certainly was not Mr. Baptiste the enemy's camp as an honored guest, but tilts was. not practicable because of anticipation ran: through him as lie Darti:i, but with the firm resolve to miss no of the mother's ferocity. She was a thought of the refreshing coolness er single chance that romised a solution the ih�ipid water. That; together g' p dangerous animal and could not be a.p- CHAPTER L•VI; with frosh linen, ,breakfast and' a cig- of the matter in hand. preached with safety, Watts; Was all that he -needed, (To ,be continued.) The baby died on. the ninth day af- The erewasnoEavesdropper. At nine o'clock Mr. Robed: Baxen- — ter Its birth. Suzette could not under - the there was a reason why' tor, after dispatching his cablegram; stand what had happened. She exam - the solicitor should, have expectedOutwitting the Beaver. that the writing on the scrap of pa -i entered his office feeling as fit as ined it anxiously, Bud when finally it per sitrnild be in Baptiste Dartin'-- though he had, retired to bed at ten I have seen a great deal of wild life, was removed from the cage she set up hand, he nevertheless experienced the evening before. ant's a correspondent, and the sagacity a frightful howling, in which Boma, quite a sense of divappoinimont, The IAird than for three days he went of the beaver lies greatly impressed the father (who had been removed to seed of suspicion, once sown' an leis on in the even routine of the work me. He is a wonderful engineer, but another cage), vociferously joined. mind I had grow•] wnazi•ngly, and Ro-' of the law. Each evening found him lits dams sometimes flood many acres bort told himself that he had let tltie,act the,littled'ingy subuxilan stage door, of land, and consequently the farmers Then she begged most pathetically to suspicion, dominate him nmol to some, but niter that first night be was able regard hon as a post, have it back B11t the poor little extent bias his judl nett, to time his arxival more precisely; chimp's troubles in this world were at g'I A colony oP beavers once flooded a Aster all, what direct evidence was I thus avoiding the weary wait in the an end* there he could bring forward that, Sor'd'id surronnidings, and a taxi soon stretch o part of it eight Then 1 railway. a. Then a could an an3> way Incriminate the mos- ran them out into streets where it stretch of logging ai w y ter of Adderbury 'Powers? The man's seemed possible to breathe. Idueh cold snap left as muah, as two feet of remuark to Stoll'a that rte haci seen her evening, too, a dainty little supper ice covering the tracks in places, and , company , , n ° h winter the co a • r ret of i actino in the Pein,aes pa.ntaiuine, t4nulal be awaiting theme at the fiat, Tai the s P Y may have 'keen just Dartin's idea of and Robert tried to, and in part suc- haci to :resort to "tote teams." I eoixt diment, I truth or otherwiseceoded: in driving the problem, of Mr. liven blasting out dams has failed of which did not natter. But Robert' Dartin and the Cb•auville inheritance to discourage the little workers. But thought alsn of tine particulars Cpri, from his mind, giving hrnisel!f nn un- one lo6'gitug company got rid of them twined- in the document left by his reaorvelly to his reunion with 'Stella .in a curious way. They attached to a anceeator., odd Adair Boxenter., details) and. -to tAing up again the threads of Wire stretched across the stream a which seemed to be 'known so well to Ills interrupted love affair, number of sleigh bells, cowbells and Baptiste Dartin. it was not within The girt, too., feeling as though a rile bounds of possibility than Hobert weigbt hail' kxeri sildaleiily lift•ad from tin cans. In the middle of the wire, had either shown or spoken of the her heart, became again the radiant' attached to a short line, was a float parchment to anpore;.moreover, aftea• creature she had .been when the young of wood, which, bobbed in the water his death it hard been found, apparent- soldeator first• mot 11er and, loved her and leapt the be11 jingling above the iy untampered.. W.'tll, togetlle,r with tie at the river party. For her life was dam, That was more than the beay. solkitor's ruin], in ilii, •harldert drawer now all swrslime On which there. wad ei` could understand, and they re. of the bureau act the Rep'ent's Petrk no shadow, and it seemed as though moved their home to another stream. flours, her cup of happiness n' ; fully ahorg- No, I1,artin's knowledge of the do- ed, inks ofMaria Iirissae de Dartignyl Her stage career was to her now a owed its sonrce other than to thbi thing of no moment, and fier evening Mate cont left by Achim Baxenteld womk wa.s as distasteful as it formerly Talcing ane urine with another, Ito- had, ''been fascinating, Her contract c - ---..._-- rf , , li 10, not `�.► tky r r i. 1sle• A4 Waite 6Rte+. l Powder the,al4s d ; . 1ka ptwde r ofp sea , poli ora I, i contains efl . a vx Q31!r sal .�a Alla � S �' '�$ lilt,.. >/ i Its ,"r�`�+ ,a5�^�,�.'',:A,�.itdili3it�pi'&'u � �,D�'I'�lC'&it` i3c�ui3WrNalid �a A.. �w COOS ria or t° t tfi f( r41t RS:Y kh1A4Sgv `iwaitie in dCatswtd�i i ;.Wi 011,11:'A r Q'd114I16A5t8Y• Ylurrm _, When Your Canoe Capsizes. How to empty a capsized canoe in deep water is something that every danoefslt should learn. If the canoe has outside gunwales, swim at once to the middle of ou'e side, right the cameo, so that the gunwales are level, and begin to shape it to and from you, so Oat the water spills over the side to. ward you. It the canoe has inside gunwales, which prevent the first out - rush of water, swim to one end and jolt it with a longer sweep, The in- side lip of the gunwale will cause a 0 r' cod deft] f wast r c to remain n in the g you n bail I' C cavae lint ca buil Lou as soon Y aS you club aboard. With an "out. wale" type, art expert, from B sitting Position In the cauoo, con slibttiorge his boat, turn It completely aver till- , der water, sl'take all tire• water out and climb back to his orfinal Position In Attach BceOuds, . Queen VictoeA of U9I�- pati. wag at One time an etithusiustfe amateur• aetress and wa•'s word -,to possess &a.hiatfid tilt of a higtif• ota'at, A Scholars Idea of Education Not all youthful intellectual prodi- gies remain remarkable in adult life, Among the pregociolis children who did not disappoint the expectations their brilliancy aroused was Lord Kel- vin, tiro famous physicist who entered the university at the age of eleven and who was a professor of natural phil. osophy at the age. of twenty-two, When lie was elglity-three, writes Mr. Arthur Warren, he outlined, as probably be had often outlined before, the plan of a boy's. education, "By the age of twelve, `said he, "a boy should have learned to write his own language with acctiraey and some ele- gance , he shduld have a reading know. Madge of French, should be able to e translate Latin and asy Greet auth- ers and should have some acquaint - ones with, German.', Having learned the meaning of words, a boy should study logic. I never found that the small amount of Greek I learned was a hindrance to my acquiring some knowledge of, natural philosophy," Some knowledge at Irl There in. deed was modesty, for who had more knowledge of natural philosoplaT than T,Or(.IieIvIu7 IdealMat ch. Pdttll—Sov'au consider it an ideal match? Ethel --Yes; lie has inaney and she knows; ]tow to spend it, AUTO USED PARTS We carry a full lino of used Biiarts for all makes of ears, alonatod and S'roo froto gre�use and dIrt, Mngnotos, goara, rYlrritlgs, oomtrlete &ngdfies, fires, oto, Irl�lacet Boldos bold for old cart: M ter wire or. pilon&• 6U104*09i"9bb *AUTO Cie„ load Dttfideid Ot, *bA v Tororutd _...-._--.__.__..-.... WWW46 14 I F ,r , - a Marey Oat of IFlowers, ,that cavit;r, ami to negle t fthe ilii -I The .farm woman, or, in fact, any ;gleno of the mouth, The sceond type woman WWI a littio plot OT g'roumdy is the worst of Sham ail, In no way who is lookir.,g for a way to malts a the fa'ul't of the sufleror, !bad 'breath of bit of pin-maney with a minimum of this; type is dreadful to its pungency,, outc.,;ty and €i maximum of pleasure for the odor is like that which a ..• _ b a t and -agreeable worl, could not do bet -egg gives off when broken. Teper ier than to'Lr or hand� t growing son• with soch a breath is ixing hardy poronnia,s. Tha4 is, if she lovas either from abscess or from gangrene f he fun r from dilatation -hs o t o amof flowers and r a , ow s i t s h dl ,n bout g, happy gg aU p 6 rcr d ors ]n the Mort, No don't ! iUb tomen hi—e m lir s that aro ver ddf- I away begin to paint flower gardening ficult to Pure. IIva can sweeten leis' as rosy proposition aid u sure -thing breath only UV wearing a ma lt tm - money-maker -after bay Yo urTr first n atod` with creosote, theo ore)— bulbs or, young !plants. INcm nature soto not only ixlodiiaea the odor lout is no respecter of por,ioils, rind would sometimes greatly bonefiLa the dis- play hard on your young planta ivi•th ease. The third type has the small as tirciholy •a glee as who would• your of garlic and chara•eterl es persons nirvUor's stztwoxYaro1 And ,who take cortain dru s such a$ drought and insect posts are most fin- arsenic or bismuth. The fourthi type partial in their treatment of all forms 'h'as a wNetxsh odor Ouch 'as is solne- of pliant 'life. But take it by and Large, times observed: in the 'breath of per - flowering for a 'living 'leas 'no more sons who suffer froom diabetes. Bad uncertainties iter ,any a'ther trade or breath of the fifth type has Ibis im- profeiision which you night choose as pleasant but often remediable odor Your means of a livelihood. And, us that disorders of the digestive tract cause. The arson with t art of T suiy, it takes so Little to -start with P w ilia s in the beginning, that is, the raising bad breath can quickly sweeten it of hardy perennials. No hothouses eit'he'r i]y taking a laxative or by tak- are necessary, no cold frames, no any- ing a little rhubarb and soda after his Ibling but the outdoors and some meals or even by taking care to ma'B- tieate his fo • more t orou hl . r s od e h fan'. for dor g 5 p is fo the tial -start. One successful flawer-grower, Mrs. Anyone whose breath is persistent - Lawson, whostarted with ,a plot b feet ly bad should consult a doctor, for it by 25 feet and, is, now, cultivating five may mean the beginning of some can- -acres, has the following to say about stitn,tional affection than can be cured the work: if taken, in time. "With hardy perennials your work begins in early spring, and keeps up The Ups and Downs Of a until frost again. We'have some flow- Camel. ers•, arbutus for instance, that blossom before the snow is entirely gone In The camel never endears himself to the spring. There ,are your young a European rider. That at least is the plants to start, and transplant, deeds judgment both oethe British, soldier to clean out, ,perhaps new ones to plan, and of the British war correspondent, and, the spring sale of, pltants for home men who are used to: ail .manner of gardens. The ,spring market is most- mounts. The camel is above all a ly plants. Everyone is fixing...up the beast of burden; you cannot make a grounds; and• plants,fos beo.ng-are .Vet of him.-. Young; old_or middle-agedy in dethand. Latex, during the..aummer, he 1s:•'the same unsociable, awkward', the.tra'd'a is•flowers..Just now rho oi& . indifferent, "grousing" beast.. Though fashioned flowers are.in.demand5 we- hIs•eye w, calm and•doe-like, .it -bides have sty -Its in • flowers .,as ema as e alt uiaeven,: fretfirl.temper. In his, Five. clothes. Larkspur, columbine- ox Decades•,of-.Adventure. Mr, Frederic honeyslrckle—Limimy forget me -nuts, Villiers, -the war - correspondent and 'baiby's •breath, and all, the. old,* -favor- Illustrator, .gives. this humorous. ac- ites, are now favorites ugWrx. BabYN count of camel riding: breath is an great dernamtl for its I chanced ono morning to overbear cloudy blossoms which are so effective a soldier singing a verse from a song in decorations. that was then famiifar to frequenters "How did I learn about flowers? of any IOngheb watering place: Mostly from -the garden, Of course, When be's he's up; I studied every book I could' get hold And when he''ss down he's down; of and subscribed to numerous garden But when he's only halfway up magazines, Vat after ail, my best He's neither up nor dawn," knotvl•ed,go is what I have gained from Surely the author of those lines must emper)ence. The reading was a]& rather have had the camel in mind when the Inspiration came to him, for nothing blind emit. T went out and tract to could be more accurately descriptive practice it, One mistake Taught me of the blast. When he's up it's all more than twenty volumes. Oh, yes, right; when he's down it is just as you can make midstakes in •gaxd'ening satisfactory; but when Ire ishalfway as well as in cooking. It fall't aunt between, then is the critical jerking sunshine and flowers, It m•eeds i•nflnite and neclt-breaking moment. patience -and observation, and much 'A camel will start from his sitting tAought. But it is pleasant work, and posture by rising on his foroknees one of the pleasant things about it is first, thrOwing you violently back to meeting the people who -come to !buy. his haunches, As he lifts his hind Of course, folks who 1yan't plants and quarters, you are jerked suddenly for - flowers wild be the sort you're glaud' to ward. It is at that moment—wizen a ineet." close proximity of your nose to the Certainly the gardens Look as dust seems to'be your lot—that he in - though working in them wouldlie or. ,variably staggers slowly to his fore - oar a perfect human. emtoya t as foot, seeping you hanging on mote or any forst of labor could be to a dies- less in suspense. When the brute is cendent of Adam. _Just at the edge of up safe and souud and begins to walk a grove of virgin wood they stretch there is a sort of four•Nuro jolting away in masses of color, the domin- movement, a shift forward, one to the ant tone changing with the days. To- left, one to the right and then to the day it is ,bill!ows of Oriental poppies rear, the effect of which Is heightened that command the attention, to -mor- proportionally to the baste of the row it will be columbine, and next brute. A calculating Scotch subal- stately blue larkspur. Last week A tern, counting by the telegraph poles was fleur de Bs. And, so it goes, as along the way, once computed thnt a week follows week and. the various human being mounted ort a camel Ia beds conte to blossom. The plants subjocted to twelve hundred and are set out in rows so that a wheel eighty-five distinct jerks a mile. As hoe may be used' between them. Of several of us suffered the second day course, since the gardens have grown from severe stiff necks, it is more than to their present. size, Mrs. Lawson possible that the young subaltern's has to beve the help of a man in pre. total was correct. pooling the ground• and for other world about the grounds. In considering a business of this sort the first question to be asked Is, what shall I grow? The second, where could I market? As to what you should grow, your location must de- cide that. Write to a reliable nurs- ery and ask their advice as to plants best Bolted to your Locality. Then start with them, and add to your list as you gain experience. With grow- ing hardy perennials, it is better to grow big than to start big. Every looa1Wj can tell you a story of somo- one who started out to mdake a for- tune ortune with pl,acits and failed the first year. How many dah'.6a furans and tulip farms have: burned up or frozen up in a season? And there was the nami who set out forty acres to Christ - mats trees, and retired to the poor farm the folirowing year. I don't x%, member whether it was drought or frost that ripped the Christmas trees before Santa O:aus time, but they went. So if you contemplate raising plants for the matket, start with a five-foot plot and watch it grow. Bad Breath. IA healthy person's breath is witmut odor, .unless ie Ates recently been eating something Late onions• or stroairg elieeae. A sick persons :breath is often charged with certain volatile products that make it most disagree- , -]a, but the oder is transient like the dt'imess and disappears with it. If a person is suffering from some crhronic trouble, however, the odoz• may he more or less permanent. The sudever a p Train bad! breath may or anay not be aware of it himself; in most cases he is not. The toruses of constant -bad- breath are numerous, The most common are r conditions esti cater hal •ions c i t of the bad t nOs,.o of pharynx, indigestion, const+ii]a- tion and certain dlgeasolt of tlte'lunge anl• of the bronchial tubes. A writer has distingoisheil five types of bad breath. The first type he calls the putrefactive, which is per- haps the mast common The 'odwr is Idke that of strong ahsoso and, usually pefnis to ehronlc miscall disease, in whicili crust% ato formed andi decom- pose, to d,)scas'e o8 the anta•nan, in which the tecretion adeatudnlatos In Crushed Flowers. My mother, writes a thoughtful con- tributor•, grew geraniums and other flowers. in the ilig windcw of the sit- ting room at home. That window is a treasured memory of childhood. To us children the flowers that bloorned there seemed the most beautiful things in the world. When the ground out- doors was frozen oat] covered with snow the window was full of life, color and fragrance, One day I asked my mother for a geranium leaf and, when alto gave it to me, eruslied it in my hand the bet. ter to enjoy its strong fragrance, At another time I tacit a dozen or more leaves, pat them Into an old sugar bowl and crushed their with my little list until the fragrance tilled the air. 1' put the bowl on the bureau in my bedroom, and that night I.Avant to sleep in an atmosphare heavy with the exquisite perfume, As the years have passed and I have grown In knowledge of life, I have learned that other things than geran- ium leaves give their utmost frog. rance on being crushed. Now many of God's other precious flowers there are that have given cut their sweet fragrance when crushed with worldly mtsfartuno and grief, flowers should be more than beautiful; they should he fragrant as well. Too often the flowers of God are satisfied with a frigid purity when God wishes them to be wllnu with the perfume of love. That perhaps is why Ifo sends some crushing misfortune that through But. ferhig w0 may icarn sylupathy, It Is, iho hurt of rove that gives to our lives the fragrance of understanding and sympathy. __.y Where t0ake•up Went. 1 ire] 7 A gy (tired walt.n* —` b) s Your cis• ter making ills her mind whether• to and ran duo r i come down , o tot? Dobby --"It Isn't liar mint, she's mak- flit, al)", _; Duuing the month Of April, 2,258 Uuikad-sbates Battlers orrrivad Weaborn Canada,, bringing lwlth them goads to (the value of �$147,868, and vft4y mo]vey to the extent of :$598,154, The victor is he who call go it alone, WOOL SITUATION IN E D �i I. EFFECT ,yam �/d1"�€/•+laNC X V.1 Air w 4.D R TARIFF BILL of U.S. Grading of the 1921 Clip in Various tiThrough- out out Canada. The long delayed U,S. Emergency Tariff Bill was signed by President - Harding and became law May 28th• 'Tilts, weans 16 cents per pound duty on all wool going into that country, and unless its passage boasts prices to a marked extent on that market, it also means that it will be impossible: for Canada to ship any wools that di. rection thisason It is t remain se o effective six month..• or until such. time as the permanent Tariff Bill be, comes law. " This latter, it is expect• ed, will show a slight reduction in the tariff on wool. To offset, more Cana•• than manufacturers are expressing: their desire and willingness to co operold in the purchase of more Cana•• Man wool as It Is now put up by farni•- em and graded. More business must,. however, come their way before they, can do very much buying of raw, stocks. All of them report business: as very slack. Many of the smaller* mills are closed down and others are, Planning toclose for a few weeks un- til such,tlme as there ie a mom active: demand for t'beir flnislted• goods, Such a demand seems likely to come! In Canada shortly, as increased+active•: -ty is being noted in•.other-.c°atres.:. U.S, mills arse, reported as,.more• busy' than a month ago, and there is con siderable buying of raw wool on the, part of the larger Plants, At the open -- lug of the 22nd series of Colonial wool sales in London, May 3rd, a. strong demand was in evidence from Continental Operators, empectally from Germany, and prices took an upward turn of from 6 to 10% on various grades, Bradford market is also feel - Ing better and has markets prices up to some extezit in the past month. Consumptive demand is at length he- garling to be manifested In the Euro- pean countries with something like its Pre-war vigor, and Continental and English buyers are reflecting the in,, proved conditions at home In their purchases In the primary markets of Australia and South America, In sliort, it would seem that the era or defla- tion in the wool industry is very near- ly at an end. It is bound, of coarse, to be erratic far some monihs to come owing to the present stocks of wool in the world amounting to nearly a two -years' normal fullply, but there is a growing belief that the corner is now being turned. Remain I. N Re in o in Prices Nominal. Prices still remain nominal. Local dealers In the East hardly knew who: to offer in view of tete condition of the market, and hence any offers that are being made at country points are tow. Small sales continue to he made of Ontario wool, now available at from 13 to 16 cents on coarse, to as high as 25 cents on some of the ntedlurn grades. In the United States, various sakes have recently been made. For instance, Utah, growers have just dis- posed of 600,000 pounds of the 1021 clip at 1.7 cents, and the opening of sealed bids for the Jericho wool poral clip early last. month disclosed 16% cents as the Highest bid. These are U.S. prices where, us explaired, a tariff of 16 cents is now effective. Some consignunents have been made in that country against low advances, and iwmany cases growers have found it necessary to consign this year's clip In order to pay off the over ad- vance made to them on their 1920 shipments, ]telative to this question, the Ilostcn Evening Traabscript of May 6th, 1021, says that "fu many cases at least two years will be re- quired for saaio of the growers to work off the over advances of last year." Grading rtt.IK]A_, 1 Cana(liall clipis being carried oar at Guelph and Smith's Faihi, in Ontarlo, al: Lennox• v111s, finches., and at various points Ili the Rlarlthnas, Weetern wool began to arrive at Weston the latter part of June. ' New Automobile Signal. Tile newest idea In the way of at; electric signal for automobiles takes the form of a eland ilhmttnnted by small incandescent lamps. The hand is made of glass and hol- low, the thumb and each one of the fingers containing a small incandes- cent lamp. In the middle of the ;Jahn there is a sixth, lamp of larger rime, so that the whole, hand is brightly lighird' when extended as a signal to notify other vehicles of a ronte,nplated change of direction. The wires extending to 1.110 1191tt bulbs are satpplied with electric,, cur• rent through the wrist of thn g astt hand. The device is intended to ]ea- sel] night accidents. The whole trick of ld}o is living :rlt17 the kind of people that belong to you, —Bronscn Lennox - _ _-._.._.._ US -ed Autos gn�1dlI v s]°Lls x FnzT� our t Il t ,ea• all cars mild cub- dont t0 delivery Up to 800 m floc or teat ;ran of saano distance if you {vi°h. in LLd Word order ria yurchasc4 or nuiretwr l• �r(ae refundad, liING ralianle of ,your own ohoieb to look th&rn ever, or a0k us to a t ke any car to sit re rosenthtive Y l!hapeotdon, Very lNege stotjk always tR f,nnd, •. Hreakey's used "O Ills k6ti toi IrolA fd ittarddL. waft*** IS S UE ]ctrl, 2o• 121 �~ ",+_4_1 A.,I