The Clinton News Record, 1926-09-30, Page 6VitrisoMINKIPM..-schintolpt
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aft
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• 'VhilieiitieS, thataeetee: time nftea
TlielinnfiledePertiter tocate)iEen,
etia:the SSetteter''s got the nieeeage.a He; .t .the 1di 1iqck w actually
,gs'a.leet'SS,',,Sffrea4 rt. titkiti ellot,"?.14dk the 0421 ,
Informa, z thatW and '2' .Ev wasper1nsOoeofthe elevs'
• betathe,giatY, raCeejgattgaltheesehoSe.q era nventors o hia age sae hed tits t.
sees ., Seer, titedLiet be- e ect.ted It was thinking matueel, beriettewayd_radie tiat, seems
i."..'0. flQfl1C3Tt abait t as hISLqiiek;xnLnd bernehr 'stelae .peetite. ;His tieeasettee
inea,u4, uud c»0.o6-,,,,,Nierkof ethe,,,aedite dictogratile'hadelieeh antuaden
e was annoyed br o1ne un'.66`itb'e of, iit t" qdere., clitssegtele
ese-expected , interfetenee on..the, waye-i finder -as, he Itad.deeelopecl ;it, lie. bad
, • lengthhe was esing• is., ismother invention almost as sensation
' • Hank had. gone 'directly diate. the al a the Cold Tobe of.Etensite,
'vi1ag hoose* t his hoe. He had Easten had taken ,theeloote idea and.,
calculated' that he might be iatiree'for by , emptying other:principles he had
jam next hourly period' set for con-, developed' an 'instrument which whew
munication -by_ the wireless threggle rotated gave streagereaulses aloimethe
• , .those highee up ehe, ratite gang to radial liesi from Which. breadcesting
'the chief.' -And he realized -the vited wee 'taking place, " In. other worde, by
, •
importance of. the threetwhieh. Ottudg focusing . the radio compass or direce
• flower Pete had just made; OneleCiteute- 'teen finder one might by sueeessive,
flowed Pete began to epillethe.beane success and ,faelare atslast, get even
there, wee no tetling how far it Weald eoser tothewane, of wireless
go. the centrait or fooal-point.
Hank mounted, quiekly"to robin ,Zeston was setting up the dcrectien
were he had installed hi neeVeradid finder in a hurry, for the quarter after
and at Once he began to send, It might the hour was at }Alla. He rotated the
be a minute or two late.but. still there thaw glee/eye:
.was. e chaneea. , "There it fee K903 is, right"
Out in the rainelfieckleredisarn and. With his sensitive compass Beaton
in the cabin of the "Scooter" in the was makinw makingmhurried.taleulation. "It'
Bayles slapYtirie es it -ehanced, both
ends of the radio line were woeldngsaa
Hank tuned in. ..
"Someone's butting in, ,donfouna
'em!' exclaimed -the thug who was
operating the field .set with the gray
racer. Be was ,anneyed for he had
just prepounded a weighty idea to the
Man -higher np on the "S000tee" and
before, he -signed of he expected soriut
orders to tome through in respect to
carrying the idea out.
At the same time the man muffled
In the great coat in the cabin of the
"Scooter" was for the filament equally
annoyed. But it was only for a mos
inent. .
• "Ittltat bey, Hank," he Muttered,
and he cut intosignal back to Hank
co go ahead.
• Hank was eager to reply. "Cairn.-
. flower says you must get"him out or
hel squeal!"
With any ordinary thugs this threat
might have struck consternation in direction finder as he spoke. He want -
them. But this radio gang was re- ed to impress Ken with the manner
• sourcefal. Hero were tbre arms of of Easton's living—always prepared
It in instantaneous communication.
The man on the "Scooter". instantly
had an ideas. White those in the ,red
barn were making the air lane with
theirelanguage he was doing some
• quick thinking.. • .
His instructions to Hank came back
almost -as fast as one could think it.
"Tell Cauliflower to stick. We'll get
him out. We'll trade his freedom for
- " the boy.Get off fake message as
• • '
from Diek Gerard on 'Scooter to Ken
Adams that Dick is at Bayles ship-
yard. Lure ldrn there with news from
Dick and a fake chance at rescue. We
will take care of the -rest."
Hank was overjoyed at this corn -
mission. Nothing could be more to his
liking than to get Ken in the clutches
of these criminals. As for the gang
in the red barn they, too, were over-
joyed when added instructions came
through to them to co-operate in car-
rying off Ken.
Hank Hawkins thought a moment
as the radio message ceased. How was
he to get Ken? The first problem was
to locate him and as quickly as pea -
fable. He reached for the telephone
to call the Radio Shack, devising
his voice as he did so.
Of course at that momeat there was
no answer •over the telephone a the
Radio Shack. We were still et the
Club.
"linee's a message for you, Mr. Ken-
nedy." The club clerk bed at kiet
located us and handed Craig a note
that had been left for him that morn-
ing.
Craig haStity 'teed it. "Every hour,
on the quarter ''aftei. the hour, 1.ana
picking up some foliow on a boat send,:
ing on 250 inetere. It is about it boy.
slie seems to be sending and,receiving
from some ono with a car on land.
Could it be the Dick Gerard you are
looking for? . The last message was,
'Kennedy and Jameson are away with
Evans from the Radio Shack."
"Who sent that?" I asked. "Is it
a tree?"
,• "No, I dOiet think so. It is signed
by oneformer friend K904, Deer Park,
Long Ietand. No, I think this is MI
the level," Craig re -read the message
with -keen interest. "It's impertafit: It
must be that the communication is be.
tween the 'Scooter' and the gray racer.
' I think we might do well to.pick up
some of these messages and hear what
they have to este." .
Ken -wets quite eecited. "If we could
only find that gray raCer, it might lead
to something: But how are we ever
- going to do it?"
The remark of Kee. seemed to give
Craig an idea. "I have 'it, Easton
17Vliat about'your direction finder, your
radio compass? We could set that up,
discover the direction from whichethe
• messages ri,rt doming. Sooner or later
We would runthera ' •
"Bile -t" exclaimed Evens. "Just
the thing! We'll get over to the Radio
Shack right now and get the thing set
it tip. By that tbne it will be the
quarter after the, hour that this , kind
amateur 'tiPs us' off about."
$ozne day
:Notoaki:theshadfloOTin •
alt0t;
elygat eve a harbor, blue, •gullfe seer. and .—
I meet be living ell toelayi
To. Sea make halite beforoethe wind,
Triumphant coines topper-oolored
All
uneartwotrknogeswonasstevaaaymoTmhweritugothtgolamyi
My little taeks, like merry ottildien
Por fun,"t"Gan't bo neXt?" thee, 00a3 -
"Les reinyg.t:rrYn'next!" till -I oan sparest ,
Its tend
'Them all, Yet sometimes they 'will , •
shirk and sigh,
Then work lti more like work, but not
to-dayl
1 must not mise one, moment of to-
, dayl
—Bessie Andrews Dana.
camas northeast by eget, one point.
"Now," sexelaimed sKennedat "we'll around the side. of the shack where
get tidothe car start out as nearly he had been -playing watchman on the
as possible northeast by east, one harborfront
point. An lieu*. later Whet we are
pet up somewhere we Will get the direc-
tion again, correct it, narrow itsdoven.
If they- do that every hoer, it 'must
inevitably lead us to thein in theit
' • •
•Tkia Eeltimo OotIlle on the Siberian coast of the Behaug Straits show bow thee light' their igloo be means
of an lee, frInslow. Thee black of silo* sbasaling out from it catehee the rays, of the sun and reaectf3 them to the in.
terier. thee giving- andegree of natural heat to the dwelling
... •
The Higher Quest.
t was onuy for a mement. Ken Care for the Boys.
had been attracted by the soand of _ -
engine. He was right on the job as What Cad a boy do, and where ,ean a On the last day that Jesus was in
guarclian and come on the run from..., boy stay, • 'es the temple in Jerustaett, one pf his
If he is always told to get out, of the' diseiples who had a Gr.eelZ earner -Pitt-
way? • . " Itp, was approached by some Greek
He cermet aft here had he -must not visitors, who said, "Sir, we would see
stand there; • Jesus." It was evidently more than
The cushions -that cover that fine rock- idle cariosity that Prompted them.
..
Ing chair Their request evoked from Jesus an
Were put -there, of coureee to be seen exclamation of surprising interest:
and admired; "The hour is come, that the, Son of
A bay has no business to ever be tired. man should bo glorified," It was not
this incident alone that was to glorify
The beguttful roes - and flowers that Him, and much that was to occur im-
"Hello, Ruth " he celled. "Anything
new "
"I should say there is, Ken. I just
ha ci a message from Hank Hawkine.
He told me that he was sorry fo
What he had done and that he ha
wtith" exclaimed Ken, "this is heard that Dick was on the 'Scooter'
reguar Scout stuff! It is like track- mid trying tg get in touch by wireless
Meg," "etaree ' with thine of Us. Don't you suppose
xactly. Tracking through the you could get in the Shack and listen
air." in? Maybe we might pick up some -
"Being a radio detective!" cried thin ,p?"
Ken. "Why. yes. I have the key. We'll
"Yee, indeed. Detective work is like try." Ken was quite excited by any
scoating. It is tracking of another prospect of communicating with Dick,
-sort We are now scouting through BO excited' that he did notweven stop
the ether! And the motto is the same to doubt the sincerity of any conver-
ageehe Scout motto: IiE PREPAR- sion or, the part of Hank.
ED!", They entered the Radio Shack and
Kennedy was pointing to the EVahe Ken selected one of Easton's radio
sets with which he was mos% familiar.
He began to twirl the knobs.
"He didn't tell you, by any chance,
what wave length Dick was using On
the 'Scooter," did he, Ruth?"
"I didn't gat it elearla. He said
sotnething about three hundred, or before;
three -hundred and something. 1 Should pass through the gateway .of from heaven, and that was the pride
couldn't understaedsa
glittering light of Ephesus. In a hundred temples
(To be continued.)
To hear jokes that are merry and they ay have seen tar more of beauty
i
•
songs that are bright, than anyone weld show them In Jerus- the wrist are gathered into band cuffs.
. A T•est .4our,. Bring
.3f C. geout a warm welcome with flatter- elem. • The back is pkuin and a narrow belt
It takes oourgae of a none too cone ing voice, They had seen imperial Rome. If ties in the centre back. The pattern
l
monicital to be ridicelotagfor the Bake And temptingly say, "Here's a place they had not visited the Eternal Olty is perforated for ow round neck and
o fellers. In her recent "Meraories ,, for the boys."
of Ninety Yeare" the *aged English
artist, Mrs. E. M. Ward, tells how her 0, what 11 they should? What if your
son Leelie, then a youth at the smell- • boy al -Milne
tive age, once rose to a trying occa- Should cross o'er the threshold that
skim She was absenteand he and his marks out the line
two beautiful sisters, Enid and Eva, I "lavixt virtue and vice, 'twlxt pureness
had been invited by Lady Otho Fitz -
and sin,
gerald to a dance, a very •brillimat at- And leave all his innocent boyhood
fair, which, in those 'Victorian days, s within?
the girls could not attend without 0. what if they should, because you
their brotheee esoort. But his dress and I
clothes were being repaired, and when While the clays and the months of the
at the very last moment the box came Years hurry by
from the tailor's, it contained the Are too busy with cares and with life's
wrong suit and one large enough to lleeting joys
hold two of the slim young mate who To make round our hearthstone a place
for any emergency in the air. 1 cou
not bat admit that Craig's little object
lesson ndebrief sermolt had a sharp
oint.
We carried carefully the delicate lit-
tle direction finder out into the car
and made hasty preparations to be off.
Every ininute counted ow if we were
to track down this nefarious radio
gang in the gray racer. •
"We can't leave this place alone,
though; not' now." Easton had begun
to realize how valuable was the ap-
paratus; he had stowed away in, the
Radio Shack. And, if he realized it,,
how much more quickly would- those
astute minds in the radio gang realize
it? "This place ought to be guarded."
" ht!" agreed Craig. "lCen itis
yewt duty to geard the Radio Shack
In our absence."
Ken's face fell. He had been count-
ing on the excitement of the radio
chase with the direction finder. Here
it was, all lost to him.
Still ho was a Scout. He clicked
his heels without a ,word of murmur
and saluted.
The last thing we saw as we whisk-
ed away, planning on what roads -were
nearest northeast by east, was Ken
standing tonerd, manfully.
CHAPTER X.VIII.
DANGER!
While WA vter5 riding and calculat-
ing with the radio 'direction finder,
most• exciting events were preparing
at Rocidedge in our abeence.
• Haiik had literally, scoured the
neighborhood'aver the telephone to lo-
cate Ken. • He Was not at the' Radio
Shack to start with Nor was he to
be found at the Club. Hank had even
taken a, chance and'called'Ken's moth"
er. But she did net know where her
boy was. On a venture Beak had ask-
ed for Ruth, Perhaps Ruth might
know: But Ruth was not at the Club
and her mother did not know where
she was, either.
Hank would have despaired hut he
had a keens crafty Mind He -would
get at Ken through Ruth. Ruth was
the easier to find. He knew the hang-
outs of the yeting peoplei and surely
in one or another of them he would
locate Ruth. •
He tried the Blue Rooster,- Not
theeThin he thought of the Bin-
acIa Inn. Sure .enough, there Vika
rayd, Glenn. Buckley, Rae and jack
Curtis 'were And vath'them was Ruth,
listening in. She .had taken Laddie
along with her, As Hank hold the
telephone- he quickly thought up his
stoty.
"Ruth," he Whispered excitedly,
"'don't tell anybody. But get away.
Filth Ken. Telehirn that Dick has got
a _wayof using the radio on the
`Scooier and that if Ken *P..a
in on the radio he will be able to get
word from Dick—perhaps rescue
him!"
Ruth was overjoyed, She thanked
the petfidious Hank, left the telephone,
made, some hasty excused to the others,
climbed in her.car with Laddie and
was off in a cloud of dust This was
great. If she could help in getting
b..aak little Dick Gerard it would re-
establish her uncle's faith in her. And
she thought much of - Uncle Craig.
But it was not such ati easy job to
find Ken. Looking for the boy was
like hunting for a needle in a hay
'Stack, Hank had found it so ei'id had
- passed the buck to Ruth.
Ruth started out first to find Craig
Emuand me. But Wherever she -went, whe-
• ther it was at the Cleb or elsewhere,
Get, she could find no train of them. For-
tiniatelv she knew nothing f Hank's
• S
ome , first telephone call that had failed to
locate Ken at the Radio Shack. Other -
Nies she might have avoided going
tnore, considering it of no use. But
after she had found Eagles' Nest also
egert,O.': OW 2.414 krfa'-it irssz
• u t p e ch mck.
Qh.ef.91...OVione'tlItelik Ail far the
• sati• gfies the,. desire for that sh'e had not vt.entecl
f ke, Easthn just yet. But in a mat
-
Cs 'Wipe make strong ter regarding Dick Gerard she felt
• healthy teetitPremovei herself capahe of ladePing the converi
`' satidn to that point and off those
particles d foCcl frott things,irhibhnow might embarrass
• . her until they were cleared up and
• teeth crevices, and axas• -
,..ittgestio.o.•So•it. is a Thus it was that 'Ruth nosed her
ii
W.11,1;
blopm
On the floor of tris darkened and deli-
cate room
Are not made to walk on, at leaseartot
for boys;
The home is no place, anyway, for
their noise.
Yet hoys must walk sbenewhere; and
what if their feet, -
Sent out of our homes, sent into the
street,
Should step round the corner and
pause at the door
Where other boys' feet have oft paused
mediately seemed for his humiliation
and not his glory; but the coming of
these men of foreign birth was the oc-
casion of that remarkable utterance.
These men had quite possibly* se -en
the Parthenon; whether they lived in
Atens or not, they were men wo tra-
veled. In whatever _part of Greece
they resided they knew the religious
system for which the Parthenon stood.
They may have climbed the Acropolis
and stood within the miracle of Pen-
tane marble which even as a battered
ruin is one of the'wonders of the
world. They may have seen the image
of Diana that was said to have fallen
.• ,
• , ---,—t---
. Why Go Old?
Why get old? Well, you reply, you.
really cannot help it. Yesg but age _
isn't measured merely- by birthdays.
me there ie your real age.
and how old you feel. Average these,
There are two othee and far more lin-
portant factors—how old you look,
How can you get and keep that
and that eedulg
Flannel_ shows up . smartly for this mot'.
1310 young "feeling-
. . .
"look"? Each rote on the other, don't
forget. Here are the roles as laid
SIMPLICITY OF LINE FOR down by a scientist who in his awn
SCHOOL DAYS. person is a, testimonial to their et.
frock in a two-tone combination. It is Assoeiate with the young; youth
a slip -over model, with the skirt front, literally radietess youthfulness.
pocket and Peter Pan collar in itplaid leave a hobby; that puts an "in- '
design. Long sleeves slightly fu,S- at tweet" in your face, and thus keeps
it young-looldng.
Drink three pines of cold water
daily; it cleanses the system, expek;
ageing poieoes, and keeps the 'deemed
from deteriorating.
Don't Be intense.
Don't pull your taoe silent by frown-
ing, Goo much laughter, or overall.
tense emotion. These things mike
wrinkles and lines.
Put your shoulders well beck and
walk erein and quickly. That keeps,
the internal organs in place, and the
arteries won't age. And don't overt,
load yourself with clothee.
Don't worry,
If you sleep with your mouth open,
tie R. up with a bandkerehiet. A
hengiug chin is a face -ager; It makes
"railway lines,"
Dress young; it has a great maim -
logical effeot.
Keep your eyes opeu, literally; "old
faces" always have drooping agenda.
And don't -put off getting elapses, if
you need them.
. Finally, twice a week eat half your
your body.
normal quantity of food. The age of
your 'ftl0 depends on the health of
read messages not by means of pima, --.--a,..---
tures in strips,of paper, which en only
meant for beginners, but by sound— Tankage for Nursing SoV/3.
1,
that is, by the clicks; of the instru- Tankage has been proved at the
ment. '01 course, by practice, an opea Brandon Experimental Farm to pro-
ethes ear is rendered ssusitive, until vide a Useful part of the ration for
at last he can catch the faintest Whig- sows raising litters. A test was made
perings of his instrument. It wouldn't with three sows with litters of twenty -
be supposed, however, that this meth- seven pigs, and three with litters of
od of treading' messages would suit a twenty-eight, ali approximately of the
deaf man. And yet a deaf man has same age. The meal ration fed one
itecustomed •himself to these eireum- group was made up of oat chop two
stances. A oertain .operator in Wash-, parts, barley
chop one part, bran one
ington is deaf, but he sends and re- part, and shorts one part, with three
ceives messages by the sense ot feel- per cent. oil cake meal added. The •
Ing. He places his leg against the in. second group -was fed a similar ration
strument-tablo, Luta reads by the swift but included ten per cent. of tankage.
jarring thus communicated; at the
Seven pounds of meal per sow eel' 'day
same time he watches the motions of
were fed in each case. The extra cost
the instrura_ent. _....,•....
of feeding the sows with tankage for
twenty-five days was 93 cents.. The
Grateful' Expectancy.
I sows receiving the tankage lost 29
"
Herbert, aged three, bad been given poueds I•ess than those in the other
an orange by a gentleman who had lot, while the litters of the tankage.
celled. As oranges were a rare lax- fedaot gained 121,4 poinilits more than
ury in Herbert's experience he gazed those in the cheek lot. This test is
at th.e fruit in rapt admiration, but
, reported in the Brandon Experimental
could say nothing. . ; Farm report for 1925, available at the
Mother, after wetting for him to Publidations 13tancla of the Depart -
thank hie benefactor, decided to ment of Agriculture, Ottawa,
prompt him, so she said, 'What do you
say0, IsioAlii'lln.
hs," eat& the little- fellow, • • , ti
. .
be The average man can lift one -anti -
'Chose who find fault eoldom lose it.
hardly witbdrawingaiis gaze from L
golden bell, "have yen got any more?" a-hali times his awn weight.
gazed Upon it in dismay. Naturally,
he declared he could not go to the
ball, but the pleas and tears of his dis-
appointed sisters were too mach for
him. He surrendered, and went.
"I had to awailow my pride and en.
amethe ball-roona awkwardly enough,"
he used to relate, "al, I had buckled
back my waisted -it, as far as ,cpulde
but with the coat there was nothing to
be 'done but take a lapel under each
for the boys!
There's a plate for the boys. They'll
find it somewhere;
And if our own homes are too daintily
fair
For the touch s of their fingers, the
°tread of their feet,
They'll find it, anel find it alas, in the
• . street, s
'elid the gilding» of sin and the .glitter
arm end. do nay best to conceal..the 111- 'of vice,
fitting karment—which I could have And with heartaches and longings we
folded twice around my body—by hold. . pay a dear price
ing it out of sight. I For the getting of gain that our life-
time employs,
After lurking long in the back-
ground, he suminahed courage to ask a If we fail to provide' a good home for
Pretty girl for a dance, and she, to her the -boys..
ctedlt. be 11, said, after her first in.,
voluntery glance of astonishment bad
evoked- an explanation, braved the Roman Autograph Found on
eyes of the ballroom as his partner. * • •
Ancient Paving Stone.
This was consoling, and' for et few
The retrieval of -nn old custom is re -
mammas he was able te forget his toe-
th er at Caerleon
ful olothes; but his qualms returned a,
hundred.fold when his hostess sudden- amphitheater of the iribribed stone Exiough Apples for Everyone.
. which was part of a road surface in
itself, they bad at least seen abundant
manifestation of her authority. In her
various subcapitals and colonies the
Roman spirit displayed ite powe•r and
majesty. If mere respect for order,
if reverence for,eovennmental organa material,. 20 centa.
zatlon, couldhave satisfied, thee men Our Fashion Book, illustrating the
had not been where they Were or Beek- newest and meet practical styles, will
ing What they sought. be of interest to every home drese-
They had seen nature. They bad maker. Price of the book 10 cents
traveled by land and sea and had the copy.
looked upon ooeau and volcano along
the Mediterranean coast. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
And they had seen the temple In Write your name and address plain -
Jerusalem. They were not mere Gen.- giving number and size of such
tiles. They were probably what are patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in
known as "proselytes of the gate." stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap
They bad turned their backs on poly- it carefully) for each number and
theisin and had learned the beauty of address your order to Pattern Dept.,
the moral law, Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade -
But they were not satisfied. And hide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by
Jesus felt that theleadesire to see Him return mail.
was prophetic of the dawning -faith of
other men of like spirit. A Deaf Operator.
The MBA of today has seen what It is well know that what are called
inert payer saw before He has, seen earst-Class" operators in telegraphy
nature subdued and.brought under the •
hand of man as nen.c3 of his forbears
has beheld it. He has seen the span
of life lengthened, and the whole
coarse of history changed. He has
seen space explored and mysteries re-
vealed. He has witneeeed the spread
of intelligence add the sgrowt1i7ef in-
vention. But his heart is not satisfied.
The better instincts of hurnan life still
seek fol. something beyond material
proves& Men u•eed now as they never
needed then peace, joy and righteeus-
ness. In their hearts they .seek Jesus.
short sleeves finished with cuffs. Any
of the ligh",-t weight woolen materials
'could to chosen for frock No. 1310,
which is in lazes 8, 10, 12 and 14 years.
Size 10 requires 2% yard e 82 -inch
7 SUabab000U ULU 4,44 LJ
the Prince Imperial. He never knew the middle of the entrance to the
arena recently opened 119, says "The
what he said, but he guessed all too
swathed In London Daily Mali," It bears the name
Well how he tooked as,
thosegigantic trousers and With a coat (lf en-eineer, Q• (or Quintus) nent'll-
lapel tucked under each arm, he made inlra Presumably, when, his men had
his bow to royalty! finished -constructing this road—for in
a military station like Caerleon all the
week was done by eoldiers—the officer
in: charge "signed" it by the simple
"Cow" Gives Any Flavor
process of carving his name on one of
of Milk or lee Cream the prominent -stones in the road. • •
A cow that gives new milk, skim- This custom still obtains In the.
DISCI milk malted milk cream fruits •Latte countrite, where architects, as
• • cro- alolig `the road past the Radio
wort.clerfu: . ts0, gs. she .a`ppreiackted,
, - Cop? ,loolsed deserte.c1 and she wes full.of
'iiiisgiviep as she nulled up' an the
In relation to population Canada and
tho 'United States will each produce tide
year one barrel of apples for about
every three persons of the population.
The commercial apple crop of Canada
Is placed at 1,000,000 barrel% The
Dominion's populetion is 9,000,000 in
round figures,
In the Milted States the apple crop
is estimated at 40,000,000 barrels. In
Ontario,Qttebee, Neve Scotia arid New
Brunswick,- the :principal` fruit grow-
ing districts of hasitern Canada,, the
cantle crop this year is slightly lower
flavorednallt and ice.oreath to order is tiny visitor to Paris.may observe, sign, than taet year, but is 30 per pent, more
tho remarkable animal for which car- the buildings they maistract, their in British 'Oelumbla than a year ago,
penters are building a epeeists seed ett names beifig carved eomewhere close' The production in 1926 in British Co-
beard.the A.fricen steamer' Nigerian in to the door lintel: : i. lunibia will toed over /,200,000barrels.
thesHerculeneein dock at Liverpool., A Romart "road repair" of a very A considerable part tof the Canadian
This cow never hicks Or flicks its tail modern type, too. has test been dis- apple crop is exported to, other coun-
le the Milkos's eta; ileter. is seasick, coveted in the small entrance of the tries where it finds, a ready market.
never,elry,, and can be millegd by a„., Caerleon amphitheater. 'r_his is a The fruit is eiold principally through
marine engineer in mid-Ateantio as series of four eteps, .Which seine one s0 -operative organizations. o1 fruit
well as by a intik:maid on a Cheshire seems to have thought would improve farmers,
farm. All the itrigeriay's cow. heed:3' things, placed back to back to the —..--.„
ls a diet of milk eowder, fresh butter longer, flight ef steps, which has al- D
and a drink of water. The milk is '.ready been a:teased. Aild then some Pritcish'Carnnuflage Ankles.
claimed to be as rich and fresh as that ; one. else appareptly thought the. Steps Traveling iriVestigators claim the
from any dairy cow, although she 'would be of no use. Anyhow, they -English Women have notoriously fat
were covered over without being Lissa, ..ankles, even the young woman losing
all beauty lines on that portion of her
'anatomy early in life -If, indeed, she
ever had that treasure in her posses.,
sions So an levenfive' desigiver over
there has brought out camouflaged
hose, the clever feature. of tbe World
„Veer' being used _te help obe. prigiieh
woman ,make her ankles •appear to he.
lees huge aial unwielelYthan thatreal-
.
ly are, and the wise inventor claims,
with confidence le les. advertising, his
new hose will make the. fattest ankle
alMeas trino, sY P e • an grace 1,
The art of camouflage is Wrought by
head painted ellailowe. on either Side
of the ankle, making longittiae appear
Proneimeed while breadth di b, earn is
made to appear less Veen it really Is.
illow.eree speech to those who ' 'SeaeSeehali:g°11111,?0htlitt8g.wt7,(e)attLnitfhel3bee°;:tasatticeli:ed
Seeks like an electric inaehine.
•1
, ,• ,
I .1.
1 1, •
l-2n bean a nauhtt.) '
t'keroikett 6tiond
• c,19u4ut.
bast ov.,$)
(..4) r441 -it- ca\oaii
ma fulds
it out-
and in time the roadway was eon
structed above them.
•
• lit Is Dangerous-
-To leave a child to cheese his re.
ligion without some guidance.'
—To leave politics thoge who
want to make motley out of it.
—To give a marr leisure If4Le does
not know liow to use it.
• —To give a boy money faster than
he teams hot to spend it.
—To train a child hi the table Irma.
nere Land leave Pim in ignorance of
how Lo eern. bread.
,„ --To allow any man to think the
commenity awes atm something' he
has not calmed, •
litive nothing te Say. to.,11181)eaee
alce e Hardest
ay t sier4
Ringo takerthe hard work out of washday.
With Ritmo you inst soak the clothes,for
a couple of hours or overnight,rinse and
No more cuttin,g up of soap and slrle2rinfei
• over -the .clothes. • No more rubbing.
Rinse the clothes clean
with RINSO.
The Nreiv Kind Tili'skr)E By '1',J-1Fs'
r OP LUX