The Clinton News Record, 1924-12-04, Page 6ibe Pk•
us Flair°
drtiaWrA rOm the lea,
BY )UM VORIC MILLER
EN
114,620
,
has Weri 121iillieril),S ISISe**Ss SCOld
by &El dirOCerSo BUY p Ckage todar.
FREE SAMPLE ef GREEN 1111, UPON REQUEST. "SALADOTORONTO
o sant;
Ote. 45906$'
Development of
,a , Cada.t1ai holt' OS 0.•
h g bfgving st.plan or player-, n •
an.w
tkli"ant,°s: 1.::anoi'll:19rtoPitisrit"404,0,111-42'444t 171'010'1174ot It -the place of the Sone e.
11E" h'c'ulea at Sea Wil" it . ,grb:',nrihi7PGiarMaePdbPals4"071',Wa.:"4
•to is-mai:Y/1st svhare the plan origlifated, considered "the -al-tiat'O Plane.: £1
who originated it,, and how it has de- earlfar days it was calledthe wing
voloped th'rough the 0enturi6a. piano benause o/ the wing shape of
The following Iffstorleal infornia- the raised top ,
'tion, therefore, may be 'of- Interest to The develonnient of thWicranA PISP0
' APT11,41 and another to the West, antloL :et came all theY s;an ahailt their favorite inatro. Rttaraant8 ware ad, exaatiy tta
,
Thitt ztrar,s,a on Jau to, her the brilliant whits mem, ifooding th.a the piano. , same shape as the grand is to -day, and
telYillghter the,midale night*. iv6t IllaE°14T the,..°1a waliq with The forerunner of HerIngptl oma of them Were yery largo.
ow are Buell thing te extgaine.d? .43Paritlin,g radiance, strati -write was the monochord, invent- Curing tbe last 60 years, there dace,
Y the ell-powerful-Awtor of rove? Or There WaS a strong smell of liot, wet ?all ,
, , music lovers who are ,amzious knOW 'With 't1":0 harpC115r(t 'These in,
scientific reaSon? ,Yet it. would seem scented. so Whip, tIlill
V 11 14 a NIA/Tont' SuPPIY us with •a earth and pines,' the -air was as beav, Thi, eminent imijo50,„h„ wed kureivern-ents ,fil r;lano con,structon.
that tile must be in ITugo got -up cautiously and tWitter- primitive' instrument to make experi- The development of the piati has in-
,
plfeSeiel,
tagreefdDlie
;slid sa,
bek_Fifffi P4.01
caress.
Good gio7
ltee!la, V.3rP-4th
WU:a eikfiebakii101`
IVIO.tersi Itte
iise=t
taste better.,
y a as. In the year 682 BC. not apnea, to have been any important
020te touch, with, the heart in such ed deg,. Let mortals deep mento In the niathernatical relations of chided a ,graat number of inventions,
instances. foralways it is the voice if. theY chose to do 00. The night .•".°a41, MUSleal intOr1. T1:, niOne,OhOrd ',MITI the time of ,the clavichord lw-the
off love -ihat: spealcs„ sendIng ita .1m,„ ' for him and the little green' waS a woacl.H1 box with ‘a. single string, fifteenit cent'Ury,,to tho piano of Cris-
perative message across oceans arid n'iii40 a vanceg on 'tiptoe few of cat -gut stretched over a finger tofori, in -1720,
haSOMethlng is wrong, something hall ‘t)wpeo elvh:adigInloe'efieVIOI.1°1-4eggla A,D
f n nsis destine on.
Was nothing' e.pecially new tintil -1000• ,neriod of abouta50 years. in sill It has'
continents, with no regard for time or Paces then woitc for a menient• Ns board.
distance, ,
" thce the invee:ti::soaf
It wa.6 nearly 700 year's later, about T116'.:develeinnentr'eith:(0°n.ia.1100 , R
PPesied—and the heieved none otit ilia thin arras with an _exultant • ' 0 -of Arezzo invented eludes manY 1,n.ventions Most,of Which
vtio a bl
TIRIGHTENING TJP OUR IgE -ALS. soen. es ..theY start to 'boil remove,- kit ,kfr, Ah, this- was what ' he wantedj , . .
Artists, PhYaldans, dietitians and rm,se and b ue, -
el to Gaunt `and Freedom on a mountain,top the worl A.p., when severs, r age. weie added taken upwards of. 450 years to bring
end the night his oWri, He ralised his tAthemonochord, with Iceys and a de- the piano , to its fullest development
1110V4 e bridge. Atter tills there have been discarded. . covers a
sonae -ministers join in recognizing the Y rig ,C• a wei‘e sa o y canine
i +hill eth d 11 -tains dis, 000 Tit • df r the night
efszt of color on human well being.' al3Pear• Clothe6 'Wear longer- shelterhig in 0110 ,00 the caves .in e8 th ;•11 , a Nieo to Phick the strings. '
dry„ , if the outline of .what had °ire been ,ri.,very slow',. It -took abioni'1500 y,ears to
It is 0 svhalesome aim in meal- than b 11
y constant iubbing. 'There is the ruins Of the ancient opg cast e. A fair- lea1-e .°Ve their sbOter• There,Ws go the early developments were
menu. as to have the food /limn its tlke, clothes are coming to a bell.—r or the males; and Carlo had tucked anything that'.2iresembled
tower, just a Shell Of t ree 'walls ,,,,, -
pierced by a wirldow overrun' -adth _
planning not only ,so to arrange the plenty of time to tidy my Louise while• ace had alga been scovete
chief aim of nourishing the bOdy, but Mrs. M. himaelf away i another eave. - The
also, as aiy Swartz Rose so well ,,_
puts it, to have it a joy to all the
senses. "So long," she says, "as beauty
is a. part of life and the spirit more
than' meat, the housewife will take
pride in assembling her faintly about
a board which delights the eye and
makes the ineuth water,"
A hungry mail absorbed in business
—or in love --will not sufrer from anY
"conscious lack if he eats creamed cod-
fish and white potato with a cold white
crockery plate, but Why starve ,his
sense of beauty? Just as yellow wall-
paper in a north room'. hrings- in the
sunshine, so does a blown crusted
.:Tohnny cake on its old -blue plate.
There is a pat oryellow.butter on the
table, too, Imagination flies to daffo-
dile for a centrepieee. '
In our home, we already have bit-
tersweet berries to dispel the winter's
gloom. To brighten the scene there
ore orange curtains in our dining -
'MOM of unfortunate 'northern expos-
ure and orange candles from the "5
and 10."
Just a -little list of 4alorful 'foods
will suggest an endleas clMin of varia-
j Lions from wliich to cheese. ,
Reds—Beete, „tomatoes, pimenthes,
red peppers, raspberries, cranberries,
apricots, salmon, lo,bster, shrimp, pa-
prika, jellies, cherries.
Qrange and Yellow — Pumpkin,
squash, orange', eggs, eairots.
, Green—Peas, celery, Spiratch, green
,peppers, green beans, parsley, pielcles,
relishes, olives, grapes, lettuce.
MOott, notur.a0N.
Two 1 -quart cans tomatoes,
stalks celery, 8 slices carrot, % onion
(slice(1), 1 small green pepper, 2
.oloves, blade of ranee, t. salt,
pepper. This is a nice, bright -red
clear soup,
Pllt all the ingredients except the
se:t and pepper into a saucepan, hav.
ira removed the seeds from the pep-
per. Let simmer fifteen minutes.
Ft bin. Add salt and pepper. Serve.
RAW OARROT SALAD.
q9Z.CA
atom raged an the rain came down
in torrents. .
Gaunt found what had Mee been a
srneke-hele in the roof, and they built
a fire under it Out of dry branches and
masses of dead eage and 1'00113 wiTh
which the floor of the cave was litter-
ed. It wIls warm and dry and cosy,
but the ground was hard to aleeP ort
and they quarrelled about the cush-
ions. Hector and Hugo wanted Jean to
have them all, and Tito tried to com-
mandeer one for himself, and was
promptly evicted from it, Hugo said
he did not intend to go to pbeep at all.
It was too • glorious, and Tlto, and he
must keep guard at the mouth of ,the
"Otherwise the little green men will
surround us," he said. "We have
taken. their castle and they Are now
holdiag a couneWelf war against us.
We must be prepared. Even though
they are se tin, there tire!hordes of
them:and., if they surround us it -May
ther case of Gull'ver -and the
A COMFORTABLE WINTER
:
OUTDOOR GARMENT- Gaunt roared with laughter; -
4020. `Teddj, Bear" cloth, eider- "And can you see the. 'little green
clown, corduroy, jersey and flannel men'?" lm asked.
may be used for this design. It -is Hugo was alightly offended. "Of
a one-Pece garment with "drop" back. course I see themr he said. "They're
The Pattern is cut in '4 Sizes! 2, swarniing -all over the walls of the
3, 4 and 6 years. A 4 -year size re- rail' rvr3' time the lightning flaah-
quires 2% yards of 86 -inch material. es I see them. Look—therel Good
Pattern mailed to any address on• Heavens, inan—where are your eyes?"
Tito suddenly begsn to howl. He laid
receipt of 15e in silver, by the Wilson back his head and ears like a little
Publishing Cos0.78 West Adelaide Sta fox and uttered Iorig, mournful sounds
Toronto., - j of. an 'unearthly quality.
Send 15c in silver for our up -to -I "There—Tito seee them, too," aaid
date Pall, and Nirinter 1924-1925 )3oolc' Huge.
ft
Spring Wheat Varieties Dock-. Gaunt s reach and admonished silence.
of Fashiml. . , i Shut that"g up or I'll ---
..—..s. .......,........ ' /.1uo quickly re.meved Tito from,
. , age for seed , 11 "Nice old fellow! Don't you mind
. Heetor—he's a silly man. But keep
Unoleaned and ungraded samples of quiet. We musn't let the little green
-spring wheat were collected by the men know we're im to their game.
Cereal Division of the Dominion ,Dx„. That would never do,"
perimental Perms from most of thel jean made a n ' 1,7E1,1: iVencetehgwaeatsttenon1.k"1brarich Patios it 1929, arid subjedted swieLheY'esuhwe wouldn't
-to a uniform system of cleaning and as it alvrays was when lingo's eccaen13.!
grading, :With a view to determining,„•tricities manifested themselves.
from. the standpoiat of the seed g,.. "There's "There's anothet unbelinverr Hugo
er, the percentage of small mu, confided to Tito. "Nobody believes in
which have to be removed in order to anything but you- and me. -.But we
',sod ace a ni,st class eare ie s d oughtn't to blame there, Tito. They
, really can't see the littite green men,
Two c. raw carrot (ground or grat- In the rePori of the Dominion Cereal- and so, of cOurse, they think they're
ed), ai c. ehOpped raW cabbage 1 than ' ist, Mr- L. H. Newman, for the yea'" not there Such a namovamincl d
referred to, a table is givsn of the people! 'There are more things in
results achieved from sample's sent In Iteaven and eattli, Horatio, than are
by seven Parma said Stations in the dreamt of in your philosophY,' Smite
West. Then varieties were subject to of the poor fellows in That Place were
more intelligent than Hector ,and
Three-feurths cup grated theese, the test. As Marquis Ottawa 15 is Jean, Tito. ,iset, rny 5004 iliey were.
chopped onion, salad dressing
This is even better than it looks:
The salad dressing may be, either
mayonnaiee, cooked or Prench
may be substituted for the cabbage. the variety latest popularly used, the aThere was one chap, / remember, who
Grated raw carrot nialseem delight. Per cent. dockage of that varietY at conversed with the "inhabitants of
ful garnish for any pale Soup or salad, each Earth or Station is' here given' Mars. ,He did it with a pocket torch
rent, 7,5; Lacombe, 7.9; Lethbridge,1
Brandon, 35.3; Indian Head, 55.3; from his window at night; But, of
,Rosthern„ 6.7; Scott, 14.9; Swift Cur, course, whea the stupid fools discov-
ered what he was about they took his
8.9. The other varieties. used were toreia away from him. As a ,Matter
Es.rly Triumph, Garnet Ottawa 952 '
of fact they said it wasn't his torelt
RED DRESSIXO FOR LIPAD LETTOM
' One tbsp. chili 5aucer-5, tbsp, oil, 2
tbsp. vinega ,r salt to taste, pepper, pe-
prika, English mustard -
Blend all .thoroughly and add;
that lied stolen it from one of ,the
tbsp. chopped yolk hard cooked egg, ISitehener2. Rota, Red Rohs, Red l'IU0 warders. Well, they might hate let
% tbsp. chopped. white bard cooked Ottawa 1. r, Reward Ottawa 928, Ruby him keep it hi the hateiests of
egg, aa task, chopped pimento", % Ottawa 628, and ' Supreme. Results science."
tbsp. chopped onion, -asfi tbsp. chopped from all of these are detailed in the jean tried not to listen to this mad
1 chivea, parsley, olives or green pap, report, and the percentage of dockage menologue. She tried even not 't look
from Brandon etimples being general_ at Hugo, but where he ,sat the light
ly high, Mr. Newman explains that of the tire threw his slender body into
this was due ohtafiy to the efteete of full relief,' and his grotesque taesturee
the epidemic' of wheat at rust rivetted her distasteful attention. She
whieh •redamed not only the total yield
, wondered at Gaunt, who. took no mot
notice of Hugo than he did of the
but 81z6 of kernel materially in most thender and lightni 6
ng.
POTATO APPLPs.
TWo 0, hot rise(' potato, 2 tissp. but-,
ter, 1,-3 es ,grated • cheese, cayenne,
grating of nutmeg, yolks of' eggs or
whole, egg.., '
Mix ingredients in order given and
beat thoroughly. Shape in form of
small apples, roll in flour, egg, and
crumbs; fry in deep fat. Insert a
elove at each end. 'These are almost
'as pretty if, after shaping, they are
eimply brushed Over with slightly
beaten egg diluted with one tbsp, cold
water and browned ie a hot oven.
APPLIS-cRANRPRRY SAuca.
One •quart cranterries, 2 qt.' apples,
0 c. sugar, ^
Cover cranberries with boiling
water and similar until they burst.
Strain, Add'segar and apples pared,
cored ,and cut in eighths. Cook gently
until the apples soften but retain
their shape.
SELLING EGGS IN CAMS.
If you sell eggs in any considerable
quantity you are cloolitless puzzled
sometinies to know what to do -with
the unsaleable ones—•those that are
cracked, misshapen, too small el. too
largo to:go in the boxes. You can dis-
pose of them in a Way to make money.
if you are a good baker of, sponge
cake, Sponge cake reqaires no short-
ening, 116r ner icing and is the
easieet of. allseakes put' together.
The cull eggs madb iota s.aonge, cakes
will find a ready Sale, of-ben:with the
verY ones who hi:1y your eggs. have
''ouncl if so,
caset. The variety Reward Ottawa
928 ranked rehttively high at all the
Statiops as zegards the percentage of
good plump grain obtained. This var-
iety and Rota„whieh is relatively re-
sistant to rust, exhibfted the same
pereetrtage at Brandon, namely 27.5,
but Reward Wat much the saperior in
strength of straw. .
Go Forward:-
1The man whe, in the poet's words,
"has a heart for any fate" will ueuallY
find fate in a kindly mood. It's the
Gaunt had dug a hallo* for himself
irathe sandy fleor of the cave and sat
hunched up with his back to'�n 'of
the walls smoking his pipe and half -
drowsing. Jean twisted aboat trying
00 reake herself comfortable, but de -
Spite the fact that they Lad insisted
upon her having all the pillows, she
nould tot rest at -ease. There was nbt
room to swing the, hat -an -melts and no
way of tying them.
"How long -will it last Hector?" she
asked: .
- Gaunt removed hi ' f
a pipe fro 31
mouth
" "Eh? Oh, the rain, About another
sliirkea,who gets into dilneuliles, The hour, I should think: Then, the moon
man who has the .pleek to go over will tome out. By midnight it should
hedge and ditch ••gets there,' first, be ereer and we can watch the light, -
Fats /4 taasa/y as arias al, making. ning over the Esterelles."
Bad luck often means - bad mane ' Hugo clopped his hands'
ge- "That will be splertdidi '1e 'to olden,
MM14t. Smilell;e°-P-1° are- for Jean, and we'll wake you up when the
Mg streaks of "bad Juek." COMB ,to time comes,"
know ,them, and you find they never "If do get to sleep, I hope,yon
shape for good fuck. They are stiele wen% Wake me," Jean grunibled.
In-the-murls. • There was no more dry fuel at hand
The man, who, reached the Celestial and the fire gradually died down 'to a
CitY was the Mall who struggled glowing bed ef red embers. The srooko
through the Slough -of Despond to its of the dried herbs, not all escaping
farther side, The ether ten -who through the hole in the -roof, filled the
was a booster, 415^o struggled out—but ns
ea.,,,ee with a pungt.nt odoi. as of rn-
It waS very pleasant, hot, and
on the side he went lit He had "no- dr . cold drive of
. t e rani-eutside. '
where to go but backs' hy, r9mPared with the
That is Lifyl, Forward is the word ,:.After a while JdWi' e e b a to
thee pays Anyone. can turn hick. The drool). There was thesfa3dinsg egglown' of
•winner is the one who knows how to th0 sire and of Heetor Gaunt's pipe,
go on. „ the silhouette Of Hugo with the clog
........._.a,......„aa____a_._ ;n. his -lap .growing a 'little iadistipct;
aNisse made,Frcirroz Ille-Wail -ef the wind -and ram reeecl-
, ..,___—.
, ,.„ , . . oaes- ing to a distance Sit l a14cm 1
WASSIING WIT-HouT RUI3BING.
. The rose long figured in the Smarees. Gaunt's ,pine elr.01/..nalifiesisnl' ahsilseVa.nd,
E.,,,,y thri•,..rtV housewife has pima- sepsis.... pliaY gives -over thirtY..reme- lls head nodded lower and lower, Pre-
ical-- lahor-0:,tvins• devices whirl). the dies eelneeelided of rase-lessiee and setiti.3.,7'1)° 1:ies61°d "sr "'his sidc' rest-
. <- , -
urts',.into overY-day use. 3 use the petals ilia eliogabolus used ,to drink mg le 'hip in the hellowed sand. and'
'no rub". method .Sor washing- clothes. 1.4:•9 wino, as, a tonic after his periocit maiden -a, pillow of his arms. .
he night before I wash,. I put ray cal bouts, while la much more recent naraa fa irlf.
Hugo watched him, ,/istened, whis-
dethcs to -Soak in cold svater, soaping tittles sufferers' from nessnus vmn, ' 10 was 'ge--air;g. on
towaros midnight
he badly soiled:snots. In the morning PlaintS have been iidviSed to seek re.: and, -as - Gaunt,' haa predicted she
erring out- Having my faolley rem. lief by:swallowing rose -leaf compouads storm began to 'Rise ver. The 'lig
yid; about two pails ef cold sot cr sleeping -on pillows stuffed with nsing waS not quite, kSo'Mid, the th Ill':
cljo ba, o.t, gooci ia"dry asap rose.notess, ' der rumbled ineteaal of' crashing .r.unPo.--
c.c.oked the night, before), and one nose -water, too, was at one tine9 lently, the rain fell with a gentle,
ablespoun o. kerosene oil. A, dd white widely used for flaverthg foodE/ no hpabiedi Patter that gradually ceased
10311,....s, in,osing them around occasion- the Chineae still have rose fritters, a'tecthteir,in the clouds broke, on'e
ily. Let 1.1o100 te a boil slovrly. As 'hlle, the Masale dellelt In rose-eand groat bank rolling away to the seuth
,
vines, from .wluch a thin rarch flung musk.° lristilinlent' Purther exPeri"
itself as a bridge to another line of monis were made that led to the in.
broken wall. How high was . it? ventlon of the clavicytherium. This
Thirty, forty feet? Carle had said it ,Instrument with the unprononntimble
could be climbed, oven by mortals. !, name was Invented in Italy in 1200
As Hugo looked, the wall and tiower A-11 In shape it resembled zither. butter afterwards. Milk and cream
Of green rile light that onced catgut. It had key, with a simple do ...ng agencies and if allovied to talc
4
as we know It to -day in am' homes.
Controlling Fermentation in
1$utter-lillaking.
The keeping quality Of butter de-
pena' very largely him the fernienta
tionif that take Place not: only 'd,urin
the ripening of the cream but in th
. .
'Swarmed with, tindy figures likedpoints Tho strings Of different lengths were of I are subjeet"tb many typesef fernient
end swaye -on or. the strong -gleam, of
the reetna, Hester and Jean, ne doubt, :dee ty,t.plwked the strings.
romuelelinagayintlitsitewliegrheteminlyn-oziwye. lelbvaeto . Next
camihtehoCcialavvicitichorodrd.., first
built
was. beenuSe they cOnld pot see aa in the fifteenth Oenterv This -lustre-
well as he could. Hugo knew that
h ., raent- had 22. strings Of brass and a
ftoyeenjittlegr
smneee.onmeheeweeout n
inn iearnc.4udowinafluidu tenient,- fez. toned to the , keys .caused
tile strings
began to beelcoto hinia Perliaps"their o vibrate. '
recognized him for a friend. He too t. . ,&t the beginning of the Seveeteenth
n •
out his handleachlef and fluttered it 'century the clavichord 1'MSgreatly, '11n7
like a flag of truce. 'Let. them kno*, prov•ed. . It was Pie favorite instils,
that he -really was a friend. ' l•ment of the time, and was theforertila,
tle'rroglY
hined„aocl he spoke to the lit-, r -
, ter' of the square piano At this 'time
stisrulY but 0» 080 his breath' • "e claviehbrd possese.ed ' severe.' I •Of
"Now you be quiet. Don't you start ''"
the 01117) encl.-you'll wake up in forte, ita
ortev, aitsof t
nild°1i4nitsflailn
teerdcIeredvenleplan
meking.traible, or 0,11 throw yen over
Heaven." .. I was, used-byJ3ach, and even by -Mozart
, Evidently ;Tito. had,ne Wish as yet and 13eethoven. ',Ia fact, . Mozart's
M. -become. aegnaitited with his future 1 opera the "Magic Pinto," was com-
home. lle, stopped' whining end thrust posed' on . the cIaVieliord,
out a moist, affectionate torigue, kiss- 1
ng his master's hand.
`IThat's all right," whispered Hugo,
somewhat Mollified. "You just do as
you're told and there'll be no bad
blood between us. runderstand?"
They ativaneed
forward . s p.
step, feeling their Way up the trench
emus, bmar-entangled path. One
Hug0'3 foot leesened 'a large stone
and it rolled,. down, making a grea
disturbance, ' but' after isne h.eart
quaking mornint .he satietied hhesel
bray grom ene-of, the mules alto start-
led himS, It was Just bele* hfra some-
where. He heard Carlds Sleepy voice
grumbling harshly, end he expected
Tito to hark; but nothing liapnened.
Silence once 'mare, Save for the
rustling of the' little green men on
the tower wall
(To be continued.)
/The Spleet.
In 1503, Spinetti, of Venice invented
the spinet Thfe inethument was more
powerful than the claviehord, the
strings were longer and were'plucked
Y by a gefil operated by a peeuliar 'me-
_
e obantsm at the cud Of the key. Vasil
improvethenS were made In the Spinet.
It was built in` different styles and
thanei. In England it was called the
g ,
• At this time there was a desire for
greater Volume .of tone. In 1521, the
spinet was enlarged so,that the tone
'wart more powerful, and with further
-improveinents it developed into the
harpsichord, This instruinent passed
through a nornher.of chansee until it
took the shape of the preSent day
grand. piano, 10 feet long, -and-with 25,.
pedals. Of course, these pedals were
gradually discarded, until only the
'left,
ef the present deysilano were
The harpsichord continued In use
until toward the end of the eighteenth
century, at whiet time the pianeforte
had 'reached such a state of 'develop:,
ment that it entirely superseded the
harpsichord.
The Pianoforte:—
The invention -of. the pianoforte' as,
an. entire, and cent -Pieta inetrument
must he credited to Bartolemob Cris-
tofori, of MY, In 1711. In 1720 Cris-
tefori Onstrueted a mach- stronger
,cese than had been used for the harpsti-
'chord. This was to withstand the in-
creased strain of the heavier string.
hi this action he added the OsCapettient
.sleviee, haok .01seek, and eennected
an individual stunner for each note di-
rect with the hemmer action, thus giv-
ing the perfernier ss mechanism iyith
which he could, through the touch, pro-
duce a delicate ?genitalia° and a
strong fortissimo, impossible on either,
the clavichord or harpsiehord. Cristo -
tort died. in 1731. -
, The Square Piano. •
that no one lad heard. A. 'Sudden
Weather Wisdom.
'Berl at night is the shepherd'a de-
light
Bed in the matting is the,thephard's
•-- warning.°
This hrthe old English rhyme, but
the idea It expressesis Icnowa' In
nearly every country in the world,
riven the ancient Egyptians and
Greeks had sayings similar tethe
above. Furthermore, it is scientifical-
ly true. Red skies are really weather
s,
,. •
If the atmosphere le clear in the
evening or,morning the StIll'S light is
s'eti becauSe the Wile, of which the or-
dinary white light of the rem Is made
up, haa been absorbed by the great
length of atmosphol 1 through which
the slanting 'rays of the Ilill 11 have to
pass, , .
In the eveain e ros g
g the y 11 litf the 0
sunset illumines the clouds on the
eastern side pf the sky. This shout
that the donde have gone by' and are
taking the rain with them. Tints we
-get red at tight,,indicating itne weath-
er. In the meraing, the rising sun be -
054 in the east1 the light illuminates
the western horizon and its ciottde,i
which are on their Way to us. We need
eot he, shimherde to know that If the
sky is red and lowering in the morn.
lag we are ttt for a good "soaker° be -
fere lunchtime canna. 1
.0
- Polo Has ng rstory.
There is no game to -day with along -
01' history and one so onsietently ro-
mantic ati that of polo. oVer'100 years
kgo pelt) 1090 first observed it Perste
by ,earlY.Derepeart travelers, like Sir
-William Ouseley and Sir Anthony Shin.
ley, The latter quoted hisSfererunner,.
the Italian Pietro della Valle who, ie.
1118, had Sound polo under the patron-
age of Shah Abbas, and remarked that.
'lt waa a favorite recreation of kluge
and chiefs., and originally, believe,'
considered, as almost peenliarstosilles-
The greatest activitY in the d0N(0101)-
010810 of.thepiano took place between
1855 and 1880. The first square Mem)
was made in Germany by 'Prederici in
1745, troadwood built the first piano
In „England 'In 1771, while In Prance
Sebastian Brand made theSilret spdare
in 1776, .
Ilroadwood Wag the drat to place the
wrest pleat at the baelt, instead 05800
the right head end of the:ease, as it
always had bee* done in the clavi-
chord. This Fevolutionized the con,
struetion of the square Pidno end made
it possible greatly; to increase the vol-
ume of ton0. This epochonalcing in-
vention watt inktle 111' 1781.' The /fink-
ing of the aquare piano practieellY
ceme to 'an end in 1880, When it *Me
superseded by the* upright. '
-
The Upright Piano.
The first uprigh wast
I b
Schmidt of Selzburg, Austria, irt 1180.
it was not until 1860 that the Ameri-
can makers began seriously to de-
velop theopright Piano. They,were so
uecessfel that the "A
taious 'personages." he 'French tra- .
veler Chardin sails the Persians plaYed
Withthirty or for..ty.on a side, though
the Persian miniature's remind u`s., that
'eventhen) thresi or four-sidod tearns
were aorenton, anothe'r traveler calls
AP:the game of 'Canes." , .
-•
, This 'nes fifileci`•In 119,40i.1,,,:giatIlesex; England; 10 se olti :that to 1.11011e11800 •
date13f ite erigln hss liddnfouild. The 00e3e0t.postinas4er has held the st •
for 01 years, his 111001110' for 60 years.and 00t faintly' before 1
their, natural, eouree, develop- all Man
ner cif • flavors in the iiiiished .produot
By pasteurization the, molds, .Yeast
and bacteria contained in dairy, pro
ducts are brought under:oontrol. In
order to inalte a atudy of this questioi
the Dairy Branch of the -Department
Of Agriculture, daring the pest sum-
mer, earried on .research, using
samples of butter collected from fac-
tories seVeral of ;the provinces, of
Canada. - Many of these . Samples
showed' ainfost- nUmberless bacteria,
handreds of melds -and thousands of
yeasts to' the, cubin centhnetre' These
came from crearneries re/here:pasteur-
ization had -not been ptectieed. , On
the other hand, 'safaples Were received
that contained exCeedingly 'small
counts of these 'agencies,- indicating
excellent lo,vgliniaohip and very satis-
-faCtery sanitary cenditions.
By treating the 'creini- te pasteur-
ization for ten minutes at 180 deg. IP.,
all of these.molds aad practically all
of the bacteria `are made dormant;
Following this precess-care has to be
taken see that the vats, , churns,
pipes, and pumps with which the
cream comes in contact, are kept, in a
thoroeghly' sanitary condition. Even
parehment paper Ilners are able .to.,
carry infection to the butter unless
they are properly treated. In kermalin
and boiled. The makiag Of gelid hater
that has longkeeping qualitiee, it was
gciund, depended upon thorough pas-
teuriSation of the cretins and thorough
:Nettling and eleaneing of mita; churns,
and other equipment with which the
butter or creain comes in eonttlet.
- ,
Marking Synthetic -Camphor.
Turpentine is the prineipal ingredi-
ent of artificial, or "synthetic," cam
plior: It would be more accurate, how
ever; to say "pinene," of which turpon
tine contains 7.0 net cent,
The thief source•ef natural bampho
Is the 'Island of Pormosa, which 'be
longs , to 'Janata But destruction
the ciaulphor trees has had the effee
00 raising the price, and thereby a
profitable market'. for the eyatitettc
products liasi been gained.
' "It was the Germans who Invented
synthetic camphor, Dater, American
clientical -concerns undertook to maw-
factere it. The artificial product IS
superior to that produced by
oa-
ture, being purer and of More' uniform
quality than the gum Of the camphor
tree. '
ror household purposes CaMphor -has
been replaced to a great extent by
naphthilines-which is a .by-product of
the distillation ot petroleum. It Is the
stuft.frota whigh, moth balls are, made.
But. within recent years many ne*
uses have been toned for camphor, as,
for example, tn. the mauufaettire of
eelluleid. ' •
COW Bad .-fer • - •
A Nation's Prayer:.
Along the bosom of this favored nation,
13reathe Thou, this day, a vital undii.
lation! •
lJet all who do'this land inherit
Be conscious of Thy moving spirit!
011, 'tio a ,goodly Ordinance,'the sight,
Though sprung from bleeding war, is
ono:o5. pure delight;
Bless Thou tho hour, or ere' the hour
- When a whole people shall ltneel dpwn
• in prayer,
O And, at one moment, in one rapture,
- strive , .
-,t171011 lip And heart to toil their grati-
1 tude
•For Thy proteeting care,
Their soleten joy—praising the Eter.
nal Lord
For tYranny subdued. .
, AtaLfor the sway of equitY renewed,
Per liberty confirmed,- and peace re,
cloyed!
Wordsworth.
Distinguishing Marks.
There born with every dee 'or us,
and- continuo Unchanged- through all
our lives, an unfailing and Ineraille-
able mark or raarlts.swhieli absolutely.'
distinguish Cach'ene 'of ha fibre ovori
'other felMW-being. These phireital
marks .n.Pver chmtge'iroM the Cradle
to the grave. , This born autograph is
4 Imphasible to counterfeit, and there is
no duplicate of It auiong the teeming
Millions 'et the .Werld; Ldok at the
.insliles 'es your.hands and the soles 01
your feet, closely examine the elide of
your fingers? .you "see circles and
Curves 'and, arCifee and whorl's, Onus
prominent. with deep cerrugations,
oSolieri;:iniuute and delicate, but all a
well-Seflued end - Closely tracdd pat-
tern.. 'There Is your Physiological
ig-
nat'0re.- -
. Rub ')/our handsethrouib. your hair
end broil your' finger nails on a piece
et clear glees. You gee all the deli-
oate tracing transferred -s -not two fin-
gers alike—e,Ven "the lett hand know-
etk, not what the right hand death."
They are all distiactly different. Even
twins may bp so similar In size, fett,
' tures and general physical conditions
dieT-as to be scarcely distinguishable, yet
heir finger autographs are radically
r nsereanoti
f, mali Intinatity -eVery being
; carries 'With him lill 141)7 Angora and
s' his wrinkled halide of decrepit old age
-s-bow the identical curvessarches and
circlet thatwere horn with them!
Nothing except, dismemberment can:
obliterate or diegaise them. crimin-
als may burn or scar their hands, but
natures -when she restores the outtele,
invariably brings back the netal ante-
graphi.'
Stop Pine Tiiee- Moving.
Because of the •datige,r of spreading
blister rust : -disease, federal forest
authorities haie ruled ag•alnst the
practice of tonrists digging up white
pines for transportation to their homes
in distant locaIitlea,
In Capt, Cook's Memory. .
Martin-liaCieveland, Yorkahirerlitrtia
place of...Captain Cook, the navigator,.
received a Commereorative Union -Jack
from Gisberne, .14ew .Zoaland, •jahere
Cook landed on pctober 8, 1769,- •
, ,
Extreme cold, is known toliave hatl-
disestreus effects on tin,- In ecniXries
like DaPtherir Ituasia, lt Is 'deelared
that many utensils often luicome-use-
less in wintdr. .-A whole shinlokd of
Meeks Of the metal, stoi'ed R115.
elan euitorn house, was reported tO
have crumbled into dust during ,..the
col(1 months„ tt has frequently beet
found In mines in a gray poWder form
:which 'when heated, turns' info- the
Shiny Metal but, duririg sulazorp
'weather, duty beoome dust again.
When tin "catches 'cold,'a tiny *gray-
ish spot that grows in size and is
jaewain7ed. others, aPPearS OR the sur -
feed In timehe tmetal crumbles
'
r
\\,t
\
030.
QUIZ
oncentrated
t1'eng.,/,31 an
Goo4ntss
';17..,&:411V; .,21.4fAti
,'Ai05114434 4c. k
aktaN,
\
One -of . rho greatest. of Oh
Energy,Prqdueing Foods!,
--Delicow far Ms tafde ond fer thektng.