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The Clinton News Record, 1925-03-19, Page 6Sli 11W -7`c= "Tr G'ocer Selis GREENT ave you trie it? The tiny rich. flavored leaves and tips are sealed air -tight. Finer than anY Japan or Gunpavvdcre Insist upon SALADA. _ " .}tyx,aez,6 litge-06 PRESERVING EGGS FOR HOME (or) I% cup shoitening, 1 cup rich USE. buttermilk (and) g rounding tsp. soda, ta tspnutmeg or cihr.arrion, % tem Salt, flour to make a Stiff dough that ,will roll out easily. Sprinkle the cookies with sugar from the sugar 'shaker after they are .in the pan. --Mrs. F. B. ' • E -Z Cake—% cup butter %, eup sager, I egg, % •cup milk, 11% cups flour, 2% tsp. baking powder, 1 top. vanilla. Cream the butter, add the sugar and egg (well beaten), mix and sift flour and baking powder, add rains gradu. 13ake thirty minutes hi shallow pan. Spread with chocolate frosting. —Fourteen -year-old Cook. There is Perhaps Ito better way to take advantage of the low. price Of eggs during the spring months than to preserve a reasonable quantity for winter use. This plan makes it pos- sible for the entire familytto eat eggs freely throughout the year. It helps the consumer who wishes to get eggs at a Dewer average price for the year. It helps the pnodueer by making it possible or him or her to sell all the high-pticed fall and winter eggs, the home table being sup- plied from jags in the cellar. Eggs especially geleethd for preserving may be sold in many enarkets at a nice premium over the current market • price. s . Pitha.bly the simplest process for home preservation is what is known as the Watergless method, Commer- del Waterglaes—sodium Silicate—may be obtaned froni any drug storm and is not expensive. It should be mixed with pure water at the rate a one quart of -Waterglass to each nine or ten quarts of .water. • --„ - The safest procedure seerr.s to be to uae boiled water where small quan- tities are to be 1presrvd, although many prsons have reported successful • results with miboiled well or spring water. The writer bas seen upwards of• 2,000 dozen kept successfully for Several menthe -where ordinaty tap water wes 'used without boiling. Five -gap easthenware jars or new galvanized cans nielte desirable • containers. A. Avesgallon jar will hold fifteen dozen eggs. Pour the tolution into the jar and immerse the eggs. afterward • The solution is dense.though so thatl if an egg is placed jugt beneath the surface and released it will settle slowly to the Vett= without danger of breaking. If eggs are piled in the 0 jar before adding the liquid there is great danger of the ones in 'the bot- tom being crushed by the Weight of these above. • None but fresh, clean, sound- thelledeeinwathed eggs should be pre - 'served. Place the eggs in the water - glass solution the seine day they are laid, if possible, , . If only a few liens are kept, add the eggs to the solutionfide day td day until the jar or ether container is full. Creeked eggs may be detected by taps ping each two eggs lightly together before pladng in the solution. Avoid the use of thin -Shelled eggs that would be likely to break and per- haps spoil a jar eull, It is usually best to preserve early spring eggs, not only because they show the best interior quality .but also because they may be had at the lowest price for the year, They will easily keep through the following winter months. If eggs are purchased foe storing in this manner it fs well to itisist on fertile eggs in order to avoid any poisibility of germ development prier to preservation. See that the tip eggs in the jer are at least an inch below the surfase of the liquid. Cover the container to pre; ventevaporation and set ih a cellar or other cool roorn where it may re- main until wanted.' Therm.is no great , harm in moving the jar later, pro. vjded only that it be done carefully so as to avoid breaking any eggs. RECIPES FOR THE SWEET TOOTH. ' MolaseeS Layer Cake -1 cup sugar, % cup shortening ½cup molasses, % re 1 p buttermilk, 3 eggs (saving whites of 2 eggs, 2% cups flour, I tsp. soda, tsp. cloves, I tsp. cinnamon, 1 tsp. ginger. Bake in three layers in a moderate • 'Favorite Cookie Recipe—It is good th know. how to substitute and still get good retults in cookies. the efiagrin of the wearer. A cortven- ' er. 13/2 cups sugar, % eup short - lent way of fastening it on temporal. - ening, 1 cup thick sour crearn, % cup ily is •to take an "invialble" hairpin, buttermilk (or) 1 cup "shortinging, % push it througla the 'holes- iri the ha- ssle sour cream, et cup A PRETTY UNDERGARIVIENT. 4842. This combines e ve.st and drawers in "step in" style. Long cloth, nainsoolc, betiste, crepe and Mope de chine May „be used for this model. A ruffle of embroidery, lace or of the material may be added foe tritnining. The Pattern is cut ia 4 Sizes: Small, 84-36; Medium, 88-40; Large, 42-44; Extra Largo, 46-48 inches bust measere. A Medium Mee requites 2% yards of 36 or 40 -inch material, ' To trim as illnetrated will require 5 yds. of edging or lace, 2 or 3 inches wide. Patthrn mailed to any address on receipt of 15c in silver, by the Wilson Publishing Co, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Anew two wets for reSeipt of pattern. Send •15c in silver for our up-to- date Spring arid Summer 1925 Book of Fashions. SAFEGUARD THE POISON. We always keep on hand iodine, earbblic acid, muriatic acid, and a fOW other ontrnon poisons. I have never liked to keep them in the medi- cine cabled. For there IS 't11•,Itays chance of one's taking the wrong bot- tle on medicine when in a hurry, ,And with children at tile climiihig age the pantry shelyes won't do,' „ Finally I hit upon a pith that safe- guards all the Piece the bete • Ole of peisoh, sometimes two or three of them,. in a quart glass ,fruit can, screw the cover on the can tight and put item the shelf: The children can: net unscrew it and we,older ones can never pick up a bottle of poison by misbake.—"E. S. . TEMPORARY BleTTONS, • Freque.etly as ohe is preparing to go out a coat button flies off, much to "itennilk ton and through- the cloths Then twist Pass it aftririiiid • after every Meal: Give the family the benefit of its aid to digestion. Cleans teeth.too, Keep it always in • the , honsp. Rol Costs little - helps lima*" 9 ISSU No. Ole ends of, the hairpin: around a coulee of times and stile the long ends into .the cloth. • SPEEDIER SEWING.' When besting, or tying quilts, lace iot of needle,s onto the,throaci used. 'Tfaph time you need .a.--retedle it is -already threaded. Agiyou have to do Is cut it all the spool. It dives of time. 0.r.iein of Postal System. In olden tlinee, before the tlays of .postage fiamps, It was the custom air .the recipient of at. letter to pay the pi; s t - age. It iS said' that the origin of, p're: paid postage wes due to an sedate Inver, Ife split epistles to 195 lady of his W10 promPtlY 'sent thein .back, refusiug to pay roe them. The poStman suggested to authorities that it would. save trouble if the sender paid the postage; and the idea was adopted.• ' We 'hear that. oise of thoso society wedding S was held up. the Other 'day through the absent -Mindedness of the bridegroom. . No, he didn't fotget Ole wecidi fig ring. It was something, worsoa He forgot to eotify the movit Cameramen! . - Warren' Peck,,Was,one, ci.P those men, thebard who upect ,youratheories. 11.4 a, .„Iteliente ,wana, . one taS wholly bad, ' , 'eally • The Wn ric A poli64 /3( deal ,011 the., wreng' olde 0 titre. 'I-Ici. adult' Poril.a o' a 4°Pel0,14f 'f'4ti3O,f,t4tIP't0ii0'''''; a ,IVIIII:e.,401*.Ok#4'41,1i,4 tte, t 'fi,It0:i3Ot."110/1",4titeirgeUtil 'ire.rinii, 11,e iiiliatliel iiioaatalihntonilOng' .. . ,'•filiiitii being. Mr. William 'f. TOwens .. .,---i , in I hli Y ' ' t B ,"`"ts t' tang of n the cfp.. 9, game a ettee that', cisme under hl f own eye that taught him not to condemn 999 - you decide that it is pray. the eilticienia .allecoroem, was on t"He's" the worst boy in tee district," energetic individual Who geta„,s ah°i''thT0''oP601,tee'S eieg -the thonsO' fa'am. scuff-. the jailer, referring' to -a , in this world, along colnan'' 'tiro drivenety;•g!gaimeouldn't gee Wale liklrodUirchin 10 the chick. ."1 -Ie treats never -.efficient, never ,on time, never -ten ,tles..y,ard,. and het Mixed his mother shametullY.“ thinking about hi8 own interests, „awl eafiltawiaed tq, "011, dont say theta! pleaded' his 3's'eeetrePerd°vt'sd tfoortbryitiacireemvhiitePeien that But e-Oniacioue'o'ilthe'strin- boy. to leo, Yert -Toe?" • .11 she ctiirnd .devnintaire' mother tearfully. "I-le's, a :dear good least. . - ing eliuga of- Sheilodkediout, Joe griagod. He was an accomplish - He had. married a woman who was Werreie.tgas •theree • In 'getting od feting liar but he ,drow .the at one ef these 11°;Itsandsheit wive°'4ialf. the Tal'out, he -had 'backed off from aiding ctea Abetting his „ben the time she thought she loved pho' man:ow' eeMent l'OnnerS, and' he ahe-told 911011 11, pain -able untruth as husband, and. half the time' beemacitylaeg•aall't his time t,o get 'that. The Jailer, had 'not, piandered afraid she (lien t. oye g up on thein The" rear Wheels, nattino 'and' his sympathy, but there reapci ,runner..8 were timee :when his ihefficient and and sunk 'in the%soff'titirfle" 'Itepeat- dilatory habita deovether edly' preen' 'Of board 11 Their domestic,. life waseeiles: a. tels front of ',each- Wheel:: sWring into the angler-- Luella- tnaveled' Me the hypo- car 'ar:cl fed tie; gas. hugfely:' aBut each amuse, ea.fialerktiy.talthig the sherteat ear -only heaved and sank cut betW0e11.tWO,, points, -While War- back. ; ; ren ambled along the` other two sides. Lue-eate. ,:y*ay raamteed. wee It took him lenge?: andit .te half Past two. ,IIe would never get Luella foolith, but seMetimes Isis good thatmoney into, the hank., She nipr4 nature and sloe*, moving brought him ped the certaitel with. tense"fingers as to the same p.eilet,„ sale was aimiligefor she ivetegied.eStietteet,ened to her toes .e-sometinies, even,' to a ,point slightly 'But Luella edger believed that this would heetpen. Wisen it occasiona y did, she never believed that te would happen agalin Was et pessible that inefficiency "plas,,any* „other quality whatever could equal efficiency? .111,dis culeus I But 110W arid then the -facts did not uphold Luegla. ' 'When Wargen sold,a strip Of land for twelve hundred dollars ,end came home with the greenbacks in hie poeket, leuelta rolled tip her sleeves and went -to it She felt it her duty to see that the money was disposed of immediately -where it would be safe and he earning more. - "Aren't you going to put it in the bailie?" she hegiihaThey were at luneh, and the had tactfully waited until she had served the strawberry shortcake. "I don't know." Iie pulled a thick roof of whipped creem gver with e forkful of shortcake and consumed it with 'slow. enjoyment. "We might think of something we wanted to do with it." "What Would we thhils of?" she de - mended in no encouraging tone. He smiled et her naively. "I never know what I'm going to think of ahead of time. Do you?" "I know what I'm likely to," re - termed Luella meetly. "If we needs ed for anYtt'llig right now, we'd know it, wouldn't WO" "Maybe," Warree censinned fur- ther motithfuls of shortcake with un- impaired placidity. His wife's brisk rmatoning often lef t him behind, contented and inserutable. .110 rose,, smoothed back a rebellious lock of raild brown hair and stretched prodigionsly. Getting over it, he smiled at Luella with admiration. She -was a pretty woman, even if she did try to rush him, - , • She suspected him of sliding out of her reach on tide smile, and she undertook to pin him on the spot, "Can't you go to 'the bank now?" "Not right now," he discriminated., "I've got to mend the fenee in the chicken yard." "Heel; sniffed Luella. "The hens began digging 'under that fence a week ago and it heals% been worry- ing you." ' "I coeldn't get to it• I started it once, and. Bill'Gregory called me over to help him with his radio set. But I've got to mend it this aftertmon or Ole hens will all get into the garden. It won't take me long. I can get to the bank before three." , Luella sighed, for this was the way she uaually came out. • As Warren picked up his cap dnd started through the kitchen door,,she thought of a cynical jab that he might take with him. "If yetdri) catching up on thiegs that have been hanging, jest reMembeeethe faucet in the laundry tub. . days now since I asked you to put in a nen, -washer," . Warren turned th the porch. "Pll get f0. it pretty soon," he drawled. "It isn't leaking any .woese, is it?", • , ,"It leaks pert of the timey just as it has for deys. wouldn't take •you five minutes, to pee m a new Washer, but simpese. yoligt rather wait till this gives 'out entitely. • Maybe if it leaked a stream—ag "111 get to it.pretty soon, Lusga. I've got it in mind, but I've had so many things to catch up on." With a shrug of her shoulder:re, Lu- ella gave ep and, elearedtthe tahle, to the 'jazzy accompthiment of ,,her. own ghoughts. 'wrist -get -to -day; was every day. That 48. what' magengthe encturable unendurable • • And the • . tiouble , wasn't Mitirely Watesn'S slownest. He was. at everybody's beck said chg. , •Ifew maity radio sets had he helped to install, Jest because he anderstood electricity, and friends reded epee him? If anybody needed help of any kind ,whatever, he eeat for Warree; and Warren dropped•hie tryvn affairs instantly' and responded. His • bome place comprised thre-e acres in the outskirts of Eastwood, and his work was always behind, As Ise admitted, thele were alwaye•things waiting to he done. They waited usu- ally from four to five days to ,a week; often longer: • , While Luella washed the luneh dish - 90 she glanced into the side yard freni tints to. time. „She waS not naturally agiagger; but yeare of ,seetrig cs...ear'- Mit path to some effidertt ed end then having Waren doeifgobstruct- , mrely m the riedd.e. of that petle, was getting oe hen nerves. She .knevi .she was' hecomieg impatient and iinetable, but she felt thatediehad provecation. After a while the Effw IKSVrell come bacia'from the -chicken yard ,Sel•th 'his She knew he bad bei driving stakes into tho iopetaine undoa • the fence, milling on piectis of plank, ited • filling In each side with clirt. He wash- ed his hands, at the outside frinct, and sapped on his ,coat egarie Then he, went into the garage gad gob into his him when he.. described, the ,way 10 which he treated his mother. ' • FortunaTely perhaps for her, he was tlfo, only child she had,' She lavished 'all her love on him, Warned day and uight in order that ho, might live in idleness anti contented herself with scanty fare 00 that he might havesgood food and 'plenty of it. Even in the depth of 'winter she wore`thin'cldthing iu order tar provide, him with good boots and a- warnt overcoat." „lierery itight he went, to her for'pocket,mone'y 'eviethiever thesear started; she sank and"get it. Atileast twice a week she back 'till. her beei.,s whenever the ear hail -to give hint enough to 'take him lurched again:into the soft ground. 'l0t1°1 the. ghilerY °' cm° (1" the aheaP' • Bet 'when, .ten minutes later, -the theattee a1½ whtl° h° Wa°' enjoying car' gii'Ve a`mightieV heave than ever, the, elan for Sixpence ot so, with mer7 lifted Itself 011 the'boarcls 'and i'egain- -haprfried fish and potatoes to follow, 'ed the ituirfersi.' Luella thought Hie hie poor old mother' was probably cry - trick' was turned and 'took Creidt be ingqierself. to gleep. He rewarded all had eggs sele„ceagelee ,her Madness With • base ingratitude enough notstheay anything., - • .• and Sometimes with personal violence. As years rolfed and the boy grew PIVS: minetes Reseed and all was ee quiet s into a- red-haired ruffian it was ueeless ed mltheutav ain.cfr'irhee"4.L r svadeiae sbl aciltdin tor his.mother to plead for niency on thegarage. Werren was shoveling a the ground that he was "a dear good s witeellearroar load of gravel into the hog." .and he w,as ent to prism in new rats. Luella, finding 'Self-contetel several ,occasions. His mother altr.lys in the' WraY, threw it te the wiees,seee *met him at the prisongates,. and he had what he described as "a high old rushed mit to the husband of her choice, • , beano" with the money she had saved ' "Warren Peck, are you crazy?" she irtquired intimately". • He 112 ted is hot faetgand blinked at her mildly. "Did yott see what a time I had, Luella?" "Te, I saw. But do you know how late it Id? Why in the name of good- ness don't -you get the car ont— Straight—and go to the bank?" • (To be continued,) Who Invented the Calendar? The earliest known time measure, ments were made by the Egyptiana. Tito Babylonians • heel 'previously /mired to a year as the year of a spe- cial event. during hes retirement. • -- Then there came a sudden change— the most remarkable change the mis- sionary then at Bow Street had everoo known or heard of—the-pr old WO - man suddenly became blind. The son, -instead of ill-using her because she Was no 'longer able to minister to his Scents, became .a reformed cliaracter. He gave up his evil companions and Worked herd in order. that his Mother Might have,all that She required: On Sunday night ho astonithed all who knew him by leading the poor Crete- ture to .church. Ho was virtually the .onlygnurse she. had during a paingul fitness., end just before she died in his arms she was. heard to say, 'Se's a - • In the forty-second century p.c. the dear good boy to met. 10 my boy. rn Dgyptians dielded the year into twelve pay his One, sir, if you'll let me." And soon after the fenoral Joe went to 0110 of the col'oules, where he did well and reared a number of red-hair- ed boys who never saw the inside of a Police court. 'squat" months of thirty days Mich. Five feast days were kept at the end ot the year to bring the total length of the • yeer to .665 days. • , • Julies Oessaar fixed the mean length of the year at 365,14 days.. He decreed that every fourth year elieuld 366 days, the others haning 365. The first Julian year began on Janis - ars' lst of the forty-sixth year barite Otto birth of, Christ. ',In the distribu- tion of the days he adopted a mese' simple plan than the confused Systein whith preceded the Julian Calenden file ordered that January, March, May, July, September and November shoilld have thirty-one days, and the others thirty, except February, which Should' usually have' twenty-nine, but thirty in overy .fourth year. This order was changed later•by Augestus, so that the month of August 13110111i1 have at many doge es guise whith was nanied after guiles Caeger. 'February -.thus lea a day. •Septisieber .arid November •also each lost a day, which:were added to October and.December respectively. • .VllageVio1inMakers.' . Everyone has • 'heard of Antonio Stradivarig-the famous violin maker, who constructed eome of the finest violins which .have ever been made,' He was a simple countrymtheliving 01 a humble cottage, but the work cattle IIISCP saves your streng ybur time - and your clothes1 The first reallimodern Lau dry Soo Lein4Prox. Los eg,Torotzeo DOCIIEROES OF THE ALPS After having kept "open house' for nealey, a thousand years, the St. Bet, nerd Hospice, situated over.eight thou - easel feet high in the Alpe, is likely to be run as 'a hethla in which visitors will be charged for their accommo- dation. The step is rendered neces- sary by the fact that in yeeent years large numbers of visitors. have' 01)0500 ,the monks' hospitality ,by net ,contri.• 'buting towards the cost of their food and maintenance while stayirig at the The hospice of St. Beraard can boast that Itis one of the oldest and most in- teresting institutions et Is kind in the world.. It was founded in A.D. 962 by a nobleman narried Bernard de Men; wh then, o wished' to give shelter to pilgrims, making their way acrose the Alps 16 Rome. 'Killed by the Cold. Inthe course of its long 'history it has often been besieged by r rebbes band, .while once 'it was. almost en- tirely destroyed by fire: Napoleon spent a short time. there When he led his arm y into Rely in 1800; the table and chair be used are still pointed 0150 callers. • a Prut in the minds of most people the hospice is mainly remarkable for its dog heroes and for the wonderful &oda they have nerformedtin saving the lives of missing travellers. An average number of twenty St. Ber-• muds is kept the hospice kennels, and each is ttained in the task Of s earthing for persons best in the monis.. tains. Having found them,' the .ant - male aftord thent aid. in the Sorm of agiesIthog wine, and then either gaide them tO the hospies , or go for help. In all, some thousands of lives have been Saved by those sagacious crea- tures, vshich belong to a breed evolved yeara ago by the monks themselves. Incidentally, Just over a teneury ago an intense spell -of coia wiped oht the existing breed segioa had to be found- ed again '111' Grossing Danieh typo with a .mastiff. To -dal' the noble, St, Bernard is found all over Switzerland. Saved Forty Lives: One of the most vondertal - of the dogs attached to the monastery was Berry, to 'wkom a monument 'stands in theeceureyard ef• the hosnice, with the .inscriptIon: ,"Berry the heroic. Saved the liye,s of forts, persons' and Was killed . -by the forty-first." The manner of this canine hero's death ts unknown but it was _Isellevea to be - case of naistaken 'identity. • • On one Occasion Barry founa a Mold oggen lying in the snow at the meet of.succumblug to exposure. 'The feith- tui animal first swiped the. child's face by breathing on .R and then linked it until it awoke. Then Barry lay qq, -his side by which the kneW that it was to get on his back. In this way the child was brin.fght to the hospicee where it recovered:. • - ' --At another time n monk -went oul with ,dog to search. fax some travel, lers of whose danger the animal hd first given. warning, Reaching thes spot, the dog pawed feverishly at the' snow, until the body of a man was re - vented. Itestoratives were administer,. ed, and the:monk and the deg then proceeded to look for the trevellege companion. Hearing a cry some yards away, the =ink went tea iavestigate, when suddenly he was gripped -from behind and palled badtwards into the snow. With the aid ofshie 'astern he discovered thee the animal had sav.ed him from. stepping over a precipice!. The monks of St. Bernard are seven. teen all told, with a -similar 'number of guards and handyman. Ilaeh monk 18 chos,en because of his ability to withetand the rigours of the life, 'the period of service being litteen years. EASY REPAIRS TO SWEATERS. My son's heavy wool sweater was 0 badly worn at the elbows, To mend, T first out mgay1the worn portion and raveled out the edge until I had a straight tipper edge, I then picked up all stitches on a knitting needle and, using heavy yarn of the same Shade, I knitted back and ferth across, esTs- using tem needles' and catching up - ,hlstitches at the sides with the hole was covered. Then with a darning •needle the patch was Sewed in place at the bottona• , Next the darning needle was theead- ed with yarn and beginning at the top I picked up each stitch test where re- set begets and chain -stitched down , across the patch until loWer,side was reached; here the chain was connected with corresponding rib below. In this way the patch ,can hardly be detected, as the chitin stich on top makes it look exactly like the original knitting. I The sweater which I mended was, extra heavy and yrrn -was doubled for Ole thein stitch in order to make thet part as sparse se the rest. If 'sweater wart light weight only one thread would be needed. Where runners had Spanish- gold' mines a Central and gon,e up the sleeve I used a crochet thropoIogists like Sir Arthur Keith, In the Sarnei,Boat. Ilis Wile—'Drunk again!" , The Old Sok-enSall my dear, Stem I." • More Precious Than Gold. . Platinum was first found in the Our Sinaller "The brain is lave compact than 11 used to be, but the size of the brain is of itself , no indication.' of mental Dower," said Mrs. Stathpool O'Dell, the consulting phrenologist, teterring lo Sir Arthur Keith's statement con- cerning the large 'Male -capacity of the Rhodesian cave man of 100,000 yearn ago. Sir Arthur. Keith, in his. lecleire to the Royal College of Surgeons, said that the skull of the ancient .Rhode. elan had not merely a large brain ca- pacity, bat possessed other features closely resembling the man of to -day. The brain ot primitive man, in fact, was probably bigger tbau that of the man of toelay. "A. scavenget or a navvy," said Mrs. O'Dell,. "may havea large brain, use- ful enough tea muscular purposes, but It -may be 1s00 'ore* quite small in the intellectual region, but also of a lows quality organization Then again a , large skull may be very thick, thee leaving a comparatively limited space for useful brain matter. I "It ie always interesting to compare the observations et distinguished an - hands is known,the world over. South America:- but ktte rn _larger needle for pulling the stitches ack elm bave spec al zed on skal s of a I elegises who, like myself.; have exaeis Will a similar fame be won by any quaatities in the Drat Mountains, At thgough.—R. R. Y. ' periods,' with observations of phrea- og tile eottagers of the little village of firstat-was a, mere curiosity, which the IVIarkneukirchen, in Saxony? For: Indians 'mead for making fish hooks, some. generations now tlie villagers but when it was didscovered te be the there haire been hard at work 11ash1on.1 only.metal upon which no Single acid' ing handmade violins, Each lustre. had an etnict, it camearito ego in every merit is merle entirely In one humble chemical laboratory. . The. only acid , home, and 10 10 ,possible to.find three that will touch platinum ie a mixture whieb (tail' 'be installed in ships . to undoubtedly, affect the brain -growth , • of the people and preportionatelv. generations •at work. in the. same coti of nitric and hydrochloric, make them unsinkable. I . ' , '. tage and at the same,bench. • Platinum exisands less bY heat than The invettion contiots of a device their InteneetTa' lueraL atHi gecial: The villagers are artists—they ila , any other'inetal and 110SgeSSOS an ax- wherebs. the water whieb. has entered' qualities. • , • value of their handiwork as about its.1 not oast either in air. isr water, and ha's ' and the 0111 ' buoyancyi t' . 1 net care so much eboat the mouetery ' tremolY. . high melting. points It doe,s ; threuggi a plesale.'ittiioedniabus.dakmaegtaih tr., super -man -will not' so -much be a (mess "The hial,n of thV 'future man ore - . den of size 'as of strunture and tem.' - Experiments wit a is e ve- oo . a pavement, Cho intellectatil deveropa ' 1 ined .tlionsands of, liviug heads. • • liesainkable Ships. I "Ply °vitt 009001e11011 hi that ih°r° Is _ a steady unward trend of brain rim All erigineer tamed Liebetrau, 10 , the Austrian proyince of Fararlberg, volopreept Whichas oductition be, , comes more getteral and efileient, yvill quality. Bat when they carry, their 1 a great power of, resistance ' to elec- . . . , , products..to.the market there is nev,er 1 trieitY. any doubt cf their violins command, „ It is Also the heaviest of all sub - Ing a ready" sele, . • - 1 stances, with the exceptiOn of those . ...' very rare metals, osinfum and iridititn. Injunction Against Initiator- . It has other uses in..e"bemistry 150 a f Salacla Label "catalyser" or "changer,' aud is 'mita . . ' °a • • . able to the photographer for the pro - Tile Exchequer uourt et Deeeda gen- t ,,duction of pictures nnown as platino. bd-yer.etedsuitiindggni:nt 0O Febrtiary ,16th las ' ' 1.1 Set .4 T ' n Lyp"'• In favor of ' ic . , aaa ea Clo spany , f. . . '.' --n. injunction. agra1inst an- Forty years ago pat intim was much other tea firm' re -straining. them front cheapet than gold, for in the early tu3ing it. label which resesnieed cldsely eighties 10 °°11111 he bought for $1711 an ounce Then the pric.e, began 'to that used on Packagers of Sa''ada Tea • 1 . . - - ' jump, and, by 1290 it was ',,-41.ith its :he defeeclant eompany was also or- dered to destroy all copies and dssigns, were carried out on Lake Docieu. boat ins which the apparatus was in. The meet keeping paCe with the moral and stalled W013 lauded with GOO pounds Of 00e101 qualitie8." stone andethen sunk in sleety feet of ., . , --'c water by opening a valve. The b,oat . ' cles.t. of .6.teel Users. later robe to the surface and remain- RailroadS- consuine more steel time , . ed fleeting. ' any ether. gulestey, buying .27.5 per 'Ihe engineer states that his iteren- sent. ci' ,the total output. tion can be installed in liners and coin! ' . .---7--?-777-'''' trolled from the bridge. We shohld. be ,enjoying life, living with the- truly great, the nobln poets and philosophers and tlthikers and Object to w°°-'1 F1'es* discoverers.; with:the-inspirecileaders, The peceale .ot, Iceland Will not us'e gay. wits Liu ',10001' 1ers. weight in gold, buring the war e ',ash wood for rut]. , because they be- , . . Cifiture belle answer to the men fetched ' $1.00 an ounce, about 'eye. liove that those' who sit around sueh who -would enjoy this-life.—E. I-Ialde- times the price of gold, v.nd was so scarce that • the British Government rConimandeered alt sepplies.. Teo reason 'for tne scarcity was that the supply from Itusfia had ceased, and that almost the, only soilece from which pletinuto ecnild be obtained was South America. A little is feline in the United States, stilleess, in Australia, but recently .Cenada hes co'rne into, the -market as a eource of futility. - The silver black fox industry, though carried on in every previncs in Cianada, is more Missessively de- velosiod in the Maritime lnrovinees. During the past, fiscal year 'approid- rnate:y 4,000 line foxes were. shipped Tisac'e Teat. out of tits Peovias of Prince Edward wamid you plelti tj lohind. Of these 3,000 AV -01.0 exported live- 1y or 0 atitry ?'' . many going to the United States 810 -"7', you like Avilers the industry is developlag at a bests" rapid rate, a fire will beconte‘eigeniles. seers Julies. . . OZirkthin Avoid Imitations