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The Wingham Advance, 1920-11-25, Page 9I Nr % THE GREAT PANNOEA. General Bramwell Booth has made a most pleasant Impression on the , general audiences lie has been. Addressing, as well as on his own particular flock. He has An Amiable humor and does not take either himself or the .Salvation Arroy too seriously. He feels that his 'work does not need to be , justified and that It Is not necessary for him to attitudinize over It. It .ipeaks for Itself, The Army Is now a trusted agent of governments, and Its head is consulted by monarchs And ministers alike on problems of the submersed 1, truth. In a, Chinese, city Infested with beggars the authorities asked the Army what they %would'take and clean up the afflictlon. An agreement -was made .,and tile -beggars disappeared. When tile King of Sweden enquired how the transformation was accomplished, General, Booth said: "We wake beggars � work." This Is a panacea that might be applied to nl�exidioants of all classes, and to the d3agruntled. the dissatisfied, and all tha+ Are ill Sorrow or tribula- I tion. Few people understand what a wonderful cure for all things work Is. It boo a banling quality, It has redeeming power, It has an ennobling In. fluence, and the Salvation Army has discovered how to apply the panacea. The governments discovered It during the war, but fli6y have laid It aside mow that Ileace has come. Could the government notget the Salvation .Army tp keep daall busy? it is tile sovereign tamedy, . , ., � SPI.IhN,1311) NATIVE SCULPTURRO. I I Ontario , has reason to be proud of the att of one of its native sculptors, . His memorial at Brantford of the discoverer of the telephone is aot�merely a worthy trlbute;to a great Canadian, but Is In itself .a, matter for rejoicing as a product at Canadian art and genius. The Toronto . memorial of those who fell In the South African war Is. a striking piece of work, the Splendid figure of Peace on the tcp of thei obelisk being of unusual ;,andbeautlful design, His latest Work Is the great War memorial at Peterboro which shOws Barbarism stopped and'recolling before the spiritual forces Oi , civilization's m4allood. In mAny of these memorial pieces the design covers -a considemble, area and this lends. additional Impressiveness to the figures, which Are of heroic dimensions. It is to be hoped that when statuary Is selected :hy any of the memorial committees they will pla4e the work in coml3etent hands, after consulting recognized authorities like the Royal ,,Canadlan Academy or the Ontario Society of Art. 1� � FARM VALUES AND PRICES. � Harvesting operations for 1920 are,now reported as complete, but a large ,amount of thrashing, remains to be done. .For one reason uild other, in spite ,of, or perhaps on account of, the open season, a -very small proportion ot ?ghing has been done- Some nature signs seem to Indicate a prolonged a1louepen fall, and the farmer Is not loth to take advahtage of an opportunity to prouastinate. November,rains have put the fields In fine condition And -the wise plowman does not logo his opportunity, ,Vve stock are going, freely ,.,on the market, the abundance of fodder being no consideration against com- xaodity values. Potatoes are proving 4 plentiful- crop, and ralces. rull from , . ,11 to $2��a. bag. The cost of seed last spring I% being considered in some listricts. At $60 an acre for seed, and with 100 bushels an acre production, .-.a dollar a bushel is not ,a long price. The fall in the price of milk Is. one of the nothble signs In' the general reduction of values.' The adjustr4ent in prices IS not going to inIttre, anyone who has been thrifty for five years past. i I NIAGARA AND THE ZAIM-BES,I FALLS. . I . . Leo Weinthalls'domparisou of Niagara Falls with the great Victoria Falls �oa the Zambesi River is almost unique from the fact of his Intimacy with the great African cataract and the close study lis made of the American one, o uite changed his mind about Niagara after seeing It, i� and 'tho.impression. that he had formed from written descriptions had evi- -dently failed to convey a proper conception of Its grandeur. The height of ., the Victoria Falls Is from 400 to 450 feet and its width 4,500 yards,, as con- -trasted with the 160 to 170 feet of Niagara's height, and width of 1,000 yards. The greater tonnage, of water pouring over Niagarg conveyed to him an Xextraordinary sense of its tremendous resistless current. The rush of the I 'Taptds and the enormous force with which the Niagara thrxent Precipitates Itself contracted. with the sluggish current of the Zambesi, flowing through . -levbl country for 2,000 miles and fed by few rivers till It falls from. a beight � ,as,great as the golden ball of St. Paul's Cathedral above the churchyard, Into .a canyon fifteen miles long. The presence of extensive coal fields near the Victoria Falls and cool at a cost of $2.60 to $3 a ton prevented the develop- lineAt of hydro-olectric. power there. He thought the r�servolr of the great lakes a' natural -storage of power for the people of Ontario. Mr: Wellathal ,did not allude to the Grand Falls of Ungava, now part of the province of I �Quebeo, on -the Hamilton River, which are among the wonders of the world, and should be known to Canadians. They are 900 feet high, and with the development ;of long-distance transmission can hardly fall to be utilized at .a future day., So If Niagara becomes played out we have another card'up -our sleeve to'trump tile Zambesi lead. 1 � GOOD REPUBLICAN CABINE+ TIMBEPS. . I . No one should have been surprised at the result of the Presidential ,election in the Upited States. All things considered, the surprise would have beeyi to have found Goliernor Cox the favorite. Senator Harding declared h1treIrl'. opposed to the League of Nations, but lion. Elihu Root, Herbert 110 vs ex -President Taft and other prominent members of the Republican , party evidently I took this In a Pickwicklan sense, and apparently the French, . the German, the .British and other European papers now accept tfte slWation as an Indication that there will be some revision of the covenant of the League and that Uncle Sam will take his place -with. John Bull, Johnnie Crtpaud, Fritz the rowdy and all the other European gentlemen. LThe fact is, Mr. I Harding won!t be Able to help himself, any more than .Mr. Wilson was when lie declared war after saying he'Wouldn't. �Tbore are possibilities of a Very fine administration In the Repu6llcan barty, and the men who are being I . mentioned, should they prove to be Mr. Harding's choice, will outshine and outweigh Mr. Wilson's aggregation. Mr Wilson did not seem to ,have the great modern business faculty of pickini a good staff. It Is Impossible to suppose that there were not abler men- to be had than the men he chose. Mr. McAdoo was perhaps as able as any, and he did not remain in the cabinet. . That Mr, Wilson betrayed fundamental weakness In this respect should not, *�wever, 'deprive him of the credit he deserves for his idealism and his academic fait'a In human nature. He is likely, like many other great men, ciation from posterity than from his contemporaries, and hq should as a scholar be satisfied with that, even,if his fourteen points dc not i5onetrate tile Political cuticle of his countrymen. I . I * U I A DOLLAR HAIR CUT. . A hair cut is costing a dollar in Chicago now, and it does not appear that this is an inclusive charge. One only gets What Is described as a trim foi the nimble buck. It the charrLe included a face massage and bay rum oi some of the and -dandruff applications, along with a free singe which if guaranteed to remedy the damage done by the scissors, as well. as sanitar3 and antiseptic treatment throughout, and if the operating surgeon wouI4 consent, like the New ThougUters, to go into the silence for half-an,h6ur, � dollar hair cut might come to be regarded as not unreasonable, Provlde� one got a hair back. ,It is reported that the reason hair cuts have been s( cheap In the past has been*on account of the bye-Droducts. This is beyone US, but VVItl1 the reputation scientific research has achieved In the utilizatioi of wastie produclO one Is not prepared to deny the possibilities latent li blonde and auburn sweepings. it we pay a dollar we should get the haii back. There Is no doubt about that. In the old days in Chicago, a genoTatloi ago, A hair out cost anywhere from fifteen to twentY-five cents, according v the equipment. Clippers were only coming in and there was a prejudiel against them Ila some quarters. Brushing by machiniry was tabdoed. Th4 tonsorial artists, as they called themselves, struck against the dust-stornas h which they found themselves involved. When the simooui arose they declarei th4y became affected with all the diseases on the medical health officer's list And they declined to do more than blow down your neck and negotiate a sid, Parting with the ordinary comb slid. brush. For twenty-five cents at mos these delicate attentions could be purchased almost anywhere, and in maiv, plaeas of equal respectability for less. And now tile Chicago barbers charg is dollar. No wonder baldness Is Increasing. - I ,I �.11 __ � . . 1i . I I - - - i . . Is in Russla0l Poland, where one be( alone is known to be 500 miles Ii A 'engthhll miles wide, and about 1,201 feet t ok In many of these Bure pean salt mines the men worklul there never come to the surface, A PART OF 0 IET they would lose too mudh time. As I result some of them have been knowl Practically everybody thinks salt is their entire.lives down in th pleasolit to ,spend only Used to give food a bowels of the earth with their fou flavor, when from : - a physical stand- walls of nothing but salt, salt, $all point it is moot important part"of Ili one of these mines there is la churel the diet, Where salt is search It is sculptured entirely from Salt. . ,00naldered one of the greatest IUXU, Salt wells of Michigan and NeN 'ties and probably no one article to In York, the Great Salt Lake out In Vital more Universal use, unless It be water. the famous rock salt mines a you pick- up the salt Shaker slid and a and Kansas furnish Draot ,zprlal�lo your food with It, not once Louslan cally all the salt used In the Unite, 4.111til'Ing of Its wonderful qualities, States, Besides its table uso, salt M %hare it eonies from or how It 19 Pro* �Uples a most important place it, th imrod for use. comincretal world. It is used extet 'Sidt M gometimes found In an almost Sivoly in the process Of glazing eard I#Ure st-Ite, but an it general role It Is enware and in the preserving Of meAt' Imixed with other things that must be hides and many other articles. Cel 4smoved beforo, It IS allit'016 for table tain smelting proceasos require Ito hot tls'�- Iflowt'vet, theta are some gait ill separating metals from their orel VU64 whort.. , the, only thing necessary and It Is Utilized in fertilizing dr I r its vreparguot. to to pulverip It. 'sells. . ftit Is fouild In lorgeo quantities, In Probably YOU do not know thht YO'fl 11 V*A 'water, but this kind has Ift"Or blood contains About the game PrOPO' "O., US04 tdr the table, at, the Purer tion, of salt as the water of the Ocel 16tt" Ar4i via much More, AvAllabI6. does norftlallY. Islor that reason W11161 jcwlk w4t 1p k*Ae p,A"st form Of 144 0 W thd pleatesit doolt of this kfa& evor, you put gn, eXee3sLve Amount __ NE wu BE ACTME .1 � . I IN UCAON AFFAM i .1 A JEE WV1W EL IN THE *R"' OUGH - The sky above them' arched in I .11 44 - ;����� pitchy blackness, but the starlight was 4 14140 Pauline Ou'ratok has been so keen and, brililant that it lighted I . Appoints# as executive secretary up thq white silence round them, c in charger of the affairs of the Stephen, on his baud$ and knees, hung t � Woman's Auxiliary of the Amerl- over the still figure and gazed down I can X,aglQn. Men Cumick, *110 Into the marble , face, The allort, lives in XnMaAaPolls, PaU044 Silky ))Jack hair made a lit. I headquarters of the. LeKlon,, has tle blot of darkness in the snow, the 0 been a leader 14 Uumerous, Wel- white face was. turned upward a fare Activit nfi to - the . starlight, Taab,ot, lookdng s service men during the war and down, caught for an instant the sIgIrt I � I has served an personnel and em- of its pare oyal, regular lines. And the eet mouth, and the pasgionate, rea- � saptem industrial, establishment. s011ieng face of the .man crouching , ever it, and then looked desperately , I up and down the narrow, lonely trail. I �"-"-Pft They Were five milleg from the -r>wn, , A little over three from the cabins. I � 1� T-7�� g4r T glistening white,aeala lay *,I around, . . m4r . illl the plains of snow grt,* gray In, W the, distance; overhead, the burning uln IJ )rJ L jfttfhay 0,r4jajal flashing, restless otare; and far �Oft,* ­ where the two planets guarded, the . I . hor-zoli, tile red.lights, of the nortU I E-nasialt ,begall to quiver and ,flicker In the night. The Mail on the ground noticed . "---`r�W the=, und straightening himselk 4ud- W_ denly, looked toward them. Lesson IX. I November 28 1,T,he flare, of hell!" ho muttered, HOW JESUS WAS RECEIVED with staring, straining eyes. "It's Lesson1-Matihrw 11,and 12. Printed coming very near." Text -Matt. 11:*1-6, 16-10 , 26,30; 1204 - Talbot saw thaL WS reason had Golden TexL-I'Cofne unto me-, all gone. ftiled ,suddenly, as a light -goes ye that labor aqd, are hea.vy laden, And, down -under o. blast; he,was delfirious I'will give you rest" (Matt. 11- 28). with that sudden delirium born of Historical Setting the awful cold that selzee men like a Time -A. D. 28 and 29. Place- wolf in the long Alght ol 1;lie Aret!c Galilee. , � winters. Daily Readings For a second. the helplessness of his Monday, November 22. -How Jesus situation flaahed in upon Talbot's was Received (Matt. 11: 1-6, 16-19). brain -alone here at midnight oil the Tuesday, November 23. -Warning and frozen trail, with a madman and _* invitation (Matt. 11: 20-30). Wednes. corpse! . day, November 24.-4 Queftion and He saw he must get help at orice. � Answer (Luke 7: 18-25). Thursday, and,, the cabins were the nearest I November 25. - A House Divided point wherfa help could be found. He (Luke 11: 14-26). Fridayo November could get men who would carry Ste- 26�-A Withered Hand (Matt. 12: phen by force It nacessawy, but.viould 9.14).- Saturday, November 27.--�­A he ever live in the fangs of this piti- Band of Believers (John 6: '60-70). loss cold till they, could return to Sunday, November 28.-A ,Man of Sor- Utm? He stood �ilor one moment, Ir - rows (Isa. 53: 1-6). resolute, unwilling to leave him to Comments meet his death, and that horrible Verse 1. According to the Gospel fear that he road In. those haggard harmonies this verse belongs to a time eyes watching the horizon, alone; later than the things described In 2-6. and in that moment Stephen looked It is really the conclusion of chapter up at hini and met his eye, and the 10. Jesus was going from place to madness rolled back and stood o# place healing the sick, teaching the his brain for an Instant. He beck - people, attracting'crowds and making "64 to Talboti and Talbot went many disciples. The picture IS Sketch- down ,on his knees beside him on. the ad in Luke 7: 21, 22. oulow. , I : � I t *1 tered Steplie , Verse 2. John the Baptist had been My claims," mut �il. imprisoned by Herod in a lonely castle "those claims wila be yonrB no,w, do nine miles east of the northern end of you understood? I've arranged It all with that lawyer EoGkins, down - the Dead Sea. town. ,They were to 'be hers it any - Verse S. John was somehow In thing happened to me, but we shall touch with the outer world. In fact, both go. to -night, and they Will be Herod stood in awe of him; simply ypurs. She said I had sunk my soul wished to keep him where he could not In ,them. Talbot, ohe was x1ght, The tell what he knew obout Herod hinn- gold got me; I neglected her; I lot "If. The Jews were confidently ex- r slip back into evil; I've murdered pecting the Meablah, Was Jesus the lie, her for the claims. They are the Messiah, or was He not?. gTice ,bell paid me, But You keep Verse 4. The witnesses were not them, All turns to �-oQdj In V*ur to deal In hearsay, but were to toll hands. They can't harm you. Keep John the truths they had heard and them. They are.my grave." the miracles they had seen. "Stephen, rouse Yourso'U' t 'You are Verse 5. These miracles were to alive! You've got to livel said Tol- be described to John that his faith hot, desperately, *,shaking lilm. by the might be strengthened. shoulder, "I Am going now to bring Verse 6, -John was discouraged. men back with me to help you home. Jesus cheered him up. Things did not You've got to live till I return, do look good to' the rugged pioneer you he�r?" I preacher, whose expectations had been Stephen had turned from him again I right. and put his arms round the motion - Verse 16. The conduct of the un- legs form ,before them. friendly Jews was so inconsistent that 1,Th,1y are coming nearer," Talbot it was difficult to find an Illustration. heard him mutter,- "but! they Shall Verse 17. Reference is here made burn through me first, little orie." to the contrary ways of children at And he stretched hire-6olf across the play. corpse As It to shield it from the aP- Verse 18. John the Baptist came proachlitg flainw, anP far Off the red neither eating nor drinking, In har- eyes of the planets sunk nearer tbA mony with the customs of the rest of horizon, but still seemed to watch the people. I them scroas the snowy waste. Verse 1, The Son of Man came eat- Talbot felt the only one thin thread Ing and drinking, just as other people of hope was to go as fast as his fA, I eat and drink, and neither Jesus nor tigue-clogged feet could MOVO UP to John pleased these fastidious fault- the cabins, and he rose and faced the , finders'. They were determined to re- homeward trail. He felt the hope Of ject Christ and his representatives. Saving Stephen Was just the least," I Verse 25. Those who were ,wise In Jointest flicker that ever burned With- . their own conceit and,who"were deter- Ili. a heart; still there Was the chance , mined to be critical did not understand -the chance that, even should he be, . Jesus. while the open-minded disciples already 'in the sloop tliftt enft in . did. - death when he returned ' they could L Verse 26, "Thy will be done," rouse him from It and drag him into 0 Verse 27. All things pertaining to life again. He forced his heavy feet � the origin and extension of the king- along, and with a great effort started � doin are In the hands of Jesus Christ. into a run. His limbs left like lead, L Ve�fses 28,80. All must Aear the and all his bodY like paper. The L yoke of somebody's authorit�r. in long hours of cold and fatigue, the , comparison with all others 'Christ's excitement, the rush of changing emo- ) yoke Is easy, his burden light, tions he had gone through, had beeA : 12t, 14, In spiteof the abundant love draining his vitality, but he called ,upon all that he had left and put It r and childlike simplicity of Jesus' all into the effort to save lits friend. � teachings, the Pharlsees sought His He know that any one senond lost or destruction. Their pretended reason gained might be the one to turn the, . was that he violated the Sabbath And balance of life or deoth, and he urged i was condemned by the law. himself forward till a dull pain filled Topics for Restarth and Discussion all his side, slid his temples seemed I I Who bursting, and the great lights before I 1. John In Prison (vs. 1-0) - " was John the BaPtIst? 2 H9W did him swam in a blood -red mist. ; he happen to be in prlsoni 3. What Stephen, left alone, raised his head I did John want to knOW9 4. How and gazed round him once, than ba I would John understand the Word Jesus laid big cheek down Oil the cold I . t sent to him? cheek, pressed his lips to the Cold I It. An inconsistent Generation (vs. lips, and his 0ireast UpOla the cold 7 16-10). 5. What Is the meaning of breast just over where the bullet had Jesus' Illustration In verses 16 to 19? Plowed Its Way through the flesh and j 6. Why Were Jesus' critics so inals- bons. The night gripped him tighter ttut and Inconsistent . 7, What had and tighter, and slowlv, he sunk to V sus done that caused certain ones to steel). 1 toe radically opposed to him? .LIONVOL, i Ili. The Authoritative Christ (Is. Noontide In June. A Sky on the � 25-30)). 8. Who were Meant by the clearest, palest azure, and A, rollicking, . I ,,wise and understanding"? 9- HOW swelling, tumbling sea, fall of smooth, , can any yoke be easy? 10- Moss billowy wAves chtising each other over � authority stands out hers? , 11. Must lt,i Acup green surfaee-waves 'with .. we have authority in religion? �thelr white crests blown backward, �ed Pharlseea (vs. 1244). .. IV. FArag sees and the throwing, their spray high in the air 1; 12. Describe the Pharl and seeming to lough and call to ,611ch , reason for their special animosity. 19. Other In gurgling voices; and Q'i�esft P Were they, themselves' consistent ch* sea and sky the liquid golden sunlight 1, servers.of their Sabbath? --,-L-., -------- 1-_-A tilling the worm, throbbing air, V balt In Any of your food Very soo� spreading itself In dazzling. sheets craving for upon the water, and glinting lit ten r Afterwards you feet ii Ig points on the fly- .. Witter. This to becallsoe lir 0 t) thousand glitterit - �#O*616= Ing spray thrown up by I 6tthmet's tt I eallit for water or liquid a- - - "" �. to counteract the overouppl it strew. It was the steamer "Privict.' I 1�ou have absorbed. -homeward bound. from Alaska, carry- W111111111l11 ug passengers, And a cargo as rich nd yellow as the sunshine. And as f It knew of Its precloilog and co�tly . harge, the steamer out proudly brough'the turbulent water, cleaving to straight passage homeward, home- ward, On the deck of the boat, leaa� ag back Idly Ili a long chair, his aim, gray eyes fixed on its receding hores, where the golden sunshine . � coined palpitating on their portions oveliness, Talbot was sittim with the freshening breeze stirringbis hair and bringing to him the breath of a thousand spring flowers on the land. He was returning, and returning Sue- cessful, with his wo* accomplished, his toll over. his aim achieved, and Among all the lines of pain stamped OIL Ills Palo and quiet face there was , I written a certain triumph, that yet perhaps was not so much triumph A.% relief. It was just four mont4s since he had yeen both laid side by side in their lonely grave in the west�&%Ich; and those four months would ever be a blot of horrible blackness on his life. Should he ever be able to for- get the blank desolation that had closed on him night - after night as he sat by his lonely hearth or paced the floor, his steps alone breaking the aw- ful stillness? Yet Ike had forced him- self to stay and face It, had continued bLis work and his method of life un- ubalikged, Ills men bad noted littlo difference In him. He had stayed the time he had Appointed for hims- self, had accomplished his self-ap- pointed, task, and at last, when he summer burst In upon the gulch and loosened all Nature's letters, he found himself also free; and now, like a black curtain rent In twain and tom from the bright face of a picture, the clouds of the past seemed falling away, leaving his future clear to his gaze. It stretched before him bright as the laughing sunlit sea beneath 1 his eyes. If they could have shared his joy, it they could have had their hame-coming, his fellow -toilers, ]its tellow-prisonersr 'And the salt tears stung his lids until he closed them, Shutting out the vivid yellow light, as lie thought of the desolate grave !a the gulch. The fresh, cool air tanned his face, and the sun smiled upon him? a loose piece of canvas of an awning near him flapped backward and.fo'iward with a monotonous musical sound, the Plash and gurgle of the tumbling waves fell soothingly on his cars. Gradually sleep came over him gently, and in - wrapped his stained, wearied body. his sore, bruised mind. - 'When he opened his eye$ again I It was afternoon. The steamer was still flying onward, but the sea 'Was quiet and smooth, and lay still on every side in the sun's rays as a P801 Of liquid gold, and the shores of Alasira had vanished, lost In a burnished haze L of light. , The End. ________.0�._ WINTER CARE OF I BEES AND HIVES IPacking - and Storing Methods Should Receive Careful Attention. ____ The initial step to the sucCessfnl wintering of bees commences in Sep- tember when the hives are carefully gone through And the weak ones fed a syrup solution consisting of two parts sugar and one of water 'Mi ounce of cream of tartar to 40 lils. of sugar is usually added to invOrt the sugar and retard granulation. Con- tinue feeding in October if necessary J and make sure that each bi-, e has a� least six full frames of sealed stores. The hives should be packed or stor- ed away in November, and various methods may be adopted. At the Ex- porimental Station, Inverinere, B.C., wintering In the cella,r has been tried, in a pit in the Ontario wintering case, and Ili the Kootenay hive case. The last method has given the best results, The Kootenay hive case Is all Ila - prevenient on the double walled hive, and has best, introduced In the form of a permanent hive case, and made to. take the ten -frame hive. There 14 a three-inch space all Around the brood chdinber and supers. T'p to the top of the brood chamber it is kept perman. ently packed with moss or planer shav- ings the year round. This Is covered ss or shaving� from falling Into the hive When Open, There Is also a three-inch space tin, derneath the floor, which 18 kept Per, nianently packed as well. The stories,or' 'lifts," Are all alike and as supers are put on they arc -added. The flat cover Is 3,� inch larg. er al round than the top of the ease dnd small triangular block$ nailed it each corner inside raise it and ausutt permanent ventilation. To pack for Winter all that 11 necessary Is to have one "lift" allow the brood chamber packed with mow or Viiner shavings. To facilitate th( packing we Usually have pillows, rialldt from moss and ugnny sacks, just th( size of the Storey or lift. The eovei is then Added and the bees are pack p.d for the Winter. The only attentiol now required In to keely the efttrano clear of dead bees. � The bees have more protection 11 thin ease than In the double-wallei hive, and the temperature Is kept cool or and more uniform In Summex 0 LThtre is tot the trouble in the Pall, or unpacking In th Sprint, aa In the case Of the singic, I - ­ __ ­­­­ I -M, . - _. ___._.____40 � - . I , 1. , - � I - � - � � - - � , - I , - I - I - $00400001*4000,00 64* for the I I I floosmite 1 0*#0#-#+*#+#4#100*_!$9,4A4 . TWO OULINARY HORItORS There are two cullinary horms- hard, dry, horny scrambled,egski, am watery., mushy acrambled eggs. This 800mij a great pity, AS there is no bot� ter or more easily prepared dish for: tho home luncheon or supper than a light foathery mass of golden Ogg$ cooked to just the right degree of per, � rectfort In this way, - ..- Then, too, this dish may be ran- lered a very economical one as well, ror the number of eggs may be re- auced and bits Of minced leftovers added just as the eggs begin to sligiltly tilicAor, in rue, pan. ASP4,ra- gus tips, cooked peAs, bits of chopped cooked celery or carrot, chOpped cooked Spinach, minced cooked sausage, how, bacon, meat and poul- try are all specially good - additions and may frequently be the means of using up leftovers too Small to use Ili any other 'way. When the eggs are to be served alone, beat them thoroughly, Allow - Ing one for each persons to be served. Add a tablespoonful of milk for each egg and also a tablespoonful of chopped parsley. It the family ob- Jects to parsley Surprise them some morning by adding chives chopped very fine. Salt and paprika may be added to suit the Individual taste. But even It tactfully seasoned the eggs can be ruined In the cookiugl Lot a tablespoonful of bacon dripping welt In the trying pan (the chafing dish in ideal for cooking scrambleA eggs)) and when It sizzles pour In the egg mixture, Let the degree of beat beneath the pan be moderate, for If too hot the eggs will brc-Arn on the edges and the rest will turn to "curds and whey." Now the usual procedure Is to take a kitchen spoon In a tightly clenched fist and sttr with might and main to produce the scrambled effect. Don't do Itl Use Instead your most gentle and skilful touch. Lift the cooked part in large pieces and lot the un- cooked part run to the Wtom of the pan, Continue title shifting and lift - Ing until the ,whole is A. light. creamy mass and Serve Immediately. The same rule of one tablespoonful of liguid to each egg holds good 'when different liquids are ,,combined with the eggs, and tomato sauce catsup, stock and gravies are all gool Chid1r. en giblet gravy is delicious 'with a 3mall quantity of chopped chicken, catsup with ham or sausage and a piquant brown or 'highly seasoned cream sauce with the cooked Yege. tables, Three eggs with. halt a cupful of leftovers will serve four persons gen- erously and it is recommended that the "Aramble" be served on buttered toast slices, thereby Improving not only the appearance of the dish but Securing a convenient service of the principal course as well as the bread course of the meal. I RHUBARB GROWN IN WATER Rhubarb that has taken root may be grown In water, care should be taken, when liftipg the roots from the gar- den, not & Injure them, It Is well to leave them fully ex- posed to the weather for -two days be- fore bringing them Indoors, Then half - fill empty jars with water; It you can got rain -Water so ranch the better. Put the rhubarb roots right into the water, it some of them aria too big they may be cut In portions, though care must be taken to avoid damaging the top buds from which the stalks will spring. The rhubarb does best of all In the early tages of Its growth If It is kept away from a bright light. In a wonder- fully short time the pretty pink stems begin to come up. Then the plants may be removed to a lighter position and they are seen to be really very at- tractive Indeed. It Is surprising what a large num- ber of stalks quite A. small root will send up and eventually the roots should just be placed in the ground again, Any shoots they send'up must be left alotio, and, If this is done, the plants will be In bearing again next year, The only thing to keep In mind Ili connection with this novel culture Is that the rhubarb roots should never I be allowed to become dry, .- ­.. _­ __ , - . ".. " VIORA" wov". 74* Voatis In ftval Wxrfwa in Z004tiv oubc 11 i I A, *r. - A 3UBSTITUTE FOR LINEN Paper doilies, are now being made so closely to resemble those of more sub- stantial fabrics that It is quite diffi- cult to distinguish them from the linen varletloi. When made of heavy r1bbod linon paper, with no cut.oUt designs, and finished with raised borders to suggest Scalloping and dainty embroid- ery, they are most attractive to use for the hasty luncheon. These doilies come In many sizes and shapes and may be used several times, it care Is taken, because they are so durable. REMARKABLE PASSAGE A remarkable passage has just been accomplished by the Danish three - wasted schooner Harris, which has made the voyage from Campbollton, X.B., to Coleraine with a cargo of tim- ber. Before leaving the other side, three of the crew deserted, and the difficult task of bringing the vessel . across the Atlantic devolved on the Danish captain (Mr. B. Harris). the I Danish mate (Mr. C. Rasmussen), and the steward (Mr. 0. Gadow), a young � m L an of German descent, who has only � just passed his eighteenth birthday. . Not only were they successful In ne- i gotlattlig the long trip, but they brought the ship across In the good i time of 20 days. When It became 1 known In Coleraine that a vessel Of I such proportions, carying 500 tons of ! timber, had been manned by such a � small crew, the townspeople enter - I I Mined the latter to dinnerand - press): - I ted them with mementoes of c . A,N". I . I I I I I aLWQ hives. it is less eXl)e11SlV0 tU I- & double -walled hive, as % inch ship, I lap is largely 'used fit Its construction. I The bees come through the Winter In I . good shape and commence work early . in the Spring. Beekeepers would be 9 well Advised to give it a trial, at It 61hu maimy features that are anpatiot . toothtt methods of wIntering bees, M 6 in some ways Aix *oropiane is mom atfactive In locattux a submarine than % destroyer or a patrol boat, alld it way even be able In exetptlonal cir, enwAtancei to 4eAtroy tho undersea T"s6I, usy�, C. G. Grey. editor of the London At-roplane. Thert Is a Popular Illusion, which is not MaCtly % d4luelon) that the '01). ,�:vrver In an rkeropune, can sea aa far down In the 'water as % sUbm&riuQF is 111cely to, dive. Up to A point th1h, ig true, for It the water is cle6r it ir, pos- 61ble to sea some Twenty or thirty feet title It from a point vertically above, and it such water is only forty or t1tty Not deep a submarine Is not likely to aive beyond the visibility point. it Is quite another matter, however. where the water is a kind of len4an. gray Ili color and where ton feet of Nvater over the periscope is enough to hide. a ,submarine as effectually as If st.e we�-e ,twenty fathoms down, Therefore It Is fAirly obvious that the scouting air craft have to depend 00 eurface vision quite as Much as the patrol boats. where the difference � does come In Is in thip angloOt 'vision train which 4,11at surface view Is ob- tained. For instance, a patrol boat might Ysell m%s seeing a perleoPe half a . mile oway, espoplaily it the periscope ,%ers between the boat and the sun, so that the reflection of the sua off the, water Was dazzling the lookout men. The streratt observer, On thP* other hand, Perched up aloft, would have a far better chance. The Pert - .scope, cutting tbrougb, the , water, juakes, a very distlot wake which spreads out on each side so that it makes a liglit but quite distinct ',broad arrow" of foant. 'When the periscope is above water the top of the couning tower Is not far below, sa that thisalso Is visible unless thera Is a beavy brooking Sea, And probably the bubble$ from the ex- hausting air can also be seen. Tlins an escort 09 seapIP-110B shOuM have a far better chance of spotting the.presence of submarines than codl-I any escort on surface ships. At the same time it well to remember that an escort of destroyers or some sildi- gar type of armed shIp- Is '10i"!S811TY, . because the aeroplaue or airship of to -day is not capable of carrying big guns WX i,nong� to sink submarines with certalnt�r, and the art of bOM4 dropping from aircraft has not becoma sufficiently a science to make the ver- tainty of the bobms reaching their mark as great as to the certainty of a. Shell from a four-In0b. gun doing so. Therefore the aircraft by them- selves can only hope to keel) subma- rines submergid by dropplag ,bobras, at them, though they may sink one here and there by a combination OC personal skill and griod luck, whereas, by acting as "spotters" for the highly trained gunners of destroyer flotillas they can co -opera e very materially In tile ac ___ , - 11action. of onemi .submarines. Where the naval air craft really do come in is In the immense surface ot sea which 'hey can cover in a very short time �Ld their ability to take, enemy submarines by -surprise while lying on the surface "airing" them- selves and charging up their batteries. A small fast scouting aeroplans doea anything between eighty and a huri- dred miles an hour, and at a height Ot 7,000 or %000 feet It is fairly hard to see. On land one is generally warned i of an aeroplane's arrival by the souxiii of its en-Inee, but. at sea the lapping, 0 of the water and the Whistling of the wInd through rigging or around Super- structure drowns the sound or the acre engine till it is fairly close. Cor, - sequently a, Seaplane baa more than 0. sporting chance of Setting within a mile or so of a submarine before It Is seen, and if It gets within that dis- tance it should be abl.,� to make things very unpIcasant. for the submarine. even if it'has not the luek to sink it ontright. Even at night Ili moderately fair weather, which Is naturally the beat ter submarle operations, big Seaplanes with searchli.-Ilt3 could do as 'much tor. keep ,submarines tinder water and so add t3 their troubles by preventing them from Stopping on the surface long enough to air their Interior$ and to charge their storage battories.­ New York World. WMTZ PEOPLE RARE. A snow white hind has been born in an Inverness deer forest, and I--, being guarded with the utmost care. it is not only because of white hlnd In considered an emblem of good luck, but also that such a case Is, very rare. While the albino Is common enough in rabbits, rats, mice, guinea,pigs and certain other animals, it Is very rare Ili deer, and even rarer in the case of horses. A true .albino Is A, creature, whose skin and hair is devoid of coloring matter. True, it has pink eyes, but this Is simply because the absence ot pigment in the eyeball allows the retl blood Ili the capillaries, or tiny veins to become visible. Albino people are rather rare In this country, but not go mliell so to other part% of the world, In New Guinea Is A. race of albince-,AvIlose skin varle-,4 in color from pink -white to a whitish brown. In Bolivia there Is a similar tribe from Who has grown UP the legends of the White Indians. Birds give frequent examples of at - I binism. You find ,albino jaekdaws, rooks, blackbirds and even swallowS. Stronger still, there are albino f6h. A race of albino trout has been �170_ duced in America and found to breed true. Albino flowers are, of course, vc,ry I common. There are certain curious polnts� about albinos which are difficult to I explain. AS everyone knows, white pigq are common in most partt. z,* the -world. In Virginia there A.1,8 none. White pigs are born there, as every. where else; but the farmers destroy th,em At Once. ThO reag011 11� that, Ot Allowed to live they llevtr reach MCI- turity. They,eat the Point root Plant Which is common everywhere, and their bones turn pink and thtlr hoofa drop off. Blftek Pig% eat the salue root with perfect Impunity. � a