PAGE 2. \‘vt hnw St'IIIOm is this recognized. Ch! to‘llvrt nf tho world; the great enterprising are Christian. And He has won the moral Thvt'o‘ is no rountry so sure to respond to and he‘llbt'ulnPS? as the Christian countries. h,,n AL ' A - -. .u. u. yvullvl It _ . . ° slugh degme :v'on the money power . And for that r eason, Bis cause “ragga. (1 Work. -- e an Yet the lli‘it‘ft'St. i-eileetion makes it clear that money is just. â€lo' uniwm‘d symhnl of much that is best in man. Money hon- estly acquired is timught. labor. diligence. skill and courage. A man's mwney is the man transmuted. If that be realized. the tremendous responsibility of 3 Chris- tian in regard to money is manifest. The man who wastes his money n_n i‘:~|l.\"o_.r self-indulgence is wasting himself. 'I‘HF. I..\TF PRINCIPAL DENNY UNCE POINTED 017T THAT murv ts ~a'ut atmut mmwy in tlw New Testament than about anything: “150‘, 5.. much at mmmnn and rathm' sordid talk has money for its «unit-ct. that it might haw hmfn vxpected that. the GOSDels anot Epistle»: “3‘3â€". hay? had a mind abova it. 'l‘hvw Is prunf that ï¬nd mad» tho Sabbath as a “Sign" Of the Mr nf am‘io'nt Isravl. According to pl‘OphPcy. as the nation nbsm-xml :uut hmmrmt. or dishunorml and I'Pjectmt the Sabbath, m «hunk! Its t'ntm‘P b0. 'l‘ht‘y ctisobnyvd God's Sabbath law, and \vvl'v ~‘t'atto'l'mt nbmaddon tribos Inst. thpir places burned, and tho‘ po'uplo' bo't'amn a “bywnrd ilntl hissing.†Avvnrolzm: tn ymlr judgmmt. ii Sunday Observancp or non- nIm-rmnm- hwlpim: m' hindm‘ing tlw kingclnm of ï¬nd in our twmtxw“? n-nwmlufrnm o‘wr and always that. pvm‘yfvil conquered, every “'er rightml. hnlps tho comma: of the kingdom. ___V .7 -‘JV w-mlarizm! Hw Sabbath day. she would not endure a hundred yo-ars. Abraham le-nln sand: "As we keep or break the Sab- bath clay. wv nuhly saw' or mmmly 1030 (hp last best hope by which man arm's." SIDNEY [AMER SAID TU \\'.\l.’|‘ WHITMAN: “YOU CANT mako- a ro-puhlir «ml 0" musrlo‘s. bruins 01‘ Rocky Mountains. llvpv}lvlu'~-:l_vo- l‘nado'_nf spirit." l wvnt mm‘ to my nwn secrt‘t hiding-bléé6:-31fét‘éa thanks and npvno-d Hw bank. I began m wad tlw ï¬rst line on the title paw. Prinh-d by the British and F oreigu Bible Snciety and on down to the lust. This is' why I always dosiro to do my part in supporting that Sovio-iy and lim- daughtor. tho Canadian Bible Society. I dosil‘o in so.) ihv Socivty so strong that it. can give) tho. book to eomn nthPl‘ young lad who may want it_ as. badly as I did. mum, 313331113 sup Tm'r IF THE I'NI’I‘ED STATES Pimh-nlly thv man had seen my disappointment. for after snmo- days. he) c-amv and nfl'orod mv the book for what I had hm'n bidding. I shall never forgot. the feeling of awe and rever- o-m-v'wnh which I tonk thv book that now was my own. Tho' Bihlv was brought. out. and I put up my bids. but a man m-nt t'artlu-r than I could go. With a sinking heart, I saw [mm mm thv book from the hand of the auctioneer. I dnn’t mm! to h-ll ut’ my sorrow. my tears arm crying. viurn l lvft. [ went behind 01â€"11“ Qiablv and prayed that. God “'0'!!!“ no)!» mo? t0_ gc-t (hp bemk [was longing for. l HM) ALWAYS DESIRED 1'4) 7'9\\'.\' .:\ BIBLE. AND BEGAN wry o-ul'l) tn saw:- my pennivs. 'l‘lw amount did not grow very fast. fur my ï¬rst salary (for taking can" of cattle for some of tho- IIo-Ighlmrs cunsisted M 0m- l'nal‘sv hnmt‘spun suit, a pair Hf ho'au' sluws‘. and about ï¬fty ('Pnts a ymu'. l puwhml and saved, savml and pinched. till 0110 day I heard that. a mam tfll'ttlm' clown Hm mile-v was gtmlg to sell out at ant-Hun. l knows“ hv had a Bible', Perhaps that wnuld b0. 801d hm? I had tn tw ttlt‘l‘t‘ at tho! atlt‘timl. WHEN o'..\"l'HERl.\'E BOOTH WAS DYING, SHE TOOK THE wo-olohng rim: .ur ho-r ï¬nger, and slipping it on to one Of the go-m-x'al‘s tingm-s', said: "By this lnkvn we were united fur lime, and by it now we aro- unitml fur eternity.†The general kissed her. and promised that he would be faithful tn tlu- mw. and he hers and Inc-rs alone for ever and ever. In» “1- ho-lio-w that God is still what He was in their days and In Hlo'm‘.’ 'I‘HE TASK III“ THUS!) WHI) SF'I‘ IM'T AT THE BEGINNING tn .aw HII- \HH III “Ith and {OI JPSUS Christ. was at least. as IIphIll and mumhvlming as that hpfnro nursehes tndav. but Hm tmklml it and l'UllSidPlillL' all â€In fOI‘CPS against them, “It“ \IIIIII nIIIaIIIlIIus Hump-Is! EWII thmugh thom what Hm! has in IIIIWII' ‘ Main and simplv teachings 0f Jpsus‘? 'l‘hzil way ï¬es help fOr thé snilltinn Hf o‘mr national ills. In thnso- clays, men and women daily lived their religion, and \wrv mvmbm's of â€I“ church militant . . . Might itnot be \wll tn r-o--o-slalilisli the family altars in this land. In thus» days. parents were not content to lcaye to an hour or Sabbath School once a week tho religious traming of their ('hildl'o'n. would “1- nnt proï¬t as a nation if we placed lPss reliance Upon "mp-mac!» Alawg Iand aprjnvstly ggught to get. back _to the Aronnol that family altar in the days long gone by, father, motlwr and children knelt. in humble devotion and gained that. help amt inspiration that nerwd them to splendid deeds and set'rillci-s. Time was when the family altar was the rule, not. the ex- ceplinn. In that time, the family Bible was far more than a mere ornament of family record. Its well-thumbed pages tes- tified to a spirituality and a religious devotion that nerved the pioneers to sacrifices of which the present generation knows nothing. «JERTAINLY NO ONE WDULD THRUST THIS mUNTRY BACK to the conditions that obtained a generation or two ago, but who among us will deny that we could, as a nation, reach back into the past and bring into the presentafew of the things that our fathers and grandfathers had and which we have neglected of late years. In c'ultimting tho sim'ii. WP must SN? “(1 Hull] “0 I lll‘Jo ~~Thv B01 md of the B1 itish and Foreign Bible Society. ' cuwv‘ pahvnt fm-v v m changv them whmi “0. will chic manhood tirm against the crowd so'nsv nf duty. sumething of a faith. l-nwrmwv fur Hm laws “:0 ourselves havo made Would you win all the world for Christ?â€" Une way there is and only one;â€" You must live airist from day to day, And see His Will he done. But who lives Christ must tread His way, Leave self and all the world behind, Press ever up and on, and serve His kind with single mind. No easy way,â€"r0ugh strewn with stones, And wearisome, the path He trod. But His way is the only way That leads man hack to God. But his lone cross and crown of thorn Endure. when crowns and empires fall. Thy might of His undying love In dying conquered all. Only by treading, in His steps, The all-compelling ways of Love Shall earth he won, and man made one With that Great Love above. For The Quiet Hour mmwy ls manifnst. The" man who wastes his r snlf-indulgvncn is wasting himself. am is this recognized. Christ has won the in- x-ld: the great entpmrising. thoughtful nations “AI “1 I--- 1'0 '1' "I WOILD _,_ “C‘"""' .uwulvw has won the-morai'vsenge of the world. sure to respond to sentlments of mercy "\u ' . |I_\.:An AA-g“_-__ 1 It“ i. ‘ k to gain. The ï¬rst place of interest we came to. about eight miles out, was the Tikitere Geysers and mud holesâ€"the latter far longer than those at Whaâ€" karewarewaâ€"the Devil’s Porridge bowl. the Devil’s Bath and the Gates of Hell, the last a pool of thick mud the size of ‘a largish room, boil- ng furiously in immense seething i Lï¬ï¬kk‘ ‘- Yesterday I went for what is called the Five Lake Drive, the only long trip which I seem to have time for; for aftc, r all, I have only three clear days. and there is so much to be seen. This drive of 30 miles each way was worth even the dis- comfort of being jammed up with a number of strangers in what was er- roneously called “a seven-seater motor.†1n the clear, champagne-like qual- ity of its air. the feeling it gives you of having been washed clean from all the weariness, the sense of melancholy and ' futility, which is the long aftermath of the war in the engrossing wonders, drawing you out of yourself. and above all in its perfectly wonderful endowment of medicinal hot springs, which em- brace pretty well everything which can be found in Europe, at a quar- ter the price, writes Elinor Mor- duant. the well-known writer, in the "Daily News." I cannot. make out. why more peo- ple do not come out to New Zealand even if it wérp only for Rotorua; for it seems to me it can be lik nothing also upon earth in all re. Spools to offer. Altogether, New Zealand has giv- en me its best, and I evidently have much in store as I intend leaving the. first of the year for the thermal region, and later for the South Is- land, where I will take a motor trip over one thousand miles. l I have motored over all the ranges within lil'ty miles and probably more of Wellington. The New Zealanders have made roads into the most im- possible places. ()n Boxing Day, Deâ€" c-ember twenty-sixth, we motored over the ranges beyond the harbor. In the distance, from Khandallah, the mountain ranges. lying behind the opposite shore, always are so blue, with clouds hanging around the summits, I have longed to pene- trate them. They do remind you of Kinpling’s “Something hidden. Go and find it. (lo and look behind the rangesâ€"â€" Something lost behind the ranges, Lost and waiting for you. Go!†The bathing in the long wash of the Australian Seas is splendid, vtoo. The climate here 1s very pleasant except the wind. Recently, there has been 34,» much rain that many roads are impassable. Slips on the railrtmds also interfered with Christ- mas traffic. W'cllingtou is decidedly ditfcrent from any 11131311 I have ever seen. Situated 1111 a protected 13311 of the harbor, which resembles a huge bowl, s11V 1111 miles In nine miles, the city 11x11111ds back on 111 the hills. The 11111111111111 g1oups of hills a1ound the city 1101111 the various subur.bs '11111 liousos appear to ho perched on 1111.1 1.111g11s 111 11111 hills. I quite 011- 1111111 many of them will tumble down 11111 hills 0111.1 day. At various points around 11111 11111111011. suburbs are found. Aftc1 No 111115111 Atmkland, I j0111110yed 011 to my final destina- 11911 1111110 capital c11y,_AWel_l_i1_1gt011. We arrived at Auckland, the city at the northern end of the North Is- land, very noted for its splendid harbor. Standing on one of the high hills there, the city was very pic- turesque, with the many inlets of water, extensive harbor, red-roofed houses, trees and green, closely- cropped hills, dotted with sheep and tiny lambs. Suva, the second port of call was interesting, too, with the native Figian and the eastern atmosphere created by the many natives of India found there. Honolulu, the ï¬rst port of call on our passage across the Pacific, re- mains in my mind as a beautiful garden peepled mostly with pretty Japanese maidens in their native kimonas. The last ï¬ve 01' six months have certainly brought me many new and interesgmg experiences. Christmas, under the Southern Cross, in the middle of summer, was vastly diflerent from our own mer- ry Christmas with the blankets of snow and happly Christmas cheer. On Christmas Day, we motored to the beach on the western coast to a little bay, a summer resort. We went in bathing before dinner and again before tea, in the salt water. I wonder if I will ever enjoy other bathing again! It is so delicious to have the large waves come rolling in, dive through and be ready for the next. Wellington, N. 2., Decenter 30, 1924. The newey Chronicle, which ar- rived soon after I did and continues to come with each mail, every two weeks, surely does carry me back to Durham and vicinity again. It! [pry Iquijur 1-911. of 9mg. um um, New Zealand “Cabana-3' Khandallap, r. Illal'l y. Felicia. broken in health and pen- niless. goes to Boston seeking her former husband; She comes to Lechmere’s home in a storm. but _. d . Then she relents and takes Felicia in. Lechmere reaches home just. before his former wife dies. and they are re-united. Later Lechmere kills himself, .and Harry Vassall re- turns to Pen-ma, and they will re~ mam Later the Vassalls are in London on their honeymoon. Sir Humphrey and his wife are not getting along, as the wife has taken up question- ahle associates. including Felecia. Against the wishes of her husband. Petrina also takes up with Felecia. Lady Emilia divorces Sir Humphrey and returns to Boston. The Vassals continue to disagree, even after their return to Boston. and ï¬nally comes a separation. which two years late ends in divorce. Meantime Sir Humphrey has engaged himself to Gentian Tyrell. but delays marriage which is opposed by his daughter. After her own divorce. Petrina brings Sir Humphrey and Lady Em- ilia together and they remarry. Pet~ rina and Dick Lechmere, lonesoMe, buntz not inllove, marry. O -A-‘ The super-photo-play. “Let Not Man Put Asunder," which comes to the Veterans’ Star Theatre tomor- row and Saturday night, is said to be one of the most wonderful of screen creations yet released and one that every man. woman and child should see. The play is adapt- ed from the famous novel by Basil King. with a cast composed of Lou Tellegen and Pauline Frederick. ad- mitted the screen’s most emotional actress. The play in brief is: Petrina Faneuil and Harry Vas- sall. both wealthy and prominent socially. marry. It is a love match. DichoLechmere, their friend, has his misgivings. He had married Felecia do Proney. an opera singer, only to be divorced after she had re. turned to the stage and a doubtful life. Vassall’s sister. Emilia. has been married several years to Sir Humphrey de Bohun and lives in Lo_ndon. . Screen Adaption of Basil King’s Great Book Should Be Seen by pvflvnnn - ‘.55‘ A A nizim éllnus country indeed, whvrn (mo catches (mos ï¬sh at “no pool and cooks it at another no morn than hm or three feet away. In tlm Shorts shup in the little 1mm, more are stuffml ï¬shâ€"brown trout 11p to 25% pound. ramhnw trout. 11;» g,“ 23 pound. and sea tmut. also topplng_22 pound. ‘ .-. uu- w II‘ “(T 1’ so full that 0110 can scarcplv see the water, and there is room fur no morn. This is enough to necessitate a constant cleaning out of the pool. of which the bottom. away from this stranger material. is an almost pure white lime or sand. The. depth of the water is from eight to ten feet. And all this arranged by Nature as a hosiiitahle setting to the. most marvellous assembly of rainbow troutâ€"originally importedâ€"which one ran possibly imagine. so many that they jostle. each other! We. move twenty yards or so down the stream. which runs out. of the pool to Lake Roto’rua. a good mile and a half away. It is running in rapids: and yet the ï¬ish are coming tip it in eohorts; very soon, the caretaker tells me. the pool will he P..Il Al_-1 Set in the side of a hill, the pool is of triangular shape, not. I should judge. more than eight yards in each direction. And yet it is said that ton million gallons of water riso up in it evory 24 hours; and not, only water. for in two places z curious material, like the tranSpar- out. roarso black sand that one finds upon the hoach in tho Canary Is. lands. minglml with a clear. white silica. is thrown up in, say two over- runtinucms handfullsâ€"no morn. This is onough to nocossitato a ,,,_-‘.â€".1..._ Issv in a motor on the way homeâ€"to see what is called the Fairy Pool, 3 natural sanctuary and spawning place for trontâ€"providing the sort 0; sport a ï¬sherman might dream one spot which we could reach upon the side of the steep hula which eur- round and shadow it so thgt it seems to be lying there in all its begutz; lookingâ€"as a Maori woman said M though it had been dropped there at the last moment, m auctions and enchanted in a way that none of the lgrgeg lakeegre. nf. The whole effect of the wide lake and distant mountains, with this sil- ver veil blowing across the fore- ground in clouds and puï¬â€˜s, is beau- tiful beyond words, while the sun is so warm that it is delicious to sit and back in it, with the whare be- tween my back and the cold wind. All the same. I drag myself up and offâ€"far too long a walkâ€"though I am fortunate enough to get a lift m a motor on the wav humpâ€"in mm Over another hole, a foot or. so further awa , her dinner is cooking, covered wit a piece of sackingâ€"- meat potatoes, onions. I have been helping a small boy of between two and three build a castle with his bricks, and he is now Playing at mi feet. He has a perfect y round, dar head, as smooth as a seal’s, with the hair cut in a straight fringe across his forehead; immense dark eyes and that wonderful, deep color, which comes from the mixture of European and Maori blood. On this child, who grandfather his mother tells me, was an Eng- lishman, it is like a deep crimson stain on weathered oak, but on some of the young girls, it is like a car- Today I am sitting scribbling qun the steps of a whereâ€"or native houseâ€"which is used as a tea-room in the vi]! e of Ohinemutu, on the edge of-the ake. The native woman who keeps it has just taken the kettle oi! the top of a steam hole not more than two yards from the door- step where I am sitting, and is mak- lng my tea. __ Everyoné, hills. So the old dog wearily tra- velled those 70 miles back here to the farm, and there he stayed until he died. This is not. a story; every statement is literally true. Some- times I wonder if there is anything in this round world that equals the love of a dog for his master. ,_ _ "v UV...“ Aun uvvulue, auu in different. directions, how coul that dog know which way. to go to ï¬nd the master that he loved? He couldn’t, like a carrier pigeon, make great circles until he saw some landmark that he knew. That sense of direction was in this case surely marvelous. But Edward was just coming down to see his brother, so he put the old dog into the auto and brought him back to the farm again. This time the old dog stayed a week, then he was gone again. He knew the wav now, but when he reached the Tunxis Club, there was no mas- ter there. Edward had become gamekeeper for a man who owned some 6.000 cres in the Liwhï¬eld hills. so the Old (‘02 Wpfll‘ilv lm_ After three days on the farm. the old dog disappeared. A week after- ward he appeared at the Tunxi-s Club. Edward said the dog was not footsore or hungry. He had proba- bly rested nights and stole 0r hunted sufficient. food. But how could a dog, carried more than 70 miles in a box where he could see nothing, and in different directions- hnw nnnlrl (George A. Cosgrove. in Rural New Yorker.) A very remarkable case of this sense came to my knowledge not long ago. Edward Wraight, then gamekeeper for the 'I‘unxis Club in Western Massachusetts, had an old [dog a little fox terrier, 12 years old, lpartly deaf and half-blind. He ‘wanted to send the old dog to his brother George, here in Wa'lmlington. who now owns the farm I owned for 20 vears. The old dog was nailed up in a box and put. in an express car at Winsted, Conn. He had to. travel about 60 miles to the south‘ east then he transferred to the Vermont Central Railroad and was carried north 14 miles. George W raight was at the West Wilming- ton station to meet the dog. He took him out of the box, put him in his buggy and drove six miles north to Stafford to do some trading, then 8% miles south to his farm. There was another fox terrier on the farm, a son offlthe old dog. Bocauso of the difï¬culty of secur- ing accurate information as to the origin of imported red clover send, our Canadian farmors aw urged to socuro locally grown sood where pos- sihlo, provii‘ling such sood can be 88- cure-(l roasonahly free from noxious words. lt would be much morn pro- titahlv to plant. a largor quantity of local seed, the germination of which was impaired to some extent, than to tako a rhanoo of winter killling in tho raso of imported rlovers. tho origin of which was not, known. Sood from Swodvn and the_ Nor- thm‘n Statcs has compared quxte ta- \'01'ably With our own. Tests of the relative hardiness of domestic and foreign red clovers have been conducted on the Dom- inion Experimental Farms for a number of years past. \Vithout ex- cept-hm. French and Italian clovers have winter killed badly under most cnnditions. while English seed and that secured from the. southern por- tion of the red clover areas in the. l'nited States has been less hardy than Canadian grown seed. Red clover seed has been a failure or partial failure during the past season in a great many districts where seed as usually produced. Such a condition alwa 3 means dan- ger for the farms in nada, partic- ularly in those sections where sev- ere winters sometimes interfere with our red clover stands, saysOG. P. McRostie, Dominion Astrologist. The danger to which he refers is that of securing imported red clo- ver seed from regions where sorts, henâ€"hardy for our conditions, are produced. A shortage of domestic red clover seed on the American continent always means heavier im- portation of foreign seed. Seed has been coming from France and Italy, and therin lies, at least in part, our danger. RED cwvn s- (Experimental Farms Note) SENSE OP DIRECTION â€$in a plaintive «diliii'iï¬ cali‘iil‘ dgoara. The seal had came back. He howled until he was admitted to the family circle and fed with a piece of ï¬sh. Some of the boaoh cnmlwrs in Al- aska adopt habv soals as pots. They become as faithful as dogs. and it is impossible to banish â€mm «‘mce they become auavhnd to their mas- ters. An instance is oitpd of a baby seal that was takon out. to 503 in hopes that it would reunito with its hen}. About midnight. more was In teaching her baby to swim. the mother seal flounders out on the rockery. gathers the baby seal under her flipper, and slips carefully into the water. Suspending the baby on her flipper. the mother seal barks. R‘l‘unts and whines in her attemmts to indicate what, is expected of the baby. If the baby refuses to per- form. the mother spanks it with her flipper. The young seal learns to swim by floundering a few strokes at a time.- When it becomes ex- hausted and starts to sink. the m0- ther snatches i_t frem danger. BABY SEALS (ByF. H. SidnevV Babv seals are as helpless in the water at birth as is a human lmdx. They must. be taught to suim. :m'a instructed in all the lore of seal life including how to hunt feed and esâ€" cape their enemies From the time a babv seal is laid snugly \xithin :1 bed of dry seavseed. until he is able to look out for himself. he is sull- ject, to an unrelenting discipline: a log House, and then the whole family set out. to clear the farm and make a living. They cut down the trees and sold pulpwood; they raised a little grain amongst the stumps; they bought a cow; and the next. year, they cut. down more trees. sold more pulp, grew more grain. and so gradually won out. Today they all still work in the fields. but. their farm is worth 835.000. and they have a fine herd of cows and a line flock of poultry. while they go to town, not barefoot. as of old. hut in a ï¬ne automobile. All this in nine years! And in that time. while. this poor widow was making good. we. suppose a number of others far more favorably situated in the he- ginning. have actually lost. money. Sometimes seeming adversity is lml. a prelude to sureessful effort. and seeming prosperity is but a. prelude to failure. Much depends upon enur- age and to“. forcibly that this is still a wry young country and there is still room for the pioneer. The Quebec Telegraph tells a striking story at a brave French-Canadian woman. who, left a widow with eight (-hil- dren, nine years 880. borrowed 8.30 from her friends and made her “av to Abitibi where she tack up land. The neighbors helper! then} to build Chevrolet “Canada's pioneers are swim-M to belenf to a former day, but m _ cutout! y_ we‘ppe .rem‘nggiml My) Here's .11 uncle from one Of «mp â€chum which shpws the spirit, 0! the old pioneer still lives in this countty: Sales and Service A. N OBLE. Prop. GUARANTEED REPAIRING 1 I03!†'0†PIONEER Headquarters for Greases The parts of the 0' w are most EXIMSOJ D b not so active. Hend “lies the nose and chu Ml-bitvs «mm Hun! "uni “m Old I" HIH‘G “hm â€h, .‘ dvhllnatwl. an: m... Ill!!! 1v0n1nu:. . mSlll'O' 1“ Hi" HM ‘...1;J a‘enl ch'Llc'M H!" mum; «' 1 88. 'h" llH!‘i"!' I""H1‘ ( d n contrmtwm u: tn.- mm mes “Inch â€Hm Irmni m: “I“. ‘|H\\lll'..' u 13.. ,- pull“! and {mum ..N “flan (of Hn- HST'WM‘ . ,; 1 tinned. adMotmlmt «"2:u"-,.-‘ plum in (hr 1 nun xv: 4: u cultin s‘anurc'hv. 1m. , ‘d'flws tlw IIHMH' int, “‘0“ max 10" Muhg'f :Hmill m Sllddl‘li ¢=\|HD~HI‘¢ '_«o \q "wiï¬tï¬ "I. Y‘mhhmy ‘\\"E 1‘ burning Hr 1mm. [mediate Attention New â€â€œ011 “3"] “I“! [0""i'!lo\ t1 «bin dummy :m In ;.\....| orlx canâ€; 1m t-«utï¬tutw yhaw m"'1l|llmi |. . W portant M !"¢'Ilulnlu: â€1m? 1 OIDUSUI'P M â€Id :HlW-wn! m "PS. C. 1'. V1111 1“: l'ied \\ 0111311: 21111 31.1 2 Inchns:\\1111:111 1.11 “I“. I" I“1‘11U11' l“\\'11u|11 \1.11 1\1111 mlfl'timls 1111 11111 :1 OISPS â€H11 I 1'1111111 111 weight lw'.’ 3. ““vi“ H In one has had an “VP. years ugu'.‘ £31m ' child MM mOVNI 1’" that yuu 03!. \‘u did. that. suppliv- body than ll lls‘d's is dcmu in nurnm CHIIHH‘I UH- lamiy storm! up PIIPI'II). eral instruflmns «, thou! as fullmxs: sary [cl‘nh‘ms‘ by 0‘ “108‘ and “\u 1'; III?!“ MM 3 mm somv I'al'l'mhych‘: sugar . Hal‘imh) such things as [c macaruni and hi] Yun “NIX ' can-I'M“. “I" bans. u-im: ‘ 88.84193 lc'HllI' oil. '7‘" H“ 800“!“ Hf SH dy swm'h‘. l clkfl". 2h “" olivv nil. IOIH' mount Hf ‘ daily. 2, "\Vh: HIGHER consulm '1 Its alum pound~. \ of «mix .. (jm'im: ch' m 1.03 W“ marknts 3! per pmmd prior 1" ‘- (hp ha-‘I~ costs. SH 1 drinkm's‘ mturv. "'3 The (Copyright, 1924, by The HEALTH Qtl 0 nm for Reduction '8. C. P. “Pitt‘s: “I am : Rc'dlfl, nu MINI}, at kp a mmlvl'a arhuhydl‘ah' (Larlmhych‘a int?- as [MUN uf suua “'0“ ’. fobruu‘y 5, 1‘ \I In IVIII at ash “I†HI Reply IIIH I" unswm NIH roam ¢ illdl} HIM (H THE h III J 51! mm H am um IIM \\ l"!