“!Aw my daughter ? Certainly not, air‘ y, you seam to forget you‘re only my clerk!" And Sir Stephen Windermere frowned blackly at the young man who had dared to suggest such a thing. ‘ Norman Granville bowed his head slightly. He had his own ideds of right and wrong, and he kad considered it right to make a formal application for the hand of Ann Windermere. He was a cleanâ€"shaven, goodâ€"tempâ€" : eredâ€"looking young Britisher, just such a one as is shaped by a public sehool into a good citizen. His somewhat| snub features lookedâ€"grave enough,| but his grey eyes twinkled bumotolsâ€"}l ){‘ as Sir Stephen acted the stage| heavy father" to the life. o "If my daughter was & poor gv.rl‘ you‘d never have thought of her," conâ€"| tinued Sir Stephen, his wrath growing | hotter, "but you considered it was .‘ very good way by which ‘to get hold ; of my money, if the silly little fool| eould be persuaded to marry you." ' "I wish your daughter was as poor as myself, Sir Stephen, then you wouldn‘t refuse me. Can‘t you give your money away *" | Mc e u_ Geaahan‘s hushy white yout ud 2 _ ofo "What!"‘ S.r Stephen‘s bushy white, eyebrows stood out stiff with indignaâ€" tion as he frowned again. "You m:â€"‘ gest that I should «disinherit my daughâ€" ter to oblige you! Your impudence, sir, is colossal!" â€" "8o is my love, Sir Stephen. 1 mean to marry Ann whether you like it or uatkt." *°/*1l1*" a 4 * wo ao ce mem . Stephen. "You give Ann to me, and | I‘ll improve your Thex explosive for} gas engines." ' "Â¥ou!" Sir Stephen was so astonishâ€" ed at the audacity of his clerk that he | almost spluttered as _he .went on:| "You‘re a gas bag, sirâ€"the very last person I‘d entrust ‘Ann to. And what‘s more, you‘re a fool!" "Look here, Sir Stephen," the young man said earnestly, "I shouldn‘t have come here if I hadn‘t a nnon:ble‘ chance of improving my position. I‘ve been studying e&cmhtry hard. _ I‘ve fitted up a litt laboratory of my own, and Pvée found out how to imâ€" prove on the Thex. 1 can show youâ€"" "You dare! You dare interfere with mey mnatent. and I‘ll ruin you! Jt -t_ook B~~ NMorman GranvilHe It was only as he h o he was not altoge! The lbex explosive } explosive engines, an Btephen a fortune 2 hake GPmA¢C no smile from there was only tor Ann Winde m Feuy * C CCCE O wik "Did you tell him you could improve | m his silly old mixture?" I "He didn‘t believe me, and he dared,| me to interfere with his patent. You 1 wee, his patent covers my process, nnd‘ I ean‘t sell it to anyone but him, and | e won‘t buy it!" T "Oh, Norman! What shall we do *" "Get married!" was his surprising | mggestion. "I‘ve got a thousand, andl that will keep us going for a while.| Then I‘ll discover an explosive better than his, and on that his pltent' doean‘t cover. I‘ve the ilea of it alâ€" ready; I tried a mixture the other day, and though it was no good it was on the right lines; and when I perfect it we‘ll make terms with him. I krow I‘m asking a big thing; it‘s a q,ueation of love against money, but I‘ve an idea that my Ann is all for love." She smiled up at him. "If you hadn‘t a penny I‘d marry you, dearest!" "I wish a fog wou‘d come on, s0 that 1 could hug you for that," Norman whispered, his face beaming again, but as the sun was shining, he had 1, conâ€" tent himseift with squeezing her arin. "I‘m going to give notice at the registry office at onee," the maiterfal young man announzed, and althouzh eC If books are treasures anywhere it | would seem that they would be es pecially valuable at sea. But, speakâ€" img of the average seamian, an old time mariner says that the rarest sight to be seen in a ship‘s forecastle is a man with a good stock of books. Occasionâ€" ally, it seems, & sailor does get hold of a good book or two; and it is quite pathetic to see howshe will treasure EEECECY The mariner adds that he was never "In but one forecastle that had not a| Bible and a copY ot Shakespeare, the property of some man who held on to them voyage after vovage. And guch books get read at sea with a closeness and persistency one may look for in vain ashord exCept myiopg‘ students. ... It is interesting to note the dl of reading in the forecqaties J.é especially foreign ones. In the ship‘s 1 L e 200 M Nh ie tds weete t y. ©BDORIERE ACMCCER C T T ferecastle itâ€"is setdoff possible to read %.@ll owing to the absence of light, Reading Under Difficulties at Sea l diad morin amnmnnl "Of course, he‘ll lecture you & lot. The best thing is to make no reply. He may send yoa right nva. If so, fowward your address, and arrange to fetch you. But nothing that Sir Stephen can do shall stay us from iet- ting married within a month. nd !now, dear heart, goodâ€"bys till then. \ Write as often as you can!" ! Eighteen months later Mr. and Mrs.'l |\ Norman Granville were in Norman‘s Haborator{, where he was spending ifourtee'n ours & d:& making his exâ€" | periments. Master Norman, aged six \ months, cooing and dancing, was in his \ mother‘s arms, as she was looking on | anxjouslty. . ,..... s o ever. he Ann turned swiftly, swinging rOUund with baby in her arms: . His slight graep relaxed, and the bottle fell into a mortar in which Norman senior had pounded a combination of chemicals. Instantly there was an explosion. A flame shot up and Norman hurled himself on the mortar, shutting out the feeding air from it with bis iroad ENE u% Instantly there was an °xp flame shot up and Norma® himself on the mortar, shut the feeding air from it with j chest. The atr was charged with moke, and baby set up a ho a bit scared, ran out of the taby on a sofa, and ran back ne HEses® CC CColnce \ "Shoutâ€"singâ€"pinch meâ€"do someâ€" thing!" he cried boisterously. "Babs has solved the problem!" ‘ And then, with bis arm round his | wife‘s waist, he ran her into the next | room and hugged and kissed baby, | who was so astonished to see the ‘black man that he was awed into silence s11ence . "Babs, old man!" Norman cried, p.cking him up, "you nearly blew us up, bnmou’ve made our fortunes; and you shall be the junior partner in the hew firm of Granville and Son." "Ann, go and play, ‘See the Conâ€" t\\‘:ering Hero Comes,‘ and I‘ll march the conqueror of th» secret round the room en my sh_o_uld‘e_r!;'\ Some incubators for‘chickens used now are the same in pyinciple as those of the Egyptians of 4000 years ago. W\ sasilh . _% _ _4 thi (10 B 0 LC 14 Aprastindirr Pn .3 eb 1 > Fifty machines, 100; reople and 200 processes are employed in the making of a 7pair of shoes., either by day or by night. MeCH HETZ been known to expose a ship to terâ€" rible risks by fire bYy sticking odd tengths of purloined candle on the edges of their bunks so that they might have light to read when lying down on the only spot on board rightly their own. One man, an American of great mental qualities, had such a pa sion for reading that he would sit up . the whole night with a favorite author. Dickens for preference, and bribe his \ watch mates heavily to take his duties | for him, such as wheel or lookout, so that he might remain undisturbed. Bent nearly double in his bunk, the miserable lanmip hung upon a surreptiâ€" tiously shifted hook so as to bring it nonrer to him while still affording .":o light for his shipmates to rise or retire by, he made a pathetic picâ€" turs of the pursuit of literature under â€"dificulities, yet one familiar to many deep water sailors. was charged with an acrid 1 baby set up a howl. Aun, d, ran out of the room, put sofa, and ran back to rescue (The End.) by night. A}!en have = â€" «gr o e e The only direct propaganda raid for which the American army had opporâ€" tunity before the armistice was planâ€" ned and carried out on the Metz front by Capt. H. E. Osann, an officer of Belâ€" gian descent who was familiar with EC U olsn nume "requs s nifagatint by Capt. H. E. Osann, an C gian descent who was 1 the German army, $aY8 writer. 11000 122 t h. icntciceiviantsns c i 4000 servation post on the edge of a wlred\ woods and boldly set up his call. Thero was not even a shot. After ten minâ€" utes he began again, "Men of the 61st Regiment, listen!" Then the patrol behind him began to hear voices; in the Roche trench a guttural but earnâ€" est discussion was going on. Again Osann shouted nrames he knew; in the silence the whole patrol could hear the footsteps of a man walking along the railway track toâ€" ‘ward Osann, but ho ran back and Osâ€" | ann had to come away. BTRERT CCC BC APOECC A few days later we took prisoners on that‘ front, and every man had copies of the Alsaceâ€"Lorraine leafiet in his pockets. When we asked if they had noticed anything recently in No Man‘s Land at night, they answered, "Â¥ou mean the ghost?" A ghost, they said, had been heard calling soldiers by name. Their officers had made a report of the ghost to the Kommando. _ For all I know the command may have issued orders about it: "In future ghosts will be met with five rounds of M. G. fire; angels with ten." A Propaganda Ghost. There are fashions in faces just as there are fashions in the manner ~â€"of wearing the bair, Face fashions, hawâ€" ever, cannot be altered when it suits the will, but remain for at least a seaâ€" son, and sometimes for years. oi 0 tR c a0 B t atatnhacca dn i Sometimes the popularity of a cer-‘ tain sport or hobby is responsible for | the prevailing fashion; at other times a certain type becomes popular, and, through imitating this type, the face assumes a permanent expression of a particular description, The fact that fashions in faces have existed, dnd that they have varied very considerably in shape and style, may be proved by a study of the best \ pictures of people of different periods. se * _ GLLHLZL Jw ha . noint. t CSR o Some of the variations in the paintâ€" ed pictures may be due to differences in the ideals of the artists, but, again, much must also have been due to difâ€" ferences in the face itself. There is another type of face fasâ€" hion which prevails in this country, or, indeed, in any country where the people have descended "‘from mlxed tribes. In one district we find that a certain coloring and type of face pre-â€"‘ 'dominates, while in another district & itype of quite a different nature will prevail. Fashions of this description do not alter, however, or if so, but very slightâ€" ly and very slowly, as people from neighboring towns and districts miâ€" grate, and so the fashion gradually loses a certain amount of its individuâ€" ality One of the amusing stories in Capt. : not across Evans‘s book, Kecping the Seas, is of | and down. an incident that oscuf‘red when twentyâ€" | polish can five million doffars in gold was shipâ€" | complain ped across the English Channel. â€" The |their fings ship carried as passengers Mr. Lloyd I it with or George, â€" Gen. Robertson and Sir| Steel w Maurice Hankey, who cccupied the ; valuable 4 cabin in which the golil was stored. iiron ware When the gold was landed, a Bank of England cierk complained that one bag was missing and asked anxiously it anyone had been in the cabin. "Oh, yes," said the captain. "Three men were there."â€" _"Who are they ?" "Wéll." replied the captalza thoughtâ€" fully, "I kncow that, gne. was called George.". _ ._ s _ Later it was discovered that the bags had been miscounted. s Minard‘s Liniment used by Physicians Fashions in Faces. Not the George y a butrst or two," 1 miss, and there‘ll 1 call more names. out there to argue back to bring his TORONTO How Are Your Pots and Pans. Fortunate indeed is the housewife who works in a kitchen whigh has We W RBE T V C COOn been carefully planned, not in one which has happened. In a carefully planned kitchen, the size of the room has been decided by the needs of the heuschold and its equipment {urnished | and so arranged as to accomplish'z maximum work with minimum time and effort. The mother needs all the time she can secure for the training ‘of her children and the social needs of her family as well as herself. | The arrangement of this desirable kitchen is also a wellâ€"planned scheme, not at all dependent upon chance Of the convenience of the carpenter. After the kitchen has been planned and the equipment selected and arâ€" ranged, there remains for the houseâ€" wife the selection of her cooking utensils. For convenient, easy work\ she must have enough utensils for the preparation, in the most nttractive] way, of any dishes she may wish to cook. There is such a thing, howâ€" _ever, as acquiring too many utensils, or an overabundance of the wrong \ kind or a duplication of saucepans and kettles. RECDDECEE When choosing her utensils or when || making additions, the housewife keeps| in mind what use she is to make of| them and the size of her family. The rural housewife buys very little food | already prepared. On the farm she\ will probably carry on at some time or other every type of food preparaâ€" tion, butchering and curing of meat; canning and drying; baking and roastâ€" ing; boiling and broiling; soAP makâ€" ing. There are on the market utensils made of iron, aluminum, ename] ware, glass, pottery and wood. The woman | who gives thought to her buying will choose from all of these, since no one material will give the best result for all kinds of cooking and food preparaâ€" tion. made of iron, aluminum, enamel ware WR AEIE 00. Lean £ zlass, pottery and wood. The womn; The plan has been followed by vtvio- who gives thought to her buying wil1| men who are far more confined toh eâ€" choose from all of these, since no one finite tasks than most houseqot er‘s shttenet w mice the bass resul for |art, D96 Reothore of only sns oach i i .\ ness, M F :iltln:‘ nds of cooking. and food prepars extended the hospitality of her home If she wishes to have things heat| last winter to a young,man who paid through and cook quickly, she will nominal board, but "fhc redl purpose choose aluminum or enamel ware. For of each was to provide companionship boiling potatoes, cooking egRS, heating| for her son. The young men read toâ€" water, for any process in which quick gether, played musical . instruments returns are required and when we ao| together _lnd found utl,gtuctxon and not wish to retain the heat, these two pleasure in each other‘s company. materials are very satisfactory. Youth must and will hlve. eompanionâ€" _ "Besides being a fine conductor of ship of both sexes, and if the home heat, aluminum appeals very strongâ€" does not provide it, will go out after ly to the housewife because it is so| it s light and easy to handle. It is made| Youth also needs entertainment; up in very attractive shapes, and is| wise parents provide music, games, very good to look at. What woman lights and good food. Youth is alâ€" is there who does not enjoy buying| WaYS hungry; make boys and girls kitchen ware which is comely? The free of dining room and kitchen and 1many styles and makes of utensils on do not be afraid to.let. them’ use the the market maintain a fine average best dishes. Electricâ€"light bills, fue |\ for neat and attractive appearance. and china are cheaper than anxiet] ‘ Iron is the best material for Tat.| and trouble. Above all, let acheeljful |\ frying and for preparing potâ€"roasts hospitable and happy spirit prevail. | because iron holds heat well, and an â€"â€"3â€" & even, slow heat can easily be mainâ€" tained. »« k Two Handy Shelyes. For good, brown crust: ‘and surâ€"| Two shelves thirty inches long b: | faces, the Best® materialsy are Russia) ten inches wide,â€"with a double ror ; | iron, aluminum, enamel &are ow#@lass. of hooks im ‘the bottom make on ‘| The glasgware appealsi strongly beâ€" housewife‘swkitchen ngat and conver ; | cause it easily can be kept clean and| ient. One shelfâ€"white enameledâ€" . | the exact stage of brownness gn be| over the sint. On it B&T\ds the doub! | seen so slearly. boiler, coffe@percola , coffee in a U mmuihos © 4. 1. itsht" »somk.tM# eoffee mill is a B.otâ€"}; til-évél;ésware and pottery are very valuable for casserole cookery, eustards and m_olds_. Aâ€" genuinely good and enthusiastic cook will insist on a careful selection of casseroles, for she is going to cook many oneâ€"dish meals and thus save much work for herself, besides: feeding the family adgquately. Since the casserole can be placed on the table, extra dishes are likewise eliminated. Rice dishes that require long baking, custards, stews of all kinds and baked hash are casserole dishes. In the selection of cutting tools, the quality of the steel is the most imâ€" portant. Cheap steel knives and scisâ€" sors can neither take a good edge nor "hold" an edge. o u?l‘\.e c‘ilox;;;!'\-g bowl ‘and some of the mixing spoons will gpetguarily be of Steel wool is indispensable forl aluminum. A good nonâ€"alkali soap \ should be used with it. Wet the wool,‘ use plenty of soap and scour the | ‘a]uminum. using a motion which folâ€" ‘lows the shape of the utensils. On \the bottom of a round utensil, the motion should be round and rorund,! | not across; around the sides, not up | and down. In this way a very good | polish can be put on. Many women | complain that the steel wool hurts \their fingers. Use the cork to push \ it with or wear a thick glove. After all these utensils have beenl selected, their care is the next imâ€" portant consideration. Over the sink or very near it, should be a shelf or cupboard in which are stored soap, scouring soap and powder, steel wool and a couple of large corks. ‘and steel wool. Wash again and fill as full as possible of cold water. Add two tablespogns of washing $ _Pégg:e the kettle on the stove and let the water simmerâ€"slowly, fop three ; hours. Again serub tbe».ht& with Steel wool will be found just as valuable for glassware, pottery and iron ware as it is for aluminum; for removing burnt material or material which may stick, steel wool made wet and rubbed on soap cleans and at the same time polishes cooking utensils. If iron ware is to give the best satisfaction, it should be tempered beâ€" fore using. First wash and scrub well, using a good scouring powdcs RE D SCCETET scouring powder and steel wool gt into the clean kettle abot unds of fat Of suet cut int You can use it, afterwards, fo fat. Try out the fat slowly, careful that it does not burn. Mb * C Cl ce necve Â¥6 e 6 COem C t scouring powder and steel wool. Then: &nt into the clean kettle about two unds of fat Of suet cut into bits. You can use it, afterwards, for soaP fat. Try out the fat slowly, being careful that it does not burn. When the fat is 'tried out, pour it out of the kettle. Wipe the utensil clean and smooth with some soft crumpled paper. "Make the home atitrace the boys and girls will pN the street, the corner drug cheap dance or theatre," i advice often heard, but th is, How can you do it? The answer, as many 1 mothers have proved, is C | surroundings, freedom and « ship. ship. Women too often make the mistake | of beautifying their â€" homes beyond‘ practical usefulness. Fragile furniâ€"| ture and embroidered eushions lrel well enough as ornaments; but if the| younger members of the family multi be continually warned against injurâ€" ing the one or "mussing" the other,. they will prefer going where there is less to mar and "muss." _ Let the furniture be solid, durable and as beautiful as may be, but not too beauâ€" tiful to be used. \ If you have an only child, find some EaDCY CC COCEOCS Bam Rome. it yOu Ens 9 0o o __ # boy or girl who is away from home,‘: living ~perhaps in an unattractive| place from which he will be glad to| escape, and take him as & bolrder.‘ Never mind if you do not make money from the venture or if it causes you‘! extra work. It is an investment that‘ will bring valuable returns. ‘ I _ a m1._al hu w« 44. Youth also needs entertainment; wise parents provide music, games, lights and good food. Youth is alâ€" ways hungry; make boys and girls free of dining room and kitchen and do not be afraid to let them use the best dishes. Electricâ€"light bills, fuel and china are cheaper than anxiety and trouble. Above all, let a cheerful, Ihospitable and happy spirit prevail. Two shelves thirty inches long by| f ten inches wide,â€"with a double row of hooks im ‘the bottom make one|s housewife‘swkitchen ngat and conv@nâ€"|. ient. One shelfâ€"white enameledâ€"is over the sins. On it sttj,nds the doublé ) 1 boiler, coffe@percola , coffee in an airâ€"tight camâ€"tH® coffee mill is w\l tached to 4Me wall ‘Just over the| drainboardâ€"g@ii&} scouring powder,| bath brick, steel wool and a bottle of | javelle water. On the hook beneath\ hang the cooking utensils in constant daily use, longâ€"handled spoons, meat] knife and cleaver, bread knife, ‘dish mop, soap shaker, bottle cleaner, cork‘ screw, steel frying pans of small size,| stew pans, etc. The other shelf is on an enclosed porch, and is just outside the kitchen door. On the hooks hang broom, floor | mop, dustless mop, oiled mop, lamb‘s wool brush for wiping down walls, | window brush pole, longâ€"handled dustâ€" | pan, and cleaning brushes of various sizes. These all have screws put in :‘ the top of the handle so that they may ‘\ be hung up easily. On the shelf is furniture polish, floor wax, a shoe box | containing clean old cloths and squares â€"| of. cheesecloth for cleaning and dustâ€" F ui 2 in o 0 l take Keeping :x‘t:“;\a';r;u;ty syrup pails, in which oiled dust cloths are stored. The carâ€" pet .;';;e}'.n& scrubbing pail stand below the shelf. Father, with all my heart I thank Thee *__ for today, For all its sunshineâ€"all its rain; For streagth to tollâ€"for a heart to play. Help me to forget its pain As, with my hand in Thine, 1 go to rest. But, when the day shall come again, That I, still close to Thee May meet my task w With love, that maketh all things plain _ And makes me trust in Thee ~" _ Ang neter ask > But that Thou work continuallyâ€" That, which Sor me is best. * The Bride: "Oh, how I hats to let you go, darling! 1 sha‘n‘t see you again until lunch time!" s The Groom: "You must be brave, Httle woman. No matter what happens, rl swear to telephone at eleven." Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the .house. ARC OR ANCCTS swer, as many fathers and have proved, is comfortable ings . freedom and companionâ€" An Evening Prayer. Them at Home. ‘Those Awful Partings. PmR mCs 200 s not burn. When put, pour it out of > the utensil clean some soft crumpled attractive, 80 that _ will prefer it to ‘ a%.% PRCIC ug store, the " isâ€"a bit of the question It was: the NP 4 *"" _ . lege class, and two of the med were calling on their old professor of philo® ophy. The conversation drifted to the different men in the class and their success since graduation. ‘ * luna in the papets SUECe®e ®ICCE T20 "And did you notice in this morning, professor, ab appointment to the pres!d Brown & Brown Cor Pre or for so younE a maD, think*" P E; LRINK * "Yes," replied the professor, I‘m afraid a little too ea8y an for him." o dn nom uold "Don‘t the job? haste. "I have no GOUU *"0 °.000 I afraid that he will hold it down, and | be content to do #0. 1 don‘t like to'l see things come 80 easily to 80 young ; a man. â€" d rather have seen him. weather for ten years or more. He‘s: capable of bigger things than this. You re_member how the Bible puts it ‘about the Jews: ‘God led them not through the way of the land of the Philistines, | though that was near‘ He made them 1 take forty years for a trip that was no \ more than four hurdred amiles in a bee Ne t T9 ts non 9Â¥ more UAAN EUE‘ 7"****~ _ "hna line. He wanted to toughen them by | hardships before He brought them &n-|‘ to the land of luxury. . Once in the wilderness He let them feed on quails, \ and many of theri| gorged themselves to death. They weren‘t ready for A| ‘quufl diet. There ard more men buried | in the graves of so# indulgence than | ‘ln any other kind. ‘ "How many valedictorians do yOu a ay.le a man C PPE Vt EAPWAE C hear from afterwards? Many a man '\' is so elated by an early half success | , that he relies on that to Carry him | . through. _ No. You fellows are not{‘ long enough outfof tollége to begin to ; , measure the success or failure of your | . classmates. Wait for ten yeare more. Life is like the four years in college: the showy fellow who wears a red necktie and is elected to the presiâ€" dency of the freshman class is seldom | heard from afterwards. Along toward the end of the course some quiet (el-‘, low whom you didu‘t notice much mx your freshman year forges to the front ‘ and walks off with the prize. | |â€" "The man who gets easy success usâ€" | | ually weakens at some point. Don't‘ | be in a burry. Don‘t ever be afraid to | weather and season a little. _ Then '1 when the strain comes you won‘t warp ;\ or break. Take your wilderness jourâ€" neys It will toughen you for the luxuâ€" rx of Canaan when you arrive. I have géen: too many characters rotting in tfe sunshinerto want you to arrive beâ€" y | fbre you are hardened for the goal." fhe cherry, the peach, and the plum were all first grown in Persia. The hippopotamus is nearly blind, but can scent a white man two miles to windward. Britain bought the year‘s sugar Crop | in Mauritius, comprising over 200,000 tons at a cost of $90,000,000. l Although salmon have not frequentâ€" ed the Thames for a céentury, they aro“ found in the Tyne, near Newcastle. Remodelling the liner Aquitania, afâ€" ter her war service, employed 136 joiners, 30 painters, and 30 polishers. * When Caruso, the famous tenor, is lon the stage, his medical attendant is always on duty behind the scenes. During a thunderstorm the least dangerous trees are birch, alder and cherry. But all trees should be‘ avoidâ€" Fairhaired poople require more oxyâ€" gen and nourishment than do those with dark hair, and therefore are to be found more in the country. London‘s oldest markets are said to be Smithfield, where cattle were sold in 1150, and Billingsgate, which is reâ€" puted to have been fornded in 400 B.C. t you think he can 9" said the other Cut Your Fuel Bills in Half by Ucln.i "CLEAN ALL®" _BOoILER 1 aipgy. ~_ Manufact Thf Alten Feed Water Purlfior Co., Limited, 21 Camaden st., Toronto TORONTO SALT WORKS C. J. CLIFF + ToronTto no doubt about that. Worth C COARSE SALT LANDB â€"SALT fiftp reunion Some Facts. 10 gets easy success usâ€" at some point. Don‘t Don‘t ever be afraid to season a little. . Then n comes you won‘t warp e your wilderness jourâ€" ice in the PaP®!® | .or, about Kelion‘s l presféency of the ) Pretty fine “0“'\ man, â€" don‘t y04, e professor, “b\“‘ hn easy AD honor of the o+ hold down in anxious® wÂ¥ lsportam "I‘m tereste ana | and b« e tol°“° & oung ; GeOrE® him' gports He‘s ‘ person , You mbout | _ ‘The rough â€" porse: binne ‘ Lanan Love of Sports and a Keen Sense of Fair Play is Characâ€" teristic of Britons. If you a®K 4 how he differs tional in the w ly say, In his ® 1f you ask a Britisher to tell how he differs from every othe: tional in the world he will instin« ly say, In his attitude toward ep "We are the best gportsimen |! world,. We know how to play." And he will probably go on *« gomething like this: "When you undenern""" "*=° .0 our «poris and recreations Jns\ geriously as Our work, you‘cal; our history and not,laugh 0Â¥ an incidert 88 the dancing sof people when London was burii 1666, You can also indersta.« our goldiers gambled all night zero hour when they were to £ luu top in the morning. _ Av King, because his chief jJob is courage national life, must be a gportsman. It is his business to terested in all sports, and for and happy for bim # he lov one . «port. And by this «t George V. does not fail. H« | gportsman, and has two sporis ! |peuonally loves and excels in." old 4A aals gportsman, and has two sporis (43 personally loves and excels in." Held Court at Ascot, The King «hows his duberest porseraclnx by holding courl horse raceâ€"at Ascot, â€" Queen A had the course 0n Ascot Heath . structed in 1711 with an ey@ scenery as well as for a testing | for thoroughbreds. For two centu ‘the English public has shown i . proval of the Queen‘s choice. ‘ On the opering day at Ascot iKlnz and Queen drove down course in state. They â€" mot |tlu'ou(h the great park of Winds the approach of the course and ! took the royal carriages. Eigh: riages made up the procession, first béing drawn by four #rays | the remainder by four bright bay. | which the royal stud is so famou 11400 4 4 c uts db P which the royal stud is so famous. in the first carriage rode the King and Queen with Prince Albert, now Du\« of York, and Princess Mary, .« whils Prince Henry was among those in the second carriage. Each day at Ascot the King gave a luncheon in the royel dining room immediately to the rear of the roval box. The Queen attended only o two of the four days, which means !C those who would garb properiy th: they must wear the tall black silk hot when she attends and the tall w! "topper" when she does not. Ascot is horse racing glorified. 1t is a pageant, & festival. it has a ) much ceremony as any function on ‘the royel calendar. The gypsi¢ f the Derby race are not there. . The ‘hookmaken take a position 1« 1 from the rest and dress in the ventional silk hat. Society‘s toll are more elaborate than at any other function in England. The dre makers of London make more f1=s about Ascot than they do for the E \er promenade, and Ascot is a » when applied to dress, which "me« | chiffon, georgette, charmeuse, 0‘ | die and lace. At Ascot George V. gives ‘hb perogatives to the national in ,’wtlon of horseracing. Me gives i\ =< ) | royal encouragement. Me is a = al gportsman there, King of Horseracing r Interested in Many Sports. e\ George V. is not as fond of racing as was his father, King Raward. He â€"| seldom bets, not because he thinks it $\ is moraily wrong, but because he h« â€"| lieves it injures the sport. His Majosy 8 | believes in sport for sport‘s sake‘ "!0 ® | has brought up his children on ‘ ut theory. In horseracing he belioy©s t | the great sport is in breeding hors«s d | that will be fast. It is more of an inâ€" 4 | terest, so far as he is personmally conâ€" cerped, to improve the breed of horses Yâ€"| for which England is famous. To t"s! s° | end he takes a practical intere«t. !}* P P T7 WDPTERT a Ond Ee mt C e ‘wu a fair stable himself, and has few borses of tolerable hoof, amy which is Viceroy. In this connection the King ®© be mentioned as probably the bige farmer in England. His shorth | cattle are famous, and he love spend bours looking about his ! l at Windsor and Sandringham. The King‘s devotion %‘thlm:â€" \undoruku personally is *A s |chu'gqurlme. For instance, as mon ‘fisher he is exéx“l by few | | goes s#lmon fishing in Scotliand « .| year and is rated with Lord Gr« \ an angler. The King as a pistol has only three peers in England. } lishmen say he is probably one 0‘ best pistol shots in the world, G: and phessant shooting is hit favo sport. Me goes to Sandringham | after the season opens in Augus* : spends many days on his ranges t! * | ura takes great care Of the birds 0: | He takes great \ estate there. |__For the first time since the.otoup" ; tion of Lens by the Germans coal 4 |\ been brought up to: the eurfrce fron ‘ono of the raines, #aye a ¥évent i« ‘puch. Many of the mines are still ’ood.d. but the pumping out cont=â€" ves. Engineers in c.'rg“f ¥¥e work m’flm 'w\l exploito uppor workings: of t\ _ mines wrill be recumed about the nud C adbe OL 1YZL :>,0~. . s leal , Lens Produces Coal Again. and recreations )ts; our work, youâ€"0aig) and notlaugh 0% q as. the dancing sof* underetand th vOu 4 the among Address all question care of The Wilson Publi to, and answors will app In which they are receis ‘*tion this paper. As spac Iimmediate reply is nec Gdressed envelope be en the answer will be mail conpuCcTEo 8y The object of this de wice of our farm readers euthority on ali subjects 8. R.;>â€"To inoculate necessary "to make it so, how do you dry the not work good in drill, have never used any so please explain in € Answer:â€"In inocula seed is fairly well then spread out whe blow across it but not € sunlight. The water the seed and very 1i experienced in sow.n Do not allow the seed mixture, but see that dampened, Be sure instructions sent out of the inoculating m B. L.;â€"Is sand ve rid of when one does 1 it any Jonger? . Is it | ang what is the best of quack grass? W hi sand vetch or Essex corn in last cultivati thic with TH i Th W ToKEA ~â€" W D () ty kingiy In 2 Samue DAÂ¥ AUC _A