{! Ll e e AAARERUIT 200 NC P a tattered sleeve. [to the moonli Billy sat up and surveyed his comâ€" sound asleep. panion: with disgust. ,to the lake an "A nice pair of scarcâ€"babies you! _ "I s‘pose we two are," he said, scathingly. "A great Billy. "All rigl pair you are to help me find old Scrog-l Arriving at gie‘s will an‘ money. Why, say, if ed after caref you‘d only kept your nerve a httle,'cveryt'hiln wa that ghost would‘a led us right to the action. Not a spot. most likely; but ‘stead o‘ that the homes of £oSS P mmA EECZ CHRI CHC They were fully a mile away from’ymfl' trail. the place of terror before sheer ex.| the ghost, b haustion forced them to abate their Ringold‘s w wild speed ard tumble im a heap beâ€"|rubbed up a neath a big elm tree, along the tmil"nsp fungus of the forest. | sparks of 1 For a time they lay gasping andiheered it bas quivering. â€" Maurice Kyee!er was the| Somewhere first to speak. "Say, Bill," he shiverâ€" a giggle, wh el, "is it light enough fer you to see gm"d as h if the hair is scorched off one side of, his shoulder. my head? Thatâ€"that ghost‘s breath| "Yep," he shot blue flames square in my face." | steer. too. "It grabbed me in its bony fingers,", hopin‘ we‘d whispered Fatty. "Gosh, it tore the | wonder what sleove fair out‘a my shirt. Look!" And| _ Tom Holt, to prove the truth of his statement a watch, cons he IMfted a fat arm bo whish odnamcerls nare un‘ O 8 which he and Mavrice 'mâ€"-a; _have echoed, for all he knew. €80 TTE natias Aitet edPs / Bc form quiver and leap even before his agonized howl fell on his earsâ€"a ery which he and Manrita Wwa¢ hou‘s D to be caum J oo s n y Th wmerniUtk etebiits rlair to be seen ho was waveriag. His you, an‘ I c feet were getting uneasy, his toes think of rig fairly Liting holes through his socksr Just here in their cagerne:s to tear up the| sounded fro s«ward. But as leader it would never| the trail. do for him to show the white feather. "That‘s EJ The approaching terrer had drifted’comm' to lo« into the shadow again. Suddenly, so| "Answer ‘ near that it fairly seemed to scorc‘h, Maurice p th Prowey top of the sapling toiglve an ans which be was Manging. a weird biue, turned almo light twisted upward almost in Billy‘s| ment later t eyes. At the same moment a tiny the moonlig? hootâ€"ow!. sleeping off its early even-f "We wond ing"s feed in the cedar close beside the lers, so came boys, woke up and gave a ghostly ery.| Tom Holt as It was too much for overstrained you‘d be con nerves to stand. Billy felt Fatty‘s Swamp trail, watchers. Billy, tlghtly grippirge his ratbit‘s foct cha in one sweaty kand and a roughâ€"barked sapling in tha other, felt Walter‘s hands clutchâ€" ing his shoulders. "Clh Jerusalem!" groaned the terriâ€" fied Patty, "It‘s the ghost! Look, it‘s «ho‘lin‘ blue graveâ€"mist! Fer the love ¢f Mike let‘s get out‘a this!" "Wait." gulsed Billy, but it was s s 1 & © _ Meamne Fant oo Thalh wirce 0 tr Prainis tds 4i jNokin fer the money he buried an‘| Maurice looked frizhtenodt "I forgot where, it‘s his own funeral.| wasn‘t pokin‘ fun at the charm, Bill, I‘m fer not mixin‘ up in this thing| cross my heart, I wasn‘t," he said anyâ€"* earnestly. ‘Keep still!" cautioned Billy, "an‘| _ "All right then, see that you don‘t. look yonder! See it?" Now, see here, I‘ll tell you somethin‘. He pointed through the trees to an I did throw my rabbit‘s foot charm open glade in the grove. ‘The full but that was to keep that ghost from meon, ridincg high in the sky, threw,’fol]e!‘in’. Maybe you two didn‘t hear her light fair upon the fernâ€"sown sod; it snort when it got to that charm across the gwlade a white object was an‘ tried to pass it, so‘s to caich up to movingâ€"drifting straight toward the| us; but I heard it. _ Oh say, but watchers. Hillvy Mlaklw artimmin. Ito Fasuetchare ts tuntnano aet Bols any ol the other inyuns if there has." "Oh, it might lay an Injun ghost," said the unreasonable Fatty, "but how about a white man‘s? How about old man Scroggie‘s, fer instance? You know yourse??, Bill, old man Seror#ie "There‘s never been a ghost that ever roamed nights been able to get rear it. You kin ask Tom Dodge er any of the other Injuns if there has." Billy turned upon him. "Say, Fatty, haven‘t I told you that this here charm protects everybody with me?" he asked cutting‘,. Nee cpet AvapCampainginn cal tepiveiinr q enc ApaiP | 2 0 PG0O%, 22PeCACE arnEned. An His companions crept forward and you grabbed Fatty by the arm an‘ peered through the trees. Sure enough Pulled his shirt sleeve out. I saw you. from the one unglazed window of the And you can‘t say you didn‘t run old building came the twinkle of a neither, else how did ,you get here light, which bobbed about in weird, Ssame time as Fatty an‘ me? uncertain fashion. |, _ Well, I didn‘t run, but I own I "Old Scroggie‘s ghost huntin‘ fer follered you," compromised Billy. the lost money," whispered Walter,| "There wasn‘t anythin‘ else I could "Oh, gosh! let‘s leg it!" | do, was there. How did I know what "Leg nuthin‘!t" Billy removed his you two scared rabbits ud do? You hand from his trousersâ€"pocket and might‘a run plumb into Lake Erie ln"‘ waved something before two pairs of got drownded, you was so seared. fearâ€"widened eges. .Somebodr’s had to keep his head," he * ‘No ghost can harm where lies said airily. this charm, " he recited solemnly.! "Well I kept minc by havin‘ a good "Now if you fellers feel like beatin‘ pair of legs," groaned Fatty. "I‘m not! it. why beat it; bul so long as I‘m denyin‘ that. And by gravy, if they| grabbin‘ onto this left hind foot of a ‘had been good enough fer a thousand graveyard rabbit I don‘t run away miles I‘ve let ‘em go the limit.! from no ghostâ€"not even old man‘ Scared! Oh yowlin" wildeats! I'llsee; Scroggie‘s." I rhnsts cam‘ amlW Iubacumses * se ts Ee k nlha sns 4 P °0223 "~AC widlâ€" snapped lfllly, "Look!" he whispered. _ "Look! | glowering at his two bosom friends. Th':re's a light in the ha‘nted house."| "You did," Maurice affirmed. "An‘ CHAPTER l.-â€"(Cox_lt.'d.) m 1 _"Well, who did?" A SON OF COURAGE c oo nernnatnatas t P rmnerty 32 _ _ _ c 3@ A90 UP." . FBOUETE r overstrained you‘d be comin‘ by the tamarack ly felt Fatty‘s swamp trail, an‘ we stuck around even before his there fer quite a while, waitin‘. Then his earsâ€"a ery Elgin said maybe you had come the ce may have ha‘nted house way, so we struck w. ‘through the bush an‘ tried to pick up nile away from‘your trail. Once we thought we saw fore sheer exâ€"| the ghost, but it turned out to be old to abate their Ringold‘s white yearlin‘ steer. It had _im a heap be.|rubbed up ag‘inst some willâ€"oâ€"theâ€" along the trail wisp fungus an‘ it fair showered ‘sparka of blue fire. If we hadn‘t y gasping and heered it bawlin‘ we‘d have run sure." eeler was the " Somewhere behind him Billy heard ill," he shiverâ€" a giggle, which was immediately sup-t fer you to see &ressfd as he turned and looked over lF ns stkc > uied in c s o BY ARCHIE P. McKISHNIE Copyrighted by Thomas Allen. old mmmtimtrame nesdraarme _ _ 0 00 6e22% _ SACEmerCU Irom the homes of the fishermen, to show that they were awake and vigilant. The whiteâ€"fish run was on and when the boys, launching the big flatâ€"botâ€" tomed fish boat, carefully cast and drew in the long seine it held more great gleaming fish than they knew how to dispose of. "Only one thing to do," reasoned I NPAR NC id Yies ie ags mss ie cadchus 4. BB .L.A l think quick. It was up to me to save you, an‘ I did the only thing I could | think of right then." | _ Just here the whistle of bobâ€"white ;s,c:undcd] from a little distance along i tha twai _ "That‘s Elgin Scraff and Tom Holt comin‘ to look fer us," cried Maurice. "Answer ‘em," said Billy. Maurice puckered up his lips and gave an answering cafl. It was reâ€" turned almost immediately. _ A moâ€" ment later two more boys came into the moonlight. ! "We wondered what kept you felâ€" lers, so came lookin‘ fer you," spokel TomflHolt as they came up. "Thought ; NCEA t Greipmmemie To 5 c m ayre . "And‘ that‘s why you throwed it," exclaimed â€" the admiring _ Maurice. “}E;osh, nobody else would‘a thought of that." B;‘Nobody," echoed Fatty, “ncr‘body,‘ il1," "Well, somebody has to think in a c:sebo' tt:-a‘-t kind," admitted Billy, "an‘| ty S s oi e e 9 1 wouldn‘t it be mad though!" _ _"Boys," cried Billy in awed tones. "It‘s gone!" _ "What‘s gone?" asked his companâ€" ions im a breath. Billy was feeling frantically in his pockets. "My rabbit foot charm," he‘ groaned. "I fell over a log an‘ it must‘a slipped out‘a my pocket." ' _"You had it in your ï¬and when th‘ if ;;w:;n, hous en ""-Lé Bm f oller you," compromi illy. \"There wasn‘t anythin‘ else I could | do, was there. How did I know what _you two scared rabbits ud do? You might‘a run plumb into Lake Erie an‘ got drownded, you was so scared. .Somebodr’s had to keep his head," heJ said airily. said airily, 61 f A Shower of Fish, ‘"Well I kept minc by havin‘ a good| Between the fishermen of Sandtown pair of legs," groaned Fatty. "I‘m not| and the farmers of the community denyin‘ that. And by gravy, if they|existed no very strong bond of symâ€" had been good enough fer a thousand pathy or friendship. The former were miles I‘ve let ‘em go the limit.| a dissolute, shiftless lot, quite content, Scared! Oh yowlin" wildeats! I‘ll see, with drawâ€"seine and poundâ€"net, to eke ghosts an‘ smell brimstone the rest out a miserable existence in the easâ€" o‘ my life." iest manner possible. They were tolâ€" "Boys," cried Billy in awed tones.| erated just as the poor and shiftless "It‘s gone!" of any community are tolerated; their "What‘s gone?" asked his companâ€"/ children were allowed to attend the ions in a breath. lschool the same as the children of the Billy was feeling frantically in his taxpayers. pockets. "My rabbit foot charm," he{ Each spring the farmers attended groaned. "I fell over a log an‘ it the fishermen‘s annual bee of .pile-l' must‘a slipped out‘a my pocket." 'driving, which meant the placing of| "You had it in your Â¥.am when th‘| the stakes for thenround netsâ€"a danâ€"| shost poked its blue tongue in our gerous and thankless task. Wet,! aces," cifirmed Maurice. "I saw it.";weary and hungry, they would return | "You > thorvunerk cemmmunthiéut us ce op s iigy e y o uL pa T by the tamarack we stuck around while, waitin‘. Then 1 D s 620 A0 C200E IHC PAnC and vegetables for 'l!other" canning, if it reâ€" NODEMIODE datd (â€"Antica: c td intumi . A o. 3. 4 2 WO-; praidieddrs e l.l 8 go?d. nelw n1es :A h man on the jl.':b at home has not yeti stutre“mtch:i«, ‘?; itorv:'igllln:ot ’c}:l:‘:e,:h:: learned it as thoroughly as she slfmuld.: bent double and pinch ed, if it fits the Summel"r"days mï¬l 1 Ii:,y! .uor ?‘xneck of the Jar snugly, it might be fitst n in vacating! * o ,used the second time. However, I‘d » ~ jo make it pass a very severe test, beâ€" Don‘t "Take a C.h- “ g C“.il“l cause it‘s better to discard a doubtful Coldâ€"pack canning is the simplest rubber than to lose a jar of canned and surest method we have for ean-‘m' If the rubber does soften or ning vegetables. The flavor, °°l°r’! bulge when the jar is processed, I and texture of the product are cox;- replace it with another steriiized rubâ€" served, and time and labor 46. tate *| ber. and put the jar back in the sterâ€" But canning by this method is Sasy)] ilizer for five minutes. To test the ;’gv::fk’ and sure only when wo’ sea, put a little water in the jar, put O rections. i;,! the rubber in place, and screw ar 1 epare the fruits 28 rubber in p _ L always helped prepare 1 m NCP T . i "_""cause it‘s be Coldâ€"pack canning is the simplest! than and surest method we have for ean-‘ rubber Ill i ning vegetables. The flavor, color,| g:?d' hen and texture of the product are con.| "MSO “:t 5 served, and time and labor are saved. , YEplace it wi Th 2 Ed =‘mmer days are good days for a first lesson in vacating! Let‘s all go! Don‘t "Take a Chance" in Canning. Coldâ€"pack canning is the simplest lpd surest method we have for canâ€" WO OEOCCCCE TV WV UUHVJATCCIME RUVUC in the best possible way. Business rubber fits, s women, such as stenographers, clerks may cut the t in shops and offices, dressmakers,| perfect seal. teachers, editors, writers, artists, the type, mus have all pretty well learned the value‘ rubber is an e of the vacating process and go at it bers every ye more or less systematically. The wo-: as good as a man on the job at home has not yet turns to its learned it as thoroughly as she should, ! stretched, if i Summer days are good days for a bent double ar first lesson in vacating! Let‘s all go!| neck of the 4 | the people who climb high in their ,) particular callings, are the people who | make a business of securing some deâ€" ‘ï¬nite time for play, vacation, change, | and who play very thoroughly whfla‘ fthey are at it. They must! They do | it for the job‘s sake. If they did not,’ the job would go stale on their hands. They tell us that when a woman | will, "she will, you may depend on it", | and that "when she won‘t, she won’ti "lnd thore‘s an end on it." Thousands! of glorious women have said "I won‘t"| !when it comes to considering such a "fcolishness" as a vacation of any kind. _ Perhaps they would ch.ange, their minds if they could clearly see| that their "job," whether it be farmâ€"| ing or mothering or cooking or sewâ€"| ing or mere housekeeping, absolutely needs that they get away from it inli order th‘at it may continue to be done ; the * in order that it may be done in this j way, the job itself needs a vacation! Theat is to say. the human mind, on ‘| which all successful action depends, ,| absolutely must have its periods of change and rest. It is "made that -'way.†A bookkeeper who sticks at |his books twelve months of the year, |loses the ability to do sharp, cleanâ€" ' cut, accurate work at necessary speed. | For the sake of the job itself, he must’ {“get out," vacate, empty the job of | his immediate presence, empty his 'bmin of the steady grind in order that he may bring back to the job, ‘ for the job‘s sake, new ideas, sharpâ€" ened powers, fresh strength and inâ€" tspirstion. _ The dismal wail that "woman‘s | work is never done" should be drownâ€"| ed by a better song. Woman has| accomplished marvels but we all know | that her marvels would have been| more marvellous yet if she had given |! her work the benefit of deliberats vaâ€"| ! cations! It is almost the rule that| I ske o ioa : W Billy, | The Job‘s Vacation. , Sometimes we hear good women say, not without a touch of scorn, "I ’have no time for a vacation," meanâ€" liing that personally they do not beâ€" jlieve in vacations. The word vacate means, to leave empty, and hosts of conscientious women shudder at the ithought of deserting anything that seems to be better for their attention. When, however, we study this subject‘ of vacations from the right standâ€", point, we make some discoveries;' which ought to be made. One of these | is that every job that is worth doing at all is worth doing excellently and in order that it may be done in this way, the job itself needs a vacatinn! 300 _ $07 " B »PCWeL | the stakes for then}:ound netsâ€"a danâ€"| lots gerous and thankless task. Wet,! you fweary and hungry, they would returni‘ m to their homes at night with considerâ€"| map able more faith in the reward that | him. comes of helping one‘s fellowâ€"men | puti than in the promise of the fishermen | a po to keep them supplied, gratis, with all the fresh fish they needed during the season. M in \1ee BaY sT. Billy, "take what we want an‘ let the rest go." * And this they did. When they left the beach the moon was low above the Point pines, the rawâ€"seine was back in its place on the big reel and there was nothing to show the lake fishermen that the Scotia Fish Supply Comp:_:'ny had been operating on their ‘Have You aCamera? Sond us one negative and vnv\;ll; make one print FREE to show our quality work. This places you under no obligation to us. Judge from our one sample print If you wish tb send us more of Developing and lâ€"'ï¬;râ€"t_l(;; Enlarging, Copying, Coloring Huntboy Mail Order PHOTO FINISHING CHAPTER IL. omans â€" (f{ 653&991)9 ve T 44009 COI CC ey did not,’ tik heir hands. a woman| be pend on it", pr she won‘t| ov Thousands | ed t "I won‘t" | isn ng such a}| to n of any| to Id change| ha s ed many of my jars, my collection "{isn‘t uniform, but each container has ,| to pass a rigid test before I allow it y'to have its pack. I find it best to : have the containérs tested out and ;‘standing in cool water on the stove .| ready to heat before I take the vegeâ€" â€"| taibles from the garden. r‘ The jars should be free from cracks | and uneven edges. I am especially | careful about the rim upon which the ‘rubber fits, since a small projection : may cut the rubber and cause an imâ€" | perfect seal. The covers, whatever ithe type, must fit perfectly. A good rubber is an economy. I buy new rubâ€" bers every year. If a rubber seems !as good as a good new one, if it reâ€" ‘ turns to its original shapne â€" whan yb P CPEV! Either tin or glass conta be used, but I‘ve found the ; practical because they ma; over and over again. Since ha t didlait reeponnind tss siit hy 1dsc ici old by attaching a short piece of hose to the coldâ€"water tap. This stream of water washes off the stubborn parâ€" ticles of dirt very quickly. ‘ o t e en rinsing, and draining make the work go faster. If you have running water, you can lessen the time spent in washing greens and other veretahlo« TORONTO _ o ElPParation equipment is a large pair of sharp shears. They cut the time spent in getting greens ready amezingly. I‘ve also found that a number of large basins for wuhing,“ rinsing, and draining make the wayl. g| _ Luckily things began to happen || very soon in spite of our cool and | wellâ€"constructed storage closet. Of |course, some things did keep, but I | believe I had practically every misâ€" | fortune a canner could have, and in |almost every case I could trace this‘ | misfortune directly to my neglect of some, seemingly, small detail. The right equipment for the canâ€" ning season is simple and inexpensive, and having it makes such a difference. ’My small, stiffâ€"bristled. scrub brush, with an easy grip, is about as cheap as one with a sharp ï¬nger-cramping] back. I use it to silk corn as well as for scrubbing vegetables. I also find several knives with edges that do not dull quickly and handles which fit into the palm comfortably save! not only my hands but my temper as well. One of my recent additions to my preparation equipment is a large pair of sharp shears. They cut the time spent in settine eranma 2.3 CR NC OOR PRTTTTY PRUDY he ‘"Brothers, you heard what our minâ€" ister said, an‘ he‘s right. I fer one, ed| am ashamed of the thoughts I‘ve leâ€"/thought to‘rds them fighermen of of ; ‘Sand'tgwn. I‘ve acted mean to ‘em in w [pj" _2AAM Ave acted mear 20 EOe PCE 20RT UAECCLIUHS, _ Mother always was a great believer in experience, so one day I got my chance. My packs looked wonderful. I had my Jars, covers, anf rubbers clean and sterilized, but it did seem so poky to test eyery seal, so I left it to luck. The time of processing wasn‘t always according to the clock, either. and so had plenty of chance to study her methods. _ She was quick, and didn‘t seem to get tired; but, secretly, J used to think she paid too much atâ€" tention to the clock and her directions | h +7 Patatnge ts s 0s 18 1 ARB o i d lots of ways, I‘ll admit. An‘ so have youâ€"you can‘t deny it!" The deacon, a florid, fullâ€"whiskered man of about sixty, glowered about him. No one present thought of disâ€" puting his assertion. The deacon was a power in the community. | Minard‘s Liniment P e e s obee n dE CP down on your knees and pray humbly for light, remembering that Christ believed in His fishermen." At the conclusion of the service, Deacon Ringold called a few of the leading church members together and to them spoke his mind thus: s “"Brotl_njers, you heard what our minâ€" 138UE No. C aa C Sm P Ca HTTICEY T O AIRTY to treat it as a joke. Nevertheless. they were always on hand to help with the pileâ€"driving. They were an oldâ€"fashioned, simpleâ€"hearted peopie, content with following the teachings of their good Bookâ€""Cast thy bread upon the waters, for thou shalt find it after many days." And find it they did, ultimately, in a mysterious and unexpected way. One late June morning each of the farmers who had for season after seasbn toiled with those fishermen As far back as the farmers could & a the clock and her directions. always was a great believer (To be continued.) other vegetables used by Physiclans Fow persons realize how much shadows help us to judge the form of solid objects and how much we deâ€" pend upon them . In locking at protoâ€" graphs of the moon, for example, it is only the shadows that tell us whether what we see is a hill or a hole. If the shadow falls away from the light, the eye sees a hole; â€" if it falls toward the light, a projection.. But the eye is easily fooled. Showing â€" o P on t Ey filling in the missi V & stamped envelope, with : direction clearly written ti without delay, ‘ inform you complying with our simple cordition about wh obtain absolutcly free, a watch that you will b While the puzzle may be Alfficult. it costs Bex Manufacturing Co. Dept. 62 117 Ma» The most important thing in canâ€" ning, I think, is to use a reliable bulâ€" letin and to follow the directions exâ€" actly. sues a bulletin on "Preservation of Fruits and Vegetables for Home Use," Bul. 98. E. F., which may be obtgined free from the Publications Branch"at Ottawa. _ The directions and time tables have been very carefully tested | out. In using the time table you may find that setting an alarm clock for the time the process should stop will help. Remember, though, to count time only when the water in the water bath is boiling. * BENSON‘S CORN STARCH queer, sour taste which is called "flat" sour. This condition develops in any of these vegetables when the time beâ€" tween gathering and processing is very long, especially on warm <hyl.] Then, too, all vegetables have a betâ€" ter flavor if canned fresh. 1 tables of the highest grade, since we can just about follow the "from the garden to the can" slogan literally. It‘s amazing how important this preâ€" caution is Canned bears, peas, asâ€" paragus, and corn sometimes have a drops of water. * We farm women have the best chance in the world for canned vegeâ€" clamp the cover on tight; shake, then turn over on the table and watch for The Department of Agriculture Shadows and Solids. analitu thas ... _______" "~~CYy, creamy quality that every good cook wants in her fruit pies, custards, blancâ€"manges, sauces, gravies, cakes, and puddings. Makes them delicious, dainty, satisfying, wholesome. y gives that smocth Malnutrition. moon, for exampe, t | _ GCOARSE SALT hadows hat tell we se is a hil or a)| LAND SALT xsl en oo L 1000 waTourgs ABSOLUTELY PRES Why pay $50.00 for a solid gold watch? when you can obtain a watch free, that will equal for time any solid gold watch made. . Fill. in correcxlz the missing letters j the following phrase, an where now marked with a DASH â€" T~â€"Esâ€" W=â€"CH=â€"S Aâ€"E Fâ€"Lâ€"Y Gâ€"â€"Bâ€"NT_â€"rm "No, but I sat near him at Junch toâ€" day, and I heard him say absentâ€"mindâ€" edly to the waitress, "Dimme icky dinky watty, pease‘, " ‘"Billy Youngdad‘s baby is beginâ€" ning to talk now," said one of his bachelor friends to another. "Why, has he been boring you with stories about it?" Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. | My mother‘s just the sweetest A fellow ever had; I love her mostâ€"but here‘s a tip To my old Dad: My Dad can sharpen pencils And mend a broken skate, Knows every skunk an‘ rabbit hole, And lets me sit .up late. Dad‘t got the moÂ¥le nickelsâ€" And when I licked Jim Brown He said, "My gon, just keep it up, And we‘ll keep the bullies down." And Dad, He never whips me; Leaves that for Ma to doâ€" Says he hasn‘t quite forgot When he was little, too. My mother‘s just the sweetest A fellow ever had: I love her mostâ€"but here‘s a tip To MY OLD DAD! ‘ J} REAKET SELLS z-m(-, USED ‘ï¬gfldfllm ennu:-.:. a setms Sipiahor if you wish. in as em“‘m“u mch-‘.-.'-&- eâ€{ceMuM t sws * &R&Nd'“: them .v-',": ask us t: :wfl%&%h'mn Breakey‘s Use#d Car Maurket 5;-2-"“-0. s Forents e missing letters, and enclozing , with gour rame and complete ‘Itten thercon, so that we may tm you of your success, and bout which wae write, you will i will be proud to own. it costs nothing to try, 117 Commissioner Et., Montreal Buy Canadian products. a picture of the moon in which the ’lltht comes from the left immediately after showirg a number of pictures in which it comes from the right will change a crater into a mountain peak even to the experienced eye; a new example, perhaps, of that famous woodchuck hole that stuck out eighâ€" teen inches when the frost went out of the ground. l' Circumstantial Evidence. order as purchased, or purchase z. 'téxw:.n::.n:d: RUSSIA N COUNTF.SSES say car io cuty repcsssetathe tos â€" â€" FOUND IN OFFICES. My Old Dad. G~â€"â€"R=NTâ€"ED _._ The first trip on t»3 new Paris to :-n' air :‘:hn too: ten hours, compared sixty hours for the journeyr by train. my Garling. Lovely ‘o;"l;ot e-xpre it, I assure you!" Rich but unattractive spinsterâ€" "And am I so very, very lovely, Jchn?" Needy but truthful suitorâ€""Love}s A high mountain top is sure to be struck frequently by lightning. n not so if its elevation be great enough to uplift it beyond the ordi ary level of thunderclouds. In tha: case it will have a lightningâ€"struck zone lower down, around its sides Often a lightningâ€"boit discharged i to quartz rock or quartz sand mel the silica and forms a curious Jitt‘s pipe of glass, perhaps an inch in diam eter and some inches in length. Suc! pipes, calied "Pulgurites," are som« times found n large numbers on monunâ€" kud_ ul _ For a like reason the Eiffel Tower in Paris has often been struck by ligh ning. ‘The lofty shaft erected in hot or of Gen. Washington in the Unisoa States capital is a frequent target 1 thunderbolts, and has to be protected against them by an elaborate systom of lightning rods. be struck by For instance, there is an ancien: saw to the effect that "lightning never strikes twice in the same place." This is absolutely untrue. The Forestry Bervice, which dreas lightning as a frequent cause of tfor»: " 0O Ve~Cp uo 4 meq! It is an old saying that most verbs are only balfâ€"truths. Som« wholly contrary to fact people, EOO CECCUD TIP PUUH in the hoiel was filled with men an: women seeking to apply personal;s for the position. Most of ithem we> so we!! e€ucated that they could gua fy not only in the four languages mo; tioned but in others as well. _ They were either out of work or receivin such sma‘l pay in their present cm ployment that they were anxious to change, Among the applicants were a formor colonel in one of the most aristocrati~ Petrograd guard regiments, a dozo:; other forryer officers, two men who had been managers of big Russian fac tories, and many other wellâ€"educae; maanla An American correspondent who a4 vertised in a Riga newspaper for ; translator able to read, write an: speak fluently English, Russian a German, and with some knowledgo . Lettish, received fiftyâ€"ome replics | v mail. The corridor facing his rocim e sb o4 W The condition of these Russian re fugees who have found shelter in ;) infant Baltic states shows how com plete has been the financial downt; of the Russian nobility. in Riga, R« val and other Baltic towns princes, barons find counts and their fan.:. s accustomed for decades in u: ia to lives of luxury, are living a hand +o mouth existence. _ The possessions which they once bhad and escaped ©op fscation by the Bolsheviki clutter up the shelves of second hand dealers i these cities. Diamonds, other jewels, fine tapestries and the countiess cost. ly nick hacks of a& luxurious civili; tion have been sold by these refugoos to get bread. Speak Several Languagec. The casual stranger dropping into Riga or Reval for a day or two woul4 never find this poverty, Instead, h would find cafes, open all night, wher foreigners, lucky because of the low rates of Latvian or Esthonian e change, and local profiteers tossed :; bank rolls of almost worthless rubles or marks to waiters who count only in hundreds of thousands. Fallacies About Lightning It is nH DIH HHÂ¥imw #ha: ____. l It is nothing unusual in Riga to hav» ‘a_ Russian princess as your s grapher. At least a business man .. | acquire the service of a countess in 'M capacity, _ Almost every diplo ; matic or consular mission in Ripa )1 at least one princess or countess w. b ‘Inc as typist, says a despatch (;, m It the supply of princessos and countesses fail where remains a | number of other well educated peop most of them unaccustomed to w but mow anxious to do anything ; save them from starvation. Men «> have been genoral managers of hi Russian factories are now glad to +.\ .. any kind of decent honorable employâ€" ment to earn their living here. Refugees Throng the Baitic States _Gll‘ to Do Any Worl: 4 Not the Word. most proâ€" Some aro This In t should have pnot cracked graing. mash may be gis Of the latter onl given so that it other nitrogenou feeds as gold «a their basis whea fincly «cracked, added for warict also prepared on fincly ground. they will hust Avoid overcrows« clean all fiith fre For chicks the practically the sa there should be grec: stuff, The some corn to ba other nitrogenou feeds as gold e« hom they they fhheld. feet tered in Wi #7 wh thi «rior Wm. Stone 14 wie The outlook i low prices. now and get , will be treat If grot leas AOViSe Cr A1 land which i quack grass, . summer â€"f allow would help by to buckwheat when in bloss think it woul killing the gu kill this weed the same time to planting to clover next s dress with m oats. is well to n conctan:;1 _ so they may A chick‘s « aispoonful ufl digests q tive. â€" Conse Address tare of The 1 to, and answ in which the tion this ’.d immediate ‘: Cressed en the enswer \ The obj wice of our ï¬ @uthority on become t 7 woopsTC Establis is availa fex mout After « o-â€"-d After conn