-ii/Ltind was totally unexpected not! was made by workmen who were alter. ing the "(311' at of the boating â€Ma"? 'Tr? c'. ‘L A tine Mecearf eleventh century wall Iow‘atands'rovealed and it is hoped that it will-'be‘pouible to follow up the the ,woeAha9i'irtteo"r the LCo.r---The remarkable discovery has been made 9! Raging 1.tf.nse.hurety about M53; "it 'i.hhtCedititAU old benetth 6160} it mandate: Ab. i/e.C End . problem . id: pun! V . ed B'BttF' are ' 3 M. tttptr., ',1i.ii.il'rles'tr/te' tantrums or by whining. . 7. Kcep cool and quiet yourself. Speak in a quiet Voice. s. See that h, leis thing"! they are good tor him) only when'ho‘ls quiet and hippy and polite. ' l 9. Show the child you are pinged when Find Under Westminster Abbey _ ' Portions of Original Edifice th, in Dallas, Tex.-4peeantr Motives h the quiet of the ttie-s-ttins, eit!tles---interrurted llâ€. . This soon my be atâ€. of the'vm it the result of HIM! teats with .Iow train whistle, built like . men- phone. which throws sound directly down the right of wny, so no one close to the tracks can fail to hear it. But the sound in reduced on cit! er side of the track. The device hu been de- "ned and built by employees of the Missouri, Kenna & Texas Railroad. “Mills and mechanics have devoted “Vera! years perfecting it. . _Work was started by C. T. Mew.: . ey, for years superintendent of ghimry on the Katy. His son, C. . McElvaney, jr., now general round. house foreman at Dallas, continued U. s. Children's Bureau Gives Nine Essential Rules Wusmimrton.--What the 11.8. Child- ren's Bureau considers the nine es- Iemiul practices of a good parent are contained in a recent publication of that bureau entitled "Are you train. tme Four child to be happy.'" They are: count them. things 4. " th Céntralized Heating Plain Will Furnish Heat For , ’ Homes tuttrbsimestrtr' I Buildings Locomotire Megaphone Whistle I _ _ ' -v" - Mi Photoirrapher Churchill to Have. Modern Apartments town plan will specify locations ot 'tstrlir' buildings, vehmls. churches. may station, hotels. buxiness ntrtretse, residential section and recrea- thm grounds. ‘Mequnte surveys will be made this your. A compact settle F! is planned with the inltisl resi- dential construction possibly in the tom of apartment houses. heated by a central plant that would slso furnish but for business blocks and public buildings. Settienent will sdhere to a carefully devised town planning acheme with proper sateguarda made for future development and attention given to recreational iacilities. Many applications from those who wish to establish business houses of all description! It the new enport are being i'eceiVed by the Manitoba Gow ernment; Three or tour hotels and restaurants and a lumber yard will not]: the initial construction at Churchill and work on these will prob ably Mart this month, when the sur- " will, it is expected, have been com- Metal, No More Parents Should Ignore Tantrums Winnipeg. - nonhuman! d.- the castle of Churchill. Canada's new- seapon, on Hudson Bay, terminus (Aha Hudson Bay Runny, in ex- . to start an: wring. I a , Information "Iâ€. 7iaetle gal others here.' “ ' ' T The entire torrtvsiteictutrettiu is owned by the Praying of Manitoba it is to be developed along modern uni-planning lines. No property will 3. sold but, istpteqtLthere will be long, “I leases subjeét to reasonable re. n at stated Wt inch as every til': or9pesitrs. My . . Baum are now a! mum-hill Corkinz out plans tor water worIm.r wat"," mains and “average lines. The “In plan will ~pm-lly locations of "Mir 1ruildmirs. yelirmls. churcheu, Dallas, Tex . De taut a trim e Shrieking Whistles Will Be Heard in the Middle of the Night-Latest Device Condenses Sound to One Spot . up bad habits by keeping so by†with interesting lo that he forgets the old attention to him when he what he wants by temper Directs 'So.und Beam ba,,, Track The early church we: opened in the you 1065. and was the gift of Edward ttyt Confuse! who was struck down with his last illness almost " the moment when his great church was being eonseerated, . The present abbey Building owes its origin to Henry m. “It took the place of a church of to'tnlly different style with large round arches 3nd heavy massivykcolumnls characteristic of the Norman builders. original dimensions of the Norman have, a subject over which archaeol- ogists have laugh may} battle. _ The dialogue to between a small girl and the proprietor of a corner shop. "A large tin ot salmon, please, and will you book It?" "t think there is some mistake. Your ulster ctuno for one 1 quarter of an hour ago, Surely your mother doesn't want two?†"Yes, ith all right. She sold the other one to go to the pie. tures." _ We, the pedple, dont' irant to get rid of our prdudlces. "Get out, man, Columbus didn't even have a car'." “Just to think ot Columbus going over two thdusand miles on 3 gal. lean." expeginents, and through his efforts mq,whistle has been perfected to s phi! _ 'here tests are haiUd " Inc- cash]. Terminal elevators, needed tor the storage ot wheat, are carrying sub manual quatttities ot these grain by- products which Are, in consequence, being ottered at much lower than the usual prices. Mixtures ot barley and wild oats, finely ground. are available at 89 cents per mm, sacks included, delivered at Montreal, Sorel Ind Que- bee. MeEivaney'a whistle, which ha been placed on two fast passage: train locomotives on the Katy line, has an tunplifier and sound director which looks much like a headlight. - . Warning notes no producod by six pipes,' with low and high not-Ia so blended that they produce a maximum warning with a minimum of annoy- ance.. Because)! softer tonep.tsnd the {not that sound will not be heard all over the countryside the whistle is expect- ed to benefit notuinly trairrpturrhttrtyrs but also thousands who "Eve along the fg ht of way, especially in large cities. Any danger from the presence of weed seeds in these nutritious grain byproducts would be corrected rea- sonably well by Btte grinding with high power hammer grinders. and this fact, together with the low prices at which they are now available should render them protitatrte to the Cami. dian feeder, even at the present low prices tor animal prodttets.--hnmed by the Director of Publicity. Dom. De. partment ot Agriculture, Ottawa, Ont. Screening Feeds _ Officially Graded sheep. N, The product formerly known as "Oat b'ealpintts" and consisting main. ly ot wild oats, but with small per- centages of domestic oats and barley, is now designated "Mixed Feed Oats." First Quality Now Designated ' As No. l Feed Screen- i, _ _ V-inga" Canadian farmers will be particu- larly interested in the following state- ment issued by the Seed Brunch at the Timon Department of Agriculture: creenings shipped for feed from terminal grain iteratot, are now be- ing sold under grade csrrtitteates, um der the new grade standards and de- signations provided by the Canada Grain Act or regulations thereunder. w X: Miss Molly Brown, seated in t1rst Packard gar pun; in 1899, Fill be driven from Detroit to Bethlehem, Pa., to le placed In Lely‘gh Universltx on exhibi-. non. lil 1899 this on mauled “31.250 and present trade-in "In. 1: 192mm Non-Skid Rugs Will Prevent Stumbles Nonskld rugs, tn help save some of the thousands of falls which statistics show to occur annually trom the slip- pery proclivlties ot the ordinary ar- ticle. have been studied scientifically by the United States Bureau ot Stand- ards. Comparisons were made, a bulle. tin of the Bureau reports, between an ordinary untreated rug, a rug treated with a commercial preparation design- ed to make it less slippery on its un- derside, and a third rug backed un. derneath with a commercial material used as a rug underlay. The ordinary rug slid down a polished inclined plane, the Bureau reports, when the plane was tilted at an angle ot only 18 degrees, not an unusual slope for an inclined walkway. The treated rug stayed on the polished plane repre- senting the floor until the tilt was M degrees, a little more than one third ot the angle between horizontal and vertical. The rug provided with the non-skid underlay clung still more tightly, not sliding oft until the polish. ed plane had been tilted to over 54 de. grees, substantially steeper than a one hundred per cent," slope? Were this slope the side of the mountain it would be impossible tor human beings to climb it except by using ropes, cutting steps, _ or otherwise employing the technique of professional mountain ciphers. Determinations or the co- e clent of friction between rug and ttoor also were' 'made‘ by the Bureau, confirming the easy skidding charac- ter ot the ‘ordihary rug aha the elec- tiveness of ttttrtmrttotrgkid expedi- ents. , , _ _ Doris (expeetant1y).' "You’ve seen Father? What did he say?" Tom: "Er-er-er I'm not certain whether he said, ‘Take her, lad,' or 'Taka care, lad!' "-Christian Science Monitor. In a letter accompanying the wheel, the elder Mr. Swasey explains that the wheel oxiglnally belonged to Ben- jamin Dodge ot Exeter, N.H., who started a pottery in Portland in 1801. which later passed into the hands ot Frederick Swasey, whose hither. the late Ehon Swnsey, bought the basl. ness' of Mr. Dodge. Longfellow, he A tour-line poem by Henry Wada. worth Longfellow. written when he was 16, and believed to be hitherto unpublished, has been brought to light as the result ot the gift to the Museum of the Peaceful Arts, New York, ot a. seventeenth-century pot. ter's wheel. The wheel. now on ex: hibltlon in connection with the mm- eum's "Men and Machines" exhibit, is the gift of Ambrose Swasey, Cleve- land machine tool and astronomical instrument manufacturer, and his nephew, Frederick D. Swascy ot Port- land, Me. [ H. B. CNsler, Seattle photographer. who trekked across Olympic ,"enim sula, unaccompanied and unarmed. Vick no food or Meg-ms, bolts a few juicy morsels ot a marmot caught by his own ingenuity. on a mountain top. Unpublished Longfellow Poem Given To Museum of Peaceful Arts First Packard "I'm just a notch on her pet golf club. thats' all." As an offset to the new State text- books which are being introduced into Italy by the Fascists to make young Italians militantly nationalistic trom their primer days, comes the news ot an experiment in international eduea. tion tor children beginning its third year in Spain. There, in the Spanish International School at Madrid, under the Association tor Plurilfntrual Edu- cation, children almost from the cradle to college attend six hours ot classes and games daily in tour lang. uages--Spattish, English. French and German. Thus, presumably, they will think. speak. and act internationally from the age ot 3. suggestiohs from educators in all part ot the world. Professor Pedro Salinas of the University ot Seville is chairman of the executive committee. "Then you think you won no per. manent place in her heart?" Longfellow. he said, wrote the tour lines, similar in theme to the “Ken- mos" of his maturer years. leaving the slip of paper on which it was written on the potter's wheel. Mr. Dodge found it and made a plaque. on which the poem was inscribed. For years it hung over the wheel, but finally it was sold by Eben Swasoy and his partner, Rufus Lamson, who later tried to buy it back but could not dia. cover the whereabouts of its purv chaser. The poem follows: i No yamiicrattsmian's art 1 Can to or art compare; _ _ We putters make our pets or what we [rulers are. Moreover. in the true international temper the school asks criticisms and wrote, often visited the Dodge pot: tery and wasrinterested in watching Mr. Dodge fashion clay into various forms, probably being inspired to write his poem "Keratnoig" while there. An Experiment in Spain I "I can't see why they have a man l to steemmom the rear ot the fire de. 'otr%-gamser truck." said Mrs. Mummy; [may it's a necessary “but, 'ir-tr-fl-ren' Mrs. Back. Aetit,' “but; 6r-rettrivit-lcgou that ith MP} W mum“ . tq {Chemical h, Invented to Halt i Bad Cheques at Teller', Window The demonstration that the space GLiilred that a pound ot Manitoba between the stars conning very dit- maple seed on an average contains fuse gases, the theoretical determina- t3,000 tree seeds, the number ot seeds tion ot.its density and temperature, in this collection reaches the astound- and 1116 Oal proof ot its uniform glis- ing total ot 39,734,000. Ot course. tribution and its participation in the many of those will not germinate and rotation o tthe galaxy, tom n striking of those that do, a proportion will die example ot the elective combination without having reached maturity. ot theory and practice. The derelop Nevertheless. it is a conservative ment ot this interesting'admnce in estimate that as a result at the chil- our knowledge ot cosmos may Justly dren’s ettorts over twenty million be considered as one ot the romances: more maples will eventually help to ot autonomy And form: n important,' beautify many tam homes in Mani. Canadian contribution to science. ltoba. Saskatchewan. and Alberta. While the early observations at Vic- toria furnished the foundation trom which Eddington deduced the physical properties of this gaseous matter, the final observational completion ot the whole structure has just been deflttite- ly proved that this diffuse gaseous mat-er is uniformly distributed throughout the stellar system. It has also been shown that this matter is not at rest as previously supposed but partakcs in the most beautitul exact way in the orderly and moiestic ro. tation ot the stellar system around a very distant centre. the most convinc- ing proof ot the similar rotation of the stars having also been obtained at Vic. toria. About tour years ago Sir Arthur Ed- dington was led, by the proof at Vie. toria that the hot stars were in rapid motion through nearly stationary gases. to investigate theoretically the physical properties of this gaseous matter. He was able to show that it must be almost unbelievably tenuous. ot thousands of times higher vacuum than an incandescent lamp. Indeed the whole volume ot the earth would contain only about a quarter ot a pound ot such gases. He showed tur. ther that these gases behaved in an almost paradoxical way, that although external space was so cold that a solid body placed in it would tall to about 450 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. the molecules of these diituse gases w'ere so tar apart, about one in every cubic centimetre, that the radiation trom all the stars would give speeds to these molecules corresponding to a temperature ot about 20,000 degrees. Eddington assumed these rare gases were uniformly distributed in the space between the stars but there was no proof ot this unitorm distribution nor knowledge of the motions. The presence ot very tenuous gases in the space between the stars, pre- viously indicated and discussed try others, was definitely proved at the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory at Victoria. B.C. about seven years ago. It was then shown that stars of the highest temperature trom 30,000 to 50.000 degrees Fahrenheit, ot the greatest mass up to about 100 time: that at the sun. and ot " intrinsic brightness over a thousand times greater than the sun, were rushing about rapidly in all directions through diffuse gases which were nearly sta- tionary in the stellar system. The gaseous matter which is believed to be ot the same general composition as the earth, was recognized by the am pearance of certain lines in the spec- tre ot these hot stars and was shown to be widely extended throughout the system. Results of Study by Dominion Observatory of Diffuse Gaseous Matter in Stel- lar System hd l? Important Addition To Astronomic Data Detection ot I raised cheque is in- tttatttatteoas with this device, and the 'rtrrtriiensiou ot the person present- ing it can be brought that. Iimultule- only; according to the inventor. Explaining the system. Mr. Block said: "A bank needs only to have its cheques printed on paper treated with an infinitesimal amount of a certain chemical which does not meet the ap. Indoraing {cheque that ha been hmpereil with will be like Main; 1 warrant tor his an arrest to I per- son presenting such a cheque at I bank that uses lvnew protective sys- tem recently developed by Dr. Julian Block in Chicago. A conceded unu- violét rar. lamp is used In conjunc- tion with. a Irlurto-eteritrfe cell and other little-known apparatus. any 'ilhGii Eyes, Made to Order, Are Given to Canadian Veterans ', Dn'l'aylor told how at the end of Ithe_ yangermnny .71: the only coun- trTarrodtteing glass eyes, nnd sen-ice nae: In 'tueftit them had to send to d.thirman tirtn in New York to be Qittmt,. In we 61 Menu! they had .ta_ we the rimuxloili‘ork our gSoil Improvement tuiafittt chum. er , . _ l, .f‘1éven‘f "i';lf'r'.it.N,7 gram need i)rly.t1?,ili' Tait}: {pig-i "'ft,ite,e out . Ce? 1tihra" m. e. "an" tf . ilitit1ilili' .tp eortgider' {to 'rfy'i.gftiils'r'l,] I'm-r _ . easily rephced in one ot accident. Sllk Tassels Popular Lomlon.-S" tassel: In gay colors aris the latest thing tor modern turni- turfHa place of handles. They no mug to tit in with the color scheme ot thé room, npd an be (lunged with the seasons and the cutting. The seeds collected by the Dauphin children tilled 139 sacks. This figure does not seem large. and even 3,055 pounds (a ton and I half) is I reason- able quntlty to grasp, but when It ls considered that a pound ot Manitoba maple seed on an average contains 13,000 tree seeds, the number ot seeds in this collection reaches the astound- 13,000 tree seeds, the number ot seeds In this collection reaches the astound- ing total ot 39,754,000. Ot course, many of these will not germinate and of those that do, a proportion will die without having reached maturity. want-mamas. it is a conservative Collecting Tree Seeds For Prairie Planting year, as in many years past. the' school children are helping Mr. F. J.! Smith, Supervisor ot the Ridinzi Mountain Forest to collect seeds fromi the Manitoba maple trees in the: vicinity of Dauphin. After collection. the seeds are shipped to the Forest Nursery Station ot the Department ot the Interior at Indian Head, Saskat- chewan. where they are planted in seed beds to germinate. The seeds mar be planted either in the autumn or the following spring and the next spring following. when -tlter have been in the need bed eighteen Gl twelve months, as the case may ii) the young seedlings are lifted and let out in the permanent plantation! Of the four couches which made up the train. the ttrtrt was uscd as a laboratory where Bamples ot soil, brought in by visiting farmers, were tested for acidity, and recommenda- tions given as to the approximate quantities of lime required according to the results of the acidity tears. The second car was devoted to de. monstrating the advantages from the moped use ot agricultural lime: the third. those ot commercial fertilizers, while the fourth was the lecture car In which lectures were given by the oMclttU in charge on the use of am; cultural lime and commercial fertili- zers The train was organized by the Quebec Department ot Agriculture in cooperation with the Agricultural Colleges in the province, the Seed Branch ot the Dominion Department of Agriculture, and the C.N.R., and was part of a campaign now under way in Quebec for tteeuring greater‘ yields from a more Intelliettt and more general use ot agricultural line and commercial fertilizers. The set monstratil moped us third. tho: Upwards or 10,000 farmers the train in the course..of Its t thou! 5,000 soil :umples We ed.--0ssued by the Director “city, Dominion Department l culture. Ottawa., _ . new trees boys and h soil improvement train has just completed its three weeks' itinerary through southeastern Quebec, hum; started at Contlmok on September 15th and tluitsua It vereheres on oe. tober 4th. penance 01th. paper in an my. in to (â€all e and! ultra-violet ray producinc anemia beneath the cou- ter " in paying tellers window. The éhemlcnl employed any be applied in the ink used in chem writing In- etead of in the piper, um is than adaptable to protective cheque-writ. iug machines, or it In" be applied to both the ink and the new. ; "The moment n cheque nude with paper or ink so mum is altered It the teller'l window equipped tor this process, the invisible uttraNiolet an produce n tmore-ttee which mike! the genuine tuures shine out bril- liantly, while my alterations in the tttttres or other writing. ammo: or other signs ot tampering Show up as dark, ttOtt-luminous spot: on a glow- ing field." l0,000 Farmers Visit Train in Course of Tour-l .000 Soil Samples Tested here will prai Train imQuebec ,sult of the efforts of the girls ot Dmphiu. Manitoba. probably be several million sprouting 0n Canada's west. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO VI Pub Agri Ind the iRndioaNoises and ; Small Golf Racket tionnl Pipe Product.. Corporation. Wm. Townsend was visiting "thr friend Bobbie Jones in "Atlanta and they paused to watch the players at a min. iature Nurse. Townsend at once saw the commercial possibilities. That was last October. and look where things m now: 6.0? courses in the entip country, one timt under the Tom Intents. and nobody knows how many owl-mug outside the patents. The most protttaNe and colorful are the MMind the Roxy Theatre owned by William Fox. where Broadway caved: that the theatre. These bring in about n thousand dollars a day pro- vided the weather is good. - carterJ'tuti',ciccpure,'i'sa12':xyt of hh mm Invirciion. E innit? ever plays no" hunt" md “than heard to cail this! who do. “cling fools." He has sold is inte I the patent rights Yor a'Eoupl'c muarod thouund dollars, the patentalile part of the idea beintthe use nf the dyed cottonseec ards. Th ever is nu in the cou called Fai The pm what it is are the T, In turning around on I road which In: soft shouIders. and may to“. do when "man's min. tall, the dal- ger ot getting stuck ls enure1r elimin- M It the driver nmenben to he. the driving wheels on the hard dttes noo. It doulot. '1le much dilem- oneo If than-gm. Elwels sink a Mt I. lot: ",tl" r.ettpair has martial. _ A highland ferry-hat laden with oaaiettg6m was caugst ll I In“. Icull vim: hut-my arm" the loot “u bouncy but: tun tho (our m.“1'uur ye; f. . m, ttrs 'ieasc'-aarndots TirBurs . got from E baits. Wh his cotton p lost Withou the Inwnlil layer of eor his peon's forms. C a: miniature 1 happy thou seed green. fun if the cm around more, , tried it. and th is bigger. Jt has s? der, dried peas or rain. " kinds of sirens. and I resine Simon pulls to g cmwinu. and r If pulls the strive, tl mi that “Swazi-s h "ULLiPUT" G Gettitur'di1litrently to this miniature golf cours find that it was all sum 003:. Tennessee, by a Mr ter, who owns a hotel m Tom Thumb idea came three years Ago. He h golf count in connect hotel and also a clock-; went for practicing mm it struck him that it w The â€we: scape: a toothpick on n " to the creck of I hammoPk swinging. twists one glut tumblre insideJnothu for the ureech of auto. mobile brakes. cranks u coffee-grinder to Achieve the noise of a big {notary " work, sumac: In elastic to get the tsound of _ m Tell's bow. Mr. Sin. ton has to mke the sound of the arc now in ftittbt bith his mouth. it took I lot of .mhearsnl to get it exact'sr right. The pounds of unlocks and sleighhells are the only ones that have defied Mr. Sinton's ingenuity. He has to use the teal articles for thew. H, does it in a far corner of the Yum! where explosions are also made Air. Simon smacks a ban drum “ill: the fltit of his hand for these. Mr. Sintnn has invented a machine that will make Now and then Mr. Simon comes upon brilliant successes by areider= A noise likere Chicago Fire was up ently aough by one of the big hours. He had gun a dress shirt from it: sheath of T oiled paper one even. int, crumpled the p;.per up, and was about to the it aside, when his ever alert ears tW/ed' up. He crumpled the paper L.. "Eureka'.' he ex- claimed. fit Chicago Fire'.' A log dam. ‘h was. together: sum If you actually We re atrrm.d o picked up I bet a ship; he "named a leather hillfoll _ door creaking on its hinges. Tho effect of a waterfall is got by rustling tissue papa-in the hands. ia-ii Lite' Titi/isiiiirLss, Mr. Al Sinton. a serious, slightly built man, halos the noises for the Columbia Broadcasting System, and the other St ho showed us how it's . be grasped two cheap , s and clicked the handle. Pt swords clashing in a duel. " you Wally clicked fencing foil: m a microphone it would attprtf fenders colliding. He picked up I berry basket and twisted In frail wood in his hands. “Cope smashing a door with axes," he said. Wm en you hear the doors beaten dt in J police raid that it'a Mr. Sin lemnly mangling a berry basket. He thumbed some cornstarch in a he that was men crunching snow , oot; he twisted a rickety kitchen' e r-wind in the rigging 06 muse! " Soft Shoulders t was all started in (putt-n- ncssee, by a Mr. Garner Cu- Wns a hotel near there. The mb idea came to him about " Mo. He had a regular " in connectionJvith hi! also a clock-golf arrange- practicing pitting. One day him that it would tie more a clock course were" spread d a ma It look It has nd Broth Ire taken (in-by I hulls trodden Ttttder the 1oadite-ttUt- :lied‘fhe we: so his His. too-Pans the at rick hau’ids. He tt are. The idea ulls for grass ho an named Fair. irn went down to in Mexico he wu GUI bare Th [ business, WI 1 in Chin-n- Garnet Cu- " there. The ".0 him about ht noticed hard†ou the I. how- aboute Thumb he ta. m- he