juu in lexas for Fis} 228 Miles cings MB« ‘,l *4 & 1 . ie L5 74 The earliest instance known of penalizing smoking in the streets is mentioned in the court books of the Mayor of Methwold, in Norfolk,. There is the following entry on the record of the court held on October the fourteenth, 1695â€""We agree that any person that is taken smoaking tobacco in the street shall forfeit one shillinge for every time so takâ€" en, and it shall be lawful for the petty constables to distraine for the same, for to be putt to the uses above said (ie., to he use of the town). We present Nicholas Barber for amoaking in the street, and do amerce him one shillinge." The same rule was repeated at courts held in the years 1696 and 1699, but no other fine is mentioned at any subsequent court the war debt payments because it could not collect them whatever it aid is sending a representative to sit in the Council of the League and is anxâ€" Jously hoping to find some WAY of restoring the international credit sysâ€" tem. The world depression has furâ€" nished proof that the United States has failed to keep itselft .economically ijsolated from the world; the Japaâ€" jappuanerreramreripiere N oP o)( o ):( 00 not H td PCO V C B Lo. b::: able to maintain pblitical isoâ€" lation. â€"Patrick Kavanagh, in _ Irish EStatesman. There is a homely, ~cheery infor mality about a kitchen; and if the lady of the house will take you there herself, some rainy afternoon In the country, and serve tea on the clean, plain table, and let you butter the toasted crackers yourself, with all the buttor you please, why, for my part, F ask no more this side of poradise. _ To use a quaint old obâ€" rolete word, 1 like to be "kitchened." â€"Raiph Bergengrem, in "The Comâ€" forts of home." For my own partâ€"and no doubt each backward traveler has his parâ€" ticular kitchen memoryâ€"I ate the crisp brown beans off the top of the beanâ€"pot. _ It was a sort of ccremoâ€" nlal; a Saturdayâ€"night. function, irâ€" respective of whatever menial might at the time be im official charge of our kitchendom. ©‘The bakimg of the beans was never altogether trusted to a menial. _ My mother, lasi thing before bed, would go out to the kitchen, lighting her way with a kerosene lamp; and I with her. We put the lampâ€"on the table; we openâ€" ed the oven doorâ€"and alt over the kitchen spread the delectable, mouthâ€" watering aroma of the baking bean. We took out the beanâ€"pot. Then we acraped off the crisp top layer of the beans into a saucer. â€" And these we at# . 2. "And Uncle Felix traveled backâ€" wards against the machinery of time that cheats the majority so easily with its convention of moving hands and ticking voice and bullying, starâ€" inz visage. _ He slid swiftly down the long Lanisterâ€"descent of years, and reached in a flash that old somâ€" ber Yorkshire kitchen, anq stood, fourâ€"foot nothing, face smudged and fingers sticky, beside the big deal table with the dying embers of the grate upon his right. His heart was beating. _ He could just reach the juicy cake without standing on a chair. _ He ate the very slice that he had eaten forty years ago. It was possible to have your cake and eat it too!" ‘ir mataretite Talky enotonaty | In his mature [3 h of his own kitchen, still keeps a tenâ€"‘: der memory of soMe kitchen of lh' early youth. It may have been hisg ‘ mother‘s, his grandmother‘s, or u.' Aunt Susan‘s; and not often, : but | c once in a great while, something re. minds him of it. His thoughts hark back, and he touches, in his own deâ€"| : rree, the emotion of Uncle Felix | g (whom you will remember â€" it you have ever read "The Extra Day") | 1 alone at night in Mrs. Horton‘s kitchen. i 1 find a starâ€"lovely art In a sod. Joy that is timeless! O heart ‘Tranquility walks with me ~ And no care. O, the quiet ecstasy Like a prayer. I dream with silvery gull And trazen crow. A thing that is beautiful 1 may know. 1 turn the leaâ€"green «down Gaily now, And paint the meadow brown With my plow. 38 * 100 °/ @~"*, @10 never Something ‘Tells Me â€"â€" ‘{ Prof.â€"Give. me a definition, of.abog. life thinks e‘mouonnlyl That ‘the square dance ‘used to be" Studeâ€"It‘s the 111 ivoodwind,thn_‘ tchen, still keeps a tenâ€"‘a round of pleasure. ,Inobody blows good. uied of some kitchen of u.’ That too many tourists let thei'r‘i w * ' It may have been his guide be their conscience,. ‘ Mamaâ€"What car 1 do to induce grandmother‘s, or his | That there is no cure for a mandyou to go to bed yalges s 4 +; and not often, ht’cm‘e. * ‘|_ Youngsterâ€"You can Jet me.sit up a at while, something reâ€"| That every book has a book end. little longer, * it. His thoughts hnk' That they hold tou ‘nements so that =o m ns lfper > _ ‘ touches, in his own do fall the nann;."" . _ OJ AEaH a fNash that old somâ€" kitchen, and stood, &, face smudged and beside the big deal dying embers of the xh ut so easily ‘their Teacherâ€"‘. his is the worst composiâ€" tion in the class, so I‘m going to write a note telling your father about it. "If the present hat styles result in no falling off in the marriage }liâ€" Pupilâ€"I don‘t care if you do, beâ€" cause he wrote it. "If I dream that I bhave a million dollars, what is that a sign of?" a man wanted to know the other day. "Well, it‘s a pretty good sign that he will meet with a great disappointment when he wakes up. Offspringâ€"I‘m proud of you, father. If it hadn‘t been for your pluck and perseverance 1 might have had to do something of that sort myself, | MOURNING WARDROBE | Jonesâ€"What coal is it? Same kind as you sent me last? Coal Dealerâ€"Yes. Jonesâ€"I wouldn‘t bother insuring it if I were you. It won‘t burn. Millionaire (lecturing his son on the importance of economy)â€"When I was your age I carried water for i gang of bricklayers. Coal Dealerâ€"I say, Jones, 1 want to insure my coal yards against fire. What would .. policy for $20,000 cost? A Motherâ€"Run vpstairs and wash your face, darling. I think, grandma wants to take you driving with her. Ruthieâ€"Hadn‘t we better find i'nit for certain, Mummie? Reporterâ€"Do your football men get up bright and early? Coachâ€"No, Just early. to court his. girl with matrimony in view, : Now he corrts a girl ‘with al most everything else in view. ... No woman is half so ‘ruthful as her own mirror," Among the girls simplified dressing is making a good showing. . . . Once upon & time there vere two Irishmen. There are lots of them now. ... No man ever loved a woman when be was busy or had the toothache, . . , A bachely> friend of ours has hay tever so badly he sneezes when passâ€" Ing a grass widow . . . . How dear old ladies are shocked to see girls do the things they vainly longed to do at that age! . . . A fellow used "A death occurred in our family and I1 hbad to go in mourning. I could hardly afford to buy all black clothes, so decided to dye what I had. I consulted our druggist and he advised using Diamond Dyes. Everything came out beautifully; coats, wool dresses, stockings and all, I have since learned to ap preciate the excellence of the black Diamond Dyes. 1 tried another black dyoe and the results were imâ€" possible. I had to get Diamond Dyes and do the work over, Recently I have tinted my curtains a beautiful raspberry shade and dyed a rug a lovely garnet with Diamond Dyes. They are real money saversâ€"the finest dyes money can buyâ€"I truly believe." C Lucky Bride From a wedding announcement in a Warren, O., newsjaper: Mr. and Mrs. H. â€"â€" win go to housekeeping on Eim Road. They have many friends to exterd good dishes, TDAt & good lwcrd-swallowing act can be seen at ary lunchâ€"wagon around meal time,. 2 4 That troubleâ€"s"ooters should exninit That every book has a book end. That they hold tou ‘mnements so that all the people who think they are good can find out about it. retin Pmb Naviiny w ui.: on * cuonibm L 0 ce ae en insy mnamme in t on een n ens or n «++ +t\ > aaatnmenierngertncts aioents $ .# * + x tm . Ai .: Eul a t ut * Nng cce i C 404 > > se No Sgmicly R * % * : pithober â€" toas ,‘.uaz,_....‘.\_,.., . Wimamane * sgeak We t seig _ q + »* € . i ictliey ooo se s sB staen® t Sok 4 meia h 96 0~0 +m x is." y «<or & *9 ho « Sge: s in ie t i ie s oi .. se drnke n " mss meâ€"mne.. That sossir:ber'sâ€" are "(p KEEP YOURSELF HE ALTHY ‘The lot of most people is much indoor work and little real exâ€" ercise. That‘s why it‘s sensible, ;'â€"rdh'-" thorough . cicanslhs it m.’..w{:%l_{!“ * lTOuDieâ€"3"ooters should exploit sorvices in g big way. â€" 1 Fracd" dhvc Mrs. GKL., Montreal.r Wmm 2l6i9 c uen expert in their ‘E i _| ten>: rate," says w eynte; “&n"fll‘fll ‘ the final proof that love is blind." on ie nc Northamptonshire can boast of a village in which oneâ€"third of the inâ€" habitants possess the same surname. This is Bozeat, which has a populaâ€" tion of just over a thousand. Nearly three bhundred of them have the surâ€" name of Drage. Many villages and small towns can show surprising numbers of a few surnames amongst their inhabiâ€" ‘tants, but nowlhere else is such A large percentage of people with the L L & s1 040 stan or jug made of earthenware or thick china then is warmed and a supply of boiling water is provided in another vessel. Two ounces of the freshly ground coffee then are placed in the warmed jug for each pint of water that is to be used. The boiling water then is poured over the coffée and the mixture is @tirred vigorously with a wooden spoon, metal spoons being condemned as likely to give the liquid undesirable flavors. _ Some froth will rise to the surface of the mixture of ground coffee and boiling water. This is to be skimmed off immediately with the wooden spoon. The coffee, still in the earthenware jug, then is allowed to stand in a warm place for six minâ€" utes to allow the grounds to settle. A dash of cold water will assist this settling. The beverage then is ready to drink, although the Comâ€" mittee states that a small pinch of salt will still further improve the flavor. Another. scientific investigation of the best way to makeâ€" coffee so. that the beverage will preserve the maxiâ€" mum of flavor and healthfulness has been made by the Imperial Economic Committee of Great Britain as a part of the effort to popularize the kinds of coffee grown in the British Emâ€" pire _ The method recommended in the committee‘s report, published recently as a British official docuâ€" ment, is the "steeping method" ‘said to be used by professional coffee tasters to determine the relative flayâ€" ors of different samples of coffee beans. _ The first essential, the reâ€" port states, is that the coffee be freshly ground. Any convenient pot ME C Pss Sm CR Eoo s same name to be found. It is difiâ€" eult to discover how it all happenâ€" ed. â€" Surnames are a comparativeâ€" w Iss & ky ie ® CG. NPIER NTR OOE 1} ly modern institution, for in the old days there were none. To distinâ€" guish between two Williams, one might be referred to As William, Robert‘s son, and the other William from Handley. In course of time this was shortened to William Robâ€" ertsonâ€" and William Handley, or, again, a man might be known by his trade, John the smith becoming John Smith. M : Where the Drages came from is a mystery, for there is no mention of them in the old records. ed at the stgke. Joan of Arcâ€"was & pheasant. Sno was caught by fow! play and burnâ€" evening. | When the still twilights visit me again, Again that passion and that calm pass through me, And 1 am shaken with an ancient‘ pain Which grows not old, since she and‘ and pain are one, **| And grows not less. And so my <life runs on. | Scientists Give Recipe For Perfect Coffee eyes A bannered army in a molten sunset, An army that defies Time in my heart, or time upon the Stirred, and then spoke, and then beâ€" came a power, The face became a triumph, and the closed so firmly, i And were so red, so full of mystery, Closed over speech like nothing man has heard o SBince the first wind in the first . . branches stirred. It was as still as is a summer twiâ€" light, . Oval, and molded to serenity And brooding calm. The lips that her. gBij$ She is not my most constant memory. And yet, deep down, beneath sunrise and sunset, She is the very heart of life to Ke, And that still face that could so dance and flame Comes back to Days come and go, and often 1 forget By Susanne Valentine Mitchel! in Harpers. Ten years have gone since . last. 1 saw her enter Into the room she had. made hers and mine, And since then time has flowed with tidal measure, Ee se Obliterating what was so divine, Covering with its pale and â€" heavy mt nB c um moving and motions of hands. One Name Village He Thinks of Her shame. me, a lost, a lovely «â€" 1 ISSUE No. 45â€"‘31, â€"â€" |of chacs. her I There are a great many stories m about Justin Morgan. told in Randolph, IVermont, where he first became nti\known as an unusual horse. ‘They |nm tell how the "little horse" pulled id a heavy pine log ten rods, when horses ~â€"| weighing 1,200 pounds and over had y failed to mové it even a short disâ€" | tance. 7 e ; His life is touched with irony when we consider that even though a chamâ€" pion of all horges in his neighborhood, he was not considered of any great value because of his small size. Mr. Morgan, who had first taken him to his Vermont farm,â€"died when the colt was but five years old. After that, his namesakeâ€"changed hands freâ€" Justin Morgan was named after his owner, who had lived on a farm in the "Brush Hill" district of West Springfield, Massachusetts, and Jater, selling the farm, moved with his famâ€" ily to Randolph, Vermont. It was on this "Brush Hill" farm that Justin Morgan, the "little horse," was born in 1793, foaled by "True Briton" or Beautiful Bay, an English thoroughâ€" bred who had changed owners curing the Revolutionary War, and changed names as well. All the big people who had seen him or heard about him called him the "big, little horse." That was because, standing fourteen hands high and weighing about nine hundred and fifty pounds, Justin Morgan could outâ€"pull, outâ€"walk, * and outâ€"step any of. the larger and much beavier horses whom he ever met. Biut these stories that tell about the things he did by virtue of his treâ€" mendous strength and courage, fail to tell the best story of all: how the "little horse" earned for himself and gave to his family a name that is known and venerated . @mong horseâ€" loversâ€"the world over. The "Little Horse" That ~~CC _ _ ~ Couldn‘t Be Forgotten The best way to prevent colic, doctors say, is to avoid gas in stomâ€" ach and bowels by keeping the enâ€" tire intestinal tract open, free from waste. But remember this; a tiny baby‘s tender little organs cannot stand barsh treatment. They must be gently urged. ‘This is just the time Castoria can help most. Casâ€" toria, you know, is made specially for babies and children. It is a pure vegetable preparation, perâ€" fectly harmless. It contains no harsh drugs, no narcotics. For years it has helped mothers through tryâ€" ing times with colicky babies and children suffering with digestive upsets, colds and fever. Keep genuine Castoria on hand, with the name: « » & THROUGH CASTORIAԤ GENTLE REGVUVLATION for COLICKY BABIES C O M F OR T CA S T O RLIA Maria Seiber, came to America from Germauy not long age with her dad, and is seen here with her mother, Marlene Deitrich. Maria seems to be a serious young person. And on the little "Brush Hf!!" farm in West Springfield, Massachusetts, there has been placed a tablet that tells all who stop to read: "From this farm came the Stailion, ‘Justin Morgan,‘ progenitor of that useful breed known as Morgan Horses." Wherever a lorgan horse is found, it is sure to be â€"recognized; true to type in every particular; the "little horse" that â€"couldn‘t be> forgotten.â€" Rowland Everett Baird, in "Our Dumb Animals." Toâ€"day, the Government considers Morgan horses. so valuable for Govâ€" ernm>r. work that it maintains an extensive breeding farm in Middleâ€" bury, Vermont, known as the Morgan Horse Farm," where the Morgan Horse Club has erected ~ fine Ilronze statue to the famous progeny ‘Of the "big, little horse," the first Morgan. "Preventable noises cost employers 5 per cent. of their payrolls annually, through the decreased efficiency of workers," he declares, "and the harmful effects of street and other rackets continue even when persons are asleep. Quieter offices, quieter bedrooms and other interiors~ in which 2oises are deadened by soundâ€" absorbing upholsteries (like mobair velvet and other materials are urâ€" gently needed to counteract the efâ€" fect of city noises. â€" Earâ€"muffs to shut out noise will be the fashion if the din of Amepican cities keeps increasing according‘ to Dr. Donald A. Laird, psychologist of Colgate University. : w All the business world needs now is a man who can bring orders out For seven years he lived on a stock farm in Vermont. It was here that he left the several sons who were deâ€" stined to become even more famous than their hardâ€"working sire. Thus he gave to the country the first of the great "Morgan" family, renowned for those four qualities of the perfect horse: speed, endurance, beauty and gentleness. He died in the winter of 1821 at the age of twentyâ€"nine, his strength unimâ€" paired by his years. His death was by no means due to old age, but rather to exposure and the lack of proper care following an injury received while being jastured with other horce«. . quently, sometimes in payment ‘of debts, and at other times ‘being purâ€" chased at a good price because of his reputation, which had continued to spread through ‘he surrounding counâ€" try. Liberty Liberty is the right to do what the laws allow; and if a citizen could do what they forbid, it would be no longâ€" er liberty, because others would have the same powers.â€"Montesquieu. "Repeated tests have shown that noise lowers efficiency," said Dr. Laird. "Highâ€"pitched sounds are esâ€" pecially disturbing and harmful, but these can be curbed to a marked deâ€" gree by placing absorbent materials like mohair upholsteries and. drapes in an office or other interior. Bedlâ€" rooms in which soundâ€"absorbent fabâ€" rics are employed are likely to be quieter than comparatively. barren: rooms and are more suited to purâ€" poses of sest. Even when ‘we are asleep loud noises get in their harmâ€" ful effects. They cause contraction of the muscles, thereby ‘Wtï¬g 10 impairment of the digestive functions. It is literally true that loud sounds may cause that ‘dark brown taste‘ in the mouth after a night of uneasy slumber in g nolsy environment." â€"Muffs May Be Worn To Shut Out Noise 1 1go.‘=£L A man toos a €100k to 2 pay ~â€"brokor in an éffort to "raiss the winc." : "Is ir an eightâ€"day clock?". ask,l the pawnbroker. "I don‘s know," replied the man. "I‘ve never had it out more than four days at a time!" "People cre brying bocks in Engâ€" land and the publishersgre eager to get theim," che said. *There is a great demand in England for popular books on science, z2lso for the old classics like "Dickens and Thackeray. Many of the magazines have dropped out and the people are now reading more books. Two of the most popular periodicals ~deal with women‘s .subâ€" jects, including dress, of course. "A boon in the sale of books is ragâ€" ing in England at presept along simiâ€" lar lines as in Canada, according to Mrs. Elinor Mordaunt, British author, who wrote "Gin and Bitters" and sevâ€" eral other books on travel and advenâ€" ture. Nt friendly thing; And warm across the deep old kitchâ€" €n sill ‘There comes the sweet and spicy, comforting Fragrance of peaches; by some chemâ€" istry D. Ading P Known only in that shining scentâ€" ed place Being distilled to gold transivcency, Precarious on this chill} small flowâ€" k @re grate _ . The dooryard, as though loving the R dirt path, The worn old steps of deeply dentâ€" And finds the wideâ€"branched towerâ€" . ing shelter good. % How dear this place to us who know it best! A peace is here past clumsy words Big Demand For Books In British Isles The bobbing shadow of a leaf along The whitewashed wall is such a The roof slopes close against a giant A dignity and sweetness and content, Because it has been loved so long and well > â€"Anita: Laurie Cushing, in the Christian Science Monitor. which is a quick recovery for an ddmn,vluzt;nu OeunIZodvu the reason for it, they told meâ€"and ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO TWO OPERATIONS AT 71 A Splendid Recovery the credit for two daysâ€" P e o Miranesain «arer. Thak of Magnesia in water. That is an alkali, effective yet harmless. It has been the standard antacid for 50 years. One spoonful will neutralize at once many times its volume in acid. It‘s the right way, the quick, pleasant and eflicient way to kill all the excess acid. The stomach becomes sweet, the pain departs. You are h&{l‘lm in five minutes. ‘t depend on crude methods. the best way yet evolved in of searching. That is _ s" Milk of Magnesia,. Be sure _The ideal dentifrice for clean teeth and healthy gums is Phillips‘ mmthhlllwld ia, ldsup(-nor lootgo eguards against acid« mouth. (Made in Canada.) fills you with a bracing sense of Kruschen Salts is obtainable at all Drug Stores at 45¢. and 75¢. per bottle, gcuive and efficient, New, healthy blood puoouu.n:s through the veinsâ€" carrying health strength and energy newemnstebnt, And ‘s gentle but ive action is more than merely ingâ€" it has a direct tonic effect upon your blood, too, and through your bloodâ€" stream upon every fibre of your bodyâ€" Candidates for the City of Police . 4n 1930 numbered whom 77 weére passed and jected on medical grounds. AN orFFER To EVERY lNVl:NTOIï¬ List of wanted inventions and ful information sent free. The Ramsay Come pany, ‘Norld Patent Attorneys, 273 Jaok Street. Ortawa Canada LADII:S wWANTED TO DO LIGHT sewing at home, good pay, . Work sent, charges paid. Stamp for partiou« lars, National Manufacturing Co.. Mons \‘llll" Us YOUR POULTRY AND +°} eggs Highest market prices »aid. Write for quotations. Immediate settle» mont by certified cheque. Craces loaned, Give us a trial Rosenfeld Pouwtry and Eg Co, Limited, Mentreal. A NCY WORK CLPPINGSâ€"300 silk pleces, $1.00; 2 pounds velvet, 1.10; 2 pounds cotton, $1.00. en Novelty, St. Zacharie, Que. and bowelsâ€"to function as they should â€"m:‘l≪ttlnc in their lives, Instead of being clogged, the intestines are clean and clear, Instead of liver FEMALE HELP WANTED London 179, of 102 reâ€"