_ KBRBAFT â€" _ CHEESE | Made in Canada Mary didn‘t manage to act so well this time. Her face felt stiff as she amiled goodbye. They were approachâ€" ing the gates of the Tabor place. Corâ€" nelia her satellite swished off the bus, Ethel casting a provocative glance at the busâ€"driver as she bouneâ€" down the step. It was wasted; he was wiping off the windshield, and seemed unaware of her existence. Driving the bus along "Rotten Row" had made him impervious to flirtaâ€" "Oh." Cornelia‘s eyes slipped away evasively. "Well, we‘ll be seein‘ you, then. _ We‘re coming, too. Ethel‘: honor, 1 guess, Nothing formal, you knowâ€"just the family." "All right, 1 suppose," Mary anâ€" swered matterâ€"ofâ€"factly, although she knew the question was meant to seratch. "Call me tomorrow and I‘ll report. I‘m dining there tonight." Cornelia‘s gaze rested curiously on the man‘s topeoat lying across Mary‘s lap. Mary‘s silence begar to e'at the edge off the other girl‘s gushing manner. "How‘s Dirk? _ Seen his mother 1 tely?" Cornelia asked at last. "How is she ?" "That‘s not Dirk‘s, is it? Twoâ€"timâ€" ing him already, are you*" "It‘s my brother‘s," Mary said. Cornelia gasped. "Oh, my dear, I‘d fergotten about your brother. You must forgive me. So sorry." "How‘s the murder coming along*" C relia seemed determined to blot out the memory of her former tearâ€" fulness by being unasually vivacious. "Dirk‘s a beast. He jist says it‘s a‘ll settled, and he won‘t tell me a thing more about it. How can a murder be settled if the murderer isn‘t in jail*" Mary merely shrugged. So'Dir'( had seen Cornelia, had he? He hadn‘t wmentioned it. "Oh, my dear!" she shrilled, "I didn‘t see you there!" She popped ap and came back, followed by the other girl, and sat down opposite. Just then Cornelia looked around, whether guiltily or net Mary couldn‘t decide. Mary turned hot and cold, and shrank down further to avoid any chance of being seen. Or were they doing it for her benefit? She couldn‘t tell. Thank goodness, they would get off precently. Mary was relieved to see the big Tabor house loom up on the hill ahead. CHAPTER XHLâ€"(Cont‘d.) "Rotten for Dirk, but I don‘t supâ€" pose he realizes itâ€"men in love are so stupidâ€" Oh, I Jon‘t think he‘s so much in loveâ€" Don‘t you?â€" Why don‘t you think so*" Then shrieks of nirth, subsiding into giggles. "On, it‘s too funnyâ€"the family skeleton walking out and rattling just at this limeâ€"every family has one, they say â€"my dear, not the LEuythers! Can you imagine a Ruyther walking around in his bones?" More *hrieks, more giggles. ‘ Rich old Mrs. Jupiter is robbed and murdered during the engagement varty she give= for her secretriry, Mary Harkâ€" ness. . Mary‘s seane e brothez, .lodie, was to huve Leen j:.nfucd at the murâ€" der hour. She tells her fhanege, . Dirk Ruyther, who arranges a rendezvous with the boy, but oversleeps. _ Howen, a Star reporter, drives Mary there. Edâ€" die is run down and kille! as he crosses the street. Bowen tells Mary there is & racetrack gambler called ‘‘The Fly" t> whom her brother owed money. He gives Mary a coat he foundt in the Jupiâ€" ter house the night of the murder. it â€"°C, COube (he 1 t> whom her brother owed gives Mary a coat he fount ter house the night of the is her brother‘s. { Rich in calcium, phosphorus . . . and bodyâ€"building vitamins. It in the most highly concentrated source of highest quality protein known. For a balanced diet, inâ€" «lude Kvaft cheese with every 44 Ib. packages or sliced from the famous 5 Ib. Joaf, Look for healthful Gems of Peril sSYNOPSIS. By BAZEL ROSS HAILEY. "You can‘t be sure it‘s the same eoat," he said. "If the man was a thief, would he try the front door?" He snorted disbelief. "It‘s the same coat," Spence reâ€" affirmed stubbornly. "I‘ve seen thouâ€" sands of them in London, and not half a dozen in New York, sir. And it‘s old, sir, and fair in threads along the edges,. Struck me edd at the time, gir, a man in evening dress like that sir, wearing a disgraceful coat like Mr. Jupiter, hov;ever,A was slower to kindle over the idea. Spence, rendered completely agog by the possibility that he had brushed horns with a thief and murderer, was in and out on a variety of selfâ€"made errands, ears open to hear all that was said. He had guarded the portâ€" als better than he knew, and virtue shone as a garland on his grizzled brow. He was convinced already that 1 had met the brute in singleâ€"handed combat, and subdued him by the maâ€" jesty of his person, alone. else DID get in, and took the things anrd did it all, just as I said! Not Eddie! Oh, Spence, you old lambâ€" v hy didn‘t you tell me this before?" They were still talking it over hours later, Mary and Mr. Jupiter, across the little green bazie cardâ€" table drawn up before the library fire. Early dusk had fallen because of the rain, and tea things sat disregarded on the table between them. * "But this is Eddie‘s coat, my broâ€" ther‘s," Mary told him excitedly. "Oh, Spence, would you know the man a in if you saw him? Oh, do you see what this means?" She seized the surâ€" prised old servant by both arms and danced him around. "It means someâ€" body else tried to get in, someboly "Sure! When you come in like that, with that coat over you, it brought it back to me as plain as if he was standin‘ there." "Not your brother, Miss," Spence explained testily. "I told you as ‘ow ‘e was a stranger, and no gentleman, either. ‘E had that coat on, as sure as I‘m living, with the collar turned u« about his ears, like this." "Are you sure?" "Sure! When vou come in Vika ther «_ thieves. But did he take it like a gent‘eman wouid? He laughed, i you‘ll believe it, and he called me an ‘old fool,‘ he did, ani said ‘Mind you ecunt the spoons!" His wrathful mimicry would have been funny if Mary had not been so preoccupied with the identity of that ~ ysterious visitor. "But who was it, Spence? My broâ€" "It was the night of your party, Miss Mary," the butler explained. "Of all them that came and asked to be let in without tickets, he was the freshest." Obviously the man‘s partâ€" ing jibe had left an indelible mark on the old servant‘s sensitive spotâ€"his dignity. "Why he looked at me as if he5d have liked to do me in, that he did! But I thought as he might be a friend of yours, so I explained about the jewels and the need to keep "He had the face, if you‘ll believe it, Miss, to call himself a doctor, and t:. to force his way in. Yes! And when I told him yo=‘d neithsr invited him nor sent for him, that impudent he was he tried to walk past me into the ‘ouse! 1 put my ‘and up and J said ‘None o‘ that, sh 1‘ 1 saidâ€"" "When was this, and who was it Spence?" Mary demanded, impatient ly. CHAPTER XIiv. ‘"What young man Spence? What are you talking about?" Mary eyed the old butler, fearful of what he might be about to reveal. He looked so vindictive as he held Eddie‘s topâ€" coat aloft and glared at it as if he would have liked to shake its owner. Uncer the stress of emotion, his rsual West End English left him and the CGockney came cut. As she stood shaking the raindrops off the coat in the entry she thought Spence gave it a second glance. He continud to study it as he took it from her. It had a rather obvious, plaid pattern, which seew.~ to interest him deeply. To her question about Mr. Jupiter, he answered absently. "He‘s in the library, playing paâ€" tience. And you‘d best hurry on, he‘s been asking after you since breakfast. ‘E don‘t like poker, and none of the chauffeurs plays cribbage. Ah," he broke offâ€"so you krow that young man then?" "What young man?" Spence shook the coat angrily. “The‘ young man who tried to ‘crash the gite‘ at your party, the night Mrs.‘ Jupiter was killed," he answered. "It‘s his coat, I‘d swear. Now how did| you come by it, Miss Mary, if 1 may ask "‘Thanks, Bill, I‘ll be all right," Mary replied, throwing Eddie‘s coat over her head as she ran up the drive. Mary seethed with jealousy as the bus ground on toward The Point, where the Jupiter marsion stood. "Sorry I can‘t take you up to the door, Miss Mary, the busâ€"driver said as he let her down. tion; too many kittenish debs had tLrown themselves at his goodâ€" looking Irish head from time to time. 99 95 40Â¥ 4 ¢ e #â€"6 04 â€" "I don‘t expect it to," answered the modern youth. "I merely want it so that I may be able to choose the kind of misery that is most agreeable to me." In lakes and swamps bhundreds of flocks of ducks are passing the sumâ€" mer. There is no lack of water this season, such as last year decreased the flocks. "You must remember, my boy, that wealth does rot bring happiness," said the fatherly parson. Winnipeg.â€"Ducks will be plentiful in Western Canada this fall, hunters who have traveled over the north durâ€" ing recent weeks declare. The ducks are experiencing ideal conditions this season for breeding ~nd hatching, and there is every prospect there will be record numbers flocking southward when the ice begins to coat northern lakes. Ducks Due to be Plentiful In Western Canada This Fall "Why, yes." Mary was a trifle dashed. "Iâ€"I lunched with him toâ€" day. He‘s making an investigation on his own, and I‘ve promised to help him." "It‘s not his business. Kane‘s the man!" Mr. Jupiter‘s stick came down with a rap on the velvet carpet. (To be continued.) "Hold on," Mr. Jupiter chided. "You‘re going pretty fast. You been seeing that reporter lately?" "Or mighn‘t he have heard Eddie telephoning me?" Mary put in. "Eddie knew all sorts of men, gamblers and so on. Mr. Bowen was telling me toâ€" day there‘s a racetrack gambler they call The Fly, and he thinks Eddie meant him when he was out of his head and mumbling. Only he wasn‘t cut of his headâ€"he knew what he was saying. But he was weak, and we wouldn‘t pay attention. That‘s what 1 believe!" "Not by the front door, sir, that‘s certain," Spence agreed. "But," he edded with a side glance at Mary, "the side door was open." "And how would he know that?" "He might just have tried it, sir, and found it open," "It‘s old, surely," Mary agreed. ‘It was Dad‘s and Eddie came into it when Dad died. It was big for him, but he needed itâ€"times when he hadn‘t any other." Mr. Jupiter remained silent. He was unconvinced, but he was thoughtâ€" ful. Mary continued eagerly.â€" "I shouldn‘t have thought it the same coat myself, only that it was that very same night, and his trying so hard to get in, and being so nasty about it. And Eddie‘s coat was gone, somehowâ€"lost or loaned or something I‘m sure of it. Mr. Bowen, the reâ€" porter, and I both heard Eddie say plainly when he was lying in the ambulance, ‘Make him give me back my coat.‘ And when Eddie came to meet me that day whenâ€"that day," she swallowed hard and went on, "he had no coat on, just his blue suit, all mussed and wrinkled. And it was cold. 1 remember 1 wore my fur jacketâ€" and nearly froze in that reâ€" porter‘s open carâ€"" "But he didn‘t get in, you say, Spence," Mr. Jupiter turned to the butler. Personality plus. Radiating plenty of pep, Billie Elwood, 18, San Aotonio miss, arrives home by plane from Galveston after dazzling the judges there. She will soon make a nationâ€"wide tour in her new capacity. your "Miss Personality" It is proposed to restore the whipping triangle and the catâ€"o‘â€"nine tails in all jails. It is also demanded that all firstâ€"degree murderers shall be exe cuted, the court decision to be unalterâ€" able by the government. For Lash and Hanging Sydney, â€" Australia.â€"Powerful citiâ€" zens‘ organizations, with the support of newspapers, are demanding . that the government restore the lash and hangman‘s noose in the state of New South Wales. Recent atrocious crimes are alleged to have been due to the modern humane treatment of prisonâ€" ers. Comprehensive as this collection it, it does not contain all the Pressâ€"cutâ€" tings about the Prince. Only a selecâ€" tion of those which are recelved is actually kept.â€"Answers (London). The Prince already possesses very full records of his various tours and other activities, in the library of perâ€" sonal Pressâ€"cuttings which is kept at York House. There are over forty volumes, each containing nearly 7,000 cuttings, and they have been found very useful as a means of reference to past speeches and visits to persons whom his Royal Highness has met. Every letter posted from the Royal Camp Post Office was franked with a special postmark, and Mr. Cooper colâ€" lected _ covers bearing postmarks which account for every town and place visited during the tour. New So. Wales Calls A unique collection of special Royal postmarks, forming a record of the Prince of Wales‘ Indian tour, has been completed, after ten years‘ work, by Mr. J. M. Cooper, a wellknown phila telist, who travelled from India by plane to present it to his Royal Highâ€" ness. It was almost shocking to me to find the way the latest generation seems to despise the war, and the heroic ideals behind it, as a folly which could have been prevented. But 1 believe it knows something which is hidden from the older people, for all their experience, and because of that attitude war will stop. The underâ€" graduate nowadays is far more seriâ€" ous. He begins work at 9 in the morning and often spends his afterâ€" noon in the "labs." He is much less of a schoolboy and more a manâ€"of(â€"the world than those of my own generaâ€" tion. His distinctive "Cambridge acâ€" cent" is going, but so are blasphemy and drunkenness. He is not, as a rule, so well dressed as his predecessor, but he is far more gentle and considerate in mannersâ€"far more expert, in act, in the gentle art of sjving. His attiâ€" tide of mind, whether he is evangeliâ€" cal or Angloâ€"Catholic, is more tolerant, more broadly sensible, and he is not troubled nowadays by "party" quesâ€" tions in religion. By Alexander Nairne, Regius Profess or of Divinity, Cambridge University, in an Interview in London. The modern young man hates to be thought an. idealist. He prefers to think of himself as a realist, a little cynical .about fine words and large hopes. Nevertheless, the ideals are still there. Youth of Toâ€"day Royal Records ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO The physicists have been turning their attention to sodium, because it glows with an agreeable yellow light when its vapor is electrified in a tube. So we find Professor Georges Claude, Professor Pirani and others experiâ€" menting with it In Holland the firm of Phillips, Ltd., and in the United States the General Zlectric Company are experimenting with identical types of sodium lamps ‘that show . clearly enough what may be expected a deâ€" cade hence. f Sodium Lamp Experiments The various efforts of European and American physicists to give us an electric gaslamp have inspired more than one item in this column,. ‘There can be no question that tie present filament lamp is doomed Its efficlency cannot be greatly increased, The fuâ€" ture of illumination belongs to the gasâ€"lamp, which we now see on every hand imitating a red neon or blue arâ€" gon the most complicated designs and facsimile signatures. Large structures of concrete, such as sea walls, which cannot be treated in a retort, are impregnated in various preâ€"cast sizes. In describing the process in Civil Engineering, G. F. Nicholson, harbor engineer of Los Angeles, observes "that a wellâ€"constructed impregnated pile is practically permanent and will serve until the structure of which it is a part becomes obsoleteâ€"in â€" any event for seventyâ€"five years or more," By this soâ€"called penocrete process â€"that is, the penetration of concrete by asphaltâ€"the concrete after curing is thoroughly dried by air in a temâ€" perature chamber, .or eighteen to twenty hours. _ ‘The temperature is then raised to 240 degrees Fahrenheit and maintained there from two to four hours. The slabs are then rapidly moved into the main treating cylinder, which has been prehated and dried. Thus free water is driven off and a vacuum is produced in the voids created. Asphalt fills the chamber and rushes into the vacuous ores. Air pressure maintained for twelve hours completes the impregnation. The temâ€" perature is then allowed to drop slowâ€" ly to cool the asphalt and the slabs. Concrete is thus impregnated to a depth of 1% inches t 2 inches, The asphalt cannot be detached from the surface. \ Asphalt to Protect Concrete Concrete is attacked by sea water, alkaline fresh water and moist soil. In 1920 the harbor engineers of Los Angeles dipped concrete in hot asphbalt at a temperature of 450 toâ€" 500 degrecs Fabhrenbeit, for a period of from fifâ€" teen to twenty hours. Out of this e‘arly experiment came a method of impregnating concrete with asphait by a vacuum pressure process, similar in many respects to that used in creosotâ€" ing lumber. After immersion in the sea for a period of seven and oneâ€"half years concrete thus treated has reâ€" mained intact. ter which occurred in Belgium in De cember, 1930, when sixty lives were lost in a poison fog. Drs. Griffin and Skinner have invented an apparatus in which sulphur dioxide is absorbed in an ijodine solution. _ From the amount of iodine used up the chemists are able to calculate the percentage of sulphur in the air. The work of Drs. Griffin and Skinâ€" ner has been confined merely to the detection of sulphur dioxide, so that measures may be taken to prevent a repetition of the Meuse Valley disasâ€" Dr. Snow‘s discovery is important because it shows that sulphur can be removed from coal before it is burned. The coal is first ground in the mine and then treated with an acid solution of ferric sulphate. Thus treated, it is washed and heated in an atmosphere of hydrogen, by which the sulphur is removed to form hydrogen sulphide. As much as 93 per cent, of the sulphur originally present in the coal can thus be extracted. * According to an announcement of the American Chemical Society, disâ€" coveries which have been made by Dr. Robert D. Snow of the University of I!linois, and by Drs. 8. W. Griffin and W. W. Skinner of the Bureau of Chemâ€" istry and Soils, will probably do much to free cities from the dangers of the noxious gas. $ Sulphur dioxide is the constituent of coal smoke that menaces health and corrodes buildings. Even in diluted quantities, sulphur dioxide in the air will corrode steel and other metal and eat away marble, brick and mortar. In more concentrated amounts it may destroy vegetation and even human life. This Week‘s Science Advances Why Coal Smoke Is Dangerâ€" ousâ€"Protecting Conâ€" crete with Asphalt Same Fine Qualityâ€"Lower Price "Eresh from the Gardens" *T CA Then come the apples: if you look upon them from an upper window, so as to glance along the level plane of the fruit, delicate streaks of scarlet, like those that lie parallel to the eastâ€" ern horizon before sunrise, and appleâ€" green, and some that the wasps have hollowed, more glowingly beautiful than the rest; sober leaves and black and white swallows: to see it you must be high up, as if the apples were strewn on a sward of foliage.â€"Richâ€" ard Jefferies, in "Field and Hedge row." If instead of a gem, or even a flower, we would cast the gift of a lovely thought into the heart of a friend, that would be giving as the angels give.â€" Macdonald. The shadows of the trees in the wood, why are they blue? Ought they not to be dark? Is it really biue, or an illusion? And what is their color when you see the shadow of a tall trunk aslant in the air like a leaning pillar? The fallen brown leaves wet with dew have a different brown from those that are dry, and the upper surface of the green growing leaf is different from the under surface. The yellow butterâ€" fy, if you meet one in October, has so toned down his spring yellow that you might fancy him a pale green leaf floating along the road. There is a shining, quivering, gleaming; there is a charming, fluttering, shifting; there is a mixing, weaving â€" varnished wings, translucent wings, wings with dots and veins, all playing over the purple heath; a very tangle of manyâ€" toned lights and hues. A Window for the Heart In The Journal for Experimental Biology and Medicine, »rofessor Walâ€" ter L. Mendenhall describes an invenâ€" tion of his which makes it nossible to see and even to photograph the heart as it beats within the breast. He fits a window of transparent celluloid (photographic film) in the muscles of the chest and squeezes the skin tightâ€" ly upon it. An operation »nder ether or chloroform is necessary and arâ€" rangements must be made to draw oul air from the chest so that the outer air may press upon the window and hold it in place. Windows for the clest and abdomen are not new, but ncver before have they been made of hotographic film or fitted with such simpsicity, Their priâ€" mary purpose is to make it possible for students to se the heart, lungs and other internal organs o. animals at work. Professor Mendenhall suggests that windows of quartz, which transmit ultraviolet rays, may even . make it possible to treat the internal organs with beneficial light. Send for this FREEBOOK 1 ST. CHARLES MILK UNSWEETENED EVAPORATED When drivers of fast cars in Holland entered a length of road brightly ilâ€" luminated by these new gas lamps they switched off their headlights unâ€" asked. The laboratories of the Genâ€" eral Electric Company report that the light is not suitable for homes or shops, but has possibilities for specâ€" tacular effects. For interiors, a whiter light with better color values is wantâ€" ed. Still ,the efficiency of the sodium light is extraordinaryâ€"amounting as it does to three or four times that of an ordinary filament lam of the same candlepower. This new lamp consists of two cylinâ€" ders, one within the other, The inner contains a little sodium and argon. When the cylinder is heated the sodâ€" ium is vaporized and g\ows when A current is passed through it. The arâ€" gon glows first ‘and then communiâ€" cates its heat to the sodium. The outâ€" er cylinder, from which air has been pumped, is required to keep the «nner cylinder at a constant temperature and to reduce heat losses. Colour in Nature for the asking. Send for our new cook book "The Good Provider."" Vjol hill in the attached coupon. One hundred and eightyâ€"six ways of making your cooking better ith St. aodos are yours simply ;.' the asking. Send for our new . 35â€"â€"‘32 Then will pure light around they path be shed, And thou wilt never more be sad and lone, The world suffers a great deal from people who are uninteresting, because they themselves are not interested in anything. Jt also suffers from the learned people full of knowledge who are extremely foolishâ€"and lots of them arc at the universities and else where. This occurs because â€" they have not cultivated the outside world, nor do they know what is going on around them,. They haven‘t noticed things and haven‘t got the power to apply their common sense to common things. Be noble! In othe will There is a great deal of false sentiâ€" ment about England today which is different from sentiment and utterly opposed to true kindness, Looking back on my own school life, I know 1 owe a great deal to a headâ€" master of discriminate but ferocious severity, who put what is sometimes called "the fear of God" into us, and I believe it did us good. By Sir Adaic Roche, Judge, King‘s Bench Division. Just as 1 should be sorry to see use of the cane in schools abolished, so am I particularly glad that the good sonse of the House of Lords put back the right to whip in the children‘s bill which has been before the House. Of great importance is the sterilizaâ€" tion of the jars. They must be spotâ€" lessly clean but a thorough washing gives this result. Dust is, however, the greatest enemy of jelly and there fore the jars should be sealed as soon as the jelly Las been poured, with hot paraffin wax. Then when the jar is cold, seal again with paraffin and roll the jar to spread the parafiin on the sides. Store jams and jellies in a cool, dry place, as dust free as posâ€" sible. Then with a cupboard of perâ€" fect jams and jellies, the homemaker is never caught without the ingrediâ€" ents of a delicious party when unexâ€" pected guests arrive. Know Perfect Foods Third, the fine texture is assured beâ€" cause exactly the correct amount of pectin to jell the fruit is used. A turned out jelly should quiver when it is tapped with a knife and the knife should cut through it easily and come away clean, not covered with a film of syrup. _ The cut edges of the jelly should be sparkling and sharp. The clearness of jelly depends chiefly on the attention given to careful drip ping of the juice and skimming beâ€" fore pouring. If the bag is squeezed while the juice is dripping, little parâ€" ticles of pulp came through and make the jelly cloudy. Flavor, Texture and Color Are Qualities Essential tc Good Foods Jam and jelly making used to be the finest art of the experienced cook. The principal tests for all good foods are flavour, color, and texture, and to jelly must be added clearness, both from pulp particles and sugar crystale. When underripe fruit is used as in the longâ€"boil method of jelly making, the flavor is, of course, never as good as when the fresh, ripe fruit is used and cooked for only a few minutes. Also in following a recipe that has just been picked up and not carefally tested it is impossible to get uniformâ€" ly perfect results for the recipe may have been for the fruit of a different district and under different conditions. Tested recipes from the great kitchens of reliable manufacturers and distribuâ€" tors of food products give assurance against the failures of a "handed down" recipe. First, the jams and jellies have the fresh flavor and color of the ripe fruit because the cooking time is so short that the fruit flavor and color are not changed by the heat. Every home can have first class food products. But far too many homeâ€"makers cook blindly." _ They bake cakes, cook meats, prepare veke tables and yet do not know what the perfect product of the food should be like. Just now when thousands of dolâ€" lars worth of fruit and sugar are be ing wasted in kitchens in "bad batchâ€" es" it is time to review the qualities that perfect jams and jellies should have. Second, there are no sugar crystals in the product because the recipes are perfectly proportioned _ and tested thousands of times. true-ot'â€"tâ€"h-é }éclpes which manufacâ€" turers send out with their various proâ€" ducts. These recipes have been testâ€" Jams and jellies made with bottled fruit pectin give the qualities identiâ€" fied with a perfect product. Good recipes and good materials give every cook a chance to start off properly. But the recipe must be folâ€" lowed exactly,. This is particularly ed, not once, but hundreds of times i0 bring out the very best in the product and give the best results for both exâ€" perienced cooks and the newest bride. ~ _ â€"â€"James Russell Lowell. The Rod and the Child )ble! and the nobleness that lies other men, sleeping, but never own ; 4 wilt thou see it gleam in many majesty to meet plane ca; with Ayir pondma 1 tral Btach mo @ro tlo ® y ®wih Has Job I th h ang Thes ing, build elect @pJp ti tud th su0ce: to the for 1 part land the ti app!yi tion o them Bull Island most th #sla be tlo: the aul # m «toes this tically t is anticij the 1931 bushels duction â€" About h. «utunin‘s bulk of 1 mestical! #airly st;: Capta polato presen minioi has ju #n Vici Counti D indu indu @cou will oper and t i8 M Buryey the cit tion of ment morth e Jand . â€"Thi Canadian sociation, nual meet ed the sal with few . tion‘s hani oubs werd A p Mil h W Hal Charlot mi W