SEFUZMBJE. l?» 12.19.32, (i .)- Tvllnv Only PRINCE EDWARD lll-l-s-l-i I CHARLIE CHAN “T T“ RACE TRACK en's rurxrv (£000!E-(‘IIARLEIY (‘IIASE & scorn‘ HARRY CAREY Mommy -- TUESDAY _ WEDNESDAY DAILY 3.15 -- 1.00 _. 5.45 r. M. " Your hearfwill tell youlof-the beauty,‘ the soul; thrill, of this drama of youth-zip love- rebelling Iagainstlthe) harshfcodejoflitsuralders ll Proudly Ipresenied by1he_ PIIOIZIIICGISOf;AhWIIdEIDGSSI w Ivm- ucinneu . . _ n MAII EN USIILI- Matinee 1lc-27c. ‘ . ADDED. ... . COMEDY and r in PLUS COMEDY nunvx MERRIWEL CHAPTER 4 ...30 —-7—-8.45 HWAGON TR3A|L$" AND SERIAL 1110.16 Evening 27c—33c. A HEALTH SERVICE OI’ THE CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION AND LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES IN CANADA HEALTH AND THE SCHOOL Can a school do harm? Of course _it can, and of course it does. The artificial confinement of children into schools for the best; third of their waking hours. under cowl-WI‘ sion of the law and the truant 0f- flcer may be necessary-I canmt say-but even if necessary it ls an evil. It, i5 a necessary evil, that. may some day, if we are Olfllldllinded. evolve into a necessary 800d- Wilh- out the evil. What can we d0 l0 R0019 the 200d and cut out the evil? What can we report, school by school, about. gen- eral cleanness. cfezinness of walls and fioors, clennncss of toilets and water supplies and places to wash? What about infectious and disinfec- tions? What about lighting and ventilation? What about those fet- lers of the squirming little bodies the desks? Are lli(‘_\' ns elastic as possible? Are the standards of the school in cleanliness and convenien- rnnvrznogui: R. C. M. P. l l ~ mu .- _ .\.\',\i'.\'llO'l'S - trylvrocrx‘ ‘YY-TUESDAY-“(ILDNIISDAY ; li,\ii.\' 3.15 — 7.00 —— 8.45 l’. M. - o '27 l l l EVENING c - 33c - 38c '.\i.'l"l‘l f I'll: - _ £1111" Golden Fruit 11y BARBARA B. BROOKS l L00, i5’ l l l roasts. and very attractive, . .u:> All lclrutin. _‘__‘ Peaches Au Gratin l wtnclics, 'l-4 cup corn‘ t.u.n.».». i--l cup butler. " nir- imlve lunches. Roll ln' dubs. pure in butler- .u suie up. In hol-, ul whole coves, acid‘ ‘ m n szunr. Dot ullh but- _ll'ii‘; ~ with lemon juice. “l, . . . not men l400 (leg. F.) un- AH, o. H11 . ll.l.L 1s tenth-r and crumbs are ‘ . l l‘ ‘brown Illl-lil nuivuies.) Serve hot. ’1\‘o'\-: It roux: ,- l cup who corn iltkv-s to inukc l-4 cup cornl fluke criuxibs. Pouch Cob er is nn old way of ‘.‘"..n..' DOZIPIlCs. but <l0IlCl0llSly new win. the all. bran dough used. It ls poll svrvctl hot or cold with thick t-reuzn. Peach (Mbbler ‘milk, cups flour, 1 tsp. bak- ‘. l-2 tsp. soda. 1-2 tsp ‘at bz-un ‘in buttcrtnilk. Sift “w: v ,,,,,._ flout‘, linking powder, soda and salt . 1 ._,_ fpgoplivr, Clll in shortening until l -~ rhvlls Inixlnre is like coarse cornmeal. Add ‘soukwl ull brnn; sin" until dough l follows fork zu-o. id bowl. Turn on- Ito ilourctl board; knead lightly a few’ st-colllls; roll or pnt to one-half‘ inch tIill‘l<ll".\\. Nnlc; SWEET‘ MLLK RECIPEI‘ milk is used instead of hulzc-rmliiz, omit soda and increase baking pmwlcr to 3 teaspoons. Fresh peach pie is temptm! and‘ ' .».tl.sf\1n:. lt should be eaten nu. or n‘. least soon after it has‘ own baked. ' .1‘. For proper ventilation windows hum be opmcd top and bot-tom. The foul uh" rises and goes out at the top ,nnd in this way a bed- room 1s kept sweet clown-Charlottetown Bus Service >~.-*\"'.l"|\(l .\I().\'I).\Y. APRII. 27th. _ xllilll uflcr s jiossiblc. W1 ‘c: IGeo lmflyp 1,. .; r JLLr-nvn Charlottetown 4.00 I'.. . - < .\i. Jnbnsimfs River . 4.20 RM. ' ..\1. Webster's (‘cirncr . 4.30 RM. ..\l. I-‘urt Allllustus 4-40 PM- ..\I. Pislluid . . 4.50 Pu“. .\I. Prakcs . .. . 5.00 IE. . ..\l. :41. 'lbcr1' '. .' 5J0 H“. _ _ Ilzilciwiil, Road .. 515 1",“. . 4H lfozul .. .. 20 RM. _ ~ l (‘ardignn .. 35 PJI. Arm,“ 1 m, . (leurgetmrn . . 5.50 II". Ilvu ' - ' ..f I |.u'lu‘.l|'l¢n\|\—. flll.\.\'.\ 'I l‘l.-\ ROOMS. lieu. (w r-.~_. I luv-J". .I. SOLONIAN. Ill I( K T-I'.\S.\'I'I.\'HEIK (“AR .4. LLIS ON H UES TIS f IIIIIIGHMUJII. l‘. E. l- Parcels 1.15.. .1 .u nnnimum charge of 25c- l So busy all with eWfi/lhmg With Tuxedos or such TODAY Was there in known or written hi5- tory ‘ The such activity as marks our day; ‘ th T111 press and platform an] e land were filled _ with-noise of functions simchcfi and Parades, Then all the business of the daY would seem _ ‘, A constant carnival of banging drums, , w r, ogram and camflfllulls- gI ggviernrncnt and boards of trade. l Associations leagues and ffilafles- Conventions orders and fraterni- ties Is there no man who lives his llfe in pence? . As mer were wont ere orgflnllmg craze Made statesmen jumP ilk? fleas from land to land. infecting pcddler. PaT5°Yl~ dlmce l and clerk. d Professor, laWWf. media’ an tramp To join a union or to found a state. Abrcihcrhood. n pln-lv or a m“; t u work That hitherto were deemed neces- sity ’ For young and old. f0!‘ humble "5 for great. Who now have joined without end. Of tirscl. feat-hers. travesty. the turmoil pomp l Once, sports upon the villnuc green would hold Foch native satisfied to be himself: But 110w the boiler-makers‘ bull competes crossing - sweepers‘ hlilll soclcbv. 1e All stiff and starchcd in fashions full dress suits, formal evening W931‘, I'm not a. snob, but yet I must con- fess Some thin-gs just make me wonder, none the less: Hog-calling women win a place of fame To bring the press boys running to their feet; 4 cups sliced peaches, 3-4 cup , ,, suznr. L! tbsps. butter, 2 to 3 tbsps. A medal 1118066 upon a, swilling ‘ ur. l-L! tsp. nutmeg, l-4 tsp. swlne- ,_,,,,,,,,_ Who wins the flagon quaffing l nee neurhes, su ar, spices and tou-Fna-Tnenw? hziil~r 1Q nwp pang Sprinkle with Each Independent Order Snmd T0 flour. Plvpflfl.‘ biscuit dough, roll ' Tvhe Bunk- ‘(jut -_0 Uncuhulf inch in thickness ‘Ihnt holds up traffic, headed by , , n, PM“ land pnq. over top of peaches. flbllfld; I ‘ ‘ hni-tr- m rnoclerntelyr hot oven (425 BQOIWEBYPYS named 1°!‘ PR-Tllfiment . ram. Lieu, l~'.\ for 30 minutes. Serves B. , 1° Wlll ‘ , “ ,J A place of honour in affairs of , " All Bran liutiennilk Biscuits Slime; l-2 (‘up in: bmn, 3-4 cup butter- And on and on the merry clamor K098. And where it goes your guess good as mine “James M. MacLean, 2149 Nel- son Ave.. New Westminster, Can- axia is RIBBON TRIM Black marocian nftemoon en- sembles are brightened by gros- grain ribbons braided ln three colors GENERAL IIEFS LAUNDRESS Juliana Lara, who claims to be , 104 years old and tells of being a lmmdress for General Robert E Lee. has recived approval ‘of her application for Texas old age as- sistance iORDON FIFE, fir. l hos w. " W" i. ‘ FIFE LEADS ma WAY _ w mam ABANDONED AM ( P . 9U EL EULA , l and l l l l r l v l l , crnte fattening may be obtained by Cr-altlelFéié-d-lhfiltrf‘ And Increase Income A substantial amount/of money ln the nuureunbe is lost by farmers every you‘ due to sending their poultry to market not properly fin- offered on both the domestic and export. m-irkcts is below the .\iilk- l fed A und luukrcu n classes for l which n premium up t0 as high as ,' three ecnts per pound is paid over Illf‘ low izrndcls. ' certain way in l by the com- l The surc and raise the grade is parntlvcly simple process of crate _‘ feeding the birds on a ration of l flll0l_\'—§l‘l‘0llll(l home grains, ' pota- y foes and sour milk , There are various fattening mix- tures that give good results, but the point it to make use of the feed produced and available on the farm. The best results will be ob- j tnined if the bird»- ave put in dis- 5 infected cmlns two or ihrce weeks | l before muikciinc. The crates j should b" put ln reasonably wami ~qunrters free from droughts hnd I the lyirds should be fed morninf! l nncl evening. The following ration is rccommcndrd: Equal jmris of oats and wheat. with barley or buck-wheat; add jiointocs nt the rate of care-third of the total wright of the mcnl mixture; mix l with sour milk so that the mixture l will pour m. _v l beginning of the fccdim! Us mo-i. important. If the ‘ birds nre plnccd in the feeding crates have fvrul ill lhcir" crops -' should miss n meal and should pvrlod l res and sanitation the standards of Millar Enjoyed Being Peculiar, S0 Baby Derby TORONTO. Sept. 10.—-(CP> When Charles Vance Miliar made l will leaving $500,000 to the Toronto mother having the most children in the 10 years after his death he took no one into his confidence. Not. even his closest friends can fathom the reasons for the strange document. It will never be known whether he made the bequest with the genuine wish to help large families or whether he foresaw the race that has been staged for the money and drew strange delight in start- ing such a contest. He will be dead 10 years Oct. 31 when the “baby dorby" ends. The story has, been told that he drew the will in an exuberant mo- ment as a joke and intended to des- troy lt later. His friends say not. According to them it was drawn several years before his death. His "ccccntrlcitlcs" were premeditated. He seldom changed his mind. Another explanation is that Mll- lar was vain and wished to be talk- ed about even after his death. Some of his friends though his peculiar actions a pose to draw attention to himself. They strggest he made the good homes. or of not very good homes, or are they the standards of very poor homes? is the school levelling housinu stnndurds up, or‘ levelling them down? What about fatigue? I woifd like to have it enacted that each school trustee when be assumes. office should put in a day nt school. In the country hi» might start off some time nflcr se\'crr-‘.l1irt_\- with the school van. afid get lanck ncur five- , thirty, with a few CllUYPg and home- isbctl. Fm‘ L00 mllvll 0f llli‘ llolllll?’ l work to do. I'm sure he would slope‘ the homework and uo tn b~u Work i5 good. but over-plzrv ls n02. Fatigue is god, bu‘, ovcr-pltry 1s not. Fatigue kills health. . Well, then. the first ivrintriple is to do no harm.‘ to send out lhc child at lcnst wirhou: injury and without much disadvnntuctx For this little child who comes t0 us trailing its clouds of Glory from God who is its home. the School must first o.‘ all be made safe-squi- tary, c‘can, decent-safe. So far we lmve presumed that the child comes to school a good physical annual. well fed and cloth- cd and cared for. What if this is; choked by , not the case? What if he tcomcs half-starved, or half tonsils and adenoids, or vviih neg- lected teeth troubling him n0\\', and laying up (liseascs that cripple and ‘ kill in after years? Do you know that conscription showed just onc- third of young Canadians lit to be sodliers, and two-thirds unfit, with‘ defects nnd disability that could, have been mostly prevented by, thoulht and core in childhood? But -I hear you protestina, Mr. Trustee. Mr. Principal‘. and Miss ‘ Teacher, that such things as these are up f0 the parents. 01' I l l I l course , they ore-if the pnrcntg are doing their job, or can do it. But what if they are ignornnt, or careless, or l s] ii'!I_\' for about dnycs. Immediately on being pin in fccdiiv: crate»- lnrds should be for for the Sins 0f [he 1,31,01,15? or 111"?“ l‘ lllllqfllwfi‘ I" l“? "m" °I the misfortunes of thg parents? Or ‘ Sinlllxln tthrvnftist feed“ the wronqs of the sociz! sysfcm l Ill-‘ai-fl f” ~ a n“ tylhno Hmd _l.ln* parents . stiffer under? The.‘ ‘PDlll (l ,‘..‘~[\ll $51 S O l) l ' , “Qbmls- 7:1"? film‘ Shmlld d3‘ ‘I child-raw material into citizens, If -, solved in \\_. ct and smlition ‘I m? raw malvrml is fauna“ must trsedwfor ‘l I "3 lllf‘ fill-‘ltlmfi Y“ ; the manager. the teacher. the trus- [ e Itlitllldkhmli- d lllllowlllrl “mix”; , lee. simply soy notliinc. but so on i 1?)l‘w_‘lil_"i_ "hi “j"o‘i"‘l]‘t“ in: ‘go l hopelessly nllh routine forms and , iv“; "H; "b," rwifilou“ feed for useless processes? Has the school} tire ‘first t\vciit_v-foiir hours after ' m” a duty m Sm that me raw ‘ fairly hunch"),- and never satisfied until they lveomc used to their confine.‘ cpmrtcrs. After that as nun-h fr-czl ns they will take may be givz-n two or three times a day. After every feed. however, the trouirbs should b: cleaned. and u supply of grit should be available two or three times a week. Further detailed information on writing the Publicity and Extension Branch. Dominion Department of Agrlculinre, Ottawa. for pamphlet No. 125 on Preparing Poultry for Mnrkot or information may be ob- tnined from the various provincial Departments of Agriculture. CREAMwflRTFii-r MERING UE One-half cup rice, 3 cups milk, ‘l.- cup suunr, "t teaspoon suit, grated rind 1 orange, 2 tablespoons orange Juice. '1.» cup chopped dnlcs, 2 eggs, few drops vtuillln, 4 tablespoons powdered sugar. Cook rice and milk in a double bollei until rice is soft. Add sugar, salt, grated orange rind and juice, dates and slightly beaten egg yolks. Cook until mixture thickens. Turn into n serving dish and chill. Brat, ‘ whlics of rugs until stiff. Beat, in ‘powdered sugar and vnnillrt and drop small spoonfuls onto a baking sheet covered with waxed paper. Bake twenty minutes in a. slow oven (300 degrees F) Slide to top of rice puddirrgirnd servc-Exc. Soldier of Fortune material is suitable or is nmde sult- I In“? dedlcflwd the T059 t0 Venus plltltlnglllwn‘ I“ IMKIPIIMPS tum‘; t“ able? The School is much more l over err um. For 1e irs ew n‘ . Ct, , - _ dnys the birds should be kcpl n" a d‘ on‘ IL l!’ the “month parent of the child and shouId step l in when real parents fall down on their job. - y The School is Trustee for the, child, Trustee to the parents, to,‘ the State, to the‘ Future. England; and Wales learned long ago the, wnstefulncss of trying to tench spe'- ling or geography to children whol had no breakfast. Last year School Boards provided nearly seventy mll- i lions of meals to more thnn four: hundred thousand Enullsh children.’ S0 we who are superintendents, or lnlslces or teachers: must first of} ' sons with roses. will as a. means of attaining post- World Champion In Sight (By W. H. Goober) When Greyhound won the second heat of the free for all trot at Springfield, 111., in 1:57% his time was within half a second of the world's record of 1:569’; which was made by Peter Manning at Lexing- ton in 1922. The time was also the fastest ever made in a race m har- ness by a trotter or pacer, the new figure taking the place of’ the 1:59 made by Tilly Brooke at Toledo in 1924 and the race record of 1:58 for pacers which stands to the credit of Direct-um -I. He made his trip in 1014 at Columbus, Ohio, when he defeated William. In the fourteen years which have elapsed Since Peter Manning made his record of 1:565; Greyhound is the first trotter that became a threat for the highest honors in light harness racing. In the eigh- ties there was an active rivalry be- tween St. Julien, Maud S., and Jay Eye see, while the record was be- ing reduced from 2:l2-‘l to 2:08§l. Al, Rochester. N.Y., on the some day in 1880 St. Julien and Maud S. each trotted in 2.11%. A few weeks later St. Jullen cut his mark to 2.11% at Hartford while at Chicago Maud S. moved the figure down to 2110K. The next attack came in 1884 when Jay Eye See trotted Narragansett Park at Providence in 2:10. He "noovrn" '| POTATII naarns l l a NEW and 3 USED In good condition ALSO i International 3 ]-[_P_ Engine in good condi. lion All of which we a; ff at reduced prices e o "In: to clear, A. Ilorne & 0o. Charlottetown Handicrafts Show (By The Canadian Press] OTTAWA. Sept. l0 _ sjmwmg some of the results of ycnrs of m, search Work and study. the booth in the Manufacturers’ Building which l5 devoted to the Canadian handicrafts exhibit of Miss Juli- ette Gatiltier, was one of the mos; intensely interesting 5pm M m, Central Canada Exhibition. and at. lracicd large crowds. proved a one day champion as on moi-fem notoriety. The man was something of an enigma to those closest to him. He wore the most expensive clothes but wore them in such a sloppy way as to draw comment. When his j horse won the King's Plate he re- Vfused to go to the stand to re- ‘ ceive the trophy. When he was ap- y pointed n, King's Counsel he de- lcliticd an invitation to Appear for l his patent Some of his friends say this indicated his bashful nature. Oth- ers believe re refused to appear at lhc functions because refusal made hfvn conspicuous and drew to him fir; imtoriety his appearance would no t , hfillar was a member of an in- flucnlia‘. law firm and built up it fortune of $2.00fl000 through shrewd investment cf his fees. He‘ was a poor boy who wroked his way lhrozigh the University of Toronto to a law degree Toronto knew him as a clubman, something of rt humorist. and as the owner of a stable of horses which he raced on Ontario tracks. He died when prohibition was in force in ‘Ontario and agitation against horse racing at its height His feelings on these subjects were indicated ln his will. He left several clergyman of various denominations brewery shares and stock in the Ontario Jockey Club. M°$l> 0f lllcm accented the shares “ml gave the Proceeds w charity. Story of the Rose Roses are blooming Every Harden and how prodlgpl they are of the sweetness. But. all in nearly the folio-wing one Maud S. trotted in 2.09". at Cleveland. Jay Eye See never nmde another bid on account of lameness while in 1885 Maud S. trotted in 2.08"... Ill 1391. the inst ycnr that the high wheel sulky was in use, Sunol trot- ted the Stockton, Cal, track in 2108K, In 1892 the bike sulky appeared and’ with it a new crop of cham- Dlons, 'I‘lmt yjenr Nancy Ifnnks pull- ed up with :1 record of 2:04. She was lndue time followed by Alix, The Abbot_ Crcseeus, and L011 D11- lon which in 1903 cut the record to l:5B‘-.-. In 1912 Uhlnn made the record 1:58 which was the best un- til Pctcr Mannlnu trotted in 1:57";- in i921 and 1156b in 1922. Greyhound is a four year old. He is by Guy Abbey out of the Peter the Great marefiliznbcth. sister to Peter the Brewer. As a three year old his sire was in the Fire Glow race nl: North Randall and received lYlJuries that interfered with m5 turf career. He. also won, the Rcvlev: Purse at Goshcn and wns second to Silencer in the Hambletonian at Syracuse. Piglizabcth ls one o e er the Great yearlings which Walter Candler purchased’ from Laurel Hall Farm. She did not have the flash of speed which made her brother a. leader but passed it along to her foal when she was bred to Guy Abbey. - f the cro_p of Duke of Lancaster was n. red rose, While the Duke of York chose a. “(We rose as his. In 14st: the two were united to form the Royal em- blcm of England when Henry Tudor of Lancaster married Elizabeth of York. Thomas Miller yvritcs book called “The Poetlca in an old l Language too soon they fade and their frag. “m? pcmliless, -or all three? Must the ‘ mnm b“ 5 menwry. The rose‘ “mg Well C0 "M l children to the third generation suf- ‘ has relgned a5 Q1199" 0f Flowers for twenty-five centuries. The’ flower is frequently mentioned in; the Bible, although the “Rose of‘ Jericho" and the "Rose of Sharon“ School is a state factory to make ‘wore "HY "mike °l11' modem r0se. It is sold that the rose was cillti. vflwd in the wonderful gardens of l Babylon which are supposed bo§ have existed two thousand years‘ before the Christian era. l The ancient. Greeks loved thei rose which they used as s, symboy flfi an emblem of beauty; and fol CllDld 8s an emblem of love Thel rose was the badge of youth, sol . Wllllg men and maidens wore roses l ‘sub rosa.‘ " at festivals and religious cere- monies. l The Romans used the rose a‘ l l And they slept onl them too. for they stuffed their‘ mattresses with rose leaves, and in; is from that custom that we get the 5 expression "a bed of roses." so itl is not surprising that they set; nslde large gardens for the culti-l vatlon of the flower they prized so great deal tco. They decorated their halls, their rabies. and their per. of Flowers".- "The white rose has _ tisldered as sacred to 511911“; over whatever conrpany lt~ “'54; suspcndcd no secrets were ever, revealed for it. hung only above ghel fcstal board of swom friendship No ‘ mutter how deep they nngm, drink 0r how long the wine cup mlgm circulate round the table, so longl as the white rose hung over their‘ heads every secret was considered, mvroable. No nastier how trlviall or lww lmportam t-he trust, beneath.‘ the flower lt was never brlrayed, .or around it was written the sent-, enccz- l ‘He who cloth secrets reveal l Beneath my roof shall never llve.’v From this we get the exprcxlon,’ In the seventeenth century Johnl Gerard wrote his Herball, in which; he says: “The rose doth deserve] the chiefest and most principal‘ place amongall flowers whatso-l ever, being no: cnIy esteemed forl its beauty. virtues, and its frag-j rance and odoriferous smell but al-l so because it is the honour and‘ ornament of our English scqrterfll Richard Weston mentions eighty} varieties of roses in his book called: "The English Flora“ which he wrote all sce that children are not harm-l mllch- All“ by Dlllnllll! and forcing l in 1775. ed, not harmed much. by the school l and secondly. we must watch rtndl care that children are not neglech‘ ed in their homes, but lmvc a dee- m“ might 0f 1l5 ill"! l-lle . spent vast sums of money on roses, ent break, But these two duties, doing no_ hurin. mid lllilflllllg up cicfccts. arc both negative. and do no‘, glimpse, the fine vision of body and mind developing ln lmrmony". 'I‘o think of health as a mere absence of ill- ness or defect or crippling or stor- vatlon is a very poor conccjiiiott. Health should be a positive. radiant,‘ physical glory. What are we doing for the boys and girls who are noty handicapped? What arc we doing‘ for all boys and girls us normal‘ average boys and girls? Questions concerning health. ad- dressed to the Canadian Medical Association, 184 College St., Tor- onto, will be answered personally by letter. they managed to have the year round. . when the Roman Empire was at nobility blooms all l The Emperor Nero loved Rose Dinners and he thought; nothing of spending thousands of» potmds on roses for one feast. The: banqueting hall was strewn withl rose leaves. The tables were clec-, orntcd with roses, roses floatrd in- the wine cupsI and the wine itself was perfumed with attar of roses. At the end of the feast shower; of rose leaves fell on the guests throughlholes in the ceiling. After the fall of the Roman Em- pire the rose seems to have been ircglected for some centuries. Then in the fifteenth century it came into prominence again when the Wars of the Roses broke out. As. everybody knows the badze of the‘ to give ,' Preparations for Defense At the beginning of the nine- tccnth century the mnpicss Jose- phine popularised the rose. She grew every variety in her garden M Mlfmflison. About that. time English gardeners begun to culti- vate the rose seriously and now we, can honestly say that. Britain is the true home of the rose. Many poets have praised the rose. Shakespeare wrote? "The rose looks fair, but fairer wej lt deem i‘ For that sweet odour which dothl in it live." And Robert Burns wrote: "Yon rose-buds in the morning dew, How pure among the leaves sae green." ' Dean Hole in his fascinating book about roses says: "He who would have beautiful roses In his garden must have beautiful roses in his, One or more of the lnbitants of the Selgneurie de Ia Petite Nation were at work at all times in the booth, carding‘, spinning or Wm“; I112; braiding wheat. straw, barley. straw. corn husks or grass 1m}; huts, baskets, mats or one o many other useful articles; carving, o; working at tapestries and rugs, Miss Gaulfier l5 very proud of her collection of trnditiouul Cans. (lion handicrafts and anion: he; ning wheel and a. yarn-winder, each more than 100 years old, n hand. made wooden cradle. a group of peasant figures carved by {viedmd Bourgault. a very handsomp Indian head carved from walnut by E. l. Z. Saucy of Montreal especially for the Ottawa exhibition. on Cop- per and iron cooking utensils and many other examples of the habit- anlis craft, ' Not only wool but also flax, hemp and silk was woven into arucles of wondrous artistry and all of the dyes used were extracted by Miss Gaultier from the native plants, barks and irults of Canada and from other countries of the world. Miss Gaultler has succeeded in finding more than 300 different shades among the vegetable dyes and all of them are fast colors. Through this development of na- tive dyes, Miss Gaultler hopes lo be able to eliminate the tremend- ous cost of the imported dyes and thus to encourage the revival of tapestry and petite pointc work. ‘These natural dyes are invaluable in thc restoration of old IADPSITEPS and textiles which were made in a time when the analine dyes were unknown. l RABBIT T00 lilllfli FOR , PYTHON l TORONTO, Srpt 1o -—l\f_vrtle. a 22-foot black rock Python n: the Canadian National EXIlIIJltLOII wcut without her monthly men! ‘today because a little white rabbit, xiow dubbed Goliath, refused zo be eaten, The bunny was dangled before the snake but before Myrtle cculd strike and crush it, Goliath hopp- ed on the Pvt-hon ord chnlvrfl Myrtle up and down her endless spine. 'I‘hen Wally Welllver. 0W0" of the snake show who was clad the ignomlny suffered by 11ml“ was not viewed by the public hep- ped in and rescued his pet Pyfllllll- Jelly Hints. Brambles; rowans; sugar: Will"- Gathcr the rowans when HWY P“ nnd wash them carefully, then Plll into a preserving pan with Jll-‘l enough water to cover them. ' Hol- for thirty minutes. or till the rowers burst. Stir occasionally with n wooll- en spoon. Put into a jelly but! ll-llfi strain. Choose brambles that are not too ripe nnd place in a PYWPFYlIlEZ pun with u small teacup of water to each pound of fruit, Boil for fifteen minutes, stir with a. wooden spoon- Pluce in a jelly bag and 5011M” thoroughly. Now take the bramble rind rowan juice in equal quantities. plucc in n clean pun and allow uni? pound of sugar to every pound o! juice. Boll for thirty minutes, stir- ring constantly ,thcn skim and Pol- DON‘T CROWN GIRLS! The cape Town Argus devotes n news column to the fnct llll‘; city is short of "shorthand-twists". and the “demand cannot be m?!» Mice hate the smell of P9P???‘ mint, so a little oil of pcmwrmll" sprinkled near their holes will drive them away ht. heart " It is a beautiful thouf! we‘l worth remembering. By Bob Moore and john Hales mo wet urea r Humor ‘mun .THEY'LL'BE were mlm nous‘ or: rwo AT Mosri ALLTHE PROTECTION .W_E CAN GET. ~ av Jov:,cAvrA|u....wbk HEBEI......HERE’S'~A CHANG. To ewe mess raccoons me ‘surpass: .or mam twss. treasured possessions or‘. a spin.‘