THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN iCirins’ Fairy LTaIeQ A 20th Century Version of Stories You Have Heard Before ,in right frame of mind. tsnm! Shoe: and Backaehe. an” flute" Mun“ Lug 05ers! it is not economy to wear around t. not” be |°,,,,d__|,u; u, 10w; m», the house old, run-over, misshapen to bummed upon. but to do some- shm- Such shove give one the _‘I'HI ITOIY OF PANDORA By GREGORY GRIN. Ever since the day when Ive put the gypey touch On that. rosy red apple and was given the air from the well-knwn Gordon of Eden; man has declared and affirmed that women were. are and always will muuvyxw "h", [or “ha” no; backache and a nerve strain which ,0 1m“ “w” (hopped “u, youhhamper efficiency. The woman who‘ lap,but lobe rmlly needed in 50mg wears at her work. nell-fittedl Con‘, 0t m, “at shoes with low heels and roomy n,“ u“ “can”, for m. homgitoes. can accomplish more and do! 1,1555,“ ‘o y" ‘MM “be-o; ugg_ it with less wearl-ness. Better throw ‘ T“ an". m,“ ad me “o” W the old shoes away than try to} m‘ "my. a N" m," hubby-swear them out at t-he expense of‘ C03“ m‘, ho m" (he 911mm“; ‘health and happiness. One can “mum; u, 8g" mm the 59M sta/ud straighter and stand more if 5”", ‘m, we d3! To help Bud she stands in comfortable shoes. find his carp or to sharpen a Penn" for Sis may put them. in happy mood and send them off to school l l To Gain Weight. ' .\iuch is written about "How to Reduce". but there are some who are still loo thin and wish no ndld pounds. if you are underweight. go first to a physican end find out if you have some disease which is keeping you down; something like tubercolosis. nervous breakdown or anr-ntla. Or perhaps it may be due tu bud teeth or tonsils. A person who is underweight may put on flesh by mating much and eating a simple but nourishing diet. Avoid rich pasterlos and indigeav‘ ihlc foods, but drink warm milk, and cocoa. and eat foods containing sugar, starch and fats, Potatoes. cornmeal. olive oil. cream, ba/nan- nfl. f-‘nrwle. cheese. nuts candy and Other privileges are to chat with n neighbor aa you pick your daily lettuce, to eay “hello" to the young- sters l6 they pass your door. They are the future. if you can put any- thing into their lives, you are serv- ing your country. it is a glorious life. and its most glorious glory is the ever-present opportunity to serve. Our little eer- vllcos may seem but trlfles, but the We shall never realizv- how great that ls until we see it tolnll-rtl i-n the ledger uf the IL-corditig Angel. Libraries Next to the schools. a public li- brary in our greatest educator. In many schools the use of the public library is taught and students, go- ing out from such schools. are able to continue their education by aystetnatk: and directed reattiing. The old idea of a library was 8 place where books were "kept". Now the idea is not to keep them there, ‘but to get them out to circul- ate among the people. ‘Phat is the meet successful librarian who can induce mast people to use books. By the story hours. displaying at- tractive pictures. dramatists. adver- tising. night classes, a-nd every sort of device are people cnticctl to come into the library and become inter- ested in looking at some book. They era thou led on, and directed in reading. The librarian is a. public teacher. The library is generally looked after by a board of trustees who cane for the building. employ the li- brarian and select the books with the advice of the librarian. The di- rection of the library in helped by organizations which aid in train- ing librarians. keep tho ideals and standards high, pass on statistics and experiments that library truste- ee may bring their own institution up to the standards of tho best, and keep the librarians informed as b0 what are the best books, to date, The library consists of the refer- ence department, whetr txptenslve tttls are useful in helping develop joy of riding “thorsie back". with little child ride on the back of an adult, holdin-g on with its wee arms clasped tight about the neck of the bread and butter are fattening foods. Fresh fruits anld- gmen eel- atn appetite for hearticr foods. "Hot-ale Back". Happy the child who knows the his arms around the neck of a fond parent! There is tnever, in all life to come. a more thrilling method of locomotion. And the "horse" seems to enjoy it. too. Wtho was it inven- icd this sweet custom of letting a‘ one who carries him? The tCocopa tindlan mother car- ried he-r child in this way, but wel do tnot know whether the custom was original with her. The method is akin to the practice of carrying the papoose. in a basket or wrap- peti to a board on her back. Poor lmdlnn mother! She was the pack horse of the tribe. But of all her burdens. we fancy this one was the most cheerfully borne. Good Feature. Health exports tell us that pos- ture ‘has much to do with our heal- th and endure/ace. Excellent posture is: head up. chin drown in, chest up, breast bone farthest forward portion of body, lower abdomen ln and flat, and curves of back within normal limits. Bad posture is: l head markedly forward. chest do- l pressed and» sunken, abdomen com- plctely relaxed and protuberant and the curves of the back extreme- ly exaggerated. tbooks are kept to be used by stu- dents for reference; the circulation department whose books are to be- loanod out to bouiee; the children's department, of-ten used ltn connec- tion witrh tho Schools iu coopera- tion with the teachers. the period- ical department a-ntl tho depart- ment of special hclps for use in special lines. The library building should be zit- tractive, warm enough, mid excel- lently lighted. One earnest llibrurlun arranged a smoking room in the basement where working man cotiltd of an evening. meet about tab- les and read even if they were too tired to dress up and 1gp lrn public. T119!’ 081110 hero in their worklngt clothes. She made it a point that‘ few citiaens in her community A‘ the wnce“ U"? 1mm" 1°" “WM. Bu.” use o! the “bmm _ into ‘a dispute about one selection. Freahenlng the Furniture. Furniture pin constant use, be- t-Omcfl finger marked atnd covered with a film. and penhttDs. too. it bo- comcs "checked" or crazed" from drying out. too much. To remedy these defects. rub lt with a soft {cloth dump with sweet oil, or use Pu good furniture polish. l Bmllel. _flOVfi! MO ‘lkftnt from bursting rig influence in| Such. a litbmry is a wonderfully el- evating and rtefinit a community. Some ambitious youths have be- come educated by use m l-blylrlws, The Olaaa Fad. We may not live "lu glans ltotm- ea". but we are choosing glagg n; many of our furnishings. Frankly artificelnl flowers of glagg are dgc. crating our tables in colored glaml flower holders. Amtlwr, gram]. rortu, yellow or blue are bcatiliitil color- ings. ' Patterns for dishes are all sorts "i queer design, We used to say it was not good taste to have a tie- sign for a utensil. which wait tnot nn approprhte (lcslgll. but lhat rule n1 longer holds. We today have n 111511 9-110 $111191! 0f n duck, resting on tlbe table. or trcnnary or parrot. We would never expccfto‘ find a reel duck or canary or parrot there. Glasvdlshert are now bubble-fleck- rid. frosted. or crackled. or of the thinnest plain white. (Haas llilfl ootno info ..|s own and is put to ull 90ft! 0f ‘uses. One of tho nnvttlast of Uhese is for the electric lamp, which looks for all the world llkc "1"! 6116M) giant» kerosene lamp grandmother used to carry upstairs to bed with thor. The Baked Apple "Prr out the beauty possibilities of tlrtritlkt-ttlt apple. When careful- ly cocktail‘. preserving its red or Illldrcdldting. when the syrup ls cooked down aftor the apple is rs- ntwea, and Mlllrtil it is served on a putty ‘china plate with a dash of wlflppod cream over the top, lit there Inythfng more attractive‘! The -name. baked apple, has sound- ed so common to us that we lhave despised the product; but in most fashionable restaurants the baked apple ‘is recognized ls a choicest delicacy. We might as well "ddll it up" a tblt vat ‘homo and lead our own hotlleholds to enjoy it for all it D worth. When halting applets, cut tho skin Intent! the cantor of the apple. to l aad-epalllagtinsitapoottaeawie. Anion mayo: pmparc an unis lofhklllla toauf outtheoore "It was from Wagner". said one. "From Beethoven," insisted the other. Jonnle slipped nearer the frc-nt where ha could read the pli- t-nrd and came back with the an- numnt-t-mcni: "Youm; but}; lwrong ii buys. "ilefrttln from Spitting!" “Dill ynu marry well?" "You, but i‘m sick of ii. now". H‘? who banks on -rola1.ivea is n poor financier. Women’s Handicap , is curbed this new way of eolvingoldeethygldlcprob lelmgivelttllnpfoteclion- discards like tiuua HERE i. l newwayin m...» hygiene that and! the llllittlril! of old-time “unite y pads" and their unhappy days. _. Eight in l0 better-clan women now use "KOTIX." _ , /biecarde u easily as a. piece of qQlIIUC. No laundry. No embar- nutrient. Five times an absorbent as ordi- nary cotton peda- _ _ Deodorlzel, thus ending ALI; den- ger of oflending. _ Obtalnabla at all drug and de- partment none simply by saying "KOTEX." You uk for it without helitancy. I com only a few cents.‘ Prevta old way a mediate risk. JZ-ll a pack- age. in fairness to yotgsell‘. try it. r ‘ = . karts nib-a sharps, buffs and fill the latnJQti-Jinql Km: nfitar 7le Km: euporli-te be as ctnriotu as a hound pup in a moat market. But listen, Sister, if any of those hiorrlschair Worms try to whisper into those acandalrocotvera on each side of your head that Eve had a corner on curiosity, just re- member that she is a distant rela- ifon of yours and coma back with a snappy "8o's your old Ian." For Adam was given the gate lust a split second after Eve and it's not on the records that he slap- Ded Eve on the fingers, and said, "Naughty, naughty" when she reached for the apple. In fact there are some who believe the Old Goat had already started to cook up a scheme to make apple-jack out of the con, if Eve 80th away with her applecopplug ac . Just to show you what kind of an oil-can the male half of this sketch was, he started to squawt while they were shill brushing the dust off their fig leaves after the fall. "I told you to lay of! that ap- ple." he cried. And it was then that Eve, w-hllo she powdered her nose and adjust- ed her boyish bob. gave utterance to that now classic remark. "Apple- sauce!" Now the story of the Apple wenlt, over so big that a few hundred cen- turies later, some musty old,Egg thought b6 would put over another foul ball on the Coala. So he cooked up the Story of Pandora. in “'1\1°11 119 189s the blame for all the Troubles 0f the World up to and in- eluding salad forks that look ltlke ice cream spoons at the doorstep of the more or lees Fair Sex. in case you've never heard this choice bit of slander we wtlll give Wu a brief outline of the pilot. it goes something like this: lltn this beautiful lamd there were no second-hand automobiles. poli- tfclans, corne, static. installment collectors or reformers; and every one got two vacations a yearl- of six months each with full pay. Even halitceis was unheard of and every one was popular even rhhough he hadn't senttrn the coupon and learn- ed to play the saxophone in six easy lessons. in this Pollyanna ‘Paridlse ‘lived a couple whose home life was so happy that tit made a pair bf love birds look like ‘Herriu, 1ll,, on Elec- tion Day. They loved bhe simple anid beauti- ful thitngs of life a/nd so w-hetn a iii.- lle boy came to ‘bless their home they made up their minds that the name. The ‘Mrs. placed her bet on "Epimetheus", while the old man said he thought "Aloysius" was just about right. Finally they agreed to comprom- ise on Ephimeuheus. Time went on as the reader has no doubt observed it has a habit of doing, amid ytou-ng Ep passed front the marble-shooting to crep- shootlng age. Talk about a thot tamalel Why, Nun; Ep had Fleming Youth look- iing like a wet towel. He was bet- ter looktl-ng than a collar ad and made the spear carriers in» a Broadway success look like bhe final mile of the retreat from Mos- 00w. Bu-t brains were as scarce in this tBintbde bean. as kind thoughts for Vlolebeed in the heart of en ex- Brewor. Ask him if he had ever read. “The tbstst tDays of Pompeii," and he would have said. "No, wh-at did the die of?" tfluch wna theswte of affairs in Elf, whio sported the mon-ickler of verted sense of humor, decided in sit in the game and stack the dock. So on» day he approached Ep and hustled thim a line of bobgtna. that any one else in the wbrld but this champion Half-wit would have laughed bff. Among other things. Quicksilver told Ep that he wanted iio give him a knockdown 41o a flossy little rib labeled Pandora, who waa the flea] lingerie when it came to being easy tlo gem uwn. Mien lip was presented he fol-l for Pandora like a tent in a cy- cllono. Pan was everything that Quick- silver had saiid. and lthen multiplied by ten. She was a perfect example of why traffic officers go wild and Butter and Egg ‘Barrens can't keep their minds on their .work. When this fussy f-rill ankled down the street every mnls she passed had a still neck hr a week. While Ep and ‘Pam were hnrud- ling each other the customary flan of bull old Quicksilver quietly slipped away and unturned with a quaint chest which was as old-fash- ioned ll zmoidost bathing sult at Attlemio City. t tChtt-cklflng like a any who inst beet the street car company out of a fare. Quicksilver placed! this mysterious looking box in the hail of ‘lip’: homo where Pandora ‘WI! lo the who guest of Epb sister dur- ing her visit. Al; he straightened up from his task Quicksilver aaid to himself. "There, lf that doesn't do the trick, l thrill out of stoppin‘ Out cad; P. this monkey was an curimu an I M. than Peggy Joyce Hopkins dose customs inspector euneornfinl 1110 out of another wedding. tents of that chest ant. he saw Then. too. the dinypace had hadhere a chance w get h tlzsap. So tu effect on. nn-s wallet. and along he stood hack and quietly Mind about this time he wen as busted as over Pan's lnvtlldnr- the Ten Commandments. Just as Pan loosened the last Klonaequlently Pan nod time to knot she thought she heardua W100 give her surroundings the once within the chest orylnz. Let tie over. and about. the first thing out." eho saw was the cheat which Quick- Throwins caution to U18 b19918! silver-had left. Giving lip the come- she threw back the lid and out hither. an.» started t» third-dogtreeinmDed 01d Men Twnhl» n1 111° hhn ‘donoernirng the contents, for head of hie £8118- she figured ‘he might be holding Iliad you ‘been there w“ @0111 out mm Private ambit on bee. have checked i-nenl n" M! an 111°!’ 0t cotuns, ab told her that he tumbled out. Amofl! the veyyflm aren't know what it contained. and out were. "Buy ‘Pavmgnln. Ysw of course she believed him in ex- Ond-H-wnd Cars", ‘Static’ and a pal‘- actly the same fashion and in ex- ticularly husky and active one la- netly the same degree that the fe- betled “Rcfornmr”. With a laugh "male or the species always beiiev- this merry bend m w tvvrk 1m- “ me pulp-that ls, the sung way mediately on a_ little skit entitled. the Hllgth eehdoi Set of today be- "Main-ms it mush for humanity- “eve in Sam-ta Claus, the Easter Slamming the lid down. Pandora rabbit and hhe Stork. was Just abbut to hit the breeze After an hour of cross-examin- when she bee/rd another voice ation tEp got-as sons asthe lutnbago Within 1116 0110!?- 8871118- 149i- I119 and said: "Now llletentio me llfllll19. 0111. t1 0811 1114-1“? B 1111111 "l"- 011 01d i don't know any more about the Men Tmnbkh" , .... O-O-OO-QOOQQ Health Literature [applied by thg F. I. l. Rod Oman 000M! i. OVERHAULING M0 QAAQAAAAAL THE LAWN The ‘handyman will find that a . little time fpent ‘pa! thftglettlnlng 0F THE FLY. a-nd genera over an o e awn TH! MENACE lmower will always be well reword- lt has now been established that ed. ill lt has "been pul- nWay for a flies are not only a nuisance. but] that they are very active dlbtribu- tors of disease- While by preference the! inn!" places where filth abounds, they are of ubiquitous habits. and P!" cheerfully from the manure been» the privy. the garlmge pal] or the sick room to get the first taste of food intended for our dining tablefl. to deposit on it such filth as the?’ am able to conveniently carry and mayhap the germs 0f such dlnonnec as typhoid fever, tuberculosis in- fantile diarrhoea. etc. The chlof brooding 915°" °1 flies are collections of Bnfbnln mud manure - particularly ‘horse manure. in such places they multi- ply with great rapidity. Each ad- ult female fiy deposits several hun- dred eggs, which pass throuzh "In cycle from egg to fly within 9181" lo ten days. "Seven to ton genera- tions are bred annually. Thus tho M05911! of a single female fly. which has survived the winter. may amount to several billions in but one season. The Merchant's Associ- ation of New York estimates that the progeny of one pair of flies for one summer. tlf all survived. would occupy a space of 14.000,000 cubic feet. even if pressed together There tie one tgood roaiseon. there- fore. why the campaign against the fly should be commenced at the very be commenced at the very 1 blades. while, the mower will issue cover- ed wtith congealed oil. and dirt. Ob]- vlously. the first thing to do wi be to remove as much of this as possible. The whole of the M16611- Bible parts of the machine should becleaned as thorouglllY l" P09‘ glblo by men-net of a 500d 5115 1mm‘ and n liberal application 0f Dimi- fin oil. an operation shown in Fig-l- When this has been done exam- lno tho tnachine for wonr or neces- gary adjustments. Th"s uPDlles i101‘- tlculnrly to the cylinder or that part of the maohitne carriflllg the- The urratigement “W1 on most machines is that Shown 1" 317g 2. The cylinder "bearings in thin . ndiusted that l should have a simple and beautiful‘ contents of that chest than a New York taxi driver knows about an hlonest days work. So that's that." Ep'o gentile remark only served to make Pen es determined as a mother-ln-law 11o ascertain the con- tents of the chest. So she handed him a Britain-g that sen/t him out in search of a nice ‘warm iceberg. No sooner was he out 0f the house than she was on her ‘ktnees beside the chest, giving it the glim- lot eye. The chest was boutnd with a cord which fastened in a. klnot. Pan thud always been a hound for chose-word puzzles, and that ktnot. fascinated her like an original Palrls hat. She bad a hunch she 001116 1118109 that lcnot disappear quicker than a twenty-dollar bill in a night club. Finally she determined to try. thinking, l can tie it up again wlth- out oponing the chest." And right hene the head coal shove-fer in Haldes laughed so hard that he fell over the coal pile. Pan was busier with the ktnot than a mosquito at a summer rc- sort. conscqu ~.t:ly she dtld bt hear Ep enter the room. When he lwho framed this dizzy fable. saw what the Glrll "000 jumped Old Man Trouble" Now, Pandora ‘had more nerve than a spinal column, so she decid- ed to take another chance. She opened the I'd again and out step- ped a classy dame who said her name was Hope. Hope told Pan b0 mop up,the tears, that she wuld flollow Troubls like indlges-t/lon follows Welsh Ratrebit _ and that everything would be jerry with lhc more or loss human race. Up do the present moment, how- ever. Hope had prove-n to be an 18- karat false alarm. She is the gnl who stamds back of your‘ chair when you are eighteen buckts out at midnight and says, “Go on. play another hour—you cam win it back; and besides, the wife will be sound asleep anyway." Two hours later you leave the game wfith everything gone -but the gold i-n your teeth and find llbt? lit- tle-but-oh-my woman waiting up to kiss you good-night with ‘a bough spreader. Now that. dear reader, is how Trouble and Hope came into the world-according to the Hop Head I I | Atnd tlf it doesn't constitute l beginning of the season. Our houses (particularly the dbl- lng room and tkitchen. and all elck rooms) our food (lnnlnditns (W118 and vegetables which are eaten un- cooked) and the faces and bodies of infants should he protected against flies by sulteblesciwaening. Every fly should be killed on sight. But the principal means of control- ling the fly pest ls to do away with the breeding places. case consist of two half-bearings ‘Particular care should be given fitted in a. slot cut in the frame of to the removal of stable manure, [he machine and 0198-11111 01-1191"! which durfing the warm weatherbadjttsted as to lhelght. By ratslni should under no condition be al- or lowering the bearings in this lowed to remain at a less distance slot, the k-nivos on the cylinder tbam a quarter of a mile from hu- are brought nearer to. 0r lull-be!‘ |man habitation. Garbage contents from, the fixed blade _H110Wn 11l- 1119 tof privy vaults, and refuse or alllbottom of tho machine in F18- 2- klnds should be similarly remov- This illustration also shows ed if the preferable destruction by the means of adjusting L119 fire cannot be carried out. Manure cylinder. To raise the boar- plts. garbage receptacles, etc.‘ ma, the screw C is re- should be made very tight (to pre- leased and the screw D tightened vent the maggots from gutting tin- by the necessary ammknt. T0 10W" der-tlie underlying soil) and should the burnings the operations are re-l be systematically and completely versed. always remembering to re- cm-ptcd at least every four days Intuit! one screw before attempting tdurlng the warm weather. They w tighten the other- should moreover be carefully gunrtl- Should the bearings be worn and , FIGS. F|r;.4 |ed by screens or otherwise made fly tight or should be sprinkled liberally and frequently with chloride of lime or a solution of sulphate of lion. two pounds to the; gallon of water. Privlcs and privyl vaults in particular should be thoroughly screened. Flowering Vines Flowering vines are needed to make the ‘garden complete, front ‘the smaller trading vines for win- ulnw boxes such as the tliunberglas! - foctcd by lnosenlt A recent lnvestlgnticucarrkztl out. by the United States Department of Agriculture. shows that treatment- of manure with powdered commerc- ial thorax is tnot only the most ef- fective method of destroying the‘ larvae of flies, but that it actuallyl adds lo the fertilizing value of that manure. This i; applied to the mau- ure. by means of a flour sift-er. im- motllatoly after tit is removed from the stable, in the proportion of one ou-nce to each cubic foot of tnanuro. ilk-special care is to b0 taken that tho ottier edges of the heup receive a proper share of the powder. Two or three gallons of water am to be sprlllkl8d over the heap aftor the application of the powder. This nntl tnatirtttiditts t0 the cllnrblng na- sturtltitns. morning glories, cardin- ul climbers. moonflotvers and flow- cnlng beans in the flower gurdcm] Vines quickly conceal an tmslghtly, fence or cover a two obstructlvel garage or burn. converting its‘ sides fnlo a sheet of flower and full-F l The Japanese mortnng Igloricsl tire n revelation lo those who know‘ only the oltl-fashintivtl sorts» wlth' their flowers sometimes fringed! and scalloped und with a great var-l iety of itittrkitig and delicate color-T ing. There is also much variation, in th folluge. stunt: of it being pref-l tlly variegated. l pvt-land w“ up m, did he rush 11D. gnounds for an airtight case of ll- s-lap her hands and say, "Be your tbel against l-llte Speaker ‘Sex, then age?" Not on your existence! m Jack Dempsey won the war. this latnd of No Tnouhles when an f Quicksilver and wlho ‘had a. Dnr- ‘ ‘ "Guide Me, O Thou Great Jehovah". The great religious revival which swept ovor iii-ales during the first half of the Eighteenth Century was accompanied -by something of a musical revival. Howell Harris. a yountg layman. who. perhaps more than any other man. was responsi- ble for llghtimg the revival fires. was quick to recognize the die-ed of good hymns. The parish churches of Wales were still singing metric- pl psalms which somehow did I101 seem to sult the fiery and pension- ate Welsh temperament. Harris re- sorted to an unusual device. He called together the men wl10 had gone out l0 preach and announced a competition in lllfnln-Wrlllllfl- 1! is interesting to note that. musical, competitions are still held in Wales.‘ Among those who took part in the contest conducted by Herr’! was a young Anglican clergyman, nam- cd Rev. William Williams. it was a feverc-tit evangelical appeal. dc- lfvered by tSamuel Harris in the openeir. that led Williams to eu- ter the mlnlatry. He was ordained ‘in 1740. but was not happy in his work and together with some other clergyman of the oatahlleliod church. he became one of Harris preachers. - The prize of hymn-competition fell to W-‘lllams. He had a Ml-Ilfll gift for poetic composition. and for several years had written FAVORITE HYMNS Ag!) aikflilll fiITERB then ueitthercatn Houdini" M11111!- -1'n 1740 11B M11116!“ ' For a while Pandora didn't m- group with the title. "Hallalutiah" tlco the chest for llp kept her-huli- Ind in 1146 a I ‘ zrmtu awn» grghuqymg only mpy of "Drgphy ed in which the hymn "Guide 1M6. Stories n. a boarding sctmt. ,0 Th0" 0M1 Jshnvsh" sunset-vii, ‘He rushed her ameni- tto all bhe He continued to publish hla hymns, gm; y“ 41v“ gnfl band“ m u» until his death in i791. anid woll-| Milne-bowl: girls the high note and earned the aitla of "The Chlfhl. vacant stare. Pan had Urns to hie Wesley of Wales." . . hand like a straw hat. and be p»; Although Williams Wu a men claimed to the utlgmatic vvorldlof much gentler dlepoeitlotnt than than. she was a Main Bout on any others of his day who became ‘Rin- card. emit evangelbte he seems to have 1hr n plum everything we: take, endured much hitter persecution but coon the continued falling.» bravely He 100804 Mn! "U "W1. muhd-atenttdllelllilonPm-‘lqotlof w blo- h nae-will» no aha etairtyot“ more of a the h _ ovnvotl did mt dflJnrJ flit» l hi l- it not equal that of John Wesley. his indomitable prcscrvonce and mat- leas energy were only equarrod by his undoubted piety" For forty-three years Williams travelled more than two tltousatnd miles a year over terribly tbad toads and frequently at consider- a-ble risk from violence. As Dr. kl.’ F. ‘Benson writes, "His life was spent, mot in a preeoherb study but tin the great world of out-of- doors." No ldoubt the wild and rug- gcd scenes of Wales fired his lim- nglnatlbn and kindled afresh from time to time, the poetic fire wlth- in him. Meet of zhls poetry was writ- ten in hlk own Welsh tongue, and it is diiflctilt for those of other nationalities to understand how great an influence -hls hymn; still have among the Welsh people. Rev. H. Elnet Lewis, one of the most dstlnguiahed Welsh-man of the preuont day, writes, "What Paul Gerhardt has been to Germany. what Isaac Watts has been to Eng- lan‘l. that, and eve-n mom. has Wil- llum Williams been to Wales." {iii-t- Brigltt Colors. Bright colors are quite "the thing" lib-ls season, lm hats. dresses, draperies and furnishings for the house. Vivid blues and fiery red add a mote of cheer. while yollowth. cool greens. and dainty luvondzrs. furnish variety. Lamp shades, rugs, sofa and floor pillows and window hangings give opportunity to induce oolor i-nto a room. There is no excuse this year for dull rooms. --—¢-oc--—-~ A MISTAKI. OOMIWHIRE "Mother." said little Bobby. bursting into the house‘. "1118?" going to ‘be thq deuce to ply down at the grocers. in wife hu In‘ treatment tis. of course. repeated with each addition of fresh manure. s; The cost amounts to about one cent I per horse per day. l ‘Cuspidors should be given specli‘ oi ctvre. A little solution of forma- lin (a teaepoonful to a pint of wat-, er) should he placetd in each cuspi-l tlor. This solution. sweetened with sugar and exposed in saucers, will’ tClimhlng nnslurtitims need con- derable help as they make great cntzths of growth without any abil- ity to twine or cling to supports, They are most effective tumbling- ovor a low fence or slump. butl with a little help in the way of 0c- caslonul tying up may be assisted, up porch airings and give a ‘blaze! uf bloom illlll scores or fragrant bnnrue all stnnnicr. u '9 impormm 1° “"7 o“! “w” T110 (tlflllflilf! Lfiilfllfy of the card- P"°°=*"i'°"“ 1"!" 111° "f! com-tum: clhubnr with it.- brilliant blo- n'°“°°m°"t' M m” WMm weaummotiis is n boatillftil twining subject and to persist In them tlirottghoutj-m. “m, ,,(.,,,,,"_,, m. to be “unwed in Hl'llllllllli‘. among llio ‘llfllllffllils of the season; The presence of flies lndl-catottfumhing r0506. ,,_,;,,|,,g a “com; the presence of filth or of unsanlqvrop M Mom“ finer mu "He, am, tary conditions in the tnelghborlgonn‘ m‘, nmwm is m; “envy. hfiod‘ and 1' 3 68mm‘ 615“ that i‘ t-nnttgh l.o interfere with the rosefl- cleaning up l“ necemmy‘ Tho trap‘! ’l‘ht~. improved form 0f the b8!"- pma 0nd awawng M m“ are ‘m’ clitrli hcan with its tiellcnle whlln ‘mubtedly °1 "hm but rdpanmlnntl lavender bloom, purple stem mun apically M place“ o“ the atttd huge purple seed pnrlfl 1R B1" elimination of breeding places. lways an Omamenh n 1' “l”; Do "m patmmm dmlem ‘grower and excellent to cover a foodstufftt whose wares are notfwh," [mum Fm, a mp“, “we, o; kept carefully screened from flicsl ' m be a Department of Public Health N. S. Ontario Health Almanac. , kill fl"es in a room. in PAGE FOURTH‘ ‘fhe Handy Man's Corner e :AAAQAA ‘ lives m“: M‘ flllflaca, u “a 9 Blllndle m a", ote surf,“ o, i‘ bearing; m,‘ t u‘, where the two l; scraping out the "TY. to make th ly on the compl lliiearlngs. highs d m. er must remo scion by removingvllt 2:: m‘ Wu and the spindle tit a, DGAWI smnnthed with very 11.18am "ill paper. u: the cuttbig km,“ “"11 ly damaged m- wm-n n, ' U» be sent to Fefllbutnd, 3's ma "i! done in a machine bum lmmlt ‘of m“ pmpime- The cutlhgwhl B. Fig 2. at the bottom sh 1' be looked-to and l1 badly tsuldiln or worn should alone,“ Tm by a new knife Ol‘ l“, mmmlili The oil hnles for the smndtild. l-nss and the m... m ,1"!- _thoroughly elem-w o, an "rd be 11181161‘. the whole pal-Lg lgorsureggl“ ‘gill?! and the cylinder ‘replaced; 1 tore. The cylinder shlould beg: he l the edge bf the ...".‘l.'.;‘g,,tg$-h.... 3i 11 5118M but regular m Ind“ throughout their ' length Am“ 18B! ‘ls to place a piece of). good tween the two, when on ma’? tho cylinder the paw, aho-uomvml cut. The knives ca-tt be touch be 141181111! 11y smearing the“, 911,11” grinding paste and revolving m"! backwards fltllckly, adjlmmg [that cylinder so tlutt the blades j e touch the fixed bottom blade u“ The ‘bearings for the mainland front rollers should 3139 he m, out and udjtiststl. thoroughly label‘ cated and replaced as before Til. drivting clmin should be looped ls and any excessive tip ‘in the manner shown in 11)’ Punching out llie rivets, lng as muclt 0i the chag... a, “m, strry and re-rivttlm; Any tum“ adjustment of the chain Can he (it l the ~ of either the main grcller gfafl-T dnr according to the different malt of mower. drawing them backward 0r forwards as occasion requires The bearings are thou mughwne as shown in l-‘lg. l, The cm should be thoroughly washed I paraffin to remove any dirt an congealed 0’l, and then thorough] lubricated with thin 0|- llgllg ma ‘chine oil. All parts should he thorough] oiled bcfon" rc-nssembly, and m taken to see that all the oil holt- and passages are quite clear 5 that the oil can finds its wa easly and quickly to its appoints place. Such attention will make .- vast difference to the labor lnvolv ed in mowing. Slight but regula attention in the way of lubricatlo of all the working parts vuill ltttt the mower in first class order an well repay the tlntetoxpeuded i so doing. slackness m.“ permanent feature, the Japaner hop is excellent. it will make 5W1 height as vines go and all/v screen tmd will reflpllnll‘ f" yum once it is planted. The fenthm-TnTl-latsltllgttlfltlhQ Dress vino is t:1>I111"K_ 1"" W, W119‘. land acarlm hril-lgllltitlflllli orvbqly its ll. ls an it (or ma gatttlon. 1* '1' ‘.1 t lull! amnutnill helfbortzikggiydtlnlttxv; 8111111 ;"]‘:hf,°:.,, tt elliiblY- Yil" “himm “prfilw ut rant bushes ns suou tlltltn“ W" allow 818°" "m1 “l”. m» s"! three fihfiwnm- H” ' tutrsorles for 1111-‘- {Qt-i l THE MAN WITH THE HOE 8AY8-] l ("Flor Your seeds early if you ,> want to be eure of getting the best- varlolios. Often they sell out early.‘ ‘T0 dislodge plant lice from cnull-‘l flower. bruesels rtprotila or kale lfl their presence is sitspectetl. soakl the vegetables in cold salt water before cooking. Any lice will let go and come to the surface. The new models of ‘ D & A Corsets Coraettea will im- Gpread manure on the garden an Prove Your figure‘ H0011 DB‘ you can GGcllrB l supply. - v Fa-nnern are at work at this jnb every warm thawing day, possible are truly lt ls time to look over the cold- frame suh and see If it is tight. and do a little leisurely glazing to- CORSETS 8t CORSETTES collating style.‘ fit and waar with low”! mi“- s»; he ready when the time comes to} start the hot he'd. New substitutes; are vory convenient. but not as, good non-conductors an glues sash. ‘ -f used the beds should be started, n little later. l .lf you planted kale last year you I can out fresh groom every day. Try a packet next summer. it hss_ become a common market vego-, hi a . . n- h" lie‘.- all aoll I) It A Canola l Bflflhn‘ table. in the last two years after failing into disuse for a long time. a-Mby girl and be‘: had a ‘Boy Mmnteiksign in the window for a mt- ». n1‘.- ' Ill Plant lice made it unpopular, but now these peats are I0 easily con- fir"!!! with a few spraying: it is c an. -t.tw ,2 (p. " ' ityt: it Corset U iartmentu ' b a cottsl-ITT" pith club: N‘ f; Ml |- M Lenin l" ‘.5... ll ~