ms iGUARl)lAN. Cl-IARLOTTETOWN erick willhouse, of, Kansas, who owned the largest and most profit- able apple orchard in the world. comprising at the time of his DECEMBEK 6, 195, PAGE THIRTEEN , lsame vivid blue. From the kltchenlfore they took shape. T window above where she lay came ;the sound! of! I-Iazcih hllilllilmlnz as she iroue ; rom t c vng room t ' came the lagge noises of the New She scarcely heard the doorbell By I.-. .L Mamrrhu, . death 1600 acres. His first crop 3, Langa Lewis York Philharmonic concert, Vic- ring, nor Hazel answer it. The y:elded 1.500 bushels rom '53. itoria lay flat, hcr aims crossed onysound that made her lower her --- acres. Ten years later his yield There was nothing in the world but glowing heat of which she had become 'a part. ”ml.-1-En, THIRTYJW0 her 'forehead to make a cave ofiarms and open her eyes was the Everybody has two chances-one was 79,710 bushels, minus "culls" shadow for her .eyes. thinking heavy sound of masculine foot- of getting sick and one of not. If It required 200 cars to move the part Om nothing. only half hearing. only steps on the floor or the dining. you get sick, you have two chan- huge crop to Eastern markets. -1 , hall alive. The warm sun poured room, and then sawn'.s voice ces, one of getting well. and one The native women of Mexico At noon on Sunday Vlcwrl” l'””,down like melted butter; it seem- speaking. ”lIello. little friend." or not. If you die you still have don't have to worry about soap . the brilliant blue mat 01 ed to permeate the tissues of her He was standing in the open two chances! when wash day rolls around they 31115 ”" ' l the bnlconv, body. In 5:0 as deep as the bones. doorway. looking down at her. As A strange uccidcnt lmppcneri bundlc their dirty Cloihes "H0 8 hr; Sllllt-llallbnglt aumuuy of memension ebbed, mougm,-, (aded be- she struggled to a sitting posture recently on the farm of Cameron tub. take a piece of soap from the waflllg 5 - and look, aifrgg cookbook! U1! Fvy'a Cocoa in delicious cakes, cnoiurs. pies. frosrings. desserts! For Recipe Book. send name and address to: Fry-Lndhury L:d.. Dept. M-4, Montreal. - a. Cup of F1jY,S ortifies . ; A OW ms! UR Til UREX l mu! UREX msiii against. the tilted back of the long chair he went solidly and with as- surance to one of the canvas-seat- cti white metal ichalrs huddled around the white table. scraped one into a position lacing her, sat down. He managed to look ex- ceedingly comfortable sitting there. his hands on the arms of the chair. one leg cocked over the other. He continued to look at her, expresslonlessly. "You're wondering why I'm here." said sawn, belatedly remov- ing his cap and tossing it sideways to the table. "I am.” Victoria felt oddly de- fenceless in her brief shorts, her face bare of lipstick and shining with sun oil. Her voice, she realiz- ed was unduly sharp. "I want to talk about whit hap- pened to your husband," "I don't,” said Victoria to Sawn. She lay down again: once more shadowed her eyes with her arms. "I never knew you to hide your head in the sand before." said Sawn. There was malice in his voice as he added: "You are us- ually so direct." - She didn't reply. "All right, then, I'll talk," said Sawn. She heard the snick of a match being lighted, smelled burning tobacco. "I haven't got a very clear picture yet. but the de- tective who questioned me this morning gave me some notion of what happened. Anu rm mighty darned curious." Victoria. forced her eyes to re- main closed, forced her Voice to he very casual. ooh: Mr. Tuck ques- tioned you this morning?" ”Yes. I believe he came to find out whether, in my opinion, you could have poisoned your hus- band." He paused. "I told him I didn't know." "That was Willie of you," said Victoria dryly. "But since then l've dour some thinking, I've done some wonder- ing... ' Victoria dropped her arms, swung herself to one elbow; on her lips words were already forming NEW! i QUICK I All-BRAN HOT-BREAD t 80 light and good falling, mode will Kill 5': All-IIAN and molasses. Dells oils with Oven-Inked Beans. K II ' I L . I :u'p'aIhad new In V: 3 Va cup he want I. Manure flratlingrodidntainto bowl. Add water. stir till shortening rneltal Add era: beat wall. 1. Sift together flour. andl. malt, cln. namon; add to All-Bran mixturq slirring only mm! romllimd. 3. Fill 2 greased halted hean caruu If full. Raise in prehaatxl mod. lwma (.'l.50'F.) 45 min. Yield: 2 lnavf& Or use 8 x B-in. - pan. Balsa in mod. oven 35 min. Yield: 1 lnaf, Malte- delicious lunchbox sandwiches. So Good for All' Cooking! NOTHING IUT WATER ll re- moved from Carnation Milk. (Only vitamin D is added.) 50 Chi! doubly concentrated milk is doubly useful. and drinking. FOR US! UK! CREAM -- in coffee . I so pod-yet so thrifty. . bll WTY Scrambled Eggs wmq the ilk af FOI EVERY MIIK USE-mix Carnation with an equal amount of water. You get velvet- Imooth. r'ich-flavored whole milk for cooking oerealrand frults...in cream recipes or for whipping...use Carnation amlilyml. "Iron: Contented Cows" McTaggart, Middlesex County, On- tario. when a straw stack collapsed and buried six valuable steers that v.ere sleeping beside it. All six were dead when dug out from the straw pile, rcturnln'-1 a loss to their owner of sl.800. In the autumn of 1850. ten pairs of English sparrows were released as Halifax. in the hope that they would multiply and aid in the de- struction of a moth that was dam- aging shade and forest trees. To- day the English sparrow is found right across the American contin- ent, all descendants of the 20 birds that were brought to this continent one century ago. 0 O O Census figures in 1901 placed the area in Canada under field crops of 19,800 000 acres. By 1941 the figure rose 55,800,000 acres un- der crop. The next census gave an acreage of 62,000,000. and it will be inttesting to learn what further crop acreage will be re- vealed in the census taken on June last. l Information Service, Department of Agriculture, Ottawa. reports that a new honey-fruit spread is finding its way to the U. S.A. It is made from concentrated fruit juice or purer. mixed with honey which provides sweetening and makes the product spread. Here's the 10 r.odcrn command- ments to he kept in mind it you have passed your 40th birthday: Keep slim, drink plenty of milk and water, Try new foods, Make new friends. Get out in the fresh air oflcn. Limit the intake of fat- tv foods. Eat plenty of fruits and vegetables. Don't worry and dont lose your temper. Incidentally. temper is one thing that never spoils by keeping, Distillation of perfume is an an- cient art. In i300 B.C. perfumed water was poured over the hands oi guests at those fabulous banq- uets of which we read. The trick of grafting is incu- ticned by Phllm: as a. common practice long before his timc By grafting. cultivating,ctc.. the hum- blc apple has come a long war lfrom its bush and crabbcd ancest- The apple was a t.'haracteris- tic fruit of Britain for centuries and its early cultivation was car- ried on almost wholly by the cler- gr. I O O The iitlc of ”Am-in King of the Vorld" was bestowed upon Fred- which would tell Sawn that she had no intention of being ques- tioned by hfm. But his hiank, al- most placid facc, iippcd a little forward and looking steadily to- ward her. made any such outcry seem childish, pettish. She swung her legs over the edge of the long chair, stood up. put on the white tcrrycloth robe lying across its foot, "Is she pretty?" asked Sawn. Victoria paused in the act or ty- mg the robels sash. "Who?" "The actress. M-Jzra l-laslings." ..vm.yp.. To be continued CALGARY-(CF)-School trust- ees are considering using a gamm- cidal mist sprayed in classrooms to reduce the risks of infection dur- ing the winter months. IT TAs'”TEs VGOOVD IT 5 GOOD TASTE Hddpgi csnmu - SCRAMBl.ElloENcc5 4 out Q '"'Paen um '.i teaspoon pom," cup Cu - una;iur:.'l""" Mm" ' ' """'IlIoon hum 0 Beat c Carnationg 53'" .Pf-ilspcr, utter in ;..,qp'a:'i 38am. Melt rat; add CB8 mgigimegium '. stirrin - 9. mk . rm ulnosr i:,,(,:f5s':::,'ll)'. amnion give, ,,e,:";l' ,! .. . my Eavorsyumm cu Ill an half .5 mud, as "um. ..Ol'I soap plant and put it in the water. Presto! the water forms suds like soap and the washing gets under way. - The root is white, beet-shaped. and about 6 in. long. It will clean the most delicate fabrics-' without injury. There's an English village made entirely of old railway cars. even the chapel being composed of four horse trucks. Population: 1000. Valuation: 38.000. This unique vil- lage has no school, nor bther pub- lic building. Then there's the village Buck- land which as the distinction of having no public houses, no police- men, no medicos, no ministers and no paupers. This English village has a pop- ulation of 100 souls and is owned by a family named Bastard. All the inhabitants of Euckland are pensioned by the owner of the estate. Anderson Walker. an old Negro slave in Virginia, continued to live in a state of servitude for more tl1an.a quarter of a century after the emancipation of the Negroes by the war. Why? Because he wished to serve his old master un- til death parted them. 0 I C A day is not always made up of 24ihours as most of us believe The word day is frequently used as merely the anthesis to night. Even the law distinguishes between dies naturalls, and dies ariiticiales. Astronomers. too, reckon their own days: The solar day. F3ngin': from about half a minute under to the same amount over 24 hours at different times of the year; the mean solar day being our com- mon day of 24 hours; the lunar day of nearly 25 hours. and the sideral day of about four seconds short of 24 hours, ' ' But to get. back to the Nalurnl (lay. In all places it does not mean a day of 24 hours. Near the north and south poles. strange phenom- ena occur. For cxample: at wan- derbus. Norway, the day lasts from May 21 to July 22 without inter- ruption; and at Spitsbergen. the longest day contains 3": I'0011lll5 Ar Stockholm the longest day lias 55', hours; at Danzig. the longest day has but 17 hours. and the shortest seven. At Berlin and London. the longest day has 16y, hours. the shortest only ll. 'Just when the day bP!'!iIIS 15 I from- sunrise. ens at sunset: matter of controversy. The JewsiE:.,vpiians and Romans beganthelr For more than half a rcniun and Babyonians rcckoncd their dall day M mldlllilhin The people of Ath- North America still in Italy the day custom-that is, our day begins as begun at noon, while the ancient 5m)" 55 we 91”” 1"” Slmck mld' follow night of the preceding day. am; not Slltiei siixi still ”lGlorybe! -its ihai FAMOUS OFFEE We who live in has so much to give you ! wally e pow mfolisoiiil:-arcvmld at plil7li0 Rucl-10" ”d(-ad letters" in the postai D9,": ill such a manner as not to destroy I this partment have been opened. cxam-: their idrntiL)'- whm 0iV'11e1'!hllJ i ined, and records made of their cannot be established the money i contents. What happens to thnsnifnlliid in "dead loiicrs" is credited i that are unclaim5tl'3 The conlonls-ill the I10-it-Tl F9VP'W”5- . ..m.-....... Aof flilicsc arc tluys in "count our lllcss-iixgs!" And certainly one of those blessings is a good cup of coifccl ' Sn buy the best and brew it heart)! In the piping hot fragrance of good old Chase F: Sanbom act nostrils a-twitching! Let everyone recapture the zest of that fnmnvu roflre flavor . . . deep, rich. saiisfyingl - Ycs. (lhasc lb Suulmrn gives you nmrr of the vital qualities of the llllvst tollecl So get Ihc most for your coffee money. Ask for (Ihasc 8: Sanborn -Canada's favorite coffee for 85 years! -411. ms ruvaa 0 Your cur am your