n glp arhm 9tm ffaoob thursday december 2 1020 the commolmptfcice girl imc a little brown slip of a girl wilth not a dlmplo 01 u curl her gown la plain so la her luce hci vciy numo in lommun place her fingers do not move with ease upon the smooth piano keys the gift- ot aong hus paused her by though she can hum a lullaby but she can mond her fathers socks and build wee boy a house of blocks and though she cannot muke good fudge of bread and blscujt shes a judge and sho can cheer up dismal folks with wieriy laugh tind hhe can coax bear grandma horn her flrculdo chair and lead her out to take tho air so though in stately hall of fomo thoy may not wilte her simple name within our hearts well give it space our lady of tho commonplace pauline ivancos camp mysteries of the 8ea bottom 1 i the deep bog is tho most mysterious as well as the most extensive of all the haunts of animal life there is of course plenty of life in the two hundred and fifty fathoms or so near the surface into whicli light can pene tratc bellow that eoys prof j ar thus thomson dn his lectures la the royal institution at jlondon there are vast lonely wastes of water with ac any hf at ull ana belo that again at depths varying from two and a half to six miles is another world swarming with living things but different from any world of which wo have any experience no one has over seen it but the long arm tf tho dredge can reach it and has told us wonderful stories of what goes on down there it is cold and dark still and very silent and the pressure of the water is at least- two and a half tons to the square inch yet all the animals taave adopted themselves to life under tnose grim conditions all the animals that live on tho sea bottom have enormously long thin legs especially the spiders and tho crabs the bottom of the deep sea is covered everywhere with allmy oore so that they all must walk on stilts to escape being smothered three types of life are absent from those great depths there are no plants because plants cannot grow without sunlightr there are tio mic robes so that nothing ever decays and there are no real insects as thtere i are no plants it is hard to see how tho animals feed we know that in tho deep seas fishes eat raollusks and mollusks eat worms and worms eat smaller wbrms but that sort of thing cannot go on forever something must come from the outside it is now known that that outsldo supply of food consists of a continual rain of atomies infusoria- and brokon portic7esfrom- the sea meadows far above a11 clean and sweet and never falling many of the largo fishes have enor mous eyes some indeed so lasge that the fishes have to carry them at the end of stalks others have eyes small er than pin points no ono knows what they use their eyes for or why they acre so different canother puxifle is phosphorescence many deepsea fishes havc lanterns jt is unlikely that they use them to find their way about in the depths because they often wear them in their tails perhaps they use them as a lure but if so why do some of them have red lights and some green lights it is all very puxxlins perhaps it is best to say we do not know a third puzxlo 1b the brilliant color of many of the creatures that live it the dark crimson and blue and gold of what use is it 7 but professor thorabon concludes perhaps we are too anxious to find usefulness in everything perhaps the very beauty is sufficient use well possibly but to raise the question of utility again of what use is hhe beauty that no one ever sees r j 1 4 e m tmts czv anm iks iiiiiii ijfkbfljl ihriiii the old summer path to church it leaves the doorstep worn and gray shps underneath tho maple trees and slowly climbs a grassy slope to meet stray butterflies and bees then through a little sagging gate u uuiu into urr orchard old that holds within its gracious space more treasures than our arms can hold down aisles of sunshine flecked with hade while overhead the swallows call the narrow path leads willing feet when summers peace broods over all it sigzags like a wandering child through w aving grasses tam and green but seems to loiter with a laugh where woods and mountains can bo seen then on again beyond the fence where elm treea fringe a meadow wide and bubbling songs of bobolinks fall from the air on every side i across the road up to the church it ends at lastlts winding way where words of prayer and hymns of prodse rest like a blessing on the day ad el la washer and have had the property insured for three yours but since those payments both took considerably more money than i expected i am now a 1 lttle short and ishould like you to pay tho mortgage yourself seth wus profuse in his thanks arid asbured his father j h- law that he would pay the mortgage in u slioit time but tho young man liked his rod and his gun better thun ho liked his plough and hoc and consequently ho never got enough mo hey ahead to pay off tho mortgage that did not troublo lum nearly so much an it did mr wentworth on whom mr richardson called regulaily twice a year for his interest finally aftei thirteen years mr wentworth gave up hope of ever getting his son-in- law to pay off the mortgage and drawing tho money out of the bunlv ho payed it himself when in a manner somewhat lr ritoblo for hhn he told seth what h had done seth replied cheerfully father you did just the right thing and as long as mr wentworth lived seth depended on him for financial obligations tho old man has pa scd away and solas boys have grown up so that with their help tho taxes and obligations are paid year jby year as they fall due but seth still likes his rtfd and gun and the ford he now has better than his plow and hoe and farm wagon some of you older chaps know seth quite well news from acton england gleaned from the columns of the aoton gaxetta and express moving pay in this ca the want to know who i am the editor of the fiucb press has handed me the following interesting correspondence which speaks for it self jeorgetown ont november 10 1926 dear h p mr john mcgibbon has handed mo tho enclosed letter if you can supply the information the writer wants i am sure both he and mr c would appreciate it very much i told mr mcgibbon i would re fer it to you j sincerely 1 joe m the following is the lettor to mr mcgibbon referred to by mr moore of the georgetown herald the endless resource fc1 there is a beautiful saying attribut ed to vergil man wearies of every- thing except to understand in youth mere understanding does not seem to go very far we long to do to lead the life of action to leave sorao mark on the world these mag- nlflcent powers have been given us surely we should accomplish some thing worthy of them it does not much matter what we may pile up a fortune and use it for the worlds iod we may invent vast utility we mvftreat vast beauty somehow or other we will not die without so be having toward our fellow men that they will remember us with honor long after wo have departed or at least there are other pleasur es more intense and satisfying than merely the slow effort to understand there is travel movement in this oge jt is so easy to roam over the wide world to see and hear and touch all oris of beautiful entrancing things thero ate the social pleasures to know multitudes of human beings and make ourselves known to them and jirniaed and loved there are rare and costly enjoyments which one tolls for and strains for and at last obtains and finds that their value lay chiefly in their prfce for as youth fades much of the 11 luelon of these more stimulating de sires fides with it action but th musclon are flaccid and the nerves are weary and the end attained seems so petty in comparison ivlth the strug sle to attain it we have done our very best and people somehow do not seem to care pleasures of tho senses but tho scenses are jaded and the temporary stimulation of them only leaves them a prey to more profound ennui it la then hat we gradually come to feel the truth of vergils saying 4 for wo can still sit quietly and taste the endless pleasure of thinking and learning and knowing the secrets of the world to study the vast incal culable mystery of nature to probe j the still vaster and still more incal culable mystery of nature to probe affords inexhaustible intercsand de- light only thero is a halm about this as about everything do not let tlto mad vagaries and hungry ex- ceases of youth obscure jtae faculty of understanding if irou would wisely store up arid fully relish its immense resource in age a good likeness especially the buttons the old and highly esteemed family coach mun has at lost resigned him self to a pension and a lodge gate keepers duties if he is by no means resigned to the sight of the chauffeu who now reigns in his stead tho blowjhat the loss of his post caused has been softened slightly by the pres entation of a handsomo portrait of himself in full rogalla wrh a pair of hls favorite horses cavorting nobly tinder his whip tho old man is well pleased with tho effect and so 1s his good dame though tfrhen questioned as to the portraits resemblance to her husband her answer was somewhat l equivocal yes indeed its yegg she said but particular the buttons winnipeg man november 8 1028 john mcgibbon esq ksqueslng ontario no doubt you will bo surprised at tcceivingva letter from me but r sometimes see items in tub acton pjrbh fkess telling of your being present at aomo gathering in town i saw that you were present at the funeral of an old schoolmate of mine in the long ago mr oliver xasby i havo noticed that you attended acton tall pair prom this it would seem that your health must bo fairly jrood though you aro not as young as you were about sixty years ago when you and i last met my chief reason in writing you- is to find out if you can tell me who is tho man who writes inter esting oldtime articles in the acton pros press under the titje the old man of the big clock tower he seems to know you very weir ho was one of my old schoolmates but i have not been able to find out who he is and i would like also to know who his wife mary is of whom he speaks so often i have met men who were born in acton who were between 50 and 60 years of age hut they could not tell mo who tho old man is if you can give me this information you will do me a great favor kindest regards to you all s yours sincerely t d c november 18 1926 j m moore esq the herald georgetown ont dear joe enclosed you will find mr mc- 01 boons letter similar queries to that of mr campboll of win nipeg havo come from time to time to this office from all over tho continent the nuthorshlp of tho old man of tho bis clock tower has never been divulged people used to say it was ived secord but fred died and the old mans rec- ttllcctlona went on as usual then they said ft was jinvmle matthews the postmaster but jlmmle died and the old man continued to keep his column full from week to week then somo people ventured to guess that tho oflitor himself did the writing for that interesting department but the editor went to great britain and the continent for two months in 1925 and was on his back in the toronto general hospital from august tilf october 1026 but still the old man was on his job every woefc without ex ception therob moio fun in guessing than in knowing better keep on guessing yours truly r hp moore editor well well and say they want to know who i am say thats com plimentary but do you know these recollections of mine wouldnt give half as much interest if everybody really know who the old man really 4s and my winnipeg friend would like to meet mary too his bump of lnqulsltivenoss is just as active as when i knew him as a boy in school mary and i have many a quiet laugh together at the efforts made from time to time to discover us but never mind dear folks well try and keep up tho interest and stand for actons best things a number of congressmen accord ing to the argonaut were whillng away the tlmo in the smoking room by recalling peculiar experiences they had undergoneat the hands of more or less hospitable strangers mr nicholas longworth of ohio said he was once driving with a friend through a lonely region among the mountains darknesh overtook us ho said white wo were travelling through a strip of seemingly interm inable pine timber after a couple of hours of slow plodding we saw a llght ahead when we reached the house i yelled as loud as i could and a be- whiskered old fellow opened the doer and asked da what we wanted when i said we wanted to stay all night he looked us over carefully and said wall i reckon i kin stand it if you kin we thanked him politely and go- i ing in fpund that the cabin had only one room which was swarming with children of all ages there were six or eight of them in sight and others within hearing we were disappoint ed at seeing only one bed and wonder ed whether we should have to sit up in chairs all night we were so tired and sleepy that we could hardly hold our eyes open after giving us a good supper of fried pork and corn cakes the mother put the two youngest children to bed in less than three minutes they were sound asleep she took them out of the bed and laid them inthe corner on the floor then she put the next tworj in bed and so on when all tho little oneswere asleep on the floor the old folks strolled out to the woodshed and told us we could use the bed we hop ped in without delay imagine our surprise when we awoke at daylight next morning and found ourselves lying in the corner with the young sters and the father and nlothcr snor ing comfortably in the bed a black irishman nothing astonishes american visit ors to the west indies more than the speech of the negroes naturally it takes its tone from the language of the people who used to be their mast ers in cuba and in port rico they speak spanish and on the inlands of haltf and martinique french in jamaica and in other british islands the negro speaks with a cockney ac cent in montserrat which irish planters peopled in tho seventeenth- century all of the descendants of the former slaves have a strong brogue not very long ago says sir freder ick treves in tho cradle of the deep a british ship dropped anchor in the main harbor of the island and an irishman among the passengers lean ing over the rail accosted a sooty negro who ha come alongside with fruit to soll oi say cuffey he cried phwats the chance for a live lad to get a job aahore7 faith yer honor answered the negro if its wurruk yer afther yes can foind it in gobs for tho lookln an ollr be thankin ye not to be calun me cuffey mu lea allys mo name pathrick mulcaahy mulcaahyl saints in hi wen dye mane to tell me yer an olrahman as good a wan as yersllf wurra wurrat an how iongve ye been wurrukm here folvo years come st fathricks day ye dont tell mol folvo years an in that tolme yeve- turned as black as me hat on me spwl if ol stay long enough to make me for tune and go back to clonee with 2t twill take some mlghtysoft pershaud- in to get maggie murphy to marry me an sho not boln able to tell me frrom any navgerl drawinqroom blunders an appreciative soninlaw here is a little story of fifty years ago which some of you will on joy youll understand quite well that i cannot use the real names of the part ies because some of them or their de scendants are in tho community yet whon amy wentworth married seth knowles her father gave the couple as a wedding present one of the most dcslrnbje little farms in ea- iueslng as mr wentworth handed his son- inlaw the deed he said seth the farm is free from ull encumbrances except a mortgage of three hundred dollars which i assumed when i bought the property for you 1 would have paid jt at that ume but mr richardson who holds the mortgage was away and i could not get a prop- potatoes sold at 2v25 on quolnh er discharge i have p tno taxes j an english paper tells a redlculous story that may be true or may not of a funny happening tn the royal draw ingroom when a peeress is pre sented as it seems it is customary for the queen to greet her with a kiss tthlle visitors of inferior rank ore re ceived less graciously lord carrlngton the lprd chamber lain one day in announcing a mrs whatshername rnnde a dreadful mis take and called her lady whatsher name the next moment he became conscious of this blunder and called out hastily to the queen dont kiss her maam dont kiss her shes not a lady after all but it is not alone in the rooms of royalty that awkward slips occur the washington post says that a very pretty woman went to one of the tri weekly recemlona of president cleve land duflfffftiils first term of office when her turn came she grasped the president hand but like many other person in similar positions she could not remember a word of the pretty speech she had intended to de hver in fact she was completely flus- terated and looking earnestly into the presidents face sho said how do you do grovert the president held her hand and looked into her face which presently became scarlet as he realised what she had said then with a smile he answered i am very well indeed and very happy to have met you with a courtly bow he released her hand and she passed on what on earth was tho president saying ao you and what did you say to him inquired a friend who was just behind her but the unhappy lady did not tell procuration is now boing made by tho acton strolbinst players for an in teresting 4oca vr oductlon in uld of a suitable churlty to be selected by tho mayor six sons of the into mr j j soley of derbyyard acton green who was a very old acton resident bore his re mains to tho grave in chlbwfck burial ground inst week there was numerous street collis ions in acton this week but no serious cuse of personal injury was reported up to wednesday afternoon ia every case tho personal injury was so slight that medical aid was declined david prlscoll a traveller who an address at southend was fined at acton police court yesterday for being drunk and incapable in guri- nereburylane monday even ing a meeting of the acton congregational church guild was devoted to the musical circle a short precis of the history of music was given by miss norah townendv arc m with illustrations on the pianoforte some of our civic fathers de not seem fully to appreciate the motives which led parents formally to petition against the new east acton school being fetr for public dances they argue that slmhsxdances are regular ly held in other schools without any one being the worse that his condition was duo to hav ing no food and all beer was the ex planation given by james jones a dealer of no fixed abode who was fln- edioa act p c on s urday for being drunk and disorderly and using obscene language un en- fieldroad acton tomorrow night will see the open ing of the handsome new dining hall and lodge room which has just been completed at acton vales only hostel ry the kings arms this fine room forms part of the extensive ad ditions and improvements which are now approaching completion at this oldestablished inn much encouragement came to the numerous helpers representing all branches of church activity who join ed hands last week in tho promotion of the threedays formal baxaar in aid of the actqh wesleyan church and causes associated with it at the end of the second day it was announced that 500 out of the 875 required had already ieen raised the unusual privilege of having en- joyed sixty years of married life is being celebrated today by our old fellow townspeople mr and mrs r frulh 6 cheltenham place who were married at acton parish church whereat he brudegroom had been christ ened twentyseven years previously on novmber 12 1866 by the rev parry the then rector of acton a creditable debut was made yes- terday week in st dunstans hall in east acton by the brown revellers i actons latest concert party by day these merry people earn their bread and butter in the wellknown factories of s c brown ltd north acton and by night they rehearse all sorts of entertaining items for the diversion of theur fellow- workers and them selves the major announces that the council and himself were invited by the rector to attend the parish church service on sunday morning what ever other invitations they might re ceive in tho future next sunday would be the mayors sunday and he hoped he would be well supported on that occasion light refreshments were then served in the mayors parlor and commit tee jroom the wisdom of settling all differ ences at preliminary private meetings was shown in tho unanimous elec tion of the mayor and the ailbut unanimous clecton of mrs barnes as alderman for wnom even clr mld- dleton her former rival voted such is the power of feminine influence that even party conpacts are as nought before it the mayor made the speech of a business man committing him self to no definite programme and recognizing in tbe council the dic tator of policy but he gave it good ad vice the first public act of the new mayori and mayoress aid and mrs orange was to entertain a group of od people from the almhouses at tea in the committee room after a good meal supplied by mrs labrum they served several councillors wives and friends aid mence miss mo 111 e mercer miss mollle seymour mr wake ley mrs morgan and miss m orange contributed to a varied music al prorgramme everyone in chats worthgardens acton and dts neighborhood ts talk- ingof the impudent doings of an am ateur burglar who ate a hearty sup- 1 per washed down with gin at one house where he made himself com fortable for the night in the dining- room and looking in next door dur ing tho early mornlne called on the surprised householder to hold up his hands had a few minutes scuffle with him and disappeared over the back- garden wall weekly fashion hint a drop of water w a new apron effect after d recoil is this charminp frock fashioned flat crepe is used for its development the color being a soft deep rose a distinguishing feature is the apron front of printed silk ar ranged across the front there arc shrrings at the shoulder on either side of the front thecol lar-ts-cut- with thev tiestrings and both match the apron tunic medium size requires 2j6 yards 36mch plain and 1 yard f- figjpred material tho fear of silenco and loneliness nut fotldom irt tack b burly minora who fur that reason refuse to wink alono in distant uilfts in china uil viry uilncmcnt of torture lo lo confine u jj ioiu1cnuxeu in a pluto whoic tiuund cannot leach him and ovci tho plunk to which he is bound to place u vcysel of wntur to regulated that onco ovciy few minutes a single drop shall full upon his brow there is no light and no sound to distract his at tention and tho thoughts of tho pooi wretch become so concentrated on the xpoctauion of tho noxt drop of wutti that when it falls it seems to strike him with the impact of a bomb and reus on cannot long withstand the strain in his book in lotusland jtipan mr h g pontlng says ho ciune to understand tho strango drtai of silence through un experience in a california mine at midnight i ive hundred feet lnlb tho crust of tho turth i went and felt no new sen sations except one of disappointment as the shaft echoed with my foot steps six hundred feet seven hun dred feet eight hundred foot and the bottom of tho mine what he gav the world soybean varieties and their adaptation a iuurtcr contury ago tlicic died in but as i stood there a cieepy feeling came over me what wus this con sciousness that suddenly oppressed me and made my blood seem chilled i had felt no lining llko it before my candle gave but a teoblo glimmer and i found myself peering furtlvoly into tho shadows with a feeling almost akfh to dread all at once i knowl was the silence tho immense oppressive silence hitherto whon i had been down in the mine thgr frd niways acton and district milton 8ullion brings big price waveily king champion hackney stallion of canada who was again successful at this years royal winter pair at toronto last week has since been sold by its owners tho joseph tel for estate milton to allan mann a noted horseman of pejtet boro for a record fourfigure price a hare for the preacher on friday rev g w tebba was paying cala on his people cast of port nelson whilst walking on tho highway a cottontail rabbit jumped out of the grass in front of a fast moving car the car caught it and threw it back on the sidewalk at mr tebbs feet it was quite dead and a day or so afterwards formed part of the menu at the rectoiy dinner tabic good hunting burlington gaxctte boys musc not use firearms chfef 34phereon is anxious that tho parents of young boys in acton should see that they are debarred from using firearms serious accidents have oc curred in tho past and thei o have been reported several cases of neai acci dents this fall from the use of 22 rifles and other firearms the penalties for the use of firearms by bos are heavy and parents are usually called upon to pay them prevention is better than nay been the regular beating of the ham mers on the drills now thero was nothing but thick velvety silence then a sudden sound liko tho crack of u stockwhip put every sense on the ulert was i not alone then after all in a moment the instinct of self- preservation reminded me that i was unarmed who could bo down here ut this hour and what could bo his object had i been followed with out a weapon i was at tho mercy of any lulqan all this rushed through my bruin in a moment and 1 tried to pierce the shadows my candle only served to make tho darkness visible another crack almost like a pistol- shot and then enlightenment and re lief flashed upon me it was nothing but a drop of water falling fiom tho hanging wall in the sump below yet in this dread silenco it struck with almost the detonation of a fulminat ing cflp ono of the louthimi elties a inun whoso rulch of life wcie so different from those of lili ntlbhbois that most of tl em thought him mail ho lived in a apaciouu old house huiiountled by a gardcn which he hud bought forty ycain befoio liu go blocks of business liouhespow htm mod it lb and ho was offeioda price foi his lot whlcfi would have made hlnrilch but he would not nell jt lhls in homo to my old wife hi said i couil not buy foi her with tho money you offei the eomfoit and content sho has in liei home and her garden but you can make your sons rich it was urged i do not want to make them rich he replied his neighbors aohl theli lots spec ulatcd amassed lurto foituncfe push ed thch sons into politics or made them manufacturers or biokers that they might amass still target wealth he made of his boys working horti- cultuiluts liko himself it is a business which will give them comfort but not wealth ho said in lw too they will not be employed by other men nor employ mnny bands and so will be outside of nhy future struggle bctwoen capital and labor in this country when he had gained a sum large enough to- keep his wife from want if sho should aurvlvo mm ho gave up his vineyard and gardens to his bos and devoted the i est of his life to charitable work and 1o the culture of a new si ape of a peculiarly fine flavo when he hnd succeeded in marrying on account itov mi williams was the congre gational minister in tho village of wlnslow maine several years ago ono evening says a correspondent of tho boston globe four young peoplo called at the parsonage two of them wished to be married tho papers in the case were legal so mr williams performed the cere mony tho other couple acted as the bridesmaid and best man the groom was the son of a wellknown man in town and as tho happy couple were leaving the parsonage tho young man whlbpered to mr williams just charge it to father parson it will be all right bringing it to perfection ho gave cut tings from it to all tho poor horti culturists that ho knew a man he said should try to le ive tho world richer by something for hishaving been in it some men leave a great picture or a book or noble thoughts to it i only havo a erapo to give he gave it with all his heart his neighbors whose business in life had been to gather great heaps of money called hbm eccentric judged by all that is noble in life who was more sancjio xr they thero aio a groat many varieties of soybeans listed b anieilcan seed- mon but only u limited number these aio suitable for canadian farms during the past three years about twenty of themost promising varie ties of soybeans for canadian condl- tunu have been tested for yield and matui ity at the dominion kxperl- mental station at harrow ontario tliv so varieties have been grouped into four classes determiried by the length of time which thoy have tskep to mature the various maturity groups with tho outstanding varieties in the gioup are as follows very early varieties maturing in 105 to 112 days mako the first group thie best of which are early brown and ate- annes no 02 in the second matur ity group which class as early varie ties and which take from 113 to lfo days to mature tho best representa tives have beenv yellow no it and summer and of the medium varie ties which constitute the third group pml which take 121 and 128 days to mntuie early korean manchurtah black eyebrow o a c 211 and green have riven the best results to harrow in tho fourth group requir ing 120 to 136 days to mature the var ieties a k hoohler and ebony have shown up the best under conditions at harrow as these varieties differ widely in maturity care must be tak en in choosing one that is suitable for tho district in which it is to be grown soybeans can be grown for ha bllage or heod under favorable colfi ditlons tho c irl er varieties win to 20 bushels of seed per acre while tho lutter varieties will yield from 14 to 2 tans of hay or 18 to 30 bushels of eeed per acre soybeans wlj grow on practically any typo of soli but the best results have been obtained on sandy or clay loams reasonably fertile provided the necessary bacteria are present a soil suitable for growing corn is usually suitable for soybeans how- i ever thq soybean la more resistant to droughts and less sensitive to an ex- cs of moisture than corn proputty proputtyi 1 proputtyi thero are those in scotland and eluowherowho appreciate the value of a tenerous marrlago portion mac i heard ye was courtln bon ny kato macpherson said donald to an acquaintance one morning well sandy man i was in lovo wr the bonny lass was macs ro- ply but i fund oot sho had nao sil ler so i said to mysol mac be a man and i was a man andnoo i pass hpr by wi silent contempt how he lost it a smalt boy was returning from school crying bitterly what is the trouble my little follow asked an old gentleman i- ive loost the ppenny tho tt teacher gave for bbeing tho best boy in tho class sobbed the boy oh well never mind replied tho old fellow here is another ono that will take 4ts place but tell me how lyou lost it cause i wasnt the best boy in- tho class replied tho boy t more winter eggs at big prices without cost to you your hena pay for it or we will give you your money back you take no chances simply use in their daily feed little of i r stocked and bold by d talbot acton get ms radio winter evenings 71 8imple indoor aerial king radio engineer describes ef ficient antenna for indoon-jristal- istion in listeners attic there aoremany radio listeners who are not able to have an outdoor nerlao says h a gut en chief ra dio engineer for the king radio and for those a simple but effective indoor installation is recommended this tn- marlcet on saturday a cold welcome a clergyman in a small town was de ploring the fact that none of the couples that came in from tho country to be married stopped at bis house for thl purpose well brother said the man ad dressed what can you expect with that big sign on tho tree there five stalatlon requires no special tools or equipment the screen wire can be bought at any hardware store and the other material can bo secured at the radio store or the antenna can be in stalled complete by the radio dealer the materials required are 25 feet of galvanlied not painted or enameulcd fly screen 21i or 3 feet wide insulators and leadin wire tbe wire should be supported on tbe insulators at the highest point in the homo with the flat surface of the screen parallel to the ground this antenna- 4s intended for attic instal lation but in some instances ha giv- en excellent results on lower floors by being separated into two or three pieces and placed under therugk of course u is necessary to electrically connect the pieces together when connecting the leadin solder it to tbe most convenient point vt the screen and run directly to the net use only ordinary galvanised screen wire this type of antenna will not work satis factorily under a metal roof for that matter even the outdoor aerial should be kept away fromthe metal roofs and other grounded objects mr gates la tho designer of tho famous 61 nd 62 king radios so many of which are belns installed by h axoxc dally demonstrations arc being held at this store mbng61 a powerful set butvery f inexpensive jmkseeil king rabi most radio per dollar i an tho placo to the end of thl your i dollar iplne tor hltrtrins heret joke on teapher jack well x aboyre4 up th teach er today before the vrtiole claes jill howm ya dp it jnek- sjl naked mo far lincolns oettyapurff addrese and i had to tell hr be never uvm there i vt then daddy comes home and the vv evening meal is over then a new daymrf delight begins from a hundred broadcasting stations comesthat parade of great tilings on the air music or stories for the children the tantalizing strainsof famous dance orches tras lectures from noted educators at your invitation half the world comes in your radio door nothing makes long evenings short like a king radio and the king you see here is so inexpensive that youtl never miss the money we will install it for you complete with everything you need show you in a few minutes- just how easy it is to operate it iandk you for only a small payment v down the balance to be taken care of in contaoienfcaaioiints as you enjoy the set h- a coxe aston corn u today tf you can or tf you presn phone usjmdtwe will install this of any king radio bejor rrn nutj m rvj 1