The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-9-3, Page 2The Fresh Flavor
• preservecl in the air.tight sALADA
packet. Finer than an7 Japan or
Gnipowder, Insist upon SALADA.
Love Gives Itself
THE STORY OF A BLOOD FEUD
BY ANNIE S. SWAN.
'Soya tree itself and is not boughtfe-Longfellene
santelloseers ir
;and Or See
nodded, aild drawing upethe
syso.oeiree;t cosinfortable chair: atelsed judYto
sit down, and.seid slip would melte the
Every vtor to,T4aa Deinpster'
sitting-rooin knew that eliminate little
coiree-machine, which she manipulat,
ed with her own clever Augers, there-
by prodecing a nectar fit or the gods.
"You look ever so much, brighter
then when I saw you last Saturday..
Had any good news?"
"Prn going hem on Saturday," .
answe'red Judy unexpectedly, I
"Ohl" aajd J.9an. interestedly. "But:
Mis Tentaraett season isn't over—".
"Nat for another month. But she's
sending- tie home, I didn't know liow.
desperately wanted' to go until we,
Were at the ateareship office to -day,
And I nevere-no, I never knew e
more understanding person than she
is. Her intuition is uncanny some-
times." '
"The artistic temperament," mur-
mured Jean, on the spur a the mo-
ment. "But she'll miss you fright-
fully!"
"I don't, know. I've been rather a
pig Just lately. Fact is, Miss Demp-
ster, Scotch women can't lead an idle,
purposeless life. If I were buy like'
you or Miss Tenderden, I think I:
should • like Nev York quite well.
What I'm mortally afraid of is that
she marries Graham Madox in the
end! Don't you see it would be a
'? •
CHAPTER XXVIL—(Cont'd.) Carlotta, with a.n infinite patience, splendid arrangementThey seem
, made for one another, and a course
Judy me had got soof the patter , crossedthe room and krielt by s !he is very good-looking—and thee as
1
of the stage at her fingersetidsand' side, laying her kind, compel ing wellh,
h
,
d 1earud a great many t'hings hands on her arms, and forcingt e A curious look flitted across Jean'
thS,
about e private life of ita devotees darkrebellious eyes to meet hers.
which had astonished her not a little. I "Listen,. dearest. I've been watch -
Perhaps the greatest eye-opener had; ing you all these weeks, and I kneW
been the colossal nature of the work. I that it mast come. When we agreed
face, and he suddenly found the
coffee -machine more than usually
iin-
terestng. .
"I don't think that will ev
der hap -
Its aruous exactions, es ausseritya o h' t to ther > everything
pen. They'vedhad plenty of chanes
There could not be even a moment'si was different. We expected to find before they ever came here. I
slackening and sometimes she won- Alan here, and that you wOuld have wouldn't worry about that, Miss Ran -
his companionship and all the cot- kine. I dont think she will ever fox-
dered' havi Carlotta could stand it,
and be invariably so cheerful and
r g
It may be said here that there was
one flaw in the friendship between instant, but She made a gallant e art
recover herself. "It is cruel to
these two. Carlotta, out of a mis-,t°
be-
taken iaea of sparing Tody,s feelings, ; sides.keep you here, and unnecessary Don't look at me like that,
and Pefliaps making the future more
Judy-
We• can'teafford to drift -away
bright and complete, had withheld
from one another—we daren't, do you
from het a full confide.nce. hear? And for that reason you are
Judy was as yet unaware of the
fact whieh Carlotta, in a moment of gang hone."
emotional abandon, had communicat- "And 'when I am gone Gpliam Ma-
dhme- dok vvill have you all to himself, and
cerns of lus life to interest you. We get y -our brother."
have been disappointed----" and here • "But he isn't here, and it'sethe man
a little catch broke her 'voice for an on the spot who has the chance," ob-
ed to Jeagi Dempster, an adi m
diately thereafter repented of doing
so and had laid a vow of secrecy upon
Jean.
Judy did not know that Alan and
Carlotta had been married at a Lon-
don Regietry Office on the morning
of the day that he left London, and
theq Carlotta considered that she and
all her earnings belonged to Stair.
Had Judy been aware that that ob-
jective of Carlotta's Weaves to do her
part in the redemption of Stair, she
would have understood the practice
of the small ecorimies, which som.e-
times both puzzled and irritated her.
Carlotta snailed her far -away and
as Judy reeled
• most provoking, sm e
or her arguments in favor of a closer
alliance between. Madox and his lead-
ing lady. She understood that 'Judy
had much to try her, and thus forgave
the pin -pricks of the everyday life
which both were beginning to feel
. just a trifle trying and irksome.
It was Jean Dempster who was
Judy's stand-by in those days. The
acquaintanceship had made great
strides, and often while Carlotta was
at the theatre'Judy would slip down
to Mrs. Isaacstein's for a chat with
the count,' woman who understood
her, apparently, better than Carlotta.
New York is a levelling place, and
Judy, amid all the strange -new whirl
of her life, had almost forgotten the
trammels of the old days, when she
had known just this one.or that, and
had had her social list marked clown
with a blue pencil, Ass a county where-
in Stair could not only hold its own,
but might lead, had it been so minded.
Carlota understood Judy far bet-
ter than ju.dy imagined, and with the
unerring intuition of the born stu-
dent of human nature, lead her finger
' on the sore spot. Instead of making season, but perhaps we shall be lucky of desig t vsem e Inver a 7
any answer to the jibe about Graham enough to get you a berth in Satur- served Miss Dempster, announced
Madox, she leaned her elbows on her day's boat." "Mister Fordyce."
knees and looked across the floor- judy looked for a moment at Car- Jean was undoubtedly surprised,
• spaee of the hotel sitting -room of
which they were both so heartily. sick.
"Judy, darling, the matter with you
is that you want to go home."
"But I can't," she answered dis-
mally, not even trying to refute the
suggestion. "You won't finish for
another month, at least; and I heard
Mr. Madox saying on Sunday that
lie only wished he could add another
; month on that! As likely as not he
'will add it, and then where shall
"At Cambridge, my dear, I hopes"
said Carlotta firmly.
"Then you want to get rid of me!"
• cried Judy, in hot rebellion. "Of
course I quite understand."
the inevitable will 'happen! Nothing
can prevent it, Carlotta. It must be
better—far better !—just to accept
fate. You are great on the fate -line,
anyway? I am sure that Graham
Madox is your fate," -
She spoke hardly, but her heart
was,. melting in her breast, for the
lovely face so near her own had- a
haunting, pathetic. look, which it was
not in Judy's nature to resist.
"You don't believe that in your
innermost heart; Judy. You may
have ceased to love ine, perhaps I've
been trying, but you believe in me
yet, hope and trust, or I couldn't
go on—
eerved Judy dismally. "It's' all a
horrid tangle -from first to last, and
I've lived a thousand years in the last
one. Are you all right? I thought are finished With a turn -back cuff.
you'd been crying vhen I came in?" Netted frilling forms the jabot, which
"Well, I had been," admitted Jean, is not included in the pattern.. The
glad to .get off the subjeet of stage diaoain shows the simple design. of
TAILORED BLOUSE OF CREPE -
DE -CHINE,
Strictly tailoreci,blouses adopt frills
and buttons for trinuning, and fine
cluster tucking in the front distin-
guishes this version of the hip -length
blouse. The long tailored sleeve,
fastening with a link cuff, is AT liar-
mon,y with the simple collar that can
be adjusted with many buttons.
Short sleeves are much in demand and
love -affairs. "I had h letter from rny pattern No. 1149; which is cut in sizes
mother this morning, and she says
Mamie is going, down the hill, and 84, .36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 incheg Mist.
f 21,4 ards of
that it isn't likely she'll ever see
Hunter's Qttay. Think Of that! After
all my hard work and scraping, and
only on Sunday I had a good count.
up and I thought I might manage
It in two years instead of three! A
kind man I kne-w in business put Sae
on. to a rather good investment just
lately, and -I've made a bit--"
"Oh, I sans sorreal Has she had the
best advieevand everything?"
"Well, of course, mother haa done
what she could; but she's poor. Wh,at
1VIarnie wants is fresh air, an a the
'best fetid, and res, and—and happi-
ness. If only I coed afford. to take
run home, would see for myself just
what is the true state of affairs. I
"But Alan is deadl There can be know itmust serious bea,0„ mother
nothing surer than. that! He never would let m:e know anything about a
wentato that Calgary ranch. He has at all." •
never been heard of since, and worse "I wish could help, or send you
Couldn't take
than all, he has made no attenapt to home in any placel
send back Fordyce's money—because your place at the School of Steno -
Jean Dempster told me—and that graphy, and *give you frly passage?"
proves beyond all doubt that he is The idea pleased Judy. To do some -
dead. I know him better than you, thing for someleely was certainly
and that his pride is as high as the what ga,v,e her the most happiness' in
heavens. the world, and ealled out all that was
Carlotta rose slowly to her feet finest in her nature. The forced in,
Her face had whitened a little, but aetivity of body and soul had been bad
her eyes never lost their serene and for her in every way.
steadfast look. Jean's eyes ineontinently filled.
"Judy, if Alan were dead I should "It is dear and good of you to think
know l Do you hear? Iashould know!
He is alive He will come back to us
and things will right themselves at
Stair. Don't ask me how' I know, be- always does. '1 have found. that, even
ca,use I can't tell you; only it is here in the darkest hour of my life, vrhen
—deep down.—the only thing that I was wanting to tumble out of it in
keeps me going," she said, pressing the very quickest way I could find."
her hand to her heart. "Try to hold That very night—nay, that very
on for a little longer. And now go moment, her words seemed to be veri-
fied, for the sitting -room door Opened,
and get your hat and we'll do the
steamship offices. It is a crowded and black Samba, with the flourish
' '
of it, and I shall always remember at.
No—I shall just have to go on. An-
other door will open somewhere. It
Pass it a'outi
after every taeaL
Give the fantily
the benefit of its
aid, to digestion:
Mean teeth too.
Keep it always'
lin the house, R81
Cots tittte - helps much"
4SSU No, 3S—'25
Size 38 bust requ res y
86 -inch, or 2 yards of 40 -inch (ma-
terial. This' blouse, if worn with
skirt .No. 1165, wonla make a charm-
ing two-piece ensemble. Peke 20c,
The designs illustrated in our new
Fashion Book are advance styles for
the home dressmaker, and the woman
or girl wh6 desires to wear garments
dependable for taste, simplicity and
econmoy will find her desires fulfilled
in our patterns. Price of the book
10 cents the copy Each copy includes
one coupon good for five cents in the
purchase Of any pattern,
ROW TO ORDER PATTERNS. -
Write your nameand address plain -
Ay, giving numben and size of such
patterns as yon want: Enclose 20e in
starop or coin (coin preferred; wrap
it carefully) for each number, and
address -your order to Pattern Dept,
Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade-
laide, St., Toronto. Patterns sent by
return"maiL
Plownien rioneors.
Strong men lave gone adveaterieg
Sinee Adam saw the ,sword, '
And Seine ilftiTO „cliadSte'perve kieg-
7' And Some S.eledS the I1,61-6;
And ,sing sevye their sityn red blOOSI •
That keeer the Waywai'd pall
Aed •rinsweretlet,nd.,:faiia.it eoo:cl,
Irrore, Wreegel Bengal. .se
lotta's face, and her own was a study. foi though Fordyce had calied y
"Carlotta, I do believe you're the tunes at the Donner House, and had
best as well as the greatest woman had much to say to her over the
in the world! How dare you treat a 'phone ataodd times, this was his first
little beast like me so nobly! Why visit to Mrs. Isatiestein's. But she
don't you knock me down and *ample was pleased, and looked it as she intro -
on me? It's what I deserve! I won't duced him to Miss Rankine, hot with -
go! I'll see it through. I'd be a out a eertaiir diffidence. She was not
worm of the deepest dye if I took you surprised, 'however, when Judy im-
at your word!" xnediately took her leave.
• 'You are getting a little .mixed It was Judy's first opportunity of
your metaphors, rny precious! But seeing Fordyce -arid the thought of
the Atlantic breezes will clear your the money he 'had given Alan, and
brain," said Carlota, with a slight, the silenee which had ensued, ca.ueed
wavering smile. "It is all right, isn't her pride such acute disemn.fort that
it? And you won't drag in graham she was glad to escape. Jean, with a
Madox again, will you? His placein murnigred ,word of apology to For -
my life is what it always has bean,
and ever will be, I hope—that of good
friend and faithful comrade. He is
perfectly safe, Judy, and so am I."
With that Judy professed herself which Miss Dempster spent her len,
content, and they sallied forth te. sure time, and he did not fail to make
gether to the steamship office and 1.1•Se of it. Ile was accustomed to gor-
get a berth on a steamer sailing on geous rooms, filled With the things
the following Saturday. for which the rich man's purse can
"Alan's boat," said Judy, with a Pay, but here he found the thiags
strange note in her voice. "And' for which, fortunately • for huniamtin
his sake I ought to go second class." money is powerless to buy—the es -
But Carlotta would not hw Of sence of home!
that, and a acrinfortable outside "ee that is Rankite's sister?" he
staterootn was duay engaged and paid obsbrved, when Jean a trifle breath -
far that very day. less from her hast -e, on the stairs,
dyce, went down to the door with
judy.
This gave him an opportunity of
looking round the sitting -room in
Instruitatehtal Music in Schools
• •
as Developing.
,
And we have roused, good song for
Who, whether young or old,
Have eotered OlymPfads
Adventuring for gold.
So have we sung. the'ecas of ware.
And so we sing them naw.
But who has twanged:,a ballad for
The heroes of the plow?
West loivig prairies through strange
What? Was it gold that thpw:ea their
AC arildmwlolsPdill:tnoe:ris'egfo°1111:11 t "'—
Long muskets hooked beneatb. their
- 'arms—
Afraid of none but God—
They carried plows ,to virgin farms;
• Lean aldiers• of the sect
The amazingly eased development of
instrumental training. In the public
scbools represents perhaps the most
significant phrase ,in the evolution of
public school music during the last
decade. • .
To -day, practically every progressive
music department includes in its cur-
riculum some form of instrumental
training. It is gradually taking its
proper place in the general scheme of
echool music. Its importance is second-
ary only to vocal training. The latter
reaching every child, must retain its
undisputed supremacy.as the foremost
doctrine of schoel actinic.
The greatest development has per-
haps taken place, in the high school or.
eheetra. Many a these organizations
represent a 'very, satisfactory standard
of taste and performance, Where this
standard has not been 'reached the
fault often ina,y be found in the fact
tb.at the teachers,... ffred by the ambi-
tion to present an imposing program
of fine music, omitted to subject the
orchestra to a systematic course in
semble training which wouln have prp-
viaed the necessary technical pro-
ficiency for the adequate performance
of an ambitious, programnienaAnother
failing is sometimes' encountered,
namely, that teaehera in their en.deav-
or to avoid too difncult music, become
blind to their dutieseas educators and
present insignificant an& mediocre
music to the orchestra for practice
performance.
These were the men who saw wild
gfass - '
With creepingdeath astir;
Who fought red terror in the'pass;
They loved the smell of virgin soil, In Suttbnin-in. Nottingham -
And braved the massacre; -
s a regu ar . ether itidicious metho.ds of propaganda,
shire, there Is an hotel where roast the distributien hasa become wide -4."0
The fertile feel of loareo hedgehog'i 1' feature in the sPread, and the number of new names
Yet mingled direing with their toil, bill of fare. Every race has its favor- added annually to the list for free
And so, at last, came home. Ite dish and whigt they shudder 'over
„,.., trees now runs into the thousands.
•, roast beef, ,the Chinese enjoy soups 'ik An idea of the extent of this work
Their furrows down the field of years from certain -kinds of birds' nests. ,, may be gained from the figares cover -
handy size pack -
1 age -for occa.sions
, when half a pound is
just right."
LtpOs' OF' S LING§
ctrivi cis
1.)1STIZIBtITED,
Establislunent of Groves Con-
serves Moisture and Stops
. Soil Drifting,
The early belief that trees. epuld not
• be stmeessSully grown oa the lers.irias
• has been thoroughlY dissipated by the
resulta attained by the Forestry
Branch of else' Department of the In-
terior conjunction with the Cana-
dian Forestry Association 'during the
Past twenty-five veers. hi. distributing
free to farmers and Othera "ffiterested .
In promoting forest .growth, trees,
QUee" r Dishes. seedlings and cuttings for planting.en
their property, either as wind-breaka,,
Ata luncheon given ree'en on fer ornamental. purposes. Whena
pigeons stuffed with,cheePies.
being goose th15 w"It'commeneed In 1901, the first.
den many strange edible§ appeared on
the -.menu, among them distribution was made .to only twenty ..
stewed in honey, chicken stuffed with
pistachio- nuts and dates and serv-ed
with honey sauce and cherries, and
farmers, but since that time, by means
of lectures, travelling. demoastration
calla the, setting ,aside of ah official
• holidey, for the planting of i trees, awl
Are straight and true and deep.
()simple pllowmen pioneers, ,
GOd fest you In your sleep!
And we who swell 'with lusty breath
The ballads of the brave "
Will rouse a chant for noble death,
And sing it o'er your grave! ,
—S. Oiniti'llarker.
Prance breeds snails specially for ing the operations of the forest aursery
the tame. In Canede we mariel that stations of the dovernment located at
anything so undleaw as snails oould be Indian Head. and Sutherland in the
eaten by anyone, yet tha lobster feeds
- -Province of Saskatchewan. During the
on the refuse of the sea, and the pig is past shipping season, which extended
fed on offal, whilst snails live only on. from April 14 to May la 2,470,000 seed-
greenstuffs such as parsley, lettuce, lings, cuttings and tran,splaInts were
and vine leaves. .
Whale, cattle', and elephant ,steaks... armers, and- , , , .
sent' out from Indian Head to 3, 0
f2 500 000 seedlings and
Modern Humanity. Were served at a zoological dinner in
Research shows that what'we term Paris and wore greatly relished. '
In India a species of ant is driednind
Inimanity originated away off in Asia
made into a sort of curry, and in the
s5 many thousands and thousands of
West Indies no more' tasty disheas yet
years ago that it la quite impossible to
even approximate the date when man,.. been disCoverethrf-hativra.ts. e
You can eat fried dragon -flies in the
kind first flooded the Europaan con -1
tinent. Always, so it seems, the great MalaY Archipelage, caught by boys
with branches smeared in birdlime.
Even the octopus has its partisans
among thapeople of the Mediter4nean.
and in China it is dried and sold cover-
ed in flour.
Tasmanian.
loose masses of humankind have flow-
ed .neriodically through the passes of
the, •Caucassions, only to -find the ,ex-
pected new land. filled with other mass-
es' that had poured there eenturies-awl
thousands of years ago. The tact that
we date Europe from the. Gotha',
cuttings were distributed from Suther-'
.
land to 3,010 farmers, To date, an-
proxiniately 81,000,000 seedlings and
cuttings di broadleaf trees and nearly
1,500,000 young spruce and -pine trans--
Plants have been distribtted., This
'distribinien represents- the establish-
ment of approxiinately forty thousand .
sheaterheits. • , •
. Many School Grounds Beautified.
While a majority -of the trees distri-
buted have been supplied to falmers,
an endeavor has. been Made to interest
others, and M. this oanneetion it is In-
-Franks and such things means nothing Canadians ,whe have . visited. Tea, .terestingto nOte.- 'that Many' sane'
e
except that these pedples have left mania. have capitulated ,toatb.e charm grounds !lavbeen planted with trees
-s-
better records of their wanderings onthe Australian isId and its supplied from nursery stationOf the
than the older ones. One of the 'great-, ants.. The hartor; fOrraed by the tier-- Government.Inf Seekatchewan., 202
1
s pte
est outpourings of record la one 150.0 went River, hae, 'few equals. ...Not. till schools thii1gwet furnished.
B.C., when Waste hordes taaae swarm- 1853' did this earthly paradise cease ‘vitli 166,00° seedlings and cuttings,
Ing through the Passes, living in tents- to be a mere limbotowhich convicts and a enaaller • nimher Were assisted. '
and. caves knowing almost nothing of .were cenzigaed. A. great mischief ac-
inlilanitelia and Alberta.
agriculture or any 'art except war, lizi- coMplished by ,whiteapieneerawas. thee Th.e establishment a. 'these groves .
it .nat;
Ing no laws, and evidently no ahn ex- extermination of the aborigines, . pa and tillts Of ees has'docieuch to in
cept to 'escape from Asia in tlie same whom there were but four left in 1865 creasethe aniount aadawariety of agri aa
cultural and horticultural products '''''''r
produced in. the West, both by con-,
serving the 'moisture and by stopping
soil drifting. For instance, e net so
main years ago, fruit growing as a
practical' undertaking was never eery
sidered as possible, butnow one finds
farmers all over the country growing -
small fruits; plums,' crabapples., 'and in
some eases even standard apples,in
quantities sufficient for hoine consump-
tion. But after all, perhaps the great-
est value of these, trees is the comfort a
and beauty they pring .to thefame
making the prairie farm home a real
home in. every sense of the word.
• The Icing's L9ndon Home.
During the middle of the 'sinimer -of ,
1825 the building of Buckinaara 'Pal-
ace on the site of the old Buckingham
House was cernmenced. Although the
whole of the ground floor of Bucking-
ham House was preserved, the. Palace
costhalf a million pounds and `took
two years to complete:
. William IV. never liked. the+Palace
and it was not until 1837, when. Queen
Victoria removed there from: Keneing,
ton Palace, that Buckingham Palace
became the official home of Sove-
reign. ^
The most Interesting event which
ever took place in Buekingliam Rouse
eves the drinkingof the first cup of tea
ever mad.e in England. This took place
In 1666 when the Duke of Arlington, .,
who then owned ,the mansion, bought
a pounCof. tea 'for 60c, a
Buckingham Palace may be regarded.
as a Inpky' home, for during the bun-
dred years it has been a Royal resf;
deuce only one member of the Royal -
family has died therel--Kineladward
VH. Queen Victoria, die.d at Osborne,
Priece Allse7rt . at Windsor, and both
princelohre and' the Dulteof s,ciarence .
at Sandringham. -
During the last twenty years a num-
ber of alteratious have been made to
the Pala.ce., King Edward made
changes Which simplified the domestic
arrangements and 1n.1913 King George
had the whole of the front, which had
become very weather worn, refaced.
Radium's Rival,
. ,
Radc.th, a new .dia.covery, costs 35,000,7
000 an ounce. 'Although it is the Meet
expenslve sithstance in the -world, its '
use will Make the treatinakt �f oancer
dieeper. It is a gas -like emanatioe of
radium and will be " eheaper to 1180
than radium. because It es, 160,000 times
as active. .
Radon is it up in tiny glaze "seeds",
tbo thickneets of a human balm The
Supply is inexhaustible, but it has the
disadvantage ,Of,'Short Wee It Icsas
half its activity in admut four days,
swvleiliglehtsraadthtiiiiios .ontedalaieta.:41i44 hyaolatiI.(!f It*
es
,
Gull's Transatlantic Plight.
In the records, of navigation, the feat
of the first gull to fly the Atialittic
Ocean is an hororable one, and worthy
Upon the compilion of that trans- re-entered the room. She doesn't ,of record. The gull, a kittiwake, Wee
action, Judy's spirits visibly rose, 'and look innch hike him. He seems to have
found in Newfoundland wearing a sae
that evening about eight o'clock, after annexed most of the looka. of the
Carlotta had gone to the theatre, she family." ver hand uponwhich were inscribed.
, '
took the street car to Mrs Isaacstein's "011, dso Wel , any- .
think / i. ' the words: "Interne 'WI erba, High
'al '
way, she's got brains and a heart. Holborn,London,"and the bird liar
She feels meeting you. Her pride been identified as one that had been
didn't like it, poor dear! Queer— released, from the .coast of Northum-.
isn't it—that nothing has ever been barland by a correspondent of the Lon -
heard Of hire."
, don naturalist.
"I'm not troubling about him, •No
• ,
—I don't. think 'anything at all It is it likely that this gen was
happened to, him, except that he has
has forestalled in hit great aehievement by
Shunted all into some side track. ether gulls. It is .: pity to have to re'
Somebody he met on the train per- cord that the bird was shot.
manner and come across the 'wafer to
what ia now America, and thig must
have been' many thoesands- of years
ago.
to tell jean Dempster the great news.
She found Jean alone in her sitting -
room, in which there was a wealth
of flowers.
"Yen are a very extravagant wo-
man, Miss Dempster!" she said, at
she touched the seraet spring lslos-
some with tender hand, their -deli-
cate perfume bringing back a swift
vision of Stair Woods in April, car-
peted with prinuase and daffodil.
rather $ I have an- extrevaa
,atit friend," answered Jean. "But
think I've put a stop to it."
"Admirer?" singed Judy, "Viewers
seem to be ope of New York's chief
extravagances, Miss Tentorden gets
wagon -loads of thane What money.,
they cog, tool just twice as Zech as
hape offered him'seinethitig better, or,
on the face of it, mare attractive.
That sort of thing happens, in this
eountry---especiahy out a bit—eveey
clays"
"I never thotight of that! She's
worried ta death, and thihke all sorts raee of Atxstralia.
af things Sieve happened to him," "seee"
(To be contietted.) wileard% Liniment for Burnt.
elave Lame Limbs.
Abnormal length of foeearne eua or
the leg, from the keee downward, is
characteriseic of the native savage
Minard's Liniment for Dandruff.
Too Harrowing for Hi
"What did you -think of that
m.
farmer's
tale of woe?"
"Toorharrowing for me."
Even After All.
A" suspicions -looking customer was
boasting to a grocer of the cheapness
of ten pounds of sugar he had boughti
J. a rival shcip.
-"Let me weigh, the package," said
the ,grocer.
The customer assented and the pack-
age was found to be t*e pounds short.
The man looked perplexed for a
moment and then said: "I.don't think
he -cheated ine muca, fornahile he was
getting the sugar I pinched two cans
of candens....,ed milk."
New Ship Material.
A new ship of 6,300 tons, the first
vessel built of the new material known
as elastic limit steel, has been launch -
in England.
and one in 1876. These people knew
altuost nothing, and did not even pos-
sess the art of building boats, being
content to use pieces of bark tied to-
•gether with grass fibre. They made no
pottery; theYnceuld not use the boom-
erang, and mentally and manually they
lived in the Paleozoic Age, with its
stone implements.
Hc,bart has abOut 40,000 inhabitants
and the *University of Tasmania has
about 200 students, the number Seem-
ingly depending on whether it raias or
not. The Island produces tin, copper,
silfer and gold, and fruit -raising, es-
pecially of apples, it of prime indus-
trial importance. a,
Britain's Doles.
GreatBritain ha's, spent £173,530,000'
on unemployment benefit, since the
'armistice and 250,520,000 on out -of -
work donations.
I ONTARIO COLLEGE OF ART!
Grangc,Park . Toronto ,—
.DIMVING•PAINTING•MODELL1NGOESION
DIPLOMA COURSE 4 LIMOR COURSE.
'TEACHER'S COURSE- COMMERCftL ART
G.?A•REID R.C.A• Pr4t4pal ,
Session 1925-26 opens October 5th
.For Prospectus apply to Registrar
. .,, .
College of Optometry
The College of Optometry of
Canada opens the second Monday in
September with the offfcial two-year
course for those entering the prac-
tice of _Optometry. Operated in con-
junction with the 'University of
Toronto. Write for syllabus of
training and other particulars.
601 -LEGE OF OPTOMETRY
138 St. George St. Toronte
..lenee.szetsece=rme.147emanky
,Note the flattened top
of this fine kettle. No
,waste space above the
water level. A very
fast boiler, decidedly
neat in appparance:
Weil made,
generelis sized, •
properbrcurV-
ed spout. Tip
of spout well
above watef
line to preveet
overboLiing.Ot
epfllhlg
Hinged lid at side
of kettle for speedy
filling under tap or
by dipper; being.
hinged it cannot fall
off or. gee lost.
1=7:, "er-----ttra large
rigid, shaped to fit the
hand and always cool;
beirig rigid you have per -
foot control at all times,
gol.mminsorms.......opearemormr
.This kettl.e is
made in SMP
Pearl and SMP
Diamond Enam-
elled Ware, also
in nickel plated
copper ware. The
.patne Savoy and
our trade mark
on each genuine
.kettle.
.1011.4ents.im.01.0010scia
TT