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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1920-9-9, Page 6•triinf' to t 1 e her ay front acether,' D'1 ttv lend met r iewFi 1t. t t'en tie • a , little girl tai if tieo bays c°,a'atie l the Saint' tl, ii e`. hi eh 'had happened rarely cineath a tL, ,. C. . i 1a at a,•l , -•lt;. i Mall*, ll'1li lee c ;G 1 tdehial tetie other �� wva*�• i�@..,.8".,e4f 't .` •• ivlfh..t is ' . 9 On her s ay 11'7'''':!,.' Ind, ireh l ei"rn to '" (lo:lbt the pingibillie of it all,' As:iiah trail been. telking eiget.:'Jnr' boly flee, cr he had '11^':n lo,ing -he wee sigh t terrible fondle tis ceek nap thing; and !fool peaele' Or elee ;Jim Oreavrord. i was just making it11 of As.:nh, She Three I£i;4 tett Iielps, to the Bella -strides and calls to Me would nest tell her nt:�'hc'l this nav:s. I wish ever That night, as she was tilaelzi,.l; the y woman had these tha;ee that ray dinner is. ready. .In the Irit- dishes after her late supper, the Hoar- 'things in her 1 itchen; ellen window is a little folding table tacit burred. A• I itehezt stool - i°:tette the right with a little' bide Jkpanes�e cloth •mitt eel "Matt go. mother, will you? 1tiT}' • he�!ght for her to iron, wash. dishes at napkin, and I have my dinner on -. 8t5 s hands are ;all atlas."'her . s:riTc a her cal.) that, and suave ?lice dinner it ahvays Send .us a* post cera for free sample, g , .,] nd heart cakes at 1of win hot tea , fl e� R Green lldo r,.- but ca eb ack sla,vly to the tants T ;sever havo been :.tale to stand 1S, a little althea pot piping , Y"E��, pay ? you }hall floor, but came back with a burst - � l�,i;,l�a 137iZ on nig feat tori without getting a bad pretty clishos aitd always a 1'ittle'rnda- txed ,`ea,. Address Salads, `P .„, of unsus eetecl s need. She was pale g ". :,._:. _ 1 backaeha end:had zul. to feel that 'petty dessert that she has made .r., with tr,;,,ht, , 1t d bet, .•-•..M . •.�,,,..,_,Sees : ,.,.,*"" i-- i "It's !" h ,',•,, T never could bean efficient farmer's speoially for Me when she mRde the n•t:m..'_•,•3;,aass.•.,�,:..,w.:,:•ss •n.�,.Y,p• ,�.,,,,,.-,, .�.,.,, r.• -STM- -..,._.,,.,.•.,._ ...rc i at titan, she 1. (.a, tleratl. • " A man! Who could it be?" Debby wife. But my f firmer-husbtuid=bless dessertthe clay before for .the family gasped. his hehrtl __salved any di£ficull les lair dinner, a mgld• of. eornstaxeh, a Larne Pose ''One of theta daylight burglars, pro- znys reriausly shuttin i hhnself up aneover, or a small cottage puctdirig; r tv da?„ g Sometimes in the summer there is a lr lye That tl e afternoon ill his worksho . Heemerg�} Last o Sumnter „ p 1 flowers" in the 'Middle of • �, i "We torrid run. out the back door after' anli with kitchen little vase of flow s while he's at the front." our or stna Iaisand it is almost as dear to me the table that' I can take home. with. i "He might have a confederut wait- stool, me when I go. And 1 smooth up my By 1 , , r �- n i ingto grab us there." as ;is my 500 pi lin. RLI'Ik.i TILT zL�S' i i That's so!" A built -in -cupboard for dishes over hair and take off • my apron and feel . "±ges•=,ei in--ri•.•=-•• : - What possible motive a burglar the sink. 1 used to have 'to trot into like a real lady while I eat. I am •„_ • .n I am �_.��__z and •teaironingmega go ..� readyt0to, �,. -=-,rzs -i Was �.�-��,:•-� � i t wo- the pantrywithmy and T v as '`tea,:•:.�,a lam these two,hes t could have for krdishes, g, gl • CHAPTER "I. + to such t Hire soaking girl! 2tiy,' then, what possible value they would trotting most of the time. Any cup- in • much Bette snood than 1 would e n. hew she has aged! Poor Jose! But have for him, they did not inquire, board except one that was built in be if she had slammed some food onto Josie, however v:;:arlil nee .a•i.i , , a; ,, as size so scared. p edge the inevitable • • tt- '• enc>. •,v�uld' I1b0 tt..r.E. What v 1 Put Debby, in the new executive habit would have been awkward. and and in rite the cornea of the kitchen table foe me, cress the. d a i ten -a, . about?" of her mind enough to take v r• now grow old :c illi grace fromoot and rest n-; , grew bold enou way in my kitchen. Now my dishes' the ironing board is always smooth S the store ` It was the very old triumphing over, at least a peek at the stranger. alicl'clero and there is l sleeve each at.on, she limped sat. „ i .e �,, meeting the same fate. In The bell continued to ring while she are washed and teed toald in about half t`1lakMg her vely head, gent. this the t_ti forg , ,e c lifted the the time they asci demand, and T and a nice big rack for the folded be hens Shillaiter, who had romped her own summer Mrs. Larrabee had, tiptoed into the parlor and clothes. And there is an electric iron. through life a: -i::: lseaut-s in and a taut! been a rose aril had Shriveled an the' shade slightly aside. She spe-edily can use that extra energy that 1 Andyet I know Man electric friends v rythin' she was ami wore and did? ` stem.- ( recognized a familiar -suit. spent trotting from pantry to kitchen Wondering haw it $s that everything D lsorali could have illegalized oven That right Deborah thanked Golf (Continued in next issue.)and !ba k again in some other way— are always woad g E F. her as Hamlet o`-er 1t'=ick's skull that He had net lent her beauty. Its doing some of the ninety things that she is .able to get so mue11 out of her Where be your ^etal t tier ts, .aur ftaT!, repayment e was socia ruin. ++ r i Bits. tivo farmers' wives want to do but washerwoman in a"day, and wily she I a r thei TracingCounterfeit _ stays avith her so long: This is 'why. red lips, your eatzci_a chin, az:.. "that ; The next morning bazaar was, never find the time. Ion,;, lithe throat, and those pearly, open at the regular hour. Shoppers The tracing of counterfeit bilis back And thirdly, a landscape window in "-"' ehouldera, arid all that high -breasted,' came as nanlerousiy as before. People; to the person responsible for their is the kitchen =`t window a wide Dollars From Gingham and Beans. s •innie-hi 'wed, lean -Embed gir ish:se s were as eager as ever toe aareee their, sue is a curious and exciting employ* , with a wTiidata g yours? 1 And 'where your veios :v, charms or d�.sndsc their flaws. Ina enough far a plant box or individual A few years ago.a. young girl found ] laughter, rear a::: "roes `feat da;; s Asaph Sielaber •was again in sent, says a New ""York newspaper• pot for Rowers. why shouldn't Moth- it necessary to earn some money if year �,ise sa 1 a and. The experts assigned by the Govern- a g p she was to continue to Live at home, enteiz�rise'' his office. He ware black always, er get all the -light ht and view possible t:ct::ci they have ever been a part of a flack tie, and he moved about with; sent to this work are among the mostewhile preparing the fond that is to as she wished to do. The family> real- ingruinbercr of the graur_d, err p-; mourning :n his manner.crav; spl membons of the Secret Sncy keep Father and Johnnie well and dence-is on a much-traveledhighway, ing almost n s slowly and heavily as 1 A month later he cravat was brown,} The protection of the currency de- malco. thane efficient? She can't do over which great i>nmbers of motor r< cine alai: a talc:, gray wall. net i leek. and the next week it was pends in large measure upon their el- it in a dark, glociily kitchen. tains pass every day and along which Deborah's hand went to her heart,; red. He vas takingmore care of his' faciency, and the pains they take aro , where there was an she of pity for: costume. Ile talked more with womenyIts a pretty good investment to crowds of children go to and from on who had never pitied her. It eves cu tem�rs, especially the young wo ! almost o fiches o strange stunt toldekeep Mother healthy in a light kitchen, school. It occurred to the girl that e v n by ane of these operatives illustrates Deborah nov. that was almost girlish, men, and he dial not keep his eye difiicuities vehicle they meet and with a window in it wide enough for the site offered a gogd chance to sell of form; she watt t:z'y now 1 ' .<g cat,: 'zr` io::ly on Cha front door. He rub t]ie her to see the blue slay and trees— things. taking flesh apo ler bane end bell his hinds once more, rccomnland-; overcame. say a window four feet wide 'la two She spent ten cents for seeds of rhythm into her ir•_ i '::rs. And that :ng his goods. I One day a bank clerk in Cincinnati feet High. And how her plants will common garden bush beans, winch she scrawny ;: lcken-1-•�•.: ;t cf hers was In a few months younger girls were; detected a counterfeit $20 bill in the grow on this .wirhow ledge!.Planted in an unused sunny spat in becoming v;orthy of :hat e; benua-ui'f'er:r,] many of the counters. Deborah, deposit of a small retail grocer. Theher father's garden. suem she had game IL so dear S plate; she n,•as ?elf that youth was invading and re operative was sent for and undertook harvestedhe the crap, she bought he had gaining a la om. She clad net know placing. She wondered how soon her: the case. The Washerwoman Speaks, yards strong, p, bright -colored ging- how the tch r , a, salter. rrei had. tri: -would come. It be a sad' He found that the grocer received The other .night T came across asen-bags, Some shifted h:e laver to her fecal ; , day, fen she loved the work. ! g ham and it into bean lams. ether slave But she took some reassurance from, the bill from a shoe dealer, who had it tence in a hook which read: "No man she made square, some round, some in She knew only thrit Jcaie vas in the praises of Asaph. He paused now from a dentist, who had it frnmisome- can be a hero to lits valet" and I the shape madeof animals, and on them disgrace with beauty and stared after and then to caiillrliment her on a sale, body else, and so en, until finally couldn't help thinking that this was she embroidered eyes, mouths and her in we:-e,"e3 pity. Win can feel or her progress. He led up to herr Secret Service man traced it to an in- almost as true about a treman and her noses in colored worsted. so sorry for a fat en tyrant ars the some of his most particular customers: valid woman who had used it to pay wasllerwomari. • These bags she displayed for sale -risen victim of ;yrsnny? and introduced her with a flourish•= her physician. When questioned, she Of assume every day is Monday to a on a large square of canvas that she A .few weeks. inter Deborah weht Sor etimes he paused as he went down; said the money had been sent to her woman who washes for her living, six hese on the roadside fence. The agate! ea �'z= a ei house, sat again the aisle, She k turned back to stare; by her brother, who lived in New Or- and the person who called Monday whole supply sold almost at once. Lan he i a • "e dining room. The at her. knew that she had blush children lrcti? ;,11 ecnie home. Josie ed, because iso her face was hot, and once, leans' blue certainly knew what he was talk- The gingham had cost seventy-five was it the leerier, "'z1e-st hidden in Mrs. Cxans'_nar , who was trying to i The operative looked up her broth- ing about. But I would just like to cents and the beans ten cents. The Sowers. She did not rise to receive mateh a sample. whispered to her: l er's pedigree, and was certain that he say that it can actually be made a rosy hundred bags that she made sold at ler- guests. They all filed by and : "Say, Deborah, what kind of rouge was the man wanted. He h of a dive d a bad day, as you will see from the descries- ten cents the b so she. had a. looked at her end swath their heads- dof you use? .It gives you the nicest' record, was the proprietorfperson to be tion I s. going to give o� my day tn profit of nine ec , 0 and fifteenhcents: She d. d not arciv: with a rood. Bird- ec•.o:, and it looks like real. land was just the sort o pe s with M X. The next she made six hun- eline wept aver her, looking aider and When Deborah denied that she , e eonfederate of counterfeiters. The If Mrtien only knew hoax very short -ilei bags, yearea by making them a • terrified. But Pamela was wonder- � pained, the undertak.er's wife was operative went to New Orleans with sighted the were i11 the way they, fully pretty in black:. She sang Josie's angry. She thought Deborah was try-; the handcuffs in his pocket, but he wast g y y little more elaborate sold diem for favorite hymn, "Jesus, lover of my ing to copyright her 'complexion. De-; •a little premature. • treat their washerwoman, tlie�v v*ould cart;-fie�0 cents apiece. Her profits soul," with a quartet ac•empanying Torah's cheeks tactfully turned pale:• certainly turn aver a new leaf, And that year were a pieceed and forty- ' the r zr c age The man proved to the detective's y p five dollers.By g her. Then t _ p_ea_:: - said a fear again, new that Asaph had taken his because I think that T may het them o de rees she `added 'evorr tail Tz t i strange ,yes from her, and now the; complete satisfaction that he had re to see this I want to vrrite this little other things to her stock su.ch:as pine: Mr. Craneshow was there, and re woman said: f1 cei-vied the money as rent for a small article for some tearer• needle pillows, the materials for Which were his canip,-steels. One cf them t "You're right; it's your own. It; house he owned in�Pittsburg. The , How mach time doyou su ole is had '?unse i, and the bas_ of the c: mel and ;ccs! Look, now it's tom operative took the next train for Pitts-! pp she collected while the beans were lost in this country every washday just growing. Now the profits from her . choir had been unable to aspen • g, haat again."! burg. :Some cf the yca'- people g= tried. :.rid so teas Asaph. When Mrs.! The tenant of the house proved to in waiting while Johnny scoots down yule business keep her in spending always, But even for teem the Crankshaw had moved off Asaph hung! be a travelling oculist, who spent most to the store to get a cake of soap or mo' ev the year round. t h - , t a a box of starch, or for the water to _laughter Was but the automatic :a, oa. awkwardly. Finally he gut the; of lis time on the road. He was then of a released spring, anti there was backs of his knuckles on the counter; away in the West, but the operative get hot, or for the woman of the _t,iinard's Liniment For Burns, Etc. no n th in the air. !and leaned across to murmar. + house to go scurrying around picking n heat once hisreturn and hrmo on lar,- s .,� aLe . i-1 C 7Debby,Ione , •. rUs Tn % ,. ,I tellingJimhe all the forenoon? Y '. "Say, was�tilt clothes g with't cowering u her d hwas filled . T:�t.OeE o f pY been given! bill.It had b..en lv - h e recognized theg .as Made! e , ,:nes ,; comb p ze rush, niadc �r r f hon 'av that sees Ax' yesterday youfla�o 0 inose a tthink, The storminteresting, I t n one' sr awe, as o_ e whoIt would be very g, , at' the thepatientin Cincinnati, athat a� him by� past and i _ age.unhurt save for the vision! more gales than any other clerk in a if one of those fellows you read abontt eialI' well with spices, and for o_ its wreckage. The girl Pamela had shop this last month." C very point from which the operative i sung here a year or so ago that song ; "Oh, really, did I?" Deborah gasp had. started. + who works in figures would take time reason it may be used with very sat - to the rese, and had shredded the' ed, her eyes snapping like electric? The patient was a boss carpenter. to work this out. is£actory results in cake making. The • .°tower and ruined it and tossed it aside.; sparks. They teamed to jolt Asaph; The Secret Service man got his ad When I get to Mrs. X's, as soon as use of honey also makes the cake • !So time had se. away the rose that' 11e fell back a little. Then he leaned;and made a bee• I take off nzy things and get into my keep fresh and soft for a. longer pee- s} l dress from the oculist t apron, I s_ down at the table, where tad. Itaxely is honey more economical tad been yu. Deborah had heard; closer.Cl line for the city. Ile had a premoni- p it the rose cry out its agony of dissolu his for rain he'd like youo have you ; hap- a there is a cupof hot coffee two or. than su ar nor is it often much more 'tion, and now it was fallen from the: =n his store. I told him were ai tion that something was going to three slices. of nice buttered toast and expensi�e. � It is the exrelience of the bush, scentless and dead. But it had fixture here. Don't you leave mei pen. and he wasn't disappointed. left at least other buds to replace it. , Debby. You won't, will you?" ' j The carpenter was an honest old • a dish of stewed fruit. I go to the flavor imparted that' commends it for That was more than Deborah had every "Why, Asaph i" she cried. 1 fellow, and told the detective without ( laundry, and there are the clothes in use in cakes. dole. i "Leastways, you'll let me know any; hesitation that he had received. the bili I the tubs, where they hav been put to Honey Pound Cake. A good pound The stare was closed the day of the .offer ' get before yogi take it. You from _lir. Smith for repairing his barn. soak the evening befare; • the table- cake can be made by using equal funeral, and Deborah went home with; can promise me that, can't you?" Mr. Smith was the small grocer in cloths, raplcins, etc., in one tub the the weights of honey,leggs, sugar, fiolir ter mother. All that her mother could `"Of. aasrsa I will but— Well I, a underelathes, towels etc., in the Daher, and butter. A Iit�le soda should be. ,,, ' ' - whose bank deposit the counterfeit ' talopey ins k about was: But didyou see Bird- rhThis Last was true. She never had had turned up. The detective flew to wild th'e colored clothes in Iheebaskst added on accouand iiavorint of n¢lused than Pear My,Josie 3till , his store as fast as taxi could carry on the floor. A narrow shelf stead of sugar. g (line? how poorly she looks! known. new that superlative rap-himand, across the end of the room, and on will give the desired taste. The recipe end so kind of scared. ?end she usedI ,.are of a woman., to have one man found it closed. le had left; town. His shop, it was proved, was it is soap, ammonia, starch, bluing— may be varied by using some sugar ^, a mere blind. everything I t m going to need in my instead of all honey. The mixture s i •r f� dtt . -� day's work, and never in the three should be beaten for ten minutes, and a,E�L "� 1r • �� j years I have been washing there has, cooked in a deep pan in a slow oven • , 4� sin MI others at cacy wad 1�• r 3, f ' '-q t1 � 1 Mel - " TIuisL ,+Tari:IDOCt" The Origlual nttlhber trattty 1lepairS Hot Water Bottles; Punctures: Bicycle, Auto Tires; Rubber Mote, Sluaranteed to satisfy. SQ cents nestp�.iel, Maii P. £tohofieil, e'i Pail.onsle 151., Toronto. your older, to d -• The tooth of a fossilized elephant recently found in Frtince weighed seventeen pounds. It is ;tliott"ltt that this animal seldom felt the 4leed for nutcrackers. The GRRA'C1;3T BIT IN YEARS s Dedicated to the United Farmers u' cr x,adcenaposecklaykl,erveU-lsaiin�n 8 C song writer, Mr, Morris Manley,. ( Words and I,tusic 3 5 c, postage prepaid, Address: Caccasa rims, LI tv en, Publishers, ti8. and 50. Lombard Street, Toronto, Cet, OOARS SALT LEAN D SALT Fink Crlot TORONTO SALT WORKS Q. J. CLIFF TORONTO .ate a,,,, (of .F. an}':SCENTED RED t D . CEDAR CHE'ST3 'unit. wonder. Absolutely moth -proof d 1 •. b y P a fully haudeome piece.: of fauniture. iiireot from manufacturer to you. Write for free illustrated literature. Eureka Refrigerator Co., Limited Owen Sound, Ont. 1.11241.2.1IMIO=i111:132.D, 'V* sap V ate*-- ` Used for i0 Years Thru its use Grandmother's youthful appearance has' remained until youth has i become but a memory, The soft, refined, pearly white appearance it renders leaves the joy of Beauty with you for many years. ROMANCE OF RUD. RECALLINGTUE. DAYS OF • POWER. AND PRIVILEGE.. Pioneers in Fur "`Trade, culture and Commerce of Northern Canada.. Linked with every phase of the his,. tory of Canada is the name of the Hud' son Ray Company, which, in its hey' day, governed a vast territory anti those who lived there, For generations it was absolute ruler ' of the region north of. Quebec • and Montreal. Just hall .a 'Century ago, when. there: was a' probability of its being dispossessed by force if It refaced to come to terms, the company' agreed to the transfer of its teeritorial rights to the Dominion of Canada for $1,500,000 and a twentieth of the lands to be set out for settlement laY the igfifty ears. tan f in the ens Government i Y This land, enormous in total quan- tity at the beginning, still forms great numbers 01. "little oases of virgin salt that have remained untouched by the plough since Indian days, and sur' rounded by the cultivated fields and 'matures of the richest farming sea tisane in. Western Canada." Pioneers of Fur Trading. Time was when the founders of this famous concern, now facing a new ers with two and a half centuries of ro mantic history behind it, Went to I3os' ton and vainly. urged upon the mer chants there the 'merits of their sclieine for an extension of the Cana- dian fur trading enterprise. These pioneers were two dissatisfied French employees of the French monopoly of Quebec which had re- fused to oxpand its field to the Hud- son Bay., At the French Court the two adven p _ Carers farad no better. Filially they e obtained accoss to a A. manual for fax farmers covering ranch construction, housing, feed- ing, breeding, and furring foxes, by E. H. Rayner, one of the best known fox breeders on P. E. Island. An invaluable handbook for all who wish to make a success of raising foxes. Sent postpaid to any address in Canada or the United States for 11.00. Send orders to R. G. CLARK Box 514, Summerside, P. E. Island KEEPS D. S. F. MUSTARD is lamely associated with the fame of England's roast beef, having been used with it for over a century. en' e S. FB Mustards eaten with roast beef and other meats fish r > game, poultry, cheese, etc., causes better digestion, and assures full nutrition. it has received the highest awards at exhi- bitions all over the world. �• -tet.- r 1ti?ACOR, SO]!f & CO., Limited Montreal Toronto Canadian Apents. 12 0 therproof the Shingles There's added years of service if your roof le preserved) with s 1 . STAIN ASK YOUR DEALER The Harvest Moon. ' anything been missing from that shelf " for an hour. , When hLrve''t moonlight filters when I got there. The water is hot; i Honey Drop Cake.—Take t1tth e e- throug]t the gossamer of wood -1 and there is a good glass washboard; fourths cup of honey, one-fourth p land dew, and wringer. Another thing that i of butter, half a teaspoon of cinnamon, And dream -eyed folk come back ' would surprise you is the number of a fourth of a teaspoonful of cloves, anew to trip their measure rare, women who expect you to do' a good! one egg, two cups of flour, half tela Then fairies dance an cobwebs thin, to - day's work without any of these three! spoon soda, two ehopsponns water, one strum of cricket's mandolin. things. Instead of a clothes-Iine, Mrs. ; cup of rail,:ns chopped fine. Heat the And, glancing o'er the mosses, pin I. X, has a reel that slips into a socket; honey and butter till the butter melts, pale ui onrays in their hair. ! in the back yard, and you can stand and while it is warm put in the spices. in one spot and hang out. the clothes.±. When it is cool, add part of the Hour, As gloomy -laden shadows fade into a And there is a Little flag walk down; the beaten egg, the soda ai'ssolved in starry -lustrous glade, to a tine platform under the reel, so water and the raisins.: Add more The harvest rim a tryst has made, Ido not have to wade around in the flour to make' a dough that will hold where lilies, twilight -cool, mud on rainy days. The clothespins itogether. Drop by spoonfuls in a but- Liburnished goblets lift their i hang in an apron bag ir. the laundry,' tiered pan and bake in a moderate throats, and on the air a frag- and in another bag is a ball of line oven, ranee floats, that can be put up in the cellar on , Honey Cookies.—Use a fourth of a The scented stores of golden boats, rainy days,a cup of water, two cups ofsugar, haat on a moon -silvered pool. On the stroke of 12 Mrs. X. conies a cup .of lard, ane cup of honey, tivo ix To kecp this tryst and there, fromefay dewyadusk till - , ' i co s oegg £lflour, eateaspaontul ofdc.nsa- dawn, 1 ' ,i ti %� &0 Imoil anti Hall a to tspoorl?'ttl of ground They chant, until the night is gone, The Haver 011 Company own oil ginger; Heat the water, mei led, lard a tender roundelay; "II-- mortal nd honey, until all is areal ..1. When leasee an 1,OQO acres of land in Dover cool add the yolks of the eggs and And if beneath the harvest moon, your i and Tilbury eTlle ver and in the I .tour sifted with the spices and soda. Comber and delle River districts. In l You'll see them pass in silver slioon a Roll out on .a figured board and cut the latter district they already have , 22 wells producing oil in encouraging I i altodeleted shap..s. Bake ire a Ill"' quantities. In order to finance and ' erate oven, Earth's School. develop this enterprise, we offer Know One Like Him? in her own way doth mother earth 100,000 shares of stock at par value of "Can Jiggs take a joke?" Sure consolation give, $1.00 each, Can sorry to say he eau." Bringing to htarts bereft re -birth Write Now for Full Particulars to John i Pratt & Serry't" Of will, new ;sewer to live. {, "Yes. Ile takes 'one from the Co.o. • humorous papers, after I've read 'env, fainards tiro:rre(:tr. Relic - es Golds, Etc. 79 Adelaide St, E. Toronto and springs then on me as leis own" a -down the leafy' way. afr r� Seal Many Canadian Beauties owe much of.their exquisite com- plexions to the creamy, skin healing, fragrant lather of' "Baby's Own Soap". Its Best for Betty • and Best for You. ALBERT SOAPS LIMITED. Manutacturere, MONTREAL, r:z-2o P. B LoI 1 Unioa'hliide, doves Overalls & Shirts Lad ¢-y 'Bob Long •Says: -.-- 'Illy overalls and shirts are roomy and comfortable, and mad* cope_ eially for farmers. S designed them with the idea that you might want to stretch your arms and legs occasionally., BOB LONG GLOVES will outwear any other make of Glove on the market, because they are made by skilled work- ,men from the strongest glove leather obtainable, Insist en getting Bob Long 13ra, +3s from your dealer— they will save you money R. G. LONG et Co., Limited Wirsnipor TORONTO Montreal. BOB LONG BRANDS Il nown from Coast to Coast -' f,{8 company of mer chalets at London,' and to Prince Ru- pert, cousin of Charles II. A charter was finally issued, giving them such amazing rights as these: A monopoly_ of the right to trade within the hay or on its coasts, and to expel anyone entering its territory without its license; the right to build forts, to send out ,ships of war and privateers, and to declare war on' and make peace with any non-Christian peoples. There followed v,ars and rivalries - with France when. trappers starved and Indians lapsed into ca.nnibaliam; rivalry and warfare with the Great North -Vest Company, and that nee - approach to war with. the Um td States States which terminated in the bound- ary arrangements of 1546. And to -day it is one of tho great merchandizing corporations of Canada. Under the new policy a "chain of liartment stores . reacning acrcies Canada has been established. .,. There are company stores in such centres as Winnipeg and Calgary, Vali couver and Edmonton, Victoria and Qu'Appelle. While the company still has fur poets scattered over: Canada, and year- ly sends to England valuable consign- ments of raw furs, its merchandise so greatly that business has developedg y that it does not care to retain the land that formerly made its empire, in Manitoba, ' i. landis located o 'This and Western Saskatchewan, Alberta, W Ontario. The farmers, who long have surrounded it with their cultivated do- mains, look with yearning gaze upon it. Ere long it will be dotted 'with set. tiers' homes. And when the grain -fields come, the vast empire of the Hudson Bay Com. pany will bate terminated its fasc3, nating story.. 4,1 The Beat Recreation. 'Walking has its merits, but, serious• ly pursued, it takes a big toll physical. ly. Gain there' is, of course, but it is not all gain. Walking, too, does not hold mach mental zest. Swimming is etcellent, but it has to be limited. To overdo it would mean a decrease in health. " - Tennis is ;a trifle too violent for many, and tennis -and -tea ranks more as an amusement' than a recreation. Cricket has too many periods when there is "nothing doing""to be classed as a recreation. Five minutes at the wickets and two hours in the pavilion is not exercise! Cycling, taken steadily, is good, but it requires more pedal power than brain power. .13 -owls is a pleasant recreation for the middle-aged, • combining medium exercise and medium mentality. Fish-' ing is half an amusement, but is good for the very tired in, mind and body. Rowing is splendid recreation for the young, but it has its ]imitations. There remains—golf! Jokes and • ridicule follow the golfer, yet the fact remains that golfing di supreme as a recreation. Fresh air—good for mind and body; skill ---good for the mind • and the eye; exercise—good for de- vitalized muscles; and walking—good in every way. Golfing wins because it re-creates, and—most important this —it never palls. A recreation must always hold alt interest, Jr It ceases to fulfil its function. The Niagara Suspension Bridge -..- 245 feast above the water. Its length„ is 1,268 feet. Snow has fallen fez' th4 second tinit in three centuries in Buenos Aires, the storm being severe enough to stes•p tilt electrical works. - icy