The Exeter Advocate, 1922-9-21, Page 2.:.
MARCO N I
Concert R
Sets
Marconi .Model "0" Regenerative Receiving Sets, furnished by us,
guaranteed to receive concerts as far dawn south as. Memphis, Tenn„ Atlanta,
Ga,, and west as far as Kansas Clty, Mo•, Denver, Col. and Omaha, Nebraskai
in addition to all the ether Canadian and United States broadcasting stations,
Amateurs, radio fees and dealers, note our prices on radio parts:
Radiotren Valves U.V. 200 , . , $11.75 Alt Vernier Rheostats ..... 2.95
Radlotron Vaivec U.V. 201 ... 7.75 S.C. Filament Jacks ..,1.38
Radlotron Valves U.V. 202 .., 10.50 a Variable .Condensers, 43 pi.ate 4.95
3" Bakelite Dials ............ .90 Variable Condensers, 23 plate 3,95
1t a" Rheostat Dials .85 ' Variable Condensers, 11 plate 3.25
S,C. 2-A 'Phones, super sense. ! Magnavov R3's 60.00
tive 10.25 Ampllphone Horne, double re -
Connecticut 3000 Ohm Phones 10,50 • ceiver type 12.00
Audio Transformers ........, 5.95 y Prest-O-Lite 80 Amp. Hr. "A"
Coit Mounts. with handles .... 3.75 d Betterles 18.00
Many other parts of QuaLtty equipment also at most reasonable prices,.
Mail orders shipped smaae day as received.
A RADIO EXPERT IN ATTENDANCE TO HELP SOLYBI
YOUR DIFFICULTIES. LTIES. DO NOT HESITATE TO WRITE DS.
When in Toronto LOOK for the RED radio sign et 140 Victoria St., just North
of Queen• --Automatic Telephones & Tlme Recorders Ltd. Main 301,4.
BLUE WATER
A TALE OF TIFF DEEP
SEA FISHERMEN
BY FREDERICK WILLIAM WALLACE
the rails to gaze at the tiny "flab an make them lay in th' bottom o'
boat" plunging like a sea -bird .in th' dory. Be careful, fellers!" And
among the •great rollersin a minute they were clear of the
"Hev a loel€, consarn ye' bawled
a fisherman, unimpressed by the ma-
jeety of the rolling ocean palace tow-
ering above thein, "Vin blame skip-
sthooner and reeling over the cream-
ing, wind -lashed waves:
It was blowing very strong from
the nor' -west, and there was a heavy
per hez shifted his course t let ye see sea running, and if the rescue had
us. Ef it was thick he wouldn't shift been carried out from a steamer with
his reedy course an inch ef we was similar conditions existing there would
under yer 'oows. And carried away have been a call for volunteers—
with the hereditary hatred of the single Hien preferred-- and ti'ey would
Banks, he 'shook his fist at the won- have pulled away in the same spirit
dering spectators on the liner's decks.. as a forlorn hope, while the steamer
Westhaaver, steering, glanced into would have nianoeucred to windward
the binnacle as she. hauled ahead, of the thirty -fact lifeboat with on
"Now that •craft's a New Yorker, dripping from the latrines to break
that's evident, an' a New York boat the sea.
on th' course she's steerin' means that Whiz the men of the deep-sea fish-
.
we're south o' forty-two, so we'll jest •Ing fleets there were no such prepar
haul th' Mabel a ]stile more no"therl}r" tions, They are used to handling
And on this slight deduction the young boats in rough water and heavy winds,
skipper shifted the course. Ave.! shift- and the six dory -mates from the Mabel
e3 mare than the vessel's course --but Kinsella pulled away in their eighteen-
the
ere some who will contend that foot dories with the supreme eonfl-
the God of Luck has eontralled the deuce of men who know what their
de"atinies cf many lives; that a turntboats can stand ---for the dory, those
cf Fate's wheel has upset the thrones ugly, cranky,
flat-bottomed bixinehos
of kings, the powers of empires, and of the sea, will ride out a howling
while showering wealth on the beggar gale if not overloaded and improperly
lit has beggared the wealthy.
it is +handled,
blind luck, chane, destiny, or for- While the boats were rounding up
I tune? Oris it the hand of God—a under the barque's eounter W esthaver
l God who sees all and knOws all, and drew away on the jumbo, started his
who holds the lives, the fortunes, and sheets, and swung down. to leeward,
the destinies of all men in the hollow where he rolled with Wild sweeps
elf his hand? among the debris -littered cumbers,
It was McCallum who roared the while the gang lined the rail and
intelligence down into the cabin where watched the work of rescue with
Westhaver was reading. "Ok, skip- anxious eyes.
per! T'ere's a park or a t'ree-master There were ten all told taken from
town to loo'ard leokint' fery distress- the water -legged barque, and when
fui, sir, V nil ye pe for looking at the first dory pulled alongside the
her, skipperV' schooner 'walling hands lifted the be-
t was a barque, and, as McCallum numbed members of the windjammer's
bed „em she was "dookin�• very sus, crew over the rail, A boyish figure,
tressful." The foretopgallant mast slight in build but beautiful in the
w•ls gone and she was evidently Iying' alabaster paleness of his features,
to under �a goose -winged lower main- ; dressed in seamen's oilskins, was lift -
(p` rig: t by tale Mussou Book Company topsail with the lee clew hauled out ed aboard by Westhaver, and when he
How the Stacy Starizd,and a small rag of a mizzen eta set]
glanced at the face in curious wonder,
inn ard
groaning; n every beam, knee,' The curled-u.n seals en tee yards had • Jake 'Simms in the dory confirmed his
eine It'estiiaver, known cis ar:r plank, the Schooner wallowed, broken free of the gaskets in mane suspicions. ' Git her below, skipper!
lurched, a d flung h i p �'f aver Sl f ted•--�•-•'
"Shot t} " Paves at Long Cove on Iia$ urc , redrew, an ung a el ' places and were bellying out in 1� .1- se's fainted—"
o° 1?.a1 u coast Villi his mother and the rearing crests with all the twists,
loon -like knobs; the hull rode vex lots A girl. esthaver leaped for the
st-
his ;maw, Captain Jerry Clark. He tine
lunges
xr c'Q jh • n anti arentlyj�l'n ? m the water, and it appeared that ing inn gh s s#ronay �itm •msh e su1 lightrden ly s
d>;d his chwxn Lemuel Ring drink PP .Dine of the eeas were making a coni g
bottle of ruin, w<bereupon Frank's terniin ble da�•s the gale continued" ` plea breach over her. As the :�i:i!te1 a feather.. "Cit th' cook aft here!"
uncle :ells him the stars* of his fatb- anal the T ineell , hove -to all that time,. Kinsella cleared her a string of flars he coaxed`. ;;Tell him t brim along'.
en's fondeeess for c:rin' ar, ltow the drifted away to the eastward. "So ; ran up to her spanker e nf7 flutteee d coffee — tea •-.- soup --- anythin hot.
"'Grace W este:aver" went downs off far," as one et the gang remarked, fol' an 1• n-tant, ate vanished.
Jump, Some o' I t...
.ealv'.2. is.arzd • with ten cf I er crew and "ihet� t had nce;1 a c?odlar's Werth ee ;,1;hat`s tli' u:e cf' Liam flyiii' li: Clattering below, }ie laid the still
i~er al..pper, Thi-. etas the. dossed ef- pee at -e s.arnlls on c pen -card t reach ten -el --mai eel, hoists to a fisher- form cif the girl .on a locker, and for
feet sopoz? F'sanl.. He Welles s haof , a. Ne?,, a:sa to ,;t ,tits }'*e was man," said Ni'estliaver, ••We i9 :'t a moment he pondereu1 els to what he.
with credit to 1 •' lser. anti spends the net ttppre.l,.tc,. by the s:owiing flab- knew what they are, 'though I ca':ate" had better do to revive her. "Now
s mn ;ter is an rigiarentice to? Long €crier in the :,djaetr.. bunks. . 'that was •\•{'. that went up— Thar' I'}1 be hanged of I know what t do,
p.ele. 3enn.rb . In Augai-t his uncle With the davwli on the mox•ning of raw•; lie's talker' English" he he muttered, when a grizzled old man'
takes sine oma telling trip as spare the fe�ur:h env ranee e' 1.1 that the British merchant ensign, urian dc?vw.i, clad in a lung blackoilskin coat step -
Larva ab .. d ilio 11. - lea, Whi s at sterni vias •'shear m . I Ile snow had brcth
kc Dui half -way up e signal bah. peri clown the ladder.
al li
Car in Canso sifter the first Iishnng'ceased. end the eefi glint e?i' a cloatd-, liards. It bad streaine.1 out like a' "Is she all right?" he queried, civ
trip. Fr;ark res:ues a French boy -corn i enehrouaed sun ."l1.11 1 ted a vv,•lste sheet of tin far but a few sera nde Ing «esthaver a piercing, anxious:
'�•' a IVA0 ,voys L his
hand at ido y, streak twain - N. :._ 'sea, foam- when the wind whiffed it into no- glance.
t k 1 a i rearing vii to capped •ii as
$ren a *' thirwness, i "Waal, I reckon she's jest fainted,'
hs zr.;; Jen fury. Frank's presence. lighted rg t p t I wind'vard, and when the crowd lounging 'aft `'Stand by the sent for th' cook t' come aft with
eornonin hot—here he is, now. What
of nm ":1 sant the verse: from Col- the rag r } e:o icer, racing like smoke ' e
Beim with t When Frank is mainsheet Jaime= o you Mak
.+ a steamer.
:an b ' t. h o .e 1 upa ta.l r ape f t a.. I pat th•tv13ee1-I dei . at tl Ch1 lev 9
twenty -ere esid Jules nineteen they p s ahh I '1 1 i'�c.idti Helm's alien" And ofi„in Plate yt� d better git
engage f Capt. �Fa J
at .war e ale.: t ye a ear , Charles Coffee? I
flirt `mil C , re, the watch lei el , ,p• ! Cit
'. ter a season with 'IV nt . With •it ,fight• "W Bather s , , 1ta^ec�n her Lips---"
ECM, Fr gin', calla en 1 ' bovheed sweet- to windward e f the Io" i,v sea -washed
tra.•nzng in a Boner: lulspital who in-' I''400 , • hawin 1.2.te • J hands
some of i
ilEginitiMINOnneeageeeeeeese
-edi`il��3 $i�ZJi!££i 53
3#
1110pop
10000
Juicy Fruit,Peppermint and
Spearmint certainly make
three delightful flavors to
choose from.
And the new 1 P $--the
candy -coated peppermint
gum, is also a great treat for
your sweet toot!.
fromAll eke Wrigley le face
tories where practice has
made perfection.
Packed
Tighht---
Kept
Right
iftin'. �1�: r,lr. TGialr's a streak 0'++ •* ' i, ,r `;••, , "`eS1' ,aid the old man, bending'
and rolled in the swells. The ,Sieg over the faintly breathing form.
g
n v
boom, Carrie /Dexter, row curse in `ne r. Barque the fish ne zahoonet tumlee d
Boner: ` Ail hands tust.lrled up to see it—a - "wait, an' I'll flit them ail-clotltea
tr'�dt:e's him to the matron as Captain : ;trooped aft while. Westhaver scrutill �„
E\ esthaver, On the return trip Capt. er.rn,nor �r car,* :eel + urimportant keel the barque-av th his binoculars, eft' n her. Got a bunk, sir?"
Watson dies and I'rar,k steers the ces•=•1':�1. to a Anal--mac--hu- as beautiful+. "Humph!" he muttered as he 101s0! Shorty jumped to his own bertha
eel into Boston harbe r through a heavy as the sight or hole to the sea -weary them clown. "she's . small craft bee- She kin ,hew my berth, he said.
sea. Carrie ;peaks scornft-lly of life. Wren with eyes jailed by the manoton-, ed with deals. Thar's all her gang eagerly. Jest a couple o shadier til
on a fis'rin messed. Frank buys the Our mala of restla'QS st"a and sullen,• aft en topof-the house. Whole main-' I fix it up. And lie hove old news -
on .incegets his deurken . clff ata r•g snow-n"c,-1 slay They , - : s . Waal. I collate we kin papers, pipes, mittens, foliate° plugs,
Mabel bxn_e..0 ;end h (leen a i 11
erew to boar"i. He reser.es a :nanw tehel it spread as the strong nor,- pit them. Off 1 ith tit' gri,:d. o11 yen dh'ty collar:, and old socks out of
overheard it the stent and wins :,hely WNW!' tirrve the flees stoiin-'.oracle' le'" neat nn' put three dories nes over I'll the coffin -like hole and smoothed out
P
the deep cie�•otien•of,his gang, .way. and when the sun broke clear,'
pick •ye up clown t' loo'ard -" •The the sodden bilge -reeking pillow and
the v3tcr • waste re,f1E: tl"�I the cabal blanket a Muth cf h ne for the
'Lei' .N—(Cor't'..i 'of the western heavens. Blue water! before a lash was llia'?e by the wlic'ethoggishness ef his sea life,
CHAPTER h F It away go;,d t€i �e. it •c+n^e again, and c:ev fur the dorso; nested ern d-.hips,a Put here in here, mister," he said
Below desks the ,,.e.•,, with ai+ ales the whole aspect of things changed; ::Saw!'• shouted Westltaver, "I said when he had kicked the rubbish to
atihin
about, hung :nte their yea,.!:--hinime:d bayous shout. "C ame on that•,' ai1uie ,Came aft here other fel}ors what. the sodden, girlish body into the bunk
vt with rolled -up clothes, mat*1 e 'ss Put th' double -reefed main '1 on her!, ain't aslLed t' you ----" land rolled her up in the blankets.
and pillow ---and n ,.nod pia,; afterMet t th lumbo: And while the men 1 They came aft, protesting and ! "All ab; aril, skipper'" shouted
Blau of tohacto until forecastle and tan to execute his contman4ls he hove pleading, "Let nee go'.'' "An' eilel";someone down the hatch. Westhaver
eleidin 1 ecane crpeq�.2... with the. Pete; the le...I over for a sound. 'Jitr Iludsan kafn't hand!fi a dory like, left the berth. "Th' steward here'li
reek. Cit.-ilutl:e swung like lien " C�e�.s1iittalter} be said as the coils I kin!" "'Tis mydory usually Des on git ye anythin' ye want for her, sir,"'
clulums trent the beaks on the l,utlt- flaked out and he was forted to belay. that lee nest she' go h, rl his" he said, "I'11 hew t' leave ye for a
y oris were scarce out ' of his nmouth withs sal 1
g with the jolting and knocking with the color, and Westhaver gave a; t}i' 1ee d;ries—three o' them only.; one side, an between them they laid
heads, and bates and Buckets clattered, ""No bottom at a hundred fathoms! "Three dories ain't enough, skipper'" fevv minutes."
and rolled across the floors. Charley t,al"late we roust ha' blown away out-' And so on, taut Frank was firm. I On deck he saw the water-logged
Costa the Portugese cook—worked, Side th' hundred -fathom 'curve. Now, "Three"s enough;' he said. "Belay: barque a good mile to windward; the
ar;,uand his stave in lnornentary ,1.inyFr; ef I only had a sextant pan' knew how yen jaw now an' help them fit then' rescuers had returned safely, and the
of being hurled against it, and he pre -it use it I'd know what I was. As it over 'thout etavin' flour en th' rat}."; dories were nested and the gripes
pared meas after a fashion, The, is, 111 her t slam her to th west, and Westhavel went fol weld. "hlovv, you over there
bilge -water in the vessel's bottom 1 until we raise son:ethixl orpit a po-• rescue fellers," he said. "Be careful! (To be continued.)
&washed among the ballast, and the sition from another vessel.', ,hulkl _
fumes made the lamp burn blue and! A huge two -funnelled Atlantic liner don't roll"do $n oat eRou'n1 up see -ht i
blackened the fresh -painted weodwarkl overhauled them as they swooped to her les quarter an' pit her people ff,i Minard's Liniment For Colds, Etc.
liming o the Cabin ani fore-as„le�, be the westward under their scanty can
sidle making many of the men sea vas, and the crowds thronging her
si i,. with the nauseating odor. Creak-; spacious promenade cler:Its crowded to ; '-'
Y ,J
After yo
T3nd -L11.1
awe r
ant iu
e worn ianfield's
bought t, you begin t
sterlin qu' ity,, the ns
ship the sly
y
fam1us of 1Canadia
winter
4 good a ' the day you
,,ppr cin a the
er > Jrkmastt
/O)`
ear o f\this most
ade Underwear.
'1EL
Made is combinations end two-piece suits, in f911`length, knee and
elbow length, and sleeveless for men and women. Stanfield's Adjust-
able' Combinations and Sleepers' for growing children (pat)
For sample book, showing weights and textures, write
STANFIELD'S, LIMITED, TRURO, N.S.
•
Loving and Chastening.
"Aunt Nan," cried Beth, running
into her aunt's room, "I've been study-
ing my Sunday 'School lesson, and I'm
in one of my awful tangles. It's be-
cause of the verse: "Whom the Lord
loveth He ehasteneth.' Mary and I
could think of so many cases where it
seemed to be especially true—good
such people having an awfully. hard
time, and others having everything
their way. It seems awfully strange,
doesn't it?"
"It does," replied Aunt Nan. "And
C
it used to puzzle me too a great deal.
Why should the good, 'I thought,- be
severely punished for the little
wrongs they do, whereas the rest, who
-
i+gnore religion, appear to be no worse
off?„
"Exactly," agreed Beth eagerly, "To
punish seems a queer way for the
Lord to show His love, doesn't it?"
"If you translate chastisement as
punishment, yes; but the real idea in
the word is training and discipline,
which, as you know, is diseipling:
Haven't you ever thought,, dear, how
wonderful it would be to have been
one of Christ's disciples and learn
directly from Him? Whom the Lord
loveth He takes as his own disciple
is what the text. means to me now.
And the punis�hnient, if there is any,
is merely incidental.
"One of the clearest leeeee.s 1 ever
had came to be in an unusual fee -broil.
oil.
One day 1 suddenly realized that 1
wes making Little of say life.; For
years• I'd been what I celled a Chris-
tian,
tian, but I knew all at once that Christ
hadn't guided 'my life; and from that
moment I determined to let Him do
it, to give myself up to His will ab-
solutely.
"For a few days there was the most
beautiful peaoe in my heart, and then
into my life cane a trial that for
years I had dreaded and hoped to
avoid; it was the one thing that I
wasn't prepared to face. 'Thy - will
be done,' I should have said, `except
for that one thing.' I became bitter
and rebellious. `So this,' I thought,
'waswhat I t
go when I promised to
submit my will absolutely to God's!'
"And then one day Sue Strayer, a
girl whont. I had known all my life,
came to call, S'he had always been
what we termed musical wird was just
returning from studying with a really
great teaches in the city. He told her,
she said, that it was worth while for
her to make a profession of her music,
`And, oh,' she added proudly, 'he's so
strict with me now! He manages my
entire life:. may dressing, nay- eating,
my exercising, my sleeping. And; oh,
the practicing that hie males me do!
If a thing is hard, he makes me do it
again and again! Some of the other,
pupils are positively jealous when I
tell:them 'about it, foe they know what
it means.'
`Well, what does it mean?' I in--
ciuiled rather absently.
"'Sue thew herself, up. 'It means,',
she rereled, `that Signor Mass�oni
thinles that I have in me the rnaking,s
of a great singer, When you have
just a pretty little voice he gives you
a few exercises andtan s you over
to one of his assitsants. But when he
sees signs of what he calls the real
thing he is absalutely merciless with
you, Ile thinks of nothing except to
snake you just as perfect as he con.
One girl complained of his being so
hard, and he, said, "Wliy then did you
put your,.elf'into my hands? To have
an easy time? All right; but if you
have an easy time, you will smother
the angel in you that wants to sing."'
"I don't have to make the lesson any
cleaner, o•0tl t n r ,
am sure, just as I understood it there"
•
Give a Serious Thought to the French
Dressing.
To make French dress.irig use olive
oil and pure, fragrant vinegar. Let'
the' oil be put in by a spendthrift, the
vinegar by a miser, and the stirring
be done by a madman, according to
the classic directions. Coming down.
to more prosaic instruetions:
One teaspoonful salt.
One-half teaspoonful dry mustard.
One-fourth to one-half teaspoonful
paprika.
• One-half - teaspoonful celery salt.
Two slices onion (or clove of
garlic).
Six tablespoonfuls olive oil.
Two tablespoonfuls vinegar.
Mix the dry seasonings and add
the .vinegar and o-il, beating with a
fork. Add the onion (a most essen-
tial ingredient) and 'keep in a cold
place one hour or more. Remove the
onion. Beat we11 before serving. This
drestsang can be made in a large quan-
tity and kept in a bottle ready for
use.
For fruit salads substitute lemon
juice for vinegar and cut the mes :era'
and' -celery salt in hallf. The onion
may be omitted with fruits, although'
a tiny bit of it always improves the'
flavor, to our way of thinking. Its
most violent opponents will prefer the
dress-ing which has been flavored sub-
tly with it, although they may not
know why:
A French dressing . as made in
France has finely cut herbs for San-
sone/1g rather than the dry . spices.
' Waterproof Mitts. jf
The five or ten -cent cotton mitts
which are so largely bought by work-
ingmen May be waterproofed by dip-`
ping then . in melted paraffin; or, if
a thinner coat is preferred and only
on the palm of the mitts, melted par-
affin may be brushed over their sur-
face. For handling damp bricks, for
working with plaster, a.r cement, par-
affin mitts are far superior to the
original. Women will find them valu-
able when scrubbing floors, setting out
plants, etc. Leather gloves for use
by fanners in hauling damp corn fod-
der or any material that is wet, may
be waterproofed in the same way. The
coating of paraffin may be renewed as
often as the surface needs it. Mitts
and gloves—even boots for ditchers.
treated with paraffin last longer, be-
muse the water can do them little
damage. The comfort the wearer ex-
periences by using waterproofed mitts
or gloves far outweighs the bother of
melting and applying the paraffin.
Dye Any Garment
or Old Drapery
in Diamond Dyes
Buy "Diamond Dyes" and follow the
simple directions in every package.
Don't wonder whether you can dye or
tint successfully, because perfect
home dyeing is guaranteed with Dia
mond . Dyes even if you have never
dyed before. Wore, faded dresses,
skirts, waists, coats, sweaters, stock-
ings, draperies,hangings, everything.
become like new again. Just tell your
druggist ,whether the material you
wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether
it is linen, cotton, or mixed goods.
Diainond Dyes never streak, spot, fade,
or run.
1
Some folks make their joys mere
incidents and their sorrows great
events.
Keep Minard's Liniment in the house.
You can't rob ink over others with-
out spattering yourself; neither can
you say mean things about others,
andnot make yourself mean.
Recommended
"Vaseline" Petroleum Jelly bene-
fits all bumps, sores, bruises, sun-
burn, blisters, cuts and chafed skip.
Never be •without a bottle of it in
the house. It's safe, always effec-
tive and costs but a trifle.
CIIESEaRoUC!•I MANUFACTURING CO.
'Corsolldatcd)
16 SO Olt t2otAve. ., ilontroal
Vaseline
Trade Mark
Peti•oleriin Jelly