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The Brussels Post, 1925-8-19, Page 2h n the Tea Cup the full charm revealed. The flavor and �''ff`��°ICa>i� lNislll��i A 2E au lr or Green Rose is reve is pure, fresh t. Try it. Black,en Blends. I;tl i i' CAMP AND PLAY SKIT. For every -day wear at home or away on a vacation, we have especial- ly designed this suit for the active boy. An open -neck shirt, with short or long sleeves and patch pockets, a pair of shorts held in place by a leather belt, and bare kneed ---what a line costume for hot days! In order to withstand the roughest sort of wear the suit should be made of a durable fabric like khaki dunk, No, 1145 is in sizes 4, 0, 8, 10 and 12 years. Size 8 years requires 2',4 yds. of 86 -inch material for the suit, If it is desired to make. the suit of con- trasting materials, 1% yds. of $6 -inch' is required for the shirt, and 1% yds. for the trousers. Price 20 cents. Our new Fashion Look contains pinny styles showing how to dress boys and girls. Simplicity is the rule for well-dressed children. Clothes of Character and individuality for the junior folks are hard to buy, but easy to make with our patterns. A small amount of money spent on good ma- terials, cut on simple lines, will give children tie privilege of wearing ador- egble things, Price of the book 10 cents the copy. Each copy includes one coupon good for ftve cents in the pur- chase of any pattern. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- Iy, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Pattern Dept, Wilson Publishing Co., 78 West Ade !aide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by 'return mail. To -Morrow. To -day may be derk and forbidding; our hearts may be full of despair, But To -morrow the hope that was wan- ing will an-ing.will prompt us to 40 and to dare. To -day was may feel that life's sorrows outweigh all the joy that we crave, But To -morrow will teaah.ue the lesson that life ie worth while to the brave. J"af hetet is forerunner o sadness-- nt u f despondency robs us of health! The man who is chock full of gladness le the man who makes most of life's wealth. To -day may be all that 1s mournful— our paths cannot always be,. bright, CHAPTli?i X?CVIi,—(Cont'd.) rads," said the Man of Law, "pad gin Mrs. Mae Walter was at the hall he dies within twenty -tower house-- door before Kit 'and in Wnitng for weel there reawa� since Ma Tilrminy, lit wad be a "'Yo name;ess b«acltguard You that The unconscious "(erre Man" was for years ate the bread o' a deeent brought out and laid gently in the household and then lifted up your heel bottom of the cart, Then with Willie Again' them, A. Rennin' man', an' 1'en one *haft and Knit driving on the wad claw the e'en oat o' your face. 'other they ratteraway through the This is the meanin' o' your carryln's buzz and ,stir in the afternoon. Kit on and your Blaek Shed's: I'll write covered his friend from prying eyes to them that gies the siker, and see beneath a couple of corn sacks. Flo if they hand wi' ale black Ingratltedo himself enjoyed a popularity he had —that I well!" !never known before, being pointed out "Dad I not do my wark, Mistress as the "farm -lad that beat a' the ither Mac Welter?" said Kit, very quietly,' Middies free the !wholes an' acad. being anxlous.to get away and And the emiee." "Orra Man." 1 Kit looked anxious lest. the provost "Your warle—what has at of the town, who shook hands with do wi' it? Xe hse ta'n thethat bite gcot too him seated with his feet on the shaft, my John's mouth, puir laddie. I wadna should wonder what freight he was veneer gin he was to do bines!' a mis- parrying home, chief. )lie's that upset aboot it." "West dune; Whinny;iggate" cried Kit passed on, but the voice cf his ; the rprovost berth' to the'lod1 1seend yeen g gB late mistress pursued him up the ye gang to Edinbra. They gang fine sir etAnd I'll tell John Mac Walter so iwi' a cup o' tea', and kitchen baker's I will, that he's richt served for talon' bread so that ye wadna keneit frac naebody-kens-whas intil his hoose to i' soda scones." deprave his lawfully -begotten bairns. But it was not bill they were clear And I'll tell Walker Mae Walter that of the town, and driving up the long' ie can keep his wife's misfortunes at waterside of the Kees Water, that Kit fame after this—defraudin' honest I'eshy felt comfortable in his mind. But To-morrowwe'll somehow take; folk o' their just dues!" He .wanted to get to the Cottage of courage, and trustingly enter the; "My good woman," said, the reeler Orae before the fall of the evening, fight. tary, suavely "pray do not fret your- f°other.r he ha o knew d his gntl atal oshe would his the eself. Your ven ifuld not have ChristopherKent watching eagerly her lonely win-, To -morrow the sun will be brighter; , money , dow in the red freestone front of Tomorrow the skies will be fair, t Hedy had not been successful. And the Kirkoswald. bo 's character is without blemish, as To-morroww we'll our cast asidessomro w and caro, whit as i be lighters, sstj ave two ministers' certifioates to I eageWillie las Kit. Gilroy want d ts o see Betty Remember when heartsick and weary: "Biyiiihe `Gula wumman' me," she Landsborough, and he had a question the sunshine comas after the cried in a louder voice. "I am nae i to ask of her, $o Mary Gray had no rain; 'gguull wnmman, and that I wad hae arest for the soles of her four feet, and To -morrow is time to be cheery; Toe ken. What I say is that my Johnny! Kit urged hee had of attain d for gait, morrow we take hope again! didna get fair play amang ye, and that I am w'eel sure o'. For the Dominic i Kit mourned over his friend and re- v fused to be comforted. Gambling With Ice -Cream, l says that there's no the like o'him; "He's never bean like this," he said. 1n nearly all the small towns In , sn ten parishes. Mair nor that, this , "I wad raither no has had the bursary Spain the buying of toe -cream from a` Doctor Mac Lagan, he's nae better 1,than that he should do the like o' p ,than he's cad ed, or he wadna hae , thl a I" street vender is made the opportunity; alooed a servant to be piteen before, "Hoot" said Willie, "he shouldna for a gamble. his =ester, or his maisters son, for hae tried to break bines!' a' et yince. Oa the top of the zinc pall that holds that's the same thing, And gin the i The creole' wad Mist bank up like a the cream 1s a small wooden plate law was as I would hae it, the si:aer water *hint a dam—and then -whoosh above which ie poised a revolving should be my Johnny's even as it tel l p For instead o''gieing the thirty guid. id she ngeed. Thican will keep imaybe Pram the do him stick. Round the edges of the late, cnida to this ungratefu'blackguard,' gin ye Which 1s gaily colored, graded numbers''kennin o' his maister• No that Cairn - from ten to one hundred are painted.', t wad declare that Christopher Ken -!harrow has ony richt to be very par - The intend! Hedy should hae spent his time o' ng purchaser pays the ven- , learnin' his malster'e son, as it was h u1 0ron I hae nen him gangin' cot. der a penny, which entitles him to one his bounden duty to do. What busi- , „ coggly in his gig twist of the stick. If the pointer 1n-' nese had he to ken noir nor oor Jock, ' h'ir'es! I I dicates a number higher than that f that has aye had the best of boo! In the meadow opposite to the Crae Cotta Kit u' d eBide Mamma Surprised Again. Marjory—"Mamma, wore you at home when I was born?" Mother—"bio, d,a.r1ing, I was at grandma's, in the country." Marjory—""Wasne yeti awful sur- prised when you heard about 1t?" Greenland le the largest island in the world. .After eating or smoking 'Wrigley§ freshens the mouth and sweetens the breath. Nerves ere soothed, throat is refreshed and digestion aided, Seery es marry du little packet! made by the stall -holder, the winner; 'Germ, and him but a chance -gotten t „up. 1s entitled to an ice-cream free of lcailant keepit *boot the hoose out o' • you here, he said'; I :1 no be away a charity, when a' is said and dunel" quarter o' an hour—' charge and another twist of the stick. But except in thus easing her mind With Bring me word what Betty Lands - With luck, and provided the game is { Mistress Mac Waller got no redress, , borough's dein'. And gin ye get a played fairly, one can have a succes-, but all the household had a terrible chance' tell ter that there's a lad cion of ices for the originalpenny. If got _chance' ggest- to see her at the loan end." g 1 time of it when she home to' Loch # "What if she'll no come?" en the stall -holder wine in the first in- Spel anderie. fed Kit. stance the penny Is lost and the cues- I Meanwhile, the new Bursar Design-'` Willie Gilroy closed an eye id. tomer receives nothing. These bar.! ate was seeking the "Orra Man" from' "DSnna t 1 her who i 1 d • clothes used to be yellow - now they are 7� snowy whit "X always had trouble with,eny clothes—they used to come out ;to yellow. Then a friend told me about 'Rinso: I found it makes a wonderful soap emits-• tion, This removed every bit. of dirt and then it all rinsed out completely. There was nothing left to yellow the clothes—as there was no soap. to sticic—it was all dissolved. "1 am now delighted with my wash—my clothes are always snowy white." —A letter received by the makers ofso. Rin just shake some Rlnso into a saucepan, add hot water, pad you'll get the wonderful soapy solution that L the only soap you need for your set tubs, your boiler, your wash- ing macluae. blase soaks dirt out. Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto. 1,4 RAH --s So up the smooth trunk of the talla sparkle from the crystalriver that pine on the top of the crag above the cottage Kit warmed with the : easy progression of a born woodland's bolt. rhe flag was the handkerchief his grandmother had given him fresh and clean the tiny before. With a reck- ie"sness which would have shocked his uncle, the forester, he stripped the top of the pine that his flag might Ry free. The sun shone out from behind a cloud; and Kit's signal took the air at the same moment. What was his mother thinking now? Did she see it? We may be sure that she did. It chanced that at that moment her husband, Walter Mac Walter, was amusing himself with taunting her, as Was his custom when ruffled out- side. "I married you for your beauty," he wall saying, "and how much of it rows are a source of interest to stn -:public to pubac over the town. Pee warrant gin she's a woman ava, have 1 ever seen? You go about dents, who spend most of their spare : wanted to thank the mail who had ehe'11 come to see wha is'it?" droopir•g alae a barndoor hen on a wet cash in attempts to defeat the ice ; done this thing for him day. I crrrot bring my friends to the p Kit shook his head. He knew that, 110050 for your face is like a death s cream man. But it was Hue in the afternoon, _ when, after being thrice turned from f the Sheriff's officer was only prepay-, head at a feast. It is 011 that boy of The venders also sella very popu-;the door and thrice denied at the bar, ing additional disappointment for him- yours. You think more ohim—more lar drink For a penny one can obtain 1 self. He remembered the three forest Kit ran him to earth in the inner par -1 ars and how Betty had treated them. of his blackguard father even now -- a glass full of a white liquid resew-. for of the Black Boar. He would have Ming milk. It is made from water, missed!hint a fourth time but for the' he was glad he was not to be present sugar, crushed almonds, and orange eagle eye and trained legal inters:_.' at this new flouting of honest affec- of the Sheriff's officer. (tion juice, When served It is icy cold and ; gence, "Betty's weel and weel eneuch," he makes an excellent "cooler." , But Willie Gilroy responded to Kit's, said to himself, "but for the life o' me !questionings, "Sec your friend? Of I dinna see what a' the tyke's aboot coorse I saw him. Hese drinThe him ,Sett this' and t et'J" see fu' in the Black Boar. They tell: y 'Betty ye that he's no there? Man, ye ken' He ran across the great stepping- litt.,e, an' you a learnit man, they tell stones' chick time out of mind have me, gin ye behave a single word that carried the feet of home -returning men over the cool brown bend of the Becky Snodgrass wad say to ye, Gan :richt in, I tell ye, and see for yoursel Crae water into the dusky woods, in than of me that made you mistress of Kirkoewald. Deny it if you can!" Lilies his wife did not answer. e'ho did not even look at him. His wards did not hurt her for in the household cnly the voices of those one loves have power to wound. He went on: "Yes," he said, "I am nothing. I never was anything to you except a convenient means of paying your father's debts. But the day will cense when the boy you dont upon shall which the tang of the cottage peat break your heart with sorrow. He is And if they try to hinder ye, threaten ' them that ye will bring a polissmanl resit hangs like the peculiar incense 1 his father's son, and *:ready he corn- , .: Faith, that will do your business if I ! of kerne' ken Mistress Becky. She never coud The Crae stepping -stones! Kit had The Blank Book. • sot h d the silver buttons a' the days back crossewhen d ehe was m on his grandfather's tooyoungito "I've just returned from one of those ' Accordingly in the Black Boar, mind readers, Miss Sharp. She cawn't tumbled on a sofa of worn hair cloth read a thing, you know," Kit found the "Orra !flan —dent{ "Not from a blank book, Mr. Sapp.", d He did not heed the angry tongue of • Mistress Becky. He knelt down be - Japanese Proverbs, fore his friend and besouglht him to The character and the ideals at any !awake, for Kit had seen little of in-' itoxication. But the "Orra Man" only: mitten are always pithily expressed in igros$ed. . the popular proverbs that have become I '•Oh, this is terrible—terrible," said part of the everyday speech of the Deo- 1 Kit; "I wish I had never gotten the • pie. Here is some of an interesting bursary if I hae driven him to this,"; Proverbial philosophy of the Japanese: i It chanced that at this moment' One Japanese characterietle, Dense- ' lei:thesis Mac Walter passed the door; veiance, is expressed in the saying: Ion her way a "to change her breath "Fall seven times, stand up the eighth .'ld ma -1 c ri °m„shoShegcaughtcaught into that uof Kit time,” Another proverb in the same through the open door and cried out, vein deolares: "A road of a thousand I "There's a bonny bursarI Didna I tell miles begins with one step." ye? To think that the like o' him, I The Japanese equivalent of "casting that companies with a' the drucken !earls before swine' 'is "giving gold and debauched in the countryside, should tak' the Bowden guineas oot o',i my Innocent. Johnny's pooch. I ds-' dare I'll joist gang this verra minute and fetch that secretary man to see this sicht" But by this time Willie Gilroy was on the spot es a reinforcement. "In the mane- of the law," he cried, t grandly, "woman, what is this dis- turbance opposite to my property? I ,stride the glossy interspaces of brown moss water. He had paddled with bare feet between them as he grew older. He knew the green stars of bottom weed, the little peeping whorls of water stalwort the tall rushes on either bank, which grew thickest where the water divides round a little ten -yard square Island all overgrown with red purple willow herb. There are just ten sipping -stones big and little. You wade chin deep in the, Al that moment Lilies saw s me creamy spray of meadow sweet to get thing far over the. heaped masses rf to them. Gowans tickle your chin as tree -tops down by the waterside. She you turn up your trousers. The trout 1 was standing near the great wide spurt this way .and that as your sha- dow falls on the water. With what a window of Ktlkoswald which looked ( to the south. She had her eyes on a pleasant sound the wavelets ripple particular fir -tree which, being perch- ed boldly on a jutting crag, rose half its height above the wood. She often stood here and looked over the wide rusty valley with eyes as full of luminous haze. But what she saw that night made her heart beat and the landscape waver before her face. The sun was setting, and shot a last level flood of rays up tho glen from the west. A moment the top of the pine tree stood dark against the sky. Tho next a little white square flow out, Lanced in the unsteady breeze, and sank -down limp by its Yiagstaff. Then it blew out again, and with a last expiring effort the sun caught and glorified It, so that it burned like panics with the lowest. In ten years he will be—well, what his fattier has become. You do not believe it, but I know." If you had your will I doubt nit-" -Lilies, the mother of Kit, was begin- ning. But in a moment she command- ed herself and 000 silent. lIer husband laughed. "You do wee not to defend him. I to you he will grow up an ignorant boor, a public -house sot, the compan- ion of the vilest. Kit Kennedy Ity name shall be Christopher Kennedy by nature." about your legs as yon mount Al� Cairnsmore, the big granite boulder in the middle. On rushes the Crae we' with a little silvery water -break ant' a smooth glide over a stone which t has worn away till its head is be- neath the surface, Then with three strides and half a jump you are on the pine needles, and the resinous smell of the firs stings your nostrils, Verily it is good to be young and to taste these things, They are good to este even if one is old. CHAPTER XXXVIII. ' THE FLAG UPON THE PINE. But Kit had no time to linger now. He went across at a rush, and his ap- preddation of tho rich twilight glow along the !Waterside took no other form than the drawing of a long. breath as he ran up the path towards the cottage, Now ho must climb' the tree for his mother's sake. She must know first, Colne to a cat,' 'and instead of "a wolf in sheep's clothing" they speak of "a wolf dressed in a priests robes." When a Japanese wishes to explain 11:11 a thing is quite impossible he lis you that one might es well "learn to swim in a field" or "lap up the ocean with a shell." 'A small-minded man loops at the through a reed" and "The heart is will servo a notice on you Instantly!" hmsahee nttihree as at sixty" are other And Willie drew out his legal case, It. Japruese"g;y Picturesque too aro "'At the foot! * lighthouse it is dark" and "When thea hen crows the house goes to ruin." Mb -latter saying indicates the Japanese View et_ feiniu• ;sm. Equally pithy ls: "There 'b .st - medicine for love -sickness or for fool." 1GLE{ Potullar Performer, "Is Mrs. Bellamy ah active member of the s@wtag guild?" "My goodeese; no. She never has a - lX, i2P' 2f,eiyDi1Cit3 /2113 word 10 say—just sits there and ! sews!" IssUE No, 39—'25. I Minerd's Liniment ftr Dandruff, is to be feared that like some other officials of greater authority, Willie somewhat traded on hie neighbor's' ignorance. `There's mac risturbance moister Officer," said the landlady Becky nodgrass, with twittering anxiety. S" s, desirous of getting' .this man Mfg' hout a disturbance as—" "Gan es his beast and attirt, boy, and I'll Wait perp ivi' the body," said i Willie, s"if ho were about to lrul'y a fifth wife. "1 dinna caro gin I,gan,r a bit of the read hate wi' ye, thyself), Within ten minutes the red tart, with Mary Gray between the shafts, was et the front door of the Black Boars ''This is your wark, Betty Snod- Amts Wanted in every town in Ontatio, to sell MISS SIMLICITY 'tellspfor a 8 cash or en time pnymente. Good side line. we can tell you what ethos are doing. Write now, Berle i:lectrle, 107 Richmond East, Toronto, cad CTO RAPID The world's best hair tint, Will,; re- store gray hair to its natural color in 16 minutes, Small wife, $3.30 by mall Double size, $6,00' by mail Tho W. T. Pember Stores Limited 129 Vongc .St. Toronto 1s about the Throne. • Lilias the' mother turned to her husband and smiled. And from that moment she heard not a word what he said. She only looked at him with the light of a new knowledge in her eyes. The man rose and went out, angrily slamming the door after him. He saw that somehow her soul had escaped him for that time, but in his dark heart Ile sat himself, more bit- terly than ever to effect the ruin of Lilias's son. (To be continued.) Minaret's Liniment for Burns. We're All Gasometers! The chief Ingredients of your body are live gases—oxygen, hydrogen, nit- rogen, chlorine, and flourine, and there is enough gas 1n 0 man to fill a gaso meter of 3,649 cubic feet. The most important element is oxygen, and the bulk of that gas compressed within us, If set tree, would be equal to a beam of wood one foot square and 1,101 feet (nearly a quarter of a mile) long. Every man's bbdy contains 2,400 feet of hydrogen, sufficient to inflate a balloon that, would lift himself, bal- loon, and a tacide. The nitrogen In the human body is about half an ounce to each pound of body weight, and about twenty times the bulk of the body. There is suf- ficient carbon in the human body to make 65 gross of load pencils. • Fair Ehough. "I'll give you just three days to Pay your rent." All right, I'll take First of July, Chrfstmak and Easter." telinA/401041 Wb,O The Ri ht Way Boil Potatoes Put the potatoes ;ton an EisilP Enamettd,Potato Pot. Cover with water. Add salt to taste: Boll until soft. When finished, drain off . all the boiling water through the strainer spout. Iklo danger of steam scalding the hands because tho handle securely locks the cover on. If your family uses potatoes, you require one of these. Enlarrdeled POTATO POTS 179 u+,'em,mrw�om,mm,v,mnnwtwvdnie,nrun PRINCE VISITS 'ARLV' FOItEIGN COLONY TRIr,QNS WERE FIRST TO SETTLE ARGENiTINE COUNTRY, Helped to Win War of Inde- pendence and Began' Trade Development. The visit of the Prince of Wales to Argentina and other countries of sout'll- ern South America- mimeo ah 00 sur- prise to those who aro acquainted with the vital part played during the last 100 years by Great Baltzell in tho da- veilopinent of those lands, and the great Interests she has accumulated titers. In Argentina lies one of the main concentrations of British eat/ abroad, It being chiefly centered in railroads, water works and land. Thy British -controlled enterprises In A,i* gontinn. are the main support of Bri- tish trade, because they purchase their supplies lies IP and machinery in Great Bri- tain, and it is by promoting these en- terprises that Great Britain hopes l 0 Maintain her trade, considerably wee • ened during recent years., The Britleh- owned retlroads of. Argentina repre- sent an investment of 9700,000,000. The total investments of British oapl- tal in Argentina have been conserva- tively estimated at well aver ;2,000,- 000,000, 2,000!000,000, and In the whole of SSpU1 America OA about $4,000,04000. Great. Briton Is the oldest investor in the Al field, as she was the first modern trad- ing nation to enter the South Americas markets, when the Imperial colonial. power of Spain waned end_was shaken off.... Great Britain helped Argentina and the other South American countries In their war of liberation; she supplied them with munitions and money. Later, when the new states were set uu. she took active part in their economic de valopment, particularly In the rase of Argentina, whose farming and yastol'al industries have placed her among the foremost producing nations of the wo. Britons First to Arrive. Tirld,lls year the Prince of Wales is being greeted 011 the banks- of the Plata River by one of the oldest and most prosperous British colonies in any foreign land. Impelled by the spirit of adventure, that has led the Briton to the remotest corneas of the earth, the British were the first to emi- grate to Argentina when Spain was forced to loosen her grip upon the southern colonies, and probably were among the first to reach the shores of the Plata River three centuries before, In the days of Sebastian Cabot. At the present the British colony on the shores of the Plata numbers nearly one hundred thousand, This colony is made up of commercial agehrt, and re- presentatives of British exporting firms, official,' and employees of the British railroads, banks and debit' com- panies, farmers, cattle growers and managers of large estancias, and mem- bers of a great many. British education- al, religious, philanthropic, literary and social institutions, 'The British. Have two dailies in Buenos. Ayres and one In Montevideo, Besides the Bri- tish -born settlers, there is a population of Brltlsh extraction several tidies as large. Isolated British rural colonies have been set up In several instances in Argentina. British Sports Popular. Greater perhaps than Great Britain's economic contribution to the develop ment et South America halo been her contribution to the welfare of those peoples as their sport teacher, Great Britain has not only built South Ameri- can railroads, she has taught South America hoy to play outdoors. She. has inculcated the love for sport In the est two generations there. The youth of the new South America has grown and is growing under the wholesome tlmulus of British sport, Sporthas een the most valuable British export o South America. Nolte other hae aken deeper hold with the people. English football is unlverdal. and has one a great deal of good for the rig. ng tion, Argentinagenerahas been. linked to (treat Ilritain by a virtual economic alliance extending td more than 100 yeah�@@ teat Britain has always been and still s the main market for Argentfd taple prvdu4t@, eueh 45 wheat, coria, cozen beef, liifitton, linseed, wool and ate, taking under normal conditional etween one-fourth and one-third o,t he total Argentine e:tports. The re. cant movement !a England for an int. erial protective tariff bas created nxiety in Argentina, as rho competes n the British market with producers f the dominions, particularly AO. retie and Canada, and a disorimlga- ton In favor of tho dominions would seriously affect Argentlna's Basic in- estrles. Sentence Sermons. We Must Ile Free From—From envy f we are ever to find contentment; —Prom hatred if ever we expect to nd any peace of mind. —Pram the mastery of passion if we re to be the eons of God. Front the spirit of revenge if we re to have time for teal living. ---Front worry if wo expect to do our est —Fronk jealousy 1f we expect our narriago to be a suaeete. --1+`rom all fault If w4 amine 111. fight to bytes judgment On all men.