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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1922-9-21, Page 7Juicy F'ruit, Peppermint and Spearmint certainly; make three delightful flivors chooselr9m. And the new , —the candy -coated;, epirrntpt gum, is also •a 'great treat' your sweet ooth. All from the Wrigley fac• tortes where practice has made perfection,' • Packed.. TigFzt Kept ' Right Is.lt Good-bye to the • Tin Can? It has been said that if processes for "tlehYdrainr vegetahlesand fruits can be made entirely suceesaful, we • "liVe. out cif, cartons instead of One ,of the most puzzling „problema 111 this Tine has beanoffered by sweet corn; but .it seeins at last. to 'have. been -selved and already that delect- able food haa appeared on.the market • in paper pactrages,..• it cost the house- wife: only half as mita, as she pays for canned corn, and the flaVer,is much snore likethat of corn on the cob. Leaving refrig.eratiou. aside, we have- r:We in6thtiao-of preserving fobd—steri- lization a.n.d'dehydratlp. The former Is represented:by .Cifirniiiig. The latter • Is as oldas civilization:, for , house- wives for thousands .of years -have dried some kinds of foods to preserve' Shen. Haw ancient and familiar is. the The recent war gave a great impulse to the development of dehydration, tied Sinne.the armistice much, has been accompliehed in the lntproverhestt o Methods. 'yVitIi esome-vegetablea and fruit's success; has note yet bean at- tained, but the .problete teems to'have been satestactorily solved with regard to grapes..a.nel most ,other, fruits, as Veil EIS steingles.s.. beans, spinach, purrnekinS and root Vegetable's. ' ae,Flire bushels of 'green SW'eet corn will yield otie,bueshel, of ,the dried pro- duct, One pound ef the lattet% Make anequivalent of 'three bans of 'fancy canned corn. ' 'Refreshed" soaking in water, as a preliminary to cooking, ",a Pound of dehydrated corn will weigh. nearly .tleree pmurds, , In the preparation of 'dried sweet corn, incte,rtclriven Machines are used to remove...the husk ana silk and'. cut Um corn from the col .. To ''sot" the mak and preserve the' color, the cora 'a blenched 'M a steel tank, into which ie. steam is blown. The drying • is ?...eornplielied. by conducting heated Do' beneath a compartment' In which cern is Celitained in wire traes. la:laity the product is run through a I,attifing mitt tmiemove delfrls,sad In iAen ready. to ,beapeched in eartans. Expert Record Maker Finds New Market. , The faenily portrait album ,of the futile, will: talk. 'Alt 'least that -le the idea- ....suggested by .a -new...business which;ha.s ju9t been itarted isa &Milan for the making of PrlYate granloPliPne records' at reasonable prices. Fern- erly milk very ideli peoPle'and pOpular. artists ,,loave-lbeten ai;16-i6 inaulgo in the pleasureeof hearing ;themselves., on a gra.niophone. The big -record mak-. Ing had not found the haSine4s profitable enough, to be worth&maul, hging W. Shakier Darby, a graihophoileiex.„, pert Of -25 years' experience, has !set up a studio in the West End ot London exclusively for the making of -records for private customers. 'In a short time he has discovered that the Idea iseproving very popular. Several titled .people with nensical.and elocutionary abilities have had records made to give to their friends_ One of them has recorded her own •piano compo.sitions:' Amateur .and. .professional singers have .found,.that gramophone repro- • dtictiOns of their singing reveal Many hitherto unrealized faults. .A. baritone who had a -record irtade by Mr. Darby recently says, that it has preyed of More .value to .him than any number of lweens, as it, enabled him to dis- cover where his breathing and enun- ciation were Rut one Of the moat attractive as - poets of this now idea is:the recording of eleilarenes talk atararious ages. Re- cently -father, mother, ntir,se, .and the two .children of -one f,arielly ..went ta the studio and had -a record made of their conversation,' Another parent had, a.frecord Made Of MS little bey. re- lating in lies 'childish way '.tlie things he had done during the day, while his still 'entailer sister kept interriiing, - Plain Jane. • A. pretty youngiay named Jane, While 'walking was caught in the. rain, She rare-,alrti6et. flew; . Ier eomple4outtildJ too, And She Peathed,,,home' exceedingly. • 11 ph: ' a eae DISOVered Tee, discovery Of two now stars, de- clared to ,be twins, by Dr. J. S. Plas kete, oe the aetrcaphyeicill persarvatory it Viceorla,,,B.C. le- profenindly intar- oOting, especially in view of their gr. antic size—one of them being a sun seventy-five th»os.ae bigetts 'ours, and Ihe other 'sixty-three , times as big.— hut the phenomenon • of "doublae," where eters are•Zoncoytiea,'is n great • aovelty. , , The s,tae neareseato the earth, called • Alpha 'Centauri, may, be seen with a geod.,fleiti 'glass to be .rally a pair of Kiln, which, the astrbnotners tell. . revolve about a 'common 'Otani ...of •gravity. Each at them.hi ttlioat the Mae a our own orb Oe.awy, They are 'Visible Maly in the tight sky of , the totithern hemisphere, - Theee nearest tosmic 'neighbors of ours are distant from Me about four and a.thitd, fight -years, or approxi, Mately.255408,016,000,000 isiliOS,, If Yen Were lo etart to-therrew for Alpha aCeittanet la an airplane—or let tee, eaY an' ether-plane—and travel 200 milpe an Iteiranight temi day, without stop- aing, you wouldgot there in a bit over • 24,500,000 Years, Most familiarly ate:Devil of all the eenstellatiotie is the Dinpee, Ih the inutald of Ito "haridle',', is it star called' lilbear vthu1tbi fit In reality twine—a pen' of giant enna, Again, in SCOrplo there le sun linked With 8 much smaller bright grofmi eau. The ancients were well acquainted With Castor and Pollux, two monster sues which they calle*d, Gemini, or thei, Twins. , They are 1:15I: rehlly jat aStionemical Sense, but not very long' ego the extratnalinary deeoveey was made that Castor revolves about] a yet largereglobe which is darkeend. therefore Invisible no man h.as seen, or ever will see; that .rlaik globe,its exis.tence and Ite power,of attraction are 111E4111 - tested' by 'swaying the Metien at the greatster :which revolves, about it, The altuattozthus .presented 14 most re-. Markable, for•here WO have the epee. bacie of e.fferY' orb Many thieee bigger than our owneeini revolving aroUnd a colossal world which (mite possibly' Is inhabited.! - It Ins often been eaid that we have lip knowledge Of an' planetsother than thee° of the solar eysterri, al- though it is to be presultiod that there are billione of. them, But there 18 One very interesting 6=01)11one-a dark globe which revolves, about the great Star Algal (in Medusit'a 1-Ie51el), Out. ting Off thied-fourtlia'ot Its light at re. galar laterVala of 0)6p-ei0ht, home, mho dark -sphere la alemit four-lIfthe thp 84Z0 Oi A1ol, ItS Atalria5r b(Shig t)prdxfniatelY 850,500 lisibos, XIS Meier word, this enormons Menet 15ebotit as bIiqft5 plft etin. Chopped ota it, welall mitke 1250,000 woefile. the eize of cure. Oneo Mere 0111 Ineigitilleanebt ROBEE'r 3., C. SlEAD.. (Copyright The Mueson 'Book Co.) 6 SYnopsis of Preceding .Chaptees, Dr. HarclY, furious- specialist, .and hisalaughterlrenemeet with an, acct. .dent avhile en a motoring trip in the foothills Of Alberta and find a reffige in the cabin Of the Elden ranch where dwell David and leis ;dissolute father. The ,girl and boy' promise to meet again in the futereeAfter his father's drunIcen death David gees to seek his fortune in town and lopes all his money at a pool table, He 'spends an evening with Conevaial, lis poolroom acquaintance, and tWo actresses. -and takes liquor for the first time. Nett morning he awakerA from -a drunken sleep resolved to amend. Na is .at - treated by the singing, of a choir girl in a' chureh; then he attended a So- ealist Meeting. Whendelivering coal thci liezne of Mr. Duncan he is offer- ed evening tuition in rettirn for oc- casional' services 5/5 a .coachniart. The first evening he discovers the chpir girl hrEdith D'uncan.A.Ind,er.his tutor's careful , direction Dave's , education thrives 'apate. He becomes .ya reporter on The Call. One .Stuiday he told Edith -the, story. of his life arid his eompact with Irene. Conward drops in With -talk about "industrial develop- nient" arid 'fires David's iinaginatiOn, • ',CHAPTER X.—(Cont'el.)' , His nights ,were.husy with his in- vestigations, but on SundaYs,,as uSual, he went 'out to Duricans'..' Ile had developed' the -habit of .attending merging service; he loved the niiisic, and it was customary for •-Edith, to sing a morning Solo. Her voice, whibb. hada enraptured him When they first met, had developed wonderfully. It filled the morning.,air like the clear ringing of sillier belle.. For its sake he gladly endured the sermons, and even, jar the serirfon Ise epmetimes found common ground with the preacher. They could meet bit any faith that postulated the brotherhood of man. e But the reverend speaker touched, such a subject watily. It seemed to Dave he would gladly have gone, furthereabut was held in re- straintby a sense of the orthodoxy of his 'Congregation. -Too literal an interpretation of the brotherhood ,of man might carry the taint of Social- ism, and the congregation ,represented She wealth of the city, ' It was safer to preach learnedly on abstractions of belief. This morning Edith had not been in her place, and the service was flat. In the afternoon she was not at her home. Mrs. Duncan explained that Edith had gone to visit a girl friend in the country; Would he awaY for some , time. Dave felt a foolish an- noyance that she should have left town. She might at least have called him up. Why should' ,she ,call him up? Of course not. Still, the town was very empty. He dteve with Mrs. Duncan in the afternoon, -and at night took a long walk by the river. He had a vague but oppressive aense'of lone- Jiness. He had not realized what part of his life these Sunday afternoons with Edith had come to be, He had no inan friends; 'his nature held him apart from his own. sex: And yet he had, a strange capacity for snaking friends- quickly, if he tried. But he 'didn't try. He didn't feel the need. But he felt lost without Edith: A feW dayS later C,onvvard strolled in, with She inevitable cigarette. He smoked in eilence until beimcom- pleted a story. • "good. stuff you're giving us," he commented, when the article was finished. "Mighty good stuff." • "Your tip put ene on to at good lead all right," Dave acknowledged:, "And now The Times Is chasing me hard: They had a story this morning that the railway is buying as right- of-way up the river." "Remember what I told you the other day? Stories start .from no- where. It's 'just like puttieg a match to tinder. New we're off." - Conward smoked a few 'ininutes in silence, but Dave could nbt'fail -to see the excitement under his calm, ex- terior. Ile had, as "he said, decided to "sit in" in the biggest game-• ever played.. The intoxication of sudden Wealth hadalready fired his blood: He slipped a bill to Dave. "For your services in that little transection," be exPlained. , Elden held the bill in his fingers, gingerly, as though it might carry in- fection, as in very truth it (lid, He realized that he stood at a turning- point—that everything the future held for him might reet Oba his`preeent deeisian. Th,eee zem.ained in him not a little of the fine, stern honor el the ranchman of.tim open ran,g^e; an honor eurioue; sometimes terrieas, in its in- tehnretatien of right andwrong, but a fine, stern honor 170515 the lees. And ho instinctivelY'felt that to accept this money `Would 'compromise him fOr ever mere. • And yet'—others • did it. Ho had no . doubt of that. .Conneard would laugh at ouch scruples. And Conward :liad • more friends thah he had. Everybody Jikel .Cen d, It eeeneed to Dave that he, only, distrust- ed bios But that, also, as Dave said to'hirneelf, lay in the point of view. lie granted that he, had no 'more' right to in -Leese hiS Standard of morals upon Con -Ward' than the preacher had to impose 'an arbitearysbelief upon •lohm Ansi as he turned. the bill in his fingers he noticed that it was for one hundred dollar's'. He had thonght it was ten, "I can't take that much," he ex- clymed, isn:t fair." 'Fair enough, said Cenward, well pleased that Dave should ba impressed by his geherosity, "Fait ,enough,". ite repeated, "It's juit ten per cent, of eby flb ft "You meah you made a thousand dollare on that deal?" "Exaetly that. And that will look like a P'eahut to what we arc going to realee later on." alga ea Yee. Yon and me, We're going into patthership." "But I've 'legating tee hivest. I'vo only a Veiy little '05.Ved . "Invest that •hundred." Dave leeked sit Conevard glint/dee Was Ise trifling? No; his oyes were frfink Ind Serione, "Yen -mean it?" ne "Of touree. Noeve I'll put e'et on to Sernething, end lee the biggegt thing that has beeri Milled off yet, There's 55 sectiah of lend IYhig tigisi against the eity limb1,a thet is owned hy a fellow over in England; remittence 105111 who fell iiab t alt eetate arid bad to go home to enend it. Well, be' has been paying taxes ever since and, isi til.'541 Of the 'Melly rawnch'; besides, he i6 busy, keeping his property in England reasanably well sPent. 5 ant • arrangifigethrough a Leridon office to' offer leine ten dollars an acre, and 1.11 for the necessary credits, but there bet he jumps at it. thee arranged Wilt be some ,expenses for`cables, and you can put your hundred into that. If we iiele it oc—and wa will, pull it off---vve start up in business as, Conward & Elden, or Elden & C,on-' Wardo whichever sounds better. Boy, there'S a fortnne in it," .1 • ,d"WhatDavea:ot7rylvfiguretopake 5it_e'eworatshi;yr sn, "Twenty-five dellaaS an acre?" 1 "Twenty-filee dollars an Amer, Conward shouted. "Dave, newraperi routine has killed your imagination, little as one would expect such a re- sult, from sonie of the things the payers print. Twenty-five dollars an acral Listen! ' ,• 1 "Ilheeity boundaries aro to be ek- ,teiTded—prebably Will be by the time this, deal goes through, Then it is city property. A street railway sys- tem is to behlMilt, and we'll see that It runs through one. land. We may have to"grease' somebody, but it's- a poor engineer that saves on grease. Then 'we'll survey the section into •twenty-fiVe foot dots—and we'll -Sell them at two hundred' dollars each far those nearest the -city down to one hundred for those farthest out—aver- age one hundred and fifty--tOtal mine hundred and, sixty—thousand dollars. Allow, say, sixty thoueand for • 'grease,' and there is still 'nine hun- dred thoiesand, and that doe -Sift, eount resale commissions, Dave, it's good bora cool million. And that is just the beginning. It will give us a stand- ingthat will make anything- possible." ...Dave was doing rapid „thinking. Suddenly he faced Conward, and their eyes met. "Gonward," he said, "why do you put this up to me?" ' "What d'ye mean?" "You 'don't' need my little hundred to put' his over, Why do you let me in on it?", Conward smiled and breathed easily. There` liad been a moment f tension. "Oh, 'that's simple" he answered. "5 figure this 'bnelnees is going bo be toe big for me'and Yea lire the Part- ner eeed. figure we'll travel well in double Inernees, I'm a good mixer —1 loam posple---and Ive got,ideae, And you're sound and' hogoreble ,and e P43'Kla 9PIletti17:'" you." • , •Da. ye, dryly, "Tlutt's 1441t1" Conward centineed. "We'll be is combination hard to boat, „Y,ouaknow the'story 'about the broth. era in the cOal.lansiness?" when al revival, broke Qiit in' their "Jim. and Fred were e0al dealers, town., and Jim got religion, Then he tried to convert ,Frad; trieci . awful hard to get Fred to at least ,go to the Meetings. But Fred avotildn't budge. $abd 11 Waseet practicable, :Tim argued and coaxed and prayed, but without result. At last be put it nal to Fred. 'Fred/ he said, 'why won't you come'to ,eur meetings?' '‘ 'NV:41,' the brother answered, 'it was all right fer you to get religion: Sort o' lends respeotability,to the firm. But if.. I get -it too, who s going to weigh the weal?' " The two men' laughed 'Wier the try, and yet it left an unpleasant impression upon Dave. He had neve): felt sure of Conwarde; and'now he bet less sine thaneverl3ut the juat of wwithin bios, TteiblreiglliMilninfistoli*aPntdisr represented more than three week' w,ages. Conward was making money- -making. money fast—and surely here was an' oppoTtunity such as comes once in a ltile-tiree. A boy shove-el:eh'. his head and, Yelled for copy. Dave swore at him, imnabient- ly. He lad never before realized how irksome the drudgery of his steady grind had become. "Pll go you," he said to Conward at last. “ral risk this hundred, and a little^mare if necessary." ..eGood," said Oontard; epringing tO his beet and taking. Dave's hand in a wenn grasp. "Now we're away. But you better play,safe. Stick to your pay cheque her until we Tull the deal through. There won't, be much to do until then, anyway, and you. ean help mare by, guiding the paper along right lines.' "It sounds like a fairy tale," Dave demurred, as • though -unwilling tis credit the possibilities °onward had aublined. • "You're eure • it can - be d°er' "Done,? Why, son, it hae been clone in all the big centres in the States, and at many a place that'll never be a centre at all. And, it vvill be done here. Dave, bigger things than' you dare to dream -of are looming up right a.lieatien" • ThDave had a qualm., "If that section of land isworth close to a dollaes," he said, "18 it quite fair to take advantage of the owner's absence ansi ignorance to buy it for Ss f,ew.thousand?" • "Dave," .said Conward, with an arm on his shoulder, "the respectability of the firm •13 safe in your hands. But —please let me'weigh the oal." (To be continued.) Fall Sewing Notes. A, .yardeand a half of forty-indh crepe de chine! • Doesn't thatsound like a "short , . cut" for. the 'lap -over" bionic? it seems so, eSpecially when you consider that this particular blouse has extra length and drops ,over the skirt in the most, approved 'way. And right here avant to squeeze in a little note about the 'fashions.' • Everything's dropping. Skirts in the faddish extreme are literally &Wen': to earth. But, of course, no sensible woman is going to give up condor,t for a mere fad. A •safe and Smart skirt rule is ankle length for evening end six to niite inches from the geound'for street iv -ear. Sleeves axe loneeei;• too, and,gerier- ally very much in evidence, you may not care to Wear your heart on your sleeve,but certainly, if you want to be' smart, you "will wear your em- broidery on yen): sleeve this fall. Even waistlines have taken a; drop; Isi the "lap -Over" you willfind the Waistline rating comfortably on the hips. It giVesthe straight-line sil- hotiette that everybody veants And., to tell the truth, it's justaabont the only way of:hiding the old 'Pinch-in- at-the-Waistlineelook of' as suit. YolTi clothsunerner suit would take on a new fallisla note if yeti added a long-sleeved .1ap-oVer. blouse.,Take Your choice an exactly atch,ing shade of crepe. de ehineaor a decided! eenerast. Elo'hiel of the Smartest three - niece snitS 5 haVe seen'have lad such color COmbinatiene-as canna -red, toyal blue, or gray drape de chine With navy • blue twill, el' beige silk with brown ;velour. °Silk is used' tor the coat To be enre, yoUlniust,cut the blouee with, the front and .back edges on the fele]: of the geode. A bias binding of the material makes a neat and quick finish for the elash. , Freshen Up. Of course, I -know that you are too busy to take naps during this month, devoted to canning' and preserving, But here's a short Cut to freshen air.' Squeeze in two or three minutes f or 'a "mental rest"'treatment. This is how You do it; Stand with your back to a chair and sloWly allow :yourAblf to fall into it. Yam' arins will hang down, your body will gag. That's What you want. Close yout eYes. Lot your head, fall back, but be sure that youare cOrnfortable. If your neck aches, the treatment won't be a suecess. Try to think and see nothing. Let the whole world becoms one big blackeveid. • Stay in the tlarlenees and the no- thingness jiest fcr a minute or tWo, Ibsen come back into your own world, Stand up, take a long slow breath, and start year daily tasks. If there's a„mirror ne.ar, you might take a peep in it. I think ,you will ,be rewarded lining as web as the blouse. IT -sunny by seeing that your eyes ere a httle the Mithreideree 'is 'the same 'Color AS brighter and your face a little fresher b'otiee leoking TVS' a quick way ef elearaing On the Scales. What do you weigh? You are so • small! Eight little ponnds at seven weeks? Eight little pounds—and that is all -- Of waving arms and rosy cheeks. But we who tip a heavier scale, What ,r.lo we weigh, then, as a whole? • What do our pounds of flesh avail Against your unweighed soul? —Ruth Wright Kauffman. take. Just be sure that you are able to digest it That's theeeecret of get, ting fat. It isia.t the food you eat that adds curves where angles are. It's the food you digest that tnrne the trick. , Did you ever try laughing, as a cure for thinness? There's :nothing war- ranted to make.food assimilate quick- er than a few hearty laughs. It, really is a form of primitive exercise. It ehakes all those unused musclee acnoes •the abdomen, it stimidates the cir- oulation, a.nci it arouses the digestive organs to activity. . So, if you haven't the time nor the money for other forms of treatment, laugh and watch your figure improve. Canadian Building Boom Big- gest Since War Began. • Canada is experiencing a building boom -Figures. Per the first six months of the year show. a volizme of -do-estrum non unequaled in any year since 1914. Building permit'shadan aggregate value of 5132,452,000 for the llrst six 111011thS, arSconipared with' $111,76.3,50 in the Mist half of 1921. 'Ontario. am counted for 574,586,900; Quebec $31,- 29.4,200, maritime praVinces .55,521,700, and the western provincea. $21,049,200. • Of the total $53,435,300 .was invested in reSidences, .$39,660,900: laebusiness buildings , -,510,050,700 in, industrial con- cerns and $29,305,100 en engineering construetion. Compared with east year building in Ontario has doubled and Toronto has led all Canadian cities in work of, this kind. This activity:: extends from coast to coast. Fifty-six cities show an • im crease In construction of po Per cent, over last year. Quebec reports an in- crease or 50 per cent, Saikatcheivan 300 per cent. Value of permits. in Win- nipeg inbreased $1,000,000. In Cal- gary the million dollar mark was pass - Regina, Illdmenton, Moose , Jaw, Brandon, Lethbridge and ether west- ern centres report more building than sums before the war.. Building in these weatern cities Is taken barometer of the prosperity of the ag- ricultural prairlo pro-vim:me. Building was almost at a standstill during, the war and. has been slack since. Resumption of comet:maim:1 on 4 substantial scale Isa looked upon by' business men 'and economists asan augury of prosperous tunes ahead, . . A Germ -Proof House. _big the temporathre of the reams resdrat these undestable things, The. walis are inecie."6f holloW bricks. of glass, which is inta:oaucedea eheneleel Signed and constaucted expressly to solution which has the effect 'of cans - 11.8V01' to, 'vary, ,The ,',,Yliqd.q.ivt are closed with sereene through which the air penetrates only after being fitter - "NI germs. nor earth,q,u, ekes need an - ply," might Well be.the legend on the lintel oy a: house in Yokohama, de - The creator of this extraordinary device is 0 European; nhYsiciaJ, suf- fering Limn a sort of microbe -nimble. -44e sees germs everywhere. He herd- ly dares to eat or drink, throng:a fear of swallowing armies of microbes. . A Similar fear of germs ie found, of course, in many people, .though less pronotinced, Yet our ancestors Eyed just as -long as we while Ignoring, thie danger. Do 'YOU knew tbat you ccn Ististe tsjs pour 10010. , with youl' aIvipg Inaehine? Leeson If ybu have a little longer time to one of 5115 tensions and, lengthen the devote to the freshening -up presets, stItches. If one tenSionis'Very loose add cream to the treatment. Put a and one medium, yen an caellY pull certain tich, fragrant. yellow CreaIll Out the threat!, !under the eyes, around the corner of Make yone iron do half your' sewing, the mouth, and aleng your neckline. When you ere binding"an eeige, if yen Those me the treachezaus. places Press th,e bieS fold ,before joining it wheee fatigue brings the first wrinkle to the edge 35 will be easier to stitch or eleepena those you already have, 111 wade, Lay the feed on 'the, weong perhaps you are aaannina to go out side of the goods and etiteh along the ea perhaps friends are coining to visit edge. Then turn the fold -0Vre the you at the end ei a particularly trying edge cn the right side. Press it in day. Here's a quick sineple way , to „place, tern under the free ete, and freshen up: After yOu have finished press agaim Yon can h,lud-sew 0.r waehing .Y011t faee daith dash it off w Machilleentitell the neatlY turned edge cold water info whish you have pub a in a jiffy. Belt if the laid is wrinkled, few (Imps 01 ,8pgritY oe eampaor, Pc and ereved the eewing • will take eure to keep your byes dosed tightly, twice ," 1 for the camphor smarts if it gets ht • A. quick substitute for binding an them. 1 ktns etsiw you111. firid (this la. half-Mah irresgram ribbon in a, shade -don stinnalating. It will brighten -up to match the blouse' or dress. An you' the taco and. make it •feel velvety have to do bit ePPlYing 1515 10 crease smoeth. it through the centre, insert the ratv1,• Another simple osnodient for toning odee between the two thielonseee 'eff tin the exPl'et,7jon is 'bp Pue the Pahn fhe ribbon and enteli it in plaoe with' 0,f the Ithrul against the chin hone and meeeerized embroidery cotton, ,hist nreSs Lii-OWLY up. 'This must not be stis ireaend-out mining stitch lel fl -ons roughly nor for too lohg a time, d eeeraei It tens, Muelties tit the tide of the Thr c; 1g • 00 eeea to ea -ash aama' face, and rooted inaeolte ate never reeitte-fretit Sr eentre-baek elositae in' eagging mitlbeles, your blouse any more, A little threc.1 There's nothing like the milk dirt inch eIeslirelethe centre.froat or hada', Cot the 'woman whose work scoms to makes a blouss easy to slip on over' snP lice vitality And to Icecp f..er the head duly tliin It is 50 simple, 00 easy to Tablet Designs, in -Demand. The-.Cairatilian •National nuts Branch of the Departmlent ,Of the In- terior' has Organized a competition a:MOng the.'architeeta and art schools of Canada fox a -design fox a suitable standa.rd to which well be affixed the bronze tablet intended to mark the his- toric sites of the Dominion Which are judged by the Historic Sites and Monurnents Board of 'Canada to be of national importance and worthY of . 'preservation. and 'Commemoration, nye hundred leillars will bo award, -Id, as fallows:.:--Eirst prize, $250; second prize, $150; third. prise, 5100. The assessors also retain the privilege 05 choeeinge. any designs ness'esGang 'special Merit and for those an'avve.rd of 550 will be made. - Conditions ot theaeomnetition Will Ile advertised in the Canada Gazette, - in the principal aechitectuaal,journeela and the post offices thcoughent the Doniinion. 'Conies -of the conditions will also be sent bo architectural as- sioclations and schools -of art and de - 'sign, The asSessers, will he Professor P. D. Nabbs, M.A., F.R.I.B.A„ Mr. S. marchanci and Mr. Homer Watson, President of the Royal dana. dam Academy. Princeis Much Photo..., gran e Princess Mary pursued by phote- graph ers mare relentlessly than any penson in the public eye except Lloyd , George, says a London despatch. Cam. Ora men, profession'al mid amateur, have attended her every movement shrice leer inarriage to Viscoun,t Las, cellos; slie' Is assailed by them even when] she goes to church. AL a recent 'garden party the Prim coos was 06 beset by.the picture -takers 'that she had to make a specific request that they desist. " a Dye Any ..Garment Or Old Drapery ' In Diamond Dyes iBuy "Diamond Dyes" and follo'ry the simple directions in eveiy package. Don't wonder -whether you can dye os tint aiaccessfully, ' because Porfeci home dyeing. IS guaranteed with Diah mond Dyes, even. it Yqau leave nevet dyed before. ' Worm 'faded dresSes;' elrirts, waluts, 'coat% sWeaters; 'etocla begs; draperies, leanghiga ekerything, become like Ili3W again, ' -jast toll Your druggist whether the' material Yon wish to dye la wool or silk, or ' whethe,r tt Ls. linen, cotton; or miXell goods. Diamond Dyes never .streale spot, fade, dr run. ' • ...........—_,e 'Malte something but of life, Don't drift, don't leaf, don't whine. "Quit you like rnen, be strong." 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Ha "A" Getteriet —.a ia.ocf many other tarts or quality. cemininent also at lndst reasonable nrluoS. Mail orders shipped- emus' day tie teceived.' , A RADIO :EXPERT AT'PE,alDAN0.1e To VIELP YOUlt DiFirfOlet,TIES, DO NOT 14DSI'l'ATIll PC isPltIh'h 00. toeee li, Toroato LOCK fee ibe Rep radio sign at 140'Vletailei 5114. just No th of alueonealentomatie TeieplIones Ttre iElrti endors Ltd, mein 2014.