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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1923-4-19, Page 6rzirs cop VRIL in the) :House ovrii.; prevents that "Sinking reeling..., The Gift Of The Gods BY PEARL FOLEY. (Copyright.) Ti 'Hee peered haPnily f rein twoen, the curtains of their rickshaw on the way to Madam Hoy's, The life of the 'thoroughfares never teased to ; interest her. There 'stood the old an In his sus- I tomary corner dishing up ears of boil-, ed green corn, A. little further along, surrounded by a groupof children, Watt the candy man, delighting them by his deftness in turning out animate and birds, which formed mysteriously as he blew taffy from a straw, ,An old beggar; ragged and dirty, Prostrated himself as lis saw the onm, coming rickshaw, and Tu flee tossed him a few cash as they sped past, "We shall pass the Americans', ;I wonder if -they will stop us to -day/' To Hee inosed aloud, but there was an eager thrill in her. voice. (To be continued.) CHAPTER I. ears and down ' the long, shining r over the pool, . 'It's ripping fun, Uncle Wong.' braids. Then bending v p , The words trilled out gaily, and the site surveyed herself appreciatively in girl paused' in the'act, of batting an the watery mirror. Clasping her ' oncenunl half. "That's a foul, Lun. hands on the .back of hor head ehe Try again." Her bat was poised eas- swayed back like a graceful mwillow and smiled up at the white puffs sail- ing so airily across the blue of the sky. Then, spreading her arms like a bird its wings, She abandoned her- self to the joy of mere living. Her small, satin -shod feet gleamed in and out among the flower beds? Her heart supplied the rhythm, and so perfect was the attunement /that she forgot she was paying.'homage to life in a' foreign way—forgot she was betray- ing her Chinese training. She saw as in a mist her uncle and Lun appreaching, but she • could not atop. 'Her heart was too light to gar - fly and this time met the ball equare- sending it in a straight, clean spin r_into a distant thicket. "My word, etty, that's a home run for you:" - Wong Toy looked about puzzled. "Where are the other players, Autumn Gladness? Did my approach banish them?" "Lun is one side and I'm the other. The rest are make -believes. We saw them playing the game yesterday at the Americans' 011 the oposite hill. They call it baseball." • "Indeed? And' you like the Chris tian game;,. ' I telco the orcin cine," corrected bar even pity. -Neither the rebuke in foreign a her' the mandarin's eyes nor the horror' in the girl, a teasing ppedi her b in,nurse's fascinated gaze'touched voice. e -.had dropped her bat, and her n The youth within hr had- called now, crossed: to .the, beech, where the her., y roan-was'seated. Sinking into' a grace- and she had had to obey. So she ful attitude; at his feet, she looked up ]red on and on until she fluttered, a at him with wide ' serious: eyes: a breathless heap, at Weng Toy's feet. "Uncle Weng, why do you hate the It was only then tire -enormity, of her foreigners? The 'American; girls on offence rushed over her. Clasping hen the opposite hill are so: pretty. They hands she dropped her head lower,and laugh, and run and dance. Yesterday lower until her forehead touched the I coaxed%,un to stand and watch them, mossy ground: A quiver shook her as and,one girl came up and asked us in." she wondered if the Evil Eye had ttcast -,."DidDid you .go?"'There was an; easily 1 spell on•her.while sl gazed an's • oice. _: foreigners at play. detected anxiety in the not, w x ,, il d- ' out Your "Raise your head, ,Autumn G a. "No, -no, of bourse with Y your acts to- •pees. Do you not trustU permission; but 'if they ask me in I?" Weng to know that •youth and:liappir day, may I. nese cannot be curbed? Why that. The tris voice was wistful. ' ' Weng Toy looked down atdroop:of shame in your eyes?' the eager . and hes were young .face. Placing tris; hand under:! Tu ileo looked up er e think it her chin,` he! questioned, "Aro you! wide: and questioning. You growing dissatisfied with your .:old not evil then to adopt soquickly the e Tu Hee?". ".•. uncle's .comptiny;;'Tittl American play?"Youth mimics Youth.: Fret not A quick, protesting shake was the answer, and the girl caught his hand, yoGently heliftedher to her fact; but pressing it against: her cheek. "You he could not banish the shadow that Know that .could; never, , never be, rested` oh her face. As. they- walked' Uncle Weng.- How could I be any- back to `the 'house, .where tea was thing but I-t's ahappy, when you are so good ready on the verandah, Tu Hee' 'was .. It's a to mewonder I m not a.stuck , silent. Sh°..wae ,Jnusing over ,the • up prig, the way you spoil Inc.` -But strange rapture. that for a .few mo - these girls, Uncle Weng, they look as,; meats had changed her whole person - happy. as .I It is ,true` they are per-' ahty. She had n°'longer been the haps e little boisterous,, but when I1 Gift .of the'Gods'while; she danced. hear 'them laugh and eee 'them 'run The'f'nfronted her, emphatic and jump, little quivery thrills run sill and undeniable, that during those through me and :I • want to'do the brief moms to sho had been transport - springing I could, too" ehe exclaimed, n P springing nimbly to' her feet. "Poor ed nay, perverted—into a e Stirring thins theywear ` skirts—American eigner with alien„ emotions Stirring for - things, every fibre: Of her being. What pen skirts. She looked down "with can=, altyshould she exa t from herself that 1 'satisfaction. at her sunt sederab a Y , would'le'sufilcien0� . ]arch? Incense - silken • trousers.' Then: with'a gay offering seemed a poor unguent for" laugh she darted away, disappearing offended coustienee.' She would keep like a nymph among the flowering; away from the foreign, horn on the bushes: i neighboring' hill; for 'a month. Even Tu- Hee, or` Autumn Gladne s, had. asshe resolved she'was startled =•at Not Being Neglected. Dad• -"You should take up biology— no education is complete Without it." College Girl—"Quite so, fattier, I'tn giving intimate study to the Genus e. ea• o tportunity" Nome at yell' 1 native charm o£ he Assumed, imbibed the subtle chs ,. the .nropartion_s,her sgcrifice,as hills'of China. -'The create of her skin • - as ',relieved by touches of rouge - and CHAPTER II. her the inti] • aimed lips, s ave ll da P. r Rself-imposed o ke er e th l TuHP I promisie of a radiant tropical abed Ise, faithfully. Por five weeks her, im- promising to unfold wondrous beauty. %Her naturally arched brows were gen- outingsthe were in an opposite direction Americans. To -da , however, tiled; into a fine line, while'masses of a�so cal",function compelled her to peas; black hair, :crowned -her` an oriental . •. prineess - Hoops of inatrqut pearls the shunnedplace. She had demurred 1 at going; but Weng Toy,'insisted that • shone softly from her ears and seem- She must not. exile herself. fie wanted "',ed to enhance the youth and mystery her to be happy and gay and not mope ' of her. Trousers and a loose' coat of around the house like- a love-sick finest embroidered silk were the final. maiden,. and Tu Hee shrank from tell- 4 ell- Midden of the Old World, Was one on this Ing him' her true reason. She could craftier of theEhet. There not pain lulu- by confessing whet. 0 '.arts and tiIn, • nse offerings which ad•aht magnet' the foreigners still were to arts incense offerings' could. not r. ho prevail on to blend with the oriental Conflicting em tions orowded'-•on coloring. It was her eyes, . They re- h r s Lung re aced her for Madam &meed the deep am ling blue of . I Hoy's function. When the last 'gelid NURSES The Toronto Ilotat>ita? or Xticur- ebleie wt811atfen with iellarue and '(irI1ieteleoei• e theue Ourof••1n1 log to retina Women, haying the re - (Mired education,, and detlIrou0 or in- ogtning nurdea. 1'),te l-tospital has edoe1tod• the eight hour dydtom. The pupils receive ur,l7or,u0 or the School, , oxperjne141 to and and New York. travelling further information apply to the Superintendent, Scientist Finds the Origin` of Coal. Prof,:I3artou Scammell, President of the Radium Tnetitete at Dover, asserts that 11e has discoveredthe origin of coal, IIe has beenengaged in re- search work with lava from Mount Vesuvius which is being used as fer- tilizer, and says this led to the dis- covery that tee layers of "bine!"—the mysterious substance foetid on'the top and bottom of all coal seams -are identical in analysis with lava, ' The bind contains lithe, iron, mag- nesium, potash and other elements re- quired by plant life, and, when made radioactive with 'solutions of radio' phosphate of potasbl, it absorbs nitro- gen from the air and forms a perfect Almru!nge for Spring. when sup 1e loaPlag in the bark Arid jonquils' split the mould, When,dandeliond star the park With asteroids of gold, When maple buds are fringed with red And aspen boughs , year beards sot gray, And swallows twitter overhead. Get slit and dig your garden bete— The ed-The Spring is on the way. • When ,clouds come drifting high • With rifts of blue between, When crows flap U1aek against the sky 'And 'willow: twigs are 'fledged with green, When swift the jeweled hornet e'neede And furtive fares' the hornet .toad AO midges dance above the °•erode, 1 -lie fortis and buy your garden socia The spring it on the road, The origin of coal is time explained by Prof. Scammell. It' is a cellulose of tress and vegetable matter, carbonised by -hot lava, thus' forming coal, and' sunk into the depths of the earth by disturbances of the earths crust' at a remote period He claims that - conversion of the - bind, now a waste 'product, into fer- tiliaer, will enrich the mining and ag- ricultural industries. MOK kite and When barefoot children seek the Haunt. Ot,wood anemones, rflaunt d ar le While icobin• ran warbler W e wt's 1 , Their feathers in the naked trees, When, lingering late, the lover leans On dameol's gate at dusk,ot clay, When lads are lords and glide. aro •queens' Plant lettuce, spinach, peas and beansl For Spring -has oome to stay! —Victor Starbuek In Youth's Com- panion, 'Winds of Home. We have gone down to the sea' a ' .With hor, brine on our fearless lips, From her grasp we have laughed us free of lio- raged for hor tithe When s g - GRANDMOTHER'S SHAWL. • of every kind had waned—the'art has ic- In the days of our dear mid-Vic- torian id V torian grandniothees, when hoopskirts extended: the proportions of those worthy ladies far beyond the. confines an important article of dress ever, are they valued by those in P become : almost a lost one, and their ,price consequently is above that of rubies. -They •are literally worth their weight in gold. Far above the price of a coat,the shawl of necessity,Was of rubies or their :weight in gold, how - Of the many varieties of these gar- whom is a deep-seated .reverence for ments in vogue at that day there were the pasU—for things hallowed by their two of distinct elegance, the cashmere contact with life's,experieices. - manufactured in the beautiful Vale of • Grandmothee'e . shawl! What mem- Cashmere celebrated. in song' and ories it evokes;! What,' dreams are born story, and the Paisley' from the' an- from musing over -'its' history! What tient Scottish town of the same naine. stories it might tell! It is something One or both of these'' lovely products more than a mere garment to be "worn of the hand loom were' apt to be in and `discarded at will. It is a symbol. the wardrobe of any lady of affluence. Romance clings to A. Love, tragedy, argeneration or two : ago, and no self-sacrifice,' joy, breathe within its' lavender-scented folds.' '- U,nmovece at the feet•of-death .. We have, fought her ,seething foam; But now' we choke with the quick-. drawn breath„ We are rounding in towards home! There's's, light of gold in the southern tky, Andthe luring epics winds. croon, From lands' in a zone of 011n that Be In a golden afternoon; f But afar, and ayra.y where the gray clouds,froivn roam; There's harbor tor sails. iliat t a , And sweeter than song -Elie guile- scream down brine -burned winds. of home. - The brl wi -Edith Partt Dickens. i ,' ithe° ° prepared ewe, button was fastened and'Lun pus ed Light as thistledown, shetnd th'r w her in frontofthe longmirror r to the blossom bond'eyed path and threw dierself;' pa„vtng a little,.;oh the Bank survey the loveliness that glowed from of a large pool which. barred het wasq' the mauve silk gown, her,'heart ,beat Ttvo large willows drooped; lengfiidlei ra bidle o Land her a fe t tilted, ilert d,n cpatientt over the water, casting it half , in toff again' shade, and in and out of its shadow- I "`Of course I shall enjoy flecked depths darted fan -tailed ;gold- - "O party',” confided shall ep Hee Madama. her fish. Musingly Tu 'Hee trailed her fierce and maid, !flout what I should'he gold nail shields in the water. Her; like moat of all would be a ride on •a reverie was of short bonen, how.' a' meek little beast 'either, one-. With a graceful bound she was but one with0an arch to his neck and on her theeet again,, Deftly she un- 1 fire in his .eye." - bound heavy , inai two of longr lhait,1 Lun paused in the acfof placing the over letting r themo fall in : Gathering .a pinlaits big jade pin in; her Mistress' hair and over her shoulders. s fromna.ahane-' ful of white blossoms from a tree i�e.I'Peered wonderingly into her:. fate. side her; she 'twined them over ,h `;But Misses Tu Hee-never ride pony 4—mule maybe, but pony,; not' �— —�— "Ah; but I've seen other girls ride them. And Luft"—here she dropped - her voice,.but her tones were emphatic —"I've envied the foreigners riding them, especially „the English girls. They look.so—so chic."" "Cheek—cheeken—cheeken is fowl; 'Missee Tu Hee., , Tee hee—my, my— you Very funny! Just what Lun thi,hka-ungraceful;- . bad, : mannerly— just like cackling hens" - "No, no," laughed Tu'Hee. "You do not understand. That word is French. It means smart and attrac- tive looking." ,' "So?—hen." It was' evident that for once; Lun openly disagreed with her- child. Then, a lurking doubt in her tones which she evidently wished to have banished at once,she ques- tioned, "Misses; Tu Hee happier than foreigners, eh?!' "I suppose," But `Lun fancied the • big bow was worn., with this, and tone of hmer mistress lacked decision, quaint And coy indeed must have been "Mime Tu Hee arey rich man - the the fair Scotch lassie soYrobed 'on her• ddrin—have sons and happy right here in China. No go away or do "tinting" day,, bride's trousseau was thought,to be complete withoutone. -' The cashmere, examples of which are occasionally to be found in ,this country at the present time, were' ex- quisite works of art --so soft and fine- ly woven. that although;. of. enormous do the work of the farm wife,, that is size' ^ they could, easily 'be • drawn coming into high favor. through a! lady's finger ring. The.wool. been oueid,tosave, countless It has fpr these shawls came from a certain steps.- Whole 'meals can be served breed of goats; from Thibet, said to with only; one or two trips from 'the be the most+'beautiful.-in :the world: dining -room to, the,kitchen ',and, it. is Only the finest of this -----that lying just as useful in clearing the table next 'to the skin of the` animal—was afterwards. The dishes can be stack- ed on it as they are washed, and wheeledyto the cupboard in one trip. The' wheel table id also' convenient for serving buffet lunches in any room of the house: or on.the porch. In time of sickness it is invaluable. This wheel tray or'table need not be expensive. If friend husband is handy with. toole,,he can transform an old wash -stand or kitchen, table to this use• It should ; be made of dur- able material and covered with a hard finish so that 'it can be -washed to'keep it' clean and sanitary. Wheels from an old baby carriage, particularly if rubber tired, have -often been found WHEEL TABLE•IS'BIG HELP. It as nothing less than the effete tea wagon of • the society novel that, is made in a fashion big and strong to Used in the manufacture' of shawls. The lovely and intricate patterns for these garments were : handed` down from time immemorial, from an in- credibly ancient Hindu 'ancestry; the originals of; which werepreserved as heirlooms, in ancient castles and were regarded with almost sacred ven- eration. - " The. Harness Plaid. The Paisleys, more frequently to be :metwith in. our own country, while often exquisite in texture and of the same Asiatic designs, :intricate and delicately lovelyras old Venetian point, are, after all, but imitations of the encbmparable'-cashmere. •In the home useful 'for these homemade wheel of, .its birth the Paisley shawl, how -:1 trays. ever,;is not so designated, but ie called "harness. `Plaid". (pronounced plade), the word harness'indicating the character of the design. - During the time of their manufac- ture, when 8,000 looms were kept busy all day long meeting 'the demand for them; three grades of the shawls were Woven—that for ceremony, Which :was darken ; for - oak add one teaspoon of naturally the moot lovely, •that for, yaw umber; for walnut, add one tea - every -day use, and the tartan worn spoon of Venetian red, half teaspoon by the then of the clans as a distin- yellow pchre; for" mahogany, add one- guishi'ng'insignia. - quarter teaspoon of yellow ochre, half Tle shawl of"ceremony, which was teaspoon Bipmarek.brown, and a'tea- the finely woven' orb withAsiatic ' at- post of burnt senna, tern, was never worn by an unmarried woitlan. On the Sunday following her WI•NGS AT DAWN. marriage, however, when she was Dawn is dense with twitter, "tinted' • she appeared for the first : Aird rho white llr swans and• sings time in hor "harness plaid." To be :In rapid wings that glttt r, "kicked" meant simply that on the; And iheTfla=.ihing of Wings— first Sunday after the marriage core• Dohc2te,,and,fugitive shiverings mony the. bride and groom, with their ,'The dews e.url up in haze, attendants, appeared qt church in a' While the 0011 from his, hive 1 Like a giant bee ablaze ured •three -and one-half yards long by Bursts. di?zfly alive -- one and three-quarter yards wide— And through the glow a thousand it was first folded in the middle'; then swallows dive. Provides "the biR of sweet" In beneficial. lomat. Helps to otilerstnsse tite teed; - and, keep fittest; healthy. D35 Rabeitart every room in9 habit to shinewith TO FILL THE CRACKS. A good formula:to follow in making a homemade crack "filler is: One pint of linseed oil ono„and one-half' quarts of turpentine one pint of whiting or, ;cornstarch. - ' This will snake a white filler. To, Experience , • She—"if youV' a never been in..iove betotd, how is it you're eo clever ,at it? , He—"P spent an afternoon with, a widow last summerat the seaishore.". lryou. raliyour ask 'kfO�rO voaroinr ,Weon chat) An Eskimo's Love Mistake: ' Between the cake of toe on which a. youthful Eskimo Sealer had erected his hut and the ,larger flee thea, was lire='emptiei} by the parents of his sweetheart the cold had broken 'a, ere- vase° some Hundred feet, or more in depth and twenty in width., Except for a single jutting fragment just thick enough to bear little more than his own weight, hiehotue was completely out off from the world about -hen. This practical isolation inspired- hint, He began storing up in 1110 humble Of groat length—the garment mese- civarters oil, blubber and.: other deli•pear to have eaten large black spots - oaoies sufficient for ,the support of two, arranged at nearly regular intervals erSons for at least six months. `Ile alongg the length its body; closer 1? steal his.. bride,. and -t I n each case head resolved to ., _examination slnows.Lhat 1 ,., know that if lie gained' his' i.' with- three spots ons "on the left "Side;. and hes• and broke down the bridge- they four •on the Agit aide. safe from, trou le of pursuit tor are it +e loci : spaced, hut in ' were a b They, ngu Y p, the winter season or until, warner anob ,ec manus- tha;Eoe looking tifrough weather moved the icebergs to closer the body all seven ap1ieee. be a,sym- contact , metriett row, • Now the Eskimos•sleep on a raised snowbank on one side of the floe, or toe -house;, incased in their sealskin nlghtbags, with a huge protecting hood over the head and 1010, maletg thein as comfontooble ae thein nature re Transparent 'Creattii es. 1 of the anima -Among ,ahe, curio'sit es o ;l kingdom are transparent animals. Rel -sent studies of two larval eels which belong• to one Of the Untied States) Government bureaus at Washington seem to elbow that among the possible advautages1 of being transparent is listed economy in personal decoration. In ordinary opaque animals the color markings are symmetrical; on both sides of the body, but this is not„the case with the tranisp'are0t eels. When 'looked at from one secle these eels ap- The yoath waited outside the .girl's home• •until all within were asleep; then creeping through the 'narrow en - "trance he made his way toward -the young woman. He seized the long bag - like mass in whloh her form was in- cased, bore ittriumphantly, across the narrow bridge to hiss stronghold and before pursuit was possible with PI, ax cut down the ice bridge and was What,E'very Husband Knows.' Said the Fireit Man— I'm•'lookdng far a wife,wnoImre a good disposition; and who neverloses her -temper." Said, the Second: Man— "I want a wife. who atfows how to' hep house; ho' and wstaye home nighte." Third' Men—"Give me a wife' who can cook. Fourth Man=" -What I want is a girl who -has a little money' of her own, Who is. pretty goodlooking, and has no relatives.", Fifth Man—"All I, ask. for: is a wife I can, show •to anybody, ' no matter 'where I and, and I'm glad." ' Then ad the othere ;gathered around him and With one acclaim ,shouted; "You 'win!" pointacross to form a triangle, the upper Light like a etorn9, perhaps a foot from the bottom Deluges the grass, one, and then thrown across the shoal- And birds In a swarm dors and fastened with a large pin , Wheel, dwindle and mass made especially for the purpose. A And their wings' are slit silver a silk bonnet tied under the chin with a they pass. ' - —2 -Joseph Auslander, like foreigners' to make happy, eh?" "Lun!" Tu Hee grasped the Wo- man1s hand. Icer eyes were wide, and hre face looked pale despite its make= up. "Who says I marry mandarin? Not Uncle Wong? No, no, I couldn't bear it." "bio, no." . Lun was soundly fright- ened at her •indistretion,'and hastened to. reassure hor mistress; "Only ISM say 00. It not be if Missee Tu Hee Was no, - Comte not." Lun pattethe ,}t, tie hand lridle' held, and her otos s so reassuring that Tit et grow 0a114 again almost immediately, but her Voice was a trifle sharp as she ad- monished, "?leaSc, then, Lmi, don't say such foo ish things again." Then noticing the hurt look, on the„ at1ner's face she placed her arins around her and exclaimed' inipulslvoly, "1 am happy watt ju t you and uncle Wong. I waft no tushalnd•--un,xesrf.•" "Pot?" pi'ttnptod the Chinese wo- man: The girl's tetivy lashes drooped shyly-�' I"failin levo," Favorite of Queen Victoria, Queen Victoria, dear •, did lady of tradition that she was, loved the Pais, ley to her dying day, and every girl friend of her little Majesty knew'well that on her wedding day a present of a rare one from her beloved sovereign would bo hors. Alwayu expensive; now since their manufacture hasceased—some fifty years age whoa the vogue for shawls er w w w w ve POTATOES HASHED IN CREAM. Cut warm boiled.potatoos`dnto small even pieces and „add a half pint of boiled cream and a teaspoonful of salt. Rw. Oys v ' i,ri s Heat slowly for ten minat f, '# F . 1 .SLE . ts JELLY Most people prefer it, because it is easy to digest, and delicious, with a full, juicy, fruit flavor. It is easy to make tasty. desserts with McLAR- EN'S INVINCIBLE Jelly Powder. Sixteen Different Flavors One package serves eight. people. "At all Grocers Insist on McLAREN'S INVINCIBLE. JELLY' POWDER Made by McLYRENO LIMITED, Hamilton and Winni9o4. Not wanting 'to'hear the .objnrga- tions' of theare: on the other side of the abyss .;he .knelt dawn beside her and dragged. back the hood to catch..a glimpse of her face. • • He had stolen his intended father c To soften a hard sponge cover' it with cold water, add a tablespoonful of borax, and bring slowly to the boil, in a clean satucepan. Then refnove the spo-nge,' rub some dry borax into, it, and rinse under the cold tap, allowing the water to run over it for several: minutes. ,• Grazing Lenses, It has been decided to grant'gras111g Teases of vacant Dominion lands mint' for agricultural pilrposos in the Pro• viaices of Manitoba, SasltatoboWttn and' Alberta and •Which are encunaUerod by: Seed grain and relief indebtedness, cu the condition thatthe lease will con- tain a clause to tho'effect that it may ho cancelled on one year's notice, The, applicant, however, is given alio option fYaung ladies n b •rano a a Yoare` of paying ile indebtedness and obtain- ,Sienoral Nursing Course i ,ihe Ontar•te `leg a lease without. this coeicellatiou 'Ilosptfal, Dee Queett titreet Was clause Formerly applicants wore re- ' o 0nibe, $29,0Q"p, mouth with beard) (tinted to pay the indebtedness before ttn form,. end lalln,dmy, for the first obtaining leasee • car with Increase each your after. w>art�M, ,App icritig rifest he healthy, - Heat In Carbon, onl under 80 roans! of ago.AIMIY to .Q# ..beating. power per bound of hydrogen, odioat esu orint ul nh Ontario Eifik. C t boli has less than one-fourth the Phle •Bd11 Outfitand other-enizes, for new and Oirlo (swan tor' sonlhg a few doli'tts' worth of , Govnrnmeht Teeteil Orden setds at 100 a rocs. We rimer% rash also, if you iVleh. SIdtrann-(SUR corassayrir leZona &frost, - - Toronto 80114 inn Pant, 3D ee iaheicagcs, of coeds: getddbo Ykltvst Ol1f. retfrn`, thin flat tyo(r exheuyb, 1\w,tino.. Slott 1`1"0, .Gown , ...... ri Yiu r50 m0110n A Lifebuoy: bath Cool, fresh, rested titin tinglingwith health and comfort— _)Feeling cleaner than you ever felt before Beoauseof the big; creamy lather of Lifebuoy.' They Do aeHundred rCaiork-s inS • About 94- AT .•a box' of 'little raisins when Ba you ,feel liungry, • lazy; tired,. of - faint. In about 9s/g seconds a hundred calories or more of energizing nutri- ment will put you on your toes again, For. Little Sun -Maids' are 75 %' fruit sugar in practically predigested form.-levulose, the scientists call it. And levulose is real body :fuel. Needing practically no digestion, it gets to work and revives you quick. Full of energy and iron'= -both good ' and good tot you. , Just try a box. Little "Betty en Meal" Raisins Sc Everywhere Heid Y da�r