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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1930-11-20, Page 2Churton News=Record' CLINTON, ONTARIO Perms' of Subscription—$2.00 per year en advance, to Canadian addresses;; $2;50 to the U.S, or other foreign countries. No paper discontinued until all arrears are paid unless at the option of the publisher. The 'SYNOPSIS date to welch every subscription is Christopher Steynes,' a young. so - paid, is denoted on the 'label. ciety man, is being sought after by a tiAdvertising Pates—Transient hent advert Russian countess- In order to die - Insertion. n. per count 'line for dent courage her he offers Mary Kate 0' - insertion, Be .for mai)punts subsequent Hara a large sum of money to play'the ins* ll ad. Heading counts 2 lines. part of his wife for twenty=four hours one Mph, itch ase'Want dnot eo 'oust.. •Mrs.'O'Hara is :• widow and the mete - "Strayed," 'etc:.: inserted .once for er :of' a large family. Martin ani 35c. Y Mary Kate age she only two working. &dve each meets ent In ninon lin '.Martin is studying medicine and' has Aructi sementt senthn bee of in a'chance to go to Germany, but lacks atructwons as.to the number ot. el the necessary `fiimle. Mary Kat- ac- ededrtiut and win well, ran until order- ce ts-Ste es' :prolwsitian it order to ' out and will b'e charged accord- ge the oriey for Martin. She tells merle. -Rates 'for, display advertising her, family she is going to Sacramento made known on application. on business for her boss, but takes a . Communications intended for pub: train to Burlingame, where young Mr. lica faithon must,'as a guarantee of good ,Steynes .meets her and takes her'to faith,, be :accompanied by the name his home. of the writer. .CHA,PTER XV.—.(Geeta.), , Propri G. CI. H2Iopri o M. R. CLARK,etor. Editor. Chris :led the way into the dim _ .`shadow:; of the interior, gratefully cool on thin warm airless afternoon• Mary Kate; speechless with the deep r v M.D. SIC?AG ART . satisfaction of diseoveved beauty', saw subs narrow, arched doorways, fine, ;twist, �{ ed stairways rising up against bare, Banker ed walls, niches where- Spanish saints•steod stiffly, under crowns of A general 'Banking Busine$s tarnished stars, a great fireplace with Notes Discounted. a.wrought iron crane, a bit of balcony transacted. from which hung a tattered scrap of Drafts Issued. interest Allow- mellow old limeade. "Will you put rey 'cousin in the ed on Deposits. SaleNotes Pur *pare room, • Peter?" .Chris , said. to a chased. .quiet, middle-aged man -who was car- " eying Mary Kate's bag.. Its now ten H.' T. RANCE minutes to six—we ought to leave at, ten minutes to eight," he told his Notary Public, Conveyancer guest.. "I've got to go over 'to the Financial, Real Estate. and Fire Im club, so make yourself entirely at mance Agent. Representing 14 Fire .home. There are books—there's . a Insurance Companies. ' ' radio over there." 'Division , :curt Office. Clinton. lie tureed :away, and• Mary Kate discovered • with an • obscure satisfac- LL.B. tion that her rooms were • on the drank Einglend,B.A„ ground. fluor. Somehow'that seemed to Barrister, Solicitor, Nary Public mtike the whole adventure seem safer. .done K:C. Here they were,'.the first. a darling Successor to W. BrY bedroom with two low cavern beds of swan Block , — Clinton, On black wood, -chests and tables and .chairs to wattle low lights in little CHARLES B. 'HALE • parchment hoods, And opening out of it on one sidea sort of piazza sit - Conveyancer, Notary Public, ting room, with wicker chairs and a Commissioner, ere. tiled flcor,• and bare grape vines pat- - tering against the glowing garden be- yond. over J. E. Hovey`s Drug Store) yond. On the other side were a lux- urious dressing room and bath. DB. J. C. SANDIER There was another door, a 'deep set with hangars. Her eyes shone. do - Office Hours: -1.30 t0 3,30 p.m., 6.30 Oe the hangers *weret costhme voing to 8.00 p.m., Sundays, 12,30 to 1.30 p.m. wrap, the white 'spor silk, with the striped coat, and the Other hours by appointment only. creamy .satin evening dress, embroid- Office and Residence - Victoria St. mad 'n pearl roses. On' the shelf be- y reath them stood ' the creamy satin FRED O. THOMPSON slippers.with their pearl buckles. DR. In tie- dressing -table drawers were Office and Residence: powder, perfumes, rouge, cold cream. Ontario Street — Clinton, Ont. come from •a neighboring garden, or One door west of Anglican Ouch. might -have beenservants in the kit - Phone 172 then. Once a bird screamed harshly; Eyes Examine„ and Glasses Fitted Transparent, flesh -colored stockings, DR. 'PERCIVAL HEARN ei'd a rlosed, old-fashioned jewel -case shared the second drawer. Office and Residence: Ma,,,' Kate took off her hat and coat Huron Street - Clinton, Ont. and hung then up carefully in the Phone 69 closet. Then she went quickly to the (Formerly occupied by the late Dr. hall door and locked it. After that C. W. Thompson). APRIL , ESCAPADE y KATHLEEN' NORRIS J • Unfamiliar with all the creams she tried several; she turned her bright head upside down, and brushed her 'flaming mop until it sparkled like copper wires.' She wiped her greasy face or, a soft towel and sat at the dressing table regarding herself thoughtfully.. .. A first moment ,.f panic smote her. "What on earth am I;•deing?" Mary 'Kate said, half -aloud. The transparent stockings, were drawn on; she steppedinto the pearl buckled slippers. They lifted her un- expectedly high; it was a-ta11 girl who looked back . at ' her from the mirror. CHAPTER XVI. What New York. Is Wearing BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON Illustrated Dressnailking Lessen Fur- nished With Piney Pattern Her wildly tousled' hair was brush- ed into a shining ' cap of metallic waves. The 'deep ripple of it was lore on her white forehead, just above her dark -blue •eyes;, little wings •of glitter- ing red -gold crept but upon her glow- ing cheeks. The dress went over her head, dee- Tended in a cool ripple of satin, ivory of her ;shoulders rose from the smooth ivory of the gown; the skirt ,stood about her knees in great petals,em- boiilered. with pearls, 'Her '"bedding breasts, the slim -,straightness of her :body and legs were outlined in the lustrous soft lines,'the.pea'rls over her heart rose and sank softly 'with her sudden, ecstatic breath., Mary Kate took the old pearl -neck- lace in her fingers, .clasped. ltoabeut the column of her throat She slipped her linger throughthe ring. Then she stood up, and looked at herself iii the mirror. "Oh, you Marguerite l" she - said, half -aloud, the unwilling dimple, ape peering at her suddenly -curved mouth. The girlie the mirror was Hee-aflame in .an alabaster epp. ' Her cheek* were blazing scarlet, her bitten lip' crimson, the cream of her modelled brew and chin, her ,smooth .throat and swelling bosom ivory, white, flawless and .soft. Against he pure skin the rosy little globules'di the pearls threw opal aha i.ows. The furred. wrap] with its gold and cream quiltings, over her arm, she went out iiito the now• softly lighted living . room; Christopher, very tall and broad and ;mart in full evening dress, was, standing beside a wood fire; smoking. He turned as she came out, and threw his half -finished cigarette into the fiances. "I say—" he •said in a . bewildered voice. He frowned, but there were wrinkles of averted laughter about his eyes 'top. He took a step' or :two to- ward' her, halted, his puzzled gaze not for an instant leaving het. "Say, Mary," he began again. "You look wonderful—you look simply grand. What a swell dress—what a swell you are—" The boyish paucity of his phrases appealed to her ee no sophisticated compliment could have clone, and she laughed in a sort of delighted con- fusion. "Isn't it a,gorgeous dress?" "And the pearls—" he said, admir- ingly. "Why, they Were made for ycu! They were My Steynes grand- mother's, and the ring was hers. She gave them to my aunt, Mrs. Florence, and when Aunt Minnie died, out here in California, last year, she put them in safety deposit for me. "But honestly—" He was still com- pletely taken by surprise. "You are perfectly lovely." "It's the dress," Mary Kate re- peated. It may be partly the dress—it was certainly a find," Chris conceded, studying the details of the perfect whole curiously. "But your hair—and your slippers—I didn't realize you were so tall. You're very tall, aren't you?" "Oh, yes. I'ni as tall as my brother Martin—I'm nearly as tall as Ton." "Weee' Tom?—the fiance?" "No; the man I'm going to marry is named Case Keating. No; Ton'e's my younger brother. Tom's seven- teen." "The youngest?" • "Oh, no. Then comes Tess, and then Regina, and Pat --he's the baby." "And .has—Mr. Keating—ever seen you like this?" Chris saki in his care- less way. She laughed artlessly. "No one's ever seen me like this! I -didn't know this creamy color would be so --well, so-" "Becoming. Why dont you say it?" he asked, as she hesitated. "Beco ling." (To he continued.) es Examined and Glases Fitted. .she stood in the centre of the room Eyes for a moment, panting, her eyes wide DR. H. A. MCINTYRE open, the fingers of one slim hand at DENTIree leer cheek. ' Not a sound anywhere. Or rather, Ofllee over Canadian Nations. Express, rot a disquieting sound. The quiet Minton, Ont, splashing of the fountain was audible Extra—ion a Spe;ialty through the stillness and now and Phone 21 then vague. voices, that might have she had seen a parrct, walking sus - D. H. MCINNES piciously up and down on a perch. in CHIROPRACTOR 'the patio. Now and then a motor Electro Therapist hlasa;eur honked, out of sigh: on the road, be- ornce: Enron St. tFew doors west or mond .the lawn, and the garden trees Coital Bankl• and shrubs. ours—'roes. •rhurs. and Sat., all day. Then the fountain again, splash and Other hours by anointment. Heasstl trickle and splash, Arid always the Office. -110h,. ,Wed. and Fri. forenoons, Searerth Oftiee—•non.. teed. and Friduy soft, incessant plaint of the doves. ar•,h,titnntis. Phone 207. The sun must be almost gene now; CONSULTING ENGINEER :erne leaves outside i.er shutter win- dow were burning blood red. S. V Archibald, B,ASe., (Tor.), Mary Kate went back to the dress- O,L.S., Ltegistered Professional En- ing table and sat down, She took the gineer and Land Surveyor. Associate jewel -boli in her hands; opened it. Member 'Engineering lnstitu:e of Can - meet lay a triple string of rosy, smr,ali pearls, held by a tliamond slash, ride. Office, Seaforth, Ontario, enc had never had real pearls in her GEORGE ELLIOTT hand.: before; she••knew .hese were real. Licensed Auctioneer for the County • Lying in the circle of the pearls of Huron. was a beautiful heavy ring; two great Correspondence promptly answered, pearls guarding an emerald. This was immediate arrangements can be made old-fashioned, too, and the lovelier for for Sales Date at The Flews -Record; that. The girl slipped it on; it fitted Clinton, or by calling Phone 203. perfectly. Charges Alederate and Satisfaction She put all the jewels back care- GaarantMd. fully and begaei an inspection of the B R. HHGG:INS rcom. Books—they looked fascinat- ing; magazines. �iTlren she peeped Clinton, Ont. Life orm, Live Stock, Fire and Life insurance Agent through the open .00r she. could see Cenernl for flaaforand Wnobody„,ear no sound. She made a Automobile and Sickness and Accident timid tittle tour of inspection of the Insurance. illi roe .and Erte and Cana- lower floor, admiring the patio again, da Trust Boucle .Appointments made took from the line of Magazines that to meet parties rt Brimfield, Varna were faced in an overlapping line on and 13ayfield. •Pelee 57, a library table, one or two for her r own anmusemnent. THE-McKILLOP MUTUAL Back in her own room, the door Fre IriStlrance Cocnparty Head of ice. Seaforth, Ont. locked, she removed her dregs and shoes, lay reading on her bed, looking President. James evens, F3eechwaod. at pictures, always with an. odd sense Uie .piesldent, JamesCunuully,lloderich. of excitement and dangerrunning in •UI erture James 5houldice, Walton; her Vei115. Mint Flinn Hullett: Ftobt. Perris, Elul- A darlin house, and a darling let; James llenu.wets. llroadbasen g John Penner. B3rtt ufleld A. B,uiadtoot. 11on... Delicious smells everywhere, Seaforth: e F. \f0Cartney. Seaforth,- • and especially the fro ranee from' the Agents: tV J ',en, NA. No. 3. Clinton: p g' John Murray. Seaforth, James watt, white elms or. her table. There were Blyth; Ed..lL,1,hley, Seaforth, ns and ink on that same tvritili Secretary and 'treasurer: h, F, me,e p.g or Seaforth, table;, she smiled idly Y to think 'how Any money to, be paid piny be paid to nourish Clothing Co.. Cnntun, or at tseless they were to her!' Titer* was Calvin Cutt's Grocery, Gdderich. • nobody to whom Mary Kate could send transactgotherrbusinessrwill beupromptly letter paper heavily :engraved •tvith the att,.nded to on apPlicatton to any o8 the mysterious words "El Hogar.” What. . above offletre addressed to their respeo- gid it mean, anyway? That would be tire post offices. Losses inspected 1;13' the Director who livesnearest the scone.. - a trice, .safe question to ask Mr. Steynes when they came hack weight, It was twenty minutes to seven, and time to dress.- By this time to-morrolv TIME TABLE night she would be at home ie. Moth- , Trains will alive at and depart from er's kitchen again, thrilled' by her Clinton as follows: secret adventure ready to break to Buffalo and Goderlch Div. Mart the intoxicafng news that he Going Oast, depart . •6.44 a.m. night go 'to' Germany with Dr. V 2.45 p.m. Antwerp if h0 would] a GoingWest, ddr` 10.29 Thin.n. She ran bath water into. a pale pink 'r depart 10.24 P.M. square' tub, poured in bath salts, took London, Huron & Bruce the fat little cross stitcher cloth from Going South, depart 7.38 a.n. a ca 4.08 p.m. the rack And wh.." uoapl—delicious- - Going North, depart ' - 0.42 p.m, ly scented with violets, and what a „ ar.11.50 4.3.2.12 p.in, luxury of hot water! American .Admires English Courts Lawyer Practising in London Says Trial of 'a Case is Decorous and Pleasant Tells of Quaint" Customs The English barrister appears to 'be iri a class by himeolf. He cannot sue a client who refuses to pay him for his services and the amount of honorarium for ;handling cases is ar- ranged for 'him by, his clerk. These and other interesting details of legal practice in England are given by an.Ainerihan lawyer practicing in London, P. S• Dyer Smith, who writes about it in The Landniavk,`organ of the English-Spealdng Union. Mr. Siiiith confines' his description of the famous Temple to the observa- tion that it is a legal community, a :place of mellow, old, sunflecked courts, dim ,passages and gardens hidden eway.behind,the buildings on one side of. Fleet Street, The Temple ,contains the "chambers" of'barristers.and'their halls, libraries and 'law sehools. "I used to practice law :on the 26th floor of the Woolworth Building in New 'York,"' continues .Mr. 'Smith. "Everything was :Very efficient, .con- wenieiit' and bustling, Now I have dh'ambers.in the Temple onthe ground tooe:of a sombre,.blackish brick build- ing several' hundred.yeers -old, My room islarge and peaceful, with a cheerful coal fire. The birds are twittering outside. It is •.dignifiecl, if dingy..• "The Temple is nnich the saltie as When Thackeray deserileed Pendennis as living there are complaining about the ,lade :of washing facilities .then. I, to wash, go down the steep :stone steps into the basement, clinging. tei .a rope at ,one side, 'for the stairs are• very dark: Turning into the base- Ment, a little' light is given by tiny gray windows opening just above the flags outside. LAW'S MAJESTY UPHELD BY WIGS. A black canton crepe endorses the wrapped flared tunic skirt. . It's so smart for.Autt. nri wear. The curved Manning and: button trite of the hipyoke are decidedly slim titer orange P&; o teal this in Hair U.i,l r ORANGsE PEKOE_ BLEND 'Fresh £FO r i, 'th " gardens' 760 Tale of "Seven League Boots" Tr = ced ack to Men on Stilts 'Origin of the innumerable myths fen dwellers could move across the and legends of "seven league boots," country much more rapldly than run. shoes of swiftness," and; other similar ning.men;'finding.no difficulty, for ex. aide .to fast .gunning heroes or evil- ample, In cutting off and killing Out. doers are not prophecies of Modern side invaders not equipped with stilts railways or automobiles, Miss Alice B. or in reaching the' outer end of some Gomme, has suggested to the Folk-, road into the marsh long ahead of Lore Society, in London, but are dim fleeing invaders. Many of the legends folk memories of people ,.who once of the "seven league boots". describe 'lived in the fens and marshes of south- their owners as giants, :which would ern ,England and northwestern Eur- be a quite natural conclusion of dwell- -one, and who were regarded with ter- ere outside the marsh land who saw• 'eor : by' tee 'peaceful farmers of the these niarsli men walking along at a nearby solid 'ground because they distance, apparently With their •heads walked on .stilts. •The :fen men habit- 10 or 12 feet above the ground. ' As •wally„ used' .these tall ;stilts, Miss time passed the marsh lands were Gomme suggests, to moveabout in the drained and reclaimed, the use of .swamps sand shallow ponds•and dyked 'edits ceased and was forgotten, but fields of their homes. Becoming' ex-. the memory of speedy fast walking •tremely export :00 these, de the stilt giants persisted, ' took on a •supernae walking shepherds ,et the French sand tural east and became part of general dune : country in .Gascony still are, the European folklore. "I leased my chambers from the ming details. • wig and gown maker, who includes The supple bodice shows slight tete chamber -renting among a number of around blousing. Pin tucks parrow side lines. In his main. business he the shoulders. is 'of cotirso; a necessary adjunct of The dainty flared lace cuffs of the the British law, because British bar- long sleeves make the arms appear risters; as well as 'me bud' the judge, very slender. and' the clerk of the court, all wear law court during a trial is a pleasant Style No. 2561 is youthfully smart gowns and wigs. The judge's trig is and a decorous sight; with the coun- and wearable. distinguished from the barrister's by sel.xnd judges, dignified and handsome It i designed in sizes 16, 18.years, a.diff'erent arrangement of curls. Thus in their gowns and n s stating their 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48 inches are the majesty and the decorum of views in the quiet. meltvoices of Eng-' bust. the law upheld. fish gentlemen, wee consideration The 3o -inch size requires 3?a yards "The wigmaker offered me the emit for the other, all unfailing po- of 39inch material with 14 yard of choioe 'of' space in King's Bench Wall:, liteness. 39 -inch Contrasting. overlooking Temple Garden, Puma a "The Temple is an important part. Fig Tree Court, etc. Pump of the great Brieish inheritance front Crept'. woolen, crepe satin and flat Court, crepe are suitable for this model. Court has no pump, but is a pleasant the past. Its esthetic value s unde- BOW 'TO ORDER PATTERNS . paved quadrangle' with' trees in the niable, and even those to whom effi- Write your name .and address plain centre, and an old sundial. It is near ciency is the sole criterion mist admit ly, givingnumber and.sire .of such the round Norman church' built by the that its final product, British justice, Kni hte'Tem lata in` 1185. Fig Tree is of the highest quality. 'patterns as you want. Enclose 20e in g p Amps or min (coin preferred; wrap Court has 'no fig tree, but it is record- ''The world may be becoming stan- it carefully) for each number, and ed that one flourished there inihe year dardized into a drab, efficient same - address your order to Wilson Pattern 1515- nesse The law may he in process of Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. "Entering the quarters which I changing from a gertlemans profes- finally selected, we first pass through sion into a recognized business with The Dark Pines a ponderous outer doorway, within the ethics of other businesses, Heaven which are painted the names of the forbid that these movements should go This shared .beauty, this cool bark, occupiers Through the entry we much' further! But if they do the This harmony of height and girth, come, in septi -darkness, to the mas_ Temple long will stand. an oasis of These wafted, plumes at heaven's are, sive oak outer door of our chambers, sturdy indiviclualism and of the pleas - Are things of earth, yet not of earth. This, upon knocking, will be opened, ant, leisured, odd' old ways, 'In the by the clerk. desert of change: There bides a Breath upon by brow "A barrister's clerk is a distinctly And in my soul a certain sign, British institution, unlike anything in Else would I kneel, a Druid, now. an Ameriean law affice. HIe stands Idolatrous 'of this dark pine. as a buffer between the barrister and solicitors and others, books all ap- I swear this is no mortal tree. ; pointments and attends to all money No perishable root would dare matters. Stand robed in such sublimity, • "In our case the clerk is a rosy - Exhaling a celestial air. checked, eager young person with temperamental hair, bright eyes and Who drew my dreaming to this hill? a honeyed tongue. He, and also most Who set this snare? A falling cone of the barristers in this suite, are Alone responds. Some ]hidden Will proofs that English people are not Is overshadowing my own. standardized products, as it is said Americans are coning to be, but are strikingly individual. SOME BARRISTERS NEVER • PRACTICE. solicitors and cannot, of course, go out and ask for 'work, •as an advertising -• nt 'would do. • LEGAL PROCEDJRE SURE AND SPEEDY. "Tile English legal procedure eras reformed in the last century, with Keep Xmas Trees in Cool Humid Places 'Ilow to prevent the needles on Christmas trees from falling oft after the result, as all agree, that justice the trees have been purchased is a is .surer, quicker and less impeded by problem with which manyhomes.win. technicalities than in America. •The be confronted during the holiday sea - distinction between barrister and son. The Now York State College of solicitor was retained, however, while i rorestry at Syracuse University sur - it was dropped in the Unites States,] where a lawyer'praetiees all branches rests that the most practicable thing of his profession. to do is to prevent as far as possible "I will not here go into such .quest the tree being placed in a room where thetem- tions, but I will say that an English the atmosphere is -dry and pe%atur•e high. Keep the tree in a humid place where the branches and leaves will not dry out. This may be accomplished by setting the tree out. doors where the sun cannot strike it or in a shed or garage or barn. Even If the tree can be kept in an unheated room of the home until the day before Christmas only slight deterioration will occur before the tree is loaded with its previous freight and glimmer- ing lights. If the tree is kept in such Places until it is ready for use, it will usually retain its verdure over the holidays, The .bigher the temperature in the room and the drier the atmosphere the sooner the, needles will fall off. Sprinkling the tree with water is not harmful and has probably resulted in a longer retention of the needles ori the stems. Setting the base of the tree in water previous to mounting will impart longer life to the needles. In other words, the durability of the tree is largely governed by atmos• ohmic conditions. The sante may be said of Christmas wreaths and other forms of decora- tions made of plants such as ground pine, club moss and holly. Small, lir. ing trees often may be obtained in pots and utilized for ornamental put/ poses during the holidays and success- fully planted later, if not kept too long in the house. Thus, trees used In con- nection onnection with the celebration of Christ. mss may servo two purposes. Atm', ', ATIONAL'HAILWAY My feet are lost; I am waylaid. i There is a Witness watching pie. Beauty from Iter bright balconade Leans like a lilting deity. "The barristers should now be pre - O Being, so superbly seen, 1 salted. I counted ten names on the Betray me not upon the steep. outer door, to my surprise, far it seemed. impossible for so ninny peo- O God this verbevergreen,tople to have table space in these few Beware! I have myysoul okeep. rooms, and actually several of then -Cliiforcl S. Laub*. do not., The barristers' calling is still a gentleman's occupation in England, A Handy Xmas Gift and men with independent incomes A. nice Christmas gift Por a man is study law and become barristers with - a soft -collar case. out ever practicing. They arrange You can make it from any mate- merely to have their names painted rial you like, but a black, or maroon en doors, red, navy blueor brown faille sills "] met a number of these men my case, lined with scarlet, silver or first few days in chambers. Watson , makes a good color combing- is a scholarly looking elderly gentle- betion.igemanwith a white beard. He is also Your finished case can be either an amateur tinker, • at which oteupe• long enough to lay the collars out tion he is more active now, evidently, straight in it; or it ear be long en- than the late. For• sonic time he. came ough to fold them through' the back in each day with a now idea for lteerr- and have ample space for them that in'g my lire from smoking.. He wecl�ged way. • .The majority of cases fold the Erebricics in the sides of the fireglace, collar, but if a man Is fussy, and and later whittled a long stick, which ' that crease he forced into a crack in the front would be bothered with through the contra of the back, make sheathing- But the fire still makesmokerd him a long one. until the clerk consulted the wig, For the fall -sized case, have it fin- who sent for a chimney sweep. irked to measure 17 or 18 inches "1 also met Garvin, 'a portly gentle - long, not counting the flaps that fold°.maiie who donies in regularly to ail over and,tasten. • Out both the, out- inner 500111, reads letters, telephones side and the inside of the case twice bbs'brokrer, and thelgoes for the d'ay, that long and from 12 to 16 inches He shares his coon e with Whitely, who' wider Fit a 'piece of cardboard in chiefly acts as counsel in 'Poor -Per- through thecentre and stitch the case sons' Cases' under the new divorce all around the gardboard to hold it law. This work, however, Mots him in place. 'Then cut out the corners, more in out=of-pocket expenses than he so that the flaps fold down over the 'gets' from it. the o aside edges ".To complete my tubulation, Craw - 1 collars and stitch t ei', i n who a,c • i nrathem ti a 11 nt ' a ri a F v u rid. on is b , ,: all ono ' but does t ' .Unaversi •e t London lectures a Y +� To fasten You can put on a fancy • :Y When It Was Dark The gas company's 'htspeetor call- ed on the •busy housewife to repair a defect in theltghting apparatus. "You're not always troubled with poor light, are you?" ire asked. "Oh, no," replied the housewife; "not always!" "Ah," murmured the inspector, "I thought so! It's only at certain times—eh?" Yes; only after dark,' cane the retort. — <,0: iiF�B Hereditary Little Peggy was often very naughty, and on one occasion, viten she had been particularly trying, her, mother, hoping to be specially items - sive, said: "Dc you know, a cbbu> -^- -- keep on doing many naughty thhiings, Your children will bo naughty, The child gave a triumphant smile. "Oh, mummy," she said, "now you have given yourself away: button and loop or you can use the little legal work. Palmerston is a "I always have a feeling that George serviceable snapper. Member of Parliament, who uses the "I'm chambers only as a forwarding adc will disappear late in the autumn and we won't see him again until spring." .rf dress. Vernon is a kindly, whimsirsal "What a peculiar notion. Why?" Hummngll man, a specialist in ecclesiastical law, EIe's such a bear:" The -landlady dashed upstairs. veyances of churchyards. The dining -room bell rang, fiercely, who spends much time in drawing con er was com laining bit- "What Is It?" she asked Iter only , "It may be as well to state that un - An old farm 1? der the Britieht legal system some trly to the minister' of the terrible boarder.berristers bad weather for the crops, when the "I' want to speak to You about this command arege treemsely buwhilesy niany latter reminded him that he had much egg," said the boarder. to be grateful for, all the same. "And "Well" she said, "what have you lyhupon.tre lthbl vee n omesveA bar- reniember," said the good .man, "Pro- to say? tester vidence •mires for all. Even the birds "Listenreply.'the ` eggthefirst, telmlme itadame' given isonempetaiined a by centime, fawn, of of the ale are fed each day. "Aye, was s replied the farmer, darkly, "Orf my you. think there is anything useful I ISSUE No. �}y-x-`30 eor-n:' eau add." ATLANTIC CITY.N. . Just Off the Boardwa.k Fireproof Construction On a Residential Avenue I•rarntonious, restriil surroundinge. with recreational advantages. European Pian tram $4 Daily American Plan from $7 Dalry WEEKLY OR SEASON RATES 071 APPLICATION E1. , N? • Don't be helpless when, you suddenly get a headache. Reach nl ediate for immediate inyourpocket v relief. If you haven't any Aspirin with you, get some at the first drugstore you come to. ,Take a tablet or two and be rid of the pain. Take promptly. Nothing is gained by waiting to see if the pain will leave of its own accord. It may grow worse! Why postpone relief? There are many times when Aspirin tablets will "save the day." They will always ease a throbbing head. Quiet a grum- bling tooth. Relieve nagging pains of neuralgia or neuritis. Or check. a sudden cold. Even rheumatism has lost its terrors for those who have learned to ° depend on these tablets. Gargle with Aspirin tablets at the first suspicion of sore throat, and reduce the infection. Look for Aspirin on the box--. and the word Genuine in red. Genuine Aspirin tablets da not depress the heart.