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The Clinton News Record, 1926-08-26, Page 6
ypiarselt ECTIV U it . iik:I9y31 . .vry ak.NKrn a bright bras• Binnacle had been set ijnp. T eae W¢re ehoi=4 and llv, that wheele,;lope•, bra• ra , og , ®. . celideivable thin tee ilia od 1 fialdijatil. 'rhrongli the wif _ _ R ve a di\ughi} glihtpsee bf• 'the•o� TileY throd h two headlands the tt1ti de {s pass . arbo . `n he ival. a w ou rliYue had pahatings of t$ia.s, nd st1E rear the :lose s d1 a eat, ign time Reco' C1o"c •t :heir• j t . , n ez s til !S•}i� ', dd ee.,: to interest Kelilled" 4 11itibil , Ie. 1 'think Keil,, b lied ''tio.ertii ,,, ibr era1. But the` hts5 r i�Aeei :' ill Ei- g j� 4 : ei night. These Stec'` didh . em gh ?s aces; l�r;><ne�y ni ht` It ; o°-. ai, , s 1 at +�a wv ,ere s� 2 P c 8 cold hith o c it... • nod t�esfre F.'k :�li y d'Ir Y d. ? omits ed a t lt. tea t� is fin sniff.:: acs _ e( his • I e� h n f � Y �the i 'ii' 8 one ' thin eitl diff sand x.'d' s h •,. Mae. dl . 'The h` "'r" taltlt h fed: pairh. a Thee 11 it "If anyonr° asks who we are doing,. res we are Pocking eye the 'privdte. din - tee ing rooms," he winked, - "We are ex - :and pest1 ng to re a ba?nduet to .a select alt a nu'nber of friends. at. the Club.!' one in rfered thou' h And little No � g ough we -did, actua:,y find in OUT explore - seen, tion upstairs a very attractive private he di ing reign, ere too Wan another radio and that again interested ffair OrAist. What chiefly i, terested hint _ for Orel moment 'WWI thh Ile one was punver hi the a�cord andyyl1ii b had limn us Iia enter.gat atiate 'With Iiia Rae trained stoat on ' a t et us aidmo e� ti then -know if ' d ` BD 1�0 . n yu omastarted a syl:tematia Moire of the cad- r bot a.n . aerial alt ' ha& Nubian. a sr"That's a ,and utt roc to place cam he stood over i�t fi� co at eoPieen andexa iiiad t�, outfit up those-1hare,Did �tsNga t mate Wats and- t7a. for Me int ' the eaves Aar o *is q, in fire,Gpp degs a nage on an' 1 i ar- tlstid Thie urachi ha� byi mitiy bean the den of the bias 'Sae to which' e k h Acid ret re away frdiii the other ntem- bers of the household, yet over -looking the sea.. I could insi gine that many a financial coup had n diem/fed out over the fire, in that fireplace. Kennedy. was oak, by7, a cedar chest on the other side of the room. It had a leek on it, but the 1pelt 'was simple and required fie-espec ia$ skill to manipulate, The temptation was too giseet to expidre tb, Kennedy manipulated the look, r He dived htlto the chest sad runz- ma ed arouird `among a few things ill "Rere's a 'e& eras-autographie-- and a pretty -gee one, -There's some other st+atffff, a ri'S sweater, 13y T g Wear that. And Jin ve• leen Viitit here's' a clams ei"lliey of • Rockledge, class of '20, that I timid s'rWear be- 10.gid to Gie " Buckl6j. 'That s justivhy X came 1t re, shy I wanted to look around.- I was burs this was a batkeut et times of those young per' on Was a bit New. This' did noase him • mach. They had never taken the into their confidence. But than he had not been. a sport. t all went to show that no matter how intimate you may be with peo- pie newadayif olio neer oats tell what elsethey may have in their Jives ybu4e not know anything about. " lesith edy summaging 'about had brought up a tell of - film. it gage, hlim as idea. He looked again. at the camas., "Set for slumber five, abet to he taker:, 1 *ink I'll lest slip abet* lead of partly. e, seed film out avid to t along. There's no teilidg what Information it may con- tain When detreloped. -kid we may Tqt get this 'ol 01in/city seen again, hid @fay 1}A evidence: ' Easton' Was atilt ever by the radio alj4 lyis by the freplaoo when we e hear a sudden ekelamaiion from Ien. C ate softiy closed the lid of the cdar cheat _and restored the leek,, so that it would give no mark of tam- pering • "What IS. it, Ken?" he 'whispered, "Someone ceraleel" -. "No. Look!" The boy was • point- ing but of •the Window in 'the threes do of: the' month of the barber. " "There's the 'Scooter' 1" • We gathered about the window and pecked out 'ever the bay, Sure enough while we had :been waiting the scout cruiser . Which we -had really come to forestall had slipped up and wet an- chored'off'thesshore. Now -from whore we Vete we could gee a tender put- ting Off from it 'unit starting for the shore., Prom oar vantage point Ken- nedy took in the lay of the lead.- ' In front of the Binnacle the 'land had been buikheaded out and filled , in. k"rom' that point huge conereta piers has been built to entry a dock and out at the end of the dock web a runway and float. Everything was there to invite yachts of deep draught to land oven at low waiter. No• won- -der the Binnacle was -popular to tour- ists by' car Or boot. • he tender with its pretty fast tt1e engine ivas headed' apparently off: ttjo In it wore two sailers t is ,. ,4,*an�q •Ky ' A$' en<j 1 feel e4 a dyaig won-' dei ngi what �:ia to ttke, . We : tight' %ie )Ij y51 here hilt Oleo we cQuld c�o 1 o • d, We "Mild not glrike co sate Diek. Kelinedy looked• up the thoio.` There Wei- a fIne read, which svtept its way down to the dock; and then tpriied:send proceeded telmlg filo shore self, bov.�h alive, othggr fief ai}ly y Vire. ulI" next Hver yl tell fed nee. the had own sing his Kon Pen nisi - hut. Tied. areh ns ray. d.Jte ooula news; Invot ad t lis • came a ear swan chid y •mss, e eve- s ape• sffreer: d clear, off t" few he , some - looked wn the nd land tchthg 'et in on ay from las horns up aerie What partite- of 'Ruth roached, over the mbeeaded totidn't 5010." , ' Tlhat;s o, Conte to Bin, . a piece fid req -- ace tie2f wee ttly lig (tests ameatad ungalow, been eo- n which i a" fort of '-. • "'The plan lnuat' be to tram til' Min, from the 'Scooter' where he is ]mown water, to be ee the gray iacoe that hag been camouflaged, then to whim whisk h away air in to some -few hiding pace on land." 1 �. After le This Ilennedy was trying to pierce it o- , )� nVeRy meal oui; and gather. "That mean, that the gray ,,,,...4•1'0.1.„,„,,,,,i, -' 1 a ship,„ .,sear will have to approach from .this •e reties shore, road. If we can keep under •r';` . 13&Ug fro 2q : 'E©. hr room soya of 'those leashes, then get basic 1 . a 2+lhrp lige at ba^lr 2zo Where ! .<• eanu,rt n2, „o rem el the". the.pigt4ce;;•�D` � ' ilf t or the eiii t e linty be,ab;ro to ' het -wrier.' iiherti :s they land y Phcre mre tee S_4 mean C 1'stae:ier'e wo can do it: t o 8 t dowit ti under rover , FAMILY ORATOR, �S .OWN SPEEC iE chi r l , _ tons Cp' �lvs D2Cta 4e °Pell Drafts ?'a�OIte ., Colrtililete C p Zia Peelt il' end IZ.elu omen es Piga hed Pled awt 1 ' at H otyte. Bast lander is� &ening adoi1tl 4i''e, Made our way quietly die zi- strl' Ay and again intmeged to do so i itgbut beim~` aeon Outside it was ctttefl yot.. Ther, lima ,no one to say nay if ',Ye, were sen there, -for lite¢ A'rounrs were alnitiat'like n park &nd e jaun,ic had access to them. aea titbehind the luxuriant lilac e rye rbm the Inn down to the dock, ahiiged to got acres::: the gal he- iiketn that and the bath houses,- and • id'aicd P•S61471i fiul; ",. 7o stcion- of- `lie bathhouses thhouses T Could eco that along the shore where 1,11,e shore-.drlvo turned front the' dock there was a heti wall conip'etin the bulkhead and bas l'on it the drive lowered to the-ievel Of t e beach i$self runnhig along well ip yond the ii#ias ofseagraes:and that showed high water Mario. e tender lad of up to the ihja • et tl e Find 6f tile cloth nd net* !Pe. 1 ori d Make iat the, fee Lick, Alert a#iyl "o OM ev .be ing cy3teni as Conte, lead Jtii'li i 3z 8 tiaa 8f M p'4 t1 .N li4 t o sir,:tW bth i' tie tt 4. n The 4il.' 'faTddW catvn },eve ?heti, hall i$¢ed the i i iii iiia �` alt lessa at Was a. nieflien€ at reg Ikea Wit o# the attention o at fwd'li the engine, the d the redder '{To be eontinned). LIFES KEYNO The:keynote is thn'note which 'dem-` inatee; controla, orders;' sustains, eels has; sthd harmonizes ;e piece of music. Love his been called life's keynote, because it does tor lite what the 'key - nate does for a tune: It glues to both diel 1 • piton. • P Lave is a -word often "soiledo 1ed by an ignoble use -Men speak of love who, have not' the vaguest inkling. of - its meaning. 1t it one of the: reiraclee of language, that the Word love; des - Hite. this, has retained its rank among 'the great little words of the English tongue: It is too good to spoil; It is too great to be spoiled. It ha's two eonuotations. "One ie in- dividual,' exclusive, selfish, It is bet - tel' called •passion. - The- ..:other; ie uni- versal and heirless. It is better called God. Its true meaning Is the latter- the way the Bible uses it, and which aurn o a asst t, called the spirit o'E charity. • ' When the music of the world is set to this keynote, harmony will afevail. There will be no -discord, ri-' *are Will cease, It is the poet's dream that - New arts shell bloom .et Softier mould, And mightier meek thrill the: skies; And every life shall lie a sang, When all the earth is Paradise, But, sad to say, itremalns-a dream— a splendid dream which has fired the Imtfgination, "inspired the tongue, warmed the heart, °and nerved the sinews -of good men aid women from the dawn of history. , What Was it set the pitch of such lives aa those of John Howard, who're - formed the bestial prisons -of Eurdpe; of Jahn Wesley, who said that the world was his parish; of Wilberforce, who freed the slav'ce; of Livingstone, who died for Africa and ie that con- tiuent's true maker; et Bunyan, who .saw the Celestial City'aed described ft, ; of Shaftesbur the friend ot'the Y, City "arab"; of Florence Nightingale, the Lady of the Lamp; of Sister Dora, the Angel of the Wards; of Katherine Booth, the friend of thepoor; of Nurse Cavell, who. said that patriotism was net enough,.. because it was love of country and hot love of mum? • The,keynote of such lives was that spirit of love which Is embodied in our word "philantuyopist," which means; litorelly, "g lover of • iankind." The old, s'o'ng -writer said: "'Tis love that makes the world go'round," and he said truer than he knew. Love hats saved the world ten thousand times, and *II1 save it again,` because nothing else can. Hatred, mistrust, envy, greed—these are love's antipodes, love's bitterest anomie&; but they have never succeeded -1n killing her, and they never will, But the trouble ie that these things are, militant, , We aro apt' to teminlze love. Tbeyaro alviays' on the War- path—scheming, working'for their own ends: Levo is apt to sit at home, to be unaggressive. 'There is no greater mistake,., for Lova.fe a Conqueror. It le.no carpet - knight. it le a groat and mlgl{ty fighter. It sees injustice and sn ttes it; it sees tyranny •and-. subdues it; , It sees exploitation of the weak and devilish cruelty, to the helpless, and it agrees to the rescue with tiering words and dauntless heroism.' Pu'rthermoris, love is the. biggest SUeees, on earth, It never fails• And we have the highest authority for that assertion. The .only trouble is that it is sa.saldom tried. • It snakes them. it's :euro ' w- firth while. 13y waiter T„ Roberts In talring'the clta1r at' the opening 01 the -British Assoeiatlon at O:ford on I Auguot 8 -and' i 1 ntaltfug the prosidell- tiaispeecll the Prince{ of• Wales did something,tNat no 'Prince of Wales has y•et . d•ons. The last, member. of the notes, Ialien•ho is wtiat may ho called "part" perfect in -the speech he xv hear hes it In the presence of a Pew [nein begs of his household, and tbo,ppoeoh is then ready for delivery. St may 13e meitiloned that tris Prince nt'Girelotl bas not since tile end of the roy:il family to take,. the chair was War aliowosl any one to . rite flit- 1';•lnce Albert, tris'husband-of Queen speechesfor him. Irl this practice he 'Victoria, The speech has been a dif- follows•the example of his father, who flehit one for the Prince to propai o, ds h'S'5 ahvays composed his own, apeeell-' ft meet of.noressity ,deal witlh modern zea although Thug ,Edward irivariablj� scientific developments, loll tho,corpesitioii'ofhis ep,eedhes'58 - 2 n others, � Two -Speeches Were Difficult. • In his earlier day the Trines of vA'u es teas beset with an eictreardinarj+ nervoillittdtif3-which marled his seederiy, _es ast soniefimes -rendered them al- most sihiete111gdhle to his tiudiando lad* he bed Tate conquers$ tblq nes`-. 'rt-uanalib and barring, the fact that a4. dasiobally fro aliolvs.;his voios to " to rather+ ton low, bid 0 esoline flee sisit for hie flardienee to fbItovy, rife th ¢ la;.a tnef icliotfaness in hies dslho tlti'sb makes hiul'pleasantto,114tenti. There• are two 'speeches which the. Prins regards •,as the most ctillialt Pfte Prince, has had to be especially\ he had aiatie, One was -made •shortly careful In the preparation of hid alto, 'his eight), birthday et a lunch epee;eh al the British Aasoeiatio'hjt party given In his honor by a -lady wiio prhieh will be delivered to scirantists Of lyse - a:.friend of 'Qteen Marji, thelia: o T - k.Theladyhad sena w r d 'isle- .re reputation- and gill be' Duchess 'f •Y'or d W �p w o broadcaat theeitalhout the World. 'ales a silver sword to the '?rhes�r u ife Prliice sole 11 radthe-draft t 1 rain t -hie- fat era dii•aotio a r e of this cording. ,o speech three tunes to- experts before had to express ilia, t ankh tdtina1 ' toffy he 'was advised that the technical mat- the gift at the eenciusion sit' the l',n h, ter it contained was eoireet. 'She -'Prince' stolid,' upon a' 'abate Aird' When the ;draft of a speech of this with corieiderable dignity and ]ctud' is completed the I'rinee writes in clear voipe said: • "I-- thadi l*$u Yery en beautiful• p cls. the whole of the epeecli- he in- greatly-Ror giving me sGo71- tends to deliver and learpe-it byheatt, Sword, -t shall always keel itand•shall for he rarely delivers. a speech' froni always remember•this pleasant party,"• This, however, is not by any men s thea first tune in which the Prince of Wales has had to speak on subjoots of Which ilea 'knows little. His praotioo in propene rsuch a speech•is tb set the tea terial from experts on the subject inraiu the natallel s supplied lad makes ion h l yxift of the db@cell fie dictates this aVa2i, to a sliorllailicl wslte -When the draft is corit[rlefod at least two of the experts whom Jae has consult -ed are summoned, to 'York klouse again, wlisn the Prince reads the draft to'hoat fat order to see /hat there aisle rib t%hlitisinl afore._ Speech to be Beendcastf':. Aches in ,the. Wrong Place! Mother. While the hands and .arnhs seem to I can see yegi, Mother, walking daily be doing most In a gamo of tennis, 1t • in your garden, - • is in the legs that fatigue leaflet felt. Dropping tender ' -benedictions on each Thin sort of thing bolds good in near- tiny fioWer; ly,aU games, 'as well as in the various Gently whispering. be the backward forms of -manual labor. It is not the : slant a word of courage, most used muscles that are most sub-. With that .tender patience, e11 your sect to fatigue, but rather those that . own, which never tires. are r kept under tension though doing comparatively little Work. Mother, nowhere glows there such a If you watch a man' sawing he :teems place as glows y6ur garden, to be. Using mainly his arms and Where bobm side -by side the summer shoulders. Yet in sawing, it is the long the smiles of heaven, • muscles of the calves of the legs that Shedding fragrance rare,bestowing are thet'color,joya n ss firs to give. out, and en the and glad e next day the unpractised sawyer feels On each •weary wanderer who passes - very stiff In the loins. It is the. same Y by your- door. •- with rowing. The muscles of the eaivee and of theinstepare most severely taxed during early training. ' ' it is .perhaps to be expected that af- ter fter the first day's bunting of the sea- son;a man ehould complain of stiffness in the thigh muscles. But it is not ee clear why, after a dance, the musoles that suffer most are those of the back and shoulders. On the other hand, in playing golf fatigue begins in -the legs, So far as the•erms and'shouldere are concerned, one might go •on roundafter round Mother,' I was once a tiny" Hewer in your garden, • In that garden full of metherlove, tan - der, guiding care, Where the songs were deep:felt praise; and all your took, Were bless- lags, Which bred courage, stoadtastneee and trust in things above. 14luch I love and thank you, Mother, still I am your debtor For the years that came and went, and Without. any sensation of tiredness. ' _yet ate here to come. It ie,.tlte, same with people who work Ativags must 1 Mesa you for the tested - It standing at a bench. lug and the tending, The writer once spent mouths pack. ]'or the toll and sacrifice, your garden ing oranges—packing up to seventy work of •lot*e: boxes a ,day—during which elms he —Kath rle a Asgard, handfet and wrappee aonio-fait thous- and orange"a. It was his legeand es- peeially his feet that sea -erect not his cr.ns•or hands. In the same way the .baker suffers from leg fatigue and often front vont-. °Dae veins, while the muscles ,of arms. and shoulders, thong$ they seem to be doing all the work, do net tire et ail. / On the other !land, a blacksmith finds 11��1 11 4''hi that bee back aches after an unusually ' hard day's ,wont, 1 -t,c•iu. In fencing, the muscles that i1ret feel Her -Cold Faot. fatigue are triose of the right shoulder, . white in violin Playing it 1s the left , "i?1'd amu get cold feet when. you first hand that 1s the first to suffer, .But a thought of asking your wife .to marry young violinist who le still learning You?" - says that after herd practising rte -finds "No—got 'eta after I married her." that his neck'atuscles have gone atilt, ell Diamond Found. aeneaing a wag day o£ fly fleeing the _neck muscles: stli ee. Yet in ay A six -karat red diamond of a marc fishing ail the work is done with the., type has been Potted at the Kimberly riglht'arm, and principally from the eV dlanmrnd mines., bow. I One of the tete pursuits In whet the Besides the Xing, tial Duke of St expected happens ia...ordinary digging, •'Albans has the -right of driving in a which produclis the ache Just where carriage down Rotten Row, in Hyde the strain has been greatest --namely ,Park, because he holdt the hereditary in the small ot the back.—B, T, C. !Make of Grand 'Fniconer-of•Dngland. • ,�...a=m A tetdepoozi}Eul a ixret6.,46,6#1, the�b6�o : for05tteit4ii iteetifttr§ the Gilleft'e j1ya (ma' trll Cleaning merit dilagn9'e!geag . veal Mitre a��eroiiv -. 4200 • PLAIT'S EIlIPI;1A �!7RAIGHT L SbuETTPI. Ai o -ea is -featured in 7 plsy t ed1 h fig elle Ce• r5eft tasltioneci of'.flgutced t;'re - rio dice' 'section b s .on cin -Dined r 8' j to h l64 bP"18. at the frerit, which iii ns" 1 s ai u�c s by uioans'of 'doubts i nye ' d units. :!Ph bank i , oak a 'plain, � e a 1 1... P , tsd bn full alcoves And #mat :he joined to the klnhond shtiidllders. The convertible collar It : fashioned of, a darker -tope materiel zuat' Clhin g the pateh pockets; which P acoan 4row tie belt 0.124i i" � la in s ze ii _ d 8c 98, 40 an 42 inches frust. _Size i (a bust requires .8% yards 30 -inch, or 2ari yards 54 - inch material, :i•'rice 26 cents: The .secret of. distinctive dress lies 1n aood taste rather than a lavish ex - peed -aura of money. Every woman should want to make her own clothes, and the home dressmaker -will find the designs jllastrated in our new Fashion Pook'to be practical and simple, yet maintaining the spirit of the mode of the moment. Price of the book 10 centst copy. he HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address' plain- ly, giving. number and size of such patterns as you want. . Enclose ,20e In stamps or solo (coin preferred; wrap 3t carefully) each h u d eddrese your order tb Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co-, 73 West Ade- laide St., 'Toronto. Patterns, sent by return Mail. The Call. In the shade of a beautiful wide- spreading tree, 'Bat. Alice and Joseph and Annabelle Lee, _. Who waited politely for Richard and me. I dressed in my very best dress, for you sec, We were the.. guests at their Five O'Olock, `ea: • The tea was not tea, but the best lemonade,' The cakes were delicious; and wore eorved by the maid.' We eat very still, and our voices were low; .. We were pleasing our families,' who certainly know ` That geod manners aro needed, each our of the day; Butttright at my side, I saw the swing sway So lightly and free to the soft sum- mer breeze, While I longed for a ride through, the great leafy, trees. Then I thought of my blue gingham dress, right next door, And the bat and the shoes which I usually wore.' When 41I of a sudden I heard Joseph • sigh m As he glanced at hie pumps, andhie Very best tie. ' Then I smiled, so did,-A•:ice, and Annabelle rose. "Let's play games," elle said quickly. "But we'd best change ottr c.othes." • - Elizabeth . Mallory. There is a 'real sigsiidcance in a patch on the trousers, whether . 15 he en the knees .or en the seat, Tho one •spells piety,anil industry and the other laziness.; Tourists in Jaepet Park Preparing for a ride tip one of the monnta Mg, regarded as the' greatest scenic playground in the world. testa, The Canadian Rockies are bo-> A Contrast in &oris. August is web; generally, In 2cot-1 land, but when you are !n"Scotland yo'u, Won't mind rain, or had better not;' .. °And the ;Seottish-summer twt4 lights are things to'remeinber. They are overdone fit Norway,` where they go behind the hill for five minutes •and begin, the day -before you have thought of'going to bed, `rod can't keep•tliat' up, -tut it isestelttng enough at flr'st,l The great chain$ ` of the •Norwegian), Strminer to Me' 14 that It include& yt•hat.- we :MI): Spring. The other season:,' bo that cbnwtry.is Winter,: thiols .begins "le September and aids with foray.' Then, immediately Slimmer beglliell'_ the 'grass gyoyle and is ready fer.the scythe, •the, cherries flower and get ripe and are erten--all atonce. you get those amazing contrasts there which you only have in mountainous eountries; which I remember • most vividly crossing the. Cevennes from Le Puy to Atlas.' On the watershed I was picking daffodils, only just ready to be picked;. in the valley, of the Ardeche they were making hay, and rowed were dusty • in the hedges: I slid froni March 'Into June-.jn twenty minutes. Yo' wi o it t be i n o d1 u a de n Fan Hq g land; yet if •your taste ilea in the way et strawberries; for instance, yen can do pretty -work even In i8ngland, Yoe can begin In Cornwall,: or, %Clay, and have your first dish in early May, or late April,, with clotted cream of course,- Then you can eat your, way through the western shires to llamp- sbire .. , In Susie a you osn go on to.the, Pena and find them ready for you ineferly July. In August you will find them at their best hi Cumberland, and in' October, weather permitting, you will have them on your table in Scotland.' Altar that, if. you really care for strawberries, you must leave, this kingdom, and perhaps go to California. I don't know. The Summer will give you better berries than the s•trawberriee, in my oppinfer:, It will give. you the wild' stfawherry . Than there is the bilberry, which wants cream and a great deal of t wth•brush afterwarde, awd .the blueberry, which grows in Cumberland above. the two thousand - foot mark, just whore the Stagehorn Moss begins; and the wild raspberry which here is found t n tho tops of the hills,. and in Scotland nt the bottoms,' In Norway you wi11 have the erauberry and the sastorberryl but in Norway you will want nothing so long as there are oherriee. 'I know Kent very well—but its cherrioeare not as. good' as those of Norway:—Maurice Hewlett, in ,'Last Essays." Vale. This was the heavenly hiding place Wherein the spirit laughed a day, All its proud ivories and fires Shrunk 10 a ehoveifulof oley. It must have love, this allenh earth, • To leap up at the King's desire, Moving in such a noble dance Of wreathed ivory and fire. It 1011 not stir for mo at a1.1, - Nor answer Sae with voice nor gleam: Adieu, sweet-memoried dust, I go After the Mester for the dream, --A. "E. � ux _,Caun red m geute- asge onqer Cate in the 'marled awash., ing your deinty'lingerie will ' repay •you in much lonaeg service. Mild, pure,bubbhng LUX. suds will not harm a single delicate thread—Rill not dull the gloat delicate colour. - Subst itfttes ,are xpensive Cd?1L • ' way . you look •/'it it' Lc^vcr Brothers Limited Is- . 2 Toronto