The Clinton News Record, 1927-10-13, Page 2CLINTON
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,
!G. IL 'BALL, ' M. R. CLARg,
Proprietor.. Editor,
it MeTAGGART
; BANKER
A genet:AI Banking Suainess traneact
Notee Discoutited. • Drafts Issnerl.
Interest Allowed on DePositea '841°
Notes Purchased.
H. T. RANCE
Notary Publics, coneeyaricere
Financial, Real Estate aad Fire id
surance Agent. Representing 14 Pile
Insurance Companies.
Division Court Offtce, Crinton.
•W. BRYDONE
earrister, Solicitor, Notary Pubile, etc.
Oftleei
SLOAN BLOCK • CLINTON
DR. GANDIER
Office alenrs:-1.30 to 3.30 p.m., 6.30
tO 8,00 p.m., Sundays, 12.30 to 1.30,e.m.
• Other hoe's by appointment ouly.
Office and Res' Wenn, VIctoria St
DR. •FRED.G. TI-IONIPSON
Office and Residence':
Ontarid Street - Clinton. Ont.
Ons door west ot Anglican Church:
•Phone 172. eu
Eyes exaniined and glasses fitted.
DR. PERCIVAL HEARN
Office and Reeidence:
Huron Street• Clintot, Ont.
Phone 60
.":(Forruerly occupied by the late Dr.
C. W. Tbompson).
Eyes -Examined and Glasse:: Pitted.
DR.
DENTIST
Office hours 9 to 12 AM. and 1 to
6 except- Tuestlays and Wedues-
attys. Office over Canadian National
Zepress, Clinton, Ont.
Phone 21,
DR.F. A, AXON
oeivrts-r
Clinton,, Ont.
Graduate of C.O.D.S., Chifiege, end
11,,C.D.5., Toronto:a '
Crown and Pla
te week a, specialty
,
D. H. IVIelISTNES
Chiropractor—Electrical Treatme,nt.
Of evingliain, will be 'it the Opininer.
eial•Inn, Clinton, on IliondaY,Wednes•
week.
day and Friday threithens of each
Diseuses et all kinds succeseralle
bandied.
it-1eem:0d Auctioneer tor tha County
ot Huron.
Correspondence promPtin answered.
Xramedlate arrangements can be made
to -Sales Date at The Nowa-Record,
Ointon, or by calling Phone 203.
Charges Moderato and Satter/zeta:fa
Guaranteed.
OSCAR KLOPP
leaner Gradaate Carey Jones' Natiottal
Selina ef Auetioneering, Chicago. Spa.
eat tours° taken in Pure Wed Live
Steck, Real Estate, Merchandise and
Parin Sales. Rates ine keeping with
prevailing market. Satisfaction as -
leered. Write or wire, Zurich. Ont.
- Phone 18-93.
R. HIGGINS
clinten, Ont.
Gdneral Fire and Life IneuraneoaAgent
fog Ilerttord Windstorm, • Live Steck,
Automoblie and Sickness and Accident
Xneurance. Ithrou and Eric) and Cana-
da Trust Bonds. Appointme0t:9 made
to meet partice 5.1 •larticetield, Varies
cued. Beate:el. 'Phone pl.
• TIME TALE
Trains will arrive at and depart fir,Om
Clinton as follows:
Buffalo and Goderieli Div.
poing Neat, depart • 5.44 dm,
Goleir, 'West, ar. 11.60 a.m.
e ar. 6.08 alp, 6.53' pen,
Leaden, Huron ee Bruce, Div,
Going flown, ar, 7,50 dp. 7,56 am.
" _
geeing North, depart 6.60 p.m,
ar. 11.40 " 11,51 a.m.
The IficKillop Wititual
THE Four] N.la TELLER.
BEGIN HERE. TO -DAY.' England; followed and persuaded him
I. jonquelle greatest of French until, in his ill-healbh, you got,this
tale 'of a crime that took piece' years ago, When Marshall fell ill, you ker-
ne diary tell how the son of Pey-
ton Marshall stolo his tatheral will mao
the will remained and where it
because he believed hie father at his wasa You made sure by. pretending
.death ht been strangely influenced te write letters in this room brieging
fiy the Eg.nishman, Gosford, and your p,ortf olio evitb ink and pen and
had left his $50,000 estate all to Coe- a pad of paper.. Thee, at Marsha -flat
ford instead of keeping leis promise death, yeti ingaireci of Lewis for and leaving his son $30,000. The son ineasurea to discover the dead man's
adreite he thole the and surrenders'
it to the executors who are gathered will, And when you find the room
M 'the plantabion library with Go, fansaekede You rem after theeleeeee
foiel and the old doctor, Gaeld. • My father paused.
GO ON WITH THE STORY. ":1 t a your paat, i at Mr Gosford.
CHAPTER, III. • Now let me tell your future. I sea
you in joy at the recoveeed will. I
see 'you pleased' at your foresight '
"Gosford," he said, "what scheme Dare you urged on lalarshall to leave
•detectives, reads from a diary the will. You saw it written two years
ago in ror-°ff "Virginia' ; ried here, learned from the dying man
It was My father who broke the
111
silence.
a. getting a (Heed bequest, and at the
were yoa and Marshall about?" no evidence of his plan, lest the
"You maY w0nfler, sir," replied the authorities discover it. For X see,
Englishman, continuing to write his lar. Gosford, that it was your intena
• notes; "1-shail; net UR tion all along to • keep ,this 'sum •
-"But I will -tell you," said the boy.
"My 'father tilt:eight that the states
in this republiceould not hold togeth-
er .61 -yr much longer. He believed
that the country would divide, and the
South set up a separate government.
He hoped this might come abut with-
out.a war. lie was in horror of war.
He had•traveleae he had seenenations
and reaa their bIstoree and he knew
what they were talking when they
urged war."
lie paused and looked at (tosford,
"My hither was convinced that the
South would finally set up are inde-
pendent government, but be lived a
war migat not follow. 'Ile :believed
that if this new government were im-
mediately recognized by Great Bri-
tain, the North would accept the 'in-
evitable and there would be no blood-
shed. My fataer went to England
with this selfeme. He met Mr. Gos
fead so -neva -Lore -eon the ship, I think.
And Mr." Gosterel succeeded in con -
1i -hieing my father that if he had a
sum of money lie could win over cer-
tain povrerful persons' in the English
Gevernenent, and So pave the way to
an immediate areco'gnition of the
Southerit Republic by Great Britain;
He followed my father home and
hung about him, and 'so finally got
his wilt My father was careful; he
Wrote nothing; Mr. Gosford wrote no-
thing; there is no evidence' of tine
plan, but my father told me, and it
is true,"
My father stopped byathe table and
lifted hiseggeat shoulders.
"And so," he sad, "Peyton Maee
shall imagined a plan like that, and
left its execution to a Mr. Gesteed!"
The Englishman put down his pen
and addressed ray father. - •
I would advise you, sir, to require
little proof of your ,conclusions.
¶tthitt is a very pretty story, but it is
prefaced by an admiseion of no evi-
denee,;and it comes as a special plead-
ing' for a criminal act. Now, sir, if
chose, if the bequest regale -id it, I
could glyeei further explanation, with
more substance; of meneys borrowed
by the de.eedent in leis travels and to
be returned to me. But the will, sir,
stands for itself, as Mr. Lewis. win
father seemed brought up in a eley fathee's hand held the crystal
• di
oul-de-sac, His face was tense and above tee figures of the begeest wait_ JA.,SPAR ooLr TR OPHY PRESENTED
money for your_own use and pleasure.
But alas, Mr. Gosford, it was not to
bet X see you writing this release;
and Mr. Gosford,"—,my father's voice
went up full and strong—"I see you
writing it in terror—sweat on your
facet"
"The Devil take your nonsense!"
cried the Englishreati. -
My father stood up with a tedsted,
ironical smile.
"H You doubt eny skill, Mr. COS -
ford, as a fortune or rather a mis-
fortune teller, will ask Mr. Lewis
and 'Hertean 'Geoid to tell me what
they see."
The two men crossed the room and
stooped over the paper, while my
father held the crystal. The manner
"Sit," eald the- Englishman "d
you enjoy this foolery?"
arid bearing of the inen changed. The
grew on the instant tense and fire
with • te • •
just made, commercially, in. this year •
against the old habit of careles
of 'fifty-six by mr. Stephens, But :torts and casualness.
I am an Inveterate reader. If a
o wilte here it's lVi trel v -t Quick relief I om
t rto o , pain,
'fifty -roue with, le?Wodd," Prevent shoe pressure.
11 tuned art'ST ambled In las little At al/ aalttheasto,,a
case c'f 'bottles.-
1,'"' *110117v ,
11 • bit
, ya e rtc1_, „„or my 1) (,),• . Pitt one on— atC
ple's indigestions: bas other uses." l'a,,”4 cone
He tyllipped out -the sto • "
vial and dabbed *Gdpferd's, ;toles and
Marshall's signature.
"Seel" he srieth "Your vrZitille,- /0 • IS la! alerio.
mr. Gostfora, ono- Marshall's
one- speaks tl) 11142 "Mille I Et111 (NOD Ill
O book I will rePIT at random, nin
IZIeltY.4nty " "tfld
, cermet* re, in '
a, -
.hard,
nev,er niat it monotonous • Ld11,1Yg•',1r.ite
one evening remonstrated with me bo-
catise,I ansvmred her romarks 330 1.111^
atiZtaetOrill, I ;suggested, that,' i
; when 1 was readine- I had (Nita Jail-
od to aee that it was inniolito 'and '
thoughtless of me to snend everY
• .
everting so engrossed; with a book that
I did not wish to talk, Also, I had .
fargetten that, wthRe •my wife likes; to
read, she ie• not averse to tte theatre,
playing car -is, •er ,ealling 00 friends.
Foolish, isn't it? A trifle! Easily ad -
hated by' an3r two people with 40111.
mon •Aen.se. Rut it wasn't adJuStea,
and equally' little titian's •-m 't al
3usted la families—wherein ;Iles much
of the tragedy of fa.mily life,
Another email discourtesy which
bedaine a source ef eerious diasension
was that ef 'interrupted remarke. 'Each
came timely to believe that neither
wae alloWed to ilaisli a ire-reark, At
first we had aretaced our iaterrup-
times Israeli an bee,- your pardon.,,
Later we woald take the conversa-
tional bit 'between, oar teeth /Without
ane .apelogy., We would •eyea epeaa
in unis.on—eausing bur friends: 'no end
•of amusement aed as no mad et irrita.
tion. Naturally the matter of inter -
ranting is bottled- up with egoism. So
is all dis•eouetesye We think ao much ,
.ourselvea th.at ved have no roona 411
our minds for the •thuogl4s of othere.
This Was brouget home forcibly Lo
ma one- niaht when; .lielerleg a . eadio
program which b.oied me, I earned on
another etation. ,
"You might have at least inquired
it I were enjoying the program before
turningeit off," eat& my wife.- As a
matter of fact r had never thought of
it I woaldn't dream of ewitching off a
strangerei raalo set, nor that or a
erienti, without same apology or re-
quest eor aermisnion, But I wouldn't
grant my wife even the hoarteaY 01 a
'casual inquiry as to her enjoyment or
the program. It was not that I wished
to 'be rude, Tait simply because I didn't
think. You cannbt be polite without
thiOnfktienug'when I am writiug my wile
drives Me to distraction by making ex-
tranetus remarks -e -not to annoy, but
because she deesn't itep Le ttenk,.
Fortunately my wife ena I avonte
before it was topelate, We were etum-
bling.along, groping through a morass
of dis.sension whieh had so bogged our
happiness that ie seemed to spell sep-
aration. But one night we "got to-
gether". and we talked and talked.
Not dramatically nor hysterically, but
inst tvvo adult human beings In thee
full possession of their- reasoning
faculties, We tensely decided to -treat
eaele other as if we were stranger --
to extend the same 'courtesy we wouhl .11303
how to an outsider. Our system wee
o be given a fair trial for six month
as very 'cliscourteaus. to,interrupt
How Do You Traela Your
WW1 an, ,outh• the trapped Inan , •
struck 'at,,Gaelci'a hand, The tylel'iell • r arni )
. ,
and cracked an the,table. !The hyclso-
,ehloric acid spread out over mar-
shall's will. Ami •under the chemical
reagent Ike figure In the bequest oL
fifty thousand dollars changed beau-
tifully; the bar of „the 5 tarried blue,
and the remainder of it a deep purple -
red like the body of the will.
"Gaeki," cried ray .lather, "you
have trepped a togue!" •
' "And I have lest a measure 61 geed
acid," replied the old man. And he
began to ' gather up the bits of his
broken bottle from tho tette,
Another ,triumph ef M. 'elenquelle,
aTha Talangulare-Hypothesis," will
continue after thise
. Care of Brushes
Brooms end Menthes give much
longer and More eedeieni. eervMe If
they are taken care Of,
Before being usoa Mr the lirst tim.e,
all household bruahee and brooms
should be soaked In colel , water and
allowed to dry thereughlY. Thikmakes
the wood arouud the bristleseswell
atul thiet strengthens the laid on
them, it also prevents the bristles from
beeaktug•off short.
A broom should be kept free from.
all sweepings. Keep at hand an old
piece of comb, and; whoa sweelfing is
over, gently remove all hairs, bits of
flukand odds and ends before putting
tile broom, bruslaend upward, in the
corner.
Periodically brooms should be treat-
ed to a bath of solt soap and watee, to
which a little borax, ecidaeor ammonia
Lte been added. Having been well
rinsed m several cold -waters tne
brooms shoeld be thoroughly aria.
The bristles- of hair brushes, broomer
and scrubbing baushea may bo stiffen-
ed if dipped In a strong solution of
alum, or, in the case of tooth brushes,
O solution of salt and water. Brooms
and bruehes, bowever thiek the
bristles, must never be allowed to rest
upoil the bristles when not Muse. .
"I had a beard like yours once, and
eel= I realized how It made me Idok
I eat it off." "Well. I had a face Illee
yours once, and when I realized
couldn't cut it off grew. a boarclea
• A genius is a num who takes the
lemons that Fate hands him and starts
a lemonade stand with them.-Illbert
Hubbard.
Sueeoss Magazlee for September
1/011 'an anonymous 111 331,0 „that hits- a
protruding family mil '1i=ight 011 310
head. 411 is -welt •worth 'aeriada- nen-
sicleratien espeoinlly In families
whS tkero are more than just has-
bana and wife,•
1,t runs as ,
, IS was Somewhat of 42 8110410 have
my wife tell me one evening that I
Was the most discomteena ratua she
had ever known. Among my friends
and busine88 associates I have a E:light
reputation for courtesy. I am con-
sidered 'old fasbionocl en any Ideae of
courtesy to strangers., Her accusa-
tem made .me mad, Tee injustice of
it ranaled until ma" Wife pointed •out
tbat Ileopt my politenee,s for outsiders
and used aone •lit my own home. I
don't like to think ot it even now, but
It pas -true: was not giving 111Y wife
even nee courteroal gave my' (Mace'
assiatente; la one. of those 'sudden
flashee that collie to us, was revealed
why our lite, which 'bed begun with
such high hopes, and breived aelvessity
after adversity -.was- being beateu 10
aieces on rocks, which seeneed too
trivial to 110t100.
POW men' and women have lad a
more romantic courtahia than. my wild
Dad I. • „Almost every obstaele ealeted
for 110: ne money; family arid friends
111 opposition to the match.' These ad-
ihr rani but fanned our love to a
gber flame. /tad, when, WO married,
We weee in such an ecstasy of bliss
that lacekeof money, cIethes, aua 87017,
thing aisually deemed necessary aid
not in the least disturb us. We had'
each, other. ;
It is a long • descent fee* those
heights to the place where alreast
every other word is in, argument. The '
transition was not rapid. It was no
sadden cleavage that killed our ro-
mance. It was merely the endless
repetition. or daily diseourtesiese the
constent easeal inapolitenese which
people Ream intimately toa,,ethea ex-
tend to etch other.
Discourtesy es a' very insidious
thing. It •creeps 'upon one without
:warning and is hard' to dieaodge. • In
the beginning, one's lapses are so
trivial as' to seem negliglble• Multiply
them by, say, seven a --day :tad you
have 2555 -opportunities In year for
hurting or annoying weather person!
It required hard thinking for me to
accePt all that. Even now, knowing
what I do„ -have to fight coatinuallY
Gay Embroidery Sets a Vogue
Tiny width ueedheork known, as the edge -with fine machine smelling
...French.' embroidery is colutna into , in silk Ross. Some ofethese sketcleed
tee own in much al the. best lingerie; edth gilt and silver thread are en -
and in handkerchiefs. This follows , chantingly pretty and will be worn
the fashion of peasant embroidery and during the Meter for dances and the
coarser types of• needlework which opera.
have been used for several seasona. It * * * •
Is shown on many lovely new modele Many novelties In seams are aP•
in underwear, ilue•rie, bloue•es of crepe Peering, from time. to time. For street
georgette and crepe. Ilandkerchlete, Wear the Radler -cashmere mufflers
which have been a lazaree 01 many/ and searvet are the most attractive
colors and Combinations ef color are in the %Shin merket They are
now shoevu in innumerable styles, all woven of zephyrillte weal, with
white. The handwork—bentraing and threads of silk that make the iustreus
enfin-oidery—is unusually fine and pattern of the surface. They are ha
dainty. A mother of charming col- asseribably beautiful and are like
lar and cuff 'sets of batiste .and fine thistledowu to the touch, 111 artistic w
voile,are liemetitelted aad embroidered combine:Hoes of blue, soft greed' beige
VVilson Publishil2g Company
Ii
(4).
ciyAroAr
'
ao matter how odd'or stilted oler be.
bavlor might seem. Funny? Of
course, at first, The very humor of it
helped. It made us laugh end yeti
can't be vela- tau.chy when you laugh.
Looking back it doesn't seem se funny.
000 doesn't get much of a Ittught trom
the odd look of the peank that saved
teas from drowning In mid -ocean. Our
echeme added zest to life and put eech
of ,os on aur mettle. Yell have no
idea how lade you have been until yell
try te be polite. • At least I ha,d tone,
O had give,n up seating my wffe at
meals; waltitig for her to eat before
beginning; arising -when she enteted
'a room; assisting her wide her coat—
and a huadred other tillage con:al:throe
unneees•seay in family aife. But their'
are the meet necessary things. in the
orld. They turned oar lives from a
0 and elaborated in several different and gray, with the contrast delicately
waTylisewviot nee:fdleacaenids ft:1s; charmingly
, exPreseed in some of the evening
a scarves: These are woven ieto the
"• most filmy lengthe, smaller thaa the
"I see ILI" said the -old doctor, witl
a queer, foreign „expletive,
"And 1," cried Lewis, "see some
thing More than Pendlebon's vision. I
eee the penitetiary in the distunce."
!webs. Larger and 'heavier starves or
sliaded to easemble dew on s•Plder
Ike Rodter weave are suitable for
; street and speak; wear during the Fall
and Winter, taking somewhat the
, great ewe:talus silk and ererie ecarveelplace of fure. Someaat these are in
' of last Season, Spanish lace and the plain coeors, some mixed, and manY
- shades and are dyed In ina.ny lovely , stripes anti geometric ligures, The
tints frem the deepest to the most dee ; original . Deauville scarf, wlich is a
net novelty lacee are shown ia natural are in etrIkleg patterne et plume;
•
in love -
Beate. a. long, .straight scarf of silk - squere kerehief, 14 still shown
net is embroid'ered in it lacy pattern .ly Golors, in silk of surah lype aied
at' each end end ecalloPed all around 'heavy crepe.
20 n,„ unan sprang up with an
amnia eou. Ile saw the tin
oath and leaned acress the table. Theta,
ng. •
most unhappy state into oue of peeee,
oontentment and affection.
Concentrated effort on each other's
welfare gavo us' • what eve call • the
"mutual entlooka—the essential view-
point for family life. By seeking to
find things mutually pleaeant our, re-
sultant comprquelses usually pleas,ed
118 both. Far from becoming artificial
and unnatural, our •life tegether be-
came uatural and pleasant, It Is a
myth that family -life must be diesenta
ent, It is so only because of a lack
of ardlnary courtesy among its mem-
bers. ,
People sievetimes blame. the age Mr
securtesy. I have used that alibi
eselt It is pure, -unadulterated
buncombe, Petiteness. is a pmeonal
atter and has nothing to do with the
ie in which one •Ryes'. Courtesy. is
more and no :lees than consittera-
n for others; thoughtfulnese. It
es not mean what le vaguely rear -
'to ae polieh or fine manners. These
e often nothing but. a showing off.
at was the. sort of courtesy which
d had—a mere ,extertof furbishing,
t or: to impress °theta I droPPle9
when I enteeed •Lenne as there
med 110' -need imareea my:wife.
at was evhere I was wrong., It Was
-more necessary for rue to make a
od impressien enemy- wife nliten tO
ve casue.1 acqueintancea Wilk of
me
disturbed. Ile stood by the table; and ten in the body of the will. •The
now, as by accident, lie put °et fecused lees ,of Ithe glass reagained.to
hand and took UP the J'aPanaaa caY9- a•great diameter and under 'the vase
tal supported by the necks a We, enlargetnent a thing that would escape tin
uo
tid
three beonza storks. lie. tippeaeacl eln- the eye stood out. The top curl of a
conscious of the act., tor he was in figure 3 had been erased, and the bar
do
aeep rellectien, Then, as IX -tingle the d a 5 added. Gee could see the bre
weight in his hand drew, his attention, re
ken fibres of the puper en the outline
he glanced at the thing. R 1-1-,i
-°211;°--ng of the curl, and the bar of the five
about.' it struck 'him, for his matmer lay across the top of the three and
changed. He epread the will out me ha
the table and began to move'the,erys- the top of the 0 behind it like a black
pu
tal over it, his-faee eloee teethe glass. lath tacked across two uprights.
i t
, The 'agute 3 had been changed to
Presently his hand stopped, and na e.se cUrtningly -11s. LO deceive the eye,' see
Stood etooped over'•ataringinto the t;ut •iae: eee. deeetee tee ease ieegealeee Th
of black art who prediot events Irma ceia at and etude like a carpentmae
Oriental crystal, like thoseelmacticerstana 1 the crystal.- The thing stood
.gb
far
ha
ar
Th
want they pretend • to see in theee pama-, .
Me. Gosford, sittiag,atidels ease, in , less like wood, his betty rigid; thee he
sepercalious, ironical smile.,
"Sir," he said, "are yOu, by chalice
"A fortune- teller," replied my
spheres of Ala... •
I"Gesford's face became expression -
life
across the table, a
, "Quite sot" he said in his vacuous hib
Englieli‘voice. "Marshall wrote a 3
by inadertence and changed He laat
tbatashipsolnlitein' a Is centered ;holly :on
The thundation of a hwy. :family
, is reepect. But one cannot respect
person who isealwaye. selfish, ex-
its. no control, and shows plaiuly
leaf, have/seen many marriages,
ong people of many kinds, and I
,e•be'en ni.errisa some years myself.
liave e -et to fend a con.delon. ore vital-
affeethig the 'relations ;of people lir-
intimately to,gdther-thfm 'courtesy,
A. fe'w tre,es are riVert by lightning
belie. • Thousands are •clestroyed by
tiny, slimy "woima and. slugs, A few
;marriages are smashed by some big
thing, Thousehtls of marriages are
wrecked ar seriously •crippled, by the
daily repetition of little ,tlueuahtlees
diS coat tesies. •
victory; -regarding, my father. with s?;ood, up mid faced the three men
father, his face still lishi above, the
crystal, "I see here a misfottune to
Fire insur• ance Co uany Mr, Anthony Goeford. I predict front
Heed -00k' e, Seferth, Ont.
omeo-roror:'
t president, Janes COI -many, GoderIch;
Vico, James Evans, Beechwood; See,.
Treainmer, Thos. E. Hays, Seaferth. ;
Dtrectorst George McCartney, sea.
forth; D. P. 11ToGrogor, Seafoi-131 1. G,
• Grieve. :Walton; Win fl.2ng Seaantlii
at, eremwed Clititoiij Robert Ferries,
1'1 -fetlock; John Benneweir,,B.eedhageni
Connolly Goderich
41.featS; Alex, Deitch, Clinton; J. w.
Eloderiah; Ed. Ilincliray, sea.
7 forth; W. CheeficY, Egmondville: n,
2. minnuth, erednagen,
Any znimey tb be paid in may be
!paid to Aloorlsh .Clothing,Co., Clinton,
pr at Caft's Grocery, DoderIch.
PattleS desiring tO affect Insurenea
int, transact other business will be
1.vrotr,ptly attended to on applicatien to
ituy of the above °dicers addressed to
•;their aespeotive post ellIce. Losses
Inepected by the Direct& Who lirea
• ;leanest the 00400.
what I see, that he will release 'this
bequest of moneys to Peyton Mar-
shall's 5071." -
"Sir," said the Englishman now
proveked into a ,temper, "do you enjoy
this foolery?" ,
"You are not interested in crystal -
gazing., Mr, Gosford,", Tonkel My
father in a tranquil voice. "Well I
find it most diverting. Permit -me to
;piece ont your fortone, or rather you
misfeetizne, Mr, Gosford 1 By chance
you fell in with this dreamer, Mar-
shall wermed into his confidence, pre-
tended a relation to great Men in
-
ACCOUNTANTS AND AUDITORS '
W. MacMillan axtd Company
union Bank Building: Gait, Phone 568
Also Toronto and Kitchener
• W. MACMILLAN, L.A.
borrowect my penknife to erase the am
• a
hal
My' father and Lewis gamed like
men Who see a peimad-4nbeast, slip
ant through an taiiniagieed passage.
-There eves slier:era 'Then suddenly, in
tho Strained stillness of the 1700112, old
Gaela laaghted, -0os-trot-el lifted his
thmg pink face, With 13,0 cropped board
,bringing out the ugly mouth, .
"Why do you laugh my good mall?",
laugh," replied Gatiki, "because
a figure 5 cau have so many colors.,"
And now my 13ather and Le-ivesi
W111'(5 no less astonished than Mr. Gcs-
- d '
"Colors!" they said, for the
• flgtiro in the will was lilack.
"Why, yea," replied the old man,
• is very pretty.'_-
He reached • across the table and
drow,Ofer Mr, tiosford's memorandum
beside the will.
"You are progreesive, sir," he went
R. P. Baker (rig,Itt), of Jericho club,
Vancouver, winner of the Totom Pole
trophy at Jasper 'Park Golf Course,
;Menet National Park, during the an-
nual golf. week, being preheated with
the trOphy by Walter Pratt, Coneral
Manager of Hotels', Sleeping' and Inn -
ing• Cars„ • Canagaan • National Rail -
elle "you write in ironalutean ink ways.. , The .fasner Golf tournament la Staged. ••••-
growing in favor ',kith fonoWers 4! the
game and Ilia year, with entries from
Canada, , United Slates and other
countries, be'came international in Rs
charadter.Canada's famous 0801110golf muse, wen high praise froM the
golfers who -played -over iL during the
Golf Week coinpetitions, and some
18000 battios for eapromacye 'were bust)
ly
ing
• A certain young barrister had been
addressing a airy for about twei emirs,
and when lie had finiehed the oppos-
ing , 0011120e1 arOse arid said, "Your
lordelem, I will follw the example tie
my friend who ;has Suet finished, anti
submit 'the caee wheaut argenneati"
•
Lady—"Tell me, :looter, I .went my
and Ldtake me 'to Cannes, What
ent 110 .7011 recommente" 31
'PRACTICAL AND DECIDEDLY
NEW
This little dress .ef attractive design
fer daytime and selmeatime would be
equally effective if fashioned of figur-
ed or plain material with contraeting
collar and s -et -on vestee. An inaereed
plait In centre frent gives the neees-
sate' fulaess, and the sleevea may be.
long and gathered into narrow wrist-
bands, or -sheet, A belt fastened. with
a buckle in front is placed' at top of
the hips. No. 1303 is i esizes 6, 8, 10,
12 and 14' years. Size 8 eequixes
yards 32 -inch materiel.; oe 21,fi yards
39 -inch, - 21) cants. '
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
Write your name and address plaio.
ly, giving nuinbet and size of such
patterns as you want, Enclose 20e ia
stamps or cein (coin prieferred; wrap
it carefully') for each-aleinber and
eddress your order to Pattern Dept,,
Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade-
laide St., Toronto. • Patterns scut by
return mail.
Flowers All the Year '
Go into the gardan and cut a snia-
or buds, being sure that the stems
wheu out are quite 3 inches long. Seal
the •end ot ettele stem 'with pure soft
sealing wax and placonhe blossoms on
one side until the buds begin to look
ebrunk and withered. Then wrap each
bud separately, in a piece of clean tis -
gee paper, fasteaied In• suele a way as
Lo keep the bud Inside air -tight S,ore-
the buds in a dry box or drawer and
leave them undisturbeal where it is
"W°Lheu. in lieed'of ilow.ere, lust go to
the drawee and take out some buds,
Unwrap,' cut off the sealed ends and
eland he rain water to which a geed
handful of etelt bag been added. In
the course or an hoer or so the beds
will epee. • • .,,,
Ease in eouth i5 the mother of tle-
generacy.—Montavitle Plewers.
YI is the ideal sweet for chih,
dren and you, too.
• It aid's appetite and VA
digestion, and satisfies
the eriying for Mi
sweets. rj
efi
•:After
Doan+ IVIcat
kssue No.
2—'27