HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1917-05-03, Page 6LI
i The volume of applications for new insurance
during 1916 was by far the Greatest in the
' History of the Company. That is the best
• evidence of public esteem, ,
d.
Let'ue send yowl some fresh Inegr'aneo foots
OITIOWN LIFE • INSURANCE 00.,, TT®ifi?ONITO
!Agents wanted in unrepresented districts 35
THOUGH THE DARK SHADOWS
Or The Sunlight of Lori
• ChA'k'TIeR XXVT,--(Cont'd).
It took some time to settle up all the
details of 'Harker's * Ltd." Jasper
Vermont had died intestate; and al-
though advertisements were- inserted
in various papers, seeking his next-of-
kin, no 'answers were received. The
money, therefore, reverted to the
Crown; and Mr. Harker, taking up his
real'cnanle of Goodwin, settled in King -
sten with his daughter and her hus-
,• end,' Who now, thanks to Lord Barmin-
sten, owned a flourishing business,
Lady idarivale never visited Bar-
minster ieestle again, She had sum
oerded in convincing her husband of
the hermlees nature of her flirtation
with, anti patiently bore the brunt of
his ver;' natural resentment at the
publicity 1 ccorded to his name at the
trial; tho:;gh - he acknowledged that
under., the circumstances she could
have drae nothing else but dome for-
ward to exonerate Leroy. Then her
•
ladyship retired, into the country with
her husband, who was greatly gratifi-
ed in the dutiful interest she showed
in him and his farm. All love of in-
trigue seemed to have died. out when
her flirtation with Adrien ended, nor
was it -ever revived.
Sbcicty, also lost it fashionable
monarch, as far as Leroy was con -
Tees, cerned . The vow that he had eagist-
ered beside the dead body of the girl
who had so loved him was religiously
kept, Ile disappeared from his form-
er place in the world of amusement,
and the devotees of pleasure knew him
no more,
After the funeral, he stayed on at
Barminster 'Castle for a time, with his
father and Lady Constance; but, with
the consent of both, he departed a few
months later foe Africa, on a big -game
shooting expedition. Living the
simple but ardluous life of the hunters
and trappers, he sought to bury the
folly of the past, and restore his hopes
of a brighter and better future.
One day. about six months after the
r, death of Vermont, Lord Barminster
- sat in the dining -room of Barminster
Castle, His eyes, their expression no
less keen, but far more gentle than in
former years, were bent, sometimes on
the cheerful fire, sometimes on the
calm faceof'his ward, where she stood
in the deep embrasure of the window,
gazing out over the snow.
A book was in her hand, but it wa
closed; and the wistful look in her
sweet eyes showed that her thoughts
had flown from the pages of fiction to
the realities of the past and the future.
Suddenly Lord Barminster raised
his head.
"Constance, what does Lady Auk-
' -soon say in her letter?"
Theegiii took it from the rack on the
writing desb,
"She says," erepiied the sweet, anals
cal voice. "that the Ashfords are well
and thriving. She has taken quite
en interest in them. Mr. Harker is
rather weak, but cheerful, and se
happy in the love •of his grandchil-
dren."
"Ah!" said Lord Barminster,. "I am
glad they are happy, they deserve all
the pleasure they can get."
Ile,sighec1 "When does the African
mail conte in, my dear?" he asked as
Lady Constance put •away the letter
she had been reading.
"To -night, usually," slie returned
with a sigh. A sudden flush rose to
her cheek, rendering her face still
more lovely while it lasted, butleav-
ing her paler than ever when it had
gone.
"Still wandering," said her . uncle
sadly, "surely by now, Adrien ought
to have forgotten the past."
"He'll never come back until he
does," said Lady Constance softly. •
"No," said her uncle with a touch
of pride. "He will not come back un-
til he can take up a worthier life with
a worthy love, Constance. Ring the
bell, my dear, and inquire for the
mail."
She obeyed him and returned to the
fire again, placing her hand upon the
old man's shoulder. , Very beautiful
she looked, as the bright gleam of the
flrelight•illumined her face, more love-
ly now because of its tender, womanly
expression; and the old man's gaze
,rested lovely on her.
"When he comes back." he said
musingly, "Adrien will find a sweet
prize. He Ioves you, and his love
will increase and endure."
Almost before he had finished
speaking there came the sound of foat-
steps, and the door opened. The girl
barely turned.
"Has the mail came in?" she asked,
thinking it was a servant.
But there was no answer. The
footsteps came nearer, and someone
bent down over the old man's chair.
."Father!" exclaimed a manly voice.
Lady Constance uttered a low cry,
and Lord I3arminstor sprang to his fee
exclaiming:
"Adrien, my boyl"
"Yes, father, it is I," said Leroy, his,
voice hoarse with emotion. Then he
tur•fred to Constance, who was gazing
at him with tears of joy in her eyes.
"Constance, my darling," he said
gently. "Will yowl forgive me my
long neglect of you? My eyes have
seen you through all the darkness of
these weary months. I have hungered
for you all the time, and now, I have
come into the light, I want you for
my own."
As he spoke he drew her ueresist-
ingly within his arms and the old man,
with one loving backward look, stole
silently away to apprise Miss Penelope
of the joyful news.
A month Iater the church of Windle -
ham was all ablaze with winter flow-
ers, while crowds of happy, rosy-
cheeked children thronged the steps
and porch, for it was the marriage day
of Lady Constance Tremain and Ar-
rien Leroy.
There were no fashionable silk and
satin -clad guests, or a body of mighty
ecclesiastics to perform the ceremony,
The old rector, who had known them
both from childhood, made them man
and wife, while Lord Barminster gave
the bride away. She had chosen to be
but simply dressed, and followed only
by two bridesmaids—sisters of
Mortimer Shelton, who acted as best
man. Among the few guests there,
were also Lord Standen and Lady
Muriel Branton, soon now to be
wedded. themselves.
Adrien had explained the reason for
his anger long ago, and Lord Standen
too 'fully understood to continue the
.oldness which had nearly spoilt their
life-long friendship.
Happy was the bride that bright
winter morning, and Adrien as he felt
her loved arm against his aide, was
filled with gratitude and love.
"My darling," he murmured as they
emerged from the church;"we do not
need the world, you and I. We have
r��rAf+��w �nr1 est �•�
The Guide
:o True.. Economy
Tliis year, instead of buying new clothing and
ousehoid effects, let Parker restore those you
eddy. Yon will: gain in every way.
lista. in
and CLEANING
Cloves, eke,ethers, Lace Curtains, Blankets, Car-
pets, Gent's Clth ng. We are known throughout the
Dominion for ourahorough work.
Send for aur Catalogue en't..`leaning and D. rain A
Y B,
aa
pARstil,s DYE WORKS, LIMITED
791 Verve Street - Toronto
1 b yff"• + 5 r' 4
11�. tf 'lite)... t.t...�.,�,lt�', :t,t��h�1
1s 3
A y
nr:+.ev=uietR.su"aWeiftWAWc�.a15ii`'G'
mak your farm :ore pyofitable
There is money to he made
hy using. Concrete, Many
hundtadt of fanners have
proved it.
Wo WiOggladly .end our
book 'What the Fgrmer
Ceti do with Cenere'e"
to any Fenno »he
' wn)ea, he it,
1*15•KRCts
-wrlle k•ddtr
Cntiad'a Cement
Cafnpatty L;itnted
!lg llktxfd bdidi.Y
MOF('fkgAL
"t'1'...,�.:.w_.. war .,,..
•each ,other, that ehell-be wort l enough
for }e at
"Net to the world da 1 awe hoe,
Adraelt; mad Lady Constance gravely,
"but to anethei woman" Drawing
him to the marble slab, which stood'
elpse to the Mob, she bent .down unci
placed her bridal- bpugpet .of white
roses on the grave of aessica. "But
for tier, life would have ended for both
of us that summer day.
Adrien was deeply moved by her re,
-membrance of the child,
"My darling," he said tenderly,
"we have passed together through the
dark shadows: Let es enter now lute
the sunlight of our love."
(The end).
WITHIN RANG" E OF THE GUNS.
Life of an Old French Couple Amid
`the Terrors of War.
A correspondent of the Bystander
tells a touching story of an old couple
who Jive in a little French'town where
they are In constant danger of bom-
bardment. Before the war the town
had twenty-five thousand inhabitants;
there are about a thousand civilians
living in it now, and it is full of sol-
diers,
When the correspondent asked the
woman what sort of life she was lead-
ing, she laughed and replied, "As al.
ways! When the shells come we don't
;get excited as we used to. We say,
''Tiers! they're bombarding again! and
we go below. Of course we only ge
below for the big shells, the 80$'s. We
have got quite used to the others."
Her basement is comfortable as base -
meats go. It has a tiled floor, a kitch-
en table with American cloth on it, a
few chairs, a cupboard, a handsome
old armchair, a funny, old-fashioned
bed, a little petrol stove, a cage with a
canary in it, and on the walls ,some
pictures cut from illustrated papers.
The rooms above are mostly in rags
now, but the old man is going to build
up his house again as soon as the
Germans leave off bombarding, he
says. "We have a son at the front,"
he explained,;"and you know we want
to have everything ship-shape for him
when he comes back home again."
"Now and then," said the old lady,
"when the shelling gets very fierce, we
go down into the cellar, and then we're
not so comfortable."
I looked my astonishment, and the
old couple laughed.
"I'll show you," said the old man,
He lifted a corner of an old carpet
that hung on the wall, and I saw a
great breach in the wall and some
rough stone steps. The whole town
is honeycombed with `deep cellars.
"They say the Spaniards built them,"
he said.
Down there in the dark pit he show-
ed me a little embrasure in the wall.
There were two rough wooden benches
and a box marked in squares.
"We come down here and play
drafts when the bombardment gets too
fierce," said the old man. "Sometimes
a shell drops nearer than usual, and
then the whole house shakes. I won
a game the other day when that hap-
pened' My wife got nervous. She
beats me, as a rule—but she lost her
head that time."
RUSSIA'S FORESTS.
Comprise the Great Timber Reserve
of European Continent.
The development of the timber
business in Siberia and Eastern Rus-
sia is engaging the attention of the
Russian people. In a recent article
n The Economic World, of New York,
Samuel McRoberts, vice-president of
The National City Bank of New York,
n referring to Russia timber supply,
aid:
"Russia's forests have hardly been
coached, and comprise to -day . the
Brest timber reserve of Europe, the
empire having practically all of the
urplus timber available outside of
anada and the United States. She
xported in 1913 some $84,000,000•
anis of timber products,
"Europe' must go to Russia for
timber when the inevitable .rebuilding
rogram begins, and will 'afford Ru-
ia'•a wonderful opportunity to realize
pon the latent wealth of her forests.
his will require an enormous outlay
f capital for the building of railroads,
ort facilities, steamships, sawmills,
ulp mills, and all those things incl -
ental to the manufacture and trans-
ortation of timber products.
"The development of Russia's rail-
oads since the beginning of the war
as been at a standstill; ' and even
ow they are inadequate in her most
eveloped territory. The opening up
`Turkestan and Siberia, will require
n enormous program of railroad
wilding. If we include the undevel-
ed territory of: Russia, an idoa of
rat railway mileage inay be requited
n be obtained by comparison with
fat of the United States. The total
ileage do Russia is at.preseet 47,000
iles, against; 260,000 miles in the
ates, This means for Russia, on the
sis of square miles, only 5 per cent.
d on the basis of population, only
Iter cent. of the railway mileage of
e United States."
s
a
C
0
W
P
s
T
O
P
P
d
p
r
h
n
1
of
a
b
op
wv]
CR
th
111
SS t
1
all
a
10
tis
LILIES" SCINT 8,000 FEET UP.
ilish Aviator Tells of Giant Bed in
East- A Erica.
ffEe ousew;Je
eoj,er
Several Bot -Breads From One
Formula.
Eggless Cream Muirins.—Mix to-
g'ethor two cupfuls of white flour, one-
half level teaspoonful of salt, two tea-
spoonfuls of sugar, and two rounded
teaspoonfuls of baking -powder. Stir
in a cupful of cream or enough for a
stiff batter (fleet beating in the pinch
of soda if sour). Boat very thor-
oughly and bake in buttered gem -pans
Ina het oven.
Por other varieties of muffins omit
one cupful of the white flour and sub-
atltute • a capful of rye or Graham
flour, bran, rolled oats or wheat, or
corn -meal, and proceed as before Any
of these may be baked either in sisal..
low loaf form or in gem pans,
For biscuit, use the same .formula,
adding merely enough cream for a
rather firm dough. Knead lightly,
roll three-quarters of an inch thick,
cutin rounds, prick twice with a fork,
let stand for ten minutes and bake
in, a quick oven.
For shortcake roll this dough into
two roundsheets about one-third of an
inch thick, bake and put together with
any fruit desired.
Fruit buns may be had by rolling
the dough into a sheet about one-half
an inch thick, spread with a thin lay-
er of soft jelly ' or marmalade.
Sprinkle over this a layer of currants
or chopped raisins, or of stoned and
halved dates, pressing them slightly
into the dough. Roll, cut in half-
inch slices and bake.
For a delicious steamed pudding, lay
the roll in a steamer over boiling wa-
ter, steam one and one-half hours and
serve in slices with hot lemon sauce,
or sugar and cream.
The wholesome and economical ways
of using cream scraps in baking and
cooking are legion, and are limited
only by'the ingenuity of the cook and
the amount of cream at her disposal,
Ferns Not Aquatic.
Many women are unsuccessful in
raising ferns because of too much or
too little watering. Usually, how-
ever, the trouble is too much water;
often the pot containing the fern is
allowed to stand in a plate of water
for several days at a time. The soil
at the bottom of the pot quickly be-
comes sour under such conditions. A
florist expressed the true state of af-
fairs well when he said, "Ferns re-
quire lots of water, buy they are not
aquatic."
The Housewife's Day.
I;Iere are a few items for~the house-
keeper's daily progr'am:--
1, Have a definite plan fox each
clay's work and try to carry it out.
2. Spend at least twenty minutes
daily, in the open air;
3. Take a . daily bath.
4, Work but do not worry,
5. Read one chapter from .,some
good book every day.
6. Drink plenty of water,
'7. Eat regelar meals at the table;
do not hurry.
8. Get eight hours of. sleep.
9. Cultivate a hobby, or have daily
intercourse with some friend who is
not a housekeeper. 5
NEVER TO BE FORGIVEN.
Extracts From President's Message to
American People.
In President Wilson's appeal to the
people of the United States, he ad-
dressed himself
par
ticularly to farm-
ers, and said: "The supreme need of
our own nation and the nations with
which we are co-operating is an abun-
dance of supplies, and partieularly of
foodstuffs.... Without abundant food
alike for the armies and the peoples
now at war, the whole great enterprise
upon which we are embarked will
break down and. fail. The world's food
reserves are low.. . . Upon the farm-
ers of this country, therefore, in large
measure, rests the fate of the war,
and the fate of the nations."
As far as the middlemen of the
country are concerned, President Wil-
son said that the eyes of the nation
would be upon them. They are ex-
pected to forego unusual profits, to or-
ganize and expedite shipments of food,
to think of the nation and not of them-
selves. The men who run the rail-
ways of the country are appealed to
to suffer no obstruction of any kind
to hamper their work, which is abso-
utely vital to the welfare' of the nas
ion. "To the merchant," he said, "let
e suggest the motto, 'Small profits
nd quick service,' and to the ship -
under the thought that the life of
the war depends upon him." The min -
r, too, must realize that he stands
ith the farmer. The work of the
orld waits on him; if he fails states -
en and armies will be powerless,
The President concluded by saying
at everyone who creates or culti-
ates a garden helps and helps great -
to solve the problem of feeding the
.tions, and that every housewife who
ractices the strictest economy puts
erself in the ranks of those who
rve the nation." This is the time,"
e message says, "for America to
rrect her unpardonable falt uof
wastefulness and extravagance. Let
ery man and every woman assume
e duty of careful and provident use
d expenditure as a public duty, as a
ctate of patriotism which no one can
w expect ever to be excused or for -
yen for ignoring." It is heartening
eed to hear the President of the
ited States so solemnly warning his
ountrymen of the • character and
avity of the enterprise to which
ey now stand committed. Canada
s been in the war for more then
tw
dre1
t
m
a
e
b.
w
w
m
th
Ferns should be watered well front le
both the top and the bottom; but as
soon as this is accomplished the wa- n
ter -dish in' which the pot stands should h
be emptied and the fern given no more
water for several clays. The soil at the
top dries out more rapidly than that co
at the thttom; therefore the fern
should not bo watered from the bot- ev
tom as often as front the top.
When a fern begins to look sick, it an
tis
should be turned completely out of the di
pot and the soil examined carefully.
If the bottom soil has a grayish -white no
color and is soggy, the' fern has been
g
kept wet too long at a time. In such incn
cases it is best to refill the pot with c
new soil, gr
In general it is best . not to water th
the fern every day. If the tempera- ha
turd of the room is about 65 degrees,
waterigg from both the top and bot-
tom once a week is sufficient. If the
temperature is 80 degrees or above,
water every clay.
• Uses for Borax.
To brighten your old faded carpets,
rub with warm water and ammonia to
which a tablespoonful of borax has
been added.
Add to the last rinsing water to
make your clothes white.
Use powdered borax to get rid of
cockroaches and beetles.
A teaspoonful added to a gallon of
hard water' will make it soft.
• For freckles, add a quarter of a
drac'hrtr1 of powdered borax to one
o years and a half, and yet hun
ds of thousands of us could wei
ord to listen, humbly to the great
oolmaster at the White House.
aff
sch
Mahle i3aking,Powdor costo
no more than the ardinary
klnds. For econonTri buy
the one sound 21.598, '
E Y 6!LLETY c0MPAtir 11MIMI)
w nglo.0 Tottaryro, ort?
S,Ittpao,
TRENC11l�r�pppJJ q���q� k�'��AptrtrF��t� (( bombardment the wlluld have served'
HES L their purpose; my some eases they
have done their work well, for those
NOT IMPREGNABLEnests for machine gunners, Fortthat were not destroyed served • as
un-
ately these were few, for the airmen
THEY FALL AS DID THE FORTS
taken hundreds of photograph's'
of the German positions and most of
the trenches were known in advance
OF LIEGE AND NAMUR,
end subjected to a conscientious fire
from heavier guns than were ever be.
cora tiara turned against field entrench -
However Deeply and Cunningly
I ments. -It is incredible that the
structed Cannot Withetand ttrendes that the Germans are now
Heavy Fire. digging in the rear of the shattered
Hindenburg line can be so well pees
In their mullet; advance the Ger-
pared as those whiab, have been O-
mens proved that the utmost that
stroyed already,
map could do in the way of fortresses
of dee' and concrete was futile
against the fire of the heaviest guns.
Ways of the Crocodile.
Liege, Namur ancl Maubeuge are
monuments, to this effect. These far- The crocodile diffees from his cousin,
tifieations melted, as someone has de -the alligator, in that the
lower maxi's
scribed it, as butter before a heated lary, or jawbone, moves in the "gator,"
knife. There followed the Battle of whereas it is the crocodile's upper jaw
the Marne, which checked the German that is movable. The crocodile, mores
over, has two sharp teeth that pro.'
trude from the lower law through the
upper and movable one; his nose is
sharper, his teeth are longer, his scale
softer and not so thick, and his body
is slender and active. His eyesight
and hearing are both good, and he can
scent an enemy, if the wind favors,
for at least half a mile, He can dive
and swim like a fish, and on land he
drive, and ushered in the period of
trench warfare. On a .large part of
the Western front the trenches have
remained as they were after .the first
German check. The Teutonic advance
was stopped; but it appeared that the
Allied advance was equally paralyzed.
There is every reason to suppose that
the Germans when they dug their
trenches thought that they had discov-
ered something that would do what can run at a good pace. He is cruel',
fortresses had failed to do, and that, and cunning, and it is not easy to caps
resigning themselves to the certainty turd him.
of not being able to advance and take
Paris, they had consoled themselves
with the reflection that those parts of
France and Belgium which they held
could never be wrested from them —
that the trench, in fact, would be the
impregnable fortress of this war,
A German Error.
British guns of late have Shown
that the defensive has not yet counter-
ed the offensive in warfare. The
trenches have %ellen as the fortresses
fell. Once more have tate Germans
erred on the side of thoroughness.
Finding that a trench six. feet dee
was a good shelter, they argued tha
a trench or shelter twelve feet deep
was twice as good, and a drain
twenty-four feet underground we
twice as good again. The British guns
have destroyed the exits of these
trenches, and have left the subter-
ranean Germans an easy prey for the
advancing infantry. They could no
get to the surface and operate thei
machine guns; they could not escape
from the rear exits because of the bar-
rage fire, and so they were caught, to
use a good old expression, like "rats
in a trap." The deeper the trench the
more certain their capture—that's a
military principle that the Germans
have been taught in the past few
days.
Elaborate But Futile.
The German engineers have done
their work well, as stories now com-
ing back from the front attest. They
j have made their shelters not trenches,
but mines, with elaborate systems of
ventilation, with numerous. exits and
entrances, plentifully provisioned and
equipped; they were expecting tot
stand a siege like a fortress. Their!
concreted, steel -lined underground re- wlllea,e t renlhnaven esaalmnnnndnnlhedeadl
treats have been the result of two Qnrn,a It wur; •a is a thick couuttg of vnrrtmb, ttorj
Made in Cnnndn 6y
years' planning and work, Pitted IHE 0. & W. TIIUM COMPANY, Wslkorvitle, Oot.
against anything less than the British American Address: Grand R,,ida,MieL
p e�a
t'9
s
i Fly Poisons Attract
Both Flies and Babies
In Cho loot thro0 yenta tho pre,, ions 0015P0 5 0 011 10 0 lir
i'01e0nInQm.ex-alntao prnportlonfntnl. T0oln004eot
nnking sou 1.Itkitasivaatoned wi0k—tl 0 eaucor of poi•
son popor—both contain aYaenr0, dondiiost of ponono.
No mmher wbnld pat a 0loon wlthiv bet anti•
,fen's
myoe oWsdal,on14, thoehoou frelnu1lolae,10
11p10undonnogo.r17. ,4Yo1b FFItP
kraaflulvvolnon,pm, tT7PS:8.?bIIu80vilo
907a16sr,aynpwronvnl, meal= 0lahwd,mly,
1 pnpaor001ca1I<wM4,1Nnrn0epnn.mooh0h.0al
d caro.!, *be n,aab4no0ehn,,Io,1 i.teonin. *0.900.., akwd,. * 4
o6,len 10,.6*,, itlel,II,.AV6at 1600.,00'01^'4,40. nit,br,nr."nn1,
Iamp t6. !6101, An,,I,sl ssdny.}leg derlr.A ffit,et b, r0,ed .0.0•
o19..3:m,i .; a.nl.nue,.04 eb.nld asses Ls 0,01, 00,.11 OC*,mn.,,,e.n not
rho (400. ra 0000 oI,fe, sura, 11011-nol5oaous, efficient fly
0"
to
ye
Being Perfect.
'Be ye perfect'!" quoted Nancy,
.king up from her Testament, "'Be
perfeet't I do think that's the
R10st appalling command, Aunt Molly,
t you ? Why, it's impossible to be
fect. There's no use in trying, for
harder you try, the more disco=d you are sure to get. How do
suppose—anyone—ever expected
to be perfect?"
unt Molly smiled reassuringly. "I
w just how you fuel, Nancy," she
d. "I used to worry over that,,too,
think it was quite impossible, and
that, just as you do. But one day
card a very wise man talk about
since then, it's never troubled me
all.
He explained that 'perfect' is real -
relative term, not an absolute•one,
most persons think. And your per -
ion is measurad by the standardd you ata given ,time.
t is set before e,
dost'
per
the
age
you
us
A
ounce of lemon juice :and half a 1 Sao
drachmaof sugar; mix; let it stand for
and
ee
three days and rub on the face oc- all
casienaily,
Dissolve a little in warns water to 12;h
clean the teeth.
To clean ,your hairbrush, 'add a at.tablespoon of borax and a tablespoon - ply a
fel of soda to a basin of water. Dip es
the brush up and down in this and fact
then rinse and dry, the
For
Heine. Calendar. littl
Clean out chests and closets where Cott
you are going to store furs and flan- bas
nets, Clean fairs by first gently beat- Per
ing them with a length of rubber hose. ape
to remove all dust. After getting to b
dust out, rub hot bran or coenmeaI that
well into the fur, lay away for a :fewv war
days and then brush out thoroughly,I ".9-
Coarse
tS
Coarse furs—boar, buffalo or even fax that
--may be washed with lukewarm wa-, to b
ter arc! 1• cam
t pure white o soapsuds, Wipe i told
dry with a clean cloth, hang where
fur will dry quickly, and then -•comb lust°•
at with a coarse comb,
Store furs in closet room having, • a
mall window if possible, as this wilt,
reap keep moths away and afford air
o clothing that might otherwise lie -
era somewhat• musty, Pour a Tittle
urpentine in the colliers of closets,
vardrohes, trunk, and containers
where the furs are stored and moths
will not molest them.
A hardy Laundry -Bag.
This laundry -bag is a great im-
rovement over the old -:fashioned
raw -string laundry -bag, A wooden
oat -hanger forms the, top of the bag
Meir Chives to fit seugly over the
anger. The opening is formed by e.
slit from the top, half. -way, down the
center of the front of the bag, and is
bound with heavy tape, This 'rialtos
it.very easy to get things in and out
of the bag without removing the hange
er from the hook, This bag would
maks avery dn•otty-gift if Ynlid'0 of
cretonne, having the. opening_ hound
'rook of the hang-
• wound with ribbon.
instance, Nancy, when' you were a
e girl doing arithmetic—multipli-
on, let us. any, --and you carne
e with the inturk of ane'tendred
cent., did tlutt mean that you were
rfect mathematician—or expected
e ? Not at ail. It meant merely
you were perfect in that day's
k!
o that, Nancy, is all, I believe,
is asked of us human beings now;
a a,: ,
i feet i
n al
p each t day a lesson sn
as it
4
e. The reit est of that verse, we eve
elsewhere, we are 'to grow. rap
A Britt;h officer on duty si{itis the
air service in Eitel; Africa includes in 0
one of hie reports a graphic doocrip
tion of en int/Time valley filled with a
the huge "Aril) lilies," ovei tl'hiclt 1
lie flew somewhere in the .region of t
Zanzibar. As he passed over the vas -c
ley be leap/140()0 p ,0()0 feet high, but the, -
t
perniiiirt of the lilies reoc:hed his nos -
0 ile for ,l 10101„• filet/ince,
ily means of his glasses he'observ-
ed thatthe lily 'lowers were "as large
as etopha nts' ears," and that the whole
of the valley had been Monopolized
by the beautiful fower% The !9xuri- 1
awe of the vegetation was particular- d
• ly i•omarlsealo. He learned later that c
the scent of the flowers was so over- µ,
powering in the valley that no uativc dt
had ever dared to penetrate within its
borders.
Trials of a Mother,
"Mary, 1 shall take erre of the child.
ren to elei sh with the this morning,"
aniiouncetl Mrs, Fatillionet,
O.Yetem," replied tat r„t: I
"wliietr one elo et Lv 1 1 wt
lest with my leverder gown?” ow
SE
/• Breads
Cakes -Puddings -Pastries
JOUR puddings are palat-
able. why use Five Roses ?
Simply because you wan t
them more daintily porous,
mote digestible. FiveRoses
puddings digest unconsciously--
every
nconsciously—every spoonful is a tasty
source of vitality.
t9 " r a6,}-1.'.'r'�k.ia-ls;:soi55 + ��:� �•'.,,w;.:
A Roel Fancy 1Voi'9yadtGfg;
Sloon111y 10,40 One cloudy 1 Uc0—tnakl gg It n cgrvlllsto
harslet against Itlfre&ululate as wall a§ moll l onitry, rrb0p.
&004 iroeout wises am A—ntteunedImps No, le Niro,. -1 lotto
14731'
gg byetroti t rai{,mewp whlohehn&undah 'l
113 .5 .m, 166.1616e.1.8wdktggl0 A,t.bbUtoUrr.YOr.ad.nA00eak1'
tvnel
a .A cache nx . r,
.g S I Yei he,' i' e.l e
1 �• r rn n,l.alnu4..
a B e d1,Yilim'.
aa1 tae
r
9(f„_• �- Tho 8ortwett•noRla ,„ Fen&.Company Ltd”
'
gin
ca.,„ 0nn1
in
, oa
a
char, ,
�`� 4. ..w✓. r torr off`..+.. Ott.,' xr W.�+.Si'•: .t, v .'N•p�,lria:. .r:-nr.. ��
10, 2a, s nd CARIOUS* ags. Carkad 5a ga,z, Refining C0e1 Limited, Montreal,
If better sugar is ever produced than the present
ltEDpATI-I Extra Gran1,1atedg you may be sure it will
be wedeln the svine R, >,t>iiery that has led for over.half
a century—and sold unde,'thesame mase--RED?ATH.
"Let Redpath Sweeten it."
is.