The Seaforth News, 1923-06-07, Page 2Goodood Luc�
thought to o a long wan but
Goo
a farther.
TO USE,'
"The Tea that is .always Relia
H343
Making a Man of Him
—BY L. H. ROBBINS.
-tk'ii}fig•s about
a man
wh
o bulldozes s the
spirit out elf his son trying to put
spirit into him. They say it tells a
lot eibout the man's awn hidden', fears
and weaknesses; perhaps he knows in
his heart that be is in danger of beiifl '
foliop(' out for a Mover hitheelf
"But we won't go into that, sir. I.
have to remember ,that you are my!
father. The point for you to note is
that the bully -fagging has stopped. It
stopped for ninety Seconds ados y
d it
stopped P
more,,>
While Mr. Weeks still struggled for
words, Mr, Lormer pushed the young
psychologist tactfullyout of the pri-
vate office. Then he returned: to his
superior.
That gentleman, having found voice
at last cried, "What in eternal thun-
deration1" or words to that effect, and
wouldsurely have dashed himself
against the ceilng if Loonier had not
put out a saving hand.
Shake, sir."
"Shake?". Weelce stared. "What
for?"
"Chief, you ought to be proud of
yourself. You've ti Mum his
brought out:ten
yearson. "gorry1 Man, in Y
the: lad willl be running the cor-
poration. You've•turned the trick, old
chap. I congratulate you. I certain-
ly do. I never saw anything like It.".
The thought was a perfectly new
one to Mr. Weeks, The longer he con-
sidered it, the more entranced with it
he became. Mopping beads i of sweat
from his flushed brow, he exclaimed
weakly:
"If he only sticks, Lornier;• if he
only sticks!"
It has taken years, Loaner, years.
Nobody knows the fight I've had."
"Yes, Chief, but see what you've got
at last."
"That's right" said Weeks. "See
what I've got, Ask him in again, and
let's look over his report.
The 'general superintendent opened
the
Weeks walked in just then, looking
Aboutt' thebigclock down- uncommonly austere, and, the eyeshade
PART II.
ou the time
came' down':
stairs chimed three, Teddy dreamed a Nevertheless, it occurred to him'
dream, wherin. his father appeared that it might be well to save Mary
garbed as Magician Merlin, in a star- from the error e thinking there was
spans a robe en onl one rising you,
l d b d holding a horned ng industrialist in
animal by a tether. , Universal Electric. Hence Mary had
Up to the Magician strode Teddy, 'occasion next morning to thank Mr,
and spoke: Acton for a superb bouquet. of Eng-
gio, lye xagge that I Gimmeam inferiormheli violets that she had found upon
isg grossly exaggerated, my her desk.
goat!" "Sorr " said the' thanked one
"Your goat? Go on l'"retorted Wiz -gloomily "but I'm not the party."
and Weeks peevishly. It's my goat."Then who is?"
Thereupon they mixed and stru- Acton conducted cautious interroga
hlad• but the tether was in Teddy's- _tions. Cunningham, Dailey and Char -
Dreams
atni last, they ters pleaded inocence, and the dark
meebms are hamming things; horse was not disclosed.
comed backntaddlew and occupy his Mary wore the violets at her work
mind he theo should
bels of a busy day, in the clubroom, where they received
to propi- notice from some
bePlen
uldstudying Pfavorable i shevo b
wet hewide and fa
hate his father. hundreds of sentimental young gum-
It thathn swift and resolute gains- chewers. When Mr's. Lormer dropped
Mir tar . Acton waged a e- in to encourage the welfare depart-
Mary so serious
Beforeslong has be-ment, the blooms were again admired,
depart -
come serious yhat Cunningham,n, and Mary ryas again reminded.
Charters and Dailey stepped aside and, "1 don't know where they came
let the master of the wire department from" she confessed. "No, they axe
have the field to himself. i not kr. Acton's."
When Acton would bend intimate'
ni" , "Strange," said Mrs. Loaner, "I
over Mary's desk, Ted would pull wonder—do you suppose Teddy
eyeshade low to shut out the sight, Weks-" Mary.
There is no better aid to concentrThoms "Oh, I m sure not, said y
than an eyeshade pushed low. At home that evening Mrs, Lorimer
accoutred one morning he was enabled' gossiped. Was Ted weeks still count-
to detect an astonishing discrepancy ed among Mary Stair's loony!?"
py in Pinion upon the parent coin- "I doubt it," Lormer answered. "He
any "Acton,seebhrnever goes near; just keeps his head
P
ul r
�, axe a
see here."in his deslk and digs, Hes g
The big chap swung across from woodchuck these days. No, .I guess
Mary's to Ted's. to store all this Acton has the right of way there."
"Where d'youGoingexpect She mentioned the violets.
copper? to "leathe First ,"I'd like to, know," her husband
Regiment Armory; maybe?"mused; "if that persecuted cub i plot -
Acton
gave appalled attention to the tingsomething,I'd just like to know.
figures and muttered sentiments die- n the line f his duty, the general
creditable to typists. , superintendent approached the third
"You can't pass the buck, Al. Here's vice president a day or two later with
the error again in your own copy."a suggestion. It had to do with a
It was too bad to annoy the model marvelous economy heating system
and infallible Acton et this daa rumored as operating somewhere in
but a man who expects to- becomeuebec.
hunter in the near future Q " Weeks. "He
has to practice Sure, let him go,"said
gas toislono tally
andif l Teddy as
e in
gave himctia tog to go a ons tot Canada aslfoolingaarouiid1here. But
Mary'sdeskself-respecting enough leanint go across twhy not send a practical man?"
tthe and lean intimately upon "I'm sendingone," said T,ormer.
it then and there. But Old Marc'The big hunting ccurred promptly
after Tedyy's return. It took place
in the Old Marc's private office. The
only eyewitness was Mr. Lormer. The
auditors in the big room outside were
many. Out there work was suspended
by common consent while the sport
'went on.
"So," bellowed Weeks, Senior, "you
expect to asic the general board to look
at a fool recommendation like this?"
"That's 'what I expect, sir," answer-
ed Weeks, junior, `unless you prefer
to keep on wasting sixty-five hundred
a year of the company's money in fuel.
'You say the first cost is ruinous. 1
show that the thing pays for itself In
six years. You say it won't work. I
tell you it has worked in Quebec since
191b"
Weeks brushed aside Teddy's papers.
"If the scheme was any good, don't
you suppose we'd have heard of it?"
"Aren't you hearing of imow? Sas
anybody had time since 'Fifteen' to
hear of anything?"
"Don't stand there and argue."
Weeks waved a dismissing hand.
"I'll stand here and argue till I get
a respectful hearing."
Ted's face was red, and.his voice
may have shaken a little.
"The company gave me this assign-
ment.. I've put a month of work on it,
and 1 want it judged on its merits.
"That's only fair, Weeks," Mr. Lor -
mer hinted.
"When I came here," Ted continued,
"you told me to forget I was your son,
• and to expect no favors from you. All
Lb69 right. Suppose you forget you're �'my
father, and. expect no indulgence
from
�,„ me. Suppose you talk like a business
man. This plant is no kindergarten."
Weeks should have taken warning
and saved his face. But a fixed notion
that has stood for years is not dis-
lodged in seconds. Teddy, remember,
had the advantage; he had trained for
this clash for months.
"How do you dare talk fresh to
me?" cried the Old Man, rushing to
destruction. "How do you dare, you
—you -you little runt?"
"1' scarcely know," Teddy respond-
ed. "The way you've raised me, you
haven't left me much nerve, But I
have enough to tell you that I'm darn
tired of this ancient delusion of yours,
and I'm 'through with this hoodoo
you've put on me. Pardon my frank-
ness:, .
The Old Man's cheeks swelled and
his eyes bulged. So many retorts
crowded hie tongue that they got into
a traffic block and .none came forth.
Mr. Loaner turned hie batik, gazed out
at the window,, • and .quivered with
emotion. • -
"You have loaded • me," Teddy pur-
sued,
ur
sued, - candidly, "with an inferiority.
complex big enough to' founder an ele
phant. Before,I was five-year-old, you',
began teaching `me 1_ was no 'good;
teaching .me. I vas a flivver and a
fluitker, I don't ask why •yon " did it.,
The psychosharps say pretty rough;
8
•'Phe, oplpt{,, •Ilospltsa for �oci 1
arybiee bo ai'1111atton with Bellevueti
Allied IiO4Pltale, ` New 1dilr City,
.offers a Ores years' Course of Ti'ath-
,(hf• t9 young. wenien, liar ng th,e }}��e-
gttired•edhoa ion,. -and d@si onqs et ps'
coining nurses. 'Phis Hospital has
adopted the eight-hour system, The
pupils receive uniforms or the "So ool,
g, monthly ai]ddwµhee and travellIinnatg
expenses to andfron Now Yore the
further inter Illation apply
Superintendent.,.
Weeks was seated
Mary Stair's desk.
"Olt, Ted." ,
"In a minute, Mr. Lormer."
Sueh are the rewards of big hunt-
ing, Thus Casually did Teddy. reply to
the once stern can of Superiority.
The conversation itself, which went
forward. so vigorouely, would have
richly repaid the vainly listening ears
of. Acton.,
The spectacle alone rejoiced the en-
tire '
n -tire' office. Without pretending to work
they watched the drama unfold. Tho
worde that salted the action wars
heard only by the chief actors, But
they appeared to'be entirely satin-
factgqiy.
Why,, yes, Mr. Weeks," Mies Starr
was saying,. with a smile on her Jac-
queininot lips. "It's lovely of you,
and so nice of your sister, and I'll be
ready at eight. Just think, I haven't
seen the inside of a theatre since I
came to town."
"And listen, Miss Starr, we'll have
a box, you know, and so—would you
just as soon „wear that black velvet
dress with the—er—the straps over
the shoulders?
"Really? Shall I? Some people.
don't approve of it, you now.
"Oh well," said. Teddy, "he won't be
there.'i
(The End.)
To
MInarras Liniment for Coughs & Coide
intimately upon
Ef0g*aietl.
The ardent maple. lights her altar fires
The steepled birch to the blue Sky
aspires,'
The elfin; the tulip and the oak,
L restiro crowd of forest folk,
Beseech high laeav'n to grant their
Spring desires,
i3ut the pate dogwood neither prays
nor preaches;
As level as the tide upon the beadles.
She spreads her snowy loveliness
Unflawed, nntinted, passionless,
And offers . not to mien, nor gods be-
seeohes•: '
'Twixt he-av'u and, ectrt'h her balance
is exact,
She guards her heart with admirable
tact,
Na prejudice or preference glows
Beneath the etienee of her snows,
Though the pink 'apple pour •a cotercect,
Tlzoueh the lush qulnee, the denttzia
and the pear' '
Bend their decked brows and laden
' handy to s'liare
Their'kfey% magnificence with us.
Indifferent; and ungenerous
The dogwood dreamsupon the quiet
afire:
doar. Across the big office Teddy
Al;
ut the House
THE PAY-AS-YOU-GO VACATION.
The girl who finds the matter of
expense an obstacle to her vacation
plans can perhaps get' a valuable hint
or so from other girls who have de-
vised a way to a "pay-as-you-go"
outing.
One girl in a northern lake region
made use of her ability to amuse chil-
dren. While the mothers went on fish-
ing trips or visited the surrounding
places of interest she helped to make
sand villages, took small children on
voyages close to the shore or on walks
to the berry fields. Since the girl in
charge really enjoyed children, the
work was not tedious to her, and the
problem of expense took care of itself,
One woman' who owned a fireless
cooker kept its three compartments at
work in the service of other cottagers
who wished to spend their time on the
water.' or in side trips and so was able
to make the family vacation twice as
long as she had expected it to be.
A girl' whohad hadexperience in
teaching used her forenoons, or a part
of thein, in tutoring some children who
had school work to make up. Her
afternoons were free, and she -spent all
summer at the vacation resort instead
of `merely the three weeks that she had
thought she could afford.
A typist sent cards to all the hotels
and cottages saying that she would
answer' business correspondence, make
out hotel menus or send out letters ex-
tolling the merits of the resort to pros-
pective visitors. For the last-mention-
ed work her services, were sought be-
cause she put human interest into her
writing that did not appear in the
usual descriptive circulars.
One girl and her brother gave swim-
ming lessons. Every morning and every
afternoon they had large 'classes of
persons who were eager to learn from
some one who was really expert.
Another girl met her entire vacation
expenses by taking, finishing and sell-
ing small photographs. "Few vacation-
ists get good pictures; either they
don't know howto gauge the lights on
the water or they fail to pick out the
really beautiful points of 'interest;
maybe they want to be in the picture
themselves; so "I am always getting
commissions to take pictures," she ex-
plained. She did the finishing herself
and found that good snapshots were
usually in great. demand.
Many resorts are a considerable dis-
tance from the email town 'on which
they depend for their supplies. People
on vacation dislike to make trips to
town, and so one girl seized the oppor-
tunity to shop for the others, A slight
payment from the cottager ann a
small commission from the merchants
kept her in spending money all sum-
mer.
Candy makers need only set up shop
to be successful, because all`vacation-
ists have a sweet tooth and the ordi-
nary village, store does not fill the de-
mand for sweets. Baiting small cakes
or frying doughnuts is another way to,
earn enough to extend the holiday.
The right sort of girl can act as
guide, for a locality. If she knows the
points of interest in the neighborhood,
-the best fishing holes, the side trips
and the berry patches,—she may find
her services in steady demand.
When your vacation is done take
stock of your abilities; plan your cern
fiaign for the; neat year and when the
'time comes go forth confident that if
A Beautiful Complexion'
A clean healthy skin' is
the first requirement of a
beautiful complexion.
Tho daily use of Lifebuoy
is the simple, sure, way
to skin loveliness.
And yet our Hearts against her cannot
hard en—
Her beauty ie•,her argument and par
don,
Why Should we smugly'tunalyze her?
Noglory of the wood outvies her,
NOT any pampered darling of the gar
• den.
—Henry Robin -sun Peumer,
A Tasmanian Orchard.
People who are well acquainted with
the appearance of an orchard in We
country probably imagine that, an or-
' chard In T'asm'ania looks the, same,
haying rich green,ggrase growing under
Ale trees, But title • de not the case at
all. I arrived in. Tasmania in spring
proceed,
i country), n to this Y), and n C
(autumn
ed straight to an apple orchard, At
The Creat CanadianSwectnwad
gsmuvldes plieeSsust
sled=
tor.your teeth,
trroisetrstatng; the crevices
aidd sisasistesI tM`tem,.
Thea., too, 'ing e9tlB
slagestto a.
Use INIZIlEiLE9r'S' atter,
every meal --sets how
much better yoei .will
,`•fleet.
SWAYING ,MBLI.O.NS
One of the best-known woman arae
tors in the world said recently t1IIit
the only life worth while was the and
of :a platform speaker,: There is ne
donbt abort the tremendons fascina-
tion of being able to sway the crowd
and make them listen in breathles's
animation to yotlr every word•
It has been the orator, and not the
writer, who has- in a 'moment of, na-
tional crisis -come to the rescue with
the hypuotisiug gift of' words. Word's,
words, they flow Like a frenzied torrent
the lips of the gifted orator. Hie
from
whole being le full of strange, yet
simple mannerisms which are the out
cone of sincerity, indignation, patriot-
ism, or it may be sympathy with
great and good cause. -
Most critics of public speakers are
agreed that the Prluco of Wales -wilt
become a great orator, . When he ie
streaking Iris face lights in a wondei°-
ful way, h1s voles rings, with sincerity,
and his eyes flash in ash in a most captiv-
ing m000er.
The Prince is very particular in the
'make-up of life important speeches. Ho
writes the speech with his own hand.
It Is then sent to the typist, and When
it is returned the Prince goes over the
subject matter very carefully,_ cutting
otit oli pedanUO illusions, and maiint g"
the speech a triumph of the Iting'd
English--s'imPl'eand pointed.
,An. orator a. another kind is Mr,
Lloyd George. He is the born publi
speaker, wonderfully intuitive, wit
abundance of human sxmpath
most uncanny way or telling tl
excited audience the very thi
want to know, expressing h
the language of the crowd,:
comparisons; Which grip the
tion of even the most simple
hearers, telling stories full of rel
pathos, or sparkling with 1111
humor,, and with the wildest of b
eat sudden
t ten sweeping ing the gr u p
off their feet, making them almost me
with cheering.
Mr. Lloyd George .knows the great-
est of all secrets of the popular orator
—the supreme value of an appeal to
the emotions,
ftaYtn,ond Poincare is perhaps the
most polished orator of France at the
Present ` day, His speeds is .clear,
trenchant, precise to a degree in long-
WI' nie it's the very reverse. i wtinna . moraage, but singularly,free from etostatealat
be buried anywhere 'else —if I'm j eniottors,i'onalisnn, common to mosgr,
spared."
.The art of the orator remains lin-
The love of truth is not the same diminished through the ages. It is the
as the love of your own opinions.' • ebleP expression tlnuman bein
fevered by the peiofselonthe of patriotismg,
Burden Enough
Y'ri red—"Den't you pay an income
tax?
Miilkmen—"Naw, don't I pay a water
tax? That's 'nought'
r ant
'
I i lum
1�r. Corns and
Warts
that time of year it looked like •a verit-
you are willing to give a part of your able fairyland,; all the trees were cog- Minarda
Picking His Place,
Two elderly Fleas visited the town's
new oenetery, One of diem, who did
not like its spick-andsPan appearance,
said, "I'd rather 1100 than be buried in
sic a place." -
The other said—"Would ye, man?
time to it, you can readily make a ered with pink and white blossoms, —..---..,0--..—.
large share of your expenses.
TO -DAY'S MY.X+RIEND.
I don't know much about To -morrow;
I've never seen her yet.
She may be very fair, To -morrow,
But still I dont regret
That we have never met.
To -day's my friend, my comrade; she's sprayed as a Preventive ag'alost in3oct
And in heart I haven't room for P
true blue.este. The owner of the orchard must
two, o. Have you? I1 be an expert, or must, employ an 0I -
pert, who thoroughly understands
EFFECTS OF COLOR. I pruning, spraying, picking, . sorting, and ambition. Even in our own times
and wrapping'apples before packing, the place of oratory is the foremost in
Some conclusions of a Central Euro -i Plvely apple that Is packed must be ( lvfla`1 roidery, Crochet, ancy
plan society which has made studies fewith neither blemish nor' public -Work. There ere many who feel
color have been noted
perfect, �eet�le®niers'
of. the effects of o 9. bruise and must also ,have the stem.
it the Journal of the American Medi-
In
Association. are wrapped in paper before it is Put in a , highly intuitive and absorbing nature;
following: Specialty Shop g y
case.
to comprehend.thoroughly 120 Danforth Avenue Toronto a:giPt of acanrute atvalysis, a tempera
-
theorder.' ller'ng the dn'y period orchards have ment Which refuses to be the slave of
the psychology of colors and to use
for the decoration of to be irrigated by means at g i tb praise or blame,- super -abundance of
that knowledge(The hmsss used for Ploughing in the 1 moral courage, wit, an even temper,
interiors' and exteriors of dwelling' orchards get to ]snow t1:d}fir work flier-, u N -e°f
k., )liscix the alit of decision, absolute sincerity,
places, one should familiarize himself I oxighly; and soon learn to duck .their ' �� f .r"._. l'., fife a and a Aft ore trained to reflect all the
udandthe.:•n•
the effect on the mind n er the branch- + tins of the passim; hour.
with heads when passing under ' , a azia '.: fleeting emotions P
emotions of the various colors. os o•P a tree,' and so avoid breaking •'�.,rn��?��,,"Sl�:,.OxbAood[• �
WHITE a � ,r's�' +�v,a-•� �: 9Ywt®
The whole orchard mnst'be sur-
rounded by a rabbit -proof wire fenee,
rabbits being olio- of the;worst pests.
An orchard of a hundred acres iso con-
The first thing that struck me was
the cleanliness of the aroma. There
was net;a weed—not a blade of grass
even.
.Every year the whole of the orchard
has to be ploughed, cross -ploughed,
and harrowed;- and ,the ground round,
every tree has to°be dug up.
Twice a year eacb', tree must be
lrawil to the platform. but oratory in
t Fadi apple has to be Individually
We sell your amnia -on consignment. I practice ie a different matter.
Amongthemthe pp I Send a stamp for reply.
Lingerie and pe Y
It requires years of patient study, a
MATCHES
East-West
EDDYS Best
LOOK FOR THE NAME
ON THE BOX
TE makes a roomappear bright-
er and larger but it gives a sense of
coldness and emptiness.
SCAM= givesanimpression of'deli-
cacy. "In a room in which the 'walls
even the smallest branch.
and the curtains are scarlet, children !Adored 'large, and will be found big i
work batter than usual. • II'enough for most people to look after.
YELLOW suggests warmth and the Thetrees -are -=ganged . symmetrically, ,
light of the sun and produces' a #eel 111111 in 'a straight line whichever way one
looks'. Bach tree 10 about eighteen
feetaway from any Other in every di-
rection,
Looking at •au orchard ireful bearing,
one can hardly imagine that It was
originally dense bush, all of which had
to"be cleared at considerable cost be-
fore even ploughing could be conr-
menced.
When the ground le all in order, and
the trees art planted, one must watt
about three years before they com-
mence bearing.
Lighthouse Moves Inland.
The lighthouse once off Atlantic City
wall out to sea., is now 500 yards inland
from the Boardwalk, and surrounded
by paved sdreete. and apartment houses.
In fifty years the shiftingsands have
added million's of dollars worth of land
to the northern end of the island.
It does not matter what one learns
so long as it 1s learnt well, and is
worth learning.—Sir Robert Horne.
•ing of comfort. Yellow paper renders
a dark room bright and habitable. -
ORAxSII has the sante qualities as
yellow. Curtains of this color in a
bedroom have a stimulating effect on
the nerves.
RED is the color which represents
the spontaneous joy of youth but it is
also a color, most hard on the eye, A
neutral red causes a feeling of ener-
vation. Persons subject to melan-
cholia under the influence of red have
their dark thoughts dissipated,, but
nervous people should avoid this, color.
VIOLET is depressing.
BLUE is calm and comforting. Those
who are sick sleep better with a dim
blue -lamp or a blue lamp shade in
their room. •
GREEN' has also a Calming effect.
GRAY, employed upon walls -which
are very large, produces a sensation
of desolation and emptiness. ,
The sick are always depressed by
obscurity and somber decorations.
While the conclusions of the Munich
Association may not be altogether true
they are interesting and can'possiblyl
furnish valuable indications for the
interior decoration ofhouses, and of
rooms in hospitals.
These of course are general conclu-
sions and may not prove true in all
:cases. Reactions to color vary with
individuals and depend to some extent
upon one's previous: assecsation and
experiences with color.. But as a gen-
eral rule bright colors excite and
stimulate and dark ones depress.
Our Free Booklet
�of Engravings
1s yours for the Asking.' It
ghee Particulars of how ypti
can obtain
The Finest Instrument:
The World Frustums,
,A1 • .FACTORY - 550E
Cash or Credit.
1.0 dors' free trial In Your.
own home,..
Imoarlal Phonograph Corp.
Dept, IC, Owen Round, Ont.
Betablleh,d 26 years,
ISSUE NO. 23--'23,
Skirts Pleated $1.
Fermin pia tr`S • Aerordlnn rlontlna and Moe 'Wulf,
film qt g l a r
12 'Cent9 h yard, • ,Out af•t„vii orders 'prdmpnY ret -
tended to,
EIMEIROIDSR'Y AND LINGERIE CC.,
740 Yange St., Toronto,
a
�', t '. 0,. prloea' it 1 silt Mnmt1Q •nae
HOT WEATHER DAINTIES.
RHIMAitn SHERBET -Cup Up a pound
of- young. rhubarb --into •short lengths.
Boil in three pints of water for twenty
minutes, strain, sweeten to"taste and
serve cold. If liked, the thinly peeled
rind of hall, an orange may he boiled
with the rhubarb- ,_
RASPBERRY AND CURRANT ME --Boil
two cups of sugar and four of water
twenty minutes. . Mesh raspberries
and currants separately and strain
,the ,juice through jelly bag.. Add to
-the cooledsyrup, and. freeze. The ad-
dition of the stiffly beaten whites of.
;two eggs or a•. tablespoon 'of gelatine
softened in cold water, and diesolved
in the'hot syrup, gives more body.
T�s�t
u.niCKS
We Will be pleased to Mit your name on our
Melling List t,' regularlyy Melee our Aitnh,g Bul-
letin weekly without charge, 1f you will write lis
'your name anal address.
AR•NiSTIl0NG & CO.
'Royal Bank Building Toronto
tie wonder SmaxfkMowers as-
sopopular! They cuisoeasily
sand wifh Welt liiile"push".
Marbrin/cad 1Yarkmaashlp Gua!wnleet%
AT EVERY HARDWARE STORE
sbl1dra_sMAfsr f Atkit BRacscvar.Eoat:
not only
thatmustard ars,
-gives
lu?ow.' std {levet tome ,
''vis lsoTts'imula 9 .our `dlgest'i0
�° stimulates your adds •
but also assimilation it
because it aids:
nourishment to foods.
A{.
229
(, t,
White Flowers Are Sweetest.
Hardly any brown or orange -col-
ored flowers are of value for making
scent. A few pale yellow flowers, such
as the American jasmine, are useful.,
Blue flowers, such as violets, and red
roses are valuable; hut, as any ecent
manufacturer will tell you, white flow-
ers are more scented than those of any
other color.
Think for yourself, and it will at
mice occur to you Clow many pure
white flowers posess intensely sweet
scents. To mention only a few, there '
are the tube -rose, the double jasmine,
j•tho white lily, and the blooms of the
orange and the lemon.
iKnowledge is neceseary as to the
proper times at whdelh to pick flowery
for making scent. Pinks, for instance,
only yield their scent after having.
been for at. least three hours in fu
sunshine, Beset:, on the other hand,
must be gathered as soon as open,: and
jasmine before sunrise.
Nearly all flower scents can be • inti•
toted by judicious blending of antidotal
odors. That of the jasmine remains
the solitary.exceptdon. ..
'rite great artists in seenh-making
declare that scents afleet the nerves
of the rose In inuch the dame way as
Bounds affect the ear, and that It is on
these lines that they woik. .
They .will tell you that the sense -
tions 'afforded by heliotrope, almond,
clematis, and vanilla are : all similar
and near tho,.bottom of the scale. A
sharper, note is struck by lemon, ver-
bena, and citron: '
Scents, of course, are manufactured
from many other' subetalnces besides
flow*: Among .hes( may be: men,. from
,camphor, cinnamon,
oastoa'aum obtained from; the heaver),
and also manyre,lins,
Cloth. Knit, Not Woven, by Eigllsh
Machine,
Fallowing the improvement of knit-
ting time:lesies for underwear' to ,the
pointat whiehe hes praot'ical'y .din-
placed cloth, •comes an English method
Of knitting cloth for outer garments..
A knitting machine lies' 'boen maim
factured which is claimed .1nb y dil'r
the flee, smooth -finished fabrics, like
meitons, at a colt which makes them
competitors of woven goods,
•
The thought is father to the dead.
By turning the thoughts of our grow-.
ing children into clean and healthy
channels, weare lessening the neees
city for the upkeep .of places such as
the Home and Prison Gate Mission.