HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1923-12-06, Page 2I(E MCIPIEY!
GRADE EGGS
:-Tion• Donlirdon. 1,aw says all corgi . must ;be
, sold- bY 'grade ordY. That raeatui openingt
',,. for Goyerninent E:gg', Insnootors:--znore grad-
ers, candlers,aud rad], trained' in the ogg .
.business. .T'Inck formers :aro , now. roakit' v
. extra money buying eggs and. grading ..tnert1-
seises. Country In'efehants are piiiIng 253'
,.. tb 6i)o 13 ' iase for. grading. 1.471!,111. C FS grsdint
and .egg ' business In 6/1470 taloa ' by. ntall" '
` 'throngh Shew's ' Egg ' Grading 4COuise. . Au.
'Proved by authorities., P,i•enare now for the
F. nian.y, openings, tho 'April rush 5111 create, '
det. mit. inrarnistron. write erof., c. h.i
, Gi.nbani, Dept. '‘,18,, Shaw' Zehools, Limited, •
; 46 'lilted, SS:.•
.. .
, •
1
:seed '•
One cent
may obtfttn 3 cOp
;
,
$!,
"7",1;sivp,Elpt,,,it •,,r,,er".
•
A405
for ex, trit&A paclikage itedar.
eliciaus I Economical I
Viox•MII
Impow........usreownmiaassumaimaass
ontam
leimtz
--------sradoessurawisaisses
FOR THE SCHOOL LUNCH BOX.
' Cooldes and fudge and fruit eake
are popular additions to any school
box, providing, of course, that enough
of the "filling" foods are included to
,
take away that empty feelied.
Fig Cookies—For the fig cookies use
any preferred cooky recipe, roll thin
and cut in long, narrow cakes. Lay
half of thee in a shallow, oiled baking
tin and siarend with a fig paste. Brush
the edges of the cookies with cold
"S*
rWillOgAiKr APYANDV
•
,
' „rs—aseea-----eseges==1 Was not My wish then to keep YoUr
child. 1 had no interest in the foreign
The Gift Of The Gods, .ionoi, my slate' s eleild. It a MY
bebe. /merely cilsired to gain no:see-
' . i tention to return yoUr .041 -when
e e, first opportitnitY offered, which
tuopyrigatil stvboroulltdonnoet(iinacyriImdinif:vme:eciantdhaptutyernusrr
nelsliew beyead. me reach foreVer,
P,BeARti ,PcidoETo
' babe's sunny, foreiga way e had bound
tight cords around my heart, 1 laved
her. 1 salved my conscience with the
thought you had my float). and Islood
in yqur possession. I bribed and co -
weed your servants to leave you, And
then you sailed for your own country
and my way was lear.
"I ask not your pardon, madam.
The beaety of oyur child's soul bruises
and tortures me every day of MY life
With the realization of what I have
bereft you. IVIy daily prayer is, -may
the gods give me strength to confess
in time. I think they will. On your
child's twentieth birthday my guilt
Will be made isneevn. If the spirits of
my ancestors call .me before then, this
letter is to be 'handed to you by the
df:ca4tig.°1 Lim two moons after MY
"May the gods crowd intp the Ve-
maining years of your and your hus-
band's livell the blessings you have
foregime, and multiply them tvyiee
CHAPTER XKIV,--(Cont'd.)
' Yee, truly, there is no spot in the
whole world to which the little gpd
Cupid Call fit?,ztj away and rest; the
whole globe is his wirkshop, and he
was having a busy time in China right
now.
"Poor mother, 1 don't care about
leaving her toe long, Her eyes follow
me ect wietfully, as if she were afraid
I might vanish any moraent."
"And sp you may, der"
Tu Hee lifted smiling eyes to Dav-
face, but her voice Was softly
pleading.
"Ab, David dear, you knovi's I long
for that fime as much as you, but
dont you think I owe rny parenth at
least a year I feel if I gave them
that it would, help Uncle Weng's spirit
to rest easier," '
"Dea.r Hft.1 irl, I understand. A
;eager girl about to keep a tryst. Her
heart was palpitating, her cheeks
were flualied, and her eYeS Vta e when
ahe at last paused and opened a door
. on her right.
Softly ehe closed it and stood gazing
expectantly across the 'dainty room.
' Only for a moment did ehe hesitate,.
Like a magnet she Was' drawn for-
ward to the small white bed, There
ishe caught her breath as she loolred
down at the girl, whose eon., regular
I breathing proclaimed youth?s un-
troubled sleep.
The -miracle satutated Irma Cul-
fvei''s soul anew. Her daughter—her
very own -this radiant, joyous crea.-
ture—bone of her bone, flesh of her
flesh—the babe whom she had mourn-
ed' for sixteen years given 'pack to her
ifredn the -grave! Surely God reigned
in the heavens and'all was well with
. .
activity of the doctor wilithbee'rEe7i;eatetedr- yea"rPafri-r%7 ni),:°Ns).;',Idt'htehlic'.1ifferg:Ow°.11(-1,1-1:t'shaev.;`)as ed the bad. , and had in His aweP ;00;
of less work to ,do, and had ,watched over and kept unternish-
in a lower death rate for sal ages, an have heel' es' say gods, time returned it to 'her arms a biog.:.
dly know what I believe now. s • • . —
fi
increase in the life spansand greater for har
thdught slieuld never smile gain,.asoPure aria unstained when e
and I want to
health and happiness for the longer hidigh ays now. No;took it from m her. ,
life. please dents misunderstand me. How, lovely, she :was! The long, dark
lashes lay like silken fringe on •the
— haven't forgotten Uncle Weng, but
fair skin, which returning health and
BEDS WELL M.A.DE. somehow I fed that he isn't far away,
s lead delicately flushed, The,
' a that he can see me and that my being haPPines
Those who have had the hiring an s hair clang in soft, golden aurls aroued
'appy too,
training of a great number of house- hapy , makes him nthe tem ie. Will YOU moist, smooth brow. ne han was
workers will tell you that it is hardea- ere 18 P Yesu come lying-Pahn 111) on the Pillow, the other
to find a girl or woman who makes a
water and place the remaining rolled bed really well than to find a good
cookies on top. Press the edges to- waitress or even a good cook. It needs
gether like a sandwich, brush over special trebling, and Barrie people
with beaten white of egg and dredge never can be taught the trick of mak-
with granulated sugar. -Bake about ing beds well. They- can make beds
ten ininute.s and Iiflt out of the pan for a time as they should be, but they
with a spatula_ To make thefig paste lapse back into old, cateless methods
isook half a pound of figs in boiling unless constantly supervised.
water to Cover, and when tender and 'Perhaps young women who have re -
the water is almost absorbed chop ceived hospital training make the beat
finely, add one-quarter of a cup of -beds, and they surely know the
- sugar and the grated rind and juice portance of making beds with preci-
of -half a lemon. Cook for five min- sion. In their training they are taught
utes longer, cool and pack. that the xnerest wrinkle or crease is
Mock Mince Tiereavers—Roll rich fault enough for a reprimand from
pastry into a thin sheet and cut in their supervisor. „
circles. Place in the centre of each But beds cannot be well made with
two tablespoons of the following mix- poor bedding. Sheets must be large
ture: Mix together half a cup of enough and of heavy enough material
seeded raisins, a quarter of a cup each to make it possible to pull them taut
of currants and shredded citron, the and tuck them securely under the mat -
grated yellow rind and juice of one tress. Pillow cases rnust fit the
pil-
lemoii, four tablespoons of melted but- lows with something like precision.
ter and three-quarters of a cup of Blankets must be of the rlght size,
neither too large nor tdo small,
Usually this depends more on care
and attention in buying than in the
expenditure of large amonnts of
sugar.. Turn the pastry (seer into
neat half circles and crimp the edges
Cif the crust together with the tines
of a fork, dipped in flour. Lay in a
greased pan, brush aver with beaten( money. The housewife who is par
egg, miii
mixed with a little cold water, ticular about her beds takes measure -
and dust lightly with sugar. Bake in ments of her pillows and then if they
e hat oven until crisp and brown are of various sizes ias_special pillow
Nut Bread—Mix together three cases to fit each pillow. It is simple
cups el' entire wheat flour, one-half enough to sew a little tape on each
cup of bread flour, one teaspoon of pillow with a letter, A, B or C, to ba-
salt, one tablespoon of sugar, three dica.te the size, and then rnark the
and a half teaspoons of baking pow- pillow cases indelibly beneath the hem
der and one cup af chopped hickory with the initial of the pillow that
nuts and English or black walnuts. they fit.
Gradually beat in two and a half cups No beds can be well made that have
of sweet milk and turn into two wel.1-
oiled bread pans. -Bake in a moderate
avert for eorty-five minutes. If prefer-
red, half a cup each of nuts and
raisins may be used Instead of all
nuts,
BEASHAMED TO BE SICK.
The woman of to -day, instead of be-
ing proud of her illness, is beginning
to be aeharned to be sick. Sickness is
an admission of inefficiency. It Is an
admission that one has been a bad
s manager in the business of- Iiving.
The principal topics of conversation
among women, and men, too, for that
matter, have been the =Tether of op-
erations and "what the doctor said."
Instead, the conversaleon should be on
the number of sniles one can walk
without tiring and the record months
sar years of unbroken good health.
An unbroken record of good health
does not necessarily mean the absence
of a doctor in the house; that is a
proud reinark frequently heard, The
absence of a physician In the hoine
does not necessarily indicate that his
services were not needed. The best
assurance of good health requires the
regular co-operation of the family
with the phyalcian to the end that
medical seience may be brought to
bear on the problems of the family
health and welfare.
The work of the physician is chang-
ing and the new attitude af then ublie
toward disease and health. The doe -
doe will probably have more instead
./r11ous Book Bargains
'Tracy a History of Canada, Charriplain
to Laurier, full af plates, $ volumes
($5.00), the set 32.25. Who's Who and
Why In Canada, record of 3,500 Cana-
dian Men and Women, hundreds. of por-
traits, 1968 pages ($10), $.3.25. History
of Canadian Rebellion, 1337-39 and Life
of WL11. Lyon. Mackenzie, by Lindsey,
650 pages ($5.00), $2,25. 51r Wilfrid
Laueler, by Peter McArtleu.r, life, arteo,
dotes ead complete political career
($1.00), 35e, Lilo of the lirimortal
poison,. by his Secretary, Baron de
Motteval, illustrated, 3 vols. ($4.5-0),
Margaret Feeernasonry Exposed,
origiti, history, key, etc, paper cover,
90s„ Scottish Kirk and it e Wor,thles,
complete bistery DIckeon, colored
;plata; ($3,00), $1.60. Shakeepeare, as
Poet, Dramatist and Mari, by gable,
400 pages, 100 pietrures ($3.00), $1,25,
Cemploto Pam* Doctor and. Book of
Hisalth,"by the fisrattita Dr. MeCormick,
aolorcd and other plates (irictuding
herbs) 000 bee pages (66.60), $2.50,
inibie avarice fee 62 fdiradage, se -tuba's,
Vette-es and stariee, $70 pages ($3.00S
A,haves are ell papular boOke and well
toraind. Wrs give regular. priees in
brackets, end our S'euesain Peletati mei
eertasiehets wo phy &diem" thargee.
ALer.flt MIN ELL
815' "a Pl tr, ST. - TORONTO, ONT.
'
loose and ill-fitting pads beneath the
sheets. Pads fit best that arra exactly
the' right length and width of the -Mat,
tress. If this is not possible then, they
may be made to keep in Place by se-
curing them with tapes aittaahed at
the corners. ,
in with me?" , •
As they made their way past the
prostrated,guards, Tu -Hee slipped her
hand into David's and together they
calinptrroea.ched the great im,age in the
e
"See, David," whispered Tu Hee.
David glanced up. "Why, there are
-two rubies now." -
Te. Hee 'nodded, "Yes, father arid
mother have given Paul's gift back to
c,f ,
the house ta Which it belonged. It is Primifive m its wildness.
e
this great estate should pass out
better so, just as it is better that
Tu Hee stirred. Hr hand uneurled
ed. lima bent her head and
my hands to the next in line. So you
thrilledanliftas the slender fingers brushed
a, „
see, dear, I shall ake nothing
away "erAsAPhser hand fell back Te He's eyes
with me but memories and undying
love, for his love will surround opened. She smiled dreamily into
rne
always, as he said it Would."
The monient was too sacreffor an
answer. Silently, and reverently David
watched, Tu Hee as she knelt before
the statue and made her offering of
incense. He glaneed again at, the
glowing, radiating poc4e of crimson
small.ana white, over the lacy
coanteeparie. - The- --nails, pink ..and
sliellslikee:diad 'discarded . the seal df
the .Easta-dcliegold, menacingsshields
. . ,
-Irnia couldtesiSt,the promptings of
.her great mother:love .no loriger.
pulsivelY she ,reached her-arms:toot-his
wonderful child—hers, her very, own,
-Her starved heartbeat in great, .suff-
tocating throbs. Her love was almost
Irma's adoring face, and a sob of jay
died in the woman's throat.
"Mother!" Tu Heeraised her arms
now, and with a soft, endearing term,
resurrected from the dear dead past,
Irma: clasped her child to her breast.
"You have been withene all through
the thiswonderful night, my darling little
'shining 'up. so brilliantly against
mother," Murmured ' Tie Hee, as she
whiteness of the alabaster brow. The
stroked her rnotheide face and hair;
j jeviessels, wnaonldoenrginerg sscpinixtiiitliastesdeleikikengrestt
"you and father and Uncle W,eng, and
right earthly 4WrOTIgS. Instead, their Uncle Weng was as happy as 'we., You
pinch,
rays appeared to proclaim an ever -
don't -mind my loving him so
lasting peace. • mothee, rndee,arnary' darling. He has rob_
li
compassionate,
age, again, as on that other As Pavicl's aYes lingered on the bed me of sixteen years of mother
.feli.
ke face of the im-
nigtt love', but we can Make it up, can we
wee-ks ago, the temple ,seerned filldd not, Tu Hee mine?" •
with the presence of the Christ Whose Ah, yes; and he suffered all those
years, mother. How he suffered!' I
love had redeemed the world. The
of childhood ever_ know, for I loved him so well." ,
uaquestiOning faith
whelmed him, thattime that still Tu Hee pressed her lips to the
,
hands that clasped her.
glimmered a hallowed light in the far
away past, when he had knelt at his "Mother! What a name! How I
mother s knee, ,a, small, white -clad, have longed to say it from a tiny
credulous boy, and impelled by a force child! I used to pretend and call it
that lifted his soul strong and clean to Dun, but, dear old Lun, she couldn't
aboye the mundane things of exis- bear itunderstand at last the
tence, he dropped on his knees beside reason—it pricked, hurt her just- as
Tue Hee and with hers his heart went ever-iricreasing remorse hurt Uncle
up a great cry of thanksgiving and Wang."
praise to the God of all humanity.
- •
• CHAPTER XXV. •''
The wonder of it peeped in anew
with the dawn., Irma Culver slipped
on her dressing -gown and stole to the
casement window. , A, soaring -laek
gave forth his ecstacy in full-throated,
olden notes; the flowers, drowsy with
5ew, unclosed sleepily their petals as
So they talked, mother and child,
until the sun burst in full radiance
through the open windows and house-
hold sounds proclaimed a wonderful
new day had begun.
Neil Culver closed his heart to all
petitions that day. The sick he turned
over to a doctor in a neighboring hill,
who, although a foreigner merely so-
journing like himself, readily acceded
the sunbeams cla,nced a.cross them; the to Ins request despatched by the vol-
1,
• (To be continued.)
e Try It in the Dark. „
We discovered' this rather . effective
methOd by which to locate certain.
trouble arising from faulty ignition of
the flivVere
After a futile search fora had plug,
ground, "short,'l or some other troutsle,
-we drove the car „into the carriage
sited. The interior of the shed hap-
pened to be quite dark. With the'hood
still up and the motor running we dis-
,
covered -a tiny spark—we were unable
to 'detect this in the light outside—be-
tween the porcelain and shell of a
plug. This unlooked-for fault was the
troublemaker. .
The engineswould miss only when
under load, seeming to rim smoothly
when'idling. This rendered -the screw-
driver, method. in.effective. By rieriort-
ing to this .take-iain.the-dark plan
later we were able to find a ,short.In
the R. C. • .
- Once a Sifter.
s
When -the flour sifter has become
too shabby 'for work as a sieve it
makes' an excellent egg boiler. It can
be placed inside the saucepan arid the
eggs ea,n be placed. in the water at
once and all can be removed together
when. done. .
I
Ay •
,..
-S-eds't VA
-0
•
• What' Tired Eiftn--S,o,?
"Well, have you got all your things
• . .
packed ready to go away?" . • ,
-"Yes, and I'm worn • ont--my wife
has jiist gotten through with:tire job.''
. • '•
Mit-lard's Liniment Heals Cuts.
• •
•
AL
1,..stii-•-ossasid....--is...s. she -.1-1 g; ,ubles hearniii ISVe vavvrtkly.
the wains,t. gazing: on all this pure child with a. mixture of awe and ill._ plysonuts.f,:est sitoetici and sale
a new 'day by TO-SeemellOW music; and His eyes -folloared his new-found ir complete, and exclusive lines of wholo-root,
splendor compared it to a new dawn credibility. Somehow his practical ea- ivi„okuLty. °11°I -m
in her own life. ture could not readily grasp this won- tufa BROTHERS. MONTREAL
It was -without regret, however, that derfuhrevolution in his life. It seemed
she turned away from the scene and to him that a miracle had indeed been
moved softly to thedoorin order not wrought. This lovely, radiant crea-
te awaken her husband, -who slept ture his! And then regret lashed him
after a late vigil at a sick bed. furiously as he recalled his apathy,
Her step asquired a joyful spring his repeated warnings against inter -
h d d ference Ile shuddered as lie theugh.t
when the corridor was reac e , an _
she sped along the passage like an, how near she, his child, had come to
. tossing herself into the abyss of de -
Help the Veterans" spair, forever beyond his reach, as
the wife of the Chinaman, Chu Sing.
To lielp solce the problem of the His face blanched as he called' to mind
veterans' Associations, a 'norninion- how, but far his sudden decision to
wide•campaign for funds is now being return, the sea might have remained
conducted in the ferre • of a 'Poster between them forever.
Judging Competition. Bitter, inflexible anger gripped him
Se. noi Donation of $1.20 at the cruel; barbarous wrong that
. had been perpetrated against him and
Every donor of $1.20 will be presented his. The present flood of ecstacy that
with one ticket -folder on which -sixteen of engulfed their hearts only caused the
the most celebrated BOVRIL posters- are hideous crime to appear blacker and
reproduced ie full colors. larger. He sat, ad unforgiving judge,
Which are the 12 bes, in order mes rit, ' over Wang Toy's written confession;
t
it what you gee decide, reee, feeler . I swear by the epirits of my an -
show: just what you must do. cestors, madam, rnY Intention was but.
It is a fascinating trial of taste and judgro 'to -regain my own, my sister'schild-
Malt to class these posters in the Order saw my oPPortemity when plague had
which popular faucy will endorse. It is called Your husband to the interior,
a real gatee which can be played over but when soon after his depaeture it
and over again, and in which all the family crept into your household and laid, ita'
can joie, Imistress low, I belie:ved the gods were.
To add interest, ,2.003 prizes have been Playing into me- hands. My time had
arrangea for, amaunting irt all ta e30,000 came.-
. Plans were skilfully laid—the
(About $138,888.00), these having beers
Chinese child, Paul, was to ,be carried
donated by BOVRIL LIMITED. fr°h`' his mitaarY at midnight by my
The first three are approximately as follows: men- We (n-l•ld ant fail- The greatest
• menace to our plans, Tem, was silenced
Prize, lst Pre, $55,555.00 by threats on the welfare of the Gift
Pt47,-- 13 S88.00 " of the Gods, yotix child. So forgive
the faithful nersearid attendant of
. .3rd Prize, 1,5ther55:00, 1yain, daughters for see has ever veov_
Only the vast scaie2. on which. tester-, ed that.
Jadgiag CoroPetiti°a hs been °41aniz°a 1 "But madam, 01.1T scheme failed,
has made it Possible to offer these ,Miscarried. When the child was en-
Itil lwrarped before me, I discovered the
Ji
,Join n the game sanicn Is a most enter-- frightful blunder. In consternation I
tabling oner, and windh nano for intcnif$nee "'ordered the immediate return of the
mid white babe but My servants brought
So send your donation now and let every, the ward eoied net be eohcayoiee
one try the game. hushaiiel had arrived frent his long
Address olonalions te any of the following vitsil in the -plague-stricken diStriot.
OrgAni:ntips, Of thei.r brunches which are Luis -was coed into an ally by the
actively Imo:rested anel ask your help t belief that the miStake proved the
Veterans', Association. et Great Dreale, 272-4 gods dosieed the little Gift of the Clods
Park Ave-, gas -treat, for Chien A story was quiekly eon-
Grkta Votocaus' Anootinflori, Citi/en eseted and,tec,spised by you and ssus
drew55 oy can„,1,14 121 husband that the child had disci with
Pv;:. ,c,f, Montreal, the dreaded. Sever detins; your illeess,
papered Vtn oas 11 carman, stio Mate "I offer no exedso for my or/elite:a
-4 Metro sdeart-sss. '1* naarlain but by the gods I sevele it
A SMART "CARNIVAL OR
MASQUERADE COSTUME"
453f. This may be inexpensively
developed in crepe paper, which may
be purchased already printed with
various designs. The model would be
nice in tarlatan, sateen, taffeta, or
unfinished caw:brie, A decoration of
gold oe silver stare in 'tarlatan would
be effective.
The Pattern is mat in 5 Sizes: 5,
8, 10, 12 and 14 yerses. A 12 -year
size respieee 47S3 yards of 30 -inch ma-
terial. If upper flounce is omitted lh
yard lees is required. The hat alone
requires 1/2 yard.' -
Patteen mailed to any address ori
receipt osf 15c in silver or Stamps, by
the 'Wilson Publishing Co., VS West
Adelaide Street, Toronto. AlloW two
weeks for tempt of pattern
Minard's Liniment for Dandruff.
17 doth well, who dooth -good
To those Of his Van brotherhood;
Ht doeth better wbo doth bless
The etaanger le his wretchedness;
Yet best, ela hest of all, doth /it*
"sisb.o helpellemY.
..1111SAW
fulLE6) Cll1LijEN.
Sand :E
..,,'-'vktrppers, from
r
e•aersee,
LetttOirk6 Si,s, 0 tireal,
WOIV1EN CAN DYE. ANY
GARIVIEN1r, DRAPER
Diamond Dyes
Dye or Tint Worn, Fade
Things New fOr 15 cents.
Illr'r'rY"r117 7"..,1 • .;711,7%1T .1.11
r • r r
,
TIniredaSe Deeernber 6, 1623.,
"7:2-sts-
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Eirprir
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Meal-
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4K.,;(...,. -A!,,,-..,:`'
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. thI/oodthatil
to rerrieirther'''
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SeilitiCilli
r ' lia P6,fitY.
Piktigie
. . .
, A univOrsal code*
. that hooefits:00,1-1‘
-„-,-;':-,..
body.., ,,..,
I Aids .digettioo,
oloonses the tee111
soothes the throat
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•. ., ,,. .,..'-- It ,.,'
, • -.. , $.1'.? ,,
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. eel . GLEVS
' " tal1PCOsoS`
.verass , sewage'
aossese. 04,a0;.••'.• -.4
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.; LASTS . ,
and
is
.
re-
• ,
issa
and
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„ •
,''atatults. . . . ,
"Listen to that, fellow jabber,
howl!". ejaculated- a' guest. "Who,
., ,. .
he and what is the mat,ter with, him?"
. ,
"He is a resident of Periwinkle,'"
, . , .
sponded the landlord of the Petunia,.
. ,
taxern. ,,"Here We 'claim he's ascrazy. ,
. as a bedquiltS but over there he
.. ,
prominent and in.ftuential citizen
• . ., .. r ,
as sensible -as any of 'Om!'
, , , . . • ., , , , , . . -
• s. r • . . • •
. , • , . .
- • • •
lir 0 AI F.W 0 It K
We require Parties.. to, knit Alien's
''. wool. vocks, for us at, home, 'either
with' -machine. r or by. hand. ' „Send .
Atanap. and 'addressed' envelope . for '
' information. . ' : ' . . , . - '
' The Canadian Wboladale Distribut- '
'• .„ing'to.n0i-1111a, One- . a , '
..
'
. ,
--
Os
eaO- .
se- . svziriswlssiox no ' -'4.,."
'silent,- butetoquint-
..
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„„ , . , „ .
.., .--.., ,,,;.-440.
r,.. ...
,render the,-,InVittlum.,
..of-..neltiftirservice:
.
-ALWAYS, ASK, FOR .1...4
' iDDY43,411i4TClUiS „ ; •G›,"":'
'd.
.
..
.
Pronounced,
. University
.for
. .unbreakable.
, ID
..._,
.
.
' ;
Direct -trent
RADIO
. ...,,
. :: $5:00‘
, ,.
' .' '. PH, o e -
the
Professore.
eurVeyers In
DAYS'' TRIAL.
MONEY REFU,NDEO..,If
.. WRITE FOR
HALIBURTON
Maattfaetkirere
. . ,
Korth
:,,,-.
MONTHS'.
MAIL
.
,
'
.2200 °limas'
.. ,..
In, 'Gee...ember.
, .
Teloihofie by
by the .Gover,nmorit
bedause ,It has
1 ,,
• GUARANTEE.
'NOT SATISFIED.,
,ORDER LIST.
& WHITE
..
-
.
• ..
. .
' '
leading
proved
;,' .. .•
' .
TRAD-,MARK.
the
BLUE,
, ,Postpaid.
.
will ,advanee
.
beet 'Canadian
Selected
the tar
‘..
12
OUR
. .
. . , .
' ' ..1.1inited
314 Notre Dame West, - Montreal
•
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• :,'""4--;-'..O...
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.
VtgiNtAlconlY4.00
, 1..r.-- • •
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r, II,ril!
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IirITIlifery-Wqrufettee'd7f1".,
'
. ,
• ' • • -
. No StOrrri. Can -Beat . „ ,. .. . ,
. ,. .,
Down This 'Netting: -
.. . . . ..„. . ..
.,. Under theemost. rsesgt- re stonries of "
rain wind, snoW, . liail,.:Peinee..,'
. Edward .,', Fax Wird.. stands un-' ,
.harnsecl. . With its. extra heave-,
galvanizing. and. ,dabla'velSeor ...
Joints,Princs Edward wf-req.s,
•, auk for •PrOtection ••
. . _, .
' Not for a Price. • 1
, , . , .
Successful Ranchers all v'over the ',,untry are
using no Other but . Prince ' Edward. Brand_
.r,ri'' ,PPI,'!!."77;.•77P." .
11.. t..12101:10AN, Liniite.ct
r
•E, • '
' Sumrnersirde, :to, Island.
. .... , . , .
'
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. ,ease.
'
...Faiding.
''-.
, ,nierkable
. • GET'
, .
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A REIVIARKAll-E
,
AND OTHER
.
. ;WITHOUT
A6 . .
A Wonderful
...
TG11S 3,10W
Tells how
Telts- about
Rase Food--Grains----Tolls
,Veget.able
and 'restores
. , .. , ..,, '.1.......'
, ,
'2 .,. "
, r,
.
Life
.
'
DiS
Bartle
,,
a re
. , .
. HEALTH' ivlETHOC
WAYS OF 1-4EALING,
,
MEDICINE.
.
.
Boo —Heath ancl,
.
to get well with Foed,
Food 'glees Health 'or
. r.•
Fasting • and
, , .• - '
of
that invigterate
if eaten raw. Banishet
,
•A•
r..‘ r
„,
,
.1
' .
Rhettinatisin and euilds tp the -weak
-corniton vegetable but little -nsed-r---:
its• -virtues -almost iinknown, . Solt J5
every:vegetable store, , . ,, • ' • , -•,.
'Pelle hose to develop Steenetts Rules
for perfeet Peer:ciao. How to didvancr
In Life, What ,Succs,ss is, Tolls hos.
to „ be Efficient' 1 --.TOW to get,,'morf
nimieea liarin.Y other items , of grea
value for 'these who w.a•nt to know. '
6th ' ',Edit/On-2S ' Books , in , 1,--,-20(
Pages, beatitlfdlly' hotted, , Price' $2.0e
delivered. -free. ''.' ' d, •.. ,
5t11'..ltdititeraee2 pregesaellealth Fact,
anis. s 'Price .$1.06,.deliVered :f ree '
laaeld ,wonder 'Whether. yen can' dyo • G'uisranteed to more tin -in pleaS
or tint sticcassfully, benause perfect' Your money Address
honie dyeing Is giittra,t,t,eo,s1 With' - • 0,, •vi. CALLAHAN, •c%. 00,
"l)igra01111 :1)YeEi" 'wen if • Yon have 218 PRONT - NEW vo
never deed before.. Druggists ILS:ys al; , • ' •
colors, bireotioas in Sash package.
'
clilLDRPV
.MA8TERIITECES FOR
Not long ago the original manustript,
of -"The Rose and the Rine'° was soirt '
e the United States for a harelre'Ll'i
tersest ,its weight in geld. , It is
story,Of Giglio and Bubo, and it is it;
lustrated by - create drawinge.
The tragedy of l'haciperay's nlart .
ripze to e Woman evlitan, he 'love& ,,
dea,rly, but wins destii?-ed to spend ,
All her -best years in innatie asylum,
is one of tile. greatest. in literary ale'',
nals. But she .left at home. two little
girls whom the nov7list lo.ved passione
' A 'Laber of Love.
Whilst they were still' v6ry, young
their famous father' took them to 'Italy
to see Robert BroWning and his equal=
ly-fainotis wife. Theyshact one:son, ,
boy of sixOknown as 'Pen,' for whend
the' story of Biglio and; Bulbo
started: A.s the big man with the shies
Ing .eeectacles .taid.' the story he drew
pictures , to illusiltrate it, and beforedlig
Stoili; had gone 'far, all the
tlie,Knglish colony had gathered round
the storyteller. ,
Then one of them, a little girl, fell
111, and the great novelist and, all the
ether'ehildren Used to go every - day to
her:house to read to her the latest in=
staiment. And that's how this little .
masterpiece canie into 'being;
"To my -children, Rose, Maurice,
Mary, a little'Present of Old. -,(1reek
Fairy Tales",—dhat is ..the dedieatigri
to -Charles kingSley's "Heroes."
after...this .Charniing, little claSsie
been In 'circulation smile time ,Snothet
"little stranger" arrived in -Elie .
age- 'Of -Ever'sley, and Mrs. Kingsley,
said "Rose. Maurice, and' Mary have
,
get th,eir
book, -,.,,-and now Baby, nin,St. ,
Her husband ,obeyed, and ,penned'..
."Water -Babies," that pathetic' story of
a little boy -sweep. -Which ,did ,.So nraeli
to ,alsolisli 'and na, any.other
disgra.ce the industrial
record' Of the laSt Century. •
Wordswerth's world,knowns spoeinsr
"We AresSeyen,", Was-qiispired..by' the ,
poet's t .ariteryiew svith ,fair-lialreda.,
chllct at Pettses-y-Coed. .. in- North.
Wa.lCs; and the same „poet's '"Triad"
was inspired by Ilia 'own" daughe. -
ter Dora, Edith .Seutheg; and S...drale
Coleridge—three daughters of three • .,
great poets, two of Wham becaine Poets'
', The Children's. Question. r, •
"How does the water rcorne down at
Lodore?" is the; beginning :of $outhe3r's
well -known -.poem: Alot. only had a
blg femily,of 131.s own, but he was more ,•.
often' 'than:not ',Charged with Cole-,
"ridge's' dhildren..aS well, at --1-eswick, r„.
eshere 'Phesdual fleck -used to • r
go for' tramps; and it -was
-wa.tching • the Falls ofr Lodore at 'the, , •
head- of -Derwentwatersthat the childs
ren asked. the,peet to tell thein how -
the '-wa,tertii carne down. •
.s.r.One 'Of -PrOwning's. earliest . child
'favorites ' swas Macready, the
great'aptOr's:liitle 'Son. Willie fell .
and ;was confined; to room. • To
_keep him a.mdsed Biewning told him
the old legend of the Pied Piper ot
Hamelie.„ but Willire would not lye sat-
isfied until his Peet', had Put it int°2 •
verse. -„ ''-
scett's "Tales of a Grandfather?, eag
told chapter by chapterebefore e'esora
was Written down, to his dranddaugla-.
ter,' during the very worst period. 'af
thb flnalielalOtraubles , •
''Pielieffs--alantbite iliSrsunifd's; faits=
, tery.nones. -f 'England": for Ids own little ,
; Liddell is imniortaillzed are
"Alice in Yeariderlend."' She was one
rsof- a 'family. of -girls, lielong'ing to the
Vey Rev,. Henry George Lidd.ell; Deans •
of Oxford; whom the Rev. Charles Lilt-
NV-idge. Dodgson,, a shy- old bachelor
"c1.9nr 'a'aell to take fOr *milts.' To ,
gitile, the wayMr. Dodgs on told the -„,
little girls an interrninable story •, •
which they knew as "Alice's Advee-
tures, IIndergroenci. Presently it ap- ,
petered an print as ."Alice in Wonder- `;
la.nd," 'with illustrations by John Ten= sol\
niel. The noni de plume of the ox= t -r-- •
.lord don :ct7 "Lewis Carroll."'
POTS FOlt 11OUSEPLANTS
Tin' cans and 'old kettles and pans
have been called into use as ,*flower
pate about as. often as 'regular. pots,
but pate are so inexpeasive th.at if we
can get tliern.they Will add So niticluto
the ..1,eitity or the -windovi :that it will .-
pay. If we canned get pots conven-
iently then we can' use cans, but they . • ,
should be painted ,a neutral. tine to. ,
inake theni less consiriceolis' If Wo
use cans it is best to cut the tep off
',just beloW the rim and . carefully r,
. :Pound the edge into a little roll onts. '
Ward, This yids it of sharp edg'es and
p,,errnit plants being shaken out .
without danger to the ,noote,
.' The .shape and eiee of pots 'should
Suit the -plarita grown. Ferns
beet in a ahallovv pair, and fosr bulbs ,
there is a half -depth pot made that • '
• will ,give thetn,'pletitY of -soil and save "
trineh,licavy, lifting. "Sortie plantS, like'
geraniusris, .will Sbloorrn beat in ,small
iwaohtisi6sooththeies,rolioktes,.. ew2litiztshepripoctirl-b4isiianndL.,
tlio-rnurns want'plentY of rich 'soil.
Woodstone.,
, Woodstbrie is ; the , name. of
toxin,' made of sawd-Usit inixeil with
rniagnesia ceinent compress
,o dr toxie is very like ordin,ar,y wood, save
, .
' that it bee tie grain. it, is Made .
whieh .can 'he eat with
sSUENis). 48,„,s23., a('11'ntli 6e of
v ;
,
4'
,} 4 ,
1111;.;