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The Exeter Times, 1923-10-25, Page 2the a most sci te,a, sold to 'Vs TeI500 tiZICal.17 TIral" its "HERE'S THE PIN." "Mother," -.id little Herbert, "will yon please pin my collar tight? Here's i the pin." Sure enough, ia his small bard he grasped a large safety pm with which to snore closely confine the collar of hie play coat. I "Why, what a dear, thoughtful child," exclaimed an acquaintance. "I think you have the most helpful chil- dren I ever saw, Almost, any boy' twice Herbert's, age wosild expect. dottier to get the pin. herself." "W IL" • Itted M Briggs, "it was seeing just how helpless many children --and adults as well—are thatI made me determined to try and teach sny children to be self-reliant. "I began with Linda as soon as she could toddle. 'Bring mother your mit- tens and we will go for a walk.' 'Bring your warm coat and we will take a ride,' "One day Linda came to me with her bettoniess little play jacket. 'B'oke,' she announced. 'Where is the button?' I inquired. 'Go get mother the button and we will sew it on sgain.' In a moment she was back with the button. "I placed a workbasket where the children could reach it and they be- gan bringing me necessary repairs_ thread, blunt scissors, needlecase, and the like. They quickly learned where to get wrapping paper, twine and paper bags. this I believe is training is teaching • the children to be more patient and • thoughtful. Many times I have watch- ed them when a toy broke or some article of clothing gave out. Instead of casting it impatiently aside or run- ning to me for help, they almost in- variably look it over thoughtfully. 'We'll have to have hammer and nails, Linda,' ,eut announce. 'Pll get them, Or, 'Mother can sew that shoeseirrifig together if she had linen, keine. siatad. I'll get it, I-Ierberfa e's•- "Just now this is a gre,a.t, help to me. But I believe that in the future it will be the children who will reap the reward." MOTHER AND THE STREET. "I can never, never ask anyone to come and see me here!" Evel-e-n de - eared chokingly. Donald looked queerly at his sister; then he glanced down the street and whistlbd under his breath. It was not a pleasant outlook. The houses looked as if they never had been cared for. Nearly all had cl,seep isteehsaptsains that veried in shade from vrhat ald called "Pale dirt" to iron gray. Each house had a yard, but most of alas se" sae, were' leaee, eed the chief irs'e of the fences seeenect to be to hold all the torn papers that blew down the 'street. "So far as I can judge," Donald de- clared, "this neighborhood needs moth- er's garden about as much as any place very well could." "Mother's garden!" Evelyn echoed. "You don't mean mothers going to have a garden in this place!" "She certainly is!" replied Donald., "What's more, the game of mother and mother's garden will be worth watch- ing. Better fall into line, Evelyn; you'll miss heaps of fun if you don't." "Fun!" Evelyn retorted scornfully. It didn't seem that anyone could ger, • In and out of a yard several times a • day and not see what was happening in it; yet Evelyn went in and out and saw nothing new. Once or twice' to be cure, she noticed Donald diggieg up a border or Seeding bare spots, but she went by quickly without specially remarking what he was doing. Once or twice too she caught her mother talk- ing over the fence to one of the neigh- bors, but each time Evelyn went straight into the house. One Saturday when she was down- town shopping she returned earlier than she had expected. At the corner • of the street she stopped; something oseemed to catch at her heart. Had here been an accident? The yeard in front af her house was full of people. When she became calmer she saw that they were neatly all children, and that nth as `.,61ding a purpe or yellow pa risy, "ClecOmu t Street Dooryard Associa- tion! Notice any difference, Ms?" She' tingled at the sound of her brother's voice. Don aid put his heed ender her elbow. "It's time this blind streak pa.eseci, young woman. Now walk up AUTOMOBILE SCHOOL Ono of the Post Iiiquipped in Ontario, We have leirei Clese lestructois to melte you a Reel !expert. Write or see W Petan, 001 Qms.ou St E , Toronto. 444,0 We' NO, 4,2--'23„ louse s "-- Hidden 13Y J. B. HARRIS-BURLAND s CHAPTER VII.—(Cont'd.) Doctors, pOlicemen, Trehorn, Sir table, smvelntitd tPoatthecl°hwing tlialcequtrearYwoanrdt AlVileerxrregdt°°1;1'13rtialdeneaY4.1Ivrailelt-114sthoefsePaatin robe, and took out the fur coat. others had pieced together the tregic Ari ssion of relief story of l?aula's death. And Yet, curl - eyes. At any rate the woman had not expreGame into Ruth's °nal), erough, in spite of the awful nature of the tra.gedy, a dull mono - removed the coat for other eyee to see. • the possible result of law and But When had she gone to the ward- teaY" and ceremony, lay heavy over robe and seky lusd she gone to the order the proceedings like a ' pall. The wardrob Be wasgoieg to be all tha rno-rt4d e'llisteld be To-morrew. Wo one Ehould be kder or braver than he To -Morro -vv. .A friend who was troub1941 t4I141 weary Ie kuew 'Who'd be glad of a lift and who fitted - ed it, too; On him he would call and see what he could do To-niorrow, Eac morteing he stacked up the let- ters he'd write • To -morrow. Antl thought of the folks he would' fill e? eseeesieseseelifiesl: A universal custom that benefits everY- body. Aids digestion, cleanses the teeth, soothes the throat. Fletcher brought forward the coat eh gl:eatesatitst:tor;gta0edwould edhoY -,'I°feIthIgde-n r°:eteiTo set withde-niligolirrtow. and laid it on the bed and ansWered, lesoses if it wee tem 'astetyitaesseS to It. was too bad, indeed, he w tit before u a askeda ceiOner and i ury., • to -day, _Anti hadn't 'et minute to stop ,reu .eve,Y; More time he would have to give, others, he'd :say, To -morrow, The greatestof workers this man would have been To -morrow. • When the last witness had said the "You will remember, my lady," she lest words answering,the lashquestion, said, "that you asked rne a few days the corner turned over his notes, aeo to take more care of your lady- clea'red his throat, and looked at the went to the theatre last night, and not "You have heard the evidence) end dow-n the block and tell Me what in the car either, I thought that per- gentlemen,'" he said in a brisk, bast e." - you haps your ladyship's beautiful coat aesslike voice, "and it is now my duty se At heart Evelyn was a good sport. might be rumpled, and those caps to present it to you as clearly and con - She admitted what she might have asa. aren't always very ,Iliees ,are they, my lady? So, when I came M to draw u. cisely as possible so as to help you to yards had been raked up; scene had had a look at the this morning, my lady, 1 , 'eclical evi- dence is plain eno 'knitted days before: almost all of the the blinds P come to a decision. Tho ixi - coat, and I d have svas'poisonecl by cyanide of potassium, ugh. The deceased the beginnings of gardens, and here taken it to my workroom if it hadn't and enough poison was found in the and there clean white curtains were been for the tear. I thought Pd bets bottle of liqueur to have killed fifty hanging behind freshly washed win -'ter ask your ledyship about that." people. Death probably took place dows. It was a reasonable explanation, and within a few minutes, and insensibil- "That's after three months of livingit was quite true that Ruth had asked ity might have occurred .within the , near mothSr!" said Donald.h I er maid to pay more attention to the space of a single minute. The fact, " Evelyn said slow "I think la else, fuxs. Ruth could only say, Oh, that therefore, that the deceased, who was - ' •" , was very nice aned thoughtful of you, alone in the fiat, did not cry out far have Line. Craig come and see me Sunday." Then she sinned, e les. But this tear—oh, it is help or run for assistance does not dreadful! I can't imagine how it hap- necessarily prove that she had taken pened, I must have caught it on some- the poison of her own free will or that NEW USES FOR DOOR BUMPERS. thing. Sir Alexander would be furi- she wished to be left alone to die. ous if he knew. One of the skins is "Against the theory of suicide must Those wooden door bumpers that torn, Fletcher." be set the fact that the poison was in screw into the wall back of the door "Yes, my lady," said the servant, the bottle, and not merely in the glass, extending out three or four inches fingering the sleeve of the coat. "I Now a woman wishing to take her own with a hard rubber tip at the end are can see it better now there's more light, life would not put the poison in a full useful for other than their original II could stitch it up"—she paused for a bottle, but would put it in the glass. purpose. I moment—"so as hp one svpsild notice She would not wish to endanger the Screwed into the bottom othe legs it, hat it wouldn't last. Oh!'" lives of other people. ' f I Her fingers were thrust between the "Against the theory of murder, how - an ordinary dining chair trans- silk lining and the leather of the fur, ever, w'e have set this—that this pais - forms it into a very acceptable high and she suddenly withdrew them and onous salt has a very bitter taste, and chair for the child not yet large, held a small piece of broken twig be- it at once produces a feeling of burn - enough to use a chair of usual height.' tween her finger and thumb. ing heat in the throat. It also has Some housewives prefer such an ar-I "It pricked me," she said, "and it a strong odor of almonds. Anyone rangement to the usual high stool for issust have been that as did it, my sipping this liqueur would at once no - working at a table or sink since the lady.” se tice that something was wrong with it, back of the chair offers extra support' Ruth needed all her self-control as though not perhaps se readily as if ' she replied sharply, "Nonsense, Flea- the poison had been mixed -with any to the worker. I cher! and held out her hand. other ferns of spirit. Noyeau itself is In the same way a low work table, I She examined the twig as though it made from the kernels of peaches and can be successfully raised so as to had been some curiosity from a mu- contains a small amount of prussic prevent unnecessary stooping. If the: seum. It was no more than an inch acid. And you musf.take this fact into bumpers are stained or painted to cor-' in length, but it was stout and it had consideration, that there may have respond with the article with which a rough sort of .point. It was not a been an intention to disguise the taste they are used their appearaece is , thorn. If she had been pitched into of the poison as much as passible, and, good, for at a casual glance a visitor' a thorny hedge she would not have of course, you must -corissder the pos.- come off so lightly. . ,sibility of the deceased having gulped miglit likely suppose that they had e ' 1 It must have been there for ages, down a large quantity of the liqueur been put in place when the chair or. Fletcher," she said. "How could I tiee a single mouthful. ; table was made. !possibly have -torn ray coat last night "A person intendino- to commit sui- If the sink issolow as to be in,con- on a twig ilke that?" ' cide would hardly have troubled to venient for dishwashing, fasten four off "I cannot say, my lady," the servant , select this particular liqueur. Indeed, the bumpers to a square frame or anawered stiffly, "but I dentt think it I you must bear in mind that consider - platform as a stand upon which te can have been there very. long, my I able trouble was taken over the pre- . place the dishpan. This makes a lady, because the wood is quite fresh' paration of this fatal liquid. Cyanide " reen.. strong, steady foundation and, a fact and g . of potassium is not easily' soluble in Ruth Bradney could stand no more , cold alcohol, and whoever Prepared the that will appeal strongly to the care- of this. It was almost like a cross- ;mixture must•have heated the liqueur. ful housekeeper, the rubber tips will , eXamination. What a woman! With I A woman about to take her own life not mar the enamel sink. the eyes of a lynx. Nothing had, would not be very likely to do any - Yet another use for them was found escaped her notice. •I thing of the sort, 'even if she had the when the kindergarten set became tool "Well, it doesn't matter, Fletcher," 'knowledge. She would have put the low for the children to work ateinl she said with a smile. "The coat is. poisonous salt into water, which dis- comfort while the adult -size table and torn, and there's an end to it. You'd solves it eaelly. 'better stitch it up now and I'll take it "That, gentlemen, I think, is all I • chairs were still uncomfortably high. • down to the furrier's myself. I shall need say about the medical evidence in Bumpers proved to raise the low tables have to see the man about it. this case, except that the ' deceased The servant placed the tray outside must have taken the poisonbetween the door and returned for the coat. 9.30, the hour at which Sir Alexander "I'll take it to my room, my lady," Bradney, left the flat, and 10.20, the she said, "and bring it back in half time of the maid's return. Indeed, we an hour. Your ladyship can rely on can narrow down the period to half me to do the best I can for you." an hour—from 9.30 to 10 o'clock—for, / "Thank you so much, Fletcher. 1 the deceased, showed no signs of life really don't know what I -should do at 10.20. without yob." • "Now -with regard to the other evi- The maid left the room and Ruth dence, it is a matter for regret that closed her eyes. The light from the Mr. John Merringtop is unable to be WindOW seeTged tv"hurt thnt,' 4S1ie , ereesnt. As you liv heard, Mr. Mesa dencentrated heee thoughts Fletcher•Irington met witb a motor accident on The woman had been in her service ' his way to sts,y with his friend, Mr. for five years—a thoroughly reliable, I Ardington, at Dedbury. Mr. Merring- honest, and pleasant woman. How wasiton has riot only lost his memory, but it that Fletcher had seemed—well, just' according to the lateet report, 118s in a little different this morning—not I a critical condition at the house of Dr. quite so pleasant, perhaps? Surely1Trehorn. We have listened to a state - Fletcher would not imagine that her, ment made by one of the. best brain mistress had not gone to the theatre.; specialists in London to the effect that One can tear one's fur coat anywhere possibly Mr. Merrington will never re - if one is careless enough!' But that. cover his memory of a certain period twig! How sharp of Fletcher to have in his life, and I may say that 1 have found it—how wonderful Of Fletcher been guided by that statement in my to notice that it had teei recently' decisibn not to adjourn the inquest in broken off some shrub or tree! the hope of getting Mr. IVIerrington's / "I must burn the hat," said Ruth to evidence." herself. She looked at the fire that' (To. be continued.) had been lit an hour previously and was now burning brightly. It had I been lit more for its coiniortable pearanee than for warmth; for the! and chairs to just a suitable height for the youngsters. A SIMPLE, PRACTICAL HOUSE •FROCK. s busy The world would have known him had • he ever seen To -morrow., But the feet ig he died and he faded from eeievh And all that he left here when living was through Was a motiatain of things he intended . to do • ' Toerierravas —From "A I-Ieap o' Living," by Edgar ,A Guest.. Blood Tells in the Race. . Dr, Christian P. Neser, of Onderste- peort, South Africa, declares he has found a way to determine the endur- ance of a racehorse more scientifically • Mil has hitherto beeru possible. He finds that the red bleocl cor- pusclein the animal increase as its ability to 'stand hard etrain iacreases, eo that, other thinge being equal, the horse with the highest blood count bras the best chanoe of winning. Horses used in ordinary work, states Neser, have only 23 per cent. of red corpuscles in their blood, while horses trained for the oourste often have as much as 52 per cent. nt corpuscles are oxygen carriere, and when a horse has many of them he can run longer and faster, because his muscles can„.draw on a large re- serve of oxygen, and he therefore does not tire so quickly. A STITCH IN TIME. When you want an extra snap to repair a garment, do you have trouble in finding tops and bottoms that fit? A friend of mine, has an idea that saves much trouble. When she has astray snap she does netthrow it into a drawer- loose.- She lies a small card about the 'size of a post card through which she punches a hole with a card punch, stiletto, or anything handy. Then she puts the bottom of the snap on one side of the card and the top on the other and snaps them together. Whenever she needs- a snap of any size she does not need ta spend precious minuted searching around in a drawer trying to match up ,parts. whole house was kept at an even' temperature of 65 degrees by central ./, heating.. But for once the fire would justify the extravagance. - r qiz5g Ruth slipped out of bed, locked the , door, and opened the drawer where she had placed the hat. ' se But the hat had vanished.' Ruth s . stared blankly at the place Where it •,, should have been. No longer had she i any.doubt about Fletcher. No one else • - 4454. This model has convenient could have taken the hat. and Flet- cher had said nothing whatever about I pockets, inserted at the joining of i waist and skirt- The lines are simple Ruth searched everywhere, but still and the style is easy to develop. Cre- she could not find the hat. Fletelier, tonne and unbleached muslin are here had simply removed it. And she, Ruth;1 combined. Crepe in two colors would could not ring the bell and ask Flet -1 The Pattern is cut in 4 sizes: ch -r about lt, - 1 1 cil I ched the door and crept also be attractive. Small, 34-36; Medium, 88-40; rearg.es back into bed. She was eha.king With s, le un o a.., sarAss" Hoped to, at Least. e 82-44; Extra Large, 46-48 inches bust measure. A Medium site requires .3 terror. If at the.s inornent her hus- h d had come Mee the room she rob-, fter ably would haye confessed everything.1. Sh'14°'w will you treat me yards of one material 32 inehee wide; But later on. when she had had, her we are marriecl?" or, 13e. yards of plain material for the bath end had dressed herself, 'refusing He ----"Well, Just as often as I do now, waist pOrtions and belt, and 814 of to allots- Fletcher to help her, she re- I hope." figured material. The width, at the •, viewed the situation more calmly. She foot is 21" yards, 'sew what it. wonld mean to john Mer -1 Woman's Tool, Pattern Mailed to any address on rington if sae told the treth. EngineDriver---"The reason we aro receipt of 15c in 8ilver or stamps, by kept waiting hero, ma'sm, le because the Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West C,HAPTER VIII. Ithe etgine hes broken down 1 have 1 and if I only. had the Adelaide Street. Allow twe weeks kir - examined" All day thee•oroyer's court had been it, receipt of pattern, crowded, and dhe ettnoephore in it was proper tools 1 ccuicl rly: It la hall' at _,..41,____,,,a, thick end etele. Tt WP,S eOld OlitSid?.. , The United States annually gives and a denee Seel:tine, eleng th the wi ' emir." ' , away n packagesvegetable• • 'dowa. T-Itene - ftee hour witnesses had Ileilifill 01(1 Le dy-l--"Hei•e's a heir - come foreette! ,t;iven their evidence Pin, anti floWer seeds, 5/ artsVfarefl ee -4i onS, an,d vanished in to Minard's Liniment 1-10218 Cuts, obseurity s gain. minardee Lfelmeni. for, Vantirerfe a good tam to eaancirabe Sealed in its Purity Package TiilE; OR LASTS It's i good safe rule' to sojoernirin every place as if you meant to spend your life there, never omitting an oie- portunety of .doing a kindness, speak- ing 8 true '44,',ord or making a friend. To supply the, ste.adily ncreast n8 demand for MATCHES Eddy's, make 1210 M LLION matches a day A1C-4),Vel . n. • ca.4 ,M44%, • ' algt &Vint a 6 99 a rS Feel The perfect balamce and ihe liandeomfort of lite Smart me "de Axe.4lairclened.iou011ened aurcTi tempered by inert wIto Immo/how to build double life and double vahrle into ever I/ a-74.re y -the,,4nla41,,,:v. ASK YOUR HARDWARE MAN FORA Single Bit-Dot/41e Bit 4i7j/ Shope -Any Wei:91/2.e lOWNERAC,V.:641,11`44,4' 4 VW.,444-a*K<e"W"TATZ' 4 CANADA FOUNDRIES & FORGINGS -LIMITE JAMES SMART PLANT BROCKVILLE. ONT. zoomonew.memen.,••••••••••••••••••• • ';!r V - ti i;• I .4 , 7 . • .: ... . 1,...1-421LP . 40 %.a.la,,,, ,x• la,..: (7..4, ft, OW', IVA• ?F'¼' _4.•;41 -, • •'0,41t,, 10, , ,,,,,, k• s '- e ' • V r'' ,., ' ..,. nI. ., le . ,,.. from -....., ., A , Littie-d. ,. r w IT' S the careful systematic month that enables buyers Of good Bonds road.to financial independence. 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' jar is ei Co ,...4,- L4M1n:0 Bay- Street Toronto , i a copy of "Buying Bonds n the . .. .. ... ..... .. ., .. .. . . . .. .. .. .. .. ... ...... ... .. .. ......... ........ .... ,. . ., 2014. Ottawa, London, New York, London, Eng. . ...... Hat Bor. I have gro-444n weary a ttils languid laud; .3ick of the low horizon line that flows Like a great fierebre river; eta to death Of rose and leerel, oucar,r.. ptus, palm, 'Broaing In lavish sweetnese. I ant mad For the harsh glory of my own Tar bills, ,iror the Stern masculinity of benne. They do aot Lave sunri4e or sunset here; Rather the'slianeeful day slinks cower. lug in Over .1 -ray waste of waters and gray' land, Under a muted, xnelallcholy sky. And never does ,it•burn away in one Swift, splendid burst of sanctifying flame At day once did, but shambles grayly. 1)0st Under the mantle of the leper fog, To the clelj stupor of a starlese night.. 0 God ---for splendid spaces in this . dawn— For glimmering, vastness -- for the wind that swings 1, Tumultuously in from starry horigen— , For the tempestuous magic of a ske- Torn, Mee shreds of fire—aed for the, hush Of _aspen leaves black on an amber heaven— For all the mighty pag-ea.ntries of dee That,macle life epic large, I alb. athiret. They have been music in ray inemory;' They will go echoing with me till, L came „I-Iome to my hills. • Feet that have trodden graulte Can never be content with milder ways. Eyes that have held high converse with the stars' Cannot be tamed to blinking servitude In molelike burrows. Hearts that have followed the wind Beat with a winged 'lisle:gene° telt they spur The timorous flesh to skyward traile • again. And mine to -night is wild with allre: hellion; Blind to all other beauty—hungering only - For hill horizons and e coyote moou— Sage in my nostrils ---milling, mare - rick eters-- And then the flame clad riders of the ,dawn. Loping across the sky with hoofs of - thuuder. Olson. The Great, Dibillusion, Disillusion, alas! comes to all of us. My first disillusion, says Mr. ..erther Porritt in theeBest I -Remember; came when I was a boy of nine years, and every detail is burned upon- rny mein- ory. At my day school in a, Lteei'dt!t'n:E:e. town the boys had a ma craze one year for a particular form of sweets. All. our pocket --money weet on a sort of sherbet, Which we ate dry leith spoon, and which we called "kalif' It was sold in littler flat vroceten boxes, arid there weee several varieties, lee -i- on, orange, pineapple, and so forth. Opinionvaried sharply as te the merits of the various kinds. One "boy praised lemon kali; another eared for nothing except orange; and a third 'vowed that all other varieties of the sweet were tdmply uneatable com- pared witk pineapple kali. We quar- reled ar,d almost came to blows over the relative merits of the flavor. We formed groups rot orange kali boys and felt bitterly toward the. avoweecham- pions of lemon and pinea.pple,kall, In faht, we boys 'blindly 'elevated the kalis into real party issues. Now the summer holidays ' came ' while otrr differences, of opinion were rat a height,.and I went to visit rela- dire& in an East Lancaeliireeeewn„, While there I had the supreme joy -of beiug tak-en over the factory -where the kalis wore made. On my round I entered a room, where; four gills In white overalls. Were filling the familiar flat wooden boees', which were already labeled; there- wee a mountainous pile of' the tdothsoene powder on a, huge round table. I looked at the boxes; they bore, colored labels, yellow Inc lemon kali, red for orange' kali, and green for pineapple kali. Rut --all- the boxes were being filled from the same pile! Aghast, I welted one of 'the if a horrible mistake was not being made. "Aren't you putting orange, hall itito a lemon kali box?" I a.skeet, In a tone that meet have sounded hor- roi-sti-uk. "Oh, no," she replied; "there's ne 'difference in tbe kali; the difference is only'irt the labels o11 till boxee," left the, factory, a sadly dIiliusan- -ed boy.' , if orre puts hie -ver' beshteinto eveerr, litt le „theregehe. does----png his - heart and conscieneeinto it, and "fi•fe-e to' 'Or est"' how muele and not bow little,- hp can give his employereehe will eot be like- ! ly to be underpaid very long..for he wiiI be adyaneed. Good work cuts its, own channel and (trete its crevn talking. i What nititter if you do twenty -live 5,01- - tars' worth of work for five dollars? It is the best advertisement of your worth yeti can possibly- give., Bad ; worit, half -done work, slipshod ivork, 'even with a good salary, would Lt0n.. relit. you, No, the way to get on in the world is Doe to see how little you can give for y,oue enlarr beer how much. Make your ,employer ashamed or the meagre salary' he gives by .be great disproportion It:tweet' what ,rou 410 anti wbat you Fi'et.--,Seiteeeierr,