The Clinton News Record, 1924-07-10, Page 6•
•
tit
titter, every /Ilea
Clettiereest ineoth
teeth 'emeralds 'elliegesettent.
thetie ie:Wer"
snifters fte,elitesp seed aced
swath. '
„u 1-a.aesteiesiest, flavor.•
tsUe 1h eiteglog tor,
sweets.
• Wrigley's 119 'double
value let 'the hiefeelle and
edictal:mire garevIdee.
ggeediel. Ira site Firrley
Package:.
`Vela"
-•
gheitafi.6/;'4i#0.
ege•ovirete"..ete'....effe4eiee.
BY laLIZALtEiTri YOR.K-MiLLER,
'Wks Iteteeta contuulndt,,
Pro os fends tho aapcot,oetitattollinuo depart!'
- CHAPTER XXIII,--(Cont'd.) • "Oh, I'm not a bit hurt," Hugo as -
her without avail, until Alice found Jean was silent as they climbed up
Hugo and Alice, tried to comfort sured her. .,
an ear and , whispered that , she through the old town, and then, farther
• wouldn't leave her precious mother, up to the groves above Sasso,
that she wouldn't get married, they'd They sat down ;to 'rest beside the
send a 'telegram to Philip telling hila path looking towards Monte Nero, the
it was all &IT- 'Then Jean came to hillside falling away sharply at their
' her senses and started explaining. feet into a dark gorge, from which
All that was the Matter with her, came the tinkle and murmur of water
she said, was T,Incle John's bluffing! rushing over sone: "Bleck M011a-
the „Italian bank int.) believing thetItain," , indeed, with its -hooded crest
he had a fortune and their allowiee, of sable firs, How lonely it mustthe
iitn to draw ten thousandlire on the up there at night—yet how beautiful,
("strength of it. And he didn't know ' Jean thought that she would not be
lye; whether it was true or not. •really lonely if someone -she loved were
lingo began to, laugh. • there too. But Hector Gaunt had no-
I3ut you've been worried about it body for company, unless ono counted
yourself," she said sharply. old Maria. Hours ' and hours and
"„et -about that I haven't," he said, hours he spent aloe° on that Inman -
Sunshine E lnd ou ve been worrYing about sonie- tin -top.
" nga
° thing. What else could it have been?" A great log earn° sailing majestic-
/nen the sun shines in England it • "If you don't know I'm not going to ally across the valley' from the west -
atones ' tell you." He sipped laughing and ern slope to the sawmills at Sasso.
For low -hung leaden skies, and rain loolced very cross. "Ilere—gaze on The- eteel cable^ whiell cemried it Was
and dim , that." • , • • ahaat , invisibleand • It looked like
• Moist togs that paint the Verdure. OA HO -Look a crumpled Paper out of bi some new forin of airaraft.
• her stones, • •
pocket and handed it to her. • • "Leek!" Alice cried "Theie's a man
It Wee, a brief note from the local en it! / wish are could get on one and
And fill her gentle rivets to ,the bank to say that theyM had their pay Mr. Gaent a surptise visit."' She
reached out and squeezed her mother'e
hand. "Mr. Gatent's the nibest mate
;hope tl,kele hasn't got late sier , A St
ich
Eiheitld he?" Alice *eked -e'Y twrilanf ri.fdee welte Mie tu st huh
When the son shines on England
shafts of light
Fall on far towera and Mlle and
dark old treei, • -
And hedge -bound meadows of a green
as bright—
As bright as is the blue. of tropia
,•
seas.
When the sun shines. it is as it the, face
Of e.sonte. • 'proud man grelaied its
haughty. itttiee
And smiled upon us with' a sudden
grace.
Flattering because its coming is so
rare.
•- —Alice Duer Miller.
telegram from Mercer's; it was quite
all right. The balance of the 15,000
cash was safe right here in Bordi-
ghera. • -
AA is usual,. relief turned to indig-
nation. • • -
"When did this come?" Jean de-
l -needed. ..'°•
"Last evening. A boy brought it
up" Hugo replied..
"Wily didn't yon tell me?"
"I durene. r cifcht% think."
"But I've been nearly Mad with
anxiety!"
Hugo shrugged Ms shoulders.
"I don't see 'why," he ,grumbled.
"rve told yeti alb along tee' it wad"
safe enough. I don't' see •whyiyou
couldn't believe me."
• Aseueual, she had tried to erose" a
bridge that .didn't,exist.
CHATER XXIV.
"Could we take a little walk, mim-
eo- daeling, Not too far, of couree,
• and you might put on my fermis
shoes." • •
Mrs. • Camay's rather tired face
Broke into bright agreement.
"I'd love a wall," she said. -"But
first I must tincl. out what UnclJohn
means to do." • . •-
• "Without, linrting his feelings, could
we lesve'him behind?" Alice asked
,quickly. '• .
Her mother nodded. There was no
need far explanations. This was her
very last evening with Alice before
life changed entirely, and the fact
that her daughter wanted to be alone
whither' for A little while was natural
enough. They had been so rushed get-
ting ready, for the wedding, and while
there was • still ,another day before
the • two ceremonies • took place, to-
morrow 'would be another rush with
Philij Ardeyne at the end of it asiXi-
ous to claim Alice and make up or
what he had lost of her -s'ociety.
Mrs, Carney trotted into, the house
and found Hugo at the writing bur-
eau in the „salon submerged in a, sea
of calculating: He. was a picture of
vittuous, clerkly energy, his shoulders
humped over ,the , task, his near-
sighted ,gese bent upon long columns
of figure's, his lips severely pursed.
"Well, my dear, what is it?" he
inquired When Jean had stood by this
desk a moment a little loath to inter-
rupt hire. -
"I only just wanted to know if you'd
Mind if*Alice.and went for a stroll,"
Or. C. S. Myers, C.B.S.
Voiotia experimental psychologist of
Louden, England, wbo is homing to
Canada to attend tbe sessions of the
British Assoeiation for Advancement
of Science. '
Hunting with a camera bring•s the she replied.
hunter into more intimate contact Hugo aid mind, since the request so
'pointedly' left him- Out,, and he hated
to be left out of anything, but he
gave her a grudging permission.
"I dare say I can manage Without
•you for, An hour sir so. But don't be
too long: want to toll you what -Pm
planning to do."
,s."Itie the last chance I'll have to be
alone 'with Alice," jean falteeed.
•
with nature than hunting ,with a gun.
Getting a good picture of a living wild
animal requites tro muchemore °skill
than killing it with, a bullet thateit is
presumptuous to regard heade or pelts
as of equal rank as sporting trophies
with photographs of animals in their
native wilds.
0,11111e
Gmafer -wante. Mort potpie, t than the isilverV
But ,feeit did net reply "
(1.lo be eoneinued.) Or evion.each pmni
lebe "eaes, it burg,
• Reflected b n °
Christened 'Hi"? M .1 g tido. ce
"Algeithe I walk therein, s prop and water them,
nethe of Uncle Brogue • Thum miraeles M leafy erhr and hood,
Perhaps he'd "stand de godfathem-the Sometimeehey Tju1 to lrush my gar -
reheat nen•in teiwge ' inegee heM
But Gran declared. 'twee. fancifuln1. With an unspoken meaning; gratitude,
fixed on "Peter j'antes " A ,sense of homely memories We share,
.Or maybe 'TR' Harnabas"-Lshe's fonfi, The dgyti, werfought and Womted fleet)
of '131;ble names. , Oe drouth, ' - ,
• . ' ': , Our ertnelee when November stalks
.
Then tient Matilda wrote and aslted if low bare -'.
. . , ,
"Mervyn" Wettldtt't,, do; ,.• ' Or w thin' •• winds are sultry from . the
-
I've ever met—except Philip, of
course.. I'm glad you're goingto stay
here for-ahttle while, mumse? dhr-
ling. I'll feel happier, somehow,
knowing that Mi. Gaunt's kebping,an
eye on you."
"Will you dear " jean asked *1st-
ftli4OU're such a little mother. Yeti
need looking after, the being so 'sele-
ish in leaving youl"
"No, you're not," Jean ,said, her
voice bright and quick. Alice muse't
guess for asmoment how desperate she
was feeling. about this parting. -"I
can't tell you how _thankful I am
you've fonnd such a. good man. And
I want you to be Just the• happiest
girl in the eyelid. As soon ete you are
nicely settled in your _neve home
coming to pay you along visit. Dr.
,A.rdeyne asked ine, and he also asked
Uncle John." .
"Foot Uncle John!" said Alice
thoughtfully.
Twice Alice had said "Poor Uncle
John!". Would it be too risky to ask
her why she thought of him as an
objeceof pity? Since that night when
she had asked her terrible questions,
Alice had avoided personal reference
he "Uncle John. So had her mother.
Just the ono word "madhouse," or
the suspicion' of it as figuring in
Hugo's. past, might have altered the
whole situation. Alice 'as- so terribly
conseientioue. She would have insist-
ed upon Ardeyne's knowing, would
have insisted upon being told how, it
might affect herself, mite madness
runs inlamilits. Oh, there had been
lo many near shaveS, and oven now
%he n everything—including Alice's
Buspicions—seenied• lulled into secur-
ity, an -upset might occur at the last
moment, at the very altar itself. Sean
knew her daughter. Alice had a will
of iron, and even love itself would not
shake her convicitions as to right and
wrong.
Why—Mrs. Carifay reflected with
acute dismay—if Alice knew the real
secret of her birth she was quite cap-
able of breaking her engagement
without a single word of explanation
to anybody,
It was like a beautiful- castle built
-of cards—a breath could destroy it.
"Sometimes I feel I have no right
to be so happy," Alice said. "What
have I ever done to deserve 10"
"You've been the best daughter in
the world," pretested jean, half cholt-
ed between emotion Mid her heavy
sense of guilt. "It's I—I, who don't
deserve anything!"
"But. you're net getting 'anything,
neurasey dear. And you are the one
wbp deserves everything the world
could give anybody. Don't think be-'
cause' I'm getting married and it looks
as though wed be sepaeatedgthat we
really will be Separated. Letters are
wonderful things—and there'll „he
visits. Perhaps you'll come to live in
England. I'll have Philip, but tan't
de without ray mother. You see how
ffelfish I am. If I thought I'd have
to do without
(She hived a "Mervyn" long ago)—hat
Uncle Seek said "Pooh!"
There never had been IVIervyns in the
family before,
And why begin ottlandieh names?,
'Twas folly, he was sure,
The next-door neighborswanthd
"Claude": the Joneses' "Edward
- Pattl,",
The Smiths suggested "Montague"!
One couldn't. pleathem
Cried mother, "Leave' the name to
mei" And father said., "We will)!
So Baby' S elerle.tened."Latieelot
—but, there—we ,catil him "Billt"
—tali Drag,
A leaf—le it a fleger?--eonchea nie,
As I move past, duyab yet remindinglY.
`17171;ti-sienelit..
it Is the music hear through your
strong, dark door that want:
Not your fire.; „not yeet bee:0g
I shall. not touch your bell, et,i. be on
your dooretcp • ,
12 ever„You open to look for me, or for
anOther,
shall take only what raf own, and,
ever whee you knewe.
It is tee' medic / limn' through your
strong, dark d -one thee I -Want.
—Flocclenee jamegy.
r ev ry .
t.oash-dley method
DINS° is ideal for any wash -clay
IN method you use. You do not
have to charge any: of your usual
steps—just use Rinse where you
Arsed to use ordinary stare,
If you like to boil your white cot-
tons, Rinso will tive you just the
safe cleansing suds you Oed 111
the boiler. If yo, Wttthir/B.r.
iri
machine, follow the nalYiSS 0,400 ).94E
washing machine treiriuftaatut010--'"
taseRinee
Just soaking with this new „kind of
soap loosns all the d5t until a
single linsing leave's the clothes
clean and spotleaS, 6
Ii0Wever you do your wash, make
it easy by using Rinso.
•LF.V5fl, BROTHEYS
Raise, is sold by all grocers LIMITt
and department stoics TORONTO
AwIt,timirtrzwratouregtxr.42451,,,TRats-OlesVazttaraZz,twomoz„olworAttsuraintriguLTZ.:tt
•
If Doti use a Washing
Machine, soak your
cloihes in the Pinto
sucls as usual, "In the
morning add more
• Rinso solution and. -
' vork the' rnathine:
Thei?rjnse drj,)-••
yoo will have a cleant
a))Yaot , snore -• toitite
wash.
• DON'T SHUT OUT THE DAY-
. LIGHT.
Mary Drake was not an .old woman
--only just the other side of forty.
It was annoying -to flbd that her woidc
was slowing up:because she no longer
could see as rof old. She said as meat
to the doctor who stood in her kitchen
for a moment after •dropping in to
see Grandpa Drake.
The doctor's reply was to reach, his
long arra up to the top of the dark
green window. shade ana lift it from. •
it There are some fruit stains that
faoteleingsi then he crOSSell to the
north window ad -did -the same thing will disappear if the fabric is stretch -
there. To Mary's great surprise her ed tig1161Y ave'r the top of a bawl 01
pan and'boiling water is poured sloW-
kitchen things stood out as if sud-
denly illuminated. She had not real- ly oil the stained places. „
ized that the two shadeo would melte
such 4 difference.
"I'm getting to be quite crank
about these dark green shades, said
the doctcir. "In half the kitchens and
living robins of this country women
are pottering around in a half-light
because they deliberately shut out
from twenty-five to fifty per cent, of
the daylight with the darkest ehades
they canbuy on the Market. If yen
have to have shades, why not buy
them of white, thin, translucent ma-
terial, such as will admit and diffuse
all the light possible when the .sun
shining directly upon them, and roll
them up out of the way'syhen there is
no sun,"
"We raight as well, doctor," admit-
ted Mary. "I suppose most of us use
dark shades .45artly because We have
became used td 'thein anti partly be-
causethey don't shovr the dirt. But
we eould. use light ones. We. have to
hayo shades, you knew, They serve
for other things than to keep the sun
from looking in." '
"Then why not hang them at the
lower part'of the window. It's quite
possible. Don't you realize that the
place from which you Want light to
shine on your work is from above.
You may blot out the entire lower
half of year window Without noticing
the loss if you will just have a few .100
inches of clear light from the upper •
part. In doing any work your eyes Handmade FnOck of ttottid
naturally look down rather ,than tan. Voile
Shim/Jetty is the keynote of thie•
dainty frock, suitable for all oc-
casions and cool as summer breezes.
Sleeveless one-piece slip-on dreas
with long drooping- slicmiders falling
in graceful folds under the arms.
Pretty round neck slightly gathered.
Slashed at ahoulders and Oniehed
with elect edging or rieleratk braid
tends to beautify the model, Sum-
mer silk, voiles! or ginghtims aro
good for this becoming frock. Girls'
these No..1003 cut in sizes to
14 years, Size 12 requires 2','
yards- 36 or 40 incla material.
Pattern mailed to any address on
receipt of 20 cents in silver, by the
Wilson nate= Service, 73 Adelaide
St. West, Toronto.
-CHOKECHERRY SANDWICHES.
'When our four familia gathered
for a picnic by a little stream of water
under the trees, our chokecherry Eland-
viches we're extremely popular.
It all happened on a rainy day when
nothing elee could happen: We were
making chokecherry . jelly, the best
jelly in aur cellar; when we pail our
heads together and decided to make
chokecherry jam out of Hit remains.
We squeezed some of the .pulp
through the sieve and some through
way.
tis
e,acataugi)
114e finest green tea produced in
th, world. As,* 'ora.trial package.
• FREE SAMPLE at WEED TEA PON ROUST. 'IALUM," TORONTO
the , potato rise -and then mixed At
with ,emnia hpple pule; We added
sugar and put the mixture on the
etove, The longer it conked the bet
ter it teeter(' We stood •erourid the
kitchen, „ spoons. in land, for...a:good
part of the 'dey, Then We copked it
eolith more, let It stay on the back of
the Stairwell night, arid the next morn -
we tasted it all rirorind -againi and
made sandwiches of it for the picnic.
Since then we bEtfe done some ex-
perimenting to iincl *hat proportions
el% best and these ' are Oar eertele4
Sit)ae: About lieelightli as much
loke'cheiTy as imp e is hest of all.
the hitter taste the cherries
,en the hushes have turas into ,a
cate, Aromatic one when Used, es flav-
- and the coloring is rich.
• Salk Our Forests.
Frera lie
ere, y ory Canada has
'been known by the extent of its for-
For tea or coffee stains, soalc,..the
stains in cold watet, wring, spread out
and pour a few drops of glycerine on
each spot. _Let it Stand several hours,
then wash -with cold water and oalt.
In removing iron rust, soak ,the
stain With lenion inicen sprinkle with
"aatt and bleach far -several hours' in
the sun; ,
Mildew stains 'should be soaked in
a weak.soluthin of chloride of lime for
several hours and then rinsed in cold
d,areas.. Logs and lumber were
'
an linpartant part of the original trade
carried an yrith France and Great Bri-
tain, sad- even at .the time of Confed-
eratioa luether 'was our :chief oatmat.
In fact, the lumber industry isetill Ono'
of the ldot itema entering into our ma
port trade,: other words, there .is nothing
tha. past fifteen or twenty wrong with the foods you are Acme,
years ..aerieW _forest industry has de- toured to eat, except that yon,proleably
VeloPed 15 Cauada---the production of do not ,eat these foods in the proper -
pulpwood, says the Nattual Resourens• tion and amount required by the °hem -
Intelligence Service, of the Department istiy of your body. :
of the Interior, Ottawa. The enor. To take a specifie exainple:
mons growth in the demand for news. per consisting at bredleci steak, ,fried
print -has been the incentive to a de- Potatoes, bread and 'butter,, pumekire,
veloPment, of our pulpwood areas that pie and coffee prebebly waned impress
may be characterized as phenomenal. Yfiu are being a good meal, And yet
In 1910 there was but enegand ofie-hali 12 is not, Protesser Eddy says; for it
million cords of pulpwoed cut M thug' lacks at neat one element essential to
ada, while in 1922 theme: was nearly the welfare of the body. Add a green.
four Million Cards eat, nearly three vegetable ---spinach, string beaus,„ or
Million cords of which was used In' something of that. sort—or a - salad,
*Canada. „ and yon have supplied the eloment
To make one Orel of. pulpwood, re- that is.leeking, and have made a eittli-
quires the cutting „. of eight trees, ' factory meal. ,
eight !melees in -diameter, at breast Otte 'reason ter this, is that your
hefght, coheequently, the 1922 mit "of body requires a small alumna of Min.
Pulpwood required over thlrty-one, mil- eral s�,l,ts m011 day -,e -particularly salts
Hon trees. I containing ceeclum and phosphorus,
thiewas all the forests had to sup- These are present in green vegetables
ply it would appear to be quite enough, and milk in proper proportkons; in the
Int the railwaysneed twelve million , meal just detailed, coleium was lack -
tied. per year and. telephone mu/ tele- ing until supplied by a green vega
• • '
"011, you won't! Yes—yes,
I'll-come
to England. I must be neeryou,par-
tieularlYein case—" Old-fashioned
Sean -blushed, -faltered, and broke, off
aelf-conseieus.LY. ' ' f d'. articles through the
table linen and light dresses. If be.
looks nature in. the, face' nnd gees no laundryorsen f.'ruit stains ale '401'
J'alut Alice was of a generatirm which
reason tA make secrets of its .i.anse dampened 'with alcohol or ctimPhor
"Yes, if I have a ebi1d--children-- ell- trues 'of discoloration will have
I'd want you, miunsey." vanislied'after they are eirasheci.
Jean squeezed her hand, •• If the children 'get graase,from the'
"I can't realize it—that it 5087 'be ear or tractor on their clothes, sp-seail
possible-. Why, ' you're . only . a be,bY better or lard 'evenly over the spots,
yet. It doesn't eeem. quite—quite— and let it remain until the greaSe
Ourself! 'YOU aeen't even married 25
atm,. ir* funlly ybu are soft, then .v° washbinti°° ith tod ta r'fti, soapy Atzvat+ehre.'
Adiee laughed heartily now. "Why, To Ilein°S' SISS'
Pailip djZcasse,8 spots in salt water, ,.qat.,11 and rinse
" ',Not with; you!" Mrs. Carney WaS thelistial way.' ' I
horrified. , Grass stains may be removed by'
, "Yes!with me, nnirosey, darling."
, "He talked so boantifully, it simply
made the want to -weep,"
-"IR.* do you mean? What could
be have said,? Beafly, Alice—
about the great responsibility
of parenthood. How nobody, no intel-
ligent Inez' or woman, had any eight
'to bring children into the wdrld'unless
they „could guarantee thong ' a :lean
bill of health—mental and ..physical."
Joan shivered:. - "I .cannot under -
„stand anyman talking dilet that to
the girl he's going teinarry she said,
, But AliceWas 'unpertulbed by this
criticism. '
""Philin,'s , Sliel,-Teminded
her nether. "He se,es-b groat deal
of the misery ,that;.---thatparents do
inflict upon their, children, -merely by
1>ringing ,them‘into the
"My. clear, the2e. thing;q: are -better
left to S. -Higher
"I dobelieve,” ,.A.cci .hsaid slowl
n't y,
"that t4ings to chance' 'IS" the
smin'thing as leavingthem to God."
The sun had Ono,doWn, ,and-Stfd-
clerkly it was*Onitc' thilly. Monte' Niro,
was'like a giant shadow, and the little
white f ann. gleamed ghostly .in the
d 'light, shone frdin. one . of .
th'e windows-Tlxat Would:be Heater'8
dear, untidy sitting-room,.the noon' in
which -Jean could not help remember -:1
ing, he kept her photograph to bear
him: company. -White • 'Alice and she
Ever notice that? Try reading a news-
paper held as muchaboveyour -eyes
as you, would usually hold it below
and you will realize that your -field of
vision is Much better downward than
upward. Use the upper part of your
windows. Strip them' clear of every-
thing. teethe light come in and you
will not realize that you are an the
better side of forty."
REMQVING SUMMER STAINS.
Now is the time ono must watch
most earefidly for fruit stains on the
Saturating the spot with kerosene be-
fore washing the gaymout,in the usual
inkles and RR Safe, Com-
' nation, t xpert DenlareE, •
Aro. you afraid to eat lobster and ;
ice create at the's.A"Me meal, or pickles ,
. ideas suoh ,thasso that :certain
feeds eaten with other foods, Perin r`bad
combinations"; ano absurd, says Pro -
reser Walter H. Eddy, well knOwt:i
autherity an food and diet, a Colum
bia .1.1ni'versity,-,sthe recently' attracted
'Wide ..ate.ntion by isolating -"vitamin
IV' One of the mysterious and elusive
sthucplipoert°11osftiltlufee:.11' te 0aullYe'07aeenteiVacl
became 51 after eetieg, ioe cream and.
lobster or pickles.and milk., he ass,erts,
it was.beCause he'ate too:rm./eh or was
poisoned by impUrities—elther. ope
Of which might have happeoed to hlni
aster eating any ,of the foods alone, ,
Feeds • are not antagonistic to one
another, writes T'rotesser Edd. There
are really no bad food combinations; at
least, if there are -bad eonibinatiens; "
they are made sit More liecause ot
what they leek than ,becauie of what
they contain; and these become good
ehmbinations as_ S000 aa the miSsing:,
elements are supplied. •
graph companies one million poles per table,
year. There is as well all the timber Professor Eddy' also declared- Met
needed forzown lumber, lath, Ahingles the number. of ."aaleries," . or heat
and the thousand and Mae articles units, that certain:footle contain does
made at wood. I not offer a guide in. selecting a diet. -
Th 'forests have done their part, and Any fod chemist, he writes, coUld com.
eyeli mare than thew put, toe the pile a 'diet" consisting .of alfalfa,
trade and industry of this country, chickenearn' and linseed all that '
They have provided .employment and would oontain all the eater1es. the hit.
wages to thousands and in export man body requtres, but you couldn't
'trade they have offset many of the use suck a diet. The 'human body Is
tothinimgspowrte. Gmana;ilittavuttsthdnead gitivneetcherte,orty. iminotit clueL:lgoodnedoitt!, .digeet and utilize hay
este a thanott. See that they are pro; at le dee:lined, thbugh, to utilize
teeter/ from lire by being °mete/ our.. fedi of the kind that you are aecus.
selves and telling others., ' .temed to eat, soya Professor Teddy, and
it you will Cat the equivalent of a hell
Sorrowing.pound at beetattenk a. day, use green
- vegetables- to make up Lite intik 01,
Teaeher--"We•borroweel our nuttier- your teed, take milk freely and subst(sirs:.
els from the Arabs, our calendar. from tate cooked fruit,' simple puddings an:1
the Romans, and our banking from the lee Greene For piese pastry and other,- ,
Italians. Can anytene Mink 'of any heavy deserts, 7000 diet prolnem will
other eicanipleet" , virtually he solved.
lawnonteier ftom the
- ouretndosettral'laabdyd.edriMrflaT1 from TieeYyeouunuggge9stt FrFerriecnilciSi Panenta°11'.Joneees, 0r, M.
tit Betuaps•P
el/trustier, Just sleeted for the Gard
.., • Department, 'only reached the mint.
Windeor Castle is built' on land mum age limit, 40, two months rigor
which William I. acquired from the,
Abbot of Weetininster; The Newman. "Babies cry for the same reason 08 .
kingand his sons Rufus, used to dee- young lambs cry," says a '
brate Easter and Christmas there.- doter; "they want their mothers."
„ ^
sibn 1 pension Ifeetor'llbrd Lf,21'10Ys • Kawaneshoh, ,greaa-great..granildangitter al Capt. Joseph 13mni, Who was
- ruling chis(' of id Six NatiOil fridiaxis at. 1,1113. 1.401,0 of She Antell.ca'a rev°111"
/) tiv.r1c before w.) get hems. I. tion•
•
1' re, .Vre,i, tr.
1'
Refregh yourself!
Uncap this air.
tightpackage-
-As the spar,;.,
bubbles'
rise .to.refrgs
our thtretyl
lips, you ate -
assured of
goodness and
purity.
Soldevervwhere— -
in. bottles -and 05 ,
serissfoimtains.
1iciou6, 41,nd Refreshing,
The Coco -Cola oipmy o Carifaai Ltd.
Bea v4c06: Toxcakto
•24' . swim '4141',34JOVAM45;';':"`"11
0$.4.i..spwieviar'iplavranweigteri