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The Seaforth News, 1924-07-03, Page 6None Will Satisfy! li1;,e pure. delicious THE CHAN G NG WOODS BY E. J. RATH, GREEN A 11473 !, The finest agrees' tea produced in i[a than works . — Ask for i. trial paCge• FREE SAMPLE el SUER TEA! UPON REQUEST. "SALEM" TORONTO PART I. The man' frowned and winced as he shifted his bodyand turned to face the sound. Thecrashing in the brush puzzled him, because in that country; people followed the way of the water and traveled by canoe. Yet he knew the footsteps to be human; no deer was likely to seek the lake at midday. His lips framed a call, but he hesi- tated; to Ball meant the pain again. Besides, the footsteps. were nearer now. he would know in a minute, ikbout the House "Nearly two days," he unuttered, as his eye roved for an instant over his scattered duffel and the canoe half drawn from the water, a few yards away. Then, he uttered a stifled gasp of surprise. DECORATING TRICKS ADD few opposing cross lines or cross It was a girl! She broke into theopen fifty feet corners. Should a room be too long, place When entering certain rooms for the furniture with its longest sides the first time have yon ever been at a' across the short sides of the room. loss to discover just what `Dade it look Raise the ceiling by making it lighter "just right"? Nothing was elaborate. and of smoother finish, In fact, everything was quite ordd- A ceiling almost as dark as sides, nary and simple, yet the whole room surface, or brought down conveyed an atmosphere that was and of roughg y on side walls, seems lower,than it is restful and so pleasing to the eye. little tricks de- UP-TO-DATENESS. you.Cheer up Everytiittl"e- hing sistewr-.ill" be :all right. r. In• a moment',ehe looked up and smiledat him with trembling lira. "I'll stop being a. coward now.. I'm selfish. I was just lost and hungry. But you—for two days Tell me what to do. Where •can I. get: somebody? I'll go now." "You mustn't go just now," he an- swered. "There are other things to do first. We've got to get organized. Both of us ought to eat. I guess you can •cook 'some."• burst into a fresil•steren of tears. Be ''I can ..cook some things," oho said reached out with an ,effort and took doubtfully. "But your leg—are you It true one of ;;her hands;.. 'weecruelly suffering? `' scratched' and had,been bleeding, 'Not just now. It's waited for two . said' Lloyd' days and it Gan :wait till I eat..After ';I gimes you were lost;'. gently. "But you're found', ,now,, SO that I'll see what we can do. about' it. the wotry'is all over. Hungry,'I guess. There's some pilot bread in the top of that nearest sack: Get it -and will Are you rested enough' to work a bit? "I'm ready,", she said rising. "Tell me what to do." • you give •me a bit Of it, too?" "I'd like a little •whisky," he began. Without a word she obeyed' him, "Just 'dump out that small sack. There then. . sat and:ate ;with the pathetic is a flask in there With my clothes hunger of -..a half4starved animal, He that's it. You take some first. You nibbled slowly at the, bread, while he need it as much as I." studied. her face. But she would not drink until Lloyd When she had finished two of the had put the flask to his lips. big trackers, he told her where to find "Now if you'll get me a drink of the cup and sent her down to the edge water," he said. She found one of his of the lake, to drink. She came back tin galla, filled it to the brim, and and sat near him, her ` dark eyes brought it to him. He drank long and slowly. "Gee, but that's good!" he said sneil- ing. "That's the first since yesterday:" He caught a look of pain and pity in her eyes and added hastily: "Now we need a fire. That's a good enough place, right where the ax is lying. You won't need to chop any wood; there. are plenty of dead sticks." She laid. a fire under his direction, Lloyd smiling faintly once or twice at her unfamiliarity with the art, Then he told her where to find the matches, and she uttered a little cry of satis- faction when the dry wood blazed up briskly. "Now, if you'll take that ax," said Lloyd, "and cut a couple of sticks with forks at end, Pll show you how to boil the kettle." "I know what you mean," she said. "I've seen the guides." "Next there's' the grub sack,"' hs went on, when a pail of water had been swung over the blaze. "Over there under the dog -tent. I hadn't got the tent up when it happened, you see. It was just a few minutes after I came ashore to make camp. And, by the way, may I have my pipe? It's in the canoe, I think. I have the pouch. Thank you—and the matches. Now I'm fixed. As I was saying,.I was just unloading the stuff. I slipped with the heavy sack and went down with it. That 'stone there did the business—that and the sack. But let's talk about dinner. The, peas soup watching him with wonder. fif from where he lay, "No fun -being lost," he began. "I stared at the lake for a few seconds, .was lost once myself. It melees' you and sank sobbing to the-, ground. hungFy,. and usually the sleeping's Lloyd watched her in.amazement.to be bad. How long since you eft your wore a short skirt that seemed party? shirt had"Yesterday,i flannel sh it ads• her ra ar8 fn airwe g Y morning." They she, was g a, great rent in one sleeve; the first words she had spoken, and hatless, and her hair hung in disorder they were uttered in a whisper. to her waist. The man glanced at His eyes showed pity. -"All night her hobnailed highlaced boots and read in the woods—alone," be said softly. a story of bitter travel through the "Poor little kid! Where's your camp?" The mind wants to see likeness in forest. "Round Island Lake." There are many i e to dimension but not sameness. This Once she. Lifted her head from her eleme in the world—" Lloyd ex- costing that help to create this at- • i I make the square room or hands- and stared again dully at the claimed. "Why, child; that's eight or here and I believe tricks with th shining water before hent en her nine miles, straight through the bush principle e s q h hid h mosp the too long room unpleasing, In e curtains make delightful changes in one we see sameness, in the other we 'face while her shoulders shook in an and over a height of land! Tell me our roams that it does not pay us to Bythese uncontrollable convulsion. For aurin- how it happened. fail to grasp likenesses. ute more he watched her, then called overlook, tricks we change apparent dimen- sions; we make our rooms eatisfying, In the too large room the mind can- not grasp the dimensions or their comparisons. A too large room -will lack in the quality of intimacy, Fur- niture is apt to look too small in pro- portion. Put in more furniture and place it in groups. Break up long spaces, reduce the light, use contrast, heavy furniture and hangings, deep and advancing colors and rough tex- tures. The size of rooms is apparent- ly lessened by having all furniture, pictures, ornaments, etc:, large and heavy. There are certain other require- ments in decoration for emotional sat- isfaction or feelings. Definite laws or principles bring about required re- sults that the mind accepts as beau- tiful. When you buy new furniture or change the fixed decorations you can make your home what you want it. In the meantime, try some of the tricks of the decorator's trade. Curtains of one color very different from the walls give too sharp a con- trast. A band (on heavy material) or a braid. (on light weight) contain- ing colors of both curtains and walls, will tie them together and reduce the contrast. Extending the curtains out- side the casingwill givethe effect of width and help make room lower and more extended. A valance does this, too, besides giving the wanted color that furnishes variety. Low broad ornaments, vases, etc., add to the effect of repose, as long, low buildings and long low rooms give the idea of repose. Low, wide masses give the feeling of stability, while the slender lines, as church spires and skyscrapers, give feelings of exalta- tion, action. Straight lines, especially vertical ones, also may mean dignity, stiffness, susterit • a opposed to the buoyancy,ancY , grace, and yieldingness of curved Bees. Curved lines better express rich- ness, and furniture with curving out- lines will look more expensive than straight line furniture that costs more. Straight line furniture in a room demands more color and ornament and design to offset its austerity. The small room will do better with curves instead of straight lines, all- over patterns instead of stripes. Placing furniture carefully is an- other trick that will add spaciousness and repose to small rooms. In small rooms the centre must be left empty to give a feeling of space. The long way of furniture and rugs must be placed the long way of the room, with softly: "Don't cry. It's all right." She struggled to her feet with a shriek. "Don't be afraid," he said. "I'm right over here." She saw him then, and stood . very still, gazing at him, as if in unbelief. "You'll have to come over here," he went on. 'I can't get up just now." She approached slowly, half afraid, and looked down on him. Then she dropped to her knees at his side and LUMINOUS LABELS FOR SAFETY. One night last summer, when visit- ing a friend, I had a severe toothache. I stood it for an hour and then ventured to wake my friend to find out where to get something to relieve the pain. She said: "In the little white wall cabinet door, I found that every bottle was labeled and that the writing showed up plainly in the dark. The poisons were all in bottles just the same size, For every wash -day method �INSO is ideal for any wash -day method you use. You do not have to change any of your usual steps --just use Rinso where you used to use ordinary soap.. If you like to boil your white cot- tons, Rinso will give you just the safe cleansing suds you need in the boiler. If you use a washing machine, follow the advice of the big washing machine manufacturers— use Rinso. Just soaking with this new kind of soap loosens all the dirt until ' a single rinsing leaves the clothes clean and spotless. However you do your wash, make it easy by using Rinso. Rinso is sold by all grocers 'and department stores If you use a Washing Machine, soap your clothes in the Rinso suds as usual. Irithe morning add more Rinso solution and work the machine. Then rinse and dry- you will have a cleave sweet snow - white wash. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED TORONTO 0-4-87 "I was paddling," she answered, slowly. "I took a canoe out before breakfast to go down the lake a way. I went pretty far, I guess. Then I went ashore; I wanted to get some red leaves from a maple. But I didn't fasten the canoe securely, and when I got back it had drifted out in the lake. I didn't dare swim for it; it was too far, and the wind was carrying it. Then it went around a point and I didn't see it again. I waited—ever so long—but nobody came. Then I start- ed to walk; to follow the shore." "I understand," he nodded. for a daytime reminder, and they "I came to where a stream emptied into the lake and I had to walk back were all on the top shelf. into the woods to look for a place to The next day I asked my friend cross. The stream branched, and fin - what sort of ink she used for the la- ally I got over on a log: Then I came bels so that it shone in the dark. She to the other branch and I got confus- instructed me 'to dtssolve a dram of ed. I couldn't find the lake again." phosphorous in an ounce of tit of "You should have followed the cur- rent he commented. cinnamon. This is then put in a bot- „' I know it now. But I was nervous tle and the bottle tighly corked and. then. I tried what I thought was a placed in hot water until the mixture short cut back' to the lake. And then ready I it is I walkedwalk- is dissolved. When coo —then I was lost. and to use. Using luminous ink will pre- ed; but I couldn't seem to find any- vent possible tragedy by making bot- thing. Sometimes I rested a little ties containing poison noticeable even bit, but I was too frightened to sit in the dark.—N. P. A DAINTY PARTY FROCK. 4784. In this model the little miss may have the same flare effect in flounces and sleeves, that mark this new feature in her grown up sisters' dresses. This is a very pretty style; one that will develop well in organdy or voile. The Pattern is cut in 4 Sizes: 2, 4, 6, and 8 years. A 6 -year size re- quires 34 yards of 32 -inch material. Pattern mailed to any address on receipt of 15c in silver, by the Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Allow two weeks for receipt of pattern. Send 15e in silver for our up-to- date Spring and Summer 1924 Book of Fashions. ler` after every meal Cleanses mouth and teeth and aids digestion. Relieves that over- eaten feeling and acid mouth. . Its 1 -a -is -t -t -it -g flavor satisfies 1dee crawling for sweets. Wrigieesi tsdouble' vain In elle benefit and pleasure It provides. Sealed in its Parity Package. ieni ' 1 E7heJl war iasis his 'dfrettions,You'>epely handy,'Y'u he commented, approvingly.. ought to like the woods." - Do you?" she, said, stopping in her work and looking her astonishment. "After this?" "Sure! The woods' are not to blame for this. I don't hold them any grudge. I'll be back just the same next year. So'll you. You don't think so now, but yeu will. I can tell You're going to make friends with the woods be- fore you're out of here;" (To be continued.) For Gore Feet-MInard's Liniment. We wear. away quite two inches of shoe leatherin a .year. A pair of boots that would "last a lifetime" would, consequently, have to be pro- vided with soles from 8 feet to l) feet thick. would do us both good. It's in that oiled paper tube; that's it—the pow- der," He watched her as she worked under still long. I shouted, too; but after. it began to get dark I was afraid to shout: The walking was very rough. You can see—" and she ran her hands over her tattered skirt. "When it got dark I didn't dare walk any more; it was so still. I slept after a while. Twice I wake while it was still dark; it was horrible! The next time it was broad .daylight, and -then I began to walk again, Oh, how I have walked —and called!" - The tears started to her eyes again, and she said in a stifled .voice: "Oh, the woods are horrible! Horrible!" "Poor child!" he said gently. "But never mind now. You're found. Can you cook a bit? We'll have a square meal, if you can." "I'm a coward," she said weakly. "But I can't help it." She brushed the tears from her eyes and. tried to smile. Then she bent forward sud- denly , and searched his face With' a quick glance. It was drawn and hag- gard, she noticed for the first time, and he lay half propped against a tree. Lloyd smiled back at her. "Are you sick?" she asked .in an awed tone. He tapped his leg and nodded. "Broken," he said.. "Oh!" she gasped. "And you're alone " Lloyd nodded again, and fdrced an- other smile to his lips. Impulsively she placed a hand 'on his forehead.. "That part of Ws -better now," he reassured her. "The fever waspretty strong yesterday, but it's gene down a lot." "When—when did it happen?"" "Day before yesterday." "And you've been hereVN she said, in slow amazement="alone! Oh, you poor thing!" She hid her face again-: "There, there!" he said, comfortinr-- ly. "Don't worry about my trouble:•. You're found, and .so am I. That's' i beginning You need me and I need TI -IE G LORIBS OF JASPER PATt1K • Not only is,.Tasoer the largest of alt. the Can...dian:,porks, but it is also the newest in the sense that It is. the most recently opsned reserve. Located in uorthsystorn Alberta, where the border line separating that province from Bri- tieb Columbia swings eastward, Jasper was remote- territory populated only by Indiana. and trapers until, about ten :years ago,n the new National Transcon• °tinenntal Railroad was thrust through Hs heart. During the wale, Canada had !small time for developing eT exploiting' anational parks, and it was not until 11022, .following the consolidation of a number of Canadian railroads into the great Canadian National.railway sys- tem that much attention was paid to develaping'Jasper as a tourists' resort. Lodges at Lake Boauvert.' Discourage fishing, hunting and trapping for the mere sport of killing. Get rid of the steel trap, toy weapons and war games. CHOOSE YOUR HUSBAND by ins writing—pia. a dollar to a 77510011. oa-haat asinine of writing, .mall it: with soar moose and address, for doaerlution of clmracter. vocational ap- titudes, appearance. and marriage nee uartnershIP adaptations The Dollar Cllnrauter Service. Arthur nlaek Farmer, '700 Bathurst Street Toronto, .lin, TO JOIN LACE NEATLY. Sometimes lace edging will have to be pieced in the middle of a ruffle or some other place where it shows equal- ly as bad. I£ you buttonhole both cut edges with a fine thread and then whip the purling of your buttonholing together the joined place can scarcely be detected. Of course, it is essential) to match the design and to usea thread . for your buttonholing that!' corresponds to the weight of your) lace.. Also I use this method when I join lace anywhere in place of the felled, seam we are usually taught to use, RESTORING WILTED LETTUCE: Nothing seems more hopeless than a head of wilted lettuce, yet in lettuce as in life, "while there's life there's' hope." Wash the woebegone vegetable in cold water, shaking out all surplus moisture, and imprison it in.a stone milk Crock, covering it tightly. This treatment of solitary confinement will work wonders with the erstwhile hope- less looking lettuce. In a short time it will emerge as a creditable soect men. .This sante method of procedure will keep lettuce fresh and crisp for• several days. Minard's Liniment Heals Cuts. • f.; and hexer amp ,he, SmAl2,T"S TAN. O/,' Ooua/,Ade-4,6g ,Ase/ant easy working ando'ura• b/e pump. that defni e/y rep/vices the Wing type mode/ • Primps Bir kinds of /,quids. Gan be drained to prevent freezing Easy to prime • and to, repair with /iouseho/dtoo/s SEE IT AT YOUR NAIjD.;4ARE STORE ';." JAMES SMART•PtANT BROCKVILLE OKI: r tai A e 1. s le.: It's o I�� custom that Drakes pe ust. i take not just with their meals. M mustard and helps to assim 1 laate the digestion good habit to , • . late-themeats. It is a g acquire.' 'Mix .meal. it freshly for every ee S At Jasper station fronting on Lake Beauvert, the Cauadiau National .built a nurubee of. lodges 'surrounding .a mainbuilding, the whole knawn as Jasper Park Lodes. This rendezvous has been made the centre of activities for. Jasper Earls; from which .radiate the hundreds of ruling, motoring and exploration Deities -videli every sum - tiler seek in increasing numbers to 00- simllato they beauties, of this wildest of acoessibl•e mountain wildernesses, • There aro more than 100 mountain peaks .within' the 4,400 square miles enclosed in Jaaper Park's boundaries. Many of these have not yet been named, and only a few ever have been climbed. The park naturally is a mac - se for adventurers whoiind their great• est thrills in the perilous ascents, of unexplored .peaks. The Alpine Club ot Canada: sssaile the Jasper Park mountains every summer, and the Ale palachian Club of the United States has planed to attempt several of the mightiest of the Jasper mountains• dur- ing the season now opening. Expert- caned Swiss guides, 'whose lives have been spent among the Alps of their native land, have been brought to Can. ada to' help in the conquest ot these newestranges. , Most of,the Jasper mountains are glacier hung and some 'strikingly beau - Will phenomena are to be found among these fieldi of trotured ice and snow. Travelers, who are e0J7ecially interested in these formations, ,find the Columbia ice field, the' most re- markable outside Alaska, within easy a •each of the -park, althougb it ries be- yond the actual boundary line. A Wild Life Sanctum. Chief of the peaks melee Jasper Cavell, the 11,- Mount Edith Park is 000 foot precipitous and snow-covered mountain named in memory of .ling land's martyred war' nurse. , There are more than 1,000 'trails, and roads, hav- ing i. tcital length of several. hundred miles, which lend climbers, riders and motorists through bbs park, and many' of them were blazed before the white man came by indians,•fur'traders• and the original white discoverers of Gan- adz who pa:seil through the Athabas- ka Valley ontheir way to the Pacific. The Athabaska Pase, w,tiioh is the route. the railroad now follows, was discovered in 1511 by David Thomp- son, Jasper Park is a wild lite sanctuary. Mountain sheep and mountain goat, bear, caribou, moose, deer and elk, as web as the emraller fur bearing ani-. male abound, unneeeested. The park contains hundreds of pellucid lakes, fed by the glacier clothed mountains, and there is plenty of sport for the . fisherman. Thera is golf and tennis as welly suposing one hes. the hardl- hod to practice those ultra -sophist!• cated amusements in the midst' of such serenely awesome surroundings. On the British Columbia side of Jasper Paris Is Mount Robson, 13,068 feet high, and rightly named the mon- arch of the Canadian Rockies. An area et 840 square miles around this- eta - 'emulous uptltnuet of glacier hung rock' is reserved- by the British Columbia government as a provincial park, and named for the mountain. The Jasper Park tour. takes In Mount Robson as a matter of course, so that the two Parks have become practically i'denti- fletl aa. one, although Jasper •iso a Do- minion reserve while Robson is a pro- vincial enclosure. G.ernnany Recovers Grip on Trade of Argentina. - The German flag ranked an easy second in Argentina's trade before the war, and, despite the surrender of the Cerium] mercantile marine It has almost regained that position since the sighing of the peace treaty, as °- ording to shipping statidtios just pub Holed, says a Buenos Ayres despatch. p It obbably will be'a'close. thing be twoeu the -ltaliaiis and d•erlirans as to who will tYoo ity second place. in' Argentina's earryebeeeerade this year, boot it is believed that iiia Germans will win back titer old position,in the course of two or three years as 14i'Glrr.'-'-41 month saes a new German liner in these tvetersi France and the. United i States would appear to be dropping back lel the laco' e. Germans arluigrafiiug by thous. ands to Argentina, which affords spa cal ilicouliY s and. attractions for them 'German staamehip lines have bion lately specializing 10 what may be termed second class or one class ' passenger 'steamers. German vessels to -day bring1 the lgrea-er pr;opostlon of north European passenger's to Argen. . tins. O e o'f-the. earliest of still popular noveis, "Don Quixote," is also one of the longer+ it is estireeted to contain 461,000 words. 309300 ISLAND ATE GEORGIAN BAY DISTRICT Folder and Time Table, showing list of Resorts, Boating, Fishing, Camping, etc. When planning your 1924 Vacation write Box 862, Midland, Ont. ISSUE No. 27-'24. You will .see this shield -shape trade miir'k•.s in hardware stores everywhere. You won't see it on cheap, inferior goods. .It goes only on household utensils; of the highest quality, yet selling, at moderate prices,, because of the tremendous quantities sold each year. 4Choose cooking and baking utensils that darty this."trade merle. Choose SYLP Enameled Ware, with its .very hard, smooth surface.. Heats faster, cleans easier, fm pggrts no metallic flavor, causes no danger- ous acid re -actions. Ask for Peovitefede.i Three finishes: •'Pearl Ware, ewe coats of pearly -grey enamel inside and out. Diamond Ware, three' coats, light blue and white out- side, white lining • 'Crystal' Ware, three coats, pure white' Mettle and out, with Royal Blue edgingv, IWOG BY CF CANAaP "aSHEET METAL PRODUCTS Co. aitnireo MONTREAL TORONTO WINNIPEG ED71ONTO.N VANCOUVER CALGARY' .n* 106