Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star, 18 May 1922, p. 6

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> coral, or pink will be most becoming i . The $185 Tractor (F.O.B. Toronto). Pays for Itsel in Labor Saved ct itbestie a tata Be mds. LEE Before th ~seasot e : pigwh wheel or itself by the labor expense saved. | Wh Agencies open in some localities, : 52 COLBORNE 8T, Dept." "C * TORONTO, SPRYWHEEL. ok BY) WO hold your hat comfortably, either a round or oval shape. Remove, the lid from the box and discard it.| From a piece of cretonne cut a piece to fit the outside bottom portion of. the box, allowing a quarter of an inch! seam all around the edge. Cut a strip of cretonne long enough to reach around the box, allowing for a seam 'Where the ends come together, and three times as wide as the height of the box. Sew the ends of this strip' Color can make us beautiful or| together in a seam so that a continu- | homely. It has much to do with our ous piece is formed, and then sew this disposition, too, at least so the very,| strip to the circular bottom piece of : very wise people are telling us. We cretonne, so that a complete case is know how uncomfortable and utterly formed into which the box is slipped. unhappy we can feel when every re-| Turn a two-inch hem at the top of this! flection of ourselves in the mirror bag and make a casing by putting fairly screams, "Why did you put on two rows of machine stitching through that awful tan which just exactly] this hem. Insert a wide tape or piece emphasizes your sallow skin, makes! of ribbon as a drawstring. Put the your eyes look faded and your hair; box into the bag which should fit ex-| dull?" | actly, place your hat inside, and draw We choose colors in relation to the up the strings. So simple and so very color of our hair, eyes, complexion practicall | and figure. Always to bring out our i best feature and subordinate the less attractive is the big gecret of appear- ing well, | If you are one of the fortunate girls! with a clear complexion, you have a| and to each of the corners fasten a vast array of eolors from which to! chain long enough to reach from the choose. The girl who is pale appears; cot to the porch ceiling, These four at hex-best usually in the warm 3 he should be of equal length and "I am a sallow blond." "I have too much color." "I have too little color." "I am very dark and have blue-green eyes." "My hair is red, can I wear nothing but blue, blue, blue?" "Not being exactly a blonde or brunette and having greyish-blue eyes, what colors are most becoming to me?" These questions and many others of like nature puzzle girls and women from time to time. Porch Seat From An Old Bed. An inexpensive swinging seat for the porch or arbor can be made from that is, colors containing red or yel-|'the upper end of each should have a low. And here is. the answer to Littlebstrong hook for screwing into the ceil- Miss | Sallow Complexion: try dark|ing, Put the lower end of the chain blue' or warm browns. around the framework of the cot and. With a pair of clear bright eyes, by | fasten-into-the wood with strong but all means wear the color that makes nit too large hook screws.- Cover the' them shine forth in all their bright-! mattress with any dark-colored den'm ness, ; . or madras and you have a comfortablé Most of us may wiccly avoid dead) and good-looking porch seat for very white and- chog€e in its place cream little outlay. If desired, the goods white, The dark.ekinned girl, espe-lysed to cover the mattress: can be cially, will remember that white em-| fastened to one of the front chains, phasizes the darkness of her skin. | brought around across the back and Don't you just adore the lovely grey| up the side to the opposite front chain,' things in the shop ~ windows .these| making three sides -of the swing days? The rosy-complexioned girl! enclosed. may safely enjoy the grey costume. A touch of gay color will make it more becoming to most of us. Dark reds are becoming to fair skinned brunettes and blondes = Red brings out the color in the cheeks and lips and. must be avoided by the girl fowl---Mrs. F. C. T. with too much color. Our auburm- p ; ; haired girls. must beware of reds and| 8 jheat Way io beep fe 0 Slog on pinks. They will find their colors instead of tacking it on. 1 have dis: rich browns, blue, dark green, %: covered that'itiwill much] i purple and violet, amber and gold-- ab it of move and wii Kio va . quite an array from which to choose: wiped 0 it does not X oh R In hues which are nof too intense, op the 'wabter.--M: A hy soak yellow is a delightful color to wear| "4, equal mixture of talcum once in @ while by almost all types,| 4 baking soda sifted inside 2 Wier except possibly the brunette with dark y.¢06 one starts on a k will ¢ d sallow complexion. = Rose, : ong walk w yee BI : !| keep the feet from growing tired and aching --L. M. T. . ; ee er ree : Dye Old Wrap, Skirt, Sweater, Curtains a In Diamond Dyes Each package of "Diamond Dyes" contains directions so simpie any-wo- man can dye or tint her old worn, faded things new. Even if she has e can put a rich, Short Cuts to Housekeeping. If. you desire to save feathers from chickens or turkeys, it is a good plan to shear the fowl before scalding, leaving pin feathers and quills in the to her. Dark blue is the oasis in the desert for all of us and is in good taste in many different' types of dresses and suits and hats, for many different oc- casions, v4 : : Remember this; girls: there is the color for the occasion as well as the correct style for the occasion! Selecting the 'color that makes us afb i his < um R elle him the story: T's | ess for and "Grace Westhaver" went dow Sable Island with ten of her crew. amd ber skipper, This has the*désire fect. upon Frank, The two boys ! an Italfan vessel into Anc ; the ent of Captain with credit to himself and 8. summer as anedpprentics to "Long! Dimer a ancdpprentics Xe fark takes him to Gloucester as 'spare hand on the Kastalia. Frank checks up the ship's provisions accounts and enjoys his first breakfast at sea. fos CHAPTER FIVE-- (Cont'd.) 5 It was a strange .sea-picture. dim-lit fo'¢'sle ranged on either side with two tiers of bunks which ran be-" hind the pawl-post-up into the dark and of recess of the peak; the narrow table, ¢ piled with steamihg pots of potatoes, boiled Leef, cabbage, and beans, bread,! the and stewed cranberries;! the aproned cook standing by his stove at the after end of the fo'c'sle ladling out mugs of coffee to those who called for the beverage; the tousled bunks littered with suit-cdses, ditty-bags, and variwcolored .counterpanes and blankets; * the eilesking hanging like dead men upon the bulkheads; and lastly, the men themselves, ruddy- faced and loud of speech, clad in bi and ends, sea-booted and rough- looking, all piling in to the food, while the whole apartment creaked and swayed to the rising lift of the sea' under the Kastalia's forefoot. ! A glance at the vessel's crew then would have confirmed a landsman in' the belief that they were a gang of pirates. Gone were the nice table man- ners of the shore; gone were the trim clothes, collars and ties, shirts of linen and natty shoes; and gone also were the niceties of speech. Men passed their remarks cursefully, and conver-! sation became painfully free and! highly charged with the red-blooded' talk of the sea. The envirdnment had | changed it all, and. the kick of the surge underfoot had dissipated the! shams and foibles of the land. : | an old eot bed. Remove the four legs Sed a man comes out in his true colors. he sa] and he speaks as he thinks, and Shorty himself began to feel he had taken his place as a man and no longer as' a fourteen-yeargold boy. When he came on deck-again'it was toisee Cape Ann astern and the Kas-| talia scudding along and 'curtseying! to the swell. The sun had risen clear of the sea to the eastward, and th | 1€ day was sunshine and clouds with a! fresh sou'-westérly breeze -blowing. | As soon as the first table gang emer-| ged the skipper sung out sharply, "Set! th' light sails." Spying his nephew, hé called him. "Kin ye steer, Frank?" | *Sure thing," answered the boy, "I kin steer Cap'en Daley's packet." Uncle Jerry laughed. "Huh! Waal, ef ye kin steer that barge I callate ye kin steer anythin'. Take th' wheel. ! East-no'th-east th' course!" | } "Kast-no'th-east, sir!" repeated | Shorty, and he grasped the spokes, while his uncle went forward for op breakfast. { If ever a boy felt proud it was Shorty that morning. Standing at the' wheel of the schooner he kept a vigi-! lant eye on the compass aloft at' the gaff-topsail which was set. Therd' was a spanking breeze blowing, and hen the .gang piled on the "kites": he Kastalja careened to the weight of the wind in them and buried her lee scuppers in a boiling of froth. Up went the great balloon JE and the men swaying on the halliards were drenched in spray when she hefted the' sail. "Hey yi! Sheet her down!" And six brine-drenched fishermen laid their, weight on the lee sheet and belayed it tant as a wire" Y. } The fisherman's staysa#l or main-| topmast-staysail was sent aloft next and set to leeward, and then; having of Tot Tome wo. STR, "pat 'our lowers, 8,' balloon, and staysail, the gang trooped pf "Thar' now, son," cried a man, ad- dressing Shorty: "We've hung out all her rags for ye. See ef ye kin tear th'. patch 'of'n her. Drive her, son, grivef er!" a ne ie = ; 'The * skipper came: up 'from below with : : ent. "See this, Frank," hé said. The other, intent on 'steering, to. Sp harbormaster. = Frank finishes school The: hgh ; 'up, and the 8 gear, . and foredeck i ge n in. the sunshine. The vast x of canvas reared silently aloft, full with the wind and quietly doing their work with but eping of mast hoops e x the clink of sheet blocks fetch ng up pg a . _ Amidships sat a few of the men Svat o - Is, and their voice floated aft in a wing monctonie, while the rattle 'and ¢ pans sou from the fo'c'sle fnterjectad | by snatches of song from o ; With the letters "E.N.E" for ever before his eyes, Shorty was yet able to daydream a little as he twirled the spokes to the swinging of the needle around the lubber mark, and his fanc; pictured himself as a modern embodi- ment of Amyas Leigh steering on his mission 'of revenge to the Spanish Main, It was a delightful fancy, and the boy's imagination took a dream- er's license and wove the ancient story into a more modern conception, with Carrie Dexter as Rose Salterne and Bob Morrissey as the hated Don Guz- man. Not that Shorty hated Bob as much as all that, but Bob was forced to take the part owing to the lack of a better, or worse, rival. At the wheel of his ship Shorty was steering to rescue his lady-love, and he had ot to where he was hanging the wretched Bob from the = cross-trees 'when his uncle stopped in his weather- alldy pacing and sung out in the pe- culiar long-drawn shout eommon to all seafarers, "H-e-y thar'! Sheet in an' jig up!" And when the men turned out to sweat up on the slackened hal- liards he relieved Shorty at the wheel. "Git all th' gang aft here, Frank," "We'll set th', watches at When the men were haled out said. a. piece of echalk to John Ross, the oldest fisherman aboard. "Mark th' baitin' places, John," he said, andthe .man went around the house and kid! marking the baiting positions. Everything aboard a fislierman is drawn for at the beginning of tne voy- age, and by this means there is no uabbling afterwards, as edeh will and by what he draws for. The top of the cabin house is capped around its edge by planks, upon which the men cut their bait, but there is not enough room for all the twenty men to cut bait and bait their trawls around these bait-boards, so some have to bait on the gurry kid--a huge box just forward of the cabin house--- and down in the hold. Thus the reason why the favored spots are drawn for, After this apportionment was sat- isfactorily = carried out the skipper eds "Who drawed Number One dory ?" Two men answered, "All right, boys. Set th' watch at twelve noon. One hour an' twelve minutes to watch." The positions for the fishing work were also portioned out, and the men detailed off into "splittin consisting of a "throater "gutter," and and oldest salt fishermen aboard were selected. for the salti wand, was given no definite place, but e was competent enough to join all splitting gang if necessary, alhg he did EE lerutaas the science of salting fish. He did not have a watch to stand, but he was supposed fo give | a hand to anyone who wanted him, = day passed quietly, and the schooner sped along at a steady leven-knot clip. Hourly the log uled and 'the Yeading mounted" eleven sea miles on every sight. was good going, the breeze was. prises get, rh 2 ware "Sand" a nl jaws, and |" litter," while the best] | . and' "kench-{ ing" work in the hold. Shorty, as spare! Packed Tight-- Kept p= Right & PR Juicy Fruit P »g) Spearmint hi ertainly three delightful flavors t And the new NIPS--the candy-coated peppermint u also a great treat for your sweet tooth. ey All from the Wrigley fac-.- tories where practice - madesperfection. has ™ 3 vessel tearing over the dark-swathed [from fo'c'sle, hold, and cabin he tossed ; sea cradled him into the forty-fathom slumber of blue water, When he awoke next morning at four the wheelman' ! pointed with 'a mittened hand to' a light gleaming over the port bow. "Cape Sable!" he said, and Shorty stared once more at the land of his birth until the sun quenched the flare of the lantern and illuminated the { low-lying sandy shore, fringed with | the dark green of spruce, past which | they were tearing, | ~All day long they stood up the coast 'of Nova Scotia, dropping the land into ia blue streak towards nightfall, when another light gleamed, star-like, in Fons Dini i HR ih Tr " said the skipper in reply ito his nephew's enquiry. "Th' ni {one jest ly showin' above th' horizon is Sambro Head at the en- trance to Halifax harbor. We'll see th' lights all night long as we travel up th' coast. That is, ef it don't shut [in thick o' fog" When Sambro Head was ' passed Shorty turned in and fell ---- ---- asleep with | his uncle's "admonitions to. the w ringing in hig ears, "Keep a g 00k= out an' call me ef it shuts in thick or th' wind shifts." It seemed but a few minutes ago that his uncle had spoken when 'the boy 'was awakened" by the skipper's: voice. "All out 'below! Git th' light sails in!" and he crawled on deck to find the vessel driving through' a steaming wall of fog. The breeze had freshened and the Kastalia was driving ahead in lurching dives, while from out the gloom for'ard came the drone of a horn. The crowd were all up and mustered aft--their oilskins gleaming in the wet of the mist. "All right," cried the skipper, taking the wheel. "Clow up yer tops'ls an' tie them up. Down ext | balloon an' stays'l!" (To be continued.) Et Minard's Linimeat for-Burns, eto. Vaseline CARBOLATED - A VERY efficient ~~ £4 X antiseptic when 'used as a first-aid dressing for cuts, scratches, bruises, in- sect bites, etc. Keep tube' in the house for emergencies, ' CHESEBROUGH MFG. COMPANY

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