Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star, 23 May 1929, p. 2

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CHAPTER XIH.--(Cont'd.) "He ha da boat; he wants to say, "1 was a humble man; I took fish on hooks and in nets" Barney wrote out his next question before saying it aloud: "Maneto o mikweniman no nossan gaie nin- gaian?" "He wants fo say," replied the voice, "I have never heard of father." 'Ninga?" "He says, 'Yes.' He says, 'Mother J knew; mother came to shore bear- ing' child; not born child, he says; 'she was very sick. I took her in eanoe, that is." "What did he do for my mother?" "He says, 'Took her to my house #n the lonely place where was wo- man, my wife' He says, 'There boy was born; you stayed there.'" "What happened to my mother?" "She was very sick, but she did not dle, she went away." "When?" "At the moon of the wild rice gath-| ering." "When she went away, he means?" "Yes" "Then wken did she come?" "In the moon of the breaking snow- " "What year?" The medium made no direct an- swer; but after a pause the Voice continued: "He says that all summer she fed the bahy at her breast till she went sick again. He wants to tell you that she said, when she went away, she: surely would return. He says, 'There 1 lived until water froze again' He says, 'But no one came back; so I went away." "Where did you go?" Barney eried quickly, as the .medium's picture changed; gone from her, as surpris- ingly as they had come, were the slight motions of her hands, the jerk- ings and mannerisms which had char- acterized the presence of the "control." Mrs. Davol slowly sat upright and gazed dully about like an ordinary, overfed woman making an apparent effort of memory to recognize her callers. "Well, dearie," she said at last to Ethel, "Did you get satisfied? Was there good results?" Ethel realized, with a gasp, that the seance was over. CHAPTER XIV, "You think we'd better have Kin- cheloe arrested?" Ethel asked Barney when she returned home. "I'd like to kifow what he's doing now," Barney said, "Oh, Bennet's told me. He's having his sort of a fast time. That part of left to wait; for you 3 "But this which we learned tonight, Barney, helps a lot; your mother came --with you," she added gently, "to the shore there beyond St. Florentin, In boa acros the channel to Resurrection Rock where he and his wife took care of her. You were bora there; in Sep-~ tember your mother was sick. She did not die--there, at least. But she went away and did not come back, though Nosh Jo waited there until winter--"' y "November," he meant," Barney of water; that is the Chippewa name for November--the moon of the freez- ing again" ] "I see. And then, as he Was a nomad, he went away and took you he died--now. you're coming to affairs you learned from Azen Mabo--and gave you to Azen without being able to tell anything about you but that the ring went with you. We really got a lot tonight, dMin't we, Barney?" "I've got," Birney said, his hands still clenched behind him, "more than I ever had/in all my life before." He moved a little nearer her, "I mean from you--Mise--Ethel Carew, You're a strange girl; the finest and noblest in the world," he added quick- ly. "You turned against your own people, and you trusted mel" "You, Barney? Why not? could I help it?" "Don't!" he warned swiftly. How "I've J. Q." "Being aware that any unpleas of the VER wait to see if a headache will "wear off," Why. suffer when there's always Aspirin? The millions of men and women who use it in increasing quantities eve: ce to Quinlan os 3 » fr pleasant to his his satirical deserip! supplied. "He spoke of the freezing | hg on a most of other spook capital J. and Q. FOR LITTLE SUB-DEB. The growing miss today demands sophisticated styles in smart fabrics, {as attractive dress of printed cotton 1 4oul d in bright red tones illustrated, The scarf collar with loose ends with kuot at shoulder, trimming pieces, cuff bands and belt are of plain matching shade red linen. It's so inexpensive and 50 easily made, and flares so beau- tifully at hemline, you'll just want to make another in same model of print- ed silk crepe with plain contrast, or of French blue eportweight linen with tiny white polka dots with plain matching blue linén. Style No, 474 ean be had in sizes 8, 10,12, 14 and 16 years. It is also suitable for wool crepe, lightweight tweed, printed pique, chambray, checked gingh and shantung, Pattern price 20¢ in stamps or coin (eoin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully, "HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. QUIP your car with Firestones- thé toughest, long- est-wearing tires on earth--and know wherever you go, wider than the span of the ball of "roots; wide enough to allow you to 'spread' out these roots in the direc. tion of their natural growth. . Too of- ten the roots in planting are bent and cramped into too narrow a space to | allow for their best development. It {1s always to be remembered that the (roots obtain the food for the plant, | that the root system is one of the | most important parts of the plant. Shrubs should be planted at the same depth at which they stood in the nursery. This depth will be evi- ' dent from the soil line on the stems. They should be watered thoroughly af- ter planting and should be cultivated ta a depth of two or three inches in bid fo conserve the supply of mols- ure, : ? your tires will carry you with greater safety and economy than any others you Writs your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number and Pruning Often Overdone Another 'part' of our work with shrubs is pruning. As a'rule shrubs are pruned too much, gften from ne- cessity atising from lack of space, year prove that it does. relieve such pain. The medical profession pro- nounces it without effect on the heart, so use it as often as it can Chicago's called by people who go there, 'Little Paris.'" Barney made no comment, and they both sat down. ol -- ee Son dy 5 Pe 2 (Call it Gayvert) SPEED FILM Load your camera with a Gevaert Film -- Laugh at the Weatherman. "Get" what you want any time, anywhere. Save Money----Save Time and enjoy the thrill of better snaps. Today, at your dealer's get a roll of Gevaert Film-- Tn rolls or packs to fit every camera, "Do you want to tell me what you \{ thought about it?" "You mean whether I believed those were the circumstances of my birth? Yes, I did, Miss Carew." "Who could the Indian be? Jo?" ' "I suppose 80." He stood up and, turning his back to Eethel, he strode away, as he had a habit of doing when beset by emo- sion, "You see-- you see-- Miss Carew, it hadn't occurred to me then that I--" "What, Barney?" "That I might have been born on $he Rock, Miss Carew." "Barney!" Ethel rebuked him by his own name gently. "Barney." "You can't want me to call you--" "I can't?" "Ethel)" he said, hardly whispering it; but she heard. "Ethel!" he clenched his hands behind him, and she step farther back, "That's the way 1 was born, 1 believe." "Let's believe it, Barney!" "Miss Carew!" "1 don't mind believing it, Barney! It doesn't change you! Except to make you finer!" "Finer?" "Because you've had to doit all yourself! Don't you see how I--" she faltered a little and substituted--"how every one must admire you only more for that! Besides, my people are to blame." | "How do you mean?' he asked quickly. | "They must be. We both of us know Jogether that my people--my -grand- father and my uncle, at least--tried to harm you, Not to hurt you, perhaps; but they saw that Quinlan was killed before he could find you. Why? You hadn't done anything to any of my | family; you hadn't even heard of them {before you met me. It was what you Noah Great Grandmothers "All the men ..i the world must have loved you, Ethel." got to thinking about you in a way I never should." "How do you think about me, Bar- i "Think?" he repeated. "I don't think about you. I eant. I love-- love--love you! There, I've said it)" He snatched his hands apart behind him and struck them together before him in his dismay. "You love me, Barney?" she said. "Love you! Love you!" "1 love you, Barney. I've loved you from our first morning together, I think." "No; no; nol" he tried to deny her; but she only smiled up at him and said: "Yes; you've known that, Barney. That's been what's troubled you; not that you loved me, but that it was so plain that I loved you." X "So plain!" he denied, almost furi-|. ously, for her. "It wasn't. It's not true now!" "Oh, isn't it? Do you suppose I'm ashamed," . He dropped to his knees before her and caught her hands and held them. He bent his head and drew her hands to his lips; and his kiss, though not at all like the first love kiss she had dreamed to be hers some day, brought her amazing ecstasy. She this boy who so loved her and} yet, half in fear of himself, half in fear of her, held from her even in their ure. She wanted him nearer now; she wanted his arms about her, his strength subduing hers, ove! ] rpowering and holding her; and yet she delight- ed too in his courtly awe of her when he had kissed her hands and released spare you any pain, Every druggist always has genuine Aspirin tablets for the promt relief ofa headache, olds, n a, lumbago, a er en yourself with the proven directions in every package. GASPIRIN Kapirin 10 & Trademark Registered tp evade address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 78 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by an early mail. inane Mistress--"Do you think you will settle down here? You've left so many situations." Maid--"Yes, m"m. But remember I didn't leave any of 'em voluntary!" ! ------ Minard's Liniment--geod for tired feet can buy. See your nearest Fire- stone Dealer today. { FIRESTONE TIRE & RUBBER ~ 00. OF CANADA, LIMITED HAMILTON - ONTARIO especially when the shrubs get old and big. The cutting out of all dead wood and 'vecasionally of wood that is crowding other branches is -in many, we might say most, cases suf- ficlent for pruning operations. ~~ All shrubs, like trees, have a defin- ite form, often of some special grace, when mature. Why should we try to make them conform to the same out- line, to trim and bind them to a rigid itt ! 1 Riding abreast ol AN years ago. And you get it. Greater speed, and i 4 are smoother power to modern cars more resp » 1 as a result of the development of higher speed, higher coms pression motors. To ensure a engines , catching his breath, after no more "With greater vesistanen to heat and woss SE hats spherical 'or half-arching form when === {they want to send out great arching chains, as the golden bell in spring? pruned back so that it has only one or two feet of straight young shoot to cover with ita rich mantle of gold. 'Where some pruning is necessary it is well to remember that most of the early flowering shrubs flower from wood of the previous season's growth, hence they should be pruned immedi- ately after flowering, giving them alk summer to grow the new-flowering 'wood, Then the summer-flowering shrubs usually bloom on wood grown the same season, so they can be cut [back during the winter or.very early spring months. --e-- It is to Laugh It 'can be readily believed that a popular character like Sir Lau- der, reputed to be earning colossal sums, has had during his long and successful career plenty of opportuni ties of participating in what he him [self describes as "easy money and. get-rich-quick schemes." In his auto~ biography, "Roamin' in the Gloam- in," he tells in this respect quite a number of good stories against him- "Aelt; 0 | Andrew Carnegie once gave him a tip to buy United States Steel com. 'mon, because he was so pleased at '{finding he was a tenth of an Too often is this beautiful shrub - °

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