Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 21 Dec 1916, p. 7

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d The Advance is read in the best homes in Barrie and vicinity weekly; these readers patronize Barrie Stores. To get this business advertise in the Advance. ADVERTISING to the time of Edward I are therezl Henry VIII and allhis wives; all the great En, statesnien-of the past two h1n_1dredeyea1's and. more, great scholars, writers and artists are there [and mostly all eminent statesmen and soldiers of to-(lav. Taft, Roose- felt,' Cleveland and-Lincoln from America, also Sir John A. McDon- ald of Canada and Lord Strathcona. Notorious criminals also have their place. The leaders of the French R.e\")lution and so on down to Ro_2je.r -Casement and Dr. Crippen. e 1-. LI... 7I`-....... A4 TA-\I1I1r\1i 11-n aniv hundreds of suits of mail and armor and arms; `We were in the room where Sir Walter Raleigh carved his 3 messages on the wall. These and ]those of other noted prisoners are the Crown jewels is grraml. They are 'easil_v legible. The room.eontaining' encased in around dais inside a big 4 iron cage, some ten feet in `diameter, and area mass of blazing diamonds, `rubies, emeralds, sapphires, pearls "R1hUlllUll|/ illlll JJJ. \/11 nu. 7 7 .In the Tower of London, we saw`- t:u1(l gold. There are about six -Crowns, K1115.;"s, Queen s, Coronation `Crown and one for functions there- after. The diamond in the State Crown is as big as a hen s egg`, and. say, doesn t' it sparkle and flash. ' The Abbey was of course very in- te1jestinn'.' We saw the tombs of many of England s Kings up to the time of Geo1'_2;e II. All after the `last named are buried at \Vindsor. - . rm , , .1--- ..-... ,.,....' Q4. Danna l11l1C(l 'd.l'L` uuncu tu. vv luunux. The same day we saw" St. Paul s Cathedral and parts of the Houses of Parliament; The best thing in the latter are the fine paintings in the panels of the -hall leading from the Lords to the Commons Chamber. The. two Chambers are not so large as I had expected and remind one quite a lot of those in Ottawa; I (`H n___I9_ __._~ (2.... 'l'\l.Aw-. nvn d. IUL UL buuat: 11.1 uuuauvu. St. Paul s was ne. There are many notables buried here, chief of whom a1'e Nelson and \`Velling'ton. They have great big tombs raised up `some ten feet from the floor, of the crypt. VVelling'ton s funeral ear is also there, a gigantic affair drawn by horses eight abreast. We went up some two or three [hundred feet in the tower` and had a view over Lon- don. On the `broad steps and plat- form in front, there are hundreds of ' pigeons all (lay long. They are very `_tame and will scrap` for a. place on your wrist to eat our of your hand. ' urn ,..II...1 o+ Hm I`. A Mr`. nma- _)uur WLIBL LU can uux \ll Uux uuuu. We called at the C.A.\I.C. Head- quarters to see Herman Arnold, who has been there for some" ei_g'11~tee1i months. ' 117 1 I ' 11 ,_L-.__, -._ L._l.L 17': luuuula . VVe took in theatres on_ both Fri- day. and Saturday nights and struck good shows each time. VVe left a call for 6 am. Sunday mornin;z'but the guy never wakened us and when we came alive, it was 7.45. Our train leftvfrom Cannon St. Station at 8.25, some two miles away, this beiny: the last whicrh would get us back in time. .-W-Iaybe we didn t hurry. VVe dressed, washed. caught ; a taxi and were at our train in exact- Butter takept. Vaults _ _'aPP9L Under the present act governing the sale of Butter, each pound must have a wrap- per` withthe printed designation on it. The Advance can supply the very best quality of paper, printed out of stock or with_ the maker's name included. ' Mail cider: promptly attended to. THE AD VANCE PRINTED Phone 53 twenty mintes from the time we jumped out of bed. But we mis- I scd breakfast. TY A little girl aboutve or six years `old was sent by her sister to post a. letter. As the letter was heavy she was told to have it weighed and, if necessary to buy and affix another penny stamp. Tn 4-Ln Lu`:-v'\\-:01) n Ianv aicfn-no ch!) IJCIIIIJ DU(llIllJ- To the surprise of her sister, she returned` triumphantly with the .pen-` ny. ` ` 1133.. ,5 1v1\i1 nun` :+ \un;'lv11o(` Q ,' I UL I'll may homo- f bavailgblo to a - A};p1ica:? L 61.... I\..... ll) - ` Didn t you get it weighed? Said the sister. . Oh, no, replied the wee mite, when nobody was looking I popped :L :.. ~H it. Remarkable Woman His wife is a remarkable wo- man. V How so? She can look stylish in bonncts | that he likes. i . V `The temperature of a new electrur flatlron can `be regulated to four different degrees. II"! I I ` ` A `J L|I,_ _____._- L-..L UIJIUI CHI; (1581063- The shoulder clot is the very best Icut of beef for pot roasting.` Tnnn nun]-rm. nu-11` vnnvun anon :0 +110 luuh UL UCCL LU1 IJUII AUGDDIIIS. Less water and more soap is the [secret of the successful laundress. . TI"! , ._1'1!_- l-.(`L .L'_._-_- L._....`I-I'...-.L o...-.1: DCULCD U1. DIIC auUl3CaD.LuL I.uuuu.Luou. The coee left from breakfast may be utiliged _for coffee gelatine. 13-...-- -.. ....-.L.n nnI\v\nA n4 -|`I:1r\rv Rnnnu UK: u'uu1.t:u LU]. uuucc gcxauuc. Even 111 wmtcr canned strmg beans may be uscd-cold--for a simple . salad. A I I I A J _____...J _.ILL lauxuu. Cabbage cut and served with French dressing makes a very dainty Iwmter salad- ` 4.1.- --;..L.... u....L .l..:...1 VVIHECT saLa.u.. . Save even the water that dned beef has been boiled in-it may be, I used for" stoc_k. "._I_-_ _ .....-,`l ......J -2.. USUU. LUI BLUUA. Veal pot pxev makes a good and 1n-- expensive dish for wmter. The breast of the veal_is~ _1:he best.for `this. _-_.-..LZ........ ...-....I n. `O1 U118 V86]. 15 `bill: Ucblr Lu). lollln Peanut 011 1s sometlmes A used In` place of olive oil by people who dis~ like the latter. - 1171 1 '1______A_A_ 4-____ ____L IIXKC Iallc IGDIICJ. u When cleaning glassware try puff-~ ting a few drops of laundry blue in the soapsuds. A uA:I:.-. rs`-uc:v\I\n vvun`rAn n Vvvnvuv LIIU buapauua. 7 I A voilin string makes 9. very good thread for stringing beads. It will stand a great amount of wear and Oh:-un Iv .41.. .1. l..l1.l.A.\/J The writer is now in France. It is 11ot wise to choose the larg- est sweet potatoes nor the largest turnips. Medium-sized potatoes and small turnips have a ner flavor and will cook more satisfactorily.` 12 . . . . . . -... .....-1..I..,1 ...:n. :...u......., ` W111 UUUl\ IHUIU D'd:|albl.l1U|oU1llJ. If you are troubled with indiges- tion and cannot eat white bread, make bread from the whole Wheat flour. This is more easily digested and more nourishing than the white bread. I ` ,LI -_, A well-known explorer is author- ity for the fact that lions are gener- ally left-handed. They usually strike with the left fore-paw. She Fixed Them residence the land in homestead- 'les of his Yours, TXT A .1. \l|l1-3 W.._L FLETCHER- Barrie stituted for , conditions. homesteader pre-empt 1 his home- iSf.Pr- v\ " `Ln I no 491 priotor ake (1;."piI_i'~ ertain dis r -7--. . E slx mom`-~ culti-van Lv vnv-n. .st:' r -.1 vs VA: Dormmon ub-Agency) IKEY 50Il% LIGLELKKI` BEGU- L V\l VA\lUP| ned in the of . Mal-v prompt bvtlv vav LLLLL uo 2',`-I``.h`ere was A a" look of discomfort ma anxiety in Grant Oswald s pale, high-bred face while hejspoke, . al- though his voice was /emphatic. Enoch did not answer. He moved . restlesslye in his chair once or twice, lifted a programme that lay on his desk, `and ran his eyes through its pages. ` Oswald paused as if waiting, for a reply. ' H -- .. p:----_. :_----agg- , - Marse rmocn." . - Wentworth returned tothe theater and took up his duties as if nothing had happened.` His associates greet- ed him with their usual courtesy; still he felt as if a drop curtain` had fallen between him and the world. where his daily labor lay. \Vo1ncn and a few men shrank `away from him even while they seemed to be trying; to be polite, -soinetimcs kind. Zilla Paget made no secret of her change of residence. She flaunted the news of it abroad and Went- worth s lapse from the conventional- ities -of life made a nine-day gossip in theatrical circles. It even agi- tated moralities which had been es- teemed lenient. The reason back of the intensity of feeling was not, in every case, shocked virtue, but Dor-. cas was loved, while the English- woman was held in universal con- tempt and hatred. n....:,.s:+u mwnw nnf. its draqnet` UV IIU Illa v u v a -v s------- - 1 J .1 Pose nothing, answered his `wife scornfully.` Weutworth hates Puget worse than any of us do, and that is going some. I ve- watched them together. She knows he hates her, even if she is living under the same roof. He"s afraid of her. I've seen it in his eyes when he didn't -LL`--. .......I...-.11 sung vol-niiinw T`? I (1 It _ dusuu : _ Y2]I( :18inbc0mi;;`hty glad to do It: rse Enoch. 7 MeIT_..L.nu+la 1~o+11`l')'Inl'-` f.n H10 theater BUHIIJU uuu uulu. nu -Curiosity thre\.v out `its dragnet` among the people in the company, whowatched Wentworth goand come` among them day after day, treating Miss Paget with an -"aversion which was colder than allything doled out to her by the players at the Gotham. 31.9- _...... .24-L TK7nnl>_ seen It In [115 eyes wncu uc ulull u ~k'now anybody was watching. If I don t miss my guess therc s black- mail or something like that back of it. She s fit for it. Wentworth s '8 goat in some way that we re not .l\UI +l\ ,, DU JIDL IIJ vuv 1:---J V-.. _.- -__- _ ,, I tell you, it s pose with Went- worth, -said John Brcen, the man who played the janitor. ,1_I___.... 7! ..... ...... ".41 `Ha "glass door behind 'him slammed, and ! Miss Paget came rustling in. on EU. It was several days after his re- turn to business before Enoch met his sister. ' He heard in a casual! way that she `had rented an apart- ment andhad taken Alice Volk with l the two children to live with her.- Their first encounter was an ordeal to each one. They came face to face in the` foyer. ' Enoch said -Good morning and held out his hand. The girl held it for a second looking up into his face with eager. wistfulness. The ghost of a smile broke over Enoch s haggard` face, then he glanced backward as the` `LL. .5.....m.3l ks-nennnlv and entered m:n'v| M188 rage: came rusuuug m. . He turned brnsquely and entered` his oice. The jaded look in his eyes had changed to shuddering hate. Dercas passed out to join the throng on Broadway. She felt chilled and lonely. She did not realize that the sun was * shining. CEAP71'I:1?.`XxIII The Parting. of the .Ways All I have" left to say, Went- worth, is this-we have come to a crossroad and you must choose be- tween two paths: either cut that woman out of you life-or don t ex- pect to take your place among de- cent citizens. 1: n ._-... __ _'.l.._d . 1--.__.-_ I can t understand your infatu- ation, Wentworth, he wenrt on; the woman degenerates every day of her life. God knows, a bitter .tone crept into his voice. `-I `feel culpable for even bringing her a.- cross the ocean." Then" I ought to have let her go when I spoke `of it ` a month or two ago. She was bound ` -to do mischief, only I never dreamed that you would fall into her clutches. I warned you. - , C ____ . .._...-_. I wish, Oswald's tone was al- most wistful, that you would at least talk it over. I- think I can deal with the woman if` anyone can. ., -I have`-always treated her` with a cer- ;. tain stand-oifishness that she re- gsents. Shehas tried," more than once. cross the line I __drew. She didn t! lucceed, and .it galls her. I never put into. words` what I think of her- heV'_nnderstands, however, t'hat.I re-V! her 7velue dramatically, while e 1`.80nally-4to mee-she. is offensive.l ' he youinfher power won't `e.?_ It would__-nefver'_ go _.be: =- 1 . _Sh`e;.Aknows-t/hat. ._I. 4 'I_?F.' `F3;;3l` 1..`5 Enoc17xWs:a{iV11 sullen stillness,` with his eyes xed on a calendar which hung above the desk. . 111' I `ne urorld would call .9: Vcreditahle story. I can handle her easily. ` A gleam of relief and hope drifted for a moment across Wentwoi'th s face. Then he . laughed nervously and the sullen frown returned to his V'*-- `-7- -----~--\ -MI` '|\nrrn7\ -.+_n'nn.m!. IIOWH .l'UI:|.l.ll.lU\1 DU Luv eyes. He rose and began to `pace the floor of the oice with nervous foot- steps. ` .- Won t you trust me? pleaded Oswald. I have a real ` regard,- Wentworth, for you as well as `for your genius. I would do it for your sister if for no other reason. There is time enough yet to pull away, but, he spoke abruptly, it won t be long. The woman has dragged more than one man to the gutter or to-su'icide. . 1-1v._,L__.-..J.L I..."-I-.nJ , Jicnarnonhlv I ' t the` Dom- C1 __.L to-su1c1ae.' ' Wentworth laughed disagreeably Well,? it won t beTsuicide,-_he an- swered harshly. T lL'l'\-_ ,1. Ln `AA :-turn `vnhnn `nah swereu I|u1'su1_y. Don t be too sure. When a man who has always had a fair amount of self-respect begins. to lose it, he usually faces two alternatives; that :.. ....1....o 1... lane a calm smnhnr in his HD1118. ' Enoch ht a clgar and [began `to smoke. ;x11,'J___A.1-- IL in 1~nnn`nDD fa fnllz usually 18.l3S_ LWU au.I.::.ua.uu,o, uuuu 1s, unless he has a sohd anchor m Ins home. ,1, 1:1. .. ..2....... .-nu] knn-on `fn smoke. . Evidently. it is `useless to talk. What passes my understanding` is how any man can turn out a woman like your sister "to give shelter to Zilla Paget. I `hate to say it, Went- worth,' you _will set me down as a cad, but I prefer to have a separate oice. I am willing to take the lit- tleback room, or you can. One suits "measwell as the other. `_ KlI,_,L_:__`_- 1! 117....`-u-rn-u-Lin Inaimn +0 me 8S ,Wl1 as ule uuuu. _ Certainly. Wentworth leaped to, his feet alertly. 1 l1 change at once. I d hate to thrust my society upon anyone who does not care for it. 111'; 2- __._L ......... nnnni>v T rnngn 1t." T It is not your society I mean wholly. I object `to Miss Paget drop- ping in here as she did today. Do1'1 t hurry, I did not mean that-- 461 .1-.. 7+ no-rn 1\711nf vnn nmmlt. hurry, 1 did not mat-" ; I don't care what you meant. I can make the change at-once. Enoch s` voice was churlish. He be- hgan to drag vo`1umes`fron1 the book- case beside him and heap them on the top of his desk. You made yourself tolerably plain, don t spoil it with politeness. T_T.. -nnlln Hun nnnnre frnm niQ'eon- IE Wlul pun wucna. He pulled the papers from pig'eon- : holes in his desk and tossed thcm_ about in loose piles, dropping` some in the waste basket and binding others together with rubber bands. A 111 , _-___ A._...-...1l:...n. n`nur, Uhlllful husvvxguz unvu `an-..-..V- ....___-, Oswa1d s pen was trav.e1ling.slow- ly across a sheet of paper when some one` tapped softly at the door. Merry- entered. Enoch did--not turn his head. The actor seated himself he- side Oswald _s desk. (1`l" , ,,_ ---L- ..1...... u|s'\ 4-11:5 rnnrn- 'r';u our 59.3- Blue USWKI-lu_b ucon. - .. It could not; show up this morn-. ing when you -phoned, he explain- ed. I have been `arranging for a funeral. It s one of those funerals which have not great string of car- . , .. ring? -ho s dead? George Volk. : r Oswald laid down his pen and star- ed` at'Merry. George Volk! When [did he drift back to America? L1. 1-- ... Nobody soen1s.to `ooything about him._ It s 9. mercy though; 1t lsets Alice free. ` 111-1` ,, .13) _L_ L..1-.. 1&0 , nu`.-Ar` fhn sets Auce lree. `` How did she take it? _ asked the Englishman quickly. ' - I haven't told her yet. Where did he die? The last time you heard of him was in'Eng'1and, !.........n non WaS'B lb 8 the theatre toget a letter I left in ,my dressing4room and ran into a` `policeman who was looking for `Alice iVolk. I asked him what he wanted. They found a letter -addr'essed to. her on a man who was killed last night .down near the bridge. I ve been `with the officer since 10 o clock. Is there anything I can do? No, I ve looked `after every- thing. But I want your advice on one point. What do " you think of not telling her--till he is buried? HT;9,. H.` lm'm+ nlnn T gnnnnged Yes. .This morning I came to ' SO10. DBIOIB cue curuuu. wcuu uy. The house was `packed to thereof on the night the play closed. l It`was ` ' the middle of June and the city had 3 grown uncomfortably hot. -Wentworth ?had spent a restless day.` ` It seemed ' to him as if the air was lled with anticipation. b He overheard the Breens discuss their plans for the 5 summer in a Maine camp._- Julie -lVolk-had approached him, half shy, i half eager, to tell him of "a `shore! ' cottage where they `were to stay; with L Dorcas until the season opened.jTele- _ 5 gr8ii1s.came and .'went," everyone ~ the-theater Had `e:_cept~ `him `YUU :l,wasn t it? (117,, IIUCIL ll not 1;eun1g I1e1'--uu 111: lb Uuxlcux _`j`It s the best plan. I supposed he had fallen pretty low. - _:-_._....-: 1,:. IIU GU LMIAVAA `.I&\}yyJ -..... . Low! Merry shrugged his shoulders. I did not know such dives existed as. the place where" I found him. He had been lying. there soaked to the point of insensibility for two weeks. He was too hor-T rible a `sight for the eyes of any woman. ' ' 11117! ,1 __- ..--.]'7 `nu -n`n:vv\nI1 na . What an end! `exclaimed Os- wald. The man once stood on a pinnacle that many an actor would give half 'a. lifetime to win. He had ! i .The Englishman and Merry both looked up quickly. Wentworth had drpped an armful of" books noisily on `his desk. He opened the door whi -11 led to the inner oice, passed- tlnj ugh, `Chen slammed it sharp1y?be- hind him. ' - CHAPTER XXIV The Yellow .,I}nvelope More than one summer show `had begun to blazon an alluring sign over the door of a Broadway theater before The House of Esterbrook closed its season.. The fame of the play had gone abroad through the country, and night after night, long after the residence part of New York showed a labyrinth of boarded front. every seatin the Gotham was sold before, the curtain went up. mm. x,.___. _-___ `......1-...1 ...4:|... mm-P self. He; felt. isolated `amid the ex- citement of a closing night. He had no` i tie s-not* a human being cared whether he came or went. There was a house-he held thetitle deeds for it, he paid taxes. and hired servants to care for it-4but' it was not a home. Only a year ago the three of them had gone holidaying, as care-free as children.` Ages had passed since ilast summer. ` ` 1 ,I,_,_L L1,, LI_'._L___ 1.. iussl. auxuumr. He wandered about the theater in aimless, unseeingl fashion. The world seemed to have grown intoler- able. He hated the gay. laughter in the audience, the rustling of fans, and the buzz of voices between the acts. The orchestra had chosen airs that jarred upon his inmost nerves. He stood watching the throng when suddenly he wondered how he should meet tomorrow and every tomorrow of a long, lonely, inactive summer. n..:.-....., 41... -....+..:.. can M. H... I..=+ U1 it lung, luucly, ulauuvc Duuuu.uL. Before the curtain fell on the last act he strolled through the darken- ed house and opened a narrow door behind the lower` boxes. A `few shadowed steps led to the stage. A man stood inside with his- ngers moving over the buttons, which flooded the stage`wirth.1ight or shad- ow. VVcntworth pushed past him and, wa.lked swiftly behind the drops un--` til he reached a corner which wasl comparatively deserted. He stood inside a wing, watching the company take -their curtain calls`. Last` of all 5 came Merry, alone. . The. insistent applause importuned a speech. Went- ` worth smiled grimly. Andrew's one terror was a speech. He saw the actor glance about him appealinglyf then his eyes signalled to the man- who controlled rtheeeurtain. It began to descend with slow deliberation. Merry paused for a moment, then he came back. _ . I `rnom ORILLIA MOTHERS` T0 |. smcon MOTHERS V l We have been told that some par- 1 ents are still holding back their sons ofrom enlisting. .As mothers who ~ have given, all our sons of military age it has been suggested to us that `we should use our influence to aid in breaking down this barrier to re- eruiting. We appeal to other mo- thers of Orillia and Simcoe not to -stand in the way of their boys do- in: their duty. \Ve know the heart- ` ache of saying good-bye, but we know also the satisfaction of realizing: ` that our sons have not been (leaf to the `call of their country. We would not have our boys untrue t.o their manhood, nor would we rob them of their self respect. \Vc love them toowell for that. We do 11ot relish publicity in this matter, but it has`bcen represented to us that by such an appeal as this we can help the cause. Having giv- -u~-nuu cu-use sun 111:1] nnf c"I1`;11`( `FY0111 we can uclp uu: pgzunu. 1.lavxu_;3 ,3 enjour sons, we. will not shrink from -this lesser sacrice. \Ve only "hope that this` appeal may have some weight with parents who have been` d-iscou1'ag'ing thcir'so11s, from enlist-. ing. - n -n-, _,,_n.--_- 1....:.-:....1 ..+ D.._ mg. . Orillia mothers (original at Re f cruiting Headquarters, Bari-ie)--Bes~ . sie. Ardagh, Jessie B. Jasquith, Mrs. , W111. Ironsides, Mrs. H. R. Channen, Annie T. Bowen, Mary H. Jupp, Lil- lie Carss,- Adeline C. Cooke, Mary T. Cook, Mrs. Pheobe Hermiston, A.` C. Cull, Mary F-. Lumsden, Mary Paine, Rhoda Millar, Helen Clark,l Nellie Thomson, Mrs. J. J._ Wilson, Mrs. G.` A. Cole, Mrs. W. H. Price, Mrs. `M. McDonnell, Mrs. D..Wa.l- lace, Mrs. Colin Henderson, Mrs. W. J . "Douglas, Mrs. May Whiting, Mrs.l T. Harte, Harriett Tuphope, Mrs. M. A. Deans, Mrs.J. Flurette, Mrs. N. D. McIntyre, Mrs. S. D. McPhee, Mrs. B. -F. Stewart, Mrs. J. P. Jack- son, Mrs. K. Gallagher, Mrs. A. Wal- ker, Mrs. M. J . Flannery, Mrs. D. M. Glover, Mrs..H. A. Croxall, Mrs. D. A. Clark, Mrs. A. Birehard, Mrs. J. Tate, Mrs. Jas. Clegg, J . E. Maynard, Mrs. Wm. Davis, Mrs. E. T. Bernard, Mrs. Annie Davis. . A . II IIIIV IJUllI' Subigency 1;; BT91! l\VI'I1U\\1\I| What Victory foruns Would Meanl For Preemen` their victory. The Kultur will go` If the Central Powers win, all thei instincts of privilege, self-conceit, bullying tyranny will have free play, once the bloody adventure of the: military, feudal and capitalist clas.-I seshas turned into so signal a suc- cess, says L.` Simon, in November Avtlantic. This war has been theirs, and they will duly claim the fruits of ``"NOTHING TO? WORRY ABOUT `* You have two alternatives. Either you areimobilized or you are not. If not, you- have nothing to worry about. `,`If you are, you have two alternatives: Either you are in camp or at the front. If you are in camp you have nothing to worry about. . urn ...;.- ...... .. 4.1.... 4~ .. .m+ 17:-I Iunm I-um nH>m-nn+ivne- -'li`.iH1m- vnn 9.1-9. 3.1; `He Iront. .l.I. yUl1 21.115 {Ll uzuup _y_Uu uavc .uuuuu5 uu vvu;:.J urvuuuc If you are at the front you have two alternatlvesz Elther you are in reserve or you are on the ghting" line. If you are in reserve, you have nothing to Worry about. ' -H11: ...... ...... nu +1-un'Qm]1{';nrr Iinn vnn 119170 twn nlfprnativpst Either nave notnmg to worry uuuu-1.. - "`If you are on the ghting line you have two alternatives: Either you scrap or you don t. If you don t you have nothing to worry about. If you do you have two alternatives: Either you get hurt or -you don t. If you don. t you have nothing to worry about. alfxyou do you have two alternatives. ` Either you get slightly ihurtor you get badly ' hurt; A If slightly you have nothing -to worry ..l..u-.L . _ uuJ.u VA Jvu av-I ------g '-`--" ' U or v . u II b t. . I . 8 9uIf badly,` you have two alternatives: Either you recover or you don 1:.. If you recover you have nothing to worry about; If you _don t and you have followedmy adve clear through, you have `done with won'y1ng forever. A 7 , _ . - - A . m1.......;.....; ..4-` H... nml~lnn ~p nf Hus: `nhnnnnhv nes: nnt nnm=m'r--ner- Worrying IO1'BVB;'\. n , I The name of the author of this philosophy does not appear-per- haps some French `soldier who `had acquired the happy habit rst put , it into writing, Nevertheless it is said that thousands of T ghting Frenchmen now know "it by heart and have made it their philosophy of ...__= _- I213- t`...'.I..'...... .' J.` 1'UI.lUlI`lllCLI. uvvv nuv II army j life.--C1,fitique. WOE II` VJ I/0 esidence in ter earnmg 50 acres ex- tion patent ' n as home ' conditions. hausted his The French Litany of the Trenches NORTHERN AnvANd:: Ion d1-illing the ne'w acquired masses; it will infuse youth with all the ideals of the feudal state, with as little in- dividuality as man can live on. In .the conquered territories the popula- tion will be held in the helot-likel position of that of Alsace-Lorraine, Sclilesw-i_s_: and Prussian Poland, and their children will-be cultured into Sta_at-Deutschen. _The wealth of the victorious empires will grow beyond the dreams of avarice, and the usual stigmata of denioralizationland de- cadence, which were becoming already - much in themselves in Germany be- fore the war, will make, themselves seen. The German Empire will go the way of Rome under its emperors --and all the more swiftly because,` notwithstandine; its outward Christ-I ianity, its soul has really remained a heathen. germatically heathen,` to i the core. I LONDON, EDINBURGH A; AND cmscow; (Continued from page two) now. ..to_uri_st season but quiet tried to get a sail down starting right from Glasgow docks so as to pass by the big naval` and other shipyards but found the authorities wouldn t allow anyone to go as pas- sen`gers on freight steamers. The pas- senger boats had all stopped and we phad arranged to go down a on a f1'eig'l1te1' with the shipping` company superintendent. The `latter was very sorry later when he found that he wouldn t be allowed to take us so we wentto see the G1-asgow Cathe- dral and the Glasgow Gallery of Arts instead. Also we succeeded in being ` conducted through one of the bigger ship-Building); yards a11d saw destroy- lers under all stages of construction, lalso one big submarine. We ` The windows of the Cathedral are i very ne. They portray all the best ` known Biblical passages. Above the altar, twelve huge windows are giv- en over, one each, to the twelve` apostles. These last areeat least six- ty feet in height, over all, including` the inscription below and designs above and below the figures. There` are at least over one hundred win- dows all beautifully worked in stain- ed glass,many of them presented by noble families in memory of some dead heroes of wars in India and Africa and the Napoleonic wars. We had Wired for an extension of leave on Tuesday night and the re- ply next day `granted an extra two days. ` 117 ' 11 I 1' 1 T',`l,;_ i We arrived back in London Friday morning and again put up at Char- ing Cross Road. That day we saw Madame Tussaud s Waxworks and the Tower of London. Madame Tus- saud_ s founded in France about 1788: uand in Engrland about 1860, has the` [most wonderful and life-like gures in wax I have ever seen. The fea- tures and colorings are nearly perfect and each is clothed in g'arments such as they would `wear in everydoy life. 1 All Eng;land s Kings and-Queens back in its highest sense is the creation of a new want'and providing the means with which to apply that want._ The aim of advertising is not to spread the name of a rm so much as to get business for that rm. The ad. that counts is the one that makes the luxuries of to-day the necessities of to-morrow. A great many . people advertise as they give to charity-merely to get rid of the solicitor. Then the advertiser says it doesn t pay and. when done in that spirit it does not. Ad- vertisers must put brain and selling force into their copy, and when this is done they nd that advertising is not an expense, but the finest kind of an investment -S. C; Dobbs, past president Associated Advertising Clubs of America. ' Advanee_ read in the homes in Barrie DFING.

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