Flesherton Advance, 10 Jun 1925, p. 3

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Youn^ Tender Leaves n tnd tips used in SALADA' GREEN TEA II B680, ikre seale<l in air-tight &luinintixn foil. TKeir fresK flavor is finer tKan anx Japetn or GunpOMrder. Try SALADA. IAunt Hattie waa momervtarily si!- cm«ed. i "Who's guing lo live with me and help ir.e with the woik?" she asked presently. "You can gi>t somtope. You can hire them. Y'ou've pic-nty of money." Aunt Hattie shook her head. "Did you say this man that wants you to work for him is rich?" she asked. "I don't know hew rich he is but he has a wonH?rful horns and acres and acre? of fruit.' Aunt Hattie went upstairs to her rcom. Barbara tried tho windows to ses if they wire locked and then the door. She went to hei' room and un- I dressed. She did not go to bed. Shj sat there by the wind-^w looking ov.i ^^^'^ , across the soft summer night â€" dreani- >;2i^^^ The Backsliding of Barbara It Brought Happiness and Awoke Love in Four Lives. Preftntly the clock on the Pres- I bylsrian church tower struck e'.even. â-  She rose. It wa.s time fur her to .sleep for she must be rested for the n-ow chapter of life that wou'd begin on the morrcw. Sht stretched her arms across the' sill of the open window and it-scenied : as if shi looked alon^j th? road she â-  I would travel. Work was there and "Good night," fhe said. 1 the joy of work. Children's fc2t danc-- "Well!" .\unt Hattie had been look- ed ahead of hiv. Happiness lay along while Barbara and! ing out of the window in the djrken-tiie path and it even teemed to her; BY COURTEN.AY .SAVAGE. !ng. PART III. They lingered at the table until it was dusk. Then, while Barbara and! _ _ Mr. Howell his nam« was also Rich-]ed front room and she came quickly i that time might mellow the heart of ard, washed the dishes, the children! il'-to the* hall aa Barbara entered, i Aunt Hattie and teach her happiness, made themselves ready for bed. When I "Wh': re you been? Joe Baxter's been | "Oh, God," she breathed softly, it was time for them to be tucked in'sendin' up here to know if you was "thank Y'ou for letting me go back- Barbara went upstairs and kissed! sick and me thinkin' you at work all [sliding â€" backsliding." them goodnight. i the time. Where you been, gettin'. And though she did not say so, "Don't go away, Barbara," Richard; home at this hour with a man in a | Barbara knew that her backsliding Junior begged. ' ' i machine? An' look at you, all friz- j had led her to the greatest joys the "And if vou must gn come back' zed up. Say, ain't you ashamed, with] world can hold â€" love and duty. some time,""shi€la urged. ! you"" ''â- eck showin' and your hairj (The End.) "I'll come and see you often," she hangin' over your ears? No account,! ^ â€" , . promised. |just like your mother. She went offj Richard Howell went to get the car to a picnic and come home married to EO he could drive her home. Jim,, my Poor brother, married him right the man who worked about the place,! under everybody's nose. Y'ou ain't would stay in the house so the chil-^ niarried, arc you?" dren would not be alone. | Barbara laughed. She could not Barbara leaned back on the cush- ; help it. Ions of the car and sighed. I ">jo, I'm not married. "I'm afraid you're very tired." : (i^y off FOLLOWING THE FLY A YOUTHE'UL .NKGLIGEE. I for use inj very simple ! A simple negligee ; madam's room is this ; straight-line kimono. It is surplice ^.^____^__^^^_^.^_ and closes at low waist-line. When; ! worn with a straight si'p it makes an! i The fly is not a fit comi»anion for^j^j.jjj,(jyg lounging-rote. The kimono i human beings. The objection to him ; p^^^^^^^^^ jj^, ^^33^ jg finished with; u * l'^ °""^ °^ ^^^ '''â- "'"^ °' '^'^ ''»°^'»seâ€" ; shirred ribbon, contrasting material! . . , . -^ • • I ve worked at the store for i a kind of musical hum-though that la If ^h-reckline and sleeve-edges.' Howe.ls voice carried a note of deep, ten years and never had a real day | annoi-ing enough at limes. It is on 1 j^ ^^^j.,. eaborate and vouthful negli- soncern. ,,„,.!*<* myself so this morning I decided' the score oC its habits that human be- ; ^ „^^^^ from this very use-! "Yes, I am,' she confessed, _' but that I'd go for a walk." ! legs object to the fly. Objection to it ' ^^, ^^^^ ^^ ^^ ^^.t for sleeveless, and "A walk? You're crazy." ; on this score is more than objection, j^^. adding the flattering tucked ruffles A& - Ive not boiled anygannents since" "A friend suggested that I stop boiling the clothes I washed and try Rinso, \t'hich I did, with such delight- ful re.sults that I have not boiled any garments since then. "I found that Rinso is excellent for removing finger prints from white paint and for washing all woodwork. "It has cut my house cleaning troubles in half and consequently I felt that it was only your due to know that Rinso has a much bigger work to do in our house than just to clean the dirt from our laundry." The makers of Rinso receive many sucfa letters aa this. For Riiuo not only does the family wash merely by soaking â€" it is alao excellent for many household duties, such as cleaning woodwork, scrubbing floors, etc Order Rinso today. Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto. at all sorry I sneaked off; "Yes, over the mountain towards i[ is a disgust so strong that it sti some soft material, about the neck to face the masic, . Camdentown.^' Briefly Barbara told.iates a desire to slay so that we may : ^^j ^j^^p armholes, one has an inter- j ,. _ ...1.. J , ..... ^ ^jj ^^j. ijabttations and ourselves of ^^^.jj^g i^jj ^f finery. Cut in sizes 34! ! her aunt of the day's adventures 2V2 yards of 36-inch material. Price centj. ! I'm not to-day." "You'll have wos't you?" /., "Yes, but that isn't anything to. Aunt Hattie was almost too amazed the enforced attentions of these flfthy ! T*"''^ j^j^'^'^^ ^ygt' 3:3,^ 33 requires ^^riji^Wry over. After all, I'm not^a child : for speech. Mnsects. ' »* V'''.jM;i-,biave a right to one day out of : "You went into a strange house! After he has stretched his little â-  Wf'^' land cooked meals for folks you'd wings to dry where does the fly go? -They were silent for several min-| never seen? Oh, ain't you ashamed? | Most likely the fly has a keen sense of utes. He drove the oar slowly as; What'll folks say, after all the trouble' smell. Where does it lead him? Like though he were in no hurry to reach' I took to brmg you up right after I the bee. to the pink oi orange or blue Barbara's home. 1 your mother and father died?" | petals or the summer flowers? Not at "Miss Barbara, you're not happy j Barbara offered no comment. I all. Attar of roses has no attraction where you are. I wonder if you'd j "I might have known it," the older, for him. The odoriferous fermenta- consider leaving your present way of 'woman went on, rocking back and' tions of the garbage can. the manure living to take care of Richard and | forth with indignation. "Y'our pa' pile, or the stinking emanations of the Shelia. They need soneone like youjv,-as foolish of else he wouldn't have! cesspool have the first call upon him. who would really love and care for ; married a city girl without a pair ; it is to these spots he makes his first them." I of pillow cases to her name. Y'our! visit. To list all his subsequent rest- ~ , _^ '!I know they do. I know they need ma was just plain empty-headed, ing place would be too disgusting. Ob- care . . . but . . ." she hesitated- 1 Then they both of them died and left serve for yourself and make a mental "It hasn't been easy, trying to bring' you to me to struggle with. It's ter- note of them, them up," the man said softly, "andirible. j Sooner or later, the fly makes his when I walked in to-night and saw! Barbara frowned and she felt anyway into our dwellings. He enters to you there, it was almost as if all my! ache of resentment creep over her.' get relief from the heat of summer or hopes and prayers had been answered.! She could not remember her father! the cold of autumn, .\fter walking en The place hasn't seemed as it did to- j and her recollection of her mother filth, corruption and. as likely as not. night since their mother died." Then,! was dim. She knew they had loved; Infection; does he manicure? Not a after a moment, "I'm sure that she'd one another, that they had been happy, bit of it be happy if she knew you were there. Perhaps she sent yon to look after us all." Barbara did not answer. A mist filled her eyes. She was thinking that for the first time since her parents bad died she was really wanted. "Don't you think you could come?" "I don't knowâ€" I'd like to." They were quite close to Wallon- and that only in the narrowness of; With feet clogged with foulness he Aunt Hattie's heart was there any-; is seen on the spoons, on the forks, on. thing questionable about their mar- j the butter, the sugar, the rim of the J^J^ge. ! drinking vessel, the meat, the edge of , "WTiat'll folks say?" Aunt Hattie' the milk pitcher. And be sure that as | was working herself into a temper, muddy boots will leave a track across j "Suppose you can't work at the store' a crimson carpet so the fly will leave no more, suppose ..." ' his tracks on everything he touches. I "I don't care what folks say," Bar- Is he satisfied with making his call bara said. "I've played truant for "^ the eating utensils? Not at all. He boro now and Barbara showed him the ; one day, that's aH. And' I'm glad I &^^» rest for the soles of his feet upon lane that led to her home. went for I had a chance to do some-' our hands our faces and he particular- "Will you promise me one thing?" thing good for somebody. You can't ' J' affects the cr&dle where lies the ^ be asked. "Promise me that you'll I understand it. Aunt Hattie, but I dis- ! hclples infant. Imagine how easy it ; think it over? Ev^n if you can't come I covered to-day that it's the things' '"««t he when the fly al'Shts on the for good, will you let me come and that you can do for other people to habys lips for it to leave behind the; get you in the car on Sundays and! make them happy that count for most i S^rms of disease. It has been proved, take you out home for the day? But in this world. And Mr. Howell asked' that the house fly may carry the germs , me to go there and uve and take care of his children." Ten Ways to Hurt Your Church. 1. Broadcast the faults of the minis- ter. Assume the .-ilence of your hear- ers means they agi'ee with you â€" and so report It, 2. Repeat every rumor you hear about the way people are cutting down their giving to the church â€" and believe al! you hear on the subject. 3. Attend church only when an "out- side" speaker occupies the pulpit â€" and then shake hands with everybody that day. 4. Lament about the "poor music" and the hign cost of It, harking back to the old days â€" when you did the same thing about the music then. Dit- to the preaching. 5. Tell everybody that the attend- ance is falling off. though you never got a report of the ofliclal count. 6. Criticize fellow members for things you. too. are guilty of. T. Give one-third of what you can give. S. Reixjrt that the church lacks spiri- tual power, although your own life Is like a cinder. 9. Park both your piety and Intelli- gence at home when you attend church; then accuse the preacher of being "heretical" 10. Send your children to another church school, and publish the fact. Oppose the leaders of your school â€" always ! Facts. The original manuscript of "Kid- i napped." by Robert Louis Stevenson, ; brought $10,000 at an auction in New j York City recently. Texas produces 40 per cent, of tha ' cotton of the United States. i The authorities in charge of several j big hospitals in England have decided , lo lift the ban against women nurses ' smoking cigarettes while on duty, hav- ing concluded that it was impossible . to eatorce the rule proMbitiDg the practice. Montreal is now the greatest Inland 'â-  port in the world. The water of the Dead Sea Is fiv* limes as salty as that of the ocean. I The history of almanacs has beea^ traced back to very early times. It ha« been ascertained that Alexandrian Greeks had them, though It is not ex- actly known when ihey appeared In , Europe. The oldest existing almanacs ; in manuscript form date from the thir- teenth and fourteenth centuries, where- [ as the earliest printed almanac was by the astronomer, Purbach. and appear- ed between the years 1450 and 1461. ' The unpleasant odor of Llmburger cheese Is due to specific fermentaticna induced during ripening. This cheese is made i^rom sweet milk, the curd be- ing formed into cake? about Ave Inches ! square and two inches thick and not ; pressed. The main cause of the putre- I tactive fermentation is the extremeljw moist condition in which it is k^t. For Flr«t Aid â€" MInard'a Liniment. A CAPE ENSSMBLE. tary and come for all time. We need you and I'm sure you'll be happy." " "I'll think about it and let you know." "May I drive over on Sunday?" ^Yes." "Good night." H« took her hand and held it between his own. "I sort of feel sure that you'll conie â€" that .; of thirty distinct diseases and parasti- "Go there and live? Leave me? You can't." "He asked me to^" "It wouldn't be right. You don't; dare. I brought you up and you owe it to rr»e to stay here." Then, as a sudden thought came over her money-' yott?' want to come when you realize j loving mind, "H*w much did he say how niuTh the children need you â€" how happy I'd be to h.tve you there." j AfterEVeryMeai \ Pas9 It around after rrerjr meal Give thr family the benefit of Its aid to dl^Mtloa. CIcaiit tctfth too. Keep It ahrays In the house, m , '<h$tsUttk'kefy$mmi' i mm A. straight-line cap© with a flatter- ing collar, a dress with a circular side- j i cic organisms. Think also how logl- ; front trimming and a front tie, raglan ; I cal a connection there is be ween the sleeves that burst into fullness and' I fly and the prevalence of such a dis- bald tight about the wrist by a nar-; I ease as diarrhoea among Infants In row band, and a very flat' straight! summer. I back are the interesting points in this; It is an established fact that files ! very graceful ensemble. Of course can convey typhoid fever. In army ' the cape, No. 1092, is lined with flat camps and in many municipalities ' crepe to harmonize with the gown. It: where measures are taken to stop ty- is made on slendering lines and a , ^„ : phold fever a campaign against house small yoke is used close about the neck; ,.^J'*^-?°^\ ,11.- .. i lies ts considered one of the most Im- ; to which the slight fullness is adjust- We didnt talk about money^ _ I ,,ortant means to this end. ! ed. Soft wool makes this a most at-1 'We.l, you re not goin. J^o^"^, Flies multiply as they have oppor- ^ tractive summer outlit. The dress,! just hfce your maâ€" -you don t Know j^^.j^ ^^ ^^^^ ^^j flj,^ breeding places. No. 1083, may be cut with short: nothin about your duly but you go; ^^^ere tore it is important to prevent sleeves and a narrow collar-band used. ' backs.idin through life without a bitj t,reeding places such as manure piles! Cut in sizes 34 to 42 inches bust. Size^ of shame m your whole ftiake-up. | ^^^ ^^ starve them by covering food , 38 requires o'* yards of 36-inch ma-' takin' things from fo.k.^ and ... i „^ garbage. .\bsolute cleanliness 1 terial for the dress ard 2\i yards of' "Stop!" Barbara's eyes snapped' ^^j (^e removal or destruction of any- ; lengthwise material in any length firj. "Aunt Hattie, a good many peo-, ijjj^g („ „blch flies may breed or feed i cape. Each pattern 20 cents. pie have told me about my mother and! „.p PS, en, In] ] ,.^^, ^„ „ my father. My mother was young: ^^'^rlTorp^^^^^^ may be u.ed to' HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS, and pretty and kind. She fell in lovej<,mpjj adult flies but It Is more effectjve : Write your name and address plain- j with my father at first sight and, to starve them than to swat this dan-; iy. giving number and size of such ^ ;they ran away and giV; married. Myjggrous enemy to mankind --F.D. j |)atterns as you want. Enclose 20c in; ; parents were very hflppy. And theyi ^ I stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap; weren't pcor. Aunt Hnttte, they didn'tj They All Say So. 'it carefully) for each number, and; have to take anything from anybody.] „^__..>;o^_ ^^n-t forget, dearest, that »ddress your order to Pattjem Dept. Thet Last Resort. 1st Microbe â€" "Everything's so darn- ed clean. Where're we gonna go to live?" 2nd Microbe â€" "On the Office towel, I guess I" A City Under the Sea. The ruins of an ancient city hav9 ; been found by divers submerged thirty ; feet below the surface of the Mediter- : ranean Sea, oft the coast of Tunis. I The divers report that many large I stone buildings were visible, outlined In dim shadows on the sandy bottom, i and that fish swam in and out of th« . crumbled doorways. j Archaeologists are preparing to 1 make further explorations. Additional j interest i'^ atta'-he<l to the discovery by the fact that the city lies in water* described by Virgil and near the "iBie of the Lotu3 Eaters," of which Homer sang. Well Named. Teacher {to new boy)â€" "What do they call you at home?" Boy â€" "Flannel, miss." "But why?" "Because I shrink from wash'ag. Wall Papers Send for Free Booklet. We pay express to any point In Ontario. BELL BROTHERS S98 Danforth Ave. Toronto When my mother died she had thirty- i three hundred dollars and she said itj^^^^^ ^^ kept a fiecret." He- for family reasons our engagement ISSUK No. 23â€" '& N was to be given to you to be spenti gjjeâ€" "Yes that's Ion ro». I got through school when| ^g„,„g ^,.„y-i,ojy •• I was sixteen and Ive been working | 'in the store ever srfnce. First I got ! five dollars a week, tlwn six, and so on until two years ago I got ten. .\nd I've brought it sll to you. It's more th«n paid for my food and clothes â€" more than paid!" Aunt Hattie winced. "I'm not asking for a penny of that money or for my father's share of this farm. You can hare it. But, to-m<WTow I'm goinff away â€" to Cam- dtntoKm â€" to tak* oaro of those chil- (trmr exactly what I'm Th* Tonal* NMVIbil far InmraMn, l» •tmiatiM «>« »«ntrs< xnt uruta Hawitiik Mm> 1m% C<*T •••» • tkrM inrf Caarl* •t Tralnlnt !• r«in« miMii. kairlx Om rt«alr«4 •<nattoa. aii4 *nlr«» at tacMlltf ••rata. Thli Manltal Xai adHtX tha atikt. ti««r t9B4«ai. TA« a«p4lt rctahr* anlttrAa af Ika Salital. a â- anttilr allowanm and IrmlMiit (spanaoi la and lr»« Haa Vark. Far larOlar ictarnflian ••«<> t> >ka a«»«lnlaadailt Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade- laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. Minard's Liniment for Backache. • Steady, "The Smith boy who used to work tor yov wants me to glvo htm • Job. Is be steady?" "Well, If he waa any steadier he'd be motionless." • Piano-playing is no help in working a typewriter. In the former accom- plishment two or more notes must be struck at once, an operation which would b« fatal on the typewritar. Nolo she flattened top of this flna kettle. No waste space atwve the water level. A rery fast boiler, decidedly neat in appearance. Hinged lid at side of kettle for speedy filling under tap or by dipper; being hinged it cannot fall off or get lost. Handle, extra large rigid, shaped to fit the hand and always cool; being rigid ycu have per- fect control at all times. Wall made. generous sized properly cunr- ed spout Tip of spout well above water line to prevent orerboiJing or apilllnc This kettle Is made in SMP Pearl and SMP Diamond Enatn- rilcd Ware, also 'D nickel plated ccpper ^varc. The name Savoy and o'lr trade mark on each ^nufate Kettl» ^.UD Kettle ,.»^>^^^M^^e^^^>^->.J^.â- dBâ- g>^^g.^^»^â- ^,^wa/M

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