Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 26 Dec 1912, p. 2

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. Quality Tells! I! The emphatic demand of the public Is for SALlI Tea and "Salada" Only. Blfie*. Mlxd or UncoJord Qrn FREE s.n. p u. MmM I Sealed Packet* On!/ Refuse Addrm i "SAIJkDA." the back regions. She wondered 9 a little that Roy did not oome to I ' her ; or, at any rale, send her some mefwage, and at the end of the last chorus began to feel a little anxi- ous and uncomfortable. At last, to her great relief, the saw Frithiui coming toward her. "Your brother has never com*. On the Farm Succulent Food for Stuck. Just as one enjoys eating no ap- ONLY A MONTH; OR, A CURIOUS MYSTERY EXPLAINED. CHAPTER XXIX. It is of course a truism thai we ever fully n;>pre< iate w^at we have, until some trouble or soi/e other loss shows us all that has grown familiar in a fresh l.u'.t Fond as he lad been of hi Some before, Frithiof had never until aow quite >eal ; znd what it meant to hin But as ea. h eve-,i: M he j o^UVnhbig" returned from wo-k. and from tan' evero trial of an he said, in reply to her greeting. p | e occasionally especially during "I suppose this fog must have hm- the winter, when lew fruit and ve- dered him. for he told me he should getables are used than during the be here ; and I have been expecting summer just so the live stock in him every moment." ( the winter, when their rations coo- "Is the fog eo bsd as all thatt" sist largely of dry feed, need and said Cecil, rather anxiously. appreciate some form of succulent "H was very bad wh.ii I cam.," fuud There i , ^ >i"l* added said Frithiof. "However, bv good *pense 10 supply.ng animal, with I luck, I managed to grope mv wav reasonable amount of suwulent to Portland Road, and came down f ?," d - elth " ln th u e '<>" of *>* or !.v the iletropolitaa. Will you let ' For herd f tw ? lve . - r rae.ee you hornet" , more f w : th " &2!"A~ ", I ..!- L t most cheaply supplied bv the use ol Thank yeu, but it is so dre.id- ., bu , - for , he ., herdi OT fully out of your way. I should be for , mtn without a 8 ii o> root8 a f. rery glad if yon would only it is fop<J , n exco i lent iu bstitute for si- troubling you SK> much. j a _ a "You will be giving me a real By care in preparing the ooil and pleasure," he sad "I expect growing the crop, from fifteen to there will be a rush on the trains, twenty-five tons of roots, like man- Shall ne try for a cabt" gels, rutabagas or stock carrots can , So they walked out together into *> grown per acre They can b ... ... , . .the dense fog. Cecil with a blissful 9d ""der the feeding-alley or she had not time to think much of ^^ of confidem . r in thp m , n wh<) in a pit outside of the barn, at ver, L ih/mtMI. f A,, i., .'pilled her so adroitly through the. 1 '" 1 *' Pe. Twentv tons of By the middle of August, Lanee ' A , r.xjts will supply ten cows twenty and Gwen had recovered, and were I pounc ; s por dav cacn for 200 davs, taken down to the sea-side. But At last, after much d.mcu.ty, an<J can bf MW and hai . r< , st<x , in spite of lovely weather that sura- Frithiof secured a hansom, and put ^ R cost Q{ thgn $40 Th< . nu . mer'a holiday proved a very dreary J*" "" ll she * "ecretly re- trientg obtained ; n twenty one. Roy was in the depths of de- l*"^ that he got in too. pression, and it seemed to Cecil i that a great shadow had fallen up- j will PERRIN GLOVES The world's standard of glove perfection. Style Fit Se t-i t the tntf* i k I M e v ory ;!. Durability, > *' of r(K)tg ap( . wonh g30 wh(>n bran "1 will come back with you if you ' \ f W0 rth SCO per ton ; so th feeding rill allow me." he said; "for I aTi value of the ro roots is sufficient to not quit* sure whether this is not pnv for the cost of production, be -I "Robin," said Mrs. Boniface, "I a more dangerous part of the ad- B iJ c the additional advantage of i want you to take that child to venture tlian when we were on foot, their supplying the succulence uapicton and dislike he felt much Switzerland for a month ; this place I never saw such a f,.g! Whv. we needed by the animal. as the *a, lor eel, whan, after U,s- ig do , her no d at , Rlui sing about all day in stormy seas he anchors at ninht in some harbor She can't even see the horse, much less wanU change and mountain air." where he is going.' of refuge. Sigrid knew that he felt with her as she and Swanhild the hut and crowded arid with her as she played at Mine Lechertivr'a Academy. But tht-re was something in the work etv t p hy 8 i c ally she gained gmit that prevented the trouble from ^ from the ^ and canie b .,,. k really prevmg on her mind ; she was ith a Cu , or in her cheek , whluh ad indeed yet not in d^pair. . Mt ificd her mother. Nevertheless, Mine, l.echert.er't | .. Rt . the bye dl . ar { e ^' remarked PlnnJHg Large seeds of Fruits. like paaches and So the father and mother plotted "How thankful I am that you and planned, and in September Ce- were here! It would have been plums may be planted in the fall. he shoulc JotTv'n gu' s her trou I Cl1 ' n !, uch . * a "'' 1 . h " r wl11 ' *"' dreadful all alone." snid Cecil ; and and they will freeze sufficiently We It wa?i "with hfr certahilj as" ' l Sw!Uer ' and to lec "he explained to him how Mrs. during the winter to cause them to he went about her household work, i'^l^'"^^!^,^! ^! 118 ^, II<jrner hud , v fnill>d . her ' the last 'Prout readily in the spring Small | BUM, i eing a seiisiDie gin, i s moment. ^ou have not met my seeds like the apple, grape, etc., did her best with what was put mo ther since she came back from should be mixed with sand in the Are you still afraid of in- fall or early winter, and placed in fectiont The house has been UK>r- , a shallow, open box The box and anxi- oug |,!y painU-d and fumigated." | should be set fl.it. on the ground north side of a building here it will keep moist and re- ninin there all winter to freeze and thaw as often as it will The con- tents of Uie box should never be best with what was put " d , though her mn,< l}w ^\ * de *' F " lhl f '" "Oh. it is not thu." said Frith- oi'd i? still You do uot quick eves n^U-d at once the change in her favorite. "You are not well, cherie," she "By Mrs Bouifnce, the day after her iof ; "but while this over me. I can't come, renlire how it affects "It does uot affect return, "your father ihuughi you home, would like to hear the 'Elijah' to- 'night at the Albert Hall, aid, "your face looks worn. Why. m> dear, J can actually see line, in has , efl , wo tlekcu ." your forehead. At your age that is inexcusable." SiRrwi laughed. "1 have a bad hnbit of wrinkling it up when I am worried about any- thing," she said. "To-day, perhaps, I am a little tired your own allowed to dry out. Very early in the spring just as soon as the soil "No. that's true,," said Frithiof. 'in the garden will do to work, the and he "It has made me value that nmrc, seeds should be planted in rows and it has made roe value your and covered very lightly The ne^ds But. you nee, you mnv be separated from the sand "\\ h- Albani is singing, is she fru-inlsliip more, not?" cried Cecil. "Oli, yes, I I. '.;'! like to gu. of all things!" "Then 1 will tell you what we how y<i\i manage to do it passes my are the only one at Rowan Tr>-e with a sieve, but this is unnoces- House who still believes in me: and sary as sand and all may be sown in the row. Take care that the will do ; we will tend a ak 11 rs. Hornrr to go It is so hot and [or it>1 the cfturch nic< ,ting to-night, sultry, and besides 1 am anx.ous and father and j do not want to card and comprehension when there is wilh you, thing t-o prove me innocent." "None uf the things which we be- no- seeds do not become dry before they are planted. Apple seeds be bout Frithiof, it is a Irving lime for him " "Yes, thia heat is trying to the mis* it." lieve in most can proved." cnid Cecil gin growing very early, so that be ab'ohrely care munt be taken to get them in t t . _ I "I can't logi Cecil oould make no objection to cally justify my belief in you a:iy thu, though her pluasure was rnther more than in our old talks I cu'd strongest said lime Lecherticr ' damp<;c | by lhe progpec t O f having justifv my my angrl, there are Mrs Horncr as her companion, world." new bonbons in that box ; help Tht . re wai | ittle ]oe lost between "Do belief in the the ground before sprouting begins. yourself. thorn, for the innate retinement of Sundav In the Poultry Turd. It is a mistake to keep late I hatched pullets of the larue varie- you remember that first ties for winter layers. These are when I was staying with always the late moulters. A hi*n The child was never happier than t i le one jarred upon the innate vul- you, and you asked me whether I changes her coat at the same time when hard at work at the academy; gl4rjty of the olher all(J vic , ver , ft had found a N orwe)r j al) church t". each year. even on thu hot summer day she Jt was a | itl | e atter ieven O ' c | ot; k | "Yes. very well. It .vexed me so| If convenient separate the fowls never oomplamed ; and in truth the when Ceci | drove lo t)le Homers' much to have said anything about into several bunches They will lay afternoons just brought ^.he right ooll , e and wag us h e rt-d into the it. but you see. I had alwavs liv,-d more eggs than if crowded together armnmt of variety into what would g<jrgeoU s drawing room. Otherwise have been a very mono- tonous life. "Bigrid," aaid the little girl, as "My dear," exclainx-d Mrs. Hor- ner, entering with a perturbed face, their meals. with people who went to church or '" on<% house. For inatance if chapel as regularly as they took hundred hens are kept, divide into : four or five flocks and have a sop- 'did not my letter reach you in "Well, do you know I was wrong; arate house or apartment for each they walked home together, "is it tilne j | niade sure it wou ld The there is a Norwegian church down """<* true wht you said to Madame f uct li% j aill not feeling qll jte up near the Commercial Docks atj Don 't forget to store plenty of about Frithiof feeling t<) gomg to-mgnt. Could you find Rotherhithe. It is too far for Fig- cabbage for the hens. . They take Is it really that which any onr c | ie d o vou tn j nk( wno rid and Swanhild to go very ofien. the P lnc<> of ffr " better than anv- has ma<]e j( b.im so grave the taut Wo ,,| d go w j tn vou f I but to me it is like a bit of Norway thin cl e with th * exception of few days? Vci\ thought for a moment. | planted down in this great wilder- Kreen rye In case the cnobnge It _!_ partly that, replied Sig- "Sigrid would have liked it. but ness of bouse*." he said "It was cr P ' f*i | < ir ' > then by all means I know she is too busy junt now," j st range that 1 should have hnppon- * w * P*tch of rye in the fall Lechertier the ln-ai ? i ed to come across it so unexpect- Save all the turnips, ruiabasras, translating, h* paced along tke Embankment He crossed Black- friars Kndge and walked furthnri rid. "But he has a good deal to trouble him that you are too young Hne to understand things that will not! - An<J OBf deali fnr hctter go edlv7 juitl at "the'time Vhen'Tnios't P" m P ki - ' "' can be con bear talking about. You mum try ' a | <Jlie tnan lake Miss |.>| c ki" ,,d needed it" | venientlv stored for winter poultry to make H bright and cheerful at |Mr , Homer. "1 shall never forget "Rut that surely is what always food Tnr - v mAV b ' fed "ther cxwk- ho a ' what I endured when I Uiok her happens." Raid Cecil "When wo "* or r * w Cooked vegetable*, of Next morning (Sundav^ was HO wllh me lo npar Corney Grain ; she reallv need thing we get it " ' <*>w should be mashed and thick- bri K ht that Sigrid persuaded him to l aug hed aloud, my d-ar ; laughed "You learned, before I did. to * ned wuh ro " d ? r ' n Alwayi taksi a walk, and fully intending to ,j|| k | 1<r potl tively cried, and even distinguish between needing and return in an hour s time to his wen i , o far ai ^ c | af , her n . 11)tl8 wanting." said Frith ; of "But I, It makes m* hot to thiuk of it you see, hud to lone everything be- veu." for* understanding to lose even "1 always enjoy going anywhere my reputation for common hon- aud further, and on to the further I with Sigrid." said Cecil. "It seems esty. Even now it wins to me bank of the Tower -solid and grim, ' ^ me t hat her ax befitted the guardian of so manv j (ll r nj,, V nig eecrets of the past Even here nlllc h u, be envied there was a ()uiet Sunday feeling. while something familiar in the IIIB _,, ._ ._ W111 , W1 UIUYO 1I1C w wlllll , ^..^ IlrP , ItHI sight of the water and the shipping ono of tne Greenwoods is disen- ' "It is good uf vou to tell me thiv" "T, ?,?"? u carried him back in imagination i to g.ged." I .aid Cecil. "It 'seems to put mean- Norway. an< urn ^ with hasty farewells she went ing into this mystery which is al- off, laughing U> herself as the cab wavs pur./ling me and seeming so rattled along, to think of Mrs. Hor- ,,Bcless nnd nnjnn. Fv the hve, "^"' .huld"be"7llowed took possession of him, nor cou.a he; ner . s discomfort and Sigrid's in- Rov tells me (hit Darnell has left " ! ' low wet land - n.tte? for it. sudden ten , e . pplec iat,on of Corney Grain.! "Y." said Frithiof. "he left at how .ttr.ct^e the herbage therein Fate, however, .eemed to be against Michaelmas Th-'ngs have been ra- ?" ," r * CtlT * the herb * gc there n for that sick longing for his native nor; Ber friend, tne Greenwoods ther smoother since then" to which he is often were out for the evening, and there 1 "1 can't help thinking that his THBEE AMUSING STORIES. "King Edward In His True Oel- n," by Mr. E4ward Lrgge. "King Edward In His Tme Cel- ors" is the title of a book that has ju*t been published from the pen of Mr. Edward Legge, which is aimed to controvert the li'e written by Sir Sidney Lee, in the Dictionary of National Biography. Here are two or three amusing stories from it: "At Marlborough House one nifrht in the eighties the King, who wa* then Prince of Wales, was play- ing billiard- with some of his giie*ts. 'H.R.H.' was not in par- ticularlv good form. and. after a rather bad shot, one of the younger men shouted, to the amateraent and diaarustof the others: 'I say, Wales. pull yourself together!' The Prince made no reply, but beckon- ing to a servant, said: 'Call Mr. 's carriage!' " "Etiquette prescribes that those who are invited to meet sovereigns, or their heirs-apparent, should wear, when thev possess them, the orders of the visiting monarch, or hi* representative for the time b- ing. The Marquis de Soveral, when he was once commanded to Sand- rinnham, where some of the mem- bers of bhe Royal Family of Greece wre staying, was een by King Fdward at the dinner to be wearing the wronft decoration. His Majesty quietly removrd his own Greek Or- der, and under cover of the tble cloth affixed it to the nether end of the Marquis's waistcoat. None of the party perceived this timelv. good-natured action, the amu<e- ment being divided between the King and the then Portuguese Minister " "An American soldier wns once aked what he thought of the Prince of Wales 'What do I think of him?' replied the sergeant in a burst of enthusiasm. 'Why, Albert F/dward give me mv first s<art in li'e' When the Prince was over here on a visit to the President, a grand re- view and luncheon was riven in hit honor right here in Boston. A friend of mine, a Mrs. Brown, wan there, and was fairly 'gone' on the young Prince, like ever >ody else. They all raved about him. After the luncheon she said to me. 'Oh. corporal, can't you give me some- thing that the Prince of Wales has touched I don't care what, as long as it's something, if it's "nly a fish bone ' 'Well.' I said, 'i 1 get you thoe duck hone* that I s*e there on the Prince's plate !' I went over to the table where the Prince had *nt. picked up every one of the duck bones that he had left on his plate, and passed them on to Mrs. Rrown. ho gave me three dollars for the prize, and went her way as proud as a Thanksgiving turkey. I then rtrolled around the table, collected all the bone which the other people had left, made them up into iitiio parce't. and trad-d thero off to my friends aa the real, original duck bones that the Prince of Wale* bad left OB his plate ! It wa a regular cinch, and I cleared forty-eight dol- lars by the deal! That's how I pot ay first start in life from your Prince, the loveliest young gentle- man I eTr struck." HERO OF LIGHT BBIG1DE. Sir G cerise Wnmbwrtl Celebrates IIU Eightieth Sir George Wombwell, who has just celebrated his eightieth birth- day, has been described as the Ma- jor Pendennis of our day. He withstood all the horrors of the Crimea, rode with the Light Bri- gade without turning a hair and even still is envied by men half his age for the skill of hi& tailor and the way he wears his clothes. His home is Xewburgh Priorr. in Yorkshire. historic mansion which holds more secrets of history than many places of greater fame Sir George, who married a daughter of the sixth Earl of Jersey, celebrated his golden wedding a couple of years ago. Sir George took p.irt in the jr,real charge immortalized by Tennyson, and after having two horses shot under him and falling into Russian hands he escaped and returned to camp with "all that was left" of the heroic brigade. CONVALESCENT. The Waiter "Bacon rank. iirl< Impossible, sir ! Why we cured ii ourselves only last week I" The Vitim "Well, if* had a re- lapse I" Still Anxious. "Are you goiiig to keep your new cookf' "I can't tell. We don't know yel whether w suit her. sr wonderful faculty hardlv possible that life should go I v lm . 1 everything in very on undor such a cloud as that Yet _ nr 'k/*l n nvied However, as the dnvs pass onich->w. and I be- there is no chance of her going to- lieve that it wa this trouble which night. 1 will call and see whether drove me to what I reaMv needed." r more lhf tefd from H H-M- Mere Shre-p. Fifteen or twenty ewes, and a ram, will constitute about the right- 1 sized flock with which to begin. They must have abundant shelter and snow : but it need not he in a warm barn Wet, whe- au intense longing for hi own coun try. It was a feeling that often Exposure in ram is bad for a horse or it is doubly bad for sheep sheep sheds should be on a high, well drained site i any more account than the Swiss can account mountains liable. "It's no use," he thought to him- self "!' -Ml take me the bet part of my lift at* ptaui the debts, and till y I caa't ga." CHAPTBn III. Perhaps it was almost a relief both te Frithiof anst to Sigrid th.it. junt at this time, all intercourse with Rowan Tree House should be- oome impossible Lance and Gwen h.id eiok*aed witk scarlatina, and of oour**. all communication was at end for seme time to ttoia* So that, perhaps, tk* only person who sighed ever th* **p* ration was <> oil, aod she was fortunately k-m hf her little patients that Except that the ram should have ij tt | e ira j H now mn d t h Pn . to . wa. nothing left for it but to drive leaving j,..t now i, indirect eridenee mainU i n his virtility, and the ewe, home again . or else to go ,n alone araln.t h-m." sid Cecil. 'Bird a little at lambing time, the flock and trust to finding Roy afterward and I suspected him from the first. She aVc-ided to gu aloae. and writing Do not yen ensreo himf s few wurds on a card asking Roy, "Tns." ha replied. "I < to cosn* to her at the end of the wifKt anv reason." .mi. HI. i. ib* seat it to the artiste'* ( "Whv did he got" room by ose of th* attendants, and "His wife was ill. and was order- settled herself down to enjoy the I d to a warmer climate He has lambing will require onlv pasturage for the greater part of the vear, with clever hav or like roughage for winter feeding. Ths farmer with enly himself and a child or two to oarrv the burden of caring for animals, will often find the keeping of skees> , * * III. w n vi i*r ii 1 1 1 n i iii' sw i i i 1 1 in Bssrwf niunc. secretly rather glad to have fk.n a situation at Plymouth, more advantageous than the keen an empty diair instead of Urs. Hor- ner beside her. All at once the color rahd to her cheeks, for, looking up, she saw th TOM sunnect him T After all. there Is no real evidence ing of cattle. arin*t him. and a great deal of evidence against me How is it Frithiof crossing the platform; she ,. 1 know *u h.-d watched him place the score on the n <-i '(- rn do witS {< ' ..,i,| (>,->|. noeducu.r's desk, and turn to an- F >-d runs.-, I wS her nwer swer the question of seme one in would b. vet lored to hear her eay the ureheslra, in -n diaaapear again the word*. witkin tk* wiag-rfeor* leadiaf t* (To k* eoatiaved.) Send Past Card to- day for, U w "Easy Pocket Girls Money LOOKING FOR TROUBLE Every farmer wo o allows an outside closet to remain on his farm is Looking for Trouble disease and illneas for himself and his entire family. It Has Been Proved That nine out of every ten eases of illness on the farms are directly traceable to the outside closet thst horrible aink of disease and nith Just think ! You allow this horror to remaia within a few steps of your home and force your family your wife and daughter to us* itr-in all weathers winter and~summer. Way, man, it's outrageous I Especially whea you eonsidcr how little it would cost you to inatall a Good Health Sanitary Closet right in your own home. Imagine how your family will appreciate its privacy ami convenience, liake up your mind nw to gat rid of that outside privy. We will Uow ro aw. HI*.*. Mn4 SM ll jMU-tioul.r. ol L h BailUrr C1ol This Coupon to Us RIGHT NOW THE GOOD HEALTH COMPANY Brockvillo Ontario

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