Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 18 Apr 1923, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Always keep BOVRIL, In the House Bovril prevents that Sinking Feeling. QREENMANTLE BY JOHN BUCHAN. part, and Peter was not of the wash- ing persuasion. But we had a very good breakfast of coffee and eggs, and then the lieutenant started on the tele- phone. He began by being dictatorial, then he seemed to be switched on to higher authorities, for he grew more polite, and at the end he fairly crawl- ed. He made some arrangements, for he informed us that in the afternoon we would see some fellow whose title he could not translate into Dutch. I judged he was a great swell, for his voice became reverential at the men- tion of him. He took us for a walk that morning ; NURSES The Toronto Hoepital for Incur- ables, In affiliation with Bellevue and Allied Hospitals. New York City, offers a three years' Course of Train- ing to young women, having the re- quired education, and dealrous of be- coming' nurses. This Hospital has adopted the eight-hour system. The pupils receive uniforms of the School, a monthly allowance and travelling expenses to and from New York. For further Information apply to the Buperlntendent. bushes all round it The place depress- ! (Copyrighted Thorn** Nelson and Sons, Ltd.) CHAPTER IV. (Cont'd.) With a feeling of distinction we stalked out of the ordinary ruck passengers and followed the lieuten ant to the station restaurant plunged at once into conversation, ! and he looked over his shoulder. talking the Dutch of Holland, which after Peter and I had attended to our e d and yet cheered me. It somehow | toilets. We were an odd pair of made the German people seem smaller. , scallywags to look at, but as South; At three o'clock the lieutenant took African as a wait-a-bit bush. Both us to a plain white building in a side . of us had ready-made tweed suits, ' street with sentries at the door. A grey flannel shirts with flannel collars, young Staff officer met us and made and felt hats with broader brims than ' us wait for five minutes in an ante- , they like in Europe. I had strong 'room. Then we were ushered into a nailed brown boots, Peter a pair of big room with a polished floor on those mustard-colored abominations which Peter nearly sat down. There which the Portuguese affect and which was a log fire burning, and seated at made him hobble like a Chinese lady, j a table was a little man in spectacles 01 . Mjeir wine in urai? ana poiiucH, ana , V . . , .. ... >, ". , ', . . mi. ten- we have been building great ships i?, nd ******* l \ lk . e General Smuts . him and announced our names. Then He oh so manv! Mv cousin at Kiel " lFeters was the kmd of loose fl a PI> m & *>e disappeared, and the man at the ion. land he looked ov/r his K ho,,lrW thing the taakhaar loves, which has , table motioned us to sit down in two Peter, who had forgotten his school- ** o.iv^. ever been shaved, we never heard about that : combe d once in a blue moon. found a bit hard to follow. He unfit for active service, because of his -eyes and a weak heart, but he of tongs." was a desperate fire-eater in that X>IPB stuffy restaurant. By his way of it and is i chairs before him. I must] "Herr Brandt and Herr Pinaar?" sunburnt man Bay we ma( j e a pretty solid pair. Any he asked, looking over his glasses, and our friend sprang up and ; g^th African would have set us down, But it was the other man that 1, clicking his heels hke a pair j as a g oer f rom tne back-veld who had caught my eye. He stood with his bought a suit of clothes in the nearest : back to tbi tire leaning his elbows on are the South African inv reswiurmn, ov ms way m store, and his cousin from some one- J the mantelpiece. He was a perfect Germany could gobble up the French Dutch - Hcrr Captain," ho said. horse dorp who had been to school and mountain of a fellow six and a half and the Russians whenever she cared, I The new-comer looked us over with thought himself the devil of a fellow. feet if he was an inch, with shoulders but she was aiming at getting all the bright intelligent eyes, and started; We fairly reeked of the sub-continent, j on him like a shorthorn bull. He was Middle East in her hands first, so that .questioning Peter in the taal. It was, as the papers call it. in uniform, and the black-and-white she could come out conqueror with well that we had taken some pains I It was a fine morning after the rain,! ribbon of the Iron Cross showed at the practical control of half the world, j with our story, for this man had been ! and we wandered about in the streets a button hole. His tunic was all "Your friends the English," he said years in German South West, and for a couple of hours. They were busy | wrinkled and strained as it it could grinning, "will come last When we i knew every mile of the borders. Zorn i enough, and the shops looked rich and, scarcely contain his huge chest, and have starved them and destroyed their j was his name, and both Peter and I commerce with our under-sea boats we WRIGLEYS and give stomach a your lilt. Provides ' the bit of aweet" ID btntficial form. Helps to cleanse tbe teeth and keep them healthy. O35. IRON IRONING, with Hot- point Iron, becomes a iilensunt task. Thin famous Iron Is so constructed that you simply tilt il hack; on the In-c-l tand without hav- ing to lift it at all As u result the tired feeling. o many women experience after ironing, Is entirely eliminated. For sale by de:ilcr< every- where. "Midi la Can>d" by CaaadUo Oineral EUctrlc Co., ' II... i i ((; . Toronto Wo wonder Snun-O Mown* MV ao popular! They cui M eu*ily and with nidi Iliil. >uir. AT CVCftV tIAHDWAHl TORI SMARTS MOWERS JAMCS .'MART PL Ar/t aBOCKVlUC OHT. thought we remembered hearing him spoken of. I am thankful to say that we both bright with their Christmas goods, and one big store where I went to buy a pocket-knife was packed with cus- tomers. One didn't see very many mighty hands were clasped over his stomach. That man must have had the length of reach of a gorilla. He had a great, lazy, smiling face, with showed up pretty well.' Peter told his i young men, and most of the women; a square cleft chin which stuck out story to perfection, not pitching it too I wore mourning. Uniforms were beyond the rest. His brow retreated high, and a-sking me now and then I everywhere, but their wearers gener- for a name or to verify some detail. ' "y looked like dug-outs or office fel- Captain Zorn looked satisfied. "You eeem the right kind of fel- lows," he said. "But remember" and he bent his brows on us "we do not I wo stared at the Marmamt, and I and the stubby back of his head ran forward to meet it, while his neck be- lows. We had a glimpse of the squat j low bulged out over his collar. His building which housed the General St * ff and off our >* Tnen head was exactly the shape of a pear with the sharp end topmost. you will be rewarded, there behind old Tirpiu's wmsKers. | struck something 1 had been looking to play a double game ' The capital gave one an impression of for for a long time, and till that mo- like dogs. Your race i U K'X cleanness and a sort of dreary ment I wasn't sure that it existed, ivcr many traitors for ' effect iveness. And yet I found it de- Here was the German of caricature, He stared at me with his small understand slimncss in this land. If wondered what plots were hatching bright eyes and I stared back. I had you are honest you will be rewarded, there behind old Tirpitz's whiskers. | struck something I had been looking but if you dare ' you will be shot have produced over , my taste." | pressing more depressing than Lon- the real German, the fellow we were "I ask no reward," I said gruffly, i don. I don't know how to put it, but | up against. He was as hideous as a "We are not Germans or Germany's ' t' 16 whole big cncern seemed to have , hippopotamus, but effective. Every slaves. But so long as she fights no soul '" ' l > * De ''k e a big factory bristle on his odd head was effective, against England we will fight for!' nstcad of a cit y- You won>t make a her." factory look like a house, though you "Bold words," he said; "but you' decorate its front and plant rosc- must bow your stiff necks to discipline i first Discipline has been the weak ' point of you Boers, and you have suf- j fered for it. You are no more a na- ! tion. In Germany we put discipline first and last, and therefore we will conquer the world. Off with you now. Your train starts in three minutes. We will sec what von Stumm willi make of you." That follow gave me the best "feel" (To be continued.) Mln*r<T Liniment for Cough* A. Coldt Woman's Sphere of any German I had yet met. He was SIMPLE DESIGN FOR a white man and I could have worked' PIECE, with him. I liked his stiff chin and steady blue eyes. CENTRE- hole, 1 ch; 2 long tr in next hole, 1 ch. Repeat from * and join. Buttonhole around the linen centre with No. 20 white cotton thread. Then crochet the lace on with crochet cot- My chief recollr-tion of our journey to Berlin was its commonplaceness. The spectacled lieutenant fell asleep, I ton No - G0 - and for the most part we had the car- First Row Making 1 tr under riage to ourselves. Now and again ai stitch of the buttonholing; 2 ch, 1 tr soldier on leave would drop in, most! under next stitch. Repeat to end of of them tired men with heavy eyes. lound and j oin to first tr. No wonder poor devils, for they were; S|icond Row _ I)c i in nex t 2 ch, 3 talk to them, but officially of course I knew no German, and the con versa- | twi ' en each ! 2 oh > 5 tr in next ho ' c ' tion I overheard did not signify much.) Kapent from to end of next hole, and It was mostly about regimental de- ! join. tails, though one chap, who was in I ''hird Row Make 4 B! st on the 4 better spirits than the rest, observed i tr at the beginning of the last row; that this w the last Christmas of | j dc in tho noxt ho i e <) c h; 4 tr in BBW^lS^fil^K ho,c (this occurs at the begin- ets. The others assented, but without! " r of *", next t 8evcn rows ' much conviction. The winter days most of tho journey wus made in the dark. I could see from the window tho lights of little villages, and now and then the blu/.e of ironworks and forges. We stopped at a town for din- ner, wheru the platform was crowded bo described as 5 tr to save space) ; was short, and! * - ch . 1 tr in ch of the nex * four holfrH \vith 2 ch between each; 2 ch, 5 tr in next hole; 2 ch, 5 tr in next hole. Repeat from * to end of row and join, fourth Row* tr 5 in next hole 2 ch; I tr in second hole from tr Just fade, 2 ch; 5 tr in second hole from ch; 1 t n tr ln hole ch. We saw no signs of any scarcity of ' tr J ust mnde - food, such UH the English newspapers j UlWWB the two groups of tr. wrote about. We had an excellent' Repeat from * und Join. dinner at the station restaurant, I Fifth Row * tr in next hole, 2 ch; which, with u bottle of white wine, 15 tr in next hole, 5 ch; 1 dc undur The ncx t 6 oh, 1 dc on the long tr; 1 dc in Eleventh Row SI st on the first tr, 1 dc on the 3rd tr, 4 ch; * 2 long tr in first between 1 tr, 1 ch; 2 long tr in _<1 hole, 1 ch; 2 long tr in 3d hole, 1 ch; 2 long tr, 1 ch; 2 long tr, 1 ch; 2 long tr in middle hole, 1 ch; 2 long tr in 1st, 2d and 3d holes of 1 ch; 1 long tr in 3d tr of the group. Repeat from * and join to tho 4 ch at begin- ning of the row. Twelfth Row * 5 ch and 1 dc in every hole. In the previous row there is a 1 tr between the points, and the dc must come on tho 1 tr, so thoro will be 10 holes of u ch. Repeat from * and join. Thirteenth Row SI st on the first 2 st of previous row; 1 dc under the 5 ch; * ch, 1 dc into each loop around the point; at the tenth hole of last row after 6 ch insert the hook Inj the 10th hole and first hole of next point, and dc, which will make 9 holes | around the point. Repeat from * and join. Fourteenth Row Like the 18th ex- cept that you make 8 ch instead of 6J ch, and insert the hook in the Oth row: and 1st holes. Fifteenth Row 10 ch instead of 81 ch between dc. Sixteenth Row 12 ch between each : dc. well." Meta'a glance swept from her gown with its unmistakable air to Martha's plain trim dree*. But Martha did not notice the glance. "Oh, I believe in pushing yourself," she replied, "but I think the right way to do it is to do your best possible work. To tell how many chances you have had well, it's like telling a man that he isn't keen enough to see what good work yon do. Besides, it doesn't seem loyal " "Bosh!" Meta interrupted her. But for a moment the girl was uneasy; then the feeling passed. She was quite as expert as Martha Erakine, and she knew what an asset she had in her air of health and competence! She felt very sure that no man in his senses would hesitate in choosing between the two in a matter of promotion. A week later, when a vacancy oc- curred, Mr. Rudolph did not hesitate. He chose Martha. Then he called Meta to his office and told her why. "You do good work, Miss-Carrick," he said. "But we value very highly a quality called loyalty. To boast con- stantly of opportunities elsewhere seemed to us a bit inconsistent with that feeling. I am telling you this because you have so much ability that it seems a pity you should miss op- portunities because of a thing so easily remedied." Meta came from the interview with high color and angry eyes. "Resign?" she cried in answer to Myrtle Bright's question. "You bet I resigned! Any- body who would choose Martha Erskine!" THE LEFT-HANDED CHILD. "The child is left-handed because it is 'made that way.' Left-bandedness, like right-handedness, has a definite anatomic basis. To handicap a child by training it to use a less efficient half of the brain, and thus to run also the attendant risk of developing seri- ous speech defects, is surely not a wise educational procedure. Expert left-hantfedness is much less of a dis- advantage, if any at all, than awk- ward aad inefficient right-handedness and the commonly attendant imperfec- tion* of articulate speech." Good Health. O M inard'a Llnlmwit for Corn* and Wait* It is far easier to become a hero than to live up to it afterwards. Will nof burn A Lifebuoy bath Cool, freib, rMted skin tintflin* with health and eomfort Feeling cleaner than yon erer felt before Becaiueof tbe big , creamy lather of Lifetmoy. LM4 Tact "You wish to marry my daughter?" she asked. He was a diplomat "Not ao much that madam. The keystone of my ambition is to be able to point to you one day as my mother- in-law." INVINCIBLE JELLY Most people prefer it, because it is easy to digest, and delicious, with a full, juicy, fruit flavor. It is easy to make tasty desserts with McLAR- EN'S INVINCIBLE Jelly Powder. Sixteet: Differemt Flavors One package serves eight people. At all Grocer* Insist on MoLAREN'S INVINCIBLE JELLY POWDER Hade by McLARENS LIMITED. Hamilton and Winnipeg. Row --14 eh between Row 1 R ch between cost just thrtte shillings apiece. bread, to be sure, was poor, but 1 ran ; '^~[ ' hol ' e ' 5 ~~ ti ~" Repeat"^'* and' Seventeenth put up with the absence of bread if ; , . each dc. 1 got a Juicy fillft of beef and as good J01 ": . R ,- . . .. fi . ' Eighteenth vegetables a you will see in the , S'xth Kow- 1 r. fi, 8 ch, B dc, o ... Savoy. I was a little afraid of our ; before, three on and one after the e giving ourselves away in our sleep,! three dc of last row, 8 ch, 5 tr in next but I need have had no fear, for ourj hole. Repeat from * and join. | lAl, A escort slumbered like a hog with his! Seventh Row--* tr 5 in next hole of Meta Carrick hung up her jaunty mouth wide open. As we roared i 8 ch in lust row, B ch; 3 dc in centre; hat und fur coat and revaled a new through the darkness I kopt pinching! of tno 5 j c> 5 c h; B tr in nevt hole of gown with the latest style gir.lle. But myself to make mo feel that I was in ; 8 ch 4 ch . Kc j )oat f rom ami j o(n . , oddly enough she was not thinking of II.- my land on a wild mission., E|ghth Row _, B tr 3 ch . l {ong the nriw ^own; she reapondod absently tr on second dc, .'t ch ; 5 tr In next hole, ch; 2 long tr, 1 ch; 2 long tr, mission. The rain came on, and we pu.s.ted through dripping towns, witn the lights shinging from the wet streets. As we went eastward the lighting seemed to grow more generous. After j the next 4 ch, f) ch. Repeat from the murk of London it was queer to 'and join. Blip through garish stations with aj Ninth How hundred arc light glowing, und to .si* long tr, 1 ch; 2 long tr all under when Myrtle Bright spoke of it "Yes," she said, "it is good-looking, ! 5 tr In next hole, next hole, 2 ch; 1 I kept awako till midnight, trying tc focus thoughts that persistently lo "K tr "" strayi'd. Then I too don-d, and did not, ( 'hi - lo "M awake till about five in the morning, peat from In middle bole of ] ch, 1 tr in next hole, '2 rh. Re- and join. isn't it? Miss Ueed in Mackenzie's gave me the tip. It's a sample not on sale yet. Say, irlrls, I had a chat with Rudolph." Marthu Krskine's face did not Yift Meta kn<-w thut Martha 1 hearing anyone xpeak of aj man without using the title mister. Somehow Mnrtha irritated her, though Meta never had taknn the trouble to decide just why. Now, looking wtraight when we ran into a great busy tcuni- i Tenth Row* 5 tr between the two nus un bright as midday. It was the {groups of tr, 1 oh; 2 long tr In the! at Marthu, sho repeated her state- 1 easiest and most unsuspicious journey j <) rs t holo of I ch, 1 oh; 'i long tr In' 1 " 1 -" 1 - "Yes. air," she continued. ' T V l?I "?2SL. ..., ,. , , ,. txt hole, 1 rh; 2 long tr, 1 ch ; 2 long! "Wasn't It luck? I met Rudolph on 1 The himself and he culled me into the for there seemau to be no j porters. Our escort gave the addreH*' of some hotel and we rumbled out into! lit empty Rtreeti. WANTED Thi Hmitonant noddd good-humor- dly. <7 The gratt people on earth," he aid, " ns their enemies will noon bear witness." I would have given a lot for a bath, but I Cult that it would be outride my Ho.pltal, 99 Quaen Street West. didn't miss my chance, I'll tell the world! I just hinted thnl I had had three other position* offered me." "O Mtu, you didn't!" Martha ex- clalmcd. "0 Martha, I dill!" Meta mimirkrd Toronto. $25.00 H month with board, i angrily. "Why not, Miss Last Cen- unlform, and laundry, for tho first j tury? You've got to do your own year, with Increase eacli year after- j pU8 hing if you want to get anywhere. I)Pb9hhy 1>v r "discovered that anybody Medical HuperlntBndent, Ontario Hos- pital, Toronto. was standing round waiting to do it for me! It strikes mo it works pretty They Do a Hundred Calories in About 9| EAT a box of little raisins when you feel hungry, lazy, tired or faint. In about 9% seconds a hundred calorics or more of energizing nutri- ment will put you on your toes again. For Little Sun-Maids are 75% fruit sugar in practically predigestcd f orm levulose, the scientists call it. And levulose is real body fuel. Needing practically no digestion, it gets to work and revives you quick. Full of energy and iron both good and good for you. Just try a bo.\. Little Sun-Maids "Bet ween -Meal" Raisins 5c Everywhere RAISINS. Had Your Iron Today?

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy