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Port Perry Star, 20 Aug 1925, p. 2

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Pe oi vy Ca oe is revealed. The flavor is pure, fresh and fragrant. Try it. ~ Black, Mixed or Green Blends. . To-Morrow. dare. i orave, brave, life's" wealth. bright, * fight, rain; morrow we take hope again! In nearly all the small towns for a gamble, For every-day wear at home or away on a vacation, we have especial- ly designed this suit for the active ir of shorts held in place by a eather belt, and bare knees--what 'a. twist of the stick. { Today may be dark and forbidding; to the : our hearts may be full of despair, if But To-morrow the hope that was wan- ing will prompt us to do and to Today was may feel that life's sorrows outweigh all the joy that we But To-marrow will teach us the lesson | po yop toe mon uir laddie. 1 that 1ite ls Warth while to the |e or Faint heart is forerunner of sadness-- despondency robs us of Health; |street. i The man who is chock full"of gladness | - "And I'll tell John Mac Walter, so i the man who makes most of I wull, that he's richt served for takin' To-day may be all that is mournful-- our paths cannot always be But To-morrow we'll somehow take 3 courage, and trustingly enter the | "My good 'woman," safd the secre- To-morrow the sun will: be brighter; To-morrow the gkies will be fair, bo To-morrow our hearts will be lighter; I we'll cast aside sorrow and care. |}, 41s. on Remember wher heartsick and weary: | the sunshine comes after the cried in a louder voice. "I am to ask of her. To-morrow is. time to be cheery; To- ---- mimes Gambling With Ice-Cream. Spain the buying of ice-cream from a street vender is made the opportunity | CHAPTER XXXVII.--(Cont'd) in' them.. A kennin' mair, an' y he een « od face. m that gies the silder; and sy haud Jo sic black ingratitude wall" - Swath; M CL Sr Mie ac Walter?" ve! Ys eta Yond Bd the being anxious to- ", ITA Man." gota "Your whrk--what has ) C do wi' it? Ye hae ta'en the bite oot 0' { chief. He's that upset aboot it." Kit passed on, but the yolce of his naebody-kens-whas intil his hoose to folk o' their just dues!" tary, suavely, "pray do not fret your- self. Your boy would not have got ve two ministers' certificates to "Dinna 'Guid wumman' me," she didna get fair play amang ye, and that I am' weel sure o'. For the Dominie says that there's no the like -o' *him| Doctor Mac ~he's nae better, than he's cas'ed, or he wadna hae alooed a servant to be piteen before | his malister, or his maister's son, for ory _ { FR y ing. And. gin the BOYS' CAMP AND PLAY SUIT. On the top of the zino pall that holds | that's the same th gin { the cream fs a small wooden plate law was as I would hae it, the siller above which 18 poised a revolving stick. Round the edges of the plate, | 3 which is gaily colored, graded numbers boy. An open-neck shirt, with short| prom ten to one hundred are painted. | or long sieeves and patch pockets, a |The intending purchaser pays the ven. {should be my Johnny's even as it is. | unds to this ungratefu' blackguard, nedy should. hae spent learnin' his maister's son, as it was] der a penny, which entitles him to one his Iunden duty to do. What busi- If the pointer in- | ness ha d he to ken mair nor oor Jock | fine costume for hot days! In order dicates a. number - higher than that! that has aye had the best of book | to withstand the roughest sort of | mage by the stall-holder, the winner |learnin', and him but a chance-gotten | wear the suit should be made of. a|is entitled | charity, when a' is said and dune!" "| +1145 is in sizes 4, 6, 8, 10 and-12| With luck, and provided the game Wo put except in thus easing her mind years. Size 8 years requires 23 yds, played fairly, one can have a succes-| of 88-inch muferial for the suit. If sion of ices for the original penny, ~ it is desired to-muke the sult of con-|the stallholder wins in the first 1 and girls. Simplicity is the rule | cream man. for well-dressed children. Clothes of | The venders also sell a very popu- gharacter and individuality for the|lar drink, For a penny one can obtain Junior folks are hard to buy, but easy |a glass full of a white liquid resem-! to make with our patterns. A smail| bling milk. It is made from water, 'missed him a fourth time but for the 2 amount of money spent on good ma-|sugar, orushed almonds, and orange eagle eye and trained 'legal intelli: ti It time of it when she got home to Loch o . trasting materials, 1% yds. of 86-inch |stance the penny ig lost and the cus- : is required for the shirt, and 1%. yds. | tomer receives nothing. .These bar. for the trousers. Price 20 cents. TOWS are a source of interest to stu-| Our new Fashion Book contains |dents, who spend most of thelr spare [WaDied to, thank the man: who had foasy styles showing how to dress|cash In attempts to' defeat the ice. | done this thing for him. ys | Spellanderie. | public to public over the town. He! istress Mac Walter got no redress, {but all the household had a terrible Meanwhile, the new Bursar Design- ate was seeking the "Orra Man" from! But it was five in the afternoon when, after being thrice turned from! the She i the door and thrice denied at the bar, | . Kit ran him to earth in the inner par-| lor of the Black Boar, He would have ' terials, cut on simple lines, will give|juice. When served it Is icy cold and gence of the Sheriff's officer. children the privilege of wearing ador- | makes an excellent "cooler." able things, Price of the book 10 cents Srl the copy. Each copy includes one coupon good for five cents in the pur- chase of any pattern. 3 HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write 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 ie it. carefully) for each number, and address your order to Pattern Dept, ' Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade. The Blanic Book, "laide 'St. Toronto. Patterns sent by "I've just returned from one of those : mind geadens, Miss Sharp. She cawn't Return mail > 2 read a thing, you know." Mamma Surprised Again: "Not from a blank book, Mr. Sapp." Marjory--""Mamma, were you at J home when T was born?" Japanese Proverbs. proverbial philosophy of the Japanese: i Greenland is the largest island in| "0 Japanese characteristic, perse- 7 the. world. 5 verance, is éxpressed in the saying: "Fall seven times, stand up the eighth time." Another proverb in the sam , veln declares: "A road of a thousan: miles begins with one step.) .. The Japanese équivalent of "'cagting pearls before swine' is "glying gold coins to a cat,' 'and instead of "a wolf in sheep's clothing" they speak of "a i wolf dressed In a priest's robes." 'IM When a Japgnese wishes to explain fl (hat a thing is quite impossible he tells you that one might as well "learn with a shell." iT -. "A small-minded: man. looks at the sky through a reed" and "The heart is i-the same at three as at sixty" are other "At the foot of the lighthouse it fs | dark" and "When the hen crows the em. Equatly 4 Raith, that Nis do yous business if a ken Mistress y: é never cou [oe the silver buttons a' the days frosted them on ° BY tumbled on 'a sofa of worn hair cloth, Kit found the "Orra Man"--dead | drunk, ; He did not heed the angry tongue of Mistress Becky. He knelt down be- fore his friend and besought him' to Mother--'No, darling, I was at, The character and the ideals of any | Ewake, for Kit 'had sepn little of in. Mistress Mac Walter passed the door on her way "to change her breath afore she inte gr plea hine. cau; sigh : thrash he ¢ open r and {ied out about your legs 'There's a. ursar! Didna I tel : on + To think that the fike o' him, in the middle. Or t companies with a'. the drucken: BFS atooth £3 . and debauched in the countryside, fi" % g i should tak' the powden gui oot 0 oat grorn sway ! es a nays, peo 35 to strides and half a ¢ 1 juist gang this verra minute : 2 and fetch. that an the this sieht." * "to swim in a field" or "lap up the ocean | - Japanese gems. Picturesque too are - house goes to ruin." . The latter saying | indicdtes the Japauese view of femin-|( ] thy is: "There is no |Snod, cine for love-sickness or for al' SSE CR WES But Willie Gilroy responded to Kiva! Becky Snodgrass wad say to ye. Gang richt in, I tell ye, and see for yoursel', c.. which the tan And if they try to hinder ye, threaten neck hangs like the o them that ye will bring a polissman! ' " her "7 | toxication, But the "Orra Man" grandma's, in the country." nation are always pithily expressed in' ononned. Marjory--"Wasn't you awfu! sur-|the popular proverbs that have become! ~ "Qh, this is terrible--terrible," sald prised when you heard about it?" part'of the everyday speech of the peo- | Kit: "I wish I had never gotten the' re aii ple. Here is some of an interesting bursa¥y if I hae driven him to. this. . It 'chanced that at this. moment! at cauld ma-! Tut by this ti '| Mrs. Mac Walter was at the hall 2° ! foor: before Kit and in waiting for °° m. » "Ye nameless blackguard--you that for years ate the bread o' a decent. household and then lifted up your heel the "him seated wit should wonder. waunner gin he was to do himsel' a mis | °8rT the provost hea barrel o' herrin' to the ye gang to Edinbra. T lita cup o' tea, and kitchen baker's y¢ wadna ken it frae But it was not t#ll they were clear received by the ) makers of Rinso. late mistress pursued him up the i deprave his lawfully-begotten bairns. | And Ik tell Walter Mac Walter that of the he can keep his wife's misfortunes at! ime after this--defraudin' - honest | really felt comforthble in h He wanted to get to the Cottage of | Orae before the fall of the evening, had his signal to make to h He knew Shat she ould | be ng eagerly from her lonely yrin-| the red freestone fi for he | America atabout $4,000,000,000. G the "noney even if Christopher Ken- | Welch nedy had not been successful. And the 'go 8 character is without blemish, as | $ was every whit as e wanted to see Landsborough, and he had a question for the sol ry era ad oe id wumman, and that I wad hae ye oor fOr the soles of her four feet, an ' | Kit urged her into a five-mile gait, a en. What I say is that my Johnny speed she had not attained for Kit mourned over his friend a be comf; "He's never been like this," he said. |, wad raither no hae had the bursary Sham that he should do the like o' t 3 . A "Hoot," said Willie, "he shouldna hae tried to break himsel' a' at yince. The cravin' wad juist bank up like a water ahint a dam--and then--whoosh she gaed, This wil maybe do him can keep it frae the in ten parishes. Mair nor that, this',, Argentina, whose farming and pastoral x industries have placed her among the producing nations of the * in Bo up the smooth trunk pine on the top of the c; cottage Kit swarmed with the easy rogression of a born woodland's boy. The 'flag was the handkerchief his grandmother had a sparkle from the crystal river that about the Th Lilias the "mother turned fo her husband and smiled. And from that moment she heard not a word what he looked at him with ledge in The man rose and went ou angrily slamming the door after He saw that somehow her soul escaped him for dark heart he set terly than ever to Lilias' ai Te, be continued.). Minard's Liniment for Burns. rr A dn 3 We're All Gasometers! The chief ingredients of your body are flve gases--oxygen, hydrogen, nit- rogen, chlorine, and flourine, and there is enough gas in a man to All a gaso- meter of"3,649 cubic feet. important elément is oxygen, and the: foremost warld. For instead o' gieing the thirty guid. pebir : ore. With a reck- lessness which would have shocked his he forester, he stripped the top of the pine that his flag' mi The sun shone out from 's signal took the air What was his moth Did she see it? =. We may be sure that It chanced that at that moment her husband, Walter Mae W: amusing himself with tauntin Tas was his custom when ruffled out- the light of a ne 'harrow has ony richt to be very par-| ticular. T hae séen him gangin' oot o' gye an' coggly in his gig] p t wad declare that Ohsistopher Een-}1, time In the meadow op; 2 elsud; and Ki Cottage Kit pulled the cart up. "Bide er thinking now? to an icecream free of | callant keepit aboot the hoose out o' . ' durable fabric Mie khaki duck. No.| charge and another twist of the stick. me word what Betty Lands- Chance, tell tat that +3 ore ) wantin' to see her at tl n end. "What if she'll no comg?" suggest- ed Kit. - Willie Gilroy closed an eyelid. "Dinna tell her wha the lad is, and she's a woman ava, "I married you for your beauty," he was saying, "and how much of it have I ever seen? drooping like By ardor hen on 2 wet Be gat oe re eae] bulk of that gas compressed within us, head at a feast. Tt is all that boy of If set free, would be equal to a beam yours. You think more of him--more Of wood one foot square and 1,191 feet ard father even now- | (near! than of me that made Kirkoswald. Deny it Lilias his wife did not answer, She did mot' 'even look at him. His words did not hurt her for in the household only the voices of those one loves have power to wound. He went on: "Yes," he said, "I am nothing. rever was anything to you except a convenient. means of paying your father's debts. But the day will come when the boy you doat upon shall ur heart with sorrow. He is 's son, and already he com- anies with the lowest. In e will be--well, what his father ha "You do not believe it, I'se warrant gif she'll come to see wha is it?" Kit shook his head. He knew that riff's officer was only prepar- tional disappointment for him- He remembered the three forest- ers and how Betty had treated them. He was glad he was not to be present t 'this new flouting of honest affec- on y a quarter of a mile) long. Every man's: bbdy contains. 2,400 | feet of hydrogen, sufficlent to inflate : i a ballcon that. would lift himself, bal- "Betty's weel and weel eneuch," he questionings, "See your friend? Of, 381d to himesis, 'D YEHOs the life ae |coorse I saw him. He's drinkin' him- 'Betty this' and 'Bet hath sel' fu' in the Black Boar. They tell i H ¥y OLLY: {ye that he's no there? Man, ye ken' little, an' you a learnit man, they tell : | me, gin ye believe a single word that The nitrogen inthe human body 1s' about half an ounce to each pound of body weight, and about twenty times | the bulk of the body. ficient carbon in the huma male 65 gross of lead pencil © ran across the great ste stones, which time 'out of min ried the feet of home.returning men over the cool brown bend of the Crae water into the dusky woods, in g of the cottage peat peculiar incense "I'll give you just three days "AN right, T'll take Pi Christmas and Baster." ghee ; : 1 stride the gloss Accordingly - in the Black - Boar, p00® 8 BH ut in a moment she comma reelf and was silent. ler husband laughed. You do well not to defend hin te.i you he will grow up an ignorant boor, a public-honse sot, the conip fon 'of the vilest. Kit here] namie shall be Christophe |. At that 'momsnt" Lilias sa tops down by the them as he grew the green stars of ed bottom weed, the I of water starwort, the either where the water divides oo ten-yard square island all ove only with red {to South America. None: other -ha taken deeper hold with the peoples 5 creamy s -tiekls 8 you turn up your trousers. . The trout | We : spurt this way and that as Your sha window of w falls on the water.. With what a|to the Ad the lo p "|terpriges that Great Britain hopes Wr tls | Ihaintain her 6, considerably weak- ~ © Britishs etiod during recent years, 'The she owned raliroads of 'Argeiitina repre: $700,000,000. of British "| tively estimated at well over $2,000, 000,000, and' in the whole of South Briton is the oldest investor im the fled, as she was the first modern trad- ing nation to enter the South American markets, when the 'imperial colonial - power of Spain waned and was shaken fof. « reat Britain helped Argentina and {tho other South American countries if their war of liberation; she supplied them"with munitions and méne¥. Later, when the new states were set up, sha: took active part in their economic de velopment, particularly in thé case of Britons First to Arrive. | This year the Prince of Wales Is being greeted on the banks of ths Plata River by one of the oldest and 'most prosperous' British colofiles in any foreign land. 'Tmpelled by the spirit 6f adyenture, that has led the Briton to the remotest corners of the earth, the ritish were the first to emi- [grate to Argentina when Spain' was forced to loosen her grip, upon the southern colonies, and probably were | among the first to reach the shores of the Plata River three certuries before, in the days of Sebastian Cabot. At the present the British colony on tire shares of the Plata numbers nearly gue hundred thousand. This colony is made up of commercial agents and, re- presentatives = of British " exporting T firms, officials' and employees of the # British railroads, banks and cable com- panies, farnters, cattle growergsand managers of large egtancias, and mem- bers of a great many British education- al, religious, philanthropic, Uterary and social fustitutions, The British have two dailies in Buenos Ayres and fone in Montevideo. Besides tiie Bri- tish-born settlers, there is a population' * of British extraction several times as large. Isolated British raral colonles have been set up in several instances In Asgentina. ~~ 7 To > British Sports Popular. ; Greater perhaps than Great Britains econcmic contribution to the develop- ment of South America has besa her contribution to the welfare of those :| peoples ag thelr sport teacher." Great and is growing 'unde : Bris "football fs 'universal. dud he Cairnsmore, t]

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