Halton Hills Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 23 Jul 1924, p. 2

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PENNY PLAIN BY O. DOUGLAS Sbo{jm»n~"Yon may b«ve your clM>tc*â€" pMiny plktn or two-prac* color^iL" BotauiD Smtll Boyâ€" "Penny pUln, pleat*. It'i b»tUr *alu« tor the money." •£f Copyright 6y (r^orgt H. Dormm C*. CHAPTKR VII.- (Cont'd.) .Bill the Lltard, in order to get room. "I simply don't know," said Pamela.' J» »» " K""*"* di^sd vantage to be too •Tiow people who don't care for ••'JP» 'o' ?"•â-  surroundings, clothes get through their lives. Clothes ' The parlor was as much changed as art a joy to the prosperous, a solace,'"* ^*d room. »i. j j to the unhappy, and an interest al- The round table with the red-Hnd- waysâ€" even to old age. I knew a dear ' Kjef". c_"\e^ ^J"} Jl"!*'v,"P.)vf.."I. J^ ! old lady of ninety-four whose chief di ~ vemion was to buy a new bonnet. She of the room had been banished and a small card-table stood against the would sit before the mirror discarding *"" ready to be brought out for model after model because they were ">•»!"• ^ Persian carnet covered the 'too old' for her. One would have: ''"°.'«"'",f"/ ^^° '•°™'°.''^»'''« *'«^^^^ thought it difficult to find anything f}'«'" ",'i«><l J!}^^ cushions stwd by too old for ninety.four." l^he fireside. The sideboard had beeti t 1 i.ji_»t.iL Lj' converted Into a stand for books and Jean laughed, but shook her head. , flowers. The blue vases had gone "Doesn't it seem to you rather awful j from the mantelshelf and two small to care about bonnets at ninety-four?" candlesticks and a strip of embroid- "Not a bit," said Pamela. She was ery took their place. A writing-table powdering her face as she spoke. "I stood in the window, from which the like to see old people holding on, not j hard muslin curtains had been re- losing interest in their appearance, 'moved; there were flowers wherever making a bravo show to the end. ... a place could be found for them, and Did you never see any one use powder i new books and papers lay about, before, Jean? Your eyes in the glass! Jean sank into a chair with a book, look so surprised." but Pamela produced some visiting- "Oh, 1 beg your pardon," said Jean, | cards and read aloud: ' 1 great confusion, "I didn't mean to "MRS. DUFF-WHALLEY. MISS DUFF-WHALLEY. The Towers, Priorsford. stare " She haatily averted her eyes. Pamela looked at her with an nmus- «d smile. "There's nothing actively Immoral about powdering one's nose, you know, , ,„,,, , , „ , , , Jean. Did Great-aunt Alison tell you' , ^ho are they, please? and why do it was wrong?" j^ney <^ome to see me?" "Great-aunt Alison never talked' •'«'"" ^^^^ ^^^ ^'^°^' ^"t •««?*• ^^^ about such things," Jean said, flush- : V'^«^' '" "? '^ \[°PJ^« to get back to ing hotly, but I " ment . _, , ... , myself if my face were made up." thing about everybody and simply "Pamela swung round on her chair scents out social opportunities. Your and laid her hands on Jean's shoul- ,"»">« would draw her like a magnet." ders. "Why is she called Duflf-Whalley? "Jean." she said, "you're within an ' »"«^ where does she live? I'm fright- II •llW«l«t«* • »p«llt« Had â- !«• «l««atloa. II makes jroor tood dayeaaiora good. NoM kow If rcUcvc* thai stallr todlag •Iter tacarly eaitaa*' .Wblt«a« t««lk. â- w««t«a* kvaath •>« '^in Its Purity Package R29 such things," Jean said, flush- ""8^^ in as ir nopmg to get oacK to otly. "I don't think it's wrong, ! « s°°". »"d smiled broadly, don't see that it's an improve-) "Mrs. Duff-Whalley is a wonderful I couldn't take any pleasure in i woman," she said. "She knows every- •on at Cambridge, aiul • (Uughtw, Jfnrial, at hooM. I think it ntut b« v«ry b«4 for the Daff-Wh*lUy« liviDf in aueh a vulgw, rcatlcas-IooUnf houM." Pamela laughed. "Do you think all the little pepper-pot towcra nuat bave an effect on the soul? I doubt it, my dear." "Stilt," said Jean, "I think more will be expected at the end from the people who have all their lives lived in and looked at lovely places. It al- ways worries me. the thought of peo- ple who live in the dark places of big cities â€" children especially, growing up like 'plants in mines that n^ver saw the sun.' It is ao dreadful that some- time* I feel I must go and help." "What could you do?" "That's what common sense always asks. I could do nothing alone, but if all the decent people tried their hard- est it would make a difference. . . . It's the thought of the cruelty in the world that makes me sick. It's the hardest, thing for me to keep from being happy. Great-aunt Aliaon said I had a light nature. Even when I ought to be sad my heart jumps up in the most unreasonable way, and I am happy. But sometimes it feels as If we comfortable people are walking on a flowery meadow that is really^ a great quaking morass, and underneath there is black slime full of unimagined horrors. A paragraph in the news- . . . ^ ^. , . paper makes a crack and you see being hostess. She welcomes you and g^^^. ^^men who take money for advises you where to sit, makes BUit-^ j„ ^^^^^^g babies and allow them able conversation and finally bids you ^ |jg ^^n ^^^ torture: tales of hor- good-bye, and you feel yourself mur-l ^^^ ^^^^ jg^^r. The War made a tre- muring to her the grateful 'Such a ; ^jg^^^g ^^^.j^ ^ gg^med then as if pleasant afternoon, that was due to .^^ ^^^^ ^n ^ i,e drawn into the slime, the real hostess. She is in constant; ^^ jf cruelty had got its fangs into conflict with the other prominent ma-;tj,g ^eart of the world. When you trons in Priorsford, but she always ,j„gjt ^o -^ay at nights you could only jrets her own way. At a meeting she ^^y and cry. The courage of the men IS quite insupportable. She just calm-, ^^o grappled in the slime with the ly tell us what we are to do. It's no ,,orrors wes the one thing that kept good saying we are busy; it's no goodl^jg j^om despair. And the fact that saying anything. We walk away with t^ey could laugh. You know about I a great district to collect and a P'le the dying man who told his nurse of pamphlets under one arm. . . Her Lome joke and finished, 'This is the nose IS a little on one side, and when â- y^ar for laughs ' " I sit and look at her presiding at a Pamela nodded. "It hardly bears meeting I toy with the thought that thinking of yet^the War and the some one goaded to madness by her , ftgj,ters. Later on it will become the , calm persistence had once heaved i ^eatest of all sagas. But I want to isomethingather, and wishl hadbeenlhear about Priorsford people. That's .there to see. Really, though, she is L ^ean, cheerful subject. Who lives rather a blessing in the place; she^jn the pretty house with the long ivy- After Toa fUm Used II "SAUDA GR£EN TEA â- Â«'« Fou bav« a slandArd br ^rHIch to y»dg9 otKer €•••• 8al*dUk !• tlkm fln««t produced In tHe world. â€" Try it* REE lAMPLE tf UEEI TEA WM KIMaT. "MUM." TMNtri been folded. Too much ice spoils tho drink; use only enough to make it cold. PRESSING FERNS ON BLUE- PRINT PAPER, Three youngstera at our bouse hay* found much pleasure with blue-print paper and printing frames. Small feathery ferns carefully pressed be- tween the glass and paper gave at- tractive results. Print in the bright sunshine until the shadows show bronzed. The examination must be made carefully lest one part slip when half the frame is opened. Then wash in clear water until the whites are clear, and dry between blotters. Pretty place cards may be made if an oblong of heavy paper is placed over a small portion of the blue-print paper so it will keep white. ace of being a prig.. It's only the!*""y intrigued.' freckles on your little unpowdered "As to the fir nose, and the yellow lights in your '**s_"0 t^i?"*^*'^"' '''*''"''"^.*'*^*'" ^°" keeps us from stagnation. I read' covered front?" eyes, and the way your hair curls up 'â-  <"" '"^ when she was christened â€" or at the ends that save you. Remember, i rather when the late Mr. Duff-Whalley please, that three-and-twenty with a ' **^ christened. And I pointed out perfect complexion has no call to re- 1 the house to you the other day. You prove her eiders. Just wait till you asked what the monstrosity was and come to forty years." 1 1 told you it was called The Towers." "Oh," said Jean, "it's absurd of you ' "^ remember. A staring red-and- to talk like that. As if you didn't . '"'*>'*« house with about thirty bow- know that you are infinitely more at- â-  windows and twenty turrets. It defiles tractive than any young girl. I never I the landscape." know why people talk so much about I "Wait," said Jean, "till you see it youth. What does being young mat-l'^'o''^ â- * hand. It's the most naked, ter if you're awkward and dull and i "•'"^^s* thing you ever saw. Not a shy as well? I'd far rather be middle- K^eeper, not an ivy leaf is allowed to aged and interesting. crawl on it; weather seems to have no "That," said Pamela, as she laid her effect on it; it never gets to look any treasures back In the box. "is one of, 'ess new. And in summer it is worse. somewhere that when they bring tanks of cod to this country from wherever cod abound, they put a cat- fish in beside them, and it chases the cod round all the time, so that they arrive in good condition. . Mrs. Duff- Whalley is our cat-fish." "I see. Has she children?" "Three. A daughter, married in London â€" Mrs. Egerton- Thomson â€" a "The Knowe it is called. The Jow- etts live there â€" retired Anglo-Indians. Mr. Jewett is a funny, kind little man with a red face and rather a nautical air. He is so busy that often it is afternoon before he reads his morn- ing's letters." (To be continued.) o MInard's Liniment Heals Cuta. the minor tragedies of life. One be- gins by being bored with being young, and as we begin to realize what an for then round about it blaze the red- dest geraniums and the yellowest cal- ceolarias and the bluest lobelias that aan Woman's Sphere asset youth is. it flies. Rejoice in your 't's possible to imagine." vniifh n«ti« T<i.n-.>4..i /.,_ ;*•- . .!...« I "Ghastly! What is the owner like? "Small, with yellowish hair turning youth, little Jean-girl, for it's a stuff] will not endure. . . . Now we'll go downstairs. It's too bad of me keep- ing you up here." "How you have changed this room,' said Jean. "It smells so nice." SELECT STYLES. By Florence Bayne Smith. grey. She has a sharp nose, and her eves seem to dart out at you, take you all in, and then look away. She is i rather like a ferret, and she has small, ! "It is slightly less forbidding. I am "harp teeth like a ferret. I'm never a ouite attached to both my rooms,] bit sure she won't bite. She really is though when Mawson and I are both ' rather a wonderful woman. She hasn't i here together I sometimes feel I must been here very many years, but she J fioke my arms out of the window or dominates evervone. At whatever hrust my head up the chimney like house you meet her' she has the air of Making wash day pleasant â€" Just use Riruo i»here jfou used to use bar soap â€" for soaking, boiling, or in your j»aihing machine. THE hardest part of wash-day, rubbing, rubbing, rubbing, has given way to the nevf method o( soaking the clothes clean withRinso. This wonderful new soap gentlv loosens the dirt and a thorough rinsing leaves things while and glistening as you never could get them before. Only spots where the dirt is ground- in, such as neck bands, cuff edges, and the like need a light rubbing, and a little dry Rinso rubbed on these spots quickly makes the dirt disappear. Rittso is gold by all grocers and department stores Rinso MADE BY THE MAKERS OF LUX i006 /007 Smart Mode for Outing Wear For sports wear, nothing quite so amart as this kimono blouse and bodice skirt for vacation days and holiday outings. Blouse has long or short sleeves, well shaped collar and a jabot of lace or georgette. Skirt with straight lower edge, ilther gathered or accordion platted, attached to a long-walnted camisole bodice. I^artles' blousa No. 1006 rut In sizes 34 to 44 Inches bust. Siz<« 3S requires 17^ yard 3G or 40 Inches wide with short r.leeves. IjoJtes' Bkirt No. 1007 cut In sites U to 44 Inches bust. Any size requires 3 yards, 36, 40 or 44 Inch material tor plaited skirt. Camisole 1 yard. Pattern sent to any addre.<!S on receipt of 20 cents in silver, by the Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. In the wintertime these make excel- lent punches, hot or chilled, spiced or livened with lemon or vinegar. Iced Tea is always best and clear- est made and poured hot over the ice. It should be made almost double strength and the glass filled three- quartors full of chopped ice. With the usual lemon, try adding several whole cloves to the steeping tea. A most refreshing flavor as well as aromatic fragrance makes it a choice drink for hot weather. Blackberry Mint is one of the fav- orite "coolers" at our house. Take a few mint leaves and crush in the bot- tom of the glass. Allow two table- spoonfuls of blackberry syrup of the consistency and sweetness of unboiled jelly juice. Fill with half a glass of cold water and chopped ice. Pineapple Spice is easily prepared and served nicely for either home re- freshment or at club or social. Cook together one shredded fresh pineapple with the juice and rind of two lemons, two sticks of cinnamon, a half tea- spoonful of ground ginger and two cupfuls of sugar. The syrup should be quite sweet and more sugar may be used if desired. Simmer an liour, drain through a bag and bottle, using one- third glassful of the juice over cracked ice and fill the glass with water. Iced Coffee is made a number of dif- erent ways, but a most satisfactory one is to make the coffee double strength and, like the tea, pour it over a three-quarters filled glass of ice, serving a heaping tablespoonful of whipped cream on top. When stir- red into the coffee the color is just right and the flavor excellent. Chocolate Whip is not only a cool drink but a nourishing food as well. Make a rich cocoa and chill. Beat an egg for each glass. Mix into the-chill- ed cocoa and pour over a small quan- tity of chopped ice. Top with whip- ped cream in which cherries have EASIER UPSTAIRS WORK. By keeping on the second floor a carpet sweeper, a small basket con- taining dusters, cleaning brashes, bathroom cleaners, polish and any- thing likely to be needed, much run- ning up and down stairs will be saved. This doable equipment is an invest- ment and not an expense, as the articles wear just so nJuch longer. o The immediate need is not for kind- ness to animals, but for a modification of the manifold hardships and cruel- ties with which humanity afflicts them â€" for plain Biblical mercy. ^ â- :-^. am/ tmfi The SMART'S TANDEM Ooub/« Act/n^ A si/ent, easy worfr/mS and dun- bhpuJnp that definitety n^flacei the Wins type modef Pumps a// kinds of h'quids. Can be drained to prevent freexJnd £aqy toorime end to repaff- y wftn house/xUdtoob SEE rrAT YOUR HARDWARf STOPK ^JAMCS SMART PIANT. anocKviui ONT. London Oltfar Than Rem*. Borne is a modam city coiinpa*«4 with London, tondon was fouadad la 1108 B.C., while Roma was not fooad- sd OBtil 7S6 B.a For 8or« Fsat â€" MInard's LlnlmsnL • . Pa An Artist "A good artl^" said tbe dmwlag^ master, "can turn a happy faca into a sorrowful one with a few strokes!" "That's notblng," replied Tommy, with memories of several whacklngs at home. "My father can do it with one!" Made in Canada. PAY $5 DOWN And Get Yourself a REMINGTON PORTABLE To-day The Remlnoton Portable has tha regular keyboard and all other features of tha Standard Reming- ton. It responds to the lightest and swiftest touch. It Is strong and dependable. The beauty of Ita writing Is noteworthy. Yet It Is as sasy to carry as a small hand-bag. For the professional man, the commercial traveller, the retail store-keeper, the student, for all who with their correspondence to be easy and pleasant to read, the Remington Portable Is tha typewriter. Pay 96 down and you can have a Remington Pert- able sent to your home Immedi- ately. Further payments of M a month will complete purchaaa. H. F. STILES Vice-Pree. and Managing Director. J. A. WRIGHT Sec'y and Provincial Manager. Mail this eoupoH before you forget it. Remington Typewriter Company of Canada, Limited 68 King St Weet Toronto, Ont Please send me particulars re- garding: tbe Remington Portable, Including plans of purchase. Name Address W J* TINKLING GLASSES. What sound could there be more interesting anil m.i.sical on a hot day than tinkling glasses? And what awfully good mid refreshing diinkn can be made at home â€" other than lemonades and root beer known to every housekeeper. No time of year offers Much -i ' -li-- icty of fruit juice.s as duripfr the warm months. Not a drop of lo/l over juice from canning should evci be thrown away, however tired one iu WE WANT CHURNING CREAM We supply cans and pay express charges. Wo pay dally by express ^ money orders, which can be cashed ; anywhere without any deduction. Our Prertnt Price it 33 Cents Per Pound Butter Fat. | Nett to you at your statton. \ Price l» subject to change without no- ' Uce. To obtain the top price. Cream t must be free from bad flavors and contain not less than 30 per cent. ; Batter Pat Bowes Company Limited, Toronto For referencesâ€" Head Office, Toronto, Bank of Montreal, or your local banker. Estebllshed (or over thirty years. ISSUE No. 2»â€" 'S4. RefresH Yourself Says the Hostess Order a case from your grocer* Keep a few bottles in your box* Drink Delicious and Refreshing Hm Coca-Col^Company of Canada, Ltd. Maairf Offlee; Toronto

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