Flesherton Advance, 15 Dec 1926, p. 2

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When You Can Buy TEA . WK7 be content wltb Inferior tea. JDBU_. A SIMPLE AND SMART APRON. Much can bt- Kaid in favor o/ this tpron. It is usually attractive, yat vurj Einip'.y maJ*", besides Ijeing a goureo of juy to the busy housewife ^vho hurries hon»e Irom her Hhoppiiij? r.nd slips it on with a knowV'dge that lif- dresH is protcett-d whi'.e she Koes jilKi'.it h:!r work. The patte-ni is cut In one piece and has a becoming V- luck and uatful patch jmr-keUs, while the back fas'le'na over on the front at both sides under thw arms. Chintz, iringhani. chambray, cretonn9 or per- ca;«: an- nl! »uitnblc mattrials, and may be appropriaitly trimmed with rickraok braid, or bound with solf or ro!itrnatinK material. No. 1024 is for hidies pnd misses and l.t in sizfls :i< •1(1 and 41 ii.che.i bust. Size .S(5 re- (|uires 'IV» yards 27-inch materia!. 20c. Th? jfurmcnls ii'.u.'^trated in our new I'(i>>-hioii Hcok are advance .stylos for the h'.imc dressmaker, and the woman or (fii! wi\o d.\iire8 to wear jfarment.s dep<»i:dublo for tasti>, simplicity and ecori.niy wil; find her desires fulfilled in our j.atteni:'. Price of the book 10 cents the copy. HOW TO OKU?;U PATTERNS. WriU; your name and addr«M platn< ly, (ivioK number and size of •ueh pattct-ns at you want. KncloM 20c in •tamps or coin (coin preferred; Mrrap It carefully) for each number aud address your order to Pattern Uapt., Wilson PublishinK Co., 71 West Ad«> Ifiide St., Toroiita Patt«riu k«nt by ruturn mail The M«^ Carpet. "Tb«re la neitlirr nmrrel nor m«cto Here In our W««tern world. Wbere IvnTrytufr whe€4« ar» whirled. And folk rueh to and fro"? Ab, that, my friend, wac» tracio If troft but It le not true! Seeâ€" I wlH ibow to you A wonder that I know I Come to oii« quiet comor Of the duety city jwrk This autumn day, Mid mark That wlilch nhall make a cound Bel'lever or a ecomer â€" Thla maple, miarled and old, That with Its red and gold Hob spread the froflty grounil. Her* on !t« spend thrift glory Tntetful I fling mc down â€" \x>, Hwlft the clanglnjs town la left behind, forlorn, Just as In Batiteni story! High over field and wood I sw^ep. In exultant mood. On my .MaRlo Carpet homo! Oh, vanished Land of Childhood! In an instant')! flaehlng space I have reached that marTeloua • p!ar-e! I am on the leaf-bright floor Of my old-time autumn wlldwooil! The KoW and thf scjir'et gleam, And the long ynars 8*em Inif a dream, A nii«ty dre>am--no more! Olad playmate."! all around me! We gather the !eave^• so fast. Kach lovelier than th* last â€" Presto! A!l vanlphodâ€" all! Hut oh, hJ.est .Mafslc that found me! It shall bf ar inn Hgain and again Kar from the liaunt.s of nieu. When the leaves (.f the mapl(> fall! - -.MInnip I/eona Upton. That Foreigner at latkrop*s BY ROSE WIIJ)ER LANK. PART II. Thay dative away in her car, and after ahe had fed him one of her fa- moun Sunday dinner*â€" "Acting tta if he was some nabob or otlier!" Mandy SimuKina said â€" they went walking to- gether. Julie Morton and Jeff Rogers met them just after punsftt, comini? down the woods road. Wra. Latbrop had » bunch of violeto in her hands and almoflt b'liuehod when rf» nvet JuUe's ©yes. Bi'.l Morton was profoundly dis- turbed, perhaps feeling himself some- how responsible. He had told tlie fellow how valuable the I/athrop form was. But he was hardly more dis- turbed than the rest of Ureen Valley. A few tried to dismiss the matter by saying there is no fool like an old fool, and no acoounitinj; for women. But almost overytwdy really cared for Mrs. Lathrop. Tiiey remembered how hard she had wxvrked all her life, get- ting together that good home for her old age, and how kind she had been to them in times of trouble and sickness, and they said it was a Khamt»; some- Ihlng should be done about it. Still, what could be done? Nobody had the courage to warn her, and no thing could be Earned about the man Once or twice he let his bijl run at the Stillv^nter House, but just as it Looking »t Picture*. Among the moat pathetic lUmrea >â-  the world moat be counted (he men and women who may be aeea in any ptctur&ga^lery skAviy circumambalat- liMr tb« four wall* with «)«• fixed upon catalogue or guidebook, only looking up at Intervale to insure that they are standing before the right picture . . Again aad again they, find themselves looking at (amouA pictures without V 1- 1 t. t i .1 , ««^liit them. They ore conecioas Uiat \wiy he did, she went on, speaking of • ._ ° ___> # i ,. ^.JT^ .. . .. â€".. - ." .. isome wonderful power U«a hidden i li. 4 u i >i I there, but they do not know ' the want it to happen to you." charmed wonl to nalease it. They f^ BJ,e Lathrop i>egan takh« up tha ,„^ o,ey should be Interested; at the "That's hijw ivo got around me the that other man. "Oh, Ellie, I don't roMs, folding tliem and tucking them into the baking pan. Hor )ii>s looked as pinched as the edges of the dough. Mrs. Hanafield did not know what slve was thinking. same time they know they are bored. . . . They do Indeed deeply honor the names of the gi-eat masters uiKm the plctui«-fram«6; some HUght ac- quaintance with them Ineplres lever- FOR ALL' ^ yourbdl^siasc BAKING POWDER Np4« in Conoda - No Alum I "Please don't be mad at me," ahe ^«,e and r«n>ecf, but where it goes pleaded. l,'^a<te"P my mind to teU, beyond this it Is for the most part un- discriminating and unreasoning hero- you, Ellie. I never t</.d anybody what ho did," she went on desperately. "When we were five weeks married we went uptown to see Henry Kennedy at the bank. We were going to take a trip to California. He said he was expecting a lot of money." She tried to look at Ellie Lathrop again, but couldn't lift hex eyes above worship, We long to feel at home in a ooll«c- ' tfon of pictures. Instead of tost In a strange world oud out of totjch with : Its Inhabitants. . . . And indeed here ! Is no book written, or erer to be wrlJ- ' ten, which will suddenly transform the BAKING POWDBH Industrious and well-intentioned read- those hands, busy with the roUe. "His ' er into the just and experienced critic, i money didn't come, and Iâ€" weâ€" bo [The art of seeing pictures Is not con 1?«J' L, Tti. i «/-«- thought juat a little mortgage on the talned In rulea or formulae. Books ^•"••"fi *-'»•<*"» W^nKt farm â€" till it come â€" so I left him at I alone can no more teach how to aee the bank to fix it up. ' j pictures than how to paint them. "When I came back Henry Kennedy The are many . . . points of view called me in and talked to me. Henry i to consider in looking at pictures, Kennedy talked to him, and EHie, he which need only to be suggested to ap- â€" he said he didrft care what interest ' Pcal at once to the spectator. Thoy he paid just so he got the money. He ' 'a their turn suggest others. The said he'd gh-e a •thousand dollars in- , utandpolnt widens, and the spirit of terost if the bank would lend himlcrlUcIsm Is awake-ned. Pictures which three thousand on the farm. "Then Henry told him he was before we have passed Perhaps a hundred time*, noj- ear«d to see, acquire an interest, a fascination for dawn and dark there was hardly timej^uj. ^^ ^he farm. And when I got there seemed that he might be put out for '',,,^^-^ ^^^ ^^ wouldn't lend him a cent. not paymg it, he came in with the That's what happened, Ellie. That's '"'T*'^!' . â-  . . . â-  what he tried to do to me. When .^.uuiIu «u inLereKr a ra«f.inn.!«., »«.. And the rush of spnng had come Henry Kennedy toM^im that, he just usTh; iT In ^TnTtuie o^a "rltl^ upon Greett Valley, so that between I ^^„t out and took the car and dtt>ve Our purely IntallectH^ ple^^ Suhe puzzles and problems of plctoral art. Its historical and archaeological sidea, grows to bo of the keenest. Wholly distinct from these our aesthetic de light In the beauties of form and color Increases with each new discovery. Enjoyment fol,!ow<« hard upon under- standing. Every branch of the graphic for man or woman to draw a free breath, they were so driven by work. Only the foreigner had nothing to do. Tired men, Ktoppinjj to breathe their horses at the end of rows, looked up niui .saw him leaning idily on a fence, looking off acros.s country, or walking down the road, bareheaded and whistling. When ho was near enough ho al- wny.s shouted a greeting and often tried to start a conversation, but the farmers cut that short with a chirp to their horscw. At night they told their womenfolks about it. The women said he was gone and he'd even taken mother's pearl pin." Mrs. Hanafield pressed her hand- kerchief hard against her lips. "Please don't be mad at me, Ellie," s\ti said again. "Only when I think how you " "I'm not mad at you, Mai^," Eili«|arts gains a st>ecbl and peculiar In- Lathrop .said. "I'm glad you told me."iterest. A collection becomas the meet- Ellivs's face wa.s mottled red and white. |lng place of familiar frlende and faces. "I â€" I Kues.s were all fools, us women," i With experience and knowledg«», each she said then and shut her lips tight, i picture falls Into Its place in the mind, "Jim was the same wayâ€" -Kke your, Is a.ssoclated with others, suraests John," siho went en. "Seems like theyj 'rmparlsons and parallels and a sense i think, after thi-y get a woman, all she of the eesentlal unity of pictorial art. Return to Bacon, Eggs Liondoo baa voted against the Amstl- can waffle. Just about a year ago a great firm of caterers imt the ertap and toothsome American concoction. on their menus. Mapde sprup, w»- called, was imported to pour oo the wafflee. For a few months they weie popa- lap. Then the demand dwindled and finally dlsavpeexed. The caterers at- tempted to revive Intereat In the waa-' In« waflle, even tried putUoc cm egs' tn the batter, bat staid oU tiondon held aloof. The caterers say tbe exptanatlim ttv that eating to a wrkma business with! the ElngliBh. Ba«oo and eggs, beeC. and boll«d iwtatoes stick to the ribs' tn cold weather. Wafflea may satisfy American appetite*, but they scaioely' :iT0<ise English curiosity aa tooA. Big Yield of Potatoes. A most reinarkahU; rwj>rd of |K>lat* pro;iuc(lon has l)0<-ii rt'iioned from a I>k>t of lltt'.«> nicTo itmn hu-lf an arj-e on tho farui of Mr. OraybDl. Just a mile weut i)f Oomnw^rce, near Ijelhbridgo, AJbcrtii. Tlie^e wi;j-" Gold (.'i^in pota- loMi aiul non-'rrlKf'ted, aufl the tnu»ll piol yiBliK.d 12 tons and SOO pounds. Cue poiaito weigluKl 63 oz. or three pound« 15 ounties, end th«ro weie over 20<> pofa.toes which wotghad hwwfw-n two and three pouuili> each. All for Naught. Willii rsliini'?-! ve.ry pioudiv from his Ursl day at niJiooI, luid bis father. Biikel him what he had been taught He rtpJicl " TeaclitiT taught us how to say 'V'e». tna'ani and '.N'o, sir.' " "Is Ibat fo?" "Vep:" Hunting Germs With Air- planes. Himtlng germs with alriilaii^ys Is the latest sport of the Uoyal Canadian Air I'\>rce. It Is a sport which promises to ho very pj-ofltalile l<> th«> farmars of Ciuiadii and tho TJniKvl Ktat,e«. Kv«;r since tho c!«9» of the war the ll<jyal ("anadlan A'.r Korcn has b>!c>n eniplc/>od in p» aci:ful services of an oui^<aii:llng rharai.tc" Patrolling IliouF.anus of .'^quarc miles of fort'.sl, niapplns by photograpliy tht* rich min- ora! lands of northern CaUHdu. and now hunt Ijig gornis. Tho hunt is boiug conducted as part of the effort Utiiig iua<l« by the ('una- dkin (Idverniiifnt i<i stamp out tht> dla- ea»t! nf nisi in wheat. In connection with ihe IJoniluloii Kiisi Ressarch I>n- boraiory at Manitoba .Agrii-ulturnl Col- lofii' iuvetvtigallons are being made by the Air S(*rvlce as to the exlstoiu^o of rust spore In tl." iitmo8phe-r.\ My iiiriins of (levisos fcir llio pnrposo the plnii's have succewled in tnii)plng srore.s at an altitude ;i.« hifili a.s 5,000 fiv'l, Hiid Koniellmes at dslarnxw moro than :>00 inilt'« from tho neuresl wheat- growlDK area. Tho t'anadlau n«i)«rliiient of Agri- i'ull\iiu hsis alreuily suoce&ded In pro- ducing oar.v ripening variotjos of wliwit wlili'h hav4* forced tilHv wheat lint furtlKsr a;id furthw norih until Canada hati \\awt\\\c. tlit; greatest \;heat exporting (ouiilry In the world. It Is hellevt-d thai means will also bo found to stamp out rust, and farniftii! of tho whole contint'nt will be placed lender a I'lirther debt to sclentltio research. A fes'llng of ma«tel7 over a whole world of beautiful forms and colors th!;!)) said, "I don't blamo you a mite, .\I;iry. Maybt' J<<hn thought he was a â-  good prov.i<ler, but \t» wa.sn't. If he'd cf us. Sympathy and whatever of the artist there may be In each of ua en- ables us to read something of our own Into the most perfect picture ever that "owadays he was just about a | ^j^^t.s is a good home. All they think free' l>oardor at Mrs. I«ithrop 3. ^.j^^ j, ^^^e cows and more land.. ~„ -„,. Mandy Simmons said that after sup- ' geems like there ought to be more to 'takes the place of Impotent and vexa- per they sat on the front porch till | ijvjnj, than that," she said, her voice; "'>"â- '> un(>ert8lnt7. . . . ail hours, he talking nl)out Mexico and i shaking,^ ard she put her arms around 't !« the wholehearted enjoyment other foreign places. Or sometimes jj^^ Han:ifiold. , {which cornea with growing powers of they walked down the orchard lane in g^ .^^^.^ ^ ^hWe, when they'd both i "PPreclat Ion that gives painting, and the mooniighl. If it had been any-Lvash^d th.'lr eyes in cold water and.'i'deed all art. Its fascination for most body but Eiliu Lathrop, p?ople would | jyjrs. llai.afield was leaving, Ellie La- '* """ ' " - - have bpgun to talk about her. k% it waH, Mandy Simmons wouldn't put it past her to up and marry him Wli,-n she hi'sard that, ^'"•'«: besides hard work and money in the! P"'"'"^'" °<^^"" droamed. -Robert Cler- Luthn.p had been like a .sister to herk^^^ you'd iiovi-r 've listened to that"'"'" ^'' " ' "â- - "' â€" in hor own trouble, and she wasn't' ^hor man. Rut good merv haven't Koing to Htnnd by and do nothing to.^upij ? -use that way. I >?uoss. I gue«9 have her now. .She put on her hat and j it's only tho rascals thatâ€" thj.t know wont up to the Lathrop place. It waBljjow to pet around a woman. Moon- a warm May aftornofn. The app-o^ jij^jjtt-. ,^^ ^,,ij_ „g jj ^j,^ ^^.^^^ ^^ trec.-f were in bloom, and the big white ,j„jj ii,»use gleamed in the suiii^hino. The I xhinkin;? it over, Mrs lilacs wore out, and wistaria hung in Mrs. .Iohu;;y„ ;^>t y^„ ...methinK to remember I l"*'nted, something of which even the Ilanafidd mad« up her mind '^' '- rnont Witt, ture«.' in 'How to Look at He- Indhistries in Manitoba. J. K. Walsh, General .Manager of th* (,'anadian. Manufacturers' Association, . reoently completed a »ur\'ey of the 1n- ".'*"*"*'-*' 1 duvstries In the Prairie Pmvlncee, ahd I" over, h-^avv dusters a'l nlonir the porches 1^'"'^ *!!"' '''"' ^""^ ^'''•f ^v ^\ ^^'1 stattetlcs'mclud^l InUie survey show n..av> iiuBM.rs a.i aiong mc jxirint.s. jj,jjj ^.^g ^yj^,. gy,^ „f ,{. when shfl saw Mrs. Hanatiold went around to the ^^at .Mendoza man hurryintj toward tide porch, Ktepping rarefu.y amonR , to^v^, about .â- â€¢).»: o'clock. :;V hoped a nock of yelow .hicks, whi.o tho hen jjuj^. Lathrop was rid of him for good clucked frTnticnhy to call them "way|^,f(.[j ^^•^ from he.- black .skirts. Hearing the j j,.^„jy Simmons had met him at the „,« that other Western provln^"had l..n, h lie â- athro,, came to the screen^ ^^en he came, barring hi, way «u„^.u «>nrespond1ng gains and men- aoor. Iloi hn.-.ds vvere iloury; she was .^j^^^ j^^. ^^^^^ ,,g^,^^ ..^j,.^ Lathrop in tho kitchi-n, making Parker House' ,,^.g ^ ^.^^ ^^^,^ ^^^.y^ ,,ut ^y^^ ^^^^ rollH f.r supper I abed and cant soe anybody," Mandy Mrs. Hanafield did not waste ""y'Mii<l " '^ What i.s tht> matter'.' What does Minard's Liniment for Sare Back. â€" *- iMONDS SAWS BECAUSE f^uarantced to cut 10' i, more timber In •rune titnc, with less labor tl^n any other Saw. r.IMOriOS CANADA SAW CO. I-TO. ' MJNTHS-At. i VAriCOWkR. MX, JOIItl. N>a., TOftorftO ISSUE Nc.eoâ€" '2S. Has Been Successful in Alberta. R. M. Dacjri, of Korl Sa.sknlcU»*aii, .\;b«.'rtn, who came from Harlan, Iowa, 11 years ago and took up a quarter suet ton of land In the dwtrict of which ho i.s living, now owns 800 acres. His wheat rroi) liao averaK<;l slmc lie be- gan to tanii In Alberta, from 40 to 50 hii.-'he!n to the acri', ajid hi« oats from 80 to 100 liiishelf; on t-iiu avoiage. .Mr. Iiaf.«.n Mittiw tbm t!i»- laiea arc much low»r In .\lb«rlii, than lu Iowa, iind ho GstimateM ihat In the pa«t eleven jeat-s the value of his oriRiual Invest- ment has quadruplcL He say» (hat he Muds (he cVimat .' In Aihwia not quite Fo liot in tho tiunumr nor k^i cold in ihi' Kin««-r «8 In low.i, and hp con- .Hldfis that A'beria. paitlciil>arly the loutrsl p.'Tt, a goo.l dUlrict for anyone Irom Iowa to fi.rni In and If n se-ltlcr win work hard hin succesH will bij as^ fined, lie has found the educational and 80<'i«l advanlagts partlriilarly Rood. -« Pot Calls Ktttio Black. 'Isu'l it 84i°«ng8 how some (leoplo try to got along without tools? Why, those n«v. neighbors of initii* haven't I lawn mower, hose, iilephtddor. or .-.tn a BBW." •How do yo<i know they h.ivi-n'l ?" â- Upcairte ilio day after th»y niove.1 .:; ] triad to morrow them." lime. As Hoon as she wa.s settled in a chair iiy tho kitchen tablo she snid, "Kllie, I vc com*! Uj talk to you. I think it's lime sjinobody should, and you oucrb; to know you haven't a trtu r friend ttnn I am." Ellie Lathrop went on cutting out r.>unds of dough. "Yes, i know that," she said. Mrs. Hanafield looked at her, and hardly knew how to go on. Suddenly she Toll like crying. She beifan to plait che fdge of her hand- kerchief in hor lap. "Ellie," ahe said, "I've made up my mind to tell you â€" you don't know, no- lx)dy ever knew, how I folt about â€" him. How h^e talked and everything, an-d what happened; why he went away lii<e ho did." She was talking, Kllie Lathrop knew, about tho man she had married after John Hanaf'c'd died. Everybody in (ir.-^cii Valley had s«id at the time that ahe was a fool, marrying a man two or three year.-i .younger than she was, who only wanted her for her m-^nay. They h.'-d iK-^en married only li\ii' weeks when \v>. v/eiil away and she had been a deserted wife ever .tince. But people still cal'ed her Mrs. John Hanalield, as if to protend that i hey had forgotlen. "Ellis," .she Hflid, "I never kne* aiiy^)ody talk like he did. It was like poetry. .Mmut moonlight and flowers and - me." In spite of herself she be- gan to cry. "I'm a .silly old fool, I know," she sobl>cd. "But oh, Ellie, I was so iired of always being sensible! I couldn't hslp it. Stxjined like " "Yes, I know,' Kllie Ijathrop said, resting her hands on the edge of the dough board and looking BtiMifirht i.s thu <lo<-U>r say?'" said Mr. Mondoza, very much agitated, and he took a step nearer, but Mandy <{id not budge ail inch. "It is not po-ssiblo!" he said again. "She â€" .so radiant, soâ€"" "AH I know is, s;he was lying down upstaira when I came back from nny sister's this afternoon, and the kat- chen fuU of smoke and the bread burned to cinders in the oven," aaid Mandy, "and she said " "But surely you have oallod tha doo- tor?" Mr. Mendozit interrupted, and seeirtg Mandy's surprise he oontiniMd rapidly, "I will go at once and ffet him. I will- " "My good-neoa!" Mandy exclaimed in exasperation. "She don't nead a doctor any ijiore than a cat needs two tails. All she needs is ho be let alone." Mr. Mendoza bit at the edge of faiii mufrtache. After a mom<nit he siaid, "Pl(a;:e, will you give her my very sincere rosrpects? 1 regrst very much â€" 1-- hope she will I'ec'over soon." He went away, and Mandy, watch- iivg behind the parlor curtains, saw him turn and look back at thei^^Lace j«>veral times. She did not say any- thing to Mrs. l.>athrop, knowing that .'ha must have heard the \*ii»le con- \<>rsatioii through tho bedroom win- dow up'ftairs. Nor (Kd she say any- thing to the hired men. She was a«v- ing the news to bell her sister as soon as ever the dishes were washed, (To ha concluded.) Outside of Thatâ€" ".M.v hi>y. why are yon not In school that la 1910 Manitoba had 439 fac- tories with n tura-over of 153,000,000, while In 1924 the aanae province had 768 farti'i'les with a tUTn-ovar of moaie than $102,000,000. Mr. WaUh pointed- tioned that the mauufacluriuig indus- try In Canada Is moving westward. Farm Workers to Get Three Acres and Cow The pooodbKlty of becoming the own- er of a home with enough hind to grow vegetablies and keep a cow, pigs and poultry, is opened to avery agrlcaltur- al worker In Britain by a Government measure on "Small Holdings and Al- lotments" now beCore the House ot Commons. Cottage holdings â€" comprising a dweUing house and not more than three acres of agricultural land whdch can be cultivated by the occupier and his family â€" are to be sold to the occur piers In.coneldera'ticn of the payiceat of an annud'ty equal to the "full fair rent" tor a period ot 60 years, as In the ca«e of small hoMtnes. None but bona fide agrlcultuTail workers or per- sons employed In a rural Industry will be quailtlfled to become purohaseirs ot cottage holdingB. Wendy, Wh^lTEight Silent and stlU, she Ilea. The light Is burning low. Her fa;ce a cameo, and her »ye« S^k in the dusk to know If down the pasaage dimly bidden One should come, whom she has bid- den. She feels me kneel, and softly joys To find It Is no othar; Ihen pate me gently with her hand. Mothering meâ€" her mother. â€" Carlne M. Perkln. Sugar Factory Finishes Season. ahead of hi'r out of tho window. If-day?" "John was a go'xi man. He work- 1 'My mother needs ine at home to- ed hnrd and never was mean to me," d^iy. besides, this Is a holiday, hesMe* Mr.s. Hanalield said tremulously. "It s-hool hasn'i started yet besides I'm war.n't that I didn't appreciate him, EV.ic. 1 always did. Onlyâ€" -1 â€" g-guoss I w.ta always kind of oilly, maybe." Sta wi;yrw«;yesandt:;w Wio.^l'^'''-^-"* ummam ...r Cold.. not old enough to go to school." The sugar factory at Raymond, W- berta, has ilnlshed bustneas for this season, with a total delivery of about 86,000 tons of beets. About 1150,000 hofl been paid out to the farmers for beets. About 100,000 bags ot sugar have been made, with 12,000 tona of pulp avai'lab}« for stock feeding. Th* Hairleat Brother. .\ little girl was regarding with criti- cal eye her newly arrived baby broth- er. The proud father, who Vas de- cidedly bald and hated any reference to the fact, was also gazing on his son and heir. "What a pity my tiny brother hasnt got any hair," said tha little girl. "It'll grow beautifully later on," re- plied the nurae. "But hasn't Daddy's been a dreadCoV ly long time starting!" ezclalm'id tlM little makl. ELECTRICITY BIG JOBS FOR HOME TRAINED MEN. Blaotrlcal »xp«rts eara BIO PAY. Thare ia a constant demand (or TRAINBO MBN. Bileotrical ezperU earn 18600 to I5OO0 per y«aT. No HIGH SCHOOL OR COLLKOB EDUCATION REQUIRED. WH ASSIST OUR BTTDBNTS TO EMPLOYMENT. YOU CAN BARN WfflLB YOU LEARN. Naw Day and Evening Clasaea now forming. Coma to or writ*â€" Lat'i discuss your future. Day, Evening and Correspondenoo Classes. â- I ! \

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