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The Colborne Express (Colborne Ontario), 3 May 1928, p. 6

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THE COLBORNE EXPRESS. COLBORNE. ONT.. THURSDAY, MAY 10. 1928 Judge the quality of Green Tea by the colour of the brew when poured into your cup before cream is added. The paler the colour the finer the Green Tea. Compare any other Green Tea with "SALADA"--None can equal it in flavour, point, or clearness. Only 33c per |-Ib. "SALADA" GREEK 'l so fascinated Nichols a short time before. "What I'm up here about," went on Macarthur, smoothly, taking a seat on a rock which enabled him to face Sprir.'ger, and at the same time sifting some tobacco into a brown cigaret paper, "what I'm up here about is another grubstake." The silence of Springer was profound. "I've found the real thing at last," went on Macarthur, as he twisted and licked his cigaret paper. He lighted it and turned his head to watch the match fall- "If I told you all the facts about where and what it was, you'd pack up your things and leave this here hcle in the ground and come vith i "Maybe." :ek one clip with a hai "Hal," said Mi ward and speak of persuasion, "j a lot of hope BEGIN HERE TODAY J feature they were as "Joan" closes the book she is read- j could be, yet their ing and goes to the cfcor of the ranch ■ so similar that they hous« at. the sound of wild geese fly- taken for brothers. Ing in the northern night. Buck Daniels, who is presumably her father, rustles his par.?r and watches her with a frown of alarm. "Joan, ain'i you happy?" asks Buck. "I never go where other girls go,' complains Joan. "When you went outside, what were you listening to,' asks Buck. "The wild geese," she tells him. The crying of the wild geese, the girl says, brings to her "a happiness --a queer, sad happiness." Then Buck says: "I once knew a man who found all those things in his head when the wild geese flew over"--but he refuses to say more, and sends Joan off to bed NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY irthur, leaning for-2f in the soft voice i may have used up i that, last job CHAPTER I.--(Cont'd.) She hesitated. There was a storm of questions lying locked behind her teeth. But she let them remain spoken. When this man chose to be silent there was no winning him And brides, he had said enough make her wish to be alone, so that she could turn all that had happened ever and ever in her mind- So, after that thoughtful instant, she kissed the bronzed cheek of the big man went slowly up tha stairway, which ireaked and grcan:d beneath her footfalls. Buck Daniels watched her going with an anguished face, and when she had disappeared he swiftly packed pipe, lighted it, and went outside to walk up and down, up and down, for a long time. It was the beginning of the end, he felt. And he was filled with a cold and helpless senst deem. The t-bacco had beer, long bu to an ash before he finally went in again Up the stairs he climbed and paused at the door of the girl. "Jean!" he called very gently. Thc-e was no answer, and, confident that she was aslesp, he went on to his own rcom. But Joan only waited until his footfall had gone down th« hall; then she slipped from her the where the law slept. To Ha! Sprinsrer and Rudy Nichols )f the sun was most wel-whan one has "broken ground" all day, and when the "ground" is hard ciuartz, fatigue be-co--es a thing which bites clear to the K"'V And. as a matter of fact, they could not have sustained the burden as well as they had done had it not be?n for certain gleaming little threads ,of rich yellow in the stone wh;ch told them that their labor now iri-ar*t rert in the davs to come When they laid aside their double jacks arid their drills, however, they did not instantly set about preparing Burrer. They first sat down on a stone and lighted their pipes. To be sure, the twilight would make the cooking of supper more difficult, more unpleasant, but this small interval was- refreshing their muscles, their t fan out, but take this from xpress'ons were' you're a fool if you don't try another night have been i try- | "I could of got backing a good The third party, Harry Gloster, was i many Plaoes with a specimen like this absent hunting to stock their larder. ! *° show- But 1 wanted you to get They beor.n to hear, now, the sharp vwir money back--and more, too. So sound of shod hoofs striking the rocks 1 COTle ctear «P here instead of show-below them, a noise which constantly mS thls here ore to Milligan or to one climbed closer. They knew who it of them ot'h»r rich ffents that ain't was. As a matter of fact, for the last the £unt» to gamble on nothing two hours they had washed the rifer but a 9Ur3 thing. Take a look! What working up the valley from far awav, i d'you think of that sample, Hal?" the distance diminishing his size al- j "For a sample," murmured Spring-though the clear mountain air leter- "!t looks like something." them see him distinctly enough. j And he tossed it back. They had watched him, from time} The other pocketed the specimen ii to time, when they came out from the silence. His jaw had th: UNUSUAL APRON shaft to let the wind blow thjm cool. But neither had said a word to the But as the noise of the horse < closer, Hal Springer went to the little shack, half cabin and half dugout, in which they bunked, and came back wearing his cartridge belt with £ velver dragging the right side of it far down over the hip. His companion appeared to take not the slightest note of this preparation. He seemed to be only intent upon certain light effects and climbing sha- slumped ual apron cleverly designed, ist out and that appears more like a pretty morn-scowl was black. ! ing frock, is found in pattern No. 345. "That means you don't give a damn It has a comfortable fitting waist, about making your fortune?" he which is cut in one with front panel, asked. j The side sections are gathered and a There was another depressing in-dainty sash ties at the back. Japan-terval of silence j ese pongee silk, cotton crepe in floral "Hall," said Macarthur at last, | design, zephyr prints or plain or fig-"don't you believe me?" j ured sateen will give unending service 1 ere was another little interval for general wear and will launder of dragging pause in which Nichols beautifully. Small, medium and large discovered something of interest some size. The medium size requires 3% distance down the slope and rose and yards 27-inch; 3 yards 32 or 36-inch sauntered down. j 2M yards 40-inch material with M I don't believe in you," answered yard 18-inch contrasting, and 2% Springer at last, with all the deliberation of a matured judgment. "When I grubstaked you, I was drunk. You got me when I was in town drunk, and you worked on me until I handed over enough money for you to use as a grubstake, as you called it. That made us come up to this job short of everything that we needed." Macarthur bit his lip. "Look at the sample, though," \e pleaded, fighting down his passion. "Samples ain't hard to get. Some buy 'em, and some borrow 'em." Macarthur arose to his feet. It affront. "what d'you yards binding. Price 20c the pattern. Our Fashion Book, illustrating the newest and most practical styles, will be of interest to every home dressmaker. Price of the book 10c the copy. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. "Springer," he said, mean by that?" "I mean just this," said the ot^jff. spelling out the words on his fingers, "I've looked you up, and what I've heard would of made a dog sick. You ain't no good, Macarthur. You skinned me out of one neat little bunch of money- You won't skin me out of . another That's the straight of it. n.LZ f~ f'T T^F ^ u. „~v, „.;fi, „ i • j t>™ of the fam°us folk of history and through with your kind. , mythology which were vanished from heard how you-.....| the rygta, pa]ace during tQe ^ ^ back on exhibition again, but they aro not quite the same as they used to be hps were trem^jn»wtdjand „ clagBlfled now tney make Repairing Famous Keeps Chief Busy Venuses get New Noses while Dignified Queen Consorts with Nymphs topped. Something hai hap-lhack pened in Macarthur like a silent "~ plosion. His lips were trembling____ lean face seemed to have swollen, j straag9 company. You damned old fool!" he wins- In a room supposed to be gacred tQ P6»T i v u o • t. .Grecian statuary, Queen Victoria is J% „^^.?^"r.!S"°!!!r,JfUvlfound turnlng' Perha»9 for apathy I Cleopatra. Gladstone beholds the dows which were blurring the harsh outlines of a southern peak- But after a dozen puffs of his pipe, he also arose and went to the shack and returned nilarly accoutered. He had barely appeared when the stranger came into view. He had been obscured for some time by the j a gasp whkh let the pipe fall from! " ~ sharp angle of the mountain side, h^eon his teeth he leached for his1?* ° -°Ien beauttiful women-to be a fellow Nothing to Fear From Lightning Says Engineer Chance of Being Struck in Your Home is One in Several Million, He Estimates CITY DWELLERS SAFE The next time the lightning flashes and baby cries and mother shivers and you swallow hard and tell Johnny pooh, pooh, there is nothing to be afraid of, and then duck your own head under the bedclothes--don't. You are right. There Is nothing to be afraid of. The chance of a person being struck in his home is one in several million. And if you chance to be at your desk in some dov/ntown skyscraper, the lightning cannot reach you. You have the assurance for this of r. M. Spurck, an engineer of the new swltchgear plant of tho General Electric Company at Philadelphia, in charge of the high voltage testing of circuit breakers, where arcs of artificial lightning at from fifteen to twenty feet are played over apparatus to make sure there are no defects and that it will withstand conditions when it in the open in eas. "Shooting a Ircuit breakers to ixn before leaving mere guess work, e based on studies mere ■ MAGIC BAKING POWDER used ii\ Canada than, of all other brands combined MADE IN CANADA NO ALUM put into service, ov natural lightning ar million volts Into c thoroughly thest th< the factory Is not The fundamentals ar made in the company's laboratories, field observations and the classic-work of the late Dr. Steinrnetx," Mr. Spurck said. If you reside on the top of a hill with no trees about, you are in a comparatively perilous position. Such a house is likely to be struck once every 100 years. But If you live In the average city home, with houses of equal height about you, lightning is apt to single you out about once every 1,000 years. As for the residents in the house perched upon the hill, th9 chance is one in several million that they will be stmck by the bolt that comes once every 100 years. The bolt might tear up the roof, or even set it afire, but likely would get no closer to you. It would encounter the electric house wiring and would be carried, impotent, to the ground. Or it would hop onto the plumbing system and docilely speed off Into the The safest place in your house is anywhere except where these lightning conductors are centered. Most plumbing and heating pipes run up and down in the middle of the house. Keep away from the walls in which they run. Do not stand between two metal objects, such as a heating radiator and the plumbing pipes. There is nothing wrong with the superstition that bed is a safe place. In the modern steel office building, lightning can't even get the roof. Most roofs of such buildings are metal and are purposely brought in contact at some point with the steel framework and this circuit absorbs and carries off any lightning that may-chance to shoot down. Perhaps the questio . of the efficacy of lightning rods has never been fully settled in the public mind. Lightning rods are now to be seen chiefly in the country. There is a lightning rod on nearly every house in the cities. though it may not be visible to the efye. Every plumbing system has an air vent--a pipe--that runs upward to, if not through, the roof. It serves exactly as the lightning rod which pricks the air on the farmer's house. Minard's Liniment for "Name this child,' said the Vicar at the christening. "Luthy,' thir," answered the lisping mother. "Never will I baptize a child with the name ot Lucifer!" said the Vicar. "Matthew John I baptize thee . . ." and the babj girl was borne away with Ch'lstian, but hardly suitable, names. ' I instead of finishing his sentence, with '• ( while Disraeli is almost lost _ n«-ri"' glided out of the scabbard ^^^^^^S^T^iti , „.i ease which told of a skill which enter invisible baths saddle as if he had mrf been^ riding, h,ad at one time) perhaps, been great, j Joseph cheek, superintendent, nurse ... i ,---fast as his movement was, it and surgeon for all statues, busts and mounted, throwing his reins, while |wa3 like standing ,tm compared with modeIs In the palace, admits that the the tying hand of Macarthur. His classification might be improved, but gun spoke before the muzzle of explains that he has had a big'job the Springer's revolver was clear of the last seven years getting them all to leather, and the miner, with a cough,1 light again and repairing the damage lumped over to done when they were hustled yell from Rudy make room for war-time occupation of I the palace. armed, and sitting as lightly i saddle as if he had not been ] hard through the entire day. He dis- j mounted, throwing his reins, v " " the hungry horse, daring not to n reached in a guilty fashion after a blade of grass which was near its head. "Hello, Hal," he said. "How's, v things." J ^e side. There "Things are tolerable well, Mac- j Nichols ' | twisted around ; arthur," said Springer, and he took the hand of the other in a relaxed grip. "This is Rudy Nichols," he said.! Gr.rr.rh! The train drew up with "Make you known to Joe Macarthur, ja mlghty crash and shock between (To be continued.) The train have put together beauties that have been broken into bits, to say up with nothing of providing new noses for old Venuses by the score,' he said. < shook hands, but Mac-! r I stations. "Some one pulled the com- j "and making ears and feet and munication-cord!" said the guard, and legs for all sorts and conditions aruiur swung back to Springer. He .Tne express has knocked our last car of nymphs, ancient heroes and Vic-wasted no time in preliminary re-1 off the raiis. Take us four hours be- torlan statesman. The most difficult marks, but went directly to the point. ifore tne track is clear!" "Great Scott! task is fingers. But I have made so "The damn vein pinched out on j Four hours! I am supposed to be many hundreds of them now that I me," he said. j married to-day!" groaned a passenger, merely take one look where the miss- There was no response other than | The guard, a bigoted bachelor, raised lng finger was and go straight away a puff of smoke from Springer's pipe-big eyebrows suspiciously. "Looked like the real thing," went here!' he ejaculated, "I beliv on Macarthur. "Then it faded. Never; the chap who pulled that c was worse fooled in my life. Showed I _,♦.___ the thing to old man Shaughnessy. He j Approximately 28,000 men said the same thing." men turned their backs on the firm . , -------*--" "Too bad," drawled Springer. | in g^th Dakota to attenl agrlcul- ' Ti-"-:igoti -Why, no. Whatever "So your brubstake was throwed j tural short courses and then turned mil iin-h riii idea In your head?" Bob-away," went on Macarthur. | back to the farm better equipped to 3 .'V. 1 ile£""ri !o Ma Springer shrugged his shoulders.! face t>-eir problems. He appeared to have found with his I .----.>-- tain which had: Keep Minard's Liniment "Look and make another that will fit ou are rectly. !" "Don't worry about the classiflca- ! lion,. We'll get them all placed right That Iowa man who eleven years ago knew nothing of farming and who hsa Just retired from the soil with a competence says he did it by using diligence and economy. Digging right down to it still pays. there is nothing that has ever taken Aspirin's place as an antidote for pain. It is safe, or physicians wouldn't use it, and endorse its use by others. Sure, or several million users would have turned to something else. But get the real Aspirin (at any drugstore) with Bayer on the box, and the word genuine printed in red: Ttrestone Dealers Are Trained and Equipped to Save You Money and Serve You Better Firestone sells tires only through regular established dealers--the outstanding tire merchants in every community. 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