Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 3 Apr 1924, p. 6

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GREEN TE ke the finest uncolore reen jg arable in the world. Superior to the best Japans. -- Try it +A SIMPLE NIGHT DRESS WITH CAP. 4642, The dainty simplicity of this style recommends it at once. It is suitable for cambrie, nainsook, batiste, crepe, or crepe de chine. It may be decorated with embroidery or hem- stitching or trimmed with narrow lace edging. The Cap may be of self ma- terial, or of lace or net. The Pattern is cut in 8 Sizes: Small 84-86; Medium, 88-40; Large, 42-44; Extra Large, 46-48 inches bust mea- sure. A Modium size requires 3% yards of 86-inch material. The Cap requires % yard. Pattern mailed to any address on yeceipt of 16¢ in silver, by the Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto, Allow two weeks for receipt of rn. _ 8end 12¢ in silver for our up-to-date Boring & Summer 1924 Book of fashions. THE SPRING CLEANING. Do not begin the spring cleaning #00 early in the year, for bad weather may come again and bring mud and * furnace dust in its train. But when ou have finally begun the under- ing try to make it something more han 2 mere refurbishing. A new ar- « rangement of the furniture or the pic- pres, a new color note introduced into 'pooms, will have a cheering effect pj every member of the family. Do mot try to begin the house- ining before nine o'clock in the prning. You must first prepare for the meals and finish the routine work 'the day. Then you will start the : : I Ri ! work at nine o'clock with the' Remove it from the fire, add two and put the box in & drawer in the ling that you have made an excel- fir 'beginning and have accompara- tively free day before you. Let the children. take their lunch- to school and pat up a luncheon yourself at the same time. Take ot) box out of doors at noone time nd take an hour off to eat and rest. you have assistants in the task, j¢ a cold drink in the middle of the morning. They will feel refresh- Eas IAT | TR ed and in good humor both with you and with the work. The secret of easy house-cleaning is knowing when to stop. Many women go just a bit Leyond their strength, and then are tired and irritable, so that the whole family dreads house- cleaning time. Tear up only one room a day; co the work there and then stop. If the whole house is in confu-, sion you will find it difficult to rest. The worst of house-cleaning can be done before the family realizes that it is going on. By cleaning out bureau drawers and closets first you will ac- complish at the outset the more ted- y ious work, and you will also prepare receptacles for articles in the room,' where they can be kept after they have been cleaned until the whole room is finished. When the heavy work is done it is a small matter to put them back into place. But if the small things are laid aside dirty, cleaning them after doing the heavy work al- ways seems like a serious task. | The following things will help to make house-cleaning easy: soap, soap powder, scouring soap,' chlorides, ammonia, kerosene, gasoline, turpentine, floor wax, furniture polish, old stoékings, percale, flannel and tissuc paper for cleaning and polish- ing; a dish mop for cleaning bed springs, a carpet beater, brooms and brushes, a step ladder, hammer, tacks, mop, sal soda, whiting, and last,' though most useful of all, a vacuum cleaner, | | A little blowgun and insect powder are a great help when cleaning closets (and cupboards. With the gun the | powder can be forced into cracks and! q lodge. Clean each closet well, apply the powder and 'then, if there is any| sign of moths, substitute gasoline for the powder and force that into cracks | with the blowgun. Pour more gasoline on the shelves and round the base- boards, then close the closet for twelve hours at least. Of course, there must be no open flame about when the gaso- ine is used. | If the room seems thick with dust, 1 do not wait until spring to give it a thorough cleaning. 'Make little re-| pairs too from time to time, so that the annual task will not seem so burdensome. Never relax your efforts to "weed out" the accumulation of small things. Lay thom aside in two groups as you come across them in the course -of| cleaning. Those in one group can to the charitable organizations where they will do the most good; the others "can be sold. Advertise the best of the ' articles and sell as many as you can; | then dispose of the things that are left to the junk man. A good cleaning fluid is made by bringing two quarts of water to a boil and dissolving in it two ounces of a good white soap cut into shavings. | | 1 tablespoonfuls of ammonia and bottle; it. If tightly corked it will keep for| some time. When you need to use the fluid saturate a cloth with it and wash the woodwork; then wipe the wood- work with another cloth wrung out in clean warm water. Two large sponges are a great help in housé-fleaning time. For washing paint quickly have two basins of water; one with clear, warm water for rinsing and the other with warm suds made with a good white soap and' the suds, wash of® vi the work with the other sponge wrung nearly dry from the clear water and! wipe it dry. Change the suds fre-' quently and the work will progress very fast. A sponge gets into cre-' vices and does more even work than a cloth. : LR Clean your rugs with the heip of Some bed Sri gs. Take the out into the yard, spread the them and ae, th a wire Re beater. The dirt and dust fall out water over them with the garden after the dirt and dust have suds a little ammonia. Dip a sponge into' tive in a the dirt, rinse, what to the in ter, and {vill a the right de gen springs % gn into! iB 8 ¢ the grass and cling to the rug less| in it to make it CHAPTER XXXVIIL-- (Cont'd. "You tryin' to hang this killin' ot if you didn't do it." Ki loloked at Bim quietly, ti = undisturbed by the heaviness of hi frown. "But you come to me an' tell the story of what you saw. say. Yet all the time you're holdin' back. Why? What's the reason?" open war, . M tell you what you did that night?" answered Kirby, without the least trace of doubt in voice or man- ner. "When Mrs. Hull pulled down the blind, you ran up to the roof an' cut down the clothes-line. You went back to the fire escape, fixed up some kind of a lariat, gi' flung the loop over an abutment "stickin' from the wall of the Paradox. You swung across to the fire escape of the Par- adox. There you could see into the room where Cunningham was tied to the chair. "How could I if the blind was down?" "The blind doesn't fit close to the woodwork of the window. Lookin' in from the right, you can see the Jett half of the room. If you look in f the other side, you see the other part of it. That's just what you did." For the moment Olson was struck dumb, How could this man know exactly what he had done unless some one had seen him? ' "You know so much I geckon I'll let you tell the rest," the Scandinavian t said with easy sarcasm. "Afraid you'll have to talk, Olson. Either to me or to the Chief at head- quarters. You've become a live sus- pect. Figure it out yourself. You threaten Cunningham by mail. You laundry make threats before people orally. | You come to Denver an' take a room in the next house to where he lives. On the night he's killed, by your own admission, you stand on the platform a few feet away an' raise no alarm while you see him slugged. Later, you hear the shot that kills him an' still you don't call the officers. Yet, you're 80 interested in the crime that you run upstairs, cut down the -clothes- line, an' at some danger swing over to the Paradox. The question the police will want to know is whether the man who does this an' then keeps it secret may not have the best reason in the world for not wanting it known," "What you mean--the best reason * crevices where insects are 'likely to in the world?" "They'll ask what's to have pre- vented you from openin' the window an' steppin' in while ny uncle was tied up, from shootin' him an' slippin' down the fire escape, an' from walkin' aaa -------------- 1 comes from dragging them through the house. . A dusty carpet can be brightened without removing it from the floor. Soak an old sheet in cold water; then wring it out and spread it smooth over, the carpet. Beat it well with the wire beater; the danfp sheet will catch the dust. ; . HOME-MADE RECIPE FILE. The thing that I call my chief con- venience is a recipe file, made from an ordinary box of light wood, four inch- i os wide, twelve inches long and about 'hack to the Dry Valley settler. "You? | three inches deép. I made cards of heavy pasteboard to fit, and put a large letter on a projecting corner of the card in red ink--such as P for pies, etc. I .cut two dozen pieces of heavy writing paper to go with each card naming the recipe for each kind of cooking. Then I arranged the large index cards and their corres- ponding recipes in alphabetical order kitchen cupboard. Now I can bake without wasting precious time 'turning leaves and reading clippings.--Murs, G. R. FESTIVE CHICKEN PIES. When it is desired to add a festive touch to the Cer t is made with a biscuit crust, cut small rounds jg of the dough and arrange them over the top crust. When the tiny biscuits puff up they make the pie very attrac- quantity of crust that is compatible with ene pie. TO STIFFEN LACE. 'also add some- | ) Aback Spstalrs 3 oP "Pm tellin' "surely raise the "558 thoy do 1 the Fanohot luz m fi i Ls A ! Tanta ic I Id Te oa 8 | wouldn't take one h D lars it," thus proving the high valuation es on the famous treatment. 1 had thought this he ham is yore awn ebt Valley man flung out'v "Which one?" = = "You saw him do it?" s "I heard the she "while I was on the roof. When poked round the. edge of the blind five minutes later, he was goin' over the papers in the i deck--and an automatic pistol was there right by his hand." . [Bi go Jum, Ho ot ck, the first da; 3 val in 1 and sifted the evidence for and against him. A stream of details, ¢ tugiti 0 impressions 'mental re cons "of ute oxi 'or one of so : James had been distinctly friendly to a" ; him. He had gone out of his way to He was alone?" "diy find bond for him when he had been} "At first he was. - In ests ine) He had tried to smooth over | te his brother an' Miss 'Has | diicaltis between him and Jack. | came into the room. She ed Kirby, agianst his Souivs, Tom : i cy to explain "had known 'uw | when she saw yore uncle an' m a agons of poli fainted. The r brother, the youn; Or am: Tien one, kinda caught her an' wou! by leased throu) her. He was struck all of a Would soon Te 1d zh Rimsclf. Yon 'sont os Hime Bs ors Oe Wyiiog . 0 see ; : ste; n to : ng looked at James, an' he suid, ay Go cou eontence in 'order that he you didn't--" That was all. No ni mi prove an asset rather na to finish. © course James denied it. { liability to his cause. The oil} broker te'd jumped up to help support Miss had readily agreed to protect Esther Harriman outa the room. 'Maybe a McLean from publicity, but the. rea- {coupla minutes later he came back gon for his forbearance was quite jelore. He went right straight back plain now. He had been protecting wo the desk, found irside of three sec- mself, not her. londs the legal document I told you I'd) The man's relation to Esther prov- {seen his uncle raadin', glanced it aver,'sd him selfish and without principle, arned to the hack page, jammed the| He had been willing to let his dead raper back in the cubby-hole, an' then ' uncle bear the odium of his misdeed. {switched off the light. A minute later| Yet beneath the surface of his cold {the light was switched off in the big manner James was probably Swept by {room, too. Then I' reckoned it was heady passions. His love tor Phyllis itime to beat it down the fire escape. Harriman had carried him beyond {1 did. I went back into the Wyndham prudence, beyond honor. He had dup- jcarryin' 'the clothes-line under my ed the uncle whose good will he had |coat, walked upstairs without meetin' carefully fostered for many years, | anybody, left the rope on the roof, an' and at the hour of his uncle's death 'got outa the house without being he had been due to reap the whirl- | Seen. nd. | "That's the whole story?" Kirby| The problem sifted down to two a. ship's a = said. factors, . One was ime el t.| The of the Lusita | "The The other was the temperament of were 330 fathoms long--nearly 2,000ft. stack o James. A man may be unprincipled swith a weight of 125 tons! Every | Did you fix the rope for a lariat' and yet draw the line at murder. He ink has to be carefully welded at the upon the roof or wait till you came may be a seducer and still lack the proper temperature. Such work re back to the fire escape?" oo. courage and the cowardice for a cold- oyeq infinite care, for in no case is I. "I fixed it on the roof--made the blooded killing. Kirby had studied his the saxing truer that the chain is onl loop an' all there. Figured I might cousin, but the man was more or less ng tru. 3 : oniy e seen if I stood around too long on of a sphinx to him. Behind those 48 Strong as the weakest link. On He--"Would you give me a kiss it 1 asked you for one?" She--*"No indeed--but if you stole one, what could I do?" - Minard's Liniment Heals Cuts ---- tas A Liner's Safety Chain. The terrible effects which might re- sult from carelessness' in a black: smith's work are well {illustrated by the great importance of every hk in chain of a ship's anchor. ' whole stery. 1'd swear it on a Bibles." of | oq hai wielded by the arm: of the village smithy he- instead, a a weight, to one of thousands of tens! gi * $i > x {unrivalled both by rail and | factuvers and for "the 'Montreal 360, ree of power in quantity end suit 'located, is certain to outstrip the k everything else being equal. | Canada, with her unique water-powers fortu Btely located In or ices to Hep industrial areas, with vast and va ; resources aw materials, and with transportation facilities water, offers to manu- abundant and- 'unusual opportunities for profitable trade and Investment. ' An analysis of- the development which teok place during 1923 discloses the fact that some 265,000 horse-power was added, thus bringing the total water-power installation in Canada to 8,228,000 horse-power. 'A more signifi cant feature, however, is the. large number of projects actnally in pro- gress of construction at the present 'time or actively in prospoet. These profects when- brought to completion within the next two years will add to Canada's total more than 900,000 horse- Power. i : Ontario Leads in Development. Among the proviuces, Ontario led in installation during the past year, with 146,000 -horse-power. This was chiefly comprised in additions to the Queens- ton and Ontario Power plants of the Ontario Hydro-Electric Power Commis. sion and in developments connected. with the mining industry in northern Ontario." Quebec was second, with some 44,000 -hamse.power comprised chiefly in additions to the Cedars plant Haight, Heat & Power | Conselidated, and in new plants for 'Price Brotiress & @o. at Chicoutimi nd 'the Lower Bt. Lawrence Power Company near'Metis. In Manitoba 28, 000 horse-power wwewe added by the 'Manitoba Power Compeny, and British cloasly alowed with 26,00 'horsepower accounted for hy A new | plant of th® Hast Siar. Power Company and additions to the pants of the Granby Consolidated Mining, J wer Company andithe Pacific Mills, Limited. Nova Scatia i d its total Dy 7,800 hawse- power In new developments for ithe Nova Scotia Power Commission and } the Avon River Power Oompany, and * With regal! to works at present un- der way or in active prospect, Québec is with a very extemsive pr the platform." [cold, calculating eyes what was he every single link in such a ¢hain the "So that you must 'a' been away thinking? safetP.of a glant vessel.mnd the lives quite a Jitte while: : (To be 'eontinued.) of perhaps 3.000. nooner. reckon so. TY a quarter ERIS AEA rliest = bla 1: 'an Sous or more," $e ly Minard's Liniment ror Dandruff. ihe hy holes inthe sides io "Can you locate more definitely the! A ? The Remans exact time you heard the 'shet?" Famous Little Rivers. | it Womiies Cetiamens tavent. No, I don't reckon I can." EV! érican accustomed to such ° sw Kirby asked only one move question; Tle American accus oh | using a bladder of goat akin. "You left next mornin' for Dypy|Iivers as the Misslssipply regards the| Nowadays enormous -dmgots of steel Valley, didn't you?" 'Thames as scarcely more than a glorl- | are heated in "Yes. Neue o' my business if they, fled brook; yet the Thames is "Hauld | graulic forging press ds taking the stuck Hull for it. He was as history," whilst the Mississippl 18 | p1gch of thes a sin, anyhow. If he didn%: the old, "Just water.' The Nile is the most anvil. The hammer mar, it wasn't because he didn't want famous large river, but it does not sur- strong n of | to. Maybe he did. The testimony at pass the tiny, insignificant Jerdan, comes, the inquest, as I read the papers, left which fs possibly the mest «famous : Xt tht maybe She blow on He head river in the world, i 1 unn ly . ol wasn't gonna ane in hot: To the Scot, the Tay cannot compete Kirby said nothing. He looked out! With "Bonnie Doon" or the Clyde with, of the window of his room without| the tiny Ayr, because these streams seeing anything. His were | are hallowed by the genius of Bufns, focused on the problem ore him, | the national poet. 3 . i The other man stirred uneasily.] One of the best-known streams in {"Think T did it?" he asked, the world is the Swanee River, a tiny The cattleman brought his + se in Florida, which a com- A * chose because its sound. fitted Oh, no! You didn't do it." poser .& ; : There was such quiet inty. in his song and sang Sweetly. It is topo his manner that Olson drew a deep! mall to be marked of anything but a | [breath of relief. "By Jupiter, I'm! largescale map. ol {gind to hear you say so, t made| ~The, Tweed, tod, is. celebrated in R | you change yore mind?" - . |song and story, but it has two tribu- | "Haven't changed it. Knew that all, tarfod which excel it--the Teviot, the jthe time--well, not all the time. I was scene of Chevy Chase, and the Yarrow | {millin? Jou over in mi e athe cen of the most famous of gli | wa, | bit while you were holdin! out.on me. | border ballads and the subject of two |" | Couldnt be dead sure whe YOU 'noems by Wordsworth 3 were hidin' what you knew just to s lot TIRE = oa hurt Hull or because of your own Into the Teviot runs an gven tinier guilt." 5 stream called Allan Water, on the "Still, I don't see how you're sure| banks of which lived wicertaln "mill. | From Warehouse, Fox's In yet. I might 'a' gone in iy the Win. | er's. daughter," whose! sad fate has Tu Waol, Navy Ble, Rack dow an' gunned. Cunningham like you! made thousands weep. % i 1 0 4% yds, Mall orde said." : Ce But all 'British rivers must yidld bi guarantee. Mill Yes, you might have, but you pride of place to that lovely little tri-| 397 8¢. Paul West, Moy didn't. I'm not goin' to have you ar-! py of the Severn, the Warwidk. |. Lr, / rested, Olson, but I want you to stay shire von, because of its BANKS IB Tae is ey in Denver for a day or two until this boy walked--it is possible he swam | .i8_ set We may nied Jou, ue ia, shad dni Ite witor =n Mj, Witness. It won't be long. 'gee; 8 ters=--who four expenses are paid White yo tined re." 5 : "I'm free to come a please - "Absolutely." Kirby look with level eyes. He spoki matter of course. Olson. You wouldn't stir yal | After washing lace and rinsing, A8ainst Joust, : well to remove all trace of soap, "dry tiff. I take a will hy water to ce th and before, puttivg oweets: enough ig ? pain FOR THE. on th on

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