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Durham Review (1897), 10 Jul 1924, p. 2

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‘a 6 a 1 4734. In this model the little miss may have the same flare effect in flounces and sleeves, that mark this new feature in her grown up sisters‘ dresses. This is a very pretty style; one that will develop well in organdy or voile. The Pattern is cut in 4 Sizes: 2, 4, 6, and 8 years. A 6â€"year size reâ€" quires 3% yards of 32â€"inch material. Pattern mailed to any address on receipt of 15¢ in silver, by the Wilson Publishing Co., 783 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Allow two weeks for receipt of pattern. Send 15¢ in silver for our upâ€"toâ€" date Spring and Summer 1924 Book of Fashions. DECORATING TRICKS ADD UPâ€"TOâ€"DATENESS. When entering certain rooms for the first time have you ever been at a loss to discover just what made it look "just right"* Nothing was elaborate. In fact, everything was quite ordiâ€" nary and simple, yet the whole room conveyed an atmosphere that was restful and so pleasing to the eye. _ There are many little tricks in deâ€" corating that help to create this atâ€" mosphere and I believe tricks with eurtains make delightful changes in our rooms that it does not pay us to averlook. A DAINTY PARTY FROCK. None Will Satisfy t.l;.: world. â€" Ask for a trial package. FREE SAMPLE of GREEN TEA UPON REQUEST. "SALADA,*"* TORONTO used to use ordinary soap. If you like to boil your white cotâ€" tons, Rinso will give you just the safe cleansing suds you need in the boiler. l? you use a washing machine, follow the advice of the big washing machine manufacturersâ€" Just soaking with this new kind of soup loosens all the dirt until a clean and spotless. However you do your it easy by using Rinso. Woman‘s Sphere NSO is ideal for any washâ€"day method you use. You do not to change any of your usual â€"just use Rinso where you Rinso is sold by all grocers and department stores likhe pure, delicioue the clothes Curtains of one color very different from the walls give too sharp a conâ€" trast. A band (on heavy material) or a braid (on light weight) containâ€" ing colors of both curtains and walls, will tie them together and reduce the contrast. Extending the curtains outâ€" side the casing will give the effect of width and help make room lower and more extended. A valance does this, too, besides giving the wanted color that furnishes variety. Curved lines better express richâ€" ness, and furniture with curving outâ€" lines will look more expensive than straight line furniture that costs more. ow pebad en eratn n oies etc.,i“‘if%?:‘; did say I might come in when add io mt efact of Tep00e 88906 I liked," she said as she greeted Joan, o Dundings and long low roonis t |"I‘ve had tea, thank you. Mhor, you the idea of repose. Lov‘v.' wide MasseS paven‘t been to see me toâ€"day." give the feeling of stability, while the‘ "I would have been," Mhor assured slender lines, as church spires and her, "but Jean said I‘d better not. Do skyscrapers, give feelings of exaltaâ€" you invite me to come toâ€"morrow?" tion, action. "I do." Straight lines, especially vertical) ‘"There, Jean," said Mhor. "You ones. also mavy mean dignitv. stiffness. Can‘t unâ€"vite me after that." Straight lines, especially vertical ones, also may mean dignity, stiffness, austerity; as opposed to the buoyancy, grace, and yieldingness of curved lines. The small room will do better with curves instead of straight lines, allâ€" over patterns instead of stripes. Straight line furniture in a room demands more color and ornament and design to offset its austerity. Placing furniture carefully is anâ€" ;}; other trick that will add spaciousness ag and repose to small rooms. In small see raoms the centre must be left empty ro« to give a feeling of space. The long rif way of furniture and rugs must be C« placed the long way of the room, with ge few opposing cross lines or cross t}i corners. | Should a room be too long, place the furniture with its longest sides across the short sides of the room. Raise the ceiling by making it lighter and of smoother finish. The mind wants to see likeness in dimension but not sameness. _ This principle makes the square room or the too long room unpleasing. In the one we see sameness, in the other we fail to grasp likenesses. By these tricks we change apparent dimenâ€" A ceiling almost as dark as sides, and of rough surface, or brought down on side walls, seems lower than it is. Gea prqduce_d !n' 1f you use a W ashing Machine, soak your clothes in the R’:mo suds as usual. Inthe morning add more Rinso solution and work the machine. T henrinse and dryâ€" you will have a c sweel snow â€" D LEVER BROTHERS TORONTO iJ CHAPTER V.â€"(Cont‘d.) lthe talile pluyi‘nflnnt bei:;lg‘ u$mfi.‘ 4 Pamela was stitching at her embroidâ€" Jean watched with | delight BC‘ ory, Peter Reid sat shading his eyes rather dl!figu!t guest blossom into from the light with his hand. :f,:fif,“‘x' heÂ¥ao°l‘:! l:ire ‘l‘?;kmg Mt:: Jean knelt down on the rug and: n o m 4 s "‘;{ held out her hands to the blazing fire. | ere for a week and rested and ’rs.l "It mustiie sad to be old and rich," M‘Cosh cooked you ,“‘M" nourhhmg she said softly, almost as if she wm‘ food and Mhor didn‘t make too muc | speaking to Kerself. "It is so very noine, I‘im sure you would feel 94it°} cortain that we can carry nothing out| well again. And it does seem such a} of this world I read somewhere ;ny:o pay hotel bills when we wuntiof & man who, oft éver)’ birthday, “vei ou here." _ P hi Fi t Hotel ° bills! Peter Reid looked 2WAY ®ome of his postessiont, so that sharply at her. Did she imagine, this) 77 q weighted witi them." She looked girl, that hotel bills were of any moâ€";:p and gaught the gaze of Peter Reid ment to him? Then he looked down‘ FX.4 on her intently. "It‘s rather a at his shabby clothes and rec.-lled;nice idea, don‘t you think, to give thgltr; lc‘onversation and owaxeglthat h"‘awuy all the superfluous money and mistake w t unjusti " x But hnwa:xrfnn:‘dr:gll:sni i.f \:n;! "I"hn,lzland.s' plctureg ‘x)d j'eW?ll’LSYgl'yEl’ling l Pamela shook hands and at once proceeded to make herself so charmâ€" ing that Peter Reid was galvanized into a spirited conversation. Pamela \had brought her embroideryâ€"frame ‘ with her, and she sat on the sofa and sorted out silks, and talked and laughâ€" |ed as if she had sat there off and on |all her life. To Jean, looking at her, it seemed impossible that two days ago none of them had beheld her. It seemedâ€"absurdly enoughâ€"that the ‘room could never have looked quite right when it had not this graceful creature with her soft gowns and her arls, her embroideryâ€"frame and ggaped, brightâ€"hued silks, sitting by the fire. | "Miss Jean, won‘t you sing us a song? I‘m convinced that you sing Scots songs quite perfectly." | \ _ Jean laughed. "I can sing Scots: songs in a way, but I have a voice |about as big as a sparrow‘s. If it \would amuse you I‘ll try." | 1 So Jean sat down to the piano and sang "Proud Maisie," and "Colin‘s! \Cattle," and one or two other old songs. ...‘ ...‘ . T 4C *Wn i Hotel bills! Peter Reid looked sharply at her. Did she imagine, this girl, that hotel bills were of any moâ€" ment to him? Then he looked down at his shabby clothes and recalled their conversation and owned that her mistake was not unjustifiable. _ _ But how extraordinary it was! The instinct that makes ple wish to stand well with the ric?(:nd powerful he could understand and commend, but the instinct that opens wide doors to the shabby and the unsuccessful was not one that he knew anything about; it was certainly not an instinct for this world as he knew it. Just as they were finishing tea Mrs. M‘Cosh ushered in Miss Pamela Reston. "Indeed she can‘t," said Pamela. "Jock, this is the book I told you about. . . . Please, Miss Jean, don‘t let me disturb you." "We‘ve finished," said Jean. "May I introduce Mr. Reid?" "Indeed I do. It‘s one I like very much. I have it here in this little book." She struck a few simple cords and began to sing: it was a liltâ€" ing, haunting tune, and the words were "old and plain." "O, the lift is high and blue And the new mune glints through On the bonnie cornâ€"fields 0‘ Strathâ€" airlie: . Ma ship‘s in Largo Bay And I ken weel the way Up the steep, steep banks o‘ Strathâ€" airlie. "I wonder," said Peter Reid, "if you know a song my mother used to sing â€"‘Strathairlie‘?" O, the land is fine, fine, I could buy it a‘ for mine For ma gowd‘s as the stooks in Strathairlie; But I fain the lad would be Wha sailed ower the saut sea When the dawn rose grey on Strathâ€" When I sailed ower the sea A laddie bold and free The corn sprang green on Strathâ€" airlie! When I come back again It‘s an auld man walks his lane Slow angi ]siud ower the fields o‘ Strathâ€" airlie. O‘ the shearers that I see No‘ a body kens me, Though I kent them a‘ in Strathairlie; An‘ the fisherâ€"wife I rus, Can she be the braw lass I kissed at the back o‘ Strathairlie? In the too large room the mind canâ€" not grasp the dimensions or their comparisons. A too large room will lack in the quality of intimacy. Furâ€" niture is apt to look too small in proâ€" portion. Put in more furniture and place it in groups. Break up long spaces, reduce the light, use contrast, heavy furniture and hangings, deep and advancing colors and rough texâ€" tures. The size of rooms is apparentâ€" ly lessened by having all furniture, pictures, ornaments, etc., large and heavy. sions; we make our rooms satisfying There are certain other require ments in decoration for emotional satâ€" isfaction or feelings. Definite laws or principles bring about required reâ€" sults that the mind accepts as beauâ€" tifal. When you buy new furniture or change the fixed decorations you can make your home what you want it. In the meantime, try some of the tricks of the decorator‘s trade. Jean rose from the piano. Jock had rot out his books and had begun his essons. Mhor and Poter were under Sol:;m Small Boyâ€""Penny plain, please. It‘s better value for the money." Bhopmanâ€""You may have your choiceâ€"penmy plain or twoâ€"pence airlie." PENNY PLAIN Copyright by George H. Doran Ce. BY O. I‘d make children smile. There‘s no fun or satisfaction got from giving |big sums to hospitals and thingsâ€" ‘that‘s all right for when you‘re dead. I want to make happiness while I‘m alive. I don‘t think a million pounds l:lvould be too much for all I want to 0"’ | "Aw, Jean," said Mhor, "if you had |a million pounds would you buy me {a bicycle?" | "A bicycle," said Jean, "and a moâ€" tor and an aeroplane and a Shetland ipony and a Newfoundland pup. I‘ll imake a storvy for you in bed toâ€"night ‘all about what you would have if I were rich." "And Jock, too?" Being assured that Jock would not ibe overlooked, Mhor grabbed Pater ‘round the neck and proceeded to babâ€" ‘ble to him about bicycles and aeroâ€" we have, and stand stripped, as it were, ready when we get the word to come, to leap into the beyond " _ . "Yes," said Jean. "I know it‘s quite easy for me to speak in that lordlÂ¥ way of disposing of possessions, for haven‘t got ony to disYose of." "Then," said Pamela, "we are to take it that you are ready to spring across any minute?" _ * w"]";'rr;e'lu"s;);k;"firitâ€"f "There speaks sweet and twenty," she said. _ "So far as goods and gear go; but I‘m rich in other things. I‘m pretty heavily weighted by David, and Jock, and Mhor." +3 T S Wat. _ _Then Peter Reid spoke, still with his hand over his eyes. . no "Once you begin making money it clings. How can you get rid of it?" "I‘m saving it up for a bicycle," the Mhor broke in, becoming aware that the conversation turned on money. "I‘ve got half a crown and a thruâ€" pennyâ€"bit and fourpenceâ€"ha‘penny in pennies: and I‘ve got a duster to clean it with when I‘ve got it." _ _ _ _ _ Jean stroked his head. "I don‘t think you‘ll ever be overburdened with riches, Mhor, old man. But it must be tremendous fun to be rich. I love books where suddenly a lawyer‘s letâ€" ter comes saying that someone has left them a fortune." ______ * "Oh, well," said Jean, "of course they would come first, but, oh, I would do such a lot of things! I‘d fiind out where money was most needed and drop it on the people anonymously so that they wouldn‘t be bothered about thanking anyone. I would creep about like a benficent Puck and take worried frowns away, and straighten out things for tired people, and, above all, "When you‘re poor you‘ve got to dream," she said. "Oh, must you go, Mr. Reid? But you‘ll come back toâ€" morrow, won‘t you! We would honâ€" estly like you to come and stay with I am going back to London in a day or two. I am obliged to you for your hospitality, especially for singing me ‘Strathairlie.‘ I never thought to hear it again. I wonder if I might trouble you to write me out the words." planes, pups. "But take the book," said Jean, runâ€" ning to get it and pressing it into his hands. "Perhaps you‘ll like other songs in it you used to know and like Take it to keep." Take it to keep." Pamela dropped her embroidery frame and watched the scene. Jean "Thank you," said Peter Reid, "but looked apologetically at her motors and Newfoundland ISSUE No. 272â€"24. TORONTO noap" AiPE t\ oufon " d P uk PP oo Promtireg fregin pao viey prec were ng fragile an pre cious. Pamela was puzzled bv;rtle exâ€" pression on his face. He did not seem so much troubled by ttenslft as amâ€" nndâ€"sardoniculli am i . "Thank you," he said. And again, "Thank you!" "Jock will go down with you to the hotel," Jean said, explnimni,e when‘ the visitor demurred, that the road was steep and not very well lighted. _ ul go too," said Mhor, "me and Peter." _ "Well, come straight back. Goodâ€" bye, Mr. Reid. I‘m so glad you came to see The Rigs, but I wish you could have stayed. . . . ." "Is he an old friend?" Pamela askâ€" ed when the cavalcade had departed. l "I never saw him before toâ€"day. He once lived in this house and he came ‘back to see it, and he looks ill and 1 |think he is poor, so I asked him to \come and stay with us for a week." "My dear child, do you invite ever stranger to say with you if you thin! he is poor?" L en ars NnR "Of course not. But he looked so lonely and lost somehow, and he doesn‘t seem to have anyone belonging to him, and I was sorry for him." "And so {ou gave him that song book you value so much?" ‘"Yes," said Jean, looking rather seemed pleased, don‘t you think? It‘s a pretty song, ‘Strathairlie,‘ but it‘s not a 'pukka old oneâ€"it‘s early Vicâ€" torian." * ashamed. "But," she brightened, "he "Miss Jean, it‘s a marvel to me that you ”have anythin@ left belonging to you." _ x an weate + d in "Oh, but wouldn‘t that be rather familiar? You see, you are soâ€"soâ€"" r“gtricken in years," Pamela supâ€" plued. _ _ "P sb c 28 _ "Don‘t call me Miss Jean!" "Jean, then; but you must call me Pamela." "Noâ€"butâ€"well, you are rather imâ€" pressive you know. It would be like calling Miss Bathgate ‘Bella‘ to her face. Howeverâ€"Pamelaâ€"â€"" (To be continued.) Discourage fishing, hunting and trapping for the mere sport of killing. Get rid of the steel trap, toy weapons and war games. Minard‘s Liniment Heals Cuts. oL o fiavefl”sb’d Alv;yibem lable 30,000 ISLAND ROUTE butit mast be Folder and Time Table showing list of Resorts, Boating, Fishing, Camping, etc. When planning your 1924 Vacation write Box 862, Midland, Ont. l"s not just take musta® f ‘ ‘ ‘ %A & eE CLCa oft just custom that makes people ; mustard with their meals. Must-: [ _ 2A healmns to assimiâ€" RESTORING WILTED LETTUVCE. Nothing seems more hopeless than a head of wilted lettuce, yet in lettuce as in life, "while there‘s life there‘s hope." Wash the woebegone vegetable in cold water, shaking out all surplus moisture, and imprison it in a stone 4 Loooz uie o 00W Li PVAVAACAE ERES T OmE on ‘ a head of wilted lettuce, yet in lettuce as in life, "while there‘s life there‘s hope." Wash the woebegone vegetable in cold water, shaking out all surplus moisture, and imprison it in a stone milk crock, covering it tightly. This treatment of solitary confinement will work wonders with the erstwhile hopeâ€" less looking lettuce. In a short time it will emerge as a creditable speciâ€" men. This same method of procedure will keep lettuce fresh and crisp for several days. could lick that thug?" "Nothing but the thought Your friends do not need explanaâ€" tions, and your enemies will not beâ€" lieve them. For Sore Feetâ€"Minard‘s Liniment. Nothing But the Thought. "Whatever made Smith think he Keen‘s 4xeP in a number of lodges surrounding a main building, the whole known as Jasper Park Lodge. This rendezrvous has been made the centre of activities for Jasper Park, from which radiate the bhundreds of riding, motoring and exploration parties which every sumâ€" mer seek in increasing numbers to as similate the beauties of this wildest of accessible mountain wildernesses. There are more than 100 mountain peaks within the 4,400 square miles enclosed in Jasper Park‘s boundaries. Many of these have not yet been named, and only a few ever have been climbed. The park naturally is a mec ca for adventurers who find their great est thrills in the periloUs ascents of unexplored peaks. The Alpine Club of Canada assails the Jasper Park mountains every summer, and the Ap palachian Club of the United States has planed to attempt several of the mightiest of the Jasper mountains dur ing the season now opening. Experi enced Swiss guides, whose lives hav« been spent among the Alps of their native land, have been brought to Can ada to help in the conquest of these newest ranges. | The German flag ranked an easy second in Argentina‘s trade before the war, and, despite the surrender of the German mercantile marine it has almost regained that position #ince the signing of the peace treaty, ac cording to shipping statistics just pub | lished, says a Buerios Ayres despatch. |_It probably will be a close thing be | tween the Italians and Germans as ito who will} occupy second place in Argentina‘s carrying trade this year, but it is believed that the Germans will win back their old position in the course of two or three years as every month sees a new Germar liner in these waters. France and the United States would appear to be dropping lInck in the race. ; Germans are migrating by thou»â€" ands to Argentina, which affords speâ€" | clal incentives and attractions for them. Gerimar steamship lines have been lately specializing in what may _be termed second class or one clase passenger steamers. German vessels toâ€"day bring the greater proportion of :m European passengers to Argenâ€" Most of the Jasper mountains are glacier hung and some strikingly beauâ€" tiful phenomena are to be found among these fields of trotured ice and snow. Travelers, who are especially interested in these formations, find the Columbia ice field, the most reâ€" markable outside Alaska, within easy reach of the park, although it lies beâ€" yond the actual boundary line. A Wild Life Sanctum.. Chief of the peaks inside Josper Park is Mount Edith Cavell, the 11 000 foot precipitous and smnowâ€"covered mountain named in memory of Eng land‘s martyred war nurse. There ar more than 1,000 trails and roads, hav ing a total length of several hundred miles, which lead climbers, riders and motorists through the park, and many ofthem were blazed before the white man came by Indians, fur traders and the original white discoverers of Canâ€" ada who passed through the Athabasâ€" ka Valley on their way to the Pacific The Athabaska Pase, which is the route the railroad now follows, was discovered in 1811 by David Thompâ€" son. Jasper Park is a wild life sanctuary Mountain sheep and mountain goat bear, caribou, moose, deer and elk, as well as the smaller fur bearing an! mals abound, unmolested. The park contains hundreds of pellucid lakes, fed by the glacier clothed mountains, and there is plenty of sport for the Asherman. ‘There is golf and tennis as well, suposing one has the hardi hod to practice those ultraâ€"sophistiâ€" cated amusements in the midst of such serenely awesome surroundings. On the British Columbia side of Jasper Park is Mount Robson, 13,068 feet high, and rightly named the monâ€" arch of the Canadian Rockies. An ares of 840 square miles around this «t pendous upthrist of glacier Lhung rock is reserved by the British Columbic government as a provincial park, and named for the mountain. The Jasper Park tour takes in Mount Robson as a matter of cours., so that the two parks have become practically identiâ€" fied as one, although Jasper is a Do minion reserve while Robson is a pro vincial enclosure. One of the earliest of stili popular novels, "Mon Quixote," is rlso one of the longest; it is estimated a contain 461,006 words. Germany Recovers Grip on Trade of Argentina. KEEP AUTO ENGINE COOL The principle of engine cooling why it is necessary for a cooling : tem to be functioning properly every automobile are among the thi motorists should understand. mutomobile engine derives" its po from heat. A charge of gaso mixed with air, is taken into the inder of the engine in a comparal ly cool state. In the cylinder it is compressed ignited. As it burns the tempera is greatly increased and the pres in that cylinder increases in pro tion to the increase in the temp POWER FOR DRIVING. 1 Thus power is derived for dri the machine. However, the exces temperature, which runs up to 8,000 Fahrenheit, heats the wo parts of the engineâ€"that is, the tons and cylindersâ€"to such a d that unless some of the heat is j pated it would be impossible to nt tain a film of oil between these w ing parts. Consequently they w bind or stick and the engine w not run. The metal parts forming the | bustion chamber also would ge hot that the incoming charge of would be ignited when contrad with them. If the engine could at all under this condition cons able power would be lost. It is necessary, therefore, to C off enough heat to keep the wor parts at a temperature that will mit proper lubrication and insure trol of the ignition. On this act every automobile is provided wi eooling system. Two systems â€" engine, namely, hb are in common us system the heat i the cylinders by air, which is cau eylinders. The c eration is incrc many projections ders, which, in t mrea for the air these is ready exi engine. the air carri mirâ€"cooled sy: by. The heat is absorh eylinders by water carri eurrounding the cylinder then flows to the radiat« mir extracts the heat fr A leat As I m Or w Refl« The The d Or w My tw More â€" Wit 4ng after sun dowl! Top Flat Te Nightingale, yo fint!" by & a N The it A Sonnet th A Kick Cameee watt n wa t * the TY it

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