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The Olds Gazette 1926-01-01 - 1927-12-30
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1927-08-05
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° THE GAZETTE OLDS. ALBERTA, , \A Have You Blemishes or If you wish a skin clear of blemishes and other annoying eruptions begin to-day the regular use of Cuticura Soap, as- sisted by Cuticura Ointment. No other method is so agreeable, so often effective and so economical. Sample ach Free “Btenhouse, 1 ment 26 and bie, “Talcam = Clear Smooth Skin? By Mail, Address, Canadian Depot: Price, Soap 2c, Oint- Guticurs’ 5! Shaving Stick 25c. BY NELLIE COPYRIGHT, PAINTED FIRES L. McCLUNG. CANADA, 1925. | ~ CHAPTER I1l.—Continuea Helmi had the quality Miss Abbie} lacked; she was not afraid of any- thing. Miss Abbie read it in her eyes, || in hef carriage, in-her poise. and for that reason she was attracted to her.) Ali her timid life Miss. Abbie had craved io be fearless and ‘unconcerned ; “I can give yeu references.” said Miss Abbie eagerly. | pleased to have you come yourself te [gee my home if you would -be ‘so | good.” | In all her jane experience in dealing jah the. public it was the first time , anyone had suggested that Margaret “and I wonld be | ror she had iooked into which did not | make her face look wavy. How ever, when the minister's sister, the psycho-analyst. pointed out to Miss Abbie that Helmi seemed to be grow- | ings conscious of her personal appear- !anee Miss Abbie dismissed. the mat- | ter loftily. | “One must net blame her, Miss | Terry,” she said in that sweet ton? Sh? |always adopted when'she was work- }ing toward a climax; “the curves of a young face are good to look at. There | are certain privileges we must accord | to youth; my dear. Now, with you | | ' jand me the. glass cinnot exercise the -same fascination, though, I fear it will | not be. counted to ‘us for righteous- | ness‘that we resisted.” Miss Abbie noted with some alarm ; the progress Helmi was ‘making in adapting: herself. to her new . Iife. Helmi’s hair was no longer ‘brushed ‘straight back, braided and tied with a black ribboii.- It came down over her cars now. in the “buns” so favor- ed at that time. The. high collars Qu Helmi’s print blouses. had: disap- | peared, and quite sufficient white neck was revealed; and. when.she took. her down to see the stores she noticed ‘how she Hngered in front of the | pretty. dresses; and when they came to.a millinery window Helmi stopped} ae z Hew. To Plan Girded Pathways | Planning of Pattiwaye May Work. a Transformaticn In the Garden “Thoughtful and clever planning of pathways may work a transformation in a garden writes Charles Wellford Leavitt in thé July number of “Arts and Decoration Magazine.” Ingenious a tiny estate seem much larger, and interest and variety to what is really a small plot of ground, leading to as- cents and’ surprisés. pleasantly ar- aranged,” he continues. “Paths may divide. up a large and imposing es- tate, giving portions of it an intimate secluded air, lending to others the ‘dignity of.a Versailles, making small er units and gardens within gardens. “We think of gardens largely in terms of trees and flowers, yet a gar den would be simply a picture to be observed from porch or highway were jit not for the paths that entice us to jenter and wander. Paths are the ar- | teries of. the garden throygh which | life passes. Paths persuade. first the /eye. and then the foot to exploration, jand. lead one on and on. ‘Here fs a - broad gravel pathway that leads to a ‘terrace. What lies beyond? We must \investigate. There a tantalizing series winding and curving paths may make : A few friends dese tion Po Wags 2 BY ray clears your home of mosquitoes ies.° It also kills bed bugs, roaches, ants, and their eggs. Fatal to insects but harmless to mankind. Will not stain. Get Flit today. Distributed in Canada by Fred J. Whillow & Co., Limited, Toronto DESTROYS Flies Mosquitoes Moths Ants Bed Bugs Roaches How Plants Feel -— about public. opinion, That was the | ‘Kenny should~ look at references. { of stepping stones dips behind the “ if This biggest thing in life, not to be afraid | ' She had been asked to produce them. | so suddenly that Miss. Abbie collid- ted d. cb’ ts wanderluse? No Dividing Line. Between Life. Pro- Little Helps For Week of anyone. -Miss Abbic had heard it but not to Took at them. She wrin-/ed with her and Helm did not even) cess of Plants and Animals : 3 put very wickedly orice. It made her | Kled her forehead in deep thought. {Saye it! f ie : In his many writings and: lectures} Abstain from all appearance of evil. shudder at the time. but it-fascinated ,Magele Kenny knew that a hotel with | . Miss Abbie felt ‘herself at a loss in A Musical Education to learned societies, Sir. Jagadis|—1 Thess. v. 22. her too-—“So live that you can look its comers and goers was no place-for “Icnow what to do about this. Evi- ‘| Chunder “Bose, of India, has already | God dc does not say, “Be beautiful,” “Be ¢Helml;_besides_she liked the genteel . .dénily Helmi had a deep Jove for fin-| Fond Parents Very quently _Nip-—-explained,-amd-ti-a measure the -whote-wortd itr the face-andteiHit to. £0 to—” Miss Abbie could not even think the word, She struck the horse with the lines instead. He, believing her to be merely knocking eff a fly switched his tail appreciatively. Miss Abbie would adopt the girl; yes, she would.. If the girl was open for adoption she would be adopted by Miss Abigail J. Moore, Spinster. Helmi directed her to the Yale Ho- eu, and Miss Abbie, tying Jasper to the ring in the sidewalk. entered. Ty- ing Jasper anywhere, at any time, was what is called now. a: complimentary gesture. They. entered, Ielmi striding through the front corridor down the narrow hall, where coats and hats of the diners hung, and se through.to.the Kitchen. The “help” were not allow- ed the use of the front door, but Hel- mi reasoned -that on her off day she had temporarily ceased to be. help. Therefore the front doer. Miss -Abbie, glowing with her new resolve, was brave even to reckless- ness. bees : “ft found this young. girl. being chased by two young. rufilans,-.and! brought -her hoine, to the cook, who siood in the middle of the floor with along complicated! “L would like | can-opener iii her hand. to know mhore about her if may. interests me; | am a worker girls. She speaks no Dnglish, I see.’ Maggie Kenuy politely handed Miss Abbie the one vacant chair, and laid down the can-opener before replying. “It's litlé 1 know myself, ma’‘an, only that my sister in Saint Paul sent She her to me to look after—and it's a. handful, ehe is, Ma’am, though a good - girl as I ever caw in ler work, and smart and willin’. - She’s.a quare girl fn the sudden way her teniper rises. “Do you think I might have her to come and live with me? I am all alone and have a little means.” Miss Abbie blushed: becomingly. “She seems: so lonely here, not able to speak, that I feel sorry for her, and besides, I need _someone. ¥ would be-good to her.” Maggle considered. the eee critically. Sere : THEY SUFFER. NO MORE- Two Women Owe Health | to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound St. Adolphe, Manitoba.—‘‘I was very weak and eh great paifis during - my periods so that I could not sweep the floor. The pains were in the right side and ex- tended to the left and then down- wards. It seemed as if the body was heavy and upside down. It is for these troubles I took the Vegeta- : ble Compound. I saw about it in a paper and one wo- man prevailed on meto take it. It has helped me in every way, the _ are less, and | have more appe- Itisa pleasure to recommend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound to other women.’’—Mrs. J. L. COURCHAINE, St. Adolphe, Manitoba. Found Great Relief Toronto, Ont. —“lam at the Change of Life with hot flashes, dizziness, weakness and nervousness. I had head noises and was short of breath. 1 was this way about six months when Tread about Lydia. E. Pinkham’s Veg- etable Compound in the newspapers. I have taken eight I bottles so far and found great relief.’’— Mrs.R.J.SAL- MON, 112 Lawlor Ave., Toronto, Ont, W. N. U. 1689 said Miss Abbie! lady who offered. references.” Miss Abbie won. CHAPTER IV. jimpeachable — neighborhood, where | everyone had a sleeping porch on the grass at the back in the centre of which a clothes-line reel stood like 2 wind-inverted umbrella every day ex- cept Monday.. On Monday :the ware! wires bloomed and fluttered in the breeze, running before it in vain cir- | cles. A sleeping porch in front, a square of grass behind, and a decent little mortgage covering all—but so! arranged that one paid the interest tn | the form of rent. The building agency made that very. clear. own house and pay as you live,” was a sentence oft repeated. Miss Abbie kept two impeccable boarders, who came and. went: noise- | lessly, left. their.rubbers at the door, came in early, had breakfast at -the same hour every morning except Sun- | day, when they had nene at all; who | Shovelled the snow from the walk in winter; sent her a white lily at East- | Miss Abbie J. Moore lived in a Mittle:! | neat house in Chestnut Street, in an | front of their house, with-a square of. “Live in your | lery. and Miss Abbie trembled for her | | When she thought of- the evils that | are in. the ‘world: “And I don’t} | blame her,” she. thought, “it’s ‘all ; men's faults after all! They w; | to ‘see women dressed up like pea- ; cocks; they won't take much notiée of them if they are not. I know I was always the homespun, flat-héeled, rainy-day-bat kind, and what good did | it do me? | Sjill, she will have to be Edney When Miss. Abbie went into the | | kitchen to tell Melmi what to get for | dinner she found her busy polishing , the tin dishpan so that she could see ; her face in it. So absorbed was she | )in her pleasant task she did not hear | ; Miss Abble coming. Then. and there Miss Abbie decid- ,ed in favor of “snuff brown” for ‘Helmi’s gingham dresses. _She had , thought of henne and burnt orange. | Actoss the corner from Miss Abbie’s | prim little house a shingled bungalow | | with -mullioned windows. «raised its | symmetrical roof among the. trees. Miss “Abbie said it looked like a Cali- | fornia house with its sun-porch in front and sleeping verandah screen- “ed from the world with green and | white canvas at the back. . It was set among , er, and a red cyclamen at Christmas; |exactly in the middle of the plushy who paid on the first day of the month | jlawn with liac bushes at intervals all , &xcept when the first came on Sun. around the fence; a Maltese cross of day. and in that case made the pay- | yeq and white geraniums; a bedge of | ) ment on Saturday. g | blue delphiniums in front of the Jat: | Miss Abble referred to ‘them _ as tice fence which dividéd the © front | “Mr. A" and “Mr. B,”—but whether. jawn from the back garden; window | this gave any clue to the initials of | poxes of red geraniums, white daisies’ their names remains a matter of ani blue lobéelia, upstairs and down; | doubt. : ‘a suinmmer-house grown over with -can- Miss Abbie’s house reflected her ex- | ary yine, a caragana- hedge, neatiy | cellent character, She . be'leved having things about her plain but | cor -eted by hedge growers. . good. The. Wood in her house was ed, indeed, life the ‘oak. the curtains net, the hangings a home ofa siibstantial citizen. sedate brown. “snuff” brown to be. (To be continued) more exact... The carpet'on the living) ga ee eS room and on the stairs was of the ~ Japan’s celta Royal Family dullest.siades of brown and fawn she | urea) could get, and the pattern of geome-| No Other Dynasty Has Been So Long trieal design, Her pictures were steel | Lived engravings and enlarged ‘pictures of) ft is difficult to realize the anti- ‘erim visaged departed relatives. | quity of the Japanese royal family, |‘ “P?hat’s Mother, the Winter before | for it goes back. 2,500. years: Em- | she -died—it was working on her then, | peror Yoshihito ‘is the one hundred | but we didn’t know it. This is Father and twenty-third of the Yamato: house | itaken when he lay on-his death-bed. | to hold the scepter. Fran the begin- The man came to the house. j ning there has been no other. dynas- It look- in trimmed to that flat surface so much | perfectly | kept! This ig Aunt Mary. She ain’t lookin’ | very cheerful but: you can’t wonder; she went straight from the doctor’s ‘office when he told her he was afraid ‘ghe hadn’t very long to live, This is; my youngest sister. She never was strong; her kidney floated all-the time | and killed her at last, Shé knew it was gettin’ worse, so she got one of these for each of us the last. Christ- mas. In Miss Abbie’s family it. seemed an “intimation.” Her “steel engravings were sombre in character, too— “The Stag at. Bay,” bleak, lonely, desperate; The Doctor sitting. by the sick child; Wellington terloo, with dead men under horses’ feet. Helmi now for the first time in her life had a room to -herself, and. her own little bed, a gorgeous one in her eyes with its chaplet of white enam- ribbon at both head and foot. The top quilt was a patched one of blue and white, in the pattern known as the “Pavements of New York.” chilly nights there was a small eider- down flowered in appleblossoms, she saw there, for it was the first mfr. , that a photograph was something of | greeting Blucher on the fields of Wa- | their | elled flowers tied with a bow of brass and for, Miss Abble wag grieved to see in} Helmi a growing tendency to stand | before the mirror In the elmwood | stand. She was attracted by wliat | ity in Japan. Perhaps this bas some | thing to do with. the Japanese. belief that tlieir emperor is descended from the. gods. Jimu Tenno, settled his peo- ple in Japan and founded the royal | line in 660 B.C, Yoslithito, like every other wielder of the Japanese ‘scep- jter since, is his direct descendant. In all history there fs nothing else like this. .The Egyptian dynasties. were | mostly short-lived. The Chinese im- perial howses came and . went. The whole series ‘of Roman emperors last- }ed brief periods compared with, this ‘| Japanese line. The English, French, | Spanish German, Russian royal hous- P es were kaleidoscope beside the Jap- | anese. Better ‘Price For Sugar Beets |' Another 50 cents per ton for beets delivered during 1926 is annotinced by T. George Wood, manager of the Can- |’ Factories at Raymond, | ‘This means a distribution of | |adian Sugar | Alberta. about $20,000 in the beet-growing area. The beet growers will have re- ceived $7.25 per ton, ' addition, an increase of $1.25 over the | 1925 price. Higher sugar contents | |and higher prices have made this “rise possible, Mr. Wood explained. The 16-acre plot of land on which the White TIlouse stands was pur- vhased originally for $1,600. Now it is valued at $10,500,000: with this latest | Budding Musicians If 94 per cent. of the young hopefuls whom fond parents: consider embry- nic Paderewskis drop by the waysidé | before the. third grade is reached, the ' fault Hes. mainly with those same:fond | parents in the opinion of Nancy Arm- | strong, writing in the July issue. of “The Musical Observer.” » . “My best sight readers,” says Miss | Armstrong, “have been in the family | where the mother and governess did. ‘not know music. My pupils from six | years and older, of average mentality, who do not have supervised ‘practice have gone far ahead of those who have help at each practice period.” - Miss Armstrong: points out that as | the parents usually expect some re- ‘sults after the first few lessons: the | child is often taught pieces. simply by note. She says, “the longer a child is jtaught by: imitation the more diMeult ‘it is to teach, him to read. music, as he has learned. that he can play with- ont bothering about the notes, and the Fattention remains where it was at |first focused, on the hands. and keys and much: lesson, time is required tu ‘undo this and. train him to watch the notes, and gain the touch system.” Newspapers Good Educators Newspapers: are the only reading | matter. of many. adults. Children, who | ‘learn to: read newspapers intelligent- | ily, discriminating between the impor- | tant and unimportant, have acquired | the basis for a liberal education which will grow broader and richer with every passing year. They have} | acquired the habit of really thinking about what they ead, discerning ; from it the trend. of history, the. j;mareh of science and the progress of | the art of ane: —Cleveland | Plain; | Dealer Breaking the News The troupe of performing animals were to be presented to the public at an Irish musie hall. when tragedy stalked, and the hyena died. The! trainer did not know how to report this loss to the proprietor, for that gentleman was a person of violent | temper. A few minutes before the cur- | tain was rung. up: the proprietor shouted, Mike?” “Yessir,” replied Mike, “all excitp the laughin’ hyena, and he ain’t got nothing to laugh at!” The largest basket in existence re- | cently was: exhibited In’ New York. After the dimensions of railroad tun- nels had been determined, it was sent across the continent on a flat car. 'Diarrheea Summer Complaint HE ALWAYS USES Mr. T. EF. McGr } Alta., writes:—“ Over my mother used to give us | Extract of Wild Strawberry for diarrhoea ‘or, McLennan, orty years ago De Fowler's andsummer complaint. All through the years since then when troubled with an excessive looseness of the bowels I have been accustomed to take a few doses of the same old, reliable remedy and it always seems to have the desi effect, no matter what the cause.” Don’t Accept a Substi.ute This valuable preparation has been on the market for the past 80 years; put eed only ne ao Ts Milbu urn Co., Limited, pee eS ized, the results of his {vestigations | 2° aught that man in man’ will over into plant life.. Briefly, he has de-: Only “Be good.” the pends Father monstrated that there is no dividing | cries: line between the life process of }We seek to mount the still ascending plants and that of animals. and that; Stalr, plants have a nervous system and a Ha! pe Glory, and ‘the: crowns physiological organization which are) we fey to fall heart: sickened in in all.important respects similar to|- despair. those of animals. | The purposes. of life misunderstood By a series of amazingly delicate | Baffle and wound us, but: God only experiments, rendéred possible by an! would : ; That we should heed His . simple electrical apparatus which he himself | words, “Be good!” has invented for the purpose, he has shown how the plant rUsponds Goodness is the investment that Hike the animal, to external stimuli; I eater! fails. In the music of the harp how it can’be depressed and elated, | that trembles round the world, it. is hurt and healed, caused to faint and! ; the insisting on thig which thrills us. be revived, all but killed by a poison | —Henry David Theres and revived by an antidote; in -fact made to behave very much as a frog or even & man in Nke circumstances. | RED HOT JULY DAYS : These experiments led to the con-} clusion that ‘the plant,‘ like the. ant- / HARD ON THE BABY mal, must have something which may : be called.a heart, some propulsive Jy ine oe, of sete wick red-hot days and sweltering nights; Orenn Melchy ree Pe Mp ee iaw et es jis extremely hard on little ones. juice or sap, as the heart does that of | | Diarrhoea, dysentery, colic and chol- —Wiiliam Sawyer. this, too, was finally located by a precious little lives every ‘summer. electric probe, its movements recorg! | The mother must ‘be: constantly on lwandgraph: ’ jher guard:-to prevent these troubles, oa eee 5 lor if they come on suddenly to fight When these experiments. were first | ‘them. “No other medicine'is of such the blood in the animal body; ana| era. infantum. carry off thousands of, “Are all the beasts ready,. reported, a certain incredulity was expressed, and the results~ seemed ; fantastic and uncanny. In reality: 'they are in line with the growing 'seientific tendency to presume the’ unity. of all life and to discoyer life . in: many substances supposed to be | Inorganic. By his persistence in his researches and his — resourcefulness. Un devising new. and newer experl- |ments, Sir Jagadis has fairly beaten ‘the sceptics. out of the fleld and won. | the recognition that is due to iim as a pioneer in a new and. most fertile field of research. | } Powerful Medicine. — The healing {properties in six gssential oils are concentrated in every bottle of Dr. !'Thomas’ Eclectric. Oil. forming one of the most beneficial liniments ever |) offered to the use of man. Many can jtestify as to its power in allaying | pain, and many more ¢an certify that !they owe their health to it. Its won- 'derful power is not expressed by the small-price at which it sells. - Increase In Auto Industry Finally revised statistics on the ‘aid to mothers during the hot summer .as is Baby's Own Tablets. .They 'regulate the bowels and stomach, and an, occasional dose given to the well child will prevent summer complaint, -or if. the trouble does come on sud- ‘denly will. banish it. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or’ by mail at 25 cents @ box from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co. Brockville, Ont. qt Irish Boys For Canada Training. School Has Been Establisired By Ulster Government” Rey. R. Maxwell, of Ligoniel, Bel- fast, states that with Northern fre- land facing similar conditions of un- employment as in England, the Ulster tovernment has established an. agri- cultural training school at’ ~Richill, where boys of 14 to 17 are trained for life on the Canadian farms. Facilities for studying farm conditions in Can- ada were placed at the disposal of the Rev.-Mr. Maxwell by, Colonel J.'S. Dennis, Chief Commissioner of the Department of Colonization and De- velopment of the Canadian Pacific automobile industry show the total | Railway. and others. number of motor cars produced in Canada during 1926 at 204,727 — an increase of 26 per cent: over the 161,-. {970 output of 1925, 55 per cent. above | 1924 and 89 per cent. above 1923. The 1926 output included 154,061 passen- ger cars, 30.440 trucks and 20,226 chassis, valued at $122,620,537. The manufacture of parts brought the to- tal up to $133,598,456. compared with $110,835,388 in 1925 and $88,480,417 in 1984. Mother—“Johnny, is that nice to tie a pan to the dog’s tail ” Johnny—“But it’s not our dog.” Mother—“No, but it’s our pan.” Neuritis. Drive away the throbbing pain with applications of Minard’s. Something Worth Knowing A paste made of bicarbonate of soda and water applied to sunburn gives a cooling sensation almost im- mediately. When the moisture has {Seon absorbed from the paste the | ere ‘of the burn will have disappear- | ed and the danger of blistering is lessened. Germany leads the world in com- Relieved quickly, safely and | surely by one or two doses of mercial aviation. The records of one | Chambertain’s Colic | German company shows more bus!i- | ness than those of all the compan- jes ef France, which ranks second. On the east shore of the Salton Sea, | in the Colorado ‘Desert, jets of live steam issue from holes in the ground, Ta | ‘and are used for campers to cook wie their food. Gkin Disenses, Mocs for Chri { Bold byleading Chemist s,oreithe te. cnn ermine egret wwe
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Image 707 (1927-08-05), from microfilm reel 707, (CU12500195). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.