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Flesherton Advance, 17 Jun 1920, p. 3

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â- M mm mmmm mmmm "^ THE FLE8HERT0N ADVANCE.. r â- â-  BY AUNT JUNE j^ Our Boys and Girls Corner Registered Aceording to the Copyright, Act. DEDICATEDTO â-  EVERY BOY AND GIRL IN CANADA BOYS AND GIBLS. My dear Boys and Girls: â€" Marjorie, who is just nine years of age, came into my room one aay just as I -was writing my weekly letter to you. "What are you doing, Aunt Junei" she said; and I told her that I waa writing to my Helpers. "Help- ers! What's a Helper!" she said. "Why, Marjorie, a Helper is anyone who does something for others," I told her. ' ' You are a helper when you Snii grandma's glasses, or put things away for mother, or when you run to the store for her." And so we had quite a long talk about helping. Marjorie had never thought seriously of herself as a little person who might be useful before, and this cenversation made me think that perhaps there are still a great many boys and girls who may wonder, in spite of our little talks and the pledge that is printed on this page, exactly what a Helper is, so I want to just tell you to-day that neit week there wiU be an extra special piece of news for you about helping. So, dear boys and girls, be sure to look out for your own special letter in this corner next week. OA£DEN NOTES. Good news continues to come in from our gardeners. Many Helpers report that • • gardens are coming along splen- didly." Mary "Winter has had a mis- hap with her' tomato plants. Mary's father gave her four to plant in her own garden, but alas! one morning she found that three of them were broken off and withered. That was too bad, Mary. I wonder if a frost killed them in the night, or whether some prowling pussy-cat walked over them. Some cats, unfor- tunately, you know, are too fond of walking on the garden. I hope you will have better luck with your other plants. Don't Forget the Weeds. Now Helpers all, your real work in the garden is about to commence, for already I see weeds are beginning to come up, and it will need many busy lingers to keep continually puUing these out if we are going to have good gar- dens. The best time to weed is early in the morning, before the sun gets very hot upon the beds, and if you start when the weeds first begin to show it will be an easy matter to keep your gardens tidy: biit if you let them go for two or three days they grow so quickly and so strongly that this task will seem twice as difficult. Please send me lots of news about your flowers and vegetables, and also about your school gardens, those of you who are plan- ning for a school fair. PLEDGE FOR HELPERS. "Do a little kindness to someone every day. Scatter rays of sunshine all along the way." I pledge myself in the se»- vice of my King and Country to DO MY BEST IN MY DAILY WORK, wherever it may be, to help others wherever possible, and to endeavor in every way to make myself A GOOD CITI- ZEN. Date Name Address It is said that he devours the eggs of i ether birds, and sometimes even gob- bles up the baby birds. He is also quite a pirate for stealing fruit from the orchards, so I am afraid, Alice, if I ' your father has a good garden he will I ; not welcome this mischievoui little I chap. The bluebird is one cf our prettiest I visitors just now. His ccat is a very ; beautiful shade of blue. He has i rather a small head, not a very long beak and a brownish waistcoat. ' I am going to answer your riddles I i first to-day instead cf at the end. ANSW££S TO LAST WEEK'S PTjZZIiES. I I E.â€" If a man has a suit, what is the I j best way to make his ccat lastl A. â€" To make the waistcoat and trousers first. This is the month of wild flowers, and soon you will be thinking of the holidays, "when there will be lovely long days for walks in the country. I know what some of my Helpers will do then. They will be looking out for pretty bouquets to take to the people at home. When you go out to pick the wild flowers do not forget those who are sick. To take them flowers is a very happy way of helping. Here are some wild flowers seen dur- ing the pa«t week. Dog tooth violet. This is a yellow flower, slightly bell- shaped, with six turned-back sepals. It grows on a single stem, and is found in swampy places. Yellow star grass. This is a' very pretty little ye^ow flower, growing in clusters of three to four blossoms, looking exactly like a little golden star. Its leaves are like sharp blades of long grass. There is â-  also a blue variety of flower, very much like this, but this is called the bine-eyed grass. Hepatioa. This pretty flower, which I have seen in three shad«s of mauve, sometimes almost a : pink, sometimes quite deep, is now to I be seen in many hedgeways and in the woods. I think you all know the shape of it, starlike, but larger than the little star flower described before. E. â€" What net is a bird with a sweet- toned voice! A. â€" Lin-net (linnet). E. â€" Why is a dead hen better than a live onef A. â€" Because a dead hen will lay wherever you wish it to, and a live one will not. THIS WEEK'S EIDDLES. E. â€" Can you guess what word of six letters contains six words without mov- ing any letter out of place? - B. â€" I went to a field and I could not get through it, so I went to a school and 1 learned how to do it. Guess the answer. B. â€" ^What flowers can be found be- tween the nose and the chin! AB0T7T THE BIRDS. Roy Brown has guessed the name of the bird whose description was sent in by another Helper last week to be the red-headed woedpecker. I think Roy 's guess must be correct, as this was the bird I had in mind when reading the description. I am afraid he is not a very welcome guest where other birds are concerned. GEESE THAT WEAK BOOTS. Did you ever hear ef a goose wear- ing boots .' Xo, this is not a joke. It is a ' • really, truly story. ' ' In Vilna, which is a place in Russia, a chief industry is raising geese, which are then driven on foot in large flocks to the markets in other parts of the country, where they are sold. The poor geese used to get very footsore after they had waddled for some miles, so the people who looked after them thought of makng them shoes, and this i? the clever way they did it. First of all they made the geese walk through a lot of tar, and next through a pile of sand. As they went through the sand, of course, it stuck to the tar, with the result th.it each goose had a well-fitting pair of boots. 1 which protected the soles of his feet i from the hard road. Don't you think these would be funny boots to wear? Y'ours lovinglv, â-  AI'>.'T jrXE. IN A FRENCH CHATEAU BY M. BETHAM-EDWARDS. (Author of " From an Islington Window," " Heart* of Alsace," etc.) (Continued from last week) "Enchanted to meet you, my dear de Bretteville, and as, like everyone else, a soldier for the nonce. Welcome ti; my quarters. Here we are, and by ourselves. ' ' Thus saying. General Malmaison ushered the other through the wide doors of his official quarters in the Rue de Bellechasse, Paris, and led the way to a small sitting-room. Both men were past middle-age, and of distingushed though contrasted ap- pearance; the civilian and country gentleman was tall, powerfully built, and bronzed, but it was easy to divne rather by the chase than by campaigns in Senegal or Tonquin. Below average height, with a fine intellectual fore- head, its lines bearing evidence of deep concentrated thought and commanding presence. General Malmaison looked what he was, one of the foremost en- gineers of the French army. Both wore the red knot of the Legion of Honor on their breast. ' ' On my word, you look more cheer- ful than i should have expected under the circumstances," said the General, as soon as they had seated themselves in easy chairs and lighted cigarettes. "Wasthe ransack and pillage of your paternal home as ruinous as report saidt" The other uttered an exclamation of disgust. "Ransack, pillage! What are these compared to defilement and downright bestiality f There are no other names for the pet job of these ruffians Lis- ten, my friend; as we all know, drink makes a beast of any man; the Ger- mans have invented the word super- man. I will improve upon it; th« German drunkard becomes a super- beast. It will cost me a rorfnd million to have my pig-stye of a house scoured, white-washed, renovatedâ€" in fine, ren- dered habitable. As to the millions upon millions of valuables carried away and valuables destroyed because they" could not be packed up, for rep- aration I wait patientlyâ€" but not till the Greek Kalends." "Pardie, no! And your patience will probably not be so long on the strain as folks thinkâ€" or pretend to think." Here their eyes met, exchanging a look, mutually understood, but too ter- rible to be put into words, a look that almost took away the human in both countenances. Then the General added â€" ' ' Now tell me more. Your ladies, I le«rned, were safe, and, as far as I have been able to gather, none of your serving folks suffered in life or limbt" "Trust my discreet butler, old Benoit, to look after those confided to kiml I bad only time to bundle «S my wife and daughter, or rather to get them bundled off to England, for I had, of course, joined my old regiment. Benoit just managed to bury title- deeds and bonds deep down under a dried-up well when lo! the wolves were on the fold." He broke forth with a laugh. "No time was there, alas! for- imi- tating the examj)le of my wife 's trraudfather, a rich proprietor in the Cote d'or. In '71, when the Bochcs were at Dijou, this wise old geutloman had all his vin ordinaire, some hundred bottles, sealed with yellow^ wax: the rare old Burgundies, almost worth their weight in gold, being re-corked as of no account! And the dull Teutons, never having tasted claret in their lives, got finely drunk upon w^ine worth a few sous the bottle. But to pro- ceed. Benoit was solemnly charged to allow no resistance â€" the womenfolk had all, of course, been sent away â€" he was not to yield up a single key, but not to resist, even if the villains stripped him in the search. And so the brave old fellow â€" seventy gone, mind you â€" stolidly sate out the devastation with pinioned hands and a pistol held to his ear. What enraged him most was the eight of his mistress's and his young lady 's lawn chemises and silk stockings carried off. to be worn, for- sooth, by frowsy German housewives and their daughters, who even of the better class, are brought up to kill the ducks and chickens before preparing them for the family dinner! '' ' ' You are surely exaggerating, my friend." ' ' Truth! I can swear to it, for my sister, who was educated at Weimar, learned it from a school-fellow, daugh- ter of a Von! Well, figure to yourself my poor old man, and the agonies he endured â€" his own gold watch wrenched from his fob, my family relics, minia- tures, keepsakes, and curios that he knew I valued beyond anything in my possession, gone! However, he had his reward. The sight of his face yester- day was worth â€" I was going to say â€" restitution of the entire lot. Could only a Rembrandt have caught his ex- pression as I read him this." Taking out a well-worn Swiss news- paper, and spreading it on his knees, dp Bretteville slowly read the follow- ing paragraph: â€" • ' We have just learned from a pri- vate source that the officer of high â€" some say of royal â€" rank, commanding the much-talked-of raid of the de Bretteville chateau in the Seine and Marne, some months since, has just died of virulent poison in his paternal castle in Southern Germany. The young man had carried off a poisoned ring, and, tryng it on, died in fearful convulsions." Facts About Canada DOWN BY THE SEA. After thirty years of peace war broke out in 1744 between colonies in America, when a struggle began be- tween the French and the British in Europe. This affected the colouies in what is now the Maritime Provinces or Canada more than any other part of the new world. The French at Louis- burg received the news of the new war first, and resolved to take the English in Nova Scotia by surprise. A force was hastily collected and burned Canso and besieged Annapolis. The fortifica- tions of the latter place were very weak, the garrison was small, but it put on such a bold front that the French, who received loss aid from the Aeadians than they had expected, le- treated without making a very serious attack. The commerce of Now Ent:land had already suffered much from Louisburg privateers, and the people were eager to fight. Shirley, the Governor of Massachusetts, persuaded the Assem- bly to vote sufficient money to send a force of 4,000 men against Louisburg. Pepperel, a merchant of Boston, was placed in comamnd: officers and men were alike untrained in war, but they had courage, enthusiasm and shrewd common sense. At Canso the expe- dition was joined by an English fleet under Admiral Warren. So well had the secret been kept that the first news of the expedition received by the French was from its appearance be- fore the fortress. Warren 's ships bom- barded the place and prevented aid from reaching it by the sea. The army was poorly supplied with can- non, but early in the attack they cap- tured a French battery and turned its heavy guns on Louisburg. Many of the New England troops were skilled riflemen, and prevented the French from using their cannon with the best effect. In seven weeks the provisions and ammunition of the gar- rison ran short, and the fortress was compelled to surrender. The news of its fall was received with wild joy in New England and equal dismay in Prance. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON. fi N Saturday night it shall be my care To dress my dc&y and comb her long hair; On' Sunday morning to church we*ll go, With father and noother, and Susan and Flo. Hnd Susan tad Flo. RI||fst sids dOVB, OD upper side down. POEMS YOU SHOULD KNOW. Charles Kingsley was born in Devenshire in 1S19. He died m 1S75. His poetical works consist of '"The Saint's Tragedv"' and ''Andromeda and O ther Poems." THE THEEE FISHEES. Three fishers went sailing out into the west, Out into the west as the sun went down. Each thought on a woman who loved him best: And the children stood watching them out of the town; For men must work and women must weep, And there "s little to earn and many to keep. Though the harbor bar be moaning. Three wives sat sp in the lighthouse tower. And they trimmed the lamps as the sun went down: They looked at the squall and they looked at the shower. And the rack it came rolling up ragged and brown! But men must work and women must weep, Though storms be sudden and waters deep, And the harbor bar be moaning. Three corpses lay out on the shining sands In the morning gleam as the tide went down. And the women are weeping and wringing their hands For those who will never come back to town; For men must work and women must weep. And the sooner it's over, the sooner to sleepâ€" And good-bye to the bar and its moaning. â€" Charles Kingsley. AiLITTLE OF EVERYTHING HITMOEOUS GULLS. A subscriber in Scotland -sends an ac- count cf an experience en the Berwick- shire coast: "A consderable number of gulls roost every night on a low reef beyond the foot of the great cliffs. One night I was witness to a moonHght frolic. When 1 approached the spot the flood tide was noaring the full. Be- tween me and the moon lay the long reef, around which the waters swelled. The majority of the gulls were perched, but some were afloat in the silvery track of the moon's rays, and 1 observed that every little while one of these birds would return to the reef, sidle up beside a sleeping com- panion and edge it from its perch into the swirl of the tide. This displaced gull would cruise abo'.it for a time, and then return to pass the trick on to its neighbors, after the nianntr of school- boys. The sly movements of the ag- gressors and the protesting squawk and shuffle of the surprised birds were ludicrous in the extreme. WHEN WE GROW SHOKTEB. A person usually begins to lose height at the age of fifty, and at the age of ninety he has lost about one and a half inches. VEOETASLES AST3 MEDICINE. Apples, carrots and Brazil nuts are excellent for sufferers from constipa- tion. Asparagus stimulates the kidneys. Bananas are beneficial to sufferers from chest complaints. Cranberries are astringent and cor- rect the liver when it is suffering from inaction caused by over-eating. Pates are exceedingly nourishing, and also prevent conetipation. The juice of grapes is a laxative, but the akin and seeds are likely to cause eoBstipation. (To be continued next week,^ COSTLY BED. Like old wine, some beds improve (in price"* with age. A four-poster made in Florence in the sixteenth cen- tury brought $2,550 in the sale of the Tolentine collection at the American Art Association. TALKING TO MARS. The idea that the "mysterious mes- sages" being received by wireless tele- graphers may have been sent from Miars, or that we may communicate with that plant t by wireless, has aroused the ire of Mr. Alan A. Camp- bell Swinton, F.R.S., president of the Wireless Society of London. He de- clares that the whole thing is non- sense, since to transmit messages to Mars, or from Mars to e«rth, would require, he savs, the stupendous force of TJ.000.000,000,000 horse-power. 1 CITY WITHOUT EUNNING WATER. Vladivostok, in Siberia, a city trf some 350,000 inhabitants, has no run- ning water. Nor is this lack of an everyday convenience made less press- ing "by the fact that Vladivostok jumped from a population of about i 90,000 people, without adding to the number of houses, writes Paul Norton, in Travel. The Manchu water vendor, with his hogshead mounted on two wheels and drawn by sturdy, thick- coated Siberian horses, takes the place of pipes and faucets, filing his hogs- head at a shallow well in some private or public yard, and retailing the com- modity at the rate of two buckets a day for a month, for about $"2 in our money He carries the buckets at the end of a pole over his shoulder. X-EAY AS CRIMINAL CATCHER. The woudcriul advances made in X- ray photography during the last few years were demonstrated at the Royal "institution, London, Eng., recently. A new development is an improved method of taking the linger-prints of criminals. A radiograph on the screen showed the network of the skin brought out with extraordinary detail. Clever criminals can sometimes smudge their tinger-prints under existing methods, but they will be defeated by the new X-ray photographs. POLISHING POWDER FOR GLASS. A polishing powder for glass may be made by rubbing down calcined mag- nesia with pure benzine until a mass is formed sufficiently soft to allow drops to be pressed out of it. The mixture should be kept in closely stop- pered glass bottles to retain the very volatile benzine. A little should be placed on a pad of wadding or cotton, and the glass rubbed w'th it. NAMES. Middle names were once illegal in England. A child's surname is never men- tioned durng christening service. In Holland all Christian names be- yond one are taxed. The name by which a persons is usually called or known is his legal name, though it may not be his right one. The origin of his surname was com- monly the trade followed â€" Smith, et«. An offence is committed if. on the committal of an offence, you give a wrong name. STEEL FOR DENTISTRY. A rnst-proof steel, highly alloyed with chromium and nickel, is reported to have been developed by gome Euro- pean scientists. Experimental use has been made of this steel for dental purposes. The weight of plates cast from this steel is about one-half that of gold plate*. NEW SHJK SUBSTITUTE. A Lyons textile firm has. it is re- ported, just discovered how to produce from camphor and other chemicals a wonderful new fabric called silk cellu- lose. This material is said to resemble real silk so exactly that only an ex- pert can tell the difference. By the now process the manufacturers claim that production is cheapened, and (he consumer is able to procure silk which is far below the price of the genuine article. A New York hotel proprietor re- ceived the following puzzle note the other day from one of his regular tran- sient guests: "Reeerve room. Coming Wednesday, without bath." Lesson XH. Jun« '-20 THE ^ORD OUR SHEPHERD. Printed Textâ€" Psalm 23. Golden Textâ€" "Jehovah is my shepherd; I shall not want." â€" Ps. 23:1. Historical Setting. Time.â€" 1050 B. C. Place. â€" Jerusalem. Daily Readings Monday, Jane 14.â€" The Lord Our Shepherd' (Ps. 23.) Tuesday, June 15. â€"False Shepherds (Ezek. 3-1: MO). Wednesday, June 16.â€" The True Shep- herd ^Ezek. 34: 11-16, 23-26). Thuis- dav, June 17. â€" The Good Shepherd I John 10: 11-lS;. Friday, June 18.â€" Seeking the Lost (,Luke 15: 1-10). Saturdav, June 19. â€" "He careth for you" (1 Pet. 5: 1-11). Sunday, June 20. â€" The Ever-living Shepherd (Heb. 13: 12-25). Comments. Verse 1. David s name is insepar- ably associated with the Psalms, and we are taking up a series of lessons in the life of David. Henry Ward Beecher called this the nightingale of Psalms. "The divine Shepherd, like the human shepherd, cares for the needs of his flock. " ' They who acknowledge Christ shall not be spirifaally destitute. The gen- eral significance is that Jehovah is anxious to throw round his people every possible safeguard to protect them from the attacks of the enemy, even if the shepherd is solicitous in protecting his sheep. The Oriental shepherd guarded his sheep from wolves, robbers and all other dangers. Verse 2. There are no ' ' f eneed-n- pastures in the East, where the sheep may be left alone while grazing. The shepherd must be always in attend- ance. In summer the pastures dry up and become brown. The hot earth is disagreeable, and the good shepherd leads the flocks away to sheltered nooks in upland valleys where there is coolness. He seeks quiet waters and avoids sudden torrents that sometimes occur. Christ thus spiritually protects and leads his people. Verse 3. In case the sheep are lost, the shepherd seeks, finds and restores them. He guides them in paths of safety. In this same way Jesus came to seek and to save the lost: came to guide them in paths of righteousness so that they might be protected from temptation and sin. Verse 4. In the hill country of Judah there are deep, narrow gorges, dark, gloomy defiles and caves, into which the sheep may wander if left to them- selves. When necessary to cross or go through such places the shepherd is ever watchful. He carries a club with which to defend the sheep, and a long distaff used in guiding them. Christ our shepherd is amply able to give us a similar sense of security. Verse 5. The ' ' table ' ' simply means the prepared meal. It is the feeding- ground of the sheep. Oriental shep- herds saw that their sheep were guided to spots where there were no poisonous plants or snake-infested places. (Christ our Lord guides us into all truth. At the door of the slieepfold the shepherd anointed the bruises and thorn scratches of the sheep. I We prefer to believe that the I Psalmist continues the shepherd figure ! throughout the Psalm. I Verse 6. The goodness and the loving- kindness of the shepherd followed the sheep through ravine, bramble, briar and all dangerous places, and was ever present with them in safe pastures. The child of God is similarly guard- ed, and there is provision made for his dwelling in the presence of Jehovah forever. Christ said: "In my Father's house are many mansions." â- ' I go to prepare a place for you. ' ' Illustrated Tm'Hi. "Here we cat a. a ;ab!e spread with pilgrim's food, manna from heaven and water from the rock We eat in haste and with an eye on the foe, but Wo may hope to sit down at another table in the perfected kingdom. The end of the frav is the beginning of the feast. ' ' The Lord is a true shepherd in that Ue meets our needs in all the exigen- cies of life (,v. 1). Illustration. â€" So far as our worldly needs are concerned, most of us believe that they are more likely to be met by the specialist than by the all-round individual. However, when it comes to friends we do not want the specialist. ' ' Oh, he was all right to laugh with. " ' a young woman said of a man whom someone had sug- gested to her as a possible life com- panion, ' ' but he. wouldn 't answer for everyday needs." It was well enough to h.Tve one who was good company in hours of mirth, but she realized that life had other hours. Topics for Research and Diacnssion. I The Pivine Shepherd i.'^'S. 1-3). 1 Whose name is inseparably associated with the Psalms f 2. What kind of care did the shepherds of Palestine bestow upon the sheep f 3. How does that care correspond to that of Christ for his followers f 4. How does Jehovah satisfy the hunger of the sonlf 5. Pescribe the pastures and feeding- places of Palestine. 6. How does the Lord guide us in paths of righteous- ness t 7. What does the Oriental shep- herd do for the sheep that are lostt 8. What does Christ do for wandering souls f n. The Divine Comforter (vs. 4, 5). 9. Describe the hill-country of Judah, and tell how the shepherd conducted the sheep from place to place. 10. What is the significance of this figure when applied to the disciples of Christt 11. What dangers beset the sheep in the Orient. 12. What dangers beset the Christian, and how dots Christ pro- tect t 13. How were the sheep pro- vided with food in the Orient t 14. How doee Christ feed his followers spiritually f in. The Divine Companion (v. 61. 15. How much of the shepherd's care and kindness was devoted to bis floekf 16. How much a ttention is bestowed upon the ehildren of God throngb God's grace and the guidance of the Spirit t

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