Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Flesherton Advance, 1 Apr 1936, p. 7

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t> \ Try this fresh fragrant Green Tea KNIT THIS CUNNING SET FOR BABY'S AIRINGS, SAYS LAURA WH££LER Rainbow Gold by E. C. BULEY >»â- â- Â»Â»Â»Â»>«««»««»â- â- â- â- Â»Â»Â«'â- Â»* And goU ill the aria bush of Australia. , They slake their claim an<l start the J long- jourr'!y to th«» toast. I W.-'sle>by has a f.aiicef Ola^Iyir Cl«ni- lenta in Knsland. hut when tiiey arrive |ln Sydney he marries a pretty Monti':. â- <â- <••â- â€¢â€¢â€¢>â- â€¢â€¢â€¢ t \ AIR-TIGHT Wrapped Indirtdually > ROYAL YEAST CAKES always keep FULL STRENGTH 1 Use Tested Royal Sponge Recipes and Royal Yeast Cakes for these fine breads An air-fight trapping iirpscrves the frvshnpss of each Royal Yeiist Cakeâ€" the only dry yoast wiih this extra pr<^ tection. You can count on their full- Btrengxh kavtning power whenever you use them. 7 out of evorj- 8 C ana- dian women who prt- fer dry yeast de- mand K^yal. Buy a package uxlay. FREE BOOKLET helps you! â- The Royal Yeast HaWe BiK'W >iivc« t \' s t c d K u y a 1 Sponge Recipo* (or all the brcailt shown above and many t» t h e r s . KREKâ€" Malt cou- pon toitaji'! HIY M\nE-TV- lAN.UVV t.OOl>S â€" ^^ STANOARO URA\T»S l>'r»«et \*c. aiicl I.tbcttv Flifratc -wnj lue the IIM1T»-1> St.. torunto »r.v Koval .Ont. T.-._» Vr«» • : ,. ,;.-... .; L'an to I'orixi«r Iianc*;e. <-iIaU>:i Clements, In Loniluii anil wheti Dan arrives she be- lieve he Is Gordon. Eve GtlchHst. a typist, obtains woric In Medlicott's of- fice, thp brolt«T who la floating the niirie. Kve and Dan faU In love but whi'n E.e in crinfronted by Olaiys she b.'M-vos in Piin's iluptioity. BABYS KNITTED SET PATTERN 1177 It was at Karachi that .â- ^.mherst saw his opportunity, an*! Vu!r.»e-:ted to Dan tliat .t was worth grasping. "I know this bit ahead of u.^, and tl'e wind and t!ie weather are just n:_;ht for night-flying."' he suid. "With a bit of lack we car. gain a! lap on the scan iing record; but we' mu.'Jt let them know we ar-i coming." ] "Suits me," Dan agreed. "Just accept whatever you say." i (-onjse. Their sate arrival at Calcutta, and' their prompt departure fraiii t''at point, woke the new.^papers :.t Great Britain. Brief and caut'ojs me3-| .-ages had previously rei-ov^ied the [ progress of the flight of .\mherst and a passenger. Prescott's nan;'? being carefully suppres.sed. .After what had been published in T.ondon. it was better to be on the '•afe j^ide. It was generally supposed that Dan was es- caping from the consequence-? of his misdeeds. â- Whether His Highness, the Baby, is yours or another's you'll want to knit him this cunning set of Shetland i!oss. Anyone can do it â€" so simple is the sweater body of lacy stitch â€" the yoke cf ribs, caught with contrasting yam to resemble smocking. Pattern 1177 comes to you with directions for making the sweater and cap in an infant and one year siie (both given in one pattern); illustrations of the set. and of all stitches used: material requirements. Send 20 cent* in itamp* or coin (coin preferred) for t'nii pattern to Needlecraft Depl., Wilson Publijhing, 73 Adelaide W., Toronto. Write plainly PATTERiN NU.MBER. your NAME and ADDRESS. Daily Newspapers Being Issued By United States Government Fr-m the New 'York Ti.xes as the merest matter There was a great crowd to wel- come them on their landing at Singa- â-  pore. Their luck had not only been ' good, but phenometKil. The wind ' had always been favourable, and â€" perhaps as a result of Amhersfs pre- cautions and Dan's tireless industry â€" no mechanical trouble of any kind had ever threatened their advance. There were cables for 'ooth men ; cables for Dan from Medlicott and i from Cairns. The news that suffic- But at Calcutta Amherst gaye ient capital had been obtamed to vent to ^ome of his new found en- 1 meet all requirements, and faat thusiasm for his com.par.ion m the 51ade had been instructed to pre- ti-ip , pare for a big push immediately o "Prescott running awav?" he „.' Dan's arrival left him quite tinmov- peated indignantly when one news- «^- The report oi Cairns e.KpIammg paper made the su'^gestion. "Let me '}^ '^=''',r^ ''""'^^; **' *^* ^""''^' tell vou. sir. that he's not the man Courier ne d.d not even reaa to the to run away from anvbod-.' or any- ^'?J- "f ^â- ='' "°'. '"tere'^^d "^ thing. I don't know whv he's in a ^'^^'^f Clements, or .n the steps pro- hurry to get to Sydney. I n-ver ask-; P*'^*'^ " P*^"'^'^ ^'^^ detractors, ed him. and I shouldn't ad\i?» yo.: t ^| "Bad news, old son?" .\mherst a.-=k neither. But the object of this asked, scanning Dan's gloomy face. flight is to get him to Sydney as soin "You look pipped, somehow." as possible. He's paying for it, and "Xews is all right." Dan iaid som- he has no other idea in his head <-x- brely. "When do we push off from cept getting thert. Have von got that?" "Flying records?" he continued, prompted by another question. "Mr. ' Prescott isn't interested in that. He doesn't know what the existing re- cord is. and he doesn't caie .\nd there's aniM.ii<. • thing. VVhen 've set to Port Darwin, if we ever do, I'm | through. I'll turn her no>o around, and go to bed for forty-eight hours. But Mr. Prescott hops into another bus that he has ordered by cable to .\ustrali:;, and drives right :\head to â-  Sydney. He'll get there, too; he's an iron man." "Maybe he's Hying to the death- bed of ssor^e friend." the reporter suggested idly. Dan. who was at v.ork c:i an over- haul, and not supposed to be listen- ing, lifted up a haggard face nt this "It might be a death-bed al! rigiit, if he doesii't behave himself." he >'aid. and that was as far as he went in the vay cf expianatifii of his hu.^te. l!y the tin;e the two adventurers reaclie<i Singapore Dan Presvott was a v.orid-faniod figure. He was the man who was, in a simple and prac- tical way. showing the British Km- pire how the gaps of time and space could be bridged. He was a bold pioneer, dcing for the first time wl';it those of the next generation would RUN DOWN? TAKE WINCARNIS It work and worry ha\e got the l>etter of you and you are feeling weak and listless, follow th« recoinraeudation of iiR)ro than 20.000 metlical luen. Take Wiiicarnis three time* dady. To lhou>«in!s who ouce felt as you feel now, this»i|\ ivv has proved iavaluable. \N incarnij brings to you all the valuable elements of grujies (-'-i lbs. in each bottle", and the streu^th building ivutenl of lieef and iimll extract. It is not a dru^, but a tlelicioiis. bloo<i and ti.viue budding wiue which quickly soothes tired ner\es and builds new wells of energy. h'rom the liuio vou start lakiug Wiu- carnis you will sleep belter, wake more cheerfiilly. ami feel more nearly as you should. You will kuow, then, how wonderful it is to K' on the road to sustainetl. vigorous health. Kor tho.se who are run-down, or who suffer from ragg^-il uerves, iiisoniiiia, auHcmia or debility, Wiiicarnis is a marvelous tonic, ticl \\ iiKarnis from N our druggist totlav. â€" .^les Vgent.*: llaivU f. Uitehie & Co. Ltd., Twonlo. here'"' He had been hoping though he diJ not adnnc as much even to himself â€" that live might have relentea and sent him sonic message of encourage- ment and goodwill. If not in "ner own name, she might have got Med- licott to put a few words in, just ; show that they were still friends. Clearly, Eve had meant it wheti she safd that she never wished to see him again: that he no longer existed for her. -And all the time Kve. a'.vay in London, was smiling bravely In the attempt to hide what she re.ii;y be- lieved was a breaking heart. S'ne moved in a whirlwind of ac- tivity and joyful bustle. .\11 abo.: her were people openly triuniphanr and wildly optimistic, and all this commotion centred about tlie man she loved, and had dismissed so sum- marily. .\nd. what seemed to the girl .'o utterly cruel and inhumanly inconsiderate, not one of her asso- ciates wiis able to s[iare a thought for her predicament. ?tedlicott. for instmce. who ''ad been at such pains to show her that she had been unjust and hasty in her treatment of Pan. and who had laid so much stress on the import- ance of a reconciliation without loss : of time. This very Medlicott no* I dict:ited to her a cable to Dan. com- ' posed without any regard to cost, and : had not troubled to inchiae one I word referring to Eve. ] Mr. Cairns also employed her as ! a secretary, atul he in turn dictated j lengthjy communications, all refer- i ring to the course he was takinjt «ith ] Gladys Clements and the "Kecord- Courier". But it never seemed to strike the lawyer that Dan's rela- When The Buffalo | Wore Two Coats (From the Reg'na Leader-Post) The Leader-Post's inquiring report- ; er took a half hour off to interview a number of old-timc-rs oa the pres- ent state of the weather compared with the old days. Here are some of the views: Ezra Peters, Lemon Hill, Sask.: "She sure stayed down pretty steady , in January, but it ain't nothing to . what it was in '92. I was hauling cord wood from the valley that Win- ter and the wood fro:e right to the sieigh rack so we had :o bum the raclc because we couldn't get it 'h.. .,! away trom tae wood. Yes, sir, that was a coid Winter and the nest Summer we had a great crop of wheat, mosquitoes and bill collect- ors." Beciah Beatley, Spruce Crik, Sask.: "Weather, did you say? Y'ep. I see It's pretty cold all right, bat not Use it was back in 'S2, when I was riding herd west of Wocd Moun- tain. Me and Ike Weever shot a 'ouf- falo bull that Winter and the son-of- a-gun was wearing two 'ouffaio coats. •\nd, by cripes, he needed them." Ira Swatfoot, Moose M.'untain; i "To teli you the truth, young feiier, ! I think she's been pretty cold tiie bst couple of weeks. It pretty near froze my mcther-in-iaw stiff in Jan- uary, but we didn't notice much change in her. But I was out cae day there a couple of weeks ago, and I sure would have froze my ears off if it haJn't been that I had frcze them otr compietely back in the cold Winter of 1907. Having no ears now, and Knowing enough to keep my nose out of other people's busi- ness. I get along pretty well now. Winter and Summer. Good day." Henry Wooibottom. Gocse Gulch, Sask.; "Weather? What weather? Cold weather? Who cares? I ain't been out of the house since Christ- mas. If you're looking for weather, go outside and got i:. I'm staying in" The initial issue of the first official daily newspaper of the Cnited States GoTcrnmenr rolled, from the giant pr<=ss6a ot the Government Printing Office the other day. Edir>:l, published and circulated by Govenuneat personnel. It is devoted exciusively to the rales, crders. regu- lations. specifica"i';as and judicial in- agencies terpretations ot the executive brinch of the Federal establishment. A spvcsal appropriation of $100.- 000 is available from the recent De- ficiency Eill to finance the Tenture through the remainder ot the 133S fiscal year, which ends Jane 30 next. The daily is officially styied The Fed- eral Register and Is ia the sam-a (or- .mat as The Congressional Record, the closest approach heretofore in .Am- erican history to the otficiai gazettes ot other great capitals The Congressional Record, how- ever, :3 devoted exclusivrlT to the transactions and tiebares ot the House and S-^nate and appears only when Congress is in session. It is published by and for Congress and never has been offered as an official record of guvernmeac. By contrast. The Federal Register undertakes to present in official. autht)rit3tive and uniform manner the multifarious de- cisions of the 130-odd Federal admin- istrative units. It wili be a formal journal, devot- ed excl'csively to officii! texts. Edit- orial comment is specilicallT forbid- den by the statute creating the en- terprise. Ne'-vs of matters beyond the administrative and quasi - judicial agencies is to be limited sharply to the official utterances of department or bureau chiefs, as triosmitted :or- mally to the Federal Register Admln- strative Committee, composed of the .Archivist of the Unit-'d States, an As^L-itant Attorney General and th* Piiblic Printer, The Register will appear daOT throughout the year except on Sm^ days and Mondays and days follow* ing holidajs. The initial run was 13 000 copies. About 4,000 copies are renuired la the Govei-nment depaiiments and principally in their legal divisions. The remaining copies are for sale at 3 cents a single copy, II a month by subscription or $10 a year. A surrey by the American Bar As- sociation showed a wide potential de- mand for such a daily record among attorneys, newspaper editors, schol- ars and business men. Xew orders, the survey of the As- sociation disclosed, aggregate approx- imately iOO.oOO words monthly in simple text. Perhaps .an eitil volume of iaterpretations. ru.lngs and decis- ions follows each month's orders. Henceforward all current orders will be published daily in official text in the t'edeml Register. As npidly as possible the existing body of ad- ministrative iaw will be cod"ied. de- partment by department and buream by bureau. "It is quite clear that if all th« worid is rearming we ca^..^ot be d»- fenceiess." â€" Mr. Lioyd George. Early to Bed \ Undergoes Revision EDMONTON. â€" -\ group ot Vni- versity ot Alberta students here be- lieve they have found the secret o? scholastic success. They go to bed at 7 p.m. and arise at 1 a.m. From thfu until iectures start they study. I ^ Boi/s send for fids HOCKEY Book and AUTOGRAPHED PICTURES af YOVR FAVORiTE PLAYERS # Ev\>ry boy -xiV. -ymi' SS^ H x^kâ€" "Hjw to Becccie a H xjl^'v <uu- '.byT-F. .Tcsr^yl Ccr2ia:i. coLwh and roinA;;^ oi thtf W.jrid Cbampioa Montreal Mar-joii*. Sidply tait» alabei rn. ."u a tiu ot *CKO'^ N* BliAND" oc *'LILY' \\ HITL" ' CORN SYRVPâ€" writeoa the back your iL*me xad iiidrttfi^â€" piamiyâ€" Azd tatf wenli ''Hixit-y Bocii". Mail th« label tu The Caaaij :^ci^.â- a Co,, Limited, Toronto, and vour book wi^I be 8«nt >-otf immc\La:ety. mho % Send in a !abel cr tbe froot ot s cartoa frca any pi-jcact ef Tbe Canada i:>tan.*h Co. , Lauited !i:jx».'-'d 'siOx yc-ir nama and ad- dnass aird '.'~^ p*cf.;r« you *un; ^une Fi^'tum for each 'abx-t .and your cac. -eoi tiieloilcw- iotf pictur-;;^. cio-onted nady ft^trtinumnc, wiZJ be xax. to you. Croup M- atrral "Minwos*"â€" ^rvop "Lc* Cina- (liem"â€" AJnjcp'Cmatiian Oiviopic Hotkey r^jmâ€" Ind^ivitjal picrtrr* oj BoiJ'' Nortivi'jtt, Go^ti« Monthj, K'JS3 Bunco, An Loi<u.', l>av« Tro:; cf, '•.\«" Baiiov. EDl%*ARDSBrRG CRDWN BRAND CORN SYRUP THE FAMOUS ENE^CY FOOD ULV WHITT COR.N SYRtlP BENSCN'S CORN STARCH CANADA CORN STARCH CHALLENGE COK.N ST.«RCH SILVER GLOSS LAUNDRY STARCH PrxsJucts nf The C\N.VP\ STAHc-IIfOMP.V.NY LImlttJ TPKOVIO o The Man Who Knows Whether the Remedy You are taking for Headaches, Neuralgia or Rheumatism Pains is SAFE is Your Doctor. Ask Him Don't Entrust Your O'.vn or Your Family's VVell-Being to Unknown Preparations BEh'ORE you take anv prepara- tion vou d'-m't know all about, for the relief of headaches: or the pams of rhcutnatisrri. ueuntis or neuralgia, ask your d-xtvr what hs thinks" about It â€" la compansoo with "".Xspinn." We say this because. Deiorc tlM di-<covery of ".Aspirin.' most so- called "pam" remedies were ad- vised against bv phvsiciaas as being bad for the slomac"h: or. often, for the heart. .And the discovery ol ".Aspirin" largely chanj:ed medical practice. C.o'tatless tnousani's ot people who have taken ".Asdi.-i-i" \ear in and out without ill elTcct. ha%-« proved that the medical tindings about its salelv were corrcc-t. Remember thi*: ".Aspirin" is rated 'imortu ihe 'ijaicsC ri^-thods yet diSLVirred for the relief cf headaches and ail coniriion puiiis . and safe for the avera;ie terson to take re^ulariv ____ â- â- .Vspinii" Tablets sre made ia Canada. ".Aspirin" is t.he registered trade-mark of the Bayer Company. Limited. Look for the name Baver ui the form of a cross oa e verv tablet. Demand and Get "ASPIRIN" Ir >ou urs s^fliiiij; mental ituprove- meri! and ettlcieiicy, vou should wilts for partlcuUtrs of the couv.-'\s "(TfreJ at niodk-rate fees by Th» la- •titat* of Praetloal aad AvpU*d F»ycliolofy. !:«.a ruE hklckk' â€" h »*« luonthly iuagajin« of help for ev- erybokly uuMtshed by The Institute of Practical and Applied Psychology One liollar ;i yt-ar Jiample Copy â€" Ten Csiits Write for your copy TOD.VVt BUIZ.DINO Qaatcc 910 CONFEDEBATION MouTteal "There is always a tendency to criticise sovereigns till they have been able to forge their own great- ness." â€" The Dean of Windsor. tions with another girl might be a matter of some importance. H«. blandly ignored triat side of the ques- tion although Eve knew he was well posted as to the reason oi Dan's sudder tlight to Australia. (To Be Continued) i Issue No. 13 â€" '36 to ILL? S,raraie** of ths aator* of year illnna or It, duration, do not fail to writ, or t«>,ptioa, Il«« Conipai^ Iitd., r«d«ral Boiiain;. Toronto, for Or. Tbo*. J. II,,' frM lBfont»tioa. •Wot,, of latarrat oa Perm»nt," »ad "Aatiphyuiiaol." SaccKfnl darlnc 17 r,Ar«. ^T.iai.< IttCaajjA DON'T RISK FAILI RES . . . Follow the advice of Can- ada's leading coi>kery e.xperts and use Magic whenever you ba.ke at home. This famous baking fimder is absolutely dependable. .\ssu.-es luscious. fine-textured cakes every timeâ€" because it alwaj-sgivw full leavening power! And Magic is s-er>' economical â€" actually you use fcss ihun ie tn;r'h in a cakel Order a tin from your grocerâ€" today!

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