ABBOTSFURD. SUMAS AND, MATSQUI NEWs kitchen. “Whai's ? d | Maggie read the letter | She'll come in at five tamorrow, when I'm up,to me in the dinner. Now, you go cown—you can speak to her and be back in time to carry the dinner, too.” Anna’s head was flung back. “I quito a elf—I didn’t send for re -B B FI this girl— nothing to me—a lative Praine oat ss eas !ly another wage slave ee to take latestgg Fe ce too many girls now} — ————— $$$ $$$___—_—_-— |for the jobs. Lo Lae | Maggie -Kenny as screwed been up in astonishment. “My God," she *omOtom PAINTED FIRES |cried, “is that the brotherhood you he Wet, é learn at your meetin’s,” ‘age | “We're opposed to immigration,” Oth. said Anna firmly, .“the Government | 4 Bold- ~ BY NELLIE L. McCLUNG | dumps in people here, just to keep or | oak f = — lis 5 le: a ele |sou buves'taenia'eicta wee” i sens Eg see “For all the brazen, selfish lumps I Clog pep. CHAPTER I.—Continued indignation. Miss Katherine Kenny|ever saw it’s you Anna. When you ch quiek. “Are they all bad, Aunt Lili?” ask-| 45 Dot so large that she could not|came here two years ago all you East as ‘ ed Helmi tearfully. kneel at the door and apply her eye| could say was ‘Yiss.’ Who showed laps the A long spell of coughing delayed jto a keyhole in such a manner that | you how to make a bed and comb your Temuner- Q the answer. the whole room and its activities | hair and garter up your stockings, ; farmery q “They don’t want to settle down were revealed. Mr. Laine could not | And now, by Gosh- you wouldn't meet 7 DOt have | foi their home like we do; they don’t | reply to Miss Kenny’s accusations | another girl at the station, and her ave been jike kids and a nice quiet Jife—though |and threats of exposure by hitting her |from your own country and all.. Did this part thes will tell you they do. You are over the head with a chair. Suchj|you never hear of the Golden Rule. pretty Helmi; that’s why I am afraid. | crude methods of gealing with wo- | do as you would be done by?” found to {I don't want Mike to see you if it ¢ n | Men ean only be safely used inside the “Old stuff, Maggle,” scoffed Anna, r he wih : be helped. He'll want you just like |hallowed precincts of matrimony. He |“‘no one believes that now. The idle pronilsing fhe wanted me. Kate, the cook, will | contented himself by telling the cook |ricli sling that stuff around to lull us decorates bid > you |he didn’t care what she had done with to sleep, that’s all. It may catch you ‘tim is a i 7 friends. . [the girl; he had “had enought of these | and your breed, but not us. We've a chance, Lill sald; Helail. ” I Vide tempered Finns, anyway.” | gone a long way past that.” %, a Having received the extension of | WIOM Ng Laine shrugged his) “What the devil do you want, Anna bling, ths time she had asked for, and .having | lshoufack = ent back to the bar.|Milander Haven't you a good job, t when a S— delivered her message, Aunt Lili gave | |He w oul2a WHEply ect the girl yet.|£00d meals, good bed, better clothes me Is {p- up the fight without a struggle. The | |She would Ybgg@piting back for money than you ever had?—What alls you?” urities og silence of the room was broken by | and claiming, “Yationship with him. pecs nothing to lose but our me + die stormy sobs of big Kate, the cook, |A sit] Uke that, Wight off the farm in| chains,” sald Anna lofiily. | “Now nily inter and the two upstairs’ girls. She. had | Finnland, with a ‘pretty face and no | long could old Spencer run this joint a Way to gald goodbye to all the gi in the | English—Some feliow would be too| Without us? The world belongs to the ; ellectite . house the night before. Her last and | S™art for her. b ‘workers, but we hayen’t the back- e through | enderest words were for her young| ©n the Soo line, in the day coach, ogee to claim it. Softies like you keep : do not | niece jwith her face against the glyss, a box |Us back with your Golden Rule, and ds paying | “If you could only talk English 1|0f sandwiches beside her; money in |the Spencers get the profits. There’s t go beg- ! ela: sta: she had sald. “It is a|her purse and five ten-dollar bills |only two classes, those who work and ey are ap } good country, but it’s too hard for a sewed securely into the pocket of her | those who live on other's work. Some | ming to 7, pretty girl who has no English.” | petticoat, sat Helmi, watching the people earn and some spend, If the offer they | “1 can learn, dear Auttie,” said j landscape slip past. It was a brilliant | Workers would all organize we could broker or i Helmi, kissing the thin white hand, ¢ in March; wild geese were flying | dictate terms, Some day we'll do it z, and the “ike you did, Aunt Lili,” but Aunt north in V-shaped formation; cattle} Then a new day will come.” be advised Lili did not hear. with blotchy coats were roaming the | (To Be Continued.) nto Globe. Mike Laine, the proprictor of the| nelds; black channels of water licked | — = “Farmer's Home,” learned in some thet way otiroueh Set Rte Claims Oldest Sewing Machine way of his niece’s arrival and asked yer SOW AOE Ikon rows ot pee A tractine Gieiter: He pinched her arm stitching around the fields, At one | Cranbrook Woman Using One) | affectionately the day of the funeral | 300% HRS ey ea Eek i Seventy-three Years Old tified by and told her to call him -“Mike” ae eee geehors a girls) A two-year old automobile may be! f cut the “Uncle” stuff. His burning ust out ‘Of school hadi comes down to | considered old, but there are sewing ah evan iad hey shudder: the station. Helm{ was glad to see | machines In use in British Columbia sive and "One of the zirls talked Finnish, and | wearing a cap much like her |citles that came to this part of Can-| pie} z ff the kitchen; 2|°™ gaye her a delicious thrill of ada many years before: the railfoads | Ich Is: be- NES Ee Ce. '|monti, A boy and girl walked away | traversed the Rockies. 4 y tho min- pune was pelds pitty ae el | together—the boy carrying his com-| jj through the province, espqcially | eh: 1 eee Bo. ol eee a |panion’s books and skates as well as \in the interior centres, there ar@ se } This Js ap- ee. ee 0 ae oN ae | his own. He leaned towards her as |jng machines that were brought to the | volume of ee LAA a inne ¥ B ; rf sting | Le Spoke. coast on sailing ships around Cape epar nent pps ae eee eTDre Helmi’s eyes were wistful as she | }yorn. which Sa: ! Boks cone ereument: | watched. “They are not all bad,” she} A short time ago, a continent-wide ent ae For three days) the discussion |.a1q in her own tongue search was made for the oldest sew- rom Sa a Eaeets Helmi during the intervals} tho train bore swiftly on. Eagerly ing machine in the United States and having washed her clothes and learn ltelmi watched the racing, swinging, Venaan: thane ere UnIad ebr | the more ed their English names. She also did} sliding fields, The sun went down in} 153.949 pwners entering machines in 5 of the her share of dishwashing and potato), -imson mist, shooting streamers the cont More than 100,000 of ‘ked inter peeling. Ter skill in these matters | into the sky, so warm and glowing |these machines wereat least 40 years or old age won the heart of the cook, who on Hee ibateit seemed to Flelml like’a’ welt | Bld. Uae thee wiinine snauilnies ware wever, are Ns sith ate ua oaner sla ‘| coming fire, whero she would find | manufactured before the beginning ot Costar Whines ie Pee: onmect the friends, home and happiness. Even)|the American civil war or Canadian t most de exlyytrom Saint Paul hs at Lede e after the sunset had paled and faded | confederation. Jebor, the day and look out for a “Finnish Bil |into the gray of night she knew that| ‘The oldest sewing machine in Can- he part of with red hair and a green Tam) i) 45 still burning and glowing and | ada Is said to be the property of Mrs. ners, Is be o’shanter, ____| beckoning her further on. P. Willis, of Cranbrock, B.C. It is| rom thes aie day that Yelm} left, Big Kate} Ana so came Helml,foung, strong rears old. and yet it is still In reg- snost inter made the explanation to the bereaved SRA AT eat y Uncle. Being the cook, she was mou ee PA « Brstia ont are Te afraid to talk back to any one, and} CHAPTER It tement of _ Bee tietcd ait Lelec's acsst ot| Margaret Kesiny was wiping her} antenyqDeonlo: ae almost apaDle pect {0 lr tiande on the Arurcplonedtroller tow. |wuce ome. Ue AL is suesdless autres on, but — 3 __, \ing which can be speedily ended with take, el which hing behind the pantry | trojloway’s Corn Remover. tact OPERATION LEFT. qloor pre ry to the opening of = Se interest 38 ich Jay on the lenirieufors Scavleisrevar adian gor - a mdsnent did| Iodine, injected hypodermically. not | ; liste elder Migs Kenny take herseyes | only we dae searlet ee but will tte . |totally kill its germs, according to a ——— ie Vea in the States,” she | doctor praciising in the Ambruzzl Letter Tells of Wonderful | said, “and so it’s trouble. she's | Mountains in Hay, He Ae iia Relief After Taki: Lydi j adopted a child, or killed a anan for e during a “ op oh d ate cae ay