ABBOTSFORD, SUMAS AND MATSQUI NEWS This Washboard will wear for Years | T’S so strong you could stand on it without doing it any harm. The rubbing surface is heavy SMP Pearl Enamel, positively smooth as glass, but unlike glass, it tannot Break! And it won't wear out, like zinc. The back is heavily re-inforced —with wood, It’s a washboard that will last for many years, and { gate } “Why didn’t you want me Miss Coutant’s been tonight? It would much ‘ sh reason,” Brandon “You're an {mportant on to someone, you know, for some Decisions you make now are hence. |the responsibility linto anybody's gt Thén you | will not be able to tell me about it “A wholly sel informed her I'd rather not haye dance. *| later on, if you feel like it.” “Do you think { shall ever be = “That doesn’t follow. ' Certainty, to go to than. tomor- of delivering you} Was Formed From Layer of* Earth’s | Crust Is Belief | A new theory is now being put forth that the moon was formed from 8 Jay- er of the earth’s crust, about 41 miles thiek, and covering about.two-thirds of its total area, and which was pull- I, on Baby's care a e ed off by the attraction of the sun, an eeding. The crustal area left on earth formed - the continents. This theory also : ’ accounts for the fact that while, ac- | ordens | cording to generally accepted ideas, | EAGLE BRAND Write for our free booklet jma Ss of lighter density stich as jmake up the earthly continents should cover the entire surface of the globe, New Titory About the Moon ™ remember, it is SMP made. the Sheet Metat Products Co.traes rah 7 ‘° joritory Vencouver and [heard many women telling how ‘ good it was so {roux hibit. would help me. And it did) NowlI take six bottles every year and recommend it to othe; “— DonaLDA FANTEUxX, Ayer’s Cliff, Quebec. “Unable to Work” Canning, Nova Seotia.—“I had ‘ir- regular periods-and great suffering at those times, the paifis causing vomiting and fainting. Iwas teach- ing school ahd often for some hours I would be unable to attend to my : work. Through an advertisement in the papers I knew of Lydia E. Pink- x ham’s Vegetable Compound, and it has been of great benefit to me, the troubles being completely relieved." —Laura J. Eaton, Canning, Ki g's _Gounty, Nova Scotia. c Ce ee eT Stange Fomaitic LoveAdventures wes of the Flapper you babu) “I can’t be still, for long, 7 “But T'll help you, perhaps,” Yvonne , _ car and Yyonne’s, Brandon murmur-} \ night. And tomorrow wilk do you dust as well. Iam going to drive you = home.” .‘s pee Ce Brandon ly took Joanna’s hands First gytional Pictures, Inc, |itps.. Then @ho finished: “That “I'm afraid I would be awfully funny | haven't had any home, for a tong) frankly } time!” | CHAPTER XII. ~ Joanna Visits Eggleston | | So Joanna, a billow of snow white ermine, nestled fn the cushions of) Brandon's limousine, went happlly to! [ | | | | | “Decisions made after niidnight are |not always safest. I’m\going to-drive | . you home,” said Brandon, | the place she had called home. _ Went | to the rooming house where Mrs. | Adams “lost her sleep over flapper! | lodgers. She thought it would be for |the last time | | Realization that rich, | |fabulously rich like Cou-| jtant; Jike a movie stay, like Mra. Delancy Jordan, with “whosa son| | Bob Joanna once had a date, DpSoUELS| | | | | she was Yvonne jed over his mother’s shoulder at ‘the | silk counter, had settled at last in ther groping brain. Her fight for un- fderstanding of the fantastic thing that had happened to her was over, sooth- jed away by the retrospects Of the évening. The feel of the ermines| j4gainst her cheeks and throat and| shoulde the nearness of Brandon,| his . evening clothes so} Prospects of the morrow | }when she "vould move Into‘the aura | of Yvonne, the symbol of Life, throb- | bed through hef pulsés and suffused her alert body with a gentle glow. For the twentleth time she resolved to puzzle no more about the source o1 | the money or the reason of it. Some- thing would happen to her, of course She'd meet it on tiptoez, One thing, jthoygh, she must square.up.* Bran- don, whatever his part In her affairs, poustn’e think she was—well, the kind jot a bell that is all clapper and no izing. She taxed him suddenly: ‘ who _ wore |smartly, the +} eyni | wasn’t ready yet ¢6 méet him fairly. yourself,” Georgie, assured her wise- in his and gently drew her to him| & 3 - x y. “He's got six cylinders r th until she stood quite close, so that she | 2 PASEO GAIEE Raa hood maybe, but only on orks. I'v had ta lift her chin to look into lls | ways ian frat ia Mie OE zs Bots face. For a moment stie was panic), 5 ~ : bon. He’s frightfully cut -up.” stricken. It was the prelude of =| “That's dot it Thich waliose ott Kiss, she thought. She didn’t Seat he pomerdayseait Mraatit ine nelsie: Brandon to kiss here Her Ups burn-| &f eles E z Sahat thik tireat of ‘it pected so mudh as it was anybody, She would} * t it I ked 1 oth any girl, I mean, who's got knees and S| as 8 e : OHARA LER IE hes askedeter, 100 “lisn’t ashamed to show them. . I'm took his caress without asking. Pook going to—!’- {t would spoil the evening. Still,/° 7 £ a, ‘What?” Georgie prompted her, but when chaps were decent and had con- | i = cy oanna bit her lips and wouldn’t tributed what might be called a good’ y | finish her sentence. time-for lack of a better phrase, there | (To be continued) but one coin with which to re- s ard* them—the coin that passed ip currency. But she didn't | want Brandon to take iG and he didn’t. He held her hands and looked down y eyes 4 y » She at his} into her eyes silently he ‘met ual The fact that the An Ingenious Contrivance | Wonderful Provision of Nature For | Seals and Camels wand seal gets credit gaze steadily, unafraid, but quivering | - Ea +3 a’ little. She had reasoned to ct a a ee ig rae i Rages Goce self that tonight she had discovered’ ~ : — ; _ y 1 ¢ d dislike th { ingenious contrivance in his nose, each praise ea 4 Rete Ste iE a fog | HOStriL being provided with muscles 001 10 i ectly i) me ou : | which e it hermetically a man, who itapfessed her always as igeae eee t hermetically at he was taking charge of her. It} 3 oe : . would be woman, she thought. The | "O*e {ss such that when the nostrilg woman in her leaped to the defensive jare ‘closed not a drop of water can before him, and with a sense of futil- jenter. With seals the closing-of the| ‘nostrils at the moment of diving has) ity. Kenilworth she could battle on become an automatic process. There} his own ground. Brandon tortured {scasallllemord weriuxwablo aplieitiGed women, sli® had -concluded. ~ She|~ es ‘ js | far remoyed from the seal, ‘The seal | But he BpOke softly. Do youlis a water animal. ” Te other owner | Know,” he said; “f shouldn't be sur-|o> trapdoor nostrils is the camel, an prised if you’d win through after all!” inhabitant of the waterless sandy | She cqught her breath. “Win! desert8. The camel is not troubled | through? Why-—what;” |with water, but he 1s troubled with He dropped her-hands instantly, and ldust. fF the camel had not nostrils! his manner changed. ou must which wtre perfectly dust-tight he! forget that,” he said: meécking again,|could never endure the dreadful sand } “It's another e of a funeral with and dust storms. nobody dead yet. At least don’t re-| — tember it for a long time.” Anti-British Sentiment Georgie, her own new hats and : Wraps and gowns, Joanna’s shower ot | This Propaganda Is Spread All Over gifts, hung from the door top, the} France chandelier and either side of the mir- The British Government was seri-| ror, so.that she might prop back on ously exercised by the ‘god of antt-| the ‘bed pillows and examine them, | British propaganda which is spread Was awake and waiting. She refus- jall over France, stimulated by the fall ed all invitations for the evening, both of the franc. 9 sentimental and hilarious, frankly. ad-| While Paris has shown particular) mitting she coukln’t leave her ward- | antagonism to Americans, tie robe at home alone. Joanna threw | French people in the country attrip- off her momenta depression, the ute the r in the cost of Hying aftermath of Brandon’s sententious-|to the pound sterling’and are still tn- ness, and plunged inio a gay recital|clined to regard -most foreigners as} of the night's events. Then Georgie|Englishmen. The result is a feeling D¥Bached Her own news. of irritation and hostility towards] “John liere tonlght,” Britain all over France | nounced. “He was. at the This is due, of course —-- ance of the situat f is neverthel was she an- bank to- to ignor-| , but its existence FOR 2 “Cholera | infantum”’ MOTHERS SHOULD USE The Boundary Line | - es A Path Leading From One Neighbor’s House to Another | of that boundary line— where in all the world ts there a boun-| line between two countries that} means~so little of what international boundary Mines all too-ofteh do mean— jealousy, suspicion, hate, fear and all the ugly devi duces to les | Speaking dar Is the humai mind pro- | it into wars and other} & ! , the-houndary line these Duluth good-will caravaners cross Is | not a dividing line at all, not a bit more than the friendly path that leg from one neighbor's house to anofher’s—Dulath Herald ; | This valuable preparation has been war | on the market for over 50 years, and Waiter: “A customer wants to know has no equal for offsetting the vomit- ing, purging and diarrhea of cholera infantum. Put up only by The T. Milburn Co, Limited, Toronto, Gat, how the tongu andwiches are.” | Proprietor: “You tell him that tho| “tongue sandwiches speak for them-| iselves!” Egglestone what you had s@id—that | Africa, and that it floated away to its }it she stood side by side with John.! I don’t the j|and sing,.“Auld Lang Syne,” four kept And the shape of Enel eitete }of the same principle in any animal | offers a simple remedy. | surely and promptly. | they actually cover only about a third, the missing two-thirds consisting of j the moon. The new theory also fits jin with the {deas of a German geolog- ist, Professor Alfred Wegener, who believes the American continent was originally united with Europe and |present place. This would not have been possible so long as the entire earth was covered with such a crust, |but after the moon had been torn |away it was possible for the continents to separate from their long pmbrate. | Little Helps For This Week { There shall be one fold and one shepherd.—John x.,, 16. Wild bird flying northward, whither thou? $ And vessel bending southward, what thy quest? 7 Clouds of the east with sunshine. on your brow, Whither? and crescent setting in the west? Stull we pursue while the white day is , ours; The wild bird journeys northward fn lis. strength; tender clouds waste in their sunny bowers, shepherd guides and them at length, —Anme Fields. He will guide ts in a sure ba though it be a rough one; though | shadows hang upon it, yet He “will be| with us. He will bring us home at} last. By His eye or by His yoice He | will gulde us, if we be docile and gen- tle; by His staff and by His rod, if we wander or are wilful; anyhow and by all means He will bring us to His Ire: —Henry Edward Manning, The One gathers | Minard’s Liniment for Dandruff | ae | Of elght Londoners who had made ja promise to’ meet at the steps of St. | Paul's Cathedral, 20 -yeays afterward | word recently, Three dead and the other disappeared. Were A Remedy for Earache.—To have the earache is to endure torture. The ear is a delicate organ and few care to deal with it, considering it work for a doctor. Dr. Thomas’ Eelectric Oil A few drops upon a piece of Tint or mediéated cot- ton and placed in the ear will do mucn in relleying pain. . 4 New. Zealanders Patriotic “ Few German goods are entering New Zealand, merchants Weclare. Be- fore the war the importation of Ger- man hardware was yery considerable, but it is now very smally The aver. is branded on them. Germany _has lost all the cutlery trade. Swi and palatable, Mother Graves’ Worm Exterminator is accept- able to children, and it does its work Some people never succeed in find- {ng out which side of.thelr bread 1s buttered until they drop it. t A woman can keep an expense ac: count almost as long as a man can jured that he lost his speech a A Queer old Document Professes to Trace Saxon Pedigree Back*to Adam In the library at the Herald’s Col- Tege, Queen Victoria Street, E.C, London, Eng., is a queer 16th century document, the history of which ts unknown. It, professes to trace the pedigree of the early Saxon kings right back to Adam and Eye, among the names of those appearing in the genealogy being Our Lord, Alexander and Nebuchadnezzar. it contains some beautifully executed and well- Preserved pen and ink drawings of subjects which include the fall, the building of the Tower of Babel, and the Ark. Adam fs stated to have dled from “gowte,” and to have been buried at Hebron. The document has been in the possession of the ‘Herald's College for 200 years, ; ~ SAVE THE CHILDREN - In Summer When Childhood Ail- ments Are Most Dangerous * ‘Mothers who keep a box of Baby's Own Tablets in) the house may feel that the lives of their little ones are reasonably safe during the hot weath- er. § Stomach troubl cholera in- fantum and diarrhoea c rry off thous- ands of little one every summer, tn most cases because the mother does not have a safe medicine at hand to give promptly. Baby’s Own Tablets relieve these troubles, or if given oc easionally to the well child they will prevent their coming an. The Tab-, lets are guaranteed by a government analyst to be absolutely harmless eyen to the new-born babe. They are especially good ft summer because they regulate the bowels and keep the stomach sweet and pure, They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from Tye Dr. Wil- liams’ Mediciné Co., Brockyille, Ont. pee @ C.N.R. Earnings Show Increase The gross earnings of the Canadfan National Railways for the period end- ed July 31, 1926, were $7,408,639, as compared with $7,059,027 for the cor- responding perlod of 1 an increase of $349,612, or five per cent. - = Miller's Worm Powders, betng in de- mand everywhere, tan be got at any or drug shop, at very small ‘ y are a rellable remedy for worm troubl @ can be fully relied upon to expe! ms from the system and abate the sufferings that worms cause. © There are many mothers that rejoice that they found ava: effective a remedy for the their children, “You say Cohen was so badly in- “Yes, both his arms were broken.” —R. Minard’s Liniment for insect bites Don't {magine that be us® one of the participants in a quarrel is wrong, hat the other is altogether right. Most men are as anxious to get rich as most women are to be beaut. keep a diary, ful. Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Headaché Pain Neuralgia Neuritis Toothache Lumbago Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFE CT THE HEART Accept only “Bayer” p 4 which contains proven directions. Ha ; Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggista, ‘Aspiria ts the t acidester of 3 Heacld (Acetyl Bayer manufac 7 will be stamped with thet. de-mark (registered in Canada) of B Me Acid, “A, B . to asetat the ige ndy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Manufecture of Musiohsetlo: While it is well meown inst imitations, the oJ de mark, the “Eayer Urves.* F geue: j id King’s