Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 30 May 1935, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

#\ _ _ Perhaps you “1‘ A ars not really ill agae â€" yet when the o .L,', work is dooeyoumtootind to eater into the god times that other women enjoy. For extra ene + try Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegeuable co:r‘d'l'm"’mmtnl bealth. Gives you more pepâ€"more charm. Remember that 98 out of 100 women report benefit. Let it help wan fan: The Professor pursed his lips. It was evident he did not like the idea of the circuit going out of his conâ€" trol, or else it was that he considerâ€" e himself to be in charge of the "I came to get the circuii. I want to make an important experiment with it tomorrow." HEALTH MEANS charm AND HAPPINESS Be sure to look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every Aspirin tablet. Aspirin is made in Canada and all druggists have it. grating as soon as it touches moisture. That means that Aspirin â€" starts "taking hold" . . . eases even a bad headache, neuritis or rheumatic pain almost instantly. And Aspirin is safe. Doctors prescribe it. For Aspirin does not harm the heart. An Aspirin tablet starts If everything had been all right he would have been at work on his valve tonight. He was working out in his mind a scheme for an attack on Mr. Corville Perkin, and in that scheme he was proposing to make use of the mysterious powers of the valve. TO BE SURE YOU GET Fast Relief ADAM PLANS aAnN ATTACK After Adam had made his statc ment, he found there was justâ€"time to get to the Technical College before Professor Starling would have lef*. & With almnes 122 _ 0_ SUOPY @Xp¢TH ments with shortâ€"wave wireless, Waliking homeward, Adam is nearly Fun down by a large swift car, He calls on Prisciila Norval. Her futher recounts the history of five nntloue chatrs he possesses. Adam is extremely puzzled over the gonnection . of Corville _ Perkin _ and Montada who wants the antique chairs. Then Priscillia is spirited away. 1 P Eomm CC T/ WCled t0o a solicitor, mukes a brave but unsuccessful attempt _ to thwurt three thieves in a bagâ€"snatching | raid The bag was torn from the hands of a ::" who explains that it contains the Y‘s takings of her father‘s shop. Me attempts to WaCck the thieves and reaches un old warehouse. Adum enters the building _ while the girl watches the door. Suddenly he hears footsteps, The man turns out to be Adams employerâ€"Corville Perkin. Adam Meriston, ln_lclod to a solict TRADEMARK REGISTERED in CANADA A S P I R i N Demand and Get Ves in a bagâ€"snatching raid Â¥as torn from the hands of a uplal'ns_ that it contains the mere w P i9 Th " his private h« NS private hours experiâ€" EUE B LOCROITE THT s of her father‘s shop. ts to LrACk the thieves and old _ warehouse. Adum building _ while the girl door. Suddenly he heaurs a good a _ farmer‘s disinteâ€" COs 20 PEOS PCCRTIITICHL 10 days‘ supply (in granules of leasing g:)‘_ég: 45 days‘ supply, 81400 at corpuscles in your blood to throw off the poisons which induce muscular 5"&','.‘1’: skin imperfections and general ebility, Start taking Phillips now. You will like itâ€"and find it very economical. 15 "I have begun to dislike your Mr. Perkin very strongly, I‘m afraid," he remarked halfâ€"way through the narrative. "I fear already that I may find it difficult to retain the scientific detachment so necessary in these exâ€" perimental stages. I had much the same difficulty, I remember, in the little test I made on my wife‘s goldâ€" fish. If you knew how I hated that goldfish I think you would underâ€" stand." P ael l w ECC OY PCCCBY *TCECASC, Phillips Yeast will do this for ion because, in its preparation a 't:{ as been found to preserve indefini y, in the highest state of activity, the rich content of the B Vitamins, Enzymes and Nuclein of yeast. LIVE Yeast : (1) Help:‘ digestion ; :gwghzm o ter eating. t your wy Oxtncunae full benefit from the food you eat. (3) And enables the white your appetite improve, energy increase mended your Yeast to many n A festlly in is sihcacs. tine. en it testify to , espeâ€" clally as regards the keen zest for food imduced by its use."â€" London, Englandâ€"Extract from original letter. Would you like to be free from lassiâ€" tudeâ€"alive, active, bealthy ? Then take Phillips {’H!e_iLIVE Yeast. Watch a hand to load the b;it'er;e; x;xt;) Adam‘s old suitcase and to connect up _the ci_rcuit on a removable shelf. _ It was a great relief to the torâ€" mented Adam to tell all his hopes and fears to a sympathetic listener, but he insisted that he must be packâ€" ing up the apparatus while he talkâ€" ed, and in this the Professor thought it wise to humour him. He even lent LIVE Yeast Gives Buoyant Health _ "I never did any aiding and abetâ€" ting as far as I remember," said the Professor philosophically. "One ought always to seek new experiences. Look here, my lad, don‘t you think it would be wiser to tell me all about it first. Then I‘ll tell you whether I think I ought to come with you or not." "This‘ll be a legal stink, sir, if it comes to that. Action for assault and battery and all that sort of thing. You‘ll be aiding and abetting if you come." to stinks. They are sometimes very valuable indications to the trained mind. And as a matter of fact, I‘ve none of the vulgar prejudices against stinks. I quite like ‘em." Undoubtedly he was "But my dear fellow, you â€" surely give me credit, after forty years of laboratory experience, for being used "I‘m afraid it wouldn‘t do for you, sir. I am by no means sure of my ground yet. I am acting only on very strong suspicion. If the man I‘m after does not know anything about Miss Norval‘s disappearance there‘ll be an awful stink." "That sounds very interesting inâ€" deed, but I think you would be well advised not to experiment without the aid of a trained and, I think I may say, a compctent observer. In your present condition you are liable to become excited, and the most imâ€" portant of your results might escape you altogether. What I mean is, you‘ll probably be so concerned about a matter that has no scientific value whatever that you will overlook the subtler phases of your subject‘s ceâ€" actions. I therefore propose to be present at this experiment. I can make the notes that you will certainâ€" ly be too unbalanced to make, and without which the experiment will be, scientifically speaking, valueless." LIVE Yeast regularly, with excellent results. I have recomâ€" ! "I think it would be better if you did not know, sir. I am by no means sure of my ground yet. I‘m in awful trouble, as you will have guessed, and I‘m proposing to give the valve its first exercise in the detection of crime. If I can frighten the truth out of one person, I think everythinz‘ will come right. Ii I can‘t, I suppose‘ I shall be in a worse mess thanl ever," experiments now, and resented the suggestion of independent action. "I suppose you would not mind telling m« the lines you propose to go on," he remarked equably enough. "About three months out three months ago 1 nced to take Phillips Pure trying to cheer NoA h i ie ie ole oD e ue .. Apart altogether from the moral angles to this question, the writings tell me that this is the case. Both the man and his wife are of the selfâ€" _ However, she also sent me some of the writing of the man in quesâ€" tion, also that of the man‘s wife. Ard from my inspection of all three writings I cannot but come to the conclusion that this girl is making a very grave mistake. J Her own handwriting shows that she is very affectionate and of a markedly sympathetic nature. She responds very readily to emotional influences, and I have no doubt that it was, in the first place at least, this eager readiness to sympathise with others that led her into her} present attachment. Well, of course, the decision as to her future course of action must come from herself, but as she has written to me about her problem, I deduce hat she is worrying over it, and I am therefore going to give her my candid opinion. \ I have another letter this week from a young ladyâ€"she is 21 years of ageâ€"who says she has fallen in love with a married man, and, to use her own phase, "simply cannot give him up". (Editor‘s Note: Many of our readers have already obtained a character study from their handâ€" writing. Have YOU? The revelaâ€" tions will certainly interest you and they may surprise you. The author renews his invitation to readers fol-‘ lowing this week‘s article.) "Have you seen ring Jack gave me? "Yes; pretty, isn‘t it? I was sorry it was too large for me!" Issue No. 21 â€" ‘3§ "‘Then don‘t open the door. Shut the shop. People will understand you doing that after all your troubles. Be out. That is, don‘t be inâ€"they might break inâ€"but unless they do, don‘t show up." He was confident now that the lawyer knew all about the disappearâ€" ance of Scylla, was no doubt responâ€" sible for it just in order to secure the chairs by this specious offer of assistance. His proposal had a certain degree of cleverness about it, and forced a reluctant admiration â€"from him. Perkin certainly was a remarkâ€" able negotiator. "I‘m afraid it‘s too late to withâ€" draw now," Norval â€" was saying. "He‘s sending for the chairs toâ€" morrow and bringing receipts for the payments of the money between us." "I can frighten the soul, if he has One, out of Mr. Perkin," answered Adam boldly. "In other words he‘s blackmailing you in what looks to be a perfectly legal way, and more than that, the cunning devil is getting the chairs and the money as well, that is he‘s getting the chairs for nothing. Don‘t do it. Leave Mr. Perkin to me for a couple of days at least." "But what can you do that you have‘not already done?" , Norval found some plates and oddments and the two made a show ,of eating. As they did so he suddenâ€" ly remarked: "You‘ll be surprised to ‘lenrn that I have decided to let my chairs go at last." "Let them go? To whom?" "To your Mr. Corville Perkin, of course. He called here today and reâ€" newed his offer. He also hinted that if he had a sufficient sum â€"of money placed at his disposal he firmly beâ€" lieved he lould do a great deal more for me in connection with the reâ€" covery of my girl than all the police in the country. I feel I daren‘t reâ€" fuse his aid, and the only way to get the necessary money is to sell him the chairs." | Although the hour was late, Norâ€" val had not attempted to go to bed. He said the house seemed so liked a morgue now, that he never lay down in it without thinking of himâ€" self as already dead. The rooms were untidy and undusted, but beyond all that there was an extraordinary sense of emptiness as though the soul of the place had departed. Acam up by his foolishness, but in this he was not very successful, and when the young man left the Co:â€" lege half an hour later, staggering under the weight of his batteryâ€"loadâ€" ed suitcase, the burden on his mind seemed to exceed that on his body. He made his way to Cavendish Street, where he had been staying for a night or two. ' (To Be Continued.) 919 the engagement Ceoffrey ot. Clair, Room 421, 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto, Ont. Letters will be answered as quickly as possjible, and letters will be com and without bias. Would YOU like his help? Have you any friends whose true characters you would like to know? Or do you merely wish to find out what YOUR handwriting tells about yourself? Send sveciâ€" Not all the problems with which this wellâ€"known author has to deal are given in these articles. There are many that are too confidential to be included and in all cases, Mr. St. Clair is able to help sincerely | __I have a letter from a lady who signs herself A.K., and the postâ€" mark on the letter was Edmonton. I would like this lady to write me again and please enclose her full address so that I may write to her confidentially. ] He is interested in her for the moment, but has no sincere desire to ruin his present conditions of life and marriage. So I say to the girl who wrote me, in all sincerity, that she is far too good to take the chance of ruinâ€" ing her life for the sake of this man. Give him up. You will find happiâ€" ness in other directions and in a more permanent manner. ' But I cannot say the same thing about the girl who writes to me and the man. I do not think that the man is seriously in love with her. He may be infatuated with her, but I suggest that, if the girl insists on his getting a divorce in order that they can be married, she will find that what I say is merely the truth.{ interested type. They look after their own interests firstly and lastâ€" ly. I would say that the man and his wife are wellâ€"suited. I wonder why we are so prone to ’ censure and to blame? Can‘t we forget the faults, and seek for virtue and acclaim? 1 wonder why we always see the flaws and faults alone? Are there no virtues there? And are the faults worse than our own? O, let us give"a word of praise to those who daily plod; l That word may be the ray of hope that lights a soul to God. ficlure the consequences if the powers of smell which once belongâ€" ed to the human race were restored. There can be no civilization without smells. To warm ourselves we burn coal and other fuel, producing smells which we do not notice, though if our noses were perfect they would be loathsome. In our houses there must always be tiny escapes of gas, which luckily our modern noses do not detect. Nor are they offended by the smeli of the wool or cotton of which clothes are made, or the leather of our footwear and the thousand and one other odours which would become intolerable. lslderably below any retiring age which is likely to be fixed. If a judge is competent to do his work, I can. not see any reason why he should not go on doing it. Ample power is already vested in the Lord Chancellor‘ to get rid of anybody who by age or incompetency should be relieved ofl his judicial responsibilities ." On the questior High Court judges who is just 60 y "No retiring age speak «without pr have almost reach "Nothing has created greater in. dignation in some parts of the counâ€" try than the closing of jails," declarâ€" ed the judge. "No one would think that they wanted a jail in their midst, but I know several towns which were highly indignant that their prisons should be taken away. Prisons bring people into town as visitors, to see it, and the same thing applies to the holding of assizes." Saved by the Modern Nose Picture the consequences â€" if London, Eng.â€"People are proud of their penitentiaries, according to Mr. Justice Sir Rigby Swift, one otf the judges of the King‘s Bench. The judge was giving evidence before the Royal Commission on the despatch of business at common law. Are Proud Of Penitentiaries English Judge Says Jails And Courts Attract Visitors A Word Of Praise the question of retirement of Court judges, Mr. Justice Swift is just 60 years of age, said: retiring age should be fixed. 1 iwithout prejudice because I almost reached the time when entitled to retire. and I am conâ€" o town ; same t assizes ,‘ question e fixed. 1 because I time when I am conâ€" Puiruips‘ SS When you have ons of these acid stomach upsets, all you do is take Phillips‘ Milk of * le/lagnesia after meals and before going to bed. Try this. You‘ll feel like another fiers_onl Take_ either the familiar quid "PHILLIPS‘", or the conâ€" venient new Phillips‘ Milk of Magâ€" nesia Tablefs. Made in Canada. Also in Tablet Form: pritipe Mits of Magnesia Tap: . @ Well, scientists say the cause, in a great many cases, is merely an acid condition of the stomach. 'Â¥he thing to do is simply to neutralize the excess stomach acidity. We B > 2300 es oc to Scientists, May be Somethin No More Alarming Than ‘ Touch Of Acid Stomach At about 40, many ;}eople think they‘re "growmg old." They‘re tired a lot. Have headaches. Stomach up~ sets. Dizziness. Nausea. "An angel is a person who has conquered self and risen to high levels of character. No person can be endowed with virtue or holiness." â€"Edwin Markham. ‘t' The gladiolus is deservedly one of the most popular flowers in Canada. ‘| Also it needs very little care except : at planting and digging time. About 1 the middle of May is a good time y for planting but, as pointed out by j the Horticultural Division, Dominion ‘| Experimental Farms, the exact date : varies according to locality because | the frost must be out of the ground and the soil dried. Sandy loam, well |fertilized the previous year, is the |ideal soil, but gladioli will do well on heavier soils. In a light, poor soil they would probably fail in a hot dry season. After planting the soil must be cultivated frequently to keep down the weeds and render the surface loose. During very dry weather a thorough soaking with water once a week is very beneficial, and it is well to remember that when the time comes for cutting the blooms at least two sets of leaves should be left on the plants, so that the corm will come to full growth ‘and so be in good condition for growing next year. There are hunâ€" dred of varieties to choose from, but the Primulinus hybrids which are quite distinct in appearance from the largeâ€"growing varieties are becomâ€" ing more popular every year. â€" The corms, as obtained from the seedsâ€" man, should be planted from four to six inches deep and about three inchâ€" es apart in a sunny position in the garden. I It‘s Frequently Just an "Idea." Not ';37:1 Age." And According #a @2b c ard" Tok e 4 TE malies | EA. T â€" t il, ‘ ‘: BJ3 T Why at 40 ‘ou Think You‘re "GROWING OLDP" BROWN LABEL â€" 33¢ 4 Ib. OQORANGE PEKOE â€" 40¢ 4 Ib. Popular In The Dominion ie Andrews now. Small tin, 35¢; Large tin, 60¢c; Extra large bottle, Tbe. Proprietors, Scott & Turner Ltd., Newcastleâ€"uponâ€"Tyne, Eng. 4 When you feel like a log and your muscles tire easily, it‘s more than likely that wastes that shouldn‘t be in your bod{ are sending out poisons into your blood. At times like these, NO PEP ? 1. Write a short statement (under 50 words) on why you prefer RIT Dyes and send it together with an empty RIT package (or reasongble facsimile) and your name and address, to John A. Huston Co. Ltd., 46 Caledonia R. «» Toronto. 2. Send as many as you wish; contest closes midnight June 29, 1935, 3. 1,000 o;nm will be awarded on the decision of the judges, which will be final, Whether you win a pair of silk stockings or not, we will mail to all entrants free of charge, our famous bookletâ€"*"The A.B.C, of Home Rug Making", Couas 20 2 0 CC TERERE OF reasons why you will prefer RIT. RIT comes in 33 basic brilliant colors, from which can be produced over 50 of the newest Paris shades, FAST ‘Colors wirkout somine 1 Only RIT offers this advantage! RIT is the mo!cm tint or dyeâ€"easier and surerâ€"far superior to ordinary *‘surface dyes"" because it contains a patented ingredient that makes the color mf’ in Jnfv, set faster and last longer. Sold everywhere. fashionedâ€"shadowâ€"free pure silk chif. fon stockingsâ€"latest Spring shadesâ€" guaranteed f 1,.00 valueâ€"will be given as prizes to lL,OOO entrants. There are dozens of _ Canada qertainly does not starve its people if we may judge by its recorded consumption. In 1983 we ate, per capita, 136.99 pounds of meat, 10.68 pounds of poultry, 30.4 pounds of butter, 8.30 pounds of cheese and 257 eggs. The meat bill was as follows pork, 74,58 lbs.; beef, 56.09 pounds; and mutton and lamb, 6.32 pounds. ‘ rd SBUNE lt se ccstn ts Th i : 4 7 l Pipe Smokers! fill up with . yHIQRLCTS: Tlll up wit "GOLDEN VIRGINIA" and enjoy a really good smoke! Canadians Well Fed HOY TO win in the world, but iihile-;a t‘;au 1‘0v0 years has become the tea garden of the world.â€"J. H. in Ottawa Journal. But 1839 was a date never to be forgotten in the history of the British Empire for it was the year in which Empireâ€"grown tea was first sold in ~England. Now the British Empire not only <produces tea which at its best is the finest _ One item from the Forbes scheme reads as follows: "Theâ€" excessive use of tea is now become so comâ€" mon that the meanest families, even the laboring people, particularly in burghs, make their morn n ameal of it The same drug supplies the laboring women with their afterâ€" noon‘s entertainment, to the excluâ€" sion of the twopenny.." There were, however, crganized efforts aginst the growing custom ’of tea drinking. The most pouticalâ€" ly adroit of all the objections of that period was that raised by Dunâ€" can Forbes, Lord President of the Scottish Court of Sessions He arâ€" gued that tea drinking reduced beer drinking and so diminished the y.eld from malt duty. The â€"deserrent measures he demanded were finally defeated after a lengthly qaebate. Hard as a stone and aimost inâ€" destructible, they travel all over Asia on a camel; when you want a glass of tea, you chip off a bit with a knife, as the oldâ€"time traveller in China, cuts bits from his silver "shoe" to weigh against purchases. ’ Tea was known 3,000 years B.C., and though by the thirieenth cenâ€" tury it was a universal drink in China it was not until nearly 400 yeas later that Europe began to hear of tea through the Portuguese and the Dutch. The first Englishâ€" man to mention tea was a Mr Wick» man in 1615. He wrote from Japan to a friend asking for three silver porringers in which to drink tea. Tea "was first sold publiciy â€" in England in 1657. 1t fetched from fifteen to fifty shillings a pound in the leaf. It was also sold in iquid lform, made, so the vendor said, acâ€" cording to the directions of the most knowing merchants and traâ€" vellers in the East. In 1711 the "Spectator" recomâ€" mended all wellâ€"regulated families who set apart every morning an hour for tea, to order the nowsâ€" paper to be punctually served up and to be looked upon as part of the tea equipage. Drinking tea is a fine art in China. The late Lord Li Chingfong, when minister in London 20 years ago, objected to the custom of putâ€" ting the saucer under the cup, whereas the Chinese put it on top. In China tea leaves and beverage are served together in a little bowl, into the top of which the saucer fits. Gripping the bowl with thumb and outer fingers, with the middle and first finger you adjust the saucer to hold back the leaves us the liquid flows out. Brickâ€"tea is made mostly for Rusâ€" sian anc Mongolian consumption. The leaves are damped and comâ€" pressed into blocks about ten inches square to one inch thick. _ There is a ritual of teaâ€"drinking in China, as there has been for thousands of years about every deâ€" tail in the taking of nourishment, though the foreigner never learns more of it than not to touch the cup till the business of the interview is ended. are being taken in China and the response is a better demand for her tea. Certainly, if China had given the world nothing else, we snould owe her gratitude for her tea. trade. Today, however, more Before the year 1984 China supâ€" plied the world with tea, and it was in China that tea had its origin. Now there are teas and teas We have Ceylon tea, Indian tea, Java tea and China tea. The more scienâ€" tific methods adopted in Ceylon and India in preparing tea for marketâ€" ing gradually reduced the China tea national drink of England is well reâ€" cognized, too, despite the "savage" â€"according to general complaintâ€" tax upon it. But the great drink of the United Kingdom is, without question, tea. It is the daily houseâ€" hold beverage. al drink of : events what i imposed on it sixpence ($17 national drink cognized, too, "A hundred years ago the Indian tea industry was founded; today it is the largest organized industry in the country, providing employment for nearly a million workers, and among the producing countries of the world ranks highest. We here in Great Britain consumed more than the rest of the world put together and teaâ€"drinkingâ€"at once a solace and an inspirationâ€"has become part of our national life» to an extent not always realized." Writing in the Manchester Guardâ€" ian Commercial‘s special issue in celebration of the Empire ‘Tea Cenâ€" tenary, Samuel Hoare, Secretary of State for India, says: TEAâ€"DRINKERS OF It always t is wel drink 0: CEOE PRTBOZIT MAREL LNC ABAUUON~ k of Scotland ‘is, or at all what it was before there was 1 on it a tax of 72 shillings e ($17.50) per galllon. The | drink of England is well reâ€" d ton dnunite the Haonuane* ays realized well known n it a tax of 72 sh _(§1_7.5Q)7per galllon. known what the Scotland ‘is, or â€"has become part life» to an extent nation W th w ing gethc "cakelets" are sp tea, They can | ranged, too, and appearance of the frequently, & ring, «(not r fine sieve or and mix the tablespoons s beat until sti mixture. Fo berries. Tur automatic re rapidly as p vsually requi to container, in equal par hours. Makes 18 ed i muft An flour Sift f 1 °EE, Sift f ing pow Cream b 1% 19 We Torw. for i ner : shou! perfe 1J ticular June, M ssorte PC cuy teasy f Coconut Vanitie fted cake flour Queen from Fu Mathchu FU MA ft iA () Mu fln1 M

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy