Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-), 20 Sep 1934, p. 2

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

Tt gets od of 'scrubbing . . . . T TNPLEASANT cleaning jobs "down to ground-in grime! Use a - solution of 1 teaspoonful dissolved 'hard rubbing) '. "Keep Gillett's Lye on hand for fl five-mile area from Charing Cross. Mbtorists showed a readiness to re spond and 3000 extra police, posted throughout the area, were rarely obliged to caution drivers, Even the late-night outpouring from theaters with the usual frantic demand for taxis was conducted in comparative silence, When the first glint of sunrise burnished the cross of St. Paul's, lorries rumbled toward Covent Gar- den without a single blast, "QUAINT" HUMOR The quaint hvmor of the Scottish bench in former days was illustrated by the sentence of one of the judges, "Ye're a very clever chiel, but ye'll be nane the waur o' a hangin." SLAVE TO HOUSE-CLEAN- "ING CHORES bhp fe dirt easily and quickly, no hard rubbing and : are easy when you use Gil- Jett's Pure Flake Lye. It actually washes the dirt away. Gets right 'in-a quart of cold* water. Off 'comes the dirt! And you do no all your cleaning. Use it for toilet 'bowls. Toclearstopped-updrains. It kills germs, destroys odors-- andneverharmsenamelor plumb- ing. Your grocer sells Gillett's Lye. Ask him for a tin--today. *Never dissolve lye in hot water. The action of the lye itself heats the water, Al wh ly FREE BOOKLET--Goet your copy of the new edition of the Gillett's Lye Bqoklet--it tells you dozens of ways to make house cleaning easier by using is powerful cleanser and disinfectant. contairls full information for soap making, thorough cleansing and other vses on the farm. Address Standard Brands Limited, Fraser Avenue & Lib- erty Street, Toronto, Ontario, | i . GILLETT'S market gardeners' 'I phne to meet him in order to clear BYNOPSIS Michael -,Borde, 40, unmarried, born and bred In a Birmingham slum, is pow a wealthy motor manufacturer, Qne day he visits the countryside around his old home and rescues Daphne Eden from a menacing tramp, He falls in love 'and proposes. Daphne accepts and introduces him to her father, who greets him with the words: "Get out of here you cur -- you rulned my home ---- stole my wife -- curse you!" Daphne's father dies and she disap pears. Michael explains to her frlend, Mrs. Gregory, that he was nlsrepre- gented. He buys the old Tudor House owned by the Hamill-Hardy's. Mrs. Gregory promises to mall a letter from him to Daphne. "Why didn't 1 think of that? Of course, if Daphne's mother were found I could prove there was noth- ing in it," he said, "She may be dead, though." For some time he sat musing, At one time Michael Borde would have declared arrogantly that with money you could do anything. Experience had taught him that money did not always yield results so quickly as he imagined, for in spite of all he had done to find Daphne's whereabouts he was none the wiser. With a woman like Mrs. Eden, however, as he re-| membered her, and it was odd to find how little he could remember and how blurred her image had grown, it might not be so difficult. If as Richard Eden had declared so vehemently, she was supposed to have eloped wilh him, it looked as though she had quitted that Midland town about the time he left, therefore her destination might be traceable. It was certain she had not gone back to Eden, and unless she were dead . . . here he shrugged his shoulders, "Her sort don't die young," was what Michael Borde said rather bit- terly. : . It was very annoying to find that a woman for whom he'd not cared twopence. should have power, after all these years, to work such dis-| turbance, And in the first affair of the heart he had ever had. og He suddenly buried his face in his hands. Yes, he 'did care, he _ cared turbance in his life. He felt that he gould never be able to concentrate upon business in the same way until once and for all he had discovered whether she would marry him now. It was difficult to write the letter, without ¢iving himself away. He badly wanted to tell the whole un- varnished story, explain himself, for he thought it would be so easy. But since Lorna Gregory had advised the other. thing, he simply begged Da- things up. ' "Until you have heard what I have to say, Daphne, don't. utterly terribly. Daphne had become a dis-|. won't. . breath, and out of a spell of what VE Night Noises Nil Jess, XXXXXXHX XXX RAE SS EAP itr D Ny As London Sleeps = ? By a, " 9% e ; * London -- London's campaign to . 2 "quiet the big city during sleeping 0% 3 hours was inaugurated with success sf wecently, There was a stillness for RJ 2 1% hours thai astonished the town. | i B By order of the Ministry of Trans- | By MRS. STANLEY WRENCH R port pe Buaing oO voile 5 (Author of "Sing for the Moon" "Strange Lovers," elc). Ri orns and sirens was . tween 11:30 pm. and 7 am, in a LT, RX RXXRXIXXRXIXXX RHINO DOOR ROO RRR 3% to-day it I. had a son like you," she told herself, and after he had gone she sat looking very thoughtful, "I believe I'll 'do ft," she sald, "After all, he will live here at Wer- burge Lucy now. The land will be his," » She wrote a letter to her solicitor that evening asking him to come and see her the following week, as there was something in her will she wish- ed to alter, end mentioning certain investments, "I want you to be .prepared for a somewhat drastic proposition from me," she wrote, "lI have an excellent reason behind, which I will explain personally, as it is impossible to ex- plain by letter all I have in mind. That I do not wish to make these changes hurriedly, I have suggested this day week for your consultation, as this leaves me time to think over what I have in mind." That letter was posted, and in the meantime she received a reply from Daphne, but in it she made no ment- ion of Michael Borde, or the en- closure in the letter from Mrs, Gre- gory which she now answered, On the assumption, however, that "no news is good news," and that no mention of Michael means that she intended to meet him, Lorna Gregory watched him set off in' the Multiple racing model, wondering why she should have impressed so fussily upon him. the need to be cautious, over driving, "I'm like an old hen. with her chickens, today," she told herself, as she lay back in her chair. "What do I know about modern cars? He must have thought me a fool." He had smiled back in that charm- ing, although cocksure way of his, waved his hand, and as that sharp pain ran over her body again, Lorna Gregory closed her eyes. Years ago that terrible accident in the hunting ficld had crippled her, and there were days, as now, when as well-as physi- cal pain, black spells of utter melan- cholia enveloped her, so that she was unable to think coherently, A presentiment of evil hung around her, but this had happened before, and like a woman possessed of sec- ond sight, as she lay 'with closed eyes, she followed Michael on his journey along the white dusty road that wound from the bottom of the hills to Shakespeare land. Once or twice she plucked at the fringes of the cash- mere shawl wrapped about her like one who counts a charm. "Will she come. . . she will. She . I wonder if she will," ran the jumble of her thoughts. Then that sharp stabbing pain ran through her again, she caught her on Saturday at two o'clock. wait in the garden condemn me," he wrote, "I'm the| might have been unconsciousness prisoner at the bar, waiting to be| heard the cuckoo calling down the judged. But any prisoner, even the|vale, his cry answered from tree to lowest of the low, is given a chance to plead. I don't even ask for that. All I want is for you to give me the opportunity to state facts, Please be fair. Meet me at Stratford-on-Avon will behind Shake- some I tree. Hawthorn blossom scented the air, syringa hung budded beside her, ready to break into sweetness when the lilac was over, and near her feet a bed of green ledves held lilies of the valley, reminding her of Daphne again, for she had planted them here, so as to be near the house when Mrs. speare's house. If you prefer other time or place, please let me know. Otherwise, 1 will wait there, and until you have~told me you have cast me out of your heart for ever I shall still sign myself your devot- ed Michael." The next day he handed this to Mrs. Gregory, watched her seal this in her own letter, and when the post- man came with a delivery, she-hand- ed this to him. with her other cor- respondence to be posted. "I always do that," she said. "It saves that long walk down to the village, The Birches are not ordinary people, although she is postmistress and he is now acting postman. I'd like you to meet her some time, a charm: ing woman. She has written to thank me today, just because I enquired of Denis. You can see the handwrit- He read the short note, passing it back with a smile, : "Now Daphne knows I am here," he observed, "and she knows you must have told me that you know where she is, I haven't given her long in which to make up her mind, but, at any rate, if Saturday isn't convenient to her, it gives her a chance to let me know not to go on a wild goose chase," / That boyish - smile, so anxiously asking for reassurance, again lit up his eyes, 3 t 8 ' "WILL SHE COME?" Gregory had-been ill, Mary's blossoms, another much Mrs. Gregory loved their freckl- chumps from the meadows, bringing Ariel's messengers to Often she had told Daphne Eden she had "green fingers," since planted seemed to flourish. Michael would almost be there now. She plucked at her shawl again. course she will, She loves him. must come , other way . , ." was the subject of her Michael Borde waited, and he took out ing is that of an educated. person." - his watch, He was ahead of time. appointment in my dinned that into my brain from time everlasting? Take care of the minut- es, and the hours will 'take care of themselves." Plumbing May Be Gave Mother whim of Daphne's planting, for finding how There were cowslips, too, ed favours, she had transplanted the garden. all she Her eyes went to her watch. of ) She . or I must find some "Will she come, . . I wonder, Meanwhile, all unconscious that he thoughts, "Well, I've never been late for an life, ran. his houghts, "Time is. money. Haven't I (To Be Continued.) Of Amoebic Dysentery Toronto--Prevention of athoeblc dy. entry by the fnspeéction of plumbing | T. O. Byrnes, wife of the Mrs, Gregory quietly. And she sald, kissed her hand, - she did not.voice aloud, "I think she'll come, Michael," sald in her heart Lorna Gregory beleved what "It I were twenty years younger 1 should have fallen in love with you myself," she told him, and with a curjously shy gesture he got up and What Lorna Gregory thought then , "What a proud woman | ghould be in all of the larger and older build- ings in the United States and Canada was the chief topic to be discussed by sanitary engineers at the {nterna- tional convention of 'the Anierfcan So. clety of Sanitary, Engineers held here, The hazards of defective plumbing In older buildings as illustrated by the epldemic of amoebic dysentery in Chicago were dealt with by Thomas J, Claffy ot the department of sani. Blend Orange Pekoe ------ : 1x Fresh from the Gardens (Editor's Note: The striking Inter. est in Character Reading from Hand- writing Is shown In the number of re- quests from readers who- wish to have thelr own handwriting analysed, as well as that of thelr friends, Have YOU had YOURS analysed? The an. nouncement following this article will Interest you, This week I am {llustrating the wri. ting of a lady with a rather strong character, This lady has a good deal of capacity for emotional feeling, but she also has, what in her case is a compensating factor, a strong mind, She feels deeply, but she also brings her mind into play, and uses her jud- What Does Your Handwriting Reveal? GEO, ST. CLAIR (Grapho-Analyst) All Rights Reserved, Reticence Is shown in the way she closes her "a", She doesn't talk at random, and let everyone know what she knows, She knows how to keep secrets, Anyone who writes the "a? and "0" go that they are closed, is not inclined to talk too much, and if these letters are knotted at the top, this is even stronger evidence of. this char. acteristic, . Another trait that distinguished this lady is a tendency to hold very de- cided and fixed views on cerlain mat. ters, Once she makes up her mind on any question, it is not easy to dis. suade her, } And she can be a little ruthless, too, gement, There are, people who have a tre. mendous capacity for emotional feel. ing, and who are ruled completely by their feelings, They do things impul- sively, without any careful pre-judge- ment, and are swayed hither and yon as thelr emotions dictate, Not so with this lady! She feels deeply, and will often feel sympath. her mind will prevent her from going to excess; She may he generous, but it will be a reasoned generosity, and not the blind impulsive generosity of people who are governed entirely by their heart and emotions, In her particular case, there is an. other tralt, She js inclined to consid. er her own self-interest in doing any. thing, She will be inclined to ask her. self the question: What do I get out of this? " . This lady has a very quickthink- ing mind, She arrives at conclusions in a lash, Note the sharp-pointed n's and m's. And she has a facile mind, also, Qbserve how the loop of the 'g' turns to the right, instead of normally twirling to the left, as most people do with this letter. etically disposed to other people. But |. There Is evidence that she is more in. teresied in attaining any" particular objective than in the means she uses to attain it, Notice the small "d" stem, This writing {s that of a lady who useg her head more than her heart in doing anything, She controls her feel- ings, A good person to have ir charge of any position of responsibility, be. cause she uses ler judgement, Miss 'Clarice', Toronto, You will have to come qut of yaur shell, if you want to get on, You are too backward in expressing yourself, You let others ride slipshod over you, because they are more aggressive, Don't be afraid of speaking up for yourself, Do YOU want to know what YOUR handwriting shows? Have you any particular friend whose real character you would like to know? A handwrit. ing analysis reveals the real self be- hind the writing, and may open the door of opportunity to you, Send spec- imens of the writing you want analy- sed, and state birthdate in each case. Send 10¢ coln for each specimen, and enclose with 3c 'stamped addressed envelope to: Geoffrey St, Clair, Gra- pho-Analyst, Room 421, 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto, Letters are con. fidential of course, Women Not Lonely Ir North Eleven Hundred Miles From . Civilization, There is so Much To Do and There are Many Visitors. Cameron. Bay, N.W.T, -- "The Great Lone Land," it has often been called, but to the women who live on the Arctic's rim the north country is far from lonely, . Eleven hundred miles from civiliz- ation, the few women living at Cam- eron Bay, mining settlement on Great Bear Lake are always busy and, even when cut off from civilization by the "in-between" season find plenty to do. The two six weeks periods of "break-up" and "freeze-up" when nature opens and closes the water- ways, are standout dates in the life of those northern dwellers; It is from these two seasons the women of Cameron Bay date all the events of their lives, ' In the tiny log cabin village, Mrs. resident doctor, sometimes helps her husband with his cases and amuses herself "with her radio and magazines brought in hy airplane, - Then there WHEN YOUR DAUGHTER COMES TO WOMANHOOD Most 'girls in their teens need 4 tonic and regu~ , lator. Give your dau htet Lydia By Pinkham's Vege- table Compound for the next few months. Teach her how to guard: her health at this ¥° a critical time. When she is a happy healthy wife and mother she will thank you: Sold at all good drug stores: '9 5 Tah trtlacst ablons Le : ' > y « tary engineers of tlie Chicago Board of Health, is always' her housework which in the primitive life of the horth neces. sitates expending considerably more effort than that required by the city housewife, Mrs, Byrnes goes on oc- casional trips to the Great Bear Lake mines with tke dog teams in the winter time, She is a graduate of St. Joseph's hospital, Toronto, and has lived at Cameron Bay for a year, To Mrs. H. Reed, wife of the owner of View Inn, the long day is just one big round of visits from the trappers, miners, traders and police- men to whom the hotel is a rendez- vous. A native of Spokane, Wash, Mrs. Reed has been at Cameron Bay for two years and is assisted by Mlle. Marie Onrat who came from Quebec City a year ago to visit her brother in the nines, Marie became fascinated with the north country and is in no hurry to go home. In her few leisure hours she takes pictures, makes dresses, goes canoeing in the summer and in the winter goes for long drives be. hind her dogs. Anne Swanson, daughter of the general storekeepr has a different set of activities, She spends her spare summer hours cultivating her tiny garden, In the winter there are bridge games and the occasional party to be attended, But the gold grubbers of Great Bear hand the palm to Mrs, W. H. McDougall. Day after day "Ma" McDougall mends socks, overalls, mukluks, parkas and other garments for her "boys." She was born at Hay River, N.W.T.,, and has spent Film Players To Be Married HEATHER ANGEL LEAVES FOR YUMA BY CAR WITH RALPH FORBES Hollywood, Calif,--Ralph Forbes and Heather .Angel, film players, are on their- way to Yuma, Ariz., by automobile to be married, Forbes, former husband of Ruth Chatterton, met Miss Angel about a year ago at a dinner party, They did not see much of each other for sev. eral months, Then six weeks ago they fet again on a tennis court at the home of Charles Boyer and his wife, Pat Patterson, screen' players. Then the romance began in earnest, "We talked it over and thought we ought to make our romance a per. manent institution," said Forbes be- fore they departed for Yuma, "I am sure we will be very happy," sald Miss" Angel, She was brought to Hollywood from England by the Fox Studio and bas just completed a picture, "Romance.in the Rain)" Mae West Gvies Big Gifts to Caste Hollywood.--Mae West has passed around $15,000 in presents to those who helped make and remake her lat- est picture, "Belle of the 90s," it was recently disclosed at her studio. One of the gifts, a $1,000 diamond ring, was instrumental in proving that the actress knows - her jewels. The ring was too small for the re- cipient and he left it at a. jeweler's to, have it made larger Miss West saw him wearing it at the studio and noticed the original blue-white spark- ler had 'been replaced by a yellow diamond, In 15 minutes she was de- manding how it happened and the jeweler insisted it was a mistake. ES Lord Montague Is Hot Dog Vendor London, Eng.--Lord Edward Mon- tagu, second son of the Duke of Man- chester, is running a hot dog stand and making money, the Daily Express declares. He started business at Maidenhead, famous Thames riverside resort, on Saturday wth £1 (about $5) in cash and said he made £4 within 24 hours, He sells hot dogs, coffee, soft drinks and sandwiches. . { Lord Edward, who is 28, said he hopes to start a chain of stands. "I think this is better than the French Foreign Legion," he said Early this month he went to France to join the Foreign Legion but chang. ed his mind at the last minute. Makes Good London, Eng.--A Scotland Yard detective disguised himself as an ex- sailor selling matches, when he was in scarch of a "wanted" man. this disguise he stood on a London sidewalk for six days and eventually secured his man. "In the six days he also received nearly $40 from kind- hearted passersby, ; The authorities of Scotland Yard have ordered that the money shall. be paid into the police funds. They consider the money was earned in the employer's time, and therefore be longs to the state. FALSE TEETH] | Da WERNETS POWDER | Dr; Wernet's Powder h Idsf plates so firmly and comfortably Jos place for 24 hours--they actually feel natural--eat, laugh, ging without fruits ably mn I is cw it's L-- . her whole life in the north, e Just sprinkle on: =-any drugstore, " to send ug saleable Sketches; Stories and Articles. three cent stamped envelope . Ideas Wanted © Artists and Authors, Amateur or Professional are invited Are You Artistically Inclined? We offer you practical instruction and criticism on Paint . ings, Landscapes and Flowers in Water Colours, Send a Ideas Unlimited ~~ Illustrations, Designs, Short for full information, -{' doubt about it. In|: RE Storm Fright 4 Is Contagious Control Your Terror If You Want Your Children to Se be Fearless ---- tr ---- Paul W, Kearny tells some things about lightning. by In this year of storms it is com forting to hear that out of a hundred and some million people in the Unit. ed States, less than 500 are killed by electric storms, although only an average of 2,000: are injured. tripping over rugs and five hundred times as many are killed or- hurt by automobiles, he says, Therefore the chances are small"of meeting our Maker by way of the storm route, One of the hardest things in" the world is to cover our feelings when one terrific blast after another shak. es the earth open. Yet it is precisely what we oldsters have to do when our brood is about, There is nothing so catching as fear. Catching because it is already there to spring into life at the first engagement, And few things can make life so wretched as these fear with which children grow up the happier life will be, One mother with a family of little folk has an unconquerable dread of storms, Her terror of lightning amounts almost to hysteria. But not one of her children bothers about a storm, : They laugh at the "boom bang" up in the sky, and the flashes, 5 - The miracle is due to her own con- troi. "If I'm scared too much to hide it," -she says, "I say I have a little headache and lie on the couch with my face to the wall. They play about. But, of course, I know what- they are doing. "Usually I can keep going. Some- times we start a game or I even sing. But one thing I never do. I never talk to them about the storm except to say, "My, oh, my; now it's going to be cooler.' " A real soldier-mother, -this, She knows the agony of storm terror and she wants her children to avoid it if possible, She blames her own fear on the procedure of her mother when she was little, of pulling down all the shades, hauling her small daughter into a dark room, covering her head and uttering low moans At every crack. HOW TO SET FEAR Dramatizing self in electric storms serves to set the fear--there is no The only real relief is actually not to be afraid. We should work toward that end with children even though we are hopeless cases overselves, : Mr, Kearney warns about fire- places and chimneys favorite hunt- ing ground of the stray bolt. And open fields. And tall trees, It is not wise to choose the tallest of a group or to stand too close to any tree. But even $0, we can remember with com- fort that the odds are small. Anne Lindbergh Dips Her Peri In Thrills and Color ------ Washington,-- Anne Morrow Lind- bergh dips her pen in thrills and color to tell in September's National Geo. graphic Magazine how it teels to ro globe-trotting with her famous airman husband, Making her debut as author of vivid the 933 flight 'around the North At- lantic, on which she handled the wire. less key, : She makes her travels live again: missionary outposts of Canada; the country dances of Greenland; {ce- land, where giants conquered the land; Leningrad, "a beautiful city gone a trifle shoddy"; Moscow, "amazing combination of old and new," ~ Her longest dissertion on her own clothes could hardly be called a fash. fon note--it was over the Greenland ice cap: "I was wearing, in addition to wool. len underwear, one thin wool shirt, one thick wool shirt, ono ool sweat- er, wool riding trousers, several pairs of wool stockings, fur-lined kamiks and helmet, and over everything the hooded white blanket parka designed for us by Dr. Stefansson, | was quite warm except for my feet, which I sat on, and my hands, on which I put another pair of mittens," And for pure exultation, there's this passage on the hop.oft from the becalmed African coast: "We're off? =I held my breath, more spanks, Yes, we're off -- we're rising, The engine smoothed off into a long sigh, like a person breathing easily, almost like someone singing ecstatically, We turned from the lights of the city, The plane seemed exultant then, even . arrogant, Woe did it--we did ft!" IAL, We're off, No The human brain, the seat of sensa- tion, is itself without sensation, Its "THIRTY-NINE LEE AVENUE, TORONTO tissue is insensitive to any feeling or pain even when cut or cautorized, #Three times as many are killed obsessions of ours, The fewer wears make funny eyes at ~ travelogue, Mrs, Lindbergh tells about No--spank-spank-spank -- but almost . te

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy