Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-), 11 Oct 1934, p. 2

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TREN TRAV AREER ART Ag 7 Ln SN 4 Gd F588 = a SAN REN TE MAAK RRR RAN CCN ARE IR AR GRR MT SE ES re A AN TEA BRE SR Ts NEE UR ASEROE ARE WO IER i A Sp ta Pe ARMM EA VA, Nek TN A ERNE SRA NEL RIG RE } DIESER RCH ts Here's Way Science No Relieves Pain in Minutes BAD HEADACHES, NEURITIS AND RHEUMATIC PAINS ced w---- Ww EASED ALMOST AT ONCE Remember the pictures below when you want fas! relief from - pain, Aspirin eases even a bad headache or neuralgia often in a few minutés! An Aspirin tablet begins "taking hold" of your pain practically as 800N as you if it. And Aspirin is safe. For Aspirin does not harm the heart, Remember these two points: Aspirin Speed and Aspirin Jaf ; And, see that you get ASPIRI the method doclors prescribe. It is made in Canada, and all druggists have it. Look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on oyort Aspirin tablet. Get tin of 12 tablets or eco- nomical bottle of 24 or 100 tablets, tablet in grating. = Fo IN 2 SECONDS BY STOP WATCH An Aspirin tablet starts to disinte- grate and go to work. Drop an Aspirin of water. Note that BE- FORE it touches the bottom, it is disinte- mn a glass -- What these glasces in iy in your stomach--ASPIRIN taplets start *'taking hold" of pain a few minutes after taking. happens When in Pain Remember These Pictures ~-- ASPIRIN DOES NOT HARM THE HEART -- So Ie! Bo ROO RIOD III RII IOXINXX XNA] 4 XO CX |<] rol '% D4) 3 -- % wn d 9 0 [DX] Dd] Ki 3 9 « 5%) : Bd) J Dd Yo! ) - D{(] be ® 3 8 he ne KR - By MRS. STANLEY WRENCH % G Yo! o. . et (Author of "Sing for the Moon" 'Strange Lovers," etc). bd] Ie nieve a e™ , RS DIRPOOOOORR RIED ORE TRIE ERI IDOI BYNOPSIS not mistaken, Here Michael Borde Michael .lorde, 4v, unmarried, born | grinned. Well, every man had his us- and bred In a Birmingham slum, is now a wealthy motor manufacturer. One day he visits the countryside arocunu his old home and rescues Daphne Eden from a menacing tramp, He falls love and propuses, Daphne accepts and introduces him to her father, who greets him with the words "Uet out of here you cur -- you ruined my home -- stole my wife -- curse you!" Daphne's father dles and she disap pears. Michael explains to her friend, Mrs, Gregory, that he was misrepre eented. He buys the old Tudor House owned by the Hamill-Hardy's. Mrs. Gregory promises to mall a letter from him to Daphne arranging a meeting. Daphne does not appear. On the way home Michael collldes with a car driven by Diana Hamill-Hardy. Trottenleigh -- Trottenleigh--he racked his brains to remember why the name seemed sy famillar, Then he knew, Familiar enough in the City circles, director of a dozen City companies, at least his name appear- ed on dozens of prospectuses, Lord ~Trottenleigh-was a guinea pig, a very much gilded guinea pig, too, if he was Write for Money Bend today for free copy of authors magazine. Tells how to write and sell short -storles. novels, plays, articles, songs, ete. Written In plain language especially for the beginner. Big list of magazine, book and music publishers Writer's Index sz BUSINESS EXPANSION WANTED--An executive to join a going concern to take charge of one or more depart- ments on a fifty-fifty partner- ship basis. An investment will be required, this investment to pay interest and is returnable at a dale suitable to all parties concerned. Send a three cent stamped en- velope for full information. Ideas Unlimited Thirty-Nine Lee Avenue, Toronto, Ont. es. He was here, being helped into Lord 'Trottenleigh"s country house; probably he'd end by selling his lord. ship a car--Multiple cars were the best on the market, all-British too-- help your country and help yourself, that was the best of being all-British at the moment, Or--and here his brain worked swiftly he might [lind his lordship useful in that other sclieme simmering in his brain with relation to an amalgamation of the motor industry in Great Britain Schemes--why he was full of them, and provided he could convince the othiers-- "I've never yet failed at anything 1 set out to do," ran his thoughts, Then, like the silver note of a bell hear one word, and Michael Borde's lips closed tightly, Daphne. She had had his letter, but had not come, after all, as he so con- fidently expected, DAPHNE'S MEMORIES Daphne Eden sat in a little orch- ard, watching bees fly in and out of tlieir hives, set beneath the trees with blossom luring them, It war a pleas- ant place, and in her black dress, and leaning slightly dropped from her as she basked in the Clusters of polyanthuses tween the stones edging the which led to the orchard, a few bees flew back to their velvety petals, but the orchard boughs, hangs so thick too, it's always a good year for the honey," The old cherry tree was a dome of white, its crooked branches held roun- bitter-sweet blossom clcse as honey- bees, They forsook even the rose- pink apple blossom for the freckled whiteness of the flowers of the cherry, The little orchard was full of songs. Not only the hum and rhythm of the bees, but blackbirds were singing in! the oaks beyond, thrushes called, and | once she heard the cuckoo 1s he flew across the meadow, where already the lilac of ladysmocks was fading so he replaced by the gold of buttercups, and sometimes when thrush and the blackbird paused for a minute or two Daphne heard rillets of song from the smaller birds, the notes of which re- ' striking in his brain, he seemed to lime-washed trunks, pink and white forward, weariness May sunshine, and found herself in- terested in those busy little workers, grew be- path, for the most part they were up among "I's the time of hon:y-flow. Best season for years," said her hostess that morning. "When cherry-blossom ' ded clusterd like snow. Globules of comb were simply humming with the minded her of a day she wanted to forget, =» Once, as a cascade of soft musle met her in the full-stop, between the gong of one blackbird and his mate, she caught another note, repeated se. veral times over, She winced as though someone had flicked her ac- ross the face, remembering the chiff. chaff, and she and Michael had watch- ed together, ; In the field below she heard the far- mer calling hoarsely to his horses, the leaves of every tree were soft and cool and moist and magi: of May brought buds to blossom. A minute ago the world had been full of happi- ness of warmth, sunshine and bird. song. Now the note of a bird had set her -in solitude again, All pleasure, light, warmth, loveliness was gone. Bhe stretched out her hands with a wistful movement, It would never be the same again. Perhaps it was better BO. Getting up slowly, she returned to the house, picking up the book she had brought out with her to read, but but had not opened, As she walked up the flagged path between the polyan. thuses, a wandering bumble bee dro- ned, upwards a great velvety fellow, and a swallow swooped, then as she followed his flight up into the blue, once more that odd pain tugged at her heart, Michael Borde's face smiled at her, SCRUBBING TOILET It flushes off stains without harming enamel or plumbing... OW to get rid of those ugly toilet-bowl stains! It's easy --with Gillett's Pure Flake Lye. Once a week pour this powerful cleanser and disinfectant--full strength--down toilet bowls and drains. It flushes off stains with- out scrubbing. Cannot harm en- amel or plumbing. Kills germs and destroys all odors as it cleans! There's no need to slave over unpleasant cleaning jobs. Let Gillett's Lye work for you--it"s quick, thorough and absolutely dependable, Ask your grocer for a tin--today. Never dissolve lye In hot water. The action of the lye itself heats the water, FREE BOOKLET ~Send for new re- vised edition of the Gillett's Lye Book- let. Gives full 'directions for cleansing sink drains and toilet bowls, tells how to shorten dozens of other cleaning tasks, Also contains full directions for soap making, thorough cleansing, and other uses on the farm, Write to Stahd- 'ard Brands Limited, Fraser Avenue and Liberty Street, Toronto, Ontario. bilan ~ EATS DIRT hi GILLETT'S Issue No. 2034 '4 so as to bring the very poorest 111 1 Fresh from the Gardens The annual Boy Scout Apple Day is more than just-a means of raising money, It is the boys' individual response to the re- cent significant appeal of their leader, Lord Baden-Powell. The appeal is worded: "We urgently need to extend the Movement in these days of outs of-work lads and world unrest under the good influence of healthy training." Last year 90,000 apples were sold on the streets of Toronto by the Boy Scouts. The immed- iate results were shown in the , number of new troops organized in the more congested sections of the City. - By buying Ontario apples on Saturday, October. 13, the man on the street, and the woman too, directly contributes in a most effective manner to the spreading of - the Boy Scout, Movement in the places where it is most needed. smiled, faded to nothingness, and she saw him again, as she had last seen him, hard-eyed, struck dumb by her father's accusation, pale but with something about him even at that mo- ment that made her pause and wonder for a second time the memory came back, "lI won't think, I won't remember," she said, as she had said dozens of times before. « Daphne went into the farmhouse where a fragrant smell of hot lardle cake filled the kitchen, and a pleas: ant faced woman looked up from a great pan before the fire, "Wantin' your" tea? Well, it won't be long," she said. "1've made lardle- cake again seein' you like it so, 1 guess you'll be like the rest of us though, Miss Daphne, and you will get a sickener of it in time." Replacing the cloth over her bread- pan where dough was rising, she got up slowly. "My rheumatics trouble me again to-day, Guess there's going to be a change in the weather," she sald, "Wind is in the south-west too, How- ever, we could do with a shower or two, There's a letter for you, Miss Daphne. Yes, I set it on the dresser when the post came, My hands were stick with dough, so excuse the mark. Mrs, Meadows smiled. She knew lit- tle about her paying-guest except that she had come to her with a strong re- commendation from her sister-in-law, Daphne had told her that she had lost her father recently, vhich accounted -for her mourning, but according to Mrs. Meadows, the loss must have been a dreadful one to all account for the unhappiness she knew surrounded Daphne Eden, ' "Time heals all wounds," she sald to her husband that morning, "You'd have thought by this time she'd have got over the worst of her grief, but last night when I went down stairs to get that bottle of liniment for my rheumatics, I passed her door, and what do you think, John?" She paused he looked at her, shook his head, and she shook hers in res- ponse, "Crying away fit to break her heart : poor thing," she said. "I tell you John, it' made me all of a dither, it did. 1 know what it is to love and lose........ she bit her lip and looked away, "Re- member when our Jim was killed in the war? It was bad enough to bear. But time heals you know. However, here she's been all these weeks, and seems to me she's frettin' as bad as ever," "Don't talk to you. about it, I sup- pose?" he asked, She shook her head, "Not a word, She did tell me her father had died, but that is all, They must have been terrible fond of each other, Of course. if Denis' wife had been more friendly I might have got it)out of her writing and: asking, but i she and I never have been more than relations by marriage. You know what I mean, John, She isn't my sort and I am not hers. I wonder she ever had thought of me at all, In fact when she wrote and said she'd+ recommended Miss Eden to come to us for paying guest, I expected somebody like her. Not a bit of it though, Miss Daphne's a sight nicer than our Denis' wife ev- er was to me," "I expect ds time goes on she will feel it less," he said, "It may be she had no other relation, Makes a woman feel lonesome when she's not married and 'maybe not one o' the marrying sort." h Mrs. Meadows quickly, "What makes you say that, John?" she asked, "I'm sure Miss Daphne is not the sort to make an old maid. A bit tinicky maybe, to please, but when the right mdn comes alopg--" she glanced at him shook her head shrewdly, and John Meadows went off laughing, > . Now, however as Daphne took up her letter and went off, good Mrs. Meadows sighed and her face resumed a serious expression, "Wonder who it is writes to her, a woman or a man," she said, "Strikes me it's a man, Women don't grab let- ters as eager as that when it's one of their own sex writing to 'em I saw her face, too, go all pinky, Besides if twas from a woman she would read it here instead of taking it into her bedroom, No, I shouldn't wonder it Miss Daphne hasn't got a love affair, Maybe 'tis that keeping her so peaky and white." Upstairs, in her bedroom, Daphne tore open the letter with grave delib- eration, but instead of reading it through she ran her eye over each of the four pages, like one who seeks for some word or clue, Then, turning back to its beginning, she read it through slowly, and sitting down be- slde the open window, laid it down, and cupping her chin in both hands, gazed out into the apple tree, her eyes very wistful. - "I won't go back," she said. "Not yet. I must wait," Hot Dogs Have Gone Into French Society Hot dogs have gone into society. The Hotel Ritz in Paris now is serv- ing them at tea time with buns and mustard, cocktails or orangeade, Two years ago the manufacturers of hot dogs in France launched a campaign to popularize their product, but it is doubtful if they ever anti- cipated invading the swank hotels. Called '""Saucisses de Francfort," hot dogs are not a novelty in France, although their general popularity is not equal to the standard on this: side. They now are available, how. ever, in hundreds of French cafes and attractive posters, written in English, French and German, pro- claim the virtues of hot .dogs. 1667 Statute Wins Case In England Calgary, -- A statute passed 257 years ago in England was produced in' Small Debts court here recently, be- fore Magistrate G, M, Graham, to de- feat an action brought by a Calgary doctor to force payment of a bill for medical services. The doctor was call. ed to attend a patient by another par- ty and sought to hold the latter res. ponsible for the bill, D. Austin Lane, solicitor for the defendant, said the statute of frauds, passed in 1667, pro- vided guarantees of others' debts must be in writing and signed by the guar. antor. In the absence of this detail, the action was dismissed, The apple is said to be the oldest fruit. What about the elderberry? Ask WMother-- ~~ She Knows Mother took this medicine be= fore and afterthe babies came; It gave 'her more strength and energy when she was nerv- "ousahd rundown ; 3. Kept het on the job all through the Change. No wonder she rece | 'ommends it. LYDIA E. PINKRAW'S TMontreal VEGETABLE COMPOUND Regret . If time could only turn back, even for a day, I'd find the kindly deeds I lost along life's way, I'd say the simple words to make some starved heart glad, I'd spread some eheerfulness for souls "bereft. .and sad. I'd right each little wrong, and mend each broken thread, I'd do and say the little things 1 might have done and tald, PREVENTS MINERAL DEFICIENCY STOP LOSSES Mineral deficlency 'doesn't dtick out like a sore thumb to help you recognize it offhand. Chances are that some dni- mals you own, healthy enough looking but not so good producers, are border line cases, The right minerals are your key to profit right now. these C-I-L Mineral Supplements dally to protaote thriftiness and productivity. Rich in digestible calcium arid phos- phorus and nutritionally balanced, they give results with real economy and pro. " C-1-L NUTRI-MIN 1005 Available ana Digestible. calclum phosphate, wholly digestible, concentrated calclum-phosphorus salt, combined with other minerals supply- ing Iron, sodium and chlorine: Hd C-IL SOLUBLE MINERALS The entire mineral portion of bone, specially processed to secure digesti- bility and balanced with other essential minerals. Contains phosphorus, calcium, lodine, sodium, chlorine, iron and sul- phur. Take no rlsks of mineral de- ficiency. : Di- Write For Free | Literature Today CANADIAN \NDUSTRIES LIMITED Windsor Toronto Best for You and Baby Too Baby baby, wr Itsfragrant lather soothes cleanses Individual cartons Relieved / "Baby's Own Tablets have been the only medicine my four children have everhad., Innosingleinstance has it been necessary to consult our doctor." So writes Mra. Harry Pilmer, Cumberland Bay, 'N.B. When the 'baby or young child ~loses appetite; is sleepless or rest~ has coated tongue, colic, indigestion, cold or diarrhoea or is taethiop . » « give Baby's Own Tabléts for safe, quick relief. "Price 260 at all drug stores. 206 Dr.Williams' LLCS A REIS J netually takes less than 1¢ worth of Magic Baking Powder to make a cake, and you can count on good results every time! No wonder Canada's cookery experts say 1€ doesn't pay to take chundes with itiferior baking powder. Bake with Magic and be sure! MAGIC MADE IN CXNADA a Ca Bower 8 hat a iw any harmful Ingredient, Feed one of, (bone derived), the! naturally balanced, Little Comforts Easily Provided Many Small Innovations Will ~ Aid the Busy Housewife ~~ # - m---- without little things that would add 'I to one's comfort and efficiency in the home," sald one woman to a friend in an afternoon chat. "Often it is not the lack of time or money to procure these little extras, but merely one does not happen to think of them as an ald to happiness, For Instance, 1 bave a desk in one pleasant corner of my bedroom, Beside my 'bureaw there js a small wastebasket in a color that harmonizes with the other furnishings, For a long time 1 could not decide whether the wastebasket was handler near the desk or the bureau, [I tried it in both places, moving it back and forth, and find. ing neither place quite satisfactory. Then one day'l thought of having two wastebaskets in one room, 80 bought a small unoobstrustive one to place at one slide of the desk and solved the whole problem." Another woman was bothered by Jack of a place to put rubbirh and papers that accumulated in the kit. chen, She was trying to save her steps and did not want to go down cellar each time, and yel she wanted the kitchen free from unnecessary clutter, After a little Investigation she found a metal container, palnted in a choice of colors, that could be put in a corner of 'the kitchen or fitted under the sink, and which was light weight; deep enough to bold plenty of odds and ends, and could be washed easily," This added to her kitchen efficiency. > 'Sometimes it is a question of extra lights in the rooms, One family had two kinds ot bulbs in their table and floor lamps, one bright enough for reading, the other to be 'used | when 'only a pleasant' general glow was required. - A tiny light at the head of the stalis may aid in a bome where there are children or elderly people, An extra light down cellar may illuminate a preserve closet or a dusky spot, and many an odd cor, ner may be made surprisingly attrac- tive 'if the right kind of lighting 'is introduced there, Little things such as plenty e¢2 dress hanflers and dress covers in every closet will often prove a great comfort, One means to have these, but in" busy days such trifles are often forgotten until the annoyance of hunting for them brings them t¢ remembrance. "1 keep a list of the little things mother says she wants, and then every so often 1 surprise her," said an older son one day. "Yes, 1 went to the closet the other day -and found three new pitchers of various sizes," sald his mother, with an appreciative smile. "He 'evi- dently had overheard my plaint for more pitchers, Another day he put a box of elastic bands in my kitchen drawer, and you would be surprised bow many timeg 1 find use for them when I am working in the kitchen, The food 1 put in the refrigerator is first covered with waxed paper held on by an elastic band, Instead ot string it is sometimes more con, venient. to slip -an elastic band over a package." g "I 'believe in duplicates in house. keeping," sald a mother of four chil. dren, ' "Constant running up and down, stairs .wastes a great deal of time, 80 to prevent this I try to keep a duplicate of many necessary articles both upstairs and 'down It is a great help where there are children, Therefore in the various closets up- stairs I keep a small box of tools, nails and thumb tacks, an extra carpet sweeper and 'dry mop, plenty of old clean cloths, wrapping paper and 'string, writing materials and a | complete sewing outfit, None of these useful aids to housekeeping need to bé 'brought up or down when they are needed, which not only-is a worth while.-saving of time and energy, but helps to eliminate confusion and friction," The saving of time and energy is important fn the homemaker's work, and any afd to her efficiency and comfort makes the home happler and more comfortable for all the family, The Cult of the Amateur h Cecil Fifoot in The Fortnightly (London) writes: One of 'the most curfous and characteristic phenomena in English national life is the cult of the amateur, The professional, as practitioner,' administrator or expert witness, is prima facie an object of suspicion, Even the schoolboy shares the distrust 'of the prize-winner who has notoriously worked to gain his end, and 'reserves his applause for the athlote who had added a scholar- ship 'to 'his laurels, as an. interlude In sterner tasks, In sport, indeed, 'amateur worship is under a tempor- ary eclipse, though the House 'of Lords has recently ruled ¢hat to cast a doubt upon a 'golfer's amateur status may still be considered defam- ~|'atory. But in politics and in the ad ministration of justice little en PL J croachmont! has as yet been made upon the sacred principle, "Isn't it strange how one will do ~ TT TTT ata i BE:

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