The Colborne Express (Colborne Ontario), 9 May 1935, p. 6

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;LLOW LABEL THE COLBORNE EXPRESS, COLBORNE, ONT. THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1935 THE TUDOR HOUSE By MRS. STANLEY WRENCH (Author of "S'.ng for the Moon," Strange Lovers," etc). 'You're Daphn yo irk." I not find her task easy. Miss Crick at Multi-Motors she addressed herself first, through M'ss Crick to the Sales Manager, then to the staff, appealing to their loyalty, and finally to their sense of sportsmanship. Daphne was feminine enough to play her last card, looked difficult. I thin- "I ' rived i . 1't now a wealthy motor manufacturer Ont day ha visits the countryside around his old home and meets Daphne Eden He falls in love and proposes. Daphn 'Get out of here you cur--you ruined Daphne's father dies and she di pears. Michael explains to her fri Mrs. Gregory, that he was misre sented. He buys the old Tudor [[< swned by the Hamill-Hardy's. Michael "It's all right," said Daphne v ily. "I've been into those ma with my solicitors- They've seei father's papers. Michael Borde did not steal father's invention; father disposed of it to the Swede, who promised to exploit it, and put it the market. He didn't, that's there is to it, but sold it for a 1 hundreds to Michael Borde, who patented it." Lily Eden made a gesture of hope lessness. "Well, what are you going to do now?" she asked. Daphne shook her head. "I must wait till he is better," she said. There was a little silence, Lily Eden's thoughts were busy. "Daphne," she said humbly, "why did you send for me? You ; have something up your sleeve, dear? What made you fetch down here?" For a minute Daphne hesitated, wondering how much she could trust this woman, whom she ha( hated and despised, but now ha( come to regard as simply one of thi tools of Fate. "Can you keep a secret?" sh< asked. The other nodded. TO ALWAYS GET FAST PAIN RELIEF An Aspirin tablet starts disinte- fating as soon as it touches moisture, hat means that Aspirin 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. 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. Demand and Get ASPIRIN TIRED and IRRITABLE DO you feel weak and den? Take Lydia Woodstock.New Brunswick, says, id rundown. A le Compound. It helped i_____ much that I am taking it now at the Change." Get a bottle NOW. It may be iust i the medicine YOU need. "Well, I'm a fairly rich woman, a very rich woman, if all the investments are realised," she said slowly. "I sent for you because I feel I can trust you to look after Michael when I go away." Lily Eden's blue eyes opened wide. It was a long time since anyone had spoken to her like Daphne, treated her decently, and now the word "trust" appealed to this woman, who for years past had been left behind in the backwash of life. "Where are you going, Daphne?" she asked. afraid I let him she said qu:etly. I've come here now, he might be furious to think I have interfered, j Mis Crick looked at her, remen | bered the pictures she had seen c Michael Borde and Diana Hamill-Hardy, wondered what romance lay behind it all, decided there undoubtedly was a romance, and decided t( throw in her lot with Daphne after that, the rest was easy. "She's not a looker, when yov consider her and compare her with the other, but by jove, she's got some spirit, Florrie." cried Miss Crick. "Look at all the talk ther that last model of i put on the market, and the way she's managed that." "Was it a bad model?" asked Florrie, patting down her plati: waves. "Bad model, no, but we were ing to have the ground cut from under our feet if something hadn' come along to take away the nasty taste of things just at the time that other affair happened. The Chief name was being bandied aroun Daphne's face asumed a different *Ver that Trottenleigh case, rightly expression, reminding Lily Eden just or wrongly, I can't say, but he wi then of the man she had married, mixed up in City affairs then. That and awakening a host of old mem- happened just at the same time that ories. they sacked a lot of men at the "I shall wait till I know he is wol;ks- See? A11 tninSs together-out of danger, then I am going to made for a "astv feeling. London to look after his affairs," (To Be Continued.) she said quietly. "He has lost a good deal by all accounts, I've put things together through listening to his talk whilst he's been ill; that, the newspaperrs, anil what my solictors have found together, and it seems to me that' ten unless someone steps in now Michael's business may be ruined. I may be too late to do all I want to do, but there's one thing I'll save for him, and that's the good name he has built up alll his life." The eyes of the two women measured each other. "Goodness me, Daphne," said Lily Eden soberly, "you must be terribly in love with him." answered Daphne quiet- spite of improvements in ti that have taken place in few years, the fastest train from pieced I London to Edinburgh is one hour "n 1935 tha , 1.895. POOR LOVELORN Edmonton. -- Lovelofr During di. cussions of the bill to amend the Solemnizzation of Marriage Act, which provides for production of health affidavits before marriage, F. C. Mover, K.C, Drumheller, Independent, moved that before marriage licenses are issued to persons under 21, two weeks mu.t elapse from the date of the application. In the interval the license issuer Is to notify the parents or guardian of the The committee did not take any vote on the motion, reporting progress on the bill which will be considered again. Suggestion during the discussion that banns be published in all marriages was '.objected to severe attacks. It did not reach the vote Under present duction of affida marriages of nized upon proof the parents Record Of Imports Of Preserved Fruits Imports of canned and bottled fruits into the United Kingdom established an all-time high during 1934, showing an increase of 8.3 per per cent, as compared with the average for the live years 1929-33. As regards pineapples, supplier from Empire countries increased to 94 per cent, other varieties to 25 per cent. Kmpire countries supplied 44 per cent, of the aggregate of all varieties. The moot important item insofar as Canada is concerned is pears, followed by gallon apples. There has been a progressive increase in supplies of Canadian gallon apples. Loganberries come next in point of volume, followed by apple pectin, pltims, cherries, peaches and straw- ly. white -garbed nur the room, and gave a : port of the patient's c Lily Eden looked i WHAT DOES your HANDWRITING j REVEAL -^^Re'served Geoffrey St. Clair Graphologist Het : th< ried ' .uug I suppose, nurse, anything to make him happy now would be a very good thing," she remarked. Nurse Grey glanced towards her. She was puzzled by Lily Eden's advent as a< visitor. Somehow, she did not appear to fit in here. "Possibly, so long as it was nothing to excite him," she said slowly. have no worries, of course; ihat Daphne To The Rescue Lily Eden nodded her head, and when the nurse had gone out, she looked towards Daphne meaningly. "You hear that, Daphne," she said. "Now is your chance, my dear. If you care for him as you say you do, just pop along and tell him so. I reckon that'll be the best tonic he can have to set him getting better now he's turned the corner." But Daphne shook her head, her eyes wistful. "Not yet," she said. "I gather Michael is pretty weak, and the doctors seem to think he must have been terribly worried before the accident happened. Perhaps when he found business was going wrong and he was losing money he fretted over that. At any rate, all mention of business must be kept from him till I come back," her lips tightened. "I'm going to see what Strings I can pull and what I can do. But whatever you do," she looked at Lily Eden earnestly, "don't let him know that I have taken any interest in his affairs." "Well, it's a queer world," soliloquised the other. "Who would ever think you and I would ever become pals like this." who is separated from her husband. She says: "I was married four years ago, buj mint was an unhappy marriage. My husband was cruel to me, and left me after a year. I haven't seem him since, and he has not helped to support me, although I know where he is living. Now I have become fond of a young man, and he wishes marry me, if I get a divorce. I c easily do that, but would like yo opinion about my friend's characti I also enclose some writing of i husband's." Your husband's writing merely confirms what you tell me about him. He has a violent temper and is selfish. Thinks of no one but himself, and his own pleasures. The writing of your new friend shows that he reliable and honest--normally a fectionate, with an underlying sen of judgement or balance. He is also ambitious and hopeful-should get along very well if he h; half a chance, because he is anxioi to be someone in the world. He hi no outstanding vices, so far as I ce judge from the very small specimen of his writing that you sent me. There is one point about him though, that is worth mentioning. H is no sit-at-home. He likes to bi having a good time. I do not suggest anything vicious by this, but simply that your friend likes some variety fh his life--shows, parties, dances, probably--things of that sort. However, your own writing shows that you have this same character istic, so you are well matched ii that respect. On the whole, the two of you seen well suited. I hope that, whatevei you do finally decide to do, you wil get more happiness than seems t< ^jave fallen to your lot in the past. I would like to take this op portunity, now that this series o articles has been running -in this paper for over a year, to thank all MOTHERS! WRITE THE SOCIETY DE HY-GENIQUE, DEPT. E, 441 Seymour Street, Vancouver, B.C., for confidential information on family limitation. "li'sBestAYou Issue No. 18--'35 MerHeJpstheHabitof GeanTeeth SweetBra SaiinSfetni those who have written to me in the past, and for the many kind expressions of thanks for help given. Th< letters that have come to me-in th( mail have been one of the brightesl parts of this work, and I am verj glad to have been able to help sc many of you. I do appreciate the many pleasant comments made from time to time by readers. Would YOU like to have your own character analysed from your handwriting? .This well . known Graphologist can help YOU as he has helped so many others. And he may be able to help you to know your friends better. Send specimens of the handwriting you wish to be analysed, stating birthdate in each case. Send 10c (coin) for each specimen, and enclose with 3c stamped addressed envelope, to: Geoffrey St. Clair, Room 421, 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto, Ont. All letters are confidential and replies will be mailed as quickly as possible. BROWN LABEL -ORANGE PEKOE "Boon Doggling" Good English The "boon-doggling," permitted by the New York unemployment relief authorities, much to the indignation of persons there who could not find the term in any dictionary, is really nothing so very vicious, according to S. K. Marshall, instructor in English literature at Columbia University. "Part of the term, at least, is good Elizabethan English," he told a reporter. "Even yet in parts of England something good is referred to as 'boon.' And a 'doggie' is, as I see it, nothing but an archaic slang-term similar to the modern 'gadget' "Hence, even if you never have boon-doggling in Canada, you'll know that it merely means making good or useful gadgets." •livery day is a little life," wae old thinker's wise epigram. if l day gets the better of us. how we going to conquer in life as hole? Only as we make each*day ictorioiu? battleground where »el-aess and shirking and disobedi- Enjoy a realty fine hand-made cigarette by rolling your outo u)ith GOLDEN VIRGINIA ence and discontent are overcome, can we make life a victory in the end. Lavater. the old philosopher laid down the rule that "each daj should be distinguished by at leasl one particular act of love." It is s rule which makes life happier foi the doer, and for everybody else.-- Go to your di Then tell' us in a statement of 50 words or less, why you prefer RIT--1,000 pairs of Monarch Debutante full-fashioned--shadow-free pure silk chiffon stockings--latest Spring shades-- guaranteed $1.00 value--will be given as prizes to 1,000 entrants. There are dozens ot reasons why you will prefer RIT. RIT comet in 33 basic brilliant colors, from which can be produced over 50of the nt-nest Paris shade*. " FAST COLORS WITHOUT BOILING! Only RIT offers this advantage! 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