Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 2 Jan 1935, p. 2

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Mystery Solved IJilcntloss hum lor six years by New York police for abductor of 10-ytar-old (irace Budd of New York, missing since 1928, wa.s reward- ed as Albert Fish, 65, house painter, confessed that he'd kidnapped and kiileil her. Fish is seen above after arrest. *â- *â- ><••>â- :•<• :••!•***«•>.:••>•; '•â- .â- >.;. â- ^^â- ^4.1^.^,}.;. 4. {..:..2,^,^.:..:..>,{.,^^^^,^.}.. t By FAREMAN WELLS â- â€¢<••>•:••:•**♦<•->.:. ;•<• ; •!•*•> •:•♦•!••; SYMOFBIS _ . .-MtilHion. u farmer's son. TitKil 10 a solleitur. inukcs a bravo but uniuccubsful ullt:iiii>t to tlnvurt three tliltvea In a biiK-snatcliliif i^ii'l The bac v.iia torn from the huiids ol' u Kiri who afterwards exiiluln.s to Adani that it coiiialiis tlie da.v s takines ol' her father's shop. ii« o>>„......_ .. "rock the Ihlevts and warehouse. Adamn ig while the girl Suddenly he heura be Adaiii> e»perl- uut to I'erkln. Ivato hours lave wlreUs.s. Walking homeward, .\dum Is ncarlj Mr JliiUir! !)>• a liirgf swift ear "WHAT'S THE MATTER BEN" Krom that start it was easy to un- fold his story and be did so as graph- tcally a.s lie could. Ills father listened koeuly evidently apprecialini; liiie more exciting incidents, so difTerenl from the huiiidnini life of a farm. His uiollier watched his face all the time, ami iKti liciilarly so when lie lipoke of the girl, and doubtless she drew ber own pilvale and niateinal concliiKioii.s They both listened with- eut Interrupting until his final and lUio tiono'ialaiii conclusion: "And i-o .r~ <n call Over to Menstoii to- il them d out." that," 'won* •h.' ing lint! - -. to 't« qulti< well-informed about Sunday trains to Meiistoii. She concluded correctly Ihat he must have l(M)ked them up in tlie ofTlce Hra<lshaw that mornliiK. "I wonder how niiio!) of the truth Mr. I'erkin wa.i tflllnf? you" remark- ed hia father tliouKlilfully. "Somehow J don't always feel w-i if 1 had done riff'it 111 puttini; you with him.' Adam looked into his I'atiher'a â-¼a^uely puzzled eyes and inanaRed to '•' loafldently. "I shouldn't worry • Had " was all be sa.id, of his mind wat; tlio • that before very loiin |i<- . Independent of Mr. Cor- Tille I'erKiii. For Ihe firnt time since hi.'i wild â- ^ttrif^siiuaiu youth poor old tJrlmsliy could not Be r'euml al lockini; up time Uiut nlKhU an<l Adam felr uneasily contrite on ills uccoiinl. In the mornliiK he koi up early, eonaURierl wllli eaKerness to te^i his mystoriou.-- valve further. He urraiiK- ed what he called a dlslJint control so that he coulcl operate frotn outside •'^be Btable. An lie worked, there was p?>rfwuiK. about the yard a bent and withered ntlic witli failed blue eye »nd a little sprouting r)f w.'ilsker fioni beneath hia round and. iiijiple shiny thin. This wa.s old Hen f;unini, the oldent labourer on Ihe farm, and there bad loiij? been 11 mild feud be- tween llie two of Mhin owing to the Old man's perHlstence in leiivitiir |,ls â-  iraple Impleaivnis In Adam's labor- atory. lU; had been wont to do so for /ears, before Adam had ever been lK)rn. and wa« naturally resentful wften the habit of a lifetime had toeen internipifd by the houing in liable of what he was cfuileinpt- wearing an ingratiating Bmile. "Would ee like for I to give inside there a sweep-out like for 'ee?" he eufiulred deceitfully. .Adam saw through the man- oeuvre. He had already observed the broom and lie knew it would be the chance of a successful experi- ment. j wearing Uiis style, and "Certainly Uen, thank you," he [ very small boys Here, roiileid, and closed the switch Old Gruniin .shambled tlirough the door, only to come out in a moment like a young man in a wild hur- ry. In the middle of the yard he paused to pant and scratch hi.s silvery hair. What's the matter, Ben'/" asked Adam solicitously. Old Grunim turned his faded, freiglitened eyes on the young master in a stari! of horror "Can't say as I rightly knows, but tliere's something mortal ijueer obaul that old stable," he gasped. "It srikt's me you've got a guilty conscience, lien." "Mester Adam," he cried re- proachfully. "I didn't no more than put up besom in there and now 1 daresent so much as go near he. Seems like as if Old Nick himself was in there smelling of brimstone. "I shouldn't be a bit surprised," said Adam, "but it's only these with bad conscience that are afraid of the devil." .â- \s if to prove his words he switched off and walked manfully into the stable to return with the birch-hronm. "There you are," ho announced. "If you put it in there! again the devil will get bold .,f you ' proiierly." ] "Thank you, Me.sler .Adam, and 1 T certainly won't." And he .shambled off towards the front jiath mutter- ' ing that he had never .seen the like i for nigh on ninety years, he hadn't. TEA FOR THREE j When Adam walk><| down Caven- dish Street, Mensbridge, that after- , noon, he was stirred with a com- ! pletene.ss that would have satisfied I the exacting standards of Mr. Drew- : ster, his superior at the office. He j wore not only a hat. bill gloves, stiff ' collar an<l necktie. | He pau.-.e(l in front of the .Nor- ; val's artistic shop-window not to ex- | amine the few s|)ecimen pieces that ! it displayed upon a .ingle oriental I rug. but to adjust his ne<-klie and make sure of the angle of his hat. ' Then he cai'ffully unbuttoned onr 1 glove, the right, so as to inake sure that it would withdraw easily, and | kiioikfd timidly at the side iloor. It | would have been hard for an obser\'- i er to believe that he was the same j rebellious young fellow who used to | meander dreamily down Mc-nsel Street, hatless, Wearing a baggy suit and a viviilly coloured scarf. (To Re Continued.) Brimmed Hats Are Popular for Childr'n SMALL FOLKS IN LONDON AND PARIS WEAR SIMILAR CLOTHES. In Paris, as iu hondun, brimmed bats for clilblreu are the most popu- lar. The I'arls versloi; Is often of tbo same tabrlc as the coat, but it is seamed or stitched to get the crispness of outline of a felt hat and the .-'Jiapes aiu the same as one sees In felt or â€" in summer time â€" In btiaw. A faivorlte is b'Je round crown- ed Hreton «ailor, with fairly deep roll to the brim, worn turned up all the way around or up at back and down at front. I.iltlo cloches are still worn by Bmall I'arislemies although they have been abondoned by their mothers. These likewise have crowns closely fitting the head, and very cloche brims not more than a couple of inches wide af^hcir widest; this stylo of hat is worn back on the head HO that the effect Is bonnetlike. From these two main type_ ajipcar spring variations such as clothes witii brim cut away at back, or Bretons with slashed or scalloped brims. Oc- casionally, one sees a trlcorue with a postillion coat. PASTELS FOR TOTS. For school and niornng wear, col- ors are often dark, especially navy, but liny tots In Paris wear a great mnnv nale pastels, pink, blue, creamy e afternoon, and In such nd coat almost Invariably ret, classic ba.squo style, or >r of felt In slightly less clas- •ion. Is only worn by the old- .dren from eight or nine up, and even among these is not predom- inate over the brimmed shapes, and 3 confined mostly to sports cos- tumes. In London, the leading hat style for youthful aristocrats is the clas- sic felt, slightly more squared of crown than In Paris, with roll brim worn up at back and ilowu at front. If one makes a promontado of Hyde I'arU or Kensington Gardens, more tlian half the little girls will be many of the may be seen n SALAD Orange Pekoe Blend TEA -f*^' Fresh fro the Gardi Pioneer Woman Doctor To Return To Work In China New Yorkâ€" Six thousand babies and 14 trips around the world have left Dr. Anne Walter Fearn, at 62 gay, vigorous and ready for another trip to Shanghai. The plump, white-haired woman â€" the first woman doctor to go into the Orient as a general practitioner â€" owned and managed a hospital in Shanghai for 12 years. Here for six month vacation, she said at her hotel of medical service, "each time I return, I note tremen- dous strides." A pioneer among women doctors, Dr Fearn overcame parental opposi- tion to take her medical degree in 1893 from the Women's Medical Col- lege of Pennsylvania. "If you become a doctor," her mother wrote from Holly Springs, Miss., her birthplace, "we rhall dis- own you." heir opposition vanished when she won a prize for a paper on sur- gery. At 21, a few â- weeks after her graduation, she performed her first difficult operation in China, with success. Soon afterwards she pre- sided at the birth of quadrupets, and was, she confessed, "a little e.>ccit- ed." What Does Your Handwriting S) By GEOFFREY ST. CLAIR (Graphologist) All Rights Reserved. So They Say .some bonnet cloches, but to les.s ex- tent than in Paris. .-vv'hcn man invented the wheel Sailor berets, copied closely from i and the axle he forged the first the Criiish sailor's headgear, are also i weapon with which to destroy his a good deal worn by little Britishers, | own solation."â€" Owen D. Young, but only in navy with reefer coats. Basque and fabric berets are, as in Paris, only seen on 10-year-olds and up_ and usually with sports clothes. The fitted coat worn by little girls in both Pari.i and Loudon, Is accom- panied by the styles of hats men- tioned other than the beret. These, anil postillions and other little coats fitted at the top, are a great deal worn by children up to 7 or 8. Above that age, little girls dress in loose, belted coats, with berets, but there Iiersists some innuence of this more fitted and formal style, with a good many brimmed tats, either of felt or fabric, being worn. "Conventions are not arbitrary and hampering rules, but customs that have developed through genera- tions of practical usage." â€" Emily Post. "Everything that we do with tent to increase the security of individual will be a stimulus to cuvcry." â€" Franklin D. Kooscvelt. in- the re- School or Jobs 'â- ^^ thf Bously woni lo call ".\lestei Adam's BKiiia 8-agery." In Hplle of Adaon's ol)- Jwtions bf still made fmtlve use of tlio sacred prt^mlses and the reason *f>r hdH pottering about today was ttiat he wanted to recover a birWi bro"m that was hnng^ing iherin on Ihe -an!<- pair of nails he had driven .» for I lie purixise more years apo than $ he I il.i rememb«r. ' anted U^ sweep Ihe from palh ^ (be Master" o»mn out for Ch . ' !i ind Adam showed no signH Ut y 1 lAay. Piesenlly he sidleil up WHAT, AGAIN? Having lived to see the day when a woman in a .short skirt looks jio.^i- tivcly dowdy, we must prepare for another shock. Next Spring, the fashion experts say, skirts will be shorter. Women will .'till drcs.< in the height of discretion, but the height of discretion will be raised a few ii.ches. Hy this time next year the fie .sing garments that now look so smart may he worn only by aunties. When this sec-saw proces.-) has been repeat' d a few time^ more the whole human race will be shock-proof. And what will the modi-ite do then, poor thing? -Manchester Sunday Chronicle. "The trouble with youth," a man who knows boys rucently^conimented, "is its youthfulness." If the aiihox-- ism nt>ed.s explanation, he added, let it be said that a prime characteristic of youth is an urge for activity. If opportunity for its expression is not given through schools, and jobs are unavailable, is it to be won<lercd that unadjusted boys and girls experi- ment in fields that lead to ronriict with law and order'.' The dangerous age for a youth is the period when he i.s reaching ado- lescence and early maturity. .Statis- tics prove this. In England & Wales forly-two per cent, of all persons found guilty of indictable crimes last year were under tweiity-oiu". In the United States, according to depart- ment of Justice reports, two-thirds of all arrests for crime involve per- sons between fifteen and twenty-four and those I'J years old lead any other age group. No grand social scheme 'an solve the problem of unadjusted youth at one swoop Hoys and girls like their elders, are not cut to one pattern. But any adult docs a real service who makes it possible for a young- ster to remain in school, which is the best agency for life training thai six-iety has yet evolved, and when school days are over helps him get suitable employment. â€" Uotarian Ma- gazine. Clouds Wlien clouds o'erca-t the pathway Oh soul of mine, be still .â- \nd know that far above them The sun is shining still; Though for a time they linger, We know they cannot stay. That the sun will still he shining When they have pa.-<sed away. Though losses he thy portion With which thy soul is jyicved Remember too, the blessings I'nmeritcd, received. So .shall the atorin clouds vani'^h And alt thy trials rease, -And gladness be thy portion X* Ilia '"n *oes down In Pniirn "It is not the immovability of our faitli, but rather where we have fas- tened it." â€" Evangeline Booth. "We will have to have unemploy- ment insurance, old-age insurance and health insurance for the masses." â€" Edward A. Filene. "The wise and just man will not do to his neighbor on the right what he would not have his neighbor on the left do to him." â€" Tgnace Pader- ewki. (Editor's Note: This week's article shows Just how graphology can help in solving personal problems. There is a message of hope In It for you, if you are worrying over some personal dif- ficulty. If It is merely a character de- lineation that you would like, you will find it of immense value. See the Invitation In the following article. .. A letter I received a few days ago from a young lady living in Toronto has given mo a good deal of pleasure, and, because It will show just how graphology can be extremely helpful In solving personal problems, I am reproducing It, In part, this week. It Is as follows. "Dear Mr.St. Clair: I was reading your column in which you advised a certain Toronto girl concerning her fiance. It was the first time I had ever read your column, and, as I read of this other girl's problem, I had the queerest feelig â€" for I might han-e been that "other girl." Hav- ing read it, I <iecided right there and then never to see my own boy friend again. Knowing where my duty lay, this problem had been worrying me for a long time, but notJiing could have driven it home so much and have made me see so clearly that I must end this friendship, for my own good as well as his_ as your article did A.<5 I write this, I feel so grate- ful to you, Mr. St. Clair, and I want to truly thank you from the bottom of my heart. But what kind of a person must I be'/ Before I met this boy, I tihought I knew myself. It's fun- ny, isn't it, how little we really know of ourselves?" This young iady, apart from prov- ing the personal value of graphology made another point when she said "It's funny how little we really know of ourselves." Not very long ago, a gentleman living in W'innipeg wrote to me asking me to analyse his own writing and that of his wife. He said that the domestic relations were ra- ther strained and both himself were very unha[ suit. He added that he I big wife was mainly at 1 though that If I were to alysis of her character, h show it to her. and thus a realisation of what she wTeck the marriage. Well, I analysed both ' instead of having to tell wife was to blame, I hac that he himself was nior party. He was inclined t eering; would brook al interference, and could other people's views if tl variance with his own. In this, he had quite a tem well visualise the scenes 1 when he was laying dov and could easily understa of harmony. The sequel came some when I received another him, to which his wife at script. He had been so my delineation of his cha he was beginning to ton somewhat, and his wife for creating a condition believed, would lead to s mouious home life. These instances will graphology, by dissecting can help a good deal wit lems that worry s-o many • 'VOU any persor that is causing you a lot and worry? Do you wish t truth about yourself, and ) as revealed by your h^ Send specimens of the I you wish to be analysed, 1 10 cent coin for each. Sen in each case, and enclose stamped addressed envsloi frey St. Clair, Grapholog 421, 73 Adelaide St., We Ont. All letters will be ti confidence, and letters wil to as quickly as possible lay is usually unavoidabi the large number of lette sent in. They Ve Telling Us "An empty stomach is not a goov political adviser." â€" Albert Einstein. "Any one who stops learning is old â€" whether this happens at twenty or at eighty.' â€"Henry Ford. Anti-'Flu Workers al the British Natii^nal Institute for .Medical Research dis- covered recently that mice can catch influeii/.a. Having first administer- ed ether to the rodents to make them unconscious, they drojiped a virus containing influen'/.a germs in- to their nostrils; the mice sniffed it up and contracted the disease. Fur- ther experiments in passing the in- fluenze from mouse to mouse proved that the infection was contagious and not merely a chance result. The doctors also succeeded in preparing an antiserum which rendered other mice imnuine from the infection. Similar experiments have (irevi- ously been conducted upon ferrets, but as mire are less expensive and more easily handled this new dis- I covery to have far-reaching results. j It is hoped that it will eventually lead to the development of a suc- cessful aiiti-inlluonze serum f)r hu- I ninn beings. "Being serious or angry ai)n.t things that doi;'t matter is the mark of the Puiitan."â€" G. K. Chesterton. Man Uses Feathers To Smother Blaze ".\ man can hardly ri.ie to the rop without being something of a schemer." -Pcan Inge "No nation can give its wor<l i f honor to anothei nation, because no nation '•-.(.:â-  a word of honor to give." â€"A. A. Milne. "Every writer needs a secretary ui h brains, for all writcr.s are dumb- bells." â€" .loseph Herge.sheiniev. "Two witnesses of the same neve." have the same memory of ac; it." An Mai.rois part; bran, 1-2 parts, pound of this mixture pounds of skim-milk or bt From the time the pij months old and weigh poonds up to market wei may be fed the follow! shorts, 1 part; oats, 2 pai 2 parts. With one pouni mixture, feed one and pounds of skim-milk or TO CLEAN THE ".America is th'b' greatest country in the world for the masses, but not for the individual."â€" Luigi Pirandello. "The pleasures of philu.'iophy arc like the heights of love, to which no mean soul can come." â€" Will Hurant. "That whi'.h distinguishes from animals is lying and tuic."â€" Anatole France. man liter- Groton. Conn., â€" Fletcher Daboll doesn't need the fire ilepavtmenl ; he Uses feathers. Daboll's automogile caught fire and when the firemen were slow in rosponuing, he t(ire open a feather pillow and scattered Ihe contents over the blaze, smothering it. October Is Driest Month Dallas, Tex.â€" October was the driest here it has been for 'JO years â€" and that's as far hack as the bureau records go. During the en- tire month there was only .9 of an inch rainfall recorde<I against a nor- mal fall for October of 'l.W inches. "Some of my friends marvel at the spread of radicalism. 1 wonder thai there is .•^o little of it. Harry Emer- son Fosdick. "X suspicion abroad is the land that justice is tainted is more dan- gerous to the public peace than tlic liberty of a thousand bad men." â€" Ravmond Molev. "The unpardonable sin of an ad- ministration, any administration, is failure." â€" James X. Farley. MKAI, MIXTURES FOR PIGS IN W' 'TER For pigs newly weaned up to four months of age the following meal mixture is recommended: Middlings, 3 parts; oats, 2 parLs; shorts. 1 In view of the sweeping which have been made in ; ters, implying that the pr ufacture of arms is ne vicious system, tainted I tion and essentially unp its methods, the result ol inquiry should do much t( air and enable the ordin; to form views of his owi impartial standpoint. â€" Telegraph. Ar Autho .\N.\UUNL MONTHLY L j SlfiniClZ to artibt I lliois, listiiij^ iip-ttK I formation tm WllEI i SELL. \c'\x\\ subsc One Dollar. J Send a three cent si * envelope for full ir i tion on our other ser^ \ partments. Ideas Unlimr ihirtv-Nine Lee \\ Toronto, Ont. Issue No. 52 â€" *i i

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