Grimsby Independent, 3 Apr 1935, p. 2

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Be sure to Jook for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on. every Aspirin tablet. Aspirin is made in Canada and all druggists have it. An Aspirin tablet starts disinteâ€" grating as soon as it touches moisture. That means that Aspirin‘ starts "taking hold" . . . eases even a bad headache, neuritis or rheumatic pain almost insfanily. And Aspirin is safe. Doctors prescribe it. For Aspirin does not harm the heart. He looked round at her, and she sank back out of the tooâ€"revealing wind, holding the fluttering chiffon down over her knees. In the glow of the light from the dashboard his face was forbidding. 10 BE SURE YOU GET Fast Relief ‘"‘They‘ve decided to play bridge instead. That was why they wanted Edwardâ€"to make up a four, I‘ve not heard a word about Nice, young woâ€" man, except from you; and you seem to be obsessed by it!" ; "Will you please stop. The others are going to Niceâ€"I insist on goâ€" ing!" ‘"I‘m not going to Nice," said Piers Hannen. "I said that I didn‘t want to go to Nice at dinner. Didn‘t you hear me?" "You‘re on the wrong road," she said, trying to speak steadily and quietly. "The road to Nice goes the other way!" : She .sank back in the seat, gazing furiously at his inexorable profile; and then with a start, a sudden sinkâ€" ing sensation, she realized that they were not on the road to Nice, They were flying northward, leaving the town behind already. The lights of Mmpty road, and y virteyards Jn o_ er side ‘"‘Turn back, please! I‘d prefer to go back, if you don‘t mind!" Joan said, in his ear, speaking coldly and distinctly so that he might underâ€" stand that she was really annoyed. But he only laughed and the car sped on into the night, Joan felt furiously angry, sitting upright in the bucket seat with the wind whipping her curls back and blowing through the thin chiffon of her frock. The others, she supposed, would follow on to Nice in Lord Ed:â€" ward‘s limousine. But they might think that she had consented to go with Piers, and though she did not care for Lord Edward she hated to think of his being in suspenseâ€"for. their conversation had been interrupâ€" ted at a moment when he could not have known, poor man, what her reâ€" ply was going to be. If only Piersj Hannen had come three minutes latâ€" er with his rude interruption! ‘ He took no notice. They swept round a bend and out of sight of the hotel garden. ‘"Please. We must wait for the others!" "I didn‘t think that you minded breaking off a conversation in the middleâ€"you did it twice to me, this morning!" Piers put in the gear lever, let in the clutch, and . they went away with a roar. 3 "But pleaseâ€"I‘d rather wait! I was saying something to Lord Edâ€" ward, and you interrupted the conâ€" versationâ€"we broke off in the midâ€" dle of it!" Joan Denby, of bhumble origin, is introduced as a social equal of Miss Georgina La Fontaine, rather than as her salaried secretaryâ€"companion. Geoâ€" rgina is anxious for her to marry wel) and intends to introduce her to Pliers Hannen, head of the Hannen Steel and Iron works. Lord Edward proposes to TRADEMARK REGISTERED IN CANADA A $ P I RI N Demand and Get Issue No. Synopsis A SAFPE GINTMENT ‘35 Joan 28 (In the course of a recent lecture in astronomy it was sugâ€" gested that townâ€"dwellers> of to day did not get so clear a view of the stars as did their forerunners of a generation ago because of the improved lighting arrangements for city streets.) o Papa, in Queen Victoria‘s day, Could frequently detect Orion; And Charles Wain, or Milky Way, He often had his eagie eye on, But now his offspring, bathed in light From more immediate constellaâ€" tions, f ? : Sees little of the starry night, But lots of urban coruscations. ‘"‘The consideration is wholly for myself," he told her ironically as he got back into the driver‘s seat. "I can‘t talk to you if you‘re : shiverâ€" ing." He got out of the car and pulled the coat out of the â€"back seat; it was a large leather garment, and she hated to put it on, but as she was alfraid that if she did not do it herself he would do it for her, she obediently did so. She was nearly lost in it. "So much consideration is hardly in keeping with your character, is it?" Joan rose to the disappointment bravely, remarking sweetly: ~She would not :speak, but sat starâ€" ing ‘angrily ahead wondering, with a rather faint heart; what he meant to say andâ€"doâ€"when â€"he got her into the hills, as he said. Suddenly . the . car‘s speed â€" was checked and he drew up at the side of the road, Immense_relief floodâ€" ed her at the belief that he had deâ€" cided to turn back. But instead he "WHAT IS THE MATTER mm â€"WITH MET! Joan was really scaredâ€"and she was angry too, She could not‘reply that she did not dislike him, that would have been too extreme an unâ€" truth. And she saw.â€"that to rage and storm would please him more than anything. Apparently he â€" had brought her out here to amuse himâ€" self with, her, But she was very anâ€" Â¥ry ‘and bhumillated, and she could not help thinking of poor Lord Edâ€" ward, who did not know whether she was going to marry him or not! MerHelpstheHabitOf ___ Dentifrice en lecn __ . ue Lollck ‘"We‘re going into the mountains," he said coolly. "Where we shall. inâ€" vestigate your dislike for me!" ‘"How â€" ridiculous!" said â€" Joan, though he had managed to frighten her, . "Whereâ€"where are we‘ goâ€" "You‘re illogical," he pointed out, calmly. "I‘m a man who bas no consideration for anyone or anyâ€" thing save his own pleasure. You‘ve told meâ€"so. I might as well be hanged for a sheep as a lamb. If I have that reputation I‘m going to get all I can out of it!" ing For answer he pressed the accelâ€" erator and the whine of the superâ€" charger screamed through the night as the car leapt forward along the rough shingle road, a road, Joan guessed, which followed the bed of some river into the lonely dills. "We‘re going for a drive, you and I!" he said. "This is absurd," said â€"Joan, "Please, Mr. Hannen, I don‘t think this is funny. In a moment I shall be seriously angry, . I don‘t want to go for a driveâ€"" Pipe Smokers! fill up with GOLDEN VIRGINIA® and enjoy a really : good smoke! "You had bétter put on that coat!" Our Leading Lights 99 (To be Continued.) It was during the seige of Mafeâ€" king in the Boer War that he is reâ€" puted to have first organized a corps of young men to assist the beleaâ€" guered forces in scouting and other supplensentary military. work, and the outcome of this little â€"unit was the Boy Scout movement which spread first through British lands, and today embraces practically every civilized country in the world... Set High Standard Badenâ€"Powell put many of his ideas for young men into books and articles and he set up a high standâ€" ard of manly conduct for‘ growing boys to live up to. So rapidly did his ideas fire youth with ambition In addition he was engaged in secret service work in South Africa, Turkey, Russia and Germany. Badenâ€"Powell, as he is familiarly known to all Britishers, is the son of a parsonâ€"professor, and was born in London, England, on February 22, 1857. At 19 he was commissioned in the 13th Hussars as a subaitern, and saw service in India. His carâ€" eer was both exciting and adventurâ€" ous. To Be Welcomed Here Plans have been made through the Boy Scout Association, in which the Governor General is Chief Scout for Canada, to welcome the chief, and all Scouts and Guides of Ottawa and district will probably have an opâ€" portunity of seeing the man »who created their organization for the first time. Lord Badenâ€"Powell will arrive in Ottawa in May, accompanied ‘by Lady Badenâ€"Powell, who is chief of the Scouts‘ sister movement, the Girl Guides, and other mempers of their family. Ottawa. â€" Keen interest is being shown here in the forthcoming visit of one of the most colorful figures of the century, Rt. Hon. Lord Baâ€" denâ€"Powell, of Gilwell, founder and Chief of the Boy Scout movement of the entire world, and one of Briâ€" tain‘s heroes of the South African campaigns. Lord Badenâ€"Powell Founder And Chief of Boy Scout Movement of Entire World | _ (Editor‘s Note : Greater interest than ever before is being shown > in these interesting articles by a wellâ€" known Graphologist,. He again inâ€" vites readers to write in for a perâ€" sonal character reading, See the folâ€" | lowing article for details of his ofâ€" |fer which has attracted thousands of \ readers), You are, perhaps, too prone to view the future a little cyncially, without that faith and ambition that a young man like you should have. Be more definitely ambitious; make your plans for the future, and then get down to brass tacks to try and realize them. o ONE OF THE MOST COLORFUL FIGURES Mr, A.G.T. : You have a fairly norâ€" mal nature, with a slight leaning toâ€" wards ardour, but are by no means intentionally emotional, Your sense of judgement is well to the fore, and as a rule will prevent you from doing anything too impetuously,‘" You are independent, in the sense that you are chary of accepting the relp of others. And you have a good regard for order and neatness and are careful about details. All in all, you should do fairly well at your ofâ€" fice work, and be far happier than in the occupation of nursing, Yours is not a nature that would find nursing a very suitable occupaâ€" tion, and it is fortunate that you reâ€" cognized this and discontinued. your training. The ideal nurse needs to be wellâ€"controlled, able to keep her head in emergencies, and at the same time be sympathetic and kindly. You do have the latter traits, but certainâ€" ly would not show at your best durâ€" ing tense moments. to‘ get easily excitable when things do not go just as you would like, This is not a weakness in the ordinâ€" ary sense of the word; it is more a tempermental disadvantage, brought about because you are so subject to your feelings,. You are so quick to feel jJoys and sorrows, and will proâ€" bably suffer a good deal as a result. Miss B. L, : You are inclined to be somewhat highlyâ€"strung, and are apt Some extracts from character readings actually prepared for readâ€" ers will prove interesting to many. We guarantee that your bean crop will bring valent of the standard price for wheakt novrt ROOM 306 Mr. B. B. ; Your girl friend is atf What Does Your Handwriting Reveal? GEOFFREY ST. CLAIR O0F 1MYy on~.~.. GROW SOYA BEANS â€" A NEW DEAL itee that your bean crop will bring you at least the equiâ€" the standard price for wheat next fall, and will contract for your crop acreage. For particulars write: _ Soya Mills Limited __ 456 RICHMOND W. (Graphologist) All Rights Reserved A similar mat can be made and used on wet days when there â€" are youngsters in the house. Placed just outside the door when the children are expected home from school it will save much time indoors, as the most of the mud can be wiped off the boots on the mat outside. The wad can then be taken indoors and the soiled top removed and burned. At the back door such a "mat" saves the hcusewife, when there are childâ€" ren who will scamper in and out. Grease on a stove can be cleared off by rubbing with a wad of paper. Washingâ€"up loses much of its terrors if the plates are first cleared of the grease paper. As a polisher for the windows, newspaper will be found more than useful as the smell of the printers‘ ink helps to keep away the‘ insects,. Blankets, clothes and furs should not be laid away for long perâ€" iods © unless layers of newspaper have been placed between the folds. A newspaper "mat" needs twelve large newspapers placed one on top of the other, folded over, "packed" carefully so that they do not slip, and bound at each end with string. It wili last a long time and will be found to be a boon to aching feet. Most women never think of it, but when they stand ironing, for inâ€" stance their feet will ache intolerâ€" ably. This "ache" can be most easâ€" ily avoided by making a thick mat out of old newspapers. And all standâ€" ing jobs can be relieved of much of their strain if wads of newspapers are put on the floor. f There are many uses for old newsâ€" papers. In fact, if the housewife only realized it, they are a valuable help in reducing work. and increasing comfort. His Majesty the King gave impeâ€" tus to the government by his officâ€" ial patronage, and Badenâ€"Powell was later known as the first man to enâ€" ter Buckingham Palace in "shorts" now a familiar item of attire for boys and young men. for scout training and so steadily did the movement gain in strength and scope, that the founder of the Scout idea was obliged to retire in " Oe oob lWerâ€" Opaitzntpugizegt ce that time he has davot. 0 _ »te that time he has devotâ€" eamrsâ€"ftire energies to the work, with the noble support and encourâ€" agement of Lady Badenâ€"Powell. Would YOU like to have YOUR handwriting analysed? And perhaps you would like to know the truth about your friends? Mr. St. Clair can help you as he has helped so many others. In order to get your personal . character analysis, you must send for a copy of Mr. St. Clair‘s new Chartâ€"the Graphochart, which contains over 100 iHustrations, and shows you how to read character from handwriting. It is fascinating and very interesting. Send 12 cents for your copy of the Graphochart, and an additional 10¢ coin for each specimen you want analysed,. State birthdate in each case, and send with 3c stamped, addressed envelope to: Geoffrey St. Clair, Room 421, 73 Arâ€" elaide Street West, Toronto, Ont,: All letters are confidential and will be answered as quickly as possible.‘ Miss P. A. D.: It seems to me that most of your troubles can be traced to the changeable nature that you have, You flit too readily from. one thing to another, and don‘t succeed in any one of them because you do not devote sufficient energy and conâ€" centration. You vary in your moods and the result is that no sooner have you become interested in one particâ€" ular thing than something else turns up to distract your attention and inâ€" terest temporarily, I am writing you direct, because it is essential that you adopt a more definite course to follow in order to make any real and lasting progress in the future, You might devote some attention to curbing the temper that stands Out in your writing so blatantly. This is sheer waste of energy, as well as likely to cause some trouble and unâ€" happiness,. fectionate and spontancous. But she is far too unassuming for her own good. It would be better if she were a little more conscious of her own powers and exerted them more. Tempermentally, this girl has the same keyedâ€"up nature that you have, easily excited and very expressive of her feelings, She is careful about details, is neat and orderly, She would, I have no doubt, make a good housewife, alâ€" though probably a little fussy. Handy Newspapers TORONTO What is required now in Canada is intensive work and the closest coâ€"operation of physicists, clinicians, radiologists and pathologists and, above all, the training of experts, both in diagnosis and treatment. Everywhere efforts are being made to increase available supplies of raâ€" dium and provide expert treatment for all cancer patients, During the past three years, rapid advance has been made in Canada â€" diagnostic centres®and clinics have been estabâ€" lished and the amount of radium inâ€" creasedâ€"but a great deal more reâ€" mains to be done. The fact must be emphasized again and again that treatment of cancer, if it is to be successful, whether it takes the form of surgical excision, the cautery, raâ€" dium or Xâ€"ray, must be undertaken early and it must be reiterated that an essential part of thie campaign against cancer consists in the eduâ€" cation and intelligent coâ€"operation of the public, so that early diagnosis and prompt treatment may be. obâ€" tained. Taking all cancers as they come to the Radium Institute at Stockâ€" holm, there are fiveyear cures in 38.5 per cent. of all cases and this is almost entirely due to the use of radium. Norway and Denmark are almost equal to Sweden in their faâ€" cilities for treating cancer. \ INCREASING RADIUM SUPPLIES. Cures were obtained in 68 â€" per cenit, of 200 cancers of the skin of the face; 68 per cent. of 66 lip canâ€" cers; 62 per cent. of 113 cancers of the mouth; 22.4 per cent. of 500 cases of cancer of the neck of the womb; 43 per cent. of 46 cases of cancer of the body of the womb. All of these cases were what is known as fiveâ€"yearâ€"old cures, that is to say, a relapse had not occurred five years after treatment. France has established a Radium Institute and possesses a quantity of radium which is allocated to a number of treatment centres. At Stockholm, the â€" Swedish â€" Governâ€" ment has built a Cancer Institute, which is recognized as a model for the rest of the world. To this inâ€" stitute, patients are brought from all parts of Sweden for treatment, The Government pays for the transâ€" portation of the patients and proâ€" vides . treatment free of charge, when necessary. The radium used in that institute is also provided by the Government. This â€" institution has been operating for some years agd it is interesting to briefly scan. This rapid increase in cancer deathâ€"rate applies to all civilized countries. It is generally agreed that facilities for the diagnosis and treatment of cancerâ€" ~are markedly deficient in _ practically all counâ€" tries. Some countries, in recogniâ€" tion of this fact, have taken steps to augment their facilities for diagâ€" nosis and treatment of the disease, ESTABLISH RADIUM INSTITUTES Ottawa. â€" The following figures will indicate quite clearly the rapiâ€" dity with which cancer is increasâ€" ing in Canada, The deathâ€"rate per 100,000 of populaton from 1926 to 1983, the last year for which statisâ€" tics are available, was as follows: 1026, 81; 1027, 88; 1928. 88; 1929, 90; 1930, 91; 1931, 92.4; 1982, 95.5; 1933, 100. Deaths by Cancer In Recent Years Show an Increase Advance in Treatment But Great Deal Remains to Be Done in Canadian Research _« MEMOST Pn «ae! vauue m"lfq P s f e 3235 * ‘\":\A . ns f A e ¢ t + A F sled uin io. ym m e wGl o i 3 > Ssymn ts mss 9 @ Apoct ho i C‘ c k i A6 * & 5 y S peeais ) Ns R Bs e . wnktin s 0 B i 4 4 4 T = A 8 2t Cosy public rooms and cabins . . excellent ~C5y public rooms and cabins food and plenty of it . . good sun decks food and plenty of it . . good happy Jays of sport afid fun .. fine @toueeZne eamarayee sc s1 0000 2C Serve the Best Tea TEETH The spring sunshine is worth a lot to you, and should be allowed to enter through the widows as well as the doors. Take a sun bath through the window as much and as often as you can. It will do you a world of good. Bask in it and sit in #, and let it trickle down your back. Take the March rays this way and you will fit yourself for the coming of Spring. They talk about spring fever or lassitude. Try this treatâ€" ment and you will probably be ready for the garden work when it arrivâ€" es, for you will arrive to meet it. â€" â€" TLIVER Montreal Located in the heart of the city â€"less than 10 minutes‘. walk from all depots, a few minutes‘ gvalk to retail stores, theatres and points of interest. Write, wire or telephone for reservations. Small Tin 35¢, Large Tin 60¢, Extra Large Bottle 750 BSoott & Turner Ltd., Newcastleâ€"uponâ€"Tyne, Eng. Distributed in Canada by MeGillivray Bros. Limited, Toronto. _ 51 FOR YEARâ€"ROUND FITNESS Mount Royal Hotel PREVENT CHAPPED ROUGH HANDSâ€"apply HINDS Night and Morning Vernon G.. Cardy, Managing Director. Alderic Raymond, President. Let The Sunshine NDR FW@ Grips plates so firmly and snugly they can‘t slipâ€"you never know you have false teeth. Dr. Wernet‘s Powder is pleasant and never causes sorenessâ€" it is the world‘s largest sellerâ€"prescribed by leading dentistsâ€"costs but little but blissful comfort is yours all day long. Inside the mouth of the clam lies Nature‘s most efficient substitute for a tongue. It consists of myriads of minute â€" living â€" hairs, technically known as the cilia, which operate at such a speed as to defeat the. eye. Highâ€"speed photographs, recorded by the Massachusetts Institute of Techâ€" nology show how this device funcâ€" tions, ‘Upon contact with food, the bhairs after moving limply upwards, stiffen suddenly, catching hold of the morsels on their tips like & bristling array of forks; then, with T powerâ€" ful downward sweep, they whisk eveâ€" ery scrap into the clam‘s digestive apparatus. Each hair works in harâ€" mony with its neighbour. Water is served in the same way. We salute herl Isn‘t it a â€" great story about what a woman can â€" do if she makes up her mind to it? â€" She‘s never: afraid of anything â€" saysthe . only place she ever locks her door is in New York City, by theâ€" way. She expects to travel until she is too old to get around. Then she‘ll sit in the sun on some remote island and write her memoirs. "If you‘ve ever actually been broke, why, then you can never be afraid of it or mind it again," she says. "So really, it was worth it for that bank to fail just to show me.": She has promoted newspaper cirâ€" culation campaigns and once nearly took a job in Mongolia as assistant to a missionary. The only time she was ever broke was in Florida when a bank closed. She‘s philosophical about that experience, though it was not so nice at the time. now they‘re doing it. It was just by a lucky fluke that Neill got to Pitcairn Island at all. Ships don‘t usually stop there, but hers did on account of an SOS from the island. Somebody was very iil. That‘s the way things happen to her. Volcanoes erupt just after she climbs them, revolutions dog her but she‘s never hurt by them. She has worked as a stenographer and typist in many lands and nearly always has found good jobs in the diplomatic service. "You know Piteairn Island will only support two hundred people," she explains, "so when more than that get on it, the inhabitants draw lots to see who will leave. Well, I noticed that they all went bareâ€"footed there, because of course they have no leather. I had brought some bamboo sandals from Japan and they had the bamboo on the island, so I taught a few of the girls to make sandals and now they‘re doing it. The cofi'flfi?‘”wmfi-% most jobs was Russia, Miss Jam says. Only because of her visa runâ€" ning out, she couldn‘t stop to take any of them. The time she felt most useful was on Pitcairn Island, whers she started a new industry. "I haven‘t been ~a lot of places," says the indefatigable traveller. And there ara so many countries, and even In Honolulu her luck held and the brownâ€"eyed Neill persuaded an ice company to create a job for her. She took charge of the complaint departâ€" ment and set about making the whole district iceâ€"conscious. Succeeded, $oo. Then, as she says, seeing the ships go by all the time sort of made her restless and she decided to go to the Orient. The ice company gave her a six month leave of absence and she set out for Japan. This time she lanâ€" ded a newspaper job and never went back to the ice company, which was desolated to lose her and cabled her a raise! "I climbed all the mountains in those parts and then looked over the field and decided it was a good time to go to Honolulu. No, I didn‘t have a jJob there. I‘ve found it‘s best to go without a job and look around. "In Washington I took a map and picked out the farthest away place in the United States. It was Seattle Washington. So I went there, or raâ€" ther at my request the Government sent me there. And then after I got there Uncle Sam decided to economâ€" ize and I being the latest comer was laid off. 3 "But I‘d always kept maps around, and two weeks after commencement ‘set off for Washington, D.C. Luckily I had taken the Civil Service examinâ€" ation. You see, I meant to be an arâ€" tist until I found that artists always seem to stay poor. And I didn‘t want to stay poor. Well anyway the Civil Service inspiration got me a job in the War Department, and I had also had the forethought to learn shortâ€" hand and typewriting. "There was no travelling at all in my family. We were born on a Mis. sissippi cotton plantation. I had neâ€" ver been out of the state until I was graduated from collegeâ€"never slept on a train over night. Oncee since she left Mississippi Woman‘s State College, she has gone around the world by way of the Pan. ama Canal, and another time she also tried the Siberian route and the next time she wants to go around the Horn with a stop off at Easter Island where the monoliths are and where you can‘t set foot without permission from the Chilean Government. Here‘s her own story, as told to a New York newspaper woman: 4 who fills one‘s soul with envy. â€" She is one of those brave, footâ€"loose and fancyâ€"free women who work theix way around the world. â€" There‘s ITINERANT TYPST ere‘s a girl called Neill James fills one‘s soul with envy. _ She CLAMMY Tng

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