HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1932-06-16, Page 6":1-4^t
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resent prices
owest in 15 years:
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Alttsical Typewriter'
, eNret -ooe, that plays. tuneve but *me
_a Mee* eenee, can be
,Writtet4 just as one -Printeeiorils with
;an ,orditiary• eepewritee. .'• •
.0111etleileg or 6,64044
beei me 1eain Oem.g.tgegi''
qeelni-7L4-Natere`e4Paris-yiebut none
been auceeesfuLuntil the invention
et, the:Machine, described .'beloW: We
• Eteherto:-1ittle- eProgi. ;eSe has ben
made in. printing Music, and even in
Writing it While the processes em.e
ployed •in printing and reproducing
Written languages have been „continual-:
Jy funproVedethe reproduction nmete,
either ' tkpOgraphy or by ;hand; has
-
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remained. as it ha's -been for years.
---e-Attenapta--to constr•uctea timeline-1th
eerite, music havemet with insue-
Mein:table clifieeltie:s, especially in Jet.
_Acting...the., necessary Cembinetion
the.-notee-ande;reusicale-signi, ow the
-anetliand,,and the lines of the staff on.
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the Other. , •
It..hah , leen, thought to- solve the
e --problem by. Using sheets of "music;
paper Or_hy_ writing_ theiinesLef the
ataff at the outset, ..by a special tia-
eliitie; but this process was difficult
41)
74,74
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..and -necessitated too great watchful:.
-
!o•s Machines baS•d on this eirin-
,• •
elide were: therefore quitkly aban•
. . , • . „ •
muelc-ieritieg ma.chineinvented
• :liy Gustave Itepdstatter, an engieeer
trankfort-on.theelfain works' On an
entirely different principle. Outwardly,
-exactly resefables an' ordinary type
iriterexept gat the eon:mien key-
board 1 reD1d by one of special deL
at the earilage, instead of.
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advancingevery time a key istthiched,
Ways qniet. until the assemblage of
,tes aiedeeigns is complee. The dif-
ficulty 'fif adjUsting the .sgns With
Arence to11 staff le...wadded by an
'4'irgOtutO connection of: each note with
he corkeiponding wet . the staff.
The latter is termed atttomatically by
"tne rjunetion of mites end signe On the.
blank paver, at Mich. impression.
The7itotes are written' as easily, as:
quickly, and ad, exactly as one Would
%pay them on the keyboard of a piano.
- The CooYistis neveritatigued and the
-44
tfelq*r1494 Mtge l as. meateland
'clear as a printed sheet
•
LONG JOURNEY
A man who spends a geod deal ef
time travelling ie devoted -to golf
when at home. He is' more cele-
' brated for enthusiasm chat' for ac
arway.
Oneday he. got into a deep bun-
ker, where he stayed for a long time.
epponent strolled over teikdis-
coverthe globe-trotter had dug qiiite
it sizable nee in his ' efforts to Ms;
lodge" the ball." .
"Well, Bill," he said, genially, "off
Australia again?"
Getting
Most people think of it in terms of
geetingehilMtecess • • • • id: ernig-df"
giving -Henry- Ford.
Try this
Sa,lad
ressing
r
• . •
Xciatt salad
Pressing will keep for week.
It stays gbisit tight down to flee
last tangy teaspoonful. There's
riev'er any waste and I •
It menet, for an' atnazinkly low
price. G et some to.dev.
•
e • • •• e • eeete
tear Caiiada
Salad Dresgin
".411*-Promnimm--"ungwomm
ISSUE, No. 24—'32
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BY .0,4-ZBLI ROSS RA' 11.,,E'r,:
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• 4•11-11. •••••••••••0-o- gi•-.1,11•41.41-414-o-0-e-O.
SY°P1S* 4 .ire, the choking breath of flashlight•
• •
Owder, the hurrying to and.fr..,
ceased,
The. Murderer, it seemed, had 'gat
mear awa. Search of the gronnits
had failed t� show any • evidenee
his :coming Or going; both the roanny
of his entrance and of; his exit Were
unaeeonted for.. Thieetmucte-they..,
;leaned 'frere,'7iht 'they -could ove.r-
hear: Whoever the intrider was he
hail done, a clean-cut. joh ;of ite Ae
the'clieeltltiF of 'evidence -went.- on, it
began,''to appeal. :that no one eitcePt,
Mary hadduecteviof any 'sort:
And tut.yvaslrlabli.! liftee and .6:
no practical .use.; e • -
•foreed to admit, in reply to:,:inipeetor•Kane!e,
earnest urging t� retail, the tuan's
voice .she hadlieard the murdereed
aroznan'S radii, 'It watt* a voice ex
actly-it was just growl, I
can't, eitplain it. It wee jest- a, sound
-sinyone inighelieve Made, in his threat
if he We'te angry.' you'el 'say if you
heard it that he was mad enough -to
kill.", • • •
"It Must rernind you of any yoke'
you'd ever heard before?"
,TuMer, wife of. the O,1,,111k94,
sire iiutnohile-tuarafaeturer.iMe 101'
engaement moiler and dance •:or
secretary end protee; Mary Ilaanee,
- who, to marry the soctany Oita Pitli
Itnyther.' 'Mary receies.a.,Weplone.04111,
train her Scapegrace brother. gddie, say-
ing he is in trouble and must see 'her
•
Mary -arranges for tci he admitted
French Seek Word,.
'k Etia'
• Payle:-Efforts are neing made te
find a liven* term fee "Wekeeed.",
inieehis been offered tor the hest
sug-
gestion.....- . '•„ ,
' Tilee cknepetitorsj are.ndig, hove.
ek4r; thee the pet*: like "ccittail
'five Cielieeletea;" fs .b wed fro"ni the
English *Igen has beficiete;raherertn
ly .embedded i the' French language
Many seekers after analternative -ae.i
eleen there As np ,hoi*, • of „banishing
•aweek-end," eo.they propose phonetie
substitutes. One of .the Most , promis-
ing is "auiquende;" which 'has the
merit .of being fairly accurate. french
repreSentation. of the normal 'proe
nunctatiOn • ••
Mare entirl-sth word -comers seek
apurely French equivalent and. urge
their felloei-countyynien to adopt
i'lielifW"eeer ."teeeltteertere!rpr "la eee
Tinehe.' The last term, is used. by
theatre, managers to indicate that their.
hosed are temporarily dark. , •
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0A
Wadi Tea Company
weeny.; When she gees tipstaire to Meet.
him she fins :Kra. Jupiter robe d 0and
murdei ed n-herr.rOor: --fttitiniurtif An -
,hr Oane.e, sheIds him in '.the? girder'
with Cernelia Taber, his einidlinod sAteet
eart..
• •
CHAPTER II1=
',1•Maty • ' was -too surpriteti te.inoVe. fo'
an instant, , *a at coieldielai peat
with Corneliae.that she ehoidd-'hehaiii
like that?- e • .• ee • e • e'
Dirk etrowled "tion'einite'a (Janne
fool .pf.,Ytirselt Con. -,Antikgaio your
:voice down; will -'you'- Do- yen meet
everybody to hear?." '
"I don't cake!" Cornelia subAel
into childish Snifiliege Just then she
;loked 'tip and saw Vary, watching
'them. • Mary.'thought she hadnever-
seen anyone leek so silly' in heie life.'
Ccirnelia hadn't expected interruption,
that was sure, from the dumbfounded
leek on her face. '
At Marys eall, -Dirk 'Wheeled about
eeo abriiptly that, the Clingingegirl top-'
pled and 'almost: ted. •
"Ceme quic Semethireg •
terrible has pend!” Without a
batkward loOk Dirk- Came running and
took theStetts to leer side in .a
bound. e •
"What's Wrong? • YOU look seared to-:
,death,•hOney," he asked werriedly. The
:terror in her ayes stabbed hnt:with
',concern. His arm *Mit abouiper prci-
.tectinglY. They -drew away, out Of
Cornelia's, heating .aid lowered their
voices somewhat.
•
Forty yeas this Month in' 'an
unpretentiOus little building on front
Street, in Toronto, the 'Salad a Tea
Company 54cli-.ed its first amid of
tea.- Founded in 1892 by the We'
Honourable Peter Larkin, the :busi-
ness progressed very rapidly and by
1894 a .branch.nad been: opened in
MontreaL , Two . years later the• Crated
States market was invaded and an
Office opened; in, Buffalo. To -day,
tliree Of :the largeSt and finest wae-
houdes in the World, devcited exclu-
sively to the Racking og tea, staodas
ineniorla, to the fotiaderlocated in
Toronto, Montreal, and is Boston (the
'rerene of the Mem.orable ea party.
which- precipileted the Revolutionary
-War)e-,
The Canadian market 'wad then Con;
,trolled be China, and Satan teas -the
largest sale being China tea of poor
quality : Thee tees were being' sokd
from. eheste; exposed' to :.air, dust;
.dampness, foreign odours, and so
teeth, alldetrimentalto the quality of
'tea. 'r In' Englan whiCh was, and still
tea -drinking country
is, the greatest
in the wold, Ceylon end Indian teas
of fine finality had practically dise
placed Cliina, tees, and it occurred to
Larkin that'Cinaciiins also would pre-
fer `hese finer teas. He, consequent-
ly, introduced a Ceylon add Indian
blend tet this Continent: Ile then con-
ceived the idea Of packing -it in metal
packaes, in order that it would reach
the consumer intact, with its flavour
and totality unimpaired by dampness,
store odours, etc. This step revolu-
tionized the tea market. on this Con-
tinent
He sought a name for his product
and decided on "SALADA," which was
e name of an old Indian tee garden,
I that was left now was to tell- tne,
publlc about It. He wisely decided
that the quickest and cheapest way
do this was by -means of the 'news-
paper. The rest was so gratifying
that he continued ter use the news
papers as his chief advertising vehicle
from that day.
eee.
He strove always to give the public
the finest quality tea he could at the
price and then advertise it for all he
was Mirth. His achievement is the
lar&e,,tJ soiling po
America. •
•.
On the Shelf
It js still eustomary in ruhl districts
1. Scotland for the minister to preach
a. .series, of sermons around one Scrip-
ture text. The paeable of the Ten 'Vir-
gins had been selected by a Minister
for a series of ten sermens, in 'which
he took one Virgin at a time.
Many of the church folks were tired e
of the subject at the end of a week or
two; but it was left to the, beadle to
tell the minister the truth. •
Asked by the preacher as he was dis-
robing him in the vestry one evening
how he was enjoying "nty analysis of
the characters of the 'Virgins," the
beadle relined, britsquely: "The hale
congregation's fair seunnert Wi' them,
sir. They mann be a kit 'o' tough mild
maids. hy this time!"
.A. Welshman ependine k holiiay .in
London noticed on a door of a big
heuse the words, "Please ring the
bell." He rang the bell. In a Minute
Crteman pear ' ad asked
what he wan ed. " oth ng," said the e
Weishnan. "Then why did yott ring
the bell'?' asked the fotrilan. "Be-
cause It said i," replied the Welsh -
Man. "Oh," said the foetinan, With
q set you come from the coUtt,
try, where nanny-goate grow congfenie
berry bushe!" "tell," kaid the Wein-
man; '1)14 in London thete are sole
more ettinderful sights. • Yon have Only
to ring the bell and Et Ilictigter Mitt o
4 ver, activity was intense.n
Two me
nn uniform pounded up the staircase
in the wake of the butler, creaking
witli'leather and breathing as if they
had run. Police; in the sacred pre-
cincts, of the Jupiter mansion! one
o them turned and tailed to a. third
who rerimined .behind, "Don't let any-
bedy leave the 'house!" •
• Dirk Squeezed Mary's hand 'reassur-
ingly. "They'll find whoever did Its
Those boys work fast. Dofi't Worty„
It Will be all right"
Mary bed cause to be °grateful for
the steadineSe that canie to her nigle-
ally eit touch, for there Were
bad numeente Ahead of her in which
she ne4t ell the • composure -she
Ould muster.
It Was all it once a topsereturvy
world. The Jupiter mansion no latter
belonged to its °Weer, in effet,1* to
topeetor Kne, and the men. Who
came -With, him from county police
neadquertrs. The cream IA Sciuth,;,
ampton'simingr set found theraselyeS
_Agrded into theballroom for quetion;
Jug along with ar frighteed' iludite
f servants. It was hearsbefore: the
u
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• Mary poured out at
her story 'in -
eXcited jumble, almost crying With the
joy of relief.
"o you think it's anything to do
with Eddie?", she askel anxiously. '
"Listen,' said Dirk, "who% is this
Eddie You're: talking about? you clOri't
mean the, kid brothe?"
Mary said yes, of course.
"ut what bee he t� with it?"
, "I 'don't knOw•--nothng, I suppose
But e may _ ave • een le e ouse--
le was in trouble-". e.
Dirk laughed, and patteza her ehent-
der. IneSpite Of •herself, Mary felt
reassured.' Dirk seerned to wipe the
whee nightmare away:
"That .kid? •s, Why, yoteee all mixed
up. This is soniething 'else. That kid
wouldn't 'hurt ea By!" He pressed her
hand 'comfortingly and they started
for the house.
Dirk called sharply, "Coming, Con
file?"
Cornelia, still standing where he
had left her, moved forward convel-
sivelY at his command.
They had reathed the. loggia when
Teddy Doulton luMbered toward them
out of the darkness, cursing earnestly,
and seized upon them , as an fiudietitee
far his griefs.
"Damned idiot!" he exclaimed fer-
vently, rubbin:g his drooping shoulder.
"Ran into Me down in the bushes mile
knocked the breath out of Me. Arid(
not a word to excuee it -not a word!"
They did not listen. "Bave you
seen Mr. Jupiter?" Mary 'mimed to
ask. •
tHavLeeen him? ..-me-Askerie i
I've seep Jack Dempsey. Yes! Who
luta the fool,, anyhow? Wiladdiya a
ask such people for?" -
"Who?" , They could not wait for whis answer. It was all meaninglees
chatter anyway -he was drunk enough Th
have collided ivith the side of the p
house. -
"That tool I last met. Listen!" -he
called, •plaintivelje after them. "Yee h
know what-" ° , a
"Keep--still-altout-Eddie," Dirk ea*. -w
to Maty in a low Voice as they entered in
the house, "till we see what's What. h
No use mixing him up in it unless we w
have to. He might have a bad time." 1-.
The ballroom was deserted .tlove, ex -
ceptor the musicians, who were pack. h
ing up their. instruments. The sub- g
titled babble from the dining room in-
dicated that supper was still going on. as
In other parts of the hotiie, how -
.g1
1VfiY," n!" She Was obviously
staxi-htledein,
inspector frowned' thoughtfully..
"What 1 ant getting at," he was
kind- enough to •explain tO theni both,
ht a: lowered tope, "is the possibility
6!nsatn him?"
job. 'Mt. butler -L -do ythi
t
"Ahselutely!" • it ve a relief
be on safe grued. •
The inspector sighed.
"Well, I do;, too. I think he's onthe
level when he says he kept eveeybode
out thethadn't been invited.' He had
a real. argument with one Man; h
-
says -nearly threw him out. Bit
Lord, there are a dozen loop -Wes
Nebodi checked on the cars that tame
and. went, and theee Were plenty of
windows open rhoSe doors ,ver
there," he indicated the kenth doors
Opening' onto the loggia, "were open
when I came in What do we know
aboue those 'black horn-tooters? Net a
thing." He Shook his head. .
If he meant to throw Al • off
guard by thiseconfideneiel infenent,e_e_
tuiceeded, for She Changed color when
he asked abruptly: "What were you
doing upstairs, Miss Harkness? When
you heard the setids .ou speak of,
and the shots?" •
'Why, Panic Seized her.
"You had been: daticing a momen:
before, 'hadn't yel? Why _did. you
leave the ballroom and go upstairs?"
"I -went up to see how Mrs. Juni-
. ter was," Mary faltered. "Someone
teldine she"' weft tired° and had gone
to her room to rest." • •
"You were --alone, up there?"
"Why, yes." What did he meat,
Mary 'wondered fearfully -What did
he know? ,
But his question had adifferent
meaning, sh9 soon saw from effeet
on Dirk. He turned • first red, then
White, and •jurnped to his feet. He
drew a deep breath.
an'g'Srhiy.ecertainly• was alone," he said
`Q•
"All right, all right," the Officer re-
turned pacifically. "We've got te
think of everything, you know."
- lesee- no- reasorr moreexctreter-Dierce
said stiffly, "for your thinking of sueb.
attshhini ding
something, he thought.
gdeteetive .eves not riled. Mary
"Listen, buddy," he told the gloWee
Dirk firefly, "strnger things 'hap -
en, evarp day. I'm just trying to find
ut what's what. •
"Look at that mob," he tilted fes
ead towards the milling ra0b of girls
nd men. "Unless we got fingerprints
e -got -about as -much elieniee of 'find -
g the guetevho did this as if it never
apPened. The crook that pulled this
as smart Everything Set to corer
p for hint.
"Any ,one of them smart kids coted
ave pulled •the- trik, and hid the
un." •
"But how about the jewels?" Mary
ked. •
"We'll find them," the officer . aid
oomilie "But it' ii going to take time,
tilting for them to turn up."
Be -looked like a: •man in the lut
throes of depressien,
DetetiveByine came and reported
that every Car had been searched be-
fore leaving the grounds. •
Inspector Kane prePared to move
off. "Well; no offence, young lady"
When the rush for wraps and home-
ward -bound Motors had cleared the
toom$ all thatremained were the
group of officers, Mary and Dirk, the
housekeeper, Mrs, Warren, and, busily
speeding the parting guests, Spence.
dace Inspector • Kane, asked in
Iow voice "Where's the old man? "Up
there?" Pointing to the ceiling. Byrfie
e_elded. "Let him stay."
The srvants, those Vidni remained,
Were released and sent off to bed. The
sight of their smirtying backs me-
Menterily confounded Miry. -he bad
forgotten all about Bessi. What had
Bessie t0:1, if Anything? •
AS if he read her thought, TOspee
tot Itatie tinted to One- of his mere,
whose job had be -en quizeing theepere:.
vante.
"They don't knot -nothing," was the
esti-On/4k the runetiligVand
If.
The Graham Wafers you have
always liked best, kept crisp
and fresh in a new package
.1'
vt14.
crisp atirrerundiy
sonongishing
with milk anti other
beverages . . . you'll. like
them dbetter than ever..
• - •
• '`er •
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oteer's ,diaguated report. "They're
,Sure4jj all?- youArai:tfniss
anybedy?" he • asked' phanily.
Th detective reteaved a list fent
.his hie pocket, where he had lust
stuffed it, and seannefl.i.
• "TWO," he said. "A maid nkmed
Beseie and a ehe,uffeue. Nobody knowe
where they've gone:"
. • (To be continued.)
Genii from Life s Scrap -book.
CHARATER. • .
"Character is made up„ a smalk
dUtiee faithfully performed -of self-
deniele, of self -sacrifices, of kindly
aets of hive and dut."-Anon.
"Buman improvement is from with-
in outward."--Poude
"Our character is bur the etaniP
on our eouis of the free choice et
geoid or evil we have made. through
life." -J.. C. Geilcie... • • . •
"We: are -all .sculptors, working at
letiselrees, moulding .and
ling. thought." -Mary' , Baker Eddy:
"It isby presence of mind -in ;un-
tried .emergencies that the eative
metal of. a Wail is tested.7-iowe1l.
• • Remembt,r-41thoUgh his writings
he gained weds acceptance,. still it-
is the character 'of Robert Lees Ste-
venson that most arrests attention.
Children
.:There le nothing e all the world so
important as Children; nothing So_ ine
Westing. If ever you- wish to be of
real use in the world, do something for
children. lf,ever you yearn to be wise,
efndy children. If the great army of
philanthropists ever work 3ut race sal-
vation, it in' be because a little child'
has led. --David Starr Jordan.
SEND, FOR
-FREE,
BOOK
Doe. baby cry at night".t141 andgI wakeRaYE
you? Is he difficult eo menage? •
Pale or underWeight? Our anthori-
tatird. book on Baby Welfare will
help you. Mothers all say they wish"
they had known Of "Babys Welfare"
-sooner its ea-helpini-seneible and
saves inuch nimble; irout cope
mailed free. -Use the coupon below
The Borden Co. Liited,
115 George St., Toronto, Ont.
Gentlemen : Plane send me free eolYi of
booklet entitl5d "Baby Welfarn.
None '
'44ddress
-EAGWRItatiVI
C 0 144iJD.F.14TSED
Top Prices For Lambs
Let Reason Togetimr
From all the information we can gather there is: a
fairly heavy crop. of Iambs thsi.year, and methods of mar-
ketin likely to be somewhat different due to the fact that
Abattoir Companiesliave„decide.d-to;plaee in -cold-st&age
mily about 50%'. of what they hake usually stored in preiri-
ous yearst
They realize from past experience that the consum-
,
ng public seem to prefer fresh lamb rather than lamb from
cold sorage, and as an illustration we find- that according
to Government Statistics' there- was in storage on April
lst, '1932, smile five million twenty. two thousand pounds
as against three million one hundrdd and fifty thousand -
pounds on April lst, 194, showing that conditions and
' requirements are changing.
During the last few years the qualty of Iambs have
shown a decided improvemnt,. and by doing so you have
done much to, stimulate greater consumption" hence demand -
for greater vOlurne, • This has ben. accomplished by better
breeding, better feeding and catration.of buck lamb Light
thin Iambs do not prOduce good quality larnb peat. 'Heavy
Iambs are -also undesirable for the market, but godd fat
iambs yielding a dresied carcass of thirty-five to forty-five
m
pounds. are desirable and will coniand top prices, or in
other words well finished lambs 'weighing 70 to 90 pounds
th
live weight at e market are desrable. Lambs weighing'
over .90 pounds -t the market are likely to be discounted in
priced With all these facts before us we feel disposed to
recommend 3rou to ship'. out your lambs As they get fat
1and hold unfinished lambs on the farm until fat, but the
Chief feature is to keep sending them out as they get ready,
believing. as we do that -prices will be better during ,the
early season of marketing rather -than fall months' when
receipts are likely to be hay.
are anxious that farmers fila3,- receive the best
assible returns for their lambs, and are asking our ship-
pers t� co-operate with you by maintaining,a regular ship
ping service and tssure our- readers that We have a full
staff of experienced salesmen, and in a position to handle
all classes of live stock whether by rail or by truck. •
The United Fanners Co -Operative Company, Litnited
Live Stock Commission Department
Union Stock Yards
West Toronto
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1.7.1•0#1*-•„,AVV.,,••••‘9
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