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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-04-11, Page 2
rt WfW1’ ’’-i (I'jA Some Howlers 9 . ■estate, became a deader of society, .1 •I becamea SatinSbin^ YELLOW LABEL ALSO MADE UP IN PIPE TOBACCO spring hatj ., . ,... (To ,be Continued.) shone devastatingly from beneath' a •book-hall. She wore brighter clothes ___________ ...... .,_3n on her neat -iittje person; and film night-blue eyes kills the young of our lovelysong birds. We fear that a verdict of “guilty” must be rendered on both those-count-s. But' there issomething- ^Honey^yilmorid CKEAM I fl A D L MARK fll.QibTCRLO ................... _JN CANADA ____........... Socrates was pp: >dba.e jqX; ^tedldcfelL^ Keats is an insect powder. . Waterloo was won on the playing ^fields- of- Wellington, ALL THE FANTASt OF GOLDEN AGE Cdlumbii^, built an opera house full CHAIRS By FAREMAN WELLS SYNCiFSia. ‘ • Adam ftltriston. a farmer’s son, Ag-rfarticied to u 'splicitor. makes a brave ®*>- but unsuccessful attempt to thwart “ three thieves An a bag-snatching raid' " The bag was torn frbm the-hands of a girl who explains that -it contains the day’s takings of her father’s shop. • He.-attempts* to crack the thieves'ana reaches an old wjjirehous'e.. ...Adam, -enters the building while the" girl r 'Waifches the door . Suddenly " he hears' .job ('steps.' i-;"".The’.~mari-'turns’r-out—“to—be—Adams employ er—Cor ville Perkin; • ., Adam, in his private hours . experi ments with short-:wave wireless.. < Walking homeward. Adam > Is nearly -furri-down by. a- large, swift car. He calls on Priscilla Nor-val. „ Her father recounts the history five antfirue .chairs he—possesses. connectionof ^Corville jerkin of. ■Adam ii~ extremely puzzled over the ■vOnr.cotion" of 'Corvine Perkin and «^4isMMhntada-Whp~wan.ts.^the ■ahtiaue^chajrau \ . '■ , ;-----: Adam took the chair she indicated and sat down patiently, his eye tak- “ Ityg ’in the details of' the little room aty/he waited fOjr the, gift of tongues ,» - to"descend on the’ silent Hagar. The room’ "had nd more furniture than. . three chairs and a very plain table. al the valve, an exacting .pro cess., . | The View now takeirjiy Professor Starling was that, as soon -as the second Valve was completed and proved to behave jn the same way as the flrstv they wduld have sufficient data available to publish their re sults, and he geiverously suggested s that Adam should, jointly with. him- , self, .present a paper to the local sci- l entifio society. Although; the meet ings' of 'the society ' were only of I minor importance in the \v,orld of 1 science, copies of the paper ’ )vould ' fie sent to interested parties all over the world.^7"Z^ ' I “And iit after that,” the Professor said drily,, “you are still so 'purblind as to wish to follow -a scientific car-, eer, I have no doubt ttoat the way Will be open to you.”. . Despite the disillusioned cynicism of Starling’s words, they presented to his hearer an intoxicating prospect. He began to feel assured of a; for tune, and of a future moreover ^hat included Priscilla Noiwal. ;<r * •Months had pasded since trie driz zling winter evening, when he had ^st^nol^Xto^Scy.lla^and>ULQ.w--.thea heavy weather, was, gone and warm spr-ng days toad arrived.' It seemed, tod, that the Norvals. had overcome theif loss, and though he knew that fietoind the scenes their economies had been drastic^ he felt as if there must by now be j brighter . days in store for ..them too. They had lived through a. grim winter jn that dark house of theirs, lived . through it ’ bravely;. and perhaps it , was some thing in the contrast between the fresh young beauty of the/ country- ^sjde and the drab unchanging, mon- . btony' of Cavendish Street thbt 'maSe: Adam long to give the girl a glimpse of the refreshing beauties of spring. He .felt also that, it was high time his parents knew something of her, if only to put an end-to. his mother’s silent, but none the less stubborn, op position to his friendship. As sdon, .therefore, a there was a reasonable prospect of settled weather he invit- ;ed- father “and-:daughter -to- Periny-- • mopr?^ ~~“ “7/ '. /.; /■ : ’ Whit Monday was the day appoin ted, a day-warm- enough“that year for full summer; Wearing not only a hat but a collar and tie of a lustre such as would have satisfied thp exacting _Mr. Corville Perkin, Adam, waited at the statftm_“foF"li‘is'rgues'tT~with'rthe' farm car, a comfortable if somewhat BFld'eriy-^klbler-’—1 ■■ ■ ■■■■;—-r TOlm«hlS’=imaginat’iOn^Spring^only.,,.be-. gan \at the moment when Priscilla '"emerged“iTit(>_an“ai)propriat;ely~radl- ant. world from the gloomy little Ahan h’e had vet sed r There was a worn rug on the cem-' ent floor and a? cheap bright table- clotto. The only ornaments . were a geranium plant, a canary, „ and a stained engraving representing Queen j Victoria distributing , bibles, Adam recalled ttye old womans claim that, her man had been running straight and “getting a nice J^le-tyome- tor gether,” and was - almost overcame ’by / the “Wanted me to do a job Tor them in Cavendish Street,” came abrupt ly frocn- the bulging lips of Mr.,.Ha gar. \ * Adam’s eyes widened. enquiringly. “Oh!” he said. • /^Antique . shop,’’ said Mr. Hagar, ^and paused with the ’effort oE^eek- ihg for the next wqrd. ' Adam had plenty of time <to think about his question, and wheii he got tired of- the long silence toe psked •jt. “What did they want to get hold ' oif?” ” ■ .•■ ■ Mr.. Hagar held up a hand . as if pleading not to be distracted. “Didn’t get' so far. TpTd ’em running straight Never knew.”' He sank fiatk in his ctoair as if. exhausted af ter so long an oijation. To Adam it was., growing" clear now why it had meeded -.the skilri of: a practiced ^barr i'ister tp extract any sort of story from him in the Court. He. began to 'fidget., with his wateto. If he did not/ go soon he would be too late to put. ;n an appearance at the laboratory. ‘ “Don’t;b^ in a hurry,, sir,” came ifroin ’ the stubborn lips of the man opposite. “Want to tell you. I ^kiiow what you don© for i^ie. Grateful: Samuel Hagar.” He nodded gravely -and—Adam^_was—cbnstraiined„-tori-waitri “Montada’s betoind it. Got it in for your friends,” was the' hext scrap of Tnfdrmattoh. “But Montada’s out . of the country . now.” , •'■.■'■/' ■ > Mr. Hagai/s lips curled contgmpt- -~Luously._Hft£P-at-oii^ih.eL,fire.~Eor—the. first time his reply camo reasonab ly prompt. “Find him in ten min- ‘'utes7n^puM.~^^dtyra^r~db//tytyfige^ -pufirMie~said^and^then==ad.ded^«^Only« t don’t know anything,- see.” ON A SPRING DAY. Adam sat silent, .reflecting upon ^hat-HagaF-had-tpld-him. ^=-/Montada^was-st-ill-^in=th«--eountrty== and-Hagar knew Where he was. ,If Hagar know, others - certainly would.; Mr. Perkin for example. His reverie Was broken by the muttering of Hag ar’s reluctant voice. “Ever y-ou’re in trouble ;witto Mon- ■tada came' to Samuel Hagar. That’s me. Do a lot for you. Grateful., Wanted to tell you Montada’s still dangerous, that’s all.” -—There was-a-n- air^of- complete fin- “anvy^typut hi^/woTds ;tyow and Adam ■felt./as /If Jie/tyad tyeePL.i already,, dis- "ty1atydr"“^®r^ horny fist? ■ . ■ r- “Good night,” said Mrs. Hagar af fectionately, and he; was out oneb more in the wretched little, street. • At the . Technical College, Adam found trie Professor too eagerly THERE’S never any ques-- tion about perfectly leav ened bread when you bake . .. with Royal Yeast Cakes,. You can be sute of, full leavening power no matter how long • .they have" been on your pah- • try sshelf. .Individually wrap- ;. ped in airfjght waxed, paper - u , they rhach you in perfect con- ' dition and keep fresh for ‘ months.. Royal Yeast Cakes have, been the standard * of, quality for over 50 yfears? ■ ’ / Two Helpful . Booklets... V. FREE! .. The ”Royal Yeast Bake Book” tells, '1 all about the art 3 of bread making ! and Rives tested j recipes." “The j '•RoyaltRoad to I Better Health” 5 explains how the ■ i ret’tifar use of ■ Royal Yeast Cakes / - asja dfqod will im- . < j pro’vT-your health. ■t! . buy Wape-in,.'’ . canaPa coons AN'DAnty BRANDS f.IXHTEjl I r-a.ser A , andtifyerty St., Toron to, Ont. I lensd sen<L«nC. free, the "Royal Yeast B.ikc Book", and.,"TEfts Royal Road to Better Henim”’ ’ ", ’■ ' To-vh^Prov. DUST Those whp have not experienced < dust mb tor m upon the prairie'cannot readily recent winter ported 800/000 We who sit in houses with their double windows act against all /wea thers, imagine thj^rthey are pretty well chink-prdotT But a dust storm would soon find them out. However well built , a-house is, dust always .seems to find chinks in it. Blown tip- on a strong wind, it enters through key holes, through the tiniest ; air passages in the window/ sashes, un der doors aiuj so forth. It is choking nauseating, lung-filling.._ With the sun--blotted~out—a t—high-noon,7I t-of- fers t^e inost serious mOnhce to traffic, a„nd, in any case only the hardiest people bent upon urgent missions will brave the discomfort atyd danger it causes out of doors. And behind it lies tragedy to the farmer. It. repregents draught, with. TTb^op/^il^lfio^n^cleam^ayvay^frpm- pthe fields' and piled up. in dunes ag ainst the least obstruction, such as a. bank by the roadside. This storm suggests ruin to the 'American win ter wheat crop, already in. Very bad shape. The A.A.A. therefore, has re moved a restrictio'n against. sow ing of spring wheat; But, unless There is A generous rainfall soon, \vhgt chance has spring wheat to reach fruitful maturity- in earth that is turned to dry powder? Already; there are indications that the Am- -erican wheatJmlUinay.be.. as :hard hlt„ this year-as^-last. Out Canadian conditions are re ported to be somewhat beitter, al though patchy and none too bright in spots. And, in any .case, with the thought of the dried-out areas in central Saskatchewan, we can well sympathise with Kansas and the American West. In, crop liinltation schemes Nature outstrips the A.A,A Montreal Start imagine-.tlie horror of the visi tation,;;upon-- the "A merican Wheat belt.’ .The storni>iS je- to have- covered an area of square miles. . AnlhterestihgExperiment For The Teachers With the approval .of the Depart- menriof “Educationdf'new'pla7r“6'f teacher training that promises to> gLve wortty-while “resultw^|ri^ ■■ being ..uhdertaken in—theUnature—of—an, ex-, p&riment by the Peterborough 'Normai~-Sehp61r^^hte“7-majority—-oi- graduates from normal schools re ceive their .first experience in actual teaching in the rural schools, and and practice work BROWN LABEL ORANGE PEKOE - 40< Wlb. FRIENDS OF THE CROW DENOUNCE I . EFFORTS FOR HIS EXTERMINATION (From the Chicago Daily News.) The Illinois Department of Con servation is- making war on crows. Its; bombers boast of slaughtering 150,000 since the first, of the year, Jahd:~Kb^~t<T~kilF 200;000 more by; spring. When Mother Nature balanc es her accounts with these violent conservationists they^ may not be so proud. She has a way. ow . demon strating the wisdom of her own order that frequently has made her human .^revisionists appear very foolish. , . There are two major counts in the indictment of the crow. He helps 'hims'elfTo'_th-e--’-farm’er’s'grain-with- an almost insulting bravado, and he witty the mystery of the . lengthen ing shadows. Some of us: wo.tyU spare them /or the sake of that , thrill. But a more practical’ defense _rests _o.n..the.part they.playin thq-- economy of. nature with which man < meddles at his peril. ' , . has been confined almost entirely to ; urban _schools where the conditions are quite different from those the hew teachers will encounter in an ungraded- ’rural school. Under 'the new plan graduates, will take over their posts in ; country schools ■ henceforth much**, better equipped and with a more thorough 'grasp of their, duties than under the old system; It is planned to send- each NormaT'’School pu’pty~fbf~’ a -week/s-Ltrainityg. :„in _ty . wellrmanaged. cn. over- puts on tois new potatoes. Acrimony, which is called hq another name for marriage, Lot’s wife looked back and t a somersault. ■ ; Shakespeare lived". ~at Windsor ■ Two- famous Scottish, patriots are awaiting his advent to pay ■ official .with his,;merry Wives. the ’^Robert Bruce and Edgar Wallace. .Sir Walter'Scott was called the ■ "Blizzard of the. North:.”. The, knight , fell- down an abbess that: yawned, in’front of him. ! A-gasometer is where you ^?ut In your pennies. . ' '. , When Elijah went up to Heaven, his , maniieplece fell, oh .Elisha. ■ - A grass widow is the wife of a andZo'5lainr.a.-.-wo^m^W33^dSfc^£, the conditions under which rural schools .are /operated. Well qualified^ rural teachers will he- selected as the -mentors for the budding , young teachers during the* week’s rural training. ’ •> Not the least important- side of this experiment is that the staff of, the normal school will visit their, pupils -during their period of -rural training and thus" come into * close contact’ with country classes with helpful results to the,., staff itself, to the rural teachers and. , to their pupils. If the Peterborough experi- nieht proves the’ success -expected the plan mray ‘ he adopted in the other normal schools. fenses. ■ - Against his thefts of. -grain should; be set his insatiable . appetite for field mice' and other small mammals, for insects . and cutworms.» One ^authority declares that . he “amply repays the farmer for what’he tak- ek by destroying the vermin in the fields.” Fewer (jrirfcs, tyiore mice and cutworms—so./nature riih^ take toll for man’s interference.. .■ . . It is less easy to. palliate the ...the. XV W XWV X* 4^ Enjoy. a really fine _ hand-’made/ciqare t~Ee~ by rolling your ouhi With golden Virginia li ROUGH HANDS FROM. soAp«and HOT WATER? attention to his lateness. He . was, full’of involved -theories fabout action" of the yalve, but his .chief idea w&S that it was time, for Adam to! tnake up a second valve so t$at they, I ebu I d make ■ sure that th e s ani e • phe- naimcna. would..'be-.reproduced. ' The jnvemor had already gone, some way i X>warde this, working bn the same I Pinos- as before, ■ • ■ ■ Hhs method was, simple. First of i all toe ''produced .a valve from one of.' vegetarian, b . •• i '■! DEATHOF A POOR WIDOW RECALLS (he- weil-kn-o-wn maker# .and, having/ extracted, the contents, replaced I tliein irith elements 'Of. his own j ftig^ Then he had .to exhaust ahd TO ALWAYS GET FAST PAIN RELIEF -nests-ot.—. o.ther..'..mrg_s,. :\Pu.iEZJ»gS£: ornithologists hold that mUrdefrous offense is rare—much rarer, prob ably, than man’s violence to 7 mem bers of his. own species. Possibly the human, race should be exter minated — some pessimistic- phil osophers have suggested as much trbut the majority is still opposed :to a remedy so drastic. Generally1 the crow is conceded to be the most intelligent of birds. Captured when young he soon be- comes/.fearlessly familiar witty hu- man folk. He is discriminating,- picking whom, he will for company,' and raucously scolding those he dis likes. Always hej remains a rascal, a lovable rascal, tyo.ckily independent and impudently'predatory. Only, a mind, insensitive to na ture’s moods could look unmoved Upon the etched, beauty of the scene when, as the setting sun hangs pn the dark edge of the ./distant woods, the crows come, cawing from the :*r" APPLy hinds 4Sk An Aspirin tablet starts disir^te-' That ■ means that-. Aspirin ■ starts ' ^taking hold’*,. . . h Led headache, neuritis or rheumatic pain Doctors prescribe it For Aspirin does r i__________1 in the form of a cross on W&Y ■Aspirin tablet ' .-I-------:-------— .Witty, the finding of Elizabeth Mo- Court-Tabor -frozen‘ to death in -si- shack at the°Matchless Mine in Lead ville," the newspaper reader of today, was dropped suddenly into that' part of the past which first occurs to inind' when one speaks of the “fan tastic history” of America. ■ She was- “Baby Doe,” wife of “Sil- ' \er Dollar” 'tabor,, Vermontei, who; j 80 years ago moved to Kansas, made’ a small fortune in land sales, -pushed’ ■on into , Coibfadb,': nnx(.-d~-“poii'tics' with management of a, general store ,in a small.'community, joined in a search for gold,, found silver in stead and/by 187g, .was-'a milHo'n- ! aire .and going fast- But -that was tie beghimng only." Tabor becamea .'Mayor, then a divorced his first'wife ■ and settled 1/20’0,0(>0 on .her, married the youtljul and beau-' tiful “Baby ,t)oe” (“there wasn’t another woman in DenV.er who could touch her for Idveliness’1'/, was ap-.. polnto4 tb the United States ate, spent $10,0()0 a day. one Of the w^/ftyr’s largest land owners (he had acres of mining 1 ktyd, 4,600,000 \ acres of gracing kind), "bought nightshirts that cost 1|iS50 apiece, 0nd a million dollars wfirth of jewelier'y for his wife, in- posedly Isabella pawned te stake grating as so.on'as it touches moistufe. .Lieutenant-Governor . eases' even a bad J headache, neuritis or rheumatic pain • almost instantly. And Aspirin is sfl/e. Doctors prescribe it For Aspirin d^s ' not harm the heart.- Be sure to look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on ■Aspirin tablet. /Lspirin is made m ..Canada and all qruggists have ii. “ De mand and Get AS PlRIN '' • - It I 'tTRADEMARKnealSTBRKb IN CANADA -pf , and mahogany^-and-a - hugA|- fields in ■ flock formation to merge estate, became a-leader of society, ‘ 1 crashed and died. It was the erash ^of 1^-92 that 4- VI stripped and kJled. him, ami ivr.i.' Ilft'WFRNFTS POWDER * bis.wife and daughters -back to U-ad- MOlfc! * ■ vniFhn ville ‘ with . picks .and ’’sho' ch. to ‘ look” ■ ;• ‘ for “another rtri.kt.” • s ’ . | • AB.'of .'the speed, splurging,, fan-/ ■ . tasy,' action, luck, lavishness ahd ' -tragedy of th'e ’golden age-of'Amer- ■...isais—fortune making it epiXvmizeb ■ in this family history; ' even; ''one might say,''’down to the-mad ‘faith ~futyn=W of T'atrnr’k wife-to the wmrV-- 'v ed-out mine thAt' once had turned- out the ^:35,O00'-a-day profit. For ' she 'clung to that like a ghost■’keep- ■■ ing “possession”; forgotten until I . death ' recalled her' dazzling, beauty | *. and fabulous wealth.—From the-'’ j-JJaM-in-ore Sun . ". FOR HOLDING TIGHT TEETH * “^No allppihg nrslitl- •, fnz --no cli cking' wharf you u«e thin' i grand powder that' moat tlvpjdfltfl pre- Bfribc' :lt'a’ tt joy to ’ all iiwa and ia the largest Fa'llhr in the vrorld I•• p vim no. ‘coJomd, gurn my lanfsi ; •■■kll drug atorita. ’ . ‘ DrWernets Powoeh poo routt Who Use YEAST “I find Phiilipb Pure LIVE Yeast helps niy digestion more that! anything t Ge. It creates aa appetite ; ..and aids digestion • afterwards.’’—London, England ■ — Extract from original letter. In Phillips Pure LIVE’Yeast a way r has been found to .preserve in the high- 1 est state of "Activity the . live elenients ' which make.’iyeart s,uch a splendid cor rective of the ills arising from, trouble# in tlie digestive; tract., ... No need, nmv^”to bother'about nevr supplies each day. Phillips Yeast staVs active.' Ydu can buy a month’s supply / and morg ahead—and save money by , ■—doing —■ —-......:'•’---- ■ Phillips Pure LIVE YeijsjRKu JEtfg- . lisli discovery—-otic that has'helped many 'thousands iiri England/ tc new health. It corrects digestive trmibles, makes your food do you gdod, and bupda ' • bk’od. ’ • o If you have found y^a^t SP°.d foV02K''s' Von will und i'iiiiiips hath beneficial and eePnomical. And .wirKLlfke it. lydays' bupnly'(m «. or 50c ;45 "’ druggist’s.istheMabitPf ^Dentifrice ' Lotion B Cream f<’ ^SidtSWn X/lxZE MJ GROW SOYA BEANS’<2 A >EMy>EM We guarantee that" your bean crop will bring ydu at -left.st the equi valent of the, standard price for wheat and will ennttact • for your crop acreage. ■ For ,particulai;s writ^: Sbya Milk Limited, 45 RlCHIViO^D W. ' TORONTO /ROOM 306