HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-11-07, Page 6Mrs. Roosevdt Looks
* Over ‘‘Starers” Heads
New’Voi'k. — Mrs. Franklin D.
Rposevelt says she has found a way
ignore the stares of crowds.
have developed the self-protec-
jkiye habit of looking over people’s
heads,”: the wife of the United
States President told.. members of
the Brooklyn Institute of Arts arid
Sciences. A -
“Soldiers and sailors are the- real
pacifists.” — Admiral Isamu Take-
lihita. '
J
EVERY DAY LIVING
A WEEKLY TONIC,
by Dr. M. M. Lappin
re
<• ’■ ■- '.'t't—"S
Dan Prescott, and Gordon Wes,terby
And gold in. the arid bush-of Australia, i
They stake their claim .and start the
long journey to. the coast. ’•«/*Westerby has a fiancee, Gladys Clem
ents In England, but when they .arrive-
-in- Sydney he • marries- a pretty blonde.
, Gordon forwards' “a photo - of Dan to
former fiancee, ' Gladys Clements, Tn
London rind-. when. .Dan arrives -she be
lieves he is • Gordon. EJye-Gilchrist,a , typist, obtains work in..Sibdli-cott s ot-
fi'ee, the .broker who . Is floating , the
mine. , ' ■ r. ■
Is these anything- else, sir?” he ask-
edv . .
“I’d likp you to get me Into tliis-
harness,*” Dan said with a gesture to
wards the" dress clothes. “Over in
Australia we don’t go in much for
this sort of rig; not where I come
from. I never w’ore a tail coat In my
life/’ '
■ “Very good, sir,” the rrianjrlgreed.
Presently he tied Dan’s■ bow, and
helped him into .the coat.
“You were made for the suit, and
the suit was made for you, si.r, if ■ I
may venture the observation,” he
saHTTr’bavb^ofteil;--fottced"h-bw--a-t9;n^
,ned ^complexion" is set off by_wel 1-cut
evening clothes.” .
Eve noticed it, too; with a’propriet
ary sense of pride. Dan was facing
the music like -a soldier going into
battle, but he looked all of a man,
though a very. stiff one.
“Relax,”, she murmured. “These
"are' •kiridr~hn<mely -people; -Dan-;-1 and^
Mrs. Medlicott is a dear.” • . •
There was certainly nothing.formid
able about Mrs. Burdon, a grey-hair
ed matron with a smiling fflee; or
about., her. Husband who wasill florid
~atta~’actTvei-y^hQ^i^bler-^^-.^=Mie41i~
‘ "cotT "^d?~geijtTe""aiid"'fair-,—'and—had
preserved a youthful .appearance by
virtue of placidity.
Australia must b-e a very interest
place, Mr. Prescott,” Mr. Burdon said,
almost as soon -as they , were seated
at dinner. “It produces "phenomenally
skillful young men,, like Lindrum and
-young'Bradman. I suppose Bradiuan’s
a public idol out there?” . ------
“He’s a bonzer’ cricketer,” Dan,
- -a’greieid;----—————--------- -—.——
“Does that mean very good?” Mrs.
Burdon ask,ed. “I don’t think I’ve ever
heard the, word before.”Dan was s’car-let with confusion;
bity he strove to rise tp the occasion.
“It’s miners’ slang, Mrs. Burdon,”
he said, “so you must excuse hie for
t using it; On the goldfields; a very
rich And was a bonanza, you jsee.
I’m told that Is Spanish, and came
from the Californian diggings. Button
the goldfields,.fellows who could just
went on, making a noble effort;,‘‘There
was a fellow passenger on tfie'bdat
'comingover; a lady w&o. had to ten/
g'aget a ■ new housemaid iri •• Sydney..-
One of' t,he girls- she saw wa? a friesli
impprtatioii from England;-smart, ari'd*
just what she wanted. ■ But before
signing this, girl on, the lady ^sked.
lier why she", was - leaving tpe Place
she held. .
“‘Well; mteda.m,” says this girl. I’m
English, - you see-;- and the master is-
very Australian. And we couldn’t
seem to agree about the cricket test
matches’.” ; •
' Medlicott. led the laughter* which
rewarded this-little anecdote, and Dan
plied knife and, fork with the ail* of
a man who found conditions were
more endurable than he had been led
to expect. But hisf host was intent
upon drawing him into the conversa
tion; and presently began to ask ques-'
tions about the lo-nely places which
Dan had see and known. .
’ “It sounds an appalling place,” Mrs.
■Madlicott. ventured, "so . dry and
dreary; and so utterly 16'n.ely Fancy
being- two hundred miles . from any^
body, in a waterless waste!”
VIt all1 depends,”. Dan said vaguely.
“Depends on what, Mr.. Prescott?”
asked Mrs. Burdon. , *
“On the time of^fche year,, and the
conditions,” Dan ^Splained. “I was
once: *camping,”ta-^ar7ho^lto|&-^Uder^
ness; nothing, but loose sand as far
as the eye. could .see. And ^e had
two days’rain; drenching rain. S6ven
or eight inches of it. On top of that
ting out - a syllable. And--so-every-
.the^sun^came-.QMt, ____L__
Eve - asked; sinep -Dam
seeirieTlhMin^a'^^^
‘‘In twenty-four hours you ..could
see thp' sand changing colour,” Dan"
said. “In another day.it was like a.
billiard table, all covered with dark
green velvety growth. Inside a week
the grass was knee deep, and pat
terned with wild flowers like" a bright,
carpet. TVlfles and miles of It, all wav
ing with pink and white and -purple
blooms. From day to day. It was like
'tene^'oFThose fransformation~sceiLSS'
at?„a2p,antomiirie. And then—Bingo!”
“Bingo, eh?” said Medicott.
Dan nodded emphatically. •
“The hot sun dried it all-up,” he
said.. “Nothing left but a. lot/of brown
stuff like thin hay. The wind blew all
that away; and there were the old
sand hummockri again. All Inside a
few weeks.”
“And iv remains desert. until the
rains fall' again?” , '
:. “If they ever do,” Dan agreed. “You
TrtrifliF~"fteei d—Hfe--Wlfdle -^vorid-oa- -What-
YOU can be sure of suc
cessful’ baking when,
you use Royal Yeast Cakes.
They keep fresh for months.
No matter, when you use
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cause they come individual-
. ly sealed in airtight wrap
pers. Order a package from
. your grocer.
Two Helpful.
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The’“Royal Yeast **
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Name!
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~just-bonzerA’-*h—-—-— •
“How very interesting,” l^rs. BurL
don said.
“Talking about Bradman,” Dan
•
' ’ • ■ • r. ’ . " , ■ ’ f \
Give your Health- a daily thought
Be assured of
Vigor, Energy
and Pep
every day in' the year (
I
Try
and
and
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*
Remedy
happily
nearby
■ IJBW.$ '
"t6nic |
REMEDY.
■ Herrgott’s Tonic
you will Work mefre
sleep more soundly.
a ' bottle at out*
Druggist.
Herrgott’s Tcr.ic , .Remedy is a
scientific preparation! which helps
rectify conditions arising ' from
our present habits of living. .
YOUR GOOD HEALTH-
FIRST AND FOREMOST
Maintain its energy and vitality,
- give it a daily thought
jLiiinL'.iiiiiwiin'iirrsiiTfC ir'iir>T-‘--rrrnrr- ■'-ir-tr Im
/
[ROWN BRAND
ORN 5YRUP
THE FAMOUS
EN JERGY
Foqo/a-
A r.ro:lutt <,j , The CANADA STARCH CO., Limited
'“THE ETERNAL TRIANGLE”
' “The Eternal Triangle” is always,
cropping up. It is not only in books
of fiction that we come across it... We
meet'wi;h it in real life, '
“I have been out to one or two
dances, with a man who works be-
pide me./He is older than I aih and
is’ married,, but he' says h.e is not hap*.
;pWat homeland bhat I.jam. .so difi’er-
eri't from his ,^vife..H-e thinks I..could '
make hiin nappy and he wants me to
keep company with him regularly. At
first I was a ..bit- shy; at going ', with’
him,'but he has. been so,, kind to me
th?i?t I .thirik .I'am now beginning to
really like him; I £.m in. fix. -Can
you help me? Do you thrik I should
.continue my friendliness with him?’1
That is .pqrt of a letter written to
me by a girl of tweniy-three, and my
• advipe to her would be to send, this
man about, his business and .tell, him
you w’ant nothing to do with’Kim. /
Men Of that’ type are capable of
working irrevocable harm in the' lives' ,
of^oung women. They should be left
severely alone. Apparently this man
.blames-his wife for the unhappy con
dition of his home life.' Not a very,
chivalrous thing to do even if it were
true,, but not at all uncommon in
such cases. It should be remembered,
however, that,__is it ...takes .two to
make a bargain, so it takes two^To"’
make a quarrel, and-this man is,^prob
ably not so completely without .blame
as • he. pretends to be. Personally, 1
would w^rit to hear his wife’s story •
also before I; passed . judgment.
T w’ant to remind this young woman
that--it- dotes, .matter what other
folks say and think; We have to
HVe^ambhg "'people' arid" we*' have to
mingle; with them daily and we' must,
to some extent,, care for their opin
ions.: Unless - she wants to, run the
risk of being ostracised' from the so
ciety of decent self-respeeting peb-7
*ple7"shF’hhd";TjefteT'"db^
*s"an'ctidm3rand-\iQ^^^
ciety and quit this flir.tation right
away before it becomes more seri
ous.
Wh.at are,„ the ..real intensions of
this ‘man toward this girl? He cannot
marry her. Is she willing to have' her
whole life marred ? Is he trying, by
±is~friendship -with her, to give his-
legal wife grounds for divorce? Would
my eorrespdndent like to have her
Taif^namri'^ra*gged~dnto*"thnV'Sort-nf*
Tiling? Has she thought of the re
flection, that .it- might cast upon heiji
family? That is something that we
ought to always consider—the reflec
tion of our actions upon others and
the suffering that, we might ■ cause
others by our wrong behaviour. '
.- If this girl allows her. ‘friendliness’
—as she terms it—to continue, she
may wake up to the realization that
;her fondness for this man is increas
ing >to something more than fondness ,
-andr - just..Avhen...ah.e^fe.ds--she_iS:_read-y_
.t.o.sacri'fiCftevei-vthin^uDorifhe-altar
* “Arid ThaVs "Lire "sort—of country
w>Jiere you discovered your ; mine?’’
Mr.. Burdon asked. “Does not' the ar
idity malreit very, difficult to develop
the mine?’’ .
“There’s underground wafer there.”
Dan said confidently. ; “We’ve only
got to bore for it. And then Feather-
top vfHl be a centre for prospecting
and for developing the country.‘It’s
going to -be a big place, in my opin
ion.”
“And you'll be able to' say that, you
put it on the ■ map?’ Medlicott re
marked, “How far'is it from rail
head?”?
“A bit over three hundred miles,”
Dan sai/1 carelessly.. “What’s the
odds? We got a car there, and a bit of-
road,making, will open a good track
for cars, so. long as U doesn’t .rain.
The clay pa ches turn t0 glue'in the
wet.”, ; __’ ',1
“Tell Mrs. (Burdon about the birds,’’
Eve suggested^. “How they disappear
when the water dries up.”
TO' BE CONTINUED
Rcthschild Heiress
Marries French Baron
New York,—‘An »heiress to the
Rothschild’ banking millions and a
titled French sportsman were 'mar
ried -rit City Hall recently.
' The bride Was the .former Kath
leen Rothschild, of London, young
est daughter of-the late Nathaniel
Charles Rothschild, fourth head "of
the great firm, of N. M., Rotschild
'& Sons in direct succession.
' The bridegroonf -was Baron Jules
de Koenigswarter, of Paris, also a
member Pf a prominent bankihg
, family* The bride gave her age
21 and the Baron his as'31.
“Among my minor prejudices
/the word ‘hither’ in the title of
-book, play, lecture, magazine article
essay.”—George Jerin Nathan.
OSTUMEJ
Wife,. G'r<t»M Paiiitt, Scenery fdf
Amateur Theatrical*, hfasquertdei
and Carnival*.. Send for'Caialogue.
MallabarCoitumer
102* Beaver Hall IIill 375 Hanrravt Si.
Montreal Winnipeg
309 Kins S<. W„ Toronto .
.u a.
y~~JiL-------—
Heating Hints!
IN 'ORDER "to regulate the lire for
* daily temperature changes,-, rely
entirely on the Check arid Ashpit
Dampers. - The Check -Damper is a
flap-'like damper which should, J be .
located. in, the chimney pipe between
the Turn .Damper and the chimney.
When, this Samper is open, it retards
the burning, speed of the fire. The
Ashpit Damper is located below- the
grates and controls
the '.amount of air
<„,» supplied to the fire.
For best oper-
■ atiori these two
, dampers s ho U Id
work together<i»> •» i
“AH things obey fi.xed laws/—-
Lucretius.' * - / .1 ■'<
“The",people’s .safety is the law of
God.”—James' Otis. . '. ,
s-l’o suppose that "G.od " constitutes
laws of jnliarmony’is a mistake; dis
cords have no ' support from nature
or divine law, however much is Said
.'to the contrary.” -— Mary Baker
Eddy. . ■ '
. “Law is not" law, if it'-violates the
principles .’ of eternal, justice.”—Lydio
Maria Child; '
“There is b.ut one law ■ for all;
namely, that law which governs all
law.—the' law of our Creator, the
.law of humanity, -justice, equity.”—<
Burke.
“There is a higher law than' the
constitution.”—W.. II. Seward,. ’>
\f\f L VYurn.
______■ x ' "that "is," when one is
open the other Thould be closed. In
mild "weather, ..when you ^want a
slow, lasting fire, the Check Damper
should be wide open and the Ashpit
Damper closed: This saves coal.
When- you want more heat, the
Check Damper ...should be_partly
closed and the Ashpit Damp’cr open-"
ed' part . way. In extremely cold
weather,, of course, the Check
Damper should be closed . tight and
the Ashpit Da-mper wide open. (8).
-CANADAIMPORTS ;
in-the some case as his-present wile"
-—left .aside to mourn her folly while
he passes on -to some new adventure.
For her own sake she should definite
ly end the matter now'.
There are other potent reasons
why I strongly advise this girl .to drop
this foolish friendship but I am em
bodying these in a personal letter to
her Sometimes o'ne can say in' a per
sonal better what is npt appropriate
to a column/in public print and, since'
it is my business to help all I can, I
am always glad to write a. personal
le ter when necessary*. . .
Musical Instrument Imporla-
fion High ‘.
Montreal. —. You may . take the
'wbrd'bf'F.' W/TIelfiT' Tfis^MAjesty’s-
.Senior , Trade Commissioner in Cana
da and Newfoundland; bag-pipes. are
musical instruments. And Mr. Field
is'a Sassenach. ,. . .
In ■ his annual report on Canadian
condition'^ Mr. Fiel,d lists bagpipes
under the general heading “musical
instruments.” Oddly, most of the
bagpipes imported by Canada , come
from the United States.-
Imports of “musical instruments”
rahge from $30,000 to $170,000 annu-'
ag^h.oslb-vhHdasajg^^^cer^?^hea:.e;,
is no .indication what proportion wST
spent for„ Scotland’s favorite ini
strument.- . I
Mr. Field recommends a
and persistent” attention by
sentatives of United ' Kingdom
cal instrument firms to the
dian market for the purpose
creasing sales. Maybe Canada is in
for a flock of travelling bagpipe sales
men. - •
•V
“close
repre-
musi-
Cana-
of in-
A Law Every -
Mother Should
Know and Observe
NeverGiveYourChildAn
Unknown Remedy without
^Asking Your Doctor First
-Aeeordin g—to
any doctor you
ask, the—only
safe way is.
never to give '
your child a
remedy you idon’t know aH'
about, without asking him first. ’•
When. it comes .to “milk of
magnesia,” that ydu'know every-
•”Avhere;-for-over60"yearsrdoctors-
have said “PHILLIPS’ Milk of
Magnesia for your child,”
So—always, say Phillips' when
you buy. And, for your own
peace of mind, see that your
child ’ gets thi^'.; the finest men .
know. Made in Canada.
I You.can assist others by refusing
I to accept, a. substitute for the.
l^nesia.pothisinthe
jpndyourchikpep.
I terest of the-
| public in general.
^>uw>s':=i
-
Phillips’
A/il/c of Afayne^ia-
T-TUNDREDS of trappers got top of
A-L the market for their furs through ••
Simpson's Raw Fur Marketing Service
last season. You'can, too! FREE new
"Dominion Trapper gives full* dc-
tails. Also latest trapltne new& and
WOOS
* . ■ hsfss—ict—r
ALSO MADE UP IN PIPE TOBACCO
Issue No. 44 — ’35
I • ■■■■' I —;--------------------£1—
1
NOTE: The writer of this column ;
is a trained psychologist and an au-!
thor of several works. He is willing .
to deal with yotir problems and give
you the benefit of his^wide experi
ence. Questions ■ regarding .problems
of EVERYDAY LIVING should be ad-
dressed to: Dr. M. M. Lappin, Room
421', 73 Adelaide Street, West, Toron
to, Ontario. Enclose a 3c stamped,
dressed envelope for reply. '
Orillia Assessment Up
'Orillia-^-The assessor's rojll,
livered to the town clerk by
sessor Taylor, 'shows an assessment
gain of $78,989 over last year. ‘The |
figures are: Lands, *$1,675,780;'.build?
ings, ’ $3,773,265; business-,' $387,629;
income, $59,070; total net assess
ment, $5,895,744. The ■ population is
up about 100 to 8.662,
As- '
. Enjoy a realty fine
hand-made ciqarette by
rolling your ouiri u)itn
GOLDEN VIRGINIA
CRACKED SKIN
HINDS
^n&t^lmond
;* rhAoc-'mark -RrbisTCRtb.
MAIL COUPON BELOW
pictures-,-plus valuable pointers on ,
trapping.for greater cash profits. No
other publication like it. Mail coupon
-now, f '----—-T—----• —----r—-
(This service is limited Id Ontario Only)
THE ROBERT SIMPSON j
Eastern Limited J
| Raw Fyr Marketing Department- •
- TORONTO, ONT. ’
' Plcmsv mall me,- withou.t cost, or obligation, IX
fur shipping tags and latest, edition of "TH
DOMJX'ION TRAl’I-ER," width cotlfdtA I
complete inforjntPitm regarding your RUw <
Fur Marketing.Senice. - |
Name . . L_____
P.O . • ......
Route..............
Street Address.
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1^'WORtH
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