Loading...
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 them, yoii can count on full leavening power. That’s be- ’ cause they come individual- . ly sealed in airtight wrap­ pers. Order a package from . your grocer. Two Helpful. ( ® L Booklets-. .. FREE! The’“Royal Yeast ** Bake Book” tells all about, the ayt of breadtnakinft and gives' tested rjccipes. “The Rpyal Road to Better Health? explains "how the regular, use of Royal Yeast Cakes S$", I as-a fodd will iin- i 1 prove your health'- i . ' ’ ') • riCY MADE-'IN- CANADA GOODS r ■ i 'i~ - standard brands limited„ Eraser A.vfe.,and Liberty St.. Toronto,Ont. Please send me — free—the "Royal Yeast Bilcft Book" and "The Royal Road to Better Health." Name! Street — • Town-Prov' -T ~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 » $1.00 * Remedy happily nearby ■ IJBW.$ ' "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. DON’T RISK BAKING FAILURES . 1^'WORtH BARE WITH MAGIC and be sure of good cake! This dependable baking powder is used and recommended by Canada’s lead­ ing cookery experts because It gives better results. Order a-tin today ! ___ • CONTAINS n6>,ALUM— This ntatctridnr on every tin la your ftua'rante<! that Maftic Baking Powder 1.9 free from alum or any harmful Ingredient. Made in Canada