Zurich Herald, 1934-11-08, Page 2Way ti Ease Headaches,
Pal ,. Almost Instantly
METHOD OFTEN RELIEVES NEURALGIA
AND RHEUMATIC PAINS IN MINUTES!
Remember the pictures below when
you want fast relief from pain.
Demand and get the method doc-
tors prescribe—Aspirin.
Millions have found that Aspirin
eases even a bad headache, neuritis
or rheumatic pain often in a few
minutes!
in the stomach asif'n `the glass
here, an Aspirin tablet starts to dis-
solve, or disintegrate, almost the
instant it touches moisture. It be-
gins "taking hold" of your pain
practically as soon as you swallow it.
Equally important, Aspirin is
safe. For scientific tests show this:
Aspirin does not harm the heart.
Remember these two points:
Aspirin Speed and Aspirin Safety.
And, see that you get ASPIRIN. It
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have it. Look for the name Bayer
in the form of a cross on every
Aspirin tablet.
Get tin of 12 tablets or economical
bottle of 24 or 100 at any druggist's.
Why Aspirin Works So Fast
Drop an Aspirin
tablet in a glass of
water. Note that BE-
FORE it touches the
bottom, it is disinte-
grating.
IN 2 SECONDS BY STOP WATCH What happens in these glasses
happens in your stomach—ASPIRIN
An Aspirin tablet starts to disinte- tablets
few minutes "takingt afof ng• of pain
grate and go to work.
When in Pain Rerraena,ber These Pictures
Aspirin is the Trade Mark of the Bayer Company, Limited
m
By the Author of "Pencarrow"
13y NELLE M. SCANLAN
was her Chief consolation. When they
met, as they frequently did, it was
with the same eagerness, and between
them no conscious change had taken
place. Yet they never returned to
quite the sante plane as they had
reached on that summer day when
Matthew died, It was partly because
they were seldom alone; nor did they
seek to avoid the others. They were
apparently content to leave in sus-
pease that open declaration, the re
suit of which neither could foretell;
they were satisfied with things as
they were.
The temporary placidity into which
the family had sunk was rudely stir-
red by the news of Neil Macdonald's
engagement. Neil had gone to
land to complete his medical course,
It was his intention to remain for
two years, but his success justified
further years of specialization, after
which he took a post in London in
order to gain added experience. The
two years had stretched to seven.
How this measure of life abroad
would affect him there was as yet
little indication. His letters reveal-
ed the salve self-importance, which,',
filtered through news of his work and
achievements; certainly he had rea-
son to be proud of himself, •
The quiet existence at Scot's Bay
in the Sounds woke to happy activitY
in anticipation of his return. Donald
Macdonald stroked his beard, and all
the Scottish man's pride in intellec-
tual triumphs warmed at the thought
of his son.
Dr. Neil Macdonald would .com-
mence practice in `,Vellington, and al-
ready an excellent hospital appoint-
ment awaited him there.
He had sailed to Australia, where
he was to remain a couple of weeks
before taking ship to New Zealand.
It was from Sydney that the surpris-
ing news had come in a cable an-
nouncing his safe arrival. "Engaged
to be married, particulars on ar-
rival," was the cryptic addition to
this brief message.
d.,,,, v.o-e.r-Q-(7-e-mom........+.. .. - ... ...�„
Synopsis of Preceding Chapters
Tlie principal character in the story
Ls Kelly Pencarrow.
Kelly is the son of Sir Miles Pen-
carrow, a lawyer, whose father and
mother emigrated to New Zealand and.
brought up a family who are now the
Parents of the young people with whom
the story is concerned.
Sir Miles Pencarrow: wished Kelly to
become a lawyer and to enter his
father's practice. Kelly insists on be-
coming a farmer. He loins an uncle,
Michael Pencarrow, who owns Duf-
field farm.
His uncle has a daughter, Ella, who
fans in love with' an Englishman nam-
ed Gentry Ella's father offers Gentry a
half-share in the Duffield Farm.
Tliis infuriates Kelly Pencarrow.
He quarrels with Gentry, assaults him
and leaves Duffield to work elsewhere.
Kelly received a summons to the bed-
side of his dying grandmother, the
mother of Sir Miles Pencarrow,
Arrived at the bedside, lie is asked if
he will apologise to Gentry and thus
give her the assurance that the family
ri hope of reconciliation.
By the Will, Kelly inherits two
thousand pounds, and purchases some
bush land at Tapuwal.
In his second season he invites his
a.
Yieid to the soothing action
of this medicine. You will eat
better ; ; ; sleep better ; : a feel
better ; ; ; look better. Life
will seem worth living again:
Don't delay any longer. Begin
raking it today;
LYDIA IEV. PINi(DAM'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
ffifflialoPEMEMENEszoffsiazsGaZalliatilfiCBE
ItiffAit. AND NOM?
IF your day begins
with nerves frayed,
aackache, or periodic
pains you need Dr,
Pierce's Fa v o i• its
Prescription. Rees
what Mrs, 1). Kelly
of 283 Chatham St
Brantford, Ont .
said: "Alter my
daughter was born I
was -os weak to ae up .ny nervous system
went to pieces. I took .1)r. Pierce's Favorite
Prescription and began Lc pick up almost
from the first bottle. I contniued its use and
Rained in every way, my nerves were better,
i became stronger and have been in excellent
health ever since."
New size, tablets 5e cts., liquid $1,01. Large
• Are, tablets or liquid, $1.35•
`Write Dr, Pierce's Clinic Buffalo. N. Y.
for free medical advice.
Safety Of Children
Cold weather source of discomfort
and danger
Children's skins are very tender. Fall
and winter winds and dampness quickly
smite them tender, raw and sore. They
need therotection of Hinds Honey and
.Almond Cream, This smooth creamy
lotion gives protection and relief to little
hands, necks and faces.
Worse than the soreness, is the danger
which lurks when sore skin becomes
cracked and bleeding from constant
exposure. Those open, smarting cracks
in little hands can easily become infected.
Apply Binds Honey and Almond
Cream generously to tender skins --its
smooth, cool texture will soothe hands
and faces after washing, and form lust
adequate protection against wind and
dampness. An instant relief for chapped
hands --a constant protection st
them--}II"nrls Bona and Almond � m
has been the reliable remedy for ail and
young since 1875,
Oa sale at all drug rtorc,
sister Genevieve, his sailor -brother Pat,
and his cousins, Robin klerrlcle and
Jessie Macdonald to come to Tapuwai.
While they are with him, Kelly starts
a bush fire part of clearing operations.
The fire, aided by winds, gets out of
control.
The young Pencarrows are rescued
and return to the home of Sir Miles,
bringing with them a baby whose
Parents have been killed, and Kelly's
stout-hearted assistant, Potty Darker.
After the disaster, . Kelly goes to
work on the farm of a friend. Then
Grandfather Pencarrow dies.
Genevieve goes to keep house for
Kelly.
CHAPTER TEN
Gene+vieve's success as chatelaine
was not derived from. any special pas-
sion for farm life. Unlike Kelly, the ; Erena Joicy-Goff, a young, beau -
land did not claim her affection in a' ti£ul half-caste Maori, combined the
personal way. The new life at the breeding of her English father, youn-
ortun-'
anoan and
Hutt Provided her with pl ger son of a country gentleman, n
ity to try her skill, and do something her mother, the proud daughter of
that was measured against the high a Maori chief.
standard set by Grannie. It had scope So that was it.
and made her stretch, as she put it. The Joicey-Goffs were large land -
In Kitty's regime, during old Mat- owners in Gisborne, Erena's father,
thew's last years of invalidism, there one of the early settlers, had acquir-
was an atmosphere of impermanence; ed a large block of land, and added
the transition from one generation to considerably to his estate when he
another; from Matthew and Bessie to
—whom?
Genevieve now set herself the task
of restoring the tradition established
by Grannie, and winning back the old the rulers of this savage race.
position that the Home farm had Though the Maori had no written
once held. It was a job to hand, and
one that appealed to her sense of
family. At that time Genevieve would
have thrown her abounding energy
and ambition into another channel if
it had provided the same scope.
Robin, who was made a junior
partner in the firm of Kelly, Pencar-
row and Herrick, had the joy of re-
warding his mother's years of sacri-
fice and devotion, and if the house
in Hobson Street, so long delayed,
did not bring with it all its posses-
sion had once promised in her im-
petuous youth, he was not permitted
to know. It was sufficient to have
him with her, and be the mother of
a handsome, much -favored son.
The break had been a considerable
one, and not only had Genevieve and
Robin been torn apart by physical
circumstances, but the complete
change in the ordering of their lives,
the shifting centre of their personal
interests, had applied a brake as no
outside interference could have done,
Not that they had changed, but that
daily encounter in the leisured sum-
mer evenings fed an increasing need
in each of them.
Genevieve led a busy life, unlike
the discontented days when Robin
Hester immediately wrote to Kitty
and Miles, and Kelly passed it on to
Michael.
Who was she? if he had become en-
gaged in England, it was strange he
had not written and given them full
particulars before sailing.
Neil's arrival after such a long
absence would under any circum-
stances be an event in the family, but
the glamor and uncertainty surroun-
ding this unknown lady, no doubt ac-
companying him gave it an import-
ance based largely on curiosity,
* * ;t *
"Mother, this is my fiancee, Er-
ena Joicey-Goff."
All her self-control was needed
to keep the exclamation of dismay.
locked in her heart, Hester looked
at the dark girl beside her hand-
some son. He was every. inch thl
doctor, she thought, and very con-
sciously the professional man. She
stifled the ery that wrung her.
married the daughter of a famous
chief. Erena's mother, even into
middle -age, retained that native ar-
istocratic bearing which marked out
Off Colour
How Is for Liver ?
Wake up your Liver Bile
—Without Calomel
Your liver's a very sniail organ, but
it certainly can put your digestive and
eliminative organs out of kilter, by re-
fusing to pour out its daily two pounds
of liquid bile into your bowels.
You Won't completely correct such
condition by talking salts, oil, mineral
water, laxative candy or Chewing gum,
or roughage. When they've mdved Your
bowels they're through --and you need
a liver stimulant.
Carter' Little Liver Pills will soon
bring bitok the outshine into your life.
f
They' a purely vegetable. Slate Elure.
Atilt i` . Iebif) lit name. Etettike sub
stituttis. *50 at tall druggistk. 48
1utq No. 44-134
Young children easily catch cold.
So Mrs. Russel Ward, of Hilton
Beach, Ont., wisely says: "If I
notice that there is any sign of a
cold I give Baby's Own Tablets
and find they aro a great help."
Thousands of mothers do the same
not only for colds but for fretful-
ness, indigestion, constipation,
teething troubles, colic, upset
stomach and so on, Baby's Own
Tablets are safe and sure in reliev-
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Price 250.
Dr.Williams' 13G
illiEitS
If
Delicious
Quality
JAPMJAPAR GR1
Fresh from
E the Gardens
782
What Does Your Handwriting Reveal?
GEO. ST. CLAIIt
(Grapho-Analyst)
All Rights Reserved,
(Editor's Note: An analysis from
your handwriting will often provide
an insight into latent characteristics
that will change your entire life. The
author makes an ,interesting offer
following this week's article.)
This week's mail brought a rather
poignant letter from a girl who lives
in Toronto. I am reproducing it be-
cause you can read it and decide
what you would do, if you were in a
similar position.
"Dear Mr. St. Clair: 1 am bring-
ing my problem to you because you
have helped so many others, and 5t
niay be that you can shed a ray of
hope in my own case. 1 have been
going with a young man for some
years, and there has for some time
been a tacit arrangement that we
should be married.
"Latterly, however, my friend has
been going out with another girl,
and 1 am wondering whether he has.
got tired of me. lie tells me that
she can be of great help to him in
his business, and that, while he likes
her as a friend, that is the only feel-
ing he has for her, and 'that he still
loves me.
"Now, Mr. St. Clair, 1 love ,my
friend very much, and he seems to
be an ideal companion, and 1 do
trust him, but this affair has me
worried, because he has not been
out with anyone other than myself
for a long time. Do you think it
means 'that he is losing his love for
me, and that 1 may lose him? 1 clo
wish you could help me, and 1 am
sending his writing with my letter."
The writing of this girl shows that
she is normallly affectionate, maybe
a trifle impulsive, and she is gener-
ous. She has simple, modest tastes
and is, on the whole, an unassuming
girl.
But there is one outstanding trait
'hat' is not so good. She is incllined
to resent slights, and, being some-
whra5 sensitive, perhaps imagines
slights where none is meant. And
she shows her resentment. It niay
be that she has got into a habit of
'getting her back up' with her boy
friend, and he has become a little
tired of it, and turns to another girl
for a change. He may have no in-
tention of giving up my corrosponcl-
ent, but there is a real danger that
he may develop a real interne.; in the
other girl, and that will ripen into
love.
His own writing is normal enough.
language when the white man came,
they had a wealth of tradition ban-
ded down from father to son, and
their genealogical tree was carved
in symbolic devices on their dwell-
ings. For hundreds of years they
could trace their ancestry, and the
records of thoir battles and victor-
ies, their tribal conquests and migra-
tions, were as stirring as the tale of
any knights of old. Their language
was rich in poetic imagery, and their
flax and feather garments were wo-
ven with artistic symmetry of de-
sign, while. the harmony of their
simple colors. was evidence of an in-
stinctive taste.
Enna was an only child, and when
she was fourteen her father sent her
to England, providing the best edu-
cational facilities that Great Brit-
ain and the Continent could offer.
After England she went to France,
Germany and Switzerland, and she
spoke her foreign tongues with ease.
(To Be Continued,)
He is not one of the amorous or too
flirtatious type, and he has no out-
standing vices, such as being decep-
tive or dishonest.
My advice to my correspondent is
that she discourage the trait I have
already mentioned. She should avoid
anything in the nature of 'carrying
a chip' on her shoulders. And she
should strive to keep things on the
old footing. It certainly will not
help her to talk a lot about the other
girl, and show her boy friend that
she thinks she may lose him.
She' should do everything she can
to show him that he means a great
deal to her. Do not take anything for
granted.
No man likes to be nagged and
the tendency shown in this girl's
writing is rather like nagging. She
may not know it, because so many
people who have this unfortunate
habit are really unaware of it. Butt
it has broken more romances and
spoiled more marriages than probab-
ly any other single cause.
(Have YOU any problems in which
you need advice? Do you wish to
know what YOUR friends are really
like, and what are your own real
characteristics? A personal analysis
would help you a great deal. Send
specimens of the writing you want
analysed, and state birthdate in each
case. Enclose 10c coin for each speci-
men, and enclose with 3c stamped ad-
dressed envelope, to: Geoffrey St.
Clair, Room 421, 73 Adelaide St.
West, Toronto, Ont. All letters are
confidential.)
To a Spider
Ingenius elfin engineer,
You stretch your bridges over spat(
With far-flung cables, flexible, sheer(
And girdles of translucent lace,
Nocturnal fisher, swift and sly,
You fling your net athwart the ail
And harvest forth your moth and fly
From sea of wind with subtle care.
A tight -rope acrobat, you tread
Your slender silk with native ease
And then, with quick -extending
thread,
• You spin your own trapeze.
A momentary jeweler,
From moist night air you coax your
pearls;
At dawn the sun, like conjurer,
Your rainbow handiwork unfurls.
I seek not entertainment far
When close at hand your talents
shine,
Technician, sportsman, circus -star,
And artist of elastic line.
—Benjamin Sturgis Pray.
MAKES FALSE TEETH
FEEL LIKE NATURAL
There must be a reason Dr. Wernet's
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riDWARDSBUR
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MADE IN CANADA
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