Fordwich Record, 1935-03-06, Page 2News!
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CHAPTER 1
ON A RIVIERA BEACH
"It is an invitation from Piers
Hannen. He wants us to have lunch
with him today aboard the Corsair!"
said Miss Georgina la Fontaine, as
she finished reading the note which
the waiter had brought to her on the
sun-flooded terrace of the Hotel
Mediterranee.
"Both of us?"
"Of course. How nice of him to
look me up so soon—the yacht came
in only last night, he says, You'll
enjoy it, Joan; you have never been
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Issue No. 7—'35
44
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"Simple passive resistance e
priests and believers Is enough to
render the attack of the State inel
fective."—Benito Mussolini.
HOW TO RELIEVE YOUR COLD
ALMOST AT ONCE
1. Take 2 Aspirin tablets.
2. Drink full glass ofwater. Repeat treatment in 2 hours.'
3. If throat is sore, crush and stir
Aspirin tablets in a third of a glass Of Outer and gargle. TIM eases the soreness in your throat almost instantly.
Follow Simple Directions Here
For Quick Relief
When you have a cold, remember the
simple treatment pictured here . . .
prescribed by doctors as the quick.
safe way.
Results are amazing. Ache and dis-
tress go immediately. Because of
Aspirin's quick-disintegrating prop-
erty, Aspirin "takes bold"— almost
instantly. Your cold is relieved "quick
as you caught itl"
All you do is take Aspirin and
drink plenty of wafer. Do this every
2 to 4 hours the first day—less often
afterward . . . if throat is sore, the
Aspirin gargle will ease it in as little
as 2 minutes.
Ask your doctor about this. And
be sure you get ASPIRIN when you
buy. It is made in Canada and all
druggists have it. Look for the name
Bayer in the form of a cross on every
Aspirin tablet. Aspirin is the trade
mark of the Bayer Company, Limited.
DOES NOT HARM
THE HEART
aboard a big yacht before, have you
my dear?"
Miss Ia Fontaine folded the note
with an air of satisfaction, Sitting
beside her in the orange-colored bas-
ket chair, Joan Denby, Miss la Fon-
taine's youthful secretary-companion,
made a delicate picture in light and
shade, for her slender figure was all
sun-chequered by the rays which fell
through the palm fronds overhead.
This light and shade effect seem-
ed the very expression of herself
and her face, where a smiling mouth
mingled merriment with the wistful
sympathy of glowing hazel eyes. She
glanced at Miss la Fontaine with a
doubtful air.
"Do you think that I ought to go,
Georgie, dear?" she asked. lu mom-
ents of mischievous amusement Joan
Denby's mouth curved in an elusive
dimple in her cheek. The disable was
there now.
"Why not?" enquired Miss la Fon.
taiim, calmly raising her aristocratic
white head to gaze at Joan defiantly.
"Oh, Lit rling—!" protested Joan,
in despair at her employer's obstin-
acy. "You were a dear to bring me
here to Cannes—and I hate the idea
of having to go back to London. But
I feel so uncomfortable at times,
sailing under false colors and meet-
ing all your friends as though I were
their social equal. For you know,
Georgie, you do make them think
that I'm just being your secretary
for fun! Sometimes I want to tell
them all that I'm not the last of
"Georgie, I can't hold out against
you!" said Joan, and the dimple came
and went in her cheek as she add-
ed. "Really, it will be rather fun!
To meet the Hannen of the Hannen
Steel Combine! I'm afraid I shan't
feel conscience-stricken, only amus-
ed!"
Miss Is Fontaine smiled as she
looked at Joan, thinking how perfect.
ly at home she appeared on this ter-
race where the fashionable world was
gathered to enjoy the Riviera sun-
shine. No one seeing the girl could
have guessed that Joan's mother had
been her own. Miss la Fontaine's par-
lor-maid in the house in Eton Place
before her marriage to the man
Denby.
The first five years of Joan's life
had been spent in her mother's poor
little house in Poplar, near the Han-
sen factory in which Denby worked;
today those five years might never
have been, Yes; it was a wonderful
thing that she had done for Joan, Miss
la Fontaine thought, educating her
and inculcating in her all the habits
of good breeding—but one had to ad-
mit that most of it was in the girl
herself.
Joan had a native pride, one could
see it in the turn e° ' •
It was an MM.'. in her
which made he. .rly to
stay with her fan, or little
house in_the slum t India
Dock road! And the bro [h-
ers, who had been be. en Miss
la Fontaine took Joan to a at Eton
Place, were the greatest care of
Joan's life.
"That frock suits you very well,"
remarked Miss la Fontaine approv-
ingly, glancing at the simple, dis-
tinctively-cut white muslin which set
off Joan's fair head to perfection.
"It's a lovely frock!" Joan said, but
With a little sigh. Much as she lik-
ed Miss la Fontaine, she so often
wished that she herself could have
bought the things that were so gen-
erously given to her. But she was
only twenty-one; and as she looked
across the glittering blue of the Me.
dlterranean, she promised herself a
future in which she would make a
way for herself
Dreaming her ambition dreams of
independence, Joan took little notice
beyond saying good morning when
the Honorable Mrs. Walter Dale, a
friend of Miss la Fontaine's who was
also a guest at the hotel, came to sit
down by them,
(To be Continued.)
Speed in Cars
Many people must have wondered
why motor manufacturers advertise
economy, long life, greater cola,
add believe it or not, greater safety.
Economy results because more effic-
ient design permits you to achieve
normal speed with less expenditure
for fuel. Longer life is produced
because your car is always operat-
ing well within its capacity. Great-
er comfort cornea from the absence
of strain inherent in underpowered
cars. If you have ever driven one
of the tiny vehicles England pro-
duces to escape exhorbitant taxes
you will know exactly what I mean.
And latent speed may be invaluable
in pulling you out of a tight cor-
ner."
These are words to be remember-
ed by every motorist. When the
manufacturer says the car will go
90 miles an hour, he isn't urging
you to prove it by travelling at that
speed. He means that at 30 miles an
hour you will have comfort, economy
and safety, and won't be running
up a repair bill, since the car is good
for that and 60 miles an hour in
addition.—Detroit News.
Groom Waited at Church
— Bride Snowbound
Vancouver. — While her groom-
to-be was still "waiting at the
church," Miss Lucina Coone, of
Edmonton, was somewhere in the
Rocky Mountains. Miss Coone was
to have been married here last
Thursday, but, with scores of others,
has been stormbound on a train.
When six years old, he should be
able to coup; op to 13 and know
the differences between a nickel,
a dime and a quarter.
But here is Dr. Grace Adams, a
psychologist of parts, who assures
us that there is no such thing as an
"average" child. We are inclined to
agree. Outside of being equipped
with 270 bones, it seems a large or-
der to set down any very definite
specifications.
Dr, Adams describes children as a
"unique, interesting and likable
class of human beings"— a pretty
definition, when you think of it, and
one that covers the case. She seems
to realize a truth that evades some
scientific minds, namely, that homo
sapiens, even in his tender years, is
a thing unto himself. He cannot be
classified and conveniently regi-
mented as "average" even when you
catch him young.
Physicians and psychologists may
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some noble line, some mysterious
county family fallen on hard times!"
"Nonsense, Joan!"
"It's not so difficult at home in
Eton Place, because there I'm just
the secretary, I can efface myself,
and If they're nice to me it's their
fault! But here I go about with you
—you Introduce 'me to them all, and
they take me for granted,"
"Don't be a silly young thing", said that their cars can travel at 10 or 90 1 He—or she — starts to crawl at
Miss la Fontaine. "How ridiculous miles an hour, when everyone knows nine months, totters about on his
it would be, my dear, to undo all such speeds are deadly in town and feet and begins to utter something
that I have done for you since you impractical in the country in all but resembling the king's English on the
were a child! How can I take you exceptional instances. Russell Holt first day of its second year. At the
about with me in comfort If people Peters, in the February Forum, says ago of three, your child, if "aver-
are going to look down on you so- the manufacturers don't expect drives age," should be able to distinguish
cially? No, my dear girl! You are ers to use such speed. familiar household objects a n d
sailing under false colors on my he- "This sounds absurd," says Mr: specify whether he is a boy or a
half, not on your own." Peters. "It isn't, for speed securell .girl.
"I wish I could feel that." through efficient engineering meads
"Then' do! Besides—they are not
false cetera at all! Your educacten
has been as good as I could make
it. You are charming, Joan dear, and
anyone should be proud to know
you!"
"You're so sweet, Georgie! But in
this case, just consider! Piers Han-
nan! Would he invite me to lunch on
his yacht if he knew that my father
le only a foreman in one of the
workshops in the Hannen factory?"
"I hope that you would never be
so silly as to let him know," Miss
Ia Fontaine replied. "Though if he
did it would make no difference to
him. I respect Piers, my dear; he
is not a snob. So we shall go!"
The "average" American child,
physicians hold, has the following
specifications: weight at birth, 735
lbs., height 2034. inches, number of
hones 270, stomach capacity, one
ounce of feed.
No "Average" Child
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