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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-02-28, Page 6•*"**•-; •F, <? ' Puzzling Universe powder among to it 1 ■ I I - , nebulae are rushing FOOD THAT- 'ktA NOURISHED ft MORE CANADIAN CHILDREN THAiN ANY OTHER CORN \SYRUP / product of Thc..CSSSD\~SThRC».C().r-lAmit^i CAiflE: WITH INFERIOR BAKING POWDER. I INSIST . ON MAGICS fcESS THAN y . WORTH MAKES A BIG CAKE,” says MADAME R. LACROIX, \ Assistant Director of the Pro­ vincial School of Domestic Sci­ ence, Montreal. approach the weight of the home. But in relation to other influences its’ weight is -heavy. If from the I I iham pKM) , mAtANbrvu.saiiMt ‘ osMMtiMntnsa 3. If throat is sore, crush land stir • 3' Aspirin , Tablets in sa .third of a Wass of water and gargle. This eases the soreness in vo.ut1 thrdJl almost .instantly. •Adam had been sent. with/, a-briefft to. one. of the 'few barristers who had barrister for whom this .brief Wasj tly. of the big car, below to confirm .•5* 4; Adam normally Avoukl Jfav3 been the last pi^n to" take, a, drink-during businessbut somehow no>y iio; was' feeling consoiQU^ .that there was ‘ •y« .sometWhg-. unusually. .important * be- & hind the other's knowing look. They* * 'ft \ ■ ..- -ft ■ • ;■ -. . ; (Bureau of Statistics)- -;’ • - * Schools and .universities In Can- •« drank together 111 a little bar and. ada-.cJai af)out. 3;& per cept. .« ten mmntes shppedjary pleasan to Wonaf expejidilnre, 'and \t« I -Away until-Adam Mt he really must ,in,|ipaW, get back to the office. H.e .was val- _most beginning’to -feel as if there might be something attractive in the , legal profession, something ‘trial - ' , . , - . . a . , . .hitherto he had misse.d.nearly dashed into Ad<wn later on the same evening. ML Montada, -who yrns.-concerned' .ih; the alleged framp-up that we likely to .turn out' . sO ba,dly for tne. ex-burglar, Hagar. And now Mr. Montada, .the employer, -jg. a]1 „ ,bf the hunchback who had otaken'part' in the robbery ' at Grail., Street co'r- ’ -ft.,.. •’ ft, ' ale he -had imbibed.-—He—pondered -this sequence of “ev- “- / ends; but he could get. no connected ■ •theory out of it; finally"ie put it/from •his-mih'dftft''ftft','.ftft'. '• '.ft . But it came back a few days later, and-with greater force. \ ,-ft * // ♦ ada'-claijn about 3'.5- per cejnt. of. the ....1 ft. . , ftis may be* considered as R;n indicaHon of ' their importance, in. the economic' ( life- of. .the. country. Their jveight ns a-social factor- can nbt be as readily UHSSCM. represented statistically., but the on . i"“Now not a word to anyone, milid following , .considerations arc of «in* !ybu," the other told him W ... —— ted. "if we., don’t see- som,e pretty No'other occupantional activity in fireworks before this Hagar case is the life of the country claims, .the ' finished I shall be disappoifited, that daily attention 'of'as many .persons. . 2 1 Adam went ba.ck to the Each years .sees one-four th8* of the-/ . office in a puzzled dream that had pbppintion of Cariada appearing in npthing-to do with the glass ...q£ mild .the classroom- either.' as pupil or —ftLft---?.—ftft,—ft'..,/ ft — -teacher? There are about twice as An' evening or two later, , when ce mariy schoel children as, there are r y^;a8'hurrying—late' to the Teehnl-'.ftfgarid as. many as thei’e are. i 'O^lft.Qollege he came face? to face men in all other occupations '< com-; ] with Mr. Moptada for the,'.first' time., 'bified •• - * ,T ' - A very small, widened; man^with a ' F{>; almost ten years of his :life. ggeat ’hooked -nose.. His. actual attendance in [SFwtle hot teown eyes thatMh's js ..CMiSidered, .conntl. f nJ. ? a ft, ftT’ft*’ « “““t1"5 ye’?, _ ___.obviously to be Mr. Montada that it • ui. •_chambers in the town. The particular hardly required the sight subspqueri- alnut ^Hlf a«ymnch°a^n^ftR barrister for whom this brief Was } tly,.of the big car, below to confirm - g ftnfarkeiLdid. aigodij d,eaL bf-work-for4 'Instinctive^ guess- -as to h“isft ns'' p r , ' - -L‘ - - - ‘ .... _■ ,.^.g a . formative•“ influence ■’-the Mr. Montada was about to pass all- school can", hardly be expected to By FAREMAN WELLS “ - f -k . SYNOPSIS' ' , Ad^m MerlsCon a farmer s son. ^artieie’d to a solicitor, mukes,^ a brave 'but unsuccessful- attempt' to thwart three thieves' In a bag-snatching raid The bag was torn from the hands or a- girl, who afterwards' &w)lalns to Adam that it contains the, da.vs takings of-her father’s shop. . „ - « ' He attempts to track the thieves ana reaches am -old warehouse, ' Adams enters the building .. while the Jplrl' '-watches-the door Suddenly he heara footsteps, . ' ■ r . ' _ The .manftWJbs;: ttut^,. jo .. be: „Ada.R»«s •mploydr—Cbryfile Perkin,. , < - ' ' A’Adamrin Jits private hours expert grients with shortAvave wireless. Walking homeWard. Adam is' nearly run «lowr bv n large swift car. He calls, on Priscilla Norval. ? flVe antique' chairs he possesses. i - . - -----------------. . • • -7 All-.the -way home Adam was try­ ing to put two and two together. It was a. complicated calculation-r-Mr. Montada, the important client for wh pm TM'rrftpiS'f'•kitt~~Wg~,ftyakfpg ^‘match-light Inspection'of" a disused warehouse; Mr. Montada, the own- er .of property in Grail Street—Adam had had a charice to/verif y that Mr. Montada, the client whose car,had so Enjoy areally fine nahd-made^qarette-by- —rolling your own With GOLDENVIRGINIA ALSO MADE UP IN PIPE TOBACCO Whenthis den­ tist’s grand ipre-"’“: •cription for hold- ing plates firmly, snugly and coni- ■I fortably in place ,;.„--il)LBS-th&.4ar;gest-— •ale in the world . —there’s a reason « —ask your den­ tist—he prescribes ,it—-never causes, soreness—inex­ pensive. 7 ■ft. »■ . '■> , . e. . . « *• npw tas a Mend for every purse as quently at His chambers; arid al-1 Ift. vv M-W VUWWUb VW JJCVOB) «.!- though Adam jvals not-a "good mix-!,png the- corridor to Mr. Pei'kin’s pri­ or,” he had struck up aa friendship - vate door when* the two became mix- with this barrister’s^ clerk, a man* UP in one of those absurd maneov- . - ~~ . named Meopham., Though always ear- res that occur when two hurrying time that he starts to school he tying a wo'rried expression, sugges- .people endeavor to make way for spends an hour and a half, weekly ting that the entire bhirdaa of his one another ft It' seemed doubtful if in church, at the theatre,, at' the master’s practice, feji on His should^, Mr. Montada was as politly disposed ers, Meopham? was a kindly fellow, ;.as bis maneouvring might have'.indl- ' easy to /get on with when once you !, catpd, for \yheri. the'two had chassed.i accepted his belief th'at he was the ! iaefiectively for the . third ,time? his indispensable pillar of his ftbloke’s” ] thin’ long upper lip lifted viciously, practice, ft “ . " | .and he. spat out—-a.--fereign .-wordr Auam- meniiuneu—~.<"Hagar case. Meopham? who/ knew ’ ..A . a oriiplimentai’-y. Adaon stood 1ft', ed with an air of assurance, has a good chance of. going down for three years, -I should1 think/' ‘‘His wife’s a queer one,” coritin- lifed Adam. "She’s been trying to { get our old man to Have him asked; a certain question in th.e-box.._When- hei refused ..she fastened on me.’’ ..‘‘They’re; often like, that,’? said Meopham, judicially.. "Fancy /, they -know- a- lone; -of defence 'that’ll lick anything." What sort of question was it?”? He, coughed, drily, burying his face in a colored handkerchief. "Well,. apparently all she wanted was to get the defence to ask. him when he last- saw Mr^Montada.” "What?.? The inquiry was sharp ..and explosive. ; He stared a moment and resumed: ‘‘df course your bloke wasn’t' going to have him asked that?” - 7. ___---------- ft "I don’t! suppose /he thought it would ^6"'any* good.” "I’ll bet'he didn’t either. Look; here, lad? you’re coming out to have a drink with mfe. No. I’m not going to pump you.* I’ve heard ,(enough, and you haven’t so ' much as said'' a‘ ... .wprd^to^.^ • -jyrate' at’taciroFhysterics, and had al- watch Ollt "for niv hlnkA° nclrincr ihnt cn indliinGrl athletic stadium, reading the daily preSs, or listening to the radio, the. I young Canadian of today will have to live to .the age ..of 90 years in or-, 'der . to spend as much time with _ ........... | ■ . - --- •- -----• "■“-“>,f'anyTdn0J!of these as he' spends^ in _._To.-JMp..Qphaan,™Adain--mentioned- the ft . na6<ii vaec. Meopham, who/ knew ~ — ------the. details of the evidence, arinoiSn- ■ stJ1|at °^®’ audhttle man mov­ ed with an air of assurance, "Hagar e round hipi and scurried dowp -the ■ ’ ° nfisaap-A . . • BROWN LABEL • 33c % M> ORANGE PEKOE * 4OC% lb All leaders in their class Much From Little ! --'.ft - The days-of ^romance are hot yet over, and .ipany a small and strug- cgling^stablish.ment---founded--v-aS‘-^a“ means of livelihood during the de­ pression period may yet., become a massive industrial undertaking. . Consider the case of two brothers belonging' to Birminghani, England, who in 1910 decided to engage in the ismallest-. possible-—manufacture of- .bicyclesand who rented „a four- Ontario’s First Highway passage,. .... -. • {Adam heard Mr. Perkin’s door slam a„.mpmerit later and judged , that t^he client had walked, in without so , much as a knock. Ah imperious inan this little Mr. Montada who owned ^derelict" properfyT kept a chauffeur capable of high-way .robbery and of trying to run down respectable citi­ zens at night, and who was some­ how concerned in what Mr; Hagar alleged-to be a frame-tip. It was in a very puzzled state of mind that , . - Adam hastened along?to the College't0 calculate when the process began; twenty bicycles a week, reflecting on. these things as he went.’ J x ’ ■It , ’ • .». ' . ■ 1 - ' . ; . .BACK TO SCIENCE, Once' in the' laboratory Adam for­ got all-about Mr.. Montada in liSteri- .ing to the Professor’s account of the splendid- progress he had made, with/ his investigations - on the -Waive. It—was-~certainly an interesting ac­ count. The ProfessoF^HaUft^am^g7 -other, things, stampeded -the members of a visiting committee from the Town Hall just as they were becom­ ing a nuisance to the teaching staff, induced, in his own _wJfe^afty-ery—^lastte = watch out-for my bloke0 asking that question?’ He coughed wretchedly for a 'few minutes while- he found his< hat, and as soon as he-had ceas­ ed coughing he chuckled, as if it had been..the- most amusing exercise. QUICKEST METHOD TO RELIEVE A COLD Follow Directions to Ease « Pain and Discontfort Almost Instantly When you have a cold, remember the simple treatment pictured here . prescribed by doctors everywhere to­ day as the quick, safe way. ' Because of Aspirings qiiick-disinte^^, gi?afeg® ’pFbpertyr' Aspiriif" “fakes^ft hold”—almost instantly. . Jim take Aspirin and drink plenty of water ... every 2 to 4 hours the ; first day—less often afterward . ", . If throat is sore, use the Aspirin gargle. • But be sure you get ASPIRIN., It ■tis made mj^ahada and. all. •druggists- • KaVe it. Look for the name^Bayer in. ft the form of a cross on every Aspirin . .Tablet. Aspirin is the trade mark of the Bayer Company, Limited, so induced one of the harmJess old ladies who, cleaned the building after lecture hours. to drop hter bucket of soapy water in the middle of,.his of­ fice earpet and dash away to, lock herself ip one of the. cleaner’s cup­ board’s, a refuge from which it re­ quired a. professional locksmith extricate her. : ;(io be continued) 1, Take 2 Aspirin Tablets. 2. prink full -glass -of- water.-- Repeat treatment in 2 hours. . DOES NOT ' HARM - . THE HEART You Are The Captain All people like an excuse for their ..shortcomings. - There -are' gfay^hair-' ed men who think their bad tempers are due to the fact that their mothers did hot train them properly,, and lay the responsibility-for th,e faulty grammar on the ; shoulders of some teacher, who perhaps had forty or fifty children under her charge. Mothers may be lax in discipline, i buite0 therefftisb thwr™ children should not finish up the job they ..left at loose, ends. .TRemost im­ portant lessons 'are self-taught. DO not try to get rid of your rer- spdnsibility for- that which you are by blaming your mother, your teach­ er, some schopl-mate, or an oldgjr brother who set you a bad example. Whether7'othersi help orhiridfer, you are the captaip. - OLD PEOPLE FEEL YOUNG Its Inconsistencies. Are Still A . Mystery. To Scientists The-outer nebulae are xusuiug ,-—•'~*'T away at the rate of 12,000 miles a roomed house in that city at a cost second. Assuming/that' we .. have ( °f s*x shillings^ a week where tney 2here_Qptical evidence, .that :.the..mnil j-S^bimen.c.e.d77w-ork.-~ y ■- —'“ft " verse is expanding like a soap bub-, | At that time the brothers thought ble, In accordance with the latest fa- that’they, were very busy if they shion. in relativist circles, it is easy { succeeded in - producing and selling ft...................... ' ■ After a and how long ago the great act of! year’s, hard work, however, they creation began. The answer proves found that they had saved eriough to be ten thousand million years. But the new school of astro-physl- _ _ _ ___o cists contends that the actual age of I yard. Although the" war interfered the universe must be a hiiridred timed • • - • ...............- •greater. It takes that long-for the stars to radiate their mass away by the annihilation of their mass “and dts'~corivm?sion“iritb“'^n'efgyft'How can Jthe, universe be younger than' the stars of which it is composed?,. The discrepancy presents, one of the ma- Engll^^lHment'ft^H-rftlft^W'al'keft comes forward with an. explanation that seems worth considering. He suggests that the., stars may be ra­ diating not simply light, heat and electromagnetic energy in a suicidal conversion of tfieir mass, but, that they- are ridding themselves of actual matter in the form of ions or incom­ plete atoms, some of Which are res­ ponsible for the manifestations of cos-- . mic rays; - j; .ft"'"ft 'ft -ft ft The explanation is ingenious, 'but it requires -experimental verifica-; tion. How that is possible at a time ■when the very nature of the cosmic rays is still the subject of ffiu^ cussion, if is’difficult to see. When we know what the cosmic rays really are the mystery may be, solved? . U.S. Train Makes 100 'Miles An Hour ble, in accordance with the latest fa- that They, were very busy if they. " * J' After a found that they had saved eriough . money. 0 extend their humble ‘‘fpc-, tory” by covering an adjoining ft .’ft’ _ft \ I with their activities, they perseVer- ed,. .and.<today--their -worlft-cbvers1--13: acres and they give employment tri Z3;QflOZIwbrkpeo,ple.ftDimjng^^^past° year, the firm has manufactured 690,000 bicycles arid next ^year, they ■ 'ft- - -ft l'ess 750,000 machines-ftmore than It is just twenty years ago that the first permanent highway wai -built and it sparihed "the “fofty-mili ^±rj^tQh^^xe.ei^7Ha:milt-on To-• ronto. It was built as a relief mens- ■ ure to give much needed employ . ment to hundreds of men in 1914-15,. Since that time..hundreds of. miles of concrete roads , have been »built, stretching from Windsor to Mon­ treal and from Sarnia to points lead­ ing to all urban centres of Ontario. - WitlrkighW’ay^^MTi^ioiradvances. It was so in the old land. THe Ko- • mans were the first great roadmak­ ers. They built so :weil "and solidly ft that many of their wads are still in use, and we cannot think ■ of road- jrnaking, without casting the mind back to those far-off days When the legionaries of Caesar laid down the primary conditions of.’ civilization— roads to travel by. Not by the sword but by the spade did those early conquerors make their finest con­ quest.—Exchange. . . CH APPED H A NDS ? - NO I are planning to. produce not than 7 ....... . 0 jor problems, of physical science. _anx^.tto^^ f . A W’aTV'iii^_____1 t xt ■ . . *‘ft ' ft_’ ■ i. • ■world that is engaged -in the manu­ facture of bicycles. This is the romance of the Her­ cules Cycle Company, which * , will spend 250,000 pounds on, newspaper advertising next year and which is today acknowledged to be in the forefront of the international cycle trade. Who can tel,l if some of the small works” established during the ...past, few., years in -this- country, by out-of-work individuals who were determined 'to preserve their inde-' pendehce will hot eventually reach the same standing?—Brockville Re­ corder-Times. apply hinds See, how quickly it soothes j Honey^Almond CREAM TRADE MARK RtGlfcTt>Cft T i Just because more, years than you ,care to' count’ ,'have lied by bn your life’s calendar is no reason for feeling'' old.. Age, after all, isn’t a matter of years. It. is a matter of health. Stay vigorous and- you stay young. * But how, you. ask. Do it the way , thousands of people of advancing • I . years do._„„TakeL.-W-inGar-nis-regularlvv—- - Wincarnis is a delicious wine, frbe "from drugs, that brings you all,the , . Valuable elements of grapes combined ' , with the highest <£rade beef and ^guaranteed-malt-exlract-.- - Its-ihyigof=~.’ ating cffcct .is alinostr magical^yet perfectly natural. . These valuable elements in Windarnis ' ‘ give your ageing system exactly the stimulating nourishment it requires'. They sbotne your nerves, enrich your blood; arid flood your whole body ' with almost youthful buoyancy and vigour. ft More than 20,000 medical men have • .heartily endorsed Wincarnis., It. is la great torjic. It will make you'feel young again by creating for you new ” stores of strength and energy. Get Wincamis.from your druggist—Sales Philadelphia.. -— The- “ F ty-i-n g ; Yankee”—latest in streamline train construction—clicked her wheels . at better than 1Q0 miles an' hour op| her trial run for the Boston and Maine and Maine Central Railroad last week. ■ , Leaving the E. G. Budd manufac­ turing plant, the stainless steel train, first stteam-iihe one for an eastern railroad was taken zover the Reading •railroad lines to West Trenton, NX, and return. - .• . Back- in the" manufacturing plant again, officials of the Budd Com­ pany said .minor adjustments to be made immediately will enable the “Yankee” to move faster than 120 * miles an hour. Made lip of three j ‘sections, the train is 199 feet long, powered with a 60Q-hbrsepower Win-1 ton Diesel engine. She- is. equipped to carry 140 passengers and a small baggage compartment: DON’T RISK BAKING FAILURES ■•ft b 11 I “ Agents: Harold F. Ritchie & Co. Ltd.* “YOU CAN’T BAKE GOOD I tk&HEWmtiSt —ft— "if we had' libraries of books that ! told, us, whet.,we don’t know, they’d ft « have to be seventy tiimes larger than ( I -the- ongs- we-haye that-tell- us-whaV' we dtr Inrow.’’—ClrarTs K Ketfcrlrig. ■' I I '• I i , Canada’s best known Cookery Experts and Die­ titians warn against trusting good ingredients' to poor-quality baking powder. They advise" MAGIC Baking Powder for sure results) _ CONTAINS NO ALUM—This atabSment on every tin wyotir 7 JSSHWHSSf-sIbi—ft'iavantee;thftt-Maftic-B«klnR--PoWder-<la“freejfrorn.nhitr"TVr'’“'- any harmful ingredient. Made in Canada