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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-05-23, Page 2• r rJ years. ♦ WHAT DOES Your HANDWRITING O’! < L 0 , GOLDEN VIRGINIA •I ;r *" NEW YELLOW LABEL (Editor’s Note: Here is another of those human interest problems with which this ,well-knoWn writer has to it -keep—t-h el r- jobs.-7- ers?‘ See the close of this article lor hia invitation to YOU).________ ___ chairs. . Neither- matter. Tn Oklahoma there is a bill to tax bachelors over 28 years of age. That is the nearest to an official ruling we have yet seen regarding when a man becomes a bachelor. companionable wife and a good mother, . . The1 other woman’s writing • shows that she has a very strong temper," life seem Main Street ^E., IIaniiltpn,^On- . pound built me up wonderfully. I vegetable COMPOUND "expoked" Td" pneumonia' - becaffse of" their occupations, Up snirl the -griiun n e 1 ij (Ipd s n a h outdoor workers as policemen, flre- men and others. purely a,provenr“The vaccine is tive one,” he said. 51 <5. »r-■> V; l ■ \ I > Crecmfi* i 0- ft vl,iL£ “Anybody might have ' thought he was shot by ine.” “Not much fear of that, luckily. bridge:” . . • ‘^-bridge?^-——-—,—-———— ' “Yes, there seems tp be some -sort of mechanicabbridge. 1 could not see jjggg TH E WORLD'S -X - THE. QU A -L-l T Y CHEW J N G. G U M ’ ’ SYNOPSIS ■ Adam M er Is tod. a farmer’s son, articled to a solicitor, makes a. brave but unsuccessful attempt- to thwart r-—--three—thiaves—in-a-.bagxSuatc.h.lng.__ra1-dL. The bag was torn from the hands of a1 girl who explains that it contains the day’s takings of her father’s shop. ■ He; attempts to track- the thieves and reaches an A old warehouse. * Aaarn enters the building while t|he , girl .watches the door. Suddenly . he hears footsteps. . ■ -.,.t ' The man turns out to be Adam e employer—Corville Perkin. a.____Adam,—ln-i.his_ private /hoursexpepL - -nients-’wlth-shorUwa^JWireLeas-.......... Walking * homeward, Adam . is nearly run down by a large swift car. He calls on Priscilla NofyaL Her father recounts .the history or •five antioue-chairs he possesses.Adam isextremely puzzled over the connection ' of, - Corville, ^erkll\. Mohta.da,A'A.o_wants the^ antiqme^c^^^ Then Priscilla is splrFted, Way. EXIT MONTADA Against ■ A^ans\s determination Montada and fri-s/ weapon were no* / more than a threat to be * eWepV «his khe^ .against -the . edge of the •“/""mhfeTirwn^ahbld’rLcke^table-and . V- ’fce; had felt Tt sway between the op/ posed pressures of his knees. and of > / Moqtada’s leaning body. When he had ^suddenly threw his' weight for- . ward he was able to drive the op- .jrosite.rjedge violently into , the little . m'qn's .chest,. , '■"/ . - Jj-^'6ntada -Sired as-thel .ta^l§. aim-. The ^hot went crisply over - Adclm-’s-head and--thai. wh.Ql^ „ — ^emedVto^adllvjd^^hft^gpjQgiPP^ He crashed over even asxhe fired TTendTrijImost—immediately—th^re^was_ I'Rnderijig ' explosioii.- —This- tlme he had fired from the° floor and -"-^I^7at'-Ada^r---~--7r----—.......-v He, too, had had an ^ea in his head, the idea of firing twice; once for Adam and once-for himself, and in'.the shock of the unexpected as- t had acted 'on ide3* automati- ’ „As if in answer to a signal there/ By FAREMAN WELLS visionJof^^Mgefs oLhl# position; He’s still got his hand on. the gun." Ainyway,o we’d been listening, to , yon for the last half hour. . Interesting conversation, too.” “Then you} knew he was .here all the time?” “Not . till this afternoon we didn’t. "To tell you tire truth the mah we’ye been' hoping to catch here for weeks is your Mr. Corville Perkin. We knew he’d a reason for wanting to get here, though we” hadn’t guessed it was. to §ee Montada/’ . ■ “Well, he was here .less"_thain_a{L hour ago. I .reckon so, at least, for I believe it was ,him •; I saw getting away.” ’ “The devil you did! How did he 7^anage-that-?-^W-e7-reckoned-TojiaYe_ ^11 .the approaches watched. How matter?————-—-—■;—-—7r—;------ \“I came dowif the - river in a sort of boat. I’m afraid I borrowed that without permission. Do you Call that stealing?” ■' \- (j, . “Sounds like' it, but I doubt iP it matters much. The point is did Mr. Perkin come,by float too??’ “No, I should imagine he came the “B&e way lhat he rwentrand thaV-^ras ? across the riVer—by^some. ' kind/ of n ♦ $H>’ C ****<•« •’I’m very grateful to you. Is there any reason. why I should nbt go home now ?” “Better dome along“ with me to the station first. We shan’t keep you long this time, but we’ve got to have ev­ erything cleared up ready for the in­ quest,. He didn’t seem to know much, about your girl, did he?” “Not a word. I don’t think he even knevy she’d been kidnapped-Hintil I told him.” „ “You seem pretty confident “that she has been kidnapped,” commented’ the Inspector. “Ever-occur to you. that she might .have gone off on her own account?” - JJ'. ■’ , “She’d never do that,” answered Adam, con Aden tjy. . “Well-you never know with young Ternate's. That’s what it, looks likely to .turn out as so far.” ^A~dam'hadno^patience-with--that- suggestion. He shook hls head an-., grily, at which the Inspector smiled. “You come along * wjth me/’ he said. “I want you to tell me1* what all that he was saying about ‘ soma chairs was meant to be;” Adam”told him as they squght the police station, but the information only seemed to puzzle him. It bore out:’whAt"Nor:vai fiatT tQ’ld the . police ' about the operations of what he call­ ed his enemies, . but he could not imagine anyone going to. s^ch lengths " to' securi^iTTevVTnoilldy, 6Id could Adam \ for. that (To Be Continued) Rapid Growth of Canada > Predicted by Statist'' And’ Smoke Too Much; Still Superior To Her Ancestors , New York.—Women are gating too little and ^^i^klngifiunh, In the opinion, of Mrs. Annp Steese Richard. sonb^VpAyear'-old associate editor ot n^Vonfan’s magazihe. * But- despite othe modern young wo­ man’s over-fondness of clgarettetj, said Mrs. .-Richardson,, “she is super- io in almost every way to the girl in my. 0wn day.___ ,____ ____ “She is healthier, she .dresses more sanely, she is a more intelligent reai. der. Above all;-’ ishe has social .. con­ sciousness, She thinks of something besides, dress, dancing and marriage. ^“WfieiTT vYas a girl, * Wat; “WaK jilT we had to think about. One’s whole duty was to get the right man and marry him.” - ■"’Mis': RSChafftcW returned recently’ from a 13,000-flnile tour of the coun­ try—its purpose to find out what wo­ men are doing and thinking. She said she riotecTa decline !nTelfgibus fafthT. “Young people want It but can’t, find it,” she said. “I think, the church leadership is at fault. Young people don’t want to hear politics in, the pulpit, and they get. their science in school—they don’t want it in church”.... ' ..Girls,,r she .said, “don't seem to re­ alize that there’s a time and a -place .for smoking—men would/ be afraid to-s-moke^-as----mueh~~as-’--sdme women do. . . ‘‘And girls often do, thing® when they smoke thait men don’t like. For example, some have a cigarette after each course when dining.. A man 1 would call that, economic waste.” . --AVorking-for--a-liviiig---has-improved- girls’ health,, said Mrs RichardsOn. /“They know-'tney musl^leep^w^FW4 ♦Jtekrfjn' ................■ J Montreal—The United States is fast approaching a stationary pojiul- jitione GeorgA W. Hodges, executive ’of: the Staridnfd Statistics Company of New York and former president of the Investment;Bankers’ Association of America, told a service club-here recently, 'j. . ’• ? immigration Js restricted and- ^r^ir^'^afe'^nnly^e-xceedwig^deaths-by* a narrow margin, he said. On the other hand, he declared, possibilities of population and industrial progress of Canada cannot be charted. “The Dominion’s growth during the next, few decades will be. comparable with that of the United, States during its greatest expansion period/’ he .proph­ esied. ' one let it down dver my head and Tibisted it up again when he’d ~gone over.” “I remember, now, air/Y. interposed bne of the constables. “There’s an old, loading' arrangement back of \’the premises on the other bank.' They | used to use it ip . the 01,d. days when 1 there werb ' barges starting ' from 1 —^I*e-nsxO-n”——have—ct*— 'Hiwfrl; ’ Dtv/C A l O Ah Rights ! KtVUrAL- f Reserved There was no heed . to speculate' ■Onrthe4dent4ty-M>f.rtnese-meW^ai^Y^lu — •File Inspector stood with^vhistorch (turned towards Montada v on the, 111loor, while one of his men expertly turned ^the littla Spaniard', over. . “Well, that one’s - done for,” lie said with' cool professional certitude. “I» the other fellow hurif?” ■ • Two beam® frbm torches converg­ ed to show Adam standing yri^h the hand of a policeman gripping each thotiider, “Good thing, you managed . to dodge, thdt one. I . take it was \ meant for. * you/’ remarked tfie In­ spector companionably. J .“It’s, all ri&ht,” he told his men. “You\ needn't hang on to him.\We know an. about ■Mr. Merlston.”' ' \ V , \ It was nice to '.feel a free'man Again after evenVb short a detention. ;. "Tm gla'd you were on t’hC spot/’, ’ eaid* Adam, witii a\ momentary clear Druggists Hare It » " An tablet -''ttairts /disinte^' grating h as it touche® moisture. 'Drat' means that Aspirin 6tafts "taking hokf* . ease®'even a bad headache, neuritis or rheumatic pain •almost, And Aspirin is safe.. Doctor^ prescribe i^. Pdr Aspirin 'do^ nPt harm thr, hiart. . . ' . , ,Be,sure to Took for .the narfic Bayer /'fa the lorrq of a- cfdss oh every l'Aiiptrm tablet. Aspirin is made in Canada and all dhiggistsi h$ve it Demand and (iai aspirin rmAOEMAIW mtRrtr- IM CAMAOA in and out all-right,” agreed ^he In- ■'spectoF.~--itThere™we-....wer.e,_wj^tchJn_g the strefet, and Jhe bloke walking 'in . and out n® cool as you like ■behind the scenes’ Doesn’t say much for the .intelligence of some of you.” He cast _,a withering glance round. “Ah well,” he 8£^d after a- pause that let his condemnation . sink \ in’ effectively. “It's no use crying over spilt milk. k)ne of you better go up the ^street . andget^hem to -send a .stretcher < and a suii'geon. Better have him examined just as he ljes, even .if there isn't anything the5 doctors cab do for him. Poor little chap! A proper toff, he. wasii When he was driving round in his -big. car,and sjiendfng his money. jhere’8 worse than him.left alive, I. shouldn't wonder. Why on earti> a fellow Jlke that with- lots of money should want to go ' crooked ..beats me.” “Any objection to telling me what brought you into the building just at that moment’* Asked Adam’. “We got’ information/' the Inspec- fer told him- .“Information Jrom someone who professed thgit he’d put you on to Montada. He seems to have been u'neasy about you, as irb ’reckbned the little mail’d have a gun aird'^bb desperate, \ and that you were half' off your head and not prop­ erly capable of looking after your- sClf. .We’d seen come down , the -. street and try to getjn, but we* thought, that ypu’d given it up.' ,We, khwy too that Perkin was on the' prowl, but h‘e seefiied to be safely employed in that business of his ac­ ross the river. We never realized thatj. that wag the- back door, to -this place, though It-seems obvious en-. ough’ now.. Anyway, in case some- tiring ’ unpleasant did • happen, we .thought it . would be as w^ll to lo­ cate Mr.*,ilontada, to.,we worked our way in quietly and the' two of you were talking so loud we could have •heard every word on the next, floor. ThaW about all there is to It.” T am "giving part of a letterwhlch I have received from’ a young lady of 28 years ,of age. Not for a long time have I received a. letter which presents such a vital problem, hav­ ing in it all the \elements of romance, 'pathos, unhappiness, and fn essence, gen^rodityof heart. It goes as fob, lowsf . ’ * “My problem, is one which may be more prevalent .than .is thought pow- adays. I have for about eight yeans been living with * a man who loves me devotedly and wht>m I love wiUi all my heart. His wife gave him"'h lot of trouble and. Unhappiness, fin­ ally leaving him to go abroad. She consented to divorce him, but when' it came to the final point she refus­ ed. Now she Is back again and wishes to resump her life With 'him. in tlje meantime, he . and’ I have been living as hu^ahd and'wife, and. we have one “ child of whom we are both passionately fond. .My “hus­ band’’ does not want to have any­ thing to do with his wife, and insists On a divorce, and he now bps evid­ ence which will enable hjm to obtain a .divorce, if she will not do so. her-. self. Srhe point*’that I would like to have your opinion on Is whether this woman, on'myself. would....make the. better wife to him. ' As''f have said , already, I love him with all my heart, but if I thought his’ happiness de­ pended oh this otberywoman, I would leave him, d6spite"all there has been between us, and in spite Of oh'r boy. Please give the your frank -opinion, gnd whatteveA the cost, I will carry, out- what T decide is my duty.‘to him/'^ . ‘ . . I am goi.iigZto refrain from dealing with the moral-angle .of tliils case,” because these people are living and carving, out their own lives-*-and 1 am gokig to confine myself to the ! questioni of compatibility of temper-' afnents. ' . . i am profoundly.happy to be ^.ble that,, in my_opinion, judging' from the in the specimens of handwriting Imuo No. 2Q-—’3^ ili,«« i ii' if' nW T ' W <* Lobar Pneumonia Preventive Vaccine Ready for Human Use ■ . l. . ’ V--‘ “Philadelphia. — Discovery of a vaccine against lobar pneumonia ‘ was reported by Dr. John A. Kolmer recently before the lU.th annual clin- leal-nieetfng^oftlie~Ameri(!an“College'’ of Physicians. ' . . 6-. Geoffrey St. Clair. Graphologist Geoffrey St. Clair Graphologist '■ The physician, who” gained promfii-- rente"through’his~ dis,coyery--of~-an-in­ fantile paralysis vaccine, said the neW serum was the result of three, years’ investigation at the Research institute for Cutaneous ftledicirie. “So far we have had a very large degree of success in the treatment of dogs,, monkeys and other animals/’, he said. [ , “We feel that the time has now come when the vaccine can ■ b e—us ed^—success f ul l y „~on- - human beings, particularly those who are Dr. .Kolmer said the vaccine was' made from five types of germs which --cause--tire diseas.e.' He ‘added that it had beep successful, in from 80 to -8? per cent of the cases in Which it. Was used, :■ -^Raymond-f-A-l-ta7—La^t-^-Fal-1L-.oui<-^~ Brandley paid $20 for a four-year-j Ind. steer. After a Winter ■ jnTne. ie.eq-V 4ng-~-ldt-g-,--J-umb0’r-was--8tdd“fa^ —- to Chicago buyers, the highest pri^t for a steer in this district for year% jindl-hafc-3'ery, [ndSnaj ~She is ; nrarow'/minded and selfish, and undoubtedly through all . this affair.she has been actuated solely by her own desires . and eelf-intef- ■ests. .< " ■ I say advisedly that my correspon­ dent should encourage the m^n - to insist on a divorce, and. if this other woman will not go ahead herself, then it is up to the- man to do so. This is not the time to “beat abdu& bush”—it is essential that you be in a position to marry tlfe m.an you love and who loves you—and with all my heart I wish.ybu success and. future happiness. , j . I, am writing ' at greater ’length direct. • •' ■ * Do.YOU wish to knpw what YOUR character is from your writing? Have you any •problems that are perplex­ ing you? The writer of these articles can help you Just as he has been able to help so many other readers.* Per­ haps you wish to find out the truth about your friends,, too? Send speci­ mens of the writing you wish to be analysed, enclosing 10c coin for each specimen,, and stating birthdate in each case. Enclose witfc) a 3c sfamp- ed, addressed envelope to,: Oeoffrey St. \Clalr, Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto, Ont. All letters are confidential and readers may be as­ sured that they can -write on their persona I probfehTsr'“w1thT' corn plete" confidence. Letters will be answered as quickly as possible. I.. JLltS^^inenJ^aning, , _ W.ashing-toh--^Asserting..that 1 her mail reflects decreasing unemploy­ ment among American women, Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt said recently, women were showing gre§t .ingenuity in solving depression problems. Among her 27000 weekly letters, however, there is an increasing pro­ portion from “white collar” women seeking help on individual problems rather than just any ’kind of a job. ■ “While there is a decrease-in the number of people who want . jobs, there is -a change/’ . Mrs. Roosevelt said.. “Their ’problems’ cannot be fitted: easily* into categories because the individual requests are mote for some specific thing that/.will help them, gfet'back on their leet, some way to carry on a business they have ''started, Or ftelp them get something they need on the. farm, or find ways .to educate their children. To many I'of thepi, these things seem the last jump over their difficulties.” K Each request is investigated, she said, and some way usually is found to aid those who -really need\it. ’ - . ----------—-----------------------------------A WOMEN A RE you tired, ^■nervous,-run­ down? No pep? I No ' ambition? L Take Lydia E. I Pinkham’s Veg. ' etable Co m« pound. It quiets quivering nerves —‘improves the appetite—makes * to say at once to this, correspondent . . . • .. t • 4 . . » jl » -l .. ■HL arlouA chafacteris.tics revealed to, ^0* in the ■specimens of handwriting sh6 sent\to me, site is the one who will make, th.e man' hapi>y. She 110 of a w^m-hearted and affectionate nature,\ fcympatrtetic aiid , genoroua, rm ’bag h v< temperament fia./ni, t a fe seem worth living again-. Mrs; Janies Martin of 227^ 2„._— /!»> Hamilton, On­ tario* says—“Your Vegetable Cbm- . pound built me up wonderfully. I \ have, gained” pep, ndy. nerves are . better and I have a good appetite. I feel much stronger/’ . A Boon To Alb WhoUsoYEAST “I find Phillips Pure LIVE Yeast helps my digestion more , than anything else. It creates ah / appetite . . . and aids digestion afterwards.”—London, England «= Extract-froin original letter. 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