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Zurich Herald, 1935-05-30, Page 2A HANDY POCKET TREAT By NELLE M. SCANLAN (Author of "Pencarrow") -0-cry-w•e -w-enneC M.A-mases-t-enne gee-e-0•?+2w ISYNOPsss Here we see a group of young peo Dle carried on, the tides of youth Young Kelly Pencarrow finally settles down on the Pencarrow farm, With Genevieve, his cousin, as housekeeper, who is in love with her cousin, Robin Herrick. Cousin Neil Macdonald be,. comes engaged to frena Joicey-Goff. Peter Pencarrow is showing Interest in Maisie Kite, a typist. The family is suddenly faced with the serious illness of Sir Miles Pen narrow. Kelly suddenly marries Maisie Kite. "Genevieve! I can't help feeling I've been unfair to her. I hope she won't be hurt," said Kelly. "She may, at first. But I'm not sure she wanted to come back. I've feeling that Genevieve was prepar- ing Ito nukesome change. She had been vedd about it; always put- ting it off." . "She may resent my taking her here." She will get over it; they will all 'et." over it. Mrs. Kelly Pencarrow, shell have a busy time winning them �baek, but I'll bet you have the y corning as usual before the year is out. "I wish we had Genevieve on our side," she said a little wistfully. "Darling, don't think about the family any more. I want the whole of your attention now. I'm a jealous and exacting husband." "It was quite dark when Genevieve apened the gate 'of the Home Farm. She stopped to look at the old square house, the light shining from its windows in the quiet hush of night, and a pang of regret woke with the memory' of the years she had spent Here. She wondered what changes would make; little things o-' o het—the way she put the s on; the swindow-seat and the ev vas our stela a 4 ry 0 ;niggt .,alb told her; surely:he could save trusted her. But to dash off in that headlong fashion, heedless of Consequences! Maisie she did not blame. Her mother and father were quite wrong in suggesting that she teas a designing young creature, out TO B2S GET Fast &lief Get tin of 22 tablets or economicalbottle of 24 or 100 at any druggist's. al �. "WES NOT HARM HEART :'in Aspirin tablet starts disinte- grating as soon as it touches moisture. That means that Aspirin starts "taking hold" , . eases even a bad headache, neuritis or rheumatic pain almost instantly. And Aspirin is safe. Doctors prescribe it. For Aspirin does not harm the heart. Be sure to look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every .Aspirin tablet. Aspirin is made in Canada and'all druggists have it. Demand and Get A S P I R' N TRADEMARK REGISTERED IN CANADA ,r.... -:- c-..... .em.,.rstomium. HEALTH MEANS CHARM AND HAPPINESS Sparkling eyes and smiling lips speak of health and vitality. Clear skin attracts. The healthy active girl 18 both happy and popular. Perhaps you ate not really ill yet when the nay's work is done you ate too tired to enter into the good times that other -women enjoy. For extra energy, try Lydia E. Ptnkham's Vegetable Compound. It tones up your general health. Gives you more pep—more charm. Remember that 98 out of 100 women report benefit. Let it help you too. to catch .one of the family and secure a position for herself. Long ago Genevieve had suspected that Maisie was in love with Kelly, but of late they had drifted apart. She acquitted Maisie of any desire to marry Robin; but to find herself pushed out, un- ceremoniously, suddenly dismissed by Kelly when he no longer needed her, made it difficult to overlook. Kitty she refused to see. She could not forget that her aunt was prepar- ed to sacrifice her—to sacrifice any- one—for Robin. Nothing, no one, mattered, provided he was safe. She knew the heights and depths of which that possessive maternal Iove could attain, and she pitied her for the narrowness of her vision. Might she not, in holding him too tight, lose him altogether in the end? It made her impatient with Robin, this seem- ing dependence upon his mother. Yet it was that gentleness which appeal- ed to her own firm will. Now she had to make her decision as to the future. The doctor had said that her father would redover and that even the muscles which were slightly paralysed would regain their power. But he warned them against a further shock, or anything that might seriously upset him. His long illness had also felt his heart weak. Genevieve's first impulse was to see Kelly and tell him frankly what she thought. But what good would that do? It would only widen the breach and cut herself .adrift from all association with the Hutt. More and `more the burden was being shift- -ed. on to ..her shoulders. Her father 'Tide'l5 said that:' he depended upon her nottt;he'•doetor had also declared it was for her to compensate for Kelly's defection. Ber mother -turned Robin? Or must. she still wait? Why „couldn't she defy them too, and take lip. happiness where she found it? n1 strong sense of family, a firmer fibre that invited responsibility and responded with a curious loyalty, prevented her from following Kelly's course. Had Robin been a dominant lover, impatient of restraint, she might have yielded to his pleading, There was something almost maternal in her love for Robin. The tall, sling body, the finely cut features, the gentle manner, the timidity where a hurt night be inflicted, was in sharp contrast with her more athletic vig- our. She was more robust of mind and body, frank and outspoken, sharp-witted and sharp-tongued. Now she was learning to control these impulses, to curb her tongue and cloak her hurts. She did not want to pile wreck upon wreck. She fought it out alone on the windswept Tinakori ,heights before facing any of then, and she de- cided to see Kelly first. Genevieve carie in the door- and paused. Kelly and Maisie, taken by sur- prise, were momentarily embarrass- ed, and Maisie instinctively looked to Kelly. Genevieve smiled and put out both hands—one to each of them—but they noticed that her eyes looked tired and her face was pale. LIVE Yeast Gives Buoyant Health "About three months ago 1 commenced to take Philips Pure LIVE Yeast regularly, with excellent results. I have recom- mended your Yeast to many friends, and those who have tat• en it testify to its efficacy, we. daily as regards the keen zest for food induced by its use." --- London, England—Extract from original letter. Would you like to be free from lassi- tude -alive, active, healthy? Then take Philips Pure LIVE Yeast. Watch your appetite ituprove, energy increase. Phillips Yeast will do this for you because, in its preparation a way has been found to preserve indefinitely, in • the highest state of activity, the rich content of the 33 "Vitamins, Enzymes and Nuclein of yeast. LIVE Yeast: (1) Yelps digestion ; ends pain and discern - fort after eating. (2) Iunsures that your body extracts the full benefit from the food you eat. (8) And enables the white corpuscles in your blood to throw off the poisons which induce Muscular pains, skin imperfections and general debility. Start taking Phillips novV. You will like it—and find it very economical 15 days' supply supplytaste), 4 days' evpplan 1,00 at "I hope you will be very' happy" "Then you're not angary with me? Oh, Genevieve, I was afraid." "Angry, no! Hurt u • little. Yoil might have trusted me, Kelly." She kissed Maisie, and ,a flood et relief removed the shadow frons her happiness. Genevieve was on her side. "It wasn't that. I thought you ha better keep out of it. If you knew , "I see!" "How have they taken it at hone ?" Kelly asked anxiously, "Pretty badly!" %Father ?" "Yes." Genevieve had come to tell them, and in the face of their happiness she was reluctant to dim it with re' morse. "What happened? Go on. We've got to know." "Father was very angry, and got excited, and raged round the house, Well . . . he's ill now." "I'm sorry!" It was Maisie whit spoke, and Kelly slipped his era, through hers' and drew her to hie side. a` "A stroke!" said Genevieve. "Oh God!" For the first time Genevieve Kelly look afraid. (To Be Continued.) Are Proud Of Penitentiari Batt; English Judge Says Jails A Courts Attract Visitors London,' Eng.—People are moue of their penitentiaries, according te. Mr. justice Sir Rigby Swift, one of, the judges of the King's Bench. ThES judge was giving evidence before the. Royal Commission on the despatch of business at common law. "Nothing has created greater in- dignation in some parts of the coup-' try than the closing of jails," declar- ed the judge. "No one would thinks that they wanted a jail in their midst, but I know several towns which were highly indignant that their prisons should be taken away. Prisons bring people into town as visitors, to see it, and the same thing applies to the holding of assizes." On the question of retirement of High Court judges, Mr. Justice Swift- who wiftwho is just 60 years of age, .said; "No retiring age should be fixed. :)<. speak twithout prejudice because have almost reached the time . when I am entitled to retire. and I am eon: siderably below any retiring agO which is likely to be fixed. If a judge, is competent to do his work, 1 calls not see any reason why heslagultt not GULF STREAM FALLACIES it Flows On Like A Real RiverAccording To Long Study The maps give us a poor concep- tion of th,e Gulf Stream. They were made primarily to help navigators, who are not keenly interested in what goes, on below 'the surface of the water.' As the years have passed, those who make the earth their special study have been more and more im- pressed by the theory of the Danish geographer, Nielsen, that the Gulf Stream flows like a real river, and this is without either diffusing much into the Gulf of Mexico or receiving much water front the Gulf. To test this view Yale University sent the schooner Mabel Taylor to the Gulf of Mexico in 1982, Instructions to the scientists on board: Determine the saltiness of the Gulf Stream at ;various points and find how it flows as a body. Give the world a three - ‘dimensional picture of the Gulf Stream. Illuminate the chemistry of the Stream, STUDYING THE CURRENT At last week's meeting of the Na- tionrl. Geophysical Union in Vrash- ington Professor A. E. Parr of Yale 'ave an account of the Mabel Tay- or's fiedinggs. The schooner spent all of her time in the Caribbean r<cur rent, which passes north from the Caribbean Sea through the Yuca- tan Channel, and in the Florida cur- rent which flows through the Florida Straits. Thus was the problem of inflow and outflow studied—the masses and kind of water that enter the Gulf of Mexico from the Yuca- tan Channel and that leave it through the Florida Straits, It turns out that Nielsen is right. The Gulf of Mexico is saltier at the surface than the Caribbean current --exactly the opposite of what was supposed. The Caribbean current sweeps straight from the Yucatan Channel to Florida. Below the sur- face there. is some Caribbean water which loses itself in the Gulf, but the so-called Gulf Stream is about as independent of the Gulf of Mex- ico as the Mississippi River. Big Game Season Reduced To 11 Days Halifax-. — Big Game. hunters in Nova Scotia : Chia yea`s will, have only' ti, -0: thaWoods. •Tlu>,d eadui ^r +e,.•^-, sly, to get rid"oY anybody' who ,y'a incompetet icy should be rebel his judicial responsibilities.",:' s ,;on 'for moose, deer and caribou to period between 'October 20 and tictober 31. HAT DOES Your HAND WING NG REVEAL ? Asehts Geoffrey St. Clair Graphologist (Editor's Note: Many of our readers have already obtained a character study froth their hand. writing. Have YOU? The revela. tions will certainly interest you and they may surprise you. The author renews his invitation to readers fol. lowing this week's article,) * :4 * I have another letter this week from a young lady --she is 21 years of age—who says she has fallen in. love with a married man, _and, to use her own phase, "simply cannot give hint up". Well, of course, the decision as to her future course of action must cone from herself, but as she has written to me about her problem, 1 deduce flat she is worrying over it, and I am therefore going to give her my candid opinion. Her own ,handwriting shows that she is very'' affectionate and of a markedly sympathetic nature. She responds very readily to emotional influences, and I have no doubt that it was, in the first place at least, this eager readiness to sympathise with others that led her into her present attachment. However, she also sent me some of the writing of the Man in ques- tion, also that of the man's wife. And from my inspection of all three writings I cannot but come to the conclusion that this girl is making a very grave mistake, Apart altogether from the moral angles to this question, the writings tell me that this is the case. Both the man and his wife are of the self theHabitGf CleanTeeth eanTe r SweetBrea SatinSkin Heirl ealtk Dentifrice Lotion Creamhlt s iekSlua ., Sap f.. hannpoo 717!ALANIFultsirts.p a� shoo ranevrsropet Issue No. 21 -- '35 j nitalf ea ;;•li.�i ,rk�, 77"�t.4"Y wk?ai:AFA a Gladiolus Popular In The Dominion • The gladiolus is deservedly one of the most popular flowers in Canada. Also it needs very little care except at planting and digging time, About the middle of May is a good time for planting but, as pointed out by the Horticultural Division, Dominion Experimental Farms, the exact date varies according to locality because the frost must he out of the ground and the soil dried. Sandy loam, well fertilized the previous year, is the ideal soil, but gladioli will do well on heavier soils. In a light, poor soil they would probably fail in a hot dry season. After planting the soil must be cultivated frequently to keep down the weeds and render the surface loose. During very dry weather a thorough soaking with water once a week is very beneficial, and it is well to remember that when the time comes for cutting the blooms at least two sets of leaves should be left on the plants, so that the corm will cone to full . growth and so be in good condition for -growing neirt ;year. There are hun-; ,, '(atrose :front, but th Ymult br s which..., e n s ' rd are u y quite" distinct in appearance from the Iarge-growing varieties are becom- ing more popular every year.: The corms, as obtained from the' seeds - man, should be planted from four to six inches deep and about three inch- es apart in a sunny position in the garden, , "An angel is a person who has conquered self and risen to high levels of character. No person can be endowed with virtue or holiness." nn -n nnans--°-' --Edwin Markham. interested type. They look after their own interests firstly and ]ast- ly. I would say that the plan and his wife are well-suited. But I cannot say the same thing about the girl who writes to me and the man, I do not think that the man is seriously. in Iove with her. He may be infatuated with her, but I suggest that, if the girl insists on his getting a divorce in order that they can be married, she will find that what I say is merely the truth. He is interested in her for the moment, but has no sincere desire to ruin his present,. conditions of life and marriage. So I say to the girl who wrote ine, in all sincerity, that she is far too good to take the chance of ruin- ing her life for the sake of this mar,, Give him up. You will find happi- ness in other directions and in a more permanent manner. * >ti * I have a letter from a lady who signs herself A,IC., and the post- mark on the letter was Edmonton, I would like this lady to write me again and please enclose her fulll address so 'that I may write to her confidentially. * * * Not all the problems with which this well-known author has to deal are given in these articles. There are many that are too confidential to be included and in all cases, Mr. St. Clair is able to help sincerely and without bias. Would YOIJ like his help? Have you any :friends whose true characters you would like to know? Or do you merely wish to find out What YOUR handwriting tells about yourself? Send speci- mons. of the writings you wish an- alysed, stating birthdate in each case. • Enclose 1Oc coin for each specimen, and include with a 3e stamped addressed envelope, to: Geoffrey St, Clair, Rooth 421, 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto, Ont. Letters will be answered as quickly as possible, and letters will be con- fidential. • Why at 40 You Think You're ''GROWING OLD" It's Frequently Just an "Idea." Not "Old Age." And According to Scientists, May be Something No More Alarming Than A Touch, Of Acid Stomach At about 40, many people think they're "growing old." They're tired a lot. Have headaches. Stomach up- sets. Dizziness. Nausea. Well, scientists say the cause, in a great many cases, is. merely an acid condition of the stomach. The thing to do is simply to neutralize the excess stomach acidity. When you have one of these acid stornacli upsets, all you do is take Phillips' Milk of Magnesia 'after meals and before going to bed. Try this. You'll feel like another person! Take either the familiar liquid "PHIL LIPS' ", or the con- venient now Phillips' Milk of Mag- nesia Tablets. Made in. Canada. Also to Tablet Form: Phillips` Miik of Magnesia Tab- lets" are now on sale at all drug lCores everywhere. Bach tiny tab- et is the equivalent of a teaspoonful of Gen- uine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. PHILLIPS' AA_ armada,. Canadians Well' F Canada certainly .;does lin its people if we may judgj recorded eonsuniption. In 10 ate, per capita, 136.99 pound meat, 10.68 pounds of poultry, pounds of butter, 3.30 pounds o cheese and 257 eggs. The meat hill was as follows pork, 74,58 lbs'. beef, 56.09 pounds; and -mutton an lamb, 6.32 pounds. c \-3,, 4 no `O y ere , S ' `:P \ VC, Y :IIS "ale .4 Pipe S xkers! Fill Via; wit GM EN -,'Sr ail is good San Go to your druggist or department store and buy RIT Dye (any color, 15c-2 for 25c). Use it. Then tell us in a statement of 50 words or less, why you prefer RIT-1,000 pairs of Monarch Debutante full./ fashioned—shadow-free pure silk chiffe fon stockings—latest Spring shades—, guaranteed $1,00 value—will be'givea at prizes to 1,000 entrants. There are dozens of reasons why you will prefer RIT, =comes in 33 basic brilliant colors, froor which cae be produced over 50 of the newest Paris sh24es, FAST COLORS WiTHOUT 80141�yGl, Only RIT offers this advantage! ,t`i�l' is' the modern tint or dye—easier and surer• star superior to ordinary "surface dyes' Uebaitee it contains a patented ingredient•tliat'maxes the color soak in (loo er, set faster **flan longer. Sold everywhere. HOW 10 WIN 1. Write a short statement (under 50 words) on why you prefer RIT Dyes and send it together with an empty RIT package (or reasonable facsimile) and your name and address, to John A. Huston Co. Ltd, 46 Caledonia RI, Toronto. 2. Send as many as you wish; contest closes midnight June 29, 1935. 3. 1,000 prizes will be awarded on the, decision of the judges, which will be final, Whether you win a pair of silk stockings e1 not, we will mail to all entrants free 01 charge, our famous booklet—"The A,B.a of Home Rug Making ii TINTS and OYES Rit is a convenient • scored wafer, eas• ler to measure; iyon't sift 0u6 sf the pottage. PEP? When you feel like a log and your muscles tire easily, it's more than likely that wastes that shouldn't be in your body are sending out poisons into your blood. At times like these take a bubbling, bracing glass of Andrews Liver Salt each day till the trouble clears up. Then take an occasional glass- once or twice each week—and you'll stay perfectly fit. Get Andrews now. Small tin, 85e; Large tin, 60c'; Extra large bottle, 75e. Proprietors, Scott & Turner, Ltd., Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Eng. 15.