Flesherton Advance, 23 Oct 1935, p. 1

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TRAPPERS; To help you get top cash prices for your furs I cINtI*S()NS brand new "Dominion •â- ^ Triipijer" is different from any 'â-  r putihcaiion o( its kind! Ncwii . 1 I'lcturcs (rtini ihc iriiplitM: Ptunt- » i . on trapping (or preatcr proliti â€" I'lus full dt'taiU on Siin[Mon'tt Haw rur MarkctmK Service, lh»- new, dtrect way to f:< * '*»/> market prices for your nkins! (This ftervice is limitid to Ontario only.) Vourcopy is I-'KEE. MAIL COUPON NOWI THE ROBERT SIMPSON Eastern Limited TORONTO. ONT. Vlraiic m.ill ni^. without cost or obliinlion. fur »lii[>i>i>i| t-iK* ond l;iti-tt rdiooti ol '1 HK UOMINKIS TKAI'I'KK." which conl^tnt minifl'tf infiiTiiiition regarding your K«w l-'ur MMllbCtlllg bcivicc. Sikm€, • I P.O . Ttov I r ... , Street AddrrM â€" .••...... ......,-, | Route. ... Bo* No . Rainbow Gold by E. C. BULEY What The Tourist WanU J t, SYNOPSIS Dun Prcscolt aiul CJiiidon Wcsterby tlrul Kulil '" ttic »'''>i l^""*'' °' Austriilla. Tiny slake llitlr claim and start the loiii; journey t(i the coast. WoHtcrby lins a fiancee, Gladys Clem- ents In Kngland. but when they arrive In Sydney he marries a pretty blonde. Ciirdon forwurd.s a photo of Dan to former fluncee, (iladys Clements, In l.niulon and when Dan arrives she be- liivcs. he iH (Jordon. ICvc UlUhrist, a typlat."" obtains work In MedlUotts of- tUe, the broker who Is tloatlnf? mine. the REMODF' FD FOR SCHOOL WEAR Style' Details Th;it Help Home Dressmaker Economize Kach Rca on offers certain dis- tinctive fashion details that help the home dressmaker, provided -she ha.-: the insrenuity to ad.;pt these fea- tures to her particuhir sewing needs. Just now one's attention is called to the practical advantaiji'.'i of shirrinjrs and pleats â€" especially in the work ol remodeling.'. Tnakin;? details, moment, have I!oth of these dress. so emphasized at the the pleasant (|uality of ccnccalinK unwanteil seams in an ornamental way, while their expand- in'c possibilities recomincnd them to anyone who i.s remodeling clothes for jrrowin? f;irl.s. Shirrinjr i.s e.s- peei.illy obli'/inir. as iti admits of a fabric bein;; pieced horizontally â€" the seams concealed in the evenly placed rows of jrathers â€" and also vertically, a.s the piecinfr will be hid- den in the fulness below the lines of shirring. Hubby â€" I'm ph'd you only want $5 to no shoppinjr with today. What are you going to get with it? Wife â€" Nothing but luncheon, dear. I'm going to have everything else charged. If You Kat Sturehea Aleuts, Sweets Head This They're All IS'cci'ssary Fintda â€" Itul All Acid ' Forming. Hence Most of L's Have "Acid Stomacli" At Ti»i<?s. Easy l\'ou to Relieve, Doctors say that much of the so- called "indifjeslion," from which so many ot us sulTcr. is rcilly aciil in- difjcstion . . . brouRht about by too many arid-fonniini foods in our modern diet. And that there is now a way to relieve this . , . often in OiinatesI Simply take Phillips' Milk of M:iyncsia after meals. Almost im- mediately this acts to nnilnilizc llio Stomach acidity that brin/,'s on your trouble Vou "forxel you have a ttomacbl" J ry (his just once! Take either the familiar liquid •'PIIILLIl'S' ", or. now the convenient nrw Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Jablcls. Hut bo ture you get Genuine "I'lllLLIPS' ". Also in rablet Farm: Pl.ilhps' Milkol M.ign(";i.i I.iMfts â- re now Ol. sale at .ill drus stores ever y where, luicli tiny tahkt IS the cqiiivn- lent of a teasnoonful of f,oniiine Phillips' A1|II< of Magnesia. Phillips A/i/A a^ Atnnnesia, MAOI IN CANADA "Are you trying to say . . . "Eve began, angrily; but Frankie stopped her with an uplifted hand. "I am meaning to say that our heads, and not our hearts," she re- plied. "Make sure that he has got a real gold mine before you fall in love with Dan Prescott." "I get out here,"' Eve replied, rafi- ping on the cab window. "You can be out-rageous, Frankie, when you lot yourself go." Before noon on the following day Dan was hanging about Medlicott's ollico, waiting for the 'phone call to come through from Sydney. The con- nection was made punctually to time; Imt the voice which Dan heard was not that of Westerljy, but of Slade. "1 want to speak to Westerby," Dan insisted. "Send him to the 'phone, will yon?" "He's still celebrating his honey- moon," Slade replied. "All I know i.i that ho is somewhere in New Zea- l;ind. What seems to be the matter with you, Prescott? I had your cables, but I cannot make much sense out of them." Dan explained hi.s troubles; and the diuckles emitted by Slade during the narration did little to soothe hi< anger. "Westerby put a trick like that over on you, did he?" Slade said, "and you made him a rich man! Well, it's a raw deal, Prescott; and I'm ready to do anything you ask." "Then send this girl a message in Wcsterby's name," Dan suggested. "Write a long explanation, that will show her that the man who asked her to marry him is still in Australia. Sign it Westerby: and make him stand for it. Will you do that?" "PU do the best I can," Slade agre- ed. "You'll want to know just what Pve sent. you. And Prescott. ..." "Well?" "Hcfore you do anything about it, see Medlicott's solicitor. Mecllicott will give you a line to him; a man named ('aims. You needn't tell Med- licotl your troubles; but Cairns will handle this in the right way. It sounds to me ,\.' if heavy danir.go wo. lid have to be met by soii.rixidy." "I!y Westerby," Dan said savage- ly. "Find the dog, Slade. Send a radio message to New Zealand." "That's an idea," Slade agreed. "What's happcninfr at the mine?" Dan dcmandeil. "If I hadn't been pusheil off from Australia at a day's notice I could have looked after things there." "There's nothing happening," Slade confessed. "Do you realise that anybody can ilrop down there with a plane, and snoop away with a lot of gold?" Dan .asked. "Westerby ought to be on the job there. Look here, send two or three good men, in charge of some- body you can trust. Get them there at once. Set them boring for water; it has got to he done." "That's going to co.sl money." SUkU' objected. "You do what I say," Dan called in tones of command. "You and Westerby are lying down on a job just because Pve had to come away, (id some action, will yoii--and at once." He slniiinu'd iluwii the receiver, 1111(1 turned to find Medlicott regard- ing him with twinkling eyes. "(iood man, Prescott," he said. "That's the way to handle Slade, though I don't know how you sens- ed it. He has to bo kicked into do- ing what he knows • light to be dune." h DON'T RISK BAKING FAILURES .... '<YOU CANT BAKE GOOD CAKE WITH INFERIOR BAKING POWDER. I INSIST ON MAGIC. LESS THAN U WORTH MAKES A BIG CAKE/' j(iy» MADAMK. K. I.ACKOIX, Aitiuant lUmtnir of the Vro- riitcial Sch*ml til l>utngttU Sii- vnc9, Montreal. "Westerby's worse," Dan snorted "Will you give me a line of introduct- ion to your solicitor, Mr. Medlicott? Cairns, did not Slade say?" "Certainly, he's a useful chap. What's Westerby been doing? Lying down on you?" "He's been lying," Dan agreed grimly. "Lying up and down." Medlicott asked no furthef quest- ion, but used the telephone and made an appointment for Dan with Mr. Cairns. The solicitor listened to Dan's story with a gravely sym- pathetic air, which was very reas- suring. Any amusement he may have felt was cleverly repressed. "Well, Mr. Prescott," he said, "your partner has certainly landed you in an awkward predicament. I take it you wish to free yourself entirely from this entanglement?" "That's the one thing I want most," Dan agreed. "It will be better, then, that you should not see the lady again," Cairns suggested. "When the cable arrives, let me see what has been done from Australia. After that, I can inter- view Miss Clements. I think I shall take the line that you acted as a proxy for Mr. Westerby, who is still held by his promise to marry the lady; both by his own letters and by the act of his proxy; yourself." "But he's married already," Dan objected. "If the other side are not informed of that fact." Cairns explained, "it will not be consistent with my duty to yourself to inform them. After all, the lady has promised to marry Mr. Westerby, and he h/is promised to marry the lady. That is the main point." "Which lets me out?" Dan asked. "That is my view," replied the man of law. Slade's cable reached Dan on the following day. It was signed in the name of Gordon Westerby, and Slade had not allowed any consider- ation of expense to cramp his style. "An unfortunate mistake has a- risen, owing to my having mixed up a photograph of my partner, Daniel Prescott, with my own. The picture I sent you is that of Prescott. It is Prescott who visited you in England, while I had to remain behind in Australia. "Prescott has cabled me, inform- ing me of your natural mistake in mistaking him for me. I blame him for not undeceiving you at once, but I have warned him that you have have given your promise to marry me. "Please conlirm this by cable, and write to my partner telling him that he must not attempt to see you again. He was supjiosed to do no more than explain to you why I was detained here; though I must accept most of the blame for sending the wrong photograph. "His cable says that be profoundly iTgrets his conduct. You will have no more trouble with him if you are firm in refusing to see him any more. Am writing at length, for this has been a great shock to me.â€" Gordon Westerby." (bairns, the solicitor, grinned wide- ly after he had read this through twice. "What do you think?" Dan asked. "Slade certainly leaves Westerby holding the baby," the lawyer re- marked. "I am not sure that he may not have overdone it a bit. Anyway, I'll get right away to Ilillingdon, and see Miss Clements." "Let her down as lightly as you can," Dan urged. "This thing has got to be settled with a lot of cash when it Comes to the real show-down." "Is she likely to fee! very deeply about losing you?" Cairns asked. "Wel-ell," Dan said slowly, "a girl who can engage herself by letter to a man she has never seen is not the one to feel things de(|ply, is she? She's more likely to feel them loud- ly, I should say." Cairns nodded his understanding. "I don't know much about women,'' Dan went on. "I diiln't quite get the hang of this business before she had me all tangled up in it. The whole family, (hey were oozing with sur- plus atrection." (To Be Continued.) Some tourist attractions are per- manent, others occa.sional. Tour- ists just have to be reasonable about it and discover what if what and when. They may sit on the veran- dah of almost any large hotel in In<lia any day and see the mango tree trick done; but they will never see the rope trick performed unless they are quite a shade less than strictly sober, and probably not then. Moreover, they may roam the country for months before catching sight of an elephan', a tiger or a cobra, even where they are reputed to live, and do live. It is a pity when tourists feel they have been disappointed and deceiv- ed. It is a temp'ation too; it would be so easy in Canada to have a few Indiana always handy in feathers and war paint solely in order not to disappoint visitors. Then the tourists would be deceived, but they would feel that they had not bean. Life is very complicated. â€" Saint John Telegraph-Journal. Serve the ^est Tea um A V A m mn XSA EVERY DAY LIVING A WEEKLY TONIC by Dr. M. M. Lappin Heatinc Hints "T'OSSING on a few s^ovelsful" is * the common way of refueling a furnace, but 1; Is not the proper way, nor la i: the way to obtain the most economical he^t. Try this method next time you find it necessary to refuel: PMrst, shake the fuel bed gently, until you can see t.he lir,i red glow in the ashpit. Don't shake the fire roughly or allow red coals to fall through the grates. Then take a Eihovel, or hoe, and pull a mound of live coals to the front of your furnace fire-box, just Inside the fire door. Do not disturb tho layer of a-h under i the live coals. I Now you have a fire bed sloping! downward, from the lower edge of i the Are door, toward the bac'- 'f /our furnace. Into the hollow formed by this flope, put the fresh charge of coal â€" t'.ioveling it in carefully toward the back of the furnace, leaving a mound of live coals in fron: near the fire door. These live eoa^s .n .jnt will ignite the gases arisiuj; from the contact of the fresh coal with t-'ie hot coal, and will cause them to burn without odor. I Next remove the ashes from the ai.'iiiit, and reset the dampers. The | Turn Damper in the smoke pipe i should be as nearly closed as pos- ] sible; the Check Damper i.hould be | closed; the Ashpit Damper should | bo open. It Is also advisable to open I the slide in the fire-door slightly â€" about the width ot a wooden match j stick. (2) Woman Makes 14,000 Mile Pilgrimage To Son's Grave Darwin, Northern Australia. • â€" A Laticashire woman has just made a pilgrimage of 11,000 miles to see the gi-ave of her son. She is Mrs. Emily Clapp, aged 62. Her son. Constable Arthur Clapp, of the Northern Territory Police, was fatally injured in a shooting ac- cident in 1027 and was buried at Katherine, 200 miles inland from Darwin. After her son's death Mr.s. (^lapp resolved that she would visit his grave. "I felt I could not rest until I had travelled to .Australia to see his grave," she said when she arrived in Darwin. "It took a long time to make the necessary inquiries and save the money, but row I am al- most there." A man presented two keys tied with string lo " clerk at Leeds Post Office last night and asked them to bo forwarded with a leloRrani which Jio wished to send. He was surpri ed when he was told this was impossible as he said he understood money could ho forwarded with a telegram.â€" Sun- day Dispatch. A Wonder Clock â- -T-'- I ..htM;irlnMtl.lr Ciinau.t's best known Cookery F.iperts nnd Dle- tltlann wnrn against trusting ftooU Inftrcdlentii to poor-quality bukiitU powder. They advise MAGIC H.iklnft Powder for turo results! flONTAIN.S NO AI.IJMâ€" Thl» ntsiem.nt on avery lln I. your iHi NUiglr llaklnft ToHder any liumiful liiftrnalniit. fliiiirante la fri^r fnun nlutn nr Mailii la Csimda London. â€"What is claimed to he the most accurate clock in the world â€" one that will not vary more than one (|uarter of a second in a year- is being made by u London firm for pre.ientntii)n to (M-eenwich Observa- tory. ROUGH HANDS? NO! Hinds restores smoothness which soap and water tasks steal away from your hands 2 WOOLLEN BLANKETS, $3.50 full doiiMc sUe 6ii X Ml, trliniiie.l Willi ilih, IiiHlriiUH rllibon. Our re fulnr price.i $7 IKI per pair You liu\ Ihoiii now cm sain for |3.(>u pet pair (2 blankets). ('oloi.«: l(ii.'<i'. Idiie, (freen. mauve, (fold. Sent <M>.1), plus few pennies posliiifc. Money- bfick Riiiiranlee. Textile Mills, hi pi, W.I.,.. Montreal. H]» HINDS CREAM A WIDOW'S DILEMMA My heart always goes out to a woman who is bereft of her husband and is left with the task of bringing up young children alone. The gallantry with which some women have faced such a task, and the success they have made of it, can only Invoke one's admiration. I have a letter this week from a widow who is In a dilemma. Let me quote a part of her letter: "My husband died nine years ago and left me with two children â€" a girl and a boy. My boy is now seven- teen and fs finishing high sciool My girl is almost twenty and has a good job. They are both good chil- dren and have been very considerate of me, but something seems to iiave come over my daughter in the past year or so. She is not what you wou'd call bad. She has become very fond of dancing and wants to bo out every night. She is keeping company, par- litularly with men^ that makes nic anxious about her future. If I remon- strate with her -he tells me I am too old fashioned. I have a strong suspicion that some of those she runs around with are too fond of drink. I ara really worried. Can you help me in my diemma?" ThN letter is obviously from a wo- man 'who sincerely desires the best for her daughter, and to that end she ha.-, tried to do iher best. Of course she Is facing a situation that many mothers have to face, but I some- times wonder if, in such circum- stances, a mo:her's fear are not apt to be unduly exaggerated. Mark you. I appreciate the feelings of a mother In a case like f^is and I think I can quite understand her problem . There is a tendency for the world to take more notice of a youug woman's mis- conduct than it doe; of a youtig man's misconduct. Somehow we seem to as- sociate the sowing of wild oats with young men and look for that sort of thing in ti!iem. I do not know why we should do that, but do it, and the fact tha' we do is apt. perhaps, to make mothers a little bit more sensi- tive regarding the conduct of their dauK'hters. A young women, like the one con- cerned here_ needs to be handled c:irefully. To adopt an unsympathetic and scolding attitude toward her may do more to drive her along tho wrong path than anyt.'iing el e. .\fter all. she is not yet twenty and she is Just at that age when .she is going through t'ha' experience which psychologists call "the period of stress and storm". and her present coiuluet may be noth- ing more than her reaction to those changes which are taking place wit'h- In her. Perhaps she will settle down soon herself and see the wisdom of taking things in moderation wi Liout your having to do anything about It. But T fancy that you are too anxious to wait for things to take their nor. mill course. Probably you even feel that if she is no; checked now t.^ere can bo no telling where she will land. And. in a sense, you may bo right. What fhi- girl needs is wise ilirec'iou. 1 would advl e you to have a sirali'.ht heart to heart talk w'th her. Watch for an opportune moment nnd then open up with the conversation quiet- ly. Try to S''l0w your love and your thought for her in your conversation. I mean, of course, more in the tone and manner of your speech than In the words you usp. If you begin to talk to her in '"deary deary" terms she will almos: certainly resent it. Point out that there is nothing wrong In wanting to have a little pleasure Mul that you are quite willing that she should have it. l!ut make clear to her als<i ihat over-indulgence In anything is always bad for one and lihat. In the ultimate, the highest values in life are not material, but mental, moral, and spiritual. I am sure that if this mother will only adop: the right attitude toward her daughter and have a real honest- to-goodness iheart to heart talk with her. she will find her daughter to be a fairly sensible girl. • • « NOTE: The writer of this column is a trained psychologist and an au. thor of several works. He Is willing to deal with your problems and give you the benefit of .is wide exper. lence. Questions regarding problems of EVERYDAY LIVING should be ad. dressed to: Dr. M. M. Lappin, Room 421, 73 Adelaide Street, West, Toron. to, Ontario. Enclose a (3c) stamped, addressed envelope for reply. It was characteristic of the thor. oughness with which Sir Arthur Rose is carrying out his work as Com- missioner for Distressed Areas in Scotland, that on the occasion of cutting the first sod of the Garnock Yalley drainage scheme at Dairy, iie took off his coat for the job. â€" Scot- tish Country Life, Augus:. The Aga Khan set up a record fbr the present Assembly. He spoke lor only a few seconds more than the time this horse Bahram took to win the Derby this year â€" 2 minutes and .'56 seconds. â€" Daily Telegraph. Enjoy a really fine hand-made ciqarettc by roUinq your ou)n uHth GOLDEN VIRjGINIA ALSO MADE UP IN PIPE TOBACCO REGAIN VIGOUR quickly Don't stay low in bodily health and spirits. Do what thousands have done. Take PHOSFERINE. And recapture fresh, vigorous buoyancy quickly. PHOSFERINE, the great British Tonic, will do that for you, as it has done for thousands in England and Canada. From the very first day you take PHOSFERINE you will feel better, sleep better, eat better. PHOSFERINE is concentrated energy. You take just a few tiny drops each day . . . but they are drops packed with new life. Quickly they build you up, soothe your nerves, drive out pains and stiffness, and give you a new lease on life. PHOSFERINE has been remarkably successful in al- most countless cases of poor health and depressed spirits. It will prove just as good for you. PHOSFERINE is splendidly effec- tive at all ages for combatting fatigue, sleeplessness, general debility, retarded convalescence, nerves, anaemic condi- tion, indigestion, rheumatism, grippe, neuralgia, neuritis and loss of appetite. Get PHOSFERINE from your drug- gist nowâ€" in liquid or tablet formâ€" at the following reduced prices: â€" 3 sizes, SOc, $1.00, $1.50. The $1.00 size is nearly four times the SOc size, and the $1.50 size is twice the $1.00 size. jo The Longer Event ings I'f Fall and Wliuor aifiud op- ix^riuiiuj- for mental iinprove- oienl. ^„J c;,„ oveivi.me Inlerl- oriiy o.inple.x. develop a power- .lul memory, learn tho secret "f success, and Improve vour iiieiiial calibre hy fascinating correspoMdeiicf courses which .^ ou can study in your spare time and In the quiet of vour own home. For full particular.^, write to The Institute of Practical and Applied Psychology 910 Confederation BuUain* MONTBEAL, QUEBEC Issue No. 42 â€" '35 Edivardsburfi [RDWN BRAND [ORN SYRUP cHtROY FOOD THAT i. ^H ^ NOURISHED Hj^ MORE CANADIAN CHILDREN THAN ANY OTHER CORN SYRUP A ItroJua of Th* a\NADA STARCH CO., I Imittd

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