Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 29 Nov 1934, p. 6

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SR = Ee T= 8 a ----)§EALH.o®r ee rr | "to Relieve Remember the pictures below when ou want fasf relief from pain. emand ad get the method doc~ A rescribe--Aspirin, or i "ibiions have found that Aspirin eases even a bad headache, neuritis or rheumatic pain often in a few minutes! In the stomach as in the glass here, an Aspirin tablet starts to dis- solve, or disintegrate, almost the instant it touches moisture. It gins "taking hold" of your pain Faster Way Found NOW PAIN OFTEN RELIEVED IN MINUTES! Headaches =] practically as soon as youswallowit. Equally important, Aspirin is = safe. For scientific tests show this: Aspirin does not harm the heart, Rar these. two points: Aspirin Speed and Aspirin S ely. And, Rt) you get ASPIRIN, It made in Canada, and all dr ts have it. Look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every Aspirin tablet, et tin of 12 tablets or economical bottle of 24 or 100 at any druggist's. tablet in grating. IN 2 SECONDS BY STOP WATCH An Aspirin tablet starts to disinte- grate and go to work. Why Aspirin Works So Fast Drop an Aspirin water, Note that BE- FORE it touches the bottom, it la disinte- a glass of in these Hass our stomach--ASPIRIN tablets start 'taking hold" of pain a few minutes after taking. What happens happens in When in Pain Remember These Pictures Aspirin is the Trade Mark of the Bayer Company, Limited | The | - TUDOR HOUSE CLC TCLLXCLLLLLLT LL By MRS. STANLEY WRENCH : (Author of "Sing for the Moon" "Strange Lovers," etc). SYNOPSIS Michael .Borde, 4v, unmarried, born and bred ip a Birmingham slum, is now a wealthy motor manufacturer. One day he visits the countryside around his old home and rescues Laphne Eden from a menacing tramp, He falls 1n love and proposes. Daphne accepts and introduces him to her father, who greets him with the words "Get out of here you cur -- you rulned my home -- stole my wife -- curse youl" Daphne's father dles and she disap pears. Michael explains to her frlend. Mrs. Gregory, that he was mlsrepre sented. He buys the old-'fudor House owned by the Hamill-Hardy's, Mrs Gregory promises 10 mall a letter from him to Daphne arranging a meeting Daphne does not appear, On the way tiome Michael collides with a car driven by Dlapa Hamill-Haray. Mrs. Gregory dles. from her sollcltors. At the solicitors she Is met by her stepmother, Daphne hear' She drew a few whiffs, scattering ash untidily, and again Daphne shud- dered. "Well, now what about Borde? she asked, "What is he to you?" "Nothing," answered Daphne shor- tly, and was amazed at the vehem- ence of her own voice, "You mean he wants to be?" "No." Lily Eden laid down her cigarette and finished an ice, _ "My father believed you ran away with a man called Michael Borde," said Daphne slowly, "He evidently be- lleved that to the day of his death, " "Tien iu wasn't true?" Lily Eden looked up with that slow malicious smile, "What's it worth to you to know sori se the truth?" she asked, Again that dull pain pricked at Daphne's heart, becoming sharper as the minutes passed, . "I don't understand," she repeated but she guessed at what was com- ing. "Well, women of your sort don't go to a lawyer's for nothing," the other wont on, Rchard Eden may not have had money about somewhere, or those foxy old solcitors would not be after you, Well," and her lips tightened, It's Liver That Makes You Feel So Writched Wake up your Liver Bile . =--No Calomel necessary For you to feel healthy and happy your liver must pour two pounds o Jiquid blle into your bowels, every day. Without that bile, trouble starts. Poor digestion. Slow elimination, Polgons In the body. General wretchedness, How can you expect to clear up a sit- uation like this completely with mere bowel-moving salts, ofl, mineral water, laxative candy or chewing gum, or roughage? They don't wake up your ver, * You need Carter's Little Liver Pills, Purely vegetable. Safe, Quick and sure results, Ask for them by name. Refuse substitutes, 26¢c at all druggists. 64 ' HOLDS FALSE TEETH | TIGHT AS CEMENT Plates can't bly slip when you sprinkle on Dr. Wernet's Powder: Largest seller in world=holds plate so Ligh they can't annoy yet so comfort a actually feel and act like your own; ps mouth , breath / yenta sensitive gums from Bmall cost--any drugstore. . Issue No. 47-34 4 on pre« sore; 42 DIAC III ICIICICICII ICI III KY "I'm his wife, He didn't divorce me, for all his suspicious ways, If there is money I'm entitled to my share and I shal] see that I get it too, but I'm not one to make -a row when things can be done peaceably, So that's why I suggest you and me chat this over, woman to woman, and to share and share alike" Daphne sat still for a minute, won- dering how best to deal with her. It was quite evident that she did not believe hier. It was equally - evident that she was going to be a difficult person to shake off, "Listen," she sald "I am speaking the truth, That visit had no refer- ence whatever to my father, 'Bennett and Downing wanted to see me be- cause a woman--someone I used to work for had left me a little proper- ty." "Property eh? Well that means money in the long run," she repeated "I can easily find out if you are tell- ing the truth or not, But you can't bluff me my girl, You may not know it, maybe you don't, but you looked dippy enough just now, and if it is not Michael Borde, then it's another man, and you're afrald of Michael Borde stepping in." She laughed, and lighted another cigarette, and crushed the stump of the other on her plate, "Shouldn't have thought he your sort either," she observed, The End of an Ordeal So it was true, Daphne never knew how she sat there and endured the chatter of the woman opposite whilst they drank coffee then she beckoned for her. bill, Suddenly the eyes of Lily "Eden hardened, It was now or never, and she put out her hand, "Listen, Daphne," she sald thickly, 'you and I have met again but we are not going to part like this. I have got was to see more of you, There are things that have got to be cleared up, Lis- en, There are some things no woman its down with a smile, I've been waiting for some years to have my ay but I have never gotten a chance, You say your dad is dead, so it's too ate now to have things out With him, but by jove, someone shall hear--" Daphne's lips were white as she took her bill conscious that people at the next table were listening, "Where do you live?" she asked, "Give me your address, "I'll write, then as she opened her bag in which she had bestowed the bank notes she realised that the eyes of the other woman had seen these, Obeying an impulse Daphne drew out a five-pound note and pushed it across the table, ' "I'll write to you," she sald, <The woman's fingers closed greed- fly over the note but her eyes were hard as they travelled over Daphne's dress, No, the girl was not well dress- ed. Good clothes, yes of a kind, but they were past their best, Perhaps some of what she sald was true. She studied Daphne's face, Um, Thirly it she was a day, Well women were queer cattle, -- She wrote down her address an looked at Daphne enquiringly. The other shook her head, "No I have no address at present," she sald, "I can't give you a hotel ad- dress because I am leaving London to night, I'm paying with friends {in . the Midlands for one night, then--" she paused, "my plans are uncertain, You need not fear," she added with a wan smile, "for now I have your address I will certainly try to help you if it is poesible. Now, I am sorry I have another engegement and I must really go--" Lily Eden gathered up her belong- ings and followed Daphne towards the pay desk, hugging her bag with that precious tive pound note, It was a long time since she had been go flush and she tucked in a- strag- gling wisp of hair, "A good meal in you and money in your pocket, ~--a0o--you can jump over the world," ran Lily Eden's thoughts, as she walked leisurely al- ong Oxford Street, and gazed in the '| windows, A red and white spotted gown-- Lily Eden's eyes lighted up, It was her colour -- danger signals some called it, but she knew that she look- ed her best in red. Should she, With a slightly subdued feeling she passed on temptation over, No, with five pounds in her bag, she mustn't play any tricks, even though there was a fair certainty of more, Daphne was like her father, a bit of a prig. maybe a trifle religious like he al- ways had been, but she was the type who would keep her word even if the skies fell, A comfortable sense of complacency returned, she felt quite cheerful by the time she had quite cheerful by the time she had reached a little beauty parlour, Daphne Eden was her trump card. Besides even if she didn't turn up trumps she could always get at her through that firm of solicitors, The warm scented air of the beau- ty parlour was like a tonic to Lily Eden, she sniffed this appreciatively, took a seat, whilst the girl in forget- me-not blue uniform reached out the list of bookings and ran her eye re- |flectively down the list of clients. In the first cubicle she could hear chat- ter and laughter, and in spotless white, an attendant put her head out- side for a second at the sound of a bell, "Miss Manners--" she called sharp- ly. The forget-me-not sprite moved off with a murmured "Pardon me, mad- ame," to the newcomer and Lily Eden reached out, took an illustrated per- fodical from the glass-topped table beside her chalr, With nonchalant alr she flicked over its pages, gazing at one illustration after another and Studying the.-captions, Society folk, country house 'parties, the London sessions beginning. Yes, it took all sorts to make a world, and this was the world outside her ken, Yet, in a way, other worlds mode;led t{hem- selves upon it, Al} at once she stiffen- ed, ag a familiar name met her eye. (To Be Continued.) Farm Boys and Girls At the Royal Fair Out of the round 30,000 farm boys and girls registered by the Canadian Council on Boys' and Girls' Club Work the most skilled in juding of livestock to the number of about 300 will competg for the annual finals in a series of competitions that culmin- ate at the Royal Winter Fair, Accor- ding to A E, MacLaurin, secretary of the Council, Ottawa, the preliminary contests held in all the provinces have shown a high standard of live- stock knowledge among' thesg junior farmers, and he looks for a very close competition in the finals at the Royal Coliseum on November 20, the day prior to the opening of the Ro- yal Winter Fair, This competition has for the last three years attracted much attention among those interested in 'keeping boys and girls on the farm." Five pro- jects, the judging of beef cattlg dairy cattle, sheep, swine and poultry are undertaken by the juniors in groups and individually. sc. Mr, MacLaurin reports a steady in- crease in the enrollment which this year in Ontarioa lone numbers 5,600 some thousand or go more than in 1933, who are entered altogether "ik about 290 boys' and girls' clubs in various localities, Exquisite Quality JAPAN G TEA xf 781 Fresh from the Gardens What Does (Editor's Note: These human Inter est problems, with which Mr, 8t, Clair Is dealing, are similar to those that beset sa many of our readers, Can this well-known Handwriting Ex- pert help you? A friendly word, some cheerful advice, will often help you to bear your troubles easier, See the author's Invitation following this ar- ticle.) "ct "Sally," which {is a non-de-plume covering the identity of a young lady iving in Toronto, writes as follows: "My problem js, I suppose, similar to hat of many girls in business today, 1 happen to be fairly good-looking, and my boss, who is, by the way, a married man of 88 years of age, keeps asking me to go out with him. Now 1 am not particularly staid, I enjoy good times, and am fond of getting around, and, to be quite frank, I am not worried overmuch about the mor- al angle in this case, because I hap- pen to know*thkut tiy-boss does not get along with his wife, What kind of a man {8 my hoss? Does his writ- ing tell you whether he is honorable, and do you think he is the type of man with whom I can go out with occasionally, without any serious re- sults? My own age is 23." This is a rather different angle to this age-old problem, Generally the layman would lay it down as an ax- out with a married man--and it is still very true that a girl lays herself open to unhappiness by encouraging the attentions of a married man, - However, I do not intend to lay any stress oem this feature .in this case, The man's writing is so informative as to his mentality and character that a partial analysis of it should suffice to discourage my correspondent. The writing of this man reveals an overwhelmingly conceited personal- ity, He has an amazing impression of his own importance in the scheme of things, and, to be quite frank, he thinks the sun rises and sets on himself, His writing is very plain in this respect, -- And there Is another feature of it which would be enough to warn any girl to leave him alone, He ig de- ceptive--not to be trusted for a mo- ment, Naturally shrewd in busi- ness, he is something of a hypocrite, too, but his deceptiveness sticks out like a milepost, Leave him alone, Sally, He can do you no good, and I don't belleve that his intentions are straightfouward, Probably, if you were to know the wife, you would find that he is the one to blame, In any case, discour- age Ms--qoedmacnz, ( Qive him no en- couragement at all, After a while, he will get tired of constant re- buffs, and turn his attention else- where. Mr, T. London, 'writes: "I am 17 years of age, and 'my parents are very keen on my going to college, I have always had an {dea that I should jom that a single girl should not gol real truth of his relations with his| Your Handwriting Reveal? GEO. ST. CLAIR % vi (Grapho-Analyst) All Rights Reserved like to be a doctor and my parents are offering me the opportunity to study it, But I would like to be earning money now, and a friend of mine has an opening for me in, an office at quite a fair salary, What would you advise?" There can be no hesitancy here, my friend. You would be very unwise to give up your earlier ambitions re- garding becoming a doctor for the very temporary importance and self- satisfaction that money would give you in the other job. You would be sorry for it in years to come, In this case, I can confirm your par- ents' advice, Go to college, Have you any problems that Mr. St, Clair could help you solve? Do you want to know the truth about yourself--and your friends? He will tell you the unvarnished truth, Send specimens of the writing you want analyzed, and enclose 10¢c coin for each specimen, Enclose wlth 3c stamped addressed envelope to: Geoffrey St. Clair, Room 421, 73 Ad- claide Street West, Toronto, Ont, All letters are confidential, Five Dionne Sisters Begin to Look Alike Callander, Ont. -- So niuch "alike are the Dionne quintuplets that neck- laces bearing their names will have to be worn by the famous sisters for identification, Dr, A. R. Dafoe, their physician, believes, } Dr. Dafoe, who has watched over the "famous five" since birth, be. lieves that the babies, now five mon- this and one week old, are becom- ing more alike and that it will soon] be necessary to have some definite means of identifying them. Crowds Demand Lighter Music . Margate, Eng.--Taste in public en- tertainment at the seaside has com- pletely changed since the war, At least it has at Margate, where, ac- cording to John Saxby, Margate's en- tertainments manager, who has had 34 years' experience of the town, Holiday-makers are no longer con- tent with orchestral concerts and the concert parties in vogue before the war. They want revues, cabarets and jazz. Generally, they demand lighter entertainment, and expect accommo- dation for refreshment, Mr. Saxby told of this change at a Ministry of Health inquiry into the corporations application for a loan of $135,000 to construct and extend the pavillion and Winter Gardens. The pavillion, said Mr, Saxby, was totally inadequate to cope with the change of taste in entertainment, This year Margate has approved im- provements involving an expenditura of $1,500,000. ; A @% Be er Pipe Smokers! fill up with "GOLDEN VIRGINGA® 2 a rea good smoke! z YES MADE UP IN CIGARETTE TOBACCO Yor C, heap ed ands HINDS Horne 1% E~Alnrorid. CREAM WN BRA CORN SYRUP The famous energy -producin sweet --an easily invaluable for infants, growing children, and enjoyed gested foo. by the whole family. A product of : The Canada Starch Co., Limited 1 NaC Stand BEST Christmas Cake CAD AL | ( FOUR A LH j U CHRISTMAS CAKE -- Christmas : - dinner , . , a monster turkey, nuts, candies, paper hats which come from the gaily colored Christmas crackers -- and to bring to a conclusion the year's greatest feast--a Christmas Pudding and a FLOUR. You'll appreciate the high quality, the absolute uniformity of PURITY FLOUR in the season of Christmas baking. It's best for all kinds of baking. All baking made with it is marked by a distinctive, pleasing flavor, an even texture, good color and the other qualities which fill the housewife's heart with pride. Buy a bag today from your grocer, and keep only one brand of flour in your kitchen. ITY FLO made from PURITY } Radio "Thrilleys" Harmful to Child Removal of Programs Exploiting Crime ! Sydney, New South Wales Strong objection to radio "thrillers," mainly broadcast from American records and featured by the "B" class stations in Australia, has been taken by parents and educators on the ground of their bad effect on children. These stations, as distinct from "A" class stations, which obtain their. revenue from listeners' license fees, . subsist on revenue derived from advertising: . Most of the "thrillers" are sponsored programs. One of the most severe critics has been the New South Wales Director of Education, Mr. G, Ross Thomas, who, at a recent teachers' confer- ence, said: "We all deplore the thriller which is being put over the air, so often to the detriment of the child mind. I refer to the kind of entertainment which has as its background undiluted crime. : "The commercialization of serv- ices such as broadcasting frequently leads to a lowering of cultural standards. Such is the morbid inter- 'est created by broadcast thrillers that they are going to have a devastat- ing effect on the mind of the child, which is so plastic, impressionable and emotional. "This type of entertainment is handed out at a very unsuitable hour, when the small child is prepar- ing for~bed, and its older brother or sieter is settling down to homework, It is worse than sensational enter- tainment that comes in the form of literature, It comes through the ears and enters the mind of the child through the door of creative imagis- ation. "When we have all the vast field of good literature that could be ex- 'plointed for the development of hizh- er forms of thought and morals, it is a reflection on us that this kind of thing is tolerated, and that we "allw it to be meted out to children at. this particularly unsuitable time in the evening. "From an educational point of view, broadcasting is still in the very first stages. If it cannot be used to foster higher ideals of life, it would be preferable, so far as education is* concerned, - that broadcasting should be eliminated altogether." ll C ride World girls, Miss Peggy Robertshaw and Miss C. Davies, with a pedometer attached to the right leg, walk the prescribed distance and return to the factory and: hand in their pedo- meters and their bools and shoss. v * * * An 80-ton wooden steamer, with a Diesel engine, has just been launch: ed at Sydney. The vessel was built by Mr. Arthur Davis, eighty years of age, and his three sons. They us- ed timber felled from the bush ad- joining their house, and fashioned it with axes and adzes. . * * * "Swift as an eagle's flight" means -about-120 miles an hour, if the speed of .a. golden eagle observed in Scot- land may be taken as typical. ~The. eagle flew at that rate for about three and a half miles and gained 1,000 feet im altfad¥osw 0 : Painful Prospect (There is a report that the B.B.C. is about to start an official filing system for all jokes emitted by com. © edians at the microphone.) Brother, ere you crack that joke, Please consult the file; Haply some preceding bloke Wrung from it a smile, Do not trot it forth again When you "take the air"; Leave it in its little den, Docketed with care. Yet this cautious plan implies Points one cannot like-- As of jokes men used to prize Stuck upon a spike; Dusty jokes of vanished gents, Bygone and begloomed-- Jokes as Ancient Monuments, Scheduled and entombed. O I beg the B.B.C. To revise its scheme, Lest the jokes that used to be Vanish like a dream! Lest all jests are laid away, Gem as well as stumer, In one grim, official grey, Burial ground of humor! --Manchester Guardian November Hidden, the frolic and singing, Hidden the colorsome sway, Dignity steps from her clofster U N ( R U AN Silent, with garments of groy~-- Walks:down. a field way of tatters Echoes and. memories of pl Frowning, she beckons to Winter, Hastens the Wind on his way, ~Rena Chandlers, Two Liverpool girls earn their Tr living by walking twelve miles a day. They test new footwear. The So Declare Australians--Seek' ™% i ---- ig

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