West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 16 Nov 1922, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Canell CAT NERVIE INCT CURLOSPCNUSNCO _ “;h-. does not. Now, lr:x,a a plain business man, Mr. Griffithâ€"â€"" "You are!" the incorrigible youth hunxud "Very!" "And I‘m open to do a plain busiâ€" "Cut it out! A man who attom’phn to persuadle a young girl to leave her father‘s home at midwight has no ight to mind her being guarded from Lb cunning by her natural rrotoctor.” "Do you mind if I smoke? If I may be permittad to say so, Mr. Merryâ€" weather, you provide an interesting pchological study. I presume Kzur ::;gmm- does not know you ve tampered with her corresporlence?" "Indeed! gentlomen _ : &4 not occur "You made a most dishonest sugâ€" gestion to my daughter," "So long as 1 didn‘t ask her to open other people‘s lettersâ€"â€"" "Thet shows your power of thought is not as good as it might be. You know what was in that letter?" "Evidently you doâ€"â€"" "You made a most dishonest sugâ€" particular young man. "Inadvertently," said the host : merest flicker of a smile, "I op« the letter you sent to my davng this morning." ‘"We have not," said Merryweather grimly. "The only time I saw you was in the distance; you were kissing my daughter and made it your busiâ€" ness to alip away before I came up." "If I had known what a é}'.s{-nfi?ifi father your daughter had I shoul most certainly have waited." PART II. "We have not had the pleasure of meeting before, I‘m afraid," the man rakl as he stepped into the room. THE DEAL CICT & i)l!f nOW aMU ICC )qu \x,” ‘-Oup')n fOI" frce Mok men folks taste it. of tested Sunâ€"Maid recipes. Made with tender,thinâ€"skinned, _ Learn what you can do with meaty, seeded Sunâ€"Maid Raisins, _ luscious raisins. SUN.MAID RAISINS Get a pie now and let your men folks taste it. Once try tnese pies that master bakers bake fresh daily in your city and you‘ll neves take the trouble afterwards to make raisin pies at home. Baked to a turnâ€"â€"a flaky crust filled with tender, tempting raisins, the rich juice forming a delicious sauce. THERE are luscious raisâ€" in pies just around the corner, at your grocer‘s or a bake shop. tock of his opporent, ang | Stand **" Ambrose l\m-ywva'.hs:r Perfect sum & man up he wus“" ‘r?‘.;;':i-pi:t. far wrong. He used his Wel? to gauge his fellow men,| "Bluff, 1 taught himâ€"as it taught could you an than heâ€"that every disinherite price. What was worry. you could : + was the price of this| whom you ung man. \ deals! _ B ntly," said the host with‘ You‘d han r of a smile, "I opened brokenâ€"dow u_ sent to my danahter thing." Try these Bakers‘ Raisin Pies I t.hou’ht that among| "Then it‘s uch .* * * inadvertences in these thin â€"save baking at home Blue Package The Supreme Pie Raisin enjoy * Sunâ€"Maid Raisin Growers Membership 13,000 FRESNO, CALIFORNITA BY JOHMN 1 opened S_lyn-Msg’d Paisin Growers, Sraeer NAME.. Please send me copy of your free book, "Recipes with Raisins." Dept#. Nâ€"5833â€"7, Fresno, California. CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT pounds to clear out." "And desert your daughter?" "That is the proposition." "Supposing I were foolish enough to accept such an inadequate sum what guarantee have you that f ShO}xH abide ‘nyi nnS oontmct?”" "It isn‘t an equate sum," proâ€" tested Merryweather warmly. *And I should want you to sign a written statement that in return for the money you agreed never to see my daughbor again." in these things * * * I‘m sorry; I was atiempting to pay you a compliment." "I‘m a plain man, Mr. Griffiths." "Oh, don‘t keep on saying that * * * admitting obvious facts." "I‘m open to offer you five hundred pounds to clear ant*" broker thing.‘ you ¢c whom deals! "That I cannot admit," the young man replied with dignity. "Naturally, naturally!" the old man said. _ "There‘s no need to admit obâ€" vious facts. The position is, though, that if my daughter marries without my consent not one penny of my money will she have. _ You underâ€" stand ?" "I like a man who says what he thinks, Mr. Griffiths. I suppose you‘ll agree that it is not Gertrude Ann you want as much as her money." _ive hearda you were rather good at doing!" The graceless old scamp actually smiled. ness deal," the elder man continued imperturbably. "I‘ve heard you were rather good ANTHONY 0u 81 You may be offered© other brands that you know less well than Sunâ€"Maids, but the kind you want is the kind you know is good. Insist, therefore, on Sunâ€"Maid brand. ‘They cost no more than ordinary raisins. Also a fine content of foodâ€" ironâ€"good food for the blood. Use raisins frequently, thereâ€" fore, which are both good and good for you, in puddings cakes, cookies, etc. Raisins {irnish 1560 calories of energiziog nutriment per pound in practically predigested form. uff, my dear sir. Bluff. What you do with your money if you erited Gertrude Ann? Of course, ould return it to the people with i you have had plain business ‘__But that‘s very unlike you. have to found a home for nâ€"down taxiâ€"drivers, or someâ€" ude Anun will one day be alf a million," the young man ure you I am not bluffing o what, your naturally bad taste mar ..State make â€"v take a thouâ€" he old elf make poste I needn‘t tell you how important diet and fresh air are to the oilyâ€"hairâ€" ed woman. Indigestion, faulty elimâ€" ination, food that is too rich or stimuâ€" lating, all help to meke your hair look fust the wav it shouldn‘* The oily scalp isn‘t clawed. It‘s pinched into prettiness. Every night, no matter how tired you are, pinch all over your scalp with your thumb and forefinger. Be careful that you do not leave a single inch of the scalp unpinched. _ This has the effect of squeezing out all the surplus oil, and gives the glands a chance to rest and relax. U Minard‘s tin poo your hair in hard water. This always leaves the hair deadâ€"looking. Hard water can be softened by the adâ€" dition of borax or soda or a little lemon juice in the last rinsing water. But caution is necessary in using these things, as an excess of them defeats your purpose and brings back more oil than the shampoo takes away. \ly swing them in circles up and outâ€" | ward until they meet at the crown of the head. Stop and start all over | again. _ Do this for about five minâ€" utes. _ Clawing is another exercise , that causes your hair to gleam with lunexpect.ed lights, or, if it is gray, | gives it an attractive silvery glow. j’l‘his exercise is particularly designed ito persuade hair cells that are lazy to get up and do their work. | Before I tell you about the exerciss just designed for your kind of scalp, let us make sure that you really have oily hair. Too often soap is left in the hair after the shampoo. In a few days this residue of soap gives a greasy appearance. Or you may shamâ€" _ _ Whken your hair falls out easily and breaks off quickly, when the scalp is covered with a fine dustâ€"like dandruff that looks so untidy on a dark dress, then you want to do this exercise. Spread your ten fingers just as wide ‘as you possibly can and put them | right behind your ears, with the | thumbs at the base of the head. Slowâ€" natural oil for your hair. You look at the dryâ€"haired woman in envy when you start shampocing for the third time in one month. You never can keep the wave in your hair, and, no matter how much pains you take with your coiffure, it always breaks into strings and looks untidy. Stand your hands up on your finger tips. Put them right behind your ears and move your fingers backward and forward all over your head. being sure that you do not leave a new way to fool nature and have just the kind of hair you want. It‘s exercise for the scalp. Special kind of exercise for the dry, undernourishâ€" ed scalpâ€"other exercises for the oily, overfed scalp. The Nature â€" doesn‘t give 'everyone glossy, abundant and wavy hair. No, indeed; but modern science offers you This season Fashion has changed her mind about hats and hair and necklines. Hats still set down closely on the head, but a soft fluff of hair and the curve of a neckline must show somewhere beneath it. So if you want to make the most of your appearance, don‘t overlook your neck or your hair. helbipesdennite ol a | 70 wercome as a sonâ€"inâ€"iaw a man who, "There was a note for you, sir, on jn spite of his educational advantages, the dressingâ€"table. |really likes the excitement of being With unsteady hands he opened the a burglar. Perhaps you will apologize note she gave him and read: | to Mr. Griffiths for my using his "Dear Father: i \ name, but you rather forced it on me. "I discovered that you‘ve been at it Cheerio, and again thanks!" crain and have taken a letter which _ "Bother!" said Mr. Merryweatherâ€" ;‘..’ 2 Grit‘fith? sent to me. It is the or words to that effect. mank ademace EVISRpSRHRTEAANE COd Tred 2 "No, sir. Bed hasn‘t been slept in." Something was very wrong indeed. It seemed to the stern father that the room was going round. In the morning Gertrude Ann was not down when her father entered the breakfastâ€"rcom. Indeed, the second gong sounied before any sign of her. The maid whom Ambrose sent to her room returned with a :Kite, scared face. "Bez your pardon, sir," she "but che‘s not there!" "Not there?" ast straw. I have az'réfiEed with him "I hope we part as friends, Mr. Merrywesther," he said as he was going. "Even though you would mxt have me for a sonâ€"inâ€"law, you are splendi@ty prompt in your business affairs. It is reaXy a pleasure to have a litile deal with you. As we shall not meet again, I bid you farewell." But in spite of his words Ambrase Morrywo.ther did not like the grin on the young man‘s face as he went out through t‘ French window. bross Merrywoather, who had really expected to _ay a larger sum. "No, you won‘t!" said the young man. "Not f I know it. Notex." "Then you‘d better sit down whie I get them * * * ypou‘ve got the makâ€" ing of a bosincts man, Mr. Griffiths." Five minutes he returned and handâ€" e over the notes in return for the document in which the yourzg man agrecl never to see CGertruule Anue again. â€" “NO & # o# t in the ew!1 they compromised on eight hundred. m "ipx: "I‘ll give you a cheque," said Amâ€" bross Merrywoather, who had really Real Music Teachers point to the prog Woman‘s Sphere For Added Charm. ment for Diphtherra n himself well that is being noreoy Bobson «= his New Hite Remedy Company i wel) _ I8 Wosk Adsilalde 8t, Toronteo Duty is an alarm clock that causes some men to rise in the world. Others turn over and take another nap. "I wish I had a baby brother wheel in my goâ€"cart, mamma," small Elsie. "My dolis are always ting broken when it tips over." skirts, waists, coats, sweaters, stockâ€" ings, draperies, hangings, everything, become like new again. Just tell your druggist whether the matorial you wish to dye is wool or silk or whether it is linen, cotton, or mixed goods. Diamond Dyes never streak, spot, fade, or run. Buy "Diamond Dyes" and follow the simple directions in every package. Don‘t wonder whether you can dye or tint successfully, because perfect home dyeing is guaranteed with Diaâ€" mond Dyes even if you have never dyed before. _ Worn, faded dresses, Dye Any Garment or Old Drapery in Diamond Dyes But when you buy real jewelry the gratification lasts a lifetime. When you find a real music teacher the apâ€" preciation never wanes. _ The real teacher possesses a par-{ ental heart. He is interested in each student as an individual. The real! teacher does not cloak himself with a| mantle of superiority. _ He tries to| make the student feel at ease with him. Real music teachers are as rare| and as precious as exquisite jewelry. Cheap jewelry is easily accessible, so is the person holding a diploma. The one is supposed to be a piece of jewelry and the other is supposed to be a teacher. Both belong ill-t‘hé ;z;n;e category and deserve little credit. + ed a verp unselSed Jny ‘ranéering} ? what had Inspoened "The evearing post | s brought the colution in the form of a| : tyrpewr‘t‘en letter, wikhout address or | | signntore: | | _ *"Dear Mr. Merrywesxher: | °_ "I eannot refrâ€"in from writing to ; thank you for your exceedingly courâ€") tems resention of me last night. I% have never been welcomed so effusiveâ€". ly before. And the trouble you saved me! I should have had to force all! the tfocks of your siiehoard (I found‘ that they were locke] while you were ‘ upstzire getting the notes), and even , then I doubst if I should hive found |eigh kundred poun‘s‘ worth. And ri notes are s#so much handier, aren‘t they? I have never met Gertrude "A.rm, and I shall keep my contract with you to the letier and never see ber in the future After all, kind as| you were, I could hardly expect you‘ . to welcome as a sonâ€"inâ€"law a man who, | in spite of his educational advantages,| {really likes the excitement of being | a burglar. Perhaps you will apologize . | to Mr. Griffiths for my using his| \name, but you rather forced it on me.| One bottle for One Dollz: Six bottles for Five Dollar Mailed direct to customers made. He never tries to teach subâ€" jects or instruments of which he has a panoramic knowledge. He does not hesitate to admit his weakne > along lines foreign to his specialty. There is absolutely nothing belittling if, for example, a person says he cannot teach harmony and tells a prospective pupil to consult another teacher. Testimonial: Dear Sirs,â€"After suffering from Sciatica for over 15 years and spending money on medicine, baths, electric belts, etc., which did me no good, I was cured by using one bottle of your NEW LIFE REMEDY. ?'wer the phone to be here et elevenâ€" thirty, and as sson cs you go to bed I €m!} slip out. Don‘t worry. I shall _ ONTARIUVY Arundives TORONTO Nru ZHite prot twelve w‘hzn he came‘ to the dinimzâ€"rcom. SBurely she would not| bave allowed him to @winl‘e me! I‘m| cerlain she woclir‘t." Sudderiy he: romembered ihe sorod of the first motor, and knew that it might easily Lave been tht of the €cuing wu,n!e.i He wee commmcis‘ly purtled, and passâ€"| ed4 a wverp umse:Sed Jnry wondering| Do all right ard will let you know where we are soending the honeyâ€" Merrywoather to hims=?. "It was RAEUMATIC SUFFERERS Yours truly Somcthing Safe Remedy Babson Wm. Gilfay St. Hast.. ‘ (The End.) For l erze w ioronto iar ; ars. said get The cost of living 600 times in Austria. on the property of human hair of conâ€" tracting sharply on passing from wet to dry air, consists of & hair attached to a trigger that holds a ring. The instrument is sent aloft with toy balâ€" loons on a string; as soon as it reachâ€" es dry air thoe hair contracts, pulls the trigger, and down comes the ring on the string. HE postman or express man T bring Parker service righ your home. Whatever you sendâ€"whether ; suits, coats, dresses, lace curt; tapestry draperies, etc., etc.â€"wi beautifully cleaned by the Pa In the war which Spain carried on |against Morocco in 1911â€"1912, and ]whlch was principally an ambuscade | war, the Spanish officers, who are jgreat smokers, puiled cigarettes in orâ€" | der to kill time in the trenches. Someâ€" times it happened that three of them lighted their cigarettes with the same matclh. Now, in the course of time ithey noticed that at the first puff of smoke.escaping from the cigarette the Moroccan across the lines opened his eyes; at the second cloud he noted the place; at the third he fired. And often the smoker foll with a bullet in his forehead. This third smoker, made prudent, therefore took to blowing out the match. This quickly becrme a euperstition, which continued after the end of the war and later was passed Cleaning Measuring "og. The Parisâ€"London air service has an ingenious instrument â€" for measuring the depth of fog above above the startâ€" ing place at Croydon cr Abbeyville, and so to determins whether there is clear, dry weather a fow hundred feet up. The instrument, which is based supe end from This superstition now generally esâ€" tablished in the public‘s mind is said to bave had this origin: "Never light three cigareties with the same match," cried the third smoker, who immediately blows out the flame which you hbold before his nose, For he does not care to die in the course of the year. The Fatai Third PuG. 1 to France process and specdily re turned. Parker‘s Dye Works, Limited We pay carriage one ay on all orders. Write for Cleaners and Dyers 791 Yonge St. Toronto ‘ full particulars ‘e curtains, ete.â€"will be the Parker is increased asP i to The Meanest Man, The meanest man on record is said to live in Shrewsbury, Mass. He sold his sonâ€"inâ€"law one half of a cow, and then refused to divige the milk, mainâ€" taining that he sold only the front half. The buyer was also required to feed the cow and carry water to her three times a day. Recently, the cow hookâ€" ed the old man, and now he is cuing his sonâ€"inâ€"daw for damages. Remarkable Bird. The Hoactzin of British Guiana is one of the most remarkable birds in the world. Almost as soon as it is hatched the young hoactzin crawls out of the nest by using its wings as foreâ€" fect. The "thumb" and "forefinger" of the wings have claws with which the young hird climbs about the branches, As soon as the wings grow strong encugh to support the bird in the air the claws disappear. Minard‘s Liniment for Colds, etc. MENTHOLATED CHESEBROUGH MANUFACTURING COMPANY Is THE RELIRF from beadâ€" eche or neura!gic‘Falnl worth one cent to you? That‘s all it costs for an application of "‘Veseline" Mentholated Jelly, With the first indication of a headache rub a smell amount of it gentiy on the forshead and temples, So convenient, effecâ€" tive and economical} 1880 Chabot Ave. _ Montreal ‘or Nervous Hesdaches Vaseline PETROLEUM JELY L iet eHPAIN® Xo T MENTHOLATED | Trade Mark pir gard and tre and treat it? Are you your nerse come reagily to mind. Trave! in itself is worth whilo. The business man should be, and genorally is, a good ‘mixer. On the train of boat the good mixer soon meets mer and women worth knowing. The conâ€" sequence is a mental rejuvenation, or brushing up, that is good for any man, One thing is sure, the man who starts out to see Canada is pgoing to come home an enthusiastic believer in his own country and an optimist as to the future of his own business hshing grounds of New Br»u: the seafaring life along the s» the Muritime Provinces; â€"p Prince Edward Island; the app leys of Novs Seotia; the harbo beauty spots of St. Johrn and I â€"and these are only high spo: come readily to mind. Trave! in itself is worth whi business man should be, and po; is, a good ‘mixer. On the tra _ _The beauties of the Pacif ities and their parks, the Rocl Okanzgan and other BXC. vall« ‘prairics at harvest time, or i matter, at a time when the crc the drives around Winnipeg; th Lakes; the Muskoka lakes; the quin Park; the pastoral sce: Ontario; Niagara Falls, whirip rapids; the Niagara fruit distr Rideau; the Thousand Islan« drives around Toronto, Otta: Montrea‘!; the Parliament B: and the view from Parliame: the St. Lawrence and Saguena trips; old Quebec; the hunti fishing grounds of New B the seafaring life along the s» the Muritime Provinces; ; Prince Edward Island; the ap; leys of Novns Seotia; the harb beauty spots of St Inhr and 1 Do you regard your job as riend, knrowing that if you { it, it will iake care of y« ard and treat you as von One cannot know his market too intimately; and, as every one in bus ness in Canada knows, the distances here are great indeed and the divers ity of interests entail serious study to be fully undersiood. Travel In Itself Is Worth While, Apart from the purely business aspect of the matter, however, Canada offers to the touriet a wealth of places worth secing: For instance, how many business men in Canada know what towns are effected by drught in a certain district in the West? How many know what towns would be affected by a grea: increase in demand for Canadian paper and pulp? We all know that the needs of a customer in a manufacturing city like Windsor are very different to the needs of a prairie city like Saskatoon But to thoroughly understend, and to be in a position to answer any demand in these places, the business mar should visit these places and stndy each one in relation to the produc h manufactures. To understand men one should be familiar with the conditions under which they do business, To do this, one must visit the city or town where they do business.and get close enough to see in what ways conditions are different in one locality from another If you would build up a national business, you should know Canada; you should understand the d‘Terence in the viewpoints of the Woesterner, from that of the man in Ontario, the man in Quebec and the man in the Maeritime Provinces. AY It is an extraor{dirary thingâ€" nevertheless a factâ€"that thore are in the East generally many prominent business men who, year after year, do business with the West, yvet who have never personally visited it. They make frequent trips to Europe and to the United States, but when it comes to personally visiting the Western section of their country, they "pass it vp" in favor of some other trip. The T‘nited States slogan "See America First" might well be adapted to "Scee Canada First" by those business men who can, if they will, see more of their own country. The article referred to is as follows:â€" Under the above title, The Canedian Manufacturer, in the August issue, contains an article which is of parâ€" ticular interest to every Canadian business man. The Easterner who has not seen the West and the Westâ€" erner who has not seen the Eost are working under a severe handicap. Thet the Montreal business men are keenly aware of this fact is indicated in the recent tour of the Montreal Poard of Trade to the West, who had, as their guests, a number of British industrial men, members of Parliaâ€" ment and financiers. _ Knowle{se is3 power, and the soundest knowledge is tkat which is chtained directly by omeâ€" own ears eyes. WHY BUSINESS MEN SHOULD SEE CANADA become on the ground, heard w nno best 36 Ask Yourself. pains tak al appe: the r and keep them y 18 with one‘s one‘s own oY ¢1 the the 0 at n e a hy Ir

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy