West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 3 Feb 1927, p. 7

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Do you dress fish or just clean ‘em? There‘s a vast Mfference. A properly dressed fish is attractive to the eye ind proves far more appetizing when serve1 than one that Iust got cleaned th« Kans, Wipe ( the #JI Only th claim adva Federal D« Hon. W. Agri from mnt e han Marquis. een very satist M W1 Garnet Wheat Lives Up to | Expectations. | M ever, the flour betf not & #@T its leaves. ter show of line an edge of t twist of th reach of tre its f Agricu point. _ A8 drooping © fect of the the horse < th th reach of the sycamore, the irregular or unbroken fork of the neglected apâ€" ple and cherry are illustrations to the point. That we oftener admire the drooping olm, or the spreadâ€"broom efâ€" fect of the maple or the round ball top of the horse chestnut, proves merely that our range of vision is limited. Still even thesoâ€"the commonest trees of the lawn or the pastureâ€"will have a pecullar beauty which only winter can fully reveal to us. The beech is alâ€" ways admired for its beautiful bark, but is it ever so beautiful in texture, so distingnuished in color, as in midâ€" winter? A few dull gold leaves clingâ€" ing here and there and streaming with the wind seem to accent the silvor trunk. Gold and silver and white, with blue overhead! What a colorâ€"scheme to baffle a Whistler withal! One «annot forget what Corot made out of the common brookâ€"willows at Ville d‘Avray, and what pictures Monet produced with Lombardy popâ€" lars shivering in the wind.â€"From "The Mewdlows," by John Van Dyke. Ext In some deep mines it is mecessary to place blocks of ice in the ventilat ing «hafts tor cooling purposes. iC From CU How to Dress Fish. rnet h il Mot! L &n where » care for your fish as soon move them from the hook. h to string your jake spocies iss and pickerel do it properâ€" pass the string through the â€" drowns them. Rather, pass ing needle through both lips. uls manner a figh will Hve and swim around the boat off B The Artist‘s Trees. one piece. have removed these orâ€" i any blood that may apâ€" i damp cloth. Stuff the ity with grass or fern. But water under any creumâ€" ts action on flesh quickly nposition. Wrap the trout t otled paper and place it A 10 $2,004 the «p« ber delicate fAish requfml on If you would Ircep, condition for the pan. t at once by striking lt‘ n the head with a knife" your trout to retain its m as much as possible don‘t shit it down the ally done. Instead, Jjust Vâ€"shaped plece of flesh n front of the trout‘s which will separate the head but allow the head the fish,. Now you can is and you will find that mach and intestines will irvested 64 it T fings off such fish as y weakish and other ies. If you use a hom off close to the it of Ag on c.0s@e 10 U ‘he fin bones | arp ends in t! mc k h rp ends in 1 offenders t he grain, satd that it had a oloring. Howâ€" s bleached the that this was ng nt of view, & ig stripped of inches of winâ€" reveal beauty strong, coarse the angular . the rambling 1bt io phi doct« fiw«, Department it on the 12 ishels to the of his crop M VA od every &T the a®t ce is so ng very is come on St€ reports w Garâ€" hu hit ) have emain ouble. Ou there to the 1 batk ulture lhel The most fatefu! years in a woman‘s ass | life are thoso between fortyâ€"five and ips.| fifty.â€" Many women enter this term Hve under depressing conditions; through roat |overwork, worry, or a watery condition of the blood, and they suffer heavily. wire Among the commonest symptoms eep | are headaches, palpitations, dizziness, pan. t backaches, depression and other well g it | recognized disturbances of the health nife? which show that the blood requires arher the 41 ‘FATEFUL YEARS . | . FOR ALL WOMEN : n# ill Much Suffering Can be Avoided Through the Use of Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills. | vousness. Take them as a tonic if 'yuu wre not in the best physical conâ€" |ditton and cultivate a resistance that [ will keep you well and strong. You | can get these pilis through any mediâ€" ;dne dealer or by mailyat 50 cents a box | from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., ‘Hnu-hllle, Ont. attention. Women stand in need of rich red blood all their lives, but never more so than at middle age, when the nerves are also weak and overwrought. In this condition there is no other medicine can do so much for women as Dr. Willlams‘ Pink Pilis, for these pills make rich, red blood, which gives tons to the whole body, thus restoring robust health. Thousands of Canaâ€" dian women have proved the value of Pr. Williams‘ Pink Pilis in cases of this kind. Among them is Mrs. J. H. Johnston, Lion‘s Head, Ont., who says: â€""I am writing to let you know the wonderful good your pills havte done me. | was a complete wreck, and wou!ld faint if I crossed the room. 1 wis goâ€" ing through the change of life, and was so weak I could not do my work. 1 went to Toronto, when my folks said nothing but an operation would helip me. But I said: ‘No, Dr. Wiliams‘ Pink Pills helped me in girlhood, and I am going to give them a trial‘ I took the plils steadily for a monthb, 1 delve Every delve And takes, To see the And measu When I rec Thereafter, 1 may ® And sp€ Which ® .ve in a treasury wide as air found in it got everywhere. uwia, rheamatisn gUCKLEY§ Dissolve two "BAYER TABLETS OF ASPIRIN‘ in four tablespoonfuls of water and gargle thoroughly. Swallow some of the solution. Don‘t rinse the mouth. Repeat gargle every For two hours if necessary. This is an effective gargle proved safe TON%IHS by millions and prescribed by physicians. onmDtP OW Lt Accept only "Bq er" cYEFLF* L V package, Look for THROAT the ‘Bayer Cross." Handy "Bayer‘" boxes of 12 tablets. Also bottles of 24 and 1060â€"Druggists. Aspiria is \hg trade mark ( registered in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticâ€" u“‘“"umn:&’"‘“.é::&‘&““sn?‘%“u Auslic keainet imitations the Tabists o1 Bayer Company Wbo st w‘x& their ‘l'on:nl umg‘thq -;'m: C:os:." Acts like a flashâ€" a single sip proves it 517 Of nk Pi Wilha puts more it leaves Speech. leaves ail. echâ€"hoard of its demesne "Let there , as opals in all speech t which glin hi steadily for a month, home a well woman, my work with ease. y it‘s a wonder I am _1 went through, and to eay I believe Dr. Pills saved my life." iams‘ Pink Pills for atisin, neuralgla, nerâ€" ery where. Webster Merrishew m € As All 1 begin all time sublime be light,‘ my sight ) know, t shone For speech e for yould eech Man‘s first dreams of fiying a* * sumed wings of some kind attached to his shoulders like those of a bird. The unfortunate Jcarue devised wings like that, and Leonardo da Vinci, learned engineer ‘as he was, still thought of wings fastened to a man‘s body as the oniy means of keeping him buoyed up in the air. The airâ€" plane is a different kind of invention. It has wings indeed, but the wings aro part of an enginedriven machine in which the fyer sits. Nevertheless, in | ventors &re still tryinrg to find a way‘ to riake man himself the fiying creaâ€" ture and not a mere passenger. An| Australian engincer, Anton Lnatsch by' name, has contrivel a machine to be| fastened to a man‘s shoulders, flttedl with batJike wings to sustain his weight and driven bya gasoline engine ! which rests against the man‘s back. Two helicopter screws peep up over the fiyer‘s shoullers, and they are inâ€" tended to enable him to rise quietly and almost vertically into the air. The apparatus weighs only eightyâ€"eight pounds, and Herr Lutsch hopes to reâ€" duce that weight by twenty pounds by substituting aluminum for tron whereâ€" ever possible. He says the machine can be built for about $100. Here where the rotting corduroy Wanders aloug the swampy places Wanders as well a lonely boy Berrice are bright along the swale; Bright on the hills the Autumn burne. * o Silence is heavy on the trail That leads to nowhere and returne. IS THERE A BABY _ IN YOUR HOME? The trail returns; and the lad, returnâ€" ing, Softly smiles as over the hill Nightfall carries the ancient, yearnâ€" ing, Rapid cry of the whippoorwill. He comes to the lighted homes of :1 With quiet in his heart at last, Never, never to walk again The ruined roadways of the past Is there a baby or young children in! your home? If there is you should not: be without a box of Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets. Childhood ailments come quickâ€" ly and means should always be at hand to promptly fight them. Baby‘s Own Tablets are the ideal home remedy. They regulate the bowels; sweeten the stomach; banish constiâ€" pation and indigestion; break up colds and simple feversâ€"in fact they relieve all the minor ills of little ones. Conâ€" cerning them Mrs. Moise Cadotte, Makamik, Que., writes: "Baby‘s Own Tablets are the best remedy in the world for little ones. My baby sufferâ€" ed terribly from indigestion and vyomitâ€" ing, but the Tablets soon set her right and now she is in perfect health." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25¢ a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. > ,,47“ irro ie An Old Superstition. When the month of January begins on Saturday, says an old superstition, the winter will be very open, with some frest; the summer will be hot and pleasant; the harvest moderate. Garden herbs will be damaged; hemp, flax and honey will be plentiful. Ourâ€"National Anthem has been in use for nearly two centuries. Looking his last on phantom faces The Bird Man. | â€"_How to Tell a Classic. Old Roads. â€"A. K. Laing men In literature the word classic was originally limited to Greck and Latin prose and poetry. It has now come to mean any plece of literature whose quality is such l(Kat it has survived forâ€"filty or a hundred years and is by common consent regsrded gs so good as to be permanent. A HMicrary classic shouk rossass one or all of the followâ€" No one gemeration can determine what clasetcs it is producing. The final judgment murst and will be proâ€" nounced by succeeding generations. Walt Whitman and Lincoln were lookâ€" ‘ml on with contempt by many of their most highly educated contemporaries. | And yet Whitman‘s "O Captain! My |[Captain!" and Lincoin‘s Gettysburg ‘Speerh will live as long as the Engâ€" lish language lives. Nor does # classic have to be "highâ€" brow stuff." 1f it is a genuine intelliâ€" ; gent and witty picture of a certain |aspect of society, even a bestâ€"seller 'u‘.n) becoms a classic; although I am bound to #ay that most of our modern |bestâ€"sellers have very Mtitle chance of iachieving this immortality. Artificlal | aund pretentious writing never makes a | classic. Sincerity, . simplicity, and | spontaneity are qualities that every | true classicâ€"whether in music, paintâ€" |\ing, pross or poetryâ€" possesses; all | others . pretending to the titles are | counterfelt«s. _ Net nobody hoodwink | you into supposing that the classics fm pompous, stilted, and boresome. If ‘they were, nobody would read themâ€" not even your teachers and professors. ‘â€"â€"Lawrence F. Abbott in The Outlook. 1. It should refect 1 thought and the customs of its time. The travels of Herodotus, the dlaâ€" logues of Socrates, and the nove‘ls of Jane Austen are examples. 2. It should te written in a beautiâ€" ful and striking style. Lincoln‘s Gettysburg Speech is an example. 3. It shou‘d @pring from and appeal to a cultivated imagination. The poems of Keats are an example. 4. It should be a contribution to the thought of the world and should stimuâ€" late the thought of the world. 5. It shoult possess _ & universal human interest end express all phases of human experience. The essays of Ralph Waido Emerson are an example, The Q!d Testament and Shakeâ€" speare‘s plays are examples. | Lay the plece under the hole to be mended, darn it down all round on the rigkt side and cut away superfluous ‘materlal. Do not cut too closely, howâ€" J ever, and if possible press with a cool ‘dron after washing. A Practical Hint for Children‘s Socks and Stockings. Always try to mend the children‘s socks and stockings before they are washed. This applies also to all stockâ€" ings, but it is specially necessary where there is a large weekly basket of mending. Where there is a family of boys the inevitable footballâ€"stockings will reâ€" quire much attention. _ It is a good plan to ravel the leg of an old stockâ€" ing in order to mend the others with that yarn. _ Sometimes a patch cut from the foot will effectually transâ€" form a hopelessly large hols in the heel to a neat and successful mend. Great care should be observed in washing children‘s little white woolen socks, for they should not be allowed to get smaller and smaller as will cerâ€" tain‘y happen with careless washing. Nash them quickly, one at a time, in warm (not hot) wuter with soap lathâ€" er. Only when necessary to remove some stain from a brown shoe or from mud splashes should the soap be rubbed on them. Rinse them in water about the same temperature, softened with a shake of soap. Then squeeze out the water, never wring it out with a twisting motion of both hands, and finally squeeze it in a towel. When all are ready ~to dry, hang them up by the toes, each one sepaâ€" rately, in a draft or in a warm place, but never beforé a hot fire. See that the sock hangs in the shape of the gock as worn, not as folded when new. Endeavor to stretch each one, while drying, from heel to toe; if possible, do it several times. Pull hard. This will keep its original shape and one will be surpriged â€" at the increased length of usefuiness obtained thereby. There are no warblers on the boughs, No robins in the grass; But there are songs within our hearts That will not pass. There are no leaves on bush or tree, The roses prostrate lie; But there are hopes within our breasts That will not die. Bo let the tempest wreak its will On forest, field and bower: My house of dreams will hold me safe, With love‘s bright flower. â€"Thomas Curtis Clark. Warm for Early Risers. j With the cold weather, students in the dormitories at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have designed several automatic devices for closing windows and turning on the steam heat about a half hour before rising time. One of the most ingenious plans is a switch, operated by clockwork, closing the hbouse current circuit through two stoves, one of which has a pan of cercal upon it, the other a cofâ€" fee pot. Minard‘s Liniment for animal ailments reflect the Song. a" mode . of 1 manners Angus Knew. The London newspapers like to tell funny stories about the countrymen from the north of Scotland, who come down to enjoy the sights of the great city; and the Scots are too fond of a joke themselves to mind it. Here is one from Sunbeams: Two Highlanders were on a visit to London when a watering cart passed them in the street. Donald was very much excited and shouted at the top of his voice, "Hey, mon! Yer losin‘ all yer water." Angus turned to Donald and said, "Hoots, mon! Dinna show yer ignorâ€" ance. That‘s just tae keep the bairns frae hingin‘ on behind." When Lord Grey of Fallodon was threatened with total blindness, he learned to read Braille, and even now, with his eyesight much improved, he still finds Braille books useful. "One can turn out the light,‘ he eays, "draw up the sheets, and literally read one self to sleap." |\ Instantly! Stomach corrected! You \never feel the slightest distress from indigestion or a sour, acid, gassy stomâ€" ach, after you eat a tablet of "Pape‘s Diapepsin.‘ The moment it reaches the stomach all sourness, flatulence, heartburn, gases, palpitation and pain disappear. Druggists guarantee each | package to correct digestion at once. \End your stomach trouble for fow Covering 17,300 square miles, Canâ€" ada‘s new national game preserve has been named Wood Buffalo Park. Alâ€" ready it contains nearly 6,000 bufâ€" faloes. This park is half the size of Seotland. _ Doctors vouch for Minard‘s Liniment When you get that tired, lag-emedown-and-die feeling take 15 to 30 drops of Seigel‘s S‘ym{g in a glass of water. Does the trick and safely. You‘ll teel like new. When you get that tired, layâ€"meâ€"downâ€"andâ€"die cents. PUT STOMACH IN ORDER AT ONCE "Pape‘s Diapepsin‘"‘ _ for Gas, Indigestion or * Sour Stomach A Tip for the Sleepless. Women of Canada Pay Striking Tribute to Aluminum â€"â€" â€"â€"the Modern Metal Saint John OoNTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO T. H. Estabrooks Co., Limited I “ROM Windsor, Ontario, to Hudson‘s Bay, from Halifax to the Rockies, RED ROSE TEA within the last few weeks has scored an extraordinary increase in sales. It is because we have stopped using paper packâ€" ages, and are again packing this finest of teas in the old, familiar Aluminum package of years go. The reception it has been given demonstrates beyond all doubt that housewives of Canada recogâ€" nize Aluminum as the perfect container. For more than thirty years we have been experiâ€" menting with packages â€"trying lead, paper and Aluminumâ€"seeking always a material that would protect and be worthy of Red Rose quality. But it was only after Red Rose has been offered to the public in all these packagesâ€"first lead, then Aluminum, then paperâ€"that the great advantages of Aluminum were proven. Aluminum keeps out moisture, preserves the flavor and protects the quality. Paper packages, on the contrary, absorh moisture which occasionally impairs the quality. So now and in the future RED ROSE TEA will be packed in the Aluminum package, as it was in years gone by. Toronto _ Soldier Settlers Prosper in _ Classified Advertisements. Further evidence of the prosperity ‘_'_lz"lâ€"‘ltrof.k 87 of Western Canada is to be found in Â¥ INET, plays a the collection statement of the Solâ€" tions, automatic. dier‘s Settiement Board, recently is $35.00 guaranteed, sued. ‘Royal %nf, Montr From October to Jan. 7 last collecâ€" tions amounted to $2,394,653.07. Colâ€" lections in the corresponding period of 1925â€"26 totalled $2,206,851.90,. This shows an improvement of $188,000, which is considered remarkably good by the department officiale. About $4,000,000 falls due annually. It is pointed out that these payâ€" ments have been made on the existing capitalization. ‘The legislation of 1926 never received Royal assent. ‘notwithstanding‘?" a small boy reâ€" plied; "Daddy‘s britches are all glazy at the back, notwithstanding." _ In answer to the question: "Can you give a sentence with the word Plans For Homesr Winnipeg Calgary Edmonton |1 BAD COLD? TAKE "CASCARETS" FOR BOWELS TONICHT *4 and ligh or spare time any distance stamp _ for Manufacturi: (‘RATI§~ "LITTLE FRIENI! K aither csox> mailed in nlain l?ARM ENGINESâ€"USED, Gt condition, cheap, 1% to 15 Boat engines, 3 to 35 h.p. Get . Engine _ repairing done. . Guara Motor Co., Hamilton, Canada. Get a 10â€"cent box, Sick headuche, biliousness, coated tongue, head and nose clogged up with a coldâ€"always trace this to torpid liver; delayed, formenting food in the bowels or sour, gassy stomach. Poisonous matter clogged in the inâ€" testines, instead of being cast out of the system is reâ€"absorbed into the blood. When this poison reaches the delicate brain tissue it causes congesâ€" tion and that du!l, throbbing, sicken» ing headache. Cascarets immediately cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested food and fou! gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out all the constipated waste matter and poigons in the bowels. A Cascaret toâ€"night will surely straighten you out by morning. They work whils> you sleepâ€"a 10â€"cont box from your druggist means your head clear. stomach sweet and your lver und bowe‘ls regular for months. 592 I am sure we can never be wis« our own wisdom.â€"Montaigm, : No headache, constipation, bad cold or sour stomach by morning e nmvee epnprsn ncmnd + +s 4n( > @24 us e 0 ; ADIES WA NTE JICTROLA STYLE, FULL either sex Paris Sn« GRAMOPHONE 188UE No. 5â€"â€"‘27. ariled in plain « ty Co., Montre nose clogged trace this 1 rmenting foo assvy stomach 1 records, 48 ; Value $95.0( Poissoa, 340 N , 1% to is h.p 35 h.p. Get lists done. â€" Guarantes alars. Montre PO Do J at homs nur, . We for int el

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