West Grey Digital Newspapers

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

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

nty _ antiâ€"come roduces strong rnal menace to asemed much n censored disâ€" have been al rtain‘y Russta, estrous of win abroad, would s Inteornational to wholesale deed the Comâ€" ussian Govâ€" : to Unfor Action lature TTORIALS ACTORS advertise Times. 1 did you kn and munist img wp viet ofâ€" sh spy to the )0 a t Ni for The vigt U "Route No. 20 will carry the motorâ€" ist from Buffalo and then over a highâ€" Iy improved Canadian road to Deâ€" troit. The motorist who seeks a route to follow still farther westward may take No. 10, through Saginaw to Ludington, where Lake Michigan is erossed by ferry to Manitowoe, Wis., and then touc®2ag Minneapolis, Farâ€" go, Bismarck, Pillings, Missoula, to Boston.â€"Tourists of 1927 will be agreeably surprised at the improveâ€" wments in American highways since last year, according to a report made by the national touring board of the American Automobile Association, acâ€" cording to a Washington dispatch to the Christian Science Monitor. During the last year, according to the statement, additions to the Fedâ€" eral Aid System alone total 9,400 miles, bringing the aggregate federal aid improved highways to 55,903 miles. Equally important extensiong have been made to the state primary systems and, in particular, to the iamntenance of east and west and north and south roads. ‘ "An outstanding route because of: Its signifcance as a midâ€"continental connected highway from Atlantic City N.J.,. to San Francisco," says the reâ€" port, is U.S. Highway No. 40. This touches such important cities as Balâ€" timore, Wheeling, Columbus, Indianaâ€" polis, St. Louis, Kansas City, Denver, Salt Lake City and Reno. The entire length is 3,220 milesâ€"and the route il| paved throughout, from Atlantic City to St. Mary‘s, Kan., a distance of: 1,302.© West of St. Mary‘s the md-{ way is chiefly graded earth or gnvel,‘ except between Auburn and San Francisco, where there is a continuâ€" ous stretch of pavement. This route trosses the Great Salt Lake Desert over the Wendover cutâ€"off. i "Another United States route of imâ€". portance to the tourist is No. 20, from Atlantic City to Portland,.Ore., coinâ€" ciding with the Lincoln Highway beâ€" tween Philadelphia and Granger, Wyo. At ranger, Wyo., Route No. 30 divides into 30 North and 30 South, the southern branch going through Evanston to Ogden, Utah, while the northern â€" division _ continues hto' Idaho through Montpelier and Soda BSprings: At Pocatello the route folâ€" lows the Snake River rather closely and in Nebraska, Idaho, and Oregon it coincides with the old Oregon Seattis." Its signifc connected 1 N.J., to Sa port, is T. touches su« timore, Wh polis, St. L Salt Lake ( length is 3, paved thro to St. Mar 1,302.© Wes U.S. HIGHWAYS ARE EXCELLENT in UNIVERSITY man taking of from Morningside Meights for Madrid in two passenger biplane "The Spirit of 116th Street" would be glad to take Barnard girl for companionship; must be a young lady who is not afraid in the dark and who will not insist upon epocial midnight lunch while sool miles from Halifax in a thick fos IT WONT‘ BE LONG NOW The N.Y. Sun Offers the Folâ€" lowing as_LikAely to Appear ledge of dead reckoniln;;;eferred Write Mr. Woofle, 265 Spruce avenue COUPLE fiying from Chicago ‘to Naples during first week in July willâ€" Ing to take another young couple; must be congenial and furnish own sandwiches and letters of introducâ€" tion to American ambassadors. Phone Megglethorpe $235â€"Party J. PARTY of four business men, hopâ€" ping from Kansas City to Vienna, can accommcâ€"ate two other gentleâ€" men accustomed to flying through sleet storms; men with some knowâ€" 2oon in (Jur Papers GENTLEMAN going to Moscow by rirplane will consider taking party of two willing to share expenses. No children. Write, giving business and references. P. G. J., box 456. n tire â€" Transâ€"Continental Highway 3,220 Miles, Open to Traffic ITS TV n » Europe without your us move it over for you 52 minutes 11 seconds. ce N. Y.â€"Paris Moving tion New York ig empty; rporation ine ly w 0OGI in Cle hydr 1€ Ar 1C n PI lud W t ne from with her c:lps® We com con with m M ri i nd sible for 50,000,000 people to hear him. This company pays Americzn Teleâ€" phone & Telegraph Co. $1,500,00 yearly for use of its land wires. Price paid by National Broadcastinvy Co. for staâ€" tion WEAF, New York, formerly ownâ€" ed by American Telephone & Tele graph Co. was $1,000,000." "The Natibnal Broadcasting Co. will show a deficit of $800,000 in first year‘s operation," said President Aylesworth at hearing before Federal Radio Comâ€" mission. "The Naticnal Broadcasting Co. is owned 50 per cent. by Rario Corp. of America, 30 per cent. by Genâ€" eral Electric Co. and 20 per cent. by Westing Electric Co. Mr. Aylesworth has declared reads ‘Barron‘s Weekly‘ that eventually the company hopes to earn something and also plans to exâ€" tend its network to Pacific Coast and Northwest. He estimated that on days that Colonel Lindbergh was in Washâ€" ington a hookup arranged by the Naâ€" tional Breadcasting Co, made it pos St1 throt mail Red Rose Tea, now packed in the bright, clean Alumiâ€" num package, is completely guaranteed. You can try it without any risk. Order a package from your grocer. Use any portion of it and if you are not entirely pleased return it and no charge will be made. d medicine Trv T [ When a young girl becomes pale, complains of exhaustion at the least ’exenlon, has dizzy spells, headaches ‘or stomach trouble, she should know ‘th_at these are some of the many symptoms of anaemia, which means that her blood is thin and weak. In such conditions there is the most urâ€" gent need for a tonic that will promptly restore the missing qualiâ€" les to the blood and thus bring back health and strength. or this purpose {here is no tonic can equal Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills. Thousands of weak and ajling girls have found new strength and happiness through this medicine. Miss Gladys V. Bond, Kentâ€" ville, N.S., used this treatment sucâ€" cessfully, and says:â€""I cannot praise Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills too highly for the good they have none ame. If was in a cordition of vyery poor health, suffered from â€"severe head-! aches and nervousness. My appetite was poor, and very little exer'.lon| would leave me tired out. On the adâ€" vise of a friend I decided to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. In a fow weeks 1 began to feel better, my appetite . improved, and the headaches were loss frequent. I continued the use of the pills until I had taken six boxes,1 by which time I felt as weil as ever.| pounds t rnaen GAINED IN HEAELTH AND IN WEIGHT Now Gives All the Credit to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for naemia, rheumatism, neuraigia, nerâ€" ousness ard stomach trouble. Take iem as a tonic ard cultivate a resist nce that will keep you well anrd rong. _ You can get these pills irough any medicine dealer or by ail at 50c a box from The Dr. Wilâ€" ims Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Soldiers in Hospital Mothers and Infants Children in School The Sick in the Home Sufferers through Disaster Canadian Red Gross Society Succesoful Baking! & Please Send Your Contributions to It depends largely on the flour you use. We believe ou‘ll welcome this suggestion â€" try PuritK, the rich, vigorous i’lourâ€"madc from tgg finest Western wheat. Thousands of cooks say Purity Flour is best for cakes, pies, buns and bread. PURITY FLOUR Send 30¢ in stamps for our 700â€"recipe Purity Flour Cook Boock. 261 Western Canada Flour Millc Co. Limited. Toronto, Montreal, Ottews, Sainé John, WEAF Shows Loss 10 HON. TREAS. ONTARIO RED CROSS 410 Sherbourne St., Toronto 5 ime I felt as weil as ever, ined in weight from 98 114 pounds. For this reaâ€" e all weak girls to try this needs your support of its work for Canedian Coke for Canada Saint John ‘Timesâ€"Globe (Ind.): Since the last anthracite coal strike ;the use of coke in Massachusetts has increased by GJ per cent. Already there are rumors of another disagreeâ€" ment in the anthracite region. The extension of the coke industry in Canâ€" ada, which should soon be going forâ€" ward upon a great scale, should keep a great many millions of Canadian money at home, besides delivering this country from the dependence upâ€" on outside, fuel resources that are both costly and uncertain. Small boys are a nuisance to the neighbors. But then, neighbors are a nuisance to small boys. Some girls will go through anything for the right fellow, particularly an income. There is one good thing about a horse. You can buy one of ‘em withâ€" out any fear that the dealer will flood the market with a new model the next day. An carly vacation is advised in drâ€" der to give one plenty of time to reâ€" cuperate from it before going to work. The trouble with committee work is that nobody does any work. one torpedo after another that exâ€" ploded with a deafening sound while his little daughter sat near with her fingers in her ears. It is sweet to see fathers trying to give their children pleasure no matâ€" ter at what personal sacrifice, and we saw one Friday evening touching off Dost thou love life? Then do not squander time; for that‘s the stuff life is made of. Sweet Young Highâ€"Yallerâ€"Black Boy â€""You don‘t ‘zantly remind mo of silence yo‘ ownself." Negro Sheilk scream." Grooms are queer. They don‘t get mad if you kiss the bride, unless you do it a year or so before the cereâ€" mony. Do you know how to approach a girl with a past?" The price of some marked down goods seems to indicate that the merchant was standing on his head when he marked them down. _ "With a present." "How ?" QOWLâ€"LAFFS (On With Leughter) â€"â€" "Al, you sho‘ is a Johnsonâ€""I hear you are about to marry Miss Simpkins.. Now tell me â€"I am asking for my own guidanceâ€" what did you say to her when she mentioned the subject of marrying?" Biggsâ€""I simply said ‘Yes, dear.‘ " LAND HUNGER IN THE WEST Eager to file on certain blocks of land in the Burnt Land district, west of Red Deer, Alberta, theso three men, Johnâ€"Pohanson, Sergus Jorgenson and C. W. Long who already have farms in that district, took up their positions on the steps of the land office Monday morning, May 23, and remained there unt‘l the morning of June 8 when the land wae thrown open for filing: â€"A chilly northâ€"east wind making them shiver, they erected a shelter made from a carpet.within which they placed their bedâ€"rolls. C. W, Long was caught by the camera as he occupied the chair by the door on his tour of sentry go. They were not after the same piece of land and therefore worked in coâ€" operation, delievingâ€"each other for moals and during sicep hours. The phatoâ€" graph shows the ecgerness with which lond is snapped up along the lines of the Canadianâ€" Pacific Railway. I believe that the most important day in a child‘s life is the first.â€"Dr. W. A. Potts. More Than She Thought. Sheâ€""I don‘t believe you know anything about a wonderful extinet bird of New Zealand." Minard‘s Liniment for insect bites. Baby‘s Own Tablets accomplish all that castor oil and other badâ€"tasting remedies can do. In fact they accomâ€" plish more as they do not leave the child exhausted from its struggle against taking medicine. They reâ€" lieve teething pains, banish indigesâ€" tion and constipation, break ‘up colds and simple fevers and promote healthâ€" ful, refreshing sleep. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Baby‘s (Own Tablets are the modâ€" ern substitute for these nauseous doses. They are the very medicine the child requires and are so pleasant to take that they are as easy to adâ€" minister as a glass of water. They are the perfect remedy for all the minor ailments of little ones, being absolutely guaranteed from injurious drugs. Mothers, do you think it fair to torâ€" ture your little ones by forcing them to take illâ€"tasting oils when they need a laxative medicine? Don‘t you find that the child‘s dread of these mediâ€" cines often do more harm than good? WHY TORTURE THE LITTLE ONES Heâ€""I know more than you think." THREE YEAR CLD IMMJGRANT » This is little James Mclecd not much more than three years old, who jJourneyed all the way from Coseley, Etaffordshire, England, to Rainy River, Man., a distance of some 4,000 miles. He travelled alone and joined his parents in Rainy River who have not seen him for two and a half years. The photo shows him being looked after by Captain M. Doyle, Master of the Cunard liner "Andania" which brought the little fellow to Canada. "Let‘s see ... Did 1° ‘Da, deâ€"de, da, this old gray ra, but da, re, daâ€"da flag, she said.‘ You‘re quite right, Laura. Don‘t look it upâ€"I know it perfectly. Only give me half on that one. I took too long to deserve full credit. . . Ask me another." "That‘s not all! You left out: ‘she said ‘" "Isn‘t that aggravatin®» and I know it just as well? ‘Da, deâ€"de, da, deâ€"da, da, da, but spare.‘ Hm. hm. ‘Old gray head, but spareâ€"‘ What‘s the noxt word, Laura? Don‘t give it awayâ€"just the next word." "‘â€"you country‘sâ€"‘** " ‘Fleg‘! ‘Your country‘s flag‘ Of courseâ€"now I‘ve got it! Well. If that jen‘t perfectly ridiculous! ‘Shoot, If you must, this old gray head, but spare your country‘s flag.‘ It‘s one of my favorite war poems too. . . . How perâ€" fectly stupid not to remember it at once "‘Shoot, if you must, this old gray head, but spareâ€"‘* ! "‘Shoot, if you must, this old gray head, but spareâ€"‘ * ’ "Oh, my dear! How perfectly dumb of me! Of courseâ€"by Francis Scott Key! ‘Shoot, if you must, this old gray head, but spare the six hunâ€"dred.‘ I know it all the time. , . . It‘s not right! It‘s by Whittier? Ob, well, Whittier, that‘s different." ,"‘Shoot, if you must, this old gray head.‘ ‘Old gray headâ€"old gray head.‘ Now let me think. . . . Funny, it‘s right on the tip of my tongue ... Oh! I beâ€" lieve It‘s from ‘The Charge of the Light Brigade‘! The next line is: ‘someâ€" thing, something, deâ€"da, deda, six hunâ€"dred.‘ Just give me a hint." "Oh. Yes. Now wait just a second, Laura. . . , ‘Shoot, if you mustâ€"shoot, if you mustâ€"‘ I know it has something to do with the war. Now, just let me think a secondâ€"I can‘t quite place it. You say Edward Hope got 78 on this one? . . . Oh! Of course: ‘and never brought to mind.‘ It was right on the tip of my tongue all the time! No? ... How stupid of me! But I know what ‘and never brought to mind‘ is from. That‘s a line from Invectus, What was it again, Laura?" ,"Give me the next line after: ‘Shoot, if yo must, this old gray hear.‘" " ‘Shoot, if you must‘â€"what?" " ‘Shoot, if you must, this old gray hear.‘ What‘s the next line?" THIS CHILD KNOWS THE ANSWERâ€"DO YOU? _ ¢+# â€"Jack Cluett. I‘d rather have a big fellow any day in the week than one of these sardine ball players. â€"â€" Wilbort Robingon, Brooklyn Nationals, I do not mind saying "damn" myâ€" self, for one bas to call a spade a spade sometimes.â€"The Archdeacon of Bedford. Keep Minard‘s Liniment near at hand The active irritants contained in pills, purgatives and laxatives, gomâ€" bined with their only partial relief, caused Dr. Robert Boll to soundly [condemn their uso as being injurious and dangerous. The method of curâ€" ring constipation without drugs is disâ€" closed in the las book presened to the writer by Dr. Bell, whose advice is quoted in the writer‘s copyrighted diectary which is mailed without charge toâ€"every Canadian and American purâ€" chaser of the English home Cancer treatment. Detailed information conâ€". cerning this treatment 4s also freely mailed on application to Charlea, Waliter at 51 Brunswick Avenue, Toâ€" ronto 4, Ontario, Canada.â€"(Advt. ) | heaith preservation and the substituâ€" tion of what have been truly described as "foodless foods" which create a superabundance of acids in the human body, resulting in the new. practically universal complaint of constipation that is the inevitable forerunner of Cancer and also of nineiy per centum of all civilization‘s physical maladies. Countless <thankful patients living!""- Alex toâ€"day mourn the passing in 1926 of| w 43 the author of the above quoted words | HOR« ,;};( and if Dr. Robert Bell‘s profoundly | date, and considered warning is now heeded, it | Y*!%,,,, \\ is possible for the public to renderfs(.m.m # the devastating Cancer Scourge a| =â€"â€"â€"=â€"= mere matter of history, _A & l Civilization‘s diet is responsible for depriving the public of the abundantly provided organic salts essential to That celebrated British eurgeon and cancer authority, Dr. Robert Bell, M.D., FRFP.S., &¢c., voluntarily sacrificed his highly lucrative surgical practice when, after long years of exhaustive research and practical experience, he nobly published the following stateâ€" ments of vital import to the cancer stricken civilized world:â€""Cancer is a blood disease and its breedingâ€" ground is the colon. Neither Xâ€" rays nor radium has ever cured or will ever prove of service &s a cure for Cancer. From my knowleige of the disease I affirm that the knife hos never cured Cancer in a single inâ€" stance; but, on the contrary, has only succeeded in aggravating the discease and adding to the sufferings of the poor patient." Mackintoshes of waterproofed art silk embossed with crushed glass form one of the senations of the manneâ€" quins‘ parade. y This year‘s exhibition also sees the inclusion of "imitation" glass printing on artificial silk, but in the form of erushed glass, embossng and beading. The secret of "imitation" glass beâ€" longs to Dr. Pollak, of Czechoâ€"Slovaâ€" kia, who is now the director of an English company turning out the glassâ€" printed fabrics. An innovation at this year‘s show is the artificial silk furs which successâ€" fully imitate anything from fox to leopard skin. Velvets, plushes and the finest lingerie silks are now made from paper with the help of chemicals. London women of all classes are} now wearing artificial silk ntocklngs.i which are indistinguishable from the| "natural" kind and cost less than half | the price for natural ones of similar, durability, ] The second annual Artificial Silk Show, now arousing great attention here, proved that the new processes have eliminated this feature successâ€" fully, and many of the satins and crepes shown there are mistaken for natural silks. The secret of the recent boom in arâ€" tificial silk is the fact that manufacâ€" turers have succeeded in taking the peculiar sheen out of their product which formerly brandmarked it es "imitaticn." Londonâ€"Artificial silk is displecing the genuine article in England to such an extent that artificial silkâ€"making is now one of the leading and most proâ€" fitable industries in the country, Artificialâ€"Silk Trade Boomed by Process; Een Furs and Velvets Are Success fully Imitated Saw$ Something, Anyway How to Avoid Cancer Rayon Popular / |experience . _cure for| sells itâ€"f. ge of thelz(m Bay & knife hcai ;“‘T“ single inâ€"| Moo: , has only | 509 6th A TORONTO VWGMAIECV L J§q SENTonakQucsr \ Tells cause of cancer and what to do |\for pain, bleeding, odor, etc. Write for | it toâ€"day, mentionits this paper. Ad« dress Indianapolis Cancer lospital Indiarapolis, Ind. Aleohol presorve not confidential i: CANCER HOROscCoPE date, and $1â€" ysls. Write ASTROLOG Y Now I have three girls an\ a boy and have done my work vp to confineâ€" ment. I am now at the Change o° Emowe x{!)' gno«uuulds wtyd l‘ ‘kham‘s V egeiuble Compound. take a bottle wxl)xen 1 think I llmei it,"" â€"Mrs. Susan DaÂ¥nmiXx, 22. i. No. 5, Colborne, Ontario. Â¥ Bold by crupggist» everywhee. 0 medicine advertised, so I told my huâ€" band that I thought I would try i;, that I might get some relief. I had not talen one bottle when I could fecl it helping me. 1 took five bottles and hod bctter health. me, but my husband was o 1 Tint. Ihad seen Lydia L. Piikhan AVOIDED AN OPERATION Asthma. Classified Advertisements Spread Minard‘s and apply to the hale. Quick rel Dancer 6.Anjurious Cooking Method: Common Errors in Diet 7. Elements jof Food. 8. Medical dorsements of Our Claim. 9 Chief Minerals of the Body. The Thymus Gland. 11. Age N lime Begins to Accumulate. Potessium Causes Lime Exere 18. Great Value of Potassium Parts of the Bodv Lish\s 1. The Limitations of Surgery Some Doctors Oppose Operatior 3. What ‘;‘:‘;;l;e;"."l“l:w 4‘.’“‘:;1‘;“ the M)‘Y _CELLS BREAK Dbown This book will be sent free to pationts or any one who is interâ€" ested in the most suocessiul meâ€" thod of fighting "THBE CANCBER soOURCE." * The following is a list of the chapters: a remarkable book has been spe clally written.s the cells . (;)_‘b; come malignant A wellâ€"known London Surgeon and recognized authority on Canâ€" cer hus created worldâ€"Wide interâ€" est in the discovery that Cancer is due to a deficiency of |polumlum "salts" in the body, which causes In order that every one may learn Great Sucess of Cantassium Treatment The Real Cause of ad $1â€"â€"witll Write todw ISSUE No. £7â€"‘27. Station. NEV uses Lime Exers e of Potassium. e Body Liabl arts \\'%Ich Are â€" 16. How a D break down and be URSELE ur name | bring c inf chilt.} but J did, and brog) the time my ba came 1 uu(fereg all the time and doctored took med:â€" . Life became a bezden, and docâ€" tors said an on:r- eould hci> weak. The doctor eaid I was weak and would never be able to have a FREE BOOK on brown throat."" 7 BLIN4 INSTIT lox 141 it AEE 01 eould help ; Wms o 3 'Du h\;;- t oul‘-g'y M > _ relief, I . tle when I Ri Avoid m 1 Ki iml 21 tion Agg Dt itad 14 10 11 me®s

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy