West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 16 May 1929, p. 7

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Bogs, )me i by â€"fog The ibt De ist M nt 1@ 3t es RBinks: So you are to be oporltod" on, eh? Jinks: Yes doec said he: wants to take out my appendix, but I think what he really wants to get nt; *f me is a new car. â€"â€" & Is it, for instance, to be held that & child born in Turkey of Canadian born parents is a Turk? It does seem that United States is beat on defining what is a Canadian in spite of Caraâ€" dians. Court apparently holds that all Canaâ€" dian citizens are either nativeâ€"born or naturalized.) There is, however, a third category neither nativeâ€"born nor naturalized. This is by no means numâ€" erically small. It is composed of Britishâ€"born Canadians whose birthâ€" place happens to be outside Canada, but not in a "foreign‘ country as the term is understood and used in the Dominion. That theso are in a class separate from the foreignâ€"born is evidenced by the fact that they need no naturalization, being already Britâ€" Ish. _ It is dificult to accept birth place as the sole gauge of nationality. Saint _ John _ Telegraphâ€"Journal (Ind.): (The United States Supreme in plenty of strawy manure, leaves, wasto garden material or even a light drossing of coal ashes. If very light, the incorporation of humiusâ€"decayed vegetable matterâ€"is advisable.© For certain types of flower and most vegeâ€" tables too, for that matter, tile drainâ€" agze should be provided in heavy clay soils, and it may be neecssary where an expensive rose garden is to be laid out to place a layer of gravel a foot beneath the surface. the hand it is ready for the spade or plow and not before. _ If the soll is a very heavy clay loosen up by digging 1 1000 m°C mt Tepare supporl. Galâ€" deners are advised to make sowings of peas every week beginning with the earlier sorts to prolong the seaâ€" ton * This vegetable like all others must be grown quickly to get high qunlity and2 on this account will bonclit from quekly acting fertilizers such as nitrate of soda at the rate of a scant ounce per square yard of soil, and regular cultivation is also essenâ€". Ital to hasten growth. I Planting Trees and Shrubbery Fruit and ornamental trees, shrubâ€" bervy and rose bushes are planted as aoon as the ground Ns dry enough to dig The same rule applies to bush truits, strawberries and hérbaceous perennials. _ Once the soil loses the moisture of early spring and the hot dry winds commence, a much larger proportion of plants is likely to die than If planted eartier. Care of the Soil Serious harm will result if one rus"es the season and gets into the garden too early. Ou lay soil partt cularly there is grave danger of pudâ€" diing the earth and causing it to bake. When this happensâ€"the result of working the clay when still dampâ€" the soll will never work up nicely that season. _ When the soil crumbles readily after being @queezed between *maA‘ garden peas are hardly practiâ€" ami as they take up more room in proâ€" portion to results than such vegeâ€" tanles as carrots, beans, or beets. It is only out of a nearâ€"by garden, howâ€" aver, that one will get‘ Arstâ€"class quality, as peas lose their flavor rery quickly after being picked. _ On this a ~onun‘t»,they are often given room aven where space is Himited. The ¢!imbing types, supported on brush or ebicken wire, will give the largest d What is a Canadian? th d ds for ible w Where the garden is very large and it is worth while to effect & saving in hand labor, or where one is going to be away, a good deal of the time, a practical plan is to mulch between the rows of vegetables or clumps of flowâ€" ers with straw,. Vegetables, partiâ€" eularly those which yield fruits lying on or close to the ground, will be much cleaner when sumune Lo el 5 is also valuable, Culitivation tor Peas Poas whether of the flower or 1 )le sort require very deep cul n The plants thrive in cool 1 this deep cultivation allows ts to penetrate to a consider th away from the hot soil at With April nearly ovep ; e to think about getting in the types in the vegetable line. Labor will be experienced in growâ€" ~ dwarf types in double rows do not require support. Garâ€" are advised to make sowinrs n pouia o o it Semeriee ‘ly those which yietd fruits Iying r close to the ground, will be 1 cleaner when grown in this Straw, lawn clippings, or ‘s are spread over the earth to pth of between four and six s after the plants are well n This mulch will keep down 3 and will conserve moisture, i one is going away for two or weeks in the middle of a hot ier, spreading the lawn clippings the earth in the garden like this rticularly advisable in order to rve moisture and prevent the | from becoming stunted. _ With plants which will not permit ‘ultivation on account of spreadâ€" NOte CIOS@ O tho surtanm esns WATCH CLAY SOIL »ves, supported on brush or vire, will give the largest the space occupled, but less Mulch Saves Labor Alkali killg, acid instantly. The best form is Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia, beâ€" eause one harmless, tasteless dose neutralizes many times its volume in acid. Since its invention, 50 years ago, It has remained the standard with physiclans everywhere. Sick stomachs, sour stomachs and indigestion usually mean excess acid. The stomach nerves are overâ€"stimuâ€" lated. Too much acid makes the stomâ€" ach and intestines sour. SMARTS of his death. He was eightyâ€"five years of age last March, all but fifteen months, and had he lived till now he would have been dead a fortnight. O1 would beg of ye not to broak the seal of this letter until two or three days after ye have read it, by which toime ye will be more prepared for the sorâ€" rowful news.â€"With love, from Pat. me he doied through iliness, but; Mickey, me bhoy, between ourselves, stop_pgge of the heart was the cause :dwub lul’flfle;dt". Moateriot and Workmanship Cuarantebd AT EVERY HARDWARE StoRE | _ tG Reduce the Acid ye in five minutes. Then you will always| "A soldier all through, be was also know what to do. Crude and harmâ€" & Student,‘" comments the Daily ful methods will never appeal to you, Chronicle, "deeply read ,continually Go prove this for your own sake. 1t tosting theories, though keenly alive may save a great many disagreeable t0 What no theory can give. One of hours. M | his greatest qualities was his power Beé sure to get the genuine Phillips‘ to learn from his mistakes.. ifilk o‘t Msnoneda prescribed by ,hyn.} Error of Offensive at all Costs ns for b0 years in correcting excess|~ " acids, Each bottle contains full direc _:t_t_h:_m:t::t ot_th: _w “::_':. tlonsâ€"any drugstore. Inmgaromernay eprroppemrt > e Take a spoonful in water and your unhappy condition will probably end in five minutes. Then you will always know what to do. Crude and harmâ€" ful methods will never appeal to you. Go prove this for your own sake. It may save a great many disagreeable They haven‘t the Daughters of the Revolution in Mexico, but we fancy the mother must live down there somewhere. so sotry. 1 used it yesterday to enamel over the bath. You‘ll find it in a Jampot of turpentine down in t t.h-e scullery!" Husband: _ "I BAay, Aliceâ€"d‘you know where the deuce my shavingâ€" brush is?" Wife: "Oh, my dearâ€"I‘m L wul e es en ie ts RVS eeuee Many fiyers have seen this phenoâ€" menon when flying abave the clouds with the sun at their backs. B No pot of gold rests at the end of the rainbow, for the air mail has provâ€" ed the meterological phenomenon to be a perfect circle instead of an ArC. Minard‘s Finds Rainbow Is a Circle ! Miss Sharpeâ€""You are to be gratulated taht the vold is not so plete as usual, Mr. Sapp." Reggieâ€""I have a terrible my_):ead, Miss Sharpe," Ing" at the beginning became the reâ€" gular practice later on. A similar deterioration seems to bave taken place in this matter of selfâ€"advertiseâ€" ment. Much that would have been reâ€" garded as gross and ungentlemanly by fathers seems to have become the common usage of toâ€"day. i G.G., in the Nation and Athenaeum (London). The trade of a publicity agent is apparently a lucrative ore. The traitmed eyo can detect in the columns of newspapers and magaâ€" zines much that is apparently news but is really advertisement. _ The late C. 2. Montague recorded that during the War many things that revid have been regarded as "unsportâ€" j keum ies ue 2. % & L 7 NP NintRipia on sedtbbuda iss cs c ~LL c +1 so_ often found in identical twing, or it may possibly be the parental postâ€" tion of the rightâ€"handed twin, which would prevent it from developing into & leftâ€"handed one." | CV VA ARV It appears quite clearly â€" from - Cintiftic® published by Herbert D. Baby‘s Own Chamberlain, of Ohio State University, Babyhood in "The Journal of Heredity" (Wuh-} Ai ington) thay lefthandedness is inherit. ! . ‘ A medicine th From families in which one or both â€"one good in . of the parents are leftâ€"handed we get will quickly ban a percentage of 17.34 per cent. of the babyhood and c children leftâ€"handed, while in familâ€" cine to keep in ies in which neither of the parents are to always have leftâ€"handeg only 2.1 per cent. of the emergency. _ Su children are lefthanded. _ If jeft. Baby‘s Own Tat handedness is not inherited we would ful at all times not find over 5 per ent. of the chilâ€" but thorough 1a: dren leftâ€"handed in any of these fnmfl-’ gulating the be les, regardless of the handedness of | banish colds and their parents, It is very evident that | rect constiplation there is some sex influence munltest-,’ lMeve colie and : ed in the imnheritance of leftâ€"handedâ€"| the cutting of te ness as shown by the larger number of Thousands of n leftâ€"handed boys in this population.| medicine for thei; It is also apparently transmitted difâ€" them is Mrs. J. ferently where the father is leftâ€"handâ€" meath, Ont., wh ed, as note the small number of Iett-’ four children an handed girls in these families. There them are i11 I can be no doubt that the trait is inâ€"; Own Tablets and herited. Siemens presents twenty-,’ good in every wa one cases of apparent identical twinsl‘v without the Tabl in which one was leftâ€"handed and the | like your little b other rightâ€"handed, and cites this as| Baby in Health a evidence that leftâ€"handedness is not' Baby‘s Own T; an hereditary factor. The probable' medicine dealers oxplanation of this 14 wirror Imauty@ [ .. 73 __ _ C Eaigrs NoT aA voID as UsuaL Liniment relieves pain. Publicity tor. ‘The probable is mirror imaging, identical twing, or be conâ€" so comâ€" cold in â€""Foch is no more," says the Mornâ€" ing Post. "The greatest Frenchman of this age has passed awayâ€"greatest in an age of great men; an age that knew great discoverers, inventors, authors, artists; an agoe essentially great in itself that saw France rise again from the bitterness of utter deâ€" feat. _ Foch was greatest because most needed in France‘s dark hour, greatest because he turned darkness into abounding light." ; "The doctrine of the attack at all cost had some crudu practitioners and some disastrous {llustrations. It was susceptible of modification by mud, barbed wire, concrete, and maâ€" chineâ€"guns. _ But there has been in military history no clearer, no more consistent, and, in the end, no more triumphant exponent of the weight ot‘ moral fators in battle than the soldier of genius, the simple, chivalrous gentleman whose memory France and England provudly and sadly salute and honor toâ€"day." "What soldier could ask a more magnificent epitaph? No soldier of his day had a higher intellectual concepâ€" tion of the conduct of war. â€" His practice, like his teaching, was a modelâ€"from the classic mould of the Latin mindâ€"of logic and of fervour. He not only believed in the "imâ€" ponderables‘ ah the arbiters of war. He embodied themâ€"the will, the seltâ€" confidence, the passionate concentraâ€" tion upon mastery of the enemy comâ€" mander‘s mind. They were felt throughout his own command. They were felt, as German memoirs have testified, among the enemy. in his lifetime? and it is not likely to be taken from bim by historlans now | that he is dead. _ As the Times says: ,' The Inevitable Commander | _ "It was Foch, the Frenchman, who !waa the ordained ,the inevitable comâ€" mander. _ The German breakâ€"through was the German undoing. It erâ€" ; mobilized the trenchâ€"imprisoned armies it had gone near to shattering, and it freed trenchâ€"ridden minds. Above all, it liberated the aggressive genuls of Foch. He was the man for his opportunity. It was given to him so save the Allied chuse, and he saved 1t. This admission does not lessen the{ British regard and appreciation of thef late Lord Haig, but when the “unlfled’ command" was agreed to, the fact‘ that Foch was made the head of the} combined forcgs gave him first pheol E se c in Oe e ds o eenen‘ eP P aetrels Sece Professor of the Rcole de Guerre, he had urged on the young soldier provâ€" ed to be the essential doctrine in modern warfare," says the Yorkshire Post, and all the tributes to his memâ€" ory: bear testimony that of the great military figures he stands out preâ€" eminent. | unknown. â€"Birmingham Post. ‘"There can be little doubt that Marâ€" shal Foch was the greatest soldier of the war. The theories which he held and preached in time of peace were justified in practice, and all that, as "Marshal Foch is the second figure of the World War. The first is, and always will be, the ‘Unknown Soldier‘ And perhaps it is the fairest commentâ€" Ary on Foch, as soldier, that he will always remain second to this myriad unknown."â€"Birmingham Post. "In his own medium he was a genius of the first order. Englishâ€" men of the war generation will never forget the debt they owe to his genius. And in military history his place as the warâ€"winner ameng warâ€"winners is definitely assured."â€"Daily News. J | A medicine that all mothers praise h â€"one good in every wayâ€"one that * will quickly banish the minor ills of ° babyhood and cbildhood is the mediâ€" ! cine to keep in the medicine chest; @ to always have on hand in case of 0 emergency. Such a medicine is ~ Baby‘s Own Tabletsâ€"they are helpâ€" 4 ful at all times. They are a mild â€"| but thorough laxative which by reâ€" [-’gulatjng the bowels and stomach t | banish colds and simple fevers; corâ€" t | rect constiplation and indigestion; reâ€" ~| leve colie and diatrhoea and make +/ the cutting of teeth easy. ' ‘| Thousands of mothers use no other +| medicine for their little ones. Among' | them is Mrs. J. H. Bromley, Westâ€" | meath, Ont., who writes:â€""I hlvef !lour children and whenever any of them are i11 I aways use Baby‘s [ Own Tablets and have found ihem ,'good in every way. I would not be‘ I‘vwithout the Tableis and would also| | like your little booklet Care of the | Baby in Health and Sickness.‘" ' ' Baby‘s Own Tablets are sold by | 4 lmediclne dealers or by mail at 25|: cents a box from The Dr. Wmh:ms" & It Was Given to Him to Save the Allied Cause and He Saved It GREATEST SOLDIER ‘ As England Sees Passing of Foch Medicine Co., Brock;l-i!‘e.-dflt. !GOOD IN EVERY way y s Own Tablets Bar Babyhood and Childhood Ailments, _3 _ ___,___Which entailed over haif _ Tablets Banish France‘s casualties and nearly lost and Childhood her the War. Gradually, through the ilments. War years, he unlearned it; and so slowly climber to that wonderful at all mothers praise equipoise between patience and audaâ€" every wayâ€"one that ¢ity, which so signally triumphed in ish the minor ills of 1918." ‘ "Like other young mothers, I wor ried every time Baby cried," says a Syracuse, N.Y., won.an. "Several times when she was upset or constiâ€" !pated. I tried castor oil but she couldn‘t retain it Our doctor told me to try Fletcher‘s Castoria because it is harmless and babies like it. That ended my worries and I‘ve used it since for all my children." Castoria never fails to delight mothers by the‘ quick way it ends those upsets of babies and children, such as colic.! constipation, colds, etc. â€" That‘s thei reason for its tremendous sale and| popularity. Like all good things, it‘s imitated, but genuine Castoriaâ€"the| purelyâ€"vegetable" product â€" lh’l)’s‘ bears the Fletcher signature. GUNNS LIMITED SHIP YOUR EGCS A QUICK WAY TO END BABY‘S UPSET SPELLS a few words of simple eulogy suffice, such as any child in Picardy and Artois can understand? With such the great Commander would himselt be most pleased, for he, the ‘foremost Captain of his time,‘ was also ‘as the greatest only are, In his simplicity sublime.‘ ‘ "A brief recital of his deeds might ' "Crowned with honor, fame, and the respect of the whole world, Ferdinand ‘Foch has passed to his rest," says the |\Glasgow Herald. "For him, the latest and not the least in greatness of France‘s departed Marechals, how shall the oraison funebre be most worthily framed? l "His merits and achievements as t, Minard‘s Linimentâ€"good General of France and as Commanderâ€" , omm commmne i hat touc inâ€"Chief and leader of the congregated | dnfiox;:u: fc -â€"D(:;ltal: l\l.::‘.): armies of the Allies to victory would| k l ‘ seem to call for the breadth and the} C weight of Miltonic vowels. â€" Or shall| mm â€"â€"=mmmmemee Highest Prices, Prompt Returns bis triumphs modestly and almost meekly. Ave atque vale. The perâ€" fect knight of a noble cause is dead, and the who‘le world springs to a last salute." St, Lawrence Market, Toronto his ©47:poise Dbetween patience and audaâ€" city, which so signally triumphed in 1918," _ ‘"Many of the world‘s great â€" solâ€" diers," points out the Daily Telegraph, 1 ‘"have been blemished by an ambition to play the role of the conqueror, Not so the General who, before his last summer campaign, publicly asked for the prayers of the children of France, and when the victory was won took up to the neck in the disastrous erâ€" ror of the French High Commandâ€" the offensive at al} costs and in any situationâ€"which entailed over hait munalaay > 2. 7 invisible difference Many motor oils look alike, but there is a vast difâ€" F ference in the way they perform. Unfortunately this difference is difficult to detcct. The invisible difference which makes one motor oil better than another must be inherent in the ‘crude from which it is made. Thereyou have the reason why Marvelube gives bet= ter engine lubrication than oils refined from ordin« ary crudes. Imperial Oil searched the world over for abettercrudeâ€"â€"and in South America they foundit. From it they make Mervelubeâ€"â€"a pure, carbon« free, fullâ€"bodied oil that resists the extreme heats and pressures of modern engine operation. Aircraft operators prefer Marvelube because betâ€" ter lubrication means greater safety and longer intervals between overhauls. _ Motorists prefer Hn-nlnbe'!nealue it is the ideal oil for modern E V ERARY W HEGRLE 1 TO Marvelube a belfter motor oil made from Peruvian coude }t ensures il_'e.â€"t-e'r-;:;e;:. {r‘;ater flexi« | RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOE is extra good | m even be suflicient: the very fields of Artois and La Fere Champenoise praise him. . Or shal} his silence be respected, the bowed head alone acâ€" knowledging grief? 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