West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 15 May 1930, p. 7

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r Record Ned Brown writes:â€" It looks as if this will be the most profitable year boxing has experienced &n these parts in many a day. Matches in prospect, which promise not only great revenue for the promoter, but also immense profit for the contestâ€" ants would bring together Jimmy Mcâ€" Larnin and Jackie Felds, Al Singer and Sammy Mandell or Singer against Jackie (Kid) Berg. Of course the heavyweights attract the most interest, therefore the fight between Schmeling and Sharkey would be the big fight of the year. It was expected that this battle would be held on June 26 in the Yanâ€" kee Stadium, and unless the plans are changed the German heavyweight will battle Sharkey for the championship of the world in the Polo Grounds this summer. Of all the stars who will appear in Iocal rings this summer, Max Schmelâ€" ing is the unknown quantity. _ His defeat of Paulino Uzendun stamped him as one of the best heavyweights in the class, and because he is supâ€" posed to have improved in his fightâ€" ing he must be considered the big contender for the championship. McLarnin Best Welterweight McLarnin was regarded as the best of all the welterweights until he ran into the clever Negro from Chicago Max Schmeling, German fighter, made a hit with the frauleins in his movle debut, recently, He is now training in preparation for his antict pated meet with Jack Sharkey. and then even though he sustained a broken hand there was some doubt whether he was the best in his class. Everybody knows that Jimmy broke his right band in the first round of his fight with Thompson but they also know that McLarnin was having his hands full on the defensive so that a draw decision would have been a most popular one. Tony Canzoneri was one of Al Singâ€" er‘s rivals, but he never was able to defeat Singer.,These two aro natural rivals an da meeting between them no doubt would draw a capacity crowd into any club in which it might be held. Jackie Felds, known to be one of the cleverist of all the woelterweights 4s the champion in that class but there are those who believe that Mcâ€" Larnin will defeat him it ever they moet. Doctorâ€""Has there been any insanâ€" ity in your family?" Mrs. Henpeckâ€" "Yes, there has. You see, it was like this, my husband once thought he was boss hu* I soon cured him." In the heavyweight class Schmeling appears to be the most dangerous of the contenders. _ According to Billy McCarney, the German is the next heavyweight champion or the world. Max, Billy says, is in tiptop condition and will show a better exhibition of boxing than he has shown heretofore. Summing it up, the outdoor season in boxing promises to be the best over held here. At least three championâ€" ships are scheduled already, McLarnâ€" in and Felds appearing in one, Schmelâ€" ing and Sharkey in the other, and Batâ€" talino and Chocolate in the third. According to McCarney, Schmeling will score a knockout if he ever meets Sharkey, but the Gob‘s friends declare that the German will not last as long agcainst Jack as did Tommy Loughran. In New York City, a child is born every four minutes. Nine million perâ€" sons scramble daily for subway seats. Fourteen persons are married every hour. On the average for a year, 23 new buildings are put up every day and six torn down. New Yorkers and their guests eat 7,000,000 egge a day. And how the human family loves amusement! There are 800 theatres in New York City. A treasure chest full of gold and silver coins of the Eighteenth Conâ€" tury was recently pulled out of the mud by a dredgeâ€"boat on the Elbe River, near Wittenberge, Germany, Most of the money consisted of silver coins dated 1740 to 1811, but there were also a number of French Louis d‘or. It is assumed that the treasure was loot taken during the Napoleonic wars Big Question in Heavy Division Schmeling Dangerous RHEUMATIC VICTIM FOR SIXTEEN YEARS Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills Restored Her Health _ Rheumatism is a disorder of the blood. Wet, cold weather may aggraâ€" vate it but that is not the cause. Bad blood charged with uric acid is the reason,. Reâ€"build the blood and rheuâ€" matism will disappear. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills enrich and purify the blood and that makes good health. Mrs. John C. McPherson, St. Mary‘s, Ont., writes:â€""For sixteen years I was a victim of rheumatism, For eleven years I was unable to walk. Massage and chiropractic treatment failed. I was utterly discouraged till I heard how strongly Dr. Wiliams‘ Pink Pills were recommended for cases like mine. 1 began their use and in a few weeks the pain lessened, my appetite and color improved, and now 1 am able to do light housework. It is wonderful what these pills have done for me." Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills do one thing but they do it wellâ€"they enrich and purify the blood. This rich blood banishes rheumatisim, sciatica, neuralâ€" gia and neuritis and promotes health and strength. The Pills are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Mcdicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Show me the man who has advancâ€" ed very far or made much improveâ€" ment who is always shouting his own opinions while refusing to listen to the experience of others. Show me the man. A chronic borrower of cash will pay his panâ€"bandiing debts when you hear a waiter say: The service was poor and the tip too much. HUNTING. fishing, plcâ€" nicing, swimming and Cruising on lake, river, sound or bay add to the zest of living, happiness, contentment and enjoyâ€" men of Cruisabou t owners. ( £ The most pathetic picture is to see a woman‘s face all furrowed up and wrinkled with reducing. T his double cabin Cruisabout, 29‘ long, 5‘ 10" wide and 2° 4" draft is a completely equipp*d summer home_ and is priced at $4,185 at facâ€" tory. Sleeps six, four in forward cabin and two in stern cabin. . Exccllent design, perfect balance and staunch, quality conâ€" struction make Cruisâ€" abouts sound and sea~ worthy for_ any water. 6â€"cylinder, 60â€"A.P. Gray Marine motor gives cruisâ€" Ing speed of thirteen miles,. Write for a cataâ€" logue. CH0 UTCE MV WI ETGNERâ€"IINES . Complexion cleu‘:fike magic. Nerves, heart quiet. Get"Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives"from druggist today. ONSTIPATION COMPLETELY GONE*" writes Mrs. W. Walkor, Thousands say constipation, indigestion, gas Sterikeed. TISSUES$ Listen a Little Plan Now with "Pruitâ€"a CANADAS FINEST For This Summer‘s Good Times! Richardson 1930 Cruisabouts T. B. F. BENSON, N.A. 371 Bay Street Toronto, Ont. Life in the Canadian By the Venerable Dr. A. L. Fleming Over twenty years ago I went North in a little 54â€"ton fishing schooner from Newfoundland. She had no auxiliary motor power. We had on board proâ€" visions for two years for two men, as well as the lumber for a small house, with the necessary furniture and fuel. After an adventurous journey, we As for light. reached Baffin Land on August 27.‘ 1t was interesting to be the first Apart from scattered ice on the sea white man who had ever reached and some magnificent icebergs, there many of these places, and as a paying was not a speck of snow or ice to be Suest of the Eskimog in their igloos I seen. The land was bleak and desoâ€", Was able to appreciate their qualities. late and yet there was a pathetic: They lived the simple, primitive, comâ€" beauty about it. The rugged hills stood| munistic life of nomads, spending out in silhouette against the evening their time hunting the wild animals sky, but, except for a little rough | of the barren lands, just as their fathâ€" grass, heather, moss and lichen which‘ers had done centuries before when we found growing on the southern hill they first came from Mongolia. . The slopes, there was very little vegeta-! fact that in their intense isolation, and tion. Baffin Land is almost five times| while still largely using spears and as large as England, but there are no| harpoons, which they made themâ€" trees. ’selvns. they could live in that wilderâ€" We found the Eskimo living in tents| N€S$ of ice and snow . was proof of AF snaleiina ‘anX . waeine Tha nramhistirts | their Ability and tenacity. We found the Eskimo living in tents | of sealskins and using the preâ€"historic blubber lamp. This is made from soft | soap stone found in the country. Dried | Moss mixed wtih the bloom of the| wild cotton plant found on the rlver‘ banks is used for wick, and the oil is . from the blubber of the seal walrus,| whale and narwhale. | After the lumber and provisions had been landed the schooner departed for the south, leaving the two missionâ€" aries, the Rev. J. W. Bilby and myself alone. it was tweive morths before the next mail of ‘letters only‘ reached us from a passing whaler, and two years before we got our next supply of provisions. We found the Eskimo, to look at, ~ery like the ordinary Chinese or Japanese we have seen at home. They are short, with jet black hair, round flat faces, dark brown, ofâ€" ten oblique, eyes, and high cheek bones. They are simpleâ€"natured peoâ€" ple and very lovable. True, they have an aroma which, while not exactly pleasant, was nevertheless arrestive, but on one occasion whon I mentioned this fact to a sledge boy he replied, in the most friendly way, ‘So do you!‘ Each winter 1 travelled about two thousand miias, visiting remote Eskiâ€" mo encampmerts where the condiâ€" tions were what you would think of as Arctic. The people lived ia domeâ€" shaped huts made of snow, with a block of clear ice for a window, and were dressed ia clothing of caribou YOU may select any one of these Sterilized Eddy Rolls, assured of its purity â€" its safety, and knowing that it measures up to the high quality that pro. tection of the children‘s health demands @ The price ensures the biggest value for your money @ Ask for it by name, THE E. B. EDDY COMPANY LIMITED HULL + + CANADA rony antec ie white. mppod,sz *‘DREAD« Lized Rolls of , NOUVGHT! 750 sheets, â€" « . A big va‘ve Eddy Sales and Service by "COTTAGE" The aristocrat of Sterilized Ti wrapped Rolls. 3,000 sheets, full skin. On such trips we hid to live largely on the produce of the country. Sometimes for several weeks on end my diet was stewed seal mea., hard tack biscuit and tea sweetened with eithér sugar or molasses. At other times it was walrus meat, and again, when amongst the mountains, it was caribou meat; but whatever the flesh might be it was always eaten either stewed or raw, for in these early days we were entirely dependent upon the native blubber lamp for heat as well as for light. Until the missionary arrived among then they could neither read nor write in their own language. _ Their method of counting, for example, shows how primitive they were, They began by giving a name to each finâ€" gerâ€"atowsik, maggook; pingahshoot, sittabmut, tedlemut; thus they reachâ€" ed five. _ Ten was twice five, but twenty was one Eskimo, his extremiâ€" ties then being ended. _ Fiftyâ€"nine would be two Eskimos, and ten, and five, and four. This shows the need there ts for education. As we became friends of these peoâ€" ple and got to understand them we discovered that their religion was a simple form of primitive animism. Alâ€" most averything had a spirit, and the native Angakok or high priest was the magician who held a position of great power in the settlement. The Eskimo have a very special â€"â€"T_O'BT claim on all fairâ€"minded people. For & centurtes they have lived in these, PON‘t toll me of tomorrow:â€" northetn areas, hunting the wild flife‘! _ There is much to do today there ind obtaining from the country, Thl:[ cannneverflbe :c"°mm"3h‘"| all that they needed. Now the white‘ Evor:'vemo:;::t h‘:s Il::r;ui::’ay' man has cote. on year by y?ar, Who the future can foretell? creates new problems for the native. Why. put off till tomorrow Unless the Eskimo is given the rudi-' \\"hat today can do as well? ments of education he must go he-i * a ' & fore the white aggressor. In order to: % + meet this pressing need we establishâ€" You Will Win ed the first residential school in Canâ€" There is no need of mapping out a ada for Eskimo children on the Arctic policy for each day. . As problems coast last year, and one reason I am‘| Come up ,it is wise to think carefully in England now is to try and gain sup-i belf)ooreu.\m“ clrel:s:lyi if thing Sud port for the extension of this work. e square and fair We bave the proud distinction of, that principle will take the place of operating in the Western Arctic the! tactful "policy". We have the proud distinction of operating in the Western Arctic the most northerly hospital in the British Empire, 120 miles north of the Arctic Circle. It would be hard to exaggerâ€" ate the benefit this hospital has proved to the white and native popuâ€" lation. The joy is mingled with sorâ€" row, however, when we remember that there is no hospital in the whole of the Eastern Arctic. _ Two fully qualified uurses are waiting to go North this year if only I can raise the modest sum required for the building. Others are now coming North in search of the rich deposits of copper ore, since, according to a Government publication, ‘the richest ore of copper mineralization in Canada is on the Arctic Coast.‘ This has brought to the Arctic powerful: aeroplanes with prospectors and miners. Great changes are, therefore, taking place in the far North toâ€"day. Not the least of these is the completion of the railway from western Canada to Hudson Bay, and the recent announcement by the Preâ€" mier of Ontario that another railway running to James Bay (lower Hudson Bay) will be completed in two years‘ time. Many of the white men who go North come from England, the Hudâ€" son Bay Company alone sent sixtyâ€"two fine young men from these shores to northern Canada last year.â€"The Lisâ€" tener, London. Some orange trees bear fruit until they are one hundred and fifty years old. If a man should come to you and frankly say. "I‘m a failure at everyâ€" thing I try to do," would you hire that man and then expect the fellow filled with discouragement and disâ€" may to make good? Any manager who thinks construcâ€" tively has great faith in the influence of the mind. The manager knows that the way you think is the way you are bound to go. 4 The manager understands that unâ€" wavering courage and unfaltering deâ€" termination give one the spirit of success, while discouragement means disaster. Successful managers know the mind is the pilot, also the propeller. Why so many folks fail so easily, give up in despair and dismay and sort o‘ fade away, is this: _ Everyâ€" time they‘re hit, they lose their grit and quit, The mistake can be remedied at once, but the steps taken on the wrong road must be retraced before you can begin again to go the right Campers Carry Minard‘s. The greatest factor in human sucâ€" cess is "grit", No man can prosper permently without pluck, Proceeding in the wrong direction is much worse than making a misâ€" take. Do You Need More Pluck? Go the Right Way : _ We should not arrogantly pride ourâ€" selves upon our virtues and knowâ€" ledge, nor condemn the errors and weakness of others, since they may ! depend upon causes which we can . neither produce nor readily counterâ€" . act. No one, judging from his own ; feelings and powers, can be aware of | the kind of degree of temptation of ; terror, or the seeming incapacity to resist them, which may induce others to deviate.â€"Abernethy. KEEPING BABY LOVELY AND WELL Some babies thrive from the hour of their birth while others make so little progress as to be the cause of much apxiety. As a rule it is the diâ€" gestion that is at fault with these backward ones and they start to go ahead directly Baby‘s Own Tablets are made the corrective of their stomâ€" ach and bowel troubles. Baby‘s Own Tablets are specially designed for the use of babies and little children. They are absolutely safe and the mother can feel perfectly secure in giving them to even the most delicate child. They are a mild but thorough laxative which banish constipation and indigestion; break up colds and simple fevers and allay the pains which accompany the cutâ€" ting of teeth. They are sold by mediâ€" cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. If the peculiarities of our feelings and faculties be the effect of variety of excitement through a diversity of organization, it should tend to proâ€" duce in us mutual forbearance and toleration. . We should perceive how nearly impossible it is that persons should feel and think exactly alike upâ€" on any subject. Don‘t tell me of tomorrow:â€"â€" There is much to do today That can never be accomplished If we throw the hours away. Every moment has its duty: "Our faces tell the truth about us." â€"Kathleen Norris. Women between forty and fifty years of age make very good and safe pilots of aeroplanes, although they may be slower to learn than their younger sisters. FIVE D.C. MOTORS V4, 1, 1%2, 4 and 8 Horsepower, all in good condition. Cheap for immediate sale. H. Watkins, 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto. What most people call indigestion is usually excess acid in the stomach. The food has soured. The instant remedy is an alkali which neutralizes acids. But don‘t use crude helps. Use what your doctor would advise. The best help is Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia. For the 50 years since its invention it has remained standard with physicians, You will find nothâ€" ing else so quick in its efect, so harmâ€" less, so efficient, SMARTS MOWERS eo popular so casily‘ end with nndt'rhlafle‘pud\'. Moteriot on# Workmanship Cuerentebd} AT EVERY; HARDWARE STORE . _ FOR SALE fiick/ TOLERATION ONTA figes"" , A GOOD NAME Good name, n man or woman, dear, my lord, Is the immediate jewel of their souls, Who steals my purse, steals trash; ‘tis something, nothing; *Twas mine, ‘tis his, and has been slave to thousands; But he that filches from me my good name, Robs me of that which not enriches him, And makes me poor indeed. The wedding was over, and the bridegroom was settled in the car that was carrying them to the station. "Harry dear, "said the bride coyly, "where shall we live after the honeyâ€" moon is over?" The bridegroom laughed a little hol lowly. "Why worry about that?" he murâ€" mured. "What I‘m wor.ying about is how to pay for the honeymoon." About the only things we get out of hatred are a few deep and disagreeâ€" able lines in our faces. Work is whatever you must do. Play is what you like to do. So why not like your work? When others know me as I am, and then accept me with all my faults, they are my friends, and what a lot that is to expect from anybody. The richest man on earth is he who enriches mankind most. Spring house cleaning is necessary, so now is the time to clean out the slackers and the payroll cheaters and give workers who are worthy a real chance in the organization. Heal the Sprain with Minard‘s INSPECT STEERING GEAR Even though only a small percentâ€" age of motor accidents can be laid to the failure of steering gear to function properly, there are suflicient of those unfavorable happenings to make every driver give some thoughi to this phase of motoring. One tasteless spoonfal in water nouâ€" tralizes many times its volume in acid. The results are immediate, with no bad afterâ€"effects. Once you learn this fact, you will never deal with excess acid in the crude ways, Go learnâ€" nowâ€"why this method is supreme, Be sure to get the genuine Philips‘ Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physiâ€" cians for 50 years in correcting excess acids, Each bottle contains full direc tionsâ€"any drugstore, Why be handicapped with unsightly blotches on the face, eyes with yellow t'mg?e and that tired and languid feelâ€" ing? This indicates a torpid liver Headache, Dizziness and Biliousness surely follow, You must stimulate your lazy liver, start the bile flowing with Carter‘s Little Liver Pills, They also act as a mild laxati purcly vegetable, free from ulm::i and poisonous drugs, small, n,{ to swallow, and not habit forming. They are not a purgative that cramps or pains. unpleasant after effect follow= |Anfi. on the contrary a good tonmic. Druggists 25¢ and 75¢ red pkgs. 75 in Canada may now bring forward their Families, Relatives and Friends on Easy Terms. Dist. ’wf(éfi&iu‘un Canadian Pacific Railway. Toronto BRITISH REâ€"UNION ASSOCIATION Deep and Disagreeable Spring House Cleaning For full details apply:â€" i GFARES to CANADA ADVANCED THE FIRTS WORRY A Lot to Expect TORONTO FROM YOUR % of TOTAL BRITISHERS â€"â€"Shakespeare Switzer sAY CHICKS â€"NB AATCHED Al 215.000 last year in four nrli ties â€" Write for free catalogue A Sick Animals Tired. Now Peppy. Cained 11 Lbs." "I Was Skinny and "Had tired feeling, BX no pep. But Ironized eA Yeast gave me pep; much stronger, Gained . 11 Ibs. Bolls and pimâ€" PR 4 .ores disappeared." â€"â€" Mack Lattoria, Amazing new Ironized Yeast adds 5 to 15 lbs, in 3 weeks. Changes "skinny," weak body to strong, wellâ€" developed form all admire. Blotchy skin gets clear and rosy like magic. Nervousness, indigestion, constipa tion disappear overnight. Sound sleep New pep from very first day. Dont‘ be "skinny," weak, unattrac tice. Get Ironized Yeast from drugâ€" gist today. Feel great tomorrow. Money back from manufacturer if not delighted with quick results. Two great tonics in oneâ€"special weightâ€"building _ Malt _ Yeast _ and strengthening Iron. Pleasant little tablets, Far stronger than unmediâ€" cated yeast. Results in % time. Ne yeasty taste. No gas. 20 Famous Breeds to choose from. Send for free chick catalog; it has valuable information on brooding chicks FsSsex " As a nfid of both gout and rheumatiem rj-l” 50 years, 1 wish to ackncwledge that have found nmothing so absolutely certain as z-m Sults. Ezu and other things alt their wirtues, also their drawbacks. Kruschen Salts 1 have nc:'!owd.a!br 6 yeare or more of using them, no drawhacks and mno counterâ€"effect whatever, 1 am 76 and more active than 40 years ago." _ cels y 76 who is "more active than 40 years ago," thanks to the " daily dimeful * ol Erumite Kruschen Salts is obtainable at drug and department stores in Canada at 75¢, a botte, A bottle contains cnough to last for 4 or% monthsâ€"good health jor hall«acent a day. 76 beats 36 Welcome Minard‘s. It is an ideal first aid about the stable. Get a bottle toâ€"day. FROM MOTHER Read How This Medicine Helps Her Cardston, Albertaâ€"*"I am fiftyâ€"cight years old and the mother of cightcem m living children. We ue w > d live f :d $# ho $Sg . > ve on a larm at $oofitee, ®% [ J am a vory hoalâ€" Lmmmmmmmmmemmemel i( {(0] 1})i\} i on e en ie was telling me ut hi wife‘s milments and after I told him about the Vegetable Compound he went to the drug store and bought her two bottles."â€"Mas, Buarna SauueN®« Back, Sr., Cardston, Alberta. Read this wonderful letter from a man of ISSUE No. 19â€"‘30 CHICKS T sonatobi ng for you * Original letter on fils {pr inspeciion.

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