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Durham Review (1897), 25 Jan 1934, p. 7

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l J w ecommends Hezt For Frost Bites . Johnston, M.D., Backs p Advice With Actual Uired Have i in on ment as Lxpert H acts mimon al Farm aAir () P a l D 14 given on the choice of a career, Urgent action is advocated. Reorâ€" ganization of the medical and legal profession is pressed. It is suggested that from the period of the elemenâ€" tary school the child‘s special aptiâ€" tudes be studied and careful counsel "Somctimes," writey Claude Belanâ€" wer, general secretary of the Unione Nationale des Studients de France, "a medical doctor is engaged at 15 francs a day selling pharmacentical preparations. Eut most of them reâ€" main without work with nothing in their pockets but a piece of parchâ€" ment." The position of the art stuâ€" dent is, if anything, worse. , Examinations are made more diffiâ€" cult, newspapers hold investigations, the authorities issue warnings, but still the students come and the probâ€" lem grows. Five hundred of those who were graduated in science in 1932 are unable to find jobs. In arts 767 are still unemployed. Paris.â€"Paris is faced with a stuâ€" dents‘ crisis. The Quartier Latin has closed those haleyon days of lightâ€" hearted Bohemians and the students crowd to the great schools in everâ€" increasing numbers, but as the stuâ€" dents increase, jobs diminish, Paris Seeks to Stem Tide Of Students Asking Help It was reputed to bave had nmmom bership of 11,000. During his seven years it the "Amâ€" bassador" he met many society celeâ€" brities, for the club was designed to be the most luxurious in London. W., for £20,000. Mr. Mazzina is believed to have made the purchase on behalf of a synâ€" dicate. He is one of the youngest resâ€" taurateur> in London. London.â€"Mr. Peter Mazzina, the former managing director of the Amâ€" bassador Club with which Mr. Maundy Gregory was so closely associated, has bought the Bristol Grill, Cork Street Mr. St. John Hutchinson, prosecutâ€" ing, offered no evidence reégarding a further charge of driving s car while under the Influence of drink, to which Mr. Scottâ€"Paine had pleaded not guilty. ‘The jury found him not guilty of that charge. 1 Sir Henry Curtis Bennett, K.C., deâ€" ftending, revealed that Mr. Scottâ€"Paine served throughout the war in the Royal Naval Air Reserve; was awardâ€" ed the Distinguished Service Cross and medals from other nations; flew continuously under bombardment at Dunkirk; in 1917 was shot down in the North Sea, was picked up after five er; was taken to Germany, where he ad a half hours by a German destroyâ€" was confined at six different prison camps; escaped from three of them; and was consequently placed in soliâ€" tary confinement for three months. police had to be summoned to disperse an unruly crowd. First Baby in Nuddist Colony Paris.â€"The first baby to be born in Physiopolisâ€"the nudist colony on an island in the River Seineâ€"has arrived to the wife of a French professor. ‘ He weighed eight pounds. Te proâ€" fessor and his wife, both prominent members of the colony, decided upon a "100 per cent. nuddist birth," as a sclentific experiment. Despite the recent bitterly cold weather the mother has takaw haw m When the news of the baby‘s death reached the Birmingham club an offiâ€" vlal immediately asked Bradford if he would like to retire from the game, "I will stay," he said. And he played well. Two years ago Joe Bradford was the hero of a eup final He had been suffering for weeks from an injured leg, but it was decided to play him in thne Wembley match between Birmingâ€" ham and West Bromwich. =â€" West Bromwich won 241. Bradford scored Rirmingham‘s only goal, Dislike Josephine Baker Helsingfors, Finland.â€"Miss Josephâ€" Ine Baker, the colored dancer, is hayâ€" inz an unbappy time in the Baltic ountries. Last week she was not allowed to perform in Estonia. Later her apâ€" pearance on the stage of a Helsingfors theatre caused a riot. The famous dusky artist was asâ€" salled with stink bombs, accompanied y an ontburst of catealls and whistâ€" "Go back to Africat" s nraged Finns. The performance had to Birmingham, Eng.â€"Joe Bradford, hirmingham‘s centre forward, played a great game in the local Derby acainst Aston Villa recently, Yet a few hours before the match his baby had died. The baby was born two days before and he had spent the long hours beâ€" tween then and the day of the game in an anguish of anxiety. Plays Great Gameâ€"Knows Baby Dead Recent Events From Overseas .\lnn\‘hfle. outside Impoertant Deal Africa‘" shouted the the theatre, the be broken the pure, fresh blood co;:_t;lâ€"nl;'; };; six salts of Kruschen is carried to every part of the body. Then follows Here‘s the recipe that banishes fatâ€" take oneâ€"halft teaspoon of Kruscher Salts in a glass of hot water before break{ast, modify your diet, and take gentle exercise. The stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels are tuned up, and I think is right I‘ll tell them. But I do know thisâ€"I am feeling better since taking Kruschen, and am really glad I kept on with it."â€"(Mrs.) E. _ 1 was gaining in flesh and not feel. ing too well, so I started to take Krusâ€" chen Salts, and am nowon my third bottle. My hips used to be 47 ins., and the last three months I have got them down to 42 ins. So my friends who used to laugh at me are now wonâ€" dering. I shall have the last laugh, for when I get my hips down to wht‘ Those friends of Mrs. E. M. D., who have been wondering how tbQ_t lady is reducing ber hip measurement, â€" are now let into the secret. She has been taking Kruschen. Here is a letter from her:â€" Friends Wonder How She Does It HER HIPS REDUCED 5 INCHES 2. What insect does the blacksmith manufacture? 1. What is that which, by taking away an I, has nothing left but a nose? Candid Clerkâ€""Lady, with your figure, you should careâ€"you should care." Pretty Young Thing.â€""Are you sure these curtains won‘t shrink? I want them for my bedroom windows." Weptctntints infi Wt dnc cidhicissistnals oi who used to spend a lot of time rubâ€" bing the creases out of his trousers, has a grandson who spends plenty of money trying to keep his creased. A KRUSCHEN SECRET First Womanâ€"“Wéll, don‘t tefl -her I told you she told me." Second Womanâ€""The mean thing! I tfiqld her not to tell you I told her." First Woman â€" "She told me you told her that secret I told you not to tell her." Women‘s bathing suits used to be an embarrassment in the water, but now they are an embarrassment out of it. Womanâ€""He may be square, but I don‘t want him around. He thinks it Visiting Gentleman Friendâ€""Why, I thought he was a pretty square sort of fellow." Womanâ€""My husband is a perfect brute, and I am going to get a diâ€" voree." The 21st verse of the 7th chapter of Ezra in the Bible containg all the letâ€" ters of the alphabet except the letter J, examination shows The oldâ€"fashioned Beau Brumme!} Manâ€""I wonder if dyeing the bair is really as dangerous as some of the doctors say?" Henpecked Neighborâ€""You bet it is. An uncle of mine tried it once and within a month he was married to a widow with four children." If ‘Twas Told C+ You Just a little bit of siander started in a thoughtless way May put a blight upon a person that ‘ quite likely long may stay. Or, the thing may have been started as some sort of foolis}: joke, But think how you‘d be insulted if ‘twas told on your own folk. Slander moves in vicious circles seemâ€" ingly without an end, And like al} the slimy reptiles is a thing without a friend. He or she who spreads a story that should not have been unloosed May be certain in the future it will sure come home to roost. Drug Clerkâ€""Very fine; we have a customer who took the cork out of the bottle with his teeth and the next day he had a mustache." Baldâ€"Headed Manâ€""You say this a good hair tonic." per dishes wait until mbrfiihi_'higro than one young husban‘ has had his eyes opened with a can opener. _ Sense is a better inheritance than _dollars. People who give a square deal usually get a square deal. Re joice at another‘s success and study his methods. Crime isn‘t due to pinch of want; then it must be due to want of pinching. And then, of course, the nudists can save quite a bit on moth-‘ balls. Ten men overplay or overloaf, where one overworks. The men who sit around and whittle and wait for the breaks are the men who stay broke. The beginning of a perfect evening is a decision to let the supâ€" Riddles m cedb t s i e e td shouldn‘t you too? Kruschen Salts is obtainable at all Drug Stores at 45¢. and 75c. per bottle. sheer{ty; ) * ie vivacity and charming figure. Millions of people all over the world are already proving this daily, _ Why Lx 2430 1 . L It will astonish many people, says | the Implement and Machinery Reâ€" ‘| view (England) to learn that the feudal way of farming is still being practised in England, even in the twentieth century. Laxtom, Nottingâ€" hamshire, is described as the last village in England that is still farmâ€" ed on the manorial system, which reached its zenith about 1200 A.D. Here every farmer Jlives in the vilâ€" lage street instead of on his holding, and his haystacks, sheds, etc., all alongside his cottage, _ The parish is divided into three huge open fields, each of about 400 acres used for wheat, spring corn and dead fallow in turn, and there is also a large common. _ Every farmer or "villein" may use the common and may graze ‘his quota of 20 sheep on the stubble 6f the other fie‘lds as soon as they have been reaped â€" and officially "broken" by the ringing of a bell.| In addition, his 30 or 40 acres of land ] are divided up into about 16 portions scattered far and wide over the three open fie‘ds. is Feudal Farming Miss Booth scored a personal sueâ€" cess at Bayreuth and was presented to the former Crown Prince and Crown Princess and to Herr Hitler. â€"_"I had a terrible time at first in the opera," Miss Booth explained. "My German was still imperfect and 1 had to sing difficult Wagner roles withâ€" out a proper knowledge of the lanâ€" guage and with no stage or orchestral rehearsals." That trouble has gone now. She speaks German and French fluently and sings as well in Spanish and Italian. ‘ It was a success. Professor Hoerth, director of State Opera, offered her an engagement, and Miss Booth was enrolled on the spot. one afternoon _Aravant{n6£;--££agg deâ€" signer, heard her sing and insisted that she should have an operatic audiâ€" tion. & When she was 21 Miss Booth came to Berlin and aft@® only six months with one of Berlin‘s most famous teachers her opportunity came. At tea "I remember with great pleasure my days at the Guildhali Sehool," Miss Booth said. "I had lessons from Jenny Hymans and Madame Strangâ€" ways and I owe a great deal to them.," she went to Southport and fin;ilyrt-t; the Guildhall School of Music in Lonâ€" don. she in "Parsifal" and later talked with Herr Hitler about music. Miss Booth was born in Wigan and lived with her grandparents, who, she said, "abhorred anything connected with the theatre." As a young girl wtew ce uie m 12 8 company. This year she sang at Bayâ€" reuth, before thousands of people who went for the annual Wagner Festival. She was asked to carry the Holy Grail D Noh Aricudnevnit idsÂ¥ w1 5ck.24 Miss Booth is now in her fifth year at the Opera House and ‘during that time has developed from an obscure beginner to a leading member of the A Lancashire girl, Miss Margery Booth, is England‘s only representaâ€" tive on the German singing stage and has woen recognition seldom granted to a foreigner at the Berlin State Opera. y 0 ttke . Py 5 ’ English Girl Makes Succeg-of Operatic Womanâ€""Why did you marry such a homely man?" Beforeâ€"He talks and she listens,. Honeymoonâ€"Sbe talks and be lisâ€" tens. Afterâ€"Both talk and the reighbors listen. %, Answers 1, Noise; 2, Fire fiies; 3, A cord of wood; 4, One sews what she gathers, the others gathers what he sows; 5, The wind. 5. What is it that goes all the way around the house and never makes a track? 8. What cord is tull of knots which cannot be untied? 4. Why is a dressmaker like a farmer? Vis!ting Woman In Great Britain â€""He asked me." ll And here is a story of a White . Cockatoo, told to Ur. Chapman by "‘I refuse to take part in the deâ€" struction of such a noble bird for such a low price!‘" matically: to $10 per Condor, and, with a fine show of feeling, Porta exclaimed draâ€" "For each set of 80 feathers conâ€" tained in a tail and a pair of wings, he had received $20 in gold. Because of the war the price had now fallen _ _‘"He had seen 800 Condors in a single roost and shot 114 in a single day," adds the dean of American orniâ€" thologists. "But, as & rule, the birds were netted over the carcass of a fat horse as bait, 64 birds being the largâ€" est number captured at one throw of} the net. "By profession Porta was a hunter of Condors, and he proudly informed me that he had sent the wings and tails of 16,000 Condors to milliners in Paris. On one of his birdâ€"hunting expediâ€" tions in South America, Frank M. Chapmanâ€"Curator of Birds in the American Museum of Natural History â€"went collecting one day with the taxidermist of a local museum, an Italian named Fernando Porta, "one of the keenestâ€"eyed men with whom I have been in the field," says Dr. Chapâ€" man (in "The Autobiography of a Bird Lover"). Such pride! An openingâ€"whichever way you look at it. ’ "One is tempted to ask whether there is no manufacturer capable of making a real corkscrew which will extract the corks of wineâ€"bottles neatâ€" ly and cleanly," he adds. "Could not wine merchants as a body offer a prize for the best corkscrew, and gladden the hearts of the wineâ€"drinker and the manufacturer by supplying it to their customers?" «â€" A good corkscrew is one of the rarâ€" est of human blessings, declares Mr. Allen. Yet in two centuries this imâ€" plement has made little progress. "M, Simon has traced the corkscrew back to 1732, when an anonymous poem of a mock heroic character celeâ€" brated the discovery of "‘The Bottle Serue whose worth, whose use All men confess, that love the ‘ juice.‘" Where did the corkscrew come from? Ask H. Warner Allen, noted wine connoisseur (in his fascinating and timely book, "The Romance of Wine"). And if anyone should know it is Mr. Allen. But the best he canl do is this: one. Maria (glancing at catalogue): "Solomon dancing for Herod." "But he never done it, Maria!" Maria (tartly); "He musta done, else he couldn‘t a been photographed !" And that reminds Sir John of anâ€" ther ovecheard conversation in an art gallery. This was between two women who were looking at a picture, "The Dance of Salome." "Well," said the husband, "I always heard she was a wild, bad woman, but I never thought she would go to exâ€" tremes like that!" _ At a Dublin exhibition of paintings, reminisces Sir John Ross (in "Pilgrim Scrip"), an old couple looked at a picâ€" ture of the expulsion of Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden. The husband asked what it represented. Biddy looked at the wrong number in the catalogue and said: "It‘s Queen Elizabeth Spanish ambassador." ‘"Now what‘s that, Maria?" asked ONTARIO ARCHIVES Toronto receiving the Finally only Like a reminder of the sky, and a lamp lit in it; And three pigs; and a cow chewing her cud in a dooryard; Toâ€"day there is snow all over the valâ€" ley And we ride in a little world hidden from the mountains, ‘The hills behind Pojaque that are usually painted on the sky The color of fire against the color of mountains Toâ€"night are byacinth pink on a grey cloud curtain, ‘ Fading to violet, fading to no color at all. * And here is a house withf blue door and a blueframed window, y cicc t CRCNmeWn t aP mxmfivflmifl-nufi.. The very first dose gets down to business â€" you can feel it doing you good, Its Hightningâ€"fast ection amazes everybody when they take it for the first time. If you, or any member of your family. has fvo, sir. No matter how hard and cold No, siz. No matter how hard No Cold is a Fixture with _ Buckley‘s Mixture "Oh, no, boss," insisted the old man, "he ain‘t sick nor nothin‘, he‘s only lazy"â€"and, as the man looked more and more puzzledâ€""he‘s settin‘ on a thistle." = "But he must be ill or in pain," proâ€" tested the other, "or he wouldn‘t be yowling like that." "Oh, there ain‘t nothing wrong with him, boss," said the negro. "He‘s only lazy," * "What‘s the matter with your dog ukgd a passerby, } Mrs. Anna George De Mille, daughâ€" ter of Henry George, who made an abridgment of her famous father‘s "Progress and Poverty," used to tell a story about a whiteâ€"headed old negro sitting by the roadside with a miserâ€" able looking little dog which was howlâ€" ing with pain, of "The Lone Wolt" stories, recalls the fact that when William De Morâ€" gan published his first novel, Mr. Vance wrote to him pointing out that the title, "Joseph Vance: An Diâ€"writâ€" ten Autobiography," was not exactly calculated to assist the reputation of a writer who was becoming establishâ€" ed. The upshot was a firm friendâ€" ship between the two men. The recent tragic death in New York of 1_nuis Joseph Vance, author _ "‘A few days after Mearns had gone back to Manila,/ the Governor continued, ‘a native woman came in, crying, and said that someone had killed her pet Cockatoo!‘ "Recalling this story on one occaâ€" sion when I was in the National Muâ€" seum at Washington," chuckles Chapâ€" man, "I asked Dr. C. W. Richmond, in charge of birds, if Mearns had ever sent them a White Cockatoo from the Philippines, ‘Yes,‘ he replied, ‘one from northern Luzon.‘" "‘"That man Mearns,‘ said the Gowâ€" ernor, wholly unaware that I knew him" â€" Dr. Chapman speaking â€" " ‘*didn‘t care anything about me. All he cared about was birds. One day he came in from hunting and said that he had made a very remarkable discovery. He had shot a White Cockatoo. And this, he said, proved that the Philippines were at one time connected with Australia. y only the noiseless invisible snow pricking down out of larkâ€" ness. f convineed. Refuse substitutes. Buckâ€" Winter Sketch â€"Peg ggy Pond Church. 99 Four of the eight children of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Fletcher, of Shapâ€" leigh, Maine, underwent appendicitis operations at t\ ~ same time. a general view of the situation in | Australian things are decidedly betâ€"‘ ter. at The government statistician hbas just issued figures which showed a general trade revival. Those referred to increased motor registrations, new wireless licenses, a much larger trade balance, more deposits in the savings banks, fewer bankruptcies, more companies registered and a steadily growing volume of exports. Taking Mr. Seppelt said that firms which hal been losing heavily during the ‘lut few years were now looking forâ€" ward to better times, and they bad grounds for their optimism. There were possibilities for many firms balâ€" ancing their ledgers during the curâ€" rent year, There was a definite indiâ€" cation of the revival of the building trade, and associated industries in Australia were showing a distinct imâ€" provement in turnover compared with the previous year. _ Adelaide, 8. Aust.â€"aAfter a tour of the Eastern States, Mr. Oscar Seppelt, former president of the Associated Chambers of Manufacturers, said in an interview that there appeared to be a general industrial revival everyâ€" where, and maufacturers, and commerâ€" clal leaders were speaking in much more hopeful terms. ‘ Australia Well, what do you think? Or maybe you‘d rather not even think about it at all. If this is true, you have comâ€" pany. Personally, it seems hardly probableâ€"that is, among women who insist upon a bit of common sense along with their fashions. Too long now we have enjoyed the comfort and practicability of the medium length skirt, and it is dubious if the modern woman of fashion will ever again subâ€" mit to & clutter of cloth around her ankles anytime except in the evening when the fabrics are light and billowy or, if velvet or brocade, sufficiently wide to permit freedom of movement. Some will, of course, but the majorâ€" ityâ€"no. Paris.â€"Heim says it‘s a good hunch to pin your eye on your skirt if you want to be the first to catch a change in the spring mode. And good graâ€" cious alive, we haven‘t saved enough yet to buy our winter clothes and Paris starts talking about spring! He thinks that even by midâ€"winter there will be a change. "Litte by liule,"‘ he says, "they are getting longer. The cocktail dress is responsible but even sports skirts are adding an inch or £0o. Our prediction is that by this time next year al dresses for day and street wearâ€"with the exception of the purely sport clothes, will be the same length, and that this length will be to the ankle," I Spring Skirts Are to SCOTT‘S EMULSION RICH IN viTAMiINS whole s ystemâ€" there‘s a job for COLDS THAT HANG ON Coughs that rack the itions Brighter Ankleâ€"Length relief. Sold by all druggists. relieve and prevent disorders. No narcotics. Not just a pain killer but a modern LYDIA E. PINKHAM‘S TABLETS FOR WOMEN Britain sin century. \ Britain Cuts Infant Mo: Deaths among infants l» year old bave fallen by halt 4 _ _ j t fountiess numbers, skin sufferers have had cause to be thankfu} for D.D.D., the prescription of a highly successful physician T» n n n * successful physician, Dr This liq '!“r::"flcfipfion k New 55¢ Size Give Place to Veivet Smooth Skins In HHMHHKE sniitins s 12. 14 a& woman, When she has had n When she has had c When she has know: repose : Not to demand more, To take what comes, To bold what she ha most of it! The look on her ta« moonlight on h Desires rest in her 1i That have bhad enous} SKIN RASHES There is Cuticura Wiam cc21, _ "ZAPrAves Sn Information went free The Rameay pany, World Petent Atiornevs >~> Street Ortaws Canada For them by name Ref all druggine C L ce N OFFER To EveRry INYENTOR, .s List of want: ~ inventions aho full information sent free. The -‘.“’ Com» PRMY. Warla Dasse. d l2 CEmmRed 2 qlas 00 E23 COPOR: IC CioWr Cke this completely with mere f senlts, oil, mineral warer, div n t w chewing woun: or roughage! Thes Vow ver, ou need Carter® litie liver i m; Bute Quick and sure 1 ISSUE, No. es Whis s c MB i1 c c /. Department for quotations @l. The Milnes Coa} ©o., Ltd. TO SAVE YOUR HAIR ip 25¢. Ointment 25¢.and B0c. M‘S LIVER Thas MAKES YOU FEEL S0 WRETCHED YOUNG MEN:! ake up your Liver Bile â€"No Calomel necessary C es IA Lâ€"\\'Bl'!‘F:‘ OUR WHOLE®A (From The Ad« a forbearance COaL aAND CoKE. Forbearance the fi ‘cor Infant Mortality ok and sure resulus ."a efi mlo®tita tw the wt D. D. Dennis Ihantive coun Pill® â€"f w i net ste Nee Wl Ha nke he

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