West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 15 Feb 1934, p. 2

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U Jl'ST THINKâ€"it takes less than 1# worth of Magic Baking Powder to make a deliâ€" cious threeâ€"layer cake! And Magic is alâ€" ways dependableâ€"gives the same perfect resultsâ€"every time. No wonder Canada‘s leading cookery experts say it doesn‘t pay to take chances with inferior baking powâ€" der. Bake with Magic and be sure! aAd _ new Syntax had wealthy South Afr Lecordingly he evening rut g Michel ten ininutes late through Glynn‘s attention to his returned his key After breakfas cab and drove to on the outskirts Max following a s _about th sugrested press whic tioners wit purpose ( That night, Glynn Elliman travelâ€" led comfortably down to Ribbleston, settling himself in and sleeping most of the way like an accustomed travelâ€" ler. And in the compartment next to him, Max smoked cigarettes and dozed between them, but never failed to be awake and alertly on the watch at each stopping place to see that "CONTAINS NO ALUM." This statement on every tin is your guarantee that Magic Baking Powder is free from atum or any harmful) ingredient. t from the factory, fnrilfi-emf'n‘r‘;l‘e"‘;";;e... Agents of "The Vulture" in London hear of this and track him to the factory. NOW GOo OX WITHK THE sToRy. "The mapâ€"the Airways map," said Stefan, evidently convinced. "At least the Vuiture‘s men can reach the aeroâ€" dromes halfâ€"way from India." "And if there is an accident at some place like Basra or Bagdad which preâ€" vents the Syntax from fiying on, it will not be as easy to find another machine there as in London," added Michel. d At Croydon Aerodrome, Glynn Elliâ€" man, pilot of the Indian Air Mail Liner, meets Norah Seaman who bhas come to see some friends off. . At the last minute, Glynn is taken oft bis regular fying and warned to standâ€" by for a special job. He chats with Norah about this, both wondering if it has unylhlnfiflm do with the press reâ€" ports of a nce of :. apalate fying to India. He is i!! in London, but in haste to return to India, where his father has died. He must be present to claim the throne, which his halfâ€"brother, "The Vulture," plots to seize. Glynn and Norah nart and as the as ext Max was telephor guarded report t 1 in their room in t day there were pointe At C & as The mnC TT hursday, Glynn Elliman tax to a Club aerodrome London, took up the quarâ€" 1 been arranged for him and telephoned to report o the Prince‘s equerry. ted out that he was natâ€" asked a good many quesâ€" ‘he machine being there d a little paragraph for ich might satisfy the ithout giving away any of the machine‘s purpose es jater ha lynn‘s bag | to his Pass is key to th eakfast, GJj rove to the ; tskirts of : ving at a d cab. And v wn the ne und and exa a oriei note appeared apers to the effect that x h!d_ been bought by Ir w Ip partic A y Flying Courier sYNOPSIS T w\ an sportsma use, he machir r the Miss Norah nn ining it careâ€" ing a lengthy » Stefan and London. three lots of these events ulars of air ind at the ofâ€" eceives secret gets instrucâ€" : to London Prince‘s use. London hear by Boyd Cabise alr your proclamation here in of witnesses who will sig _ "There is precedent for the fire and slaughter that will assuredly come on the Day of the Feast," said the Prince grimly. "And for British bayonets beâ€" ing called in to restore peace and law â€"as after the Moplah rising." "I see nothing for it," said Sir Aylâ€" mer despairingly," but to fall back on the other suggestionâ€"that you make other party?" ' "I‘m afraid," struck in Sir Aylmer hurriedly, "I‘m afraid that cannot be done. 1 have already raised the quesâ€" tion privately, and am assured, priâ€" vately but authoritatively, that our Government cannot interfere. The whole matter is one of the laws of Napalata, and the voice of the priests and people. There is no precedent for British interference with the doâ€" mestic affairs of the State of Napaâ€" lata." _ would it not be possible, â€" Your Highness that the British Governâ€" ment could act?" asked the Secretary. "If it were officially published that the British and Indian Governments supported the claim of Your Highness, would it not weaken the hold of the _inere was another leaflet," said ’the Prince, "deriding the report that I might be able to fly. Now, if it has to be told that I cannot do so, it must even weaken those who have supported me so loyally up to now." ‘ *"Would it not be possible, â€" Your Highness that the British Governâ€" ment could act?" asked the Sarrataw Sir Aylmer handed back the copy and shook his head. "The reports from Napalata grow steadily worse," said the Prince. "Have you seen this cabled copy of the leaflets that are being sent round and displayed everywhere?" Sir Aylmer took the copy the Secâ€" retary handed him and read: "To the Priests and People of Napalata. It is our law that the heir to a Prince who has died must proclaim himself in his capital within seventy days, that your eyes may behold his face and your ears hearken to his voice and that so you may know him. One son of our late Prince is in London, injured, dying or dead. The other son is here with his people, and will proâ€" claim himself on the Day of The Feast. He being the only lawfully proclaimed Prince, will then reign and will give rewards to his friends and| punishments to his enemies." | s1/wer they had gone, the Prince, exasperated and almost exhausted by his fruitless arguments and pleadings, discussed the position with _ Sir Aylmer, with the equerry and Secreâ€" tary in attendance. | But on the same day a consultation was held at the Prince‘s house which looked like upsetting all the careful plans of plotters and counterâ€"plotters, The specialists had made a full exâ€" amination again, and after discussion had delivered their opinion from which nothing would move them. If the Prince were moved within a week, they said, they would not be answtrâ€" able for the consequences; and they would go further and say that if he persisted in attempting the flight to India before then, he would almost certainly have to be removed from the plane before he got halfway, and would probably die in whatever hos pital he foundâ€"if he were within reach of one at the critical stage. After they had gone, the Prince, exasperated and almost exhausted by his fruitles$ RFOUMARLES 2Hi mlan Abscsras *There was have to be in an ambulance, and we can‘t miss seeing that. And another man watches the Club aerodrome where the machine waits." In _ "There must be no slip in the watch kept on the Prince‘s house," _ said Michel. and would probably be flown out to him soon by an experienced pilot who had been testing the machine. The camouflage however failed to deceive those .most interested in the destination of the Syntax. "It is a blind that might have succeeded" Steâ€" fan remarked to Michelâ€""if we had not known that the pilot fiying the machine had called at the Pri'nce’a' house just before taking the train to the factory." | MADE IN CANADA in the presence sign and swear A new record depth for the ocean has been discovered. An American expedition, sounding off Porto Rico, reached a depth of 44,000 feet,. The previous depth was 34,416 feet in the Pacific Ocean, ‘ The urban public libraries of Engâ€" land and Wales issue some 136,231,000 books a year,. For the first time the most doveted aAward of the London School of Denâ€" tal Surgery has gone to a Tirl. She is Miss E. L B. Stamper, of Willisâ€" den, England, and the award is the Saunders Scholarship, the ho‘!der of which is regarded as the senior stuâ€" dent in the final year of the course. Miss Stamper also took prizés in dental surgery, bacteriology, and denâ€" tal diseases in children, and a certiâ€" ficate of honor in radiology. The , school will not admit women stuâ€" dents hereafter. | Correspondence of Times Magazine, your dear mother and father : ingham Palaceâ€"and I have : gotten it. They knew I were shireman before I came away putting my confidence in you hope you may long be spare 01 pursuing "your work." â€"â€" _ When the speeches began it was Mr. Smith, one of the oldest, hardest and greatest of British trade union leaders, who proposed the Prince‘s health, ~ Heaving himself to hig feet with something of the massive effect of a heary howitzer getting into position, he talked of the hope with which his class looks to the Prlnce.‘ Ha ended with his stolid peroratian* _ At luncheon in Barnsley, the Prince sat with the Mayor on one side of him, Mr. Smith on the other, and a Barnsley chop before him. (The fame of Barnsley chops is due to their size; as they weigh a pound and a quarter, only two of them can be cut from one sheep.) Unemployâ€" ment and the slums were the aole‘ subjects at the Innehenn. Now in his seventies, he is such a man as only Yorkshire can produce. He is grim, gruff, blunt, downright and decided. In a cloth cap and muffier, with a deadly pipe slung beâ€" tween his teeth, he is a vast bulldog of a man with the temper of an autoâ€" crat and the thick brogue of the west Riding of Yorkshire. A man who says what he means and means what he sayvs. A iew days ago, visiting unemployâ€" ,ment centres in Yorkshire, the Prince of Wales came to the bleak mining town of Barnsley, famous as the home of Barnsley chops and Herâ€" bert Smith. _ Mr. Smith had been the president of the Miners‘ Federation and was "Ahr ‘Erb" to a million miners. It was a nickname of proprietorship, for Mr. Smith was a pitâ€"boy before he was ten, His childâ€" hood was spent in some of the bitterâ€" est poverty in the country including the workhouse. Gi;l Wins Dental Award The Prince of Wales | "Butâ€"butâ€"is it your face, your voice?" said Sir Aylmer, still in rather shocked tones. "I mean would itâ€" from a filmâ€"be held legal in the Courts?" 1 But now the Prince was chuckling. "It is an excellent questionâ€"and the argument for and against it being within the law will assuredly keep the people busyâ€"perhaps until I can ride at the head of my troops to settle it. But argument follows the cause of it. At least we provide the cause, Jt is enough. See to it, quickly.," *(To be continued.) The Prince repeatedly softly the words of the Lawâ€""that your eyes may behold his face and your ears may hear his voice, ard so you may know him for your Prince." ‘ "It can be done in time most cerâ€" tainly," said the equerry, answering the Prince‘s question. "A horse race that is run in the afternoon is shown on the screens of the theatres the same evening." ‘ A few days préeceuentâ€"1 meanâ€"is there?" The Prince laughed again. "There is never a precedent until one is set, yet many have been set." "Itâ€"it is mostâ€"I m;;; Sir Aylmer, "I don‘t think : precedentâ€"I meanâ€"is ther equerry. "Make your proclamation on a talking film, send it out by air, and let the people see and hear it," "A talk film," said the Prince, and laughed shortly, "Truly, I have often cursed the evil they have brought to India. It woula be coals of fire if now they helped me. Can such a thingl be dongâ€"the film be made in time?" "True," said the Prince quietly, "You have that English saying about a drowning man and a straw. Speak Out of the silence that followed, the voice of the equerry broke sharply, excitedlyâ€"“l!ighm, Sir Aylmerâ€"I believe I have it. It might fail, but it‘sâ€"it‘s a chance." and your ears ma;' 7h‘ear his voice, and that so you may know him." ne taixed of the hope with is class looks to the Prince. d with his stolid peroration : 1 a long conversation with r mother and father at Buckâ€" Palaceâ€"and I have not forâ€" _ They knew I were a Yorl th the slums -w;erer ifi;'ra-c;le the luncheon, ° speeches began it was film~§ talkie‘" cried the Make your proclu-râ€"n;tion on nce in you, and I s be spared to go work." â€" London ‘ the New York came away. I I don‘t think there is any a Yorkshireman Mr. Smith was a was ten, His childâ€" some of the bitterâ€" country including Napatala. Read ts said on that." d it and slowly .. must proclaim within seventy may behold him ," stuttered Whyte Packing Co. EGGSWANTED However, the principal thing for a mother to realize is that little children are not helpless. The can be taught to ease ber burden, to help keep the house in order, if she will only take time to teach them. Tying shoes and buttoning hard butâ€" tons will be more difficult. It takes the smartest child some time to learn to tie a bow or even a knot. Buttons will be mastered first. We Pay Top Prices For Write For (JJur Weeklv Ou l Moreover, they need not always be waited on. It is absolutely amazing to see the things some children of two and a half or three can do for themâ€" selves. Wash and dress themselves, and feed themselvesâ€"if not perfect!y, at least enough to help out on a busy dayâ€"and even bathe themselves. They can put on their own wraps and overâ€" shoes, too. _ It isn‘t their fault. A child has to be taught. When he is ten it‘s too late. When he‘s eight, or even six, it‘s almost too late. Neatness must be absorbed with the milk in a nursâ€" ing bottle. When children are two or three the should have some idea of or J der, inf 1or it of her own accord. But about children clearing up after themselves, We see children of two, four, six, eight, twenty, forty, and eighty who have never learned to pick up a thing after they‘ve dropped it or put things right after they‘ve dropped it or put things right after they‘ve been disturbed. ‘ 78â€"80 Front St, East, | This idea of making a game of a ; | number of things was used to advantâ€" |age by a friend of ours. Her little â€"] girl for some unknown reason tired of | milk and was drinking far less than | the doctor ordered. The mother worâ€" ried about it and the doctor suggested |giving the child mill: in the form of & flavored malted beverage. This, too, the child refused, asking for water inâ€" stead. However, mother got a bright idea one day. They were playing train and mother announced that it would soon be time for the "man who sells drinks" to come around. Thereâ€" upon she left the room, returning a few minutes later wearing a man‘s hat, and carrying two glasses of the milk drink the doctor said the child should have. "Nice drinks," â€" she called, "ten cents each. Who wants one?" "I do," said her little daughâ€" ter, and mother handed ber a drink| and pretended to collect the ten cents. | The child drank the milk down sweetly, | . while mother also partook of the same beverage. After playing this game a few times, the little girl became so| j fond of the drink that she began askâ€"| ; ing for it of her own accord. 3 The little fellow has been trained to all sorts of things without knowing he was being trained. And that‘s more than half the battle. ONTARIO ARCHIVEsS TOROoNTO Result of Training. In the first place she is what we call a "merry" mother. She has a habit of making a game out of everyâ€" thing. Another custom of hers is to say "we" instead of "you" and workâ€" ing "with" him. "How in the world did you ever teach him?" every one wanted to know. ISSUE, No. _ Every one was surprised, but his mother said, "He does that at home. If 1 tell him to clear up his nursery he pushes his little table and chairs back to the wall, puts his toys all in a corâ€" ner and lays the odds and ends in a pile on the couch. I don‘t have to tell him now, or name each piece. He‘ picks things up like a grown person." , The other day a little fellow was at | our house and sat up at the table to ,dine. We had no high chair, having passed ours along, so he had to be bolâ€" stered up with two green pillows from the livingâ€"room, ‘ Perhaps you won‘t believe us when we tell you that this baby of two years and four months slid down when he‘d finished his cereal and baked apâ€" ples, allowed his napkin to be untied and then gathered up his pillows and marched them back to their accustomâ€" ed place without a word or suggestion from any one. Youngsters _ With Proper Training May Do Much to Ease Burdens of Busy Mother Teach Children Meaning of Order Yop Prices For Eggs, Uur Weekly Quotations. Delicious Quality SALADA "In every realm the pathfind« been few and the truths that triumphed were at first the pos of a minority."â€"Harry Emers dick. "The churches are the greatest inâ€" fluence in this world of ours to over. come the present tendency â€"toward greed and for spreading the new philâ€" osophy of government."â€"Franklin D. Roosevelt. "All I know 1 read in he added. And an official of the Soviet Emâ€" bassy told the London Sunday Chronâ€" icle that he had no knowledge about the alleged Soviet women battalions. He could neither deny nor confirm their existence. But another newsagency stated that they had been unable to confirm the existence of wome: troops in the Soviet armies. "It is fairly well known that there are several battalions of infantry, arâ€" tillery and sappers composed entirely of women." Ask your doctor about this. And when "The women. soldiers are drilled in exactly the same way as the men," th report stated, "but they are not conâ€" scripted for service, their battalions being entirely composed of volunâ€" teers. it. Thesimple method pictured above is the way doctors throughout the world now treat colds. It is recognized as the QUICKâ€" EST, safest, surest way to treat a cold. For it will check an ordinary cold almost as fast as you_caught ta According to a London news ageficy battalions of women soldiers in Soviet Russia are udergoing strenuous trainâ€" ing in a general drive to weld the Red Army into a more efficient fighting unit. Russian Women‘s Army What is the mystery about Russia‘s women soldiers? Mystery Surrounds He does not know he is unkind, He has a jewel for a mind And logic deadly as dry bone, This small son of Euclid‘s own. â€"Robert P. Tristram Coffin from the Saturday Review of Literature. Almost Instant Relief in this Way )TG Here‘s Quickest, Simplest W ay to Stop a Cold He makes no motion but is right, He spreads out his appetite Into a network, twist on twist, This little ancient scientist He spins himself to threads of dew Which will harden soon into Lines that cut like slender knives Across the insect‘s airy lives. His back legs are a pair of hands They can spindle out the strands Of a thread that is so small It stops the sunlight not at all. AsrIRN tasuers Ame MADE in Canapa He lays his staircase as he goes Under his eight thoughtful toes And grows with the conceniric flower Of his shadowless, thin bower. He walks upon the sux;ximrerf s;x'Iâ€"es',' eE Drawing from his silken b‘ouse The lacework of his dwelling house With six small diamonds for his eyes GREEN TEA e at first the possession ‘â€"Harry Emerson Fosâ€" The Spider pathfinders have the papers, at last you buy, see that you get Aspirin Tablets. Aspirin is the trademark of The Bayer Company, Limited, and the name Bayer in the form of a cross 1s on each tablet. They dissolve almost instantly. And thus work almost instantly when you take them. And for a gargle, Aspirin Tablets dissolve so comâ€" pletely they leave no irritating particles. Get a box of 12 k tablets or a Jhe Preeminent Hotel Achievement SHAW SCHKOOLS, Dept. W.P., 1130 Bay Street, Toronto At some of the busiest traffic points in London (Eng.) it is possible to count more pedal bicycles than motor cars. FEarn increased Salarâ€" m ies as Salesmen. We teach_you how to produce good ones Cost Ts low, results certain. it was only 36 feet high, and they finished it in the slanting position,. The builders of the famous leaning tower of Pisa, Ita‘ly, intended it to be vertical, but one side sank when Why not invest some of your beauty budget money in bathroom luxuries and see for yourself how pleasant the daily bath may be? Many prefer toilet water to bath powder, and others use both,. But for the sake of your guests it is a good idea to have a little jug of toilet water in the guest bathroom. Bath oil someâ€" times takes the plac: of bath salts. A few drops of it soften and perfume the hardest water. Manitoba‘s next com!ngiprod’u?er. Maps and Fu!l Information on Request. Doran Securities Ltd. 67 Yonge St., Toronto Bath ensembles assure you of nonâ€" conflicting perfumed odors, If your soap and bath salts are the same scent as your bath powder, the effect will be more pleasing. The same is true of toilet water. Show Card Writers Jâ€"]RAYMORE Huge cakes of soap are really more economical than those of medium size. And they‘re much more fun to use. Rough wash cloths and a long handled bath brush should always be banging within reach of the person who is takâ€" ing a bath, DIANA GOLD A well outfitted bathroom makes the daily bath a real joy. And, speaking of "outfitted," we don‘t mean fixtures of shining metal or landscapes on the walls, but things you use when you take a bath. Modish Creations Also in Black and Mixed For The Bathroom 113 "The best cure for a little informa tion is more knowledge."â€"Nicholas Murray Butler, .. _ The townsfolks stared in amazeâ€" ment from the sidewalks. Queen Mary‘s automobile had broâ€" ken down between Ely and Cambridge while she was motoring from Sanâ€" dringham to shop for antiques. Titmous saw Her Majesty‘s plight as he drove down the road. He ofâ€" fered his aid. The Queen accepted. Gives Queen Lift Cambridge, England.â€"Percy Titâ€" mous, who works for a brewery, drove into town this morning with Her Maâ€" jesty, Queen Mary, riding in his little automobile, Brewery Employe Colors shown were chartereuse green, tea green, gray beige, navy, pale blue and white. While hundreds of Parisiennes pre» pared elaborate toilettes for the eveâ€" ning festivities, Worth displayed sports modes designed with trim, cleancut lines, with skirts 12 inchos from the ground. Paris.â€"Spring fashion shows, givâ€" ing the first hint of new 1934 modes, opened in crowded salons recently on the eve of President Lebrun‘s annual gala reception at Elysee Palace. Sport Skirts Twelve Inches from Ground The manner in which Saskatchewan will fulfill its share in lopping 4,000,â€" 000 acres off Canada‘s area is not known, but details of the province‘s policy are expected to be announced shortly by Hon. M. A. MacPherson, Attorneyâ€"Géneral and treasurer. |is Regina.â€"Possibilities that Saskat chewan farmers will be faced by com pulsory wheat acreage reduction whe: they sow their 1934 crop are remote according to Premier J. T. M. Ander Acreage Reduction is too hot for anything to grow. This year we had about 30 pineapples, and I used them mostly for jam. The Chiâ€" rese use them quite a bit with beef," "If you will come and have a meal with me in January I will serve you a lettuce and tomato salad, fresh from our garden, and strawberries with whipped cream (if the canned cream will whip; if not, beaten egg white). Then there will be plenty of bananas also, if the thieves do not get too many. We have more than 10 bunches coming on now. Our garden is best from December to April; after that it ’ "The doors at the front and back are closed up tight at night to protec! them from thieves; the whole family of pigs, dogs, chickens, and cats brought into the house also. Is it any that so many of the natives are sick? It is always a wonder to me that the children live at all. Most of the bedâ€" rooms are inside rooms with no ligh whatever, except what comes in through the small door. wood or grass for burning and the If.mfly pig or chickens, I have more than once bad to step over a pig or have one come and lie down with a grunt by my side. Most of the homes, especially the heathens‘ are built with few or no windows, as the fewer they have the less likely the evil spirits will enter the building. "The smoke has no outlet, so it setâ€" tles around the room and makes the walls black. The floor is littered with *"Homemaking in China is very dif. ferent from homemaking in Canada, I shall describe one place, which is typiâ€" cal of the poor, or even middle class, home of Soutir China. Tke floor i8 mud, which is almost as hard as ceâ€" ment. On the "ight as you enter the _]|door is a bed made of boards, and placed on a stand about two feet from the floor. This is covered with a mat, and during the day they sit on it to do their work or eat their rice. In the middle of the room is a table, on which they place their food. This table, as well as the whole house, is thoroughly cleaned once a year. It is almost imâ€" possible to make a Chinese understani that to keep a place clean is so much better than to clean it after it is dirty, I might say, though, that lately my own cook has begun to take a pride in keeping the aluminum pots clean, for they always look so nice, and I do not hesitate to tell him so. But coming back to the little Chinese home, as J enter the woman is sitting on a low stool, with a small table in front of her, shelling watermelon seeds to ho used for moonâ€"feast cakes. EARTHENWARE PoTsS, "I have tried my best to think of some places in Canada to which 1 could compare the Chinese kitchen, but have failed. Anyhow, the stoves ars open earthenware pots, into which the wood or grass is put; a kettle is placed on top, and the rice cooked in this way. When the rice is prepared, then they take a huge fryingâ€"pan, much deeper than ours, and prepare their other food. Few or No Windows Writing to the Women‘s Page editor of the Toronto Globe, a woman migâ€" sionary tells of lx'»memgking in China ; igs and Chickens, . Cats, Sleep in Which Are Built Few or No Winc and Chickens In Distant China Is Held Unlikely Dogs and Houses With *# +4

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