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Durham Review (1897), 24 May 1934, p. 7

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edish ocientist Belic Preventive Substance From Fruits . Head Named ealth Festival page Theat Crop adly Damaged he M AT Ma ttective he cro nia Cure in at M )nt re )() â€" _ Professor e Nobel prize has discoverâ€" of protecting , the Svenska week. mingg ince onia Sepe m that 1 which ravages O he YAE & the 10cocei. ‘al al fficacious itamin C lds the subâ€" currants, Believes N# T@ 23 M uEi 1% D althy heria now 1% h er @33 hen Ty $ SSOr 1Ve he olt re Name of owner: Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick Daâ€" vid Windsor, Prince of Wales. Name of dog: Jigs Found by: Unidentified motorist. Received by: Southampton police, who had been driven batty looking for Jigs for three days and nights, when he ran away from Wales‘ country house, Fort Belvedere. Charge: A.W.O.L. Disposition: Lodged in jail awaitâ€" ing royai equerry. Windsor, Englandâ€"Found: one dog Cairn terrier. The locomotive was designed by Herbert Nigel Gresley, chief mechanâ€" ical engineer of the company and the school in locomotive design. The engine will have eight coupled driving wheels, each six feet, eight in. in diameter. It is understood it will be used on the Londonâ€"Scotland run. Doncaster, Engiandâ€"A new "hush hush" locomotive, believed to be the largest in the United Kingdom, is nearing the stage of corstruction at the Londox and North Eastern railâ€" way‘s shop here it was learned last week. Dadâ€"Junior, to be a son of mine you must be good for nothing. Sonâ€"Dad, I‘ll be good it you‘ll give me a dime. Touristâ€"What‘s in here? Guide (leading the way into a morgue)â€"Remains to be seen, sit. Some men get away with anything they doâ€"others just do the things they can get : .ay with. Stage Hand (to manager, sotto voice)â€""Shall 1 lo ~~r the curtain?" Managerâ€""Why ?* Stage Handâ€""One of tLe living sta tnes has the hicâ€"cups." # Callerâ€""Quite. _ But I should like you to explain why you‘ve printed it under ‘Public Improvements‘** It ?= Classified News * Callerâ€""Look here, I want to see you about this paragraph announcing my resignation from the Chamber of Commerce." Husbandâ€"It doesn‘t blow for the fire, it blows for water. They‘ve got the fire. No matter what"you do, somebody Always knew you would. Never bother about the man who calls you names to your face, but beware of the "bird" who goes around and talks about you behind your back. Witeâ€"Why does the whistle blow for a fire? show. & o c Samâ€"Did you win a prize? U hadliccGaa sA 2. EUE blocks, or a boy for years, nothing equals the feeling of disappointment of finding you‘ve caught the wrong one. A manager of a concern was preâ€" senting a purse ind a watch to one of the employees who was leaving the concern. The purse and watch were gifts of the other employees. After a long flattering speech, the manager wound up with: "The conâ€" tents of this"â€"holding up the purseâ€" "may in time disappear. But"â€"hold. Ing up the watchâ€""here is something that will never go."* Photographer (io wo Look pleasant, please. Sitterâ€"I get the idea. Photographer (click, you can resume your n: slon. "I do hope you keep your cows in A pasture" said Mrs. Newlywed, as she paid ber bill to the milkman, "Yes‘m" replied the milkman, "of course we keep tkem in a pasture." "I‘m so glad," gushed Mrs. Newly wed. "I‘ve been told that pasteurized milk is much the best." Mrs. Newrichâ€"What‘s & Landscape Artistâ€"That 3 the time of day. The sun through the heavens cast a which is recorded on the dial Ing the time of day, the parson he parson after the c;;;n;'ony. "Oh" said the nervous groon done that already," "" " i‘@wrich had given the land. Ecape artist full authority and he was showing her over the formai garden he had just completed for her. Mrs. Newrich (pointing)â€"What is that? Landscape Artist dial. Editorâ€""But it‘s quite true, isn‘t A‘fter chasing _ a street Heard? )eâ€"I‘ve just come from a dog . Newrich had will now kiss the rapher (click, click)â€" Now resume your natural expres. Found ‘! â€"That is to tell â€"That is & sunâ€" woman sitter)â€" T a sundial? bride," said car for moving shadow indicatâ€" I‘ve ui you have Acid Stcmach, don‘t worry about it. Follow the simple dosage of Phillips® Milk of Magnesia acts at once to neutralize the acids thatcauseheedache.stomachrim and other distress. Try it. You‘ll leeélikeienewperson. utâ€"be careful you get genuine Phillips Milk : of Magnesl:.n or Phillips Milk of Magnesia ‘Tablets when you buyâ€"25¢c and 50c sizes. If Past 45 Look ftor Acid Stumach The frail woman is Mrs, Hind, widow _ of the millionaire brush manufacturer, whose _ hobby was collecting rare stamps. It is the British Guiana one stamp, the rarest stamp in world. It is the only specimen existence. Meanwhile in England half a dozen connoisseurs are keeping in touch with New York by cable, watching and waiting for the opportunity to step in and gain posesssion of that piece of paper. By the end of the year seventeen squadrons will be using it. The South Wales coalfield, which, before the war, supplied the Navy with the bulk of its coal, has sent a deputation to the oilâ€"conversion exâ€" perts inviting them to establish a plant in Monmouthshire. PAPER WORTH £10,000 LONDONâ€"A frail iittle woman is fighting a legal battle with lawyers and executors in New York over a square inch of paper. But that plece of paper is worth between £10,000 and £15,000. \ This year 1,000,000 gallons of petâ€" rol will be produced for the force from 300,000 tons of British coal. So confident are the authorities of the quality of the fuelâ€"proved â€" by last year‘s gruelling testsâ€"that the seven squadrons at Biggin Hill are to leave on protracted manoeuvres early next month, using nothing else. For 17 Squadrons | The R.A.F. now consumes the whole of the British output. ‘ It was the larges-t burnlkwl'upply of petrol made from British coal ever delivered. NEW FUEL LONDONâ€"A fleet of new stream. lined wagons recently delivered to the R.A.F. aerodrome, Biggin Hill, Kent, eaough British coalâ€"petrol to supply seven air squadrons. ans, O Foresters, O Radleians, O Upâ€" pinghams, O Carthusians, 0 Haileyâ€" surianns and O :Jtonians. The winners in the third round were O Wellingtonians, G Watsoniâ€" DEAL. Eng.â€"Old Rugbeians, the holders, were beaten in the third round of the Halfordâ€"Hewitt Golf Cup on the Royal Cinque Ports course here recently, bp Old Watsonians by 3 games to 2. i The most spectateular shot of the day was a shanked drive by E. C.| Tyrwhittâ€"Drake (Lancing) from the first tee, the ball going through the door of the clubhouse and coming to rest outside the dining roomâ€"â€"the 19th hole ine one! She still possesses the stamp, WHEN SHE LO8T 28 Ibs, Recent Events â€" From Overseas "I am 24 years of age; height 5 ft. 5% ins.; and a short time ago my weight was 28 lbs, above normal. I was listless and without energy, Now after taking Kruschen Salts regwarly 1 have lost 28 Ibs. in weight, and have much more vitality. Also I have a very gocd complexion and I do not have face blemishes of any kind. Surely this must be due to my having pure blood, and I attribute the fact to my taking Kruschen Salts,"â€" (Miss) M. 3. Kruschen combats the cause of fat by assisting the internal organs to throw off each day those waste Ero- ducts and poisons which would otherâ€" wise be converted by the body‘s chemistry into fatty tissue, | Jms young woman‘s method of reducing overweight is evidently as beneficial as it is effective, and a letâ€" ter she writes is therefore worthy of publication :â€" befotarihatatatatatatacintetaatatirntotatorntattnttatainintrtsrintointadntnts HERE ARE THE SIGNS: vousness Frequent Headaches raigin Feeling of Weaknese iges tion Sleeplceances s of Appetite Mouth Acidity sea Sour Stomach Autoâ€"intorication WHAT TO DO FOR IT: She Gained Energy A RECORD cent the in Compared with the time it took to build some of the other great cathâ€" edrals of England this will be a truly amazing achievement. Wholo cenâ€" 1y to be finished completely in anâ€" other 16 years or within 50 years of the laying of the cornerâ€"stone by King Edward VIIL, HUGE EDIFICE LIVERPOOL, Eng.â€"Thanks largely to the munificent gift, just announced of nearly $1,250,000 from Lord Vestey and his brother, Sir Edmund Vestey, Liverpool Anglican Cathedral is likeâ€" "It is printed in black on magenta« colored paper, and was one of a few issued in 1856 by the British Guiana authorities." "I am in touch with the executors, and as soon as the ownership of the stamp is settled I shall buy it. Mr. Harmer said: "The question has not been taken to court, anc I hope it will be settled amicab.y. When be reached America the squabble was still going on, and the stamp cannot yet be sold. Hope of Settlement But the precious stamp which Mr. Harmer wanted more than any other in the world, for which he bad waited many years to buy, â€" eluded him. Meanwhile the remainde: Q"â€" the collection, valuea at £100,000, has arrived with Mr. R. H. Harmer, the stamp dealer, who, on hearing that the collection was to be sold, raced out to America in advance of hundâ€" reds of other dealers, and bought. the lot. Chester, the City of the Legions, has been well described by this quaint bit of verse: "I doe love this ancient citie, We never tread upon it but we set Our foot upon some reverend historie." Memories of Chester cannot, with certainty be carried back further umentnatis ihit cndB uhh sc at i AP 1 3 1y her husband; the executors disâ€" pute hber right to"it. Negotiations continue. Winchester, the old Capital of England was a tribal capital in Roâ€" man days; a long line of kings were crowned and buried here and, as late as the time of Henry III, the citiâ€" zens of Winchester disputed with the citizens of London over the right of precedence, _ No factories foul the air or mar the outlines of her streets and the Romans, in planning the system of roads, had them radiate like the spokes of a wheel, so that the city is the natural county town. Water meadows stretch for miles to the north and south and, thanks to | the foresight of its builders, Winâ€" ichester has probably more open spaces than any town of its size in the Kingdom. Henry Ward Beecher proclaimed the Cathedral to be the most beautiâ€" ful in Europe and recently, in talkâ€" ing to a prominent Catholic Church dignitary, he told me that he conâ€" sidered Winchester Cathedral to be the finest ecclesiastical edifice in thel British Isles. _ Here is the tomb of William of Wykeham, founder of the church, William Rufus and others Mary was married to Philip of Spain in this Cathedral. â€" The nave is the longest in the world, with the excepâ€" tion of St. Peters‘ at Rome. Wonâ€" derful carvings in stone and wood give artistic grace to the interior â€" it is history in a form which charms the eye and spirit. The Rare Old City of Chestar which, she claims, was Thousands of years have made these Islands what they are; there is a continuity which, in spite of mod: ermn improvements, definitely links the past with the present. â€" You are in a foreign country and yet you are Home â€" quite a paradox. Cathedral â€" Cities We shall visic some 21 Cathedral cities this summer, 1 shall refer only to two of these. THE ENCHANTMENT OF ENGLAND We are visiting the British Isles this summer and the prospect has a glamour and allurement that it is difficult to put into words. _ We enter a different world, full of the romance and history of the past; unâ€" believable castles, hedges along the winding roads, green fields that merge into the landscape, the quaint v.llages with the steepled church doâ€" minating the whole, thatched cottages â€"you can see this all in no other country but England.. There is no other country where you can take scenic beauty as a matter of course; where pageantry fits into the picture and where dreams come true. 1 TRAVRL iNPREssiONs given to her In anticipation oi criticism about the spending of so much money on a cathedral, it is pointed out that 8) per cent. of the Vestey donation will be spent in local wages and material. R blutomdns ts ied d ds : ud ctth 1247 3 000 a year the Cathedral will be con;~ pleted in 1950, or 50 years from the date it was begun. "Up to now we have had rather a shapeless building from the outside," says Sir Gilbert Scott. "The tower will give it a certain completeness and dignity. We shall start on the tower in zbout two years, and it ought to be completed in about four." Anticipate Criticism The nave, which is the final stage of the Cathedral building, will cost $2,500,000 and if money comes in to enable the committee to spend 3300,-] Lord Vestey and Sir Edmund Vestâ€" ey are making the gift in memory of their parents and the money is to be devoted to the building of the great Central Tower of the Cathedral. This, the crowning feature of the deâ€" sign of Sir Gilbert Scott, will rise 327 feet above ground level, making the Cathedral a landmark for many miles out at sea,. 1 turies were spent upon the erection of such noble piles as Canterbury, York or Lincoln. On the other hand St. Paul‘s was rebuilt after the Great Fire of London, in the short space of 35 years. The money for its rebuildâ€" ing came largely from a tax on coal brought into London. Freewill Offerings ( Liverpool Cathedral is rising enâ€" tirely through _ freewill offerings, ranging from the penny of the Sunâ€" day scholar to gifts even more princeâ€" ly than that of the brothers Vestey. The medieval streets, with their halfâ€"timbered houses are being judiâ€" ciously maintained and the character of the town preserves its old time atmosphere. Of interest to Canadians is a corâ€" ner of the trancept where, hanging near the ceiling, is a tattered battle flag and, in the corner under it is a picture of the Plains of Abraham. The flag is that of the Cheshire Regiâ€" ment and was used to cover the body of General Wolfe when he lay morâ€" tally wounded at Quebec. The Cathedral associations go back over 1000 years and bring recollecâ€" tions of King Alfred‘s daughter, Ethelfleda; and the grim Earl Leofric of Mercia, husband of the celebrated Lady Godiva. _ He and succeeding rulers made notable additions to the building, the latest change being made about 1880. The Rows are a remarkable feaâ€" ture of Chester and are unique in that there are rows of shops one over the other; the sidewalk of the upper shops being immediately on top of the stores on the street level. _ The main street of Thun in Switzerland more nearly resembles the Chester Rows than any other street. _ This idea might be adopted, in modified form, to overcome our traffic probâ€" lems of the future â€" who knows! a circuit of the old city on the top of what is the most perfect structure of its kind in Britain _ A history of the Wall would be an article in itself and some time I may write about this. than 47 A.D., when the Romans adâ€" vanced from the Midlands to attack Wales. Recently, however, two stone axes have been found in an old section of the town. _ It is one of the rare examples of a walled town and, even today, one can make Write to Captain F. H, Reid, C. P. R. Building, Toronto, or tele phone WAverley 6646. Or, if you want to go to the Conâ€" tinent or the Passion Play, there are seven itineraries available, ranâ€" ging from 27 days to 57 days and in price from $341 to $778. It costs nothing to enqulreâ€"'u is a wonderful opportunity, Captain Reid‘s all motor, all Britâ€" ish tour sails ou. the "Empress of Australia" on June 21st. You can take 31 days, 45 days or continue on the whole trip for the 52 days. It is worth while to build up an estate of memories for the future: it is worth while DOING IT NOW. England, Scotland, Ireland and Walesâ€"just think of visiting them for the first time, or, if you have been there before, think of renewâ€" ing your previous experience. THE BRITISH isLEs. "How do you happen to know that" "I‘m biological instructor cf the Coâ€" lege of Idaho here sir." "I am no optimist, but I see no immediate danger of war." â€"Benito Mussolini. "Name some disease this vitamin prevents," directed the major. "Scurvy, sin" \ "Do you know what a sacrimisoâ€" cervicia is?" Bure. Ask fo them by name. Reâ€" fuse substitutes. 25¢ at all druggists. "Do you believe in feeding your troops on salads and greens?" he inâ€" quired of Sergeant Cramer. Yes, sir. " W hy# your bowels. You won‘t completely correct such a condition, by taking salts, Oll, mineral water, laxative cln& or chewing gum, or roughage When they‘ve moved your bowels they‘re throughâ€"and you need a livâ€" er stimulant, Carter‘s Little Liver Pills will soon "Why?" "Because green stuff contains Vitâ€" amin C. % daily two rouxid- of liquid bile into your bowels. You won‘t completely Caldwell, Idaho,â€"Mess Sergeant Cornelius T. Cramer of headquarters troops, 116th Cavalry, Idaho National Guards, knows his onions as well as his cabbages and vitamins. Major John Hood was giving the organization its annual examination. Your liver‘s a very small organ, but it certainly can put your digesâ€" tive and eliminative organs out of kilter, By refusing to pour out its Mess Sergeant Explains He‘s Biological Instructor How Is Your Liver? Wake up your Liver Bile How welcome his cheque when it reaches our sanctum, How it makes our pulse throb; hbhow it makes our heart dance! ‘ We outwardy thank him, we inwardly bless himâ€" ‘ The steady subscriber who pays in advance. \ But always says "Send it; I read it; I like it; The fact is I think it a help and a I‘m subscriber, Who pays in advance at the birth of each year, Who lays down the money and does it quite gladly, And casts ‘round the office a halo of cheer. * He never says "Stop it, 1 cannot afâ€" ford it; When it came to his turi he spoke out in his sleep but this is what the stenographer heard him say: How dear to my heart is the steady The editor after working over his list of delinquent subscribers until he was weary, fell asleep. He dreamed that he was a boy away back in the district school, that they were having an entertainment and that his part was to recite "The Old Oaken Bucket," "Yes, sin" This precious residue is collected once or twice a year by men who go into the basin‘ of the chimney and shovel it out. The Assay Office reâ€" alizes $10,000 to $15,000 on the sale of gold reclaimed from chimney soot. Even the dust on the walls is colâ€" lected for gold. The Assay Office is hocsed in a relatively new byilding, white and severe, at the corner of Old Slip and South street. One of its important in stallations is called a fume precipâ€" itatorâ€"in reality, a series of metal sleeves each plumbed by a chain. AI-‘ ternating currents run through the chains and the sleeves; and, as the smoke passes up the chimney, the soot . particles, containing minute particles of gold, are dashed from the air by this electric barrage, and fall to the bottom of the flue. Since the government devaluated the dollar, almost doubling the dollar value of every scrap of gold, the Asâ€" say Office in New York has been usâ€" ing every conceivable precaution in its melting rooms to conserve the meâ€" tal. Recovers Gold Even From Chimney Soot less, nought. Whose journeying shadows fell and left no trace; Whose worlds in worlds of woven and welded thought Are now the language of a vanished race. Nothing exists in life more strange than these Lost lineaments of human histories. Are somewhere in the library of Time. Glimpses we get, of what they felt and said, Humdrum and bomely, or loftily subâ€" lime; But mostly Human Historie Siegtfried Su-oo_l':_l: the Sne The Editor‘s Dream OFF COLOUR? getting more magazines now than Knows Onions ied Sassoon in the Spectator. multltqdlnou dead, like books Without Calomel they are ghostly, nameâ€" Tissue cream should be patted into the skin and the spot under the chin deserves a few extra vigorous slaps. See that there is plenty of cream aâ€" rund the eyes and across the foreâ€" kead where fine lines have a tendenâ€" Cleansing cream comes next. Using upward and outward strokes cover the skin with a thin layer of the quickâ€"melting cream. Let it stay on for two minutes and then with soft cleansing tissues remove every trace of it. Skin ‘onic is the third step. Pour a bit of it on a cotton pad and pat throat face and forehead with the pad. Use brisk upward movements that stimulate and strengthen sagâ€" ginf muscles and lazy tissues. Let the tonic dry into the skin before you put on a very thin coat of tissue o nourishing cream. { Here‘s the Perfect A perfect nightly beauty routine and one which every skin needs, reâ€" gardless of its age or type, makes use of the four essential cosmetic preparationsâ€"complexion soap cleaâ€" nsing and tissue creams and skin tonic. Today we‘ll concentrate on a regrlar hom» treatment. First, wash your face and neck with soap and water, rubbing with the palms of your hands as well as with a rough wash cloth. Then rinse several times with tepid water and finish with a very cold rinse. ons 421 College St M o ¢ Toronto * S Resillinapmmepte > Harleyâ€"Davidson Distributors and Used Parts Write at once for our bargain list otf used motorcycles. Terms arranged. LYDIA E. PINKHAM‘S VECETABLE COMPOUND Issue No. 20â€"‘34 Mother took this medicine beâ€" fore and after the babies came; CIGARETTE TOBACCO S AVE THE POKER HANDS It pays to "Roll Your Own" with FPREEâ€"Everybody agrees that "Chantecier" and "Vogue" are the best papersâ€"you can get 5 large books of either brandâ€"free for only one complete set of Poker Hands, from your nearest Poker Hand Premium Store or by mail from P.O. Box 1380, Montreal. &\.r_o-_ Poker Hands to get Better Cigarette Papers ,V'uomokeuvbo“rolldm’rm"-dmmm- ing 10¢ do a bigger job than ever before.: They‘re using Turret Fine Cutâ€"the mild, cool, fragrant tobacco that .imdlennorcmdbemrmkutonhcsme money udPokcerdnoexchmpfor&u;ifu. 'Amw'l'urm!ine Cut is a turn in the right direction tas greater economy, greater pleasure and the extrs value of Poker Hands. Don‘t wait! TURRET FINE CUT Routine NU _ FADUSSI 11 V mss TORONTO Imperial Tobscco Company ol Canace, Limared Colic, Distemper, etc., and equally .ol:' in stable cr.:‘.bonu."‘;cfl\ named "King of Pain", '1_‘ few ow priceo oeli arive gower A pumps, 1933 models. To ve #old quickly at greatly reduces prices Write today for prices, and siwte depth Of well. Mr. Anderson, Beatty Brom.. 1.imite ed, Fergus, Ont., Box 238 W Cows aren‘t machines, They can get sick or hurt, But Minard‘s Liniment makes it easy to care for their ills. Mrs. Thos. Builmer of Lardo, B.C., found one of her herd with a l::: in her udder. "I; rabbed it Minard‘s Liniment",‘ the says, "and it soon got better." Minard‘s is best for Cuts, Bnfll,o‘, l)ROSTATI-: GLAND â€" SUPPEQSRSâ€" Free information regarding a treat» ment from which I have receives amaz» ing relief. No opligation is hereuy m« plied at all. "Preely ye have reveived, freely give." Alfred Beadle. 1649W Minâ€" nehaba, 8t. Paul Minu., U.8.A. ably the reason. 1t is most hikely the reason even though you are as regular as cun be in your daily habits, because lm:l".ly is no guarantee of completeness. Foliow there sinâ€" ple bealth rules: Eat moderately, sleep a«ffâ€" eiently, get lots of fresh mir and exerciseâ€"and ©nce or twice every week take a bracing, eve wib hy aue mvipants row abul in our who !J h‘ Nature end t‘nu tined , * days. Get Andrews liver Fait mw ‘n&b‘:&:‘fl 60e in mu.J 7,6- new hlf Bole ute: Juhn A. Huston Co., Ltd., Toranto Age 3 Beauty Preparations Used by Mien Montrealâ€"Men use beauty preparâ€" ations. There are still business o‘fices where the appearance of a vwoman is interpreted as a request for a subâ€" scription to something or other. These facts were glanced from adâ€" dresses delivered before the Business and Professional Women‘s Cub. Nearly 60 per cent of all Canadian exports which in their original «tate were produced _ on Canadian farms went to the United Kingdom during the fisca} year ending March last year, cy to form. When you have fin‘shed wipe off the excess and go 10 hbed. BARGAINS IN FARM PUMPS Are You W EA R Y ? CTORING YOUR | DAIRY HERD Classihed Aovertising

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