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Durham Review (1897), 18 Oct 1934, p. 2

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s 4 e J * 4 (* i } ‘THE coD Liver oil. witH me PLUS vauue : Me sighed reluctantly. "I‘d forâ€" gotten," he said, and then, more re solutely: "This won‘t do, will it?" "I‘m afraid it won‘t," she agreed. At that they turned back and be gan to study the big gates for posâ€" sibilities of climbing. He was examâ€" ©Cscute alley in the â€" raim, without apeech but with the subtle conâ€" sciousness that they understood ons another, that there was a sympathy, unexpressed but perfect, between them from now onward, She was the first to speak. "We haven‘t got the money back yet, have we?" she asked with an air of _ reâ€" grétful, halfâ€"whimsical reproach, as i# now she no longer cared quite . so much what might have happened to theilittle lsather bag. with her at the bottom of that obscure alley in the rain, without apeech but with the subtle conâ€" sciousness that they underetnn4i awo There wasn‘t any doubt about it now. Though they had barely exâ€" changed a dozen words, though even her name was unknown, he was deâ€" Anitely and inevitably in love. ‘ It came upon him in the form of a great urge to protective tenderness, He dia not want to touch her again o soon, that he would hop* to do latâ€" er, but he wanted insanely to remain witlk Ner at tho © beortoth \at " snarl the drizzle as if dwelling on words. "There, buck up," he said. "We‘re not beaten yet." ‘"Your‘re ever so good!" MHer tonc conveyed so much of inâ€" genuous admiration that he was completely bowled over. He wanted to say something offhand, to adopt a nonchalent "Oh, that‘s less than noâ€" thing" attitude. But instead he found himself saying, "I‘ve been wanting for months to do something for you." The heavy white eyelids fluttered. For a moment she Jooked up at him as if with a kind of grateful surâ€" prise. Then ber eyes yeiled themâ€" selves again and she stood silent in The ENERGY VALUE of Cod Liver Oil Scott‘s Emulsion is more quickly and easily assimilated than plain Cod Liver Oil because it is already emulsified, Scott‘s Emulsion is rich in body building hypophosphites oflime and sodaâ€"PLUS values you get in Scott‘s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil, 1A But although he was beginning to feel as if there were something futile and ridiculous about their search, Adam strove to prevent this from showing in his eyes. He even ventured to put out a hand and pat‘ her gently on the shoulder, an action that gave him a very delightful sen-l sation of protectiveness. He by no means prepared to admit t as yet, but ail the same things did seem to be taking on an air of hopelessness, and the amateur nature of their efforts to be growâ€" ing depressingly evident. \They had very little real evidence that the thief had come this way. Moreover he might easily have slipped back while they were all standing dumbâ€" founded at the corner. He might know of some way of getiing from here into another street. And so it proved. They reached the high wall that closed the far end of Grail Street without observing a sign of their quarry. Here there was another lamp, a single weak light that shone from against the dirty surface of the wall where a little, electric bulb was cupped in a sort o!f shell at the top of a length of rusty , conduit. It was under this inadequate HMuminant that the strange girl lookâ€"] ed despondently up at Adam so that‘ he found himself taking for the first: time a long look into her eyes, try-‘ ing with his own to infuse a measure of hopes | Adam _ Meriston, a farmer‘s son, ariicled to a solicitor, makes a brave but unsuccessful altempt to thwart three thieves in a bagâ€"snatching raid. The bag was torn from the hands of a wirl who afterwards explains to Adam that it contains the day‘s takings of hcr‘ father‘s shop. \ With e:uhified oila. di.ndonfi bem mth thl: the stomach. Ordinary oils must first c wi pan« cml:uichju‘:';u-mfmu emulsion â€" before they can be assimilated. AS S IMIL AT 1O N PLUS speeEov FIVE CROOKED CHAIRS For Sale by Your Druggist stood silent in By FAREMAN WELLS n‘s There came a sudden loud cluckâ€" ing from the opposite bank as if his torch béam had aroused a hen. The noise startled him and he was to reâ€" member it later. Fancy keeping hens in a spot like that, he thought as he moved away to examine the rear of the building in which someone‘ certainly was lurking. Here again there were no openings to offer an ®ntrance, though he realised that any a building on the opposite bank, a high building that stood flush with the edge and had a similat small yard at one end of it. The rest of the yard was fairly elear, running out to a steep, stoneâ€" pitched face at the foot of which the river flowed sullenly in a course that here was confined to a width of less than twenty feet. Adam moved to the‘ ®dge and flashed his torch idly over| the swirling black waters. There was ere side made a high pile. The little paved yard beyond proved most desâ€" olate. An ancient van stood forlornly in its centre, its tilt rent, the supportâ€" ing ribs gaping as the rays of the torch flickered over it. Except for some dirty straw it was empty. l They stood together on the inside while hbe> slowly recomnoitred â€" with the torch. They were in a dark archâ€" way littered with old shavings and dismembered packingâ€"cases that on Without a word he relieved her of the toreh, his excitement not too great to ignmore the light touch of their meeting fingers as he did o. He switched it off as he squeezed| through. She followed at once, her slighter figure not having in the least‘ to squeeze., | his delight he felt it yield obstinate| _ GENEROSITY sLOW TO BUD ly. | â€"Yet there is a natural generosity ’ "It‘s oper, part open at any rate,", in the child of three or four. It may he whispered, cautious even in his bud even younger, rising excitement. The door stuck,| _ But parents get impatient. but there now a dark gap throughf Nature, of course, won‘t do it all. which a man might squeeze. |Nature did not form "social" law, "Wait a minute. I‘ve a pocket-!‘ so we have to continue where nature torch," came in the subdued tones of | leaves off. $ his companion. "Silly not to ~have‘ ~All training toward good should be thought of that before." :gradual and tactful. A gardener She flasked a ray of light into the| may kill a young plant or stop the opening. | budding by rough handling and by Without a word he relieved her of, stifling. It needs care. Children are the torch, his excitement not too like plants. "Wait a minute. I‘ve a pocketâ€" torch," came in the subdued tones of his companion. "Silly not to ~have thought of that before." that the upper stories were continuâ€" ous across the opening and that there was little or no gap between them and the top of the gates. Fumbling about the lock Adam happened to lean rather heavily against the woodâ€" work. Fancying that he fcit the door‘ swing slightly he pressed harder. To The girl moved silently by his side: until they came to another of those| big yard gates. This one had a! smooth face, even the hingeâ€"plates | and boltheads being sunk too deep in | the wood for climbing. Therewas just enough light from the lamp at| the end of the street to show them‘ 23 10 IMVCBupdie LUrLner, lhere was a door in the centre of the building, but it was evidently firmly barred. He turned the doorâ€"knob and pushed with ali his might. That door might never have opened in a century. He moved along the frontage, trying; each window again. They were filledl in with timber securely. | "YOU‘D BETTER GO BACK." "There‘s someone in there all right," _ Adam â€" said superfluously. "Keep as quiet as you can." He crossed the roadway cautiousâ€" ly to investigate further. There was 1 He turned abruptly. Through the‘ dirty panes of ar upper window in | the building opposite there showed a‘ dull flicker of light as if someone inâ€"‘ side had struck a match. f "Look!" she whispered, with sharp indrawing of the breath. ining the first of these when suddenly clutched his sleeve. The footmiarks were pl:xn, {t;o, on 1 stairs. Someone had certainly go up there not many minutes carlier, (To Be Continued) "This is where he got in," he whispered, and shone his torch into the entrance. The dirty floor showed a track of wet footmarks leading to the foot of a worn flight of stairs. narrow door hidden behind the @ntrance gate and the piledâ€"up packâ€" ingâ€"cases. A gentle push caused it to creak slowly inwards. \ They came disconsolatély back to the archway again, and as they enterâ€" ed it Adam felt a sharp thrill of exâ€" citement. Approaching from that direction he was able to observe a lowl one of its several doors might have been openable from the inside still. These are the things that make one. armed driving so hazardousâ€"the AM: forseen emergencies which require the full strength of both arms. Comâ€" mon sense pleads with the motorist to keep both bhands on the steering wheel. Two handfuls of safety are in finitely better than one.â€"Exchange. _ This gent feels that one hand is plenty on the steering wheel, So he speeds along apparently unmindful of the fact that a sudden jolt may throw his car clean out of control, A blow. out, for instance; an unseen hole in the pavement; or an unâ€"noticed ob stacle in the street. | in a breeze, Good at cuddllng-h-fi sweetie, too, as he sails along under a romantic moon. Also he‘s mighty clever in using both hands to light up the old pipe The oneâ€"armed wonder is another species of chiseler, You meet him often. He‘s an expert in lighting cigâ€" arettes while driving fifty miles an hour. Whatever childreén are they are normal human beings. We coined the word "wicked" for our own conâ€" venience. she It is wrong to call the tiny child "bad". Me might be "cross" when routine is irregular or he gets too tired or too nervous or too hungry, or when the "self" instinct is too great ly interferred with, but he isn‘t born{ "wicked." Once this is done and the little boy or girl is established as real person in a tough world, nature then begins to let up a little. Very, very slowly comes reason, and with it the preâ€" ventive instincts that shape the. conâ€" duct of the child to less primitive urges and to advance generosity and natural kindness. | Two savage children of primitive instincts, without anyone to give | them an inkling of theft, murder, or | harm to another would in time deâ€" | velop a recognition of each other'll‘ | rights. I The selfishness of early childhood is not real selfishness as we know it, but an order from Mother Nature to appropriate every right and privilege that helps the self instinct to expand. That natural inhibitions are not present to any @xtent in babyhood. however, is pretty well acknowledgâ€" ed. Indéed some authorities go so far as to say that babies are born with eriminal instinets. J BABIES AREN‘T CRIMINALS _ This is decidedly not so. What they are born with is the "self" go ing, both mentally and physically. | | Are children born with a sense of | right and wrong? There is little to , prove it if they are. ‘Natural Kindness Gradually, however, when they get over babyhood certain mentai policemen do develop (inribitions we call them) that would be there, it is thought, even if no one said a word to them about doing ‘"vrong." | The Selfish of Babyhood is Oneâ€"Arm Drivers and Generosity in ONTARIO ARC TORONTO Not Real Selfishness as Adults Know It n, too, on the tainly gone 1000 ARCCAITEl HeCucQ When you feel blug, depressed, sour on the world, that‘s your liver which isn‘t pouring its dail two npounds of liqu!d bile into your ‘owcu. Digestion and elimination are being clowe‘i ux? food is accumulating and decavine inataa _._.. *CCUMmuati Your Liver‘s Making You Feel Out of Sorts Many excuse their delay ing the doctor, or their neglect of their obligation by pleading their own limite but it is at becsk calfclk=... an s 44 . "PoOLIEEs form on top coating of dark red, The result is a tinted â€" nail gleams and shimmers with a undertone of color. to say and what she wants. Paris favors a new motherâ€"of.â€"pear; polish in liquid form that has the luster of the inside of an oyster shell. A number of women on this side, Gartman explained, have hit upon the idea of applying a coating of this in the colorless form on top of a coating of dark red. | The woman who likes to think ot herself as sophisticated, said Gart. man, still affects dark red tints, but she is not altogether unmindful of Paris, for she has combined what the Frech capitol fashion experts bave to say and what she wants For, said Mare Gartman, president of the Chicago and lllinois Hairdress. ers‘ Association, Paris decrees that vivid red finger nails, especially for daytime wear, are "out", but women in this country so far are turning a deaft ear. * Chicago.â€"Amezican women, so it seems, are saying, "no, no" to one fashion dictate from Paris Red Finger Nails t Bs e t onl and bellow back, "Have you heard this one?" We‘re all cowards undér the skin, so shame on us for our bigger, betâ€" ter, holierâ€"thanâ€"thou attitude toward children. Fear is natural. Fear of death, and feat of hurt, We‘re born )}cading their own limited meanar;' it is at best selfishness, or at Ur you were up in an airplane, we‘ll say, and the engine â€" stopped, Below â€" was fog and storm and a mountain. ‘The pilot shouted. ‘"Don‘t worry.. We ‘can only die once." Did you light a c@garette nonolalantly ul g c s s o . 1M All right.‘ Remember you had an abscessed tooth once. Last night you felt a similar twings on the other side, Did you laugh it off, or call the dentist? _ Before going into the matter of the constructive course to pursue, please let us digreq gor an instant, ADULTS TOO KNOW FEAR. Why do we make such a fuss over the terrors of children waen every adult on earth is full of them. Perâ€" haps you think you have none, that you are one of those magyars of grit who is not "afraid of God or man." Issue No. 41â€"‘34 is not there just because he is try. ing to whistle up his courage. It is well known that the violent effort to down a real fear by sheer force of will may make the trouble worse. Before going into the matter of the constructive course to pursue, Oh, yes, he may pretend to be bravâ€" er, to laugh at a lot of water, or a dog, or a big bully of a boy, He may put up a'grand front as he climbs up the dark stairs alone to bed. But these things do not mean the terror Unselfish Physicians Don‘t do any of these things cause it won‘t be any use, When a child is afraid of something what are you going to do? Make fun of him, shove him at it, or bully him into a show of courage? You‘ll Regret It Later On If Terror Becomes Shock and: Leaves Mental or Emotional Scar | Liver Bile li-y;?‘?. Calomel needed Says Paris â€" Mother of Pearl Polish Much . Favored "°~ Wieif delay in pay. tor, or their complete their obligation to him, Daytime Wear Exquisite Quality from Paris, s d 7Gartman, president BULLY YOUR CHILD INTO SHOW OF COURAGE 99 For C 4. +m that deep gins "taking hold" of your Millions have found that Aspirin eases even a bad headache, neuritis or rheumatic pain often in a few minutes! In the stomach as in the glass here, an A.:fginn tablet starts to disâ€" solve, or disintegrate, almost the instant it touches moisture. It beâ€" worst something one hesitates to say, not to economize in spending for things not necessary in order to meet a doctor‘s bill. A big, bad brute of a boy? Never, Oh, yes, he should have other chil. dren . beside namby.pambies to play with and learn by degrees that he has to take his own part, But please spare the little fellow even the slightâ€" est association with the bullying type of boy. \ Remember the pictures below when ou want fast reliet from pain. f)emand and get the method docâ€" ton;s.mjescri_beâ€"‘gsplrgnt Naver,‘never "force" him into the water, into the dark, at a dog, or up against a boy he is afraid of, You may regret it later if terror becomes shock and leaves a mental or emoâ€" tional "scar" to haunt him forever, TACT NECESSARY, Use wit, kindness and tact. Homeâ€" opathic methods are best. The shalâ€" low puddle and the next day another inch or two may help him see reason about water. By degrees he may lose his frigh\ over "big" water, . The same with the dark â€" light very, very gradually reduced, It may take weeks or even months. No dogs are necessary, His own experience will teach him in time that most anâ€" imals may be trusted. JAPAK GREEMX Don‘t talk to him (or her) about his fear. Don‘t mention it at all, You may overâ€"tilk, And anyway, words mean nothing. * Never ridicule him or scold him. Don‘t undermine dis self.â€"respect and fertilize his inferiority by over. rating his fear. Why harp on one. or two things when otherwise he is a splendid little fellow? Why not iell‘ him he‘s all right? As it is, the physician sets an €xâ€" with it, farâ€"fetched unnamable bor. rorg, called obsessive fears (more inâ€" tricate of nature), are still based on the same cause, HOW TO HANDLE CHILD, Now as to handling the timid child,‘ Here are some rules: When in Pain Remember These Pictures £, == ASPIRINâ€"DOES NOT HARM THE HEART â€" An Aspirin tablet starts to disinteâ€" grate and go to work. IN 2 SECONDS 8y stoP watcu An Aspirin tablet starts 40 Aisinta. to TP A Faster Way Found ) Relieve Headaches NOW PAIN OFTEN REuEvEp IN MINUTESq Why Aspirin Works So Fast bottom, it is disinteâ€" tablet in a glass of water. Note that BEâ€" FORE it touches the Drop an Aspirin What happens in these l m"“’?‘{.km,.:.;‘s.,"""-"' m [s 1 J a few minutes d(u"‘ takineg. _ pain s ges o nR PR a few minutes after taking. ually important, Aspirin is saf:‘.q For scientific tests show this; Asgirin does not harm the heart, emember these two points: Aspirin Sfl)eed and Aspirin S%el s And, see that you get ASPIRIN, Yt is made in Canada, and all d ists have it. Look for the name gnyer in the form of a cross on every Azé'rug tablet. t tin of 12 tablets or economical bottle of 24 or 100 at any druggist‘s, practically as soon as you swallow it. Equally important, Aspirin 1 EP Senda today for tree copy of authors magazine. ‘Tells how to write and sell short stories. novels, plays. articles, songs, ett. Written in plain language especially for the beginner, Big list of magazine, book and musicâ€" publishers ave y Writers‘ index l "The parents of our children are the‘ guardians of our future citiâ€" zens," writes the United States Preâ€" sident. "They cannot evade the reâ€" sponsibility which is theirs through example and intelligent understandâ€" ing to inspire and d4ay the ground. work for that type of character which ‘ does~what is right under any given circumstances and is able to with. stand â€"temptation . as well as for their (:lllldreli.'7 ‘Parents as well as citizens might well set up standards for themselves New York. â€" President Roosevelt advises parents to set up standards for themselves as well as for their children, in an editorial in the Ocâ€" tober issue of the Parents Magazine. Write for Money Set a Standard For Children They Cannot Evade the Reâ€" sponsibility Which is Theirs Through Example in part due to that service seldom if ever paid in full. It is still much as it was in other times: "God and the Doctor we alike adore ‘ But only when in danger, not before. The danger o‘¢r, both are alike requitedâ€" God is forgotten and the Doctor slighted." ample of unselfish service to other professions and even to trade. Withâ€" out his indispensable skill freely or g@nerously given the _ depression would be far worse than it has been.‘ That the death rate is not higher is Fresh from the Gardens â€"New York Times. 4 Auld Bldag. 131 _ ,__", "" " ‘e, Mnown olfice. boys t miss further than that. â€" The New W l3 > ; __"_ 7 77SN I90Kk on his face, and drew from it a sardine sandwich or teast. We‘ve known office bovs t« Ten minutes went by, during which the important gentlemen were restive. (On an average, it is estimat. ed, their time is worth a dollar a minute.) ‘Then the boy came back, in his hand a smal] paper bag, which he handed the chairman of the board. mL & »iul c CBHe C The latter took the bag with a very Mn” look on his face, and There wasn‘t a copy in the direcâ€" tors‘ room, so the chairman of the board rang for an office boy. _ In came one, wideâ€"eyed, shy and ner vous. The chairman of the board barked at him to get a Saturday Evening Post. The boy didn‘t unâ€" derstand at all, but he wasn‘t going to say -o._n. just backed out. we know office boys well enough not to doubt that this actually hapâ€" pened. The directors of a big comâ€" pany were holding a meeting, and in the midst of a discussion of a weighty question one of them said a fact they wanted had just been printed in the latest Saturday Evening Post. 7â€"The police have the right to arâ€" rest any one on sight defying the new regulations, 6â€"The new rules must be carried out within two weeks after promui. gated by school teachers, girl stud. ents, women government employees and wives of government e#mployees ; and one month case of ordinary wo. men and girls, strictly prohibited, 3â€"The bair must be combed backâ€" ward, and must not be longer .than the collar of the gown, 4â€"Woolien overcoats without butâ€" tonsâ€"â€"must not be worn. 5â€"Walking in the streets in pyjaâ€" mas and slippers is strictly forbidden. _ Shangbai, China, â€" The "purity" campaign which has been sweeping through the jength and breadth of China and which is designed to raise the standard of public morals by rules and regulations, has at last reached Shanghai, The Shaughal magistrate‘s office has just issued a set of regula. tions containing several articles govâ€" erning women‘s dress These are: We lu_)ouf office boys Regulations Containing Seven Articles Governing Woâ€" men‘s Dress Just Issued. "Basil Radford gives conviction to the troubled emotions of the head of the family; Reginald Tate is the imâ€" petuous, dogmatic son who has no patience ~with these interrupters. of business; and Scott Sunderland and Staniey Lathbury are among the others who give adnmable perturmâ€" ances." "Joyce Bland plays the badâ€"temp ered blind daughter who acquires a Christian sweetness after her sight is restored by the healing hands of the Saviour; and Patricia Burke makes a notably good first West End appearance as her sister. "This pr&vout.ive. if not 7e|;trxrely satisfactory play is extremely wel acted. "Mr. Drinkwater lets the miracie of restoring the blind girl‘s sight proâ€" duce its own dramatic effect withou! stressing it by immoderate jlan guage," it is stated. ~"His restraint emphasizes the realism, too, of the last scene, wherein the father of the householdâ€"‘a month ago a raiâ€" ional contented household, but now disrupted by the visitationâ€"looks from his window and sees the Naz arene, crucified and buried three days before, following the deserters from his house up the hill to Bethany. Allowing for passages of arid talk, the theme is treated interestingly, the critic declares of a family in Jerusalem to thy comâ€" ing of Christ to their city, It is noted Mr, Drinkwater has tightened up the play somewhat since its production in Malvern, and "has sought to give a clearly detached view of the situâ€" ation." The critic continues: "*‘Gospel me foot,‘ for example, however reasonable an equivalent it may be for the language of a hotâ€" headed young business man would use when he found an apparent agitator upsetting the community will jar upon some people." Reached Shanghai don. The play deals with the reaction London, Eng,. â€" Whether â€" John Drinkwater has not gone too far in "his modern colloquialisms" is the question brought up by a critic of the Debate Use of . Slang In Drama Old London Splitâ€"Modern Jargon Is Used In Biblical Play t‘s t} d EO t} th () t} pp na M cabba lunch it NA

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