West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 27 Feb 1936, p. 7

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Paid to man Lyricist TB th ow Different It ing fine M ible hre ler n would be of greater benelit to e nation than the present sums that °e spent in acquiring used lands There is still much to be done in veloping a sound forestry policy in s country. The National Forest rvice bas made important strides. e states have added to their forest ide. Private owners have been en iraged to plant trees. To lay con. ‘vationists it would seem advanta. s to the present conservation vement if for a time, at least, lerica‘s lumber and pulp supplies tht come in larger proportions from esn countries. Only if the prices the covecy 1 ittle Bird * On NelFe‘s Hat © essential thing is to preserve eaisting forests so that they may sely barvested in coming gener. «. The more stands of good timâ€" can be saved from present ruth. culting the betterâ€"whether they head and wings i)eréilo.a"én » and a new print is patâ€" n tiny colorful parrots. »a:rot appears in Paris midâ€" {ashions. _ One modiste has 1 a little, flatâ€"crowned, ¢lt sailor hat with a green A recent editorial in "Amerfcan Forests" criticized m removal “ part of the restrictions on the impor. tation of Canadilan lumber on _ the ground that it would discourage the growth of timber within the United States, As ardent advocates of sound conservation policies, we cannot feel that a direct relation between tnese iwo things actually exists Some of the American lumber companies have sulfered from low prices for their proâ€" dncts. Naturally they do not care to awe foreign lumber admitted to com. pete with their own products. This, however, is a problem of the moment.l The growing of trees for future har. resting does not become an economch problem until the trees are ready !orl he marketâ€"which means a genera. ion or two hence. No one has yet et-l ectively proved that retorestasion is wot desirable and does not promise taoi e economically profitable when the na! guarded your health. had recognized your fault. had _ enerously acquisced. had not blundered. had persevered. had daily prayed." â€"By Grenville Kleiser. Saving the Forests For the Future i had only kept silent, had been a little more patient had listened to good advice. had promptly apologized. had acted with prudence. had taken daily extrcise. had avoided that accident. nber companies nave rapidly de. ted their private foldings of tum. . In mary cases they have created » prices by excessive eutting. In + meantime the area of goud timber i teadily decreased. Much of the «d in the national forests is private. owned and can be cut at wi.. And ch of the land in the state forests already been cut over. in parts the West imrcrtant stands of vn. timber belong to the Fedeâ€"a> gov. ment A few scattering stands of d timber are found East of the 86 ut oast and west the forests have 1 stripped ruthlessly. There has i no attempt to harvest tham. Raâ€" se imports were to be so much than American prices that they stimulate â€" fresh _ cutâ€"throat tition and mass eutting in Amâ€" lorest lands would the effect Michigan kies States had controlled your temper ad not run into debt. ad always been on time. ad said "No." iad started early. ad put it int. writing. ad said the timely word. ad caten in moderation. id staved at home. facts are so simp.e that they for chemselves; the United is the largest single consumer 1 and lumser in the worl1 The Ipen Would Have Been or elsewhere in the These famous dry I.yeast: cakes assure perfect leavening. Fine quality is one reason . . . careful packing is another. Every Royal Yeast Cake is separately wrapped. Airâ€"tightâ€"it keeps fresh. No other dry yeast has this protection. The standard for over 50 yearsâ€" Royal Yeast Cakes are now preferred by 7 out of 8 Canadian women who use dry yeast. Order a package. Tow STANDARD BRANDS LIMITED Fraser Ave. and Liberty St., Toronto, Ont. Please send me the free Royal Yeast Use Royal Yeast Cakes and Royal Sponge Recipes for these good breads . . . ROYAL YEastT CAKES keep Full Strength _ How many men and women â€" are there who would like to have their past recalled? Very few, 1 fancy. And yet, every now and then we come across someone who wants to rake up the past in somebody else‘s life. Human nature is Indeed strange. _ J SsOME THINGS sHouLDp NoT TOLD EVERY DAY LIVING A WEEKLY Tonic By Dr. M. M. Lappin is delicious TEA _ Take another point of view. Has the young lady with the past incident in her life nothing worth while in her makeâ€"up to commend her? Surely she has.! Why, everybody has. There is good even in the worst if we try to find it. Then, if there are good points in a person‘s character, why talk as though one indiscretionâ€"probably it was only a trifling matter after allâ€" were all that there is to that person‘s 1 would like to put one or two ques. tions to my correspondent. Would she ‘ike to have her own past recalled in detail? How would she feel if some. one betrayed her confidences? Has she considered what the young man‘s reaction would be? If he is an honor. able young manâ€"and she seems to think that he isâ€"then his reaction would probably be to regard her with scorn for having betrayed a confid. ence. Look squarely at this thing. One person regards another person as a friend. Because of the friendship a confidence is given, but the one to whom it is given betrays it. What is she or he? A traitor! I am quite sure no young lady would like to be known as such. BE But come back to my correspond. ent‘s problem. What is the true moâ€" tive that is prompting her to tell? Has she herself got a boy friend? Has sho an eye on this young man horself? These are items concerning which her letter is silent. It may be that if she will sit down quietly and consider this whole matter, she will discover that, perhaps unconsciously, the moâ€" tive prompting her to tell emanates from this direction. The trouble with us is that we so often confuse duty with a petty des.â€" ire to gain some end of our ownâ€"and an essentially selfish end it so often happens to be. We need to carefully examine the inner motives which prompt us to do things before we act. We need to be sure that what we proâ€" pose to do is right. If it is not right, then it cannot be our duty. And no. thing can ever be right which ineviâ€" tably works barm for another per. son. The moment you feel a cold coming _ " on follow the pictured directions g above. e m Your doctor will approve this as @ mhaps the quickest, easiest way C wn to fight colds and sore tr throat. L The "Aspirin‘"‘ taken internally in will combat a cold almost instantly; if throat is sore, crush and stir 3 A/Z DEMAND AND GET I often wonder how many â€" souls have been irreparably damaged â€" by others who have excused their conâ€" duct and appeased their consciences by trying to persuade themselves and others that it was all done in the saâ€" cred name of duty. Again and again I have to try and get correspondents to see what duty really is. It seems to me to be summer up in those words of Malachi written so long agoâ€""What doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?" If that does not sum up one‘s duty, then what does? ’ Without actually quoting from the letter let me state briefly the prob. lem. Apparently there is a young man from the same town as my cor. respondent who is a f@kdent at the same college. He comes from a very respectable family. He is keeping company with another girl student in the college who has confided to my correspondent an incident in her life which belongs to the past. The comâ€" panionship between this other girl and the young man seems to rile (I think that is the most appropriate word) my correspondent, She writes me asking me if I would advise her to tell the young man what the other girl has confided to her and adds â€" "I somehow fee} it is my duty to tell Kao jise him." have a letter before me now fr young college girl, and it raige problem which has all the mar "the eternal triangle" about it. sort of problem which provides working capital for novelists story writers. Take two "Aspirin‘ Tabâ€" lets. Make sure you get COLD? Do These 2 Things Instantly! A Simple Method that Anyone can Follow for novelists -élid , and it raises _ a me now from a the marks of ASPIRIN" 2. Drink a full glass of water. Repeat treatment in 2 hours. ‘‘Aspirin‘ Tablets in a third of a glass of water; gargle twice. Do not rinse mouth. ."A?)irin” Tablets are made in Canada. "Aspirin‘ is the registered tradeâ€"mark of the Bayer Comgany. Limited. Look for the name afver in the form of a cross on every tablet. For the one indiscretion that _ we know of in a person‘s life, we do not know how often they have struggled against temptation and resisted it to overcoming. If we did, we would be more prone to admire than to conâ€" demn. Let us try to keep that in our mind, and remember that the busiâ€" ness of every man and woman is to discover the purpose behind his _ or her life, and by quiet, honest perserâ€" verance, to try to achieve that pur-} pose. Only by so doing can we con. tribute our best to the good of the whole. Why waste time trying to run other peoples‘ lives? We have each our bwn life to lHve. Let us live it as well:as we can. The on earth, Is the one that resists the desire." sin Is luring your soul away : But it‘s only a negative virtue Until it is tried by fire, And the life that is worth the You recall that poem ‘Worth While‘ by Ella Wheeler Wilcox: "It is easy enough to be prudent, When nothing tempts you to stray, When without or within no voice of But then, folks who feel like my correspondent are likely to try and justify themselves and they usually come back with the questionâ€""But _mustn‘t I tell the truth?" Why, of course, we should all tell the truth, but we can at least wait until we are asked for information and even then we can be discreet, and use common sense and, at the same time, be truth. ful. Long ago the Wise Man wrote in bis Proverbs, "There is a time to speak, and there is a time to keep si. lence." I think this young lady should keep silent. life? Why not em slead of the bad? "Now, listen," Mrs. Medlicott said, impressively. ‘"Prescott owes all his trouble to this snake Westerby. IH tell you how it began. Westerby shows Dan a picture of a girl, all very droopy and pathetic. "Now I can mar. ry the girl who‘s been waiting in Eng. lang for me for years!" he says. "Ob;, but . . ;" "Sâ€"sh! I‘m telling this. Of course, he‘d never even seen her, and she‘s > never seen him. We know how they got to writing letters, don‘t we? But Dan was touched by the picture, and the lie. Very well, when they got to Sydney, Westerby booked his passage to England, and the one thing he wanted from his dear friend Dan was "How dare you say . . "Eve start. ed; but to her own ears her protest sounded feeble. ’ "Nonsense, my dear," replied this astonishing woman, You are dying to hear something in Dan‘s favyour. Don‘t tell me. I saw you diving into iceâ€"cold water just to show him what you could do. It gave me gooseflesh to see you; but I‘d have done the same thing myself, I suppose." i "I know all that I want to know Eve said loftily. "I had Dan here last night," Mrs. Medlicott continued pensively, "And I turned him inside out. I had to ask ever so many questions before I could find out just what happened. Men don‘t know how to tell a story like that. I‘ll be bound that you haven‘t the faintest idea of the real truth." Gordon forwards a photo of Dan to former flancee, Gladys Clements, in London and when Dan arrives she beâ€" lieves he is Gordon. Eve Gilchrist, a typist, obtains work in Medlicott‘s ofâ€" fice, the broker who is fioating the mine. Eve and Dan fall in love but when Eve is confronted by Gladys she believes in Dan‘s duplicity. Westerby has a fiancee, Gladys Clemâ€" ents in England, but when they arrive in Sydney he marries a pretty blonde Dan Prescott and Gordon Westerby find gold in the arid bush of Australia. They stake their claim and start the long journey to the coast. emphasise the good in SYNOPSEIS the honor lished? Light is thrown on these and edited â€" by Walter H. â€" Mallory, (Harper and Brothers. New York). Do you know what were the results of the recent general election in Great Britain? What country returned to & monarchy in 19357 Last fall the Lib. erals won an overwhelming majority in the general election in Canada. How is this likely to affect Canadian tariff policy? How many Hearst news. papers and there in the United States and in how many cities are they pub-‘ POLITICAL HANDBOOK 0OF THE WORLD, 1936, "You make me feel very paltry," Eve faltered. "If you know where bhe "And you can," her hostess said ’emphatk-ally. "Dan is no help, be. cause he will not put his mind to business. The only side of this affair that matters to him is that he has put himself in the wrong with you. So dont be a meanie any longer, Eve dear. You know that you mean to have him. and that you‘d tear the evyes out of any woman that tried to come between you." \ "But how do we tie their hands Eve asked. "I‘m ready to help, if thought 1 could." ‘"That‘s one point in his favour. The second is that as soon as he met you he fell down and worshipped. That same day he went to Cairns, the solicitor, to clear up this mess with the Gladys girl." _ "And what happened?" "Clever Mr. Westerby, over in Aus. tralia, has gone missing, and remains missing. That‘s why this newspaper is able to print what it likes about our menfolk. They cannot hit back, and you and I are among the things that tie their hands. So we have got to do something, haven‘t we*»" "That‘s what T‘ll never under. stand," Eve said. "That awful girl told me that she showed her love for him, being of a warmâ€"hearted dispoâ€" sition herself. And my office still reeks of the scent she uses,. Where do they get stuff like that?" "Never mind that. She was a gold. digger, and she made Dan buy a ring and a watch, and pdraded him. Not nice for you; but what yonu have to remember was that be ran away atter‘ two days." rmsesec0s0c0s0‘0smi0‘0.0 ts ©00.RuRâ€"B OX C 2.%02â€"@9 00000000300E 0sR sA!0R¢Re.A!0 ’ ‘"‘Maybe you were too high and ‘mlght,v to listen," the other woman suggested. "Though it took a lot of perception to worm the details out of Dan Presctt. And now we come to the climax. Dan calls for the forsaken maiden, and she at once drapes herâ€" self around his neck with a glad ery. Dan sees his own face staring at him on the mantlepiece, and, like the idiot: be is, postpones a denial, and thel nasty job of breaking the bad news." ‘"Because, my dear, those two men left a whole lot of gold, just covered by some loose sand, when they de. parted from their mine in such a hurry. Mr. Gordon Westerby â€" knew just where to go, and where to dig; and with Dan well out of the way, he planned a nice little steal." "But why wasn‘t I told of Eve wailed. "But why did Westerby Eve asked. zo to England instead of him, and Dan must see the girl who had been waiting patiently for years. Dan must explain, and make any amends posâ€" sible. And, like the softhearted fool be is, Dan agreed." "He‘s no Mrs. ‘Arris," Mre. Medliâ€" cott said positively. "So, Dan must "You make him sound very real FEve remarked. "I‘m afraid I was b ;inning to doubt his existence." her, and he sent Dan‘s photograph just to show her what he might exâ€" pect. The next reel shows him the day before he‘s due to sail, with a smart girl, that be says is his bride. And about that, my dear, you and I may have our own opinion, I think, knowing the sort of excresence this man Westerby is." \ ut \; ! i 4 TEER e § NA ; ux4 $ens Issue No. 8 â€"‘36 "Then he wrote to this Gladys girl, to say he was a rich man, and coming home by the Moonalong to marry whom Dan had helped to mnke-so happy." "I wondered about that," Eve con fessed. his photograph, to showâ€"to the girl -7' ie qo â€" t i 38 m U C ivrnpmnn‘s 6070 s cmmmemene> p :'«"4:; Ts se l‘ ..,.‘3%%;&:5 Wormty t es do this? if 1 this ?" 999 T he "Paulina" â€" by L. H. Hyers, (G J. MacLeod), March. "Once We Had A Child" â€" by Hans Fallada (Mussons), March. "Ladiges of the Press" â€" by Ishbel Ross (Mussons), March, similar fundamental questions ferring to this handbook. MASON & RISCH LTD. 642 King st. w. Foronto, Ont. l m mm t m o t Get Our Prices On Factory Reâ€"conditioned Pianos First New Pianos $295 up. Grands $575 up. LIBERAL TRADE IN ALLOWANCE is, I‘ll humble myself before him. 1 knew how cruel and heartless I was; but I didn‘t seem to be able to help myself," BY MAIR M. MORG And the homely hen we prize Which demonstrates to you and That it pays to advertise, The homely hen lays but one; The codfish never cackles, To tell what she has done; And so we scorn the codfish, The following ditty was read reâ€" cently by the Lord Mayor of Lonâ€" don: The codfish lays ten thousand eggs, It Pays To Advertise FORTHCOCMING BOOKs Mildred Westop One problem of vital importance that confronts young people, is to de. termine the vocation, profession _ or trade for which he or she is best suited. The purpose of this column is to be of service to those who are now seeking help in this important mat. ter,. Your birthday can be used as a guide to a proper decision. Let us suppose that you, or some. one in whom you are interested, were born between February 19th and the 29th. Such a person should seek an occupation in which personality can find expression. The home will _ be linked up with the work in some way perhaps as business headquarters. The work of persons born in this per. lod should involve contact with peo. ple and such will find a special sat isfaction in social service work and will be happlest in those endeavours te Book | Shelf | BUYING A PIANO? Of changing seasons This is true: The heart must have Its Winter, too. As well as stream Or mountain lake, Be frosted over And opaque, But though the mind Tonight reports Conditions right For Winter sports, Beware the heart‘ The ite is thin And he who ventures May fall in,. (To Be Continued) £L, 4 IF ITS ARROWROOTS in the New York Sun, iA N ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO 100 re. "Whare® a (*he..s; /o. _ â€"4» uP ibiP "Jheres a Christie Discuit for every taste® "It is dangerous to abandon one‘s self to the luxury of grief; it deâ€" prives one of courage, and even of the wish for recovery."â€"Amice}. *"The pains of sense are salu if they wrench away false ples able beliefs and transplant the fections from sense to Boul, w the creations of God are good, joicing â€" the heart."~â€"â€"Mary B Eady, The Institute of Practical and Applied Psychology } A personal reply dealing with one ‘importmg question will be mailed to anyone sending the day, month, and year of birth together with 256 and stamped and addressed envelope for reply. Address all correspondence to Ann Pennington, Room 421, 73 Adel. aide St. W., Toronto, Ontario. which call upon the emotions. Some of the most svuccessful kindergarten teachers are born in this period ‘They have the faculty of teaching through love and understanding and apprecia. tion of the needs of their young char. ges. A man in this category would be successful in horticulture, particuls; ly in research, finding his greatest satisfaction in producing a new var lety of vegetable or more beautifal flower. Fullest success will com« through quiet persistence in the so. lected vocation. T hose Leisure Hours 910 Contederation Building ECarning â€" Capacity Unfertortty Complea mental . nower, . an« munse} | for hetter ardy detsurely in th ur Oown home Writ wlars of fnseinating len‘e eonmrses â€" 0 transplant the afâ€" sense to Soul, where false pleasum are good, re. Mary â€" Bake; are salutary

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