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Durham Review (1897), 22 Jul 1937, p. 3

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If Your Child Super Airports Needed in F There Are Several Ways i Fashion Better ‘ More Highly Paid Jobs Women in This F‘-u‘-n_"." in Any Other in U.$, Doesn‘t Like Milk Bureau Urges Planning on F YORK. â€"â€" Fashion, lntq ~t.he M‘;; may be Daily Diet more paved lant n1 a diversion of not Mc to flelds especially t« purposes will be ~ in the not so distant au predicted. ~=." it explained, "that rvice on the air m ir or so are 40â€"passon ~. §0,000 pound giants is around 237 miles an ling speeds all“_' ifety of these 'lll;: airports perhaps to wn as super-m’-' i said the bureau, ad¢ women than n’ 1 States. # x on Part Of Cities no immediate nece* number of these SW itor, perhaps, more but the big atrcraft at first for only the veled rortes." u_ referred only 19 ady being fabricat nont aireraft engit turers have m in the next 10 ; Td veiching 200,000 ~ now being rl"“ t coast plants ap )0 pound mark 1® a movie star‘s activk o ten years, ‘ashion field there in : improvement. A woe : indefinitely ag long + and alert. the depression," shy know of a single reak person who was out n# period." pe ‘re holding big lon than in an trained women 1% un iand for more, pert "in five : $5,000, if she m 0 _ years, $10,000 or talk shion is better for earning a mg period of hat ways milk can ildren are not par «t i airâ€"minded com« s name in a ie roof of a cared a fow actes d it an airport i# ©, which contains, proteins, starch, al salts. cal milk can come aln as soup. _ Al to soup, for it th ir transport busek by the* United in commerce last t of superâ€"termite | superâ€"speeds. irging all cities," regulatory body, i mind long range 520 No. 1 1.'ldugp|-y'~ paid jobs awai@p a thaD ANy offes taken flippantly the children can x by arrangement i1d who dislikes iken it unawares, olate or cocom at without the midh its place he can Durn, â€"Fifth Avenue of. king today about tunitles for L% the form of che who 1% «« ules should keeP co fit again the has fallen below A glimpse into »ilk again, but od, and never Ive) after balf ide wnh‘::r is an «; meal, che d in the Gerâ€" vith whipped this Any othep for timg, The thins Cre nowâ€" ceal« in was and back he had b« he could â€" flames, ar way ‘Thy Lefty‘s first sensation, upon getâ€" ting away from the house, was one of glorious _ freedom. He dashed down the road. He‘d find a way out! He wasn‘t going to sit up there on that mountaintop, like those softies, and wait to be burned alive â€" or strancled. the roa Lefty, seiz‘ng Trump‘s gun, made &« dash for the open, and rot away. But Stutter was too slow. Red Doyle, bounding into the kitchen, had him before he could reach the door. strategy. As he strugs aged to life one thin | the door a vicious kick shut, . nail h« hoped, aid. kne €7plosive formu‘a belicved to be in ./ posscssion of a passenger, Finâ€" ley Trump, chemical magnate. Meanâ€" while, a forest fire, creep‘ng up the mountain, traps the group. The first night, Ike is mysteriously strangled. The circumstances appear to point to one of the passengers as the murâ€" derers. Later, the other two bandits are overpowered and bound. Meanâ€" while, May Lawrence, pretty trained nurse, and Dr. Nick Strand have falâ€" len in love. On the second night, while Trump is guarding Lefty and Stutter, they suddenly leap on him â€"having surreptitiously cut their bonds. Three Landits, known as lke, Lefty and Stutter, seize a transâ€"continental bus, and force the driver to guide it up a mountainside to a lonely log shock. They are after a secret new explosive formula belicved to be in d cinders were thick rain. He He H n In was close to the house again too close! But the woods conâ€" TERROR MOUNTAIN n n closer irte ind suddenly, he heard someâ€" the brush behind hm and â€" Too late! He felt a searâ€" ition in his gun hand, and P Green tea at its best ced into the woods beside But he d‘d not get tar. had climbed higher than lieved possible. As far as ee, he was surrounded by d the heat was unbearable. r his gun, he tried another is the road. But the fire closer there, and hot ash s were blown over him like in. He was forced to turn _vicious kick. It slammed ng a frying pan from a the stove. The noise, he ild bring the others to his CHAPTER VI ight furiously, but he i‘t a chance against the unless he resorted to he struggled, he manâ€" one thin leg, and gave "And that about Amelia Bangor?" whispered May. "I‘m worried about her sleeping out in that bus." As Strand vanished, she walked toward the bus, small revolver in hand, mounted the running board and looked in. Amelia Bangor was not there! The bus was empty! "Whoever did this didn‘t believe in the fire reaching us," said May. "Hopeless people about to die do not murder for great gain. They‘re afâ€" ter that secret. They even tore up h‘s shoes. Nick, if you have it . . .. oh, I‘m so afraid for you!" Nothing will happen to me," said Strand quietly. "Have you got that gun, May?" Yes." She was shivering, conâ€" scious that he had not denied that he had Trump‘s secret. "Then wait here a moment. I must, see whose bandana that is." Strand was back in a few moâ€" ments. "Everybody there but little Jenâ€" kins," he reported briefly. May nodded, feeling cold and sick. But she was a nurse and, as Strand dashed into the house, she knelt beâ€" side the body and made a swift examâ€" ination. Doctor Strand was bending over him, working at the knotted banâ€" dana. ‘"Dead," he said, his face brim. "Can you stay here a moment, May, while I look about? I must have missed the killer by seconds. I‘d gone out for a breath of air." Finley Trump, in a gayly striped dressing gown, lay on his back beside the door, with his feet against the side of the house. A red bandana was knotted about his neck! It had been his bedroom slippers beating against the logs as he strangled that May heard. Meanwhile, that horrible tapping against the side of the house conâ€" tinued. It seemed to come from just outside the front door. She must see what was making it. She thought of wild animals driven before the fire, and of Nick not being in the kitchen. . . . By the time she reached the door, the sound had ceased, but she stepâ€" ped out, her hand at her thrcat. And thenâ€"she stood paralyzed, inâ€" capable of making a sound! Halfway to the front door, she heard a strange sound, a kind of rhythm;e tattoo sgainst the de of the house. At the same instant, she stepped upon something, and stumâ€" bled. Stooping to pick it up, she saw that it was a man‘s shoe, with the sole ripped loose and flapping spineâ€" lessly. Whose was it? A shiver ran down her spine. But Nick was not in the kitchen, where Stutter, bound again, was deep in slumber. Immediately anxâ€" ious, May went back through the livâ€" ing room to search for him. It was strange for him to desert his post. Finally, at threeâ€"thirty, she slpped into her dressing gown and stole through the empty living room toâ€" ward the kitchen, where Strand had been left on guard over Stutter. She and Nick had plighted their troth on this mountaintop that might soon beâ€" come their funeral pyre and, vith death so closely threaten‘ng t © i, she wanted to be with him every minâ€" ute that she could. The house finally became quiet again, but May Lawrence could not sleep. The thought of the fire comâ€" ing closer and closer, and the horrid knowledge that there was a ruthless murderer in their midst, keot her staring tensely into the darkness. "He knew the murderer before he died," Strand said as he rose from a brief examination. "And it surâ€" prised him. Get the look in his eyes and on his face." They carried h‘m to the shed and laid him beside Ike. This horror and amazement were in his eyes when, a short time later, Finley Trump and Nick Strand came upon h‘s body, flat upon the ground, with a rope knotted cruelly about his thick neck. The gun fell again, and he clawed at it even as he stared, in gasping horror and amazement, at the perâ€" son who was strangling him. . . . the gun dropped from his limp i.nâ€" gers. There had been a silencer on the weapon that had fired that bullet! Lefty seized his gun in his other hand, and sprang erect. But just then, something tight and/ agon‘zing fastened about his throat. (TO BE CONTINUED) The Appellate Term of the New York Supreme Court held last week that the plaintiff had grounds for a damage suit and sent the case back to the Municipal Court, which had At any rate that was the contenâ€" tion of a lawyer who sued the New York Central Railroad for $47.80 because he had had to stand in one of its tra‘ns all the way from Albany to New York City, a distance of about 150 miles. When a railroad sells a ticket, without hanging up any such warnâ€" ing, the purchaser expects to be able to sit down during his trip. When a theatre hangs out a "Standing Room Only" sign, anyone who buys a ticket to see the show expects to stand up. ‘Standing Room "All 1 said about King George‘s funeral was simply incidental to my general remarks on the nature of my work." "I recollect that the Duke did say something to that effect, that it was his mother‘s wish that the funcral should be concluded in a week in order to avoid prolonging distress to the Royal Family,‘"‘" Wollaston said. Wollaston referred to that part of the Duke‘s statement revealing that he, the Duke, called a mecting to disâ€" cuss arrangements the day after King George‘s death and that Queen Mary wanted the funeral January 28, 1936, the day it was held. The Duke of Windsor, in his stateâ€" ment to the Evening Standard by teleâ€" phone from Austria, said he "had to speak quite sharply" to Sir Gerald in telling him to expedite his part of the funeral arrangements for his father. B LA CK HE A D 8 you will wonder where they have gone. Have a Hollywood complexion. Sir Gerald, whose chief task as Garter Kingâ€"ofâ€"Arms is to proclaim the accession of a King, told a Lyceum Club dinner: "ROTTEN STORY" The Duke was revealed, in a stateâ€" ment to the Evening Standard, to have described Sir Gerald‘s remarks as "a rotten story." Blackheads go quickly by a sim&l: method that just dissolves them. two ounces of peroxine powder from your druggist, rub this with a hot, wet €loth gently over the blackheadsâ€"and LONDON, Eng.â€"The Duke of Windsor has received from Sir.Gerald Wollaston, Garter Kingâ€"ofâ€"Arms, a statement of regret for remarks on funeral arrangements for the late King George V. Apology Is Sent Duke of Windsor Lord Beaverbrook‘s Daily Express Si Brideâ€"today! Hostessâ€"tomorrow! And your immediate need is one for lacy accessories with which to entertain. Begin at once on this s‘mple filet design, accented in a few places with a raised stitch. It is suitable for luncheon set, searf, cloth or pillow. Use string or a finer cotton. Pattern 1478 contains detailed directions and a chart for making the filet design shown; illustrations of it and of all stitches used; material requirements. Send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) for this pattern to Needlecraft Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide, Toronto, Ont. Write plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. Issue No. 30â€"‘37 LAURA WHEELER FILET ACCESSORIES FILL EVERY ENTERTAINMENT NEED FILZT CROCHET REEBUKED BY DUKE Only‘ In Trains Criticism of Duke tries. While thus engaged she kept Miss Cora Hind, for long Farm Ediâ€" tor of the Winnipeg Free Press and author of Western crop reports that have enjoyed the highest prestige.in grain circles, has lately returned home from a twoâ€"year period of world They based this opinion on the New York Public Service Commisâ€" sions Law, which requires transportaâ€" tion companies to provide "such service and facilities as shall be sufâ€" ficient and adequate and in all respects just and reasonable." Charging a man $2.80 for the privilege of stand‘ng up in a train from Albany to New York obviousâ€" ly appeared to the Court to be neither just nor reasonable.â€"Detroit Free Press. The learned judges of the Appelâ€" late Term refrained from declaring that the mere possession of a ticket automatically entitles a passenger on a train to a seat, but they were unanimous in asserting that "the jury would be authorized to find that the plaintif was not furnished with such reasonable and adequate accommodation as was required in the cireumstances." dismissed it on the ground that posâ€" session of a ticket does not entitle a passenger to a seat, for retrial. Florida has no mountains. _ The greatest variation in altitude in that State is about 200 feet. Some day we will awaken to the truth of the old saying that "Man shall not live by bread alone," and realize that the indispensable eleâ€" ment of our lives is the air we breathe. It is sufficient to state here that the mental qual‘ties and characâ€" ter of a person are now proved to be in direct ratio to the depth and rhyâ€" thm of his breathing." Stretching movements are especiâ€" ally beneficial, &as they develop the greater activities of the system, and, at the same time, strengthen the ligaâ€" ments and cords that hold the orâ€" gans in place. It is easy to include deep breathing with stretching moveâ€" ments and so develop the most imâ€" portant life function of the human being. The best exercises for the young child are those which stretch and reâ€" lax their muscles alternately, and inâ€" volve rhythmic and graceful moveâ€" ments, says a writer in New Health Magazine. Physical jerks are out of place in a child‘s curriculum. The key to their movements lies in the careâ€"free dancing and resilient moâ€" tion of their everyâ€"day activities. Rbhythmic, Gracoful Movements Best For Young Child Stretching Good For Little Tots "It is a pity this matter had to be the subject of controversy. But do not blame that upon the Duke. He shows, and it is good he does, that in things that concern him personally he is no longer going to let the rest of the world co all the talking." and it is about time, too." "What is more," it added, "he has done it in first rate style. For long enough every one has taken a free kick at the man who was King. High and low have had their say about him â€"Now the Duke answers the stateâ€" ments of Sir Gerald Wollaston. . . in an editorial declared "the Duke of World Travel PATTERN 1478 had becen guilty of saying "bus." Evidently she believes in selective slang, for she didn‘t "think children ought to say to their mothers ‘O.K., New York Timesâ€"Every once in a while some British purist or anciâ€" ent sounds a warning against the ravages of American slang in the inâ€" violate island. His cause is hopeless. Even in girls‘ schools, which might be thought the last defence of the proâ€" pricties and pedantries of speech, the keen humorous imm‘grant has made his way. At the annual® conference of the Association of Head Mistresses a high school teacher said that modâ€" ern life is so tiring that the youngâ€" er generation wants something soothing and relaxing. They are bored by sentences from the classics "whereas slick Amer‘canisms meet their need and are far more effectâ€" ive." One teacher thought "deâ€" bunk" was an excellent word and deâ€" fied any one to find a better. She recalled that not so long ago a head mistress would have been fired if she The Ottawa Journal, noting these suggestions, says that it "sounds like a sensible and practical program," which our public men might study with profit. And we can endorse this comment." ‘"Finally, persistent, neverâ€"ceasing effort to open up the natural resources and enlarge our home markets by inâ€" creasing our population." her eyes keenly open in the interests of Canada and she had published some of the conclusions reached from these observations. Among other things, Miss Hind thus advocates: "Consideration of wheat areas, with experts abroad to keep Canada posted on what the world is doing. A wellâ€"organized and constantly operating system for sellâ€" ign our wheat." "Better support on the part of exâ€" porters and wouldâ€"be exporters, "Utilizing of markets, â€" however small, with a willingness to buy as well as sell. "Better status for our Trade Comâ€" missioners and close coâ€"operation beâ€" tween the Department of Trade and Commerce and the Intelligence Deâ€" partment. "Early consideration of a fresh meat trade with Britain. Chocolate is a universal favorite at any time of the day, any season of the year. And it reaches its peak of perfection in desserts, particularly puddings, Rich in flavour and color is this delicio~s chocolate molded pudding. ‘The ingredients which go into it tell you that it is novrishing and healthful and the relish with which it is consumed tells,you that it is tasty. It‘s attractive looking too with its cunning garnish of whipped cream. Serve it soon an destablish it as a faâ€" vorite in your home. 1 square unsweetened chocolate, 1 cup milk. 1 tablespoon granulated gelatin 1â€"8 teaspoon salt Conquest of England Chocolate Velvet Cream A Fine Pudding fi Woman‘s tA WOTld By Mair M. Morgen Ivs Cream Devilsâ€"The village of Boddam, near Peterhead, Scotland, has been branded as "a hell upon earth on Sundays‘"â€"because its iceâ€" cream and tea shops are kept open. NEW YORK â€"Imported hot dogs â€"from _ Finlandâ€"have just found their way to the shelves of some of the fancier del‘catessens and grocery stores. They are much larger and longer than domestic frankfurters. Their unusual size makes them especially suitable for frankfurter recipcs that demand stuffing. One of these, "frankfurters with apple," calls for boiling the "franks", splitâ€" ting and stuffing them with chopped apple, and wrapping a strip of bacon about the combination. The "franks" are then boiled. The old age pension section of the Social Security Act requires employâ€" ers to file a return as of June 30 on salary and wages paid to employees, From these returns the board will know how many days each of the 29,000,000 individuals holding account numbers worked in the first six months of the year and how much they were paid. Even Hot Dogs Are Imported Now curity Board will begin receiving from employers this week the most comprehensive data on employment and wages ever gathered in the Uniâ€" ted States. Pay Data Wili Cover 29,000,000 Add chocolate to 34 cup milk and heat in double boiler, Soak gelatin in remaining % cup milk 5 minutes. When chocolate is melted, beat with rotary egg beater until blended, Add gelatin, salt and sugar and stir until gelatin is dissolved. Cool,. Add cream and vanilla. Chill until cold and syrupy. Place in bowl of cracked ice or ice water and whip with rotary egg beater until fluffy and thick like whipped cream. Turn into large mold, chill until firm, then unmold and keep in refrigerator until served. Garnish with whipped cream. Sprinkle with chopped blanched almonds, or grate chocolate over top, if desired. Serves six. 4 cup sugar 1 cup heavy cream 4 teaspoon vanilla, WASHINGTON â€" The Social Seâ€" creeds, but actions."â€" "A noble deed is a God."â€"J. G. Holland. "No matter what a man‘s aims, of resolutions, or professions may be, 1t is by one‘s deeds that he is to be judged, both by God and man."â€"H, W. Beecher. "We should believe only in deeds, words go for nothing everywhere." â€"Noyasâ€" R "The devotion of thought to an honest achievement makes the achic« vement possible, Exceptions only confirm this rule, proving that failurs is occasioned by a too feeble faith." â€"Mary Baker Eddy. "A life spent worthily should be measured by deeds, not years."â€" Sheridan. Perhaps a genuine outsider could put his finger on the trouble at once, Anyway the problem is there and calls for a solutionâ€"Farmer‘s Adâ€" vocate. This problem is worthy of a thorâ€" ough investigation, ‘One would think that other districts would sink in deâ€" spair long before Western Ontario would sow the backward tendencies so noticeable to those who knew the Province well in former years. But other districts have not given up, Some less blessed by nature have even advanced. Older members of the community know well enough that the good farm buildings all over Western Ontario were put there prior to the war, Here and there a new roof has been put on, plenty of garages have been built and quite a few chicken houses have been erected. In many cases the homes and outbuildings have not had a touch of paint or whitewash in the last 20 years and sometimes abanâ€" doned, and erstwhile farms are now grazing land. 0. A. C. He told of overhearing a conversation concerning 100 acres of land for which the owner wanted $225 a year rent, and the prospectâ€" ive lessee was willing to pay only $100, but eventually came up to $125, If 100 acres of land is worth only $100 per year in Canada‘s best agricultural section, then something is very much wrong, the Minister deâ€" clared. Everyone who has traveled at all knows full well that one must go far ahield to find a large stretch of counâ€" try that even compares with Western Ontario for agricultural purposes, The land, for the most part, is not so rolling that it is worked uneconoâ€" mically; the soil is as fertile as will be found in any like area; marketing connections are goosl; it is well built on and well fenced. In spite of evâ€" erything farm property in Western Ontario is not worth as much as it was twentyâ€"five years ago. The farmers are apparently no better off financially than they are in districts where the natural advantages do not compare with those in Western Onâ€" tario, There is something wrong, Honorable J. G. Gardiner, Federal M‘nister of Agriculture, referred to this situation when addressing the Agricultural Representatives at the Wha‘‘s Wrong In "No, I don‘t think Toronto women would like that," said Mrs. William C. Douglas, it savors too much of caveâ€"man methods. 1 know a woman does not like to have a husband who won‘t stand any nonsense, but when it gets to using a hairbrush there‘s something wrong with the wife, Those Sioux City wives certainly need drasâ€" tic treatment. "It‘s rather like going back to the dark ages, isn‘t it?" suggested Mrs. H. Harris, convener of the committee on moral standards of Local Council of Women. "I only hope they don‘t try it in Ontario, *"What," she asked laughingly, "are the wives allowed to do to their husbands?" The whole thing is rather amusing. If women out there have so little to do that it is necessar yfor them to form a club of that sort, they certainly need a good spanking from time to time," Mrs. Harris continued. Mrs. G. Robertson, viceâ€"president of the Local Council of Women: "I don‘t think Toronto women would even conâ€" sider it seriously, It isn‘t necessary any longer to treat wives in such a way, Nowadays, husbands and wives talk over their differences without resorting to the hairbrush method." "It‘s absolutely ridiculous," said Mr. Day. "It‘s the most fantastic method I ever heard of for getting into the press, I suppose some husâ€" bands have done the odd bit of spankâ€" ing, some in comedy and others seriâ€" ously, but it‘s certainly a thing to be deplored." TORONTO,. â€" Acting Mayor Raiph Day does not believe husbands should spank their wives. He said so commenting on a Sioux Falls, 8.D,, despatch telling how a club of women had been formed there with the mot» to, "Spare the hairbrush and spoil the wife." Ontario Wives Do Not Need Hairbrush life

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