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Durham Review (1897), 7 Apr 1938, p. 2

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$#3 Whenever anyone who is subject to the tor« turesof Rheumatic Pains decides to take Fynnon Falt regulariy, life for him begins to wear & brighter aspect. No longer do the painâ€"racked joints dety his efforts to secure longed l: relief because the corrective ingredients Fynnon Sal: â€"Sodium, Potassizm, Lithiumâ€" just wom‘t be defied. Uric Acid can‘t remain in the systemâ€"it bas to move on move out. ing for your Rheumatic Pains, Sciatica, Lumbaâ€" go, etc., and you willsoon be re;oicing that life hag nfle hngm. and cheerful again. Your du gist sells Fynnon Sait, the rronn Bri semedy, 75¢ a large package. If you have any difficulty getting supplies, write: Laurentian v Awt sy®s;l;s who have turned to Fynnon Sait have had good cause to bless the day they Sait have had good cause to bless the day they gave it a trial ,‘?‘,‘!*tn:!s'_ the subject 9‘;’5!&5?: mmatic Pains crops up, you will hear the praises of aches and pains. How else an you account for the enthusiastic welcome given to Fm&h. a combination of natural saits of the Earth? _ Â¥ynnon Sait sung. Take a !; tea Â¥ynnon Seit in a cumblerul of water It becomes increasingly obvious that the Rheumatic Sufterers oi Canada have for long been seeking a new remedy for their ndgging off British Remedv for RHEUMATIC ACHES strang« The h aid the her hav engers eft her The at first only whe see the what‘s a Faney 1i and find "Let‘s yasped t ""W hat ationâ€"n nd T} "Simp Nes M He ro: ompartr » the p cllâ€"dres ‘jolently eplace : With : ct the n ucked it "That. ranger ene in 1921 wnat You U The When mM THE ne Issue No. 15â€"â€"‘38 AV Must Share Your Secret e train may go without me," ie stranger. _ "You would ra ive me alone than all the pasâ€" s in the train left here." at do you mean?" asked the t. Gabriel St., Montreak _# me W u see," he said, "doesn‘t ht look suspicious. It‘s vou grope along the surâ€" id with a iamp, that you venness of it, and know e other side of the stuff. y up the eloth at night that, as I did!" t into the openâ€"air," tationâ€"master, Let‘s get horrible deathâ€"trap; it remain in it." nd flung the door of the : open, and bounded on orm. As he alighted, a man who was smoking ed nimbly aside to avoid ccre wha t if I HAPTER XIX STERY EXPL 1€ n at all he i signal D in view tr ention Us oT KW W B i0r an answer he to the footboard, nd entered. The nâ€"master weni in a !4 teaspoont pooniul of vatching part ment mg the platform, on of prying into 1 may be excused ‘ather more closéâ€" ew of the nature m EXPLAINED nâ€"master â€" could moved his hand to the guard to nent Chaukley and he lightly t allowed to i1 give the cen to the .‘ said the h it n 1g I his hand i to move asked the signal to riid the is gainâ€" If my me tell said the the little here en n n o W US d was 0 "What was done was this," he said, looking for a moment at the sleeping figure. "Dartonâ€"that‘s his nameâ€"got clear of the asylum. How he did it we don‘t yet knowâ€"I‘f&m a member of the staff of the asylum, as you may have guessed. He got to London, and haunted King‘s Cross as he‘s passionately fond of trains. He saw Mr. Bryden a week since go North, and travelled for some disâ€" The doctor listened carefully to all that was said by the officials, and he pjeced the accounts together at the close. ‘"‘Then that accounts for his tryâ€" ing to put the blame of Bryden‘s disâ€" ajppoarance om me," said the guatd; "and it explains what he did at Mornâ€" ington." call," he said. "I can only put two and two toâ€" wether," said the doctor. "The man there is a patient who escaped from Walton Asylum eight days ago. For brief periods he is sane as any man walking. At his worst he is one of the most dangerous homicidal madâ€" men in the country. His marfa is for strangling, and very small men seem to have a fascinration for him. His ecunning and craftiness would at times baffle the smartest and keenest men living; but happily he shows so much inconsistency ard is guilty of so much bungling that he is casily discovered." "Tell the doctor," said the staâ€" tionmaster, "all that‘s happened to your knowledge; then I‘ll relate what‘s been done here since you left us there is Walton brief pe "Because," said the doctor, still speaking in a low voiceâ€""because he is a lunatic." * e Two And Two Together When the stationmaster and the guard had recovered from the shock of the surprise, they begged the docâ€" tor to tell them all he knew. At the same time Cotton signalled to the men who were watching to leave the room. "You can wait outside within guard ‘"Whatever he is," said the guard, "he‘s a murderer." ‘"True," replied the doctor; "but a murderer with whom the law can do nothing." "Why?*" demanded the astonished too The doctor stepped gently up, and gave a swift keen look at the sleepâ€" er‘s face. "Thank God," he murmurâ€" ed fervently, "he‘s the man I mean, "If he‘s the man I mean, he‘s betâ€" ter sleeping," returned the doctor. "Well, there‘s the one I mean," said the stationmaster in a whisper as they entered the room. He pointâ€" ed to a figure on the couch. "He‘s asleep tionmaster, as the room in w been left. "It wake him." him "At onee," said the doctor. "How marvelous if it should be the man I want!" "It is as I thought at first," he said. ‘"The man has been strangled strangled first, and then stuffed in here. _ You will notice that all the upholstering material has been reâ€" moved. It is the work of someone whose sole object was the taking of lifeâ€"not a paper, not a coin, not an article of any sort has been touched." The doctor had by this time rapidly examined the pockets. "I know but one man who could have done this," he concluded. "And I think we know but one alâ€" so," said the guard. The doctor became animated inâ€" stantly. "So," he said, putting aside all his assumed calmnessâ€""so you have seen the man?" Strangled First The doctor gazed intently at the rigid features, and then turned his eyes to the throat. "Seen nim and got him," said the tationmaster. _ "Shall I take you to He leaned forward, his cigar still between his teeth, and put up the cloth with the coolness with which he might have drawn a blind. He took a pin from his waistcoat and seâ€" cured the cloth so that he had an unâ€" interrupted view of Mr. Bryden‘s face. "Now," said the doctor, seating himself on the opposite side to that on which the guard had raised the curtain, "let‘s sit down and reason the thing out." _ or was," said the staâ€" they walked towards hich the prisoner had won‘t be necossary to "I don‘t see how he got to the corâ€" ridor carriage," said the guard. "He is the very man I put into another coach before we started." "The man who could plan a thing like that would not hesitate to swing himsek along the footboard even of the 9:15," said the doetor. "It tance, at any rate by the same train, That was when he first tried to perâ€" sonate you, guard, by assuming a false beard and wig. Probably he meant then to take the unfortunate traveller‘s life, but finding that Mr. Bryden had seen him he didn‘t try. Then again, he might have been conâ€" tent with the terrible fright he‘d caused,. Last night he came again by the 9:15, and managed to carry out the scheme he‘d no doubt been nursing for a whole week. Good heavens! What a diabolical business. Nothing but a discased brain could have conceived and carried it out. MAYFAIR NO. 160 Here is one thing you can‘t possibly go wiong onâ€"Monograms, for your gifts of linen undergarments and every houschold accessory. A fine linen monogrammed handkerchief is always the most welcome of gifts. They are equally attractive, embroidered in colors to match your costume, or emâ€" broidered in white or colored linen. Every combination of initials is here and in five sizes. If you wish tissue pattern for nightgown and panties same may be obtained by enclosing additional fifteen cents for No. 560. Send 20 Cents (20¢c) in stamps, postal note or coins to Mayfair Patterns, Room 421, Wilson Buildings, Toronto. Print name and address plainly. made from fruits and herbs, will strengthen and build up your liver like nothing else will. You‘ll be amazed how well you are every morning. ‘Try Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives. All druggists. testines to work properly. A mere bowel Keep your liver healthy and you‘ll feel great every morning. When you wake up feeling "roiten‘ your liver is out of order. Your liver clears the blood of poison:, separates the nourishing part of your food from the waste. Supplies energy to muscles, Until some one told him that the baking industry was faced with this Mr, Duval‘s device, a vacuum coolâ€" ing arrangement, cooled the bread in exactly ten minutes, and, he insists, did a much better job than the eleâ€" ments. The particular little problem of cooling bread happened to be one with which the best brains of the bakery industry has been wrestling for years. Ordinarily ‘FTakes Four Hours On a normal summer day, it takes, by ordinary means, about four hours to cool a loaf of bread sufficiently to permit it to be sent through an automatic slicer and an automatic wrapper. Thus, the entire baking inâ€" dustry of the United States was held up just four hours, and the loaf that reached the housewife‘s table was not such a good product, at that. WAKE UP LIKE A CAVE MAN The contribution of Montague H. Duval, New York City, the gentleâ€" man in question, as an inventor, was a device to cool bread. Is Invented By An American â€" Does Job In Exactly Ten Minutes Fresh â€" Baked Bread Visiting Toronto last week was a broad â€" shouldered, _ square â€" jawed young man who holds the distinction of being invited to the Capital of the United States to sit a* dinner as one of the twenty of the country‘s foreâ€" most inventors. Feel Full of Lifeâ€"No More Tired, Dull, Heavy Mornings Monograms for Distinction ‘"‘Ah, how good of you, doctor"‘ he exclaimed. "You have come to take me home!" The sleeper opened his eyes and yawned; then stretched himself and sat up on the couch. He looked for ahmoment at doctor, then burst into a laug! pleasure. ‘"Then )'et a telegram be sont," said the doctor, "Meanwhile I will see to the wants of the patientâ€" ah! he‘s about to awal:e." PP un hn in itc uid o lliciad. s 1 let it fetch him.., I‘ve had enough to last me for many a long day." ‘"Whatever the iiw may wantâ€" and I don‘t suppose it‘ll be satisfied with such a simple view of the matâ€" ter as yours," said the stationmaster: "I‘m with you in getting the creaâ€" tureâ€"1 can‘t call him a manâ€"bactk to the asylum. If the law wants him. eems impossible to kill or hurt his particular problem, Mr. Duval had never looked into the inside of a bakery. And that, he says, is just the reason he untangled the knot in short order. ‘The gentlemen who were mixed up in the industry, he exâ€" plained, were too confused by the unâ€" important angles to get down to the root of the puzzle. Hans Adolf yon Moltke, (above), amâ€" bassador to Poland since 1931, will succeed Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop as ambassador to London. Von Moltke has had an acâ€" tive hand in promotion of the Gerâ€" manâ€"Polish relations during the past several years. German Envoy C (Concluded next week) t ONTARIO ARCHIVES ent at the a laugh of _ course, 1 wear an overcoat ard proteci myself from the cold like other f{olks, but not during my fifâ€" teenâ€"miinute «laily airingâ€"off period," Youm; adds. Young, 59 years old, believes one reason he values fresh air so h‘ghly is that he spent his. youth in the coal mines where fresh air just doesn‘t exist. 1 L css L0 tm us oi ne nnt ty @ne of Young‘s stunts, which sometimes mmazes visitors to the town, is shoveling the snow off his front walk while barefooted _ and dressed only in light shirt and trouâ€" sors, _APDics, tomatoes and humans need air," Young explains. "Put apâ€" ples in a hot room without fresh air and they rot vapidly. Give them air and they keep good for a long time." @ne of Young‘s stunts, which sometimes mmazes visitors to the town, is shoveling the snow off his FADAT 1 ts $ fifte And Walis Barefoot In Snowdrifts food you can l and never have store teeth. If you worryâ€"with that queer taut feeling in your stomachâ€"take PHOSFERINE. A few tiny, economical drops each day will help steady those ragged nerver, improve your appetite, build up your strength. At druggiste, L0¢, $1.00 and $1.50. 65 THE GREAT PHOSFERINE:S@E That ofd houschold remedy, bicarâ€" bonate of soda, is wonderful for cleaning the teeth, and it will really whiten and strengthen them. So if you have no particular brand â€"of tooth paste, give it a try. With constent "care «nd proper food you can live to a ripe old age and never have to go shopping for profession has cularly of late There are plently of good reasons to give a little thought and trouble to your molars. They should look their best for beauty‘s sake; they should be strong and white for health‘s sake; and they should be clean for your breath‘s sake. Five Minutes Twice A Day Your dentist will tell you that three to five minutes twice a dayâ€" morning and nightâ€"is the minimum number of times you should brush your teeth, And it‘s a good idea to brush them after every meal if you can possibly arrange it. Brushing should do two things, â€"cleanse the inner and outer surfaces of the tecth to remove any particles of food that may be in the crevicesâ€"and stimulate and massage the gums. This last point is one that the dental profession has been stressing partiâ€" usc cx TW If you STOP THEM SCREAMING! Lovely tecth are one of the most attractive features of any face, and completec cleanliness is the first ‘step toward toothsome beauty. â€" Though your teeth may not be perfectly formed, through no fault of your own, they can still be attractive and have & unique charm of their own if they sparkle with health and cleanâ€" liness. At Least Two Brushings Per Day Nese:sary, Say Dentists The next day he informed the police. But when the police went to arrest the sorcerer they found that he had vanished â€"â€" with numerous valuables belonging to the old man and $25,000 which he had been persuaded to hand over to the magzician. Cleanliness For Beautiful Teeth en The old man went again to the sorâ€" cerer, "Be paticnt," he was told. "She will come tonight, Go home and preâ€" pare a magnificent supper, with chamâ€" pagne and flowers, and await her." Back For More Advice Again the old man followed the sorâ€" cerer‘s instructionsâ€"and again, disâ€" appointcd, he returned for more adâ€" vice. This time he was told to get some pil‘ls and take injections. Still the girl did not relent. Fo mt The old man and the girl met on board a liner on which he was returnâ€" ing to Italy from America,. He fell in love with her, and when she left the boat at Naples he left also. At Resina, near the foot of Vesuvius, he took lodging not far from her home. "Be Patient" Insistently he tried to win her atâ€" tentionsâ€"but in vain. At last he went to a sorcerer who lived nearby. The sorcerer told him to buy a magnificent house near the girl‘s home, furnish it luxuriously, and then wait. The old man did so. She did not come. When his wooing and wealth failed to make any impression on a 20â€"yearâ€" old girl with whom he had fallen in love, an §2â€"yearâ€"old Itallan enlisted the mid of a sorcerer to try and win her love. No he has enlisted the aid of the police to try and find the sorâ€" cerer. ears or more, winter and ren (Ginger) Young of lich., has been taking a ite walk barefoot daily. that time he never has dav. His Girl By Magic : any particles of food in the crevicesâ€"and massage the gums. ns apâ€" air air the union of plaid and plain is import ant in every sort of costume, For sports, country or travel wear, the contrast is carried out in the use of plaid wool tweed jackets over monotone skirts in soft shetland wool, and dark monotone jackets are comâ€" bined with contrasting lightâ€"colored skirts and boxy overâ€"jackets, i Not only is there a great freedom in the use of the bright new colors in bold combinations, but designers have expressed their liking for variety by teaming contrasting fabric types in the season‘s suits, Plain and Plaid Together Soft smooth woollens are used with nubby or hairyâ€"surfaced wools in jackâ€" ot and skirt costumes or in twoâ€"piece ensembles of the frock and coat school. Plain woollens are smartly set off by novelty striped and patterned weaves in bright combinations, and NEW YORK. â€"â€" The contrast note looms large in this season‘s fashion picture. Nowhere is it more strikingâ€" ly displayed than in the new wool day. time costumes for streot, travel or sportswear, Especially In Ne‘_w Wool Daytime Contrast Is Used Should the present trend toward cellarless houses become more powerâ€" ful, we can all have nice low houses with a minimum of grading. drainage from cellar fiftures. Skill ful grading can overcome the stitled effect to a large degree, although it should not take the form of sharp terraces that look too artificial. The slope should be as gradual as possible and should extend well away from the house. di is the need for waterproofing, which also adds cost; furthermore, in many streets the sewers sre not laid deep enough in the ground to allow proper Deep excavation costs more, and the deeper we go the more likely Most suburbs, and even cities, sufâ€" fer from overexposure of the cellar, When we see a house built lJow on the ground it seems more pleasing to the eye. The reason is plain. The phrase "a long, low, rambling house" is typical of the ideal of most people in the way of architecture. Yet knowing this we still persist in placâ€" ing houses two or three feet out of the ground. The reasons are pracâ€" tial ones, and, unfortunately, they are mgre potent than esthetic appeal. Trend Toward Cellarless Buildâ€" *‘ ins Should Result in Cosier High Houses Lack Beauty of Lines factory carbohydrate to use as a milk modifier in the feeding of tiny infants and as an energy producing food for growing children. ENERGY h L Even In Fabrics CORN SYRUP a most satisâ€" PDRRARENIF 1 RaVBREY aiRVE, They never tire of its deliciâ€" ous flavor and it really is so good for themâ€"so give the Te CAseeeineainaett P _ (CHILDREN of all %.. Y thrive on **CROWN !y is there a great freedom e of the bright new colors in binations, but designers have | their liking for variety by contrasting fabric types in Street Costumes the committee, related â€" a t point, that of a foster moth: d deceased, who built a monumen: *** herself in the remembrance of <=~** whom she befriended. This wo= # made foster motherhood a voost * Mrs. Bertha H. Butle: ing the C_hiugo Orphan Made It A Vocati Permanent attachments velop from the fosterâ€"m: tionship, said Leon H. Ri« chairman of &he commit: perintendent of the foster partment of the Jewish Bureau. Council of Socia committee, which is movement to mcquain with the opportunities cited cases of persons when tbfiy took under. drew in to board, not muneration, but u: scope for talents in ho Permanent Attec velops From A list of carce past 40 should inc hood, ascording t« foster home care Foster Parert Worthwhile © Edgel] ventin Some men whom centric are remark: pushing their pet â€" these was a man 1: spent fiftyâ€"three y. secking to prove t fat, He often slop night, so that he n study the sky whon offered. After long ed at the conclusion no more than ten i the carth was flat. Althoash all this > Nearly a Million 5 A keen astronomer in burg spent twenty years | ing the distance {rom th« 450 stars. Star countinp for the impatient, and an who have achieved remarl in this direction is Mis: lamy, of Oxford Universit] tory, who, with the assista uncle, has fixed the positio ly a million stars. example, spent n years making a the positions of were fixed. In these restless sGays supposed to be rare. 4: fact there are still many can display pagience of . inary kind. Astronome: ion Observatory of Sout) Some People Do Jobs Which quire Years of Exactisnsg VW =«â€"17 Years to Count 2.000 { Patience Sometin Is Extraordina "It would be a fim us if we could take the day, keep books. try to settle each da If there is a loss, w« if a gainâ€"all to the g day end before the n if the day has been :; it â€"off, and do not f» advised. Modern civil all day and worries a) the fretting and anxi the pressure which p health, he said. "Civilized man would d would consider not on!, life, but the generatio) said, ©Because if we p; make things too diffics bright child too high, the position of tryin> 10 with an air engine." Bookkeeping For £ The bright child should rather than pressed for will â€" develop â€" beyond strength and disasicr w opined. And the adult ; nize what he is, and tal from the "doctrine of ac said. left out of your « doubt if any of y day," he arswore the pressure and cess commenced a and goes on "*~o, life‘s career, to the One Of the hardost things the life of modern civilizeg n tke 41," sald Dr. George on Oriie, Cleveland, eminep and author, in addressins ; ) ering of the Local Toy» i1 of in the Academy of Medicin, on *Life‘s Impacts and n Adjustments." "HOW much Yime haws ~. One Day at a Time Right w to UVe.. a?\:c!lnd Scien. Says Worry Play‘; Havoc With Heam,' 11 1« much tin tist Advices, at ust wi priy Iy 10 uth tha d ibn Day Ines§ i t In ol ut tw Wt € url In the Pis‘s 1 MNew Process Mak Pictures On Me!l * hat Charce Has it YVOIC { t vely accurate, w e explained that emperature caus msion of paper J i slight «istorti tographs Pro Way Are M dopt Ibly i thing 1. In not, decad v diffo » to Farmers rjculture is a its Less Provincial Powe i surve ely ace n ng pilation hardening « more diversificd us Do Not React To C} react spok« have thic to * Mn ippro ition whi M ) TH Al se Onta Ilâ€"bein CANADA e metai pictur« h changes, he s miscalculati gl \I 11 | » do

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