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Oshawa Daily Times, 5 Oct 1931, p. 2

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PAGE TWO 'Touchdown in last Quarter Won Game for Peterboro "Peterboro Squad Excelled - . +. hand, . extensive and profitable use of * and completing five, which is a ful passes. *, . ' same as last year, having lost on- * posed about half and half of last issued final instructions. * west end of the field. Armstrong * of P.C.I. kicked off, the hall hit- " ES PERALIRIIRIL IATL 2A INI RY gl f . THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1931 in Running the Ends -- Had Perfect Interference --0.C.V.1L. Should Have Had Even Break On Saturday afternoon at Riv- erside Park, Peterborough, the O. C.V.]. Senior rugby team went "down to defeat before the league caampions, P.C.L, by the score of 8-3, The game, the best ex- rilition of rugby ever seen in Peterborough, was played before # large and enthusiastic ' erowd and the outcome was in doubt un- t1: the final two minutes when P.C.I. plunged over for a touch, thereby breaking the three-all tie which had existed from early in the third quarter, The Garnet and Grey squad ex- celled in end runs, many of which netted them ten to fifteen yards. Their interference on the end ruv* was perfect, Time and time again the front line of the Osh- - awa team was cut down complete- ly, leaving the secondary de- fence the task of stopping the play. This was particularly true in the first half, On the other the Trieolour crew made the forward pass, attempting six very high percentage for success- for The the The teams trotted out warm up practice at 2.15. P.C.1. team is practically ly Preston, MacDonald and Dun- kerly. The Oshawa team is com- vear's seniors and juniors with one new womer, Jolice, formerly of North Toronto Collegiate. Sharp at 2.30 Bob Armstrong called the twp teams together and The Game Oshawa chose to defend the ting Brown, who quickly dropped on it, leaving Oshawa in posses- sion on their own 45 yard line, A forwatd pass, Hicks to Henley, caught the P.C.I. team asleep. The play netted the 0.C.I. 20 yards, Failing to make yards on their next two plays, Oshawa was forced to kick. Young ran the Ball back five yards, evading a swarm of tacklers. A buck by Clayton and an end run failed to give P.C.1. yards. Armstrong booted a short one to Conant who was nailed by Reynolds. Two plunges by Guiltinan and Kashul ieft the ball on Peterboro 35 ward line and on the third down, Conant kicked to Armstrong who wag forced to rouge, 6.0V.1, 1; PCL. 0. run, Richardson to Young, line. Score end of 1st quarter: O, C.V.l.--1; PCI Second Quarter On changing ends, Peterboro with the wind aiding them, work- od the ball down the fleld to Oshawa's 20 yard line, There the Tricolour line held for two downs but on the third down Young kicked a beautiful field goal, the ball travelling over the bar and ending its ride outside the park. 0CV.I--1; PCL -- 3. Lfter the kick-off, Oshawa started a march down the field which took them from their own 20 yard line to Peterboro's 30 sard line where they were final- ly stopped. From here Conant kicked for a single. 0.C.V.L.-- 2; P.C.IL.--3. On their very next play Peter- borc attempted their first for- werd pass. Hicks intercepted it and ran 15 yard. before being brought down, ' He was hurt and went off for repairs. 0.C.L kick- ed the. ball going deep behind the goal-line, Young coming in fast, scooped the ball up, and worked his way out to his 2 yard line, Score half time: O.C.V.I.--2; P.C.1.--3. Third Quarter Peterboro obtained the ball on the kick-off. Two plunges failed to give them yards and they were forced to kick. Kashul's buck und a forward pass, Hicks to Guiltinan, brought Oshawa with- in striking distance of P.C.I's I:ne and Conant kicked for the tying point, 0.C.v.1.--3; P.C.1.--3. The play for the remainder of the period ranged in mid-field with neither team able to get close enough to their opponents' line to score. Fourt Quarter Peterboro had possession of tr.e ball when the teams changed ends for the last time. They nicked and Conant was again downed in his tracks. Two end runs gained Oshawa some ground but they were forced to kick. The kick was a high one and Conant came up fast to recover it but | the ball bounded past him. A P'eterboro player attempted to fa!l on it but the ball slipped frcem him forward to another I. C.1. player, completing an illegal forward pass, but the referee did not see it. On their first play, P.C.1, gajned 20 yards on a very deceptive forward pass. Then Armstrong broke through for a 26 yard run, being stopped on Oshawa's goal line. Breckenridge and Waddell fail- ed to buck it over, the 0.C.1. line holding like the proverbial stone wall, but on the third down Arm- strong dove over for a touch. 0.C.V.1.--3; P.C.I1.--8, After the kick-off Peterboro' attempted an end run, which ended in a loose ball which Pet- erhoro luckily gathered in, '1sey kicked and Oshawa tried a for- ward pass tlew for time, Final score: O0.C.V.1.--3; C.1.--8. The line-ups announced by coaches Kirkland and Legon, just before the game started P. \ | were: -- On the very next play, an ond PPeterboro aAd~ vanced the ball 20 yards, bring- | Waddell fag it to Peterboro's 45 yard | Clayton | Armstrong | Breckenridge Position Snap inside Inside Oshawa Rrown Weldon Bulmer middle Myers middle Kashul flying wing Guiltinan outside Joliffe outside Henley (C.) quarter Shellenkoff halves Conant Stroud Hicks Marsh Jupling Feynolds Gardener Fraser (C.) Richardson Young Kirkwood Substitutes: -- Peterboro --- Sloane, Lord, Oshawa ---- Young, Henderson, Cirothers, Law, Shewchuk, Gibbs. Dinson, just as the whistle | St. George's Won Weird Game Galt, Oct. 5.--~In the wierdest exhibition of baseball ever played in the Ontario senior finals, the Toronto St. George's walloped the Terriers here Saturday, 17 to 9, to even the series and necessitate a third game to be played in Ham- ilton on Wednesday afternoon at 3 o'clock. The score is an indication of the play, the game containing everything known in the baseball alphabet, Both teams got a lot of bad baseball out of their systems. The Terrier infield could not do anything right, a Jot of what should have been easy outs going for hits. The Terriers had seven errors, and St, George's four. Three Galt twirlers yielded fifteen hits, several of them very scrat- chy, and two Toronto twirlers were nicked for ten hits, all of them. clean-cut, hut one of them was a lucky home run, the ball bouncing over the rightfield fence, Harry Sniderman and Dicky Green took off hitting honors with three apiece. Vie Brown and Stewart of the locals and Dickey Green for the visitors pro. vided the fielding features. White Sox Take Lead in Series Chicago, Oct, 5. -- Donnie Bueh"s White Sockers continued to treat their National League cousins very rudely yesterday af- ternoon, and by hammering three of the Cub's star hurlers for a 13-to-6 victory took the lead in the Chicago city series. The Am- erican League Socks have now ven three games to the Bruin's two, and need but one more vie- | tory to take the title, Red Fa- her and Charlie Root, opponents in the opening game of the ser- jes. went at it again this after- noon and again Faber was the vietor, He was not in at the end, Ted Lyons having replaced him. Smead Jolley was the White Sox hero in the fifth inning. With the American leaguers behind and the bases full, he lined a home run into the right field grand stand, and the four runs resulting assured the Hose of victory. The 42,000 fans, mostly | Sox fans, went wild as the big { Smead ambled around the bases, spelling the finish of Charley Root, A home run by Lew Fonseca in the fifth inning with two runners win on Saturday, 4 to '3. Al nings and Fraser relieved him to shut off a dangerous Cub rally. Belleville.--~The new St. John's | Anglican Mission at the corner of Bridge Street and Herchimer Ave, is now open, Church service is be- ing conducted 'on Sunday and a midweek service on Wednesday evening by the Rev, Mr, Secker, Sunday School is also being carried on by the rector assisted by his taff. Later in the season the social activities of community will be centred in the Mission, The bhuild- ing is of cement case with a frame top and presents a Ane picture a it lias been newly painted, Referee ronto, Umpire--Jack Bond, Oshawa. Bob Armstrong, To- Bucki | 'mmemrmes FA * 78,000,000 more * 325.000 more Pac "'Ere, Bill, ave a real puff!" "Wot d'ye mean, a real puff?" "Why, blimey, Bill, a Buckingham -- a blooming sun-treated Buckingham." Buckinghams sold every year eS sold every month ngham ---- and Smile | Thomas weakened in the final in- | Sport Snapshots | Mike's Place advanced another fielding high-lights, tween Peterson and Hurst, at first, Stadium, euds, parent ease, lyse apiece, The Blue Devils made a good on Saturday, Tiger Cubs down to a 7-1 score. the Blue Devils. LJ * second quarter, owing to somebody | at a critical moment, was the best of the two having a fine change of pace. only got six hits, the Brantford team showed that they can hit the ball hard on occasion zs three of the hits were for extra bases. game will Le played here on Saturday afternoon at the Motor City 10 watch, and the Cubs knew they had been in a game. point 'in the Oshawa play was the failure to get extension plays work- ing smoothly, but this should come with more practice, Mike's Place Earn Victory game closer to the finals of the Ontario Junior final on Saturday in Brantford by defeating the Brant- ford Collegiate Institute by 8 to 3 and shaded their opponents in most departments of play, It was a close game for the first two innings, but Mike's Place scored six runs on as many hits in the third inning to take a long lead and never were in danger from that point on. White- ley pitched a fine game allowing six hits and taking it fairly easy atter the third, At that he struck out eight batters. the pinches and left nine men sthanded on the bases. piayed heads-up ball all the way with Hurst and Hall supplying the Hurst's play on Batson the first batter to face Whiteley in the initial inning was a gem, The ball was hit hard be- It looked like a sure double but Hurst dived to his left and came up with the ball in time to toss the runner out, Brantford trotted out two pitchers, Webster the last incumbent He was good in The local team Although they The return Collegiate Teams Lost Both the senior and junior teams of the O.C.V.I lost their inter- scholastic games on Saturday afternoon. The seniors lost a close de- cision to Peterborough by 8 to 5 and by all acounts should have had at least a tie. The Peterborough crew uncovered a fine running game which coupled with good interference enabled them to gain around the At that the local seniors held them down until the final quarter, The junior team playing in Bowmanville also lost their game but by a larger margin, the score being 26 to 5. The Bowmanville team were much too fast for the local aggregation and ran up the score with ap- The loses leave the O.C.V.I. entrants with a win and a Made a Good Impression impression in their opening game It must be remembered that they were up against a tcam Of senior rating, and from this angle they did well to hold the The Cubs were unable to cross the Cshawa line, and that in itself speaks well for the defensive play of The tacklings shown by the Oshawa team was a treat The weakest Who Had That Whistle? The crowd was all at sixes and sevens in the closing minutes of the in the grandstand blowing a whistle Allan had kicked a bounding ball over the Osh- awa line, and Doc Rowden went after it, chased by Hamilton tacklers | Just as he got to the ball a whistle blew, and the Hamilton players | stopped. Doc, however, got the ball and ran it out, getting up the | field about twenty yards before the umpire blew his whistle, wondering what it was all about. for running the ball out, LJ Some of the crowd thought a point had been ahoard, and Vie Fraser's fine re. | scored, some thought the period had ended before the play was com- i liet pitching in the final two in- | pleted, but the truth was that the extra whistle in the grandstand nings enabled the White Sox to | had nothing to do with the game, and that Rowden was given credit thus pre » enting a score. * * A Dangerous Play How dangerous the forward pass can be, when incompleted, was | shown in Saturday's game, tossed the ball too soon, however, urday, to the Tigers' twenty yard line, Rowden threw a forward pass, After Hubbell had made a fifty yard run He and no one was there to catch it But, since the ppss as thrown within the Tiger 25 yard line, the ball, under the rules, was handed to the Tigers for first down on their 25 yard line, and a good scoring opportunity was lost by the Blue Devils, . » Will Oshawa Do Likewise In Brantford on Saturday the largest crowd that we have seen this | year at a softball game turned out for the junior game between the Oshawa-team and the Brantiord Collegiate. way around af® least three deep with a crowd that was estimated at 1,200 fans all wildly rooting for the home team. to say that they got their money's worth for the game was a thriller even though the score was somewhat one-sided, accommodation here and the final round in sight the local fans should not hesitate in attending the return game to be played here next Sat- The field was lined all the It is no exaggeration With by far better Anglers' Meeting This Evening The first gathering of the Oshawa Angler's Association for the fall and winter season will be held this evening in the Genosha Hotel at 8 pm. It is hoped that a large interested in angling will make it a point to be on hand. turnout of members and all those The series | of meetings which will be held on the first Monday of each month, bids | fair to be one of the most interesting yet undertaken by the local association, Rochester in Driver's Seat St. Paul, Minn,, Oct 5.--George P.ccinelli's terrific home run in the ninth inning, gave Rochester | a 2 to one victory over St, Paul | vesterday, sending the Interna- | tional League champions ahead | in the little world series three | #1mes to one, It was a tough game for the | American Association champions' etar hurler, "Huck' Betts, to | lose. He allowed the Red Wings | only fiflve hits and had worked the count to three and two on Pucinelli' when the Rochester | rightfielder parked the next pitch | over the left field wall to win the game, There was one out when Puc- cinelli broke up the game. and Betts made the next two hitters {ly out to Anderson. The victory gave Rochester an almost insurmountable lead In the series for the Saints must win four of the next five games at Rochester, starting Tuesday, to win. Balmy Beach Beat Argos Toronte, Oct, 5.--Balmy Beach supplied the answer to the ques- tion of where football suprémacy in Toronto resides, when they de- feated the doughty Argonauts by 5 to 1 at Varsity Stadium on Sat- urday afternoon in the final game for the city championship and the Reg Dg Gruchy Memorial Cup. The Beachérs are now champions of Canada and Toreénto. Played as the second part of a double-headér in weathér that was too summery for the gridiron sport, the contest was all that could he desired. It savored of midseason football, Six thousand or so fans viewed the struggle, and saw Balmy Beach outpla: bg Tp he Rr nh 4 I's e . the with a championship display in the last half that would not be denied, After wasting a chance to take the lead in the third quarter, when the score was tied at one all, and they were within easy range to kick a point, the East Enders kept the Scullers on the defensive all through the final period, and scored a rouge and a goal from placement to gain the decision, No Individual Hero There was no outstanding hero, no individual performance that blazed forth to dim the others by comparison, It was a machine-like display on the part of both teams, and it was concerted effort with every man giving of his best that enabled Balmy Beach to triumph, Ab. Box gave a better display of kicking than anything Argo had to offer of a similar nature, but on the ends and along the wing- line Balmy eBach also excelled when the victory hung in the bal- ance, Argonauts led at half time by 1 to 0, Not until early in the third quarter did Balmy ' Beach break into the scoring. Argonauts gainéd yards from scrimmage n times to Beaches two in first half, but the were successful only twice in the second half of the game, whereas the East Enders moved the yard- sticks five times, Forward passes did not play any important part in the result, Balmy Beach tried six and com- pleted two of them. - Argos tried three and completed the first one, Armour Munro tossed one to Frank Turville in the first quar- ter for a 35-yard advance, which was the feature pass of the day, but Argos did not attempt anoth- er until late in the game; when they resorted to it as the last des. porate measure of'a béaten team. Another Fish Story Port Hope~Messrs Ed. Sargeant and R. Shaeffer of Salem, Ohio, who have been visiting Mrs, Frank Meyers, Hope Street, caught a twenty-five Jeund lunge at Rice Lake on Wednesday. It measured 41 inches in lanwth. Oarsmen | FIGAL INSTALLMENT "There is no' happiness for me. That's all finished. Don't look so tragic. We must all live our own lives and work out our own ealva- tion--if there is such a thing. I'm glad to have seen you again--it hurt, the way you sent me about my business, . , " "1 shall never forgive myself, Julie." "You must; there isn't anything really to forgive, I wasn't too kind to you either, Lawrence--" "You gave me the only happiness [ have ever known, and that is why I want to give you your happiness." drew back sharply. y--what do you mean?" "That I want to take you back to Chittenham. He's a fine fellow, Julie, and you mean everything in the world to him. There was a time when I hated him, but lately, now we understand each other--I can see why I never stood a chance when he was concerned--" "What do you mean? How dare you say such things to me?" "I dare anything if it means your ppiness." "My happiness is no n of yours--" She turned and began to walk away from him, Her heart was beating fast and her eyes burned with the tears which she dared not let fall, In the evening Schofield called at the little hotel. He brought a large bunch of roses and he kissed her hands as she took the flowers from him. "Bay you forgive me, Julie?" "Of course I forgive you." But in her heart she knew that if she had cared for him, forgiveness would not have been possible. "Of course I forgive you," she said again wit) an effort: "but in return you must promise me something, will you, Lawrence?" "If I can--you know I will." "Then promise me that you will not tell any one in London where I am." He hesitated, and she said again sharply: "Most of all you must promise me not to tell Mr. Chit- tenham." Schofield looked away from her. "I have already wired to him. I wired this evening after you left me." She drew a deep breath, her heart was beating so fiercely that it seemed to choke her. "You think . . . do you think he will come here?" she asked. "I am sure he will come." "Yes . . . yes, I suppose 50." She touched his arm. "And you are the good Samaritan who will bring us together again," she said, and he did not hear the mocking note in her voice. But when he had gone she shed! no tears, She went up to her room, leaving the roses he had brought lying on the table in the deserted ralon. She dragged her few clothes from the drawers in the little painted chest, and huriedly packed them, Her only thought was to avoid seeing Giles Chittenham. "It's all over, that part of my life--it's finished forever," she told herself over and over again. "I don't want him now--I don't even want to see him! T could never forgive him or believe In him again." : Bhe told the landlady that she wes going back to England, but at the station she took a ticket to Lausanne. "He will never think of looking for me there," she told herself ex- ultantly, "He will think it is the last place I should ever go back to." She changed her name to Lang- dan and took a room in a little old- fashioned chalet overlooking the lake, and when she found the time beginning to hang impossibly on her hands, she advertised for pupils to whom to teach English, For one thing she needed the money, and for another, she felt that she would go mad if she could not find occupation. But except at intervals she was not unhappy. And so the late summer and the autumn passed, and the cold winds came, and the grey days, and the 4 pga were hidden in vells of What was Giles doing? One night she dreamed of him so vividly that she was sure he must be somewhere near her, and for two days she was afraid to go out for fear that she might meet him. "I will go home," she told her- self, and tried to believe that it was sheer longing for England that .drew her, and that the presence of Chittenhani made no difference, "I will go home for Christmas," she decided, and from that moment her spirits rose, and the people in the house smiled when they saw the change in her, "She has had good news," they told ane another, and were quite sure that it was an unhappy love affair that had hitherto caused the sadness in Julie's eyes. And then a week before she was to leave, Julie suddenly felt a great , longing to climb the St. Bernard once more. She made enquiries and was told 'that she could not go without a guide. "It is a dangerous time of the year," she was warned. It wag the same day in the list of visitors in the paper who were expected at the ce Hotel Caux for Christmas that Julie saw Giles Chittenham's name. She was glancing down the list without much interest, wondering i! any one she had known in Eng- land might by chance, be mention- there, when suddenly his name seemed to leap out at her in let- ters of fire. "Mr. Giles Chittenham and his flancee Miss Beatrice Neale--" There followed a little chatty paragraph about them--but Julie read no more. She stood with the paper clutched in her hands, cold to the lips. He had forgotten her s0 soon--he was to be married to another woman, Bim had often said bitterly that no man could be faithful and Julle had not believed her. Well, she be- lieved her now--and such a tide of hatred and despair rose in her heart that she was afraid. Three times Giles had struck at her--three times he had made her suffer beyond all endurance, and now, she would suffer no more, She put on her thick boots and her warmest coat and went out. At the front door she met the woman who kept the house. "You are going out?" she asked; that the snow ceased falling. It was getting light then--the faint out- line of the mountains began to stand out against the darkness as if drawn by a ghostly hand. Chitenham was nearly worn out, but he refused to go back, or fo rest although the others often urged him to do so. "Further on there is an inn where he can rest--the people who keep the inn are friends of mine/" Adolph said. But it was half an hour before they reached it--a small, unpre- tentious little building of wood, standing back from the rosdwsy and half hidden by great drifts of snow. . Adolph tramped up to the door "Oh to not go far. There is more snow to come, much more snow." "I am not going far," Julie sald and hurried on. / The woman closed the door and went back to her warm kitchen, She told her husband who was sitting smoking his pipe by the stove, that it was a good thing Miss Langdon was leaving--not that she wished her to go for she liked her well enough, but because now she could get three times as much money for her room. There was a knock at the front door, and she broke off in what she was saying to see who the visitor might be. A tall man in a big overcoat stood there--he asked for Miss Langdon. He spoke eagerly as if with great excitement, "She has but a moment gone out -if Monsieur would put himself to the great trouble of coming in to wait." "I will certainly wait" It had begun to siow £freh, and the shoulders o! Chittenhea i's coat were white as he stepped into the little hall-way. He had been vi:i'in~ some people in London whore « . ziler had come home for the Christmas hol- idays from school in Switzerland. She had been showing amateur photographs of her school friends, and amongst them was one of Julie, Glles had been bored by her chatter, and had pushed the pho- tographs aside when she pressed one more upon his notice. "That's Miss Langdon, who comes to teach the Swiss girls English. She's a darling . . ." And he had looked down into Julie's face. ,. . hb And now he was here--in a few moments he would be with her, and holding her in his arms. He walked over to the window and stood look- ing out. How long would she be? moment seemed an eternity. "I will wait here til] Miss Lang- don comes in," Giles sald obsti- nately. . But at ten o'clock she had still not returned. Giles went to the front door and looked out, followed by Adolph, The snow was falling so thickly that ons could hardly see a yard ahead; there was a deep menace in the unbroken silence. Every Chittenhgm loked at the man be-|.. side him, "Well?" he sald sharply, struck by something in Adolph's eyes. "It would be good now to look for Mademoiselle," Adolph sald, "I; have friends--good fellows all. If Monsieur wishes it--" "Let us start at once" broke in. He was afraid of the fear in his heart; he was conscious of nothing but despair when an hour later he was stumbling along through the blinding, clogging snow with Adolph and half a dozen other men, The lanterns they carried shed weird, dancing shadows on the whiteness of their feet; the flakes Giles whirled in their faces half choking: them. It was as if all the. human forces had ranged themselves as enemies against them, he thought, as he bent to ask Adolph in which direction they were going. : His heart seemed-.to stand still when the answer came. "It was to the St. Bernard that Mademoiselle wished to go. For days she has talked of nothing else. I told her she must take a guide--she was disappointed but she said she would let me know." "The St. Bernard!" ham stifled a groan. He might have known---might have guesséd. It seemed now to his despair that he had been a blind fool not to realize from the beginning that she would come to this place, that he had ever needed a ghance photo graph to guide him. They trampled on in a silence which Chittenham broke at last to ask curtly: "Is it ever possible to find any one who gets lost on such a night?" "They have been found of- ten" "Alive?" Adolph did not answer this, and Giles dared not press the question. It was not unt). early morning Chitten. Her lips quiversd as she said in a voice all broken with sobbing: belo oti belon M to me--" she glanced up at the sky. "I should [and knocked; there were lights in sevéral of the windows, and the door was opened almost immedi ately, to admit the men into the warmth, stamping the caked snow and ice from their boots. Chittenham dropped on to the nearest bench, It was not fatigue so much as despair that had beaten him. Like a man in a dream he heard Adolph calling for brandy and hot coffee. He leaned back and closed his eyes. Everything seemed whirl. ing about him; it was only the rough but kindly touch of Adelph's hand on his shoulder that roused him, "Mademoiselle is here--with my friends," he said. "Here!" Chittenham stared up at the man's kindly face with dazed, unbelieving eyes. "Here! . , . Oh, for God's sake, if it is not true..." "It is quite true--they found her aléng the road. last night = in the snow. She was lost--the poor lady! They brought her here and put her to bed, but she is ill , , ." Chittenham staggered to his feet. "Let me see her -- let me be sure , . He followed the daughter of the house up the narrow, creaking wooden stairs, There was a shaded lamp burning on a bedside table, and its light fell full on her face which was half turned from him, Chittenham gave one glance-- "Julie!" Oh, thank God!" He bent his head and pressed his lips to her hand again and again, kissing her fingers, and wrist, and soft warm palm, till suddenly she stirred restlessly and turned. For a moment she lay quite still, staring up at him with far-away, dreaming eyes, then suddenly the tears welled up into them, and her ips quivered as she said in a voice' - all broken with sobbing: "Oh, you belong to me---you bee long to me--" "Always--always . . . She began to cry weakly "You were so long coming to me « thought you didn't care any more." y "Julle--" His voice broke; he slipped an arm beneath her head, drawing it to rest against him. She drew back a little, the tears wet on her face, her voice broken with pitiful sobbing as she asked once more: "Oh, do you still belong to me?" . and Chittenham answered again as he bent to find her lips--'"Ale ways, always . . . . always," THE END . Reb Gananoque Store : Gananoque. -- Early on Thurs- day morning thieves gained an entrance to R.J. Dier's clothing store and stole more than $10 in cash from the till, and took as well suits and overcoats valued at about $150, Acess was gained by prying open the bars of a cel- jar window, An attempt was als so made to enter R. C. Osborne's jewelry store next door. 3 If you have headaches, or suffer biliousness or indigestion

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