West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 19 Aug 1920, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ul «* ww that «~ of Y Al eont* the the . fort ed C Ca) ser vie the the 10 re it Don‘t Trust to Luck nine, in fact, except the c?rwoman.' who was reputed to be ninety at leut! â€"had ever W the portais of the| offices of Mr. Gooffrey Ware, morcb-| ant of Lime Street, London, E.C. | It therefore came as a surprise to the said Geoffrey Ware when, on enâ€" tering his private room one morning, he found a tall, somewhat allutingâ€" looking girl seated in his best chair, "Who are you, f&nd how dars you enter this office?" he asked angrily. Most men of fortyâ€"two or thereâ€" uts, with fairly attractive {faces without any responsibilitics in the pe of a wife or fantily, would have elcomed this unexpected visitor. But ‘ooflre Ware never looked at a woâ€" rn ily he could possibly help itâ€" hever spoke to one if he could avoid she said, sweet!; this was the priv: the marine engir #t. , He hated the s« eonsistency worthy The {!.rl did not s "Perhaps 1 have she said, sweetly. he almost shouted:â€" 1 "If he cares to engage youâ€"for I suppose you have come after a situaâ€" tionâ€"that‘s his business. As for me, I woulin‘t have a woman clerk in my office if she paid to be allowed to work. _ You understand?" "You have made yourself !airlx clear, Mr. Ware," the girl replied wit "His office snapped the c "You Rave i Can‘ you re:i word _ ‘Mere! name on the a slight flush. "And v{-cu have really interested me. May I ask v;lr? you obiect so much to my unfortunate humor you," snapped Ware, "but perâ€" haps it‘s as well '}on should hear the truth for once,. You girls are so acâ€" eustomed to the stgarâ€"plums that you ie o ch dliios ie s 2tn nc it on s ons 2 hi ncntntrannatzi t dn ~ REebNAIRT 3 L DC K TV sex ?" ' He was fond of girls in those days. "I don‘t know that I ought to | There was one girl whom he was tryâ€" humor you," snapped Ware, "but perâ€"! ing very hard to make his wileâ€"but haps it‘s as well you should hear the| she had suddeniy turned him down and truth for once. You girls are so acâ€"| married someone else. He had accopted eustomed to the sugarâ€"plums that you) his disappointment with resignation, don‘t of:¢n realize the bitter things. but it made him a bitter man. Well, my cbjections to womenâ€"labor| _ And now those trivial words about in officss are several. In the first| the broken broomâ€"stick had recalled to place, I consider that they give an him the one woman on earth who had office an unbusinesslike appunnce.‘evcr mattered. _ It was her sayingâ€" Secondly, they areâ€"mearly always ua-’a little proverb invented by her and punctual; and thirdly, they are freâ€"| never used, he was certain, by any al:‘nuy ill, or imagine they are ill. other woman, How came it, then, that erally speaking, they are a nuis-i Mary Blake had used it in her letter? ance," There could be only one explanation. He flung himself into a chair and | In that moment the heart of the bitter took up some papers. |\ man of fortyâ€"two became as the heart "I won‘t detain you any longer," he of a boy. J’I‘ho missx;y of e:nb‘i‘tter:dj‘ d t td or Mi "NMon‘t bother about the Yolic'eman, Mr. Jerrold," she said. "I‘m going now. Butâ€"but I shall write to you," she added, and she gave Ware a furiâ€" "Â¥You can do what you like so long as flou get out of this office." | a moment the girl had gone, he turned an!flly upon the clerk. ‘ "Now, Jerrold, understand me. If ever a woman finds her way into m°¥ private room again, I‘ll sack the lot you. You understand ?" "Yes, sit," hr:suod Jerrold, meekly. When he reached the other side of the door he grinned. "The ”ovornor is awfully down on women," he reflected. "He must have omen," ho renected. _ D0 :ad a”msty knock when young. s % A On the fo morn Ware fl%\mdm on l}:‘ opened it and : Ferm Lake T ledc U On the following morning Geoffrey | e Ware found a letter on his desk. He) opened it and read: Hi Ferm Lake Road, d ‘mbledon, S.X. f "Sir,â€"I cannot tell you what I ink | a your dmnix:lo conduct this mornâ€" } . I know that, nowadays, wonl don‘t o?oet to receive w the tnN- ment of a bygone time, ngl}rndc-‘;‘ Then Th?l‘ea That Never Disappoix{t'i When ordering Tea, but insist on getting the refiabLe_â€" ' is on the next floor,‘" ther Mr. Geoffrey Ware nade a foolish mistake d? Couldn‘t you see the ant‘ oprinted after my cted visitor. But looked at a woâ€" ssibly help itâ€" f he could avoid with a force and £f a better cause. he ‘s ul-'a little proverb invented by her and e fraâ€"| never used, he was certain, by any re ill. other woman. How came it, then, that nuis-i Mary Blake had used it in her letter? There could be only one explanation. r and| In that moment the heart of the bitter | man of fortyâ€"two became as the heart r," he of a boy. The misery of embittered .K:"S rolled away like a cloud, and | hind it he saw the flamor of the he reâ€"| dagl of oneâ€"andâ€"twenty in of o Maryâ€"his Maryâ€"was still alive. o hear| As he sat there, his thoughts turnâ€" * ‘ing youthwards, there suddenly came femiâ€"| upon Geoffrey Ware a wild, dominatâ€" of my|ing impulse to seek out his old love. | He tried to turn his attention to his I have work, but all his efforts were useless. my orf and wrote these words: "Madam,â€"I have received your ncte. It is absurd to talk about my having insulted you. _A man surely has a right to say who shall and shall not erter his own cfiice. If you had not entlered a room where you were not invited, this would never have ocâ€" curred. uol 4 "The rudeness you lg;ak of was egr-l tainly present, but obviousily it was your own fault, for you shoulid have left the office directly gou discovered your mistake. Had I been guilty of rudeness w.thout x"ustiflcation. I would have aologized. As it is, I consider that I did the right thing, and I reâ€" malin, Yours obediently, "G,. Ware." He hoped that he had done with Miss Mary Blake. But that he was unduly optimistic was proved next morning, when another note,from the young lady lay on ki'_s d‘esk:‘ * "Sir," it saidâ€""Thanks for yourl letter. It leaves me quite unconvinced. However, I shall not attempt to argite with youy for as my mother says, one may as well try to sweep a floor with a broken broomâ€"stick as to argue with an angry and unreasonable man, s "Your faithfully, % "Mary Blake." When. he came to the words "A broken broomâ€"stick," Geoffrey Ware uttered a little ejaculation. _ @ _ "By Jove," he muttered, "I wonder how many years it is since I last heard that expression." fost N _ "COne might as well try to sweep the floor with a broomâ€"stick as to . . The office faded. The roar of the city failed to reach his ears. Geoffrey Ware was twentyâ€"two years old again and he was on the sands by the Devon sea, with a girl beside him. a | Would the journey never end? He | was absurdly impatientâ€"he wondered| at his empetuosity. It seemed like a | miracle that he, Geoffrey Ware, should . be speeding with passionately beating heart to seek out the one woman who ; had caused all his regrets. 1 | The cab stopped at the door of a pretty little house covered with ivy. |* "Is Mrs. Blake at home?" ho asked | the maid who Ofiined the door. ‘ | "Yos, sir. What name, please." | _ "My name is .Waroâ€"Geosrey Ware. But one moment. Is Mr. Blake here }a]so?” | “h'h. Blake died three years ago, | sir. | nSho beckoned hh:o i:to a p;mall rom : He saw some graphs on piano. Omor!!.geu\wuo!thofi iwbom he had tréated so rudely. | other was the Mary of his boyish love, . So he was right after all. _ _ e _ He rose and paced the room with wild .steps. _ t3 e s "I‘m mad, I suppose," he muttered, "but I must see her. I mustâ€"â€"" Five minutes later he was in a taxi on the way to Wimbledon. . _ _ _ l Footstato sounded outside. He went | towards the door and held it open, The . woman come in. | â€""You?" she n'gl, with a little catch lin her voice, }5 she took his hand and | held it. "Iâ€"I wondered if you would ‘ ever come back." _ _ ~ Throughout the journey his brain worked swiftly. Perhaps he was travelling on a fool‘s errand Perâ€" haps it was not Mary after all. Proâ€" verbsâ€"even homeâ€"made proverbsâ€"â€" had a knack of getting repeated. |__ & Suddenly she rose, put N°f "N" * / her face, and went out of the moom.' When she came back she placed someâ€" thing in his hand. It was a sprig of rosemary. e . 2% "Â¥ou sent it to me the last time T{cm NCE in i sok s¢ at â€" enE en BC C e T ever wrots," she whispered. _ " gime wben’ you were in Scotland. remember ? rememvel . "I remember. And you have kept it all this time?" 4 "I shall always keep it, Geoffrey. I â€"I was looking at it onli yesterday when I was going through some old "Just fancy, â€" wrote MITZ ITH"J Blake, to a girl chum a few days later, "Mother is going to be married to an old flame of hersâ€"a man who trut“ed T ud veasarâ€"riatin P Poggh " V me abominably when I went to his office about a situation. But I‘ve found out since that he‘s quite a good sort, and it was really all mother‘s fault that he ever got so disagreeable to our charming sex. _ pe o : L4 OB ... adsorates. â€"Peteciend "And there‘@ another thing. It was really me who broutht them together. For when I wrote him a very nuti little letter to put him in his glneo, used a proverb which mother had inâ€" vented about a broken broomâ€"stick,. Directly he read the words he guessed who mother must be, and then he made up for lost time."'. i e y _ In a recent book, Royal Dixon mainâ€"| tains that plants have "a human side." He tells of plants that walk, plants that fiyâ€"or at least use airplanes to enable their seeds to fly, of plants that. fish, that keep servants and domestic | animals, that use animals for transporâ€" tation, that forecast the weather and itgll the name of day and accomplish many other marvels that seem to ape ‘ human intelligence. | We know, of course, that plants are | not really "human," as that term is usually understood, and that they are | not ‘even on a par with the animais | that we consider so far beneath us. But it is admittedly hard to tell just where to draw the line between plants ‘and animals and men, and the more ‘one studies nature with an open | mind, the more there does seem to be | some sort of intelligence and feeling / common to all living things. t h. ind thic s ns w acatd And so it was. If the broken broomâ€" stick proverb had served no other purâ€" pose, it had at least brought together two hearts which might otherwise have beaten in loneliness to the end! (The End.) The "Human" Side of Plants i Samucl Butler, in one of his books,| maintains that both plants and aniâ€"| |mala actually do possess intelligence, | | not merely of a human sort, but in | | some particulars above the human! | standard. Hoe accounts for all such | marvels as those mentioned above by. | explaining that the plants know exactâ€" | ty what they are aboutâ€"that they do \ what they do because, in the course of long and shrowd experimentation, they have found that that is the bost way for thentto get along.â€" Likewise with |animals. The chicken creates an egE, ‘he says, beeause the chicken has ‘learned exactly how to do it, with a / definite purpose in view; and the egg | in turn creates a chicken because the i egg knows by oftâ€"repeated experience . just how to go about that wonderful ; task. The acorn produces an cak beâ€" | cause it wants to do it, and knows how. .‘ The flowering plant knows all about ‘ boes, and produces flowers especially t‘ designed to attract them and have |\ them distribute its polien. He took her hand. "I had never forgotten, The knowledge of the plant or antâ€" mal is all the more perfect, Butler argues, because it is so largely "unâ€" conscious." We ourselves only know perfectly, he reminds us, those things that we have done so often that we have learned to do them automatically, That is the way with the bees and ants. _ When you are congcious of knowing a thing, he says, you do not know it absolutely. There is inflnite interest, recreation and stimulation to ba found in obseryâ€" ing our plant aad animal brethren. The world is a great deal bigger, more varied and more wonderful than any petty round of business, society and politics. Although the Germans claim to have invented the piano, there seems to be no doubt that the honor belongs to Italy. There are in existence two of the first pianos made by a harpsichord makerâ€"Christofori, in Florenceâ€"eéarâ€" ly in the cighteenth century. The first public nctice of a plano is in a Covent Garden playbill, and the first use as a solo instrument was in June, 1768. England has had its full share in the improvemeat of what our grandfathers called a planoforte. The original Broadwood is said to have been the first to adapt pedals to the plano in. 1783. Business men at Aalesund, north of Bergen, Norway, intend this summer to use seaplanes for seal and whalo hunting in Denmark Strait, between Iceland and Greenland, says the Naâ€" tional Tidende. The first machine will pÂ¥obably be sent up in a week or so. Many ships are already in the strait, In Glasgow they tell of a resourceâ€" ful clergyman who is never at a loss for a retort, He was once called to Seaplanes to Hunt Wha.les Who Invented Pianos? ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Mary "â€" wrote Miss M: for rememâ€" " he said, They Paid the Mortgage. After the sudden death of their plr-l ents in a railroad accident, Alice Tucker and her sister Mildred faced | the world with a $1,500 mortgage 0n the 60â€"acre farm. There weret three horses, four cows, a flock of chiekem‘ and two pigs. The house was well built and roomy. . ' The girls‘ equity in the farm was less than $500 and for a miserable week they almost decided to sacrifice the equity, sell bff the stock and go to the city. Mildred was seventeen, Her sister, a trained nurse by profession, would have to be away from the rooms they intended to rent and hesitated ‘to leave her sister so much alone in the large city. To‘ PORVent smy o CC IELBE CIOZ* The girls "put their heads together" and disregarding the comments of free advice givers, went ahcad with a plan of their own. UE MIRWNE CCCE The two horses and such part of thel farm equipment as would be used with a team, were sold. This money.w'u" spent at once in putting in a bedroom and clearing away several unsightly buildings. _ Then a tennis court was built.â€" Alice, the nurse, made a trip to the city and called on two or three doctdrs who knew her work, and to them she explained a plan which met with their hearty approval and promâ€" iso of support. Last year, there were twelve guests all summer, and before winter came, the "Tucker girls" drove their car into town and, at the bank, paid off the mortgage on the farm. The free advice givers have nothing to say and all their friends rejoice. The following recipes will give you three of the very nicest summer kissâ€" es, warranted to melt in your mouth and not to cause either heartache or stomache ache after indulgence in them: Daisy Kissesâ€"4 egg whites, 1% cups powdered sugar, YÂ¥ tehspooni lemon juice, 4 teaspoon vanilla. Beat whites unt.l stiff. Add sugar gradâ€" vually. Continue beating. Add vanilla and lemon juice. Drop from the spoon on a baking sheet covered with damp paper, or on buttered paper. Bake in a very siow oven for thirty minutes, or until brown. Seaâ€"Foam Kissesâ€"2 2â€"3 cups brown sugar, 1%4 cups water, 2 egg whites, 4 teaspoon vanille. Boil the sugar and water unt.l the syrup will form a soft ball when dropped from the spoon into cold water, Beat the whites of the eggs very stiff and beat them into the warm syrup, Beat the mixâ€" ture until it begins to thicken and then drop on buttered paper. As the first spoonful flattens, pour a second on top of it The nddfllon of a nut meat to every picce makes very atâ€" tractive candies. Divinity Kissesâ€"2 cups sugar, 2 tablespoons gelatin, 1 cup water, % eup cold water, 1 lemon, 1 cup nut meats. ‘Boil the sugar and water toâ€" gether until it reaches the softâ€"ball stageâ€"that is, until the syrup forms a soft ball when dropped in cold water. Then add the grated rind and strained juice of one lemon and the gelatin which has been soaking in oneâ€"half eup of cold water for two hours. Beat until it begins to harden, add the nuts, and pour in shallow dishes to cool. When cold cut in dice or heart shapes, and roll in confectioner‘s sugar. Looking Your Best. Fashion still calls on you to reveal your neck. Therefore give a thought to its appearance. An ordinary washâ€" ing onee a day isn‘t goél enough for it unless it‘s a real good neckâ€"and, alas, how few real good necks are seen! Take a peep at your own n'oo'k.fl If it‘s dingy and wrinkled, the chances it Have Some Summer Kisses? ere going to be ready to| There are preparations to remove scents who could aford| liver or moth patches from the neck. 1 sum weekly for room| Peroxide or a paste of borax and he country and attention| water faithfully used for several ered nurse. .night may lighten them. , six convalescents were Just because you‘re thin, don‘t conâ€" ucker homestead. They! gratulate â€" yourself. that youa will airy house comfortably| escape the double chin. It‘s a mean he yard was shady and old thing that smneaks upon you unâ€" 1. There were plenty of| aware. A few good exercises pracâ€" and lounges, magazines: ticed every day will soon send it about hose who felt strong| its business. Slowly but rhythmically play tennis. | toss your head backward and forward, were a constant delight:! and then from side to side. Then twist ntry ham and chicken,| it, still slowly, as far around your body vegetables, home-gtownl as you can. milk, cream and butter.' The tooâ€"thin neck and shoulders can prepared by Mildred who be improved by massage with a heavy lent cook. I nourishing cream, and by deep breathâ€" hite uniform, gave spe-l ing. Anything that aids in building to such convalescents as| UP the general health will have a elâ€"or comfort. ‘ good effect upon the neck. You seldom se of the establishment see a woman of vigorous health with a a A neighbor‘s boy d.id| scrawny neckâ€"now, do you? are that you treat it like the bad step-1 sister of the face. But just a little kind care and attention will make it fresh and pretty. The constant daily use of a good lotion whitens the neck and banishes the telltale wrinkle. You ean buy these lotions in the drug store, or‘ you sean make them right in your own kitchen. Here‘s one used by a famous SpaTâ€" llhbqanty:rothowl\luotanegg add an equal quantity of strained lemon juice. Boil them to a soft jelly, and apply to the neck in an upward and outward motion, Of course yoU know that all motions in beautifying must be upward and outward, because as the years slip by the muscles sag inward and downward. Let this lotion stay on all night, and wash it off in the morning with cold water. The lemon juice acts as a bleach, while the| egg is an astr.ngent and irons out the: wrinkles. 1 It‘s not only in your kitchen that you can find cosmeties for your neck. Step into your vegetable garden. The fuice of those ripe tomatoes will beauâ€" ltify any neck, Or else pick a cucumâ€" ber. Cut it in picces, cover it with cold water, and slowly boil it down to a puip. When this is strained and cooled you‘ll have a delightful lotion,. It can be used on a refractory face, It‘s not only in you can find cosm Step into your veg juice of those ripe tify any neck, O: ber. Cut it in p too. If you powder your face, put a little on your neck. Then the line where the powder ends won‘t show, and the skin will look pretty in a natural way. And, as I said before, a pretty neck goes far in aiding you to look your ";c')t a neck that is darker than the face, or discolored by furs and high collars, there is a wonderful bleaching cream. Canada, measuring nearly 4,000,000 square miles, is the largest British possession; the smallest is Gibraltar, less than two miles square. Minard‘s Liniment used by Physicians Gillette perity that is a distinct asset in his business and social life. Now imagine him with a couple of day‘s growth of beard! Who now would guess his prosperity. He no longer holds his head so erect! Yet a few swift strokes of his keenâ€"edged Gillette, and he is ready to face the world againâ€"sure of respectful aitention! * Are YOU depriving yourself of far more than you can imagine by delaying the purchase of your Gillette Safety Razor ? Do you realize that there is something more than easier shaving, time saved, and a smoother chin coming from your investment of $5.00 in a Gillette? se‘ ks * â€" = Look prosperousâ€"it is the first step towards being prosperous! NO STROPPINGâ€"NO HONNG The Shaving Service for Every Manâ€"Everywhere Make a point of asking your tomn dealer to show you some GILLETTE Safety Razor Sets, including the new "‘Big Fellow" at OU would say that the man pictured here was wellâ€"toâ€"do. His smart appearance gives an air of Prosâ€" Prosperity ! Safety Razor famous Spanâ€" reticot AutoStrop Safety Razor Co., Limited AutoStrop Building, Toronto, Canada Out of your bed and shaved in three minutes. This is AutoStrop Razor service. A clean start for the day! Easily stropped, easily cleanedâ€"nothing to take apart or unscrew, The only safety razor that sharpens itself’., Any dealer will demonâ€" strate the AutoStrop Razor to you, guarantee satisfacâ€" tion, or refund of purchase price. Bulk Carlots TORONTO SALT WORKS J. CLIFF » TORONTO Only $5.00â€"complete with stropâ€"twelve blades in an atâ€" tractive assortment of cases to suit any purpose. AutoStrop Razor Your travelling equip« ment is not compiete without an AutoPtrop Razor. s w N 208 TWO ZEPP RADERS "SUNK" IN THE AR DURING LAST ATTACK ON ENGLAND. The last serious attempt to raid England by a feet of Zeppelins, which was made in August, 1917, is described in an article published in connection with the opening of the Aero Exhibj. tion at Olympia, London. The writer The coming of the Zeppelins was quickly made known to our air sta tions on the East Coast, and without an instant‘s loss of time a fleet of air craft burried into the air and sway out to sea in search of the raiders, Among these aircraft were machines built for sea work and able to Noat if they had to come down on the wator; but there were also land with wheeled under carriag device of any sort for kee; afloat if for any cause t come down in the sea. As our machines, in ans alarm of "Zepps reported," far out to sea om their s« weather began to blow up their dificulties. Wind, thi and misty rain sto«ms all gether to make fiying ove: dangerous task, and hunti pelins in the darkness an possible one. But the ski severance of the airme: gtanchness and reliability « chines and engines won in Zeppelin is Quickly Set â€"â€" ‘The Zeppelin fleot was : some of our machines cl tion. It was a two seai fitted with Rollsâ€"Royce e tackled the first Zeppelin. quickly secured a favoral for aitack and the obse: fire. The action was short the first few rounds took small flame was seer to run fiickering along the 1 the ship‘s envelope. C filcker leaped to a gust of \swept along the side of and in a few seconds she from stem to stern. lHer upward for a moment, t down again, and the airshi in a roaring torreat of 4; plunging down toward a 1o clouds 5,000 feet below. As she fell these clouds caug! threw back the lurid refloction : blaze and lit up with quivering of hot, red, glowing light the circle of sky, the Zoppelin des machine, and the two mon in it ing out overside and staring fagcinated to watch the finish of handiwork. Next instant the rc of the airship plunged down in clouds that closed selidly ove shutting off the blazing light an« ing the airmen circliug over a ness that by contrasi was bii pitch. s ‘ Potatoes seldom* grow darger ; marbles in Greenland, In the interior of @n 6+diftary ; there is about a mile of wire. .Bpain has fewer daily, rewsp ‘‘Than Any other European courtry | _ BeeÂ¥ will guck over 3,000,000 fo ‘in gathering one pound of honey Meantime the other raiders we ing pursued, and a second one closed with and brought to actio again the machine that overtoo was a two seater fittod with Royce engines. . This Zeppelii was shot down, according to th dence of both pilot and chsery the two seater, although unfori ly there was some hitch or de crediting them with their vieto: Battles of Final Air Offen. sive, Aug., 1917. that where the fArst Zeppelin destr er returned at once and made a rc; which was at once published, our si ond machine after the action had « siderable dificulty in fnding a w back and only made a landing ! from the air station and too late ! report to catch up to the first in pul cation,. The second Zeppolin was ; sued and fought a good many m further out to sea than the {r>‘ thick, rainy weather gadc It hard the pilot to pick & course and find t land. He reached it at last and m« a euccossful descent whon his pet: was running down to its last galion: s A s1@l, crawling â€"«gthout a pau would occupy fourtsron days ani % hours testzarel q. ml10. u0000 ; Although theofeo is a #teady do: for long human «bair, the clip: from men‘s heads have 160 comm« value. â€" New York Museum has aâ€"epee!mon of the largest bird‘s eg£ in the wosld, that of the extinct mpyornis of Madaâ€" gaseer,;>â€" With ‘a shell ong ighth of an inch thick and twc&’! inches in T $ At has & holding capac! J of hoo anliens. . _ _ .. mines is by means rock dust suspendg of the tugnel Ang Sscond Foe Craft is Shot Down of two galjons. A wew }?&m‘@ or ppoiis inpes is by means ..Of .boxes B * *z Just Fancy! for this was | lers were Ww( n ng Ares in xes of fn0 t c Bt. Johnâ€"The Canadia ment of Public Works and State Highway Commissi z.-joint eall for tond ction of the supersi eubstructure of the prop national bridge to be bui €t. John River between 1 and the village of Madaws Bids will open August 18 â€" Bathurst, N.B. â€"Because eral coal shortage the Bat forced to ® .l.y about Montreal eral coal shortage the Bathurs ber Co‘s large pulp milis ha forced to shut down. The m 1 about 500 hands. â€"The most import me by English inte pulp holdings has n closed as the result of No Anterests of London, England med a twoâ€"thirds intere Gulf Pulp and Paper Comp Clark City, below Quebec. the company owned by mer the Clark family. Followin purchase, the Northcliffe have formed the Imperial Pay Limited. The remaining one the interest in the company purchued by other London p« are interested in the pur« mamer. The price, it is un was $3,000,00 mâ€"O\'El’ western woo!l has adian manufactur Coâ€"operative Wos tion at a price : B5 cents per pou 640,000 pounds of RED CAMPAJGN THROUGHOUT C Bolshevik Russia Prep Send Spellbinders A â€" despatch -”:â€"Bolsh(-\'ik to flood the Unit« with thousands « who will spread ganda. Arrange pleted by "Comr: in‘s chief foreig the "perceful ; erica. with thousandas ol secrc who will spread the S ganda. Arrangements ha pleted by "Comrade" Sch in‘s chief foreign prop: the "perceful penctrati "A large percen returned from th Canada to fight Germany talk E: %he United States eican twang, thos an English acce the correspondent removed, protesti! and ordered neve men are now bei spellâ€"binding and preparatory to : adopted ~countric hampion a Sovic port regulations through the 1« of talkers in Caneda." Schkoviski‘s « mark was due < ery that he w wailors‘ and 1c which paralyzed months. We are out 1 present system of « ment everywhere." He boaste: support in S gible a gener: Esthonia _ w Soviet. Nine â€" hundred throughout the are to have p eaptured by th Germans durin of them have | and placed in v _ _A semall « placed befor dence. "Not minion archi mte the visit te his home. Cols. Bishop : have charge of H.hu at the C tion. on of the supersiructi re of the proposed widge to be built on River between Edm: Mage of Madawaska, amen August 18th. Canada Fr m jJowns to Get Ge America. HELP Me. ARITHME! wmext Te M 18 Al Stm t« h t m Ba re

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy