West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 28 Sep 1922, p. 2

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Mew Lite Remeby €ompany TB West Adslaldo 8t., Taronts Nrw Lite that my son Gordon wow‘ld have inâ€" herited the forture which is now Miss Hal:tead‘s had she failed in a certain condition of the will. Miss Halstead herswi‘f told me Gordon was the next to benefitâ€"ncsurally, 1 made inquiries. And it svems that the will required Miss Hastead to be married before the was twortyâ€"ome I hsrpm to. know hor birthiay. What I feel it my du‘ty to ask is, has she fulfilled . "But isn‘t that rathorâ€"impossible whe cried. "I mean, it brings me ba to the business I came about. It seer He was seemingly impervious to Marcia‘s gasp, Kempton‘s choked exâ€" camation. %Rasflaer simply atood, staring. she laughedâ€"a hard, rathor janging laugh. | _1 hope that quite sizortly Miss stead wil be my wife." and bowing over hand. He had not of her manmer, t eyes, ani wonden ture ME h ccnniclncs â€" Ahdniiih, dntrtad iesd alomeâ€"â€"* "It cdoesn‘t make any difference if you‘ve come on business." it was Waldron who epoke, rising Wls youlaul. & L 2s 1 She aaw Waktron for the first time and swopped. She looked taken aback ; then she said quickly: l"l'm sorry. I thought you were he "I‘ve really come," Ruth declared, her voice slightly staccato, ber manâ€" ner not quite so easy as usual "about â€"abcut a little matter of business I wan‘ed to speak to you about. I made Kemq come with me. I‘m rather stup.d about business things, and I lt:hnugh_t&, as you‘re such good friends, One bottle for One Dolla; Six bottles for Five Dollar Mailed direct to customers CHAPYTER LI.â€"(Cont‘d.) 'very clearly, but very low. She did Araby nodded, shook hands warmly ,nm look at Waldron, she kept her with Wa‘liron and disappeared. Marâ€" Faze fixed upon Ruth Rosslaer. The cla striled at him a little nervously.| latter‘s face carkened with a momentâ€" ie had only seen him once since he| ary disappointment. Then: kbadl pleaded with her to marry him,| "It seems almost impossible to beâ€" and then in a crowd. She rather| lieve!" she declared. There was a dreawied the present teteâ€"aâ€"tete, and studied insolence in her manrer that was relieved when a maid annuunced:,'was not quite made up for by her "Leady Rosslazer and Lord P.os'slaer."i next wonds. | Wa‘iron flung himse‘f back into his) _ "Oh, I don‘t mean to be nasty,‘ chir and swore softly. Ruth Rossâ€"| Marcia. Only it is rather amazing mer came in, followed by Kempton.ihhat you should have contrived to The latter locked puzzled and ill at fulfil the conmdition at such short noâ€" c« e. ’uce You were twentyâ€"one only twvo’ "I‘ve really come," Ruth declared, days after hearing of your fortune, her voice slightly staccato, her manâ€" weren‘t you?" 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M A RC O N 1 Concert RADIO sets {owing over her halfâ€"re‘wctant He had noted the feverishness ~ manner, the hardness of her ani wondered And he disreâ€" 1 Marcia‘s halfâ€"protesting gesâ€" RHEUMATIC SUFFERERS CHAPTER LILâ€"(Cont‘d.) ard Kemedy for the quarter century for natism, Sciatica, Lumâ€" §°u l1a, Gout and 4 CHAPTER LIH CERUCET 3000 Unm Fhones 10.50 seivor tYpo ...... ... :+ HAOWD io Transformers ......... 5.95 Prestâ€"Oâ€"Lite 80 Amp. Hr. "A" Mounts with handles .... 3.75 Gattoritk .........+«...«.« HKOW other parts of Quality equipment also at most reasonable prices. Mail orders shipped same day as received. A RADIO EXPERT IN ATTENDANCE To HELP SOLVE YOUR DIFFICULTIES. DO NOT HESITATE TO WRITE US. 909 For The Gates of Hope a«ddled deliberately, e was wrung a ~amation. â€" He, to the lips, and supoer sensiâ€" BY ANTHONY CARLYLE aer the 999 her before she heard Wakdron‘s voice sreak her nams. She had stood with her hand gr.pping the back of a chair, her eyes cused. Now she opene i them, and for the first time realized that they were alone. Rather gropâ€" ingly she found her way to the chair and draopped into it. She felt sick to the inmost soul of her. Wa‘iron‘s voice came agian, and she winced piteously at its new harshâ€" nets cating ri‘ght of her before she syreak khor nams her hand #r~»i her ba She was looking straight at Kc vgâ€" ton, and st that which was in her eyes he gave a smothored exclamati~n, «umbling forward. But her quick gerture staycd him. "I beardk" she sanlt amk Inranizm interuption The cort "For God‘s sake," Kempton began, and then stopped. Like Marcia he was conscious of a despairing sense of being trapped; helpless. The utter‘y unexpected and unlookâ€" ed for had happened. Denial would be uselecs. And his mind rec‘ed at the consequence of confession. There was a singing in is ears; above it he hoard Marcia‘s voice, Steady, ice cold, it rang through the noom. "Since you incist, Lady Rosslaer. Lord Roevlaer married me, by special license, the day before my twentyâ€" first birthday!" 5 She stood ewavine a NikLs aArw. iL. C N ue c o c on c in ie xm Ne C ‘ately, appealingly, but she was scarceâ€" ly aware of the horror in his. He laid his hand heavily on his stepâ€"mother‘s arm. "I tell you," he said, roughly, "that‘s enough. You‘re going too far. | We have Miss Halstead‘s word for it | that the condition was fulfilled. Her [ reason for making no announcement of it is her own affair. Youâ€"â€"" 4 youre not going to tell mé_fh;tâ€"-yn are the man?" "My dear Kemp," she shook his arm off lightly and faced him again. “Il utterly fail to see by what right you| interfere. Unless, of course." She stopped dead. Into her eyes had flashed another gleam, of amaze, this time, and suspicion. | For a long instant her keen, shrewd eves scarched his pale face, noted the utter dismay and disturbance of his | expression and manner. Then they | narrowed. | "Good Heavens!" she cried. "Sureiv _1 heard," she said, and, turning er back, went swiftly acrose the hall. . moment ‘iter the outer door shut martly behind her. It seemerd‘tn Niowaia thas _‘ . m "I think not. I can demand to see your marriage certificate. And if you suil refuse it is very easy to trace!" Marcia put her hand up to her throat. She felt cornered, trapped. Her eyes sought Kempton‘s, desperâ€" sk.y. uns fes TT & . C "And I‘ve every right to refuse to answer it!" "I think," she returned, very quietâ€" ly, "that I am not bound to tell you that. It is entirely my own affair, surely?" Her voice was cold. Ruth‘s eyes gleamed. | "Under the present circumtances,, hardly," she said. "I‘ve every right| to press the question." | sucâ€"ien step nearer. ' | _"That‘s enough!" he said to Ruth, almost roughily. She turned on him |defiantl'y. ' |__"It is not emough!" she retorted.| f“As Gordon‘s mother I‘ve every right to know the whole circumstances. And ’ it‘s just a little odd, isn‘t it, that there , whou‘d have been no announcement . made of such an interesting ceremony. Marcia, my dear, who is the man you‘ve so greatly honored? It‘s quite impcssible to guessâ€"because you had not met Mr. Waldron then, had you ?"| Her disappointment had made her ma‘écous. Marcia‘s face flamed, then â€" grew white. But she still held her head high. 4 scemed to Marcia that a suffc id 3i Cc oonyue All Vernier Rheostats ....... §.C. Filament Jacks ......... Variable Condensers, 43 plate Variable Condensers, 23 plate Variable Condensers, 11 plate Magnavey N)‘s ............. Ampliphone Horns, double reâ€" curtains at the doorway the threshold, her face her eves wide stond L8 mt mmet . ey> ght of darkness passed over prices on radio parts )n radio parts: state ....... 2.95 Kke .:...«.««+ +406 ers, 43 plate 4.95 ers, 23 plate 3.95 ers, 11 plate 3.2% s, double reâ€" xxx« x««+*1rs Hhg® cried. "Surely Wt t s a _ Colorâ€"blindness is more | as common in men as in v Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the New Office Boyâ€""A man called her to thrash you a few minutes ago." Editorâ€""What did you say to him? New Office Boyâ€""I told him I wa sorry you weren‘t in:" _ "Diamond Dyes" add years of wear to worn, faded skirts, waists, coats, stockings, sweaters, coverings, hangâ€" ings, draperies, everything. _ Every package contains directions so simple any woman can put new, rich, fadeless colors into her worn garments or draperies even if she has never dyed before. Just buy Diamond Dyesâ€"no other kindâ€"then your material will come out right, because Diainond Dyes are guaranteed not to streak, spot, fade, or run. Tell your druggist whether the material you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether it is linen,‘ cotton or mixed goods. I Dye Silk Stockings â€" Blouse or Sweater in Diamond Dyes ms arms went round her. _ There was pity, and tenderness, and an infinite understanding in his face. "I shall always care!" he said. (To be continued.) she stopped. Waldron had lifted ber to her feet. As their eyes mieot I Do oo m c en e e Dul, you found me again. And then I had | to tell you I was dying. ' "I thought that would be enough | to make you realize that we could | never | be : antihine." ho mes yc Ed ath Rortines ts s AnatihointPh lt c s 2B ... #t :. found his hands upon her shoulders. | "I suppose I must seem horribly | mercenary, wickedly deceitful. â€" But: |there was no other way. And I had | ‘known so much of poverty, so little even of comfort. And then there was mother.'\’ The sob came again, she| |lifted her hands and caurht at his _ | Mo eeedme n ome uen Pweqrtnls them apart. "It was for this reason that he wished the marriageâ€"our marriage" â€"she stammered over the wordâ€"â€" "kept secret. And it did not matter to me. The thing was a form only, to give me the right to claim my forâ€" tune." She laughed rather brokenly; a laugh that changed to a sob as she "I suppose I was wrong from the very beginning to make such a marâ€" riageâ€"to go through such a mocking farce of a ceremony, with a man who was practicaly a stranger to me.| Kempton Rosslaer was practically a| stranger to me. I knew that he was‘ in love with Araby Trask; I knew that| their affection was mutual, that only | h{;s father‘s disapproval was keeping renpingnbmberdih "Why did you do it?" he asked. ‘"Why have you deceived me like this, | you, the woman I love, and the man I beheved to be my greatest frieni? In Go<‘s name what does it mean?" She looked up at him then, and at sight cf her eyes his heart leaped. Inâ€" Ivo}untari:ly he stretched his arms to her. But she flung out a protesting hand. ’ "Wa‘t. Let me tell you first," she said, and sat for a moment with droopâ€" ing head. Still in this attitude she tud him al that there was to tellâ€" omitting on‘ly any men‘‘on of the po~1 sition in which she had found Kemn-| ton. "It was that which made mo !'unl away from you in the beginning," she‘ finished. "The knowledge that I was tied, another man‘s wife!" She Iooked! up at him wearily. | A There was a silence, then she heard We‘dron‘s steps crossing the room She did not look round, and abruptly he dropped his outstretched hand and came back to her. "Is this thing true?" he asked, and without meeting his eyes she bent her London He Wa. Sorry. _ â€" THE LATEST in siDE cars (England) youngsters ready for a spin e than twice women. house Again the children are with a cold lunch, and as intended to take the pla Preparation of the improved for the using threeâ€"quarters quarter grape juice. C ONTARIO ARCHIVEs TORONTO allow two pounds of brown sugar and child‘s appetite. â€" That is Nature‘ the juice of a large lemon. sprink]e! way of calling for more material with a thin layer of the sugar in a shallow' which to build a bigger and stronger agateware pan, spread over the toâ€"‘ body and it is not a call for food but matoes and repeat with another layer for nourishment to give strength. of sugar and tomatces, squeezing over, It is sometimes advisable to ask them the lemon. Place in a slow oven| your child‘s teacher to coâ€"operate with and cook until the tomatoes have abâ€" You in regard to the eating habits. sorbed the sugar and look clear. Re-! It is very essential that children move separately to a clean platter and should masticate their food properly. let dry in the hot sun. Sprinkle oc.| They should not be allowed to grasp casionally with granulated _ sugar their lunch and go rushing out to play. while drying. Store when perfectly‘ Does your child do these things? His dry in preserve jars. teacher will be glad to inform you if Tomato butterâ€"Peel ten pounds of questioned regarding his habits. ripe tomatoes and put into a preservâ€", oririnmmcnce 1ingr kettle with four pounds of granu-} Newâ€"Fashioned Notions. ated sugar, three pounds of chopped,| peeled Greening apples, about one} f The new autumn suits are much Tomato figsâ€"Yellow pearâ€"shaped tomatoes are gencrally used for this delicious â€"confection, although any small tomato can be substituted. Peel the vegetables and for five pounds allow two pounds of brown snoar and C Green tomato mangoesâ€"Cut a small cube from the stem end of each green tomato and with a knife reâ€" move the hard centre. (Sometimes an apple corer carefully used will do this, but do not cut through the bottom of the vegetable.) Put the cubes back in place, place the tomatoes in a large bow! and pour over them boiling salted water (a tablespoonful of salt to three pints of water), cover and ; utes. _ Add eight pounds of heated granulated sugar and cook down thick, stirring frequently. Store in small jars, as for canned fruit. The Useful Tomato. Tomato preserveâ€"Take ten pounds of green tomatoes, sliced thin, and add six unpeeled lemons, thinly sliced and from which the seeds have been removed. Place in a preserving ketâ€" tle, add one cupful of apple juice and half a pound of shredded candied ginger. Let stand over night and in the nquing simmer for thirty minâ€" Woman‘s Sphere School Luncheon are off to school | as this meal is place of dinner, .‘ â€" ) ) . ‘me, or MONBY EKSrUMNDED IF NoT SATISFIED, Bend 25¢ for a large trial box. Agents wanted P. Lograsso, Box 637, Toronto, Ont, 2 q O2009 CPPHCC! Can be successfully dyed, Curtains, draperies, carpets and all household articles can be dyed and restored to their original tte freshness, busts o MB â€" will remove them nights‘ time, or 3 Are you suffering louses ? Flma oA HE postman or express man will | bring Parker service right to ; your home. Suits, dresses, ulsters and all wearing apparel can Tis E1A nc l ds 4 mA A REAL COR% REmMEsY ib Sactools, 2c lt ind c tavinbifiicids disi 2 | but the long straight lines of slimness hold high favor. The jacket may match the skirt in color or not as one‘s | fancy moves, but a black one beâ€" comes useful and conservative when worn with other dresses and skirts. One sees a good deal of jackets in contrast, as red, biege, sulphur or white embroidered in black. They are goodâ€"looking and practical for street wear. I Human Varieties. Some people jump at conclusio others are more leisurely in mak their mistakes DYEING r| _ It is not enough that the child‘s apâ€" p" petite should be satisfied If you | were engaged in making a cake and 1 sent your little daughter to bring you ;‘ a cup of butter, but instead of bringâ€" ;) ing butter, she would fill the cup with || beans, you would be no better off than .f before sending her. So it is with the |, child‘s appetite. That is Nature’s! ," way of calling for more material with | which to build a bigger and stronger| ' body and it is not a call for food but, |for nourishment to give strength, | It is sometimes advisable to ask | your child‘s teacher to coâ€"operate with | you in regard to the eating habits.l |It is very essential that childrenl | should masticate their food properly. | They should not be allowed to grasp | Pugnte ces d id & B8 ,’ If great care is not taken, the chilâ€" |dren will soon tire of the more nuâ€" tritious parts of the luncheon. To ,prevent this, provide a variety; it is also often advisable to almost exclude | sweets from the school lunch. If a | child dulls its appetite with sweets _before touching the rest of the meal,{ . OOp Dptliet the idee that a childs/ are Ropt _ _ . °_ > _/ _ _ _ > || luncheon must be of the light frothy| * *°> Winifred Welles | varieties. _ It should certainly be e es _ packed as daintily as possible, but it nsc â€"omme | should also be substantial foods. If Tennis is Popular, | you expect your child to be strong| At Wimbledon, England, the new | and healthy there are certain essenâ€"| stand that surrounds the centre court ; tials which must be put in the lunch on which the championship tennis fbox, One of the foremost of these matches are played, is modeled after ;is milk. Most children will enjoy a the Colosseum of Rome. There are ‘ glass of rAth milk at noon, but for| seats for ten thousand spectators, and | those who do not drink milk, mty: there is stanrding room for four thousâ€" | dishes should be prepared that use and more. During the recent tournaâ€" milk in the making. ’menu the place was filled continually. ,’ If great care is not taken, the chilâ€"| That tennis is becoming a popular _dren will soon tire of the more nuâ€"| spectacle is not astonishing, for the tritious parts of the luncheon. To game is fast, easily followed and prevent this, provide a variety; it is| raises interest to as high a pitch of inâ€" also often advisable to almost exclude tensity as anyone can wish. ’we must be very careful and parâ€" ticular that it is as nourishing as it l! should be. When we adults eat a light noonâ€"day meal we find that the proâ€" 'ceu of digestion continues, without a feeling of undernourishment; this is !especially true during the winter months when few of us are engaged in hard physical labor. The child‘s system is different; it is engaged, not only in furnishing energy for the healthy young body, but in building | bones and muscles for the quick deâ€"} velopment of the child‘s body. A child ; of school age is not equipped to store| energy or nourishment. If he overâ€"| eats, the result is a case of indigel-' tion and if he does not eat sufficient amount of nourishing foods, it may soon be observed in the general weakâ€" ness and stunted growth of his body. uiferinz with Corna or Calâ€" Blmg Cora Balve positively Parker‘s Dye Works, Limited We pay carriage one way on all orders. Write for full particulars, Cleaners and D”'; 791 Yonge St. MONEY RSPUNDEDp Toronto 92R painlessly in few conclusions ng | _ Fitchburg and Petersham, two ur. threatened lban communities in Massachusetts, "°" !" Y# | have established town forests and are *** #fter , reported to be thefi rst towns in the ****â€" Th | United States to engage in municipal {!9° *@8 forestry. two bundre« It is not uncommon for glassâ€"blowâ€" ers to drink 25 to 30 quarts of watér in the course cof a dn;'â€"uâ€";;ri Orly FPour Hundrod at This Price ORDER EARLY We Will Ship to Any Point, c.o.p "WE SELL MILES® Minard‘s Liniment For Colds, Etc Puzzied Her Parent. What odd questions children ask. A lady writes that her little girl wanted to know what God does with all the old moons. On another occasion she asked, "Does God make Jesus help light up the stars ?" **Vascline‘* Petroleum Jclly bene. fits all bumps, sores, bruises, sunâ€" burn, blisters, cuts and chafed skin, Never be without a bottle of it in the house. It‘s safe, always effecâ€" tive and costs but a trifle. CHESEBROUGH MANUFACTURING Co, 1880 Chabot Aye, " Contolidated) Ees ol | _ That it can be assembled in three minutes by the merest novice, is one of the features of a new collapsible boat which has a carrying capacity of 500 pounds, or three persons of ordinâ€" ary size. Tte frame is of heavy waterproof canvas and folds in accorâ€" dion fashion, but when opened to full length, strong strips of ash are insertâ€" ed into brass clamps along the sides and bottom, forming rigid gunwales and a keel. Nine Dollars & C%, GR AY ** Nonâ€"skid Tire and Tube Tennis is Popular. At Wimbledon, England, the new stand that surrounds the centre court on which the championship tennis matches are played, is modeled after dream comes true! And all the little promises of pools Are kept. here, I can see life and beauty rising, findâ€" ing, Taking hold and making safe. The under All ugliness, all death, all that is lost Or drift. Whichever way I turn from From where I look, I can see going Recommended Of High on my bill I watch the tide come in, Laying its blue tiles in a broken tomb Over the skeletons of sand, over the 4,000 Mil> Guarantee Petroleum :lelly aseline Jong graves * With griefless hands and strangely happy voices, to Carry Three. and wharves, wreathing the with a High Tide. _YOoNGE st., TORONTO The current of the River Amazon is fe‘% 150 miles out at sem, History Lecturer=â€""Carn a; tell me what makes the Tow, leanâ€"" Corpulent ldaâ€"â€""1 don‘t know would take some myself." °___AT" vwere never in the woods | fore, or who go in only at long int« vals. Still there are in the aggreca a large number of these people. an leaving, as they often do. a trail of f\ behind â€" them, they give the wh army of campers a bad name. It hard on the rea; ecamper, sportsma and woodsman, and the omly way o is for everybody who goes into t} woods or who has anything to do wit forests, to exert all the influence po sible to educate these "tendeorf« and to create a public opinion that w support forestfire laws and the was |_ Some Canadian campers, who k and love the woods, have been . | plaining lately that they are acc of starting a large proportion of fires which annual‘y take such a rible toll of our forest wealth, say they have been going into forest every year for suck a numbe I‘years. and they defy any one to p to any fire they have started. _T complaint is doubtless justified. : who go every year into the woods woodsmen, and woodsmen do not s forest fires. _ The people who s fires are those who are not woodsn who know nothing of woodcraft, 1 probably were never in the woods fore, or who go in only at long in vals. Still there are in the aggrec a large number of these people. a leaving, as they often do. a trail of behind â€" them, they grve the wh IRAEINY OL ANRIRMNAPE B nBA â€"raumans â€" oa. MÂ¥ Toâ€"day Doverâ€"so called from small river Dour, which runs thro the town â€"though her population n bers no more than 44,000, is knows far corners of the world. where cil ten times her size are unknown Nor was it until within comparativeâ€" ly recent memory that work was be gun on the wonderful harbor, with its pier threeâ€"quarters of a mile long and w _ Through the centuries the story o Dover has been very largely the stors of ber castle. Many a king has foun a legal hospitality within its walls Richard the Lionâ€"hearted, when on h way to the Holy Land; Henry IIL «: his disastrous return from France, an« again when be found a refuge there on the rebellion of his Barons; Ed ward I., homeward bound from Palesâ€" tine to his crown; Edward II., on his nuptial journey from France with his bride; and our fifth Henry, fresh from his glorious victory at Agincourt. :l Such a stronghold at the very g; way of England naturally has a st. lio( battle and bloodshed, but its m | thrilling and also its proudest epis« ’ was when it was besieged by the 1 phin of France, on his way to se | the English crown, Week after w ! it was swept by a ceaseless hurrlca Iof huge stones and arrows. Star ltlon. disease, and death ravaged brave defenders, but the Dauphin |« ed in vain for the least sign of surn der, and in his rage he vowed would not budge a foot until he ) captured the castle and seen ev, man in it dangling at the end o# rope. But his threats were in va _and at last the arrival of reinfor _ments sent the boastful Dauphin so rying back across the Chann«l Do Cumpgrs Start Forest _It is to the Normans that Dow largely owes her imposing castle, w its outer girdle of twentyâ€"seven n sive towersâ€"and its inner wall, w fourteen towers to guard the keep central stronghold. In the Conqu or‘s time this castle, whose mizh bulk dominated theflphcnnel. had # its custodians eight of his most pow: ful Barons, who reaped many Eng! manors for their services. When, a cehtury later, the Roma» came again, they made it ene of th« strongest military 'uflf{“ and suc) was Dover‘s progress /n later yos, that when the Conqueror first set ove: on it it was a#highly prosperous tow: with a stout fortress to defend it, , monaster?, and a guildâ€"hall. It prov ably grieved him that, before he cou! make it bend the knee to him, he wa« compelled to lay it in ruins with 1 and sword. A few years later, how ever, it had risen from its ashes a blossomed into a town more flour ing than ever. If PDover had but a voice, what a fascinating story she could tell of her glorious past, from the day when he, armed sons, massed in her clifie caught their first glimpse of Caesar‘s galleys, and when, at sight of thom, the invading Romans turned thei; prows towards Deal to avoid such a; ung:leuunt reception. us, in those early days, Dove; was playing the gallant part of »» tain‘s sentinelâ€"a part she has play with such@‘staiwart loyalty for t« thousand years. Efficient Remedy A Town of Thrilling Owier ation num L you of Pisa I} M« )int th

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