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Durham Review (1897), 28 Jun 1923, p. 7

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â€" "SALADA" * Those Who Drink Japans aneime eBEEADNONEN paveieP â€": camiiie iroren aee N 4OA on s 22 etet eitenge i ow . . _: [ 7 "4S Plenkiron? I dared say Sir Walter would value the informaâ€" tion, but I couid not get to Sir Walter,‘ 1 was to go on to Constantinople, run-‘ ning away from the people wfo really | SNNNSirerrrrmmeerer rmmmmmenscccn 000. asked to dine with the Kaiser. iron might do something, but on earth was Blenkiron? I da; Sir Walter would value the in 3ion. but 1 couid not get to Sir 1 \ * sat down and looked dismally at: the prospect. The exhilaration of my . discovery the day before had gone. 1 had stumbled on a worthless piece of . knowledge, for 1 could not use ii.| Hilda von Einem, if such a person | existed and possessed the great secret was probably living in some big house in Berlin, and I was about as likely | to get anything out of her as to be asked to dine with the KaL.. m.. I 1 kissed the children, shook the woâ€" man‘s hand, and went off down the clearing. They had cried *A u{ wiedâ€" erschen," but it wasn‘t likely 1 would ever see them again. The snow had all gone, except in patches in the deep hoillows. The ground was like a full sponge, and a cold rain drifted in my eyes. After half an hour‘s steady trudge the trees thinned, and presently 1 came out on a knuckle of open ground cloaked in dwarf iuniners *L« sn 1 k hembuth â€"nue dit .. d â€" town they w 1 advise you ingâ€"foot and fails. You n ing, for some and your ms; the wars." I kissed the man‘s hand, clearing. Th erschen," but ever see them The snow | patches in th ground was li cold rain drif rimming river, I sat down and mies and the gold C«‘C as soon as pos get on with my busin« it was not fair to th moment 1 might be # she would get into tro: ing me. I asked her if the Danube was, and I nisrd me. "You will ur‘s" walk," she sai through the wood runs ferry." Next morning afte took my departure. I: weather, and I was fee Before going 1 presen: and the children with apiece. "It is English "for 1 have to travel a mies and use our enemi the gold is good, and if J8OUE No. 28â€"23, ""TC c of open ground cloaked in arf junipers. And there before me ‘ the plain, and a mile off a broad lea GREEN T sed frnen tss ingperfect! Japans you ever tasted (Copyrighte HAPTER VIlHI.â€"(¢ W ‘* iLR Â¥iil.â€"(Cont‘d.) clear to me that I must soon as possible. I had to th my business, and besides, )t fair to the woman. Any | might be found here, and | get into trouble for harborâ€" asked her if she knew where e was, and her answer surâ€" .. "You will reach it in an ‘k," she said. "The track e wood runs straight to the GREENMANTLE _ - @ after breakfast I ure. 1t was drizzling was feeling ve? lean, presented my hostess 1ca 171 ectionâ€"fres cleui ":)ry. mflor to theh' finest rou ever tasted. Sold by all Grocers. ighted Thomas Neison and should surely try BY JOHN BUCHANn Blenkâ€" where MA Whagi: 4i ABusinctitins. 3 | lhe places you‘d be apt to leave unâ€" | searched would be Scotland Yard. | , It was sound reasoning, but how was 1 to Tt on board? Probably the !bea-tly things did not stop once in a | hundred miles, and Stumm would get: me long before I struck a !ulting~j fihco. And even if I did get a chance | \ like th.tf how was I to get permission | to travel? | One step was clearly indicatedâ€"to rt down to the river bank at once. So | set off «t a sharnm walm _ _2 8| & set off at a uharr walk â€" across uol%.flolds, till I struck a road :Lan ditches had overflowed so as almost to meet in the middle. The Minard‘s Lihiment fer Gorne and Warts WRANE tP P in saind.â€" se It sounded lunacy, for I guessed that munitions of war would be as Lealously guarded as old Hindenburg‘s | health. ~All the safer, I replied to my. self, once I get there. If you are lookâ€" ing for a deserter you don‘t seek him at the favorite regimental publicâ€" house. If you‘re after a thief, among the places you‘d be apt to leave unâ€" searched would be Seatland vw.o_s nwak auscs cl‘s D oo oil . Sn netslptile , There was only one way for me to ;fet out of Germany, and that was to |leave in such dzood company that I | would be asked no questions. That | was plain enough. If I travelled to | Turkey, for instance, in the Kaiser‘s | suite, T would be as safe as the mail;| ‘but if I went on my own I was done. . | 1 had, so to speak, to get my passport | inside Germany, to join some caravan | | which had free marching powers. And | there was the kind of caravan before ‘me'â€"the E‘ssgn_bargee. I e 2 s 0n Poue / Co ‘Gallipoli. And then, as ‘idea came into my head, Ian'riig-hth part of a hope L dLe C 0 1Cs eqhuy‘s lt OR train t ® of the discussions you have in hospiâ€" ot ou! | tal, had told us just how the Germans f lay 1 munitioned their Balkan campaign. it, carr | They were protty certain of dishing ders, Serbia at the first g0, and it was UP _ It cof | to them to get through guns and shells body. |to the old Turk, who was running have di | pretty short in his first supply. Sandy him. I |said that they wanted the railway, but towards | they wanted still more the river, and they w |they could make certain of that in a though week. He told us how endless strings for a & ! of barges, loaded up at the big facâ€" would t I tories of Westphalia, were moving chanee. | through the canals from the Rhine Or| _ For I ‘the Elbe to the Danube. Once the course. ‘first reached Turkey, there would be couldn‘t regular delivery, you seeâ€"as quick could bl |as the Turks could handle the stuff. up the : And they didn‘t return empty, Sandy whole c said, but came back full of Turkish‘Richard cotton and Bulgarian beef and Ruâ€" would w manian corn. 1 don‘t know where hunters. Sandy got the knowledge, but there Stumm | was the proof of it before my eyes. ; worth a It was a wonderful sight, and i good eno could have gnashed my teeth to see tain, those loads of munitions going SNUgly | off to the enemy. I calculated they | omm would give our poor chaps hell in Gallipoli. And then, as I looked, an, idea came into my head, and with it . Gal an elehtly maus _a 2. ‘ ma 1. .4 , _ ip SAHHeh river in front : l of me led to it. And as I looked my {attention was caught by a curious [sight. On the far eastern horizon, : where the water slipped round a cor |ner of hill, there was a trail of smoke. ,’The streamers thinned out, and seemâ€" ed to come from some boat well round |the corner, but I could see at least two ! ‘boats in view. Therefore there must be a long train of barges, with a tug. in tow. ‘ | I looked to the west and saw anâ€"| _other such procession coming into sight. First went a big river stcamer ‘â€"it can‘t have been much less than 1,000 tonsâ€"and after came a string . of barges. 1 counted no less than six . besides the tug, They were heavily loaded and their draught must have ; been considerable, but there was q plenty of depth in the flooded river, |g A moment‘s reflection told me what a [ was looking at. COmen Sanks s_" NOr : C t Iuucugl nc s u8. 44 4 > COUnC not cross the borders by any railway, My studies of the Tourists‘® Guide had fuggested that once I was in Austria I might find things slacker and move about easier. I thought of having a try at the Tyrol and I also thought of Bohemia. ‘But these places were a long way off,. and there were several thousand chances each dajy that I would be c2DGHE aw an . ... o5 how I could go on seemed shut to me, pretty a tangle as stumbled into. For 1 was mused pulled the ropes. But if could «!o nothing, and I a V on oo Conery roof of it before my eyes. a wonderful sight, and 4 * gnashed my teeth to see o wl ucce mewinl - . _ _ _ CSton told me what ing@ at. Onee Sandy, in one cussions you have in hospiâ€" 1d us just how the Germans 1 their Balkan campaign. * pretty certain of dishing the HFSE 80. AME it use _E view. Therefore .file(r: I train of barges, with a 1 g _must go on and I did could go on. Every shut to me, and I was ht o lirst go, and it was up through guns and shells irk, who was running Tuiee Musilte L D . chas 1 idle the stuff. empty, Sandy 11 of Turkish eef and Ruâ€" know where But if I stayed I and I couldy not 1 and I didn‘t see . _ Every course any man VC ic nntnheiiedion thindit u.3 4 TCJ him. I watched the procession move but towards the village and I reckoned and they would take some time there, n & though they might have wired ahead ngs for a grave to be dug. Anyhow, they facâ€" would be long enough to give me a Ing chance. ‘ O"| For I had decided upon the brazen the course. _ Blenkiron had said you. .be couldn‘t cheat the Boche, but you ick could bluff him. I was going to put | uff. up the most monstrous bluff. If the ‘dy whole countryside was hunting for’ ish Richard Hannay, Richard Hannay| tuâ€" would walk through as a gal of the ere, hunters. For I remembered the pass ‘re, Stumm had given me, If that was _ _|worth a tinker‘s curse it should be 1‘ good enough to impress a ship‘s capâ€" CC tain. McLARENS LIMITED, Hamilton and Winnipeg in as ever A cold roast has an appetizing zest when served with these delicions olives. Chopped up in a salad, they add a new piqzant flavor. Imported diroct from Spain ‘or the Canadian leopic. Every olive perfect. Every variety At ell Grecers i L . s, flung up the curtains, aknvind «. 3 _ _Câ€"CCP and they also! ~F*‘* UAC b“"d? started to drop anchors, which showed &nd bro’ught in the workbasiket, the that there must be at least two men| children‘s toys and .fath.er.s cataâ€" aboard each. Some of them dragged logues. "Now," we said, "it is a livâ€" a bit and it was rather a cockâ€"eyed| ing room. It looks livedâ€"in." ‘ train that lay in midstream. The tug) _ Alas, it does! Particularly if there ot out a gangway, and from where‘ are children in the family, and if f lay I saw half a dozen men leave| mother is adding to her household duâ€" it, carrying something on their shoulâ€" ders. ‘%_____m It could be only one thingâ€"a dead| â€" body. Some one of the crew must! have died, and this halt was to bury| [ hint | T uratatack «h.0 M Bs _ my , ,_____ _"_,"@ ve no doubt about it. The procession was coming to a standstill. The big tug nosed her way in and lay up alongside the pier, where in that season of flood there was enough depth of water, She sigâ€" nalled to the barges and they also started to drop anchors, which showed that there must be at least two men‘ aboard each. Some of them dragged| a bit and it was rather a cock-eyedj train that lay in midstream. The tug qnint cR | o | Aner We se ie mans C L0R nil L lusist on MceLAREX‘3 INFINCIRLE HPOT .\ Fiptnifialliat 0) dmstcudien) B6 .2 AL a straggling village with a church| and a small landingâ€"stage. The houses stood about a quarter of a mile from the stream, and between them was a| straight, poplarâ€"fringed road. ' Sogrl there could be no doubt about‘ i4 C esn mc 1O ee ' f;lace was so bad that I hoped travelâ€" ‘ ers might be few. And as 1 trudged, my thoughts were busy with my prosâ€" pects as a stowaway. If I bought food 1 might get a chance to lie snug on one of the barges, They would not break bulk til] they got to their jourâ€"| Ca=â€" ney‘s end, , THE Suddenly I noticed that the steamâ€" er, which was now abreast me, beganl Of to move towards the shore, and as I‘ wives came over a low rise I saw on my left! anlurn a Cetranmoline s .0 Slvk " * bust _ .. ; j "ree cakes of chocolate I still FF__Y S~Â¥ "Vy hy 44, and 46 inches bust carried_ o measure. A 38â€"inch size will require! At last, well after midday, I could 1 6% yards of 86â€"inch material for the see the ship‘s party returning. They ;! dress with long sleeve and the blouse marched two by two, and I was thankâ€" i in full length. In shorter sleeve and ful to see that they had no villagers : blouse length the dress will require With them. I walked to the road, /54 yards of 40â€"inch material. The turned up it, and met the vanguard, | width of the skirt at the foot is 24 fo°/V‘"C my head as high as I knew yards. § ; Pattern mailed to any address on" (To be tenkinued.) receipt of 15¢ in silver or stamps. | Amesonâ€"fisenio=â€"cme | Write the Wilson Publishing Co, T8 %â€"“ | Adelaide St. West, Toronto. U |OLIVES] hitvd 6 ds soa s h 6% yards of 36â€"inch r dress with long sleeve in full length,. In sho blouse length the dre 5%4 yards of 40â€"inch width of the akirt a+ . \ P L .. £700000, UF IT INC newest "short" length. As here shown orange color canton crepe was used, with band of black crepe embroidered in orange floss. This is a good model for linen and pongee. 1 The Pattern is cut in 7 Sizes: 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, and 46 inches bust mMensure, ©â€" & UMimals tss ueng " o. Sm | . 4005. Here is a charming model, with costume blouse and twoâ€"piece | flare skirt, The neck is finished with ‘the popular "kerchief" collar. â€" The sleeve may be finished with a wrist length "peasant" portion, or in the 4365, oNE or tgr SEASON‘3 SMaRTEST FASHIONS. 42, 44, and 46 inches bust A 38â€"inch size will require of 36â€"inch material for the oc t use $ i1 "Dseda ner way ide the pier, f flood there ter. She sigâ€" nd they also which showed Cession move _ I reckoned time there, wired ahead or in the bered jokes have been dedicated to its memory. And how progressive we felt ourselves to be while we snatched kn lay Cr3»C 4 L °en nmmmnememcmmrmmem | THE CLDâ€"FASHIONEp Of late years we country houseâ€" wives have been rather priding ourâ€" selves upon getting farther and farâ€" ther away from oldâ€"fashioned notions. Any new idea has been accepted as an improvement. * sapwag;. . . V _b Juuging by my ob. : servations, very few of them stayed at home. . That funeral took hours. They must have had to dig the grave, for I waitâ€" ed near the road in a clump of cherryâ€" trees, with my feet in two inches of mud and water, till I felt chilled to the bone. I prayed to God it would not bring back my fever, for 1 was onlf' one day out of bed. I had very little tobacco left in my pouch, but I stood myself one pipe, and I ate one of the three cakes of chocolate I still carried. PNGpP l vivibivnl n Aaal t AP ons «Anhand ie T1503 and did not know what it meant, and would refuse me transport by the letâ€" ter of his instructions. In that case I might wait on another convoy. I had shaved and made myself a fairly respectable figure before 1 left the cottage. It was my cue to wait for the men when they left the church, wait on that quarterâ€"mile of straight / highway. I judged the captain must! 'be in the party. The village, I was glad to observe, seemed very empty. I \have my own notions about the Baâ€" ‘varians as fighting men, but I am bound to say that, judging by my obâ€" servations, very few of them stayed at home. _ That funeral took hours. They must have had to dig the grave, for I waitâ€" ed near the road in a clump of cherryâ€"| trees, with my feet in two inches of { 1 mud and water, till I felt chilled to | j the bone. I prayed to God it wouldlc not bring back my faver far T unu|f ZEnmilius Jarvis & Co Woman‘s Sphere Al10UILULLLl ifi‘é saved and invested in safe bonds from fi'“ (â€" age 30 to 60, interest being reinvested, 5&\' ‘5() accumulates all th_e oldâ€"fashioned noâ€" Many investorsâ€"both large and small found in Buying Bonds on the Partial Pa me: the solution to many of their financial roKlem euggeot' that you mail the coupon l‘)’elow £. nanktlasils .. ONTARIO ARCHIVEs TORONTO ture of this pia_x;.â€" Our Partial Payment Plan for Buying Bonds is excellently fitted for such a scheme. %'hrough it is provided the necessar incentive to carry out a sys. :~matic programme ofy saving adetermined portion cf v~sur income each month and investing it in safc bonds. The contract into which you enter with us is just sufficlently stimulating to create and maintain the desire to continue buying high grade governmens, municipal and corporation %onds. The availability at all times of fimt'fioco Inviattarl 186 an. mame caea 1 on per &Bn St. ‘Toronto There is the month PARLOR. $49,772.06 unnumâ€" shogmys j .4 _ t "10D" and modern Iabor‘_ If parsley is washed with hot savers, but what busy, ambitious farm i"5te_ad of cold it retains its woman has sufficient â€"time and and is easier to chop. strength to keep an ideal home during ===========mmme the rush season? If my experience| and observations are correst, it simply "can‘t be did." Flies will congregate, Dust will blow in open wondows. Disâ€" Te order â€" willâ€"â€"accumniSha in . Ts3 1. It is all very well to talk about ideals and methods and modern labor savers, but what busy, ambitious farm woman â€" has suffcient / Hims. .4 the mditi n tohar diseizaisinti insd cs S 3 ~ 14 in this dim, cool, quiet room on a bustling, blistering summer afterâ€" noon? Who hasn‘t longed for its freeâ€" dom from dust and disorder, flies and] shabbiness, when callers arrived in | tha \Hnow smmaâ€". s butil must he heen‘s .. HREID .A c ontntet t itc sia? 4d who hasn‘t longed for a halfâ€"hour in Shis dim. senrl Eastay _1 ll.. LF w es nvw,SUulty so invested is an attractive fea. Always have/lus on the lable It‘s not just custom that makes people take musterd with their meals. Mustâ€" ard aids digestion and helps to assimiâ€" late the meats. It is a good habit to acquire. â€" Mix it freshly for every meal. ap w # ‘as : . _ , â€"Please send me copy of booklet l:( ‘82 "Buying Bonds on the Partial J Payment fim” for Iâ€"have nt Plan as. We WRIGLEY‘S is a helper in all thits work â€"a pleasant, beneficial pickâ€"meâ€"up. Sound teeth, a‘ good appeftite and proper digestion mean MUCH WRIGLEYS. 4n us * Oe MR Of all speech, the m._, r us is 3$ ert th¢ most important 0 udn i7 V Es ~WwSul AdsGl i ,thatched roofs, and you come to it af. ter you have passed the oid itone oburch with an ancient square tower and a solid red brick mansion of rich Georgian favor. Out of the back door of the inn and down hil across green fields a footâ€"path winds, surmounting here and there m stile, Beyond the last stile is a white ribbon of road beâ€" tween hedges, and down that road a little way an unpretentious iron gate, "This gate opens upon a stoneâ€"flag. ged walk leading ACrOESS a widm owas~ Inlar 4 cb 1 _ In the village of Burwash, in English Bussex, is an inn with the sign of The Bear," says H. I. Brock in the New York Times, "It stands in a long street of low cotiages with tiled or of To in thinlhy ut o e Nee n & : " ‘‘teit bridge the gulf between startâ€" |ing point and goal. |_Plain living is wanted to eke out high thinking. Ends without means /are barren. It is well that it should | be so. Effortless mastery is not good "for the morals of any man. In this sense the half is immediately greater than the whole; it is an indispensable and preliminary step. The wise man, therefore, eats his halfâ€"loat in humble thankfuiness. It serves as the vory least to keep body and soul together 200 fite> him | t0 tsla mm mongy »of A 1 | less of the probabiiities of acquisition and digestion, would rather chase the whole Lhog than cat the kalfâ€"loat. Some , | do so because, though they would hate to be called gre>dy, they like a lot; " others because they are born gambâ€" " lers, and cannot rasist the temptation | to risk all on the hance of winning | more, l The outâ€"andâ€"out id=â€"lis; as in the same care. He will not take Ioss than | the whole; even to rest in the t J# way | house ‘: to bia ta : in againet the . <ht. , His picture of life is "a design in snow and ink," and he is diâ€"comfited by t.. > reality, which knows no absolute, but is an affair of every gradation of shadâ€" [ing Starting from widely separat i | points, the gambler and the fanatic thus have a ; ir: ar~ tendercy to meet i in a common fate. Bot.: play double or quits with the lor‘ls cf life, and both, aiming at all, hit nothing. The "naught at all" of Ibsen‘s Prand may have raâ€" sults as disastrous materially as the last throw of the most reckless dicer. Happy in Striving to Attain, But that is no*t to say that there is no place for the iderl It is mandad 1. The Utter Englishness of Kipling‘s Home. Popular philosophy, with a worldly wisdom which some find sordid, deâ€" clares unhesitatingly for the balfâ€"loaf, | fearful of the breadless alternative. But | men will always be found who, ‘egardâ€" It is a common experience for & man to find himself faced with the necesâ€" sity of choosing whether he shall take at once what he can get, or, at the risk ’o( missing even that, shall go on strivâ€" ing {or all that he would like to get. ‘The dilemma is somctimes seen on an ‘ a‘most national scale At one time | people "want eight" and "won‘t wait"; | at anotter they sniff at sixpesce off i the income tax because they are bent on getting a shilling. The choice conâ€" fronts the business man daily, and is said to cause great searchings of heart on the Stock Exchange. No maun, inâ€" deed, can hope to escape it. Good for Paing, "* 1 Drock in the New "It stands in a long cotiages with tiled or , and you come to it af. passed the oid itone n ancient square tower 4 brick mansion of rich TR EAT M KEN D A One of the joys of 1 on the farm is the pi the who‘s family has i mll through the busy 4 W m The pic the gala whether ; hood ~ath dinner at bration. Ww +1 is quite as home. Pa the day t; idea, Sm paper and bon have keeping f Pimento, 1 all add th« or salad «l individual dall‘s | Wreain all of th wt once i appr spec Straine, ap: everwoske twinge of!| B1i Be lem not th (or paget The Metal If "Metallic Fire, Lishtning, 11 Ask your drug d¢6 amMil redâ€"w hi 0F iB8!i€E N SP A VI o ce rby Do \p

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