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Durham Review (1897), 16 Aug 1923, p. 2

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€ / 886 Haenri Julien St., Montreal KEXNXEDY MANUFACâ€" TURING CO SAPH draperies Li dent ruction moths away. SS\ /Â¥ Bupho Powdar exterminates ail these pests, but is NONâ€"POTIRONOUS and HARMLES3 to bumana The hamby Weuke We musllls iscc _ _ Rid your house of filth. § carrying, diseaseâ€"breed. K hna Hick Be free fromw: bunlnf mosquitoes that make your sleeping hours miserable. Deal death to ants, roaches and bostics. ww lay it with SAPHO You Can Learn More 5 "SALADA" andy Mapho | It POWDE R Than we can tell you in a page of advertisement TRY IT TOâ€"DAY GREENMANTLE H prayed in *, furnitu moths, p nd â€" even d $1.20 C&NS, ready.to use 1b Spreyer puffs from a teapot test of ghted Thoma partmen‘a BY JOHN BUCHAN B6 Was , 6y and Dyâ€"hours later it seemedâ€" | Minard‘s Liniment Heals Cuts. _ "ney motioned us to ret into. Tt lookâ€" ed exactly like the Black Maria. Both of us sat still, like truant schoolbovs, with our hands on our knees. 1 didn‘t know where I was going and 1 didn‘t care. We seemed to be rumbling up the hill. and then I caucht the glare of lichted streets, "This is the end of it, Peter." T said. "Ja. Cornelis." he replied, and that was all our talk. uts ECOC 0 ECCWET UnPCuen the dark passage and the empty shop, and out into the snowy street. There was a closed carriage waiting which they motioned us to wet intn. It lookâ€" ed exactly like the Black Maria A man who seemed to pointed to us and said Kuprasso, who nodded. ily to our feet and stu: them. With one on ea we crossed the vard w The game over. with low vi care greatly there was an the act of (. us dow: and me The place emptied like magic. Turk and German tumbled over each other, while Kuprasso wailed and wept. No one seemed to stop them, and then I s«aw the reason. Those guards had come for ns. This must be Stumm ut last. The authorities had tracked us down, and it was all up with Peter T o ui eeic s oi on e y for, though I could not see clearly. my hearing was desperately acute. That Is often the way when you suddenly come out of a swoon. the common squalor of a low saloonâ€" white faces, sleepy eyes, and frowsy heads. The dropâ€"scene was there in all its tawdriness. The Companions of the Rosy Hours had gone. But at the door stood men In uniform. I heard a German a long way off murmur, "Enver‘s bodyâ€" guards," and I heard him distinctly; 7 Feprend Opaln C rar P C & place except us and the magicâ€" workers. Then suddenly the spell was broken. The door was flung open and a great ust of iey wind swirled throuzrthe fia]l, driving clouds of ashes from the braziers. I heard loud voices without, and a hubbub began inside. For a moment it was quite dark, and then some one lit one of the flare lamps by the stage. It revealed nothing but the common squalor of a low saloonâ€" white faces, sleepy eyes, and frowsy heads. The dronmâ€"scons was thowa tn looking for me : was praying and could have choke chatter would re to me that there place except u worker«, Then suddenl The door was ffi: {uat of iey wind all, driving clou braziers 1 heard By and byâ€"hours later it uic _ ) on S Em neni ltA Stumm seemed feeble simpletons by are the l2 contrast. _ The window I had been despotism. looking out of was changed to a prison Wilrobe no wallâ€"I could see the mortar between'upon the the massive blocks. In a second these your poet devils would be smelling out their|" "Bu; 1 enemics like some foul witchâ€"doctors. mered. * I felt the burning eyes of their leader "My me looking for me in the gloom. Peter a bit of a was praying audibly beside me, and I difficult t« could have choked him. His infernal dorff will | chatter would reveal us, for it seemed toâ€"morrow to me that there was no one in the terv tan / r it 6 fons of thing in Stumm contrast en oo aener y felt the dancers as monstrous, inhuâ€" man, devilish. The thick scents that floated from the brazier seemed to have a tang of newâ€"shed blood. Cries broke from the hearersâ€"cries of anâ€" ger and lust and terror. I heard a woman sob, and Peter, who is as tough as any mortal, took tight hold meaning now youth had fie ing in the a slon, which nor night. lif halfâ€"world be felt the dane man,. devilish the mow pass then to an notes spun topether rider ndeed There was low vitality. I didn‘t seem to greatly. . We were done. and was an end of it. It was Kismet, t of God. and there was nothing hbut to submit. I hadn‘t » flicker thought of eseane or resiatanee ny arm It seemed to be part of the veld, but e no veld I hur:ver seen. It was der and wilder and more gracious. deed, I was looking at my first uth. I was feeling the kind of imâ€" »rtal lightâ€"heartedness which only a y knows in the dawning of his days. had no longer any fear of these igicâ€"makers. They were kindly wizâ€" is, who had brought me into fairyâ€" # HIETVGEU C now realized that thege Companâ€" ities, Wh of the Rosy Hours were the only | about tha g in the world to fear. Rasta and ficulty in mint | ammmmial Aesei on i k i d 2 " A m i1dden â€"re On an ) % l vitalit , very slowly, it changed. The ised from blue to purple, and an angry red. Bit by bit the in together till they had made imyâ€"a fierce, restless harâ€" And I was conscious again of â€"clad dancers beckoning out cirele. N0 seemed in be a sergcant us and said «omething to ho nodded. We got heav. '.wt and stumbled tow=rds owly from the silence there Ilrops of music. They came r falling a long way into a the essential quality of gure Ve, with our elaborate harâ€" ive forgotten the charm of tes. fie African natives and I remember a learned telling me that the Greeks ame art. Those silver bells of infinite space, so exquisite ct that no mortal words â€" been fitted to them. That music, I expect, that the tars made when they sang e on each side of us vard. walked throuch )n# teriy and 107 , Ltd.) see clearly;jfiy' nothing but tience cards resistance, absolutely a man seem in m26% Telegraphs in Uganda are not alâ€" ways reliable, as the natives covet and often cut down the copper wire for making into bracelets, necklaces, and legâ€"bands. Children up to 12 years of age have been photographed standing on the giant leaves, six to eight feet wide, of the Victoria Regia waterâ€"lily plants in Kew Gardens, London. A mysterious "army" of white ants has caused considerable damage in the South of France, and colonies of these insects have now been discovered in Paris. as a nut, his bare arms all tattooed with crimson rings, and the fox pelt drawn tight over brow and ears. It was still a nightmare world, but the dream was getting pleasanter. Peter said not aâ€"word, but I could see his eyes heavy with his own thoughts. (To be continued.) Santiago, Chili, has a radio broadâ€" casting station. tience cards with his old sleepy smile, and Sandy, dressed like some bandit in melodrama, his lean face as brown The thing was too deep for me. I looked at ?Ien}gi'ro_n., shuffling his Paâ€" toâ€"morrow, but he will find the mysâ€" tery too deep ior him. That is the advantage of a Government run by a pack of adventurers. But, by Jove, l)l,c)k, we hadn‘t any time to spare. If Rasta had got you, or the Germans had had the job of lifting you, your goose would have been jolly well cookâ€" ed. I had some unquiet hours this morning." "My men," said Sandy. "We have a bit of a graft here, and it wasn‘t difficult to manage it. Old Moellenâ€" dorff will be nosing after the business _ "But I don‘t understand," I stam mered. "Who arrested us?"" MluS C c Ont S Comene Smmy . COVierLy SBC 2509 CS of;serving'. you‘re safe enough here, but you‘ve cut it mighty fine. Offiâ€" clally, a Dutchman called Brandt was to be arrested this afternoon and handed over to the German authorâ€" itles. When Germany begins to trouble about that Dutchman she will find difâ€" ficulty in getting the body; but such are the languid ways of an Oriental despotism. Meantime the Dutchman will be no more. He will have ceased upon the midnight without pain, as your poet sings." I "It was the only way, Dick. If I hadn‘t come mewing like a tomâ€"cat at your heels yestergay, Rasta would have had you long before you got to your hotel. You two have given me a pretty anxious time, and it took some doing to get you safe here. Howâ€" ever, that is afi over now. Make yourâ€" selves at home, my children." "Over!" I cried incredulously, for my wits were woolâ€"gathering. "What place is this?" "You may call it my humble home" CHAPTER XII. POUR MISSIONARIES SEE LIGHT INX THEIR MISSION, A spasm of incredulity, a vast reâ€" lief, and that sharp joy which comes of reaction chased eacf': other across my mind. I had come suddenly out of very black waters into an unbeâ€" lievable calm. I dropped into the nearest chair and tried to grapple with something far beyond words. "Sandy," I said, as soon as I got my breath, "you‘re an incarnate devil. You‘ve ri'.'en Peter and me the fright of our lives." "Dick, old man," he cried, "I‘m most awfully glad to see you again!" It was a pleasant room, with a polâ€" ished wood floor andâ€"a big fire burnâ€" ing on the hearth. Beside the fire a man lay on a couch, with a little table drawn up beside him. On that table was a small glass of milk and a numâ€" ber of Patience cards spread in rows. I stared blankly at the spectacle, till I saw a second figure. It was the man in the skinâ€"cap, the leader of the dancing maniacs. Both Peter and I backed sharply at the sight and then stood stock still. For the dancer crossed the room in ‘t-wo‘.stridl-s and gripped both of my 10C} us and took us down a passage till we halted at a door. He stood aside and motioned us to enter. I guessed that this was the govâ€" ernor‘s room, and we should be gxt through our first examination. { head was too stupid to think, and made ug my mind to keep perfectly murn. Yes, even if they tried thumbâ€" screws. I had no kind of a story, but 1 resolved not to give anything away. As I turned the handle 1 wondered idly what kind of sallow Turk or bulgâ€" iing-;ecked German we should find nside, some kind of uniform pointed to the staircase, up which we tbdded wearâ€" ily. My mind was too blank to take clear impressions, or in any way to forecast the future. Another warder We entered a door, and found ourâ€" selves in a big stone hall It was quite warm, which made me more hopeful about our cells. A man in door and we go( out, to find ourselves in a courtyard with a huge dark buildâ€" ing around. The prison, I guessed, and I wondered if tgny would give us bla'akeu. for it was perishing cold. ARIO ARCHIVEs TORONTO Flir y O L T fOiU!. Some thing that will please the :Well, a; Ihwas children without much expenditure of ht;n?il:.‘f_-. Ofq‘ ¢ither time or money is what many led Brandt was MOthers are considering for that apâ€" afternoon and Proaching birthday or any other party, Cut circles of white or pink tinted paper the size of the candy and fasten it over the waxed paper in which each lollypop is wrapped with two or three touches of glue. Next mark on these circles all sorts of funny faces. From the gay paper fashion bonnets and dresses held in place by bits of narâ€" row ribbon and touches of glue. Thrust the end of the stick through Buy a quantity of lollypops and some gayly colored crepe paper, or use the odds and ends of such paper you may already have in the house. P ) signtenar ab s 2O lsnt Aiinticisnntlin scutndss 43 an occasion of thrilling importance to the youngsters. § 100. MOCC _T were Ca% AVAyeat SIZe PF Corn and Cheere Souf fleâ€"Here ls’ quires 3% yards of 22â€"inch material another corn dish which may veryi Serge, crepe knit and jersey weaves acceptably take the place of meat. A| also taffeta are attractive material: large cupful of grated green corn is for this style. required for its making, also half n’ Pattern mailed to any address or green pepper chopped fine and a cup-i receipt of 15¢ in silver or stamps, by ful of grated cheese. Cook the pepper| the Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West for five minutes in a generous tableâ€" Adelaide st., Toronto. Allow two spoonful of butter, then remove it and| weeks for receipt of pattern. add two tablespoonfuls of flour to the memmmmemnmemmmmmmemmmmmmmmmmemmmmmrmme butter and cook these to the bubbling! &n empty spool and you have a charmâ€" point. Now pour in a cupful of rich| iP& 'doll that can stand alone. Enâ€" milk and cook till smooth, stir in the dearing colored babies may be made corn, cheese and fried pepper and add bY Using black paper'for the faces, a mere grating of onion. Cook for a\ These lollypop dollies may be used few moments, then whip in two wellâ€" as place cards or to decorate indiâ€" beaten egg yolks and season to suit vidual servings of ce cream. â€" They the taste. Finally fold in the whites may be marching in file round the of the eggs beaten to a stiff dry froth, table or as cake decorations. And.in pour into a buttered baking dish and the end they posses the useful quality cook in a moderate oven for half an of being edible. hour, or until the souffle is firm in| mssnd mm the centre. Serve immediately, for| On Chart Room. a dish of this sort will not bear| The topmast radiator on a great waiting. Iodomn m / Abvewage es " B oo es B2 qo 2t i ic o maple syrup, or plain sugarrâ€"syvr'x:l;: though usually regarded as a meat substitute. Corn Oystersâ€"This is a good supâ€" per dish for cool evenings or when something tasty and substantial is deâ€" sired. It may be made from corn that is a little too old for boiling, and will be very nice. Grate the corn, and to a pint of pulp add two wellâ€"beaten ezgs, a tablespoonful of melted butter, half a teaspoonful of salt, and enough flour to make a rather stiff batter, sifting one and a half teaspoonfuls of baking powder with the flour. A little milk may be added if desired. Drop from the end of a spoon into boiling fat and fry to a rich, nut brown.| Drain well and serve hot. These frit»; ters are truly delicious served with half a small onion, likewise chopped; melt a tablespoonful of butter in a frying pan and turn these vegetables into it and toss them about until the corn begins to brown slightly. Meanâ€" time scald, peel and scoop the centres from six medium sized tomatoes:; fill with the corn mixture, sceatter bread crumbs and bits of butter over the top and bake in a hot oven until the toâ€" matoes are done. J , QUICK PUDDINGS AND CUSTARDS IMYINCIBLE] Tomatoes stufed with cornâ€"Grate the corn from six ears and add to it half a green pepper chopped fine, also Corn and tomatoes always make a tasty combination. This one is dif.â€" ferent: Delicious Desserts easily made with At all Grecers. Specif MeLAREN‘S [lf VINCIBLE Lemon, Vauiille, Arrowroct, Nutmeg, Aimond, Plain Made by McLARENS LIMITED, Hamilton and Winnipeg. + Chocolate, Cocoanut, Tapioca Save time, trouble and money. Just add milk to contents of p.cl::d(e. Boil for a minâ€" uteâ€"and serve. E?ually delicious, hot or cold. DELECTABLE CORN DISHES LOLLYPOP DOLLIES Woman‘s Sphere (M) the house. pink tinted 14 | _ _Blind and without hands, William | McPherson, of Kansas, "reads" his | Bible by means of his tongue, which |\is sufficiently sensitive to feel the | Braille type. On Chart Room. The topmast radiator on a great ocean liner is generally fixed in the chart room, some 80 feet above the boilers. Such a radiator receives more heat than those on the lower decks, as it is necessary for the officers and men to be kept well warm. | _ A117. Smart belt extensions on this | dress, effected by slashes at the sides, are an outstanding style feature. The | sleeve may be in wrist or elbow length. | _ _The Pattern is cut in 4 Sizes: 6, 8, § 10 and 12 years. A 10â€"year size reâ€" | quires 3% yards of 22â€"inch material. iSerge, crepe knit and jersey weaves, also taffeta are attractive materials l"for this style. an empty spool and {ou have a charmâ€" ing doll that can stand alone. Enâ€" dearing colored babiafi may be made Pattern mailed to any address on receipt of 15¢ in silver or stamps, by the Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide st., Toronto. Allow two weeks for receipt of pattern. S A SIMPLE FROCK FOR A YOUNG MISS. said: Fresh air You can be sure of it as the Report of the Ministry of Health of Great Britain *"‘a sanitary environment and sound nutrition "â€" Delicious and Refi'eshing Pureâ€" . j are the great safeguards of Health. BOVRIL THE COCACOLA COMPANY Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver When you‘re hot and thirstyâ€" «â€"â€"iceâ€"coldâ€"a blend of The use of his free hours makes or mars a man. A new invention is a powerful elecâ€" tric light attached to the lifeâ€"boats of a steamship, which is automatically switched on as the boat touches the water. One of Britain‘s most famous fishâ€" ing grounds, the Dogger Bank, in the North Sea, is said to be falling off as a source of supply, Minard‘s Liniment for Dandruf. LIFEBUOY Y ou feel Lif ehbaoy‘s hnalthiness right down lato the pores. After â€" Lifebuoy â€" you _ foâ€"l cleaner than you have ever foit before. nearth § OA P Mr. Manâ€" The odour vantsher JAMES SMART PLAKT BROCKViLLE OwtT F innana . *CHEs â€"£# horsepower of 100,000, burns 5,700 tons of liquid fuel in a single crossing. An adult seaâ€"lion has been known to eat fortyâ€"four saimon in a day, Lo uo CCCCCerm®coome wome ue llumc and Pacific coasts for the Aree quarter of 1923 accounted for a rev. ‘euue of $1,8798,875 as compared with ‘u.m.uo in the corresponding month in 1922, an increase of $218,735. The | value shows a decrease, however, of {8439.206 in comparison with the first | thras months‘ pario4 of 1920 and ; $399,402 with the same period in 1921, Iln the consideration of the lower { prices for products at the present time Lhe InCTAGEB BiiHMatecct q2 1 0 L make it appear that the burglar has climbed upwards. In opening doors the burglar varies hs methods according to the task copâ€" fronting him. He tells whether a door is locked or boited by pressing at the top and bottom. If it is only locked 'udmewhutonununualu mpat!teh.flclmhlpdrotfow@n and turns it from the outside. In one case, in which a door was locked, double boited, and heav ily barred, the crackeman effected an en try by eawing from a point about a foot above the lower hbinge to another point halfway across the door, and thence continuing the cut downwands to the bottom. He thus made a email doorwttunthohrgeom. working on the lower hinge, and was able to craw! through and close h:s own door behind M4... If he obtains the room above, he ties & rope to his own window or verandah and lowers himself to the next. Then he secures the other end eA the rope and, aided by & sheet of pewspaper emeared with gum, cuts & hele i: the window. The paper is placel on the window so that when a seeiics of glass is cut out it can be with ise wn without any sound being made. «ftep returning to his own room he usties his rope and throws the end dows to 1 His next step is to ask for the above, opposite, or next te thet pied by his victim. When the letter arrivee Re watches the bhotel clerk place it in the pigeonâ€" hole allotted to the room occupied by the man to whom it i~ adéressed and so discovers the number of the room he is planning to burgle. Having marked down & prospec : victim, the crook obtains some â€" velopes of a distinctive eolor, wkic he cannot fall to recoguze at a reaso: able distance, He then posts one co: taining some harmless e‘regaiar, at hange about the hotel reeention ~* ~ Mr. Goodwin has some interes: stories to tell of the metkeds of i thieves. made in it by the action chanism on the opening This would give him the he required, and the third see the completion of the would visit the safe he propseed tack. On the first night he remove the dial and place beh arcle of white paper. On the : night he would removre the pap« study the ridges and inden: The potorious sefebreaker Hamilton, of New Â¥York, has t method of negotiating comb "It is obvious," he afds, °* LOOn us U becomes known thae: bination lock bes been succes=! gotinted, moa only does ever; of a sale to which it is firtted a combination, but the type of in becomes obsoletse. Hoodwinking the Law. *"The cracksman, beving sper money, and care in riastering tricacies, takes messures to cre impression that the lock in 4 was not picked, but that the s blown open. He leareme soms concentrated explocive in the s fore reâ€"locking it, attackes a tim and decampe." and expense, and will devors | even years A cartul, pioftine tuking research in experimer: on its possiWilities," write J Goodwin in "Sidelights on ( Matters." "The picker of combinatior a patient, studtous worker, acquire a wpecimen of a new tion lock utterly regurdiess ¢ Hate makers and lockeam!\ns m»mMart watr ugabnst the crit‘ s the latter still proves himse!! :> wmpe with each new Inventot of the wclentific forces arraye* :7 THE CRIMINAL‘S oo oi en > O Es sheet of newspaper , cuts & hele i: the er is place.l on the when a seeiica of t can be withdsewn being made. .:fter wn room he usties Â¥s the end down to : eolor, which e at a reasonâ€" posts one cop. eireuiar, ard peeption office, . ke watches in the pigeon. aker, "Sheil" hes his own combination mesession he roposed to at. bt be would e behind it a n the second he paper and indentations : of the me of the sete, combination Bight would project t interesting ule aÂ¥ hatel U i# M 4 * HR.H. TO HAVE HOLIDAY ON R HIGH CLASS OF A despatch from London The rush of British harve: Canada, which has given th ship companies the busiest 1 ever experienced, will end on & when over 7,000 men will way to the wheat ficlds. | mble berth has been booke demand were twice as g be filled. Eighteen hundn gone from Glasgow and will go before Saturday mdian Pacific boats lef! present fortnight with space filled. The Auso and Canada of the Whi are leaving fully loade Pittsburg and Scythia booked up. Economic Depression i men to Harvest Fie Busiest Fo A striking featy tion and one typic depression here is ed craftsmen. On« men who left M anijversity student: G@rivers, cotton sa A qespauch irom 1.07 Now that the Prince of finitely decided to go 1 Beptember, the hope is officially â€" expressed . tha will give him every 0j take that complete rest £ pose his visit was plant gecret in London that strenuous round of dutic votion to sport have tol point which gives rise tionate, if illâ€"informed, : part of his admirersâ€" t §sh public. _ 1922 $%: It was thought th visit to his ranch afford more epport plete change and r Autumn holiday in announced that the #will leave England 4n September and : of October. en a singie T. terials has bs road in Euroy 1921 incr ¢rops, w\ and eggs and vegetables ¢ the total agricu klh' field and Pr farming an ANn A truck w ince‘s Visit to Cana« ned Thet He May Opportunity for C plete Rest. OO( toba fur The Agri h On One Rail arm oniv A W m pT PF W

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