West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 2 Aug 1928, p. 2

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_Lyp waited while out the new license along with a metal tag which "Gyp" took in wagged "Thank you obediently for home. not an« ter . . . Sensible folk will g approval. Weddings inc ot the program of put advertising in show win bailoons and airplanes, Dog Applies For Own Licenseâ€"and Gets It up th t has turt Dr In the case « with insulting stead Heath it wags one of ten y quarrelling as to & girl home. Minard‘s Liniment for Insect Bites. smart for style suitabl trasting ma the facing blazer Jacke pockets, and sleeves. Tt sideâ€"closing quires 2 yard 1% yards 54 Inch contras the pattern. Hor withir low t1 can b fcally, tured chart shows when plaine an altractive dress. book 10 cents the copy HOW Write Inspire resp The Blazer Jacket is Smart Only teas grown 4,000 to 7,000 feet above sea level are used in "SALADA" Orange Pekoe Blendâ€" the flavour is therefore richer, more fragrant and much more delicious than other teas. Only 43¢ per â€"lb. â€"Buy it at any grocery store. [C the Weddings in the Air and heque cket, the laps on the se and the cuffs finishing The trousers are of Ing type. No. 1538 is in s _8 years. Size 6 years yards 36â€"4nch material 1 [ 1SSUE No. 30â€"‘28 W rited t} SAxAA" T MCLk = t} at plec the at or all th t h haviour without difficulty, ss. Price of the ing who asion into a stun se and placed it tag in an envelope in his mouth. He ou" and started 18 nd %% yard 36â€" Price 20 cents publi fre stated men | sey magsitrate ught to be asâ€" for trying to W youth ive him their laded as part A‘T 1538 n who ould _ fairs, as , and Ia not tend charged Hampâ€" that he ho were 1 escort folâ€" n it ‘Tâ€"in the the lzes usion thing H in ly 1 1nl ludâ€" &( J h n ;Tr:u‘e, answering Perey A. Hurd | (Cons., Devizes), supplied details of |the direct help Canada had given |British employment since the war. He ‘said the Canadian Pacific had spent |$70,000,000 on new tonnage in British \shipyards and also $5,000,000 on maâ€" \chinery and the conversion of ships \ while a further new ship was under consideration. _ Lloyd‘s Register reâ€" ported that since the war the Canâ€" adian Steamship Lines had built here 16 vessels of a gross tonnage of 81,â€" 000 tons. He had no official figures ‘to show what these orders represented in British wages in the shipbuilding, iron, steel, engineering, coal mining ‘and other industries. Col. Amery replied, "It is of coursee contemplated that he will be authorâ€" ized to make representations on comâ€" mercial questions to the ('J&m_dian Government, where instructed to do so by His Majesty‘s uovernment in Great Britain." Mr. Hannan, who, it is understood, represents the Federation of British Industries in the House of Commons, also asked, "If, insubmitting proposals respecting British commercial interâ€" «sts to the Government of Canada, the British ligh Commissioner will have the full diplomatic support of His Maâ€" jesty‘s Government?" Question Arises in British House Regarding Preceâ€" dence Question London.â€"Col. L C. M. S. Amery in the House of Commons, replying to Patrick J. H. Hannan (Birmingham), that it would be for the Canadian Government to decide whether the British High Commissioner to Canada would enjoy privileges similar to those of foreign «liplomatists. _ Regarding precedence, he said, ‘"in the analagous case of the Dominion High Commisâ€" sioners here, they rank immediately after Cabinet Ministers, but not beâ€" fore foreign representatives. The Trade (Cons the d Canada to Decide Status of Envoy Here lies a l« know That love is dreamed Of bodily H 1v€ Tl 1st Mouse: What a queer place to e. How do you manage to sleep? 2nd Mouse: Very comfortably. I en between the ticks! A 1 igh mists BEST FOR ALL YOUR BAKING == Pies, Cakes, Puns and Ereada =â€" DOES ALL YOUR BAKING BEST gleamed lig? whit President 11 h ined, and unattained TICKâ€"TOCK!1 Daphn in 11 LT lovelin Epitaph d whi f the n 1 is de passion f the Board « ne who did not spiritâ€"one who utr, ndon s that faintly hat arms were when the m 8 tten rise de So delighted was Morton with the vigor of the rejoinder and so grateful, that he expanded into unaccustomed warmth:; and Kelsey took quick adâ€" Kelsey was pleased to find that NC could genuinely concur in the little man‘s views; and by his advice and with his assistance a letter was comâ€" posed to the publication, which they were convinced left the offending author not a leg to stand on. Verna breathed a different air. About her was the atmosphere of one reared in ease and fredom and beauty. She had all the simplicity of good breeding. Anita‘s veneer was specious. While he pursued the puzzle, never getting any nearer to a solution, a big, luxurious limousine turned in at the gates and drew up before the enâ€" trance. A ponderous, bent old man emerged, carefully assisted by his valet. Some one important it was without a doubt; for Bristow came down the steps to meet him with joâ€" vial camaraderie. There was an amâ€" ount of luggage which was hastily unâ€" loaded and carried up stairs. The new arrival gave some directions to his valet and his chauffeur, and then preâ€" ceded Bristow into the house, as if perfectly familiar with the place,. He ;»stopped at the head of the steps, though, to speak to Anita Copley, who had hurried forward with smiling, alâ€" most sycophantic deference, and Kelâ€" sey got a fair view of him. Eoo Ee on c en medical journal lay upon his desk in which he had just been reading an article that controverted one of his pet theories; and he seized upon the opportunity to refute the fallacy, citâ€" ing authorities and giving his reasons at length, while he puffed indignantly at his old, black pipe. "I will," said elseye. "But why?" "Don‘t stop to talk now. We haven‘t time. She will be right back." With her usual languid, uncertain step, she moved away toward her chair; and Kelsey returned to the other end of the porch, perplexed to understand the meaning of her reâ€" quest, yet rejoicing that she should have called upon him for a service. The house physician, when Kelsey dropped into his office that evening, happened to be in a voluble mood. A 1 W vien oys ig BEGIN HERE TODAY Loring Ranger offers a kundred thouâ€" sand doilars for the safe return of his missing daughtcr, Hope. He is assistâ€" ed in his search by his good friends, Eustice Highy, attorney, and Juarcz Charlie, adventurer. Acting upon directions from Hopa‘s captors, Ranger leaves a <hunared thousand dollars worth of bonds at a specified place. Charlie stations himâ€" self near the place mentioned in the letter to Ranger and follows the car that collects the bonds. At Dr. Bristow‘s private sanitarium a plot exists between Bristow and a nurse named Copley regardinfz an inâ€" mate registered as Nurse Copley‘s sisâ€" ter. George Kelsey, detained at the hospital, is friendly with the soâ€"called sister. He decides that the girl is not insane. Revolving the riddle as he mused on the porch in the sunshine, his glance strayed from under his down drawn hat brim to where she sat, the everâ€"present elder sister knitting beâ€" side her. How alike the two were, and yet how different. Anita, beautiful in a way, but to him repellantâ€"a woman pursuing the course of her perverse, unscrupulous will. She drew in her breath quickly as he mentioned the name. It seemed to confirm a conjecture on her part and carry considerable significance. "Find out all you can about him," she bade hurriedly, "and let me know." NOoW GO ON wITH THE STORY He knew the girl was acting, but the way she held her pose, never reâ€" laxing for a moment into the normal, roused him to wonder and admiration for her courage and strength of will; and the pathos of that courage stirred his heart. he one say know." came little voice e at t e over Aldern CHAPTER XII the old man that just o asked. â€" He wondered a e note of urgency in her so immaterial a matter. in Higgins, I heard some ie told her. "That is all 1 as ple;as-ed to »find_that he Mes Wirson Woornrow D MLOSTRATEDP By C ® RWSGatreEAFIELDâ€" | this afternoon in Bristow‘s new Rolls | Royce." & ‘;Yes, Doctor," he said; then relucâ€" tantly, as he turned round eyes toward Kelsey: "Yeâ€"esâ€" Yes, he‘s here, Docâ€" "You see," he explained, "all this happened after ‘Hobo Bill‘ came into our lives, and I‘ve always believed that he gave the tip that was responâ€" sible for our rise to greatness." The bell of the telephone jingled, and Morton interrupted himself to anâ€" swer the call. "Found the buried treasure under the old mill, what?" Kelsey yawned slightly. Morton chuckled. "Where the money came from I never knew. Bristow‘s closemouthed and it would take a boldâ€" er man than I am to question him about his affairs. vantage of the propitious moment to strike. ‘By the way," indifferently, ‘who was the old rooster that arrived this morning in such state?" Morton looked at him in surprise. "Why, you know. Or, sure enough ; you didn‘t come here until after he‘d left for Bermuda. That, my son, is exâ€"Alderman William Higgins. Mean to say you never heard of ‘Hobo Bill‘? Well," as Kelsey shook his head, "a half dozgen years ago he used to be a power in New York; about the same type, I guess, as some of your picturâ€" esquely named politicians out in Chiâ€" cago. He started out in life as a tramp, they say ; but somehow he manâ€" aged to edge into politics and cleaned up big; worth anywhere from seven to ten millions, I guess. He stays here when he‘s not off on one of his perâ€" jodical trips. Funny old codger." never knew from one week to Anolnet whether we could keep going or not. Then, all of a sudden, we were on easy street. Bristow began putting all sorts of improvements on the place, buying more land, throwing out new wings, installing modern appliances, reâ€"furnishing, reâ€"decorating, splurging on cars, turning himself out like the lilies of the field, and making the old dump ‘one of the highestâ€"priced reâ€" fuges for fashionable nuts in the whole East." "I should say so," Kelsey agreed. "It‘s the first time I ever heard of a man voluntarily making an insane asylum his headquarters." "Oh, he‘s no bug. Half blind, pretty well broken down physically, but mentally keen enough; shrewd, devilâ€" ish shrewd, let me tell you. And as to his being here, why, he had some nervâ€" ous affection, you see, used to go on fierce sprees and all that, and Bristow got him into shape. They‘re like broâ€" thers." "So?" Kelsey was mildly interested. "I saw the two of them out together Morton filled his pipe and looked over it at Kelsey with a humorous, contemplative smile and a wag of his head. "Yes; some car. I‘ve seen the days when Bristow had to hoof it all the way to the station, if he wanted to get into town." cent sml He stopped at the head of the steps to speak to Anita Copley. â€""Times have changed, ch?" Kelsey was stretched out in his chair. "Not always so prosperous?" werd Cor. Jarvis and Dundas Sts. Every Room With Private Bath Rates $1.50 up â€" Garage at Hotel 3 Minutes Walk to Shopping District. Royal Cecil Hotel me UNIAKIU ARCHIVES TORONTO WHEN IN TORONTO Stay at the ) pros alway r ill lingered seven m p VC Mort per Wh th ar rem: y 1 d iing t} W( tor." After a moment, he hung up the receiver. "It‘s Gristow," he said; "he wants to see you in his office right away." Kelsey flung himself out of Morâ€" ton‘s room and down the hall to meet his anticipated wigging. Sleek and shining, Bristow lounged on the hearth rug, looking down into the clear flame of a birchwood fire. The conference upstairs from which he had just come had left him in the best of humor, and he felt in the mood to play a cat and mouse game with Kelsey, whom he regarded as lamentâ€" ably lacking in finesse. "Ah, Kelsey?" he said pleasantly, taking a chair himself and waving hospitably toward another one. "Sit down and have a cigaret." He pushed across the table a humidor containing various brands in the different com« partments. Kelsey stiffly declined both the chair and the cigaret. This unwonted corâ€" diality made him wary. But Brisâ€" tow‘s smiling geniality was proof against the rebuff. "Do I understand," he asked with exaggerated humility, his mouth still twitching, "that you wish to entrust, not that hypothetical quantity, your honor, but your name, your scientific reputation to my unworthy hands?" "Rather late," he said; "but I was anxious for a little talk with youâ€" about yourself." He was grave now, but kindly. "Although I may have seemed to neglect you, you have really been very much in my mind. To speak frankly, your present manner of life is not good for you; it leaves you too much time to brood." Bristow lifted the letter containing the magazine offer from the table, and getting up handed it to the younger man. "I have neither the time, nor," with a mellow laugh, "the inclination to undertake it. Too much research; too much work altogether. But it struck me that it would be just the thing for you. I would have to sign the articles of course, but that is detail." o Kéfséyysnw himself pulling Brisâ€" tow‘s chestnuts out of the fire! _ Not for a kingdom. es : 0 mrkelsey rapidly glanced over it, but before he could speak, Bristow took up his thread agaip. o He went on, clothing the same arguâ€" ments in fresh phrases; but all the time he was covertly scanning Kelsey‘s face, watching for that quick gleam of the eye which ‘would show that the cther had awakened to the latent posâ€" sibilities within his proposal. (To be continued.) The shaft glanced of without leavyâ€" ing a scratch. "Don‘t belittle yourself, my boy," benignly. "You are, I know, an exâ€" cellent and wellâ€"informed writer." "I‘m sorry," Kelseye‘s tone was elaborately satirical, "but it will be impossible for me to oblige you." "Think twice before you refuse," Bristow urged persuasively. A woman flies from Newfoundland to Europe, and then telephones back about it. If that doesn‘t epitomize the present era,, what does?â€"Chris tian Science Monitor. for Sunburn? Use Minard‘s Liniment S18tat t THERE is nothing that has ever taken Aspirin‘s place as an antidote for pain. It is safe, or physicians wouldn‘t use it, and endorse its use by others. Sure, or several million users would have turned to something else. But get the real Aspirin (at any drugstore) with Bayer on the box, and the word genuwine printed in red: s the trade mark V- istered in Canada) xfi’uun‘ Bayer Manufacture. While it h rell known that Aspirin means Ba oi manu goture, to assure the public AQIDI{ {; tationa W n 11 s1( ung SEOTE Th bHo against imitations, will b: :\:;m 'Eus 0«5 "g.'- u> uen Si n marl T 2. » era,. what does?â€"Chrisâ€" / Monitor | g 4 \| w / pper (to assistant)â€""I an, there‘s a ladder in ¢ «A igs." Exasperated Asâ€" * #1 ‘> Mrs. Carrlie Chapman Catt seeks a million dollar fund to combat what she terms the cigarette evil. _ Cash and Carrie! "that both as a matter of law and otherwise the position is one to be adjusted by the Canadian National Railway and not by the Government." In other words, Mr. Dunning says he is going to keep the Canadian National out of politics. If he takes that stand in reference to railway hotels in Haliâ€" fax and Vancouver, he must logically take it in reference to the much more important question of the sale or lease of the P.G.E. to the Canadian National. It is an entirely proper attitude‘ for any minister of state, and it contrasts very wholesomely with the entirely improper attitude of Premier Macâ€" Lean. Boston fisherman opened the stomâ€" ach of a large cod and found a can of condensed milk inside. Probably an ocean flying fish. ~ Vancouver Province (Ind. Con.): (In his campaign speeches for the British Columbia election which took place recently, the Premier has reâ€" peatedly suggested that he and his Liberal Government are the only peoâ€" ple that can make a bargain with Ottawa about the P.G.E.) Mr. Dunâ€" ning, in reference to another railway matter, that of the projected C.N.R. hotel in Vancouver, takes the position Peppermint Flavor Firestone GUMâ€"DIPPED FIRESTONE TIRE & RUBBER Co. OF CANADA LIMITED Hamilton, Ontario Here is a treat that can‘t be beat! Benefit and plea sure in generous measure! HE Firestone TCumâ€"Dipping process strengâ€" thens the tire to meet the demands of hill climbing, quick stops, sudden turns and high speeds. The Fireâ€" stone tread is scienâ€" tifically designed to grip the road in emergencies. _ You can have this extra safety on YOUR car. Ask your local Fireâ€" stone Dealer. He will save you money and serve you better. Always put a Firestone steamâ€" welded, leakâ€"proof tube in A Strange Argument your Firestone tire Builds the Only 5i 20. o td wernin i0;‘ + SotaiseCapmennieantt . +7 .7 Routes that were matters of week to negotlate with loads a year ago n« now traversed in a few hours. Dog trains have proved too slow in th« mad rush for development over a r glon 1,000 miles square. Bundles of rich furs that have come down by th« slow process of canoe and dog «led from the Hudson Bay Co. for a con tury are now being shipped into Win nipeg by these returning planes, Wireless Orders. Daily wireless orders are received by merchants at Winnipeg for «sup plies to be rushed out the same day by this or that plane. . In sevoral cases this winter injured men have been trangported to the local hospital« by the air route from remote points and last week a wireless was received from the Central Mining region re questing a plane to bring a doctor and return with an injured man. Engineers and investors fror onto, Montreal, New York a1 cago arrive daily, having wired vance for their plane reservatic within an hour after their arri on their way northward. which William Morris founded society fifty years ago has been : Although declaring that this, | sense, is true. The Guardian disp quotes the report as saving: "The need for the society i: great as it ever was, and the p bilities for usefulness are un‘!im Owing to the rapidly increasing fe faclities, the country side is ing on an appearance which b« the war was confined to the sub of great towns. The widening of roads, as well as the making of ones, causes the disappearance buildings to which we have bec accustomed, and which for long y have been balfâ€"consciously adn as fxed features of the lands Where these are not entirely stroyd, they are often left isol and stark among the new, crude unfriendly neighbors . . / ‘"There has never been suc! time," it was pointed out at the n ing by C. R. Peers, Chief Insp« So much competition has troduced that passenger ! plane are not more than fo the railway tariff. For fre charges are proportionately than other means of transy but not so high that fur co mining enterprises and kindr tries cannot afford to pay creased price. The damage which fin« ings in the City of Londo pears to increase cach y ing to a report presented €lety for the Protection Bulldings. which held i: Buildings annual m contained ing to : Manchest Last week and order for deliver 1,000 pounds of beans, a ton of cellaneous canned goods and pounds of bacon was received for livery by plane to Old Lake, 800 n north in the Hudson Bay section jobber who filled the order had . culty in finding a plane without a charter to make the journey. . Be the chip left another order for electric drill ang other machi weighing a ton had been received shipment by the same plane Machines that will carry five of freight and three or four ps gers are in use by three different panies â€" operating out . of Win: From The Pas, 50 miles nort} Western Airplane Co. has a fle #ix machines constantly in use {. mote points north, even as fa Forts Churchill and Nelson, on son Bay. Competition is Keen for of Available Shins Spectacular interest surroun airplane rush into the North days. Men and freight are bein daily into the Hudson Bay coun this method. Trips of 1,000 t« miles, continuous flight, are n common. Everyone Flying in North Country of Ancient Monumer struction of roads, r tric and water supp of our most serious relation of the new bridges. A sensibl« and beautiful bridge ed and widened, wil tle of their ancient 1 forunately, the cons native bridges is sible." Ten athletic events consti decathlon, says & contemporary IJdea of a fine example is und: in an upper berth.â€"Plorence Horald. The necessity for some« authority is urged by M "There are streets in son country towns in which ev is worthy of preservation," "Buch things are nation: ments, but they are at the munipical authoriies. . Loc: ment in these maters is theory than in practice, an be more closely linked with muthority before it can hbe rips of Weeks Duration Are Cut Down to Hours England‘s Landmarks "FUR IS FLYING" a London C ster Guardian, i thought that William â€" Morr m s are national hey are at the m« uthoriies. . Local ; se maters is bet in practice, and i ely linked with a . fore it can be tru r supply sy serious pro e new road ensgible nu: bridges, w ed. will be railwaye aby re Balkans Stirr By Attempt Minister aTT Britain Ba ©1 afla $U t

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