West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 24 Jan 1929, p. 6

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

BLOOR aAND BAY 8§T8, ToRownto Name Train for Business ‘"Weil," he said at last, "you‘ve made a nice mess of it Why can‘t you keep your nose out of other people‘s busiâ€" wess? Why did you have to date my leaving Black River®" ‘Gilchrist could italk freely now:. Clare was gone. a Cmichnmst and Jerry eye for a moment. Then Jer to the table, poured chim and downed it with a‘g Gregg Business Coliege the merning, man as he le “Ta“ him t Cilehmist with 2 tube. "Don‘t worry get you. It m Fll get you‘ A but not eager for arot} he made for the door "My Ged!" It was Stedtman‘s exâ€" pression of amazement as he looked from Giichrist to Jerry, bewildered. Hennig had scrambled to his feet. Paniel .06n€( selicitous)y . the _ itA nig‘s twist This coupon malled to us will bring a Free Booklet malled to you. "Opportunities in Rusiness for Young People." wil out this with "I didn‘t t? she mocked. pathetically : about everyt} And she w saw Gilchrist open his cler and lower his head. "Dani" she said in "you‘re not going to take t} Gilehrist looked up unas "I1 have nothing to S8 swered simply, calmly. It now. Clare started with the blow but eaught herself up quickly when she trembled with anger. With a swift metion he brought it up and with its back slashed Gilchrist across the mouth, a stinging blow. Gilchrist‘s hands clizched tightly, his face colored so that the red mark of the blow was lost, he drew himse]? up as if to launch his whole force at this snarling thing before him. Then, as suddeniy as his muscular frame had stiffened, it relaxed. He bewed his Aead, as one humbled. In his mind Re bad seen a figure and heard a voice. ho pe as Clare U BEGIN e Jewet orry," he muttered. "TT t may be a long time bu: . And be hurried out. m home, Stedtman," said th a trace of tender solieiâ€" e was gone CHAPTER Xil ERRY S UiTtinaT "*K HE. @AQ 8 tOvuroNn athe thing L & B $s 6 ) 33 N YA P // 3 9€ . o by CHANNING G DLLOCK \ 3 l\tv\;:'a‘rlb & R.W . SATIARTILLD B Every tiny leaf is a storehouse of flavour nk you were a coward," Then helplessly â€" and *You seeâ€"1 was wrong ng to take that? l Yss JG ‘Fresh from the gazdens‘ â€"__ WiSTRATED y RW SAtEARTILLD HERE TODAY eyeq each othe: Jerry sauntered wed auversary 1 to his Teet e~ encountér unashamed be around it ~\ enid Stedtâ€" mrned his muscular relaxed. He humbled. In amazement a drink ched hand Jce lA *T 2 4k 0 scorn he an he his ’ "How‘re you going to do it?" quer led Goodkind, doubtfully. "Don‘t forâ€" get there are as many people paid for stirring up strikes as for crushing ‘em. Paid well, too. What the laborâ€" ing mar needs is a real interest in i "I agree with you," said Daniel, ignoring the apology. ’ "I‘d hate to figure out what walkâ€" eut have cost this country," "Yes. 1 ofter wonder why it wouldn‘t be cheaper to keep the men centented." J ARTKEâ€"B@ALN, .. ~ "I‘m dogâ€"tired of Towing with labor. It‘s such utter damned waste! Excuse ~ihank«s," said Gilchrigt, emiling. "If you‘ve really settled this strike," said Goodkind ‘seriously, "our wayâ€" your salary from today is $80,000 a year." ® ute and we‘ll hear the conditions." He sat down contentedly. "Somehow, 1 knew you‘d do it. Jerry says you‘re a philanthropigt, but 1 knew he was smioke began to come generously, "how are things in Black River?" "I! think we‘ve got everythirg set. tled," said Daniel. â€" "Fine. Benfield!! be‘ ud it & min. "Jerry doesn‘t like you n he?" he declared, as he re the humider and passed the Gilchrist, "Net much," smiled Gilch The two men sharec a n puffed vigorously. "Well." said Geadkinad . ht br <d ou "Why don‘t you give it to him?" "How*". By doubling his wages? be more most of "em get the less Goodkinc looked after hiw Thanksâ€" Â¥oice "Here Gilchris The senior Goodkind came from the music reom as though summoned by the mention of his name. "Wou‘ldn‘t 1? Well, you understand| that I‘ve forbidden you to sperk to| her and that goes. If you come here, again T‘ll have the servants throw|} you out, and 1‘ll tell my father why.”l "You wouldn‘t understand, Jérry," Gilchrist was looking off in the disâ€" tance. "Wou‘dn‘t 1? Well, yvou understand mouth shut when I lost my temper? Why did you turn the other cheek?" Aren‘t you?" "Yes." The answer was bland. ‘"Well, you‘ve a hell of a nerve to preach to me about Hennig‘s wife while you‘re making & play for mine." "I‘m not making a play for yours." "No?" Jerry‘s tone was sarcastic. ‘"You expect me to believe that when you admitâ€"Why did you pull that hero stuf? Why did you keep your t â€" "Why f you have | Hennig?" And Because you‘re in love with her said Gecodkind, when the that s n« sig n the name of heaven did to get mixed up with Pearl he queried earnesly. take what I want out of y answered with a smirk. t nodded. ‘s, ‘There is the world. Take want,‘" he said, and then asts, " ‘and pay for it‘" _ h!" mocked Jerry. *"Save biny for those who like it. away from my wife." x t his father as be stalk nb 4 smiled Galchrist sharec a match and nearer and lowered his father now," dared he you much, does he reached fo; up in a min» 1‘ll (6, nuttered cigars to §012%1 And The boy‘s breath came a little short and he theld his head very high as he walked with the Son of Satan into the arena. . . : He tied the donkey :> a stone and set out to explore _the ruing. He serambled over the broken seats and mounted crumbling marble of marble seats, crowned by the gaunt archee, to watch tremendous specâ€" tacles in the arens below. Here gladiâ€" ators }onght and chariot races were run. Here tawny African tons shook their manes. And to this amphiâ€" theatre, twenty miles from the sea, water was brought by an underâ€" ground passage to turn the arena into h lake for naval Ifights and pageants. For this huge coliseum of El Djem was built by the ancient Romans when centuries ago they: conqguored andl ruled all of North Africa. . . . I In 1t,'wher. it was new, sixty thouâ€" sand people could sit on great banks Abdul Aziz looked about him. . . . The place was so gigantic, and it was so lonely! _ The people who lived in the houses must all have been at supper, for the boy saw no one. and he and the Son of Satan trotted up unnoticed to m great hole on one side where the arches are broken down.* Here there was a barbed wire, but the two of them slipped under it and went in. â€" A little after noon the boy saw on the horizon the great ruined building which had made htm so curicus the ,day before. "This time I shall look at it," said Abdul Aziz to himsel{, and steered towards it across the plain. But it was farther away than it looked and it kept retreating unâ€" eomfortably before them, so that the sun had almost set before they reachâ€" ed it. Seen against the wunset glow the great gaunt arches, set in a huge oval, seemed to reach into the sky, making the cluster 0‘ squat Arab houses around its base lock not much higher than toadâ€"stools. | teor s while longer they travelled ’(yn. «. . The donkey breakfasted on some young cactus that grew beside the way, but Abdul Aziz, who had had no supper the night before, was ravenously hangry. . . So he begged | Arab bread and come carobs from an ;oblip’ng farmer‘s wife in a place where there was water. Then they] £¢t out on the long way home. | ‘Abdul in the Desert shee ,!_. "That‘s why I‘m fighting the unâ€" cerer came to his mind. "When the ~ions," continued Goodkind, well \\'ar'n1-5t101!ke\' kicks in the dawn, look careâ€" "_ed to his subject. "Not because I want | fully." to starve the man who works, but beâ€"| He held his breath with excitement cause I want to fire the man who;â€"â€"and looked. / docsntâ€"and reward the man who} ~ There among the crumbling rubble ‘does. I want to give every man a|lay the broken pieces of an ancient , good reason for doing his best. You;pottery jar, and on the ground, in a lcan talk equality and democracy all"gleaming shower, lay dozens and _ you like, Dan, but the minute t},e,dozens of gold pieces, big thick shin-‘ ‘average man isn‘t afraid of being fired |ing gold pieces. *And on each of them | {he isn‘t afraid of being worthless. The| was the head and superscription of a minute you take away the incentiveâ€"| Roman emperor.â€"Eunice Tietjens, in, {the chance to get this"â€"and he waved|"Boy of the Desert." ;a hand at the signs of wealth that| m=~" . surrounded himâ€""that minute you reâ€"‘ > ’m ‘duce the world to a common level of ‘common indifference and common| = futility." | aris ""‘N;W %rkfl ! | ‘"Right!" agreed Daniel again. l <€ | "That‘s the idea," beamed Goodâ€" kind as he picked up the sheets. He flung a cocky look at Benfield. "I told you I knew my man. The Lord knows he‘s full of theories but sometimes theyâ€"‘ "They may seem a little radical," he said, "but I think I can show you they‘ll save money in the end." Daniel drew a folded paper from his pocket and handed it to Goodkind. "Right!" agreed Daniel again. "Have another cigar!" chortled Goodkind, well pleased. Gilchrist wayâ€" ed the one he was smoking just as Benfield appeared at the door. "Come in, Charlie, said Goodkind. "Gilchrist‘s settled the strike." _ \iCnmesws seliled the strike." "Good." said Benfield, but with a skeptical reserve. aC "They‘ve got to be little m:en, too, Mr. Goodkind." "And they‘ve got to be satisficl with little rewards. We can‘t all have the same bankâ€"roll any more than we can all have the same health. That‘s where vnions go wrong. When you tell a man he‘s going to have the same reâ€" ward whatever he doesâ€"not because he‘s got ability, but because he‘s got a union cardâ€"down goes the standard, out goes incentive, and to hell goes the whole social structure." "Right!" said Gilchrist. approvingâ€" "They‘ve got a notion that you get rich by riding aroundâ€"in a }imousine." ‘"Don‘t you?" Daniel asked quietly. "Not eften. Not unless you think while you ride, or your father thought for you. Even then, money doesn‘t stay long in bad company. To hear those fellows you‘d think there wasn‘t any work except what‘s done with a pick. The man who really produces is the man with the idea." ‘ "The man who produces most," corâ€" rected Daniel. # { ‘"Yes. and he ought to get most," said Gcodkind,â€"firmly | â€" "He coes,"*came back Gilchrist. | "He always will," assented Gooilâ€" kind. "Show me a big man asd Ull show you somebody who‘s dore a big‘ job. It‘s the little man with no caâ€" pacity and no chin who cries about a conspiracy to keep him from being president." "They‘ve got to be little en ton. they want to do for thai." a y rage appeared an adiated confidence a e continued.) d Gilehrist, approving the typewritter he stopped short. Mhat‘s this?" is feet and a face that moment beâ€" issented CGoodâ€" and ¢ man asd I‘ll _ W o‘s dore a bigistre n with no caâ€" east ho .cries about him im from being the it ~ You know defini #taircases. â€" He DISTINCTLY UNUSUAL 4A # 0 _ o " e u. ... Christies Biscuits J¢ se » camp he; 4DG 42 inches bust. (It adapts itself e:;“ ?f::lc;:o‘):, h;,'peau%ifully to the season‘s new fabrics ~right he heard ayib Â¥ich printed rayon velvet, plain of stones. Quekly{®heetr velvet, lustrous crepe satin, rection. â€" There ,'n‘supple woolens in new featherweight, he saw the Son of‘ar.d the lovely silk crepes in tweed, his héelsâ€" in his’modern'fstic and novelty weaves. Patâ€" ind out of pureite”{ price 20c in stamps or coin (coin hoofs against the‘Preferred). Wrap coin carefully. % e flooring. As the! LOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. heels thrashed out! Write your name and addrers plainâ€" a sharp crack like‘ly, giving number and size of such ing pottery. Then| paiterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in andfather the sm'-'slamps or coin (coin preferred ; wrap mind. "When the‘it carefully) for each number and : dawn, look care-znddress your order to Wilson Pattern Ifiervic *, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. h with excitementIPatterns sent by an early mail. ‘ Letty: "She swears she been kissed by a man." L isn‘t that enough to ma} swear?" Haughty Fatherâ€""So you desire to | become _ my _ sonâ€"indaw ?" Rlsingl Young Man (frankly)â€""Oh no, 1 don‘t; but if I marry your daughter;l I don‘t see how I can avoid it‘" pick?" Beggarâ€""Well, ma‘am, it goes according to the seasons. I pick strawbherries in July; in August I pick hops; in September I pick pockets .and the remainder of the year Ladyâ€""What is your trade?" Begâ€" garâ€""I‘m a picker, ma‘am." Ladyâ€" "A picker? Tell me. what do you | ved J, 17 , )‘ |WICL WIID Not milK | Proved by 34 years of growing popularity Minard‘s Liniment tor Grippe and Fiu Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Conada) indicating Bayer Manufecture. While 1# 18 well known that Aspirin means Bayer manufacture, to assure the public against jnita» tions, the Tablets will be stamped with their ‘"Bayer Croes" trademark, To break a cold harmlessly and in a hurry try an Aspirin tablet. ‘And for headache, The action of Aspirin is very efficient, too, in cases of neuralgia, neuritis, even rheumatism and iumbago! And there‘s no aiter effect; doctors give Aspirin to childrenâ€"often infants. Whenever there‘s pain, think of Aspirin. The genuine Aspirin has Bayer on the box and on every tablet. All druggists, with proven directions, Physicians prescribe Aspirin; it does NOT affect the heart Made by The Canadian pick No Doubt About this Famous Cereal â€"_1C6 DuUsL ‘It adapts itself ly to the season‘s new fabrics printed â€"rayon velvet, plain elvet, â€" lustrous crepe satin, ovlens in new featherweight, lovely silk crepes in tweed, tic and novelty weaves. Patâ€" High value at Jow cost Ideal for Winter with hot milk : you want. Enclose 20c in coin (coin preferred; wrap Eut s! . ‘ oakum SPIRIN ‘ Lotty make ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO ny £i n Well V @1 Shredded Wheat Company, Ltd. She wouldn‘t want him three other women weren‘t get him too. "Which is one of the slowest things on earth?" asked a schoo! inspector of a boy. _ "Influenza." remarked the boy. "Influenza," said the inspector, "how do you make that out?" "Beâ€" cause it is so easily caught," promptâ€" ly answered the boy. CANAD!IAN CORRESPDONDENCE j COLLEGE Use Minard‘s Linimen* for the Fiu (Juniors and senlo";)i f in Three Years A fifteenâ€"yearâ€"olid boy did this straight from Entrance. A farm boy of 18 not only did it but took 16 Honors. Ask for "Stories of Success," and reliable adviceâ€" is XING sT. BaST. â€" Tomromro Li . 0t P HAFL â€" TOEO] George (nervousty): "I‘d like best in all the world Rose, to marry you, but 1 don‘t know how to propose." Rose ({promptiy and practically): "That‘s all right, George; _ you‘ve finished with me. Now go to father." Lt.â€"Col. a. C MATRICULATION C. Pratt, President ®oon 4, if two or trying to he mo Agricuiture and cattle raie the chief industries of Veq Bouth America, which covers . at large as the Province o) One ‘ As Sir Malcolm Hailey, Governor of Ithe United Provinces Afia and Oudh, ih“ recently pointed out, however, the fate of the independent princes of Inâ€" dia is in their own hands. _ *"The guarantee for the permanence of the lprinc(:\«s’ rule," Sir Malcolm said, "lies ‘less in the protection of a sovereign power than in the approciation of their Iown subjecte." â€" Sir Macolm | here ,touchen the kernel of the gituation. If the princes can so broaden the basis of their rule as to render it ac ceptable in the future to their peoâ€" ple in the gradual political awaken ing that has begun, their dynastios may be able to survive. Otherwise, soonâ€" er or later, the whole system they reâ€" present must pass into the limbeo of forgotten things. . No suzerain powâ€" *er whether in India or in England can, in the long rur, maintain them in auâ€" thority. _ Lord _ Oliver‘s «question may have more than one possible anâ€" swer at the moment, In the end, the judgment passed upon the Indian princes must be the one which they bring upon themseiver. â€" Editoria}, Ehristian Science Monitor. In answering Lord Oliver the Marâ€" ,quess of Reading holds that constituâ€" tional reform should be a gradual deâ€" velopment from within, not an imâ€" position from without, The princes themselves naturally object in the strongest possible woay to any interâ€" ference with their powers. â€" For the same reason they are apprehensive that. the . somewhat shadowy superâ€" vision hitherto exercised over them by the Government of India may get to be intolerable if that body becomes truly elective. The solzxtion they have been urging before a committee of inâ€" vestigation which has been sitting in FEngland under that able Angioâ€"Indian administrator, Sir Harcourt Butler, is that they should be taken out of the jurisdiction of Delhi and transferred to that of London. No. anathematician likes arithmetic Oe vmawp P aratt Agriculture is that their powers ought to be reâ€" stricted so as gradually to fit them into the scheme now under discussion for making British India selfgovernâ€" ing r Lord Qliver, one of the representaâ€" tives of Labor in the British House of Lords, has been asking in that Asâ€" sethbly what is to become of the semiâ€" indeperdent princes who now rule autocratitally 70,000.000 of the people of India, when the time comes for the remaining 250,000,000 to be given deâ€" mocratic institutions. His own view The Future of The Indian Princes If correct, this means that, under certain conditions, two €lectrons, inâ€" stead of one, may #simu!taneously "Jjump" toward the centre of the atom and «end out an Xâ€"ray. A furthe: study of this important field seemms likely to add valuable data with reâ€" gard to the structure and behavior of atoms. | Although Xâ€"rays are invisible, Xâ€"ray _ apectrograms can be made by suitable apparatus and much spectrograms show lines analogous to those found in the visible spectrum. These Xâ€"ray ; spectrum lines have been lmown for many years. According to current :atomic the8ry, they originate as a reâ€" ‘suh of the falling or "jumping" of |electrons from the outside of atoms : towards the inside. _ The "satellites" which the Cornell physicist is investigeating are faint lines lying close to the more intense Xâ€"ray lines. As a result of a careful study, Professor Richtmyer has found many new satellite lines and, in a reâ€" cent paper before the National Acadâ€" emy of Sciences, has suggested "the possibilityâ€"to be tested by furthor experimentsâ€"that the satellltes may be due to twoâ€"electron jumps within the atom." Although atoms, the smallest units of chemical clements such as oxygen, gold and silver never have been seen, belief in their existence is supported by a vast amount of evidence from physics, chemistry and astronomy. The Cornell research is one of many excursions into this field and it is | producing additional data in support | of atomic theories. ‘ Dr. F. K. Richtmyer, professor of ; physics, one of the authorities on Xâ€"rays, working under an August ‘HWeckscher grant, is studying the "saâ€" tellite" lines in the Xâ€"rays spectrum. This work may be visualized by comâ€" paring it with a photograph of the spectrum of visible light as made by a speciroscope, an instrument which acts upon a beam of light in much the same way as rain drops act upon the sun‘s rays in producing a rainbow. Such prints, usually called spectroâ€" grams, frequently contain sharp, transâ€" perse lines which reveal the kind of substance from which the light has emanated. Ithaca, N. Y. â€" Announcement is made at Cornell University of results obtained from stidy of Xâ€"rays that reveal the possibility of atoms. Cornell _ Scientist Suspects More Than One Electron May Prompt New Light Behavior of Atoms Under Xâ€"Rays May Solve New Secrets VENEZUE LA it Te dg are of Venezuela, covers an area P «bd Oluré D t 1 j Great Byrd M M @10 d Can and Bikling most po and yâ€" devotees old thr forward of the fir skier mer im a k in ak 64 light 10 M

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy