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Durham Review (1897), 1 Aug 1929, p. 2

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A printed (repe de chine that wsll prom . smart amnion to your sum- mer Wardrobe Tuck: at left hip cre- ate a charming swnthetl movement to Ikndeflle the hgrsre. The skirt has grouped plain " left side 0 Bare the but. Neckline Also tapers to left side in diamond treatment, which all com- biem to carry out I vertical line to hnethen the itlhouette. The bow at necklino with long: scar! ends 1: youth- nu. Style No. 551 is designed in rim M, Is, 20 non, M, 38, 40 and 42 lulu. but. Printed voile in clash. check in blue and white will make up lovely, and will prove an economical chow for warm days. Shantung, rill broadcloth, silk pique, printed rnjali, polka-dotted dimity, georgette crepe, and shamans also fashionable. Pat- tern price 20: in stamps or coin (coin preferred), Wrap coin carefully. Quebec Sole“ (Lib): ln business, Britain and its politlclane have no untument. Britain ie always out tor the main chance and takes it when n an unit it. Still, nation. are like peo- ple. sometimes it pays them to give " n moderate or Immediate 'rotit if there are serious grounds fog believ- ing that by doing so a better preritt or one lasting longer may he ohtelned. London he - been all. to nee this. Nor yet has London learnt how to behave with strict loyalty in its dealing» with the British Dominion. union In not tuned to pend to no he doetr‘lne of imperial eolidnrity funnier it was n question of ex- peneu to pay or responsibilities to the, but has always torgotten to pru- tice what " preached when it wee n emotion ot getting benelte out at the Irltiah Comm-wealth. The United lludom de-tttt as its due the Bri. en. prelerenee. but melee no honee u let-nine it to its urine". Write your more and adding plain- ly, [Bung number and sun of such pattern.- as you want. Enclose 20e in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap n carefully) for cull number, and mum. your order to Wilson Pattern Srrvue, " West Adelaide St. Toronto. l'attuns sent by an early mad. The 'Selhhtess" of Britain HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS llll - not. rvttlteArydtefiurite. pest. ED DISTINIITIVE LINES You will - In: can “thus“.- he. IAIADA than you will In. cheap no lit-alll. $tiiiiiiii'ili'?lt, 'l'mh “the gardens’ , Ho proved on. of the most tear. leu clean and became one of the In! Aces. Serving right through the war with only Might wound; it was to: him to ehotme " tho and of the wan-between a brilliant civilian career nd n humble place in the service ot the Church. Rejecting an ttoers, he returned to his studies and upon their completion he was ordained and went straight out to Papua, where he became fame; as one ot the most gentle and charming ot the Yule lg. land priests. Ace Renounces Brilliant Career and Returns to Dangerous Church Work Sydney, Australia-How comes it that rare visitors to the wild and r+ mote little French mission Itatlon on Yule island. Payne. and, carefully tended in the small cemetery. a brass cross placed by order ot the French government over the grave ot one ot France'- war hero-ttttt ttrinql, ace who destroyed thirty-six airplanes and balloons? it is a story that the mission rath- ers tell with pride and sadness. Father Bourjade was a brilliant schol- ‘ar. as well as a great hero. and the outbreak of the war lound him study,- in. tor service under the Sacred Heart community. At the call ot that, he started in the ranks, rose rapidly to a commission and enter- ‘ed the dying service. The stillness and cglmness ot the desert is noticeeble here, and the scarcity of birds and wild animals adds a touch ot remoteness to this water hole used by the Indians. in early summer the mourning doves appear in pairs and tty in trom the desert or. swift. rhythmic wings. How daintiiy they drop to the pool to drink ct the cool water, and how gracefuily they whit away through the blue "r Prom a vantage point among the rocks on the rim one can look out a short distance over the tawny plain and down upon a water hole cupped In the sands ot a low mesa. At the Brat glance the 11nd wane appears dull and monotonous. but " unwise "rilight.tittted colors are re- iUttted in the shady JON, and more brilliant hues wink and 'reintillate In scattered patches out on the level plain. When the sun has been up but a tew hours there comes a haze of dust on the horixon. which rises higher end grows larger with each passing moment. A faint noise rises from the billowing cloud and at last the or. scuring murk tioats have"! and a lock ot sheep surge town-d the water hole. The bleatinx becomes loud and discordant; the baa-aa ot lambs in e lower, fainter hey comes from the rear, the patter of little feet on the sand and the shrill barking ot a do: adds to the din; and yet there is e semblance ot order among the thirsty noel. A squaw, with a stout its! in her hand, struggles behind the dingy, surging mess. and two dark, ben- headed boys astride a shaggy donkey come slowly so the mesa. The privations and risks in those tropical islands make them Oni' or the outputs of Christianity and, to the sorrow of the natives and his rather priests. the t1rlttg ace was destined after a tow you!“ “but to fait u victim to the deadly bleach water tour. With a mapping ot drab, ragged clothing and the (latter ot a red headba'nd, the “can: pass among their Meeting. may charge: and turn the band expertly to the water hon The: boulevard toward the desert. The dust and noise are'over, the land relapses into its nun] culm- Ieu. and the water hole ot the Ninjas again becomes a tranquil 'oot.-"The Dasert." They apparently had not. met tor some the. They were alum: in the gleaming, listening to the Innate-s roll ot the swim; so: below. F V-And just ‘tancy ion being in the 3mm um I lived In! week," no murmured not”). Brass Cross Marks Papuan Grave Of Aviator Priest 'cFaGeiiiel the young mam} commercial (runner; "it was odd, wasn't it?" v "I did," “Skered the rotttti gal- 0' . "I? "IV. FOI'IIIIIGM w lanuy. "1raidto mysell, 'Why, hart, ----"-"-T--"'-" m. where Ma's-mm “in?” l ISSUE No. 30--'29 "Did you think ot me?" asked the sh) not. um: ma. l At the Water Hole Not Fdrgotten ED I With or without imminent. ‘ Suckling In the Ohur Wave Method ittf Permanent lelng. (For ladies 1 who are.) "You can’t affirm that no positive- ly," Kent said; "nor em you give up the idea of an outsider merely because I didn't see him make his getaway. Of course he would hive disappeared silently and in the darkness of the shrubbery, and I'd stand small dance " acting him at all.” "Yes, sir, and I do discard them. i've thought over that nurse, but she never would have shot and then turn- ed on the lights. In the dusk she would have run away." Dobbins looked uncertain again. The man seemed to have little initiative.-- yet he was rated a good detective. But, as he had said, this case pre- sented so many possibilities, had to many sides to it; and Dobbin was In val-nest inquirer rather than a bril- liant dedueer. This f1ippaner irritated the arm of the law, and he scowled harder " her. "Be careful, Miss. Have you ever heard of contempt of eourtt" "No-what'., it meant" "It means that if you treat lightly the inquiries of a dtteetive.ry Ire liable to fine and imprisonment" "This is discarding the theories of Miss Turner or of In intruder from outside," Ezra Goddard summed up, thoughtfully. "Pve got tn interview more people," he sighed as he rose "Bat I know where to go for information. I'm tro- ing for some now-and if I'm not mis- taken, it will throw some light on a "Oo! PM so 'fwaitly' But though Dolly pretended frtppttrtey, Dobbins could see she was seriously disturbed. "Danger? How conic?” -and the slangy child snapped her little fingers in the deteetive's face. Dobbins found it-was neural-y to take strong measures with this dif- ficult chit. "And to," he followed up his advan- tage, "unless you see ilt to tell me whatever I ask you, I shall have to report you---" ‘ question was snapped at him. bish." . “Why did she take the trouble to carry it to the Falls to dispose of itt" "Oh, it wasn’t any trouble. _ We were out for a walk, you know-" l "Not much it doetm't.'" Dobbins re- turned. "The truth is, to put it plain- ly, one of thou: two people shot Mr. Raynor. Both know which one did it. Neither will tell unless if one confess- es, then the other will. If Mrs. Ray- nor fired the shot, then Mr. Finley picked up the pistol afterward, and rubed on the fingerprints. If, on the other hnnd, the shot was fired by Mr. Finley-Mrs. Raynor saw him " the; stood " the west door. But they both} know." 1 Sanguine of nature, the -deteetive went off and went straightway to the home of Dolly Fay. That young peison sat in a swing on the lawn, and with a word of greeting Dobbins sat down beside her. "Now, young lady," he said, trying to intimidate her by I fierce scowl, "you are to tell me all you are keep- ing back about Mrs. Raynor. If you don't, you’ll be in danger yourself." "You were with' Mrs. Raynor when she threw a parcel into the Falls?" - /'Atsy; that was only, a bit of rub. "Had you ever Been that parcel he- fore?" Douglas Raynor is found shot through the heart in the early even- intron theloorofthesunroomo! Flower Acres, his Long Island home. Standing over the dead man, pistol in hand, is Malcolm Finley, former sweetheart of Raynor’s wife, Nanci. Eva Turner, Raynor’s nurse, Man g by the light switch. In s moment Nancy appears, white-faced and terri- hed. Orville Kent, Nancy’s brother, comes in from the south side of the room. And then Ear. Goddard, friend of Finley; Miss Mattie, Rarnor's sis- ter, and others, enter upon the scene. Detective Debbi-1 heads the police in- vestigation. An autopsy reveals that Raynor also was being systematically poisoned with arsenic. Dobbins makes to arrest Nancy, and Finley “con- fesses" to shield her. I Permanent Waving ft By Experts tlist) When you via" Toronto ddn't fall to tttttttt one of our famoul Permanent Wave. at the Reduced an. of $6.50. 2M YONG: STREEY, TORONTO Write for Booklet "WP on the care of a “up Wave Penman} Wave. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “What do you want to know?" the Save the Price of Your Fare to Toronto BEGIN ROBERTSON’S HERE TODAY Dolly was friendly with the old man over his "specimens," which always interested her. She didn't like Gan. non-didn't trust him, but she had a natural bent toward the science he fol- At last, aatisfied with her examina» tion of the specimen, she turned.to leave the room, when a word or two from the men on the pore hbaught her ear. Gannon and his visitor fell into an absorbed conversation. Dolly, inside the room, studying the new moth, heard the hum of their voices but paid no heed. "Wha's Jour everlnsing hurry?" asked Lionel. "Youhre enough to live on-rltaven't you?” She had done her best to keep faith with Nan, and if that old detective had discovered anything, it was not her fault, she mused. As shdesune to old Gannon', house, that worthy sat on his little porch, smoking his pipe, _ - _ -- The old man remained on the porch, and, when a few moments later Lionel Raynor Joined him there, he had quite forgotten Dolly’s existence. lowed and had spent many hours lis- tening to his discourses on the habits of water-beetles, or the varieties of dragon-tties. "Did you get the new night moth?" tsht_asked_as she, paused before him. "Yep. It's in the ease." He jerked his finger over his shoulder, . mo- tion meant as In invitation to go in and look " it if she chose, and curious to see the new specimen, Dolly ran into Gannon's house. "We're lucky to be rid of the nurse," Lionel was saying, "she could have made trouble. I made her see it was best for her to tto-and go quickly.” "Yes; bu I don't trust you especial- ly; and besides I want to get my boodle and go to South Ameiiea. It's long been the dream of my life to study tropical insects down there. You fixed off the Turner woman, why ean't you " on me?" "I will as soon as it's possible. I hate to seem in too much of a hurry to take possession.. And-pm sorry for Mrs. Raynor--" "Softly! If you get hit there--" "Not at all-it isn't that. But I don't-1 ean't believe Mrs. Raynor shot Dad-Mid if she didnt--" He went away, ttnd Dolly, torn and shaken by the experience, started to walk over to Flower Acres and talk to Nan about it. "That's all riiht," GGmin sa'id, grumblingly. "But what about me? When do I get mine?" "H she didn't, who .did.' That lover of hers-Finley. It has to be one of the two-you know that, Lionel." "What About Peters?" “He’s all rittht--gone to California." "Well-PII tix up the financial mat.. ters " soon as I can, Gartnon-tust don't hurry me. Where's the-the- you know?" “It's all right." _ "Havea't you destroyed it yet?” "When you meet my demandtr-a'll ~cusider yours." "Oh, you Shyloch! I tell you I'11 ‘x things " loan " 1 ear." "Don't worry. It’s all talk" "And the other?" Dolly was unaccustomed to lying, tmaeeustomed, also, to being question- ed by a detective, and, " she spoke the untrue words, her red lips quivered and she burst into tun. . "Go away!” she cried. "Wait n minute, was Fay. Try to realize that for you :0 tell the truth will help Mrs Raynor more than for you to conceal anything." 'V“What do you vine"; by tf', a don't believe you'. Take me Mrs. Raynor, then, and ii she gives me per- mission, I’ll tell you all you ask."_ - But this plan by no means suited Dobbins, and, too, he had found out all he wanted to know. There was a mystery about the parcel. It was a secret between the two. Dolly had promised Mrs. Raynor not to tell about ib-therefore, the parcel of mor- phine was of importaneo-it was no old rubbish to be tossed away care- lessly. Dolly was game. "No," she said, stubbornly. N never now it before." - _ Miami's Llnlmont M "We're lucky to be rid of the nurse." “Safe, too." "Well, so h i, so long. I'll go right now ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO to no hiya mutton. Bull with l - who HIM Dad." A A“Yon're mighty a)Petionatt towed Always an on door girl, Dolly studied the habits of the little crew- tures, and by reason of Gannon's in- fluence had turned her study espe- cially townrds birds and the Inger in- sects. Butterflies Lad moths faseinat- ed her as well Is the water Giea. So her presence in Gannon’s house was always welcome and unquestioned. The old woman who kept house for the hermit liked Dolly but paid no at- tention to her comings and goings. (To be continued.) "Theu would you mind walking up and down my path a bit; it's so un- even, and I haven't got a garden roll- mud you when he was an!" “I m: forget that if I have " his property. And, I tell you a fellow m’t no hi: father murdered in cold blood without getting hot about itt" There wan no gaineaylng the tact that P.C. Roberts was an outtake. HI: feet covered quite a large area when placed together, and they left deep Impressions where he stood. Bo perhaps the little girl who was spreading sandy gravel over the gar- den path may be lorgiven, tor, as the worthy omcer passed the gate tor the second time in tive minutes, she ran across to him. er." She accordingly slipped out n the buck door of Gannon’a little house, and went l roundabout way so that the old man shouldn’t see her. Unversed in the ways of wicked men, Dolly was intuitive by nature and sagacious beyond her years. The more she mulled over the mat- ter, the more she began to feel sure that the missing will that gave the Raynor property to Nan was conceal- ed in Grim Gannon’s house. She dir. trusted the man-although she " mired his eruHtion, and was grateful for his kind instructione in the field she was deeply interested in-that of natural history. Lionel Raynor went any, ad Dolly Par, Renting . atew mystery, felt it would be better for her to de- part unnoticed. She couldn’t quite bring herself to think anything. so terrible " there two men planned to destroy a will, yet the fragments of conversation she had caught pointed that way. She didn't quit; know herself why she Soot than precautions, but it Wat, in the back of her head that the con- versation the had just overheard was o" importance, in some wny, to the Raynor use. . Moreover, she gathered that it re- (and to the will of Mr. Raynor, and that then wu some wrongdoing on the part of somebody in connection with that will. "May I ask you something?" she In quired. "Ask away, mlaaie," beamed the constable, and tuck’ed his thumbs into his belt. "My friend," he said. "you are in luck's way. I see you use our matches, and my Brm has unmarked me to hand over a guinea to every man I meet who produces one ot these boxes. Here's you: guinea." "Here," said the Scot as he came up. "I tttocht there wad be a catch in it. Ye’re awa' wi' ma matches." A stranger In Aberdeen stopped tt man in the street and naked tor I match. Reluctantly and silently the other handed over his box ot matchel. which the stranger examined with interest. He passed over the money and turned away, leaving the astonished Aberdonian gazing at his windfall; but he had not gone tar' hetero he heard the other shouting to him to stop. MInard'u Llniment for Neuralgla. 40c Lunch or Supper a Speélalty YONGE sr., Opposite Eaton'. Hotel Ram: 31 Per Day and Up Where The Catch Came WHEN IN TORONTO SHIELDED EAT AND SLEEP AT SCHOLES HOTEL Just As Good The: shall I nee it not too great, nor small. To wit my spirit and to prove my . powers; Then null I cheerful greet the ta. borlng hours. And cheerful turn, when the long “More an At eventlde, to love and play and rest. Because I new tor me my work ig best. Let me but do my work from any to Let me but and it In my hurt to say. When "mm wishes beckon no our”. “This Is my work; my Messing. not my doom; Ot all who live, I an the one try whom This work on best be done In the right way.” Lumiunmmnw-mhm " this. neuralgia. or headaches when relief is swift and sure, thanks to Aspirin. For 28 years the medical profession has recom- mended it. It does not affect the heart. Take it for colds, rheuma- tism, sciatica, Iumbago. Gargle it for a sore throat or tonsilitis. Proven directions for its many uses, in every package, Every drug store today has genuine Aspirin which is readily identified by the name on the box and the Bayer cross on every tablet. IT',?, folly to suffer long from neu- .f.c., -....-.J...:.. -_ L‘_J‘-L-_ In. Toronto Hospital tor incurable- m ntiiiiation will: Bellows and Allied Hospiuls. New York am. after. h three "are Couru of Taming to young women. having the required education Ind tie-iron. of becoming nurse); This Hospital hu rumpled the light-hour WI?,'? The pupils receive uniform. o the School. I momhir dlownnco and traveling expense. to and- trom New York. For further lni’ormuginn write the thtperlntendent. loom. tn roaring market place or trawl! ambitiou- worker " out" an LIN Maurine. Business " a whole-um or part-Um. bub. dar, In tMM or forest, at the desk or trtreeiat Box 356, G.P.O. Toronto 2 NURSES Opportunity No Capital Required Write at one: to contracts ulna cum. to men ot mum and y In this tNetrlet. tte. -Van Dyke, in "Forbes." ‘Lady of Eighty I Gives Her Views I On Old Age Benn." umment be not ratifted thin month, Fume must pay out $700,000,“ or Inlet the consequences M befall I nation that repudintns its most solemn .4ttrtieations. Wnahingtoas Post: France’s ngrcc- meat with Great Britain requires her to m an Inch pro rat: to Britain u in paid to America. If the 8400.000.- 000 dee on August I should be paid to tho United States, France must pay atrprrt “00,000,000 to Great Britain 9 debt account. Thus. it the Mellon- But in the meantime he has been able, in the domestic sphere, to set on foot great hygienic and agricultural reforms. Simultaneously, in the sphere of foreign ntrairtr, he has concluded the important Nile Convention with Great Britain. These accomplish- ments are to the soon of Egypt and to the good of Englo-Egyptian rela- tions; and this growing cordiality be.. tween the two countries will certainly stand Egypt in good stead when the time comes, as it shortly will, for the raising of two more important prob- lems which, however. are international and outside the Anglo-Egyptian ques- tion-the revision of the Egyptian customs duties and the abolition of the capitulationr. It ia_just a year ago since No- hansed Pasha Mahmud became Prime Minister of his country. Under his government the Egyptian Constitution has been suspended and King Fuad rules through his Iinistry without a Parliament. Egypt is thus at the moment being ruled abnormally. and the treaty question is wisely being left in aheyance during the suspension of the parliamentary regime, which lo- hamed Pasha Mahmud says he does not intend to psolong a day longer than is necessary. Important Egyptian personalities are visiting Great Britain this year. The Egyptian Foreign Secretary has come and gone and is returning again; the Prime Minister, Mohamed Pasha Mahmud, has also arrived and has been ofrieia1ly received by the nest Labor Ministry; King Fund is expeet- ed on a private visit in August. Thus time visit- nro eloquent of ehantted times in Egypt. Five years Mo, when political tension between the two countrieu was " its height, such coming and goings would have been, it not impossible, It any rate the occasion for endless agitated ru- mor, centering nerimoniously round the prospects of an AngIo-Ettrptiatt treaty. J “Tho writer in long on.“ to oo- clu that may ground among the seated ”center-Vol up nightly-um. at until. moi! In and wiiI Tim and, III. on theretorq ”out with the howls“. of “at. not with the coniecturo of then. on the wou- uu sud strength. on an loam ud- nilu of old "o."--) nun nu- ding, in the Come-awn: Review. “Nothing help. u nod hadn't. Ibdicaio his throne with "new! dignity like love dud appreciation of his luccessor". when Lady [Ann kidding in the Conumponry Review. Old People Can Extract De light from Exuberance and Certainties of “This noble condition cu be reed- ed by old people retain; to may the you; in e temper ot ieelone ama- ien. The, an only do thin when the, rally Accept the not that the“ newcomere meet think. on: end do most things diilerently tron to. their pre-deceaeore thought. aid and did them. The focue ot young and old eyes dilere. The role colored vie- ione of youth may. one: ell. be me! than the blue-tinted can ot their enoeewrs. Indeed, some of the let- ter Inn: have been color-blind "Old people can extract delight no well no entitlement from the cum nee end - eerteintiee ot youth: and that helm them to judge in ob. Iurditiee and inpauihle whim-I with tenderneu Did not they too. in the due of their twenty years. believe that they were celled to do wonder“! thing-3 To rectify the mistaken at the previous attentions? To (err iah the world with a higher mun-e ot ethic; sociel reform, comm-lent. art, literature? "the not that then anyone-o long ego Med In untrue should make them very gentle In their uno- turo on youth. They know well el- ouxh that discipline will tone the new seller-(Ion he eternly " it “no. In grand-wreath. Youth. too, meet drink the cup ot Me. Youth. too, In “no. will prove the thth of the were time. will prove the truth ot the ooet'e "' . . . Though the earlier groove. Wttielt ran the laughing lore- Around thy lane. no longer muse and press? What than“. about thy rim, Scan-thing- In order grim Glow out. In [aver mood, obey 1 the name: are“? "With the “the: of that nom- edge before him. up. does we" to Mretr {utterly Ion to than; I gilt which reaps I rteh reward ot warm. alectlon trom the youthful throng.” Egypt yhrirta Eng- " 't6ao.lr.i'0"" "I ."R"'m. - - nreu. no“ the nudism? when The French Debt Youth m. In also. 1- In city not " Neruda dent ( the wo pruned mint? The add nu mm th tr " ttmor " Wit nt " " Aw c Font 00060! I not .. " art, In.“ Hun-aim than OW an." ml: I nkn wor" HANI M Add

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