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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1927-07-14, Page 2© b? l^afaQl.oabaiM
thing more than forty, who once must
have been very lovely, who was very
lovely still with the refining quality
that age brings to some women, Her
dress and carriage alike advertised
great rank.
“I take my leave here, since you
have a visitor,” said' Andre-Louis.
“But it is an old acquaintance of
your own, Andre, You remember.
Mme. la Comtesse de Plougastel?”
He looked at the approaching lady
and because she was named to him
he recognized her. He must^ he
thought, have recognized her without
prompting anywhere at any time, and
this although it was some sixteen
years since last he had seen her. The
sight of her brought it all back to
him—a treasured memory that had
never permitted itself to be entirely
overlaid by subsequent events.
When ho was a boy of ten, on the
eve of being sent to school at Rennes,
she had come off a visit to his god
father, who was her cousin. The great
lady, in all the glory then of her
youthful beauty, with her gentle, cul
tured voice—and her majestic air of
the great world, had scared him a lit
tle at first. Very gently had she al
layed those fears of his, and by some
mysterious enchantment she had com
pletely enslaved his regard.
For three days while she had been
at Gavrillac, ha had gone daily to the
manor, and so had spent hours in her
company. A childless woman with
■ the maternal instinct strong within
i if in some difficulty, and then went: her, she had taken this precociously
ion, her eyes upon the ground: “Tell intelligent, wide-eyed lad to her heart.
! —the truth of that event at the
Quick, safe,,sure relief from
painful callouses on the feet.
Atal! and jLv
]D£Scholl's
Zino-'P&di? Fuf one on—fhe
^ain - S°ne
Wilson Publishing Company
World Delegates Will Tour
Canada
Ottawa, Canada.—Delegates from
some forty nations attending the
, World’s Poultry Congress in Ottawa
; July 27th.to August 4th will make a
i tour of Canada from coast to coast
j immediately following the Congress.
Preliminary announcements of .the
tour have been made from the World’s
Poultry Congress offices here.
The tour will be made by special
train leaving Ottawa on August 4th
and covering first Quebec and the
.Maritime Provinces as far east as
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Stops will be
made at the principal places of in-,
terest, particularly from an agricul
tural point of view. The special train
will then tour Western Canada, mak
ing stops at Winnipeg, Brandon, Re
gina, Moose Jaw, Saskatoon, Edmon
ton, Calgary, at a number of famous
beauty spots in the Rocky Mountains,
at Vancouver and Victoria and other
points en route. Upon their return «...__ _______ _
East the delegates will visit Niagara French-Canadian element established - this s-uman. peril.
............................................................................................................................................“ This means that when we came of*-4
« ..... . -..-.M.. -, - . ...........................- — - t
They were a hundred and go at least once a year for careful*
For all
»n«
IB Saves Soflp
Cancer Can Be Cured If Takeil^.
In Its Early Stages, Say?
Doctor
Rtvpld City, S.D.—Cancer can be
eliminated if ©very suscepyble person
over 25 years of age wiCl &o to a do-otpr
once annually for examination, Major
James F. Coupal, personal physician
to reMdent Coolidge, told the Black
Hll!® Medi-cal Association henei.
“We examine our checking accounts
once a month.” Coupal siaid. “Our
health accounts we rarely think of un
til we have overdrawn on -them and na
ture sends- us to a doctor.
“Well credited authorities claim
that from 30 to 60 per cent, and higher
of cancer i® curable if diagnosis of
thia condition, is made early. A
der to point out that the present de- Periodic examination of situations
volopment of Canada was above all where we know cancer to be common
and before-all mado possible by the to the only thing which can eliminate
A SMART ONE-PIECE FROCK.
Every woman'o
Mald-of-nllwork
Quebec and Canada
Quebec Soliel (Lib.); At tho mo
ment when every province is prepar
ing to celebrate Confederation and to
recapitulate the progress achieved
during the last sixty years, it is in or
Falls and the party will disband at ■ on thG scores- ofi the St. Lawrence oue
the Canadian National Exhibition at iluriQrea fifty years before every-. cancer age, from 35 onward-, we must
Toronto, on August 31.
This tom1 of approximately eight
thousand miles, which has been ar
ranged through the co-operation of
Canadian Government Departments
and tho Canadian railways, will afford
prominent visitors from many lands
an opportunity to gain an impression
of Canada’s extent ‘ and resources
which would not liave^been possible
had their visit been confined to the
World’s Poultry Congres in Ottawa.
About three thousand delegates from
the United States are expected to at
tend the Congress, a number of whom
will be included ‘in the party making
the tour of Canada.
body else.
fifty years of rough toil and sacrifice,
of war, ambush, fatigue and some-'
times abandonment. Then was form
ed the real neucleus of what we call
to-day the Canadian nation.
examination of this dangerous possi
bility,” •
Dr. Mayo Hopes That People Can Be
Immunized on Cancer
London—“I am in hopes that means
of immunizing people against cancer
will be discovered," said Dr. William
J. Mayo, American surgeon, in an in
terview here. He is now visiting this
country to exchange views with load
ing surgeons- and physicians.
He cited tho extraordinary results
of the experiments' carried out by Dr. *•
Maud Slye, Chicago woman doctor, who is able, he said, by &elee*iv^
breeding, to breed mice which will inS.
no circumstances develop cancer de- *
spite all efforts to introduce it into
them. On the other hand she is tibia,
he declared, to breed mice which will
inevitably be born with cancer.
“These experiments,’’ said Dr. Mayo, ride, easy to control, BBu Wuu-1 the others conducted by Dr.
OHlical. Stands without a rivals 100 . p n<nr1 Prnfeww W**ir Pa11Miles to Gallon of Gasoline. Price and. Irolcs^or LO.1 Lad
r preven-
of the
Medical science has massive
I evidence to- prove- that the re’it-f of all
I sources of chronic , irritation does
much to prevent cancer and that early
; operations cffe-ct cures.”
J No False Hopes
| An important exhibit at the annual
. conversazione of the Royal Socirty
’ at Burlington House, was in the hands
of Dr. Thomas Lumsden, who was
will come round presently. And then
wo shall want to know where to find
you.”
“At number 13, Rue du Hasard.”
“Tell me, Andre.” She paused, as
BEGIN HERE TO-DAY,
To escape hanging on tho charge
cf sedition, Andre-Louis Moreau flees
Irmo his native town of Gavrillac
and hides his identity as a member.of
a I‘ai d of strolling players in which
h< inn k?s a great success in the char-j
a r--r 11‘ Scaramouche. I
IDs flight has caused him to delay }j
re-enge on the great and powerful r eyaau.
Mart] :is do La Tour D’Azyr, -ni*“
tricked Andre’s dearest, friend, Phil-! brow. *__ —------ ... -
if’-e de Vihnorin, a divinity student,; thought that prompted it. Quite
into a duel and then killed him be- . j briefly he gave her hisrau-c ;>* pmred the idealist’s “danger-; ’ \
t-i.f rii’t <>? eloquence.” C . -- Y -
,l ;>dy of his friend, Andre-Louis swore
fn paon his work of reforming,
tie lot of he peasants. 9 . |
Ffti-r.ircuchj, as Andre-Louis is:
row called, falls in love with Climene, <
df.ugb.’or of the owner of the troupe, t
and lr:
A hat d?
wil! n
treats
)
c n
I
s to forget the beautiful
Kercadiou, whom, he thinks,
•ry the Marquis. Climene
rlu with coldness.
(
Indianapolis Star: That “Ask Me
Another” fad was not so popular dur
in the final examination week.I
mi.
a i
ail
n
0
c
y
1
!G‘.■ H<
Cf;. ■
> th:
f
,p
r <-■
Hy
pa"
to
1:
“Give him to me, Cousin Quintin,”
he remembeed her saying on the last
The request fetched a frown to his of those days to his godfather. “Let
. He suspected at once the {’me take him back with me to Ver-
4-kQnifn failles as mv adonted child.”
Sver the version of the affaixx
------ “That is much what I was told,
she said. “But it was added that M.
de La Tour d^Azyr had gone to the
theatre expressly for the purpose of
breaking finally with La Binet. Do
you know if that was so?”
“I don’t; nor of any reason why it
should be so. La Binet provided him
the sort of amusement that he and
his kind are forever craving . .
“Oh, there was a reason,” she in
terrupted him. “I was the reason. I
spoke to Mme. de Sautron. I told her
that I would not continue to receive
one who came to me contaminated in
N WITH THE STORY.
” Aline said, leaving Andre f
mg to M. de Kercadiou, “you |
ashamed of you! To allow:
•f peevishness to overwhelm!
efr'ertion fo-r Andre!”
> no affection for him. I had
■••t ~ -a to extinguish it. He
j th? devil; and please ob-
don’t permit you to inter-T
J'
ko>
.e and
show 1’
r
1
shoul-
head. He had come
in such yearning,
a final dismissal.
Her face was
shrugged his
hia ~ ’
sly
dv:
Aline.
al 1
and
the
It
mt o
JI
the
war.
j a
lift
ate
as i
T]-.
1
sailles as my adopted child.”
But the Seigneur had gravely
shaken his head in silent refusal, and
there had been no further question
of such a thing. And then, when she
said gcodbye to him—the thing
flooding back to him now—there had
been tears in her eyes.
“Think of me sometimes, Andre-
Louis,” had been her last words.
But all was vividly remembered now
upon beholding her again, after six
teen years, profoundly changed and
matured, the girl sunk -in this worldly
woman with the air of calm dignity
and complete self-possession. Yet, he
■insisted, he must have known her
anywhere again.
The Harley-Davidson Single Cylinder
Motorcycle is the greatest little ma
chine that has been made. Safo to..
I ride, easy to control, and most, ©com I
~I Miles to Gallon of Gasoline. ------Celebrity: “Well, my dear, anything $300. Down payment $100, Balance log-icaOly to the idea of cane
;Walter Andrews,: lion as well as th© discove;y
Girl: “Er—yes, my fountain pen back.” . Limited, 348 Yonge St., Toronto, Ont. • cause.
Getting There.
Returned Tourist (to his friend)—
“Well, I like Paris and Rome, but the
best part of the whole thing was the
trip over. Don’t miss that, whatever
you do, if you go to Europe.”—Chris
tian Register.
/----------•” ’ - . ” ■ - ; *OVU. X/WXA UJ
else you want besides my autograph? ’, ?22 per month.
Girl: “Er—yes, my fountain pen back.” j v"”
This chic one-piece frock will, be
found suitable for all day-time wear.
There is an inverted plait in each side
seam, long sleeves extending into the
ne^J: and gathered to bands at the
Wrist. The smart vestce has a shaped
collar and the trim belt fastens with
a buckle in front. No. 1586 is for
Misses and Small Women, and is in
sizes 16, 18 and 20 jjiars. Size 18 (36
bust) requires ttys I'ards 39-ineh ma
terial, or 2% yard^ 54-inch, and %
yard 39-inch conti-fisting.
the pattern. *
The secret -of distinctive dress lies
in good taste rather than a lavish ex
penditure of money. Every woman
should want to make her own clothes,
and the home -dressmaker will find the
designs illustrated in our new Fashion
Book to be practical and simple, yet
maintaining the spirit of the mode of
the moment. Price-of the hook 10c
the copy.
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
Write your name and address plain
ly, giving number and size of such
patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in
stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap
it carefully) for each number and
address youi’ order to Pattern Dept,
Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade
laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by
return mail.
DESTROYS
Flies Mosquitoes Moths cm
Ants Bed Bugs Roaches * tvith the black band"
MONTREAL
fiolfinfr privileges on some of the sportiest ?n thf island of Montreal are among (the wide
variety of enterainment afforded guGbts of tho -
largest hotel in tho British Empire.
Price 2'Oc
THAT HE HAS SHOWN ME THE“SO PLEASED, MADAME,
DOOR,” SAID ANDRE-LOUIS.
Vernon G. Cardy,
Managing
Director.
4
: granted £1.1)00 a-year in 1325 by the-^
- Eiitish Empire Cancer Campaign to’**
carry -cn his cancer research work for
six years.
] By means of slides- under/ micro
scopes he ‘showed that anti-human
cancer serum applied to cultures of
• mouse-cancor kills the cancer cel’s
within a few minutes, white leaving
tiie normal tissues unrl-amag-ed.
When ask-ad whether the serum hatl
yet been triad on human beings suf
fering from cancer, ha replied that it
had not yet- been considered dcsirabte
to- do- this.
“One must be very careful,” he said,
“not to raise- false hopes. M-ore experi
ments must bo made with animals be
fore the treatment can be applied to
human beings, Many pisopte are will
ing to be> treated, and I receive many
painful letters, but it is essential to
go slowly, step by .ste-p. It is hoped,
cf course', that the treatment may
eventually be appi'ied.” z
One of the most -significant features
of the treatment is that only the can
cer cells are destroyed. The difficulty
has always- been to discover a serum
which would not damage the ^fier
cells' as well. C
Chair of Canadian Eitera|fero
_ One of the first lectureships in
' Canadian literature, perhaps the very
first, has been announced by the Uni
versity of British Columbia, Vancou
ver. Dr. Charles G. D. Roberts, poet
and prose writer, the author of many
books, has been appointed to the posi
tion. This is an encouraging, forward
movement, and Dr. Roberts has ex
pressed his satisfaction at the recog
nition thus accorded to Canadian
writers.
The work will mean Dr. Roberts’ re
sidence in Vancouver for part of each
year, but will leave him free for the
remainder to devote himself to his
writing. On his mother’s side, Dr.
Roberts is a distant' cousin of Rawki
Waldo Emerson. He was borip i»i
New Brunswick, just six mon this IjQ-
fore Ernest Thompson Seton 'was
born in Durham, Eng. Both men ha#
become noted for their annual stories.
Ono of Roberts’ teachers was Dr.
George Parkin, headmaster of tho
who
Parkin,
Rhodes
ft
lubled; but her wit failed-
how she could come to his
His excessive honesty
'1 his boats.
red his look by a glance
us uncle, a faint shrug,
the eyebrows, dejection
her countenance.
if she said: “You see his
■ is nothing to be done.”
with the singular grace
•c m had given him and
the door.
cruel!” cried Aline, in a
her hands clenched, and
:o the window.
1:-’? uncle’s voice arrested'
• ry>
n- her, imperiously
retum. But Aline
flrsed her,, ears lest
him, and sped light- [
lawn to the avenue,!
ci.t the departing’
n
; i
•?d
;p‘
by
>
Everyone Works in Canada
Ottawa, Canada.—More persons are
pmploycd in agriculture in Canada
than in any other industry, according
to a report on “Occupations” recently
issued by the Canadian Government
Bureau of Statistics. The report,
which is based on the 1921 Census,
discloses that the greatest-number of
Canadian workers were engaged in
agriculture, which gave employment
to 1,041,61 persons. Manufacturing
came next with 546,657. t
There were 3,173,169 persons over
10 years of age gainfully employed in
Canada to 1921. Of this number 2,-
683,019 were men and 490,150 women.
These figures show that 47..5 per
cent, of the total population was en
gaged in some gainful occupation.
Of the male population over 10
years of age 77..5 per cent, were em
ployed in some trade or occupation.
Making allowance for boys still at
school and students in the colleges,
practically every able-bodied male in
Canada was either at work or avail
able for employment.
Employment in Canada in 1921 was
divided into three groups roughly
equal in size. The primary indus
tries, agriculture, logging, fishing and
trapping, and mining and quarrying
—gave, employment to 1,161,788 per
sons. The secondary industries—
manufacturing, transportation and in
struction—employed 999,951 persons.
The third group—trade, finance, pro
fessional, clerical and domestic ser
vice—gave employment to 1,011,430
persons.
The report makes It clear that in
Canada no one cares to be idle. Prac
tically every individual is making
some direct contribution to the na-.
lion’s productive and constructive ef
fort.
.. -■ ■■ .■ A ■ ■■■■■: - '- !—
Minard's Liniment tor carache*
Effort Alone Brings Results
Character is the individual’s pe
culiar way of dealing with .Life*
Character is to living what efficiency
is to working. Indolence playa a per
sistent hand in human nature. Effort
Is tho solo reality from which any de
finite result can be expected. If failure
comes,. in spite of added knowledge,
nothing remains but further effort.
We have only to renew effort in the
light of still better knowledge.
An export is one who knows more
find more about less &nd less.-—Tho
Outlook. ».
A few friends drop in on Pa Buzz
FLIT spray clears your home of mosquitoes
and flies. It also killf bed bugs, roaches, ants,
and their eggs. Fatal -to insects but harmless to
mankind. Will not stain. Get Flit today.'
Distributed til Canada by Fred J. Whitlow & Co., Limited, Toronto
are ycu going?
XI
J;'r
:’jcy
• the
alert
came forth wrapped in
■ *.■ 1 from the bord'er-
> path,
riel, joyously almost,
t you to go like this,”
rrelf. “I know thatjVV ___ _
heart will presently I Tour dSAzyr had sworn to him that
•end for you, and he he would cut short that affair, that
he would see La Binet no more. And
then, on the vrey next day I heard of
his having all but lost his life in that
riot at the theatre.”
“Oh, if M, de La Tour d’Azyr has
sworn . . .” Andre-Louis was laugh
ing on a bittei’ note of sarcasm.
Either she did not hear or did not
heed him.
“You do not of your own knowledge
know that it was not as M. de La
Tour d’Azyr asserts—that he went to
the Feydau that night?” z
“I don’t,” he admitted. “It is, of
course, possible. But does it matter?”
“It might matter. Tell me; what
became of La Binet after all?”
“I don’t know.”
“You don't, know?” She turned to
consider him.' “And you can say it
with that indifference! I thought . .
I thought you loved her, Andre.”
<(So did I, for a little while. I was
mistaken. It required a La Tour
d’Azyr to disclose the truth to me.
They fyave their usds, these gentle
men. T?hey help stupid fellows like
myself to perceive Important truths.”
They had reached the lyrought-kop
'he avenue,
the wait-
brought
-I
c.
di
-j.
i.v h ’ b
“ Aline!" he i
“I did r.ft w-
she explained h
L's great, reft
LO’t. 110 Will
w'll ret know where to send.”
“You funk that?”
“Ch. I know it! You arrive in a
b:id mtrncr.t. Ho is peevish and cross-
grained, poor man, since he came here,
lie wosrks hiirsolf away from his be
loved Gavrillrc. Brittany, you know,
was becoming too un.-afe. The chateau
cf La Tcur d’Azyr was burnt to the
ground rome months, ago. And for
this and his prevent discomfort he
blames you and your friends. But he
that fashion.” She spoke of it with
obvious difficulty, her color rising as
he watched her half-averted face.
“M. de Sauntron conveyed my de
cision to him, and afterwards repre
sented him to me as a man in despair,
repentant, ready to give proofs—any
proofs—of his sincerity and devotion
'to me. He told me that M. de La
.■q
IS
ttt:SI H-mWEg®
Wl&Em
DOUBLE MINT - easy to J
remember—and hard to for* s . •* ■ - -* ** jn
get, once you ve tried It« g
Keeps teetli whitey
breath sweet, aids appetite
and digestion « . • f:
S (±64
After
Every Meal
S
Aline embraced her affectionately,
and then answering the questioning
glahce with faintly raised eyebrows
that madame was directing toward
Aline’s companion.
“This is Andre-Lo-uis,” she said.
“You remember Andre-Louis, ma
dame?”
Madame cheeked. Andre-Louis saw
the surprise ripple over her face,-tak
ing with it some of her color, leaving
'her for a moment breathless.
And then, the voice—the well-
remembered rich, musical voice—
richer and deeper now than of yore,
'repeated his name:
“Andre-Louis!”
Her manner of uttering it suggest
ed that it awakened memories, mem
ories perhaps of the departed! youth
with which it was associated.
“But of course I remember him,”
she said at last, and came toward
him, putting out her hand. He kissed
it dutifully; submissively, instinctive
ly. “And this is what you have grown
into?” She appraised him, and he
flushed’ with pride at the satisfaction
in her tone. He seemed to have gone
back sixteen years, afid to be again
the little Breton lad at Gavrillac. She
turned to Aline. “How mistaken
Quintin was in his assumptions. He
was pleased to see him again, was he
not?”
“So pleased, madame, that he has
shown me tho door,” said Andre-
Louis,
“Ah!” She frowned, conning him
?tfll with those dark, wistful eyes of
ier^ “We must change that, Aline.
I wilh plead for you, Andre-Louis. I
r.m a 'good advocate,”
(To he continued.)
She had her face lifted but It
when She got the bill for repairs*
i
gates at th-e end' of ijit
Through these they beheld' ..
which had brought
Andre-Louis, rfOifi! hear at hand
came tho creak of .other wheels, the
beat of other hoofs, an,d now another
vehicle came in sightj and drew to a
standstill. The lady who occupied
the carriage, perceiving Aline, waved
to her and issued a oomnian-d.
CHAPTER IV.
Tho footman opened tho door, let
ting down the steps and proffering
his arm. to his mistress to assist her
to alight. She was a woman of some-
i Minard’s Unimex* tor scaly scalp.
fell
PICYCLE BARGAINS
Now and Sllchlly used, $10 upwards. Transportation Prepaid. Write for price Diet.
FEElltrERS
> BICYCLE
WORKS
I 193 Street Toronto
DHTMOY3
*BS*
*
*
headmaster of
Fredericton Grammar School,
afterward became Sir
administrator1 of the
Scholarships.
Among the early
Roberts are poems
jects after tho manner of Keats,
a long list of works, “Songsi. of the
Common Day,” and “The Book ’of the
Native” stand out in his poetic writ
ings. Among his best-known prose
works are “The .Forge in the Forest,”
“The‘Heart of the Ancient Wood,”
and “Moro Kindred of the Wild." He
has a,lso written a History of Canada.
The University of British Columfet,
situated in Vancouver, has an enroll
ment of nearly 2000 students. It As
sesses splendid grounds and is gradually rearing fine buildings, beMg
liberally endowed. Dr. C. ,’V Klinck .
is president. Dr. Roberts fipont thSnh-
winter in the West, whore ho gave •
lectures on Canadian literature .nd
readings from his own work. ll£
a cousin of Bliss Carmen.
George
Cecil
works
on classic sub-
In
of Dr.