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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1927-06-30, Page 8COINS 0 elekrileatiotnpsinfik Corns, tand`r toes and pressweef tight eheate �.o pads #84.1:1241-4' + •• D Y verywome ie Meed-et:oi1 work �a BERGII'SMAIL I .M.1 Lei uX DtivI8SON POST, .,.CHAPTER 1 ai' idle said. "They were harder 1T'I. Passing a centre-table,as by-inad- vertenco, `she turned down a photo graph frame. ' The simple, unconscious act caught the man's attention, and when he was alone he picked the thing up and turn- ed it over. It was an odd, battered, silver rain, enclosing a picture of him- � 13 • self cut cut of an illustrated paper. `� • p c ore was ye ow w age an tomake tta Then she gave his arm a little s ueoze. ."Ien't the postscript heavenly?" He thought the fingers were on his heart. He could hardly read the dim; .printed lino, • ' "And.if.you Dome over and lick .the k Yankees, I will love j(ou more.hetter." He felt himself going weak ell over. Then, far out in the city, he heard the, cackle of a Machine gun, and he got himself ;in hand. "We mutt See what this thing means," he said. "How doom one go up?" 1 and he indicated the housetop with a gesture. her hand She- pointed out the way, on his arm, now with a firm hold, now eliding alomng the sleeve., And, en the stair, step by step as they went up, the man felt this soft, Caressing hand fingering his heart. fl g'eing On the housetop the soldier under - was s�ti ed. Islam had .risen and her in- ver- irs numerable hordes,,,swarming like woman had n -ever w u eraUle letters pretend- min, helAthe city.,; The vrl�ole desert, had got'inn m under pretense of honor Mg to be, but this was the Anly one. {heed entered p And here it was an'April flower i to the sacred carpet been cunningly reaching him. in .winter. Here was' `The procession had and,red-mouthed, delayed, and the English' regiments; youth, dimpled finer trooped , se 'arated by the crowds of people, pulling at him, a coolg were being cut to' pieces. Soddenly err wedged in, they were at the ,mercy of the `Arab kr_ife. {n faded ink. It show- Thie the only love -letter. that any ol- nrkod around written down, lay across a chair. " The picture of a woman in it caught the 'man's eye. It was the picture, in worn-out middle _life, of that, wonderful`' woman whoin he, had met and loved' while the pinto of broken bone pressed on his brain. I -le, read the notice under- neath. She lied died sitting in the window of the English hotel at sun- set. And all at once he realized that from that hour, from the,moment ant the horse -fell in the wet street, .every in- cident and details -the girl, the rising the violence, the splendid love idyl of hia life—had been figments' of the; fancy! And vaguely, as -from a distance, les heard the big surgeon going on: "!Beautifn operation. Sire Henry.. We shall' have you in the saddle at I{hastum do a fortnight."' (To be continued.) • him the m n d iLt r " Achievement" He the gess remembered' distinctly the very' flay J•(S. mail trucks, displaying that a marked copy of this paper had s which read: ''The Peopie come to him,' sent out by an adoring eted States by Alt Mail Con• aunt, , hada carried t had ,v n1 L e ppear r inn Cl p d ed a smart young officer above a le- Q gend of Brilliant fryrn 000 let The brilliant achievement •his:hoart. 7lonel Lindbergh when he cls- the rather'_ cleve'r.. handling of mom . around • a at the guns in a hill fight.'. It' was-:a_.tiny Ile felt that he was But he saki rom- 1 from elle Memphis fi folly. . on Navy Yard. How much , war and the correspondent wss:rriak muting any i "dent "It is Charming., Press wn remember how many he might keep it ways, but { }land's trying to as tr - t it Hew Y i s u n to Press c. 0 • how p les ped P pP ear now It a of k h had beehi: not that - ate' o d e eu when i, ag h w r..on ,-•• regular railroad-' izig,a11 he could of every• nc1 that I Ls� He held the thing a moment in his He wished to ask for. the lettere dad at [s I bopping across. the Atlantic, Y d he put it back gently ing to think of some •way, , Lindbergh made a contract' a lifetime, and a n anha�ttan -clipping bureau. to 'on the.table;' face down. d�enly, in. the direction of the anodal, r any newetaper'stories con- ic flight. Faithful, the bureau two freight cars fu'li of41'1p-. Immediately the girl carte a tea-tray. She could not find a serv- ant in thehouse but'; she was not dis- turbed. She was flushed and smiling; her velvety brown : eyes danced, and Telegrams -wwere delivered to the c0ers of her inauth,mnde little Lindbergh in Washington, dim s. 1pe In the man's humming head the thought paeoed that in Eastern ooun- clan Ports for Canada tries this slipping away of the serv- ants meant something serious. Things ec Chronicle -Telegraph: The like it had preceded the Mutiny. utilization of home ports for j • But his mind was in another guar: - . trade oe 1y object whens "ter•. Did she know him? His brown Appeal strongly to the citizens hair Was shot with gray now; there pand the, and not merely to was hardly any brown left in it Hie and the Maritime mostPdirectly, jaw would look lean and bony; the stand itoe benefit . the trade ng which increases trade places of his face would be flattened: pars; to build up ais beneficial greater what she had brought in with the tea.. ss at Canadian ports is a prat• She slapped the bray onto the table • ay of contributing to the in- and put the thing into his hands. d prosperity of the entire Do It was atewritten t e hero msheet tro anblue-ruledy book, the words painfully printed, the ost the V onl y thing ' women's letters uneven, "r" and "w" always a s leave to the imagination is head caller than t'are-ah'hres.and 'double - . makes them so expensive. I „ in with a gun boomed• He had been folding the letter up, turning it -in his fingols, trying to think how to ask for it, and so did not see the girl go over' be the window. red Now c y. He put the blittleof paper down and croarsed at once to liner. Immediately lie .saw whathadala� re- ed her, When they had baa Et'. the car, they had left the gate Iocked and now figures were slipping • in. An Arab in a white burnoose was pushing the gate gently open. He was stooping over, dnd carried the dagger bayonet of a German rifle in hie lean, brown hand. `Behind MEI was a black face, and a blue caftan after that It is the strength of England in the East to set flrat and masterfully. Ten - tering meant what the booan knew wat this m of the gun meant, and he hesitated no frac- tion of a meMent. ,.grep.meyde"! lie said, and hewent out of thQ room and &ten the stege. In the hall he leaked about an in- stant, as for a weapon. There was but on a rack by the door with SIR JOHN, A. MACDONALD Canada's First Premier, whose term of office began shortly after Confederation, the 60th anniversary of which is being observed this year. , -. Born' Glasgow in 1815, he migrated with hia taxa/ in 1840 to UDpgr 'oda, where re Choy settled at Kingston, He was educated at the Royal Gram•. year Scleol, which he lett at the age of fifteen to enter a law office; and Wee called tothe bar at the age of twenty-one, Atter eight years ofpeact he was elected to the Legtsiative• Assembly of Canada in 1844, and continued to represent, Kingston in parliament untilhis death in 1891. 1110, drat term of office Wes in4847-8 as Reeefvei Geners'al In the Draper adnzinistratton. By 1857 11e had become Prions Minister in the Macdonald -Cartier -ministry. On the defeat of the Tache -Macdonald administration In 1884, he was a prime Mover in the formation of. the "Great Coialition" designed to carry through the plans for Co7idederation; and after' the resignation of George Brown in 1805, Macdonald was the chief figure in the discussion . and bringing' inauguration ute tome of the British North America Act, Therefore, at t this. Dominion in 1807, he was selected to be the drat premier; and by force et his genius he heldtheposition, with the exception of lffackongfa's five years of offee, until his death. crops and walking: sticks, there was a heavy dog whip with a long plaited t had goneover to Islam; they war lash. He caught it down se he passed.; forming here and there under the He crossed the garden in great' g cnsopt rThmari stood motionless, every rites 'aalmaa a°, Toronto. /Or free oaaanPt0a British Settlers for the West Saskatoon ,Star (Lib.): The prairie Farces. iprovinces in the past few years hale settlers front Great F'aea; settle fewer lead v received Kitchen -Made 1 ne cana'lders from Continental Europe, especially race it i% notreasonab e 1 when a tell tho g The Canadian ,Race' Lib. )1 ) • s '(In { Manitoba': Free Pres Several newnpaPers, both East and. West, think that there, is no Canadian "Farce" used as a French culinary Biltain an dtho 'United Staten that race, and as 'there ie -i?o Canadian 1 to ask that ua rie thterm s in other Canadians be permitted to at it 1s. in the same language family from alio Scandinavian andthat' they are of: as the identical D+pg7lsh ward, though,w.estern or north-western countries, °Duane enumerator s eleoma many ,oE their Canadian social origlrr• Witlr thio, ' . connect en are heartily w i rsod in ( i .. one s l da abh h 1 horott Y En •-I s t g the g it � having �ecome prosper view the Free Pres he rather inelegant word the 'Rest. But if these race, g Thou• stand for. t r ,greatly: rho la aro of mixed 'origin, &a lane t 0 outnumber of Canada :o� continue 11 c "'stuffing[ and the merest sic 'potato .or tomato ,can be filled I]nglieh•apeaking immigrants It is only emacs yf,Persons living here aro-the baled p blended "farce," a' matter oP time until, the basic stock ;descendants of parents who were with -a deliciously i that the becomes a minority... •... It would English, Scotch, Irish,' Welsh, French,• ends per; andT ece p sn h addu Ca viae. anistar ndina binof o c CO1r1 ge.� a s a thrifty :French cook may have at be. to the-advantag- , Get m n, hap. Similarly, a farce a the the- ado if ,a greater number of farm set 'sons do not belong to the tIng'lirtb race, the Irish race, the Scottish, of - etre has but a shadow of : s plot, but tiers iid from brought here, aking countr9oa any. other race. They are a new Pec• is stuffed se .full of ridie>$ue ;Cpl- ca - _ pie, of mixed origin, born in a new mucin dia?ren s that itE them are the sons and lives and amusing W Wall of China land. Many o , cries- The Car881t: of French dI that has been on lives up to its name . Few .peoplo.realize what an almost daughters of stook 80 ears. These'-, on: along a this continent for 0 y time •, The culinary term, '"forcemeat,". i perfection condition prevails a o 6 to literally "stuffing meat" or a "farce, I large• part of the great wall lllrofa Chifirna. people nd belong and the O memo 0 race such as the French would° prepare oft The brielts of the parapet meat mixed with other ingredients. as ever; and their edges have stood should know It, —y and used as a stuffing. "Pormnee e the severe climate of North °lino im er Investigation____,. ee terra,. 0 rest, wheahmens s, tare laman Whet 0. e' ale g the t p of the wall is 00 smooth Woric of Th scarcely a weak. The paving . . . ""--- d seen an 'restaurant During, investigations into the mei baked potatoes, scooped out stuff. `that one may ride osier it with a chanical and physical properties of ed with a "farce" of meat, fowl, mush -,bicycle, and the great granite blocks, Canadian woods by the Fewest Pro- ri a oi' thelike,moistenednd brown-�, with tcloselY Weed as when put in plea e ducts Laboratories, Ottawa, upward rich carica anoof 60,000 tests and determnations• ed. "Tomatoes farcies" are stuffed .earth ofOthisewall &is 1,400 ,The it have been made. The data gathered. tomatoes. The economical French 1 g and wife carefully saves all the in -tis twentt•two n feet high, intervals 'twenty are of wide indhiatriti applicability,. house anal, are available'to all Canadians. tenor of the vegetable and sometimes one hundred thickyarda or s'p there aro interested. only tts skin is led[ as a retaining wall for the "farce." itowera some foray feet in height. with the theatre instead of tiro kit- predecrmers. citizens Of!egRees There surely ie a:0anadlan chem Tho French word, "fsiice" ou., farmers and 5sthese newcomers A large section of the people' THE' HEAVY WHIP LASHED HIM. The city was a pot of sound. TheI map saw instantly that the regiments were lost. `He looked out, southward, toward the' citadel, and under his eyes there leaped up a long crimson blur and, above the innumerable events of Cairo, he caught the smell of fire. Moreover, the native regiments strides The creatures in the gate muscle tense, his face like ren The hesitated and orewded together, only fingers oEnglandtt5were slipping he thd• Arab advanced, the dagger bay- onet concealed 'under hie burnoose. of Egypt! But the courage end the contempt of Then a cool, firm hgnd ente" ed his the Englishman mastered him, as the owe, .lie lookeddown some sotcareand, awliito ll et ee, front and `menace of the advancing keeper master° a snarling beast with its hell of sounds became a thing He, struck out with his weapon, but unreal, He saw. only the girl who the heavy -whip lashed him, cutting stood beside him, straight, slim, lithe, his face, hise was his driven back.s And I hair bbankedl as a around Ther face• dark He lke a ding, detail a momenteat crowding trough the lashes her every the Whole lava-feater- noted qr ieite of And the gate troop most mysterious, the most irresistible H like j he bol He Shot the bolts and made the gate impulse in the world seized him.` He fast Then he felt a thand he glrlipped turned swiftly, and caught her up in his through his arm, and r. beside him. Her face was full of As their lips met, the .girl's arms ar,; Thera ohead, the chin 1"weet out body seemed tond m oltrinto hisn. rown,rto fiery t the possethert. of him, of every nerve velvet out, r and the teeth set an the' of become every blood drop, of every fragment velvet underlip.of his flesh mid her "It was fine! They were afraid!" • kisses. seemed to murmur' in his heart. broken with shemid' again, over, the man felt "Ola, my love! I shall be with' you And that heavenly warmth, Het- figure in always!" the soft light seemed rounded out, Her "You oame an . ugly cropper,`beer slender face gleamed like a. flower. Henry," said the big surgeon; p' And lie wanted to take her in his unconscious until we`got the bone u arms and clutch her to his mouth. He The man looked about him. He was felt, in a sort of panic, that 'in a'I in wtase arra English ish some hospital.aAn rderly y moment his head would go. "They were Only a pack of dogs," ,taable The surgeon was smiling; a he'sai t Words seemed to steady him, newspaper, which: he had just put "TWE COLUMBIA" Little the Fathers of (lo lag OfJlede in• 1758 irud 1807. d uN,.i UA. Ur i✓!, y•. (;¢Ill 7itr's tniu rVilil 1,1t tion" dream of this .mighty Country. 1 n U 01 Centre of Canada's Confederation Celebration will be firmly fixed in the public mind, wonting basis. This yiol'tl eecreamtion THE NATIONAL CAPITAL The Ottawa attitude i that'govern- ion parliament agreefl- prvem the period o[ acustornarY meat or public expenditures for the lea of a Federal District to thesion •wttli fl fiery recently, it watt eta s provement and beautification of the coneeiFaably wider powers than pas• for the people of Ottawa, as well as sty should not be 'construed other mammal by the older body. end a larger those resident elsewhere, to.regard the than as efforts to dignify the chief annual fund far improvements. legislative city of the country, and Within the period since Confedeeer Capital as the favored child Political gods, past and present,. ot the tion Ottawa has grown from a lumber add Co the prestige of the nation as ..below 20ber "Not our Capital, but yews" town of considerably expenditures designed to oto "Ciro cur, whole. even indirectly, were resented in other Is oleOttawa interpretation which the papnlatiou Into a beautliul and mod lonalitea and it tips a commonplace to city is seeking to impress, And in this ern city of well over 120.000, exclusive read or .hear that Ottawa' was main• it s sincere, for while the Dominign of the neighboring city, of mit Within Wined by the presence of the .anisic- paxliamout had done rirnch for'Oftaws, a ructus 05 three miles from the eLtY the city in its turn hoe ea©riftad'manY hall are some 150,000 Souls: VisiCora five buildings1i54 and all grab an esa snore are impressed with the outs. did public, mat aI 8p ed. heat gradually a moire millions. of (Wilms ib taxes and other natirnal spiait.and outlook has develop wars in orde1' that the •country, later- and .other butldinge of the 'apital,, ed, ect1Y, eh benefit. with her Olean streets, her widespread. Ottawa `was' probably the first city hdr excellent transportation. to rrest that it owed a duty to the Native, as had often been said, has system, reek of the 'eater u ,and it set about done much e of her site. ere unrivalled tlral' lino, ueban. and and lir;, facilities, and otherwise, her fight. -progtressive veoit1188. creating a better irndratbrdid. 1 its beof l t.io to iposltioti, at home and abroad. It is of ihasize much has been in doneilsre been 1Browel ofno booms have marred �r1tllv.ueun'er its ideal of a national caps 1 alma in ate Watery, and specs, The Ottawa improvement of m �heroprogalerss. and saite1ie Capital al us de - the' theeth e at say the., new movement has only begun. 'Wilfrid one . of tae area harom ron marked, and hem 5lio conception of Ottawa as the Caai• years,. Lauriirnited funds, to beautify', gressti from 1895 onwards her pro - cauda et tnl The the ctyntry and not merely- an tears, -with 1 ld ch ns } is net. city, Ilse grown in Payor, and the outer fringe of the capital with has collections t:Cob'eferi to the seat of gov. 11le i lea. 01t0 too much le assert the ea so reality of c given anti parka, hn this CauPetleratiou celebration the idea in ronlQly given the whole scheme a ornment in toi31fu of justifiable pride. Ile --"Don't you think my dancing, imloroving?" She—"Yes, yours making huge strides." A Pebble was the , Cave Man's Candy! It kept his mouth moist and fresh on his hot,'roehy road. Calling on his sweetie,` he took her a smooth, white stone! Today, to,// make a lasting, satisfying/impression, tako her 9Vritrley's. rdLEV �NCW , i1 tr 'f•.•.. �tt ilii w e THE._CANAI)A or 1867 Compare the Canada at Confederati on with the Canada ell to -eta