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The Sylvan Lake News 1926-01-08 - 1938-12-29
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Date
1938-12-01
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Transcript
Physician EADY 1ELP ING per throat or sneezo a GO TO WORK MSCULLOUGH UM NEEDLES York has lost five esumably by theft. ntained altogether f radium worth, at bout a couple of from its value in prise of various chiefly in the treat- For this purpose jous clinies for the gnant disease, pos- rams, worth, at nate, about ' 700.- st the Clinics or sd the element al- igure. dium for the treat- e element is place: platinum-iridiun so many mi are inserted into laced close to the uted. The constant from the radium is, In institutions is sufficient, con- 10 or more grams sed. The effect of fo the rays from a - equipment. treatment of cancer her form, This is s from radium pro- paratus called an There are several Canada. The plant. ice of hollow glass collects and filters emanating from 2 um bromide, These assembled in tiny t one-eighth of an These, called radon din the growth to may be left there. ed in about 30 days. ium, in seeds, bom 2 same. As already n rays kill the can- is ig done without o the normal cells the reason that can- nerally less resistant normal cells. and production of west Canada within effected marked re- price of this valuable remembers wh hundred and twenty- Vlars a gram. Seven upply for one of our yas secured for about Now the price i: The enterprise of jd their associates in and production of t Bear Lake and the a refining plant at ntario, deserves the of every Canadian m is, according to ige, essential in the Canada is able neer. emand. te: Readers desiring set of Dr. McCul 7 articles at once ame by writing to ague of Cannda, 105 onto, Ont yt Matter Much has often been asked lion? An authority to answer it by saying ican billion is a thou- hile an English billion thousand million not much difference if they f dollars for most of see it. body breathes more than it consumes food eriod. THE NEWS, SYLVAN LAKE. ALBERTA 0 THIS TO RELIEVE PAIN AND DISCOMFORT OF A COLD Follow Simple Method Below Takes only a Few Minutes When Aspirin is Used 1. To ease pain and discomfort and reduce fever take 2 Aspirin its drink a ss of water. Repeat In 2 jours, 2. If throat Is raw from cold, crush and dis- 7 solve 3 Aspirin Tab- lets In Va glass of water... garglo. Eases Pain and Discomfort and Sore Throat Accompanying Colds Almost Instantly The simple way pictured above often brings amazingly fast relief from discomfort and sore throat accompanying colds: Try it. Then see your doctor. He probably will tell you to, continue with Aspirin because it acts so fast to relieve discomforts of a cold. And to reduce fever. This simple way, backed by sci tific authority, has largely supplanted the use of strong medicines in easing cold symptoms. Perhaps the easiest, most effective way yet discovered. Demand and Get gt; ASPIRIN * TRADE-MARK REG. MAN? ?S GOLD Courtney Ryley Cooper Courtney Ryley Cooper. WNU Service. CHAPTER VIII. Continued watch what you're saying Jack; down the lak: exclaimed. McKenzie Joe eyed him. he answered coldly, you'll find thought an awftt lot of you. One of us has got to go? ure, the older man sald. T thought that all out over there in the bush. But before I go, here's That gold find s ve sald cnough, Jo Sure. I know it. But remember you dangle just a little hay in front of a horse to make him follow you into a corral. You're bein led into something. Jack Hammond lunged angrily to- ward his partner, only to be con- fronted by Jeanne Towers, a queer, desperate expression n her face. Kay Joyce merely stood still, her lips lvid, her eyes strangely narrowed. ho Northern girl braced herself. Get hold of yourself, Jack, commanded, rr Slowly, Jack Hammond moyed back. There was a long silence. Then the younger man asked: Well, Joe, do I buy you out or do you take my share? He can't have your s snapped. He's got to go McKenzie Joe looked about him. Uneasily he wiped a shaking hand across his lips. T guess the young lady answered for-me, he said. Jack stamped into) the cabin, to return almost as quickly. He held in his arms four heavy moosehide pouches, lumpy with gold nuggets. It s everything ve got, he said shortly. Sign up and get out. Jeanne Towers Straightened. Jack she cried, You f00l yott fool Then with a half sob, she whirled and ran back to her cabin. CHAPTER IX. More than two months had, passed since that morning when Jack had walked drearily back from the lake, gaunt with the weight of strange, foreboding sadness, Once the heat of their quarrel had begun to cool, memory had, to a degree, at least, brought about a truce in the bitter- ness between McKenzie Joe and him- self. The signing over of the neces- sary papers which had put Jack in possession of all the claims had been done in silence, it is true, but not taciturnity. Write to me sometime, Joe? Jack had asked as the older man took his departure. Sure T'l be glad to do that, she ret Kay Jack. If there's anything to write about. And say Yes? Don't hold it against Jeanne for what she said. Me n Jeanne have always thought a lot of each other. /at was kind of natural that she'd take up for me. Of course, Joe. The older man had looked far glassy smooth, and with drifting, imaginary islands float- ing in mirage. For that matter, she's always A lot it's flat, with old scratches on it more'n she did of me. scraped out from ledge riffles in the main body of the stream. It never came from gravel. I know it, Joe.' The older man had looked at him keenly, his eyes sparkling, as if he Then I was lying? asked Kay. were about to say that this was just She swept her glance suddenly to in- the trouble, that Jack didn t know it, clude another figure; Jeanne Towers But he only replied: had rounded the side of the cabin. Well, I guess I'd better be getting Kay glared at her, then turned back on better be takin advantage of to McKenzie Joe. I lying Yes, you were lying, Joe answer- ed quietly. Joe Take that back Never mind doubling your fists, Jack, the older man said. Answer me, was) this calm, Old Sapphire gets pretty nasty sometimes. Yes it does, Joe. Impetuously he had put forth his hand. Shake with me, Joe? The prospector had shifted his I could canoe paddle suddenly and turned to, Kill you the best day you ever lived. nis former partner. Then had come But I wouldn't. And I'm going sitence, except for the faint grind of) gettin out of here. MUSCULAR RHEUMATIC - PAINS ACHES It takes more than just a salve to bring relief. It takes a counter- irritant like good old Musterole soothing, warming, penetrating and helpful in quickly overcoming the local congestion and pain when rubbed on the aching spots. Muscular lumbago, soreness and stiffness generally yield promptly. Better than the old-fashioned mus- tard plaster, Musterole has been used-by millions for 30 years. Recom- mended by many doctors and nurses. Made in Canada, in three strengths: Regular, Children's (mild), and Ex- tra Strong, All druggists, 40 each. callus against callus, the jerky intake of heightened breath. There had been no other sound; only the swish of Joe's moccasins as he had centered his weight in the canoe, and the soft dip of his paddle. After a long time, the ripples had rolled smoothly into glassiness again; and Joe was only a tiny silhouette rounding a faraway bend. ; - So now, two months had gone by. It was early September, with the: nights beginning to be sharp with frost, the foliage of poplar splashing the deeper green, heavier growths with floods of gold, the grizzly wan- dering the berry patches on the rock slides, and night coming out of the hills more quickly and for longer dur- ation. Yet time had only brought Jack the deeper conviction that Mc- Kenzie Joe had been wrong in his suspicions. He was frenzied these days for: gold. Early morning found him at his placer workings on Loon Creek, and Kenning were testing out the with an extra man engaged to help Ah-itis a grand idea sweetening my morning cereal lt;I with ( BEE HIVE. his two other employees with the gruelling work of raising the gravel from the pit which ran down to the bedrock gravels, and himself labor- ing hour after hour to shovel the piled-up earth into the ceaseless flow of water of the sluice boxes. There was something in. his efforts which amounted aimost to desperation; big work was going on aboye, where he geologist's theories, and men must be paid, especially up here, north of 58, where labor brought a dollar an hour, Jack and Bruce Kenning were partners now. Only two things could break the continuity of Hammond's labors a trip to the upper workings or the announcement of a clean-up from Kay's claim. She had just called to him that the flow of the sluices had been halted. Pretty Good Nugget, He Said at Last. Jack Hammond dropped his shovel and went upstream, Kay appeared excited ag usual, herself taking a pan and filling it with a part of the scrapings. Hammond bent beside her at the stream, where, dipping water, she began the work of reduc- ing the conglomerated residue of the rifles to tangible loss or gain. There: beside her, as the pan slowly twisted and dipped and raised ang circled, it came to Jack that Kay had learned much of mining in the short time she had been here, Now she spoke. casually of pockets and faults, of pay gravel and sedimentation sud- denly he halted. The pan had been cleared, the girl had given an ex- clamation and was bending over it, pointing by a nod to a nubbin of gold whieh lay there, Jt's a knock-out, Hammond ex- claimed, picking out the serrated piece of mineral. Then, as though the better to appraise its worth, he: SooScratching ELIEVE ITCHING In A Minute Brea the mort stubborn Itching of ecxems, bloteben, pimples, athlete's foot, rasbes and, other akin erup- Quickly yields to Dr. Dennis cooling, ant fis, quid D. . D. PRESCRIPTION. Its gentle footbe the irritated skin. Clear, greasclees and staln- Tem ries fast, Stopa the most intense itching, ln- stasily. A de trial bole at drug mores. proves It Semontty tack. Ask or D.D.D. PRESCRIPTION. 28 he was confirming had pulled out the true nugget gold and tha ) not the mate stone, had to a degree flattened them ket for his 1s magnifying glass. le him, Kay talked on of h hopes. She couldn't underst said, why th more put Ly claim didn t pan out values, Day after day, the out- seemed the same enough for 3. enough to keep the cottage ving and to pay Mrs. Carewe, the woman of all work Ha exp but little more. Again hardly heard her, firmed jay sine ve was ightest indication of sniper That had been a serious charge, It had meant that Kay was pre- tending to find gold when suen had not been the case. Why she Should) do this, Joe Britten Had not fully explained. He had only. insisted that the tiny flakes and nuggets were sniper gold, gleaned by scraping along the flat, ledgelike rocks of the true current of Loon Creek, where, acting in the same manner as the rifles of a flume, these ledges had picked up stray bits of new metal, washed down from the hills hy spring freshets. The old prospector had in- sisted that they were not true nug- gets, thatthe force of water, driv- ing them between thin ledges of) and so marked them that the eyes of his deep experience could identify hem, thus making it impossible for har claim. Hammond himself had not been given a chance to 100k; Kay, in her anger, had thrown them But here was no doubt that Kay's acquisition was true gravel gold. The same had been true on two-score other surreptitious investigations. It was as though Jack Hammond had) put Joe Britten om trial, and day after day was repeatedly proying him guilty. pretty good nugget, he said at last. It must be about a penny- weight. All of which helps, the girl an- swered, with a casual shrug of her shoulders. Maybe I'll get down to real-money-some-day you never can tell Nobody can, with gold mining, Hammond answered. After a time he returned to his own labors, again feverish, again criving in his inten- sity. He knew that this claim of his was beginning to weaken; the nuggets were not as large or as fre- quent as when he and Joe first had slashed into it. Doggedly he told nimself that it could not, must not,/ flash out. There must be money to keep that work going above, and he knew that Kenning could not furn- ish it. In truth, Kenning was pro- viding little in the form of funds; they had thrown their holdings into one pot, share for share. But the cash to keep development going must come from Hammond. Kenning made up for his lack of it by his advice. (To Be Continued) Work In Even Temperature Big Automobile Plant Has Way Of Heating Open Doorway Although the big door near the end of the assembly line in one big automobile plant is left open fre- quently, workers do not suffer from winter's chilling blasts. A curtain of hot air keeps out the cold. A huge rotary fan drives air through steam- heating coils and then downward to the floor through a narrow overhead vent extending the full width of the door. The warm downward current excludes the outside air to a large extent and mixes with such cold air as does filter through. As a result it is possible, even in zero temperatures, to leave the door wide open for the passage of new cars while assembly men near by work in an eyen tem perature of 72 degrees. Popular Mechanics. Spiders are not insects. They have no antennae, such as all insects h and have four pairs of legs to the in- sects three. A scientist has estimated that all the clouds on earth rolled into one would weigh 613,800,000 pounds. Cheese is milk coagulated by the use of rennet, an ingredient fre- quently used in infant foods. Stores of Japan may sell only one cotton or leather article to a cus- tome 2283 them to have-comefrom Kay's gravell FREE FOLDER FOR PRACTICAL FAMILY GIFT THIS YEAR IS A JOHNSON CHORE-HORSE This Chilstmas, make the entire family hapy with the comfort and convenience of a Johnson Chore- Horse, the practical Gift of con- stant utility. Costing trom am low as 69.50 (all taxes Included) these Johnson Chore-Horse models are light and ympact for portability, yet sturdy and strong for constant service under all conditions. Easy to In- stall In basement, garage, or other outbuildings, you are assured con- Stant electrle light and generous quantities of power for pumping water, for charging batteries, for fadio and for the hundred and one other chores of farm and rural life. Chore-Horse capacities range from 730 to 800 watts and are built by the manufacturers of the world famous Sea Horse Outboard Motors. FREE FOLDER We have a free illustrated folder for you that fully explains the ad- vantages and exclusive features found only with these Johnson Chorse-Horse models, Investigate this practical utility power-plant today and see what a new era of comfort and convenience It really holds for you. Johnson Motors 590 Monaghan Rd. Peterboro . Canada, A Canadian Product With Sales and Service Across Canada Many Will Agree hat The Radio In Observation Cars . Is A Nuisance Lucius Beebe, in the New York Herald Tribune, says one of these days some righteous and cash-paying passenger is going to rise and smite the detestable innards out of the nastiest menace of modern human contriving, the radio in the observa- tion car, where you can't escape it. Railroad executives who fancy this obscenity is a boon to their fares ave driving passengers by the legion to thumbing their ways on the mac- adam... i te tos Angeles is America s largest city, in area. TAKE THE LEAD OUT OF YOUR LEGS Get Oxygen in Your Blood and You'll Get the Pep that Sends You Bounding Up the Stairs leath die beenuse ly cut off from slowly smoth- People who smother to oxygen has been comp them, Just ua surely yor ering if your blood Incics Red corpuscles: are 0 They carry the oxyxen you by ery part of your syatem. Witho gen-carrying corpuscles, you stomach and bowels slow d gots pale, flabby, often pimply tay become jittery you. tire quickly feel depressed. Whut you need Is Dr, Williams Pink Pills. These world-famous pills help make more and better red corpuscles and thus increase the oxygen-carrying power of your blood. Get Dr, Williams Pink Pills today at your druggist, See for yourself how quickly this time-proven blood-builder will help give you Back your pep, Ceur- 1951. G.7.Pultord Ce,.Lad.
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Image 1478 (1938-12-01), from microfilm reel 1478, (CU11123923). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.