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1506
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The Sylvan Lake News 1926-01-08 - 1938-12-29
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1506
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Date
1938-12-22
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. MSCULLOUGH ING PAINS ns painful extremities (ten called growing nm regarded as rheu- and so treated. lysis of the histories with well-developed t disease at the Ly- h Centre, Minneapolis, 4 of them gave a of a major attack of ction; either rheu- chorea (St. Vitus' . A careful study of 16 demonstrated lly every instance, in ct that no histo of rheumatic infer ed, there was defini they were suffering inued rheumatic in- had such signs as low ss of weight, definite ebleeds, skin rash and the symptoms were ugh to send them to other childr stitution was carried years. Though these ained of pain in the them had given any umatie infection, The as a rule at night and ng the day. They are ood health and none rheumatic heart d ns are so common in children during early adolescence that it their complaint is due, atism but to normal ote: Readers desiring set of Dr. McCul- er articles at once ame by writing to eague of Canada, 105 onto, Ont. Jouse A Mystery egularly But Tenants a 40 Years Ago orning, forty years ago, Young and her sister an eight-roomed villa street, Airdrie, Lanark- the door, and as far as cownspeople were con- ed, this house of solid red remained empty. the town can say why t or where they went. year the sum of 141 is assessed rental and by a firm of lawyers to Council. 3 were very reserved as known about them, or. ed out of the house one - breakfast. ns of their breakfast the table as they left that the house was no one knows why it is known no one has jouse since the sisters ins on the windows are hreds, and the windows been cleaned.'' London ess. he Olden Days iefs as we know them a comparatively recent man s wardrobe. At one the days of dentistry, dainty lace handker- de their decayed teeth nailed. Long before that, : tails were carried, as handkerchiefs and fans. British Columbia be- he raven is the source ad life, and that the Je can turn itself into 2286 f THIS: Massage his throat, chest, and back with Vicks mor McKenzie Joe's test shaft, prog THE NE abruptly, This time Pd bet- him aloi ggod him to w She bi it for morn- countered with hastily framed excuses. AT last he was alone, through the shadows toward ing; Jack ing more by instinct than by dirce VapoRub and tuck him into bed. tion. Next, put a spoonful of VapoRub in a bowl of boiling water; place newspaper or sheet over the child's head lke a tent, covering the bowl too, so the medicated Be vapors can be inhaled for several minutes, This treatment loosens phlegm clears air-passages- fg sequence of events Ww Mentality had concentrated upon h now were ming hofribly, truthfully clear. McKenzie Joe had been right after 1 trom the very beginning enecks tendency t0 cough re Now the cpisode of the sniper joves local congestion. Long aft ; ted ae asin SHS Loe oe peacetl nleehi gold was expliined and the reason GapoRubls poultice-and-vapor f that he never again had found such action isstill bringing rellet-and ff nuggets at Kay's claim. He knew ec ICKS ) VapoRus rest too, POOR MAN S GOLD Courtney Ryley Cooper -e- - i Courtney Ryley Cooper. WNU Service. CHAPTER X. Continued For the first time in his life, Jack heard Kay stammer. Then she begain to rage, her clenched hands extended. But Jeanne Towers cut in with: Shall I give you the hours, days and dates? And perhaps you snealc out at nights just for the exercise? In-your pajamas? Jack Kay tried appeal. Are you going to believe this wretched little iar? If you only knew He knows, Jeanne cut in, if you're referring to my life with Lew Snade. Kay, the man interrupted daz- edly, has all this been just a game with you? He was groping, like a man staggering to his feet after. un- consciousness. You've been just playing me you never intended to marry me? Just holding me at arm's length Men are easier to handle that way, Jeanne supplied. You should know Kay was pac- ing. Her eyes glared: her usually smooth hair was in disarray. couldn't help watching you. Anger conquered Kay completely. Think what you please, both of you she exploded, If her word means so much to you go ahead only don't come to me with it A queer laugh passed over her thin drawn lips, Thank God for one thing. I won't have you pawing me any more that's a consolation. Kay Don't speak to me she shot at him, You've got your own informa tion bureau beside you- talkc to her ' And you know it's the right in- formation, Jeanne insisted. You've cooked it up every word of it, Then why do you admit it? The Northern girl advanced a step to- ward the verandah, Call out Mrs. Carewe. She's tired-of her job; she won't be afraid to answer questions. She'll tell you how many times she's seen you go over to Bruce Kenning s) nights when she couldn't sleep and watched you Oh, the cook s word. A good woman's word If she had only come to me before McKenzie Joe left, Kenning never would have gotten his hands on that property Kay straightened. White-featured, her hands half extended as though they Jonged to claw the brown eyes of the woman who accused her, she: stood a moment transfixed with an- ger. PATENTS AN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR. Cist of Inventions and full Information sent free. THE RAMSAY COMPANY, istered Patent Attorneys, 273 Bank tup this quixotic idea, to marry him) ter of money, explain the payment of) now that her placer workings had heen. worthless and that thoy had been salted with metal from Ken- ning s workings up-the-ereek. It was her alibi, her excuse to thwart any plea that Jack might make to give now, and forget pride and foolish inhibitions. To cover also the mat- workmen Jack knew now who had paid them, Bruce Kenning. To make Jack believe that she was a trifle nearer him, and thus, fevered-by her approach, make him the more in- sensible to trickery. But McKenzie Joe had labeled the first nugget sniper gold; which could not possibly have come from her claim, The mistake had not been made again; the gold with which that gravel had been salted there- after had been the sort of gold that would come from gravel, nothing clse.. On went the reconstruction the well-planted fable about the English syndicate, the plausibility and sense of honesty established by the failure of the main line of test pits, the,sur- prise of finding gold where no one, even Bruce Kenning, had expected it, thus absolutely precluding the possibility of gold-bearing sands in the territory where McKenzie Joe had put his faith. Don't Hurt Me, H eBegged. I'm Not Kenning. It was easy to reconstruct the rest of the picture. They had played on Joe's taciturnity and his dislike for them. Kenning evidently knew his breed; quick disgust, the desire to pull out and go on, once relations had become intelerable. So McKen- zie Joe-had gone. And Bruce Ken- ning had continued, surreptitiously, to dig where McKenzie Jo had dug; mining and geological experience had told him that McKenzie was right. Then, with the viver bed discovered, a quantity of screened gravel had been taken to the worthless. test pit on the bench land and dumped there. No wonder the bottom of the pan, when Jack had washed that sample, had been covered with gold. And now the real discovery was in the hands of Bruce Kenning. Jack Hammond had signed it over that afternoon. He knew that already the transfer had been recorded. Suddenly Hammond crouched, alive to his surroundings, He was with- in fifty yards of McKenzie's Joe's workings. A faint sound, borne by the brisk wind, carried the rasping of the old ladder as someone began et, Ottawa, Canadas an ascent of the shaft. A shadowy, WS, SYLVAN LAKE, ALBERTA of 8 dinne af wine to be 4 focus: meal i How delight : tude of their study ipped, Scots writer who de scribed as in hook of cs inc leyeo of departed gt; Christi nigh ; tion come iting hi s Smith, Hlontly, tions, clad in mance: itinently find myself hold call, brocehed heir numbers do not care to ple count, for 1 know that they are Teeling exists this pr the numbers of my years. The in England. By imagi Ss of two or three are sau but on the whole tis 2 by a faint odour of plum: pudding and: burnt brand: 4 sound ag of Light mut of women's dr in a dance; a pledged by frivnds. grave, on which the snow is 1; I know, I know Drape thy: the dead O Spirit in the midst shriek, And thee, too, with fragran of them all, T remember reigning night. Back to the in a ghostly brand; are nov plaze? murmur. eee sweet or bitter herb of memory, 2: the case may be. face, as it were. is forever interesting holding him the more firmly t existence. Everything is thorp. The smi poses beside the Through the clear winti the teafle: the dresses and thei derful bloom to the eyes of their burdened figure appeared. Hammond called Bruce Kenning s name. With that, the figure reached the surface, threw the heavy sack of gravel from his shoulders, strove to run, stumbled, then turned, weakly suppliant. Don't hurt me, he begged. Um not Kenning. . Hammond caught him, lifting him clear of the ground, Wor an instant, he held the man shaking in his pow- erful grasp. Then, with a half fling, he gave him freedom. told you never, to cross that Alaskan line he growled. It was Lew Snade, almost-groveling as he strove to back away, lo reach a dis-/ tance from which he could run for safety. But Hammond moved. with him, pace for pace. Hear me? 1 told you not to cross that line But I hayen't been bothering Jeanne. Honest to God, I haven't. She loesn t even know I'm in the, gust getting out a little gravel. To make cement with, I suppos How long have you worked here? He tried to frame a lie, but he was too frightened. since a night or two after your partner left. And you work for Bruce Kenning, don t you? The big hands caught again at the shoulders of the trembl- ing man, Don't lie you work for Bruce Kenning. se avarming: fireside, 1 lovers thout of pose nd gommer with frosts are as- Vi Lhear 2; whisk v whirled round ick as of glasses : Belore one of these apparitions is a mound, as of a new-made ying. Under it I swing tho girl I loyed and kissed her in spite of blush and pretty trencher in hand, over which blue tongues of flame are playing, do I know most ancient apparition nd clusters and knots hy and planets shining serenely in the days of my childhood am I taken pparition by the ghostly raisins simmering flame. Where q the merry boys and girls familiar x that thrust their fingers in thy Plough dipping down And now, when I thinkof it, thee also would I drape in black raiment; around thee also would I make the burial service On many a day in every year does a man remember what took place on that self-same day in for the first time, some former year, and chews the S Tt is strange how important the poorest human being is to himself how he likes to stand on the place he has stood ground on which a man has stood Found, to him. Every experience is an anchor Tn this Christmas night all other e Christmas nights of my life live, the withered leaves. Then sunset came before the early dark, and in the east lay banks of bleak pink vapour, which are ever a Then out of a lent in Dream- 3 hammer re- anvil. The weaver's flying shuttle is at rest. Prophesy of cold, Jow dingy heayen came all day, shine the bells this morning rang thick and silent, -the from the gray church tower amid elms, and up the wall agers trooped in their best best faces the sun- Yeh I work for him, choristers singing carols, of joyous rs. More to their liking is the soli- the solace of tobacco, 4 glass Here their faney is ri Here Senn oes found in hi itten in the c try 1 took their pl cently. Ln roni sermon 1 ha the ochers, and it i to hold Christma with me at ta his mu mas gust . Sitting he 1 taste of Stl gues - porter, is rubbing tower vibrates the frosty air. look out on the brilliant heaven, constellation For yellow, 0 neys. The End. Berne oN OTT EOE SR ou help him salt thi over on the bench land too, didn t you? f don't know what he the gravel I took oyer there. But you did him. ve been working for h Where's Kenning now? Lew Snade looked tip- Ain't he ut his house? You know he s not there. But I don't. don't. there. Hammond threw the man aside and turned again for the light was burning in Kay's cottage; tremendous iny he could see her shadow asshe passed ful r turm. Chatham Ney t be my table, pledge e nt night : 5 ation T can 3 BI t n toast. siletly join In every roar of 3) egation of jolly ghosts, The merriment. Thecome a sort of uni- z , think dot it * gnelent pews returned my put able. 6 it this time f should Christmas dinner at Dream- thorp has come to an end, Fyen now in the great cities the the- autres will be dispersing. The clown has wiped the paint off his face. Harlequin has laid aside his wand and divested himself of his gilitter- if ing raiment. not in white like the others, but freshing himself with a Pantaloon, after re- 1. know that sprig of mistletoe, Soon, in the great theatre, the lights will-be put out, and the empty stage will be left to ghosts. Hark midnight from the church and see a milky way of powdery splendour. wandering through 1t, of stars blue frosty spaces; and the armed of Orion, his spear pointing away into immeasurable space, gleaming overhead; and the of into west; and I think when T go in ni that there is one Christmas the less between me and my graye. ars and years now I have watched the seasons come and go around Dreamthorp, and each its turn interests me as if T saw it But the other week it seems that I saw the grain ripen. Then by day a motley crew of reapers were in the fields, and at night a big red moon looked down upon the stocks of oats and to double back on his experiences, barley. Then in mighty wains the plenteous harvest came swaying on before, to meet himself face to home, leaving largess on the The spot of 2oads for every bird, comfortable-look- ing stacks stood around the farm- houses hiding them to the chim- Then the woods reddened, h hedges became russet, -y puft of wind made rustle Then whirling snow. And so, by exquisite succes- sion of sight and sound, have I heen taken from the top of the year to the bottom of it irom jatter a little reddened by the Midsummer, with sharp wind; mere redness in the 8 qniddle-aged; in the maids won- am sitting Christmas, 1 its unreaped harvests, to the night on which I 862. mith, eae i pint of his aching in mourning stole of cape; and in : Stead of dance music let there Joints; and Columbine, wrapped haunt around thee the service for Up in a shawl, and with sleepy eyelids, has gone home in a cab. he's snapped 327 aeneiteeees ut last. A ar do about it g She whirled. The door slammed.) 4d Jeanne stool alone in the 3 and Jeanne.atood slone:dn: the is a day for reffection. The peace of pening night 13 1i of thelr heart and mind. For thelr im going to find Bruce Kenning. ) 2 t the merrincss of gift-making and gitt- a Dreamthorp , de- I My is ant to think how much kindly it the the 1 in the the carry gravel for Honest to God, T He said he was going to be at shaft did with im, aint hill, A a window, But strangely, the sight of her held no poignancy for him; sweeten my ? cereal with me wen TRY IT TOMORROW Addicts Are Increasing Charges That Japanese Are Sponsor- ing Narcotics Traffic In Nanking Charges that the Japanese are sponsoring the narcotics traffic in Nanking-Were -made -by Dr. M. S.- Bates, American educator connected with the University of Nanking, in a report supplied to the New York press. The report says 50,000 persons, one-eighth of the population of Nanking, are being slowly poisoned by heroin supplied by Japanese-con- trolled rings and that every month at least 5,000,000 Chinese dollars is being realized in the Nanking arca by dope traffickers belonging to or allied with the Japanese Army. Dr. Bates based his report on per- sonal research, on observations of reliable friends, on statements of dealers in narcotics and on regula- tions of the Chinese puppet adminis- tration in Nanking. Dr. Bates, who js a Professor of History of high reputation, has made a number of other reports on Nanking conditions, including a statement on Japanese atrocities in Nanking last Decem- ber. His estimate of 50,000 including children, crippled by the heroin habit, does not include thousands more ad- dicted to opium and other narcotics. He said the strongest of the four trafficking organizations in Nanking was directed by the special service section of the Japanese Army. The puppet government was said to he profiting immensely. There is abundant testimony that the major opium supplies come fron: Dairen through Shanghai, the re- port continues. The Cost Of Victory Italian People Paying Pleuty Conquest Of Ethiopia Great Britain has recognized Italy's conquest of Ethiopia. Fortunately British taxpayers are not compelled to recognize this con- quest in the same way it is being realized by the Italian people. Mussolini's edict of a 7.5 per cent. tax on capital and real estate is the most revealing news out of the dic tator state recently, The money is to be used developing Ethiopia, A similar tax of 10 per cent, was levied last year. Ethiopia will have cost Italy 17. per cent. of capital stock and real estate, plus the cost of the Ethiopian campaign, plus incidental money 1 Duce has been xble to find. The two taxes amount to 175,000,000. A sstment for a douibt- An hour formerly was one-twelfth instead, there was something of the of the time between sunset and sun- same disgust which he felt for Lew) rise, and one-twelfth of the time be- country. Snade, what are you doing in this test Kenning cabin. It was dark and no pit? one answered his knock. Loosening the leather latch, he walked within.) stumbling about the Kenning was not there. At lights of Whoopce lured him (To Be Continued) two rooms. Jast the : After the 1939 San Francisco) World Fatr closes, the artificial is- and on which it's built will become an airport. A barrel cactus is more per cent, water. than 90 2286 fF Then he went on to the) tween sunrise and Sunset; hence, it wwas of different lengths in different scasons. tly, MEN LOVE * PEP ; I you are peppy and full of fun, men will in- Tide te dances and parties, BOR He ieee tenba lifeless and, tid. me conte be: Interented. Mem don't Ika quiet girls, When they go to parties they wate crafttong who ure full of pep: Ae aE One ane: wom bas told eine throug with ate or ulate Veuetable Compound. It Fee eee een ap tis aystemn, chun lemon pale Nature tore VPrrom the, functional diss ing tne ait momen faust endure See oe BIA. Be KINKHANS VEGETABLE COMPOUND?
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Image 1506 (1938-12-22), from microfilm reel 1506, (CU11123916). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.