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Drumheller Review 1931-01-02 - 1934-06-28
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Date
1934-01-18
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REVIEW, DRUMHELLER, ALBERTA. W cots a HANG ON Coughs that rack the - whole system— there's a job for SCOTT'S EMULSION OF gop LIVER OIL EMU "SION RICH i VITAMINS OCCASIONAL WIFE _EDNA ROBB WEBSTER “Lipstick Author of . “Joretta,” Girl” Etc. SYNOPSIS: camilla Hoyt and Peter Anson, youn; ve, marry secretly, deciding to live their own lives apart until Peter is able to provide for her. Peter is a young, struggling sculptor trying to win a competition for a scholarship abroad and Camilla is the adopted siaughter of a wealthy family. She is not to: inherit, money when she comes of age and so studying commercial art-in the hope of landing an agency job. Others in the story are Avis Werth, another wealthy girl who is trying to win Peter, Sylvia Todd, Peter's model, and Gus Matson, his former room- mate with whom he has quarreled. At a party at an exclusive club Peter | entertain's Camilla’s guests with im-} personations. When the rest of the members of the party go to a cabaret to continue the gaicty, Peter and Camilla slip off to the beach by.them- selves’ and fall asleep on the sand. ‘When they awake it is early morn- ing and Avis and another boy are ding near them. (No Go On With The Story) CHAPTER | XXXVI Avis’ surprise and — consterna- tion over her discovery of Peter and Camilla on the beach in’ the early morning, were no less than Camilla’s. The first Nght of dawn cast gro- tesque shadows on the four faces that stared at cach other while their conglomerate thoughts made hasty adjustments and conclusions. ‘The pallor df fatigue ‘and “faded make-up gave to Avis the haggard appearance of a much older woman; while even in the dim light, Camille's vivid beauty glowed like theepromise of sunrise in the sky. She met Avis’ accusing, triumphant, angry gaze with a half smile, as if the situation amused her. All four of them appeared ridicu- Jous enough, for there is no light more merciless'to face than that of the early dawn and there is nothing that so leaves its stamp upon: the features as the night abused as day. Avis’ condemning hauteur in- creased," ‘So, this is where our host- ess, spent the night!” her words hissed with scathing emphasis. Camilla dismissed all effort at self- defense. “It beats spending the night where. you were. Did you just get back? Peter and I were waiting for you, but we didn’t. think you would stay in town all night. We must have dropped ot sleep.” She had scrambled to her fect and was shaking the sand from her chiffon evening dress. “I should think you did. Waiting for us!" Avis sneered, and turned to Terry with a scornful imitation of laughter. 4 Terry shifted his-welght from onc foot to another, avoided Camilla’s eyes and looked at Peter. Peter's jaw was sct hard, but the expression which lighted his eyes de- nied his serious concern. Fate had forced the issue, he was thinking. No Cold Is a Fixture with Backioy = Mixture fo, se, Nocatier how herd an ice will coltuse ioe m The very firs dose ‘ gets you cen feel it doing you rood. Tes lightning-fast action amazes everybody wheather take it for aiken your lasalty, as . aqui scold, "Au oe trench, ry Buckeye '* id be convinced. Refuse substitutes, Tay's is eold ‘everywhere. ‘oa PAPER pRooucTs MAMILTON, ONTARIO WwW. N. U. 2029 [she insisted. What are you going to Perhaps it was best, after all. He looked at Camilla and smiled a little. They certainly did’ not act like guilty culprits, Avis was thinking with surprise. “I wouldn't say any: thing more, now," he advised quictly. | “Then, we had better all go up to, she. suggested, veeming | not at all perturbed. Avis looked at her queerly. she was willing to go the limit, fostered | by modern social conventions, tut | Camilla’s nonchalance in the face of such evidence as this, astonished ‘her. The four ‘turned and ploughed, through the sand in silence, single-| filing in 2 desolate ‘little procession. The waves lapped the shore softly, as if in gentl2 sympathy. | The girls mounted the steps that | climbed up the side of the cliff house, | — | Avis leading. The boys stopped below to light cigarettes. “Well?” Terry inquired under his | breath, holding his lighter for Peter. | “Sorry we went to look for you, but | do about it? Peter inhaled and exhaled the’ smoke slowly. “Whatever Camilla de- | cides,” he said, and started up the | steps. “Can't we fix it up?” suggested | Terry. Queer how, in spite of the| single standard of morals, men d:-| fend each other in such auicutt| crises, and women are eager to be-| tray one another. Woman proclaims her equal freedom and Independence | from man, but still clings to the an- cient characteristics of primal jeal- ousy and feminine revenge that were fostered by her dependence upon man, Peter muttered. h's appreciation, | “Decent of you to suggest it, but I think Camilla will manage all right.” Some of the guests had retired to their rooms, but enough of them were about to witness the triumphal | entry of Avis and her captives. She | said nothing, but her elaborate air of scorn and accusation conveyed ex- actly what her words might have, | “So you found: them!” Cathie had | exclaimed when they first appeared. | “We really were anxious about you, | Camilla, No one knew where you, had gone from the club.” Then, as | Avis" congtaled manner indicated the How To KEEP FIT Aen your physical reularity le disturbed, and you feel run: wise to do i Taf take Andrpwe vee Salt Sp grveral jsuccemive days ua ive Nature your drugxiat. "In ‘Huston Co. ‘Eady household stirred. She was too excit- (ed for sleep, anyway, and rather | happy that events had reached th’'s | climax, when her position as Peter's wife would be determined before the world, Mrs. Hoyt's knock on her door did not surprise her, but the expression of horror and anger on her face did. She knew that Mrs. Hoyt had heared the news, already. Even when Camilla had been only a little girl and Mrs, Hoyt's bulk had towered above her in condemnation, she had not seemed so tall and so ‘furious as she was now. She closed the door and stood over Camilla where she had risen to sitting posture on the bed: Her small, hard eyes blazed with anger and her words hissed from behind closed teeth. “So! This is the way you show your appreciation for everything I’ve done for you!” Camilla met her gaze bravely, but with due respect. “You mean about my marrying ~ Peter,” she said quietly. “I was just waiting to tell you as soon as"I heard you awake.” “Then it is true—” ““Yes. Who told you?” “Mrs. Werth—of all people. She began with some accusing remark about Avis finding you—' “Yes, I'm sorry’ about. that. But |rather glad ina way, because it's a relief to tell you—" “A relief!” the volce lashed her as if the older woman wiclded a whip. .“Do you think it is @ relief to’ me to learn not only that you ‘have deceived me all summer with this—this—unspeakable affair, but that you have made a mesall’ance with a nobody, that you have dragged the ‘proud name I gave you situation, sh? looked at Camilla | down to disgrace? Oh, I might have .| nist with a sheathed leer of malevo- | queerly and added, “Well, now that we're all here, let's turn in. I'm lea Avis turned confidently to. Terry. “Will. you drive me home, please? I've had enough of this.” “Before you go,” Camilla’s: soft voice sounded strangely resonant in the thin stillness of the early morn- ing, and every eye turned to look at her closely. She hesitated for a dra- matic moment, “— allow me to pre- sent my husband. Peter and I have been married for more than a month and we expected to keep it a secret for awhile longer—" she ‘stopped, with a little helpless gesture which explained everything. The silence grew more tense. “Married!” Cathie was the first to “Why, you sly old She threw her arms around Camilla and. kissed her, “First to kiss the bride! Say, let’s rouse th> crowd out and celebrate the good news.” “Please don't," Camilla begged “Let's get some rest and celebrate later. Remember, even mother and dad know nothing about it, yet. Won't you let me-explain everything to her, first?” Her suggestion was’ agreed upon, as if each of them enjoyed the idea of entering the conspiracy to keep the affair a secret for a few more hours. Only Avis did not relinquish her air of shocked disapproval, and insisted upon leaving for home with Terry. “As you wish,” Camilla said, with no effort to detain her. So it happened that it was Avis| who made public announcement of | Camilla's. marriage to Peter. At a! discreet hour of the morning, Mrs. Werth telephoned her social antago- | i lent delight. “I had never supposed,” she told} Mrs. Hoyt with distinct emphasis, “that when I permitted. my daughter | to attend your house party, I was exposing her to questionable influ- | ences.” “Why—" Mrs. with horror and anger, you mean?” “Oh, you know about my caughter finding Camilla with that young ro- body who has been seen with her. Of course, Camilla says they are married, but—" ' That was the charge which dis- | turbed Mrs. Hoyt from her.lethargy | of wonder and led to action. ‘She| terminated the conversation with | Mrs. Werth as adroitly as the sub-| ject permitted, and hasten:d to Camilla’s room. Camilla: had not slept since retir- ing, but she was resting until the Hoyt was aghast | “what do known you would—a common species never can be made into a thorough- bred!”” Camilla .was tempted to. smile: a little at the implication. “Then it would not seem that I have made a mesalliance, after all. Perhaps I’ have even done Peter an injustice by mar- rying him. He is so splendid.” Mrs. Hoyt let the scorn in her eyes blaze upon the girl for a_ silent moment. “Splendid enough to marry you and let you keep silent about it, so he wouldn't have to take care of you. And I suppose he thought you were the heir to the Hoyt for- tune, too! You will see how splendid he is, now!” Camilla made a little weary ges- ture and sighed, “You're just wasting your. breath with all those accusa- tions: He knows all about me, and has begged me for a long time to let him take care of me. I wouldn't be- cause it isn’t fair. He has enough to do, now, and I only married him *| with the promise to each other that we should live apart and cach be absolutely independent until he makes good. He ‘will, too, but he has to have time. “That is what he has persuaded you to think.” “Have it’ as you will. It makes little difference to me,” Camilla re- plied listlessly. “I love Peter and Peter loves me. We are married and nothing can separate us. That is all that matters. T'll leave here today, if you wish. As for your name, I shan’t need that any more. I am Camilla Anson, now.” (To Be -Continued) Wanted It Settled Peter, aged six, was given two- pence and had been forbidden to buy a water-pistol. “What happens if I do buy a water- pistol Mummy?"* “You will have a good smacking and be put straight to bed.” “Yes, I know all about that, but | whose water-pistol will it-be when I get up?’ . R. Fowler Burton, who d'ed re- cuntiy in Stoke, Paglands left over $900,000 and no will. F, Pea as Crinrides St, t,say, was'a iil developing. 1 ‘Gal 4 anaemic, ner: n: id strengthen ¢ gros away, that ervous tired ‘condition and The Story Of A Horse Veteran Of War Now Pensloned By Her Owner Twenty-two years old and a war- veteran, twice wounded and possess- ing a record of more thar four years’ active service—that is Mary. And Mary, a round-barrelled, dark bay mare, now lives in honored retire- ment, the pensioner of her owner, Colonel Lorne T. McLaughlin, C.M.G., D.S.0., V.D., on a farm just outside Bowmanville, Ontario. Foaled in 1911, Mary was just four years old when she enlisted in the First Canadian Contingent—in the 2nd Battalion, From the start the stars shone on her, for she became the charger of the Commanding offl- cer, the late Sir David Watson, K.C.B, Later she continued to perform that duty with Lleut.-Col. (now Brig.-Gen- eral) A. E, Swift, C.M.G., D.S.O., but for a brief space in 1916 she was sup- Planted by a mincing upstart from the western plains, named Minnie, who was the favored one of Licut.- Col. W. M. Yates. Mary's glories were almost com- pletely eclipsed when the late Brig.- General R. P. Clark, C.M.G., D.S.0,, M.C., brought a chestnut hunter to the battalion as his first mount, on his becoming commanding officer. But with his departure, Mary again came into her own, and for nearly two years reigned supreme among the equine members of the unit, as Col- onel McLaughlin's first horse. Unusually intelligent, gentle, cour- ageous and fleet, Mary was by ail counts the favorite steed in the trans- port lines. She was twice wounded, but always carried on.. And now, in the twilight of her existence, far re- moved from. the gunfire which held for her no terrors and from the airy music of the brass band which she Greatly loved and behind which no horse stepped with better gait or held high its head with greater pride— From The Legionary. French Plane Spans. Ocean Completes Crossing From Africa To South American Port The great French = flying boat, “Southern Cross,” reached Natal Jan- uary 4, completing an Atlantic cross- ing from Saint Louis, Senegal. The ‘plane landed at 7:10 o'clock for a flying time of 18 hours, 17 min- utes for the 1,970 miles..The distance from.Saint Louis to Natal is 1,970 miles. The four-motored. hydroplane is the French entry in a race with Germany to set up the first trans-Atlantic air mail line between Europe and South America via Africa. It ig capable of carrying 11 tons of fuel. Within two months the French government hopes to: initiate daily service: between Paris and Rio de Janeiro—with a non-stop hop sche- dule over the south Atlantic. The giant ‘plane with a wing spread of 144 feet, landed easily on the Potengy River. Th2 flyers. said they averaged 110 miles an ‘hour. Had To Be Transferred Old Phonograph’ Discs Would Not Work On New Machines ‘The British Museum has phono- graph master discs’ on which, in the olden days of horn recording, were registered the voices of famous men now dead. Some time ago a number of people gathered to hear Lord Ten- nyson speak from a disc made many years ago. Only a jumble of sound resulted, and it was found the disc would have to be played on a phono- graph in use at the time it was made, but no such instrument 4g in exist-|° ence. Engineers finally solved the problem. Putting the disc on a mod- ern phonographthey played the old cylinder and converted the harsh and unintellgible sounds into minute elec- tric waves, which were then passed through tone filters and transferred to a new master disc. The Rule To Follow In.somé reports of the jubilee celebration of Chief of the Maclean Clan the name was spelled “Mac- an” and in others “Maclean” In reality, the Scottish Macs ought to hold a convention and agree, if they can, when the capital letter is correct. One book, dealing with the subject, disposes of it this way: “When the | part of the name following the “Mac” is a proper name itself, as in Mac- Donald, the capital should be used; otherwise the “lower case” form is correct.—Toronto Globe. A Cass county Sunday schcol teacher asked a little girl “where do/ toba, bad little girls go?" and the reply was “most everywhere"? For the first time in 12 years Eng- land and Wales were declared free from smallpox recently. & Take 2 Aspirin Tablets, ‘The simple method pictured above is the way doctors throughout the world now treat colds. It is recognized as the QUICK- EST, safest, surest way to treat a cold. For it will ‘check an ordi- nary cold almost as fast as you caught it. Dink full glass fepeat treatment in 2 ioe How to Stop a Cold Quick as You. Caught It 3 GR : % A. If throat is sore, crush and dissolve 3 Aspirin Tablets in a half glass of water and ‘gargle according to directions in box. of water Almost Instant Relief in This Way is the trademark of The-Bayer mpany, Limited, and the name Bayer in the form of a cross is on each tablet. They dissolve almost. instantly. And thus work almost instantly when you take them. ‘And for a gargle, Aspirin Tablets dissolve so completely, they leave no tentatiag parti- cles. Geta box: of 12 tablets or bottle of 24 or100atany drugstore. ‘ASPIRIN TABLETS ARE. MADE IN CANADA May Be Slight Variation Figures Regarding Speed Of Light Are Fairly Accurate The speed of light is placed at 299,774 kilometres or 186,271 miles per second, in a new estimate made at Pasadena, Cal. Dr. Walter 'S. Adams, director of the Carnegie In- stitution’s Mount Wilson Observa- tory, said in ‘announcing the new figure that it was not absolute, but that the final computation which will be completed in about six months, would not vary. much more ‘than two kilometres from it. The new value is 18 miles per second slower than that reached by the late Dr. Albert A. Michelson in 1927 after he had flash- | Little Helps For This Week “The Lord is good, a strong-hold in the day of trouble; and He knoweth them that trust in Him."—Nahum 1:7. Leave God to order all thy ways, And hope in Him whate'er betide. Thou'lt find Him in the evil days Thy all sufficient strength and guide. Who trusts in God's unchanging’ love, Builds on the rock. that cannot move. Our whole trouble in our lot in this world rises from the disagreement of our mind therewith. Let the mind be brought to the lot and the whole tu- mult. is instantly hushed; let it ve kept in that disposition and the man shall stand at ease in his affliction, like a rock unmoved when the waters beat upon it,—T. Boston, How does our will’ become sanct!- | fied? By conforming itself unreserv- | edly to that of God. We will all that He wills, and will nothing that He does not will; we attach our feeble will to that all-powerful will that performs everything. Thus nothing can ever come to pass against: our will, for nothing can happen save what God wills, and we find in His good pleasure an inexaustible source of peace and consclation.—Fenelon. ed light beams with mirrors from Mount Wilson to another nearby eak. THE RHYMING OPTIMIST '_— By Aline Michaelis TO SING ANEW Song must come come welling From out the heart, ‘There's no compelling Glad notes to start. Lyrics must bubble Like mpid streams. No sigh to trouble Their shining dreams. A Means Of Protection Less Wheat Production Seems Sensi- ble Under Present Conditions ‘The fact may arouse repugnance in the beast of economists of the old school, but nevertheless it Is true that under the present conditions we are producing too ’much wheat and must adapt our production to the requ’re- ments of the market. This is not a right-about-face for Western agricul- ture. It is @ temporary measure to meet emergent conditions. Gradually, under pressure of economic laws the market for our wheat will be re-es- tablished. For the present there is simply no sense in adding to our own jpeg Tribune. No. carols cover ‘A spirits moan, Quick ears discover Pain’s undertone. So you, when bringing Gladness again, Set my lips singing Their old refrain. Yes, you have taught me To sing anew, Dear, since you brought me Joys deep and true! Monetary Uncertainty Of C In Various Currencies Is Needed Charles Rist, Adviser to French Government says: “At a time when, as everybody agrees, the world crisis is drawing to a close, the thing most needed os a help to the revival of world business is confidence in the various currencies and certainty as to their futures. “Ie the monetary uncertainty that prevails at present could be brought to an end, problems that seem insolu- ble today would solve themselves. Re- strictions on imports and the use of quotas, for one thing,,would magical- ly vanish. If on the other hand the uncertainty continues much longer, new problems will not fail to arise, and they will be harder to solve than any that we have met so far.’* A EA ETTE HOLDER DENICOTEA Cigarette Holder absorbs the nicotine, pyradine, ammonia and resinous and tarry substances found im tobacco smoke, Complete holder with refills — $1.00 postpaid, or from your Druggist or rapaccenitts Dealers wanted everywh Western Canada Directors Results of the mail ballot for direc- tors of the Canadian Aberdeen Angus association were announced by F. W. Crawford, Winnipeg, secretary, West- NOW OBTAINABLE FROM Robt. Stmpson Co. Limited ‘The T. Eaton Co, Limited Liggetts Drug Stores Moodey's Cigar Btore fern Canada directors are: Manl- ©. 9. Whey Harry Leader, Portage la utherford Drug Stereg | Prairie; Tames,” Turner, carreit, Boss Metklejoha Saskatchewan, W. J. Warren, Bel- DEALERS WANTED beck; W. D. Lyon, Deveron; Al-| GHANTLER & CHANTLER, LIMITE) berta, E Ward Jones, Calgary; S,| ". Canadian Distributors, J. Henderson, Lacombe; Roy Ball- 49 Wellington St. W. TOKONTO, ONT, horn, Westaskiwin.
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Image 984 (1934-01-18), from microfilm reel 984, (CU11517734). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.