Close
Cart (0)
Login
Staff Login
Register
FR
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
551
551
Actions
Zoom view
Loading details...
Add to Lightbox
Linked assets
The Olds Gazette 1926-01-01 - 1927-12-30
Conceptually similar
549
554
550
556
552
553
555
582
578
560
590
561
489
484
563
562
570
580
571
488
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
551
Ask a Question
Details
Date
1927-04-01
From
551
Transcript
gives them a~ sting.” knew the value of them. eat most anything.” relief in taking CARTER Druggist Gave Her Miss Ruth Horowtiz, Bronx, N. Y., writes: with indigestion caused by constipation for several months, druggist advised me to try CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS said they are good for a hundred different ailments, if people only I can safely say that since I am taking them, and only one each night, I feel like myself again and can Those who suffer from sick headache, indigestion, biliousness tired-out and achey. feeling, when due. to.constipation, will find ’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. ‘ CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS in red packages, 25c. and Tic. Try them to-night—To-morrow refreshed—All drug2ists. Advice “Having been troubled my He Strange; Romaritic (ove Adventures of the Olapper wots hnouf Copyright 1925 by H.L. GATES Published by arrangement with First National Pictures, Ing CHAPTER XXIX—Continued It- was not wistfally reminiscent tone. apart from liim, and yoicing a. casual thought. came into his forehead, said, nor spoke ‘as “Those are not. good memories to! have,” he said... “This sort of thing She looked at him in’ open wonder- ment. If this wonderment was a mask, she concealed it skilfully. “No-memory -has a. sting, Jobn,” she returned. “That is. if they are the hind of memories that are worth while treasuring. The more we miss things we once had, the more gra- cious {fs the recollection of them. I've put a litle bit of that house we. used to plan into. every one of these things I've built here. Funay, isn't it?” “The house, if I remember, was to last a lifetime. ‘This is to be the hu- mor of a night.. I can‘t understand what part of one could be. built into the other.” “hove, John! Into put what was your of it. that love of yours, my dear—taken it the other love—your you idea from the: home you would have built, and put it into this. It was you, you know, who said, just now, that the other was for a lifetime, and that this will be desolate and crumbled in the morning. At lezst I expect nothing more—of this.” He was silent. She left him for al moment ti-give .an order to the, -Amette gardener who supervised the | - sorting- of the blossoms which were to} shed their perfumes for a night. andj then wither. When she went back to him John said, with the blunt sudden- ness. ihat. echoed determined, re- solve: ; : “There’s something I must. say to you, Jo. It’s been trying to. come out for days, now, and I know you've been a expecting it. I’ve been rather a cow- erd.—: ‘Rather a coward, John!” It was said, .quietly, softly, but there- was something deadly in the manner.of it.’ He flushed, but went stubbornly. on: i “Yes, rather. It’s. to. be about Yvonne, you know—Yvonne and me.” Again that quiet, soft interruption. That Stomach h of Yours{.. Mrs. E. Everson Cocieh, Ont.—“I ean highly recom- mend Pierce’s medicines—those that have been used in my family have always proved very beneficial. I have taken the | in| She was standing | it He could not evade those brown eyes: A. frown; that were darkened | Into these things ‘here I've put |’ }in doing. That has made my Jove, more of a woman’s than a. girl's} 2 | someway so it will stand much. Even) Golden Medical Discovery’ for Enligee | | tion and stomach distress and it has given me wonderful relief. It is also a fine tonic and blood ureer ’—Mrs. E, Everson, 02 Bilsabete Se jousands in every Province have testified that this Discovery gave them renewed health. All druggists, either fluid or tablets. Send 10c to Dr. Pierce’s. Laboratory fe Bepourss Ont., for a trial pkg. of SS en en aeeeereneet WwW. N. 1671 | have “Tell me, John: t marry me?” are you going to This time she was looking at him. by the purple haze in the air, and whose customary fires seemed to have cooled ‘into a «lazy smoulder. While he shifted ner- THE GAZETTE, OLDS. ALBERTA. , dance with me that night. By then we shall have both forgot today.” She watched him until he disap- peared beyond some shrubbery that cut off the view of the house. Then she turned toward. the stables, but had not gone far when she stopped. She stood for a moment looking about her. When she saw that none of the workmen nor attendants were near, she crumpled onto the lawn, and lay,! face buried in the grass, shoul- | ders shaking convulsively. her CHAPTER XXX % doanna’s Decision A stablé. groom fumbled with his cap. when Joanna had chosen her horse and sent to the house for the riding togs into whieh she proposed to change in the’ stable dressing room: The ‘man ‘gazed -dubiously down the Cap Martin slope-and esii- mated the thickeniug blanket of vio- let haze. . “Ith be comirg: up .fast; Made-! moisele,; after a while,” he said; “It’s troublesome to ride through. when it gets.too heavy, I. shouldn't advise Mademoiselle to go-too far.” “Just—along —-the-sea—road,—to—A~ Kenilworth's,”. she informed | hiin. “The lights theré are never lost.” The groom would. have liked’ to voice, more insistent ‘caution, but his) mistress was abrupt with him. Fhere were times when: the servants at, Villa Amette were afraid of their Mademoiselle Joanna. The groom shook his. head but decided ‘not to venture a further protest. He reflect- | ed that, after, all, she was a good usuelly | horsewoman and-that a horse is dependable. Kenilworth, whose villa nestled at | name claims during. the drafting of the Bri-4) lish North Ameiica Act: in London | are quickly SoothedsHealed am-Buk Revival f Old Idea Sir Jchn Macdonald Suggested Name “Kingdom of Canada” Before Confederation There is something unique and un- | expected in the. revival at this late date by a Western Progressive mem- ber, Mr. Garland, of the old idea of calling his country the “Kingdom of Canada.” It may. ‘not be. generally known that this title was put forward by Sir John A. Macdonald during the negotiations leading. to Confederation. Sir John was quite eager. for the Kingdom _and pressed his | early in 1867.. The sixth: draft-of* the | bill contained the title “Kingdom of Canada,” replacing the words “United | Provinces” Sir John made every effort to retain the monarchal term. > The change to Dominion of Can- ada was made at the. instance of Lord Derby, then Foreign -Minister, | who, as Sir John said in 1889 in a letter to Lord Knutsford, “feared the first name would wound the sensibili- tos of the —¥, »” Si» John in-the of the preceding draft, and) Air Mail Facilities Offered to Canada U.S. Plan Would Save Day on Coast to Coast Letters - . Air mail routes in the United States have béen made available to Cana- dians. For an extra ten cents per half. ounce letters from Canada will be carried by the coast to coast. air mails operated under contract with the United States government. Letters destined to British Colum- bia are carried to Elko, Nevada, by air, transferred to a Seattle train, and from there trans-shipped to Vancou- ver or Victoria. A. net saving in time of at; least a day is ensured. Let- ters to United States points on the Pacific coast are delivered at. least two days.earller on the average. The announcement of the United States post office department points out that the extra ten cents for air mail routes must be prepaid from Canada in’ United States . postage stamps. Little Helps For This Week The merciful man doeth good to his” | own soul.—Proy. xi. 17. | Hele quality of mercy is not strain’d; t dropped as the gentle dew from heaven * Upon the place beneath; blessed,— It blesseth him that gives and him that takes. it is twice : —Shakespeare, We are unmerciful when without |. Necessity -we are judges of evil thoughts, when we suspect meanness, littleness, untruthfulness—not to | Frenchman Will with the juice of fresh mint leaves Constructing Speed Boat Attempt to Cross Atlantic in 48 Hours — An attempt to cross. the Atlantic ocean.in 48 hours will be: made in a motorboat now being constructed by M. Bugatti, the French. automobile manufacturer. The boat is made of steel ‘construe tion of the submarine .and will have eight :motors. It is a chaser type. It is 35 meters long. is expected to make | 140 miles an hour in a calm sea and 100 miles an; hour on an average sea. The boat will make a trial trip soon on the Seine. vously, she drove in her challenge: Joanna crumpled up onto the lawn and lay, face buried in the grass, ‘her! shoulders shaking conyulsively. “Don’t be a coward always, John, | 1 love you as a girl sel-| I love .you. dom knows how to love. vel of my own money, The. mar- ! somewhere, has never appalled me so! much as your success and the gran- | deur of the thing you are succeeding your cowardice. “Now you're _ being | brave again, so go all the way in noe: leap. ‘Never mind the. stops in. be- tween. You've a fortune. ef your own in sight, so-my Jnoney needn’t count now. Shall you marry me?” “No, Jo. - You ad She stopped him instantly. “That’ 's | splendid!” It was quite as if she were | complimenting him. upon some new} triumph within his profession, She reached over and patted his hand and then pressed it for a moment in her} own, “Now you're at least’ a coward no longer. You see I've got a.funny mind, I think. I like to know things. It helps one make plans.” “But, Jo—-there’s say. It isn’t just like that—. Shall I marry you?) No. - There’s more.” “There really isn’t,” she deelared.} “You explained quite fully, without} words, -when you came.down from | London that. matters were quite the) same as ever. You'd got on. but I hadn’t. with the short skirts and see Yvonne has a lot of knees and a good time brain. Not the | kind -of .a wife for the great creator of a beautiful thing for future genera- tions to marvel at. Why tell me all over again?” He knew she him, was mocking and he realized that he was helpless. | A thousand things hung on his. lips. | In her calm scrutiny of him they jumbled. She reached to him again and patted his sleeve. ‘We'll have a drink over it all, someday,” she said. “Meanwhile I shall stop drinking all of my cocktails to you. Now go along into the house. You will find Yvonne in the reading room. I'm going to one of Teddy sDorminster’s horses saddled and ride over for tea with Roddy Kenilworth at his house.” She gave him her hand and smiled | “You will not be seeing much of me now until the fete,” she said. “It is so near and I have so much to do. But I shall want you to up at him. and its mystery | and the threat that is hidden in it} “That's splendid,” she repeated. | touch more aa I was just the same jazz girl} the base of the hill, shut off from the inajestic beuleyard which skirts’ the! shore by a dense hedge of semi-trop- ; ical bush, met cher, with . his own | groom, at his gate. She stepped lght- ly from his hand to the ground and tossed her bridle to) the man. “Just an hour, please,” she commanded. Kenilworth immediately expressed dismay. “You haven't braved the mist to give mé but an hour! It will take me quite that-long to get aceus- | tomed to the vision of you among my'| things.” “Just an hour,. Roddy,” she in-| sisted, nodding to the groom who ac cepted her rder .as final and led the horse away. .“You see I've made, | plans for the evening, and I mustn't | interfere with them. I shall have to | get back to Amette ani change.” ‘ It was-the first. time Joanna had} | granted Kenilworth a tete a_ tete hour “in the midst of his things,” as | he expressed it. She had ‘always! made a pretense of “being afraid” of | him, which, he customarily retorted, | was flattering but untrue. He assured her, at such times, that she was one) who. woulda’t be afraid of anybody. ; proposed Lady | ; Weymouth as a chaperone, but with | +no success... Joanna. asserted that) | she’d never. resort to a chaperone—-| “in these days.” He was, then, puz- zled by the sudden whim which | brought her, uninvited, and strangely vibrant. He knew her well enough to i gense a purpose. Joanna, he liad dis- | covered long ago, usually concealed |.a purpose behind whatever was. un- | expected of her: He had made a pro- | fersion, almost, of discovering those , hidden purposes es fathoming them. “Confess to me,” she challenged ; him when: she had settled in a great | chair before the log fire which baffled | the cool dampness of the increasing | mist outside, “you are wondering why} |I came so unexpectedly.” | | (To Be Continued) ‘He had desperately Good Roads From U.S. Boundary Improving Highways From Points ‘in Alberta to the U:S. Boundary . Main highways running from. points jon the boundary line. between Canada and the United States are to be sub-' stantially improved this year from | ‘points in Alberta. on the -boundary lthrongh as far as Edmonton, the. pro-| yineial capital, and to some of: the) | most attractive scenic spots in .the | Canadian Rockies. The number of} tourists coming from. the United! States to visit the scenic wonders and | other attractions in Alberta is in-| creasing rapidly every year. Both the, Federal and Provincial authorities; in Canada are doing everything possi- | ble to encourage visitors from the | United States ard other countries to spend a holiday in the Dominion. a In Relieving Colds That's why so many people buy “Buckley’s" to end Coughs, Bron- chitis and all Throat, Chest and Lung troubles. It’s instant, pleasant, guaranteed. You'll note its unique powers in the very first dose—and there are 40 doses in. a 75-cent bottle! Kk or Fale for “Buckley's”. Buckley, Limited, Bu ny St., Toronto 2 | | KLEYS j uc CKLE ie Acts like a flash— | | | | | a single sip proves it mee , would “have j the first } Yenkees.—Sin—t same letter defended his proposal, ‘and said that, had it been accepted, he was‘ sure the Australian colonies been applying to be placed in the same rank.” It is doubtful if, after sixty years’ use of .the word “Dominion,” there ‘will be found any good reason for a change. Found Airplane Trip Easy Few Days. Unpleasant,, Says. Lady Hoare, After Long Journey “Flying eléven days straight off is ' much easier and. less trying than I had. expected,” said ‘Lady Maud | Hoare, the only woman who has flown 12,000 miles on. an air voyage, when she stepped to the befogged platform of Victoria station, after an air. trip to India and back with her husband, | Sir Samuel Hoare, the air minister. Fog had prevented the completion of the last stage from Paris to Lon- | don by air, and the two were obliged to make the tedious channel crossing. The British air minister and his wife left Croydon by large passenger \air plane.on the morning of Decem- ber 27 -and landed at Delhi on Jan- uary 8 “It was no fair mrentier trip,” said Sir Samuel. “We had dust storms in the Persian gulf and earthquake on the northwest. frontier of India, snow and rain, and often adverse winds.” Lady Maud supplemented the description by saying: ; “Threg days were. distinctly un- pleasant, while five days out and three. days returning for home were very bumpy. We flew at every height, 100 to 9,000 feet. This necessitated dressing in layers, putting. on and taking off garments as required. The only monotonous bits were two) stretches. of desert; the scenery otherwise was most. varied.” Graduates at Shantung Christian University Woman — Student Diploma in Midst of War With the shuffle of China’s ‘march- ing armies almost heard on her ‘cam- pus, Shantung. Christian University 'has completed her academic year with full uttendance and, under authority | granted by the Parliament of Canada, has- areduaved sixteen Chinese stu- | denth * of higher learning, including woman to complete the course in divinity. Miss Chi Yu Chea. of Mukden, Man- churia,, was presented by Dean Mac- First , Rae of the theological faculty, a mis- sionary of the United Church of Can- ada, for her diploma, and will become a teacher of theology in the United Free Church of Scotland’s seminary at Mukden, now. being opened .to wo- men students) on a co-educational basis. Britain’s Need Is Greater President Coolidge’s proposal that another five-power wuaval disarma- | ment conference be held recalls the | statement in which British represen- tatives showed a League of Nations committee that Britain’s naval taske differed from those of other European nations.—Toronto Mail and Empire. Some men who live by their wits have to get along on very small cap- Receives |. speak of worse surmisings—in others. The merciful in thought give no room in their hearts for suspicions such as these. They do not secretly finpute evil—Richard Chenevix Trench. Bible Printed in Esperanto Last Year Saskatchewan Printed One Copy and One of New Testament The book which still tops the list as_the world's best seller is in print in Saskatchewan Esperanto. In 1926 one copy of the Bible was printed in: Saskatchewan in that international language as well as one copy of the New Testament. Other languages in wich the Bible or portions of it are printed for dis- tribution in this province are: Bohe- mian, Bulgarian, Chinese, Cree, Dan- ish, Dutch, Flemish, French, Gaelic, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Latin, Lithuanian, Norse, Pel- ish, Roumanian, Russian, Ruthenian, Serbian, Swedish, Welsh and Yiddish. Bachelors Taxed In Italy Here’s what it costs a bachelor to stay a bachelor in Fascist Italy. Ac: cording tothe terms of a law just promulgated retroactive to January 1, bachelors between 25 and 35 years of age must pay-a special tax of 35 lire per annum. Bachelors between 35 and 50 must pay 50 Hre and those over 50 must pay 25 lre. An addi- tional income tax will also -be im- posed until marriage. Keep Minard’s Liniment in the stable. Be good and you will be happ— as happy: as you can be under the cir- THE NURSING MOTHER Often Finds Herself Weak and Feeling Worn-Out The nursing mother. more than any other woman needs rich blood. and: plenty of it. The demands upon her héalth are: many and severe. House- hold duties and the care of her chil- dren exact heavy toll, while hurried meals, broken rest and indoor living tend to weaken her. No wonder she is often indisposed through weakness, headaches, _backaches .and_ nervous- ness. In this. condition the blood will always be found weak and watery, and relief -will come only through en- riching the blood. For this purpose Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills is the best blood-making tonic known... Through their use many. weak, ailing wives and mothers have found new health and strength. As an.example of this Mrs, Sarah Cortez, Ellenstown, N.B., says:—“While pursing my baby I be- came run-down, very weak and nerv-- ous. “My head ached all the: time and I was not able to do my work. I had often read of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and began using them, and what a blessing they proved. Before I had used a half. dozen boxes I felt like a new person, and by their continued use for a while I was entirely restor- ed ‘to my former health and strength. I take pleasure. in recommending Dr. Willlams’ Pink Pills to everyone suf- fering as I did.” “You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine. Co:,. Brockville, Ont. The patient usually has more con- fidence in. the physician than the physician has in. himself. A price mark looks all right on al- cumstances. most anything except a man. rinse the mouth. two. hours if necessary. the ‘Baye Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets. _ Swallow some of the solution. Repeat gargle every This is an effective gargle proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians. Accept only “Bayer” afer” ysixs ackage, Dissolve two “BAYER TABLETS OF ASPIRIN” in four tablespoonfuls of water and gargle thoroughly. Don’t For TONSILITIS and SORE THROAT Look © for r Cross,”” Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggista, Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada) of Barer Manufacture of Monoacetics acidester of Salicylicacid (Acetyl Salicylic Acid, “A that Aspirin means Bayer manufacture,to assist the Patties against imitations, the Tabletg ef Bayer Company will be stamped with their general trade mark, the ‘Bayer Cross,’ ""). While it is well knowm
How can you use this image?
To attribute objects use the information in Attribution. Permitted uses are outlined in License and Usage Rights. Usage Restrictions can only be waived by the copyright holder.
Usage Rights
Education
,
Instruction
,
Private study
,
Research
Usage Restrictions
Commercial
,
Exhibition
,
Publication
,
Remix and adapt
Attribution
Image 551 (1927-04-01), from microfilm reel 551, (CU12500161). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.