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The Olds Gazette 1932-01-01 - 1933-12-29
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Date
1933-08-11
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CHE GAZETTS OLDS, ALBERTA. - from the direction of the woods edze, | and as it passed her, scarcely a dozen feet away, she recognized Alan. He went on to the factor’s house. Sho heard him knock, heard him ask for her, heard his puzzled “That's odd,” when Mrs. Drummond said she’d been gone for half an hour. By a lightning flash Joyce saw him as he started on past her. Something in his manner, in his dejected head, in his slow beaten gait, let her know he was aware she deliberately had gone away in these last minutes and de- liberately had shunned a parting talk with him. As Alan went slowly past the ga-- den, unconscious of the lightning flashes, thinking only that Joyce, who had burned his picture and his gift, Send forthis FREEBOOKI One hundred and eighty-six ways of making your cooking better with St. Charles are yours simply for the asking. Send for our new cook book “The Good Provider.'* Just fill in the attached coupon; Borden’s ST. CHARLES MILK UNSWEETENED EVAPORATED’ The Borden Co, Limited Yardley House. Toronto Rails Used As Medium Conductor Can Converse With Other Trainmen Ahead Or Behind The conductor in the caboose of a long frieght train can now carry on a conversation with the engineer in the locomotive cab, or he can convetse with those in charge of trains imme- diately ahead or behind his train on the same track by means of a new type of communication system devel- oped by engineers of the General Electric Company. “This new means of communication igs not radio, carrier current or direct telephone in principle,” says an an- nouncement by the company. ‘“Ear- phones are not required; with five watts or less put into the inductor was now refusing a last hour with him, he heard a voice in the windy | blackness. It sounded like his: name. | In surprise he whirled toward the ar-} bor of morning glories, and as he! stood there, listening, he heard it) The next envelope was an enigm Please _send me free copy of " rovider.”* | | a. aca pts ree’: i - ! again—his. name—Joyce’s voice, halt {It contained no message, no writing— | OF THE sobbing: " = | s ¥ tictaree ,..| nothing but two pictures. One was & N oO R I Jj ana to pon't BOr gs 2% rm| nouns of a large country estate, wanda ere. . . with lawns, servant quarters, gar- dens, orchards. The other showed an imposing town residence, @ stene building overrun by ivy, with a The North’s Call j limousine waiting in the doorway. | Seu! As she worked on a report. that eve | Bewildered, Alan looked at the pic- ning in the little library nook, Joyce | tures twice, searched in the envelope | would pause now and then and listen! intently, with her dark eyes peering into the blackness outside the win- dow. Sy CHAPTER XIV. WILLIAM BYRON MOWERY for a possible note, glancd again at) the address. And then, as he studied’ ‘the crest of the envelope, he started, . la little. This was from El:zaketh! | Tg, wag time tor Alan to be return- phat insigne was the Lamroth-Has- | ing ‘with “Bill and Red from a patrol \-21) crest! Since Haskell married her down the Mackenzie. In the shaip' iq they left the North, they had vigorous gusts of October wind she) written to on one at Endurance; but’ kept thinking she heard the drone of ian nad heard that Haskell, trans-) ward the post, he was realizing, with | the launch. Across the room from ferred to a small detachment in the bitterness of heart, that his sacrifice |her, on a blanket-padded couch, little, Kootenay coal fields, had resigned and eighteen months ago, _| Marion Montgomery had fallen aslvep | gone east. CWNU Service) Copyeight by William Byren Mowery CHAPTER XIII.—Continued. As he went out along the slope to-| the greates | | tor the transmission and pick-up of ; attacking party penetrated as far as sacrifice a man can be called upon to over a picture book, her tiny mocca-| coils, loud-speaker reception of am- ple volume to overcome train noises is reeeived.over a rail distance of rive miles or more. “The rails are used as the medium signals, which are put into and tik- en out of the rails by inductor coils suspended. from the caboose and loco- motive at minimum clearance dis- tance above the rails. These inductor |. coils are directly connected to the transmitting and receiving equip- ments.” Lesson For Canadian Soldiers Learned Necessity Of “Mopping Up” At Battle Of Givenchy The battle of Givenchy, when Canadians displayed great ingenuity by bringing up.to the front lines two pieces of field artillery, was recalled at Montreal by Sir Arthur Currie, who commanded the second Canadian brigade on that occasion. When an the third enemy trench it was taken ILOW PRICED : DABLE : Pe ~ » Mae aid Firestone WOU do not have to sacrifice quality and mileage to get a low priced tire. Oldfield Tires made by Firestone—have the quality and features of tires costing much more. Only Firestone, with its vast resources and experience, could build such a big, full- sized, rugged tire with a Gum-Dipped cord body and a long-wearing safety tread to Guaranteed for 12 Months against blowouts, cuts, bruises and all other road hazards ex- sell at such a low price. cept punctures Save money with Oldfield Tires. See the nearest Fire- r stone Dealer today. Firestone Lea OFA pee LeLeSY ADS make, had been worse than futile. It} Sins off, one arm hanging over the’ had cost him dearly, it had prought | couch. In the deep dreamless sleep of | pain to Joyce, it had brought them | babyhood the little tot was oblivious tonight to their hour of separation. | Of the threat and snarl of. autumnal ti And yet, through his bitter mood ran | wind swirling around the cabin. Ir] the knowledge that in his sacrifice he! had set all personal desires aside and, had kept-faith with a partner dead | Joyce had not yet become aware of it. | and had held sacred his pormise to| The report she was working on was Curt Spauling, until Elizabeth herself ® statement to her former bureau) had made that promise impossible of fulfilment. pended in her work among the Indian’ Again he lived over that hour when, women around Endurance. | he came upon a trapper's deserted, | During a lull in the wind she 3ud- show-drifted hut, and found Curt | denly heard the unmistakable sound | there, stricken with the disease, with of the big police boat skimming up, both lungs frozen, deserted by his the wave-tossed Mackenzie. Putting | treacherous Indian helper, dying as side her report, Joyce ceased being | valiantly as he had lived. He felt that | Dputy Indian Agent at Fort Endur-| Suddenly understanding the tures, Alan looked up an met Joyce’s eyes, and he saw that she too under- stood. In a kind of scorn she re- marked: “That’s like it. Elizabeth, isn't and uniformed chauffeur and all the things that—that—” “Say it?” Alan bade. “—AIl the chief in Ottawa of the money €»- things I'd never been able to give her. | She’s trying to rub it in. Yes, it's 1.ke her, Joyce.” x “Sometimes I pity her a little— with ihm, Alan.” “I wouldn’t say that, Joyce. I knew her better than you did. I'd say, God pity him—with. her.” With a gesture of finality he ftipped p:c- there was any sacrifice in having that Alan? She wants you to realize ahie’s | was caught between two fires. ee : ‘ | airy little companion in her home,' ot a country estate and town house, from behind by a party of the enemy ALBERTA DEALERS ‘who had concealed themselves in| RARRHEAD—Hooper’s Garage. dugouts in the first trenches and had] CZAR—E. A. Finnman. | been overlooked, a fact which proved | .sPER— © e a i i —E. Neighbor. fatal to the first battalion, which |} ATRVIEW-—Northern supply Co. It | FORESTBURG—H. O. Lund. was in this battle that the Canadians | FORT learned the necessity of “mopping eB eee ” ‘ aif sTY—Bone’s Garage. up, Sir Arthur, now principal of Mc | HOLDEN__R. B. Farrell. Gill University ,said. HUGHENDEN—E. Bell. | The two guns brought up into the IRMA—Ben. Sather. |front line did considerable damage | LACOMBE ant Motors Ltd. | i —A. Mitchell. | os om being disabled. Twenty of the rf OUGHEED-_Caudwell & Duncan. 23 officers participating in the attack mAYERTHORPE—Stratton’s Service were killed. Garage. The occasion of Sir Arthur's re OO Longman. 4 raarks was the anniversary of the T BEY NTinG A DALES” battle. OAK LAKE—A. S. Stweart. OAK ‘RIVER—W. A. Barr. RAPID CITY—E. W. Reage. SASKATCHEWAN—Fort SASKATCHEWAN DEALERS | LEADER—J. H. Ibringer. LEMBERG—P. Schick. LOREBURN—S. A. Socolofsky. LUMSDEN—Wm., Fulton. MAPLE CREEK—A. Blythman. MEYRONNE—Fortier & Girardin. MORTLACH—G. Ellard. ~~ OUTLOOK—Randall & Currell. OXBOW—Grundeen Motors. PENSE—C. V. Burton. PONTEIX—W. Hoffman. RIVERHURST—S. W. Fellows & Sons. ROCANVILLE—J. H. Lockhart. ROCKGLEN—P. Madsen. ROULEAU—C. C. Paustain. SHAUNAVON—Huyke & Fisher, Ltd. STRASSBOURG—H. Gustavson. TOMPKINS—K. D. Dixon. no man on earth could understand the | 4nce, N. W. T., and became the wife the pictures contemptuously into the | emotion that racked him as he krelt of Inspector Baker, officer command. | fireplace. beside the bunk, whispering to a part-/| ing there. With a glance at the sleep-| ater, when the lights of the post, ner who was going down into the ing tot she flung a cape about ar were out, when the fire logs had| dark, leaving a sister penniless, alone, shoulders and went out the cab:n :\nd | purned to red coals and Joyce had | in the savage North. | ran down the dark. winding terrace carried her sleepy little charge away | “Alan, she loves—you,” he could toward the wharf. |to bed, they. went outside the cabin. hear those broken whispers that pres-' When the yellow eye of the launch! 1, the night. sky they heard the ently were stilled. “If you'd mariy drew near, Joyce saw.a tall figure 1 niing of Arctic geese, last of the her—my sister, Alan. . . I wouidn’t, Step upon the prow half-deck and : mind—going—if I could think of you Stand ready with the painter chain. | 112) had the feeling that in the illim- | —partner ‘and brother, too—” Aad When he jumpe out upon the itable woods all furry creatures were. over and over again that dying wais- Planking, jerked the launch alongside ..oving out warm deng and Aoriig pered plea, and the ineffable peave and lapped the painter around a pier- 5004 gor the Frozen Moons. Up and’ that came whén Alan made covenant, head, he turned to her, hat in hand, aown the wilderness rivers and far-| “ ‘ | hi h : * I will, I will, Curt. I love her, too, | reproac ing her | sung over the Strong-Woods, a whis- because she’s your sister.” | “Girl, girl, you shouldn’t have come . . |per had gone abroad of a mighty | And now, as he thought of that gone here, in this | Taw wet wind. change brooding—a’ whisper that | lone funeral sled trip home, and a3, You've got to begin learning to b? Gove jess. courageous things into he glanced up the slope toward Curt's careful—” | seca dlong flight, yet was but -a chal- towering lobstick, his lips fashioned | Pedneault Snapped. off the: launch lenge to those iOra valiant of heart silently: : searchlight; and as the two men be-| 3 “ i » eeu . |The spirit of winter was in the air I tried, Curt. You wouldn’t kav>/ san gathering their packs together, | onignt; and “Ai a Joycs. were mae oof me than wnt the mang dhrkoety Zvee wacom Ht ef Not ut It. coul 2) COU e: {ier P » rising on tip-| they had lived through other winters; af © tee on . fa wet oo and they knew the savagery of those Joyce had helped Bill take her per-| ie cold-ateet 'o 5 gun buckle: Moons and their white silent beauty, sonal baggage down to the wharf, | After supper, when Alan had made | too, They had work to keep them and had talked over with him final himself regimental again after (he pusied during the long Dark, and a arrangements about forwarding peltry to Edmonton and selling the trading store. Waiting for the steam- er she had quietly stepped out of Mrs.|' She beckoned him over to her, hold- | ing. Drummond’s house into the garden irge out several letters) which had| back of it, telling no. one where she i come for him on the Chipewyan ma‘l.| had gone. ‘ |She had not opened them; but now | She was aware that Alan intended when he. brought a chair. beside her, ; to come down before she left, for talf She read them with him. - 7 an hour with her. She had slipped! Buzzard had dashed off a page , tin has invented a device for out in the garden to make that tne fom hia apartment address In Winn! | measuring the force to tell an aviator possible. If he came down to the peg. He had “done” a couple dozen | |. oiitude wharf. at the last moment, she felt ; fairs and pumpkin shows in his new ¥ she could say good-by calmly enough, | DeHavilland, but had found that line} with a brief handclasp a voyageur’s too tame. Right now he was flying | : nod and bon chance; but’ a longer the Winnipeg-Edmonton lap of the year without illness is exceptional, time with him would be unbearable. | air Mail. Next spring he was going for statistics ascribe 8850 cases of! As she stood there, half-hidden by to boss the “smoke hawk’ division of| illness to each 1,000 persons in the} an arbor of morning glories, she saw the Manitoba Fire Prevention, with a United States each year. a dim figure come out along the slope circus of ten scouting ’planes under} | him. | “Some time this winter (he post- scripted), we might put skis on the! = crate and hop down north to visit | you. But Alan, you find out first if Joyce holds anything against me for telling you she burned that rainbow | scarf. Idon’t think she ever has fcorgiven me.” Joyce looked up, laughing, but with | a catch in her voice as she remem- bered that haunting day. “Did you notice the ‘we,’ Alan? He puts her into a postscript! She’s just a mere afterthought! Who is she?” “Louise of Kamloops, is all I know,” Alan answered. , migrants, winging swiftly south; and * * * ® \inte the living room where Joyce was |zards, and the vista of a life together | finishing her report. herein this. far land of their choos- [THE END.] Because the force of gravity di- minishes as a man rises above the, surface of the earth, an engineer in| The person -who goes through the Artificial sunshine has lowered the death rate in the London zoo. Take Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Have you ever felt ‘that you were too weak to do anything... that you did mot have the strength to do your work? Women who are weak and run-down should take a tonic such as Lydia E- Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Head- aches and backaches that are the result of a tired, run-down condition often yield to this marvelous medicine. 98 out of every 100 women who report to us say that they are benefited by this medicine. Buy a bottle from your drug- Gist today... and watch the results. BRUISES There’s nothing to equal Minard’s. It “takes hold’. Antiseptic, soothing, healing. Gives quick relief ! NAR D'S L eT the Six-days hard patrol, he stepped out | home against the blind swirling bliz~|- land a rapidly changing world, Edna Youth Seen In Attempt To Adjust Edna Robb Webster Stirred by modern. youth’s.desper- ate efforts to adjust itself to the complicated demands made- by liie Robb Webster, ‘noted serial story | writer, has given her attention to the problem in her latest book, ‘‘Occasion- al Wife,” a romance of. modern mar- riage. The story begins in this paper at an early date. Mrs. Wubster takes as her two) chief characters, Camilla Hoyt, | adopted daughter of a wealthy fam- ily, and Peter Anson, poor and strug- gling artist. an want to marry. Camilla, whose foster mother, wants her to marry for money, is not to share in her family’s wealth when she comes of age, but she is tying to carve out a career for herself. as a commercial artist. To marry Pete and saddle him with *the responsibility of her support and happiness would mean, so Camilla thinks, the sacrifice of his already promising career. So she evolves @ unique marriage plan. Mrs. Webster’s serial stories are known wherever newspapers are printed. She has written many fav- orites, among them ‘“Dad’s Girl,” “Joretta,” and “Lipstick Girl.” They love each other at a Boy Scout Club. RIVERS—E. J. Forman. ROBLIN—Roblin Motors ROLAND—H. M. Jones. RUSSELL—F. T. Storey. VANGUARD—Geo. A. Ritchie. WAPELLA—A. Gilliard. YELLOW GRASS—A. Davidson. Little Helps For This Week “Giving thanks always for all things unto God.”—Ephesians 5:20. 3 Have Universal Appetite Some Beetles Eat Anything From’ Poisonous Drugs To Chocolate The cigarette. beetle which bores holes in cigarettes and prefers to- bacco to other kinds of products nevertheless feasts on cayenne pep- per, ginger rhubarb, rice, figs, yeast cakes and prepared fish food. . The Dominion Entomological Branch is on! the outlook to prevent its spread in| Canada. Another beetle. with a uni- versal appetite is the drug store bee- tle, which makes no discrimination be- tween poisonous or harmless drugs, its preference being for the deadly aconite and belladonna. It also bores holes in leather and books as a sideline, attacks. dried beans and peas, breakfast foods, flour, syhup, bread and chocolate, has a weakness for parsley seasoning, pepper and gin- ger, and is said to tackle everything except cast iron. It is also under sur- veillance. For blessings of the fruitful season, For work and rest, for friends and home, For the great gifts of thought and reason, To praise ‘and bless Thee, Lord we come. ° Yes, and for weeping and for wailing, For bitter hail and blighting frost, For high hopes on the low earth trailing, For sweet joys missed, for pure aims crossed. Nothwithstanding all that I have suffered, all the pain and weariness and anxiety, and all the sorrows that necessarily enter into life, and the in- ward errings that are worse than all, I would end my record with a devout thanksgiving to the great Author of my being. I am unwilling to make my gratitude to Him “a thanksgiving of mercies,” but instead I would have it to be gratitude for all that belongs to life and being, for joy and sorrow, for health and sickness, for success and disappointment, for life. and death; because I believe that all is meant for good.—Orville Dewey. Determined To See Fair Nineteen-Year-Old Toronto Boy Rode Bicycle To Chicago _ When the desire to view the won- ers of Chicago’s Century of Pro- gress Exposition came to Roy Gur- rey,-19, of Toronto, he didn’t ponder ways of raising transportation fare. Instead, he mounted his bicycle and pedalled to the Illinois city in four days of arduous grinding. When Roy arrived he shook the kinks out of his legs by parading in and out of the ex- position buildings, viewing the sights of the Midway. Overnight he stayed Italy’s new highway for trucks ex- clusively has @ great number of tun- DONT SUFFERS |, PILES oy Green Feeds For Poultry In vitamin and mineral content al- falfa and clover show themselves to be the most satisfactory green feeds for poultry. Fresh or dry, these le- gumes are palatable and nutritious, the leaves of the alfalfa or clover if well cured serving as an efficient form of feed. Alfalfa meal or better still alfalfa leaft meal from well cured plants is also a suitable kind of green feed mixed in the mash.—Do- minion Poultry Husbandman. PARA-SANI HEAVY WAXED PAPER Get the Green box. Keep it in your kitchen always, Inexpensive, Gabe pees A Brodklyn bakery {s using radio wave heat to bake crustless bread.
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Image 682 (1933-08-11), from microfilm reel 682, (CU12501488). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.