The Clinton News Record, 1930-01-09, Page 2Clanton
News -Record
CLINTON, ONTARIO
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faith, be he accompanied b a the name
of the writer: p Y
G.a,
Hall I]
Al, it CLA
R
fi
Proprietor. or
A Seto -
r. tOditor.
• M. D. &TAGGART
BANKER
A general Banking Bueinees transact-
ed. Notes Discounted. Drafts denied.
Interest Allowed on Deposits. Sale
Notes Purchased,
H. T. RANiCE
Notary Public, Conveyancer,
Financial, Real Palate and Fire In -
manatee Agent, Representing 14 Fire
,Insurance Companie,,,
Division Court .Office, Clinton.
W. RRYDONE
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, etc,
Office:
SLOAN BLOCK
CLINTON
DR. J. C. GAMIER
Office Hours: -1.30 to 9.30 p,m., 8.30
to 8:00 p,m.. Sundays, 12.30 to 1.30 p.m.
Other hrnrs ny appointment only,
Office and Residence -, Victoria St.
DR. FRED G. THOMPSON
Office and Residence:
Ontario Street - Clinton, Ont.
One door west of Anglican Church,
Phone 170
Eyes examinee anti glasses 'pled
DR. PERCIVAL. HEARN
Office and Residence:
Huron Street -- Clinton, Ont,
Phone 29
(Formerly occupied by the :ate Dr.
O. W, Tnninneon`
Eyes examined and glasses fitted
DR. H. A. MCINTYRE
' DENTIS
Office hours; 0 to 12 A.M. and 1 to
5 B.M., except Tuesdays and Wednes-
days. OAice over Canadian National
Express, Clinton, Ont.
Phone 21.
DR. F. A. AXON
DENTIOT •
Clinton, Ont.
Graduate of 0,0,D,S., Chicago, and
11,0.0.8., Toronto.
Crown and Plato Work a Specially
D. H. McINNES
CHIROPRACTOR
• Eitet,'o Therapist
Masseur
Office: Huron St. (Few doors west of
Royal Bank).
Boum-Tues., Thurs. and Sat., all day.
Other bourn by appointment.
Mensal] 0Mce-kion„ Wed, and Fri.
forenoons.
Scaforth Office -Mon, Wed, and Fri,
afternoons.
PHONE 207
GEORGE ELLIOTT
Licensed Auctioneer for the County
of Huron.
Correspondence promptly answered,
Immediate arrangements can be made
for Sales Date at Rhe News -Record,
Clinton, or by calling Phone 208.
Charges Moderate and SatisfaeUoa
Guaranteed.
B. R. HIGGINS
Clinto.t, Ont.
General Fire and Life insurance Agent
for Hartford Windstorm, Live Stomt,
Automobile .and Sickness and Accident
Insurance. Huron and Bt'Ie and Cana.
da Trust Bonds.''Ap)ointments made'
' to meet parties at Bruteeeeld, •U,arna
and liaytieid. 'Phone 67.
CAAAN'A10'�JQCi
VINIE TABLE
T'nins will .wive at and depart from
Clinton as followed
Buffalo and podertch div.
;Going East, depart • 6.44 a.m.
o „ ,t 2.50 p.m.
• Going West, ar: II 50 a.m.
" " Sr. 6.08 dyo 6,48 a no
14.31 pm.
London, Huron &' Brace -z:
Going South, ar '1,40 din 7 40 a.ne.
"ft
" 4.08
Going North, depart 6 92 p.m,,
"' " zat 11.40 dp..11 03 aur;
v
�IEIE IVieKILLO'P MU'1�°IiAL
t,, Fire Insurance Company
[ s Hc'id Office, 8eaforttt, Ont,
olPeh'o DiltDCTORY:
r §
James
l'eem6. JaennolllY,. Beane,
S.
tamer, D. F. Mcbre$ai, Seafofth,)rector.
Gmgor„ge Modartney, Seafortht
Ames S onllddloo,. Walton• attirrO Gib.
It Bruogaeld• Web. Hutt, Be?afe9 th;
op t F trio demi at Joie Bon eweir,
reptiol% ; gas, a o11y; o{ierio
•''l'' It.
Atox. leolten, Clintons !r W.
eo o er
1L tra., na d l ' t1@fd. +Tat
„uuity+iile: R. Q. +Tai'•
,arod,ha en.
Any money to bo -paid In may be paid
to Moorish Clothing co, Clinton, or at
Calvin Cutt'e lroeery, Boderloh.
Parties desiring to, effect Insurance or
transact other business will be promptly
attended to on a•pplination to any of the
above afters addressee to'Itheir resneo.
hive post office. Losses inspected bq the
Director who'. lives nearest the e^eile,
>1• CAPtAl+'t;e�•*t.
"shove orf, me sons I We kin get
strytened out efleat!".
"Bands off!" roared Jake, and
plunged headlong at the mean. tearing
the sail awning down. He struck
fiercely at the diui face, and the fellow
toppled back into the lapping tide.
ike struck with Me axe, and the edge'
gashed the gunwale of the boat not
an inch dearofanother band..
"'E's a bloody murderer!" gasped
the lucky one who had escaped, Then
there was a rush. Something struck
npitched across
Jake on thehead and hec s
t
screamed,
the boat gunw
ale. Ike for
desperate hands seized his axe and
rendered him powerless for harm, al-
though hestill clung to the handle.
Jake stumbled to his feet again, all
but stuinned, and beat at faces that
suaeleT at him. He heard Mary cry
out and fought madly to reach her.
Heavy clubs of driftwood hammered
upon his skull. He felt as if wheels
whirled inside his head. Ike screamed,.
but those ruffians were not to be dri-
ven off by screams. The•boat moved,
too. They -were laue.ching the boat,
and Mary was in it. He fought well,
but be had been sadly dazed by that
first tremendous blow. He called up
cunning where brawn bade fair to fail.
Head down, and arms protecting it, he
charged clear of the Lang, and swiftly
turned upon them,
"Back, you rats! Hands off, or I'll
shoot you full o' lead! Quirk, you!"
"Bli'lne! Th' bleeder's got a gun!
Look out,"
Fearfully the deserters backed
clear. They barked as long as Fake
advanced, holding a big rinsed clasp
knife towards them. Then he warned
them to keep that distance; and even
Ike did not decline his offer to keep
watch with him tinier the shelter of
the boat.
BEGIN HERE TODAY
Alden Drake, formerly a sailor,
grown soft and flabby through a life
br idle 'erase, ships aboard the. clipper
Oxontes as "boy," under the command
of Jake Steyens, whose enmity he in-
curs because of ,a mutual love for
Mary Manning, daughter of the owner,
who is a passenger. At Cape 'Town,
Stevens is superseded as captain by
Drake, whose lawyers have seen to the.
purchase of the Orontes during its
cruise. Stevens' is reduced to the rank
of chief mate.
The oases due partly to Jake's,
Orontes, t p'i Y Ja e.
dig ba ai of orders, is runonthe rocks
o y, d x ks
in the Straits ;off' Java. Mary slips
away from the ship with Ike, the stew-
ard, and later Jake gots to join her
ashore.
NOW GO 'ON WITH THE STORY
Lulled by the niurniur of the tide
on the shore, and the soft crooning' of
the night breeze; Fake slept soundly
for all his problems. He failed to
hear the stealthy tramp of many feet.
A line of men stepped 'cautiously by
him without seeing him, and went to-
wards the boat on the .beaeh., Jake
only awoke to the snarling challenge
of Ike Saintly. Then, swiftly awake,
he became aware of the gathering
about the boat.
He ran down., bursting in among
tile riot that seemed to centre there.
"Ler' luntnte! Stooai'd, it's nus!' ex-
claimed young Tubbs desperately. Ike
menaced his head with the axe.
"Git back! Tyke yer 'suds orf the
boats" warned Ike, and his weapon
swished through the air murderously.
Stevens pushed forward.
"Get lfack there! What does this
mean? Who's here?"
"Bli'ne, it's Mister Stevens, blokes!"
cried Sims, and the crowd drew back
with many a muffled whisper and
scarcely muffled chuckle.
"What is it, Ike?" called Mary,
from her shelter.
"There's th' Judy!" whispered Shun
hoarsely, digging a forefinger jcccsely
into Tubbs' ribs.
"Don't be frightened, Mary," Jake
called to the girl. Then with a fer-
ocity that abashed the men for the
• .
0
CHAPTER- XXVII.
mem OF $IS SHIP.
Meen;vhile, after :. day of fierce
work, shifting water tanks, breaking
out cargo, moving weight of every
movable kind aft to lighten the fore
end of the 'Orontes, harrassed mates
"BI,1'ME!
—°n
TIS' BLEEDER'S ti'JT A 'GUN! LOOK OUT!"
moment he put his face Octal to the
nearest man and barked:
"What d'ye want? 'What's ,mer
game? Who sent Fou"."
Somebody remembered that Stevens
was no longer a first mate to be Laved.
Never mind cur gyute, albter,"
sternal a bold voice. "We ain't erne
iter you. • We dont rare if we never
sees you. We come to tyke the beat
an' beat •it Over th Si :es. An' tit'
lydy bin 'mete, te;o, if she 'earls to,
hey bici:e '
teat relea.ietta f•'tilors to supper and
!Temente:, ,Let them tete in may, Mister
We - i e there's likely to be
a Mame afteit Park, and I'll try to
nave the ehip again at` high tide,"
tent Dr .hc, res': ng complacently
the melt heap of cargo forward of
Ise had mode no cemmInent
aura, the g' tun; c•f "evens. He gave
re car to the win t :eg grievances of
the 'Decor, who not only hen to feed
she men. and terve the ,a't.n, but was
"tush ver raw, Mos 1 v!" growled delver, to put his weight to a rope, t,e.
Tubbs, pulling himself eel d"We un Ste c r and t ear ntnnks, He
come ashore, ?i,s.c: ti cv, .m •. 1 a. , wv dia:tce of fioatiag the ship until spring
ain't grin' to 'are our In eta broke and word of rcmplaint camped them.
be swore ate • We conic mitherm Lyme Itrake meted that very earefully. But
as you." !they felt they were working en a hope -
"Th' bloody rats ttarted to run less trek: felt that there would be no
boxer the deck, so it'f time for Sailor -hauled, too, slung cases and bore on
mon-" Another =arrulous e-aies' crab winches with the, men, Never a
broke in. Tubbs cursed the optaeer,tsdes Came; felt the noon had reason -
and went on with his own tale: able ground ..for grumbling,. But
"We want to know, Meter Steveno, molars were to be obeyed, even though
if it :ain't law as our Articles is up tan', was also expected to take 'bare of the
cancelled as soon as the ship sti�i!cee," i p: ironer, 'Erb Oats, 'Erb found his
"You'll all be clapped into the stone:rneeltirees becoming painfully irregu-
frigate as soon at yon get esteemed tar. The two young mates spared
that's how you stand," retorted Ste -t themselves 'no.more than they spared
wens contemptuously. • He might be I the »tent They tang out for heels,
a'diegraced and discredited officer, hula theybreak
giving amers and here the. own -
be still held to the rule of caste. He g the enters: So. Stir.
was dealing with forecastle rabble. ITivining only mannered assent to that
Not even decent sailormen. No decent i lnot order as Drake went below. Bat
sailermen would desert the ship white I Drake stepped back again.
thexe was hope of saving her, He I "Better hoist the •boat and swing
grinned at the thought. But in hisIt in tefere the men knock off for
.sipper," he suggested. "We won't
.need a b at tonight, and I prefer net
to Into another."'
(To br continued.)
own case he Intel been definitely redo,:
ed to •a nonentity and told to go. 'Sud-
denly he thr'ustein among the cluster-
ing g..ng. All were dripping wet,, they
smelled sour. They v,ere al) breathing
hay(' as if font exertion, or anxiety.
He peered into one face after another. Cradle Song
"I thought .sol" he rasped, stepping Sleep, little loved one, safe and warm,
back towards the boat"Not one good Shoheen, shoheen; Io.
man among you. My advice to you is, Little dark head in the crook of my
get back to the boat that brought you arm,
ashore, and xeturn to the ship before God's youngest angel guard thee from
harm.
Shoheen, little loved one, sleep.
you arefeund oat. Work, you're afraid
oft You'll build roads under a Java
sun if you don't tutu to like men."
"We didn't steal a boat, Mister," Dark thou art, and thy father is dark,
retorted Sims. The other bout is haul- Shoheen, shoheen, lo.
lad up, for fear we would, though. You
ain't been ti'ented none too good, Mis-
ter Stevens: We only dente the s
as you. We amvum for it, too. And,
we're ready to /oiler Mel if you-"
"Don't wyste bref en 'hp!" growled Soon he will melte to up aver I.1i� see,.
a voice in the dark. "Them' rats allotment'sholiedl 10',
runnin' ovet' tilt deck finished erne. To ,Poi' tweet anfli �e �g 044
'ell wiv 'Inc.` Let's tyke the boat an'
zit on our way ler Amer." .A Boli; bud of Do 8 ' fitblaelhaeld
shoe,,
Voices joined in agreement. The• gbo Beit, little loved• • qn•'.Mtn*.
crowd began to move. Ike ulllir a =r ,�i
yell, and the -starlight glittereil dot h I t 'nil Vii;
Us' lila.
Wild and free aed swift as the lark,
Lovely and strong as the bright
moon's arc;
Shoheen, little loved one, sleep.
Sunday Night
Sandwiches
Elaborate sandwiches, .sitnple' ones,
those hearty enough fora meal or
dainty onough',to.be served at an af-
ternoon tea;^all originated, according
to tradition, in that one sandwich the
Earl of Sandwich had put 'together
early;' in the eighteenth ,century lie
was busy at•"his games, as the story
goes, and refused to leavethem to
eat his 'dinner, sp his' dinner Was
broatght to him in the -most convent-
ent form.
Many home maltere to -day include
the sandwich in their'mehus because
of this same convenience. It affords
a generous 'amount . of food, and is
Simply prepared and served.
The Sunday night supper is an es
pecially good time to serve them
since in most' homes a light meal is
sufficient and the sandwich may be
as 'substantial or as dainty _as the in-
dividual dual prefee:s.
• The work is greatly simplifiedl
i0ed if
all the ingredients
and utensils are
made reedy, first. The breath knife
should be sharp, the bread itself
neither too fresh .nor too stale., There
should be separate,knlves for spread.,
ing the mixtures and the butter
should be• dreamed to the right con-
sistency for spreading If they are
not to be eaten immediately oil paper
mast be provided.
Grilled Sausage Sandwich
Parboil and broil three link poet
sausages. 'Split them 'and place them
on a slice of buttered bread. Sprinkle
lightly with catsup. Top them with
another piece of buttered bread. Gar-
nish with parsley. Serve with small
baked apples or apple saute. This
portion is sufficient for one person.
Broiled Ham Sandwich
Broil thinly cttt slices of . smoked
ham which have been first brushed
with mustard. Butter two hatfdneh
slices of bread for each person, to be
served while the ham is cooking.
Place the bread on the dinner plate
on which has been arranged a small
lettuce leaf with one stuffed or hard-
boiled egg. Then cover the bread
with the Slice of broiled ham, place
the second slice of bread on top of
the ham, Dot the top with grape
jelly.
Hamburg Sandwich
Brown in a buttered pan, thin fiat
cakes of ground steak, turning them
often. Add salt and pepper when
seared. When the cakes are thor-
oughly browned on the outside but
still vire inside, place them between
slices of buttered bread anti garnish
with dill pickle or pickled beet,
Pried Ham With Onion Sandwich
This recipe will make 12 sand-
wiches. Put, xk pott]ul of smoked
ham, seasoned and fried quite brown,
2 large dill pickles, and 1 small Span-
ish onion through a food chopper.
Mix with mayonnaise and spread it
between slic•as of whole wheat bread.
If one likes, a bit of mustard may be
adtteel.
Minced Ham Sandwiches
Brush buttered breed very lightly
with prepared mustard. Spread with
minced ham awl cover with a second
slice, Dip in beaten egg and fry a
golden brown In butter. Garnish with
lettuce, devilled egg, and pickle.
Grilled Lobster Sandwich ,
This recipe calls for previously
cooked lobster, but any canned lob•
stet' is good, or any fish, fried or
grilled; ncay be used.
Toss cooked lobster into a buttered
grill anti heat, Then make really 2
rz-inch slices of bread for each sand-
wich and fill them with the hot Iob-
ster. Serve with a tiny lettuce leaf
holding tartar sauce and t'heeoe'stuff-
etl celery.
Corned Beef Sandwich
This recipe makes 12 sandwiches.
Stix together 2 cupruls of chopped
e'orned beef, 1 cupful of chopped eel -
IVO gain thirty pounds
in three months, and
win back health and
strength was the happy
experience of Mrs.' Mar-
garet Brethour of Corn-
wall, Ont., who gives all
the credit for it to Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills.
"After the birth of my -
baby, I was in the hospital
four months," she wrote,
"and came home weighing
only sixty-five pounds. I
began taking Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills and it wasn't long
until I weighed ninety-five
pounds and my general
health was of the best.
Every Spring since then I ,
take the pills as a tonic, and
wouldn't be without them, no
matter what they , cost; I
strongly recommend them to
all mothers:'
Buy Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills now at your druggist's
or any deafer in medicine or
by mail, -30 cents, postpaid,�
from The Dr. Wi.ltiams
�t,�ediciae Co., Brockville,
Vale
ars o
"Come on, chapsli' shodted a itc
on the outside of the little mob,bit!
before Ilse could reach hint his han s
were upon the boat: ' Aniother ]nand
tore down the sail.
ISSUE N0 2—'30
SENT1ME.N.`fi'`,• •
Senthtient- is a 'strong Men'q • 'cdil
cealiiient of what he feels, 'while sen-
tlmentality is a weak man's entree,
sion of what lie doesn't' feel. --F.
Frankfort Moore.
:1A HOuesnoLe „AM
IN B4 COUNT0ICO"
erY, 1 small .ehopped. onion,. ?,5 to 1:
tablespoonful of English Mustard
Add .mayonnaise (situ this mixture
forms a paste of tspteading consist-
ency: Spread between buttered rye'
bread and servo with pickles.
Hot' Creamed -Mushroom' Sandwich'
Cut in small pieces and brown in.
butter, mushrooms which have been
previously washed and lnrepared. •Add.
rich Milk ordilated evaporated Thicken with a little flour and water
to make a gravy. Salt to taste. While
this cooks, prepare bread eases by
cutting crustless cubes Sion 3 -inch
slices of bread. • Hollow out the in-
side of each, This leaves a ;square
case or patty shell. Fill these With
the: hot meetirooms and garnish with
paisley.
Curry Chicken Sandwich
Mix to a, thick paste, 2 ounces of
Witten- 1ea o
t sp onrgl of • curry pow-
der, Int, teaspoonful of lemon juice, a
dash of salt, anti a few drops of onion
juice: Spread this on slices' of white
bread. On top of each slice place a,
piece of.c ld boded,ei him and then a
e chicken,
piece o f eh ellen, Cover withthe
second slice of bread and serve.
Hot Roast Beef Sandwich
Cut carefnliy thin slices of cold
roast beef and heat in the gravy.'
Then add at teaspoonful • of horse,!
radish for each serving. On the din-
ner plate arrange at one side slices
of tomato and, cucumber which have
been previously marinated. Put .the
meat on a buttered slice of bread,
dover it with the second slice nod•
pour over the sandwich a goitrousl
portion of the horseradish gravy. Any
roast -neat may be served the same
way.
Cold Lamb Sandwich
lfix together 1 cupful of minced
a,
cooked lamb; lei cupful of celery, 2
teaspoonfuls of chopped 'mint and
enough mayonnaise to make a paste.
Serve between slices of fresh toast.
Bacon Sandwich
Toast as many slices of bread as
needed on one side only. Spread the
untoastetl side with butter 'and cover
with sliced, uncooked and skinned
tomatoes. Arrange three strips of
uncooked bacon across each sand-
wich, place a thin piece of cheese on
top and sprinkle with paprika. Set
the sandwiches in a hot baking oven
until the bacon curls and its edges
are browned. Then serve at once
with olives. If desired, these sand-
wiches may be made more dainty by
cutting them in circles.
Other combinations of topless sand-
wiches in Russian style are: Fish
worked to a paste and broiled; cream
cheese with currant jelly; pineapple
anti cream cheese ewe. with nuts;
minced ham and mashed egg yolk
andmayonnaise with sliced pimiento
ogres; pineapple, dates and candied
ginger bleedetland garnished with a
halt cherry'an mint leaves.',Also, the
sandwich is delicious if spread with
a layer of grated cheese mixed with
chopped stuffed olives. The sandwich
is then set its an oven to brown.
Hot Musrhoo,ry Sandwich
('eel and slice ?:ir of a pound of
innslerootes either canned or freeh.
Place in a frying pan over a low fire
anti add 1. teaspoonful of butter, 1
chopped green pepper, 1 chopped
greets pimiento, and salt to taste.
Make a cream sauce by cooking
cream with flour to arcading consist-
ency. Cover the mushrooms with
this sauce and a,n'oad on slices of
toast (tarnish with paprika,
Cheese Relish Sandwich
Mash together one package of
snappy cheese and 2 tablespoonfuls
of sweet pickle relish and add mayon-
naise and salt to taste. Serve be-
tween slices of hot toast. •
Cheese Dream Sandwich
Piane a thick slice of t4teedcr
cheese between two slices of buttered
bread and fry in hot butter until the
cheese is melted. Serve scot.
Another way to make these Citee>e
Dreams is to toast the sandwiches in
a hot oven until tiro cheese mots,
Hot Oyster Sandwieh-
Have smithy dices of bread and but-
ter lightly einem] with a pickle re-
iislt. Dip oysters in seasoned erembs
anti fry in hot tat. Drain on brown
paper. Then serve ahem on the Oleosof bread and coven' with a top
Glee, Serve while 'the oysters are
hot.
Denver Sandwiches
Beat together 1-3 .cupful of coid
ham chopped very fine, 1 thusly-chopa
ped fine' onion, 1 chopped dill pickle,
and 2 beaten eggs. Try this mixture
in hot fat and put between slices of
buttered toast. - Christian Science
Monitor,
A DAY'S WORK
What do you see in your day's
work, my friend? What does It mean
to you? Do you see anything outside
of the salary? Do Yon see a
building in in it? Do you see great pos-
sibilities for success and happiness?
Do you see self•improvement, growth,
mental expansion in it, a richer char -
atter, r broader, wiser man? Do you
see your vocation as a training -school
for future greatness, or do you see
yourself tied down in an uncongenial
environment, with nothing better in
view?
Do you see only hours of drudgery
or anonotony in the day, and a mere
living? Are you' Sorry when the day
begins and glad when it ends? Does
the dollar -mark so blur your vision
so flit it, that everything else in your
day is covered np? Or is money a
minor consideration and do you see
a lot of real interest, enlarged capac-
ity, a possible partnership, a possible
business for yourself, in your day's
Folk? - -
WORRY,
Ifeep your heart free from hate,
your mind from worry:. Live einlpljt)
expect ]ittlel.give much; sing often!
pray always: Pill your life with love,
,scatter sueshine. Forget self, Think
of othere, Do as you would bel done
by: The are the tried links in con-
tentment's ' golden chain,-MoLeod.
"The idea that p burglar will breed
a burglar is utterly absurd." -Clarence
Darrow..
Salad n' O* ang ekoe :. as
by f.t? ` the finest fl ra Va ?
11
Compulsory Insurance Mortality. in Mink
Cut by Disc over
R. (..Davidson in time New States-
man (London): In may cases there
is no valid objection to making a man
carry the coat of any risk which lie
creates. But the body of motorists
include many thousand thowho
usand erson s
p
are not at present insured because of
Mete poverty, such as ,uninsured
drivers ragging. from artisan motor-
cyclist to struggling owners of a
single taxicab: They ought to be M-
imed, and it is the duty of any Gov-
ernment to see' that they are insured,
and of a Labor Government in Par -
Similar to facilitate their insurance at
the lowest practicable premium. But
the inevitable effect of compulsory
insurance is to raise premiums which
are already high towards prohibitive
figures. At present, opinion in the
House tends to consider that no real
solution of this formidable problem is
in sight.
"I think no could be very happy
together:"
"But do you think we could bd as
happy as we could apart?" .
•
HABITS
We are apt to forget that one may
be correct in the personal habits of
life, anti yet vicious in his attitude
toward the vital issues of his times;
we are apt to ignore the ethical qual-
ity in the intelect. But we should 'do
well to remember that integrity of
mind is no less important than in-
tegrity of conscience. -Frances E.
WiIIard.
"Divorce is a greet institution; It
keeps women in circulation," -.Corti
Dewar.
Canadian Icreri.tifies Flatworrli.
to Benefit fi of Fr-raisers
u a sers
To an official of the provincial
game and fisheries department, Dr;
Ronald G. Law of the province's ex.
periniental fur farm at M rltfield, goes
credit for having tliseoveretl a new;
cause of illness and mortality ainceig
mink.
Obscure though it may seem to lay-
men, the discovery is regarded, at of
's.rlmstantial importance to' zoologists,
veterinarians and wild life conserve
tors. It reveals a new species of Ma -
worms which lodge themselves in the
animal's gall bladder, eventually cans-
ing its Settle.
First notification of Dr. Law's suc-
cess was had by Dorsad McDonald,
deputy minister cf game and fisheries,
and other departmental officials, when
they received a copy of a scientific
paper on the subject from the Smith-
sonian institute at Washington. Dr.
Law was reamed as the discoverer.
'The new species is of the type
known to science as "trematodes'"
and has been identified by the paper's
author, Dr. Emmett W. Price of the
U.S. department pt agrtculture, as of
the genus parametorcbis. In a ges-
ture to Its discoverer and the land of
his birth, It has been named para-
nt:' reals canadensis..
Last i"ebruaay Dr. Law sent a.
minket gall bladder coataiuhng about
u dozen specimens to the Smith:,on-
Ian !is,titute. 'Meanwhile zoologists
there have been working on the sped.
mens and now have identified them.
Since February the department' had
no word of what lead become of the
specimens, so that the recent an-
nmutcement canoe as a pleasant sur-
prise.
EXPERIENCE
As a man grows older:
Iie values the voice of experic'h:'e
more and the voice of prophecy less.
He finds more of life's wealth M.
the common' pleasures-home/health,
children.
He begins to appreciate his owe.
father a little more.
He boasts less anti boosts more.
lie hurries less and usually makes
more progress.
lie esteems the friendship of Goa
a little liglterr--Rev. Roy L. Snaith,
A New Edition of
"The Baby
flf
has been issued by the Department of
Health of Ontario. The information
covers care anti feeding of the child
from birth to six years of age.
It is free to all residents of Ontario.
If you desire a copy sign and mall
coupon below:
Department of Health of Ontario,
Parliament Buildings,
Toronto, Ont.
Please send me copy of revised edi-
tion of "The Baby."
NAME
STREET
P.O. ADDRESS out,
e
dial!
nn
�j
c�tl v '
Nowadays, people take Aspirin for
many little aches and pains, and as
often as they encounter any pain.
Why not? It is a proven anti-
dote
ntidote for pain. It works!
And Aspirin tablets are abso-
liutely harmless. You have the
tactical profession's word for that;
they do not depress the heart.
So, don't let a cold ;run Its'`
' course.'.! Don't wait for a head.
glebe to €'wear oil'.'.! Or regard
heurelg1e, neuritis, or even rheum.
f tism as something you must en.
Ore. Only a physician can cope
With the cause of such pain, but
you
can alwaysrelief. turn to an Aspirin
Aspirin is always available, and
It never fails to help. Familiarise
yourself with its many uses, and
avoid a lot of needless suffering.
TRADE
teams REG.