HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1931-04-02, Page 2Clinton
News -Record
CLINTON, ONTARIO
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G I, HAIL, M. R CLARK;
Proprietor. Editor.
. D. &TACCA T
Salada Ore
drink t
n tea drinkers
st green tea
't1111e1t glance' at the Man who lay'Excavators Dig Up
A general Banking BusifteSS�
tr nn;sacted. Notes DiseOuflted•
Drafts Issued. Interest Allow-
ed on Deposits. Sale Notes Pur-
c.lsfsed.
H. T. RANCE"
Notary Public, Conveyancer
Fie:m •nu, deal Estate and Fire 10-
'e ti, n •e Agent Representing 14 Fire
in,v4•,nee !%'impnntes.
Dlvis,On .ourt. Office. Clinton.
IL ESCAPADE
By KATHLEEN NORRIS
SYNOPSIS.
Mary Kate O'Mara accepts •ari,rOthat
do made byChristopher Stet
t
sho.act at his wife at a dinner given by
her boss, Gordon. Rountree, Inorder that
a at
.'-ussian countess and r
may b0, discouraged and discontinue
the r attentions to Steynes- Mary tells.
1 ; mother she is going .on a business
trip and meets Steynes at the station
at Burlingame. The Countess is dis-
couraged andMary stays overnight at
Steynes' house. Diming the night a
burglar enters and Steynes shoots hien.
Police take Mary's name and address
and she is terriaed for feat' her mother
will Lind out about it. After returning
home Mary;discovers she has fallen in
love with Steynes this to 0
ass
Beatinu, tom e engaged. 089
k
er
is
Just
;iary and •she. meets and goes
lunch with him. Me asks her to visit
the the ease tagainstuihim bel will not
dropped.
t the
Mary agrees to go. .
Frank Finland, E.A., LL.B.
Carr1o:er, Solicitor. Notary Public
1l,t•roesnl to 1V Brydone li L).
olein Dock - Clinton, Ont:
CHARLES B. HALE
Conveyancer, Notary Publib,
Commissioner,. etc.
(U"l.•.e over J h1.'HoveY's 1)rug Store)
B. R. ' IICaGINS
f:a3a1, Patbt]c, Conveyancer
e
bandaged on the bed, his sullen sus-
picious look
us-ptetous:laok turned toward.. the
door.
But Mary Kate's look got no further
than the invalid's face.
Her breath rose on a quick gasp.
For a second she wavered as if she
were going to faint. Then with a
sob she. took .the little space between
door and bed with a few flying' steps,
Oho was on her knees beside the in-
jt:red man, her face against the hand
she clasped in both of hers.
"Oh, Mart, Mart, Marti"' she cried.
(To be continued.)
What New York
Is Wearing
BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON
Migrated Dressmaking Lesson Fur-
nished
'.t Ev
a1•
tT
i9ltied With N P
1L
His incoherent sentences dwindled'
into silence, He made a fresh start:
"Here's what I'm trying to say:
You're young and you're very beauti-
ful -you really are. It sounds like a
flat thing to say, but really you are
-and you're going to be married; and
you've got your mother and home
and here, your
friends.I've brothers sisters and
come along, to up-
set all that-" -
Another halt. Mary Kate ended
the silence by saying:
"You have."
"Dania!" Chris ejaculated simply.
"We'll go to the hospital now," the
girl said, beginning • to gather her
things, "and after that, I'll not see
you again. I ask you -I' beg you,"
she went on, "not to try to see me
again, after today. But something
happened to rate, last week," she eon-
tinued very simply, looking down,
speaking in a low voice. "I didn't
know what it was at first. I just
knew that 1 was -sort of --trembling
all the time, and that I couldn't at,
or sleep -and yet I didn't feel sick,
exactly -
"Everything looked. so bright, and
so -well, I don't know, thrilling to
rare," she went on, in a dead silence.
"Even I-ri1yself, was thrilling, to
myself.
!And then, thinking ene night, T_
suddenly knew what it was. _I was
remembering Burlingame, and all
that time last week, and when I came
to thinking about yon'-"
A little shrug, an upward glance
from her troubled blue eyes, complet-
ed the sentence. She .got to her feet.
"So that's that!" she finished. They
did not speak again as they left the
dini,ig room.
But in the yellow taxi, lumbering
through the light, sun -penetrated rain
that was still falling -falling to his
surprise, and to his rather touched
relief, she was suddenly her usual self
again, a tall red-headed girl -eager for
experience and filled with betel:est in
everything. She told hint the history
of the old mansion on Nob Hill, Feint-
ed out the college town,and the pri-
son island, .the quarantine and naval
base islands in the bay, and the old
Fair site, lying revel along the edge
of the sullen gray, rain -flattened wat-
ers. From personal, emotional maht-
ters she kept resolutely away,nd
saw it.
"Do you dread this interview,
Mary?"
"Not much. I have a.feeling that
it will come out all right."
She tu
rne
d to
him,
With
that
a
t An
i
-
mated wids=e ed look heso especially
liked in her. "I'm absolutely erazy-
I'm what -my brother Mart would call
completely off :he reservation! I'm
doing things, and taking chances, that
would absolutely have floored me -
that would have eath
to.d
e me
neared
a few months ago. I don't know
what's come over me! •I was in a
place where burglary and murder
were attempted, a few nights ago, I'm
lying to my mother, I'ni lying to Cass,
I'm on n1y tray to see a criminal-"
The summary ended in her gay,
irresponsible laugh. It was as if he
saw, her confession had relieved her
soul, washed away all fear and re-
sentment for the moment, at least.
"Did you tell -your brother?"
"No; he's in Oregon. And 'a bless-
ing, too! But I did tell b
"What! The whole thing?"
"Almost."
"And what did he coy?"
"0h, he was wonderful. He molly
understood."
Chris had a moment of mortifica-
tion.
"I suppose he thinks I'm a skunk,"
he said, uncomfortably.
"I suppose he does!" she conceded,
nd
etl•
"ten
.
' l4e b
"It's all sort of a moss," Chris mus-
ed, after a moment. Mary Kate -'lade
no answer.
"Is this man in a jail hospital?"
ked.
she, as
"No. Gordy managed that. 1.13
asked them that no charge be made
against him until we got it' all.
straight. He .intends -at least he
hopes, that he can- claim that it was
Mean -
'
all a sort of sokea �']tla he knew,
who'd gotten boiled 'et the club, and
so on."
"Could he do that?"
"01,, it's'beingdone all the tine!".
Chris assured her.,
They were at the hospital, mount-
ing the formidable flight of steps deet
rose at its imposing- base. Inside,
there were certain formalities, and
then a middle-aged- nurse, with a
bunch of keys at her 'girdle, led them
through various clean, antiseptic -
scented hallways to one of the im-
mense
rm
rase wings s
of
the enormous build-
ing.
ing. An elevator boy then tookcharge
of them, and 'ev.entually they found
themselves alone, outside. of a white-
painted steel door, one of a Hundred
similar doors that closely dotted a
long upper corridor. Number seven -
tile -107M ky Kate asked open
CHAPTER XXXIV.
It was after two o'clock now ra s
music had ceased. The dining
was almost deserted; only a few wait
ees hovered near ,the door, only a few
-'ate lunchere were- murmuring, as
these two were, at scattered tables.
Outside, the ;slue sky wok clouded
again, and' the Light, irresolute rain
was again falling.
Chris leaned across the table, and
for a qu'.ek wend put a warns brown
• nand over h_r own. His eyes were
smiling, but his tone was all kind.
"It's not going to take you very
long to get over it Mary?"
All my life!'' she answered
uickly.
q "Ah, no, my dear r' -
"Not that it matters,"she ' said
dully. "I don't know," she began
again with a desperate little laugh,
"I don't know who told you. I would
have died rather than let you know'!"
"You've. been telling me, all day,"
Chris answered. "You told me last
right, over the telephone." meeting
She accepted this squarely,
leis eyes. But her color rose steadily.
"I suppose so," she admitted simli
iv, shrugging.
"A feeling like that," he said,
"doesn't ipst-du you see -what I
mean? I mean -why, we all do that.
We all get involved! But the real
tiling -the things that are tied up
with your family, and your friends,
and .your home town, and --oh, well,
a man's success and future. and ehi]-
then, everything-" He stopped.
"I'm trying t'o say something," he
recommenced, with a laugh, as her
gravely ,watching eyes gave hint no
encouragement, "and I don't believe
I'm getting away with it."
"Oh, yes, you're getting away with
it," Mary Kate osoured hint, simply.
" se
>,
he
un o
g5e- P
but su
p
N
oP
argued eagerly, "that the shoe sea
the other feet -that the situation
was what -do -you -call -it -reversed,
oppose the sit•ration was
reversed.eel,
Suppose I was pegging y
' we
that
Can't
OU
see
mariy me. y
wouldn't have a dog's chaiue for :.ape
piness? Can't yoi.'imagine yourself
saying eomethi-ig like this to me? 'I
don't know your friends, I don't
understand they way they talk about
things,, they fuss me when they pull
German and French on 'me--'"
"German and Frenehi" Mary Kate
echoed, in a pause, looking atday,
slightly biting her full lower sip.
"0h, I don't mean German I mean
French! I mean everything.
--well, everything!"
t
„ 'Mary
acct y
"The beggar on borsch
Kate said lightly.
"You know better," Chris reproach-
ed her, warmly. "You know ?that 1
mean, better than that," he went on,
es she did -not speak. "You know that
all S mean is, that the things the
women I know do, would not hold you
for one :second. They are not -real,
I know that. I hate the whole.erowd
of then:, pressing and eating and
gambling. I don't see you playing
:.
it
the.
jabbering
day,ab 6
yr
every 1
bridge Y
S
jab-
ber. 1 mean-„
"I know what you meant" she said
impatiently, resentfully; in the pause.
"That -well, that in a way you're
,,
the realest girl I've ever. met-'' Chris
explained. "Your mother -your fam-
ily -the )lean you're engaged to marry
-all that is real. If I wanted that
sort of thing little sisters and bre-
then, all needing me, allwanting
couldn't
u.
can buy, thins that money y
get it. You've got a marvelous time
ahead. Yo t've got everything-"
"Ain I making sense?" he broke off
to ask with a. little self-conscious
l:ttt„1',lf
"Of course you're making sense,"
the girl. said, in the most natural tone
she had yet used." But her cheeks
were aflame.
"Mary, I Want to say something to
you," Chris said suddenly, .with a
quickened 'manner of .tone. "This
me.
With r
deepw
very
gone v
has
o Y
thingg
I've done darn -fool things in my life,
Iend I Nought this was going to be
y'N8 One min At ,thea, . lift it's n t.
3 don% mean what liapperietf S'rfti1Y
night. We're going to get out of. this
Moody business all right; I'm net
afraid of that. I'll square him �if^1
Geneva) Irsufance, including Fire,
I"T.nd, Sickness and Accident, Automo-
bt'?, Huron & Erie Mortgage Corp-
oration and Canada Trust Bonds. }Ds
127, Chilton P.O. Telephone 57.
D. J. C. DANDIER
()lace Hnors:-1.80' to 3.00 P.M, 0.30
to 8 Ou u rat.. Snntlays, 12.30 to' 1.30 Prat
Other nouns b'i appointment only.
0fflee and Residence - Victoria 5t.
. FRED G. TIOMPSON
Offt3e and Residence:
Clinton, Ont.
Ontario Streit
Ono door welt o r 172tican Ctrurch.
P- Eyes Ermine.. and Glasses Fitted
DR. PERCIVAL
HERRN
Office ant* Huron Street • Clinton, Ont.,
Phone 69
to
Dr.
the
IA
fed by
1,
occ P
(Formerly
0. W. Thompson).
Eyes Examined and Glasse Fitted•
DR. H. A. MCIN'TYRE
DENTIeT
ese
r
a
E P
-soar
. ,. Na.
Dill,e over Canadian
Tinton, Ont.
Extra,. ton a Sp.'a`•atty.
Phone 21
•
Cold Egyptian City
Ancient Temple Pound to
Have ]Been Plundered,
But Light is Cast on
Architecture
Calvo, -Among: the excavations car-
ried out this season undei',the auspices
of the Egyptian University were those
at Tuna ander the direction of Dl
Sam L: Babra, Trina' contains a
cemetery and the sacred ancient city
of.Herm0Poiis, writes 9000ph M. Levy
in a wireless to the N.Y. Times.
The city was located .on sandbills
and some stones protruding from the
top of hit indicated the presence of
a monument, Clearance of the hill
revealed a tomb temple of the Graeco
Roman period having a facade unique
col-
umnsits kind. It is flanked by two
adorned with volutes and papy-
rus buds, Above the columns the fa-
ea`de had three miniature false win-
dows of:a distinctive type, one 'of
which ha:. disappeared.
The decorations of these windows
consist of lobenges sculptured in
blocks of stone. It is believed this
was the beginning of the decorative
style which: later became widespread
in the Copto.Byzantine form:
ADVErtURE-S Of
CA 1
Div SCOTTIE'
There we were!- Standing on the
edge of that little mountain lake. Fite
to the right of us, fire to the left and
behind u. Then we heard that
strange crashing thrash the under-
brush.,
Scottie stood
hit?•° x1
bristling and
growling-then to
our relief, a deer
Interior Found Plundered
The temple door, blocked with a
wooden panel, was still in place, but
it Was later ascertained that the in-
terior had been plundered about the
fourth century B.C. Bodies had been
carelessly thrown on the ground of
the first chamber. On the east and
!vest -sides were Iocull, one of which
was empty, while the other contained
a roughly mummified body.
In the debris were found statuettes
of seraphs and Isis and two necklaces.
Further clearance Brough to light a
porch with five steps and a stone al-
tar similar to that of Petosiris in that
it was surrounded by four triangular
stpnes.
Further excavations revealed pillars
of the temple bearing the name Pady-
Kam,,, -grandson of Petosiris. This
temple is believed to have been ruined
In the Roman period because of the
large number of Romau coffins strewn
about the floor.
Although the temple was found to
be badly ruined, it was possible to lay
bare, its contours and to recover the
ground plan . There remain some
sculptures and colored stones with
hunting scenes which must. have be-
longed to the chapel. A pit contained
four plundered Egyptian stone sar-
cophagi uninscribed, oriented north
and south, 'and also six Roman sar-
cophagi oriented ,east and west, and
some poorly wrapped bodies thrown on
the ground but having fine plaster
masks. Coins found there seem to
date from the plundering of the temple
to the beginning 'et the second cen-
tury A.D.
Within the stone sarcophagi were
fragments ofwoodencoffins belonging
to a priest of Thoth, or Dhut-Ili, priest
of Hermopolis, Pady-Sam, and to Tot-
embat, mother of Pady-Kam. The pit
also yielded a line collection of scar-
abs, miniature statuettes, ''mostly of
the got) Toth, and amulets.
�r-
tion of getting hold of some kind of
plane' and getting started. In didn't even stop to enquire who owned
thlt craft, just as long as the propel
ler event arornd; that was ah I asked r
of it"
"AnywaY,here's your life preserves',"
said Bob, "and you'd better strap it
on. if this bunch of misfit parts does
not hang together -you may have to
and a fawn burst walk hemo."
through the bush By the tune the parachute WAS
and rushed along strapped on, ive were really to go, Bob
the edge of the gave her ga,t carefully -we moved out
lake. They pass- - into the. lake, lured and headed into
ed BO cloee I could the wind.
h10155. uchetl them' as they dashed s me waye tiet etrmeehave to ing Scottie90he
along.
• s.
rm
Then the woods seemed to be alive could. not possibly fallout of my a
With scurrying small animals all rush- I found a piece of strong canvas in tee
ing down to the shore. Ancient ene- bottomsof the cockpit and in the mid-
m'ies ran tcttetnotandraciscoreand
ofracial
littlel enoughthitoX shove t four •Seattle's justbig
fears forgot through.
furry things one never sees by Clay,
of the parachute straps.
made for the water line. tied to the
It was quite useless to direotion go I I had tonOW ljump his chances were about
around she fire in either
we 'must havo'a raft, There was' 50-50 with me, and with all these
plenty of time now for it' would take', autos around, that's a dog's chalice
the fire some time to reach us from anylvhe-: e.
anyt direction. I casuallyset
one. l somehow itfter a ihile I seemedsso secure tdrifting
gating sudden
logs toup far above
Of a sudden - rad cocked his cal1I along fforgotiall about thehpossibil possibility
I listened, Loo -and sure enough ft that 1
was the drone of a motor. Before long of having o jump. Suddenly I re-
atewl
came out of their hiding places and
This sling I fastened securely to one
ttie eves
we could 806 the plane,,ana in
minutes it was spiraling clown to: make
a landing in the lake. You see, it was
an amphibian plane that lands either
.onthe .ground or on the water. I
-It hit the water with a "splash."
"splash," and taxied slowly up to us• Lor
There was good o!il Bob from the air-1�t.;•
drome-and maybe he didn't look goon 'h,/1rr
e But what a rattletrap of a death blow to the
tom . , where did you that instant was a 1
machine Ise had. "Bob,
get that old crate -it sounded like a� old plane. It just seemed as if every
Viekerse-but if that's n Vickers, then • nut and Bob tune boltwere readydto fall apart.
me with his
I'm a negro!"a"you don't look hand. ISp to the edge of the cockpit
Well;' said Bob, Y
unlike one, and speaking of old crates 1 stepped -then jumped.
—where did you get that swell suit et I Quite comfortably we floated down.
clothes?" Off to the west a wisp of smoke was
Sure enough, 1 was black from head , moving rapidly down through the
to foot from soot and cinders. 11y Mils. It proved to be a fast freight
leather coat had been cut up to make. going east. The engineer sighted us
a rope—my shirt to make a sling to and brought his train to a grinding
lower Scottie over the falls. l stop. What luck!
"But seriously, Bob, wherever did i While one can guide a Parachute
f somewhat by Pulling on the ropes, it
you get that floating wreck?" is not easy to steer exactly.
'The motor is a hunune h'it's a real
Vickers," answered Bob. "hut whoever Down, down, we came. Right into
hung that motor
Ice of a plane tuns some scrub spruce, we landed, on the
that good make
ar I good
iv onfoe. It hillside above the track, lip came the
would make a good wagon for the .train crew and took us into the 00-
11 do s me gonad -or a good•boat, far]'hoose to ride out into civilization.
it deesn't leak tbut it acts like a. the I Well, it should have been enough ad-
ing rooster in the air -lots of 'noise I venture for eery one concerned -hut
but no s'L I somehow it was not. It was not long
"I don't like it " better than You before we found ourselves off again,
do;' continued Bob,, "but when I heard
that you and Scottie were lost there out on. a more dangerous journey in an
wasn't much time to go around look -'older and stranger land.
(To be continued).
Ing for it good machine. It was a ques-I
eeived a . sheep
reminder We
ran into' an air
pocket a n d-
dropped like a
lead shot. Only
for an instant
-then we were
out of it -but
As you�can see, there is just a hint
of 'a peplum in this effective little
dress of printed crepe silk which
makes it especially lovely for the
youthful figure. too, a favorite
And it uses plaiting, t ,
trim of Paris this season.
Don't you love the becoming neck-
line? And it's so comfy, too. The
short sleeves repeat the .pleated trim.
The slightly shaped skirt is the
cutest idea eller with inset inverted
plaits each side of the front, topped
by real pockets.
It's sportive! And it's so useful.
It can travel in the best of circles.
And to make it! Just try it, and
lwant to in plain crepe e1 navyblueper-
haps'
in a pastel shade crepe or roman
stripe novelty' cotton for later in the
season. •
Style No. 2042 may be•had in, sizes
14, 16, 18, 20 year's, •36 and 38 inches
bust.
Size 1-B requires 314 yards 35 -inch
with % yard 35 -mels contrasting.
D.. H. McINNES
CHIROPRACTOR
Elentro Therapist MasreUr
001 re: Huron t. 1! ew doers west of
noe
ours-'rugs•, 'eburs. and Sat., all day.
Of ice -M )l - ]11100. andtl Fri �.forenoon9
otnforth 1t' Wed. and Frlday
aftei:moenn.�dPh�oSW.
'CONSULTING ENGINEER
S. i. Archibald, B.A.Sc., (Tor.),
, 0 L..S., t+egistered Professional En-
gineer and Land Surveyor. Associate
10ember Engineering 1nstitu:e of Can-
ada. Office, Seaforth, Ontlri, io.
GEORGE ELLIOTT
Licensed Auctioneer for the County
Huron.
n.'
04
Correspondence protnptly answered.
Immediate.arrangements•ran be made
for .Sates Date at The Newe-Record,
0lineen, or by calling Picone 203.
ion
ncI
Satisfaction
Charges Moderate a
000005teed.
THE Ill K P MUTUAL
Fire' Insurance Company
Head Office, Seatorth, Ont,
ood.
L3ee
'hN
ee-pees dO . Jsn s vans.
YlDii s to 8- Jan ese Sholildlce Walton:
Wm. 111nn. Follett: Robe• it'errli. hul-
lo
John Pouner• 1)Cti efleiii i,, Urnrroa8C0'1
Se tt00ar tney Searorth
ScA encs U b nag t2.Fl. No. '3.Clinton:
Agents: W. SWatt,
Myr 4t 11. j'1 111ey, Se
James
Myth, 19a- i indh1Treasurert:t A. 0. Mo
-
Gregor,-
and be paid
y10110gear1 to ne pate may.
Any money
Calvin Celt's '00)05 5 'ode tell, 0r a
]'tarries theert'businessfwilllbeularwo or
a ontpthY
transact other
aro above officers to on application 1 to their of
ec-
heir
respec-
tive
are
sae
at
D t
as t
the
b
er Y
l• ect
asens
baf P
L
osse
ccs
oto e:
post cera
rive
the Director who ]Sees nearest
TT
ERNS
A
00
ORDER P
W•T
0
H
Write your name and address plain-
ly, giving number and size of such
patterns es you want. Enclose 20c in
stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap
it carefully) for each nuutbei, and
t rn
Pat
' son e
Wilson te
'address your
order
Service, 73 WestAdel� aide St., Toronto.
--
Tests Prove Fish
Is "Brain Food"
Black Granite Statuette Found
There also was fount) a black gran-
ite statuette of a high official named
Pagher. It is hoped that .as a result
of the excavations here it will be pos-
sible to reconstruct: the history of the
great family of priests of Hermopoils.
South of the temple on a hill was un-
earthed.a group of houses, almost com-
plete despite holes made by robbers in
the lower sepulchural chambers. This
discovery is of great interest because
fE
i-
• a Egyp-
tian
to g
• ve
ats some
of
the y
it
t re
tion architectin•e and decorative art in
the first centuries of the Christian era.
Most of them have two stories, one
for -the dead and the other for visitors.
log-
gia
sed
of a
: composed o
The tipper story is P
flanked by columns, which are
round in white -washed brick or stuc-
coed and. ornamented with wavy lines.
Before each house was a mud -brick
altar. The court of the loggia was
sometimes adorned with scenes of
hunting antelope and fishing for dolph-
ins. The first two rooms were painted
to imitate marble and further adorned
with painted flowers or geometrical
designs.
The lower floor consists of vaulted
chambers for the dead, eonlmunicating
with the. outer world by two vertical
slits in the wall. On a'staicase lead-
ing to these chambers are niches con-
taining eartlsemvarI• 'pots slightly
blacked by smoke.
Lampe and coins found around the
houses date them to the fourth and
fifth centuries B,C. \'Vigil the com-
plete clearance of these hoaxes it is
expected that a whole pity of thedead
will be brought to light. Some of the
houses retlll as well preserved us the
best of Yompeil.
, `p�ApIAN Monti iAli WA"
The. old idea, long discredited by
of
foodQ1n science, that certain like fislh, are specially goods for
brain work, threatens to be revived by
recent investigations by Dr. Walter
Poppelreuter, head et the Psychologi-
cal Clinic at' the 'University of Bonn,
t34ermr•ny, Who has been investigating
to
of
the chemical compounds
the
effects
called phosphates on activity of the
human body -and mind. It is known,
Dr. Poppelreuter recalls, that simple
phosphate compounds like those of
sodium or 'calcium may be swallowed
or injected itno the body and will help
to relieve 'muscular fatigue oe to per-
mit 'strenuotts exertion for longer
times than would be possible without
d
am
a1 e
be
censured
rams
thorn. Their actio y
to that of the phosphates in, commer-
cial 'fertilizer's in making plants grow
faster and increasing crops. Dr. Pop-
pelieute. has. carried out a long -series
of experiments on two groups o£ lo-
dividuals; one group receiving a re- I wi11 ecr5Y paesea,',rs from redrew
gulag dose of a preparation of phos-' stations to the) nndinbyfields or ,air
1
phates, the other. gt;oup sustained liners tt '
merely by a normal diet. Without ex_Hoare, tformier Ii Lith $etre ai lets
eeption, the reports, th, gmnul? receive!State for
onneetion ho salmi he een-
i•catot'� lu this c
t
red his Ropey 1n the autogyro, a wiud•
. a1.
rises .
i .
h
.s
mill type of airplane, avbich
most t e scalls
"With the world covered be re;;u1nr
air cervices, and amt taxis available at
light-
ly
centre," he said, 're shall lig
7y claim to have made the air fire for
humanity."
Pointing oat that, the conquest of
the air, especially in'Europe, hitherto
has chiefly meant, 0 great-develolunent
in the methods of destructlan, he
i for•
fuL
lire it be
rises
that in
the
1sed t
rr e
church' recently completed in U.'0' '-1 rho purposes of peace tend far dho pro-
sey, after frve years' toil, is one of the grecs of hltrna1t 1nterconTse.
smallest in the world. The ehureh•is JEALOUSIES
13 feet long, .16 feet `high, 10 feet
wide, and'has loom tor about a dozen j People talk of open jealousies; but
persons, 'There is n little steeple eon tiro secret heart•hnl11ngs that arllie
'taining a bell. t I from misenderstootl,' half -Understood,
or wholly false .positions between
Chris. and wee p
the. door, and were in small, clean, Motor Vehicles on Farms men and woman are much 1110150.
ht,. room, , filled With a nand .one-half. ,of the unmet, It is the unuttered 801551ws, the va-
grant
i chair and a 2vlole than cit admitted oust impossible-to-ite-aveng-1
what, high bed, a white flooded ci•tl vehicles registered in . Kentucky
l lvrou,ly which, erose the sharpest
TIME TAQI-i
Trains tyiltnon as follows:ad.emt from
Buffalo and oderich Div.
Going East, depart0.58 a.m. have to join the Socialists, an
„ vt 2.65 p.m.' a few bombs myself ]fere an tllgre.”
'i lit It's this other_ tbmg am]
Going West, P 11.55 a ii'
10 O9 rat rte If you re gong
Ch c t9 a ed ` �k
The health -giving, delicious drink for children and grown.
ups. Pound and Half Pound tins at your grocers.
The Personal Factor
The personal factor is one of tate
most important in the successful feed-
ingr A
ni-
e
I3o ,
R.
M. pp
of Pigs, writes
Brandon
the
Bta
•t f
mat i3ubandry expel o
Experimental Farm. 'The successful
hag feeder realizes that feeding is not
merely a mechanical operation, but
one requiring skill anti close observa-
tion to his animals, to obtain the
maximum development anti greatest
e,
feed consumed,
d
• h ee
o the return
for It
Aerial Taxis
Lord ll --The flay ,,hen air' taxis
• t depart p• . . ie' i to feel badly
,. about it -if you're going to think --
Going
8r Bruce
Going South, depart 7.38 son. HDw'l] I Put this? I mean, if any
,. .t 3.53 p.m,' ,' unhappiness tor you-"
027 p.m.
ISSUE No, 14--'3i
Gc-+ng North, depart t 11.58 ear..•
ar. 11.5cl, dp•
ing the phosphates ;showed g
amental sant sbodily activity and could
do more worst without,extrenie fatigue.
The phosphate preparations used in
these testi were made synthetically
but there are some foods which con-
tain^unusual amounts, of phosphorus
and w:iich 'tight act iia similar way.
One of them is fish, long accepted tra-
ditionally although without real eyl-
dence, as:, "brain food."
Church
Ch
Miniature
a
Entirely the work of one ,mar., .
HOME •
The air of home ... the purest and
the best there is .. • God bless home
and all belonging to it.
•
Playing
' no
Popular
Piano
PO
tx
Twenty lesson course by a led usSilcell
recording artist. Lessons in i
Personal assistance with each lesson.
PIANISTS! Join the popula1 song hila
of the month club, Book of J. L. Write:1',101
arrangements Obtainable for $2.
7!ICE C
eon
r.AW&E
SONO SEg,QrCE .STIIDIos.
36tut Clinton St., Toronto, Ont.
OR CHILDREN'S
LUNCHES
Delicious sondwiehes,
that arc at once tempt-
ing, healthful and eco-
nomical, can be quickly
made with Kraft
Cheese. Try it for
school lunches, when
for a tasty entertaining
or
be-
tween" snack.
Made in Canada
Brent white -Curtained window , oo pangs of existence,
with afternoon light. during' 1929 were owned by or 10010 ed
Chris saw. these things, after one engaged in serving i'armert.
E
E.
• Made by the Makers of Kraft Salad Dressing and Velveeta
wrig
athicker
and sweeter
syy
BENSON'S
Glol'il-t
SYRII
w sumo
inamotarmosemosairgatzsoutzolom
The CANADA STARCH GO , Limited MONTREAL
a 'i 1,,
tr'- 4LIi;L/'. Rl•%i