Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1931-05-28, Page 2tl Clinton News-R€cord 'CLINTON, ONTARIO Terme .of Subscription -42.00 per year in advance, to Canadian addresses;. 112.50 to the U,S. or other foreign countries. No paper diseontn led until all arrears aro paid unleea at ' the option of the publisher. ` The date to which every subscription Paid la denoted on the label; Advertising Pates—Transient edyer• 'tieing, 12e pet count line for first insertion,; 8o for each subsequent insertion.• Beading -counts 2 lines. Email advertisements, not to exceed one inch, such as "Wanted," "Lost," "Strayed,": etc., inserted once fn* .25a. eaeb aubeecjuent'insertion' i5e. Advertisements sent in Without 10.in- structions 05 to the numberof in- sertto, s wanted willrun until order- ed out and will be charged accord- ingly. Rates for display advertising' made known on application. Communicatiene intended for pub- lication must, as a• guarantee of good faith, pe accompanied by the name of the writer: G. 12, '!:TALL, le. R. CLARK, Proprietor. Otlttor. M. D. MeTAGGART Banker A general Banking Business transacted. Notes Discounted. Drafts Issued, Interest Allow- ed on •Deposits. Sale Notes Pur- chased. H. T. RANCE Notary Public, Conveyancer • .Financial, Real Estate and Fire In- surance.Agent. Representing 14 Fire Insurance Companies. Division :ourt Office. Clinton. Frank Fingland, E.A., LL.B. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Pubilo Successor to W. Brydoue, R.G. Sloan Biock — Olinton, Ont, CHARLES B. HALE Conveyancer, Notary Public, Commissioner, etc. (Office over J. 11. Hovey's Drug Store) B. -R. HIGGINS , Neter, public, Conveyancer General Insurance, including Fire. Wind, Sickness and Accident, Automo- bile. Huron at Erie Mortgage Corp- oration and Canada Trust Bonds. Bos 127, Clinton P.O. Telephone 337. DR. J. C. GANDIER Office Hours: -1.30 to 3.30 p.m., 6.80 to 8.00 p.m., Sundays, 12.30 to 1.30 p.m, Other hours by. appointment anty. Otflae and Residence — Victoria St. DR. FRED G. THOIVIPSON Office and Residence: Ontario Street — Clinton, Ont. One door west of Anglican Church. Phone 172 Eyes Examineu and Glasses Fitted DR. PERCIVAL HEARN Offlce enc' Residence: Huron Street • Clinton, Ont. Phone 69 3' r o (meri y occupied b date Dr y the ! 0. W. Thompson). Eyes Examined and Glases Fitted. ' DR. H. A. MCINTYRE DENTIST 011lee over Canadian Nations. IOxprese, ;gluten, One Extra,..lon a Spe-.lalty. Phone 21 D. H.McINNES CHIROPRACTOR Electra Therapist Masreur Office: Huron St. (.Few doors west of Royal Bank). .+ours- Tuee., Thurs. and Sat, all day. Other -•-hMobn, Webe d. aildt Frit' forenoon's. Seaforth Offlet—Mbn., Wed. and Friday afternoons. (Phone 207. CONSULTING ENGINEER S. 0V. Archibald, B.A.Sc., (Tor.), 0.L.S., Registered Professional En- gineer and, Land Surveyor, Associate MUfember'Englneering Institu,e of Cans Ada. Office, Seaforth, Ontario. GEORGE ELLIOTT Livened Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered. Immediate arrangements can be.made for Sales Ditte' at The News -Record, Clinton, ur by calling Phone 203, Charges Moderate' and Satisfaction • Guaranteed. THE McKILLOP MUTUAL Fire Insurance Company Head Office, Seaforth, Ont. • President, J. Benneweis, - Brodhagen. Vice -President, James.Connolly, Goderich. Sec: treasurer, D. P. McGregor, Seaforth, Directors; Zanies Evans, Beechwood; dam Shouldice, Walton; Wm. Uinn; ilullett, Robt. Fermis, Hallett; ,'ohn Pen- ner, Brimfield; A. Broadfoot, Seaforth; G. P. McCartney Seafo•te. Agents• W. J. Yeo, R.R. No, 3, Clinton; ddhn Murray, Seaforth James Watt, Biy" Bd. Ttnoltiey,: Seaforth. illy money to be paid 'nay be paid to the Royal Bank, lbrton; Bank of unm- merce: Seaforth, or at Cat+in '30125 Oro. eery, Goderlch. Parties desiring t0 affect insurance or transact other business will be promptly attended 1on application to any of the ab .ve officers addressed to their respec- tive post ofaees, Losses inspected bIt the director who lives nearest the scene, fiADI'>liN A TIME TABLE Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton as follows: Buffale and Goderich Div. Going East, depart 6.58 a,m. 41 1t ,a• 2.65 p.m. Going West, depart 11.65 a.m. is 10,09 pan. London, Huron & Bruce Going South, depart 7.88 a,ni, " " " 3.33 p.m. Going North, depart 6.30 pm. ' " ar. 11.50, dp. 1L58 Nearly ll se's' k, quality nearly al drink Salado P JESCA PA DE Ry.KATHLEEN MORRIS SYNOPSIS. Mar.O'Hara,y bate O' Ha engaged to Cass Keating, agrees to play the part of Chile 'Stones' wife and meet the coun- t= ' Morita at .Burlingame, Then she goes to Steynes' home to sleep uver- rilght, • During the night her brother, Martin, not knowing the circumstances brlake into Steynes house and' is shot as a burg,,'. Upon her return to ser rm..Mary finds she has fallen in love with'Steynes. Then Mary, Martin, Case and•Chris meet at the O'Hara home and daring the discussion the Widow O'Hara walks in and. demands. to know what the trouble is. She .declares she believes Mary Irate innocentof any wrong -doing, Then Chris asks Mary to marry him. ..CHAPTER XLII—(Cont'd,) "Well," Mary Kate continued. "And I'll be the sort, of -oh, well,' plainly. uressdd smart woman, you know, who knows all ahout books,.and plays and German and Ttalis� " "It was French a minute ago," re- tested Chris. "Oh, well, French, too, And I'll study the operas, too, Chris. ,Do you like the opera? Do you go to the opera?" "Sometimes. I like some of them." "At the"Metropolitan?" "At the Metrocolitee. The Old man has a box," "A box!" "Certainly." "At the Metropolitan Opera House?" "Why not?" "Oh, Heavens!" Mary Kate said on a gasp. "Should I have to wear evening dress?" "You would. You could wear that thing you wore Friday night and my Aunt Minnie's pearls," "Oh, sure enough! Those pearls are yours, aren't they, Chris?" "They are yours, now, I present then, to .•ou." She ;ave a frightened laugh. "Chris, we may have lots of fun!" "We will have." "We didn't think our, adventure e.ould turn out like this, did we?" "Ra': er not! I iidn't know," Chris added, "that there was ever a woman in the world like you," "I have to go in," Mary Kate said. "My mother's going over to Aunt Julia's and hart',, need me to help him getting to bed." • Chris tipped her head back, under the spring stars. "I love you," he said. "I've never done an; tiling to deserve you, and that country house ':ull of kids, and EA I ACNE? Why suffer when relief is prompt and harmless: ap. R Millions of people have learned to depend on Aspirin tablets to relieve a sudden headache. They know it eases the pain so quicldy.And that it is so harmless. Genuine Aspirin tablets never harm the heart. Read directions in pack- age for headache, neuralgia, summer colds, pain of all kinds. ASPI w,- TRADE MARK REG. Made in Canada c1JDt1RANCE aluminum Mower is twenty pounds lighter than any iron mower and far more durable . . Runs easier, Cuts with razor -like keenness.... The finest mower purchase you can make .. Ask your hardware man. CANADA FRNOGiFOUNDRIESSS LIMITED Jemc, $men Pleat Brockville Ontario ALUM.IN1UM ❑nd 01: bs' LIGHTER ISSUE No. 22—'31 ti J those nights is at the opera, e1 andall g p the iest of it. But,-" Ile stopped, at; a. Itss for words. "I know you. will!" she whispered, as if he had finished his thought. Three' minutes later, shaken and breathless and bewildered, she heard the side gate' click after him, Mary Kate took one more look at the blue dark sky and the stars and the rising tiers of golden apartment -house wi dows and the powdery silver of t M!dky Way and drew one more se:e breath of the lilac and syringe-seent night. Then she went into the kitche • It was just as she and Chris h left it; orderly dimly lighted, emp Buttercups in a clean jelly glass nn the table, eertains moving languid to and fro over the sills of the ope window. The nickel -plated alar clock over the sink ticked steadil rapidly, in the silence, and her evn heart kept pace. Her mother, one again bonneted and veiled, stood 1 the doorway between she bedrotm ar. kitchen. 1Zr, Steynes went, did he, dear?' "Yes'm" "And you're sure of yourself, Mar Kate?" "Oh, Mother!" A long pause. Tho older wonla sighed. "i'Vell, that's all I could ask," sh said at last. "But it seems afar et from the little room you were bor in, in Brooklyn!" "I know," Mary Kate said. "Sleep in my roots with Pat, dear He's apt to wake, and I'll be up wit Uncle Robert all night," Mrs. O'Har said. "But I'lI stop in at church a seven on my home tomorrow." "Et set the alarm and meet yo there, Mother. We'll have breakfas together," She was alone again. She sat on, at the red oilclothsd kitchen table, staring into space, he arms crossed, her eyes narrowed, he lips bitte.• The -lock hands moved the lamplight wavered, in the kitchen Then suddenly she stood up, and pushed her chair back into place. She took the alarm -clock, and busied her- self with the little keys on its bnek, before locking the yard door, darken - ng the kitchen, and going to her mother's kitchen bedroom. Little Pat, freckled and thin and ousled of hair, was sprawled haif- overed, crosswise on the wide bed. iary Kate straightened and covered tim. The ' turned gas was used down to t ead in here, and the one window that molted out upon the blank side wall f the neighboring house was open. She went into the dining room, and peed Tones forgotten window. Kneeling beside him, she put her ries about him, mother -fashion,, and e half roused, in his first deep sleep, nd murmured to her. "Gee, I'm crazy about you, Molly!" Mary Kate mounted the stairs, and at for a long time, in the dark back edroom, lighted only by the rise and all of the cigarette advertisement a lock away. Little tawny -headed Re- hm was sleeping like a baby saint, er hair shaken into a halo on the pil- ow about her unconscious head; Tess ad doubled herself,' her covers, and er own pillow into a great snarl, and ad to be dragged and pushed and ulled into comfort against her own leepy resistance, ,"A spider -web patty—" she whis- ered clearly, as Mary Kate kissed er. The little girls, their big sister membered, had been promised a pider-web patty. They w.oulcln't have t--now, of all she went into Martin's coin, He was propped in pillows, e slept in a sitting position, these ights. As he cants in he•closed.his ook, and enhiled-at bet, end she. set men on the edge of his bed, and nked her hand in his free one, So .she had sat, With this friend nd confidant, and confessor, itmny nd many a time, in 'the days since er turbulent childhood, She remere- ered tears and :a.i;hter, rebellion, tinning, arguseent—here in Mart's out at night. She remembered read - g him 'herScheel compositions, here;' scussing office affairs.: It was here, ne night not lug after this same ga ew year had ben, that, rosy and nfused, she had talked to'him about tinning Cass Keating, wtto was sc ever and so successful, and who— ell, certainly it Iooked that way nyway, was beginning to—well, to ke, anyway, Mary Kate O'Hara. "Hello, Sis," "Mello, Meet." "Put the lights oout?""Yes, I'm sleeping downstairs with 11- the ed 11, ad ty.i ly n m y, e • n d , y n e 37 n h t u t • r r "Happy, Molly?" "I guess so, Mart." "I know better than he does what he's getting," Mart said in a .silence. She girl did not answer she was =W- ing her thumb back and forth a00oss his big hand. "Nobody like you, Molly!" "Don't—don't make me cry. I'm— cried 'out." "It'll be tunny here, without you." "But you'll' be in Germany, Mart," "Yep Get to resp l 1 tip with n1y Unnecessary rich sister, pow!" "Ah, Malty, don't joke about it. I211>be good. for .Toni to be kin, p.n for a •while, and we'll pull the whole gang of them up, Molly," "But,not together any mere,. Mart!' "No. Not together any more'" There was silence. Then the go• asked: "'Member playing Indians .in tee old coal box in Brooklyn, Ma1;t??' "Do you remember Mothei used to take us to, church, Saturday after- noons,, and we used to play holism in the e)ews?" "Yes. And the day --but that was here -that I brought her home a plant, with my first money." "A primrose." eyep, "It's still; growing in the front gar - en Mart." d "1 knew it is.". "Remember the day the cop pre- tended to hit me, Mart, and you bit his hand?" "I. was five." "You would ' have bitten an _ele- phant, I think, if it had been mean to mel" "I would have wanted to. They were silent ..again,' fingers linked. After a few moments, Martin felt something hot end Wet fall on his hand, (The End.) What New York Is Wearing BY ANNABELLE WORTHING30N Illustl'ated'DressnteJs11 g Lesson Furnished with Every Pattern 3049 1-e.,, savors circular flares --and lots of them for every hour of the day. • Even the busy morning hours haven't been overlooked. For'heve we find one of the smartest aprons of the season. You'll love its newness. It offers such a lovely change, And it's so thoroughly simple to 131511e it. 'It cuts in ono until it joins the one-piece circular lower pert. The circle pockets are defi- nitely smart. Like all dainty > cons t ap it ties at the bank with r sash ends. Opaline greeu printed lawn 1110410 the original, with green in deeper shade rick -rack braid. Style No. 3048 conies in small, medium and large sizes. It's effective too, in contrasting colors or fabrics, For instance, mak. the tipper part and sash of blue . and white gingham cheek, with the circular flounced ruffle of plain blue gingham repeated in pockets. :Medium size requires 1% yards 35 -inch with 6'4 yards braid. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your mune and address plainly, giving number and size of such patterns as you Want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin pre- ferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. . ':• ' Footwear Will Tell • History of Indians? Waslhhhgton—Shoes .worn by the ancient Pueblo Indians of the South- west will help government uaturai scientiets fellow their trail baclt into remote history ibis summer. Different types of shoes, or sandals, provide guides to periods of Pueblo civilization, says Dr. Frank H. II. Rob- eats Pr„ of the Slnithsonian Illstitu• Not. lie lett last week to lead an expedition to eastern' Arizona seeking relics of Pueblo culture preserved for centuries by the dry climate there, Dr. Roberts wtil make hie headquar- ters at a place where he hopes to find relies of three Ftieblo periods in suc- cessive pages, one on top of the other. If be fends sa.udals, he expects them to Sympathy P. L; EISN6R Edgar Was a f_aseivatipg child; with appealing blue eyes and a little dar- ling rase-12nd of a mouth. Sometimes he" said the cunnfngest things. 01 course his mother was his adoring slave, One day, dtaeing.: secretly- taken' a knife from the pantry, he,waa out in the yard making a,sailhoat when sud- denly his mo'ther's heart almost stood still at the sound of load wailing., She rushed downstairs and was out- side in ,a fety seconds. "Oh, Edgar, .ivhiit .have yea done, my darling?" she gasped. He held out to het' a little, finger, from whish a few drops or bright red' blood were trickling. "The bail Itttife -- cut my finger," he -told her, between his sobs. She picked him up in her arms and carried him Into the house: "Oh, my poor little baby, my, poor mind, love. Mother'11 fix it." When n the -t out wasr carefully y band• aged, Edgar'a mother made him some dandy, and kept Murmuring over him commiseratingly until' the child was sure he had been grievously hurt. Next day, while.playing in a lit field nearby, he was stung by a we Again, a great fuss was made o him. Edgar's uncle Reginald happen to be visiting at his sister's that R IIs watched the proceedings quiet but ',when the boy had been put bed, he turned, to his sister. "Kate," he said gravely, "how lo do you want to keep that hid of you a baby?" Kate's blue eyes,opened very wi "What' do you mean, Reg?" Remanded indignantly. "I'm n keeping him a babe." "He is old enough to be a bra baby." boy, but if' you continue coddling hi and pitying him every time he ge a little bruise, he'll always be "But, Reg," protested the motile instantly on the defensive, "you don understand. That sting might ll caused something serious if I hadn attended to it at once. And he u still very little, and of course it m have hurt him." "Very true," her brother admitte "1 think it quite right to attend any little injury. But it is not neva nary to make the child think he b been seriously injured whenever h gets a little bump or to teach hi to come running to you for pity. A children have to get their share bumps and bruises. Teach him take them manfully." Kate thought this over. "Pollee YOU are right, Reg. I wouldn't wa my boy to grow up to be a 'moll coddle.' I'll just try your way for while. When he hurts himself, I' see that he gets looked after, bu I won't say anything to make him think it is at ail serious," For a few weeps after that, Edgar did 3102 understand his mother's am parent lack 02 sympathy and cried the more because of it, but atter a t1e sp, Vel' ed ay, ly, to. ng rs de. s of ve m is a r, 't ave ,2 's st d. to 8- 08 e m 11 et to s ut y- 11 England's Unique Railway Exhibition One of England's unique organiza- tions, the Model Railway Club, recent- ly ecently held a novel exhibition in celebra- tion of its coming of age. The ea. hibitot•s, who ranged from army offi- cers and bidders to clergymen, s ol cihildren and farm workers, submit- ted two -ounce engines, et-trete/1y wrought to the minutest detail—one 1110,101 sabmittetl at the last exhibition traveled forty-two miles on its track five-eighths of an inch in gauge. On of the most interesting models et till Year's exhibition was the work of 13 -year-old boy, This was a tiny res taurant car, complete even to a plate under the kitchen tap. Most of the craftsmen become In terestetl in their hobby at an early age. The interest is not conlinetl to Ln land; This year L'Association Fran Carse des Amis des Cihemins. de Per sent over exhibits and its secretary accompanied them. The exhibition was held at Centre, Hall, Westminster, London, and Was crowded tram Use opening with child- ren and older connoisseurs—ell ap- parently equally anxious -Tor a ride on the model railway with its ninety - foot track. A VB NT' S f,- 4 r�rua"/uiJ2ng� SCOTTi�`'. What came before; As Captain Jimmy and hie new found friend Jed stonesansaway from the Chinese bandits ill an 01d railway locomotive,. Jed tells. how Kis brother had been ce.Y,tu1•ed by outlaws, and of his vain search, ' As Jed toll, nfe 'tire story of how lis brother bad somtdly thrashed the bandit'` chief and bow they had carried .him away into the hills in The Jew had luckily jumped, and taking 110'fizthei' chances, promptly. fled. "I guess we had better:get out Of here before someone blames -us for all this", chuckled Pe Stone; "Fleet thing 'you'll know sem) one or other will want thee• old engine back" -- let's go." revenge, :it smitlenly occurred to ine • It seemed best to leave the freight that these outlaws ' were the same : cars :right ;here, ,es quickly as .I band from wbich I had 'recently .could, I uncoupled. the engine, climb- esoaped, ed iute tite•cab and'epened the throt- We were so interested in out' plans tle. After roaring a;o»g for a few .for getting .him- Miles an idea occurred to ,,Ted Stone. free, that 3 failed "How about cutting the telegraph to notice another wires?" train rounding the, True enough, in a few minutes the curve until its .seelymight decida to return and tele- whietie 'shrieked a graph ahead, and then there'!) be a warning. To make whole parcel 'of Chinese troops wait - matters worse, we ing for us, asking where we found were backing up, the engine. , We slowed down 'to a instead of :un stop. In a moment I climbed out ling forward and our string of and out the.wires. freight cars would soon, be reduced We Were still in enemy territory, to matchwood between tee heavy' many, many, miles from Shanghai. lecoraotives. Somehow we must get to • our air- The brakes would never stop in plane and get going. )livery mom- time—I switched to full speer, ahead, ent's delay meant just that much less in hope that T could lessen the im- ohahce of rescuing Jed Stone's pact, The wheels spun and 'hissed, brother, • Guy, and it seemed that our locomotive alive. On and must jump the 'track. on I pushed Too late! There was an ear -split- the old engine, ting crash and it just felt as if some as fast as I der - big giant had Welted the locomotive ed. right out from under us. It seen]- The country • ed as if she were going to turn right was Rat and over, but someho•v it held to the u n interesting. 4l, rails. Looking back we saw a wreck in- deed. The engine had plowed into the rear of our train of ten freight WS. The first three were a masa of splinters, the next two were cross ways on the track. The engine it- self, after causing all that trouble bad jumped the ,track, and now lay on its side in the ditch steaming and fussing at a great 'rate. 'rhe tracks looked as if a cyclone had just passed by. Rails were torn up, and ties scattered around. Most of the ' timber had been cut away years be- fore, and the ground almost barren of vegetation. Bile after mile pass- ed by, and after a time we began to see an occasional soldier walking along the tracks. Then a large wood began to appear 011 our left, stretch- ing away -to the horizon. (To be continued.) Any of our young readers, writ- ing to "Capt. Jimmy", 2010' Star Bldg„ will receive his signed ;loth Tree. CincolaI® Malted Milk The health -giving, delicious drink fol children and grown- ups. Pound and Half Pound tins at your grocers. Lost Villages of C nquistadors Found High In Peruvian Andes New York—High in the Andes Mountains, northeast of Areyulpa, 14 villages, said to have been established at the time of the Spanish couquest, have been located by the Sbippee- Johusen Peruvian expedition. Robert Shippee, coleader, reported the dis- covery in a cablegram to New York beadgnal'ters. Shippee said ten of them were 'in- habited, in good condition and appar- ently with about 30 per cent, popnia- tion; two more practically deserted and two completely abandoned." The villages were fount, ill the valley of theoleo said. C he Thevilli originally villages o iglus ]y were located by George R, ("Tuck") Johnson, 00- leacler with Shipped and cameraman of the expedition. He- chanced upon then, while flying in the vicinity of e Cuzo two years ago. s I It was to explore, serve3', map and a photograph the villages that the ex- . pedition last week moved its base from Lima to Arequipa, 550 miles to the south. Stlippee•s cablegram said the upper g, usually eroded with cliffs, several `.-�--Spring Comes 7'11e cottonwood's a -bloom, And every canyon wall • le flaunting living green. All down over village streets The pate leaves, satiirsmooth, peep Pai1C with the spring. end O£ the Colca Valley was "un - Dandelions Dandy Lion, he (lone come ter town Wid 'is got' ail pack In Is beg hat crown. He settle hlsself so steady in de grass, He air' step aside fo' nobuddiy ter pass. Asks des la he owned alis town,— Wid 'is gni' all pack in 'is bee' hat crown! —Virginia Woodward Cloud, in "From an 010 Garden," 5 Italy's Calendar Shows Thirteen Holidays Rome—The Official Gazette recently help identify the etilleme period in pub which til'; are tomtit!. hol in yea Th Ital ing 28, Celled the revised list of Italian idays, from which it appears that, - addition to Sltniays, 13 days in the r are recognized as public holidays. ere are three national holidays in y -the first Sunday in Pune, mark - the granting the Constitution, Oct. anniversary of the Fascist March on Rome, and'Nov. 4, Italy's Armistice Day (VIctory Day). Among the so -nailed civil solemnities are: April 21, the Birthday of Rome and Italy's Labor Day, Marsh 23, the anniversary of the foundation of the ' first Fascist, group; Oct. 12, the anmi- 'veesary o£ the discovery of America by Christopher Cohttuiius, and Feb. 11, the anniversary of, the conclusion of the Lateran Treaty,—The Chistian Science Monitor. c. Paradontitis, better known as pyor- rhea, wee widely .distributed among ancient 7dgyptianp weose . bodies are naw preserved.as mummies, it is in- dicated by investigations made re Gently "Say, 37011 are the pian wi o stencil 'me for a dime three' da ,s ago." "Yes, sir; but to do me best 1 can't keep me expenses lower than three and one-third cents a day." In clouds of virgin white The cotton drifts the lawn, And every wayward wind . Drives this white seriilg-time In gnats before my eyes. snow Ho! it is sprtngl The eottouw0od's a-bloom! —Margaret 'Miller Pettengill• Ontario's Oldest City Kingston—The city of 'Kingston was 86 years old on May ,I'803. .An Act was passed, May 18th, 1846, ineorper-' ating, the town of Kingston as a city. This mattes Kingston the oldeet city in Ontario. 1,,t was established as a town in 174.4, thousand feet high, and somewhat similar to the Bryce Canyon of Utah. We found the gorge to be about 8,000 feet above sea level and the enround- ing valley, between 10,000 and 11,000:' He added that an attempt would be made to land in order to take notion Pictures. "In the towns, eve rounded square towers, indicating Spanish origin," be continued. "Nearby were many wheat fleets in a great mosaic. Our planes obviously terrified many of the na- tives. Others tossed their large -brim- med hats into the air as if beckoning to us." s The expeditigon's headquarters here said the Colca villages ole believed to have been built high in the Andes to support silver and copper mines higher up. Their importance dwindled when the mites became exhausted, and, be- cause of difficulty of communication with the coast, they became isolated and forgotten. They do not appear on governmental maps in Peru, where nothing is known of the racial char- acteristics of their inhabitants nor of their economic, religious or social cus- toms. 111101;3: i Itet a iedrn0nte to- day et the wo0dly W1fey; Why not advertise for it? { Just So Fields; "How came that famous surgeon to _go broke?" .holt; "He 'was operating in the wrong place," Plaids: "Some mistake, eh?" Holt "Yes, he tried to operate in Wall Street!" —Nova Scotia Medical Bulletin. OR DAINTY _ LUNCHEONS A!mgat an endless variety of luncheons can be prepared with Kraft cheese. Sliced, it provides a royal meal with crackers or bread ...it toasts temptingly and for flavouring cooked dishes, is unsur- passed. Made in Canada Made by the molten of Kraft Salad Dressing and Velveetha