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The Clinton News Record, 1927-11-24, Page 2CLINTON NEWS RECORD ' CLINTON, ONTARIO Terms et Subscription ---$2,00 per year in advance, to.Canadlan 'addresses: $2,5(1 to the "U.S- or other foreign countries. No,paper discontinued • until all arrears are paid unless=at the option of;: •bhs publisher. The` date to which every subscriptionis paid' is denoted', on the label: Advertising Rates= -Transient adver, tiring, 12c per count line for first insertion, So for each subsequent; insertion, Heading counts 2 -lines. Snail advertisements, not to exceed one inch, Such as ',Wanted," "Lost," St;eyed," etc., inserted once. for :15c each subsedueht insertion 150. Advertisements sent. in without in• ttructioes as to the number of In' cordons wanted will yyfn until order•: ed out and will' be charged accord ingly. Rater for display advertising • made known en application. Communications intended for publit• cation must, as a guarantee of -good- faith, be accompanied by the name of the writer. tl, L. BALL, M. It. CLARK, Proprietor: Editor. Ds LtMCTAGG T'. 'BANKER I �, A.general Banking Business transact- ed. Notes Discounted., Drafts Issued. Interest •Allowed on Deposits. Salt Notes ;Purchased. H. T. RANCE Notary Public, Conveyancer. Financial, Real Estate and.Fire -In- surance Agent. Representing 14 Fire Insurance Companies. Division Court Office, Clinton. W. BRYDONE Barrister, 'Solicitor, Notary Public, etc. Office: SLOAN BLOCK CLINTON DR. J. C. GANDIER Office-Iiours:-•1.30 to 3.3o p.m., 6:30 to 9.00 p.m., Sundays, 12,30 to,..1.80' p.m,. Other hours 'by 'appointment ouly. Office and Resider:cs Vf'ioria St. Perfect1714 1' DR. FRED G. THOMPSON' ,Oifiee andRes'idence: Ontario Street • Clinton, Ont. One door west of Anglican Church, Phone 172._ - ;Eyes`examined and glasses fitted. - DR.-PE��RCIVAL HEARN Office and. Residence: Duron Street Clinton, Ont. Phone 69 -`,(Formerly occupied by the late Dr. C. W. Thompson). Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted. '131. erb in flavour. BEGIN HERE TODAY:" "Big Chris Larson, Alaska c nnery foreman, seeking boat connections for the outside weeld-in a launch, is driven 'by a storm into a small cove. IIe and the hard -drinking Remittance,-IVIan Munch t answer a distress DR. H. A. MCINTYRE • DENTIST .: Office hours 9 to 12 A.11I, and 1 to except Tuesdays and Wednes- days. Office over Canadian National Express, Clinton, Oat. • Phone 21. ,DR. , F. A. ANCON - DENTIST Clinton, Ont.., . Graduate of C.O.D.S., Chicago, and R.0".D.S., Toronto. „ Crown and Plate work a stleolalty his stateroom to find his 'secr'etary, Paul Saxlchef and N'ewltall eta uggling on� the dcek• and before he'could inter- eiro, I pwhall had hurled the unCor-1 h} ,ta, 9srcun intoL the water, Tshrnim iinined!itetely dived 'to, eacae -trim, but• he a.*•the'man grs;dawi forthe third thou before he Gould reach his side. Ahrc•st crowed, with griefs' Ishmin spent moat of the night in the river trying to rescue his friend's body, but though' once he saw it drifting,'he lot. it in ,the darkness .;-anti it was nett ii recovered:' - N to eveeir the 'officers• of the' law, though making every effort to appre- hend Newhall, believed that it was a, wilful, 'paernediiated murder, New- hall was deeply under the 'influence orf liquor-: at the tithe,- and it is Vo - hayed that he Committed the• crime in h burst of•drunker rage. According,' to Mrs. Newhall's testimony Newhall had awakened from a drunken 'stupor the next morning'with no monitory whatever of either threatening Sari .: 'chef on the deck or of throwing him Mrs. Laura Knight overboard. Ho flea to Western Alaska The first 'woman associate, of the -far. Mit on the Peninsula toward. Si- Royal Academy of England since its Vella After' 'Ten Years F k iii Soviet,..Rtiasia So eel ,b tench anniversary as a Co:n!nun t .:.- state the city St V enna is entering open' Its tom' - 'year under Socialist-, rule: It a.' he easy to carry the analogy between Missal and Vistula too tar,,but it Is into ,,Sunt; to note that, while, the .tto' pier ' is the only -1-,' great co ntrygoverned'-according t'b t re- tri sciples o.' com=munists, the atter i the, "only great' city of the -. world lit which- the Socialist epperi- nrent has been epndticted over a ... ' Veiled` long enough for arra estimate,Wilson Publishing Company io ee mado of its practical valise. Socialism was Vienna's answer to he chaos into wbldh the' proud Capital of. the Austro-I-ungarianEmpii'e'mad ' plunged by the World Wt '. Ten` years ago the, city was starving. 'With the conclusion of .peace • the tiny Austrian state faced econoneic :dist. aster. . Only the direct intervention of the 'Allied Owers, acting through 1012eLG 'SOFT'ENS, lWAT•�iS Everywoman's trued "f-all-wto'h ca il;eria=and the above telegraphic die- foundation in 7.709, From orphaned the League of Nations, saved it from patch completes the - story: She read the piece,through, then washed her tear -reddened eyes ' arid Auckland «eek y News: high commun- wane r e sound cord in the Plantation of comraotctal ion with the gods as, his venin tucked low roadster on the drive She resolved a great urban community, while the 5 " 1' soft 'ivoads was accomplished UY the manufacturing interests of the capital ie ria sic collapse, , Vienna•, once gay and prosperous, had to tight for Its very life, for - the Austria of which it was 1 N q A new he- once' the hub and .`enter had so shrunk Waited fo•'th 'und of Ivan's long,that it, could not supply the needs of begun to lean -was in - poverty to. artistic success. • Forest For the Future at once to keep a brave frontin hip under his clear-cut chin, he practiced, p'rpt State Fore»t Service in the iaet fluan had; ,lost their markets, For Capital Vienna ` in 1 - in'his Studio.' ' good-spo,,"mostly because of 'a g Sial ear the area planted haviog'been. . lot She y last bythe; good-sportemanshi that Pete bad y • something ;litre 5ociaiism, t which was aroused at as y p ! 19 A24 am es,; exclusive ofvarious . ex• would draw u r" • ell and found^and loved` in hor long ag ;-dud•, . - entiu l on:w:hatever wealthro• sharp ffli of the telephone. U I aril perha 's' for urely feminine1Perimonta1 plantations tetras g mailed to- its citizens fon re- teat the"cont for the open sea in e the , who n e t�to a Ngra, rho wenn p n p P , , y , I another thousand acres, . In addi- e reasons that were -by a long stretch ouirces to save • its.'great• working cannery able t o- girl, who went -to answer if. A,mo l !tion rte its 20,000 acres, ^ 52 040 s signal merit tater the s to the of the imagination almost disloyalty acres were Plante y Big ito P t S i o th feet' that he can TTo say Shetl wondered if ling tots ofthe. `p 1 ever 1 servant came e - I d b • commercial The Remittance Man forces d e er s memory. Y I and 1 1 ti Clash, to put, on his sea kat He th Population, was probably the on y ? he lied airs s k thing' which could have saved it, jar hnun e (appeal n acres for extent at least the Sbcia .its Mmstah Is , I 7..628 oorway „ cared t' "at her beat in Ivem's. 'companies Sea au io arias, ma To that u a ` oa crimen lowing a tragic Whilep I cater of the postwar housing problem, he the mutingthe.oth 'hesitated started to _in-. at last-hor heart, oma ion .but .wirile comm Savannah river. While soDor y , iu the D n Had her levegone out to hi in H d r to t. ship' strikes a reef and he is' hurled got a Nora tont tot a message, then oral plantations have'already reach- the'' hone herself. these pari, bleak, miserable mdnt ofacres,and State into darkness. - gat up and went to n r. , ed-.a'total' of 70,000' Dorothy Newhall receives, at bet go', dear girl, I have just _heard nrouriiing He fascinated- her, tints io a' -'100,006 acres, the tel y g ' '1' 'et fromtheBast, Audi plantat n f NOW GOt7N WITH THS d f t her would not now be necessary ands comfort m e rd hid home in servant told her stolidly. "He want pr"asence, scare y t has been 'euacesstul. not return to Dorothy a omin' to this wore not, sitar all, an. indication Yeai,-, ...Ivo attempt has been made Viehria is still in existence and In Georgia, from which he had fled fol- ec Itmow if you feel like c that what not,-after for vias his In the Forest Service' report tq fore- many projects," sttcbi as its `solution ride on the i alone- " begged' s the whole range of development city's' Socialist administration has done admirable work. ' It is: putting up a vigorous fight against Most unfav- orable economic 'conditions, and while- all hile all Is not entirely well, as the riots last summer showed. the. sitb;ation In Vienna today is cheerful as con-. hat of some seven years, ger problem of Vienna's Papers found on •dead body of man I want you ,to conic very and iP that rate Sau be ma n a n economic future both the Socialist p picked up on beach identify him as she answered' simply. ggal of h old pgovernment oY the city and the Gov Peter Newhall of; Augustan Georgia, "Perhaps you'd rather wait -I could Morocco Gov - ;though locally b other home in Augusta, Ga,, a telegram the awful news," he began in his'. master vox int as n i Pirate ONve, Alaska, then faints thereb between, them. State Department has set. as'its ob- !rI. on Mrs. Peter Newhall, went on, "and ""f wondering r r upon foe the current year Is 26,900 .acres, Walton' Way, i ' � � ' � would `make you feel any worse to the news from*far Alaska had made so that It may actually achieve a' re - gentle, comforting va_ce• , was no artier e STORY. „the -papers." he nett. .The divorce Ivan `'had' urged"jecthe the"eihtige of.eIts0Proaram I lust read it in'.r in the next eight years P g pared' with C Augusta, Georgia: have me come gut-" her free, ago A g � n � cord Por Eng , p On the lar `much (To lie continued.} i t i ed the lisle s eaking eouatries, 300,000 acres by 11135 s o he .reached: • 1 • ;+ D. H. McINNES Chiropractor -Electrical Treatment.' Of WVingham, will be at the Cominer. dal Inn,." Clinton, on Monday, Wednes; day and Friday forenoons of each week. Diseases of all kinds sueeeeefufy Dandled. come out later just as well:you earn Paris Capital: After long »egotia .want me," e his instinctive well-bred 1923 weakly agreed to effort to put her at her ease. ItaY a modify the Tangier statute to our you'd' like to be -alone for these first own disadvantage and to the -disad- hours, but if, later, I can help in any vantage of . our ally, the ,Sultan. Britain and' Spain, exultant that they had scored over us, -put- their signa- tures at the bottom of this 1923 agree- at.t Thereupon, as a direct eon - thou h known ora Y Y an ernment of Austria are almost power - name. Death resulted from drowning phone me when you tions following repeated requests by lees. Vienna as- a g al ty has lost anbctionlation by reefs, left in- went on, in 1l bred Sp in in we treaty its raison d'etre It seems doomed for immediate burial also " b lr' As seat of the dovernment of the old strlrctions ., that you be notified and personal effects be sent you. These are being forwarded. Body was embalmed and given decent burial by my crew near place of''fini ding. If I can be of any other service please commend me. Captain Johansen,, Steamer Norwood. GEORGE ELLIOTT ` Licensed Auctioneer for the County od. ado Std, tion of Huron. Correspondence prompt!;: answer immediate arrangements can be m for Sales Date at The News -Red Clinton, or by calling Phone 203. Charges Moderate and Satiseae • Guaranteed.:. Just yesterday, it seemed' to her, in girlhood, she had'triedito imagine how she- would receive such news as this -the sudden taking -off of some one she loved. - She had loved this man `who had died. No one dared deny that. It was true that he had oftez3 failed to understand • her -that he was careless of her needs, that he had been insanely jealous without cause -but she had loved hint and had continued to love him throughout all those cold,. hard weeks before the tragedy, after his drinking had ceased being -a ]oke to her and her friends and had become a subject avoided in his presence. He ha failed to understand her, to recog- nizes the artist -self in her' that de- manded expression and companion- ship, yet she had -given hill her love, her hand, a few of her best yeas - indeed, all she had to give. At present it did not occur to her that site had perhaps .failed 'to under- stand him, too. She read the message again. It had been sent from Alaska, the fur North, thousands of weary miles distant from miles ar e 'OSCAR KLOPP Honor Graduate Carey Jones' National School of Auctioneering, Chicago. Spe- cial course taken in Pure Bred Live Steep, Real'Estate, Merchandise and Farm Sales. Rates in keeping with prevailing market. Satisfaction as- sured. Write or wire, Zurich, Ont Phone 18.93, , '-. B. R. HIGGINS Clinton, Ont. General Fire and Life Insuranco,'Agent for Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock, Automobile and Sickness and Accidedt Insurance. Huron and Erie and Cana... da Trust Sonde. Appointments made to meet' parties at'Brucedeld, Varna and Bayfield Phone 57, • ��A� AIII�N,�ATdONAI��'A�LW�1!Sa T1MB TABLE • Trains will:a rtie at and depart from Clinton s follows: Buffalo and Goderich' Div. ' Going Ea'st,'depart ' ' ' 6:44 a.m, 2.62 p.m. , Going West, Sr. 11.50 a.m. ” ar. 6.08 dp, - 0.53 p.m. " 'ar. 10.04 p,m. l London, Huron & Bruce Div. Going-Soutb, ar. 7.56 dp. 7.56 a.m. 4,10 p -m• Going North, depart 6,50 p.m. ar. 11,40 " 11,51 a.m., way, I am always ready. "No, I really want you •to conte. And bring the Stradivarius, if you will, , I ' think it will help -to hear that." ' seduence nettle' dangerous policy fel- -Ivan hung up, and as ehe waited lowed in the Rif buy. Spain, Abdel for hint tai come she sent Nora after Krhn attached us. We were compet- ed that the news 'would be made public I led to make, both in 1925 -and in 1926, great expenditure of, man power.and material to overcome It." 'We accom- plished our leek and, thanks to our blood, aud our gold, Spain knew what it' was to have peace in a region where she had been fighting and los- ing for 400 years. And then an we expected development!' To thank us for having done the work which she had not been able to finish off uniiY 1926, -she asked us in 1927 to (rand over Tangier and its zone entirely to her. , She is playing the game of - Italy, who' is always on the look-ont for it chance to Intervene ho Morocco. -and the game of, Germany, who wants to reopen tete whole question of the colonial mandates. her and thousands of f th r from the corner of the earth where she had thought he had been hiding, She had not 'dreamed 'but that he had fled to South America, as- Ivan Ishmin lied advised. Certainly he had gone to Savannah and bad, boarded the dis- reputable trader of which Ivan had told' him; but some adventure of the journey had fetched hint up in the far North rather than in Rio de Janeiro. The letters Ivan had given him to his great friends in the Brazilian capital letters to facilitate his flight back to the frontier -had evidently been no use to him, after all. For months past Dorothy had lived in constant fear of his capture. Such news she had expected in the telegram today, that, in spite of Ivan's'heroic efforts to -cover up the fugitive's tracks, the arm of the law had seized him at last. Ivan had withheld his testimony' to the very last, running the risk of being haled into court himself on the ,charge of assisting a murderer to escape, not telling the tragic, story of what he•had seen and taken part in oil the deck, of the motor boat'until it was veritably forced from him at the inquiry several days later, but she had not direct to -believe that.Peter could escape the hue and dry that was subsequently raised. Dorothy was known, throughout her beautiful resident city, for the unfail ing loveliness of her appearance, - eyes always •bright, cheeks flushed quaint frocks dainty and fresh, bobbe curls, clustering in dark glory abou her head and around her childish slender neck acid throat -but her near. est friends would hardly have known her now. The laively dull -red glow el her brown cheeks„had faded, her son suede mouth Was drawn and beggar with agony, her eyes like dark blotche below the brows. - ,i' She' bowed -her 'lovely, bobbed hes into the cushion of the i;;.an. the blessing of tears was hers at las The long hours of the afternoon drag gad away. She was miserably alone her mother twos out of the city, eve Id .Rose; her eteored mamnmy, did no The teKi lop Mutual Fire e Insuance Company Head Office, Seaforth, Out. DihECT'ORY:' • President, *Tames Connolly, Goderich; Vice, James Evans, Beechwood; See,• Treasurer, Thos.' EE: FIays,' Seaforth.. Directors: ` George' McCartney, Sea forth; D. E. McGregor, Seeforth; J, O, Grieve, Walton; Win, Ring, Seaforth; M. AlcEv'en, Clinton;' Robert Ferries, i3arlock; John Iiennewelr, Brodhagen; Jas. Connolly, Goderich. Agents: Alex. Leitch, Clinton; J, W. Teo, Goderich; Ed,' .klinoliray, 'Sea - firth: tv. -Chesney,' Egmendville; 12. - 0. Jarmuth, Brodhagen, Any money to be paid in- may he paid to �bioorish Cletlting Co„ Clinton, ' or at Cutt'e;Grooery, Goderich. Parties desiring to affect I:topr nae I or transact 'other, b`oloess wilt it@ promptly attended to on 'application o ,any of theabove officers addressed to their respective' post office. Leasee inspected by the Director who lives ISSUE No. 48—'27 assert -the 1 `"..- It is suggested that "Loudon trams should be decked with flowers eo ad-, vertise the tramways. Another' no - Lion is that pedestrians should carry wreaths to' advertise motor -cars. .Newhall had 'hurled hint into the slight be inclined to carry her prop- rvater:" — Wash Out On the -Line eriy away' she made It a practice to' &i THAT 18TH AMENDMENT AGAIN ` "Gcrtio have you gotten every- thine very thing packed for your return to college?" "I should say not. t haven't tileoted m lfja FOR COOL DAYS. The emast windbreaker "pictured ' here. is a comfortable and easily fa ehioned 'style. The lower edge is gathered to a wide. band, and) the collar , may he worn open or buttoned snugly at the neck. There are two ueeful patch -pockets with laps and the long sleeves are gathered 'to wrist -bands. No. 1674 is in carnes 6, 8,10,' 12 and 14 years. Size 14) requires -2 t yards 27 - inch, or 1% yards 36 -inch material. (Price 20 cents• the pattern.) The secret of distinctive dress lies in good -taste rather than a -lavish ex- penditure of money. Every woman empire, as focal point for the ecou• should want to make her own clothes, omic activities of 'the extensive ter+ and the home dressmaker will find the ritorles controlled by the Hapsburgs, designs illustrated in our new I ashion there were many reasons why it ;Book to be practical and simple, yet should be the great city it was. 'To I maintaining the spirit of the mode of day it remains a capital without a I the maineh't. Price of the break 10e country, slowly but surely being fore -'the copy. ed •to adapt' itself to new anti tragic IIOTW TO, ORDER PATTERNS. circumstances. Write t 1 Park Poets 'ri a your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in I like to sit in Washington Square ; stamps or COIn (coin preferred; wrap 'Watching the gents with great long : it carefully) for each number and Bair, address your order to Patten. Dept., Writing their lofty and lyrical ricyme - I Wilson Publishing Co.; 73 West Ade- laide Th World and The Tribune,The She. Toronto. Patterns sent by Writing of nightingales, robins and crows, Of dandies and derelicts, gau0fers and 'bos; Writing of women, of song and of y pocket flask: yet." wine, c►— Some of it foolish and some of It fine, A mush. -hall artist who used to 'Some of it tragic and some of it tough, tour the provinces with a bock of, per- Some of it strange and superiluout7', forming decks found managers no - stuff, . longer willtng•torbook his show, After For many a poet is wont to`:abusa he had been "misting" for solve time The subtle weird fanefes and moods he received a telegram asking (him tot of tiie muse, open on the following Monday at a `-iiarvey- McKenzie, New York. vaelety. then tre in the North of Eng-') „ A benutlftii actress became not come; Have eaten the artistes!" sensor ofan expensive pea or e 'r 'Oen and The "'Ii-mes; • return mail. land. In. reply he wired, Regret can- the mos - To mislead any housebreaker wbo 0 know of her grief and thus could not come to. comfort her; and Ivan -on whom, in these past months, she had so soon. She found the article on the first page, and saw with, relief it wits entirely fair; Pirate Cove, Alaska, December 2nd. -The body of Peter Newhall of .Au- gusta, Georgia, ' was picked up dead on the beach on the north coast of Alaska Peninsula. He was a victim df the,wreck of the cannery -boat Jupi- ter that went to pieces on the rocks in her effort' •to aid the auxiliary schooner Vigten, which was iii dis- tress. ACCOUNTANTS AND AUDITORS The above news came as a great shock'te the entire city today. Mr. Newhall was a member of one of the South's most ancient and distinguish- ed families; and although the last part of his life: has been overtaken with- tragedy, his.. friends remember him for the good friend, chivalrous gentleman, and ,social favorite that he was throughout the years of hisyoung manhood, ' Peter Newhall was born in this City 86 years: ago, the son of Colonel -,New- hall of Gettysburg fame. He was. married two years ago to Miss Dor- othy Stanhope of Savannah. --The affair that led to his downfall occurred in a motor -boat party an, the Sevann''ah River`a year ago lust sum- mer. Accordingto testimony brought. out at the Inquiry Peter had sought a bitter giar'rdl with air. Ivan Ishmin, a violinist pfinternational fame .who was spending the season at Aiken; South Carolina. When the men were at the verge of blows, Paul Sarichef,- Ishmin's secretary, interfered in Iah min's behalf, and turning on him in a fury, 'Newhall was heard to threaten to throw hint out of the boat into the river. t Ishinin himself was the sole obeerv- car of the tragic outcome of tine- quar- rel, and tern ` between grief at the death of his secretary and loyalty to his friend Newhall$ it was with the greatest difficulty that ,his testimony was drawn from him atthe inquiry. Later this sante night Ishmin was aroused by angry voices, and he left W. MacMillan and Company Union Bank Building, Galt. Phone 563 Also Toronto and Kitchener Wt' MACMILLAN,: L.A. ivy intra. F-28 swelasoorm kd Vt,usnfiltal,+lt\: I00, A QUEER FRC -Ai( OF T1'IE NEW ENGLAND .FLOODS . Arailway bridge :washed 11 .o from under 1.lre tracks cru t1loDest 'a -Snit ':od 14 Albany lute at TIoce-ic =lttnctimi,Mass„'showItig' severity ofdatnhge} BEST FOR IL Y an•,),"14 kV1x n0„na.x a r•,•,f, ..r .:] fi. r. ,.. • n C leave tite necklace lying carelessly upon her dressing -table' beside a sheet of'paper on which the had written: "Phese are imitation pearls. -Keep me real pearls in a safety vault” One night when she :striver home she discovered that her pearls were gone, and, in place of the note she had left beside them, she found this: -"I'm "'When a girl appears shy at the mention of her age she generally is -from live` to ten years. just a substitute Tile_hurgisr -whets She (indigut y' : "I'd like to see regularly assigned . to this district le you kiss me again!" l•Ie: "All right, he prison." , keep your eyes open this time." T E . SILENCE OF THE EMPIRE "The eleventh .hour, the eleventh eye could sea stood a dense mass of Clay of the eleventh month." So thepeople, war cloacae/ma at such time Is 1t re - 'the At bothsides of the cenotaph sat , the wearers of the Silver fieri, At "nlembei•ed. And In all the world � the four corners stood a guard, two '.• wherever his Majesty's subjects gall.'from the Mississauga. Horse .in sear• er together a few brief momenta of lot and with helmet gird two from the silence fall like' a chain about the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve. The great clock began to strike out mourners gathered'at the Cenotaph. At, the hour. There was a vast sweep - Westminster, in the heart of the Em tag off of hats and caps. The wear pire, they gather .about tine body pf.'ers . Of the Sliver Cross rose slowly the' Unknown Soldier,v,,Jo all the do- minions that make up tete far-flung portions of a mighty nation the pros- aic daily duties are interrupted for a silence of two minutes. On the ships of. his-Majeaty's navy ;in an. the four corners of the ,earth 'when the circl- ing si}rn ar-tree et the hour of eleven o'clielt a silence falls upon the encirel- ing deep. Sonvaa it Friday; Nov. 11, before our Own cenotaph it the City Hall. `All about stood the throngs of those who remember ease day in all the year, but who this day 'show in public their "proud and loving remembrance." The traffic of a great and busy city. clambered through' the streets. The ciIng of street daresendthe rumbling wheels clattered over titer rails. Motor and bowed over In silent prayer. 'Phu rumbling, traffic ceased, the honking of the; passing cars ' was stopped. - Gradually a stillness fell over the en- tire scene. The guards stood even stiffer'- to attention. The memory of Mons fo'Mans came back in those brief meteorite. Each one remembered same one who fell over there. Thotfghts dwelt on the early days In -'Ypres- and St. Julien, swept over • to the. Somme . eleven year's ago, to Vimy Ridge in that drive ' on Easter morn, to Passehendaele ani-". the awful ridges leading to its height, Amiens and Arras, Cambrai and Val- lencienes. A motor car moves, a street cap, clangs and starts away. The notes' of the National Anthem breaks on cars •bolilted - and sped along the the stillness, continue'. through and streets, and all the noise of`busy bed- end. Again a great sweep of hate lam sounded round about The pati over the sea of beetle. The sorrows ent throng waited about et pile., of, lug 'ones resume their places on the stone' heaped up with flowery wreaths benches. The 'two 'minutes silence and poppy sprays, Al. far as "the 'stoves away. ;silt: tvte s.". r r UR BAKING Pies, Cakes, Dumas and B're'ad - DOES ALL Y0 I? BAKING BEST 5` " ,..: " n:.,,1 k,.u, wt• ,.,1... 4 ,,..., 'Ol'S'cl.l iV•i4..i�,i'iff ' hag i+r'a,'>"n[ . u4.,"".'ti.1'..:'ItO d. k, r+s '1 , .- h'.+,k, 4, `NG ,, to, , "yitiWt�'tl.�Y,.i v. ,',F+'o tw 4.L�:. �• ;. K ..•1 , V4 �.kiJ1.,h. .,kd9,nlY h