Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1939-06-29, Page 2PAGE 2 THE CLINTON NEWS -RECORD THURS., JUNE 29, 1939 Eden Phillpotts TOM AYLMER: At the time the story opens is living in Peru, man- aging silver an-aging:silver mines belonging' to his father. g'ELICE PARDO: A Peruvian who, although young; has been fifteen years in the service of the Aylmer mining enterprise. He is the most trusted native employee. PRINCIPAL CHARACTERS Mrs. MERCY AYLMER: Tom's mother; egotistical and exacting. JANE BRADSHAW: Torii Aylmer's fiancee. At the time the story opens, the expectation is that these two -veill marry on Toin's next leave in England. ANGUS 'MAINE: A young Scot on Aylmer's, staff, and close compare ion of Tom. JACOB FERNANDEZ: A rich, e1d- erly, South American whose hobby is the study of bird life. He is a bachelor and is engaged upon a monumental literary work on the subject, of bird life. JANE RECOVERS; Jane was quickly out of her trouble, for horror brought uncon- sciousness and she fainted, while Tont armed only with his spade, leapt into the path of the advancing• monster and felt the strands of its web tight- ening about his legs as he did so, He lifted the spade and prepared to make a fight bot knew it must be fruit- less, for the creature towered high above him and its hairy legs were as thick as his body. "Get beck,' .you devil!" he bawled, hoping .that his voice might frighten it; but the spider came 'on enough fost him to see its .poison and the thought of you will be'prec- fangs, like long daggers beneath its ious to us far ever." eyes. I "Anybody could have done it, Jane. Then sounded a sudden explosion I'm glad, for now I know why I al - waking violent echoes, While another ways carried my little revolver. I quickly followed' it. . Pardo was not was made to do it' because to -day unarmed. He carried a small revolver was, coming." always, in a packet under - his left "I wonder. I'd like to think so. armpit; but he had never told his Then it Was one of these killed poor Benny? But why didn't he shoot•it." "A thousand things might have the gigantic insect, killing it instant- happened. His revolver might have missed fire, or, while he was plodding ly. It died as spiders do, curled over and contracted its eight legs about' up the gorge with his bag and his its body. Its eyes went out; it quiv- spade; one of these creatures may -- near have spotted him and stalked him erect for a few moments in every from behind. Nothing is so silent huge liinb, then moved no more. "Gad bless you, Felice!" was all as a spider. But once et bit, whether that Toin could say. He shook . and • he fired or not, ,he must have been showed himself unmanned, but Pardo done ,fox." revealed no loss of nerve, He took "Was he going or coming back do his knife, cut Aylmer loose and then you think?" hastened to Jane while Tom followed) "Re was going," said Felice. "He I was on his way up the cleft. What him. At the same moment Angus returned full of his own excitement.I Angus saw proves that." • He had not heard the shots for *leiWhat did you see, Angus?" ask - din of the geyser had' drowned them.! ed Jane, Its here!" he shouted. "A little WHAT ANGUS SAW cairn alongside the hot -spring, butt « clash. But we are better apart, if to the heat in there. How we're go- the path for one thing and lumped net for their sakes, then our own." Mg to dig", over them, but. had no notion what "That's aright," admitted her g I theywere. Then I sweetheart; "but there's another side He stopped and saw the dead spid- er. got to the turn 1 and felt a blast of hot air that atear- to it, Jane. We haven't come all this er. "Talk afterwards. Hely Tani," said ly took my breath. It's like 'an oven Pardo. "We must get Jane back to when the geyser spouts, but it wasn't spouting water all the time, It made the boat first. . Carry her between a most infernal noise,and fire- and you and I'll watch out." I smoke came up once, then a boiling The girl was still unconscious, and net of water again.' while her sweetheart and Angus g It's a foul hole; but ten yards froth the spout I saw friends of this ancient habit for fear of their rididule. Now he had drawn it ansI fired twice into the bulk of The Clinton News -Record with which is Incorporated , TIME NEW ERA TERMS Ole SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 per year in advance, to Can- adian addresses; $2.00 to the U.S. or either foreign countries. No paper discontinued until all arrears are paid unless at the option' of the pub- lisher. The date to which every sub- scription is paid is denoted on the label. ADVERTISING RATES — Transient ,advertising 12e per count line for first insertion. Sc. for each subse- quent insertion. Heading counts 2 lines. Small advertisements not to exceed one inch, such as "Wanted", "Lost, "Strayed", etc., inserted once for 35c., each subsequent insertion 15c. Rates for display advertising ;made known on application. Communications intended for pub- lieation must, as a guarantee of good .faith, be accompanied by the name of the writer. G. E. HALL - Proprietor H. T. RANCE Notary Public, Conveyancer +b'nancial, Real Estate and Fire In- euranee Agent, Representing 14 Fire !Insurance Companies. Division Court Office. Clinton Frank Fingland, B.A., LL.B. +Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public Successor. to W. Brydone, S.C. tdloan'Blocs Clinton, Ont. A. E. COOK ' . not think the work will be hard, .eeWe"eenn■'■•■. Benny Boss was only, concerned to make his treasure safe. It may even not be underground at;all, but hidden 1 •: in the cairn that Angus saw." _ Then vanished Felice's last hope 1 and he knew the cup:was not destined ■ . eeeee.'■"■'te.n v",l Here en :.'■ti,' '.°.9.'v .'°°ee e ••e•w'i'■' o°: YOUR WORLD AND MINE. (Copyright) by JOHN C. IKIRKWOOI3 to be :taken from his lips. The deed that he at once desired and hated had looked safely beyond his reach' when they were back on the ship, for he doubted' . not that Aylmer and Maine would come ashore with him as soon 'as Jane's health was assured. Together they would face the gorge and secure the treasure. There could be no evasion. But now he found himself shaken, and his opportunity thrust upoe tin, for :five minutes. later he learned that going ashore by himself, with nothing but a lie between him and sole• possession If his great-grandfather's secret hoard. So Fate decreed and 'Felice fought no more, but saw destiny and promise of the greatest good to the number, even though he could never share the fruit of his own veli -doing.' Angus began it. "Personally I don't leave the Igu- ana again for anything on the earth." he said. "You can call ire what you please, my dear fellow, and you can . take my share:of the booty. I've seen all I want to see:of Table Top and I've got poison gas in my lungs 'at I this minute. Nothing on - earth Will! induce me to go ashore again—cow- ardly though it may sound. Not. nearly good enough." "Quite right," declared Jane.. "Nothing cowardly about it, Angus— merely common sense." "Sometimes nothing is braver than, to be a coward," said the Scot, "but not in my ease. No doubt I ought to go. but, as against that, I'm not go- ing and nothing will induce me to. Not all the gold in. Peru would make me go into that gorge again." "Perfectly right," declared Jane. "I've no quarrel with the spiders myself. We ,couldn't be close friends, because we look at life from such a different point 'of view and our inter- ests would always rather tend to -'.'i'.W■• N.'a •0 .1■'.Y:: ■ •.• Ve °a'.',ra'e �'.S'■`r',i ei .'e'c° ev elf +"■ m a •• P 4■GF■a W'I! The tumult and the shouting con- And always I was conscious of the netted with the Royal visit have died effects on our people, and on our down—except as they may be repeat- sovereigns, of the Royal Visit. It ed i!n and by the talkies..For the ! was a very Wonderful thing for a greater part of 'a month Canada gave king and queen to leave their own its interest to the; presence and do- land, and cross an ocean, to visit' a ings of our King and Queen—as was part of their empire—and to be so right. And even when the Royal' pair very human — so very lovable so crossed over into the United' States, genuinely interested in individuals, our interest followed them—perhaps and especially those who were afflict - increased: we wanted to see how the, ed or who had taken part im, the United States'would receive Britain's Great War. There was no royal King 'and Queen. We were supremely ostentation, no aloofness, no evasion happy and satisfied with the recep- of what was considered' to be duty. tions given George and "Elizabeth in I was not and am not curious eon - amine the reasons for this Royal Visit, I hear.this one and that one the furnaces on the ship 'are a fool • I saw those grey ropes run across • way to be shooed off our lawful oc- casions by an abnormal race of in- sects. That's how I feel, and no doubt that's how Felice feels'•" "I'm much too tired to argue," she answered, "but I never was more de- termined about anything in my life. bronght leer .back to the s]lore' Felice You know I'm not fanciful, or feeble what could only have been put there followed, his eyes to the right and by man. And that's Benny's cache concerning facts in general, Tom; but left. I am quite positive that it would be —a little cairn of piled stones—neat Tom held fainting Jane in his lap and. trim and two feet high. a desperately foolish deed to go back. while the others pulled as hard as rI knew what it was, of course; Nothing turns. upon it but money— they might for the ship. She breath- and I also knew that nobody could that's the plain English of the situa- ed faintly, but her face was white tion. We don't care two straws about under her tan and as yet she showed sum in that. place very long at a Berrys treasure from a romantic no st ns of returningconsciousness. time. So I made a dash and began g pulling off the stones as fast as I point of viaw—only what it may be It was typical of the sensitive - ,, •,.„, worth. I know it would be a terrible •-1..,1 Peruvian; that his first act was to lumps of pumice, but jolly hot, Then explain the accident responsible' for I heard you people yell and came saving the lovers. 'back as fast as I could and saw that "You chaps will laugh at me,” he awesome monster." said quietly, . 'but I've carried 'this They were quite fight --a ce to try. ag won't." "You've got your tail down — very naturally," said Torn.,"Go to sleep now Jane and I'll bring you some Washington and . New York, and by c the newspapers of the country. Yet all good things have an end s and as I write our King and Queen are at Southampton. Before this contribution to the News -Record will appear, we shall have read of the welcome given by their' kin and by i the state and by all the people to our beloved sovereigns• eying that the underlying reason had relation to Britain's menaced position in Europe and in her world relations, I •prefer to believe that the Royal Visit had. other inspira- tions, and that it signifies a new po]- cy in Imperial affairs, namely, the policy of cementing, in new and secure ways, the wonderful British Empire. We do hear, quite often, that Canada and the United States will some day be joined politically. That might net be any great disaster. But for the present we in Canada are acutely conscious of Britain's peril. If war had' broken out last September, and had Germany sent her planes to England to destroy its cities its homes, its factories, its peo- ple, then the dreadfulness of the de- struction would have been almost our power to comprehend. I like to think that thin visit of our King and Queen was of the nature of an' expression of thanksgiving for Britain's escape from a calamity so mind—staggering that few of us want even to center plate its consequences, not alone to Britain, but also to the whole world including our own land. 1 I imagine that I mare than most Canadians remained normal during the period when our King and. Queen were in Canada and in the United States. I read very, very little of what was printed in the newspapers• in such a vast abundance, and the innumerable pictures appearing in our newspapers and periodicals re- ceived only the briefest attention from me. When the King and Queen were in Toronto, I was but mildly, excited, and made na very special effort to see thein as they passed along the streets. All this, seeming unemotionalness and absence of demonstrated interest may be hard to explain satisfactorily. I recall that In adding up the gains of the Royal Visit, we have to consider the gavns. to Britain herself. Britain followed the triumphal' josnney. and the incid- ents conneetee with it, of the. King and 'Queen as closely as did we in Canada, and Britain sejoieed over the spontaneity and the magnificence of the Canadian welcome even as we did in Canada. ,Britain's heart was. in. Canada when the King and Queen were in Canada, and there is not a doubt in the. World that there is.a new love for Canada•in the Mother- land, We did net fall down in any particular in our welcome and in our de nontrations of affection and loyalty. It was good for Britain that its King and Queen should leave its a shores for a period. If absence makes the Heart grow fonder, then Britain's love for her sovereigns and her esteem of and delight in them has been very wonderfully magnified. I feel very sure that Britain's gratitude to Canada for our reception of the King and Queen will he richly shown, in many, many ways,- in the years ahead. during the late years of my 17 years sojourn in England and London, I made mo effort to see the Lord Mayor's show, nor any of the num- erous street pageants. Familiarity breeds indifference. I had seen the Ring and the Queen often enough to satisfy•Inc. Buckingham Palace gave me no thrills when I viewed it. I liked much better to attend dinners , at which were to be present disttn: guished Hien and women - persons having an established place in their, country's affairs. For weeks at a time I would not be on Regent Street' or Oxford Street. I was a not in West- minster Abbey once in 12 years, nor in the Houses of Parliament. I paid few visits to museums. I was not 'greatly desirous of visiting cathed- rals Lind castles. Yet I did want to • see the Highlands of Scotland, to visit Syke, and to walls on the moors.' II did wantto see the Rhine country and to sail down the Rhine. I did. want to see Paris; and I should like to see the Rockies, and the` Grand little toy under my armpit for 10 "The wonderful thing was that tea in an haul or so:' I Canyon and to sail up the Amazon Sono Must Watch" it a dr•ama of frosts of 190?, the withering of the the 1837 Rebellion and relates the Red Fife crops, and the triumphant f the search for participating survival of Marquis, is told• From "Thank God for that then,"said made ' all t d emotional situations. I be one-fifth of nn acre own at Indian rebels, With this as a premise, many gi Piano and Voice Maine. f Felice was apparently in the best automatic m my pocket whether I til you do. ,period are revealed. 1 of :spirits but he restrained his should have remembered it. The ape- things which overpower I find myself, in. common with att.', ers, contemplating the Royal Visit from the religious and the Biblical point' of view. It is easy to draw parallels between Heaven's ways with man and this visit of our King and Queen to a far -country. When all is said and done, human life is a spirit- ual experience — a preparation for samething inconceivably better than any earthly experience. Nations are but individuals in the mass. Nations today are, each in its own way, try- ing ry ing to find themselves spiritually; and it should give us immense con-' fort and satisfaction to know that the English-speaking nations have retain.. ed, above all other nations, their be- Iief in a supreme being—a creator of planets and of universes—and in a glorious immortality. When we sing "God Save The King" in the future, we shall do so with a new fervour . and a new reverence. Rumn1\ L),,utui\i�\\\lplinumpimnnmullUy(///Y /O////////orwm//// '4( , PRIZE-WINNING PLAY WRITTEN ficiary of Saunders' discovery. 1 Mr, Kannawin will present on this BY LONDON COLLABORATORS occasion "Enter the Marquis," by Following the policy introduced in Elsie Park Gowan, radio writer of the production of the three previous Edmonton, with a Winnipeg cast dir- radio plays, the fourth prize-winning eeted by Esse Ljungh, The play tells entry in the GEC Drama Contest will hew Saunders, as a young pian much be directed by a specially -invited dare intertested in music and a r t Corporation producer for this cm- than in wheat growing, was driven casion, Entitled "Some Must Watch", on to his work on the Dominion. Ex - this drama, written by Mary Turner perimental Farms by his father, Wil - and Charles Carruthers, will be pro- Liam Saunders, described as "an eld- duced at this time by John Macdon- erly, dignified druggist with a pas- nell, It will be heard on CBC Nat- s%on for eroesing gooseberries." Tonal Network, Sunday 2, 9,00 to 9.30' In the quick, moving sequences of p.m. EDST, Ikom'Toronto. 'radio drama, the story of the August me—exhaust years. Some ancestral instinct per- Pardo kept his nerve and remembered I ' "Promise then," she bade him. and down the Mississippi. I am not haps." his pistol. A split second might have "Promise me faithfully, on your word immune to the appeals of sentiment story o he difference," declared of honour, that you won't go ashore an emo tons si ua i ns. can Toni. "I much doubt if I'd had my again, then I shall sleep, but not un- stirred by books and speakers and interesting phases of this crucial Head in 1907 came the seed planted Studio—E: C. Nickle, Phone 23w." music and song. Yet there are some ]ion acres in Canada and the United and harvested on more than 20 inil- ' (To be continued) me—repel me. Thus,there is one Miss MaryTurner, who wrote the 35-tf. cheerfulness before Tom, who became petition of that nightmare knocked e States. It has been estimated that very .haggard and anxious as they every gain of reasoning power out of famous preacher in Toronto whom I play in conjunction with Cheries Marquis wheat has added more than reached the Iguana . me-" O. H. McINNES CHIROPRACTOR Electra Therapist, Massage Office: Buren 'Street, (Few Doors west of Royal Bank) Hours -'—e cd, and Sat. and by appointment. FOOT CORRECTION by manipulation Sun -Ray Treatment , do not want to listen to often. He Carruthers, is a London, Ontario, 160 million dollars to the incomes of They carried unconscious Jane up "So it did out of me," confessed RADIO INTERFERENCE ) is dramatic and eloquent, but I stay newspaper womwt. She is a graduate farriers in Canada alone. thelittle companion ladder and Angus Maine. "A poor show for Aberdeen, away from his church, I cannot read of Western University and has writ -1 Cominon sources of radio inter- with any enjoyment 1000 page books. ten several short stories. This is her ference be the home are listed in I rarely look at the picture magazine- first attempt at writing a radio play I APPEAL EQUALIZATION throe classes: loose connections in "Life,"for its many and varied pint -I Mr. Carruthers has been city editor, The meeting of the Goderich Town electrical systems and faulty appli- _ures fag me. Niagara Falls gives of the London Free Press for mere Council on Friday night was a brie! ,antes; t dpplfances using electro, me no excitement, even when ilium- than 15 years. Ile is one of. the one. The outstandfn item of brei fetched the cook, who was the ship's but the naked truth." doctor and declared to be a very skit-, "And I failed,". said Jane. "We none led physician.He tended Jane with- of us shone but Felice. What did yen out ceremony, declared that she was feel like when the thing came lumber - only ie a heavy faint and told them ing out of its cave, Felice?" g Phone 207 that she would soon come to her "No credit to ire," he answered. "I motors; and special appliances. :mated. I can stay away without dis- oldest continuous broadcasters in Can- Hess was the passing of a motion GEORGE ELLIOTT (Licensed, 'Auctioneer for the County of Huron Clorrespondence promptly answered immediate arrangements can be made rtor, Sales Date at The News -Record, 'Clinton-, or by calling phone 203. .Charges Moderate and Satisfaction "Guaranteed, . 1TE McKILLOP MUTUAL Fire Insurance Company Head Office, Seaforth, Ont. Officers: tc er s - President, Thomas Moylan,. Sea- forth; Vice President, William Knox, Londesboro;, Secretary -Treasurer, M A. Raid, Seaforth. Directors, Alex.! Broadfoot, Seaforth; James Sholdice, Walton; James .Connolly, Goderich; W. R. Archibald, , Seaforth; Chris. L eonhardt, Dublin; Alex. McEwing, Bl-ith; ]:'rank McGregor, Clinton. List of Agents: E, A. Yeo, R.R. 1, Goderich, Phone 603r31, Clinton; James Watt, Blyth; John E. Pepper, lsSrucefield, R. R. No. 1; R. F. McIIer- Ther, Dublin, R. R. No. 1; Chas. F. Hewitt, Kincardine; R. G. Jaaunuth, 'm'iiholni, R. R. No, 1. Any money to be paid may be paid to the Royal Bank, Clinton; Bank of Commerce, Seaforth, ot• at Calvin Ci'tt's Grocery, Gaderieh. Parties desiring to effect' insur- ance or transact other business will be promptly attended to on applica- lon to any ,of the above officers ad- dressed to their respective post offi- ces. Losses inspected by the director who lives nearest the scene. fiLWAVA d b t ch th' mod t ' t tl That was the senses an a no ms a Worse. recogi instantly He spoke truly, for Tom felt her vital point." hand tighten upon his prosehtly, and "So did you, Jane,' said Tom. hesaw that her eyes: had opened. I "If it had been a new bea.st that no "Jane! Jane! Say you're all right," eye had ever seen, I might have fear he begged, then heard her beloved 'strange continued Pardo.' "To face a voice. strange creature that size so close "'There carne a great spider, and night have wakened fear. But it was sat down beside her,'" said Jane. not strange. It stood twelve feet high "Did everybody escape?"` Ion its legs, and. there is perhaps no "Everybody. We shall breathe living man or woman who has be - again now. hold such a spider and lived to tell They Were alone in her cabin and about it; but itt was still only a spid- when she begged for food,and drink, a In the first case all loose connect- appointment from many great meet- ado and still does his daily morning for an appeal against the equali ions should be repaired by a compet- ings and assemblies. In short, I am newscast. He has already written 12 tient of assessment adopted by the ent electrician. All lighting and heat-'' not greatly ;hungry for many and one -act plays, seine of which gained County Council at its recent session. ing appliances such as lamps, stoves, varied experiences, I obtain more honourable mention in the Canadian All the members were present except irons, heaters, warming pads, should contentment, rest, refreshment and Authors Association contest. Reeve Turner, and the motion was cause no interference when in proper gain from domestic and restaurant passed unanimously. condition. • - 1 conversations, from selected books, I Secondly are the appliances using from recumbent reflections, frothDISCOVERER OF MARQUIS The motion was set forth that the b ARQ S electric motors such as vacuum clean- contacts with old friends. Council wished to have the final ers, refrigerators, hair driers, etc.' WHEAT TO BE HONOURED 1 equalization of the County made in The cure for this class entails the These confessions are not to be re-, the manner prescribed by sec. 91, ss. installation of suppressor units in' gardecl as signifying that I was un-' Sir Charles Saunders, great Carted- 4, of the Assessment Act. This sub - the power • supply .circuit. stirred by the Royal Visit. The very ran cerealist, excellent flute -player section provides for a court of three The third cause of interforelice is reverse is true: I' had great delight and teacher of music to Toronto persons—the county judge and two •Size is .nothing m itself and one special appliances, including electric in the knowledge that our King and young ladies, will be honoured in John to be appointed by the Ontario Gov - Tom shouted to the others who were couldn't miss. It was like firing into shavers and some types of apparatus Queen came to aur country, •and gave Kannawin's drama series over GEC's ernntent, one of whom: shall be the in the saloon a black haystack. If it had been no for. electric treatment. These. require us so richly of themselves --their Mideast and Western Networks sheriff or registrar of the County in "She's all right! She's hungry and . ,, ; thirsty! Fetch konie grub quickly, re gy havebeen farmore dangerous Angus. ' and killed us before we eaw 1t:" They sat round her and told of her. escape while Aylmer related the story . "Splendid!' said Jane. "You're and gave Pardo the praise. ;utterly wonderful, Felice, Now I "I went for • the brute* and was understand what it is not to know hard and fast in his web up to my the meaning of fear. I understand knees: with nothing but a shovel to that what we thought were Synumet- fight'him. Our numbers'. were up all rical signalspainted on the cliffs right, Jane, if it hadn't been: for Fel-. were symmetrical spiders, ,twenty reet ice. You were dead to the world and across, just enjoying the sunset."- I was glad you'd gone out and would- "They mpst have been bigger than n't wake again. And, I was too much our 'spider, Jane," thought Tom. in a rage to be frightened for the "And that's why the birds are so minute. The monster would have bag- wild and never leave the tree tops ged a brace in tent seconds; but then or the air'," said Jane. "Generations TIME TABLE '(+rains will arrive at and depart from Clinton as follows: einffalo and C adericb iii„ Going East, depart 6 58 a.in. Going East, depart 11.01) p.an. 'Going West, depart 11.45 a.in, Going West, depart 10.00 pm, London, Huron Rc Brnre Going North, are 11.25 lye. 11.47 p.m. Going South ar. 2.50, leave 3.08 p.m, this sportsman bagged him—shot him dead. The only one with a gun. .If he'd gone ahead instead of Angus, we for it. And IshouId have de were e - served it for being such a fool.'; I "It's hard to think we all forgot the automatics," said Jane. "Was it really a spider;, I just •saw enough to make 'me think it must be before I went off." "A spider all right, but nearly as big as an elephant." ' Jane took food and drank some red wine. "I thank you dearly, Felice," she said. "You've saved two lives to -day have enabled only the fittest to sur- vive with the 'spiders, no doubt, No bird could get out of their webs and very few beasts either." Angus changed the subject. "Well, Costa is fed up and who shall blame 'him?" he began. "I've told him of the morning's work and he's cicceedingly keen to be gone. The glassis standing on its head and the weather's changing. He won't endure much more." _ "Tont is in command, not Costa," said Pardo. "There are changes at hand without a doubt. The sea, begins to get up, but there is time. I do a suppressor unit of a more coni- simple selves, and that our own peo- Monday, July 3, 12.00 to 12.30 a.m. which the appeal is made, and tete plicated type, in correcting interfer- ple showed their joy so frantically. ' EDST. Appropriately, the drama of other a judge of another county. once. II was glad when I saw our citizens the life of the discoverer of Marquis These three shall form a court which l'he cooperation of radio broadcast adorning their homes, stores, factor- Wheat will ,come from Winnipeg, "shall equalize the whole assessment listeners. is sought in eliminating ies, public buildings, with colorful 'centre of the greatest wheat growing of the County." — Goderich Signal - equipment that causes interference. 1 bunting :and flags and silken banners. territory in the world and chief beim- Star. Now is the -time to tier in your worn tires and fit your car with the new Dunlop'Fort'. It's the most revolu- tionary tire achieve- ment in over 50 years of Dunlop . leadership 2000 SOLID RUB. BEE TEETH— over 5000 sharp edges give you silent, safer traction to double your confidence in, every driving codition. For Sale By LESLIE BALL—Pontiac Dealer, Loitdesboro NEDIGER'S GARAGE—Chevrolet Dealer KEN. G. WATERS—Automotive Parts 181 DUNLOP IF An outstanding, .high- qu'ality4•plytire, Silent - running, Cable Cord Construction and extra deep, non -slid tread. 5394 •