The Wingham Advance Times, 1930-06-26, Page 6ghltral Advance -Times,
Published a
WiNcruAivi ONTARIO
Every Thursday IVIerning
Logan Craig, Publisher
tription rates -- One year $2.00.
ix months at.00, in aavance.
To U. S. A. a.s.eo per year.
Advertising rates on application,
Wellington Mutual Fire
insurance Co.
Head Office, Guelph, Ont.
Established 1840
Risks taken on all class of insur-
ance at reasonable rates.
ABNER COSENS, Agent, Wingham
J. W. DODD
Office in Chisholm Block
PIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT AND
— HEALTH INSURA.NCE AND REAL ESTATE
O. Boy: 360 Phone 240
WV/4611AM, ONTARIO
HENDIRED ISOSUANI,
Coroner Is Neither A Lawyer No
Doctor.
Although the law as to the eta
polutment of coroners and the pro-
eedure at inquests has uudergone
great changes in the past fifty years,
the Hundred of the Manor of Bea -
ham, Sussex, England, atilt has its
coroner appointed under a chanter
going back many centuries.
In feudal times the Hundred of
Boshara, like many Huudreds and
Rapes, was granted a charter, and
among the priyileges was the selec-
tion of its coroner by the Lord of the
Manor. Mr. Barwell Obeeseman has
held the oface of coroner for thtit3-
ve Neither a lawyer nor a
doctor, he was appointed whea it was
not necesaary for a coroner to bave
either of those qualifications,
Taere are now -very few Charter
coroners in the Old Country. Centur-
ies ago the qualification of a coroner
was the ability to be a Knight of the
Shire.
London has one coroner, Sir Wm -
ter Schroder, for Central London,
who does not hold the legal or medi-
cal qualification. So vase was his
knowledge on inquest law that,
j. 'W. 'W. BUSHFIELD ing been for many years secretary of
the Coroners' Society, the London
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc,
Money to Loan
Th Black, Winghain
Successor to Dudley Holmes
R. VANSTONE
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC.
fealty to Loan at Lowest Rates
Wingharre - Ontario
J. A. MORTON
BARRISTER, ETC.
laringham, Ontario
DR. G. FL ROSS
DENTIST
Office Over isards Store
.7
•
WIN
MUST 60 TO SCHOOL
British. Hill liter `Teice Cliildren Front
Water Highways.
The edueation of hundreds of chil-
dren wao, with their parents, travel
the canals of Great laritein in barges,
te becoming a matte), of serious con-
cern to those in authority, and the
Canal Boats bill *Walter eeriously
the happy ease in which the life of
the canals has run for the paat 160
Years, says the L,ondon correspondent
of the Christian Science Monitor.
The measure lays it down that any
Person over the age of sixteen years
who Imo the custody or care of a eltild
under the age of fifteen and allows it
to reside or travel on or in a canal
boat (notwithstanding that such child
shall not thereby be caused unneces-
sary suffering or injury to health),
that person shall be deemed to have
committed on offence in violation of
the Children's Proteetive Act of
1928.
To the canal people themselaes the
proposal seems fantastic. Happy free-
dom is so much part and parcel of
themselves that the prospect of see-
ing legislation aimed in their direc-
tion seenis improbable in the extreme,
especially when It is legislation. which
would inevitably put an end to tam -
County Council appointed him twentr ily life as it has existed for so many
years.
Along the canal bank at Brentford,
or Wolverhampton, or Runoorn, or
Nottingham, or anywhere else that
can boast an inland waterwa.y, one
may find the barge people if one goes
to look for them. Hospitable people;Minerva until she accepts him. To
with bright eyes and bronzed skins Iescape him, she leaps into the water
and a friendly desire to talk, and who from her cabin window, swimming a
have, for the most part never known
a life apart from the canal, nor any
home besides the tiny cabin in the
Disaster overtook the raiders, for the stern of their boat, filled to overflow -
bell increased in weight, the vessel
sank, and the crew perished. To -day,
when the bells of St. Nicholas are
heard over the lea, villagers gravely
- state that they can hear the old bell
resting in the creek joining in the
chimes, •
ST. ANDREW'S LINKS.
years ago, In face of the recommend-
ation from their committee to appoint
a candidate with the qualifications
now prescribed by law.
Bosham goes back to antiquity, for
Canute's daughter was buried In its
church, and Nebo has not heard of
Bosbam's bell? In Saxon times Dan-
ish raiders swept the neighborhood.
In one of the Danish raids, so a
legend goes, Boshara's bell was car-
ried off down the arm of the sea.
AM A
NCE -TIMES
Tinnreday, June 26t13, 1980
ART44UR SOMERS ROCHE
L US TIZATED By tiONAL . RILEY
has done more than well." "That is babyish," she -told him.
She heard Men crying hoarsely, or- "I'm glad you're alive,, Tim. Mighty
der ing others to make way for their glad of it, And rin proud of your
passage. Several of them were bear- I behavior at the fire, You're a brave
ing, on an inearovised stretcher, the inan—a hero, I guess. .But you're
body of a man, something else, too, Tim,"
She heard some one ask if he were "Your husband, ch?" he sneered.
dead. One of the bearers shrugged. "A thief," she said "And . . • . .
"Looks like it,"' he answered, can't ever forget that
She was not surprised, either then
"Who is it '1,nother queried, His eyes narrowed.
"Tim Stevens," said the bears -r•
you might even . . . you m ight
"A thief, eh? If it Weren't for that
"
or later, that she was able to takm
e in eve, be y wife, eh?
on her compaoy she says she is not stant charge of -.rim. She put her hands before her face,
and that evidently Fate has arranged ot merely had Stevens been badly "How do I know? You're differ
-
it. Tim thereupon tells her to stop ,burned, but he had been truck by a
,
ent• you're finer M A hundred ways
s
looking regretfully after Leeson. 'amed. But ou cant blot
tailing timber, and, while the skull than Id dre
was not fractured, serious injury had out the ptiet, Time
Aboard Stevensboat, the Minerva,
been done. Not until the twenty- "Who the hell wants to?" he asked
Stevens tells Lucy of his love. When fourth day was he pronounced com- harshly. "Do you remember what
she replies with contempt for him, pletely out of dangertaid?
oli.dy,ou ni
that ght Barracuda I s-
he grows violently angry and she be- And on that day Lucy went to bed i
collies afraid of him. He says that to stay there a week: When she got She removed her h-inds from her
he will never let her go from the up again, the cloud had disappeared eyes and bravely smiled at him,
from her faculties and she was her- "I remember that you weren't very
self ttgain. She had not been ill dur- polite."
ing this week, simply completely "I told you that you could go to
hell and be damned, that's what I
said. I said it then, and I say it
again now."
She shrank away from the blazing
fury of his eyes.
"What do you mean?" she asked.
"Mean? I mean I'm sick of you
with your blasted holier-than-thou
ways. You nursed me through ill-
ness. e
.rAll right, that makes us
vi
"How . . how does it make us
square?" she asked.
"Because you owe me a lot -- a
damn sight more than you'll ever
know, my chaste and dainty Devil -
May -Carel" 3he jeered. "But, you've
paid it by nursing me. Anyway, we'll
call the account cancelled." He rose
on his elbow. "I wouldn't let you
divorce me; I wouldn't get a divorce
myself. Well, I thought I was 111ar-
-ied to a woman, not a cold-blooded
;aim just descended from Heaven.
Damn saints. I want no part of them.
"Now you can have your divorce.
And for fear you inayehave trouble
in getting it I'll give you grounds,
plenty of grounds.. There's a girl
down here now—a good egg, too, a
dam sight better egg ,than you'll ev-
er be, for all she's been kept by half
New York. Or, if she's gone 'back
north, I'll get her down here again.
Understand?"
"I'm not sure that I do," he said
faintly .
"Well, you'll be able to name her
1.5 co-respondent. She'll be rny mis-
tress, living here openly with me. She
won't mind being named; she's been
named before Now, you want a di-
vorce, Go on, get it. Here—wait a
moment. Shove that ;table over here,
will you, please?"
This was a Tim she had never
known before; she had known a mad
and viol en t Tim, who, she thought
would stop at nothing in the gratifi-
cation of his -passions.
This was a, Tim whose very illness
lent. a contradictory vigor to his con-
temptuous denunciations. Meekly she
pushed toward kline the table 'he in-
dicated,
He opened a drawer, drew forth a
check -book, and began writing in it
with a fountain -pen. He ripped a,leaf
out of the book, and pushed it across
to her. She Saw 11. WaS a check made
ote to her order for two hundred and
fifty thousand dollars,
"You . made this • out of :your
r el meaty?" she asked,
"Dilite
1;1eeliii(skdal it, either," he sneered.
'Earned it, You needn't be afraid to
take it; you'll not be arrested for
sharing in the proceeds of a theft.
And your lawyers can confer with
mine about settlements and alimony
and the rest of it."
'Lei you thiek," she blazed, "that
SYNOPSIS
Mr. Cooper Clary, Leeson, an attor-
ney, meets Lucy Harkness, know as
Devil -May -Care because of her ad-
venturous, eventful life. In a game
in which partners for the evening are
chosen, Lucy is won by Tim Stevens
who has a great reputation as a heart-
breaker. Leeson is a bit jealous. 'rim
Stevens tells Lucy they are going
aboard his boat the Minerva, and she
accedes in order not to be "a quitt-
er." Asked if she is sorry that he
H. W. COLBORNE, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon
Medical Representative D. S. C R.
Successor to Dr. W. R. Harnbly
Phone 54 Winglia,m
DR. ROBT. C. REDMOND
lid.R.C.S. (ENG.) L.R.C.P. (Loud.)
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
DR. R. L. STEWART
Graduate of University of Toronto,
Pe4culty of Medieine; Licentiate of the
Ontario College of Physicians and
Surgeons.
Office in Chisholm Block
losephirie Street. Phone 29
DR. G. W. HOWSON
DENTIST
Office over John Galbraith's Store.
-
- F. A. PARKER
OSTEOPATH
All Diseases Treated
Office Adjoining residence next to
Anglican Church on Centre Street.
Sundays by appointment,
Osteopathy Electricity
Plume 272, Hours, 9 a.m. to 8 pen
A. R. & F. E. DUVAL
Licensed Drugless Practitioners
Chiropractic and Electre Therapy.
Grauates of Canadian Chiropractic.
•.
College, Toronto, and National Col-
lege, Chitago.
Out of town and night calls res-
ponded to. All business confidential
Phone 300.
J. ALVIN FOX
Registered Drugless Practitioner
CHIROPRACTIC AND
DRUGLESS PRACTICE
ELECTRO -THERAPY
Celebrity Tells of Playing Golf Fifty
Years Ago.
The famous gold links at St. An-
drew's, Scotland, home of "Ye Royal
and Ancient" game, belong to the
local ratepayers who are the heredi-
tary owners. Every ratepayer in St.
Andrew's has the freedom of the
links, and at certain times in the dee
and year the local chimney sweep
takes precedence over the most urg-
ent visiting millionaire. Some of the the chimney on the cabin
best golf at St. Andrew's is ofteu But times change. It is only too
roof.
played by the ratepayers, which is evident that, healthy end happy as
not surprising seeing that they have they are, barge children know little
been practicing their strokes since of the ways of land children and a,re
the sixteenth century.
A celebrity, W. T. Linskill, found-
er of Cambridge University Golf Club,
by the way, knows more about St.
Anarew'a the,n1,1 the rest of the na-
tives put together.
"Golf to -day," reminisced Mr. Lin -
skill, chatting with H. V. Morton,
author of "In Search of Scotand," "is
a ladies' game compared witb the
golf I remember at St. Andrew's ha't
a century ago. reraenaber playing
with hand - hammered gutta- percha,
balls. Annoying things when they
ing as it is with flowery crockery
hanging upon brass hooks, and count-
less photographs in ornamental
frames, and carters' brasses, and flap-
ping red curtains adorned deeply
with heavy crochet, and with every
available inch of woodwork embel-
lished with brightly colored paintings
—landscapes of billowing trees, and
church spires, and blue ponds, and
ducks.
Here the children have been born
and grown up, generation after gen-
eration, with little or no change, save
that nowadays local authorities, in
whose area canals run, must, under
the Canal Boats Act, appoint in-
spectors who -will see that barges are s released the colored man . . . 'Ibis
hort distance under water. worn out, nervously exhausted. Her
Lucy reaches land and meets Dr. vigil by Tim's bedside had been al
-
Fergus Faunce on an island. He • , , -•
most continuous tar over tome weexs.
takes care of her and takes her home,
Everyone is worried about her, and
when she meets Stevens he is frantic,
regretful and Still ardent in protesta-
tions of love.
On the' bridge at Seminole Creek
he had shown :himself possessed of.
physical courage :equal to any she had
ever .witnessed. On the roof of
the -
cottage he had shown ability to. with -
Leeson informs Lucy that Stevens stand punishment when the event,
must raise a quarter of a million .calle.d for it. And the manner of his
lars or go to jail—"at five o'clock". injury had been Inc .A negro pinned,
Lucy goes to her bank and raises the beneath debris . . . Tim Stevens pull -
SUM,
Lucy goes to Stevens to help him,
but he refuses to take money from
a woman to whom he is not married,
o Lucy marries this man she hates,
was sacrifice, of the finest sort. For -
registered and not overcrowded, and
that tlaey carry their papers, and a and promptly runs away from him,
get all the pa.ssion-inspired brutalities
supply of clean ndrinIcing water in the .going to her staunch friend, Dr. Fer- •
he had used or tried to use, e-
very ornamental jug perched beside eats Faunce to tell what she has done. that
_ gainst herself, and one found a pret-
' Stevens sets out in search of Lucy, .y
t decent sort,
ins the Mem put . . Tim Stevens
warned that the roof above was fall -
iii. Tim Stevens refusing to flee
•
to safety, but staying until he had
possessed of next to nothing In the
way of education, since their only,
opportunity of gaining anything in
this line is confined to those periods,
of longer or shorter duration, when,
with_ their barge "tied up" for load-
ing, th-e-Y-may be sent to the nearest
school for a few odd days or weeks.
The barge child is a very useful
member of the crew, and his mother
is a ship's mate who can ill be dis-
pensed with—a mate wbo cannot only
be left in charge when the barge is
at anchor, but who can handle a rud-
broke: The rule m those days was der, or mind the laorse, and can cook
that you put the new ball on the and clean, and be very companion-
a-aee where 1 e largest fragment of able. If the captain naust part "with
the old one fell) , his children—and he must it the pro -
"In theee dee...vs tIn daisiee were ge po tut ke,coAc.§ law—he must part
thicie at St indrew's THE 'We never w ea 't
s w .
played with a white ball! I rein:ex:Leber meeeebviii, It Mint be remembered'
ho* caddie used to say: 'Red that the next few years ivill probably
yellow ball, sir!' And, by Jove—the see a speeding up and mechanization
moonlight games! How dashed well of inland water transport which will
I remember playing when the maan automatically remove the necessity
was full, with 'fore caddies to tell us for the preence of women and dill-
wbere the ball had gone, and a fellow dren. on the boats. Canal companies
following behind with a wheelbarrow are investigating the financial aspects
full of refreshments! Those were the of improved schemes, and the lay -
days, my boy!
DOESN'T LIKE BEING FIRST.
Ing up of half the canal fleets, which
must inevitably follow the removal ea
the *omen and children, would make
the accomplishment of such schemes
First Name and the Last In London's difficult, if not Possible. Minerva wonderina what happened to , a quarter of a an ion e
Directory.
other day by Mr, Robert a Ababrel- Great Men Tell of Their Habits also. Stevees threatens 'to Faunce la couch in the patio. alis great frame
in the Post Office Directory. Ile is of Famous people have undergone a. Faunce she accedes, but expresses coverlets,. But lie had been
'He opened a drawer, drew forth a check -book, and began writing
fla it with a fountain pen ... she saw that it was a check made out ta
meanwhile, Dr. Faunce and Lucy But there was something else. He
her for linndrOd. and fiftY thousand dollars. •
launch a new boat. A hurricane Iliad stolen. No argament could over
-
wrecks them on their firet trip• Lucy !whelni this fact; he had. been saved
is saved and finds herself aboe.rd the !from atil only by the a.cceptance of
. ,
What it feels like to be the firstat SECRETS OF HEALTH. 1. On the morning that she arose
Dr. 'Pawnee.
Througb IAA. . "unless Lucy' sticks to him, To save 1(x)hc(1 pitifully t 1 c e 1
Scottish descent and lives at Clap- searching cross-examination concern- •• - f • -MI tinved end the gauntness of
i t. y . = , 1 ,
ham. He bee nineteen letters after ing their way of life and the secrets hate for Stevens, A few mmutes later
his liamee., and was formerly private of their health by Mr. Leonard Hens- lie startles.her by saying .
he doecee ;his face lent 1. 001 attraction to
secretary to Viscount Cranbourne, lawe, wbo has published their an- want her, and dever will! his almost too, obvious good looks..
,
Dr. Faunce is aboard the • Minerva !from bed she found.Steveris lying on
man in London was explained 'the
ton, whose name is given first place • 11' n b sat tht
el.P., now Marquis al Stelisbury, He swers " tv rig , Be would, she reflected; be as harm -
/lours: e_e, b3 t son seve Lucy and in a Dime at I •
ni as or Phone l',11
. has been reporter, captain of con- Sir Cla.ude Champiou de Crespigny, boine in age, when withered, as in
. •
appointment. • ,..tabularand native high court oth- aged 83, drinks cider, ale, and wine )confidence tells her of a plot against th'eflush of early manhood. He held
He has bad many strange expera good healli to "lank of time to be ill." en la bud.,c on -us pi 01.011 re all right?" he asked ea
to. otit a -trembling hand to her
D .
clal, and was founder of the Phone- In 'moderation, and eats only a. lit tle slier husband, Certain Interests a,re
NI
CEWE
• tie sib orthan Writ
ma' Association. meat, Sir Alfred Butt attributes his I break do, , • ' •
LICENSED, AUCTIONEER ((fl(,both in I
i
Le Old Country and in Lord Brenttord, 'former Horne ate- erty, and xnake it worthless. She goes
Phone 002r14. South Africa, where he was once ex- retail", neither emultes nor eirinke. to Faunce's place, evhere her husband eh.hlyie, shy emere.
Sales of Farm Stock and Imple pelled by President Iaruger under Mr. Justice, Eve eats only bread •fl
am: aee togeener, and tens in "I feel like a great. big dub," he
„newts., Real 'Estate, etc., conducte1 easeicion of being a site'. I -le object, and moat, and spend.; Itis holiciaye
the plot. Pi 11) are made foi• a , , • e, •
with satisfaction and at 1:toderat siron,ely to being the feat man in a c.nraean. sam bitterly, letting you wear your-
Mg a dame aboard to -night, and ,
well, It's none of my business, Mrs.
Stevens, onlY , • , if the boss was my
brother and sister too, I couldn't like
him more, And I want to say — •
do you think it's sporting to rue out
on him like this? Because there
wouldn't be no other dame aboard the•
Minerva if you was there."
"Am I his keeper, Modane?
asked.
"Sure you are! A man like that
needs some one to look after him.
And if his wife don't do it, who will?'
"But suppose that his wife doesn't.
want to? What then, Modane?"
"Well, if she don't want to, she.
ought to, just the same, Do you think'
he'd take a 1110 out powder if you,
was in trouble, ma'am. Wh. he'd vvalk.
through .the alazin' fringes of hell,
ma'am. And that's where he's headedt
at that, Mrs. Stevens."
"He'll go where he belongs, where -
he chooses to belong, 1V1odane," said
Lucy,
"I get you, ma'am. A mazi finds his
own level and that sort of thing. But
that staff goes for Sweeney Wil'el2
there's a dame rung in on the play.
Say, if you wasn't a regular person,
I'd say you was right to play your
own hand. But ma'am, I was a crook-
ed ginny when he picked me up. I'd
brought him out of the water 'when "
he was goin' down, but most gents
would 'a slipped Inc some coin and,
It it go at that. Not Mr. Stevens. He
made are honest man out of ma He
knew I was phony and all that. Made
an American out o' me too. Say,
ma'am, if I was porth a play, don't
you think he's worth one
(Continued Next Week.)
she
"No more stomach trouble. Can eat anything,"
writes Mrs. E. White. Thousands say indiges-
tion, eeartbern, gas vanish like magic with
"Trull -a -Ores". Constipation,. sick headaches
end overnight. Berves, heart quiet, sound sleep at
once. Rheumatism flies awaftomplexion clears
snick. Get ezeuteattiees" from druggist today.
cliatrges. zatiaido mr. Charles zyhaea, Leta . health to his healthy aneeSt*. self ore taking rare of a hulk like me!
London, and cannot underetand the Earl Jellicne attributes his good Iik111.
a..
oL uev's Iniebend. and the 'men -lie can't SIX 11'1.11k Von* j.1",-; yo t3
dOn'S last man, who I 11)
s quite elated .1i. a ts . " 3 - ' — „
THOMAS FELLS
AUCTIONEER
litees nitike --------------------------1- tsaY•
ahem els stews in the 'directory, Mr, my constitution to my parents and
repute. aur. Hameln Swaffea saes: "S'o Tar the crooktel sheriff and his gang, Sliould e person back out of a bar-,
as I know I ecieuse it seems not qui e et I'd take a cent of your money? 1)o
REAL ESTATE SOLD a'AY lwalth•" backed by Clary, the copper magnate. gam b
A thorough knowledge of Fenn St., e
Zyback is a haiedresser of some my ill -health to myself," invaders andliold the bridges against "T manied yom site retorted.
Phone 231, Wingliam
--•
RICHARD B. JACKSON
AUCTIONEER
Phone 613r6, Wroxeter, or e.dares-
R, R. 1, Gorrie. Sales coralected any
where and satisfaction guarantet d
DRS. A. 1 & W. IRWIN
DENTISTS
Offle cDonald Block, Winghal
wolilAarkravevani.iniitalb:.11.11Me
A. 3. WALKER
NITURE AND FUNERAL
- S1aRV-IClt
A. J. Walker
eicetieed Funeral Director and
Embalnier.
Olfiet Phone 106. Res, Phone 224,
leittiousi 110 F1111eral Ceach
Modem Fog Alarm • nee helve.; them together as ,she 'advantageous as it 11, (110(1. evlien one you :think I'd do that?" '
e fog ,
ThPartridge leland light and
New Zealand. .
•
signal Ktation at the entrance to St: The nenetietie anniversary ef, N'eal rows 1 1
..""l:e I" NI Me la eY, gets ht•r elite% .:She left him. • '
-xi in
to it?"
Znatand'e ineamien tae Eni- car ;tad finde judge T..eamine. "I looked better et, the eerelnol V
rile cher-a—main-a Stevens ,if re- than late, then?" 110 grinned.
John, N:13., barber; 'eaid to he the pire Wee recently celebrated,. Before =
first ateam-operated fog alai in m the .,
wol'id, will in the near future derive 1840'the imlands had been a no -man's e .
land. Some of the Australian. colon- d-InIrd the. SII("141 is thrown °at of ‘:'' he blushed'
engines. 10 adopting this modern lets heel set themselves up as petty. court,' Lure begins to wonder. wheth- "You didn't appeal to me at any She didn't like the man but—
its power from modern' semi -Diesel
peeve r thi! station m 8,y ' again lay kings, .and their quarrels with the e• ,die misjudged her husband. The time," she said brutally, "But . . . I "I, certainly owe you a word, Me -
elaim to priority, for it will be the natives Iva to euch serious trouble gretet lite:le ,• fi t 4 1,1 , • - .. . t did I. t • • ' 5 • 1, • - ' I'm mal‘<itig ydaoluiciac'nosiwie.,,said., . "Yntt eaVed my- Ill();
first of the kind in Canada. ' that,.. -the Clovernor of New South ,' ., (es (i (., atm, till An( e 1 Ll In 0 ,1, MI gain,
ti t
Wates determined to bring the lelands ..." "ul Pr°ves hh"self a hero as Ills wife ig°°(.1•
under the BrilAsh ling, Cain- Hoheon watches. him aiding in the rescue. . He sighed, and Irl's eigh was pitiful, lifetlatte had eennived his yachting -
Other stations depending on oil
01110MA have only internal couxbus- tinning front Tim Steve:es, ,who might cap now, and was twisting it in his
tion motore utilizine easoline as a wa8 t a'}'11.1- a t • a' ad , , ' ' --- '
b '' an r
nd oob 6 he concluded negate- ' . lne . curse or even sob, hut vvho had nev- fingers, . .
kerosene ng a rt,•gular fue1. The light Hne ofor a. tr(xety with the prIneipal I t ovaal C the sort of banrealk et been plaintive in his' life before. "I deem) how you made that mis-
startitue enixtere and operating on ' '
Maori chiefs at Waitangi, wherebY that e character in 0 motion picture "Well, much obliged, anyvvey. 1 take, Mrs. Stevens," he said. "And
on Partriege teland wag establadied
Queen Victoria. b ee? DA their llOVO. might haw uttered:
"Ma'am,' Mrs, Stevens, could I have
a word with you?" .
he 1701, and the fog signal in 1850. reign,
It letKiriuIl No 'Waste, Ancient Walled Cif
Waste Imes Ireen practically elimin- Chester, in Cheshire, England—
ettel in tho Canadian sardine -canning where the eheeee comes from
etoriee The eettlee of the fish, once thr. 01111, city In that country' to twos
-
regarded 5, nuisance, are now sold stes ite tobiplete chalo of medieVill
to a pearl essence "manufacturer; walls. 'The top or 5111: wally has 1,111P11
110aag and tails aro converted into turned Mto a promenade and is popu-
poultry food; mid the waste ells are lar with tourists, From the roof of
eallghl and nsed in the prepa.ratien the tower fring Charles saw his'arnly
of moniela and tiaita. QC:a-fed on. Itowton Moor in 1625.
. ' ..ell.'1114i2r2-
lita Lucy ma, in no mood to be
captious, to pick flaws in praisCt or
the persoes who uttered it. I wasn't completely knocked off while Pattnee, ma'am. He knew it Was you,
-rim has, done well, hasn't ,i. , , ne .ts he
he?" 1 wee at It End a ro a en siteation ton, for he yelled your Olt ' I '
he said. '' ' if I had been." She made no reply, .dived."
17:I11e Darragh latnehxdand silence ensued for i, minute, to 1 "Re saved me?" she gasped.
-Well?" lf he's saved a third of be broken by his bitter speech; "Nobody else, ma'am. And 1
ui suPPose You'd have been glad if he'S kind 0' tragS,, 111 - 0, ' '1 If
,1,In, WI1.1 a
have dritgeed out of the: Breakers, he I had been killed," relied he's been through, and he's take made.
sari of thought . I hoped , . „ 'the boss let it ride that other time
Well, I was born a datnn fooleleicy, you inenticmed if, but it was him" Who
mid suppose die one. Too bad went overboard after you and: De
11)111 and V1701111.11 110'S S111'11V3Sed 10
11 Here and There
lair)
a ell a view to providing pro-,
pet emeniragement for the vela,
Lmpertant work being 'done by
ee :ieri Girls' CalfClubs' to Im-
mo •ee. elahy cattle industry in
'he province of Quebec, the Cana -
dem Pacific Railway is 'offering a
zeLolership to miners of 16 years
and overexhibiting in the Boys'
and Girls' Calf Club eassee at
Canada's Great Eastern Exhibi-
tion Sherbrooke; Que., August 25-
30 next.
The 1935 International Railway
Congress may be held in Canada,.
with Japan as a possible alterna-
dye location, according to infor-
mation brought back from the
le3o gathering, in 'Madrid, Spain,
by D. C. Coleman, vice-president ot
the Canadian Pacific R,ailway, and
Sii• George McLaren Brown, Eu-
ropetm General Manager, who to-
gether eepresented the railway at
the recent world meet. Every coun-
try in the world,. except Russia,
was represented.
Launebed on June 11, at Clyde-
bank by H. R. H. the • Prince of
Wales in the presence of a distin-
guished gathering of notables., S.S.
Empress of Britain, ace of, Cana-
da's stertmships, took the water
and pi ctu r es of the function were
• flashed across the Atlantic and the
speeehes radioed and appeared in
New York papers Coupled with
, the Prince's eimech weim speeches
by Lord Aberconway and E. W.
&mita, chairman and president of
the Canadian Pacific Railway.
Canada's largest eonvention held
in. Canada's largest hotel came to
a successful termination last week
when the .A.nalent Arabic Order of
Nables or, tho Mystic Shrine,
coming frem dozens of cities in
Crintula, and the United States, who
had invaded Toronto to the num-
ber of close on 100,000, left for
their respective homes. 'The Royal
York could not of course fully ace
commodate them and the Canadian
Pacific Railway built "Fez City" of
rnilway coaches for the purpose
near the hotel..
Meat and dairy products are in-
creasing in popularity en the daily
menu of the people , of Canada. .
'The per capita consumption of
meat is eight,. per cent. greater
than in 1920 and the total quantity'
of meat consumed annually in the
Domini= has increased 20 per
cent, in the last 10 years,
Ontario tops tbe list of Cana-
dian provinces with fatalities at
level crossings during the past
three Years, according to Arthur
'Gaboury, seeretary-gencral of the
Provitee of Quebee Safety League,
His figures show 71 deaths -1n
1928; 78 in 1929 ,and 16 to the end
of May, 1930. These compare
with 39, 7 and 7 for Quebec itt the
eame periods. The greatly reduced
numbers in the case of Quebec are
attributable, says Mr. Gaboury, to
the observance of the law in that
province calling upon -cars to stop
whet reathiel a crossing, whether
a train Is in 'sight er tot.
Bright Atlantie silver sea -run
ealmon are entering New Bruns-
wick angling waters hi greater
timbers than ever 'this year, tee
cording to reports from waraene
reaching the provincial ,clepriet-
relent of Lands and Mines. On the
Itestigouche River catches of 28 -
lb, rind 25-113. Salmon: have beet