HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1932-04-28, Page 6RAGE SIX
The
Wingbam Advance Tin es
Wingham, Ontario.
Wellington Mutual ,Fire
Insurance Co.
Established 1840
Risks taken on all class of insur-
ance at reasonable rates.
Head Office, Guelph, Ont,
ABNER COSENS, Agent, W ingharn
J. W. DODO
Two doors south of Field's Butcher
shop.
FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT AND
HEALTH INS'URANCE
AND REAL ESTATE
P. 0. Box 366 Phone 46
iii'INGHAIVM, ONTARIO
J. W. BUSHFIELD
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.
Money to Loan
Office -Meyer Block, Wingham
Successor to Dudley Holmes
R. S. HETHERINGTON
BARRISTER And SOLICITOR.
Office: Morton Block.
Telephone 1W.
J. H. CRAWFORD
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.
Suecessor to R. Vanstone
'Brnngham
Ontario
DR. G. H. ROSS
DENTIST
Office Over Isard's Store
1I. W. COLBORNE, M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
Medical Representative D. S. C. R.
Successor to Dr. W. R. Hambly
Phone 54 Wingham
DR. ROBT. C. REDMOND
M.R.C.S. (ENG.) L.R.C.P. (Lond.)
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
DR. R. L. STEWART
Graduate of University of Toronto,
Faculty of Medicine; Licentiate of the
Ontario College of. Physicians and
Surgeons.
Office in Chisholm Block
Josephine Street. Phone 29
DR. O. W. I HOWSON
DENTIST
Office over John 'Galbraith's Store.
F. A. PARKER
OSTEOPATH
Ali Diseases Treated
:office adjoining residence eextxo
Anglican Church on Centre Street.
Sundays by appointment.
Osteopathy Electricity
Phone 272. Hours, 9 a.m. to 8 Dan.
A. R. & F. E. DUVAL
Licensed Drugless Practitioners
Chiropractic and Electro Therapy.
Graduates of Canadian Chiropractic
College, Toronto, and National Col-
lege, Chicago
Out of town and night calls res-
ponded to. All business confidential.
Phone 300.
Licensed Drugless Practitioner
CHIROPRACTIC - DRUGLESS
THERAPY - RADIONIC
EQUIPMENT
Hours by Appointment.
Phone 191,
J. ALVIN FOX
Wingbam.
THOMAS FELLS
AUCTIONEER
REAL ESTATE SOLD
A °rough knowledge of Farm $tock
Phone 231, Winghan
RICHARD B. JACKSON
AUCTIONEER
Pone 613r6, Wroxeter, or address
IL R. 1, Gorrie, Sales conducted any -
'here, and satisfaction guaranteed.
DR. A. W. IRWIN
DENTIST - X-RAY
ice, McDonald, Block, Wingleam.
A. J. WALKER
RbtITURE AND FUNERAL
SERVICE
A. J. WALKER
Licensed Funeral. Director acral
1rrlbalmer.
Re Phone 724,
Office Phone 106,s
Latest Limousine funeral Coach.
7,711
THF' WTG ff A M .ADVAN
g-''I`IN,it 5
SYNOPSIS
At twenty-two the only thing
Diana really desired was another wo-
man's husband. A nervous wreck
from the excitement and strain of
London's gay life, she is taken by
her aunt, Mrs. Gladwyn, to a famous
specialist's office. The physician or-
ders her to the country for a long
rest. She rebels, but the .doctor is
handsome and sympathetic. She
learns that he is not the great man
himself but an assistant, Dr. Rath-
bone. "God made the country and
than made the town," he tells her,
and she agrees to go to a rural re-
treat.
Before she leaves she goes to Den-
nis Waterman's flat, where they are
surprised by Linda, Dennis's wife,
who takes the situation quite calmly.
"I suppose she wants you to marry
her?" she asks Dennis.
At the night club where she goes
with Dennis, Diana collapses. She
regains consciousness in a little coun-
try cottage, with a nurse, Miss Star-
ling, bending over her. Dr. Rath -
bone's home was close by, Miss Star-
ling told her.
After three weeks Dennis Water-
man calls. He tells her he will have
to go away, and his manner, as he
leaves her, suggests that his love is
waning.
But Dennis has not been gone
many days before Diana finds her-
self asking Miss Starling all sorts
of questions about Dr. Rathbone.
Not long afterwards she learns
that there is a woman living in Dr.
Rathbone's house, a woman named
Rosalie.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
"You asked me to come," he said.
"You said it was something urgent."
"Yes - .. yes, it is." But for the
life of her she could think of no-
enrerv,..
•
r.sk a0, 1.., ha3.!t •k'1iV 1J;
Diana shook her head, a little
wavering smile on her lips.
"You'd never let anybody down,"
she said confidently.
"You say that," he answered, "and
yet you took the trouble to drive
five miles through a searching sun
to find out for yourself something
about me which you could not find
out from other people."
She stared at him fascinated.
"I , ... how do you know?" she
whispered.
"Because all women are the
same," he answered ruthlessly. "You
tell a man you believe in him, and
directly his back is turned—" He
broke off, pulling his shoulders to-
gether as if in anger at his unwont-
ed display of emotion.
"Well, I must be off," . he said
once again.
Diana barred his way to the door.
"It wasn't that I—didn't believe in
you," she said rather breathlessly,
"it was just—oh, I can't explain, but
I think perhaps it was a queer sort
of jealousy."
"Jealousy?"
"Yes." Her heart was beating
fast, but she kept her eyes on his
face. "I expect you'll laugh at me,
or perhaps you'll be angry, but al-
though I don't know why, it is, I
think I somehow love you. Not the
sort of love I .... like I love Den-
nis , ... you're so much older than
I am, and than he is too, but you
make me feel so—safe! You snake
me feel that no matter what went
wrong, if the door opened and you
came in, everything would be all
right."
She put her hand over her eyes
for a moment as if trying to make
sure of her own thoughts. "Yes,"
she said after a moment, "that's
how I feel about you. I love you
because you're so safe. You're like
a strong harbor to which—anything
weak -like me—can go and be safe."
"Though I don't know why it is, I think I somehow love you."
thing to say, no excuse wherewith
to justify her hurried letter.
He glanced towards the window
as if impatient to be gone, even
while he drew out a chair for her.
"When are you going away."
"Early to -morrow morning!'
Her eyes grew uncnosciously pa-
thetic.
"For long?"
"I shall not be away for very
long. I am going to Paris. It's not
a holiday, if you think that." There
was a note of wonderment in his
voice as if he was asking himself
why it was necessary to make this
explanation at all. "It's an argent
case—one of my patients who is ov-
er there has been taken seriously ill.
He broke off, and Diana said in
a queer voice:
"Then you're going alone?"
"Alone? ... Why, certainly I aim
going alone." He stopped, then"he
asked slowly, "What do you mean?
Why do you ask such a question?"
"Nothing . , only ..."
lie asked rather abruptly:
"What was the very urgent thing
you wish to see me about?"
Diana flushed a little, but the
flush quickly died away, leaving her
paler than • before.
"I've told' you;"
"You've told me?"
"Yes • that I didn't want you
to go away."
"You' brought Inc ten miles to tell
me that?"
"Yes—at least, it's only five, isn't
it. Ten, if you •count going back,
I suppose , . Oh, are you angry?"
"Are you ever going, to learn self-
reliance?" he' asked whimsically,
"Self-reliance?"
"l inean," he e,cplained, "that it
doesn't do to lean too hard on oth-
er people; there's Sueh a. danger o
f
being let down."
She smiled at him with a very
sweet smile.
"That's a very dannarou
thing to say to me, Diana."
"Dangerous?"
"Hasn't it ever occurred to you,
that I am only just a very ordinary
man?"
"No, because you're not; not like
the men I've met, anyway."
"In spite of . . . . the thing you
-Sere so anxious to find out about
me?"
"You won't for give me for that.
I never really believed it, even
though—"
"And if it is true??"
She came a step nearer to him.
"It is true?"
He moved back a little way from
her and laughed.
"Your faith is not so very strong
after all, you see. Well, I must go."
So he would not tell her; she
knew that he would never tell her.
She put out her band, andafter
the: barest hesitation he took it.
And then he was gone.
CHAPTER XI
Rathbone was away four days.
It seemed a long four days, and
then, on the fifth morning, a letter
came from Dennis Waterman..
She took Dennis' letter with her
otit into the woods.
It was with a little sigh of reluc-
tance that at .last she opened it., '
"My darling:
"You have not written to rne;
though every snail 1 look kr a
letter. I am always thinking of
you, and wondering how and
where you are, New York is like
a fiery furnace; , the pavements
seem to burn yottr feet, These
lawyer fellows are keeping us
hanging about, and Linda will not
leave v until everything is
y g settled
. up, 'though 1 rather fancy. I. shall
;MihnMtlhlN{Rii=!Nfnmr_ele_m
irshne
come home before she does, per-
haps soon. Wasn't it some poet
fellow who said that -absence
makes the heart grow fonder?
Well, that's .how I feel about you,
There are times when the longing
to see you again is almost un-
bearable,"
Diana closed her eyes and tried to
visualize how Dennis must have
looked when he 'wrote those words.
She knew every line of his face so
well, and yet somehow she could not
recapture them.
She went on reading:
"Life is a queer thing, isn't it?
It seems absurd that you and I
are forced to be separated like
this, when if we were together
we should find perfect happiness.
Do you still love me? But I
know you do, and when I come
home—"
Diana stopped reading, and hur-
riedly folded the letter.
Some how she felt site could not
bear any more; it was the voice of
of the past coning back to claim
her, when for. a little while she had
thought to have escaped 'from it.
A wood pigeon flew suddenly ov-
erhead with a great flutter of wings
as if something had startled it, and
looking pp, Diana saw a girl stand-
ing on .the narrow path before her.
She was standing very still, al-
most as if she were a figure in a
picture and not a real person at all,
and standing beside her was a big
dog, a rough -haired Alsatian with a
red collar round his shaggy neck.
They were both looking at Diana,
and she looked back at thein with
an odd sense of unreality, as if this
was something she was seeing in a
till the girl moved and
dream,
spoke.
"What were
she asked.
"Thinking about?" Diana felt a
little bewildered. "I don't know;
just—things,"
The two girls looked at one an-
other, and it was Diana who spoke
next.
"I know who you are," she said
"Your name is Rosalie." "Then she
flushed and wished she had not
spoken.
slut the other girl only smiled.
"Yes, my name is Rosalie," she
said.
There was a little silence, then
she asked, "Do you mind if I sit
down?"
Diana moved a little to make
room for her.
"Are you fond
asked suddenly.
"Yes—yes, I think 1 arn," Diana
said, feeling rather bewildered.
"Do you sing?"
"I do, Listen." And suddenly she
began to sing, quite naturally and
as if it were nothing out of the or-
dinary suddenly to start singing to
a perfect stranger.
She had a charming voice, rather
small, but wonderfully true and
clear, and she sang a little song that
Diana had never heard before.
" 'How we met, what need to say?
When or where,
Years ago or yesterday,
Here or there?
All the song is—once we Inet,
She and I:
Once, but never to forget
Till we die
All the song is that we meet
Never now.
"Hast thou yet forgotten, sweet?"
"Love, hast thou?"
The sweet voice stopped, and
Diana was surprised to feel tears on
her cheeks.
"That is very pretty," she said,
hastily brushing them away.
"Yes, isn't it? Donald like it
too."
There was a little silence.
"When is he coming back?" Diana
asked.
"I don't know; he never tells me,.
He just comes."
"I see."
The dog suddenly pricked up • his
ears and slowly started to wag his
feathery tail as a :man in chauffeur's
uniform calve along the winding
you thinking about?"
of music." Rosalie
path,
"It's tithe to go home, Miss Ros-
alie,"
"Very well," She rose obediently,
smiled at Diana, and was gone,
During the next' few days, Dianar
saw Rosalie twice. Once she met
her being driven up the village
street in Rathbone's limousine, loop-
ing out of the window with rather'
wearyshaggy eyes, with the big shaggy dog
sitting beside her. Moved by a sud-
Athtnr. tri
den impulse, Diana waved a Hand to
her, but she received no 'recognition
in reply. ' Rosalie's mournful eyes
net hers without interest, as if they
had never seen her before.
One morning she had a 'bright
idea.
"I'm going to send to London for.
my car," she informed Miss Starl-
ing,
The Creature looked up.
"To drive yourself?" she asked.
"To drive myself," Diana mocked
her. "Why not?" I've driven my-
self for years. I'm a good driver.
Would you be afraid to trust your-
self to me?"
"I should enjoy it very much in-
deed, but we must ask Dr. Rath-
bone first if it will be wise,"
Diana frowned.
"I'm tired of being dictated to by
him; besides—well, he hasn't been
near me for ages."
She wrote to London that morn-
ing and then went off to the farm
to see Mr. Shurey and ask about
garage acconunodations,
CHAPTER XII
That evening Dr. Rathbone call-
ed. He told her how well she look-
ed.
"Do you realize," he asked her,
"that you will soon be back in your
beloved London?"
She looked at him quickly.
"Why do you call it that?"
"Well, isn't it?"
"It used to be."
"And will be again. You'll see.
Once you have said goodbye to the
country r" He stopped, and she
asked:
"What then? I suppose you think
I shall forget all about the weeks I
have been here and never want to
come back again?"
(Continued Next Week,)
SLATS' DIARY
Friday—Pug Stevens tryed' to
throw a skare into me today becuz
I give Elsy witch
is his girl a peace
of choklet candy.
he sed he was a
gonna drag my
pants al over the
town. Well I told
him to go on a
hed and drag my
pants all over
town if he cud
Find them to
drag.
Saterday — well
I am not so well
tonite. Ma wants
me to go to a
chirch supper but
I told her i druther stay home and
eat a sanwitch becuz I dont care to
set down very much. Pug drug my
pants clean acrost the st. this after
noon witch woodent of ben so bad
oney 1 was still in them. so I dont
think I want to set down to a
chirch supper. & I will no where to
give my candy next time. not to no
Blab mouth. like Elsy Flitch.
Sunday—Jake and Blisters and me
tuk a walk out in to the country this
afternoon and slung stones at a
Empty house and we had broke
three winders before we seen that
sum buddy was liveing in it. so we
was very sorry that we slung stones
• Tblursiday., April 28th, 1932
kali& Service
OF THE
Gambian tU b rat z s; jcrraaiinn
GRANT
Edltecrby
FLEMING, M.D. ASSOCIATE secFtvrArtv
urancrwmaramffail
MILK -BORNE DISEASE
The food value of milk and of
milk products is generally recogniz-
ed. Everyone understands that milk.
provides most of the food essentials
required by the body, and that milk,'
therefore, should be included in .the
diet regularly at all ages,
Pure milk is a most valuable food
but impure or contaminated milk is
particularly dangerous. Immure milk
is just as dangerous in the country
as it is in the city. The idea that,
in the country, all milk is pure and
rich, is not correct. Dirty milk is
dirty milk no matter where it is.
Milk can be, and frequently is con-
taminated with the germs of dis-
ease in the country. Contaminated
Milk spreads disease to country us-
ers just as readily as it does to the
purchasers in the town or city.
It is more than fortunate that inilk
can be made perfectly safe by pas-
teurization. The process of pasteur-
ization implies the heating of milk
to 145 degrees Fahrenheit, holding
it at that temperature for thirty
minutes, then cooling it quickly and
keeping it cold until used.
The reason why milk should be
pasteurized is that no one can tell,
simply by looking at milk, whether
it is safe or not. The only practical
way is to pasteurize all milk so that
if there are any disease germs pre-
sent, they will be destroyed, for that
is the effect of pasteurization.
Germs of tuberculosis, diptheria,
scarlet fever, septic sore throat, in-
fantile paralysis, typhoid fever and
undulant fever are sometimes car -
i ried in milk. In certain instances,
the disease germ enters the milk di-
rect from the cow. The bovine type
i of tuberculosis, which affects young-
er children, causing many of the
bone and glandular cases of the dis-
ease, results from the use of raw
milk front tuberculous cows. Undu-
Disturbed them.
Munday —1 gess Bill Hix is the
Luckyest man in town prehaps. when
his wife went to the hospitttle last
wea kthey got a pear of Twins and
the very nes day he got him a job
as Night watch man,
Teusday—Ant Emmy got a letter
from hre cuzzen and she sed 1 of
Ant Emmys old Sweet harts got a
rested last Sunday for being drunk
and Ant Emmy sed it was a out-
rage. she sed they shud ought to
be a Law vs. selling licker on Sun-
day.
Wensday—Ma has ben a haveing
the tooth ake today and she just
went a round a singing all day. Pa
sed he gess she wanted the rest of
us to suffer a Little mebby.
Thirsday—Ma has dissided to Ec-
onomise this summer so she has
give tip haveing pa join up with the
Golf club. besides she needs a cou-
and broke the winders for mebby it ; ple new dresses and stun hats.
lant fever results from the use of
raw milk from cows infected with
contagious abortion.
Milk may be contaminated from
the water supply. If the well water
is contaminated with the germs of.
typhoid fever and the milking uten-
sils are washed in that water unboil-
ed, the milk is almost sure to be the
carrier of typhoid fever germs.
The most common way in which
milk becomes contaminated is .thru
some handier of the milk who is ill
or who is not cleanly in his habits.
Unwashed hands are in many cases
responsible for the spread of disease
germs to milk.
There is no reason why milk
should not be pasteurized, and there
are many reasons why it should..
Milk can be pasteurized in the home
—the time required will be more
than justified by the amount of
sickness which will be prevented..
Our main safeguard against milk -
borne disease is pasteurization. Why-
not
hynot make use of it?
Directions for home pasteurization'
will be sent upon request.
Questions concerning Health, ad-
dressed to the Canadian Medical'
Association, 184 College St., Toron-
to, will be answered personally by
letter.
BY
( s`•?�. T F U L ,
RESTLESS?
Look to this cause
When your baby fusses, tosses and
seems unable to sleep restfully, look
for one common cause, doctors say.
Constipation. To get rid quickly of
the accumulated wastes which cause
restlessness and discomfort, give a
cleansing dose of Castoria. Castoria,
you know, is made specially for
children's delicate needs. It is a punt
vegetable preparation; contains no
harsh drugs, no narcotics. It is so
mild and gentle you can give it to a
young infant to relieve colic. Yet it is
as effective for older children. Cas-
toria's regulative help will bring re-
laxed comfort and restful sleep to
your baby. reels a bottle on hand.
Genuine Castona always has the
name:
0�Y7zr icy/
CAS TO ROA
PRINCES OF WALES ATTENDS SHOW
Both the King and
Wales were exhibitors at
sh gton Canine society's
the
PRINCESS
ALSATZAN AT liIG SEOW
Prince of ship
show
which
apeiled
at the Cry-
ry- N'
ale
s' Alsatian(
r
the Ite1-
J
sta1.Ful1eL,
Io
tta
n
. Photo shows hand with a#ait
champion- 'Clause ofSct1er, the Prince of
I 14
shaking
dtnirr=r.
a ra al
y