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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1938-07-22, Page 7cd41 stcr '44 efrAN.: • HAY$ & ARM- , "Apcuedinq R. Si Polo sial*teru; .4ovOturs, cluwOntwedrs and hl,otaries,u1$ic. SeliOtors for the Thaltirliell BAIA. Office in rear ot the DOminion Bank, Seaforth.. MoneY to lenut. 1248 .,•(Madame* from The'144aWr'';'*.edli ,e-neeneeeeee--:nneeedad'ddk • „,:; The dipleinati9 affairs of the millipo, 40440.04,0,r;."4,litt. :9;aser itcrx, xpti'`v."..io laor :ti71.„: e . -SWIM' 4€, ir?-xti ,,,,,.. 04, 1'10 elraoltien% alltatPdie inNitli3r1Xe-PB:we•rr11°T.Z4tirTINI;1121;;;; 4s• ,g0Tdt alisa. Staat tka 'iliOik0 an,c.*ar e41I as inliY latereitoefenebee *bit Xl XaelaS4c er- nuaranteed 'the territer341 integrity' pr 7 ., his China. President Rooe-dvelt lied alatt as tebe atas ilaPressivele With a sPeaa9 . • ne ateCiiiceago in which' he suggested a for "quarantine" of aggressor nations, nd Tokyo was nervous bet Saito was he calm. He advised: his governmeet th that regardless of what American Is statesmen, ,might say, the American ri- people would refuse to enderseorraed up intervention. Japan gambled ise this • tip and declined t� attend the ton- ne- ferenee. The, invasion weat on. et The Saitos' social life is modest for his a family of ambassadorial rank, part - ea ly because of a racial poejudice that to exists in ca.pital society and Pattie be- ef cause of lack of funds. The Japanese eir diplematic service is run on a career . DANCY & I30LSBY BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS., ETC. LOFTUSrE. DANCEY, K.C. P. J. BOLSBY GOOSSIICHI - BRUSSELS, 1247 ELMER D. BELL, B.A. Successor to John H. Best Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public. Seafenth - Ontario' 12-36 ,PATRICK: McCONNELL Barrister, Solt/Cl/tor, Notary Public, , Etc. 'Office in the Smith Block - Seaforth 3679-tf VETERINARY • A. R. CAMPBELL, V.S. Graduate of Ontario Veterinary Col- lege, University of Toronto. All eases of domestic animals treated by the mak modern principles. Charges reasonable, Day or night calls promptly attended to. Office on Main Street, Hensel', opposite Town Hall. Phone 116. Breeder of Scottish Ter - Tiers, Inverness Kennels, Hensall. 12-37 MEDICAL FOURTH I NSTALN LENT, SYNOMS With. 'his •partner, Rose Ranee Dave Turner le on his way to hie ranch at Single Shot. 'Both are • returning from ;prison where they (have eeryed sentences for unjust conviction. On the train, which is carrying a large sum of money, Rose's quick action andstraight shooting' foils a bold -up •while Dave saves the life of Martin Quinn, a gambler, who is- being threatened by a despera.do. Stop- ping at Single Shot, the sheriff tells Dave he is not wanted. Quinn defend e Dave but Dave and Rand go to Soledad to meet Mary, Dave's sister, and proceed on thorseback to the ranch. Mary reveals she is married and telis Dave that the ranch is doing peat, ly,being beset by nesters and in- volved in a claim dispute. Sud- denly a shot from the darkness topples Dave from ails horse. Rosy fires and .kills the unknown, as- sailant and they rush to the ranch to treat Dave's severe scalp wound. Next morning, at break, fast, Dave and Rosy discover that Mary is cow cooking for the ranch handse-a bad sign. OR. GILBERT C. JARROTT Graduate of Faculty of Medicine, University of Western Ontario. Mem- ber of College of Physicians and 'Surgeons of Ontario. Office, 43 Gode- rich Street Weet Phone 37. Successor to Dr. Obarles Mackay., 12-38 W. C. SPROAT, F.A.C.S. Physician 'and Surgeon Phone 90. Office John -St., Seaforth. 12-38 • 4 DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderich St., nest of the Limited Church, Seaforbh. Phone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. , H., ROSS • 12-36 Graduate of University of ,Toronto, Facility of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and4Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate course in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Opthalitaie Hospital, London, England; University Hospital, Lon- don, England. Office -Back of Do- minion Bank, Sealorth. 'Phone No. 6. Night calls answered from residence, Victoria Sheet, Seaforth. 12-38 DR. E. A. MeMASTER Graduate of the University of ''Toron- to, Faculty of Medicine Member of College of 'Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; graduate of New York, Post Graduate Sohool and Lying- Hospital, New York. aDe lice on High Street, Seaforth. Phone 27. Office fully equipped for X-ray diagnosis and ultra short wave -elec- tric treatment, Ultra Violet Sun Lamp treatments, and Infra Red electric treatment Nurse in attendance. 12-34 DR. F. J. R. FORSTER Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Graduate in Medicine, University of Toronto. • Late assistant New York Opthal. mei and Aural Institute, Moorefield's Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos- pitals, 'London, Eng. At Commercial • Hotel, Seafolth, third Wedn•esday in each month, from 1.30 p.m. to 4.30 p.m. 53 Waterloo Street South, Stmt. - lord. 12-37 "Maybe we are," Dave conceded lightly. "Tell me about him., sis." "Dad met him one day. He was an agent for a mine and he was scout- inglaround Woking over thisecountry. Dad liked him and offered him a string of good horses bemuse his own were pretty oor. Ile used, to come over quite a lot after that and -well, we jest like cacti other and decided to get married"' "After Dad died?" "Yes. A couple of months." She turned to Dave and he could see 'the pain in her eyes. "Oh, Dave, it was awful. I was lonesome and discour aged and -he was so kind and sym- pathetic and .helpful." Dave nodded rolling a cigarette. ' ."What about the place, Sis? l'it have to go to Single Shot today ..ort business?" "Do you, think it's wise? After east night?" "Likely not," Dave said, "but I don't always do wise things. Now What about the pIace?" "There's hardly a corral orient, the men tell me," Mary said. "Ted nev- er has been able to get the right tatty, but it's low. Arid there's the paper on the Place." go to the bank." "You'll have to. Pearson is still there. He's been awfully good to us. Maybe he'd give us e sixty or ninety day exteasion, but f don't know what good that wile do." "We'll have to SeIl some land to pay off' the paper and get enough cat, ile to stock the range decently. And what if Hammond takes his claim) to court?" "He can't win. We've got the pa- pers to prove it." "All that jasper needs is to have some one talk salty with him." "There's always one thing we can doe Mary said speculatively. "We can sell out to him after he finds out he can't bluff us, because it's the only water he can get, I. got a letter from a man awhile back -Crowell, I think les laame was -asking me to put a price on the ranch. It was just atter Hanamond threatened to take the case to court, so I. ftgured teat Crowell was Hammond." • "What did you do?" "Nothing. I didn't answer him. I gOt several more letters from him offering motuey for the place, but I ignored them all." "Good lire" Dave said, grinning. Rosy, loaded with wood, etttered just then witle two -strangers who Mary introduced as Sad Harmon and Lew Finnegan, the two remaining hands. They sat down at table, Mary tak- ing the hotcakes out of the warming oven and setting them on tbe table. ter for an.ythieg." Harmon; laughed silently and turn- ed te•Marila 'Tin waitiu' for those flaejacIrs, We, tee." Dave was out of his chair in a lap. Grasping Harmon lay the shirt- front he yanked him tb his feet and crashing hint full length on the \floor. Finnegan stood up. "Whaddaya' thint--" Rotire fist smashed his jaw and he sat down. "What do we owe these saddle bums, Mary?". "Sixty- dollars apiece, I think," Mary said. Dave reached in his pocketand drew out some bills, counting thexa with trembling lingers.' He threw them to Finnegan, "Clear' out of here in ten minutes, both of you. If I ever catch you on I) Bar T land again:, so help me, ru oiStol-whip you both until your own mitteheral be sick to look at You. Now get out!" Deve had gone behind the cook- , shack out Of sight, to strap the grue- some, tarpaulin -wrapped load on the white-stackinged black. Rosy sad- dled two horses and joined him. They swung into the saddle and headed northeast up the slope behind the house. The trail wheel - Dave had chosen was an old and familiar one, used since he could remember as the shortest way to Single Shot. It watild up and across the Soledad Bence to the notch between the base of Old Cartridge and Coahuila Butte, then dived angling down the, steep mountainside to the dry stream bed in the valley and into Single Shot. Soon it was noticeable to Rau that the timber was thinning out and that rock outcrops were more numerous, and they seemed almost at tthe base of the towering peak of Old Cartridge. "Up there" -Dave pointed ahead on the trail and a little to the left --"is that spring -fed lake. That's what wa- ters our whole range." Through the notch, a level stretch • Perhaps a half fiele in width, they reined up on the rock rim and look- ed down into the vale3.y stretching below the:n. The side they were on, formed by the slope of Old Cartridge and Coahuila Butte, was craggy and laugh, rocky hogsbacks criss-crossing into a mase of black canyons. The other side of the valley was heavily wooded. "You got a trail down this slope??" Rosy asks "Sort -of," Dave said. He pointed over to tae base of Old. Cartridge. "There's the lake, up there, close to the rack ilea Overe.tlie rock rim just below it is a wash cut deep in the rock. We can follow that wash down to the valley door. I •reckon a goat couldn't make it without that." Ten minute* of perilous descent mei they were on the pebbly floor of the wasb. An hour's ride brought them al- most to the valley floor. Dave was ahead and as he rounded a sharp bend in the steep -walled arroyo, an exclamation escaped him. Before him, the arroyo widened out like the mouth of a funnel, and square in its middle was a cluster of board build- ings, tin -roofed. Rosy pulled up beSide him and wthistled in exclamation. "Yeah. Hanamond,"• Dave s a i d. "See how he's rue ditches around the buildings, blasted 'ern out of the rock? If it wasn't for them, he'd be buildin' new shacks after every show- er. This wase goes hell -for -leather in a rain," Across the front of th tt main build- ing was painted in uncertain black letters: "Draw Three." "He must have won that outfit in a poker game'," Dave said. The mine road now as they swung into it out of the wash was rutted deep from ore wagons and followed the bank of the wide, dry stream bed heading for Single Shot and the rail- road three miles away. Th•e streets of the town were filled with the early morning hustle of a mining town. Buckboards at the hitchracks almost eutnumbered the saddle-horeete e. Pave andeltesy tanied ,by the halilt Wad half -way down he length so as to be well out of view of a glance from the sheriffe window, they tent- ed in to the hitchrack. They left the body ef the Ibushenhatiter on his horse and covered the fifty steps to the sheriff's office, wonderirtg if he had seen them Dave knocked firmly, paused for a sound of a voce and bearing it, en- tered. In bhe far corner, his bath, trustingly to the door, sat the sheriff, laboring at something in the deptha of big roll-top desk. "Take a chair," he said, over bis shoulder. Rosy closed the door and took the chair nearest the sheriff. Dave stood in the middle of the floor,his thumte booked negligently in his belt. His dark face was still, his • black eyes wary '• "Got a package for you, Hank," Dave said. The sheriff swiveled his chair, his little eyes sweeping the room, noting the positions of the two men before "Well?" Dave asked. "If you ain't got holes in your head, you'll take a tip," the sheriff said raeanin,gly_ "When I 'say stay out of this town, I mean it!" "I say I got a package for you out there," Dave said calmly, ignoring the sheriff's remarks. • "I'm talkin' to you," the sheriff said - flatly, "You're not talkin' to me." Rosy saw it first. Maybe it was the flicker of the red -rimmed eyes or the throbbing of the large vein in the sheriff's temple. Rosy leaped out of his chair, throwing this body across the .fat belly of the sheriff, pinning his hands down tight against his gun butts. "You big tub," Rosy said savagely, "I oughta bend a gun barrel over your thick skull. We ain't makin' fight talk and we ain't takin' any either. There's a dead man out there on a horse." The sheriff was breathing heavily. "Lemane up." "Get his guns, Dave," Rosy said. Dave slipped the guns out from be- neath the fat and pudgy 4ands and laid them on the desk_ -"You say you' got a dead man out there?" the sheriff asked. "If you wasn't so knot -headed, you'd have known that two minutes \ago," Rosy ss:ii:ddS.how me the body," the sheriff He picked this guns of the "desk and leathered them. It was a gesture of peace. The dead man was brought in and taken into a back room, of the office, and laid on a cot. Sheriff Lowe listened to the story of the bush- whacking, then looked at the man. "You seen hiat around- lewnr Dave asked. "Nary once. I don't aim to fergit birds like that, but you ean't always besure." ."stood up. "Well, sheriff, we -got business. If you think of any more questions, you'll run into us around town." The Sheriff smiled, a slow, criule ling simile that made this fat face look amiable and pleasant. "I reckon I will," he said. "Go a- head- Seems to me you'll do any dang thing y'ou please anyway. So long's you don't let any blood doin' it, help yourself?' Outside, on the street again. Rosy took a deep breath and looked at Dave. -"I reckon I just had to jump him." "I'm glad you did," Dave said. "It was either that or a gunfight." They stopped at the corner. "Take a look around," Dave said. goin' to parley with old Pearson in the bank here, Drop a few ques- tions about this bushwhacker. May- be you'll get an idea." Dave went into the beak and Rosy sauntered across the street tra• the Free Throw, and shouldered through the doors. The bar' lay to the right, the gambling tables to the left, the doer to the dance hall in' the rear. He bought a drink at the mahogany bar, then crossed the big, box -like room to the faro table against the wall and mingled with the watchers. (Continued Next Week) DENTAL . DR. J. A. McTAGGART Graduate Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto. Office at liensell, Onto Phone 106. 12-37 a4p AUCTIONEERS HAROLD DALE Licensed Auctioneer Specialist In farm and household sales. Prime reasonable. For dates oa!! information, write or phone Her - ofd Oahe Plaine 149, Seaforth„ or aPPIE:iit The Ehrpositor Office. •, • 12-37 • Three hes, row for Lucky Teter! Beldam hagi the Canadian National Dthibition found an attraction so en- thralling that It is booked for a third -consecutive year. This, hovrever, is the case vet* Lucky Teter and hls *gain thrill thonsattds of Visiters to the "Ex" with • hia date -devil motor Aunts) and breath taking jninps,, spills -atal oreahea be - „foto thei graitddstallnt „ Rosy's 'fist smash 3d Finnegan's jaw. .„ "Where you ridln' today?" Dave asked Harmon. The mane looked ep. "Ridin'?" he growled: "I'm goin' fishina" "Not today," Dave said carelessly. "You're eleanin' out that corral first, and rightin' those poles. After bhat, you can fix that barn door. I'd shift that 110,y in the loft thie afternoon, then rustle some boards and patch that barn. After that, I'd get that tbayirn machinery-" ( • "Wait a Minute," ITarmon said, lay- ing down his. fork. He turned to Mary. "More flapjacks," he ordered curaly. 'Dave laid down bis fork. "Say please eaten you ask my tea - k.01;%,.Acl'sq371.., The Free Throw saloon on the main corner a block up from the sta- tion was doing a boo/fling business its twoetory frame building, the front of which, on the main,- street, con- tained the bar and ga,mbling tables. The bade half contained the dance - hall. Tee other three torters contained the bank, a tight one-story affair of brick across the street from the Free Throw; a hardware store which was also the post office; and another sa- loon, the Mile High, Behind the baiik lay the single a- bede building that Mused the office of the sheriff. The eotirthartise lay ap the street, CURRENT CROP REPORT Crop conditions in Ontario at the first of July were average to above aVerage, accordin.g to reports receiv- ed from representatives in all parts of the provinee. Fail wheat has rip- ened rapidly and ,harvesting has chna- menced in meny districts, with pro - sects favorable foram above normal yield. In Kent and Lambton counties an average yield of gs to 39 bushels per acre is indicated. Last year the yield for Ontario was 24.5 busladis. Barley and early varieties of oats are now in and are metaled as aver- age to above average in condition, with the exception of several counties In Central Ontario wheee crops have suffered from lack of moisture. Crops are about' four to seven " days in ad- vance of usual. In Northern Ontario the precipitation during June vras fairly plentiful witeh the result that asbel:0707 have made very satisfactory growth and prospects are quite favor - Cutting of hay, clover and alfalfa has been about completed in Western Ontario and is nearing, completion, in Eastern Ontario. The yield is report- ed to range from only medium ,to average but the totality is extellent, and the feeding value will be mileh higher than, last year. In Northern Ontario growth of hay was, rapid dur- ing lune ands preduction ieeepetted te dkeeedlhat of 1937. In NiPestern. Ontario growth and de-- vele/Anent Of tree fruits, ge,apes and raspberries has been good', but het, dry' weather ntliv ly abetted attaiw parer ofif Javan Vave been, zeatkag the 17.: fpr four yeaiv br esispy. matt EaMed HitaNal, $414.4 weighs, at 'thfs writing; 92: Pplim whim he arrived from tN.nrotiO he w gaY and breezy, and weighed' peunale. Pat 'phrases ehe''hate pick up in ,feurteen yeare of previous s vice. in America canie readily to lis. ,Hia greeting to reporters W "Man I swipe a cigarette from o of yell fellows?" Someoee aeked a statement on Japanese polity a Saito, waving a hand toward t shilds bar, parried the request wi "Me Phial' ParPose irn coming there- to drink whlsity with good Ame cans." He insisted setting drinks, for everyone: , The new Ambassador entered.: on his duties in. Washington lig heertedly. Since a large part of job was to soften anthjapanse sten meet, he made himself availa.ble the correspondents, art auy hour tthe day or night, and answered th questiens freely. Salto's relations with reporters az still pleasant, but they lack the o verve. The ordeal of His ImPer Majesty's flyweight vicar in rede months has given a tragi -comic pro inence to his, dreamy brown eyes, h arge, stand -out ears, and -a nose th s strangely Semitic. Events "hay driven Saito to seek consolation writing- verses, in Chinese script, bout tranquil gardens and pearly rivu- ets-a cultural accomplishment which oothes Japanese gentlehae.n in morn - Os of frustration. The complicating element in Saito's ife as Ambassador is the poeftion the army occupies as an independent ideal entity in the government of apan. When the 'army is in the sad - le, as it is -today, its warlike int- atienee embarrasses Japan's envoys n air peaceable .countries. From alto's public speeches it is plain hat he approves of the establishment f Japanese control in China, but be isapproves of the headiong course he process has lately taken, and has ot hesitated to tell the foreign ef- ce so. He is so vociferous about it hat the...array group is said to sus; pect that he is secretly working upo he Emperor to bring about a mor °minatory policy. Representing restless modern Ja- en in a territorially contented coun- ry like Americathas never been easy, ut of late the job has been some- hing to strain the logic of a toaster asuist. Saito has argued variously rat Japan wants peace rather than erritory, that if land -grabbing is a ante, holier-than-thou Amerloa has a riminal past, and that idealism in Itereatioaal affairs is a luxury for els. Long residence it this country an idea reading of American biogra lies has .made Saito an expert ou agaries. His English is flawless an e has 'a feeling for American slang e checks up on current thought ev 3, day ire the. Washington and New ork newspapers, and studies com nts on Japan clipped by this. staff can papers published in other parts the country. He fellows baseball osely and goes to games regularriy discussing international matters he es baseball analogies, referring ibly hitting a Texas Leaguer erring the ball, or failing to touch .cond base. This sort of talk helps clarify abstruse arguments for mericaa.„consumption. Saite welcomes outbursts of anti panese recrimination. ' When fe-el g is strong, he says, a capable Jap ese apologist like himself has a ance to step into the box and pitch, is his optiznietic view that when o nations wh,ose relations a r e uchy reach a point where they take wn their hair and call each other mes, they have made the first sten ward practical unders4andine. When the Panay wA• sunk, Saito d hie wife for some weeks dechn- invitations and stopped entertain - g at the Embassy. He even kept ay from' Burning Tree Golf Club, e of his favorite spots for recrea- n. "I am in the doghouse," he tole peighbor who came in for a drink, Saite's distress about the Panay in- ent led him into a bold action that lost cost him his post While his eign office was still temporizing h Secretary Hull's demand that the ety of foreigners be guaranteed, to forced its hand. As guest akar on a radio program sponsor - by an advertiser, he publicly prom - d that the demand would be grant - Had the foreign office not been a pretty whirl at the time, it would bably have recalled its linpulsive bassador; instead, it came through h the guarantee Saito had con- cted for and then, officially forgot affair. But in our State Depart- nts, officials privately pointed out t it was an abuse of diplomatic go for an envoy to discuss a mat- in international dispute with any. but the Secretary or his assist- s, owever, nothing was done about nd Saito was able to congratulate self upon a nice piece of work. His ate explanation 6f 'flis act was in an age of quick communica- , slow-moving 'diplomacy suffers time lag and the war spirit ds while statesmen are politely NO HIGHE R/-7 •e Id ial nt m - is at in berry production in many areas. Sour cherries suffered from a heavy June. drop oftfruit and yelloWing of foliage, Some scab infestation is allowing on apple foliage and fruit in moat. dis- tricts, but is chiefly confined to poor- ly -sprayer or unsprayed orchards as yet. Otherwise, insects and fungus pests have been wellcontrolled by good spray practice. • Prospects for fruit crops! in Ontario at present are estimated as follows: Apples, slightly below average to av- erage; avreet cherries almost aver - Age; soar cherries, below average; Bartlett • pears, below average; Keit fer peals, averagV; peaches, aVerage; phuna, below aVeragej grapes, aver- age. A 1,', 1 id • 4 „ * .0? 0 ,PO4f. q'reat.P FROM PEeelf-,, LONDON and North Exeter. .... ....... ...,........ Hensall Kippen ... . , Brumfield Clinton . - 7-Onnesboro basis and hag no cotmtenpart of the. „set, wealbhy American business man type of ambassador. Saito ie paid, $15;000.,..e.'degra'ssey: a year His only extra income is an wr''''5"'"'"' expense account, which, according to a widely held belief, is used heavily for finaticing propaganda. 'Saito says that he can draw on- it only for of- ficial entertainment. Saito started his diplomatic career as an attache in Washington just be- fore the World War.. His' specialty was naval armament, and he • found that one of the best informed men mi naval topics was Franklin D. Roose- velt, then Assistant Secretary of the Navy. They became friends, and the young attache frequently had tea 'with. the Roosevelts at their home. Saito later served as Consul in Seat- tle, Consul General in New York, and Japanese delegate at the disarma- ment an dnaval conferences in WaSh- lagton and Loedon. .Prior to his re- turn to the 11. S. he was Minister at The Hague. His appointnient' as Am- bassador here was timed to meet a resurgence of primosals for reductions in naval armaments. Despite, Saito's labors, America is still opposed to naval parity for Japan. . • Friends say that if Saito had his way he would spend the rest of his career in Washington, ethen he heard in 1937 that he might be made Am- bassador to Great Britain, he exerted pressure in Tokyo and prevented the appointment. He was afraid that af- ter so many years among the care- free Yankees he would be unable to bear up before the icy reserve of Bri- tish gentlemen, (After the recent stake -up in the Japanese cabinet which brought in- creased representation to the mili- taristic group, newspaper to, from Tokyo ,predicted the shifting of AmbaSsador Saito to London). South Wingham . , Belgrave Blyth Londesboro Clinton BruceneM Kippen Heneall Exeter 12 atr 4-.0,6 7 2,17 2.26 , 3.08 3.28 3.36 145 • 3.58 C.N.R. TIME TABLE , East A.M. Goderioh .............6.35 . 6.50 Clinton ' 6.58 Seaforth 7.11 St. Columban 7.17 Dublin 7.21. , • Mitchell 7.30 West Mitchell Dublin Seaforth Clinton' .. Goderich 11.06 11.14 11.30 11.45 12.05 P.M. 2.30 2.5- 3.00 • 3.16 • 3.23 3.29 3.41 9.28 9.36 9.47 10.00 10.25 C.P.R. TIME TABLE East Goderich Menset McGaw Auburn Blyte. P.M. 4.29 4-• 4.24 . 4.33 4.42 4.52 5.05 5.15 9.00 Walton McNaught Toronto Significant of the growing import- ance of the Canadian National Exhis Won in the life of the Empire is the fact that the British Government has taken over a whole building called the United Kingdom Pavilion and is devoting it to a huge prestige dis- play featuring the miraculous dbvel- opment of travel and communica- tions of the past century. West Toronto McNaught Ulialton Blyth Auburn McGaw Meneet Goderith A.M. 8.30 1203. 12.13 12.23 12:32 12.40 12.46 12.55 .0,11 eSNAPSI-10T CUIL PATTERN PICTURES Long shadows, with the -sun as a ready-made spotlight -and the potted flower is twice as interesting. Don't overlook the pattern in the floor grooves. DATTERNS make fascinating pie- , 1 tures, and they are all around you -shadow patterns, ornamental ironi.vork, window grilles, railings, wheels, stacks of lumber, piles of drain tile -even groups of people in a, formal arrangement. • Include a definite pattern in your pictures, and they will have an un- usual, "different" quality. When you go to thVbeaeh look for patterns in sand ripples and the shadows cast by beach grass. Climb a bigh bank or diving tower, and shoot down on your crowd when they are sunning themselves in a circle or _formal arrangement like the spokes of a wheel which gives pattern interest to the picture. Take pictures of scenes through things, such as ornamental iron- work. The outlines form patterns which make the scenee.more inter- estiag. Picture a telinia player through the net or racket -or let him held theraoket so that the sun, east; an Interesting' erles-crdaS EiliadoW pattern on his face. , Out in the country, try picturing scenes through wheels of farm equipment -for instance, "frame" a landscape through the tall wheeliof a hay rake. The Spokes and rim of the wheel give pattern Interest. In town, picture shadow patterns on „a brick sidetvalk or street. The shia- 6 CMS'kive one kind of pattern tinter - est, and the pattern of the paving adds another. . When a new house is going up - before the roof and Weatherboard- ing are put on -there are pattern chances in the framing -and roof UM - hers. Get inside, point the camera upordid, and pitture workmen on the roof. Look for pictures, toe; itt the steelwork of bridgeri and Veit. ties, and in the Cenigateiiilratt, at wires and eressUains at,the of teiephonig -poletC It's tun lo hunt pattern*, A4d new latteatat th reel) Your .40w0.004,..tOr,..tle tuOg thirtbuti'ti • ,