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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1938-08-05, Page 7iz. t1µ ; 1 � •Yir«x(�,h�r,a k�V sly , as1?;nd 1',4t' k'. ie 4 4 4 4 • �.;_ .... HAYS A• MEUI Suc90di410 R. 8. Hays Barr ztere, Solieiters, Conve aneera stud NOtetalets 1?ubiic. Solicitorsfor the Dominion Bank.' Office he rear of the Dominion ,Ban$, Seaforth. Money to loan. 12-88 DANCEY & BOLSBY BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, ETC. LOFTUS E. DANCEY, K.C. P. J. BOLSBY GODERICH - BRUSSELS ELMER D. BELL, B.A. Successor to John H. Best Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public. Seaforth - Ontario 12-36 PATRICK D. McCONNELL Barrister, Sohnitor, Notary Public, p Etc. Office in the Sdailth Block S 6o9th VETERINARY A. R. CAMPBELL, V.S. Graduate of Ontario Veterinary Col- lege, University of Toronto. All dis- eases of domestic animals treated by the most modern principles. Charges reasonable. Day or night calls promptly attended to. • Office on Main Street, Hensall, opposite Town. Hall. Phone 116.. Breeder of Scottish Ter- riers, Inverntess Kennels, Hensall. 12-37 MEDICAL W. C. SPROAT, M.D., F.A.C.S. Physician and Surgeon Phone 90. Office John Si, Seaforth: 12-38 DR. F. J. BURROWS Office Main Street, Seaforth, Domin- son Bank Bldg. Residence, Goderich Street, two doors west of United Church. Phone 46. 12-36 •DR. HUGH H. ROSS Graduate of University of Toronto, Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of ,• Ontario; pass graduate course in Chicago CIrnieal School of Chicago ; Royal Opthalmie Hospital, London, England; University Flospital, Lon- don, England. Office --Back of Do- minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 6. Night calls answered from residence, Victoria Street, Seaforbb. 12-38 SIXTH' INSTALMENT SYNOPSIS With his partner, Rosy Rand,; Dave Turner is on his way to his ranch at Soledad. Both men are, returning from prison where they have served sentences for unjust convictions. On the train, .which is ,harrying a large sum of money, Resy's quick action and straight shooting foils a hold-up while Dave saves the life of Martin Quinn, a gambler, who is being threatened by a desperado. Stop- ping at Single Shot, the sheriff tells Dave he is not wanted. Quinn defends Dave but Dave and Rand go to Soledad to meet Mary, Dave's sister, 'and proceed on horseback to the ranch. Mary re- veals she is married and tells Dave that the ranch is doing poor- ly, being beset by nesters and in- volved in a claim dispute. Sud- denly a shot from the darkness topples Dave from his horse. Rosy fires and kills the unknown assailant 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, now cooking for the ranch hands -a bad• sign. After discussing ''financial matters with Mary Dave and Rosy saddle hors- es add leave for Single Shot to deliver a corpse to the sheriff and see the town banker. Ident- ity of corpse reveals him to be ex -employee of Hammond's. Dave, .'Rosy and the sheriff immediately. confront Hammond with facts. Fight between Hammond and Dave prevented by sheriff. Dave's horse.: '.The tho1'se 'jerked his down sonic hay for my horse?" ahead high, reared, and Dave slid out 1 "Sure," Rosy anawereld. of the saddle. The nester turned and. Winters led the horse in, a big bay ran toward the')house. Dave tripped him and the nester crashed .into the door. . Dave stood a- little ways off from him, unbuckling ,his cartridge belt and holsters, lting • them fall to the ground. "Get up and take a beatin'," Dave said softly, kicking the guns out of reach. The nester rushed in, head down. Dave stepped aside and straightened hem up with a- looping left to the mouth. Dave let, him , walk into a straight right arm three times, then avoiding a low kick and flailing arms, he 'sank, a body swing to the nester's stomach, doebling the heav- ier man -up. Dave stood over him, breathing heavily. • "If you want any more, stand ups" Dave said. "Not me. That's enough." "Look what I got in the round -up," Rosy's voice said from the corner of the house.. Dave turned and saw four men standing sullenly before Rosy, who had dismounted and made the rounds of the other shacks while Dave was fighting. "Get in the house," Dave said. "I got some turkey to talk." The beaten nester threw open the door. The house consisted of one room, a double -decked bunk at one end, a stove and table at the other. Four home-made' chairs and' a shelf comprised the rest of the furniture. "Sit down;" Dave ordered, stand- ing in the middle of the room. "I reckon you know why I'm here." They nodded. "I can . run you off this land right now and burn your shacks. 1- reckon you know that." "Sure," one of the nesters, a small wiry man in middle age replied. "All right." Dave answered. "I got a proposition to make. You can take it or leave it. You five can farm on a sixty -forty split here on an alfalfa crop. Startin' •tomorrow, you can break up all the land you can. I'll get a crew to put in ditches. In a week and a half you can be ready to put in the crop. With plenty of water, we'll get three crops this sum- mer and a market for the hay with all the horses there are in these two towns and the mines. Suit yourself. Stick here and take a forty per cent. share and' work, Or -clear out way out." "You mean you're puttin' water down here?" the middle-aged man asked. "That's it?' The nester gave hie companions. "I dunno about the rest of 'em, but I'll stick and glad of it. Damn glad of it. My son -in -law -he owns the place on the other side of me ---)rill too. He ain't ,here, but I'll swear he will." "I'll stay," the big man said. "Same here," the other two joined in. "If this goes right," Dave said, "there's no reason why this arrange- ment can't go on. It's up to you all. You've got more good bottom land here than you can ever farm. You've got water -or will have it. I'll have the seed ordered in Single Shot and delivered to Soledad and you can l nus it up from there." "I don't feel right about this," the middle-aged nester said. "I never have. ' I've usually paid for what I took, but this here spread had 90 Banged much land -that I reckon I hated to see it go to waste. But from now on, Turner, I'm _payin' my "Those nesters are in good black land," Dave continued. "They're probably pretty good farmers. I can get a crew of Mex's to ditch water down to them from the creek. It runs about a mile from that bottom - land, but it's shut off by a low hill." He looked! at Rosy. "Let those nest- ers raise alfalfa on shares with plen- ty of water:" "You turnip' farmer?" "No. But look. There's a bunch of mines around here, besides these two towns. With water we could get three crops of alfalfa in the sum- mer. Contract some of it, hold the rest and get sky+high prices for it later. In °ninety days, I'll have en- ough from that. to clean off the pa- per and start in stockin' the place." A two hours' ride brought them to the lip of a grassy hill and they rein- ed up: At the bottom of the basin lay . orderly _.checkerboards of fields, now fallow, waiting for the spring plowing. Small in the distance, at, the base of the cliff, lay a cluster of buildings. They rode point to the cabins, skirting the fields a little. There were six houses that Dave could see, log shacks. As they approached the first door. He noted passively that the man was so tall he had to stoop to get through the door. He was un- shaven, hatless, wearing dirty bib ov- eralls and a flannel shirt. They 'reined up before him and Dave let his eyes wander casually around the place before he brought them to bear on the nester. "Howdy," he said 'amiably. The nester spat noisily. "Lookin' for some one?" he growl- ed. "Six of you," Dave 'said laconical- ly. "I'll do," the nester retorted. He was staring into the barrel of a Colt in Dave's hand. "Close that door," Dave said soft- ly. "You got a gun there just inside the door, so move slow." The nester continued to stare in- solently n solently at him, his hands in his hip pockets. Dave's gun exploded and a chip of DR. E. A. McMASTER 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' School and Lying- Hospital, New York. Of- fice 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 teatmenL Nurse in attendance. 12-38 DR. F. J. R. FORSTER Ey'�►, Ear, jdose and Throat Graduate in Medicine, University of Toronto. Late ashfisit' New York Opthal- ene1 anis-“Attrhl•• Institute, Moorefeld's 1e7ye and Golden Square Throat Hos- pitals, London, Eng. At Commercial Hotel, Seaforth, third Wednesday in each month, from 1.30 p.m. to 4.30 pm. 53 Waterloo Street South, Strat- ford. 12-37 with a Roman nose, .,still -breathing heavily, his asides wet with sweat. Rosy . was about to speak, but held' his tongue. If the hombre didn't know enough to walk a horse after lather- ing hem, then let him lose a couple of horses in -the process of finding ort. "Look over the range today?" Win- ters asked. - "Took that jasper into town on his horse," Rosy answered. "What did you find out?" "Name of Freeman. Used to work for Hammond," Winters snorted, then smiled know- ingly. "I don't suppose Dave has told - you what Hammond's trying tb do about the lake up here." "He told me," Rosy said. Hammond too." "What did he say?'? "He's shootin' on sight meetin'," Rosy said dryly. A dim roll of thunder came to ,their ears. The first tentative slaps of rain, dull and widely speced, ech- oed hollowly on the barn roof. Winters followed him into the cor- ral and stopped, hands on hips, look- ing at the sky. "Glad I'm finished with that hole," he said. "It'll have two feet of wa- ter in it." "Prospectin'?" Rosy asked. "Yes. I putter around some. 1 got some color up in those canyons to the west of that rock slide on Old Cartridge. May not be much, but it keeps me on my toes in ease I want to get back in the minin' game." "I got so interested there this af- ternoon I worked till way after dark by lantern light. You'd never guess, but•¢-'- " "We better hightail ,it," Rosy cut in. "We're goin' to get wet." The meal finished and cigarettes smoked, Dave helped Mary with the dishes. Finished, he yawned, stretch- ed and informed them that he was going to bed. Rosy followed him, leaving Winters and Mar in the kit- chen. "Tomorrow we split up," Dave in- formed him as they undressed in their room. "I'm goin' to locate all the cattle and get ready for a count. You go to Single Shot, order the seed for them nesters and round up a couple of riders. Then ride over to Soledad and get hold of Pablo Manero at the frame store there. Tell him I sent you and that we want a'liiout ten Mex- icans, tools and all, to put in that ditch. And -oh, I'll tell you in the mornin'. I'm talkin in my sleep now. G'nigbt." It was a dull, gathering, earth-rock- inge window -rattling roar that woke them. Rosy • raised up on his elbow. "Dave." he called softly. "I ,heard it," Dave said. Another report came booming through the rainy night.. "Dynamite," Dave guessed. "There must be a ton in each shot." Thee more vast detonations in quick succession seemed to shake the ,house. "Where'd it come from?" Rosy asl ed. "Up in the mountains, Old Cart- ridge way," Dave replied. "I'm tak- in' a pasear. You comity'?" They dressed in the dark and left the house noiselessly. A steady drizzle was beating down and the first faint lights in the east announc- ed approaching day. "We saw at next DENTAL DR. J. A. McTAGGART Graduate Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto. Office at Hensall, Ont. Phone 106. 12-37 AUCTIONEERS HAROLD DALE Licensed Auctioneer Specialist in farm and thousebold gales. Prices reasonable. For dates Har- old Information, Phone write49 Seaforth, or app at The Expositor Office. 127 That's low It Stalled! "Rite barber's` pole began its career In the Middle Ages, when the art of surgery and the trade of barber were combined. Blood-letting was then the great. e'tm i:ave in lent 'he was arm giv n a opened 414, the patient tightly, thus stick o p to o grasp g mak u + d flow more freely. +iQdtem' notT1 u, the stick was' clung 'outeiile the strop with a white band- age wanted exerted it in a spiral ready for nee --indicating• that a surgeon was available. But_ the -'sight of the gory pole w e igino'u�i' li 'to the $gitt4amiel4, so in 'tdinie tihe`',barbera dis- y'playetl�. a polo painted red anti. white, Instead left tial! actually used . in the During the first "six Month of beet several test. elicits, It is fill8 •,a oar 235:7.39. pa@'serLgers travelled • � Whips ,of the 32 American, air tram ort' companies that opera!@d eats- y 1l d 'ti to the De a.rtntenit gE•-C)a>i APTKA "' theteetrll s. l: approve it is Feterncd pservice. l: Mourning had coma. Ov;erat,iglxt planes' from the West and+ South, roar- ed down on the landing field. In the hangiar the little tractor cii$checlethe° tfail. of the huge Condor and draggek' it to its starting llaee. Mall and bag- gage were placed aboard. Passengers and pilots entered. The engines roar- ed. The starter dropped his, f eg. The Condor rolled smoothly' down they runway,. across. the field, and leaped into the air. Just another airplane taking off. But I had seem some of the planning and effort that are necessary to keep the air liners flying, and I realized for the first time that an air -transport line, like a railroad, is only as good as its maintenance department. duled -passenger •services Of them, 235,042 completed journeys that aver- aged 327 miles without experiencing even 'a minor accident. Of the 97 passengers that •were in -accidents, two Were killed. Over 38,000,000 pas senger miles Sawn for each passen ger fatality -a new safe travel air re- cord. o-cord. But air travellers are coming to re- gard safety as a matter' of course. They ply for a safe, swift, comfort- able journey and an on-time arrival. That they nearly always get what they pay for is due, as much as to anything else, to the never -ceasing vigilance of the ground crews who, af- ter every trip, examine each plane frtim..lending gear to wing tips. - Re - fore the ship leaves for another flight each slightest fault must he correct- ed by licensed mechanics. Recently I spent a night at Newark Airport to see just what happens to a passenger plane between flights. A big orange -winged Condor' ship taxied across the flood -lighted field and came to a stop in front of the.terminal. The - dozen 'Passengers got out and after them came the pilot and co-pilot. - A mechanic astride a small tractor ap- i eered, coupled on to the Condor% tail, and with the plane in tow chug- ged into the hangar. • In the dispatcher's office the pilot was filing a report with the chief in- spector. The right landing gear brake wasn't working just right, he said, and it seemed to him that the air in the tires was just a little low. These meetings between inspectors and pil- ots at the end of flights play an im- Dertant part in the business of keep- ing the air liners flying. Out in the chilly, brightly lighted hangar, the maintenance crew chief told me something about his job. "It's always watching for little things, and catching them before they 'have a chance to get big, that keeps down the grief in this game," he said. "Here's an example of what I mean." He turned over an inspection card hanging, from one of the ships, and showed me a notation penciled on its back: Cut off long screw about to rub top of right oil tank. "Now," went on the crew chief, "that's a mighty little thing, a screw a quarter inch too long. It isn't ev- ena repair job, because no damage has been done. But if that long screw hadn't been noticed it might - eventually have rubbed a hole in the oil tank, and that might have made a forced landing necessary. The other work ordered on this ship is 'along the same lines. 'Repair right rear clamp on exhaust stack."'Tighten bolt in upper trunion of right landing gear.' Two minutes work. "That reminds me of an experience I've never forgotten. Late one after- noon I was doing some' work on a mail plane. I shad just twisted a nut on a bolt with my fingers, and was about to pot in a cotter pin and tight- en the net with my wrench 'when the boss called me. He kept me in his office over, an hour, and when I got cut in the hangar again it was long past quiting time. So, never think- ing about the nut I hadn't, tightened, i put on ray coat and went home. "The next morning I remembered that untigbtened bolt It was a vital- ly important nut, and 1 knew that if ,t had come off while the ship was i:. the air, there probably was a wash. ed out plane and a dead pilot some - Where between New York and Wash- ington. And that it was my fault! "I telephoned to a fellow I knew at the Washington field. Sure, he said, the ship had got there all right.. As soon as I could say anything, I asked him to go out and fix that nut. And then and there I made a rule for myself that i've never broken -never, under any circumstances, to leave a job on a ship unfinished, even if the president of the company called me and even if I got fired for doing it!" While the crew chief spoke, me- chanics were systematically at work no the linY4r. Gasoline, oil and water were. checked. The water pumps were greased. Engine mounts were inspected with minute care, a mag- nifying glass being used when one of the inspectors detected something that looked like, but wasn't, a crack. Men 'with flash lamps climbed over the, ship carefully examining -the wings, hinges, and surfaces of the controls. The retractible landing gear fit- tings, the wheels, brakes and tires. were inspected. Newly charged bat- teries were installedr�-all batteries are recharged after each flight. Start- ers and generators were checked. Spark plugs, magneto points, primers, and the ignition wires were inspect- ed. All the ship's lights were check- ed. In the control cabin every instru- ment was checked, and the radio set carefully tested. The duralumin pro- pellers were looked over with care. Each of the more than 30 items list- ed on the inspection form is signed for by the inspector who checks , it. When additional work is done, the mechanic who does the job signs for it when it is completed. So when the pilot takes over the ship for its next flight, he has, a right' to feel con- fident that it is airworthy in every re- spect. The inspection just described is given the air liners after each flight$ There is another and even, more rigid inspection at the end of 25, 50 and 100 flying hours. After 3.60 hours of flying service, the engines are remov- ed from the plane and' sent to the shop for a complete overhaul. The instrument board also is thoroughly tested. After about 2,000 hours of flying, the air liners themselves are sent to the shop for.. an overhaul that is prac- tically a rebuilding. The wings, fuse- lage -and tafl'surfaces are stripped of all covering end the frames exa eined With extreme pare. Now' parts are lustttlitdi Wherever'1�}}e,eded. Then.; af- truot+oti 1 t AVIAbi a brief glance..�.t Fair Dates A .9/11#,,ELLE C CQN.IENIENT. M' ROO1.4 a+.R WRiTE FOPI TAKSE';14 DE, il«t FROM DEPOT a*a' :. Central Canada Exhibition, Ottawa, August 22-27. Canadian National Exhibition, .To- ronto, August 26 to Sept. 10. Western Fair, London, September 12-17. International Plowing Match, Mine - sing, near Barrie, Ont., Oot. 11, 12, 13, 14. Ottawa Winter Fair, November 15 to 23. Guelph Winter Fair, November 20 -to December 1st. Dave let him walk into a straight right three times . . . wood behind the nester's head splin- tered off. , Dave saw the neste'r's face set i a little as he leaped, away from the door. He reached in and got the raw= hide latchstring and swung the door shut, "Now step out here," Dave said. He leathered his gun and the nester stepped close to his horse. Dave folded his arms. "I'm Dave Turner," be annoUFiced. '}'Hoer would you like to clear, off my land?" he asked softly. With the quickness of a cat, the nester dtote Oa est tato the Wile of , i �§y i"��.'nt,��^�"'1�a i•�!4?k�i ;4yr7 �6 SANITATION FOR POULTRY he wasn't,aliowed to seR o3 except d'nring the rntdt• flout' As for salary, bas bpsees di Ti's want to pay' him an+ytbig at all the first si�t.moi hs. So h'e OVA' tet?, 'he had saved. nifty del arse dl'uiu,'g. '.i last ten'. years on the farm and'hfi was all the money he had ul. the Wort -but he agreed to live on that . f,ar the first three months if •:they Wont . agreed to pay him ,fifty cents 'o y from these on. When he did get his fifty cents a day, he had 'to- work fif-f teen hours a day for it -so it figured out to about three cents an hour. Finally, he got a job in another store at ten dollars a week; and he slept in the basement with a revolver under his pillow to protect the stare ir'om thieves. This place proved �to. be a nightmare. His employerhound- ed hum and, scolded him aid' told him :.......... Ibe was no good and cut his• salary and threatened to fire bim. Frank ' Woolworth was a whinnied man. Re- alizing he could never make good, he went !back to the farm; suffered a ner- vous breakdown, and for a year, he couldn't do a stroke of work. - *Think of it! This man who was destined to• become the greatest re- tail merchant on earth, was so dis- couragedi then that he abandoned all thought of trying to get ahead' in busi- ness, and started raising chickens. Then, one day, to his great surprise, one of chis former employers sent for bim and offered him a job. It was a bitter cold day in March, sixty years ago. The ground was covered with three feet of snow. Woolworth's fa- ther was taking some potatoes to market that day and so Frank ,crawl - an absorbent ed up on the sled and sat on a. sack over the dropping boards: Renew lit- of potatoes and rode into Watertown, ter before it becomes too dirty, and supply clean water in clean vessels; disease may spread rapidly through the. medium of dirty water or contain- ers. At least once a year, with a boe and broom, scrape and • sweep clean the floors and walls of the poultry house, removing dust and cobwebs, first store was in Utica, New YOrK, and if running 'water is available use and it was a total failure. Some days roostso hoseaat high pressure. Paint he didn't take in more than $2.50. and supports with a good Coal.he using to go into debt, be expand - tar disinfectant, full strength, and I Hygiene and sanitation are factors as important to the poultry flock as good stock,.clean water, proper feed and range. Failure to maintain clean and sanitary surroundings is frequent- ly the weak- spot in poultry manage- ment. Cleanliness' is essential, • as high mortality and reduced egg pro- duction follow disease and impaired vitality. To ensure ,healthy surround, ings remove droppings daily and scat- terbs rbent such as land plaster They saddled their horses swiftly and swung out through the mud up to the trail to the notch. When they reached the timber, gray daylight al- lowed them to see. Dave rode ahead, urging his horse. A half mile from the notch in the rock rim, Dave left the trail and started up the rock-strewn steeper grade that announced the mountain. Rosy, puzzled; reined off after him. Suddenly it dawned on Rosy where they were going and why Dave had ridden so unerringly for this point. They mounted a . hog's -back and Dave reined up, staring. Before them a basin seemed to have been scoop- ed out of the very base of the tun- neled mountainside. It was roughly oval, quarter of a mile in Length. Its bottom, slanting steeply to the cen- ter from all sides, was a thick, black, shining -wet slime of maid. Steady trickles of water seeped up thinly m some places. Rosy's eyes` followed the level rim around and there, to- ward the east edge nearest the rock rim, a chunk seemed to have been knocked out of the rim, leaving :n its place, a wedge of gray storm - blanketed sky. The forty,yards from, the edge of the rock rim to the edge of the lake had been blasted out! • (Continued Next Week) debts. You'll get nothing from nee but work. My name's Rourke." "Ail right," Dave said, grinning. "Let it ride that Way, Rourke. If there's anything you need, and I can give it to you, come up to the house." By lantern- ligtht- efor it was.past ten when they reached the ranch - Rosy rubbed down, the horses, grain- ed tthem" and was forking some hay. The stable door wrung open and Winters stood in the doorway, his dark; face scowling against the light. "Oh, ft's you," he• said amiably, when he saw Rosy.. "Mind &yrkin!g New York, to start a career that was to bring him wealth and power far 'beyond his most fantastic expecta- tions. What was the secret of bis suc- cess? Just this: He got an idea --a unique idea. He borrowed three hun- dred un dred dollars and started a store where nothing cost more than a nickel. 'That spray frequently with a solution cf the same product according to the in- structione of.. the rnaeufaeturer. The range also demands its share of pre- caution. Gravel or sandy loam pro- vide the best sanitary condition's and is easily worked with a one-horse plough. All 'eange and yards should be ploughed and cropped yearly and seeded with a quick growing crop. Su- dan grass is palatable and greatly relished. To ensure a good supply, it is well to cut Sudan when about six inches high before allowing the birds access to the yards or range. Ideal sanitary conditions are supplied with a two or three year range rota- tion ;a hoed crop intervening in the three year rotation provides addition• al protection against parasites that flourish in contaminated soil. 4.4 lt Teacher: "Now. can anyone tell me what a myth is?" Little Loretta: "Please, teacher, ;t is a female moth." Dawn found an Englishman, an Ir-, ishmran, and. a Scot, three' survivors of ashipwreck, drifting helplessly orn, a raft. Night came, and ,still to sign of rescue. • When things looked; hopeless the Irishman knelt in silent prayer. Quiek- 1y, "the English:Maar siiatelied off his hat ea a spark of respect and the Scot, took a flying leap anti:I-The sea. Ile thought the ]tapir Was litettt itO, Make 4 10014; ed very slowly at first, opening only twelve stores during the first ten years. Finally, he became one of the wealthiest men in'America., built him- self what was then the .highest offlae building in the world; paid for it with fourteen million dollars in cash; installed a hundred' thousand dollar pipe organ in ids bome, and began collecting relics of Napoleon. Years before, when he was a poor young man and had•met' with defeat so often that he had lost all faith in himself, his mother would come and put her arms around her boy and say: "Don't be discouraged', my son; someday you'll be a rich man. . . He Ran a Nickel Into Millions (By Date Carnegie in Your Life) When Barbara Hutton Mdivani be- came twenty-one years old, she gave a 'party. She hed a Hungarian orch- estra in her home, filling the night with soft, erotic music, and famous opera stars singing to her of love and romance. And she had a reason for giving a party. Ste was inheriting about twenty million dollars. Where dad that twenty million dol- lars come fram? Part. of it came out of your pocket.. • Barbara Hutton Mdivani is a grand- daughter of Frank Woolworth; and every time you spend a nickel in one of Woolworth's five and ten- cent stores, a part of your nicht.] finds its way eventually into the exchequer of this beautiful young woman. Prow did this girl's -grandfather make the millions see is now enjoy- ing? Well. he had one great advant- age to start with. He was poor. He lived on a farm tip near Watertown, New York, and he was so hs.rd up that he had to go barefooted. six months out of the year. That poverty did big things far him. It aroused his ambition and filled him with a atoning desire to get ahead - He bated the farm and determined to be a storekeeper; so when he was twenty-one years of age, be hitched the old mare to a sleigh!, drove into Carthage, New York, and applied for a job in every store in town. But no- body would hire him, He was too green, too gawky and hay -seedy. ):finally, he found a railway station agent wtho was running a sort of a store on the side. 'Ibis station agent kept a stook Yif groceries in a freight' shed and Frank Woolwortb, worked for him for nothing -just in order to, get experience. Later on, he got a job working for a drygoods store. Although he was twenty-one years,. of age, :his empioy- ers didn't feel be lfad; 'en+ough sense to wait on castanet* str they` unlade Wail cynic, do rli earl dif a mor i1 start elite, swdep,aelit "W> C 0� yh 'a,tnrlAtfoty ,44 LONDON and WINGHAM North Exeter Hensall Kippen Brrtcefield ..... - A.M. . 10.34 10.46 10.52 11.00 Clinton 11.47 Londesboro 12.06 Blyth 12.16 Belgrave 12.27. Wingham 12.45 South Wingbam Belgrave Blyth Londesboro Clinton Brucefield He Exeter P.M. 1.50 2.06 2.17 2.26 3.08 3.28 3.e8 3.45 3.53 C.N.R. TIME TABLE East Goderich Holmesville Clinton Seaforth St. Columban Dublin Mitchell rA Mitchell D{iblin Seaforth Clinton Goderdeh West A.M. 6.35 6.50 6.58 7.11 7.17 7.21 7.30 11.06 11.14 11.30 11.45 12.05 117, PM. 2.30 2.52 3.00 3.16 3.22 3.29 3.41 9.28 9.36 9.47 , 10.00 10.25 C.P.R. TIME TABLE East 'Cioderldh Menet McGaw Aubtirn &&&&&....» Blob Walton Termite ..+W4 ...•.°sY1.4..•494'. till'; .MWN' ght ♦. r.Jp,•d'Y'f4i •i. pi YYYW .e)i .44 ,ic Viii iFii W091 t4ro 4 44 40+�l�V+'• P`+nr rt P.M. 4,20 4.24 4.113. 505 'P; -f :iF