HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1938-11-04, Page 76,, 1
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AL
- :HAYS 4 AKA,
, -
• 60C0f*RPS H. 8.: kVA
' •Baerietere, .8oUeikell, Conveyancers
we Notaries Public:, Selicitorat !Or ,
gibe Dominion Bank. Ogice in rear of
the llomiu1031 Bank, Seitfiettle Mont" ,
On Inanr
,
1
DANCEY 4 BOISBY
BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, ETC;
LOFTUS. Fe OANCE; RC.
P. J. ,BOLBBY
BODERICH • BRUSSELS
illea7
,
ELMER D. BELL, B.A.
Successor to John H. Best
Barrister, Solleitor, Notary Public.
Sealorth - Outwit,
McCONNELL & HAYS
_.
Barrister% Solicitors, Etc.
Patrick D. McConnell - H. Glenn Hays
SEAFORTH, ONT.
Telephone 174
3693 -
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, Hensel], opposite Town Hall.
Phone /16. Breeder of Scottish Ter-
riers, Inverness Kennels, Hensel].
12-37
MEDICAL
SEAFORTH CLINIC
DR; E. A. McMASTER, M.B.
Graduate of University of Toronto
J. D. COLQUHOUN, M.D., C.M.
Graduate of Dalhousie University,
Halifax.
The Clinic is fully equipped with
complete and modern, X-ray and other
up-to-date diagnostic and' thereuptic
equipment.
Dr. Margaret K. Campbell, M.D.,
L.A.-13.P., Specialist in diseases in in-
fants and children, win be at the
Clinic last Thursday in every month
from 3 to 6 pan.
Dr. F. J. R. Forster, Specialist in
diseases of the , ear, eye, nose and
throat, will be at the Clinic the first
Tuesday in every month from 4 to 6
p.m.
Free Well -Baby Clinic will be held
en the second and last Thursday in
every month from 1 to 2 p.m.
3687-
. •
W. C. SPROAT, M.D., F.A.C.S.
Physician and Surgeon
Phone 90. Office John St., Seaforth.
12-38
DR. F. J. BURROWS
Office, Main Street, over Dominion
Bank Bldg. Hours: 2 to 5 p.m. and
7 to 8 p.m., and by appointment.
Residence, Goderich Street, tw-o doors
west of the 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 Clinical School of Chicago;
Royal Opthalmie Hospital, London,
England; University Hospital, Lon-
don, England. Office -Back of Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5.
Night calls answered from residence,
Victoria Street, Seaforth.
12-38
,
DR. F. J. R. FORSTER ,
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Graduate In Medicine, University
of Toronto.
Late assistant New York Opthal-
reel and Aural Institute, Moorefield's
Eye 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
p.m. 53 Waterloo Street South, Strat-
ford.
12-37
DENTAL
DR. J. A. McTAGGART
Graduate Royal College of Dental
Surgeons, Toronto. Office at Her:mall,
Ont. Phone 106.
• 12737
AUCTIONEERS
• . HAROLD DALE
Licensed Auctioneer
specialist Is farm and household
' sales. Priebe reasonable. For dates
and information, 'verrito or phone Har-
old Dale. Phone 149, Seaforth, or
AMY' at The Expositor Office.
12-87
A small main sitting in the cor-
oar oifi a tram glared at a very Stout
want= Who oCettPled moSt. of the seat.
"lee Ift pity thein don't Charge pas-
seengtan abetxrding •tO their sites" he
reMarkeit ' ' ' • •
if ifit;ei did," tetorted the stout
liatiV: "they WOOldlift OOP to pielt
......„. ..... 0
,0",teir"t,
et. ere
,
NINETEENTH INSTALMENT
SYNOPSIS
WW1 hie Partner,. Rosy Rand,
Dave Turner is on his way to his
ranch at Soled:ad. Both men are
returning from prisoneWhere they
here served sentences for unjust
convictions. On the train, which
carrying, a large sum of money,
Rosy% quick action and otraight
shooting foils a hold-up •waiile
Dave saves the life of Martin
Quinn, a gambler, who is being
threatened by a despprado. 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
horeeback 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 dispiitte. Sud-
denly e shot firm the darkness,
topples ,Dave from his horse.
Rosy fire' s and kills the unknown
assailant and they rush to the
aanch 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 bi'd sign. After
discussing financial matters with,
Mary Dave' and Rosy saddle hors-
es and leave for Single Shot to
see the town banker, Mr. Pear-
son. Mortgage is renewed and
Dave decides to get enoughmoney
to pay off mortgage by raising
alfalfa and selling it. Following
night the lake is blown up and
Dave inwardly accuses Hammond.
The latter blames Dave. A chance
meeting of the two gives them
an opportnnity to clear away this
false impression. The hunt now
turns to Crowell, the mysterious
man of means and ambitions.
Rosy rushes to Winter's home to
tell Mary of this suspicions about'
her 'husband and asks, her help
to prove bis findings. Laredo ev-
olves a scheme to arrest Crowell
as a murder suspect in order to
hold him for questioning. By a
clever ruse, Dave escapes this cap
tors and then- frees Dorsey who
was held prisoner for ransom.
"He's dead," Rosy said. "Trials-.
are expensive, the sheriff thinks."
"I'm talkinto yea now, Crowell,"
Rosy said. "I was under the daven-
port when you were talkin' to Mrs.
Winters and her husband. I heard
the conversation you and Winters
had ishen Mrs. Winters went out of
the room. Dave overheard from
Sayres that you ordered the kidnap-
ping of Dorsey Hammond, and the
deed signed Was in your favor. More
than that, you left orders, before
Hank arrested you to burn the D
lar T. • so as to make Mary sign
away :her half the 'spread. What've
you go to say?"
"P:ove it," Crowell said calmly.
"I deemed to be placed: in jail and
have this go through the regular
channels!"
Rcsy sighed and turned,to the
sheriff. "Hear that, Hank? He de-
mands' a trial."
"Yeah. I heard it," the sheriff
said "Better let ime take him to
jai L"
Rosy shrugged, "All right, Dave'll
go with you. I'll talk to- Pearson."
"I can handle him alone," the
sheriff said. There was menace in
his speech. 'Gimme them keys," he
said to Quinn.
Suddenly, Mary cried out. She
took three swift steps and faced
Rosy. "Rosy, don't do it! Donn do
it! You know 'what will happen!"
Pies room was 'deathly still.
Rosy shrugged, avoiding her eye.
"I ain't the sheriff, ma'am," he mut-
tered.
Mary wheeled, to feee Dave. "Dave,
are you, going to let him? • Are you
-are yoU that callous?"
She sank into a chair, sobbing quiet-
ly.
"You better be careful, Hank,"
Hammond said cautiously.
"it (snick triln" Laredo said quiet-
ly,
"Vh-lmili," The sheriff' rolted a
:cigarette and lighted it, then looked
at Rosy', "Well?"
"Now go."
The sheriff walked over to Rosy's
Sidle and stood looking down , at
Pearsthe There was a faint smell pf
gunpowder on his clothes. ' •
"Better come along, Pearson," he
growled.
, "One's enough, Henk," Hammond
put in curtly.
"It, might be for you, but it ain't
for me. I got electedon an oath that
I'd do cmy best to prevent clime.
if you think I'm goin' to let him go
and have this tot.go through all over
again, you better take a longer
guess."
"How are you goin' to coVer It up?"
"Crowell's over at Pearson's place
now, lyin' on the floor with a gun in.
his hand," the sheriff said brutually.
'Pearson can be across; the room
with a gun an his hand when I corae
in with my deputy in the onornin'
after the bank ,asts me to find him.
Just a plain case of two men ehootin'
each other."
He tamed to face Pearson, but
the banker nod crumbled.
"Oh, God, get him away!"' Pear-
son moaned' through his hands. .He
crawled down the bed against the
wall, where he Imitated like a Small
boy fearing punishtpent. "I did it!
I did it! Get him away!"
The sheriff made his ,way out of
the room.
"I reckon it begins with the train
hold-up, don't it, Pearson?" Dave ask-
ed.
Pearson nodded. "How did you
know that?"
"That nanny by the name of Chinch
aut nt Sayres' place," Dave said.
Quinn frowned, then turned to
Pearson. "The money in the bag-
gage car was pain' to your bank,
was it?"
Pearson- nodded. "Crowell gave
Sayres bhe order to stick up the
train. Part of the money would be
given to Sayres, and the rest turned
over to me. You see that money
was insured. I would get that same
amount back from the insurance
companY-"
"And about three-quarters of what
was stolen back from Sayres through
Crowell, is that, it?" Quinn said.
"That's it," Pearson said.
The porch doer opened and Cro-
well stepped into the room, prodded
by the sheriff's gun,
Pearson's, jaw slacked and he
stared at Oro:well.
Rosy grinned at Pearson.
Crowell walked to his seat by
Pearson, glaring at the sheriff.
"Want to go on?" Rosy s -aid to
Pearson.
The banker shook his head. •
Rosy grinned. "It's. a little too late
to stop, now, I reckon. You've con-
fessed to robbin' a train and falsifyin'
reports to the insurance company.
That ought to be worth about twenty
year's apiece in the pen."
, Still Pearson said nothing.
"Maybe it's that you don't want to
mix Crowell in this? Is that it?"
Rosy asked. He laughed softly. "I
reckon you Will, though, Pearson.
To .begin with, youcouldn't stand to -
see Crowell tUrned loose, freed,
while you were servin' a lifo term
in the pen, could you? ,He did all
the dirty work, was "responsible for
all the crimes and the goes free. It
isn't fair, is it?"
"Maybe he'll send you some tobac-
co around Christmas time," Rosy
taunted.
"He will not!" Pearson suddenly
s a "He'll go with me!"
Onexell's fist drove into Pearson's
face and Rosy leaped on the two
figures. Crowell struggled as if in-
sane, clawing Pearson's face in a
maniacal rage, kicking, biting and
cursing impotently. Laredo stepped
in to help Rosy and after a mild
clubbing with gun barrels, Crowell
gave up.
Rosy and Laredo sat down again.
'Let's' have it, one of you, Rosy
said, :
Both men began to babble at once.
Pearson worked his way to the wall crying . . "get him away!"
"Yeah, I will," the sheriff grunted.
"Coane on," be said, f6 Crowell.
' No 'one spoke as they heard the
front door shut. Rosy watched Pear-
son'faee. The banker sagged.
Two muffled shtots frotra some dis-
tance came to them, and they looked
at each other.
"Mr. Pearson," Dorsey broke I/1
from Haminetere side, "if you know
anything tell itt! It's -it's awful!"
"For God's sake, yes, Everett!"
Hanankind broke In gruffly.
Pearson hung hio head..
The outer dodr Opened and heavy
footsteps trailed through the house.
The poach door evened to let the
Sheriff in again.
to the meth More, 181 the quartz. So
I tried to loan you enough money se
that' the • control of the mine would
be in my handle. It ciedu'e. work."
"end thereee geld there now?"
Hautmemd asked incredutpusly.
t. "Enough to make you rich," Pear -
Man saidHe addressed, Rosy again.
"Then-'3got hokl of Winters. He
tried_ to forge a cheque once and I
caught Urn"
Rosy looked at Mary. Her ,eyes
were moist but her chicit was up.
"Was that before he was mended?"
he asked.
"x ere"
"Why vidn't you prosecute :him?"
4 Can alwe.ya use men :that have
brains but no courage," Pearson
seite "I was repaid., all right. le
little while after he had been mar-
ried, he came to me with the story.
of gold on the Turner place. He
wanted me to buy the place from
his wife and Turner, and then we'd
work it together. That was when I
conceive& my plan. I wanted a man
with brains, with courage, with re-
sourcefulnese-and who was poor.
Crowell fitted that order. He was
Gut to get rich, and when I found
him in. Walpais, I knew my scheme
would work. Crowell was a gambler
-and a poor one."
"A fool, you mean," Crowell said.
"So I was careful to work it all
put," Pearson said. "I knew that
Sayres was a blackguard, a.nd that
he could be bought. So I put Cro-
well up as my front, for 1 was to re-
main unknow -n. Crowell tried to .bey
the D Bar T from Mrs. Winters. She
emildn't sell. He tried to buy the
Draw Three. Hammond wouldn't
sell, I knew of the quarrel 'over the
lake, and that fitten, into 'my scflieme
to perfection. I thought if the lake
was blown out, both the ranch and
the mine would be 'ruined, and that
Turner and Hammond would both
sell to Crowell. 'Winters ' was to
persuade Mrs. Winters."'
"And he was cheating you all the
time," Quinn put in 'quietly. "He
ems mining that gold on the sly and
selling it, and gambling the money
away." He told them of his dis-
covery of the room Winters kept in
the barber shop and the source of
his Money. "That's why I went to
see you this afternoon, Pearson.
And" -be smiled slightly -"that's
what's goat' to get you hung."
"Why?" Rosy cut in.
"Because Pearson told Winters I
was snooping around and Winters de-
cided to kill me before I founn. out
too much and told Pearson." He told
them of the note, and the killing in
the hotel roord. The sheriff listened
intently, nodding his satisfaction.
"And when I"caught this jasper that
was with Winters down in the alley,"
Quinn finished, we had it out. I
downed -him. Then I:knew- Winters
c o u RI have learned about me from
only two people -Sam, the barber:.:
ine, Pearson. And Sam was too
sea red to talk. So I headed for
Pearson's."
Ilcsy looked at him for a long
monier.t, then turned to Pearson.
"Go on."
"I'll go en," Crowell rapped out,
sneeeing at Pearson. "Oet me tell
about this Eastern genius. The lake
ssas ready to blow when Dave got
Isere. When Pearson heard about
ndreer coming horde, he lost his
rcrve. He hired Preernan to bush
. -
whack Dave and make it look like
Hammond did it. Then he hrad
Sayres blow the lake . out. When
Hammond wouldn't sell, even then,
:le ordered Dorsey'Hammond k i do a p-
p d.. Hammond would have to ram
som her, and of c,ourse, Pearson's
money that I would give Hammond
for the mtne would go to Sayres and
hack to me and then to Pearson
again." Crowell sneered, and smiled
evilly at Pearson. He even ordered
the D Bar T spread burned, so Mrs,.
Winters would be frightened into
selling her than the place."
"And I was to be murdered"
Dave put in quietly. "Murdered by
those whippoorwills of Sayres' after
they tortured me into signing away
my half."
"C'mon,"' the sheriff said stolidly
to the two of them. "Put out your
hands." Ile leaned over hts fat belly
to handcuff tih,em together.
With the witness of a striking
snake, Crowell whipped one of Lare-
do's gilns out of the sheriff's belt and
pointed it at the sheriff. Crowell
backed away a few feet across the
bed, his gun nosing steadily at his
captors.
He was laughine quietly, a little
insanely-, in the still room.
"You'll never make I'. Crowell,"
Rosy 8aid softly. only get
one of us before we cut down on
yen."
"Pearson, let% hear you first. No.
Wait." liosy's eyes. sought Dave,
and be leaned over to him. "What
about it?" he asked softeiy, motion -
lag to Mary.
, "Is it about Ted?" Mary asked
calmly.
Dave noddech
"I'd rather hear it now," Mary
said.
• Pearson &new a long breath and
began "It starts when I offered to
buy the Draw Three, Bucks," he
said to Hammond "You remember
when 1 hod the. (inert Come look at
It? 14e told me ahere was gold there,
lots of it, but, that you were inisaing
most' of it. • He said it would be over
(Continued Next Week)
When Is A Jew
Not A Jew ?
(Ornafinneed, fOnnin:Natitaal llietpaY
• I3efore Me111eaeoeatisintion; by ' the
white man; the energetic beaver wed
Americe's foremost conservation ag-
ent. His. millionof darns from _coast
to coast ;stored tbe tango% prevent-
ed floods and. erosien-and, subse-
quent drought. Today are beaver is
coming lack; -the Depturtm.ent of the
Interiorand manly state agencies are
increasingly using thin, industrilous
animal engineer in their land recla-
mation programs.
Last year a number of ,waterceurs-
es in Idaho were stocked With beav-
er. Already the animas have con-
structed dams that will increase the
water facilities of the entire region.
A field report from the area states:
"One planting of beaver has con-
structed 17 dame on a small stream
which a few years ago ran barely
enougb water for a horse to drink.
The construction work made a con-
tinuous water supply, with poodle:deep
enough to form meadows along the
formerly eroded', stream. These ponds
are also making excellent duck and
trout breeding grounds. In a few
year's the beavers will have rebuilt a
water reserere that once was complete-
ly destroyed."
HOW the beaver ean restore -the
land has been strikingly shown on
the Palisades Interstate Park at Bear
Mountain,. 40 miles north of New
York City. In 1920, three pairs ,of
beavers were released there. By nat-
ural increase, they have now formed
more than 60 colonies, spread over
a 30 -mile radius. Each pair annually
raise from three to, five young. Kit-
tens ,appear in late April and when a
year old they wander off to find
mates in other colonies, build new
ponds and lodges. Thus in 18 years
it is :esbirnated that mere than 2,000
nave sprung from the original three
pairs; rmany hlave been shipped to
other states to carry on woodland re-
habilitation.
One pair in the Park were carefully
watched. Jeurneying down a mien
brook, they selected a rocky gorge
as a homesite. With sod, poplar
bra,nohes, and small stones, the beav-
er dammed the stream. As the dam
was enlarged, the pond deepened, the
water soon covering several acres.
Near the center of the pond a mound
of sticks, the beaver lodge, made its
appearance.
The beaver bona may be likened
to a castle with a moat. Sinc-e they
ane 'unable to breathe under water,
or to hold theirbreath for more than
eleven minutes, the living rooms of
their lodge must ha above water and
ventilated. Underwater entrances
lead upward through the stick -and -
mod walls to the inside landing plat-
form. When winter came, with eight
inches of ice, the beaver were well
established in a world of their 'own.
The principal food of beaver is
bark. preferably alder, aspen and pop-
lar. Thus not a thing is wasted, for
they consume the outward covering of
their own building' material. in addi-
tion, they eat lily bulbs, grasses:
roots and leayes; being strict vege-
tarians, they do not eat fist, fowl or
i nee c ts.
Since beaver do r.•)' hibernrate, it
is necessary far them ..1 northern lat-
itudes to store their lead, beneath the
ice. Coesequently, in the fall, many
aermany now hes a Bureau of Race
Research empowered to grant the
title and privileges of "Honorary Ary-
an" to those Tron-ArYan experts Mar-
shal Goring neede in his complicated
plan of industrial selteufficiency. The
candidate appears before a board that
notes length of nose, breadth of face,
quality, of hair, shape of bands. He is
questioned on his philonophy, love of
seater% attitude toward women, "spir-
it of struggle," and other matters sup-
posed to distinguish the Nordic from
lesser categories of being. Unless
patently "non -Aryan," he is Pronounc-
ed "pure Aryan in character and
body" rand becomes a. VolitsgenoErse--
citizen of the first rank. Ile le not
peInnitted to marry an Alrean, how-
ever, an.d his children remain non -
The Bursae rendere 7iXtreeteletiary
ilea:Mott. VViten 14 vas whispered a -
be, that pkt. Goebbels 'hinnielf was a
srnall trees are felled nand submerg-
ed near the lodge entrance. The :hun-
gry animal simply swims to his food
pile, quickly chews off a branch, and
carries it into the house for a meal.
Rarely are fine trees killed by beav-
er, although I have seen 1.8 -inch trees
cut demi.
For five years the Bear Mountain
beaver labored in the little valley, as
others, were doing elsewhere in the
Jew, the Bureau judged hira,ne post
dark enedl wizened German type.' No-
body had ever heard of that ethnolo-
gieal species before, but it came from
Great Authority and was therefore
acceptable to the German mind. When
Le,ni Riefenstahl, one of Hitler's few
feminine friends, was denounced for
her Jewish grandmother, the Bureau
decided she was "a perfect German
type."
In all, the Bureau has, delt with
some thousand cases. But its work
is only for the very select -the inclis-
pensables,
Jack Horner's Plum
(Edna S. Sollars in Coronet)
'Little Jack Horner gat in a corner
Eating his Christmas pis;
He stuck in his thumb
And pulled out a plum,
And said, "What...a. good boy am I."
park. Thelli e foo.r.4
beeaVe 04141140- Th he'*. „Tar
in search of greener pantinn-lF. •
Though The dena was ;mot ap#
it neon coulmenced, 0 disintegrate,
dePidved of '.the eVextvigliant heavers
cane. Receding Watema•revealed
black soil stored UPOIn tbe Pend bnife.
tons. 'While the slam had perMitted
steady flow of water, even in dry sea-
sons, it had neveotheleate Withheld top
soil and humus ;which otherwise
Would hand been 'washed downstream
during the flood pentode.
Later that same simmer,' as the
stream resumed its former coarse,
small plants covered! the Moist pond
bed. Deer came to feed in the new
meadow. Each year the green tatigle
grew higher, binding the soil against
spring freshets, Eventually oak and
beech will cover • Ole re-created
ground.
Fishermen sometimes gomplainithat
'beaver ponds spoil their sport. As a
matter of fact, they, serve as breed
ing places not only for fish but for
fish food.
Of course there are instances where
beaver become nuisances, flooding
roads, destroying fruit trees, or other-
wise interfering with man's proper-
ty. But it is a simple matter to cap-
ture beaver alive in large wire -mesh
traps and transport them to streams'
where their Work will be valuable.
The beaver's chief tools are his
four curved front teeth and his clever
forepaws. These front teeth are some
two and one-half inches long and
theircutting edge is replaced as wear
occurs, an ideal arrangement for an
animal that will bite •through: a four -
inch tree in. 20 minutes, His flat,
paddle -shaped tail serves as a prop
when its owner is cutting down trees,
as a rudder when swimming, arud as
a warning device when danger threat-
ens -the pistbnlike report of the tail,
brought down smartly upon the wa-
ter, may be ,hiseed for half a mile in
the still woodland.
The belief that the 'beaver uses hie
tail to plaster mud, or to ferry ma-
terial acrose a pkitud, is false. Wrong,
too, is the belief that beaver can
cause a tree to fall in a, given direc-
tion). Beaver have been killed by
trees they have felled, so that if they
determine the direction of fall they
must have committed suicide.
Truth about the beaver is remark-
able enough to need no embroidering.
Thanks to the accessibility of Bear
Mountain Park, nuadeede of thou-
sands of campers and motorists leave
observed the fascinating life' of this
industrious animal. A Beaver Mus-
eum, with live animals, bee been es-
tablished in the park. Many camp-
ers have spent evening hours beside
a beaver dem. Oa one occasion a
patrolman gave an impromptu lecture
to motorists while a particularly
tonne beaver pulled branches of a
tree across the road, down .a bank,
and into the water.
No man wilt ever know how many
fertile fields were created by beaver
in eras gone by. It is indeed heart-
ening that the beaver is to have his
place in the sun onee more, not alone
to build small empires for hims,elf,
a
900'10E01P
R0044 oplin:
A
VIIII04***01-
, ?ADA A OD .1.11rAD1
PROM DEPOT ow WHIM
,_l•• i:.
11.
LONDON and *INGO*, .•°-
North •
Exeter 14)34
Reagan • ' 1040
Kippen .. . .. 10.54 •
Brumfield 114/0
Clinton, 11.0
Loedesboro . .. • . • 1206
12.16
Belgrave 12/7
Winghaipa .1245
South
Winghara
Belgra.ve
Blyth • .. ...
Landesboro
Clinker
Brucefield
Kippen
.Hensall .
Exeter
P.M.
1.50
fi..06
2.17
2.26
3.08
3.28
3.38
3.45
3.58
C.N.R. TIME TABLE
East
A.M,, P.M.
Goderich 6.35 2.30
Holtmesville . . 6.50
Clinton 6.58
Seaforth 7.11
St. Columban 7.17
Dublin •••• 7.21
Mitchell 7.30
West
Mitchell 11.06
Dublin 11.14
Seaferth 11.30
Clinton 11.45
Godesich 12.05
• 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
P.M.
Goderich 4.20
Menset 4.24
McGaw 4.33
Auburn 4.42
Myth 4.52
Walton 5.05
McNaught 5.15
Toronto 9.00
West
M.
Toronto 8.30 -
McNaught 12.03
Wlalton 12.13
Blyth 12.23
12.32
12.40
12.46
12.55
Auburn
MeGaw
but literally„to knit OW'S more close- Menaset
I y together. Goderich
cteSNAPSI-10T CUIL
• SCHOOL -TIME PICTURES
•
Composed during the reign. of Hen-
ry VIII of England, this favorite nur
seta rhyme was originally a stinging
political lampoon,
Henry had claimed for himself the
wealth of the: 14.0157 Catholic 011,11 rob.
On pain of confiscation and dire pun-
lehment the rich monastic properties
were ordered into the private coffers
of the king. The Archbishop of Glast-
onbury bowed to the inevita.ble, and
deeds to 12 magnificent estates Were
sorrowfully placed within a great pie
-One being a popular method of pre-
senting gifts, John Horner was com-
missioned to place this fabulous bid
of pastry in Henry's hands.
When the emissary retu.rnen from
court, ' he had with him the deed to
Mells Park; 'Somersetshire, whose an-
cient stone buildings had been the
favorite retreat of the Archbishop.
The people refused the explanation
that Hemel- had bought the property
from the king. They believed that
during the long trek to London, Hor-
ner's cupidity had been; tested, beyond
its strength, and that the trusted gem-
tleman had torn a hole' in the °pies -
crust and carefully removed the deed
to lidells Park, Which thus became
the historic, "PM*" a tate Jltettf. And
So the old rhynie Was written, slid
sung lustily in derision of the theft,
An easy, humorous school -time "story" snapshot, that could be made with
any camera.
VACATION is over, and a new
v school year has begun. The
hectic rush and bustle at breakfast,
the patter of small feet down long
school halls as class bells ring, and
much poring over texts and note-
books iihder the living -room lamp at
night. A new season -and a new
field for the camera.
How many of us have good collec-
tions of sohool-day Snapshots -pic-
tures of our own school days, or our
children's? Most albums reveal.too
few, and the chance to make others
will not return. Look at Johnny as
he tightens the strap about his
books, and goes whistling down the
walk to another day of classes. If
he's In the fourth grade now, you'll
never be able to take another pic-
ture of him at the third-grade stage.
Time moves on, end the 'natures 'we
lose today are lost forever. -
Do you have a good "off to soltool
snap ef the Children, showing thentJ
as Rio- turn at the gate 40 WaTe
goodbye/ Probably. not -Vet it
Would be so easy,' to lilt* Mit the
troneraitaY anon* Mtingth
tat& a gniek ittiotshOtleaki WOO
always treasure. Again, have you
any snapshots around the school
grounds -at the tennis court, the
outdoor drinking fountain, the
swings and seesaws, and other
places where children gather? Pic-
ture your children there, and later
on your snapshots will help them re-
call the good times they and their
young friends heti at school. '
When the children are old enough,
they should have cameras of their
own. A good box type camera will
serve _their needs admirably, and it
Is hard to imagine a better gift. The
growing boy or girl will delight in
picturing friends, school, activities,
school scenes - and inexpensive
cameras see so simple now that any
child can operate theta.
At hOine at night, "study", tures are are Worth while, and you e'en
Make them with. itteeatnera. All yen
need is a etinpbelifittexpendire
hoto telt Of 'that 14111
sensitive
•net try to iteep tittnt4ir
schoolliyes*bit plOttleas/onte
:th:eire dellool-tinfeainanshotti
e