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The Brussels Post, 1928-12-19, Page 7r •II 4 NOM Crea G1 (.fl 115 oraea.M,wv,,,.:wm ,ar„+.,.u.,w�+uw.n,m....®uneu,...yr;, rading Is' I"I' l E R CREAM h"l'l'ER BU'T'TER l '1'•I'1E'R PRICES Wo ane now p -pared to Grade your Cream honest -1i, getter it twice a w i, and deliver at our Creamery each d'.y we lift he We gather with covered truck to keep sun ort iL. We pay e premium of 1 cent per lb. butter fat fair Spec ale over that of No, 1 grade, and 3 cents per he. btu - ter -fur fur No 1 grade over that of No, Z grade„ The basic principle of the improvement in the quaitty of Ontario butter is the /elimination of second and off grade cream, This may he accomplished by paying the produ.te( of good u'uin1 n better price per pound of butter -fat tarn is paid to the producers of poor cream. We solicit your patronage. and co --operation for better market. fnfffla,;44,We will loan you a can. See our Agent; T. C. McCALL, or Phone 2310, Brussels. The Stafcrth Creamery A Man ami His Mate ▪ Ey • J. ALLEN DUNN Illustrations by Irwin My..rs Copyright Bc,',S$ hlal•r:a co, Tanker •^1n1,1 111tmly nuconscio.t., td thr girl's 1'0%11611o, '•(•orcin' ku fie with the d,•tit.:' he. sold. "\\'e lh-i:1tl 'eta. You 00' 111r to- gether. 11y w,euut:" l'('ggy Kinins had loaned hark, her PyP$ blazing, Lund 1.111111' for Iter, his fnee Rt w•IIiI the dealt'. 111' her, air^t5 ont:prearl, 1un11.s ',pea. lteforP Ilton„y could fling himself hetw'ren them, the girl hail snatlht'd the little pistol that Lund had set on the tt;ble and tired She Seemed to Have Missed, Though Lund Halted, His Mouth Agape, Astounded. point-blank. She seamed to have missed, though Lund hilted, his mouth agape, astounded. "You big holly!” said Raney. Now that the time had come he found that he was ant afraid 1r end of hie .ism, of Ids strength. "Play fah', do yon? Then show It! You asked me mice welly I didn't mute love to her, I told you, But you, you foul-Ininticd bully! All you think of Is your blg body, to take what It wants, "Peggy. Will you marry me? I can protect you from this hulking brute, If It's to be a showdown between you Letterheads Envelopes Billheads And all kinds of Business Stationery printed at Tho Post Publishing House. We will do a job that will do credit to your business. Look over your stock of Office Stationery and 1f it requires replenishing call us by telephone 81. The Post Publishing House I tad ine," he Iln,cd 01 1,011 1. .:... ; 'l:' is If stupefied, "let It vn1111. •, "t'ggy?o 'Che girl, tears en her emee,; that were burn from the , V 0 , i iiilf401. ti fit 'lad Shaken her, swung on 111111, s said. "You?" h, u. i and Rainey wilted miler the scorn to her verse. "Marry toll?" She began n' lantgh hysterically, "rying to check herself. "1 didn't menu you onny 111111 11," Said 1,1114(1 slowly, addressing Peggy. "Why, f wouldn't hnrin you. gni. You're my woolen. Yen e11n1e to ttl'. I w•114 jest lest 8nrhv' Incept ell' my betrbn's. Why," he turned to Rainey, Ills vulva t 1ow•n•pltrhing to a c'row•l nt' angry (un- onptt, "yon p('u-shuven' whippersnnp- eov. 1 e'ud bt'oo' your In ha'f with 11110 I hetet. Yon ain't her breed. But" - 1 his voice ehtut:.r'i again-."ifagatn-."if it's a +lura•-,len•n, fill rl slue I"If T was to fiuht you, over her, I'd �I:ill •'.n, iiyy• thlnl: T •Toni respect a • ;;,end tial? 1''vo 11,1.,'; ('10111 kunw how to ince n gal r!trllt? She' nlj' mate. \nt yours. 1:!11 i!'a up to yot, Peggy (1'nntl4. 1 1'tn'1 oleate to insult you, .\n' If •von watt Hint—why it's up ito you to choose between the two of nae" Klee went by Rainey na if he hal not existed, straiwht Into ',nail's arms, her face radiant, upturned. "1t'e yol t lore, .11111 Loud,"she said. "A man. My Hien." As her 11.1115 event round his neck slit W1\1'1111100 cry. "T wounder yeti:" slii' sold, and the tender concern of her strut.]: Ttnluey to the qulek. "Quiet:, let 015 CPP," "'Wounded, 11-111" laughed T.nnd. "I('yc think that popgun of ym'P5 t"ud strep me? 'i'11e pellet's snntiwherPs in } my shoulder, Let it little. lly Ra,h yn're my woman, after all. T.und's I T,uclt 1" Itnhu'y went np nn leek with that ringing in his ears. TTIII hnnllllatinn wore off swiftly no he (tossed beets tow•0t'd the home'. Ry the Ihne he r'i•o•'sed Ilio Itt'olnenh,ry ht' even felt 11'110141 fit tlu' 0111('onn'. TTP was not in love w'Itit her. Tie bad known that wl1'r1 be below',' err, TTP had not even told her so. TIN: ihh•alt•y hnd spolcen— nn1 his 11141 rt. :\n,l itis thoughts att'nyed hook to fait Irma, Th( ether girl, Din tut though she wins, w'nuhl never. 111 almost one breath, have shot mid 1c1 'oil the Inns si••' L."err, A lin••'r- inc vision of Peggy Simms' !manly ns she had gone to T.lmtl rellahnal and fn110d, "T.nnd's right," he told himself. "She's not of my brec,l." CFIAPTER Lttrid's Lucie Lund tzlaneed nt the gt'yse• of spray whe'e the shell from the pursuing gun- boat hnd fallen short, and then at the hank of mist ahead. They were hl Ihn 0111110.8 of Bering 51101 t, between the Cupp of Charles nod Printo 1'Tdvrnrd'a point, the gold nhnm•d, n 0111 wind in their snits, m;141n;; eleven knots to the minium I's 11fteen , 'rhe greet eurinhi of fog wee n 1)1110 nhrnrl, The Inst shell lied fallen two hnnlh'Pd yards sh,ri. live minutes more world Fettle It. Theisen hnd the wheel. Tema stood by. Ilio lnffrnl7, lits arm oboe Peggy Seems, Tie shook n fist at ihr gunboat, vomiting hlntk snide front her funnel, foam about her bows. i "\FP'I1 hent 'Pm yet," he oiled. The next shell, with more elevation, whined pnreltel with them, sped ahead, nnri sninshed Into lite wows, "TTnld yore onmrst, Thtnecn! No time to zigzltg. not to c'lamee 11, D—n 1t, they knew hew to shoot 1" A. missile brut gone Plump 1111.0111,11 mein hurl fnresnIIs, lenvele round h dt a fa trawl: tine .rearm. Anether fnh'ly struck the mein teeniest, tiler some si11nte's calm. rattling Hoorn, while thr rt'nmmtts of the top.smtl flapped meld writhing ends of halyard and sheet. 'rimy entered the beginning of the fete review winos of it rt'nthed not, tveling over the hnwsprhnt end head- salts, en elnplul; the for5mnst, awalov' Mg the schooner ne A hurtling shell ernthcd Into the sten. The nest in- stunt the 111101 had sheltered them. teed -released the glee and ;lumped to the wheel. "Note then," he shouted, "we'll fool 'Pen I" 1(8 gripped the spokes, and the men ran to the sheets at command while the TCarliik shot oft at right angles to her previous coarse, THE BRUSSELS POST e' a'•'•9d'+'F4•t'�•'FA•t'4:4Yd'e✓rN,F4i•t'o'F >7 n • i▪ FEAT v 11 � 'r e � m WANTED ,E * o: 'r la a I ?relitst ITI"lrki.t i,l1,:t, 4 u-ti(i for your 1,1•.,thcrs ,1 1• Vol 0 48' 8' 4te1'cb.sso•444,4 t<4 •44.4 tsPS•;,sr.++„.HW :••a t,y 5l tela, Itt I 'MC , a.:.l '1 t1'.1' nlr.l I't w •I HIL -e rel t t �,nl Iqi rv.•n• I: ' c, • t}:r"n'_h . ,si;P 1I:,,in i;.• iJ:wee, ltdL•.. lila• 11 ghost „n the new ?Hell fn the cosi., Ttalney,.te•n,e freer the e:eldewann ref ti's Shell, luutprd I'.T,v fit 111•+1 nn'l porno lin'l: "Sieh11th. "11 1(05 11 (hal, Lund!" he shouted. 'Or fees they dirhi'I wvtur to blow 110 1111 nu a,llnnt of the gold. Tint they've wnr(rhed the 1011111. The fog's pooling In through the hole they leant, Tama - (la's ;:alley's gone, It's raked the '(hmer!" "Su long's it's nhnve the water line, to h—il with it 1 We'il make out. Listen to the fools. They've gone in after ns, straight 011." The booming of the gunboat's for- ward battery sounded aft of them, dulled by the fog—growing fainter, "Lund's Luck! We'll' dodged 'Pen 11f "They'll be waiting for us at the passes," said Rainey, "They've got the speed on us," "Let 'em wart. To blazes with the Aleutians! heady again there for a tack! Soni -east now. We'll work through this 1111 we gil to the wind. ag'ln. Tt's all blue water to the Seward peninsula. We're hotuul for Nome." "For Nome?" asked Peggy Simms. "Nome, Peggy! An Anlerlean port. The nearest harbor. An' the nearest preacher 1" (TINE END) QUJTS RAILWAY BOARD Hon, Frank Oliver, who was 751 the other week, has ceased to be a manlier of the Board of Rtlilway Comm:Sslou, r5 of ('amid. As one of the pioneer settlers of the Ed- monton tenon, an newspaper pub- ., Usher, as Minister of the Interior in Laurier Administration and latterly as a member of the Railway Board, ;Mr. Oliver has become widely known throughout the Dominion. 9 I Germany's 100 air lines are carry- 'ing 20,000 passengers a month. Forty thousand tons of limestone were blown up in a single blast at a Llysfaon, Wales, quarry, recently. Mosquitoes are more apt to bite people with .fair skins than those of dark complexion, I Pour hours' hard thinking ex- hausts the tissues as ouch as ten hours of manual labor, declares a . European scientist. 'te 114 t. n`e 14 it t '1'4 11;4 r4 1•(4,4 14,4 r4,( Iwo rat ta'4 P'14 raj l0( rl 104 ( 4;�fese eteD.:6ie" wO•/ate 1.4:10:01+ O ,Pe ed s e„m a_ ars :NerelKeI Kele:A•a� s s,; a e' A -N RUDE LY printed in pencil on a piece of dirty brown paper, and stuck there with a sailor's rusty knife, was this message. And well they knew what it meant. The girl they had sought for days and believed to be lost —now they knew her to be worse than lost. Calypso, with her pure, olive skin and black, silken hair—Calypso, the beautiful Spanish girl Ivllo had masked as a boy and begged to be allowed to go with the rest on their perilous journey— S.o1TId he give up the treasure that he and his party—some of whom had paid the su- prcn e price --had fought and repeatedly ricked their lives for; should he give up this wealth of gold and jewels for the girl he adored, or trust to mercy of his enemies for her safety f This is the situation, created by Richard Le Galliellne--in his inimitable way of writing -'—in PieCtM Do you enjoy a story that at times is perplex. ; ing, sometimes uncanny and at all times exciting --just full of adventure? Then read Our New Serial 111 Cullinan Diamond IV.lystei-y Revived I 011ier Half of lingo Gem Sought 23 Years, Never Found Leona, -The Ntat't npuni,t:r t'f t,ulunt'lit y-Aetalay by („•,u r. with Queen Metro by ].i.; .'', d,• ",,;ring flu. Cutlirtatt diamond, t'.• lartel 1 the vet t1 and1. t': to 1„• win tit up to 'i a,000,nh9, ha: vi v. it tle !t 1 H 1 utl neer whett lwegas,nl lm• nt heti lutif' 14. t!L• ,r1, tt .Kine, d:.tintu:l wu clue: freot the e:ttlt at the Tresis leiura ret Cuilin:,a, ,;molt Ari,o, i 1!,0:,. It wa..= toun,i :hat on,; , v+u.: :/u flat a:“d .-nlootit ?teat. it 0.: I cnu:drL'n:d ts, 1„• only punt of it mtleit dinmunrl. Tin.• efflOin,e.i:; ha'. brother, hoe-, t•' r, Ices: ttev,•r found, although 1 1411 diattnu miner.;, I'iusu, u r pe 11,;,t,ta,nl ihlt•ver have bleu s,•areh::t for it for 28 year:<, Its wh,•r+•abont:, and even its existence is one of the world's. mysteries. Seidl Africa abounds with strange stories of the missing Half of the Cullianan diamond. One version is that it was found by a native work- er in the diamond mines who feared to dispose of it because of the strict law governing the illicit selling of stones. A notorions criminal once almost hall his hands on it, but he attempted to trick that native who was prepared to sell it to him, and the native fled with the diamond. Another story hat it that the dia- mond is still in the possession of native tribesmen in the Zoupansberg district, The Cullianan diamond originally weighed 3,025 ?:i, karats. It was purchased by the Transval govern- ment and presented to King Edward. It was taken to Amsterdam and divided into nine large stones and several smaller ones. The two largest ones are 5-0 1-2 karats and 309 3-11 karats making them the largest diamonds in existence. di APPOINTED Lord Londonderry who has been named first commissioner of works m Great Britain. lI .LOOK AT YOUR LABEL \ Fri 1lit'i,AY, Irl^il', 19111, 1128, ASSUMES OFFICE Preseleot W. S. Fox, Ph.D., D.L.i*t of tt 1'livcr•,;;tv of Wieter'n Olttar- 10. :ti , v. u., formally instilled ;AS presieloot Of the: University. Ile pre- id,1.t. the exercierts marking the jetties. of the institution, THF. MAN WHO DOES ITIS BEST We c•anuot alt ba geniues, or conquer wealth or fame, We 1an001 all do wondrous things, to make ourselves a name, We cannot all- feel confident of meeting every test, But when we have our work to do, we all can do our best. Our best may not be wonderful, • judged by a standard high, But we can all do something well, if we will only try. Arid if we try our level best per- forming every task With all our might, why, that is all that anyone can ask. We cannot all be famous—if we were 'twould cheapen fame, We cannot all be rich enough to give ourselves a name, We cannot all expect to be disting- ushcd from the rest, But some reward is certain for the man who does his best. —Anon. -LOOK AT YOUR LABEL W. D. S. .1AM I ESON, MD; CM; LM -CC; Physician and Surgeon Office McKelvey Block, Brussels Successor to Dr. White Phone 45. T. T. M' RAE M. B., M. C. P., 4S, O. M. 0. H„ Village of Brnsaels. Phystolan, tinrgeon, Acoovohear Ornoe nt resid enoe, opposite 10 eiv ?lie Church William street. DR. WAFOOL,W Ronor graduate of the Ontario Votertnarn ollege Oev and night cella, U�ce opposlta Floor Milt, IGthe1, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, CONVEYANCER, NOTARY PUBLIC LECKiE BLOCK - BRUSSELS AUCTIONEERS THOMAS BROWN - Seaforth, Ontario Lit•"need auurtiont"'r for collatiep of Bison and Perth. Itmuediate ar- rtutg':tlu•nt„ for :into date's can be made by ceiling The fust, Brussels,. Charges Reasenable, Satisfaction G..a1 aateed or 1,0 charge, 16 A. JAMES TAYT t'IR Licensed Alleles, 01 fee t County of Baron, 8ales attrncktl to in al' p:Irts )f t11 ',flinty. S ttisfactions tie l..ntttcd or Orders left at The Ie t, mote) Ile attended to. f3clr;rrtve Past Office. PI ION 1•;8 Dru sols, 1,5-1 3 N....eh Buren, 15-625 KEMP BROS. Auctioneers Auction Sales of :11I kind.; accepted and conducted. Sate taction Guar- anteed and t, stns reasonable. Phone Listowel at 121, 38 or 18 at Our ex- pense. W. J. DOWD Auctioneer Orders left at this office or with Thos. Miller, Brussels, Phone 16-13 will ensure you best of services at right prices. Box 484 LISTOWEL Phone 246 D. M. SCOTT Licensed Auctioneer PRICES MODERATE For reference consult any person whose sale I Have officietd at. 61 Craig Street, LONDON C. C. RAMAGE, D.D.S., L.D.S. BRUSSELS, ONT. Graduate Royal College of Dental Surgeons and Honor Graduate Uni- versity of Toronto. Dentistry in sill its branches. Office Over Standard Bank, Phones—Office 200. Residence 65-14 Gotten House — — Wroxetar Every Thursday Afternoon WM. SPENCE Ethel, Ont. Conveyance, Commissioner and C. .1. Agent for The Imperial Life Assurance Co. et Canad,. and Ocean Accident Guarantee Corpora„ tion, Limited Accident Insurance, Automnbile In- surance, Plate Glass Insurance, eta, Phone 2225 Ethel, Ont JAMES M'FADZEAHi Agent Hawick Mutual fire Insurance Companl Also Hartford Windstorm and Tornado Insurance Money to Loan for The Industrial Mortgage & Savings Compao; on First-class Farm Mortgages Phone 42 Box 1 Turnberry Street. !immesh SUTHERLAND & S®li Ge.PrT,&,f",tit CA.irre9.1614) LIMITED 0.1.1114.211 hat \:.,,akes a To a 1rosperous rural population which demands a community centre where may be established business, educational, relig- ious attd entertainment facilities. Where these flourish at(' are active it is safe to surmise that the people of that section realize and appreciate the value to them of such a centre. What ;1 i ntai ns It ? The towns are largely maintained by the surrounding districts. But the organization, the direetion, and to a great lneueuro the ep-keep• of the 111 ti;utions in such towns are itt the hands of the business interests, together with those directly and hi - directly connected therewith. Without the active business and profesionai 111021 to supervise and govern rthese public institu- tione and undertakings no town could derive. ho is Mahrd Yi; Al acted ? Every citizen either in tit about a town should be concerned in seeing to it that they do their part in carrying on any good cause which may be promoted, either by financial or active support. Only in this way will any town prosper and develop as it should. 41 brachy is Required lr. promotion work your local paper takes the leading part, It is ever the champion of worthy causes and philanthrepio and patriotic undertakings. But to function properly; and fully carry out its natural prerogatives, it must in turn have the financial support of the community it serves, When needing advertising or printed matter always first think of The Post Publishing House