The Clinton News Record, 1930-05-08, Page 2Clinton
News -Record
CLINTON, ONTARIO
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'0 I2. HALL, M, R. CLARI{i
Proprietor. Odltor,
J . �. McT,V T :
gall eek
A g enef al Bah lting Business
tran;aeted. iStotes . Discounted.
Drafts Issued. `interest Allow-
' ed on D?posits. ovale Notes Pur-
chased.
-H. T. RANCE
Notary public, Conveyancer
Finarieinl, Real Estate•^and .Fire. In..
sui•tu:cc Agent Representing 14 F,ire
Insure nap Compsniee
Division ,curt Office. Clinton..
W.BRYDONE
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public. etc.
Office:
£LOAN BLOCK CLINTON
CHARLES B. HALE
Conveyancer, Notary Public, Com-
missioner, etc.
(Office over .9 E. Raney's Drug Store).
DR. J. C. GANDIER
Olilee Hours: —1.30 to 3.30 p.m., 6.30
to 8.00 p.m,. Sundays, 12.30 to 1,30 p.m.
Other hours by appointment Duly,
Offlee and Residence— Victoria St.
DR. FRED . G. THOMPSON
Office and Residence:
Ontario Street — Clinton, Ont,
One door west or Anglican Church.
Phone 172
' Eyes•Ex^mines and Glasses Fitted
DR. PERCIVAL HEARN
Office and Residence:
Huron Street -- Clinton, Ont.
Phone 69
(Fornieriy uccupled by the tato br.
C. W. Thompson).
Eyes Examined and Giases Fitted.
DR. H. A. MCINTYRE<
DENTIST
Office flours: 9 to 12 a.nt, and 1 to
5 p.m., except Tuesdays and 1Vednee.
days. Office Over Canadian Natlbnal
rl$pi•ess, Clinton; Out.
Phone 21
DR. F. A. AXON
DENTIST
Clinton, Ont.
Cl•aduate of 0.0.0.8. Chicago, and
R.C.D.S.. Toronto.
Crown and Plate Works a Specialty.
D. H: McdNNES
CHIROPRACTOR
Electro Therapist Masseur
Office: Huron St. MFew doors west of
Royal Dank).
Lours—Tues., Thurs, and Sat„ all day.
ether hours .by appointment. ftensall
lienfortitt0Eflee-o\Inn,�tWed, a"d S'rttluy
afternoons, mono 2o7.
CONSULTING ENGINEER
S. W, Archibald, B.A•Sc., . (Tor.),
O.L.S., Registered Professional En-
gineer and Land Surveyor, Associate
Member Engineering Institute of Can-
ada. Office, Seaforth, Ontario.
GEORGE ELLIOTT
Licensed• Auctioneer for the County
of Huron. •
'Correspondence promptly answered.
Immediate arrangements can he made
for Sales Date at The News -Record,
Clinton, or by calling Phone 203.
Charges Moderate and Satistactfon
Guaranteed. " '
E. B. R. HIGGINS
Clinton, Ont.
General fire and Life Insurance Agent
for Hartford Wiildetorm, Live Stock,
Automobile and Sielmess and Accidetat
]nsnrance,.lItiron and Brie and Cana-
da Trust Bonds. Appointments made
to meet -parties at 13R:colloid, Varna
and Bayfield, 'Phon'e 57.
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL
Fire Insurance Company
Head Office, Seaforth, Ont.
Vice-president, esC nnolly, Beechwood.
Direotor5: Tames Shouldlce, .\Vahan;
Wm. Rine T3ullett; Robt, Ferris, FIu1-
lett; dames Benneweis, Broadhagen;
John Pepper, BruCSHeltl;. A Br(adtopt,
Seaforth C.. 21': McCartney, Seaforth.
Agents W. T. Yeo, ILA. Ido, 3, Clinton;
Johnlvturray, Seaforth; Tames. Watt,
Myth;' Dd, I3lnbhley, Seaforth,
Secretary and Treasurer: ,D, L'.• Mc-
Gregor, Seaforth, -
Any money tobe pal0.7nay be :paid
to MoL•rish Clothing Co,, Clinton, or at
Calvin' Cutt'S ,Grocery, Goderich.
Parties desiring to effect Ineuranee;. or
transact other business will be promptly
att;nded to on application to ens. of the
above officers addressed to their respeo-
tive post'offoSs. Lessee inspected' by the
Lmees ptjc
I/ -gb.
MAPA
T
C (AGE NOW
Gs'EEN LE1�
LL OTHER LA
15c 2»oz, PCAGE 680 'i Sc
8S Usr!.CHANGED AT 70c A
ELS 'REDUCED Sc A LS;
E LI
Th f: se Prkk -5s
re Effective How Do fi,►:t Pay More
OWING TO THE ACTION OF THE
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GROCE - Y TIRA 1 E
AGAINST LOSS ON SALADA TEA BY
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YOF CA A 14-1HTE i
NSIMIAccammonam
Cu-
r rd_wdshbur�i Child
,"A better way—to kill him?" Brena only to be driven back to .the shade
after weary marches dragging
through the sand, hunting among the
rocks, crazed with thirst, gone mad,
cursing, blithering mad—his tongue
black -the end—perhaps a thought of
you—the cur!"
He looked up at Brena; he set his
jaw.
"I'r t sorry," he said. "But I can
see it so clearly.—the terrible retribu-
tion in this place of silence. His
screams echoing back' from '„he rocks,
his znrses rising into this thin pale
blue sky and the vultures swinging
overhead."
"Seven years ago!" she whispered.
"Yes, seven years. And four years
of torturing fear that was the pay
of the one who rode away."
"Compton Parmelee?"
She said it without any external
gasped.
"It is all there—here in the sand --
record," De Wolfe said. "A ghastly
record. Seven years have gone, but
in this deep fine dust never disturbed
by wind, there still remains the
story."
He paused; lit a cigarotto; went on.
'There around the entrance are the
narks of horses' hoof-prints—almost
lost—bu. still readable—three horses,
two saddled and one carrying the
packs. They carne in two horses
abreast, and the pack horse led behind.
Two men in the saddles. Night came
on. One man slept. The other crept
tt the animals—and rode away!"
"Rode away? Left Jim Hennepin
here?"
"Yes, beyond hope—no horse, no
Water!"
"How do you know?" sign of emotion.
"Because, Brans, when tit,, three "Yes," said Peter. "He had suc-
ceedei, in wiping out one blackmailer.
But another, more terrible, sprang up
—fear."
t will show you. It is in the sand— "Iie feared discovery?"
a record and a good guess." "Yes, and something else. He. could
He was silent and he broke his sil- never feel sure that 'Hennepin was
ence with a cry. dead. That was the curse upon him
"I can see him—Hennepin--awak- —the fear the murderer feels, twisting
ening, realizing, seeing far away the and alternating with the fear of a.
little galloping specks in the pale physical coward who ever hears those
moonlight with the treacherous man threats, those curses, those promises
upon the leader --a tiny bobbing figure. of vengeance coning across the moon -
I can hear the curses hurled after lit desert as he rode away that 'night."
them, And he—the one left—alone She shuddered.
under the moon, alone under the sun, "Yes," said Peter. "That was why
alone under the moon again—without Parmelee cletroyed the map. He had
probably ridden back to some other
settlement after shooting Hennepin's
horse in some gully and,he wanted to
wipe out all evidence. For ni enths
ht resisted the temptation—that urn -
ed and scorched inside -to see. you."
"To find out whether I had been told
anything about Hennepin's destina-
tion? And then when he wasn'tsure
—when there was that scrap of paper
not accounted for-! Peter, it is too
horrible; he proposed that strange
marriage in order to go away and take
me with him. He wa„ afraid I might
remember some word—give soine
clew."
"No," replied Peter. "It was that
of course. But that was not all. The
spark of real man that you saw in
him was there, Brena. Terror put it
out at last, but the real tragedy of
Parmelee was that he had that spark.'
He"waiteci for her to look up again;
she had been staring down . at the
yellow -gray dust.
"I sup' ose you can see," he went
on. "1 suppose you can see now what
was in his mind, Two pictures. One
was the picture of Jim Hennepin alive
—that great muscular athlete who
drank hard, the love of death oaths,
the degenerate temper, the sly smiting
0102 ways of carrying a vengeance through.
He saw him in His mi 3 a i 1
s i int—sec p i g
from the desert,: Brena—heaven knows
bow—but escaping by some desperate
effort, some miracle, some way that
Parmelee's brain could .not conceive,
but yet. couldn't be put out of. range
of possibility. He saw Hennepin
seeking into, Yes, hes saw it—a`pic-
ture-a thousand haunting pictures—
Hennepin with his malicious, desper-
ate, haunting eyes- and his terrible
=sales, He saw him smelling along
the trail for his quarry."
"At last: the imaginary Hennepin
became almost a reality," said Brena.
"Compton shot at hila once -at: a re-
fiection in a piece eVglass., Ile: never
knewwwhen •Jim might Come and 'kill."
'he saw the other picture, too.
horses went out from this place into
the desert thei. footprints are in
single file -one pian led the other two.
a drop—rushing out into the desert,
Life—like good golf—is made
up of :many little things each
one of which helps the score.
Better digestion—steadier
nerves—clearerbrain, are, all
factors that count and are
gained from the
use of Wrigley's.
After
every meal
cams
Makes pep
Keeps you awake
•
TIME .TABLE
Trains will arive at and depart from
Clinton' as follows:
Buffalo and ;Goderiob Div.
Going. Bast, depart 6.14 a.m.
„ u- a, 2,50 p.m.
Going West, ar, 11.50 a.m.
" " ar 6.08 dp. 6,43 p.m.
ar. 10,31 p.m,
• London, Huron & Bruce
Going South, ar. 7,40 dp. 7.40 :a.m.
" 0 4;08 p.m.
Gong•No rth, depart 6,42, p.m.
at', 11.40 de. 11.58 a.m.
Director who dives nearest the soerae,, - ISSUE No. l9—x•30
He saw the buzzards hovering over
what was left of Hennepin, he saw .l
whitened skeleton grinning up at the
sun -lit sky and at the stars, Brenn.
That's what he saw. And some day,
some one would somehow come there.
Perhaps at the very minute a pros-
pector, dirty and unshaved, or some
accursed archaeological explorer from
a university was in that very town
where they bad bought,the horses and
was telling of the skeleton and of
finding the rkeleton of the riderless
horse with the bit still held between
the white teeth. Ile might have that
bit in his pocket! Some one recognizes
it. Somehow the chain once started
never ends until—"
"There conies a hand upon the shoul-
der," said. Brena, as if in a dream,
•
"a loandng a voitimecefPrsayinyou,g;' 7f
"We have looked
,'Yes. There .wasn't one fear,"
Peter said, marking two in in the
'sand with his forefinger,' "There were:
two :fears, 'They 'fought each . other
and their battlegrouitd:wee I?firinalee's
soUl. it was trampled into a: wallow
of terror,,,, of questioning, of doubt, Do
you know, Brena, tha ,somehow there
creeps into me 'a. great pity fo•r' him?"
"If' he had been "able to put his fin-
ger upon some button that tvouki have
blown' him; to bits fie' woulrl have taken
that 'way," •'she sail. "But.he had an
,exaggerated instinct,. for 'self-preser-
vation. It threw him back Vern any
approach. to suicide"
Peter,.;getting up came to her and
put his hand upon her shoulder as if'
to give her strength. Sipe had spoken
with a voice too evenly measured to
deceive him as to the strain she felt.
Tt had; been a long 'pull for her, he
thought. The last steps, though they
might lead out into the sunlight of
:freedom, were upon rough -.ground
rough even for ,lean.
He was wondering 'how he could
save her froth : pain. He wanted . tor
have this sprgery. over, and to 'have
it over there was only one way.
"It .was inevitable that lie would
cpme*ere-in•the end, he said. "He
had to see. He,had covered his terrors
by a cowardly prdees,e of trying to
make you believe that some mystery'
that ,clung to yeti was the cause of
them. He began to fear disclosure.
He feared that he would'allow you to
know in, Sonne mrd moment. He was
coming to the end of his rope."
"Yes, the end of his rope"
"He 'had to mak. a the hideous pi1-
grintage,at last. How could he tell
you where he was ,going -,even the di-
rection? It might lead to the un-
covering of his movements. And then
when -at last he had made uphit mind
to come, he:felt almost gay—the very
promise of an answer to which of his
two fears he must devote himself gave
him a moment of something almost
like ,gayety. What perversionl"
Peter stopped and looked up at the
ugly symbol of Ituk=u1-can 'served en
the rocks.
"He procured a copy of Father
Carlos' map a second tine," he said.
"He had to have it to -find the way.
After four terrible years• he revisited
the Pueblo lelesealero, two hundred
miles from nowhere. It called him
back. He had to come." -
"He bought a high-powered ear,
Brenn," said Peter. "Anel, all alone
he came."
"And where is he now?" she cried
out at last, in sudden disclosure of
her pain. "Do you know? 'Where is
he now?"
She looked searchingly et Peter's
sun -bronzed face, where upon the sur-
face 'of youth lines of strength had
eben engraved by war, and lines of
'Needless pans like headaches
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EMEIMEMEZEISINBREETINEEZEREINEISSIII
Plan Now For This Summer's Good Times!
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Mil"' %' rite 10r a aata- 371 Bay Y.Street Toronto, Ont.
Gover Leal lis
made ,with
ROYAL YEAST _ • A . S
r��•'B�el�ada�fea Chane
Try'tltis recipe:
1, Royal Yeast Cake ,tis. 1 tablespoon sugar
solved intone-bslf cup 1. cups flour
lukewarm water. 1 cups scalded milk ,
1 teaspoon Mit cup hatter
Pour she scalded milk over the auger, salt and butter. When cooled to luke-
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Let rise until double in bulk, brush over
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Bread is ono of the most nourishing
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If you bake alt bonie, She Royal Yeast Bake Boolt. will provir7a
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TORONTO MONTREAL . WINNIPEG
tenderness perhaps by a great new
understanding of love and life.
"He is here again," he• answered.
"He is here!"
(To be continued.)
1..".•••••••
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POSTAGE
FREE
CANADIAN
GOVERNMENT
i ls
e the
You may be enjoying all the comforts of
life. But what if time robs you of them?
The surest way to protect yourself is by
taking advantage of the Canadian Govern-
ment Annuities System. A Government
Annuity safeguards your old age and re-
lieves 'you of all financial care. Decide
now to be free at 65.
rAnnuitleeliroeh,Dot. TWL-1
Department of Labour, O:r....,
Please send me COMPLETE INFORMATION
Amu Canadian Government Annuitice.
Name
Print Clearly
Address
Annuities Branch, Department of Labour, Ottawa
Hon. PETER HEENAN, Minister
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