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The Clinton News Record, 1930-06-19, Page 2Clinton News -Record CLINTON, ONTARIO Terms of Subscription—$2,00 per year in advance, to Canadian addresses; x2,50 to the D.S. or other foreign' countries. No. paper discontinued until all arrears are paid:unlees'at the option of. the publisher. The, date to which every subscription is paid is denoted on the label. Advertising Pate$—Transient adver- tising, 12e par count line for Bret insertion. 8e„ for each subsequent insertion.; Heading counts 2 lines. Small advertisements, not to exceed one inch, such as "Wanted," "Loot,":•. "Strayed," etc., 'inserted once for 30e, each aubsequent.insertion 15e,. Advertisements Gent in without in• etructlons as,,to the number of ins' eertioes wanted' will run until order- ed out and will be charged accord- ingly. Rates for display advertising made known on application- Communicatiens intended for ptib• llcation must, as a guarantee of good faith, be accompanied by the name of the writer. G. I3, HALL, M. R. CLAIM, PrQpt'ietor, Editor. Ma D. I&TAGGART Banker A general Banking Business transacted. Notes' Discounted. Drafts Issued. Interest Allow- ed on Deposits. Sale Notes Pur- chased. H. T. RANCE Notary Public, Conveyancer Financial, Real estate' and Fire In- surance Agent, Representing 14 Fire insurance Companies. Division .ourt Office. Clinton. - W. BRYDONE Barefeter,,$oiicitor, Notary Public, etc. ffice; SLOAN BLOCK . CLINTON CHARLES B. HALE Conveyancer, Notary Public, • Commissioner, etc. (Office over J,•10. FIovey's Drug Store) DR. J. C. GANDIER Office Hours: -1,30 to 3.30 p.m., 6.30 to 2.00 p,m., Sundays, 12.30 to 1,30 p,m, Other hours by appointment only. Office and Residence — Victoria St. DR. FRED G. THOMPSON Office and Residence: Ontario Street — Clinton, Ont. One'door west of Anglican Church, Phone 172 Eyes Ex"mine" and Glasses Fitted DR. PERCIVAL HEARN Office and Residence: Huron Street •- Clinton, Ont. Phone 69 (Formerly occupied by the late Dr. C. W. Thompson), Eyes Exemieed and Glaser Fitted, DR. H. A. MCINTYRE DENTIST Office flours: 0 to 12 a.m, and; 1 to 5 p,m., except Tuesdays and Wednes- days. Office over Canadian National Express, Clinton, Ont. Phone 21 DR. F. A. AXON DENTIST Clinton, Ont. Graduate of 0.0.0.5. Chi,+ago, and R.C.D.S., Toronto. Crows and Plate 'Work a Specialty. D. H. McINNES CHIRO;PIIACTOR Electro Therapist Masseur Oftlee: Huron SL (Pew doors west of Royal Bank), -ou,'s--Tues„ Thurs. and Sat,. 511 day, 4)180,' lout's ray apiioidGnent. moons. Office -«Mon„ Wed, and Pre, forenoons. illeafortim Orrice—Aron., Wed. and Friday afternoons, Phone 207. 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 art'angements can be made for Sales Date at The News -Record, Clinton,' or by calling Phone 203. Charges' Moderate and Satisfaction Guaranteed. B. R. 1-dIGGINS Clinton, ant. General Fire and Life Insurance Agent for 'Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock, Automobile and Sickness anti Accident Insurance. Huron and Erie and Cana- da Trust "Bonds. Appointments made to meet parties at Brucefleld, Varna and Bayfield, 'Phone 57, TI -IE McKILLOP MUTUAL Fii•e Insurance Company Head Office, Seaforth; Ont. President, James , Dvans, Beechwood. Viae -president James connoliy,Goderich. loi. eotors;ames Shouldlae, Walton; 'Wm, Rinn, �tlletti Robt. Ferris, Hul- tett; Jamas Bonneweis Sroadhagen; ohn Pepper,. Bruaedeld; A. B ypathcot,. afor th G: 'F, 'McCartney, Sealfoi'tli Agents: W. Y. Yeo, 8,11. No, 3, Clinton; ffohnarray, Seaforth; Jpmes Watt, 431 h' d, llinchley, Seafor h. s�g' ' re ss1'y and Treasurer: D. 11. Me- • lA�1rY'I$MMIU i1S be Paid may be paid • to Mod.rish CU:tphingg£ Co,. gClinton, or at 911,11eSUSEslritl tbyef SE iIINfranee on transact other, business will be promptly att,nded to on application -to any of the abnva officers addressed to their respec- ticn nnei nf)J cess Losse,, inspected by the fmfr',»i'tr who lives, nearest the scene. the Snowshoe Trail By EDISON MARSHALL jBEGIN1��oItE "YouTODAY didn't think t was going to take you looking' like you do, do you— into Virg'inia's presence? The first thing on the program 4s.—a bath." IHe turned once more to Sindy! "And see what you 'can .do 'about this gentle- man's clothes, too; if he's got any clean underwear or any other togs, party. Bill and Virginia are snowed load 'eat out," in in one of his trapping. cabins. !Bill "Anything else?" Hassid , a" castically. .Bill Bronson undertakes to lead Vir- ginia Tremont • to her fiance, Harold Lounsbury, who vanished in the Clear- water of northern Canada six 'years previously. Disaster parts them from her fiance's uncle, Kenly Lounsbury, and the cook Vesper, who complete the presses a double quest, for the lost mine of his murdered father and fat Harold. He finds the latter, who has turned "squaw man•"` • GO ON WITH THE STORY Bill. realized at once that this new development did net in the least affect his own duty. His job had 'been to find Harold and- return •him to Vir- ginia. 'This smirch in Harold's life was ,a .question` for the two to :settle between them.` It did,_.however, complicate the work of regeneration. Bill had known squaw hien.before, and few of"them had ever regenerated. • Harold. shrugged once more, "And .is' it anybody's'business but my own?" he•asked. "'It' hadn't• dught to be, but it is," was the answer. "It's my 'business, and somebody else's, too." He turned to the woman. ` "You're Joe Robinson's dieter, Sindy, aren't you?" The Indian looked up, nodded, then went to her Mork.. ' on. "Then you left Buckshot, Dan—to "Go, as he •says;" Harold directed. come here and live with this 'white' ne asked a 'question in the Indian man • vernacular. Harold turned to her with a snarl. Harold glanced once at Bill's face "Don't answer him; Sindy. It's none saw by his. expression that he was of: his business." Then his smoldering baffled, and answered in the same eyes met Bill's. '"Note we've talked language. enbugiii• ' You can go." . • Once more the Indian uestioned "I've got one question, Lounsbury and Harold hesitated an instant, as —do you think, by any chance—you've if seeking an answer. It seemed to got any manhood left? Do you think the .other white man that his eye fell you're rotten clear through?" to the rifle that Bill carried. Then Harold leaped then, savage as a he spoke again, gesturing. The ges- wilf, and instantly his ride swung in ture that he made was four finers his arms. Bill's form, impassive be- held before the Indian's eyes. Then fore, seemed simply to waken with Iife. he annot.nced that he was ready to go. Seemingly with one motion he wrench- During the long trudge through the ed the gun from the man'; hand and snow, from Harold's camp to Bill's sent himspinning against the wall, cabin, the two men spoke not a word. "Before you start anything more, Harold's mind was busy with dark .hear what I've got to offer you." His and devious thoughts, crafty schemes voice lowered, and the words carne and desires more kindred to lust than rather painfully. - "It's your one to love. 13111's thoughts were more for chance, Lounsbury-to come back. Virginia than for himself; would Ms, Virginia Tremont' has come into the loss be equalized by her gain? North, looking for you. She's at my As they,neared the cabin they saw etntp. She wants to telte you Back the candlelight, like a pale ghost, in with her." . the window. Virginia was stili up, Lounsbury's breath caught with a reading pernaps, before the fire. strange, sobbing so.md. "Virginia— "Wait,' Hill eommnnded, "There's up here?" he cri:cl. "Does she know one thing more. I've brought you about—this--" IIe indicated the cabin here. I've given you your chance— interior, and all it meant, with one for redemption. God knows if I had sweep of his arm, my choice I'd have killed you first. "0f cocese not. How could she? She's not going to know about the Whether you tell her or not s'a mat -at- squaw unless you tell her. Nor about ter for you and she to decide. She's the filth you lived in. Those matters come to find you—and bring you back." are all for you to decide. I won't in - "My God! To the States?" terfere." - "Of course." He paused, and Harold waited, For the instant the black wrath had "But don't forget I'm here," he went left his face, and his thought swung on. "I work for her—until she gets ackward to his own youth—to the out of my charge I'm her guide, her aye he had known Virginia in a far- protector, the guardian of her happi- ff city, 1'Ie was more than a little noes. That's all I care about -her owed at this manifestation of her happiness. I don't know whether or ove. not I did wrong to bring a squaw man Butquieltly the expression of nis to her—but if you're man enough to face ,.hanged, and Bi11 couldn't have hold her love and make her happy, it xplained the wave of revulsion that c,oesn't natter. But I give—one urged through hint. He only knew warning." blind desire to tear with his strong His voice changed, It took on a ngers those leering lips before him. quality of infinite and immutable pro- FIarold was les,. in insidious specula- pheey. In the darkness and the sil- ans. Fie remembered the girl's beau- ence the voice might have Come from y, the grace and litheness of her some higher realm, speaking the irre- form, the holy miracle of her kisses. vocable law of the forest gods. pposite him sat his squaw—swarthy, "She'll be more or less in your naval, 1, shapeless. Perhaps it wasn't power at times, up here, I won't he 00 late yet— with you every minute. But if you "You won't tell her—about Sindy?" take one jot of advantage of that fact "Not as long as you're decent. —either in word or deed -1'11 break That's for you to settle for yourself- you and smash you and kill you in ether she finds out about her." my hands!" fie waited ani natant for the words CHAPTER X. to go home. Harold shivered as if with cold. "Go on in," he. said. "She's waiting for you," CHAPTER XL "Yes, shave! And when you bathe, bathe all over—=don't spare your fate or your hair. Wa",ee may seem strange at first, but,you'll get used to it," An hour• wrought a profound and amazing change in the man's appear: anie. He had conscientiously.gone to work to cleanse ,himself, and he had succeeded. His hair, dull befora, was a glossy darkbrown how, he had shay - ed off - the matted growth : about }iris lips, leaving only a small, neat 'mus-' tache; his hair was trimmed and bare - fully parted. The man's skin had also resumed .its natural shade. For the first. time Bill realized .that Harold was really a rather handsome. man. T. "nere's one hing, before we.start," Bili said. "I want you to tell these understrappers of yours ,to take that squaw and clear out of Clearwater." The half-breeds, understanding per- fectly, looked to Harold for eonfirma- i b d 0 c e s ,a fa ti 0 u wh "Bui,d a fire and put on some water to heat—fill up every pan you have," Bill instructed Sindy, "What's that. for?" Harold esked. Alertness scores everywhere. Wrigley's creates pep and eu• ergy and keeps you alert. A 5 package may save you from goingtoeleep at the wheel of your car. TIME Tralns will arivo at and depart from Clinton as follows`: Buffalo and Gotierich, Olv: Gong East, depart 6.44 a.m, 2.50 p,m. Going West, ar. 51.50 a.m. " " ar 6,08 dp. 6.43 p.m. tt " ar. 10.31 p.m. London, Huron & Bruce Going South, ar. 7.40 dp, 742 a a ,m an .y's...,mJ't"•,.,, N )2,, • Going North, depart 6.42 p,m, ar, 11.40 tip. 11,53 am. ISSUE No. 25—'30 "Who's there?" Virginia called. "Is it you, BiiI?" "It's not Bill," the answer came. "But he's here.' "Who is it?" she asked again, stead- ily as she could. "It's I—Harold Lounsbury. Bill told 'me to conte." • Virginia for the moment stood still, trying to quiet her leaping heart and her fluttering nerves. Her hands clasped 'at her breast, then she walked to the threshold and opened the door. Harold Lounsbury stepped through, blingkink in the candlelight. "Harold," she murmured unsteadily. She tried to smile. "Is it really you, Harold?" "It's I," he answered. "We've come together—at last:" The words seemed to rally her scat- tered faculties. Instinctively'her eyes. swept h;e.face and form. All doubt was past: this man was unquestionably Harold Yet she Was secretly and vaguely shocked. Re seized her hands in both .of hiss "Virginia," he cried. "My God, I can't; believe it's you 1" She remained singularly cool in the ardor of this cry. "Why didn't you write?" she asked, "Why didn't you come home?" The questions, instead of embarrass- ing him further, put Harold at his ease. He had prepared for just these queries. - "I did write," he cried. -"Why didn't you answer?" She stared at him in amazement. "You did—you say you. wrote me?" ' "Wrote! I wrote a dozen times. And I never received a wend—except from Jules Nathan." "But Jules 'Nathan—Jules Nathan is d ad!" • "He Ti" But Harold's surpc a was feigned. This was one picot of news that had trickled through the wastes t+ him—of the death of Jules Nathan, the water, buts as soon as I Mb' 'em a man known to them both, . It was they charge me with adulteration-" Tw:ns Take ' 'Long Trip June and George Hunt, two..year-old Lancashire twins, sailed recently,' on a' six -thousand -mile trip from Liverpool to Britannia, British Columbia on board the Canadian Paclicliner "Duchess of.Athoil," safe' to have heard from. him. The contents of the Ietter 'Could never bre verified. "He.told me—after I'd writ- ten many'thnes, and never got an an- 'ewer—that you .were engaged to be married—to a Chicago man. I thought you'd forgotten nue." • She hadn't forgotten, but—six years of separation had wrought their changes. She, felt that she needed time to become adjusted to him. "Where's Bill?" she, asked. She turned to the door and called. "BiII, inhere are you?" His voice seemed quite his own when he answered from the stiffness' of the night. "I'll be in in a moment —I was just getting a load of wood." (To be continued.) What New York Is Wearing BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Fur- nished With Livery Pattern A precious frock for wee maids of 1, 2, 4 and 6 years is pictured in pile pink batiste. It is strikingly smart and yet as simple as can be. The cartwheel ruffle trimming is amusing. This ruffling of self -fabric 1 has picot edge. It is sewed to the t dress following perforations for same. Style No. 3485 makes up beautifully p in taffeta for parties, Georgette crepe and crepe de chine are very dainty. Sprigged dimity, printed lawn, sheer linen, organdie and voile also appropriate, It may also be made . of checked gingham without the cartwheel trim - HOW T0„ORDER P&TTERNS Watch Your Baby! Make Accurate Measurements of His Physical, Manual, Social and Mental Powers By Rowena Ripin,'Lecturer-In Psych- ology, Barnard College. There are teats for arithmetical rea- soning, stenographic ability; ethical discrimination, 'emotional instability and manual dexterity, not to mention the so-called intelligence taste and others which are calculated to mea- sure various aptitudes and traits in men, women and eliildren. Now comes a series of tests, yor the baby, sMnd- ardized to measure his accomplish- ments. This will enable the parent 10 know, long before the child's entrance into school, whether his general de- velopment is retarded or accelerated, and bow he stands with respect to physical, mental; social and manual traits. And gr'andmother's boasts of the bright baby can now be checked up by exact measurements. For the first time also in the his- tory of tests, a sound picture has been made of a sample demonstration for educational purposes. It is to be shown in training schools for teachers to familiarize them with the child's development prior to the school age, and to enable them to grasp the se- ntience of his growth as a whole. The mental tests begin by measur ing the child's sense -perception, his reactions to light and sound. To trace this development with respect to vis- ual stimuli we have the following series. The 2 -months test is focusing the glance at an object; at 3 months the child follows a moving object with his eyes and Iooks after the examin- er's face when he makes it disappear. By this time, too, he distinguishes be- tween the examiner's face and a mask which she places over it. At 4 months he looks abort actively in a new shun - Hon and at 5 months he Iooks for a Lost toy. When presented at 10 months with a toy behind a glass plata his perception is so developed that he reaches around the glass inateati 00 trying to go through it in order to pro- cure the top. At 1 year he prefers flg- m'ed 'surfaces to plain and by the end of the second year he recognizes sim- ple pictures. The child's powers of imitation also come in for their share of testing. Fit'st, there is the imitation of single sounds and easy facial expressions, such as ticking out the tongue. Then from the eventh month on there is mitation of actions involving ma- erials—knocking against the crib with a rattle, opening and shutting a kture hook, etc. Whoa the child is 2 months old the Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want, Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Curves 1Vo straight line in -nature: Only curves. Watch the bird as he sweetie, Ae'he swerves. Watch eheyeliing waters Break on shore; Trace the scalloped line Edging ocean's floor. Study pointing treetops; Clouds above, Piled•and tossed by wind waves Sent by Love. Stay a while in arching aisle, Cathedral grove. Client the curves in nature- Treasure-trove; Vlahnett Sprague Martin, Romance! A fresh romance has been added; to the history of literature, says a writer in John 0' London's' Weekly, and a new key put into our hands, to the social life of the eighteenth century —a period of which the more we know, the more we want to know. There were found,' mouldering in the attic of a Scottish country house,' manuscript journals, notebooks and letterh of James Boswell, the famous' biographer of Doctor Johnson. The part Issue 'of time MSS. in six volumes will be followed soon by another six. S'— — ' -I Milkman, reflectively: "It's very strange- The milk is genii] 1 Prices from 155c. io X4.00 Choose Enameled Ware! Be sure the Utensils you selecf have the shield -shaped SMP label of qualify. tt Easyrunnitat Mowers Punt cutwitliraxorlike ke mess. ASmor'tb Mower will keep"` your lawn trial itnd neat Thoraugheyre/iaik,aluddi y guoionieed. At your hard.. ware dealers. ai JAMES SMART PLANT 0 BROCIWILLEONT. You wilt the avour ® this. Japan , .Greets.lens garde 62 739 teats show that he should be able to hold his head up when placed in the prone position, to focus his eyes on a .moving, shiny object, to 'return the glance of the adult and to show by his reactions that he distingulshee be- tween the adult's natural and. his growling tone of voice. At the one- year level he should be able to hold something while standing and, while walking with support, should observe his reflection in the mirror and grasp at a•craoker:he sees there, These are briefly acme of the tests educational implications for the home. When the series is carried further -to include the nursery school aid school ages it will undoubtedly extend its educational implje;cttons to the school. The idea of the school's restricted pur- pose to "cultivate the mind,' to make impressions on the tabula'rasa, is be - coining daily more antiquated as the tendency to regard the chile; as a per- sonality rather than a pupil is gaining rapid ground. Spare the Rod? "The generation of young men. and 'women now growing up is the first an - rocked generation, just as ft is the first unspanked.generation," declared the Rev. Dr. L. C. Douglas, St. James' Church, Montreal, in a Mother's Day sermon on "The Passing of the Cradle." The speaker considered the passing of the cradle beneficial to bath mothers and children A word of warning was spoken, however; the home itself must note be neglected under the changing conditions. "Man in the mass does not think, but only feels."—Herbert Hoover•, t i :yrs utuarag for less athiti$$BE"y The famous Passion Play is drawing added thousands. In t August and September, the crowd, has passed—there's greater comfort and better choice of accommodations everywhere. Your travel dol- lars buy the utmost. The ideal, comfort way to sco Europe this Autumn, is via Star Tours. They are timed to take fult advantage grail thefavorabie conditions at the lowest possible cost. Beery detail of your trip is arranged before you start. Tour A - 49 days, $625 Tour B - 59 days, $725 �q Visiting England, Scotland, Denmark, Germany, MIS. trio, Italy, Switzerland and 4 France. t Soiling on palatial White Star 4 Steamers August .. 0-16-243 September 4-13 Far complete information and illustrated itinerary. phone, write 4 or call personally 55 ming St. E.,Toronto or any Authorized Ticket Agent 657 Bedtime Story From Bronxoille a wonderful thing? "they report: There, by a highway where autos ca., vort, A button Is placed of a magical sort„ ; , Timid pedestrians'crossing the Pike Just touch the button, then over they] • hike, While the traffic stands motionless, paralyzed like. Now go to sleep, little Morris and Mabel, • And maybe next Sunday your 'nice Uncle Abel Will tell you some other astonishing fable. Our Idea of an Easy Job • "I'mpublicity man for the citrus growers." "Well?" "I want to get grapefruit in the pub. lie eye." Miss Thirty- 'd: "Ob, 't'. Blunt, this is so sudden," Mr: Blunt: "I know, but F thought you could stand surprise better than suspense." 14De14SED A'1IL. Kis the ideal food for thebottle-fedbaby because it is clean,uniform in composition, nutrltiou s, most easily digested of all artificial foods and always ready for instant use when diluted with plain boiled water, Itisusedmnoreoften than all other artificial foods combined. TI12 BORDEN CO., LIMITED 140 St. Paul W., Montreal .Sand Fre. Daby Book to; NAN,: 203 Plan Now For This Summer's Good Times! HUNTING, fishing, pie. nlcing, swimming and cruising on Jake, . river, zest o sound f lnr ibay vingeddhapptoiness, the , contentment and enjoy - men or Cru.ssbout owners. Th is double cabin Cruisabout, 29' long, a' 10" wide and 2' 4" draft Is n completely couinp^d summer home and le tory, l le E.•1,786 nt lac• a.s tory, Sleeps six, tour , �'Y forward cabin and twain 9' ar stern cabin, Gxerilnni design, perfect balance and staunch, quality con- struction make C r u i s- aboutesound and sea- worthy ton' any water. 6 -cylinder, 6o -.LP. Gray Marine motor gives aryls- ing speed of thirteen miles,write for cata- logue. 8!tel 30 (rt isgbot Sales and Service by T. B. F. BENSON, N.A. 371 Bay Street Toronto, Ont. 0 No man of good appearance goes out without a collar... nor does he go about with dusty, unpolished shoes ... Personal pride suggests a frequent "Nugget" shine to keep the shoes smartly presentable andwater. proof. 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