The Clinton News Record, 1930-07-03, Page 2Clinton
News -Record
CLINTON, .ONTARIO
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G. 13, HALL, M. R, CLARK,
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M. D. i &TAGGART
/danker
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 Fere In -
minium Agent. ' Representing 14 Fire
Insurance Companies.
'Division .,curt Office. Clinton..'
Fraik Finglend, E.A., LLD.
Barrister, 'Solicitor, Notary Public
SuccessortoW. ,Brydone, H.C.
Sloan Block — Clinton,Ont,
CHARLES B. HALE
Conveyancer, Notary Public,
Commissioner, etc.
(Olflee over J. E. Ilovey's Drug Store)
DR. J. C. GANDIER
Office (lours: -1,30 to 3.30 p,m;, 610
to 8.00 p. m., Sundays, 12.30 to L30 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 Exnmeme 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 Examined and Biases Fitted.
DR. H. A. MCINT•YRE
DENTIST
Office Hours: 9 to, 12 a.m. and 1 to
6 p.m., except Tuesdays and Wednes-
days. Oilice oyer Canadian National
Express. Clinton, Ont,
Phone 21
DR. F. A. AXON
DENTIST
Clinton, Ont. •
Graduate of 0,0.D.S. Chiaag4. and
R.O.A.S., Toronto.
Crown end Plate Work a Speo1aliee
D. H. MCINNNES
CHIROPRACTOR
Electro Therapist Maereur
Pince; Huron St, Crew doors west of
Royal .[lank),
.+ours—rues„ Thurs, and Sat„ all day.
• Other' hours by appointment, Beneau
Dolce—Ron„ Wed. and rri: forenoons,
tleafortli Office—Mon,. Wed. and Priddy
afternoons, Phone 207.
CONSULTING ENGINEER
S. W. Archibald, B.A•Se., (Toe.),
O,L.S,, Registered .Professional 'En-
gineer and Land Surveyor. Associate
Member'Eegineerieg Institu•e of Can-
_ oda, 'Office, 'Seaforth, Ontario.
GEORGE ELLIOTT
'Licensed Auctioneer for the County
of Huron.
"'Correspondence promptly answered.
Immediate arrangements can be made
for Sales Date at The News -Record,
Clinton, or by calling Phone 203.
Charges Moderate and Satisfaction
Guaranteed.
B. R. HIGGINS
Clinton, Ont,
ueneral Fire and Life Insurance Agent
for Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock,
Automobile and Sickness and Accident
insurance, Huron and Erie and Cana-
da Trust Sonds. Appointments made
to meet parties at Brumfield, Varna
and tieyfleld. 'Phone 67,
THE' Mc1KILLOP MUTUAL
Fire' Insurance Company
Head Office, Seaforth, Ont,
President, James. Deans; • Beechwood,
Vice-presldont, • James Connolly, Goder!eh.
Di. ectore; James Shou101ce, Walton;
Wm. Rina, Hallett; . Robt. Perris, 1•Iu1-
lett; James Benneweis, Broadhagen;
oh1u Pep9.sr, le eef4 d; A, 8roadroot,
I earortfi, G. P. McC'arftley, Seafortb.
• Agents: W. J. Yeo, R:rt. No, 3, Clinton;
John Murray, Seaforth; James Watt,
Myth; Bd. lrtinchley,' Seaforth.
Secretary and Treasurer• Mo -
Gregor, Seaforth.
Aby- recneY tobe pall may be paid
to 'Mo"rteh.Clothing Co., Clinton, or at
Calvin Cutt's Grooery, Goderlch,
Farttes desiring to effect Insurance or
transact other business will he-promptlet
ett.ndsd to on application to any of the
above officers addressed to their reSpec:
tire nest offices. tosses inspected by the
➢lionise whotires nearest the scene,
The Snowshoe Trail
By EDISON MARSHALL
•
CHAPTER XIII.— (Cont'd:)
Bill's bullet went straight home, rip-
ping through the lungs 'tearing the
great arteries about,the heart, shiver-
ing even a portion of the heart itself.
And yet -the grizzly sprang like a de' -
mon through the deep, snow, straight
toward him,
' . Virginia's horrified eyes saw his,
fingers race ne he worked the lever
action of the gum The bear, seemed
almost upon him. And she screamed
when she head the impotent click of
the hammer against the breech. ,Bill
had fire' the single Met that was iv.
the gun.
Before ever he heard the sound Har-
old remembered. In one wave of e'ir-
ror lee recalled that'll° had forgotten
to refill the n.egazine with shells. Yet
leaping fast—red and deadly upon the
heels of his remorse --there cane an
emotion that seared him' like a wall of.
fire. Ile saw Bill's fate,
Here was his enemy, the man he
hoted above all, living creatures, and
•the bloodlust surged through him Iike
a madness. In one wave of ecstasy
he felt that he was .about to see the
gratification of hie hatred;
In the hands of a brave and' loyal
man, the rifle Harold .carried 'might
yet have been Bill's salvation. Yet
Harold didn't lift it to his shoulder,
But at :that instant aid came from
an unexpected quarter. Virginia re-
membered the pistol at her belt, and
she drew R in a •flash of blue steel.
True and straight she aimed toward
theglowingeyes of the grizzly.
At the angle that they struck, her.
bullets did not penetrate the brain;
but (hey did give Bill an instant's re-
prieve: The bear struck at the wounds
they made, then halted, bawling, in the
snow. Iklis roving eye caught sight of
Virginia's form. With a roar he bound-
ed toward her.
The next instant was one of drama,
of incredible stress and movement.
For all his mortal wounds, the short
distance between the bear and the girl
seemed to recede with tragic swiftness.
Virginia stood her ground, firing
shot after shot into the animal's head.
Because it was an automated, she wan
able to send home the loads in rapid
succession.
Bu; Bill by now had found one of
the extra shells Harolc. had given him.
The grizzly was upon them,
He dropped•the shell into the gun.
There was no time to raise the weapon
to his shoulder. He pointed it instinc-
tively toward the gray throat. And
the end of the barrel was against the
bear's flesh as he pressed the trigger.
No human eye could follow the
lightning events of the next fraction
of a sees, d. One instant, and the
three figures seemed :.11 together; Bill
crouched with rifle held pointed in his
arms, Virginia behind him, the grizzly.
Pull upon then bots.
The next, and Barnet stood alone
in the snow and the silence—awed,
terrified, and estranged as if in a
dream.
Except for three forms that lay still,
half -buried and concealed in the drifts,
it was as if the adventurehad never
occurred. —
The bullet bad gone true, It had
pierced the animal's neck, breaking the
vertebrae of the 3,ri- d column, and
life had gone out of his as a flame
goes out in the wind,
BL was first to reeve. He had re-
ceived only a gi;nring blow i ,he drifts
ilito which he had fallen were soft as
pillows. IIe crawled over to Vir-
;,1nia's side,
I -Ie seized her shoulders and shook
her gently.
Instantly her ;yet opened. Her full
consciousness returned to her with a
rush, She was not scratched, not even
shocked by the fall, and she reached
up quickly for Bill's hands. And in-
stantly, with a laugh on her lips, she
sprang to her feet
"You killed him?" she asked,
ear's all dead," .he anstgered
cheerfully.
CHAPTER XIV,
In the weeks they had been together
Drowsiness is dangerous.
Weary miles seem shorter
and theday is brightened when
you have Wrigley's witbeyou.
he sugar peps you up. Its
delicious flavor adds to any
enjoyment.
TIME ,TABLE
Trains willarive at'•and depart from
Clinton as follows,
Buffalo and. Goderlch Div.
Going East, depart 6.44 a.m,
„ 2,04 pm.
Going West, ar, 11.50 a:n1.
” ar 6.08 tip, 6.43 p,m,
" " ar. 10,31 p.m,
London, Huron & Bruce
Going South, ar. 7.46 c1p, 7.40 a,m.
n 4.03
Going Northdepart p.m.
, a
11 ,. ,4z p.m.
ar. 11.40 die 11,63 a.m.
ISSUE No, 27—'30
Bill had always•been careful never to
try tor•show Harold in a bad light. It
was'shnply areexpression of the inher-
ent decency, of the man knew that
Virginia loved' him, that she had
plighted her troth to him, and as long
as that love endured and the engage-
ment stood, he would never -ry to shat-
ter her ideals. in. regard to him.
But .Harold had a sickening an
ghastly fear of the sober query
Bill's eyes.
"Why did you give me an unloaded
gun and tell me it was full?'? Bill .de-
mended, "Except for a good deal of
luck there'd been • a smile e,n the face
of the grizzly -but no Bill!
'And by the "ray," he went on'
es
he waited for- his 'raply., "I don't re-
member hearing your gun go off ;dur-
ing the fray., You might explain that,
too."
"I didn't shoot because I couldn't,"
Harold replied, earnestly. "At first
you were between me and the bear—
end then Virginia was. It all happen-
ed so quickly that there was nothing
Ilcoeld'do, I can't imagine why I fore•
got to reload the ori°e• A.can can't
always 'remember—everything. Thank
God: that it didn't turn out any worse
than it did,"
Bill nodded; the girl's face showed
unspeakable .relief. They .gathered
about the gray grizzled form in the
snow.
"Does this—help our, feed problem
any?" Virginia asked.
"Except in en emergency—llo, He's
an old, tough brute.: Strong as mink
and hard as mock. If we don't pick
up some more game during the day,
I'll hike over to my Twenty-three Mile
,cabin and get the supplier rye left
over there: There's a smoked caribou
ham, among other things, I'll bring
back a backload, anyway."
Bill then announced he'd like to find
the grizzly's den. He felt sure it
was near.
But Herold had very special and
particular reasons wiry such a course
appealed to him not at all, "Yes—and
maybe find a couple of other tears in
there, in the dark and no chance to
fight. I'm not interested, anyway. ' Go
and look if you life."
"I will, if you don't mind. Do you
want to come, too, Virginia? There's
no danger—really there isn't. If this
had been an old she -bear we aright
have found some cubs, but these old
males travel around by themselves."
Well be bice in a minute, Harold.
And if you don't mind—I'II take my,
own gum"
They exchanged rifles, and Virginia
and Bill started back toward the fallen
grizzly.
They hack -tracked the bear through
the snow and Ca00 upon the cavern
mouth.
Back five feet from the opening the
intrior was dark as night; the cavern
walls, gray at the mouth, slowly paled
and .faded and were obliterated in the
gloom. Bill was puzzled,
"This cave—I've never seen a cave
just like this. Virginia—"
The man stepped forward and
scratched a match, on the stone. It
flared; the shadows raced away. Then
Bill's breath caught in a half -sob.
instantly he smothered the match.
The darkness dropped around them
like a curtain. But in that instant
of light Bill beheld a scene that tore
at his heart.
Against the cavern wall, long lost
in the irremediable darkness, he had
seen a strange, white shape—a ghostly
thing that lay still and caught the
match's gleam—a grim relic of dead
years.
He turned to the girl, and his voice
was almost steady when he spoke.
"You'd better go out, Virginia -into
the light," he advised.
"Why? Is it—danger?"
"Not danger." His voice in the sil-
ence tLrilled her and moved her. "Only
wickedness, But itisn't anything you'd
like toesee.»
The single match -flare had -revealed
him the' truth. .
The thing he had seen was a naked
skeleton, flesh and garments having
dropped away in the years, and the
,grizzly had simply made his lair in the
old shaft of his -father's mine, Bill had
found his ,father' sepulchre at Iasti
"I believe I understand," she 'said.
"Yoe've found your mine—and your
father's body."
"Yes, Just a skeleton."
"I'm not afraid. 'Don't you want me
to stay?"
"I'd love to have ,rou, it yeu will.
Some way—it takes away a Iot of my
bitterness—to have' you here."
He made another light• ,
They stood together, looking 'down
at the•skeleton, put -she wasn't quite
prepared for what she saw. .A little
cry of horror 'rang strangely in the
dark shaft.
This had been no natural 'death.
Undoubtedly the :elder Bronson had
been strrack down from behind, as he
worked,' and he lay just as he fell.
There was 000 wound I, the .skull,
round and ghastly, and in a moment
they saw the 'weapon that made it, A
Misted 'pick,,such as miuere use, lay
beside' the body.
"I -won't try.to.do much today," the
malt told her, "except to set up, one of
nit cornerposts and ereet a clam no-
tice;"
He held the.light close, studying the
rear wall of"the cave, It was simply'
a gravel bed, verifying his guess that
here lay an old bed of the creek. In
the first handful of stone ho scraped
out he found a half -ounce nugget,
"It's rich?" she aslcod,
"Beyond what I ever dreamed, But
there's nothing morn We 600 do now'
I've made my find' at last -but it
aoesn't seem to make me --aft happy as
it ought to, Of course, that sight --
there against the wall -would natural-
ly keep a man from being very happy.
Oh, if I could only find and kill the
devil who -did it!" '
He was letting lris claim marks.
when Ilarold came mushing toward1
them,
!thatSo:intent were they upon their work
' they didn't notice Nim until he
•was ;almost up to them.
"You'vefound a mine?" heguessed.'
Virginia'loolied up, joyful at Bill's
good:,fortune, "We've ,found his fath-
er's mine—the old shaft where the
bear had been sleeping, ;But there's a
dreadful side .of it, too."
Show, ine where 't 'ie. I want to
see. it. Take me into it, Virginia—
right away—"
They started together.
(To ne continued,)
What New York
Is Wearing
d BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON
7il'astratod Dressmaking Lesson Ftir-
sashed With Every Pattern
An attractive morning dress in
printed pique in green and white tones
that will tub just beautifully.
It is slim and stralghtwith inverted t
plaits at each side of Croat below
jaunty patch pockets to give necessary
width to hem..
To achieve a panel .effect the belt is
slipped underneath the right front and
passes through et bound opening at op-
posite side. Itcrosses the back to hold
the garment closely to the figure.
Style No. 3480 'is designed in sizes
16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46
inches bust. 'Size 36 requires only 2%
yards of 40 -inch material with % yard
of 30 -inch contrasting.
The saving is great; the making a
simple matter.
Gay 'Cotton prints are dependable
for service as broadcloth, men's shirt-
ing, gingham and printed dimity.
Washable silk radium in ombre
stripes, pongee in natural shade with
colorful dots and wool jersey in pastel
shades very flattering combinations
for porch wear.
It can also be made with long
sleeves as shown in small back view.
Will 2030 Laugh
At 1930 Styles
Men and. Women lof the
Future Will See and `I -rear
Ancestors and' Taste
the Food They Ate
By .Shirley :Long
It 1s'tho, Year 2030. The visitors are
"doing" the museum, :A pretty Ameri
can girl stops in front, of an aeroplane
exhibit, `
"My, did Alcock and Brown dactuallY
Ily the Atlantic in that tiny plane?
Calx you imagine it?" she asks in awe.
"Well, we must 'be moving.' We have
to be in New 'Yor' for dinner to -night,'
and our plane goes in an hone,"
Been tows to -day the plane in which
Britain's two air heroes braved the,At-
lantic .for the first time on record
looks out of date compared with, the
models of 'the ;giant mail planes ex•
hibited near by. •What will, it joo'It
'like in one hundred'years''time?
Again, :it 'is the d,fashion nowadays
for some.neieepapers to print extracts
from their files of a century .ago, They
Make quaint and interesting reading
to ws, They throw odd" sidelight9 on
to the• lives of our grandfather•s and
great -grand filth ors.
We'll be quaint Then!
Well, in a'hundred years' time simi-
lar extract's from'our papers will seem
just as quaint—which is a'chastening
-thought for us! - Still, they will be
talking about the modern girl and the
dangers,of epeed'eyen then, I expect,
It was ever thus!
But how will' the future see u.s?
What will.our descendants know about
us, who proudly boast of this. year of
grace? • '
None of. the •weightiest historical
-tomes,,wr'itten about a past era brings
back that lane to us so vividly 08
some trifling little domestic object or
souvenir, 86 is the bits of Roman pot-
tery, the odd Roman hairpins, and so
forth, which .occasionally come to
light that interest Us most, not Gib-
bon's "Decline and Pall of the Roman
Empire."
IIov, then, are we preserving re-
cords of .this age for the edification
and amusement of the next?
Celebrities In Canisters
Lady Astor showed the way not long
ago. She offered to the Plymouth Mu -
seem the dres which she wore in the
House of Commons when she took her
seat as the first woman Member, the
garment to be preserved for future
exhtbi tion,
• This generation, of course, has the
finest rossih)e methods of preserving
OW—the gramophone record and the
caking film. Their possibilities are
imitless,
The good people of 2030 will be able
to see and hear. Muss nine Ramsay
MacDonald, President Hoover, and
most of the world's leading flgnres of
to -day. Their looks, voices, mania
scripts, and clothes will be preserved
by the talking film,
Thoee Interesting news reels that
you see in your cinema are actually a
living history of to -day. They are all
carefully preserved in tin canisters,
labelled, and filed. In the atrong-
rooms of the Oaunront and British
Movietono News companies Mussolini,
Bernard Shaw, the King of Spain, our
own Royal Family, and America's pre-
sidents lie next to ono another await-
ing the verdict of posterity.
Kubelik's Secret Film
Jan Kubelik, the celebrated violinist,
recently put himself on permanent re-
cord for the benefit of his descend-
ants. He made a sound film in secret
of two of his most Characteristic.
pieces. This flim, the only one he has
ever made, will never be shown to
the public. It is pur'ely private.
The gramophone companies, too,
have carefully saved records of our
Ring an4 some of our famous writers,
Caruso's golden voice will be available
to folks who will only know hint as
"a singer who lived a hundred years
ago." Sir Thomas Beecham's con-
ducting, Kreisler's playing, Rachman•
100115 pianoforte performances will
live almost forever,
When, not long ago, Mr. Henry Ain-
ley gave hie brilliant performance of
Hamlet before the Ring, people were
comparing him with the Acting stars
of the past. But few remembered even
Henry Irving's Hamlet, while Kean,
Garrick, and Mrs, Sitddons were mere-
ly names. With the aid of the talking
Mtn Mr. Ainley's Hamlet can be ebown
to our descendants,. By the same
means Patti Robeson's Othello and Sir
John Martin Harvey's famous roles
will again live. The dramatic critics
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
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,
A Little Prayer
(For Larry)
Is there a country, Lord,
Where Thou dost keep
.A. place reserved for flogs
That ,fall asleep?
Large, airy 'kennels, yards
For hiding bones; •
A little• river chattering
Over stones,
And wide, green fields for those
.That never knew
:A smoky town, And there
A'rug or two
Before 'a fire where .sparks
Do not fly out.
Sparks are such nasty things
To 'have about!
I like to 'think there is.
And so• z pray
Tor one email Newfoundland
That died to -Clay.
He d was so full ;of fain,
Not very wise;
The guppy • look still lingered
In his eyes.
But he was very Clear•!
He'd come to •me
And rest his soft, black cutin
Upon my knee.
Thou know'st'hip , Ono 1119118
Not long ago i
14e tramped with me' across
The frozen' sitow.
And there, beyond the wood,
Peaeettll.:and still,
We mot Thee • realking on
The moonlit hill,
Lord, keep hitt 'eafe, wherever .
He may be,
And let hint ahvays'have
A thought of nee.
That I may hear when I
Pass through the Dark, •
Thy soothing Voice, and 'then—
A' friendly bark! d d .
—By Mina M, •Brown. ind Church
Messenger,
Cels
§err less ;art.15E%tey
The famous Passion ,Play is
drawing. added thousands. In,
August and September, the 4
crowd has passed—there'a
greater comfort and better
Choice of accommodations
everywhere. Your travel dol-
lars buy the utmost.
Wm steal, comfortway to see
Europe this Autumn, is via Star
Tours. They are timed to take
lull advah Lase of ell the Javorab1e
conditions at the lowest possible.,
cost. Every detail of your trip is
‘arranged before You start.
Tour A - 49 days, $625
Tour B - 59 days, $725
Visiting England, Scotland,
Denmark, Germany, Aus-
tria, Italy, SwItxerland and
France,
Sailing on palatial White Star
3teantOra
August a a 9"160-2e3
September 4.113
For comp0eto inforrnatfon' and
illustrated itinerary, phone, write 4
or cal:personally
88 King St, E. Toronto ►]';a
or any Authorized
Ticket Agent
4
' other Orange Pe ,
coin tin 1 this 1 flavour
of the future, when they raise their
Usual plaint that "acting isn't what it
was,' will be able to prove it. Or their
critics will disprove it!
Whichraises intriguing speculations.
It IS going to be harder than eve!' for
the actors, writers, anti statesmen of
to -clay to hand down any illusion of
gre mess.
Al�-this, of course, means that it will
be greed to be a schoolboy .or girl in
the future. Instead of•reading;dbout
'Bernard Shaw, to -morr'ow's sohool-
cbildren will see and hear, him. His-
torical events will re-enact tlteinselves
—Mr. MacDonald introducing• his sec-
ond Labor Cobinet, the Naval Confer-
ence, the re -opening of St:.Paul's
Cathedral.
America is also preserving to -day in
celluloid. The Roosevelt Memorial
Library is assembling in film form a
complete pictorial story of each pre-
sident of the 'United States,
Time and Space Wiped Out
So important do they consider the
audible film that when Mr, Stimadn,
the head of -the •Naval Conference De-
legation, presented to Mr( Hoover at
the White House, Washington, a copy
of the London Naval Treaty, only the
talkie , cameramen were allowed to
photograph the ceremgpy, '
Oof mps
of liueving historythe ost was thestaggering recent talkie
news reels of Commander Byrd at the
South Pole. The picture showed a
radio operator in New York sending
wireless greetings to the explorer at
the Pole ten thousand miles away.
Time and epace were annihilated. Yon
heard the operator's "dot -dash -dot,
dash" message on his keyboard.
Then you actually heard Command-
er Byrd'e reply in Mors .' Code! The'
operator translated for us. The thing!
is awe-inspiring when you consider'
that all this took place three thousand
miles away in Nee York, and we I
heard it in England tla' ,-1 weeps later!
The brain reels when you think that
lire whole thing can he reenacted in
fifty years' time.
The gap between us and tb future)
Is very small Indeed. Will there be a
very big difference in the inventive
and ecientifc fields? It is an interest -I
Ing thought, because inventions spring
up and are obsolata in a very short
time, Moter-car, wireless, aeroplaneI
and gramophone are practically poet -
war in their really big developments.
Just ho.e quaint will they appear tow
those who follow us?
The "horn -and -box" phonographs of
early days would : ake a modern child i
laugh. You can see th,m in the Im-
perial Science Museum, London, that
wonderful treasure house of interest,
Next to them stand the electric gramo-
phones, the combined ratdio'gramo-'.
790
phones, and the portables of "to -day.
What will the comparison be in any
years' time? '
There is a lot of to -day. in this mu
seem, waiting with the quaint
relics cf pre-war days. Models of our
India- mail planes, of the Grafi Zeppe,
IM and R•34,. models of our Flying
Scotsman, our big locomotives, motor%
cars, and Atlantic greyhou u's, Their
forerunners next to them'are quoin(
and curious. So will'they be in a hum
dred years' .time.
And what of tee things which art
brand new—tbe'novelties and inven
tions of•to,day? In South Kensington
you can see the latest film cameras
and projectors. There is a complete
story of the making of a talking film,
• Vest-pocket Ko0aks and etudlo cam
eras, a Photoinaton machine. in work-
ing order, and a'•home cinema set,
wait with the•early box -and -head -cloth
cameras our fathers knew. -
Keeping Our Memory Green
When we have complete taiking flim
performances in every home, .what
are these -exhibits going to look like to
to -morrow's museum visitors? '
And when we ring up New York and
both set and hear our friends acmes
the Atlantic, what will Baird's first
television set seem like?
Answers- does something towards
the keeping of our memory green. A
copy of every issue is filed away in
a safe -deposit, to be kept for years to
come: When we have ceased to buy
newspapers and weeklies d and have
our news and entertainment reading
printed by wireless in our own homes,
what will the "Golden One" appear
like to our third and fourth genera-
tions? '
In every sphere of life, the present
is being preserved in a number of
ways. The food canning folk keep
tins of foods. One they opened not
long ago had kept wholesome for
forty-five years. . So the future will
'even be able to taste our food,
But the Central Department for
Science in Soviet Russia has gone one
better. 1t proposes to make a museum
refrigerator capable of preserving in-
definitely the bodies of human beings
and animals. Even the ancient Egyp-
tian mummies would be cutdone by
that! -Answers,
hrtensive development of agricul•
tura leading to mass production 1s the
solution of the present business de•
pression, say Henry Ford. Evident.
ly For'd's eenthasiasm for antique
farmhouses does not include antique
farm methods.
Gop117EN5Eo rvitiji'i
;is the ideal food for
the bottle-fed baby
because it is clean, uniform
in. composition, nutritious,
most easily digested of all
artificial foods and always
ready for instantuse when
diluted with plain boiled
water. Itis usedmoreoften
than all other artificial
foods combined
THE BORDEN CO., LIMITED
„143 50. Paul W., Montreal
Sand Frao Baby Book to:
TAKE N ,r CHANCES
WITH BABY!
Cook Her Food in the
"Health Ware"
Doctors recommend Enameled
Ware for cooking baby's food.
It is so simple to cleats .. , so
easy to keep sanitary and free
from germs. It cannot stain.
There is rlo metal surface ex-
posed to the food,. Nothing to
absorb moisture, flavors nor
odors.
Matte sure you get McClary
Enameled Ware . , the
Modern "Health Ware". Watch
for: the familiar McClary label.
A Health Prodaele
GENERAL STEEL WARES
n.IMITtn
Branches Across Canada
Prices
from
30c to
,tr.40
The Cruisabouts Are
000T 11lIA01NZI—a
su910"hoBoating 29' s
wide and 1' 4" draft
fully equipped with
bertha for 'flue and
deck space• 'Or more
than twelve at. M. r,rr-
usualiy law price of
18.381 at the',fabtory.
•
.Beearse of etand-
aardization Itiehardson
ruisabouts are low' in
price. Built of. Cleernaatd1r'
Mahogany Ibex Oak
finished. 9-oyiinder •
60 I7,P, Gray Marino
Motor 41ves a speed
of 13 -miles per hour.
Write for bookie"t'
telling ail the facts
on the three Richard-
son 28' Cruisabouts.
Unequalled
Boat Value!
V aA : $ofl -
�{ CrMiqbo1as
Y Sales and Service by
T. B. F. BENSON, N.A.
571 Bay Street Toronto, Ont.