Loading...
The Wingham Advance Times, 1932-09-01, Page 6a f elliigtou 11/Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Established 1840 Risks taken on all class, of insur- ce at reasonable rates, Head Office, Guelph, Ont. ►i3IrU R CQSENS, Agent, Wingham J. W. BUS FIELD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc. Money to Loan () lee --Meyer Block, Wingham Successor to Dudley Holmes R. S. HETHERINGTON BARRISTER And SOLICITOR Office: Morton Block. Telephone 1W. J. H. CRAWFORD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc, Successor to R. Vanstone Hingham Ontario DR. G. H. ROSS DENTIST Office Over Isard.'s Store 1H. W. COLBORNE, M.D. Physician and Surgeon 'Medical Representative D. S. C. R. Successor to Dr, W. R. Hambly Phone 54 Wingham DR. ROBT. C. REDMOND 1 .R.C.S. (ENG.) L.R.C.P. (Lond.) PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON DR. G. W. HOWSON DENTIST Office over John Galbraith's Store. F. A. PARKER OSTEOPATH All Diseases Treated Office adjoining residence beret to tdnglican Church on' Centre Street Sundays by appointment. Osteopathy Electricity Phone 272. Hours, 9 a.m. to 8 o,m. A. R. & F. E. DUVAL licensed Drugless Practitioners Chiropractic and Electro Therapy. Graduates of Canadian Chiropractic College, Toronto, and National Col- lege, ol- le e Chic o. I3 , a g Out of town and night calls res- ponded to. All business confidential. Phone 300. Licensed Drugless Practitioner CHIROPRACTIC - DRUGLESS THERAPY' - RADIONIC EQUIPMENT Hours by Appointment. Phone 191. 3. ALVIN FOX Wingham. J. D. McEWEN LICENSED AUCTIONEER Phone 602r14.� Sales of Farm Stock and Imple- ments, Real Estate, etc., conducted with satisfaction and at moderate charges. THOMAS FELLS AUCTIONEER REAL ESTATE SOLD A thorough knowledge of Farm Stock' Phone 231, Wingham It Will pay You To Have An EXPERT AUCTIONEER to consduct your sale. See T. R. BENNETT At The Royal Service Station. Phone 174W. R. G. ARMSTRONG LIVE STOCK And GENERAL AUCTIONEER Ability with . special training en - alike me to give you sat" action. Ar- rangements made with W.J. Brown, Wingham; or direct to Teeswater. Phone 45r2-8. THOMAS E. SMALL LICENSED AUCTIONEER. 20 Years' Experience in Farm Stock and. Implements. Moderate Prices. Phone 331. DR. A. W. IRWIN DENTIST X-RAY Office, McDonald Block, Wingham. A. J. WALKER FURNITURE AND FUNERAL SERVICE ' A, J. YY/ALXER Licensed Funeral Directe'tt bird Embalmer. DEfide Phone 106, Res, Phone 214, i ateat Litiloiisine Putiettai Coach, •1hum life, fe, Dods life become more bearable or more productive of hap- piness? By heaven, we know more about teaching in the kindergarten than we do in the schools of applied science. Science—a great word, John, a word to conjure with, :espec- ially when applied. The rigorous ap- plication of science to Life. Ah, this would lead—" Harboard stopped and looked closely at John. The face of the student was white, drawn, "What would it lead to-" John was eager. "To Christianity, John. To toler- ance." When Harboard Left, John thought long and earnestly upon the things the older man had criticized, Men - telly he was far less able than when lie entered the schools of higher learning. Midnight came and John still sat dull -eyed. His pipe had gone out and he neglected his books, The task be- fore hirn loomed like a mountain of lead. 0 THE WINGH.EiZvl ADVANCE TI . N O NAR COU RT egtscE ascii SYNOPSIS • Johnny Breen, 16 years old who had spent all of his life aboard a Hudson river tugboat plying near New York, is tossed into the river in a terrific collision which sinks the tug, drowns his mother and .the man he called father. Ignorant, unschool- ed ,and fear driven, he drags himself ashore, hides in the friendly dark- ness of a huge covered truck -only to be kicked out at dawn -and into the midst of a tough gang of river rat boys who beat and chase him., He escapes and, exhausted, tumbles into a basement doorway where he hides. The next day he is rescued and taken into the home.of a Jew- ish family living in the rer of their second-hand clothing store. He works in the sweatshop store -and is openly courted by Becka-the young daughter.... The scene shifts to the home of the wealthy Van Horns. on 5th Avenue, where lives the bachelor -- Gilbert Van Horn in whose life there is a hidden chapter. That chapter was an affair with his mother's maid, who left- the house when he was accused. The lives of Johnny Breen and Gilbert Van Horn first cross when Van Horn sees Breen win his first mportant ring battle. Pug Malone, fight trainer, - rescues oung Breen from a crooked manag- r, takes him in hand, finds Breen cannot read and starts him to night chool. Malone, an old-timer, is backed in health -farm venture—taking Breen ith him. There they meet and ome to know Gilbert Van Horn, John attracts Van Horn, w erns of Breen's mother, nam arriet, Learning of John's desi ✓ an egineering course at Columb niversity he advances the mon hn comes to know Josephine, Va orn's ward, Now we find John hoof. OW GO ON WITH THE STORY ou become a driver or an ass, aa ssibly both. You attempt to fie se your ideas upon human being u show them how to lay a thous d bricks where formerly they only ced half as many in • the sam ce of time. You develop system efficiency and mass production none of you` has the slightes a of tthe,underlying problems o y e s a c le H fo LT Jo H sc FELIX.PI6SgNBEIZO g s i.a e, slipped on his coat, caught his cap and started out of the door, walking'. down the stairs as if in a trance. Out through the black wicket of the drams, down the long, wet black paved. avenue, below the naked, windswept arches of the great cath- edral rising gaunt and ; massive against the dull orange of the mid- night sky, lit by a billion distant city lamps, reflected downward' from the cloudy vault, It was raining, and: this seemed to fit his mood, On, and on, away from books, away from tasks and task -makers,- and away from his trudging, grinding. self, he trudged. He turned down Fifth Av- enue, and • ran easily on the hard gra- vel, close to the low coping of gran- ite. At Forty-ninth Street he turned east to Third Avenue, and still 'dog- trotted on toward the south. Police= men, flattened in doorways; took him for a home -bound watchman, or a night worker, runing -to escape the rain. As he neared the Bowery, a strange fatigue came over him. ' He slowed to a walk. Chills seized his flame. His teeth chattered. He be- gan to run again; pain in his joints filled hirfi with torture. He contin- ued his pace, doggedly, passing be- low the deep shadow of Cooper Un- ion, where he had spent such mar- velous nights, where his soul : had glimpsed the' bigness of the universe. For a while he forgot the shooting pains and rushed ahead, wild with sudden desire. - It was after one -thirty, when.he passed the Clothing Emporium, He searched for the name LIPVITCR ho in faded letters. .He thought of ed knocking at the'door, stopped for re a moment, and then in new gilt let- ia ters he saw the words, Aaron Levy, se ey. Successor, beneath the old sign - of Jo n the Emporium -New and Second ltal at Hand. His bearings were gone, en Where was Channon Lipvitch? of Where wase, he? Now the city vas. driving him back again to the slimy waters of the harbor, The whole d world began to totter; the dark span - of the Brooklyn Bridge towered like 1. gs, a massive threat, magnified by the ou -, wet mist as he had. seen it before, ha Cars •clanged, vessels bulked high lin e above him, He walked across the " s wide river -front street. He was play- He , ng a game with himself, and in it " t he forgot his misery, ped f Suddenly John Breen Stumbled.' swi His hands shot out before him as he sc e. 0 p th 1 0 w a of se ro ca an th Y po Po yo an pia ing study, that he had left his room without -a cent in his pocket:. Even 'his vest, in which he sometimes car rigid change, and his watch, had been left behind, "Wodelyouhav_ e, doughnuts or pie?" the man asked. "Hold on,", John hastened to warn him, "I'in: flat. Haven't a red cent with me. But-," "Thought so," interrupted the man behind the counter, "but see'n yer so damn honest, have a couple sinkers," anti he passed the rings to .John. "Thanks," John munched at the, doughnuts' ravenously. "Don't mention it. Keep the' chan- ge.". The sleepy lunch car `man set- tled comfortably on his perch, "I'll send the money down to row." . • "`Send it?. Rats! 'I took this at supper, an' I'm quittin' at bre fast. ' The guys what owns it's ried an' home sleepin' avid his ti Damn glad you wa'n't no'stick- Get the Bell out o' here an' let sleep." John Breen 'again went into wet. He'looked at the river, shudder of terror came over hi He turned and ran westward,- t warmth of: the coffee gradually we ing away, But as he chilled he kn that he had to keep going, he canig his second wind, he'knew that was heading: for the dorms. It was ten o'clock in the foreno when the grayhaired dormitory ma entered John:Breen's room. Da clothing hung over the - chair near h bed, and John, in fevered slumb tossed in his blankets. He had r turned at daybreak and throwing o his clothes rolled into his bed h dead with exhaustion: Harboard,'' on his way to an earl miner, stopped to investigate. hn's door was open, the maid was Icing volubly, the hall superintend - t and a young doctor, a great bulk a inan,'bent over the bed. `Batt?" asked. Harboard anxiously. Complete rest, and a, change. Get him -out of this." He nodded force- fully at the room and its fairnish- ings, ""Have you Mr. Van Horn's ad- dress?" Harboard asked of the sup- erintendent. "I think hie bad better be advised," * at y Josephine Lambert was enjoyi ane of her periods of retirene times when she sought seclusion, tunes when she; took herself with aborate seriousness. It.was past t in the evening;' site was absorbed the life story of Marie Bashkirtseff. Her long lashes, dark in contrast with her hair, gave her an air' of study, a bare knee, peeped from the white folds of'her gown, a pink ro- guish knee.Her feet were doubled under her. Josephine was reading the strange g will of Marie Bashkertseff.. "I do" not think I have ever had any' base,. interested, depraved thoughts, It is• rarely that one can say this, but in my case it is true." • On the night Josephine was read!) ing Bashkirtseff, and later on leisure- ly for'bed, John Breen was .conning to the breakaway with his_ overload of study. Josephine lingered in the warmth_ of her bedroom, a fire burn mor- I ing in the grate. Aunt Wen had gone to bed but Josphine was very job much awake. alc- She had taken John Breen's photo.- in graph from Van Horn's room, the vife. one'in short fighting trunks, his right up, fist guarding his abdomen, his left ine advanced, his eyes straight: ahead, a stiff pompadour rising from his fore - the head. John . had, a look of the most A insolent confidence on his determin- rn. ed face. he Josephine looked at John's picture. ng nt, el - en in ar- She smiled. Putting it on her dress- er she dropped her robe and stood ht before the tall mirrors; fora moment he she assumed the pose of the fighter. I strip neat, myself," she murmured on coloring: And then shen slipped in - id to her pajamas and jumped into the Dan big bed under the canopy, • is H'er hand reached for •the night er, switch. She looked at the photo- e- graph. "Young prize fighter, I'd. have ff you dizzy, .if you were here." And cif then, she laughed. What would Mar- ie Bashkirtseff have done, with" a fighter? Van Horn motored down from Greenborough, tearing at a wild pace Pug Malone at his(, side and Judge Kell .i in the e Y back bouncing about like a rubber ball. The heavy Rolls took the road withsmooth-wbrman- -' like speed... A telegram, from Har- d, board, had located Van Horn at the - farm. John was sick. The thing was him incredible. In- the meantime the;. s house in -the middle fifties was astir,• • Josephine in a flutter. Had. she just dreamed this, or what? (Continued Next Week) ".Lever and exhaustion." The doc tor, a famous football coach, time to Harboard, adding with non -prof essional` candor, °`I can't make hi t." He held a stethoscope in hi nd. "Heart and lungs O.K. Know n?" ' the doctor asked. Well; we are rather- good friends was all right last night, -but--". Here, you mean?"::the Doctor tap- -his forehead kn,owingiy. His ft eye'took in the 'disorder of uttered textbooks and papers. "Engineering" explained` Harboard. 'Applied science.' Rottenest cram- ping system' in the world. I01s hem off quick, or, if they hold .� t, ine of- ten are mentally strained, ome out with case-hardened skulls at crack: if .they get ideas. Few of m ever crack," he added' dryly, What about him, doctor?" Har- oard asked anxiously. The maid was eking John in, and one of the hall tendants come up veith some warm ilk. "Needs rest, I should Say; nursing —a change. But what a body! Best round specimen I've come across long while. Nothing overdone; oth as silk. What is he, any- ?'' een a scrapper.•A regular knock out," Harboard explained, low - his his voice. "Something fine t the boy, though, He has ideas, s the trouble with him. We were ng last night. I never realized tate or-- Well,- thank God it's orse. Anyhow he's got to quit. while. e doctor looked about. "Right. spa of but ide f a sudden John Breen lost his fell, something yielded, and in an ag- ny of realization he clutched des- " erately as he plunged head foremost z rough the door of a night -owl t inch car, backed against the head n 1 a slip. Light instead of` darkness, C arintii, and the steaming aroma of th coffee urn, not the :slime and cold 'e the river! With a bound his " nses came to him. A look of ter b r froze upon his face. to "Wode'lyuhave?" The sleepy lunch . at ✓ watcher roused himself suddenly m d removed a pair of brogans from e counter. He eyed John suspic iot}sly. all ' "Coffee." John uttered the word in a in a hollow . voice. His heal felt smo queer. The etuffy warmth of the car how was grateful, , B The man in the lunch car robbed 'em" his.-eyes, shuffled over to a small erin cupboard, took out a heavy china abou mug without a handle. He dashed • that' some white fluid into this from a talks can with a spout, and placed the cup his s hold on the job ahead of hien — full. Suddenly ,� g ' w y John realized that he for a hold on the job ahead. He tore off had on an old suit, saved for even Th under the tap of the urn tunnin rt no =Guide: "It vias in this ;.room that the Duke of. Wellington received his commission." American Tourist (suddenly inter- ested): "How much was it?" ' * * m A young man from the South went tospend his holidays with some friends in Yorkshire. He ' caught a chill in travelling and was confined to bed. His hostess • thought she would give her visitor •a treat during his confinement, so she baked a Yorkshire pudding and took it up- stairs, "Just try this," she said "it'll 'shift your cold," Then she left him. Going up some time later she inquired, "Well, have ye eaten it up?" "Eaten it? Eaten it?" gasped the visitor, • "No, I'm wearing it on 'my ch est." MUST REGISTER FEEDS George H. Clark, Dominion Seed Commissioner, calls attention to the fate that under provisions ,of•- the Feeding Stuffs' Act all "registrations expire automatically on September 30th, following the date of issue; al- so that all commercial feeding stuffs must be registered, and that the fee THE FAMILY NEXT DOOR. There's Always A Jo." Killer 3 /Nc0wISS i,-IGg ry 3 cS7� a heeiente- Thursday, Septembe • 1, 19.32 .. cal& Scram (k nbitin OF THE C,edic tA, oLriatiyj isentgcl'by -o 343 CrCPANr•Ft-EMING, M,D, ... ASSOCfAT'E SEcREh°AR`f ''HEALTH AND SCHOOL The child who is starting schen) for the first' time faces what is 'a rather difficult period for rnan children. Unless he has been guid ed properly dtiring his pre-school years the change from the home, to the school is not an easy change for him to- make, Play is necessary for the child,. and every child's life must be so or 1 ganizecl that he will get plenty o out -door exercise and .'play every y day. Meals should ,lie served at regillar hours. After washing his hands, the child comes to the table. The child respires a variety of food, and.be- cause he is growing and actice, he needs a good deal of energy -..:and body-building foods. The selection of proper foods- is the duty of the mother. The • attitude of the: parents towards food will rave a great.in- fluence : on the children. 'If father^ 3 i11; not eat this or that he need' not expect the children to do -so:" They will., follow his habits -:not his advice or his orders. The child' should - be told what school is. He must be'happy in school, and get real pleasure out of his school -wort* if he is to do well in school, The child will be eager to go: to school if lie finds that it'is a place which ` Helps him to' do the things which children want . to do.• A great deal is written • about health" habits.and yet it seems that comparatively few parents • realize just how- much- the good health of. their children depends upon the es- tablishment of good health habits as part of the child's daily routine. It requires patience to accomplish this and it is to be remembered • that scoldings' defeat the purpose; the. child needs-encourageinent, The health habits of a school child should include personal cleanliness. A -warm bath twice a week, under- clothes and stockings frequently' changed, teeth:brushed at least twice a day—after „breakfast and before •go- ing»to bed: Bands I washed before ev- ery meal. Plenty of sleep, so that the child is properly rested, can be secured. only through having a regu- lar bed -time which allows the re- quired hours for sleep before it'is time • to _ get up and :prepare for school. The healthy school child is nat- urally -active and will not need to be urged to .play, 'He will need some supervision, so that he does not ov- erdo the play and forget that there - is a regular bedtime. It is important that children get up early enough to have time to wash, and to eat and enjoy their breakfast. Breakfast should be given juste as much atten- tion as any other meal. A regular• bowel movement daily is a necessary health habit. The child's activities must not be i Ilowed to intereere with toilet habits, which_depend more upoelse. n regularity than upon : anything. g• • Y Questions 'concerning Health, ad- dressed' to the Canadian Medical As- sociation, 184 College, St., - Toronto will be answered personally by let- ter. for registration is $2.00. per brand. Feeds must be labelled ,exactly as registered and the guaranteed analy- sis, statement of ingredients and oth- er information required for registra- tion roust appear on labels or tags attached tofeed containers: Under the Feeding Stuffs Actno change in the composition of a reg- istered brand 'shall be made without re -registering it. Any change in the guaranteed analysis or ingredients of a registered brand calls for the sub- mission of a new application with the - usual fee and sample, le p and the assign- ment of 'a new registration number, HEADACHES, N EURALGIA, Whenever you have some nagging ache or pain, take some tablets of ; .Aspirin. You'll get iMmediate relief. There's scarcely ever ah ache or pain that Aspirin won't relieve—and never a time when you can't take it. NEURITIS COLDS . The 'tablets- with the Bayer cross are always safe. They don't depress the heart, or otherwise harm you. Use them just as often as they can spare you any pain or discomfort. Just be sure to buy Aspirin and not a substitute. 1, c___ q --_t JUMP AkooNte HERE Do% GONt 1T! I CANT WORK FOR TNINl,u'' AEiOl.1.1 .,, I; tSh%1N' - GOtSS 1j MlGNT ju$"t. A5. V.U.JEGO (MADE IN CANADA) NpW, DA2N \Y! 't CANT CNJOY F SHIN' P'R TH11‘4Kit ' AbOl3T TNS WORK I OTTA t3E