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The Wingham Advance Times, 1932-09-22, Page 6• rl A, a z::r.e:r1 11.4 ail rlatteArk ratee. .r4 txtrl of, frttelph, 'rant. QS, Agent, Winghatn day Sept, 22nd, 1932 ;f,fiEitr,r, 1 lin to Lou fife a t,,yer T31t,c tto iulal,t ain Stsece ster to' Dudley I'fvllttnn . HETI* RINGTON f STER S L�IiA And SOLICITOR. a Office: Morton 13:lock, phone No, (16. H. CRA D W�' O Solicitor, Notary, Etc, roto t r o Ii. Van stone Oikterio D.R. G. H. ROSS Xt L 1� l�rrlsx +()file, Over I Office 7 G ar s d s Store as W. COLBORNE, M.L . Physician and Surgeon [cd3cal Representative D. S. C. R. Successor to Dr, W. R. Humbly Phone14 Win ' hdn Lf DR, ROBT. C. REDMOND 111,R.C,S• (ENO.) L.R.C,P. (Loral.) PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON DR. G. W. I-HOWSON DENTIST DiAce over John Galbraith's Store. E. A. PARKER OSTEOPATH All Discaaes Treated Office adjoining residence next to $aglican Church on Centre Street. Sundays by appointment. Osteopathy Electricity Phone 272. Hours, 9 a.m, to $ n.rn. A.R.&F. E.DUVAL Licensed D1 uglesc Practitioners Chiropractic and Electro Therapy. Graduates of Canadian Chiropractic College, Toronto, and National Col - /me, Chicago. Out of town and night calls res - yowled to. All business confidential. Phone 800. Licensed Drugless Practitioner CHIROPRACTIC - DRUGLESS THERAPY - RADIONIC EQUIPMENT Moans by Appointment. Phone 191, J. ALVIN FOX. Wingliarn. J. D. McEWEN LICENSED AUCTIONEER Phone 602r14, Sales of Farb, Stock and Imple- ments, Real Estate, etc., conducted With satisfaction and at moderate &barges, THOMAS FELLS AUCTIONEER REAL ESTATE SOLD A thorough knowledge of Farm Stock Phone 281, Wingham It Will Pay You To Have An EXPERT AUCTIONEER to donduct your sale, See T. R. BENNETT At The Royal Service Station. Phone 174W. R. C. ARMSTRONG LIVE STOCK And GENERAL AUCTIONEER non C Ability with special training es;;- aquedt tables titre to give you satiipfaction. ArGerrit Rantoul returned from - tangements made with W. J. Brown, Wingham; or direct to Tecswater. Phone 45r2-$, tlresv alar 41':rltl;y at the.; tit rail t', 3 the ,,}haft cnlcl',,.nr'. :TF, t,hiee f,aua, 1 the itrur f,f l;atltoul, walked rly toward the eleift head. Wo- men were.r:rr,,wdiill ahem the., heed- lu,u=re; weephi s, w;rilint women children were crying, She knew the tune! wee a terrible blare. 1'1ttt. thin, E Iia, horror) Something had gene wrong, I4antr,tll heli her arm, and led .111,:f toward till: (Iffire "of the acre tion engineer, joss phini: trembled, "You ;ray here," he said, tic: stint her hcfi,re the ;leek in the deserted off- ice, brilliant with hs clusters of lights ste the work, having to phone Josephine above the drafting tables, "Some - k, i- ts C:) late r►utat Sege else isa SYNOPSIS 7 , 11 1111 J 1,. 11G Y ell 'P 1, , ynitl'[i ol gni repent all of hi►c life ab lltukiwi river tuttbunt l I yant New York, in tueeed into th lel n terrific CctlIielc,u Which iiis� Lug, t[', •, 1! t 9 ., vu. , Ff hail incoherent] ti he called father. Ignorant, fun cid ,raid fear driven, he drags i asImre, hides .in the friendly tie; of a huge covered truck to be kicked out et dawn ---an the G midst 1 1S t f u a o at bo s who tough gang of Y o be• , at and c cl 4asG IIc escapes and, exhausted, to into •t basement vain t do n! tv7 wan Y tt hides, The next dny he is re and 'taken into the Imam of a ish family Jiving in the rear Of sc•corld-Manch clothint, store. Wellies in the sweatshop stare ---a openly courted by Becka--tile y daughter.. • . The scene shift the home of the wealthy Van H —on lath Avenue, where lives rachelor -- Gilbert Vara Horn —. to whose life there is a hidden chapter. Chat chapter was an affair with his looter's maid, who left the house when he was accused, The lives of Johnny Breen and ilbert Van Horn first cross when Van Horn secs T3rcen win his first mportant ring battle, Pug Malone, fight trainer, rescues ung Breen froin a crooked manag takes hint in hued, finds Breen nnot read. and starts hits to night hoot. Malone, an old -tiller, is backed in health -farm venture --taking Breen th him, There they meet and le to know Gilbert Van Horn. ohn attracts Van Horn, who rns of Breen.'s mother, named rriet. Learning of John's desire an egineering course at Columiiia versity 11e advances the money. n comes to know Josephine, Van en's ward. Now we find John at ooh. reen grinds so hard he verges on ervous breakdown, Van Horn s in again to help save him. raduating as a Civil Engineer he a job with a great construction pany, working in New York. een has a rival for the love of phine, a riclt roan of the world he name of Fantou]. But John out. He proposes and Josephine ts, folia; of the r;ate,11; all of frutliinnal New r W � , 'n { It Ih; ll i.. the , New a, Yr d, who capable ol'. paying tittt:llt!en c, ours. t feel it cern, %vas barrio i i the city. He wt near f.aut', mere comiitle rzte,inr,rt: rltuct- e t'iVe1' ly 0I)t'reCt, more dliting'ale them ever, !cs the ! r„ • r ,. i(, hl ,,. J iuh 1 u i t1 ui a 11.: let I hint 1 7 t f • 7G 1C Mall a1 least bit difficult, the least bit at; - school• 1;tieved, he!1 fears were entire} • es- Y G lul,` 541 f moved t, ved nn his return. Even Gilbert dark- Van Horn was l;1ad le sec him, Ran.. es -only Lot41 Was returning at an opportune tI hat. 1111re for Josephine, river ver When John Breen had appeared hhn. ill w v ht, !ls tbandaged: .I ethics shuddered • Jlana inr, rc !1c • a bit at the etcrilana ion, T lifted a hum wider � , u d 4r th • •. G jaw." J le- s C11Ca r 1 haps it 1 was anything 1 thin Y Jew- g lana accurate, or heroic. Then too, it Was that Jo- lheir eephlne found it Inure difficult to i He her charms against the insister c , pit tc G of nd " t5 the t ut � kept loci l u 1111 � r J ] Gpt taiklnl, about oung telt impossible Mr. Wild, evidently an S 10 uncouth C-1 1th and unreasonable person.. erns Night after night he never came up, tete' never came near his own rooms nd when Josephine dict see hint, his �eyes were heavy with weariness, his lids brilliant with the gloss of tunnel smoke, For some months past a change had come over Josephine. She re- 1 stinted the growing place the tunnel was taking in the mind of her be- P trot.hed. 1"sven gentle Marie Eash- kirtseff would not have tolerated h Buell lapses of .devotion, and Jose- a phine was a sensitive high-strung H girl. n i yo et ca se a wi con lea Ha for Usti Jolt Ha sell IL In step G gets cunt 13r 'Jose by t wins accep NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY Rantoul, on learning of Josephines'. sudden engagement, found urgent business calling him abroad. He had vast foreign interests, $o she gather- ed from his letters, but he bore no ill -will; he was still her friend and never failed to asl( after John. Post cards calve to her from distant plac- es, C;tiro, I3ombayl Singapore, Mari- na. Afijaarently he ryas going around the world. A pathetic word or two, a mere allusion, some times a picture of some Ione ,pilgrinit, gave her the idling of a deeper message, Then, •titer some months, there was the long silence that might mean his re- 1 turn via the Pacific. Josephine found t herself wondering when he would re- t turn. She did not show these cards f to John. He was blissfully unaware cif these romantic memories on the a part of Josephine. a Meanwhile John's ability to ecirn t the .respect of his men by the use of r Ids fists had: earned him promotion, t He had been placed in charge of Sec- ' no, the toughest job on the k 1ct. that 11e could not accompany her tr, the Wintcrrow lecture on "Art, hifr.'s Real Reward," .She had already gone with Gerrit Rantoul, • "A year ✓ will 9'C "i' 4 the main vg r d ,nt., the: tuucil .hr,lcrl through a thin;; has game wrong below, .CII see." J);e Was superbly calla, "Johan] 11lope he's not hart," She. clung ,,to Rantoul's hand: "Yell ytlsl u J Tell 7 ,r b me soon, Utl, t Go--" she cried. "Don't tGd 1 ndl Lon t hof She was shuddering -- 117e: lining poured. We are in the " m- ' , xlll li'1�stage 1h1 liar, naw. John paused. "I've been watching you -- and Josephine," Van Horn continued slowly. "Site's difficult, John, yeti know t rw what I mean. Women demand lot,knew, 1 , taltn I lino J w. The older `mien looked kindly at the Y engineer. ' r ,ur, Y F a 'Mils SS r Woks is mak- ing you, but women don't see such things, not all of them, at least. Pu g remade the your body whale it is, schools . have helped your ntiitct,' but this work, rl with 1 i 5 , t. damnable dd vile. bl e de - elands, is forging character. God, bey, „ 1 en Y, v Y you elle �r G ft 11r F, Van Morn was tense. "nut you have still another thing to do, and that is to get and keep your woman:: your wife. It means a' lot to nae, John, more than you know. 1 wish a day ceuld be set for your marriage; say next June? "1'm ready, Gil." John laughed and ooked away. "Josephine can get her trousseau in. aril, I've promised her that. I'll speak to her,. a nun across will do no arm, winter in the south of France, nd back here early in the spring. white, But he had ,hipped through the door. rr. Her frightened eyes took in the fittings of the little office. The place reeked cd of labor, or and d the untidiness , of working men. A garlic smell front the locker room, conveyed a sense of common, uncouth feeding, as she sniffed the gas of damp carbide spill- ed while hastily filling tunnel lamps. And without, just beyond her sight, she heard the echo of an Homeric struggle rising from the shaft. The scre dm s of women calve to her, for the mangled bodies of anon were be- inghoisted u out. 'Wer did Ramon] an teal stay so long? � Y g Was John Filled. Why. had she come. Questions crowded upon; her. She was dizzy, nauseated. The vile garlic odor was overpower- ing. She shuddered, sinking breath- less in John's chair. Presently Rantoul returned, "J is all right," he announced cu His eyes reflected a hint of thi below. "I saw hint at the shaft he he .went down Lapin, Some p fellows ' were killed—an explosio God! what a hole!" Rantoul lit ow about that,John?" cork -tipped cigarette, snapped ' oh J n • gold case with 1' k ohn rtly, ngs ad; oor n-- the he He her, p" if may be easier for me bya c zc . Suddenly realized th t aJosephine was ill. (helped her to her feet; supported (to the open air. "We had better g lie said, quietly, and they walk clown the little •plankway outside the enclosure to the waiting car. John Breen, coming' up from t tunnel with the last of the resc party, ran to the office. A vag scent lingered over his desk, mi gled with the aroma of an Egyptia cigarette. He stepped to the outsid Dow by the curb was alt him But you have still another thing to do, and that is to get and keep our woman. Even with the money she some day would have, on the death of Van Horn, life with John Breen might be more or less of a struggle. He would insist on working, would probably want her to go to dreadful places, the Andes, or the Sahara Desert; just What to do there else dist not know, but young engineers took their wives to outlandish countries. I1antouI tol her of such things, quite casually, o course. She would have to give a well as take. Josephine found more occasion to ind fault with John after his promo - ion. Heavy responsibilities as sec - ion engineer held bin firmer and inner in the grip of the tunnel. He N on the job hour after flour, day nd night, and slept with a telephone t his bedside. He was compelled, o hurry from her suddenly. He felt estless and ill at ease when away 11e tunnel, "How long will this tunnel job cep going?" Va I3 that time, Gil. „ John visioned win- ter of uninterrupted. work. He would "get" . the shaft and tunnel by that time; he would master the work, and take his place with the men who counted, the hard true men w worked with him on the job. Nev in his life had he expected to hay such slavish veneration for hums a Ilth 5u'7ke DIr ug * f n W liz4 o waa uu ANS t 1'1•t A DIABETES aat•ua>w tlVrr, FAl,ti, n+ $SO1 A7E g CREYArlY lthf:. u,,Ital came r,f overwel es all endue grain x;ht--r,lac-; e ulron thethe pancreas re a '1,•s —injury t o that , Url,an may follow, It anti c1Jabcte rlevr lop. ver: 1`}u; rii5cover in g Y. 1321, of.a meal.: n t - n «'1 wherebyinsulin could be an obtain- ed from the pancreas res a of animals r- —' it t�r pro.. V . . l., 1 1_ a most St valuable rf 1reatment of di aid in of diabetes, Insulin is not, Ira or was it ever claimed 'be, to a S cure etlfc,r diabctes. With' the aid of insu1- r i to the diabetic can be properly nour I 1S h ell and it may be said that no d#_ - abetic should die of diabetes. ii r In the treatment atm e n t t o d]' o diabetes, e s it is Just as essential as_evez that atlen- 1. t ale, n e b given fo diet: No ane. can ibe successfully treated with'in without the co-operation Bolin ent in f 1 of the pat- . o Iowing the diet prescribed. ' by his doctor, The patient who does• this, and takes es- zn insulin ulr n according ' d1n the instructionsgiveng oo b his s doctor or has a good chance of enjoy many years of health, happiness and useful - The The prevention of diabetes, a f as we know to -day, lies in the s far ance of habitual overeatin avoid- ance ery case of diabetes occurs in at per- son of excessive weight, nor does eve cry person who is overweight dev- elop diabetes, but overweight appears -- to be the' common on predisposing fact- or in diabetes. Avoid' overeating as good 'insuran- ce against diabetes. Questions concerning Health, ad- dressed to the. Canadian Medical' As- sociation, 184 College St, Toronto,. will be answered personally by let- ' ter. s , planet t,. a disease, which li been knew» for many. centuries. is only recently, however, that have come ted nl;d a•etand wnrrlethi of its came! and treatment. Diabetes tr G.e b a Te]C t ab lrc, r isr•• •' • 1 ..a.,G which means that it is the result , a disturbance itr r hdnc ,f metabolism n', tdh I15 G m ar t1' process by which our bodies extra from the food we eat and the ai we breathe the substances require for the repair of tissues and energy It i known s c � n, n w that this 7s )rt' a ►c Ula f disturbance is the result of injury t. certain Lam r ats of thepancrease, PG :,wee ( breads) One of the functions of the pancreas as to create e substance called insulin, Insulin allows the ba' dy ti351ae5 to use a Sugar (glucose) into whichr • 11 the a sugars s an dstarch- es b which Cb wG'eat are C C Unvert e b d Y di- gestion. i to. n 1' !? t is essential i' tdl e that 2 the body tissues be able to use this sugar, as it is such. an impoi tent energy food,. In diabetes there is a lack of.in- sulin. The tissues of the body de- mand sugar for energy, yet, because of the lack of insulin, they are un- able to take and use the sugar from the blood' stream, The result is that the blood becomes overloaded with sugar which is passed off in the ur- ine. One of the tests for diabetes is the presence. of sugar in'the urine. Lack of insulin is the direct cause of diabetes. 'A predisposing factor which favors the changes in the pan- creas, which in turn cause diabetes, is overweight. The continued use of more food than the body requires— ed with Van Horn. "I'.m beating the t -•-- of tunnel, Gil," John said simply. He looked so capable, so well. John was he confident, happy. He was entirely ue too happy to be safe, especially with ue a• woman like Josephine, 'who de- n- mantled suffering from;others. n But Van Horn looked bad, out. of de e condition, yellow. Pug Malone would V n have shuddered at the sight of him. The fact that Gerrit Rantoul had -ta- ken passage on the same steamer,. again on urgent business, may beve- lled something to do with the depres- sion,' of Van Horn. Still, when John - and Rantoul stood together on the. ck John' was seeing then} off --• anHorn compared them and smiled. (Continued' Next Week) door and peered into the dark, D e ousine, 11e saw Josephine entering the with Rantoul. She was distant, quisite, her hair glowing beneath light in the car. She held Ranto_ hand, a wan smile was on her ti They rolled silently away. John was utterly tired as he was ed the dirt and grease from hands, using a gray paste smeili of naptha and filled with an a sive grit, a sort of mechanic's scou ing pomade waranted to remove t most stubborn dirt. He was loos ly jocular, his nerves were and scant control. He suddenly associa ed his cleansing- with, Josephine, an burst out laughing. John again sa the picture -of Rantoul, not the en gineer, but the financier (he woul ays think of him so), handin ephine in to the car. John felt er pang, and car ex - the al's ps. h his ng abr a- r he e- er t- d w d g a s stants were Gleaned and gone e, he had noted the events of the it -in his allele! records and had n inspected the shaft. The watch below in the tunnel, the din out had subsided fora while, the t was shut down—until midnight, 1 did not go home, he was too d, too ' many matters of moment Bred about the shaft, he felt a - e dread of the streets, he. want - o stay where he was sure of his dations, his surroundings, his ghts. In a dozen homes, women children were sobbing, sobbing. chastened Josephine was leaving Paris and the south of France. rater on the Riviera would do good. John had had a long talk ho ahv er Jos e hitt n The engineers had come up, hi d beings as he had for the oxen of the assi f great rock pressure tunnel crawling hon s beneath the unknowing people of the nigh city. "By the way,"agar John renailed as was he was about to go, "Josephine is with coming down to the job some night shaf next weelr. I've asked Rantoul to Johi bring her down. You've seen , the tire thing. I thought Rantoul might Like cent to see it, too. He got vie the first vagu appointment, I'll never forget that." ed t "Good boy. It's something that foun will open her eyes. Show her the thou whole works, John; good luck to and you."' And the night Josephine came A John was in the thick of. a big tun- for nee accident. A `yi Rantoul's gray cushioned limousine her THOMAS E. SMALL LIG1; NsED AUCTIONEER 20 Years' Experience in harm Stock and Implements. Moderate Prices. Phone 881, R. A. W. IRWIN DENTIST •�- X-RAY ;1VIcDotiald hillock, Winghatt A. J. WALKER (kbil'I'DRh, AND 'UNERAI SERVICE A. J. W'AI,:1 ER its rtsod Funeral X.)ireetow *1 Embalmer, )bons I06, heal, Phone Li Cotteb, n orn asked one evening. He and John were in the _ library smoking for an hour that world tour. He arrived et the begin -John forced himself to spare from THE FAMILY NEXT DOOR . There Are Others YOU D10, 'TOO! You KNow V RY 2'L1p YOU WEIL HEADACHES nagging ache or pain, take BOUM tablets of Aspirin. You'll get inunediate relief. There's scarcely ever an achw or pahl that Aspirin won't relieve--ancl never a time when you can't take it. NEURITIS ,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 3ron any pain or discomfort. hat be sure to buy' Aspirin and not a substitute.