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The Huron Expositor, 1934-08-24, Page 78 0 0 0 f 6 1 $ , I I � 4 1 7�,,� 11 I : ,- "- � "I - M", , .1 . � �: I � % .. , I 1 � , I � I I ,.� � 1 1 � i 'AUGUS 2491 1934. ,.�7.,_-',.7 JXGAL - ' = Phone No. 91 ' ,� � 0 1 JOHN J. HUGGARD .. Barrister, Solicitor, . Notary Publici ]Dbc. � 9ft - L.&i ' IC4 - -.0 - _AA_ "_ � I ___ - - �_^_" %F"Wa � ---" I � I .. � , . 13LAYS & M!EIR - � I , , I Succeeding R. S. Hays, ' . MaiTisters, SdUchors, Conveyancers, and Notaries Public. ,Solicitors for the Dominion Bank. Office. in rear of dw Doblinion Bank, Seaforth. Money 0* loan. . . � JOHN EL - I Itc B"Tister, Solicitori L - r r : � selsheth - - Outs�io . . . I - � " VETERM"Y � . . JOHN GRI19M V.S. - , . monor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary OoUegv. All diseases of domestic Animads. treated. Calls promptly at- tended to and charges moderate. Vet- . a specialty. Office smd resiAence on'Goderwh Street, one dow east of Dr. Jarrott's office, Sea- f0rQ6 � .. . I I A.R. CAMPBELL, V.S. � . ,Graduate of Ontario Veterinary, College, University- of Toronto. All 41iseases of domestic anihWs treated - by the most: modern principles. ChargVe reasonable. Day or night calls promptly attended " to. Office on main 6%yeet, 'Hensalip opposite Town � UnK Phone 116. Breeder -of Scot- Ush terriers. 'Inverness Kennels, H411��. ­ . , � . � . __ ____ - - I . � MDICAL I I � DR. GILBERT C. JARROTT ' " 4Draduate of'Facalty of ,Medicine, University of Western Ontario. Meni;- ber of College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Office, 43 God- erich Street, West. Phone 37. ' Successor to Dr. Charles Mackay. I . - . I . DR. F. J. WFORSTER Eye, Bar, Nose and Throat oGraduate inMedicine, University of Toronto. I^te assistant New York Olythal- =*I asid Aural Institute, Moorefield's Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos- pftals, Lond,6n, Eng. At Cokrimercial EC*W, Seaforth, third Wednesday in eaeb month, from 1.30 p.m. -to,5 p.m. 68 Waterloo Street, South, Stratford. . - DR. W. C. SPROAT Graduate of Faculty of Medicine, University of 'Western -Ontario, Lon- dom Member of College of Physic- ' lane. amd Surgeoni of Ontario. Office in Aberhart's Drug Stare, 'Main St., Beaforth. .Phone 90. 1 1 DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence Goderich Street, east of the United Church, Sea - forth. Phone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. DR. H. HUGH ROSS Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, me,mber of Col- lege -of Physicians and Surgeons of Onftrio; pass graduate course in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmie Hospital, London, England; University Hospital, Lou - dM England. Office -Back of- 150- zo(inion Bamk, Seaforth. Phone No. 6. might calls sidence, Victoria Street, SeafoTth. I DR. E. A. McMASTER Graduate of the University of To- . ronto, Faculty of Medicine. -3(eMber cof .College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; graduate of New York ,Post Graduate SchQol and Lying-in Hospital, New York * Of - fits on Hi,gh,Stre�t, Seaforth. Ph�ne ' 27. 1 DR. G. R. COLLYER Graduate Faculty of Medicine, Uni- vw9ity of We9tern Ontario. Member CWIere of Physicians and Surgeons at Ontgorio. Post grad�ate work at X&W York City Hospital and Victoria Hospital, London. Phone: Hiensallp 96. Office, King Street, Hensall. . . DR. J. A. MUNN , -� Gradtmte of Northwestern Urivers- fty, Chicago, 111. Licentiate Rdyal college of Dental Surgeons, Toronto. Ofte over -Sills, Hardware, Main St., SWorth. J�hone, 151. ' I . DR. F. 1. BRo M -ELY I 4gr"t,e Royal College of Dental SarCeoni, Toroi& Office over W. R. - ftith,s Grocery, Main Stre Sea - forth. Pbone: Office, ml; resi- .. &0001 1954. ____ - - - I DJL J. . A. meTAGGART I I ,Gft&,.t. Royal C*Ilege of Dointal ftr"Or,p, Toronto. Office at Hen - OWL Ontario. Phone 106. __ - - __ I . . AUCTIONEERS � I 6- - - I I I I RAROLP DAL9 . . 1. . I utensell Auctioneer I . SWisligt in fiLrm and bousebold ggee. PlJoee reasonable. 'For Wes &W 1r&0rin4ti0,*, write or pbow Iffar- old 1D&le phone 149,'SesfOrtbpor ap- niv &t ;�ha' minoidtor offim _ . ­_, � I �`.`�111'1111kp�111117 ".4 - 111. I IF I I I -17,1,17.1C , , " -t T rr `� . . � -I � I I . ,71, '!� I , " it""V � 'W'r�, . , � � ,­; 14� " A, 71 - I , ,� , � , " I , I . , . - . . � , 1, . - I � I I I I., I . 71T " ,� � 1* . , � , I I I I . I � , - _ � i � " I % "' r - , � 1 , , 1 , � � , P" -7 I " �� , !" I ,F­�F 'N I, ,", I I . I ! � 'I'm . . I I , I � � 7 77w, , '.1g,f, . I I � 11 � I � , , ;il �I - III � "I, . ­ ­PVIP_151�K. 11 I I , I I � " .. . , , , , � , �. . � o - � , , . , S. I I .- . i I �. I 11� , � ��. ,� �. .."I � � : I 0 THE HURON E"OSITOR * , !,�! � I - I � -11 I— I I I __ - . � . ­ � I � M dl�, �" . � U - t1f 51),11 0 CIGAR ,.*---.-- ,� I rtfr h , I,. MER'CHANT­_ ,-%p . -.11'' . ,Z,, , - k. By Gilbert Frankau -� o ,4 Romance of Mar7ied Life � . I V I I i I I -1 I �. --,. . . - ­ . co*inlbed fiv= 1"t W06. . � I : I I � I 0or MW17 un minut" nafto spoke. it was''s- night for conedine as; sflen�, save for the rivier chuckle BtaT ; pewetul. But the two Pliv" i " is'-- smoked on.; retiellut each 14Wmvft his own. dreamibw the one smug a gmat iyusinme, worIg Wide, endless in 0"Mtunity: tho Dther, vignabW m adver radianee a gaiiwi�-ther--sable-ibaologi4owid ,d hil thought, the :features of a giri_� I girl live thousand miles removedfion England--& girl for whose 'sake aix wkhout hope Of reward he -had vow. ed hinuelf to the dissatisfying gm c -f Work. . . "Why dm1t ym get nvarrie( . it I agam? asked ,Pleter suddenly. "Ondy becavaiii I caWt afford, it., lied- ,Fmnds Ckwdon. . 0 6 - Violet Rawlingsii sprightly as ever won more &My dressed than us. =I, mid her hu&bwbd Hubert, deter =n1ed that nuiety-mx ,hours oC per gonal. suggestion should at lust so mre Mm sonve part of the Nl.rvfkm advertising account, aimivied in tin'u rer lunch next day. . The doxy4aceo: Publicity agmt lost no tm-* in open �ng ,his canVsAgn. We went to the Pals,we last mot,, ,iebegan, almostbefore they had sal lown to their m;eal. "Ot, our,-wa,3 , ! .om-e I noticed that your new saig,r In ,Piccadilly wasn't'burning proper. .Y.", "Really," ,said Peter stiffly. t"Lobster mayonnaise, or som bd 'hese cold eggs?" asked Patricia �oping to turn the ,conversation. lButher fbrotther-in-4aw took no no� Joe. 'AI'm somewhat of an expert OT Ftig;ns"" he continued. "And frankl3 I don't think they have much sell. Ing value on a high-grade article hk� rours. J pin my faith to full page,, ,n the sixpenny weeklies., And, ol I - .course. Pundh." Peter, who knew that 'Rawlings Jeslyite7 his. personal unpleasantness posse_%ed knowledge, listened inter. ?stedly-as king a question every no" ind then. The others started a' cono versation on'their own. Said Violet, !�hloncopoli zing it. "Oh -,ut we never leave London while thf Rouse is ssitting.. I think politics s.( mteresting, Mr.- Gordon. Don't you! Ilhough I suppose as an author ----s( I .lever, that last poem of yours-yot take more interest in the affairs od the heart." She ruffled -herself; rattled on, "But, of course, politics are th( thing. nowadays. I'm afraid" - hei voice drop1ped to the confidential whis. per od the person who has no news tA impart---r"we're going to have trou 61e. Not with Servia, of course: bu, in Ireland. People are saying- VP S�m. 4 .. ith briV-ging the joint, interrupt. ad the Rawlings d,uo in their mono. [ogues. "'I always wonder," went on Hub, E�rt a few minutes later, "why yoi Adn't ake your brotlh'er into part, nership. 'He seemed an awfkilly nic4 rellow, the only tih* I met him." "Arthur?" queried Pe -ter. "Vk%y Arthur wouldn't take partnership ii Rothschild's! He ran away fron school when. he was fifteen; and he'., been running away from somewheri Dr other ever since. The last time ' heard from him, he was in the Dutel Indies -planting. Wrote to ask nil opinion about tobacco prospects it iava. Beastly stuff, Javanese tWo-ac co; though they use a lot of it foi making so-called Borneo cigars." 'Luncheon over, Peter and Patricii challenged the two men,at tennis. Vio let, languid in a long chair, alternate ly watched the match and picked he way e!xpertly through the Tatler. Ti own.photograph in that per iodical, not once but regularly, wa! a small part of Violet's many unre alized ambitions: which included , seat in the Housi of ,Commons for her husband, a,Rolls Royce.limougine (painted, black an4 white for preference) for herself, ani all the usual appurtenances orf th, politico -parasitical set which both o them alternatively aped and en -vi& Neither sbe nor her husband belongei to the class who 'didn't.want anythinj in particular'! Peter playing brilliantly at the ne end Patricia, backing him) up accur ately from the ibase-line, defeate, their opponents in three straight set,, Followed tea, a languid -paddle to wards §,hiplake, the dressing gonf stiff shirts and low frocks, auctia . July the thirty-first, Nineteen Hur Ared and Fourteen! Aaready th Beasts th GT&y--4murder, Tape an plunder in their swinish eyes - wer abroad. Already the Crime, so Ion, premeditated, had, been c0mftndtte( EWn as these four sat at their gamq les -s than fifty miles away from ihA up in London, amiable old gentleme of Westminster were scuttling hitlie s, anxious t compromim, fearfW. P'Two no trunips," said our X Jacksom PARTIV, CRISIS . I 1 1 To edrnorehend our 'Mr. Jaeksion - is essential you should rialize hd very little he Icared for m6ney, r4 gwded gurely as the purchase prk of wateritl contfort. As a spende he had small sympabhy with the lui ury, a his thm. His smusemml .were essentially simple ­a gun,. trout -rod, a horte, a good vlass 4 'Wille. . But Peter bad' been picked q while srtUl a boy,, into the f"icinatir game of busin"s; iwd in that jun had fovM both w**,(vrh1ch, vois vi I . I I ,N1441 &I to his "="kMuWA"V1Z%'y and enjo-, Mmt 34irmna Un*4d) *tgeh wou I tA" 69M to.,dw amaMe Individul , mersly a awAfifts fff *0 law I L . I . . � I I . I., . V 1, i , I ., I I I iI -i '"6661" �� - I . � I an income, represented to him - on mient� Mw emu ww &aLred=stiffj Ift August Bank Holiday, 1914---tthe,ult- been for two days. � Peter him inAige aim in life. lie laved that Wsd-: wanderinc , up and down the half mese not only for the sake of what ,empty building, damp cigarette be it might eventually bring him, but for tween his lips, white about the gills itself. He loved it, like a good gard- Obeirnately Adgeting and depressed ener lolfts his ,garden; as hawh .for 7be fan=9 Muck Tnoustaches, wer the labour as for the resuft, diNtiuvilY out at curl; the barilliantine( Wherefore, En9WA&i deelarstion,of b4r lacked its usual 'Polish. � war did wt our hero, 4burn to "Morning, Branymm You look ra, I Ilant little Belgium,' or ther out of sorts." I . =, 41=9 phraseology of the per. , Orainson led Ovolancholy way intA 1Q4, 'to do,.Ws bit.' tW private offlo4K , � He left 'Wargrave at ten o'clock. "It's all U.P. with us -now," Im on the morning of August the fifth, said. '14We're ruined. Miat?s aboul and reacho the-outskirtS Of London the long and short of it.1p in forty4ive minutes. Then he gave "Ratls!" sna0ped Peter lighting i the wheel to 'Murray, and began to cigar. thirik. Miroughout, his hand had "rho BanOwill be down on -us fol been pezfectly steady at the'throttle, that overdraft . ., .11 his foot firm on theamelerator. Their '93oet be a fool. To bogin with speed had averaged forty miles an 'they caift call in any loans. Thereli hour. a mlbratoriu= Secondly, if they dc Behind b1m;,- in the tonnea% sat wwrt their money, I can 9" it. D( Francis Gordon, acting as always on you really think I guarantee liabili inspiration rather than reason, de- ties 1 ican't meet. I cision already rewhed. Francis Gor- 'I hadn't thought of the morator. don. ta*ed to hintself, ,under his iulM" began Brantson, plucking u� breath: firsit in Dutch and then in courage. . German. He Was, testing, not his IPeter, Puffillig slowly at his cigar knowledge of those langdages, but -got cover the flash of temper. his accent. "Ich kann es tun. Ich "Worried about that thousand ol bin einer der eim"gen die es tun kon. yours?" he querded suddenly. ' nen," -he muttered. Then he began "No -o. Not exactly. But . . ., to recite, very slowly and t1most in- "'You are worried. Of course you �udibly, the first speech frolhil Schil- are worried. ,So am I. .190'si every- Jer's "'Republican Tragedy': . body el'se- I,k me reh-&nd you thal 'Leonora. "Nichts. mehr. Nkhts I've got 'twelve thousand pounds. in mehr. Kein Wort',Mehr. Es ist am -the concern, in addition, to that con- ?, � . Tag., ' founded overdraft. For goodness Peter was not'talking to himself. sake ipull yourself -together, man Quietly'his brain -went over -the sal- ld6f'-s��Jhave a look dt last month's fig- ient facts of the situation- weighing ures." '--' .. . ' them up; discarding details';, selectil* ;B-rwnson went to the safe; opened essentials. The Jack&on-lBeckmann it; -took o,'ut ,some papers. "Get a problem must wait. How would Nir- Pellcil," said Peter, "and write down vana be affected? Horhe, trade for what I tell yo,u. - - '. Ready . . the moment at any rate, would' col- Right . - - . Now then: Assets laps.e. _ The export business night : - ." He dictated steadily, pick - hold up. Might. -Probably wouldn't. ing out the amounts from the big hat if the�worn tYPeWritten statement. "Liabilities carrie to the worst he stood to lose - . ." The dictation continued. u . That's the lot, 1 -think. Add them, up After all, people .must smoke. Wars' please." . - .. didn't last for ever. Could he see �Branison read -out the figures: "As - the thing through? Financially? sets 227,862.: Liabilities.. including .."'London and Joint Stock Bank overdraft =396." � Pall Mall," he said to the chauffeur.' "Which nitans," coWmented Peter They swirled thtrough Piccadilly; "that your thousand and my twelve nipped round past the Ritz; slowed are worth about five between them down St. James' Street, and pulled Roughly eight shillings in the poAn� up. - -if we could - sell the factory as a "A'fraid I can't lend you the car, going -concern." . c,ld man," said Peter. "I shall want :"You haven't taken anything for ' .t all day. Are you comirLg ,down a. ,the goodwill of.,the business," put in gain to -night?" Bramson. it . No,pt answered Francis. "Pro,ut's "Of course I haven't. That's the bringing up my things on the after- whole question., Up to the end ol poon train." He 8&te�>ped out of -the last. month we were making ipr'ofits tonneau: brushed, hij�seff carefully That was why you bought Turk - and walked off down Pall 'Mall. Peter' civitch's s,hares, wasn't it? Do you telling Murray to wait. climbed t,.I,., think we're going to make a profit flat steps to the glass doors of the . this month?" I Bank They were ciosa�d: but his 6"We nxi-glit." . knock ,brought a eon*n4SSionaire, who "'Forget it," said, Peter genially. rccognized him,; open;;� them. "The best we can hope for is to nurse "No business to -day sir," said the the show through this damned war- con-srMssionaire. if it doesn't last too long. Now lis - ."Manager in?k asked Peter. ten to -me . . .11 "Yes, sir." I He plunged into detai1q, giving his "Ask him if hell *e me." orders sumdnictly. This wntust po; tha The Bank always quiet, seemed, be curtailed. Publicity account, sell that morning -like a tomb. CleAs ing expenses, manufacturing charges 'bent cover their ledgers; lights burnedi clerical work -Peter dealt with each but no customers waited at the iron- setiatim, hardly referring to the fig grilled tounters, s res on the table. "As for the fin eo in the brass shovels. afi�e;` he comluded, "III deal witil "'Step this way, sir," said the com- that myself. But mind you, tbewhok missionaire. thing's a gamble . . . Play pak Peter followed him across the stone er, Brams,on?" he asked suddenly. floor, through the. glass doorway into "Occasiona]13�." the nianagvr'-s parlour -soft carpeted, "'Well, if you ev6r put up your las lavishly furnished with dark-mahog- table -stake to bluff the jack-Nt OT any and saddle ibag chairs. ' Mr. Davis, the branch manager -present position of Nirvana Limited.' ' Two minutes wag a gray-6earded man with the , later the car ww clothes of a ,prince and the manners purring Citywar&. bf a diplomw�t. ' As a 'West End ' . § &, 1!ranrb, 'Pall Mall' did noot'seeik iner- ,Passing over London Bridge cantile business. They had taken through Graceeburch Street and Fen the Nirvana account, officially, ,to church 'Street, Peter saw that th oblige their old client Mr. Jackson, 'City had in � no wise altered. Th � whose private account,they had hand- sam-e drays, motor -omnibuses, taxi led for so -many years.' This court- cabs -and rmotor cars fought their wa hugh its streets. The same bare tion in their u-suall rates of interest! headed clerks hurried along its pave . ",Good morning, Mr. Jackson. I half ments. The same hawkers proffere expected you.," 'Mr. Darvis rose; shook the sanie wares. Only the close hands. "Won% you take a seat?" doors.of the banking,houses portend O'Thamks%. I calme to ask you &bout ed the unusual. the financial position. This war, you In his own offire at Lime Strete know. The papers talk about a mor- .nothing spoke of world-eirisis. PW storimm I understand that to nwan kins still smt at the inquiry Aes,k.01 a suspension of credit. . . ." George was still dus,ting cigar boxes �'Onfy in extreme cases,, Mr. Jack- Miss Macpherson's typewriter clickei son. 0n,ly in extreme cases. Of and tinkled from the clerk's office be course we are not desirous, at the yond the stock-roonvs. . Sin*pson,'jus mioment, of increasing facilities. we back from his chop at the Georg are, if I may use the expression, sit- and Vulture, showed no signs of de ting on the fence. But my, direct<>rs 1pression. He too, had interviewe are anxious for ,me to impress on all hi,,4 bank Tnanager. our clients that they do not, antici- "And what did Smollett say abou pate any financial crisis. Measures-, Beckimiann's bills.?" asked, Peter. -as I am given to believe, have been "It looks as though we shall hav -taken; temporary expedientg adopt- to n -*et them," said Simpson. "Yol ed; by wMeh. . . .11 He went on ,see, they%,e been discounte4. throug] to explain them, at .%onrme length. �an Engqish Bank. As far as I ca . "'Then I take it," said Peter, "that inake out, Becknmnn's aren't techni on the resumVtion of banking busi- ally Germans at all. ne firm's dom to. -iciled in a neutral country--.po Smwl .,"Matters will be exactly aq they R6tt SAYS. - - ." were a week ago." Mir. DeMs, rose a, "Do you fti*an to say we shall b gain, shook ban4e, mAde his -point allowed to 90 on importiog ,th ,courteously. O'Naturally, 1M1r. Jackson (brand ? " as Nirvana Lindted will not be under "'I don't me why not," said SimT the necessity ot making payments, WIT. .. thery Ywill not require any aWtion to That there could be any patrioti the ov*!�dratt which you 'have guxT- reasons for not.trading- with Beet ante%d for them. " nmzm's did not yet strike them. , - Of course not," said Peter- .The "El-kins and Bereidord wiV be su interview had turned out twcording to try, ind use this td prejudice ew to anticipation. If Nirvana wanted tonwra against the b=d;' sugge'ste any mre awney, it wot1d have to be Peter. found i eash 'Let tham" Sonwhow the M Us = for a agoment on the %eemed to have nerved Siniqpson. PetA gtqn of the ,Bank. London had not never xenmrkered him so decided. altered in a night. The straight ar- "W% mast go slaw", was his vel istocratic t1horough1ire seenied a lit- diet. "Of course trade will atao)uti tle busier than usuAl. lUt w"'al. ly disa*ear for the firgt week or & Then he looked for, the gaudy sm- 'Then it'll begin to piek. -up, agai� tr&%i *%#aide'L N:&r**rov%* Rouse; There'll be no difficift about " Inow,joat they, wm* In khakil pUes. W%stsrer happens on laim . P7& factory, plesso, 3(urray; and our Nwy's got tl* Oeftnus beate as fast as you car*" mid our 3(r. at *$&. Go 910W &'nd kom our I Jackson., - - - A 9=1 1i9u14-4hv&s-v* = . 4 1 2 By the way, hdw Wbout that f" To de6m-ibe Pretty VrarMwn as ner- of yolu no ? " .� WW V0,ould be '6 groft Under&t&t*- LF 104 a I I' nk _., Ili" .- I . " 7 _111,111�rll 7". 171m- �1� Yjl';��, ,,�,, �,',; -7. � .. " . � ,� ,� '�4� .'' "A' , ­ "i 141,11"I"'W--f- � 7 11" I I I I, am had always bean rILtber bostfl, Aout Nirvana --then waiA "IPwe beei lup there this nwrning. Brunwonk rather rattled. We shall have to ,K4 islow there, too. It's &,pity the braim couldn't hvtve had another two year�, ' hard advertising before this 'lappen e& As it is ---everything depends o., hoow long the war JaSts. 4 If it goe� on more than six b*nths, I may haw to find a partner. That means pact ing with a big slice � of my shares You me, I don't feel I ought to ta.k4 any miore of my capital out of th! business." -"No. I agree with you there '.rhough if it become absolutely nee eseary, . . . By the way, you wonp� nwind my saying so, but I never un - derstood why you took on Prett� Bramsou. ,He hasn't -got a very goo( reputation in the trade. And thei his cousin Kamus being a comPeti ' tor . ' ." ,4i3Oh, he's not a bad littae chap� Peter, Mw alt,good men of business Vag ovw�loytl'f* fiis staff. "The on13 trouble is that he haset got Tnuel I guts. - -Dut i he's all right as long ju You Upp -an e" on him . . . Gom Lord, itfs nearly three, oldoda, anc that poor devil of a chauffeur ar idw 'hasn% bad his 1-unich yet." . - PHad any yourself?" askied Simp am. . It was the one detail of the d&3 which' our W.' Jackson had forgot. ten! I I � A 4 I "And are we quite ruined?" chaffe( . Patricia, as they linished dinner th4 - 8=0 evening. Prout and the Rawl. imv had taken the afternoon trair to town, leaving her lonely and -t( tell the trut&�nore than a little w'or. . Iried. f "Not quite, old thing," retorteo� Peter. . .. . I . IBut that night, for the first tinu . in years, he woke - W sf�ddenly; sa,% ' her sleeping pea6,efully in the wh,it( 'bedstead next'bis, oWTVIL-and realizk that his resj)onsibilities were not ex. . clusively confinedto, th,� financing ol Nixivana Limited,. . PART V P DECISION � . § 1 lPassed .the first week ---a week ol rumours and counter-runiours., barrer of certainty. AmWble old gentlemen -,protected by a Navy they had done their best to weaken --gabbled high . words of hope. The few trained;rnen laughed at for year---, departed sil- ently about the ' ir business: the half. trained set themselves to learn. But, already, the spirit of Britain was, a- stir., Slumbering; -the spirit swoke: a , 'blind sipirit, con&cious only of resent- in-ent, of independence mysteriously threatened,, of something wrong in the world; finding its'quaint vent in shib- boleth phrases, in deep drinkings, in , wagging of flags; but gravving grow- ing always, not to be deniea. Al- . ready, through the domino cafes of London, at the long bar in the Eng- lish Club at Shanghai, in dark Ming- alowi of the Malay Peninmila, on C,anadian ranches and Australasiar 'sta,tioi& and South Mrican 'farms, there -ran the words: "I think I ought to'go, old boy." "Well, mate are you going?" . lBut no word had yet reached Peter Jackson. Me city held I him. Fo7 the momient, the old gairrw -played it- sel f on. It was a 'qiriet' time; 'but not sc bad as -he had anticipated. Jaoks-on'� customers, disregarding the nwra� �torium, paid their accounts; gay.E niggling orders. The week's shipment arrived -punctually from Hafvana. Nir- vana, to the untrained eye, seeme� hardly to 'have suffered. 'The fom ; machines stamped and clicked all - day; girls bent over the packing tab - 9 les; the thi-Imen pricked and soldere� as before. Only the pink slips ol - d unfilled orders' dwindled and dwind- - led, the piles of unsold cigarettes ir the stock -room rose.,and rose. (Peter was sitting alone in the bact - ofFice at Lime Street, thinking ho,A soon he would have to begin -paying cff his hands, when Parkins announc, t ed "Mr. Raymond P. ,Sellers." "What does he want?" asked Pet er. P '44 1 think it's an American, gentle� man, sir. 'He said he had a 'proposi. tion' to put before you." -. "Ask ,him to come in." 9 There entered a clean-shaven young - man with gold eye -glasses, in squan � shouldered clothes, square -tipped pat, � ent-leather shoes, carrying a panami - bat in one hand and a reporter'., � note ,book dn the other, who ejaculat - ed: "Say, Mr. Jackson, I'm real gla( to meet you," in a.voice which n( d citizen of the United States ever us d' ed on land or sea. - Peter started to shake hands; look- ed up at his visitor; and- burst, out y' "Francis, You b1fthering idiot, wba on earth are you doing in that. get i up ? Pt I . ,Franois looked round, to see if tb, door were closed. Then be said, ii his ordinary voice: "It i -T a birt grot esque, isn't it? But as the ,specia n an(mv . Intous Ani ericAn newsipaper syndicate, I thin] d- it will pass forr the next few days.' "You always were a bit of a luna t tic," said Peter gTuffly, "but this i the limit. What do you propose do ing in your fancy dress?" 1"I'm leaving for Amsterdam on to ,night's boat, if you want to know,' n answered 'Francis. "After that, in! �_ -plans depend on circumstances ' * Loo' � 'here," he becan-o suddenly ser, � IOU4 - "thial isn't a joke., I should get int the devil's own, row if 'they' knei I'd been down here. You nyustn't tel e a -scoul,, Peter. 'Honestly. Not eve Pa;tri6a. I -know it sounds like penny novelette -but nvost of th . penny ndvieletbes are coming true a C the 'n-Adment. Word oe hociout, ol -mian, you won't teil a wuL " nce le :that the sladmess, bad disappeare from ,his face. ne lips were tighl *set, the eyes dark with mypprewd enwtion. 4 1 In ""Word of honour, Fran�cit. a WM tell a soul. Not even Patricia. Wh did you conve here, thoWh, if it we - igainst'1-4ie sturabled, over the ww '�koi I ­ d�rs?" � 0 (Continued-- next week.) . - - . ;ft was I the undorm eMelle 4 grade A tuTbeys of the Ou"s 0. Poultr,y.pool of 'weetern CaYA& tho brought t order,) rrm , GIV, Bstain, =this-r*m%A "T *100 I apVied to the reetut "Vort shhmen, of cbkkens. P PAGE.SEVE IJT I . - * ''I 090- . . ' . - rv�:��,:;'����, L 11 Ift. - " I C L .- I Z I �� t qP � A HEALTH SCRVICX (W THE CANADIAN MEOICAL'- 't ASSOCIATION AND LIFIC ^� INSURANCE COMPANIKS N IN CANADA INFANTILE PARALYSIS When we ugse the teiim "infantile 1, 1paralyois", we are ,perpetuatingi a mistake made by giving a name to a disetse w6kh is not limited to chil- dren and in which paralyris does not always occur. The correct name for �he disease da poliomyQitLs, vAuch nwone an inflan*niatkin of certain parts of the apinal cord. As in most of t1w other �.comanunicsble diseases, aporaffic caaw of Wantile, paralysis may o0mr at all times of the year. In this emmtry, Opidenvics of polio- myelitis reach t%w heq:ht m the late summer or early siftrdn. In the southern heennisqhere� epidemaics oc- cur,at the time of your vAdch is late suW*ner in that part of the globe, during our wintw. m3e cause of PoNionvelitis. is 8 . virus, or kviur agl6t4 which is so agnute that It ckmot be seen even with the sad at the most powerful microscope, and it passes, through ffi- ters which elWnate the ordinary dis- mse-producing g�ertns. Nevfto%ekse, Lt is Possible. for the scienti*s in lbui [aboratones to grow tbm virm and study its behaviour. . L . As far. as we know, the disean is Hnited to,hwnan-b,e_ift,s, so we con- flude that it is spread from Person. to person. The virue ft found In. the, secietions of the nose.and throat, and it is genierally believed that the virus mters and leaves the body by way of %e nose- and throat. The virus is found not only in the nose and throat of Viose, who are suif- krinj from the 4wase, but also in �he nose and, throat of awarently well persons who newer show a:my ervi- fence of the disease. Such persons Lre known as carriers. There are mrriers also of dipplitheTia, typhoid �' .ever, and, otheir communicable dis- mses. Undoubtedly the carrier is re- �ponsible for the spread of the dis- ?ase in many -cases. I Following exposure to the virus, :here is a, period of from. three to Aght days before the appearance of ;ymptoms. Then, if the virus has .,rained control over t1he body, there )ccurs ,the pre -paralytic stwe of the lissease, in � whfich the syh#vtom-s are i, stiff neck, felt when an effort is: -nade to touch the chest with the �hin, headache, drowsiness and, vomit - ng. These symptoms may -be, and .ice. Many cases- recover at this, >oint; -others go on in -to the paraly- � .ic stage. The importance of recog- ,rizing the pTe-paralytic stage lies in ;ts being in this -stage that convales- ,ent serum may N� given. Whatever m pe �arly use. If paralysis does occur, ,ts crippling effects, are minimized by proper rest and relaxation of the T.1uscles as ,long as prain and fever ptrsist. 'It is only after that period �hat exercise and massage are em- >f the mruscle,s.- I Questioms, concerning Health, ad- Iressed to the Canadian Medical As- ;ociation, 194 College Street, Toron- to, will 'be answered personally by ktter. - I FARM NOTES m Eind overseas markets depends prin- -ipall z y on quality, and also on vo-lirme which must be maintained at a steady now. . The,total amount 6f ,branded beef sold in Canada during the month of June wa--cr 3.497.747 pounds, an in- i!rease of *314,314 pounds'on June, 1933. � . - Norway (excluding Svatbard) bus Fin area of some 1-95,000 square miles Df which la�es and ri�vers occupy ov- er 4 per cent. Of the. land area of slightly over 120,ON square nidles, 70 . per cent. i.s for the rn*st part unpro- duttive. leaving 36,000 square miles of productive forest, pasture and ar- I able land. I I 'nere is no record of the produc- tion o,f wheat in Canada ih 1830 but in 18M 2,366,554 acres on 464,M7) farms produced 32,350,452 bushels, whereas in 1930 24,898,999 acres on 728,664 farn-gs pro-dfuced 420,672,000 bashels. Thus in 50 yeam, the nifniber of farm increased only about 57 per cent. ,while the nuniber of acres in- creased &bout 1,000 -per cent. . The application of moolern, refrig- erabion to fur storage has undergone rapid developinient in recent years with the use of freoN an odourless, safe, refrigerant, with dry cell units, which maintains uniform low tmn- peratures essential to ,the preserva- tion of life and lustre of fur --,--Cold I Storage News Letter, Don -Anion De- partment of Agriculture. - 11 - To produce and harvest the *heat crop of the three Pmirie Provinces by the methods used 100 years ago would require the labouT of all of the farmers of Canada, their sow, and their hired men ten bours per day for a period, of 113 days, or about the � normal period from seed thm to har- vest. -Dr. J. F. Booth:' Three years of investigation of th,@ prao-tice of cutting turnip - tops for - green feed -sonve ,weeks before the root.9 are Valed, condueted by. the Division of Ohemixt�y, have pftv that the practice is -not profit". A � storage of nutrients takm Vhwe im the turnapv -during the autdom vieks and this stoTage is cheebed by astly towing. A Lice and nitin are ofbm the ft =-e ----'--2 of rx)cor egg VIVUROVIUMM (kning hm wrather. Bodv lia* eftn. �be controU ,by -the use of bluc,, ointment bereath the wirrg,�o and around Am vent. Mite,q feeding off the birdv al Twight and living in cra&s and ervi, vkm 4u,ring the day bave to be tiv*t ed differently. OnNnury coal oil wit MR tho infitcm, but as it evapomAb" qmdft the effects am no� %istme. Ar " i "I . � , . I ­� ­_­ ­­ ­ -­­­­-­-- - . I I THERE'S no athw cand like Kellogg's Rice Kris. � pies. Bubbles -of rice so crisp they crackJv and pop in milk or cream. � Children, especially, liko this fascinating cereal., Wholesonie, too - let them eat all they wavL Fine for breakfast, lunch, or the kiddies' suppei. Made by . Kellogg in London, Ontario. I . . I 0 I � . L I 0;t � . 1, I � ­­ e.,n . I '- I I . . . I 1� I � I " . I ". , . 11 � . . I I I 1�, 11 I �P. W: Aw" I . . I I . I ,.. . � /2_04AB ::_1__&1%m I,,-,-, emellent "painVI to apply,J;p, ,the roosts apd. nest boxes is coo I iposed ot one part- crude mrWie or, 6�_-y ' better still, nicotine sulphate, to, threb � or four parts of coal oil or a mixture I of coal oil and crank case oiL 0 . . I To insure bavm'g a supply of let- tuce, spinacli, radish and Chinese cabbage for fall use4 the seed s;iould . I be sown at this time. I The varieties that are best adapt- ed, amording to the Dominion Horti- L culturist, are Grand Rapids and Ice- . berg lettuce; King of Denviark and . � Prinicess Julieza spinach; Chibli and � � Petsai Chines"e, cabbage, and Scarlet Turnip White or Scarlet Globe rad- I ish. I - I 'Should the soil be quite dry it is . important to open the disills and if irrigation is aivailable, apOy suffid- ent water to moisten the s6il, and as- ,1 , soon as the lond -has dried so as to I I ; not be -sticky, the seeding shadd be ; done. , . . 1, -r "I . - I � ,In the 1932, honey survey of the En4kre Marketing Board. Canadian ,honey was found, stocked in eight out - i of the twenty principal departmeuW 1� stores ini,ondon, England, wid in six out of tbeeight chiief stores of Qas- I gow, Scothn& Only the ofWal ,brands, ,�Bee-kiist" and "Queboc"*ere . found in Glwwoow, w1hile in London ' ., - six Canadian varieties were on sale. :I I I., In London, ,honey of a light coloui! ­� was preferred; in Glasgow, the I �� &lighftly darker amber colored honey - ­ " was imre in evidence. . . I � 'I, __ 1. L ( .i � � , � I � I . � I ?A C10 mr, I I .11 q"h 0% " dw . I!, Liver and Kidneys ­ - " " � I we &*end by � ') I . 1� I D9%C1NALSK`S , I � 1i MR, a TTTT�� - - � I i . �A A LONDON AND WINGRAM � . 11 . South . ,� 11� I I . 'I P.M. 1 1 Wingham .................. 1.55 1 � 1 4 Belgrace ................... 2.11 �. I Blyth ..................... 2.23 i L<yndesboro ........ ; 2.30 i Clinton ..................... 3.08 . 'I Brucefield .................. 3.27 i Kippen .................... i 3.35 , � -1, Hensall ..................... 3.41 � Exeter ................... 1. -,3.65 , �� I I , I North � I J 1 . ,:.7 A.M. ,�l Exeter .................... � - 10.41 1 i , i I 1 Hensall ............... 10.55 1 � � :,.... Kippen ........ � ....... .... 11.01 . I,! I ,'I Brucefield ................. I. 11.09 .�'� Clinton .................... 11.64 �Jl Londesbcor^ ................ . I 12.10 . 1� I Blyth ..................... 12.19 I I ]EWIgravie ........ � ......... I 12.90 � Wingliam ................... 12-60 . �J � . C. N. R. . � . 11 Bast . i A.M, P.M. , Goderich ............ 6.45 2ZO � Olinto-n .............. 7.08 3.00 � . & aforth ........... 1.22 , e 8.18 I Dublin ............. 7.83 &3T � 3G"�J ............ 7.42 8.49 ; I West . : Dublin ........ � ..... U-19 9M � I Seaforth ............ 11-U 9.45 Clinto" . . I ........... 11ho 9.59 Goderilch 12-10 2026 I ......... I. 1 � � . . C. P. R. TU*Z TABLE I . � . . IkA , I , , . 4 A.M. Godetich .................. - 5.50 .... 1.1;*. 0 fe'.0. 6Z6 .4 Moasw .......... , ....'....... GAM ,� � Auburn ........ #- 0 ... 4.60,6.0 6.1t, , slyth........... i.a......... 625 6 * ww* 0 0. *V* 0, 6.40 XcLNaught ...... ; ......... �.. I'Wonto ... * ... * .... **6*w.. 6.52 1 10". . went . " , : I ­_ . . 1A.M. , , I T�1� ..................... I 11 7.40 1 11 MeNwWht ................. 11.48 ,) Walton ..................... 1.2.ft di � Blyth .............. ...... 12.19 �1. IAuburn ................... 4.'. 12.231 , I � Nwasw ............. , '. '. *. *. , .1244 1 �N 11 menset ............. : .* 1 12AT 1, ., 1 4 1 10�� .0 .,. .p. . �* ae ., 0 0 4 4 . * �_% I I � ". . I