The Huron Expositor, 1939-08-04, Page 7M
11
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tea• . i.:i t t tl , 'I'll"1t r �J'r.
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E1401t D. $E.1144 $,A: '
Suposissor to John IEL Beat
1 W. Siolli4ter, Notary Public
8estedh - Oatuto
Is -411
McCONNELL & RAYS
Bantatem Sonciters, Lto.
rapIck D. MCConmell - H. 0191 Hays
• SEA.FORTH, ONr.
Tele#holn•'a 474
ipl<-
YETEIaINARY
4:
A. R. CAMPBELL, V.S.
,RasduXte 4d Ontario veterinary tool•
Sage, UnivemAty of Toronto. All dds-
"m 0 of domestic animals treated by
fine most modern principles. Charges
reasonable. , pay or nigh'' . calls
gramptlly attended to6 OaUs.on Main
Street, Hensall, opposite Town Hall.
V"hone, u& 'Breeder ed Scottish Ter
Asia. Inverness Kennels, Hensall.
12-W
l MEDICAL
SEAEORTR CLINIC
IJR. E. A. McMASTER, , M.B.
Gradyate of University of Toronto
J. D. COLQWHOUN, M.D., C.M.
Graduate r Dalhousie University,
Haiifa%
The Clime is fully equipped with
Completeand ern X-ray and other
sip to dente disos'ie and thereuptic
,equipment.
.Dr. MArgaret S. CampbalL M.D.,
L-,®-B.P., Specialist in diseases in in -
.et mts and children, will be, at tAe
,Clinic last Thuradsy in every month
from 3 to 6 p.m. .11
Dr. F. J. R. Forster, Specialist in
tdIseases of the ear, eye, inose and
throat, will be at the Clinic the first
Tooefty in every month from 3.to 5
VML
Fres
Well -Bab
y Clinic willi,be held
on the s,"ad, and last Thursday In
*very movAb from 1 to 2 P.M.
, 3687-
JOHN;A. GORWILL, B -A., M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
Eq DR- H. H. ROSS' OFFICE
Mone 5-W - Seaforth
4
W. Q SPROAT, M.D-,' F.A.C.S.
Physician and Surgeon
Jane 90: Office John St., Seaforth.
1"s
. Dire. HUGH H. ROSS
Gftdmaite of University of Toronto,
Paealty of ]Medicine, member of Col-
lege elf Phywici¢ane and Surgeons of
Ontario; pass graduate course in
Cide'sgo, Clinical School of Chicago;
J?oyul Opthalmie Hospital, London,
England; University Hospital, Lon-
don. England. Offlice—Back of --Do-
;minion Bauk, Seaforth. Phone ,Wo. 5.
night calls answered from residence,
victoria Street, Seaforth.
U46
DBI. F. J. R. FORSTER
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Graduate in Medicine, Univet•sity of
'detente- e
mats assistant New York Opthal-
zwd and Aural Institute, Moorefield's
dye and Golden Square Throat Hos-
30tal, London, Eng. At COMMERCIAL'
HOTEL, SEAFORTH, THIRD WED-
NESDAY in each month, from 1.30
p.m. to 4.30 p.m. 53 Waterloo Street
South, Stratford.
124rl
AUCTIONEERS
HAROLD DALE'
Licensed Auctioneer
Specialist in farm and household
eases. Prices reasonable. For dates
And information, write Harold Dale,
Seaforth, or apply at The Expositor
*Nice. •
=47
A friend 'met a cheerful Irishman
wino had plainly suffered some bard
mocks.
Well, Pat, how are you getting ern
row?" he inquired
"Oh, OI'm still ,hard up, but Oi've
'a fine job in H'onolu'lee, and fare paid,
Oi sail tomorrow."
"Stere, man, you'll never be able to
work there. The temperature is a
bunda•ed in the shade "
Pat bad endured too much chear-
fctHy to be discouraged.
"Well;' he replied, hopefully, "Ol"I
net be workin' int th' sbade all th'
'toi'met."
e
Bobby's mother took him into the
bank and when he saw the pilus of
bills beside the paying teller be in-
OpAred: "Ma. is it because riches
ihsve wings' that they keep all the
phoney in a cage?"
•
Said Macpherson, entering the,
enar;
eery garden. , Have ya a .
euerber?"
Aye, here's' one," said the garden-
nea:1 "That ,mH be five pence."
, —roo much. H;Lvewt ie one fol
tuppence?"
Ye can have this for tuppence."
,,;
?�^^„'^.^..,•,,'}n'.nr ^"iii
w�iu _ fir"
FOURTH INSTALMENT
'FIFTH INSTALMENT
Barry Haveril leaves his Texas
home to see the country, meets a
man who has just been shot who
tuaina out to be a cousin of 'his,
'Jesse Coaa'oy. Barry helps take
care of lids woundb and Jesse
gives Barry his gain, a very un,
usual one. When they part Bar-
ry heaves. for homie but find's the
family is no 'longer :theme. When
ire is leaving he suddenly cones
across a dead man who turns out
to be 'ids brother 'Robert. Barry
starts searching for the murder-
er rind goes-Amtto the mountains
to And gold, to use for continudmg
his search. He finds a- good
spot, gets goldand goesto Tylers-
vd'lle to get money for it. There
be meets Judge Blue and his
.•.,dtaugbter Lucy, who help him to
get $4.50 for ibis gold. Judge
Blue also tells, him that the gun
Jes+e gave 'him is the gun of a,
murderer known as the Laredo
Kid. The Judge invites Barry up
0o visit him and there Barry dds-
covers the home and saddle
Which was, .stolen from his bro-
tihfei Robert when 'he was killed.
He finds onut bhat at belongs to a
cowboy who well return that
uught, He wtaNts outside the
,stabile and, finally a rider comes
up whto turns ,out to be Jesse Con-
roy, He accuses Jesse ,V killhv,,
hie brother and of being the Lar,e-
do Kid. Judge Blue comes up
behind; knocks Barry 'unconscious
and ?cells Jesse (Laredo) that
Barry knows where there is gold
and he's keeping 'him until lie
'finds out where it 'is' Barry es-
capes, however, and as ,he is rid-
ing through the mountains a shot
whilzzes past his ear. The man
wlao fired tihe shot explains that
:hie thought Barry was the Laredo,
Kid.
I =
I —
"If I was only shore," complaine,
the dp.,visible man. Ther1 he sai,
more brightly: "Step out where
can see ywli goad- If yah ain'
Laredo I won'tt drill yuh."
Barry stirred ever so slightly, stil
crouching in the hollow, and thu
A last was able to make. out th
form of the other mean, standin,
dose to a .pine. He lifted his gu,
and covered that dim form ateadily
Phen 'he ans•wwred with quiet eff
phases:
"I've got you covered! Wigg]
your ears and I'll be the one who'
drilling you! Up with 'em! High. u
and quick about it!"
A mo'm'ent later the two, standdn
fronting each other in the oper
am ly \satisfied themselves tt h a
reit e•r as the Laredo Kid. Barr
found himself looking down into th
upturned face of a dried-up littl
old man.
"No, yuh ain't Laredo, clang it,
admitted the little- gray man, an
sounded more disgusted than eve[
In the same querulous voice h
growled: "Daug it, I dunno Brow
come to mins yuh lice that, nuthe
I ougfh,t to've got yuh dead center,'
"What ,havle, ,you got agains
Laredo?"
"Aplenty! An' if I never do ai
other deed o' kindness, long's I ldvi
I',m goin' to let the bad blood out'
him, an' that'll be all the blood he
got: Tbaus a vow, stranger; hes
me? Mebbe it'll he a long char,
with him, on the jump like he is 't
"Where'd he ego? When?" da
marded Barry. 'What's happened?'
"Wait till I go git me my gun
He picked it up, dusted it off again'
a pair of ragged old overalls.
"Come along over to my cam',
IL's only a short piece back, up i
the gully. We'll squat an' gii. a
quainrted-!'
"Anybody else ai your camp?"
"Jus' Arabella.".
Arabella was as small and toug
and dried up for a burro as the li
tie gray man for a human being.
The old man by his own accour
was a sdhiftless. prospector. What li
real name was ,he 'never revealed
he conceded that men called hi'
"Alt right, there's etre money- aur
been';.,Jut it off; I,11 be calling for it
an about a fortnigthit!"
s
.,What were those unusual greens
have had tonight;° Oookt?"
"You remember, ma'am you said
4b9s4a geramiume in the garden look.
06) so lovely lou could eat ,them?" t
"Yes?"
I -`i ietl, you I u"I"
Nr
n, ,r,"�,,.•`�-„k�^��,t ,4A t,.ar:..,.a lel ,d.,r3''r ttM:1 edit:
hornet's. Laredo had busted square' graceiMly in an,accustomed saddle;
Into the Jamboree Saloon, and kill-
he jingled spurs with the best; he
ed' two men. But he dud even, more [
used, a revolver as, though it were a
than that., One killed was Jake
part of We own body, as much aiq as
Hammond, a man that folk's liked
his hand,
real well. And Jake's;, kid; Jackie,
He passed on, and found that this
only nine years old,,, happened in
was rapidly becoming, cb•ttle country;
there, stents ' hover 'by his, mama to
booking down into the lower band's lie
bring Jake home,;' and Jackie saw
was always' seeing herds, and occa,
it all and went crazy over it and ran
,sional cowboys.
and grabberd Laredo by the • legs.
With'n{;balf a day's ride from the
And Laredo said, '•'Yuh want some
creek where° lite hed, found gold, he
too, do yuh: yrh little—” and sliot
came upon a brawliing, squalling,
him through the head. He went out
lusty, raw brut of a town
.laughing, the boys said, but he went
This wtas Red' R)Qok when first
fast. o
Barry saw it one late summer noon -
Laredo, he crossed my trail close
day.
to six 'months: ago; I was out on, a
Everything was, commotion and
desert stretch a tconadd'Abie ways
dV&t and excitement, with the hum
from 'here, southwest. I don't do
,of cross, -cut saws, the 'thud of ham -
much talkin' about what happened—
tmers and the raucous voices of im-
but I been after hdn� ever since."
patient, sweating men.
Presently Barry said ,thlinking a-
Barry rtxatrried twenty -foes hours
bout. hds.plan, for tomorrow:
to bins bedlam and -w7aa glad to get
"You seem to know a good many
the noise of hammering and sawing
folks around here, Timberline. Hap-
and cursing out of his ears, the smell
pen .to know anybody out at the
orf 'aloe place out of his nostrils.
Judge's new ranch about thirty
He began .to see landmarks on
miles from Tylersville?"
every hand that he khrew as, well as
"I was out than way recently, pros-
he knew his owns boots. But over
pectin' them little ihills with the tied
the first ridge, looking down into
gullies ,in 'em. There was some new
Pleasant Valley, .he encountered the
folks out there, a man name of Hav-
unfamiliar a'ga'in. Down a winding
eril ain' his wife. A real purty Little
trail, riding like a 'man in some sc•rt
woman she was, too. He pulled at
Of new-fangled, riding' habit, a girl
his mustache. "I was goin' basic to
wlth hair fiyd'ng like tire•waving
see her same time, but she's gone
water-m,an,es was the final note.
now." I
T'he trail was ateep and cr^oolted,
"Gone? Why, they were there
he higfli above, ate far below. Al -
only bh'ree or four days ago."
most as soon as be saw- her be lost
"Gone now though, "Y'sete, young
sight of 'her around a bend. Once
feller, whatever happens in this
he heard -tier horse's hoofs clanging
country ^gets talked about in Tyler,
,against till,, rocks, though he could
an' Whatever gets talked about in
not see her. 'Then he did ,glimpse
Tyler, I find out when I drop in.
her at the exact instant when she
Three-four days ago the Judge
pulled, her horse in so stharply that
busted out't o' bore, headed some-
it s,lid an loth bunched feet. That
waveres else. Some folks says h,e
was because three men had- suddenly
wernt Fast air' some says West; it's
appeared befo'r'e her in a little open
my bet he's breaded Caldforay-way.
place, the three a breast, blocking
Anyhow,'he too•k'his gal Lucy with
the way.
him; an' he took his new ,hired hand,
He sale her whirl and start back
that lack Blount, an' [his purty
toward the valley. He heard a. man's
young wife along- --they say s,ho's
voice shoutdng; he saw one of the
a Haveril, too. An' he stopped off
three forcing .his harse, after ker; lie
at the New Branch, an' told 'eni
saw the w•+ide.n'ing noose of the man's
thiere .he'd sold it, an' he chased
r•cpe circling above his head—anci
them H,averdls off; an' folks say they
Leard the girl's scream.
for whore headed to Cal•iforny." He
Barry Haveril shot down that
cocked) a blue etye at Barry. "What
steep trail.
yuh askin' fur?" he wanted to know.
The two men holding her were so
"They're my folks," said Barry.
utterly taken by surprise that they
"Father a.nd mother, and brother;
stood stupidly and , gawked; ,he
and Zack Blount's wife is my sis-
third, slightly ,behind them and thus
,ter•."
nearest Barry, young and bleak -
"So you are a Haveril too, huh?
eyed, whipped out hds gun and fired,
Shake, H4veril." ..
and his, first bullet struck Barry's
Absently Barry shook as directed,
staddle`horn• and wbdn•ed off into the
feeling his diand gripped by a small
forest like ant angry bee. His second
one that seemed' old, leather 'on the
bullet went a'hiabst straight down
outsdde,,. stpring steel, within.
into the ground as the was toppling
First 13!arry returned to Tydters-
from the saddle, for Barry had fired
ville. He went openly, in broad day-
as he saw the obher's gun flash out,
light, but he was watchful at every
and found itstarget unerringly.
step. No onto molested bit=; none
Tire fallen . man's horse bolted
seemed to have any memory of him.
down trail and crashed into the lit -
Before .Barry left Tylersvdllet ire
tl. knot. huauaa and equine. htock-
drew- heavily upon, his pocket money
'ng the wtay. In a m,omerlt of ut-
and bought the first horste he had
most cc•nfusdon, with the girl almost
owned- He purdhra,sed the best to be
breaking free, Barry saw the two
had on short notice, and ode out of
mien reaching for their guns. ono
town that eveni'n'g well 41'dpped, h'is
of the two jammed the muzzle of
carb,4ite' lin saddlei holster, 'conveni-
his gun between her shoulders. .
en.tly at hand. He struck out for 'his
I "You shoot, damn you, an" I
own place, at tihe Tread of Sun Creek
shoot!" ;lie called, out.
Valley.
"Cali it a draw then, so you clear
Barry stopped at his ower creek
out," Barry retorted.
and went soberly to work. Day after
The g'iml with bh,e win&bilown
day the labored all day long with
hair and violet -gray eyes and the
sand and gravel, washing, his gold
fines of her that fitted into his Ideals
in a deepfry^ing pan. Encouatterin.g
like a beloved once in a Dover`s. arms,
one pocket after another during
was the loveliest t -Ung, the had ever
three consecutive days, each as rich
seen. At that i.nsitance Lucy Blue,
as the one he, 'had come upon the
like a little wustful, vatudshdng ghost,
first day, he accepted his good, for-
began fading out of his life.
l tune quite as a matter of course.
"I do thank you!" she cried out
"Must be more than two tlhou-
then, unnerved. "You, one man
sand dollars already! That's more
against those three devils: And—
than I'm to need. I'll Ret
ander-"
started torn rrowrndng."
"I'm going to see yIou again, you
When, be departed at daylight,
know," said, Barry.
still heading 'north 'and west, but
Site pointed.
beginnd.ng to swdng a bit more west-
"I live down •bh'ere. You can't see
wamdly, he carried his gold inside
the ,Mouse; it's hididen by the pines.
btis bed roll.
Yes. You will come to see me."
Down ,in a long valley at the ,head
S,hre spurred'off down the t.ra'l. He
of a vast, rippling, grassy plain--
went -on, his way, hoaded for his
cow country, this was — die tarried
lonely cabin and thinkim[g -of her,
at the boisterous little town of Five
Then at last the came into a coun-
Springs. Sctme dayla before, a young
try where, nothtintg 'had 11,<<ntged.
man aswermg Lanedo'�s descrip-
n
And then the saw a little tr-icitle
of bluish -gray smoke making its thin
wisp upward from his chimney! He
rode up to the cabin and dismounted;
bhrowimg open the door violently,
,4
Squatting before ,lids fireplace, bus-
ied with f ryd,n g pan a.nd coffee pot,
was old Timberline.
"Howdy," said Ti(nrber, as though
they'd parted yesterday. "Jus' in
bine for supper."
When Barry went straight to his
bunk and threw himself down and
r
Mt i , i
laughed, and kept on laughing, Tim -
1
berldae could on,ly suppose that lie
,` I
was drunk.
l '
(Continued Next Week)
"That's a vow, stran•ger," said Timberline.
121
Baldy' or Dad or Timberline, and
'tions, three others of his stamp with
that long ago be had come from
him, had stormed into town, paid
Georgia. I
his wild way in gold• dost, had) got -
yep, he }mowed Lai edo well, and
tent into 'a: brawl' and had stormed
beat knowed him a long while. Like-
out of Five Springs- again, headed
wise ,he knvwed Judge Parker Blue,
west. Barry followed' out.
an,, knowedi 'hi.m a lot better''n most!
Wiinenever be heard of depreda-
He refused to discus's' the Judge,
tions, of irawlesstness and- cruelty
t
grave generally, and beyond Muting
and wanton 1011H7391 --and these were
broadly that he had a fund of secret
trot uncomlmon r-- he sought his
knowledge about Judge Blue's past.
'Cbus'u Jessie in, the neighborhood.
In •the 'Laredo Kid's case, however,
But Contain Jeslste rode on, ever
the gates wel)61 wide opeu, I
vmstward•.
Tibe Kid, staid, -he, had mamraged
Both Barry Haveril and, the home
to get mmaself •into snick a mess, that
cuanibry, bvek into which ,he rode had
there waw n,otmdng left for ,him but
chaamged durd,ng three years. Barry
to skedladdie, w'hic'h he did with bill-
watt' to good' two inches, tallier; his
Yeti pesterinl him Ulke • a Swarm of
volas a Onewy slim figrlre, swaying
MEW
JAPANESE FRANKNESS
Characteristically, the Japanese do
not truet one another; one story they
enjoy Ming on ,bbernoellves ,to 11-
lusbrate tibia trait conte•'errns, two close
business friends who met in Tokyo
Central Station.
"Where are you going?" asked
Businessman One.
"I am going to Kobe," said Busi.
nesstmran Twgo, 'after some hesitation,
"Ha, you liar!" said Number, One
lowdly. "You told mo you are going
to Kobe to make me think you are
going to Ostaka! But I made inquir•
ies, amd I know you are t goingtc
Kobe! "
m a.
An Amerdcian newspaper correspon•
,dent dm Japan wrote to a friend), "1
don't know if this better will ever
arrive, becaudte the Japanese censtoi
.may opera, let." A week Pater he re
ceitved a mote from the Japanese posl
office saying, "Tlhe statement in your
letter is not correct:. We do not op
on lettele."
" t V
$.Tam tiblo"Wii'l�l t. ami* '01; 11,
mitawisltr[�,,, ls!ad!�i Rr�Xealts a �APd
0itdzea. for 1,9; 0, IN, borw, 1 In
bis shite T a416 MAWA'fi' d praOt sed felre- '
finger, 4'd , t1b4 t thele wleW t:lW&r, , pol-
bzirs the wrong way round. They l oo-k
to the Wcit' devstbeAdl of 40 thO
bou ti . ." •
Rev, Dr.4:T, S. Hemrdersop, in the
matured, vvtsd[-m of Us, 81 years, .be-
li'evess, 111041ii L'g ftct_'WaTW1 is One of
We secrets v: successful citdziepahip.
And he has' proved it by winning the
Good Citizenship medal for 1.939 a-
waa-ded by the Native Soros, of Bri-
bi,slh Cotlthtmbda, Post �Vu. 2.
"M+imfiskeirs are too ,fond' of banking
of the glories of the past when we
r?..ijould be trabking of the glories: Of
the 'futureis," said Vila silver-baired
apostle of happier thilil dig. "I do
nct believe, the Victorioms, loved In a
golden age. The golden age has yet
to come."
And When it does comes, Dr- Hen-
de,vson say's, there will be more work
for everybody atnd less work for the
indlivddtnal. P•e6p11'e will learn hOW to
wee .trhedu• 1,e1sture. There will be pros-
Fertihty, both eeo'nouhile and spiritual.
Cai adta will aria longer live under nine
governtme®+bs, with every .province
battlimtg for its life."
"I ,owly wish I could, be, twenty-five
years • oBd today," time veteran preac'h-
eir said., "I would dearly ,love to' live
in ttiait goldetn age you will know.
"You will see a W-'Mgd united sp:r-
itualiy as well as, mabelrially, a world
in which ,the forces- of science will
serve human needs"•.instead of hin-
dering them; in which national pre-
juddces will have disappeared."
Of the wairs and rumors of wars
that seem to blot out the golden age,
Dr. HerBd'erson bad little to stay. He
is. optUrnistic thiat .common sense will
preval'I ,over the forces of des'true-
tion; :but it war does came . . .
Will Start Afresh
"Wg siball have to,start afresh and
build our world anew."
That " is the philosophy of a man
who has won the distinction of
"Good Citizen's after byears of service
to an idea'1 of good livdng; who fi is:
kmndly, - gifted with a ready humor,
gra ions to friend and stranger, al-
waye attentive to a new point of
view.
His face has mellciwed with age,
but ibis eyes, sih-rewd and meditative,
shill retamn the sparkle of youth and
bis mouth has a humorous twist. .
When he. attended a meeting re-
cently t'he chairman alluded to a
i ss•ing fire engine by ,saying "There
s,eem,s to be a fire stomew-lhere." .
"Theme is no fire in this meeting,"
observed Dr. Henderson.
. Q1.
Has Faith in Youth
He has a benevolent faith in mod-
erm youth. He admires their cour-
age and cheerfulness in Abe face of
"temtpttabions and difficulties we nev=
er knew," but . . .
"Wihrat makes you so afraid of your
beds?" asked Vancourer'.s Good Cid-
aen. "Are you afraid of looking
cheerful in bhe. morning?"
YJuth ,has -so much cle'an'ing up to
do that an early start is essential,
Dr. Horde�ou says. He thinks they
might make a begitnutlug with sport,
WhLich is "fixing completely crazy"
under the influence of t'h'e cesb reg -
1 sit ev.
elisitev. •
Then there is radio. Dr. Header -
son thiwlc•s bile major !ty of programs
are, ,.;to inferior that ,!i•., wonders peo-
ple Itaten to them.
"Why can uM we, use this wonde•r-
ful Instrument -to the best possible
adgarctage?" hie asks.
A Heavy Loss
The loss of this wtiife last septem-
br,r '&fiber fifty,bh,ree, years of mar-
riage was a heavy blow to Dr. Hen-
dersce,, but he hes bowie this sorrow
w•i h eba.ractenvstne fortitude.
Born in Newmarket, he began his
active mAmAstry in Ontario, came to
St. Andrew's Ohurch, New Westmin-
steir, in 1903, and, for ton yearn gave
splendid leade.rstdip.
In 1913 ,lie was .made secretary of
social s,ervdce for the Presbytteinan
Churoh in the four western provinces
and- in the hall of 1918 was called to
St. Andrew's Church', Vancouver,
which he served until the union in
1925 -
Since .his retiremretit Dr. Hender-
son liar fiided many pulpits at the
requc•s,t of fellow mi,nri,sters. He re-
tains a keen Interest in, sport anxi
public affairs.
His, two main precepts for, good
citizenship are "virile goodness"
an,d "fidelity"
LIGH ON SUNGLASSES
Thar only way to make opt'cally
perfect glass' is by grinding and pol-
isfiing, whicth is exp+emwive. And, the
Brent majority of the 20,000,000 pairs
of sungla;sees sold, yearly retail at
less- than $1. At. this price they can-
not, be pmopenly made. They may con-
tain 'bubbles, specks or scratches.
TheBetter Vision institute, testing
cheap sunglasses on normal' eyes,
tcound some wha•ch distorted vision as
dra•s,tical'ly as, bhe average glasses
prescribed for defective eyesight, A
sitngle pair mlay shave a minus power
in one eye and a plus power in the
other.
Accordit to a report prepared Cor
the Bureau of Standla'rdts, many of the
cheapen' sunglasses keep out no more
sero glare than andtin.a.ry wintdowg'lass.
More oculists object to blue than to
any other ,tient- Bright yellow glass-
es sharpen eyesigDbt by eiimi'nating
blare haze, but marry cause +headaches
when warn for long. After elabor-
ate testt% the U. S. Army and Navy
have chroserr sungligseesi o8 soft green.
WIN% inferior sunglasses do no
pormranent barm, the effort of the
eyes to accommodate themselves to
even small d['sttortlonst may result in
eyestrain, heatd,a,cb,es, and in,fiamed
lids. So experts, advise you to buy
onlry aeclu ,tedy gmlmd suagla,s ell
from reputable opticians. Abov%,
avoid the ton -cent. junk (often made
In Japan) and flat ]tenses which cause
di,sttortrion when the eyes look to the
side, And, dlo,n't wear them at alt
unliess Mi rnustti—they Icon very eas-
ily beoomrte a harbdt.
, V !�,
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1'11�i
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p. �M�� � ,�i tM �, ,
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}_ t 4 ! r t I�!t111
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WNted� t 1' w els t, tvl}� KKK , l t Q Ai y�l} ul }s� . 4 S) i
�t9i'�"` ,. "f t{ $ �{4:, byT ,'}'O3ya1 X' rr �'� 1 },�u't y�' ,^�Y� i�t,,?,",
t� l
a y t r � f^ r 7 '; (!vs`ft+r, r �� �1 'r,t .. , .
It r� +�;
' ani y•, , r �•:�tl',�y ��yiU t si:' 1 iV Nz,a r`. +is
preq�Nt,l�9bCrnA 317p{'lYtu �1 x ^T dF + ,[,LAK ny
5T"'t` 1tV,11kQre #!lxf Y, - v'tz , i >< u?,.i 7 i3it r
RirdAlr, do a,"00,404014 � j 7i 5'Jr.t n °+`#�t
su,ppl+1� "Ot raw niatet'Q.'c�il1.t'3'� 'te�.} �? '� � �ab Tyr, P�t�rt,'k� s
Web precision t ll' t 'tbe Fo I . i * �n e r i � it!I }
nfleKl .Dkrot a &lar 10 vl+a fell ��a?�ul,ak 1 � &ie I)Y,P tsvl ,
�y •,.
eight O'yDlOOk o;1' +�:.., 1 - r $p �}° ijt t,(c „ t a.- i Fif!{�' M ' i�u "h'S P"ytY 'fi)U i"k '. 11' ". ,
I • au Ore boat �docketd. $i. Ri!Ver e, r' . -d") r 11pr,utgi!'�jY t� � a"1 }• r �� ��Ftl iia `1��`,NNI".,,
yea ;,.
Jt 5t i,
B II ,(IQy Tlle&d e8 - a ,"11 r L,� �,a� °��,i k :'i:"'.e
Rougg: y won bey °, F ✓f .; p { y� ., .
go was rkluc"ed to iron ond' teams in .. c N � 1 I MIl 1,� ,rt, � �,'
molds mddafter¢t on on ale same a 1.:.144+1. rt# j t!,ts�€it
y o . 1R -IlAil Tt►#; ::r� .,, eta <t}, •, K,
day a motor was ,on its wB,V to the ti1tR17 FiDR„)FQ4.. , { (""l f` i �aa a}l4
assembly. And ,at a little before five, TAMCE: A1• P� :#:p *11t ra�r I
if .the sale was prompt, the finished FRow RgPOT. ge wtlil F� �l$p' i` rS+p in' ,r. {i•.,1,
car was ihb the hands of Its owner ;n tE; tit , o'
Detraitf. Thirty-three hours from -{ u �,I, ; ` t
Great Lakes fre].ghter to the open ^u
road! M �r1', b� u,2 , I
One day sailer •the ' •N'ifteen 1K�1 } „
Change of the Motor Age . V I Mom T came off the � r,,)��4 �t ���, ilei
Meanwhile the Motor Age Was re- and was an antique. + ,,,,
making America •eeo�panically, and, so t I .. I ` ,. ;�,y I ,
The problem of rear• ,f
r
t.,,
clally. By 1926 there were 22 cars Ford industries foe tints n ' ' t ate est ' t "' )'
of all makes in the United States, to ^?, ¢
every 23 families. Sixteen ionnllion lure was oo1oss'arl. For before ';tll xj d ,` h
tourists visited.,the nartipnal forests Ford Company could .hudld. Model •till$ 4 •`I
that year. But no traveller, howev- it brad first to rebuild the vast toil: ” , ,'I
er far he rambled, could lose his 71.ome tery of 40,000 hig+hlry a. JZ Xtp, "�M''
town. For the Motor Age''had iron- chines Chat stood at the 'bottom of its F;" �
,d out the traits that once dds'tin- pvrawnd of prodhwtion y,
These machines were the plodui tlI'll '2
guished one oommuuity from another. of years of research. They Were ''pro -
The Motor Age had increased, the �, U,
ddgiousdy efficient trot protdnhciarg a10 ;dry
income of millions Of Americans and it
given them leeway for luxuries, 7t for Mod -el T; but unfortunately a ,.,
vast number of them were ea:pable.of
had shortened the average workday (Producing nothing else. The change.,. ,.. '
and given more people leisure time. meant wielding an axe to a finely rr�t�
It lied geared whole cities to a fac ;;,ay;
tory routine. The same high-speed f ac- timed and balanced mechanism,) and ,',;Q�
meotnganAving Ford, (pla.n�ts 'in Santlr $i '
efficiency which produced Ford cars ago and Bordeaux as we`ll as RAver.
made possible the cheap reproduction ,t.l
of other commodities. Rouge- ,,,�,
Time after tim the small car that, `ix
rapid flu ,
The stage was set fora i. was the object of these mighty ef-
in fads and, Interests. For with com- "
forts was born apart, rebuilt and .torn
petit -von keen, with a relentless de -M
mand for reducing costs through apart again.. For six months the ham-
quantity oatput,' the great machine an army
went ep at scar Rouge and
had to cultivate new tastes in order an army of reporters camped on x.he ,tib
rheels' of the adventure. On Decem - ' �
to unload its goods. ,
This it did to the tune of a billion. ler first, Ford• began a five-day ser- '?,
dollars' worth of advertising launch- lies of full-page advertas,ments In 2, '4`
000 newspapers. The new Ford, still
ed yearly in an effort to create new tr
styli, to make people who were be a complete mystery, was shippedt to •r
its showroome,.�stitch'ed is a caffiras
hind -times feel uncomfortable, to ,bag' On the first day ,of its s,ho'wung.
train the, public to want new 1.
things one million people came to see i.t in
before it had used up old ones. New York aline. Ford agencies lied 11,11
Radio sets went Florentine one to be barricaded to keep people frons .i,
year, Louis' t�uinze the next. New pihshiug through the glass.. Mounted
cigarettes, new shaving creams, new police patrolled the crowd's in Cleve- •
floor coverings and new laundry land. In New Haven the mayor .prey
soaps appeared incl covered the bill- sided at the unveiling ceremony. In
boards with their claims. New fish- some cities schoolchildren were tat:
ions in headlights., in windslhd; w'p- en by their teachers to see the' new
ers, in rumble seats, and, high fre- model-
quency horns followed one • anoth'er, Style had come at last to River
with dizzying rapidity- Color appear Rouge and for weeks the nation talk-
ed and 50 new 2baudes for automobile ed new Ford as enthusiastically as
bodies made their debut at the Motor, it had once delbated! the five -dollar
Show in 1926. ''
The landmarks of tilt's America of t; wage. Once again Ford was on the firing
1926 had changed. But a short squat line, this prestige at stake, his energy
motorcar, a plain and none too hand- and wealth pledged to a vast gamble.
some Model- T, had. held .its own At 64, an, age when most men lay)
against a tide of innovations. For 18 I drown their work, Ford was ready to •
years, ,through 15,060,,0 tl reproduc- turn back and start over. It could
tions, it had stood fast in a land. Of not fail to touch. the imagination of
sudden change- a country with high faith in its, own
But Model T was shortly due to resiliency, to see resiliency thus put .
vanish from the earth. to the test in a grand gesture.
The Mysterious Stranger Whatever the fate of our America
Ia 1926, for the first time in its of the m'achin'e, here is a man who,
astorish'ing career, the Ford Motor in helping' to bring the machine up -
Co. broke no records. By Christmas on us, and in g'oi'ng America we
200,000 men were out of work. Early de
rel
has rewritten its economies and r
in 1927 the Ford Company announc-
ed that it would produce a new car, fashioned its habits; has, more than
any other, made himself its symbol.
-) .
I ,SNAPSPOT
CAMERA ON THE FARM
Better farm records can be kept with the camera. One clear picture is
SAI','
worth many words—and record pictures such as this are easy to take.
• ,."It,
as farm implements—
informative and convincing than a
Y
CAMERAS
that seems a novel idea. And
written description. Pictures are
Ajf
yet, on any progressive farm, a cam-
easier and. quicker, too. For example,
;CN,
era can render unique, highly prat-
see how long it takes you to write
.;
tical service.
a descriptioi. of your prize bull that
• •'.
T am not referring to snapshots for
is as good as one clear picture—
"`r;
pleasure. Of course, everybody
which you could snap in short order!
;t
knows there are innumerable snap-
You don't have to be a skilled
.
shot opportunities on a farm—beau-
photographer to take good farm res-
,1l
tiful sunset shots across the tilled
Ord pictures, and any well -made,
`'
fields, pleasant pasture scenes with
moderately -priced camera will. do
.,
stock grazing or drinking from a
the job. A focusing model is most,;l
N
cool stream, story -tellers snaps
convdnient, as with it both "close -
11
such as a ben mothering her brood—
ups" and gengy4f thews can be takenQI
is
, ,I
all sorts of chances, at any season.
easily. An afiastigmat lens prof -'''l
'144
But there's another aspect to farm
erable, but it need not be an ex -
S
photography- the extremely valva-
tremaly fast one. The camgra should
.4,11.
hie, practical aspect of keeping farm
take pictures of convenient size for -
h;,Ra
records.
viewrng. `
,i ,,
Clear, detailed records play an
Excellent booklets on farm Aho-
atV'i
Important part in farm operations
tography are now availa� le through -
;a ?tt;
today,' and usually pictures can
various sources. The best of these
;
make these records even more clear
booklets notonly give easily -under -
and serviceable. If your lower slaty
stood instruction on photography,
�,+
acres makes a good crop this year,
but also provide detailed adv%e on
, t
a picture will prove it. If hail dam-
bow to keep picture records of cer-iri''s
ages the roof of your new barn, a
'ain types—such as livestock and
�,lt
picture can shobv the exact nature
crop growth. They ar ittreniely
,;[
and extent of the damage. Records
useful for the'begiurler at farm phb-
dl- ;'
l';
of livestock growth, new building
tography.
F{s
construction, crops and crop dis-
'Start now to keep picture recordim
tl
n' Lilt,
sli
eases, planting and harvesting oper-
{t.
of your' farm operations, suppler
n.
t t„
&tions, new equipment—all. 'these,
menting your written' t`63etirti6.
s �
and more, can well ,be kept in pic-
They're inexpensive, easy to MM t
ktt"pirts,,',
tore- form.
taro, and have real valtte�bot'h dibfr�,t k �
a
,y,+a,1
Such records are especially useful
rent and future. it 4
1. r ; ''i, ny y
because a good clear picture is amore
2�S^° d'ohn. van i�itilaok ; � ,
,
tlryqqry., t p
i�i�
,'t 11,. !
,.+"
y!4'fi� P
t,.eg �.., .h,,b
,; ,