coe... THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, APRIL 29,1930 PAGE NIN ® pe | arella of th } LS is i 2, of oi 13 hi 3 ri 2] £ i : i 4 if § n 2 i 4 oH 2 es tf fit dl : i 5 bd 3 is ki ill : i i i eff ih ih i i i | il - H if 2 ¥ i 5 i : 2 i i ie i g i i fi iii i i I : 1 Fe | i gf if § Kl Y a ever wi 4 . 5 She surat 5 oo hor Yoel, at the spot + of rapidly rowing Erimson on the i ehiffon neg! The first to seqain, het io? Nis ae hel ts he "uncon I sim, oy one or Dr. Dow= : lng; ' » id g i God, he's there" she sa b ohare breath when she ie | hospital, Then he, wis talking i ctedly : ; v Dowling etek! Something terrible . to Jean | hay hagpened (2 wold Some to the ® He would ch pr who needed him so wi : "vera oferd no resistance whe ¥ Vivian took the revolver nee j "She slumped down into hic and aid To winyer, J th ter 4 pind oi hy There was no ners ¥ fire or hate. Letty ignored het 80 4 felt Jean's pu i] She ih the flow of blood. She J yed | that the doctor would hurry. She a not kiriow that she was ing vw Vivian told her the oy Sox: y was 3 et, but Vivian % het po into her the door to Dr. with him was Jimeuia oi It did not occur i pg at the time that there wae anything' strahge in the two m 1 r { § "Trin ae the coming of Jimmie of had so often dreamed. | wi . at a word of glance nent, Jinile, the pallor of | By hospital "siege subBIILE re p a ; pilot, imei on the Weary Jule shhe eH the gl fvian for i sola explanation, but the girl did-not | PEN done to her?" he " have you done . demanded of Roberts. She did wt | rae het eves Stare, pointe B Jokes bi on the table, then at Bel ing saised his head impatient. to find out about " , "Help me that later," he said curtly AP we her to bed, Letty! hoi ho he 140 oo the still figure the next room. Sty God What a this ll sboutt? beseechingly : ie cried in despal bl Joking at Him now, | pledingly. so" she begged. ashes always tod everything ey stand She to 1 must have i , 1 couldn't! 1 i ih Jimmie. but 1 couldn't stand any herself at | |" and Roberta threw erica fet, sobbing, wildly. -- iS erica girl," || away from the in : t in a chair!" Jimm 1 uo nd of forth across the room like rayed Y etime enough : "| Then hand. | Jack and tried to] § Vivian th ean's homely childhood. She told how I § \ ed her! aith in her. what iW "I'm here for the same reason, doc- " he answered frankly, "1 love 1 want her=want to wake her py." He hestitated a moment, "Ive wade her unhappy in the past I know, you must suspect. I hope 1 can thake amends," and Jimmie offered his hand to this other man, who knew now that he had lost Jean Jimmie straightened his shoulders, forever, 4 p Dr, Dowling did not falter at the blow, He smiled, just a little rue~ gully, and shook the younger man's and, "That's all I wanted to know," he said, "Her happiness is the ane thing I care about.in this world," Dow ling cleared his throat, "Your job now Is to fix things with the Rplice. It's got to be fixed some- how!" At Dowling's remark Roberta's face brightened and the physician turned away from her in disgust, "Not that I care about this and he pointed at Roberta, Jean must be protected. Think what the papers would do with this after the airplane crash and cverything, And the way this girl has been hang- ing around the hospital since you've been sick and making statements to the papers." Jimmic was all action, glad of the opportunity to do something, c called police headquarters and got urphy on the wire. "Is it all right for me to talk to you on this phone?" Jimmie asked In as few words as possible he told the story of the shooting. In answer to a question Jimmie answered: "She's still here, We'll sce she stays until you come!" "He'll come right away," Jimmie sold Foving, who breathed a sigh of relief, In a sur ingly short time Mur hy arrived, bringing Grace with him, race was frantic and only Dr, Dowling's firmness and the detec tive's soothing words could keep her out of Jean's room, . Murphy and Reinsford turned thelr attention immediately to the problem at hand, "Give me that gun!" Murphy said quickly, He Slipped the handsome little affair into his pocket and then turned to Roberta, "As for you, you go free. That Js, if you get right out of New York for a good long time. A year would be enough, I'm keeping you out of this or only one reason, That's Jean, You deserve to be sent to prison, But you won't be. If you ever men- tion one word of what has happened here tonight you'll be locked up im. mediately and tried for attempted murder: 1 mean what I say, As it is now, your mother, nobody, is going to know except these people in this Spartment, t's your last' chance. ou better' make good on any prov mise you make." There was silence and Roberta sobbed silently into her handkerchied, "I'll call you a cab," Jimmie sug- gested, "My. cards out in frost," Roberta answered in a dull voice, She arose feebly from her chair, like an old woman whe has little strength. Be- fore she went she made one last ap. peal to Jamie, "You'll never forgive me?" Jimmie did not answer, In truth, he did not even hear her, He was too engrossed with his own turbulent thoughts. Roberta fastened her coat, Dicked up her gloves, sparring for ime, "I've something to say to you be- fore you go," said Vivian Brooks quietly. A Both Jimmie and Roberta started, They had forgotten anybody else was in this room of bitter tragedy. The woman continued to speak: "I'm Vivian Brooks, I used to teach you both in Hillsdale, You re member?" Both Jimmie and Roberta nodded, mystified. Vivian looked straight into Roberta's brown eyes. "You're very like your father, my dear," she said suddenly and wists fully, "I was in love with him and he loved me," Vivian had everybody's undivided attention now. Jimmie and Roberta in open-ecyed amasement, "We planned to go away together forever, We were ready to leave the night Jean left Hillsdale, Your father was waiting for me when he met Jean, Somehow she reminded him of you, He didn't go. I waited and waited, But he never came, He went back to you and mother. I never saw him again" Vivian was crying now. Roberta looked at her dully, The silence of the room was broken only by her sobs, "There isn't any more to say," she said as she wiped her eyes. 308 bad '| we made such a mess of thi father was only trying to was right. He always Toit bad about Jean, . t's why he left her the stunning revelation was the final blow for Roberta. She gave one t look at Jimmie, In his eyes was the light of a great joy. She opened the door and went out into the ralv hout another word, Her had fallen in pieces about her, She got into her car, fumbled about for the switch and drove off into the n hic alone : ie had nside the warm apartment she left Vivian a immie falked ] time, ' ol r own unfortunate love affair a the tragedy it had caused for so many people. Jimmie groaned aloud at his own stupidity. e she had died without my elt! § out to write some wanted | filled imme. can I geo her?" b immie. "I'd do her more good t for| Waa were massacred an Pre ouptured Saturday by A Thrilling Romance of Adventu medicine." Dowling only laughed and shook his head, Grace then intervened in behalf of Jimmie. Even that would not have been enough if the great Mr. Decker himself had not arrived Just at that moment. He had to be told the events of the afternoon, and after he had given vent to many ex- pletives and had soundly railed at everybody for letting the trouble- maker get into the apartment, he turned to Jimmie, "As for you, Youn man, just what are you doi eres" Jimmie laughed heartily. 'You're the second person who's asked me that, I'm here for the same reason you are-Jeanl" Decker's eyes twinkled, "You're the most difficult pair of young ones I've ever had anything to do with," he insisted, "As a matches maker I'm not much of a success, J thought once I was going to have to run off with Jean myself!" Then he added, with a note of sincerity in his voice, "I'm certainly glad you've come to your senses at last, old man! And 1 hope 1 shall be able to dance at your weddipg soon." So it hap ened that Jimmie was finally admitted to Jean's pretty bed. room, with its ruffled curtains and its fine, old furniture of which she was 80 proud, The girl was lying so white and still that Jimmie's heart stopped Beating for an instant, Then he slipped to his knees beside the bed and waited for her to open her eyes, the eyes in which he had last seen such terror and such faithful love, "Jean!" he whispered in her cur, She smiled vaguely. "I dream so much |" she sald faintly and closed her eyes again. Jimmie slipped his arm gently under the pil- low and put his lips to hers. "My d.ar! My dear! This isn't dreaming, This is real. Just you and mel" For a long time he held her so. The minutes seemed to reassure her and she held on to his hand. Grad- ually she seemed to realize that he was there beside her to stay forever, "Can you ever forgive me?" he asked after a long time. Jean smiled back into his eyes. "Do you really love me?" she asked ignoring his question altogether, "Forever and gver!" was the an. swer he made and he held her hands, the hands which had fought $0 Siavely to save his life, close to ps. . And: for a long time they talked together of their new life, y "I shall never fly alone again," she whispered. The nd VANDALS DESTROY LARGE MONUMENT Niagara Falls, Ont, Apr, 20=- Drummond Hill cemetery, on the site of the battle of Lundy's La peth visited by vandals, A large gra- nite toppled over and broken reo pleces, The memorial vault was bro. ken into and considerable damage done there. The cemetery is under Niagara Falls Park Commission, which is of- for the capture of the administration of the fering a reward those responsible for the damage. MINISTER DIES AFTER RECORD PASTORATE (By Canadian Press Lessed Wire) Toronto, Apr $0-=Rev, Dr, A, T. Love, prominent Presbyterian min: ister, died suddenly at the home of is #._.-in-law, Donald G, McLean, ere Sunday. Dr. Love was for 46 years minis+ ter of St. Andrew's church, Quebec, ears ago ad when he retired a few hs anadian record for lengt torate had been established. was Dr, Love's only charge, of pas. It Dr. Love was born in Scotland and received his preliminary education there, taking his arts and divinity course at Queen's University, Kings. ton, WEST YORK TORIES CHOOSE CANDIDATE (By Canadian Presse Lessed Wire) Toronto, April 29, == J. Earl Lawson, M.P,, far West York, was unanimously chosen candidate to contest the riding in the coming Dominion election at an enthusiang- tie rally of West York Liberal Conservative Assoclation members on Saturday. : SKILFUL HANDLING OF PLANE AVERTS DISASTROUS CRASH (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) Toronto, vil 20, - Skiltul handling of a four passenger Buhl world | sedan averted a seamingly certain disaster at Leaside flylug field Sun- day. Pilot James Crang was the hero of a splendid exhibition of piloting when he brought the plane to earth safely although one wheel broken oft. Net a pane of was shattered in the land. fag. The wheel buckled when the lane was taking off, but Pilot rang was unaware of the accident until Captain Earl Hand jumped in another machine and flew up to signal Crang of the danger, Sr ------------ TO REPORTS TODAY (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) Shanghal, Apr. $0---Chinese presy despatches ved ( that 1,000 men, women and ren, Chinese count folk, bandits who looted and burned the town of Kingsuchen on the northern bore ur ot Kiangsl and Angwel prove ne has monument 12 feet high, Yas n e Skies Ve re in the Clouds. ra Brown CANADIAN ARTIST IN HIGH POSITION Horatio Walker of Listowel Is One of Leading Painters of United States (Written for the Canadian Press by Jehannoe Bletry Salinger) New York, N.Y, April 29 -- For several months every visitor to the Vorargil Galleries, in New York eity, could wee on the wall or on re- quest. one of the most famous paintings by Horatio Walker, It is entitled "Little White Plgs With Mother," It is clumsy and delights fully genuine, this moving wass ot white swine und the gaudy ybung farmer pitching hay under & barn in the background of the pleture, A Canadian collector who resides in Boston "Is now the owner of this Jinting, so that when you go to ow York angsin you shall look for it in vain on the wall where it so often hung. Two other works by the same ar tist have recently entered private collections, "Spring Forage," a water color, also of young pigs with: thelr mother which was ac- quired by Mrs, Olive Jennings, of New York, and "Turkeys in the I"lold," another watercolor which went to another collector, The writer of this note was just looking at one of the Walkers left in the fleld when there walked into the gallery a jovial litte man wear. ing bright socks and yellow shoes, a sharply pointed greyish mous. tache and a smile as broad as the English channel, It was Horatio Walker, (the grandson of a good French lady who lived in the Rouen) whose parents lived in Lise towel, Ontario, where he was born. In High Rank Painter of a fast disappearing phase of Canadian life, this artist has of late reached a very imports aut Mmnk dn the estimation of art connoisseurs and critics in the United States, The art of Horatio Walker, al- though not expressive of the life and spirit of the day, is an authen. tie document, as forceful and ime portant as the work of Paul Kane. "Peasant life against an unstained sky," life "ot a people of simple faith and rugged health" as one of Walker's blographers, Mr. Price, expresses it, such are the subjects with which deal the paintings by this Canadian artist, With his plgs and turkeys we are far indeed from the Laurentian villages by Alex Jackson or from the mountain torms by Lawren Harris or from the geometrical ab stractions by Bertram Brooker, "Other times other ways," Hora- tio Walker still clings to the quaint French-Canadian life to which he is akin by his blood and by his spirit, Others move on and find it more adequate to expross themselves {in a new language of art. The new movoment of art in Canada does not exclude an Horatio Walker not any more than Walker can be ad mired to the exclusion of that group of Seven and thelr follow. ors are croating, Dealers Interested Tho exhibition of Canadian art which opened last March at The Corcoran Gallery of Art, in Wagh- ington, D.C., is now exhibited at the Museum of Providence, in the state of Rhode Isand, Every art dealer in New York city seems to be aware of the significance of the move involved in that exhibition and they are anxious to learn mors about Canadian art, There is little doubt that efforts will be made in the United States after the present exhibition hae been circulated to investigate the art fleld in the Dominion more completely and then we may expect to have the state of isolation in which Canadian artists have works od broken wide and interchange of trends and technigues oocour, FIRST SHIP ARRIVES AT FORT WILLIAM (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) Fort Willlam, April 29, «The steamer' Assinibola was the first boat to arrive from the east this season, reaching port about 7.30 this morning, close followed by the Keowatin, the Hamonlc also arrived and docked at Pert Are thur, Captain McCaune, ,of the, As sinibola, is being presented with the customary silk hat by the Fort William Board of Trade, Other ves &sels were expected to arrive in the afternoon, thre light for grain and others with coal. ASK RESIGNATION OF CROWN OFFICIALS (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) Port Bowan, April 29 Claims ing they had lost faith in Crown Attorney Kelly and Police ie ability of these officials to p properly their county police: court duties, citizens of Norfolk county, in a public meeting, at Walsin ham Centre, Saturday, strong recommended either the| resigna- tion of the officials, or the. sete ting aside of the western portion i the county under another magls. rate, A petition asking a thorough ia. vostigation by the attorney-gen- eral's department of the situation will be forwarded to Toronto, BOY WHO MADE GOOD Nuli--=I started out on the theory that the world has an open~ I ia. es 0 ou found § old-And you found ft? Nowa . rather, I'm in the hole pow.ewChurchipan, trate Gunn, of Simcoe, and in the | FRANGE BUILDS UP HER FORESTS Planting of 'Barren Land Serves' Many Pur. poses (By Josephine Hambleton, Cana- dian Press Staff Correspondent) Paris, France, pril 20-=France is planning to extend her forest land, Five million dollars have been voted by the Chamber of -De- puties to buy forests coming on the market and to subsidize communes snd private owners to re-set trees, Redeem 600,000 Acres The state afforestration scheme in operation since 1919 has re- deemed 600,000 acres of barren lands of the Landes, But the scheme must be spread and ampli. fled. The 20,000 which the state lants a year will, it is expected, from now on increased to 100, 00. This is the minimum needed to stem the danger of the recurring floods. For it is estimated thut each day an acre of forest absorbs fitteon tons of water, France has long had restrictions on the cutting of trees--but as the 20,000,000 privately owned acres of forest land are distributed am. ong 1,600,000 owners, it is evi dently well nigh impossible to ful- ly insure against infringement of the law, \ Means envisaged to protect' the forests are: Fire Patrol Fire patrol by agents, Alds to private owners and com- munes by grants of young trees for planting, Freedom of taxation on forest lend, This now amounts to as much as 32 per cent. on transfers of land, The dealer who buys stand- ing trees to cut escapes the tax, government CAPT. SUTHERLAND ENDORSES SARGON "I had no end of troubles with tendant ills, It was common for me to suffer for hours after my | | CAPT. G, SUTHERLAND evenng meal and by slow degrees my nervous system Was worn threadbare, After taking b bottles of Sargon I can hardly realize that I ever suffered with indigestion, My whole system has been strengthened and invigorated, Sar- gon Pills accomplished wonders in overcoming my constipation,' -- Capt. G, Sutherland, former officer of Company B, 110th Irish Regl- ment, 00 Rivercourt Boulevard, Toronto, Sargon may be obtained in Oshawa from Karn's Drug Store, And of the danger of floods France has had bitter lessons. Scholars in remote vilage schools from coast to coast have been ad- ding thelr little .to the fund: for the flood victims of the south, Des aster, floods meant at the source, Europe there is hardly any indigestion, constipation end at- | olate homes tell their story of dis- And from the high peaks of the Cevennes one sees what the to the Mediterranean, westward to the Pyrenees and eastward to hills that lead to the shimmering snows of the Alps. Yel below trees lle like slaughtered remnants of a de- tented army, Ruined stumps of vines, denuded trunks of trees, stretch thelr grotesque forms to the sky over miles of desolate val- ey. Here it fs that the turbulent Agout rises. Hore was born the entastrophe that recently devastate pd Languedoc, They call it Black Mountain, It has a black history, Medicine Men Fail to Save Aged Chief Shawano, Wis.--Refusing 'devil medicines" of the white. men and depending upon incantations of his tribesmen to cure him 'Che-gua~kif- katuppl (Shooting Star), aged chief medicine man of the Meno- minee is dead. AN rites of half a dozen brother medicine men tailed to save the life of their chief. He would have nothing to do with the reservation doctors or hospitals, Che-qua-kif-kn-tuppl was one: of the. few remaining Menominee In- diane to know and practice the dances of his forefathers at fos- tive gotherings, Famous in° his youth as an athlete, the medicine man was reputed most fleet ed of his tribe, He could run ter than a deer, tribesmen said, Bookkeepers May . Refuse Moscow Trip Borlin--~A German court has ruled that hookkeepers who refuse to go to Moscow for theip employe ery are within thelr rights, The case in point involved a bookkeeper working for the Soviet Trade Commission here, He was told to go to Moscow for the transaction of certain trade busi. ness there. Athough he held the mission was not within his sphere of duty as a bookkeeper, he allow- ed himself to be escorted to the Moscow-bound train. But, the fear of what might happen in Soviet Russia caused him to get off at the next station. He was thereupon dismissed without notice, Representatives of the commis. sion argued that the dismissal was necessary in the Interést of offies discipline, but the court ruled that if the Commission wanted to part company with a German bookkeep« er who had served efficiently for several years it would have to give him the statutory three months notice. A usT NEXCE In all spot more superb. The eye sweeps down Ik jh \\ hiv, | Boardwalk and Ocean Avenue overlooking Hotel Distinctively Different' COMPLETED IN AT ' LLED COLO LANTIC CITY Now Ready for YOU/ d 00 x ba $ Goda FETTER IAL HOSPITALITY, E Americanpis LROLLINGER, nc.» EUGENE C.FETTER, Ang Din soft '0 coast. BARISTAN Manufacturing THE BARISTAN is peer of the widely celebrated BARRYMORE line of fine tugs It is a domestic Oriental with the exquisite features of the finest antique orierital tug . . the same lustrous sheen and bloom... light and shadow. It is woven with a thick, heavy pile that yields luxuriously to the tread. 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