'AGE FOUR The Oshawa Daily Times. Succeeding THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Established 1871) An independent newspaper published every afternoon except Sundays and legal holi days st Oshawa, Canads, by The [limes Printing Company, Limited, Chas, M, Mundy, President; A. R. Alloway, See retary, The Oshawa Daily Times is 8 member of the Canadian Press, the Canadian Daily ar Rivers Amociation, the Ontario Provineis) ailies and the Audit Bureau of Cireulations. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier, 15% a week, Uy mail in Canada (outside Oshawa carrier delivery limits) $4.00 a year; United States, $5.00 a year TORONTO OFFICE 518 Bond Building, 66 Temperance Street. Telephone Adelaide 0107, H, D, {residdes, representative, REPRESENTATIVES IN US, Powers and Stone Ine., New York and Chicago MONDAY, JULY 14, 1980 SUMMER DANGERS The motor trip season 1s in full swing, the rowboat has been repainted and Is. wating for its load, and the canoe Is dancing on the water ready to do its shave In bullding up the casualty list, All this meuns a lot of Joy with more than a falr share of sorrow Just how much sorrow to be determined hy the care exercised by the holiday makers, "An ounce of care can save a ton of tears,' Paste that motto on the windshield of the auto, the bottom of the boat and the paddle of the canoe and you are writthg Insurance on a pleasant summer, THE FORGETFUL PUBLIC Conservative spenkers at nominating con ventions are making good use of the fam ous "five«cent speech" of Premier King In thelr campaign oratory, Bearcely un day passes without some orator mentioning It in terms of scathing condemnation, Yet there are signs that the people are not show ing much of an Interest In It as an election issue, This Ia what one would judge from a recent editorial In the Calgary Heruld, which In rated an an Independent Conservative newspaper, The Herald says: "The petulant and Indiscrect observation was made during the heat of a debate, und the general public has shown a disposition to let it be forgotten. Mr. King Is now ex- tremely anxious to assure the country that he has never discriminated as between pro. vinelal governments, It should not be neces eAsary to protest so much about what should he perfectly obvious, The government's ats titude in this connection Is a matter of rec ord," The Herald seems to hit the nall fairly on the head in this comment, The speech cre: ated a sensation at the time It was uttered, hut is not the kind of thing which people are likely to accept as a major election fasue, Of course, It was Indisereet, and public men often have to suffer from thelr indiscretions, and it may be that the Conrervatives will still consider it sufficiently powerful in af- fecting votes as to make the moat of It a -..s WILL YOU BE ONE? The report on automobileaccidents for the past year [x out at last, and ita figures are extremely depressing, No fewer than 81; 000 people were killed In North America by automobiles and more than 1,000,000 were injured, This represents an increase of 10 per cent, over the preceding year, The dreadful significance of those fgures is hard to assimilate until you study them a bit, Tor example, during the next hour there will be three North Americans killed by automobiles, and 115 more hurt=--many of them erippled for life, Who will those doomed people be-<thoae who are to die or be crippled within the next 60 minutes? Well, one of them may be ourself, Or it may be that your car will e the instrument that strikes one of them down,==Vancouver Province, -------- ADVERTISING I8 IMPORTANT Roger Babson, the outstanding business and economic authority on the North Am. erican continent, in looked upon by men in big business as one whose advice is worth taking, Large firms pay big sums of money to him just for the sake of securing hi ads vice, and they find it worth while, Some. times, however, he makes statements from 'which all ean benefit, without cost for the advice, One sugh statement, made recently in an interview which has been published, 'emphasises the importance of continued, un- interrupted advertising as a means of meet. ing the present business conditions, It is not necessary to add anything by way of comment to Babson's words in that re. ppect, because they speak for themselves, "Rocause 1080 is a census year," says Mr. Babson, "it in interesting to speculate what the census statistios will tell us about adver. tising as a force in Merely for the purpose of Mustration let us oot the trend of former years and as. sume that the 1080 data will indicate that American business, the United Btutes us a market Is increasing at the rate of 7,000 new customers per day. "Bvery day 7,000 customers to whom your goods are absolutely unknown! Every day 7,000 people with whom you must start all over again and tell them your story and teach them to use your products! 1t has al- ways seemed to me that this is the greatest argument in the world for ceaseless adver- tising." THINKING PROSPERITY (Guelph Mercury) That the long-looked-for business revival in on the way is not to be doubted, Condi- tions are gradually improving and a founda. tion is being laid for a sound recovery, This bis what we are being told every day by lead- ing financiers and industrialists In all sec. tions of the country, who should be conver- want with the situation I anyone should, and who unquestionably know what they urd talking about, The fact that the improvement is not as rapid as anticipated, but that there is still depression in the land, does not mean that we should give way to pessimism and grow dour and hopeless as we look to the future, The problems that oppress Cunadian busi. ness can be solved; they are, in fact, in the why, of being solved, and it is a time for optimism instead of pessimism, Sitting. back, discouraged, and bemouning hard luck will never get us anything, nor bring back the prosperous times we wre seek- ing, That can only be achieved by co-op. oration, Let us away with this continual grumbling about bad times, work together, put our shoulder to the wheel and go get whut we are after, It may tuke a little time to reach the goal desired, 'but where there in un will there's a way, Let us ull pull together and the chane- us ure we will soon he well on the way to prosperity, for we are already started along the round that lends there, EDITORIAL NOTES Col, Lindbergh, once called the flying bridegroom, will probably have some exper- lence as the walking futher, Thut $260,000 fine Imposed on two stoek hrokars in Calgary may help to make up for some of the wheat crop losses Some people think that work is common, but there are others who think it Is not nearly common enough. Iiinstein sald he conceived his new theory of spuce while in bed, What a dream that must have been, Remember, if you must walk on the high- way, walk on the left side, No one need lack for political education in Canada to-day with all the facilities of the proas and radio devoted to the teaching. An ounce of caution Is always worth a ton of regret, In Angora, -the sexes can argue on (airly oqual terme, There ure two men to every woman in that country. This comment of the Peterbore Examiner In worthy of consideration, It says: When motoring conditions permit, most people not only travel everywhere "by automobile but they ship their freight and livestock by truck, letting the railways hold the bag and carry the mall, while the business that would give them a profit goes elsewhere. And yet when these conditions result in the operation of any particular train or trains becoming tou contly to be maintained, the residents of the section affected immediately set up an outery at the service being cut off, forget. ting thut themselves, by the diverting of business from the railways to other geans of transportation, have contributed largely to the necessity of the proposed curtallment It in too much to expect the Canadian rail. ways to maintain service at a loss for the benefit of people who do not reciprocate, The small items; the locals, in a newspaper make the most interesting reading, These are the items which moan the activities of the various'people of a community, and after all, readers are interested In other people, what they are doing, and how they live, What a wealth of human interest is often buried in a short item of two or three lines! What deep significance many items bear, significance that often escapes the reader, remarks the Soo Star, Yes, what a row two lines and a half of adverse, yet deserved, oriticlsm will create as compared to twe columns and a half of fulsome praise, Editor Eedy of the St. Mary's Journal Argus would restore full rights of fishing and hufiting to the aborigines, "Although," he says, "today a fast disappearing race, the Indians wore once the proud owners of this continent, with full sweep for their ac. "tivities. Gradually they have been pressed into nargow limita, There was tragedy in the protbst of the Indian who was fined the other day for having shot partridge whereby to live and who claimed the right to fish and hunt was his by the law of God, Why should not our Indians be restored to their ancient privileges to hunt and fish for their own sustenance without interference?" Other Editors' Comments a-- TOLL BRIDGES (Manchester Guardian) The Miuistry of Transport has boon un good as its word, and has introduced into the Moad Trae Bill a new clause for desling with toll bridges and roads, . . , AL its worst the toll-gate impedes travel cheeky intercourse, and is 8 burden on trade, and at its bist It Is a constant aanoyance to thousands of motorists, An age that has con. centrated on improving the roads und giving every facility for easy und quick travel could hardly be expected to tolerate it, HIKE PURCHARL AND THRIFTY (Edinburgh Seotsman) It hag been vepreseniod that hira-purchuse is thrift, 1 is, of course, nothing of the kind, Thrift represents doferved enjoyment, Hirasprrchase 1s not thrift, but spending, und It is spending on the busis of an Income that has not heen earned, and may never be ourned, 11 timed of Industrial and commercinl prosperity, the risk in hire-purehase may not he obiry- sive, When prices and wages are rising, the man who buys on the fnntaiment systam wins, When, on the other hand, winges und prices wre falling he toses; and if, as the result of industrial depression, he in thrown out of work, he may he unable to ment hin instalments when they fall due, and no for fait the goods which have never heen actually his _- ON TARIIFY POLITICS (Montreal Herald) Asn matter of fact, much non penne in talked nowadays as to what Is Conservative doctrine and what 1x Vibaral doctrine, The fe tion obtains that Conservatives are Tories who would trample upon avory olthar interest to put a pohey of high protection for the manu fuctiurers into practice Thalr ra cord In oes shows that virtuslly no upward change in the tariff hax oeeyrred under Connarvative ad ministration The further Aetion obtaing that Liberals are frea (rad orn, Thelr record In oes shows that thay are nothing of the kind; In practice they are just as much the followers of moderata protec tion an the Consarvatives have heen Bits of Humor HIN HORNY By James W. Barton, M.D, One of the words that is really not. very popular is. 'exercise' If you speak of play of some kind golf, basehall, tennig-=thore may be a pleasurable thrill go through your brain and body, hut exercise to many individuals simply means work, And yet the Creator of that body of yours had in mind that if you wars to he happy, snd hesithy, you must keep the body active, To that and therefore the entfra covering of your body was made of musclas, some places Inches thick, in fact the biggest and heaviest pari of your body is muscle, It wasn't put there as a cover: Ing, but as a means of moving your hones so that you could walk, run, throw, Hift and esp , "Did you ever realize what acl unully happens when you take some vigorous exercise or do some rea) work : In your Wver In stored up a con siderable smount of sugar, When you exercise or work this sugar is given Immedintely to the blood for use, und the Iver immediately gets husy In storing up more sugar for future needa Think then of the netiyity crentad In your Hyver the Wlggost organ in the hody when you exercises No chances for slug gishnoess if I must immedintely Lore up more sugar And the Liver's filtering anpars tug must keen huey In filtering move wastes from the otra blood passing through Then nll the eaxtra hen! eventnd by the axarcise must he gotten rig of hy the hody, and the skin must do th Think of how active the skin hecomes as 11 opens its spores and Jets tha heut and mol ture get away from the hody Think of what axereisse means to the working of the heart nn it In eronses the number and fores of Hs hantn, un that fi doing many times the amount of work that it dos whan you are at rest Nimilurly with the lungs, ax they open wide thelr little tubes tn Curry the axtea alr in to purify the unwed hlood joh in Think of the spleen, which Im medintely pours out a large num har of blood corpuscles to ha used the asarcisn and than proceeds at once to make and store more for further need Your hy common sense - tells you The old gentleman had wander: | (hat Nature intended you to take and Inn moment wis surronnded hy shop walkers What is your plansyre, wir?" they naked in unison The old gontleman embarrassed Yr a) fluhing,' "hut 1 hat." od Into an store wh rather well, m pleastire ia he replind rather new or wanted a THE HEABON YRay, Mom, Was baby from heaven?" "Yeu, son "I guess they like to have things qiilet up there, huh, Mom!" sent down THE INTENTION Irishmen had visiiad Paul's Cathedral One was the country, and had been taken to the famous buallding hy his friend who wished him to be duly fmpres wed by Ha grandeur, An Lhay came out, the city sald Two Nt think of 17 Ian't It grand?" "Pat" said the one from country, "It hates the divi!' the | from | the Tesldent of by ec. | "Well, Mike and phwat do you | an nn to keap heart, lungs Hvar, nln, aploen, Intestine, all the Lissa in fact, aetive and healthy fn think nf un mens Oo health and happiness, Pliny brink axerolun take do cn cane Ome gimme wilks, but In any honitatinkly, | gome work or exercise avery day, Eye 1 | | Eye Strain H. TUCK, Opt.D. (Copyright 105s) YOUR CHILD AND THE EYES Pap yoo Wig ure I account of thoi Chat anid his friend was the | impressive appearance when mai Intention." OPEN SKEANON "If you can spond so much time wt golf you won't have anything Inld naide for a rainy day." "Won't 1? My desk (sw loaded up with work that 1've put aside for a rainy day HOPKFUL "In your wife having any success In learning to drive the oar?" "Wall, the road Is beginning to turn when she does,' OVERHEARD First Man: "My fiance's lipstick woemp to have a different taste from other women's" Hecond Man (innocently): "Yes, sort of orange flavor, hasn't 1?" | Bits of Verse DS "Tis well, with words, O mastgrs, ye have sought, To turn men's yearning to the great and true, Yet, first take heed to what your own hands do; Ry deeds, not words the souls of men are taught Into the fountain of all life (where through Men's souls that drink are broken or made new) Like drops of heavenly elixir, fraught With the clear essence of eternal youth Even one little déed of weak un truth In like a drop of quenchless venom Cant, A liquid thread into life's feeding stream, Woven forever with its ervatal hlead Bearing the seed of death and woe at last, seArchibald Lampman, (hi i -- TE any man be in Oheist, ho In a new ereaturs; old things are passed away: behold all things are be. come new.--2, Cor, 6:17. = Prayer: "A charge to keen I have, A God to glority. | shalled with Impressive explana: | Hons Impress us perhaps when al' | other efforts would fall | n wo think of our health und strength as an asset Invested the promoti nv of our profes lon und If we have been to a falr degrees successful or even if not, one experience hus surely shown up that in the gaining of this ex- parience an important asset was our vison, Wa perhaps realize then that its vale cannot ho monasured in dollars and cents. We would not any of us, be willing to sacrifice vision for anything money could buy It wa havo good vision we are permitted to use it In seeing and purchasing what we see, If we have poor vislon, the quality of the things purchased may ha ins farior hecause wa did not have the vislon to detect it (To be continued) When To encourage local tarmers to he. come interested in the World's Grain 8how at Regina in 10032, the Carman (Manitoba) agricultural noclety han arvanged a special class for grain and grasses for its 1030 fairs. All exhibits must be grown by the exhibitor and sheaves of grasses must he grown this year Heod grain and grass seed may have been grown in 1820, The olansifiontion In varied and the prises are quite substantial, The best will be recommended for com petition in 108%: 18, 1.. Eaton, Professor of Agron. omy, Nova Scotia Agriculture Cols lege, Truro, Nova Scotia, during an wddress, over the radio from Halifax recently, upon matters cons noeted with the World's Grain Ex hibition and Conference to be held at Regina In 1002, warned growers regarding the purity of thelr seed they should purchase a sal) quantity of registered seed and grow a plot from this. Formed pring winners approve of this ads vine, From the portions you receive, you might well think restaurant ple wan eut by a ragor hinde, Kingteln sald he conceived his new theory of space while 111 in bed, Indeed, it wounds ap though {t might have been volved in a de- Hrlum, that If they were at all doubtful | PASSION ) ¢ Synopsis of Precedin Cassy Pringle, Bain of 'wealth snd social position mar. ries hor father's chauffeur, Dan Wallace, In happiness and pov. erty two children sre born~ Tommy and Margaret. Cassy's sufficiently forgives his daughter to give hor and her hushand the use of a small ranch in Naps, California, They think their troubles are at an ond, Instead it is there that they meet Dulce Varney, a wealthy widow who marks Dan for her own and wins him, They are married after Dan's divorce, and go to live st La Lomite, Dulee's Jux- urious stock farm near Na Cassy in loneliness and courag carries on, And as the idle months pile up, Dan repents of his blind One wild wet night, when he is alons at La Lomita, the tele: phone rings wildly, "It's Cassy, Dan! Tommy has been hurt---can you come? He's asked for you-Please--will you hurry 7" Came Phot A TWENTY. FOURTH INSTAL. MENT instalments and Dan watch their boy for life, back in the to Cassy some coffee?' A few minutes later, sickroom, he whispered "Could | bring you "Hor milk," she answered, in her natural voice, Dan felt in his heart un uprising of absolute ad oration for this brown, quiet woman with the shining, mystical blue eyes, and the blood -couted hands, She was saving them all that she could; she would save them, 10 the very end When he noiselessly returned, with the hot glass, she loosened one of her hands for the first time, to stendy it while she drank Tommy sensilile watched "Ihist loks good, mom," he whis pered (NT instantly moved to the docto "I wouldn't advise ment 7 It couldn't do any shouldn't advise it" "Hat it wouldn't do any harm 7 glance face any nourish iid, in ow low harm, but | 10, vole "Ualve me a silver dessert spoon, Nurse," directed, "I'm going to feed vou as if you were & baby Fom," she said cheerful Ihe watched her; Tommy's eyes following the spoon the few warm drops trickled inte his caper Nttle mouth, He tired of it, und she stopped fnstantly "How often may 1 do that, Doe tor?' "Well, as tainly Dan imp Lun y, it 1 RO rest" "Yeu," she agreed, after a second's frowning thought, "But you'll be here, Dan?" she usked She came buck more than wn hour later, with a red spout on her cheek, like that on the (ace of a child who leeps motionless and deep. And us she took her place beside the sleep mg child a Dan got her first wear PNCOUrRKINK smile=Casny's Id, gallant smile, the smile she had given him on that blazing night when this child Then it was his turn to % to the kitchen, to and drink whatever the women put hefore him, The rain had stopped now, The clock behind him struck six He went out filled with great vere still eavy with rain But toward the east, behind the little rise of ground where the barns and windmill stood, the sky was turning opal, and great masses of dark cloud, tipped with watery pink, were moving away in deifts that were black against the brightness hevond Strangely, the householder's quiet pride suddenly arose within him hese were his acres, this was his spreading farm of bare fruit trees, and newly turned tields: these were his barns and sheds and fences, hiy cattle just filing down from the pas: ture, his cocks welcoming the morn, And this was his home behind him It was his little daughter who was upstairs asleep now, his little gallant brown boy who wis fighting for life in the old playroon = And above all, it was his girl=his sweetheart--=who was in there beside that couch; fight. ing for her first<born with all the foree af her own great soul. She belonged to him, forever and fer: ever, He wanted=he needed----no- body else Suddenly she stood beside him: Cassy, in a gray wrapper like the old wrapper of long ago, Dan turned quickly paling, but she shook her head 'No=just the same, They me out for a breath 'of air" He put his arm about her, the pale broken, burdened woman who was Infinitely dearer in this strange mo. ment of dawn than ever she had been to him in her girlhood, and they looked at the brighteiing world to- gether, Dan, exhausted, shamed, slek in every fibre of his being with remorse, still felt himself strangely purified wm soul, felt the birth of something new within him, "lan't 1t all like a dream, Dant" Cassy said, after a silence, "You coming Into our library, in the ald house in the Mission, so long ago, and our running away, that night" "Remember the night I was so wretched, before Tom came, and vour buying me a hot-water bottle, and making me tea? The most de. liclous tea | ever tasted---e=" "You'll never know what Tom's heen to me, during these three years, He's been mare than a child, Dan, Ho seems to understands" Dan looked at her, with the sun. rise shining in her tired face, and his love for her, his need of her, shook him like terror, To have his wife leaning against him again, to have her fingers tightly helding his, was more than he could bear, Tours came into his eyes, and he said, "Cass, what can | do?" She did not answer, "Everything you've ever thought of me" he began after a pause, "everything you've even known about CHASY often as he likes, cer jonsly Won't yot riuned her an four v'eluek Ain, was hor eat I'he dooryvard was puddles, the trees sent by Keto (Vorrs ; dos ise me more than | despise my. pratefully, as | FLOWER me==1 see now. | want you to know it, | want you to know that I de- spire mysell=that | could kill my- self, except that it would hurt you, You'd pity me, Cass, if you could have looked iuto my soul, this lagt hour, out here alone, and realize what I've been feeling, You couldn' se "I don't despise you, said, trembling, I see what | had, Cass, and what U've lost, Maybe there isn't any oth- er hell than that, "I've spoiled it wll," Dan went on "But | want you to know that | love yousthe way you might have want. ed me to, once! Youre n my mind and my soul all the time, Cass, There isn't an instant of the old days that I don't remembers" "Nor 1" she said, in the silence "I think all the time of working my way hack=to you and the kids und the kitehen=I don't mean hurt. ing anv one, breaking anything up." He floundered, and she said quiet vi, "No, we've had enough of that," "But some day, mightn't we be hack together, Cass? Mightn't there he some way?!" "Oh, Danny, if there might be! | get so lonesome, all alone!" For one moment her beloved dark head wad against his shoulder, in the old way, and then thelr checks were together Then Cassy, suddenly resuming her usual quiet, restrained alr, said that she must go in to Tommy again They were turning toward the kit. chen door woman = game quickly and quiet) Dan," she when a about the house, a pretty woman, warmly furred, with of deep concern upon her handsome face, Cassy shrank back a little, She had not met Dulee face to face since their happy neighborhood intimacy had ended, three years before, But Ilee came swiftly up the steps from the vurd, and took hands, und looked at Wer lovingly, Dan she did not seem to see "Tell me how is he!" she breathed Tired, confused, heart-sick, Cassy vas taken unawares "Me's dying," she faltered, in sud den tears "Oh, Dan, no!" in herror, and then lis hands, and lifted face to him "What a night you must have had} [1 couldn't sleep, worrying Dan, she looks so tired, poor Cassy! My darling, I've brought soup and rolls u look Cassy's Dulce exelaimed as Cassy turn her shocked LONDON T0 HONOR NORTHCLIFFE BY ERECTING BUST Fyfe Writes New Biography Of Newspaper Magnate "J.ondon--Lord Northcliffe . in to ba commemorated by a bust which Is to be erected outside the main door of the Church of $t, Dun~ stan-in-the-Went, Vieet Wireet, The Chancellor of the London Diocese held a court in the church and granted the faculty for the erec- tion of the memorial, Tn granting the faculty the Chancellor remark ad; "Lord Northcliffe in hig youth fought and won a gallant Aight against adversity, He quickly at- tained a dominant position in the Press and beyond, and his influence wan largely to ameliorate the posis tion of hig fallow-workers hy short ening hours and Increasing re- wards," The erection of this memorial Lo the Kreatest newspapsr magnate ever associated with leet Bireet and ite purlious has heen under taken hy a committes of which Lord Riddell {is the head, For three centuries this ares has been haunted by writers apd printers, yet it is rather curiously lacking in memorial ofMigles to such men Outside the church of $i, Clement Danes, which 1s Just heyond Fleet HBireet, in a statue of Dr, Johnson A much worthler memorial to this great man, however, was provided fn faw years ago hy Mr, Cecil Harmsworth, brother of Lord Northeliffe, when he presented to the nation as a historica] monu- ment the house in Gough Bquare, Fleet Hireet, in which Dr, John- son lived for ten years, and where he complied his famous Diction- ary. The house has heen restored an far as Is possible to Its original condition, and contains many valu ahle relies of its most famous ten ant Another memorial to Lord North. cliffe hax just heen provided in the publication of what Is des- cribed as "an Intimate biography" of him, written by H, Hamilton Fyfe, For many years Mr, Fyfe (who is a brother of Dr, William Hamilton Fyfe, the new Principal of Queen's Univarsity, Kingston) wan one of Northeliffe's most able and preserves<1 didn't know what to hring At first 1 was going to bring vou all vour shaving things, and clean shirts, and so on, hut it seemed to me, darting, that it's much, mueh wiser for vou to come home and take your bath «ll nice and comfy, und then=4f you must---come hack again, after bregkfast, Or | coyld stay, Dan. Now, shall we stay, or shall we go back for baths and breakfast, and then come down again? It's only a few minutes, you know I knew she snugpled against him "I knew vou wanted your wife heside you, last might" she said, "But when | telephoned, it seemed as if it might be any mine ute-~and it was pouring, But any | way, I'm here now, dearest, and uh solutely at your arders, I only want to make it easiest for vou, and show Casay how terribly 1 feel" He looked down at her Dan's kind, patient look "T think you and 1 had better go home," he said "You mean to La Lomita?" She brightened, "Yeau're not needed here, darling 1" UNO" he said, "1 don't belong here She slipped her arm through his, as they walked to the car, After that, for six long days and nights, Dan's impression of Cass wis of some heroic creature bound and helpless, desperately strugaling for freedom against overwhelming odds, Twenty hours eut of every twenty-four she spent in the sick. room, crouching there beside Tom: my, a brown shadow, her blue eyes fixed on his face, Her hands held hin through nights of vigil, and when the little boy twisted restlessly on his pillows, her soothing voice was close beside him She would stagger out of the sicks room dazed and pale, her eyes bes wildered "No hope, no hope, io hope," said the voices all about her, But Cassy went steadily on, holding the preci- ous little brown body still among the blankets, dropping milk from the sil ver densert spoon into the blistered little mouth that Tommy opened so gratefully, "Cassy, you'll he ill, too!" one of the women who loved her pleaded one day, "You know=you know that Tommy ean't-=we all know you can't keep hime" "Well, 1 have him mow!" Cassy answered stubbornly, weeping, And she went back inte the sick-room, Dan came every day, sometimes ataving through the endless nights of bright kitchen lights and noiseless moving forms, sometines sleeping at La Lomita. and joining Cassy dure ing the hard morning hours, Tommy always asked for him, and seemed more peaceful when Dan wus beside him Margaret shared many a vigil with her father, She was a tall, proyd child, at five, with a mane of tawny old falling on the collars of her little bluejacket blouse, She cone sulted Dan about her ties and her kindergarten wroblems, She sat in his lap at night, in the kitchen, a warm bundle of delicious confidentis al babyhood, in the woollies with the byttans down the haek and the clos (] feet, (Te he Continued) (Copyright 1930 by Helen Norris) a ---------- IMMUNR They say that music lifts one up! That It carries ene into the realmy of apirityal thing, Rut some people seem immune from ingpira- tion, One night at "Madame Nyt: terfly," in the midst of the iting, lovely music of the "shadow" scene a woman hehind us sald, 1 den't believe I'll bother preserving thie year, how about youl" seriously under his breath, Heutenants, on the "writing side at least of his many enterprises, and few men know more about the late pear's ideas and praetice In regard to news gathering and news presentation Twenty Years or so ago It was the fashion with a good many writers upon newspaper man ugement to depict Fleet Street as ptrewn with human - wreekage, ruthlessly cast aside hy the North- alifie machine directly the first hril. lance of such workers showed signs of diminishing, The pleture was never fair to Northeliffe, Tt is true he had a horror of harbouring ineMciency, and it must perhaps he admitted that there was at least a trace of cruelty In his com. position, But towards men whose work harmonised with his ideas he act ed with princely generosity, and Mr, Hamilton I'yfe is by no means the only newspaperman who re tains an enduring affection for "the Chief," Mr, Fyfe is fully justi fled, too, in insisting that the community at large owe a debt to Northcliffe for refusing to publish matter which even the least fastidi ous could regard an unsavoury Foundation of the elevator will contain 7,700 piles to be cut off al mean tide level and capped with the concrete mattress of the eleva tor structure, After piles are driv. en, the area of the bullding will be filled with gravel up to the leve) of the pile cut-off, Dasements of all buildings will be protected with a membrane water-proofing above the level of high tide, Towering £70 feet above the tops of the piles, the elevator worl house is to be 100 feet long by 80 feet wide, fully equipped; provi sion Ix also made for subsequent installations, The storage annex i to be 200 feet long by 100 feet wide, built end-on to the work: house, A continuous working grain dryer, with 1,000 bushel per hour capacity, will be housed in a separate building between the werk house and the storage annex, At one end of the work house i» the office hullding, to contain the elevator offices, millwright shop, dining and rest rooms for the staf and quarters for the inspection de partment A complete millwright shop Is provided to handle eleva. tor repairs, Eleotric power for the ~ grain elevator dock facilities and tar the town of Churchill will be generated by a modern plant now under construction In connection with the elevator, As progress of the deck strues ture will permit, cargo sheds and a coal-handling plant will be con. structed, All harbor developments are heing constructed -by the en. gineering staff of the department of railways and canals with Co), A, E, Dubue, chief engineer and D, W, MacLachlan, engineer-in-oharge, Grain elevator dock galleries and power plants. are designed by and bullt under the supervision of C, D, Howe and Company, consult. ing engineers, of Port Arthur, Ont, General contract for the grain ele. vator has been awarded to Carter. Halls-Aldinger Company, Limited of Winnipeg, Man, ---------------------- Anaesthetics produce uncon. olousness through reversible coagu. lation of ocollelds, Just se, And & good rap to the solar plexus will ooagulate those same colloids speedily, Razor blados, we read are now being sold In restaurants, Next thing you know: they'll he serving shaving oream with the strawbers ee, ;