a THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, APRIL 11, 1931 TE 7h Xi Ya 'JILTED By Margaret Widdemer Wadi PI i in the Mttle : dent ©f the bani oy ohh ko 'Works. | Tomm: takes another job in Wisconsin, and n Heather, Sweetheart of Nina 's cousin, has Tope . Ethan Sharge, Pal sit a olen, In to get away olan 'strikes i mb of a tree Jand Is stunned, 'The Kingsways take care of her, and in he course of beco! ; pes turing his affections, returns. $i ah L) wing Ween h \ a y an looks for Doris, has mysterious. ly disappeared. I Ronny i Maing 10 persuade to elo] th him. ~ As she kisses Ronny (4 A sisterly fashion, Ethan has told that Helen and Ronny Were once in love, comes upon them. Fen Anhiounces fat he and Helen : \ elen's engagement is welcomed by Mrs. Kingsway, and Nina, who has failed In her quest for Ethan, writes her a letter. INSTALMENT XXIT » + whom Nina calm and unangered. She made no reference to her own earlier idea that Ethan had never ceased to love her : _ since she broke her engagement; © "poarding-school i For th ratulated Helen without a visible claw, suggested a New York or the child, and . ended by setting a date for having 'Ethan and Helen to dinner. 'm wri on the Paris" she , "and by the time you get this I'll be back in Kingsway, Tele- phone me and say you can both she co come. I'm having just the four of us; little, | was a man who was! Ed, Gaynor is the fourth." Then she did feel it, just a e rvirth "Rnown to everyone in Kingsway, by his own admission, to want to marry "Nina, She wished to be armored. Helen came out and met Etltan on his way back to the office. "Like Patricia, I want to know 'what was in ied her. "You look very serious, dear. A I can help about? Is the R fe shaver all right?" i. "Oh, yes," Helen told him serious Jy. "But Nina's asking us to dinner!" | "Where--in France?" i A t's right," he said \ . "Or don't you want to go --0ff Nina for any reason?" Helen shook her head. She had aid: the calm' takingelor-goanicd. o 4 ; the c -for-grantod of (Ethan's love with which Nina had sailed off, There was nothing for it, but to 1 [smile and promise, and write telling A each other, The mood parsisted all i i. i> ¥ __isat, their hands very . She went slowly down fthe hall, thinking it all over | And then Patricia called her, and she answered. They had planned to A d that afternoon upholstering rs for the first Zloor of a doll's the grounds, It was a thril- late discovery of Helen's, an a- house big enough to crawl a Ms Setual stairs, d nr ut on wraps and wont fut through ar ow 1 aon ed e deep snow in their galoshes, laughing and snowballing the afternoon, after "they were through taking measurements for the house, and sitting before the fire in the long salon parlor. Marietta had spread a sheet care- + fully down before the fire, having "her suspicions of what glue and cre- donne and cotton might do to the 'Aubusson carpet she loved more than its owners did. And in the cen- [tre of the sheet Helen and Patricir sticky with glue and their hair very full of cot- ton. The little wooden chairs ther had found at a Philadelphia toysho were set in two semicircles, one o. upholstered ones, and one--ther: were only three lett now-plair wood. The fascination which making things has for most adults caught Ade Kingsway, who came in firs In spite of the danger re gray crepe de e up over its slip, began to tuck in difficult corners with her twisted, adroit bands, slim and jong fingered like Ethan's. t was so Ethan found them, en- "tering last of all, after a long hunt ifor some mislaid papers. [ "Well never any of us {unless <omething drastic is dane," he sald, taking in the intensp in- dustry that'prevailed among his wo- "Patricia, darling, go get three damp towels, sald Mrs. Kingsway. ".Bthan, you are the only one here with hands fit to touch anything. Ale b.. §lue rom head hb foot, . Could you r the tea. you think?" pou , considering, thought he and went down on one knee ; i : fy i : I 4 Hi i d iF i : 2 i 8k ' our letters," he greet- | it. Sal TTT | ay - "Nina's back," Doris answered to the point, "I know. I'm . with her~ we're dining with her--next Tuesday evel A "I always thought she wanted Eth. " Doris said mysteriously. "You know there was a sort of belief that Ethan had never got over Nina, and she encouraged it, I think. Arent you afraid to go have dinner there Helen?" "Nina won't out poison in my soup You know" --Helen took comfort from this herself--"Nina isn't the emotional kind." "I know all about her! She wat so horrid to my poor Ronny." "Where is Ronny now?" Helen asked, hoping to change the subject, "He's been getting along all sorts of precarious ways. Half the time 1 haven't know where he was, He was in New York one while, sing on the subway. Then he tried write, but he says editors are just like all the rest, bondslaves either to ideas or to people." ; "I don't see that you and Ronny are any different, then," said Helen half impatiently. "If anybody ever .|was a bondslave to an idea it's Rone Nina's letter was perfectly cool, LL on," "Well, but men never are reason. able," sald Doris in a tired voice. "What I thought was--Helen, do try to make Nina give Ronny his mon- ey. You don't know how much de- pends on it." "Was that what you wanted tell me?" "Yes--no--part of it, Oh, if Ronny would only have sense wi "He still wants you to elope, and you still won't. Is that it?" "Yes. And he's so unreasonable, He says if I loved him I'd risk starva- ation with him. And, oh, Helen, I'm so afraid. Aunt Louisa and Father were talking about eloping and--and things like that--the other day. And: they sald any girl who did ought never to expect her people to have anything to do with her again." "Perhaps it's better to wait till Ronny makes some money. Only try to make up your mind what you will do, and then don't be unhappy over But Doris only looked up at her with big scarlet, eyes and jumped back inte her car and hurried down the street to her own dinner. (To Be Continued) SWEETS FROM WEST INDIES POPULAR AT BRITISH FAIR Trinidad Chocolate and 'St. Vincent Arrowroot High- ly Favored Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, BW .1.-- One of the features of the great British Industries Fair at Olympia, according to the London correspon- dent of The Trinidad Guardian, was a display of eating chocolate made from Trinidad cocoa, which attracted the notice of her Majesty the Queen, Trinidad, St. Vincent. and Tobago had the distinction of being the on- ly exhibitors from the British West Indian Colonies. The products on Trinidad's stall at the Fair included cocoa, nutmegs, copra, mace and last but not least, sugar. St. Vin« cent showed arrowroot. . Such a demand had been created for samples of Trinidad chocolate that the stock was on two occasions completely sold out. In one case the manager of the manufacturing firm filled his private moter car with samples and dashed to the Ex- nibition grounds to cope with the demand. Many inquiries have resulted for Trinidad sugar and for Trinidad chocolate, It can now be definitely stated that Trinidad chocolate has established itself in the British mar. ket. The Queen knows Trinidad chocolate, When passing through the Empire Marketing Board sec tion of the Fair she stopped at the British West Indian stall with the exclamation "Why, Trinidad Choco late," She commended those in charge of the stall on their exhibits, The Queen was accompanied hy the Duke and Duchess of York and the Duke of Gloucester, St. Vincent concentrated on fits display of arrowroot, various sam. ples of which were sold at the Ex- hibition. The fact that this prod- uct has uses other than medical was emphasized and a list was giv- en of reputable biscuit manufactur. ers whose arrowroot biscuits are guaranteed to contain arrowroot. Push-Cart Merchants Are Putting on Style New York, April 11.-~The push cart claque have shaved their whiskers, washed their necks and gone Ritz. A Morris Karger, 'king of the push carts", has admitted it, He sald the push cart business "Ap- olls!" "San-Ann-Chs!"~has rol- ed up in the world; that a push carteer, by due industry and ap- application to business. may now hope to rise to heights undreamed years ago back in Odessa or Nish. ny-Novgorod. Kargerm who landed from Odessa with two 'dollars, Invested ft a pusheart stock and cleaned up $6 in his first day in the United States, sald the class of patronage now catered to by the pushcart men is steadily becoming tonler and tonier. Park Avenue ladies with thelr snippy litle dogs now wisit Orchard Street--where the push carts parks--aod spend thelr good old Park Avenue mopey to eu EE y Oshawa. J. BW, R. Luke. King Street East, Phones 871 or 66TW. As Cartoonist Saw Him TE ANT, Nol THE RAK. oF LEUT Dn Ase or) Sh. Tonn cd 4 life on the Canadian for the gee-gaws the push carts sell, As a result. King Karger, sald, push cart stocks now are often costly--tapestries, paintings, dmported this-and-htats,~and the folk from uptown seemed to find it a good place to buy. "Business?" sald Karger. "We can't kick, There used to be 10, 000." FAMOUS GOLFING CHARACTER DIES David Ayton, Aged 74, Was Caddy at St. Andrew's St. Andrew's Scotland, April 11, --=A famous old golfing character of St. Andrew's has passed with the death of David Ayton, at the uge of 74. He spent his lite caddy- ing but he was a fine player in his day and one of the greatest (rag. adies of golf chronicles is associ ated with him, In 1885 he seemed to have the British open championship at St. Andrews as good as won With a two-stroke lead and only two holes to play, But the deadly seventeen- th, the treacherous 'road hole" with fits 467-yard dogleg route cost him eleven strokes and the title by two strokes, ais J. H. Taylor, the famous Brit- ish pro, also took an 11 at the road hole in a British champlon- ship, Bobby Jones and Watts Gunn, in the Walker Cup matches of 1926, won the hole with a 7 from Cyril Tolley and Andrew Jamieson. Davie Ayton was a golfer of such prowess that old men of St. Andrews say he could have been one of the most illustrious stars in the world, But he was satis- fled to carry clubs for a lMfetime, CANADIANS DON'T KNOW MEANING OF REAL HOSPITALITY So Says Missionary Lately Returned From Arabia Toronto, Ont., April 11.--"We don't know anything about hos- pitality in this country," said Dr. Paul Harrison, medical mission- ary in Arabia, speaking at Con- vocation Hall recently, He point- ed rather contemptuously at the magnificent structures of stone and mortar reaching to the clouds. And he also sald that Canadians knew little about the meaning of sacrifice, "Can a man be a Christian it he has x head with G00 undesir- able citizens in it?" he asked, Some days it required a great deal of faith and goine days his faith wavered, he said, "What is the hope of our calling? Does it des pend on having a silk shirt? How many of us can stretch our minds around a church of people who canpot keep clean and can never be educated and are childishiy Oriental? A man here told me the her day that when hte Arabians ¢ Christians their ecomom!c. statis would be elevated. For 90 per cent: of the Indians, Hinduism {1s better anda for 75 per cent. of the Arabians Mohammedanism, yor theirs is uot a rich man's reli uring his voyage to Canada His Execellen 000 push crats; now there are 60,-, Pacific liner held in aid of seamen's orphans and, with the members of his suite, was cleverly s! Moers, talented Lounge Steward of the Duchess of Bedford. the Governor-General democratically took uchess of Bedford. He acted as chairman of the concert in ship- ketched by "Bert" gion. I see a church in Arabja for Arabla--a church that wears loin cloth and does not keep clean--- hut knows the meaning of hospi- tality," he continued, LORD SAVILLE HAS PLENTY OF HOUSES | ---- Young Peer May Choose Old Abbey or Haunted Castle Nottingham, Eng, April 11,-- Lord Saville, the 12-year-old school boy who succeeded to the title on the death of his father Fri- day, can have a string of ponies if he lkes. The title carries with it the ownership of 34,000 acres, Machin Mining property and a venerable castle with two well authenti- cated ghosts. The late 'Lord Saville was one of the best known shots in Kug- land and his love for hunting had heen ingerited by his son, who has been a familiar sight at hunting meets in this district since his nurse brought him to the fist meet when he was uix years old, Since then he has ridden ponies to the hounds, dressed in an English huntsman's costume, If he tires of the routine of stud- les or reading, the young lord may meander through the walls of his toric Rufford Abbey, the ancestral seat of the Saville line. It was a Clsterclan monastary before MHen- ry VIII disolved it, giving it to his friend the Earl of Shrewsbury. During the time of the young lord's father most of titled Eng- land, including King KdwarliVIL partook of the sumptuous Kavilie repast in rooms where 'enturies | before monks had dined frugnliv. If he seeks more thrilling plea- sure the hoy may visit either of the "ghost rooms" which the cas. tle boasts. Tradition says that Sir George Baville, who first se- cured the Abbey during the reign of James I, haunts some of the rooms, while the other is haunted by the wraith of an unident (Jed Clsterclan monk. : His title, which was created in 1888, entitles the young lord ty a non-voting seat in the house of Lords in which he will join a score of other minor peets, COMPLETES LONG PASSAGE Cape Town, South Aftica, (By The Canadian Press)--By an indirect route the Japanese steamer Yoshida Mary recently completed an unusu- ally long passage of 67 days from Facoma, U.S, to Cape Town. She left the American port a fortnight before Christian Day with a large cargo of nearly a million board measurement feet of timber and 3000 tons of general 'cargo. Instead of steaming via Panama or via the Straits of Macellan, the captain of the Yoshida Maru chose to call at Miike, in Japan, for bunkers, and later Singapore. The tot] length of the voyage was 13,09 miles. BISHOP OF GLASGOW Glasgow, Scotland, April 11,-- Archdeacon J. R. Darbyshire, nt Sheffield, has been elected Bish- op of Glasgow and Galloway in succession to the Very Rev, E. 7. 8, Reid, who has been appointed 10 the. Bishopric of St. Andrew's, Dunkeld and Dunblane, Archdeacon Darbyshire went to Sheffield from Manchester, where he was a canon, eight years ago. In addition to his gifts as a preach- er he is also an aceomplished musician and organist. Before #oing to Manchester he was In tharge of a Liverpool parish. LONDON PROVIDES MANY QUEER J0BS List Includes Sponge Wet- ters, Clock Winders, and Coin Ringers London,--There are queer jobs in London, jobs Sherlock Holmes could never detect by a glance at a man's shoes, his clothes or his hands. Sponge wetters, nippers, mudpush- ers, confetti counters, clock winders, pea shooters, coin ringers and the patient men who sit in little boats under Thames bridges, paddling and waiting for somebody to fall in, One has been there ten years and the only thing he ever rescued was a hat. Sponge wetters run around with a bucket of water at racetracks and wet bookmakers sponges, Nippers are the chefs of London's streets who cook laborers' food and brew them tea strong enough to take the paint off a battleship. Mudpushers are the valets of Father Thames. Each time the tide recedes they clean the gravel bed by pushing the silt and muck back into the stream. Confetti counters dre girls, scores of them who take the ticket punches of London bus conductors, sort out the hundreds of colored bits of pap- er from the tickets punched and check them against the tickets sold. Clock winders with long necklaces of dangling * keys, spend their lives winding the old clocks in government buildings and city offices. Pea shoot- ers are early risers who scuttle through the mean streets where poor work people live blowing a mouthful of peas through a little tube to rattle against upper bedroom windows > the occupants will wake up in time for work, Coin tingers are in His Majesty's service, employes at the royal pt where they stand hour after hour, day after day, flicking new coins on small circular anvile, testing them by the silvery note for perfection, Then there are men who paint spots on rocking horses, just the right number and in the riht places, and the men who keep the post box- es that eternal brilliant royal red. There are still lamp-lighters 'n old London, and men who make quill pens, and of course, muffin men and the old ladies who sell lavender, just ordinary jobs come down out of the centuries in the modern Babylon of London, ' 700 YEARS OLD Bayreuth, Germany~This little Ba- varian town, shrine of Wagnerian music lovers, is 700 years old this year. Like se many venerable Ger- man towns, it's so accustomed to birthdays that it counts them by a- turies and half-centuries instead of years, y 3 Simple exercises, consisting of musical programmes and addresses, are to be held late in March in of- ficial recognition of the occasion. Speakers will comment on its illus- trious past and the place it holds in | the cultural world of today. Bas=th probably is much older than seven centuries, but the ravages of time destroyed 'its earliest docu- ments, and the oldest ~e extent re- fers to the town in 1231, 'The Sunday school teacher had just reid aloud the parable of the prodigal son to a class of small boys "Now," said she, "who was the least pleased to see the prodigal son return ?" class, but at fast aetaoinshrdiludrr The question rather Juatied the class, bot at last a s . plied: b | STRAY DOMESTIC ANIMALS ARE NOT SAFE IN RUSSIA Small Boys 'Sell Dogs And Cats for Their Skins Moscow. -- Millions of dogs, cats and rats in Soviet Russia are add- ing their bit toward the five-year Industrialization plan. Most of the best furs are bein exported in exchange for needad machinery and farming Iimple- ments, and the small fur bearing animals are going into coats and clothing to protect the native workers from the rigor of cold winters. Small boys mike much of their spending money tracking down stray domestic animals; dogs and cats bring from 26 cents to ® dollar, according to the quality of their skin, while the lowly rat has a stardard price of "214 cents. In addition every city has its professional catchers who are adept at snaring the three ene- mies--cat, dog and rat. Many factories are working overtime converting skins into wearing ap- parel which, though not the best, provides considerable warmth. The government recently passed a strict regulation for licensing all domestic pets. This has led to a decrease' in house animals and additional furs for the country's workers, A small boy, aged four, had just told his uncle that he had heen to a party. "Indeed," said the uncle; "why, you must have been the vounuest there" "Oh, no," answered the voungster in a very lofty: manner, "there was wav oman who came in a perambulator." PRET I FAMOUS MASCOT HAS DISAPPEARED "Farfui"' Deserts Italian Al- pine Regiment Turin. Italy. = "Farfui'", fam- ous life-saving dog and mascot of the Fenestrelle battalion of Al- pine troops, has gone A.W.O.L. As runner, scout and rescuer. IFarful had a distinguished record in finding the lost or injured in the snow-blocked passages hizh 1n the Alps. When a snowslide buri- od 20 men in the . Rochemolles Pass this winter he led a rellet expedition to them. He then was sent to Turin on sick leave to be treated for frozen feet, City life apparently proved too much for Farful, Shortly after his return to duty he disappeared and after a futile search his bat- talion scratched his name off the roster. BRITISH COMPANIES DESIRE CONCESSION GOLD IN MANCHURIA Harbin, Manchuria.--Discovery led to an influx of mining engineer: into this part of.the world. sent here by mining synidicates of BEur- ope. ! The British Lave taken the initia. tive and répresentatives of a mining concern with head offices in London are attempting to negotiate with the Chinese government authorities | at Mukden for a concession in Kirin Province where the precious metal tg sald to exist in large quantities. Although the officials have not oxpetly turned thelr thumbs down on the project they have not offer»d the British company much encour- agoment. They are willing to grant a concession, they say, but Manchu- ria being their country, they want jsome real money out of any mining of gold deposits in Manchuria has Her Little Girl had Weak Kidneys "My little girl bad weak kidneys," writes Mrs, M, J: Thompson, Scoble West, Ont, "I found Dodd's Kidney Pills a wonderful help to her and I highly recommend them to any one who is suffering as she was. I gave her three boxes in all and she is now in good health. Thanks to Dodd's Ridney Pills." For more than a third of a cen people have been. telling e other of the benefits received from Dodd's Kidney Pills, They are no cure-all but purel simply iy sffective kidney remedy. r Kidneys trouble Ru take Bodd's Kidney Pills. ey are the remedy you need. Never accepta phe Tg Insist upon Dodd's DORD'S KIDNEY Ar Al Dealers venture that a foreign concern might engage in on Chinese soll. Despite the unfavorable attitude of the government, London engi: neers and prospectors are still ane gaged in their search for Manchue rian gold and other mineral depos- its. They have reported several small finds along the Sungari River and in one isolated region they found Chinese peasants engaged in vanning for the metal along the creeks. A number of Chinese merchants had staked out claims in the dis- trict and the peasants were mere'y working for them acy. The prosperity of all Canada dopents upon her agricultare. the lesson, "Economy in Pro- duction," is learned and geteraliy ap- plied, prosperity will be ours om a more permanent basis. A "Please, miss, the- fatted pr Advertising of this great Canada. Federal Government tries to take part. twenty March 1, 1932, fifty will have arranged to participate. Canada's wealth and place our The Wealth that Makes Wealth, that Builds Factories, Cities, Comes from the Soil - Canadian farmers provide the basic wealth of the Dominion. agricultural depression, industrial life stagnates. nothing else, should actuate every Canadian to do his part to help farmers of Canada to a footing of more permanent prosperity. this end an event of world-wide interest is planned Under Self-interest, if To Word's Grain Exhibition and Conference REGINA - JULY 25-AUG.6 =~ 1932 Already Farmers from the Atlantic to the Pacific are buying re more attention to cultivation, and putting forth ewery effort to major awards. It remains for all citizens of urban C Talk jhe Worlds Gra bith friends relatives, makin, meeting place Regina, July 25-August 6, 1932. Encourage your overseas friends to visit Pas Yu ? | A t You will meet representatives from the four corners of the world, But if Josidle for you to attend, take out a Al of the Conference Pr culture, lo ac C. Hea Se of Agriculture, rman National Committee HON. ROBERT WEIR Minister of Agriculture for Canada in Exhibition and Conf membership and secure a vinces are organized to a Blase hi oe c Canadian undertaking. 'Write any of them for further information, = © Alberta--~E, L, Gray, Dep lumbia--C, Tice, Field N.G. M has focused the attention of the world on issued invitations to eighty-four coun. have signified their interest, and before the nations of the 'world depends upon her * agriculture, The World's Grain Exhibition and Conference is Canada's oppor- tunity to demonstrate to the world the important part she pla more important part she is destined to play in her bid for agricultural suprem. , and the much ed A to do their part wholeheartedly. erence, Plan to visit your farmer see much of interest, TH ds mot 1 do ormation, of Agriculture, Edmonton, British C rops Commissioner, Victoria, Manitoba innipeg. New Brunswick Wi Fredericton. Nova Sc ¥ . Longley, College of Agriculture, Truro, Carrol, Dept. of Agriculture, Toronto, Prince Edward Island--J, W, Boul ter, Deputy Minister of Agriculture, Char! Methot, Dept. of Agriculture, Quebec, Dept. of Agriculture, Regina, Or full particulars will be glad bition and Conference, Imperial B Ontario], A. Carroll, lottetown, bec--Paul pt H. Vi or, ly given by the Secretary, 's Grain Exhie Sven, o Set ary, World's