Halton Hills Newspapers

Georgetown Herald (Georgetown, ON), August 13, 1941, p. 7

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tm0krpmm0mi the georgetown herald wednesday evening auguat 1 3th 1 94 1 ne ok the king him self the inimit able tommy and three greats on the continents bandstands will dispense toe ting ling tunes every afternoon and even ing as the crowds gather on canada s largest dance floor at the cn e dance pavilion when the army fight the 3avy or the air force on the grand stand track and the cn e playing fields you 11 want to be on hand to see the fur fly in these cham pionship events canada s gay white way will post tively sparkle with new attractions fromtheendboftheearth brand new airplane rides will add an extra zip to anybodys visit to the 1941 evl lucky teter and his hell drivers airily defy destruction every after noon its motor madness and each evening the amaz spectacle britannia brings an empire to hfe zbr grandstand crowds come along and be sure to bring the family spend days at tfce most inspiring dramatic informative exhibition in a colourful history m uctou for di exhibition ft unctions tamj b pgrchwd from tho exhibition ticket oomu adauid st w wa 22m moodarvm kins st w el 1090 canadian national 111 1 toronto 1941 i the world has waited seven yeabs fob thess pictubes i s greatest pictorial attraction dtonne quintuplet family be- i united the first and only group i photography ctt fto w dloone children i their mother and father will appear 1 in the detroit sunday tim watch j fu page ib tne aug 17 issue and another full page in august i 94 issue fie tore to get the detroit 1 sunday tunas this week and every hawk in the wind by helen topping miller chapteb xm there was an instants silence virgie sat without moving marian gave a little startled gasp and lucy aid vaguely why then virgie snorted i reckon i 1 just have to go on standing in the way of progress wallace be cause you won t get my mlll withers hitched forward his eyes showing points of anger i reckon you didn t understand me virgie i want your mill and i m going to get it i ve got money jenind me money i can get he timber i can get the mar lets i fi on getting into the pulp business and just how virgie asked de liberately do you plan to get pos session of my mill i figure to buy it at a fair price taking account of the depreciation n the value ofthe stock and the depreciation of the property i got d right t6 do it slow red crept up nto his face i figure to buy that property and improve it it needs improvement does it you know the shape that mill s n look here vjhat s that fields tirl writing down everything i say for this is a business conference you said so yourself i may not know enough lo run a pulp mill ul i do know enough to run a busi ess conference lucy s taking notes because i told her to do it you d better take a n6te of this virgie i m offering an opportunity io sell if you won t seil then i fig ure to put you out of business you did iume fancy figuring didn t you wallace you must have trained your mind lining all those jh aims and ambitions into ian uage too bad it s all going to wdbte all that brain power you uld run for something and maybe ltt elected if you put all your elo- juence on the job as it is you re lust wasting your breath my mill a on t be for sale tomorrow nor any ther day not so long as i can find green stick in this country to r nd into pulp so this business unference seems to me to be prac tically over he stood up and lucy watching n a sort of fascinated awe over her note book saw that his hands trem oled his lips drew back a sttle hawing his yellow teeth your mill will be for sale vir oic morgan if it am t for sale to- diy it will be it will be i don t lure to be balked in what i set ut to do not by anybody yod etter do a little thinking virgie ou 11 sell to me reasonable or i ii t capital and put you out of busl rtss now 111 thank you for my she had not virgie thought thank ully afterward put him out of the house she had kept her temper nd she had kept her head but vhen he had gone rattling away in is old car she strode the length of he room and punched the fire sav jely the old pea hen the old ant eater put me out of business will he my mill s falling in is it from a corner came marian s vorried voice he might do it mother he might do it virgie was grateful for an outlet for her sizzling wrath he might run for congress he might try to blow up whiteside mountain too but where would he get nowhere he s trying to bluff me out the penny pinching old hound dog he s sore because he couldn t marry mylnill and get it without putting out a cent i know wallace withers i ve known him most of his life as well as though i had stirred up the mud to make him but the mill is shabby mother all the metal roofing is rusty and the mortar falling out of the bricks nnd tom has propped up the fence in a dozen places red burned in virgie s cheeks her eyes shot blue sparks i should spend money to fancy up the mill on the outside whan the men aren t back on full pay yet when i can t even discount my bills your father never asked for more than thirty days in his hfe and i m thankful if i can get anything paid off in ninety we only took sixty for the new parts for the jordan machine mrs morgan much obliged lucy stick with me will you i seem to need a rouple of friends father marian persisted had d fashioned ideas you know thai lother he was too conserative r these times v looked up a d s p re at the straight strong judi line of his lips at his thoughtful cautious eyes the look heartened her stopped the odd quivering in her knees the shaken cold anger that tore at her david was with her he had died but he had not taken his spirit away from the mill it walked there stood over the blow pits and the great digesters and deckers where the raw pulp was steamed and thinned and ground and dried one fiber that would one day be milled into missals for nuns or paper on which letters would be written to old mothers she gave david a look that reached a hand to him through this strange gloom this shadow which was as fearsome and intangible as the swoop of a hawk through the wind your fathers way was an old fashioned way she said but so are a lot of things old fashioned things like good credit and a good name things like fairness and hon or and decent dealing they ve in vented some err art methods but they ve never invented anything that takes the place of those old fash ioned things we could paint the roller mill suggested lucy faintly we could let the boys work on ft slack days and have wallace withers walk by and see that he s got us scared let him build his pulp mill i m not going to be stampeded into changing my ways morgan pulp is known wherever men make paper nobody gives a darn if it s milled in a pole shack with a brush roof it s good pulp lucy you put all this in the form of a report i might want to prove some time that old withers threatened me i m going to call that lawyer tonight and go over to see tom the first thing in the morning and enjoin those crooks from cutting that timber marian stood up slim and grave and gallant all rig t mother if you re going to fight we if fight with you virgie i grimnlbb i elted and her eyes misted briefly i was just standing i ere wishing to the lord that i h id a st n lift bets pretty thick for d woman son t times but if wt hin u gelher e can beat em u c t iw mmh and take lucy i n t mokt l s sie go with you 1 i i wdni you coming back on th i r id alone mother i ve dmi n it aknc a hundred times i know that and i e been mak ing pulp for years but now all of a sudden somebody tal ls a notion lo burn down the mill though she r sl at ntervalj to take bromides virgie c uld n t sleep her battling bp ril wa roused she found herself dentine her fists in the dark making up savage and tell ne speeches and muttering fragments ff them aloud the thin blue winter dawn came late she had already given up hope of rest when the east began to be pearl and aquamarine she got up and dressed putting on her good blue suit her best silk blouse she would have preferred going into ac tion in her old corduroys and boots but this fight todav was to be one of wits of law and shrewdness not to be conducted in a disreputable old hat jerked belligerently over one eye at least thank goodness her ene my was now standing forth m the open the secret hawk that beat dark wings between her and the sky was a thing of form and definition and she felt sure that if she could keep payne and hooper and wal lace withers from getting possession of the timber area on hazel fork she could defeat their schemes she knew every inch of land every standing tree every foot of availa ble pulp wood for a hundred miles around what little wallace with ers owned even counting the acre age he had bought from perry ben nett would not go far no man in his right mind would put money into a mill with so scant a supply as that in prospect and the rest except for tom s rich heritage was tied up by leases by power concerns or lum ber people or by the great cham pion mill except what she herself controlled she knew that wallace withers would extend himself to destroy her no pestilence ever set loose in any clime could work the havoc wrought by an ignorant bigoted man work ing ruthlessly for his own ends especially when under this fierce cold passion for eminence there burned the moving fury of a person al spite wallace was e vain and jnscrupulous man disdained no ethics would deter him no reasoning ouch him he would break her if he could because only by reducing her to suppliant meekness could he rebuild the brittle tower of his own prime conceit she made a cup of coffee in the kitchen and drank it black and hot lossie came scuffing in m bedroom clippers her hair plastered stiffly in a net my goodness she exclaimed you going to the mill this early whyn t you call me to get you some breakfast i 11 eat later i ve got a lot to do i don t know when i 11 be back her old car roared down the hdl t e early morning fog was lying in ureat whife scarves of feathers down tl i slopes of the mountains the ti im of the mill drifted like wings e mst a dawn quickened sky as e approacrjed the gate suddenly she found herself deeply ed loving that shambling build ng the windows burning in the wan inirv sun the ranked piles of d een the choking sulphide thh lay filling lh g unty the mill was her uf 1 the rest of her life it was da f uhat was- left lo her of the man ihe uad loved a message for all canadians new ground is broken in the cbc production canada speaks to be heard over the national network on monday august 18 at 9 30 pjn edst in this music drama in verse john kannawln prairie regional reprsen tatlve of the cbc and veteran net work prod icer ijxjve top accepts l e challenge lo canidian radio that it shall see the spiritual issues of to f day s worldwide struggle and give them adequate expression on the net works lyrical passages in this new piece now given its world premiere have been set to music by hugh ban croft winnipeg organist and composer lower left albert prate toronto violinist and conductor now statlored n winnipeg l right is ar inf and conducting the musical score which will be presented by a lares orchestra and chorus wth stanley bio- ban and victor klassen tenor as so loists principal roles in the spokea dialogue v ill be taken by beth locker bie and helen nicol the work will o produced by charles p wright senior prair e region producer centre go 5050 with our fighting forces la- i remember t thm fouwr you drlv thm morm you mvf gxs buravd up wail standing sull totals a staggering gadanag so ntr lar your car rmn for a fw mlnutm with th motor running its just as ast to switch it off and ar gasolia rmmbr tour 5050 pldgt doat 11 your motor ldl sjtszte- atd tutit iciuz gaj aoi victory an urgent appeal to ontario farmers keep your cows milking ontario cheese factory patrons did a good job in may and june they increased cheese production by 2574772 pounds don t let the drought be a tool for hitler britain must have 112000000 pounds of cheese this year this requires effort on your pact drought conditions call for heavier grain feeding immediately 1 feed any avadable grain or silage 2 buy bran and shorts at the pegged prices from your nearest feed store at a saving of 3 00 per ton prices are now st may levels 3 feed new grain at once 4 don t stint milk flow must be maintained you will need green feed this fall vfork up a stubble field after the first raw sow one bushel rye or fall wheat and two bushels of oats per acre this mixture will also provide early spring pasture you will be surprised and pleased at the quick and steady growth ontario is britains front line for dairy products so keep your cows milking i feed the cows to feed britain ontario department of agriculture hon p m dewar mlahft w i skk dfty mmtfar vouia she wouki flght for it stiffly she set her chin on that thought the nigh men not yet gone off sift stared at her as she walked eyes ahead face grim and resolute across the frosen yard chapter xiv next weak child at keynote oompany i can heai dad dear

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