HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1959-12-17, Page 2•
., taa ...attaaitaira,lat •
For Women Who. Sew
PRINTED PATTERN
a INFANT DOLL
111 11, WARDROBE
5. 4937
FOR DOLL
l0"-20"
TALL
A federal judge in Gainesville,
Ga., dismissed a moonshine in-
dictment against Harry Cotton
when it turned out that Cotton
was Harry Lauderdale, a treas-
ury agent investigating moon-
shining.
WATCHING THE WATCHERS
PRETTY SHELL GAME — Adriene, Bourbeau is delighted by the
conch, shell she found in. Florida.
DOWN' MEXICO WAY — Russian DepUty Preiniet Antisida Miko4
yort jokes With the wife of a steelworker in her borne in Mori...
aidtVca Mexico. The City is the site of Mexieo's 104)60' Steel Mill:
During hii:teur of the cbUntry, the Soviet supersalesman else
visited oil fields and itiduitridi
She Shot Her
25th. Husband .......
Peter gotillart, a Shanghai
businessman, stared in atatONSII,
;Petit when he arrived at Yung
king; a srnall town in Sikang,,
province annexed from Tibet by
China. gyMPIIP: was brawling
• in the buy main street, Groups
of men gesticulated, snouted.
and fought. Women swore, sob.
bed and beat each other with
sticks.
The explanation for their be-
haviour was that something in
the local water made people so.
highly .sensitive and irritable.
that Yungking was the most
quarrelsome town in Sikang!
He made other strange diaa
coveries when he reached Tach-
ienlu, the capital, to work for.
the Chinese Induatrial Co-opera,
Lives. Far from being subserv-
ient to their husbands, Tibetan.
wives there did all the commer-
cial business.
They sold goods imported
from India via Tibet to Chinese
merchants, tea and other mer-
chandise bound for Lhasa from.
China. Their husbands were
merely the agents who. supervis-
ed caravans and delivered the
wife's goods to women merch-
ants in Lhasa.
But this entailed no disruption
of family life, Goullart explains
in a remarkable account of his..
travels in this primitive country;
"Princes of, the Black. Bone".
In Lhasa the husband was hos-
pitably entertained in all re,
Jiffy Stoles
tv 5:44444\tvittikk
So luxurious! Fashion loves
the stole — soft, smart, warm
with dresses and separates.
One stole to knit, one to cro-
chet—both JIFFY to make in
knitting worsted with large
needles. Lacy, lovely gifts. Pat-
tern 976: simple directions.
Send THIRTY - FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) to Laura
Wheeler, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth
St., New Toronto, Ont. Print
plainly PATTERN NUMBER,
your NAME and ADDRESS.
New! New! New! Our 1960
Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book
is ready NOW! Crammed with
exciting, unusual, popular de-
signs to crochet, knit, sew, em-
broider, quilt, weave—fashions,
home furnishings, toys,, gifts, ba-
zaar hits. In the book FREE.
3 quilt patterns. Hurry, send
25 cents for your copy.
Kangaroo Trouble.
Way Down Under
Mobs of kangaroos, 1,000 or
more strong, are causing Aus-
tralia's graziers their biggest
headache since myxomatosis
wiped opt the wild rabbit
plague. These wealthy but wor.
ried farmers say they have lost
close to a laillion dollars since
the war because of old man kan.
garoo's depredations..
At a recent meeting of the
New South Wales Graziers' As-
sociation, the president told
members that every kangaroo
which invades a property keeps
off two sheep.
He disclosed that, according
to estimates 2,000,000 kangaroos
are cropping pastures in the.
Western Division alone of New
South Wales, This means a loss
of four million sheep. That ex-
tra sheep population would add
he calculated, another $15,000,-
000 a year to Australia's ineome
from wool.
In Bourke, live hundred miles
north of Sydney, kangaroo mobs
are running, rampant; devouring
valuable sheep grass within fif-
teen miles of the town. An all-
cut hunt on one 10,000 - acre
property resulted in a kill of
3,000 kangaroos. Some indivdu-
al marksmen earned $250
week during this blitz.
But killing these voracious
crop-eaters .is not easy. The 'roo
becomes highly Sensitive when
once it has been fired at, is
quick off the mark and works
up a speed of 30 m.p.h. after a
few jumps. Little is known of
how fast he breeds or of his
migrational tendencies.
TEN CENTS — Thii is the new
Liberty B I intertiatiorfcil• air
mail stamp. The 1 0-cenufee
would ailow thesender,to ,posf
his letter- to or far as Central
or South America, if he wished,
or to The West Indies.
Tides Of The
World's Oceans
The tides are the heartbeat of
the ocean, a pulse that can be
felt all over the world. This
mysterious rhythm has gripped
man's imagination since the be-
ginnings of recorded history,
spurring him to try to under-
stand its causes and grasp its
meaning.
An attentive observer, watch-
ing the ebb and flow of the
tides from a vantage point on
the coast, will notice that this
movement of the water ineliades
both a vertical and a horizon-
tal motion. Both recur at equal
intervals, i.e., they have the
same period, and both are part
of the same wave motion. No
coastline is without tides—the
periodic rise and fall of the
water level is universal. Often
it is so weak that the effects
of wind and weather obscure it,
but equally often it presents us
with the magnificent spectacle
of tides' up to sixty Lech These
tremendous fluctuations have
a marked effect on the'econorny
and 'way of life of all those who
live .near the sea.
Tides are particularly impres,
sive in shallow waters. Off the,
German North Sea coast for in-
stance, a strip from some six
to some twelve miles broad is
'above water during low tide and
submerged during high, This
coastal strip is a wide, barren,
almost level, gray surface, com-
posed of mud and wet sand and
known as the German Watt, an
amphibian belt which is sea bed
and low-lying, fertile marshes,
protected for the most part by
dykes, During high water the
dykes form the barrier between
land and sea, and tremendous
catastrophes o c c Ur whenever
they succumb to the pressure of
the water.
The extensive mud flats are
divided by clearly defined chan-
nels. During low tide the chan-•
nets .drain the water to the Sea,
in Meth the Sairie way as would
a system of rivers, arid during
high tide they lead it to the in-
nermost parts Of the flats. The
larger and deeper of these chan-
nels which are navigable, are
Marked Off by poles from the
surrounding shallows:
When the toast is steep, the
picture is Of course quite differ.
eta. Here the tides, appear al.
most eXclutively as a tise in
the Water level, white the hoti-
zontal displacement has become`
negligible. Instead of subitierg,
frig large tracts of land, the tidal
effect here restricted to a
narrow' coastal belt. — Froth
'Ebblb find-Flew," by Albert be-
Last Saturday we went to the
official opening. of Ontario's
newest hospital — that is, the
"Milton District Hospital." It
.Was a great day for the Board of
Directors as there has probably
,.been,-more controversy over this,
one. 62-bed hospital than any in
Ontario. The public was apathe-
tic, 'Getting local funds was like
trying to draw blood from a
stone. The need for a hospital
was great yet the man in the,
street seemed to lack faith in
the ability of the directors to
plan, build and maintain a. local
hospital. This was largely • the
result of what some people con-
sidered over-spending in the inia
tial planning. Which was a pity
as there' was never a harder
working board of directors. How-
ever, after almost six years of
endeavour the hospital is now
getting organised 'to receive its
first patients, replacing the 16-
bed private hospital that ° has
served'the district for• 16 years.
The new hospital is very mod-
ern, very spacious and exceed,
ingly airy and attractive, com-
paring favourably with any that
have been built in recent years.
Naturally the cost has been high
— prohibitive, according to some
peonle. But then, doesn't that
apolY to' all hosnitals, big or
small? As I wandered through
the wards -and corridors I won-
dered if there was any way of
cutting the initial cost, I hit on
one or two ideas. Here their are
for what they may be worth,
As you know any public build-
ing must he government-antirov-
ed to qualify for provincial
grants and since hospitals follow
more or less along the lines of
a chosen blueprint, some with a
one-floor plan, others with mul-
tiple floors, why then couldn't
the Department of Health and
Welfare have blueprints' available
to meet the need of any planning
board and thus cut down on
architectural fees, which' run to
quite a sizable ,figure. It might
not make too 'much difference in
the overall expenditure but even
one small economy would be a
step in the right direction, The
sable idea could apply to schools
and institutions.
Another saving might be effect-
ed in the initial publicity cam-
paigns for raising funds, Local
papers do a Wonderful job ad-
vertising worthwhile causes and
there are always nubile snirited
men and women who will undor-
take voluntary services in the
interest of their own community.
Whir then snend thousands of
dollars on outside help to nubli-
size local fund-raising projects?
Arouse the interest of prominent
men and women , . Nieto Ore
alWays both leaders in every
community . , let them be the
ones to spark the campaign TheY
know the type of peOple with
whom they Must deal — far bet-
ter, I would say, than a hired
campaign manager, That's how
it appears to me any**,
As for the completed hospital,
that is another story. I don't
think anyone should' miss an
opportunity to go on pre-
opening tour of insteetion of any
OeW hosoital. It is quite tin
eti tication hYv \'" of think-
ing one c. 11.3 bat feotuyes of
modern hospitals is the "recovery
room,"-usually a room with frOm
twoato four beds, where patients
are' taken while still partly un-
der anaesthesia following an
.operation. A nurse is constantly
in attendance at this critical
stage in the patient's post-
operative period. Perhaps I ap-
preciate this advance in nursing
care because of my own experi-
ence about 20 years ago.
At that time, following a
major operation, I "came to" in
my, own private room . ...alone.
Not even realizing I had been in
surgery I thought I wanted• to
go to the bathroom. I attempted
to get out of bed. One of the,
nurses came in and'found me on
the floor. Special nurses had
been engaged to care for me
but I' was supposed not to need
any special attention until later
in the 'day. It just shows you,
never "can tell. It was' an un-
pleasant experience and one
that could hardly 'happen today.
Another thing I gained from that
,time was a piece of worthwhile
advice given me by one of my
"specials" -- a nurse ..who had
the reputation of being the best
in the hospital. She said, if it
were necessary to cut down on
expenses it was better to choose
a public ward and special nurs-
ing rather than a private room
with less nursin g. Partner.
thought this good advice and
when he had to go to, the To-
ronto General for observation
some years later he insisted on',
a public ward. He was there for
three weeks and hevetoregretteP
it.
Well I hope you won't con-
sider this to be 'a gloomy
column. It isn't meant to be: So
far as'l can see a stay in any
good hospital isn't the ordeal it
used to-be. We should be thank-
ful for our modern facilities —
especially tinder our present
pre-paid Ontario Hospital Insur-
ance.
Getting Taller
Bed inanufaCtiarerS, door Mak-
ers, basketball toaahes, and
military draft boards had sensed
it, and last month London
versity's famous biologist Peter
B. MedaWar confirmed it: •Hti,
mans are getting taller and
taller.
Specifically, Medawar report-
ed that Britiah teen-agers are
growing theee,cinarterg of en
inch taller each decade. The sta.
tisties are essentially •the tame
in the U.Si 'and the "end is not
In sight," according. to Dr. Stan-
ley N. Garn of the Eels Itesearch
Institute for the Study of 'Hu:
man D e d in era, Yellow
Springs, Ohio. Further, Gain
tees no ceiling on man's Up.
Ward evolution. "Fortunately,
the hear t and Other bilnian
organs are Capable' of keeping
up, with normal rim-glandular
growth," he said. Gain offers'
One reason for this "tall gory":
"This is a nation of fat kids
and fat kids Usually grow
taller!' ti
Prank 'Lloyd Wright .(Aitfif-,
led): Definition of televialorit
Chewing.guitt for the eyes,
Laughter Banned
In The Palace
When novelist - playwright,,
Dympbna Cusack recently tour-
ed China she met an Imperial
Guards general's widow, Yu
Roungling, who had been a
Manchu princess and lady-in.
waiting to the Empress Dowager,
T'sui
In her talk with Miss Cusack,
quoted in "Chinese Women
Speak" she said: "The Court
dazzled us, with its richness and
splendour. By then the Empress
Dowager was in sole control.
Poor Kwang Hsu (the Emperor)
had been put under house-arrest
in a pavilion in the Sea Palace
. , We dared not go out of the
women's quarters, To go to the
Emperor's Palace would have
brought punishment undreamed
of."
The Dowager had a cape made
of more t h an three thousand
perfectly matched pearls, each
.the size of a canary's egg, linked
by two pure jade clasps. Her
headdresses and shoea were en-
crusted 'with jewels, a she wore
gold 'and, jade fingernail pro-
tectors.
No collection of jewels in the
world could .equal hers, it was
said. There were three thousand
boxes of them in one room for
everyday wear. Many others
were kept in a safety room for
,special occasions. Her favourite
was a pearl nearly as large as
a hen's egg.
Best of all Yu loved the much
freer Summer Palace, where she
lived in a pavilion — now a
tea-house — on the lake's edge.
In this palace they were not
permitted to laugh aloud, but in
the pavilion rules were slightly
relaxed.
Normally they rose at five
'o'clock and at six sharp they
lined ' hp in the ante-chamber
to the Dowager's bedroom --
the Young Empress, ,the favour-
ite, and t h e Aadies-in-waiting.
The princesses outside came
only on fete days. They then
helRed her to dress, from a
wardrobe of thousands of beau-
- tifully embroidered robes.
In the' afternoons there were
plays and operas, all the parts
being taken by specially trained
eunuchs. These were followed
by public receptions,
`Ithose inceptions were
awful," Yu said. "Some of the
foreign ladies behaved as if they
were at a circus."
She confessed: "I'm happier
'today, than I ever was working
at the Court. Etiquette was so
strict that one scarcely dared
breathe.'
But during the eight years crf
Japanese occupation s h e and
her husband were so poor that
they had practically nothing to
eat but coarse grain.
Fellow we know-bought all his
Christmas lights:on the pay-as-
you-go plan.
Modern,Etiquette
illy Roberta Lee
Q. When a tingerbewl is part of
a formai dinner, does one put
both hands in at the same time?
A, Never, Dip just the FIN-
GERS of one band into the bowl
at a time,
Q. Sonic of my girl, friends,
who have become engaged re,
eently, have given their fiances
engagement gifts. Is this a new
custom, and is it now proper?
A, This is neither a new custom
nor necessary, Of course, there is
nothing wrong with it, if the girl
really wishes to do so,
114. '7 •+retn
In, fun to play fairy god-
mother and sew this wardrobe
for tiny I0 to big 20ainch baby
dolls. Includes coat, hat, sacque,
kimono,, dress, playsuit, bib,
hooded' blanket, slip, pants.
Printed Pattern 4937: For' dolts
la, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 inches. State
size of doll.
Printed directions on each,
pattern part. Easier, accurate.
'Send' FORTY CENTS (400
(stamps cannot be accepted; use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern. Please print plainly
SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,.
STYLE NUMBER'.
Send order to ANNE ADAMS,
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New
Toronto,. Ont.
ISSUE 51 — 1959
spects hY A lady friend, pe r'
hags the One entrusted with tit.
disposal of his wife's caravan,
The. Tachienlu wife was usual-
ly solaced in turn by the Lhasa
lady's husband who had brought
her goods to sell in Tachienlul
Thus, each husband had a wife
at either end, and when the
children of both families reach•
ed travelling age they visited
each mother in turn.
One such dealer was the rich
Princess Aja Pentso belonging
to a noble family. Pretty, slim
and delicate, with powdered face
and rouged lips, she walked
through the streets on high-heel,
ed shoes, accompanied by husky
girls carrying her merchandise.
Thanks to her wealth, beauty
and charm, she did a roaring
trade, sometimes cornering the
market in saffron or dry rhubarb
brought from the highlands by
Tibetans who would rather sell
their goods a little cheaper to
beauty than at a higher price to
a less attractive woman.
The girl-porters had the busi-
ness fever, too. When not en-
gaged in tea-carrying, they kept
w a t c h for some arriving
stranger, especially one coming
from the highlands. They would
ask him if he had gold dust,
musk, saffron- or corn to dis-
pose of.
Not knowing where to go or
what price to ask, he usually ac-
cepted the offer to help, A bar-
gain was struck over a cup of
wine and the proceeds of the
sale duly delivered in the even-
ing at an appointed place.
The man was happy over the
deal, the following evening
there might be more drinks and
a dance at a caravanserai.
Brick tea, for ages China's
chief export to Tibet, is carried
from Yaan to Tachienlu over
lone mountain tracks by strange,
pitiful, almost sub-human Szech-
uan-Chinese porters with bluish-
yellow wizened faces and unsee-
ing eyes.
Clad in rags, they resemble
walking corpses. As they are
paid by weight they sometimes
carry as much as one hundred
and eighty pounds. They stagger
along in the rarefied mountain
air like automata, sometimes
collapsing in the snow and frost
by the roadside to die unmourn-
ed.
All their energy for this grim
task comes from opium, without
which they could not live.
When Goullart w en t up-
country to Garthar to start a
modern creamery at a cattle farm
there, news came of a Tibetan
uprising near adjacent Kanze,
It was, so the rumors ran, due
to the matrimonial entangle-
ments of its ruling Grand Duch-
ess, Detchin Wangmo. She was
believed to have shot her twenty-
'fifth husband and to be enam-
oured of a handsome young Ti-
betan from another tribe The
Provincial government wanted
to prevent this new marriage,
fearing that the alliance would
make her too powerful.
Refugees reached Garthar
with panic tales of cruelty and
pillage and of raids by fierce
Hsiangchen tribesmen incensed
by the exactions of rapacious
Szechuanese soldiers.
Chinese settlers and merch-
ants in Garthar hurriedly pack-
ed their goods and with their
caravans headed for the safety
of TachienItt, Goullart soon fol-
lowed, and on a 15,000-Toot ,pass
between snow peaks had the
terrifying experience of losing
his caravan in dense fog.
CUSTODY FIGHT — Met.jiteity De Noon Hayden shown with / her attorney hi a Lot. AliqeleS ''Coultradni before a tiebi-tng' iii whit!, she demanded the custody of her three Children' by befog
Sterling Hayden. Hayden 'recently returned frcirr. a 10t 0-00-hil4
'Voyage with the thildreri defiance of a court 'ord'er etof td
remove therri from tountorii••
I
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