HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1951-1-3, Page 7Cade For ciariati to
Farm lar* Living
x11,01 .4.'9 it 11lean to Lr• 1'hris-
1i;•It I lull'': 1 ge,,ntJ 1 I -ell thlrrt
11hvn„1 In dairy. forint I”; L:,vc sm.
lidiri1 milli producers and eon -
lime • alike by :n1,tcl rine; this
Their (rank anew,, r„ter1 wilco
the cleiry farmers' s' r,l Ition,llip
;honld lie to n. e 1\,x1 n f rid 1140,
edtn'dli' 1), t crew :'11 lJI kt•tln14
111 1 Ii' (, and the Pule t govern •
pout i:a the dairy bil.ints,s, write,
r\ndl v. 1V. Ifopltill, ni "; instess-
1I l 1 arming."
1. ir,t the Christian dairy farmer
pays alllelitioli 18 el•ul, rl,lallgn, to
tcrtilizatitt, and to erosion preven-
tion. Ile does not take fatrnilanti
Mit 01 grass except 10 tit it into
a longtime, grassland progranino.
Ile does not drain land which is
under rater, simply to increase
acreage, if snob drainage will. re-
duce the general watts- level i11 the
arra.
) e
St cond, tic does um push his cattle
by or, rfeeding 10 the point where
it endamgers the health of L•is herd.
▪ a
'Third, the individual dairyman
series alto family -type farm. Atanagc-
ment and most of the labour is
contributed by' the family, which in
worn receives its inuetits. These
benefits are not gained at the ex-
pellee of people employed on the
farm
Fourth, the dairy termer takes
. time out for recreation. :It's his res-
ponsibility to participate in and help
develop recreational and social
activities which will 'lake his com-
munity a happier place.
Fifth, he affiliates with a mar-
keting organization .or cooperative
which will give hint an effective
voice in the highly organized world
hi which he lives. He works to
&•cep nut ltnfair practices.
R
* e
Sixth, the Christian dairy,farmer
complies with the standards of
his marketing.organization. . He.
complies with the standards of the
health organization in the 001n111ttu-
itir, in which he produces and sells.
.k '4
Srvt nt1, fu hit relationship with
goverment agencies, he desires no
special privileges. It is his duty to
make use of goveruulent services
when they are bcnefrcial to his farm-
ing and marketing practices. But,
at rhe gamic time, he is responsible
for sexing that the government farm
progl;minle is operated efficiently.
4 * 4
Eighth, he works for equal op-
portunity for all people, for free-
dom of speech, for fair return of
honest endeavour, and for a free
ttmospltcre in which Christian ideals
and democratic principles can de-
velop.
'These dairy fanners know their
lnswers are neither final nor perfect.
They know, too, that it won't be
easy to live up to their code in our
highly competitive society. How-
ever, they're willing to try—and
' try hard. And by their joint effort,
they are challenging other groups
of farm and city operators to seek
earnestly to takcIhetes
tiau a
x
work,
k * 41
Foresight — Or Just
"Hogtown't Hoarding?
in spite of tate defence ban on
steel for certain non-essential pur-
poses Toronto will be able to go
ahead and build four 11010 artificial
ice rink, as planned. In an election
speech Mayor McCalluut boasted
Opt city officials had figured what
was going to happen and had had
the foresight l0 purchase the
aeet'ssary steel piping itt advance,
Mr. kTc .'allunt may call that fore-
sight biit when a private citizen
does the 'sante thing with sugar,
coffee, auto tires or anything else
he blinks is going to be scarce
in an emergency, the common des-
cription is "hoarding."
The ban on steel was imposed 10
10p the very kind of construction
Toronto !las ie.. mind so that there
would be sufficient of this vital
material for defence and other
essential work. It was hoped that
people and governments would
voluntarily ease 111) on pift'CllsSe
for non-essential rise and official
interferelhec would be unnecessary.
Apparently, however, there has
been too much foresight of the hind
'Toronto has shown and so Ottawa
has lead to follow the lead of Wash-
ington and cianlp down. If we want
to see the sante thing happen with
outer commodities, foresighted ad-
vance brtyittg will surely bring it,
Toronto sh0u111 have set a gond
csantple, not boast of its "slick•
uoss."--.Front The Financial Post, '
Travelling Down A
Quebec River Road
I*falling dun II the riv ev road
1401tµ• the broad water, front Fox
River (Nivii.re au! R malts) and
t.rinn Cote 11lAtt<c-au 1;ri'find1
by Jersey Cote and lionise Cove,
pretty fndrnh ttcous where the ti,h-
irg beaohe4 arc bn,t rn ,ngh, the
4140t1ro:t tiI , 1 '•
q,(lc
14n,ic•rs,
Snit this eat is to the kipper the
rid of the 5t. Lawrence. River;
out from there runs on the marvel•
letnsly slender linger of 11111,1 to Pape
Gaspe and Slliphr:ad- the Forillon,
the. 'tinl,firr,' a most remarkable
stretch-- and 1 have b 11.4' this let
she ink flow freely in trying to
depict 1t.
I like to try, even newel' quite
conscious of falling short of the
reality; for here is a range of moun-
tains split lengthwise I s the waves,
their split -open heart standing over
111(1 northern wader., their south -
sloping flanks deseeemling by the
natural angle of the rncl, herbs to
the waters of Gaspe Bay. It Is
Canada's great index finger point-
ing to the southeast toward the
isles of I'creee and the lestmlands
of the great Gulf; only a guidepost
us big as a half range of mountains,
split along its back like a cod,
is adequate to such function. if one
would see the snarling teeth that
have cut these u10511(ains in half,
he needs but to stand on the cliffs
of Rosiers as the wave -battalions
come pounding in from across the
cast river 1no111h under the drive
of a nor' -easter, and no one knows
the stories of the lost craft whose
bones have been broken on these
angry reefs. . . '!'here are very
tangible evidences all along of the
feast of the waves and the re-
jected fragments of their gargan-
tuan appetites, .Beneath the cliffs
and along the baysicle at the little
stations 001 here and there cannon
of old French or English patterns
which have been hauled ttp from
fathoms of water, and it was from
one of the old ]louses in the ancient
hamlet of Rosiers Cove that the
venerable medallion portru 1t of
Jacques Cartier cause—a romantic
souvenir out of a dint, uncertain
past, whose story has been told
before. This interesting Aslique is
the stern shield of some square -
ended craft that went ashore at
the rocks of Rosiers, the "Cartier
Cliffs," as they should be called.
This medallion made, 1 am as-
sured by those who ought to know,
of Canadian white pine, was un-
covered some years ago in pulling
down the oldest house in the settle-
ment, where it _Uad been battened
in between the outer and inner
skins of a closed -up window 'hole.
'1110 deep and finely cut portrait,
20 in. across, is that of a black -
bearded ivfalouin skipper with tuft-
ed bonnet and loose surtout, and
the reverse of the shield bears the
deeply weathered cut -in date, 1704,
and the initials 'J.C.' The fine figure
was, 1 think with others, doubtless
intended to represent the face of
the Discoverer and, if so, whether
or not it is a truthful picture, it
is the oldest known attemptedat
one.
Strange indeed that this portrait,
which so long antedates the oft -
reproduced picture of Cartier in the
Hdtei-de-Ville of St. \halo, should
have been found barely fifteen
Miles away from the spot where
the great skipper made his historic
landing in Gaspe; Bay and set up
the lilies of his sovereign of France
--Frons "L'lle Percee, The Finial
of the St, Lawrence, or Gaspe
hfaneries," hy John M. Clarke.
MEN, TAKE WARNING!
A "department for supermen" is
being started shortly by a local
youth club in Cop 14)111eget;
Denmark. An official said too
many111sit '
men tel byand
1 t
Y
le
their wives do housework.
He said
the club "planned to slake "super-
men" out of ahem by (raining them
to help their wives•
Real Christmas Gift—Barney t ioldn1all mops Itis brow and
heaths on his new daughter after racing the stork and Six
police ('4(114 111 a 70 -mile -per -hour chase to a hospital. Goldman,
finally curbed hy the cops, explained his haste and got a police
0:40°11 to the hospital, Later he got a ticket for '1p1eriio1.1 and
r elkl ess (lriv'itoe.
Rode Bike. In Rain
— Invented Rayon
The spinning of rayon is a pro-
cess which imitates the action of
111e silk -wenn. This insect rats
mulberry leaves and produces a
sticky liquid out of two tiny holes
00 either side of its head. The
liquid solidifies in the air and be-
comes silk with which the silk-
worm winds itself a cocain.
In 10114 Dr. Robert Hooke, au
English scientist, stated that one
day a way would be found to pro-
duce a sticky liquid similar to that
of the silk -worn; which could be
forced through tiny holes to solidify
into threads for weaving.
But it was not till 11;84 that Sir
Joseph Swan took out a patent for
such a man -Made fibre. lie made
it from wood pulp, and lie intended
t0 (Ise it not 11) textile,, bit as
• filaments for electric light bulbs.
Other scientists, among them
Charles Cross and Ernest Bevan,
patented other processes, the main
principle of which was that liquid
teas forced through tiny holes
181011.71 as spinnerets t0 solidify in
continuous threads.
The next thing was to 'int a way
of collecting these threads, and the
solution to this problem was found
by an Englishman named Charles
Topham. Riding his bicycle in the
rain one day, he noticed hots the
loud flew outwards from his bicycle
wheel as it went rotfild.
IIs conceived the idea of intro-
ducing the thread -making liquid
into a hollow cylinder shaped like
a tin can, the sides of which were
perforated by the tiny holes or
spinnerets through which the liquid
had to be forced.
He then spun this cylinder round
inside a second cylinder which re-
mained still. This spinning flung the
thread as it oozed out of the holes
on to the inside wall of the second
cylinder, where it wound itself
found and round, quite untangled
and ready to be •userl for cloth.
This device became known as
"Topbain's Spinning Pot."
'explaining how it: worked, silk -
spinner Henry Mallinson said that
without it the rayon industry just
wouldn't exist today. "It was this
British invention," he said, "which
was taken to America in 1910 and
actually founded the successfitl and
now enori 10011 Tinned States rayon
industry.
"What are you wailing fur?"
whispered the wedding guest.
"Bride's father's a plumber," re-
plied the verger. "Ile's forgot to
hying het."
'Posstun Plays Photographer-11un11reds of people hat" had
their pictures token t,fijle holding a captttrr.d 'possum itt the
Anderson Independent and Mail, 11)11 11 remained for a "possum
by the 181)111' of Porky 11 reverse the procedure. 1111 breezed
1(2 the newspaper tiiiee and 1tad. I.10hl9,y Sexton pose for :I
picture. 'i'1108 I't'010y wont back to playing 'possum.
r j A )1Yg1TCk11,11-
At this time of year it is custom-
ary for sports writers to waste a lot
of time, trouble sand energy(?) try-
ing to till up a column with what,
after all, amounts tri jest ehm,t the
following;
Yours 5it110414 3
t8R\Nis bl. HARRIS
"S/shit Critic"
CLASSIFIED ADVERTI ING
101117 C11uJH
44 )4 i I 1 ,tti,t itertitttitinire,
V Ysett ler escI 1op toilnit 4131.1'.
e.t l •ra I.ly tiff ale tlies.y tl 1,111151
(110(1' tor 5.17i1 t, 11 11 I i 1,1too.
0011 1. 11. 111,3 too), sott.t for •
lentilr 1 Alou1 1 0 1.ssIts.oft. 1 i -
I 1 1, ^rot IL 111 1r 1 1 11:10,1,
4 lI 11
I
Mc 1. .3,111:3 1 f-bl 141t,1
1,1,1 will; hilts, totality.
ria
12 11, (HA 131111 ( i 1
Ivatt Plovb1 11
ce 1,. It for the I,1t'1 a ,1151* and 111,,
!top 9311,1413 'hitt adds r, 1 traollittt pronta .tion
112 st ,l::l and 1,Jy p, ihtlj'y Ihat ins10.0
brofitatile ',Yen. 'chat's 1,y many onw
o•101forder icar , t • 000. 1Ag1,t
i,,cds and sexed or on-
s -e'I. 1111 nnimhtr " Anita
able
-rka nv;dl-
:thl:• t. ekly the year la 1,W 4) reasonable
pries , (vette today for details. -:Ren
Pont 1'11 ;''arm. Myrtle )Pa000('0, Onl.
1,14,11, oli I J I N I tun.•
1 our it.u.J. wired New !tamp 'ht.k.
lived ,11;,101 1110'4.. T n , •r sort birds
Centh,r and grow no fust. Pullets Started
10yang at 42 months. mil 60" et 64
mom los k1`.) now. I'orkr.t',-I, felt lowed
and ilt veloped Pott )ort tall ItaYJe 0011111
rtemit1 10 you I Or 1 a.w '1'weddle 11.0.1',
''ui,d:s, Also Turkey (gilts. Old,r
pillets. 'rend for early deltv„rY price 1111,
1'atnlurur. 'fwcddle ''hie Hatcheries 1.1,1.,
1'.. rano, untarin.
Bt 51.)0555 oettot'rtiNl'r1E5
'01118 •n whit you're been lomtng for.
.2,11 bouoewlves oar tube Savors. 115
rro:at business eyer,l011 ,'s. Agents 410•
,l l,'ed our Nuttiness doubled last Year.
rem't "1.11 nils Wither n.0 00444 Oros .
Niagara Falls, Ontario_ .....
(10511511 AND CIJOANISE
1 O' 5 gnu anything need,. dyeing nr olean-
ing' Write m ae Inn Minrmatmn (Ve
are 41,11 rn 1004(1+ vow 'uestions De.
Partm,int 11. I ,alt I'N LJre Werke Limited.
.-- 11111 8:1100
'2101)111')1 11.1•'5. 81,1,1y David,uu New
and used, bought. sold, etohanSed (.arae
,:rink or guaranteed used motorcyyclesrte•
clan'/. by factory-trunrzd mechanise BI
eyries, end complete Imo 01 wheel goods.
elfin Gunn, Aosta cud Johnson Outboard
11.110s inten evenings until nine except
weduenday 5h•and 1'y'le 6 Sports Kinn
41 santnld, Hamilton.
CANDLE-WAX CAUTION
Candle wax drippings till 111µn,
tablecloths,- and (1lanais are almost
inevitable during the festive season.
Was spots on rugs can usually
he removed successfully by first
scraping off as much wax as pw-
sible with a dull knife and then
sponging swirl1 carbon tetrachloride.
When you scrape up the wax, be
careful not to injure the yarns. if
the caudle was colored and a stain
remains, try sponging it lightly
with a liquid made of two parts of
wafter and One part of denatured
(rubbing) alcohol,
:1s a precaution agaiest fading',
test this Mixture first on an int'Of]-
spirious part of the rug.
Wax. that has riot down from can-
dleholders onto your best linen
tablecloth can be removed by the
same method of first scraping --be-
ing very careful not to injure the
fiber or thread—and then sponging
with carbon tetrachloride, if the
stain is colored, use the solution
suggested. for a colored spot on a
rug, after you've used carbon tetra-
chloride. Again you are urged to
test an ineouspicbus spot for pos-
sible fading from use of the emu -
tints
Amazing Stone
Images!
11'1c most puhlicizcd icdnn• of
Easter Island is Os great 411,110
image,. 'These are Made of a soft
tufa, easily rut with stwle tools.
l:h'acti'ally all of then wore taken
from a single quarry in the crater
of an extinct volcano, Rano-raraku,
This quarry still r011tains figures iu
all stages of manufacture, including
one giant sixty feet long, Unfinished
image's indicate that the ancient
sculptors carved the face urs(, then
front and sides of the body. Lastly
the image was ionise -cm and de-
tached.
.1 great 11nmbcr of Merges were
set up on the slopes of 12ano-
raraltu, apparently Gong the lines
of ancient roads which utdiated
from the cotter 1,tffe r
d t nt s othe dis-
tricts
tris f 1
t c 1 land. Other image,
were set up on the mortuary plat- -
fornls of the various ,law,.
'I'Iie stone from which the Erode,.
Island images 11 tint made was com-
paratively light. '1'110 largest images
removed from the quarry weigh
twenty W thirty sous, but all these
were set up nein- the crater. The
platform images, although often 12
to 15 feet high, weigh only three
or filer tons, and their size dimin-
ishes regularly with -the distance
•10 which they had to he trans-
ported. Most of the way front the
quarry was downhill and the images
were probably pulled along on wood-
en skids or simply on their 01V11
backs. 'there is good evidence that
the hacks of 1111` figures were carv-
ed after they had been set tip,
theta obliterating any ,wars received
in transport.—From "Arts of the
South Seas," by Ralph Linton and
Patil S. Wiugett, in coifa1nt:ation
with Rend d'Harnoncourt.
Ambitious Men! nereayenr
1)175INI455 OCPORTUNTTS
EARN at least 519
'r.Nlily and be your own
Regal
Lipo needed fire oro'.
lection Invention, Eve
erY Immo, store, farm,
W::; fa0101y, garage a
prospect. 44,0 11mo
and a fete part time
It op r o s e ut a t;vee
wanted. National or-
rmtzatton. Fannon.
.+ 1 write:
11)501) C091k71' .10101 Con., Lt0.
48119 tram St.. 1101110 al, Can.
ISSUE 51 -- 1950
1014 8x1 k _-
FIRE ALARM -SAVE LIVES!
As ,1. ,10 14 tlo:0,.t a :0[1104, (.101,
,1m1,1o. .tr lY rlee on t.n r req or, glen,
111101410, 110,1 ito,9 O' I,. ,t1 '10 Poo. B"s
143. „tort to J1, 44 ebt_. or ,. OJlbun
l,lmlte+l. 1564 Dafferin Sl roe', Toronto.
,in tort
k11111, '001 on the cub 'n' shell .1 0,
teach pee tet delivered in Qatari., 110
r elotkii. 1'orfurther hartieuta,s arta Cliff
Taylor, 111.10,-''411, or phone 6 2,
FARMERS E
M RS ATT NTION
lF den .:en nine Harvesting ]:gRlpnu!nt 101
1041, plan to Include The M.S. Mirage
len Blower for your ,,liloadng job.
Lack ch f 3310reoge apace trill force us to
otrtan tm„1u•*ion unless You purchase
early in [115 new eear, e:onveet so for
name of our nearest dsnkr. xr,rh, Br's.,
41,91 re. onlario._ - _ _
ASPHALT SHINGLES 1 3.35
These mi. rlo.:atng addable/3 are ,mat, one
at our Loud roofing bal:alma.
No, 210 Bunt Shingles 53.76, No. 105
Tit eo1 r Fhylutea 8.1.70.
Roll Brock .Siding. neeonly 010,0• mor
tar 83 n3. orey 1100.510ne Design ::Siting
89 - 1 r •21110 to, above .a 1'./0.14
Fla main',
Alontininti only' 59.69
per lite s'. ft. delivered, On,ari-. Onehec
and 31tirittet s.
411 net: lol'le 25 gauge 11101040 Glare
'.t ti! 11 , ,t• prompt shipment. Send 1,1011
blr.Wr,10 00r free estimates. 1:et yours
now, 0,1,.1 limited,
ROBERT JONES LUMBER &
COAL CO,
/Willi]tun, unmet°
1). 0. iiltl,N•L1) and White Outland 'Tor-
t. --4 omit N. tiorcrnnlent 05000405
hr. te•hery nmI ln'o"ders, (trite for liters.
tare: Tinge•n's Shoreline Turkey Ranch
and 11r,• h,,ry. harrow, Ontario,
ONLY $250 UP-- —
OIL BURNERS
4 -HOUR CHANGEOVER
FURNACES REPLACED
IS 4 LT 4 11014115 17014 1•:\ CI', NGE1
`.Jr-Cnadielnu ing
Forms r,• Repass
'1'nnn3l'O'S PASTES[ SERVICE
'1,1• (.;ports can •u1,e your
treating problem and give you
eNiu,g comfort the name d07,
PHONE WAVERLEY 7198
ARMSTRONG
1'°,11. "11,1.1000, portable rout trimmers,
'pent 10( t rs. 31 ell. Ct. 84560. Saw
frames, t,l'e 32" saw. 072.50. Saw- man-
drels. scar
a. steelel stone boats Rabbit
hearing.-. Armstrong Fbundrr & Machine
.^'.hon. Oran:: a (11111. Ont.
1'nl1;dt'NlS11 genets Religion" Jeremiah
11: Daniel 2-04; Isaiah 14-12; Hebrews
i-1 k: 1a:;rititl 5-0; Ecclesiastes '14. Read
1)14.1NE 1,11'E4. One Dollar, Reverend fon
Shiloh Rommel, Niagara 1'alla 47, Nes
Tari.
TOI; I.0!jOE, African geese. ganders SS.00
each. 'thlnmso 56.00 each. FL 1C0ttyleler,
R. 1, Foothill, Ontario. -_
111BICA1.
4.111155 .70415 SAL1.
<t,.. rFl icor. Your !imagist sells
CRESS.
SATISFY YOURSELF — Every
sufferer of Rheumatic Pains or
Neuritis should try Dixon's Remedy.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 Elgin Ottawa
51.25 Express Prepaid
SAFES
rrutert . aur BOOKS anti CASE) tram
FIRE and Tn1:EV15. We bare a sise
and type of Safe, or Cabinet, far aur
nnrunse. Visit an or write fpr noires,
etc., 10 Omit, 45.
J.&J.TAVLfR LIMITED
TORONTO SAFE WORKS
115 Front St, F... I'grnnt.
Established Ism
HARNESS & COLLARS
!fanners Attention - consult
vour neatest Harness Shop about
Staco Harness Supplies We sell
our goods only through vour
local Staco Leather Goods dealer.
The floods are right and so are
out prices. We manufacture to
our factories — Harness Horse
Collars Sweat Pads, Horse Bien
kers. and Leather Travelling
Goods lnsl
stn Staco t10 co Brand
Trade alas k
ed Goods and you
get satisfaction Made only by
SA113UE1 TREES CO. LTD
42 Wellington St. E„ Toronto
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE.,
1404)01 A L
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
0x..1411 OM torment of try 0tarand rabbet,
and napping elan troubles, Post's Doze -
1 ina 4010'1 15111 not 8115551114 3.211,
11011104, scaling, 1101711514 emme111u, cong,
eigwerta. pimples rind alldl'tn's foot, wtt1
01;00110 re Illy to ileo stainless, caterer, O.
.iintinent, regardless of 110,0 st'1b110111 or
.r rodeos 1118Y dein7,
PRICE $1.00 PER JAIL
POST'S REMEDIES
▪ e04 Poet . on RecciPr of Ple
e
BOO 111000 131. E., Corner of Logan,
Toronto
ExCELLIINT Ulf"f, "01040 Caro" Rook,
53.11. 'rumor. Arthr1t10, Cataract, Call -
',torten, ftIlltin, trleer0, Anemia. Catarrh.
Obesity etc. treated sueoessfully nature'e
nay by "Orale Dirt," Al. Peterson, 00470
Lorvhlo'onq flint, 141c31,
UNWANTED HAIR
rr tdletee hint uny pint of tha body
41(1, Saito l oto. n remarkable d1800140ry
of the agl•, soca i'elo contains 110 harm-
rul lormillents, and will destroy the hair
,not.
L0i(-11E1vlt LABORATORIES
070 Granville Street,
Vancouver. B.C.
OPPORTUNITIES ('0O e1E' . & {VOMER
BE A HAIRDRESSER
101N CANADA'S LEADING SCROOL
Great Opportunity Learn
llalrllceasing
Pleasant dignified profession, good waged,
Thousands of suimeretut Marvel graduates
4 enerlca'N O rep toot System
Illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Cull
tt 41111101, 105 IMPRESSING SOHOOLS
155 Rio, St. W., 'rnronto
13r8nel,es:
t4 King St., Hamilton
72 md0au 61., 011,0(110
rA1'L•`N'rs
AN OPFER to every Inventor—List o1 In-
ventions and Cull Information Bent free.
The Ramsay Cu., Registered Patent Attor-
item 22) Bank Street, Ottawa,
t'1TI7ERSTONHAU017 & Company, Pa.
tent Solicitors. Eotabnolled 18)0. 960
[Ray Street, Toronto Booklet o1 Intermit -
don on request.
r101tSONAL
CANADIAN MOTORS needed, You pan
1c,rn 10 ,;rite prndte'de fiction. 150me-
study mime gives you personal -1004,00.'
Inn by successful Canadian author, Let
'm toll you how. Bonded and Government
licensed. Also manuscripts given careful
revision at mo,), rate rales, , Canadian
Writers' 00404,0, 2004 west 28th Avenue,
Vancouver,
STAMPS
W0ND10R1.OI. opportunity) 160 different -
etamna, good assortment, 10c to approval
applicants. Complete sets sent upon re-
'1,tert. 5. R. Mott. 290 Robina Avenue,
Toronto 10, 000800,
1:NRF.ATAf31,5, neer 123 different stamps
free to approval applicants. E. Emery,
R.R. 1, Victoria, 0.17.
TEA CITRUS WANTED
ROMAN Catholic 18n1liah-speaking teaoh ere,
must be qualified. Por salary schedule
apply to the reeretery - treasurer, Alme
Archdale, Ottawa Separate School Board,
169 Murray Street, Ottawa,
H111t471 thnint1-, AshtIeld. Township school
arearequires two qualified Protestant
teachers, 5.8. 11 and S.S. 9. Duties to
begin ,Tanuary, 1961. Schools situated
Ploughed county rondo. hydro, 00nitarY
equipment. Present salary 92,000. Apply
at once, R. T. Kilpatrick, See„ R.R. 7,
Lucknow, Ont.
wAN'rp)D
DOCTOR'S home requires capable girl oveb
twenty-two, general housework, no cook-
ing, 555.00. Aire. Ragan, b Moth Park
chins., Toronto.
This is ora• of a series
of words and expressions
whose origins and lneaning5
are published in the interest
of n better understanding,,
use and knowledge of
the English language,
HiNGF%Sftt�
Everyone knows
that the "Kingfisher" is one of
the world's most beautiful
birds. Frequenting the streams
and ponds it gets its food by
plunging almost perpendicu-
larly into the water and
emerging a moment later with
its catch.
The "Kingfisher" is the sub-
ject of many legends, A
.medieval story tells that at
one time the "Kingfisher" was
a plain grey bird. Its amazing
coloring carte about, accord-
ing to this story, when ii' was
liberated from Noah's Ark and
flew towards the sun. Thus, we
ore told, its upper surface
assumed the hue of the sky
above fl, while the lower plum.
age was scorched to a rich
chestnut tint by the heat of the
setting orb.
DA W ES
beer,
BREWERY