The Seaforth News, 1952-09-11, Page 2"Dear .lune Blest:: ince tny' 11.35 !
and died 11 months" ago, lb : had
Vie only peace I've kltow.t :three we
traerieai. Then
he was sta. I
was o131 13. .it
month after our
wedding. I re-
g'ctted t --
"lie w -a s
divoreed. afti
had g. :1 alai:
dren. •i e lived
with us. I
to wait cat them, even :.e their 1.
1a u.iry. i'»e1 I :a1 three of ,ta
a'..... anit leamed ryes? tronlide
really rets
niger. L ac ... ithine in the eaele-1-
heen s. drag tete et.. If:At
eidien ifahies-.sere )r
..ay. Iic r.,. a. .''tt al:
lainis of Isis •
meney.7 I?e did feed fee es.
but all the cdethes t.e eliil• r a+1 '
1 ifeee !tad, faietly tee,
orel,ili t get out of t; -:Ir. ,
he'd accuse f s c fug er then
te.,i:e ate wee at et-ork 1 never
von got t:. a , _. ai., r isd t'.: a.
ries:.
Olier ewe at -e jra'afee enhteir
yoinne wit 'They're afraid of
ca, a"lege_..
friernia
say 1's, r:.o
yeer,5 r- to starg'eal'ai !est30t
A "Go -Everywhere"
R4561 12_20
32—!2
r' es•ron
i nothing . - ,^ —::e -r - the neck-
line that neleseyou tan Quickly,
ke^'icool,s you coed., cool: li-hen
vaso e off to torn, 1, nasi on the l)riei
b —and yea I,ao st::a-: ' \a
• Patter. P.4311: SteeS
12.
1+ IS, ,?. t- , 3.. - 33 sit,
42. Size :;i dress and facing for
b - a - ns oi .:'rice
lia7eer. - yards contrast.
cattern ea 1.1 15s5, sims
p:_ to - te_: ed for fi-e
ranneilree ideatrated
Seri THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
• pi t < eta ieiap
-attern. Print
plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS.
STYLE NUMBER.
Sen 1 reeler t.) 123 figh-
t:ems. St., New Tore -rte..
art».
1
',;o• : . t. . . :.1435,1 to a [histo of
m} i4, • ,.1.:e nay [,dohs=td
lz
"'For Ise sworn 111 nevee mercy
egei 1, 7 l,•..e my children: t"ley are
my si holee:. I'm saving every
1 .fide- i
tlis iiret:ranee sane '•e '`-e Pit
a,k t_y's tor t. d I . re.
a ;leant tie warn all anstate eirls
as a:,t are o en tw ee their
tat. s..t. .. e r liar v.z:'te3
•11 i Z"2 NO VC"
- A mu.:eke takes -advantage.
* . a notating yang girl ties -h
* t fa"155 5.0 handle !Um; it hi a pity-
*
ti£v
s foals sit r:bar of your
* , amity ...l. not interveee.
wife. he c rt . a"ed
• ., t•.'lti<�.
and ,eale'a. ,
Marl ••Cal were a; elpieee
_a s theegli :'.e kkciieel• yo:: le a
Raid telt[ :)ata e -..t .[,+ism
..to 'alta to: you, •7•1:3 :la;
.15•aii: set • - - free.
Na.Now enie can help }• ie Odle
• LcVaer tide frightened v'eari
• r ser kt.ew while their iat,ter.
• ti: r.i. anti ptoride a eaceta i <t,ire
thr + 3Ii.
deieemi:cation t.) stay
single is natural—for a time. I
however. that scanie di•aerea
• ins :omenman trill discover you
.• .r• dam. and deutons trate hear
• eo , a'nl T cit, i4'I ...-.rriac.5 era
You are not alone when trouble
comes. Anne Hirst will stand by.
A woman of long experience in
human relations, wise and kind,
she is here to advise you. Address
her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St.,
New Toronto. Ont.
Hear Corn Growing
CAN TOL HE..R cern .ng
in At: _ if you thin'.: that ` a
myt'i.�ge fiesta:[," says Ho'-ar,i1'.
1`: airier: 15, editory "Corn. who
el write as doesno one else
ai_aut this wan,rrous crops. ''Go into
a grerit ecira field,' he iuvi:es. -Go
deep into than sea of corn, so.deep
that for a hundred yards in eeery
direction corn is surrouiv leg you.
standing higher than your head.
You v ill limes placed yourself, then
in the center of a distinct and
special nori,i. a world made un of
earth. air, and cern. Nothing eke.
Tine is no wind; in the motion-
less and brooding night there is no
reas•,n for any soul:[ But tis;er.."
'i here is a whisper. a faint
.ra:';!ing, c.,mir.g from nowhere
ani e: vw e -e at once. It might
be the giimet of a sound, imagined
per::at.s• Bet listen again. It isn't
imagined. and it isn't the corn rt•sti-
21L,' in the wired. for there is na
wind It is the minute stretching
of a hilliest cern }eaves, stacks,
t Ls. kernels. it is the dark chem-
istry of ea.t::. working meward
tl ee ugh ro::o. drawing tip through
t:'• ;:a. d stg plants, transm [ting
the e, e of soil into life. It
sid the d,klitt.i. cf growth. a aetend
T _r:'a;r- lata •d by insects and other
lassly crsateres es a veritable roar
of creation. Yoe are as close. here,
to t' -e inner quick of nature as
ever y ':i ale. You are li.te'ting
S117.7/17 Of
ECONOMY
11,e a e ll. W. Griffith v. a. and
n. ^!:tet t,eop}e that in the fig
t:',:'. hoar ',act'e scenes of his 'The
Rirta of a Nath •:e e i p yed
+a«,
c \tree. 11'le people painted
I I: must have coet!tint
3i' - n dollars a day for ser
• :'t'!days. and -narteled
"Ilew 5- s:arOiveetl Gri-
rit chucklesand say. "1
,e .r.e5 'eon: an ififkIt.'.-
J::' sei.7irra used. real burets."
Screenless Television—lo order to keel, sightless l c'eeers posted
an programs their neighbors talk obot:t, TV experts designed the
above pictureless set seen entertaining Marie lyeilicana and Bern-
ard M. Krebs. Experts say using the sceeenless set overcomes
"psychological barriers" which build up betwee's sightless persons
and their sighted neighbors.
VENUS OE
VINE—
Historic Venus
de ,Milo, itt
background,
steeta the Venus
ef Vine Street M.
Hollywood,
actress Julia
Adams. The
classic armless
Grecian beauty,
long an ideal,
measures 30
Inches at bust,
28 at waist, and -
has 38 -inch hips.
Julia's statistics:
36 -inch bust, 22 -
inch waist, and
34Ve-Inch hips.
HRONICLES
1NGER M
1 r 13.t o, h r}acs i.:r.e ,. ra
vera nuc'.: Oce'upiea with one ai
the hardest lobi of the year. !t
night not be hard for everyone
but it is for nte, 1'•tat job is get-
ting ready for a fave•day holiday,
Since Partner will be "batcllin"
my preparations. have consists;
mostly in leaving him as well pro-
vided for as pessib'e so that lie
can get his own meals with a mini-
mum of effort. It is at such a time
that a "frig" C.att.e in might} handy
--a .reek's supply of pies, fruit
and meat cal[ bre stacked u? Quite
conveniently.
For toe tide Iardesr. part of
these pre-ho`idav preparations is
keeping my heart front wool-gath-
ering. Last time i ::as away for
a couple of days 1 took Partner's
reading glasses aT. ay' vien me ae
well as t n oven! I was twenty
miles frost tome w''en. I d [ey-
ed what 1 itad d.,ne. The only
thing T condi) !o was eih.,ne 'tome
and 'ureal; the neves. Sa long as I
ler Partner kn,$- what happened
I knew it would he all right as be
had an obi pair he could fa'i back
on. Otherwise t moll imagine
hie. hutting t;.e house over—and
maybe the barn as welt,—;lasting
preciema time and getting more
provoked every [menta wondering
what an earth had become of t'"_e
"darn. foot giasses1" .Actea}lye .t
was a for:nnatc r.:is1ake because
the frar.:es were broken, so, while
I had them with roe. 1 vas a54e t,
get the old lenses put irto [fere
fra•nes—e:?tir1, yc t',} have meant
a .tie •'•,• r rte any -
w ay.
In lite ': urry an; srur:'c :f ,get-
ting away people iso often do crazy
thinna—or they h rget to do things
that shot id neve been. done. On my
way bark from London last Tune
a ycnfl -5 plc with two cl iliren
howled the train at -a c01ttt sta-
tion. A-. oaf twenty 101.150; .;ter
the aro said to Ler '7115.:)371,.5--
"Ken,
s: a•• —
"Ken, di' yes: the front
dna ..'•i-el'.d ia to be hoped 7.
is d; t. n:.• " And then they
beta s a .cd to lattgle. And1.
t tt+e:' . s tide,' i. is 51 he `r
t..,,.,t•.e
t'aerhe thle ti717e are taatng.
^ie to a ;,,Sia: ..t n atside Ottawa.
I: wi'd ::be aof bre:r:an i:a41.
day re ;', es friend: of O;;
a _
!iv? -m i .a...n,. Hov'c"er. I
sot l: - eealittle bit of
tJ : :.r'1 . a . re
I ,s3,.
05 - at
z'e iia' a via:
.Friday.da:itation
welch — 1•Rv.•as not
carnot ac-
enn shot ::y Ot-
za':•'5 visit— seI probablyshall
net voiet te de. a d of remese,it
a', e in themiddle 0f
the ceening and niehlieg season.
a,ic} the t fico -acre field of all -
a! a that r. n:tethe.ned fast week it'
teride• na he rut and haled. Parser
as l field tai,
Conveyance Ctilt.=—thanks to
his ingenious father, this Tokyo
tyke has a combination tricycle -
carriage. When mother doesn't
feel like pushing, baby takes
over, and when he grows up,
this Japanese lad will just re-
move the bars and presto, he'll
have o tricycle.
ala
tecilei it.fidria show much
peesatiae a; a eee.i cr,.n. i'nfor-
ttina:e by :he time one can be
sure of e i tees•sibilities the alf-
alfa ie e too advanced to
mane gemej nay. I! ,, ager, one has
to. take that chance.
There is etiii tire;:aiag to be
done te this nog',arood, W1 -hat
r i:it cat, hy weather and •waiting
for the xi -reeling machine it must
state 11;a a long -drawn out
n -.est tar: rig '),ur-Farmers
--langen pro..aD'_ than when the
veer, wee stowed a.'ay the barn
itsae:-ai: .:e arrival of the thresh -
:recline. :e. t )h in the barn
worr fee itt e.ann.' 'i on with wet
weatl,e- 'were a- • att end' in those
by -gone 433s.
Partner and 5. in conversation
with farmers :ea.. various other
ioca!itc rtee discovered that
many of tneine e the old meth-
od of haevesting—if they had the
to . ee : ._ ait. They con-
leaa is is ?;:, , a..efel and less
carie .•':e. 11 e fee! ti a: way our-
Cara iitrt t ceattryrnan and
Fac::er Aiwa:a:e i.. " ,Veldwood
gives some interesting
hams went three line:. It says
In part —" Ma ltinarty takes the hard
.".tat:ua! 'a"r;::r reit of the grain har-
ee-..a: randera');e cost, 32
an area for awathing, 36 for corn-
ar..3 312 an hour for putting
the straw in the barn snakes pros-
e : qday hers-eat-inv. expensive, par-
:i-:rlariy with a light crop of straw
and gra;[,. It cost 32 cet.ts a bushel
for uee ma:; irery and operator
, ?wryest is -acres of oats on a
,teetens`,ass Besides the farm help
i.3riling the graft/ t and gather -
re Ili the straw."The last sen-
eo r S g:n'a a . because, 1n
it,' 'i g.'i "ori ed [machinery,
.^.':arape.eser ae still necessary for Fi-
na'- hendlime, kind re crop,
thelerlirg
SCHRAMM PORTABLE & STATIONARY COMPRESSORS
PUMPS, CONCRETE MIXERS
AIR TOOLS
and ACCESSORIES
RENTALS — SALES
RAY GORDON LTD.
1385 BLOOR,
TORONTO
KYnwo. d 9417
"Three Out off Five Get Away with ;,antsy
.'.it a+e"itl,*et• Lao t'trce 511,W-1,?r.i are
disfewaned itt ¶acerin every +^eek,
anti. the per ientage of cases cleared
tip -1a higher there than any other
eau€[try in 11,e w-•arl•1. Bet experts
beliexe that the nt:miter of tater-
dorsa inttuitta I zs actually much
tiigii z than the rt-unher discovered
and ineeetiaatcd.
In many setons the police, al-
ttao'al,.t they Might have snspicio118,
are enable to read[ any lotlCtite
sions. ani indeed unable to start
any inquiries at all.
It is fano!} certain that nutitbers
of altperettt suicides are really min-
ders, asd that many people listed
a; nt >11.5 hive ie. reality been
quietly put away and their bodies
s0-004ftilt' cntt.eaied.
Worst -Year
The plain truth about murder le
that the chances of getting away
with it are unfortunately favorable.
This ;vat revealed in a murder
chart prepared by the Home Office
for the Royal Commission nit Cap!.
tal Punishment. Between the years
1900 and 1943 there were 7,318
murders known • to the police. In -
1;635 cases the s+lspcct r,)tntnitted
seicide.
• Oaly 3,042 successful arrests were
made, so that 2.641 murderers es-
caped tntscathed. These were mur-
ders known to the police. How
many unknown murders happened
Within that sante period nobody can
tell,- hitt expert; estimate that three
out five of all naal•dercrs are gets
tang sway with it.
'l'i`e w.)ret year this century was
104_, when 211 people were killed
and the police failed to arrest 119
of the killers.
Assuming that mindere-re enjoy' a
normal length of life, Home Office
figures reveal teat there are at least
1,200 of them m i x i nig freely
with their fellow -citizens to -day.
Although this may be alarming. we
Can take comfort in the fact that
it is rare for any but the profes-
sional killer to stake twice. And
pro'esaionai killers are very few in
that country. Most notorious of
recent times was Haigh, who is
thought to have destroyed nine
people.
Human Vampire
Sta: tiing face caste to light be-
fore the eyes of Scotland lard in
1947 when they began a search for
a missing widow, Mr,. Olive Dea-
con. Several cases of persons who
had mysterinusty disappeared over
a period of three years were linked
together. The circumstances were
strikingly similar
In each case letters had given
the suspected murderer power to
die»ose of the property of his vic-
tim, hut so skilfully had those doc-
uments 1)ee1 forged - no suspicion
arose at the time. Studying these
case's. the Yard found that all the
victims hal, business transactions
40111:, ani were friends of, one par-
. et!'ar 711311.
The Nat which tiais man had
rowel was searched, and experts
found eines which made them think
that 15:ntan bodies had been disin-
tegrated on the pre:ni`e- •'•il'at7S
of at acid bath.
The accusing finger of justice
started to point in the direction
of iol•n George Haigh. For .'ears
he had escaped discovery, hut he
had stale a fatal mistake in his
latest killing, that of Mrs. Deacon.
He had imrriel and not completed
tate job tiderottghly; a pair of false
teeth belonging to file missing wi-
dow n. ere e fo.un,i.
SALLY'S SALLIES
"cheer up! A daughter is a
daughter all her life. but maybe
you won't have to support her
that long."
15 tt.li s kitltt 1'.-; ut.•th red. wooly
•.nereettaty. 14,t .sun• yews[ pay'
l:nluy,ir,ill t'+':[•tete, t h e el+•lisle c
sailed, itt had hrn,un' a luunnn
Yautptu', ,!t'fatkittl; Ike bleed id hitt
virliut;. A cal elate,;:, 1e11 btctod
ed nlmdl•trt, uhhlra;Uin1 11.10•,i of
Ida 01'11[131, until he 10,1 lily+ thor-
oughue,t tint jto,Iii itl.t.ped Hill,
Who ate the the -o .nn ed five
who never Ib11 1.1 Olen iuleh?
hloslIy they die hard wertLers of
ronahlt'i:tblr nticlliln•tt e -wlin uaul..
yze weer 1101Ve ;uol a,l.r!ir the risks
to the laare•d tivaainului.
They have sternly flet ren, clear
iulr¢crbi,. t- ttii one trit,Rri' Muerte.
They know luiw to Mho or elite-[
iitate rlutti, aiul fin n1:du• ft htt-
pus code lir polio• to tat't'y nut
early htvestigakiuu.
And the
BELIEF is LASTING
Nobody knows the cause of rheums-
tism but we do know there's ono
thing to ease the pain . . . it's
INSTANTINE.
And when you take Xe0S SOTINIE
the relief is prolonged because
INSTANTLNE contains not one, but
three proven medical ingredients.
These three ingredients work together
to bring you not only fast relief but
more prolonged relief
Take INSTANTxNE for fast headache
relief too ... or for the pains of'
neuritis or neuralgia and the aches and
pains that often
accompany cold.
Eel 'astatine today
and always
keep it handy
nstantine
12-Tabtat Tin 25i
Economical 48 -Tablet Bottle 75c
YOU CAN DEPEND 0
When kidneys tail In
remove exams ao;ds
and wastes, back-
ache, tired feeling,.
disturbed rest often
follow, Dodd's
Kidney Pias stimu-
late kidneys to
normal duty. You
feel batter—aleep
better, work better,
Get Dodd's atany
drug atom. You can
depend ou Dodd's.
itching, Boning
Toes and Feet
Hera b a clean. stainless antiseptic oil MK
will da more to help you get rid of 505111x001119
than anything you've ever used.
The action of MOONS'S EMERALD on. Is
so powerfully penetrating that the Itching fa
Quickly stopped; and to a short time you are d4
of that bothersome, fiery torture. The alma Is
true of Barber's Itch, Salt Rheum, Eczema 1,4
many other Irritating unsightly skin troubles
You can obtain MOONS'S EMERALD OIL
In dee original bottle at any modem drug atom
It is safe to urs -and failure le any of these ata.
meats Is rare indeed.
WITH De
1-IELP Of
TOBACCO ELIMINATOR
FREE tOOTCtIr,T and Testinooniala. Writs
0. w', IC1nU3 PRAM' AC'AL 00110, LTD.
Rog 571 London. Ont.
ISSUE 37 — 1952
t,rmottle. „ cu cess
WAGIC:
53A.KING
SPOWDRR
ors uam�ear ei+�e+�re,sxri'pmmv.ai,�emuix: n
JAM UPSIDE-pOWN
SHORTCAKES
Combine 1 tbs. soft butter, a;1 c. thick jam, 1
tbs, tenon juice and, if desired, I e a. broken nut-
meats and divide between fi greased individual
baking dishes. Mix and sift twice, then sift into
a bowl, 1?.4 0. once sifted pastry flour (or 11i c.
once -sifted hard -wheat flour), 8 tsps, Magic Bak-
ing Powder, !,ti tap, salt, i y tsp. grated nutmeg
and k•.1 e. fine granulated sugar, Cut in finely 5
tbs, chilled shortening, Combine 1 well•beaten
egg, ? c. milk and 1 tsp. vanilla. Make welt in
dry ingredients and add liquids mix lightly.
Two'thirds fall prepared dishes with batter. Bake
in a moderately hot oven, 375', Omit 20 tuinutes.
TOM out and serve hot with sauce 00 cream.
1i+rld--G serving's