HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1947-04-10, Page 6JUST IN FUN
Irony
A woman got on a bus and too''
the only empty seat, next to a
barn;less-looking reveller. Soon
she opened a' map of Manchuria
• and began to study it.
The 'revellergazed at the map
for a while acid finally addressed
the woman in an interested. tone:
"Sure you're on the right bus?" he
asked.'
A lady who, had ordered ice from
a new ice man heard the familiar
ring of the dumb waiter the next
morning: She seized the rope and
began to pull but found the effort
unusually taxing, Nevertheless,
thinking the ice manhadgone, she
bent all her energies to the task
and pulled away until the dumb
waiter rose to the :kitchen level.
Then there appeared not only the
cake of ice, but a small boy sitting '.
on top of it.
"Young man, demanded the
housewife, "why did you make me
pull you all the way up here?"
"Because," explained the young-
ster with a smile, "I thought the
ice might be too heavy for you to
get into the icebox, and I came up
to help you with it!"
Both in the Eye
"Last week a grain of sand got
into my wife's eye and she had
to go to the doctor. It -cost me
$"
"That's nothing. Last week a.fur
coat got into my wife's eye and it
cost me $500."
Ont the Waiting List
"I can't promise you anything,"
said the automobile salesman to
the disgruntled customer, who
slammed the door on the way out.
"What did he want?" asked the
dealer.
"Oh, he wanted to know if he
couldn't turn in the 1916 model
which he hasn't received, for a 1917
model."
Pasted Together
Mother had baked a hyo -layer
cake for Daddy's birthday. Aged -
Three, telling a neighbor about it,
said: "We have two cakes for
Daddy and we are going to paste
them together with icing."
You Never 'Can Tell
You never can tell when you're
likely to have a change in luck.
Sometimes it comes at the most
unexpected moment. Like the prim
school teacher who was making a
trip with a group of children and
stopped for lunch at a restaurant.
-The children noticed a garish slot
machine in the restaurant and ask-
ed what it was. The teacher
launched into a lecture on the
evils of gambling. In order to
emphasize the futility of trying to
get something for nothing, she said
she'd show the children w :at she
meant. She marched ever to the
slot machine inserted a nickel. said
"Now, watch what happens." pull-
ed the handle, and oat poured a
flood of nickels. She had hit the
• jackpot!
Not Too Old To Learn
A group of elderly women were
mans of
and e
i u
dscstng ways
discussing
raising funds for their church or-
ganization. One suggested organ-
izing a class in glove making.
"Do you really think that's neces-
sary at our age?" asked an old
lady in the rear.
"What—glove making?" asked
the other.
"Oh, 1 thought you said love
making."
Ford's Answer
A favorite story about Henry
Ford is the one told on the occa-
sion of the Fords'. fiftieth wedding
anniversary, when a reporter asked:
"Mr. Ford, to what do you attribute
your successful marriage?"
The kindly automobile man an-
swered: "The formula is the same
as one used to make a successful
car—stick to the same model."
Self -Appreciation
"just listen to that man talking
to himself," commented the wife '
to her husband, An elderly man,
walking in front of then, was
talking to himself in a very serious
and admonishing tone. Apparently
he overheard the remark for he
slowed down and lifting hat, bowed
deeply and with twinkling light in
his eyes said: "Pardon nue, madam,
but it is necessary to talk to some-
one sensible sometimes."
HOLD EVERYTHING
"Mother spends all her time wan-
dering through the stores a . so
she decided to make it pay!
PATROLMEN OF BAVARIA'S. MOUNTAIN WATCH RESCUE INJURED SKIER
High in Bavaria's rugged alpine mountains, a three-man Mountain Watch team comes to the aid of a
ski accident victim. First aid already has been administered, and the injured man is being lifted into
a toboggan for the trip down the mountain. Many of these ski patrolmen served in the German moun-
tain troops during the war; the U.S. Army has carefully screened them to make sure they had no Nazi
connections other than military service they could not avoid.
By DORA JANE HAMBLIN
American Red Cross
Representative
Garmisch, Germany — They
sweep down from snowy heights at.
breakneck speed; they leap yawn-
ing crevices- with uncanny skill. In
their veins, so they say, flows the
blood of mountain goats; on their
chests gleams edelweiss, the flower
of Bavaria.
These are the men of the Berg-
wacht, world's greatest mountain -
safety organization.
Bergwacht means "1.touatain
..Watch." Members of this fabulous
group, who jest among themselves
about the renewed strength they
receive front goat's blood, have
saved the lives of 116 Americana
since V -E Day.
Some 348 of them toiled for 464
hours, at great personal danger, to
save those lives. Others put in a
total of 168 hours to bring back
bodies of 11 Americans killed -while
climbing, hunting, or skiing in the
Bavarian Alps.
The great influx of sports -loving
Americans and the release of the
Germans from the regimented life
of wartime has made the months
since V -E Day the busiest on
record for the Mountain Watch.
Since then, its menhave• rescued
1555 persons, and have recovered
the bodies of 57 casualties. Be-
cause most deaths are due to falls
into almost inaccessible places, it
is not uncommon for 27 to 80
Bergwacht men to spend three to
five days on a recovery mission.
An all -volunteer group organized
in 1020 and sponsored by the Ba-
varian Red Cross, the Bergwacht
is made up of the mountain coun-
try's best men. They may be asked
to join or they may 'apply and wait
to be accepted, but to either case
any sturdy, experienced Bavarian
skier and mountain climber con-
siders the Mountain Watch a top
honor.
A 'Bergwacht man gets no pay;
he ,must attend special school twice
a year; he goes out clay or night,
into blinding sun or raging storms,
to find and save anyone who needs
help. If he is a barber and a call for
help comes while' lie's shaving his
• Typical member of Bavaria's famed. Mountain Watch is Carl Reger,
23, who was born and raised in the mountains and has been in the
Bergwacht for eight, years:' Onhis left breast pocket ite wears the
red and white badge imprinted with the edelweiss, flower of Bavaria,
the red cross, and the ,inscription "Bergwacht."
best customer, he puts down the
razor and answers the call like an
American volunteer fireman.
Testimony to his skill is that in
the 20 years of some of the most
dangerous work in the world, no
member of the organization ever
has been killed on duty.
Though the chief factor in a
man's selection for the Bergwacht is
his mountain experience, intensive
training in first aid is vital to this
success. Reaching an injured victim
is only the first part of the job, for
often a life hangs on the skill of
men trained in emergency first aid
practices. Since war's end, all Berg-
wacht 'men have received training
in American Red Cross first aid
techniques.
A small group of Bergwacht men
has been hired by the U.S. Army
for full -tine work. at Army resort
areas. These Wren serve as instruct-
ors and safety supervisors around
the trails and ski slopes, aided on
weekends by o th a r, volunteer,
Bergwacht men.
Before the war most men of the
mountain watch were in their twen-
ties or thirties; now the ages image
from 16 to 65. Once a man puts on
the edelweiss pin of the Mountain
Watch he is qualified to wear it as
long as he can do his job.
Weather Flights
Over North Pole
Army B-220 Superfortresses have
begun weather flights over the
North Pole and will make daily
flights over the Pole, beginning in
May.
Brig. -Gen. Donald M. Yates, chief
of the Array Air Forces Weather
Service, flew on the first flight last
week. He said this was the start
of routine A.A.F. weather reporting
from the very top of the world.
Yates said that from now until
May, weather -equipped Ban's will
fly periodically- from California to
Ladd field. Fairbanks, Alaska, then
fly north over Point Barrow, circle
oyer the Pole and return to Cali-
fornia by way of Alaska,
Beginning in May, he said, the
squadron of converted super -bom-
bers will move to Alaska and begin
daily flights over the Pole from a
base there.
On the first flight, Yates said, the
B-29 was in the air 16 hours and 30
mintes. As it flew over the Pole, -
an uncoded message was sent out
giving weather conditions.
• Weathermen say most U.S. wea-
ther originates in the North Polar
area.
No "Amber" Light;
Accidents reduced
As a road safety measure, the
experhnent was made in Glasgow
some time ago of cutting out the
amber light on the change from
red to green in the automatic traffic
signals.
The experiment has been so suc-
cessful that the Highways and
Planning Committee of the Town
Council have decided to recom-
mend to the Ministry of Transport
its general use throughout the
country.
The Glasgow experiment, car-
ried out during the past six months
at a number of the busiest cross-
ings in the city, has been success-
ful in reducing the number of road
accidents
An Experiment
With Mayonnaise
Occasionally, during summer
days in the country, far from
shops, we run short of some food
commodity, in spite of careful plan-
ning. When faced with such a
plight, we are apt to resort to ex-
periments. One such that proved
most successful was the extending
of a small quantity of mayonnaise
with the white of an egg. We beat
latte • until stiff and then
whipped it gradually into the n'idy-
onnaise. The result was a suffic-
ient quantity of delicious, fluffy
dressing which saved the day for
our luncheon .salad.
VOICE OF TIE
PRESS
Will Help Our Stories
One pleasing feature about the
recent storm is that we will be able
to tell our grandchildren 20 or 30
years hence about the good old
fashioned winters we used to have.
—Owen Sound Sun -Times.
Works Faster Here
An exchange tells that in Turkes-
tan professional women weepers
will cry for six hours straight. More
accomplished women and softer
hearted men have cut the necessary
time in this country to a minute
Or so.
—Port Arthur News -Chronicle.
A Sure Sign
A person may know that old age
has marked him for its own when
i
he begins to notice how � much his •
associates have aged in the past
few years.
—ltitchener Record.
Advance Agents
Those early robins are now be-
lieved to be advance agents. sent
in to look over the spring housing
situation.
—St. Thomas Times -Journal.
Style Note
A magician has been in the news
for getting out of a locked safe in
30 seconds. We'd like to see him
get out of the back seat of some
of the new car models lin double
that time.
-Peterborough Examiner.
Professionalized
Everybody's becoming a profes-
sional these days. Over in the
United States they're even issuing
degrees of janitorial engineering to
caretakers of buildings. And we
understand some of the panhand-
lers are insisting on being called
professional coin collectors,
—St. Thomas Times -Journal.
Not Guilty
We're convinced that Alexander
Graham Bell invented the telephone
—but never contemplated the party
line.
—Stratford Beacon -Herald.
Or Something Else
Safety experts say the kitchen is
the most dangerous room in the
house. And particularly so in the
vicinity of the sink, where a domes-
ticated husband is apt to develop
a bad attack of dishpan hands, or
dropping a Spode plate.
—Ottawa Citizen.
A Bare Fact
Only a few months ago the gals
were tinting their bare legs to simu-
late stockings. • Nylons being made
in the U.S. are said to be so sheer
that they are virtually invisible. The
trade mite for them is "Nude."
—Fort Eric Times -Review.
Weak Link
One of the great trouble -making
factors ina democracy is the readi-
ness of the average individual' to
exercise his right' to believe any-
thing that he has never heard be-
fore.
-Montreal Financial Times.
Wide Camouflage
The Germans held property in
Canada, which officials of the Cana-
dian Government had no idea about
until papers and records were found
when Germany was invaded. The
art of camouflage was never
limited to war zones, or bomb
targets.
-St. Catharines Standard.
Masterpiece of Absurdity
The Russians have barred the
Salvation Army from their part of
occupied Germany on the ground
that "the Army" is a quasi -military
body. Absurdity, aided by Joe
Stalin •and pals, has achieved what
looks like its masterpiece.
—Brantford Expositor.
Nothing Owing
There is no Communist who does
not render a higher loyalty . to an-
ther country, and in support of it
he is ready to destroy this one.
Canada owes him nothing, and
surely decent labor unions should
declare themselves similarly free of
such a debt.
—Windsor Star.
Methodist Millions
"It is the greatest gain in any
church in any year in the history
of this country." Thus Bishop G.
Bromley Oenam of New York
greeted the March 4 announcement
of the Methodist Council of Bishops
that the Methodist Church had won
1,021,210 new members in the
United States during 1940, topping
its "Year of Evangelism" goal of
1,000,000 converts. Of the new
Methodists, 5.10,265 joined by con-
fession of faith and 480,9.45 trans-
ferred from other faiths and
denominations. The United States
membership is now close in
9,000,000.—Newsweek.
Royal Yacht Retired
Britain's 4,700 -ton royal yacht,
the Victoria and Albert, which was
built in 1899 and has been used on
many state occasions, is to retire
from active service.
The yacht, which is no longer
regarded as seaworthy, will in the
future be used for residential pur-
poses by the king and queen when
they visit Portsmouth, where the
yacht now lies,
HEMORRHOIDS
2 Special Remedies
by the Makers of Mecca Ointment
Mecca Pile Remedy No, 1 ie for Protrudiat
Bleeding Piles, and is Bold in Tube, with pi
:or internal apptioation. Price 75o. Mem File
:or
No. 2 is for External Itching Piles. Sold
n Jar, and is for external use only. Price 56o,
order by number from your Druggist.
Although there are 2670 of these
sturdy climbers, organized roughly
ii.to units in 64 towns and villages
in the Bavarian Alps, when the
phone rings for' help, they go out
as teams, r two men on' a 'routine
patrol, four on a search, eight or
more on a difficult recovery, In
summer, when there is no snow ,10
the lower reaches of the mountains
to facilitate moyement, eight to ten
Hien constitute a rescue or recovery.
team.
Mountain folk say the Bergwacht
men can go anywhere a mountain
goat can.
KIDNEY CI S
Rob your Rest..
Many people never seem to get a: good
night's rest. They turn and toss—blame it
on 'nerves'—when it may be their kidneys.
Healthy kidneys filter poisons and excess
acids from the blood. If they fail and
impurities stay in the system—disturbed
rest often follows. if you don't rest well
get and use Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's
help the kidneys so that you can rest
Letter—and feel better. 136
5iI8 „
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POP—One-Way Traffic
I.
BY J. MILLAR WATT
Wi4A'T (7o YO4a
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ONE TO 0 UP
ONE TO GO DOWN
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