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The Wingham Advance, 1923-11-08, Page 6
3,1 :11 nt�yb4eaR ;pa�lty�. }. ltMc,ry, . nag is T1' )! .f4L;no very Thereda,• Mprning " .S{k., StVxt X lin, vol,itzitet ubstription rates: -- Oae feu?. OA;.pix,tzoza dao tees li atio at�anyx 0 By B. Ft•, MORTON Tho spruce is Canada's most: izn, i ntal>e it very' valuable for this Pur- Portant tree to -day.: Both as a lumber' pose, Its lack n -tasteYIto,T�haSatktetrc and a pulpwood pros , the $ 00 to a '1-` lose quality of prolonging ants in some years: held first place. More rates- on a p1 an 1250 4x0 000 :feet board measure I creasing sound vibrations an there 44vertisingeIn averted a t.il fo, eiel i than ac r year,- that is, approxi -1 fore it is largely used for; piano sound- lid ound- bdverttsenasnta are cut e k Y , ectlona red be inserted usatil forbid Imately one: third of our annual cut of 1 Ing boards, - pipe organs and small in Ithe spruce tress, 1 musical instrtlm,e?its. It is also used n ctza,rgecl'aGernrc gly, - ' ,}'sahib©r is made from I manufacture d t mdgertiair t 1 richt 'for the Changew outs bo In. 4 fi but year fol , of tho wood �` t ng for •'skis Sitka spruce is most i This is � this purpose BUSINESS CARDS �---L------.----7— Wellington tual Fire ,Mu lnsura1 Ce Co. Established 18e0 tlgadfflcc, iuciph It, is one _. taken on all cusses ox innur !bated trees, extending' from the At, almost colorless fibres which are There• it it partsfor ofofAlong.haspresentwhitegreaterwidely I''.' -ABNER COSEl�1S Ag in are four other species o spruce i •t of increas iii K sprucet is confine P to Canada, Red IS nraritfriro provinces• and the east= ; ir.g use,. of other species —Canadian the ,Forest olid 0uthea s • ern Bart of Quebec• Black spruce oc- DUDLEY la BARRISTER SOLICITOR, ETC. Iptory and Other Bonds Bought -,'lend Spid, :' Block, Wingham Office—Mayor BF4RRtSTER ' AND SOLICITOR Money to Loan at Lowest Rats. LV'iIVGHATVI a 0 ua r Gaaduate Royai,Colicgee of Dente!. Surgeono Graduate University,"of Toronto of Dentistry Fatuity e. D'S STORE ):E ICE OVER H. 9ice eupies praetioally the same range as j.��® Ce7�lI!i®Lyes. the white spruce. Sitka spruce is eon - French I1eteo- Pacific coastal region, En- A fevv:.weeks ago the fined to-:tlieP nn. ruce is found in the inland rological Office invited'photographers aoun sp Col-' to submit photographs of the sky ntaii'ous regions of: British mtu umbia and the ;east elopes ' of the 'taken ,. in varying circumstances, with. Rockies in Alberta, a view to making use of the Pictures conditions. 0 f we ether the stud Sitka Spruce Giants. In y • 'Clouds.. are said to' be difficult to The white spruce is the largest and this is 'onlythe case - photograph', but most handsomee of the eastern spruces"' when one wishes to photograph 'a land- the size of the but it does not reach, scape at the sante. time. When the es�t.and most,im ti es of clouds sitka spi ace;:; the larg Posing of allour 'spruces. object is to make negatives .'White only a quick exposure ::with any or - spruce infavorable sites may reachdinary camera will do the work. feefeet in height and two or three Amateurs with cheap 'cameras which Peet in diameter, The Sitka spruce; have only one snapshot speed can get how -ever, is frequeound growing over the difficulty by stopping down to the height of 125 feet`or more and the lens to less than. ;half its usual diameter of three to five feet. opening. ' Then they must:be careful" ac '. ^'_-__. ..,_•.:Ssa. bn eeeeinn -the white. s:---,.,., fe et— ee Inlot.. i' ntil thrt spruce 'produces dCr'c1OP taco film er 1-a _- t na rrow --- tifu tonin eau be a b is ust g clouds g I the j spruce image of symmetrical, conical -shaped, ,crown' to show on the Back, when it will be 1'ie, ,' s irez exbath. is v P e. e t i �tanc Y 'film in h fixing ' ads put the fi hat u i to which time w ul ar 1 popular It has: been one of the most 1 P Those with .better -class cameras' a ive plantingi in evergreens for decorative ma use self screen plates, stopping g5 Special attention paid to diseases'ef taken' ' fomen and Children, baying d t Baty C to ::work . is Surgery,: .: It Bac- teleology x'ioloay aand it well deserves its popularity. Offfic in t and eScientificSI`encMee, bet is a' very handsome tree' with its' com- esldence between Office u .ha Kei•r,.,,I{ , •in green • a the .Ba nisi : pact crown and shimmering g Queen's Hotel pee R she Elueei, i in - growth and ex- Church. foliage.. It is rapid g in ll hard It can be grown tremely Y business given c.arefui attention, X11 P.O. Box 113 provinces from the Atlantic to the Pa- cific. 54. • ak ']1 bl e makes 'a desirable windbreak ctfic. , It • borders and oz d d is useful for hedges,.b, e an m Pied6 ec M.R:G,S- En®r• t a, v -AND SURGEON' Is 8�s-i , S{GIAN Dr. Chisholm's old stand) tri _— g P an €lraduate' oa .Luiveersity of Toronto F`aculty'of•3ieciicla •- Licentiate,o° the, Ontario_ College• of Physicians and fr O ,eons. c Burg Office Entrance: t OFFICE IN, '' CHISHOLM BLOCK el a• PHONE E 2;9 JOSE?i-dliVE. 8-l`REE c 'u'Calder LY� o � � s General Practitioner u 'iii ersity-of 'T'oronto, Grcduate L v .. � Faculty of. Medicine. n a door, s outh' O[.ace—JesepilnH St.; tw s of Brunswick <Hotel, g Telepha.es—Oiilce 281, Residence 151 1'. b �3sEC�Il SAC ian 0 a�CO . mini �^a_;; t�`a •. _ :.! - rt. '6� A•e� fl Pi. riiiiiriLli ii. OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN t All': Diseases Treated. Office adjoining residence next'' t Aagliean Church •on Centre' Street.. '- Open every day except Monday and; 1 Wednesday afternoons.` t Osteopathy - Electricity Phone 272 DRUGLESS : PHYSLCI �aNS FOX CHiR PRACTOR a to 8 s: o P•r4 t7:ftcc iiaur yt 5 nd7 Weduesday Afternoons by Appoints -'went only, Telepone 191. �cINSSJRs , CHI OPRACTOR Qualified Graduate sti rents given for diseases of Adju 1 s s ecializci in dealing witb'' all 'kind,.... P. t.:Li iidi t.z 1. ISady attendant.' 'Night calls respoude d to, .r„ 1ln'liam Ont, e 1 li Scr>tt Vii,,; 45 g, U.,i.c • a , lin house aC tire late ,[Ce' `Wacker), Phone 150. /g/ 1!` OdL. 1� ' A' Live Wire: "'hat follow fairly 'shocks stunt his onergY•'' �''yree-l±e's''a li•t°e wire,". Fla ales, 1,000,000 .nodes • long leap 1 edit into space frorii the sung yet: they • - ere scarcely yzalbk. io the naked eye.` I"be ,•oi,r a ia'o cn, ori}g'inally a native tf laxichi'la,. has lipvr been acdlinaa- �ire'oi Rate'-ica, i11-om it can _ 1 e miiaettrrecl ns31 , brread, eheeso, aril« Jeerii e, paipt, v=rrnicsh, cake, Sallee,' IA 1" ablt,urzi, i c�•hitil<ile t` b 1liat4--'e1)s and �F',oVrse,#txridor.3 '1 IE t INGH AD Y eeNCt II til; .a.•�-rri ar Thursday November {l, 1'Q21 1"YIAY IS 'THE PROF3t-1M. ie O..' TCNr =-"' THE CARBON MONOXIDE GAS FU, MES STEALTHY ENEMY OF MOTO RISTS. illness or death may result bile engine le more prevalent than: the Serious r es y i lire average automobile owner a�ipreci- • the. au'touiolile erg ,l ,_ from allowing � ,> tel•, Often mQtoi. -- I Dr. t,ol to run in a; closed garage while the ate"' said lsts are at£ected owner is making adjustments, or driv- Ing closely behind a closets body truck, or bus, is the :Warning given py Dr, L. S.- Colter, vice-president of the Am- erican Automobile Association. Dr. Colter cites; the marrow .escape from death resulting from carbon monoxide gas ;poisoning o1 -:'t o ,young men who were piloting -un automobile float- in a recent civic parade' in Cincinnati. The parde was moving slowly .and in close formation and the young men in a specially built cab. were enclosed p Y The carbon monoxide gas fumes from theexhausts' of the cars and trucks and do'not recognize - that the symptoms of • fatigue, liesi3- ache ' Shortnese of breath, diznness result'from care; and possible nausea bon monoxide gas poisoning. The American Medical Journal' in a•recent number quoted a report from the Ohio. State Department of Health shoaling eighty-one cases of poisoning from the deadly gas from automobile exhausts, with thirty-four deaths, ; during the first ten weeks of last winter. "Not only is it dangerous to run the e in a closed garage, but con- siderable engine siderable risk is incurred in trailing a large e body too' closely a •trucic'witkx g y :. ahead resulted in both young men •which prevents the gas thrown orl being; hurried to the hospital ,for from spreading out. + E MEETS einer'gency'treatment. Women on the "With cool' days here, the motorist IMPERIAL C O N F—From the it - the gas to' a will do well to avoid getting in too fess.; flat were affected- by —From :London -Daily .Exp w Identification of Woods. The identification of -woods is. a mat- ter and rte ter of some industrial ;impo, n the number o f : ersons who can yet I P , 'wood's common identify half a dozen . . isprobablylimited whereas most per- sons , sons can' readily, nalne correctly six common metals. There is a good r ea down to F16 and making an exposure of o'ne-fiftieth part of a second. rk ma - be:'done by I]ven better' wo y sin orthochromatic plates and - a u g color .screen on the front of ithe e usin a three -times 'screen, the �?h u 1; lens may be stopped down to F11 and an exposure of one-tenth second, or, if -eens along drives, the weather is_,bright, one-twenty-tlfth; hite s ruce havo r -le for Phe leaves oY ape w p second may be given; The u teristic pungent odor. It tioned above a .lies very charac P devolopmeut .then PP this chaiacteristic which gives the "skunk" and "cat" 3e the names. ' one of the f, atures , which 'ttae � anti . ., . , ..:•., .,r o. ; ar '.., ...c ... :. `:,. u 't"',. ,�. ..'i'r• ,ice :��,`'•:, :•la. c. ,• 'in between i t in�tiish i dnS g n b s fur •:o- x.- 4 i sere , s .h .. t ei u .�. , th er'e 1 �:• he dt .. may.•+. .a. ... .: ,. •e <�„ "... c-. .....slit ,:. Telling the Spruces Apart. in all cases, The cones' of the white spruce are twoinches,long. The, omone-half to one scales are narrow in proportion their' length and very flexible and 0 a astic. An open dry cone when. d will s ring back ban p rushed'in the ore• or less into sli'ape. -This charac it from the black eristo distinguishes pruce which'is mc -re brittle and will. scally': break with such treatment: spruce cone is long and The white P eared with the more arrow as. corns Also the mar - ins black spruce. le are smooth and not ius'of;its scales egged as is usually the case with the lack. :Cones of the white spruce drop fP the press after the seed is seed while those of the black spruce some- ,, nn tae tree for Years. Tile inexperienced person finds it omewhat• difficult to distingnuish be- ween the white and red spruce. Even he expert is` frequently puzzled, The red spruce has rather a wide spread- ng open crown composed of compara- ively; ''few large irregular branches and lacks somewhat that narrow coni- cal aspect 01 the white spruce. .The woods -man usually distinguishes these trees' by their look, which in the base' of the red spruce has' a reddish brown cast as compared with the gray of the wbete spruce. sonfor this. Metals are• -recognized by their color; but the woods' are dis-, a b milder degree, close contact •With`the confined filmes "Poisoning; from carbon- monoxide from the exhaust of an automobile -- as from, the exhaust of the automo- engine.' g ,tinguished by differences in thein r • lilt les, structure which are often• microscopic: teribr, Canada, where special:: fat e ur' ose are' available. of fo th P P tfication r . in' •thee idea Expelt service •. .. -., -... rovided o r citi- - woods `is P • - -.. o_ t Pr Be Pares. and industrkes; b3 t tens 9 feet on each side and ducts 'Lab oi•ataries''of the ` Forestry Measure 20 'inch.. the -n- ou will have an acre within' an Branch oY th.. Department -of l y,. ct L, e Pair's of e 'Gra i one rc rt h b r -and I a tte mind g -an e -e' from another. the be Id- • model, 3 h ar „ doctor from -a third, until' I aa1 m3 �-. '. lily i h_m in compiete;as''T had Pictuiec_ mind•" i.' . s r fu.,,re I Iobabl • no arfist wa_ eve X yfete-' tato _ rk �1 conscfeutious in his wo sonier, "Iloy, did you paint the suo-.t y t you r icture of 'Napoleon; zit road. n , t p 1S14'?" V'ere,stchagin once asked the great French artist; who piciced� out. •,from unrier the table ar low• Platfoi•n1 andseer hIm iration. of Il a half r uare,F and ` tumbin houses -and thuslastic adm about a yard and 1•_ e admire blazing and Pa nlh;lhlV• ieW of .nS;_wlie Y'_._ . _.., . ,.:_ I ...,,o :�.a. .- d1,1� . rail a 1 CAA . 1T d3.�__: �-._.._ ._. _. .. Dear. '-.. �:., nu ' i clotli.es :caught hie. oaten. vel snow ,. r. . alnted tlutil h s n rand h 1 ,. abo n t e W h at 1 P ma S ahz en I • re t t res ts. great. ptc u , Mr: Holman Aunt sp requsrod-snow, nntd, and ru crit have. often gone `to tl>eir roes ing% A Veferan War Artist. in the Red Sea when ushed ,aafoss p the desert fring g kneaded :the clay,' and .p Malty of Mr,.A. D. 1VIeCorr ick s wop- Verestcllagan was as much at bonne he was painting '`Phe Scapegoat, and 1 canvases for examine, have' attlefield as',in his studio, and it this piece of'cannon several bine-, dezfu on the b ith'him the very goat:he wished li �V`th' .a sli.od hoof I 1tookaw up and• dour i k . . { . een aznted ani.l the solitudes of'the 1 calnll produce his shetchboo et local color -y. his oP the„hoz acs b P vvou d Y Ito paint. To g then pressed• the marks 1 lists , I est nd p arc s, with snow c ad make 'a drawing while bu e ,, Innocents ane o.he high and 71,tu'mph pf the Beet; I'strewed:'.flour• over zt, Pushed:: a in i .:. ' the for and an - r tchin i ears house d ` and' calls st e g t t in est h s built a, and::con lid es P viers. wh s 1 g P i Ictuses he ( on acioss a ata, g _ „ , ,.pastern p the conn g n ,with was in , t ' of. score: of miles,on every fids, a d hash of sworls and -bayonets~ ;tudto for hlmselE:an;tho:outsktr s .- tinned to do sa until I olltained' tilt .: IEe to bs man a env n form -of 1 as wounded. Y s ent m not aanywge e. a y his eyes. Tae w Jerusalem, and there he p semblance of areal road: T.hcn I dere. ,'. O owill • 1 Ig w'an seen anYw � '� time'while !; ears rodiicing -, salted itand tits road.wa It 't f ?” - have an I c l following his' art h' de9�fu1 s read.,',: ,, y p Gor •e he office •Sald pointing feat f which 11Tr. 'NIc b hit her 1C been This is a ea o w keeps hon - light, t mick makes . 1 g g 'What did von -sit i or . h he pleads to his leg, "and there," pointing to his So .exacting .a critic Was ,he of pts Tog et the brillianev of the snow. paint- "I -have been wounded all often, desfroyetl 0 littlepride at having p forehead. *n work:.that lie. guiltya cn ed a picture a:few thousand'feet high- over. But it, was _necessary. There picture an Which he: had spent months artist who ever• was no other way •to''obtain'the facts. r labor rattier than allover it to er than any other oflia d Il .anwith lived. ' War painted otherwise«k is simplylanded go cut into: the world'h wasbut 3 000 illusion,- a ;m th a farce. red .amimperfectlon. belowe' that height"—he llluszo , Y , what hesconside it of the, Pioneer ninon hien •who pursue' their art Doctor:' ft. the summit g the Stor of."T.f7e •.' ,• veryhi •h place y a the ifflcuitses a g Peak intthe :Himalayas 1?e say•s under dli .es ' arntecl uis fore Sir ,Luke F_ d p to .. Mr. 13ertiam „Before exertion makes even the should be awarded• strongest man .gasp, through the air Hiles; who prodnees the most remark. pathetic ,,and beautiful -picture, "The h' mouth. Asa Doctor" he spent several'weeks tre- being so rarefied; • own it required strenuousexertion d to cross one. leg over'the other. At this twenty-thousand-feet=high camp- lace I did one• -water -soler paint- ingp and. When I sat able _paintings with his Hon. James Lyon Ontario Minister of Lands and For- ests, who has pledged the government to :development in Northern'Ontario, and advocates the' building of a high- way from Sault Ste. Marie to Fort Wil- liam to link; up with the highway which is being built to Winnipeg. This would give Canada a 'coast to coast highway. Spruce and Musical' Instruments. In the lumber.market the different - are not -as a rule cies o f spruce s P e P In onL sold coin Y o.� All are s..p.ruted. simply as spruce. The wood of spruce is soft, stiff, tough' and strong taking Weight into consideration. It has a Inc even grain and works easily. St seasens'w•eli, holds nails well, is taste- less, odorless' and non -resinous. Sprttce Is used in greatest quantities by the manufacturers of, building ma- terial For rough dimension lumber it has practically taken the place of white' pine in the lumber 'market of. this country. Large quantities are used for .sitting, flooring, roof -sheeting, as well . as' for the maniifaoture of boxes. Its totighness, , lightness, th�. strength , and . nail h'.alding properties Loving Good Music. The purpose of a music memory contest is to develop •the ear for ,good music and' teach one to appreciate the and their compositions. s. A masters rize young child looks forward to the, p but: at the same time he has acquired benefits that will not be readily' for- gotten, •while, an older child works for more definite results. In the contests only the best music is given,. which is to be identified• together with the' names of the composers. The con- tests are especially beneficial to those who do not:kfave music in the home; and they may be the means of awaken - talent of some future .musi- ing latent earlier in life a child i The en - ill u ' ' tlZe was run.ove'r by a Brix- yelling. over the country to get :tiler: boy of eigll to with cottage in- ar :and' lost beth:`his arms-; oughly acquaire „d tol:t�amq �he�i: t1 and w but such was the, boy s pluck and love Ceziors and their > tenon S„ trial: ori that he, set to'werk to -model, to the cottage -room he wanted was fix a ith.his mouth.�ly pictured in' his' blain he had tl d't aittt w ?l ris �'eou d �'� sly do you smile . How else you do it?" o Bought a,Wheat-Field. _ It was illeissonier, too, :who, when wanted to paint a wheat field' hi. s; " he :P • , battle -scene actually bought a field Of ` •• a t and got a..squadron 'of vh.,a . in v -growing b cavalry to; charge through it. . Speaking. of his - Clarge of the ira Waterloo''- Mr. French. Cuirassiers at. Berkeley, .painter' of so many Stanley. stirrin pictures of battle- and: sport,r g _ a the merit..oE aw, an o P e ie "For the 'animal pulled on to its' Ing, witch has at leastdr built exactly to sizo . • Within he had won a first- room carefully. , haunches by its: frantic ,rider,' when I beating the record as to being painted iVttiim two years perfect to the Minutest detail, •at had co np1etefl my picturd'1 got'piie ,o1 made sever-, ,aha p z ahheight,though g 'vastas atthat al water -color drawings not many thousand feet below." class certificate forfreehan'd drawing. 4r. Charles'Felu;.the Flemish artist, ith- it,inay be remembered, was born w out. arms, and yet, Bolding his brushes 'between his 'teeth, he was able to. paint 'j e of surpassing merit • and Slung from the Bowsprit. r Com- Iiiilg Edward's marine painter, Martino often practised mendatore conditions which many his art- under not only . oust uncom- znenwould find Y fortable, but for physical reasons im- possible `"What I do," he says, "is' to a' large basket either at the rr an re g a b I,. end of the -bowsprif, or at the stern, anti' Lei -a vaa,•r i aa.;:d k . an 1 eat .fh P.. sailors to lower me a few feet by' means of a rope. Here I remain sus- pended as thes1)ip pursues her course, watching the ,tumbling waters -and tak- ing rough: notes in my sketch -book. But the ' Chevalier' has had more than one predecessor who pursued ar-t with an equal enthusiasm: and under as great difficulties: 'Turner, , once, when overtaken•. by a snowstorm at sea, had himself lashed to the mast, so that he might observe it without - fear' of being pitched into the tuns_ bling waters; and. Claude Vernet, a famous eighteenth -century marine in of a point'going ma de 'rater . alw a s P Tal Y 1 out to sea when a storm was raging. On one occasion, when everyone else on board was praying for a safe de-" liverance,: he threw up;'his'bands in an ecstasy of admiration and exclaimed:.'' "How glorious 'it is 1" Mr.Ckledon Cameron ran terrible risks when' he was painting .his enormous 'picture, "Niagara in Winter,'' ,spending scores or -hours suspended fromrthe cliffs at: dizzy heights at the end of a rope. r0'.F-test of Japanese IToysai the g, c an• artists, has many a'tiine risked his' life the more apt he terse these contests 1 � retch. On one the end of his studio, so e- w my ovrn Horses .and rested its law or able' to 'transfer' to • canvas exactly •'tile heats of m e.3s, oin, til order iv see , what he saw, even'to the massive' raft - whether '' had sante details correct' ers of the ceiling. about -which 1 was a: liatle -nxious For the doctor, he says:-' "Several A.g`iin with regard to the Welling -- James JCarter, whose , arms •had been people sat' for me, but I knew perfect- ton boots the, -rider was wearing, you ba• aures ed useleGs .by paralysis, pro- ly well the kind .of man .I ,wanted— will' recollect that' the field of GVate;'• r ender canvases which woe .,the :en: that 'is to say,'. I had the ,type in my 1 dated c late' good music, to procure a desired sl wilt be to''appiec g 1 Ocoee -len, when a, fierce het ce fir vvas ra�r- e b census regulars , 1 ing :in Tokio, he: took his easel and sat Babylonia- took a c b Y- ,. c •,' of 'rst was taken before 3800 B.C. down in :the• midst of the furnace The fi II til 50MG TUNE TrIAT N.1/4q \5 I hi rEb0R:o h7LUES " gyAIN'T' iT DdC2jj„ / rI loo was c , almost a quagmire on the confi c , ,\ e , we 111 and, galloping over _ _... one wet day, , g, ploughed fields got my topboats lite ally splashed with loud' 'When I 'ar- rived-bonne" r iioni r :ef. 11 iiateed i.:_. r'A:Y CLL a] Vit'i-, v -. �--• �. lessee_ boots to see hew spatters of ,mud fell upon :ti dila, rind :then compared those natural mud splashes with tbosa yvhicli+:I had palirted' upon tho `boots Of the cavalrymen in illy picture. BUSY SUCKERS.: The suckers keepon sending their coin to sinful sharks, in spite Of my unending din sage counsel and remarks. These sucker- ` like civilians who won't to me give ear are blowinghard earned .: millions for gold bricks every year. in vain the village'•banker expounds the' safer plan;. for sudden wealth they hanker, and. seek the :gold brick man. Of unearned coin they're dreaming, �s in o Eb ries trleam and g e behold the glittering �, and in their sleep all filmed with gold, You'd think when once they've tasted the faker's bitter d raft their coin would not be wasted; again on such a graft. y , Betrayed �by some false;mncker you'd think they'd quit,,' but no; the sucker is; a sucker while he remains below. The sucker's hopes are builded on dope; of rainbow hue, on promise so gilded they never could be true. Themillionsthat are,wasted would buy the ,suckers homes, with- golclleaf neatly pasted- upon the shining domes: The millions they have squandered' would buy them rich sedans, in which they 'might have wandered in to fakers would buy them caravans. The. millions sent joyride ace above and they -might sail through acs acres of space airships proud, the cloud. N i ABI ! £ BORO THE. 'L- A1)ER of 11-1E-; ORCHESTRA -la ,u5r CR!'"a.Y ABot)-r ; ._ . SA`e5 rt -U-�;1-\uN`r5 I-ltl� ' 1 T 5}1OULD TI -LINK `iT JOUL.`D C' NAI/1\1 HIM 1 Woman Heads Lahcr`Cangress. O- t, Rl'is:'11. 13oYidikeld, e e.,t,d,ps ofthe i—iiittslr.,Trade 111)! Ooiigrrs's: Sl e is the first n'onlaia=to occit,ty the post, , E. fr]URDE ,0. 1. ; 11