HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1940-06-14, Page 7RINE1 O •.
LEGAL
ELMER D. BELL, BA.
Sueec or to Johan H. Best
Barrister, Solio tor, ',Notary Pabite
Seaforth v Ontario
18-80
McCONNELL & HAYS
Barristers, Solicitors, Eto.
Patrick D. McOBnnmej11 - H. Olen Hays
SEAFORTH, ONT,
Telephone 174
■
•ass
E. L, McLEAN
Barrister, Solicitor, Etc.
Joynt Block - Hensall, Ont.
VETERINARY
A. R. CAMPBELL
Veterinarian
Henan - opt
Phone 113 P. O. Box 291
8749-k
MiEDICAL
SEAFORTH CLINIC
DR. E. A. McMASTER, M.S.
Graduate of University of -'Toronto
J. D. COLQUHOUN, M.'D., C.M.
Graduate of Dalhousie .. University,
Halifax
The clinic ...is Hilly equipped with
complete and,modern-X-ray and other
;up-to-date diagnostic and therapeutics
equipment.
Dr. Margaret K. Campbell;, M,D.,
. L.A.B.P., Specialist in diseases in in.
Pants and children, will be at the
Clinic last .Thursday in every month -
from 3 to 6 p.m.
onth•from3to6p"m,
Dr. F. J. R. Forster, Specialist In
diseases. .of the ear, eye, nose and
throat, will be at the Clinic the first
Tuesday in every month from 3 to 5
P.m.
Free. Well -Baby Clinic will be hold
an the second and last . ThtirsdaY in
every month from 1 to 2 p.m.
8687 -
JOHN A. GORWILL, B.A., M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
IN DR" H. IL ROSS' OFFICE
Phone 5-W Seaforth `f
IlIIIARTiN W. STAPLETON, B.A., M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
Successor to Dr. W. C. Sproat
Phone 90.W Seaforth
DR. F. J. R. FORSTER
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Graduate in, Medicine, University of
Toronto.
Late assistant New York Optbal-
mei and Aural Institute. Moorefield's
Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos-
pital,
London,En At COMMERCIAL
fta]g
P
HOTEL, SEAFORTH, THIRD .WED-
NESDAY in each month,°Prom 2 p.m.
to 4.30 p.m.; also at Seaforth Clinic
first Tuesday of each month. 53
Waterloo Street South, Stratford.
12-87
Margaret E,: Campbell, M:D:
LONDON, ONTARIO
Graduate Toronto University
Licentiate of American Board of
Pediatrics
Diseases of Children
At Seaforth Clinic last Thursday •
afternoon each month;
8749-89
AUCTIONEERS
HAROLD JACKSON
Specialist. in Farm and Household
Sales.
Licensed in Huron and Perth Colin
tees. Prices reasonable; . satisfaction
guaranteed.
For information, etc., write or phone
Harold Jackson, 12 on 668, Seaforth;
R. R. 1, Bruoefield"
8768 -
HAROLD DALE
Licensed Auctioneer
Specialist in farm and household
sales.,. Prices reasonable. For dates
slid information, write Harold Dale,
Seaforth, or aPPily at The Expositor
Office.
1.2-87
eer e,,,
al
CHAPTER VIII
SYNOPSIS
Idi>e- grows complicated for the
children of plucky Anne Phi'l'lips
wm14, 'by 'working in a department
awe', has suPpoz''ted them educe
heat ` husband's deartlb,, Her mar-
gited dau'ghitelr, „Berenice, quarrels
with her husband, Bill" • Jim, the
soap, is infatuated with the rich
Helen Sanders, although Anne
suspects that, Cathy, the widow-
ed little dancer in the apartment
across the hall, is in love with
him. And Janet, Anne's younger
daughter, is unhappy because her
well-to-do friends iieglect her,
and insist on iieldeving that she
Jai annoyed over Gordon Key's
interest in • Priscilla Leigh. Janet
is studying interior decorating at
normal school summer classes
and is„ commissioned by Tony Ry-
an to help him restore the old
Phillips estate which he has
bought. A negro and an English-
man working there tell her of
Tony's kindnesses.
By the last week in July Mr.
Busby was next to finished at the
Radcliffe 'house; 'There were only
the loose ends to be tucked in.
Janet began uneasily to wonder
what would .happen next. Sha had
after considerable research decided
on exactly what furnishings the old
mansion required.She had t he
names of dealers • and 'prices at her
tongue's end, as well as neatly put'
down in a slender red notebook for 1
Tony Ryan's consideration,
Deke had been engaged for sev-
eral days in •carefully .weeding out
the flower beds at the sides of, the
Radcliffe mansion. It was work at
which he could sit down if his leg
troubled him. The . business of
pruning the trees and cutting back
the heavy shrubbery was to be left
to Rule under the Supervision of the
Earl of Jersey, so Deke said..
"Mr. Tony knows I can't handle no
scythe," chuckled Deke, "but he prom-
ised to skin me alive if I missed any
weed in these here flower .beds. Mr.
Tony can't stand nothing slovenly."
Janet's' lips curled'. "Ile expects
you to earn your keep, does he?"
"Yas'm."
"There's nothing like being able
to eat your cake and, have -it—too"
she remarked. "I mean,; it, isn't
everyone who can make 'a beautiful
gesture pay."
"Yas'm," agreed Deke doubtfully.
He had' no idea what , she,, was
talking about, but the man who had
come up behind her knew. "I've
seen the skids put under too many
-Good Time' 'Charlies to let that 'hair-
pen to me," said . Tony Ryan in a
:hard voice.
• Janet turned with., a little gasp.
He had come in through the rear
gate. Under the dark tan of his lean
cheeks there was a red glow like the
do eky flush on a copper vase. .
"I'd' like if possible to •have the
house ready for occupancy by the
twentieth of 'August," he . said.
"Please buy what you think the
house needs and have them send the
bills:.to me," he said crisply:;
She winced, and her old 'antagon-
ism flared up. "The price is no
object naturally?" she dsked.
He gave her a curious glance. "I
want the best."
�-
* *.
Theoretically, after she had been
Sales Books
are the best Counter
Check Books made in
Canada. They cost no
more than ordinary
books and always give
satisfaction.
We ate agents and
will be pleased to quote
you on any style or
quantity required.
"'See Your Home Print& Fiat ,
'E.HuBiON EXPOSITOR
—Seaforth„ Ontario,
heart was full. of tenderness when
she said, "I- have money enough in
the bank to pay our expenses to the
Fair, Bill, if you'll go."
Hen started to his feet son violen't13t'
she dropped her fork. "What are
you trying to make out of me?"
he cried in a tortured voice" "A gig-
olo?"
Berenice's cheeks flamed. "It's like
you to be that unjust," slie, said, "Has
it occurred to you that after I've
pounded the typewriter from nine to
five I'm not exactly, in the mooch to
be shouted at the rest of, the night?"
see demanded:
. Bill's mouth tightened. "Maybe
yon think I'm! crazy about coming
home to this sort of thing, when
I've tramped the streets all day try,-
ing to sell advertising?"
"Is that' why you're not so hot
at it?" she asked -stingingly.
He picked his hat up from' where
he had flung it down on the littered
desk. He did not speak or glance
back as he jerked open, the door
and banged it behind, him, Berenice
stood. very still, listening to his re-
treating steps. Suppose Bill did not
come back? ° She had a 'longing to run to her
mother, to hide, her head in Anne's
lap as she had done -when a child
1f she had had a nightmare 'or been
frightened at something. She had
stretched' out her hand' to take up
the telephone' when it rang` Bere-
nice had meant to call Anne and
ask ion a eouwldre come over, but May
was
"Meet us down
in the on,
kid. You and Bill are
riding in our -mar."
"Bill isn't here," stammered Bere-
nice, trying' to conceal that she was
crying. "We had one, of our famous
battles and he walked out on me.
"He'll be back," said May with a
hearty laugh. "Surely you aren't go_
ing to give him the satisfaction of
staying at home and moping. That's
exactly what he'd like."
Berenice's round childish chin
hardened. "All right," she said, "I'll'
meet you downstairs as soon as I can
climb into my best bib."
* 5
When Berenice let herself back
into the apartment a little after two
Bill was there asleep on his side of
the bed.
She, closed the dressing room door
cautiously before she started to un-
dress. Her hands ,were not quite
steady and her eyes did not focus
correctly. That was how slue .hap-
pened to !pull open Bill's drawer in-
stead of her own in the chifforobe.
That was why. she did not at -once
recognize the stack of neatly cut out
pictures which lay on Bill's pile of
handkerchiefs.
The local newspaper had been
mining a contest for eight weeks.
Each day they published a picture
puzzle. There was a grand, prize, of
five thousand dollars and' a second
of a thousandand a 'third of five hun_
dred ands forty of five dollars each.
Berenice had never dreamed•Bill was
working at the contest. • Yet"' there
were the pictures. painstakingly puz-
zled out and lettered in Bill's small
cramped printing. Berenice's' heart
ached:
He had secured duplicates 'of each
!puzzle so that/the-set he finally sent
in should be neat and: legible. These
were the ones, he had worked. from.
They were almost tattered where
he had written in, and then rubbed
i out and rewritten his answers. In
spots the cheap ragged paper. had
sheen. In the dining rooan a Shera-
ttor% ktable and village leather -seated
chair rested on a hand-wovelr blue
rug. Upstairs; . prim ruffled white
curtains framed the windows of
bedrooms in whit* there were ma-
hogany four-poster beds and, slipper
chairs and chintz -covered chaise
longues.
"Almost finished," breathed Janet
one sultry' afternoon toward the
middle of August. "The sooner I-
get away Prem here the better. The
first thing I know I'll be breaking
down and sobbing on the inter-
loper's hearth rug."
A man stood at the foot of the
stairs. "I'm sorry," he said, . "I
didn't :mean to startle you."
He was a slight man, thin for his,
height. He looked to be about
forty-five and his expensively tailor-
ed gray suit was a little shirty at the
seams. .
"You are Miss Phillips, of course,"
he went on. "I'm - Steve Hill, a
friend of Tony's. He's done me a
,great^service by being alive."
The next afternoon he was in the
library when she arrived,- sitting on
the cushioned window seat, turning
the leaves of an exceptionally fine
Copy of "Tristan and Is'olde."
"Allah be praised, you don't buy
booksfor the color of their bin.d_'
"The price is no object, naturally?" she asked.
busy at the office for eight hours,
Berenice 'should have been satisfied
to stay quietly at home with Bill• at
night, only it had not worked out
that way. She was generally tired
by five and more and. more inclined
to feel sorry for herself because her
friends had been doing nothing all
day except play bridge or otherwise
amuse themselves: She formed the
habit of stopping in at one of their
apartments after work. Usually •The
Bunch was together somewhere
having cocktails. They encouraged
Cher to join them.
When she came . into the apart-
ment that afternoon Bill was slam-
ming things, around in the kitchen-
ette. "Hullo," he said without look-
ing up, his face like a thunder-
cloud.
"Hullo," said Berenice coldly, go-.
Ing into the dressing room to put her
hal and gloves away.
The living rooms needed clearing of
cigarette butts' and scattered news-
papers.
' "Come and get it," called Bill from
the dinette.
"Have you thought any more about
going to the Fair with the bunch?"
she asked after a white.
"For Fetes sake,", he protested,
"What le there to think about? I
cantt afford a jaunt like, that and
you, know it-"
She Meant to be generous, , fifer
•
Educating youngsters to a potaaol'
Problem on, any tia'ovie lot. ; The Ate-
liers involyed in this are: Worts izi
films, study, the problem of eombi
ing theste i,n such a number as • -t'o'
produce good resatits im1 eadk; and
the cost of such sclhoali7rg.
Because the California laws pro
shp kzi *8 !t ca
and `hear. d;arra Id+avltccesl. atlb• vqh
to snare . the Students' I'+1>+Getre k
, Projects 'l Uncial
A, westerns! pi'eture '011,04ee40 tpauliter:
oda history. which she leitroOnc'est as
eighteen 'set to their eurricnlum+-inspired
vide that every child under ei
cou
Shall have four !hours ofscJio ling, rses" par a rnml+e, ureter the stun
per day, with not less' than 20...mzin net of pane dpang bletery a mrOJect on.
tiro_ expo siotn of une 'West maybe • in-
utes of study at any one time nue trodueed Naturally, a. child) who has
that such must be corzipleted by four
seen a great western epic unfold will
p.m. ; and 'becaus,e thee' hours must be interested in 'and little troubled
he incorporated into the eight hour by adtditionai reading in that phase
work -day, the cost to the studios for 01 Amte,riean hdstar'y- This, in short,
tutors .atnd rearranged e'ch'eciules a- is the mtetuod• by w+bieh Miss Hoene
mounts to th'otisands of d'ollara each
marrySer students to interest all sents• in
jeer,•
all subjects. By' correlating them to
their surroundin'gs.,
_ Helen Parrish, who is 16, is in the
eleventh grade and making all honor
Deletes despite the fact that when
she started work at Universal stu-
dios, she thoroughly disliked! French.
Miss Hoene, hhowever, Pound that she
was extremely interested in art, and
by intnoducieg a course in French
art was able to help„ `Helene . hurdle
that dtiff'i•ouLty.
Through, her interest in the Hawai-
ian background of 'h1er new picture,
"Ws a Date,," Deanna Durbin became
inber•esttedein geographical'`problemhs of
the Pacnfre and In Oriental history,
easy," confides Miss
Many Children Employed
• The average person probably :fails
to realize the great number of chil-
dren employed in the studios. They
notice only Deanna Durbin, Jane
Withers, Shenley Temple and otter
younger stare. Actually, nearly ev-
ery script has written into it a child's
role. It. may be a minor part py the
time it reaches your theatre. • But
chances are the child has•. wogleei
several weeks at the studio and' re-
mained "on call" for s'ev'eral more be-
fore shooting was finished on thle ;pro-
duction. That means' that the sehe-
dwle on this picture has had to be
BO arranged as to allow the
-four hours a day for edu
company time, and the pen
ings!" he said.
Janet stared at him critically as
he' talked an. He did not sound like
a bum, but neither did the Earl of
Jersey. Steve Hill had a sensitive
mobile face, and he seemed to have
read everything worth reading and
to have seen everything worth see-
ing and to have known everything
Worth knoiring.'
"Sorry," he said, glancini; abrupt=
ly at his .watch, "I'm afraid I've bor-
ed you.",
discovered, with an incredulous
start that they had been sitting there_.
for an hour ' while 'he literally charm-
ed her with the gently satirical !lcw
of his conversatiou. "No," she said,
"you Ihaven't bored me. I doubt if
you ever bored anyone in your life."
To her dismay his mouth twisted
with pain. "I failed lamentably with
the one audience in' the world which
mattered to me," he: said and walked
quickly away as, -.11 a horde of • tor-
menting memories had been loosed
about him.
But he was back again the next af-
tern'oon. Janet was hanging pic-
tures.
"Nothing's, lacking," she told "Steve
Hill, "except the portrait of my great
grandmother which • is in our living
room at 'home. It belongs' here, com-
manding the whole honker she indi-
cated the space opposite the wide
staircase and the entrance to the lib-
rary. "But nothing could persuade
us. to .part with it"
She laughed unsteadily. "There
are some things you can't put on
the auction block unless' it's a mat-
ter of life and death. At least we've
managed to eat without pawning
great grandmother." She regarded
him defiantly. A bit 0 maudin sen-
timent,
timent,
eh, what?' as the Earl of
Jersey would say."
Steve •Hill smiled. . "There was a
time when 1 thought I'd outgrown
the old gods, but that's ,merely -a
phase, you know. In the end you
realize that life without sentiment is
a wine without bouquet."
She caught her breath. "I'd like
you toknow my mother,"_ she s•a;dt
and blushed because, until then she
had not known she approved of brim
to that extent. "Would you like
to go . home with me tonight to din-
ner? It'll be informal. We lire in
a flat and we, can't entertain. • on an
elaborate scale, but Mother's the
.only person I know of in this towndistance between Work and home, of
who could' talk to you about • books steps between the classroom and
and philsophy and poetry and hold stage, or of time between "takes'."
her own. You see, she grew up in
a library like, this."
"I'll be delighted," he said.
(Continued' Next Week)
been worn through in holes from
this •patient eraser.
"Oh, poor..... Bill!" Berenie whisper-
ed to herself.
For all the pictures were torn in
half and in the waste basket beside
the •'chifforobe lay a crumpled news-
paper. Berenice picked it up with
shaking " bands. There - were t h e
names of .the winning contestants.
The *inner of the grand prize
beaded them all in huge black let-
ters, the second' in smaller type, the
third in still' smaller print, and at
the bottom the inconspicuous col-
umn of forty who received! live dol-
lars each. "
Berenice's trembling finger ran
down the list. Bill had. not received
a prize, not any at all. His name
did not appear , anywhere on the
page. Berenice' felt an anguish of
pity. She knew why Bill had' wanted
five thousand dollars, why he had
clutched at this ' forlorn hope to
save his self-respect, but he had fad-
ed,,
"Oh, Bill!" whispered Berenice,
crawling into bed beside bit and put:
ting her arm: Iaentivy hint.
But even in his. 'sleep he flinched
away front her.
* * * •
Gradually the stately ^ old house
began+ again' to take on a gracious
and gle'amting aspect. Worn Beetle
an wainscoting ., d.lep'ed a satin
youngster
tion on
hies. for
erring in this matter •are scie heavy
on
director teacher and picture core-
paiy alike that no one dares to vie -
late, the ruling. It often means that
n'ew sets must be constructed eo that
additional sentences in which the -
child does not appear may he shot
while, the cast is waiting •for the
youngster to finish hos or her school
work.
Every studio pas a school room in.
which the head teacher presides. But
in addition to this there are school
rooms set up on every sound stage
where children are acting. 'Usually
extra teachers are hired for these.
But, of even more importance than
the cost to the studios of educating
children is the problem of • interesting
the latter in school work attracting.
them from the. fascinating aspects of
their dramatic work to such prosaic
subjects as arithmetic and Latin.
Keep Up With Public Schools"
bt'•s :hard work being a child ac tp r.
Learning lines and acting' them o
to suit a director .and there turning
one's attention to learning French
verbs and how to conjugate them, To
top. it all, •every teacher is en her
mettle . to see to it that her pupils
can make a showing when they re-
turn to public 's•chool. Statistics
show- what not Only. do :these young-
sters make good grades in the studio
classroom, but when- they return to
their 'own schools,. 90 • per cent of
them are ahead of the classes they
left. Any •number of them are "jump-
ed" a grade, or placed in the "genius
group." .
,The average child, according to ,ed-
ucation authorities, has some subjects
in which the excels, others he dislikes
and may be very- poor at. Film chil-
dren are no exlyeption: but on the
whole they seem to show. more uni-
Yormity in all -subject masterythan
tiTe average child, a
When asked how she' accounted for
this, Miss Gladys Hoene, head' teach-
er at -Universal Studios, explained it
on the basis•• of, catchingg the child's
interest. This Was done primarily,
she added through the project meth:
od and Honor Roll posted on the
blackboard in front -of the classroom,
And correlating the subjects to cur-
rent events. In order to get on the
Honor Roll, 'a s'tud'ent must -have
three "A's" or more in major sub-
jects. • -
Little Billy Lenhart, aged 8, for ex-
ample, d'idn't like arithmetic Until it
was presented to, ,him' in terms of
"It's all
interests
be applied
sequentt •
"If ou can just find out w
a dap, that inter•
O any subject with
IniprOMem>emgt c
i in lean
Picnics Ahead !
it
Sunny days' and ,balmy breezes
bring the sar'bject of picnic's almost
automatically, to mind. The prospect
of public ' and private holidays and
Saturdays and Sundays coming every
week as well, make the summer an
open season for picnics. Whether
you regard; them as sports events, so-
cial activity or just relaxation, food
Seems to be the Main ingredient for
a successful ' one. From a simple
menu consisting of sandwiches and
fresh fruit to an elaborate spl•ead in-
cluding salads •and ice I drinks:, the
travelling ability of tl'e "eats" must
be considered first. Don't include
anything .that can't stand a few
bumps and perhaps some crowding
or that will perish too quickly. Here
are two recipes, cookies and small
cakes, that fill all the requirements
of the picnic basket.
Chocolate Pin Wheels
11/2 cups sifted flour
1/2 teaspoon double-acting baking
powder
1/a teaspoon salt
% cup butter or other shortening
1A cup sugar
1 egg yolk, beaten well
3 tablespoons milk
1 squar= insweetened, chocolate,
m'elte'd.
Sift flour ,once, measure, add bak-
ing powder and salt, and sift again.
Creams butter thoroughly, add stigar
gradually, and cream together instil
light and fluffy. Add egg yolk and
beat well. Add flour, alternately with
m6'ik, mixing well after eaeh hddtitien.
Divide dough do two parts, To one
part, add Chocolate and blends. Chili
until Mire m oi�ba
ro11,
o11 each
half into rectangular sheet, Inch
thick; .place plain sheet over choeo-
latb sheet. Itol:l as for jellg' 11I. Chill
oveetlig+ht, or until firm eno1ingh to
sltee. Cut In! %-inoihi slice% Babe on:
("Takes" is the expression; used on
sound stages. for the shooting of a
scene.) Lois Schoonover, aged 10,
little Gloria Jean's sister and stand-
in, found only mechanical things 'of
interest ur'til she visited a set.Where
a picture was being ,made .which was
laid in France. From that time 'en.
Miss Hoene was, able to interest her
in French customs, Language, history
and geographical surroundings:
In every course of study, MISS
Hoene tries to insert as maul—things
as possible which pertain to the sur-
roundings. When Deapna Durbin was
working in "First Love," she and the
other adolescents is the cast were
.given a course in social usages and
customs, taught how to make proper
introductions, etc., since the back-
ground of the 'picture was that. of
"smart society."
Thede children are primarily inter -
stated in. picture -,making. They know
imim,ediateily all about every picture
being made en the lot. Aa soon as
a picture is ,selredu•led, Mises, Hoene
is given a copy of .the script anti,
from the background of the things
at
ay
a con-.
ng„
mall Seeded
False Flax
Small Seeded False Flax, a winter
annual weed, may now be observed
in fall wheat. fields. throughout the
Province, .States John D. MacLeod,
Coops, Seeds° and Weeds" Branch, On-
tario Department of Agriculture, To-
ronto. The life history of this weed
is similar to fall wheat which is also
a winter annual. Plants start :growth
the previous fall, live over the winter
and produce flower and seed early the
following year.
This weed has a branching stem
and' the lower leaves are long on
short stems, whereas the upper leaves
clasp the stem with arrow shaped
bases. The flowers are pale ,yellow
and very numerous, small reddish 1
brown seeds with a small whitish
spot at the smallend and may be
found in pear-shaped pods each on a
slender stalk:
An average plants of Small Seeded
False Flax may produce 40,000 seeds.
These may be easily removed from
fall wheat, but in clover and grass
seed they are difficult to remove.
This weeddoes not give-'• serious
trouble, where a short rotation of
crops and thorough cultivation is,
practised. Sow. spring grain instead
of fall *!seat-atMrsfbd down with a
good hay mixture.
If the field is very badly over run,
un'greased ;baking sheet in !rot oven
(400 deg. F.) five minutes, or until
done. Makes 31/2 dozen pint wheels.
These rolls, when ca.refiilly wrapped.
In waxed paper, may be kept in re-
frigerator for several days and'•baked
as desired.
Chocolate Marguerites
i/ cup sifted .cake flour
1/4 teaspoon each soda 2nd salt
lit nap brown sugar, firmly packed
2 eggs, well beaten
2 tablespoons butter '
1% squares unsweetened chocolate,
melted
1 cup finely cut pecans.
Sift, flour once, measure, add soda
and salt, and, .sift together three
times. Beat sugar ,gradually into
beaten eggs. Melt butter with ch'oco-
1•ate an dada to egg mixture; blend.
Add flour gradually; then nuts.Turn
into greased small fanny -pans,' lace
pecan hall on, each. Bake in moder-
ate oven (375 deg P.) 10• •urinates.
Makes two dozen. -
Dolph!, ..-;'
Foible R.om
1C1ose+ tit? elle Lip
Parll,amOpt B
Map'ls .!serf i#3;hde
T h ea;tres, qapitals
Hou
Wholesale' ses ,add
' the Fashionable• Retail
Shopping Oistriot.
A. M. POWE (.,, PSL.SIREN•r.
1,
plow lightly as soon as the Cnop i$,
harvested. Harrow and cultivate. fz?
quently throughout the autumm-,he der
stray. young seedlings. This' autuz
cultivation must be thorough. Spsn!g
grains may he sown the following
year, seeded down or ahoed .crop
might be planted • and cultivated thor-
oughly.
Summer
Feeding Tips
• The feeding and _management of
the milking 'herd during the summer
is just as 'important as during the -
wirier, points] out the Ontario Feed--- "'•
Board of the Ontario Denartment of
Agriculture. Supplies and kinds ,of
feed are fairly; constant during .the.
winter but pasturage during the sum-
mer varies from immature grass to,
ripened hay.
No hard and fast rules can 'be giv-
en for summer feeding but ty direct-
ing attention to Certain details mill[
production can be kept ,at a fairly
high level throughout the season.
1. Rotatioral ,grazing of Festa" es-
on well fertilized land iength.en:, title .
pasture season and ensures a seat-
er -quantity of young growing'grass
throughout the season.
2. Use of silage,emergency pas-
ture crops, aftermath or green crops
to supplement the regular pasture,
particularly darting the latter part of
the .. summer. •
3. Feeding meal mixtures. accord -
ink to yield of •meds and, kind of pas-
ture. Young growing grass provides
sufficient protein and a •mealmixture g
made up of home grown grains will
be satisfactory. Wthen the grease ma-
tures. the .protein content of the meat•
mixture should be inereased to ap-
proximately 16 per cent. Cows, on
good pastune should produce from 20
to 30 pounds of milk per day without
meal. Feed -approximately one Wird
of meal for., eacht three •pounds of
mill$ produced' above this amount.
4.. Provide_ water, salt, miner
mixture, sihade and protection. against
flies.
CPieSNAPSI.4OT GUILD
WATCH THOSE SUMMER SHADOWS
See that the shadows are properly illuminated In your summer snapshots
of people. Here, a bright, sunlit sidewalk reflects Tight up under the hat
brim, and helps give Shadow detail. -
AS SOMMER approaches, outdoor
lighting on sunny days becomes
more and more contrasty. The sun-
shine is brighter, the blue sky does
not reflect as much light as a gray
winter sky and in consequence,
shadows tend to appear stronger
and blacker in your pictures.
Of course, in some pictures you
want strong black shadows, to cre-
ate a desired pictorial effect;' But
in most " pictures—and especially
snapshots of people—you *ant de-
tail in all the features. Certainty
you de not desire deep shadows
around the eyes, nose, and lower
lip—for these make a person al-
most unrecognizable.
To avoid such shadows, or get
detail- in them, there are several
methods. The simplest is to place
your subject in open shade -not
under trees—farting the clear skye,,
Then give about double the average
"sunshine" exposure—say 1/25,,seei.
and at f/8 IenS.opening, on average
speed fllm on a bright sunny d9.y.
A second method is to use re
flec-
tors, or place your. ub ect where
there are natural ref ecting,objects.
For. example, in the picture a'bov'e,
a light-colored concrete dldewalft
reflects quite a bit of light up under
the subject's hat brim.
Excellent reflectors can be made
readily. A white card, or one cov-
ered with crumpled tinfoil, senses
nicely for small areas. A white
sheet also will do.
Backlighting is another device --
really" a variation of the "open
shade" method. The subject is
placed with his back to the sun, so
that his face is in Shadow, and ex-
posure is about the same as for an
"open shade" shot. In the picture
above, if the subject faced to the
left, you would have backlighting_ ,
The dark background would then
be even more important—for in the
priht the subject's face should ap-
pear lighter than the background.
In taking backlighted pictures, do
not let sunshine strike the lens..
Use a lens hood, or have someozfe
Shade the lens without obetrueting
its view.
Watch the shadows when you aro
taking pictures this summer. See
that they are pr6perty illuminated
make sure the'
nearest
00
great—and yod'3'l get a better et
feat in your prfnit>i.
284 Jehiz t f ddiZ
ft.