HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1940-06-21, Page 71'.
T?'
•
L qm,
R D. BELL, $.A,.
$ueeessor to John H. Beat
Banister, Solicitor, Notary Public
Sealterti4.
O t rIo
• lee
McCON'NELL & HAYS
Barrister's, Solicftoiey Etc.
Patrick D. McOonn011 - H. Gleam, Haye
SEAFORTH, ON'1:
Telepth Wi a .174
K. L McLEAN
Barrister, Solicitor, Etc.
Joymt Block - Hensa1i, Ont.
VETERINARY
A. R. CAMPBELL
Veterinarian
• Beason.,
Phone 113
- Ont.
. P. O. Box 291
8749-kf
• MEDICAL
SEAFORTH CLINIC
DR. E. A. MOMASTER, M.B.
Graduate of University of Toronto
J. D. COLQUHOUN., M.D., C.M.
Graduate of Dalhousie University,
, - Halifax
The Clinic is fully 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 disease in in-
tents and children, will be at the
Clinic last Thursday in every month
tram 3 to 6 p.m.
Dr. F. J. R. Forster, Specialistin
diseasere of the ear, eye, nose and
throat, " will be at the Clinic the first
Tulesday in every month 'roan 3 to 5
p.m.
Free Well -Baby Clinic will be held
n the second and last Thursday in
every month. from 1 to 2 p.m.
3687 -
JOHN A.,GORWILL, RA.,. M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
IN DR. H. H. ROSS' OFFICE
Phone 5-W - Seaforth
IIIARTIN W. STAPLETON, B.A., M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
Succestsor 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 Opthal-
mei and Aural I•nstitute, Moorefield's
Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos-
pital, London, Eng. At COMMERCIAL
HOTEL, SEAFORTH, THIRD WED-
NESDAY in each month, from 2 p.m.
to 4.30 •p.m.;, also at Seaforth Clinic
(first . Tuesday of each month. 53,
Waterloo Street South; Stratford." ;
12-$7
Margaret K. Campbell, M.D.
LONDON; ONTARIO
Graduate Toronto University
Licentiate of American Board of
Pediatrics
Disease of Children
At Seai;'orth Clinic last Thursday
- afternoon each month.
3749-89
AUCTIONEERS
CHAPTER IX
SYNOPSSO •
i.4!Ee giwwes, complecated for the
celled on .of pr Anne Phillips
Who has alied theta nine
her bmalelkan fe dead Her :pian_
riedi daughter, ..Berg, quarrels
,with dher husband. Jinn, Ammse's
son, is .infatuated with tate rich
Helen Sanders. Anne suspects
that Cathy, widowed little danc=-
er, is in love with Jim. Janet,
Anne's younger daughter, is un-
happy because her well-to-do
friendoni neglect hes. She iS cona-
missioned by Tony Ryan to help
him restore the old Phillips es-
tate 'which be has bought. She
tweets Stephen Hill there and in-
vites hist to dinner.
Janet who was preparing the grape
fruit for breakfast gave, her. mother
a pawned glance. It was unlike Anne
to be le stable.
"You're worn' out with the heat.
You Ought to take a month off and
meat."
"Wit the August fur sale just be-
ginning? Be your age, darling!"
"At least," muttered Janet, "you
wont have to worry about dinner to -
,m„
"No?" murmured Anne uncertain -
"Please" melte ,yourself comfort-
able," Janet said, 'smiling, as eche
took has hat. • "I shall have to do
something about food. We have no
maid."
Steve Hili was staring around the
living room; at the • couch which
Anne had covered with flowered'
chintz, at the ivory book shelves
which Jim had built in between the
windows, , at the glass basket of
zieniaas on the : drop-leaf table by the
'easy -chair; at the colorful ticked
rugs which Janet liad made for the
painted floors.
"Auybody home?" called Anne from
the front door.
"Mother, tlhis is Mr. Ryan's friend,
Stephen Hill," stammered Janet.
Anne smiled.
"How do you do?" she said, putting
out her hand.
It was not the words; it was her
warm, gracious• tome which removed
all strain from tele situation.
"How's for eating?" demanded •Jim,
banging the front door behind him.
"My brother, Mr. Hill," said Janet.
Jim started forward with. out-
stretched hand and tripped over a
•lamip cord. "Sorry," be said: with a
grin. "I'm the blunderbuss of . the
family."
• Janet's remaining qualms were dis-
sipated by the ,unobtrusive manner
in which her, guest 'fitted in. at their
table. They sat for two .hours after
:they finished eating. Janet's ' eyes
glowing, Jim looking more relaxed
than he had in weeks; Anne leaning
foiwvard, her cheeks' bright, all of
them wafted out of themselves on
the Magic Carpet of Stephens Hill's
fascinating drawl to the far• and
strange places of the e6rth, to the
Peacock Throne and the lacy minar-
et of the Taj Mahal, to :crocodile.ln-
fested tropic• jungles, to Piccadilly en
a balmy May afternoon, to the baule-
varde of Paris on a fantastic moonlit
night.
"Isn't he wonderful?" cried Janet
when !bre- had gone. "I don't care if
he is just anther .ene of what the
Earl of Jersey calfs .Pa bit, of flotsam
on thee beach of fa .g 'Steve's 'lprec-'
ions,'
-Jim Began .to laugh.-. Ile laughed
imgroderately. "I can't help' it," he,
!pleaded, "it's just that when I -think'
of you two determined to feed the
crumbs of your divine charity to
Stephen, Hill, I get the giggles." He
HAROLD JACKSON
Specialist in Farm and Household
!loess-., •
Licensed in Huron and' Perth ern -
ties. Prices reasonable; satisfaction
guaranty'.
For information, etc., write or phone
Harold Jackson, 12 on 658, Seaforth;
It.R..1, Brueefield.
3768 -
HAROLD DALE
Licensed Auctioneer
Specialist in farm- and household
sales. Prices •reasonable. For dates
and informiatison, write Harold Dale
- Seafortb, or apply at The Expositor
Office.
12.-37
ser 'e
Sales .BOo6
are 'the best Counter
Check gooks made in,
Canada. •They cost no
more than ordirna'.ty
books and always give
satisfaction
We are agents and
will be pleaged to quote
you' ore atr' st ' 1`a or
quantity required.
Wet, 'o 'lloMe Prima? NC
THE HURON EXPOSITOR
S'eaforth, Ona°
ly-
"You must wear your new ivory
lace," Janet was saying. "It's• per-
fectly lusoiious en you."
Anne made a grimace. "If I can
get rainy mind off how many coats we
msoved today and .the minimum num-
ber of sales we bave to make by the
end of the week, and remember that
a lady at a dinner party is expected
to be a fount of inconsequential con-
versation, I'll be lucky."
There were sixteen around the
Poole dinner table -,a table that glit-
tered with . thin crested and fine sil-
ver and gleaming damask. The cen-
terpiece of exquisite pink asters com-
pletely screened Jim -from Janet's
view, but she did not nseed to see her
brothiees 'face. She knew exactly
have furious •he was, wedged in be-
tween the opulent' and extremely'de-
eolleite figure of Mrs. Henry Leigh
on one side and the gurgling Myra
West on the other.
m"Where have ,you been keeping.
yourself lately, Janet?" murmured
Gordon Key.
Anne was having a marvelous time.
She did not believe anyone could fail
to be plucked- but of the doldrums if
Stephen Hill took a notion to dispel
them.
Down the table Priscilla was lean-
ing a little forward in order to trans-
fix Janet • with a 'peculiarly brilliant
smile. "Darling," she said in a high,
carrying voice, "I do elope you are
doing right by our house."
Janet's 'h'and bad tightened on her
glass'. So they are engaged, Priscilla
and Tony, she really is agoing. to mer-
ry ;him apd live in my house, Janet
was thinking. All around the table
there was bone of those ghastly silenc-
es that happen even in able best siocie-
ty. ,
"I wouldn't know, of course," said
Janet at last in a slow painful voice,
'exactly what you'd expect of your
dream house, Priscilla."
Priscilla looked up into 'Pony Ry-
an's intscrutable blue eyes. "I -sus-
pect it's all 'right," she said. "I mean
1 could go for anything that includes
Tony."
"Sure," he murmured with an ironi-
cal gin
Janet turned a little blindly'to Gor
doen....."You asked me if I'd save you
every-. ether dance," she said q(iite
loudly, "1@!s love to."
"Thanks;" murmured Gordon. in, 'a
startledi voice. They d9,need;' CO the
radio. Janet wondered miserably
why she had ;promised Gorden so
many dances. He had asked hser for
them and she had refused. That was
wkly ,:he flooded startled when 'she
changed-' her mind, but she was cer-
tain that everyone present believed
she had invented the request mars or-
der:,:to clanisp Gordon to her side.
Janet 'went on dancing with Gor-
"He isn't the Stephen Decatur Hill!" cried Janet weakly.
"That's our penalty , for getting on."
Anne aemiled. "I mist admit we're
not so skittish as we ;were."
She rose and Myra. clutched Jim's
arm. "You can't run off and leave
me odd man."
"Ive got to take my mother
•home," said Jim firmly and added
under his breath, "thank the Lord!"
"I'm taking Mrs. Phillips home,"
observed Steve Hill pleasantly.
"Butte--" protested Jim, looking
blank and crestfallen.
To bis surprise Tony Ryan with-
out a change of expression kicked
Jim violentlyin the shin and tossed
a bunch of keys at Steve Hill. "tee
my car," he eai!di.
"Thanks," said, Steve and reached
for Anne's short • silver -brocaded even-
ing wrap.
She was laughing softly when he
tucked her into Tony's elongated
black and, silver machine. "Pm afraid
you've made . an enemy of Jennie
Leigh," 'she said. ' "She doesn't ap-
prove of middle-aged widows who can
still wear a'size sixteen dress."
Steve smiled and put the big coupe
in motion. "From the way you look
now you were a mere child• when
your husband died."
"I was twenty-nine."
"And you never remarried."
','N'o.. There.,;wrere •several hien who
tried to be,n-ice to me after I'd been
widowed a couple of years," ex-
plained Anne.
"Jim wasn't quite thirteen at the
time. He began to act strangely.
He's always thought me perfect, but
he took to staying away from home
as meteete•-an Passible. Berenice en
the dthier hand shunned her play-
mates. Janet was crying when I
came home from the store one night.
She told me that all . the kids, at
school were making fun of her anal
Jim and Berenice. The other cliie.
dmen had invented a song, you know
how children do, and they chanted it
at my childrenevery time they got
a chance. Something to the effect:
Your .mother's got a beau ! Jim and
Berenice's- mother has got a beau -o-"
Steve Hill s atithered an expletive.
"Little savages!"
"Yes," Said Anne, "but it wasn't
worth it. The candy and flowers and
theater tickets, I mean.' .
Steve Hill chttekleti and then his
•face sobered., "notelet warning me
that your children come first with
put an arm about each of them.
"Dear sweet innocents," he explain-
ed, "don't you ever read the bylines
the newspapers, haven't you ever
listened to the radio, did you ever
'tee a travel book?" • •
"Oh, my sainted , aunt! " cried Janet
weakly. "He isn't, the Stephen De -
'eater Hill!"
Jim nodded and Anne clutched his
erne "The famous war correspond-
.,, - ..
"Tile guy," said Jim, "who knows
more celebrities intimately than .any
man in the world; the guy who's) cov-
ered' every imeportant mews event for
,twenty .yetel." '
"'And we set Wan down at a Petcsh-
ed tablecloth," mourned Janet.
"I don't believe he n dnded,"" said)
Annie with that oddM^esa"thlsess note
its her voice.
e s *
The eixteen•th day .of August began
unpleertanitly for Anne She
had neat slept well the night before -
,It was very* hitt ands' she rolled and
"If only I knew eicaetly what I am
afraid of?" site tad herself. "You
clan fight anything after it comes out
into' the opedi,"
She Was nervous the nett msot'lsing.
She let the toast scorch, semaething
Shelled riot done thi y'et i , end, burn-
ed !lost hatxfGh i i!e eov'ety. n -
"The rothlCbl you can
de everything wrong on some days
ele'al�ly� eeblbnl,4a be utilized;" 8tnappbde
Arima;, ;ehatclafig at the' drill la Wig
goat
Bryaking , Down
•
We were reading fire other day a.
very wise saying --that eutleeiy calt
breek dawn ; r t takesa men not to.
Courage
The most •sublime courage I have
ever witnessed has been among that
•classeto•o poor to• know they poeaseete
ed' it, and too Bumble for the world
to discover it. --H. W. Shaw.
Success
There is no. road, to success but
through a clear, strong purpose. A
purpose underlies character, culture,
position, attainment of whatever sort.
-Munger.
Laughing and Weeping
When a friend laugh+s, it is for him
to disclose the subject of bis jloy;
when he weeps it is for me to dis-
cover the cause of his sorrow, -Jos-
eph Francois Deemrahis.
Serenity
A face which is always serene pos-
sesses a mysterious, and powerful at-
traction; sad hearts come to it as to
the sun to warm themselves again.
-Joseph Roux.
Belief
It is only from the belief of the
goodness and wisdom of a supreme
being, that our calamities can be
borne in the manner which becomes,
a man. -Mackenzie.
Lenders
Neither a borrower, nor a lenler
be; for loan oft loses both itself- and
friend; and borrowing dulls the edge
of husbandry. -Shakespeare.
Industry
National progress is the sum of in-
dividual industry, energy and upright-
ness as national decay is of individ-
ual idleness, selfishness and vice. -
Pride
Pride is not the heritage of man:
humility ,should dwell with frailty,
and atone for ignorance, error and
imperfection: -Sydney Smith.
Duties
This span of life was lent for lofty
duties, not for selfishness; not to be
whiled away in aimless dreams but
to improve ourselves a:nd serve man-
kind'. -Aubrey. De Vere.
Belief
Happy and strong and brave,, shall
we be -able to endure all th,ings, and
to do all thing's -if we believe that
every day, every hour, every mome-
nt of our life is in His handls: Van
Dyke.
you."
"Yes."
"But you can't keep them always.
Have yqu never realized how lost
you'll feel when they've left you?"
"I've been staring that in the face
for quite a while,' •said Anne in a
low voice. -
He had stopped the car outsidethe
flat building, but he sat there'motion-
less gazi'mg straight before shim, " a
crease like a. wound le tween his
eyes. •"There's no emptdnese so
,ghastly,' he said, "as having 'nobody
to go on, for. .I had a son, Anne.
•
"Yes?"
"His Mother died sio'otf after be was
born. 'I banked eve' thing on the
bevy. I was a struggling young re-
porter lei those days; having the dev-
il of a time to get'by. " X.had a• dream
of being able to retire some day; In
the meanwhile I boarded him with a
•family, good people, only •lie wanted'
to be with me,
"When the war broke out and the
(paper sent me to the front,! couldn't
see him at all, of course. After the
war I• hale my passage engaged' t3
return to New York when the office
ceb]ed: me to cover a flare-up in , th e
Far East. Then before I knew it I
wars in.Australia, interviewing the'
Anzacs. It was four years before I
saw the boy again, and I- bad lost
him.
(Continued Next Week)
•
don, wretchedly self-conscious be-
cause her friends beamed every time
they looked at_ her in bis embrace.
Not, one of tlhems would have cut in
for the world, but Tony Ryan did
without even a by-your-leave. He
merely tapped Gordon on the shout -
'der and waltzed off with Janet.
"I'.m breaking the • unwrirttem law
taking you away from that bird, or
so I've been given to understand,"
he said with. a grins.
"I can stand, it if you eau make
You! peace with your fiancee," she
strarmmier'ed.
Tony ,glanced at Priscilla who was
Showering eat them. "Do you believe
everything you hear?" he asked lee-
rily. "I've never got aroun1d yet•, to
!asking any woman to be meree'fe."
Janet had an infuriated conviction
that he was amiusing hineeeif •at her
expense. "I droner believe Priscilla
wowid take everything for granted
unless sine had ,s mmetbing pretty defe
nite to go oft," she said •heltly.
"Doeft you?" drawled Tony Ryan
as if he did not care at all what she
bell,eved
The bridge game of the elder
guests broke up at eleven when; Me.
Hairy Leigh . entail:Med with a
bleak smile that tit was time for all
good peopie to be in, beds Norma
itwas bulgy. tele
protested that •
'thank of tine eyeletig end Pretellhat
preparing to Aimee again) with Tone,
agreed with her,
"Naturally the young folks aren't
*tea -moi, ,l,o," murmured Mrs. Leigh
aunt ended poisoi 1lslY,, at Anita
A CAKE TO RACE
THE OCCASION
Since June is the month' of wed-
dings, graduations and mane birth-
days it is --also the month of ansni
versaries. - Though an anniversary is
not as .important an occasion as the
original, there is often 'mere settee
meet at'tented to the annual observ-
arice of` the date. If 'you are marking
the sacoasion with a family dinner.,• a
special 'afternoon tea or an) evening
party, you will want something spe-
cial in _the cake line.. Here is one
which was created just for much cele-
brhtions, •is a particularly grand cake,
earthy of the important role- it in to
play.
Anniversary Cake
3 cups .sifted cake flour
3 teaspoons• baking power
1/3 teaspoon: salt
4,4 cep butter or other shorteeing
2 cups stmt. •
% cup milk
to teaspoon vanilla .,
8 egg whiten, stiffly beaten+, --
Sift flour once, measure, add bak-
ing powder and salt, and, sift together
three tunes. Crean •butter thorough-
ly, add sugar gradually, and cream; to-
gether until light and fluffy. Add
flour; . alternately with milk,' a small
•amount• at a time, beadings after each
addition until sthooth. Add! vanilla.
Fold iai, egg whites quickly and three
Cug!hly. Bake int three greased nine -
inch layer pans in moderate even
(375. deg. F.) 25 minnteal or -until
donee. Spread White Moua]rtadn °!Teeth
between layers and on top and sidles
of cake. Decorate with pits Of can-
died ehserriesl anal citron, 11 desired.
This Cake meat' be turned into an
836 eneh tube paha which leas been
greased, .lined with heavy paper,' ' and
again greased, anal bak'e'd; iia a, Mow
oven (325 deg. F.) onie°4lrouti . and 30
mdnnttes, oar until droner. . Oi'! . it mal+
be baked in twig greaseedi Mee Met
lfl hes, in Moderate !chem; (350 deg.
P,) 45 mdnalbea, or Until doa0:
Expedients
Expedients are for an hour, but
principles are for the ages•., -Just be-
cause the mills descend, and the
winds blow, we teem& afford to
build on the shifting sands. -H. W,
Beecher.
Wtsdom
Wisdom whispered yesterday in
the ear of my mind, "Go, and iru thy
frailty retain still thy endurance
still make patience thy chief pur-
pose; .in stillness, grief or want, al -
way s be patient.' -Hafiz.
already con ntat titer ep Lortexte
A ret, Seehe
It is savage (ellete yet kow trap
is) that a great sscetle .et•alitees Mere
irnpreseerive if Vethizl' saerrieee, it
is.n'olea the thunders the aUIenee
time Cannte :.
Qualities
Industry, good, moral• habit's, cour-
age, faith in God and miaw-these are
the fundamental qualities in all great
,lives and great successes in the
world of men and afaira---J. R. G.
Our Will
We are too fond of our own will.
We want to be doing w+liat we fancy
Mighty things; but the great paint
is, to do small things, when called to
thein, in a right spirit. -R. Cecil.
Helpers
Help thou thy brother's :boat across;
And lo, thine own has touched the
shore.
-Persian Proverbs
Joy
Joy cannot come to us without ef-
fort on our part. We must go out
to meet it and draw it t nwuard curt
selves by the quality of our own
thoughts and ac;tione-V. M. Cottrell.
We
Our Work
are not here to play,
or drift,
We have hard work to do
to lift,
Shun not the struggle, face
God's gift.
to dream,
and: loads
it, 'tis
worry
Worry less about other folks and
their faults, and .work harder Yfto fix.
yourown shortcomings. Take a long
look at yourself; and the long look
will cause you to wince. -Van Am -
burgh;
Devotion•.
Devotion is like the candle wihich
Michael Angelo used to ta1:e do 'his
•pasteboard cap, so as not tothrow
his shadow, upon' the work in which
be, was engaged. -Phillips Brooks.
Aspirations.
Far away there in the suns'bine are
my highest aspirations. I can not
reach thein, but I can look up and
see their• -beauty, believe in therm, and
try to follow where they !coal �-
Louisa May Alcott.
Two Things
Two incontrovertible things I now
say"to you. The arse. is:. "It is al-
ways possible to hold on a little long-
er." The .second is: -"Yea never
know what • is, round the corner." -
John A. Hutton.
Duty
Be not diverted from your duty by
any idle reflections the •silly world
may make upon you, for their cen-
sures are not in your power, and con-
sequently should, not be any pant of
your concerm-Epictetus.R
Happiness
To watch the corn grow, or the
blossoms set; and draw hard breath
over ploughshare or spade; to read,
to love, to pray, are the things that
make men happy. -Ruskin.
•
Things To Lays Hold Of
What; then, • remains? Courage and
patience, and simplicity, and kindness
and last ,of . ail, ideasremain; and
these are the things to lay hold of
ate to live with. -A. C. Benson,
Adaptations
Tee whole secret of living is to
make adaptations as they are neces-
sary. Let none of us try to insist
that nothing should ever be changed.
-Jane Adams, -
Abilities
The knack of making good use of
moderate abilities secures the esteem
of men, and often raises to higher
fame than real merit --La Rodhefou
crated.
Duties
• A soul occupied with great ideas
best .performs' anal' duties; the di-
vinest views of life penetrate most
clearly into the meanest emergncies.
itn truth 'nothing is degrading wehicb
high and graceful purpose ennobles.
Truth
Say what is true and what is pleas-
ant, • Do not say what is plealsant
and not true, neat what is true and
not pleasant, -Coventry Pattnorte.
Character
Such ae are thy habitual thoughts
such• will be the character of thy
mdndi, for the mind is dyed by the
thoughts. -Marcus Aurelius.
To do a thing carefully and pre-
cisely is a good discipline in itself. -
H. A. White.
A clear consciepce is a continual
(holiday of happiness.
Opinions
New opinions are always s'us'pected
and usually opposed, without any oth-
er
ther reason, but because they are, not
White Mountain • Cream
ol,
,otlWe�p'tln;
etertene
Rates '"14.1't
--- T tour to 10.0t4.1 -:
Ea�
Close to the tlnivp pry,
Par einen+tIe�alIdlntet
Thnant.rg of °1144pitaill:
Wholesale Houser, and
the Peehtertaileiet Rebel'
ShorleneDistrict,;
A. M. POWEt,L,. PitRuInii,*
LONDON and WING
NORTH
Exeter
Hensall •
• eippen
Brncefreid;
Clintear„
Londesboro
Blyth
Belgrave
Wingham
Wdngham
Belgrave
Blyth
Lonidesboro
.Clinton
Brucefield
Kippers
Hensall -
Exeter
SOUTH
1'0.34
1!0.48
10.53''
11.00.
11.47
12.06
12.16 -
12.27
12.45
1.0
2.06
2.17
2.26
• 3.08
3.28
3.38
3.45
3.58
C.N.R. TIME, TABLE
EAST
A.M. • P.1CI. .
Godert'a]. ' 6.15 2.30
Holmhescille 6.31 2.48
Clinton 6.43 3.00
Seaforth 6.59 3.16
St. Columiban 7.05 3.23
Dublin 7.12 3.29
Mitchell 7:24• • 3.41
WEST
Miteheil 1L06 928 ,
Dublin 11.14 9.36
SeatorIh • 11.30 , 9.47
Clinton 11.45 10.00
Goderich 12.05 10.26 •
C.P.R. TIME TABLE
EAST -
P.M.
Godenich 4.20
Menset 4.24
McGaw 4.32
Auburn 4.4
Blyth 4.52
Walton 5.05
McNaugli:t 5.15
9.00
Toronto, '
W EST
A.M-.
Toronto 8.30
McNaught 12"03
Walton 12.13
Blyth 12.23
1
12.402,32
12.44
12.5a
Auburn
McGaw
Mens et
Goderteb.
3 caps sugar
1 teaspoon light corn serve
1/3' Cups boiling water
4 egg wbdtes, ,stiffly beaten:
2 teaspoons vanilla or % teaspoon
orange extract.
Combine 'sugar, born syrup and we -
ter. erisng quickly to a bell, stating
only Until sugar is dissaoleed. Boil
rapidly, without stineag; until a
Mall amount of syrup 'forme e, soft
ball in •cold writer, er spent a long
thread when dropped from till of
ever. (240 d'eg. Pe. Pour Syrup in
flue str'eani over egg wbilt'ba, beating
constantly.. Add flavoring, ConJbtnue
b daitmg with ' betery ice r 10 o 15
Minutes, or until Pi delbi'ng le cool and
of • aonttiaitetaey tlo sv reads : CiSeA tertote
'este ,ap en. *hen oro . tltii'f iter beater.
qeSNAOSI-10T GUILD
FILTERS- FOR BETTER' PICTURES
In taking this shot, a flier( was •used to reproduce the sky,. tone so that
the white smoke would stand out. Try filters -they'll improve your pic-
• tures, and add interest.
reLOR filters -simple little 'de-
l•+ vices that slip on over your
camera lens -can add a lot to the
quality and value of your snap-
shots. If you've never used filters,
now 18 a good time to start. All the
experts use them, and they'll mark
a big forward step in your own per-
sonal photography.
Slip a medium yellow K-2 filter
on your lens, load ..the camera with
any good "chrome" or "pan" film,
and you get pictures with more
natural tone values. Or, in .techni-
cal phrase, more accurate render-
ing of relative brightnesses as Betel
by the eye. Which, briefly, means
that your picture • of, any' outdoor
subject Will come closer to showing
things' as you saw them when you
-snapped the shutter.
Slits a deep yellow Gt filter on
your lens, and you'll get clearer,
better pictures of distant scenes
that would look hazy in an "unfil-
tered" shot. You'll also gett skies
that look deeper .than normal in
tone -very efieetiee- in some plebe
etre shots.
' POP spectacular affects„ very
dark skies, and exaggerated cOri•
trast, load to : earners with "pan"
_film or infra -red film, and slip a
red "A" filter on the lens. Don't use
the red filter with other types of
film than panchromatic or infra-
red; it's for thes only.
From the 'effe is described, you
can see that tern open up an
interesting n range of picture
possibilities he le -2 Is the beet
all-round filter, so start with that;
adding the G and A when you are
ready to branch out into dranaatie
"effect" shots.
Every .filter, of Course, cuts Mt
part of the light to which a film is
sensitive, so exposure must be in-
ereased accordingly. Bach filter's
"exposure fac''tor" Is constant for
each film, and exposure adjustment
is not hard to calctYiate; but tett°
easiest Method is to tele a pocket
filter guide of the dial type. These
cost but a few cents, and readily
indicate the exact' letts opening
needed in a partictilar gitttatiOn.,
'If you would'Improve your gild-
tographeternaltle uses` fif filtelare i"ilet
resnllts +Ill surprise 'YOt1-elft tacit.
'ou'll
0613: 01f
'Why' didn't. some
abut t aforat"
288 i1lt'altiI