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The Huron Expositor, 1941-07-18, Page 3
"0;19 41:, ti (Continued • fiioun.. Page 3) trailing behind it. On going to the hayfield, he first saw a mower up- side down beside a fence and farther on. he discovered Mr.. Prout in some shrubbery in a semi-conscious condi- tion. He immediately brought the In- jured man, to a • doctor in Exeter, where, he was found to be badly shak= en up and suffering- from shock, but fortunately no bones were• broken. Just what happened Mr. Prout was unable to tell.—Exeter Times -Advo- cate. Fire Destroys Kincardine Plant Fire destroyed the main block of 60 -year-old, Hunter Bridge and Boiler Works at Kincardine on Saturday in a spectacular blaze which did dam- -age in excess of $5,000. Cause of the. fire was undetermined, but William Hunter, head of the firm, said a short circuit may have started the fire, which 'got unjlier way .on the ground floor about 3,30' a.m. and spread up- wards. Smoke pouring from the roof was noticed by neighbors, who turn- ed in the alarm. The fire was already snaking rapid headway when,' firemen arrived.—Winghan Advance -Times. Resigns As Organist The resignation of Mrs. W. J. Skinner as organist of Main Street United Church was received by the music committee during the past 'Reek. Mrs. Skinner has done effici- ent work here for the past ten years. It is understood She intends to go to London to reside wih her sister, Mrs. Reid. --Mitchell Advocate. Transferred To Flesherton George Northwood, son of Mr: and Mrs. George,,, E. Northwood, of town, who has been employed as teller of the Bank of • Commerce at Auburn, has been transferred to Flesberton. He commenced his duties there last Wednesday. — Wingham Advance - Times. Thieves Break. Into Robinson's - Thieves broke into the premises of Ezra 'and W. F. Robinson on 'Pelee - day night helping themselves to about $20 worth of tobacco•and about 10 gallons of gasoline. Entrance was made by breaking a window. Con- stable Frank Fermat had seen the three men loitering about the' prem- ises but on his approach they drove away in a grey car. He notified Con- stable J. M. Douglas after investigat- ing.—Mitchell .Advocate. • . Watch For Fellow -Fireman Pte. Charles Robertson, of the Anti - Aircraft Battery, Guelph, while home for the week -end, was pleasantly sur- prised by fellow members of.the Mit- chell Fire Brigade when they pres- ented him with a 'fine wrist watch., on the occasion of his last leave. Fire Chief Walter Bennett, who made the presentation, extended him the well wishes of the men with whom he had 'been associated' for sonie time.—Mit- , •chel1 Advocate. Flying Glass Enters Lad's Eye Little Billy Baxter, son. of Mr. and Mrs. Redvers Baxter, Fullerton, is in Stratford Hospital, where he under- went an operation on his eye 'yester- day morning. The little lad was op- ening a bottle on Sunday when it broke, a splinter entering one of his eYes. His Mother is remaining at the. hospital with him for a few days.— Mitchell Advocate. He is the truly courageous man who neved desponds.—Confucius. •:a very Packet of \\ WILSON' \ FL PADSJ WILL Kitt ten"'F:ff. 'THAte`Y•' SEVERAL DOLLAR WJRTH/ of ANYOTHERILYMUT:Fir/ 1 /'it Beet. ofali $y iciltare. 1V©etitn, `quick, sure, eheapi Aiela your gist Grocer or General Store. Eff? 8 N'FL''Y 'P . COMA • During his Western inspection tour Prime Minister W. L. Mackenzie icing was greeted in Regina by two full-blooded Indan Chiefs of the Peapot Reserve in the Qu'AFpelle Valley. Ile,is shown here ex- amining a Great War decoration proudly worn by Chief .Harry Ball, Who served with the 195th Regi- ment and lost a leg at Vimy Ridge.- Chief Abel Watetch (centre) was also a private with the 195th and was gassed at'Hill 70 in 191. Mr. King joined the Chiefs in smoking the pipe of peace after in- specting the„ all -Indian platoon o• •a Regina regiment. All recruits iv this, platoon come from the Pea - pot Reserve and are followng the Great War example of their chiefs. WESTERN CHIEF GREETS PRIME MINISTER • I . Fourier Huronite in U. S. Favours Help for Canada Weaverville, Calif., July 8;" 1941. The Huron Expositor: Gentlemen: To show you what some of us think of Lind'ber'gh, Wheeler, Nye, et•alios, I enclose here- with a bit of 'rhyme, which, you are at liberty to publish, if you so desire. Though born in the United' States, in Wisconsin, h was "raised'.' in Hur- on County, Ontario, at what was then Blake. Went to school in the old No. 9, Hay and Stanley schoolhouse un- der teachers Hicks, McAndrew, Hee- demon, the two Crasswellers, Roder- ick Ross and others. Under the lat- ter studied for and passed third-class non-professional teachers' examina- tion in 1885. Ross was afterwards a dentist at Seaforth. All •honor and thanks to him, from me, if he is still alive. About 1888 and 1889 naught school at 'Dashwood, and was correspondent from there for The Expositor. While in Washington; D.C., in the spring -of 1928 I ran across :and read The Expositor in the !Congressional Library. I have not been in Hurdn County for 46 years. If you care to publish this, coavey my regards to the old-timers. I shall be at this address till about August 5th, and should be glad to hear from any old acquaintances. My sister's grandson, from Winnie •aw "KL t" i rile ilial!. it ' M He i %AV'ERLE"Y Located on tillgoir.lepadkia Ave:" g,. s ett,C0 oge;°St V Eati iVeldttg Pacllltiss;' ConvenI $t til'eligh itjta-1- 0 �, .:'s>7:S til.,. * 4e i ' 1101 ,"i5.$1 Sus Close • efi* ` tBuildi'tthilvs�e t#Y. Paell'. ,It„ tit(IIt,,, Ms iim'Liaf Gardens, T h +t iiiki r�fro" ,1Hattpl9'r,: . WOOS,Oh* )eal'nilH. 'le.. • a� the shlenbe. Retell DIIt1iCL . A. illi; I tiWYEU.t�,, tlam' ri peg, is now with the Canadian army in .,Britain. Good luck to you and all Canada, in crushing Hitler! If you use the rhyme, will you kindly send me a copy of The Ex- positor containing it. l My sister, in Winnipeg, sends me a copy from time to time, if she knows my_ address, but of late I have movedround a lot, from The Pas, Menito a, to Mex- ico City, in Old Mexico: Carleton Sherritt, who staked the Sherritt-Gordon Mine, Northern, Mani- toba, was it, first cousin of mine. His father, Aaron Sherritt, was born in Huron County, near Blake. John Sherritt, member of your Dominion Parliament about 40 years ago, was my uncle. Other uncles were Thos. Sherritt, of Blake; George Sherritt, of Grand Bend, and William Sherritt of Hillsgreen. All my aunts and uncles on both the Sherritt and the Styles side are now dead; • I am 72, but .in good health, and with lots of fun ahead -yet, I hope. 2 Of late yea_.s I have followed! the prospecting game —have not struck it rich yet, but en.- joy n-joy the 'healthy outdoor life. I spent two years northeast of. The Pas .n Northern Manitoba, "North . of 53," in 1928, 29 and 30. • ' A. J. STYLES. Weaverville, California. LAMENTABLE, BUT LAUGHABLE This world is an amusing place, and, always you can find .Soiree fact to jolt your funny -bone, and thrill your mirthful mind, 'Assuming you possess one 'such, not all folks do, you' know, Some take themselves too seriously,' inviting lots of woe. One case I have in mind is this: Lindbergh flewo'er the sea In nineteen -twenty-seven, from New York to gay Paree. His plane was of the latest type, it functioned without fail, For thirty' -three long hours its propeller fanned a gale. The !makers' of that early plane still merit much of praise, But planes are ten times better now than in those ancient days. The youth was lauded loud and long, the plane we soon forgot, One proof of what I said above, this world's a funny spot. Within a month C. Chambeirlain, who bore a greater load, A longer flight had made on the New York to Berlin road, A greater feat, but later, so no prize, small fame, he gained, A case where, by a later start, was lesser luck attained. And then came Wrong -Way Corrigan, and grabbed two sheets of tin, And nailed them to a drygoods box, then boldly bounded in, And flew that crude contraption clear across the startled main, Just for sheer love of doing it, nor thought of fame or gain. And now the lady, Jaqueline (Miss Cochran, as a maid,) To serve her country, pilots planes across to Britain's aid, In• less than one-third of the time consumed by Lindbergh's flight, And through •a deadlier danger -zone, from Nazis! in the, night. And Challiberlaiet, with competence and modesty combined, Now ferries planes to fighters who dare Hitler and his kind. But Lindbergh, whom we honored once, can'tstand prosperity, " And fails his country in this hour, andene'er a help is he. He sides with these wbo wish us ill, the murderous Nazi greed, And knocks our government, instead of boosting when there's•need; He takes himself too seriously, and makes himself a tool For artful awful Adolph; who can use a - pliant fool. •r"" He missed the bus to further fame, because of love of self, His seeming brilliant future is behind him on a shelf. When founts of fame go -dry for them, how strange it is to see Small-minded mengo drink at swamps of notoriety, And strive to smear their slimy muck on others of their race, More worthy souls, • whose cleaner tastes avoid that stagnant place! That goes for Lindbergh, Wheeler, Nye, and others of their types, Who in their self -exalting would pull down the Stars and Stripes To help Herr Hitler to enslave the whole of human kind. Strange are tire working of the selfish pride -perverted mind! The municipal •council of 'Osborne Township met on July llth with all members present. Minutes of meet- ings held on 'June 14th and 17th were read and adopted. Correspondence was received as fol- lows;, of Highways, warning municipalities that care trust be exercised in subscribing to iIknemployment insurance unless mun- ielpalities are assured that employees Will be eligible for benefits. Also warning that any motor fuel used In road construction, rho matter where, tax of 8 cents „per Must pay y gal- )on. rteciuest from Geo. Wright for PAY for cleaning tile on his own pro- Perty, $.10.40,;• retluest refueled. "Cbrn- mittee on Glenn-SOmerv#;lle Municipal 1'ilra'In reprinted 'the contract let to lbw -Drury * Con:4ttueion Co. and the IWOrk of exda'('ation completed. Aeat- i`gg upon releaa'e 'orders from 'p. it t dttersok, it was ree'Ved by itodgert arid! Ctouper, that teeny Canstrtldtien Minute .. Miniatures Colonel Oliver Mowat. Biggar is chairman of the Canadian Section of the Permanent Joint Board of De- fence. (Canada -United States). His appointment to that Board along with, officers of the Army, Navy and Air Force, and one of the Assistant Un- der Secretaries of State for External Affairs, follows in, the tradition that has established' the unique spirit of the International Joint Commission. On this Commission ,Canadians and Americans have long sat rotrnd the table as one homogenious body of men, considering the problems alfnt before them es technician _ : 'udg_ es seeking equitable so m ions, not as rival teams of intriguing natianalists trying to outwit each other. Biggar is solid Scot right through, his father's grandfather emigrated here from Kirkcudbright, Scotland, in 1792, and his mother's from Caith- ness. 'He is the oldest grandson of Co. be 4paid $667.948, and T. 11. Patter i fl4'. $105:0 4 for, survey,' report and indpection. Carried. Date for open- ing and consideration ,of report on the proposed: work on the Centralia Drain initiated in the Township of Stephen, was set for the 9th day of Au'ust. Clerk was instructed .to not- ify parties affected accordingly. The Clerk was also instructed to publish notice in the Exeter Times -Advocate requesting farmers to cut the weeds on roadsides adjacent to their farms and to submit account of their time to the Road Superintendent. Relief Officer reported relief furn- ished during June to unemployable amounted to $29.50. Treasurer re- ported. receipts, during June, $410.52; balance of cash, July lst, $7,736.80: On 'motion by Mabel! and Beery,' the following aecdu'nts were 1 -,paid: Road superintendent's vouchers, $6,- 146.22; -relief and athninistration, $31.50; drainage, $797.95. ry Council adjourned to !deet on Aug - tat . 9, 1941.—A, 'W. Morgan, Clerk, ;len te A Weekly RevI w 2f •peyelgprente oto; the Horne Front •- 1: Announced that OoVerntrlent fes. vors post of living bonus for workers in preference to increati.e In basin. rate of wages, Baste of bonus: 5 cents per week for each. rise of one Point in cost of living except .where juvenile or female workers earn less than fifty cents per hour in which ev- ent they reeeive one per cent. of their basic 'wage rate. 2. Canada makes '. macre Canadian dollars available to Great Britain, Authority given to increase advance of -$325,000,000 to $400,000,000. Ad - vane is to enable Great' Britain to puirchase war munitions, raw mater- ials and foodstuffs in Canada. 3. Dominion Bureau of Statistics cost of living index rose from 108.6 in April to 109.4 in May. In May last year, the index stood at 104.9. (Base 1935-1939 equals 100). 4. All radio stations' on the air bases from Edmonton tq the Yukon are to be finished this fall. Construc- tion of the bases was recommended by the United States -Canada Joint Defence Commission. 5. Canadian i m p o r t s increased $185,000,000 to $530,360,000 in the first five 'months of 1941 in comparison with 1940. • 6. Revenue from income tax dur- ing the first three months of the fis- cal year (April -June inclusive) total- led $238,578,197 against $117,891,134 received during the corresponding period of last fiscal . year, a rete in- crease of $120,687,063. 7. Owing to the increase in metal- lurgical use of coke and heavier in- dustrial• demand for war production in"the United States and Canada, sup- pties of coke for domestic use will be considerably reduced next winter. 8. Next group of" men called for four month compulsory military training begin their term July 31st. 9. Defence of Canada regulations, inregard to persons interned, amend - red in accordance with recommenda- tions of special committee of the House of Commons. Three -men ad- visory committees . •replace the one- man bodies row hearing apopals,.-the chairman to be a .person who holds or has 1'eld high judicial office. A ee,rscn detained under the regulatione must be informed of the general grounds on which he is detained am notice of his detention given to tis family or such person as he may re- quest, where possible and not con- trary to the public interest. COLONEL OLIVER MOWAT BIG - GAR,. K.C.,Chairman of the Cana- dian Section- of the Permanent Joint Bard of Defence (Canada - United States). the late Sir Oliver Mowat, Postmas- ter -General in 1854, and Premier of Ontario from 1$73 to 1896 and later Minister of Justice and Lieutenant Governor of Ontario, and of James' Lyons Biggar, a Member of Parlia- ment from 1873 to 1879. - - Colonel Biggarwas born in Toron- to 64 years ago,' educated there at Upper Canada College, University College, and Osgoode Hall. He was called to the Ontario Bar in 1901, but soon 'afterwards moved to Edmonton where he carried on his private prac- tice until,. World War One broke out. Already a lawyer of sound reputation with his full share of publis seiCvice, Member of the Board of Governors of the University of Alberta and the Board of Mie k?dmon$ in Hospi i,' he tvhtdx etalnlopieejos ,a tEdieltel esti-, r.'ib• the 101at Regiment, Edux ofrfOn 1i'usg- tiers and soon afterwards called to Headquarters, Military District 13, at Calgary, as Deputy Judge Advocate General, From that duty he was summoned to Ottawa"£o act as mem- ber of the Military Service Council set tip to administer the Military Service Act. He was made Judge Advocate General of genet% in 1918, promoted to Lt. Colonel, becoming a full Colonel. the following year: After the war, Sir Robert Borden took him to Europe as one of the Canadians delegation to the peace conference. In Paris be ' acted as British Secretary to he Com mission on • the re spolleibilitiee for the war where .laWeers nf.the'ltighest distinc- tion hi their '•r espeetfir'd coiiiitriea ' de hated fundamental gttestiens of pub, lie law, Bich as whether the Allies had a right to Lang the Kaiser!, Back, from Europe, "`IOolonei 'Biggar organized the original Air Depart- ment for Canada tis.''iried—Chairrman of 10. Contracts awarded by the 'De- partment of - Munitions and Supply during the week ended June 27 num- berer 3,574 and, totalled $30,710,497. Larger contracts were: Construction, Atlas Construction Co. Ltd., Montreal, $5,349,000; shipbuilding, Dufferin Ship- building Co.', Toronto, $2,499,600; shipbuilding, Port Arthur Shipbuild- ing Co., Por-t•Arthur, $3,840,000; land transport, General Motors, Oshawa, $1;416,53L 11. To meet a. scarcity of. qualified masters, mates and; engineers for ships, order -in -council passed permit- ting the Minister of Transport to au- thorize ships to sail from Canadian ports with, persons holding qualifica- t:ons one grade lower than those stip- ulated in the Canada Shipping Act. 12. Construction work proceeding onmore` than 2,000 houses, stal hous- es an dother accommodation in ten centres from Halifax to Fort William, for v: their contracts have been aw .- d - ed by Wartime Hous'ng Ltd. Con- tract also let for 1.50 houses in P:vey Spar d qui Nobel, Ont., ivhile other e;:- tensive housing projects being initiat- ed in Kingston, Hamilton • (addition- al), Oshawa, Frankfo+rd, Hull, Valley- field,. Quebec City and Amherst, N.S. Projects involve commitments to d .te of approximately $9,500,000. Wartime Housing Ltd. is a govern- ment-owned company. any' a hamlet, road Took :the wa)r Icy hteari Like a <danc€ng child 'with Huriont, ie a naive enchanted, All the.hongra bring7 t4! thee;' Bacak an iortg the mapiee, cJucenly, Up the hills all, decked like thrones., Robins sing their motes •serenely', Brooklets Murmur o'er the stones. Nowhere is there found ' a copy -- Fertile ,Selds end stately homes; Tonle when the lake ie cholypy, Charnrwhere'er the Maitland roan4s.. Back where morning comes too early, And the golden day's too short; Hayfields out and raked so curly, Wagons hauling loads like sport, Here are men of iron -muscle, Women proud of grit and tan; Long as eye can see, they hustle, Keeping Huron in the van. Back again! Oh what a favor! Every road is lined with joy; Breakfast has the same old! flavor, Kindly faces, grace employ.. All tqo short the fleeting hours, Merely time to wave a hand; Shed a tear upon the flowers. Whereewa grave breaks the sand. AUSTIN L. BUDGE, Hamilton. AN OLD BELGRAVE BOY CKNX — WINGHAM 920 Kca. 326 Metres WEEKLY PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS Friday, July 18-8 a.ni„ Scott Reid, news; 12 noon, 'Canadian Farre and Home Hour; 6.40 p.m., Guy Lomba:- do Orchestra; 8.30, Gulley -Jumpers. Saturday, July 19-8.05 a.m., OKNX Breakfast Club; 11, Saturday Morn- 'ing Frolic; 6.15 p.m., Scott Reid, News; 8, Barn Dance, Walkerton. Sunday, July 20-11 a.m., Ohurch Service; 1.15 p.m., Gene Autry; 6, Gracie Fields Varieties; 6.4,5, Organ Music. Monday, July 21 — 9 a.m., Piano Ramblings; 11.15, "Cecil and Sally"; 1 p.m., The Song Shop; 7, Telephone Tunes; 8.30, OKNX Raneb Boys. Tuesday, July 22-7.45 a.m., "Hymn Time"; 10.30, Church of the Air;; •6 p.m., Wilf Carter; 8, "Captains of In- dustry." Wednesday, July 23 — ..7.45 a.m., Strike Up the Band; 10; Scott Reid, news; 5.30 p.m., .Kiddies' Carnival; 8.30, Clark Johnston. Thursday, July 24-8 a.m., Scott Reid, news; 12.30 p.m., War Savings Club; 6, Venus Concert. the Air Board under the Hon. A. L. Sifton. He takes particular pride in seeing what. his "baby" bas today grown up to be. Hon. Hugh Guthrie paid Biggar a great compliment in 1920 by asking him to become Canada's first Chief Electoral Officer, a post made inde- pendent of party control like that of a judge, th'e incumbent being respon- sible only to Parliament, not to the Government of the• day. That Col. ;Biggates appointment received the approval of the whole House of Com - Mons testified that he possessed the judicial outlook envisioned in the ap- pointee by the new legislation. . While Chief Electoral Officer 'Col.• Biggar continued to act as vice-cetair- man of the Air Board. He also serv- ed for a time as )egad advisor to the Department of External Affairs, and was chairman of the Interdepartmen- tal Committee on the St. Lawrence Waterway. Though be could, have settled down as Chief Electoral Of- ficer till the ripe. old age for retir- ing, he resigned in 1927 to become a partner in the law firm of Smart and Biggar in Ottawa. In bis interesting professiofiai career in the capital 'he handled a num'b'er of large and in- tricate propertyand constitutional eases.The Proviice of Alberta chose him to act as counsel in the recent famous ,caress of .the Social Credits Act and the Bank Taxation Act. lie lost the cases but not the confidence of the 1 roVlrice. Ile aerVed as Conn- ed for the Senate Committee on the railway slinatiob in 1938 and 1939. ; .Bed.oste $1:4.Y am_ a i�� alapa to fo In:: e; to fry' Ktrui ebe`n`rSalts 1s„did #1S and 1 an4'most"hhaia y key, after a short time 1 f it th relief. f ro tin ed tak l el ; till 1 felt anyself ite' betteir,:and,; I elan 1.fet eart d I did twenty ye04:4•1:43•119".ar `rhe seyerai. salts' in 'Krusehe combine aid in promotingregula'tt1< and •help eleanso your system. eae day of .poisons and impurities. Mi lions take• the "little daily dose." A all, drugstores. Economy Economy is the .good genius whosq presence guides the footsteps of, eY- Ky. prosperous-man,,—Dr. Wise. Music If I were to .begin life again, 1. would devote it to music. It is the only -cheap and unpunished rapture upoa earth.—Sydney Smith. Duty ' It is every ,manus duty to dliseipline and guide himself with God's tteiP Guided 'by the good example and good works -of others, - we must yet rely mainly upon , our own efforts.. --5: Smiles. Kindliness Kindliness wears well, looks well and will be remembered long after ;he: ,prism of politeness or the cqn- I.leidon of courtesy has faded away. —Vanburgh. Ability Natural ability can 'almost compete :,ate for the want of every kind of cultivation; but no cultivation of the mind can make up for the want at natural ability. Others Others are affected by what I ani ::nd say and do. And these othesis have also their sphere of influence. So that a single act of mine may spread in widening circles through a nation or humanity.—W. E. Channing. CdT COARSE FOR THE PIPE CUT FINE FOR CIGARETTES The March of f Science TELEPHONE RESEARCH The soft notes of a distant flute, the roar of the crowd, the rumble of thunder, and terrific crescendoes unequalled by any orchestra — all coming from a stage unpeopledby any players whatsoever — were presented re- cently by Bell Telephone Labora- tories hi a demonstration of its latest development in sound re- cording — stereophonic reproduc- tion of "enhanced" music. By this new technique, sound can be re- produced with a clarity, range, and spatial sense hitherto un-, known. For example, the usual motion picture sound track cannot record the full rangeof a large orches- tra. In the stereophonic process a special soundtrack -is provided to -'make a nee" of the overtones lost and re -introduce them when the record is played back. The listener hears every sound he could have heard when the or- chestra itself was playing. Secondly, the sounds are picked up by: three microphones placed. near each section of th$ orchestra, and thus "each group of instru- ments is recorded on a sound' track of its own. In reproduction, loudspeakers are located on the stage in the places occupied by the original sections of the or- chestra. The listener hears - - let us say—the drums from the left, and the flutes from the right, and the other instruments in be- tween. The whole width, breadth, and depth of the orchestra is re- produced. • Finally, before being played to an audience, the stereophonic rec- ord is heard by the orchestra con- ductor. Seated at a control board, he v ries the volume or a tone ef the mereic as he desires. The vol- :ume can be increased by' as !much as ten times over that of the loudest orchestra. Pianiasinii, On the other hand, are the merest Hirsh. The recording, is actually better than the original perform- ance. IMPROVES RECORDING How does it happen that te• le- phone engineers should make im- provements in recording? .As a matter of fact, the association be- tween the telephone and the phonograph dates back to the earliest days of the latter. Thomas Alva Edison invented the phono- • graph, but • it . was Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the tele- phone, who first perfected the talking machine for commercial p Moreover,utelephone ' research discovered the orthophonie prin- ciple, which revived the record industry from the great slump of 1924. In the old days, .the power off the voice or music alone drove the stylus by which a sound track was engraved on the master rec- ord. Even the tremendous voice of a Caruso, however, could not make a satisfactory recording `by this method. Then, Hell Telephone Laboratories; studying speech in all its aspects with a view to im- proving telephone transmission, came forward with the rtho- phonic •principle. By this -method, Sounds to be recorded are first picked up by microphones, and powerful electric currents from these microphones drive, the re- cording stylus, which. is thus able to catch all the delicate overtone's formerly¢ missed. Recently, the telephone en- gineers came through with still another improvement —"bill and dale" recording. On the old tY10e of, phonograph reeord, the needle bumped from side .tib side in the ggrroove,' prOiductng ''blurred and dragging izlusleal votes. On the new type of hill and dale record, the needle slides ;up and down in cad o *mono thegroove ttn f st � ty b" from side ,1 fide. The ooye•is 'inath nattaketer than fornieray, 445-. that ret e,, t ' •C,;; W•l r si en eta' ied1 rrrore, burred n notes are eliminb t recorded is •atilt ul Na, 7 of A seeks ,jtlrrpared iso 11 wi' G. ,Ou, Jof the Br1J' T,leAtb e.Cem ity aptibodg, ii uk Y��