HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1942-07-24, Page 7Barristers, Sa11ct,4Z,, P1.c,., , t... -
Raleigh D. MCGi !ell . .11•.01-0.4n Bays
.'1001,Q3.0.1341 mss.
.11. MCLEAN
- Barrister! Solicitor, Etc.
BEAFORT :. !,. - -
Branch Ql los
Keenan
Phone 1
ONTARIO
- Hensel ,
Seaforth
Dios%
173
M DICAL
SERFORT1I CLINIC
DR, E. A. MoMASTER, M.B.
Graduate of University of Toronto
PAUL L. BRADY, M.D.
Graduate of University of Toronto
The Clinic 18 fully: egU1Iped with
!complete and modern Xray and other
up-to-date diagnoBtie and therapeutics
equipment.: •
Dr. F. J. R. Forster, Specialist in
diseases of the ear, eye, nose' and
throat, will the at the Clinic the first
Tuesday in every month from 3 to 5
p.m.
Free Well -Baby Clinic will be held
on the second and last Thursday in
every month from 1 to 2 p.m.
8687 -
JOHN A. GOFLWILL, B.A., M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
IN DR. H. H. ROSS' OFIPICE
Phone 6-W - -Seaforth
MARTIN W. STAPLETON, B.A., M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
Successor to Dr. W. 0. Sproat
Phone 110-W .. Seaforth
DR. F. J. R. FOR.STER
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Graduate In Medicine, University of
Toronto: •
Late assistant New York Opthal-
med and Aural Institute, Moorefield's
Bye and Golden Square Throat Hos-
Spttal, London, Eng. At COMMERCIAL
HOTBL, S1 APORTH, THIRD WED-
3QESDAY in each month, from 2 p.m.
to 4.30 p'n'i.; also at Seaforth Clinic
Bret Tuesday of each month. 53
Waterloo 9Street South, Stratford.
1247
AUCTIONEERS
HAROLD JACKSON
Speelalist :in Farm-and.,Household
Bales.
Licensed in Huron and Perth Coun-
ties. 'Pisces reasonable; satisfaction
guaranteed,
For information, etc., write or phone
Harold Jackson, 14 on 661, Seaforth;
E R. 4,- Seaforth.
8768 -
`EDWARD W. ELLIOTT
Licensed Auctioneer For Huron
Iorrespondence promptly answered.
Immediate arrangements can be made
for Sales Date at The Huron Exposi-
' tor, Seaforth, or by calling Phone 203,•
Clinton.. Charges moderate and satis-
,faction guaranteed.
8829-62
LONDON and WINGHAM.
Exeter
NORTH
A.M.
10.34
10.46
DDen 10.52
Brueefleld 11.00
Clinton 11.47
SOUTH
P.M.
Minton
Brucefleld
K:ippen
Henson
Exeter
C.N.R. TIME TABLE
Io!-Ir..r !M
i'inl1.14„
9 1•
CiH�fuwwPTEafliX
8YNQPR�+13-.,--"
A man identified as Joseph
Blinn is found- drowned in the
Hudson .river near Albany, N. Y.
i 11031 was i 1suirect by the Protec-
tive Life 2nenrance company, and
his ibeneflciary is a- man named B.
13 •Twombley who lives in Troy.'
The company's Albany agent, Car-
lin, identifies the body, and the
insurance money is paid to
Twombley. But Jerry Glidden,
suspecting that Slim was murder-
ed, gone to Albany to investigate.
Learning that Carliin has gone to
Maine, he goes on to the little
Pennsylvania mining town of Ir-
onlburg to see an "Angela Shun."
She turns out 'to be an. ugly re-
cluse of a woman who lives in a
shack near the abandoned. "Break
0' Day" iron mine. Rose Walker,
granddaughter of the owner of
the mine, runs the local store and
post office. When a ,man regis-
ters at the hotel as 13; B. Twomb-
ley of Portland, Maine, Jerry
wires Mart McDowell at Troy
for information about Twombley.
He sees Twombley talking to
Rose, and later he sees him
again at Angela's shack. He re-
turns to the post office for the
reply to his wire,''whieh confirms
his hunch that this Twombleyl•is
Slinn's beneficiary, As he looks
up after r-eading the telegram, he
sees Angela Slinn watching him
from the doorway. Twombley,
however, has not yet returned
when Jerry sat down to dinner
alone in the -hotel dining room.
With the second cup of alleged cof-
fee, a possible explanation occurred
to the solitary diner. Jerry asked
the waitress for Rose's address.
She smiled knowingly.' "Las' house
on your left.",
"Between here and that old mine?"
. "Yeh. All the strange gents as
comes here asts where she li'Ves. But
it's no igoot; Miss Rose don't take up
vis nopobdy. She ain't soft, she
ain't." '
- Glidden, heartily agreed; -But- he -
wondered if Twombley hadn't, any-
how, called there• on his way back
from. Angie's. Jerry remembered the
house, a neat one, fronted by a lawn
and flower garden.
"What time did Mr. Twombley
leave the hotel this afternoon?"
"This after'? Why, him, and Miss
Rose was .on the poach togesser for
a while and then . , , But they was
-talkin' business, Mr. Glidden. Nus -
sing else, they wasn't."
'What makes you think that?"'
The waitress flushed.
"'Cause I know Miss Rose," she
loyally protested, "and 'cause" -she
less readily concluded -9I had to pass -
close ,to .'em, couple o' times. an' I
heard dollars mentioned•• like."
"All right., When did this .travel-
ling salesman leave the hotel?"
"Most soon's she • did."
Jerry, fought down' an unmanly•em-
otion. •
"With her, do you; mean?"
"Oli,•nad'-' The'waitress tossed her
3.08
3.28
3.38
3.45-
3.58
EAST
A.M. P.M.
Ooderich .. . 6.15 2.30
Holmeeville .. 6.31 2.48
Clinton 6:43 . 3.00
Seaforth 6.59 3.22
Bt. Columban ........ • 7.05 3.23
•Dublin 7.12 3.29
Hitchen 7.24 3.41
WEST
7iiitchell 11.06
11.14
I lieforth 11.30
Minton :11.45
Goderioh. 12.05
•
9.28
9.36
9.47
10.00
10.25
C.P.R. TIME TABLE
ioderlc'b
I4ieneset 4.46
McGaw 4.54
Auburn 5.03
3iilyth • - - ' . 5.14
1N•alton, 5.26
IsdcNaught • , 5.37
Toronto 9:45
'101 111
Moreato
P.M.
0114araiiih. -;••• sHilrobliete•O• 1 12.04
1?G`eiitoa ....,..•,..c....., 12.15
••• .r.e.•4.b8'•.4'
12.28
L1O1i11Yy,�•1 e'•.• •12.3!
ikeic4:1141.44446444446.4111.1144•J - b�iYVV
at 4.b tl12'/�1,`4j�,,y
i n.4..'..••.irifi,rr •'
EAST
P.M.
4,40
;Glidden studied, the ceiling "YOU
talk too rlaucl} Still, it's a common
disease. So do L. -Keep the money."
She was going tor- "I'm that sor-
ry of 1 told him anysing I hadn't
ought have," -
"Did you tell him I showed this
Twombley , interest entirely after he
catne;.into the hotel?"
It wasn't. It wits half otherwise.
But he wouldn't correct her mistake
for worlds,
"It's all right, IMiss-whatever your
name is. Not guilty, hilt don't do it
again,. see;"
She nodded fervent vows of •obedi-
ence, •
They might still laugh at him in
the office; but he was going to write
them the facts ascertained so far.
He went into the public room and
wrote. The light was bad, his foun-
tain -pen needed filling, and the qual-
ity of host Hasler's free ink wasn't
a 'hundred ,plus. Moreover, as be
wrote, his ' array of "facts" began to
look like a string of broken coinci=
deuces pieced out by ,unsupported
guesses.
Yet he had to unburden himself.
He ,tore up his failures; he wrote
MacDowell:
"Dear Mart:
'Thanks. I'll not forget, but you'll
have to wait a while. That bird's
-trying to get something for nothing,
and I'm trying ,to get something for
something. If I win, there'll be a
beat for -.you. But don't spill a. line
till I wire again.
Yours truly,
^ Jerry.
Not what he had meant to 'do. Not
half what he wanted to say But he
was . afraid that, if he wrote the of-
fice, 'stupid Steinhardt would make
•some pacifistic move calculated to
drive the quarry to cover, while
Lightner laughed -and he was afraid,.
too, that, addressed to Mac.Dowell, a
full narrative of existing suspicions'
might tempt the temporary journalist
into too precipitate print. The re-
sult he stamped. He addressed it.
" Mr. Twombley not back yet, Mr.
Hassler?"
"No, -ire ain't;.an.i!m now beginnin'
to git some worriet myself."
"I'm going for a stroll before I turn
in. I'll keep an ,eye open. Where's
the•nearest mail box?"
"Aain't but -one. Ofer there on the
porch post of the store."
Thither Jerry went. . The 'moon'
hadn't yet risen, but there were many
stars. ,He found the box -dropped
his report into it.
"Hello, Jerry!" said ' a mocking
voice near bp.
"Hello!". -
That return. of her greeting leaped
forth spontaneously; then he bit his
under lip. Rose was leaning out of
a window, her arms extended for sei-
zure df its • shutters; an appealing
pose for a painter. Jerry wished with
all his heart that he did not mistrust
her part in whatever plot Twombley
was pursuing.
"I'm sjlust. shutting up shop for the
night," she said.
Jerry's regard was . a'• gaze as -un--
swerving as his emotion would per -
"What were y.ou talking to that man Twombley about?"
head.
"But he followed her?'
"He went up tjie road, same's
done. But dot foller'n bdr.1'
This was getting better.
"How do you know that?"
"'Cause I know her."
Loyalty above logic, perhaps, but
none the less satisfactory.
"About three o'clock, I suppose?"
"Someveres there."
"Listen." Glidden pulled at a pock-
et. "That all you know about this af-
ternoon? Another dollar• gone.
The waitress glanced at her palm's
new contents and blushed scarlet.
Nothing can better describe the Isola-
tion of Ironburg than the mere state-
ment that the local hotel employees
were still on distant terms with tips.
"Well, there's just this, an' I guess
A.M. II oughtn't fer to'Ve done it. But 'fore
8.30 he started out -Mr. Twombley, I
mean -he est m^e who you was an'
what fer you was here, an' I tol'.him
6 didn't lcnoW nussing, but now you'd
ast me yet about them old dead,
'pwombleys
an' said -You know you
did when you heard his name -you
used to know a Twombley in TroY.4
she
• And he had hiss. reward, Soon
•though not too soon -the door" peen-
ed. She stood atit with that smile
of the modern young 'W'oman w. ph
iinpudently transforms an insult ry to
a peace offering. .
"You're still here? It was nice of
you to wait: Now you may walk as
far as my house with me."
They walks under the- stars, up
the .silver ribbon of the turnpike.
There . was no other' person promen-
ading Ironburg's sole 'thoroughfare.
Woodland scents fell sweetly from
the hills, '
Something inside Jerry bade hien
abandon his sulking. He fought it.
Anyhow, she would ' have to speak
first.
Silence.
She would' have to!'
The village possessed no street-
lamps, and most of its houses were
dark. Through the fanlight above
the' entrance to one of them, how-
ever, a tardy luster showed, and when
these. strollers reached it, the girl
seized his shoulders and brought him
about so that he had to look her in
the face.
"What's -wrong?" he asked.
"That's what I want to find out,"
she .answered. "And if you won't
tell me, I've got to look 'for it."
She studied him as - she would
some staple of her store's wares gone
oddly wrong.
Perhaps it was this apparent sin-
cerity - perhaps her touch' on his.
shoulders = but immediately his
doubts fell away. Ile was ashamed
of them! Anunreasonable change
of front -complete, though.
As he returned her level look, . he
could not a minute longer mistrust
her.
That frank face! Surely its dark
eyes hid nothing ,discreditable. The
kindly mockery of its smile could be
directed .only against his disordered
fancies.
Partially releasing him, she led
him, across the road, where a low
gra8sy bank provided a resting place.
"Sit down here, I'm going to make
you talk!" "
"What," he inquired, "do you want
me to tell you?" .
-- -"The truth,- if you -k isa c hew- '
He ,mustn't. He guessed too little
of it, and until he had guessed more,
he owed it to his chances with the
P.L.I. to keep what he did guess from
her, however innocent she undoubted-
ly was. "No, I mustn't,"' he said.
Strategically, it -had been better to
invent a subterfuge. Quickly • she
bent toward him. By the -starlight,
he saw her brows .contract. It was
she who! now suspected.
"What's that?" Her voice fell sev-
eral notes in the scale. "Why must-
n't you?",
Well, rve got other people
to think about. 3'm only an agent,
and not . a free- one."
Audibly she took breath. "So
that's it. That's why you were so in-
terested ' in the ' name of Twombley!
Just what were you doing out at the
mine today? And why did you take
the trouble to look up- whether'' it
could be drained or not?"
But here was a relief; here he
could ' follow her! He laughed aloud
in his emancipation. "Why do you
suppose - except because it •was
years? As for that, what's your in-
terest in Twombley?"
In his turn, Jerry won. The readi-
est of tears may be sometimes sus-
pect. But there is no counterfeiting
wholehearted laughter. She_ echoed
him with 'that throaty laughter of
hers.
"Oh," she admitted, "maybe I'm
silly. I said 'I'd never have anything
to do with Break O'Day Iron. But I
guess it's in my blood. Here I've
been for two or "three years dealing
in sugar and canned • goods -in five
and- ten dollar accounts; is it any
marvel if I go off my head when some-
body talks to me in land and tlfou-
sands?".
Jerry sat . bolt upright. "Does
Twombley?"
She nodded. -
"You didn't know him before?"'
"Never. And now he wants to buy
all that waste land from me around
the old -mine. Says he represents a
syndicate with a patent process to
make such land arable." -
"He-" Jerry could have sung to
the stars. "He bid for that? And
that includes th'e mine? I'1T bet you
anything you like it does!"
"Naturally it does. But of course
the mine itself's no good. 1,, only
mentioned it to you because if it
hadn't been where it is, I'd never
have owned the land around it. I'm
not a bit sentimental about it; it's
brought enough bad luck to my fam-
ily; but I do think that now if it
indirectly-" -
Glidden made a rude interruption.
"And there's where our fifty thou
is going!"
"Your what?"
"Nothing."
"He only offered me five thousand
--Twombley did. But that's a lo
- more than it's worth."
(Continued Next Week)
mit.
"How did you get hold of my first
name?"
"There's a register
burg's hotel."
"Yes, ' I heard you'd been there."
His tone betrayed him. Her face
clouded.
"What of it?"
Well, what? How could his rights
extend to interference with her ac-
tions? He owed cher his life and was
duly grateful. Yet. like most people
in the wrong, Jerry became belliger-
ent." •
"What, were you talking to
man Twombley about?"
"Business." -
'What' busines$?"
"Mane!"
She banged those shutters. Jerry
knew that, if his doubts were justi
fled, he had prematurely shown them
--supposing Twombley, or Perhaps
Angela, hadn't already revealed them.
On the other band, if they weren't
justified, he had merely increased
the girl's annoyance with him, Ile
ought to go, but he wanted to stay!
He stayed . ,
even In Iron -
that
(R'Y RaymondanseB intagazip.e •
�" lll�est�
Baby Jar es tI f1' er at' the .' engag-
ing age of two-anda-half 'years, was
Uncannily facile with tools `One day
be picked up a screwdriver and put
together a -crane from his 'building
set,, At eleven his . father gave him
a telescope. It interested him for a
few days -then he pulled it apart and
ooncocted an instruuient for enlarg;
,ing tiny objects . . in other words
a microscope. '
Today the name of James Hillier,
of Toronto, Canada, and that of his
associate, Albert Prebus, are head-
liners in scientific literature. To them
goes much of the credit for perfect-
ing the electron-miscroscope, a mir-
aculous eye of `steel which magnifies,
objects 10,000 "to 30,000 tinAes-a feat
that even Einstein , declared impes-
sible. This magic lantern, se to -speak
which sees^ by eleetricity instead of
light, enables ' man to peer at atoms
so infinitelysimally small as to have
beep, merely a theory up to now. A
-new and powerful weapon of science,
it promises to go far in 'eliminating
disease and disaster. It may someday:
give medicine a final victory over all
germs and microbes: -,
Try to imagine a red blood
corpuscle enlarged to the size of a
two -foot hat box . '., . a dime the
width of a race -truck . . . a human
hair 15 yards across. According to
Professor. E. F. Burton, . head of the
Physics Department of Toronto. Uni-
versity, imagination cannot grasp the
possibilities of the .electron -micro-
scope. "It has opened. new worlds.
People are seeing things they never
saw before, and only guessed exist-
,ed."
The possibilities in the field of med-
icine are tremendous,
Typhoid germs, tuberculosis germs,
pneumonia germs have up until now
been regarded as jellylike substances,,
quite without any structural form.
Viewed through the clear eye of the
electron microscope, however, they
are seen to be quit)a different. Some
have thick armor. which strongly re-
sists'the chemicals used to kill them.
Others have long, hairy arms that
help them to move about in the body.
Some germs have other smaller
germs living on them. All these -
things the electron miscroscope sees
and the scientist records. If the life
processes of the germ can be accur-
ately revealed -how it feeds, how it
is reproduced -then all that will,'re-
main is -'for the :bacteriologist ta- stela-
in
stel -in and conquer it. He will have only
to- put his eye to the little steel
needle to see all the little deadly
wriggling creatures that he has hith-
erto been fighting 'in .the.•,dark-
He will be 'able to look at photo-
graphs of the entire rogues' gallery=
even at that million -dollar wastrel,
the common cold.
' A big order? That's merely the
beginning. There is also the com-
mercial side, the 'millions of dollars
that can be saved in vegetation and
crops. Scientists will be. able to find
out what kind of virus is, eating into
our tomato plants, cabbages, pota-
toes,' In some seasons the loss of
crops to tobecco'growers has been
estimated 'at $10,000,040. The .dam-'
age, to our forests• is, even greater.
When the Hillier youngster scrap-
ped his telescope to..use the eye -piece
to s'ee tiny objects -,he was merely
trying to satisfy a curiosity which
humans have had since the beginning
of time. Men have always wanted to
peer at smaller things -objects that
could not be detected with the .naked
eye. Since the days when a simple
lens of water "in a glass was used to
enlarge objects. for study -progress
has been slow. It was 200 years from
the time Leeuwenhoek squinted
through his . home-made miscroscope
at thousands of little wriggling0crea-
tures in a drop of rain water - until
Pasteur discovered the antitoxine to
slay them. Bacteriologists have al -
• ways complained that their -micro-
scopes don't begin to show half the
disease germs' they want to see': For
a long time it looked as though they
never would get to see them ail. . ,
Then someone had the bright idea
of using• ultra -violet rays instead of
ordinary light. Scientists could then
see objects so 'small, you could put
10,000 of them on a pinhead.
That satisfied them for a while.
Then they, began :to demand a miscro-
scope that would see things 200^time9
smaller. They wanted to see atoms
and molecules.
The history of the electron miscro-
scope is, one of many minds working
in many' countries and at different.
times. British physicist discovered
the disc bodied atom of electricity
called the electron, back in • the nine-
teenth century. In 1924 a French stu-
dent'
tudent' contributed • his theory, that
these electrons, like light, move in
waves. Two years later, a professor
of Jena University discovered that
electron -beams could be foces8ed to
form an enlarged image, and ten
years, ago, in Berlin, Max Knoll and
Dr. Ernst Rusks built the first elec-
tron miscroscope. They called it the
'Ubermilcroskop, the supermicroscope.
This was the basis for the Hillier-
Prebus electron miscroscope, surpass-
ing all previous inventions for mag-
nifying power and ability to -focus. It
was built under the guidance and in-
spiration of Professoe• Burton of the
physics department of Toronto Uni-
versity wlio, on a trip to Germany.had
examined the German model.
In 1937 the work commenced. The
university had little money -to contri-
bute to constrettiet of aha ulentron
r:hiorouebpe: the two ytfitm}.g sttldeeit80'
Started"' soratch, With told coir -i.
t
1 -
"Good afternoon. Were you wish
ing to consult me?"
"NO. That's all right, doctor;
have Ind Bailed to read the serial
started last **O.!!
Is
1
1
toners^
to dies
the
TOt.te
braes tubing ing,
ity workeitO13The c l e
er cotttOmted *1049
"o
ing of .0q tun -41-41e ' BLP
recalls • that 0.8 g98-81s1V14188141 y
Said to have cost 6R,Q;Q. Tl;€t. 'Here.
in Canada,". h, laughed, "it• .Cana be
liurlt
for 6,p04 cents. ,
Janes Hillier was; as you might say'
born into the Mechanical field. The;
town was Brantford, (P,34, I s father,'
a mechanical eagmeer, Specia;lizlyd } ,
designing bakery machinery. 11: 148.--;.
turaily followed that young:
go into some such :branch .as . mathe
matics or physics. in 1937, with a B.
.A. degree, be obtained a job at -the
university as demonstrator in physics:
Professor -Burton encouraged i1m
to work for his M.A.-at the,; flare
time carrying forward the work pn,
the electron, -microscope, Barton pro-.
vided him with la partner, Albert Pre -
bus, a graduate, of the 'University of
Alberta -who came to Toronto Uni-
versity on a scholarship of $650. fr�m
the National Research Council of.
Canada. The two men lived together
and worked many a long dayat their'
invention.
It ,was; an odd series of circumstanc-
es that brought the microscope from
its experimental stages to 'becomea
commercial instrument . .. now avail-
able to colleges and research instruc-
tors all over •America. in 1938 Hillier
who had earned his Ph.D. for work on
the microscope, was invited to the
Camden laboratories in New Jersey.
Here he was able to improve on the
first bulky machine which needed
three operators. to work it.. Ms sec-
ond instrument was more compact and,
much simpled to operate, It was the
forerunner of today's commercial mo-
del, which sells for $10,500--a price.
within the reach of most -colleges and
research institutions:
Take a look at the supe r -micro-
scope, as designed by Hillier and Pre -
bus. In the center of a ,darkened room
it stands -a metal tube about four,
feet tall, clamped in a • frame, 'Were
it not that it bristles, with knobs and
gadgets', it would have the appear-
ance of an ordinary furnace pipe. On
a jutting rim are half a dozen peep
lioues, through which as many people
can gaze as the mysterious struc-
tures, -of minute objects is made vis-
ible.
Let Charles J. Burton, the man in
charge of electron research at Cyana-
mid tell - you hoof the Instrument"
works
"In principle, the electron miscro-
scope resembles a giant radio tube
made of steel. At the top is a fila-
ment of -tungsten wire, which, when
electrically heated; gives off a swift
stream of electrons. The electrons
are focussed by magnetic lenses to
reveal upon' a fluorescent screen an
enlarged image of .the specimen un-
der examination."
The screen, he explains, is similar
QUICKLY, CLEANLY
HUMANELY
'rd x r fifiMMr.
to that :used, in $10 Y1
sets It is a :. lniet o1- ghe•9S-co
a mrneF,al compound that glow,
the eleeli'PAs•^ strike it : 'PO*
power of the screen -iso p ;r
the wa'l'e lengths of °`;el;ectrd
small 'to 'lie ' dtected''• by the
:eye and7.only fltro'rescen-t err
transform the beams into. viis
light.
This,
This, then, is the' precise Maths
that. .can -'improve .the. food ' we er
the clothes we wear, the cars' we 'ride.!
in. Through research with ,this. magic' ,r
instrument, steel can be !}!sire stun-
ger and !lighter for Motors arid- plane;
-paints can be made More enduring
the ,fertility of the sort niayibe 'in-
creased until America's gardens i tifir
out the lush .specim,ens pictured, on'
seedeatalogues Consider the paper,;
nsed for packaging foods The quali .
ties for Which they are valued `re-
sistance to • moisture,: odors and ,
grease -are alldependent upon, .their . ,
surface structure. And the . ordinary
•.microscope 'is incapable of revealing
surface flaws. Only the electron mic-
roscope can step in and show lip -ds-
fects, thus. clearing the way Lor -1m-
proved paper wrappings end contain.-
er.'
Scienti>;ts and. manufacturers . are
well aware of the Value;, -of .this new
discovery. !Many, of them are engag-
ed
ngaged at this moment in making a pil-
grimage to the Camden laboratories,
to study their specialties and pro-
ducts throughthe magic eye. The
Campbell's Sou'p . Company' visited
Camden with satrapies; of various sells
in an effort to find out what bacteria
will increase soil fertility and pro-
mote better vegetables f_or their
soups: Sherwin Williams brought
samples of pigments for their. paint.
A dime manufacturer is anxious to
improve the strength of mortar and
the finish of plaster.
And still the work goes on, aiming
at the age-old dream of scientists -
knowledge and perfection. From, the
Rockefeller Foundation word comes.'
that $65,000 has been granted for the
further- development: America's new
elm: an electron microscope with a
magnifying power of 1,.000,000 times--
about
times=about 1,000 times more than the Hil
tier-Perbus model'l
ib
Long talking begets short hearing, ,
for people go away. -Richter.
He who knows only his side of the
case knows little of than: -Mill.
eSNAPSNOT GUILD
PICTURING'SHE FARr1
If you want some good
It's well worth
picture subjects, take the 'time to visit a farm.
It when you can get results like this.
lleICTTJRE making on the farm is
1I� something• that many town and
city folk are likely to overlook. But
it seems to me that a trip intoathe
country, and a visit to -'a farm, is
a fine thing for anyone with a cam-
era -and a splendid way to spend
a very pleasant day at this time of
year.
Slip a few rolls of fresh film into
your pocket ---some "chrome" film
for outdoor, snapshooting, and some
fast "pan" for. picture taking in-
doors or when the light inn very
strong -and you'll be all set. Take
along a medium yellow filter for
your oamera,'and a lens shade too.
Picture making on the -faun is
one of those things that might be -
gib with daylight if you're up that
early -though I'll bet you're not.
fn. any event, the earlier you get
started the better,. because thetl"
Yet cart snake a series of pictures
as the farmer milks the cows, feeds
the chtekemis, tends to the hofees,.
antl tln'tms the AAA nisi ta04p turd
Working step by Step -or picture
by picture -in that fashion is an
excellent way to approach any
photographic subject, particularly
one as big as a farm, because it
keeps you from missing snapshot
opportunities. And if you're • look-
iirg for just a few good pictures,
perhaps to enter in a photographic
contest or salon, it gives you many
negatives from which to choose.
Birt getting , back to the picture
possibilities on a farm, don't fail
V) get some pictures of the men,
working in the fields -as in our
illustration, for instance. Look for
interesting angles as they plow or
harrow the land• if ' you stand bean
some, distane'e yttl'41 find that a
plowman makes a perfect tenter tit
interest for a: 1a ndscape , :•
Keep yb'ur' ,eyes ap'en
find hation, 5t;ilFlIf'e, stun
telling and When iute'rest`"1iietn�'e
in abundance everywhere that Me
work in the c6untry.'
89;.,. ; •: J.' „Mu van Gnil
F
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