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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1950-04-21, Page 2is li 1; s a b.s ed 18410. A, Y, McLean,Editor Published at Seaforth, Ontario;ev- cry Thursday afternoon by McLean Bros. Member of Canadian • Weekly Newspapers Association. Subscription rates, $2.00 a year in advance; foreign $2.50 a year. Single copies, 5 cents each. Advertising rates on application. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa SEAFORTH, Friday, April 21, 1950 Native Canadians Now and then we hear that old suggestion about giving the country back to the Indians. According to figures from the Inldian Branch of theDepartment of Health and Wel- fare, that is what we are doing. The pati irth rate, Indian and Eski- mo is 40-45 per 1,000. That of the wh'tes is 25. If birth rate was all that counted, it would only be a matter of time. But apparently we are more determ- ined to live than are the Red men. In any event the native death rate is 17-20 compared with the all Canada average of 9.5. There are now 130,- 000 Indians and 8,000 Eskimos in Canada. Every effort is being made to im- prove the health standards of the tribes, according to the - Winnipeg Free Press. "There are now 21 de- partmental hospitals with beds for 1,903 patients operated under the In- dian Health Services. Also there are 22 nursing stations and thirteen dis- pensaries which serve as centres from °-which field nurses visit sur- rounding native population. "All this may seem a far cry from that black year of 1879 when 3,000 Indians fell before smallpox on these western plains. That scourge is now under control. Tuberculosis still tracks its desolate way along the pralrle and the forest paths ... 30 times more deadly than among the whites ...,;.,,but it too is receding." One of the big problems is that of training natives so that they may be able to provide necessary medical care for their own people. How much effort is being put for- ward to get suitable Indian girls from the schools into hospital train- ing schools for nurses? the Free Press asks. How much is done to be on the lookout in our native schools for suitable candidates, young men and women, for our medical schools to train for such work among their own people." Some progress is being made, how- ever and Indian girls wishing to train as nurses will be• given every assist- ance. Tuition grants are also avail- able to native young men and women who will undertake vacation train- ing, including the study of medicine. • Through Traffic and Towns It used to be that municipalities, about to be sidetracked, as a result of the re-routing of a major highway which at the moment passed through their borders, wereloud in their de- mands for reconsideration. It was pointed out that the community would suffer serious loss in revenue as a result of motorists being divert- ed around the town. We remember, for instance, when Number 4 High- way, used to bend westerly to pass through Centralia, and the protests concerning a direct route which re- sulted. . Perhaps all the concern was with- out foundation. In any event, st". l�- fes in California show that proxim- 1 to arterial highways can be a d 1ieSts'ing and , that business toigri in sties bypassed by new high - d routes sometimes reap aston >i beee xts. • e weattle Times reports that th O division _oo l i ghw ys N 1` .' Ve fects ou Xbrth Sacramento of the opening of a'.. -"freeway" by-passing tb•at community. . The "freeway" re- plced about four miles of state high- • way that had servedmore than 200 abutting buineesse s, Average daily traffic dropped off `44 per cent. after the new road was opened, but the total volume of busi- ness in the district in the ensuring two-year period rose by approxi- mately, 31 per cent. Benefits tothe retail trade were especially marked. The California division of high- ways concluded that "removal of highway traffic from a downtown business district usually results in a betterment to merchandizing, estab- lishments such as department stores, grocery stores and other businesses catering primarily to foot traffic, principally because of the better parking conditions and easier pedes- trian movement." Certainly there are evidences of traffic clogged main streets in this district. Through traffic in both Ex- eter and Mitchell frequently is de- layed because of the density of local traffic in the business area. Seaforth Main Street, at times, becomes as traffic -jammed as any other, but how much worse would it be. if all through traffic on No. 8 Highway was forced to travel its length? } • Hidden Assets Perhaps it is old-fashioned, but we always thought that a wife was an asset beyond all price. But appar- ently this is no longer the case. It seems now it is possible for a man to figure out in actual dollars and cents whether he will get value for his money when he says, "I do." "How much for a farmer's wife?" asks the "County Guide," in a recent issue, and then goes on., to give the answer. "For years back some American professors of agricultural econom- ics," according to the Guide, "have been studying farm records to find the answer to this question. A few years ago a Minnesota professor placed her value at $69,000. X R. J. Dunsmore "Now, an Illinois professor, who has examined thousands of farm re- cords, comes up with about the same figure. He says a married farmer, on the average, has a net income of $2,400 higher than an unmarried farmer and that this at four. per cent - interest on investment, is worth $60,- 000 or, at the rate yielded by U.S. savings bonds, $82,789. Furthermore, this is an average figure, covering large and small farms, good and poor land." • WHAT OTHER PAPERS SAT: SOCIAL SECURITY (From the Ottawa Journal) Most of us have thought of "social security" in terms of the factory worker, forgetting that hundreds of thousands of our people don't work in factories but on farms or for them- selves in other ways and places, and that equally they are entitled to re- tirement pensions and unemploy- ment insurance and all the other good things that the "welfare state" promises—forgetting, in short, that what's sauce for the urban goose must be sauce for the rural gander. The cost of all this. Ah, well, that is another matter, with the thought of everybody these days on 'ways, not means, and no one asking the question that the New York Herald— Tribune the other day put into poe- try: "The government, It's probably true, Will take care of me And take care of you. Take care of our birth, Our marriage, our death, Take care of our first And our final breath. Take care of our thoughts, Take ,care of our rent; ‘But who ''will take care Of the Government?" doh 1Q' ii. y (Article 'Roo Of course all -we +`Country boys went •barefoot ii<i suzn tier,. from soon after the first of May on into September. One fine spring I wanted to discard my, copper -toed boots and go barefoot to school, but was told I bad to wait till af- ter the 24th of May (the Queen's Birthday). I started out with my shoes on, all right, but half way to school I got over the fence where there was a haystack • at the edge of McConnell's bush, took off shoes and socks, hid them . deep in the hay, and proceeded happily on foot. Coming home after four o'clock, I climbed over to retrieve my property from the haystack. While I had ;been busy at my les- sons, the crickets had been mighty busy with my fine new socks. In fact, there were no socks left, just an island of holesurroun:ded by wisps of yarn. It was lucky they couldn't eat my boots, or I'd have had an archep.elago. (I learned that word at school nice, big word). Speaking of going barefoot! At the end of a summer, we boys could have had ourfeet half -soled, so thick and "calloused were the soles of our feet. Fields of stub- ble and thistles ,had no terrors for us. We adopted a cow at our place once. She was a gentle, dignified sort of cow, but carried her head with an air of hauteur, as. though her folks had been Something in the Old Country. , I named her Mrs. Finn, after Huck Finn. Along about fall, when the nights began to be a bit. frosty they started to build a stable for Mrs. Finn. At night she_ had to sleep on the grassout in the field. Every farm boy who is anywhere near my age will remember going to bring up the cows in the early morning, when the grass was crisp with hoar frost. How cold their bare feet would get, and as the cows were prodded to their feet, we boys would step quickly onto the warm grass where the animals' bodies had lain.; What a soft, warm spat it was. I Often wanted to lie down there myself. At the foot of our garden was a small hen house. It had a nar- row door. One evening, after the cow was milked, and no one around to see, I persuaded Mrs. Finn to accompany me down the garden to the hen house. I couldn't wait tillthe stable was built, and I did want to see how the cow would look in a stable. Mrs. Finn was very bulky, after a long day's grazing, and she was a trifle too wide to go through the narrow door. She wouldn't co-op- erate, very much. She disapprov- ed of the idea entirely. S1ie slash- ed me across the face' with her tail. But I persisted, and by .push- ing and heaving andshoving, I managed to squeeze her inside. I could barely shut the door 'behind her. She just 'fitted in there snug- ly. Then I got up on the roof and peered down through a crack and gloated proudly over the unhaipy Mrs. Finn. Next morning I was awakened' by a general hullabaloo outside. The cow had not come home. They were hunting up and down the road for her. This was my chance. I hurried down to the henhouse, opened the door and Mrs. Finn shot out backwards into the yard. She had shrunk awfully during the night, and came out easy. Also she was a sight, as I had not tak- en into account that the hens also bad shared her lodging, above her head, and I had not yet studded the laws of gravitation. I may say, I was terribly abash- ed; I might say, cowed, as it were, when I had to confess that I was the chief instigator of the vile plot. Mrs. Finn studiously avoided the proximity of the henhouse ever afterward. Huron Federation of Agriculture Farm News It Pays To Clean And Treat Your Seed Grain Year in and year out officials of the Canada Department of Agri- culture have stressed the import- ance, of using graded clean seed, properly treated to - control dis- ease. A somewhat newer note in this regular warning was sounded.re- cently by J. E. Langille, of the Experimental Farm at Nappan, N. S. He states that "while many of the new cereal varieties possess resistance to some of the forms of smut this does not mean that seed treatment should be neglected." Here again are the 'musts' when it comes to handling and( cpaosing your cereal seed: Ghbos� clean graded sound seed; Use organic mercury compounds to kill the dis- ease organisms of the various types of smut; treat the seed just be- fore seeding unless cool dry stor- age is available. Dual Purpose Meadow Livestock farmers are asking for a suitable grass -legume meadow which is able to produce a good first cutting of hay and thereafter supply abundant aftermath recov- ery for mid -summer and early fall grazing. Such a crop may be termed) a dual purpose meadow. Experiments have ' definitely es. tablis'hed-that if alfalfa is adapted it can admirably meet the above requirements. However, a pure stand of alfalfa is seldom used for pasture, but this legume is prec- ious when compounding 'hay -pas- ture mixtures. A good dual purpose meadow in a short rotation may be obtained by sowing the following mixture: Timothy 8, red clover 4, alfalfa 6, alsike 2, pounds per acre. For well -drained clay-loams or clay soils that will be" used for hay one year only and then pastured for two or more years, the fallowing mixture is highly recommended: Timothy 4, brome 5, orchard grass 3, red clover 4, alfalfa 4, ladinc 1, alsike 1 oto2 pounds per acre. Many other mixtures may be sown under different conditions and for certain specific purposes. The two given above are worth J while trying for a dual purpose meadow. For further information write the Division of Forage Plants, Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa, Ont. Toys left on the stairway Marbles in the halls Add to household hazards; Often cause bad falls. Dept. of National Health and Wella,e The New W'aed•.Act While a Weed Act, just passed by the Ontario Legislature, is new in every respect, the problem of weeds is by no means new, A. H. Martin, Director of the Crops, Seeds and Weeds Branch, Ontario Department of Agriculture, stated, in 'a radio interview this week: Mr. Martin was interviewed by Jack McPherson on the CBC. "Perhaps the most important feature of the new Act is the meth- od, of approach on the part of weed inspectors," Mr. Martin said. "If a serious weed problem arises on any farm, the inspector must first try to come to some mutual agreement with the owner or uc- cupant for disposal of the weeds." He points out that under the new Act the inspector can enter priv to property and dispose of weeds a manner that will present their seeding and spreading. He then sends his bill to the municipal clerk. If it is not paid, it is charg- ed against the lands as taxes. In cities, weed inspectors must be appointed by the municipality, but it is no longer necessary that the inspector notify the owner to cut his weeds. Notice can, under the new Act, be placed, in the lo- cal newspaper and within a reas- onable time the weed -gang can go up and down a street and cut weeds on all vacant lots where the owner has failed to do so. The bill is then handled through the tax collector. "Oftentimes the weeds can be cut in this way more economical- ly than by the owner," Mr. Martin states. He also pointed out that it is il- legal under the Act to move thresh- ing outfits, combines, portable cleaning equipment or silo -filling outfits without first thoroughly cleaning them of all seeds. Weeds can no longer be dumped in the nearest stream, on river banks or roads anywhere if there is a pos- sibility of them growing. Surveyors Face Huge Problems; Boundary Work An apparently prosaic bill pre- sented to the Ontario Legislature provides for the annexation of -,240 acres to the province on its west- ern boundary. Other bills, along the same line, will. he presented to the Manitoba Legislature and the federal government. When they become law, a survey jab which has :been. spread over a period of 51 years will be completed, The late Jack Pierce, one of On- tario's most outstanding survey- ors, had taken a major part in the survey of this boundary between Ontario and Manitoba. His son, J. G. Pierece, also of Peterborough, was rightly enough given the hon- or of working on the last leg '.of the survey. There were immense problems on the survey. "Briefly," said F. W. Beatty, Ontario's Surveyor 'General, "a survey consists of run- ning a line from one point to an- other. Hills, swamps, lakes or riv- ers' don't mean anything Regard- less of dlffielllties, the surveyor r'un's• kis line." And, although the story may p.60: er be written, the surveyors en- countered major obstacles. The northernmost extremity of the boundary was fixed by statute where the 89th meridien of longi- tude intersects the shore line of Hudson Bay. This point' was de- termined by a series of astronomi= cal observations. From the re- sults.ef these calculations the line from Island Lake was surveyed a distance of 284 miles—ending a- about`21 feet from the monument that had been established at the shore of Hudson Bay. The original western boundary of Ontario ran from the most northerly point of Lake to the Woods to the Winnipeg River. In 1912, it was extended• to the _in- tersection bf the 12th base line of the Dominion Land Survey system —west of Lake Winnipeg. Then it went on to the most easterly point in Island Lake and: from, there to Hudson Bay. The last stretch of 284 mites, brought the survey par- ty out 21.6feet,west of the point er3tablished by observation and (Botitl-hued on Page 7) - Years Agone Interesting Items Picked From The Huron Expositor of Twen- ty-five and Fifty Years Ago. From The Huron Expositor April 24, 1925 Mr. Frank Cudmore, of the Bank of Commerce staff, Walton, has re- turned to his duties after three weeks' vacation. Mr. Harry Jackson, Walton, has engaged with the W. G. Neal store to run the truck for the coming season. Mr. Jas. Walker, Jr., Brucefield, has purchased Mr. George Arm- strong's farm on the London Rd., while Mr. Armstrong has bought Mr. Souter's farm on the 2nd con- cession of Tuckersmith. About three inches of snow fell on Sunday and the weather until Wednesday was very cold. Guest SeIOIat At Cantata. lt.n'p %' .RFed moyi>ag pieturee i;a the, Mr. Harry Hoffman, baritone, of char J Monday evening, appropri- Dashwood, was one of the guest.' ate. to the Easter feativa,l. R. s. soloists at a special presentation' Macaulay, president of •the club, of a sure cantata, "Olivet To'0a:' extended 4, welpozne to the .large Vary," at Calvary United Church audteuee, while Rev. D J. Lane, London Friday evening — Exeter minister of .the church, .outllned the 7. Times -Advocate. 1 Program to be presented. Follow -- Girl Girl Undergoes Operation Sharon •Gaiser, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Geiser, Credi- ton, underwent an operation for appendicitis in the Stratford Gen- eral Hospital Monday and is get- ting on as well as can be expect- ed. Sharon was visiting in Strat- ford when she was taken sudden- ly ill.—Exeter Times-AdVocate. Injured in Fall Downstairs Lorne Hoggartb nine-year-old son of Mrs. John Hesselwood, Londesboro, was removed to Scott Memorial Hospital, Seaforth, as the result of a fall down the stairs in the .Community Hall, Londesboro. He is reported suf- fering from a punctured liver, sev- eral •broken ribs and pneumonia, and it is expected that he will be hospitalized for some time.—Clin- ton News -Record. Honored By Police Colleagues At a dinner at the Park House attended, by associates in police and court work, William Gardner was presented with a •handsome Gladstone .bag in appreciation of his work for ten years with the police in Huron County. Mr, Gard- ner replied fittingly. There was an attendance of fifty at the dinner. Mr. Gardner resigned from the On- tario Provincial Police with whom he had proved. himself a capable and courteous officer, to be associ- ated with his brother Jack in the business of Gardner Motor Sales. —Goderich Signal -Star. Mr. Wm. Elcoat, of town, has purchased a new Overland Sedan from the local agent, G. C. Bell. Mr. Walter •Scott has accepted a position with a firm in Walker- ville and left that that place . on Tuesday. Mr. Jack Hinc'hley has accepted a position on the staff of the Brant- ford', Collegiate and started his du- ties on Thursday. A challenge euchre, held in St. James' Parish Hall between the ladies of the Catholic Women's League and the gentlemen of the Holy Name Society. Prizes were drawn by the lady and gent obtain- ing the highest individual score and were awarded to Mrs. Robert Devereaux and Mr. F. Sills. The following program was given: "0 Canada"; piano solo, Mrs. W. H. Bullard; -solois, C. Thiel, Mrs. L. Fortune, T. Flanagan, F. Sills; selections, Daly orchestra. Mrs. Joseph Keating gave the history of Seaforth, and much credit is due her for her painstaking effort. - Seeding - near Chiselhurst has proceeded rapidly during the past week and many are through the sowing of grain. Mr. Jas. Swan, of Bruceileld, •is in Brantford and Hamilton this week. . A meeting of the congregation of St. Andrew's Church was held in Bayfield' on Monday evening to consider the question of church union. • J. H. Reid was- appointed as returning officer, with E. F. Merner as clerk. The poll is to be held in Reid's store during the first week, and the second week in Mr. Merner's store. Miss Ina Grey, of Tuckersmith, spent the week -end with her aunt and uncle, Mr. ' and Mrs. James Moodie. • From The Huron Expositor April 29, 1900 Messrs. William and. John Mc - Gavin, of Leadbury, were at Elora on Tuesday, John being judge at the spring stallion show. in that place. Mr. Alexander Monteith, of Tuck- ersmith, 'recently sold a yearling bull to Mr. P. Curtin for $125, He also sold a 4 months' old heifer to Mr. L. Farnham, Hullett, for $60., Mr. Chas. Wright, who has had the farm of Sirs. Donald McGregor in McKillop rented for a number of years, has rented from Mr. Jas. Cowan the • old Cowan homestead on the 7th concession, The work on the Bayfield har- bor is proceeding rapidly. The piers should shortly be completed, and when the necessary dredging is done Bayfield will have the best harbor of refuge on the east coast of Lake Huron: Seaforth was represented at the annual conyention of the Canadian Lacrosse Association held in Tor- onto last week by G. C. McIntyre, F. C. Jackson, Frank Nelson and Fred Baker. Mr. Charlie Willis, ,of the School of Pedagogy, Hamilton, spent the weelnend here. Mr. Bell, of the Seaforth Foun- dry, bas orders ahead for eight en- gines. About 3 o'clock Sunday morning two men broke into Henderson's Hotel. They gained an entrance through a cellar wind"iow and after collecting a quantity of liquor and eatables, made their way up the stairs to the bar. The porter heard a noise and took a lamp and went downstairs to investigate. He saw one of the men but was unable to identify him. The annual meeting of the West- ern Football Association was held at Berlin on Good, Friday. Mr. Wm. McGowan, B.A., London, an 'old Seaforth boy, was elected honor- ary president; R. 0.- ,Cheswright, Seaforth, was elected president; 5. A. Dickson was appointed' on the inter -college association com- mittee, and J. A. Jackson on the Caledonian cup committee. day. Mr; H. Kelly, of Kelly Bros., who for some time ran a ,save frill in Mci�illpp, 'but who 'nen' are engag ed in sawmilling, and luinbering in Louisana, has` .been. in, the ''vicin- sty of :Seaforth for a few weeks; l IF . Saw Two ‘,. olves in a children's film featuring Stan Laurel and Oliver )lardy, the main. picture was entitled; "The Power Of God," produced by the Missouri Synod of the Evangelical Luther- an Church. It proved a very fas- cinating film, with a high moral motif. Two +hymnsI in technicolor also were presented. _ Clinton News -Record. Lions Club Hears M.P. L. E. Cardiff, M.P. for North Huron, was guest speaker for the reguliar Lions Club meeting Mon- day night. His subject was "Par- liamentary Procedure." The club president, Robert Bowman, intro- duced a short musical program in whfhh June Work playedl a piano solo and a girls' sextette from K. Ashton's class in the public school sang two numbers. The girls were Barbara Allen, Jean Jewell, Sheila Porter, Maureen Sullivan, Joan Thomas and Agnes Lane. The club will send a pee -wee hockey team to the Huron County Sports Day in Goderich. A committee was named to discuss and arrange for the erection of a Lions Club bulle- tin board at a central location in the business 'block. The annual summer carnival in aid of the club's work will be held and plans are in the making.. A group of wo- men from Melville Presbyterian Church served the dinner for the meeting.—Brussels Post. Mr. Henry •Clausius and son, of the Blind Line, the other day while going to the bush, noticed two large animals, first thinking they were dogs, but on more careful ob- servation noticedthey were wolves —being about 20 rods away and very unconcerned as to the where- abouts of them being so near. They were tearing at the roots of a tree underneath which a groundhog had made its nest down in the earth. But being unable to dig down, the. wolves missed a good fat meal and Mr. Woodchuck is still chucking away.—Zurich Herald. Fire Destroys Interior' of Home Fire late Wednesday afternoon did thousands of dollars worth of damage to the interior of the con modious ,brick residence of J. Bart Levis, located on the south side of Joseph St., 'Clinton. Mr. and Mrs. Laois had gone to London in the morning and were absent when the fire took place. The blaze and smoke made quite a mess of things —both upstairs and down; -Fire Chief Grant W. Rath stated that the fire was discovered firstshort- ly after 4.30 p.m., but when the fire brigade reached the scene it had made considerable headway. He said that it started in the stair- case and gave defective wiring as a probable cause. The fire -brigade used every available facility in the battle, with four lines of hose, and kept fire damage at a minimum. Damage by smoke was heavy.— Clinton News -Record. Men's Club Presents Movie The . recently -organized Presby- terian Men's Club added another, activity to its swelling list when A Smile Or Two 'Why won't you marry me?" he demanded. "There isn't anyone else, is there?" - "SOh, Edgar," she sighed, "there must be!" He could neither read nor. write, but when a distant relation) died and left him a small fortune he started to make a splash. He ac- quired a .cheque book, but instead' of signing his name on cheques he, pubtwo crosses and the bank paid.. Then one day he handed the ca Then one day he handed the cashier a cheque signed with three crosses. • "What's this?" demanded the cashier. "You've put three cross- es here." "I know," was the reply, "but my - wife's got social ambitions. She says'I'mu'st'have a• middle name. • 1. The young reporter in search of copy thought the old man in the potato -field looked the last word in rusticity. "Good morning," he said. "Love- ly day." j "Aye," answered the oldest in- babitant, leaning on his ',hoe. "But -there's rain coming." The journalist drew out his note book. "How do you know that?" he asked. "Red Sky at morning— shepherd's warning, eh? Or per- haps you've your own ways, of find- ing out?" "Don't know anything about that," was the reply. "But it was on the radio- last night, and in the paper this morning." Lake Superior is the largest body of fresh water in the world. BOXWORD PUZZLE By Jimmy Rat World Copyright Reserved ACROSS 1—Staff of life 4—Foolish person 7—Observe 8—,Pagan deities 10—Tiuin 11 ---Female sweet- heart (Scot.) 15—Period 16 --Once or the other 19—Oppose 22—In>,dian corn 23=Act 25 --Masticate 26—People of Ireland 27—Not fit 30—Perched 31—Property in general 34—Most peculiar 37 --Loiter 38 --Plants of a region 40 --Smallest particles 41-•-kevolt 42- iiilject 4&—Beneath n." 46—Babe 49—Non-metallic element 52o, -Part of foot 53—Commission 56—Fashion 57—Dig 58—Set free 59—Conjecture &0L -Revolves. DOWN 1—Be on one's 2—Make even 3—Levees 4—esland' 5 --Possessive • pronoun 6 ---Three (prefix) 7—Horse 9—Not within 12—Cavity under shoulder 13—Backbone 14--Occurretice 17—Feels irritation 8(9LILiti014; G;N'; PA guard E7 of skin 18—Vital organ 20—One who edits 21'—Poem by Homer 24—Artist's tripod 28—English admiral 29—Boys in livery 32—Soviet political leader 33—By oneself 35 --English evolutionist 36—Set in surrounding matter 38—Myth - 39—That Which oils 43—Spealcs 44—Twilled woollen fa:brie 47—Not at any time 48—Messenger of God: 50—Advantage 51—Sick 64—Floor covering 55—Devoured, 4 lm E 3 _ 11 10 ■ U 12 13 14 16 17 18' 19 80■ 22 25 24 1.E6 26 34 55 31 32• 3S 27 28 29 26 37 38 . 39 . 111 40 �■ 41 • 42 43 ql 46• III 1114-6, 4�i 48 49 60 61 III fi2 68 .w 64 66 66 67 ■ 68 69 . 60 ACROSS 1—Staff of life 4—Foolish person 7—Observe 8—,Pagan deities 10—Tiuin 11 ---Female sweet- heart (Scot.) 15—Period 16 --Once or the other 19—Oppose 22—In>,dian corn 23=Act 25 --Masticate 26—People of Ireland 27—Not fit 30—Perched 31—Property in general 34—Most peculiar 37 --Loiter 38 --Plants of a region 40 --Smallest particles 41-•-kevolt 42- iiilject 4&—Beneath n." 46—Babe 49—Non-metallic element 52o, -Part of foot 53—Commission 56—Fashion 57—Dig 58—Set free 59—Conjecture &0L -Revolves. DOWN 1—Be on one's 2—Make even 3—Levees 4—esland' 5 --Possessive • pronoun 6 ---Three (prefix) 7—Horse 9—Not within 12—Cavity under shoulder 13—Backbone 14--Occurretice 17—Feels irritation 8(9LILiti014; G;N'; PA guard E7 of skin 18—Vital organ 20—One who edits 21'—Poem by Homer 24—Artist's tripod 28—English admiral 29—Boys in livery 32—Soviet political leader 33—By oneself 35 --English evolutionist 36—Set in surrounding matter 38—Myth - 39—That Which oils 43—Spealcs 44—Twilled woollen fa:brie 47—Not at any time 48—Messenger of God: 50—Advantage 51—Sick 64—Floor covering 55—Devoured, 4