HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1950-11-03, Page 28i•
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•• THE guRow EXPOSITOR• •.
NOVEMBER r, 1959
Estas t0
A. Y", McLean, Editor
Published at Seaforth, Ontario, ev-
ery Thursday afternoon by McLean
Bros.
Member of Canadian
Weekly,Newspapers
Asociation.
Subscription rates, $2.00 a year in
advance; foreign $2.50 a year. Single
copies, 5 cents each.
Advertising rates on application.
PHONE 41
Authorized as Second Class Mail
Post Office, Department, Ottawa
SEAFORTH, Friday, November 3
Election Time Nears
Itis fast approaching municipal
election time when voters in each of
the towns, villages and townships
will have the opportunity of 'select-
ing those who will have the responsi-
bility for the direction of the affairs
of the municipality for the coming
year. It is a time of year when pub-
lic attention should be concentrated
on good civic government.
While it is desirable of course that
throughout the year ratepayers pay
attention to the way its council ful-
fills its/duties, it is particularly im-
portant, with approaching nomina-
tions and elections, that thought be
given to those who are to be called
upon to serve in the coming year.
At the same time there should be
no hesitation on the part of qualified
citizens, who have the interests of
their municipalities at heart, in of-
fering their services. True, such an
offer, if accepted by the ratepayers,
can result in much work and little
thanks. On the other hand, there is
a satisfaction in having accomplish-
ed something worthwhile if the posi-
tion is approached objectively and
with a sincere desire to render ser-
vice without thought of personal
benefit or publicity.
When a Council is permitted to as-
sume office more or less by default,
it is a clear indication that the rate-
payers, whose representatives the
members of the council are, don't
care what kind of representation
they get. They don't care what hap-
pens to their town or township. They
refuse to accept their responsibili-
ties as citizens. Unless citizens give
some indication of their interest in
the affairs of their municipality, by
attending nomination meetings and
ensuring that the best men or women
are nominated for office, they can
have no justification for complain-
ing about what their Council does or
does not do, or how it is done.
Too often nomination meetings are
attended by but a handful of citizens,
and frequently the majority of those
attending are not financially or oth-
erwise interested in the welfare of
the community.
Apart from serving as a vehicle
for the selection of candidates for
civic office, the nomination meeting
quite properly provides an oppor-
tunity to air complaints and griev-
ances; to bring the spotlight of pub-
lic scrutiny on the performances of
the Council, School Boards and Com-
missions; to ask questions and bring
forward ideas about the running of
civic business.
Formal speeches are of little help
to the ratepayers. But when an audi-
ence of citizens poses pertinent and
well -considered questions for the
candidates to answer, then the ques-
tions and the nature of the replies
they are given can be such as to ex-
. cite a lively and well worthwhile
interest on the part of the rate-
payers.
•
The Fly Nuisance
There probably is no month in the
_ year when the common housefly is
not in existence. But there are cer-
tain times when the fly seems a
greater nuisance than at other times.
The bright sunny days in late fall
when fires are first lit are such occa-
s axons. • -
We are sometimes inclined to re-
gard the common fly as something
that will be with us always. And
ill wed 't lie a the necessity of
`itliitfJ<1Cll s'c'atting, we more or less
sated and ignore conl-
iace to health which.
Medical officers of health warn us
that flies carry some 20 fatal diseas-
es of llunian beings and especially of .
children. Deaths from fly -borne dis-
eases are more than twice as great in
number than the number of deaths
from measles, whooping cough, diph-
theria, smallpox, scarlet fever and
undulant fever combined. Such dis-
eases are called diseases of sanita-
tion.
Further, for every death reported
from diarrhoea and dysentery there
were certainly several thousands of
less severe cases fat which no doctor
is called and which are attributed to
something eaten over which probab-
ly a fly has walked. Yes, over such
common foods as milk, bread, meat,
potatoes, or gray, flies which have
just left a manure heap or an unpro-
tected toilet may leave filth lying on
the next mouthful. Typhoid fever
can be spread that way as all old-
timers know it was spread when sani-
tation was very defective.
Where can flies find breeding plac-
es. Right in the back premises, on
the lanes between houses it is com-
mon to find careless disposal of garb-
age badly packed in defective garb-
age cans, manure piles round chick-
en houses, or rabbit hutches,`rid rot-
ting heaps of weeds and grass clip-
pings. Around stables, slaughter-
houses, creameries, and produce
houses careful inspection is very nec-
essary. It is easy to understand that
fly control depends on the personal
interest of the parents of every home
who can thus train their children in
the importance of 'allowing no op-
portunity for flies to breed around
any home.
Here are some rules for home use:
(1) Have one or more garbage
cans. Keep them clean and covered
at all times.
(2) Bury or burn all garbage that
cannot be placed in the can.
(3) Spray the garbage can inside
and out with 5% oil solution of DDT.
(4) If you know of some breeding
place of flies which is being neglect -
d, report it to the County Health
Unit.
What Other Papers Say:
Good Night Irene
(Brockville Recorder -Times)
Every year about this time a "pop-
ular" song catches on and do what
we might it's impossible to shake it
from the airwaves, from the throats
of our would-be soloist companions,
or from the very ringing in our ears!
We refer to that horror of horrors,
"Good Night, Irene !"
The ballad itself is simple enough
—and as far as we can gather is the
tale of some unfortunate fellow who
took himself a bride only to become
"parted" and now thinks he might
take a stroll into town. Corny!
•
Students First
(London Free Press)
Archdeacon W. A. Townshend,
president of the Ontario Public
School Trustees Association, fore-
sees "schools where texts and hob-
bies, God and man, jobs and inter-
ests are the curriculum." Such was
the educational Utopia he set forth
in an address in Toronto before the
annual convention of the association.
The schools of tomorrow, he said,
must place emphasis on the student
rather than on the course. The stu-
dent will have to be regarded as an
individual; the teachers' duty will be
to prepare that individual to take the
rightful place in a complicated world.
This is both a noble and a shrewd
estimate of schools as they ought to
be, and we hope, will be. It is indeed
a revolutionary vision to put the stu-
dent
tudent ahead of the course, the pupil
before the curriculum. Orthodox
pedagogy may not take readily to so
drastic a conception, though progres-
sive educators will:
Once such a change in policy is
undertaken the decisive role will be
played by the teacher, who as Arch-
deacon Townshend says, "must show
sympathy to the student as an in-
dividual.' The best teachers, . of
course, have ever taken such a stand.
When schools at large follow suit, we
shall begin to make the most of what
we have hi; the way ,
�£ ,latent talent
I o
414111
LAZY MEADOWS
To some people there is no nov- I
elty in the fact that they are going
to take a trip overseas. They move
in those lofty circled, to which
world travel is . a comlmonplace
thing. To a farmer, content for
the most part to go 'into town on'
Saturday eight, and attend the Fall
Fair and the fowl supper at the'
church each year, the idea of a
trip to Great Britain and Europe
is a different•matter.
At first you don't really appreci-1
ate what it means. Sure, you're
going away for a trip . - but, well
something will probably hap-,
pen and you won't be able to go.
The days go by and you just hap-
pen to be at the road when the
mailman goes by and you say,
"May have to go to the Old Coun-
try this year!" He looks duly im-
pressed and you can bet that ev-
erybody on Rural Route 2 is ac-,i
quainted with the fact within two.
days at the moat.
You then bask in the curiosity
of the neighbors. When you walk
into the grist mill, somebody is
certain to say, "Well, here's Phil!
When you leaving to go and see
Churchill?" It starts after a time
to creep up on you that you really
are going overseas, and that there's
a few things you had better get
straightened out before you leave.
The man to go to obviously is
the manager of the bank. He lifts
his eyebrows when you tell him
about the proposed trip. Then a
look of something that seems like
satisfaction creeps over his face.
i
By .Harry J. Boyle
He's remembering a leave he had
in Paris during the first war. That
makes at' least a half an hour, and
you leave a feeling that he's not
telling you everything that hap-
pened.
Then you get down to the mat-
ter at hand. You have to have a
passport. If you're planning on
going by way of the United States
and coming back that way, you will
also require a visa. You have to
have a smallpox inoculation. Then, I
there's the matter of currency.
Money, I mean! Pounds, shillings,
pence . . . and in France you'll
face the franc ... and in Switzer- I
land they have francs, but they
are of a different value, and, of
course in Italy, they have lira.
I left with my head in a swim.
Then, there's the matter of trans-
portation. I went in to see Joe
Williams, the station agent, and
said I wanted a ticket to London,
England, and he looked at me as
if I was crazy. He pointed out
that the C.N.R. only went as far
as St. Johns, Newfoundland. It's
a long. cold and wet walk from
there to London, England.
I drove home disgusted and dis-
couraged. Surely, going to Eng-
land could hardly be as difficult a
job as they all seemed to make
out. It seemed to me as if the
only thing would be a trip to the
city after I got my passport. Ed.
Wothing said he would apply for
the passport. When I signed those
papers for the passport, it was as
if I 'had declared that I was going,
even if I had to walk.
Tribute to the Cow
(From The Ontario Milk Producer)
Grand and noble brute! Of all
mans,,animal friends she is the
greatest;,. To her we owe the most.
Examine into all the channels of
trade into vrhich she enters and
nate the result should she be blot-
ted out. A Sunday stillness would
pervade the great stockyards of
our large cities and grass would
grow in the streets.
One-half the freight trains that
plow the continent from ocean to
ocean would sidetrack, for there
would be nothing for them to do.
Fifty per cent of the employees
would draw no pay on Saturday
night and our tables would be bare
of the greatest luxuries with which
they are now loaded. The great
plains of the West that the cow
has made to blossom like the rose
would revert to the Indians whence
they came, and millions of pros-
perous homes would be destroyed.
None other like the cow. There
is not a thing from nose to tail
but what is utilized for the use of
man. We use her horns 'to comb
our hair, her skin is on our feet
and horses' backs. Her hair keeps
the plaster on our walls. Her hoof
makes glue and her tail makes
soup. She gives us our cream, our
milk, our butter and our cheese,
and her flesh is the greatest meat
of all nations. Her blood is used
to make sugar white, her bones
when ground make valuable fer-
tilizer, and even the contents o
her paunch, wherein she herself
has put through the first chemical
process for the manufacture of the
best quality of white board paper
and now it has been discovered the
paper can be made into the best
false teeth.
O you who would abuse the cow
I wish that I could for once take
from your table as you. are about
to sit down to the evening meal
all that the cow has placed there-
on. I'd take the cup of milk sit-
ting by the baby's chair; I'd take
the cream biscuit, the custard pie,
the cream for coffee, the butter,
the cheese, the smoking roast beef
or steak, or the sweet corned plate
of juicy meat. In fact, I'd leave
you to make your meal on Irish
potatoes, beet pickles and tooth-
picks.
No other animal works for man
both day and night; by day she
gathers food and when we are
asleep at night, she brings it back
to rechew and manufacture into
all the things of which I speak.
She has gone with man from Ply-
mouth Rock to the setting of the
sun. It was her sons that drew
the prairie schooner for the sturdy
pioneers as inch by inch they
fought to prove that "Westward
the Star of Empire Takes Its
Way," and the old cow grazed
along b5hind and when the day's
march was done, she came and
gave the milk to fill the mother's
breast to feed the suckling babe
that was perchance to become the
ruler of this country.
It was the cow that made it Pos-
sible for man to change the great
American desert into a land of
happy homes. When she came,
the buffalo disappeared, the •In-
dian tepee gave way to the church,
schoolhouse and home; and where
once the wild wolves howled, to-
day children prattle, grass grows,
flowers' bloom and birds sing.
Crop Report For Huron County
Most cattle are still out on pas-
ture which is holding up exceed-
ingly well due to the fact that
there have not been any real hard
frosts es yet, and there still seems
to be considerable nutrition in the
gr ass.
Sugar b?et and turnip harvesting
are still the order of the day, and
a number of silos were filled this
week, although the corn is rather
dried up; Husking corn has me-
tered better than had first been
expected in some localities, but lit-
tle if any has been picked to date,
as famers are letting it dry as
much as possible.
The Farm -Home Shelterbelt
If shelterbelts about farm homes
could be planted in winter, they
would be much more common than
they are at present. When the
warm days of spring and summer
come, the 'howling snow storms
and the days when the wind blew
a gale from the northwest are for-
gotten. Plenty of water and regu-
lar exercise in the fresh air and
sunshine of a sheltered barnyard,
are conducive to the health of
farm animals; when stables are
drafty and uncomfortable, live
stock require more feed to main-
tain body weight, In winter, when
nothing can be done, the value of
shelter is appreciated but hi spring
it is forgotten.
While it may he too much of an
undertaking to set out a windbreak
in one year, a start may be made
with one row. 3f plantings are
added from year to year until a
belt and hundred feet wide has
been set out on the west, north
and east of the buildings, what at
first appeared as a great deal of
work will be accomplished grad-
ually and without much effort.
When located one hundred yards
from the buildings, a windbreak
will not be the means of filling the.
yard with snow.
At the Experl!nental Brants)
CharlottdtoW — t .I., /haul` tO n
Imo Weft ested to d1 idz( .._.
their value for shelter. Chinese
elm will provide the moat shelter
in the shortest time, but the trees
are not long lived and grow slowly
unless manured or fertilized. These
alms may be set out as the front
row, back of which slower grow-
ing trees can be used to form the
greater part of the belt. On light
land native spruce and red pine are
preferable as they grow best where
there is little competition from
grass. A few native 'hardwood trees
which are known to do well in the
district add to the appearance of
the shelterbelt and form a good
background for the buildings, They
may be mixed with the later plant-
ings. All trees should be protect-
ed from livestock.
Spruce and pine stand trans-
planting best in September and
October, but the work may be done
in early spring or late fall. Small
spruce, about six inches to one
foot in height, are most easily
transplanted and should be dug
with a square of , sod . attached. If
shallow trenches ar opened with
the plow, the snrallees may be
planed in the furrows and planted
with little trouble..
Economical Feeding Of
The Laying Flock
Wltb laying 'hens being housed
for the fall and winter laying per-
iod, now is an opportune time 10
review the fundamentals of good
feeding practice, says T. M.. Mac-
lntyre, Dominion Experimental
Farm, Nappan, N.S.
The most common method of
feeding is to keep laying mash be
fore the birds at alt times and to
supplement this with scratch grain
fed in the litter in rthe . evening,
aid with oyster shell or ground
limestone constantly available.
Tlits practice has met with good
t'luecees and may be regarded as a
safe feeding practice. Variations
of tltia method of Seeding frequent-
ly
requently emgloyed by individiial feeders,
slit n Seeding; tan»pie#tlentary lay
ti 1 x91 i pel`idih lir 'it'at uthab, i cine
"t►<liiklult d)ii '1) •
Freddie Fimble s small son
Paul.
Aiming to grow straight
and tall.
Knows that proper play and
games
Help develop sturdy
frames.
Dept. at National Ntatth and Wattage
Years Agone
Interesting• Items Picked From
The Huron Expositor of Twen-
ty-five and Fifty Yearn Ago.
From The Huron Expositor
November 6, 1925
Mr. Wilfred Scott, of Constance,
left for Toronto last week to take
a course in the Technical School as
a machinist.
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Gorden, Eg-
mondville, have returned after a
couple of weeks pleasantly spent
with friends in Buffalo, Niagara
Falls and Brantford.
C. Aberhart, Fred Crich and W.
Sutherland were in Toronto on
Saturday, attending the Varsity -
Queen's game.
The fowl supper held by the
United Church, Hensall, on Tues-
day evening, was the most largely
attended and most successful ven-
ture ever held. On the program
was a splendidly rendered solo by
Mr. Sam Ronnie and a reading by
Miss Frances Winter, elocutionist,
of Seaforth; quartette by Mrs. Sin-
clair, Mrs. Mark Drysdale, Miss
Jessie Buchanan and Miss Nellie
Boyle, and solos by Miss Scarlett,
Mrs. J W. Bonthron and Mr. W.
O. Goodwin.
A real game of caards was en-
joyed Wednesday evening in the
G.W.V.A. club rooms at the lawn
bowlers' annual smoker. About 100
men were present Dr, C. Mackay
and Dr. F. J. Burrows took home
a goose each for being the best
card trundlers; C. P. Sills and W.
J. Duncan carried off second prize,
a chicken each; Jack Cluy captur-
ed a duck for the most lone hands,
whily Wm. T. Thompson and D. F.
Mclregord lugged home a pigeon
each, proving they need a lot of
practice to avoid the booby prize.
Mrs. J. F. Daly, Mrs. C. Fink-
beiner and Mrs. Jos. Keating are
the delegates from Seaforth who
are in attendance at the diocesan
convention of the C.W.L., which is
being held at Sarnia on Wednesday
and Thursday.
Mr. C. A. Howey, of Kitchener,
the new organist in Northside Unit-
ed Church, had charge of the choir
and organ on Sunday.
While Councillor Regele of Mc-
Killop and a companion were out
shooting, they made a lucky find.
They had shot a skunk which
crawled under a stump, and when
dislodging it they came across a
bees' nest which contained about
t'eree pails of excellent honey.
•
From The Huron Expositor
November 9, 1900
The first snow of the season fell
on Monday, Nov. 5.
Mrs. Fowler has disposed of the
old Cameron farm on the Huron
Road, west of Seaforth, to Mr. Ed-
ward Jermyn, for the sum of $4,200.
We understand that Mr. Jacob
Webber, of Dublin, has disposed of
the pottery property in Egmond-
ville to Mr. F. Burgard, who will
cperate it in future:- -
Two of the oldest voters in Sea -
forth marched to the polls on Wed-
nesday and cast their ballots in
favor of good government, namely,
Mr. John Hannah, aged 96 years,
and Mr. Thomas Darwin, aged 91
years—an example to the younger
generation worthy of emulation.
On Saturday morning the spa-
cious barn of Mr. Oswald Walker,
of the 10th concession of Usborne,
was completely destroyed by fire.
Mr. Chas. Turnbull, of Walton,
left this week for Toronto, having
secured a situation in the Grand
Trunk Company's freight sheds in
the Queen City.
Thefollowing were ticketed to
distant points this week' at Wm.
Somerville's uptown railway ag-
ency: Mrs. Armstrong, Goderich
St. East; to Yale, Mich.; Miss Mc-
Dougall, to Cleveland, Ohio; Herb-
ert Waterer to Seattle, Wash., and
Charles Stewart to New York,
Mr. Joseph Fowler, of the Huron
Road West, has removed into the
handsome new residence which he
built this summer. I•t is built of Mr.
Gutteridge's pressed brick, is two
stories high, and iv one of the
handsomest farm residences In this
,cart of the country. The mason and
plastering work was done by Mr.
Gutteridge, the woodwork by Mr.
Henry Edge,' and the, painting by
Mr. William Smith. '
1ti!r. Robert Govenloek and Mrs.
Archibald Scott returned from Lon-
don this week where they were
visiting friends. While In London
Mr, '(io'Venlock had the opportunity
of hearing Sir Charles Tupper ad-
drese a' nitass meeting.
A nuniber of eases of diphtheria
have detdlOI ed, in S.S. No. 6, Itib
heli, carie the Beard of AWOL has
aUh0i'.1ed the . closing 474 the
Purchases Property
Mir. Ervin Gingerich, who has
been a resident of Blake for some
time, has purchased the dwelling
property in the west part of town
from Mr. Henry Gackstetter, Zur-
ieh Herald.
Has Arm Fractured
Douglas Gibbons, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Gibbons, happened
with an accident while at school
recently, which resulted in a dou-
ble fracture of his left arm, and
Douglas now has the arm in a cast.
--Blyth Standard.
Threatening Fire
What might have causeda bad
fire in Zurich last Saturday took
place when boys entered Miss
Louise Hendrick's barn, located at
the westerly part of Louisa Street,
and a short time after smoke and
Hames were noticed after the boys
had left the building. Owing to
quick action of Miss Hendrick and
willing neighbors, along with the
boys' help, the fire was brought
under control without calling the
local fire brigade. Zurich Herald.
Minister Inducted At Blyth
Induction services for the Rev.
Charles J. Scott were held in Blyth
United Church Thursday evening
last. Rev. S. H. Brenton, Londes-
boro, and Rev. E. R. Stanway, of
Brucefield, were in charge of the
service,, Rev, Mr. Scott succeeds
Rev. W. J. Rogers, as pastor of
Blyth United Church, and preach-
ed his first sermon in his new
charge the previous Sunday morn-
ing, He comes from Kennetcook.
N.S., where he has been stationed.
Clinton News -Record.
W. I. Holds Card Party
A pleasant afternoon of bridge
and "500," sponsored by Goderich
branch Women's Institute, was
spent in the Legion Hall on Thurs-
dal last. Twelve tables of "500"
and fifteen tables of bridge were
in play, Mrs. Leitch won the hon-
ors for "500•" and Mrs. McLaren
had high score for bridge. The
branch directors, under the con-
venership of Mrs. R. Good, served
a delicious iunch. Mrs. Mathieson
and Mrs. Tichborne were responsi-
ble for the cards.—Goderich Signal -
Ste:.
Tells Of Trip To Lions Group
Bayfield Lions Club enjoyed a
dinner meeting at the Albion Hotel
on Tuesday evening, with the
president, Charles Scotchmer, in
the chair. There was a good at-
tendance of members and several
guests. Orlo Miller gave a very
interesting talk on his recent trip
to the eastern part of Canada and
the United States. Plans 'to erect
a bulletin board to be placed in
front of the post office, and for the
starting of a movie for children to
be shown each Saturday night
from the first of November to
spring, were discussed. — Clinton
News -Record.
bruiegs. Damage to the car
amounted to about- $400.—Exeter
Times -Advocate.
Power Cut In For Centralia Station
A larger and more powerful h3-
dro station to serve the rapidly -
growing R.C.A.F. Station at Cen-
tralia was cut in on .Sunday and
power throughout the Exeter rural
district was off for a short time
Sunday afternoon. The new station
replaces the old one that has. sup-
plied the R.C.A.F. since the lluild-
ing of the airport. To care for the
more than 400 homes now being
occupied or under course of con-
struction,
onstruction, a new and larger trans-
former station was required 'and
the rapacity has .been increased
from 600 to 1800 kilowatts of 25
cycles This will be greatly in
creased under the 60 cycle system.
The hydro station is situated just
south of Centralia—Exeter Times -
Ad v;'c ate.
Exeter Girl Serves in Japan
A one-time graduate of Exeter
High School, Lieutenant Lillian
Heywood, two years a United
States army nurse, is seeing ser-
vice in Japan. She is the first ser-
vice woman to enter the "Chicks"
—soldier's name 'for their regiment
—says the tri -weekly news sheet
of the 19th Infantry Regiment pub-
lished .,at„Beppu, Kyusu, Japan. The
new "Crick” has been nursing
since 1937, training at Sarnia. Gen-
eral
eneral Hospital and Port Huron,
Michigan Ohildren's Hospital, and
Washington's .. alter Reed Hospi-
tal. She joined the army in 1948.
She is a daughter of John Hey-
wood and the late Mrs. Heywood,
Eiimville, A sister, Mrs. D, Black-
well, lives in Petrolia. — Exeter
Times -Advocate.
Steel For Harbor Piers
During the week the railways
have brought in some 800 tons of'
steel which has been piled on the
bathing beach, to be used in com-
pleting the sheathing of the south
pier and part of the north pier.
This is a continuation of the work
done on both .piers after the de-
structive spring freshet of 1948. The
contract, which is in the hands of
the Canadian Dredge & Dock Com-
pany of Toronto, would probably
run to $175,000 or $200,000. With
the season so far advanced, it is
not considered likely that work
will be commenced until spring. A
quantity of square timber has ar-
rived to be placed in Snug Harbor
as a breakwall for protection of
the craft that are berthed there-
from season to season. This work
is under the superintendence of W.
J. Buchanan, harbor works fore-
man.—Goderich Signal -Star.
Face Badly Lacerated
Murray Brintnell, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Cliff Brintnell, is in Victoria
Hospital, London, suffering from`
large and deep lacerations to his
face received in an auto accident
Saturday night. Murray was a pas-
senger in a car driven by George
W. 'Purvey when the car collided
with a tree at Riverpiew Park about
11 o'clock Saturday. Murray was
thrown through the windshield and
received severe injuries to his face.
He was taken to the office of Dr.
Milner and later removed to Vic-
toria Hospital, where he was oper-
ated on Sunday morning. Turves
and a third occupant escaped with
A Smile Or Two
"Only cheese,for dinner . to-
night?"
"Yes, dear. When the chops
caught fire and fell into the pie.
I had to use the soup to put the
flames out."
•
"Old George is terribly mean.
Someone plight to tell him he
won't be able to take it with him
when he dies."
"Listen, old man. If George
can't take it with him, he won't
go!"
•
"Whenever my wife and I guar,
rel, she becomes historical."
"You mean ,hysterical."
"No, historical. She always digs*
up my past!"
BOXWORD PUZZLE
By Jimmy Rae
World Copyright Reserved
ACROSS
t—Sorceress
4—Barbed missile
7—Three (prefix)
8—Live coal
1.0—Striped quadruped
11 ---Order, harmony
15—A beverage
16—Meter
19-- Real estate
22—Follow
23—Boys
25—Virtuous
26-66 feet
27—Cast forth
30—P1. of ovum
31—Persian sacred
writings
34—Adobe Indian
'village
37 --Born
38—salmon trout
(Be.. Isles)
40 --Leaning
41—Animals of a
region
42—Young sheep
45—Fragrance
46—Lower
49—Write
52—Dove's cry
53—Barber of sevillo
56—Stretch
57—Capital of India
58—Produce eggs
59—Light anchor
60—Each of all
DOWN
1—Sorcerer
2—Shinbone
3—Vital organ
4 -Curve
5—Roads (abbr.)'
'6—To court •
7 --Aggregate
9--�i�tii°C'Idt
13 -Paficalee�e oS' eggs,
861'11110N ai$ PAll`E
etc.
13—Body (Fr.y
14—Not sour
17—Hymn book
18—A number
20—Flee
21—Depart
24—Got up
28—Discordant sound
29—Top of milk
32—Plying
333—Holy person
35—Not Just
36—Limit
38—Sash
39—Not right
43—Roguishly
44—Plunder
47—Weird
48—Throw
50—Knob
51—Sick
54—Writing fluid
55—Sum up
1
2
II
3
8
16
17
9
II
18
4
III.
5
III
6
7
10
III
11
12
13 .
14
15
E3
24
19
20
21
■
E5' .
22
29
26
1
31 •
.
32
33
'27
28
30
-
34
36
36
i
37
38
39
■
40
41
49
60
•
51
46
47
•
48
42
•62
48
-
44
45
■
53
54
66,
.67
�
III
68
69
160
ACROSS
t—Sorceress
4—Barbed missile
7—Three (prefix)
8—Live coal
1.0—Striped quadruped
11 ---Order, harmony
15—A beverage
16—Meter
19-- Real estate
22—Follow
23—Boys
25—Virtuous
26-66 feet
27—Cast forth
30—P1. of ovum
31—Persian sacred
writings
34—Adobe Indian
'village
37 --Born
38—salmon trout
(Be.. Isles)
40 --Leaning
41—Animals of a
region
42—Young sheep
45—Fragrance
46—Lower
49—Write
52—Dove's cry
53—Barber of sevillo
56—Stretch
57—Capital of India
58—Produce eggs
59—Light anchor
60—Each of all
DOWN
1—Sorcerer
2—Shinbone
3—Vital organ
4 -Curve
5—Roads (abbr.)'
'6—To court •
7 --Aggregate
9--�i�tii°C'Idt
13 -Paficalee�e oS' eggs,
861'11110N ai$ PAll`E
etc.
13—Body (Fr.y
14—Not sour
17—Hymn book
18—A number
20—Flee
21—Depart
24—Got up
28—Discordant sound
29—Top of milk
32—Plying
333—Holy person
35—Not Just
36—Limit
38—Sash
39—Not right
43—Roguishly
44—Plunder
47—Weird
48—Throw
50—Knob
51—Sick
54—Writing fluid
55—Sum up