Loading...
The Wingham Advance-Times, 1951-06-06, Page 10This superb tea guar,.:ntees the flavour of every cup From the "BLUE BOOK" of Famous Trains eeeee••„. eweileeee,,....„either You'll appreciate and under- stand the beauty of Canada better when you see it from Canadian National's famous Continental Limited. Every day between Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver this famous train speeds across the continent. On it you'll travel in style in colorful, up-to-the-minute equipment inviting bedrooms, standard and tourist sleeping cars, lounge cars and the latest air-conditioned coaches. Take the "Continental" scenic route across Canada ... daily service East and West betw,een Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Minaki, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Edmonton, Jasper and Vancouver. For reservations and information regarding your business and pleasure travel needs, see, write or phone your local Canadian National Passenger Agent. , CANADIAN NATIONAL THE ONLY RAILWAY SERVING ALL TEN PROVINCES Mb. Aruniatemerms7.-.., Alla11111•111 OCK Insulation . Keeps summer heat out Keeps winter heat in Gives extra fire-safety In Blankets, Batts and Granulated Form Besides Rock Wool Insulation your Barrett Dealer has a complete line of roofing and weatherproof- ing materials. THE BAR-ETT C N1PANY, LIMETE Halifax • Saint John ° Montreal • Toronto • Winnipeg • Vancouver tae your building rob ems to your Barrett Dealer *Reg'd Trade Mark Keystone of Main Street The towns of Canada are vigorous places. Early settlers built them beside great oceans, turbulent rivers, towering mountains and rolling pastures. And each town's character and industry came from the surrounding countryside. Helping to build the industries of many Canadian towns is your bank ... a branch of The Commerce. The manager is a neighbour, a professional man who gives Service that comes with long acquaintance. Canadian towns depend on each other, and upon the men and women at The Commerce. They are good people to know. • Lome lioucbatd, The Canadian Bank of Commerce "The Commerce" 188-50A1 wgiuff AM ADVAISTCWITUS 1114PNV,S1)4.7 .4111N.P. VON :On *AGE TES Pr. Fore fre4c4ed, 4.1161. 'wrote that Nazi. ideas Were. tlangerona to Chris- tian The police warned _hina'to• atop - but he would not. Secretly and at night he and friends printed a. little newspaper to give courage to those who wore standing against the Nazis. One night an urgent message came to the Forells. ""Thep olive are coming to arrest you in a few hours." • Forell and the family fled at once and managed to escape to Vi- enna in Austria, where the Nazis • Journey lo Freedom The Forell .farelly lived in ,qermany. .atid from the first the parents boldly defied the Nazis. The two song were too young to take part in the struggle,. .Reverend Frederick Forell was a leader in the Protestant .church. in Germany and his wife was the dau- ghter of a Protestant minister. They saw that if Nazi ideas and Nazi lead- ers ruled their country, there would be little freedom for ordinary people. were 4.0 Yet 41 power, die Worked among the Jewish people of Vieflna for some months. Then the Nazis took. over Mott.* and again the Per- en family had to, flee. This time they went t1::1 mission 1.a:4 0niandenaggaiil the thJeeywsr Tb4.1;43 in a .11 decided to send their two sons away for greater safety. One boy went to England and the other Tel America, In 1940 the German army surged into France and captured Paris. This time the Forells were not able to es- MK They were captured and put in separate interment camps. They could not see each other or get news of their sons. They did not hear until later that the boy in England had been put in prison because he was a German, When he was proven to be anti-Nazi, he was set free. All during that time that the Ger- mans held France, the French Pro- testants were working secretly to keep up the courage of their people nd to help refugees escape.p. In the south of b'rance the Protestant church is especially strong. The pas- ' tors and potpie planned a system for etting refugees across the border in- to Spain where they would be safe. LSCAP.te, Dr, Forel' managed to escape from was aitieu by the French Protestant camp, He was alCieU by the /oreneh Protestants and passed secretly from one little village to another, until he was safe over the border, He did not know it but his wife also had escaped. The church people helped her too and she found her way to Spann. At last the two met and felt themselves a family once more. They began to hope that they could find a way to get to the United States where by this time their two sons were living in safety. Before they could get papers to enter the United States they had to prove that they had some way of earning a living in this country. The church people in the United States were ready to aid them. They were already several committees trying to help refugees. Through one of these committees a large Presbyterian church in New York City invited Dr, Forell to come and take part in its "rk. Atlast the necessary papers were made ready. Dr, and Mrs, Forell left for New York and arrived safely. Everything that they had in the world was in a knapsack that Dr. Forell carried on his back, All their hooks, clothing, furniture and every- thing else had been left behind, de- stroyed or lost, as they fled from one place to another. But at last they were safe and their sons were safe. They were sure of shelter and food and they could worship God freely. The church that invited them has be- come stronger because of the work of the refugee pastor *and his wife. The Forell family is safe. So also are Hansi and his Teddy Bear, whose story "Journey to Freedom" you will hear on the radio program All Aboard for Adventure, Sunday, June 10th., over CKNX. The Forells are doing good work in the United States. So also are other refugees, like Dr. Einstein and Dr. Thomas Mann, who managed to es- cape the Nazis. America is richer be- cause of the gifts brought by the refugees. But there are thousands who were not able to escape and their suffering is still great. HUNGRY PEOPLE The war is over, the air raids are ended, but the destruction and the hunger remains. Whole cities are in ruins and clothing and food is scarce. There are hundreds of thousands of children and grown people in Eur- ope, in the Far East, and in many other parts of the world, who need food and clothing and friends. That need will last for a long, long time. Church people must be ready to meet it so that those others in need will receive help just as did Ifansi and the Forells. There are many different plans for helping the refugees and the people who are suffering from the war. Some churches are sending food and some are shipping boxes of clothing, Childrens' groups have packed par- cels containing clothing and toys and crayons, Some churches are sending cows, as you will read in the last chapter of this book. Some are send- GABE OF YOUR CHILDREN'S FEET Mot children have strong,. feet at birth but occasionally a baby's feet are structurally weak. The bones play . be slightly out of pooition; an eNtra, point of motion may develop between bones; the .accessory hones. which show up later in muscle tendons, May be misplaced. These abnormalities are not noticeable at first and may not give trouble until the child has walk- ed for some time; if the mother not- ices that a child walks queerly, moves his, foot unnaturally, or has discom- fort, she should have his feet exam- ined. Early treatment may correct slight abnormalities and prevent foot weekness. The longitudinal arch of a baby's foot is obscured by a pad of fat. This pad usually disappears when the child is about two years old and until that time the mother need not worry about the child having flat feet. The age that a baby should walk depends on the child. Do not force him beyond his strength and ability but give him a chance to creep, pull himself up. and progress at his own speed, If an overweight child walks too early, his feet may be weakened. When a baby starts to walk he holds his feet far apart. This is only for a short time and he soon learns to bal- ance his relatively heavy body and walk with his feet closer together. Slight toeing-in usually makes for strong feet, and should not cause worry unless it is exaggerated and the child falls over his own feet. Proper shoe fitting is very Impor- tant, If one foot is slightly larger than the other, fit the larger foot. The shoe sole should be moderately flexible and from three-quarters to one inch longer than the great toe when the child is standing. There should be ample room for the toes and depth enough for the fullness of the child's instep; the heel should lit snugly and the widest part of the foot should be at the widest part of the shoe. It is better for a child to have only one pair of shoes and have them replaced frequently as the feet grow, than to have several pain at a time. It is a mistake to pass shoes from one child to another as no two ins carloads of wheat or bags of seeds for planting. Almost every church has some plan of helping. Be sure that you find out the plan of your church and be ready to take part in it. There is something that everyone of us can do 'to help if we only care enough to try. P 4A549,0 f9Pt are. P$9,907 tho S4TOP.. Short, shoes and stockings. :put ogre _en the Pint where the great toe meets the long bone at the bail of the foot, If this bone is shortened, the. weight .bearing ratio disturbed and -extra. weight must be carried by the mailer bones. The results are weakened' feet, diseomfort,. and leter deforinity, It is, wise te znarcl„egainst presaure caused by the rubbing of worn shop. linings, or a fold or coarse darn in a stocking, Make a point of examining your child's feet each night before he goes to bed, If there are red areas, find and remove the cause of pres, sure, IN PRAISE OF BOOK INDEXES The Most accomplished ways of Us- ing books at present, is two-fold; either, first to SerVe them as MPP do lords, learn their titles exactly and then brag of their acquaintance; or, secondly, which is, indeed the choicer, the profotinder and pouter method, to get a thorough insight into the in- dex, by which the whole book is gov- erned and turned, like fishes by the tail, For to enter the palace of learn- ing at the great gate requiree an ex- pense of times and form, therefore Mer4. of Much haStO And little eere,, many are content to set ,in by the back door, Per this great .hlegaing, jndeN2 we Are. Whelly ir0e4tOO„ tO* systernS and abstracts, in which .the, modern fathers of learning, like pro- „dent usurers, 094: their sweat the .ease of us their .ehiidren, Por jai our is the Seed Of idieness, and ft peenliP,r happiness of our noble age' to gather the fruit, —Prom Jonathan Swift's "A Tale,. of a •Toh," Do good, speak truth, right wren& follow the king, pipe' wherefore bore, ---from Tennyeon'e "Idylls of the; King," Ta Cam (1 Ca Cno@ the By Roe Farms Service Dept. t. LADIES, FROM NOW ON I WANT SOMETHING TO CROW ABOUT. I WANT MORE WORK AND MORE EGGS. ---.....--" (LADIES, LADIES. MAYBE. YOU'RE DOING YOUR BEST. BUT I EXPECT BETTER RESULTS NOW THAT THE BOSS IS FEEDING ROE VITA-LA'/ PELLETS. 1.. x. • THESE-ROE PELLETS ARE TERRIFIC -o GIRLS, I'M PROUD OF YOU.WHAT PRODUCTION LINE! r.,...... A WHOLE EXTRA CASE OF EGGS. AM I CROWING! 4 ..........." A EGG PRICES NOW I ANDATPPRON'S ierv, PELLETS . E. . . , t 4 4. , E, /:), , , , Y.( :04. , / /, vi e: Rd KEEP ?WM goy '' ' ' 7 " 4._ 1.0 EGG ' > el/ANN6' 5 i 5: 1 ( i 5 I:: N `4-t-2i1Ifii/ Ot 1 IP, *4 c, . V4: EGG PELLETS I. Naillk 11 11k AOC FARIS MILLING Cf 41Arii' ,:k\ VL-10 ...,_ I FEEL SETTER ALREADY ' t A'.t JOE ,c_ ,:C.;:: . ' A, , n 1 .. r) 1 -I; ,.. . to Li di 1 iiii , ,r HI>., , 4,51 ;N 8 :6;0 F :pi; rt;;, .eove:: oicT :r6:0 ,(064: yr:sD 7: 8 0:5r iA :44 ,:1,0:6. .,/ )6 ey. efir:v 0 :rye OH -, E65 ON/Nr0 4 ' ';''':',:e1D1,t5 We/6Hr da, PhZ l4 EE;6 Moi.r5 r° CAW /N .., ----___ _.-.4---- .....-.. , /V6700. ogez tp.4i ,,I YOU 6 EGG ' rkto ....opllzprr,, .,....a THAT COCKY ‘...dot, ROOSTER P7,4".4! frp ...ip to , -:-.:: .• ,1 ., "'" P .4.1 1 r, ' •-• ;-'' r1;C)) -4 , ‘ / -,-.. _... // -:;...„:cz.„, , 1, ' "il , ., It k '&,.. --4 • ' bar ,.... A,,,, wah, -4,..-re dr. v A Eea. ! '', il , 't ii k v .,,,,,, A 01 - '0 NOKLET'SSHOtil ''`..";;;Aga WITH A ‘, 1, - ' 1..,, ._.--- ..* , .* I WAS NEVER SO INSULTED —...... ;Iv ....- I'M 1.1.4 MY ' . - SURE, DOING fIEST 1.41110 DOES HETHINK HE, IS ? L.4.4:::' ... ., • _ r ..- .-- r ) (0 44: 4 e'er _....- -- ,.'.",.`, .L! / •,, , Ltr , *.•,. c (, tr..4) ,v.) Allik - '''........_._ , ....-. #10. " 1?.... ,- .......-u...- - , k 4,‹ ot4' PI ' ., .1 I \ ...,...... ...,, r=-- / ...... - 4 , -.A --....‘ ........- _...., ....,--• .......- ,.. _ ?..-- , ---- e• , A J .----. Howsoh & Howson, Wingham i. Beigrave Co-op, Belgrave f Ross Anderson, gelgrave vale Milling Co., Bluevale J. C. Scharbach, Teeswater