The Wingham Advance-Times, 1961-06-07, Page 3ime WM.rhana Adva4e0-Timels, Weilnorlar, Orono 1, Piot Pp.(
Stars of Romance styled by Bluebird—see thins •
in our window. Every Bluebird diamond
guaranteed flawless and insured free for • . . , , . year against loss or damage.
two units—even under ideal con-
ditions. It's safer to use one un-
it per man. If a pipeline milker
is used in a -convential barn, he
believes two, units can be used if
the man does nothing else,
Similarly, in milking parlours,
when the milk is collected in pails
or suspended units, one man
shouldn't handle more than two
units, And under ideal walk-
through parlour conditions where
the milk is carried by pipeline -and
feeding is semi-automatic, one man
can safely handle no more than
three units, because cows vary so
much in milking time, Prof. Ham-
ilton says- it's difficult to handle
three milkers when certain cows
are milked at the same time,
liege,.
DIAMONDS centimplimin i : . • . -
EWELLERY
WINGHAM, ONTARIO •
ENTERTAINMENT AT THE TRADE FAIR was top calibre, with two
acts each night of the show. One of the Williams twins, who displayed
their skill on the trampoline, is pictured above as he performed on
Thursday evening.—A-T Photo.
I
HAF ERNI F, 1,7,
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•
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I NAME.
I AI1DItif.g4S
•
CRITICAL CONDITION—Andrew Casemore is
own above just after he had been removed from .,
r
$ apartment in the store block which was burned
' t .Tuesday afternoon. He was in the building for
)
nearly a half-hoer and suffered from extreme smoke
Poisoning. He was retnoved to the Whigitam• General
Hospital,, where at 6 p.m. he was, reported to be in
critical contlition.—A-T Photo.
great deal of good to understand
the period jusi prior to our births,
Those who have lived through part
or all Of 'the period may- enjoy* re-
living it through another's per-
spective. • •
He recounts ronghly one. event
:for each. ydar beginning with the
Rimer rebellion in' 1900- and ending
with the assassinationof Archduke
Franz Ferdinand in,1914.' The mod-
ern echicatiOnal'sYstern has Its de-
fects, I think 'we will all agree, but
so did the more ,ancienCsy4m of
say,_ thirty or so years ago. The
defects of each, of course, are dif-
ferent.- It seerns-;to me that in (
spite, of a good; foundation in the
basic subjects,' we did tend to
struggle across the
we,
with Han-
- nibal, ; navigate the , French, River
,with Champlain, gaze in horrified
faSeinatio'n' at the blade ,'of ' the
gaiiloane, but, wej.lealt in' a' very
sketchy "fashion' with the history
just prior to our own lives and'ac-
tually, after we.'had covered' the
AmeriCan Revolution ,and•the.War
of '1g12 'Studied.•little Of the nation
to' the south of -us. This book fill-
ed' in for;Me many, gaps in .''trig`; ed-
ucation.. • • '
•Walter Lord,' in his usual fash-
ion,
. „ has delved into old neWSpa.pers,
.unearthed • diaries 'arid correspon-
denee, and -even. sought; out
present at some or the
'events. He has •compiled a wealth,
of. -lively- information,. and, under
his 'skilful touch the people spring
into :bein'g, with "icohvincing reality.
Previously unpublished notes of
MoKinley's, reVeal the
.true- tragedy of his 'death. • He
Might have'. been :saved had not
.professional played such a
part.,-. Peary's magnificent dash to
the•Pole arouses .amazement ,at the
achievement; the depth. of
appointment , upon-. returning' to
'civilization cab be understood; Af-
ter all his' effort he had 'still an-
other ,fight •on- his hands—CoOk's
.cialms had to be' disproved, Peary
was • finally recognized; but there
must always have lingered bitter-
ness -within. The San Francisco
,earthquake and fire have been often
written about' in fiction' and fact
The' ,atieedotes that Lord re-
calls, especially about ' such "per-
'sons as Enrico Caruso and •John
Barrymore set in tragic relief to
the death and destrUction around
• are rollickingly good. There are
tOOf.11 tog 4f tla# MtSt dfetticat
frivolity of wealthy T4ew YorkerA
in 19110--hers the caterers' 'note.
books reveal filti4h more than ju'st
arrangements for food and drink.
The panic of 4901 when J. Plerpont
Morgan took they helm is reminis-
cent Of MO, which many of us
remember, Theodore Roosevelt
and• Woodrow Wilson, the Wright
brothers, the suffragettes and the
child mill-workers all Cod their
Places in the pages of the book.
These were indeed good years.
There was a zest for living. The
people depicted in these pages ex-
cued resourcefulness, courage, self-
Confidence, pride and boundless
arobition. Their statures were
tall and they.matle of history a vi-
tal story.,
STUDY 'THESE FOUR
IDEAS ON MILKING
Are you dbing a good milking
job? You aren't sure? Maybe you
can use these ideas from Prof.
Fred Hamilton of the Dairy
Science Department at the O.A.C.
First, Watch the vacuum gauge
on your milk line. If it fails to
show a,steady non-fluctuating va-
cuum level, your Milking system
is probably inadequate or defec-
tive,
• Next, multiply the number of
milker units you use times the
number' 'of minutes required to
milk the herd; then divide by the
number of cows you are milking.
The result should be no more than
five minutes' per ,cow actual milk-
inetime; or 5-6 minutes for over-
all time (includes carrying milk;
etc.). Many mastitis fiends, says
Prof. Hamilton, have average milk-
ing 'time per cow exceeding 10
minutes.
For conventional stall barns
where the milk must lbe carried
outside, the stable,•he believes that
one 'man can't handle more •than
oitensive Damage
"Local Accident
xi.ensive damage was clone on
turday evening when, a car own-
by Reverend Donald Sin.-
air, which was parked in front
his home on Minnie Street, was
ruck by another vehicle operated
Clare Hopper. Damage to the
o* machines amounted to over
poomo, but fortunately no one was
l
ijured in the mishap, The acci-
lent. was investigated by Police
hief Gordon Deyell. Charges are
lending.
The sub-title Of
THE GOOD YEARS
by Walter Lord .
caught my eye. It •said,, "from
1900 to the First World War". For
amusingly personal reasons: I was
determined -to • discover why Mr.
Lord considered :those particular
years to be good.' .He makes his
point; and it might do those 'of us.
who were born since that time a
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