The Wingham Advance-Times, 1974-02-28, Page 171,
V 4011
NWARDEN
GUARD IAN DRUGS
mount forest 323 ii
' oNVALESCO.t .IDS'
OF ALL TYPES
. FOR SALEQR RENT.
*lel .moils; 'walkers.'Com,
mode*, t�quadrupcd Canes,'Bed
'rests,, Etc '
* a
A COmPREHENSIVE
STQQ( oF SURGICAL
SUPPLIES
°PE` I'4, TO 9 a
SIX
IX PAYSWEEK
.PENWARDEN a�
GUARDIAN .DRS
Mount Forest , '323-1780
* 1072
users' in'the area leet 14 bead of
from. deaths atteOsottell
County -coOld it not
for blackflii0e," sari M.. Om),
the Agriculture Canada Rel.:000h
filatierl: in Lethbridge. .
Or. Ithan :and. twe other mien -
lists at the station, R, Pepper ,
Ind 'SiteMauclink.g..otro Part
of * federal-proVincial team
contrai meaziures that could 'pro,
Vide * major gain for 'northern
and Orices," Dr.. Pepper adds.
WAT D LING
BY D: .
, S >
WE HAVE, ',UST PURCHASED Ati ADDITIONAL
,,,HIGHI.PRIESSURR ROTARY 'DRILL TO fiROVIDE
our Walls 'Exceed Provincial Government' Standards -
Modern Rotarf and Fer,Csidn:Orilling:
DAVIDSON WELL WINOSOM
DRILLING ITO. B4507;it%
WER: 1NTERgST RA
Now Available On
iST. AND 2NO MORTGAGES
Anywhere id Ontario
On
RESIPENTIAL, COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL
Cond FARM PROPERTIES
linteriM ,r litany 4,1g For Nen' ('onstrnetn)n St 1tevelopment
ip.,,,,icresimtauves,In4VininfArea
SAFEWAY' INVESTMENTS AND
CONSULTANTS
(519) 744-6535, COliect
Wad Office - 56 Weber St..E:, Kitchener, Ont.
We Buy•Existing.MortgageS for instant Cash—
MOBILE HOMES
DOUBLE -WIDE HOMES
Marlette
Pyramid
•
Tiver's sloe
t Mei are caught about
two above the water surt
flee *alai high fired SWICAPS'
the river. Larvae are colleeted
**tit' cones anchored. kto.. the
.breed* iceations it will keep
any nee of poesible 'future Peati
eldes teestrkteoll to en* the areas
populations Come under "Idr...
ation JO the key Objective,
'4110 gives US .a• base against
which -we OM Compare the effec-
tivenetis of control measures_ and
iii.upoint problem: areas," he
tiVe want te measure. the dis-
tance .from the river to .4reas
where,cattle are bothered, Even
in years of low: blacldly pow.
lations, there are, still problem
Pockets. Wo .need some way of
predictiug Where these will oc-
Possible itentrol m are
being tied in with habit* of the
blackflies and' their tormented
"There may be genetic influ-
ence in the tolerance Of some
cattle to blicliflies," 'Khan,
lai$ sewn to be bothered lest.
They also haVe a welt -developed
cutaneous muscle which allows
them to shake off the flies more
'effectively for better Pretection."
Dr. Khan,* pining an eXperi-
Anent with Charolais, Angus and
Hereford breeds to see if there is
-a bolsi& breeding *programs to
develop More toleraWcattle.
Newrepellents'are being tested
on cattle in a chemical approach
te relief from. biting flies.
Dr. Khan suipeas the best
iMmediate approadh could be to
simply proVide shelter -for the
herds:during; daylight hours.
."The blackflies don't follow
cattle into a,dark barn," he say4.
1'011.40 •btototecOgpi d
000.4:#1,0156-0 dAttei-
ence for .a herd that is trained to
Projects are also uriderway
amens 'loftier' reSearch groups to
in the cattle.
With the pressure on for in-
creased :protein supplies and
more beef prOduction, territory
gained from the pesky blackflies
and turned over to the livestock
industry would be a welcome vic-
tory for -the Canadian consumer.
•
demanded hY
Sift recent the
Agriculture Canada Research
Station at
show that Ciditals can be
from milk and given * groin diet
during the last few weeks before
meatcolor orquality. The advan-
tage to tbo producer would be a
rations can Mire
easily than I
nutrilionist at the station, divided
60 calves into 10 test groups and -
fed them varYinii. ProPortiono of
grain and soybean protein sup.
igementi with the exception of *
control group which was fed .the
COPVentional. milk only ..diet,
exclusive] b started en
animals wer
Y, Olt* except for
the control group!, were weaned
toahalfgrain,half-milk ration in
the thiid week. By the fourth
Week their diets consisted *.of
grain and protein sumlonentt
At 250 pounds, the COVels'were
slaughtered.. and " the carcasset
aded for color, tenderness. fat
HOMES
DISPLAY
LONG-TERM FINANCINg
(10% DOWN) ,
illOBILIFE CENTRE
8.HWy. BETWEEN HWY. 401
' AND KITCHENER 653-57138
strrER:
By D. C. 1%4411486n
WORDS OFTEN MISUSEEk
no not say, "We shall proceed
on with out plan, independent of
the 'others." Say, "We shall prOceed
Somit 'on') with our plan, INDE-
PENDENTLY {adverb) of ihe
others."
Distinguish between NAUGHT
(nothing) and AUGHT (anything).
Thus: "They have failed to do
AUGHT for themselves, and
NAUGHT can remedy the' situa-
Do not say, "One should never
allow himself to become irritable
under these circumstances." Say,
"One should neyer allow.014ESELF
to become irritable." •
Distinguish between ANXIOUS
(worried) and EAGER (keenly de-
sirous). Thus: "She is ANXIOUS
about her On's welfare, and EAGER
for him to return home."
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED
Vehement, Pronounce we-a-
ment, accent fiist syllable.
Generic. Pronounce ja-nehr-ick,
accent second syllable.
Vignette. Pronounce vin -yet, ac-
cent second syllable.
Metamorphosis (change of form,
etructure, or substance). Prirwiipal
accent is on third syllable.
Trachea. Pronounce tray-kee-a.
accent first syllabic.
WORD STUDY
a mord three times and it
is yo s." tet us increase our vo-
cabulary by mastering one word
each day. Words for this lesson:
NUBILE; marriageable. (Pro L,
nounce noo-b31). "She has reached
the nubile age."
MELIORATE; to make or be-
come better; to improve. (Pro-
nounce meet -Ye -rate, accent first
syllable). "Our situation 'has been
OvEnt open to view; mani-
fest; eVident. (Accent second syl-
:table). "It was an overt act of
DUDGEON; anger; resentment;
, Nil to go at he Wishes, he UpSe'S
RESIIDENTIAL
N R E
D M V
U BUSINESS
COMMERCIAL
A LOTS
For the most of the good life see Don Hoist
REAL ESTATE LTD.
Reaitor
'HUGH 'CAM.P.PLE144 right, serviceman for McGavin4s Parn1 equipment, Walton,' has
retie:nod frOm Week-leng training program at Me Sperry New H011and service training
Center at. New 'Holland; Pennsylvania. Whiie. at the center he attended,sessions in Itle
serVice And rePair of wide variety :ot modern farm machinery. NV. -Campbell, too.
He has ,an 'opttensive background in. farming and methanits. '
This is to a lovely oid lady 'who
will neVer know that i've ever
said a thing about her beeause
much. She would be terribly.em.
barrassed if she "did find out. 1,1i
call her Mrs. BroWni for 'AO*,
though brown is hardly the Colour
for her becinse in Spite of her '70
odd years the's evergreen
sort, one of these rare women
who never seems- to facl,e 'or, get
old because she keeps moving so
fist that Father Time can't quite
catch up with her.
Back on the farm she raised
eight kids of her oWn, it*Sed
them without any- reading•of4he
psychology books or any of the in-
tellectual woriie$ that so many
parents feel is. essential nowsz
days, She saw that they got, ,to
substantial sandwiches lir'
lune.h buckets. And when they got
that husbands usually grunt when
they.know better an to argue..
So she raised the ell y too,
and though she ha somewhat
more trouble than she expected
with him had to go,down to see
the principal more•times than she
cared to remember, and.even bad
the cops Come round to see her
once —, Kelly's doing just about
as well as her own now. And
sometimes seems that he ap-
preciatet her even more than her.
But not all of her own had per-
fect records. Qzie of the younger
daughters Came home one day
with her face full of tears and her
kmAckles White. and told her
mother she Was pregnant. Which
isn't so much of, a disgrace 'any-
more even when you'ye-not mar-
ried, thank the. LOrd, but XIS Stiff
‘1, ahouW., conkenient as
dy,
;willing aod able to marry the girl.'
Or 'when the girl knows.very
he isn't the man for her and never
Mrs. Brown just pulled the tea
piit off the back of the stove and
made two cups as strong as she
' garea- --f.kkleaSt you don't have to
wOrry whatIo do with the baby,"
she said. "Thia house is so empty
lately it scares me."
,So long after her own had left
. her kitchen, and Kelly too, and
when well past her threescore
and ten, Mrs. Brown started
hanging diapers on the line again.
This time she really spoiled .the
• little beggar. "Well," she says, "I
guess I had pothing else to do
much but spoil him, Oh my but
And then \just last month, when
the little fellow was learning to
talk back to her, the daughter did •
find the right man. A man so
ikight,that he was quite anxious to
have the child as part of the mar-
riage agreement. Which was
simply marvellous for everyone
but Mrs. Brown.
"Didn't eat Tor three days after
home at night she was the onc
who taught them the meaning of
work and responsibility.
She was also the diplomat of
-the house, the one who had the
difficult task of bridging the anx-
ious gaps which sometime;;
threatened .to separate fathei
Her children grew up in a quiet,
unspectacular way and they have -
all done her so proud that she
generally has to have a little
_over them whenever they come
home to her.
I think it was after the fifth had
left hothe to do her proud that she
began to get restless. "This is ail
awful big house for only three
kids in it!" she told her husband
one night. "And that young lad of
Mrs. Kelly's that's been giving
her so much trouble since she lost
her man — well I told him he
could stay here if he'd a mind to.
He's\ here half the time any -
ways."
To which her husband merely
grunted tircthe important way
that lad went away,'.', her huts -
band will tell you. "And when she
gets aver this one, I don't doubt
Shell find another somewheres.
No use. for me to try to talk her
out of it. She's just incurable that
husband that, there is Something—JO
wonderfol humbling about a wo-
man like that, this is my tribute,
not to Mrs. Brown alone mind you
because she'll neVer read tbist
but to the thousands of Other wo-
men who, in this most self-cen-
tered age in history, and knowing
full well the test and the tears
and the striate involved, are still
eager to take sorneone else's
child and -make it their own.
If the Almighty, is still on the
job, there is surely a special
, 'place in heaVen for these incus -
able mothers,
an
'"We cifoulated that the
to feud flu. Woes
a milk takes mare those
tbastfeedlag *grain dist to
00 anhuals."
These roc** ire csaildiesod
prothninary but, the
serpent
the
OCOnomic
grain, the practice could
i*O1010O111040141conimerelal pi*
Dr. LatlatIOMO 1,411 feffilleSt
le* with the inclusieief a meat.
meat protein *UPplenent
grain,fed calves.
•
New sihool
of ihought
(Continued froin page. 1)
dent must be combatted to learn-
ingand have a great desire to use
tithe, tnen he would.•be missing
much more than he misses in the
current system, because the
periods of work are longer ;mid
more is covered within the four
The project has been discussed
by the school for almost two
years'. "The teaching staff has
had to re -plan courses around
70 -minute periods."
Mr. Birtwistle • said another
aspect of "open education" is to
have less stress on *formal
examinations and more day-to-
day observations and class
The first semester will end
January 24, 1975.
Mr. Birtwistle said, "For the
student who is self -motivated and
wants to work on his own More,
this prograth gives him a better
chance. For the More lax student,
well, if a student doesn't want to
work, he Won't, whether you have
a teacher leading him around by
the'nose or tie him to a desk. He
won't work unless he wants to.
And that is What this system was
tailor-made for ;` a desire tO learn
and work."
hot 1
the Rooting IV*
*livered were lined up,.
,511 ruilealont.
fitiest in
und
orn
cal
MORTGAGES & PERSON
.500.00 $25,000.00
Get 'A Fresh Start To:
* DOWN PAYMENT ON. ItROPERTY
* IMPROVEMENTS TO PROPERTY:,
* OR FOR ANY WORTHWHILE PURPOSE
V‘1111.1AA4 REAMA. N
Palmerston
Kitchener
TRI-STATE INVESTMENTS
200 King Street Easi
Kitchener, Ontario
343-2616
576-1300
813 1200
Cut end bring this ad to our store for a traa bouts
spitclal shampoo.