Clinton News Record, 1945-07-12, Page 3•
E CITQNREC
a;" e • : ".,
het 1 irth,sie?„ Aiseerdiea• teethe es "and ',in emineetionayvithatierefeliga
ord 'tlietienati; milisic is the aet atieee:' gathetingle :then enate:'lhe !ga4.
expeerasieg, or stireing. emation,by •'sttainsapleeiedepeincipa lyeonasolemn
Fioe.eeontheieiVeiie" of somel.; ecailalaaea:.N'OtAele-•Oesala:ni;;"*ab'''la'
eelsie the feeerimeto ef„ eingitA ',the : tad teSeottiiii.' • "Fleieeiii a ad.' ;the.
d tlie'velee is , the Ineans• by which Foreat" whielf is wailed Mn OM'
eak This takes us a little into bae:eiletes. quite. often -
study of • •anetaray. Theetarynee Proceesieta • • ' • ; '"
opted ,•iet the threat. Lie th argeteetef A title Vent:0kt Wae •fatind
e Veice' afldsblee„ Imasea lip S We a'not • one -
gee end teeth are. the organs of aertaia to eithiiia, 'or'pa 'atone.
eecla .The structures which are Different note 'woud e et/Tele
ecialle'etametatediu the pletebictien which oula haeme ' e and fttini.
the voice are the yocel lend- or the time of the duet two singing
ids Thee are stiteteated acro; the 'together we have claire/Pi Where
rynx Theee ombined gwe aa the hundreds sare jonungharmaniously
Vier, of' ,ie) Seel/ ,a,id of gp'' in 'One -thong large' saneandity.
sirehetteat are • ProVidirig eentertaitia
men for 'times:et:as e± ninsiesleverSa„
If a gatherings Of 'people were
tasked if arta.'" one :could reintnaher
the abate time they had ever etitere
eatned ;fay.
probability there -would' he sten res
palate et • ail. Our ;parents, older.
heathers and ;sisters could likely
recall „hew as little tote, we pireed up
our lips and entertained the audience
'-withifasfew scattered teunds, grime in
tune and some not, We even at
times responded so lustily to an
encore that our 'visitors were Pleas-
ed when. we: ceased singing oui solo
Olin.: Tale variety instrument we
nd ohi,seily immix, symphony orches- and they were given an opportureity
. . to talk: ' •
- -
•
Instrumental ninsic was obtained
rimarily :from aaowiag, through a -
ed, muph he lame idea as; the
ute. Another idea was to stretch
Se bide of an animal aver a 1o11eW
4 and, strike it. An ordinary chute
aaiaqual to this. Late a on some
ne invented a box with a hole in it
ver *)ich were stretched pieces of
atguteand across them was dtawn
rosi matte of horse hair fastened to
1511 mid of the stick and drawn.
'alas was the crude begiening
E several of the fine instruments of
)-day, one example of, whita. is the
As far back as bistoey goes, We
nd music. The Biala givee many,
stances d happy gatheringe,whera'
fferenteklada eof iestrineerstaadieio
eyed; each as the lam, the bate
There are Several, kinds- of Music,'
om :the bright, happy, joyous type
:eh as is used in our paces of
easure and enjoyment, the saered
Usia 'w'hich we enjoy in our church -.
In the attics 'of pia home, especial..
ly in the farnaleg districts there sneer
still be found an old fashioned cradle.
We can recall.man'y cecassions when
a Mother lifted a crying baby from
its
its littie rocker bed and although it
took time from a busy day or even:-'
ing she would sit down in a rocking
chair, feed the baby from her breast
which was the eueldin in dhe days
now largely past and gm -Le, and would
sing the little one to sleep. Does it
eSNAPSHOT
IAD
• MAKE 'EM TELL 'STORIES
104
. .
An unbetatable combination' for appeallnwpicterear is a child and herepet.
• .
1N4 REGENT survey made (Mae,
ban of advertising agencies and
magazine editors it was found that
pictures of children Med animals
rate highest in popularity and ap-
peal. All the world loves a happy
hild Mid not the least:of the great
ate bestowed upon the /world by
he dillooverY of Photography
:hat which madeit possible for
parent to make it. picture ro-
od of hisfown cbildren.
aTothing is SO satisfying as mak-
ng pictures of children, whose
pontaneity and zest make snap
hooting one of Was epecial Pleata
res. Add a pet to the human sub-
ct and you have the combination
at brings a smile of delight to the
est jaded adult.
Leak at the little girl and her
g in today's picture. It shows a
let interlude in the everlasting,
eathless play of a 'healthy child
d her dog. The child is asleep,
It the picture goes back to evoke
the nand of the spectator mut-
ated scenes of the two tearing
ck and forth about the house,
e dog leaping and barking and
e child laughing gleefully. An
• imal and a child are, indeed, an
beatable combination for an in-
ite variety d pictures. •
The best pictures 'that show two
rsons, or a person and an ani -
al, are those which tell us some-
ing of the relationship that exists
etween them. Simply to pose a
og and a child together; and pap
he shutter iniala make a picture
f some appeal, but If their relation -
hip is depicted fie some natural
ciba the picture takes on added
leaning. •
To get such pictures keep your
eyes open while the child and the
pet aile,eat.plity in ceueetaof the
day. Watch for bellaylor. elnet will
lend, ittelt, to Pict -toes., Theo plan
to recapture what yop inne. You
can't always take what you, alms
wallet It- is hitemeaing. It you 2eau
:wise yenr. subjects in amitturDway
without resorting to.foree, Inalthars
gamed it, yea will be earptisesl at
the :moos that ieepeseiala.
If you aave a chid, ;but no pet,
it is, still ,poesible to „borrow one
from a frame or neighbor,. When ,
,you do that it is important that, you
give 'the child and the animal
plenty of time' to. get acquainted.
For not Until the two have truck
up a friendship will it. be Possible
to get really goad pictures that, will'
reveal the relationship , between
them.
Today's picture also suggests the
idea of a snapshot biography as an
altogether worthwhile photographic
project. Begin it :now .and berioda
catty add to it new incidents that
develop with the child's growth.
Watch the things the child doers
during ethe coarse of a weekaiiiid
make notes of the incidents that
are most characteristic. SimC of
the incidents that occur outdoors
can be snapped as they heaven.
Others may have to be posed under ••
flood -type photo lamps indoors. If
you are fortunate enough to own
a flash synchronizer and can get the
flash bulbs the indoor job is easier
and many of the pictures can be .
made while the child is at play.
The 'enapshots made foe a' .bio-
graphical' project can be mounted
in an album, one volume for each
year. It will be one of the most
cherished books in your library.
John van Guilder
ese.'=e aV.:eneaaeleasee, e
Tim 1,s,....... jativeramseernese.et memo
e. --a-assa.........a.a.......„
iYOv will find yourself one of the best informed persons in eeeeeee.aeleaate
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ltenderetanding of world affairs ... truthful, accurate, unbiased '
mews. Write foe sample copies today, or send for a eneemeeee
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The Christian Science Publishing Society.,
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Lel trial. subietiption 'to- The -
-Chrtitlah Science Awake.
for Wfilith •I OASIS, S... 1
asetemeposeetaiewearriera
•
ever #aatitdth; Oh%
otJe 407i<iaer,e 4a0k):160.0k t
the"..Mafffer 'ill*. they ehiliffsen, of to
Ike;
Sai4clethit''illiirlthAre,
. ..wara-40aven..anek",40.#4l'0'Pk"M'Ota•-•-'
•
t Stutrat4ree nor sleep •Se
7 ThY4,44:tell'etii.4''..l'etealidat'',',.:aei4ill.
•
todr'aire /cittigr: 0:f.feren.
f The Lotaatha'S kens. the //Ord thy
liVeiaafXdin"
tunes 611440 ,o•p,
Te
day Aria
ancivi. the 8thfife 1,0%.aalre,
large: part of the time which other
eviee'sit‘edd.• bee devoted' ,to tam
s
On th eight letand deth stay;
a The Moor: by, night thee sball nat
smite; '
` • Nor yet the sun by day.
Itaritiyaliesin• areeent yedia ; eorn
liteaSeti .eterveleged t ear Mite
sii4eaa';bubfalsie'aerinAlt4•44,17';beee
so 'eet as t1i of 01r dear Mother
heWelierhaPeeMaytiraseareapethe Glory
Land as she'.'rei:e1Q1 'ea to sleep sing
111:••414141',40" 100,11i• 0°010 "Feat
'whea we,'wereeeld eneitialt M remeei
e The Lord, shall keep thy seal; He
d shall1
Preserve thee from all ip.
„Hence fOrth thy going out and in,
GeV keeps forever will."
PEG
a
In thinking ever -past days we
remember 'the times when our father
used t walkup ankdoWn: the room
with his children singing to them. We
San se aeXather tossing his little eon
hp inlae air and as he caught him
sawing "Bye, leaby Bunting, Father's
goaeahunting". Some of .ua are not
Whit we eau remember
these pima ,,days of happiness ani
conld eitieh,ewe eduld, live thein over:
Parents are yen &Voting your
tO•yone ehildreii in 'theta' early days
or are 'yon playing a selfish pot
which. will leave them tai pleasant
meinories?
A ,, AA
' Many can leak batla to' -the days
when they thought their parents
were 'very striet. Maybe .they insise
ted on things being done differently
from what our children. and young
people .are doing today, but if we
were given our choice we would
cbbose the way where Chtist was
'in oar home and where we
were brought up te hive Wm rather
that's in many homes today where our
Lord is practiCally unknown.
Young people then found their
pleasure at home or in company
with family.. friends. At any rate
their parents knew where they were.
It is true that there was the occas-
ional father or son who came home
intoxicated but Tor a youth or young
girl to come traiang in, in the early
or late hours of the morning Was
practically an unheard of thing. Par-
ents have you anything to do with
that? Think this matter well over.
How happy the Young people were
lie they gathered around the melodian
as the piano was called in those Jaye
and sang the old songs and hymns.
They left for their homes at a
respectable time and did not go
staggering home at dawn, There
are many at the present day' to
wheal this does not apply: Many are
clean healthy youths, but We must
all admit that there is a vast in-
crease of these who would no like
to be found in some of the places
they frequent if Christ were to come.
If a curfew were to be rung in these
days the town or city fathers would
have some disenasioll as 'to whether
they should' announce the time even
for .young children before twelve
o'clock,'
•
Quite often -the Mother in the old
land learned to 'play and when she
came out here and the 'family were
aide to get au insteureent, of any
kind, she• xepewed her practise and
taught the childeela to sing and play.
'rhe 'families were settled quite
spareely, but quite often there
would be "bees" of different kind'.
In the eveaingS they would gether
around the instrument and sing.
In that way the old psalms anti
paraphrases were learned. The
mothers could be heard singing in
the homes and the fathers in the
fields. How many people to -day
could repeat even that lovely twentla
third Psalm? If you do not know it
learn it before sleep overtakes you
to -night.
Singing in the benne has practically
become a thing of the pelt. Pianos
have Veen sold or in many cases
given away. The children are spatter-
ed in the evening and the Mother
tied father er maybe just one of
tam is left sitting alone. Does it
ever occur to the young people thet
their parents might enjoy bavi
them stay at home for an evening?
The time may comesoon ermagh
when they will not be there wal-
ing for theni.
It is erne times changed, "but how
how much happiness. could come with
the revival of some of these old
thin.
• Radios have largely taken the
place of pinto. 'Strange to say
so many of the young pcople enjoy
jazz more than any other kind of
music.
The etory le told taat when Jenny
Lind was corning to this country for
her first concert tour that, she ;as
quested the captain of the beat to
have her wakened Orly the following
morning that sbe Might see the sun
rise over the omen. The Captain did
so and he described this .beautiful
singer, one of the greatest of all
times, standing Watching the shades
and tints- of the sky. Then the fir t
golden rays shot up from the heeizon.
As the sun finstRy leaped up from
the waves, her deep religiona feeling
Mood expreasien in that noble work
of /feeders "Messiah". The captain
said no one could- ever xealize what
the singing of that part "I know thee
my Redeemer avail" really meant
as sung by that „aeeutifulegirl who
had given her life,to Christ and who
had, aedicated. bee God given talent
to Him.,
to the hills wile lifeanieeeeritaa
Fiven Wheneedetie coma mine aid?
My safety cometh from the Lord,
• se al; ' the a riiiibprtoirfeltrliv tret.lcsizelielseretalg
eee ereeimaareerarop it drzt like
cleosys Ipeodsvemtot,..4.0,reelitg
utY-t oti ertateiiet theY
•
' 'Mee! dia., l'e-easn onc, ars out ,
4,s:didn't chew ;
0WS
Hero Homemakers!
We hope you are enjoying, the
produce of your Victory 'Garden.
The pleasure derived tom gather-
ing and serving your own salad
green should offset the back- stretch,
ing and lame -bending hour spent
in protecting your garden from
weeds.
All the vegetables greenery', as
well as colorful radiehes, earioti,
beets, tomatoes, and so on, add their
owe individuality to salads. Fruits
too — berries, cherries, melons,
peaches — follow' along in succes-
sion to add pep and goodness to your
meets.
Whether you pick your own as-
soetment of salad materials or WY
then, please do be sure that they're
mug andlendet. Wash thoroughly,
;Vain on tows and chill to crispness
be.fom you use them. Chop, slice, OS
shred finely. Just before serving
add salad dressing tossing the in-
gredients together—do not mix too
much'. If your salads are to be at-
tractive and crisp do not prepare
them, too long before serving.
TAKE A TIP
Keep Electric Refrigerator Clean
Clean the inside of the refriger-
atoe, every two weeks. The dial
should be turned to "defrost" or
"off" position. Having removed the
food from the helf" below the
freezing unit, spread a layei of
heavy paper on it. insert a pan
of hot water in the freezing unit to
eaten ice quickly; meanwhile" lake
out everything in the obinet, Wash
the interior with a ;mild solution of
watex and baking soda (1 tbsp. to 1
gal. of water). Wipe the .coilte in-
side the ice tray units as well as
the sides of compartments. Dry
out before turning on the electricity.
Wath ice cube trays in warm
water with clean cloth to Prevent
the lee cubes front beeeming f av-
oared. Scrub shelves anil dry them.
Ruh the rubber gasket on the door
with a dame clothwrung out of
clear -water.
Do not use a scouring powder on
the outside of cabinet. Wash with
mild soapy water and dry well.
Coils: should be cleanedof dirb
and dust at least two or three
times a year, because accumulated
dirt keeps the. 'cells hot. '
it may prove to he good economy
to have your dealer or reliable Ser-
vice man inspect the refrigerator, if
that has not been done for some
time. Older types which may re-
quire oiling . should be oiled every,
month,
SALAD SUGGESTIONS
1. Sliced beef liver loaf, spinach
and lettuce salad with sour cream
and chopped hard -cooked egg dress-
ing, tomato wedges.
2. Jellied vegetable moulds, cheese
and parsley sandwiches (triple
decker ribbons with brown and white
bread), pickled beets.
3. Stuffed cooked, beets, chilled.
green beans in French dressing,
green onione, radishes.
ilellied veal and rice., mould,
currant jelly, 'mixed vegetable
greens on nasturtium greene with
salad dressing.
5. Egg halvein tomato jelly,
cottage cheese and parsley mounds,
brown rolls stuffed with cabbage
slew.
6. Corned bed and head cheese,
jellied horse -radish, macaroni salad,
grated carrot with mayonnaise,
lettuce.
'7. 'Palled cooked fish on lettuce,
cacumbers in ever •cream and
potato salad, -
CORN CAKES
3 cups cooked Corn, Va eup milk,
1/2 tbsp. sugar, 2 eggs, % cap flour,
3 tspsbaking powder, % tsp. salt.
Add the milk and sugar to corn
and combine with the .eggs which
have been well beaten. Sift to-
gether the dry "ingredients and add
to the cora Mixture. Drop by table-
spoohfuls into greased ,rnuffin tins.
Bake in an eleetric oven at 375 deg.
—about oneahalf hour. (Suggested
for meat salads).
SUGGESTION:
MOCK POTATO CAKES
1 cup dried split peas ia-mier din
By an overwhelming
preference Canadi
would rather oWn
any other brand Of
This preference is
past experience
tires:
allege facts'
scientific opi,
Canadians fro
survey, ,mad
largest „and.
search orga
fully condu
e.
on
t °1bile
:0arna°reofu am°
na
oast to Coa$
• .st depen
• tions, w
• that
ot thcletle1°e$0t00nt skasof prop°
tered. vehic
the number b
Furthermore, Ilene of
answered the carefully w
tionnaire had any inkil
tire company was be
vey. The names of c
ear,
• '• asee•eae
While even this last fig
highly flattering and exee
gratifyihg to the Goodyear
izatione it ,is even More"
to compare it with h
figere suppli
knows, e
an
ti
Like Wearing Qualitle
.Proof that prefere
year was based Jar
ing qualities, lies i
both- motorists an
combined gm* Go
cent vote, while th
gave Goodyear a
The next most
ceived only 14.5 per
total vote, just shout
Goodyear rating am
surveyed.
• When the figures have been
broken down even further to ex- hat
elude the motorists from the non- their
motorists, we find that 38 per cent even
of the non -motorists showed prefer- Th
ence for Goodyear over all other ly
tires. dura
fter
es Gi
se 11)
s a
'
adolt a Sekeef th _
hie days" lessened
tigue: •
• Conclusion is
ws -pula 'ty
dr
o aroWina'
ommissioners and
to c!et„tnicatut:14hooe'lbdd.4iettahretla4ciltOntiitniinly(fite r,
tore with steel piss
vehnigbhew payermb lettered toll
;boards had to 4s
om one farm to an*
he ne ire offered real, possa
buillttulerteo
. ewniesrevolutionway.;in 'afiri•
t
Ru. would. 'greatly Morose
tress of a tractor. The
s quick to see this.
any • left his steel -shod
ut in the Weather.. With
er-tired tractor 1m could•drive
it up to • thel house faster than he
could vva•1
a •el
th
etie
were always' used t in puts per •ce
ting questions. yery carefully, those K
. who ansvvered were broken dowe c
into automobile owners and ,nona
automobile owners and record re
made of such data as the 14of cars they were driving,
proportioti of
in er brands: Tire
cent; Tire B, 5.8 pe
C, 5.5 per cent' •
per cent; Tire E
e F, tal per et'
t; Tire H
)p; ,., •
tree': ceo,
h survey
es
et e Canadia
do synthetic tires
were convin
; were
Tire
s, 2.0 per
6. per cent,
point brou
s tha o
fe hi
e
on -
LIT
0
• ose
oug t synthe
ad etually had ex
.7 them it was found tha
sal one out of 10 of these
rating. satisfied ith their
tire re- reas.
:e of the atisfie
ird of the r whe
'all those ve had e
er
o he put it away in
ving maintenance
could drive it into
ut damaging floors
o ubber the tractor need
limited to slow speeds, might
driven at 25 mike an hour. By
hooking on a trailer or farm
wagon, :Pe could haul products to
tires al
erience w
hnost nine
s wer
10
SO. there was •no reasoe why
er tires couldn't be applied to
r farm machinery. Within an -
r two years, the threshing mas
ne, the separator, the binder, the
n -husker and shelter, the mower.
e Potato -digger, the ensilage -cut.
V, the silo filler and the manure.
reader all.began riding on rubber.
eir n • t
how , r, more
thetie owners
re just as good or
than nattiral rulater.
rate them beteer—a good-
ton—say they are snore
Rayon Is Used
In Truck Ti
Go
„„lidsisTitoa
not
Today' m
1 nod s
•
t point in an elaborate
len am survey conducted on be=
al? of Goodya! ong Canadians
om coa
The -e e ed by one of
•most reliable
organizations,
pr ar' y o finding
o Cana el about
.m .11e tire
addition t
w defini
o obi
adult
Y new auto.
ar. This in.
as revealed as an
uld
CC without a
elopment—truck tires
yo o Instead of cotton
thus enabling tires to s
der the extreme
high speeds.
One of the g
Velopments, it tst e d the mo
stubborn stu. , next to synth
rubber, on the part of the
department of Go
back in 1927 tha
chemist, R. P. D sed
the question o or rayon
in place of co , w ich Was u
able to stand up under the e tr
heat generated by the to
runs of cross -co
Silk was fo
ately unseat great
difficulty • as that it
kept sop t fro e rubb
The prober/ w- ge
rubber to stick
L. B. Sebr
head, thought
coating forst as 1 he U.S
Navy's rigid sh whi he had
previously d eloped, •gested
somewhat similar soltal to s
the rayon problem.
came the need for a s
Search seemed endl
progress was made
Presently a mini F 11 was
bunt and hundreds tires were
built under thousands of laboratory
experiments. ;
Fatally the answer was found
after thoueands of tires had been
tested. The hew Goodyears gave
eutetanding service, sepetior to
anything previously built in the
field of long-distance sons, and
other companies hurried in, de-
manded the :tame rayon Goodyear
Ws tilting from the rayon com-
panies and eta up tiro to see how
they were Wilt.
4 ;1
their .rk easier,
food for victory with
nks to ru.b
rk, t
vehi s and
h story of r •er on
began in 1931 hen a
rower in • a comp
Good r an,
an
to
on
m . Some
airplanes had
ed to the Jackso
h of Goodyear.
Constructed a d
the' tires on t
tractorto try
The rge r la eti
t poun ure nd the
tree • • • .unds pressure.
ea w d. 'I' large, s
• muld roll ove
out of hol
ci stalled trac
wed that the
idd d for the
ve rrain t ine that
done t irplane on
pastur irports still com-
that period.
d Way
experiment was not a come
p success, but it pointed the way
ard the use of Air Wheel -type
es for farm use. The manufae-
urers of tractors became interest
ed immediately, and while the de-
velopment men of Goodyear 'were
driving ahead on the design of
farm -tiro, the engineers of the
tractor plants, working closely With
them, were modifying' their wheels
to permit the installation of rubber.
The 'sleet. yar, rubber -tired trae-
tots were demonstrated at the Na-
tional Covrt-Husking contest and
made a deep impression. The farm -
ea an observine man noticed that
57.4 per cent
to buy new
cts include an.
t who have not
minds. Only
itely do not plan;
rs after the war.
g trouble
• ose, dry
e unde
s Thaed w'h'ee j1
p ently ul
taiivating
tufa would
tra r.
.0
blaileTtcl
play
were skit
nesrosnito
ri ented With
I aagn) it°aei isei 1 sYost il lenefar °.odrri r47elli
v small %ati
2. s
timres . seetoeipset;
re too heatee. oast
o • ear engineers, king: -vie
of their StraiahteS e ailnelphs
their ow
vel h e, rd thefabfirrsiee,
si specter re.
ui
, pktenuip, and it
k for airplene
me all, Goodyear O -
d with development Work,
Ind by the imel the first World
War broke out they domihated the
market.
5
rk
a s es me Ns re
Uri
11
•' •
411111111•1011,4
minced onion, e tepe sage, 2 eggs
(beaten), 2 tsp. pickle sauce, la tap.
salt and Lg. pepper.
Cook 'washed split peas in boiling
salted water until tender (soak for
a few hours first, if desired), ilea
drain and force through a sieve to
make a thick puree. Combine wIth
remaining ingredients and mix thor
oughly. Shape into patties and roll
in additional mamba Chill in elec-
trc refrigerator until tea time
.(about an hours then saute until
brown, Serve with a Palish, if de-
sired.
THE SUGGESTION BOX
• Mrs. J. B. says: (1) To stiffen net
veils iron. them on waxed paper:
(2) Freshen roses; by placing
them face down in a bowl of cold
water. -
(3) Stamps stuck together can be
separated by covering them with a
sheet of paper and pressing with a
Warm iron.
Mrs. M, M. says: We've had our
electric toaster in constant service
for 18 years became we keep
crumb tray clean and keep eord
area from kinks; pull out the plug
gently — never yank it. If toast
sticks, we ease it out carefully with
a fork; neves" dunk_ toaeter in
water and above all handle it
fully.
Anne Allan invites you to write
to her
% Olheton News -Record. Send
in your suggestions on homemaking
problems and watch this column for
replies,
•••••••••••.•••'•••++,-..-++,..*•
TORONTO CONSERVATORY
. RESULTS
The following is a list a saecessful
cariclidates in examinations held re-
eentiy by the 'Ibonto Conservatory
bread cruetbe, 4 tbsp. hulk, 2 haiteloa Ildueie in Clinton, The Mame are
iSERE'S.110V1 lati1010SIS VOl.
014 Vat PREFERE140,
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9e0 Meet . • a . . . 41. ,
Msmate • . . , . . Ofe
sat iseet . • • , . . Oa
' eta:04004 Meets 0)000 ezea,
Isswilectikeitesset term to a temeaebt
itseatilta tatete teasneaa tatesatee
maned In order of merit.
rano
'Grade IX; Ilonopis—Oarnes 8. Hall
Gracie VIII; IionOirs-,‘daiherine
Hay; Pass—Mary Oleefe.
Grade VII; PASS—Marjorie Finlay:
Grade VI; lionouts—Mare Beatty;
Mary Thompson.
Grade V; First Class Honours—
Phyllis fianly; Holioars—Barbara
Gaunt. Pass—Anne Channeey.
Grade IV; 'First Class Honour'—
Marguerite Hall; Honours—Gordon
Lane- Eleanor Wightman; Doris
Marlatt.
•
Gradelll; First Class Honours—
Ronald D. Philp. Honours -a -Donna M.
Anderson; Mildred Cook Graee
Gilmour (eual);• Marjorie accKnzie,
Donna J. Powler.
Grede II; First dos. Honours—
Maey J: Giblaings, Honours—Barbara
Ititia; Margaret Collins, Douglas
Kilpatrick (eqoal).
• Geede I; Pit st Cass Honottre—a
Helen E. Potter.
Singing
Grade VIII; Honours—Dorothy E.
Hamilton, Lois A. Lockridge,
Grade VI; Pass ---Phyllis McCord.
• British Minesweepers in Tort
Photo Shows: General view 0 minesweepers at their base.