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The Clinton News Record, 1940-09-26, Page 7PAGE 6 THE CANTON NEWS -RECORD Tk�IiRS,, (SEPT. 26, 1940 YoN.V•"s'I"r°x'r.° ,• r"• •"••••.p•••'•*0• i rhea's'•••°•1" .•••r`r.'4n'r rr es em oVie 'r',,.• • c I React And Write For You (Oopyright) •*, By John C. Kirkwood '.^'•',eeee',eeee eeVe"• tae ard'd'm° ee eeeel ee o •i"y iceeees e'•Yi eeee d o eereeMes rear You probably remember ,ending ,blood chemistry, clinical. pathology about _a man - an American invent- and elemen tary bacteriology. Also or - sehogot widely publicized be- she is capable of greeting people cause of his declaring that he had sympathetically, intelligently, effie- invented •a new type of bomb which, iently;capable also - perhaps ; - of in explosion, would kill everybody taking the doctor's dictation,' keep - within 1000 feet of its point of burst- ing his 'ceases" eeports, and keep- ing, and of the :failure of this bomb ing his books, to do as it was expected to -dc when Bern's a feminine vocational field trials were made of it, with tied far from being over -crowded. goats as testing substitutes for human beings. Well, this man, nnin- ed Barrow, has received salve for his humiliation - but not in relation to hie limed oxygen bomb he was There is an increasing demand for Skilled -personnel to man the research and manufacturing phases of the Ontario Fa ture Lands are Being Invaded By European Enemy hid"��i I� y T , , I , r :,t I i,: Wild Carrot spreading rapidly states John Dee MacLeod, Crops, Sends and Weeds Branch, Ont, Dept. of Agriculture -Suggests eradication methods. No weed is spreading so rapidly in Ontario to -day as Wile Carrot, states John D. MacLeod, Crape, Seeds and. Weeds Branch, Ont. Dept. of'. Agriculture, Toronto. This bier - Mai weed of European origin is sire - liar in many respects to our culti- vated carrot, It has a deep, strong, tap root, a bristly stem, and much divided leaves. Clusters of white flowers curl up when mature. Seeds ar•e ono -eighth of an inch long, ridg- `.present national week programmes, ed,'and hear 4 rows of spines, which 'l i byPresident it" nee cit the very ctrutdstna ainfrin of $692,719 in and t waxtperiod. programmes demand is in The root has an odour similar to respect of an infringement by rho P chemists that of the enitlwatrcl carrot. This awarded o v of the work prograrunos of the assist in their distribution. U.S. government of his patented relation to engineering, y, aerial torpedo bomb - us physics and metallurgy: The men is ore positive means of identifying bombn - an previbusP who remain and will remain without ' it. Flowers may be cb :rvecl from ed in the 25 WorldeWar.. Bar-hijobs are those lacking a specialized. July to October, prcgagation by mw h, to wait ly years for hes seeds which mature from August to money, but probably the money re- training; which suggests that all • belatedly will have had a wel-men in need of work, or who want November, Wild cannot will not be- come 1 is Y have had to nentect themselves in. their Pres- come established where a short rota - had been it received 20ao eat places of employment should noir of crepe and therm -mil cultiva- age it been received or so years 1 studiously. fit themselves to do spec- tion is practised. It is one of On. age' ial work - should make themselves tario s most objectionable weeds in The 'big cheque received by Bar- particularly competent in a special Permanent pastures, old meadows, low was big only in amount: it ized field of activity, r , asides, fence $ and nd occasional - area, as measured in square inches, was ncrinal. Here is the story of It is of vital importance that seed - a big cheque whose filled-in amount Our universities are Znercasingly ing be prevented as thourar:ds of seals may be produced cm an average plant, The- may remain on the by the 14tuskerroa (Mich.) Junior ing needs industry d of and commerco plant until late fall and winter, when ly in poorly cultivated field', was but $300: It was a cheque meas- widening theircourses - giving soca_ m .+ `: O feet x 2 feet, was designed indeed earn ses eeleitlatetl to Help as a tobotr*gen, and was presented graduates fit swiftly into the grow- ' Git, r.l:-r o$ Commerce to the great- Thus, by way of example, one uni- they ntay be carried miles ave, froz- en • Muskegon Chamber of Commerce 'rpt ground l and in drifting enoev, versify is giving a course on food thereby irfeet:ng new arras, Birds, as a contribution toward the erre-' technology. Lectures will be given Lien of a toboggan elide to Muskegon on pasteurization, refrigeration, bake t"'"e State Park. The local bank accel:Le,l ing, packaging and bottling, canning,illi��tr Pro,. $, y*� ,t it and cashed it. l' humidification and :fir -conditioning. e¢ ITEI. s`''a`,sa gYa s Pro,'C .i. !Ca: ; a s On The lectures in part will be given Birmingham..I nF,.,,,,l, has apop- by experts connected with the food livestock, water and man also are responsible for the distribution of seed. The following methods of eradication ' are suggested: 1. Sow; clean clover and grass seed, 2. Pull or spud out seettesecl Plants; rogue the clover ;and grass send crop; cut badly infested fields early for hay, • 3. Break up infested meadows and pastures and practise .thorough cul- tivation tend a short : rotation of crops, • 4. Mow meadow and pasture fields when plants are in the early bloom stage. A second or third mowing ur:iy pc necessary in order to prevent seeding.' If plants are too far ad- vanced, rake up and burn, 6, Pasture infested areas: closely with sheep. 6. Start early after harvest cul- tivation immediately afbcr the crop has been removed and cultivate until fall, • 7. Spray with a chemical weed kil- ler. Cutting of wild carrot has proven to be a discouraging' and costly operation. A. 1.00',1 eradicatiu i is possible by the use of ehetnie'rls at casts lees than Sept which would be spent for cutting with the added advantage of affecting a co,.i,,'ee kill. The value of mere protein otur•e f ld nest Tarns bre been lowered consid- erably ,'tee to the prevalence of Wile Carret. e t, Cont -el of th'a weed is a riddle r• r h,=• i, whirr 1'. n r na' r„tri41 ,r, t oil ,•r• -p rt'- - mwnei • should co- operate, Mr. MacLeod states. Co 2k St and chemical industries. elation nese tiara that of Greater - --- -- - Montreal. It is a city which the i Germans would lila to smash to 1 In 1914 Mrs, Fanny S, Sweeney 3ieht eel day, in fele weether the throb: i:tg cif its meter;: Tele. v• :,.o smithereens, for it is a chief centre started a business based on .site and foul, without even the break in g'iast:: para, the :,ta,t tis trriere for the mead acture of munitions, ' n1 stenotype - a stenographic machine t,t„t n;; tint ,se` ww ., 1'brew, towel& the aaol1. li it p: night t;. Yd„.},• nl;• re_it of Ca ..t.}:ea foteeie locator,' t :n ,-,.tit thr,t .rine r , t: •particularly of fiverams• She had begun as an ordinary sten.,1al,:lg :t chlieltt with wv'•:,' beep vigil. et elatce'tc point: pow egfel GENERAL CROP REPORT While harvesting in the Prairie Provinces has been delayed by wet weather, satisfactory progress is being made,'' Threshing is nearing completion in Manitoba and is more than ore -half finished in Saskatche- wan. In Alberta threshing operat- ions are under way. ' The Dominion Government's preliminary estimate• places wheat production in the Prair- ie Provinces at 634,000,000 bushels, distributed as follows — Manitoba 71,000,000 bushels, Sasbatchewan 260,000,000 bushels, Alberta, 203,000,- 000 bushels. This year's wheat pro- duction is 71,000,000 bushels higher than that of last year and is almost equal to 'the, record crop oe 1928: The estimated average yields per acro of wheat in Manitoba and Alberta are Bigler than, in 1939, but in Saskatchewan the average yield is slightly lower. In areas where rainfall was heavy bleaching has occurred, and frost has ceu:.1 alight damage in 'some districts. In the Province of Quebec harvesting has been delayed in some art -as by cold, wet weather, but on the whole fav- ourable conditions pee -vaned and good average crops `lp eat assered, In Ontario con tinu d ewe, v,,: t weette- er has seotssly haeineeed hera -t- in;• operations, and bee cast. 4 leseee to crops in alrbut some cf t"t.. I t t- ern egtie ge In the leneeiree Prov- inces o1- - mce., i-cectlt rule.: hive, 1we l 2 - eficial to root ce; mot preetur , bee harvesting of grain has been hamp- ered with :one; tl nt:';u:neu in British Cohen:Lie tae se a on is at least tea weeks earlier than lt.+!; year and crops, which have n r tetlr•- ed without damage, are geed, with the exception ai' grain and hops, yields of which at_ b.Iow as sago. • Twcaty Yet:? ee , ;) and drradee the appearaneo of a 1 visitor. Winn h ;useaoid ;•a .l were i inkrn ( t w nn stet, they wills not l,c .eplac d. Often a women could 1 not provide adc:mat,) di, 1, :. mer meal awl in the feint., ere:•1 undor tn: ars.'. lent b d Beg. . Imekino bat over threw home Birmingham has been called the eglaphel; but was led toward steno- il: I)ominicti Eaeti.t t'?, --t lire. 1111 ,a , it of 1000 trades, Perhaps no typy, and later set up in 'Amine,:Tr.rratc•ni=111 muzzL' of r,.a t.,1 1'^t- 111 :ling 1 L,_r3ir.:, 1)1-31•11 prep e city 1. her^alt t Ftouotapist oTnd^n,•r.av,,ry •f it r • i.k c'aic'y'lr at t !. i,..{' 7 • other city of its size anywhere in 5 ' ” ` "'• ' �; 3tory ,:n,t ser.+p ill, !sect •ntns>.' _, e size has a company tailed The Ma,{. „ , -- 3: _•• 1 the world has a more diversified _Is int b, t- , t the le.(. # •'. I production of manufacturers, Yet ter Pet:partin ; Cotul,any, and employs I tie- skies: , hunt it - of the Can .i`ee it is a handicapped city, for it lacks no operators. Since 1014 she has re—small rand levee:, dart t:tcl: and navigable water. Situated in the ported 15,000 public addressee -3 Her t r, organization is called on from time 1 t1 c''ri l 1 Midlands cif England, surrounded by i run; ia.3tly en iia 1, 1,: n e.:,r: ' forests of (tali and good plow and to time to supply operators icer rice, marauders. it in 'tam' indust- vice in overseas countries - in con - Pasture land, B m gl s Important among C, ±i, •l ' rialists used the materials at hand, nect!on with international eonven-, 1 r1 der nr; `a -t-:31' war ni 3 I to)'- yawn,butchering,tanning !•r•. a -1-'7:a clot the hill :,:>:• loaf-, , 1st • i3.1,-1,” e 1 ! t I 1- , 1 at 1 I c,.1:0 taught seined los : remit,- ;v r. the mit. - before i nein• e, , :3' , the t r ,t,l�- ,: k,t•. way; no:; r ) , ?alt in t..- t 1 tip tj' nt ;r^.rl c it` t. r :ley ;eel ,,1"0 it, 1,,,» tis- 1;e1 , .., nee'! ren' , I.n; .(.rally. Oac'* 1 :l. wt- o, I, r.^.n fntcic, _ r.3 h.. _.*.ntr'd. 1,!' n;h , f: -;t t, tw my veil }- L (1. 1 3333 . 1 ;tee A c:•cw 0: f:•nl:'t .'c . 1P: +, 1 , .. 31 ilirir 1)1i0 313, 1 ' a r, eelt • t.^,:. C'. 1' 'ill: 'i 3inte f1•a:, „ ,,t '• 1 3: 3 , y 10 n expo' I ,... w , •:1 ', 1„ c'1 the nl., ll' .. w c N et, i eying ;• 1, t.l with tier 1 l t,, 1 Piet. le the height of the 1. ..c .. , Vega a11•1 51 _a?• , c. i 1 , f im,1I t al! • ,!2., frons or meetings, Her setvxces are , ,;..,, glee e, i, 0 c ',)- see of VA -11, 1 '1 - 1• : ,rt t'. ,l, , tee w a le,,,;', ,:• ,," 11• and early ped woollen, linen- i bat are tea +.,t> 1*' + a ', :,;,rt. hut- :e • ,t, 1. . 1.:,,. 1 c linen - 'in demand by The Frigidaire "Cold -Wall" is built on entirely neer principle that sates foods' vitt mins, freshness and flavor amazingly lower. You don't have to keep fooris covered or }wrapped. `w Come illi-J.e a d.mgnstratien of the le i,;idaire: ••Cold• i51ra11” today! tlate'4.!3 ,T„ I! r- 4 !; c • '1 :r 1•c; r t:,,r,.t.. l.t ,V!,ti.0:, 1: Jen!, t, atm T;-. 1' .. , , !r .t ... :Ins ret Ct'iclt, 1. 1, T_1 ;il_ 51)'3•' i:::,1 lemma) oiu:ool t'uiv•t.-r+y of Manitoba n,nl :•.'•121•21J9, 1 [ +11,j!•, 3 .:' trade asrociatint s. , , thing 1 a and }cath- t ally trt:rrsmiitc•. to a "Frei; ,I,. , 1 -r 1 t r 1 + :'a, • convcnttons club gatherings public h ,i t is : e< ; - • , 1 ;, ,' , , r' . _,u,l "'I: ' et utdu:,t3tes, mail coal and non 3 „< lie .#t1iitic s0.shonitl. ,•P lie fl • brought to timing- meetings, "My greatest thrill," she < ,,.� l... • .. , 1. ..:'C. ., a•.� ..?., .-• '.. l:; _ 1, '.l 11 ,_, x,1:,,1 :_ x : li 1. .zt y U ( g„,.,,,id., t- i says, "v110`in covering an American + fel iit:'•rl}v 13113 ,fug '1 ,"int„ }.:rr list t> 3;tc. 3_ lin :ill, i :::iiii; i linre l with the :3 half of canals , sCity . front v:•ell-trediem h.. U .,.: , '_11c' ("ale' v: it11 41,.Is ;ut 1 u tet t \ ,. 1 , n e ere w' and o ltvc agog e slide a shorty after t convention in Ilan.-asea, the hei.let or alto p do ;K le , shortly after the Great'1 `ars A groat ,•,;' 'n of c ,,2,..11:1 ; A -•A guns .11111 ., new crnriUlc-irnn pracess gave Sltof-; it; u: `o t t ani I3r;u r a' lt: ii h • v,It u i i r . , :1 ' ] , 2 t mita* military dr nairice includin • ,m...1, u., ane 5ittually 11211„55151 t• •• ` i Walt I , t , i ere', i ,s field an nulw•antal't Birmingham tank g , 6 Jen ^",t , --:` , t:'t- 1 ran u.;,.r f.•.'i eel' t, L .' ' r,» . tel t, • „ 1 Marshall Foch and Genets Pereh- vet andarleofel na. s; Joys, and became the k Theyr gathered to -in every resnret three;t r.a ,1 of brass manufactm rr rnon-ferrousT h l P h all but these who lune tlhe'n M.r a 'a up In a. , work and leading centre nig m' e. were g c .r o lr , ti: 1 5:11 t' t :n'1"- '•1 •e - it : get}ter to assure world peace.. It was netts of anal -aircraft prune are the r9, Then began the trialing of bicycles and ' their confidence that the warld had coa:. nteg s bulw;ak never 1.na. e t firearms in a big way. Y P tt r , e t ), 1 1 1, sated, and the talk of no more tear 1•:•,5 d the D•:,niulon' (0t'.t, are the t :r ilr n, ,,, ,,, b rl t,irr.u.ti its A. ladylike oceupat!ou Is being a 4 made the occasion unbelievably imtthelnatieletee dream emcee trio, ,,;••t, i', :pili medical assistant. A medical assist- momentous and inspiring:” Alas, rf. +1 leen; „ i'r'e a., ' see 1 ,•t • r i, „ . I „t: e -et lea�.ea ant sets as office nurse and liber- Alas! c " u•trrtn:li5 ' :hell e *' ' t rr• .. flirt., c.,.l,l carry this 1,:fo•rntation to A -A en reached a degree of eivilivation 11; ,fir. r r', 71 , 3 nt. the n- whereb encs could at last be as- . .1-•l beta:lime. s":ls ,. t l She1 hoe t • I li ve 1 :t.'l how tp meet e, 1.ao•:lc .a_;1 learn tem tl.. _. and that is peasi',lc the relief years tercel,`, rue. in 2 eye rase, I feel that without beetles lives1 tie 1 iia' c. without those 11:1:,1 knocks I have received, I would not be a}tic to uttdet„tsnd tl'at vital struggling fewtncnt of life hi b'o:•'3nr, 111,1 r1:4, - flap di<•triet:r. 5 -1545 1 1. ., W111•.11 1'. •. h 5,'. 1 , T'ir.ty ,.f f 1 , ' 3' -, 3 dna.' ?,li.LS,rtuu, ;II, ,,,.,',r .t•1;c,,•3 U Rt•., ,r.,:'r: iitt- t3i; AD ,. ii .. , .., ,4:.'. .. t1, c i'rie, of 1'1=;tit. •t fo+•tn •r tele; t X11' ,';' 'rte ITeneell taut ,1 ('ha,lalt. else I'.,,l,t. I simian r ;t:1 1h end 1 , t11, •' , I Moet t ,1,,, 1 , , T atltu. Rtw. 1^ 3vnl t oir_ ,> 11''n311. , L..-' ,:.:; 1rt.a,. 31.5 led in 11 a er. ' a.hidc• r rot ?I:''' e•r: , 1 "0 God 011r li ]l .n Ager Peg" e •" ; ' t 1jj 1. •t ,mit .nd nrr. W. 0. <,- ; _ r t ,. I �... �.,;.. ' ...,: 1'1,d i , d,.. - • atony ec tmeltm, snows w 'n Vogues ih public addreese', have •:tai battery Icor, eve eepui't- ,•rte ht 3135 slty, "Tie ro i' .. T , ' " "• , ton 11, g P 1` I eim,w wha: to t^ an i A " e patients, ie aro era, set: Mee 513 anm 3onrnt closely co-ordinated +..• t sr;`r. ,; '5 1, a:,,., i1•:, ? 1 t`I n a1 x ,. drap t 1 P p 3 l not changed fundanuntally; say_ a Z i 'e'• try constituents. ram ane of forS1•.; (ire3, D;:51.;:3„ 'flt„n,.rs 11'•.1 1, `war' _t 1 tl t. tr 111 , .I ;:; and sterilize instruments, haw to Mrs, Sweeney, although the market e•e:' - 'art. litee It -ave ailpl ees be- ,3. t'a., l,,t '.,: ,.a•l :•`.- z wire n 1 i;'ti Le; ..,.. , " theist and merely the mouthpiece of , , prepare uaze bandages, swabs, tom-, „ a fo:e they c. n Uc icon, <r1' tivstt Iia- 3 1 -,1voh' at other sp„t,e tazn,:' tee 11:3wyt Ptaw*.,t (,r. F iitc'r .3t c , y-1.1,1•1„.'t1..., c a ,tr=,a l P g for humor seems to !taw e tarsen , , „e. their needs. I shall neeleve part of i , .. . u. b,. , , }'}:1 t " Piw rrl. r leer:. - i posses end other. „ter.l3 3aeterial , :,,;,,d rluno'c -downward duringre- tc'c•c• tie,' aro Within .,1.111,11„ die- ; r , ,..,h t..*. es; ,a it c. ,�: &yu1 '1'i t .• ri s a t,,, r •, ., n ,.. wig nee] a gigantic task if I can abiei h or r = t „', v r,,, •' e 1 v rl;-....',,,-12', d • ,, ,,t. She is tapable of giving patients ('part months, Another' lost artifice is t':r,951:1!•!.:; flair 1' !slit, 1. 5 1151 s: y• n or 1 ,••:t. mei), wet_ :. r , a,v v - r lr,• 1 is l tat. t ,. •• u,• • t .., Iceeen those nerds, routine office treatli:ents, such a..:c that cf resorting• to poetry for an o- fire, mil ,.11 • 11 .,..1 ,h...... a.,,1 .ln±l•• •m o it ray, diathermy, infrared and ultra- violet 'therapy and basal reetabolis;,1 tests. In the laboratory she know= how to perforin the various tuts There is a Brotherhood of Sleeping involved in haeinatolog-y, arivalysie. Car Porters - and inferentially* all inlrressivo peroration, • them, 11: J:r:r the she:lis ser gnat they tee" e1.14.4[0.-.1 Irnr,...,. ,.r: M•,:,:...V,.4,444 ,x,,,..<.,,...4.,,-„a„r,w.1. ,a.. IMVC,,,,w:»,.,•.,..e.•, I was just thinking of him as a wee bairn O 0 0 Addio G.Q �' E . all the way from camp! And he said it .dichz't cost' so much!” Trust every "Brave ',addle" to find his way, home the most economical way and to leave a cherished memory into the bargain. Especially ,after 7 p.m. and all day, Sunday, you can travel hundreds of miles by Long Distance for so little!. 1830 - ok CA1POP �S OF PUBLIC 'SlE•' 60 OS ItVI� 1.940 3rd, rotor i,l'nt- t::h, Y', r 11; 1•.,•,1 vt'hi•o, l; .tti,:l , i et on, et attl Rot tame lather, r,1 .e.1 i .•d•••: , will beret at the .;T:o3 where flip n1ane i±': ,, t• 11' 13 i t 1;;3. Vie 1. vy ('.055. 1):4 51I1.15 PL:#1 P:1R }' IN 1 ew r ; ! t u„u 1 a,, !ranee, 'fie llc.vs ani 1u. \ 3 1 P'"C 1:::`15 51 t1. '11.r '5 1'c ..tit^. • r. ! L=: l s, ,,•2 1tre _ I i;; n,•ia-I r • ui is I d. 1; is a'oille! to he whop tit, . eel: , nr•riv N .•1 , }l a eneT sten +h„ carp, P:ITILIII dG NEW AND 2 , Of ccnrse ler not :11.1c] r e ae taae begird to (lie gen. to oven the breach. tion, P1 sft sur 115.1 RL, ,Taus i l• tt, 1".,11 2 i1. "11!••1•;.' , „i II, rs - het the•3retacatl • the',; hew it t nil ;, ;, t, ,1 ch a the breach and 11F'191'.11 1'S°r1 S ( Monti -eel; 1S". e Irce. ,it nee emi epee 1:. t •ll w • !i , t y flee ..t,l, Suppe:"` 1'11 enetuy 1:1.ti:' i s wvi,t1- fire. Te do it lnrin 1 practice anti in its, way to weed Canada's comet. „lees, tee. --;pal rr ,;ir:inent,: in 1hi it i, .tail wall 0,,, t.o irawl She -war•, The boys, of air consul enti- sound locatrrs of the better, melt enc aircraft brtteries have itictlty of both. They are ready. the members are colored folik, for on the occasion of their` annual parade this month the route tool: the march- ers tltrotiglt 1•Iarlem in New York. Their cnnventirll ens addressed by Mayor La Guradia, Mrs. Franklin D, Roosevelt, and other notables. Sleping' car porters work 240 hours clangoring the lives of their live- a month and are paid from $$7.50 stock, officials of: the Hydro Electric to -100.50 per month by their car- power Commission of Ontario an- p}oyers, but what the travelling pub - lie pays a porter in addition to his Wage is a secret not disclosed. ELECTRIC FENCE ENDANGERS STOCK Farmers who hook up electric fences to hydro lines are contraven- ing hydro regulations and are. • en - Ts this news to you, namely: a per- son can succeed in an intelligence test and yet not succeed in life? of hydro current on "fencers" might There are some very wise psychos- seriously injure or even electrocute ight opests who declare that the prevalent certain types of livestock. intelligence teats aro no forecast .of Electric fences feel by current: intelligent behavior . - that even the from dry -,eel! batteries have beconte hesl•-rerearN1 tests of intelligence increasingly give only incomplete tneasures of the g Y popular in this section individual's capacity far intelligent of Western Ontario during ' the past behavior. They do not test the non few years. The 'battery hook-up is intellective factors generally describ- ed as. temperament. The most im- portant factor in educational ach- ievement in some cases' does not be in ability but in temperament. nounced here yesteday. The warning was issued after it was discovered that one district far- mer was electrifying his fence with direct hydro current, supplied through a transformer arrangement It was pointed out that the use To' finance the campaign of Mr. Willlie, presidential candidate, his supporters are expected to contribute "gifts". To date these gifts total upwards ' of $400.000. The average gift is; $5.54. The maximum gift to date is $4000. Much more than half a million chalet% - probably over a million dollars i'e needed by the .party for Mn,' Willkie's campaign,; It ie the people - not the rich few - who supply the requisite' funds. considered strong enough to admin- ister a sharp "poke" to farm: animals touching the wires and as a rale they soon lea en to remain a respectable distance from the fences. Battery -type fences are hydro - approved and ase considered highly ,seceossful by .many agriculturists. The hydro department. points oat however, that some thick-skinned farm animals soon grow accustomed to the battery shock. In an effort to give ureic adven- turesome creatures a lasting lesson, some farmers have hit union the er- rouneous idea that a hych'o shock would be ideal—only • to learn 'later that such, current is. far too strong, for elect -vie- fence purposes, itv. t ri11i1. etc, "l:' Dila:, D. II, Prater, who contmandcd Fir. R. Davidson .T, ,.m ., .l 9 t:: 11?. Greet Britain's let Army Tank iC,'o-.' ti,'rrrn rn, tw. n. i. Brigade at Dunkirk. r.tt,l to.l:ry that , mold,, G. Folliele, G. Dove:le . Timer Clanada will play n ntajc,• p: 1•t in 1 T!n,:•rrd, Jc'.+n I'ar-ineece Ti,' -'r Dom tee ciaveleemcitt air! .r..1,,. tion of Fr„ ,T•Jrk ' ','-'t (lou it a new ani better. t 1'31, for the claw 1 Sertlyis erre seat: from 'ilr, and 'MI5 when T'rrhit3 fOrees engage- u, landWm. Forest, ItIr. •tn;i MN, Wright,ep ,etieni against the C ttive 11)ott_'la. Corbett. Ilei rt Pt" -mare Brig. Platt is advisor to P.,1. P. G. .'! the 1'nitut Church. Those at- Worthington, of Camp Borden, w51511 I tending the funeral from t si'l't ,, is to -Ireia and eommimil Canada's 1 were el'e. end Mr,, Y',dt,1. ". e• a- t' , r•rtmrod Brigade. I w '.,h. Mren ; Til . e1oe. 2 British tanks left behind in the 1 a'.o. Be 1, :•n:l „ii ":jt r, r cr-=t.,:.l,i:5' 1,t DM,.ki,h •evealed `roar 0130: Rev, David l., bion llati'lion; Dr. and !Mrs. McAllister of George- 3.5; eorge- Lt,i, .,,ul,ll:ton, 1_54' -.r Ir.,,,,.- , :oiler 9'I,-. Draha tin. Ytir (;rose I1''t L,c_,r•1:. :; Guelph and Mr. Weir rf T.rinion. In- Eileen Poeork. 11. torment tens in 1-Iensall Uniait cern e. Pin 7'u,h 1 Ll y 1 „wwel'1 a. te't•. - ,. . «n T-„,_ , 1 dr/,n Jiar� 1:.:,11' 1• Ful:1,r, 0; Joe Potter, 11; 5.1•1yd Stlwerlr•, 0; Bobbie Moore. 1. latest secrets in tanks, armament end mechanic: and it is a” ?:o 5535 to produce something better than they (tic Germans) ever thought; t:'_" Prig Pratt •.,1!. Carnia has "wonderful material" fee tank 131.311 in her hi,ihrr;jneks of the North who know "tracked.' cke±d" machines: Th -y will br Me -nimble for the job of handling, tanks, he said. PRO1'TINENT PHYSICIAN PASSES SUDDENLY Dr. Moir of Hensel, Dies from Heart Attack Dr. Alexander Moir, a prominent lthysioian ' of Hensel!, passed away suddenly from ss heart condition, at He home. on Highway No. 4 South of 1-Iensall, on Thursday, September 12313. He was in his 68th year. He had trade his usual trip to I-Ieusall for his mail and -en returning• home complained of eeelinn• ill and la'cl clown. When his wife returned to him in a short time she foetid hint deacl. The deceased- was a sou of the•late 13:11', and Mrs, George Moir and was born in Hay Township. ,Ire spent all 1110 life here, with the ex - it'll,' C, !s.a 1. ' Brrreti '' ,,,1 i,1 . _l..1Yi , 9; 1 (- r• 'lute J'ulh1 1 rthl&ci liohi I t .e. Shirr ('oel ; t e slap lh: -h, i,t t... ,t; 1.11•.•!! rust,:'„ 0. l,hd Lr, II .i. C'.. r , r -.new: I'. bell. 6: .leee elii13:1-,:1 1.If 1'i t rd , ; lee id taiesen, ,1. fail, eleerev Tyrie -:ll. I1: Neva 1'y nd.,ll. 11: (liif 1'1rl 'd, len-• elnrray rn;iall. i;; 31'.aist;l e'en - 'tale Ii: Nein Teniall, 11; Sncle.. Tebbutt. '1. • Pail. 1 ue1 -• 11:1 i -- Ric 9; lin i ! T ow lu1, 35; .lo I :,t.: t, 11 ; 1302 -e • 'While Egs'' 1 dc:•cn 1'onrlld '33- oer'F�n '2. (t'kT `p ar n, t;: ;Kenneth Tendali, 11; ;Wore. e�, wo 1`yndnll. 11; In C io-c n, 11. Fair.. @ i a Beef -Type Cell', rdeer or idler--• Ray Wise. 9 I rssnr th McMillan, 2; ( Continuer from page 1) Leonard Rogers,. 2; George. \fisc, 9. Lerma Wilson, 6; Il Ronald Falconer, Dairy yss (Calf, heifer emly -- 6; Hcrbic Pocock, 3. • ('hrsier Beattie, 1; (,tart Lawson, Scnbiosa, 6 blooms Rnn,ond 3; pewee Laws 'on, 11, Young, 6; Jack Tebbutt, 4; Mary Showmanship by exhibitors in ten Jeans Fuller, (3; Jean PatniriaPell, (1. lnrcians cl;; s 7;onar,l 12.3t,ra, 2; Snapdragon, G blooms -- Vincent Bib Ginn, 2; Chester Beattie, 1; Ray 'S'ntnrg•, 6; Bette- Potter, 11; Phyllis Johnston, 1; Shirley Jones. 4. • Petunias, -6 •blooms-• 7ohn Middle- ton, 10; Joseph Salkeld, 1; Kc;nte1h Barri+, -5; Kenneth Tyndall, 11. Stock, (3 spikes—Eileen Pocock, 13, Gladioli, 5' 3enkes—P t 1 nra dleton, 10; Evan Smirks, s, 31; Marie Glidden, 3; Joint Falconry. (1. Dahlias, (; blooms—Margaret Hol-. latnd, 11; Murray Tyndall. 11; Lewis Tebbutt, 4; Nora Tyndall, 11. Dining Table Boquet -- Marney Johnston, 1; Phyllis, Johnston, 1; Keith Geo. Miller, 9; Mal gerct 'Ice- land, 11. Living Roost 'Briquet — Jtnic Mid - glisten, 10; Betty Potter; 11; Freddy Johnston, 1; Iola Jervis, 3. Boquet of Wild Flowers Marg- aret EIolland, 11; Charlie Lassaline, 6; Lola Jervis, 3; Auch•ey ,Ginn, 2. Dolls—Mary D. Iiuclie, 0; Edith !Arise, 9. Breeding Ewe Lamb, must be dock- ed--Doreen ock-ed- Doreen McGuire, 8; Colin Mc- Millan, 2; Kenneth McMillan, Ray Wise, 9, Pair of Bacon Type flogs -•- Jack Tebbutt, 4; Grace Lobb, 4; Jim Lobb, 4. Button -holt. Contest-- Nora, Tyn- dall, 11; Margaret Rolland, 11, Animal Pets, not including horses, calves, sheep or pigs—Fred White, 1; Reg, Tiepin, 1; Dorothy Stirling, 5; Joe Potter, 15. Bird Pets—Lloyd Soworby; 5; Han- riett Wise, 3; Jos. Salkeld,.1.; 1lobett Clement, 7:. Special — Livestock Naming Pic- tures—Bill Cox, 5; June Middleton, 10; Bolt Hattie, 5; VincentYottng, 5. Special — Weed Wanting - June Middleton, 10; Murney Johnston, 1; Elva Pickard, 3; Lois Ibtiddleton, 10.