The Seaforth News, 1937-11-11, Page 3THURSDAY. ROV•EMBE'R 11, 1937
Sun Dance Sanctuary
"flhe eighth and concluding .drama in
the series devoted to the gallant ex-
ploits of thhc 'Ix C.\i:P in the Carly
'days of the II'orce's activities in west-
ern Canada will be heard over the na-
tional network of the Canadian I1roatl-
casting; •Co.rporation on "Tuesday, No-
vember 116, at 9.'31[) pont. 'EST.
Rased on authentic records and
produced ,by kind permission of She
Commissioner, Major 'General'Sir
James MacBrien, Ui:C' P C M.G., D.
'S,O the series will close with the
dramatic presentation of one of the
most unusual incidents climaxing the
reign of tate 'R'edskin (ut the western
;plains. "Sun 'Dance Sanctuary" will
recount the story of the final clash be-
tween Indian'kaw and .white .laws near-
ly'fifty years ago on the fringe of the
willed Sun Dance Camp.
The .scenes of site play are 'laid in
and near `Fort 11itcLeod in 111890, and
furnish vivid glimpses of 'the sacred
rit'nals of the Blackfoot tribe, How a
a member of the force, single-handed,
arrests a mighty .Chief, in spite of the
Sacred sanctuary of the Suit !Dance
°amp, and thereby ;aids another stir-
ring chapter to the records of the
R.C:,nhl',; tJi11 be told in this eighth
and final episode of the series which.
has been produced by 'Rupert Litr.as,
.front Toronto.
Golden Journeys
'tGolden Journeys", a CRC half
hour of light classical ,elections, will
be presented :over the stational net-
work on Friday, CNav'entber 1119, at 4„30
p,nt. 'EST. with :Roland 'I'tidd and 'Ei-
leen Waddington, organ -piano duo,
tual 'lean Ilaig. soprano, as featured
artist-. \lr. Todd and Miss Wadding-
ton have been associates in ,Inti pres-
entation: from the 'I'oronn studios of
the CRC for the•nast six Sears. 'They
will offer on this date special arrange-
ments: of "'llholm mtte". by Rudolf
minis; 'it;ondolieri", from 'Nevin's
.suite 'I: t 'Daly cIn 'Venice"; "Clic Rig -
tuition", by \ladl)on''ell, and "Ro-
niaatre” front the " sari Violin Con-
certo", by
nu-
cort„ ,'by \'en'niait' lei, Miss Haig will
sing Franz Schubert', "Who Is Syl-
via" and "In the Lu\en,hourg tlatr-
d'en", frnin the suite "Pari. Skctrhes",
by ,liratli'letn 1... Alaonting,
Hawaiian Nights
An appropriate selection will open
She y1Tawaiian Nights" presentation
to originate in the 'CRCs Winnipeg,
studios on iNovember 23 at t1l1.30 p,nt.
8 ST,
The number is the most recently
Peleased hit Composed 'by 'Harry
'Ruby, "When Yon Dreani About
waii". ':\notdter island to be described
musically by Jack Riddell's ensemble
ill be the isle or Tahiti as the en-
semble presents "Tahitian Honey-
altesM , an O'iiver Campos contponi-
Ilion.
The vocal trio will offer numbers
of a distinct tropical flavour "tAthi
We'la" (!Fire sof Love); "Pablo",
"Hr'nolnlat 'Honey" and "Sweet
Brown !'laid of I<ainntlu"
Seeing Pictures
One of -the most valued pictures in
the possession of the McKenzie 11+'owt-
dation, at Regina. will be the subject
of discussion on ,Gralhaut \tcInnes'
Ol3O 'broadcast talk, -Seeing Pic -
sures", ithcdu'led. for 'Tuesday, No-
vember l'6 11 3.'415 pan
"11;1(1E -Utile and Child". by 'Pontar-
ntn, will be described: iby the commen-
tator, who has designed his 'broadcast
series as an aid to listeuers to 'visat-
ahr-e malty of the famous and beauti-
ful pictures which lung in tl,e art gal-
leries and permanent collections
thrnughoud Canada..
-1r, 'McInnes has t'isited the galler-
ies. in the course of trans -Canada
tote's slowing the past tw'n years, and
approttncee this subject with ,first-
hand knowledge of the canvasses se-
lected, .On this date he will describe
also a painting by \filIC'C which is
nnnthert'd among the treasures of
eastern Catoada.
Corporation Features Day By Day
Thursday, INoveniher 111.:
9.00 p.in, t'anacdian Lttginn Iteutem-
branc(' 'Day •hreadeast. .Pacific Coast
Choir and orchestra mulct lfnr 16o'b
vets and Percy 1-1nrvet t,Addres'es by
the !Prime -Minister, Brig. !General ,\1 -
ex Ross, Lieut-t,encral Sir Frederick
llatirice, 71r 1), 'I. 1)t,herty (,Ameri-
can Legion) and ,\l, Jean I)cahntts
(French anti International 'Ex -Service
,\ tion 1. iFront Vanrotty-
er.
411.01) P.m. " ngiist .It'h, 14F14", -111
hour -by -hour radio report of 'events
which led to the'( real \\'sir compiled
by Prof, Harold •Ceniherley of Cam-
bridge University, produced by t.anr-
ence 'Gilliam, From Toronto.
Friday. November itF':
5,30 it,tn. ''1'ictures in 710511'", \I
heal sketches ;ketches with soloists; Allan
Reid. organist and the ':Acadia 1 Con-
cert orchestra directed 'by Marjorie
Payne, ('1 (-\Id15 i'ehautgt' pro-
gramme. From
ro•grannite..Frotn IIa'Ifiax,
9),00 p.m. "Backe:age". Variety Pre-
sentation with \Vaodhonse and Flaw -
if ills, ort'hestr i direction Isaac' -ram l
oft, vocal ensemble and soloists.: From
\V'innipegt
Saturday, November ,IB:
'5.110 p.m. "rhe 'Indian Speaks".
Talk by 'fierut:tn Crate, !Front \Vioni-
peg.
1(130 p,nu. .Iit'act' 1.app's Orches-
tra dance music fr,ni the 'Royal
.York II•tttcl. From Toronto.
Sntxlay, 'November hila
5.30 p.du. 'Ilse NIenalelssobn Choir,
Anniversary biota (least.; Dr. ,H. ':\:
IFrieker, conductor. 'From Toronto.
4,00 p.m. "And 'Id ('note 'I'o Pass",
Biblical drama produced .by -Rupert
Caplan. From ltotitrea'1.
•110.00 p,in, 'I'h•e C'onstitutiou, Social
Legislation discussed by the 'Citadel
Club. From Ila,lifax.
Monday, November lu:
3.0i) p.m. Actuality' description op-
ening of il'attullo Bridge, New ,West -
THE SEAFORTH NEWS
PAGE THREE;,
minste•r, B.C. IFroe 'Vancouver,
'1000 p.m. Sant Slick—"Aisder :+'alt's
Coartship From Halifax,
Tuesday, November 1r':
9,34) }p tit Sun 'Dance Sanctuary"
one of a series of true dramas of lite
rt
h C 11..1 ala �tul by F-larvc'i,od
Steele. '(By kind,permission of Sir
haunts 11a'cB'ric•n, tf'1.C..B., C 1IiG, D.
5,0,) Toronto,
1110,3'0 pan. '"1 :Remember -talk by
Dr. J. P Tyrrell. From 'Toronto.
Wednesday. INocenther 111T
'6:341 pan. "Canadian Capers" Novel.:
ty orchest.ra direction 1'cree 'Pastern-
ak. 'I.'rrm Toron'to,
10,310 p:,m, 'Ozzie \Villienns' Orch-
estra. Dance music from the Chateau
Laurier. From !Ottawa.
BOTANICAL NOTES FOR
NOVEMBER
OT:'perintenta'i 'Farms Note)
"'rhe month of November
And ,the weather a -subject Inc
prayer".
It k di;licudr. for plant -lovers to.un-
derstand why the pot'ts malign this
month. 'Phomas flood is particularly
abusive,. In his opinion there is:
"No warmth, no cheerfulness, no
fie:Wil ful ease--
No comfortable feel in any mem-
ber—
No shade, no shine, no 'httttertles, n,;,
'tees,
'No-yentbcrl"
Nevertheless Noct'mht'r undonhte'1-
ly possesses charm, :\t the beginning
.nay he expected those few glowing
days- the 'Indian or St. \Martin's lit-
tle Summer---twhich carne after the
first fall of note, e a gentle and
w e et•ly-land sngge' ti„n that Winter
must he prepared for in earnest,
Botanists amici rate the 'first t u'eck
of \\'inter with real pleasure, for then
is the time that the rune -bearing ever-
green trees and shrubs may be stud-
ied with concentration-- the pine:,
ibentiuckn spruces, 'firs, sequoias. cy-
presses.. cedars and junipers,
The pines and their relatives (con-
ifers) are an ancient race; they are
said to hat 1• existed before the advent
of hroad-leased trees, t'nal mcasnres
reveal the fossil remains oflprehistor-
ic Conifers tchich (hard reached their
prince wheu the store vigor, ns 'broad-
leaved trte' appeared awl (loots them
to the swamps. ut,nultains at1(1 .,ell
coasts. •
All members of the. pine inntily are
either !trees ar shrubs, varying' front
log creeping form • 11:1tunipers 1 togthe
largest forest tree. (red cc'lar,1. 71081
specie, of the group are '1er.green,
wish baud utfarud leaves, •ether
needle-like in- scale -dike in fnrut.
'l'he flowers, trhidl appear in the
spring, tare of tau 'kinds: the nitric 'or
pollen 'flowers and the female or
nlate 'flow'ers. .Astow the pollen is shed
iu viand: of yellow (hist the malt'
Hower; tonally droit oil', though tltc'y
may sometimes he found in a with-
ered condition clinging to a branch.
Ile female flowers grow into the fa-
miliar catte,. 7iho C41/10S, 'When mature,
liberate the ripened seeds, whirls are
often provided with a thin membran-
eous, wing -like appendage for disper-
sal by wind. The seeds- of 'several
species of pine ,are said to be edible.
The pine fancily 19, of great econom-
unter
O
ic importance and it has claimed the
aesthetic attention of writers and ar-
tists down through the .a es. Who ha,
not heard of -The Trail of the .1 one-
soave 'Pine", •admired well-known
paintings of pines, and rear- of the ro-
mantic soughing Finers. In the Book
of 'Kings it is said of a member of the
family: "And he spa'ke of trees, from
the cedar tree that is in Lebanon even
'ionto the hyssop that springeth out of
the wall". The 'Cedar of Lebanon is
not a'Canadian species.
I't is anticipated, however. that fu-
ture articles will discuss the identity
and economic importance of some Ca-
nadian specie's 'which may she en-
countered during those winter ram-
bles that botanists love so well
when "'la is nipping 'and an eager air",
PRAItRIE GIRL HERDS BULLS
AFTER BOX -CAR TRIP EAST
('Toronto ;Star)
"'Illy, hey," shouted the reel -Bair-
ed girl on imrseback, and two -score
stamping bulls charged into the barn-
yard, sending the reporter scurrying
for the hayloft and lea:vin's 12-vt'ar-
ld Lola \la,on rthaking with Nit Olt.
ter, "Sissy stuff,” 'laughed tete de"tetnt-
inetl ,girl. who,' tikit her 'fiaaee}':F,arl
'Dantette, left the Tardier' plains of
southern. Saskatchewan two -weeks
ago, and travelled to Ontario in box
car 'Riled with livestock and household
„'nod., She is determined to marry
licul. •who feels the sums' wary about
it, they tt`alla to start life anew on a
Garet somewhere near Clinton.
For .the present, however,they are
staying at the farm of !lames Medd,
cattle buyer, aria made the trip id 1
thcatt 'Fourth ate.nther o' the panty
was ,.\rth'ttr \fcltutis, another wesl-
c'1•„ farther, who has seen his crops
burned and parched for the last six
years. ..
'Now 1 know •wtha't you're 'here fnr,'
said 7)i s \lasun ,leci,it•ely, still tit-
ling on her pony. "Von want to keno
something about than trip we made in
the.freight eau`. and 1'11 tell you shout
it. B•t'litn•e ate, it was a hard journey.
We had -is freight errs tilled with ev-
erything tu' owned ---fol• hue•,,' , ou"
eft tie. ,du' turkey, .ofd hoosoltold
gouda. \\'e cooked oar meals in the
car and made it our itoate ..for six
.days; ithat's not ail easy thing to an,
'1t was cold crossing' the prairies
and :Northern iOntarie. The. only +lot
1,00 We 'haul .was pork and beans,
That lasted for six days Rut now
we're here :end the past is a closed
closed :book, \Vt to seen year after
year o•itholtt rain enough to dampen
the grott'nd, and we're staking a fresh
start in a country where it does rain
occasicntai'ly.
I gltt'ss I'll like it here well en-
ough," By t'his time the heifers had
wandered out into ,the field again,
and, with her heel's pressed against
'her pony's Hanks, the red-haired girl,
galloped after them with shoats of
"Hey, hey." Five minutes latter she
was back again, the entire herd'airb
ill a corner,
'Could you do that,' she demanded,
"'Decidedly not, was the answer,
"VSlitat funny people you city folk
are," she exclaimed, "I'vd' lived (10 the
prairie all my life and was .virtnatl-r
raised on horseback: it simply would-
n't occur to me to he frightened of
ca atle,"
e Are Selling Quality B or ;
Books are Well Made, Carbon is Clean and iCopies Readily. Al) styles,
Carbon Leaf and Black Back, Prices as Low as You Can Get Anywhere,
Get our Quotation on Your Next Order.
Seaforth NCWS
SEAFORTH, ONTARIO,
c:
She ,ta, dressed 'in typical western.
-tyle, turners and 'leather ,cindhreak.
er, a bandana scarf and beret making
up her cow punching coshmie. Her
shaggy -haired pony had ridden with
her from Saskatchewan,• and she rub-
bed her r ha c n 1 over the horse's lean'
flanks. "It may sound crazy to peo-
ple down 'here, Miss Lola saki, '"but
fhis is the first: -greets grass my pony
has seen since last spring. (Now you
have -sanne idea of why 'he 'w'anted to
get out of the 'drought belt:"
Not three .mi'les from 'tlte •farm
where the :refugees are living stands
a freight ear , riled to over -:flowing
with food which is leaving 'Clinton
for relief of the farmers in soutthern
Saskatchew:ati.
But neither Lala nor Earl know of
this, "l expect well he down here for
sante while," said Lala, '"We haven't
set a clay for our .ry-ed'ding, 'hut it will
take place soon. Some day I hope we
can go ''back to the prairies. some day
when the rains have come to the west
again, and the farmers aren't wading
ankle deep through dost to visit binn-
ed crops they can never harvest."
THE FUTURE HOUSE
\Magic is being wrought in the
field of housing today. •Cite newest
Moises a'Imo t rnA1"' :themselves; the
improvements rga'aila'bie far old
houses are fre,]t and exciting.
Materials you never thought 10
meet undisguised in a Ito:--stet+t
asbestos, ;glass -are being n'ploycil
for decoration as well as utility, Nit
longer do they imitate something
••lsr. •!•hey can 'be proud of what .they
are, for a new beauty 'has been lis-
overed fn thein! \laity other mater-
ial,
ial, are new—synthetic substitutes
sur 'wood; and other natural building
materials; they are ti'reproof, beanti-
u1, stronger than traditional mater-
ials -mity times their wtigltt. The
shapes of household accessories are
new, more efficient; the Alien 'w'ho. de-
,igtt them are young, unhampered.
partartist, part engineer,
1Vitat they are doing to -kitchens i-
typical of tilenew conception of tails
sty pins beauty, For instance, two
arena companies are abatis ready to
market colorful ready-made kitchens,
designed for step -saving, with equip_
meat built into -the walls. One of
these kitchens hens +will contain concealed
twill t,thinets of white plastic: work
,pare, sink, and Iltiot• cabinets, built
,,n a seven -foist panel that still inter-
lock
nter-lock with other equipment panels. lit
the other kitchen the walls will be
'mill like an touuntobili chassis, with.
ironies into which working. units of
standard sizes will tit. The working
'nrfat es will be of gleaming. easy -to,
leo) porcelain, colored plastic or
stainless sleet.
''hese Ikitchens will, he light acid
'"ell ventilated, sanitary as a hospital
Mit - elleerfrtl as at nursery, They wi!'
have tin electric clock, :t radio, a
plannitt'g desk, and' conveniently high
sinks and cabinets to avoid back-
aches'.
'Yndtt trial' designers v'ie'w the kit-
chen as the factory of tlte Fume,
I•Iettce, tic' principle of progression
k followed in work unit'. Nearest the
delivery door ,hrxild be space to re-
eeite food; next, a - pI'ace to store it
t refrigerator);, next, the place to pre-
pare it (a cabinet, counter, or work.
table); next, the sink, with its dish-
was'her; next, the range,_ff you have
enough space there should be a coun-
ter where you may set (101‘. 17 soiled
'Oslo,. \ l'-shapedkitchen... save,
aalkin ,i hae'k and forth.
There isn't a kitchen need tndart
-y'tic,lt the designers have ocerl t kt'tl.
''''1 stay hate t'lectric towel drier,'
111 leviri..g:n'.h tt,(- c risheC 11,01 1111
Crises sots:1 ' e' t so .so that 11 goe,,.
dawn the drain like coffee grounds
machines to open cans, shell peas,
slice hetes and peel potatoes; a chill -
..1 rolling pin in the refri:geratorthat
insures flaky piecrust, because. it
makes repeated Homing, unneces-
sary: : compressed -air mach for
blowing sand out of your spinach, as-
paragus, lettuce, tRayntottd l:oetty,
industrial designer, is working' on a
kitchen built around the axile, with
doors nn hoth sides and a revolving
stool in the cetnter, so that.. she may
twirl herself trout, one place to an -
Mier without ever leaving 'her stool,
His idea of a perfect' kitchen floor i;
oncO'"1 rubber composition slightly in-
cliaicil, with a drain at one end, so
«-tat .tell en t'lie day- is .finished, the
'ok may step out of the kitchen and
ruay it clean.
Von may have .stoves -that.. w'iil.
?u -n Ihe' rankest cno'Icing' amateur
Ito a chef. One electric range with a
timer rings an alarm when your roast
done. Gas ranges, too, are equip -
sed with oven heat regulators' and
timers. 'These ranges conk at dinner
•orrernh aisle zire a way from
sour kitchen, on pleasure hent. Or
you may get a miraculous stove, tX-
pensive 10 hue 'h't al'ntnst nothing to
rperatc. a stove that will - boil water
'n 16' seconds, celwi11i an ,ioirat
there con may keep -rind cooking 24
'caul- and it won't hunt!
-
:P-efahricaainn can also give yon a
bathroom ready-made. Perhaps your
LISTEN...
onhahygrAt
CANADA -1937"
IMPERIAL TOBACCO`S
INSPIRING PROGRAM
FRIDAY 10' P.IVl. Est
•
CRCT= F
STATIONS C P'L
TONS
first investment will be the lavatory
unit. ready to be set, plun,h'ng and
all, into a shallow recess, This o-ne
'farrow panel contains a medicine
chest with inside lighting; a utility
shelf for shaving equipment; a lavat-
orygenerously propot:tioti-ed; nonslip
.towel bars; and -a rhttilt-in la'u•ndry
hamper, You can buy bhe toilet on
another well panel, and so on, and
transform an unused hallroom or
large closet. about 5 ,by 71» feet, into
an extra ba('hroont. Tticidentally, the
bathroom radiator should never 'be
placed under the .basin, 'because the
heat dries the trap and permits germs
to rise and he initialed,
The same intelligent planning can
be extended into other roosts, in
terms of beauty amyl comfort. Floors
Fan he whatever you Want them to
be, wlteithen you are remodeling or
building afrea'•h. You can have a floor
of inexpensive mastic that will last a
lifetime, though . R will absorb .stains.
You can have composition floors that
look life stone, or one of the newer
pressed wood floors. Tei the demon-
stration house of. a. New York store
there have been '300,000 visitors, Yet
the pressed -wood floors, with an oc-
cantonal waxing, showed no signs of
tvea'r,
Tempered ' pressed wood is made of
wood ,chips, exploded under Itigh
steam pressure into long' fibers. The
'fiber is impregnated with oil to teat-
erproof it and then compressed and
tempered by a process which reduces .
it to alayer one eighth of - an inch
thick. 'Laminated with 'waterproof
glue into three-ply interlocking tiles,
it makes .a "'beautiful floor, resilient.
gntiet, tough, nonwarping,
'Modern lighting tends toward the
indireot and diffused, coming :from
concealed openings. In a demons'tra-
tion house in Cleveland, light is used
as a painter might use color. If you
are in 5 romantic mood you ntay tura'
on the moonlight. 1'f you have a win-
dow facing on a dark court you may
'have light whioh is the color of sun-
light. In this house, lights ;are built:
into the beds for reading, .There are
also lights that chine only on bet --
room floors, so that you can arise in
the night without distu'r'bing your
better half, and at the same time keep
from stubbing your toe. Designers
are at world on a floor strip of cont -
position through whish will run cop-
per cables. This 'moulding may be
severed alt any point and a plug of
ache same shape inserted, giving you
lamp outlets wherever you please.
Some of this is still in the expert
ss
mental stage, but 'the prefabricated
house of the future is available to-
day. These houses—of steel, copper,
wood or composition asbestos and ce-
ment board—are neatly assembled on
the home site in a month's time. One
four -room house, completely equip-
ped with air conditioning, ail burner,
luxurious kitchen, and even a three-
-days' supply of food in the •b'u'ilt-in
white cabinets, costs $4]91510.
So far the n'u•mber of prefabri-
cated Ictuses hi use in she United.
States is -mall, but significantly, one
companyselling them intrea.sed its
'ale• 4111)per cent last year. The maj-
ority of them have 'been bought 'by
the quite young and the quite old—
two ela'sses which iu ist on houses
that require little care.
Critics have called prefabricated
house, harsh; but when set against
sn'hutrban .hillsides, surrounded by
trees and shrubbery, their soft ,gray_
with the pewter -like aluminum trim'
is most attractive.. Window b'oxes,.
gay awnings. porches and the ''like
give 'tient a .free, homey lootk. They
are far less ',standardized" than the
houses in some of the developments
outside large ..American cities.
The future sounds slightly tnira.cul-
ous, (Glass walls, and perhaps glass
roofs,- will let in sunshine but pre-
serve privacy. 'The arrangement of
rooms 'w'il'l -be flexible. The German
architect, Niles Van der Roche, has
already built houses, with movable
walls. In the S'ta'tes, F'rederic'k Ries
ler leas des'ig'ned a ''space lionise,"
with heavy, soundproof, rubber cur-
tains that wild cut one large room
into smaller rooms. Russel Wright,
the industrial designer, has planned
a country home which will have fold-
ing screens or sliding rooms and 'bed-
chainber.s, used only a part of the
time, may for the rest of the day be
thrown into one enormous living
rms.
\\% re gradually realizing. that
01000dent houses are. oat ;freakish, but
'ire intelligentlydesigned for cam fort
and convenience, with no sacrifice of
charm