The Seaforth News, 1947-01-30, Page 2JUST IN FUN
Going Out
Conceited Young Man:' "Have
you an opening for an 'intelligent
man with a university education?",
Business Man: "Yes. And don't
slam it as you go out("
Sole Heir
"Who's the long and lanky
dame?" asked the stranger.
"That tall and stately lady," said
the local citizen rebukingly "is the
sole beneficiary of a $100,000 ,life
insurance policy."
Honest
After the weekend guest had de-
parted, the hostess was tidying up.
"There," she exclaimed in dis-
gust. "I knew that friend of yours
wasn't to be trusted. I've just
counted the towels and one of them
h missing."
"Was it a good one?" asked
hubby anxiously.
"The best we had! It was the
one. with 'Grand Palace Hotel'
woven in it."
Absolutely
The employer, on leaving his of-
fice, was instructing his new secre-
tary what to say if anyone called
while he was out.
"I may be back this afternoon,"
he told her. "And then again, I
may not."
The girl nodded brightly.
"Yes, sir," she said. "Is that defi-
nite?".
A Smart 'Un
A school inspector, having end-
ed his investigation into the class's
knowledge, smiled at them genially
and said:
'Wow, it's only fair that I should
give you a turn, children. Can any-
one ask Inc a question that I may
answer it?"
Presently he heard a voice.
"Please zir, I knew a man who
has two eggs for breakfast every
morning. He doesn't keep hens,
zir, he doesn't steal eggs, or buy
eggs, zir, and nobody gives them
to him. Can you tell me where he
gets them from?"
The inspector thought and fin-
ally had to answer: "No, I'm afraid
I cannot. Well, where does he get
them from?"
"Please, zir," said the boy, "he
keeps ducks."
•B
cq♦.� y�•y¢Dila
ppp Y MIII
R
Al
Why a boy
that rides a
bicycle in city
traffic don't
—' git killed at
least three
times a day, 1
don't know. '
Chi:sgo nun syndicate
Double Duty
MacTavish purchased a pair of
boots which were guaranteed for a
year.
After eleven months he returned
them and complained that they
were not standing up to the guar-
antee.
"Are you sure they fit you all
right?" asked the manager.
"They fit me a' richt," was the
reply, "but my brother on night
shift says they're a bit too tight
for him."
Suspicion's Finger
The express pulled up with such
suddenness that the passengers
were hurled in a heap on the floor.
imckly the guard came along to
assure them. "Somebody pulled
the communication cord and the
brakes acted too quickly. The last
coach has Left the rails. There will
be a delay of three hours." "Three
hours(" cried a young man. "I'm
to be married this afternoon." "Are
you the fellow who pulled the
cord?" asked the guard, suspicious-
ly,
Then Sparks Flew
One of those very small cars
had run out of petrol on a country
road, and knowing it was a long
tramp to the nearest garage, the
motorist stood by the roadside and
signalled for help. A large and
magnificent car pulled up, and out
stet ped the very superior driver,
"Could you spare me a drop of
petrol? said the stranded one.
The other eyed the tiny vehicle
and asked acidly, -
"Are you sure it's petrol you•
want, and not a new flint?"
A Catch In It
Applicant: "And if I. take the
job am I to get a rise in salary
every year?"
Employer. "Yes, if your work is
satisfactory."
Applicant "Ah, I thought there
was a catch in it somewhere."
a Intelligent
The teacher had written 92:7 on
the blackboard, and, to show the
effect of mnlliplying by ten, had
rubbed out the decimal point.
"Nmi, Alfred," she Said, "where'
is the decimal point?"
"On the duster," replied Alfred.
Know Your
Hockey Stars
By ED FITKIiN
One dynamic youngster who
should be a great favorite with
Toronto fans is Howie Meeker, 22 -
year -old rookie
right winger.
They 'don't
make 'em any -
in 0 r e spirited
than Howie.
the Howitzer"
and.: his bid :for
an N.H.L.' con-
tract was . one
Bowie Meeker of the most en -
Right Wing livening aspects
of the Toronto
team's training sessions at St, Cath-
arines.. The diminutive;,.chunky
starboand winger, an amateur last
winter, was the only graduate of
the • hockey school conducted by.the-
Leafs before the regular training
campaign got underway.
* *
His story is a heart-warming one.
Two years ago he lay in a military
hospital in the north of England,
his legs gashed and pock -marked
with shrapnel wounds, wondering
if he'd ever play hockey again. The
young Canadian had been severely
wounded when a live grenade ex-
ploded at his feet during training
manoeuvres, The explosion hurled
him eight feet in the air and ticket-
ed him for four-month sojourn in
the h'ospital.
* * *
Howie still maintained his hopes
of someday becoming a pro hockey
star, despite the injury. After leav-
ing the hospital, he took a physical
training course, found out that his
legs were going to be all right, then
took two more P.T. courses and
qualified as a sergeant instructor.
Soon after that he went back into
the European combat zone. It was
his second invasion as Howie had
previously 'spent three months on
the Continent in the fall of 1944,
helping to repair bombed railway
rolling stock. He had enlisted in
Stratford, Ontario, with the No. 1
Canadian Railway Workshop Com-
pany in April, 1943, and went over-
seas seven weeks later. He served
in France, Holland, Belgium and
Germany.
k * *
Meeker, who starred with Strat-
ford juniorm
tea s beforeenlisting,
st g,
returned to Canada on the last day
of 1940 and, on getting his dis-
charge, he signed with Stratford
seniors, and was one of their most
consistent scorers. In the playoffs,
after leading the Stratford scoring
drive, Meeker was halted by a
broken arm.
* * *
Howie signed with the Leafs last
spring and celebrated by getting,
married a week later. His hockey
ambition always has been to -play
for the Leafs and now that he's up
with them, he won't go down if he
can possibly help it.
* * *
Born at Kitchener, Nov. 4, 1924,
Howie got his hockey start in
public and high school competition,
then starred with Kitchener's
Junior "B" team in 1940-41. He
migrated to Stratford the next sea-
son' with. Stratford's Junior "A"
team before enlisting.
• * *
His parents live in New Ham-
burg, which is close to Stratford,
and Howie has four young brothers
—Ken, Chuck, Tommy and Dick-
rooting for him to make good in
the N.H,L,
Irish Take Over
There are far more people of
Irish blood in the United States
than in Ireland, D. V. Brogan, pro-
fessor of political science at Cam-
bridge, told the Royal Dublin So-
ciety.
Between 1820 and 1920, nearly 5,-
000,000 Irish people settled in the
United States, becoming the "basic
proletariat of the country. The only
Parallel in history was the migra-
tion from Portugal to Brazil,
Even so, said Professor Brogan,
the proportion of Irish stock was
higher in Newfoundland, Australia
and Scotland.
GED IG A CODE IN DA HET
She's 'getting a cold In the head—they hope. Mrs. Lesly Adamson
and her husband, David; were among 24 volunteers who agreed to
risk taking colds to aid research at Harvard Hospital, Salisbury,
England. Above, she receives nasal drops containing cold virus.
. Below, after being exposed, to virus, the Adamsons-greet a visitor
who is protected by plastic hood. - Human guinea pigs' reward for
sacrifice was two weeks of "easy living" in prefabricated hut.
Edison Missed Being A Canadian
Because of Father's Rebel Spirit
Thomas Alva Edison, world-fa-
mous inventor whose 100th birth-
day anniversary will
be observed
internationally on Feb, 11, 1947,
missed being a Canadian only be-
cause his father chose to side with
the forces of William Lyon
Mackenzie in the ill-fated •Papineau
Rebellion and was forced to flee to
the United States for safety.
The inventor's father Samuel
Edison, Jr., fled the village of
Vienna in Bayham township, Ont.,
in 1888 after Mackenzie's attempt
to seize the government failed' A
year later he settled at Milan, Ohio,
where Thomas Alva was born in
1847, Two of Toni's brothers,
Marion and William Pitt Edison,
and a sister, Harriett Ann, were
born in Vienna. Tom spent some
of his summer holidays with rela-
tives in Vienna.
Worked it Sarnia, Stratford
Pioneers migrating westward
from Nova Scotia founded Vienna
village in 1811, and among them
were Tom Edison's great grand-
father, grandfather and father, the
latter a youth t the time. The
great grandfather, John - Edison,
had been one of the original settlers
at Digby, Nova Scotia, to where
he and his, family had migrated
from New Jersey at the close of
the Revolutionary War• During the
war, he was a Tory and loyal to
the Crown, and as such had been
ordered hanged forgiving aid to
the British troops, His sentence,
however, was commuted to banish-
ment from the United States.
Toni's ancestral ties with Can-
ada were to be augmented later
when, as a youth, he worked in
Canada as a telegraph operator at
Sarnia and at Stratford Junction,
First Black Eye
Some of Edison's most ilherest-
hlg childhood experiences occurred
when lie worked as a newsboy and
candy butcher on the Grand Trunk
Railroad train running between
Detroit and Port. Huron. His fam-
ily moved to Port Huron when
Ile was seven .and continued to re-
side there until Toni was .grown.
It was an ordinary boy brim-
ming with normal deviltry, r nott as
the soon-to-be inventor of such
miraculous things as the electric
light, the phonograph and the mo-
tion picture, that young Tom re-
ceived his first black eye in Sarnia
in 1880. The then Prince of Wales,
traveling as Lord Renfrew, was to
stop off at Sarnia during a tour of
Canada, and Edison was among a
group of Port Huron lads who
crossed the river to see the visit-
ing royalty. In a dispute over the
Prince, later Edward VII, the
Canadians whipped the Yankees
and Tom received a blackened orb
as a memento of the occasion.
y
ME OF THE PRESS
Secret?
Eating onions is one secret to
good health, says a doctor, What,
does he mean, secret?
—Timmins Press
Must Stay Neutral
Some countries which remained
neutral during the war have been
refused membership in the United.
Nations. Thus. they will have to
remain neutral during the peace. -
-Punch
Don't Be Hasty
Appear hesitant `'and reluctant'.
when granting something that • is
askedof you, lest the .beneficiary
will feel he should have asked for' .
more and will be disappointed.
—Kitchener Record
•
Plenty Around
United States Senate, Washing-
ton reports, is in need of 13 experts
on railroads, weather `forecasting,
television and woodchucks. Shucks,
there - are that. many around ' any.,
yillage cracker barrel.
—Windsor Star
Pays To', Listen
When you talk you say only
something you know: when you '
listen, you learn what someone else'
knows. - '—Brandon Sun
New Drive Set
Now that somebody has said that
bacon is going to be in even shorter
supply, store -haunting harpies can
be expected to, put on a driye to
hog what remains.
—Woodstock Sentinel -Review.
The Better Way
To drive slowly in winter, says
a wise contemporary, is better than
to -be driven that way. -
-St. Thomas Times -Journal
Truth Is Weapon •
Against Communism
"If weareto preserve the Ameri-
can way of life, the menace of
Communism must be met and its
forward march halted," says J. Ed-
gar Hoover in the, current issue of
the American Magazine And
that goes for Canada anti the Can-
adian way of life, also.
You may not know it, but Com-
munistic
ommunistic influences are at work in
this country, the same as in the
United States. It is subtle, well-
prepared propaganda. We've been
getting some by mail,with certain
paragraphs marked in red pencil.
The best way to combat Com-
munism is to expose It.
"A Communist, steeped in stealth,
trickery and deceit, cannot long
survive the truth, says the head of
the F.B.I. "The healing rays of
spotlight of public opinion focused
on Communism will have the sante
curative effect that X-rays have
upon cancerous growth, if applied
in tine,"
And Fast
The will of a New York woman
left'10,000 to her chauffeur. Rel-
atives will probably claim he drove
her to it, Chatham News
Clean -Up -
"A new broom sweeps ''clean."
But nevertheless it's doubtful that
`Abbott can clean us any; cleaner
than Ilsley cleaned us.
—Ottawa Citizen
Want To Bet?.
A small town is one where you
can't find any place to do anything
you shouldn't. -,
Kiwanis Magazine
•
"I Remember • When
Neighbors ark, people who come
over when you are sick—and tell
you how sick they used to be,
Chatham News
TRUSS EXPERTS
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Our Truss malting experience ex-
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most modern skilled methods of
mechanical' assistance. -
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AT TH
SEEONINA
THAT
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