Zurich Herald, 1946-10-31, Page 311,01,101
INa
By Gwendoline P.
Partner and I cleaned the flues
and the kitchen stovepipes this
morning and, Gentlemen take note
—(printer—capital "G" please.)—
Partner was just as good tempered
when we finished as he was when
we started. Maybe you can hardly
believe that, but it's true; so now
here we are with clean chimney
pipes, a stove that doesn't smoke.
and yet we are still on speaking
terms with one another. I ask you
—what more could anyone want
as the basis for contented family
life? Of course cleaning stovepipes
is a dirty, dusty business at the best
of times but practice makes perfect
and I really think we accomplish
the task now with the minimum of
fuss and confusion. At one time I
always used to sweep the floor and
wipe off the stove after the job was
done. Now I don't use a broom at
all. Instead, as the work progresses
1 mop up the soot and dust with a
h
wet ciot It keeps the dust from
scattering and afterwards one can
easily finish the job with a soap
and water wash -or of course, with
one's favourite radio -advertised
cleanser.
* * *
While we were busy with the
pipes I thought to myself—"There
now, if we were living in a nice,
comfortable city apartment we
wouldn't have this work to do. We
wouldn't even have a furnace to
attend to—that would be the jani-
tor's job." From there my thoughts
drifted back to what Daughter had
been telling us over the week -end.
To make ft clear I should tell you
that Second Neice Ieft here last
Thursday and visited Daughter be-
fore continuing her journey to Ot-
tawa. It was raining when we took.
her to the station—but not really
hard just a drizzle—so I think the
two of them got around all right
Thursday night. But Friday morn-
ing—that was the day we had the
real rain—remember?—the first
genuine rain we had had this fall.
Now if Second Neice had still been
with us—or First and Third Neice
for that matter—what would have
happened? Any one of them would
have looked out, said what a wet
day it was, and that would have
been that. They would have got out
of their comfortable beds when
they felt like it, come downstairs
to a nice warm kitchen, got their
own breakfast including the hot
coffee waiting for them on the
stove. They would have sat around
as long as they felt like it and
eventually busied themselves doing
whatever they could to help me.
* s *
But when Second Neicc stayed
with Daughter what happened?
Daughter, because she had to be at
the office by 8.30 left her cousin
to dress at her leisure. Poor Babs!
It was raining when she got up;
pouring when she was dressed, and
she had no raincoat, no umbrella
and I don't believe she had any
rubbers. And no breakfast! The
nearest place to get a bite was
about five minutes walk. So Second
Neice had the choice of being dry
and hungry or wet and well-filled.
Thinking the rain would surely let
.up after awhile she waited—until
nearly two o'clock! Oh—oh—the
Joys of the city! What's the good
of a restaurant ifyou can't be
where it is? I'll bet anything Babs
hadlonging but empty thoughts of
the old farm kitchen where Aunt
Gwen was clearing breakfast dishes
from a table where she might just
as well have been sitting had she
stayed a day or two longer, in
which case the rain would have
made no difference to her at all.
s * *
Well, I think our summer run
sof visitors is just about over. All
our nelces have had their turn and
my sister was here for Thanksgiv-
ing. Of course when I say "our run
of visitors" I don't Include Daugh-
ter who pops in any old time at all.
Yesterday, for instance, Partner
and I were alone, Bob was away
some place and the house was un-
naturally quiet when a car carne up
the lane and Daughter and friend
Bert stepped out. Then Bob came
in—and there we were again.
However we are getting a few
Jobs done inbetweentimes. And
their number is legion. I wonder
what it would be like to have spare
time and not know what to 'do with
it? But 1 don't believe—and I sin-
cerely hope—that I shall never have
that experience. Partner feels that
way too. He always does too much.
But then it is hard to take it easy
when mental energy persists in
keeping one step ahead of physical
fitness.
1 think that is something to re-
member if we have old people
living with us. To keep happy they
must have something to do because
the measure of their contentment
It their usefulness in a busy world.
PUSH A BUTTON „ e AND PLOW A FIELD
Astonished farm dogs chase and bark at remote-controlled plow as it rips a straight furrow.
Visualize fields being plowed while farmers loll at easst beneath shady trees, jugs of cider beside
them, pipes or cigarettes in one hand, and electric push -buttons in the other. That's the promise
seen in recent English experiments with radio -controlled farm tractors that pull plows and other
cultivating machinery at the press of a button. Radio-controled apparatus, used in wartime for
robot anti-aircraft target planes, has been adapted to the tractor, Radio signals from transmitter
operate sensitive electrical relays in the receiver, installed on tractor, so that by means of
compressed air servomotors, the tractor can be m ade to run in a straight line or turn right and left:
low can be aised when tractor turns at end of a furrow, Photos here were taken during recent
experiments at Barnet, in Hertfordshire.
Radio transmitter, on ground, sends impulses to receiver, on tractor. Man, right, controls movement
of tractor through push-button he holds.
Sch o1s On Wheels
By .carnes Montagnes
(In The Christian Science Monitor)
Seven railway passenger cars
fitted as school classrooms on
wheels travel throughout Ontario
to bring learning to the children
of railway section hands, fur trap-
pers, prospectors, hunters, and
farmers living far from towns or
villages in the north Canada bush.
Covering roughly the area from
Noth Bay to the Ontaio-Manitoba
boundary, each of the school cars
on wheels stops for a week at a
time, at a definite spot once a
month, and here the children of
every European nationality as well
as Canadians and native Indians get
their schooling from Grade 1 to
Grade 10.
* * *
The travelling schoolrooms have
been in operation for a number of
years. The innovation was started
to fill a need for bringing educa-
tion to the children who lived too
far from settlements to obtain regu-
lar schooling. From one grade
school on wheels the system grew
till now the Ontario Department
of Education has seven, operated
for it by the two Canadian rail-
ways and paid for by the Ontario'
government. The school cars are
regular coaches. Half the interior
is fitted with desks, wall maps,
blackboard, and the other require-
ments of 'a schoolroom. Fourteen
pupils can be accommodated at a
time, but there few stops where
this number come for the week's
teaching, so sparsely populated is
the country in which the school
cars travel. The other half of the
car is fitted with living accommo-
dations for the teacher and his
family, with bunks for beds, mod-
ern kitchen, and an extra stove in
addition to the regular heating
equipment of the railway car.
Triple glass windows are installed
in winter for the comfort of young-
sters who trarnp through even 40
degrees below zero weather to go
to school. Frequently older boys
will build a shelter near the school
car to stay there through the week
rather than make the, long trip back
and forth daily through the bush.
* * *
Like in the country school, the
school car teacher has all grades
at one time in his class. The regu-
lar school term is maintained, and
for the three weeks that the school
car is not at the spot the children
ere assigned work to do every day.
This, the Ontario educators have
found, teaches self-reliance. The
youngsters do extremely well, fre-
ouently completing the year's work
in advance of town school children
and being promoted a grade during
the year.
The teachers arrange their sched-
ule with the railways, letting them
know when to move the cars. Spe-
cial spur lines have been built for
the school cars, and when the local
freight or fast express picks up a
school car to spot it in another loca-
tion, the switches are locked so no
other train can come on the spur.
Each teacher has a special cir-
cuit to make. The shortest is 88
miles long; the longest 221 miles.
Most of the teachers are married
and have their families traveling
with them in the school car. The
teachers like the railway school
cars and don't want to change to
a stationary schoolhouse. Though
the climate is a drawback and the
work is harder, they like to bring
knowledge to the backwoods child-
ren and see them graduate to go
to high school in city or town.
* * 'k
The traveling teachers earn up
to $2,000 a year. Their homes are
provided without charge, also coal,
water, light, and furnishings. The
teachers are kept in touch with the
outside world by railway telegraph
and mail car, receiving their daily
newspapers regularly. They live in
the woods the year round. Their
pupils nearly all being expert
woodsboys and girls, often show
their mentors the best fishing spots
in virgin fishing country. The
pupils know all the habits of the
wild life in the bush,
Truancy is unknown to the
teachers on the school cars. Only
a few hundred children in all come
to the seven cars in a year, but
they want to come. Some will
tramp 40 miles from their father's
trapper cabin to the spur line where
the car is stationed, and sleep in
the bush or some nearby railway
section worker's cabin for the week.
They'll ski to the school car in
winter, paddle by canoe in spring
and fall, or snowshoe If necessary
in winter; but they come to the
school car. And their parents come,
too, in the evenings. Illiterate im-
migrants have learned to read and
write, to find out facts about the
country they live in, to learn how
other ,people , in railway centers,
towns, and cities live and what they
do. The railway school cars not
only teach the youngsters, but teach
Canadianism to the parents as well,
*(Jamas Montagnes is a leading
Canadian free lance writer).
The planet Venue is called the
earth's .twin, because it not only
comes closer to us than any other
planet, but is almost identical in
size with the earth.
REG'LAR FELLERS Speed Test
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YOUR. BEST MAN,
TACKLE. NINE. TIMES
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opera star, 56 -Outfit „
57 She is a mem-
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(abpo.) n 17 Vegetable 36 Little mass
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w•
Training Dogs
As Eyes Of Blind
Mrs. 'Dorothy Harrison Eustis,
who died last week in New York
at the age of 60, will long be hon-
ored for a unique service to her
fellowmen, says the Cleveland Plain
Dealer. It was she who began in
this country the training of dogs
as eyes of the blind. She was found-
er of the nonprofit organization at
Morristown, N.J., now celebrated
as The Seeing Eye, Inc.
Here is another instance of a
hobby assuming proportions un-
dreamed of at the outset. Mrs.
Eustis early in life acquired a deep
interest in scientific matters of
various kinds. When but a child
she conducted scientific farming ex-
periments in dog breeding on her
estate in Switzerland, paying
especial attention to mental and
working capacities. She observed
that the German shepherd was
losing its native intelligence by
13reeding for show purposes. With
the assistance of Elliott S. Hum-
phrey, a geneticist, she began to
retrieve the German shepherd by
• training it for police work, to pa-
trol Swiss borders and to trail and
find missing persons.
In the middle 1920s her interest
broadened out to include the work
done in Europe in training dogs as
guides for the blind, and she wrote
an article about it for the Saturday
Evening Post. As the result of this
article a young American who was
blind went to her Swiss estate to
be trained in the use of a guide dog.
The success of this experiment
led to establishment of The Seeing
Eye. Here dogs are trained, first
alone and then with the master.
Only a part of the cost is paid by
those who obtain the dogs, the rest
by charity.
Matrimonial Knot
The expression tying the knot, in
reference to a wedding ceremony,
is derived from the fact that priests
used to tie the ends of their stoles
around the joined hands of bride
and groom.
Fashion. 1
Skirts T
ecrees
Be Longer
About the time everyone becomes
used to seeing women's legs—or at
least that part of them below the
knee—fashion decrees skirts shall
go down. And down they go event-
ually, for what woman resists
fashion? asks The Edmonton
Journal.
just the other day we were told
by the manager of a women's dress
department that the new skirts are
two inches longer. He added, sur-
prisingly, that most of the ladies
didn't like them that way and were
having them shortened.
A little later, an obscryer at a
social "event" noted that many of
the skirts' were a trifle longer!
TO BE POPULAR as lily
hostess, serve Maxwell
House Coffee. It coutaini
choice Latin-American
coffees ... the finest obi
taivable. It's blended by
experts with traditional
knowledge and skill.
NEW LOW
PRIMES
12 tablets
18c
24 'ablaut
29c
100 tabtatt
79c
GENUINE ASPIRIN IS
MARKED THIS WAY
The Vitamin B1 Tonic
Extensively used for headache,
loss of sleep, nervous indigestion,
irritability, anaemia., chronic
fatigue, and exhaustion of the
nervous system.
60 eta. Economy size, $1.50
Fee
..nssrsr#.r;
" _ r.Dr,Chases
dfor
br'Chose's
NERVE FOOD. '
se's Nerve Fo
.17
50 FAR',
50 GOOD -
HOW ARE.
YOU ON
R_. _N.rIN%?Rq{ JNI N' to
SAY- RUNN IN'
IS WHAT 1
\\,....!..._C) HEST-
By GENE BYRNES
(Trite hf,r„ reaareiA:
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w•
Training Dogs
As Eyes Of Blind
Mrs. 'Dorothy Harrison Eustis,
who died last week in New York
at the age of 60, will long be hon-
ored for a unique service to her
fellowmen, says the Cleveland Plain
Dealer. It was she who began in
this country the training of dogs
as eyes of the blind. She was found-
er of the nonprofit organization at
Morristown, N.J., now celebrated
as The Seeing Eye, Inc.
Here is another instance of a
hobby assuming proportions un-
dreamed of at the outset. Mrs.
Eustis early in life acquired a deep
interest in scientific matters of
various kinds. When but a child
she conducted scientific farming ex-
periments in dog breeding on her
estate in Switzerland, paying
especial attention to mental and
working capacities. She observed
that the German shepherd was
losing its native intelligence by
13reeding for show purposes. With
the assistance of Elliott S. Hum-
phrey, a geneticist, she began to
retrieve the German shepherd by
• training it for police work, to pa-
trol Swiss borders and to trail and
find missing persons.
In the middle 1920s her interest
broadened out to include the work
done in Europe in training dogs as
guides for the blind, and she wrote
an article about it for the Saturday
Evening Post. As the result of this
article a young American who was
blind went to her Swiss estate to
be trained in the use of a guide dog.
The success of this experiment
led to establishment of The Seeing
Eye. Here dogs are trained, first
alone and then with the master.
Only a part of the cost is paid by
those who obtain the dogs, the rest
by charity.
Matrimonial Knot
The expression tying the knot, in
reference to a wedding ceremony,
is derived from the fact that priests
used to tie the ends of their stoles
around the joined hands of bride
and groom.
Fashion. 1
Skirts T
ecrees
Be Longer
About the time everyone becomes
used to seeing women's legs—or at
least that part of them below the
knee—fashion decrees skirts shall
go down. And down they go event-
ually, for what woman resists
fashion? asks The Edmonton
Journal.
just the other day we were told
by the manager of a women's dress
department that the new skirts are
two inches longer. He added, sur-
prisingly, that most of the ladies
didn't like them that way and were
having them shortened.
A little later, an obscryer at a
social "event" noted that many of
the skirts' were a trifle longer!
TO BE POPULAR as lily
hostess, serve Maxwell
House Coffee. It coutaini
choice Latin-American
coffees ... the finest obi
taivable. It's blended by
experts with traditional
knowledge and skill.
NEW LOW
PRIMES
12 tablets
18c
24 'ablaut
29c
100 tabtatt
79c
GENUINE ASPIRIN IS
MARKED THIS WAY
The Vitamin B1 Tonic
Extensively used for headache,
loss of sleep, nervous indigestion,
irritability, anaemia., chronic
fatigue, and exhaustion of the
nervous system.
60 eta. Economy size, $1.50
Fee
..nssrsr#.r;
" _ r.Dr,Chases
dfor
br'Chose's
NERVE FOOD. '
se's Nerve Fo
.17
50 FAR',
50 GOOD -
HOW ARE.
YOU ON
R_. _N.rIN%?Rq{ JNI N' to
SAY- RUNN IN'
IS WHAT 1
\\,....!..._C) HEST-
By GENE BYRNES
(Trite hf,r„ reaareiA: