The Huron Expositor, 1936-07-31, Page 5•-11,;.•
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U1471 1811 1,93•
'feet
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RgGENT .Tf(EA,TRE
s,N4Y0411f . •
M 'eate
'Victor Jury SAM' . 0,11011 in
"TOO TOT/04- TO KILL".
Jeep Arthur - ,George Murphy, le
' 10.A PUBLIC !WARE" -
A. :programme of. thritle and ex-
oitemsent that will keep you On the
"edgeof yone.seat.
• iandeee ,TaeedaY, WedneedaYse •
Bobby Breen, the child star of
Eddy Cantor's radio program, in
"LET'S SING AGAIN"
.The childwill steal your hearts
with his golden. voice.
NEWS OAIRTOON
Matinee Mon., Aug. 3rd, at 3 p.m.,
Next Thursday, Fridey, SatinelaY
Exclusive story isterring. Madge
Evans, Franehot'-Tone; added at-
tettetion,..The Lewis and Schmelling
Fight- 'Coming—"China Seas." '
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I'Llt.KERSMITH •
Jolhn C. Doig,. L.L.B., of De-
troit, acteormeeinied by his mother and
sister, Miss Jenet, returned. berme af-
ter a elery-IPIeasant vacation spent in
Belleville and ether !places.
.•
MANLEY
iMr. Fred....ekait has threshed his
aleike elever and the tuinout was
„good. •
, !Threshing operations have started
! and the fel Wheat isr an average
crop, and mo doubt, with the , °obi
weather aect toccasionsl rain' the
.spring torops will survive, 'which" at
••orne time were deemed, but now 'prom-
isee fair returns, _
The swamp' 'fire meth of here is
-well under, control.
GODERICH TP..
eeeee
anVIrs. Charles /McGregor; of Detroit,
ese
is
yisiting her 'sister, Mrs. S. Ern.-
• inerson, and Many, told neighbors aid
- deiends.
MT. L. Yeo and'eon'Bruce; have
returnWinn
peg to Winipeg after visiting..
rthis. mother, Mrs. Yeo Goderich, and
brothers, (Messrs. Wlill and Eldrid
Mrs:. Esther Lowery, . Toronto., and
Mr. and . Mrs. Everett Lowery. arta
ef—Oshawsee .last __week
• -visiting in Holinesville at lVlisses
Tractor's.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter 3 cDougall re-
turned home Saturday after a week's
visit with friends near Wessels. ,
Beware of
'
. .the ,Dog.
(By Albert .Paysen Terbune, in Read.-
er's ,Digest)
.1 uPpeose eVery- ome. (has at some
-time had the wits scared out of Iiiin
"by a micieus doge M any .rate, the
knack Of getting' along with doge
may btrit4'iiileeitiedly'handy or .S101
(one day.
Twice during a recent Morning's
-tramp I had to stop at farmhouses
to ask 'my way., ,Bteth times, watt:pil-
e-foga came t forward' to meet • me. The
flest 'veitered up to. Me, barking in
'thundrous challenge. I spoke te him
.in careless' frie•ndliness, all the time
-cantina:a/1g my progress up' tilie path.
He gamboled along at my side, tail
vraviing, nose gaily aloft. There was
nothing to Ibe afraid- of.
Yet if.. I ha& taken to my heels
-there is a mere than ' even chance
..that be would have ,nipped 'the first
part of my anatomy he caught up
-with. Even a good-natured dog has
an impulse to chase anyone Or any-
thing that runs in fear froth 'him.
'The wild tdog of 'old' that dM not dash
orth thus to .overhaul galloping prey
went without' food. The trait has en-
dured. Hence his 'often fatallest for
chasing care or trains,.
The second watohdog wasr. another
-matter. He :advanced -stiff-legged,
bead low,' tail ramrod stiff. He: was
,growling--n'ot barking. ,, A dog that
growls in anger holds his head lOw,
to protect his .vulnerable throat in
the impending scriiiiinage. This time
I stood stock-still, my palms on 'my
Chest, my feet -,ellose together. It was
-not a time for makieg friends-, but
or keeping unchewed.
The dog •moyed up to me, •still in
fbattle fermatiori, but tiocreasin•gly
puzzled. There Was no salient part
of me dbr himto bite. If I had tried
to pet him, or turned to run, Or kick.:
ed frantically at him, any and ',or.
armtar leg wtould have been an ideal
target for his teeth. But there I
stleod—what was the poor brute to do
-with me?
Nineteen times in twenty, a fierce
-dog will not hurl himielf on a strati-,
ger who stands thus calm and mo-
tionless. My. woke, speaking slowly
and unconcernedly to him, incieased
'kis perplexity. tior ,perhaps a min-
ute; it was a deadlock. Then t took
a step ,,toward the hieisse. •• Instantly
lie crosinhed foe a spring. •-•,Se I stood
still agent 'The average ,fierce canine
'would have given ground • at my ad-
vance, but this was one of the least
amenable types of . dangerous dog.
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE COT,.
HEAD OFFICH—SEAFORTH, ONT.
• OFFICERS:
Met Breadfoot, 3 Seiaforth - Pres.
Jeo. E, Pepper, Brucefield - Viee-Pres.
Merton A. iReid, Seaforth - Sec.-Treas.
• AGENTS:
Finlay MeKercher, R. R. 1, Dublin;
E. Pepper, Brucefiekl; E. R. Jarmouth,
Brodhagen; James WatteBlytte C. P.
Hewitteltitieardine; W. 4%, Yeo, Gude-
DIRECTORS
• .
William Knox, Landeslooto; George
Leonhatt, Br6dhag'ent jaines .000-
nolly, Golderich; Alex. Broadleat, .R.
R. 8,- Seeforthi AleetitirelVielringf
R. It, 1, IllYttif,Jetti Pfete
fieklif.lantee Sivoldide, Walton; Thos.
160011 11, tf; S4aibothl,,M1146,1,1e,
AvelAtimil; rt. gottfo''''
• Ilteeet4iftdgeselitit
•• 4,441
„
treeteserrerireV,.• •
•
• .!".:•••
, Aestle, •'• ',„
Dresses
ins season's most attractive
T
• Made to Measure.
•
THE Famous' W, R. Johnston & Co. aPProVed
clothes, at prices lower than you have ever
bought them before. High-grade Suits made
to your measure for less than you could buy them
ready made. Fit, quality and workthanship guar-
anteed up to W. R. Johnston & Co.'s standard.
Select your own cloth and leave your measure.
WE WILL Fit you!
Dresses for sport wear or
better dress occasions. Fancy
patterns, plain pastels, corded silk
piques, chiffons and silk prints, in
seasonable styles." Sizes are .14„ to
42, and include many suits. as well,
REGULAR PRICE $6.75 to $7.96
Week end A 79
Sale "1.
iy•e) '''71 et. erei„
• et • e
•••
All our Finest Summer Dresses
to clear—Finest Silk Chiffons, Silk
Prints, Crepes, etc. Every wanted '
color is here. Sizes 14 to 44. Regu-
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Don't miss this!
Only 45
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st
20% OFF
IVIen's Flannel Suits
•Aie. ••V'.7
*?e, ."1.ere•
EVERY Flannel Suit in our store gets march-
ing orders. With <a lot of Summer weather
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not miss. Anew styles, plain or fancy backs, patch
or regular pocketS; Light or Dark, Grey, Sands,
Browns, in plain cloths and stripes or checks.
Don't miss these. Come early!
20% OFF
Pure Silk Hose 59c
'
Sub -standards of $1.00 ranges;
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sizes. „
VERY spgclAL 59c
IIIININIM
Crepe Rayon Panties
' N w ,Sur
e mme style,lace triMmed;
silk elastic tops.
-29c I (
_
•
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Men's Wash P
Final clearance of all Wash Pants.
Sizes 30 to 42.
$1.79
Sport Shirts
Al
All the newest styleslaced, zipper,
,.
co ilars, or exewe neck, in smart mesh
effects.
Final Clearing —20 Per Cent Off
The only Move for me Would be te:
ht,c1c, out ..tof the yard, one step at a
time, and with long pauses between
eeidee-' .Luekilty the householder saw
us and called eff his cur. , ' •
. In these two stimPle •eneeenters lie
the basic lesions in the art of get-
ting along with dogs. Keep your
heed. Motet dogs are not biters, if
they are treated sanely and are let
gone. To fondle a strange dog ..in
rhe street er at a 'homeyou are vis-
iting is like driving pest a "stop"
signal. Often ytou lean. get away un-
scathed,' as many dogs are born(mix-
ers. But, when you meet e,.strange
dog, don't lyenk on its being one, of
them... ..•• • • , .
Do not allow fear to master you
when you are in the presence of an
ill-tempered ' or vigilant dog. My
reason for 'Stressing thismay sound
fantastic, yet it is an .established sci-
entific faze When you are frighten-
ed, nature (pumps an undule amount
of adrenalin through your system.
This throws eff 'an odor said to be
like that of formic acid, which he-
man nostrils fail • to . detect, Dogs,
however,hate it... It rouses 'Seine of,
them, torage; in others it insrpires,
only contempt. Many an otherwise
inoffensive dog will attack when that
oder reaches. him. Here is an eie-
ample: ,
Years ago, I used to visit a neigh-
bor whose gigantic cross -bred hound
was a great pal of .mine. I went a-
way for ,alinest a year. On., my re-
turn I called Ca this neighbor one
eireetng. His huge dog came bound-
ing clown th,e' •path. I stooped ever
and rumpled' (his ears •reughly be-
tween my hands. Side by , side we
. Went to the house. !He lay down on
(the Porch,. wfhille. I went indoors. My
host erett•Od• •me by saying he hoped
his dog h,ad been chained, as the
Finite NM'S murderously ugly to
strangers: •
(While I was away his thig cross -bred
had died, and he had bought another
'watchdog. This was the giant that
had greeted me. IlVly host co.uld 'hard-
ly believe the 'clog had permitted such
'liberties. Te prove it, I 'steapp•ed 10-ut
on the 'porch where the new dog lay.
By the light from the window I could
see *hetet man -killer be was. And
1„ was •seared. Yet I went toward
him .with outward self-confidence, as
A certain of a friendly welecime. He
launched at ,my throat (with a wild
roar. I barely had time to cateh him
by the side .of 'the neck as he leaped.
.Now that he knew I feared him he
attacked me Yet I can sWsar no
mere human would have, guessed I
was afraid. His nostrils told him of
my fright.
I think the 'total absence of fear -
smell explains why eo Many ill-tem-
pered doge are gentle with little chil-
deele
Some people "have a way with
'clogsvetUrd tail' de ehnest anythink
with' Intbst rof there. °Mei...people .afe
invariably &kilted (by dogs. If they
don't •like you, them gone. It
is n•o fault of yronrs,. Don't be fooled
by the AA 'tbaory 0* a man is t6
be'trusted if dogs like MM.; and vice
iverea. Met is the serest ridieulous
of .all the deg lies. Gonertare Bite-
e
ter of Maine and Ptinchiot of Pennsyl-
vania sent a dog apiece ,to state psis -
pre to amuse 'the 'convicts.. Eagerly
the canines made friends with the
criminals. Surely in those twO pris-
ons there must have been at least a
few prisoners( who were not' altoge-
ther saintly. But the doge made no.
distinction among them. No, if dogs
like you or dislike you, it 1st nocrite-
ion of Your moral Worth.
One or two More advisory tipsy If
your technique failsand you are bit-
ten by a clog, remem-ber this—not,
once inyenany thousand times is the
dog' rabid. Rabies exists,but it is
very rare. Of the almost • imeount-
able' bites inflicted during a term ef
yeaes Ori attendants in the. New York
City deg pounds, not one caused a
,case of rabies.
The bite of a healthy dog is only
as dangerous as would be a similar
wound inflicted by a piece of metal or
bcee—phis such possible folod infec-
tion (not rabies) as may have 'been
on the animal's teeth. If the bite is
where your lips can reach it, slick ,it
out thoroughly. Then bathe it in
-lelce*arm (net hot) water and paint
it with iodine. And don't worry.
t You are in so. danger,
If you are afraid the biter had
.rabies—which he almost never has—
use the same treatment but paint the
wounc1 with carbolic acid instead of
iodine." The acid will burn for a short
time, but you will be state.
There are ,far more savage humans,
in proportion, than savage dogs.. You
would not push past a military guard
without the •password. So why blame
a watohdog fer barring yeer ,way in-
to the hems he ihas been trained to
defend? 7' you should walk over to
.even fr;'.•.ly .geodetemperred man, in
the strece, and muss up his face with
the palm of your head or rumple his
ears, the chtinee,s all are that you
would, tfind yourself %if the receiving
end of a punch in the jaw. • You know
that. And you (+don't incur such a
silly risk. You leave the stranger
alone. Therefore he leaves you a-
lone.' Do the same (with cle,gs,
•
s gaoso,
4'4
Farm Notes
Vegetable Crops
The conditiron ,of vegetelble crops in
Ontario On July 15th, being an av-
erage for thle whole peovince, is as
tollidevls: (1—poor; aver-
age; 81—average; 4—tbe1ow average;
• 5-4exceptiona11Y good) : Beans—
(green) 0.8; beets 15; cabbage (ear-
ly)., 2.9; natheige (late), 1.6; csieli-
flower (early), 2.9; cauliflower (late),
-2.9; celeter (late), 2.5; corn' 1:4; let-
tece, It.t6;( onilons, 2.8; Potatoes (ear-
ly), 1.7; peas (garden), .7; spinaoh,
1.5; rflolmatioes (early), 1..7; tomatoes
(main field), 2.6.,
, • Late Sown Crops
ivieter Tee et Whiter rwliteet, sewn
glint Angle* 15th at (the rate of bwo
busitelb' Of geed pee sere, will pro -
dude ennilithseable • posh:ire in the
artitatMls, . IteSkilte of eitieritneatsin
the average Of the lest •tvitt yeah at
, •
the tOntaello Agricultural College
sthlorw that When the crop was elose.
cut (twice) - winter lye produteci a
total tonnage, before damage by ser-
itcyus frost, of 2.6 tons (of green cfeeP
per acre,' and winter Wheat of 2 tons
of green •erep• per acre, *tSheuld these
crops not be needed, for Nature ,this
autumn they can be left and pastur-
ed in early opting.
Rape I
'This is one of the good late -paSture
croest, and if it can be seeded its the
next few days will, produce pastaire
by late Autumn, It can be seeded in
rows at ,tha rate of 1Ik to 2 (pounds
of .steed per acre, or may be broad-
casted at the rate. tof 4 to .5 pounds of
seed per acre. This crop- may be
pastured tsatisfaceorily by beef cat-
tle, hogs tor sheep. There is some-
times a danger ef animals bloating
if twined Ion the pasture when This
hun-
gry tot;_evhern the crop is wet.
alloWing the animals'. to stay on the
pasture a short time art first and at.
the same eime letting ,,them, have ac -
reels( to a grass pasture. The Dwarf
Essex y(ariety isone, of the best vari-
.etiles to sow for late ,pasture. '
, Narrowstem Kale
This crop, which is recite stemmy
and has a smaller leaf growth than
rape, can also be Seeded at this date
and will prodtee worth:IAN pasture
before there it danger of serious
frost tclaniarge. ti should be seeded
at bhe rate of 1 to 2 pounds of geed!
per acre in rows, Or may be broad-
casted at 4 te 5 pounds of seed per
acre. .1Cattle, hogs or sheep cell be.
succesefully pareteeerl 'on 'this crop,
but the •sanate ..precautions ahtould be
,taken at in pasturing rape.
Any of the grain crops seeded at
this late date will Igtely flioduce un-
satistfactory yields , of grainthis sea-
son.
Crops For Rolling Lands -•
Permanent pastures are extensive-
ly grown en Volling lands. Canada
blue grass, red top, Kentucky blue
grass and White lover are useful or
this ipurpose. The first tnentioned
grass is of (particular !value where
the soil tends eo dry out in suirener.
The clot:ninon mixture ef red elover,
ailsiikel and thntothy may be sown for
a number el years. Alfalfa is an ex-
cellent crop fee hilisidesund isr to be
desired fever 'other erupt where it
rwrilI grow successfully. tt order to
receive a good' stand of this perman-
ent hay crop, Minting may be reeves
softy on seine soils.
Oats, rye, wheat and eort are crops
frequently .grown with success. en
Foaling lands, hut these crops are not
as 'Wee/five 4n controling ,erasion as
hay atund pasture crops. If satisfac-
tory crop yieldst are to be 'secured,
farm Mame% must be applied at sea-
sons wheu it, can be eleaghed under
before any Ines of fert8ity takes,
plaoe. frillt and winter fetlicationt
of Manure Mein tor eantruenelal fer-
tilizer) ars tibt deeits ottept,
level laud 1546a040 ,treat loss
*NA lit ThIt o, °toot
'tootat ill* Vatkit. ,
Learning To Swim . .
•
Bit,puddy, Toronto.
Kay. Reynolds, Toronto
s
Rekn•:,ids,
•44.),„
T°r°r(ro
BREAST STROKE
LESSON I
Leg Action
It is taken for granted, that you
have masterted floating or dead man's
float, peir Figure 2. To start assume
position per Illustration, Figure 12.
Then draw legs op, heels •together per
Figure 13. 'Whip legs out, soles- of
sleet turned out and .assume isceition,
Figure 14. Whip together to the ori•L'
iginal 'etositien, Figure 12. It is ad-
visable to meet 1, 2, 8, during the
14re exercise, 'Cloorit 1 whet legs are
tritraveti urp: count 2 *hen they aesunie
the V rvotition and count 3 during the
final &frt.
t• t'et•teyee titAel;e4,'"1 • •
• ,
, • , 4 •
. . „kb: :•.. AP• ,
LESSON II
Arm Action
'Assume position per 'Figure 15,
arms extended, palms down, shodders
and arms slightly submerged helper
!surface of (water.' tPull amnia( side.
ways below sit -time tot further than
line of sb'oulder, thands,..elightly* (turn-
ed and cupped, thumbs down, te
tion Figure it. Drop +elbow% s
down and draw MIMI titiattrition Fig.
um 17, thten shoot onto§ • 'nut ,pairits
still down,, hack to starting position.
per. Figure 16, The eon* 1,
doffing the arm +action, OW het u•SOL
estece
••
LES&NflI
Combined Arms, and Legs
Lean well forward witheut subs
Merging face, floating position. Start:
arm action. As you supproaeh petie
floss Figure 16, (with atm*, dieter lege
rap per-Tigiere. 18„ Wel .edititinte.the
test (of filre-leg nloyeuretnt_lihile the •
.artneo ate diming
last grin gosition Shoots 'td
Ike lege. -are. limught. together,
int yOU baelc 40. he
.tsi�tI 4' I
ofthet vbetiOV-Wet
tknitt 0 With% or
• •rlie
•-••. „r e,
•eY
k A t‘l • (tr '