ijswiw mftft page 2 the georgetown herald wednetday evening january 13 georgetown herald sstorlbtiett kates pet nar to adnnoe united states mo addltkmal ingle copies 8c both old and new address should be g when- change ol address is requested aoterttsbig rates legal no tices 12c per line lor first in serttoti 7c per uno for each attbsetiuent insertion xteaders tf per line for each insertion k in black face type sc per line 1 additional notices qualifying a coming events such as concerts entertainments so dety church or organization meetings etc 8c per line mjhl mum charge 25c reports of mcetinga held gladly insetted free in tnemortam notices 60c and 10c per line extra tor poems birth marriage and death notices 50c small ad verusements one inch or less 50c for flrst insertion and 5c for each subsequent lnser ton display advertising rates on application although every precaution will be taken to avoid error the herald accepts advertising in its columnson the under standing that it will not be liable jor any error in an ad verusement published hereon der unless a proof of such ad verusement is requested by the advertiser and returned to the herald business office duly sign ed by the advertiser and with such error or corrections plain ly noted in writing thereon and in that case if any error so noted is not corrected by the herald its liability shall not exceed such a proportion of the entire cost of such adver tisement as the space occupied by the noted error bears to the whole space occupied by such advertisement mmoore pab 8 georgetown bio sister belly t akffy dojsuts e newmuipct syndicate whuscrvlm this 1ear is yolrh god built and launched this sear for you upon tne bridge you stand it is your slap jea your own ship and you are tn command just what lhe twelve mom lis rtj will do rests wholly solely friend aiih you your log book kept from day to ij my friend what will it ihow have you on your appointed v a made progress yes or no the log will tell like guiding sta the sort of captain that you are contrary winds may oft beset mountainous seas may press fierce storm prevail and false lights lure you e en may know real stress yet does gods hand hold fast the helm there s naught can eer your ihip overwhelm for weal or woe this year is jours your ship is on hies sea your acts as captain must decide whichever it shall be so now in starting on your trip ask god to help you sail your ship j back in adult monthly the greatest gift a woman s heart is a wonderful thing it is made of molten gold tls staunch- and true as the heavens own blue and the love there never grows otd within this heart is an endless world of felt but unseen things they live and grow that we may know that love is the king of kings a woman s heart is a safety vault where you deposit your life your whole -i- she turns the key that none may see and guards it with her soul tola same heart is an endless thing itgrown and expands with year tls tender and stomg forgiving the wrongs that bring the bitter tears a woman s heart is the greatest jrlft god ever gave to man tls his strength his life through sunshine and strife his soul is in her hands i would rather have a woman s hear than the world and all its gold for tls staunch and true as the heaven s own blue and the love that never grows o d hardy family a town dweller walking in the country had a conversation jvlth a farm laborer who after a few mm uterrnlunteered the information that he was seventy four you are remarkly fit for a man of seventy four said the town dweller bow old was your father when he dlefl- pathers not dead replied th- labbrer there he is in the garden reading the paper to grandfather mind over matter j he had never struck such a stuffy hotehn his life in vain did he try to sleep he had endeavoured to open the windows be fore going to bed but had found them an sealed he tossed and turned a last in deeperatton he got out of bed wrapped a blanket round his hand and smashed a window then tie breathed deeply got back into bed and call into a deep refreshing sleep next awroirig he had to pay two doqata tor smashing the wardrobe detty joyce- was a very prae- tlcal young woman but inas much as she had had no training in socalled skilled work she found it difficult to decide ctlrdt what method should nvri be hers to earn her tlwh7t bui it isnt fcn- c-v- mediafe this need 9lvkl o e economically independent ar gued her mother no but i ami not getting young er tram merely wasting time and getting discouraged i have an idea but you will all laugh at me what is it to lake what money i have saved up the few hundreds that i have saved since i was a child and kept my pennies in the red iron bank my graduation money christ mas moneys you know how 1 final ly got what i nave saved mother yesybut what then asked her mother i m going to take a lease on the old craft house the one with the wide porch overlooking the little lake then i m going to manage to screen it in equip it with neces sities and start an original little day nursery i hear my friends com plaining always that they could do this or that if it were not for the children to take care of d etty s mothers face was hghl ing up there is no doubt of your making a success of anything that has to do with children dear you have a real gift it hai proved a great help to me in bringing up tom and viola and mary betty was pleased at her mother s approval 1 shall have kiddie koops crib tables and cha rs a first ass re fngerator for the m k ard foldings of the smaller one and i shall man age to emptov a voting q rl to help me i bel eve i am pri t cal en ugh to make it pay ard i shall charge fifty cents per hour for the entire care and responsibility of i child from one month to three years 1 know i can do it and that it will not be long before all the mothers in the town are dieting me they will have to make their appointments ahead of time so thaul shall have room for the kidd and in this way a mother ma go ibout her in dividual v t k or 1 er pleasures with a clear conscience they will find their babies well cared for and hap py 1 knov it is m forte i shall be known as big sist betty so as to hje an ind vidual way of being knov n and i tl ink it uiu bring me in il leist ffleen or twenty dollars a da the rent of the old place isn 1 much and the ex penses after i get rid of n y first cost will not be heay big sister betty be ame a neces sity in the town in fact in the trio of towns lying clnie together and here was not a day that t etc was a vacancy in the cheery nursery by the lakeside hello said betty one morning over the telephone that stood in the pantry where she worked over milk bottles and fruit juices no t seem not to know you no oh she breathed on- then she recovered her poise but i don t take them that age she protested and that would be after nursery hours she continued laughing on the other end of the tele phone stood the mother of the only tove betty had ever known she and frank andrews had been boy and girl sweethearts and in the way of all such young romance it had not been without its shadows they had quarreled and prank had gone away- betty keeping it all to herself had suffered and not un til she had been able to absorb her self in this work had she been able to find comfort and now here was his mother at his instigation call ing her on the phone to say jok ingly that- she had a son to put in the nursery of big sister betty betty had always been friendly with frank s mother and perhaps he thought this a safe way to break the ice perhaps your son would like to come and make his own appoint ment suggested betty that s all he wants betty dear aid the anxious mother so if betty laughed a trifle nerv qusly as she played with the babies it was because she could hardly wait for the moment when she should look once more into the eyes of the man she loved at last she found her hand in his i have studied medicine since i went away and am ready to settle down to practice anywhere so long as i can have the promise of you to help me betty he said after a long time but my nursery 1 can t give this all up after i have worked so hard to make it a success the man was silent would it not be possible- for u4o work to gether might we not evolve a plan by which we might both go on with our work and be happy r my idea is that one may do any thing one really wants to do said betty then the question is do you really want to do you still love tebetfyr well woft together she made a white cross a white cross driver who is pledged to do bis part in sav ing life and avoiding injury to him self and others he places life and limb right of way time when he b to be careful all- driving a car to keep drink and drivl ig apart to obey the laws regulating the use or motor cars to drive at reasonable ana safe speeds at all times to give undivided attention to his driving to park if he wants to adr mire scenery or do winciw shop ping to keep brakes lights horn steer ing and tires in safe operating con dition to watch the car ahead and not follow too alosely to keep in his own traffic lane except when passing and to pass only when there is a clear level straight stretch of road ahead and never on hills or curves to think of the car behind and signal his intentions before stopping slowing or turning or entering raf flc lanes from a parked position remembering that the driver behind tannot guess what the car ahead will do to slow down at corners at sreet intersections and schools and when passing parked cars to come to a full stop and to make sure that the road is clear be fore entering a through highway to observe road signs and signals to be particularly watchful when passing bicyclists or pedestrians to expect the unexpected at all times particularlv when children are on or near the road j and considerate of others on the road to drhe as he wduld have others dme and thus by example to en courage others to drive as he does tbs good ou days what has become of the comfort able armchairs which used to stand invitingly on the sidewalk in front of most country stores and hotels asks the port francis times and then continues fcf editorially answer its own question mostly they have dis appeared in the tempo of the motor age but the felicity and fellowship for whlch they stood in the horseand buggy days are not forgotten tilted back against the wall in one of those rushbottomed broadarmed chairs a man or boy could rest in the shade and watch the world go by the custom was conductive to a serene outlook to unhurried talk to the spinning of yams and to discussion of most anything from village news to politics and the state of the na tian if talk tapered down to the weather as the only topic or if you lounged alone awhile in one of the capacl ous chairsyou could always whittle and when of a lazy summer after noon even that was too much exer uon you could pull your straw hat down over your eyes to keep the flies away and just dose until someone or something came along to awaken ou and your tilted chair came down on all four legs with a thud that bro tght you back to consciousness and conver canadian fish and cheese casserole place a lajtr of cooked peas or cooked spinach in the boiiom of targe shallow greased baking hsh place on the vegetables a aver of any vaiietj of canadian raji uing elthe lices of ash or nllets cut into iuit ible serving portions sprinkle salt and pepper and cooiong pjl ovftt thi ftsh place the dish m n hot ven for six or eight it nutej then uu ing a cheese sauce readj pour it ver e fish sprinkle ft 1th fine bread crumbs dotted wit h butter and put the dish back into tlu ovtn until the top is nicelj browned tl e cheese siuce may be made a fo lows me t wo tablespoons of butter bed 15 u two table poons of flour ind add a cup of tqutd a cup of mill or of milk and veg tabic wa combined cook he mixture until it is thick and smooth stirring constat tl and jus before movii g it from tl t tove adi n ha i cup of pnt d cai ad ian rheese and continue to ur the sauts until the cheese u mel d canadiin ash arc re in vitamin- and health building minerals and having regard to nuirlt i value are among the most no irl 1 n of foods a l amine mrs jones io hi sband who ha ventured to assert himself now henrv i ldtrtand once d tor all just because vo ve b c oi a ton davs tour n iialv don t mt the idea vo i re a second mussol i 1 the wretch hubb haven t i alwas given vo i my salary cfteque on the first of even month wife yes but you never told me ou got paid on the first and the fifteenth you embexzler cits drummers rore as fond of the sidewalk chairs as country folks and after calling on their customers relax ed an hour or two before the even tug train they brought the news of the outside world and broadened the range of conversation in tturalla you could usually tell them iram the country enjoyers of leisure by their better clothes but they were a de mocratic- lot and always ready to talk with villager or farmer or even bate footboys who hovered around the group and were sure to be on hand when jim brown the clerk came out late in the afternoon to hose the sidewalk and boys bare feet but things have changed and those good old days are no more and there is no doubt the automobile has had a great deal to do with chang ing conditions there were no ploture shows in those days either and peo ple had to depend on travelling shows for this kind of entertainment plan to take a business course at shaw schools day night correspondence oimaystt passengers for toronto passengers sundays only going west passenger and mall passenger passenger and mail passenger passenger sunday going north mail and passenger going south mail and passenger telephone talks in the watson family that long distance habit is catching the watson jounprters are not mi rclv playing telephone llicj arc playing long dulanct for iong distance is a hahil with the watson familj an iikx pensive habit that wives aiixictv and help keep the familv together let the tele phom extent your horizon bevond our immediate neighbourhood let it kei ou in touch with iriw iv relative an 1 friends the cost is surprisingly sm ill tiduclions in telephone rales local and loh j distance m 193 36 and v hat effected tottngs to telephone utert m onto fit vnd j quebec of nearly one million doll its ve rl j we need your help this year every year needy children from all over the prov ince are treated regardlesm of racecreed or financial circamstancm tbia policy has been continued forover 60 tmn fat the firm belief that everyone who understands the facta would want this great work to continue would agree that no ontario child should be denied chance for health or escape from deformity if mere money makes the difference over 93 of our beds are in public wards the hospital receives no support from the toronto federation for community service because patients are accepted from all parts of the province we must therefore appeal to a human and generous frablic to take care of an annual deficit this year t is 78930 s3 pios mm a donation to fa appeal secretary 97 cobmgm sfrwef toronto thm thank of httlm children will bo yearr rasswrsf the hospital for 6ick children hie george henltatrsy j bf moobx of the canadian weekly newspaper ajsoctatkio- cnr time table standard time going east 710 aa -lq-oe- ft 8 40 pan 91 pal 7j3 pjn passenger and mall 34 ajn 334 pin 652 m 122 a 11 19 pm o time table gray c0ach lines- coaches leave georgetown a 708- ajm 928 am iz28 pjn esaibognrt 415 pjn 650 pjn 9j5 pjn westbound to kitchener x s35 ajn c 255 pjn xb 850 pjn 1120 ajn a 455 pjn d 1130 pjn x 155 pjn x 656 pjn e 1230 nm x through to london a sjuxpl oui and hoi t sua hoi c sat d except sat sun and hoi e sat sunandhol bus depot w long geor directory lerov dale kc m sybil bennett ba barristers and solicitors georgetown ontario office gregory theatre bldg mill st kenneth al langdon barrister solicitor notary public first mortgage money to loan office math street south phone 88 y georgetown w c grant banister etc offices mill street georgetown erin phone 234 po box 186 ju raney graydon lawrence a cook barristers etc z 465 bay sl toronto brampton out e fraser raney ec h edward cook gordon graydon 333 main st north brampton telephone 792 harold r lawrence loblaw building brampton telephone 643 f r watson dds mj s georgetown ofllce hours 0 to 5 except thursday afternoons j e jackson djds successor to the late eh- gollop open evenings phone 224w georgetown frank petch licensed auctioneer for the counties of beet and hilton prompt service telephones cheltenham 26 r 23 georgetown 61 r 3 post office cheltenham monuments pollock ingham successors to cater worth gait onl designs on request phone 2048 inspect our work in greenwood cemetery this space donated by the georgetown herald a m nielsen 25th year of practice chiropractor xray druglest thefspist lady attendant office over dominion store georgetown hours t 630 30 pjn closed tharaday 3 poor ole bu1i xi ao ahortjijgjited ea woruliff imsdf to death- wots is short sight got to do i cr l well e cult see when the bbst alnt toouni o vas to keep shorelllnq all the timet t