§ { AREER ---- GEE -- . x ap -- ose Wives Aren't So Badly Spoiled! There's nothing 4 thre. BEd on g ike 3 to x Minty of "those who --- claim an women are lazy and spoiled. "=, SR The hou may be the o non-speci eft in this worl of speci , She must be all things to a considerable number of people. She is responsible for the phy- sical, mental and spiritual wel- fare of anywhere from one to a dozen children and adults. She superintends growirig-up in the fastest-growing era man has ever known. She must know and have faith -- indeed, must BE an ar- ticle of faith -- in a faithless age. . In a time: of doubt and fear, she must betray no'bewilderment or insecurity. She must be an island of calm ih a frantic world. If a woman in a Chinese com- munity works in a rice paddy someone minds her children and keeps house, If a European wo- man must discharge high social obligations, some one else cooks. It an Eskimo wife must cook and keeps. house 'and mind the chil- dren, her man does the shopping with his gun. The - American. woman. must rear a model family, shop, cook, keep house inside and out, enter tain and keep a man happy. To help her, she has gadgets; and because these theoretically give her leisure time, she is expected . to participate in great numbers . of activities for church and - school, -country and community and family and neighbor. She must be the intellectual academic 'and artistic equal of both husband and children so she doesn't bring shame to them, but. she must never overshadow them. She must dream with man and child and at the same time be terribly practical. She must know more rules than a lawyer and 'more truth than the great- est philosopher, and be always more just than justice. She must be strong and weak, somber and gay, sympathetic and: tough, de- vipus and direct. She has to work before a man's day begins and long after his day has ended, but always be fresh and beautiful. And if she finds time to open a magazine, she is sure to find there an article tell- ing her how lazy and selfiish and inadequate she is. She must give infinitely and receive infinitesimally -- and be happy with it. , No thanks. Make mine the salt mine.-- Bremerton (Wash.) Sun. RESERVATIONS A Memphis, Tenn. depart- ment store Santa beckoned to a, 7-year-old girl to come forward, but the little girl stopped just short of his reach. "If it's all the same to you," she said, "please don't kiss me. Last year you left whiskers all" over my face." \ SAVING F kneel in the background. Headhunter Wore A Bowler Hat Can any family rival the re- ' cord of the painter F. W. Hay- man Chaffey for world travel? In 1949 he and his wite, Patri- cia, sold all they possessed and: left their old Sussex farmhouse: on the Rother, intending to roam Europe with their year- old daughter, Susan, in a carry- cot, In fact, they roamed the world. They 'earned their keep paint- ing, typing, guarding embassies, guiding tourists, holding exhi- biticns and selling Chaffey's paintings. They bought an old Moorish house 'on the island of Majorca and arranged an exhi- bition in Madrid. Chaffey gives a graphic ac- count of their adventures in "The Road Grew No Moss," il- lustrated graphs and drawings. In 1955, while in Mexico City, Chaffey received a cable from London offering him a one-man show at the Hanover Gallery in February, 1958. So they set out to cross Central and South Am- erica to Rio de Janeiro and re- turn to England by way of Afri- ca, earning their keep en route just as they had in Europe. They travelled 10,000 miles by bus, car, train and "plane from Mexico to Caracas, Venezuela, drove another 100,000 miles south in a Land-Rover present- ed to them there by a car firm, sailed 4,000 miles to Cape Town, drove 7,000 miles in South Africa, then sailed an- ES Sa 4 i TIME TO FLY -- Alton, Ill. will 1638 a colorful plece of local history when this Indian painting of a mythological demon Is desiroyed fo make way for a new highway. A similar picture of the demon greeted ench explorer-priest Jacques Marquette - when he pushed along the Mississippi River tin the late 17th century, Since his time, the painting times on different bluffs In the area, been duplicated three with his own photo-. rr ACE -- Wearing protective masks and clothing, barefoot battlers In San Francisco, demonstrate their skill in the ou EA AL LR] | ancient sport of kendo, fighting with bamboo poles. Students other 4,600 miles to Southamp- ton. On this journey Chaffey took thousands of feet of cine film, and-5,000 colour photographs. He painted enough for six-one man exhibitions in different cities. When they arrived back their children -- Susan, ten, and Charles, seven -- had probably travelled farther and seen more of the world than any children of their age anywhere. At one point their train had to creep along rails dented and mishapen by a cyclone, Their bus journeys and car-lifts were sometimes over roads - strewn with boulders or thick mud, skirting mountain chasms. In their Land Rover, they had to cross swollen rivers, through darkness and torrential rain, scarcely knowing land from wa- ter, before reaching the Peru- vian frontier. Near Lanquin, Guatemala, he saw one river, the Semuec, car- ried across another, the Caha- bon, 'by a natural bridge, the only one of its kind in the world. Nearly eight hundred yards long, over one hundred yards wide, it had been formed by calcium carbonate deposits and petrified vegetation gradu- ally thrusting outwards through the centuries. At Nicaragua's oldest city, Granada, they stood on the shore of a great lake which has three hundred and ten small islands and probably the only fresh-water sharks in the world. While they were crossing Col- lombia news came of a terrible disaster at Cali. Four army lor- ries laden with nitro-glycerine had blown up in the barracks square, demolishing thousands of houses, buses, cars and trains. Chaffey flew there to photo- graph the ruins, and in the blaz- ing heat wandered for hours among the rubble, smoke and dust and mangled bodies. Three thousand were buried in a common grave in the main cemetery, which had been torn up itself. In Quitos, Ecuador, he met Dr. Fergusson, an authority on the Jivaro head-shrinkers. He told him that after the fierce Indi- ans had attacked a Spanish colonial outpost General Santi- seben, commanding the Peruvi- e% Amazon area, sent out a pu- nitive force. of three hundred men and officers armed with rifles and machine guns. None returned, but almost a year later he found one morn- ing, in front of the door of his office, the dried and shrunken heads of all he had sent on the expedition! Chaffey went into the jungle villages and saw some shrun- ken heads, but never penetrated the secret of how they were treated. The Jivaros he found in Sucoa had traded with white visitors and exchanged monkey- teeth bracelets and monkey-skin bags for old clothes, and these they never removed, even to sleep, . - The Chief, Quinindo, wore an old 'Air Force cap which he had not removed for over two years. "Another , Jivaro - had 'worn a short-cut evening walstcoat for "the 'same period. An older man "was greatly pleased with 'him- 'self in a "battered, grey-black bowler, wearing below it only a loincloth! What was the sermon about, George?" "Marriage." "I hope the minister gave you some good advice." "I wish I knew as little about it as he does." The eloquence of the speaker is In direct proportion to the number of nap-takers .in the audience, : Slave Posed As . Queen's Sister . The wealthy guests laughed and talked excitedly as they .awaited the 'arrival of the royal princess -- sister of Queen Charlotte "of England -- who was touring the state of Mary- land, U.S. : The princess's host had spar- ed no expense to make the oc- casion memorable, and every landowner for miles around envied ' his good fortune in en- tertaining a royal visitor. Three trumpets. sounded, and the master of ceremonies cried: "Her Royal Highness, the Prin- cess Susanna Caroline Matilda." Men bowed and woman curtsied as 'a slim, beautifully gowned young girl entered the room. With great dignity the lovely princess received the salutations of the excited guests. Then, on the arm of her host, a wealthy planter, she moved to her place of honour at the head of the decorated table. Outside, newspaper reporters were busy scribbling notes of the splendid scene. And the princess was so gay and charm- ing that nobody bothered to wonder why she should be tour- ing the smaller towns of Ameri- ca. After all, it was known that several other rich planters had been honoured by her presence during the last few weeks, and every hostess was angling to have the royal visitor for her own guest. Then one of the reporters passed a slip of paper to a ser- vant. On it were the words: "She is a maid named Sarah Wilson, but has changed her name to Princess Susanna Caro- line Matilda." The "princess," in fact, was a runaway slave and at last events were catching up with her. In the meantime, she smiled and joked, oblivious of what was to happen. How did this amazing adven- ture begin? Sarah Wilson was born at a sleepy Staffordshire village in 1750. A smart girl, she attracted the notice of a local lady, Caroline Vernon, a Maid of Honour to the Queen. While still in her teens, Sarah went to London with her new employer, as maidservant at the Queen's House, on the site of the present Buckingham Palace, One night in 1771, Sarah no- ticed that one of the Queen's rooms was unguarded, Know- SR en ing that everyone was down- stairs, she tiptoed into the room, grabbed some of the dresses and jewels which were there and darted away. Returning for a second load she was spotted by Mrs. Von Schellenberg, who caught her before she could es- cape, Next day Sarah Wilson ap- peared before Lord Talbot, the Lord High Steward, who sen' tenced her to life transportation. Within a month she was on her: way to America, where she was sold to an employer who put her to work in his kitchens. But somehow she managed to smug- gle with her a couple of gowns and some of the jewels which she had' stolen and hidden in her room. Having spent many weary months in Maryland, she decid- "ed to make a dash for freedom. She knew all about Court life from gossip in the servants quarters. She knew, too, how great ladies dressed and behav- ed. Wrapping her stolen tro- phies in a bundle, she fled on foot to another state. There, with an accomplice, she let it be known that a sister of the Queen Charlotte of England was soon to visit the district. The rich landowners were all agog to be the first to entertain the "princess," and Sarah Wil- son soon had a long list of in- vitations, With great skill she contrived to "arrive" at night, with 'one maidservant. This may sound strange today, but in those days the people in the remoter parts of America knew very little of royal etiquette. For quite a while the "prin- cess" duped the district, living free at all the best houses. Then came the tell-tale slip of paper, and once more she was on the run. She was eventually caught at Charleston, South Carolina, and was taken back to where she belonged. But once again this amazing young woman escaped, though this time she did not pretend to be a princess. She simply told people that she was an English lady. For a while she managed to live by her wits and then, with a stroke of luck, she found herself in a town garri- soned by a crack English regi- ment. Among the officers of that regiment was William "Talbot, a kinsman of the nobleman who had sentenced her to be trans- ported. Wearing her best gown, Sarah Wilson was introduced to the young officer. At that point she dramatically disappears from history. All records of her cease -- except one important fact: she married William Talbot! Just What's In That Little Black Bag? Just what do doctors carry in their little black bags? Often, some surprising equipment, the journal Medical Economics re- ported last month. A survey of 1,100 general practitioners and specialists turned up these in- triguing items and comments by the doctors: A bent hairpin ("a quicker and nyore efficient instru- ment than &hy other for re- moving foreign bodies from ear or nose"); blank checks ("for the smart patient who flashes a $50 or $100 bill at 2 am."); wire cutters for removing fishhooks ("I've removed about 300 in the past 8 years"); and bubble gum ("with children, it's synonymous with injections"). On the other hand, a surprising number of bags (they weigh be- tween 10 and 20 pounds) lack equipment which most laymen consider essential. The stetho- scope, for example is not carried (or considered necessary) by 13 per cent of the GP's. Even ther- mometers are left at the office by 10 per cent of them. . WINTER TRAINING -- Yankee a baseball star GH MeDougald - takes over the controls of his son's model train In his home, FRIES 1 77 Li : A t $21,000, ace vg th] 2 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING AGENTS WANTED MEDICAL EARN Casb In your Spare [Ime Just show friends our Christmas and ALL Occasto ding on Greetl Jards (inclu Religious) Stationery, bry Write for (=~) o samples. Colonial Card (td. 489-B Queen East. Toronto 2 rv BABY CHICKS BRAY has avallable Ames [n-Cross ready to lay pullets, Dayolds and start ed to order. Request list. Order now Pebruary brollers, Leg purpose chicks to order. See local agent, or write Bray Hatchery. BOOKS TRAPPERS! "Wild Mink Mont Dok of ny Sdveniurescma life Re Wild Mink. Informative, factual, Inter estin cloth bound, $3.00. Barney Vaughan, R. No, 1, Aubrey, Texas. BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE TWO Storey Business Block now seo ond hand store plus four apartments. location Excellent in- vestment. Clifford Weeks Realtor, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, WOOD-WORKING shop, close to Otta wa, with excellent machinery, fair bufldings. Priced for quick sale - with or without stock. Walter C. MacDon- ald, Winchester, Ont. BALA BUSINESS RESTAURANT; two heated apartments, owners home, cottage and cabins, a year round going concern. Over 7% dock makes this ideal location for a Marina, and the' restaurant is fairly new, 14 stools, and fully pped. Emergent reason for shlling, 80 P a , $5, down and » 6%. HB, WALTER GIDLBY REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE BALA PHONE 3483 mortgage DOGS REGISTERED black Labrador puppies from champlon stock. Excellent for hunting or domestic pet. Priced reason. ay ack Blyth, Oak Ridges, PR. §- FARMS FOR SALB GOING concern, re stered herd milk contract, good equipment, very nice home. One of Oxford's better farms offered with very easy terms, K. G. FERGUSON Realtor Wouadsjogk 439 Wellington N. .9-9014 Ingersoll 724-M FOR SALE -- MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE -- One Log Loader, com-- lete. Very reasonable. Apply to Mae cGilllvray, R.R. 3, Bancroft. 'INSTRUCTION EARN more! Bookkeeping, Salesman ship. Shorthand, pewriting, ete. Teo sons 30¢ Ask for free circular No 33. Canadian Correspondence Courses 1290 Bay Street. Toronto. MEDICAL GOOD RESOLUTION -- EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD: TRY DIXON'S REMEDY MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 333 ELGIN - $1.25 Express Collect PILES (HAEMORRHOIDS) Pylatum Agency, formed by a group of ex-sufferers, wish to announce the PYLATUM treatment from England is now available through out Ontarlo. PYLATUM treatment re- lleves pain promptly and gradually shrinks plles. $1.98 from your local druggist or by mall from B.P.A, 1? Wimbleton Road, Islington, Ont. OTTAWA MERRY MENAGERIE Curtienad by Ling Ftc fy vliustn, © p=) PorDecuge 1212 "That's the bad part of being church mice--my wife cries at weddings!" POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment ma, acn orm, pimples ang fool eczem K pond readily to the stainless odorless olntment ardless of how stubborn or hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Recelpt of Price PRICE $3.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 2043 St. Clair Avenue Hast © TORONTO NURSE AND NURSES' AID ANTED GRADUATE NURSE Vacancy to be filled. Starting sala $278. Lodging $11.00 per month. 8 friiatio JP receipt es and | otter oy pa ars'and quail. fications. NURSES' AIDE Vacancy to be filled.' Starting salary $1962.00. SEND REPLY TO ADMINISTRATOR OCEAN FALLS GENERAL HOSPITAL OCHAN FALLS, B.C. NUTRIA WILL 'NUTRIA " BE YOUR FUTURE? the signs point to a bright and Hang be Ho Ro this luxury fur. success will come only "through pi breeding methods, quality founda stock, plus a program based on business methods, We offer all of to you as a rancher; using our exclu sive breeders Ra. Speclal er those who quallfy, earn Lous ut on our 80/50 is, ad Se paratlve Canadian Nutria Ltd, R. mond Hill, Ontario, OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportuni Piessant Ghent Srotiafns good easan roi n, wages. Thousands of success) Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free yi or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 Bloor § . Toronto Branches: 44 King St., W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street. Ottawa PERSONAL ADULTS! Personal Rubber Goods. 80 sssortment for $2.00. Finest quality, tested," guaranteed. Malled tn pl sealed package plus free Birth Cont booklet and catalogue of Supplies. Western Distributors, BOX 24TP Regina, Sask. PHOTOGRAPHY SAVE! SAVE! SAVEI Films developed and 8 magna prints In album 409 12 magna prints in album 60¢ Reprints §¢ each KODACOLOR Developny roll $1.00 (not Including prints) olor prints 35¢ each extra. 5 Ansco and Ektachrome H mm, 20 ex- posures mounted In slides $1 23 Coloe prints from slides 35¢ each. Money Jatinded In (ull for unprinted nege- ves. FARMERS' CAMERA CLUB BOX 31, GALT ONT PONIES SHETLAND ponles, young, bred, regls tered and grade mares, broke to ride. One grade colt 6 months. Kenneth Rath, Mossley. PROPERTIES FOR SALE HUNTING property for sale. Good stand of young timber, Apply Mac Me- Gllllvray, R.R. 3, Bancroft, Ont. BRANTSIDE Landrace pure bred glits and boars, all ages. Patterson, Box 313, Brantford, Ontario. How Can I? By Anne Ashley Q. How can I repair some bare spots on the back of a mirror? A. You can often make a suc- cessful job of this simply by cov- ering bare spots with aluminum foil, securing this to the glass with shellac or glue. Q. How can I make a remedy "for wrinkles across the forehead? A. Soak a linen bandage in equal parts of alcohol and the white of an egg, and bind it to the forehead, allowing it to re- main overnight, Q. How can I prevent the un- sightly crease that often results when trousers have been hang- ing for some time on a wire coat hanger? A. One way is to place a news- paper under the trousers while they are on the hanger. Or. loop a plece of cardboard over the hanger. Don't fold; let it curve gently, and fasten it with paper clips at the bottom. Q. How can I keep leather lug- gage, handbags, briefcases, and other such goods in good condi- tion? A. After dusting or washing with a cloth wrung out of pure soapsuds, apply some neat's-foot oil, lanolin, or castor oil -- all of which are good leather condi tioners. Q. What Is a quick and easy way of mixing leftover paint? A, Try dropping a couple of marbles or ball bearings into the can before sealing, The objects eventually will become embed- ded in the thickening paint in the bottorn of the can, when sealed can {s shaken vigor. ously, the marbles or bearings TIE sot Thitls until Re Ricken 1] begun m w the oll, As soon as the objeats rattle freely, you will know that the paint is well mixed, Then, - KINGSVILLE ROMAN CATHOLIC SEPARATE SCHOOL BOARD Requires one quallfied teacher or one teacher with temporary certificate for January 1, 1960. Apply to J. M. Smahaj, secretary-treasurer, Box 130, Kingsville, OTTAWA SEPARATE SCHOOL BOARD APPLICATIONS WILL BE RECEIVED BY THE UNDERSIGNED FOR TEACH. ING POSITIONS IN REGULAR CLASSES ATTENDED BY»EBNGLISH - SPEAKING PUPILS AND FOR TEMPORARY SUP- PLY STAFF. FEMALE (a)--(1st CLASS) MINIMUM ' . $2,600.00 MAXIMUM . 3200 FEMALE (b)--(2ZND CLASS) MINIMUM $2,500.00 MAXIMUM $4,100.00 MALE (¢)--(1ST CLASS) MINIMUM . . $2.800.00 MAXIMUM $4,400 00 MALE (d)--(2ND CLASS) MINIMUM | $2,700.00 MAXIMUM $4.300 00 TEMPORARY SUPPLY STAFF -- . $10.00 PER DAY MALE, MARRIED, $500.00 ADDITION. Al, FOR TEACHERS WITH FIVE YEARS' EXPERIENCE IN ONTARIO. APPLY TO AIME ARVISAIS, B.A..F.C.1.S, SECRETARY-TREASURER 140 CUMBERLAND ST,, OTTAWA CE. 67475 VACATION RESORTS ST. PETERSE'RG FLORIDA REDINGTON Shores on Gull three modern apartments, electric heat in ceiling, two efficiencies sleeps two and one, two bedroom sleeps four or more, $50 to $75 per week or $155 to $225 per month Further Information write Mrs, A. | Balin, P.O, Box B327, Tampa, 4 Florida, Itch..Itch Neat ray Ser, first use of soothing, cooling liquid D. D. D, Prescription positively relieves m Ted Iteh---~caused by eczema, rashes, pos A tation, chafing--other itch troubles Greascless, rtalnless, 39¢ trial bottle most satisfy or money back, Don't suffer, Youle Arugstet for Dr DD PRESCRIFTION ISSUE 3 -- 1960 ---- \