'* rQtft"'; •'-••;}•'•• sv V" Srvwfi^ T • J^sE? %i* THE WcMSKBT MJOWUiEALER IDE* OF OLD FARMING LAW •, STILL GOOD TODAY Nearly eighty-five years ago the Illinois legislature passed an act requiring the owners of threshing and other machines to j should do at leAst ttyree, things: -XTS?X. rrpirJTn.1 Internattdiial Pfcoto Exhibition "green" hired man. would stand a good chance of being held liable for injuries occurring to such persons. It would seem, therefore, that to avoid liability an employer Thursday, *2, IS&* WW* Opens At Museum Of Science TIB-ve •one other member of the family take some of the pictures in your garden serie*--so that you can be in them. General views lik* tills can be (napped in black-and-white or color with the simplest of cameras. - Your Hobby and Your Camera Are a Good Combination /CAMERAS are wonderful things ^ in many different ways. One of these is in connection with hobbles. Many people make their cameras a hobby in themselves, devoting leisure hours to fun with photography. Many other people have found that they can use their cameras in connection with other hobbies and increase their enjoyment of a wide variety of activities. At this time of year these hobbyists whose major interest is in gardening are enjoying themselves tremendously. Summer is definitely here and the gardeners are in their glory. But every plant, no matter how beautiful or how perfect a specimen it is, has just so long to live. m Many of them are well worth remembering. After all, hours of labor went into their growing. That's one reason why a picture record of gardening achievement can be so highly satisfactory. You can use any film you wish, but now that there is color film available for even the simplest of cameras, you owe it to your garden to picture it just as it grows. Garden photography can be as easy or as complicated as you wish to make it. There are types of pictures you can make with any equipment. Others require cameras that are equipped for taking pictures at close range. For extreme close-ups, such as pictures of single flowers, you need accessory lenses for any camera. For general garden views, you can use the simplest of cameras. All you have to do is find a pleasant picture in the viewfinder and snap it. As you move in closerr to feature limited areas of the garden, you will need a close-up attachment for your box type camera. There's no trick to using this little, inexpensive accessory and you can get as close as 3V4 feet to your subject Many of the adjustable cameras allow you to shoot that close, or even closer without additional lenses. •If you do want to try the extreme close-ups mentioned above, you'll need to add portra lenses to your adjustable camera. Check with your photo dealer for specific advice on this type of picture -taking. --John Van Guilder National Food Store Managers In Contest?,. Employees of twenty districts of the Chicago £ranch of the National Tea company started competing this week for award3 in a three state area. "The contest and a series of special promotions will be tied in with this annual sales event." said W. Karl, branch manager of the Chicago unit. Meat and grocery managers turning in the best records for increased sales during this big "selling event," will win U-S. Savings Bonds and merchandise prizes. To the managers of the top •tores in the National Tea company area will go U.S. Savings Bonds in place of the all expense paid trip to the Hawaiian Islands offered last year. Managers wiii further participate in this hugii 'Fall Sales Event" by contribu- ! tion to the selection of items anft values . offered all during thi» sales eVent. guard against accidents. It provides that "... all persons who own or may hereafter own or run any threshing machine, corn sheller or any other 0«ichine which is connected to a horse power by means of tumbling rods or line of shafting, shall cause each and every length or section of such tumbling rod (except the one next to the horse power), together with the knuckles and tacks thereof, to. be safely boxed or secured while running." Penalties invoked are statutory liability to any person injured and loss of the right to be compensated for services rendered with an unprotected machine. This legislation ihay be antiquated, but the idea is not. Agricultural engineers have pointed out that, unless manufacturers recognize the growing interest in safety devices and attempt to remove the danger spots from farm machinery, laws similar to this old Illinois statute may be considered by state legislatures. As everyone knows, corn pickers are particularly dangerous. Although there are no statutes applying directly to them, there are plenty of comifion-law rules that do apply. For example, an employer who fails to warn a;i inexperienced employee to use safety precautions, or who fails Keep the picker in good running order, eliminate as many hazards as possible, and warn his men about dangers in its operation. If the man is lacking in experience, "coach" him until he can opei ate it safely. This will go far to relieve an employer frcm liability, but he should still have liability insurance that will cover him in case he is deemed to be negligent or at fault. • ' • The Chicago International Ex-1 Dmitri of New York City, crehibition of Photography, repre-; ative photographer, author and sentative of the world's best con- crm ch&rlea p^ns Kelly, of temporary salon photography, WILDLIFE AREA A 40-acre tract in the northwest corner of the state's fairgrounds at Springfield is being made into a wildlife area where elk, buffalo, deer and small predatory and game animals will be kept. Governor William G. Stratton, in announcing this project of the departments of Agriculture and Conservation, said it will help make the fairgrounds a year-round attraction instead of a place noted merely for an annual exhibition lasting only a couple of weeks. Two lakes will be constructed for waterfowl and fish. Displays showing the rearing of pheasants and quail, and a forestry exhibit with a little nursery for multiflora rose shrubs and evergreen seedlings are planned. Grading of the grounds is under way and the whole project is expected to be completed within a year. opened at the Museum of Science and Industry, 57th and Lake Michigan, Sunday, Oct. 18. It will remain on exhibit through Sunday, Nov. 15. A total of 302 prints Was selected for this year's showing from 1,250 entries. These repre sent the work of amateur and professional photographers from twenty-six states and twentyeight foreign countries. Included in the international representation are Canada. Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, England, France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Czeckoslovakia, Egypt, South Africa, Malaya,* Java, Viet Nam, Japan and Australia. Hong-Kong and Singapore are also represented. V Although most of the photographs are black and white, there are also some color prints in the exhibition, which is considered by photographers to be the final criterion for judging salon photography. Particularly noticeable in this year's salon is the trend toward pattern and design in photographic irttojects as well as an emphasis CA bUman interest material. •This year's judges, selected tr-. their international reputation in photography and art, were: Ivan Chicago, curator of Oriental art and assistant director of the Ail Institute, of Chicago, writer and lecturer; and Sewell P. (Spee) Wright, APSA, of Springfield, former secretary of the Photographic Society of America, and well-known photo critic, judge snd exhibitor. Eight salon prints representing the best work of Dmitri and Wright will also be included in the saloA. The exhibitioh will be hung in the Harvester lounge of the Museum. Admission to both the Museum and the photographic salon is free at all times. / NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH by Ita AmM k IrlhSVS . HAS NO RIBS // i Me has to swallow air 'morder to cpb it into his lunqs / Married 80 ware# MR.and MRS.T&M R0SE,<* Whit *04, Texas, are protobty fcte OLDEST wedded couple in -the entire world I / A&E GROWN FOR. MA&KET IN EVEM STATE ON THE , NORTH AMERICAN CONTINBNT!! Casta* the Joint In Emporia. Kans., Carl Tate Williams drew 90 days after he denied that he was a Peeping Tom, told the judge that he was merely looking for something to steal. <• 'HyM* • -H' <• h HALLOWE'EN PARTY I AT THE i ROYAL INN t * (Torsten Bjork) f McCULLOM LAKE | free Lunch - Accordion Muste | COME IN COSTUME! S*-1* t PuoPo? A l t - A t O M I N U M COME IN ATI OH STORM-SCREEN Only GrM • Rugged, all-ofuminum construction I • Aluminum door jamb f * • 1" thick ! Easily Installed by Anyone! 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