The Independent-News, Volume 87, Number 33, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 15 August 1963 — Page 20

20

— THE INDEPENDENT NEWS — Aug. 15, 1963

49 Braces 51 Russian mountains 52 Pack 53 Lofty 57 Party 58 Heavycoated deg 59 Medley of songs, etc. 60 Sad 61 Trim 62 Heath genus 63 French river 64 Anile .65 Terminated DOO 1 Recess 2 Calf meat 3 Burden 4 Strong 5 Stain 6 Inn *7 Departures F Radicals 9 Number 10 Illness 11 Alert r 12 Emblem 13 Toboggans 21 Nickname lor relative

ACROSS 1 Shun 6 Protagonist 50 Rugs |4 Cent |5 Draft animals 16 Unauthorized . leave; ' abb. 17 Fry lightly 9 8 Current 19 Pool E0 Otherwise • El Regulates 4 22 Roasted 23 Brads 25 Extends 26 Shores 29 Tenderness 30 Young o*l Cl Factor B 3 Curtsy 36 Elongated fish B7 Vendetta f 9 Compass point 40 Sec 41 Lilies 42 Respond 44 Scrutinize x 45 Shallow dishes 46 Envies

1 P |3 |4 B [• : 16 p [8 p L<.llo 111 I’2* I’3 :>:g: %&: 20 0 21 ^22 r# 23 24 W 25 ^^^2. 26 27 20 .< 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 $ ~ ** “"~"^ 3 ’ r —l’ g-« — hn« HH" 47 48 W 49 IwbH^l s’ ^52 BsTm 5J S _ __ 52 ^59 60 W 61 62~ *3~" PUZZLE NO. 772 Announce Open Season On Rats, Gallinules, Woodsock and Wilson Snipe

The Division of Fish and Game of the Indiana Department of Conservation has notified the Bu reau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife, United States Department of Interior on seletion of open seasons on certain migratory bird? There will be a 50-day consecutive open season on rails and gallinules from September 1 to October 20 inclusive. The daily bag and possession limit will be 25 Sora rails and 15 other rails and gallinulec, singly or in the aggregate. , ( The open season on woodcock will be for fifty days from October 12 to November 30 inclusive. The daily bag limit is five and posseaaion limit is ten. ( The open season on Wilson's i

fO ? AND ABOUT TffNAGHS By C. P. Smith What Can Girl Do About insults’?

» r insults x< Sf x ": 7 A “77 X* ME 1N ( 1 z - ' . /^J f-ront )l <V> t f - 4 ^u^wHMr’7- ‘ '37 . 1

THE WEBB’S LETTER: "I have a friend 1 like very much, although he insults me in front of all my friends He has done this on two occasions and each time 1 said I would not forgive him, and then did so. Now, he has insulted me in front of friends a third time 1 told him we would no longer be friends, yet 1 still I want to be his friend What should । 1 do:" |

Anjwar To Puxzla No. 771 ! 311311 liPhlflU FFTTI la Ze MtM l * B "f I* 1 If IM 1 K Mt IMo !l I * I i i htu * n t • lupTnM^H ip| $] R 3 *ll kirn wwn r 1 11 1 ijilwaT olt mfpi f TUYt Ft F |* p |opy|t h । kl"'hn^Kr >biT w n oMnolc 011 ^Tl*rrrrl l l l°r c Zl-Zld | f rrhp l pN P ~ ietTm LhrkrJ iHHkK

43 Oriental 44 Vendor 45 Animal font 46 hole 47 Unwritten tests 48 Estimation 49 Hoard 50 Drew 52 Pile 54 Eager 55 Clare Booth - ••• 56 Direct 58 Licensed accountant (abb.) 59 Female ruff

22 Ritlngly 24 Charms 25 Building projection 26 Student 27 Debtor 28 Helper 29 Confines 31 English river 32 Command to horse 33 Rhythm 34 A single time 35 Soaks 38 Greek underground

snipe is 45 days from October 12 to November 25 inclusive. The daily bag and possession limit la eight, and the daily shooting hours are from sunrise to sunset, Eastern Standard Time. The Department of Conservation has received an announcement of a waterfowl identification guide, which packs a variety of vital information for identifying waterfowl species into its 24 pages —shapes, colors, voices, flight patterns, rising views, and flock formations. TltE CHAIN Think right- the thoughts that enter your mind play a big part in building your character.

018 REPLY: Make him apologise—in front of your friends, if possible, if the ‘‘insult” was serious enough to warrant such procedure. If he refuses to apologize —■even to you, m private—then he is certainly not a true friend Quite often it happens that people who like a certain individual "tease” that individual only to find their intentions misunderstood. it may be that this friend

Patent Has 173rd Anniversary N'iw sity may be the mother of invention, hut its Big Daddy ih the patent. July 31 was the anniversary of the day when the first patent was issued in the United States. That was in 1790 little more than a year after the new government began operating It was only a process for "making pot and pearl ashes," otherwise known as pota h, reports World Book Encyclopedia, but so important wa- the event that President Washington himself signed the patent awarded to Samuel Hopkins, of Vermont. Endorsing the document was the then Secretary of state Jefferson, no mean gadgeteer hum If whose inventions include t^e swivel chan and the dumb-waiter Why all the fuss ai^ait the patent ” Statesmen before and after Washington l ave praised it as a spur to invention and thus, technological advance. And some observers have even credited it with the We rn World’s high standard of living. A pat nt is simply a monopoly which secures to an inventor the fruits of his labor. For 17 years he has the exclusive right to make, sell or use his invention. Os course, it may be a profitless 17 years ... if some part of his invention has been patented by an earlier inventor who refuses to let him use it. But at the rnd of that period, the invention becomes accessible to the public at large and scientific knowledge is increased. Women oegan making their contributions to scientific knowledge as early as 1809. when Mary Kies wa- granted a patent for a methixl of weaving straw with silk or thread A few thousand patents later, a former Congressman from Illinois named Abraham Lincoln received one for "A Device for Buoying Vessels over Shoals." The device must have been a success. because Lincoln later declared appreciatively "The Patent Sy.st -m added the fuel of interest to the fire of genius.” About this time, unfortunately, the fire of genius was just what the examiners were demanding proof of. before they would grant a patent. Inventors who labored long and hard over their creations but were unable to show that spark of "divine madness ' were turned away, while less than brilliant tinkerers who may have stumbled onto an idea or device by accident were rewarded. In 1952 Congress decided there weren't enough geniuses to go around and changed the patent laws. The requirement, however proved no obstacle to Mark Twain, who received three patents. Tn 1873 he was awarded one for "Mark Twain's Self-Pasting Scrapbook." a book of blank

| does not seriously think he in- ; suited you Let him know your feelings, in no uncertain terms. If he is truly aware of how you feel about his teasing, or "insults, he will change his ways if he is really a friend. If he docs not. you have the choice of breaking tlie friendship or developing some sort of immunity to his insults. Tho first alternative would be less painful in the long run. If you tell him again that one more insult means "goodbye," he sure that you mean it. Stick s o your guns and let nothing short of a real apology change your mind. Every time you threaten *o break off as friends, then fall right back into the same old groove, you set yourself up for more and bigger insults. If Tsu have a tsenafe problem esn want Is 4 I»r nn i, « r an ebssrt alien is make, aHrto raur letter ts I OK AND ABOUT TKINVGIKs, NATIONAL WEI KEV N I.W a PAS-i » . BX.MVICB, FRANKTOKT, KT.

pages coated with gum or veneer. He sold 25,000 copies during the first royalty period, leading one writer to eumnwnt that this "was well enough for a book that did not contain a single word that critics could praise or condemn.'’ Hog Prices Are Near 1963 Peak Hog prices appear to be near or at their 1933 peak, say Purdue University agricultural economists. No major weakness is expected to develop during the next month nr six weeks. However, the seasonal price drop this fall may te substantial. Continued heavy marketings of fed cattle probably will bring only moderate price gains during the July-September quarter. Th? economists call a price level above $26 to $27 for choice steers "improbable.” Odds favor weaker cattle prices this fall too. Milk prices are expect'd to advance seasonally during the fall and winter, but likely will continue at or slightly below year ago levels. Indiana broiler growers can expect average pri< cs of 14 5 cent s a pound during the JulylSeptember quarter This is about onefourth per cent below the prices of the same quarter of 1962. For H >osi< r arp growers, the price outlook is somewhat better. The state’s severest winter in 60 years cut apple production nearly in half. As a result, prices received for the 1963 crop will average higher than the 1962 price of $2 05 a blislM‘l. PIPE CLEW ER 1 LYS \ PIP Short bits or pipe cleaner woven on to a tiny hook make a snazzy imitation of several kinds of insects trout go for Can be treated to sink or float. > this week's/^ X P^ttwns.,^ < VV. •VAUBMYUun y Shirtwaist Classic Oli. JEU O Pineapple Chait Set v -'-M i kSuaJ M ■■ 0r«»» FoOcrn No 3284 Shirtwoiif Ganic In many wordrobot, nothing fokot Iho pkKO of tho clottit thirtwoitf No 3286 comai in tnot 14'4, 22Vi, 2Vh. In tin li’/j, tho frontbvttonor with thorl tloovot fokot 3% rardt of 44 Inch fabrk. dtott biOtonod to woitthno with longot tloovo, d’/t yardt of 44-inch. । Noodlowork Gottorn No 1212 Hnoop plo Choir Sot Thio it o timplo pinoapplo palforn—bht tho fmuhod choir tot it /ory offnefiro Dongnod to bo modo in a rothor hoavy thrnod, it workt up quickly, yof hot o lacy oppoaranco. Aik for No 1212 ( Our Noodlowork Catalog containing a coupon for a freo potiorn it SO contt | Sond 35c for oach droti pattern, 2Se for tach neodfowoik pattorn (odd 5c for •och pattern for third clan mailing and 10c for ooch pattern for firtt clan mail, mg) to AUOm lANt SUHfAU, Bom J 490 New York I, N Y.

SH33 South deals. North and Sot. t vulnerable. NORTH ♦ 10 6 V A 4 ♦75 4 2 4 A 10 9 6 3 WEST EAST ♦AQJS 3 4 7 4 ♦ QJ» ♦BS 3 2 ♦lO96♦A K q J 8 3 ♦ 5 2 *7 SOUTH ♦K9 8 2 ♦ K 10 7 6 ♦ AKQJB4 The bidding: South West North Faq 1 pass 2 ♦ 2< 3 4 4 4 Pds> pass 4 ♦ pass p. bs 54b double pass p.e, pass Opening lead: Ten of dianionr South ruffed the opening le. then cleared trumps in two roum South next went to work on tl >< heart suit. Hearts were led thn » times, the third round ruffed a. the dummy, thus setting up tl? ten in the closed hand. A diamoi i was led back, ruffed in South- - then one of the losir; spades in the dummy sluffed on the ten of hearts. South then h i another low spade and put We » in, thus losing only one spade trick to make the doubled contract. COMMENT: W’est had good de> ble, but would have been bett< r to bid five diamonds since opp - nents were vulnerable. Would have been down only one tri< - losing two hearts and one club. Graft stays under twer an supported by the strongest aiy ments that money can buy. «P©t Lu.dk W IT BELEM BALE Patio Parties Dress up potato salad for if '- five eating by packing it into a mold and allowing to chill Inmold, cover with sieved hardcooked egg yolk and border with the white. Garnish with sprigs ' I parsley. Did you know that salmon and tuna can be combined for a good seafood salad. Mold in lemon HaHelen's Favorite: Fruit Cocktail Mousse (Serves 8) 3 i cup flaked coconut 1 cup whipping cream 1 5 ounce jar marshmallow 1 cream 1 teaspoon vanilla '< teaspoon salt 1 can (1 lb. 14 os.) fruit cocktail, drained Toast coconnt in a very hot (450*F.) oven for 5 minute*. ’ stirring frequently. Whip cream, blend in marshmallow creme, vanilla and salt. Fold in fruit and sprinkle with coco nut. Freese until firm without stirring, about 3 hours. Spoon into sherbet glaius and aene. - . vored gelatin in fish-shaped mold if desired. Slices of thin white toait, a to ma to slice, sliced turkey, lettuce and mayonnaise, topped with crisp bacon and another tomato slk* make a perfect patio sandwich Here's a good marinade to ser * with cold, cooked lobster: W c i salad oil combined with ’< cup lemon juice, 1 teaspoon season* i salt. 1 teaspoon dill week. ShaL in jar and chill. A quick dessert uses alreadvbaked sponge cake layers wi' fresh sliced peaches and whipp< ' cream sweetened with confectioi era sugar and almond extract