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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1939-02-09, Page 7THE EXETER TIMES-ADVOCATE THURSDAY, FKBRUAKY ()j fol DEEP 'ASPY COUGHS (DUE TO COLDS) If that cold has caused throat or bronchial irritation, put a small lump of Vicks VapoRub on your tongue and let it melt. Feel VapoRub’s medication bathe the irritated membranes as it slowly trickles down your throat-bring­ ing comforting relief—where you want it—when you want it. Next, melt a spoonful of VapoRub in a bowl of boiling water. Then breathe in the steaming medicated vapors for a few minutes. As these vapors work their way down through the irritated air-passages, they loosen the phlegm and ease the cough. The relief that A a a ~ VapoRub 1 Wfe brings will de-^ight you. w VapoRub 1^!......!. ■■■■■■ ,7:7^......,, ■ ■■— Tested Recipes The Winter Menu and For the Winter is a time when colds other infections are prevalent, this reason it is wise to keep body in a healthy, vigorous condition so that it will be able to resist or throw off infections to which it is subjected. The diet should include, in addition to those foods which furnish enegry, an abundance of the so-called protective foods which are valuable for their protein, mineral and vitamin content—milk and milk products, meat, eggs, vegetables and fruits. A simple day’s menus designed to satisfy both appetite and needs is suggested: Breakfast Tomato Juice Cracked Wheat with milk thin cream Buttered Toast Milk for Children 'Coffee for adults Dinner bodily or Honey “IT IS MY HOME TOWN AND I Ahl PART OF IT’’ (Municipal World) My town is the place where my home is founded; where my business is situated and where my vote is cast;, where my children are educat­ ed; where my neighbors dwell, and where my life is chiefly lived. It is the hon^e spot for me. My town has the right to my civic loyalty. It supports me and I should support it. My town wants my cit­ izenship, not my ‘ partisanship; my friendliness, not my 'dissention; my intelligence, not my indifference. My town supplies me with protection, trade, friends, education, schools, churches, and the right to free, mor­ al citizenship. It has some things that are better than others; the best things I should seek'to make better, the worst things I should help to suppress. Take it all-in-all, it is my town, and it is titled to the best there is in me. Vegetable Soup. Meat Loaf Buttered Carrots • Baked Potatoes X Rice Pu'dding Whole wheat bread and butter Milk for 'Children Lunch or Supper X Cheese Fondue (Poached egg for very young children) Shredded Cabbage Salad Bread and Butter Baked Apples or (Apple Sauce X Oatmeal Cookies Tea for Adults Milk for Children Baked Rice Pudding1 1 en- 1-2 cu'p rice 1-4 teaspoon salt 3 cups boiling water 1J2 cup sugar (white or brown) egg yolks cups milk teaspoons butter teaspoon vanilla or grated lemon rind egg whites. 2 3 2 1 WEIGH SCALES CLERK RESIGNS AT SEAFORTH Weigh scales clerk for 17 years, Andrew Little, Seaforth, tendered his resignation to P.U.iC. The commis­ sion re-elected E. L. Box, chairman. RECORD’ ENGLISH WHEAT CROP The area under wheat in 1938 in England and Wales was 1,830,261 acres, which is 9 8,42.8, or 6 per cent, greater than in 1937. The estimat­ ed yield per acre at 20.3 cwt. was the highest ever recorded, compared with a ten-year average of 17.6 cwt. The increase in the acreage, together wjth the record yield, accounted for a rise of 33 per cent, .in production which increased from 1,393,‘000 tons in 1937 to 1,8'55,000 tons in 1938. This is the highest crop production snce 1921. 2 Wash rice thoroughly. Cook with salt in the boiling water 5 minutes. Drain through a sieve and pou'r hot water over rice to separate kernels. Com­ bine sugar, egg yolks, milk butter and flavoring with rice. Fold in beat­ en egg whites. Place in buttered bak­ ing dish and bake in pan of hot wa­ ter in moderate oven -(325 to 350 degrees F.) until firm — about 30 minutes. Note: The cooking of the pud­ ding may be completed in the top of double boiler, egg whites being fold­ ed in when pudding is cooked. ‘ Cheese Fondue 1-2 1-2 1-2 cup milk cups grated cheese cups soft stale bread crumbs of two eggs SHE WAS A VICTIM OF HEADACHES Kruschen got at the Cause This woman’s headaches were of the gripping kind that reduce the sufferer to something like helpless­ ness. She tried tablets. She tried pills. All without avail. Only Krus­ chen could help her. “I. used to get very bad headaches,” she writes. “No tablets or pills of any kind could relieve them. One morning, casually, I tried Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water. I con­ tinued taking it, but I have not had one of those awful Kruschen suits me thing else. I find (Mrs.) L. A. W. Headaches can nearly always be traced to sluggishness in the kidneys, liver and intestines, and to the un­ suspected retention in the system of stagnating waste material which poisons the blood. The numerous salts in Kruschen stimulate the in­ ternal organs to healthy, regular ac­ tion so that no clogging waste is al­ lowed to collect. Your inside is kept clean and serene. And that is ju'st how Kruschen Salts brings quick and lasting relief from headaches. headaches since, better than any- it very good.”— Judge Defers Decision in Middlesex Case court ended with the conclus- testimony in a legal fight be- two- Middlesex sisters over di- •of their father’s estate. LETTER BOX Last week we printed a letter from Mrs. Ernest Kelhofer, of Shang­ hai, China. Mrs. Kelhofer was a daughter of the late Gottleib Brown, of Crediton. This week we reprint a letter written by Mr. Kelhofer. These letters were received by Mrs. G. E. Faist, of Crediton. The gross farm value of production of the 1938 field crop in Canada is now estimated at $528,860,000, which is 5 per .cent, below the value of $556,222,000 in 1937, due to price/ reductions more than offsetting the effect of increased production. 1 1 1 Yolks 1-4 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon melted butter Whites of 2 eggs > Soak, bread crumbs in milk for a few minu'tes and add cheese and beaten egg yolks. .Season and add melted butter.- Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour into- buttered baking dish and bake in a1 moderate oven (35'0 to 375 degrees F.) about minutes. Oatmeal Cookies 30 After remaining fairly constant around 450,000 buhels, pear produc­ tion in Canada increased to 512,000 bushels^ in 1938, reflecting heavier plantings of pear trees during recent years, states The 1939 Agricultural Situation and Outlook. butter cups brown sugar cup 1-.2 egg 1-4 cups fine Foiled oats 1-2 cups pastry flour The story of a woman who spent 20 years of her'life in bed was re­ lated to- Justice Greene as the winter assize ion of tween vision In the estate case, the last to be tried, Justice Greene will receive written arguments of lawyers later, and give the decision then. The ac­ tion was an attempt by Mrs. Harvey Haskett, of Biddulph to- establish a right to two farms and a $2,000 de­ benture from her father’s estate. She was opposed by her sister, Mrs. Pearl Marie O’Neil, of McGillivray Township. Mrs. O’Neil told about the years her mother, the late Mrs. Thomas Scell, of Biddulph Township, spent bedridden. Serious Ailment She said her'mother suffered an ailment which resulted in her leav­ ing her bed over a 20-year period only when she was taken to Lucan in a doctor’s .car. The mother died in March of last year. Mrs. O’Neil denied there had been any agreement 'between her, her sis­ ter and their mother for division of the father’s estate after he died in the spring of 193 6. There was talk of a division, but it never reached an agreement, she said. The father’s estate was valued for succession duty purposes at $21,000, but $4,000 of that was jointly held, and went to the mother without be­ ing included in the probate. Harvey Haskett, husband of the one sister, supported his wife’s con­ tention. Haskett said he visited his mother- in-law, Mrs. Thomas F. Sceli, not long after his father-in-law’s death early .last summer. He said that in the presence of Mrs. lO’Neil he was told “they come to an agreement and were ing my wife the property and a 00'0 bond.” He said that Mrs. Sceli told her husband “wanted the farms way, and they couldn’t handle them.’ Dear Friends: As the Christmas and New Year’s season approach it may not be amiss to cast a fleeting glimpse over the unparalleled destruction, caused by a nation which claims to be working’ toward permanent peace in the Orient and throughout the world. For 17 months the greedy, selfish, brutal, conscienceless military clique of Japan has bombed, shelled, gass­ ed and machine-gunned a peace-lov­ ing people. Blood-thirsty soldiers and officers as well have burned, looted and murdered of thousands of innocent men, women, boys, girls, new born babies. Thousands of Chin­ ese soldiers who had been promised life and freedom if they were bound together, gasoline poured over them and set on fire. Girls and women all the way from 8 to 70 years of age have been raped by lust-mad soldiers and officers. For any of these girls and women to resist meant the bayonet or bullet. Everywhere where (the victorious Nipponese soldiers have gone, the same fate awaited the Chinese. Billions of dollars worth of useful property has been destroyed. Valu­ able manufacturing establishments and business property belonging to Chinese, American, British and other nationals have been razed to the ground. Shipping and manufacturing have been seriously interfered with. Trade with China for all nationals except the Japanese has practically been stopped. 'Cultural institutions: kindergar­ tens, primary-grade and high schools, colleges and universities, libraries, churches, were among the first ob­ jects for attack and destruction. Philanthropic and humanitarian institutions suffered the same fate. Clinics, hospitals, medical centres, including Red Cross Units, orphan­ ages, homes and schools for the blind, deaf and dumb and insane same and •going to repeat these gifts this year? Could not the American people arise in mass an demand that our govern­ ment act at once and forbid the sale of all war materials to Japan — the aggressor nation? And as a second gesture of our friendship to China could not the American people insist that every -possible aid be given to China so that she can help keep on resisting the invader? Let China have our surplus food supplies and raw materials for her starving and freez­ ing multitudes. Think of the hun­ dred million destitute who have been driven from their homes in a more ruthless and brutal manner than any hunter ever chased the wild anmials. Why not extend long-term credits to China — the nation fighting for its national salvation -— and with­ hold all credits from Japan — the aggressor nation? Could we not do these things, thus bringing to China in 1938 Christmas of joy and hope and courage? Re­ member that the fate not only of China is in the balance — but the fate of the Orient and the fate of the whole world. Japanese military fas­ cism means the death blow to all those cultural values that we hold dear. Can we still call ourselves follow­ ers of the Prince of Peace unless we are willing to help our democratic neighbor that is being devoured by the military fascist beast? To pray merely for the -peace of China is not enough. Let us not insult God’s in­ telligence by asking Him to do for China that which we are morally too cowardly to do ourselves. We know what should be done — do we lack the intellectual acumen and the mor­ al courage to do it? Most cordially yours, ERNEST KELHOFER SAM FORMATION STRUCK IN HURON OIL SEARCH Drilling for oil for the Huron- Bruce Oil Company in Hullett on the farm of Howard Trewartha, Gregory & Son’s drilling contractors, encoun­ tered a salt formation at a depth of 1,2'20 feet which continued to a depth of 1,252 feet or a trible ovei’ 3 0 feet of rock salt. The drill is now working in brown shale and Mr. Gregory believes there may be an­ other salt formation possibly 100 ft. below the present depth. MODERN, EXPERIENCED BANKING SERVICE * The Outcome of 121 Years' Successful Operation The bank of Montreal will be glad to dis­ cuss with you at any time the borrowing of funds for personal or business purposes. BANK OF MONTREAL ESTABLISHED 1017 Exeter Branch: W. H. MOISE, Manager "A PERSONAL CHEQUING ACCOUNT FOR YOV"-Ask for"booklet KERR — LITTLE The McKillop manse, near Seaforth was the scene of a quiet wedding when Miss Isabel Norine Little, the youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Percy 'Little were united in marriage to Mr. Alexander A. Kerr, only son of Mr. and Mrs. Archibald Kerr, by Rev. R. W. Craw. The bride and groom were attended by the bride’s sister, Miss Marion Little and Louis Bolton. After the ceremony performed dinner was served • ; immediate relatives at the home. The couple left on a short moon trip to Toronto. ‘On their re­ turn they will reside on the groom’s farm in McKillop. was to the bride’s honey- Many books have been published and many lectures have been deliv­ ered on ‘How to become a Newspaper Reporter” here is an example of how NOT to become a newspaper report­ er. It seems an English cub reporter was frequently reprimanded for re­ lating too many details and warned to be brief — he finally handed in this gem: “A shooting affair occurred last night. Sid Dwight Hopeless, a guest at Lady Panmore’s ball, complained of feeling ill, took a highball, his hat his coat, his departure, no notice to his friends, a taxi, a pistol from his pocket and finally his life. Nice chap. Regrets and all that sort of thing.” had giv- $2,- him that Canada’s agricultural exports to New Zealand in 1938 included 3,- 076,244 bushels of wheat, valued at $2,959,416; flour valued at $2,104; macaroni to the amount or $41,984, and hides valued at $298,020. 1 1 1 1 1 1-2 teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon baking powder Pinch of salt 1 cup coconut Cream butter. Add sugar and cream well together. Add well beaten egg, then dry ingredients and® coconut. Drop by spoonfuls on buttered bak­ ing sheet and bake in moderate oven (375 degrees F.) abou't 8 to 10 min­ utes. We Must Eat Pimples Kill Many a Romance The lives of many young people ' are made miserable when unsightly pimples break out on the face, neck and other parts Of the body. The trouble is hot so much physi­ cal pain, but it’s the mental suffer­ ing caused by the embarrassing disfigurement of the face. (The quickest t way to get rid of pimples is to improve the general health by cleansing the blood of its impurities. Burdock Blood Bitters purifies th< blood. Get fid of the pimples by taking B.B.B. The T, Milburn Co., Ltd,, Toronto, Ont. A Man of his Word Caller: “Are you sure the manag­ er is not in?” Dignified Office Boy: “Don’t you doubt his word, sir?”—Kentisl Mer­ cury. Pome A city and a chorus girl Are much alike, tis true; A city’s built with outskirts, A chorus girl is too. were constant targets of the barbarous invaders. No one nothing has been spared. And yet we are told by the Japan- . ese that they are engaged in the noble enterprise of rescuing the Chinese from a disorderly, tyranni­ cal and communistic government. Also they claim they are trying to ' stop, the spread of the communism. It is to bring order, peace and pros­ perity to a people who have centur­ ies of suffering behind them! The aggressors are not, so they say, aim­ ing to injure or destroy the Chinese people, but they are determined to destroy only Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Sheck, the anti-Japanese spirit and communism. Every act July 7, 1937, ed assertions ing army to world been lied to more. Never has there been such wholesale and inter­ national hypocrisy shown by any one nation to the nations of the world. Never has human intelligence been more grossly insulted. Never have justice, honesty and righteousness been more twisted about. With the Japanese military clique it is truth, love, peace, justice, mercy, right for­ ever on the scaffold; and lies, hatred disorder, injustice, oppression, and brutal might forever on the throne. Ask the Japanese farmers and labor­ ers who are forced to sell their dau­ ghters to the government protected brothers so that the rest of the fam­ ily can live and can send their sons to destroy the socalled anti'-Japanese Chinese, ask the Chinese of Man­ churia, ask the Koreans and sans what freedom and benefits are their under the paternalistic Japanese rule. America is morally in sympathy with China. Years of cordial inter­ course between the peo-ple of the two Batons have cemented lasting friend­ ships. And yet deeply sympathizing with China in this hour of her deep­ est suffering, wo are co-partners of Japan enabling the latter to .carry on this wholesale plundering, burn­ ing, destroying and murdering. 5 4 per cent of all war materials import­ ed to Japan comes from America. It is American gasoline that furishes the motive power to fly bombing planes (machinery parts of which are from America) to every part of China to destroy, men, women, boys, girls and new born babies — blow­ ing them to bits, or still worse, mu­ tilating and toruring them — and no doctors, no nurses and no medical supplies. The Japanese have seen to it that there could be no relief for these millions of suffering ones. These innocent Chinese bombed with material that has come from a so- called Christian nation! I wonder how the Master whom we profess to follow looks on all this! Son wo shall celebrate the birth­ day of Him whose chief aim was to get people to love one another, and to do one another good. But what a Christmas we Americans people gave China last year! No joy, but sorrow; no peace, but a living death! Are wo Little neglect breeds great disas­ ter. of the Japaneses since has belied their repeat- of being a peace-bring- China. Never has the act°s, davvsou Manage Annual Meeting of Clandeboye U. Church The congregational meeting of the C)andeboye United Church was held recently with a good attendance. Rev. S. R. Johnston opened the meet­ ing with prayer immediately after the Pot-Luck Supper was finished and the meeting was carried on with all seated at the tables. All reports were given and were very .complete with all showing a favorable balance. ■Edsell Collins, treasurer of the board of management, commended the congregation on the fact that he had been able *to show a balance. The board of management for 1939 are "Wm. Northgraves, Wm. Holloran Ward Hodgins, (Arthur Simpson, Ed­ sell Collins, treasurer. The board 05 sessions elected were. Ivan Riddel, Mac McNaughton, Wm. Lee, Hilt. Banting and Russel Schroeder. The Sunday School superintendent ap­ pointed was Rea Neil and assistant Mrs. Edward J. Dundas. A vote of thanks was extended to the pastor by the board ,of management and al­ so an invitation to remain with us. Mr. Johnston expressed his apprecia­ tion in a few well chosen words. The date o'f the next annual meeting was set for January 16th, 1940, Meeting was dismissed by the pastor. hisHe arrived home to find young wife weeping bitterly. “What’s the trouble, my dear?” he asked. "Boo-hoo,” she wept, “the cooked meat shop is moving from the corn­ er.” “Never mind,” he said, gently, “we can move too, you know!’ done. be- oii at as Formo- cultura benign SoSoti^y c |B|g^ Emerson once wrote about the Law of Compensation; to wit, that a man gets out of life only what he puts in­ to it—that the would owes no one any more than they are willing to give and sooner or later, a man conies a failure or a success based what he has The Law of Compensation is work in the world of Advertising in any other plane of human endea­ vor. The business that does not advertise sooner or later pays the .penalty of neglect. The spasmodic, the now-and-then advertiser finds his business is seasonable, spotty or good only in fits and starts — and he usually does not realize why. The business firm that advertises persistently and regularly month af­ ter month, year after year, is the one who profits by the immuatability of the Law of Compensation. The tobacco industries in Canada are divided into two distinct opera­ tions the preliminary work of pro­ cessing and packing raw leaf tobac­ co anti the manufacture of smoking and chewing tobacco, snuff, cigars and cigarettes. There are approxi­ mately 100 establishments engaged» in the tobacco industry In Canada. Children '£e“olWhen ill «ere tn’4*1 eonneeuo^j „8 eonu^nover^