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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1950-04-20, Page 8THE TIMES-ADVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 20, 1950 to A Page Devoted to the Interests of the Women Readers of The Times-Advocate Pishes which have held fish will be sweet again if soaked in water to which has been added 1 tsp. mustard. Whsh well. Dot’s Beauty Shoppe (North of Bell Telephone) Naturelie Permanent Watlhfc Lustron Cold Wavfe - Open Wednesday Afternoon - Mrs. A Roche Heads Zurich Institute Group The annual meeting and elec­ tion of officers of the Zurich Women’s Institute *was held in the town hall with Mrs. A. Roche presiding. ■Mrs. N. Geiger read the an­ nual treasurer’s report. Mrs. L, Etue reported an agriculture and Canadian industry, Mrs. M* MC" Adams on historical research, Mrs. B. Mach on home economics and health, Mrs. K. Breakey for the cheer committee, .Mrs. M. McAdams for the finance com- , mitten, Mrs. N. Geiger for com­ munity activities and public re­ lation, Mrs. D. Meyers on the progress of a play to be present­ ed. Mrs. R. Elgie, of Kippen, dis­ trict president of the W.I., con­ ducted the lection of officers who are: President, Mrs. A. Roche; vice-presidents, Mrs. W. Forrester, Mrs. L. Prang; secre­ tary-treasurer, Mrs. N. Geiger; assistant, Mrs. D. ’Meyers; pianist, Mrs. H. Neeb; assistant, Miss K. Hess; district director, Mrs. M. McAdams; press cor­ respondent, Mrs. I. Wilbert; auditors, Mrs. M. Oesch, >Mrs. E. Klapp. Mrs. E. Klapp presided for the program during which Miss K. Hess played accordian solos, Miss E. Hay sang, .and Mrs. Elgie spoke on the “Early Settlement of Huron County” giving sket­ ches on local centres from then* start to the present day. Made Life Member By Main St. W.M.S The Easter .meeting of the Main St. W.'M.S. was held April. 13 at the home of Mrs. Maurice Quance. The opening service was conducted by the president, Mrs. E. Carter. The hymn “Never Further Than The Cross” was sung. The theme was “Christ Is Risen”. The foundation day .of the Christian church is Easter. Followers of Christ are found in every land. The Easter worship program was taken by two readers, Mrs, Merkley and Mrs. Mahoney, interspersed with Easter hymns; also a piano instrumental by Mrs. Russell Balkwill, “At the Cross’” Mrs. E. Carter, president of the W.M.S., was presented with a Life Membership Certificate from the -Society, presented by Mrs. Mahoney, Mrs. Broderick reading the address. It was a very tense moment as Mrs. Car­ ter was completely taken by sur­ prise. After expressing her thanks in a very appropriate and touching manner, the members spoke of her loving and untiring work amongst them. Lunch was served and a pleas- •profitable hour was spent, hostess for the May meeting he -Mrs. Russell Balkwill and study book subject will be ant The will the taken by Mrs. George Jaques. 'i ■ROYAL ROMANCE IS IN THE AIR! — Princess Margaret Rose is shovui with Peter Ward, second son of the Earl of Dudley, at a recent party in London. Gfossips have linked them romantically, and in fact, many think he is “unofficial­ ly” engaged to the Princess. Recently, and as quietly as possible, Ward has been Princess Margaret’s most regular escort everywhere. —Central Press Canadian Elimville W,l, Elects Mrs- K. Hern President The April meeting of the Elim­ ville Woman’s Institute was held in the hall with twenty-one pres­ ent. Mrs. K. Johns the president was in the chair. The meeting opened with the Ode followed by the Creed. The publicity committee were in charge of the programme. The guest speaker for the evening- was- Mrs. -Carrie McLean of" Kip pen who spoke . on publicity, leaving many useful- and prac­ tical ideas with those present. Mrs, F. Skinner gave a humorous reading on “The .new bride’s first attempt at making bread’’. Mrs. McLean installed the officers for the new year: Hon. Fres.jMrs. J. T. Hern; Pres., -Mrs, Kenneth Glenn Bell. Johns; First Vice-Pres., Mrs. Har. Hunter; Second Vice-Pres., Mrs. Jackson Woods; Sec.-Treas., Mrs. Wm. Johns; Assistan, Mrs. Gilbert Johns; District Director, Miss Ruth Skinner. Mrs. A. Kerslake and her com- anittee served a delicious lunch. 'Cheese Souffle may be baked, in large custard cups and served as a cheese course for supper. More flavour? That’s because it’s better tea Yrs—it’s a thrilling surprise . . . . to discover the wonders perform for your skin and complexion. It’s like see­ ing a miracle in your mirror. And what a wonderful surprise it is to discover that the right beauty aids for you are at our Toiletries Department—and all priced to keep beauty on a budget. . . a beautiful surprise the right beauty aids P0UIDER5..&.tREnm5? ELIZABETH ELIZABETH ELIZABETH ELIZABETH ELIZABETH ELIZABETH ELIZABETH ARDEN ARDEN ARDEN ARDEN ARDEN ARDEN ARDEN FACE POWDER ........... $2.30 CLEANSING CREAM $1.25 POWDER BASE ...... $1.25 SKIN TONIC ............. $1.25 NIGHT CREAM ....... $1*25 LIPSTICK ..................... $1.75 ROUGE .................... $1.75 Woodbury Face Powder .69 Lady Ester Face Powder .65 Yardley Face Powder .... 1.00 Revlon Face Powder Max Factor MAKE-UP ELIZABETH ARDEN PAT-A-CREME POND’S MAKE-UP PAT ....................... MAX FACTOR PAN-CAKE ................ REVLON FASHION PLATE ............... YARDLEY MAKE-UP BASE .............. ■jJL .65 1*35 $1.50 (.. *69 $1.00 $1.25 $1.25 Travel To Florida For Wedding Trip In a beautiful setting of spring flowers, candles, palms and. ferns Rev. J. H. Dean officiated at the marriage in 'Mt. Pleasant United church of Flora Grace, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Harper and Mr. William Alvin Hodge, R.R. 1 Science (Hill, son of Mr. William C. Hodge, Kirk­ ton, and the la te Mrs. Hodge. The bride entered the church on the arm of her ;cousin, Mr. James Harper and was given in marriage by her mother. The fitted bodice of her white velvet wedding gown had a lace yoke with lace ruffles and lily point sleeves. The full skirt extended into a slight train. Ruffled lace formed the headdress from which her full-length veil fell in grace­ ful ripples. Her only ornament was a rhinestone necklace with matching earrings, a gift of the bridegroom and she carried, a white Bible topped with two white gardenias. Mrs. Jo­ seph Shepherd, cousin of the bride, London, in -yellow taffeta was matron 4 of honor, and Miss Averil Keates, London, and Miss Betty -Pamham, Byron, in tur­ quoise taffeta, were bridesmaids. All attendants wore headdresses and net mittens matching their frocks, and carried matching nosegays. Little Margaret Hyde in pink taffeta with matching hair-bow was flower girl. She carried a basket of pink sweet peas. , The groomsman was Mr. Reg­ inald Hodgert, Woodham, and the ushers w e r e Mr. Lome Hodge, brother of the bride­ groom, and Mr. Orville .Kelland, cousin of the bride. Mrs. Albert Harper, Munro, played the wed­ ding music and accompanied Miss Maxine Harper, St. Thomas- as she sang "The Lord’s Prayer” prior to the c e r e m o n y a n d “Through the Yem's” during the signing of the register. The wed­ ding dinner was served in the church parlors. The bride’s mother received in a navy suit with black acces­ sories and corsage of pink car­ nations. She was assisted by Mrs. Lome Hodge, sister-in-law of the bridegroom, ,w earing a navy dress with gray accessories and corsage of pink roses. The bride’s table was centred with the three- tier wedding -gake and white candles. The guest tables were decorated with pink and white streamers and matching candles, with bouquets of pink and white sweet peas. Serving were Mrs. Howard Hodge, Mrs. William Hodge, Mrs. George Batten, Mrs. Ivan Bennewies and Miss .Lillian McPhail, For a wedding trip to Florida the bride donned a powder blue dress with gray black accessories. On turn the couple will the bridegroom’s farm Hill. Guests were present don, Toronto, Goderich, Kit­ chener, Byron, Creditor, Exeter, Woodham, Fullarton, -Munro, St. Thomas, Conroy, Anderson, Rus- seldale and Hensall. Following dinner a reception ,was held at the bridegroom’s home. flRTRTCflN'C'Ul KM Kn FV H 'SB iW ' Mrs, Beer Returned As Hensall W.L President Mrs, F, Beer presided at the Hensall institute’s annual meet­ ing held in the Legion Hall. Outstanding feature was an il­ lustrated travelogue presented by by Mr. and Mrs. M. Drysdale on their visit committee (Slate of President, presidents, Mrs. A. D. treasurer, assistant, Mrs. R. Elgie; press reporter, Mrs, M, Hedden; branch directors, Mrs. Drysdale, Mrs. W. Sangster, Mrs. Gross;., pianist, Miss Greta Lanimie; assistant, Mrs. T. C, Joynt; card convener, ■Mrs. W. ,Smale; district repre­ sentative, Mrs. Orr; auditors, Mrs. Goodwin, Miss Mary Good­ win. Standing committees—Agricul­ ture and Canadian .industries, Mrs. W. Parke; citizenship and education, Mrs. A. E. Munn; historical research, er son; J Shirray; i ___ _ McEwan; social welfare, Glenn Bell. to Florida. Standing reports were read. officers for 1950 is: Mrs. F. Beer; vice­ Miss Phyllis Case, McEwan; secretary- Miss Gladys Luker; Mrs. “ a-x icocaivil, Ml'S. J, Pftt- home economics, Mrs. A. publicity, -Mrs. A. D. , Mrs. Consumption ^of woollen worsted cloth in Canada in was 3.4 yards per capita. and 1948 Dorothy G. Reeder, Prop. Tel. 71 ’ Exbter Ladies If you hitch your wagon To a “Permanent” star, .To fulfill your dream You need not go far. Call: V’s Shoppe AH Lines- of Beauty Culture VERA. O. FRASER, PROP. Tel. 113 ExeteF —......' Tomlinson’s Hairdressing - Featuring - All Lines of Beauty Culture - Specializing In - THE NEW “FLUID WAVE’* With exclusive Magic Phlx The greatest permanent wave advancement in years. Jack Doirie is director of .the show and the various numbers from air force personnel and the emcee, Gord Carman, are eager­ ly anticipated. All airmen’s wives are urged to be present at the Tuesday meeting. Mrs. Burns’ group will be in charge of the lunch.Airmer/s Wives Executive Meet The executive of the Airmen’s Wives’ Auxiliary met on Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Phil Rumball, Exeter, to arrange for the next meeting which will be held in the new Airmen’s Lounge at the airport on Tues­ day, April 25, at 8:30. Mrs. Don Collier was present to report on Variety Bandbox, which was successfully staged in Exeter District High School on April 12 in aid of the South Huron Hospital Fund. The full amount of the cheque will be reported after the next meeting. The show will be the airport on May to be donated to chapels. Mrs. Harold charge of a dance routine; Mrs. P.. Gauthchier and Mrs. Gerald Dupuis a skit, for which Mrs. Rumball and Mrs. Frank Nixon are supervising the music. LAG repeated at 1, proceeds the station Foster is in xz: - xz- - xz-zxz- - and Mrs. W. Baker were hos­ tesses. , FOR ONTARIO Rev. Snell Speaks To G rand Bend Ladies The W.M.S. and W.A. Easter meeting was held in the United Church, Mrs. H. Phyle, Mrs. ,C. Love, and Mrs. Raymond Hading was in charge of the meeting. A solo was sung by Mrs. Mansel Mason. Mrs. J. H. McGregor, intro­ duced the speaker, Mrs. H. -Snell, of Exeter, who addressed , the meeting on “Our Responsibility,’’ reviewing the 25 years of service of the W.'M.S. which has gone all out to -help in the advance. She ended her address with a poem. Tea was served. A large three- layer cake decorated with 25 candles marked the twenty-fifth anniversary of church union. Mrs. AnnieuLove and Mrs. Mary Gill poured. .Mrs. H. Wainwright Trust MAGIC for sure-fire baking success! WALNUT BUTTERMILK LOAF Mix and.sift twice, then sift into a bowl, 2IX c. once-sifted pastry flour (or 2J4 c. once- sifted hard-wheat flour), 2 tsps. Magic Baking Powder, tsp. baking soda, tsps, salt, % tsp. ground mace. Mix in % c. lightly- packed brown sugar, c. rolled oats and 1 c. broken walnuts. Combine 1 well-beaten egg, 1 c. buttermilk, 2 tsps, grated orange rind, 1 tsp. vanilla and 5 tbs. shortening, melted. Make a well in dry ingredients and add liquids; mix lightly. Turn into a loaf pan (4^“ x 8H”) which has been greased and lined with greased paper. Bake in a rather slow oven 325°, about 1 hour. Serve cold, thinly sliced and lightly buttered. HANDS IN TRAINING |||||||| v > 1 - ill topcoat and their re­ reside on at Science from Lon- In that trying period preceding the program, the visiting lectur­ er was being entertained by a local social leader of the fluttery type. Hard-pressed for conver­ sational topics, she nt length in­ quired, “And do yon,believe in clubs for women ?’* "Oh, yes,” said the lecturer, “Yes, indeed,” and then pausing significantly, he added, “but of course only when kindness fails.” Learning Business Practice IN Ontario the wheels of industry turn for the benefit of every single one of us* Our lathesj dynamos, drill presses, farm combines, tractors, business machines^ etc* are producing goods and services which earn dollars. Th&se dollars provide food, clothing, medical care and other necessities which contribute to our security and high standard of living. Every single one of us, therefore, has a very personal interest in the flow of a steady supply of trained workers to industrial plants. These workers « will operate machines which arc important to our way of life* Wc should appreciate, then, the Co-operative efforts of government, industry and labour in the field of employee training* In sc hools and in factories our workers, young and old, arc given the opportunity to develop new and specific skills hi every field of business and industrial Activity. For instance, every effort on the part of office workers to become pro­ ficient in typing, filing, shorthand and secretarial work, will mean greater business efficiency—will help to make Ontario a finer place in which to live and work. THE BREWING INDUSTRY (ONTARIO) f war Way of Life Howards Trained Hands Ontario workers know’ they can earn more, have executive responsibility and enjoy a higher standard of living in direct ratio to t,he skills they ac­ quire and the way they make use of them. That’s always true in a free economy —that’s why our com­ petitive ’ system will continue to make Canada great and a great place in which to live.