The Wingham Advance-Times, 1952-01-30, Page 4Perfect tea is so easy
to make with
S. "SALADA"
TEA BAGS
V.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 30th, 1961
1.4
ing and dance was held in, the Coun-
cil Chambers of the Town Hell; Many
of the older teenAorq .have resigned
and it Is undereteed that the younger
ones will have to carry on alone.
,with acivieew and help from some of
the old-timers who. have had more
experience in running Teen Town.)
When Windham had a ,Recreational
Director, he was in charge, ,of :Teen
Town, .,along with its Nfayor ,Reeve
and Council.
John Lancaster ,the Nast Mayor has
reSigned and at the electiOn' Friday
night Bill Connell ,a W.DH,S. -grade
niner, was elected as the 'fiew Mayor
of Wingham Teen Town. Frances
Newman Was elected ReeVe, andvi.he
six councillors to 'help the Mayor and
Reeve are 'Frances Rettliiger, Bev.
Brooks," John ,Congram, E.Doilalda
MacDonald, Douglat - IVIurraY-1-*And
Catherine Keating. 'aeOrge'llallckiivas
elected sheriff and' he is reePOrteible
for arresting all ontlaWs iii • Teen
Town. Robert Gammage wits ehOsen
as Secretary-treasurer.
The members of Windham, ,Teen
Town are looking forward „to. many
good times in 1952, and ,everyone is
out to help Teen Town. , , , ,
There are separate schools for relig-
ious minorities In four provinces, Pro-
testant in Quebec and Roman Catholic
in three others.—Quick Canadian
Facts.
4.1
Forward vutside bracket and
RECENT & READABLE " • -
1.33,$l0 loope.
There are hints for making the
right appearance during competi-
Ire
in a
changing
and
uncertain
tivarld•••
nearly five million Canadians face the future with
greater confidence because Life Insurance serves
them these four ways!
1. Each year, life insurance pro.
vies many thousc-cids of Cana-
dians with money to meet some
of their most important needs.
Last year, life insurance com-
panies paid out $240 million in
benefits to Canadians.
2. Today, more than ever,
Canadians rely on life insurance
as the easiest, surest way to
provide financial security for
themselves and their families.
A record total of almost $2 billion
in new life insurance was pur-
chased by Canadians in 1951..
This brings the value of life in-
surance owned by the nation's
policyholders to another new
record sum of $17 billion.
3. Canadian communities from
coast to coast continue to pro-
gress — thanks in part to the
investment of life insurance
dollars.
Last year, more than $225 million
were invested by life insurance
companies, on behalf of their
policyholders, in securities that
helped to finance the building of
new schools, homes, highways and
other aids to better living for all
Canadians.
4. Life insurance dollars help to
check inflation!
One of the most powerful forces
at work to protect the value of
your dollars is the sum of money
entrusted to life insurance com-
panies by their policyholders.
This "money for the future" helps
check inflation and thus
strengthens Canada's economy —
at a time when our country must
be strong in every way.
A REPORT FROM
THE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES IN CANADA
L•1051Ct AND TWEIR REPRESENTATIVE
,
New Cars
1951 Monarch Sedan, Banning Blue
1951 Ford Custom Sedan, Sheridan Blue
1951 Ford Deluxe Sedan, Metallic Maroon
1951 %-ton Ford Panel, Sheffield Green
1951 1/2-ton Ford Pickup, Sheffield Green
Used- Cars .
1951 Monarch Sedan, Starlight Green,
only 4,000 miles
1949 Meteor Custom Coach, 2 Tone Green
1949 Ford Deluxe Coach, 2 Tone Black & Green
1948 Monarch 5 passenger Coupe
1947 Mercury 114" Sedan, Blue
1947 Mercury 114" Coach, Metallic Maroon
1938 Ford Tan Coach
1947 Mercury 1/z-to,n Pickup
1945 G.M.C. 3-ton Stock Truck with body
All above used units thoroughly checked over and
clean.
HURON MOTORS
FORD & MONARCH
A. D. MacWILLIAM
PHONE 237 WINGHAM
Quality Always
spare yourself the pain of "shopping around"
for a Monument to honour your loved one.
Depend on our reputation for highest quality
and fair dealings. See Us First.
ALL CLASSES OF MONUMENTS IN STOCK
Mot Modern Equipment for Shoo and Cemetery Work
Inscription Work ProMptly Attended to,
nrownlie Memorials
WILLIAM BROWNLIE, Owner and. Operator
Alfred St. Wingham Box 373 'Phone 450
blic Offering
own ofWingliam Debentures
For the purpose of , financing an addition to the Wingham
PubliC School The Corporation of the Town of Wingham
hereby offers for sale at par
$115,000.00
Twenty-Year Debentures Bearing
Interest at 4 1/2% per annum
Principal and interest payable in equal instalments over
the period of the issue.
The issue will be offered in
units of $1,000.00 each, bearing
20 equal Coupons for $76.88
each redeemable yearly at Town
Treasurer's office.
Each $1,000.00 unit will re-
turn to the purchaser approxi-
mately $1,537.00 over period of
issue.
Entire issue must be sold lo-
cally or offering will be with-
drawn and sold through other
channels in bulk.
Under present system of grants,
Provincial Government pays
40% of both principal and in-
terest.
If subscribed locally certifi-
cates will be available on or
about March 1, 1952. In any
event interest will date from That
time.
This is your opportunity to
participate in one of the finest
municipal debentures available,
considering the good financial
position of our town.
Applications will be received at
Clerk's Office, Town Hall,
Wingham
Up to February 15th, 1952
in case of oirer-subscription, first applications will'rectiNie tweference.
r. Anum••••••=immariminiar
(46
"%Gip roux W NGI-TAM ADVANC .-TIMS
Goderich's scorers , with 11 points,
while Campbell and Gregg 'had 9 and,
-respectively for Wingham. Coach
Martin paid after the game that the
main trouble with his boys was in
their erratic passing. They have the
team work and the team spirit, all
they need is a little 9ractice.
This isn't the gossip column, but if
anyone 'is interested Cord Lane and
George Hall had a wonderful 'time in
Goderich. I won't tell you 1,11y.
0 - 0 - 0
Around School
by Catherine "Keating
The teensters of Wingham High
School who are interested 'in Teen
Town, have elected a' new Mayor,
Reeve and Gonna. On Friday night
January 25th, a reorganization meet-
I deed, there is little evidence that the
author is politically aware at all, and
he reaches nearly all his conches-
ions by bicycle. When lee speaks of
Marx, for example,• we Gan usually Mons: what to wear, what sort of Tare are some very interesting assume that he means Grouch°, while gloves to choose, how to prepare pity- the Se new books at the Windham Public ttenenhellee refeered to le ap - sically and mentally forthe long Library lately. Three of these, re-parently, one lelouSie' Schopenhauer, grind of contests—and many others. e- 'Viewed below, are all by Canadian a free lance purveyor of beverages in
authors, two deal with sports and ALONG OLYMPIC ROAD Montreal.
' the other is humor. "A good deal of the book is about -, by Foster Hewitt
SKATE WITH ME Here is the story of a yoling Ont- Paris, which has probably been writ-
by Barbara Ann Scott ario boy growing up, inspired by his ten about more than any other city,
idol, Syl Apps, and attracted by pro- and which almost everybody has vis-Skate With Me is not only the tab- idol, sport. He finished his edu- ited by now anyway. About all the tilous life story of Barbara Ann Scott, cation in spite of attractive profess- author can hope for is that the book
. it is also one , Tonal offers, and finally geee to Eur-
of the most complete will bring back memories, a sort of t best-illustrated basic books on the.
fundamentals of figure skating. Here literary radish:" ope to win the Olympic pole-vault. In Canada's sports world, few Most of these essays have already you find the elementary school fig- names, any,:known than appeared elsewhere. Involved are if are better 1, urea upon which you must concen-Torch, MacLean's, The National that of Foster ' Hewitt, Through all f Irate if you wish to excel in this Home Monthly ,and The Vancouver Canada and the United- States, the ..P graceful sport along with pertinent "voice of hockey" is familiar to mil- Daily Province.
Information on the technique of free
"I would like to. thank my wife for lions of sport lovers. His descriptions skating. of great hockey games have brought her unfailing help and encourage- i t Skate with Me offers explicit, de- cheer and life to not only the keen, meat during the preparation of this
I
'
tailed instructions and explanatory healthy, red-blooded fans but also book, but I'm not married."—From
diagrams by the distinguished Hun- to the shut-ins, the lonelyand theill,-the Author's foreword,whichhe calls
garian artist Pranas Lape, showing I-Iis traditional HE SHOOTS, eere "A ready-made review for hurried
--- i just how to do these necessary fig- SCORES! has carried both rejoicing critics,"
t .ores: and gloom to countless fans through- THE WANDERER
I Forward inside and outside edge out Canada, the United States, and I by Mika Waltari
figure eight,
Forward and backward change of
I edge.
•fiurns
1 Forward outside three to back
t
in-
side three
Double three
1 One foot eight, ,,
11111110"— ,,,7'w1111
-‘71/07ed
MOIlARCLI I
THE ROVING I
by Eric Nicol
"Mr. Nicol's book restricts itself
to Europe, and not all of Eur-
ope at that. He has made no attempt
to crawl under the Iron Curtain. In-
Overseas. In a memorable scene in this gor-
geously caparisoned novel which
romps across the .reign of Suleiman
the Magnificent, a Mohammedan
slave dealer describes young Michael
(The Wanderer of the title) as hav-
ing a singular gift for landing on
his feet like a cat, no matter what
the circumstances, And it is an apt
phrase, for certainly Michael (or el-
Hakim-his Arabic anagram, meaning
doctor) bears a charmed life.
Heads roll, bronze cannon, bom-
bard, harem favorites connive, wily
Levantines plot, political advisers
topple, pirates swarm, lethal potions
are compounded and imbibed, fort-
resses are seized and lost, prodigious
trials of strength and agility galvan-
ize scenes of personal combat, and
equally prodigious feats of endur-
ance grace encounters, of love-but
through it all Michael, hardy, earnest
and perhaps a little naive, remains
very much alive, whether buffeted as
a slave or drenched in jewels by a
grateful Sultan.
One might,as well try to summar-
ize the intricate action and endless
invention of Seheherazade as to en-
umerate the successive developments
in this novel, Algiers, -Istanbul, Vien-
na, Buda, and Bagdad come glowing-
ly to life-gaudy, lush, tawdry deprav-
ed. And the 16th century spins like
a dervish as the followers of the
Cross and the Crescent juggle the
balance of power in Europe and the
Near East.
For more like The Egyptian in
that it follows a more cohesive pat-
tern than The Adventurer, this novel
has given Waltari all the scope he
needs -to make his talents sing like
the scimitars of his_ murderous jan-
issaries.
Mika Waltari, long famous in his
native Finland and in Europe, ale,
ready has a rare accomplishment to
his credit in the U.S., he has pub-
lished only two novels here and both
of them have been smash best sell-
ers. The Wanderers must surely add
luster to this record.
WIT HALL MY HEART
by Margaret Campbell Barnes
The young, convent-bred Princess
of Portugal who came to Restoration
England attended by a vigilant army
of ladies-in-waiting, must have seem-
ed to many of her contemporaries a
rather pathetic figure; a fragile pawn
in a sophisticated game of statesman-
ship. For to be the bride of a king
whose father had been sent to the
scaffold by his own subjects—a king
moreover, who was a heretic and
whose success with women was a by-
word—was a frightening venture
offering only slender chance of hap-
piness. But Catherine of Braganza
was a woman of passionate integrity,
and from the moment she set eyes on
darkly handsome Charles at Ports-
mouth she loved him utterly. To be
the wife of such a man was no bed
of roses. His flagrant infidelities en-
raged and anguished her; but Cath-
erine gradually learned how to hold
her own with dignity and courage
even when Challenged by the ensnar-
ing beauty and ruthless ambition of
women like Lady Castlemaine. She
learned too, to live with discretion
in an age of religious intolerance, and
it was when her whole future was
overshadowed by the fanatical accus-
ations of that archliar Titus Oates
Voted Ontario's Bed'
1 4:
GHLIGHTS.
from 'the" •
HIGH SCHOOL.
that sheefound a defender in the man
she loved and came to realize how
secure, after all, were the fctunda-
tions of her ill-assorted marriage.
MOSES by Sholem Asch
This magnificent novel sets an ap-
propriate keystone in the career of
Sholem Asch. Delving deep into roots
held in common by much of the world
today; it is• a noble story, fused with
the vigor, insight, and imagination of
a writer who has devoted years to,
its re-creation.
We see Moses first as a young
prince of Pharaoh's court, rebelling
under palace discipline, aware of ..he
legends concerning his birth, and
deeply curious about the Hebrew
people who suffer the bitter yoke of
slavery. When he breaks away to
visit them, and finds his own family,
he makes the fateful decision to cast
his lot with Israel.
In the land of the Midianites, con-
vinced that his exile will be lifelong
Moses 'marries and tends the flock
of his father-in-law, Jethro. Yet his
thoughts are never far from the cap-
lye tribes in Egypt, and one day in
the desert, God speaks to him, out
of a bush that' burns but is not con-
sumed, and commands him to deliver
Israel from the land of the Egypt-
ians.
We watch „Moses, fearful ' of his
mission but"'esnieSelvient to God'S
will, growing in strength and wisdom
as he is confronted with one crucial
test after another. First comes the
titanic struggle against Pharaoh, the
gods of Egypt against the one God,
and the triumphal escape through the
waters of the Red Sea. In the desert,
by God's help, he saves the children
of Israel from hunger and thirst mid
brings them to the foot of Sinai,
where they hear and accept Godei,
covenant. But while Moses leaves
them to ascend the mount and is
gone for forty days, they erect a
golden calf to worship, and Moses
brings the wrath of God upon ;hem.
In the time of their punishment (the
forty years of wandering that follow)
he is their stalwart leader—in the
privations of the desert and the wars
wih the idolaters.
In his portrait of Moses, Sholem
Asch shows us human grandeur,
against a great tapestry of superbly
conceived oriental color and move-
ment. The scene in which Israel bows
before God's commandments and the
people answer together, "All 'that the
Lord hath spoken we will do," Is
enormously powerful. Balaam is a
gusty character, portrayed with sub-
tle humor, and his colloquy with his
long-suffering ass is a little master-
piece. The Midianite women, who try
to conquer the children of Israel by
teaching them to sin, provide a richly
colorful episode. tut in this work of
sustained inspiration every chapter is
impressive. Mr, Asch has met the
challenge of Moses with a scope and
authority worthy of that sublime fig-
ure,
central Press Catidian
Marlene • Stewart, Canedal petite
golf sensation, has added a new
feather to her plaid golfing cap by
topping poll of Ontario sportswriters
and spertscasters to' become the
provinee's outstanding athlete of
1951. The 17-year-old youngster
with. the.ready grin was unanimous
choice for her golfing achievements
,—last year she captured the Qntario
•Ladies' Open, the Canadian Ladies'
/Close, Ontario Junior Girls' title and
Canadian Ladies' Open Crown. The
five-foot girl who has lived at
Fonthill, Ont., for past 10 years,
was ,born in Creel, Alta. Winnie
Roach Leuszler of Willowdale, who
swam the English channel, and
miller Jack Guest, Jr., of Etobicoke,
tied for second place in sports poll.
BASKIE/13ALL
' by Geoige Porter "
Over one hundred students of
Goderich District. High School
crowded into their gymnasiumlast
Thursday to see Wingham artd.Gade-
rich play the second game in their
schedule.
Paced by Captain- George "Harris'
20 points the- Goderich senior boys
crushed our team 42-25. « ngham
started,. off slow but in trip second
half they, improved tremors to ialy,
Our. Shooting was off at times .but
Goderich never missed, The leaders
in the basket department for Wing,
ham were Ken Saxton 'with '11 points
and John Hanna . with .7. Coach Jerry
Higenell blamed our defeat on the,
inability of the teams to regain. re-
bounds... •.
The girls faked a little better than
the Senior boys. They wound up on
the writing side of a 21-13 score. Al-
though their ball handling' Was a
little rough at times, they Played a
doted hard 'dame. The top scorer for
our 'Ameteons *as Jean Holiclen' with
peintS:' '
The last gamewas a heart breaker.
Our Juniors led 8-2 at; quarter time;
.
12-0 at half time and then, pop!
dOderiCh led 19-16 at three quarter
time and the final score was 22.16
for' 'them. Both teeing played e very
fast, 'hard checking rough game. At
times it Was more like football than
basketball. In the third period alone
referees Higenell and Buchanan call-
ed eleven fouls. Doehstader led