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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1940-02-01, Page 5VIL11101114.Y, Investigate these Bargains that you can't, beat those prices ANY- WHZRZ, or the same quality of goods., 3.piece ChesterEield Suite (one only) Aeaf pe,tOrn, velour covering, show wood. fronts, balloon ,euShionS, modern style, fruaTauteed springing; CHaester.4 fleld and one chair in 1Viu1berry, one chair in green. CASH SALE PRICE ,$016,50 piece uhesterfield:Suite (Qrse only) VetOur covering in siiiped pattern, show ,WOOd fronts, - balloon cushions; 2 pieces,iu niulberm 1 piece in green. pAk.f1113,11,LE PRICE $87a00)03) - Special discounts onLamps., Und,tables, •Coffee -tables and . Xedar Chests, 14011vOie, OITIROVAu 1%NAN8 SEE TiteMi • EBBUR IZEBUIiN, Jan, 31. -Mister Fraticie Jilchralic and Iti sister Muriel epent the week -end With- their gralichnother, Mrs - E. Fairish, in Goderieli. Makteillarr_v_Porton of Exeteris spending,t111TwookIiibur Miss'llarriett Horton retarnedlialtte .on ISattirday after spending a -few Weeks with her Sister at LiatoWel., - Service was held .at the, church on ,.Sunday.. It Was the. compiunion ser: vice.. There was not a large attend- ance... . 'Next Thursday, Februa0 the World's Day of Prayer for -the - Women's Missionary 1Soc4eties,'This 4 Ang.ting Will be held• at the home' Of Mrs. James: Horton. Ali ladles are • tordially invited' to this meeting. ' -- Mr. and :Sirs. 'Fred_ .Hortonn enter- tained' their reiatiVeSr'neighbors, and friends to, if socifll eVenine••-eir Friday "muting and Card's were enjoyed by 811during-the 'evening,' Mr, ARIA Sthram and Mr, James FarriSh supply- ing. the inusie. Luneh, Was served at ihiefght-Titelirdir rly boars of the morning and:, all'7de- parted le7tlieir hornes lurVyrgenjoyed the "evening gathering. •• _ `" Bram° Motor_ Boots', v" • "(All heels) • Ate' - seY .X4010shei ,Misses and Child -4' tin's' Motor -1366U -7 -P.trOloshes , Men's ,z,Bickle Goloshes, ' Bien'S OolosheS Men's,. Zipper ' Golbilies • :•10' 111AKE-UP SEOEETS , . -Because -nianit: of tig: are a littleun-., certain abOut making -up,' 1 s.in to- reveaf' some of its ,seerets. Must tone with skin. hair and eyes. Study the cosmetic make-up Charts and experiment with 41,1ferent color schemes to "find the 'best Fitece.- , The basis of. a good make -Up is a...per,- 001y- clean 'face, then ..t8e- -a-powder base.. „J,Start 'powdering , at the, base _Of ttie. tittOtttandliPPIY succession of firm -pressure moYeinents upward. Don't -nap the powder puff.- . • ,„ . Apply. lipstick , with open Moth; earrYillg • the--eolort.vvell ,inside::: Start with the upper lip, working out from ,Centre to corners., sillikftransfer cefor to lower lipby pressinglipstogether, rouging; .start: at the high point§ - of the cheekbones and shade the rouge, Common ‘_:errors. A re; Ltoc! -1111,1011 rouge.; sharp edges; rouge too low on sthee young,tglaye,nrake-up $ho-nid::, unaffected. In the tiVen es and thirties it may be smartly sephisti-• cated. ,. -As one grows older„ be- ubtle ratherthan-Obvious. . " A • word abouteYe:maire-up. • Alascari. On the upper lashee,dirkens and length- ens them. --NY•es4WW...;Pn the UPPO Iids gives brilliance to p,eyes.,.. Apply sparingly to lower edges of upper lids ,trn4 putdeout andup.: tr- yon.:donit like eyeshad6w,---r1itue owe oit"-on theupper for vice enclosing- -four one -cent. stamps. for fascinating new booklet on Beauty Zare. AddriSs-÷--Barbara Lynn, Boit. Station B., Uontreal,--;,QUe. ' THE LATEST Atert-411111611 HOW'S wbat, 1440 prove, to be the Suitt *et of the ineredinly brutal . and cruel flagon.' whieh %&1I Uitler low in- (Igy Vier LanrIstalf iu 140100111, Etete garden:on Albert street, Waritoc*was. Meted on the Jeivs in his power le 11QW rr000 an. excellent gardener. and hortienitur-, going, on, and without reeeiving 'the Ws a long,- lona fame sluice r saw tile ist; his fruit, 01)ec/41Y gr4Pes" was attention of the world as it shotild Great Northwestern Exhibition at Croderieli, and a still longer time since It WaS au event to which the boys and girls of the old Central sch-Ool•eagerly looked forward from the opening ftho terni In August. I; suppose -it was -the first fall lair 1 ever ;Ittendlid, and to MY Jaded•fanc the NOW York World% Fair ,last year was far less alluring. The Great Northwestern was one of Iiurozls mot popular -InstitutiOns. • To the 'children, of the„latter 130's and early 90's it, seemed an established and Per- pettial fixture In liuMan affairs, very much like Queen Victoria, who had been reigning' as long asany of .us could remember,*, and Was, We subcOu-c sciously felt, destiued to go on reign- -lig till the end of time, - , • • • • . first for fair , eXperie4nee Must have been in 1889--'-a good, or perhaps bad, half Century ',ago, when 1 was a' very .•yoting•pupil t 'what even In those 4W:3 seemed a very old Central sehool, 'The" doderich, /*Olio !School Board In tlib-Se-dayellad a -very :pleasant arranger ment under which the children eecured- admission, to the fair at the modest; fee 'Of five cents eaCh. :04] the second afternoon of the fair :the children paserabled at the school as :usual and seetired froWthe •teaeberS large" green tickets.. Then each .class, ,Tf.411.„044.,04,che,i‘41,ehRrep Dumbed In firternifiable- ,IndIan file famous- throughout Huron; but the Big 'Squash attained IntffnatIonal recogni- tion. Perhaps it looked bigger to a school boy than it would todayto a grown man. But "Believe -It -or -Not -Ripley" sorme-years ago -made a feature of oue of Warnock's squashes which attained a recorded weight of 362 pounds. :Odd - cause of the pressure *of war ,news. With practieally no publication of the Plan in the (ic_Tman nevvapapers, Adolf Hitler is going ahead with the creation of a so called Jewish state, located in: Poland southwest of Lublin.' A. streteli; of land, about fifty by tiixty, miles in area', has been set aside. It Is en- closed by a barbed-wire fence, and only 15", this wasn't by any means the big- JeWS Will be al.1.°wea to live therein - gest. , Into this small, territor are to be cram - such nionsters ?-4t111.iornethi,rig of a 4'3 said that the lazmi e'ei"ti°i'311Y ft IIow Warno4 centrived to prc'altice mea 11° few" th3.13 1,943A° Jews" .mystery. A. , contemporarY' traaitiezi, Poor,: Whether it is peor or rich, this w ni •the dead of winter, and In other version is 'that. be made incisions I .Part that cannot be hiterPreted to. the growing vegetables and, fed a manner them honey. Ile produced -some sizable -pumpkins, probably by the.. same mys- 'Orlon§ method, big no grower since his day bas surpassed his reeord with the Mainmoth SqUaeli, . • • The, Warnock Squash •WaS never disappointment. But one year in the tars, when I had 'graduated to the ,Godet,, „rieh „High School, there was a dismal. in 151 indeed. The me` tirt,lairatirfoet:= meats, the rest. of their means, their' ,gaged a famous aeronaut .of. jevvels,-,-everything Is -Stolen from them in the usual custoin of the men Who- deelare that, they, belong to the purest. and noblest strain of humanity the . world has yet seen, ,,No Neparations are made fqr their receptionl, they are fsoinir 1:11v4enshti)ed. ileaYlidelatt 4101% site the, deserted homes of the ev ated Polish peasanty3r, why,, they can freeze to ',death, or build new homes, without, means; without inater- Ials, without ;tools, ,without ' anything. IloW,they are to subsist when they get -there no ,pile knows. How those wha. thirVive, until the spring Will obtain seeds and farming tools and cattle and horses no one can litutgine... This Im- possible ,to centelve of, ft113T MOM bar - barons cruelty-- ancl it is deliberatelY calculated, • Behind- the , barbectwire fence the Jews ,are live "Of (Ih 111; circumstances - would not be ,p,ernated in any civilized country -47n* victims wexe,P,dog's---or.„-- cattle- Hitler is. currently *reported to be migration -Mad; ever since he hit open the: .1dea last winter ofi moving the Gerinans-ifarofllirItallalr TYTOr 4hU- •aninaltasocctipiedltself with the shift- lag'of, Minorities out of the region§ In, they' are to be.fouxid„,,and reunit- ' them with, people of their- own race. But with' the Jews the motive fll to get rid of then without loss Ottime, as has been eald, without • the slightest !regard for what may become of them after, they have -reached their, 'destination.) , "."Even if this-. "state" Were -adequately .prepared fog the 'mi- gration, could. have no econOmie future,. since it will be surreiinded •on _all-sides:by- hostile- -corrununitles;,Wha -will .doubtless not be permitted to do. ihnsineSS, with those •survi,viarinifortunt ides within the harbed4ire: •Thilve noto 'hesitation. in say14.1 that if the Hitler Government were in every other. respect a' Model one, I .shoulestill-consider it Utterly damnable . because .of. what It has done' to Jews who ,have felt the; power of this despot. ' Garrisoa Villard in The Spectator (London). avermo thlikt lie afea them. Italic, Ail,. • nnissemigration by force has been be. anything else than a determination to create, not 4 jewlsh state, but a mest horrible',•concentration (ann), which can certainly' become nothing elsethan habitation of death. For these unfortunate people'are for- bidden to_leave with more :than 300 markS, They are permitted to take -with themlonly shell handbag§ as they can carry. All the rest of their be- Tongrugs,' be* furniture in their :apa clear across town to the .faird,„grofindlis. handed over their tickets,*•'passed through'. the turnstile, and "Wcre. 104 totheir-own resourteS---. cannot„ reeolleel that In my Public .80,1001 days batll•Weather- ever inter- fered In, the least, with. 'that „annual 'March, The skies above Lake Huron were always blue and the einderpaths, which in :those daYy served- as Side - the greater,part of :the town, Were TilWays dry and a little dusty. As 'I recollect, the -only' .plank „walk Was that which entircled,the 'Square; whia, as Huron, old 'boys ellAtnow, is the business „centre of the Com•munity. To miss the fair was sheer heart;• brealt• ,9n 'ene'eceasion I went through - all the prelffilnary synantonts: After hont-'ciiith my annual fall Cold; I'd, -emerge ,shakify--:convalescent, but -with. .mykipper--ilip-a4Orned.,;witir some,itind • of black disfigurement which; ha& been older, might' 118V()1)8811taisblikeh- for an hicipient'maiStaclie..In daylight. it was, painfully coitspi.Cuous, and ven- turing out of doors- even to attend the fall fair -was manifestly iinposslb1e. state, Ae bigger boys— "Banty" Sharman, "Neck" ' Tighe, . "Skunk" Watson, "Scrooge" Atkins, and the rest ---persecuted me uninerci- " fully. With this4acIded. allurement, the persecution mould. become unbearable. • But When the great -afternoon had, , conte and gene, my.- father relented, - thithe-result-that;instead:.-otalta-feli-- 44.;,Witli ;Alm etIler. cliildren, Ienjoyed personally-cOnducted-evening.:viiit to , new : ravishing-TexPerieneee Yet, exceptfor a, Vague impre$019._ • of,cycewda and.stinshine,•and dust, there Is mall one featare„ of the ,Great NOrth-. Westirai, in .those .,byginte days- that:. ceines back vividly,and . to Which I re, . • tained-eagerly; yearafteryear; . That . was theWarnocleMacam•oth Squash, • , , - -The Warnock Squash couldn't •ap-, -propriately be spelledwith anything but a capital "S.,I,'''"'"For many 'years it was a feature Of the -,-tall fair at Gode- rich, the daiosure.of-all.eyes. including • mine. Nothing like It was ever grown , anywhere else in iSqnashdom. • The Mammoth Squash was grown by the late William Warnock, lif bus that day, Miss Lulu -Randall, to makei„.„ a . :balloon ascension aad Tiaracirate iropp.. When the time came, the erOwd was there, and on its collective toes; the huge mass of dell4ted canvas re- Presenting.the balloon Was there; Miss Randall was there -but the weather • WaS; ' Mir • once, unpropitious, and tlie- ascent was called off as too-'4angerous, Not long' after -the aeronaut took a chance- too Man', and was. killed In -a' parachute jump somewhere In gan.• • , • -' The last tirne I saw the Great North- western was in the 'filikViel.9,06,. when, living away from .Goderich, I made a trip -back there at -the propitious tao- .ment. In the early evening I dropped in . Robertson. "Let's. go out to the fair," he suggested: Se I sit* -1t once more, in all %Its', glory. In fact, I made return trip:next day.: Ifat something . was lacking: There Wasn't' any -Maram, Have .You Renewek1Cour SubseriPtion?) . "Papa," cried little Sally, "the furni,-- lure Man is here:" 1 11 bethere in a inhiite Ask tum lo kw: a chair." "1 did,, but he, said he Would start with the radio." . 06614 forSalurdp,k tuid 1V1p10r2, otTivc -With heaify ,duek lin4ng,. oll- ed edge--sope, ill -foxing- solid-- Liibtweight, 4b1 alififiurpoSe Ford triitteki' -complete" iWJtlz ferguson Hydraulic CQutrols, , --starter, power take -off, pneumatic tires, goveriLf nor, adjustable treads, iFnition locktt,trottle control, independent r.ear-iirlieei brakes, 'air , „ cleaner. Come -in. and see /11TI:AER ON THE UNITED' STATES (The following is an extract Irina "Hitler Speaka recent book in which: Dr. Rauschning, 'a former intlinate--of: 'Hitler and (President of Danzig,' re- ports conversations whibh'he had a few years ago with -Herr Hitler.), , He -expressed •his contempt of the L CHOIRS BROADCASTNEW WORLD BALLADS RAPW, present', ernmeut of the .-Ifiliteil WOulct- haVeswept 'away .aii.faisities of !ta...tes.".- . ... liberty and eparttx,*, ': .., .--r,, 1 - "This Is the la'et disgusting death, "Do YOu mean" I 8kOd, "that 'the rattle'of_d corrupt and Outworn system 1,10eurmaiakis;;"111.61.1,s,j'theanws,iirie3tujecnallet tboY'l'Oeati.d- which is a blot on..tha hi,stery Of, thiS, 1.1,, Am Alwrierti”. ' .' --,, --,:.. people. •Since 'the civil war,' in ,whiCh aThat,is.exattIf What I Mean," flit:, " the Southern' States :were-Coninered, ler returned,. "We Shall Seel IfaS'e SU .'" ,4 . . against all ,historical logic and sound !S.A.? in Anierica;',-z-We shall- train, our 'sense, the•PAnierlettils have ,been in a -1,01.1th;'-anq ve-,-shall have 'Via whout tondition', of Optical And. non1ar,..4,- : degenerate:rankeedora winobt.:be• ow ai;:2`-itt7ilittt War' it .i4WS .qickt the'. 14, 6haniiii6r-rifto:10 "Eiiiiiii".- a' ljue'-' ' .1 . oirthern-.-States- hint -theAmerican:go_ . youth, will..:,b,.:4,01.1roti,-_,,thea,.gr• .ea_stitteg: ..'-'• pie- theMgelves who were- cOnquere,d, In mtuilike -mission • of Washingtom-whiek. _:. the -spdit,ons tdossoining., of ...!economie ..this • *corrupt ..democraev ' hasc,, trodden .progress and-power:politick 'Araerica -Underfoot:" , , ' .;,' , .. • -has ever sinte.beeedrawif deeper Into.,_ _,..,' . " - --!..-.*---- ' __, t. '--- '''• the Mire'of progressive Self-destraetionWilk . 'INITEDiSTATES -ONI-IHTLEIR COuntry 4.q.• , . , • , A niOneyed clique', which presumes- to A 7eOliunnist 14 The Nevl,"- York -Sttn_. be- good .society and to represent the'writes: .: , old families, rules the under - - hp, , The /s.,'.azis are blaming that,beer--140-1 ntheevelebtl:filor:fbaeep4e;c41:aaleteYdly--„expo-- sea- tham„„.._- b on thtglattul; ,and We4,:maY bear as a mass of corruption and legal venal; italleged,-any day.now. that Churchill's Ity. The beginnings of, p. great new social order based...on the nrinciple of slavery and inequality were destroyed by that war and waif' them also,: the embryo"Of a future truly 'great Arne:lea -thatwould net'have been, ruled by a -corrupt- caste of tradesmen but by a- real Herren -class (master -class) that liave been set off, by .a lightedmatch., t footprints have been. found, outside tbe - garden,. and that Chamberlain's urn- hrehltt dug lip inthe debris. -r -t It May not hane been a' bomb at - Adolf lets off a terrifee an:quint, of. gas when -he makes -a speech. In low ; building the •accumulated staff: may - -Dozen: of Itemnints from411--olor the store,. Silks, • alub,Cottong, short ends 'after LtociF ;taking. -tour " at-a-discountLok--- • ''' -* 41,+. There some grand buys. in Childien'si-Coati or Coat' Sets,. also Plisses' ‘and Ladies' Winter, Coats. Lydia E. -Pin-planes - LACES Putnam% Diamond Sunset, nit " 2. 'pkgs for 25c " llotwater flottle *.ears lGuaranteo. 69c lutIUraSoap " elites, 6,9e L;;NreasimmoomMoMmislralpiikill0, • bz, tto,idgn MedicaUDiscoyery,',. Liquld1:44. Tablets $125 VASELINE Eine Teal .`" • Made in England , TOOTH Balsa Steribzed 9e om ina los 4s. The famous Turnbull quaiity for Giris andliOst, also Mites and Ladierlit-broken sizes etc. Save yourself ,soinet money on 'these. ' Children's Size g per Suit $1.00 Misses' and Ladies' per -Suit 449 iltAYSEit HOSE -49c t, A few pair of broken sizes etor, rn Kayier Silk Hose. Reg. 85e and $t 15 quality. 'Out they go, per pair, 406 TheCatutdian Tiroadcasting Commission is about to. enter upon a novel experiment which-, has as its purpose the interesting oE Canadian children in ballad having.to do With the history of • their own country. This will take the form Of a series of five broad Cats based on .Tohn XrrayGIh bott's recently publislied book elsTeW World Brtiltule« The broad- casts 'WO take place on stteceesive Vriday-iienings beginning Jan- , uttry 2 between the hours of 7.00 • to 7.30 eastern standard time, and be heard from eighteen ta tiorts Covering the entire conntry. Three of 'the piogrannnes ,Will originate in Toronto and the bal- lads be Illustrated by group of girl singers picked from..Tor- onto -high " schools and singing under tho direction of Leslie R. Bell, Director of Musie, •Orttitio C011oge of EdUcation, University of "l'oronto. The balance "of the programme will originate in Montreal with ballads sung by.the Westhill nigh Singers, a group .of girls from Westhill nigh ,Selltiol. This choir is under the. direction Of; trVitt Cooper, Supervisor of Mttsle for the Protestant tioard of School. Commissioners in the City of • .„ Montreal, and lectUrer at MeGill Conservatory of Music. An inter-. - estlfig feattire- of, the- experiment' - Is that school Children. in. Ontario have -been instructed' to "listen irt"! as part of their home work, and it Is eXDOcted that in other provinces the samo .action may' he taken. The attention of Alio. school- - children of Qu'ebee Province is also being drawn by 3)1T. W. P. • Percival, Diteeter of ,Protestant Education to`ibese broadcasts in the Interest of I5 eltool and (onn. innnity s1ng1n, Ulmer Piotut ,shows ,the.,Mmitres1 bor. and ,th lower picture the Toront6 choir. .'0'1 # ° • iit 1 " - SO VOt4 04‘. LW IfyouvatittOhelp keep a youthful figure ,ithd enjoy exottient heolth, start taking Dile Beanstonight. 4 7' Bi ILE BEIIMIS nif.-best'buy VELyEETA TISSIA1 • 200,-.10e 500-25t POTASSIUM IODIDE;, '356z4 oz.$L00 Rmvect) IRON • 20c oz. -2 oz.s. 35e SULPHATE OP IRON....100 lb. CATTLE firLPIIUR • „ 4 lbs. 25e • GLAUBER SALTS, .4 lbs. 2 11ELLEIIORE 4 Phone 90 Phone Phone 19, Pbo� 41 GODRICZt tt %swans