HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1941-07-31, Page 7PAZ JULX
THE GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR
row roit 04*NNINtir valym,
VlefATIME14
blittiler CANDIES ,
Many candy recipes tan be improve4d
• and' varied by. the addition of a per
eentageot fresh, Canned or dried fruits.
Fruit may ibe added to alnepet atty
steedarel eandy reeipe, :but tate folloae-
ing are, a few speelale gatherea, from
various' sources e
Fruit -jelly Candies
'Withl Fruit Juices ,
Juices with prononneed liavor$ are
best, but ettlY Of the many.fruit juleeS
niteY be used. The juices may be
(eaanned or enade fione the aresh fruit
by a procedere similar to. thet useeln
,jelle makiag. To julee•a laelting in
acidity (raspberry, strawberry, pear
and apple, if from very ripe- fruit),
sone-balf ounce (one level itablesPeoU)
of 'citric add should he added 'to each
'gallon of juice.
etra
--Fruit Juice, acidified If n.eoessary .... 1
, Sugar s
Corn sYruP %
pectin syrUP
'Mix •fruit juice 'and pectin eyrup.
Add sugar and eorn syrup. Boil to
222 degrees -223e degrees F., of' until
',strong jelly test is obtained. Re-
move from re, add 'chopped nuts if
desired, and ppur into oornstarch
inceulde or oiled pans. Mlow to harden`
twenty-four hours, r cut eb:eeta into
pieces, dust 'with powdered, sugar or
With Pulp of Fresh or Canned Fruits
With fresh fruits' cook until eoft and
kaiak through a screen'. Rub •canned
fruits through a sere:en without heat-
ing. ynth pulps lacking in acid add
.oneinarfer (cup of lemon juice or one
level teaspooftfel of citric acid to each.
two cups a pulp. After the pulp is
peepered •follow ithe recipe for fruit'
juice, substituting the pulp for the
juice.
With Dried Fruits
Refresh the fruits by soaking for :at
. least twelve hours, then -cook until
'Oft and rule through a ,screene The'
pulp -is then -used In 'a similar manner
° the pulp then fresh fruits.
maaa----"aaaa—D•azaplakartiaagarelatliallizlits •
..This dendy is .best with dried fruits.
Tim, dried fruies should 6ce1i0f5Ded ,or
• coarsely gro'utid.
1 cup sugar - . •
- 2 tablespoons' 'Cern syrup
1/2. cup water
1 cup -egg whites (beaten stiff)
• 1/3 rup chopped- or ground dried
• fralt
VI cup Chopped nuts (optional)
• sugar, corn -syrup and, water
• to 252 degrees P or to a "light crack."'
.„aseete "at. Add syrup gradually- to the ,stiffly
' • . feepase- beaten white of .,egg, -beating ,the mixe
•eeture until stiff., Addaalried fruit and
nuts; mix 'well and pour into greased
or oiled pan to. 'harden. PIUS candy
• becomes' hard, so it should be con-,
• sumedavithin a rweekafter it is Made.
- Fudge with Frwits •
Chopped or ground dried, fruits may
be . added to, any ,fudge recipe to pro-
,• duce a variatien in texture and flavor.
• tablespoons pewdered or granu-
lated gelatin
ae. epee water, hot
ee, lee cup corn *syrup
lee cup powdered sugar .
_ cup dried fruit (eh,opped) •
aaa ' Dissolve gelatin in the hot water.
eeolt • the corn syrup to 250 degrees F:
(hard ball): Beet into it the ,dissolved What comment is to be =tie upon
gelatin and powdered .sugar until light. such ,a vomment,.in view 02 the quite
Flavor . with vanilla. Then- add ,frna iireolitto.vettibie fact of history that
• and pour -on piled paper Or slab to Great Britain gave up those gold lands
harden, • •
Who Owns the British Empire?
lily NOMI•Th Jnefl
When Celonel Liatibeegh declared
that, aasie 'cause Of the Preeeat
lay in 'the fact (that "Britain ()woe teee
Muelz, et the. werldfs' Wealtheo-ald
Geimaely. Coo little." he Wai expreasing
a view of the Britisteranpire very eOfil*
Mon ill Amerlea. allritein," declared
Senator Clara in the recent debeae'.9111
the Lend-Leaae Bill, "is fighting to
retain her hold upon the riches of her
.141upire," Ile went on to dee,lare
among "German Naziem, Italian. Pas,
cism, Russian Conimunisin, ead British
Iniperlaitera titer° Is little to choose."
And Seldator Nye: '"Tliekreatest ag-
gressor In all modern history has been
the Bratiele Empire, That Empire is
theedespotie, arbitrary .and, oometimes
tyrannical ruler of'almost (half a billion
people." Senator Chandler warned
against shedtilng American blood "in
order to allow the British to enslave
the people in their (oversea] posses -
Tilt§ picture ,of John )Bull as a Pluto -
crepe landowner, possessing more Pro-
perty than he tan properly nse wKle
others laek Space," is of course
the standing thenfe of mini' German
advocacy. Elitler insists that ityls gross
inauetice for a small—nation of 45
million people to "own a quarter of the
earth."
Now, obviously, it is -of vital -concern
to •Ameriettne to know whether -this
'pletureeef !Britain terra- true pletaree Per
on the 'verdict depende Whether Am-
• erica is aiding justite, or injustice,
freedom or mere imperialist advantage.
What are the fae_ts?
The facts are .that Great Britain does
not "own" the empire at all.
Not merely has -4-ohn Baal s' no pro-
prietaryy rights whatever in Canada, or
Australia, or South Africa, or New
Zealand, or -Newfoundlea, or Imland;
but the British goVernment draws no
tribite at all from them 'or from, any
Colony " whatsOever. On the contrary
the 'British taxpayer is often mulcted
2for the dense and development of_the
overseae territories.- _
e..-ar....esekeethatheaamostainteert-
ant .part., -
• The British people do net even govern,
the greater part 'of their overseas
sessions." For during the laet 70 years ,
'Britain ha k carried onla process of 'ire-
sb that • what was
originelly an Empire has, for the
greater pert, ceased so -to -he one e what t
we're caeginally col•onies have become
independent stiltes. They have at-
tainedi without war the independence
feta which 'the thirteen American Col-
onies had to fight.:
When the statement is, made -that
Canada; and Aastralia and the, other e
Dominion's are independent nations, r
moat reatiera'simply do not 'believe it.
yet we arepob in the region of opinion,
but of:statutory' fact. '
. Te get an idea -of how vast is the 4,1
pia between reality and prevailing
opinion, examine this paragrapleirom
syndicated column in the New York
Journal -American: •
Elig',1andl never abandons any-
thing—never any conaniereial bene-
fit, never any military advantage,
never any valuable territory,
never any etralegre halter. Can
anybody imagine England's giving
uP the great gold lands of the
Rand? Certainly not.
whi'belatee reet "own" ...Canada seal
'veatlY Mere ta Canada than ateee !Gault
Britain, the aeWner." Valeada'al
ex-
p�rta to British Empire mapkete have
igeen eotaetleing like twice leer leeperte
keen the 4Empire; andi Beitaitaa :trade
has eelWays been far Marewith nen-
Empire then wita EMPire ecaantrles.
Let uS iet down concretely the facts
which treveat most clearly What athe
Britisal "Empire" has becOme. We
eltotad think, foe example, e Auatralia
san uaUGn:' quite as independeat as
were Belgium and 'NerWay beforetheir
S'ubjtigation,-byvGermauY ; having' its
own, pa.rliament, Its own army and its
oven ,tlavy controlled by! 'Jae own parlia-
ment, devising its own tariffs (Domin
ion tariffs ofteil hit ,i3ritish trade very
severely), pa tug its own immigration
laws (some f which rigidly exclude
eertn1nhitasof British. sgbjects1),,,ap:
Pointing its own foreigneerelifeeenta
tivee, (bothVanada nod Australia lhave
ministers in Washington and other
eaeltals)' baying, indeed; Its own col-
onies anddependeneies (Australia has
several in 'the Pa(.ifie) ; linVing power
to :maintain relatiOns
vvitli Britain's enemy, if it so t heoSe$
(Eire le still neutral—the Clerman
moister in even nowliving peacefully in
Dablin, and *son* '300 'Germans are
movaag freely about Ireland.).
Brita1n60-adel. apoasessionere
there are as many .different forms of
government. Some ---the Most import-
ant -a -are independent; some (like the
West Indies) poesess legislhaeres or leg-
jelatiee eouncile, and have gone already
a long Way toward practical self-gov-
ernment. From none is tribute exacted
and to many eon,sidertable subsidies
from the Brialeh taxpayers are paid.
Where administration has been mainly
arotn London, it hes often been bad.
At the evils have been due not to a
endence to expialtation but 'to the
tendencyabf Landon to' interfere as little
as pos.eible. !If there had.been more of
"Imperialist exploitation" in, shy, the
West Indies, there raigat have been less
of pavertya and the British taxpayer
would not today be handing out large
But what what about India? How many
are aware that for 20 years India has
nade ber owaeteriff, and has used that
tareffanaking power agaAnd again
to, eXclude 'British goods; and that,
even when Britain' 'controlled 'ladle's.
tariff; the Indian market was open to
be whole world on equal -terms, Britain
cleaning no advantage for herself?
That the evolution, of 'India toward
Dominion status should be slower than
in the case of nations like Canada as
easily explained., India is not a nation,
M
but a -group of many 'separate peoples,
iffering in cultures, languages, re-
igions, social habits far more than,the
nations of continental Europe differ
one from enothee. The, degaees of de-
elopment' in India range from that
he Stone Age to that of a sophisticateal
culture. Before the British tame there
was indeed no such' unit es aaladia."
The Indians didenot knoW the word.
These indubitable facts bear on •Bil-
taia's hesitation to grant India Domin-
ion status in existing.conditions of the
-world. „rrhere would follow a patie
tion of India between, say, Russiaand
Japan, just as Russia and Germany
have, recently partitioned' Poland. In
other words, Britain weuld repeat, on a
1)
V.St 13T greeter scale,the situation which
she now confronts as •the result of hay -
Inge granted Dominion stLI
re,
to La ree
Iler evacuation of the Irish navalabases
has immensely increased her defense
,
a__..
0
f
that tune the authdrity of the British (
q t Rand about 30 eeare ago? At
syrup or finely ground'
serves inay be used instead, of el
fruit at the rate of 2/3 cup
elem. reelpe.
Clear. as -Mud -
- -My good wothan," said the learned
• judge, "you 'must give an answer in
the Pewest -possible words of which
• you are vapalde, to the plain alai;
• simple question whether, when you.
'were crossing -the street with the baby
ou _y,tur a on, and tiete bus `was coming
down on the right side am' ate taxi on
the- eIt and the motorcycle was try-
ing to pass the bus, you 'saw the
plaint in' netween ,,the motoreyele and
the taxi, or • whether, and when you
saw him at. all, /and whether or not
near ,the motorcycle, taxi and bus, or
, either, Or any twci, and which of them
• resid.ctIvely, or how it
•
1
- •
1111111011111111.
• ROUND TRIP
RAIL TRAVEL BARGAINS
August 8-9
GODERICH to
Toron• to • - $ 3.90°
Belleville $ 7.30
Chapleau $16.70
• Hamilton – $ 5.05
Kingston - $ 175
Owen Sound $ 7.50
Peferboro - $ 6.20
Schreiber ' - $24.10
• Smith Falls - ' $10.05
Sudbury * - $11.60
v. 0
arid Marry antermediate • points,
(Government tax 10% extra) :
For train eervieee, lipits ete.,
Consult Agents—Procure Dodger
0. E, SMITH, Uptown Agent
Canadian Pacific
goxernment over them was.coMpletely
sdrrendered to the South African
Parliament, s0. that today larttainehas
no more epoaat o%er the mines of the
Rand _than it -,..has over .thoSe of
Colorado. If the South African 'Perna.
meet voted to confisaate tlie shares of
every American 11,11, - British share: -
holder in the Band mines., the Bete/eel'
goveanniant .would t)e. rather les le
than the American, government to do
ankthing Vint it. ,
And •-whg.teeeetall be said- of this
columuest statement that. England
noVer surrenders a strategic 'harbor?
Just before he wrote that paragraph,
-the Americhn press had been puntsbin
news that Mr. De Valera Was sill
refusing to permit' tae British .govern
meta, to uSe the harbors in South
ern • Ireland, harbors of ife-and
dea th ' strategy , importance for cl tea
Britain. This refusal Nee cost Brita h
many 'a shaffsand-meny a life, -So Ills
has the refeeal of Me. De Valera mail
recentik to blaekont Dublin. _From
Irish aitiee Nazi. raiders were lime to
get their aearings and destroy English
• lennee in "Averpool.
• IS ° journalist :Whose eolumn
is supposed to •be read hy ten n1)111101
People. It fs his .business to watel
publie even ts. Net the old ca tchword
(e-ee'Empire," • .idinpih•ialistn.‘"---still main
tain their magical power-over.hinr 11
the _fee(' ,the facts.. And hie ease
Fie typiela of that of hunataas Of writers
all over the world. With casu,a1
coneern they ignore evenezras signific-
• ant .as the achievement of the inde-
tielidelice of the 'United States.
For, after all, the Statute of West-
minster in 11931 was the aecaaration of
itnkpendenee , SOMP Nal atione (with
enote to conie ), embraefte nearly, ten
times as many,people as were living in
the thirteen roleniee when •they got
• their hulepe (T. 1 tS„ explicit terele
haveleft the Do/11161one in no wily elite
jeet to the government of Itritain'! "No
law hiqyafter made lea tile 'Parliament
of the United Kingdmit eetend to
any of the Dominions as part of , the
` law of that Dominion: . ."
irowever, even when plain facts suet'
as those eonrern(d with the South
Africaili',1nines are i)ointed- (1111, the
question remains, are it ot the
shares in the South Afriean minee held
by the Britieh? Certainly. But that
detee !not prevent Soeta Africa !being an.
• independent state; nip power to tax
or confiscate the araperty of 'British
ehareholdere just as ,ruthlessly ne in-
dependent BIN has cantleentea (whin
propertiee. Britioh 'fiefenclers .not
'own 'Property Merely in South' Afrien ;
:they own mines in Mexim.rallwaye in
moraine, qzzlee a number of factories
in the Mated gtates. I3ut. -does) this'
mean that these countrie ttie part of
e t t)11 Empire ? ,Vor a long
time Ameriean, investments' in Canada
lieve been at leant double thov of'
Great 'Britain, And. with the sale of
BritiSh'secnritie3 in. the Statea
to pay for war material .4morican.9 will
owre,ptill ShOtdd we then be
justified in iteilaring that Canada is
part Of the American "Empire"?
2o with trade. The INited ;fates,
liffiettlties at a time when shestand.s in
lortal peril.
Is itrealist to expect a iveat state to
.onnnit, suieide on behalf of the "in-
tependenve" 02 501114? other state know-
• .ing full well that thesuivide, far from
• serYing .the pu rpose' of such independ-
ence would quite certainly bring it to
an end? Britain's defeat would mean
the <Ind of theeledealendeeteg,.ofalreland,
and the prospective. ithiependenee of
India, quite as much as it would mean
the end of the independence of Britain
herself. ••
BritAin meantime continues. to pre-
.
pane the peoples of India for self-
! r t II • •
. (3 a e -gone
141 dint' y be gathered from the .fact
1 that in the goveynment of 'a countryot
- nearly • 400 million -people . there .are
- barely 1000 Britteh Officiate. In the'
- making of laws,, the work :orthe court.s,
t the management of the cities, ef tire-
) public. utilities, the schools', the aos-
o• pitals..not one in iv thdusand employes
15 Itritish._ The .rest are .
Under British' rule, India has built
35,009 mileS of railroad which have
enormously diminished famine by quick
ca rein geeof grain. If he 'WI:Ming of
„these -raj lroadS had depended upon
' Indian vapital, moSt. of them would
'I never ini.ve been built at all. India's
irrigation system, is now the greatest.
the' world. over 20,000 miles of
•
11I i11 11 ted in theTunjab alone,
lund over 14 million aerie; are irrigated
the country 115 Whole. . t'nder one
single.; project --that of the Bbakre Dam
whiela will be 394 .feet high—the area
to lie irrigated . will be four, Li .111 the
whole irrigated area of Egypt.
4 enial -vapital.for these projects have
been fontid withottt 'the ,guarantee of
the British 'government, or the projects
-,themselves parried through by a 'a •
nt country without the co-operation of
British industry?" Britain has. been
guilty of grave offenses in- the govern!:
nient of India„iust thealtritieh -goo.
ernment leis been guilty of gilave
ofren.svs, in the eovernment 'of Britian,
But if, our final aidgment of the net
results in_ India is- even to approach
fairness, British achievements omst he
set againet the offenses.* •
Diarrboea'--
,Dysentery,,
If you are Auddenly hitacketwith
• diarrhcea, dYaeutery, colic, cram& or
pains in the stomach or bowels, or
•any looseness of the bowels' do not
wastd valuable time, but at once pro-
cure a bottle of Dr. Fowlerar,Exe
tract of Wild Strawberry ana see
how quickly it will give you relief.
Where you me "Dr. Powler'e"
you are not experimenting with somo
new afta unttied remedy, but ono
that has stood th% test ef tirato, ono
that has been on the nntrket for tlte
past 04 years, Beware, df substi-
tutes. tatty he tdangcreua to
your health.
Get "Dr. Powler >a" and feel safe.
Tito T. Milburn CO., Ltd., Worelito, Oat.
The* elternative imerizaism—the
government of one eau n try 1ty another
--is not for, Oftell he independent:
that means in practice chaos. It is,
rather, partnershipeel a beefs' of equal-
ity.. Toward an eamility of right,
among inneners, are Britiell Common-
wealth le on the whole assuredly work-
ing. In 11'n 41narelde world which above
itil,1104,41 integration, we shall not, if
WP are destroy such itil)ogrations
as history Ilea lemiteethed to us.
*Por an American- teetimony to the
British part in India's development, see
Sam Higginaottem, The 'Gospel And the
RIough. •
A small boy walked into the, ,store
and put five coppera on the counter.
"Well, yottiig man, do you want conte
eandle0" erreaea, ago& Ghop
keeper. .
"I sure do:" wplied the ihoy, "hat
my mother wauto 4 bai, et f3oap."
•
The hemenaalzer, th &era taa the
ClOnbie reVoilSibility of (keepinee the
family fit and of cOneerving •C'anatia'a
eliaplue oa perishabie foOde. :TO. !aware
patter heeith, ,prOvision eliouleabe
Made ,1winterS eneala h pie -
serving fruit and 'vegetables wilelle they
are pleeztiful fld inexpeneiy`e.
sCanalielee is a:teethed Of iproserving
feed 6y anean's of heat and !peeking in
allietight leontainere of 'glees in, tiia.
This .methOd of peoceseing preserves
the food while reteinang as nearly as
possible its nateaal CPlor amEfflaVor.
By meanS ef canning, perishable
fe)ods are eliettibuted over the season
fled in places Where they are not avail-
able !when free'''. •
It poaeible vegetablee should. be.
served 'with every dinner and lunela
eon. Canned ' vegetables are good
when merely heated, but ean be•made
'into a (great (variety oa ditshes with
.metre Or at archy tOods, •, •
, Fruit* .With their dell color and de
-
Helens flavore obtar opportunity to
display ,canning k,U1. Canned ' (fruits
Make an appetizing dessert"used just
as they come frier°, the jar. The
drained fruit makes attrOtive salads.
The Juices ar4 good appetizers or wben
combined make delitious fruit drinkre
Canned !fruits can also be us4d in pies,
puddings, - ud- a Sauces .for- ice cream.
ISnecessful canning depends largett
-on-understanding -the- eausee of spoil-
age and the 'methods of prevention.
The canning iproces is Simple, vette-
ticale and requires no special equipe
ment. Only fresh products ahoirld be
canned. 'or the best results fruits and
vegetables Should be 'canned the day
they are gathered:,
A variety of containers is aVnilabfe.
Tins require a special sealing anaehino
but there is no danger of breakage,
and the tins may be used several times;
thus recibuilw cost.
Glass jars are commonly uSed for
home-eanninge' These are obta inable
iii-half.piet, pint, quart and twoluart
eizes. ,AnSiesize 'can be used for, vege-
tables if -aTelaialaiaarifillaraafeadin wee -
sure, but only, half-phit or one -pint
sizes are safe wheu sterilized in the
water bath. '
Some types of jar have h 1ass 'tow
with a metal 'screw. ring. , Others have
screw caps with (poree.lain lining. Sonie
have -glass -tops :-with -metal spring.
clanirp.and now a VR6111111 seal jar with
etraight sides and glees top is avail-
able. Whichever type is- selected, it
must be air -tight. There must be no
chips in the -top of the jar or lid.
The seal is formed by rubber rings.
Rubbers are important. They muet
be elastic. Oita rubbers are ,not safe.
Sterilization is carried out by steam
under preSsure, by boiling water, free
steam or dry heat , of the oven. The
method should be chosen for the 'pro-
duct, For example: vegetables (re-
qiiire high temperature and therefore
pressure sterilization, is, recommended,
while for tender fruits such as bearies.
the •O'en or steam process is best.
.Over -cooking breaks nee tender fruits
a od destroys color.
The time required for processing
varies greatly with the product and
the process used. Vegetable, being
non-acid. reeuire a long sterilization ;
fruits in heavy syrup will keep well
whet? processed a short Mae. "Wben
artabstaeaater be used for pies or for
special diets.- they will keep ‘iyell with=
out sugar:, 'Poi. this purpose five min-
t • 1. be a(1(141 to the time re-
quired when syrup .is peed.
Further information on home -can-
ning i,i given in Publieation 534. "Home,
Claiming of Fruits and Vegetables,"
and Publication d2, "Home Preserva- 1
don of Nfats and Poultry." Copies of
these pamphlets are sent free of charge
pn application to the Publicity and Ex-
tension Division. tneTihrtmp.nt of Agri -
Ottawa.
nped i m en tal
• The min is t4 ha called the
, widow to offer 'condolences.
"'That you have thesympathy of all
the village should 1* .some ,eninfOrt-to
you." he murmured. "andyou know, to
whom to turn for consolation."
eYes,". she said bet ween her 'sobs,
"lint I den't think bell marry me with
three ehildretr.7 • .
Z'uriela 4115 a iiew engin:0; with'
enemivals and a pikluilter glatirautooilte
throat. a atreaell of water ov-pr the
higheSt Infilding, ire the Village.
arolui MCulligan, an elderly re.',,Ident of
,Egmondville, fell front hie Wye* 'eat'
Thursday morning and *as severely
injured, Ile *as taken • to %lie 'lijoSpital
for treatment.
The will of the late Mrs. John
,Whittailear of saeaforth conthlue a be-
etteet Of $3,000 to Fiast Priesbyterian
,church, Seaforth, and 0114? of a like
°amount to the SeafOrth Club,
Bert litiaing, ILondesboro, had the
to lose about' eighty three-
Monthseeld pullets (me night recently;
all *big killed and left scattered over
the fields. It is 'believed either dogs or
foxes did the Mischief.
, After a long, illness, !Robert Menne,
formerly of (Clinton, died -on July latir
at the home of his brother, George
Mennel, )UarPurhey. •Ile waS in his
eightleth,-year. A daughter, Mrs. Zeats
of Toronto, survives.,
'Riehard Jeckline orlGrey township,
'died on Taursday last at the home- of
his son; Harold, 3rd eoneesaloa of
mal
*ts tOwasehIP,, in. his
sIxty-
year. ;His wife predeceased'. him and
he is survived by four ions and two
daughters.
• The Wingham Pualle •Sch-eol Board
has appointed •Miss ',Norma Coutts,
daughter of Mr: and Mrs. R. A. leloutts
of Wingham, to fill the vacancy on the
staff caused by the enlistment of Harry'
Beown. afisa ()teats has been teach-
ing at Orangeville.
o
:Milne Rader has eold his '125 -acre
farm On the 15th 'concession of Hay
towaship to Jos. IDucharme, of Centre
Line mieh., a eon of the late Peter
Dueharine, formerly if liesident of the
&inch eettion. Mr. and Mrs. Rader
will move to ,:Zurich ix_the
Seaforth bas bast an Oki resident
in the death otiCarolyu Leslie,' Widow
of the late ,ffugh :Grieve, which oc-
curred on 'Saturday, hi her ninetieth
year.. Two -.I sonS and onel d a Lighter
survive:. James 'Grieve; -of North
Dakota ; Joseph, of Grosseetsle,
and 'Mrs. John ateinae, of yamilten.
The oldest resident-, -Of the ,Seaforth
district. Mrs. 'Robert, Charters, died.
Jule 23rd, in her nieetatixth year,. at
her home on the Mill road, Tucker,
emith. Mrs. Oharters, whose maiden
name Was Elizabeth !Chesney, was born
in Tncke mith and spent her whole
life in that township. • tiler husband
died in 1913, and .surviving are .two
sons and two daughters, six egeand-
ebilaren ,and she- grettt-grandcfi4drn.
A sister, Mrs. T. M. 'Cleleve E,ginond-
vine,' fa the 'last 'aurviving nierabee 'of
a family of ten.
Orville. alabkirk, well-knoWn busi-
nesseman of Wingham,. died on ..July
22nd after an illnes.s a some Weeks.
Iie, had- operated a barber shop in
Wing -bane for -twenty years and pre-
viously had lived at • 'BreeeeLs and
Bleevele.., .11e was in his forty-ninth
year and was chairman of the Wing -
ham ,pualie School 'Board, Surviving
are his wife, formerly Mabel Bennett
of Walton, on son and one daughter.
A'n old resident -of :Seaforth, in the
person {of John H. Beat passed away
on 'er nesda:c, July _Aro, at the age ,
of eighty-three years -Ile had lived
•
la Seaford' for fifty-six years and was
factory manager for the Canada Furni-
t u re Manufacturers there for some I
years., He was h prominent Mason,
be 111 g• it past -.AI side t &put y g,rand
master: lie is survived by .his se.cOnd
wife a pd. one son, Ken nefli ; also by
two eons by his former wife, Arthur'''.
Beid.'of Toronto, and F. C. O. Reid, of
I >et .
Foien—Ross '•
. .
At the manse of St. Andrew';i ITnited
chnrch, Coniston, out.: on July letle
311 1',% 'Adeline, youngest daughter .of
Mr. and. Mr.. M a leohn Ross. W hi te-
church, was u iliVed In marriage to 'Sem
Sieurd Martin, son, of Mrs. 'M. Foien
011(1 the Poien of Norway. Rev.
Graydon 0. Cox officia tea. . Guests
were present from Whitechurele Tor-
onto and Sudbury.
Firelain Farquhar
1it a ceremony velebratell iintetly, at
S.Paul'e3 „Anglican eliurch, Clinton,
4)n July 19th, Margaret Ellen, daughter
of the late Mr. 4nd. rs. Wilfred Ear.
(Inbar, . was united in marriage to
Royee Premlin, son of' Mr; and
Prendin, both Of gintons
,Rev. George W. Moore ofaciated. Mr.
and Mrs.lErezniin will reside; an.
.„...
Prolned in
Swimming Pool
sGladstone at(laay. twenty year' .IJ
.son. of Mr. avid Mrs. !Hugh alelaAY or,
:Brussels, ,,vas drowned in a awimming
peal at llaistowel on Sunday. 1114
body was ifenued(lying at thebottem of
the pool, where the water was about
nine feet deep. It was explained that
because of the „large .number in", the
poet at the tane youngMeaCay's disap-
waren& was not toticed,
Farm Home near
Blyth .Burned
•
Daring the electriewl storm on Sun-
day evening the house on the farm of
James "aleffron .e Mile west of Blyth
•onethe AfiburneBlyth road, was struck
by lightning and destroyed by- the
fire whfeh folItataeal: -Tire house was
'occupied by Mr. and Mrs. 'Shoebottom
and family, 'whet lost practically all
the contents. Mr. •!Sboebottom, who
was seriously injured in an accident
last fall, was reznoved to the Falconer.
home across the road.
Boy Rescued by
Midway Worker .
• Eleven-yeat-old Ronald Browne, a
Toronto boy visiting his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Browne, at Wing -
ham, owes this life to a member of a
iniclWay cornPany that was showing in
Wingham• last week. Young Bromley
EWE
alatilaValle, Jolly >4.,--latie laieleee *air-
leY anti Nornia Sherwood are 'Walla*
in a feW daye at Port. Albert itet reteaet4
of tireir ealieinea tbe Mieeea TWatalela
a aliattrape, etetheir summer etetteeet.
Mr. 1.Tee it,ralastou. of aloderieh, mud
hie brOther Will, ()f lalotallatide, Mete,
,
vent, a. few honreewith tbeir toUlda,
and brotheranlw, Sant SherWeed,
Congratelationa are extended to aalr,
aled Mre. Vernon Hunter (nee Anna
'Treleaven), of Imeituolv, on. the
rival of a baby daughter in Goderrell
'hespital .0e July., alet. , AU are &lag
liae
Slitis iDerttlie'llkirnin of Fergue Spent
the weekeenel at the, heine of her uncle,
air. Orville Olaurnin.' .
The weathereaan Opened the water
tape (trice more and thie. lOcalitY :Wake
treated to niee raffle leet (night and
thiS MOrning, ' wbieh , Were Very,
benefieral • '' i
' air. Wm. Preaelt reeeived liorct et:wee
time, ago that his hem° in 'Belfast, Ire-
land, had been blowtr to ateme. What
makes"it seem Muele wore Is that hie
mailer 1$ ate - eldarly aeelY to • bave ' e
'no home to call her own; .'• '
Zirs..,iiiarry ISliddletOn :and little
Lynn, of daervie, ate si)ending "a .',ee'vr
(Jaye' at the henre of Mr. arid afte. seeeil
1 Blake.
, Mrs, 'Bruce' McArthur. and two Arad.
Teo, 0 ilioneton, spent Saturday tre
alueate alif Mr., and ,afrsa.Cecia 'Blake.
NILE
NICE, July .29.-4liondesboro softball
team played at Nile last Thursday
night. °Phe score was ten to thirteen in
favor of Londeaboro. -MIAs was the
best game play& at Nile this SCason.
Mrs, Albert Than(nee» May Me. "
Diarmid) 'and children; of Toronto, left,
Lr lion* on Sunday after 'a month's
visit with her parents. The Children.
remain until school opens:
•Threshing was in progress on Mon-
day morning until a shert, welcome
dowapotir of, ramstopped operations -
severe electrical storm. which.... -
passed over these parts, on elSunday
longing to to Wilmer Rutledge . was
knocked down in the stable. ,
Mr. A. W, Young has pnrchnsed a
new threshing machine. sHe won't
have to wnit on ether threehees now.
Whether he intends to doacustom work
or not is not known to your correspond-
ent. • e
Mr. _Albert *Caen, 'from
visited wit') his mother, brotirees and
sister last week and reline:led homie
en-(aturcky.
'
'Miss Ruth Cantwell, Who was honee
for, a week or so, returned oneSatardaY'
fell into a -twelve-footedee h 1 —
Maitland River at the C.P.R. briage
Ifirriffrell-Tircirm-FIO-TEe-ThiFaW7-the-
midway man jumped in and pulled
him to safety. A doctor was called and
found that theelad in falling had struelc
ate head on the wooden piling of the I
bridge, musing unconsciousness,. ° Tbe •
a ieeovered quickly., .
Growine-Sugar -beet
Seed in Usbonte
therto practically -all the sugar
,beet 'seed used in •Caneela that come
from Central Europe, but 'War has cut
off tbe, supply from these countries '
-and it has been found necessary to
grow the seed in Canada and the
I nited ,atates. It requires two years
te. elevelop the •seed. The first year
small' beets are grown. These are
placed in pits for the winteraan•d are
planted out in the spriak. The stalks
grow 'from Tara) to five feet, tally- and
aree heavy with' seed. They fire, ha r -
vested' by sickle and threslied valth a
:combine. A good 'field will average
around 1,500 lbs. of seed to the acre,
the price this year being 12c a paund.
The seed has been grew!' th,ist year on
several farms in Ushorne township for
•tlee first time, ana- has been found
to be aigood sample.
LEEBURN-
• ..1.deldlat'ataa, July 28.—Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Freeman 'and their two sons
rind daughter, from Wairifleet, motored
here last Saturday to visit relative.
Mrs. Arthur Fulford and son ,Ed-
ward, of ,Gotleriela visitea Miss ealarie
Fulford •eilid other friend's here last
weea.
Rev. diazlewomi will be away for
the month. of August. 'There will be no,
service in Leeburn church next Sim -
day. on .,,engust 10th and 17th service
will be conducted 'by Mr. 'Clarence
g -ii a n of Whiteeh urch.
'The W. • M. • Soeiety ate invited to
hold their .Aninist meeting ,at the home
of Mrs. Jas. Thimilton.,''Sewg•ate street,
Goderieh. on August lath. I7filon
ebureh W.M.S. also are invited to ,this
meeting.'
Master Fre nele Karam' spent
week holidaying in Goderieh:
• The threshing: machine Ls expected
to begin operations here next • week
to Delhi, where she has been worlearg.
HQLmEsv,ILup
allOMIESVMDE, July 29, — The
following articles were shipped last
week from. thelocal aranch a the
Med Cross Society: 7 quilts, 16 hos-
pital jackets, 4 girls' dresses, 1 child's
kimono, 1 suit pyjamas, 1 slip, and 1
pair Woomera. aeoeer of the gnats and
three -dresses were donated by the
Holinesville Junior Red 'Crass.
HELP THE RED MOSS
MIMOMMIMEMMIIMM
Agonizing
Eczema -(San Rheali)
No ret4 day or night, for thee'
aftlicOd with that awful skin die- .
ease, eczema, or salt rheum as it Is
commTheonlinytense:called.,iiirning, awing aad 1.
smarting, espocially at night, ow
.1 when the affected part is exposed te
strong heat, or,,hot water, are almost
unbearable, and relief is ils.(117:
vgde4Tmed.
oget rid of ec.zeina it 411 Dike/.
,1
sary to haye- the blood cleansed by
the use of a thoroughly 'reliablei
blood medicine such as Burdock
,Blood Bitters which during the peat!
. 60 yearS has met, with groat -success,
• inrelili
eving gilsd such diseases
seebiropertlita °Pixi
elennsianpurifyinges.
•
Tho T. Milburn Co., 1.14., Ilaronto, Ont„,
Iiiminimm611111111
„0:1911. 'EVER
ee•
visit a home to which you liave not been ,Invited.? Perhaps
you do occasionally, but ,do you really feel iuite com-
fortable? °
And that is kid how people 'feel avhe 1 they go into a stoto
-
that doesn't advertise, or in° other words, invite them in.
THE SIGNAL - STAR
can easily, solve that problem for you.
e