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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1945-11-08, Page 7Sugar is iiat�. of 'course the lresea • ssu a weet the Jess Coke .,.�.., you et fox: .Coca-Cola never corn .fir. mises with Come what may, ,tnhere's one fact Ur ilk you can, always eouit on the t X, Coke you 0- get is the real thing! Authorized Bottler of "Coca-Cola" BAXFIELD. Nov. 7. LLC.:god Weston, of It.C.A.•1:, Centralia, le Spending a -week's furlough. at his :home here. . •, . The wi irgeese have returned to this district- after an absence of live yearn. Ken. Brandon bagged.iive, Mei; Davison. two and, Glens ,Brandon one • on. Tues day morning. " A party of Zurich hunters bagged twenty-eight; Garfield Westlake shot an Arctic owl on, the north pier last week. • It had: a ninge s read of si feet. 'There were tree 0• them on the pier, Miss Jennie Grant left on Wednes-• day• for 'J'oronto after spending the past 'Sit months in the village. Mrs, Mary Cox left on,,Tuesday for Grand Forks,IND., after spending the past font months =wit relatives. • ' Glenn Smith of London: spending on is' ;a weweek'sVacation'With,. his grand- mother, M and- .,. mother, Mrs. 'Chas. Parker,• 'Mr. and Mrs. Henry Miller„ •of Mt. Clemens, Mich., spent a few days' with Mrs • M. EMI* this week. ' - ' • About one • hundred and fifty were present atthe Town Hall on. Friday evening when members, of 12.0.1 2. No. 24, ,thele wives and families enjoyed. a goose supper; Ashort- program was enjoyed and dancing followed, On Tuesday evening a reception was held in the Town Ilall in ;honor of Mr. and Mrs. James Cruikshank* of Clinton, who were presented'* with a floor lamp and satin eiderdown. The evening was spent•, in., dancing. • • No Apples for Cider Mili, Ta'or • the CHECKED X a f yr€ -or Morey thick. Por quick relief Irons I �metelter~atbie a t; nab* tdothl itlig e 'Soothes, cpmforts Wan Itching. Itch Don't suffer. Ask our ddruggist tido fie P. D. D. PRESCRIPTION. r y' pp��--�-r '{ •: {� v v'�•1 •.}}.ti. �? Y'ti�i,� {:•i+:1�:ri:�Y :.•.{.... •:?O ' {ri• •. •.: tiv'L�+ `�}'� •{i.•:•:•:•: }�•:: S'�' : �?; :S �'�'�: SIXTY ¥EAARS OF PROGRESS �Q�� f• flraf,t ',time f htetory •of"13aatd«' th e ad s Autumn ow $to mahe a complete failure a -the apnle erop. This industry Waal .at*rted Over a 3veratY- iive years ago by Rohn. m emeinhaardt. and is now run by bis two > randsone,- Ch,atrles .aaa ongitt taieemetniaardt. r let r o f al toiidon • tauiferin i kvisited,th pa'st week. With., Mr, ,M d 'M I3 d u p cawlazad, to V r o is t.. , g ���'r�� , 0- ' ' fir, and Mrs, �'�b�m Edward R f from ''an aceident which befell' her ro of Ethel, Greg* township, eeleba:aa.te! . CREWE, Nov. 6. Miss Agneas .Mal- their oldezt .wedding recently.. y 4 : • while, she was assisting , father in $ unloading "t rrii al •from, af. wati�oa<s in oc e .., .. •. y . r. !alta '• r _ rs. roWn aa' na , 'the barn, She jumped firora the wagon gun er of auk, r mss, t :., 'a and Mrs,,a � « • • e� ' vial -lin :have moved f oaat�;St* . lap , .0 V erne, r. d. Durum or Dss s t 8 where they Ii ve taken , over Mrs. E .brother, Mr. T. ,M. Durnin, Mossop's general store. . , with bis Exeter lawn bowlers. are' ' ontem l at, and Mrs. urnin, Mr. Bert Treleaven spent the week-' Aingotihaefoeccktiroenoaynmet/aclbueb,horomee. end withMr, and Niro. Vernon Hunterdyhnlnee a pro;ecti.yind • M' I,uckiiow, .. Winghani had .a subcessful .horse logs 0' 11 *.artist. samara , 11'. Mr. F Doreit hick O. punter of iti*raatig•;r noir• •" end visitors with Mr. Asti' Belt. Mrti,U ' Will. Lon. Who w '* Panful a�t` last weekr hcr. 41100ter, is getting a ascan be expected- Macs« WtIt ri 41id Inxtid *asst 400444 lag 4 few da w It' j�, Mt.s J'erviaa„,. at HoJar •����,Mr. •�}s�nd Mrs. * Verna 0 ..SX4ra�e' i' . liUl note) ed' to • O IA to ' /rt IntrtlY filled baytuoW and slid, on Saturday anape :a law da t, gi .Bowden. t47' the $oor, lauding oris tori• Of a lrt Mf`« and Mrs. handled fork which pierced the lilr.. and. Mrs. Sniy'lie and MistIV- Mr, G. G O •Dorniu of Windsor spent show on Thursday last, And, Kin= abdomen, Acer• condition ter °a time was critical,' but at later report* she • was getting along nieely. . < BENZ TILL his hoMe b,er � �.. he week -end at M e . and sardine's .annual 'horse show on• Friday i BT,INMI��+D' Il♦, �!o`P`, fi.--�11a k .8'lF�,t'►` With friends .1Goderich, also .iso drew .a, large attendance of:ex- Mr. x e • g hibito s and s c ors. services will be held ,14 B nnal ler , Mr, and Mraa, Roy Maize of Wing'haim • ., ., r n . • � last �, 1 . , were Sunday visitors with. Mr. 'and At, the auction sale of the • am ,and Uliiited. church next Sunday, November Mrs. C Crozier. effects .. of the late - Edgar 1 . 'Butt, 11, Rev', it l C, * > 1, •Cronhielm will - LAO. • Lloyd Vinasigaia,,Mrs. Finnigan, Bertha and Bobby, of Blake, were one ray, of Jiensall, visited With Mr. a Mrs., C. A. Vanatone last Wedne r`• illoving #•o . Gotlerkh ar M'o last Miss` B. bong and Mrs« 6. VAX - „Stone presented Mr« and . Mrs. , . +tom and Olean, on behalf i fri till and . neighbors with gifts; and.beet Ur, aand • Mrs. Good have moi ed to foderieh to' make their borne and hope ..Mr. ' Good's • health may . re - atoned after:a good. rept., •• JSlppen, the farm WAS avid to ell” the . pulpit at the ig iornin�g service' Teacher ' pobi Ung to 'a deer" .a>t tom. Peds far $,4(>dt It is ` ct, with they , " .. �. and in they, evening . v. Reba Meat ooi . What is that2 Jobnxay« 1C° finest farms in the district, ' r • •,of .Varna win' be. the speaker, Thence. don't know." Teacher; " VWW.hat• does, bat barns and stabling and ,two,,your _ mother callyour father." ' JAh storybrick house h hot waterheat-,will be special music by the' choir and ua _th r y brit Gus wit . h t a s ,« , , Ing and all modern conveniences. Pee' tell me that's az louase. ial thank -offering is asked tor: AOzt t Mrs and _Mrs,,A._E. FreaxUn, Clinton;, announce the engagement of their sec- ond, daughter, Violet, of Montreal, to Squadron Leader Hubert George D.P.0;, son of Mrs. Elizabeth Keillor, :Mitchell; the mar- riage to take place in St. Paul's church, Clinton, the Middle of -November. Thomas George Hemphill, well-known business man of Wroxeter, passed away suddenly on •October 29th from a heart•. attack. He. _.wasin:_his__seventy-third year, . Formerly in the hardware buss- nears with his father, Mr. Hemphill had conducted a milling . business for the last forty years. Rice—McCuteheon • At, St. John's church, Brussels, on OctobbrZ7th, Rev. M. F. Oldham united in.. marriage. Ethel Berva, second daughter of Mr. and Mral, Harry Mc- Cutcheon, Brussels; and John Lorne Rice, younger son of Mrs. Ree and the late Roger Rice, Tucko`ismith. McClenaghan—Knowles • At Trinity United church, Kitchener, on Saturday; October .27th, Ruby Flattie, ditugliter bf John S.-Knowles,l Kitchener, was united in marriage to Clarence •McClenaghan, Whitechurch; Rev. B. 0. Seymour officiating. • The couple w111 live . at Whitechurch. . - Bell --Roney The marriage took place on Satur- day,' October 27th, 'at the home ,of the bride'sl• parents, of Edith Viola,' daugh, ter of Mr. and Mrs. Alex. " Roney; Dublin, and John Fraser Bell; son of Aft,. and Mrs.J. L. Bell, Seaforth, Rev. F. G. Risdon officiating. The couple will reside 'in I3ullett township. Exeter War Bride Arrives in Australia An Exeter girl,; Mrs. Colby, was one of .a party of fourteen war brides who recently arrived at • Sydney, Australia, 'to join their husbands. Mrs. Colby, the former. Shirley Penhale, °daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. • J. Pen - hale, Exeter, is the wife of 'a former sergeant at the Centralia _ Air Force. station. ' Sundae visitors with Mr, Finnigan's uncle, Mr. Raymond Finnigan, ' - Several of the. ladies attended the trousseau tea given on ;Tuesday by Mrs. W.` Caesar •in honor • df her daugh- ter Madeline. W.M.S. Meeting. --the ladies ' of Crewe W.M.S. met at the home • of Mrs. E. Zinn on Thursday, November 1, with an attendance. of nine. Mrs. Treleaven had charge of the program. After the devotional period and the program as outlined li the Missionary Monthly, readingsere given' by Mrs, R. Finnigan, Mrs. -J, Curran, Mrs. 5. Kilpatrick--a-nd-_•ain-4nstr•umenta•1 sola by Mrs. -'.J: Sherwood. Mrs. B. Tre= leaven gave the first `chapter iii the new -study book on Africa. Prayers were offered by Mrs:. Zinn and firs. Kilpatrick. The meeting closed with a hymn and the benediction pronounced by Mrs. Treleaven. It was decided to send bores to three, boys who ace still in the services. CARLOW . CARLOW, Nov.- 6,—Mr. end Mrs. Thomas Wilson, Florence, Rosemary and • Hilton visited ,bn Sunday with Mrs,. Wilson's'brothers, Hilton of Park- hill • and George,_who is in, a London hospital. t•--•. , Mrs: A. Wilson is visi.fingsher daugh- ter, Mrs. Amos Stoll, in Goderich. Mrs.• M. Tyndall spent the week -end with her daughters in Toronto. Mr. Harold Martin and son Hugh, of Detroit, `spent the .week -end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Martin. Visitors with Mrs. R. Bean, sr., on 'Sunday were Mrs. Melville of Londes: boro, Mr. and Mrs -Cory, Mr. and Mrs. James Feagan and Don. Mr. and Mrs. Addison of Londesboro spent Sunday with Mr.- and Mrs. D. Bean. - Mr. James Farrish spent Sunday with Mrs. Farrish at London. On Hallowe'en night a program of recitations, plays- and songs was put on at No. 1 school by the pupils and their teacher, Mr.• Hall. Many were in costume • and . prizes- were given. Lunch was , served at ,the close. a There was a good attendance and all present enjoyed- themselves. •. F•, - Chas: Hallam and family spent Sunday afternoon with friends in the vicinity of Auburn.• Mr. and Mrs. Henry Horton visited Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Stothers and family at Arthur on ` Sunday last. Mr, and Mrs. Neil McDonald and Mr. and- Mrs. Louis McDonald, Paisley, visited- on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs: Rich. Kilpatrick. • On Sunday next, Sunday school will be •at 11 o'clock at Blake's. Church service at 7.30 in.the .evening. • - Trooper Archie Phillips returned from overseas on October 28. We' mel'- cotne .flim home. • • •r Rowland --Brown • .• •A nuptial event at Wingham ' on Wednesday, r October 24th, was the marriage of Hilda. . Bernice, -.daughter' of Mr: and, Mrs. W. J. Brown, wing- ham, ingham, to William Edward Rowland, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Rowland, Brussels The ceremony wasper- formed by Rev. W. A. Beecroft at the United church. The'happy couple left on a motor trip through the eastern United " •States, - Serious Accident • to • • Fifteen -year-old Giri Helen • Shapton. • fifteen - year - old daughter; of • Mr. and . WS. . Wilfred Shaptdn, Stephen towrr`shili, was "taken ”4 Ors flour , • 1CuP chtakeO, cat s 2 tsuspo°n`° Magic tells"cdp:ranstedsCnIM4 oafuf;BsLaagPowder r*w caf of ;:j teaspoon salt • • ?.tablespoon melted ;eggs butter or chickenfat l: cup mak l3�a cups chlelual DWI' • Sifte tog tbct.>Hovr, bsaldrrg pdrrderaexd sant add beaten egg yolk. and. saint. Add chicken, on1°u, grated carrot and melted fat 'o nd mfr. well. Folli, in stif y beaten egg whites. Bake1n greased baking ,dish in hot oven :a 425°F for about •25 mints.-_.,• _Berv`vi i 1t1jhot chicken gravy, 6 servings. m: ,MADE IN CANADA S is Despite all the .mother can do the kiddies will run. � c out of doors not properly wrapped up; have on too much clothing; get overheated, and coot off too slid'- . denly; get their feet wet; kick off the bed clothes, and' :,.w..•. �.w do. -a dozen things the mother cannot help. Half the battle in treating children's colds is to give them something they will like „something they will take without'any fuss, and this the mother • - will find in Dr. "Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, a remedy used by Canadian mothers, for the past 48 years. Price 35c .a bottle; the large family size, about 3 :times.as much, 60c, at all drug counters. • The T. Milburn Co.,1.iraited, Toronto, Ont.", DEAD:- or Quickly 'removed in Clean Sanitary Trucks. 'Phone collect. 910r16 CLINTON. — 215 STRATFORD William Stone Sons Limited INGERSOLL, ONTARIO _ •rill: X •%'��ti ^•'•.`,•:•:• •:• When, on November 7, 1885, the last spike was 'driven linking the rails of the (, anadian pacific Rail - Way, developments only dreamed o that day were to follow. Soon ships flying the red•.aand white 'Canadian Pacific house flag were plying the Pacific ... then the Atlantic There followed a•chain of hotels ... resorts anidlodgea: coastal and inland steamships express and gtele- ". raph services :the whole forming an all -Canadian system stretching more than half way round the world. In 1939, this vastsystem was dedicated to the win ning. of the war. Since `then the Company's all lines alone have handled more than 128 billion ton miles of freight—and 11 billion passenger miles. All ocean . p steamships have been on active service --many have gone down fighting: • Now the Canadian Pacific faces the fixture. Plans have been completed for the construction of new, I'M - polled ved locomotives and coaches • .. sleeping cars parlour cars . « . diners; for the renovation of stations and hotels; and for the building of a new fleet of oceaaa vessels..' _ ido In ae' a�> woxld at peace the Pacific willits part in providing modern, efficient .transpo,ttation land and -sea. . . THE PICK 'OF TOBACCO It DOES taste good in a pip. Biliousness. is just another ,x thio tor ar clogged or sluggish liver. It r to a1. 'very colnmon complaint, but can. le /quickly. reii 1iod by stimulating: the flow .of bile. This softens • the ac cumulated mass, .the T+oisons• fate carried out of the :system, and the - liver and bowels are xelievcd " and toned up., • - Milbutxt's taxa -Livor r'ids quickest :. txrrtl (milieu the.. sluggish liver, open- ing ftp every channel, by cansing a foe flow of bile and thus cleansing the liver .of th rltsg iia iimparitieS. They ;ae small; Alta easy to take. Do not •gtlpe, weaken or sicken. 'fhb 7C, llltosat i N.. :Aft. T4 !O Mo..Ont. CONTRIBUTED BY