HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News Record, 1945-06-28, Page 6Wound you give • 9►5 cents
Tobe "relieved of piles?
Then fry this tune -proven treatment
Few people escape the discomfort and
often keen distress'
which ,accompanies
piles or hemorrhoids. -
The itching is at times; almost •unbearable
but fortunately can be relieved quickly by
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Since:Piles are often cabled by conatipa-
tion and eonsequent straining, Dr. Chase's
KIDNEY LIVER PILLS are recommend-
ed as a means of relieving the constipation
and helping to remove the cause of. piles.
In the meantime you can depend on Dr.
Chase's OINTMENT; to relieve the itching
almost inuhediately it is,applied. For over
fifty years this medicinal Ointment has had
an enyiablereputation for the quick relief
of itching piles.
Why not ask your druggist for Dr. Chase's
OINTMENT at once and prove to your own satisfaction that it stands
without a rival as a quick relief from itching caused by piles.
-Ointment 60 cis.'; Pills 35 cts.
LOUIS ARTHUR CUNNINGHAM °
CHAPTER VII
They went into the room where
a short while ago all had been so
gay, So bright, so merry. It seemed
empty now,,. haunted by shadows,
li some sinister presence... The
black reticule still lay _on the dress-
er: where in.,dame had left it. 'Rei-
sine,. by standing on tiptoe, could
move it a little and straighten the
- pictnrc. The, light was dimmer
noir, Butthere in its "bright 'metal•
frame was the handsome smiling
fact. its eyes fixed upon them.
Pol Martin gazed at it and slow-
ly his lips parted. His fingers
tightened on hers. He stared long.
He could not scent to tear his eyes
from that thin, smiling face.
"Poll Tell mc, Pol." Rosin's
voice was urgent.
"Yes yes!" 'he whispered,
would knos him anywhere. I could
never' forget. it Ives thus lir smiled
the day he ran•from Bon I3omntc's
cottage. 1 -Ie .wore the uniform of
one of the Luftwaffe then, But it
is he." •
e., s
Yes. 1 knew. I saw it before
the party started. I could not eat
fc . thinking of it, I ,could feel him
smiling there: behind me. But what
could his picture be doing here?
Who can he be?"
"1 do not 'know. We shall ask
Corinne or Gesner, \Vc shall not
speak."
"No, we milst not speak. These
arc good people, all of them, They
do not know that the devil is
amongst them."
"But Roger promised to kill this •
one — and Roger is strong. He
wears a cross- the King gave hint
tiesse et
nuta�eei
A restful pastoral scene that
makes a , distinctive. wall -hanging.
Embroidering is a relaxation fo.
tired nerves.
Such easy stitchery in . wool or
cotton. Pattern 725 contains a trans-
fer of a 15 x 1954 -in. picture; color
chart:. stitches.
Send twenty cents in coins
(stamps cannot be accepted) for
this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft
Dept., Room: 421. 73 Adelaide St.,
West, Toronto. Print plainly pat-
tern number, your name and
address, -
HAIR GOODS
we carry a large variety
of the finest human
hair goods,' speciallzing
in made -to -order -goods,
gents' wigs and tou-
pees, ladies" -transform-
ations, bob .wigs. front
pieces. switches. .etc.
White's Hair Goods
2;i14 5ONGE ST.. TORONTO, ONT.
mosquitoes
A MOSQUITO
days eggs in
stagnant water
to hatch into
a swarm of dis-
ease -carriers.
Fly-Tox, sold
everywhere, in-
stantly destroys,
this menace. Get - • ;
a large bottle
today.
45.12
ISSUE 26-1946
for being, brave. Yes, Roger. will
kill this one surely,"
And they stole away. out of that
room, away' from the picture of
Michel Fabre that smiled at, thein
in the twilight.
It was the day following the
coning of the little Eegiish eva-
cuees who were to find a home at
Philibert. Meridel knocked' at ma -
dame's door to show the old' lady
a letter Rudolph had received from
the bureau • in charge of the little
guests. Meridel entered when ma -
dame's rich voice called "Entree!"
from the inner robin.
•
"'I shall be out in a minute — ah,
it is you, f,Ieridel."'. The door to
Ler bedroom wits open. "Make
yourself comfortable, child."
Meridel did not hear. The room
became space and the moment
eternity, Rapt, heart stili, she stared
et the picture of Michel Fabre and
slowly walked toward' it as if
drawn to it by sony mighty, invi-
sible threat. She. had forgotten
everything in the wonder of find-
ing hint again. She reached out and
touched the photograpt. She pick -
cd it up and looked' at i:, studying
every lineament of the fine young
face„ realizing how true; how mi-
nutely perfect, had been her amind's
image _ the 'thick brows, the cleft
chin, the nttong wide mouth, the
broad forehead and aquiline nose.
"Well!"
• Madame had been standing be-
side her . for moments, -watching
her, the glad look in her eyes, the
way her young breast rose and fell.
And madame was old aitd wise as
the world and she had known love
and thus recognized instantly what
she saw in Meridel's face.
am sorry. madame. I for,
got myself. This man -may I ask
—who is her
"An insolent, defiant, ungrateful
young scamp," said madame, "smil-
ing fondly at the picture. "He is
Roger's brother my nephew, Mi-
chel Fabre. We call hint Mike."
"Roger's brother—Michel--"
"Do
"Do you know hint;•' Princess?"
Meridel nodded, Slowly she put
the picture back in•its place. "I
met him once in. Gratzen; shortly
before the war broke out."
"And he made love to you, I'll
wager." •
'1' . *
Meridel. looked gravely into the
bright black eyes, aid for a mo- '
nient did not speak. Then she said,.
"Not—not as one expects love to
be made—" '
Madame chuckled. "Ah, I know.
It was in the way he looked at you,
in the wayhe said things more than
in what he said; in the way he held
that proud red head of his and the
way bus eyes danced. Is it not so?"
"Yes—yes, it is so."
"That was Michel." •
"Did he -411'4e love
to man
Y7
"
"I thing not. But many . loved
him. He didn't care. He always
wanted to be free—free of his teach-
ers, of those who would interfere
with Itis life -yes, even of the. See
here—what he wrote on the bacic
of this picture."
Madame Mimi took the photo
from its frame and showed the
boldly scratiibled lihes to Meridel,.
who . shaped . the words with her
lips—
"A better 'friend .than` love have
,:they
"For none to mar or mend,
That ,have: themselves to
. friend."'
"I don't know that any love could
hold him," .continued madame.
"What was Ile doing when you saw .-
ltitn?"
(To Be Continued)
Striking Facts
, For Isolationists
Here are a few striking facts in
the- Financial Post about North
America's dependence ou the rest
of the world.
In addition to domuestic tobacco,
the Anmerican`cigarette contains to
Iaceo from a dozen other countries
'together with more than a score of
other ingredients obtainable only ih
foreign countries. •
To make an American automo-
bile requires the import of more
than 300 different products from 56
countries,
' Of the 37 most important mater-
ials in making a telephone, 18 of
thein are imported.
Those -are, a few facts from the -�
new Public Affairs .• pamphlet,
"What Foreign Trade Means to .i
You." Knowledge is the best anti-
dote for isolationism, both political
and economic.'
MOTHER'S LETTER READ AT _GRAVE
In La Cambs cemetery,; France, where many. of those killed in the
Normandy- invasion are buried, Madame Blanche `Chapelle, left,
and her daughter, Helene,, kneel at the grave of James Simonian of .'
New 'York State while the girl reads a letter from the soldier's
mothere..The mother asked Helene to read it over the grave. The
soldier was killed in D -Day fighting,
Australia Prepares
For Heavy Fighting
The most powerful Australian
army ever' to be put into the field
. will be used in the final drive on
Telcyo: Warning that there eras still
hard fighting ahead in the Pacific,
and telling of the role Australians
would play in it, Commander -in -
Chief -of 'the ,Australian Military
Forces, General Sir Thomas Bla
i.ey revealed, that • the number• of
Australian troops to be used in fu-
ture operations would exceed the
greatest number maintained in the
field in two years. General Blaney
said: "The high degree of success
which attended the by-passing stra-
tegy of General MacArthur in his
advance to the Philippines encour-
aged some people in the belief that
the Pacific War, will end soon. 1
have not heard that view expressed
by any Allied Service leader. Rath-
er it is felt that we must face up to
the probability of sustained cam-
paigning and heavy fighting for au
unpredictable period."
Souvenir of War:
Photo of Himself
Dr, Joe Goebbels has admittedly
produced a few surprises in his
time but for "Mush" Limon, 30, of
Vancouver, a shell -shattered house.
near the deflated doctor's Gladbach
(Germany) estate takes, the spot-
light, says the Vancouver Province.
Curiosity prompted the former
city sprinter and Olympic runner
to -wander into the ruins.
Of the once expensive furnish-
ings only a wall table remained
intact.
And on that table the amazed
airman noticed a framed picture.
Goggle-eyed, he took another
look. It was a picture of himself
accepting the baton from Phil Ed-
wards in the Olympic relay. The
photo was taken in Berlin in 1936.
Limon • has it now his most.
cherished souvenir of the war.
"Mush" now somewhere • in ' Ge-•
many nvith the City of Ottawa
squadron, was based at Niudhoven
when he wrote his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Limon, West Van-
couver.;
The `Master Race'
As Master Looters
As plunderers the Germans must
excite the envy of the predatory of
all lands, comments the New York
Times. With a broad impartiality
they lifted art galleries and gramo-
phones, railroads and baby carts..
Half the people of,the Rhineland,
correspondents tell us, ride bicycles
stolen from •the French, the Bel-
gians, the Dutch, and the Danes.
. The thieving wasn't left entirely
to hoodlums, To rob the science
'museums of Russia the Nazis sent
. university professors, Ode bit of
loot these experts carried off was
the only complete' mammoth ete-
phare skeleton iri . the world. An-
other was a.herbariunt. of 103,000
plants, representing the flora of the
Ukraine, collected. by' -.Russian' bo-
tanists over a"period of more Thais
a century, In larceny, as in every
other ugly war ' undertaking, the
"master' race" "did its work with
time German thoroughness,
1V1
ode rn Etiquette
By -Roberta Lee
1. May the bridegroom mail
some of the wedding invitations.
tc his -intimate . circle•"of friends?
2. Is it cohsidered good manners
to crook the -little finger when
lifting a glass or a coffee cup?
3, Which- one should enter first '
when a mother and daughter are
entering an automobile?
4: What should one do. when in
a group of persons, either sitting •
. or standing, and it is necessary to
turn Mies bacic toward: another,
person?
5. Is it in' good form to lay two
or three spoons crosswise above
each dinner plate?
• 5, Is it all right for a woman to
present a letter of introduction
'personally?
ANSWERS
, 1. No; all the invitations should
be mailed from the bride's home.
The bride's fiance should of
course furnish a list of his rela-
tives and friends to whom he
wishes invitation sent. 2, This is
merely affectation, 3. The mother.
4. Apologize, always. 5. No; this
was an old custom, but is out -of.
date. °6. No; a than has this privil-
ege, but not a woman.
'Fiery Calling Cards
Dropped On Japan
The ,Chemical Warfare Service
disclosed not long ,ago that Super-
fortresses are dropping at least
four types of incendiary bombs on
Japan and that research is under
way to develop more fiery calling
cards.
Two of the bombs spread flam-
ing synthetic lava formed, by jel-
lied gasoline,. powdered magne-
. simn, liquid asphalt at.d outer in-
gredients. '
One is the M-76 or "Goop"
bomb, a 500 -pounder, which scat-
ters lava into corners and other
out-of-the-way places., The other
is the tenpound M-74, equipped
with a mechanism that throws
gobs of burning lava for distances
Of twenty-five yards,
The two other types of bombs
'are the 100 -pound M-47 and the
six -pound M-00 cluster. The M-
47, packed with jellied gasoline in
a thin wall, is capable of scattering
chunks of fire for distances of 'forty
yards. , The M-59 is made up of
bomb clusters scattered 'by a time
fuse releasing a shower of fire
sticks.
Though ultra -violet light does
not poduce„the sensation of light,
g r
it call produce bliiitlness,
Grapefruit Souffle Pie
3 tablespgons butter or margarine 7 tablespoon grated orange rind
3 tablespoons flour ,d1 cup "grapefruit sections
1,4 teaspoon salt % cup grapefruit juice
$ cup milk ' ' • % cup sugar
2 eggs, -separated 4 teaspoon vanilla
Prepare pastry shell; prick lightly with a fork. Bake in hot oven
(450° F) 13 to 10 minutes to set crust..
Melt butter over low heat; add flour and salt and stir until snmooth.
Add milk :slowly, stirring :constantly; -,cook until thick, . Cool slightly.
Beat egg, yolks until thick and lemon colored; slowly aild cooked
• mixture, Add orange rind, grapefruit sections and juice, sugar and
flavoring, Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. ,Pour into pastry shell
and bake in slow' oven (300° F) about's hour.
Yield: One e -lunch pie.
All -Bran Pastry Shell
2 tablespoons All -Bran • % teaspoon salt
y cup sifted flour 4 cup shortening
• 2 tablespoons cold water (more or less)
Crush All -Bran into fine crumbs; nix with flour and salt. Cut'itt
shortening. Add water, a little at a time, until dough is moist enough
to hold together. Roll out on lightly floured board to about one-eighth
inch in thickness. Fit into pie pan; thrim edges.
WHAT SCIENCE
IS DING
DDT Insecticide”
With 70 of the 112 squirt mita -
aready sprayed-witit DDT it secti
,c.ide in ire, experimental area or
the Biark •Sturgeolr river, the Ort
tali° department of lands and for='
e5ts dict Tates it has already saved
1432,000 from the ravages of the
spruce ht,dworus.
A total of li.1,000 acres have been
sprayed. Last year the sor0ying::.1
40 acres tx-•ved that the DDT kill-
ed the hucltvoi n. If it is 's
fictive Ili"- year the saving' viill be
17 to 9;8 art acre,. "Fratik A; Mac-
Dougall, deputy minister, said,
The cloniluiou government is
lending its aid'. Four R,C,A.F.
planes have been adapted to spread -
tlhe spray from the air.
Through the co-operation of the
U. S. government, which is watch-
ing the results, 40 tons of DDT
were secured. ,
Fifteen_ tons of DDT, however
were made ,in a plant at Elmira
which expects to produce 1,000,000
pounds annually.
The DDT will Iceep the flies
away from milk, 'cows and horses.
At sunnier resorts' it will . be
sprayed,:, to exterminate" the mos
quitoes and blackflies, One spray-
ing in favorable weather, it is ex-
pected, will last ,for three weeks.
It will also be 'used for ftftnigating
houses and will exterminate flies,.
cockroaches and other 'vermin.
One disadvantage of the -use. of'
D.D.T. in civilized communities, ia,
that it would kill ,bees as well as`
other insects in spray 'range. It
would have no effect on flowers.
How Can I?
By Anne Ashley
Q. How can'I prevent the crack-
ing of enameled saucepans?
A. Place new enameled' sauce -
palls in a vessel of warm water,
allow it to come to a boil, than
cool, and they will last touch tang
er than ordinarily before either
cracking or burning.
Q. How can I polish gilt frames?
A. Mix and beat tlic whites of
three eggs with one-third this
gpantity (by' weight) of javelle
water. Paint the gilt frames with.
this solution.
Q. Holy can I remove stains
from the hands and keep them in
good condition?
A. Instead of using soap on the
hands, use a• small cup of paste,
composed of .vinegar and corn-
meal.
Q. How can i keep paint brush-
es. in good condition?
A, A used paint brush should be
washed in turpentine or gasoline,
followed by a soap and, water, pre-
ferably naptha soap. Riese in clear
Water and press the bristles into
shape. e •
Q. How can I remove rust spots
.from nickel plate?
A. Cover the rust spots with oil
or grease and let it remain for two
or three days, and then rub tho-
roughly with ammonia, and polish.
Churchill Opens
Election Campaign
Prime Minister Fires First Shot
- On Village Green,
I walked to the end of`the road -
where I live, strolled over to our
village green, passed under a row
of chestnut trees which are the
chief foundation of ou local pride,
and saw in front of the Working
Men's Club, a snail crowd of a
couple• of hundred people, includ-
ing a large number of children un-
der 10, surrounding a tiny motor-
car from which an elderly gentle-
man was making a speech, writes
Harold Hobson in The Christian
Science Monitor.
Coming closer I observed that
- this Pickwickian gentleman was
Prime' Minister Winston Churchill
engaged in opening the Conserva-
tive Party's electoral campaign in
what has been described as the
most important election in British
history. ,
If this description is true, nobo-
dy would have guessed it from the
casual, informal appearance of Mr.
Churchill, at Woodford.
No Pageantry
Americans who ase dazzled by
the 'pageantry of state wettings of
Parliament and state visits of the
King and Queen would have been
Astonished, at the total lack of
cereniony-attending the Prime hfi--
nistet's , first shot in the election
battle, ,
There were no .flags, no parades
as in Nazi Germany, no 'special.
presidential train as in America;
only a stoutish "gentleman holdilig
in his hand a high -crowned hat
that would have struck the inhabit-
ants of the Ark as old-fashioned,
addressing a few halting' words, in
a gentle shower of rain, to an
audience of housewives out- on a
morning of shopping.:'
This, of course, doesn't mean
any want of ;enthusiasm for Mr.
Churchill .— it' is merely' the inex-
plicable English way of doing
things. `
Hydro Development
Some idea of how Canada rias
forged ahead in Hydro' power in
the twentieth' century is seen in
the fact that water turbine instal-
lation has increased from 143,155
horsepower in 1000•to the present
10,283,763 horsepower,
Niagara. Falls Review
The just, though they hate evil,
yet 'give men a patient hearing;
hoping that they will show proofs
that they are not evil.
— Sir P. Sidney.
Quality You'll ]Enjoy
CEill
of GiliGEIR FARM
By
Gwendoline P. 'Clarke'
e a
IVe have been seeing the world!
We have been on two trips since
I *rote last week. One was a visit-
ing and business trip.: --mostly busi-
ness—the other was a sight-seeing
occasion. Partner and 1 Went to.
Guelph,. last Friday -and ' 'that busy
little •city was about as busy as vie
ever saw it, When we visited .
.with friends'just above the College
we discovered the reason -and 1
suppose we should have known it
all 'along. It was some leind of.
'Farmner's Day' at the College,,and
it appeared as if mos'" of •fee far
• niers ' acid their families for miles
around' had moved la and •taken
over the• College lock, stock and
barrel. But we didn't go • in, At
thes time -we went by-it'was• nearly';
five' o'clock and at five o'clock a
farmer's failing is to' turn reluc-
tantly to -thoughts of home—to'
cows, that need mincing . and to'
poultry that wants. feeding. So
we had 'an eat -and -run cup of tca
with our friends and after admiring
their' chickens and gardens, ands -
what we coud see of, their crops,
we made tracks for home, our faith-
ful old Lizzie chugging along, con-
tentedly ' purring because we • were
on` a down -grade . dearly all :the
way home. .
Over the week -end Daughter
and friend Bert were here and 'it
was they who took us on a eight:
seeng trip. For a long time 'Par-
tner had been wanting to see again
the Shad Dant at Fergus. So
that's. where ,we went. • But we
found it had been re -named since
we saw it before.e Now it is
'the Grand River Dam', which
seems quite -appropriate since it is,
the Grand River which it 'controls.
By any name it is a marvellous
piece of engineering -and wet' Worth
taking a 'little time and trouble to.
see. -
Personally I shall have reason' to
remember our visit to the Grand.
River Dam for several days. You
see after looking at everything
As thrilling as a first beau, this
youthful -minded frock and' hat, Pat-
tern 4766. Frost it with white eye-
let garnished, with ribbons, Any.
schoolgirl can make it for herself.
Pattern 4706 conies in Teen Age
sizes 10, 12 14, 16, Size 12, frock,
tapes 2% yards 30 -inch material.
Send twenty cents (20c) in coins
(stamps cannot be accepted) fot
this pattern to Room 421, 73 Ade-
laide St. Vi'est, Toronto, Print
plainly size, name, address, style
number,
from the level' of the bridge we
naturally wanted to size things up
from "below. But gRing all he
way around looked like'a long way
to walk so we tried taking a 'short
cut' down the shale rock embank-
ment. It was a short cut in dia.-
Lance but certainly not in time.
Believe me, it was' some feat. I de-.
clare that that bank got steeper
and longer with every step we took
and the footing was particularly
treacherous,' We finally made it,
of, course,, but •today ani so stiff
11 -any joints it, is• 'featly painful.
to move,
From.. Fergus we went on to the
Rocks at Elora. For Partner and
I, it was in case of 'Elora Re-
.- visited", Even at that we found
several” little walks and look -outs
that we had missed before, parti-
cularly that ofan island rock which
stands in the `middle of a water-
fall. It was Daughter's first visit
however, and, knowing her wander-
ing propensities—which she pro-
bably inherits:from her mother—I
don't suppose there wet vert' much
that she missed, We had our lunch
with us and because it began to
ramp the car was our picnic ground, •
which didn't seem to make any dif-
ference' to the enjoyment and ease
with which our lunch was dis-
. patched, <
Coming 'home by way of No. r
Highway and then across co$ntry,
w finished our journey by visit -
in' a young mother a:td her three -
weeks old baby. Faturally for
quite a little while the women -folk
indulged in baby worship while
the men sat around .outside dis-
cussing, crops, weather conditions,
milk cows and other mundane af-
fairs dear to masculine hearts and
from which we women folk bene-
fit—but I might add to which we
also contribute our share of work
and worry. ti
Nascopie's Master
Starts Last Trip
The Nascopie, famous Hudson's
Bay ,steamship which .carries sup-
plies to Arctic outposts every
year, will leave again July 7th for
her annual patrol. In command,
as he has been for 80 years, will
be Captain T. F. Smellie,
But next year there will be a
change, for Captain Smellie is
planning to retire after he brings
the vessel back to port.
The Winnipeg -born ship's mas-
ter has captained the Nascopie
through two wars without incident.
During the winters of 1917, 1913
and 1919 he ran the Nascopie be-
tween Murmansk and Archangel.
HOTEL METEOPOLE
All Beautifully Furnished
With Running Water.
Rates: -
$1.50 up
NIAGARA FALLS
OPPOSITE
C.N.R. STATION
Peogrits?
...that; a Tec .package of WILSON'S FLY
PADS will kill more dies than $5.00 worth
of any other fly kilkerin Grocery, Drug
Hardware and General Stores melt and
recommend WILSON'S FLY PADS.
Not just for breakfast/abut
These days Kellogg's cereals
are more important in our •
Canadian diet than ever
before. They're easy to digest,
appetizing anytime!
A satisfying main dish for
breakfast, a welcome change
for lunch,. between -meal
snacks. Add flavour to
left -overs too!