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The Seaforth News, 1939-11-16, Page 3THURSDAY, NOV, 19, 1939 THE SEAFORTH NEWS Highlights of This Week Sunday, November 19 11.30.12 Noon. The' Southel'naires. Songs by a Negro male quartet, from New York. 1.30-2 p.m. Cardinal Villeneuve. Ad- dress by his eminence Cardinal Villeneuve, from Washington. 3.00.4,30 pan. Philharmonic -Symphony of New York, Symphony concert, 'frith assisting artist, conducted by John Barbirolli, from New York. 9,30-0.45 p.m. The World To -Day. A review of the week's news by R. 0. MacFarlane, from Winnipeg. 7.80-8.00 p.m. CBC String Orchestra. All -string orchestra directed by .Alexander Chuhaldin, from Tor- onto. Monday, November 20 2,30.3.00 p.m. Rochester Civic Orch- estra. Symphony orchestra directed by Uuy Fraser Harrison, from Rochester. Tuesday, November 21 9.15.9.30 p.m. Canada's Fighting Services. Talk by an anonymous member of the Department of National Defence, from Ottawa, 10.00-11.00 p.m. Toronto Symphony orchestra conducted by Sir Ern- est MacMillan, from Toronto, Wednesday, November, 22 4.13.4.30 p.m. Christmas Plans. Talk by Elizabeth h000ulloch, from To- ronto. 8,00-8.30 p.m. The Army Sings. In- for'mal sing -song directed by George Young, from Saint John. 9,30.10.00 p.m. Music by Faith. Or- chestra directed by Percy Faith with Louise King and Dave Da- vies, vocalists, from Toronto. 17..30-12.00 mid. Cathedral Singers, Choral group directed by W. H. Anderson, from Winnipeg. Thursday, November 23 4,15.4.30 p.m. Movie Reviews. Talk by Allister Grossart, from Toron- to. 7,00.7.30 p.m. The Crackerjacks, In- strumental group directed by Lou TI. ,.n.t fore 1a .Il. tolerate s•. 1..e.14,,lr` Snider with Ruth Cameron, vocal- ist, from Toronto. 9.00-10.00 p.m. Good News of 1940. Variety programme starring Fan• ny Brice and Connie Boswell, from Hollywood, 10.00-1.1.00p.m. The Music Hall. Bing Crosby and John Scott Trotter's orchestra with guest artists. Friday,. November 24 2.30-0,00 p.m. Music Appreciation Hour. Music education series conducted by Dr. Walter Dam• rosch, from New York. 7.00-7.30 p.m. Cameos in Swing. In- strumental group directed by Albert Prate with Dorothy Alt, vocalist, from Toronto. 9,00-0.30 p.m. The. Pig Who Ream to Farre. Football preview, from Toronto. Saturday, November 25 12,30-1,00 p.m. The Children's Scrap Book. Variety programme for children, from Toronto. 7.40-8 p.m. The United States. Talk ou current evants by Raymond Gram Swing, frons New York. There's a thrilling drama in the story of Canada's famous regiments. Many of them have a background of achievement in the Dominion's hist- ory that goes back to the days when French and British, and New Eng- land colonials fought for the mastery of a continent. "Canada Marches," the dramatized sten, of our oldest and best known regiments, will be featured over' the CBC national network early In the new year, The Important task of pros during this series has been assigned to King Whyte, a young Canadian who has been writing, producing and commentating in United States radio studios for the past ten years. Backed by an unusually varied radio experience in a dozen large American cities, Mr, Whyte brings both versatility and Imagination to his CIBC work with the Winnipeg studio. Perhaps it's natural that a man who has achieved an amazing skill with the bow should be equally nimble with a billiard cue, Billiards. at any rate, is relaxation for Albert Pratt, the Canadian concert and rad- io violinist who designed and con- ducted "Music from Manuscript." for CBC listeners last summer•, and who appears as guest soloist with the CBC String orchestra, ander the direction of Alexander Chuhaldin on Sunday, November 19, at 7.30 p.m. national. network. Mr. Pratt will play the sec- JeGALO 'S GARAGE SEAFORTH Chrysler Plymouth and Fargo Dealer Come in and see the new Plymouth car and Fargo Truck We also have a Service Truck -if you have car trouble, phone 179 and we will come promptly Electric Welding Done by an Experienced Welder, Ken Campbell. starting Sept. 4th. Work guaranteed. The portable welder can be taken any place with or without Hydro PHONE 179, 4:1 Repairs Strictly Cash. SEAFORTH We Aini To Please and movement of the \Vienawski "Romania," and two unaccompanied. pieces. Patience, says, •Prate, is the virtue that is of supreme importance to a violinist -as well as to a billiard player, Patricia Bailey is one of the youngest radio stars in Canada who can claim more than ten years of hobnobbing with microphones, Pat. who is currently starred on CBC's "Your:; for a Song." with Ruth Lowe et the piano, will be 21 next Febru- ary. She has been singing over the airwaves since she was eight, Al- though Pat was much more interest- ed in the school plays and concerts than in the three R's, she says she was lucky enough to get through without once being expelled, "But J was no angel," adds Pat, "Yours for a Song," is heard Tuesdays at 5.30 e.m. from Toronto. When Thomas Craig, likeable head of the Craig family whose daily adventures are a feature of the CBG Ontario farm broadcast, had some trouble with his teeth a short while ago. 11 was not all fiction.' Here's the story behind Thomas' dental wor'r'ies: The part is played by Prank Peddie, and Frank was faced with a bout with his dentist, and the loss of a couple of teeth. It looked as if the part of Craig Sr. would he missed from the family ser- ial for a few days while the Peddie gums were in process or healing. Don Fairhah'n. (lie Ontario Farm broadcaster, sensibly suggested that the visit to the dentist should be in• ('arpnrrltyd in the .serial. Ontario has ninny lovely farm homes; many, too, that are bare and unattractive in their surroundings. Trees and flower gardens, and green lawns add boanty and distinction to any home --and to quicken the inter- est of Ontario farm people in the possibilities of their own homes, a "Farm and. Homes Improvement Competition" was held during the past summer. What Was achieved by the 1000 Ontario farmers who took part in the (0(111 pet (t10((, will be told during the regular Ontario farm broadcast, on Thursday, November 30, at 12.30 p.m. from CBI, by C, H. Ilodge, editor of the Farmer's Magazine. Lorne Rich- ardson, Woodstock, who won the competition, will, it is ]toped, take part in the sante interview. Canada's national airways will co- operate with Canada's national broad- casting system, when Jean de Rim- anoezy (lies from Vancouver to Tor- onto for his appearance with the To route Symphony Orchestra 011 Tues- day, November 21. 10 to 11 p.m. on the CIBC national network. Hungarian by birth, with a bril- liant European musical career behind hint when he came to Canada first in 1924, de Rinunlnczy quickly wan Int- ernational a ('(•laim on this continent as a recitalist. In 1947, he became first violinist with the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra and made a four -months' tour of the United States, Later, he formed the Calgary Ph 'impolite Orchestra ; in June. 193.1, he became concert master of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra. A believer in the virtue of hobbies. de Rimaunc'zy is an enthusiastic and successful amateur photographer who has exhibited pictures widely both in Canada and united States. With football finals looming ahead. fans, coaches and players are all aquiver with excitement They'll en- loy getting behind the scenes of Me- llow rugby football with Ted Reeve. who has been persuaded by the CBC special events department to give tt preview of Ole Big Four champion- ship on Friday. November 24, 9 to 9.30 p.tn...411 of the unexpected things that ran jinx a game. and which give (oltc'hes the jitters lot weeks before a championship is played off, will be aired by this act, sports writer in his br cadcust, Selling Quality °elks Books are We11 Made, Carbon is Clean and Copies Readily„ All styles, Carbon Leaf and Black Back. Prices as Low as You Can Get Anywhere. Get our Quotation on Your Next Order. r S t SEAFORTH, ONTARIO, ewo Don't Miss A' STA.M `' CLU "DIRekiViA of STAMPS" WEDNESDAYS AT P.M. Leading U.S. Co-operator To Broadcast to Farmers American farmers are hundreds of thousands of dollar's in pocket each year, it is claimed, because of their extensive consumer co-operatives. Ontario farmers unfamiliar with what American farmers have done in yon• 01110er co-operation may, if they wish meat the story from 1. H, Hall. key- man eyntan of co-operation in the tinned Slates, On Tluu'sday, November 23, Mr. Hull will be heard in an inter- view conducted by Don Fairbairn. during the last hall of the farm broadcast from CBL, Toronto. 12.3e to 1 p.m. Mr. Hull, who is giving np Phanksgiving at his home in Jnrliana• Polls in order to speak in Taronta. holds an impressive position In Amer. icon co-operative business. In adcli lion to being general manager of the successful and fatuous Indiana farm bureau, lie is president of the touted {o-opera.tIves and national co -opera• Lives. The latter is a. super coopera- tive, federating all the big regional wholesales in the United Stales, and one Canadian organization, the Unit- ed Farriers Co-operative Co, Scheduled to speak at the annual convention of the United Farmers of Ontario, 110•. Hull has been secured by the (•BC farm broadcast depart. men) to open anew series of weekly 1interviews, which will be heard each Thursday thereafter on the regular farm broadcast. Mr. 1•Inll will he asked, specifically whether or not lie thinks consumer c0-operatioi is worthy of the atter- 11011 01' Canadian farmers, DO YOU REALLYKNOW HOW TO TALK ? Everyone speaks about 50,000 words every day, but the words are often the wrung ones, and our conversation needs a clinic just Iike a disease, it is pointed out in an absorbing article, which offers yon a chance to ding - 11000 yourself as a speaker, and a listener, too, appearing in The Anl- cu'iean Weekly with the November 19 issue of The Detroit Sunday Times. BOMB .BLOWS- IJP FAMOUS MUNICH BEER HALL Last. week end police in Muu1.eh, Germany, dug through debris nine feet deep for telltale fingerprints and metal scraps, in the Minims Munich steer hall, known as the liuergerbratt cellar. and Germany mobilized all the 111 1011 1 of her police in a search for assassins blamed for the explosion last Wednesday which only chance spared Adolph Hitler. A few mutates after the Fuehrer earlier than had been expected --;left a 16th anniversary celebration of the first Nazi putsch in Munich's Iinerg- erbrau hall, shrine of Nazism, a tet• rifle expl0010(1 showered 110w•11 the c'e'iling, Eight of his followers were killed and more than fa of the old Nazi lighters were 11tu•t. None of the high Nazi officials who accompanied Bil- ler to the traditional party c rlebra tion, howe er, Was repgrtr d among the killed n0 injured. Hitler himself was safe aboard a speeia1 armored twin at the time, heading toward Perlin after an address wlrielt was regarded generally as preparation for his people to face a prolonged am)111, 0, Criminologists had reached itcn eonclus10as. -firs), that ti time device se=t off the ,explosion ait,1, see - molly, that careful 1(11.1 cf«'iuive pr,.. pttratious had been trade. 11 London the Nazi 0ti mit 10 blame the British . c, 0 0 t service was countered with a suggestion in song" (martyrs that the alleged attempt on !liths:' life might have ben)) faked by (he Nazis themselves, iu a man - nor similar to that in which the party gained absolute power lhroagir the horning of the i10101)stag in 1101 PAGE THREE HURON NEWS Native of Clinton Passes - A native of Clinton, Mrs, Ann Brownlee Roy, widow of the late Rev. Franklin E. Roy, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. R. M. Rogers, West Hill, last week. She was in her 72nd year. Mrs. Roy, who had been ill for some time, was a resident of Toronto for many years before she moved to West Hill four months ago. Until five years ago she was an active member of St, Clement's Church, at Toronto. Her husband, before his. death, was associated with Trinity College School, for a number of years. She is survived by three sons. Roy, of Clinton; Randall, of Toronto; Maurice, of Perron. Quebec, and two daughters, Mrs. M. Milian. Toronto, and Mrs. R. M. Rogers, West Hill. Lights Confused Geese - Thin being the season when wild geese are winging their way from northern Canaria to the sunny chutes e' the southern States. Operators at the Hi:novel' hydro plant have again found that the geese are confused by the well -lighted grounds here, 0 con- riitiou trade more noticeable this year by t10 fact that powerful search lights have been installed in order to help irnard the plant against sabot- age, The ether night, a flock of abmlt a hundred geese. flying over the town. was so confused that they ('arae down and were flying in and nut among the lights and squawkin;, loudly until the guards and operators saw their plight. and turned off the lights. whereupon the geese recover. ed their bearings, went up to a much higher altitude and continued their migration to the south. -•-flan• over Post. RUSSIA AND FINLAND FAIL TO REACH AGREEMENT On 1Tnnday it was announced that the Finnish -Russian negotiations had "definitely ended," without 0gree. inen1. 'rhe Finnish delegation to the Kremlin in Moscow, 00tUrn ed home Finlad's foreign minister did not sn(+eify the points on which nego(ia• (ions had broken down. 0l1sarvers "xnrossr.rl the belief that the stuntb• ling blocks were Russia's demands for 0 naval base on Finnish territory at the entrance to the Gulf of Fin- land and revision of the southern border between the 000 countries to the Karelian isthmus, The Russians ('!111(1. that to lirotect Leningrad the Soviet must gain con- tr01 of hot)~ sides of the (11111 of Fin - 10+1(1 n well as Finnish areas on the Arctic coast west. of Murmansk. Finland now has access to the Arc. tic nr•ean 11irnngh a 000100 strip of land between 'Norway and Russia. The Soviet press bitterly criticised the. Finnish attitude and Finnish mobilization. but took the position that negotiations wore suspender) and not necessarily broken off. It is pos- sible the negotiations will be ('estnn• ed in the near future. Sante diplomatic sources have ex- pressed belief in the past that Fin- land would eventually he forced to capitulate because of the huge ern• iunni,• strain involved in maintaining tnobilizliinu. They said Finland ryas m1 "tete brink of ruin" and could not continue h1 0 state of mobilization inm•n than seven months. The Fin- nish government was charged' with• bolding from parliament the true me lure of the Russian demands. and Sweden was charged with supplying 1''inland with arms. The presentstains of the negotia- tions was believed to he: Finland re. (11cr•41 to I'ase 1111001 bases in Russia on Hann island and the peninsula on the gulf of Finland, and at Finnish folio ports. The Finns apparently teed to revision of the frontier pushing the' Finnish- burner h',el: farther front Leningrad and to grana li,roia several islands off the Stn-iet m11'l) hos,' at Krmistadt, It was helievc'r1 refusal to gi0e ftp mitre.: to 1110100 was based en the sea' that such 1(1)105 would lnako the -alt 11111011(1 a Sevirt lake. Bus - already int. ('"(11 1 the southern •-barns'.• 10 the 401)11' by concession, r.,nt ,.0 119. 1•stunia. ]1' the Soviet alte. eetrnited llcn1gn, the Fintl= roulrt ut' the approach to (h, ir• ' )s !:,111,• purl 21101 is free from ire .,11 w;llter. It 'vas not believed .that the rod 12.10251.011 army world unr'c11 on Fin E,,ollofln • pre,.nt•- a11r:1'(c1 ;rot . 1ii;(10 in 131x= str1nnzle. ,,. In,) nations'. W YOUCAN RE E® Clear Cold-CloggedHead This Quick Way Clear that tormenting stuffiness- breathe more freely! Just a few drops of Vicks Va-tro-nol-that's what you need. Pee/ it go right to work -bring real comfort. This treatment is successful because Va-tro-nol is active medication -containing sev- eral essential relief -giving agents plus ephedrine -expressly designed for nose and upper throat. Next time don't wait for a cold to get a head start, Used at first sniffle or sneeze, Va-tro-nal helps vACKe keep a cold from developing. .120.01. tYP.01 UP YOUR NOSE Dairy Production in Ontario Reports received from cheese fac- tories 01111 creameries indicate that the en:bully of milk used 01 the man- ufacture '1' both butter and cheese during October in Ontario amounted to 277,280,000 pounds as compared with icy 412.000 pounds in October 1938, 1100 271.968,000 pounds in Oct- ober 1937, The production of cream- ery batter last month totaled 7,162, 809 110nnds which represents a mod- erate increase over October 1938. All sections of the province, except Southern Ontario, showed an it - crease. Cheddar cheese output, an the other !land, was lower in October than in the same month last your. There was a tendency during the past month to divert milk supplies from the production of cheese to but. ter owing to the relatively higher price which prevailed for the latter eommodity during the coyly part of October. Stor=ks of creamery butter in daily factories throughout the province on Nov 1, 1939. amounted to - 5,034,190 pout.cls us compared with 5,230,502 pounds on October 1. 1939, and 6 • 025,175 pounds on November 1, 1038. Warehouses in Toronto reported 6; 869,460 pounds of butter on hand at Nov, 1st, as against 7.200,370 pounds a month earlier, and 4.862,108 pounds a year ago. Prices of butter and cheese contin- ued upward. The wholesale price of butter at Toronto averaged 28 cents during the month of October as 00111- paec1 with 26.1 cents for September. and 21_5 cents in August. Wholesale cheese prices averaged 14.5 cents i11 October as compared with 11.4 cents per pound in the previous month. and 11.4 cents in August. Exports of daily products from Canada during September showed a considerable reduction from the same month a year ago, the value of all products exported being 52,540.023- iu September 1918, and 51,612.089 in September this year. Both butter and sr= showed snbstantial declines in shipments. but evaporated milk shipments were up slightly, and pow- dered milk exports rose. NETHERLANDS AND BELGIUM PREPARE DEFENCES During the past week the lowland counties took swift defence meas- ures, Hollanders standing guard on their "newly -flooded "water line" of protection and Belgian soldiers dig- ging new trenches- in the east. A strange shooting incident on the Netherlands side of the German fron- tier near Venloo Was followed by withdrawal of all Netherlands' r•egu• tar army leaves, placing of guards around public buildings, inundation of water defence areas anti stringent regulation of transportation. Venlca is opprrslte the German mu- nitions centre of Essen. The government began flooding 10W sections through the centre of she country, including a wide strip- in Utrecht Province and another ex- tending eastward between the Maas and Waal Rivers, Residents of ill, "Water line" villages were removed. The gentling proeesa, which w1:: 0--. attire Dome time. is an unusual sive measure 10 cut off Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague anti other ]n dnstrial areas from the east. Although official explanations wer lacking, the neves by Belgium an.: The Netherlands we1•,' interpreted as preparation for any eventualities in the war. Possible preparation for 0 move to shift German air bases near 11,. ('oast of England was See11 111 1h+- massing of NaZi troops near the lar- ders of Europe's low 0011ntries, wa the opinion expresse1 i L British Troops Ready to Move on West Wall British Official Photo -Crown Copyright Reserved Courtesy Canadian Pacini Disembarking scene at a port somewhere in France, Note the anti aircraft gun all ready to, instant 00th