Loading...
The Seaforth News, 1942-03-26, Page 7THURSDAY, 'MARQI-i 25, 1942 THE SEAFORTH NEWS' PAQlr S4VHN I DOtYOU The Secrets O Good Looks by 1904.411W06 11,1-141.. Springtime Beauty Now is the trine to freshen up your •skin, for the wintry weather and •stuffy, overheated homes have un- doubtedly left their mark on your 'face, despite all your care. Do some limbering -up exercises 'daily. Besides making your body more supplye, exercises will stimulate the ,circulation. Then pay attention to the normal functioning of your body. "An apple a clay" is still good, and if I .add "onions twice a week" it is be- cause this is excellent advice, Eat spinach and fresh green vegetables .and fruit, That's looking alter the "inner wo- man," for you cannot look healthy if you're not feeling up to the mark, Now for the exterior. The face and neck should be creamed daily with three -purpose cream, a lovely cream that cleanses thoroughly, then acts as a foundation for powder, and can be used at bedtime as a massage •cream. Of course you must keep your skin immaculately clean. The best way to ensure this is to wash regularly with warm water and soothing palmolive soap, the skin beautifier, Rinse with cold water—as cold, as yon can staid it. have a lace mask 'once a weep, for a while. Take two tablespoons of cooked oatmeal, four tablespoons of glycerine and two tablespoons of rose water, Mix to a titin paste and apply to the face and neck evenly with an up and out stroke. Allow to harden; When thoroughly dry, rinse off with lukewarm water. Send four one -cent stamps for Iny booklet on Beauty Care, which will help you solve most of your beauty problems. Address: Miss Barbara Lynn, Box 75, Station 5,, Montreal, Que. We All Say A herd of cattle. A swarm of bees. —But how about these? A watch of nightingales, A nide of pheasants. A. brood of grouse. A sounder of hogs. A flight of doves. ' A gang of elk; A shoal of herring. A. muster of peacocks. .A bnliding of rooks. A skulk of foxes. A wisp of snipe. 'A cast of hawks, A pride of lions. A sleuth of bears. A siege of herons. A stand of plover. A covey of partridges A pod of whales. A plump of wildfowl. Prisoner — "I've been wondering Whether to go to my mother's or my wife's mother for Christmas. Now I won't have to go to either." J. GALLOP'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 PHONE 179. A11 .Repairs Strictly Cash. SEAFORTH We Aim To Please The World's News Seen Through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR AN International Daily Newspajier is Truthful—Constructive—•Unbiased—Free from Sensational- ism —Editorials Are Timely and Instructive and Its Daily Features, Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make Ilse Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home. The Christian Science Publishing Society One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts Price $12.00 Yearly, or $1.00 a Month. Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, $2.60 a Year. Introductory Offer, 6 Saturday Issues 25 Cents. Names Address SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST Seaforth Puts 'Windsor Out Those story book finishes do hap- pen sometimes, They had one at the arena last night. With fifty minutes and ten seconds of a sixty -minute 'hockey game played, the Seaforth Beavers looked like dead clucks. The Windsor Colonials had them beaten '4-0 in the game and 7-4 in the series, Nine minutes and fifty seconds later the Beavers were winners of the series, eight goals to seven. The game score was tied at four all. While the crestfallen Colonials skat- ed off, the Beavers trooped to their dressing room to whoop it up in cel- ebration of victory and to pound the back of big Farmer McFaddin, who hauled them from the brink of elim- ination. It was the Farmer who turned the tables on the Colonials by popping in three goals. Brother Albie lilo- Faddin bagged one, on a pass from Farmer, to make it an all-McFaddin show. A melee in front of the Windsor net, in which players from both tennis did some wild swinging and wrestling for about a minute seemed to change the whole complexion of the game. Fibber McGee of the Bea- vers and Tonuny Jaques drew majors for their part in the scrap. Pete Boccini of the Colonials received a minor. Boccini had returned to the ice before the Seaforth drive got under way, but three of the goals were scored while the teams were playing five -man hockey. They were register- ed within a two -minute period. Far- mer McFaddin bagged the ' pay-off tally after the teams Were back at full strength. Up to the time of their first goal the Beavers had been completely outplayed. Especially in the first and Second periods, they lacked fire and fight. It took the Colonials six minutes and five seconds of the first period to erase the one -goal lead which' the Beavers had earned in the first game of the series at Windsor. Pete Boccini of the border club Viee-Admiral P. W. Welles, R,C.N., Chief of the Naval Staff', whose br of address introduced a series of sPee- ial feature broadcasts of the CBC national network recently, had been serving a penalty. When he returned to the ice, the Beaver's neglected to send their defence back to its Proper position.It was a costly move, Alf Marinacci, swarthy Wind- sor winger, broke from behind his own blue line and soloed along the right rail to beat Hal Stade with a back -hander, The Seaforths were playing four wren against five, when the Colonials moved out in front on the round at 12.55. Albie McFaddin and Archie Hubert of the Beavers and Tommy 'Jaques were the trio in the hoose- gow, From a three-way passing play in Seaforth territory, Ed. Cross sank a counter that made the Huron county fans groan. Alex. Clark and Sam Tome of the Colonials earned a piece of the goal, The Beavers had two chances to try a power play while they had the advantage of an extra man but they didn't seem able to keep the puck back of the Windsor blue stripe. Seaforth showed more of the old fight that carried them to the cham- pionship of the Huron -Waterloo cir- cuit when they came out for the se- cond period, but Lloyd Storie, the Windsob• goalie, stood them off when they bombarded the Windsor net. At 9,35 the task for the Beavers became tougher when Tommy Jaques fought ori' two ehecks in front of the 'Seaforth net and rapped in the bor- der elub's third goal of the game. Pete Boccini gave him a pass from the corner. The Beavers were pressing when the period ended but they couldn't get the puck into the Colonials' cage. Fc• r Goals Down Seaforth opened the third period with five men on the attack. After six minutes and twenty seconds of play, Alf Marinacci and Ed, Cross who had been loitering along their own blue line, waiting far a break, got their chance. They raced away together with not a Beaver within two -rope distance. Cross skated right in on Stade and gave Hal no chance Co save. • That put the Beavers three goals down on the round, and it looked like a case of just going through the motions for the rest of the game. But the team from Huron kept trying. With about eight minutes of the per- iod gone, Frank Kennelly was in on the Windsor net but a rolling puck prevented him from getting a shot away, Kennedy sprawled over Storie, the Windsor goalie. Other players from both clubs piled up over them. Fibber McGee and Tommy Jaques flailed away at each other with their fists and it looked for a minute as if Referee Beef McKay would have a free-for-all on his hands. After a few seconds, the fracas subsided. McKay thumbed McGee and Jaques to the penalty box with majors and tacked a minor penalty on Pete Boccini of the Colonials. Boccini hacl served his sentence when Farmer McFaddin sailed' in on the Windsor net for the first of his three goals at 10.10. The Farmer beat Storie with a backhander. In a minute and twenty-seconds, Bert Thompson, who was battling for the puck along the right rail, pushed the disc up to Farmer, who had been left unchecked in front of the Windsor net. McFaddin faked Storie out of position and slipped the puck into the hemp. By this time the Huron county contingent sensed what was in store for the Colonials and the place was in an uproar, When Albie McFaddin knotted the score on the round, at 12.10 on a pass from Farmer, the Beavers' supporters threatened to tear down the rink. Storie managed to get his stick in front of Albie's shot, but the rubber looped over it and rolled into the net. With about four minutes to go, Hal Stade stopped the Colonials from regaining a lead on the round when he did a hook slide to get his foot in front of the puck after Clark of the Colonials took a pot shot from a few feet away. Farmer McFaddin had saved his feature act for the series clincher. At 16.40 he trapped the puck near the Windsor blue line and pushed it between a Windsor player's feet, re- gaining the rubber as he swung around him, Farmer still had Clark,. a Windsor defence man to beat. He waited until he could use the Wind- sor rearguard to screen his shot. Then he whipped the puck into the net. The Beavers fell back into their own territory after that goal, and Inept firing the puck up the ice. Red Carr had two chances to get goals on break-aways. The first time he miss• ed the net completely, and on the second try, he shot into Storie's pads. The. teams: Seaforth, Goal, Stade; defense, Hubert, Thompson; centre, Kennedy; wings, Binnie, McGee. Spares, R. Me- Facldin, A. McFaddin, Carr, Roberts, Nicholson, Windsor: Goal, Storie; defence, Clark, Kelly; centre, Jaques; wings, Boccini, Tome, Spares, Hrdicka, Cruickshank, Brenner, Page, Cross, Marinacci. So We'll Make Our Wartime Sugar Grow On Trees If the rationing of sweets becomes too sour, there's a remedy! An article in The American Weekly with this Sunday's (March 29) issue of The Detroit Sunday Times, tells how scientists promise to replace all the,,,, sugar crop we lost in the Philippines by processing only 10,000 acres of woodland. Be sure to get The Detroit Sunday Times this week and every week. Want and For Sale ads, 3 weeks 50c. SUBSCRIPTION BARGAINS! flahe tP'e W -L�HAPPY Iv4�' I ; gOYS &GIRLS These Combination Offers are the Biggest Bargains of the year and are fully guaran- teed. If you already subscribe to any of the magazines listed, your subscription will be extended. Send us the Coupon TODAY. BIG - FAMILY OFFER This Newspaper 1 year, and Your Choice Any THREE of These Publications CIISCH THREE MAGAZINES—ENCLOSE WITH ORM* ( 1 Maclean's (24 issues), 1 yr. C 1 Canadian Home Journal, 1 ye. [ 3 Chatelaine, 1 yr. [ 3 Click (The National Picture Monthly), 1 yr. [ 3 American Fruit Grower, 1 ye. [ 3 Screen Guidef 1 yr. 5' ] National Home Monthly, 1 yr. C 3 Canadian Poultry Review, 1 yr. [ ] Family Herald & •Weekly Star, 1 yr. i 3 Rod & Gun in Canada, 1 yr, C 1 Canadian Horticulture & Home, 1 yr. i 1 American Girl, 8 mos. ALL FOUR ONLY 2.00 SUPER -VALUE OFFER This Newspaper 1 year, and Your Choice of OISE Magazine in Group "A" and TWO Magazines in Group "B" GROUP "A" GROUP "B" [ 1 Megaslne Digeat, t mos. [ ] Maclean's (24 issuer), 1 yr, (] True Story, 1 yr. [ 1 Canadian Home Journal, 1 yr (] Silver Screen, I yr. [ 3 Chatelaine, 1 yr. [ ] Citrlatian Herald, 5 mos. [ 1 National Home Monthly, 1 yr. [ 3 Family Herald & Weekly Star, 1 yr. [ 1 Screen Guide, 1 yr. (1 Click (The National Picture Monthly), 1 yr. [ 3 Rod & Gun in Canada, 1 yr, [ 3 Open Road for Boys, 1 yr. [ 1 Canadian Poultry Review, 1 yr. [ 3 Sereenland, 1 yr. [ ] Canadian Horticulture & Home, 1 yr. [ 1 Feet Digest, 1 yr. [ 1 S0lenee & Discovery, 1 la C ] American Girl. 1 yr. [ 1 Parente' Magazine, r mos. ALL FOUR ONLY 2.50 This Newspaper 1 year, and Your [ ] Liberty (weekly) 1 yr. 42.30 [ 1 Maclean's (24 lasuee) 1 yr1,50 [ 1 Canadian Home Journal, 1 yr. , 1.50 [ 3 National Home Monthly, 1 yr. , 1.50 [ 1 Chatelaine, 1 yr. 1.50 [ 1 Family Herald Sc Weekly Star, 1 yr. 1,50 3 Click, 1 yr. (The National Picture Monthly) 1.50 [ 3 True Story, 1 yr, 1.90 C 3 Red Book Magazine, 1 yr. . 3.50 [ I Screen Guide, 1 yr. 1.50 C ] Parents' Magazine, 1 yr. 5.00 ] Magazine Digest, 1 yr. 5.30 3 Physical Culture, 1 yr. , , , , , . , , , 180 [ 1 Popular Science Monthly, 1 yr., 2,83 °[ 3 Child Lite, 1 yr. 3,10 Choice ONE other publication at Price Listed [ 1 American Magazine, 1 yr. 8.30 [ 1. Screenland, 1 yr. 1,90 [ 3 American Girl, 1 yr. 1.90 [ 1 Christian Herall,. 1 yr. 3.00 FILL OUT -u: MAIL TODAY, Please clip ilst of magazines after checking ones desired. Fill out coupon carefully and mall to your local paper Gentlemen: I enclose $ 1 am checking below the offer desired with a year's anbserIptlon to your paper, 11 A11-Famlly 11 Super -Value 11 single Magazine Name Post Office Province Duplicate . Monthly Statements We can save you money on Bill and Charge Forms, standard sizes to fit Ledgers, white or colors. It will pay you to see our samples. Also best quality 7VIeta1 Hinged Sec- tional Post Binders and Index The Seaforth News PHONE 84 The World's News Seen Through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR AN International Daily Newspajier is Truthful—Constructive—•Unbiased—Free from Sensational- ism —Editorials Are Timely and Instructive and Its Daily Features, Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make Ilse Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home. The Christian Science Publishing Society One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts Price $12.00 Yearly, or $1.00 a Month. Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, $2.60 a Year. Introductory Offer, 6 Saturday Issues 25 Cents. Names Address SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST Seaforth Puts 'Windsor Out Those story book finishes do hap- pen sometimes, They had one at the arena last night. With fifty minutes and ten seconds of a sixty -minute 'hockey game played, the Seaforth Beavers looked like dead clucks. The Windsor Colonials had them beaten '4-0 in the game and 7-4 in the series, Nine minutes and fifty seconds later the Beavers were winners of the series, eight goals to seven. The game score was tied at four all. While the crestfallen Colonials skat- ed off, the Beavers trooped to their dressing room to whoop it up in cel- ebration of victory and to pound the back of big Farmer McFaddin, who hauled them from the brink of elim- ination. It was the Farmer who turned the tables on the Colonials by popping in three goals. Brother Albie lilo- Faddin bagged one, on a pass from Farmer, to make it an all-McFaddin show. A melee in front of the Windsor net, in which players from both tennis did some wild swinging and wrestling for about a minute seemed to change the whole complexion of the game. Fibber McGee of the Bea- vers and Tonuny Jaques drew majors for their part in the scrap. Pete Boccini of the Colonials received a minor. Boccini had returned to the ice before the Seaforth drive got under way, but three of the goals were scored while the teams were playing five -man hockey. They were register- ed within a two -minute period. Far- mer McFaddin bagged the ' pay-off tally after the teams Were back at full strength. Up to the time of their first goal the Beavers had been completely outplayed. Especially in the first and Second periods, they lacked fire and fight. It took the Colonials six minutes and five seconds of the first period to erase the one -goal lead which' the Beavers had earned in the first game of the series at Windsor. Pete Boccini of the border club Viee-Admiral P. W. Welles, R,C.N., Chief of the Naval Staff', whose br of address introduced a series of sPee- ial feature broadcasts of the CBC national network recently, had been serving a penalty. When he returned to the ice, the Beaver's neglected to send their defence back to its Proper position.It was a costly move, Alf Marinacci, swarthy Wind- sor winger, broke from behind his own blue line and soloed along the right rail to beat Hal Stade with a back -hander, The Seaforths were playing four wren against five, when the Colonials moved out in front on the round at 12.55. Albie McFaddin and Archie Hubert of the Beavers and Tommy 'Jaques were the trio in the hoose- gow, From a three-way passing play in Seaforth territory, Ed. Cross sank a counter that made the Huron county fans groan. Alex. Clark and Sam Tome of the Colonials earned a piece of the goal, The Beavers had two chances to try a power play while they had the advantage of an extra man but they didn't seem able to keep the puck back of the Windsor blue stripe. Seaforth showed more of the old fight that carried them to the cham- pionship of the Huron -Waterloo cir- cuit when they came out for the se- cond period, but Lloyd Storie, the Windsob• goalie, stood them off when they bombarded the Windsor net. At 9,35 the task for the Beavers became tougher when Tommy Jaques fought ori' two ehecks in front of the 'Seaforth net and rapped in the bor- der elub's third goal of the game. Pete Boccini gave him a pass from the corner. The Beavers were pressing when the period ended but they couldn't get the puck into the Colonials' cage. Fc• r Goals Down Seaforth opened the third period with five men on the attack. After six minutes and twenty seconds of play, Alf Marinacci and Ed, Cross who had been loitering along their own blue line, waiting far a break, got their chance. They raced away together with not a Beaver within two -rope distance. Cross skated right in on Stade and gave Hal no chance Co save. • That put the Beavers three goals down on the round, and it looked like a case of just going through the motions for the rest of the game. But the team from Huron kept trying. With about eight minutes of the per- iod gone, Frank Kennelly was in on the Windsor net but a rolling puck prevented him from getting a shot away, Kennedy sprawled over Storie, the Windsor goalie. Other players from both clubs piled up over them. Fibber McGee and Tommy Jaques flailed away at each other with their fists and it looked for a minute as if Referee Beef McKay would have a free-for-all on his hands. After a few seconds, the fracas subsided. McKay thumbed McGee and Jaques to the penalty box with majors and tacked a minor penalty on Pete Boccini of the Colonials. Boccini hacl served his sentence when Farmer McFaddin sailed' in on the Windsor net for the first of his three goals at 10.10. The Farmer beat Storie with a backhander. In a minute and twenty-seconds, Bert Thompson, who was battling for the puck along the right rail, pushed the disc up to Farmer, who had been left unchecked in front of the Windsor net. McFaddin faked Storie out of position and slipped the puck into the hemp. By this time the Huron county contingent sensed what was in store for the Colonials and the place was in an uproar, When Albie McFaddin knotted the score on the round, at 12.10 on a pass from Farmer, the Beavers' supporters threatened to tear down the rink. Storie managed to get his stick in front of Albie's shot, but the rubber looped over it and rolled into the net. With about four minutes to go, Hal Stade stopped the Colonials from regaining a lead on the round when he did a hook slide to get his foot in front of the puck after Clark of the Colonials took a pot shot from a few feet away. Farmer McFaddin had saved his feature act for the series clincher. At 16.40 he trapped the puck near the Windsor blue line and pushed it between a Windsor player's feet, re- gaining the rubber as he swung around him, Farmer still had Clark,. a Windsor defence man to beat. He waited until he could use the Wind- sor rearguard to screen his shot. Then he whipped the puck into the net. The Beavers fell back into their own territory after that goal, and Inept firing the puck up the ice. Red Carr had two chances to get goals on break-aways. The first time he miss• ed the net completely, and on the second try, he shot into Storie's pads. The. teams: Seaforth, Goal, Stade; defense, Hubert, Thompson; centre, Kennedy; wings, Binnie, McGee. Spares, R. Me- Facldin, A. McFaddin, Carr, Roberts, Nicholson, Windsor: Goal, Storie; defence, Clark, Kelly; centre, Jaques; wings, Boccini, Tome, Spares, Hrdicka, Cruickshank, Brenner, Page, Cross, Marinacci. So We'll Make Our Wartime Sugar Grow On Trees If the rationing of sweets becomes too sour, there's a remedy! An article in The American Weekly with this Sunday's (March 29) issue of The Detroit Sunday Times, tells how scientists promise to replace all the,,,, sugar crop we lost in the Philippines by processing only 10,000 acres of woodland. Be sure to get The Detroit Sunday Times this week and every week. Want and For Sale ads, 3 weeks 50c. SUBSCRIPTION BARGAINS! flahe tP'e W -L�HAPPY Iv4�' I ; gOYS &GIRLS These Combination Offers are the Biggest Bargains of the year and are fully guaran- teed. If you already subscribe to any of the magazines listed, your subscription will be extended. Send us the Coupon TODAY. BIG - FAMILY OFFER This Newspaper 1 year, and Your Choice Any THREE of These Publications CIISCH THREE MAGAZINES—ENCLOSE WITH ORM* ( 1 Maclean's (24 issues), 1 yr. C 1 Canadian Home Journal, 1 ye. [ 3 Chatelaine, 1 yr. [ 3 Click (The National Picture Monthly), 1 yr. [ 3 American Fruit Grower, 1 ye. [ 3 Screen Guidef 1 yr. 5' ] National Home Monthly, 1 yr. C 3 Canadian Poultry Review, 1 yr. [ ] Family Herald & •Weekly Star, 1 yr. i 3 Rod & Gun in Canada, 1 yr, C 1 Canadian Horticulture & Home, 1 yr. i 1 American Girl, 8 mos. ALL FOUR ONLY 2.00 SUPER -VALUE OFFER This Newspaper 1 year, and Your Choice of OISE Magazine in Group "A" and TWO Magazines in Group "B" GROUP "A" GROUP "B" [ 1 Megaslne Digeat, t mos. [ ] Maclean's (24 issuer), 1 yr, (] True Story, 1 yr. [ 1 Canadian Home Journal, 1 yr (] Silver Screen, I yr. [ 3 Chatelaine, 1 yr. [ ] Citrlatian Herald, 5 mos. [ 1 National Home Monthly, 1 yr. [ 3 Family Herald & Weekly Star, 1 yr. [ 1 Screen Guide, 1 yr. (1 Click (The National Picture Monthly), 1 yr. [ 3 Rod & Gun in Canada, 1 yr, [ 3 Open Road for Boys, 1 yr. [ 1 Canadian Poultry Review, 1 yr. [ 3 Sereenland, 1 yr. [ ] Canadian Horticulture & Home, 1 yr. [ 1 Feet Digest, 1 yr. [ 1 S0lenee & Discovery, 1 la C ] American Girl. 1 yr. [ 1 Parente' Magazine, r mos. ALL FOUR ONLY 2.50 This Newspaper 1 year, and Your [ ] Liberty (weekly) 1 yr. 42.30 [ 1 Maclean's (24 lasuee) 1 yr1,50 [ 1 Canadian Home Journal, 1 yr. , 1.50 [ 3 National Home Monthly, 1 yr. , 1.50 [ 1 Chatelaine, 1 yr. 1.50 [ 1 Family Herald Sc Weekly Star, 1 yr. 1,50 3 Click, 1 yr. (The National Picture Monthly) 1.50 [ 3 True Story, 1 yr, 1.90 C 3 Red Book Magazine, 1 yr. . 3.50 [ I Screen Guide, 1 yr. 1.50 C ] Parents' Magazine, 1 yr. 5.00 ] Magazine Digest, 1 yr. 5.30 3 Physical Culture, 1 yr. , , , , , . , , , 180 [ 1 Popular Science Monthly, 1 yr., 2,83 °[ 3 Child Lite, 1 yr. 3,10 Choice ONE other publication at Price Listed [ 1 American Magazine, 1 yr. 8.30 [ 1. Screenland, 1 yr. 1,90 [ 3 American Girl, 1 yr. 1.90 [ 1 Christian Herall,. 1 yr. 3.00 FILL OUT -u: MAIL TODAY, Please clip ilst of magazines after checking ones desired. Fill out coupon carefully and mall to your local paper Gentlemen: I enclose $ 1 am checking below the offer desired with a year's anbserIptlon to your paper, 11 A11-Famlly 11 Super -Value 11 single Magazine Name Post Office Province