Zurich Herald, 1938-07-21, Page 4PA:' PO
BLAKE r St.. Joseph axil Beaver Town.
`IVIa.. and. Mrs, Chris Erb Iva fain -
Spent Sunday with ]4r. ;licca Mrs.
aCto1a Erb.
mid IVirs. David Gingerich of
' rix3c'h; life, and Mrs. Daerld Ginger-
aelh and fa'mQily of the, Goshen line
ee uth; Mr. and Mrs, Amos Gingerich
,,pent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Sant. {Gingerich.
Mr, and Mrs. lee Brenneman; Mr.
And Mrs. john Brenneman from Dtr-
tnvsit were week -end r isitois with Mr
and Mrs, Amoy, Ga.•cho,
Mr. .and Mrs. Mose Gerber slid
family of the Goshen line, were..I•un-
slay vieltors with Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
Gingerich.
M. and Mrs. Oliver St,•e1;Ie Overt:,
Sunday visitors at Baden; 11iesee Eva
Gladys Dechior returning home with
them after spending some time at
that Place.
Sunday visitors with Mr, and Mrs.
Jacob Swartzentrubor were: Mr. and i
1Irs. Chris. •Gasc]lo and family; Mr.
rand 17,'Irs. Daniel Yutzi, Mrs. L. Roth
and daughters.
DASHWOOD
rs. J. McNevin of London is sp-
ending a, week with Mr. ane::etre. A.
E, Oeetreicher.
N'Iiss Jermaine Armstrong of Lon -
glen is visiting with relatives.
.Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Rader have re -
:turned from their honeymoon and
ore getting comfortably settled in
tleeS r house they recently rented from
C. Stephan.
'Mrs. Fred Willem who spent the
past month with hei daughter in Fort
Wayne, Ind., has rets; m ed home.
Mr. and Mrs. Hairy Guenther of
Windsor spent Sport.; Day with their
.;,tarents.
plisses Helen . adieer, Edna .Afar-
'-ttene and Greta Burmeister and Carl
5Lartene and Edwin Miller- spent the
week -end week-endwith friends in�.tCl
o
-
ens, Helen Nadigc r and Edina Mar-
-teem; are staying for a feat days.
1i`r. and Mre. Fred Rinker and
f a my of Thedford :pent the holiday F
here.
'Editor—A full report of the Sports f
Day doings will be in -r i n ,l next week
:as time le not available to set the p
rule,.
>•i111r. Herman Williams of New 'Ham-
burg was a Sunday Visitor with Mr.
and Mrs, C. 0, Smith• and family.
Wheat cutting is the order of the
day, and the crop is 'not above' the
average as. it was Once thought to be
Mrs. Rachel Denomine Who ha. -
lived in St. Joseph fora few moiltlh:
has now moved back to Pointe Aux
a
Beta: e. in the house recently vadat
-
ed by :lir. Oscar - Ducharme.
•
Nr. Vincent Jeffrey of Detroit,
who has been r iiting araliutl herd
for a few days has .returned to hie
hone. in Detroit.
Mi. and Mrs. Lawrence Jaffrey
and Mr, Nelson Jeffrey of Windsor,
spent a ;few days in this neighbor-
hood.
Mr. Philip IBedard of Tilbury spent
a week \vith hie patents, Mr, and :lira
Joseph Bedard.
Mr. and fibs. Arthur Brisson and
family of Detroit are camping for a
fev,• days at St. Joseph.
Mrs. Peter Masse and family of
Detroit have rented the cottage in St
Joseph irons Dominique Jeffrey.
Mrs. Lellanger and family of Win-
dsor are visiting Mrs. Rachel Denom-
me,
Mr. Francis Ducharme of Mount
Carmel spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Leon Bedard,
The Misses Joan Masee and Ver-
onque Ducharme were week -end vis -
tors with Mrs. Kuno Hartman.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Oberer of De-
troit spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs
Jos. Sararas of the Blue Water. high-
way south.
Father Ma1chand who has
been in
this parish for upwards of nine years,
will leave here at the end of the
present month, to be replaced l,y
tither 1lartin of LaSalle. A petition
was circulated in this parish with a
ell quota of signers, but as h
e t ices was more needed in the other
r i -h than the present, it will be
srried out.
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Tit Y E O'T<EL'S
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Bre aI.•
also
CHOICE VARIETY TY OF CAKE, PIES, AND
SWEET GOODS.
All ngrediei-rts Used are of the Highest Quality
ALL CONFECTIONS -- ICE CREAM .
Our Store will be closed each Wednesday Evening '�
4.
C ePS : akery — Zurich
Telephone 100 .Y,
4.
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TriTE WORLD'S GOC D .N 'WS
will come to your home every day through
THE C r u a T lA,'1 SCr6 C' :'E MONITOR
�1ra be4r ,taiwizel Daly Newxpap2r
It records for : au the r; u: id's :inn, co :;tructive•tiolmrs, The Monitor
rices not e:tpio.t , or sen Wt, ort: neither does it,i:none thein,
but deals cons telt' trite then, Features for busy men and all the
fan :ly Mc.uti ag the W.'seals 11:.ganne Section,
The chtyir':n etiri1nce P:'bli'•hrr.', society
Orre, �.or�wra atrcet. �( •:on, '',ir.•e�.cl:,acttc
Please cater my ,;ubsor ;t:on to The Curs:ion Science Monitor for
nor_rorl o;
1 r ` i. .60 G .i to^.th . SC.00 3 month= 53.(x3 1 month 51.00
wednesaey 1cS mG wee. 4« ..S:.i a fie Sec4.on:1,yeer 52.00, 6 issues Sic
name _�-
Address—. - - .
Sara¢le Cepy .on .Request
Mai
Ip Ififif@t 1i IUI t -11 U
I Il¢E''J `8:1W1C ILMEll4UWpillEt1I,' i o;ll,uf ,iC.�tii(Jwiil o tllETZ!!I1111 II; IL0'.11.551 11 WlR.
IIERALD �?Fi'IC�'
Do You Know?rip
Mr... MERCHANT!
You know thoroughly well that you have power
in your store, to influence the. decision of your c:1s-
tomers in regard to what they buy from you. Your
,custorners rely on. you to give them products which use or consumption, will give them complete
s tisfaction.
,I right is �to use it +
big city darlles and zmaizcra."Ealy.
circulated magazines then, by' the same rete token, it is
right to use local weekly newspapers!
1 am Ow Master Salesman of this
Community, ,znd
'} niy(J name is
AV Y A.y.. S
•
r� ullltl4uc wIUJWdnWAtWlll�li,�a9✓wU1LV�t�ih4l4itlli:�ti�.'I'Ifili�ali � li�l�n t'� �wnl pl:p u � u,x�' iu�� � u � , lir miA �'I � (I � jh �p li�j f',,
J1.0 IU�I IL ,JG�..i.11}r, dlw,DUG]JIII,JiJlt1,:44..V,b,iIIJIIIIvLGuI„Il)�w��.,.
ZURICH HERALD
SCHOOL REPORT
Thefollowing is a list of the
promotions in S. S. 12, Hay, 14th
Con.
Jr. IV to Sr, IV --Ellwood T uc'--
inner, pass.
Sr. III to Jr. IV--1Ions, Ralph.Kru-
eger, Leona Druar; Pass, Margaret
Schilbe, Joe Miller, Nelson Masse.
Jr: 11I to Sr. Ill: --•Hots, Gerteude
I7ru am, Beatrice Schilbe; Pass, Nolt'
Krueger, Reger Bedard.
Sr. II to Jr, III --Pass, Ceceliv
Masse., Blanche Masse,
J. II to Sra II ---Honours, Lan:?
Scbilbe; Pass, Aryls Haugh, Dorothy
Miller, Archie Jeffery.
First to Jr. II—Hons., Ruth Krue-1
ger, Madeline Masse, Earl Schilbe,
Vcrrenica Meidinger; Pass, Jerome?
Durand.
Printer to First—}Tons., 'Hoene Mil l
ler, Leroy Rader, Pass, Albert Schiff -
be, Paul Durand, Harvey Corriveau,
Albena Bedard.
Albert Watson, Teacher.
COUNTY NEWS
The Clinton Town Council propo-
ses the erection of.'a mausoleum at
the .cemetery there this year.
ilirs. John Newsome, Grand Bend
returned home from Clinton .'Hospital
and• is slowly recovering, -
A Big Porker
Dave Cantelon of Clinton recently
purchased. from J. Wright of Kippcn
hog that weighed 810 lbs. It was
the heaviest hog that 111r. Cantelon
has shipped in 50 years.
• New Doctor Locating
Workmen are 'edecorating the ofli
ce in the, McTaggart block, Clinton,
In c paratory to the arrival of 1)r.
Douglas, of Toronto, who. has decid-
• ed to practice in Clinton.
Observes 93rd Birthday
Janie, Dignan, Exeter's Veteran
Blacksmith, observed his .93rd birth-
day. lir spent the day quietly, fri-
is corning upfromLu Lunn.
Howicic Farmer Killed -
Charles Muir, a Howick. Twp. farm-
er, was instantly killed wheelh hi;
team ran away and he was crushed
beneath the wheels of a farm wagon
loaded with hay. ITe was climbing up
the Iadder at the front -of the load
when the team started to run, He
was hrorvn to the ground and wan
killed almost intautly, Was 68 year
of age and unmarried.
In Magistrate's Court
"It wasn't me, some one else let
them out,” pleaded Lewis Thompson,'
Bayfield district farmer, charged with
permitting his horses to roam at
nights on No. 21 highway. The charge
laid under the Highway Improvement
Aet, was read in county police court
at Goderich last Thursday afternoon
The crown was not prepared for a
"not guilty" plea, so adjournment!
was taken to secure witnesses and
also to permit attendance of Th'oinp
son's lawyer. Two other adjourn, -I
ent constituted the entire business. of
a short session. Ruth McNa'irn, char-
ged with vagrancy, was remanded to
iail for trial at Seaforth on July 19.,
John Weiss, who faces a. breaking
and entering charge, will be tried a
week hence.
HENSALL
Mrs. Fletcher of Rodney is visit-
ing at the home of Mrs. Robt. Bon-
thron. -
The many friends of Mrs, Jas.
Dick are sorry to hear that she is
not improving as well as could be ex-
pected,
Dr. and Mrs. George Shellog of
Detroit, 1\1±. and ?,irs. Percy Gram
of Lansing, Mich., were visitors at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Grain
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Ortwein o
Detroit have been visiting with hie
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Vv. ureereiml.
Mrs. John Pope, who spent soiree
months with members of her . family
in Toronto, Galt 'and other- points,
has returned to her home Isere.
At the recent ball game played on
the local diamond Hensall won from
Blyth, score 8-0, Quite ad: number
witnessed the game.
Mr. and Mrs. David Blair and fom
ily of Tuxford, Sark,, are visiting
with relatives here.
Lincoln Litt and •Reuben Fink of
Hanover were visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. Eci. Fink,
Beryl Pfaff is spending part of her
vacation Whiting relatives in Chicago
Alex. Henry of Cass City, Mich.
who with firs. Henry was visiting
relatives here suffered a severe heart
attack while spending a few days at
Woodstock; he was later taken home
to the hospital-
Mattie Ellis and sister, Mrs. Fred
Snrallacombe, spent a few days with
friends in Southampton and Owen
Sound.
Mrs. Verne Smith, of London, is
visiting with her mother, Mrs. Annie
Saundercock, for a few weeks before
making her hone in Exeter, where
her husband will resume his former
position with the Huron Lumber Co.
Elva McQueen, Goldie Cross and
Marion Filshie were the past week at
Goderich where they attended summ-
er school of the United Church,
Mr, and Mrs. N. P., Warrener, of
Pontiac, Mich., former residents of
this village, were in town recently re-
newing acquaintances and their fri-
ends were pleased to meet them.
Grace Brock has returned to her
position in London following a pleas-
ant week's vacation at her hone herej
Falls off Roof
While shingling the roof of R. 3.
McLaren's house, half a mile north
if Hensall on the highway, John „El-
der had the misfortune to slip and
fall to the ground, a dista.ytee or 25
feet. He suffered a fractured hip and
wrist. Ile was immediately given med
real aid and later was taken by Dr
steer to the Clinton hospital for tre
fitment. Mr. Eider is (i years o,
4ge and hat been engaged in puttinf
,n roofs on barns and houses fol
see y Years.
Death of Peter Ste -i grt
.l'4 s . Stewart, a well known and
iighly respected farmer of 'the 13rd
1 uckersmith twp., passed .away
tt the fee e of his brother John ID
Stewart. He was in his 74th ey;.•ai
Ile has been 'sem poor health fc,r .some
lents a victim of heart trourelc. h
was ireeee married, a liberal in posit
'es and meni` c'r of the Kipper) etaitei
'hunch, He is survived by three. e. i;i;•
kers, Mrs. W. Dalrymple of Cromar.t-
r i. '1 Me,Cullle of lfensall; Mrs.
v, P, Strang of tic gine and one
o:' rel
ri
f C ref, .
,,t jos r i
tC-'
n•+
t[. t•
7'llrr, , pr•ivlyte funeral was held.
GILL RetUNION
A very enjoyable time was spent
at Grand bend at the Gill reunion,
There were ':e; petrente After dinner
,ports were held, after supper the of-
ficers were elected: Pres. Thos. Gill,
Secy Lillian WiIon, sports and press
comm. appointci, neat nimcting to be
held at salve place and time.
Kicked by Horse
Wm. •Somerville of ivIcKillop lnet i
with n:•• t•, accident when taking
load of hay into the barn in winch'
he •broke several ribs and head ani
legs injured. HIe went to move the
hay loader chain and one of the hone
e ,
bee In i r' . rt itl
. He fell cll across
the tongue of tile hay rack and ,the
lloi e Licked l ,nl ton -times
Has Contract
The ten i r of the Win. Foyrcst
)reclging Co. for work at Goderich
' ne•bor has Leen aceeeted by the Fed
:rel Dept. An engines of the public
wags branch ofiiec at London made
arrangement:: for the beginning of
the work. 'i'he $90,000 contract, whi-
ch will require two years for fulfill
sent, includes blasting and dredging
the entrance channel and along the
south side of the harbor,.
Hotel to b` floopened
The Clinton„Hotel, the Rattonberry
house is to be opened once more to
the travelling public, having been
GENERALNE%YS
Sttrip 10,000 Acres
Millions of grasshoppers covering
more teen 16 square IIA•1 of e t'l,am
lands northwest of Pendleton, Ont.,
have caused }damage estimated at
$40,000 and have left many farmers
without any crop or pa. t...r ,:or
cattle. More than 10,00 acres of land
are in the affected area in Prescott
county. Between 15 and 20 fanners
Ineve lost everything. The present
plcague is the worst in '75 years.
Hepburn Flies North
Premier Hepburn . of Ontarioand
three companions are on an airplane
..,r - 000 mile trip up nortl
and have arrived ;at Winnipeg, M
u.i u,tneay iroin there will journeyon to Western and North -Wester
("uinda. They are stopping oft a
the most important places along the
Tourney.
C/v 017 PO,
•
Zurich ernes Shop
New •oollaxa are needed at this
Gime of the year. Give us a call and
we will fit you up. If in need of a
harness ask for :prices, ail our work
is done with hand sewing, Your bender
canvass needs repairing, bring theme,
ism and we 'will repair them beforethe
rush starts. Ail kinds of repairing
neatly and promptly done. Collar.
repairing aspecialty, pt -6
B. G. CLAU aIUS. ZURICH
'-
•. •—* ^+mwenrtrwuu.1wXlenwrWASI ,yrm'aawrCSwu'
= uaw
Takes 21 Lives
Jerusalem—A bomb explosion in
the business centre of Haifa followed
by a running gun battle between
I Jews and Arabs .killed at least 12
an' ;persons and wounded 60 others. The
'outbreak was eve of the ,blooetest in
the lon • history of Arab -Jewish clash
t es in the Holy Land which each group
considers it`s national and spiritual
lmomneland.
Flew Around World
Around the world in less than fear
days, Howard Hughes, Texas million-
aire sportsman, and his four interpid
companions sliced the globe -girdling
record in half last Thursday, colnplet-
ing a 14,824 mile circuit in 91 hours
and 14 minutes and became the wor-
Icl's No. 1 air hero. But never again,
he said on landing, Wildly cheered by
an estimated 25,000 .spectators,
Hughes swooped his big silver mono-
plane to a perfect landingat Flop/
B ennett Airport, New York city.
His eye's were red, his shirt was ser
edged with grime, almost without
sleep, the had stuck it out at the
controls of the big sky -streaking
s
g
flip, aided only by an automatic
yro-pilot ever since taking off on
Su d
Destroyers Ready to Leave
Canada's ewo new destroyers, Ot-
tawa and Re,tigouche, will leave Ing
ktud zebeut time end of July for the.
Pacific coact stationed at Esquimalt.
Cant_ Brodeur, who will bring the
Ottawa over, will coninnand the Little
ilot=lia. Canadian naval ratings who
are to man the destroyers are alreackt'-
in England receiving instructions,
Te.achers Too Plentiful
.Educati'orial officials are not par-
ticularly interested in the story that
20 tons of examination ;-rs are•
being marked by teachers uncles: the •
•direction of the department of edu-
cation at Toronto. But what did bo-
ther thele was the part of the story
-
that .said 9,000 teachers are engaged'
in the work. A little mental aeithmet-
n ay 11evuous• lc reveals that there are 42,782 sec- -
• -oncary school students in the
prey -
Co. Council Not justitaedince: With 9,000 tac
hers the ,tercqheduit'
s
e of the
count
council- t
o cmi age is.
fisc pupils ilS t
o one o e tea
cher.
lsp
ist existence,” Councillor 'Edward
Kennick, Ancaeter Twp., near Ham-
ilton said. "The cost of the County
- of Wentworth's municipal governm-
ent, administrative only, was 826,988
In the event of the abolition of the
county council, ,almost the total of
this amount would' be saved annually
- since it is practically all controllable
expenditure and mnch.ef it of a dup-
licative nature. And we must rem,
ember that Wentworth is only one of
the 38 counties in Ontario
•
ale at present not sufficient to justify
•
:old to 11Irs, McKenzie of Shelburne.
Mr. Rosseau sold out last ran after
being in for 11 years. A hoted has
stood on the site of the Rattenbury
for 80 years.
Kilts Rattle Snake
.Rev. E. M. Loney and family were
recent visitors to Callender and on
their return were at Stokes Lay on
the Bruce Peninsula and while' there
Mr Loney killed a 281inc1h rattle
snake with a email stick. The rattler
had 9 pair of rattles and was exhib-
ited in a Windoev at Wingham the
Rev's. home a few days.
Lady 90 Years Old
Margaret Robinson, Seaforth, cele-
brated her 90th birthday on Silly 18,
she comes from a strain of long -living
people, her mother :being 106 when
she passed away, Miss Robinson was
born in Darlington Twp. and moved
with the family to Tuckersmitt and
10 yrs. ago came to Seaforth.
Andrew Porter Passes
One of G oderieh's best-known cit-
izcn's Andrew Porter, died Sunday
evening he was in the late sixties. An
exceptionally well informed man, had
an adventurous and colorful career.
Born in Blanshard Twp. Perth Coun-
ty, he was in turn a printer's devil,
journeyman compositor and news
writer, assistant and acting postmas-
ter at Clinton, bank manager at God-
erich and Dungannon, candidate for
the Legislature in Centre Huron in
1908 and for the last 20 -odd years
of his life, customs collector at the
port, of Goderich, retiring three yrs.
ago.
Boshart—Albright Wedding
A quiet wedding was performed at
the Mapleview A, M. Church, 3rd.
line, Wellesley, on Sunday- evening,
Jully Srd, when Miss Selina Albright
of Milverton, daughter of Mrs. Jacob
Albright, of Poole, was united in
marriage to Mr. Enos Bot'hart, eid-
er son of ,Mr. John Boshart of Sea
°nvth. Bishop Dan Lebold', of Well-
esley performed the ceremony. About
eight relatives and friends were pres-
ent from Buffalo, Kitebener, New.
TFarnburg. Tavisfock, 'M Iverton and
district, They left on a honovrnooe
trip to Peensylvrnia and tate Eastern
("east and on their return will re-
side in Seaforth.
I-Iurlecl in Ditch
Left lvinn• unconscious 'T t a reed.-
side
oed-aide ditch for nearly two hours the
v4*'i•,iwt of a hit-andrun driver, (Mee
Woods, 15 yr. old son of Mrs, Lo1'tie '
Woods, Seaforth found he had eae,-
saped with tlnly minor bend iathtm-t»
and a nossiiAle rib fracture, was sta.
tick .1C1$ mile reit of tov'n ee lir+ re/e •
to vvark oil e. .farm, he is believed to
reeve hath ie tl,n Ailed, for a few :her•
+irs iyb!`n lis, 1rrr11i71nd conseicet mreee
eel err„lbort ler'-. re m'ornembers la-
dle a(” tot+ a ,,,lei:'+'at ria•rn1i +het he eve
r^^
1 t.
t•:
rt 'oscallatiol (wf tho car,
. Ties Up at C oderich
The big grain freighter Riverton
of the Sarnia Steamship Co., tied up
at Goderich for an indefinite period,
the Cr, w, of 25 left for thele homes in
variolas pieces. The •C nodac is en
route -olso for this peat for a similar -
purpose. 260 of the Paul Henry
cruise, ebosr-': the Georgian spent 3
hours at C..,cirrich on Thursday, and
rrlany viii sed the shopping district and
points of iimteeest. The party was en
S
route to ,arni
, a.
R
AGAINST TE LIGHT
This scene was snapped against tri
camera. Ordinary exposure gives i=ii
be used—if direct sun rays stritc
HAVE
"against ethe light"— that
is, with sun or photo lights beyond
the subject so that tlta> .shadolvs
pint toward you instead ef. away
from you?
This lighting is a ,source of many
interesting -pictures. Striking sil-
houettes
alhouettes of trees and person's •can'
be obtained. Sunlight, ,corning from
above and slightly behind the sub-
ject in an informal portrait, gives
appealing highlights on hair and
shoulders. Numerous "different' ef-
fects are possible.
When you take such. piotaren,
your lens Must -be shaded so direct
rays of sunlight or artificial light
do not strike it. An inexpensive Tens
food or sun shade (see diagram) is
veryneeful, and slips on easily In-
deed, in is an advantage to use weal
az shade for many pictures. It ,ruts
Brut stray sidelights and refieetions,
gives brigla:ter, "snappier" rfctnres.
Of course, when the stip ']s low,
in the sky -,almost on a line with
your lens, the hood Inay not help,
but frequently you can filed 'LU s
c(itio'n whore the sun will be hidden ; This a tress trunk. 't'hen the of the tree will serene to
shade your lens,
&?1.-. •.eg .erect the
e light, so shadows come toward the
e silhouette effect. A lens shade must
e the Wass, they spoil the -picture.
HAVE you ever tried-t'akiixg•
iw.here the light is intense, give then
ordinary exposure if you want a sil-
houette effect. To get details in the
how ow lens shade (at left) pro-.
tett$ glass from direct glare. Stray,
reitectiotas are cut out, pictures are:
clearer; brighter. •
sliadoly side, use an exposure twt .-
air three times as long.
For informal portrait studies, with-
fltta Briar back of your ..subject, ar-
raa ge. a sheet of white cardboard.
or cloth. so that it reflects light on.
the subject's face. And when the
by is :the. background of your pie•-
nre, 'use a shy filter on the lens..
'darkens the sky a bit and makes..
unlit :subjects stand out. It slips.
n the .leas just as the sun shade',
s
julai y.,rr true:11.0e"