HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1933-08-18, Page 34 i
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1.1 18, 1933,,
Seen' in the County
kip
ers
Serious Accident.
Wm. E. Turnbull, 62, dairy farmer,
residing three miles west of Dash-
wood, was critically injured near his
home late !Wednesday night, when the
rear of lila alai& wagon was renamed
fay a light truck. Turnbull, thrc�wm,
lheadlong from the driver's, ' seat of
his wagon, was found i ndiex the truck
bumpers, within an inch or two of
then front wheels after the crash.
Turnlbullls wagon was struck by the
Gunther stage, which travels' daily
between (Dashwood and Exeter, and
was driven by Harry Hoffman. Turn -
(hull was removed to 'his home, where
'he was attended by Dr. Hobbs Taylor
�f Dashwood. He was found to be
lsuff'erin'g from, a light fracture of
the skull. Seven .ribs were fractured.
lie also suffered .greatly from shook.
:Hoffman sustained cuts about the face•
from shattered glass. In the impact,
.one of the milk boxes was jolted from
•ithe wagon, and crashed through the
windshield. Both men were travelling
.east on the Lake road aril were with-
in a few rods of Turn)bull's gateway
when the mishap occurred. Hoffman
who has driven the stage, for over 30
,years, was returning from a trip to
Grand Bend, while Turnbull was on
Reis way home from delivering milk to
)Jalkveood. The crash badly damaged
the front of the light truck, while
'Turnbull's horse broke loose and bolt -
.ed home. Hoffman stopped imrmedi-
a,bely and found the elderly man ly-
ing under his- fren.t.,.•, bumper. The
wheels had• not touched him. He ran
to a neighbor's home to summon as-
.aistance, but in the meantime, a trans-
port truck stopped and the drivers
4arried Turnbull into his own home.
'Dr. Taylor. was called and attended
kirn there. Traffic Officer Lever of
'Clinton was notified: ---Clinton News -
:Record.
A. Saturday Evening Alarm.
There was considerable excitement
.on the 'Square -on Saturday evening
•'when the fire department turned out
in response to an alarm from the
.Agricultural grounds. The trucks had
, -to make theirway through the dense
-traffic on the Square, the siren emit -
sling terrific shri4eks of warning. When
the firemen found that the cause •of
-the alarm was an automobile which
:had taken fire through its owners
.driving with' the emergency brake on.
Little damage was done: _ Goderich
,ignal.
A Mitchell Wedding.
The marriage of Miss Annie Camp-
- Well daughter of Mrs. Donald Camp-
bell, of Mitchell, and sister of Mr.
Douglas Campbell, fornilerly organist.
.of North Street United Church, and
•now of St. Catharines, took place in
:Main Street United Churels, Mitchell,
.on Saturday evening, the bridegroom
being Mr. John Finney Madill of :St.
Catharines. Among the guests was
'.Mil's Ruth War;k of Cad'erich. Mr.
and Mrs. Madill will reside at St.
4"atharines. Goderich Signal.
s Huron Old Boy
Mr. S. J. Latta of Regina, a form -
ler Huron county boy, is director of
-publicity for the Grain Exhibition be-
ing -held at Regina this month. Mr.
. "Latta was a .school teacher in Zurich
in his younger days, but went to Sas,
"katchewan in 19045 and settled on a
ahomestead. •He represented Last
(Mountain in the Saskatchewan Legis-
lature for a number of years and has
-9rela the portfolio of highways, edu-
'cation and provincial secretary.—Zur-
jich Herald. •
Near Drowning in the Maitland
Four small boys had a narrow es-
' cape from drowning in the Maitland
-river about 11.30 Tuesday morning.
Mr. G. A. Sc'hatite had built a flat-
bottomed boat, with safety pontoons,
',for use on the river. On Tuesday
morning unknown to him his two
sons, Eric and Donald, accompanied
by Jim Durnin and Donald Campbell,
took the boat out on the rimier. They
were just west of the McKenzie bridge
and near the'middle of the ri r when
they all crowded to one,'e'e of the
boat. Their weight w too much
for the craft which upset and threw
•the four boys into the water. Eric
Seliatte, and- •Jim, 'D'nrllin Could swim
rand were not in any great danger,
but Donald Schatte, about 4 years
-old, and Donald 'Campbell, 8 years,
could not swim. Donald Oanig bell
succeeded in changing on to the side
of the boat. Donald Schatte got back
'on the boat (but fell off again and had
gone down, twice) when Frank Angus
and Billy 'Seddon, who were in a boat
nearby pulled him from the water
and rescued the other (boys and took
them to ,shore. Jim, Durnin and Don-
ald Campbell scampered away home
while Eric and Donald ISehatte wait-
ed at Bert Elliott's till their father
drove them home. What ,mtight have
proved a serious accident turned out
to }se no nsoretbhan'i a thrilling exper.i-•
.eruee for the (boys.-;Wfingharn Ad-
vance-Ti'meis.
Cow Falls Into Well Near Greenway.
'There was excitement at Mr. E.
Mason's one morning last week when
e (valuable cow fell in the well near
the barn. The neighbors responded to
the S.O.S. and built a derrick over
the well, but the horses' that were
drawing the cow out stepped out too
quickly --the rope ` broke—the cow
was back in the well. When the rope
was ready again a second attempt
was rntade and the men placed planks
over the well to prevent a similar
occurrence; but also the planks spread
apart and the .poor eow journeyed
(none too gently) to the bottom of
the well for the third time. At the
next attempt the rescue was affected
and the cow isn't' much worse for her
experience. If she could only talk
elle would like say, "All's well that
ends well." ---(Exeter Times -Advocate.
Alfred Hodgins Dies.
The death took place in Victoria
Hospital, London, on Friday, August.
4th, of Mr. Alfred M. Hodgins, who
was injured in the recent wind storm
which swept this community on Wed-
nesday, June 7th: Mr. Hodgins, who
was .pinned beneath the. wreckage of
his barn had his left leg fractured
above the knee and also .suffered a
dislocated and fractured• left shoulder
and other injuries. About the middle
of July she was removed to Victoria'
Hospital, London, and since that time
has had several 'blood transfusions.
His age was 58 years and ten months.
He is survived by hie wvi•dow, whose
maiden name was Ida Windsor; also
five sons and three daughters: Ivan
and' Elgin, in the West; Eileen, in
London an•d Orpha, Pauline, Hariy,
l3rin and Emerson at home. The fun-
eral (private) was held from the un-
dertaking parlors of 'Mr. R. N. Rowe
on Sunday conducted by Rev. Mr.
Stewart, of Centralia, with interment
in the Exeter cemetery. — '1± xeter
Times -Advocate.
Sixteen -Year -Old Sought By Parents.
Concern is felt for the whereabouts
of Charles Sheardown, •16 -year-old
von of Mr. and Mrs. .Sam Sheardowvn,
Last Saturday he left home against
the wishes of his parentsy after gath-
ering up his clothes and drawing his
savings out of the bank. Nothing has
been heard from him. It has been
learned, hdwever, that Charles left
town with one Walter Dodds, aged
45, in a Buick car. Dodds is known
to the Sheardown family and when
-the trip was first projected some
weeks ago the parents warned Dodds
against taking the boy with him. This
warning Was issued again Iast Sat-
urday, but apparently not -heeded.
Dodds had a farm in Alberta but sold
it three years ago. Provincial Con-
stable McCoy was called in on the
case. ,Hie notified o'fli.cial.•s at• Tober-
nvory, by which route the pair were
thought to he travelling, to stop
them at the ferry, but they never
turned up. They ark• presumably well
on their way to the West by this
time.—Goderich Star.
Struck By Auto.
• At 10.30 on Saturday night while
walking from the Square Park across
the road at Montreal Street, Miss
Reta Carbert, 16,. of Clinton, was
strudk down and severely injured by
a car driven by Palmer Bundy, De-
troit, a summer canipet five miles
down the Blue Water Highway. The
girl was struck by the bumpers,
thrown against the headlight, which
was broken, clearing the wheels and
striking the pavement. Miss Cartiett
received head and arm injuries. The
injured girl is reported. to be making
satisfactory progress toward recov-
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Wearposiorecte
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5floW ,L i11.A✓A. s OF HOLT ;144
Stephen A. Haboush, Native Galilean, andj wife, come under auspices
of Y. W. M. Auxiliary, sand his first appearance will be on !Sunday morn-
ing, Septerruber 10th, in the Northside United Churdb, Seaforth, and again
on Thursday, September 14th.
iPalestine has changed very` little
in the past 20 centuries. It is the
same now as it was then—when the
Vaster lived and walked apuong men.
The pastoral life of the people is the
same, their customs are the Same, and
they are the same, ass•erte-d Stephen
A. Haboush, u
born bo �n in Galilee, Pales-
tine, where he tended herds of sheep
among the hills of Galilee, the same
hills that were hallowed by the; -Mas-
ter.
This Native Galilean comes to Sea -
forth under the 'auspices of the Y.
W. an Auxiliary of the ,Noi thside
United Church for two appearances
during which he will 'bring inspiring
messages from the IHioly Lands with
exclusive motion pie:Mena of. the land
of Immortals who lived, and worked
with the :Master, •.
A Galilean.
'Mr. Haboush is a Galilean by birth.
ale has looked upon the .bright skies,
the green hills, the olive groves, as
they were two thousand years ago
when the tremiendous story of the
four Gospels was happening. He was
born to the mysticism and wonder of
the East. It is his heritage. He
grew up in the eternal hills still
redolent of the mighty events that
happened there..
IHe came to North America and was
educated in North American Univers-
ities. Later he returned to Palestine
to the scenes of"'his youth. And he
'brought back 'to the- new world a
message, a message straight from
the heart of the ancient and change-
less' Holy Land, a story that every
North American and every Christian
is inspired With.
His is the message of faith—the old
faith of the fathers. To a modern
and materialistic world, he brings the
beauty and marvellous imagery of
the world that was, the Holy Land'
of antiquity, and also the lives and
characters of the Immortals.
'He adds to his .messages an unus-
ual charm by the use of special mo-
tion pictures, enhanced by beautiful
scenes in natural color which appear-
ed in the National Geographic Maga-
zine. Mr. Haboush is the author of
"AMY Shepherd Life in Galilee."
Wherever Mr. Haboush has appear-
ed, whether it is before great North
American Churches, Conferences, As-
semblies, School and 'C'olleges, before
London audiences, or on the platform
in the ancient city of 'Damascus, he
has interpreted the Scriptures in the
light of places and people. 'He brings
to you the very breath of Scriptural
times and places and people. ' Madam
Ha(bousii' will assist in costumes and
Oriental music. ' •
ery. The driver of the car, who was
not held, has.'been a daily visitor to
the bedside of the patient, as has his
father.' Young Bundy was pust pull-
ing away from the curb and was, still
in low gear when the. girl stepped out
in the path of the big automobile.—
Goderich Star.
Former Brusselite Dies Suddenly
Bruce Wilson, a re4ident of Brus-
sels some 35 years 'ago, died sudden -
Sy whiae..visiting his sister in Brant-
ford on August 5th. He was always
an interested worker in young_ peo-
ple's interests. While in Brussels he
was an active worker in. the Young
People's organizations at the Metho-
dist Church. In Brantford, he 'was.
secretary of the Y.M.C.A., For the
past number of years he has. been
living in Itchaea, and at the time of
his death was returning from a vaca-
tion, in Muskoka. 'He took a heart at-
tack during the- night at his sister's
house in Brantford, and before medi-
cal pis' could be surnlrnoned, he was
'dead. Burial was made in the Itchaca
cemetery on Tuesday.—Brussels Post.
Breaks Neck in Fall from Truck
Plunging headlong to the road from
a truckload of wood as it was going
up a grade on the county road near
H,olyropd, James Thornton, 34, well-
known Ripley baker and an official
in baseball circles of Bruce County,
died an hour later 'at 5.30 Monday.
He suffered a broken neck and crush-
ed skull. Thornton was sitting on the
load of wood while his brother Bert,
cif Teeswater •drov'e the machine. At
the grade a half mile from Holyrood
.the Ripley man lost his balance and
fell to the hard gravel surface, land-
ing directly on his head. Coroner Dr,
Jahn• Ferguson, Kincardine, wa s sums
m'oned, and the circumstances investi-
gated by Provincial Officer Waud, of
Walkerton: It was not thought an in-
queSt would be necessary. James
Thornton was well known in the dis-
trict. He took keen interest in all
sporting activities and was vire-pre'si-
dent of the Lakeside Baseball L'e'ague.
Surviving, besides his wife, formerly
Margaret Harkness, Teeswater, is a
three-year-old son, Jack. — Win.gham
Advanoe-Times.
Mystery Man, When Dead
Lacks Mbney or Friends
Wealth, say the philosophers, isn't
everything.
Dr. J. W. Lowry, "the richest man
in Lawrence county," had money,
power, learning, but when he died
recently, possilbly the victim of. 'a
m'urderer's hand, there was not a
single intimate friend to sorrow at
his bier.
Te fabulous amount of cash he
wa. 'supposed to have could not be
fours .
. IDe ective's and reporters pried into
the .private life he had guarded so
jealously,) a true men of mystery,
exposing his cherished secrets in an
effort to find who killed him.
And most ironic of all, the $40,000
mausoleum he constructed to receive
his body was empty; All that was
earthly of him was distributed about
the state to chemists, or physicians,
or 'enifbaltmers, striving to explain his
death.
A snap of the fingers for wealth,
said Fate.
The myslierious death of Dr. Lowry
the ,reputed owner of 101 parcels of
Lawrence county property, and lead-
er of the county Republican organiza-
tiotr, !has given southern Ohio one of
its most ensational murder investi-
gatione.
They nd him dead in his palace -
like hoiin'e where ha lived alone with
a7.
a negro boy for- a servant. His head
:was swathed in towels.. He ivas be-
li•eved to have died a natural death.
Rumors o8 foul play sprang up
when weeks passed without the dis-
covery of his will or his money; The
body was exhumed for postm'ortesir,
in the belief he -Might have -been
poisoned.
A virtual recluse, despite his lead-
ership in the community, • he .had no
close friends. Political and 'business
warfare had brought shim several
enemies and he was dhce attacked•
while walking near his hone.. He
was nearly always armed.
Born in Greenbrier county, W. Va.,
in 1867, Dr, Lowry earned money for
a medical education at the Univer-
sity of Maryland by working around
livery stables.
WINGHAM
Mr. and Mrs. Forgie and Miss Anna
attended the funeral of the late Jos.
Fellows which was held at Goderich
on Saturday.
Mr, Ronald Rae, of London spent
the -holiday at the home of his par-
entys, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Rae.
. Miss Agnes Gibbons has. returned
to her home after spending her vaca-
tion at 'Ipperwash Beach. •
Miss Eileen Mair, of Winnipeg, has
returned home after spending the past
month with relatives and friends in
Prince Edward Island, Toronto, and
Winghan.
(Misses Grace Lehman, Helen and
Edith Kinsie and Messrs. Gari Leh-
man and Percy Barley,, of Kitchener,
visited at theme of -Mr. and Mrs.
Sinclair Phippen on'Sunday. •
Mr. and Mrs. James Harwick and
children, Elizabeth and Walter, who
had been spending the past month
with his sister, Miss Jessie Warwick,
left on Sunday, and will sail on the
Duchess of Richmond on August. lth
•for Liverpool.
Miss Mildred. Reid, of Toronto,
is spending her holidays with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Reid, Carl-
ing Terrace.
Summer Salads
[During August, many of the vege-
table and- 'salad plants are at their
best. Among those which are useful
for salad making are tender young
carrots and onions, cooked young
beets and new potatoes, Old later on,
the second supply of green peas.
Young cabbage, tomatoes, cucumbers,
too, are plentiful. Many varieties of
salad can be prepared from the above
list.
On a hot summer evening, when
the very thought of a heavy meal
is destructive to appetite, prepare
a generous bowlful of crisp, ice-cold
salad; serve it with a platter of
thinlyesliced cold meat, and ' the
appetite orf °the most wearied mem-
ber of your family will he stimulat-
ed.
'Ainvest attractive supper dish is
made by heaping a vegetable salad
She Was Never So
Grateful In Her Life
St. John, N. B.—"It's almost un'be-
liev Zile—i can't myseif realize it—
but Sargon ended my stomach trou-
ble thrid had been pulling me db*n
for eight years," recently declared
Mrs. May Kelley, 94 Protection
Street. "Why, I lived almost entirely
on milk and crackers for a long
time, but now T can eat anything I
want without a sign of trouble. I've
also been • entirely freed of castanets..
Uon by Sargon Pills. The didn't
have t U . feet Jing celiac"
(.l. AtHA1Rlr
r /
t4 you
hundreds of dollars. to u
Each subscription in arrears
amounts to very little; :t
multiply these small amounts
by a large number of sub-
scribers and one can easily
see that the totalwill be con-
siderable. dome -six hundred
statements of arrears have
recently been mailed to sub-
scribers. If your have receiv-
ed one will you please co-
operate by remitting in the
addressed and postage paid
envelope which you. will
find enclosed. 'Thank You.
The Huron Expositor
McLean Bros., Publishers,
in the centre of the platter, over-
lapping thin slices of cold meat at
either end and garnishing it with
crisp lettuce leaves and a few sprigs
of fresh mint. A mixture of season-
ed vegetables combined with a little
crisp celery makes an excellent fill-
ing for whole tomatoes.
When lettuce is scarce, tender
young cabbage makes a good basis
for apple's, cucumbers, tomatoes,
pineapple and otheir'mixtures, and if
daintily garnished may be. served
without.lettuce.
Rules For Mixing Vegetable Salads.
(I) Choose your materials care-
fully. Make sure that the flavor. of
the different vegetables blends well.
(2) When using onions, be sure
that the onion flavor is not too pro-
nounced. Better to rub a cut onion
around the inside of salad bowl, and
obtain the flavor in this way, than to
add pj;,,'ces of cut onion—unless it is
an onion salad.
(3) When you cook vegetables to
use in salads, do not cook them
quite as soft as for ordinary use. If
;oo well done they become niiushy
when mixed, with the dressing. They
should be firm.
(4) 'When serving a mixed ,vege-
ta'ble salad, the finished salad will be
more attractive if each vegetable is
marinated separately, then mined to-
gether lightly just before serving. By
marinating we mean allowing the,
vegetable to stand in a cold place
with a little French' dressing oft it.
If you have never done this, you will
find a great difference in the flavor
of your salad when.you try it.
(5) Cut all pieces in small, uni-
forni,pieces. If cut too large, the
dressing will not penetrate sufficient•
ly; if cut too small the salad is un-
attractive to the eye.
(6) 'Make your salad attractive to
look at as well es to eat. Never
throw the ingredients carelessly to-
gether.
(7) Vary your salads frequently,
and serve them with different dress-
ings. Don't let them become mon-
otonous.
(8) ' Try to find out the type of
salad the men of the family like and
m,akle it for them, frequently.
Usually, men do not eat enough
salads.
(9) Remember to have both salad
vegetalbles• and dreekipg ire cold.
Cucumber' Boat Salad.
Wash three cucumibers, peel and
cut in halves (lengthwise). Care-
fully remove inside of cucumbers and
lent in thin slices. Take one cup
chopped salmon and refill the cu-
cumber shell With pieties of cucu'm'ber
and salmion. 'Garnish -*yeah, capers and
add salad "dres'sin'g, Chill and serve
on water crews..
Cucumber and Carrot Salad.
Grate or grind uncooked carrots.
Mix with mayonnaise to which cream
has been added, one part cream to
three or four of mayonnaise. Add
salt and pepper to taste. Heap a
mound on lettuce and surround with
sliced cucumbers. ,
Carrot and Celery Salad
(Peanut Dressing)
;Cut cold- cooked carrots in thin
strips and mix with an equal
quantity of crisp celery, cut in small
pieees.•Serve son lettuce with peanut
dressing, made by whipping four
tablespoonfuls of peanut butter into
one cup of 'boiled dressing. ,
Macedoine Salad
1 cup cooked string beans
1 cup cooked carrots, cut in cubes
1 cup cooked cauliflower, in small
pieces
I cup cooked peas
1 hard -cooked egg
1 small green pepper, chopped.
Marinate each vegetable separ-
ately in French dressing, and chill
thoroughly. Arrange vegetables in
separate nests on crisp lettuce leaves
and spr•in;kle with green pepper,
Chop egg, add to dressing with a
few drops of onign juice and serve on
salad. se
Gieen
--
Green Pepper and Celery Salad
SS green pepper, shredded
2 cups dicedeelery
12 sliced stuffed olives
Salt and pepper
Mayonnaise
Crisp lettuce.
Mix green pepper, celery, olives
and seasoning with enough may'o'n-
naise to moisten. Place on crisp let-
tuce leaves. Garnish with mayon-
naise.
Stuffed Beet Salad
Use cooked beets of medium size.
Scoop out the centres and fill with
cream cheese and cream mixed to-
gether. Chopped chives may be
added, too, if desired. Serve on
shredded cabbage salad with a thin
mayonnaise over them. Cottage
cheese may be used instead of cream
cheese, -
Salad Of New Cabbage:
3 cups shredded cabbage
3 tomatoes, diced
6 pimiento -stuffed olives
', cup coarsely chopped peanuts
les cup mayonnaise.
Use crisp white cabbage, finely
shredded. Combine with two to'nila-
tdese skinned and diced. Add the
olives and nearsely chopped peanuts.
Mix lightly and moisten with the
mayonnaise. Heap on lettuce leaves,
garnish with a tomato sliced thinly,
and top with a whirl of mayonnaise
'dressing.
Vitamin Salad
Take equal parts of raw spinach
and lettuce. Wash the vegetables
thoroughly. Roll the leaves of both
.greens into a firm bundle and place
on a tutting hoard. With a sharp
knife cut into the finest shreds pos-
sible. Wash and prepare a few green
onions. Cut into fine slices. Toss
together in a bowl and mix with
French dressing. Garnish with balls
of cottage cheese sec:staled with
paprika.
$4OOOO.
in Pri3es and Attractions
Canada's Ptogreas is demonstrated at the Western Fair.
Come and see the marked improvement that has taken place in all
lines of Agriculture and business endeavours.
fnr\Canada is winning a place in the front rank of the Nations. Go
vard with Canada.
Prize List and Information Mailed on Rearrest.
ENTRIES CLOSE ry1UGUST 91st 26
.L H. Saunders, President W. D. Sadcaon, Secretary',
September 1146, 1933
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