HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1937-08-27, Page 34
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oeoupai t .mesmfdug Ou mfr s tu-ea.:
r$a"WP / HIP 144 chi 444441NX $' ).$ 04SO A.
Mist. Met Mitt harA tt a mi**, iforfvq, Akin Re woo,
t000 to fraet n ,her, lire a, couple of 1 is ' r4Ci0 0x74 d
week,P; ago', mete alriating , if ln,r Heat aqunrety al year-_. a .pable, Theis
# bed for,.six waeks: The. accident ie ;no braChig yjurself ageiAat the Ira-
.
Pe
a -
pe tive flaws a 10,914eAtl itq
It like . gofta+g over Niagara rags
in a steel barrel full of railroad spikes.
The best thing tba't Can Paimen to
yQui-aud nue of the -rare thtmgo --is
to be thrown out es the doors spring
open, 80 you only have the gar:Mad to
reckon with,, True; you ata'ike with
as much force as. if yogi- had been
thrown from-tihe--Coetinennt eleimdted
at top speed. But at -least you are
spared the 'lethal .array of .gleaming
knobs: and •edges and glassdu the oar.
Anything can happen in that split
second of crash, even those lucky es-
capes you hear about. People (have
dived through windsrhields and come
out with only superficial s.^rp,tehes.
They .have run cars together • head on,
reducing both to 'twisted junk, and
been found unhurt and arguing bit-
teely two-.. minutes afterwards. But
death was there just the same—the
was only exercising bis' privilege of
being erratic.
This spring a wrecking crew pried
the door off a car which had been
overturned down an embankment and
out stepped, the driver with only a
scratch on his cheek. But hie mother
was still inside, a splinter of wood
from •t;htop driven four inches into
o aired ixl ,her Boli 4e l Her *MY
friends will be pleased that, -sem•
getting • along nicely:=MiteheU'Advo•
eate.
Young Men Honored By Friends
Messrs. • Norman Th<luupsan end-
- Dean Davison -were. honored by
• s
friends when the former was pre-
• sented with an' end table and the lab
- ter an ettomen yhen-a, group-Orloung
- men called at their homes on Tues-
--day evening. Following the' presenta-
•- tion a "bars met was held at the
- Queen's Hotel.—Brussels Post.
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114
.4.
NSALL
(Intended for last week)
A pleasing trio, composed of Messrs.
W. A. MacLaren, R. Y. MacLaren and
James Bengough, sang at Carmel
Presbyterian Church on. Sunday morn-
jng last.
Mr. and Mrs. Launce Hahtereby have
returned from a very' delightful ten
days' motor trap to Indiana, Kentucky
• and'' through the Southern, States.
While „there they visited - the latter's
• sister at Indiana. Mrs. Battersby's
father also accompanied them and vis-
ited his daughter whom he had not
wseen for 18 years.
The Misses Mabel Workman, Pearl
- and Hazel Thompson, Olga Bell and
Isabel! Alexander are this week tak-
ing a motor trip up the St. Lawrence.
Mrs. Charles Perisy and daughter,
Margaret, R.N., of Winnipeg, are vis-
iting the former's brother and sister-
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Corbett
and family.
Mr.. and Mrs. Herb. Britton and
daughter, of Dublin, spent Sunday
- with the latter's mother, Mrs. Hannah
"Workman. They were accompanied
back by Miss Inene Hoskin who has
accepted a .position with them.
Marjorie` Cudanore, small daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Cudmore, had
the misfortune recently while playing
he the barn, to fall down a number of
steps, fracturing her arm.
Mr. and .Mrs: Sam Devlin and tam-
. fly, of Albany, N.Y., and Mr. and Mrs.
P. H. Devlin, of Stratford, visited at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cor-
' nett this week.
The Misses Margaret and Georgia
Murray, Of London, are visiting with
friends in town one renewing old ac-
quaintances. `
Miss Maude McLean has returned
from a very pleasant week spent with
her brat
ing a gr
No blood
just a gr
ing her
had clut
leave th
'Me fun festival of
the year, featuring the
famous screen star
Tom Mix* Three big
time shows in one.
Alfred Rogers, Preying
Elwood A.Hughes;
1°""7414411.6140.
p," General Manager
7'���®
N ��
' as a result of a son's tak-
asy curve a little too fast.
no bones. horribly twisted—
y-baired corpse still clutch-
ocketbook in her lap as she
tied it when she felt the car
road
relatives and friends. in Detroit..
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pearce and
family, Winnipeg, Man., were guests
the first part of this week with Mr.
and Mrs. W. B. Cross.
Me. and Mee. George Walker and
Donald spent th,e week -end in Tiver-
ton visiting Mrs. Walker's sister; Mr.
and Mrs. H. MacDougall.
Miss Grace MacDougall is visiting
at the home of- Mr. and Mrs. George
Walker and family.
The W. M. S. of Carmel Presbyter
Ian Church held their regular meeting,
on Thursday,August 12th, at• three
o'clock in the basement of the
church with Mrs. F. Farquhar. presid-
ing and opened by singing • a . hymn
and the Lord's Prayer in unison. Mrs.
H: Arnold read the Scripture lesson.
The roll call was called. using "Love"
as the text word. The minutes of the
previous meeting were read and ap-
proved. Mrs. F. Farquhar gave a
reading, "Little Joe's. 7lhankofering,"
followed hype hymn. Mrs. F. Farqu-
bar led in prayer and, Mrs•. W. A. Ma.:
Laren took the topic, "Sightseeing in
Japan.". The meeting closed with a
hymn and the Mizpah benediction in
unison.
Hensall juvenile baseball team play-
ed with Clisltou juvenile baseball nine
in Clinton on Monday evening, result-
ing in a score. of 13-3 in favor of
Clinton. Clinton excelled in batting
as well as having the advantage from
the pitcher's mound. The game, al-
though lopsided, as to scoring, was no
mean exhibition of baseball and if
the two 'teams remain intact for a
season or two will be strong medicine
against any team in their class that
they may be grouped with. It will
be recalled that Clinton juveniles
were defeated in their first game with
;,he'Hensallites in the Huron juvenile
league schedule by a score of 9.1. The
players were: Clinton --Hawkins, 2b;
G. Monteith, s.s.; ,Neilens, 3b.; Draper,
p.; ,Paxman, c.f.; Butter, 1.1.;• tt. Mon-
teith, 1b.; Colquhoun, c.; Seeley;
Campbell, r.f. Hensall—M. Hudson,
2b:; Tudor, 1b.; R. Passmore, c.;
Drummond, s.s.; M. Passmore, 3b.; L.
Hudson, c.f.; Shepherd, r.f.;. Joynt.
-r.f.; Hedden, p. Summary:-_Hensall-
010 20 3; Clinton -240 16 13. Um-
pires, Joynt, Hensel]; Johnston, Clin;
ton.
A summary day was held in the
Town Heil, Hensall, on Tuesday af-
ternoon, August 17th, by the South
Huron W. I. of the Ontario Depart-
ment of Agriculture, to demonetrate
their refinishing. furniture project.
Despite the inclemency of. the wea-
ther, there was a very •good attend-
ance of - members. of local branches
present. Mrs. M. E. Walker, of Exe-
ter, presided very ably over the meet-
ing, Mrs. Glen McLean, of the Kip -
pen East Branch, taking Mrs. Robert
Simpson's place who was unable to
be present on account of illness in
the family. - Mrs. R. Kestle, of Hue
ondale branch, and Mies F. E. Hunt-
er, of Exeter branch, all gave inter-
esting and profitable- talks on the pre -
pairing, refinishing and repolishing of
antique furniture. The exhibits of
the work and different pieces of fur-
niture done by different members of
the branches was much admired. An
illustrated; lecture with slides was giv-
en by the department instructress,
Miss Esther Slicter, of Toronto. He;
views of furniture and furnished
rdoms, as well as her lecture explain-
ing the slides, was very new and was
well.- received by the audience. At
the conclusion of the meeting a buffet
lunch was served. from, two very love-
ly, decorated tables.
Now Live!;
Every. Mw n
Here is a 'meiltf' w�ia w'QlikO U aver
morning With a 4101 headaa>he; T d.
Eruaahem ,transformed ire da a . ,
his letter:*
"I Used to wake up ht the imrniags•
with a dull headache A year ago, I,
started taking Ka uschei Salts regur,
Intl,. To-dat, I 'wake up ^fresh and
lively and can d4 - my ,day',e work
without any eatertiott. ` 1 ca. u recom-
mend
ecommend Kruschen foe_ anyone .suffering
from 'headaches and.. constipation, and
for putting new life . into you. I in-
tend to continue with Krusehen, for
the• rest of. my fife." -E. P.
Headaohes can nearly always be
traced- to- a disordered stomach, and
to the unsuspected retention in the
system of stagnating waste material
which poisons the blood. Remove
these poisonsl---prevent them from
forming again ---and you'll never have
to worry any more. And that is just
how Kruschen Salts brings quick and
lasting relief from headaches. •
If you customarily pass without
clear vision a long way ahead, make
sure that every member of the party
carries identification papers --it's dif-
ficult to identify a body that has its
whole faced bashed in or torn off.
The driver is death's favorite agent.
if the steering w'heel holds together
it ruptures his .liver or spleen: so he
bleeds to death internally. Or, if the
steering wheel breaks off, the matter
is settled instantly by =the steering
column's plunging through his alido-
men.
By no means do all head.om colli-
sions occur on curves. The modern
death-trap is likely to be a straight
stretch with tree lanes. of traffic:
This sudden vision of broad straight
road tempts many an.,ordinarily sens-
ible driver into 'passing the man
ahead. Simultaneously a driver com-
ing the other way •swings out at' high
speed. At the last moment each
tries to get into line again, but the
gaps are closed. As the cars in the
line are forced, into the ditch 4o.eap-
sdze •or crash" fences, the passers meet,
Almost head on, in a swirling, grind-
ing splash that sends them caroming
obliquely into the others.
A highway patrolman described
such an accident—five cars in one
mess, seven killed on the spot, two
dead on the way ,to the hospital, two
more dead in the long run. He re-
ihembered it far more vividly than
he wanted toF—the quick way the doc-
tor- turned away from a dead man to
check up 011 a ,woman with a broken.
back; the three bodies out of one car
so soaked with oil from the crank-
case that they looked like wet brown
cigars and not human at all; a man,
walking around and babbling to him-
self, oblivious of the dead! and dying,
even oblivious of the dagger -Like sliv-
er of steel that stuck out of his
streaming wrist; a pretty .girl with
her forehead laid open, trying hope-
lessly to crawl out of a ditch in spite
of her smashed hip.
A first-class massacre of that sort,
is only a question of scale and- num-
bers' --seven corpses are no deader
than one. Each shattered man, wo-
man or child who went to make up
the 564 i orpses chalked up in Ontario
last year had to die a pereonal death.
A oar careening and rolling down a
bank, battering and •smashing its oc-
cupant!& every inch of the way, can
wrap itself so thoroughly around a
tree that front and rear bumpersIn-
terlock, requiring an acetylene torch
to cut them apart. In a recent case
of that sort they found the old lady.
who •had been 'sitting in the back, ly-
ing across the lap of her daughter,
who was in front, each soaked in her
own and the other's blood' Indistin-
guishably, each so battered and. brok-
en that .there was no point whatever
in an autopsy to determine whether
it was broken neck or ruptured heart
that caused. death.
Overturning cars specialize in cer-
tain injuries. ' Cracked pelvis,
instance, guaranteeing agonizing
months in bed, motionless, perhaps
crippled for life—broken spine result-
ing from sheer sidewise twist — the
minor details of smashed knees and
splintered shoulder blades caused by
Mashing into the side of the car as
she goes over with the swirl of en
insane roller coaster—and the lethal
colJsequences- of broken ribs, .which
puncture hearts and lungs with their
raw ends. The consequent internal
hemorrhage is no less dangerous be-
cause it is the pleural instead of the
abdominal cavity that is filling with
blood..
Flying glass—safety glass is by no
'means universal yet — contributes
PRPolar Virg::` y a4 1
lit c'�
is 'Ilv1r 7, lAT;
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Chug,
bo1,MeliOa
ul>e ogs3y;.I an
;A2agi5, H.erd IrRev#11
U
1aivt Markes; Q;Kenneh Ren-
laeadayi, *Amain* .$1:11.$
StrliFe UP. the Basad; .36 p.m...KW
cardiae Review; 1.15, 1.01vestnelt lY[ar-
ke#s; '5.45 Growin' up; 7.30, C`tI
Pings. . .
Wedm:etnday, Sept, 1-12.15 p•ml.,
Nan►c•+a•Song Conteste :1.15, Live$toek
Markets; 6.45: Teeawater Review;
7.30, Shep Fields Orchestra.
Thursday, Sept. 2—•t2.15' p.m., Name
a Song Content; 6.45,... Lucknow Re-
view; 8, Gladys Pickell, piano; 8.39,
CSNS HiII-Billies:
Friday, Sept. 2-12.1:5 Pm, Name a
Song Contest; 12.30, Harry J. Boyle,
news; 6.30, Guy Lombardo Orchestra.
THE TOMATO CROP
Pieking of tomatoes for canning in
Eastern Ontario, ()commenced this
week, They appear fairly good, but
some black rot is in .evidence in many
fields. Factories have contracted for
the crop at 30 to 35 cents per bushel,
depending on the ,district where they
were grown. This prices compares
With 27% cents paid last year. The
acreage of canning ••factory tomatoes
shows a substantial gain this year. 1n
Eastern Ontario about 94000 acres
were set out as against 5,000 Gores m
1936. In Western Ontario the acre-
age shows a ,rise from 16,000 to $25,-
700.
25;700.
the impact of a Iaeairy-duty "truck
against the rear of les own car. Or
be as original as the pair ofarnth
who were thrown out of an open road-
ster this spring—thrown clear -but
eacrh broke a windshield post with
his head .in passing and the whole top
of each skull, down to the eyebrows,
was missing. Or swap off a nine -inch
tree and yet yourself impaled by a
ragged branch.
It's hard to find a surviving acci-
dent victim who can bear to talk. Af-
ter you come to, the gnawing, searing
pain throughout your body is account-
ed for by learning that you have both
collar -bones smrashed, both shoulder`
bfades splintered, your right arm
broken in three places and three ribs
cracked, with every chance of bad
internal ruptures. But the pain can't
distract you, as the shock begins to
wear off, from realizing that you are
probably on your way 'out. You can't
forget that, not even wbaen they Shift
you from the ground to the stretcher
and your broken ribs bite into your
lungs and the•sharp ends of yew col-
lar -bones slide over to stak deep into
each side of your screaming throat.
When you've stopped screaming, it all
®
cowitie 1"
much more than its share to the spec-
tacular side of accidents. It doesn't
merely cut—the fragments are driven
in as if a cannon loaded with broken
bo had been fired in your face,
nd a sliver in the eye, travelling
with such force. means certain blind-
ness. A leg or ,arm stuck through
the windshield will cut clan to the
bone .through vein, artery and muscle
like a piece of beef under a butcher's
knife, and it takes little amount of
time to lose a fatal amoupt of blood
under suoh etrcumstances. Even
eafety glass may not be wholly safe
when the car crashes something at
high speed. You hear picturesque
tales of how a flying human body
will make a neat hole in the stuff
with Its, head—the shoulders stick—
the glass ,holds, --sand the raw keen
edge of the hole decapitates the body
as neatly as. a guillotine.
And all that is routine in any com-
munity. To be remembered individu-
ally by the doctors and p'oiicemen,
you have to do something as grotesque
as the lady who burst the windshield
with her head, s'piashingsplinters all
over the other occupants of the ear,
and then, as the. ear rolled over, roll-
ed with It down the edge of the wind-
shield frame and, cut her throat from
ear to ear. Or park on the' pavement
too near a curve at night and stand
in front of the tail light as you'ttake
off the spare trite—which 'Will tmtmort-
alize you ifi somebody's meihory as.
the fellow who was mashed three
feet broad said I Wo inches thlok by
When you tune in your- radio, you do not
hear the sound of rushing water yet far
away .... perhaps hundreds of miles ..
Hydro power is being generated. It is this'
power that enables the radio studio to fill
the air with the finest the entertainment
field affords, and this same power permits
your radio set to efficiently trartsform these
studio transmitted programs into enjoyment,
for the entire family.
As you sit in the comfort of your home, ti is
well to consider that hundreds of trained
Hydro men are working—watvl3ing, day arid,
night, to ensure that nothing will' interfere
with the continued enjoyment and pleasure
you obtain from -your radio.
While striving always to maintain this con-
tinuous uninterrupted service the Hydro of to..
day is adhering strictly to the original prin-
ciples for which it was founded—power costs
have been lowered in the past two years. land
every effort has been made to extend the
benefits of this low-cost electricity to Indus-
try, commerce, and you. -
Radio is just one of many services made.
possible by YOUR Hydro which has made,
and is making, life more enjoyable for you
and your family, at a minimum of cost.
HYDRO ELECTRIC POWER COMMISSIO
371 A
comes back to you—you're dying and
you hate yourself for it.. That, isn't
fiction, either! It's what it actually
feels like to be one of the 546.
And every time you pass on a blind
curve, every time you .hit it up on al
slippery road, every time you step
on it herder than your reflexes will
safely take, every time you drive with
your reactions slowed down by a,
drink or two, every time you follow
the man ahead too closely, you're
gambling a few seconds against this
kind 'of blood and agony and sudden
death.
Take a look at yourself as the •ss -
in the White jacket shakes , )(reg
5
over yon, tells the b'bys wins OW
stretcher not to bother au Soma
away to somebody else who imetuessitee
dead. And then take it ear_.
•
l.iiii>:i4:4...,...,
1aG0OZ%s
N'T IT. S
ifYeah ! It's just grand, mom !"
With their very • first taste they discovered that
Borden's MelOrol Ice Cream is very different from
any other ice cream they'd ever bought.
Yes, Borden's MelOrol is the smoothest fee cream
you've ever tasted. And creamier ... more satisfying
... the finest -tasting ice cream that ever flowed from
a freezer. A new kind of ice cream.
It's made a new way! A new process of blending
• and fast -freezing makes
Borden's MelOrol far
better than ordinary•
ice cream. It's packed a new way! Each rich round
individual serving is wrapped in a roll -pack right at
the freezer. This special wrapper protects its fresh-
ness, purity, and delicious flavour for you. Borden's
MelOrol Ice Cream retains every bitof its fresh -from -
the freezer goodness.
Go to your-MelOrol dealer today and taste this new
ice cream. It's the talk of the town! Never before have
you been able to enjoy so much good ice cream for
a nickel. Try
a bigMelOrol cone. Or discover how
MelOrol improvesa sundae, soda, or malted milk.:
And serve MelOrol at home from the handy carton
for a special treat.
TAKE HOME
A CARTON!
MelOrol is the favourite Ice Cream
now for social events and family get-
togethers 1 Each carton contains four
individually -wrapped servings, all of
the same generous size. and you can
get assailed ,avows,
LOOK FOR•
THIS SIGN!
Dealers displaying the
Borden's MelOrol sign
have genuine MelOrol,
Ice Create. Ask for it by
name.