Loading...
The Huron Expositor, 1938-11-04, Page 34cr st • 4 /1 • 1 A L1F E a i M1' Fr7•ry I�ri-1[t41t+FrNf 45..+i'{.i. , (Continued from Page p) ALIT eaten out, to eis year they pro- vided more than ever in or contingency. The young ladieS of' the ohurch had charge of the tables; bouquets of autumn flowe'rie While their eenions looked after all other Rev. G. Gilmore, the pastor, presided ;over a delightful promm, the main. features .of rwihri eh were sacred and comic numbers by the Paramount Male Quartette of Seafcath and read- ings by Miss Vera Hudson, elocution- ist, from the [same place. Rev: Maier, of Thames! Road Churoh, spoke brief- ly, also Revd. Ganiorea-Mitchell Ad - Hydro at Drysdale Hydro seavice is being extended seutherly through the village of Drys- dale, on the Blue Water Highway, as tar as the farm of Mr. William Ducharme, near St. Joseph. Work- raen are now wiring the, R. C. Church near Drysdale, and it is expected that the services will eoon be aonnected. -Zurica Herald. Tobacco Price Set After a two-day session of direc- tors of the Flue -Cured; Tobacco; Mar- keting Association and of the Market Appraisal Committee, th'e price ques- tion was settled amicably for the 19,38 season. The minimurie average price for the 19'38 crop will be 221/2 cents per pound this year. In 1937 the minimum average was 24% cents, while in la36 the figure was 25 cents. Actual average paid growers, during the last two years, 'hewever, was 27.2 cents in 1937 and 29.2 cents; an 1936. area on ;November 3rd and -in the Leaniington District on November 14. This year's crop of 67 million pounds is far in excess of the former record of 56 million pound's last year and the 23 rnillioa pounds harvested in the arought summer of 1936. 'The' un- expectedly large cre.p may average in excess of 1,1a0 pounds' to the aore. They tad come to the most import- ant and spectacular scene in the film, and the directer was exclaiming what was to happen. "Now understand," he said to the bero, "in this sce,ne the lion will pur- sue for 500 feet." The 'hero looked at the lion, ahen at the director. "Five hundred feet," be echoed, "Yea, that and no more. You Our hero nodded. "I do, but does ahe lion?" TRICHOMONAS HOMINIS—an in- testinal parasite, canning painful inflammation. Found in Maine on dirty toilet bovels THIS shm MONSTER menaces your health Rid toilet bowls of disease-lacien stains Cleanse with Gillett's Lye lr'NON'T TRUST your family's 1-1 health to: haphazard clean- ing' methods! Keep toilet bowls clean and sanitary with Gillett's Pure Flake Lye. Each week, sprinkle Gillett's-full Strength - into the bowl. Stains dis- appear without scrubbing. Use Gillett's for dozens of household tasks . . . to whisk grease from pots and pans, clean garbage pails, free clogged sink and wash -tub drains. Harm- less to enamel and- plumbing. Buy a tin today. •Never dimply(' lye In , hot 'filter. The action of the' lye Itself heats the water. FREE BOOKLET— The Gillett's Lye Booklet gives dozens of ways io make work easier with this power- ful cleanser. Write feir free copy to: Standard Brands Almited, Fraser , Ave. & Liberty St., TorOnto, Ont. , Edmund Daly, vvhe operates radio station VE3ZA, will soon have a modern radio mast in operation. Eeected last week, the 66 -foot mast is built of wood and w3s completed in a week by Mr. Daly and Ian MacTavish. Shcwn halfway ill!) the new mast are Mr. Daly and Mr. MacTavish. Crisis Leads To Self Analysis By English • (By Floyd S. Caalrn;ers, Editor The Finencial Post in The PesT).— In the cold grey dawn of the morn- ing after the crisie, the British peo- ple did a pentrating joa of national Among the_questions they asked themselves were theee: "How can we keep this nation strong if we waste the phyeical and spiritual energies ef the people in un - "Why can we net keep "alive, in this happy interval of peace, the spir- itual energy and- the nation-wide de- sire to serve the State that emerged as the Zetermieing factor in the dark days of crisis?" England is not too proud to learn, left England ten days ago I feund men and women of all walks of life de- manding to anow aow they could serve the State. They wanted to serve it voluntarily, not by compul- sion. They wanted to implant in 'a democracy the spirit of indivielual selase.crifice and the will to work that has restored, Germany ,to a position, of might among the nations% The Times has be,en carrying oh, in its usual quiet, unhurried manner, Engla.nd a form of National Service organization, not only to proviae more adequately for ;the nation's slefen;s'e, but to strengthen the country in its industrial life lard Icemsley's fast -rising- papers, the Daily Sketch and ,the Sunday Gra- aide. have, been doing, a magnificent journalistic job in exploring the pos.- sibilities of "work for the workless" and in promoting netional lanes& Lord Beaverbrook's Dadly Express has been urgipg its readers to stop trying to weaken the dictators but to set out to make the &a:Tire iteelf great and prosperous. There is a new seirit in England; a new determination to close the gaps in the nation's industrial defenses and productive defenses at the same time that the gaps are closed in the Last Monday I thad the honor 'of addressing an audience of 565 lead- ieg business and professional men at a meeting of the Oanedia.n Club in Toronto, There was time only to highlight a few of the events of the Crisis and to emplatsize the positive gains that we, the democratic nations had gained fram th;e Munich peace pluck;ed by Mr. Chamberlain from the clouds of despair. The reaction to that address has convinced me that in Canada., juet as in Britain, there is a tremendous de- sire 'foe national leadership to bring Canada. out of its polioies of drift and iedecision and inaction in respect to the great social and economic prob- lems of the nations. Young mete -many of them--thave come to me and said: "You Stepped at the very point where you stould have started to Mlle What we want to know is how Canada can learn from Ilitler's Nazi Germany and Mussoliniav Fascist It- aly the way to make this, notion great by ennobling work and enlisting ev- eryone in the service of the country." These young men, want to know how Canada cans provide for 100 per cent employnient of the people; for a campaign of phyeical and social fit - nese; for the elimination of waste in our national life; for the unification of the disunited, fragments; of Gans What an opportunity for .the state -s - men of Canada! What a challenge, to our natibesal leaders to get down tO bueinese after playing for years the crudest form of negative politics with practically every great problem facing the country:.the railway prob- lern, the unemployment problem, the problern of rebuilding our constitu- tion, the problem of training the fu- ture leaders of the nation. What hes Canada learned from the crisis? Have we leareed the leesen in an individual? Have we learned that each citizen has a duty to the Stale as great aseth;e State's respons- ibility to the citizen? Other freedom -loving nations have learned a great lesson 'from the re- cent crisis. Out of the anguish and cles'pair of one of , the most tragic moments' of history thare has come, in Britain and in Fnan,ca, a determine - tion to build for enduring power through organization and; work. Their very love of individual free- dom has led the democeatic states to disunity and sepia] conflict, to the squanderirig of public money, to such absurdities as paying people foe do- ing nething. le Canadta we go so far as to make it part of national policy to seek to bonus every group and ev- ery. area at the expense of a mythical treasure chest known as "Gevernment In Germany the symbol of power is the spad;e. Here it is th'e ballot box. In Germany wages are fixed at what tine nation can pay. Hours of work are fixed by the amount of work to be done. If a man has no job, the State gives him_somethiug useful, to d o. Last month dem.ocracy came face to face with a new type of State - the dictatorship State where waver- ing and uncertainty have given way to purpose ana decision. DiCtatorship Versus Freedom The differenoe between the two can beet be seen by comparing Germany ie not oce of military forces and, des fensive armaments. Rather let us look at civilian life in: these nations. In Germany there is, prietically speaking, no unem•ploy-ment. No man and no woman is paid by the State for idling. Work has been, created foe all and everyone wants to work. The face of taa nation is being changed. Waate land. le' being turn- ed into production. Forests are be- ing replanted and every tree accsount- ed for as it is u;sedt. SIMMS have been abolisthed and decent homes provided for all. Cities are being rebuilt, swamps drained. Boys and .girle are, trained as lead - ere 'and as workers. Women are giv- en a place of nobility in the service of the nation. Physical fitness is idealized in a practical rather than a romantic way. Germany has mobilize,d individuals to create a nation. Adolph Hitler has turned a defeated, disillusioned, dea BACKACHE OFTEN WARNING Backache may he the first Rig' n of Kidney trouble, When your back aches, look to law kidneys. Don't fail te heed' Ibis wank - mg -41 isloo important. Take prempt action hs correct Backache, or its cause. At die &st sign of Backache him confidendy to Dodd's, Kidney Pills -for over hall a dritary the favorite remek for Kidney ailments. WS Dodas Kidney Pills • The wage of Pedfataveranee with Kaneohe; in the treatment of some cases of rheumatism, is • proved by Vitheu I rammed. I began to Antral - the feet and arms, and I was, even- tually taken into hospital, unable to move. without groaming with pain.. When I left the hospital after two months. I was somewhat better. I was' reoemmendied to 'take Krusehen Salts, have taken ;talent continuously, and until no* y am entlrely. free from pains. I would not be • without my Kruschen salts for anything." -M. B. Two of the salts in: Kruse/hen are effectual solvente of uric acid, the excess of ; whicle is decidedly 'nate- reams. They 'swiftly dull the sharp edges ef the painful erystals - the cause of pain. and stiffnese-and con- vert them into a harmless solution, which is then expelled through the natural channels. pondent people into a unified nation of might and strength. Mech of what Germany- (has done has been achieved by re,gimentation, by propaganda, in some ;measure by compulsime Few of the methods; tif Nazi Germany could or ought to be applied in any democratic state. few matters is Nazilsta as pleasant as in its notable ;organization. of the nation for work. In fact, on the whole, Naziism is a hateful thing. But it is not 'all compulsion in Ger- many. -There is much that is' just and fair and inspiring in Hitler's re- ma,rkable organization of the Reich. The German people are peoud of their State, proud of their childrere's or- ganizations, their youth ceeps, their labor battalion's, their women's ser- vice fronts. They love to work and are balmy that, as they work, they build a greater Germany. Th•is is the pesitive side of Ger- many today. It is a picture that is (Continued on Page 6) The Foresighted Mr. Hughes (Excerpt fronl 'Time) The swift silver monoplane whioh Howard Hughes recently whipped round the world in a bit over three days, 19 hours, was the most fool- proof private plane that ever" flew. It had two radio comaasses, three re- ceivers and three transmitters - the latter with a range 'of over 4,000 miles, an efficiency formerly impos- sible in airplane radio. In case of forced landing in mid - ocean, the plane carried two inflat- able rubber rafts, with stocks of wa- ter and "nose cups", to coedense breath into emergency wa,ter supply. To inflate the rafts were cylindere of carbon dioxide. Linked with a long tow line, the rafts would float to- gether until belp wank! come. To call' for help there was a water- preof radio transmitter' run by dry °ens. If these ,gave out, a waterproof hand generator could be used. The antenna would be held aloft by a hy- drogen -inflated balloon. For the guid- ance of rescue ships, smaller orange balkyons would be blown up, met en the waves every 15 minutes. Had it been: necessary to abandon ship in th.e air over land, the crew would bare slipped into parachute% suspended iu the cabin, like okatime fine -agree harness, 'pulled a lever that unpinnaed the door hinges, kicked their Way to freed°, ra. Attached to each parachute was a as pact parcel containing 30 days' rations, water, a hunting knife, first- aid kit and snake -bit remedy. Wary as a surgeen about any m,ove he makes, Howard Hughes, had tested 15 kinds of bread for tentative value be- fore,deciding on which to use foe the sandwiches he ,c-es-ri.ed. So precisely was the 14,716 mile flight steered that it extended only 20 miles more than the direct course planned around the top of the world, although almost every mile of it was flown by inetruments, often, against fiercely adverse weather conditions. The Deep's Deepest Myster7 (Excerpt from "The Log of Bob The Mary Celeete sailed from New York to Genoa in November, 1872. The ma.ster was a man, with a splen- did reputation both as a mariner and a gentleman, and his family was with him. The sthip made a good passage at first; early in December two ves- sels recorded in their logs that they Taut sighte,d her 300 milevi off Gibral- tar. Then on December 5th, the cap- tain of a British brigantine that fell in 'with her noted that her course was queer and sent a boarding party over to see if ehe needed help. On deck all was silent. Not a liv- ing thing was in eight -nor a deael me. The visetors called out, but got no res3ptonee. Every soul aboard hail simply disappeared. The ship was in ferfect condition. The cargo was well stored! and in good order. There was plenty of food ;and water aboard. The cash box was intact. In the fore - cattle were the seametats cbeets and clotarintg, dry and) madistarbed. Sonia underclothes bed been hung out to dey; in the mate's cabin was a piece of paper with an undniehed sum on it. A childa drese was still in the sewing maciane, and there were four half -eaten breakfaide on' the table. nt, its (1.avi.ts. There was no 'sign of viotence, nor of any sort of trouble. The sthip's papers and ohrononseter were the only ''articles of importance that were gone. The ship's log con- tained not a hint of tragedy. There was not a .clue that might lead to the Solution of the riddle of wthere those two score people had gone, and to thin day, there has never been a Word whith threw sensible tight om the ek- traordinary mystery. Kces ' 450' Nigro Friday, Nov. QtVg* 11.30, "freter MacGregfor"; 11,4 0.01147 Talk; 740, Cocoannt Gaffe diets ram Home Hone; 10A ;pan., 7.30, Onc,oanut Grove Ambassadors; 7.45, garn Dance; Sunday', Nov. 6-11 Winghere- .Soble's Amateurea Love Tales; 7, St. Andrew's Church, MacGregor"; 7.30 p.m., C000anut Grove Ambassadors; 8, Kenneth Ren - tees; 1, Royal Chefs; L30, Glad Tid- illaa Hama "Peter MacGregor"; 7.30 P.m., Cocoa- nut Grove Ambassadors; 8, OKNX Thursday„ Nov. la -;11.45 a.re., Jaek Royal Chefs; 8, Gladys Pickell, piano. ARMCHAIR NEWS REEL (In Reader's Digest) Films showing the facial reaction of audiences during speeches of Bri- tish labor leaders are being handled round among the leaders theough an organization known as "Mass Obser- vation." These pictures startle speak- ers by showing the audience fre- quently yawning or reading programs during the supposedly most effective bits, and listening with strained, dee lighted atteetion to paseages pre- viously thought dull. The epeeches of SidDle orators -are now being "key- ed" to the results ehown in the films. -Claud Cockburn in "Ken" In Paris, to get the latest news any hour of the day, you eimply dial INF- ]. on the telephone, and a three-min- ute bulletin-sponeored by two Paris newspapere-comes over the wire im- mediately, -N. Y. Times, * * In London's bustling Euston Sta- tion, a friendly, well-trained dog car- ries a brass box on his back from ane train compartment to another, col- lectiug money for charity. He comes from a long line of taoroughbreds who, for the last 25 years, have plied the trains in Euston Station. -Hoyte McAfee- in Charlotte (N. C.) Obser- 111otor trucks can be operated in trains with as many as 10 trailers on Italy'salew special express roads. A concrete ridge in the middle of the road is strad•dled by the truck, which has rollers that fit against the sides of the ridge. The guidance is so com- plete and aceautomatic that the driver may leave his seat, while his traha is in motion; to inspect the trailers... '-,Barron's Weekly. Bulgarians who have crimson ears are not blushiag. They are freed pickpockets Whom the police have earmarked for purposes of future identification with red, indelible ink. Every importaut Chinese newspa- per enjoys a secondary circalation. Shanghai newsboys often sell their papers on e. rental basis. The paper -When APO ll'arauk _Ef. MAP. led last fait the; glitz .et the Tanaets fsseect ture to.' the ether Icing, VO call cog traticnia. And not 'a pocket V043 pia' ed. --Bob Wegner's Sculpt. The hoteda Pfelainki, Finland, displaY over the main entrance the national Fags of registered guests, so that a foreign, visitor can tell. at a glance, if a cempatriot is in town. * * * Parisians strolling in the Bois one day recently Were startled by the. music of ukuleles and harmonicas, and wild cries of `.`Yipee! Yipee." Drawn by these unfamiliar sounda in- to the Bagatelle Polo Grounds, they saw about 30 young men and woinen in outrandiSh foreign dress-broad- briantned ,hats and broad-leggelpants, lawny checked shirts and brass -studd- ed belts. They were riding horses and 'twirling ropes. ' This was the first big show Of the three-year-old 010b de Lasso, found' ed by Serbian -born Paul Cove Dabija„ Who !is stadent of Red Indian lore. able riding club_ The members, *dreased in authentic bowboy clothes ordered front Denver, • 4• .1g 0 - an• d ittfta Whit better,* , Canadian mothers'. physicians( have to t:fra!4 and' quality of ‘C4rown, delicious table syrup'. °Crown, Brand" Ise tress for the whole family. Tell the boYsi that pigtuftS famons hockey stars can be obtained for 'Clown Bon& Corn Syrup labels. CROWNI CO $Y1 THE FAMOUS ENERGY FOOD The CANADA STARcit COmPANY UMW Colorado, learn brc6nc riding, Wei*. ern music, plain and fesneY MOM, • The may requirement for nreasabernizits is sincere interest in Le Wild West. is OF COURSE WE MARE LOANS Our Every -day Business You are invited to discuss with us your re- quirements for personal or business purposes: BANK 01' MONTREAL vs.:imam= 1(311 Clinton Brands: H. M. MONTEITH, Manager Hensall Branch: W. B. A. CROSS, Manager Brucefield (Sub -Agency): Open Tuesday and Friday BANK WHERE SMALL ACCOUNTS ARE WELCOXLP"`iii Warm as toast for getting up ! It's nice to get up in the warning -if your bedroom is nice and warnt. There's abundance of quick rdarning heat, when you bank the fire Co ean, hard, long- er lasting Canadian fuel, for furnace, range or heater. t Easily con- trolled, smokeless, waste - less - gives muutimu.m heat with minimum ash. Now the lowest price in years! Please order from your local Harnco Dealer -he deserves your fuel business. Ask your dealer about the new HAMCO Automatic DRAFT CONTROL and HAMCO HOT WATER HEATER ... Twit great money saving conveniences. Wm. Ament Ernest L. Box SOLD BY HAMILTON BY-PRODUCT COKE OVENS. LIMBED HAMILTON. CANADA John J. Mater HAMCO-NOW THE LOWEST PR CE IN YEARo