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The Huron Expositor, 1940-08-23, Page 3
.e i (Continued from Page 2) welcome to Rev. and Mrs. Woods, er welcoming then} to Exeter, to Main Street Church and particularly the Xoung People's groups, Mrs. Woods spoke first in response to this wel- come and then Mr. Woods, both stat- ing their apprecihtion of the welcome given to them and also the kind re ception giveif to them by the people of Exeter. The musical program fol- lowed and 'Che; occasion closed with a /940 /81110 TEATUREJ N1s,OpS WAR EFFORT CA See how the Navy, the Army. the Air Force are being;supported by the whole Dominion—industries, sciences, agriculture, women's work. A dramatization of Canada at War. t Famed throughout the world is the big Goldman Band from the United States. Playing each might.from the modern outdoor Band Shell you hear it without charge. 'Direct from the San Francisco Worid-'-s. Fair, and presented through the, Courtesy of Inter- -national Business Machines ... "Art of 79 Countries"—an im- pressive contemporary show. ,. Duke Ellington, Tommy Dorsey, Jimmy Dorsey, Sammy Kaye. Eddie Duchin, Al and Bob Harvey with their Canadian Coster Band, dread the list of 'big -.time dance tbands that will be featured in • this year's vast, cool Dance' Pavilion. Don't miss them. 9 A brilliant presentation of latest advances in the automotive in- dustry including a preview of many 1941 models. -One of the most brilliant and daring Horse Shows en the.son- tinent. Many special' features, /farness and hunter classes. Sept./2-7th. Women's• war work• drainatlzed in a huge R•d Cross Exhibit. Learn there _hew you too can IMP the national effort. CANADIAN NATIONAL EIBlfloN u&23 IrSEPT.7 Pi*19 *pciA, v yn le N'43 eY' ning Wee Spent tee all—Exerbee M- Adn*o. haute. • Found Hanging In Barn Fred Collides, aged 58, of Matte' shard, was found! "llangivg la the bare on the farm of his brefeier, the lite Sidney Cous'lns, Monday moan- ing . just before 12 o'clock. He bad been in>I poor health • for about eight years, during which time he has been unable to walk without the use of crutches. For the past eight years he thad 'resided With 'tis brother, tag • late' Sidney Cousins, an tee 4th con- ces'slonl of Bdians'hand. He had beet/ in a depteseed state of mind since the death, of ti's 'brother, 'Sidney, two weeks ago.—Exeter Ti'mles-Advocate. Old Bell To -Call Congregation Trinity Anglican Ohurc'h• may be- fore long again call the faithful to worship by means of a bell. The old bell which toppled from the tower to the basement when the church was destroyed by fire in the spring of 1939, and cracked in several places, is now undergoing reeairs. The bell was hauled from 'the -ruins after the lire and left tn•nheeded, the impres- sion being that it could not be restor- ed and used again. Investigation, h•oweuer, led eott e u, of the congrega- tion to believe that the bell could be renovated. This is now bing done with tee use of acetylene welding torches and metal and it is hoped that this treatment Will bring back new life to its one-time' usefulnesst-- Mitchell dvocate. Enlisted in Kent Regiment' • Arthur ingram, son of Mr. anrd Mrs. James Ingram, has, enlisrted -in the Kent Regiment, Canadian Active Ser- vice Force at Chatham. He is a mem- ber of Knox Presbyterian Ohurch, Mitchell.—Mitchell Advocate. Old Residents Here • W. R. Broughton, resident here 55 years or so ago, with his wife and son, W. L. Broughton and Mrs. Broughton, 'of Woodstock, were vise tars here Wednesday. Dropping into this office we had a shat with Mr. Broughton 'during which he told. us the last time he visited Mitchell was during the Old Boy's' Reunion in 1923. At that time she met teeny of hie old friends and was glad to see a few of them again- He resided in. the Con Schellenberger home during part of the time be was in Mitchell where his fathe#- ' Riahaud Broughton, was employed as a carriage painter and trimmler.—Mitchell Advocate. In Business,At Wingham Miss Nellie Colborne, who has been in charge of the Hanna's Ladies? Shop at Wingtham for the last six months, has ,purchased the business and it will -•now be operated under the •name of the °-Colborne Lad&ea' Shop.-Gade- rich Signal -Star - Killed, By Fall Mr. H. R. Long has received word of the .accidental death of his nephew, H. Benson Long, an artillery gunner in training at Brandon, Man., as the result of a'fall. The young man was eighteen years of age and was the son of Dr., J. B. Long, of Red Deer, Alta., formerly of, Beniniller, Ont.— Goderich Signal -Star. CKNK,' WINGHAM _ 1200 Kcs. 250 Metres WEEKLY PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS Friday,' August' 23'-8 a,m., Brea'.: - fast Club; 9, Piano Ramblings; 7.15 p.m:., "Eb & Zeb"; 7:30, K'ing's Hawai- ians. Saturday, August 24-9.30 a.m., Kid- diest Party; 10.30, Srhut-Inas' Program; 6.15 p.m., Harry J. Boyle; 7,45, Barn Dance. Strnday, August 26-12.30' p.m., Hii ry J. Boyle; 1, Freddy Martin Orel- e•stra; 1.30, Melody''Time; 7, St. - n- drew's ChurchL Monday, A t;t'st 26-1 p.rn., Gene entry; 6.15, Harry .J. 'Boyle; 7.15, "it' & Zeb"; 8, Sarah and Freddy • ' Tuesday, August 27,---8 :t m . Break- fast Club; 11 I fano Rsreblings; 2,4� p.m., Songs for the Soldiers; 7.15, ",tet, & Zeb." Wednesday, August 2S Breakfast Club; 10, Harry J. Boyle; 1 p.m., Polka Band; 7.15, "Eb & Zeta' Thursday, August 29-1145 a.m., Lawrence Welt; 1 p.m., Bob Wills' Plaeboes; 7.30, Richard 'Roberts. SEED LAWN GRASS - IN LATE AUGUST Many lawn owners may niot realize lawns can be 'established in early fall. Spring seeding unless done early, fre- quently. 'leatd's fo poor resul'ts. The seedling 'grasises do not become es- tablished soon enough to stand sum-, mer ,heat or to compete With warm - weather weeds. On. the other hand, a lawn% properly constructed and seeded] with the right kind of grassy es in early fall, becomes well estab- lished and is it], condition to grow •rapidly the following spring. Such a turf will stand, bad md'dsnrmmer cone ditiens 'mush better than one sown in seeing. Fall planting Is particularly impor- tant for lawns' shaded• by deciduous treles since they get 'lots of sunlight in the fall and early spring when the, trees are bare,. Fall seeding is best done early enough to let 'the gras's become ,well rooted 'before freeze-up. At the Central Experimental 'Farm, Ottawa, the uauta time for falleseed- ing le during the, lest twit:, weeks of August. Any, bare andlt thin] areas OD (Cenelletleed Crim Soleness News X:at' tor- let•••alieader o , PIgest) Ever ',shite Romulus and Remus, mythical founders cot Rome., reports of 'huinan ''habits] reared by wolves, bears or apes have circulated. Such talles, tracked down, turned out to relate to abandoned waifs with subnormal ° intel'Ugenoe but with no conclusive evidence• .of animal foster parentage. Now, for the first time, $thence leas evidence of two instances of humans who may have been rear- ed by wild beasts: the wolf-obdldr•en of Midnapore and Lucas, the 'baboon - bay of South Africa. In 'October, 1920, the Rev. J. L. ,Singh, a native Christian miesdonary who conducted en orphanage at Mid- napore, India, was besought by bis neighbors to rid them of a "man ghost" who inhabited' a giant anthill nearby. Singh organized a party to watch ver the anthill. At nightfall they saw .three full-grown wolves em- erge from the tunnel, followed by two cubs; then,' close behind, came two hideoushlooking little creatures with human bodies. In daylight the den was excavated.' Huddled together in a "monkey -ball" were the two cubs and two children -- both girls, one •about eight years old, the other about a year and a hall. The children were more ferocious than th•e cubs. The task of restoring these strange wolf -children ,to the ways of human life presented almost insuperable dif- ficulties. Kamala an Amala, as the missionary and. his wife named them,' would tolerate no clothing. Long mat- ted hair fell below their s'houlder's, tdreir jaws had a strange wolflike for- mation, their teeth were sharp. and pointed. They would eat no vege- table food, but could scent raw meat at a long distance. They were in- capable of standing .erect, but could move on all • fours with amazing speed. They drowsed all day, but were eager to prowl at night. They disliked human, societyaand sought the company of dogs and goats. • Very slowly the 'girls began to re- spond to the kindness and affection oi: Mrs. Singh, who -patiently, •massag- ed their muscles and gave them ex- ercises she hoped would teach them to walk erect. They seemed to •be making progresste Then, 11 months. after coming to the orphanage, Am - ata died. At Amala'•s death, Kamala, the old- er one, 'shed tears—?her first age .of human emotion. For weeks she lin- gered. over 'the places:. where Amala had sat and slept, sniffing anxious- ly l.•rike a dog, and uttering • straege cries. After that she drew closer to Mrs. Singh and gradually began to show,, interest in other ohedren. She ceased to wolf her food by putting 'leer head to the plate, and learned to use a cup instead of lapping up liq- uids. She de"eloped a vocabulary of about 40 words, accepted clothing, and learned to- walk upright. Her gait, however; was slow and unstea- &^y; for running she returned to all fours. , After nine years in 'human envi- ronment, Kamala lost most of , her ar,.imal traits, and showed signs of developing' into a loveable, obedient child. Then, on November 14, 1929, she died. The .physician who attended both children writes: There as great difficulty in feed- ing the poor wolf -girls anything but meat and milk. If they could have •been induced to take a balanced diet, improvement would have been more marked and they eoule have returned to an 'ordinary human•con- dition froth the stage of animal. ' The Rev. Mr. Singh's remarkable record of the wolf -children .vehicle he kept in his diary has been studied- by a number of distinguished scientists, including Professor,R. Ruggles Gates, University of London, and Professor Arnold Gesell, Yale Clinic of Child Development. • 1t is now being pre- pared for publication, and the pro- ceeds are to go to the support of the impoverished mission orphanage. In 1904 Lance Sergeant Charles Holsen and Sergeant J. P. Venter of the Cape Mounted Police in South Africa were riding through a wild re- gion when they came upon a - thoop of baboons playing in a cleating., For, sport, they fired a shot to startle the group, and all but one of the apes fled. The 'lingerer, when captured, proved to be a native boy w,h'o chat- tered like an ape and jumped about on all fours. At the Mental Hospital in Gra- h,amstowie, the doctors found the. ba- boon -boy ,h'armles's, but extremely mischievotis. He knew no 'human speech, and refused all food except raw corn and cactus. Even now, he will eat• 80 prickly pears in one sit- ting. The police could ,find n'o one to identify the baboon -boy. So George H. Smith, whose brother was on the hospital staff,. took •chaxge of him. Lucas, as Onei•th named him, became a useful 'farm ' worker. Iie is now nearly- 50, but he still ,has• to be call- ed anew to each routine task, Smith 'believed that Lucas had been stolen by baboons' when very young: "His mannerisms, hi s constant ,scratching with his index finger, and h;is peculiar, frightened -looking grin, all tell of his early association with baboons'," When Lucas 'had' learned " a few words of English, he told 'how he and the baboons 'had raided: ostrich nests and stolen eggs. He pointed to the scar on this? 'head and said it was` caused by the kick he had received frorn one outrs.ged os'tric'h, The tale of the baboon -boy Was spread by wordy of mouth for years old"^lawn•£ inky also be reseeded at that time. It is possible to start a lawn in the fall and complete et but the finial stages of ,preparation before freeze- up, t 'Fertilization, eeechbed prepara- tion and 'seeding mage be e'arrried out without delay, ,once the soil is . in Working shape', in spring. Inf'orm'a- tion] on laying out and?' care of lawns may be. obtained by writing to the Division of Forage Plants, Central Eepeaimenta& Farm, Otttawa. pefore inveabigatiee Was made by re- putable sc}entists, 'heeded by Pere- •flessor R A. Dart, University of Wit- w'at!ersr'anid, . Jahaxfe&burg, ^ "There seems nothing mirecullous or improb- able in Lucas' story;" said one in- vestigator. nvestigator•. "Any Atoning female ape might find it, convenient..ox at 'least instinctive, to steal a suckling ani- mal sa losely resembling her own." Among older, •1•ess-documented; stor- ies, certain Batts are also known. Sir William Sleeman, 'governor at Luck - now, India, in the 1850's, recorded that many children were carried og by wolves in his lime, and that he `heard of six reareanably well-estab- lished eases in which theohildren liv+ ed with their animal foster parents. He told of a little boy captured in a wolf -den at Suitanpur who lived three years it/, civilizations, but would eat only raw meat and remained savage and filthy to the end. Another wolf - boy had to be tied to a: tent stake for four months before she began to understand and obey 'sggns. Wolves were seen to play with him at night, and he eventually disappeared and never was seen again. Wild Peter," said by Linnaeus, the great Swedish scientist, to have been found In 1724 near Hamtelen, Germany, was staked to England, where King George I turned 'him over to the Prin- cess of Wales, later Queen Caroline. "Wild Peter" died in 1785, never hav- ing learned to speak. The bark of "green twigs was bis favorite food. He was'..good-natured, unlike most wtld- reared children: "But," remarked! a scientist of that day, "laughter, which is the particular' gift of mankind, was never heard from him;." Heretofore, stories that children were reared by animals have been dismissed by modern s'ciehtific men as the attempts of an unscientific age to explain puzzling phenomena, In the light ,of• the well,establiathed cases of the Midnapore wolf -girls and the liv- ing babooneboy, they are turning hack to these old records with renewed in- terest. Murder,.. Inc. (Condensed 'from' The Nation in Reader's Digest) -- Organized crime and racketeering in America today is dominated by "Murder, Inc,"—newspaper name for a "'gigantic criminal network which conducts nation-wide ,operations in- volving millions of dollars and. calls itself ''the Combination;" It is al- most impossible for any gangster, big or small, to conduct an independent racket. The Combination grants each member racketeer 'his territory. If a racketeer leaves New York for Chicago, he can set up is business only with the .consent of the ,Chicago leader of Murder, Inc. " The Combination controls gam- bling, prostitution,' . narcotics, the policy game, and the loan-sthark roe-- ket, to 'cite its outstanding spheres'. of ,dmfluence. It ,alt dominates cer- tain trade -union 'locals. It' operates various legitimate enterprises and muscles in on, others, where it ex acts tribute from 'honest businessmen by threats or use of violence. Through its- •connection with corrupt politieal_' machines, it plays a sinister role in urban politics. The fantastic story of the crime syndicate was uncovered tar Brook- lyn's District Attorney, William. O'Dwyer, who has already headed two members of the mob, Harry (Happy) Malone and Frank .('the Di:sther) Ab- bandando, toward the electric chair for killing a fellow gangster named George Rudnick. The state said the defendants strangled Rudnick with a rope, perforated his head and body with 63 jabs, of an icepick and, to make sure, bashed in his skull with a meat chopper. The trial was mere- ly the opening gun against Murder, Inc. So far ©etwyer's investigatiions. have abed light on 56 b•itherto uneoly- od merdterae'al New York, and he bas leads which will uncover the bodies of scores of men.wholse' murders were not even recorded on 'the police blot- ters. O'Dwyer has traced links- connect- ing Murder, Ip`c^; in New York to the Purple Gang of Detroit; to Frank Nitti, former Oapone aide who now runs the rackets in Chicago and Mi- ami; to Frank Costello, boss, of the New ,tOrleane Underworld.; and to Dutch Goldberg of California, believ- ed to be the biggest shot ,of them all. Much of the information which en- abled O'Dwyer to piece together the pattern of Murder, Inc., came from Abe • (Kid Twist) Reles, state's wit- ness In the Rudnick case. Thisegang- ster has been arrested 43 'times on changes ranging from disorderly con- duct to murder (five times). ' During the .recent trial he 'confessed to 18 murders, six of which the calmly de- scribed on the witness stand. In all but five arrests; Reles went scot free. "The Conibinetion," Rales 'boasted to O'Dwyer, "is operated' •like'a chain of banks and 'spreads all over ,the coup ry-" He stated that there are hunede' of thousands Of people in the Combination, which is an out- growth of the fierce competition in the alcohol racket during P•rohdbition, ALLY KILL One pad kills Ries all day anti every day for 2 or 3 weeks. 3 pads in. each patiitet. No spraying, no stickiness, no had odor. Ask your 'DruggIm e, Grocery or General Store. 10SPERPACKET WHY PAY MORE? um WILSON PLY PAD CO., Hsmiltese Oat. 00.O. for •mlo'vie. looduortiheeteleieleding a. million rto. SrteIP Walt MAO proflugg "Spina Wel sand the $urea Pwaa14?s./, colhenthe bonds for $au Fraaicls- Go/dear Gate Pri,rlge wOse vat+ed' after 17 years of biekeettee afar en- gineerdng, Militaree.and legal hued'les, hanks and 'bond houses felled it ?nes- pedlient to handle the securiebee, the•. chief engineer appealed to Giannni- "We'll take six mil'liom, dollars' worth if .bridge bonds now and the rest when you meed the money," he said, and work 'atgrted. Giannini believes that every officer, in the bank should be financially in- dependent after 20 years? service. Any employee an buy stock on easy terms. •In addition 40 Oper cent of tthe • ban'k's profits is distributed to emrployees in stock which must be held at least three years. Two other ideas of his --that no man should be president of the bank longer than five years and . that no man £should work after 60—lured "A. I ' into the great mistake of h'as career: in 1930, after be had acquir- ed four New York banks, be relin- quinshed maarsa.geineet .to E1is11a Wa3.k- "Nobody caned how he proved a- round." Roles says- "I lookedi to kill you, -and you looked to kill me. Same, body did something out of the way and got ghee, and ellen his friends went gunning for the man who did the killing, and he got shot. There was no sense in that. So six or sev- en ref the leaders got together and said, 'Boys, what's the use of fight- ing each other? Let's put our heads together to make no fighting " When Prohibition ended the crime trust sought other sources of income.. As Reles describes its present struc- ture, the racketeers in each zone throughout the country 'are governed by an "inner circle" of overlords. Be- low these big seats ane "vice-presi- dents." The word "mob" is no long- er used to des'ignate the rank and file. They are now "trews" or less glam- orously, "punks•," Secondary leaders and punks work for wages — from. $100 to $250 a week, according to Reles. He denies that Murder,' Inc., triggermen have committed murder for as little as $5. "You d:on't get paid for that •kind of work," he says indignantly. "When you work he a shop, and the boss wants you to do, something, he doesn't say, 'I'll give you five dollars,' Any work the trig- germen does is part of the routine." Once a man is in the pay of the gang he can't quit. If she tries to, his widow is • not told what happen- ed to 'bite, though she receives' his salary as long as, his gang is making money. This is Murder, Iric.'s form of life insurance. Internal . justice enforced by Mur- der, Inc., fantastically mimics our courts. Cthanged with violating mob law, a gangster may obtain a trial by' his peers. T1)•e leaders are judges, and various gangsters appear as pro- secutors, witnesses and "lawyers" for the defense. Reles i•s proud of hav= ing• arppear'ed as counsel An these trials. He has a flair for legal •'par= go•n: "This ain't, admissible evidence" or "There ain't no, corroboration for this." Vendicts of Murder, Inc., courts are. accepted witthout, question. Loyalty to the group transcends all friendship, all blood ties. The big shots may in- form' a gangster: '.'Your brother was a rat; we had to shoot him." The gangster, knowing What ,is best for hire, acbepts this brother's execution in silence. The crime trust, Reles insists, nev- er • commits murders out of passion, personal revenge or any such usual motives, it kills—and its' victims are' legion—impersonally,. and solely for business ooneid'eratiane. • No gangster may kill en hise, own inati•ative; every rounder must be ordered and must serve the organization's welfare. An ordinary citizen cannot hire Murder; Inc., to do away with some- one he does not like. If one of its triggermen in a private deal pulled such a job, Murder, . Inc., would kill him. Such a triggerman, Reles says, is not safe to have around. "Sup- poe ," tie continues, "I Come,„ to a triggerman on my own hook and give luim $5,000 to rub' out someone I don't like, What's to stop him from taking $10,000 from someone else to rub me out? There's' got do be a good business reason, and the top men of the Combinetion must give their okay." , As an example of a "good business reason" Reles cited the case of Wal- ter Sage. The boys liked Sage. "He was like one of us," Reles explained, "bang'i'ng around the street corners making a living this way and that." Pittsburgh Phil staked him to the neanut machine racket on a percent- age basis. But Sage disappointed ev- erybody. He ,ran away with his pa- tron'•s • share of the profits. Accord- ingly two friends were detailed to visit 'him upstate. They took the un- suspecting Sage for a. "pleasure trip," stabbed him to death, tied the corpse to a slot machine, and threw it ,ipto a lake. "There',s the motive," Reles added, "when you 'have no respect.,, Under syndicate rules it is "il- legal" to kill a man outside your own own territory. If New York wants a man rubbed out and he escapes to St. Louis, thy,,, ,job must be done through the St. Lou'i's branch. They may call In triggermen from out of tower, "so the man .who will be killed won't khow them," Reles explains. "You go to St Louie and you don't know a t7ring about the man you are going to kill or why 'he is being kill- ed," Often the killer has to read the newspapers to find out whom he has executed. Then he goes into hiding, usually in Detroit. There ie a slier tial fund to cover his living expens- es .in .hiding, to defend him if he is caught.,. Every branch of Murder, Ince contributes to it. ]'teles Insists that any murder com- mitted in the United' States which' hes not been, • volverd within a reason- able length of time has been commit tell by the Combination. He clai'trie a private killing is broken £goner or later by the police, usually within ,lit months ora year. If. a killing re- mains unsolved for longer, you inlay, be sure 3t 'nue Idle worst of Murder,, Ina er of that city, who was hie eholce to 'carry out She dream dreane tee a, natttoi4 wide Bank 'of, America system. "A. P." vwerit abroad 4o rest. Sudi- denly 'hie heard' that the new muanage- meiaj; shed sold the, New York units and' proposed to drt•gpates of southern Califortpda •branches. "A. P." caught the next 'boat home, to launch the bitterest battle ,of the century for control of a financial institution. The stock of the barna had dropped from $70 to $2, virtually wiping out •his fortune. He borrowed $90,000 on hies ld'fe insurance and for three months. •&tumpee the state, raliy^ing old friends everywhere. Employees sent 'him - proxies postdating those they had- assigned the manageane ent. When "A. P_" arrived at Wilmington, Delaware, 'for the corporation's -annu- al meeting, no one took -him serious- ly. But a count of •proxies, gave him 63 per cent. During hie retirement, the New York regime had erected partitions at the head .-office, ,providing' •private quarters for each officer. U.podr leav- ing ?the annual meeting "A. P." tele- graphed San Francisco: "Tear down the spite fences so that we .can see each other and our' friends." Last Jyne brought to en end an - ether. battle, with the Securities and Exchange Oomlmissisn and the Comp- troller of the U. S. Treasury. In the campaign against bolding com- panies, the federal government had (tracked down upon Gianni.ni's. The SEC threatened to bar his bank's se- curities from the Stook IIxchairge en - less the capital structure were revis- ed and accounting methods changed. Giannini took his case to the people via the press itn' a, series of state, tnents, one, of, whish disposed .of the SECchat°'ge that Gianrdnd had cut himself in on handsome secret pro- f ts. His 'public, statement ,showed that he had drawn an average year- ly salary.of $11,853. His total wealth was slightly over $500,000 and the value of his bank stock holdings less than $50,000, Afters a year of acrimony Giannini agreed b.:). chaiage his accounting met?ods and; increase .the bank's" cap ital. by- $30,000,0QO „ which he still claimed it 'did not need. The RFC offerer; a loan to provide this new capital` :until the stock could be sold to the bank's stockholders. And the government agreed to let Giannini continue to run his bank in his own unorthodox way. He is still the com- mon people''£ banker, because the people trust him. ested Recipes. FRUIT PICKLES Fruit is be'comi'ng increasingly pop- ular as a meat accompaniment,. • The following tested recipes are re- commended by the Consumer Section, Marketing 'Service, Dominion Depart- ment of Agriculture: Rhubarb Relish 12 stalks rhubarb 1 bupeh celery 4 large onions 4 cups brown sugar 1 sweet red pepper 2 cups vinegar 10 cloves, 1 stick ainntamen - 1 teaspoon mixed pickle spice 3 tablespoons salt.. Chop rhubarb, celery, pepper and onions. Sprinkle with salt. Cover and let stand overnight. Drain thor- oughly. ' Add othervngreddents. Cook slowly until thick. Pour into steriliz- ed glasses. Seal while hot. Gooseberry Relish ` tsl 'cups ,gooseber•nies 'i/2cup water. la cup vinegar 11/4. cups sugar 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon ee teaspoon cloves. Wash and remove stems and blos- som enol from gooseberries. Add oth- er ingredients. Cook until thick and clear,: uar aallt� s• lzed ` Seal w'Iuile. Jiotr Splce Red Crurranta 6 t• 'i'ePored arta 4 e sugar 1 sup vinegar teaspoon pickle Wee teaspoon eieniamtre ', teaspoon claves 1 tablespoon chopped •preset 1 ger: Rennets cuffs f'raru step�g S measuIing. Make a syrup by' sugar,' vinegar and ._spice, 5a,nrin: Cool and strain. ' Ado currant. Re turn to fire. Cook 15 minutes. POW into 'sterilized jars. Seal while/ Not Cantaloupe -Nelda Select firm, slightly; under•ripeme- ons. Peel, tuaiter and remove. mottle. Cut in one -inch cubes. Sprinkle With salt and let,stand overnight- Draw Measure- Use the following proper- flans: 3 cups diced' molar 1 sup vinegar 1 tablespoon crushed ginger root 2 sticks cinnamon, 1 teaspoon cloves 1 cup sugar - Tie apioery iu a bag, Cook 15 min- utes. Remove spitaes: Cook 5^ Min - Ines. Pack in. sterilized. jars. Seal while 'bot. Spicy Fruit Sauce 5 apples+ 5 peaches 5 plans 5 pears 5 tonvatoes� 5 cups sugar 3 cups vinegar • 1 tabie5pobn •.salt 2 •tablespoons preser'v'ed' ginger 2 sticks 'cinnamon. Cook all together until thick. ' Re- move cinnamon. Pour into sterilized jhrs. Seal while hot • • See THE WAR EFFORT AND WAR $ERVIOE UNITS OF CANADA'S GREAT` MOTOR INDUST9T At the Toronto Exhibition, Aug. 23 to Sept. 7, be sure to see the outstared, ing General Motors Exhibit in the Automotive Building. SEE the display of mechanized army vehicles pro- duced by GM . ; : LEARN about the activities of the Volunteer Auxiiiax1' Drivers Corps; young women trained to serve by GM ... INSPECT the nese, 1941 Pontiacs and McLaughlin-Buicks ▪ ATTEND the showing of two thrilling movies—"Futurama," is technicolor, in the GM Theatre in the Automotive Building—"Motors on the March," at Harry Foster's Outdoor Theatre on the grounds. Everything free... everybody welcome. GMX•iV GENERAL MOTORS _pt>tie F.r' f til •• tea, eT`h. teddeee FOR , TROUBLE-FREE TIRE MILES YopR Gina Pada DEALER SEE GUTTA PERCHA Ti RES -•r