HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1940-11-15, Page 3-NOV R 10$,, 11940
Seen in the
County Papers
(ContinUed from Page 2)
the piano, played several' seleetions
vishieb were greatly SIPPrealaten. As
well as. playing Selo, thafy accompan-
ied the singeong d watioa the visi-
tors sang many familiar atm aud were
introduced to, a, few of our Canadian
and Arnarican f cork' songs. During the
course of the swearing lame Van Wyck
also of Wingham,, contributed to the
success of the eattertainoneet by her
elocution, both serious and comic. At
the conclusion of the, program the
choir served; eefreshments and the re-
mainder of the evening was neat in
friendly diteourse.--Goderich Signal-
-Star.
Dutch Sailors Removed
The Dutch sails taken off the
Netherlands freighter" Prins Willem
III • at Goderich Harbor four weeks
ago and since held .in ,the county jail
here were reraved on Saturday af-
ternoon. ;Inner R.C.M.P. guard. They
left here by railtwey, their destination
presumably being a. n internment
ca.-Goderitch Sigstal-Stae.
Purchased Fine Fox
•
Mr. A. R. DuVal ,has added a siplen-
.did animal to his hreeding. stock at
tbe DuVal Fox Farni." The fox is a
male 'ring neck platinum, variety.
'llhese are very rare and the one Mr.
DuVal purchased, has white' mare,
whi-ie face, white feet. He purchased
it. from the Colpitt's platinum stein
of New BranSWick.-Wingliarn Aca
wance-Tinies.
Wins -Golf Club Award
Friends here are interested in the
Guelph ,!gelf activities . inasmuch as
former members of the local club.
'iTr. and' Mrs. • W. J. Halfnight and
son, Bob Halfinght, are now mem-
bers in that city of the Cutten Re-
eneatioll Fields; Golf Club. At the
slimier marking the close of the sea -
non Bob -Halfnight was the winner
Ota the second flight award. ----Mitchell
A dvec-at e.
Wins . Scholarships
Forrest Rogenza son' of Mr. and
Mrs. Lorne eRo.gers, Windsor, and
grandson of M'r. and Mrs. Joan Rog-
ers of Zion', 'is winner of the fttet
-Carter schallarsalip, this year, in Es-
sex County. Lorne Rogers . ;Ise, the
' principal ,at Solin Campbell School.
'The first Carter •sebolarship, 100 in
.ca.ster. is • tatie_eseoncl won •he ••Ferrest.
this year. He also won th,e. Reuben'
Wells Leanerd acholanship, valued .at -
$900,• offeredannually by 'University
College, Toronto. He was, f Otiosely a
student at Keamedy Collegiate Int -
Jute. Carter Scholarship.s, are award-
ed under the will of the late
Carter, of Sarnia, to istatdents in 25
-Ontario counties'. Tee awards are
based on the ten' best upper school
• papers, whica, must include Englialh
,composi•tion and; ,literature, algebra
anhd cemposition,, along with six other
aubjects.-Milehell Advocate
CKNX, WINGHAM
fano Kcs. - 250 Metres
WEEKLY PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
Friday, November 15-9• a.m., Piano
Ramblings; 9.30, "Story of Pamela
Pride"; 12,45 penal Bell Boys; 7,
Vass Family; 8, Gulley -Jumpers:
`Saturday, Nov. 16-9:30 a.m., Kid-
tflies' Party; 1.30 am., Ranh Boys;
6.30, Sport Interview; 7.30, Barn
Dance.
Sunday, Nov, 17-12.35 p.m., Wayne
King Orehastra; 5.15, Tea Mesicale;
,7, St. Paula; Anglican, Churdh.
AMonday, Noeernber 18-10.30 am.,
'Church of the' Air; 12.45 p.m., Bell
Boys; 7, The Jesteins,.
Tuesday, Nov. 3.9i--8 a.m., Break.
East elute, la Piano Ramblings; 7
p.m., Ramona; 8, "Fdlk S,chools,"
.talk by Art Haas; 8.30, "Good Luck."
Wedaies,day, Nov. 20-12.45 pan.,
Boys; 7, The Revellers; 8.30,
•Clark Johnston; 9, Western Gentle -
omen. •
Thurs,day, Nov. 21-8 a.m., Break-
fast Club; 7 p.m., The Navati:mesi
8.30, Grenadier Gularde Band,.
eene-fieefess
• eaeleeee",•teseISS,•nee.-,,,,
RON
FRUIT
PLAN BIG
I .
Display *ill" Pea,ture Fall
And Winter
Varieties:
The Huron County Fruit Growers'
Association are planning to conduct
a Fruit Shlow in the Aigal_aulturian
Board Room, Clinton, on Friday; No-
vember .22nd.
The ,display will feature all late
fall and winter varletiee including
Macintosh Red, .Nerthern Spy, Snow
cn''Fameaste, King, Taman SWeet,
Greenling, 'Golden Raseet, 13tientheim
Orange Pippin, Baldwin, Stark, Sal-
ome and Ben Davie,.
The objective behind the -,show is
to advertise apples se es' to stimu-
late the sale of them loeal- ly and
anoughout 'the Province.
the following is the program for
the day:
11.30 a.m.-Fruit in . plane.
11,30 -1.30 -Judging 'of entries by J.
J. John'ston, Dominion Fruit Inspec-
tor, London; Charles McPhail, Holm
tor, London; Clues. McPhail, Holmes -
1.30 p.m. -Hall open to public.
2 p.m. -Program: Mrs. D. A. Smith
President, in charge; offietal .wel-
'come, Warden George Feagan; ad-
dress. on 'advertising, Harry 3. Boyle,
CKNX, Winglham; moving pictures of
scenes at the 1439 and 1940 Huron
Fruit Growers' Field Dens. -
4 p.m. -Auction leak of fruit, Thos.
Gundry, Sr., Gederieh, euetioneee
A11 persons interested In fruit ere
invited to attend. The edlispley of:
apples will 'demonstrate the quality
and the 'different varieties grown to
perfection in the county.
BAYFIELD
(Intended for last...Week)
•
'Phe members of L.O.L. No. 24 and
their families enjoyed an •oyster sup-
per in their tall on- Tuesday even-
ing, when all enjoyed a pleasant time.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Sauder, Mr.
and Mrs. Art Gable, Bob Wilson and
Bob Sauder, of Kitchener, visited
friends in the village on Sunday,
Mr. and Mrs. Him McLaren and
daughter:" of Port Elgin, spent the
Week -end with the• Misses Maud and
Josephine Sterliug.
The Red 'Cress committee is hold-
img a euchre and dance inth,eTown
lag a euchre, and dance in the Pawn
Hall on Friday evening.
Mr. and _Mrs.. Cleurenwerd, of .Lon-
'
dam, 'pent Sunday in their cottage
here.
Mrs. Trout, Miss Ann Drauin, Mrs.
Mullin and; Miss Jessie Metcalf, of
Detroit, spent the weekend in the
village'. •
Mr. and 'Mrs. Featherston were
called to Bamilton owing to the death
of his mother.
The many friends of Mr. Lewis
Thonoscra are pleased to know- he IS
improving from his recent illnes,s.
Messrs. Joan Howard and Walter
Westlake are polisaing hp their rifles
for a trip to the month, deer bunting.
Because newspapers are read toe,
two and two are, four, and four times
three are twelve, and 12 insib,esi make
a ruler, a ruler is, Queen Mary, and
esieeb Mary is a Ship; and skips, Sail
cin the ocean aiceans have fish, and
ash have tins, and; the Finns fought
•the Russians, and the Russdane are
red, therefore Fire Engines are red
because they're eusthint too-.
•
"I want ,this phatograph of ray sol-
dier 'husband enlarged," said, M,rs.
Higgins to the photognapher. "Now,
can 3',011 do it wtih his bat off?"
The phatc,grap,h,er studied the por-
trait --wild Said: "I think I can man-
age to fake the hair. By the WaY,
on which ed.& does• he pert it?"
"Ob, I jest 'can't- remember," m-
elted the wornefe, "but you'll be able
to nee that when you take . his hat
off."
•
Teems: "Miss Coy, I'm a Caedi-
date for your hand."
Misa Cby: "Very well, How much
of an allowance db you promise to
allot me a month, ate I to be tbe boss
of the house or are you, who is to
do the cooking, e'en* many days shall
I have off each week and what is
your attitude toward members, of my
family who may want to live with us?
kb short, what is your platform?"
•
D. Chase's ,
Nerve Food
' e
it brings
New Pep and Energy
Gems of Wisdom
Among mortals seaond thoughts, are
wisest -Euripides.
The basis of good manners is self-
nelianiceeeEinerson.
A good intention Clothes itself
with sudden power,-Ernerson.
Mutual love, the crown of all our
They laugh that win. - Shakes
epeare.
Prosperity is the very band of love.
-Sliakespe,are.
Mind unemployed is mind unenjoy-
ea-Bovee.
Resolve, and thou are free. -Long-
fellow.
Responsibility presents crimes. -
Burke.
He who sings frightens, away- his
ilia -Cervantes.
An honorable death is better than
a dishonorable
He is truly great who hath a great
oharity.-Thomas 'a Kernels.
Oonceit causes more, conversation
than wit. -La Rochefoucauld.
Cunning is the dwarf of wisdom. -
W. R. Alger.
Something of calumny always -
sticks,
Justice, diet the raeniritty, Should'
rule.--Bovest.
•
Cleanliness may be defined to be
the emblem' of purity of mind.
The heavens are as deep as our
aspirations are higa-Thoredu.
Arealtecture is .frozen music! -
II/aflame de StaeL
No man can ever rise above that
at which be aims. -Rev. A. A. Hodge.
FROM GREAT MINDS
Mistakes
The only way to learn to 60) a thing
right ie., by doing it wrong several
times. .The resiseu for that still re-
mains, a mystery, hut its lesson . is
plain, lenough. .Counit the mistakes
you make- in life as an eseential part
of the business" of learning how to
live it.
The Past
Be' not jealous, of a fornier love,
for love is tbe individual expression
of a heart seeking to,glye of its own
tenderness. Give of our gifts with
a full and generous heart and re-'
member that the past belongs ,to God,
but the, future is your own.
Freedom
This is a world of compensations,
and he who Wouldbe no slave mast
eonsent to have no Those Who
deny freedom to ethers deserve it
not for themselves, and, under a just
God, they cannot retain it.-Aliealeata
Lineolte.
The imad'e in the Well
All men who' know not where to
look ter truth save in .tihe narrow
well of self will findtheir own im-
age at the bottom, „ and, mistake it.
for what they are seekinge-seswee
Service .. .
Until we begin to learn that the
only way to 'nerve God in- any real
sense of the word is to serve our
neighbor, we may have knocked at
the wicket gate, but 1, doubt if we
have got our foot across .the tlurestle
hold of the Kingdom. -George Mae -
Dana*,
War
The one redeeming feature of war
is that it reveals unsuspected pass-
ers of courage and uns,elasheless in
quite ,Ordinary men and women like
ourselves. But it's leather a pity that
ordinary Men and -Women, like 'omen
selves lave to ,experitalice tragedy to
shake US out of our .self-oentred
mediocrity.
I. Senalidc• Qf Cfadatirt's
• . 4. • • -
Nloasteentil, X'a101Ogehts-ettlIn'tbe fora
GOV of the Weaticllilaaled N,Oveoalserr 7.
pr*oiX4 ffangli*Milltiab Mar
• I e,a1(.1)jduall „ _gnat -1•414-4/4-
V70 -111(0711.1k;-. .gedIng0 h71el
tecea
ber 6th hoWeSete,;::llented to intiadueo
tiongaton:Lof new ,nten:glie rs and formal pro',
E. Canadian deatroyer resales 118
survivors frometwo sthips torpedoed
by German sebitlaTines in, British we -
3. Survey crew* open preliminary
work necessary to devel,loPMent of in-
ternational replan erectioa of the St.
Lai -Fence. ,
4. index of skystical volume of bus-
iness in Canada was 155.4 in Sept/ern,
ber, a gain of three points over Aug-
ust, according to porn:anion aureae of
Statistics. This was highest point in
20 yeare.
Favored by menition orders, -iron
and steel industry recorded marked
expeneion.
5. BUreall, of Statistics index for
inclustatal employment 'showed on
October let lacrease of 3.5 per omit
over September .1. This is largest
ineeease indicated in 20 years.
6. Estimated that 14,000 men now
employed on Canada's shipbuildieg
program compared with 333 When war
started. Development of shipbuild-
ing industry to point where large
naval vessels May be produced, un-
der consideration.
7. Contracts awarded during week
ended October 25th by Department
of Munitions and Supply numbered
2,745 and totalled; $27,819,729.
8. Brig. L. F. Page and headgear -
ter; with central Ontario Battalion
aadrec battalion, arrive itt Eng-
land.
9. Bacon Board announces cut of
70 cents per 100 pounds On export
price of Wiltshire sides for exports.
New mice: $17 OR 'Sizeable Willabire
aides Grade No. le fab., seaboard
porta
10. First claret. ef me'n called up
under Mobilization Act complete their
30 days military trainag.
Life
'he' worst danger you and 1 will
have to ;encounter in this World is
not the peiril of sudden fiesta. It la
the greater peril of 'staying alive long
after we have lost all our taste for
adiventu,re and zest for new expert-
enees. It is better to be dead thart.,„
•dell.
• Peace
Peace I leave with you, my peace
I give unto yeti; not as the 'world
givetb, glee I unto esiu. Let not your
Infant be troubled neither let it be
afraid. (St. Jobe 14-27).
(POP.1W4.PROX 174gg41).
eiTe, the *411444. .OPiali444,rit,.
The Rea spoiv ?I:Sr:Pale
day' glee bleed Stediownrirealide Wangle
hot -head le Oa Phalanx MAYiays =
lealeadlieftatesPhIghoseeta----esiOSee---the-
-Strente 'Glinaataa Oen% both sidea
there are signii that th*-Seattilitilre,
eminent realizee the danger af ad-
venfturing in tbie Wake' Of GermanY
and Italy.
The Italians alave never ' ealoyeld
the esteem. of the Spaniards who, af-
ter fighting alongside them. have ,a
low opinion of their velem-. The
Germane ane better respected: and
better liked; the Spanisedlias a lea -
de admiantiods for 'team:deal efficiency,
amid moreover,. the Germane in Spain
behaved well.
They have some 'cioruenoil over Span-
ish inaustry-e.,g, air transport is
German operated -and are waning; at
monopolizing the rich mineral re-
sources of Spain.
3ut he H4tler-Staaln pact wee a
setback for ,Genntamy in Spain, for
hostility to Russia is a axed prinimi-
ple in this Catholic country which
underwent nearly three years cavil
war to ,d,esteoy Communism.
Then the French collapse brought
the German army to the Pyrenees ;
there are mew ,signis that Spain mis-
trusts German military ambitions. A
proeosed parade of vietoirtoun Nazi
troops at Sart Sebaetian, near the
Franco - Rewash frontier received
indica publicity but never took place.
Tthere followed a marked revival of
Spain's triendsthip with Portugal, a
dountlry tvvatteh has maintained, de-
spite scrupulous .neatirality, Wadi-
tiomal alliance with England. And;
there is prudence 49 tbe Spanish of-
ficial denial, at ,the instance of title
British Aimibassador, of Spanish retest
reports that Great Britain had been
holding up cargoes of wheat for
Spain.
The agreements between Portugal,
Spain end Great Britain to ennure
supplies of wheat and colonial pro-
ducts may not satisfy political pas-
,sicois, but they, do feed the hungry
People.
erpaitt has plenty of problems to
solve, agricultural, industrial and po-
Mrs. William McClure, lituannen Ona
Mrs. William McClure carried off
top honours for Tea Biscuits and for
Fara and Nut Loaf. $he also won a
prize for her Coffee Ring and was
one of the four women wlao carried
off the first four places in the white
bread contest, using Robin Hood
Flour. All four awards were made
is, year at the 1940 Canadian
National Exhibitien, Toronto. Like
many other prize-winners-includ,
ing those who won 1.ste and and
3rd prizes for white bread at this
same exhibition - Mrs. McClure
always uses Robin Hood Flour.
From her lovely farm Itorne near
Brampton, Ontario; Mrs. McClure
has kindly sent her prize recipe for
Fruit and Nut Loaf. "There is one
tbipg to remember, ladies, says
Mrs. McClure, "be sureto use Robin
Hood Flour when you make this
loaf. I have given this recipe to
women who used other flows and
they wondered why their loaf did
not turn out like mine. 1 won 13
out of 17 entries last year,
at various
fairs and everything wasbaked with
Robin Hood Flour, We are never
without it at home and I wouldn't
dream of Wiring to win a prize
unless I had Robin Hood!"
It takes both skill and good fiour
to get best results in baking. Many
women have the skill but do not
have really good flour until they try
Robin Hood. If your bread and
other bakinitioesn'a
eivaPiir f
dye
ygofie
moneypback -wads art mare 1SFYSee ,
ryHomio:dtaanbFkisdotrwati: lestoastis:faTa4etneedor
Mrs. McClute's PROpe
1)1 teascupspooRtinBliakinoogPowder
d Heo
3
3'6 teaspoon Sak
..1/4 cupcaain
p wGranulautsted Sugar
1 Egg -
cup jGuiratceed Orange Rind
and
.1A cup Cold Water
1 cup Mixed Fruit
3 tablespoons Butter or
Shortening, melted
1. Sift and measure flour.
2. Add baking powder salt and
3. Beategg until light and add to ilf
shortening, water and orange
juice. .
4. Add fruit and nuts.: . .
5. Makea well in dly.440bc..ingrediente
and add the wet. mixture.
6. Turn into a Well -greased tin and •
bake in moderateoven 350"E
about 40 to 50 minutes.
•
B.H40°BmEINI!IHAIUNOODGFLS131101eAVIMILLCE S unarm)
Robin Hood Flour'
• maed p.m *ladled Wheal
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." •
A BIGGER CAR A BETTER BUY!
NEW Big Bodies . kEW Massive Beauty
Faster Acceleration . NEW Heavy
Rigid Frame . NEW Interior Luxury • NEW
Stabilizer Ride control NEW Soft Slower -
Action Springs . NEW Roominess . NEW,
„Vision. (glass.. area 'increased up to 33%)
• NEW Wider Seats . NEW Longer Wheel-
base and Springbase.
• YOU CAN BUY A '41 FORD FOR LESS THAN
ANY OTHER FULL-SIZE CAR IN CANADA
Let's look at the facts on the new Ford car for 1941.
Body? Entirely new and bigger. Wheelbase? Two
inches longer! Seating width? increased as mu- ch as
seven inches! Better vision? 22% more vision in
sedans, 33% more in coupe. Ride? Completely
re -engineered for amazing new comfort: new soft,
slow -acting springs; new ride stabilizer. Acceleration?
Already famous; now stepped-ur for even faster
pick-up.
. Add these to new massive beauty and luxury that
matches the brilliance of'a V -type 8 -cylinder engine -
plus all-around economy -and you get just one answer.
Arrange right now with a Ford-Merrucry-tlealer-to - '
inspect and drive this biggei;,,car, this better buy!
CANADIAN CARS FOR CANADA. NO cars sold in
Canada utilize a higher percentage of Canadian material
and labour than those manufactured by Ford Motor Com-
pany of Canada, Limited.
0 a
1941
Ford and Mercury Dealer
Ford Tractors Phone' 102
:et
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