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The Huron Expositor, 1951-07-13, Page 5• • nealuruu still remain in sixth ,pot in the "Big Twelve" league, althofigh they lost two games dur- lag the past week. In Port Elgin Thursday night the Lakesides de- feated the Bosharts 17-3. Tuesday .evening the locals went to'Menford where the Nottawasaga, Bay team pulled a 5'0 win. Thursday's game at Port Elgin saw O'Shea, Eisler and Bell all score in the eighth frame on one hit and four errors by the win- ping pitcher, Bob Ellis.. Thirteen local batters- went down swinging behind the strong arm of Bob Ellis. He walked one to first base. Jack Huffman whiffed nine Port Elgin sluggers, sending eight to first on balls. R H E Seaforth ... 000 000' 030-3 2 N8 Port Elgin.. 200 550 05x-17 14 4 Batteries: Seaforth, Huffman and Bell; Port Elgin: Ellis and McNeil, One hour was the time of the Tuesday fixture at Meaford, as two errors and four hits in the third frame produced five runs for the Northern team. Smithson, Davies, Miller, Free - man and Richardson all crossed the plate with only' one out in the third. Bill Smith and Jack Bell were the only local hitters, with Smith being left stranded at third and, Bell at second. Miller was hurling them up for the Peter's Lunch team, striking Let Us Revive the. Beauty of your Rugs and Upholstery ,�A by the ^• iVIOST MODERN CLEANARG 1`.,K METHODS- Your cleaning can be done in your home without the fuss and muss of removing chesterfields, rugs, etc. GIVE US A CALL :Modern RugUpholstery & PHONE 1601 , 11` �� r ::• _.... !!� .._. \, /~ ! Cleaners F. H. DINWOODIE Gilson' Relrigerators. AT, DRASTICALLY REDUCED PRICES! These machines are priced for quick_ sale 8 and 10i/2 -Cubic Foot Refrigerators Come in and see these bargains! Box Furniture Store FUNERAL & AMBULANCE SERVICE Phone 43 : Residence 595-W eh'w�' i1 ( ,f { aW' i1 L j ' I I .Y � II f, !c ,I I i ('� , i�,l S ,I I`,.�: i,, .,:II i I 11 a 1 'I ',I, , t' I (� I III II Q. ::, I�! I 'J• u`' u q ' r'�.,I. 11 f i. ` Iril. 1' � :�iI�I,• pp II I i, I. I �' ' I h .Il I(. �flli,. _.z 11 t..l.�� Ili III'til " - '4d p 'I 4 � I Irh'� , ISI l I iI �ll 1 I' I. r r. P i t I /ti i' . t 4I ii�'OA Ill 11 A, {I I 1 1 Il,'I'I I'.r, y` `I I IV, � ' 111 '�',0 1p� I il 1 1' I I dl I11_ UI�II 1 ql y' •' . r \,� , •' W =• A J t k ��' fl� ..t fai I.,711% I ii : • i' (,i����i.. r ry :i — ,� t: wai®.S or REAL WOOD Car c 11757`ffl;Ir,'.1t'1r Warm and friendly as only wood can be, (1 Etch Wood reflects the play of light and shade like a piece of delicate I lir►t sculpture. A fireplace wall � P P becomes a show -piece panelled in Etch Wood. Halts, dens, gamerooms radiate hospitality. , .. Yet Etch Wood is inexpensive ... .and hard as hardwood. `` '=� S1 • 1.1. . v. a • ETCH%'_ SEE YOUR BUILDING SUPPLY DEALER - MacaulaBali • Phone 787 Builder? Suppllesphonle = I, qty,. i'..;' 1 ,,, f,y 7< — ill 4 ab.' -- ill ;� rI , ti ��('1 ,------,-.4-...cf,- I ' � Ui' l l '1„ til' `;i L t1 . L1)1 = " r ))) � �' I ('� ' lj ll` i9 -28 97 PV TODAY. Y • Clinton Lumber - Lime - Tile Roofing - Siding Out five. Freeman relieved hifl ip, the eighth frame with txva swing- ing out .and one walking, Bill O'Shea went the route on the mound for Bosha» sending, two down on strikes and' walking two. R H E Seaforth ... 000 000 000-0 2 6 Meaford .... 005 000 00x-6 5 0 Seaforth _ Panchok, ss; Ron Muir, 3b• Smith, If; Cameron, lb; Reist, 2b; Horton, rf; Eisler, of; Bell, c; O'Shea, p; Huffman, 3b in sixth. Meaford—Davies, lb; Gaskey, ss; Miller, p, if in 8th; Freeman, If, p in 8th; Richardson, c; Chap- man, 3b; Douglas, cf; Smith, rf; Smithson, 2b; Pretty, rf in 8th. Hughie Hall and the Iueknow Legionnaires lead the 'Big Twelve' group with 18 points, as the sche- dule starts on the final half. Wing - ham Crossett Mercuries and Mea - ford Peter's Lunch are close con- tenders, with 16 points Wingham have lost one, while Meaford lost two. Port Elgin Lakesides are holding down fourth spot with 14 points, but Walkerton are closing in on them with 12 points, having played one less game. Seaforth Bos.hasts are in the pixth spot, with five wins and six losses for a total of 10 points. Kincardine are struggling to overtake them, but at present have only three wins against seven losses. Southamp- ton and Wiarton Red Men both have four points. Centralia Air- men won one game from Goderich for two points. In the cellar is the Legion entry from Goderich, having won no games in eight starts. Still Hunt ` for , Captain Kidd's Pirate Gold, (From the New York 7.'imes) The lure of treasure buried by the pirates—bars of gold, precious, jewels, doubloons, ducatoons, flor- ins—this is the stuff on. which to build a dream. Properly, the man of adventure- some spirit takes himself in hand at times and tries to turn the dream into a reality. He sets, out in search of the mouth-watering booty. Perhaps he will•• chart a course to Old Providence Island in the western end of the Caribbean Sea, to seek out the sunken Cave where they say that that wild Welsh buccaneer of the South Seas, Sir Henry Morgan, buried his loot. (Fair Warning: The mouth of this cave is under 75 feet of water, water swarming with sharks and barracuda). Or perhaps the man with spirit a lit- tle less adventuresome may find Tortuga, Juan Fernandez, Jamai- ca, all island haunts of the bravoes of the sea, more to his taste, There are •books filled with the yarns of these hunts for treasure. Yet only rarely do we find the hap- py ending. Usually a storm inter- dicts,or the chests are found but the treasure is gone. But happy ending or no, the lure has not lessened its appeal through the centuries and it is with no sur- prise that we learn that another expedition is to sail in search of the treasure, £250,000 of it, which belonged to Capt. William Kidd, Explaining UN Policy (From "The Choices Confronting Us in Korea," by Dean Rusk, in the Department of State Bulletin) Today I should like to talk for a few minutes about where we come out in Korea. How does the fighting end? Let's look first at the choices which are easy to think about. We pould' turn the fighting into a much jigger war by attacking those who are directly involved in the ag- ression in Korea. The action of Red China and the Soviet Union in Korea has been criminal and unconscionable. But we would not solve the Kor- an problem that way. We might I able to forget it, but only be- cause we would have for more ser- ous things to worry about. Our ourpose must be to defend our se- urity and liberties without a world w-ar if we can; but defend them w•e must.. Perhaps you are one of those who say, "We don't want a gen- eral war; we only want to bomb Manchuria and attack China." But here are others in this struggle, who have great power available to hem not yet committed. to•the ag- gression in Korea. They, too, can make decisions. It may be that your guess is that he Communists won't wage a' gen- r;1 war at this time. Your guess night be right. But it might be rung. Those who make the deci- inn to extend hostilities beyond Korea would be completely irre- snonsible if'they did not take into till account the element of gen- ral war,with all the destruction t nd loss of life which wouldbe nvolved. A second easythin to think g bouti an immediate withdrawal s d to rom Korea. That, too, would lead o disaster. Korea is not the only �biect oftheappetites andamb-- pp h WE AR E AGENTS fol' Counter Check Books ,„a Printed Gummed Tape /� p MADE 13Y "1'111Pn Ennd. F ER`p R00uCT5 j(�'Stty_lle�s`��f��or every business. Various colors and designs. Samples, suggestions and prices without obligation. THE HURON EXPOSITOR 'SEAFORTH • tions of Communist conspiracy. We could not solve anything by abandoning Korea. Who would be the next victim? And the next? And the next? Have we so soon forgotten Adolph Hitler? Each bite was to be the last. Do you re- member the trail which led from Manchuria and Ethiopia to Pearl Harbor? To abandon Korea would be to abandon the United States. Some are now saying, "Either extend the war or get out of 'Korea." They are asking us to choose which of two roads to dis- aster we should take. Our choice must be to take neither, if we can avoid it. At this point, the job gets tough and complicated. What we are trying to do is to maintain peace and security with- out a general war. We are saying to the aggressors, "You will not be allowed to get away with your crime; you must stop it." At the same time, we are trying to pre- vent a general conflagration which would consume the very things we are now trying to defend. Let's admit that this effort is extremely difficult. There is no more complicated problem than to bring an end to fighting which in- volves the world's great powers without unconditional surrender of one side or the other—an uncon- ditional surrender which will not come except in general war. It is hard to understand and hard to explain. It means a condition of half -war, half -peace. Peace will come in Korea when the aggressors decide to give up, their purpose. There is no present sign that they intend to do so. But if we countthecasualties and the forces they now have in Korea, the agg shave committed mmi tied at least. 1,250,000 troops to their criminal effort and' are right where they were when the first attack was launched. In Red China itself, people are increasingly worried about send- ing waves of Chinese manpower in- to the fiery furnace of modern fire power in a foreign land, in a war hatched up by someone else Communist aggression was re - relied in Greece and in Berlin without a general war. This came about because situations were cre- ated by vigorous action on the -part of the free world which made it necessary for the aggressors, for reasons fully known only to them, to change their course of action. Both in Greece and in Berlin, the result fully protected the es- sential interests of the free world and the failure of purpose and loss of prestige went to those who had flagrantly challenged the peace of the world. Apart from Korea itself, the free peoples of the world are in- • reasing their strength rapidly; their armed forces and their in- dustrial prbduction are being read- ied to defend themselves' against the threat which has been raised against them. This very fact pro- duces peril. For a course of ev- ents has been set in motion by the free world which will shortly place us in a position to be secure and NEW CARS We have on Display a— NEW DE SOTO and DODGE "REGENT" New Dodge 3/4-1 Ton Express Truck U -S -E -D C -A -R -S '49 PLYMOUTH SEDAN '49 DODGE -SEDAN '46 PONTIAC SEDAN '41 DODGE SEDAN '39 CHEAT. SEDAN:. '46 FORD STAKE TRUCK -2 Ton Rowcliffe Motors Phone 267 Seaforth • the' most famous freebooter of them all. Protesting his innocence to the laa:t and proclaiming that he was convicted by perjuries, Captain Kidd was swung from the gallows on Execution Dock, Old Wapping, ,London, and left there in the sun to day. But before his death the captain sent his jailer to Richard Cotte, the Earl of Bellomont, ask- ing sking permission to lead an expedi- tion to recover his treasure Wrote Bellomont in a letter: '• sent him word that he was th King's prisoner, and I could heark en to no such proposition, but had the gaoler to try, if he coaql prevail with Captain Kidd, to dis- cover where his treasure was hi by him. But he said nobody con find it but himself, and wopld no tell any further." -Captain Kidd told "no further, but people have been searching fa his treasure ever since, sparred o from time to time by the rumor of the finding of gold, silver an jewels. It does seem a fact that some.o Kidd's gold was found on Gardin er's Island, on theeastern end o Long Island. Leas likely are th other yarns, all of which have a a common denominator the tale o the slave who helped bury the trea sure and then was ihimself killed and buried atop the chest. At one point this tale becam interwined with the legend o Sleepy Hollow. Laborers digging near the Andre Monument in Ta rytown unearthed a headless skele assumed to be the remains o the murdered slave. But, with n evidence of buried treasure near by, more likely it was'.the remains of the spooky equestrian who s unreasonably chased poor Ichab along the lonely road. Then there is the story of the fisherman of Long Island's Gres, South Bay who thrice dreamt o a near -by cove where Kidd's trea- sure was to be found. The third time was enough and up he got and rode in his boat to the place. Next morning he was found uncon- scious on his own threshold. His spade was nearby with wet sand clinging to it but the boat was gone. The fisherman could explain nothing: where he had gone, where he had dug, how he had gotten home. And another tale tells us that a farmer's wife near Rye, N.Y., on one properly dark and stormy night gave shelter to a sailor who next morning filled her apron with strange gold pieces—Kidd's gold, of course. Now we have bhe report from England of a party of treasure hunters about to depart for the South China Sea. Included among the adventurers are a barber, a nurse and two lucky youths, fresh out of Oxford. The expedition is based on maps found sealed in the bottom of a sea chest belonging to Kidd. They were discovered by a lawyer'in 1934 and have since been examined by the curator of the British Museum, who is convinced' that the charts date to bhe seven- teenth century and that the hand- writing is similar to that of the pirate. The island on which thetrea- sure tr a sure is buried is said to be 6C-0 miles east.of Singapore and, as in all good o treasure g e re hunts,the e trea- sureseekers will not let their navi- gator have he t exact bearings of the island until the ship is near by. For our own part we would ad- vise the young adventurers that theywould ould do well to keep a weather eye open for a seafaring man with one leg, a parrot on his shoulders and a ready smile on his lips. I e d d ld t 11 r n s d f f e s f • e f Tar r 0 0 od• Great f McKILLOP On Friday evening Mr, Elwood Boyd, who stays with his^"aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Byer - man, collided with Mr. Kenneth Byerman, when the latter was passing him at Mr. Harry Regele's gale. Mr. Boyd was thrown out of his car. Dr. Brady and an am- bulance were called and he was taken to Scott Memorial Hospital, Seaforth, for examination. He has returned home again. Death of F. J. Beuermann The death of Frederick John Beuermann, 59, occurred in Sea - forth on Friday, July 6. He had been ill for about five months. The deceased was born in McKillop Township and educated at S.S. No. 8. Ide farmed in the township all his life. He was a member of St. Peter's Lutheran Church, , Brod- hagen. Mr. Beuermann was mar- ried at Brodhagen 28 years ago to Clara Koehler, Surviving him, be- sides his wife, are one son, Mar. vin, at Yhome; a step -son, Ivan Me - Nab, at home; a step -daughter, Mrs. Wm. Murray, Walton; three brothers, John, David and George. all of McKillop, and one sister, Mrs, Daniel Steiss, Walton. Fun- eral services were held Monday afternoon with a private service at 2 p.m. at his late home, lot 12, con. 9, and a public service at 2:45 p.m., at St. Peter's Lutheran Church, Brodhagen. Rev. Walter Becker officiated. Interment was in St. Peter's cemetery, Pallbearers at the funeral of Mr. Fred Beuermann were Russell Bolton, Reuben Bunch, Clarence "Regele, Gilbert Murray, John 'Dietz and Charles Dietz. Flower-bear- to lower-bear to get on with the great peaceful purposes which are our true aims. This prospect may be intolen- able to the Kremlin—hence, the danger. But we must pass through this 'Valley Of danger if we are to maintain our liberties. No one can surely promise that we can avoid general war. But, if one should , come, It is important that we be in the strongest pos- sible position' to meet R. I, 45 Only Muracord-Gingham-Slab Eyelet 1eKsep & Picolay SUMMER DRESSES TO CLEAR AT 7.95 Lovely fine stripe Miracords, plain shade eyelet Jerseys, gay plaid ginghams, neat dotted washable stubs, and printed wash- able Picolays and Spuns, in a big range of colors, including white, blue, pink, green, grey, mauve and yellow, Some two-piece styles. TO CLEAR AT 7.95 ALL SPRING AND SUMMER II II Millinery HALF PRICE Every hat in stock, all our new Summer hats, plus a few Spring numbers, go on sale as long as they last, at one big discount. Choose your hat now at HALF PRICE FINAL CLEARANCE! Women's Spring Coats 46 end ONLY, all this season's best, regular length and Shortie Coats go on Sale for the week - at half price. Now's your chance to pick up that coat you've been wanting at a great big saving. Good choice of shades, styles and sizes. Regular $16.95 to $49.50. HALF 848 to` "za.7s PRICE STEWART BROS, ers were Gerald and Ronald Beuer- mann, Morley and Manuel Koehler, Eldon Hulley, Edward Benneweis and Be Me vin ue Melvin rmann_ Secretary: "Your wife wants to kiss s •oiY over the h e" y P on . Boss: "Take the message and give it to me later." • Husband, returning from doctor's office: "Hey, Maggie, guess what! Something wonderful has happened to me. I've got ulcers." Maggie: "Ulcers! Oh, mercy' me . . , but aren't they bad?" Husband: "Sure, they're ter- rible, but the Doc says I mustn't eat no more salads!" VARNA Induction services were held in the United Church. Varna, Friday evening for Rev. T. J. Pitts, from Newfoundland. Rev. Pitt will have charge of the Varna -Goshen Unit- ed Churches, and succeeds Rev. Reba Bern, who served the charge for several years. During Miss Ilern's pastorate a new church was built at Goshen and extensive re- pairs made to Varna Church, in- cluding a new basement. The in- duction service was in charge of the Rev. G. G. Burton, of Centralia, m-yaurtime of need BOX is the soothing hand in times of distress, sympathetic- ally understanding your prob- lems, helping to arrange every important detail. Feel free to .call on BOX any hour for funeral or ambulance service. BOX Funeral Service AMBULANCE SERVICE Res. 585 W — Store 43 assisted by the Rev. W. C. Par- rott, of Crediton- KIPPEN James T Jarrott, 89,so J rrottm' prominent t t'a m r er of Hay Township, died sud- denly in Scott Memorial Hospital, Seaforth, Thursday morning, July 5, as a result of a heart condition. He +had been a patient in the hos- pital since the previous Saturday. Five years ago Mr. Jarrott had his leg amputated and had.been in good health since- He was a member of St. Andrew's United Church, Kippen. Surviving are two sons, John and Eldon, Hay Township; o nship; two daughters, Mrs. Hugh Love, Hens all ,and Mrs. Har- ry Norris, Tuckersmith; one broth- er, Norman, or an, and a sister, Mrs. Dan Sanders, both of London. The re- mains e.mains rested at the Bonthron fort eral home, Hensall, where private funeral services were held Satur- dayafternoon, fternoonRev. A. E. Hinton, of , Kippen, officiating. Burial was in Bayfield cemetery. New Massey -Harris Machines No. 7 HAY LOADER No. 8 HAY LOADER—"Special Prig" 2 and 3 -FURROW TRACTOR PLOWS 44 & 44D & 30 R.C. 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