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The Huron Expositor, 1931-10-16, Page 3ti en "l,Jf { } :IN` THE STONIACR Don't suffer from dangerous P,asw Ineesing amend rc ,hasint, from, sourness., acidity, ,bloating or pain of indigestion. 'Stop worrying. Witmer ever you need quick stomach relief,, take a little Bisurated Magnesia -- powder or tablets. It breaks' u'p gn,s, aieutralizes acids and keeps the stow. lash sweet and strong, and .digestion perfect. At good drug ,stores. every- where. Not a laxative. USBORNE • Connell Minutes. - The municipal council of the Township 'of Usborne enet in its monthly meeting on Satur- day, .October 3rd, with all the mem- ' bers present. The minutes of the aneeting of September 5th+ -+were read and approved on motion of Fuer-Dew. Notice from •Crown Attorney, re sel- ection of jurors. Williams-Westcott: That the local .selectors meet at the +Cl•erk''s •office on Thursday, Oct. "8th, aat 8 p.m. Westcott-Williams: All un- paid 1930 taxes not paid on ,or before ;Saturday, October 17, 1931, that legal :action will immediately be taken for the collection of the same and that a special meeting of council be held on -Monday, October 19th, at 8 p.m. 'Treasurer's report: Credit, 1930 tax- es paid $680.21, penalty $4.34; Legis- lative and county grants for schools :a9 follows: S. S. No. 1, $122.64; S. NS. No. 2, $165.75; S. S. No. 3, 046.08; IS. S. No. 4, $104.38; S. S. No. 5, :150.10; S. S. No. 6, $553.45; S. S. No. 7, $132.00; S. S. No. 8, Un., $11.17; :S. S. No. 10, $185.36; S. S. No. 12, Un., 4167.15; S. S. No. 13, $2.36; total, $1,762.44. Dew-iWeatcott-,Bill paid: 'Times Advocate, notication cards, •Pym 'Drain, $2; Huron Expositor, un- employment cards, $1; Chas. W: Cisrt- ner, advance. Elimvilie Drain contract, 41,420; Pedlar People, 28' 6cY' steel •:.culvert, $314.36; George Eilber, cern- •ent tile. $8.10; H. Webber, sharpening grader blade, $1.50; Chas. Stephen, • .trucking gravel, $39.70; R. W. Batten, trucking gravel, $32; Garnet Wilson, -.weed cutting, $23.70; Alf. Brooks, -weed cutting, $26; John Fletcher, weed -cutting, $2.50;1 Gerald Ford, weed -cutting, $10.60; Wm. Brooks, weed hutting, $4; John Kellett, weed cut- ting, $2; Wesley Johns, weed cutting, 4Oc; John Hunkin, rent, cement mixer -eand labor, $10.25; Norman McDonald, Tabor, culvert, $3; R. E. Pooleye nails, • cuIvert, 49c; R. G. Seldon, cement, $31.25; Alice Cudmore, cement gravel .$3.50; Mrs. H, Ford, clerical work, $1; H. Ford, superintendence, $55.65e - 'Carried. Council adjourned to meet in regular meeting on Saturday, Nov. "7, 1931, at 1 p.m. - Henry Strang, <Clerk. To Ripen Green Tomatoes • Late in the fall, pick the tomatoes ,before they are touched .by the frost.. 1)o not try to preserve any tomatoes -that are bruised or are in any way -imperfect. Wrap each tomato in -paper and pack carefully in shallow ,slat boxes or baskets. Store in a -cool part of the cellar, but not where it is cold enough to freeze the toma- toes. As you require the tomatoes, 'brine them upstairs, unwrapl them :and _place them on a window ledge -where there is plenty of sun. They will ripen in a few days and you .:should have them for use during the Christmas season. Winter pears are stored 'in this -way. 'There's Fun At Indoor Picnics Late autumn, when the novelty of n return to school has worn off and one's memory casts back rather wiet- fully to past summer days, is •just -the time to invite your friends to an indoor picnic party. Invitations on rough, torn 'brown paper, so that they ,are completely informal, will start the fun right off. Tell them that no •ane will be admitted unless in real picnic clothes -summer dresses and white flannels, Carry •out the picnic idea by re- snoving all chars; Instead, have a few boxes covered with cheap brown •fabrics, to look like stumps, for those who object sitting on the floor, -with several covered in gray, to sim- •ulate rocks, and a cushion or two cote =ered with green sateen or denim, to .:give the floor a look of grass. Then .add a pile of boughs, a potted plant -or two, and the scene is an set. Outdoor games add to the fun. 'The supper, of course, should be kept in the picnic manner. Early in the evening there should be a treasure hunt for the boys, which will end with each boy lnding a bag of stage money;• then the picnic supper boxes should flee auctioned off to the highest bidder. Ea.h box will con- tain a girl's name, and the boy who 'buys" that box has her fox his sup - peel partner. Shoe boxes or cheap baskets packed with a real picnic sup- per for two and tied up with color- ful ribbons encourage spirited bidding. The color of the ribbons should more or less suggest the name of the girl who goes with that box, so the delicate blonde might have hers tied • with baby blue; the vivid brunette who affects oranges or browns would have her name in the box tied with those colors; the girl who loves red would have that on her box, while the one who always wears gray would, perhaps', have hers . tied with the combination of gray and pink. Prances Famous Vegetable Pills For Indigestion 4n2„4... ben troubled with Ind dos and Sick Headadies for several ' months, I was recommended to, try year famnoue Pins. After the first does was made aware of their Very read ' tonicvalue.-Miss ht. Croydon. De. Carter's Little fiver Pigs are taco eernuery sorts& aced have a very definite, vaheabietswie action on the liver ... teat • yyoouu to end. Conte Biousness, Headaches, Poor. Aon, etc. ,AlldruggistB�25e&ThC1 , 4 n- lr C p •,�. , tiNsli, b 1.., • ni✓� di hi too �" biQy zPill' lily Olga woo b�ingtioned, but since, alto ± tl , areeney in,the bags Nr. y, he qra �•nOt be able 'bi?} . get the liar bd ran a, Widele only adds to the tiro. , oelXx$ to:o, sineo ,only one, Inlet St a .tin7l'* is shown, her Bray gueJss wrongs eVs to. tslie .supper, varied sand- wiches, stuffed eggs -+so that there need not be extra salt or pepper - grass containers or chicken salad, and cake should be in each box, or, instead of the sandwiches, bread anal butter and .chicken that can be eaten without knife or fork. Each box should also contain a bottle of either olives or pickles or some other nov- elty, and these can be passed around from couple to couple. Paper nap- kin's, forks and spoons add the right touch, for there should be nothing needing e>.?tting. Started As Clerk • May Govern Bank The man who may succeed Montagu Norman as governor of the Bank of England is said to be Sim Ernest Har- vey. Sir Ernest is not so well known in foreign countries as some other Eng- lish bankers, but his long training in the affairs of the bank, his intimate knowledge of the London market, and his unruffled and typical British tem- perament has made him an admirable man to hold the reins in a time of crisis. Entering the service of the Bank of England at the age of 18, he be- came comptroller in 1925, an office', which he held for three years. He was the third,. •son of the uate Pre- bendary C. M. Harvey, of Hillingdon, and was educated at Marlborough. • He married Sophia, youngest daugh- ter of the late Captain Catesby Paget in 1896, and has a son and three daughters. Sir Ernest Harvey was made a Chevalier of the Legion,d'Bonneur in 1918, and a Chevalier of the Order of Leopold thefollowing year. In 1917.he received the C.B.E. and was created a knight in 1920. Simple Salad Dressing Cooked Salad Dressing. 1 teaspoon musts"rd 1 teaspoon sugar 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons flour Dash of paprika • 1 egg 4 cup milk 1/4 cup vinegar 1 tablespoon butter, Mix dry ingredients with the well beaten egg. When smooth add the milk and vinegar and cook oyer hot water until thick, stirring constantly. Remove from stave and stir in but- ter. Mayonnaise. 11s teaspoon mustard . 1/a teaspoon salt 1/s teaspoon pepper 1/s teaspoon paprika 1 egg yolk 12 tablespoons ;vinegar or Iemon juice. 1 cup olive oil. Mix dry ingredients with the egg yolk and beat. Add one tablespoon vinegar. Add the oil gradually, beat- ing constantly with an egg beater or silver fork. As mixture thickens, add remainder of vinegar. Honey Salad Dressing. For Fruit Salads ---A Tart Dressing. 2 egg yolks 2 tablespoons sugar Juice of 2 lemons 1 tablespoon flour -1/2 cup honey 1/E cup whipped cream. Method: Mix honey, flour, sugar, and cook in double boiler for ten minutes. Add lemon juice and beaten egg yolks slowly, and cook for five minutes, stirring constantly. Re- move from the fire and cool. This can be kept in a cool place in a glass jar -when it will keep for •weeks. Add whipped • cream toe salad dressing before serving. If a sweet- en • dressing is desired -add more honey. WIT AND WISDOM. If you want to know the state of a country, look at its politics. - Mr. Lloyd George. There is nothing worse than to make a grand display of courage and then refuse at the last fence. -Mr. J. B. Frith. The Labor party has a passion for tradition and ancient usage unequal- led by any other party. -Lord Mar- ley. I rank marriage as one of the great careers for university woman. -Miss E. S. Lodge. "Man has excelled the birds," boasts an aeroplane ad. N•o bird, for exam- ple, can hit the ground at 60' m.p.h. Kingston Whig -Standard. The true worth of a man lies about half way between what his wife thinks of him ..and what his another thinks of him. -Brooklyn Times. We don't see hdw it will ever be possible to finance another world war unless we can get It trade-in allow- ance on the old one. Nashville Southern •Lumberman. - Despite mar's' -meetings, resolutions, and reports about the only person who appears able effectively to get rid of the gangster is another gangster. - Boston Herald. Hurd cases make bad law, but it is a bad law which multiplies hard cas- es. -Dean Inge. ,. You . have no right to amusements. until you have done your day's work honestly, -Bishop of Lincoln. , Preparation for war is a step to- ward war.-dllev. James MacLeod. The World is half the size it. was es3 hitt V Cele 'tui a AS fax aA1i kaon eta ar;eee en lnyawn• WillisA, It hes •got .,ea; new that alneast any girl with a, gaol jab can get'reaaied-o: Florida TirneeeUnten• A busy man has no time for these who make a speeialty of ,gillink time, ,-Chicago Daily News. It seems to; be the general opinion that 'G'reateBritain made a sterlipg de- cisianr �Cliristian Science M,ouitor. It is not always easy to say when yesterday left off, when to -day began, nor yet when the two will merge into our to-morrows.-ienry Ford. • Wars have never been made by soldiers in this . country; they have been stopped by them. -Major-General Smedley D. Butler. A French raileoad is experimenting with rubber wheels. It can't be ,they are intent on making travel more tir- ing. -Ottawa Journal. There are so many queer things' in the world that we have no time for wondering at the queerness of things we see habitually. Max ;Beerbohm. A Chicago bank officer who took just $500• of the bank's money to margin a stock deal, lost about $1,500,000 trying to get that small sum back. There is only bad luck for the em- bezzler. -Border Cities Star. It used to be that a girl's beau had to pass muster before her mother, father, aunts, uncles and what not. But nowadays the girl is her own fiance committee.--rBrandson Sun. A. number of drinking vessels, ap- parently thousands of years old, have been unearthed in Greece. Of spree - historic origin, evidently. -.The Hum- orist.. A nation which disregards ethical principles must expect its citizens to flout them, too. --G rge A. Dorsey. There is no worse way f mistreat- ing a noun than ,by ass ciating it with a disagreeable arjective.-,Rev. Lynn Harold Hough, D.D. It's nice to have -half the world's gold, but how can a merchant do bus- iness if he has all the money in town? -Port Arthur News. A constitutional apiendment is pro- posed declaring that men and women shall be equal. If passed, it will be a great victory for men. -Sari Diego Union. May Get $90,000,000,000,000 Takes $20 -A -Week Position Now, at 25, John D. Rockefeller III, modest heir presumptive to the larg- est fortune in the world, makes his debut in the world of affairs as a member of the committee of ten to get America into the world court - along with such imposing elders as Nicholas Murray, Butler, Newton D: Baker and Professor James J. Shot - Young Mr. Rockeller, out of Princeton two yearn ago, took a $20 a week job with the information sec- tion of the League of Nations and worked his way up. When John D. II was born at mid- night, March 21, 190.6, a lurking sta- tistician quickly computed that if the Rockefeller fortune continued to grow at its current rate of increase, the newcomer at the age of 60 would be in command of $90,000,000,000,000. Apparently, the family never broke this 'news to the youngster. He• made third-class trips to Europe and earn- ed part of his livinl at Princeton so- liciting advertising. Like his Baptist grandfather, he is deeply religious, and was vice-president of the Phila- delphian, the Princeton Y.M.C.A. He is six feet tall, brown haired, slight in figure, retiring; earnest and industrious. In college, he used his spare time teaching language and mathematics to the foreign dish wash- ers and potato peelers in the college kitchens. He fagged patiently for the football • squad, scrubbing the muddy suite and footballs. What To Serve For Dessert Problem of Meal Planner What to serve for dessert is one of the problems of the planner of fam- ily meals. Coffee Tapioca. - Two cups strong, clear coffee, 1e3 cup quick cooking tapioca, 1-2 cup of sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 egg. Heat the coffee and add tapioca gradually, stirring constantly. Cook over hot water 15 minutes or until tapioca is clear. Stir frequently. Add sugar and salt. Beat egg yolk, add a little of the tapioca mixture and, stir until well blended. Return to first mixture and cook until it thickens. Take from fire, cool and fold in stifflly beaten egg white, Chill. Peach Tapioca. Drain 1 tin of peaches from their syrup, sprinkle with 1-4 cup of sugar, and let stand 1 hour. Soak 1 cup of tapioca 1 hour in cold water to cov- er; add enough bailing water to peach syrup to make 3 cups. Heat this liq- uid to boiling point, add tapioca drain- ed from the cold water, 1-4 cup of sug •r and 1-2 teaspoon 'of salt. Cook in double boiler ]until transparent. Line a pudding dish with peaches cut in quarters„ fill with tapioca, and bake in a moderate oven 30 minutes; cool slightly; and serve with cream or cus- tard sauce. Maple Sponge. Soak 1 tablespoon granulated gela- tin in 3-4 cup cold water ten minutes. Put 1 cup of brown or maple sugar and 8-4 cup hot water in a sauce- pan and (bring to boiling point. Boil for 7 minutes. Pour syrup graduaI- ly on Soaked gelatin. Cool„ and when nearly set, add whites of 2 eggs beat- en until stiff and 1 cup chopped nut meats. Turn into rnequldi first dipped in cold Water and chill., Serve with a 1 Touched by the Richiless AUTUMN is here, and with it comO,• Fashions --Creations that besp.ea.T loveliest things in Colors and Materia ' 1's, Fps ating Coats, Frocks, Millinery, Fur Scarfs ; a1 assembled here in pleasing variety for your 'in- spection. WOMEN'S SLIP-ON KID GLOVES $2.25 Black trimmed- white, Black, Eggshell, White a n d Brown. Excellent Quality. Perfect Fit. FALL FROCKS ' THAT ARE DIFFERENT Nothing more beautiful in fashioning could be. found anywhere than the Dresses featured in our new Fall collection. Distinctive, Smart, Chic, Econ- omical. Prices, $3.50 to $20 CLOTH COATS. Furred in the New Manner Smarter and newer Coats with lovelier details than ever shown in the past seasons. Latest weave fabrics in a selection of the new shades. Beautifully furred. • - Prices, $15 to $50 MILLINERY In Autumn Style and Color The radically New Hats are represented here in the most alluring and fascinating styles. Every clever detail -every new fall color awaits your choosing. Come and see them. Prices, $1,95 to $3,95 FUR SCARFS Of Style and Quality Deep fluffy full length Scarfs, of the finest selected pelts in a coll&tion of every wanted color for Fall. Prices, $10 to $32.59 S. Blue Serge. and Fancy Suits with Extra Pants $24.5° Don't' confuse these with "just suits" made to sell at. a price. These Suits measure up in every way to the'high stand- ard of quality cloth, guaran- teed colors, high grade trim- mings, made in the very newest style. . . We uneservedly guaran- tee every Suit. Special $24.50 tewart Bros., Seaforth custard made, from the yolks of bhe eggs, sugar and a few grains of salt, milk and flavoring. Maple Rice Pudding With Marshmallows. Take 2 cupfuls of cold boiled rice and add 1 pint of milk, 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1-3 cup maple syrup and ,2 well - beaten eggs. Mix well, turn into a buttered baking dish and bake until the pudding is almost set, then cover the top with fresh marshmallows that have been soaked in cold milk for two or three hours. Bake until the marshmallows are delicately browned. ' Apple and Rice Meringue. One cup cooked rice, 1-4 cup sugar or honey, 1 lemon, 3 eggs, one pint milk, 6 sour apples. Make apple sauce, sweetening it with 1-2 cup of sugar or honey. Mix the rice with the beaten yolks of eggs, remaining 1-4 cup of sugar or honey, and milk. Put in baking dish. Bake twenty to thirty minutes in a moderate oven. When done, spread apple on top. Beat whites of eggs with 6 tablespoons of sugar. Cover apple mixture with the meringue. Place in a slow oven until brown, Real Pirate Queen Sails China's Seas •There are still pirates on the Chin- ese coast, within 65 miles of Hong Kong, and •one of the great chiefs among them is a woman, Lai Choi San. There are plenty of newspaper men in China, but it took a Finnish journ- alist, Aleko E. Lilius, to find the pir- ates and to sail with the pirate queen. The very first thing he discovered was that pirating on the Chinese coast is pretty much a "racket." Up to December of 1929, there had been 30 piratical exploits registered thereabouts since 1921, but though these attacks sometimes yielded fairly large sums of money and loot, the real businese of the pirates, seems to be the regulation Chicago dodge of "protection." Maybe the Chicagoans learned from the Chinese. ' "What a woman she was!" says Liliu.s, describing her in his recently published -book, "I SailedWith Pir- ates." "Rather slender and short, her hair jet black, with jade pins gleaming in the knot at the neck, her ear rings and bracelets of the same precious apple -green stone. "She was exquisitely dressed in a white satin robe fastened with green jade buttons, and green silk slippers. She wore a few plain gold ringelon her Ieft hand; her right hand was un- adorned. "Her face and dark eyes were in- tel.igent-not too Chinese, although purely Mongolian, of course -- •and rather hard. She was probably not yet 40." An American -told Mr.- Lilius that Lai Choi Saril had inherited heir father's seven junks and had increas- ed them to 12; that she was the queen of the Macao pirates, had an immense amount of money -her name meant "Mountain of Wealth".- and that she was ruthless and cruel. When her ships were merely doing pa- trol duty she did not bother to go along, but when they were "on busi- ness" she attended to it personally. Lost Millions in Revolution Recoups Fortune at Bridge An unknown dark horse a short time ago, Ely Culbertson has jumped to the head table in bridge. A young- ish David, he has risen to defy the Goliaths of hearts and spades - the Milton Works and Sidney Lenzes and other widely known authorities whose word heretofore has been obeyed wherever bridge has been played. His friend's call him "the Bobby Jones of Contract." Eight years ago relates Jerome Beatty in the American Magazine, Culbtrts,on was the floundering scion of collapsed wealth trying desperate- ly to earn enough to eat. He was the son of an oil ma-gnate who operated in gussia and Roumania. His mother was the daughter of a Cossack chief. In 1917 the Bolsheviki had confiscat- ed his father's four million dollars worth of oil lands and nudged Ely out of Russia. Then he took an inventory of his earning capacity and found little to encsurage him. He had a superior education but no trade -no business experience of any kind. In the six years that followed, he wrote seven books on auction bridge, and tore them all up, one after an- other. When he wasn't writing or tearing up, he and his wife gave bridge lessons, teaching his system. The going was slow, discouraging. And then contract bridge. arrived - and with it Cul•'bertson's .chance to prove that his wife was right. In the last twelve months, while almost the entire world has been run- ning' on depleted bank -balances, Culb- ertson has raised his income from just enough to pay the bills to $200,- 000 a year. From an obscure teach- er, he has become a real power to the bridge world, powerful enough, at least, to engage in pitched battle with practically allthe other authorities of the game. Experts who differ from hint -and at present the list includes 'nearly ev- ery seasoned authority on contract bridge except R. F. Foster and Harold Vanderbilt, -admit his ability grudg- ingly and sometimes with reserva- tions, but declare that he is disrupt- ing the entire structure of bridge playing. They are seeking a universal sys- tem and want Culbertson to throw his system into the melting pot, out of which is to emerge, they say, one standard method. Culbertson, the lone wolf of contract, will take no seat among those around the melting pot. His method is the standard method, he tells, then. Darkened Aluminum Utensils An aluminum utensil often darkens when a food such as rolled oats is cooked in it. This is due to a reac- tion which takes place between the aluminum and th-e iron in the food. The iron is deposited on the utensil and if the pan is scoured, this valu- able mineral is lost. If, however, to- matoes or some other acid food is rooked in the pan, the iron will be thrown into solution and the family will get its iron even though it has been transferred from oatmeal to to- matoes! Great Banker's Study is Like a Ship's Cabin Charles E. Mitchell, who remains at the head of the merged National City Bank and Bank of America, made the former the first American billion dollar bank in 1927. The merged in- stitution trails closely in assets the Chase National Bank, the • biggest bank in the world. Mr. Mitchell is of New England lineage, but a sharp variant from the precise, coldly acquisitive financiers which New England has fuinnelled down into the money mill, in the last half century. A virtuoso of the golden lute, his artistry translates -it- self into venturesome moods. For in- stance, on the roof of his town house on Fifth Avenue, New York, there is a ship's cabin which Mr. Mitchell us- es for a study. A ship's chronometer paces the golden hours. There are life preservers on the walls. Here the big, ruddy -skipper of a score- of gold -en argosies find echoes of his in- ner self. He is contemptuous of tanks, and swims only in a rough, open sea. The nautical gear feeds the mood. Mr. Mitchell steps downstairs to a Lours Quinze mansion. Here is the stately and beautiful dalliance of old Versailles --another mood. The coun- try estate of Tuxedo, N. J., isl the re- treat of the grand seigneur of the English squire ,blooded horses' and prize-winnaing chrysanthemums. On the dunes at (Southampton, it is a long, rambling shingled summer home, for fox terriers and youngsters. The bank office at Wall Street is colonial -•Heppelwhite, Baron Stieglitz, Cur. tier and Ives, with a colonial fireplace and a ,genial open fire. ''(there, Oen the handouts for the respectful re- porters are Macaulaye•sque. Mr. Mitchell's career embraces the short and simple annals of the rich: Colonial New England ancestry, Am- herst, Western Electric, a New York bank) connection, and a long up -bound escalator: Show Graded Honey. One of the outstanding features in the government exhibit at the Cen- tral Canada Exhibition this year was the display of graded honey by the Bee Division of the Central Experi- mental Farm. This year for the first time horfpy is graded with government standards into the classes White, Golden, Am- ber and Dark, and there are three grades in each of these classes. As the exhibit graphically portrayed. the objective in graded honey is a better product which will develop consumer demand for really fine quality in one of nature's wholesome sweets. The grading•is .expected, through satisfied customers( buying with confidence in quality, to increase demand, to facili- tate orderly marketing, and to ensure greater returns for the .producer. Both novel and interesting was the display -of 240 pounds of honey, the prod9ct of one hive at the Central Experimental Farm so far this year, arranged as it was in pyramid of five pound pails. You've Seen That Kind, - "What kind of a car have you?" "Mine's a wreck." "A wreck." "Yes. Everytime I leave it any- where people come up and ask me if I've reported the accident yet." Brantford Expositor., -� x a �, Perserverance.-A friend of ours tossed up a coin to see whether he should go to a ball game or work in the garden. It took half an hour be- fore the coin told him he should go to the ball game. ---London Free •Press. Expehienee Teaches - On mules we find two legs behind And two we find before; We tand behind before we find What the two behind are for. -Mar- itime Farmer, Sussex, N. B. * 's* Who Knows? -What has become o8 the old-fashioned boy who thought he had had a successful summer if father. gave him a dollar to spend at the county fair along about the last areelu in August 9. --Dundas Star. * * ' In 1931. -Caller: "GoadMean sir. I'm a bond aaaletma}i." Man: "That's all i'iglit, * L fellow. 1 iere'tg n uhrter--.I yourself a square meai;d1 tte1i0; RR'eotrd.