The Huron Expositor, 1937-03-12, Page 2, ,.• ,.. ., 7
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911.4561.112. ' RCiftditf4415.01.1ff.. Ellt.11.•4111.U.S....151011.,
..elifff';
ill 'McLean r.
I
j
Seaforth, Ontario, "
,
0 , afternoon by
.";•"
Z•1S-
iption rates, $1.50 a year in
es; foreign, $2.00 a year. Single
4 cents each.
im..••••••••••",•••••
;tieing rates on application.
Fridlay, March 12, 1937
fOf
Hockey Has Lost Its
The Canadian game of professional
\ockey.,haS many stars, names which
"Tare familiar household words across
„ Canada andieross its borders.
The great and the near great have
tbeir supporters, Some are heroes
„ of speed; others of stick handling; of
shooting; of scoring; of checking,
and. other departments of .this great
• • winter profession — supporters of
• men and women; of boys and girls,
that run into an amazing and ever
• 'increasing number of thousands.
But there is one name that for the
past fourteen years has st o o d
' • out head and shoulders above all the
• hockey heroes; one who was the mas.-
• ter of all .departments of the gaine.
That name was Howie Morenz.
Now Howie Morenz has, gone: As
svsriftly- and unexpectedly as one of
Ills "plays in a game, he phssed from
life in a Montreal hospital on Tues-
day evening in his thirty-fourth
year.
• Scarcely in the prime -of life • one
• mrould say. But in his own profes-
sion he was an old man. So old in
• fact, that his _career during the pres-
•'ent hockey season will go down as
• an all time record in hockey history.
Just thirty-four years! But old.
His body, never weakened by excess,
was physically perfect and ha,d been
that way for the fourteen years in
the game. But he was old for all that.
•_Outwardly, he was a physical god of
Perfeetion—but inwardly, he was
burned out, eonsumed.
• Hockey, fiven the so-called ama"
teur brand, is no longer just a winter
• sport. It is a great financial opera-
tion, paying large dividends; owned
• by capitalists and managed by pro-
moters.
• We know all these things when
we crowd the radio to listen in every
• game night. And we don't care
, what it &Xis to the young men on the
teams. We want speed, and we want
• action and heavy action preferred.
. the so -ailed game of war,
-Ilkley. has:Its fastInation- for
on the side lines. And the re-
• sults of •the two games are pretty
rnuch the' same, as far' as the real
participants are concerned. Perhaps
the end comes a little quicker in the
war game, but When the other burns
out a youth at the'age•of thirty-fOur,
and the age limit is dropping all the
time, hockey is a much more serious
game than it sounds.
But there is money in it and we
like it. So much in fact that we let
• the promoters get away with any-
• thing,, including our money and our
minds We take what we are given
and we don't even reason why.
, •
1.•
• The Legislature .-
A8 long as Mitchell F. Hepburn is
•..Premier of Ontario there will ahvays
•be news. And as long as that Prov-:
ince holds yearly . Legislatures,
•where the Premier provides the lead-
ing, those Sessions of legislature. will
be the news centres of the country.
Take the Ontario Legislature dur-
ing the past week, fbr .instance., An
'Opposition lea:der got under the skin
f .Minister of the, Crown. The
inister, of ihe Crown -got under the
sldn of the Speaker of 'the Assembly
by talking himself out of order..
,eaker -took a hack at the
' 1 ' s shins. They were „very
084 and the Speaker's aim
ate and. well PlaCed. That
jLster feel. Worse than
eoaid still more foolish
t•-ozi: saying them,
un -
r the Crown go nil-
' -the ,Prirne Minister,,
t &ilia ti
4: :It ;Wag
gird* 0
• 7" •
•
Oii ' •
A:YJ Opt!,
tOT
,
"vs 'a 'UV plo t1
er hy the inistero the
Crow • irt thase. And it 'WAS -ar
'rrlicrint*-Vnl-cQnlPtetrgW
too, a.hou1T hive'
• And, secondly -,but seeo•ndly VMS
not performed in public, so the world
doesn't know the particulars—there
was a second apology to the Premier
or in all probability there' would he
one, and. \MUM. it be aJaeauty, too ?
. Then the House pissed on to other
things. But still to things of inter-
est. This time the interest centred
round the speech delivered on Thurs-
day by Dr. A. D; Roberts,:the Liber-. -
al mexnber for Sault Ste. Marie, an
interesting man.
• Interesting, at least to Mr. Hep-
. burn, who showed the keenest inter-.
est in the Northern member's re- .
' marks. Unfortunately for Dr. Rob-
• erts, this interest was not all of a
- kindly nature... It even seem,ed to
, possess such an element of 'curiosity"
on the Premier's part, that it started
him on a hunt for facts, which, when
he returneChe seems to, have found.
AntLaia • result of the finding, the
member for Port Arthur now Ands
,hlinself holding down a kitehen chair
by himself at the back of the hall in-
• stead'of the comfortable, softly up-
halstered one he formerly occupie
• in the Liberal House.
- Dr. Roberts', it would appear,- has
- been a very strong Liberal partisan.
A little •too strong, perhaps. Too
much of the Mussolini -Hitler type.
- He wanted the north to feed out of
his hand without saying too much
• about where that feed came from.
• The main„ thing, from his stand-
-point, was to have plenty of feed. He
would always be zealous in remind-
ing his constituents, from time to
time, of the blessings he was shower-.
ing awn upon them, but he seems
to have been a Arm convert to the
• Biblical injunction about not letting
his left hand know anything about
what his right hand was doing. -
It is party happenings like these
• th'at take more out of a Premier or
party leader than all the other work
combined. He has tot take the re-
sponsibility and face the public. He
• has to be responsible for the conduct
—private and public—of his party
• members, during his and their -terms
• of office, and when a majority of
those members were elected in a
landslide election, the • obstacles a
• Premier has to meet, the quick deci-
sions he has to make, and the bur-
dens he has th shoulder, are usually
more than one man can bear:
••Aft'the next general election the
Premitr'slot will not be olilte so im-
possible. He will -riot haTve as large- --
• a following in the House as. he cub._ _
trols to -day; but- the majority of his
followers will be men of wider edu-
cation, public personality and sound
business integrity.
• •• • •
•',,•*•4$
1,,\44•17,i0..T. re • .12, • ,,pOooto
'11.111...f.31110114,41,- "
•
77,Y
tot
WFIAT OTHER PAPERS sa
The Bridge Cards Yom Play With
•;6.'
(Si. Thomas Times -Journal)
To -night and every Saturday night, is bridge
night for a great many people • hi this and every
other Coramanity. So perhaps it will interest
you to know ..what the charactere on the'ca-rds
stand tor.„
The actual, origin ,of ,carde is lest.b,,roin obscurity„,
but they were known in France ta 1530 and
• a special vet was 'painted to amuse Charles VI
• Who was a bit "nutty." That waS -why kings,
• queens and knaves came to be bn tbe cards, .the
knaves ,presumiably being the fawnrin'g sycophants
Who hung otto the court. Actually, two' 6f the
• mieens, are from Gteek mythology and two from„ .
oo. -
the Bible. The queen of clubs Judith. (eepres- „
entative of courage) the lady Who made a date
with Hciloferenee and then cut Off his head while
he was asleep; the lady With the diamonds Is
• Raubel (Piet") ; June, the girl friend -Of Jueiter,
stands for majesty as the, Mmen of hearts, • and
Pallas 'Minerva, the god:lose ,ofothe arts mid crafts•
• for spades The original portraits were Queen ,
1Vlarie of Anjou; Isabeau, the Mother of Charles .
VII; Agnes Sorel, who was Charters. ,weakness,
•nod Joan of, Are. •The packs' weroofirst Intended
• to be portraits of . knights of roraanco,' Mich as
Lanecilet, ono of the knights of theeourt of "king
Arthur ; the national, Danish here, Holger Dankse,
• the son of Geoffrey, King of Denmark, and other
' voorthy fellow's with „poetic names like Wigailetio
Pharniond, YvOatin. , . ••• •
' The' "pis" Originally ettoed far different clasto
• es. The glair is a three -leaf Wolfer and reran' '
• vente the .flollis vohootill theolando ditainonds are
reallY kixenge "Shatied" atoneir %tat Stand Ytir the
-
masons and craftsmen generallY hearts are the
ernhol of the Priests -and thoge -who Attend, t6
our ealrittial Viellbeing; tind the gtfod old .iliPtide
• is the head of ao ancientVike,,:andi, 'of COUree,
• represetrin the fighting Men.
Bridge has.almost supPlented eiterit other „pant "
grvine, bat for Many decades the univeratia &Ale •
Watr'Whiato Which is Still played Orob4brY faerti.
• oneole bt the Old tbun tie *Mo.. •Tatteyt, ,
ram Whtr "rod dnoinit. POO Itt *Mt,
' 1411 AltutO Whet' a eed oldviuge:koti'itre
for 'youreele.'c Witte% bitrds Otte 'bo
dial *orb) Mr miillone Jet 'people. ht nittin0-se,
penfailly• the Ude( It ite to ti4 finakeNL'4640efdin, the '
..-bnedger. fetilitt„'khd iberylo Sli#Citd trinitentheo tito
,foftliarriela • : • . ' •
•"dardsrWeile•nr, first to r benaiti ' ed,
"Sent tO anittse 'f • ,'
Af.
, ..,,i,.•:', ,i'; '
QUflty
Int. Pc Atolls- p g44- . fonn, ,. . '
.o., . ., 49 41,* :31ft tatjr.:. and 7 0411)g tilig,ryOU '110,"te itiat .bought
-.:. XX4 yea -r.iver.,linOW libat• t4asa•44141:01'ere WA''S' wile;11 a eta,Ple''atta._r..qtl' nr a
waS Oat" last Tibureciay.%0,3 .seo p400114# to'. VeTY
, •••
• march 15i, 1812 '
. .. i. ...•
From .. The Martal. Expoeltor _
.04.0woemlolow4m,,64,06.c.rt twaioafaors.otP,417,71.,, _parttbingnew echetue Was tattled to
as R500 eaelf? Ter When, in the Year 1 Ameterdiiii-bee-iiiind-WW--"Cahrar-d wes,:reow tpbrr:voarviedva.sot 10.1.144.0:Q}..;4,r.,
merchaiit whoL owned the vessel, her
tanitlisetqs.,411troinl tallir1:14= unitnufrem willhe! 4ast eth71•00amaniunt.„.
1575,, a blinitostetsted ail> seiled into the Madaess,' where tullpel' Ohaaged
ba, the low-Ceilinged office of the ;ea' apfiteerfecou InolavaeanytbellweivestuthiliSethle:urt, 804th.. 0 4ei.0 ...t4art, . was
hundreds of pounds each. ,
The fall. el .1:ineW,',twe .had
.. _L—.,....:1•• Ak',......• ,',
•
. FrtY.."1.1iti, 'Sears ago Saturday; tile e4C4 corn- 'plows were e.alledfitutoservice te clear
Oda of. Morey, tino. oi,datiob;•Girrisim Master, a' plarap ruddy -faced seaman, td buy shares,: yet all that
quite a .fall. At Clinton the Mow.
Sitt later that day over a pipe and
., ... p.aay did was to trade la tutip,obulbs!
the sidewalks for.the first; tinoo since ''
hatiletY...1.4141k, tbao.Harton- , ..tittgx, „Wt. It was gambling at Its worat.
For when this form of mass med-
4eer.
'Godes/ell • NI' Sarnia .to 40 . froatier. ..Tho business of, the voyage, ha people, there, is.
dilty, at tree title of the Fenian Raid. ' hi°. •,''- Pees takes a 'hold on late in riaioetabat maga liflionki Con,
, •-i• LI no limit either te credulity or folly.
,trast to last year. When it was a bat, •
Messrs.. I. .1.. Meaner, J. Preeter and
.., -.se- disPosed of, wfhe,n the oaptaloS
tie royal to keep the •OrigloWaysoolpen
„ But there comes a moment when
eat' the sidowitilte 'fit for walking. -
drew an enionehaped object from his
"What is it?" asked the merchant, a One
etedeatiycp dream.
sanity returns. It -does Scrowithout
. • oWiagham Advance-Tinioso; • •
Bowled Well i•n Plerida
. .
ime foora ,Hensall '7toWinnilieg last
0- flartleib .Phiefied three 'ears. of on- :pocket.
• Robert fIntehison's tender for , the "That," said the skipper, turning it 'about in his hand. warning, like the COld mornlag air on
•
•
erection- of • bridges across. the Aux flower that grows evenwhere in the to. ,
'1.4 a auctioneer was offering a rare varie- On Wecinesd.ay of isst • week Alex.
on thTulip 'Change, an
e as you Crawford; skipped Ids rink te 'win the•
, 31st, aid LA.!. ,Ooneessicat wee,' an thinking, _toes, . . y It was just such a scene
Sauble River on tire 1.0ttr, lith and- east;• a pretty' flower to my way of might 'see in Christie's London auc- Chamber of Coninierce ToUrnament
exits gath- at St. Petersburg, Fltnida.- The week.
. The hex oecial held at the hem@ of . 'Ile Merchant in due cioti;se took don rooms, with the art exp
before Or. Krupp, 'of Woodstock, and
cepted,. , . ..• . .
Mr, and Mr. William, Jones,. of Stan ever to reach Europe. . •
home to .his wife the fink tulip bulb k)onffeertndtottfhoernthis mag- Alex. won the 'doubles eirepto- On
ley, under -the auspices of the Ladles' "It doesn't look -very • hopeful," she ere4,d htoat•ou,amtbidI
Thursday last Alex playedln.the fin,
Aid of the.Methodlet Church on Foi- remarked, .but 'great was her, deligbt.
'' nificeat 'Admiral Leifkin.??" he bt'om-
ale of the singles. *The At... Peters.
day last, pitnied a anccess. ., oaliert-, some time later; a lovelY froar- , sied4.ga:eAnbduzimd the a•lajgaziner n, fell, .a oe
for . burg Bowling .0110, et which 'Adak, is.
• Mies Junisoof Drurnboohas taken ti, let tulip broke tato • bloom, from a president, is one of, the ler,gest In 'the'
situation.With• Mr: Hugh MeLei4i.ni of long and gracious ,stem. • : thtitt equivalent
h loafst2,t5o0ateaction 'of its woeld and each year Ibis big, Inter7'
Hensill,„ ea, milliner, while. Mr. J.• W, "We most get more of tbeee,', said! structive,. came sanity. national ''Pournanient is held. -Wing-,.
Ortwein and Mr. E. Rennie have en- the merchant, and the . next' of his .
Icind,' SWift. as a tornado and as de -
la the very aulction. room . that had • Edwin Dearf •To Parkhill • '• '
ham AdVanceTimes,
,.
gaged the Same milliner they!hrid last merchant ' fleet to go to, sea carried witnessed the 'purchase Of a single
Sen8011. . ' — , • Edwin. Deep, younger son of. Mr.
orders to bring baek as. many ot:these
..•• „. •
Mt. Reese' Sproat, who has; clan- neiv 'bulbs • possible. . bulb for 2500, the anctioneer was of- aird Mrs. E. L. Dean, East Street, left
-
ducted a seed *tore in Seaforth, for " At first, thes".entprising intievatot - Then came the collapse. R was as
•fering. bulbs -and no one bid!
on Monday for Parklillioto coMmenoe
someseare, has Moved to mg father's found it rather difficult . to intetes.t disastrous for the 'financial stabilitY his duties as 'junior at, the Bank, pf,
farm in Tuckensmith. -..., the good folk' of Armsterdam in this Commerce there: Mr. Dean Was the
Miss joena„lierris, of the Bell Tele- new After,. and it was his wife .who of the Netherlands •as 'was the .South guest of atonor at a small gathering
departure.
Sea Bubble to Englieli finance a cen- of friends previous .to his
phone, 'Wtle'skating a few evenings hit on the novel idea that entitles her oary later., .
•
ago sever1y sprained: her ankle.. , to be regarded as tlae first tulip ad- Banks closed th.eir doors, hundreds Ed, was a popular scholarship fifth-
' Moe.' C. L. Burns, of Wingham, met vertis_er. . . , .- , former at the Collegiate and: was atc-
With &oven •serious •and painful acei- She. planted five hundred tallies in buSiness men failed, . big - business
of mercthants went bankrupt, small
tivea in, the social life ,there and he
dent in a 'Peculiar way bn Friday .last her tfront garden,and when they, men failed, .and people, living Gni pri- finds other interests In- golf, 'tennis,
as a remit of which ,she 'is •new In bloomed a vest crowd colleCted in tate incomes found theniselves faded badminton, and 'bridge , He 'will ' be
the hosPital and her recovery isoex- front of her hoiree, asking where such with'".titin„. In fact, it teak Aolla.nd 'miased by a large number of friends,-
. who wish 'him all success In the fn.' '
trem:ely doubtful.' She was throwing beautiful flowers. ceme from. • •
fifty year's to recoverre-GodericSignal•'
out Same . hot ashes and as the snow "They are to be. had at my ware- Bull -and here is the humour of it .
.
• .
and ashes came, in contact there house," answered the wily tra.d-in .the end the tulip did all (and
er, and • Celebrates Her 86th Birthday '
d .6 • • ' .
,.
.•.
was an explosion. She: was badly in this. way began the Great Tulip
Eighty4fx years • 'of age ;and has
burned: frtan bead to heels. • . Mania, that was to-oh:aye soeh .far- laird of ite adoption.
more) . that Was hoped for It forthe
. ,,,, ,
. never seen a moving pieture nor been
Mr. Charles' Routledge, of Tucker- reaching .effects. ot,
F
sinith, has , or, when the •fa.ncy, valve were in a theatre. • That is the: record of
aiild his farm' on the ard . A feverish activity began among 'deflated, sixi the huge stocks, of tulip. Mrs. ,Mary Eleanor Elliott Johnston;
concession, Harem. Road survey, to Ulnae who had' established themselves bulbs were releasedo people Planted *hes quietly passed , the eighty-sixth
. Mr. Ainoe Towneend, for $5,300: .° as groweoe• They 'strove t� *educe them and Holland became. a garden .milestone of her life at her 'home.- oro
The rural 'mail delivery boxes of rare .specierv and claimed a uniqueva- of 'flowers. . Britannia Road on Friday last. "What
Mss:. Fred Rankin and Peter'lifoir, lue for each new variation that came .To -day, therefore, Reiland,' is , the is it they call•thern?. The talkies? '1
of Arshoine Townshi.p, were ilithlesaly from. their glasshouses. ,_. home of these enchanting flowers, •never quite got up ne e. enough to
torn from their posts and thrown, into 7 Bulh dealeie' .sprang up overnight which are sown at this time of year, ,go," apologized this doe and 'alert
the ditch by Some miscreants. .and there was as much excitement festooning thetowns and ,villages in Oaancle dame' as s „e4alited- to The
Mrs. T. Ingrano ' of Mitchell, was with the •arrival ;of . a ,new plant as colours.' .• ' ' • Signal. Her daught with Wham she
very .pain•fultly injured when as she • . . , .,
. . lives,. went' to a show o ce. and saw...
was on her • way down town 'slipped: a picture of a marl bei killed. That.
.ori any -Icy spot and in kallin.gstruck was . enoUghs-GoderiCht ignal, -
bleed veseelAn the 'bruck of her head:
During the • •past week.' Mr, Jamea '' 441:.:4. VST. A ...$1141LE OR TWO • •
. , . . Billy Laws was .knocked • down by
,,, • tinocked Down- Car ' •• •
; .
the back Of . her head,' breaking ' a
Cowan,. McKillop„. dis.posed. of some .• •• - . a r car and •pahifully• bruised' while .
thorofighbrect• Shorthorns from his ', The 41.1.dge who .was .about 'to de- ,- . ,.
.. 'I am, a- worse ,tif few words," an walking tO Victoria School'on Plaits-, • .
berd to.' the..•following: Mr. J. Mc- liver it Severe sentence looked/ at theday last. • The• bey Continued On his • ,.
'wanted the 'haughty ' mistress . to, the
Elroy, of. Myth; Jarnes..Smillie, Lon defendant in the dock 'aad. begaa:- new. maid. •411t. beckon with my fiii. way After picking -himself up, . and .. Z
don Road; .."Mr. NaylorWhitechurch, "This robbery Was consummated in an' •• . • went to birf -classroom,. but was re- • -"
ger, that Mean& come." .
and 4...w4. Biggins, of Stanley.. adroit and 'skillful Manner." "Suite me, Main" repliedthe gia, mnyedf toa refit. Mona when, hie teach!. „ ••
'The prisoner blifehed and laterrypt- "Dn. a. woman of few viorde riiy.self„. '
_ Mies -Myrtle Consigney left last et heard .of. the aeciderit. 1 There were •
Monday for , Mitchell to resume her ed: "Come now, .your , Honor, no If 'I shake ' me head, tha.t 'Means ' I are an palatal- aboasione. on the • .
duties. in. Mr.., I. Hord's millinery:. de- flatten,. lease" ' ain4 eorain'," ' ••• ..• ' ••. ... • boy's Nick; and ho • Was ..sent't home-. '
partment. _ •• .. •
, for the: rest Of the' dayoHCoxlmiCh
SignaL, •". -• ,
Three rinks. of Mitchellto-curlers
• ..„.., . ..., „.•.. ... .• .. • .• . . . . ..• • .
o, . .
came' to . iSeaforth on Thursday 1 last t.. - Without Finis There • :ii - Entettained.. Hockey • Team • - o •
the local" curlers. The following were 0 o as .ma. ,,.. .. ,,,.. .
..E.... t .-* ii and ,Wad.Filins..Be No Movies, • Captain E. C. Robinson entertain- •
and played.two. friendly ,ganses With
the -Seafortili-skips: W. D Bright R. ' ' ?(Rays, 8,,napshots. ' .0 ed -the Gorier -10h Sailors hockey , team . .
to an „On r super at Weng's Oafeo
• ,
Frank Kling and John Beattie..
S. Hays Aleloi,..W.Ibemo-WollieDungan,' .t. ' ':" ' Ottle':'Srationer ' daY '60 'Years agis'"a ,• • - - . hester- baldness • • rolled in. 'featda'Alle:Serifortho BeaV k • at . ' the- .
.. •
young Man labored up a dustY. New Mass manufacture by •machinery, plug West Street Arena. ' cart; -Robinson
England lane in the morning .sunshine. the 'constant striving :for technical
On his back was a ponderous', bulky -progress; were beginning to produce. ..ePOrt .enthindast,,especially hoeko •
eY, and felloVve the , GoderiCh teams-
Pack,which. he -set down at last with If now you' visit 'Rochester, you will with much interest, ,he having been... '
relief.' From it he unrolled a light-. find an organizatiou occupying thre a hockey„player bi his earlier day.s.-,- '
proof tent. From it also lie took..a ,factoriek and an office in the city, Goderich Star., '. ' . • . . ' ,
large, box -like cemera„ Thist he set
and another 120 •buildings oat 400 ac- Junin Into 'Bioyele End of Jack -rabbit -
on. a:tripod and hiding ,his head ,un res of what wasOlice farmo land out- .. • . „,..... . ..
der the dark cloth. which covered it, side the City. • To these factories -The youthful. son of Mi. Itarvey. ,.
I3eattie, Goderich Tewnship. dairyman,' ..•
focused the. image of the mountain oomes enough . water. every day for a
oity 01 250,000 • Mhabitents. ,7 In the Ito an 'experience 'last 'Week that.
..carinere. -factories in town, Kedaks.and would do justice to the well known . • .„ •.
,their lenses are produced by the regi- •Oentie • cartoon "Birds Eye Centre,"..
inept,' As in automobile. factories.- In and the Meat jack -rabbit that it has
featuredof-date:-. -The boY-Was--ticting..-. --so. '-
the film plants .,:of "Xodale: Park • the
,cotion .and the oysizioas phenidcals are along, the . Blue Wste.r..p,01,*,g7' on '
Joined TO. Make the honey:like film his bicycle iiiT Was going, at a fair • •
.base,.'which' tinder watohful.,eyes but rate, 'Of speed -when, an oversarabitionst
is 'spread co polished ' cylipd:ers -,Of
• • ...• . „
'die .of the road. ' Bunny must have'
with not a touch'of the ^human hand • rabbit took abound --out into the mitl-;
huge machines, 'and then. by sti•11 oft, over-estimated his jumping ability be-
. .
er reachiaes coated. and cat and roll- cause he • ran .smack into the bicycle, .
ed. Kodak Park alone will Produce- striking it between the nualguard end -
tutors -than 200,000,:. miles.. of . mOving• the haralle.bars. The rabbit was kill,. . .
picture film thie "year. In*.thie .and ed instrantly by the 'act.-Gederich ' '' ' • '
others film processes it -will use four 'Star'
'bulhon a week; -more . ,
than one-tenth- of all the silver con- • Twelve friends of Miss Margaret
tens. of silver .
Miss White Teodered. Shower
'sunred in the .United States • ttr
',bite Were entertained at e dinneri
Without the . ,experimentatiiin to given at Wong's,- Cafe .on Wecbiesda
which a stained, 'macti-thilarbect •note- evening by Mrs, F. E. Hibbert.,,,:e'kit-' .
book dn Eastman's cion ,handwriting Ohm shower was. also tendered, the •
bears wittn,ess; Without the ittereaas bride-to-be who is. to be' married. n,eXt • . ..
.lag scientific effOrrt whiph .he set and
Bali. -
kept in motion, the. wet plate would week 'AO Mo 'Keith., Gardiner, of Ben- '
"miller. The table .was .centred wkh'a
still „represent the :height of Photo- -silver basket ' filled withOPink earns,- .
graphic 'achievement. Had . not . the tions. White 'Candles were placed at
eXperiments for Which Eastman is re- each encloof the table. Miss White
isuoreible , •been, done somewhere,
somehow, theo m-ovies, tallties, snap- :graCiduely thanked • tiler. frienits fOt .
shots, X-rays, news pictures, aerial the lovely .gift,li Following the din -
shots, .
ner theoo•pa.rfy adjourned to the the- :
rimpst-not one of them would exist. ' etre. CI derich Stat. , - - • •
Twenty-five. years' ago, in 1912, .a
Rochester. It was 8, building.to house •
monument to research. Was erected 15 • .(Continueci op Page 3) -.
laboratories, . which, were to be the ad-
vance guard of the' photiagraphic bus- $75,000,001:k
Mess. preirious research...had been This, • in n Striking and -unusual 'Ito
largely empirical. Eastman. shimaelf, ,.tire.', • Even more unttsual. is the' fact .
in the •b'egianing,.' had 'simply learned 'that its isPe•nding.ilitas- 'been COM -lied
what the phetographers of the - day ebiefly td a>,single pity-Roehester.
knew,..„and Without ,acientific training Mere, perhalis,,the Visitor Wanders -
had begun to cook.,,his min Mituisiens. Peet the. Eastman Scboot of Music, •• •'' '• '
Thera, When ,photographic ,manufactur- inspeets
•csamteit, abnmiencluisotnry,theefferteskoo
ing c'eesed .to be a ' 'business •and be-. VeaSark, or hears. of :the Eitatnian •
"helicreort outst of tine' nttY' ly'llere a' g°11. '
Theater. Perhaps he journeys' to the
the Rochester. 'Dental DIS -
scientific lonoWleclge, 'bee needs. totrise on the beaks Of:the Genesee '
.aaryo..,pence-the laboratories of"197:2, •haS Veen made over, at ' Oneostroktio. '..
'heace biliefie of 1937o---atid hence the, Mtn a 'College. 'Mete -,10.0t: fall, ,the
mitt 20 year's,- eresearch •ttt Roches- .. Men's college Of the' I.WieertritY . of
ter. ' . • ROCheater tOPened thedttinteotit to' her- '.. • .
Every. -so oftert :the .Work ,Of ...these ,,M9nioti4Y dealgiet'..e*Pt.w.044.outut, . ,. .... 4, .,..
labaratvea attractg tottode•affellti . Ingia Ten-Minittee..talit 04.#0,jiribiti . ,. „... ' • !.
. •
been .,,hased .on eXperimenta. tion,• on..00 it WOO When, in 1.923., the'ESStniati 'neW Medireat;'eentii...,. built ,,MiOttititth'e. . .
niev,v• •Ways Of doing "old- tiblogoi as :eelnigatlY" 'hitrodtteed the. fir at .liorite UntVeraltee,,•*afe:ellt SO:bei.". .44440. le,,,,.„'; ••• ... •
tate,it as air Mantriatturing •Skill, No*, 'lhOtthig Oiettli*.: .SO it viaa agaitilli, 'Itot...6nikAtuar-Oniir Iiitit,A'*ilitteiliii*.;-... .. •
in 100, Easitaati.emPloyed an as:4st- 1928, *toth'ilte 400u.4100:tettit of -Reda.' 1)3 . n&aIl , ,,• ,',,..".iiktati,'04.:**,,,;. : „••,.,. , •„.,
ant.- frOto • thi: ebemletty department ‘0010.;..and again: tritt, the.,:new•eirop tink .. '," ' ''''; rA7401.1100. Pr '614citett. • •
in eia.-trixiveioltyl Of Itbeh'enter- in de- speed 'AIM tie:Signed It& Meet tile- ' ..re A, ..
4%0.610:tithe ;entirely to eXiMilinesite. fleUltiea Of Making tolklea,.asottleO the,' .,..•1 'et' ' .:trottniti •aelely -reet;Or.o)".•= '" '' ''' , •
AM. fit *me not -Ione bettmethe Ybling tbel*. MI6 •Mai.4 ':6;PaSte, .11')llia` for atititO,A*'' ,!:;1.1 ''' • l';'''''''d'an)bat! elinle'''‘i-4— ,,..
tat& 'fOtInd a. Way .to make a field -hie 'RAI, r Othfologne:pfitnie, • . .' . , . , , .. : ,;',.‘ . •: ,...1. . ' - .', ''' IWO, - To' ' OA; - nurvotibitg . . .. • '
ilint,..iiiith- a.`.004,00t0686 , base, .0.„ ,• . #:_,ft.1.#110._ 10,,1,0 '4g41. '.t,hat, 'tlirdligli''' '.f.g .„
Oat ';eletiter .he .iitaS 'die
ill& '*higit vone:. trebelinregt,,"' At :the •"77..aF,,,, .71. 11,14.0f.k . 'PPP.W0.4...,0.i,a01.Y.O
, ., „,. •• ,•.., , ,•
ttdifi'. Of "ThOMaii,'.0;diatin, .*041,,..bney' Pit* i,',.)1140, ,'''', "bife
* 4.,', ;toetk.#0.:00.46.0' „ul."A.13:' '
11+11 ' ..keedel. of . MS . early, pilotn-1, •
itt fottaaeor; • It IA, .4
• • 1 - - "-'10ii,
too:00106*p aka:02314
Linde It :WAS „fnitteed,, bite . IMO*, ./It,..' -'n44.*, ' ..*:....!0.0.0*.tit";: ' Ii't4
laii1044,140,1.0*,,In*O'Iniel"'S' b4:" ' . '
.0116t .0 .01,1046.4:446! Attit ,:ofteodeit ,'00,., *4 0,13e; - ' ' :
....,.• • ,
thoy.lhearkvt. ni.o. oot „niAtoill. 'i. -' k
'" -.A. • • - ' nes.'''
t , • ,
-atotipe.1141ibiltr Takla att„1±..ablafi
."thifee it; :,-Roff.'1061.1t, 114 liiifIri...
Anbt. , Ntfiteni:':',Odibeini4nOrg,',*7.` , Alet•I,':*'• !lv
il 4' I: '' •rig'' '
''''AliP4 - •
.:. , •,' ,
itii4166'' ' •• • '6" 1. ' ' 'J.'S !O. ;het* .,',,, .2. ,..,...., ,,4; : .,
.,..,..:„ .
...''. ,..
t I •
•
st
, From The Huron• Expositor
March 11, 188? .
'Temple's of Seaforth on•Tuesdary last.'
under the auspices of the Good waegiven ia No. 4. school 'house, Me -
A Very succesaful • entertainment
• ...
,
Addresses were given on Temperarace scene he had( 'came to Photograph'
by Messrs. Hale and Hollis, Seaforth, Then back.to the darkness of his tent°,
and 7George Turnbull' and 'George Mur- to Spread collodion On a glase-plate,
'-di-e7-61--MCKII1ep. -E%-lcent -pro: and 'al) ttha wiiole in an: aelCio: katih•
sided over the meeting. The plate, still dripping, he put into
-Mrs-Roberto 'inekersenith, aii�lder,....earried it tothe camera,
has purchased theotesidence of • Mr; and expoSed his picture. Then into
Josiah"' Wateen in 'Egmentiville for the dark -tent :once. MOrn to develop
.$940.00. " the Plate .before it spoiled. After that
Mr..,,Charles Roabledgeof the 3rd all he had to do was pack op hin thin -
concession of Tuckeramith, delivered •iature chemical factory and earn it
at Coleman's Mill,'Seraforth, this week 'li°me. He had taken a picture. This
four elm saw bogs, all 'taken from One was the Wet -plate stage of photogra-
ee, which. meats ' red nearly 4,000
2
phy as it had been with little change
feet. " for 20 years.
The 1 a ome netv Presbyterian Fifty-nine years ago, in 1878, George
Eastman, bank clerk of Rochester,
Church in Hensel' was • formally op-
ened on Sunday,' last. The weather New York, read in an English photo -
wag not good„hut the crowds were, go graphic journal a formula for making
great that both the 'church and base- drY Platest-plates which could be
meat were filled- long before the hour 'eatated with their sensitive emulsion
at ; an: their
of service. Mr: McLaren weir the the factoryand Crried i
:leader ef the chair." The fowl supper •fi'mehedo farm, with the 'camera, to.
on the following Monday night was, a the .sceile ef picture. taking. So he
large success, tee . began • eiperimeats,, of his 'own', au
• On Saturday last 'while Mo- John 'in. 1880 began to manufacture dry'
Penhele, Jr., of Stephen, was felling plates on a small scale. •
This, however, Was not enough.,
,trees he met than acciden
'vvi- t by
4a•17!,ng upon one Of the ,logs, injuring- Glass plete's were heavy; breakable.
'himself internally. ' • What was wanted was a base for the
• photographic -'• emulsion • to replaCe
Searetice burglarized the Central
Sehool at Goderich on Tuesday night. glass. Sb Eastman turned aside froin
, The iron for the ,p,a.ne., in the new ids groWingobusiness affairs' and took
again to eheritistn. By 1885, what
salt block at Winghern was teamed
O
was being e.oated was. Paper; instead n Sleighe fromCloderieh, the con-
tractors, Messrs. Ohristal and Black, ef , glass. The first preoticar•film' 'had
Goderich, finding this Method Cheater be6ri
than by the Grand Trunk. Threryears' " later came the fii•st
while oeho./2„,,gas...001. John A.h., Kodak's.., They. were the fitst hand
came•ras, all others, hefbre this re-
derson, of Wingbano, and • R. Common,quiring a. tripod.. Kodak was word
Of Seaforth, Were curbing on the rink
Eastmarit• had ehtosen, 'nut of a clear
here last Thursday, it was discovered.
sky aa a strOng, •distinctive trade.
that. the former bad been 'personally
e,e
acquainted with the groat gtandfather
arae, not easy to confuswith Otte
Of each, of 'the •other gentlemen and ."-s• Thenew camera, smaller and
had .curled wtth themprevious, to lighter.thaa the soap -box affair of -wet
„ • 'Plate days, used a roll.. of the new
leaving the Old •boantry,
'
' A carload 'of fine cattle was shiPPed film long 'enough for 100 exposure&
Blyth Blylast 'Saturday This filth, was pat,1n at the faCtory.
for the. Bat-
, & When the photographer hahits
d taken '
fele mar-Itet. by -4 Messrs. Preeiesai
watom: . pictures he sent Ale tatter% hack to
The trains we Stidu. • blooked Sat; the manufacturer for rehoading, and
to bate the .pletitres,develeped.
urdoy night and, tire regular trafte-ditd '
Eastman's siMeess- 'Oita tar had
ttoortotit!et to Blyth.M$11 StUidaY after:
-
• , • • •
Rev. Mr." Mc�6'; o. Egtnotds4))e,
goes to Glinted]:',4•'-OliSuitclajr to assist
in- the Sabbath: anatrersetY
siev:HA rpalteoef the"herfor!etre'itri'art084- Ch1:116ha,
the Station,;.inr„SeafOrthiOn--tueedhY,
by Ottativ itithltersie
the American antaf114.. "
•
"B't$, orlY '&0,0Medea ,:theiSpoor
11014,,Irenpeobed littOnYtitt, hbei: end;
10,* f•iudik ItiOnir lite* ilifb fete.:
fith.bne, WOO, ,haVe
. : „ .;;;•:- •
the'Vfeoitlif *611.'Ve
10446 liebeeing
tfininer,,, ;#4,;•••0:40; 40r#40.d
• • •
..:, • , •..'
1
• 1,‘„•,,
r,ori
o
• • •
1
"
•,„