Loading...
The Huron Expositor, 1950-03-17, Page 6F s titute ''Women's � Attended ;eU .1. " �W be ting x Is WS OF' IIENSALL 1t worthy representation of mem- . ere and guests atC.@ride& the. regu- aer monthly; Hensel' Itetitutemeet- lpg in the Legion rooms on Wed- nesday night., March 8, when Mrs. leown 'aid- Mrs: Orr were capable )hostesseel Mrs, Beer, the presi- " dent, presided for the meeting, which opened with the Ode, the Creed and the Lord's Prayer, Each ,ember was asked to raise talent •:. money throughout' the year. In re- sponse to- the roll call, this par- ticular collection was received— each answered, as to how amount • The Voice Of Temperance On, its front cover Saturday Night states that "Politics and liquor don't mix." Our polic depart- ment assures us that gasoline and liquor don't mix. Our highest hockey authorities tell us that hockey and liquor don't mix. It is just as true that curling and liquor don't mix. The truth of the matter is that always and everywhere liquor is a potential trouble maker. It is an anti -social virus.—(Adv.). was made. At date of writing the total atxwunt was $37.75. . Mrs. Shirray effectively present- ed the motto entitled, "To do all" the good we can in every. way we can, to all the people we can." Mrs. Goddard contributed a pleas- ing piano solo. During the .busi- ness session it was disclosed that 13 beautiful crib quilts had been completed for the London War Chil- dren's Hospital. These were dis played. Mrs. Beer voted thanks to Mrs. G. Armstrong, Mrs. S. Bell and Mrs. A. Mouaseau, committee in charge, also the many kind lad- ies who made possible these re- sults. Mrs. Armstrong reported on the buying of supplies, ete: Mrs. Shirray very kindly volunteered to the • transportation of quilts. Mrs. A. Kerslake, Miss Consitt and Mrs. C. Cook were named a nominating committee to present at the next meeting the slate of officers for the coming year. Thank -you notes were received from Mrs. Flynn, Mrs. H. Work- man and Mrs. A. D. McEwen. "Be- lieve Me If All. Those Endearing Young Charms'; was sung. Mrs. Blackwell favored with an appro- priate reading. Unusual interest was shown in the outstanding demonstration provided by Miss On behalf of THE CAN DIAN FOUNDATION FOR POL I ... from all the folks here et CFPL .... for your grand re- sponse to the MARCH OF DIMES CF PL LONDON q8, Dozoie aad Mr. C<.ornish, et Gio(1e- rich, representing a sewing ma- chine company. Manv new, and, niodefrt, sewing, methods were in- troduced, while card games were enjpyed by those uninterested In sewing. Mrs. Parke and Mrs. Elsie Car- llle will be hostesses for the April meeting. Mr. Bennett, of Clinton, agricultural representative, will be guest speaker, and a film will be featured. A ,hearty vote' of thanks was extended to all by Mrs. Norm- ieton. To close. the successful eve- ning a social hour was enjoyed by all, under the direction of the hostesses and their assistants. I'4 s. J. E. McEwan was in De- troit on Friday attending Internale Urinal Night at Salome Chapter, Masonic Temple, Three bus loads from Seaforth, Exeter, Hensall, St. Marys and London comprised of members of the Order of the East- ern Star, left London Friday morn- ing at 7 a.m. Miss Helen Spettigue, of London, was a week -end liouSe guest with Miss Bernice Jinks. Mr. andMrs. John Shier, Kin- cardine, were visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Win. Pepper. Lloyd Buchanan, London, spent the week -end at his home here. Mr. George Ibbotson, of Kincar- dine, called on his mother, Mrs. Wm. Pepper, on Saturday. ELIMVILI :nr i TLP ON EXPQ ITQ•R. HuronFed 'r.tion . tCuntlnued from 'Page .2) the most out of it, and out of the horse. A collar ghould.•not be. so small as to throttle the horse nor so large as to put •too'miich' strain on any part of :the. : shoul- der. A properly adjusted collar distributes evenly the weight of rs on the shoulders. the pull r . An. all -fitting Dollar card do more damage to a horse during the first few days of strenuous spring work than almost any other thfug, as it can cause the shoulders to scald and blister. It is e. good 'plan to give the horse an occasional rest and to lift the 'collar forward some- what so as to give the shoulders a chance to cool and dry off, --_ The Euchre Club met at the Hall Tuesday evening with nine tables Everett in play. Mr. and Mrs. Ev e Skinner were hosts. The winners were Mrs. H. Bell and Mr. Delmar Skinner; consolation, Mrs. John Miners. A dainty lunch was serv- ed by the hostess and committee. The play put on by the W. I., "Coveralls," was staged in the church here Wednesday evening and in Woodham Hall Friday eve- ning. 'The cast of players are: Mr. and Mrs. Ken Johns, Harvey Sperling, Miss Ruth Skinner. Bev- erly Skinner, Miss Anna Routly, Murray Stephen, Mrs. H. Bell, Mrs. H. Delbridge and Mrs. A. Cooper. The Elimville W.I.- met at the hall en Wednesday afternoon with Make Your Never-Nevers Pay , Off Plenty Whether they're few or many, the things about the house that you never, never use will pay off in cash with a Huron Expositor Ad acting as your salesman. Putting those too -good -to -throw -away books, tools, appliances, baby carriages and cribs in an "Article for Sale" Ad gives you extra dollars and needy people a chance to buy. It's so easy—telephone 41, Seaforth. • Highest Cash Prices for. DEAD STOCK Horses, $2.50 ea. Cattle, $2.50 ea. Hogs, .50 per cwt. According to Size and Condition Cala Collect SEAFORTH 15 DARLING &':-COMPANY OF CANADA;" LIMITED : are f J le1 aJ31�n, .,',}! rh else_she{• Weald, .Iileala tabaa*erarifa itos""off` i di le "o "1 "tie, dar3'oi holding herfingers so. tight that the worn wending ring. ` was .cutting Into the flesh. ' , Word came after suppertime and. the alio was making long shatlowe ave}• the pavement. The man and the. Princess slat . q'uieti j. looking from the samewindow at a, horse. that flicked its tail, and at a car that passed and at ageld sign that .ence heldc a silver jewelled cob- web and --at dust on a thorn -apple tree. The six other patients• in the room were quiet, too, all waiting and hoping, and maybe praying. Pays'Tribute to (Continued from Page 3) were fit to die of shell -fire in a far country. The forty dollars—plus some that the town council votes for the support of indigent patients—al- lows the Princess t6 live . in ease and idleness with maids in. spot- less white at her beck and call. Then once upon a time—the 20th of last month to be . exact—Sir Galahad came as they always come in stories about Princesses, who live in palaces with thirty-nine. rooms, He came disguised as an American tourist, with, as much money as brains. He stontped up and down the quiet corridor 'and spoke in a big raucous voice, and gave the maids the jitters, so that one of the newer maids upset a tea tray on a bed. He even used swear words and beads of per- spiration were oh his face, though it was not a hot day. He stomped up and down the corridor and railed about young fools who would travel at seventy miles on a strange road, and he pestered nurses and doctors for "word" from the operating room, where they were trying to find if the cuts and bruises: were just superficial or . . .' or more than a couple of broken bones "which would serve the young fool right and teach him a lesson." And everybody knows "word" never comes out of an operating room until a thousand• hours have passed. It is a rule of hospitals, and the rule is not broken, even for the rich or for the poor. Because the big man with the loud voice and the, cold beads of sweat could not be quiet, the spot- less white maid, who was eldest of them all, left what she was do- ing and brought the big man to the Princess who could turn her head just a little bit. The Princess in her day had of- ten commanded obstreperous boys and she commanded this man to sit down. He did. She bad no feeling in her hands, The suis had gone and the street lamps had .come on before the doc- tor came. The Princess noticed he had tired lines around his eyes. He said .,briskly, "It's all right now, sir; he is .out of danger . , . four broken ribs and a bad leg fracture, but no cause for worry beyond that." The big ratan blurted out, "Thank God for that! The young .fool will . , . The Princess interrupted him with her (brown eyes that were set so deep, "Say that again . . dif- ferently!" And her voice was im- perious. The big man, with as much money as brains, fell into 'humblq- nese. He stared into the eyes of the Princess of the Lifeless Limbs and as he inclined his head to gent- ly brush the garish red ribbon on the thin faded hair, the six quiet patients in the ward and the Prin- cess, and maybe Somebody Else, heard him say, like a child at prayer, "I thank God!" The young idiot who had want- ed to, go seventy miles an hour on a strange road, had damaged, him- self more than he had damaged the station, wagon. It was mended in four days, but perhaps because of lack of tools, or of the proper ma- terial, or lack .of - a blueprint in the rural repair shop, it was mend- ed• in an unorthodox matlner. It came with venetian blinds, and there was a vase of flowers and a trick panel, so that if -some passenger were riding who could make no movement except to turn the head a little bit, the head could pressthepanel and a bell would ring and summon a man- servant or a maid -servant. The Princess could be wheeled into it on a little low bed and a man -servant wad given strict or- ders not to exceed ten miles an hour, and to keep mostly to roads where trees made avenues and arches. They took her to a park where the level grass and the flowers, and the little lake, and the waterfall must 'have ' cost thou- sands of dollars in the making. It was like the estate of Some very, rich lord or duke, .who out of the goodness of his heart' and the tax es of his tenants left all this beau- ty open to the public that .. they might rest a while, and that they might play on some days in the week. This was the Seaforth Lions Park. Froin the station wagon and through the venetian blind, the Princess could turn her head just a little and could see the boys and girls, almost naked, playing at ball and could see a hundred children splashing in water, and twenty contented mothers sitting on benches, and ten fretful mothers sitting on the bank where; their children splashed and laughed. She could see a girl and a boy sitting alone under a willow tree. just as if they had nothing to play with, but were content, and she could see a black squirrel stealing things from under a picnic table. Sha- dows fro'i a chestnut tree flecked ei venetian blind acid,.• wham,sun- sett•a.easner the -manservant turned the' station wagon so she could lool<•into•the sunset,"wbere it ibade yellow, and gold fringes to the • loads over Eloderieh way, where Mere is a. great lake. . Peace that passeth all under- standing came to her; She -.said that when she was' a girl some sixty-five years ago it was on some such estate as this, where she used to go with Frank on Sunday afternoone. The keep- er@ let them pass the great iron gates and warned them not to lit- ter papers, and not to break flowers nor shrubs, and not to go into the rose garden that was marked "Private." It was a beau- tiful park, and the King was so pleased with the man who made it and left it open for boys and girls and for mothers and for people with crutches, that he called the man to him and made him a Load. She Whimsically told the n - servant to go into the town d inquire for Lord Seaforth, and convey to him her thanks for mak- ing aking such a beautiful park just for her. The man -servant walked through' the little town and passed the Keating Drug Store and the Chris- tie,s Meat Market and the West- cot't Jewelery and China, just as you see in a hundred otliex .Ontario towns, but of a Lord Seaforth he found no trace. He returned to the Princess' to report that the days of romance have passed away and parks -are not made by Lords and Dukes now, but in Seaforth their work is done by an implement dealer and a farmer on, the concession road, and a doctor and a priest and a grocer and a truck -driver, and two dozen other men who work for their daily bread , at quite unromantic jobs, and in their spare hours change a muddy ditch into a clear lake with a waterfall of rippling sound-, And transform a field of wild carrot weed and thistles into a garden, where their , neighbors' children the president. Mrs. Ken Johns, in charge. The meeting opened with the Ode and Creed, and roll call was answered by a hint on ,saving time for farmer's wife to have pleasure. The meeting was on so- cial welfare and Mrs. Garnet Joins was in charge. Mrs. Haun sang a lovely solo, "The Lost Chord"; Mrs. Harold Taylor and Mrs. Nor,, man Jacques gave readings. A blanket by Dutch auction was won by Mrs. H. Hunter, who gave it to an English war bride. A dainty lunch was served by Mrs. Ward' Hern and' committee. Qat}'laitbih aid'' play,"and'where old wo ,ext. cats fl11.44,.,Pe 4e. tllgt War eth% understanding. "tet,iii4ar;`T,,ord;Sp&forth," he rep'ort,,a ;d. shy even your Sir Qaf'a g*- is� " 311, 4 a man frpm Sulfa- to *ho^t mall os iron castings for ,�- i 172 tractors. ,The day of romance are ,dead. The Princess turned. her head the little bit she could turn Ito and she said: "Ystitng fellow, you need new glasd'es!. . ',ter° , BACKACHE May. beiarninq Backache may be "a signal your kidneys • are failing to filter excess acids and poison- ous wastes from the system. Dodd'a Kidney Pills help relieve this condition, often the- cause of backache, headache, rhewnatic pains or disturbed rest Dodd's contain essential oils' and medicinal ingre- dients which act directly on the kidneys and help them regain nornial action Get Dodd's KidnerPlllsto-day. 138 Dodd's Kidney Pills Upholstering Chesterfields and Occasional Chairs Repaired and Recovered Factory, Guarantee Free Pick-up and Delivery Stratford .. Upholstering Co. 42 Brunswick St., Stratford For further information enquire at Boy's Furniture Store SEAFORTH CHRYSLER-METROD REMANUFACTU RED ENGINES ARE NEW IiT we HERE'S WHY They're precision built to' Chrysler Factory Standards. Remanufacturing • plants were designed and laid out by Chrysler factory engineers and employ factory -trained mechanics. All parts which fail to meet Chrysler • engineering specifications are replac- ed with NEW factory -engineered parts:. All engines have NEW crankshafts= • there is no regrinding. Very different from the usual "re -built"- engine. Special Chrysler production -type gauges check tolerances of new and w used parts as closely as one ten= thousandth of an inch. All engines, when remanufactured, are dynamometer -tested to the same -.Air standards as those applied to NEW Chrysler -built engines. DON'T 'OVERHAUL .. . IN$TAU / CHRYSLER -METHOD REMANUFACTURED ENGINES, i Hensal Motor Sales Dodge - DeSoto Sales & Service Hensall - Phone 31 rr • ea- ytee "A"f!/i`,i WHY SUCH RESULTS FROM THE NEW FORMULA? Because the new 1950 Roe feeds give chicks more protec- tive balanced nourishment — higher quality animal and vege- table proteins -- "stepped up" by A.P.F. — generous amounts of natural vitamins — fortified -with ROE VITA GREENS (nature - rich) dehydrated Iadino and spring grasses) riboflavin, dried milk and cod oil. Now Available in Mash, Pellet and Crumble Form • f r eff Your poultry profits depend largely on the health, breeding and vigor of your chicks ... for only by living and growing rugged bodies can chicks pay back their feed and other costs. ROE VITAFOOD CHICK STARTER with the new improved formula gives you a new thrill in raising this year's, baby chicks ... NOW offered in "bite -size" crumble form— pours with no waste—easy to handle—greedily enjoyed by chicks. New ingredients were proven for taste—feathering—bone and body development—health and bloom, and after many comparisons it was found on our 30,000 bird poultry farms that the new com- bination was really enjoyed by the chicks. They astounded us with almost unbelievable 20% greater growth on 1/2 Ib. less feed per pound of bird gain. ONLY 2 LBS. WERE NEEDED IN THE FIRST $IX WEEKS. Follow through on the new ROE VITAGROW growing mash. A tastier feed, enriched with ROE VITAGREENS combined with the A. P. F. growth factor to allow you to feed more grains to save you money and get faster, sturdier growth. The new formula Wonderbrood Sow Mash is your key to greater pork profits, for when it is fed from mating, farrowing to weaning, its super -rich Vitagreens with added A. P. F. gives you larger litters of 3 Ib. pigs which grbw faster with Tess death losses, and reach market earlier. Enriched ROE WONDERWEAN Pig Starter means Tess strain on the sow, earlier weaning, pro- fitable second litters. It produces 1 Ib. of baby pig growth for every pound fed. ROE WONDERGROW Hog Concentrate (Supplement) saves feed, pushes pigs for fast cheap gains. ROE WONDERBUILD—a real pig pusher—a complete feed -31/2 lbs. will produce 1 Ib. of pork. ROE DAIRY AND CALF FEED --now available with molasses. THE NEW ENRICHED ROE FEEDS ARE YOUR ASSURANCE OF BIGGER PROFITS IN 195Q • Available throughout Southwestern Ontario — see your Roe dealer today ,4firsaa,,t, MS MILLING CO. - Atwood, Ont. �- Warehouse 305 William SL, London, R. Kerslake, Seaforth; W. R. Davidson, Hensall; , A. t Mustard, Brucefield; • a. , A f a � : ►�,o�x - - �t ff � Y � fd��ef rodh�+�e:� t