Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 14 Dec 1933, p. 2

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So close to being the best football team in Canada thet it hurts, Sarnia Imperials had joined the hosts of beaten teams Monday that applauded the winners and news champions, Toâ€" ronto Argonaute. The Scullers won the senior Canadian title at Sarnia Saturday by defeating Imperiale 4â€"3. The young woman, who is a daugh:â€" ter of Mr. and ‘Mrs. Henry Strang of Hensall, suffered untold misery from the bitter cold and pain following the accldent. Dr. Savage, who is a graâ€" duate in medicine of University of Western Ontario, is engaged as a mislonary _ by the Presbyterian Church in Canada. She was married last summer while returning from furlough. Four persons were killed in the crash of a Lufthansa pessenger plane, D1403, on the Berlin to Hamâ€" burg route at Fuhsbuettel aerodrome near Hamburg on Monday. Lying helpless with fractured leg in a lonely logâ€"cabin in the Peace River district, 64 miles from the nearest raflroad and many more miles from medical ald, Dr. Margâ€" aret Strang Savage, of London, Ont., a medical missionary in that district, set the hone herself. Cyiprroefiet s 4 )/"t('( //}/ i. FACE PDOWD EB (Dept. OCâ€"7) Montreal, 1 enclose 10c to cover postage and handl Please wf:l(me your Oumooupt‘}'ltl.f“lmmdnnu‘;&cmplq" contrining liberal trial packages of Outooor Grat Olive Oir Beauty Products, m a You cannot buy a better powder than OuUTDoo® Girt at any price. The Good Houseâ€" k«pxu:f "Seal of Approval" is your guarantee of quality. Outpoor Girt Face Powder and other Olive Oil Beauty Products are sold by leading drug, department and chain stores in 3 sizes â€"15¢, 25¢ and $1.00. If you want to sample five'o‘ the most popular OUTDOOR GiRL prepâ€" or wrinkle here and there? A suggestion of drynessâ€"even conrseness? Don‘t dodge these questions ! It‘s important that you know the truth, if you expect your skin to be attractive to others. Begin at once to correct these exion faws, Outooo® Gizt Olive Oil P&mg'dfl' will help you. This luxurious powder feeds into dry tissues the delicate, swiftlyâ€"absorbed oils which your skin needs to remain soft, smooth and supple. With just a few appliceâ€" tions, you can see your complexion awaken to new youth and loveliness. «o _# Just for curiosity‘s sake, ty a closeup of your mmp? lnion.que you lutpdsflu, at what you see ; "A/ BKIN THAT captivatee men ? Attach a $2.00 bill or post office money order to cover onoudear’a subâ€" scription address to Is there a tendency towards duliness? A line The first copy of your Christmas Gift of the Waterloo Chronicle conâ€" taining all the worthâ€" while home news of the County will be mailed in a large Christmas envelâ€" ope. A suitable greeting card will be enclosed and your name filled in on it, as the giver of this thoughtful gift; or, if you prefer, mail your own greeting card with the order and we will enâ€" close it with the first copy. The Waterloo Chronicle Waterloo, Ont. y It is well, however, to got a bird Iwm: a nice ln{or Of fat underneath the skin for this will prevent the dry fiavoriess taste that many restaurant | turkeys have. â€" s â€" and equesesed to remove ail excess ginge it to rid the skin of iuy.‘halr which may have been overlooked. Usually your butcher will clean the fowl! thoroughly and remove most of the pin feathers. Still it is a good plan for the cook to examine it again and make sure that all parte which are not edible are removed, and to â€" Dressing Reoipe _ A simple dressing for any fowl is made of staie bread soaked in water Of course, the turkey or goose is the time bonored dish and undoubt: edly the most essontial part of the meal. Bome of us are fortunate enough in being able to raise our own but I think that most of us have to depend either upon the word of the butcher, whom we trust as rellâ€" able, or upon our own judgment. Selecting The Bird I have heard of various methods Of judging fowl and the favorites seem to be by means of the breastâ€" bone. It is said that if the breastâ€" bone is tender the rest Of the turkey la, too. However, this is not infalâ€" lible and perhaps your cherished mode is even better. The effects of Thanksgiving never do get a chance to efface thomselves thoroughly because we are plunged Immediately into excitement of the preparation for Christmas Day and New Year‘s Day. Toâ€"day I‘m going to talk mostly about the Christmas dinner and give you some recipes. ESE e nn UR PS ')gr. and Mrs, Lorne J. “l‘liarueh mlfihl etreot, a o t Hamiltonâ€"At Kâ€"W, Hospital, Dec. ~10, to Mr. and Mrs. Glen Hamilton, i:"‘.%lfl etreet, Kitchener, a zlnrâ€"u St. Mary‘s Hoapital, Dec. ‘10, to Mr. and ‘Mrs. Wm. Zinger, g:lon streét, .Waterloo, a daughâ€" Woodcroftâ€"At Mt. Hamilton Hosâ€", _ pitel, Hamilton, Dec. 10, to Mr. and Mre. J. P. Woodcroft (nee Marâ€" garet Reinhardt), a son. Martinâ€"At 162 Ahrens stroet, Kitâ€" cheper, Dec. 3, to Mr. and Mre. James Martin, Toronto, a son. | Waitherâ€"At K.â€"W. Hospital, Dec. 11, to Mr. And Mre. Wm. Walther, 965 King street west, Kitchener, a son. ! Loremzâ€"Montreal, Que., Dec. 6, to Mr. and Mre. Walter Lorens, Baird avenue, a daughter. { Petersâ€"At K.â€"W. hospital, Dec. 7, to Mr. and ‘Mre. Alex. Peters, 64 Erh . street east, Waterl00, a daughter. ; Hofferâ€"At Kitchener, Dec. 3, to Mr. and Mrs. Everet{t L. Hoffer, 137 Weâ€" ‘ber street east, a son. Weberâ€"At Kitchener, Dec. 6, to Mr. and Mre. C. N. Weber, 840 Queen‘s boulevard, a daughter. Reickâ€"At St. ‘Mary‘s Hospital, Dec. 6, to Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Reick, Kitchener, a daughter. Manszâ€"At Kitchener, Dec. 6, to Mr. and Mrs. John Mansz, 136 Ahrensa street west, a son. | Shantzâ€"At Preston R. R. 2, Dec. 8, to Mr. and Mrs. John H. Shantz, Roederâ€"At Kitchener, Deoc. 9, to Mr. and Mrg. Rdwerd Roe .%uw mot streot, a Â¥ :. Bossenburyâ€"At ener, Dec, 6, to Mr. and Mrs. Chas, Boasenbury, 86 Locust street, a son. k Harbach~â€"At Kitchener, Dec. 9, to Household Hints for the and cook until the berries are broken. Remove from fire, mix in sugar to Sprinkle the fowl with salt and pepper; place in a roasting panâ€" eelfâ€"basting if possible, because it is much easlerâ€"and roast until tender. The time you will have to cook the turkey will vary, of counse, on the alze of your fow] as well as its ago; so I will not attempt to advise you blindly but suggest that you let your butcher be your guide. The vegetables and salad for the dinner, I will diecuss in another arâ€" ticle; eo I‘ll pass them. molsture. Into this beat one or two egge, depending on the size of the cavity to be filled; mix in a piuch of leaf"thyme, a amall onlon,â€"chopped, and salt and pepper to taste. He dismissed the Mutual Life Asâ€" eurance Company‘s action against the Royal Trust Company, Montreal, with branch office in St. Catharines, executor of the estate of the de ceased who died in 1932. The comâ€" pany asked for an order that it be ranked as among the creditors of the deceased whose will has not yet been probated. The fudge found that the evidence showed the deceased was mentally Incapable of giving such bonds in 1927 and 1930 and that when he signed ‘his name to them he did not reallze what it meant and the lability placed on him. ‘chil. young . THERK 7 pe: nonmimmicnumnmurouimmiremmnnnesmmntaur E THREE CELEBRATIONS In the nonâ€"jury session of the Supreme court sitting on Saturday, Mr. Justice Kerwin ruled that the tw8 bonds of $5,000 and $4,000 each, given by the late Hamilton K. Woodâ€" ruff, St. Catharines, to the Mutual Life Assurance Company, guaranteeâ€" Ing certain mortgages on the Westâ€" minster United church in St. Catharâ€" ies are to be declared null and vyold. FATHER DECLARED MENTALLY INCAPABLE Brown, Kitchener, twin sons. Hallâ€"At St. Mary‘s Ho;\pitnl, Nov. 17, to Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Hall, Kitchener, a son. Wolstenholmeâ€"At St. Mary‘s Hosâ€" flital, Nov. 16, to Mr. and Mrs. arold Wolstenholme, a daughter. Heibeinâ€"At Waterloo, Nov. 15, to Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Heibein, a Horneâ€"At Kitchener, Nov. 18, to Mr. and Mrs. Albert Horne, 196 Abrens street west, a son. Roeddingâ€"At Kitchener, Nov. 16, to Mr. and Mre. Walter E. Roedding, Arnold street, a son. Mettlerâ€"At K.â€"W. Hospital, Nov. 20, to Mr. and Mre. J. Mettler, 110 Strange stroot, Kitchener, a daughâ€" ter. Brandtâ€"Neumann â€" Dec.‘ 9, Henry Brandt to Annie Neumann, both of Hespeler. Netheryâ€"At K.â€"W. Hospital, Nov. 9, to Mraand Mre. F. MiHier, Church etreet, Kitchener, a son. Bickieâ€"At Preston, Nov. 9, to Mr. and Mre. M. Bickle, a son. Gerrardâ€"At St. Mary‘s Hoepital, to Mr. and Mrs. James Gerrard, 1167 King street east, Kitchener, a daughter. Tubbuttâ€"At St. Mary‘s hospital, to Mr. and Mre, Wilfrid Tubbutt, 35 Bcott street, Kitchener, a daughâ€" + ter. Freundâ€"At Kitchener, Nov. 18, to Mr. and Mrs. Harold Freund, 34 Pine street, a eon. Danneckerâ€"At K.â€"W. Hospital, Nov. 11, to Mr. and Mrs. August Danâ€" necker, Kitchener, a son. Gelselâ€"At St. Mary‘s hospital, Nov. 12, to Mr. and Mre. Jack Gelsel, King street east, Kitchener, a son. Brown â€" At the K. â€" W. Hoti)ital, Nov. 16, to Mr. and Mrs. William Seipâ€"At Waterloo, Nov. 18, to Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Seip, 11 Rudy St., a daughter. Millerâ€"At St. Mary‘s Hospital, Nov. 9, to Mr. and Mrs. Ernst Miller, 230 Palmer avenue, Kitchener, a 1 cup of suet 1 cup of raisins 1 cup of currante 1 cup of chopped blanched almonds 4 cup of (lemon, citron and orange peel, candied) 2 cups of bread crumbs 2 cups of flour 1 cup of milk 4 egge 1 teaspoonful of ealt 1 cup of sugar 1 teaspoon of cloves % teaspoon of netmeg 1 tablespoon of cinnamon 1 teaspoon of soda Steam four hours. * brated every year in the Church of Nativity at Bethleâ€" hem. The firt occurs in the Roman Catholic section on December 25; 13 days later the Greek Orthodox church hold their celebrations, to be followed by those of the Armenian church in another 18 days. THREE Christmases are celeâ€" e eg o ned 124 Ahrens street west, Kitchener, Crlmrry Bauce ver the berriéa with water have a real ( Gfilfl‘u' tree, ad lwgh. else can its place. Older people may like stun: effects that appéal to the imaâ€" gination, or symbols in a fairy. m that will do th% but c want it loaded to o&ew wl:h baubles °.§ colo 28, OM aroun: with tln‘golcj strands that gleam and glitter, Marriages RECIPES Plum Pudding you should n Eve Dog I‘ ~‘ es Bs oo esn s ce EOe o ae W aine W L 8 <Gpmee: taste; pour into dish and serve elther | hot or cold . | 4& cupful of butter 1 cupful of eugar 2 oggs 2 tablespoonfuls of milk 44 teaspoon of lemon extract 2% cupfuls of flour 2 teaspoonfuis of baking powder 2/3 teaspoonful of grated nutmeg M teaspoonful of salt Cream butter, add sugar, ogge, well beaten, milk and lemon extract. Mix and eift ingredients and add to first mixture. _ Chill thoroughly. _ Roll small pleces of dough at a time, as thin as paper. Cut in shape desired and bake 8 minutes in a moderate oven. Orange cooklesâ€"grate peel of 1 orange and add to part of dough when rolling. Jelly cookiesâ€"use round outter and place plece of crabapple jelly in center of sookies before baking. Sand tarteâ€"sprinkle with cinna mon and eugar before cutting out. Caraway cookiesâ€"put & teaspoonâ€" ful of cuuwx seeds in part of mixâ€" ture before chilling. 0 6 apples 4 cupful of chopped walnutsâ€" 1 cupful of chopped celery Bolled salad dressing Peel, core and dice apples; add nuts and celery; mix with salad dresaing; eerve on lettuce loaves. This will serve six to eight people. The man laughed. "I don‘t wonder you want himâ€"he‘s a cute little tyke. But I must take him back home. I‘m to drive the family to a party tonight and. I‘m late now." Bill had the dog light in his arms. There was an expreselon on the boy‘s face of dogged determination. He looked as though nothing in the world could separate him from this newfound happiness. â€" "Yes", sald the etranger, "that is the little fellow, He got away from me while I was giving him a walk. The mistress would be wild if I lost him. I‘ll have to teach him a lesson." He reached the dog. "No, no!" cride Bill. ‘"We found him and took him in He‘s ours!" ‘"Why, Bill," said Susle, "you nustn‘t speak that way!" P Before Susie could say a word the big man had pushed by her and was in the room where the Christmas tree stood. "Ah," said the stranger, "I perceive that you have. Allow me to enter and retrieve my property." â€" "Have you seen?" asked a man‘s voice, a deep, busineselike volce, "a small dog about here?" ‘"Whyâ€"" stammered Susie, "whyâ€" ehâ€"" A sharp little bark from the other room. The children stood patting the new treasure. And the wee dog made tiny snorting of pleasure, wriggling and squirming with delight. The Christâ€" mas tree was forgotten. For half an hour the two children played with the small stranger. Bill and Susle had never seen much a friendly little creature. ‘They began to think of him as their own . . . as a Christmas gift come especially for them. _‘"Mercy!" gald Susle, "who‘s that?" And she flew to anawer it. __And so Christmas Eve came, And iMa Grady stepped down to where the stores were and expended her two dollars and a fow coppers on gifts for her éamlly. In the meantime Suâ€" sle and Bill were busy about a Christâ€" mas tree. Bill had bought it at a great reduction because it was so ugly. "It‘s a scratchirfg sound and a whine. I‘m going to see." Susie slipped into the hall. She opened the door. There, shivering on the sill, was the coldest, littlest dog she had ever seen in her life. It had long, silken ears and the biggest brown eyes iImaginable:. â€" "Why, you poor little beastie!" Susie gathered him up in her arms. A grateful pink tongue lapped her face. A cold little body pressed against ler warm neck. She hurried back to the Christmas tree. "Look! Look what I‘ve found!" Bill came over to examine the dog. "Cute little feller, ain‘t he?" he conâ€" ceded. "Guess he‘s one 0‘ them newâ€" fangled kind: a Chinese Pekingese. Wonder why he came to our door?" A loud rapping on the door. A rapâ€" ping gs of a cane knocked smartly against the panels. "Haven‘t got time to listen to the wind," growled Bill, who was feeling too important to be bothered with trifles. Susie went on with her work. Thenâ€""But I do hear somehting, silre as the world!" she insisted. Bill grunted and stood off to squint up his eyes at some cotton he had just arranged like enow. "‘Don‘t get him to barking or it will wake up the other kids‘" warned Susle. Susle paused in draping a bit of tingel on a branch. "Don‘t you hear a crying?" she asked. They did hr heve. very much money. In : they had very little. It you hzg‘md.{lto ':'&dfl worn po b ou would have seen only a mdol{‘r bu:.m a fow coppere. . This presented m monthé‘ careful éaving for C}drhtmu. The Gradys were poor Aaud there woere seoven of th:?. P4 Grady was killed in an accident three yeare ago, since when ‘Mg Grady and Busie and Bill had worked hard to keep the family together. But all the hardship in the world could not }lmfimn the spirits of ‘that fighting amily. Susie GM{ was a plucky ffteen, and got emall jobs of looking after the neighbors‘ babiles, or coming in as a mother‘s helper. Bill Grady was twelve. He picked up odd quarters in all sorts of clever ways,. Ma Graâ€" dy, that rosy, smiling, battling woâ€" man, had her big arms in the suds from morning until night. She did the washings of half the town. But Bill relinquished his hold of (By Lily Ruthenford Morris) Assorted Cookles Waldor? Salad Jack Wisdom, who was saved by National Guardsmen from a mob on Sunday, confessed ‘Monday, it was announced, that he had killed Mr. and Mra. Harry Pritchard. _ _ _ 8T. JEROME‘8 JUNIORS LEAD; WATERLOO COLLEGE LOSE St. Jerome‘s took over the top rung in the junior city league standâ€" ing when they slapped a 2 to 0 re verse on Bridgeport juniors at Kit. chener Monday night. Freddieâ€"Jacks handed Waterico Collego their se ond straight defeat in the senior city league game which followed, though they had to go overtime to turn the trick 3 to 1. Wisdom killed the Pritchards, Buâ€" banks said, in an effort to escape rogecution for giving Pritchard, a gudm merchant, a worthiehs cheque for $31. KITCHENERSTRATFORD JUNIORS TIED After running in three goals in the first period while holding the visitâ€" ing Kitchener team scoreless, the Stratford Midgets were forced to divide pointe with the Kitchener juâ€" nions at Stratford Monday night after ten minutes of overtime play. The final score was 5 all. Going into overtime the count was 4 all, with Kitchener breaking the tie at three minutes and Stratford tying it up with two minutes to play. "Bedad, a fine day!" sighed Mre. Grady. "‘Tis maybe I can give up a dozen washin‘s or so and tend to me family. That Tom is a whale of a lad for helpin‘." "I don‘t know about that, but I do know that I can buy anothor dog just like him for a lad I‘ve just foundâ€" a boy by the name of Bill." _ _ The Gradys had a merry Christmas â€"the merriest Christmas for years. Big Tom romped with the children like a boy. And barking away with all his exuberant might was a brown and white dog with large eyes and a plume of a tailâ€"‘"To Bill with a Merry Christmas from his Uncle Tom" had been on the tag that came with the new puppy. . "No," confessed Tom Grady, "not I And by the livin‘ soul of St. Patâ€" rick, I‘ll lend a shoulder in this house! Ye‘ve had a hard time, Norah, and you‘ve done a fine job by the kids. It‘ll be grand to come here my nights off. I was feelin‘ terâ€" rible lonesome this Christmas. I have most of the day tomorrow and you bet I‘ll hike it over here as fast as I can. _ Will yo invite me?" Susle slipped a shy hand into her new uncle‘s big fist. Bill moved nearer, his eyes round with bewllderâ€" ment. He stlll held the little dog tight in his arms. "Can you bring the dog to visit, too?" he asked. _ _ MURDERER SAVED FROM MOB The heart of ‘Mrs. Grady was a large one. She forgot as easlly as she forgave. And it took her only a few minutes to make this big youngest brother of her husband very much at home. "You was always his favorite sald, "and he used to worry : you a lot. Are ye marrled?" . come puffing in the door but Mre. Grady herself, her arms laden with packages, her face rosy with the cold "Mother!" screamed Bill and Susie at once, "mother! Here‘s a man who lost a little dog." Mrs. Grady set her bundles on a chair and came in. The very breath of clean outdoors came with her. "Mrs. Grady," sald the man, "could the dog not a whit. "You can‘t have him! He‘s mine!" As the big man in a driver‘s livery took a step forward his glance foll on a framed photograph. For an inâ€" stant he blinked very fast. Then he scrutinized the picture more closely. His formal epeech lapsed into natural expression. "By gorry if that ain‘t the spittin‘ iImage of me oldest broâ€" ther Tim. Tim Grady, or I‘m a Mar!" Bill and Susie stood spellbound. The little dog made a enuffling sound with his nose. Just at this moment who should come puffing in the door but Mre. Grady herself, her arms laden with packages, her face rosy with the cold "Mre. Grady your name be Mrs. Grady it apipviaaanasnia nc ce msimeizinie e in inss in it ib ib ib ib d it ib t t t Ne 2 â€" Especially at Christmas . .. 6+ Learn‘s Drug Store $ smiled set her bundles on a e in. The very breath ors came with her. " sald the man, "could Norah Finnegan?" SEASONALLY WRAPPED â€" _â€"_â€" Candies 3 It could ," she about igh Finest candy quality in Canada. nooupoenpnior rormoneconomonnconpanneccmunnmenrmenmer 18 l dge: ALWAYS DEPENDABLY FRESH AT Zexuampapercaparepecoceorpoorooranrebanneoreaaraarnegr "~ .. * E_ > s ~â€"â€" EM w s A Gift f d e e L _ that will be prized / i ; For a truly personal gift, there‘s nothing that c . take ) the place of a photograph of yourself. Call for an _ M ) _ appointment today. Take advantage of. our special _ & f Christmas offer. i 4 4 ! T : ; Denton Studio f _ 163 King West ' Phone 2592 & I KITCHENER i ic arpeinbcoeneinerieeigeeatogicmenrincecnr aneneagneinpncing ocm Scn igiic in n bn oo ce ce enc t PACKED IN FINE ASSORTMENTS. For a truly ; the place of appointment 50°¢ 8 WATERLOO Conveying your message of good cheer p e tesy Fiaer Bs m for an r PB Act

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