Grimsby Independent, 10 Aug 1927, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

mm Access svsTems LTP Mr. and Mrs. ‘w. H. Pettit left on Tuesday to spend a motor vacation, e mmmmmens The Mifses Murdoch and Master lan Murdoch are spending a few weeks visiting relatives at Hamilton Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Laing and family have left ofr an extended moâ€" Wednesday, August 10, 1927 Our readers are requested to send in I.dm..u..._ umn to the w"‘_dll".“-. While it often requires some time for a patient to become used to glasses if paâ€" tenceâ€"is exercised comfort will be secured. Many perâ€" sons see well enough withâ€" out glasses, but wear because of the comfort they give. Consult us for the good of SEEING WITH COMFORT Social and Personal VERNON TUCK Jeweler and Optometrist Page or phone 36 The Womea‘s P _ Some 175,000 American autos were old in foreign countries during 1926. tor tour of the The Women‘s Institutes of luu-‘ ville and Grimsby will hold their joint pienic on Thursday afternoon, August 18th., at Grimsby Beach. Mrs. Murray E. Randall and chilâ€" dren of Omaha, Nebraska are visitâ€" Ing Mrs. Randail‘s sister, Mra. John R. Denison, Grimsby. Mrs. K. L. Mogg and Miss Kathicen Garlick who have been spending the past two weeks the guests of H. G. and Mrs. Mogg, have returned to their home in Galt. Douglas Allan, Maicolm Allan Arâ€" chie Aiton and Erwin Phelps have reâ€" turned home after a week‘s motor trip around Lake Ontario. Mrs. W. L. Stephen and Strachan McCaskill spent a few days last week in Dundas with her nieces Mrs. Irâ€" win Galbraith and family and Miss Margaret Morrison. Miss Ivy ‘Taylor of Hamilton and Miss D. Hayhoe, are spending their vacation at Camp Owaissa, on Lake Erie. CARD OF THANKS Mrs. Sibbald and family wish to thank their many friends who were so kind to them during their recent bereavement.‘ Also the church for beautiful flowers sent. 7 ‘The earliest nutomobiles were proâ€" pelled by steam engines. The W north, an story, Edward promised the Weish that he would give them a prince of their own, a prince born in Wales, and unâ€" able to speak a word of English. This promise pleased the Welsh peoâ€" ple very much, and then the king preâ€" sented hins own little son, born a few days before in Carnarvon Castle, who certainly could not speak a word of Englishâ€"nor of Welsh either, for the matter of that. *‘ Since the reign of Edward III the title Duke of Cornwall has come to the eldest sons of kings and queens of England at their birth; the title Prince of Wales comes, with a few exâ€" ceptions, by creation. OurPrince was created Prince of Wales in 1911, when he was seventeen years old. Do we remembre all the Christian names of our Prince? ‘They are "Edward Alâ€" bert Christian George Andrew Patâ€" rick David." *@uoprrada#au quotuu10a03 uo 24 ©1 posnjor suvipur ojoujmag . otL A crumpled rag lying in the ditchâ€" taht was the treatment accorder to our Flag by some thoughtless moâ€" torist whose car had been decorated with this sign of our Empire. One tock home the crushed remmant and reverently burned it. Does it seem respectful to our Flag to use it for such purpose, a bit of gauze, which, is a pitiful form for our Flag to take, Let us honor our Flag and not cheapâ€" en it by merely using it as an everyâ€" dayâ€" decoration. beseges & ass Thanks are due to Â¥rs. Moore lmm‘ the picture threatre going public for the _ fine presentation of Goethe‘s "Faust" last Saturday, This superb production . displayed the ability of Emil Janning‘s, the noted moving plcâ€" ture actor, in the part of Mephisto. Howard Barnes, in _ the New York World makes the Btatement that Janâ€" nings has "taken a place in motionâ€" picture tragedy~only ‘comparable to Chaplain‘s eminence in comedy," One ulso enjoyed the finished acting of Yvette â€" Gullbert, _ the _ celebrated French entertainer. Traffic problems in Paris haven‘t changed much in 250 years, it is said. WOMAN‘S OUTLOOK THE INDEPENDENT . GRIMSBY, ONTARIO | POETRY | A GARDEN A garden is a lovesome apot Rose plot, Fringed pool, Ferned grot, And yet the frool Contends that God is not. What! Not in gardens when the eve is cool?t _ Xic_y. but I have a sign, The three foll very kindly sontr ber of the Grimg tute, noted fOf por SOUTHERN syorhERED CHICKEN Split the chicken down the back; open it out flat in a baking pan; dust with 8aM, POPper and dots of butter; pour over it nalf a cup of boiling Water; COVOr with another pan. Have the oven MOU€rately hot for fifteen minutes, then s1ow down. Roast the ehicken about one hour and a half. If a CrAM Erayy Is desired, thicken the juice l¢ft in the pan with milk and flour. Soak . half , cup of tapioca . over night In tWo cupy of water; If necesâ€" saty @dd MOT® water in the morning. Add one @nd opeâ€"half cups of brown sugar, COOK in a double bofler until transp&reDt. when done add a pinch 4443 teaspoontul of vanilia. Serve‘. cold with top milk or thin Serve; . cold cream. Cme OT 1W0 ogge or the yolks of ©gg8; One CUD of milk. Beat the eg¢s well, then add the milk and the paste made a% folows. . Put in a cup a teblespoonfit! of flour, a tearpoonful of granulated sugur, a teaspoonfvd of mustard, half a teaspoonful of salt, a dash Of P3orika and cayenne pepâ€" per. Mix well. add enough cold water to forM @ paste, In the meantime have a quarter of a cup of vinegar heating on thestove; put a teaspoonâ€" ful of butter to the vinegar while it is heating. Then add the hot vineâ€" gar and buttr to the mixture; sti constantly until thick. This dressing does not Curle it; it can be kept a week or more, COOKERY CORNER SALAD *T § 1 i( & L or MAPLE PAPIOGCA PlicsstNC WITHOUT A DOtBpDE, oTLER tWO ogge or the yolks of following recipes are sontributed by a memâ€" ‘rimsby Women‘s Instlâ€" God walks in mine age the early days some brawny back woedsman of that name distinguished himself among the tall timbers and tales of his achievements passed from mouth, gaining color at each telling. Toâ€"day~Paul holds a secure place beside Hercules, Jack the Glant Killer and the other select heroes of folkâ€" lore. His deeds are related in every camp; he is the unattainable ideal of every lumberjack. Legend reports that in nis childâ€" hood days Paul Bunyan derived conâ€" slderable amusement from unarmed encounters with wolves, panthers and wildcast. When he was in his rompers these beasts could put up a respectâ€" able fight against him before beâ€" ing broken or strangled and ignomâ€" iniously carried home on his shouldâ€" ers, but as he attained manhood such combats lost their savor, for he could subdue the most fearsome creature of the wilds with a casual slap. a valley of timber in the space of a day, and when Paul gets involved In a "roughâ€"andâ€"tumble"â€"as every lumâ€" berjack with spirit must do once and againâ€"the other combatants are out of luck he being as irresistible a scrapâ€" per as he is an axman and has been known to unwittingly smash an opâ€" ponent‘s skull with one blow of his © Paul Bunyan mows dowp the loftâ€" lest kings of the forest with single strokes of his mighty xe. He clears Now raw bear and cougar meat constitute minor items of bis regular billâ€"ofâ€"fare. He drinks his tea boilâ€" Ing and when he goes on a spree noâ€" thing short of @ gailon of raw alcohol will quench his thirst . An interestâ€" Ing fact about this superman is that he posses a dual personality not only in the Canadian lumber woods,â€" but also in the oll and sulphur fields o. the southern states. 1'1_) The Shorthorn bull, King of the Fairles, recently sold from the Canâ€" adian ranch of H. R. H. the Prince of Wales to a United States breeder, again won the prem‘er prize at the Calgary Exhib‘tion. Evidences of the rencwal of interâ€" est of ©d Country inves‘ors in West. e:mâ€"Canada are seen it a number Of recent transactions recorded at Winnipeg, including _ the proposed erection of three motin picture houses by means of Eng‘ish capital. Mederic Beauperant, when clearâ€" ing his farm south of Virner on the Canadian Pacific lines, tvund a 300â€" Ib. boulder which was l.alf native silver and worth about $1,200. . The discovery has aroused considerable interest among mining men in Cobalt and elsewhere who are arriving in numbers. * London, Ontario, now has an air harbor. _ Through efforts on the part of the Chamber of Commerce an ideal airâ€"fleld site bas been taken over and, within a month‘s time, will be completely equipped and marked eo as to provide an air depot availâ€" able to all planes that seek London Air mail service between Winnipeg and Fargo, North Dakota, has been inaugurated and the first mail for Winnipeg from the United States arâ€" rived recently. as a stopping place. According to a financial statement insued from the beadquarters of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company, the gross earnings of the Company for the first six months of the year ended showed an increasé of $3,614,â€" 778.06. _ The net profits, however, decreased about $900,000 due to a four million dollar increase in the working expenses for that period. tlons as the historic gateway and welcomed : their Royal Highnesses the Prince of Wales, Prince George and Premier and Mrs. Baldwin with a tremendous burst of enthusiasm and a blaze of color. Vast crowds thronged the docks and waterfront as the Canadian Pacific 8.8. Empress of Australia, bearing the distinguishâ€" ed nvhllon to Canada, steamed into sight. ‘There are 75,000 Jewish farmers in the United States. The . trolley 1883. Quebec City lived up to Its tradiâ€" Here and There was â€" Invented about 1926 totalled 9,521 fine ounces, or Bureau of Statisties. Dr. H. M. Tory, Chairman of the National Research Council, anâ€" nounces a discovery "of great scienâ€" e Rust Laboratory. A more definite announcement is due shortly. _ awarded a silver medal for "outâ€" standing excellence" at the Interâ€" anlil:n‘{'l‘m Exhibition held at partment of Agriculture. Fifteen Austrian families are about to take up land in the Okanaâ€" m‘vdlq. near Kelowa being the W to take l&.llld in British Columbia under Canada Colonization Association, a subsidiâ€" ary of the Canadian Pacific Coloniâ€" zation Department. Canada leads all nations in inâ€" creased trade since 1913 according New York. Canada‘s increase was 85 per cent, Australia coming next with 45 per â€"cent and.the U Slates thire with 31 per ount. Hefeand There Canadian _ tobacco has been in Canada in FIVE

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy