THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1940 PAGE SEVEN 4 BROOKLIN BROOKLIN, July 30--The Senior group of Red Cross workers were busy at the Masonic Hall work rooms on Thursday when a large number of ladies met to complete Red Oross pyjamas and refugee garments. A very lovely quilt was [donated by the ladles of the Angli- can Church, It was decided to have no work meetings during the month of August but to begin work again in September. The Junior group will carty on as they have been doing with their work meeting held each Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock. A number of ladies have been doing work at home and those who are willing to continue may come to the Masonic Hall on the afternoon of the girls meeting and i a member of the sewing committee from the Senior group will be there to give out work and to receive fin- ished articles. The hours to give out work are 3.30 to 4.30. The girls held their Red Cross meeting as usual on Friday with a good crowd in attendance and work was con- tinued on bandages and handker- chiefs, Mrs. Boyd had an unusually large list, for this week, of knitted articles which are still in great demand. There were fiftesn pairs of socks, two body belts, two helmets, four sweaters, five scarves, 'The response to the call for wom- en to sew and knit has been most gratifying. At present the ware- houses in Toronto are filled to ca- pacity and the word from head- quarters asks the ladies to take a holiday during August from sewing. Knitting however will go on as be- fore. Mr. and Mrs. McKendry and son Warren were recent visitors with Mr. J. Garbutt. A number from Brooklin attended the funeral of the late James Pirie at Groveside Cemetery on Friday. Mr Pirie lived in Brooklin for some years before going to Whitby. Mies Margery Paskin, of The On- tario Hospital, and Miss Jennie Pas. kin, of Toronto, are spending their vacations at their home here, Mr. and Mrs. Ross are on their holidays and this summer plan to see Ontario. During their absence Mr. and Mrs. McEachren, of Mark- ham are occupying their home and looking after the telephone office. Mrs. R. D. Hughes, of Torono, was a guest last week of Miss Alice Olver. Mrs. D. White, who has been with her sons in Ottawa for the past few weeks arrived home this week. Miss Olver left on Saturday for Pointe Aux Baril where she will spend the next few months at her cottage there. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Thompson are visiting friends at Pointe Aux Baril, The Boy Scouts of Brooklin are in Camp in Mr. Roy Ormistons' woods. They are using two splendid tents with real beds and up-to-date camp supplies. Mr. George Scott and Mr. Matthew Agar go down each evening and assist on the pro. gramme of sports. The boys are enjoying camp life to the fullest extent these warm days. Private Billy Heron and Private Tim Vipond of Camp Borden, were at their homes here for the week- end. Miss Bannon, of Parry Sound, is visiting with her sister, Mrs. Wil- llams. Guests this week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Mackey were: Mr. G. H. Hogarth and Mrs. R. Pas- coe, of Solina; Dr, L. N. Hogarth, of Detroit, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Mil. ier, Kalamazoo, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs, H. Layman, Bradenton, Florida, and Rev. H. W. and Mrs. Foley, of Bow- manville. Mr. and Mrs. Alex McKinney, Sr, of Brampton were with Dr. Mrs. McKinney last week. Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Thompson and son John, left for their hoidays on Saturday. They will spend a great- er part of the time at Little Britain with Mrs. Thompson's parents, Mr. and Mrs; Olver. Mr. Edmonds, of Toronto, is taking Mr. Thompson's place in the Bank during his ab- Bene and is staying at "To Steps Mrs. John Worden, of Toronto, was a guest last week with Misses Addie and Elsie Vipond. Painful Accident Miss Jessie Webber met with a most serious and painful accident last week when her finger became caught in an electric wringer. The finger was so badly Siushe that amputation was Rev. and Mrs. R. Simpson and Miss Chrissie Simpson spent last week with friends in Camlachie. Mr. and Mrs. George Jones were in Hanover with relatives on Sun- GO3D STORE FOR RENT Cer. RITSON RD. & KING E. Vacant Now APPLY MR. J. SAMMUT 148 Simcoe St. 8. + Phone 3994 RADIO Sales and Service 0 hawa 1438 and. day, Myrtle Jones who has been holidaying there for the past month returned home with them. Mr. and Mrs. N. J. White were with their daughter, Mrs. Elwood Crosier, at White Oaks, Minets Point Barrie, this week. Mr. and Mrs. Tobin and family are moving to Port Perry. They will be missed very much in this community. Sports of the Week Two games of softball were played this week by the Brooklin girls. Brooklin played at Cedar Grove with the Cedar Grove team and lost the game in a score of 6 to 1 on Mon- I Atty owe Drown bo were invited to the Canadian Forresters picnic at Orono when four teams competed with Brooklin playing their final game with Bow. manville and again losing in a score of 13 to 11. Other teams in the play were Napanee and Osh- awa. Football activities consisted of a game at Oshawa on Wednesday with the Wonder Bread team when the score was 2-0 for Brooklin. Next Saturday the game will be in Osh- awa with the Hungarians. On Tuesday of last week the Pet- erboro Lacrosse team visited Brook- lin with a score of 18-7 for the Brooklin team in the winning. Brooklin team went to Peterboro on Friday when the game was ga tie until the last minute of play. Pet- erboro were the victors in a score of 12-11. Brooklin plays at Oshawa on Friday, Aug. 2nd. Come along and see the game. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mowbray and family were at Beaverton in the McBrien cottage last week and Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Graham and family go this week. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Hodgins, of | Toronto are spending the week with | Rev, and Mrs. Simpson. The library will be closed for the summer vacation period from Wed- | nesday Aug, 7 to August 22. Those wishing books should get their sup- ply on Saturday of this week. Miss Edith Cochrane is on a holi- | day with Miss Muriel Harding tak- | ing her work in Dr. Baldwin's home during her absence. Mr. Hugh Ormiston has joined up with the Cobourg Battery. Work was started this week on the United Church which is to be redecorated before the new pipe or- gan is put in. Morning Service will be held in the basement. The Sine boys, of Inglewood, are | with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jephson, for their holidays. (P. L, Jull, Oorr.) BROOKLIN, July 23 -- The con- tract for decorating the United Church has been let to Mr. W. H. Moorehouse, of Whitby. The work will be done during the first two weeks of August. On Sunday, Aug- ust 4th, all services will be held In the basement. Later in the Fall a new pipe organ is to be installed in memory of th? late Mrs. E. Bell, Gordon Jull, of Sundridge, spent the week-end at home, Rev. P. L Jull and Ruth returned with him on Monday. After which they will spend two weeks at Carnarvon, in, Haliburton County. Services in the United Church during August will be at 11 a.m. only. The following will supply during the absence of the pastor. August 4th, Rev F. W. Riding, of Oshawa. Aug- ust 11th, Rev. W. P. Rogers, of Bow- manville, August 18th, Rev. W. 8. Atchison, of Winchester, The pastor expects to take the ser- vices on August 25th. Miss Florence Jull spent Sunday with her brother Rev- P. L. Jull fi of Cheboygan, Michigan. craft was wrecked in the rough Straits of Mackinac. Two Lives Saved By New Const Guard Plane Here is one of the most dramatic photographs ever made of a rescue "at sea". snapped from the U.S. coast-guard's new life-saving amphibian plane, as it picked up two fishermen whose Five minutes after this photograph was made their boat--which can be seen in the background--went to the bottom. The new plane is being tried out as an | experiment in aiding great lakes shipping and yachting and proved its value in this rescue. victims, who can be seen swimming towards the plane, are Joseph Schley, Jr, and Ernest Anderson, both | FRANCE BREAKS UP ARMIES OVERSEA Demobilizaton Ordered Foro, Units in North Africa and Syria U.S. PLANS SUPER-PLANES AS BIG AS FOOTBALL FIELD Gigantic FIVE Wings! ath aeronautical engineers say t! Could Take 5 Tons of | at the size of the airplane of to. morrow is limited only by the Bombs Across Ocean, cirength of the materials in the Return Non-Stop cantilever wings, which are built i Bl ". : tke a see} bridge. _ Vichy, France, July 31.--Demobfl- 2# a aungion, July Joe Unifed ra Pri ihe ti 3iEplang y2ation"of the French . swmiestin ua ates Army Corps disclosed that it [as a " g wing" withou - he is planning for future airplanes assembly or fuselage, guided b; Norn Africa and Syris was gn 4 . ) Y | nounced by General Maime Wey- three times as large as its present wing-tip rudders and elevators. with huge four-engine bombers. . a ; gand, minister for national defense. Such planes, each big: enough to gines Donnie incige ana ovine Demobilization prescribed by the = fill a bootball field and as high as TS On rear edg! begun) Vir | a two-storey building, may not be | Of the wing. It would be large Sra pe -- Rehjiom ey weeks aw. flying for another five or ten' years | "POush fOr passenger cabins. up but aeronautical engineers declared | Equipped for military purposes, | ago due to the difficulties in ship-7 7. that they would be practical. such planes would be able to carry | ping the men home across the Med- 77s "The bigger you build them the 5 ose han Jive wre ome oun iterranean, more efficient they are," one en- | pean c rm gineer declared. y | from Alaska to Japan, or similar a Sorerument, He ras The Air Corps now is completing | distances, drop the bombs, and re- | ior 'trom gyria, but it is believed ri at Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio, a | (Urn without stopping. the majority of the men in the igen: pve Dan Jaboreiany yesigned to North African garrisons end camps 7.5. : Bf ub lo. 0TSEpower. will not be able to return home un- q: using propeliors 4) feel, in diameter til the end of hostilities in the Me~ 53. The largest [present twin-row air- "Truth" was the subject of the | diterranean. AW oD am lesson-sermon for First Church of | The French army in Morocco, # autcmobile engine rates less than | Christ, Scientist, 64 Colborne Street | Algeria and Tunis is estimated be-.i¥ 100 horsepower. The largest pro- , on Sunday. tween 300,000 and 500,000 men, in- A; | pellor blades now in use on large| The Golden Text was, "O God, | cluding native levies. The army in bombers: or transnort airliners are my heart is fixed; I will sing and | Syria is believed to number 175,000. gz. about 16 feet in diameter. give praice, even with my glory. | Plve years ago the absolute limit For thy mercy is great above the heavens: and thy truth reacheth CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT The photograph was This shipwreck | tures" by Mary Baker Eddy, in- - cluded the following from page 286: UTAH PROJECT Ontario. | of Toronto | WITH DEFECTS | Will Help Many to Lead Normal Lives--Meet Thrice Weekly Salt Lake City, Utah, July 29, -- Handicapped children of Utah fam= ilies who are unable to afford the | high cost of possible cures in pri- | vate semitariums and clinics may vet lead normal lives, due to a uni- que project sponsored by the WPA. | At the WPA arts centre in Salt Lake City from 12 to 24 children -- | ranging in age from 4 to 18--meet | thrice weekly In an informal class designed to correct their deficien- cies. There is no charge for admittance, | and there are no limitations as to handicaps. Some of the patients although the project directors pre- fer to call them students) are "spas- tics"--children who suffered brain injuries @. birth and do not have full control over all their muscles. Some Cannot Write Others have strange. psychological and nervous quirks. Some cannot few -- three, in fact -- see a weird world in which everything is upside down. The classes have been held for The Rev. J. C. Clough will con- duct the service of evening prayer in St. Thomas' Anglican Church on Sunday, August 4th, at 7 p.m. The W. A. of St, Thomas' Church will meet at the home of Mrs. T. Bailey on Thursday afternoon. On Sunday next, August 4th, there | will be service of Evensong in or | Thomas' Church, Brooklin, at seven o'tlock standard time, when the rector Rev, J. C. Clough, will of- ficiate, AIDS CHILDREN | talk, others are unable to write. A | | more them a year, and in that per- fod a number of unorthodox techni- ques have been developed to assist those afflicted. First of all there are no referen- ces to "handicaps." The classes are billed for 'exceptional children," rather than for misfits. Directors of the project consider this good both for the children psychology, and for the persons wit. whom they | come in contact, Then, no effort to dupli- cate the starchy air of the doctor's office or clinic. The instructor, at- there is | tractive Leona Eitel, dresses in in- formal street wear. Stress Put on Play Because there are no set rules for | such cases, Miss Eitel -- who was drafted for the job from her reguler duties as a painting instructor at the Art Centre -- has worked out routines in the form of games. She avoids the effect of the classroom as scrupulously as she does that of the clinic. Some of her young charges were unable to manipulate a pencil or { brush. She put them to work doing "Japanese finger painting"--smeg ing color on paper with their finger tips. But within reaching distance | Miss Eitel kept brushes and pencils In the fields of speech and thought she has followed similar techniques, varied of course, to fit Three children who were ungble to enunciate a single word when they entered the classes have learned to | speak clearly. As yet the project is in the ex- | perimental stage. But directors of the Utah WPA hope that its prob- able success will lead to similar de- velopments elsewhere. EMPIRE BIRTH pEMANTIED | Brantford, akers used by | the Women's Canadian Club during the 1940-41 pragram here must be | of Empire origin, it was decided at a meeting of the executive of .the | club held at the YW.C.A. This de- | cision conforms with the policy of | kéeping Canadian funds at home. Although this may preclude the en- gagement of some speakers of inter- | mire | ovTIR . NEBRIDES ISLANDS Bb ? oa Pe Nop = Porous 'i 2 Hedowne ALOERSHOT ip BATH PR =p 58 SOUTHAM vd amoasa dha. aac suse Amey oase ede. SUB. BASE of szamams gace. The ABOVE map is self- -explanatory and shows how England awaits the tong. threatened assault by Germany, calmly, united and determined to fight off any invading force, ) Every Brinn Art Wren : res 'hn a Bowl ASTIN GS) the cases. | national repute, it is felt that ap- proval will be general. forwarded to W. Ross Macdonald, M.P., offering the services of the | maximum of members of the club to help in the | national registration campaign. | in engine power was believed to be ~~ rr | about 500 horsepower, but the figure | unto the clouds." (Psalms 108:1, 4). went steadily up tu the present 2,000 | Selections from the Bible includ- A letter was | Orsepower. | ed the following from Matthew 5:8, " 'Blessed are the meek: for they | f "To seek Truth through belief in a human doctrine is not to under- ""* stand the infinite. ...The under-"" standing of Truth gives full faith in Truth, and spiritual' understand- =, ing is better than all burnt offer- ings." | The !~rgest planes flying to-day | shall inherit the earth." | are land and sea shins weighing a 50 They are Correlative citations from the | capable of flying 2,000 miles at a! Christian Science textbook, "Science | CTuling speed of 130 miles an hour. and Health with Key to the Scrip- tons E49) ~ ne Lan, or WEINER ROLLS All A&P Food Stores SATURDAY NIGHTS Please Shop Early SLICED oR UNSLICED 0 FRESH paILY~ i ANN PAGEWNITE WHOLE A | Mi WHEA HOLIDAY Sens AT A & PLOW EVERYDAY PRICES GINGER ALE tf AR CLUB 3 ue 30-012. yi TE LIME RICKEY": m3 i 25e PEANUT BUTTER : A INAVES ONED ASW! not fous 2 13c: 21c MAYONNAISE = "13: wr Ae PORK & BEANS 32 3e LOBSTER ww 2De CHICKEN w 23 pWICH SAND = Store Hours STORE CLOSED ALL DAY CIVIC HOLIDAY MON., AUG. 5th AYLMER Close at NEW PACK 10 P.M. FANCY CANADIAN MER\ AE TOMATOES .... LOAF MEAT BALLS:........ 2 HEDLUND'S QUICK DINNER SARDINES TUNA FISH BEANS PURITAN BROWN BREAD MILD A DEL MO! FRUIT COCKTAIL SPAGHETTI JELLY POWDERS 3 CHRISTIE'S RITZ McCORMICK'S CHOC. CLARK'S SOUPS CORNED BEEF PEACHES SALMON We Must Limit Purchases to Family Weekly quirements. fect ay VIGOROUS & WINEY BOKAR MILD & MELLOW 8 O'CLOCK 1433 RICH & FULL-BODIED Red Circle +++ 29 ee ---------------- OLD CHEESE CRABMEAT HONEY CLOVER Tin 26 Tin Sle E. D. Smith's 32-0z. Strawberry Jar 39: 2 2: 2 52 25 fi 23e 21 llc 17 23 16- 17. yo lnplield JAM First Grade 5 d Grade BUTTER 2 ~ 49.2 ~ 48-246 | EGGS GRADE "A" LARGE Cin, Doz. 27- PUFFED WHEAT owe ns] BLACK TER i: 24 = 47- FRUIT PUNCH Harry Horne's 13-0z. Bl. 23: NUT SNACK JOLLY GOOD 16-02. sr 20e AP MEATS BONELESS SMOKED PICNIC STYLE -- PORK SHOULDERS 1b. 23¢ Maple Leaf Tendersweet, Swift's Premium, or Royal Tenderized Smoked Hams "50", 18. 27c fai 18. 29c TENDERIZED AND READY TO EAT--DELICIOUS Ib. 27 w. 29 STEAKS *.s™ 8. 23 | Sirloin, Wjng, Cube or Porterhouse ROASTS BONELESS ROUND Fronts 17 18. 2c Sirloin, Wing, Face Rump or Porterhouse 18. 27 2185. 25¢ Silverbrook Wildmere CAATEAU Hedlund"s Luncheon 1-1b. Tin Smoked Canadian White Meat PURITAN 28-01. Tin 15's Tin Glass Pot 18-072. 3-0 HIGH QUALITY GUARANTEED CHEESE New CK NEW ThoicE PEAS 4 SIEVE 20-02. Tins «P COFFEE wh bog 37 GENUINE SPRING 1910 LAMB Legs (5 29: COTTAGE ROLLS PEAMEAL BACK BACON PEAMEAL Bh BEEF BOLOGNA suceo BLADE ROAST BEEF w 17: SHORT RIB ROAST 18: | FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES CABBAGE ONTARIO LARGE HEAD 3 FRESH GREEN POTATOES oxranio vo. 1 new 10 185. 15c CANADIAN OUT-DOOR-GROWN LB. 5c TOMATOES BANANAS GOLDEN RIPE 3 us 23 PEARS California Bartlett poz. &5¢ DOL. 25 CALIFORNIA VALENCIAS JUICY poz. 10 Over a Year Ib. 23: i: 23¢ Canadian ANN PAGE Mayonnaise 3202. 3 3c NECTAR plended India, TEA 16-02. 2l ww le llc 14. 29. 6 Catelli 0. K. Pkgs. kg. RIPPLE 2 Ibs. Tin Tins 13: a Ae Tims 14 2 Choice eb. Pkg. 1-ib. Pkg. ORANGES 29. 55: | LIMES British Empire Grown : -- i SUPER(E) MARKETS 55: SERVICE 1 OSERVICE OWNED AND OPERATED BY THE Fancy Pink Re- Prices in ef- Until August 3rd.