r THURSDAY, OCTOBER STH, 1939 PAGE SEVEN THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO OF Interest To - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Be autif ut Decoraions For Hutton-Gibson Nuptials Saturday Heavy rains failed to mar the beauty of a Newcastle wedding on Saturday when Dorothy Mabel Gibson, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Gibson, was mar- ried ta Capt. Clarence Merton Hutton, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hutton, Brampton. The ceremony was held in St. George's Anglican HIT HEU COLDMISEIR RIghl WI,.r. ilHies Youl CLEMfYOUlNOSmofeuffocatingmnucuus -oenup your cold-clogged head- betemore frèéelyl Vicks Va-tro-nol is what you need. A few draps gve swlft relief frorn head cold discamot TuEs TREATMENT is successful because Va-tro-nol is acffe medication-con- talnlng several esetial rel~lfvng sgtedfor naose and upper throat. WANIUr ua 01 NOSI Whatsmae when Ue ut firat uulffle or sneeze, Va-tro-nol actu- ail helpe to Pre- -yIgg Wn many colds fin developng. YA"IIOL ouly between brad @lices; aprad outalde of mch sandwich wtb molted butter toast on bth ides und.r low broLlar hoat until brown. Pour over tiie sandwich a sauce mode of melted chosese. POTATO AND M IlCAS8UOI Plhaan pund aiCan.dor ccà* hSliand lce l ces- 61 loly malt 4L. home hdoube a ller; a*r h%34cu'p sall. Pur this aver the Ssi. Cover tiie mixture wtii mashmd cookad potato, and lUne the uini of tiie casserole wth unbaked biscuits. Bak. lu bot (423') aveu until biscuits are doue. IIIIII- IIII----- Deportmont of Fsels toa Pieaue seud me y-our 52- e Dookit, --100 Tamptn Naffe .................................. (P1.S EPNT LaTrEuu PLMULI) Addrn................................... ....... ......... .................cw. Church, Newcastle, with Rev. D. R. Dewdney offlciating. 11 Given in marriage by her bro- ther, W. Harold Gibson, the bride ware midnight blue veivet'with matching accessories and carried crimsan bronze mums. She was attended by Dorothy Bowden, of Brampton, wha ware a rosey rush velvet hat and dress and carried light bronze mums. Mr. Hutton was attended7 by Russel Hutton, and ushers were Wallace and Herbert Gibson. Church decorations were most attractivei using asters, zinnias, gladiali and michuelmas daisies. Follawing the ceremony a re- ception was held ut Williams Grave, Newcastle, with Mrs. W. H. Gibson receiving in Queen's blue triple sheer with black ac- cessaries and a corsage of yellow pomn pom mums. Mrs. Huttan aiso received in a black ensemble. Her fiowers were a corsage o! white poms. The happy couple ieft for a wedding trip through Northern Ontario, the bride wearing a tra- velling !rock of capri rase woi with fur neckpiece and black ac- cessories. Their future address wiii be Brampton. Mlas Gibson is a graduate a! MacDonald Hall, Guelph. Do we have ta go ahead, naw, wîth that Canadian National Rail- ways terminal project in Mon- treal? - Woodstock Sentinel-Re-J view. Noted Arnerican doctar says Hitler la suffering from a brain disease. Trouble is, the world la doing most a! the sufferng-To- ranta Telegran'.. There are so many doudcous variefies of Canadian FISH available alfthe yeur round, no muffer where yau live, fhat yau cun add pleasing new dishes fa fthe family menus. And rememiber, Fiuh la uouriahing, and is easiiy diçeated. Aik your dernier about the différent kande cf Fich ho coni gt for you, and arrange to serve Fish ta your family ofteu. DEPARTMUNT 0F ISHEIRS, OTTAWA. 'O . 9 I Trhanksgivin' When the frost bas tinged the grape vine and the summer days are o'er, And the chilly autumn winds have blown your way; When the granary bins are bustin' with their wealth of harvest lore. And the niow is Packed clear to the ridoee with hay. When the root hause and the silo are a-rnnnin' aver full, And the old corn crib is .anmed rigzht to the door: And the new snioke honse is loaded and the cder vats are f ull, And the cellar bins wopt hold an apple more. And yo've f locks of geese and chickens. and you've turkeys, ducks and sheeP, And fat cattle runinatin' in their stalls. And there's loads of f ood and fodder for the iivestock you will keeP Ali winter through within your stable walls. And vour hozs are slick with fatness. and vour winter's wood's ail in, Then vour heart shines fartb like sun throulzh some dark rift; And vou shout with Ioyfnl ladness f rom vour gratefulness within: "Oh Thanksgivin' for this wond- rous harvest gift." 628 Crawford St., Toronto. RALPH GORDON Hints For Homebodies Wrltten for The Statesman By JESSIE ALLEN BROWN Rave A Hobby When you are making your Fl plans do flot negiect planning te leurn something ncw. Jota a cluss, or start one. You can listen teaa lecturer, or you can do yaur own icading. We get a lot more out a! arganized work, and leurning with others, than we do warking by ourselves. A home and fumily are flot enough for uny woman. the days when you have more tlme and less family. If yau - have cantinued net develap in- ta one of those pitiful women, knaw what ta el le do wlth taem- Jut le selves, af t er Brown their familles are grawn up. Aduit educutian la anc of the greatest af modern movements. If you are bcwiidered and need direction, get in tauch wita your nearest University. They help thase who have net had mucli formai education as weii as the better educated. If they have nat what yau want they will direct you how ta go about getting it. Newspaper People As a ciass, newspaper people are tac most interesting I have ever met. For ane thing, tacy know se much. Sometimes you hear it said that tac pupers print tao much. When you heur taem get together, tuke dawn their back halr, and rcully taik, you are amazed ut tac things taey know and do net pint. Inside stuf ai- ways has its appeal. There is se much prafessianai jealausy in rnuny walks oa! ilfe, but it does not uppear in newspuper work. Truc, they are always glad ta beat tac ather fellaw, but taey arc just us ready ta help. That la the taing that struck me se forcibly whcn I first startcd f0 write for publicat ion. Other wrtcrs and editors helpcd me in every pas- sible way - even f0 suggesting markets. When ever I seil some- thing, or extend the market for tais column, my writer friends are as picased as if taey had dane it themselvea. They are so en- couraging, too. If something pieuses taem, they wili suy se. Weekly editors are busy people and yet tacy will tuke tirne ta cornmend sometaing that pieuses them. Not only editors who print this column, but athers, and often they are people I have neyer met. I have had considerable contact wlth- musicians and know their inabiiity ta work together, se the contrast wus refreshing. An art- sf friend fells me taut sume in- ability existsa uinng artista. She hus rccently sfurted ta write und she cunnof get over tac ficndii- ness and encouragement ather witers have given her. Nat only words, but concrete hclp. The !riendship a! other writers ha been my greutesf gain from rny wifing. Stains on thc Kitchen Sink Even wita goad care, same- times brown spots came on the sink. Sametimes it is under the sink strainer, or perhaps tea or coffee cause tacm. If you use a littie Javelle water, you will find that it will bleuch jhemr ight ont. It works equaiiy weii on tac enumel fable-tops. I have neyer found it neccssary ta use it on a bath-tub, but I imagine it would clean up uny brawn spots there, too. Testlnt Jelly There are severul testa, which rnuy be made, ta tel if the jelly hus arrlved ut the jellytag point. Let the jelly bol for fîve minutes after the heuted sugur has been uddcd. Remove from the tire while you are testlng Ift t pre- vent overcookll'lg. Put a liffle on a cold plate and cool quickly. If it can be pnshed back with a spoan, Ai l cooked enough. An- other way a! testing is from the point af a spoon. Dip a spoon in- ta the syrup, cool shightly, and if the jelly does not corne off in draps, but runs together in flakes, the jelly is done. The most ac- curate method of ail is with a candy thermometer. Fruit juice should jell from betw'een 218 and 222 degrees. Dead ripe fruit will not jeli, so be careful ta choose frnit a littie on the green side. The addition o! a little lemon juice is a help as the acid in- creases the jellying power. 1. Thou shaît flot forget that thy child's body is God's temple. Therefore strivqý to build it strong, and pure and beautiful. 2. Thou shait highly prize thy child's intellect, and seek ta de- velop a strong wiil and a great and noble purpase. 3. Thou shaît flot pamper him; curb thyself, and make of hlm a man. 4. Thou shait make thy home a retreat, a happy place where he will love most ta be. 5. Thou shalt play with him, thus inculcating principles of fuir play and a proper sense of the fitness of things* 6. Thou-shait flot say "Don't" repeatedly, but rather devise plans for wholesome activities as outiets for his abaundlng ener- gies. 7. Thou shait not neglect thy tchild for outside interests. Nei- ther shaît thau duli thine own perception by too close adherence ta hausehoid cares. 8. Thou shait flot in any wise betray thy child's confidence, nor wonnd his tender feelings by thoughtiess word or action. 9. Thou shait make of thy heart a cosy nest ta which he may fiee for comfart and security 10. Thou shalt seek day by day ta implant within thy chlld a love for the beautiful, for nature and natnre's God. For KITCH EN and BATH ROOM You need Gillett'a Lye in the kritchen and in fthe bathraom. Keep it handy for drains, for pots and pans, for numneraus other household tasks. Gillett's Lye wifl save yau hours of hard work-it's the easy, efficient, economiAcal way of cleaning. ON-se di-ivo is j n bot wsae. Tisa aco the <o,, ia.ie t tima 140* Locai Librarian Fis Library for Children 's Story HourSaturday Upon request Mrs. V i v i a n Argue, Librarian, has furnished Statesman readers with this re- port of the "Children's Story Hour" she is canducting in the Public Library in the Town Hal each Saturduy marning: Feeling that the aid adage -1 "Who gives a littie chiid a treat, Makes joy-bells ring in Heuven's& street"I - stili holds true; and feeling, as one of onr ministers said one Sunday morning not long aga, that in these Urnes o! chaos and strife we must do aur ut- most ta give joy and happiness ta the wee folk; - for reasons snch as these and for the reasan taa thut one of the marks o! a capablyî managed librury la the "Chul-c dren's Story Hour", we have started again this feature. We were off ta a good start Satnrday morning with 30 or more children aiert and eager for "fairy" stories, which is their unanimaus choice. The first twa stories we chose ta tell for aur opening feature were "Why Crabs Walk Side- ways' and "The Glove Hanse", bath with morals which we in no wlse point. ont, for the simple reason that children are quite capable of seeing the moral them- selves. Then we have started readîng serially Wait Disney's arrange- ment o! "Pinocchio" which we think the chiidren are gaing ta lave. We are hoping from time ta trne ta have some o! aur Hîgh School girls lnterested in chiidren and story-teliing, ta assist in thla feature. Mlas Kay O'Neill hus graciausly consented ta tel the story ,of "The Nightingale" a week frmSaturday morning. We open ut 10.30 sharp and those too late far the first story have ta remain outaide until it la flnished and may then corne in. We are loaking for greater in- terest in aur iibrary amang the town and country folk thla f ail and winter. We are an Associa- tion Library and are vitully de- pendent upon the patronage and loyalty of aur citizens. Peppers There are twa kinda of peppers - sweet and hot. It la very easy ta distingulah them. The hot pep- pers are smuller and have a point- ed end. The sweet pepper la larg- er and the end does flot came ta a point but is rather blunt. The red pepper o! either variety is the green one ripened. It la well ta remove the seeds o! either variety with a spoon and not with the hands, ta avaid a burn. Once a!- ter making a pepper pickle my hands were sa badiy burned we had ta calI a doctor. I spent the night with my hands in a basin o! cold water! Sweet Red Pepper Jam 12 sweet red peppers 2 cups vinegar 3 cups sugar Remave the seeds from the peppers and put them through the food chopper. Sprinkle with sait and let stand for thrce haurs. Drain and rinse with cold water. Add the vinegar and sugar and bail slowly until thc mixture shows a tendency ta jeul when tested on a coid plate. Pour into sterilized jars and seul. Serve with meats or use in sandwiches. PlUM Jara A reader has sked me ta re- peut my Plum Jam recipe, so here it la. It la really a jeiiy with the fruit ieft in. Wash the pluma and caver with water until you can just see thc water. Bail for twen- ty minutes ufter thc fruit cames ta the bail. Meusure and udd an equal quuntity of sugur. After it cames ta the bail aguin, bail for five midnutes. The pits wlll sep- arate after the sugar la added and they are easy ta sklmn out by using a slatted spoan or a fork. Battle in sterllized jars and seul. A MOTHERS TEN COIWMANDMENTS By Alice L. Dyer Eyesight Education And By C.FI.Tuck Optometrist Eyesigh t Spe'cialist Disney Bldg. (opp. P. O.) Number 101 No subject is as vital as the matter a! your eyes and how ta minfamn their maximum useful- nesa for fhe many yeurs taey must serve yau. Defective cyca are tac cause o! much physicai discom- fart. Cross cyca (aquint) vertical and horizontal. Styca and in!iumed iids. Large percentage o! headachea. Backwardness and seeming stu- pidity ut achool. Loss o! nerve energy, stamach trouble. 1 1 have cases on record o! the actual furning a! the eyes o! chul- dren and aduits which are straigh- tencd und irnprovcd witain twa montas by tac application o! tac proper lenses. Mare severe cases may tuke longer and muy demand Mare than the correction a! a nicre refractive error. My experience ha proven that glasses supplicd wifhout a thor- ough cye exumination arc o! littie avail. The eye exarnlnation ta be complete musttf uke itt consid- erution points far deeper thun a more test a! vision. Where your eyes are concerned, if pays ta get tac mont hlghly speclalzed ser- vice obtuinuble. ta be conttaued) MODERN MYSTERY <Contributed by Local Writer) Has it ever strnck yon that homely girls are about as extinct, as the Passenger Pigeon? And sa they shonld be. Nat because same worshîpper o! beauty has system- atically poisaned them ail, or made remittance wamen af them. Not ut ail. They are ahl around ns, but their disguise is perfect. One might venture ta say, at the risk of bringing down some wrath upon her head, that this generation of women is the best dressed and mast b e a ut i f nuiy groomed of any in history. There have aiways been ioveiy women, sleekly gowned, passessing charm and paise, o! course, but ta-day the foregoing desirable adjectives can be applied ta mine ont af ten women, which la a high percent- age in uny man's language. Every bnsiness girl, every hanse wife nawadays is a iess expensive replica o! her society sister. Her skirts are reasonably short; she has adapted the latest hair-do .ta suit her awn features; she applies make-up with devastating effect, and her ciothes are simple, but oh so smart! And there, my fri- ends, is almost any girl'you once thonght rather homely. She has nsed her head and benefited !ram her reading of Vogue and the daily fashion coinmn, perhaps a little from seeing beautiful movie stars who have overcome a seem- ing flaw. She has learned ta play np her good points and tone down her bad ones. And she can bny good clothes at reasonable prices, having acqnired good taste if she wasn't barn with it. There are still short. plnmp girls, we suppose, who will wear busties this year, and tail, thin girls who will dress in princes lines, but they are definiteiy a minanity. And isn't it a iovelier world with so'many good-iooking wamen around? We hear an em- phatic "yes" from the men. As for us, we think it mukes life much mare exciting and it gives us that feeling o! satisf action which resuits in poise and an at- tractive personality. The homely girls are dead, but long may they flourish in their glorified state! Advertising Low.rs Cost 0f LUving Custamers have long since learned that taey get more for their rnaney, week in and week out, from the merchunts who are not a!raid ta advertlse their goods and prices than from the merchants who use no promotion- ai effort whatever to inform tac public thut they are even in busi- ness. The sume applies ta nationally advertlaed merchandlae, and in discussing tais point The Finun- ciai Newsgîves these interesting facta which are a! particular in- terest ta every shapper who ha the responisibility a! buying for thc f umily. Let us sec, it says, whut advcr- tlaing actually costa on sorne real- iy well-known producta, when re- duced ta ferma o! cast per indi- viduai item:- The advertising expenditure on a nutioally advertised sheet that retuils for $1.75 is lc. On a shirt cosfing $1.95 the ad- vertising expense la 6/100 o! lc. A company selling a nutionally known breakfast food spends 3/10 o! lc per 15c package for adver- tising. It costs 1/5 o! lc ta adverflae a well-known saap costing 7c per cake. Ont o! 10e that the consumer pays for a package o! a weii- known brand o! crackers, tac ad- vertlaing expense is less than 1/10 o! lc. The cost o! advèrtising a 12c can o! soup la 36/100 o! lc. When tac consumer buys a 5c glass o! whut is probubly the best known o! ail soft drinks, tac sum o! 1576/100,000 o! le goca for ad- vertising. The advertlaing expenditure on a buo!o bread casta less than tac wrappcr which keeps it cdean. Balanced uguinst tac slight cost o! advertlaing in the distributed product is tac !act thut advertis- ing has stimulated consumer de- mand, created buyer awarcness o! tac new or improved, increased the veiocity a! moncy ta trade, put additional men ta work man- ufacturing the advertlaed prodtîct, and given employmcnt in udver- tising as well *. A hy-praduct o! udvertising, o! course, is the modemn newspaper or magazine, produced ut greut expense and sold ta readers ut very much leas than the cost o! production. Advertiaing ma ke a these publications available ta the masses. Economic reformera wiil have ta look somewhere else than ta advertising for a whipping boy. Advertising is the basis o! much o! aur udvancement in the pat 30 years. It ha benefitted the runk and file o! the public im- measurably. How else than by advertising can we hope ta keep puce wita invention? Its cost la a negligibie factor on tac con- sumer's budget. Appe Juice Galning In Popularity As Health Drink Maybe Eve hud something ta do with it - or muybe it's ull because o! the ancient heulth pro- verb about "an apple a day" muking the doctor keep his dis- tance. At uny rate, a taste for apples apparently la inherent ta tac human race. And taut muy wexplain tac rapidly growing pop- ularity o! upple juice as tac new- est o! preservcd natural fruit juices and marketed by tac Irwin ,pple Orchurda o! Whitby. Medical authorities, in constant- ly incrcustag numbers, endarse tac pure unadulteruted julce o! free-ripened Canadian apples as a hlghly benoficlal health food. Contalning Vitanns A, B and C, bouides an abundanco o! esuen- tiai body-building minerais, apple juice la wideiy recommended bath as a deliciaus and refreshing bey- erage and as a major ingredient in many appetizing dishes for the !amily table. Not tao sweet, noft ta tart - but wlth a freshness and tang aIl its own - pure apple juice retains all the flavour and gaadness o! the upples themselves. As a bey- erage, between meula, jnst before euting or ut bedtime, it seems ta be gainlng almoat universal ap- proval. Becanse o! its anti-uric-ucid quuhity, doctors have found apple juice valuabie in treating rheu- matigm, gaut and similur aili- menta, one distinguished practi- tioner even reporting "lvery goad resuits fram fasting patienta ex- ciuslVrely an apple juice and wut- er." Muny physicians have re- commended it ulsa as a tonic for children, elderiy persons and.con- valescents. Apple juice, now availabie for home use in convenlent contain- ers, is nothing mare or less than the pure juice pressed from sel- ected upples, with no calauring matter, sugar or preservatives added. HATRED "Hatred is self-punishment.- Hosea Ballou. "Clad in the panoply of Love, human hatred cannot reach you."ý -Mary Baker Eddy. "Men hate thase to whom they have to lie."-Victor Hugo. "No man hates him at whom he can laugh"-Dr. Johnson. "Better la a dinner of herbs where love is than a stailed ox and hatred therewith."-Bible. "Plutarch says very finely that a man should flot allow himself to hate even his enemes."ý-Addîson "Happiness is the naturai flow- er of duty."0 "There is no man but may make his paradise." - Beaumont'and Fletcher. "He who la good is happy-."- Habbington. "Trne wisdom la the price of happiness."-Young. No more do people draw water from the Old Village Well, but many homes stili depend on the antiquated iron pump. It is back-breaking work to pump and carry water to the housein ail kinds of weather. Don't make your family put up with such out-of -date methods any longer. An up-to-date, compact DuroWater Supply System wiil fumniali running water under pressure ta kitchen, bathroom, laundry and farmn buildings. Running water also permits fthe installation of a Modern Emco Bathroam, a very necessary con- venience far flhc heaif h and weil- being of yaur family.Also, Mod- cmn Emco Kitchen equipment foleas- en the% drudgery af housework. - - - Emca fixtures and equipment are moderately priced. The Snow-White 2Te x 42" enarnelled Sink only, including faucef ready for installa- tion, costs .................................................... Sink and Cabinet with faucet, as illustrated.... ... <Tmp, ir- pipe ad ttine xau) The Dura Special pump has a capacity of 250 gals. per hour; is supplied wif h a e5 gal. tank, 25 or 60 cycle mofar. and casts only ............ $29.75 $57.15 $80.00 SM&U entIly Payuments The Governnient Home Improvemeat Loan Act or Dura Finance Plan enubles yen to purchuse Emco fixtures, fittings und Dura Pumps an the monthly puy- Ument plan aver a period of fhree yeurs. Enquiries given prompt attention and estimates upplicd without charge. Bert Parker Plomber' Du"-peol.l Phone 2684 Bowmanviilo Aise supplled for Geselà. Uisln. oporatla. EMPiRE BRASS MFG. CO,, LMD. L.udom nemitou Toronto Sudhut Wlnmlp.g Vancouver 13 .19 PAGE SEVEN THURSDAY, OCTOBER STH, 1939 Lord Make Me BIg (By L. R. McK. on Hornemaker ,Page o! Globe and Mail) Whenever I hear o! any wornan who is, in tais great NationalI emergency, hoarding uny o! the necessities o! life, I arn ashamed a! her. Why should she because she ha a iittle mare money than her neighbors lay in huge supplies which she will nat use for a long turne ta came, while those others are flot ta a position ta do so, and wauldn't if taey could. Let's take Qur chanoe on getting whut we need when we need it. Truc put- riotisrm la big and unsclflah. In tac lust war we rculiy lucked for notaing, whilc tac people o! Eng- ],and and France wcre hard put ta it. Even now taey mnust be feel- ing tac pinch; but taey weicome uny sacrifices thut muy hei1p ta defeat tac common enemy, and are cheerful and courageous. A British periodicul suys that in Germany euch persan is aiiowed oniy anc-quarter ounce o! soap each wcek, and this must include all purposes - toilet, i a n n d r y, clcaning, etc. Let us learn ta en- dure hardness, so that when it cames, us came it muy, we shahl be reudy. And let us keep aur china up, and have aur little soc- il gatherings just the saine. Don't think you cun't have Tom and Mary ta tea because you must save ta bny wooi ta knit socks. Nonsense! We need ta be much with euch other in these gnim times to cheer and help. And this la a gaod fime ta, forget al aid gievances and apites, and ta be kind and loving anc ta uanother, sol that the White Angel Peace may dwell in aur midst.