HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1945-10-25, Page 7Cough
The. Cough That iloago Oa
. • t kind of a, co itis had to.gt rId af,.
da
s e
rt►ak ni
Y and 1c71:
Why not u bottle of Dr, Wood's Norway Tine
and see w quieldy it , wil help to relieve you
n
n
do ?
0o d>< ..
actsu u6, the foundationof the trouble
promptly end. effeaiavely, going � to le,
and stimulatin
the phlegm, ebothng the irritated air Pte, stimulating
tabinteitgchial
"Dr. Wood's' has been on the Market for the past 48 years.
Pxioe 85c a' bottle; the largo fan ily site about 8 times as muoh, 60e, at
unt+era.
lira OQ
Thi T. Ullbtuq Co., Limited, Toronto. Oat.
wOD
T
GsmuD ar 'i yislt with her for time.
Knomin/DGl , oct, 230,44r. and. Jas. Chisholm -on ,Dunday were Mrs
Cher Mrs.
Doug,
Visitors, at the borne or Mr; and • Mrra.
Mrs. Chthholm and taMilY, or T, nig'iey and her
+Me t .I W. Ashileid,' and Mr. and mre„
Co1boine township, wore v1SltQra here Clr4isholni aM daughters, grow the 73°Y -
Air.
Sued ty • lasti07-#
" ... '' iieid rvadA Goilerich`. township.
y, •fi t it . iaited Miss. Edith Clu to ,
Mr.' Tlaonnas Jo .e of a ro vt n sot. M,eMastear
JUrr. and Mrs, ,Javier Wuuace over the, University, llamilt,on, was • the guest
week -end and was accoinnanted. back, ofiMisses a, and L. 'Hortonn and also
by Mrs . •�qye, who spent the •euararm,er
of . Mr. and Mrs. ,,Hume Clutton for William Oliver, .formert ' eonstuhi, at
months bete,- r the w�eeit-end. Grand ,•Bend, died at' his home there
Mr- , Jim •ougherty, bas etw'ned to 1 . Mi 11 ry fxon, c3h r- he octo)er. on 'eImesday of 144 week .attar a
Toronto. tbanh-offering, meeting, of X,ee1flrn
long illness. 'Ile was 9n hie 'seven,tyM
Leo .and Chris. Moerbeck, and John
O'Neill are visiting friends., is -Iowa.
Miss Irene McCarthy of Detroit, is
visitini her tnotbier, Mrs. Wm. Me -
()a • rtily. • a
Mr. and Mrs. ,Hd• Xing and Dave,
from Teeswater, Were Sunday visitors,
with Mr. and Mrs. Blaise Martin'. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ted llaechler, of Gode-
rich, spent .Sunday with Mr. and Mrs,
Clifton Austin,
• LEEBUIN
LIDEBURN•, Oct. 23.E -Mr, Nand Mrs..
Geo. • Glidd' n, from Stoney , • Creek,
visited relatives here on Wednesday
last♦
Miss Sate Hunter, burse at Waterloo
Hospital, spent two or three days at
the end of last week with her father
and brothers . here, Her father accom-
panied her' on her return and will
Society was hula, on 1'rrday, October
i9tb, at• the bouleof Miss• Pelle Hhaw.
There was 'a large atten#ance, Several
former Members beeing", present, and
also 'members, of ,two other societies.
The Meeting vas in charge •or • 'the
president, and was opened with a by'mn
and Scripture reading. Miss Helen
Clark introdueed the guest speaker,
Miss Edith Clutton, a missionary lately
returned from India. • Miss Clutton
told of the difficulty of i iproving living
conditions where ;the people were, so
crowded together as in India. Still,
she said, there was ,iniprovennext. She
concluded ,by singing two verses of a
hymn in one' of ...the' Indian dialects.
Tine. address was, greatly appreciated.
After the close of the meeting lunch
was served., ..
Have you' renewed your subscription
to The Signal -Star? it it is In arrears,
it needs attention.
WHY ANOTHER VICTORY LOAN''?. . 'THE WAR'S
OVER NOW :
BUT THERES
STI LL THE
PEACE TO BE
PAIO FOR
WE MUST' tUPPQRT THE •
ARMIES OF OCCUPATION.;
It all costs money ... peace
as well as war., And Canada
needs our support now, just
as much as ever. The job
isn't finished . • . this is no
time to let up. We've stood
by to this point, let's re-
double
our efforts now, and
sign up for a whole year.
Remember, our dollars are -
buying peace/
JOHN L°ABATT LIMITED
London Canada
ninth ,year.' °
Miss - Mary Elisabeth McKibl on,
Reg.N., daughter of Mrs. 3". W. Me--
:Ribbon, Wipghaxn, has gone to Win-
nipeg .to take a course to Qqualify her
story the
V position .of airline, hostess on
the T,C.A„
victor Falconer,. lrteeve . of Clinton,
has taken over the planing mill in that
town formerly operated by the late
Thomas McKenzie and will Operate it
an connection 'with his . lunnber and.
in
coal busss. e.
•Fergus. Turnbull, E.R. 1,, Dashwood,
was fined .i?2O ands costs• in'' police.
Court at London on a charge of care
less driving, His car collided with a
Department of Highways truck on No.
4 highway on-Oetober 9th. Mrs. Tura;
bull 'vwas severely injured in thecol-
UAW
,Mrs. •Isaac Mii.rvtood, a former resf-
den t of . the Auburn district, died last
week at Clinton after a long illness,
She was in her eightieth *year. ur-
viving.,are a daughter, Mrs. Foal (41h
-
bons, Tampa, Fla., and a niece, Mrs.
Fred Huisser, Seaforth. The funeral
took place tb Blyth Union cemetery.
Rev. C. C. Anderson officiating,
Sarah Jane Netterfieid, widow of.
Thomas 3. McLean, died at het home
Winghaan on October. 15th. in her•
seventy-fourth year. A native of
Turnberry,. she had been a resident
of the Wingham district all her .life.
Her husband died in 1939, and a son,
Neil, of Toronto, and, a daughter, Miss
Eleanore Jeanette, at home, survive.
Mrs. Nettie Amelia Broder McTag-
gart, of Clinton, died on October 16th
at Toronto, where she had lived° for
some years... Surviving are three
daughters, Mrs. A. J. Crerar, .Ottawa
Mrs. Douglas Higgins and Mrs. Thomas
B. Allen, both; of Toronto, and two
sons, George D. McTaggart, Montreal,
and' Group.. Captain Fred G. McTag-
gart, R.C.A.F. The remains were
brought to Clinton • fox burial.
Change"lin Command
.at Radio, School
Grous Captain. E. .A. McGowan,, of
t John, ` t • .,
the Radio School at. Clinton: He suc-
ceeds Sdtiadroit Leader A. S. Turnbull,
who had been in command since
September . Oth. Group Captain Mc
Gowan comes to Clinton .from Goose
Bay, Labrador.
Cook ---McCallum ' •
In the United, church parsonage, 1.61 -
grave, .on Wednesday, October 17th,
Rev. G. H. Dunlop performed the mar-
riage ceremony uniting Edith Jean,
youngest .'daughter' of Mr. and Mrs.
John F. McCallum, 9th concession of
East Wawanosh, and Albert Cook, son
of Mr..„and Mrs. Fred Cook, Gth con-
cession of ° a est Wawanosh. • After;
their return from thehoneymoon trip,
the couple will reside .i't side ;on the bride.
groomn'.a farm on the 66th concession.
big *timr e ;;gambler bad just ,died,
The' funeral. was well attended by his `
•professional friends, In eulogythe
speaker said, . "Spike :1s no dead.” He
only sleeps." , From the. rear came a`
LI
,voice:
l* got x , QO that . says he's
dead." :
or
DISABLED
e.:
honc
� CleanS c
Quickly rem -lived m . Sanitary "x'u ka, i'...
norm) OLxNTON 210 'STR O
William Stone Sorts, Lithited
INGERSOLL ONTARI
Your CIZCiLEX
will Believe , Nowt
—•AR't't l„TIC PAINS*
-:--RHEUMATIC )?GINS
—NEURITIC PAINS
—VARICOSE'VEINS •
—SINUS ;
—INSOMNIA
: NERVOUSN'ESS ,
—TTEADACHE
—CONSTIPATION
and many other circulator ...:
ailments.
FREE DEMONSTRATION,'
IN YOUR•:HOME :..
.; : NO ,, oBLIGAT/O.N
ON DISPLAY AT
I: H:= ZINN
ROME APPLIANCE STORE
' ^till ,'-° { �. ±hi¢}•J�
r � � • • ifftlf ��'
• -.+fi fir.{r `i
{ . , &.... L tri
SQMEWHERE ' in the; back of your
mind, there's thaturge to go ..
'places. Right now it must 'be filed
under `Future" but it's part ofusas
Canadians to want to `discover for
ourselves what the rest of,the world
is like-=to.plan for that "some day,':
when.; welt -take *trip! 'Vat's NOV
it must be part• of our planning Dow,'
to make sure such pleasant things .as
trips are possible in the Oost-war
world. ' Add they'll, be possible only
if we fight against inflation ---fight
nada a s dollar worth
now to keep Ca .
full .dollar!
•
Why.°is NOlp' so important? Be•
cause NOW civilian goods are scarce,
money is plentiful. , NOW'' xs the bine
'(we must guard, against. paying more,
than things are worth --against black
markets --against buying more than
we, need,tior, goods we don't need!
•i eigi;fJi' et; toted rt'
�. $Ryd'l�/JCNG'r xNortl$'1rR1f �t)I�'1cAl�o)
NOW is the time we must support
rationing and price controls!
Up to the present, -We've keptour
dollar sound. ; And we can continue ,
to :do so if we 'keep` `up a strong,
steady fight against inflation! .
• If we fail in this fig prices will
riser Wages will nev , quite catch
up. Soon you'll pay, perhaps a
dollars for a quarter's worth of goods!
And that ineans•your dollar is worth
onlya quarter! That's inflation.
And after inflation, comes de-
pression. Depression means neither
you nor anyone else in Canada will
have trips. - You ll. , he lucky if you,
have a job! So,' far our own sakes,
-for they sake of returned men, for, our
children, let's never relax our strug le
to keepCanada's dollar worth a full .
dollar.
1 pledge •myself to do my parr
in fighting Inflation z' •�
By observing rallening and avoidlpg-
blackinarketi in. any sira¢a or
fon%
,. •
By respecting price Onkel' and other .°
t anti•tfflatidn measures, and ie-
fraining from careless and.unnete5-
sari► buying. 1 will not buy two
where one will do, nor will r buy
a "new" i where an `old" will do:
By huying Victory Bonds and War
Savings Stamps, supporting' tax
attar and abiding
by rr11 such measures
which Will loverthe
(~r cost :•of loins. and
,heip keep -nict$ ate
...r< . , haorr*nal level,
NO NEED t� remind him that Canada's plans for his wel-
fare are as far-reaching and generous as any in the'world.
BUT THERE IS NEED to prove that now, with the life;:
and -death struggle ended, we are as determined and
wholehearted as ever in our resolve to give him• the
best break in the World.
HE WILL BE WATCHING the outcome of this Ninth Loan
p
"Drive: a knows that on it depends the success of ciut
plans for his rehabilitation and, employment.
There can be only one . ainsvver. • And that is the
overwheimitig support, by every Canadian of Canada's
Greatest Victory Loan.