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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1940-11-6, Page 6THE BRV SEL SS MOST 'Ytredne ax, ::'.ovefober sill, 1040 44 �i. t .i 14=+ • 121 `e %. ist ti 0xx,,��bb 4:4 4 +2+ 4+4 440 4:10. 020 .4 424 o{a +020 +z' 424 424 +}O 44. +o z, 40 ,z+ +44 ►�MeN*# y►oM�M�MAM+NoA-M�M�Mo1M�N0�*Ho4NN.0.t.1�M+1 4=4 +2•i Entire X44 4+ ,4 44 ust Be Cleared 424 e24 42. Of Used vianeelgallelisementueleleineumen ,....ice..... '39 DeLuxe Ford Coach '38 DeLuxe Ford Sedan '38 Buick, Special Sedan '38 DeLuxe Ford Coach '37 Dodge, Special Sedan '37 Standard Ford Coupe '37 Stallard Ford Coach '35 Terraplane Sedan '34 DeLuxe Ford Coach '34 DeLuxe Ford Coupe '31 Ford Coach '30 Ford Sedan 2-'29 Ford Coaches 2-'28 Ford Coaches '28 Ford Coupe '28 Chevrolet Coach '27 Chevrolet Sedan TRUCKS '35 Dodge 2 -ton '35 International 2 -ton '36 Ford Pick -Up '37 Dodge g -ton '34 Ford 1'4 -ton '29 Ford 1:4 -ton Aar� ... .24 4. 424 424, 2! 4;0 oto 420 4.14, 4♦0 420 .Ze o,+o 4 + 44 44.444444eoN.o4•404444444•4ONHoION'oMN'H.4o0oioNONoo414•••••oNOOoo4 Z, 00 2 sed Tractors 44Q000o4®4041.4O4440000D44o�o0o4•4o*t.4444040044.44004004400••••444.44o•• oz4. 42. 1 Work Horses &Colts .Y. Buy With Confidence, By t.' eying at L. & W. Jackson Motors Ltd. + Phone 161 Listowel, Ont. ez; .2. 4Y. p:4 * 0,..• •:• 40.4*NiN4444 •••4 �N�4.�N`o+�M01o4 Lose Your Registration Card? To always carry on one's person their registration certificate is a warning that has been made to the public sufficient times now that there shouldn't be any. doubt, You never blow when you will be called upou to produce it and it you have- n't it with you 1t may be a rattier expensive mistake. It fa! to be expected that to be expected that quite a numirer of people will lose Or lay their registration certificates. As a matter of fact Government of- tietals report that already thoustevie ' Of applications havt+ already neer 1, recti -wad hp them. Such people. will. S of course weeder hoy they can at - cure cure devileates. The answers are ;as follows: A new card ran only be got by ap- /eying to the Domtniou Statistician, a ..iter. It twill take weeks, as verde will be lssued only after check with the original registration form whi.•'t goes to Ott•twa, The applirx.,°,on should give the name and the num- ber of the e'lertorel distuict and nem her of potitre diy areas "In which tit tozistrant. ordinarily- resided dur- ..tir ration period.' in the east of registration at place of ani levy:nem:. the number of electoral Start Usm OWLAN D'S Bread NOW ! Wrapped For our Protection Bakery in Your Own Locality. BOKAR COFFEE—always on hand district and polling subdivision should be used, just as on the cant. In the case of registration away from Brussels, or surrounding town- ship, or as the case may be, the numbers must be those as if regle. tration had been made at home. This may entail some trouble but it is essential. Thereason is that et Ottawa, where all the forms eventu- ally go for sortation, they will be flied in the home record. Regtatrat'a advise brat all applying to Ottawa for a duplicate card should keep a copy of the letter or application and carry it for p oduotion on demand, r jest as they would carry the orogtu- al card. It is also advised that all yard holders should neep a separate record of them, with all nuuthe:s, she e it can be consulted in case that crura is lost. Incidentally, finders of registration cards will save owners lunch inconvenience and embarrassment by returning then promptly. We have not beard of many cards being lost in ibis district so far but as time passes the more careless individuals ar. likely to Lind they are missing theist. t f "I hear your boy friend wants to settle down and own a. house." 'Well, he's got a good start, I gave frim the gate today." A 0 ROWLAND'S BAKERY i' .arte 113X Brussels, Ont. *MP c s434t 44 ;1 +r i te hti Warns Against Leaving School Federal Labor Minister Mc. Larty Tette .Oanadtan Young People Under 16 to Stay With Studies—Otherwise Big Risk of Being Unemployed Hon. Norman A. MoLarty, La- bor Minister, last week issued a. .statement warning •Canadian youag people against leaving school to take the numerous "blind alley" jobs that the war booth in industry is creating. "Every youth who fails to take advantage of the opportunity tp con- tinue Iris schooling until the com- pletion of the High School or Mee - Meal education course takes a grave risk of becoming unemployed alta: the tear, with a poor ',chalice of competing with boys better equipped 'n education and training:" The Labor Minister warned, "Vanda. mentally, the best insurance against 'tnempelynent is trained mind and hands,', he added, Too Many 'Blind Alley" Jobs eleLearty's statement was prompt ed by reports of falling attendance In High Schools and technical schools throughout the Dominion, as a result of the comparative ease with which jobs in industry can be secured, `The Labor elinister urg.ee that the parents of the Dominion, as well as the young people them- selves, take a long-range view of the importance of education, Moat • he -heed alley" jobs into which youths 'were now going. McCarty suggested, could be filled by bank. eappd men, Com,— ,t—r• If Peonies Don't Bloom Move 'Ern Serre'tmes Shallower Plant atg Helps Peonies teat have failed to bloom ne,.y he hemetitted by a shift to an- ther location, or by shattowe• Planting --not deeper than two o; three inches. The present is a go.r•i time to 'prove theta. Fast cal} tor sowing panty seed ,f V THAT money? Why, the money in the banks! The money care- fully put away by you and your neighbours in savings accounts. The money you could have spent today but wanted to keep safely against some future need. The businessman's money for use in his normal operations. There are more than 4,846,000 bank deposit accounts, savings and current. Within these two classes the great majority of deposits are small or of moderate amount. (I, But you'd be wrong if you assumed from this, that the rest of the deposits are owned by the few! Quite the contrary! The railways, for instance, have depositsin the chartered banks — and that indirectly includes the whole population of the Dominion. The trade unions have deposits. Millions of policy -holders share in the ownership of insurance companies' deposits. QAnd don't overlook the deposits of wheat pools; farm co-operatives; churches; municipalities and municipal hydro commissions, school districts; school children's penny bank savings deposited with the chartered banks; and commercial and"mining corpora- tions with very wide lists of shareholders, large and small, all over Canada. Truly, money on deposit in Canada's chartered banks is owned, in fact, by you and your fellow -Canadians. In war, as in peace, Canada's Chartered Banks maintain, uninter- rupted, their useful services — safeguarding depositors' funds; facilitating the nation's business — looking forward to peace with freedom as the only sure basis of enduring prosperity. ,y THE CHARTERED BANKS OF CANADA —_ _r early spring bloom is desired; sob limestone, if used, should be very id colons, such as Swiss Blue, Black finely ground. On permanent Paa• King. Snow Queen and the Alb tare lands, it seldom pays to lime .America winner, .Coronation Gold, soils tvhicit have a reaction of over are =oh more effective in bord,rs pH 6.0. The approximate amount re - than the usual mixtures. qulred per acre can be determined quickie) by a soil test, Pruning Season There's plenty of work In the garden now for the pruning shear:: anany shrubs can be thinned Sat to give mire room for vigorous new growth; the same applies to male and bush fruits, such as r'aspberrl and currants; weedy tops of Per- ennials that have completed their growth, should be removed. 7t ,t=-0 FARM NOTES NEED FOR LIME ON MANY SOILS (By G. R. Snyder, Soli Chemist) MB.* Rev. 'Dr. Robert Laird Treasurer United Church Succumbed at Toronto Rev, D. Robert 'Laird, 69, treas- urer of the Called Church of Can- ada since its eattablisbanent in 1.996 died in Toronto on Friday, Dr. Laird had been active in the affairs of both the Presbyterian and United Church and eveviet ely had been treasurer or the Prosby. terian Church before church union. Born in Sfelpette, Peed., Ur, Profitable production of milk, the Laird has educated at Ptotou derivatives of which form Canada's .Atcademy, Ptoton, 1..0., Kingston most favored war time agricultural � 'Collegiate Institute and . Queen's exports, depends very largely on an ' Uulversity, xingston, Ont. II" abundance of hi) h quality home• also attended the University et grown protein feed, such as Is pro- Perlin, duped by good crops of clover end He was ordained in the Presby - alfalfa. Wien Church, October 1, 1595, Apply Fine Limestone and his drat charge was In St. Art - i drew's Chtirch, Camllbellford, Ont, Tests indicate that the soil it fields where these crops thrive best In 1101, pr. Laird was appointed is high in line; likewise, that many financial agent ' and professor of failures of these crops are due 1,0 practical theology at Queen's Cul - strongly neid soil eendltlons, ra t'erslty, a position he held unit salting front a deficiency or Lits mineral substance.Crops take min. •sidtrable lime from the soil, but vet'p heavy losses a -e dare also to run-off and leaching during seasons of heavy rainfall, After -Harvest Fertitiz'np Finely ground limestone fe the most economical liming nutter/al for general application on the farm. Ret}', after the crops have been harvested, and before or durinr, after -harvest cultivation is the meat suitable time to apply limestnna'. Thoroughly mixed with the soil, it acts more rapidly than It does 1f lett on the surface. 0411erally, sut- ii;lent Hmeetone should be added to bring the soil reaction up to If 6,6. Potatoes, however, may scab badly wben the soil is so se to neutral. A pH of 5.1 or tow Is better for this crop. and tee 1913 when be became secretary of -the board of finance of the Prep. byterlan Church in ,Canada, Ile tilled that position during the next seven years and 10 addition was secretary organizer of the Forward 'Movement of the church in 1915-20. Dr. Laird became treasurer of the church In,1030 and continued in that Mitten in the United Church after 1925. ;1111 lthe sailor hoed broken Itite his girl, After ignoring several letters, requesting the return o1 her photogreplt, lie received ono threat- ening to complain to the 10918111. Deoiding to silence he f time, he borrowed all the pictures of 71 r Big Increase in Hog Marketing Never before has the Canadian hog industry witnessed such a tresnendous expansion in the space 1 of one year. its n 1940. This is amply illustratedithas byIagaves cotn- t piled by the Afaryeting Service, i Dominion Department of A:grlcat- tore. Deliveries to public stock yards and direct to packing plants in the Dominion during the first forty-two weeks of 1940 amounted to 3,792,000 hogs, an increase of no less than 46 Over cent over the eoreespondiug ' period of 1930. Os a matter of fact, marketings for the forty -tiro weeks referred to very' closely approach the figure for the whole of the cal. 1 ender year of 1937, a Year when Canadian hog raisers created an all time production record. ar I Women .Criminals !Definitely Deadlier There are fewer criminals than male offenders, but they are more violent, the U.S. Department et justice reported last week Only 8.2 per cent 01 the arrest rerorda examined by the Federal Bureau of Investigation during the first six months of 1040 represented women. But or each 1,000 lien aid 1,000 women arrested, it was found that there were 13women as coni- ptired lvI.h 10 men arrested for hard ei', 1 At a reeeptioix, 'Oliver Wendel! Helmets discovered a little girl look - hie hungrily nt the cakes and sand- wicltes on the tea table. ".At'e you hungry, little girl!" asked Dr, Holmes. "Yes, sir," the child replied, "Then why don't you taste some food'" "ileelause I haven't a Cork." 'iFtlntfetg nitre mune . before Corks," Holmes observed, stnllingty, "Not mine;" the 1litle girl replied, girls available on the ship, sending LOST— them to her in a large bundle, wtte 3 strayed esteem the following note: "Plea? yours out. and a black. I've forgotten what you look like" Rhone 51-r-3 reit, a roan apply to Clifford Writs