Clinton News Record, 1944-11-23, Page 4Shop At COOPERS For Christmas
10 Popular Books
How Green Was My Valley
Anne of The Island
The Green Years
Joseph The Provider
OneI Red Rose Forever
The Keys of The Kingdom.
Hungry Hili "
None But The .Lonely Heart
The Faithful Wife
Eve Curie
$2.00
$1.50,
$8.00'
$3.75
$3.00
`$L75
ow Showing
CHRISTMAS PAPE'TRIES
CHRISTMAS STATIONERY
CHRIST1VLAIS CARDS
CHRISTMAS CALENDARS
BIBLE'SAND TESTAMENTS
HYMNALS AND PRAYERS
$5.90 CHILDRENS BOOKS'
$3.25 CHPLDRENS PICTURE BOOKS
$1.75 1945 DIARIES
$4.50
This Store will be open all day
Wednesday During December.
A. T. COOPER.
We Have Succeeded
in getting what we think is a mighty nice supply of Christmas good's
and we are sure you will be delighted with them too.
Goods are so limited that wet ,cannot replace them, so, look them
over early and pick out what you want.
We have as usual an outstanding assortment of
CHRISTMAS CARDS
and they are exclusive with us .but don't wait too long
S. R. HOIMES PHM. O.
aietafild aro
CLINTON, ONT. PHONE 51
• Stanf fields Underwear
Gold Label all wool Shirts and Drawers $L95 a garment
Red Label' Combinations $3,95
Blue Label Shirts and Drawers $2.95 each
A. C. Combinations _ $3,95 each
Also Penmans' 95 Combinations and Separate Garments
Penmans' 71 Shirts and Drawers and Combinations
I- DAVIS & HERMAN
CUSTOM TAILORS - Be Measured by a Tailor.
Listen To
"SUCCESS"
Self Polishing Liquid Wax and Paste Floor Wax
Every Friday Merning, At 10,15
37 Prizes Awarded Each Broadcast
C. K. N. X. - WINGIIAM
For SIe at all Grocery and Hardware Stores
KHAKI DUGS{ HUNTER'S GOATS
ALL WOOL KERSEY+SHIRTS
2t.EVERSIBLE.HUNTING CAPS
MEN'S GABARDINE SPORTS JACKET
LAIDSE'iSPAPORT JACKETS
$12.85
$4.95
$1.85
$6.50
$7.95 and op
EPPS SPORT SHOP
Hadquartere For All Sporting Goods
BAYFIELD
Mrs. J. W. Jowett and household
have moved over to her home in the
village for the Winter 'months.
Rev, and: Mrs. F. H. 'Paull of
Windsor were the guests of Mrs, N.
'W. Woods for a couple of days • hast
week. j
Mr. L. H. MacLeod left last week
to fish at Erieau.
Mr. Jas. Cameron of Toronto was
at his cottage on the Hive Water
Highway- over the week end.
Mrs. S. ' Holley, who has spent
the past six months at her summer
home, "Volley Lodge'' left•on Friday
to spend the winter with her daugh-
•ter in Detroit.
Mr. Wm. Sleek of ,Stanley" Twp.
'is spending the winter- with his
nephew, Wan. Orr' and Mrs. Orr in
• the village.
The Reverend R. C. Holmes and
Mrs. Holmes arrived on Friday of
last week and have taken up resi-
dence in the Rectory. We welcome
them to our midst and wish them
every happiness.
Mr. and Mrs. Holmes, Sr. of St.
Catharines, spent the week- end at
the Rectory,
Mrs Wm. Sturgeon and two
daughters have moved into A. Cat-.
! lings house on Louisa Street.
Mrs. H. Thomas left on Sunday for
Toledo, Ohio, owing to the illness of
I'her sister.
Mrs. Douglas Gemeinhardt and
two' children, have returned after
having visited her mother in Oriliia
lfor several weeks,
Mrs. Adam Boyd and' little Miss
Beth Siencoe left for Gravenhurst
after leaving spent several weeks at
the forane's• cottage on Keith Cres-
cent.
Mr. and .Mrs. Apfelbeck and fem.
'e+mss
ot
Red Shield
The regular meeting of the R. S.
W.: A,. was held in the Army Hall
with twenty-three members and
three visitors present.
Two hand-knit girls' sweaters were
brought in from Mrs. Shaddock and
Miss Maude Chambers.
The following articles were peeked
3 quilts, 13 prs. service socks, 1
pr. ladies new pyjamas, 2 sweaters,
7 prs. new boys pyjamas, 2 girls
dresses size 3 yrs., 1 bed jacket, 1
baby's sweaters, 1 pr. baby's sleepers,
1 pr. of boy's soaks, 1 box of new
gloves, 83 articles of refugee cloth-
ing, 1 box Of boots and hats.
Also from Happy War Workers, 1
quilt, 4 •prs. socks, 1 pr. boys py-
jamas, 1 new baby's layette. From
Lafalot Club, 2 quilts, 5 prs. stock-
ings, 2 childs' dresses. Mrs, Harry
Johnson, 1 coat and 1 dress.
We wish to thank the members of
the quilting committee for all, their
hard work in getting the quits done
!from week to week. Just keep up the
good work Iadies.
ily visited friends in Kitchener on
Sunday.
Friends in this d'atrict rejoice in
the skill and achievement of Major
W. T. Mustard who in a Canadian
casualty clearing station, Somewhere
in Bel,giunz, has used g'ass tubes
successfully to replace shattered
arteries and with the use of the
Slrug• heparin to prevent clotting,
kept the blood• flowing until patients
were srong enough to stand the
operation to replace the shattered
piece of artery with a graft from a
vein. His discovery will be the means
of saving many hives and limbs,
Billy, as he is more familiarly
known, spent the sumnzers of his
boyhood and vacations at the family
cottage in the village, He is the
third son of Mrs. Mustard, 5 Cawthra
Sq. Toronto, and the late Thornton
Mustard who was lost at sea when
the Athenia was torpedoed. His
wife and small son, whom he has not
seen, reside in Toronto. A brother,
Dr.- Donald. Mustard; practises medi-
cine in Birmingham. .England and
two brothers are in the fighting for-
ces overseas; Lieut Neil with the
R.C.E. and Major Charles with the
R.C.A.
V-
A minister preached a sermon on
the duty of wives, says the Inde-
pendent Forester.
"There is also," he declared, "a
woman in this congregation who
is often guilty of • disobedience to
her husband. To make an example
of her, I will fling any book at her
head."
Instantly every ;married woman
in the congregation ducked!
v
HOME
This fend attachment to the well-
known place -
Whence first we started into life's
long race,
Maintains its hold wilth such unfail-
ing sway, •
We feel it e'en in age, and at our
latest day,
Cowper.
v -
He who bends to himself a joy
Does the winged life destroy;
But he who kisses the joy as it flies
Lives in eternity's sunrise.
-William Blake.
THE CLINTON NEWS•RECORD
Liberation of Europe'
Picture shows: Glider borne troops i the battleships
cross the channel above ships of theRAMILLIES.
Royal Navy. In the background are
l
•
WARSPITE and
No man should have a secret from
his own wife. She invariably finds
out. Women have a wonderful in-
stinct about things. They can dis-
cover everything exsept the obvious
-Oscar Wilde.
God has given to man a cloak
whereby he can conceal his igno-
rance, and in his cloak he can en-
wrap himself at any .moment, for it
alusys lies near his hand: This cloak
is silence-Bhartrihari.
GOING PREPARED
Aunt Mary -Why are you taking
a black dress to the seaside?
Joan -Well, Henry isn't a very
gond swimmer, you know,
What danger can ever come from
ingenious reasoning and inquiry?
The worst speculative skeptic ever
I knew was a much better man than
the best superstitious devotee and
bigot. -David Hume.
I believe a leaf of grass is no less
than the journey -work of the
stars,
And the pismire is equally perfect,
and a grain of sand, and the
egg of the wren,
And the tree -toad is a chefd'oeuvre
for the highest,
And the running blackberry would
adorn the parlors of Heaven,
And the narrenvest hinge in any
hand puts to scorn aII machinery.
-Walt Whitman]
iclbeSNAPSHOT GU1LD
MORE PICTURES FOR THOSE IN SERVICE
What Service man wouldn't go for a picture like this -be it Sis or
sweetheart.
DURING these summer months
J-/ with the Ieaves on the trees,
flowers in the garden -sunburn on
arms and faces and backs, if you
happen to be a hardworking war
gardener - it's time to provide a
good crop of subjects for your cam-
era. And, because film is still scarce,
you'll want to save it for those pic-
tures that are most important not
only to the folks at home but to the
men in the armed forces as well.
You don't need to be reminded,
of course, to take pictures of his
girl in her summer frocks. That is a
"must," and .the more the better.
Don't try, to glamorize her. Picture
her as she really is --sweet and
charming, and looking bright and
cheerful. 'Even though he wants to
feel that he's being missed, he cer-
tainly won't Iike to see her looking
downhearted.
And don't forget Sister. With
graduation and other school activ-
ities a recent memory, Sister has
taken on new importance in the
family. Her soldier brother prob-
ably thinks she's pretty sheen any-
,how and.he'll enjoy seing how she
looks in her summer duds. And, by
the way, probably he has never
aeen her in her cap and gown. She's.
really something in that. So take a
picture by all means, and send it
along.
A subject that deserves a great
deal of camera attention at any time
of year 1s the baby whose Dad' is
in the Service. Perhaps they have
yet to be introduced. This separa-
tion of the soldier father from his
baby involves a "giving up" that
tops all the other sacrifices. The
endless fascination of baby's day-
to•day progress -the first. compre-
hending glance, the first smile, the
first tooth. So many "firsts" for
highlights. But there is endless va-
riety in the "in between" tines as
well. And baby's soldier 'father is
missing it all.
That is, he's missing it all unless
you do your part.. And your part
is to make careful use of the flim
you are able to get so that you can
take frequent pictures of the baby -
to provide.a continuing story of his
growth.
When you leave these baby nega-
tives developed, be sure to order
enough prints to go around -one
for his soldier' Dad, of eourse,,and
perhaps several for • interested
friends and e'1atjyes -.- the grand-,
parents in particular. And be sure
to put a print of each in baby's
album, for .the delight and edifica-
tion of the whole family through
the years to come.
79 Jdhn van Guilder
THURS., NOV. 23rd 1944
Smartfarmers have come to know that there is a lot mere to
profitable pig feeding than just chopand skin milk!
You .can cut WEEKS off your feeding period - and save on
actual feed costs too - because Balanced Feeding puts weight on
fast - at lower cost!
'SHUR-GAIN PIG STARTER for little pigs gives them all they
need for rapid growth - vitamins, proteins and minerals, in a scien-
tifically balanced and •blended feed that little pigs like.
See your Feed Service Mill today - - -
SHUR.GAIN PIG STARTER
Made and Sold by
Clinton Feed Mill
PHONE 580 .a
Final Bulletin
Subscriptions
Canvassing District Quota To Date
, , 46,000 72,050
69,000 100,250
151,000 208,900
66,000 90,650
Goderich 485,000 593,700
Tuckersmith .... . ... .... .... 101,000 132,600
Seaforth .... .. , . . , .. 166,000 208,300
Colborne .... .... . . .. .... .. 66,000 81,450
Turnberry .... , ... •, ... 76,000 92,150
Zurich & Hay West , , . - ...... 91,000 109,900
Wawanosh East , , , , . , , . .... 69,000 83,250
Wingham 191,000 226,700
226,000 266,600
180,000 209,750
76,000 88,550
101,000 112,800
100,000 111,100
94,000 101,650
Goderich Township .. .... .. 85,000 91,750
Ashfield .... .... .... ...... 104,000 111,800
Usborne , . . , , - , . , 100,000 106,700
McKillop .. , . . , .. ..... , 101,000 105,550
Stanley .. . . ... . . . . . .... . . 102,000 106,350
Grey .... 118,000 121,000
Stephen East ,. ,,. ,. 66,000 66,650
Blyth ,..
Wawanosh West ,.,,
Exeter ,.,. .... ....
Stephen West ,,,. ..
Clinton
Brussels .... .. , . ..... .
Hensel' & Hay East .... .. , .
Enron County Total
Air Schools
Combined Total
District "8", Clinton
NAME
A. J. McMurray
It, E. Rorke
T. G. Scribbins
Banks
Employees
District "0", Hullett. Twp.
W. J. Dale
John Armstrong
W. R, Jewitt
Banks
Employees
District "R", Stanley Twp.
John McAsh
Carl Houston
Edgar Butt
Banks
Employees
District "S", Goderich Twp.
Clayton Laithewaite
George Ginn
Charles E. Wise
Banks
Employees
District "M", Tuckersrnath
Wm. Southgate
A. Nicholson
E. P. Chesney,
Banks•
Einploy'ees
2,980,000 3,600,150
133,000 219,000
8,113,000 3,819,159
Per
eentago
•156.63
145.28
138.34
137.34
135.48
151.28
125,48
123.40
121.251
120.76
120.65
118.69,
117.52
116.52
116.51
115..68
111.00
108.13
107.94
107.50
106.70
104.50
104.26'
102.54
100.98
120.81
164.66
122.68
Transactions Volume
Number of
82
122
114
131
92.
72
49
74
23
4
101
106
86
16
1
47,900
35,900
50,800
64,700
10,450
26,400
27,700
24,400
33,050
1°250
37,100
22,750
33,200
13,200
100
35 • 32,750
68 23,150
89 30,100
14 95,650
2 100
54 $2,700
81 37,000
99 46,600
21 15,800
1 •5110