HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1943-10-07, Page 2EAFQ
T NEWS
THUt3SIJAY, QOTOPER 7, 1943
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vale gave a talk on storage while
Miss Shiell of Bluevale and Miss
Velma Cook of Belgrave each read a
club story. Miss Connie Morris. Dun-
gannon. Miss Mae Frisby. Belgrace.
and Miss Xaida Pocock et Holmes-
ville. third year girls, each gave their
comments on the exhibits. Mrs. Edith
Pudner of Seaforth. hwas presented
the Provincial Honor Certificate and
pin for having completed 12 unit: of
work. Mrs. Pudner was the second
person in Huron County to receive
this award. Miss Grace Wallace of
Seaforth was awarded the Huron
County Certificate and Pin on attain-
ing the completion of six units of
work.
nese Injured — ehoi'lt might have been seriotte. but itt q wore a coat' of matellhzg blue trim-
,, '.any :event he. got out of the hetiemea tied- u'ith,ht'ilnnter. fur: -:after visiting
Onc,of the shote horses of Currie , r .
..' .bkvesI the formality totntatity of die�Shtr,.lnl \\'e.eun Bridle eltlQ the couple
T'arwft was hziureci at ilttdnlay a Itiv$stigatipai'shosv that a>cc,lnjtani• lvlli go west to the home at Edliton-.
eeit ergo, while 'bele gexhibited in disciple of baric \Val -p ton. Alberta,
ion. an ardent t
e ring. Mr. Currie, who was driciug ton, had lett a 'cifiai box tontaltuug,
he
own
he
f
via
ample
roup
ne
n
,mpleted
resented
lfiss
Fort NYilliatn. It will speed : u and
nlatef,allw lin'.1'NaSe the 19xA1'Nlll�lt.Of.
o
.Neesteinngrlin eastwalyd.- .',
'Farreets must be warned how-
,
ever,"
ever'” said Cot. Kennedy, fcof the
weed seed ttZNnace i uacceptuig grain
with the increased dockage tolerance:
the weed seeds are largely wild
oats or wild. buckwheat, the germin-,
ariatindnng n of baeth can be destroyed b,,
d the teed value o£'both
is high. If, the dockage is
maximum amount f
made up of the s, then
black seeds, then it would pay
to give the grain a thorough clean-ditional
Ong. In most districts this service can
be Provided by local grain and seed
dealers or cleaning plant operators,
or the cleaning can be done through
the
the home fanning mill. The refuse
screenings from such cleanings are
of no value, their sale is prohibited
in Ontario and they should be burn-
ed, buried or otherwise destroyed so
that there ie no danger of their
spread by wind, water, animals or
birds, It is rat safe.tc depend on
grinding alone to destroy the germ-
g
ination of these seeds."hope
The grain trade is co-operating in
urging local dealers where cleaning
machinery is available to provide
cleaning service at reasonable rates.
Grain carrying up to 3 per cent,
one per cent, and the Western eh' -
•. t
pee Is obliged to pay th4 Height to
Fort William on a dockageover 1
any,
nd
per cent: The Dominion and Ontario
subsidies and freight rebate apply on
n pP Y
the total weight of glair. The West-
ern shipper will not ship grain with
high dockage and, on the other hand
has to pay part of the freight on it.
The Ontario farrier does not pay
anythingfor• dockage over
g
and at the same time one Per
toll-
eet freight and subsidies on the total.
weight so that he has that small ad-
adti*antage which will partly
pay for cleaning, .
'This arrangement,"' said c91.Rationing
Kennedy, "is strictly an emergency
measure taken to speed up the move-
men? and increase the volume and
will helpto avert a feed grain crisis
next winter. The only danger is the
fear of weed seed distribution which
can be eliminated by care in handl-
ing and cleaningbefore feeding,
g.
When sufficient grain has been ship-
ped down from the west to meet the
emergency situation in Ontario, we
to go back to the one per cent.
tolerance basis. "
years .of, the ifl'st„ii
�Nf t'H` 1 Le
le. W. 1 i .tl ,
Stock Division, Done
>•ec turc. and
of ARn1 al
meat Board, 01 leu;
hog ennfel'oalee held
the anepic:es of the
titan of Agric:Rtturn
ere are this supp17h
35 per cath of its ba
in compallsAu with
cant before the wl
since 1939 Canada b
Britain the product
lion hogs,
and rest
tie supplies would
to be somas
mark of completing
agreement on schedi
had also coatribu
quantity of available
'unsatisfactory for do
In peace time, Most
, completing on schet
agreement with Brii
ion pounds of bacon
of skilled labor It
Mr. Pearsall estimate
were urgently neede
cess the hog run in
mouths. Even with
and with packing pi
reneef nnnAMiv. it
e animal. made am unexpected turn,- ;
i P soft-he1ed ?labs; the Mad the black Emergency Measure
id as a result a collision with ;nt bless fairly jump at, on the dresser
her outfit resulted,'It was foundforgottene : T bs To Speed theGrainIf
and Itad ein them. The tit p Cl . _
ecessary to ,withdraw the horse front were wrapped ,ret grass and the
ring.-43'uigliaru 4dratieeTinier. 1 se had warped the lid of the From The West
tiaui s, ,d p
Pt
os, forcing it to lift sufficient- !Cent
chievement Bay At Wingham cigar bhowever,can
ly to allow the crabs to crani 'out.' The Ontario oat and barley cropg.
The Huron County Garden Brigadethis. year is estimated _at 41 million
All this was going on go the meansmall
aid their Achievement Day at the slept, Henceforth he has vowed to bushels as eontpared to 97 million in
hall in 1Vinghani recently under make a careful surrey of hie room 1942. This, combined with an me
leadership of Miss Flora Derain before retiring,—Goderich Signal -Star. ereased live stock population has
Dungannon. Huron County Iionte created an unprecedented demand
conomi4 Coach. Three groups es Mrs. Robert Henderson, Brussels for western feed grain. This demand
obs displayed exhibits at their A lifelong resident al Brussels has reached such proportions that,
ork. The first year group exhibiteddue to labour shortage and, ether
passed on Thur at her temb, Mechanic
samples of one vegetable, one St • on Thursday. September 3rd, in dtii�culties; _deliveries of -grain from
of dve vegetables and one at Western Canada are falling' far short
the person of Mee Royer? Henderson,
canned tomatoes. The second Year She was in her eighty-first year and of the orders.
exhibited regetbales and a pox- As an emergency- measure only, at
leaves to mourn her los three child-
r and a group of vegetables is keep von, Bette oaf's, Harem Spero. of the suggestion of the chairman of
dt. The third year group staged Brussels: William of Sruithville. and the Agricultural Supplies Board and
exhibition of canning and one pos-the feed controller at Ottawa, Col.
John of Toronto, andn eightgrandeh4l-
r. A number of slides ,care project- drew, She was born an the 51h line T. L. Kennedy, Minister of Agricul-
I on a screen showing various Lure for Ontario, has agreed that
of Morrie and moved Lo Brussels
ha es of garden work. Thirty girls when sea was eight years old, and Ontario, along with the other Sour
a course of work and were had resided there :ever since. She eastern provinces will allow the en-
with war savings stamps, made a host of friends as testided by try of Western grain with a maxim-
Jean Elliott of Bluevale presid- the beautiful floral tributes which in- tem of 3 per cent dockage in place of
I. Miss Marguerite Henning of Blue; the one per cent tolerance formerly
eroded a p411ow from the family.
17 Million Hogs
Bacon for Britain
Engage Extra Teacher
The Wiagham High School got
back ro normal last week when the
students of the higher grades enroll-
ed. A decrease in attendance is shown
in some grades and an increase in
other In Grade IX there are 5: staa-
ent makingit necessary to divide
the classand engage new teacher.
To till this need 1I •s. Mar Cleland of
Win haat has been engaged.
Engagement '
Mr. and M Chaele Harris. Ex --
ter. announce he enga T Eta their
daughter. Margaret Evelyn. Mr.
'Edward Osborne Buddy.:n o Mr.
and Mrs. F.E.B,- 1; Toronto.n
marriage t0 k- place Emmanuel
College Chap -l. Saturday. October_-.
Painful Injury —
'While assisting her husband at :he
Mea Market one day _- week.Mrs.
George Gibbon e witha painful
inj3:ry. While operating a meat ,.niter
the index finer o. the right hand
d
cane in ceutac wit theknife i
was cut off nearto the M o; This
was most unfortunate and is a great
handicap to her as it interferes with
herperforming orji: ary household
duties.—Kincardine News.
Residence Struck By Lightning
Guthrie Iteid. of Culross. near y lost
his home last week when a lightning
Boit struck his back kitchen. and the
eurrent entered the main house. An
outeStle door was wrenched off and
tossed a distance of 15 feet. and two
heavy inner doors were also torn
loose ar-cam their easings. The west
end of the kitchen was blown out.
and the contents of tbat building
were badly messed up, Fier broke out
in the building, but prompt action ex-
tinguished it.—Mildmay Gazette.
To Appoint Rental Appraiser —
The present system of 'fixing rents
In Goderieh is to be changed on Octo-
ber 1st, A rental appraiser, not yet
announced, is to be appointed. and
henceforth he is to do the work done
hitherto by Judge T. M. Costello, who
has acted since January 1, 1141. The
new appraiser is also to take over
the filing office. which so far has been
in the office of Sheriff Hilt—Goderich
Signal -Star.
He Was Seeing Things!
A local man got out of his bed and
out of his bedroom '-Monday morning
with a speed that would do credit to
a Goderich volunteer fireman. And no
wonder! As he swung his feet out of
bed to sit on its edge his eyes came
upon a considerable number of live,
green -colored crabs crawling about
the floor and the dresser top. He is
not a drinking man, otherwise the
A GREAT
FAMILY
LINIMENT 1
spray Siem her grandchildren;pillow
Mowed, This set allow conszderabte dockage is eligible for all subsidies
from the neiaabors: spray from the quantities of grain t oby-pass the and freight rebates. The purchaser
staff of Wellesley School, Toronto;
cleaning mills at Port Arthur and does not pay for any dockage over
spray from Dr. and Mrs. Leeds.
miihcitle: basket from Mr, and
Mre, Ken Sherrie and Mrs. John
Sherrie; basket from Ernie Hunter
and sisters: basket from Mrs. Long
and Winnie: and beaauet from Mr.
and \Irs. Russ Dorvauee, McKillop..
The funeral service was conducted by
Rev.:. Kerr of Melville Presbyterian
Church of which she was a member.
Interment t'ok place in Brussel Cem-
etery.
em
e ern• The pallbearers were Messrs. -
Alvin L g . FrankMartin. George
Elliott.'Robert Bowman. William Gil-
lespie ..n3 James Arm trong Flower -
bearers. Gordon Blake.Louis Blake,
Donald Spei and Mac :per. — Brus
sele Pose.
Engagements Announced —
Mr. and Sirs. Adam Stewart. Siao-
ey Township. ip announcethe engage- '
:nem of their daughterNora. Jean, to7
Mast_, eaot Ado:ph Wilson_7
1. of Vd States fix- C p .3 e Mr.q
and Mrs. t W o Cabo:.A-l.n
ca-. Tae marriage wi., take place :
oc bee.
Mr an airs. Jcseph Webster.(lin-
ton. a.nn o n he r n ager n- i'�I
their y, - d e •g .... GladysF ro
s. o Rath John Caldwell, young-".
est s7,721 and- of John Caldwell
T'' ma ,t sake;
Dismantling Buildings —
M J c M r. ng has purl
i
tbasel bur:2111gs site t..1
prst or_\ .: a ar,d 3s;
making a k to Het;
bo9_n- lies.. M.. B F Thrower. n t o.1
whet. he^purchased abort - era: i
'ao ,m. S. Cooper Estate.
te 'd building another -au au-.
but due :o warc nd-tions wasre-
stricted. Thed, building is o be -
inn tors, down a.:1 has been steed a:
various times as a sh9e a7/'-. insur-
ance offee. cleaning and pressing e.•
tabiishrnen:. restaurant. taxi eta: r::.•
and tailor shop. Las: year another of
Ciin;on s old landmarks disappeared.
the Flynn blacksmith shop which
was directly behind the post office,
and it also being used as a ear lo_.
—Clinton, Sew;-Re.cord.
McLeod -Draper —
White anemones and white liadioii
in attractive. arrangement in the
chancel of St, Paul's Church. Clinton.
formed the setting for the pretty aut-
umn wedding of Myrtle Isabel Draper.
daughter of Mrs. Draper. and the late
R. J. Draper. to Lieutenant-Colonel
Geo. B. McLeod- Edmonton. Alberta.
Rev. G, W. Moore, rector of the
church. officiated. The bride given in
marriage by her brother. Caryl W.
Draper. Clinton. was becomingly at-
tired in an afternoon dress of dull
blue with small hat and veil to match
and with a shoulder bouquet of red
roses. The bride's sister, Miss Win
nie Draper, St. Catharines. was maid
of honor, wearing a dress of claret
wool with small hat to match and
shoulder bouquet of Talisman roses.
Mr. Stanley McFarlane of Guelph was
best man. and Mr. Ashton Morrison
and Mr. Murray Draper were ushers.
The wedding music was played by
Mrs, Theo Fremltn, the church organ-
ist. who was also accompanist for
Miss Lois Draper. niece of the bride.
who sang "When Song Is Sweet"
during the signing of the register.
After the ceremony a reception was
held at th home of the bride's
mother who with Mrs. J Sunleye
Guelph. sister of the bridegroom as-
sisted in receiving the guests.Mrs.
Draper wore a black dress with cor-
sage of sweet peas and Mit. Sunley
was also in black with corsage of
pink roses. For travelling the bride
°rid `war, etated
l' of the Live
niou Impartment
manager Al'. the
recent national
in 011awa under
(luluellun leedera•
Cunailian Yarm-
i1 Britain with
con requirements
flout Ito 22 Per
ha said, and
ud exported to
of seventeen mil.
Action of domes -
enable the Meat
where near the
the 1943 bacon
fle. Heavier hogs
tel to the total
bacon but were
mpotltive exporter'
critical facto?' in
Jule the current
ain for 676 mill-
was the shortage
packing Plants.
ed that 1,700 men
d to kill and pro -
the coming fall
sufficient labor
ants operating at
would be neces-
Canada Is sending more bacon to sary for farmers to organize more
Britain in 1943 than during all the uniform deliveries of hogs.
WTWILL COML.
I up the.
When ,ll walk colour of hil
w� come, wh the ,11
• • • ,,_ a day of our place, and lith Auer. t ears I and
back on th b his
the the showing
ho s c n pony , and e. Ill want to
•i him down osthe
heli calves you've been
ride on th
p
check up compared to
d
telling me about are tiny like the of
farms round one that looked li It h want d
'The ours, but x saw Highway ZJo • S Ike we use
bac r go over e to th e on is dans o in 6 barn."
to driveor the Saturday by then
to do d wi1l have the tractor
o n to Prig e no paint
as1rein o if flax. Thut in e �e'll Sty for paint
answas
pasture
the house, and s � thinking l Stut e m$ so far
— a7 -though 1 u
away Just now fortyab winks, and I
"Timto gr to write Varga Ile
the last
Still have
aw t, much sleep in here and
(censored) ndays coming we
had a hot timt it's e
the sinCe e e be
arri tedwit UuntgpserY's San.
11
In 1 Be seeing you .f
<;q
ereekeee
1
WHAT IS
A VICTORY BOND?
A VICTORY BOND is the promise of
the Dominion of Canada to repay in
cash the face value of the Bond on the
date of maturity with balf-yearly
interest until that time. A Victory
Bond is the safest investment in Canada
backed by the entire resources of the
Dominion. Canada has been issuing
bonds for 75 years, and has never failed
to pay every dollar of principal and
interest when due. A Victory Bond is
an asset readily marketable at any time.
Yes, a day will come... when he'll be back, ready to
take his place in a Canada he helped make safe for
all of us. To speed that day is in our power. We at
home ... in factories, in offices, on farms ...work long
hours to hurry it along. We go without, and lend our
savings to provide what he needs to win quickly. This
is the least that anyone can do. And when that day
comes — you'll want to welcome him -- and to help
him make his hopes come true.
To speed Victory, plan to buy as
many Victory Bonds as you can.
R
e'mogillICTORY110
d�!
r
gv
National War Finanoo Committee
N
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