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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1944-08-10, Page 4STACK OF DISHES and WATERWORTRIMULITI WHEN THE GREASY MESS that clogs your drain pipe meets up with Gillett's Lye it's a goner! Fast! In no time water's run- ning freely again. And remem- ber drains stay clear when you pour in Gillett's full strength our Use Gillett's in solutions to get Boors spotless without scrubbing, oli lighten the tload of all your heavy cleaning. Grandest way yet to have n clean, sweet -shelling house without break- ing your back. Ask for Gillett's today. • Never dissolve But in hot water. The action of lye itself heats the Crates'. G8 MADE IN CANADA 142 VOLUNTEERS AT SUMMER CLINIC rp• 1111 blond (Iorrors' clinic was held.. at North bide 'United Church basement Thurs. ,Tt 'hu s- ,Tt morning ing 1 tet. Only - 1.12 volunteer' re rf itvd MissaHelen Anderson, Nunotiied,nrs• ttecltas nician anin d ::-,trot Miss Mary ^Burroughs. Volunteers - ho have theirservices: Dr. Burrows, Dr. D G. Sleet ilensull• Dr. J. (Torwilt. and Dr. Stapletot Nnrse--Mrs, T. Crouch Mrs. J. M. McEdilln, Mrs. D. Wilson,. Mrs13, Sykes Mrs,- F. Kli;, Mrs. P. Brag- ger. Miss Ann Downey; Mrs J.' Crich, Miss 'Murray,Miss: P. -Timmer, Miss 3Tillen, Miss Roultton, Mrs. Rowland, Mrs. J. -Thompson, [1605 Jamieson Mrs. A, A. Moore, Mrs, W. 12. Shaw and Mrs Weaver. Refreshment committee Mrs. H. R. Scott, Mrs. J. A. Muni Pars. W. Hay, Miss Mc- Lean, Mrs. J Barron, Mrs. 'N'. Free, Miss 'Margaret Drover, Receptionist -Mrs. E. H. Close, Miss Biu,. Hills Mrs. J Catdno. Secretary and Assistants -Mrs. R. Kerslake.. Gladys Thompson. 1 Miss Bessie Grieve, Miss TWO men gave their 961 donation, N. Howe and Geo. Johnson, Eight men gave their eighth. Two men and two women gave their seventh. Eighteen men MO seven women re- volved their silver button- for, sixth donation. Donors with number indicating donations given. Seaforth--Mrs. Orville Hildebrand 3, E. Albrecht 7, Frank Smale2, Helmer SThos, George Johnson 9, Archie Hobert 4, Curter 2, Ross Savnuge 8, Beverley Christie s, Reginald Kerslake 7, Mrs. Reg. Kerslake 4, Edward McIver 4, 1). L. Reid 6, Arthur Gold- ing 4, .7. A. 'Stewart 9, Lillian Southgate 6, Marjory Golding '4, Isabelle Anderson 3, Ella .Armstrong 5, Mrs. Geo Mefavin 3, Wright 2. Mrs, Jack Cameron 3, Ross Me- iettnn, Ethel Storey, Mt., H. N. Thompson, Mrs. F. 5rriale. Pauline Matthews, Marion :ltec win Mrs. Than. 7 mnndville--Edward Brown 4, Batton 6, Mrs. Alex, Lillieo 6, Miss Nylle 11,4•x, Ruth Vhlcent. R I Seatorth Arnold Lamont 3, Bruce Ml Lein 5, Gordon Papn l Bert Haney 4. M Bort Haney 4, LorneMcCracken 5, Joe Anderson 4, Arthur Andel. n i, Ivy 1-lender- tt •, John Henderson 4 J. M. Scott 4, 61.1 'Haney ae"Anus Kennedy I1xon 7, ,sJokn Shea 6, War den [Taney 7,_ (Inc. Blake 6, Michael -,1.1.,ettay Ii, David McLean 6, Andrew A.. Moore 21t - Lena Kelly 5,Mrs, Jas. 'C. Scott 6, Seal 6, Mrs. 101 Ni8011 6, Mrs. Wil - f,..41 rl. 1 1 C l •man 5. Mrs. Geo. Eaton 6. Laura i Mr's. Paul Doig 4, Mary. 01, mpsol 4. Mrs. David ltLeLean 5. Robt. w'•dtaee, Albert Ganef, Win. J. McDowell, Margaret Patrick, Laura McMillan. Mrs. Js. t ammett 4, Mrs. Arthur Varlet' 6, y McMichael 5, Harold Rice 7, Cron -tarty -Nelson Howe 9, Jas herr 6, Wil - nun Hamilton 4. Staftu-Edward Dearing 3, Wilbert Glan- ville 2. Dublin --Thos. Butters 3, Frank Evans. Hetsall-Dr. A. R. Campbell 6, Ross Love 4, Mrs. E. B. Narminton 7, Mr's. Mary Bu- chanan 3, Archie Parsons, Mrs. Jean Boyd 6, Mrs. Phos Lavender 2, Mrs.Jas Sangster 2. Bruceaeld--Mrs. John Cairns 7Anson Mc- /urieh--Douglas .Robinson 6, Kln1ey 3Kipp. Ernest CWhitehouse 3, Emeenn rsonKyle John rro 6, tt Jos. McLellan 6, Glenn Slavin 4, Wm, McKenzie 3, Wm. Kyle 7,Harvey Jacobi 6, Mas. Ernest Chipchose , Ernest Chipehaso 9, Mrs. Jack The Clue of the Talkinai :Dog Set upon in the lonely woods, the wonder, dog who could talk 'vas unable to save lila crippled master. But 10 years later his sur- prise courtroom testimony helped convict the killers. Read aboutthis unique case in the American Weekly- with this Sunday's (Aug. 13th) issue of The. Detroit Sunday Tames. THE SEAFORTH NEWS THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1944 uh, 1, 11t .kin Wood 4, Mao. a I t 30011 Irvine 1. Mrs.Wm. Kyle '.t. .1 W10,1011 Workman 0. 1 1 -1 i Gen. Duggan 7, Jas. Jamieson l JI N it un s John Taylor 3, Roy Dol- meg, ol- an a , 9, \\ ,n 1)t hna •e 7, Beatrice Ifoggart 2, llt Nal III Ii ssalwood 2. BTus0a1s -Mrs 11. Il. Sullivan 6, Mrs, timid ilnsll ,y s „ Jack Lowe 4, 1411101 .. Fos 2, Mro. Marry Bowler" 3, Blyth --Ernest Poll 4, Kathleen Roel. \1181(011--1\m, Murray a Geo. Smith 7, Ivan Shannon 3, Hiram Blanchard 3, Gordon Blanchard 9. Jack Kellar 4, Wain..Tohn Lem- ing 6, W. J. Nicholsmt 0, Douglas Danis S, Mrs. John Shannon4, Mrs.Alex Dennis 6, lenn1e Dentis 2: Kathleen .Leeming 3, Mrs. Jas. Coutts 4, Mae Smith 4. West Monkton-Mus. Earl D1110111111 3. Provost, Alberto --Mrs. E.C. Miller. cid having boon tiled at 111icidlesex county courthouse. Mrs. O'Leary Lary Is ll sling 611116 the will, dated May 17, 1 B43, he declared not the last- will and testament. of the 410(0130cl, and claims vllidity of another will, said to be dated October, 1943, in which the estate is divided More evenly among the eleven children of the deceased, with only two of them excluded, In the will which Mrs. O'Leary is trying to break, about $50 each is granted to each, member of the faultily, with the bulk of the estate going to Miss Nola Etre: Mrs. O'Leary is being repre- sented by A. R. Douglas, of Douglas and McCallum, London. Miss Nola T U C K E R S M T H Etue and Alexander Challot, of Huron county, are the executors of the May At a special sleeting of the Tuck- will. Counsel for the defendants, the ersmith Council held on Saturday, rest of the Family, have not yet' been July 22, the tender of Lorne Finlay- named. Other defendants named are: son for repair work on drain- at Ca- Georgina Etue, London; Peter Etue, sey Way's at 96c a rod and at Mc- Flint, Mich.; Batelle Moss; Joseph' Clinchey's at 90e a rod was accepted Dtue, Arbourlield, Sask.; Clarissa and work to be completed by O'cto- Smith, Windsor; Rose Messersclunidt, ber 1st, and Bylaws 8 and 9 were Flint, 1\11011.; 'Blanche Adams, Van- dyke, Mich.; Marion Neoman, De - passed, signed and sealed. The regular meeting was held on trait; Theresa Deman, Detroit; An - Aug. 5th, all members present, the 11icily Etne, Hay Township, Huron Reeve in the chair. The minutes of County. It is expected to come to trial previous meetings were read and iR Flurou county fall assizes. adopted. The payment fol lepa r o fence on road at Scott Cluff's was tabled for future consideration, and to secure information as to who was guilty of breaking post. The Sea - forth Fall Fair was given a grant of 850 and the council also guaranteed the payment of 25 per cent. of the cost remaining to be pard in regard to the Rat Campaign. A.11 property owners or tenants will he paid at the rate of 2e a rod for cutting weeds .,1 road sides opposite their property f cut before Sept. 1st, and all such -recounts must be in hands of coun- cil before Oct. 15th or will not be nlaicl. The following accounts were Ordered paid: Relief, cash, $10.00; Town of Seaforth, Ration Board, $5; A ;'ricultural Fair, grant, $50; salar- ies, $69.00; road accounts, 9202.48. The council adjourned to meet Sat- urday, Sept. 2nd at 8 o'clock p.m.- D. an:1). F. McGregor, Cleilt, ZURICH Validity of the will of the late Alex- ander Etue, or Zurich, bequeathing most of his $10,000 estate to one dau- ghter, Miss Nola Etue, of London, is to be contested in court by another daughter, Mrs. Christine O'Leary, of Ailsa Craig, writ of summons to the other members of the family concern - A RESULT OF LOWCOST Here in Canada where the telephone idea was born, more telephone calls per capita are made than in almost any other country in the world. Usage is surely the final test. Telephone users get the greatest possible value for what they pay. Reasonable rates and speedy, dependable, courteous service -all these encourage telephone development. They account for Canada's leader, ship in the use of the telephone. vital materials has sharply Of course, war -time scarcity of restricted growth,but telephone service has been maintained at high standard. It has made an outstanding contribution to the Victory to come. 071,4cttFre S lee *Buy Wer Savings. Stamps .a and Certificates Regularly, Residents of Canada and the United States make many more telephone culls per capita than any European country. Jn Europe, Sweden leads. Latest official figures availublc (1941) give Sweden 196.5 annual calls per capita as compared with 262 for Canada. Oitilotey a 9s ter ✓✓r s H. H. P. JOHNSTON ii % tall': C' •1. CLINTON Atter an illness of several weeks which baffled medical and Hospital trea.tnlent, George Melville (Mel) Elliott, proprietor of the IIolnlesville cheese factory, died recently at his home at I3olmesville in his 37t1t year. Mr. Elliott was the son of Mrs. Wal- ter Fowlie, Guelph, formerly Mrs. Wm. Elliott, and tate late William Elliott and was born at Rothsay. He learned clreesemaking iu .Wellington county and came to Huron in 1938. After throe years with the Holmes- ville co-operative be purchased the factory and had since conducted it. He was a past president of the West- ern Ontario cheesemakers' associa- tion and llelci the important position of inspector for the dairy branch, Ontario Department of Agriculture, for the counties of Brace, Grey, Hur- orL Perth and Wellington. He leaves Grain and Fertilizer I am buying grain for Thompson at Hensel'. Call for information. Also taking orders for Fertilizer. Order early and be sure Of yours. WILLIAM M. SPROAT Phone 655 r 2, Seaforth. 16=267, P2IREMIEREMBEEM, ............. _.. .T Seaforth NOW ST-IOWING - TIdU1ZS. FRI. SAT. Ole Olsen Chick Johnson "CRAZY HOUSE" Furious Comedy packed with Music ! MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY 48 Stars and 4 Bands in "Follow the Boys" George Raft, Vera Yovina, Jeanette MacDonald, Dinah Shore, Andrews Sisters, Sophia Tucker. Popular entertainment for all! NEXT THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY James Cagney Grace George "Johrinny Come Lately Comedy! Drama! Romance ! First show starts each evening at 7.30. When single features as these are shown all patrons in by 0.15 will see complete show. Matinee each Saturday at 2.30 MEIMF a widen; formerly Helen Porter of Listowel, and a young family of three boys and two girls. He became a member of the Masonic order at Lis- towel and on coating to, Huron affili- ated with the Clinton lodge. He was also a member of the Goderich chap- ter of Royal Arch Masons. An Angli- can in religion, he was a member of St. Paul's ch'nrell, Clinton. The fun- eral was held at the family residence at. Holnlesville. Service being conduct- ed by Rev. R. M. P, Balloch. rector of Clinton. BORN JONES. -At Dr. I9etcher's Hospital. Exeter. on Thursday, August 3rd, 1941, 60 211'. and Mrs. Wihner Jones (nee Jessie Gibson), Iiippen, a son (Gary Willner). GLANVILLE. In Scott Memorial Hospital, on Aug. 7th, to Mr. and 11Irs, John Glanville, Walton, It.10. 2, a Son. D:ONNELLY. - In Scott Memorial Hospital, on Aug. 9th, to Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Donnelly, Dublin, R.R. 2, a son, Spence's Produce GOVERNMENT REGISTERED EGG GRADING STATION Highest Cash Prices paid for . Eggs and Poultry Phone 170-W, Seaforth LISTEN TO "S CCESS SELF POLISHING LIQUID WAX AND PASTE EVERY FRIDAY MORNING AT 10.15 37 Prizes Awarded Each Broadcast 920 ON YOUR DIAL. OK N X WING -HAM For Sale at All Grocery and Hardware Stores ACETONE FOR EXPLOSIVES AMMONIA FOR ' EXPLOSIVES ALKYLATE FOR AVIATION GASOLINE BUTADIENE FOR SYNTHETIC RUBBER TOLUOL FOR' LN.T, ORGANIC CHEMICALS FOR ANAESTHETICS ETC. MY CNF �\ CLYtLtL NTT l. -.P1 OS,VTi A`JIATIOIi GASOLINE r3'�9iM�i`3nr''�li,'6'4:v'�•�t ��"u �+�u"rfil t ,J �_n. HEN war demands have been filled .. , when invasion gasoline, aviation gasoline, Navy fuel oil, petro letun for the manufacture of explosives, synthetic rubber, and gasoline for war industry, farming and essential truck- ing all have been taken from Canada's oil supply - it doesn't leave a lot for the civilian! Figure it out for yourself. It takes 5,250,000 gallons of gasoline to fuel 5,000 bombers and fighters for a mission over Germany. It takes enough oil for one fueling of a battleship to heat an average house for 350 years. It takes 18,000 gallons of gasoline to keep one armoured division on the move for one hour. From petroleum and petroleum gases we obtain the gasoline and fuels needed to power planes and ships and tanks as well as the raw material for acetone, ammonia and toluol for ex- plosives, organic chemicals for an- aesthetics, naphthas for camouflage paints and plastics and resins for war weapons production. This is why civilian gasoline is short. This is why it's up to every motorist, to every owner of an oil -heated home, /40 RESINS & PLASTICS FOR AIRPLANES NAPHTHAS FOR CAMOUFLAGE PAINTS NAVAL FUELS to exercise the strictest economy in gasoline or fuel oil usage. Every gallon we can do without here at home is one gallon more for the fighting men. And they need every gallon they can get. Two full years of gasoline tationing and fuel oil control in Canada have saved 393,000,000 gallons of gasoline and 175 million gallons of fuel oil - a total saving of 568,000,000 gallons of petroleum products. Yet, despite this saving, gasoline stocks on hand in Canada, as of March 31st, this year, were 55,000,000 gallons less than at the commencement of rationing, April 1, 1942. Oil has a nighty war job to do - yet supplies are short and are constantly dwindling. Oil powers the attack on every front. Oil can mean the difference between success or failure, between light casualty lists and heavy. Oil is vital ammuni- tion - not to be wasted, not to be needlessly, frivolously spent. Faro mares An announcement issued by The Department of Munitions and Supply, Honourable C. D. Howe,.Minisler AnsweringYour Questions about the Gasoline Shortage What are Canada's total yearly re- gnirernents of motor gasoline? .. , Approximately 800,000,000 gal- lons. Do these requirements have to cover both mrl,tary and civilian needs? ... 'Yes. Whycannot this supply be increased? ... Because total hemispheric supplies are in- adequate to meet both the colossal war demand and civilian needs. There is not enough oil, there are not enough tankers, for both. How mach of Canada's petroleum needs is supplied' from Canadian wells? :. Only 15% Why can't this home production be increased? ... Every effort is being made to do so. More new wells are being drilled or pre- pared for drilling, Than at any time in the history of Western Canada, but we have yet to find a new Turner Valley. War does not wait for new production. MS -44X