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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1944-11-09, Page 5THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1944 THE SEAFORTH NEWS Superior Valves — Thursday, November 9th, till Noy, 15 Canada or Durham . Cornstarch pkg. 9c Rinso' ;Lge. Pkg. 23c Kam -- a pure Pork Product Tin 31c KELLOGG'S PEP — 2 Pkgs. 27c and one square base glass tumbler Free. Old Dutch Cleanser Tin 10c Fancy Quality Tomato Juice, 20 oz. tin 10c I-7i1lerest Soft absorbent Toilet Tissue Newport Fluffs ....5 Quart Bag -19c ...... Newport Fluffs S Quart Bag -256 Rom. Meal 3 Lge. Rolla'25e Fruit Juice Class Free Tumbler Free Pkg, 20c Pkg. 100 Lge: Pkg.: 23c 1t Sag 470 17# Tin 45c 3 Rars 19c 28 oz. Tin 1:8c 6 oz. Jar 9c t/?• Pkg. 38c 12 oz. Bottle 10(. 4-10-0Z. lulls 19c Bon Ami Cake or Powdnr . , ....... ..... , Each 14e Mazda Light Iiulbs 25 4!1 t n Watt lsch 15r Silver Gloss Laundry ;tach No. 1 Round Grain Ric, Pastry Flom' Muffets QtiiCk Quaker Oats Maxwell Ilouse Cottee, V,* Bag -25c; Hawes P100r Wax Palmolive Soap Aylmer Punipki - Ltbby"s Prepared Mustard Royal York Tea, more avp • per pound Canada. Vinegar, rider, Spirit, Malt. Aylmer Vegetable Ur Tomato Soup 1 Pkg. 73e 2lbv 25e - r Bag^ 27c Micros Short ening ..•. 1,: Carton 19c Lthnarr Vanilla Lxtrac•.t. 4 oz. Bottle Inc: 3 o2. Bottle 15c Ivory Soap Lge, Giani. Bar 10e Day of Fundy :Natural Paek Herring 10 oz. -Till 170 Hand Picked White Beans 4 lbs: 25e RiMun lelle '•• ?S"- Pkg.•21c Oxo Cubes, Trig, of 4 Cuban Bic; Pkg, of 10 Cubes 25c Kellogg's Week at the Superior Stores Kellogg's Cornflakes , .. 3 -8 -oz, Pkgs, 25c Isellogg's Rice Krlspies 2 Pkgs. 25c Kellogg's All Bran Lge. Pkg, 22c Kellogg's Branflakes, sill. pkg.-12c; lge. pkg, 17c Kellogg's Pep. .2 Pkgs 25 . c nTumbler F g:,. and one limbler res. • Kellogg's All Wheat,. 2 Pkgs. 25c, Scl, base. dish Free! Kellogg's Krumbles 2 Pkgs. 25c Ross J. Sproat Art Wright PHONE 8 PHONE 77 ANNUAL MEETING Huron Co. Federation of Agriculture CLINTON TOWN HALL Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2 p.m. — PROGRAM — 2.00 p.m.—ELECTION OF OFFICERS FOR 1944-45 2.30—GUEST SPEAKER: The Hon. J. L. Ilsley Federal Minister of Finance 3.30—MR. C. D. GRAHAM, B.S.A. Director of Ontario Agricultural Representatives Everybody Welcome to Afternoon Meeting 6.30—ANNUAL BANQUET: ST. PAUL'S PARISH HALL — 13Y TICKET ONLY W. J. DALE, Sec.-Treas. H. L. STURDY, President THEM P.:C 0 D1 0 5144 In Memoriam SMITH—In loving memory of a dear daughter and sister Vera E. Smith who passed. away three years ago on Nov, 7th 1941. NO one knows how much we miss you No one knows the bitter pain We .]lave suffered` since we -lost you, Life has never been the same, In our hearts your memory lingers Sweetly tender, fond, and true, There is not a .day dear Vera That we do not thunk of you. —Ever remembered by Mothea', Dad, Mae, Edgar and Gladys, Tune in to CK.NX And enjoy the Huron County Federation of Agriculture Programme, 8 o'clock Tuesdays own 14 r1 ANIM'ALS DEAD or • DISABLED Quickly removed in clean sanitary trucks. Phone collect 219 MITCHELL WILLIAM STONE SONS LIMITED TOWN TOPICS Mr, acid Mrs Janes 'Gillespie and Mr. Thomas L, Gillespie of Toronto were in town on Lite occasion of their parents' golden wedding . anniv- ersary; also 111r. Gillespie's sister, Miss Jessie Gilespie, of Brandon, Man. Mr. Harold Coates, Montreal; and Mi'. Frank Coates, Ajax, visited with their mother, Mrs. R. '1]. Coates; over the week end. Miss Teresa Eckert; London, spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Eckert. • Mr. Steven Gilbert, London, was a week end visitor at the home of his parents, R,ev,. C. F. L. Gilbert and Mrs. Gilbert, over the week end. • Miss Ruth Joynt, Preston, spent the week end with her parents, Mr, and• Mrs. Robert. Joynt. ' P.0, Donald Scott, RCAF., recently transferred from Maitland, N.S., to. Lachine, Que., is spending 'five weeks leave with his mother, Mrs. H. R. Scott. Mrs. Polly Leichnlan, Lethbridge, and son Clayton and wife and daugh- ter, accompanied by Janres Hoggarth,. Hensall, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hoggarth ,on Tuesday. Sergeant Lloyd Hoggarth, RCAF., Ottawa, visited over the week end with Mrs. Hogarth and Phillip. Mr, Grant Fraser, Waterloo, spent the week endwithMrs. Fraser and • Sergeant George Daly, RCAF., Ayl- finer, spent the week end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Daly. Miss Belle Jackson, Waterloo, is a a guest at the .home of 11 ' 1l, and ,Mrs.. Norvian MacLean, • Miss Teresa Maloney, Stratford, spent the week end with her mother, Mrs. T. Maloney. Thomas Kelly Sills, infant son of Pi1ot. Officer Thomas Sills and Mrs 9ilis. is ill in St. Joseph's flospital; London. Mrs, John McGrath of Dublin spent the week end with her brother. Dar. Thomas Williams and Mrs Williams. Mrs. Thomas Williams and Cecelia visited friends in Mitchell recently, Miss Doris Ruston spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs, Sylvester Kelly in Loudon, Anrorig those, frola out of town rvho. attended the tli:uuond wedding anniv- ersary of JSr. and Mrs. J. .Yl. Goven- lock were 11'1's. Norman Ireland of Climax, Sask.; Mr. Nelson Govenloek and two daughters, Waterford; Mrs. 11IcKenzie of Oshawa; Mr. Jack Dor ranee, St. Catharines; Lieut. Stanley I)orrauce, 1'pperwash; Mrs. J, K. B. Brown and Mr. Lester Govenlook, To- ronto; Mrs. J. L. Phillips and Ronnie, of Detroit Miss Trento of Southampton i5 spending a few days with her cousin, Miss Ballantyne'. ARMISTICE OR LASTING PEACE ! November llth, 1044, will be commemorat- ed as Armistice Day, On that day 26 years ago, Germany called to the Allies to cense firing. The Allies responded: A truce ensued, The terms of peace were arranged. The world had a breathing spell after four years of war. Throughout a great part of the world, fol- lowing this .truce, there was general rejoic- ing. Thousands gave themselves over to re- joicing with an abandon. that '009 spectacu- lar; while thousands of others quietly and reverently bent the knee in true gratitude and thanksgiving to God. Many of the soldiers who fought in the WRY" 1014-17 believed in the slogan that this is a war to end all wars, The years that have elapsed bear witness. Today, and for the past five yeai'e Canada :urd the freedom loving nations of the world; in spite of the tremendous saoriflce of human life and property during 1014-18, aro embroiled in n war the extent of which is without a parallel] in history: Today science discovery, modern inven- tion and speed nee making largo contribu- tions toward the emotion of a war machine that would take mass Milling and country- wide devastationat a stride. Why, says the unprejudiced observer, this. colossal sacrifice and expenditure? Why should the leading nations of the world, two lhouemul years -after Christ, and in t e light of the ravages of the first' world war, be today locked In a life and. death .struggle? Is this war the only way of meeting success- fully the agressor nations? Was there any other way, apart from war. whereby the nations that broke the pence of the world, that trampled on human freedom, that have resorted to the most inhuman and hellish means of obtainingtheir end, that hove deliberately murdered 'millions of de- fenceless men, women and children, might be. arrested. in their head -long pitch and brought to justice? To answer the above questions would re- quire volumes. Entirely quite impossible in this short article. Let us hasten to say, however, that when brute force was let loose on Poland, when the helpless victims wore being outraged and murdered, the conscience' of the .Empire rose in its miglit. Linder the conditions that prevailed at that. time, thereseemed tothe candid thinker. to be no other way to resist the aggressor but war. It must be observed, however, that this present war has its roots far bark in the. peace terms of 1918. At that time Germany - woo on her knees. The Allies .had their op- portunity of helping to matte a new Ger- many. Wineteo Churchill pleaded with :par- Imment to send shiploads of food, free of charge, to the starving peopleofGermany It was not done, < President Wilson inaugur- ated the League of Nations. The V.S.A. 're- fused to become -a member of that .League, The British Empire. . together with the other allied nations, heartsick of war, came more and more to favour the position of the isola- tionist. To some extent the world Paid at- tention to the slogan: Every nation for itself. Germany, rent asunder by various fac- tions, was enduring the birth pangs of a new nation. The Allies had their opportunity dur- ing this time to become the big brother of a' humbled and defeated nation. The result was after years of struggle between the advoc- ates of demoeraoy and autocracy in Germany ' that autocracy gained the position of power. Tho regime of Hitler came into being. Now what about the peace terms that will follow this Present struggle? What ought to. be the spirit of these terms? Rave the na- tions learned sufficiently from the outcome of the Peace terms of the first World War? The victorious nations at the close of this war will face the seine temptation as did these who sat around the peace table of 1915. Pmme the vanquished to Puy reparation to the Inst farthing. She's down, now keep her there. God -forbid tl'el suer, a spirit should be recognized at the coming peace conference, Surety.. God has been speaking to countless. _ numbers during this terrible war,. speaking in a thousand ways to all notions and peoples. Will the spirit of God, sr the' spirit of crass selfishness and greed. predominate?. Which? Long age Jesus Ohrist proclaimed tial: "Ire who would save Ids life shall lose Altar Society PARISH HALL Dublin TUES., - NOV. 14 Euchre and Forty -Five Lunch and Social` Evening Admission 35 •cents it, and he: who would lose his life for ' my sake and the Gospel the same shall save it," The nations have had a long innings. ai War, and the end is not yet. Humanity is prime to trust In the mailed list, to want the .lions share of the spoil.: Su'elyitis high time that the nations awake to God's way ofsettling disputes, of establishing peace. Our •Prayer; That the terms of peace, be dictated in the spirit of the Golden Rule, "Do unto others as ye would that others shoulddo unto : you,"— W, J. Patton, •' REMEMBRANCE DAY- - — NOVEMBER 11TH The local branch of the Canadian Legion is making its annual Poppy Day appeal to the people •of this com- munity on Saturday 11th November. The Poppy Fund is now a recognized institution whereever the Canadian Legion exists in Canada, and it selves 0 two -fold purpose of. much merit. Themoneywhish is raised by the distribution of the Poppy—the symbol of sacrifice—is used entirely to remove unusual distress among. War Veterans of the last: war and the present conflict and their famil- ies. At all times it has been found that the Veterans, in view of the fact that many of them have disa- bilities and handicaps, suffer; even more than others who are out of em- ployment; since many of ahem re- quire .special care' and attention which they are unable, to provide. This is where the Poppy Fund, raised by the sale of Poppies by the local branch of the Legion, steps in and provides relief for the situation, There is another reason why every citizen should wear a Poppy for Remembrance Day. These Pop- pies are manufactured in the Vet- eraf1 shops of Canada, workshops In which handicapped veterans are given sheltered employmnt, and in which. they -manufacture the hund- reds of thousands of Poppies which are distributed every year at this time. By wearing a Poppy, ,citizens can find much satisfaction in knew - ng that they are helping these hand- icapped veterans to obtain a liven - hood which thy would otherwise lack on account of their special disa- bilities. This two -fold appeal should find a ready response in the hearts and minds of the people of this communi- ty, which has always been ready to make the way easier for those of its citizens who served Country and a ONCE EACH YEAR YOU BUY CHICKS On them you pin your hopes for 365 Days Therefore buy wisely and well — buy the best THE ODDS ARE IN YOUR FAVOR WHEN YOU BUY Scott's R.O.P. Sired Barred Rock Chicks or Red Rock Hybrids • Barred Rock ]lens mated to Imported'Masschusetts Red Cockerels Remember you are making your year's big investment. Early orders get preferred deliveries SCOTT'S` POULTRY FARM Phone; 851 - 32 Seaforth, Ont. Empire in the Great War and in this present conflict. We commend it to your sympathetic consideration, in the hope that you will respond gener- ously and thus help to hold the torch flung to you by those who did not come back, ST. COLUMBAN Pte, Stephen Holland, son of Mr, rad Airs. J. 3, Holland, St. Columban, 11111nuuuuunnunuuu111/1111111111111/111111111111111 ........ 11111 ANCE! IN WINTHROP HALL WED., NOV. 15 Collins Five -Piece Band ADMISSION 36c uue11.nna ... uaa.unu1171n1,11.,.,a1111,a....11 n nn.nu.v. who was recently reported wounded in action in the Netherlands, has suf- fered a traumatic amputation of his left foot, a multiple shell fracture and wounds to both legs and thighs. This information io1 I3 la L•i O n Wasr , strive dW ed- nesday by his parents in a second message from the director of re- cords, Ottawa. The dispatch added that Pte. Holland is seriously ill, Want and For Sale Ads, 1 week 25e mice t In Seaforth Armories FRIDAY, .NOV. 17 Music by OKNX Ranchboys 17aiiring fi-1. Admission 50c All praceds for War Work Sponsored by Seaforth S CANADA'S VETERANS 7hei, Past-liefrOsettem res This is the Fourth in a series of advertisements to inform the people of Canada of plans to e•establish men and women of the armed forces. To get full details, save and read every advertisement. For complete informs' (ion, write rot • the booklet, "Back to Civil Life.' *me oel eawe r * provides7he 40# OD Mots Boseess have homes of There are two ways in which Veterans' LandeAct,pe can have loris. of in their own. One measure,the gh taxation financing homes on small .acreages of land outside niches or bulduigar while the re+establishment credit may ost financing is avae usfor lable under the. N tioa.al home in town or qty. Low Housing Act. Under the Veterans' LandAct, assistance The given 11W fin 1�,y1�1 up to a maximum of $4800 for land and buildings. to pay down 10 per cent of the cost of land and dtbuildings and tl the P vz iert s is then sold to him for this down payment e> 25 years, with intact at 3? balance may be mance', for purchase of equipment. cent.A ur er grant the rant of 2'13 The veteran is,given title to the property, ' per cent of the cost of land and buildings anthe money for equipment, rater he has lived up to his agreement for ten years. If the re-establishment credit s used two dollars used from veteranme, the Thi inust be prepared to put up one dollar forears t. discharge.hiyp of assistance may be applied for at any time within 10 y FARMERS AND COMMERCIAL farming fI FISHERMEN and for fishing may Veterans qualiied. for full time me on a small acreage, outside receive assistance in purchasing a Earn for home under the Veterans a Act in the same way as the veteran wanting high taxation area. In the case of full time farmiing,ta11 d di ionalacommercial the 0 needed of $1200 is available for purchase of stolecei eeup to $1200 to buy fishing the commercial fisherman may fishing equipment. heex sere ceefit under any of roal or womanthe must haveprovisions overseas service o list Land Act, least 12 months' service in Canada. TO ASSIST BUSINESSMEN applies/ One purpose for which the reestablishment credit may be used is to buy a business or to, provide working capital for a business. Here again apt troll may be inacle at any time in the 10 years after discharge.. peoplewho ay, Ill addition to usil g the re-establishm mticrw credit inmaintenancehs grant e who start their own businesses, or farmers, may thet.period. they are awaiting st 8ins from the months after discharge, fousiness or orretfarm, eriod of grants may P service, and' up to a maximum of one year. VETERANS' WELFARE OFFICERS ARE STA. TIONiED IN KEY CENTRES THROUGHOUT ASSIST CANADA. THEY ADVISE AND SHOULD X- SERVICE PERSONNEL, CONSULTED ON ALL PROBLEMS. financed, if sees f may be made P pert including g Issued under the authority Of Hon. Ian A. Mackenzie, Minister of PENSIONS .AND NATIONAL HEAL" * SEND THIS -ADVERTISEMENT TO SOlotE: MAN 011 WOMAN OVERSEAS. AW 5 s 1