Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1942-11-12, Page 4PAGE F+ Yt% YOUR ' V SC CANADA ;� iit�ll:Jr-li Thursday, November x2'th, 1042. I OF NTY! E T NEEDS YOUR P ON AND STEEL NOW More scrap steel and iron is urgently needed if we are to produce the ships, tanks, planes, guns and munitions necessary to win this war. You are asked to do your part by turning in every available ounce of scrap metal you can find in your home or on your farm. This campaign is from November lst to December 15th, 1942. In order to facilitate the systematic collection of scrap iron and steel in your County, Wartime Salvage Limited, a Government Company, and the Steel Con- troller, have completed arrangements with your County Warden and Township Reeve to supervise the collection and sale of the scrap iron and steel you deliver. ERE IS WHAT YOU DO Dig out every ounce of scrap iron and steel you can put your hands on. Township Groups have been formed. Find out from your Township Reeve how and where he wishes you to take your scrap. The price to be paid by Wartime Salva ,e Limited, a Government Company, has been fixed by the Department of Munitions and Supply as follows 1. Price at Collection point will be $7.00 per net ton on ground. 2. For scrap loaded on cars containing less than 25 tons, price will be $8.50 per net ton. 3. For scrap ]loaded on cars containing 25 tons or more price will be $10.00 per net ton F.O.B. cars. The above prices will be paid for all forms of scrap iron and steel excluding (a) Sheet Tin of cLny kind, •(b) Automobile Bodies and Fenders, (c) Stovepipe, and (d) Wooden Attachments. HOW T'1 DISPOSE OF YOUR SCRAP WHEN COLLECTED e When you .shave •delivered your scrap to the place designated for your Group in accordance with 'the instructions of your Township Reeve, you can then -- • 1. Sell your scrap metal to the Government Agency and divide the proceeds of such sale among, the various members of your Group to which you will be appointed by your Township Reeve, or— * 2. 'You ;may -donate your scrap metal to the Voluntary Salvage Corps or Connnittees functioning in your Community, or— * 3. You may sell your scrap metal to the Government Agency and then turn aver part or all of the proceeds of this sale to the Local Salvage Corps or Local War Charities. Your contribution to .the war effort is simplified by this arrangement. Don't v ill until you are urged by your Township officials to do this all-important work. Get busy right away. Canada needs, and must have, tons of scrap iron and steel crow -if we fere to keep our fighting forces armed and ready to win through to victory. TURN Y:'; UR SCRAP STEEL INTO FIGHTING STEEL Issued under authority of: Department•of Munitions and Supply Department of National War Services Wartime Salvage Limited (Address all Communications to Wartime Salvage Limned, Ottawa) SM Department of Labour national War Labour Board GENERAL ORDER The Dominion. Bureau of ;Statistics has found that the cost of living index number for October 1, 1942, is 117.8 (adjusted index 116.9) as compared with the cost of living index number for July 2, 1942, of 117.9 (adjusted index 11.7), The Wartime Wages Control Order, P. 0..5963, provides in Section 48 (iv) : "the amount of the bonus shall not be changed unless the cost of living Index number has changed one whole point or more since the last general order of the Board requiring an increase or decrease In the amount thereof." The index number not having changed by one whole point or more since July 2, 1942, pursuant to the provisions of P. C. 5963 as stated, the National War Labour Board orders that the terms of its General Order dated August 4, 1942, shall continue to apply for the period November 15, 1942, to February 15, 1943, subject to the right of employers or employees to apply to a War Labour Board for authorization of payment of such an amount of cost of living bonus as a Board may determine to be "fair and reasonable," under the provisions of the Order. HUMP1 REY MITCHELL Chairman, National War Labour Board Ottawa, Canada November 4, 1942 ��;•. ,.), NLEY TOWNSHIP v 1 "re) *rav in the: •:cr•+on of Mrs. relo Castle, widow of .George Cu-, herr 82nd 11011', after a YO1* I le yiao daughte' :*t late Mr and Mrs Thomas Heard, of Stanley Township, and was born in Stanley in J,&61. As a young woman she married .George Cantle. He died tri 196. They farm.od on the Bauble tine, Stanley, and elven 40 years s. gotook up resideirco in Bay:Acid. There survive four sons, George of. 1 oderich; Thomas and John of Bay- field, and Sidney of ,Siincoe; also one sister, Mrs. Wm. Howard or Detroit ID A8HWOOI Mr. Carl Oestreieher who has been out west with the O.A.C. students, working in the harvest has returned home. Mr and Airs Jacob Gossman of Port Huron and Mrs. Westlake of Wyoming, spent the week -enol with Mr, and Mrs. Charles Rinker, Mrs. Lucinda Mcisaac who has been visiting in Windsor and De- troit returned 'home Saturday. Miss Lucille Schmook .of Detroit, spent the week -end with Mrs. Mary Tiernan and other relatives. Mrs. Otto :Restemeyer is visiting with friends in London, Dr. Reid .and Mrs Reid and fam- ily of London were ;Sundav vtsrtors with Mr and :Mrs. Thos. Hoperoft. A. C. 2i, Howard Klurnpp of Tor- onto spent the week -end with his par- ents Mr and Mrs T. Klum,pp. Mrs. O. Pedersen spent a few days with friends in London last week. Donald Oestrei cher and Fred Hacgy of London spent the week end with Mr and Mrs A B Oestrei- cher, Mr and Mrs Alvin Kellerman are ;pending a few days in ,Chatth<arn this week. During the month of November, Dashwood Red Cr. ors Unit will ask for good used clothing or new thing to be sent to Russia. Anyone, wishing to eontrlbute to this worthy cause may leave such articles at Tie ei veen'e Hardware store, V. Schatz's' etre end Reetemeyo' &-1VIi11or"s store] AUCTION SALE Of Farm, Stock, Implements and Household Effects, On Lot :28, Con. 14, Hay Township, 2 i/a miles west. and 114, miles north of Zurich, on THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19th, Commencing .at 12.30 p.an. Horses — Pereheron Mare, rising 7 yrs. old; Percheron horse rising 8 yrs; 3 -yr, old Hackney horse Cattle — red cow due in Feb; Hereford ,cow due in Jan; grey cow fresh, grey heifer due in May, red heifer due in +May, 2 white heifers due in June; Polled Angus rising 2 yrs; red steer rising 2 yrs; Hereford steer 1 yr old, red steer rising 2 yrs, 2 red steers rising two in spring, Hereford calf, red calf, Polled Ang- us heifer calf, heifer calf, heifer calf 4 months old, heifer calf 3 we- eks old. Pigs — Yorkshire brood sow due in January, .6 stocker pigs. Hens — 50 white and grey Rock Pullets, 100 B Rock roosters and Sussex, 2 Ducks and a Drake. Implements — McCormick Dearing (binder 6.1ft. new, Deering mower E- ft. in good shape, 13 -disc McCormick fertilizer drill nearly new, 2 drum steel roller, 3 -horse cultivator, 4 - section diamond harrows, quantity of lumber, some belting, walking plow, 2 -row bean scuffler, horse scuffler new, wagon, wagon and manure. box 16 -ft. hay rack, 2,000 -Ib. scales, C1- inton fanning mill, wheelbarrow, 2 sets of sling ropes, 100 twine sacks, 15. grain bags, set heavy harness, 3rd horse harness, 2 horse collars, 2 horse blankets, scythe and stone, whippletrees, neukyoke, bag truck, axe, forks, : shovels, iron gate, pig feeder, Galv. trough, gas drum, cow chain, brace and bits, 3 pig trought, chop box, mail box, timber for even- ers and whippletrees, 3 :5 -agar. pails, 2 5 -gal. gas cans, baskets and boxes, 8 iron posts, 8 bags potatoes, quantity of pails, chicken fences, scalding bar- rel, wine barrel, emery wheel. Hay and Grain — 20 tons of mix- ed hay, 1600 bushels of mixed grain, 300 bushels of oats, 200 bushels of barley, a few (bushels •of wheat, 800 tbs. cull beans Household Effects -- Spencer Royal Shef stove new only used 5 months, dining room suit new, coal heater, ^Cockshutt Lister Separator 600 -lbs.. capacity new, 'milk pails, water and dipper, instant light gas iron with can and funnel, 4 lamps, kitchen set of ,chairs and table, buffet, kitchen cabinet, - small table, cellar table, couch, 3 rockers, 4 1 -gal. crocks, a room linoleum 9x;12 • ft; a room I2x- 18 ft; a room 27x15 ft all practically new; tea kettle, Marconi Radio, short haired .Collie dog, coal. •oil stove with oven, washing machine and wringer, galvanized sheet, horse -hide coat, and numerous other articles. TERMS --CASH Arthur Weber, Auctioneer Wm. S. Johnston, Clerk. Peter Masse, Proprietor. ERAL NEWS Mr. Lloyd Edighoffer was elected president of MVlitchell's newly organ. zed Board of Trade at the meeting held in the Town Hall recently. Mr. Edighoffer !before going to Mitchell, was a popular merchant of Dashwood where he was in the mercantile bus- iness with his father, Mrs. George Edighoffer. AN EXCELLENT RECORD Porch Alice Finderne, a member of the purebred Holstein herd of Bisset Bros., Goderich, has recently completed an excellent Record of Performence test. As a five-year- old she produced in 365 days 464 lbs fat from 13,619 labs. milk. She was milked twice daily. --•The Holstein- Friesian Association of Canada. POLA NEGRI'S TEMPESTUOUS . LIFE STORY The famous screen actress, Pola Negri, who defied fate in a search for love, is ,telling.. inher own words .. the story of her tempestous life.. in The American Weekly with The Detroit Sunday Times for the latest instalment of "Love Was My Undo- ing", by Pole Negri, "Hollywood's Queen of Tragedy. SAFE IN GERMANY Wan. Dalrymple, Brucefield, recei- ved a letter from his son, L.CpI. Wil - limn Robert Dalrymple, a prisoner or war in Germany, who participated in the Dieppe raid, The letter, writ- ten an Sept. 9 was the first received, since taken prisoner. He stated that he was not wounded in the battle, was in good health, and asked for parcels and cigarettes. ]He is 24 yrs. of age, and enlisted June 20, 1940, in the Royal Canadian Engineers at London, received his public school education in Tuckerumith, and atten- ded Clinton Collegiate. Is Now President ANNUAL MEETING The annual meeting of the Huron holstein 13roeders' Club was held in +.he Agricultural Boer,. Roc rC!'•, ton, with a capacity turnout. The j, v- GAREI'E55 TONIGHT BARNES'S TOMORROW Is carelessness the enemy within your gates? An upset lantern may prove as disastrous as a fire bomb. Matches where children can get them are as dangerous as a fire maniac. Putting coal oil in the stove is akin to putting a torch to your house. A car, truck or tractor driven on your barn floor may reduce your buildings to "scorched earth," Safeguard life and property by practising every safety measure. Doii't set a lantern down, even on a window ledge, but hang well up with a good strong snap. Keep matches in metal boxes out of the reach of children. Don't revive a fire with coal oil or gasoline. If you must drive a motor driven vehicle on your barn floor, snake sure that the floor is swept clean of everything flammable. Life is dear—and buildings almost impossible to replace for the duration. Furthermore, your farm is one of the food baskets of the Empire—a vital cog in our Victory machine. Fight to prevent fires, for your loss is the Nation's loss now. THIS ADVERTISEMENT IS SPONSORED BY THE FOLLOWING COMPANIES: ISA THE HAY TOWNSHIP. MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO., ZURICH, ONT. EAST WILLIAMS MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO.,. NAIRN, TWO YOUNG MEN wiairat:aegritexade4"' BEFORE the war, two young graduates in chemistry - faced the future with no assets but technical train-• ing and unbounded faith in themselves. They- planned heyplanned to capitalize on their years in college by- manufacturing a certain chemical product. "But we'll need some money to get started," they said;. "Let's put it up to the bank." Their banker decided that their faith was well', founded in character, ability, energy. "We'll finance- you to start in a small way," he said. "Make a test. on the local market first." Presently the product was being sold all over Canada and exported to the United States .and. overseas. Now it fills a wartime demand. The enterprise employs a large number of people. This actual example illustrates how this country's Chartered Banks help credit -worthy people to benefit themselves, their fellows and their country; under the democratic system of free enterprise. Banks, like any other business, exist because they provide ser- vice which a community needs and is willing to pay for at a rate which will yield a reasonable profit. Chartered Bank profits average less than one-half of one per cent a year on total assets.. Few, if any, other businesses operate on as small a margin. Bank of Montreal , :. The Bank of Nova Scotia ... The Bank of Taroate The Provincial Bank of Canada ; . The Canadian Bank of Connnerce. The Royal Bank of Canada.:. The Dominion Bank , . • Banque Canadienne. Nationale : z Imperial Bank of Canada ; ; Barclays Bank (Canada) esadent, J. W. VniEginond presided. A. complete report of the year's act- ivities was given by the Secretary Hume .Clutton; (President of the Bay field Pall Fair Wnt. Sparks; and by the Agricultural Representative J C Shearer. The following o'rccrs were elected: Hon. Pres., Colin Campbell, Bayfield; President, W. VanPgmo+i t Clinton; Vivi pros., L. Leam.thg, Wal ton, 2nd W L Whyte, Seafoeth, ,vr~er, }I, Clutton, Godericli, six dtrecter were appointed, The main spNalcerr, Geo. •Clemens, I3ran.tford, and gains some valued information. Byrom Ion* voy of Brantford also .spoke. Moving pictures 'were show of outstanclin Holstein herds frarn coast to :coag 1Lurtch was served nt the close of lti prO+•- •