The Huron Expositor, 1940-09-20, Page 3a
i
sr
11
sen in t.
•
' apers
vibe -president, W. Heateke; secneterie
W. H,' The
; treasurer,' ' A. I. Ere-
lane.Phe directors wIfl meet again
next Tuesdlay to -arrange for the se-
-,cur ng of ,'personnel to, get t11er school
an readiness: tor operation, Nearly
all the •names ion the directorate are
laminar to the people of C".,odierich
aand Huron Couhrtty, and esttuquld he a
igu'ananitee that the affaires of .the' new
organization are in good hands.—Gcsd-
•,erich Signet -Starr.
New Teacher on High School Staff
Due to the increased enrolment at
, Mitchell High Sdhool thds, year it was
necessary for the high school board
to advertise for an additional teacher
during the week, Mdse Eleanor Camp, -
bell, of Windsor, being accepted for
the position. Miss' Campbell is ..a
graduate of the University, of Western,
Ontario in English and `History and
;holds a spe,cialtsts .certificate in Mus-
-Mitchell Advocate.
In• Canadian Dental
Corps
In the list of appointments to Mil-
' itary District No. 1, Canadian Dental
Corps', is included the name of Lieut.
Dr. H. A. Mutton, No. 1 ,Company. Dr.
"Mutton, has received no official notice
• of this ap,poin meat appearing in the
press 'and; does not know when, or
where he will be called. This .is,. the
second Mitchell dentist to enlist for
service and already two of our medi-
ical men are on military duty.—Mit-
ch-ell Advocate. •
HAY
(Intended. for last week)
. The regular monthly meeting of the
coun,cii of the Township of. Hay was
held at the Town Hall, Zurich,, on
Monday, Sept. 9th, with all members•
present. . The minutes of the August
in,eeting were adopted as, Head. After
disposing ;of the communications the
following resolutions were passed —
'That Bylaw No. 3, 1940, providing tor
the rates to be struck, levied. and en-
. tiered en the 1940• collector's roll he;
'read three times ar,d finally passed:
"Chat taxes assessed in 1939 to Come-
, ty of• Huron be struck off es roads
affected by taxes have baen.taken ov-
er by the Department of Highways
.-and that said takes be collected from
th Dpartmn•t. That accounts covrin
the Department, That accounts cov-
ering .payments ora tow erhip roads,
Hay Telephone and . gene:'a1 accounts
he passed as per vouchers as follows:
"Township Roade—Dominion Road Ma-
chinery Co., repairs, crusher, $52.33.; •
M. D. Deitz. labor; gas and oil, 140.30;
Craig & Eisenbach, crushing and
trucking, $109.04; H. Steinbach, Road
,eupt., $36.75; Stade & Weido. acct.,
:1.65; Johnston & Kalbfieach, acct„
'$56.24; T. Welsh, 188 yards of gravel,
'115.04. Hay Telephone Svstem-Mun-
. icipal Board, re Bell Co., $1.00; North-
ern Electric Co„ material, $230.21;
'H. G. Hess, salary; $175; E. R..Guenr
•they, cartage, $1.70; T. H. .Hoffman,
' salary, $191.66; H. G. H,e,ss,, extra la-
'bor, $76.02. General Accounts — L.
.Eiendri•ck, rent, $5.00; T'r.easurer Hur-
en, hospital account, $1.75; witness
'fees,- drain action, $26.60; W. H. Edi-
; Shaffer, equal. D.P.V., $5.00; Dept. of
'Health, insulin, $6.90; Stade & Weido,
acct., $15.10; .J. Ges'cho & Son•, flag,
411.00; Exeter Fait; grant, $10.00. The
council adjourned to meet again on
Monday, , Oct. 19th, at 1.300 in the af-
;ter noon.—A. F. Hess, Clerk.
Never does the human soul appear
•strong as when it foregoes' revenge
and dares to forgive an injury.-
Chapin.
Wondrous is the strength of cheer-
fulness; altogether past calculation:
its' power of endurance.—Carlyle.
eel'm full
strength,
pure...
thanks to .
the air -tight
wrapper"
MADe
IN
CANADA
(1 d' fo'r Yea Week)
The Hibbert .torwzltbill 0auv01' Wet
he the Stark ..Towna'hlp gas so sat,
terda , Sept. gbh. Tire Clerk goad 'ohs.
n41imvttee of the previous: Meeting,
which were adapted as read. Bylaw
No. 484, authorizing the tax collector
regardingax n'iottices was given the
third and ' ftnll reading and pass+ d
The Clerk was authorized to make
application to the engbee,er regarading
the Robinson and Roney Drain, The
following accounts were pauid: Hydro
Electric, $5.24; •.. Provincial . Treasurer,
inselin, $6.18; direct relief, $12.07.—
Thom'aa D. Wren, Cheek.
CHNX, WINGHA.M
1200 Kee. • 250 Metres
WEEKLY PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
Friday, Sept. 20-9 a.m., Harold
Victor Pym.; 7.15 pm., "Ez & Zeb";
7.30, Hawaiian Serenaders; 8, Ort.
Grain's Gulley -Jumpers.
turdiay, Sept. 21.10.30 a.m., "Ded-
icated to Shut-In+e"; 6.15 pm., Harry
J• Hoyle; 6.30, Sport Reporter; 7.45,
Barn Dance.
Sunday, Sept. 2211 am., Angli-
can neburchr, 12.30 ` p.m., Harry J.
Boyle; 1.30, Melody Time; 7, Pree'by-
terdan Church.
Monday, Sept. 23-6.15 p.m. Harry
J. Boyle; 7, The Reyyellers ; 7.15, "Eb
& Zeb"; 8, Sarah Cruickshank.,
Tuesday, Sept. 2+--8 ann., Break-
fast Club; 11, Piano Ramblings; 12A5
pin., Songs for the .Soldiers; 7, Ra-
mona.
•
Wednesday, Sept. 2.51-9 a.m., Har-
old Victor. Pym; 7, Deep River Boys;
7.15, "Eb & 'Zeb"; 8, Little Bandl
Thursday, Sept. 26'=8 a.m.,
fast Club; 6.15 p.m., Harry J.
7,• The Jesters.
Tested
Break -
Boyle;
ecipes.
UNUSUAL VEGETABLE •Dl'SHES
Crisp, autumn, days bring with them
sharpened appetites. There are many
pos,sibil•itiees for new dishes that' the
-housewife will find if sthe experiments
With, new vegetables, or tries new
ways of cooking the 'regularly used
ones.
Squash and -vegetable marrow are
old favourites that may' be dressed in
new fashion. n. Cucumbers' are seo, good
as a salad.'egetable that manry� peo-
ple forget haw ,delicd!ows they canbe
when served hot. And eggplant, thet
sleek, purple ekinmed vegetable, which
le a neve'1ty to many, can be peeper-
eco.• in mgay appealing ways.
Some of these 'ap'petizinrg vegetable
dishes, tested' by the Consumer Sec-
tion, M arkeitiaag .Service, Domindtodi
Department of Agriculture, are as fol-
lows:
Stuffed Vegetable Marrow
1, ,Cut a medium sized marrow i.n half,
lengthwise. Pare and remove the
recces: ; Oook the h,alvese in boiling
water for tem minutes .and drain: Pill•
with fallowing stuffing:
1 cup finely- chopped barns or left-
oveir• meat
2 cups medium dream educe
2 tablespoons chopped'. green pepper
Salt and pepper.
Place tire marrow on a wei14 greas-
ed baking she1L .Dover . the . S11ing
with buttered, crumbs and bake for
20 .minutes in a moderate oven'• 350
Oleg. F.- Delscibue, supper all ,sere-
i'ng six to, ei'gh't, •
Eggplant Creole
1. medium eggplant, pared fled dic-
ed
4 tablespoons butter or Other_ fat
?z smell green pepper, cut in strips
2 ta.blespoonts chopped Condon
5 large tamlatoes, choppe
Merit butter in, a fryid.
ng pan. Add,
chloppecl green ,pepper 'and onium, and
cook, fora few minutes. Add egg-
plant, Cover and s'teaem. for about 5
mi'nute's- Add tomatoes and cook, un-
covered, 15 minutes" or unrbil egg-
plant is tender and tomato, bas thick-
ened. Seasen to taste.
' Fried Eggplant
Peel meediumrstized :eggplant and cut
into cetarter-iaach elites. Dip slices in
flour, then in beaten egg diluted with
due tablespoon water, and, theta ' in
fine bread crumbs seasoned wit h
salt and pepper. Fry in deep fat, 360
deg. F. to 370 deg. F. or 'saute in but-
ter in. frying pan until golden brown.
Baked Stuffed Cucumbers
• 3 mediums eueumbere,
1 tablespoon butter or badon fat
1 teaspoon chopped parsley
1 teaesporon dhopped• mem
1/2 cup chopped raw tonaabaea
ee cup •gatabedd ch,eese
1 cup bread' c'rumbe
Stolt and pepper.
Pare, cucumbreats and cut In half,
lengthwise. Seobp „ beut centres 'to,
leave ,shells., Parboil steles for' ten
mint, Cook 'onion and paarslleyin
fat. Add tire cucumber pulp, tclma-
toes, cheese, bread 'orumbs and sea-
son to taste. Coiok 5 minutes. Stuff
tihe cucumbers- with this blot mixture,
place in a balding dish, add, a little
water to keep them from sticking,
and bake 15 minutiese in a moderate
oven_ Servers .six.
GlazedSquash
Cut eubasw'ise, reweove fibre tend
seeds and serape the eaiiity thorough-
ly.
horoughly. Cut in piecestor s'ervdng.
Place squash. skin side down' in a
baking 'pan wield a eanail. amount ,of
shoot watiefr. • Bake le a mod+eraate oven
(376 deg. F.) _fur about 40 minutes,
or until soft. Sprinkle with s'ait, pep -
ver and Weave, sugar. Dot with but-
ter and glaze undler a ba iter (tante.
Toney be used In •place et brown.
'sugar.
,(t aurtieUeldi feene rage 2)
,tea's tate et book Cleetreeter,
l4tauibbbe, wheat(, acts tlnclle had eel -
tied,
tied, There dee ,worked: on ,the faagn.
MK in the Winter ttiMe went t1p echoel,
• Sia at t1be age of 17 he 'lead gphne
to se1bel in Onteartio, Neinaoka dla4
MamUttk>•bar Teaching looked Hite the
thrtr>g to da for Jimmie, sic after goo-
tug to work on a farm neer Regina,
be went to the Normal School' at that
town and qualified to, eteach.
His beet ,soho'oi wase the -Alpha Rur-
al' edictal, dome •forty; Melee sbutbeveest
of Woliseley, Saskatchewan, In euc-
aessecin he taught at Meech, Frobisle
er,
Weyburn and" Lookwoad, all in
Saskatchewan. He continufed to save
hie Money on the pittance teadhers
received.
With ship eye set oe going to uni-
versity he saved his penes and fins
Hon. J. G. Gardiner
eliy was able to enroll at the Uni-
versity of 'Manitoba. In 1911, when
he was 24 years •olid, he received his
bachelor's degree after specializing in
eistory and economics. •
r
Extra urr7culla ,activities at the
C es
scheel teacher -farmer were soccer
and deba:taing. He wase good, at both.
The 1911 campaign was, the forst in,
which be stook part. Since he was a
good school debater he was given the
opportunity to 'speak from the stump.
Naturally ,he was a"Laurier support=
er.
On graduat lion he went . to Lemberg,
::ask„ as principal of the public
school.
Once Voted. Tory
Once, Mr, Gardiner who by then,
was thorroughl•y ei'nrterested ,ihr politics;
voted' Conservative. It • was' for. a
candidate en Manitoba's, Provincial
House, new Senator William Sharpe.
That rare roccaision came when Mr.
Gardiner was a student at Winnipeg.
It was his Only lapse from the true
faith.
Mr. Gard'ener's first • contest in
whiG11, he h nLsel•f was a candidate,
was in a bye -election in the S askat-
chewan provincial eihow, at North
Qu'Appelle. He won by 280 votes:
1 h:at wase htis• lowest majority in his
nine campaigns.
Mr. Gardiner's first portfolio: came
denting .the Dunning ministry -When
he got two poets at one shot-Miniia-
ter of 'Highways •ands "Minister in
charge of Labor and Industries. Thbt
was in 1922.
'When Mr. Dunning went to Otta-
wa to help Mr. King in 1926, Jimmie
became mender of •. Saskatc'hewaa.
'He led his panty rthreugh the de-
feat of 1929. "g hat was the first time
the Liberals lead been 'defeated: in
that 'peovince ' since As,' esttablrisrhment
in 1905. =die. • the- premiersbdp of the
Hon. Waiter Scott
PILES
f ctoik treait e
Q►3ca2 p*
On Choir
P
ntmeflt
work that; rieauls it9S0 to it."
Q: "Did you. :,really make ebat
'bialf-Way' spe eh dieting the:last fed-
eral election.?"
A: "Not a,s tt warPremted by the.
Canadian Prase- Ttlit, there was no
ennedlaIDa Reetetenepeelier there- . Sec_
onKi�ly, I'm no heitel ay man.'. Theme
what I.,dikl Say won trawl tbterer Were
three--,gnoulte In Caagiadla, Theme was
finsrt, "the padi'figtt group. Then there
watt the ,group these bad dome, voth
ing about rpnepateiug',, for the war, and
opposed every bit ref preparation, that
we ,underbouok. T eg there was the
third group to which. I belong which
bad foie what was coming -and
prepaaned for tt. TheJ 'Hest group is the
O,C.F.; the seldom]: 'Is' the Conserve-
tive, and the Med is the, Liberal?'
Q: "Are you, byi your refusal to
oo-operafie, the ,cause sof Aberhrart'.s
second eleteti'gn vec'Gkuy in Alberta?"
A: "Our orgaa izatk n had nethnng
to deo With Abeabame People came
to see me and warded me to eh to..
Alberts; and •suppoirt a unity move to
defeat Aberbdirt. ,My answer wras: 'I
em . a'•Libera)i wad I don't follow Lirb-
. enol •primcepl+es jupt to detect a Gov-
einmeent- I to lew them because I
believe m , ,r? wblether ire or out.'
I told them I didn't think anyone
could trim Aber'hart unless het had a
conviction as sitnong ' 'as Aberhart's
and was prepared to build. an organ-
iiatiom to Taut over that conviction,
I went' feather and told ,them we had
an experience in Saskaitnhewan that
has taught me that a Goveur mlent
that has mo conv'i'ction..but is prepar-
ed to remain in power with the sup-
port of the • pelopbe of 'opposite . points
of view can only eremeen in office by
attempting to lapel itself into pope-,
tatty."
Q: "What do you' think of Union
Government?"
. A: "A Union Oovern,ment can do
only one Job and ebiouldn't stay for
more than that lone job,e
Q: "I5 organization the dirtiest
job in politd?" ..
A; "I've organized for the United
C'hurc'h.. I've or d fon the.,Lib
oral .pla,rty. And would say you.
meet just as man- good people in
one place •as you do im the other." ,
Q: "Are .you :a ,partisan?" '
A: "I'm a partisan in, that I be-
lieve in certain' principles and am
willing to go out' and put tile's over
on every oceastion. If fighting to put
over tee padnciples I believe in makes
me a parttisan, then I'm afraid I'll
have to 'plead, .guilty,."
Q: "What use your big job in your
new department?" ,
A: "I,n•my ophidian every Canadian
citizens no matter Whit,his, ances'ta-y,
shtould be treated' ase a Carnadien um -
til he lies been found, to be ot'hear-
w'ise, and' that is what 1 think des aur
big job. It is to recognize th,e fiact
that. democratic . ,institutions. of gov-
eminent, which (have Made people. of
other rlatd+e nrellities proceed to oell
themselves. Canadians,, are big en-
ough to permit all bh'ese people to
Serve in every phase of their defence
and the National • Was• Services -de
partment will not have done a job
unless it has put over the idea to
every citizen in Camelia that all Gan-
aidians ere equal before the law and
under the constitution"
At time of writing Mr. Garddwer is
Teamed Up. With. Davis
Wlii'le on the Opposition Jimmie
teamed up with one of the ,shrewdest
politioiams, be ,could find Tommy
Davis. For years the firm of Jimmie
•and Tommy wore down the Govern-
menet and' built up .their owns organ-
izatioai. They, were desk -mates, in the
Legislature. They knew all the tricks
endo figured"out a few ,new oetes thenar
sielvee 'Pommy became Jimnnie's At-
torney -General,
The team is together 'again.. Tom-
my, now Mr. Justice Davis of the Sas-
katohewarn Supreme Court bench and
ad-ministrator of the Farmers' Credi-
tors? Arrangement Act, in hiss prov-
ince, is the new deputy of the War
Services Ministry... A highly effec-
tave pair of politicians,
An example of hoer Mr. Gardiner
wiorkts and. soli tifies his position is
the way be carried on after Mr., Dun-
ning left shim in charge. There was
a small convention. Really it was a
meeting of three jr four peopele frim
es•ch constituency, and the mmembers.
'Jimmie got the leadership, of course
He made sure of it and the man who
'held the organisation :reins took. no
chances. There was no contest.
Wthen ie. Opposition bei orgentze-1
a big eonwenti'on in, 1931. Once again
Jimmie had no contest. '.
The former lvlayor of Lean:bprg was
a• Laurier ° :ram in 1917, . He w'as
strongly egaimst conscription -a The
War Times ,El'ecti'on Act was an is-
'su'e. All those dieeniraucrhiised un-
der that act, and- now 't'h'eir sons, stilt
Vote for Jimmie Gardiner. He was
never the one to allloiw a voting Week
to disintegrate.
notary the man des in charge of the
registration which: lends to the only
form of consenitrtion Canada ,has as
yet ie the man•,whe char always been
violently oppoesedt eo any form of e'om-
puls:ory mildta.ry service. He sees
nothing incongruous in that.
No Half -Way Speech
Here are some questions, and an-
swers in" the interview:
Q: ",Are you as ambitious, as, they
day?„ .
A: "It all depends iii• what people
call ambitlioua I aures ys try to db a
job las well as I can do it ante I've al -
days found th'e 'public to value any
JO that 'Mals blenen well done."
Q: ''Do yioti intend to build a po-
litical machine' out of the aaatinnal
registnatiion?"
A: "You 'couldn't do • the - job and
build a political organization: And in
the second: place, it ds,n't the kind of
Septeetb.er. 5-.12
Suamrnare
1. Sixth ronee:pet of Oanadiaa
triceps arrived irau Greet Britain. ' len
the contingenteewnly 11,500.eseldiers
'and 33 'awns.
2. Treaties ,of rconlc3liation• signed
at WOMeiwgtottiheti sea the Govern -
Meet et tete United'States aid. elle
vam
Goverents hof Canada,A.uStral�ie,
New Zealand
3., Wartime Prices- and Trade
Board'' mesciwded its tender of August
5th, which fixed prices, on flour and
•bread. , '
4. Sunday, September 8th, church
congregations ,.across the Dominion
prayer for an early aped victorious
conclusion of the war.
5. An Easteern Canalise port wit-
nessed transfer to the Briti 21 flag of
the first group of United States over-
age ,destroyers.
6. Newfoundland sent to Canada,
de first conthgent of future pilots,
air observers and ai-r gunners far
training under the British Common-
wealth Air Tnain1ng Plan.
7. A' Royal Canadian Air Force re-
ernitimg •unit .opened on Seeptemibea•. 11
a tour of the Maritime Provinces. The
unit will, bring facilities for enlisting
within reach of those who live beyond
convenient distance of tate regular R-
A. F. recruiting centres.
8. Announced that income taxi may
he 'paid in eight, instalments without
interest.
9. Sixteen construction •contracts
in. connection with wear effort award-
ed. TataY, $708,250.
10. During week ended August 31,
1,368 contracts for war supplies a-
warded. Total, $5,750,352.
11. Canada's second war loan of
$300,000,000 issued- Due October 1,
1952. Rate: 3 -per cent. Issue price,
98.75 per cent and ewe-tiedinterest
yielding 3.125 per eent- to maturity.
The dramatic critic asked his news-
paper to send, him to visit the troops
as a war correspondent, and his . re-
quest eaasss granted.. . At the time he
had belittled, fourteen: ,plays in a
row.
"I hear," said one of the reporters,
"that Gammond's going to cover the
war."
.-"Wthat!' ejaculated another. "Sup-
pos:in' he d'oesrn't like it?"
still the Minister of Agriculture as
well as bold:lug on to his new post.
Agriculture will Ilikfel+y go to sonieone
else soon. That will give Mr. Gard-
iner full •time for hie war job. He is,
aggressive and a driver. It is going
to be interesting to see whether or
n,ot the new job makes or breaks the
streng",m,en from.' the West.
Me`aaiweile Mr. Gardieer is work-
ing hard. He has, very, little time for.
his wife and, four children. He had
practically no time ye au?'1 last
ter; will have none this doming orae.
Noir will he have time to epen,d,at
the 'Rid-ea.n Club- of whloh ,-he is a
member. Nor will be__.biave much
time to spend at the Canadian, Ki-
wanis or Assiudbeiea Clubs ,at 'Regina.
Nee will ihke have time for his 20-ecire
farm at Lemberg.
But he well find time to keep his
political fence mended no matter
how busy bie new department keeps
Lim- It'spart of the game.
Ge1t0
cuSett f be 4u
aur Own diftieelegiseePheeeDefe.
lup[attrt°
. A laugh to I Ioy!Qi *Wit
''n.,t
Alma a • 'eeltw >heant, fOe of i'tii:4!t'it° k1nt4
AO 'ttrue
.1Aeeel Y1� there 'ran he
A more perfect race. m.eane a moi),
soulful reel a Writ. .uoij i ,race a
race hawing• greater capacity, for love.
—Alen Kee.
Cheerfulness
If there fn a varti}e• tin trice world at
which we s!fioulel' aim it is cheerful-
ness.—B•{ilwer Letton.
Good Books
4 Next ' to acquiring good friends, the
best acquisition ie that of .shod books.,
—Colton. . .
Reading
We may read, and read, and read
again, and still find something new,'
something to please and something to
instruct,•—Hardis.
Modesty
Modesty and humility, eye the so-
briety of the mind; temperance and
char ity are the sobriety ofthe body.
—Winchcote.
' The Secret
'1 he secret of a man's nature lies
in his religion, in what he really be-
lieves' about this world and his own
place in it.—J.' A. People.
Opposition
A certain amount of opposition is
a great 'help to a man; kites rise
against and not with .the wind.—„e r
cn, -
Onlookers
It is not the people who are help-
ing the world who are pessimistic
over the condition of •things, it is the
idle onlookers—M- J. Savage.
Good Cheer
Let us be of good cheer, remem-
bering that the misfortunes hardest
to bear are those which never come.•
—3. R. Lowell.
Waste.
How- can a man hopewin wealth
to
when be wastes both 'his time and•
his. money? Time and money ,— the
two things wealth is made of.
r^r •
;at�e#s
So when a great ilk
For Team 'beyarsnd• sour le i
The 11ght hoe leaves~ 1,01nd
Upon the 'path of men. t•
• Chivalry
Notbdng makes' a. man great
an appeal to ohivabry: Bewaare
that you: ju dge no Mean Wore
call chars come,
The Right •
The proof of a thing's tbeiug gag
is that it has Sowers' otter itbe :alre
that et excites us, wigs us, or
us.—Ruskin.
° ProspaePitlr= •
Peesperit$ is the. etou ,stone of vir-
tue; for it is less difficult to bear
misfortunes- than to Toreerain • • enc;:
1'upted by pleasure:T•ac4ctue- --...7
A .Flaw
He who is false 'tt z press duty •
rates a 'bread Methh° loom,
find the flaw when he may have for-
gotten its . causes.—Beecher.
Sinai! Things
In the day , of small uthings con-
stancy and faithfulness will carry: is
to noble ends.
Blades of Grass
Every blade of grass is a etude;
and to produce two where there wee
but one is both a profit and a plea-
sure.
lyscure.
er
7}.
Gifts
Happy the man whom' 'indulgent
fortune allows to pay to virtue what
he oweto nature, and
to make m'
generous gift of what must .othe..a:•-
wise be , ravished, from -.him by ereeei.
necessity.—Hume.' -
IT'S ALWAYS DEPENDABLE!
olidays March on..
•
1. lc
• ... when HYDRO
servants do the work
Labor Day has gone its way—vacation time's
over for another year—but the smart Hydro house-
wife can still take `time out every day for a holiday
from old-fashioned toil: In her spotless, modern
kitchen, a flameless Electric Range cooks the
meals automatically while she relaxes ... Again,
she has a complete electrical laundry to tub and
iron the weekly wash—a Hydro Water Heater for
everyday "clean-up" needs ....All through the
house, convenient, work -saving electrical servants
do her bidding at the snap of a switch! Is this
lucky lady rich? Npt alit of it! ... There's dozens
like her on nearly every street—smartwomen who
have 'wakened up to 'the real economy of using all
the Hydro power they can. Take their tip .. .
study the chart at left ... the more you use Hydro
service—the more you get for your money!
HD -t!
111! IIYDDD.ELECtRIC
BRINGS YOU BETTER
LIVING..AT AT LO !N ER
LIVING COST!
CHER CYi I; 11 VII