Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1940-12-13, Page 3•• ' The Plerfet Wit; AWL* was t ?petting, ter elle Deetenebtee IneStinft fhe eZlerldb. W,t. 'and deeldte advelete weaM1 er wadi:toms a el?oiegairt attend" :awe was neted. iffee. T. IX, Memo, Peesident, preeleed. Mees HEI4rry nese *ad M's. Tith Hen delegates to the .gonventiou held et leandine Presented splendid 'reports. Curren,t eyelets were coatributed by Miss) Kathleen nay. 'Also assisting with the) delightful p-rol gram were Pass Margaret Hey and Miss Hazel lettley in a vocal duet, -"The SWeeteet Story ^Etter ePold," ac- tompanied at the piano by Mrs. W. D. Bryeeea Piano solo contributed by Mrs. Dryewas ealjoyed. Reye ()each as Santa Claus favored with songs, Wilton Dagg aecompattying at the planter Christmas carols were also WEKV Pli,9ORAM VelidOle Deg 3.3---8 eine; Pre Club; B O; Edefteede; Oralefte Gulleeel • SatIDFORT, Dee. 14-9.40 .a,ni„ WO, dies! rarty; 1.30 p.m., Ranch Bays; 6,45, WW Caater; 7.30, Dam -Dame. Sunday, Deb. 119-41 Sm., Uni4S4 ClAteebe 12.35 p:m., Wayne King Or- chestra; TripleN Class; 6.16, Tea 11/Weenie; 7, Anglican Church. Monday, Dee. 16-9 a.m., Piano •Ramblings; 12.45 p.m., Bell Dore' 7, Spimaing Wheel Singers; '8, Sarah & Her. Guitar. . Tuesday, Dee. 17-9.30 a.m., "tory a Pamela Pride"; 6 p.m., National Time; 7, M & Lee at the Piano; 8.30, "Good) Luck." Wednesday, Dec. le—pen, Welker - ton Christmas Fair Broadcast, times to be -announced; 8.30 p.m., Clark. Johnson. Thursday, Dec. 19.8 'axe, Break- fast Club; 11, Piano Ramblings; 8.30 p.m., Grenadier Guards Band. featured on the pregraria. Following the business period a. buffet luncheon was served by the committee, Mrs. H. Rose, lkstrs. F. Haberer and Mrs. J. Gaseho. MRS. E. B. DALZIEL -w-E all like .to feelethat we can whip up a fine cake, and it's always fun competing in lo- cal fairs to see how our baking measures up with that of our neighbours. However, for con- sistent prize-winning, it would be difficult to beat the record of Mrs. E. B. Dalziel who lives near Woodbridge, Ontario. Asked for the secret qf her success, Mrs. Dalziel said, "To begin with you must have ex- ceptionally good flour. I use Robin Hood because it absorbs liquids so easily and •has so much life and body to it. Cakes never fall in the centre when I use Robin Hood Flour. I often think, anyone who had never baked before could start with Robin Hood and have excellent results the very first time she tried. I also like Robin Hood because it is so fine and whiteeee •••;,.1. e'se •••V e•- iwdd , I've used it for all my baking and wouldn't think of changing —it goes so far and makes baking so easye! For prize-winning baking- • Mrs. Dalziel advises Measuring - ingredients carefully. She fol- lows her recipes closely and cannot remember having had a baking failure since she began using Robin Hood Flour., '— There is a reason for this: Robin -- Hood Flour iS milled from the finest Canadian Spring wheat and every grain is washed before being ground. The millers are so sure of Robin Hood's quality that each bag contains a Guarantee Certificate offering your motley back pluq 10%, if you are not absolutely satisfied.. Order Robin Hood, Canada's all- purpose flour today, and enjoy greater baking successes. qrstarr..fotleiste;,, ' HOME BAKING SERVICE ROBIN HOOD FLOUR MILLS LIMITED • od. Flour am Wa4ted Wheal 5, Active' Organization Re- ports on Activities,for • Red 'Cross. The December .meeting ef the Tuckers/Latin -Ladies,- Clubw-asheid In the home Of Mrs. Hoard Caleb,on Thursday afteriata.on„ Dec. StJb. The ereeldente Mrs. Edein. Johns, wee in the chair and the, meeting 'opened with the Opening Odle, followed by the Lord's Prayer and the slang "Jite gle Delete The minutes, of the last meeting were read by Mrs. William Pepper. As this was; the lot meeting of the year Ate conveners. of the several committees gave a report on the year's work. Mrste McGregor, the Red Cross convener, reported •having sent into the Red Cross depot 2 pairs of mitts, 97 pairs of socks and some to come in, making the total 110; - li pairs of Warners, 7 sweaters, 2 quilts and $15.40 from a Red Cross tea. Mrs. McGregor also expressed) her thanks to several ladies of the eammunity, who are, not members of the club but have done knitting. Mrs. Garrett, convener of the Social Ceramittee, reported a social evening had 'been held in the church basement in February. In August the club en- tertained the Kinbern W.M.S. the:Stanley Ladies' Club and the London(Road Ladies' Club at a 10 -cent tea in aid of the Red Cross. Tbe club was entertained by, the W.M.S. ladies of OntariO St. Church, Clinton, on Mree Wentiorff's lawn in July -and in November was Melted) to take the mieetring with the Ontario St. Women'Auxiliary. , Mrs. Walters gave the ,report of the Flower Com- mittee. The Nominating Committee brought in the following- slateof officers for 1941: President, Mrs.. S.ellery; vice-. president, Mrs. Lawson.; siecretary, Miss, M. Cliche .assistant, Mrs. A. Matheson; treasurer, Mre. W. Pepper; social committee, Mrs. E. Grich, M.rIS. E. Townsene„ Mrs. Wm. Pepper, ivLiss Irene Garrett; cutting committee, Mrs. Walters, Mrs. H. C ch.,. Red Cross committee, Mrs. McGregor, Mrs. Fear, Mrs. F. Townsend; Rower com- mittee, Miss F. Whitmore, .Mrs.• A. Pepper; press ,secretary, Mrs: F. Townsend; aSsistant, Mrs. J. Landes - borough; pianist, Mrs. Rogerson; • as- sisent, Mds Viola Pepper; buying coin mittee, Mrs. Fred Pepper, Mrs. Gar- rett, Mrs, W. Pepper. Miss M. Crich favored with a mouth organ selection and Mrs, E. Crich and Mrs. A. Matheson with an instrumen- tal dnet. Twenty -tin* ladies were present and roll call was responded to' by a Christmas. recipe. - Mr. and 1VIrsi. V. Tereyberry, of Leamington, visited with Mr. and •Mrs. P. Peppet- and other friende in this vicinity several days last week., .Mesere. Aldeen_Crich, Bert Garrett, Jack Carter and George Hoggarth vis- ited on Sunday at their respective homes, from camp at Woodstock. • S. S. No. 6 will hold their regular Christmas entertainment on. Wednes- day evening, December 18th. - Two earns to one tongue; , therefore hear twice as, much as you speak. THE DOMINION BANK Condensed Statement as at 31st October, 1940 ASSETS Cash on Hand and in Banks, including Bank of Canada -- Deposit with Minister of Finance Government and Other Securities Call Loans ' ' $ 71,524,716 Commercial Loans and Discounts' .76,829,024 Bank Premises , ' 5,487,573 - Liabilities of Customers under Letters of Credit, Acceptances - . and Sundry Other Assets $ 28,955,390 261,950 38,489,760 3,817,616 4,610,997 LIABILITIES Deposits Deposits by Other Banks • Notes in Circulation Letters of Credit, Acceptances and Sundry Other Liabilities Capital, Reserve and Undivided Profits $158,452,310 3430,411,517 3,270,542 4,761,084 5,147,978 $145,591,121 14,861,189 $158,452,310 The General Manager,. The Dominion Bank, Toronto, Ontario. Weesetort that we have *ermined the'above condensed alance Sheet as at October else 1940, and compared it with the books at Head Office and with the certified retitle from the Branches. We have examined the cash, and the securities representing the Beek% ievestments, held at Head Office and certain of the larger Branches as at October 3Ist, 1940, • end in addition we skunked the mob 'avid the securities held at mettle 'of the important Brandies duritigehe year. We have obtained all the infoemation and explanations that we have required, and in our ',Onion dte transactions of the Bank which have come under our nods:or-have been within the powers of the Bank. our opinion the Ilelance Sheet Aide** the true condition of She. iptith and is as shouts by the books Of the Benk, L Sitelielliente of at, lielianntk, Hagen X Ny. 04;f Tratittrtclyrtga • PloVilmsbir 20,1040. ik tp, Wife Put KrUschen in taly Hi Imrw; 3 A1,440. fiee • „ • .• • 4 P0.014'il014ideretand iohy dip hea*cJes )Jt been Oabieet tO: VereenattenJ4100Ve4,'FjeWifetelti. en, and Ineae Owe sat down and wrote4hOtalloVng letter .- • 'I Me. 62 yapc of age, and ever since I .Wkis bpttof ten srpp.w, mi.)) subjpct toe 'vex*Lad headaches. But ..._.two..yeara ago .1he- headaches eased. up—for what :reason I did . not know. I was sterpeesed when one day my Wife told.rne 1 had been Iruecheta-Salteeineey coffee for over two yearn.. I anestili uteeig them, as I keen* of nothlog finer. —J. T. ., • Headaches centaften-be traced to a disordered stmeach, and te. the unsuspected retention in the system of stagnating waste material Which poisons the blood. Remove these poisons — prevent them forming again—and you emove the cause of many aches and pains. And that is just how Krusehen Salts brings pleasant relief. Kruschen helps Nature to cleanse your body cone- pletely of all clogging waste matter. 11111•1101•••111•11111M11, BAYFIELD L. 0. L. No. 24 held their annual meeting, and electiOn of offieers or 1941. • The following were elected : W.M., Julie Parker; D.M., Walter Westlake; chaplain, A. E. Erwin; re- cording secretary, Ninien Heard; thi- ancial Charles Geminhardt; treasurer, Harold Stinson; marshall, William Parker; lecturers, William McDool and Henry Darrow; commit- tee, Robert Orr, Emerson Heard, 11e5 - lie Elliott, William Ferguson, and E. A. Featherston. _ Mr. Lewis McLeod and John and W. J. McLeod, Jr., left'last week for Port Dover, where they secured, elia- ployment on fishing tugs. Mr. and Mrs, Charles Widcombe left this week to live in Windsor. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Widicombe, of Windsor; spent the ,Week -end in the village. ' His s.ipter, Mary, returned to the city with, them on Sunday. Mr. Jack Atkinson and daughter, Patricia', of Detroit, spent the week- end in the village. Miss Margaret Ferguson, of Tecum- seh, spent the wee•k-end• with her par - elate here. KIPPEN Mr. E. Willard., trucker of Hens,all, recently shipped for /Mr. Herb Ker - cher, of Tuckersmitli. to tho Whyte Packing Co.' of Straiford•, eleven hogs, six and a .half months old, averaging two hundred pounds and grading 'A' selects. Thee hogs were eleven of a litter of thirteen Mr. Kerchter keeping the other two for brood sows. THE DOMINION BANK; -70th ANNUAL STATEMENT QW,.4 4440A .,41.911;'-nabil.regent07,.. • , •-• • .• '4 -'in Pgm..40414; boon, twit *9404 0:it, in„a voat office. Oe 4y bie 10.4.01' '111MSe1t "Why Wald:Wit it he , .„ jdea to*t.m91*i„.t9 04.7P—f..9F.10k. 04064 1001474 0'0a1. to deemate their Chrhetmale lettewel. and Paeltages?' . "The royal family of 10mm:writ be' came heterested and the money was found to print the seals, They.enlid so rapidly that emote there was money .emough t -build) a children'sehospital and the lives of many little ones Were saved. "One of these seas found ate. way 'to America 'on. a letter to. Jacob Rils, American ithilauthropist, who was. native of Denmark, ."Mr. Ford poent- ed out. "Mr. Ries was so ieeprespecl with its potential usefulness and the fektive air that it gave to; his letter that he wrote an article about the seals in The Outlook magazine of July 6, 1907. "In Wilmington, Delaware.," 'Mr. Ford continued, "a lady ,named Emily Bissell wanted to keep open a little hospital where poor victims of till), erculosie were being brought back to •health. She had read Mr. Riis's art - ice and thought "Why. not try the Mullett/as Seal da -vice 1 Delawane?" "Thus Christmas Seals came to the North American continent, catching the linagiulation of the public both in the United States and Canada.. Since that early beginning tens of thousands of . lives have been saved because Ohristnias Seals madie,—tuberculosie work passible." Since the campaign, was' inaugurat- ed in Canada .in 1927, approximately two million dollars have been raised. in this way and epent exclusively for. preventive work. That the Canadian tuberculosis., death rate has come, down' from. 82 per 100;000 in 1927 to 52 in 1939 can surely be no accident but a splendid tribute . to tha efforts of lobal committees across Canada Who have . enthusiastically proinoted their campaigns 'year by year. Christmas Seals purchased in 1939 by 11,951 persons, in the ccninties of Middlesex, Lambton, Kent, Elgin, Ox- ford, Perth and Huron, enabled Queen Alexandra Sanatorium to last year send traveleing clinics monthly to Chatham, Sarnia, St. Thomas, Inger- soll, Woodstock, Stratford, Go d eri oh, and 1..on,dort, giving free examination to over thousand men, women and children, Good temper is like a sunndy daYT it 'Sheds, its _brightneSIS upon eVerY- thing, The annual meeting of shareholdea-a of The. Deminipn Bank was •held at the Head Office of the bank, in 'the City of Toronto onnVedneedny, Dec. 11th,, when the 70th Annual State- ment covering. Operations for the 12 months ended October 31st last was presented. The features of this statement that should b noted are the Bank's strong cash and licpild position, the hubstan tially higher pom.mercial loans and its inaproved earnings.. Commercial loans and discounts in Canada have shown -a remarkable in- crease during the year. 'In the report 'as. year ago they stood,at $58,396,- 418; today they have reached $74,- 157,387, expre-ssing, of course, the in- crease in business activity. Ca11 and .short loans in Canada and elsewhere have deereasedi from $5,- 759;378 in the previous statement to $3,817,616 as during th,e year there has been a marked reduction in de - Mantis for this type of financing. Deposits by the public, while slight- ly less than nt year ago, total $121,- 698,090, compared with $1-23,314,000, a decrease of $1,616,000. Approxi- mately $22,000,000 was withdrawn from depoisits for investment in Can ada's war loians. Deposits by the public that do not bear interest have increased by $3,097,000, •and now stand at 341,075,000; those bearing in- terest amount to $80,622,000, being $4,713,000 less than last year. • Dominion and Provincial Govern- ment deposits total $8,713,357, COM - Pared with 313.587,383 a year ago, a decrease of 34,874,026. The Bank's soundli4uid position is again indicated by' cash assets, at $28,955,390, that is 20.82% of liability to the public; immediately availla:ble assets at $71,524,000-.. are 51.43% of lialbility to the publie, 94c vbgkgj xzfiflff.. cmivryp vbgleq12 The net profits..are $958,788, com- pared with $802,296 for tire previous fiscal period of, ten months. After provIddeg $370,165 for Dominion, and Provincial taxes --an 'amount of $105,- 930, in excess of the previous year— $700,000 for divideniday a contribution of e85,000 to the Officers' Pension Fund and) the writingedown of' Bank Premises Account by $150,000, $23,788 'was added to the Profit and Loss Ac- count, whioh now stands at $861,188. .Theeelenk's Investment nortfollio to- tals $38,489;000, Of Which Dominion and Provincial Boras stand at $334- 978,000. Municipal and other high grade securities represent the bal- ance. In comparison with total en- vestieehts isa last year's statement there is aeeduttion of $22,100,000. This was in a large sense dee to the increased demon:di by the Bank's cue- bomers for loans to finance the 1940 grain crop and War clontraotel Letters of Credit ere ehown at $4,- 333,000 as against $2,866,000 a year ago. Vida inerease reflecte th)e great- er activity of the 13ank'e mete -Mere le foreign, business,: Cittpleall rat $7,000,000 and Reeerveti of $7,000,000 remain unchanged. k„K eree- • .S.0.1090.Y449*PrOt Vtle Pet- ,Nlv *Se b9,410"iife heat" Plate. ColtP,Ort, --onlye'e..e.eeee;;;;;"".;•77.717.4. A. Present 'F °I Would be a Model Electric To We have . ell th teadThg,tnek prices ranging from For Mother, or Sider, or Wife We suggest the Fatianus Mixmaster. Cuts work in the kitchen in half. How delighted they will be, with the de- licious 'cakes jt makes. Attachments include Grinder, Orange Squeezer, Price Cream Whipper, 1 7 • .5 Lamps for Every Occasion ght which makes reading a pleasure. We Including the modern Trill in- vite you to examine our selection. Prices .from • 2.95 • • The boon of electrical labor -savers is one that every housewif• if'‘ appreciates more and more as the years go by. More of her en- ergy and more of her time can be devoted to things more import- • ant if she has the,facilities to assist in her housework. We in- vite you -to examine our large selection of labor-saving electrical appliances. . 1 ,Radios ! Radios ! HERE IS EVERY STYLE OF TI -IE- FAMOUS; DE FOREST RADIOS. All the popular modela at prices from .59 Boshart Electric ENOS BOSHART, Proprietor Phone 75 - Seaforth fee cr. -14 • ••1 Especially this Christmas, everybody will be happy to receive Electrical Gifts. • They are always smart — always appreciated—and at low Hydro -cost for current, Elec- trical Gifts not only give pleasure ...but give better living, at lower living costs ...365 days every year, year after year! • IP t•-•• ipt r • 5 - • •?..f FOR MOTHER Pi A beautiful Electric Range . , . or a modern Electric Refrigerator. A work -saving Electric Washer or Cleaner. A handy Electric Boaster. An Electric Ironer ... Food Meter. ... Grille.; Coffe.e Maker. Or a handy Portable Heater for her comfort. FOR PAD 1/ An up-to-date Electric Shaver. A convenient plug-in Electric Heater for the car, to assure quick, easy start - mg every morning. A small Radio' for the den. A modern Electric Tool for the base- ment workshop, if he's a hebbyist. • FOR SIS A smart Electric Clock for her dressing table. An Electric "Hospitality Set" for late .snacks when her friends drop in. An Electric Curling Iron. Or an Electric Sunlamp to help her keep that "Florida" tan all winter. FOR JUNIOR I/ That Electric Train he's always wanted. Or a real Electric Motor he can "hook up" to those models he builds. An Electrical Set "for his home Workshop ... or an Electric Tool that will help him turn out woodwork with cabineemelcees artistry. , et,