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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1942-07-24, Page 5; { . _ nwSoAGXwWtW1Y�'41M1''M .... •+all .... PASS ,M4610-, EXAMS A;11 ,pupils of .114,0;,04h 'Mills, AN. 1C,M., who tried a am& were aucceea Sol. Mr. T, ,Crawword, of the 'Tgron: to .Conservatory of Mus?c, was the\ ex- aminer at the Oiinton local centre in Uune: Grade VII!—Norma Baer, pass; theory, first class honors; Grade IV, Verne Pollard, Honors; Grade III, Marie Raith1 y, honors; Grade II, Margaret Jackson, -first class honors;' . Joan Kfllough, honors. WALTON • Choir Honors Member The choir members of Duff's Unit- ed Church, Walton, met at the home of Mrs. Harold Sellers last Thursday evening in (honor of one of their mem- bers, Mrs. Herbert Travis, formerly Mildred Sellers. '-A pleasant social evening was spent and at the close the guest of honor was presented with a mirror and a walnut hall table by Mrs. Harvey Brown and Mrs. Walter Davidson, and the following address was read by ,Mrs. Nelson Reid: "pear Mildred: Although some, tuna.'• has elapsed sincea your marriage, we, the choir of •Duff's United Church, Walton, want you to know that we have not' forgotten you in your happiness. Dur= &ng the time in which you -have tak- en your -place as one of our choir, we have found you a faithful and valued member, ready at any time to do your part in helping in the service of song. We are pleased to know that your marriage does not, at. this time, sever your connection with our church and choir. We all hope and desire to see you in your place in the choir as us- ual. As an occasion of this kind comes to .most people but once ,in a lifetime, we could not let it pass with- out giving you something tangible by which to make you feel that we, too, -are happy for you and that may also serve as a remembrance of. us. Kind- ly akccept this table and mirror. We s.nderstand that your happiness will THE satisfaction. l eer Sales are the best Check Books Canada. They more than books and always We are agents will be pleased you ' on any quantity required. See Your Home ems, Books Counter made in cost no ordinary give and to quote style or Printer Fiat HURON EXPOSITOR Seaforth : Ontario , W. A.0 IAN Girls from every part of Canada, now serving in the Canadian Wo- men's Army Corps are performing the important job of releasing able- bodied.men'°•for combatant duty, as• these 'pictures show: The Corps, which will 'double its strength within the next few months, is employ- ing girls in many of the jobs available to their sisters in civilian life. In every department of the Array, women are proving they can work efficiently and well. The need for typists in the C.W.A.C. is pronounc- ed. Tho pretty stenographer pictured .at TOP was in the ranks a few months ago. Now she bas 'been promoted to the rankof sergeant. She is,apown taking dictation from Major Brown. All phases ofArmy life are familiar to the members of the Corps and at BOTTOM three members are shown working on one of the station wagons at St. Marguerite, P.Q. They are L/Cpl. E. Reid and Vol's. P. Robinson and E. Davis. Those interested in joining can get information at.thb.near- est recruiting office. be somewhat marred by the separa- tion from your husband, but'we hope and pray that may not be for long,. and that you may have many, many years of happiness and prosperity.— Signed on behalf of the Choir." Mil- dred made a suitable reply, thanking the choir for their thoughtfulness, af- ter which a delicious lunch, was serv- ed by the hostess. A most successful picnic was held from Duff's United Church. on Tues- day to the Lions Club Park at Sea - forth. Games and races and a soft- ball 'game amused the young people until lunch time when a most delight- ful meal was served. The U.F.W.O. meeting was held at Mrs. W. Turnbull's on July 15th. The picnic was cancelled. Miss M. Knox spoke on "The Origin and Sig- nificance of Empire Day." The meet- ing was favored by a piano duet by Joyce and Mavis Oliver.•. The junior girls gave .a demonstration of their work. The Young People of Perth .and Huron Presbyteries of the United Church of Canada gathered for a wally at the summer school, Goderich, on Sunday evening, July 19. "A large representation from both Presbyter- ies was present, The service was conducted by Mr. Benson Sutter, 'of Clinton, president of Huron Presby- tery Young People's Union. In the absence of Flight -Lieutenant Murree', who was to have given the address, Rev. R: G. Hazelwood spoke on "Christian Cosmetics." TUCKERSMITH- The sympathy extended to Mr. Brien in. their of the community is and Mrs. Secord Mc - recent, sad bereave- ment in theloss of their only boy. Mrs. William Landsborough iso with, her daughter, Mrs. S. McBrien, for a few weeks. Mr. and .Mrs. W. Wise and family. were visitors. with Mr. and Mrs. F. Townsend on Sunday. (]3y Helen. Marsh 'I 4the Montreal Standard) •Wartime ,Salvage limited, the new organization set ..up ib)r . the Wartime Prices and Trade iBpard, is the first salvage organization in Canada with compulsory powers. It has, if it wants to use it, the ;Power to make the surrender of jug:mandatory, to' standardize the cont3Plicated business of preparinlg salvage articles for ship- ping, to rationalize the collection of salvage. It on acquire and dispose of waste or used Materials of all. kinds, control marketing of salvage, -including imports and exports. It can Also subsidize freight rate's so that salvage prices can be standardized throughout th'e country. Right. now it Is at work on the job which it was .primarily organized to meet the demand for waste paper. Canada needs half a million dollars worth •more waste paper this year than last, and Wartime Salvage is hot on the trail. This makes about the fifteenth ag- ency gency working on salvage in Canada. There is the Salvage Division under National War Services which has carried on a widespread campaign of publicity and organization. Each of the three armed services has its own salvage department. There is a Do- minion salvage officer for civil gov- ernment departments, picking up ev- erything from typewriter ribbons to discarded spittoons. A DirectovGen- eral of Scrap works under Munitions. and Supply, and scores of administra- tors' under WPTB are `interested in the salvage of the commodities they control. Each •of these groups works inde- pendently. They do not officially re- port to or consult with each other. And in addition 'there are thousands of private charitable organizations listed under, but not responsible to, the Salvage Divfsion of War Servic- es. They are supposed to report monthly and about half of them do so. Still Free Lancing Canada is one of the few belliger- ent countries which does not have salvage organized under 'one head. The United States, though they have only recently taken 'the problem ser- iously, has a good set-up with QPM as the co-ordinating_,.,agency; _.. They have appointed armies of industrial inspectors to see that industries keep turning in their broken or obsolete machinery. In Canada there is one such inspector for the whole country. Where real shortages appear, the American agencies do ',lot 'hesitate to commandeer material. Two examples are the widely popularized Scheme of submitting an empty tooth -paste or shaving cream tube before you can 'buy a new one, and the order issued to automobile graveyards, demanding that they be cleaned up and salvaged metal turned in. In Britain all salvage collection 'is controlled by the• -Department of,• Sup- ply under Sir William Morrison. This includes salvage from the army, in- dustry, farmers, eiv'.l governments and civilian ,consumers—the works. The onus of collecting it' is placed an anhulAds' Bring Results .. Week after week The Huron Expositor hears very gratifying reports of the results obtained from the Classified Directory from people who have something they wish to sell and want to find a buyer. For a very small sum you can tell hundreds of prospective buyers who have something they are_interested in. The same applies to any article you wish to buy. Make your wishes known through The Huron Expositor and it will sur- prise you the number of enquiries you will obtain. t • You will be surprised how really inexpensive this service is. Classified Ads such as For Sale, For Rent, Wanted, etc., are 1 cents per word for the first insertion and less for succeeding insertions. Minimum charge is 25 cents per insertion. If replies are to be delivered to The Huron Ex- positor xpositor office an extra charge of 10 cents is added. Classified Ads are accepted up until noon on Thursdays. Want Ads have The Way For Easier Lining The large number of people they to quickly sell, trade, rent or buy reach always assures the best pos- Whatever is the immediate concern sible deal on short notice. They help or worry. ,acquaint Yourself with the Many Services They Render Regularly r. SLACK SUITS First Show i g For EaII. Better take a ?few minutes off 'tn. drop in ,and see these NeW Woollens for Fall Suits. They're just in, and of course they're ultra smart and new. MEN! Here's your chance to get that Slack Suit you've want- ed, and at a great big saving' tool Come early for these bar- gains. Sanforized Twills, Smart Slub Cottons or English crease -resist- ing Alpine Cloths in green, sand, blue, brown and biege— shirt and slack to match. REGULAR $4.50 for. (REGULAR $5.95 •for REGULAR $7.50 for REGULAR $10.95 for BOYS' SPORT Per Cent SUITS at 2U Off $3.60 $4.75 $6.95 $8.75 • Neat pin stripe and cluster stripe worsteds in blue, brown, teal and grey — and lots and lots of snappy sport tweeds the young blades will want. . • Woollens are extremely hard to procure, and these will not last long. Better make up your mind to order that new Fall Suit right now — we'll be looking for you. Tailored-tOMeasure 29.75 , CONTINUED FOR ONE MORE WEEK ! Snmmer Dress Sa e We've decided to continue the sale of Summer Dresses through this week. You'll be delighted with the fine showing on our racks at' every price listed below. Make a special trip to our store for this Big Salei ' REGULAR TO $4.75 DRESSES REGULAR TO $6.95 DRESSES ALL BETTER R DRESSES SALE PRICE $2.1108 SALE PRICE $4'35 21 Per Cent • ORF SALE PRICE ALL CHILDREN'S DRESSES 20 Per . Cent SALE PRICE OFF. tewart Bros. SE'AFORTH., HEAR "HOUSE OF DREAMS," CKNX, FRIDAY EVENING, 9 to 9.30 the municipality. -which may work through voluntary societies where they exist, must -do the job itself where they do not. The municipality must report monthly to the 'Depart- ment of Supply, thusproviding a run- ning _inventory of available material. !Municipal councils appoint salvage wardens and street supervisors who ponce into back yards• and alleys and die –'nut the junk. In. Britain it is an indictable offense to burn or. destroy rags, paper, rubber, string, bottles, metal of every sort to the last broken nail. Germany Efficient . Germany started rationalizing the collection of junk back in 1934, in pre- paration for its war machine. For the past eight years it has been a common experience to hoftsewives to have soldiers call at their homes weekly and search for salvage. There are grease -traps on the sewers to catch every last morsel of fats. A German who throws an empty cigar- ette packet or the envelope from a letter on the street is liable to be hauled up in court.Long before the war started, all ornamental railings, metal statues, plaques, etc., had been taken to be fashioned into machines of war. The 'Germans have their salvage collection ruthlessly orgauized, and they have_ little trouble putting it in- to effect in every country they have occupied. The Japs show equal zeal. One of their first acts after their en- try into Singapore was the .stripping of iron railings and statues for their own foundries. So far Canada has shied away from too many compulsory measures. Col- lection of salvage has been organiz- ed on a voluntarybasis and used as a means of raising money by charit- able organizations. It is argued .that tag -days • and appeals to charity are kept down by allowing private agen- cies to augment their incomes by selling salvage. Another difficulty is the freight cost of shipping 'salvage from its collec- tion point to the mill or smelter where it is to be used. Cases have arisen where the _costs are so high ^(fiat local collection agencies have re- fused to collect certain types of 5a1- vage because their profits will be too low. But nowadays the prime job Is to get needed material to the factory fast enough, Hence' •Wartime vage, Ltd., with its sweeplhg powers. JUST A SMILE OR TWO: "Young man, my daughter says you're planning to elope with her, and I want to give you fair warning." "Well, what is it?" - "That ladder 'ot mine in the gar- age is cracked!" _ Wife (sweetly) : "Could I have a little money for shipping, dear?" Husband (brightly) ; "Certainly. Would you rather'have an old five or a new one?" Wife:' "A new one, of course." Husband: "Here's the one. I'm four dollars to the good" v • "I tried' to learn swimming from a book. It is impossible. I floated on the water, read' the 'book^ and folow- ed the instructions." "Sounds all right to me, what hap- pened?" "At the bottom of the -first page it said 'Tuna over.' I did so, and near- ly got drowned." • "So he is a reckless driver?" "Reckless? When the road turns the same way as he does it'$ just a coincidence," "Arithmetic is a science of truth," said the professor earnestly. "Fig- ures can't lie, For instance, if one can build a house in twelve „days, twelve men can build it in one?' "Yes," interrupted a quick -brained student; "Then 288 will build it in one hour, 11,280 in 'one aY'inute, and. _ 1,306,800 in one second.,, And I don't. believe theycould lay one brick in that • time.". 1 While• the professor was still gasp- ing the smart "ready reckoner" went on: 'Again, if one ship can cross the Atlantic in six days, six ships can cross it in one day. I don't believe that either; so' where's the truth is arithmetic?" Then he sat down. • "Oatmeal, oatmeal—every, day oat -" meal!" .lamented Willie. "Yes," said Fred, "no wonder they call it a serial." •. there much graft In the She: "Is Arley?" He: "Oh, sure. Even the bayonets are r*ed," The World's News Seen Through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR An International Daily Newspaper is Truthful--Constructive—Unbiased—Free from SensatienaI- ism — Editorials Are Timely and Instructive and Its Daily Features, Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make the Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home. 'The Christian Science Publishing Society • One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts Price •$12.00 Yearly, or $1.00 a Month. Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, $2.60 a Year. Introductory Offer, 6 Saturday Issues 25 Cent6. Name , Address SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST Dead and Disabled Animals REMOVED PROM LY PHONE OOLLSC`r: SEA -FORTH 15 EXETE'i DARLING AND 'CO. OE CAN'AD ;a,