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The Huron Expositor, 1943-05-07, Page 3• I Ali 1. 'FOUR money on deposit at the Bank is yours to do with as you please. Draw a cheque—make it as largeas you feel you can possibly afford—and use it to buy Victory.. Bonds. This is not only a patriotic service, it is sound business. There can be no question as to the safety of your investment in Victory Bonds. Canada itself, with all its resources, is your assurance ofnl rep';' yrent•, with interest. •'.:t d e not stop there. When you have bought all the Victory Bonds you can for cash,'buy more, and pay for therm out of your weekly or monthly earnings. Should you rekquire assistance in purchasing Victory +:onds, this Bank will 'arrange to make you as loan, repayable over a period of six months, at the same rate of interest as the Bond pays you. uy with your savings ... buy out of earnings 1... buy Victory Bonds to the limit of youlr resources. THE DOMINION BANK C. H. CARLISLE President • ROBERT RAE General Manager ...BACK THE TTA K Put your money on the winner, for this may well be the year of the second front, ;the all-out drive that will set the Hounds of Hitler back on their heels. Back it up, with every dollar you can scrape together; go without non -essentials. The sacrifice is nothing compared with the alternative. Give Our boys the weapons they need and let them smash the enemy. GLend your money for victory. . . Remember it's Freedom versus Slavery. Put your money. on o' Freedom twin. EMPIRE BRASS MANUFACTURING CQ., LIMITER Duro Pumps and Emco Plumbing Fixtures Head Office and F tctt ry : LONDON, Ontario' Iliit\RILTON TORONTO SUDBURY WIaN'NIPEO VANCOUVER ,,b voltwi a ,1n b , , eki. Ted . due �i a orchestra, of London.. -111 d" t0"4 p'aeked hall fora dance in 1e Town Hall, Hensa11, olli. Tuesdays A1pIri1'27h, s 0=400.0 by' the' Girls' :Dance• Club The Missep Margaret and Nm ora Sangster spent Easterw'wi'th 'friends in London. Mlsas Dols M cLarend ]eronsils successfully 'r moved' "'atThiaDr. Stteer's office T4A1010.4T140 . ng last. The three -act cam drama, "Pll .Explain Everything,"•;: 'was presented to a Packed audience :in the Town Fall, Staffa, onWednesday night, last, presented by .tile Young People of phiseihurst` 'United, Church, under direction of Mr. JgsepI Ferguson, and sponsored by the W.M.S. of the` Unit- ed Church, .Sta#fa, During scenes Miss Velma Ferguoojn• contributed readings and 'Mrs. $envy Harburn, of Staffa, favored with .piano solos. This play will be presented in Victoria Street United Church, Goderieh, on Friday, May 14th, and Elimville United Church on Wednesday, May 26th, and in Hensel] in the near future. The cast includes Benson• Stoneman, Mar garet Treffry, Russell Ferguson, Mary Kinsman, Ross Sararas, Jean Wright; Percy Wright, Edna Mills, Margaret Glenn and Howard Ferguson. Sudden Death of Myrtle McKinley Miss Myrtle McKinley, ,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elgin McKinley, of the Goshen Line, near Zurich, died sudz- denly during the early hours of Wed- nesday morning, April Nth, in her 17th year, following .an illness of flu which developed into a heart condi- tion. She was a brilliant student at Clinton high school, and her death will be mourned: by her parents, bro- thers and sister, and by a wide circle of friends. •Surviving are her parents, one sister, Jean, and ;three brothers, Anson, Robert and Berne. The fun- eral was held from th'' e •home of her parents, 114r. and Mrs. Elgin McKin- ley, on Frilay,- at • 2 p.m., conducted by Rev. Reba Bern, of Varna United. Church. Interment was made in Bay - 'field cemetery. Farquhar - Snell A lovely Easter wedding waa sol- emnized at the home of -the bride's mother, when Anna Grace, daughter of Mrs. Snell and the late John Char- les Snell' Exeter, became the bride of Aubrey Consitt Farquhar, son of Mr.. and Mrs. Charles Far4abar•, Kippen. Rev. A. B: Irwin solemnized the mar- riage in the presence of the immedi- ate families. The bridal music was payed by Miss Gwenneth Cann. The bride was ggwned in white sheer crepe over satin, with low -waisted bodice and sweetheart neckline. Her shoulder length veil was held in place with a halo of orange blossoms. She carried a .bouquet of Briarcliffe ros- ea. Miss Mary Farquhar, of Toronto, sister of the groom, was bridesmaid; enemy. It may be quite unrntentien- tP� 40 a, e 1 Harold .skueerR +o iats l''oa� v A+ sl+r e y d00,114Fed Boat .Ayer a .blue •crep es wtt. accesl00.0s is Proms Their s son was spent in on.*b. hen Fire ` "reyentr P A Patr ot•,c ° ecessity . v,.s The advent 44 warm silril'lg Weat1 r ;each year',brings danger of forest' fires. The' dead grass and leaves which comes into view with the de- parture of the winter's $no>a' dry out rapidly, and except for brief periods after rain, remain in a .highly inflam- mable 'state until the new ground vegetation develops and the, �prests ac- quire their canopy of gran; leaves. Every epring forest fires' spread over large areas at this season. Records show that for the ten year period-1932-41—more than. 30 per oent. of forest fires in Canada were started by human agencies. In other words, only about one thousand fires, were started annually by lightning and other natural causes, Whereat some five thousand were the result of hrman carelessness. Every fire that takes men- away froin essential war jobs, in order to fight it,. delays production. With the present labor shortage,. fire fighters. can be obtained only by robbing in- dustries. Canada's••fire -protective service has been seriously depleted because of the drain of trained men to the Arm- ed Forces and essential war indus- tries. In towns and villages near wooded areas where 'fire fighters are usually recruited there is a definite Manpower shortage. It, will be nec- essary; therefore, to depepd- upon the older men and women to fight fire,. for even ,the 16 and 17-year.ol:ds are now' being - called to war work on farms and in factories where they are urgently needed. Every one living near the woods, and every one who goes into the woods for any purpose, can, by ob- serving simple rules of caution, ren- der service by preventing fires from starting. These rules include: Never drop Iighte*i matches or throw them down along the road or out of a. car; never, leave burnt cigars, cigarettes, or pipe ashes where thety may set fire to inflammable material; never set fires to clear land of brush or for oth- er purposes except with adequate protection and in accordance with regulations. Never leave a camp fire until it is dead out. The war is making great demands on. Canada's fore<•t products, and care= lessn•ess which results in their de- struction is of direct benefit to the RI but it helps •just fah �a e. Aside fgorn. the i port t ? 'off forest products for war 'purpose's they:, Will be inl:great demand An period or : reconstruction; agar'..peace•° returns. The recreational and aesthe Chic values of the forest are niso ,ef national .importance Fires in nation- al, provincial • fir municipal parks, or in other areas devoted to recreation, can cause in a few hours, looses which may not be replaced in a century. Not only are the trees u the parks ajoy and inspiration, but they afford sanc- tuary for many forms of wild life that add beauty- and' interest to these public playground's. So whether in the parks or in other forest areas ' let the watchword this year be, "No Help to Hitler Through Carelessness." rr�ar rel 40100 proved flour for �P 1 step:' up nutty rbe heartier f MtIA pludd]iigs, , whole grain cereals" and; oatmeal pie crusts deli With Varlety b9.90 stricted' it becomes inere portant to tuck in ear* values wherever possible. ;ec oio Protective Foods JUICES ovERFLIaW: If juice from homemade pies overflow in the oven, a sural Iu Or a fourii}oh stick.of un000 aroni should be placed 'upright b centre of the pie. - •' Almost everyone looks forward to dessert as the highlight of the meal— and that's as it should be for desserts can contribute important protective foods, as well as satisfaction: The clever -housekeeper will serve most frequently, those desserts that do make this contribution, but will never serve them—or for that matter, any dish—in a manner either 'implied or expressed — "Eat 'this. up because it's good for you." Most people are nutrition conscious today, and that too, is as it should, be, but when the family gathers around the dining table they are in= terested primarilyin 'good tasty meals t not in 'whether hey are getting the 0 right amounts f, calories, vitamins and minerals. Nutrition Services offers several dessert tips that .add• that "little bit extra" in the way ,of protective foods that is often all that is necessary to 1,rmft meals from the "not -quite -good -en- ough" class to where they are nutri- tionally adequate. Bread crumbs are often used in milk and fruit puddings. If the crumbs are made from brown bread there's not only a richer, nuttier flav- or, hut extra' minerals' and vitamins will be added. From now on, fruit will play an im- portant dessert role and fruit desserts DRY 'CQ'FFEE MAKERS„ Dry ?glass coffee makers t rorough'tyr before heating. This is brekage 3t¢_ surance. Clean coffee maker' soap and water .and risme. Bruder` spouts and stems. Be sure tO keeg the electric units out of water. - Dr. Chases Nerve Food CONTAINS VITAMIN 51 NO STEAK... just a seagull NO corm ._int putrid water. NO HEAT... just a freezing wind to chill the hones! Jt h 5 Men forced down at sea know what hardship is. They know the tortures of thirst, of hunger and of utter helplessness. Our own airmen have tasted that hardship in the bleak Atlantic; British flyers have come through the ordeal in the North Sea. Eddie Rickenbacker and his six companions fought the ”mad Pacific" for twenty-one days in Good- year life rafts. YeS, these men know hardship. We in Ccinada live in security and comfort... our fighting' men live in danger and discomfort. "BACK THE ATTACK!" That's little enough, when w'e know that every dollar invested now brings added security to our loved on4s and to Our Sag more 40,w/snore VICTORY BONDS 7777 Suppliii•to the Navy; Anne:anti:Air Force of quonty, , planes,' molde.cl rtiblier parts 'foe the 'NCIVy, bogey wheat= shall.,.ijarinf,etters, inine..i.gctibeis, crash helmet,. elameraliriirirrs; learner Sficla, and a hop of other moda- sf