The Huron Expositor, 1944-02-25, Page 6ah
IFi's; .. 1s1
I:tGittae-frrVehaif en
teeter, , Westin Ateeofe+Ir;m.,d
separately and ars 5f` apt Pr
fo a breeze.
e, asatts et herd Water rirnste aoieit
settop to feern creedal On rsatrttefea
e,orrristue with Melte clads, and Mao
catight to ale Assoc,, Soap can
hero 'Witter if yeits :tom erion y0 of it,
his method is e» •pensive and tis••
Ms genie ig litocittith and the
la hot, it ifs riot sheeses-af>Ii. Jt
ear. ter sere f$ Neter sf.4.1eneo.
d'fir Hanw many elothese awake, a roadi?
1;412- The rnacrnfat.elcxrers ur1 Mrerstrfe avasIlq-
on 110°e Irrg ruavfiinern gag:' •-' fig also.6/1
"°1141"i McAbee make a rade keel, Forncgre
'1.}e"1 4)!' srmple: 2 ebbe tel, ib ttlflosw twee and
hash trywebb, Overloading. not only
Irutat a. strain errs the waearhleg rnaeFc)tte
bet keeps it TthI proddefYeE', rmrf£`et
re3::tf . A :raft guide is: Nen'e-r psatt,
to more ,ehrtheo then win cit '.arae•
freely.
Iter yeti xeinoe j$.es tinkles it the rata-
t. H"1+
•1
aA
OMNI
f amrkt kff4r npetr water $ tri-
r* for waiting differcmt isats•
tftg2 ;wibtte Witte/le and li enc eau
:tats .tire
neatest water ---right up to
as�lr rtl;; csetlotted cohorts ` and lines are
the next hardiest le the fai•brte tarry
+Y�
Si. re.- -
Take a 'Tp •
1,
Test -ttise suety release on
wrier it flare you start.
. *nine wrtageraInd cafe tee
veterans far SOW a . 'Woe ifens reef
srri'tse fere cotteesiss and 'Steno — nae
the +Moser wisely. Per Vie.
%Itfhaca-t1`ita. gauge fit tat at'r3'P to make
ware that etre io are net,. screw-
ed Leer tlgFttt3- Aewringer that to tees
Me yt retry 'tear the tal'srie end may'
brie the rollers arse eeen stets the
gage.
•b. In ceder to Satre, the rubber rot-
. rets, the pressure slsseld b reed
La- soon a the' orr€rtgtrsg process has
beets fittlehed.
-4, Ressearaber that, seg ermine rub-
ber; take carve, therefore, net to spill
Oto
net
re a swear' high
f a ¢ 1't ftasi l al Tann'
GtA ltipirmlK $r1'r,lFt7ilki(Ifi. total,
nk ;fg naiillone over 3iO4x, i&1M flutV-
; ine'e>s• Obrsredj fit the 1.46.'rease. •
Senn
They roust have heea expecting- ex-
citement
or Mintething =malt tins, tax
end of the Throne Speene iieeaMies
thes galfendee eimineg the Vie have
been. li khei nttrrueitig. Et rOolted ten
Me as U the big cr>a[o!ri of *Wilds
ere • sora+e from oat of toTiTt.. 2Lliesd!-
aate ;ra ti - to stoP, Deolg rotors:
Chars tib irste 1earehng their ells:si s
on the galveryr ran, wintels a reserentity
tineessesee tragrudovmf regIETZEIGEL. ft
else ahowsnekat for there were not
WerePea:Ling, ere and snoozing. , Ptirfia•
,fit i smapy be stearrtfrtettle for
the start Ot the ?e€ A anal Reeks
ks.
as it it's gig to be one of acetate
•
plielnment. The Prime hil1t3 seenia
to. be 'pleased; that it's "bu iseeae be -
rove . gfs ae" ber e:se to one state -
!man > tenned menthers to .kaoadeaast
se„ :coo erns, 'analere-vele al' w., t 1,stir>e? Ligµ the., w'aaktitr hunts df os on the rubber part of the ttia- ,: the liatkm. swat I?a:deeneem is reefs
•
to d ti
IBX a 4 the ta". 1y a.ntrtsnrrlt.$ a y+ru rave e Operate, It fly chin;:
Hefter the rt etas dear of Prat
wl - ets a'e'etrrremiats va tl - F%e cern-
nectio ns etseni,d be wet! drainedand
i P,
kept clean,
, Wipe the mae-Esinr off thorough.:
iy, then dry, each these.
taradledto Wag's a tree` same tempe-r-
atorei rr, yott *,n11 teethe yobr b-,ahyr
Oar, •clever erhonfld . tie washed In'
en:ythirig but' lukewarm water.• Flow long do you >x>ak wartimefalrricn? Many .yieople ,maker the ads::
rtf r,<rd4rig their etrefuse over-
riitfYt._ Tri'nty rrttnl tes ire IrPOg. en-
ough.
n-
ou b for whiter cottons and-19nf-nh.
14e,ve7r leave clre artthr,a ttoaking In dirty
Wiese. • Jr yore rifle-trtu.kr•,d from
list ;tori, !rir» g, tile; r.loih•f.T3 anal ret
weak in fresh waterColored faaktrirat
beetle not be Reekeed,
Dei saps malts Fa dllfererneer today? s
tris, tea e mtp„
Wee for the fired rinse and 'two or
tlrreut rn:irmtee for .the seeo'rid
4n n erztra ruses is err. y if the
wordier h not assent.
When and knew do you ...taa,N a
Mesa ch?• :iallgaifr will iblea:eh e:lodhe e
in 4' rrUf rff edc>errs. Qfi,'iaity settontt•
and Itnenfs may nuia.410ri2aliy nfrFri-•to
44 Di441,0144 with chemical's to winterr
tirrle. Mix the: • blee{ h with the: t' rat
,ince; 7' ter eceor4.ifie to ;Sire;ra,Inns1.
,kr.-r-e ,?,,lfrr'rnvites you to write to
her c/o The Heron Expoai'tor, Sear!
Jr; your s.,ge%stieeax on ho melEirig
prrrbto;rn"', er,rl 'vateli the erihneg for
i tense; tee clothe% at new twice after r`DH .
ebe hiaaactl 14 used. 91i11cs are! rayeas
when>!rr not be Menefee,' a.a :t are:a.irena; -
the; . fibres;.
Inetlecelty' Itaayon$, r,00liernx and.;
gflka• Isaac. tr>n,i',vr• 11 washed what a
milr9,
retot rat eokp. i4trr,raaa•r a.eeipr
:tray he t,aee1 for the general fanetly.
*esti ref eettr nos end IlneJns,
FlOw. rnaurh soap fat nesed,ed ft) do a:
ftt•a't>ly vertu? tisk stnotscrft strap but.
do not, be visuite-fu.'1..• i2 s taneling ettd,i
r
-.Tilo"-.iTrr;ft€sti •}��....i-edFshl as&SFszi sYtrar,-
thief the to. fled (-Wt boy/ rrsueib goal)
ify'rrasealeral, sleets trate tife right amours
«stet -ttrr e to he tee orniral.
Why use watetr tiofteoera7 Gray
and dingy cisrthea may broadcast tine
need for a water eofterse,r. The •redo- _ r
Win an arit'eerial bleach affect my
'n-aasriolnc „mssi;hina Yeo, r:e•rtwln a.rir-
fir•iaf blru:b's may bane; a tnr:rleni:y
to pit t -b surface of the err>ao-zst tub.
ad
d1A1
itch lost
-derisory tit
leryrtkitrenalnem Iteiipse! :she pirnpi.».eels••
Mrt4',fcu,rallies,e- L4,i.ieufrefeiarr sosiwr,p.r7
uureed ,k#s treetL.. s, ear f rcw,r#rrse, -.s., ..m .
opera. l 0, D. s i.4.iipekoa.
eladgiptidcr7,ripr r.�n..
iQ hiff*. nee i- 'tsarN(I, cot Myer f.s..e My '
l� 4e'W.1,ieM1 Mf4 OM Dap. VWX1 011 r I t.,.4
WASH' NG WOOLLENS
Don't ea+h ,grillers on a wet day.
thrry'"Jf rake• forever to dry and
dr,r.'' ,fry rise's on rhe radiator , -
trrey shrir:k, from heat! 1 -
„ ,,
F,,,sr;rd says P'arro'ts Brown done
{ ke•tr •r, tat in Farmer • Smith's, ch c:ken
,,rep.._. .
1 M•era, hely' Don't 1tastne feet
"wrr:<aar, der_ par?rorn' are de one what
ff:r<:1G 'shame -d. I -h- can"t 'ip�lafn •'how
come he kr-to'h Raatues lar
THIS 'WAR AGAINST
A blizzard howler down from the North. Trees crash. 'Wires go
down. And while we huddle by the fire the hell line crews are
out,.—fighting their way through drifts in modern service 'tracks
equipped with tools, power and material -for repairing the havoc.
Our preventive maintenance program - is designed to Trent
trouble 'be'fore it develops. But when it does strike, 'these "shack
troops" go after it fast.. The know the . nation's work and `safety
depend on prompt, dependable.
telephone rruntit'ation. A'Thecy,
take quiet Bride in keeping it
that way la • • come what may.
447egfetA0 4000/44
Y ' yis YIfaN Sti44 pt.
is tottif'tt010#. tUtjy 4i H
Boil Tolaphona Employaaa
1939 - 1943
Male .... .... 4,703 4,579
Amide .. .. .. 5,008 7,336
9,711 11,915
Absent '611-
teWar t.3ergfco_-2,30.0.
iret/Ntt�i► tI ass: ► 4'.10 ''
r-.
•
Mariuger.
i
Iy 2Gn hg' instead of be- anent coming from the Canadian
fitti'fz>g its e its in the e;'yea of the Legion and Canukeens clubs%
people.
y Dairy
May
Be Scarce
number 3$; bid without, colour...' hits
bines shoos whfefs got etie good wittlt-
es of the fc-eders of our services, will
pralrasbirg Tse • greedy a ppeeetaited by
these far from: borne The fa:MTre
Mine Megan -Me tee been doing hist
tItis for, memo time neuro TI'tat
Ante far pr•fn eriily z young rna 'as• war
filuetsated• liter the feast that Major
E='t7Wer, Minfaterr'of Ilatfonal -Defence
f=or' tkfr, anuot ee'd`he tbe' Forane that
rnot-e and nitre of the younger feh
Pews wttb battier experience in the
1 ..C- bi--Lf are being brought .back to
Cascade tel' lilt Mg1 ee post$. A rlefire
ire plan of retirement for older pen,
vibe have done a good ,lob, is also be-
ing adopted , . - B sFrdf $ the stria -es
yea folks are sending your 'boys, the
Erne. ee fund.- In 1943 sent over .23
407,870 ee'.garettea- a .warter' of this
r5
Out in the smaller places everyone
Seery around the Capital: Centr
of interest in. rhe fine near Post Of
flee here i'e the new-fangled Masi
Mat, ti teems w arhich nave yen from
headaches; at the Docket trying to
. figure out •1 -w many twos and three
:you. wane€_. All yoga do is stick the re-
o.Ji'red aioonnt for stamps in a slot
in eor ettrin ti • wetcb has all .the ear
rrtarL of a gran"vending machine, to
a gadget and away. goes•,your Tette
maned and €> ag It's the firs
of it; kind in Cada. alafcough alarm
faetured ra St mford , Conr:ectic
Toe
Pat Ofleir - Department is tr.;
ing it pelt an r. - public- here and
may be some c_, we'll have one i
every post off`_ r— so the postmaste
` w i II be., able to. t , hunting a-nd c-urlin
e seems td have enough coffee to eatie-
fy, but the other day in a restaurant.
-04" in Ottawa at 7.30 p,m:••i was told by
the waitress: "No mote coffee. We've
used op our cleats for the day." If
you could see the ,crowds pouring out
of offices at meal times you'd wonder'
haw they ever, had enough coffee 'till.
noon. .
rn
r '6 F
Come and get it: While Finance
Minister Ilsley said the government
e• may -consider taking off creat ration -
it ing, Agriculture Minister Gardl' er
pointed aut. @tock surpluses were due
to tack of snipping space at this time,
r
r o'',lt appears that as the opportunity
presents itself Britain is to get as
when b -e want: to. After I tried i
rr_re 1 wanted -r, write everY one i
tare restin;try a "'atter just so I caul
Mail it in the 1ta.l-O-Mat.
much of the extra meat as •lt is pos-
e sible . to send to them. . And the
d' Prices Board announces a ten per
cent increase of tomato juice willbe
on the shelves during February and
Marche more vitamins. . . . A price
ceiling, to parallel where • possible
that in the United States, will he on
49 kind of imported fruits and vege-
tables, including asparagus, , lettuce,
parsley, cukes, celery, apricots, canta-
loupes, cherries and tangerines.
'.Anyone who feels inclined to do a
little barren. •.•zed grousing on reasons'
for rationrrug` asd controlled distribu
tion will be surely interested in the
figures, I got from, the Consumer
Branch of the Wartime Prices and
Trade 'Board is connection with par=
cels sent our prisdners-of-war in en-
emy neuetries. The • Red Cross west-
ern par kitxg centre has, for' instance,
already despratseed its millionth par -
"'eel to Cepad'e'i n boys in,'Germany and
Japan'., Do you ever wonder what
Pies into -one of these parcels? Well
they've "already grit out a milli()
liaunds of jam, half a million cans o
salmon and bzif a million pounds o
sugar. Feldeet. this, thousands of
pounds of tea and coffee, biscuits,
and other rationed goods.. All par-
cels, they tell roe, have included "shoe-
olate bars, raisins, tinned meats,
soap. Tbis all tells -Canadian at-
bomee thae there is a • reason for
some shortages and rationed dstri-
bution.
tit
Shortli ffset• o various 4047 Products t
for Canadian `rtsmnistie Onnotiiietre
have been apparent from time to time
Fins these Ritortagee have been creat-
ed
tt-
ed through export of the products tit
the United kingdom and other 'dem
tfrjatime, J. P. Singleton, Asr ociate-
Dfi?ector of Marketing Slervire, Dairy
Products,, Dominion Department of
Agriculture, and Chairman, I>'alry
Products board, t?Jld the Interprevtn-
ctal Dairy Conference, held recently
at Saskatoon. Reports of dairy Pru -
ducts to the'lfnited FCingdom have
been almost excltpsively . 1n accord-
• • .v
gahis9 /a", t000tt o?
MAKE YOUR HOME.
INTEL
=MU ■
'1.1J
A •
40LLEH,
:Cl.t•f
Cm;,:raiENTLY-
LOS:"ED
140it:t
IPAI)IMA Ave. al -
COLLEGS ST.
RATES -
Stngln
st:50 • S3-50
Duthie:
52.50 • 1100 ryl
WRITE POR/
FOLDER
A4 M. POWELL
•
A
WHOLE
oAYIS
LIGHTSEEING
WITHIN
WALKING
o1;TANCE
FREIBIDQIr
•anr.'e: with. agfcettigPf4t, betwreen tihe
Governments 'of Canada 1 ad the
United Kingdorrlt„ That la, explained
Mr. 1iogleton, that .daisy plroducts ex-
penned
xparted from -fanada to Britain have
been almost entirely shipments
'throng]] .04e Dairy. Products Board in
fulfilment of contracts between, the
tlovernrnentnl s 0e the two 'countries.
1 portva to a ostluatfpaa other than
the United 'Kingdram,are tinder strict,
control. An ex»rort pezmtit le requir-
ed
equired for ea,* shifinnartf of value in ez-
cetsis of OM and nulerss the proposed
export' is in order, authorization to
export' is denied. These exports are
confined almost exclusively to other
paras of t .e Empire, such as the Br}
tlsrh West Indies, Newfoundland, Bri-
tish Guiana, India, Ceylon and other
parts, and the exports are in accord
with the wishes of the British. Min-
istry of Food. They are ander quota
arrangement, gtrotas being established
either ona quarterly or half yearly
basis in what is considered to be
minimum requirements. Also there
are exports of relatively smaIl gnaw,
tities•• to possessions of countries
mainta.ir.tng governments in exile
which are co-operating. with the 'Al-
lis -s --for example, the trench Posses-
sions of St. Pierre and Miquelon, to
Mitre Guiana, and to the Belgian
Congo.
"Soeu
y have married the queen of
your heart?"
"Yes, and today she made the first
speech from the throne-" •
•
•
Oft repeated by authorities, again-
an urgent appeal Is sent out to the
highways and byways of Canada that
Hannan is terribly overcrowded; that
dependents,....ete., of service personnel
try to "stay put" where they are.
n Halifax population has , skyrocketed
f from 65,000 to 135,900.
$ * *
•
With th, accent now an pulveriz-
ing Germany's industrial centres' by
overpowering air raids, it is well to
keep in: mind that the British Com-
monwealth Air Training. Plan is
greatly reseensibl'e for putting the
puneh into the big attack: • "And it
way put over in Canada, 'which is
something, we sheitsld be proud of, You
know, the first class had 169 pupils
in it, and today we have about 154
schools alone, twice as many as or-
iginally Warmed. Ten thousand 'train-
•ing planes flew . an average of twp
reillipn nine:, daily, got an expanded
force of ;:noses .air'crew;, graduates, en-
ough to man 15,400 c%ornbat planes, as
well as training" 80,000 in ground crew
trariess. • We're. trained Canucks. Aus-
'}ea, New Zealanders, British, Bel-
gians, Czer-k.s, Netherlanders, but
Mare than 60 per cent were our own
lands. The first plan had its finish-
ing point at March 31, 1943, and in
the agreement Catieda was to pay 800
minion dollars of the 900 minion to-
ted cent. But a 'new agreement had
to extend the pian to March,.1945,
with Canada paying half the estimat-
ed crest of a billion and a half, and
the Pnited Kingdom standing the
other half,
If you ever come to Ottawa to see
Parliament and all the big stuff in
'action, make it. a point to he in the
main corridor, of the building just a
few minutes before three p.m. to
watch the Speaker's parade, It's one
of the few wartime reetricted'mani-
festations of traditional ceremony
suit to. Ire seen. On the dot, slowly
up the corridor come, three uniformed,
attendants, then, 'the big glittering
Mace, behind - 'that the dignified
43pee.ker in 'his rebel and a couple of
the clerks trailing. The little proces-
sion wends it.s way to the House of
Commons chamber: You'll have to
uncover, to watch, or else,
.*
Women are' keeping the home fires
burning, sure, but; they're also piay-
ing a 'big part"Iii tahe'industrial pic-
ture. In December, 1940, one woman
In ..each 188 In Canada wits in indus-
try. Last •December (1943), the ra-
tion had gone to ono In 24.
a! * aF e
Wlth t,be erylcels_;...- A, new regula.
iiron fr' the headii of the armee), sex-
_.slices-_.•.aliews- nurattik. sinters.. to at -
knowledge a salute by a nod of the
head, or should we ',nay a little bow.
That will suit most everybody be-
cause it will surely be aecom'pl1shed.
by a smile such,, a8nite.-,a nursing
_e
sister's uni forth, , . ,:10,006 tress, copies
of a pint -sited edition of one. of Can-
ada's " well kirowit islaglzzines, Ma,e-
le'an.'s, -ears goneav-erseae iib' this e,
Who are fighting.', 1Ki Mere
condensed batt o 'd , Mere adequate,
Canadian pictgre sin 16 lia$eth whielf
•
If you want to get 'dizzy, here- are
figures of Canada's bank ac-
count. ' They show that for the fiscal
year 1944-45 our non -war appropria-
tions at over $702 millions are up 54
millions over the previous year; that
war appropriations are down $240 mil-
lions from the estimated $3,650 mil- -
lions. Our national ncon,e for 1943,
Canadian Red Cross supplies being carried aboard one of Can-
ada's fighting ships. Among the Red Cross gifts carried by all Cana-
dian navy ships are survivors' bundles with which to completely out-
fit from head to foot rescued sailors picked up on the high`'sea.
I'
CANADIAN AIRWOMEN SERVE IN U.S. CAPITAL"
•
Early for work, four airwomen of the R.C.A.F.
Who work in the Canadian Joint Staff 112isision in
'R"a6biligton, D.C., i5ausebefore the door of their'
buiidinge a former embassy. Their 'work is seen-.
cerne'd With the .l7roet relnerrtea-nd• •expediti'ig. de- -
livsrjr`
Of Aulericari-made rear equlpiaetft , ig pori
aria-fztir,1fe:r role In tlie-'Ceinrn'onweatth'.A;tr
ing Plan, and the flaw. of gentle ft°'orti Cani`iit .'te
the trft'.#tett States. Left' t0' rig t -ice tltei doa1tWiay
al
;I
are Leading Airwoman, - Matilda K. Thompson,
slaughter of Mf. and Mrs, J. H. Thompson, Win-
nipeg,• arta Cpl. R. )t. Powell, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. D. Powell, Leamington, Ont. In the
E'greground-" are Sgt. Marguerite $roWn; dalighter
sePf Sire acid •'.Mira._ ,E,. Bro'Wf:t, Marten- St., Banff,
A% a , aTtd.LeidinX-Aitwetrrin'ifffinnifred Wai'la,ce4
diaigliter rsf, Mrand+ Mea, Cl; B:..Wa'lla,db; Cham;
I
t
4
tt
4
A
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5
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