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The Blyth Standard, 1940-08-28, Page 1
THE BLYTH STANDAR VOLUME 51- NO, 05. BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 28, 1940. Fire 'Arms To Be Registered PERSONAL INTEREST OBITUARY$5,000,000 Appeal To Be Hensall On Top In Huron- LQNDESBORO With Village Clerk, Mrs, Glousher is visiting with iter • .. et. .-.- Launched By Canadian, Perth Play -Offs. lira, E, Crawford has solei her hon The Dominion Government haspro- mother, 'Mrs, I-1, Glazier, in Clinton, . , Red Cross Stan. Tudors liensallites are one to lir. James l�uirservice, In Tutus vided for the registration of all rapes also attending tho tumoral of her Hunt, MRS. JOHN COOK Mrs, Crawford will matte her hon and shotguns on or' before September Mrs. T. H. Cook. There passed away at the home of With three emergency demands de tip in tete Huron -Perth erth Croup finals t elohing within the post week, inclu.d as a result o1 a lacing they handed with her daughter, :Urs. A, Kunkel, T, 1940, and through the Attorney her son lir, Fred J. Cook in Nastthe Clinton Colts in Clinloh this Niagara Falls. Messrs, R, E. SHIP) and \1'111 Col a lib a request from the Department of General's Department `for Ontario Upson aro spending n few days at Wawctnosh, on Saturday Aiorning, Au- Defense to co-operate In the provision Wednesday afternoon. The acorn of I airs. George Cowan has rented ti provision has beon made by providing the home of Will's nephew, Alvin Col- gust,2.1th, a highly esteemed resident of eight convalescent 'hospitals in 8 to 1 is a very fair Indication of the former Crawford house from Mr, Ja the necesary machinery for roglstra• linson, of nefir Kingsbridge, of Westfield, In tho person of 1M rs. ' Canada, the Canadian Red Cross So- play, T tion in Ontario, Mr, J, H. R. Elliott, John Cook. Iciety will launch a nation-wide appeal Clerk of Blyth, has been appointed to Mlss Lorna Dale of Seaforth spent Mrs. Cook was formerly Isabella on September 23rd, with an objective accept registrations for this district. the weekend with her grandfather, W. Rodger, and was in 'her 76th year. � of not less than $5,000,000, it was un Tito penalty for Catlin toregister J Si Sims. LOOK AT YOUR LABEL, g a t . She suffered a stroke early Thursday pounced today by Norman Sommer - rifle or dttotgun in the given time, is evening from which she never rallied. villa, K.C., national chairman. a floe not exceeding ;60 or thirty 'Mr. and airs. V. M. Bray, and Mis• ses Phyllis and Lorna, have returned She was a Ilio long resident of East "Almost all the r - days imprisonment, or to both fine Wawanosh and was a devout christiart $ ,000,C00 cont•I� and imprisonment, atter an enjoyable three -weeks' va• uted voluntarilyduringour campaign cation at their cottage at Ottawa, and a. member of the Westfield United I Church and life member of the W. last November has been spent in Mr, and Mrs. James Richmond and meeting the emergency calls upon .11, S, in which she was keenly inter- RedIn Goderich Hospital grandchildren, Joye, Bodie and Don csted, writing papers and poems for Cross during the past year," Mr, Suffering' From'Burns Cralg, visited the fonnte•r's daughter.) the mcetlug,' although not able to Sommerville said, "Four million dol. Mrs, Russel Wordon, Staffs, last week( attend. •tai' have been spent in actual war Mr. George McN'all Sr. is in the work and $7'25,000 for our peace -time Goderich Hospital as Tho result of an ,Mr, and Mrs. I). 0. Colclough and Mr. Cook passed away March 2S, services." accident suffered while employed .with son, Jack, of Palmerston, tvoeo visit 102'5 and since then Mrs. Cook [nude a Huron County Weed Spraying unit, ors with the former's mother, Airs. A. her home with her family, Fred and In addition to continuing the pro fn -McKillop Township. • M, Colclotu;h, on Sunday, Walter of blast Wawanos•h; Gordon vision of hospital and surgical suet In the process of his work, a spark ry of Cochtture; George of Belgrave; plies, woolen comforts for the troops , first-string hurler. They hit hint of - Alighted on tlto leg of Ills trousers, and Mr. and Mrs, John M, Cral,, Mar- (Mac) \lrs. Reg. Carter of Wood -land clothing for refugees, and the op- ten and hard, and several costly er, in a moment the chemically -soaked garet and Carman, Miss Iva Switzer i stock (Eva) firs. Earl McKnight of oration of the many wartime services rors by team-mates didn't help much and Mrs. John Craig Sr., Mrs, William , A;ubt[r»; also four step c'hildretr, already established at home and over• either. pant -leg was afire. A fellow -worker Craig and son, Bernard, visited lir.' Immediately ran for a tiro extinguish- Jasper of Blyth; David of Elgin, ain't„ setts, the Canadian Red Cross is facer) Clinton's only run cnn>,e in the ninth. and lits. Bort Craig, Grand Bend. 'I']romna of ]Bast Wawanosh; and firs: with new responsibilities in regard to Up until Chen the score had been 8-0. or which was It a nearby truck, and I Visitors at the home of lir. \V the blaze was extinguished. However, Miss Snell, whose home is south of Isaac Snell of 131 'tit; and one brother, , nccomorintion for convalescent sold -I Some of the fans from Blyth had Campbell last week and over the we !n his efforts to stamp out the fire,' Londesboro, was a visitor in town on John Rodger of East Wawanosh. One (lets, clothing of refugees and feeding pepped up tile game with their chatter end were, Mr, and Mrs, Bichat, Vit daughter, Bell, passed awn twelve of nt•isonersof-wa on something Mout executive meet with his hands, Mr. McNeil received i Monday. liss Snell was school tea- Y „ Ings of the Huron Perth League. We land, and Miss Spence of Arthur, very painful burns on the hands, which ober at Empire, 027 miles north of Years ago, There arc tw^ent.y six At trot Central Council meeting Itand Mrs. Bruce Cameron and taught necessitated his removal to a 'hospital, I Port Arthur, last term. She has been 'grandchildren and eight great -grand- Toronto. next weele, the executive will are not sure Just what It was all about Ruth, of Cincineati, Ohio. \Vo are glad to report that he is get -(engaged on the teaching staff of \Vel children. recommend that pursuant to the re- but we imagine that sane executive will have a fair idea. The Red Cross held their meets ting along very nicely, land school for the ensuing term, The funeral service was 'held on que3t from the Department of Defense , on Monday night and completed t ;Monday afternoon, at 2 o'clock, from the Canadian'Red Cross should provide On their showing lit Wednesday's the home of lir, and lira, Fred .f. I equip and co-operate in the maleic►t game, Hensall should be tate winner, arrangements for Country Fair a I I Frolic to be held on September 0, • cc » Cool:, conducted by Rev; H, C. Wilson seen of eight convalescent hospitals but we tt'ouldu't hazard a guess. Ono Flax'Harvest In Full Swing; School Opens Tuesday I Community Hall. The following a of the Westfield United Church, who, In vitriol's parts of the country for good executive meeting might change the eonttnittees appointed: Progra rla , airservice and will move in soon. Mr, Tudor seized upon the occasion School Days will find studen to trot out his star mound performer, buying their text books and suppli, 1 h e erstwhile Stratford National, at Wettlaufer's in Blyth, Carter Kerslake, and in his decision he ; The regular meeting of the Woman made no mistake, Kerslake must have Institute will be held In Comn►unl allowed no more than half a dozen Hall on Thursday, September 5t scattered hits, and when he didn't Topic, "Agriculture". Mrs. S. Carte strike thcun out, had. the Clinton lads' Demonstration, "Bouquet arraii halting right into the fielder's mils. ineut," Airs, F. Little; •Music, 1Ii Clinton looked anything like a grol'r; Armstrong. Question drawer, ' leader on their performance, but per- Suggestion for Weed Control". RI haps the cold weather got the best or, Call, "An Idea to Improve Your GI them. The day was anything but" There shall n1s' be three quil good one for baseball. to quilt for Red Cross, L.;.::c c plea While Kerslake was keeping the bring your needle and thimble a' Clinton bats silent, his mates were come as soon as possible in the ale hard at work on Draper, Clinton's [coon. A good turn out is hoped fc all ladies are welcome, I-iostess' Mrs, R. Vodden, Mrs, A. Vodden, Ai L. Pipe, Mrs. \\r, Mails, Mrs, W. Lc et.t. Keep in mind the date Septentb 50, Harvesting of the 1204 acres of Fl- Although some schools will notspoke from [sash 12th chapter, second soldiers invalided from overseas or the whole set-up, bre and Oil Flax for the Gordon Flax open until a later date, the local Pub- I I committee, •\Its. J. P. tonging, p verse, also reading portions of poems at hmue•" alenzles, Mrs. J. Armstrong. S( Mills here, 1a now in full swl[ig. Put- lie and Continuation School will open (written by airs, Cook. He spoke At the same meeting,the executive Mrs, J, P. Manning, M lers and spreaders have been in full the Fall Term this cooling Tuesday, Committee, words of comfort to the bereaved Tam- will place before the Council the re W. I. TO MEET B. Bruusdou, Air. ,1. Armstrong. Dan operation for more titan a week and I 'Inc School Board felt that thug Ily in the loss of the plotieer lady .1 special feature of the Women's good progress is being mado, although was no necessity to delay the open- ' quest from the British Red Cross thatcommittee, Percy Carter, Walla Who had endured many hardships, and 6,000 parcels of food be purchased Institute meeting to bo held next Fri- Riley, Jack Bowes. Refreshments, 1 the job is an immense one. I leg here, and on Tuesday morning Who was loved by everyone. A quer- day afternoon, September 6th, at 2.30' Mrs. Georgefencs, t and packed to Canada every week and Cream, etc., Several local young ladies are bus- pupils and teachers will resume their tette composed at �1lnitland lienty, at the home of Mrs, Young will be an sly employed In the fields these days duties after a long, but in most cases, J, L. alol)owell, Alva McDotvcll, and sent to British prisoners It Germany. exhi,tit and sale of plants and flowers, !acts, R. Townsend, Refreshment Boc The financing of this arrangement Hot Dogs, etc., Airs. R. Fairservi turning and gathering the fibro for not too long, holiday. \V1», tclJowell sang, "We'll Never Alambers will please bear this ii the binders. I ,,will be discussed. j ,Airs. A. Shaddick, Produce commit) 1 or many it will mean just rescan• Grow Old."mind and come prepared. I , Alc\'•ill Mrs. V. Roy,lir, C. Cry Another emergency call to the Can ' " Also quite a number of Indians have ing the daily grind, that is, the old, I The pallbearers were, Raymond There will also be demonstrations also been engaged In the work,adieu Red Cross was the cantle receiv ford, Mrs. B, Bronston, Fancy Wo tincts, who have beon going two o j Redmond, Will McDowell, John L. Mc- I on knitting, such as, different methods Miss E, Mains, Mrs. A. Wells, Lig eel ;Yesterday from its overseas coin. Chrea, or more years, but there's al•' Dowell Wm. Weldon, Marvin McDow-. of casting on uutd off and finishing tnissloner It London stating that ing grounds, Mr. A. Wells, Ted Pi ways that 'sprinkling of little "tuclg ell, Frank Campbell. steels and toes. 100,000 refugees who have fled to Eng eta. Advertising committee, Mr, M, CONGRATULATIONS ors" who will be making their first Tao Arnoldrs. Fear, convenor of Apiculture, rao flowerbearers were, A land from invaded countries, as well g zies, L, Mc\all, J. Leiper. Grou This column is open to everyone siert alone in the world. Remember- Cook, of Westfield; Borden Cook of as thousands of evacuated children f' will be 111 charge o[ the meeting. committee, George McVittie, Ing well our own rather quaking ex - Myth; Ted Cook of Cochrane; Dar- , Britain are in desperate need of Townsend, P. Shobbrook. To colt terlence of that first few days, our Produce: circuit 20, Mrs. C. Crawfoi commemorate some passing event In i rule Carter of Norwich; Pte, Franklin clothing. the lives of their relatives and heart always goes out to these little Caller of the Elgin Re3lment, Lon - ling Claire Ann Taylor Strangled21, Mrs. E.Wood; 22, Airs, L, Sh lads and lassies, , 1\ Ifni emergencies of this type cal - Anniversaries, friends, such as Birth ays, Wedding dots; Wesley and Norman Cook of i brook; .:1, Mrs. L. Watt; 38, Lor for our help day aster day, It will By Rope Swing Anniversaries, or any other events \1'o venture the suggestion that Belgrnve. Bunking; 39, Beth Govier: 24, E Y i Interment was outdo in 1Vest,.eld be .leen readily that we must have at Claire dun Taylor, little daughter Snell; ?,5, James McCool; 37, Lei that our readers may think worthy of there'll be many a patent with just a "' least $5,090,000 if we are to do the wee bit of an ache in their Retort, come I of Air. and Mrs. George M. Taylor, of Ball; 2fi, Airs. J. Shaddick; 27, Js note. You aro asked to use this col- ;Cemetery. I work that the people of Canada would l:lnst Wawanosh, who was in her sec umn. We think it 'would bo a find 9 a.rn. next Tuesday morning. Riley; .S Lily Adams, East of Hl 1 Friends front a distance included, have us do in relieving suffering calla. 1 end strangled gesture on your part to show your in- Only one change will be made on , year, was straw, ed Z nesday in way,Mrs,1;• trodden, West of Hi lir. and Airs, Reg Carter of Wood- ed by enemy onslaught. Our canvas- playing with a rope awing behind the terestod in your friends, C Congratulations to Mlss Joan Turvey, who celebrates her birthday on Thursday, August 20th, Congratulations to Helen Young, daug'nter of lir. and Mrs. John Young of Mullett, who celebrates her 4th birthday on Monday, September 2nd. Coni;ratula:lons to Mrs, John Mains win) celobrates her birthday on Satur- day, August 31st, Congratulations to Mr, John Mains who celebrates his birthday on Sun- day, September 1st, Congratulations to Mrs. H. Plaetzer who celebrates 'her birthday on Sat- urday, August 31st, Congratulations to Mlss ShirleyOsborne, of Toronto, who observed her thirteenth birthday on Monday, September Guth, She has been spend- ing her holiday with her aunt and uncle, the Rev. and Mrs. 11, M, Weekes. the loca 1 teadting staff this year. Visa Marjorie George will fill the va- cancy caused by the resignation of Miss Mout, as Assistant in the Con- tinuation School, stock; Mr, and Mrs. Darwin Carter of sets will start out on September 23rd, 't way; Seaforth 800, Mrs. b , antic Norwich; Mrs. B. Bendall and (laugh- and we are urging people throughout The accident took place in the Mrs.Mil.1n, Airs. Britton; Clinton 1 ter, Lois, of Woodstock; Gordon Cook the country to give to the utmost, morning. Mrs. Taylor noticing that .. llanning, Tickets to be and son, Ted, of Cochrane; Mrs. with the assurance that every dollar Claire Ann was out of the house sent on quilt, donated by Urs. C. Trot Planter of Windsor; also Mrs. Plum- contributed to Red Cross will be well n boy, Tommy, who is in his third IlhicuChicago. CommitteSundercock, Mrs, to I, HO Car year, to find her. The little boy came 11rs B. Allen, Mrs. E. ('albeit. ' tae's Into the house twice and Mrs I Ulyth Band will be In attendance. Taylor noticing his actions went out Clinton Juveniles Win Ito investigate for 'herself. She found The following is a list of artb The Clinton ,luveniles won a close ' the little girl entangled in the ropes which was shipped last week to of the swing. The body was still Cross Headquarters: from Burns, decision front Exeter in their finnl hurdle for Group Honours last Satur I pair bandages; 42 pair sox; 41 p11 warm and she immediately called Dr. W. M. Connell, of \I'inglhanm, who i cases; 3,1 sheets and from Londest day afternoon in Clinton by a score of worked for more than an hour over 44 pair sox; 2 sweaters; 3 pair wi 10-9, The game was played as part of a twin bill, with the second haltthe body. I lots; 35 sheets; 54 pillow cases; ' Funeral services will be held on pair pYJnmas; 232 towels. seeing the Clinton Colts oppose .Lon- er of Stratford. Also present were . spent. friends from Blyth, Belgave, Auburn A Call To Worship And To and Toronto. Prayer For The Empire. If ever there was a time when all Christiana should "pray without ceas- ing" it is now. We face the most grave situation In the history of the British Empire, and the most ruthless, lawless and wicked political power that has ever arisen BLYTH UNITED CHURCH during the progress of the human The minister's subjects nexit Sunday race. will be: In the dark .days of 1947, Lord 11.15: "The Dry Brook," Beatty said: "There will be no vie- 7.00: "Judgements." tory until the nation to on Rs knees." About the same time, someone Bald to King George V: "flow will this war TRINITY ANGLICAN CHURCH ever end?" and the King answered:God Save The King And The Empire. "God will have to work a miracle." There will be a Celebration of the And lin did, ns the result of the iloly Communion In Trinity Anglican earnest prayers of His people, Church, Blyth, next Sunday, Septcm- Therelore-CANA,IJ1ANS,TO YOUR ber 1st, at 11 n. m. K•N E ES 1 Came To The Service Of Prayer The Rector, the Rev, R. M. Weekes, Congratulations to Enid Bri,'ham,And Intercession On Behalf Of The will bo tho Celebrant, and will preach who celebrated her 1lth birthday onEmpire To Be Held In Trinity Anpll• the sermon, Tuesday, Akigust 27th.can Church Every Friday Afternoon "0 come, let us worship and fall At 4.45 o'clock down and kneel before the Lord our Congratulations to Mr. It. C. McGow• Maker," • an who celebrates fits 78th birthday Sunday School will meet in the on Saturday, August 31st. • Attended Short Course Church next Sunday at 11 a. nt. - There were 16 In attendance at the The Annual Harvest Thanksgiving Catches Fine Fish, Congratulations to Mrs. \Vnt. Carter, Short Course It Knitting held nt. tine Services will be held in Trinity Ole of our local fishermen, Mr. Jim East Wawanosh, who celebrates her home of Mrs. lA ne Scrimgeour this Church on Sunday, September 221fd, ileffron, was displaying a very fine birthday on Wednesday, August 28th. Wednesday, afternoon, was very in- at 11 a. nt. and 7.30 p, m. catplt of bass on Monday night. structive and educational. ' The specinl speaker at the evening Among a string of quite sizable ones, Aliso Hopkins, Department Instruct- Service will be the Rev. Dr, W, W. was a huge three -and -a -quarter pound- s was very thorough and taught Judd, General Secretary of the Social ler, which measured twenty inches the correct methods of knitting heels !Service of the Church of England in front tail to nose. They were caught and toes, 1Canada. tin a local stream, cion hurray Shoo Company in an ox Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock froth iMr. and Mrs. Joe Shaddick and hibition game. Clinton won by a score the 'come of the parents at lot 40, con- and Mrs. Richard Shaddick vis' of 7-6. The London team are leading cession 12, of East Wawanosh, Inter- Miss Ruth Shaddick In Kincardine the city • league in that city. Bosh meet will be in \Vingliaan Cemetery. Sunday. games were close and Interesting. The Mr, and Mrs. Stanley Lyou exhibition game was a tune-up for the . children 'accompanied by altos A Colts before their clash with Hensall Mrs. Ross Button of Morris Finngland spent Sunday with Mr, In the Huron -Perth Group Finals. Dies in Listowel Hospital Mrs. Earl Gaunt at St. Helen's. It is interesting to note that Hensel! 'There Passat away on Tuesday ;Airs. John Cartµ•right of Coder and Clinton aro playing a best three• morning in the Listowel 1 - al, is visiting with her tau;liter, I wlfo Elizabeth Denman, beloved wife of In -five series in the Group Finals.ROSSButton, in her 47th year. Shel Harvey Huuking, That rush to get postponed games out had been it poor health for some time I sir, Brace Riley, Port Colborne, of the way, and which quickly elfin- and underwent an operation, but her ited over the week -end at his h Matedthe BIM car;, may have its I heart was weak and she passed away here. meaning there. We understand, naw I Melded alt years ago, she and her that the Group finalists have been de- husband had lived on the 2nd conces. Glared, that a winner in this group sto►t, Morris Township, where she will does not have to be declared before be greatly missed. September 150, She leaves to mourn her passing her husband and one sister, Myrtle Carter of Seaforth. One brother, Wm. John, made the supreme sacrifice in the Great War. Funeral arrangements have not been completed, Congratulations to Mrs. Frank Mar' shall, of Dast Wawanosh, who cele- brated her birthday on Tuesday, Au- gust 27th, DIVISION COURT ON SEPT. 12TH; Mr. and Mrs. Will Lyon and Kenneth, of Bleth, visited on Sur with Mrs. Lyon, Miss Joyce Fairservico, of Lon, spent the week -end with her part Mr. ad Mrs. Tom lCairservice. Mr. Len Caldwell of Port Albert ited at his hone here, See \Vettlaufer's Advt. on pap :1 list of what students wilt prob need is contained therein. Mr. Toni Moon, of Lundon, The next sitting of Division Court at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. Mc e ''1 bo held on Thursday, September Mr. G1::an 1'airservioe of Strati l::th, vlalted at his home here, SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON LESSON IX PRAISING GOD FOR HIS BLESSINGS Psalms 103, 107 Printed Text, Ps. 103:1.5, 10.18 Golden Text: "Bless Jehovah, 0 my soul; And forget not all his ben- efits." Ps. 103:2. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time, - The one hundred and third Psalm was written by David, and thus can be placed about 1030 B.C.; we do not know when the one hundred and seventh Psalm was written, many believe alter the re- turn from the Exile, and, if so, the, would place it not earlier than about 500 B.C. Place - There are no definite geographical areas mentioned iu these two Psalms. In today's lesson we find meter - tat for the consideration of a sub - Pict which often nowadays seems to be ignored by the great multi- tude of tho people, even millions of Christians, i.e., how properly to cul- tivate the spirit of worship in our liyes. PSALM OF PRAISE Psalm 103 is written in the forte of a monologue -- in it we aro all alone with the prophet when he is alone with himself, communing with himself. It is also a psalm of recollection wherein the psalmist recalls to himself late life in time past. Thirdly it is a psalm of great thanksgiving. S, Bless Jehovah, 0 my soul, And forget not all his benefits: 3I. Who forgiveth all thine inapt'. ties; Who healeth all thy diseases. ALL HIS BENEFITS The psalmist names u benefits, coming from Jehovah, first, the forgiveness of sin, thou the healing of diseases - undoubtedly there Is far more healing by the graoe and power of God than we are aware of, 4. Who rodeemeth thy life from de- struction. There are many differ- ent ways in which God delivers us from destruction. But most od all, God saves us from destruction, hu- man shipwreck, through our Re- deemer, the Lord Jesus Ohriat. Who erowneth thee with loving -kindness and tender mercies. The great Puri- tan preacher Spurgeon once said: "When God takes a man's head out of tho dust, he crowns it with a crown that is so heavy with his grace and goodness that he could not wear it, were it not lined with the sweet velvet of his loving -kind - nem." •- 5. Who sattsfieth thy desire with good things, so that thy youth is renewed like the eagle, It is because of all these benefits received oon- tinually from the Lord that the psalmist can say that God has sat- isfied it with good. The eagle was a bird which in ancient days was thought to enjoy perpetual youth. ATTRIBUTES OF GOD After recounting many of God's benefits to him the psalmist be• gins to speak of some of the great characteristics or attributes of God from which flowed the benefits that he had been naming -- attributes which here have to do primarily with God's relationship to sinful man. 10. IIe hath not dealt with us af- ter our sins, nor rewarded us after our iniquities. God could only be full of compassion and gracious- ness, slow to anger, and plenteous in mercy with those who were un- deserving, rebellious, with these who were in need of mercy. 11. For as the heavens are high above the earth, so great is his loving -kind- ness toward them that fear him. The distance of the heavens from the earth is no more unmeasurable than the greatness of Cod's mercy to those that put their trust in hint and aro obedient to him. As far as the east is from the west, so far hath he removed our transgressions from us, Sin is removed from us by a miracle of love. GOD'S MERCY TOWARD MEN Like as a father pitieth his chlt- dren, so Jehovah pitieth them that fear him, For he knowetlt our frame. He remembereth that we are dust, Our heavenly Father never overloads us, never tails to give us strength equal to our day, because he always takes our frailty into ar•. count when he is apportioning us to our lot, As for man, his days are as grass; as a flower of the field so he flourisheth, For the wind pa-- Seth over it, and it is gone; and the place thereof shall know It no more. But the loving -kindness or Jehovah is from everlasting to ev- erlasting upon them that fear him, and his righteousness unto child- ren's children. To such as keep his covenant, and to those that remem- ber his precepts to do them, The psalmist here compares man to the evanescent grass and flowers. in the midst of this plant -like frail destiny of man, there is, however, strong ground for comfort. There is an everlasting power, which rais- es all those who link themselves with it above the t.ransitoriness in- volved in nature's laws, and makes them eternal like itself. This power le the mercy of God, which spans itself above all those who fear hint, like an eternal heaven. Psalm 107 is a psalm of thanks- giving for divine deliverance of "Big Berthas" Protect Canada's Coastal Harbors A member of the Royal Canadian Artillery squints through the sigh of one of tl:e cast coast's many "Big Berthas", severing the en- trance to a harbor. Israel and the psalmist himse:f, from terror and misery. The es- sence of the psalmist's faith ex- pressed here is that God hears the cry of a man driven to cry out by crushing burdens, and will give him strength to bear and profit by them, even if be does not take therm away. Ontario's Fairs And Exhibitions Here Is the List For the Pro- vence, Dates SubJeot To Change Canadian National Exhibition, Toronto .... Aug. 23 - Sept. 7 September 2-7 Apsley Sept. 4, 6 Binbrook Sept, 6, 7 Bruce Mines Sept, 3, 4 Centreville (Addington Co.) Sept, 6, 7 Chesterville Sept, 8, 4 Clute Sept. 4 Delta ...Sept, 2, 4 Dryden Sept. 5, 6 Durham Sept, 5, 6 Fergus Sept, 6, 7 Kinmount Sept. 6, 7 Parham Sept. 2 S. Mountain Sept. 5, 6 Tavistock Sept, 6, 7 September 9.14 Alfred Sept. 10-11 Almonte Sept. 9-11 Bancroft Sept. 12, 13 Bothwells Corners Sept. 10, 11 Brighton Sept. 12 Caledon Sept, 10 & 11 Charlton Sept. 10, 11 Clarence Creek Sept. 11 Cochrane Sept. 10, 11 Hymers Sept. 10, 11 Lanark Sept. 18 Lansdowne Sept, 12-14 Lion's Head Sept. 11, 12 Lombardy Sept. 14 Marmora Sept. 10, 11 Maxville Sept. 12, 18 Midland Sept. 13, 14 New Hamburg Sept. 13, 14 Newington Sept, 12, 13 Norwood Sept. 10, 11 Orangeville Sept. 12-14 Oro Sept. 11 Oshawa Sept. 9-11 Porquis Junction Sept. 12, 13 Port Perry Sept. 13, 14 Powassan Sept. 10, 11 Rama Indian Reserve Sept. 12, 13 Renfrew Sept, 10-13 Rocklyn Sept. 12, 13 Sault Ste. Marie Sept. 10-12 Sprucedale Sept. 12, 13 Sturgeon Falls Sept. 11, 12 Sunderland Sept. 11, 12 Warren Sept. 10, 11 Welland Sept. 12, 14 Wellandport Sept. 10, 11 Wellesley Sept. 10, 11 Wiarton Sept. 12, 13 Wikwemikong Sept. 10-12 September 16.21 Acton Sept, 17, 18 Ailsa Craig Sept. 19, 20 Alliston Sept. 19, 20 Ancaster Sept. 17, 13 Barrie Sept. 1 6-19 Blyth Sept. 17, i8 Bonfield Sept. 18 Bracebridge Sept, 19, 20 Burks Falls Sept. 19, 20 Burford Sept. 17, 18 Clifford Sept. 20, 21 Cobden Sept. 17, 18 Coe Hill Sept. 18, 19 Coldwater Sept. 19, 20 Comber Sept, 20, 21 Desbarats Sept. 17, 18 Desboro Sept. 19, 20 Dresden Sept. 17-19 Dunchurch Sept. 18, 19 Englehart Sept. 16, 17 Exeter Sept. 18, 19 Fenwick Sept. 17, 18 Galt Sept. 19-21 Garden River Indian Reserve Sept. 18, 19 Haliburton Sept. 19 Hanover Sept. 19, 20 Hepworth Sept. 19, 20 Huntsville Sept. 17, 18 Kincardine Sept. 19, 20 Lindsay Sept. 18-21 Listowel Sept. 18, 19 Loring Sept, 18, 19 Magnetawan Sept. 17, 18 Manitowaning Sept. 19, 20 Markdale Sept. 16, 17 Meaford Sept. 19, 20 Metcalfe Sept, 20, 21 Mildmay Sept. 17, 18 Mohawk Indian Reserve (Deseronto) Sept. 18 Mount Forest Sept. 19, 20 Niagara -on -Lake ..... Sept, 20, 21 Norwich Sept. 17, 18 Oakwood Sept. 16, 17 Orono Sept, 17, 18 Odessa Sept. 19, 20 Riceville Sept. 17, 18 Rosseau Sept, 18, 19 Seaforth Sept. 19, 20 Sheguiandah Sept. 17, 18 Shelburne Sept. 17, 18 Shannonville Sept, 21 Shedden Sept. 18 South River Sept. 17, 18 Springfield Sept. 18, 19 Stirling Sept, 17, 13 Stratford Sept. 16-18 Thorold Sept. 17, 18 Thorndale Sept. 17, 18 Thessalon Sept. 19 Upsala Sept. 18 Val Gagne Sept. 19 Williamstown September Abingdon Ashworth Atwood Sept, 23, 24 Avonmore Sept. 26, 27 Bar River Sept. 25 Baysville Sept. 17 Beachburg Sept, 24, 25 Beaverton Sept. 27, 28 Belmont Sept. 26 Blackstock Sept. 24, 25. Bobcaygeon Sept. 27, 28 Brussels Sept. 27, 28 Campbellford Sept. 24, 25 Carp Sept. 27, 28 Collingwcod Sept. 26-28 Cooksville Sept, 24, 25 Courtland Sept. 26 Drayton Sept. 24, 25 Drumbo Sept. 24, 25 Dundalk Sept. 24, 25 Elmvale Sept. 23-25 Embro Sept. 23 Emsdale Sept. 24, 25 Florence Sept. 26, 27 Galetta (Mohrs Corners) Sept. 24, 25 Georgetown Sept. 25, 26 Glencoe Sept, 23, 24 Gore Bay ....Sept. 24, 25 Grand Valley Sept. 27, 28 Barrister] Sept. 26, 27 Harrow Sept. 26-2K Holstein Sept. 26, 27 llderton Sept. 25 Iron Bridge Sept. 25 Jarvis Sept. 26, 27 hagawong Sept. 26, 27 Sept, 17, 18 23.28 Sept. 27, 28 Sept. 26 POP -Colonel, the Book Collector YOU'VE GOT A FINE COLLECTION OF BOOKS, COLONEL - WHY DON 1• YCu G Er SOME SHELVES Kemble Sept. 24, 26 Kilsyth Sept. 25, 26 Kirkton Sept. 26, 27 Lakefield Sept. 25, 26 Langton Sept. 28 Lucknow Sept, 26, 27 Maberly Sept. 24, 25 Massey Sept. 24, 25 McDonalds Corners Sept, 26, 27 McKellar Sept, 24-26 Middleville Sept. 24 Millbrook Sept. 26, 27 Milton Sept, 27, 28 Minden Sept, 24 Mitchell Sept. 24, 25 Murillo Sept. 24, 25 Xeustadt Sept. 27, 28 Owen Sound Sept, 28 -Oct. 1 Paris Sept, 27, 28 Perth Sept. 23, 24 Picton Sept. 26, 27 Port Elgin Sept. 26, 27 Port Hope Sept. 27, 28 llauiona Sept, 25 llidgetown Sept. 26-28 Ripley Sept. 24, 25 Sarnia Sept. 24, 25 Schomberg Sept. 27, 28 • Severn Bridge Sept. 27 Spenccrville Sept. 24, 25 Stella Sept, 24 Strathroy Sept. 26-28 Suttdridge Sept. 26, 27 Trout Creek Sept. 24, 25 Utterson Sept. 24, 25 Walters Falls Sept. 24, 25 Wilkesport ....Sept. 26 Wingham Sept. 25, 26 Wyoming Sept, 25, 26 Zurich Sept. 23, 24 September 30 - October 5 Aberfoyle Oct. 1, 2 Alvinston Oct. 2, 3 Arthur Oct, 1, 2 Atwood Sept, 30 - Oct. 1 Ayton 'Oct. 3, 4 Beamsville Oct. 4, 6 Becton Oct. 1, 2 Brampton Oct, 12 Brigden Oct. 1 Cookstown Oct, 3, 4 Demorestville Oct, 2 Dorchester Sta. Oct, 2 Dungannon Oct, 3, 4 Fairground Oct. 1 Feversham Oct, 1, 2 Fordwich Oct. 4, 5 Fort Erie Oct. 1, 2 Leamington ....Sept. 30 - Oct. 5 Madoc Oct. 1 Markham Oct. 3-5 Simcoe (Norfolk Co.) Oct. 1-4 Owen Sound Sept. 28 -Oct, 1 Providence Bay Oct. 2 St, Marys Oct, 3, 4 Smithville Oct, 1, 2 Streetsville Oct, 2, 3 Tara Oct. 2, 3 Teeswater Oct. 1, 2 Thedford .. Oct. 2 Wallacetown Oct. 3, 4• Warkworth Oct. 3, 4 Zephyr Oct, 2 October 7.14 Ameliasburg Oct. 12 Bolton Oct. 11, 12 Caledonia Oct. 10-12 Chatsworth Oct, 10, 11 Erin Thanksgiving Day Highgate Oct 11, 12 London (Jr, Fair) Oot. 9, 10 Melbourne Oct. 11 Merlin Oct. 7, 8 Ohsweken Oct, 8-10 Rockton Oct. 12-14 Rodney Oct. 8, 9 Roseneath Oct. 10, 11 Tweed Oct. 8, 9 Underwood Oct. 8 Woodbridge Oct. 11, 14 Walsh Oct. 12 1930 Didn't Know Wonders Of Today Which Brings Up the Ques- tion: What Will Tomorrow Reveal? Travellers of 1930 could but dine ly foresee the streamlined trains and motor -cars that are becoming a common sight to -day, Passenger air traffic across both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans was still to be inaugurated, Thirty • passenger sleeper planes for transcontinental travel were in the blue -print stage, NO TRANS -OCEAN Alit TRAVEL. Television, the subject of an an- ticipated post-war bocm, was a dis- tinctly experimental affair•. Even radio broadcasting was far from Its present state of perfection. Moving pictures In colour had made their low to the public, but of a quality fur beneath the beauti- ful productions of to -day. There are few Industrial fields in which the past ten years have not produced nstounrliug discoveries, waiting Haar chance to be perfect- ed and exploited in peau. LEND MC SI-11:LVES AIN Glass factories of the ?tear future will have to he extended to supply the anticipated huge demands for polarised and ,Invisible glass. The houses, and even the factories themselves, will be built of glass block`s, New chemicals applied to the problem of ligltting will enable you to have better light for a fraction of the current you consume at pre Rent, And this light will bo in are colour you desire. Our general health will also bee- etit front the manufacture of synth- etic vitamins and hormones. These useful things, once considered to be mysterious products of living plants and animals, are in reality new or - genic chemicals, By William THIS CURIOUS WORLD Ferguson OF BRAZIL, IS THE ONLY BIRD THAT SHAVES: I IT CAREFULLY PARES OFF THE WEBS OF THE , TM) LONG TAI L FEAT/ -I ERS LEAVING THEM PADDLE SHAPED. EARLY RAILROAD LOCOMOTIVES CARRIED STACKS OF BALED HAY `TO PRWTFLT THE PASSENGERS IN CASE THE BO/LER EXPLODED/ COPR. 1913 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. • .441/01.46 14 NO one knows why the motmot shaves the barbs from the two long tail feathers. It is bred In him to do so, A young motniot, reared entirely apart from his kind, adopts the habit upon maturity. L NEXT: When do male kangaroos stop growing? A HERO'S MONUMENT HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 1, 7 Pictured is the Tomb of the --- 12 Heavy blow. 13 To be indebted, 15 Proposed. 16 Successively 17 To crawL 19 Creeping animal. 21 Chest bone. 22 Picture taking machines. 24 Falsehood, 25 Musical note. 26 Myself. 27 Health resort. 29 Type standard 30 Mongrel. 31 Mentally sound. 33 Hangman's halter knot. 34 Fisherman. 35 Child's napkin 36 Beak. 37 Toward. 39 Credit. II 13 11 16 21 25 30 33 35 37 38 12 13 19 SO 51 DIECGIOO 110 UIS Mr R 40 Sheltered place. 41 Laughter sound. 42 Eggs, 44 Dress. 48 Sun, 49 Fiction story. 51 Sooner than, 52 Moves fish -fashion. 54 Lacquer ingredient. 55 To dispose of. 56 Beer. 57 It is located in the District 13 w of . 58 It - soldiers lost in the last war. VERTICAL 2 Water wheel. 3 Door handle. 4 Novel. 5 Either. 6 Model. 7 Crystal gazer. 8 Pound. 9 Simpleton. 10 Heathen god. 11 Weird, 8 9 15 18 19 23 21 27 28 31 31 6 14 Tiny. 16 The cemetery where It Is situated. 17 Calcium (abbr.). 18 Tolerable. tri It is a famous -- (abbr.) 22 Pertaining to the brain. 23 Dogs. 26 Melody. 28 Corner. 30 Sea gull. 32 Measure of cloth. 38 Molding. 41 Homing pigeon. 43 Grand parental. 45 Imaginary being. 46 Opera air. 47 Carmine. • 48 Fodder volt. 50 Small sinield, 53 Pale. 0 II I 6". By J. MILLAR WATT • te Protecting Wings Over British Convoy 'r:'�»���-. •..':.�'-*tY�SYt7vY.5G:Q... ::•:9'i •:...• -.- - .': NK7y.. A fighting plane of the British Royal Air Force c oastal command hovers over a convoy of merchant ships which aro bringing supplies to England. With Germany making desperate attempts to blockade England with motor torpedo boats and bombing planes, the coastal fliers have the responsibility for seeing that the Convoys get through. In the past week or so attacks on convoys such as this one have brought great air battles. Some 600 German planes are said to have been engaged in one fight this week. L'44-4."-'""""T Must Keep Skin hat Science � Clean In Summer Is Doing -4.vt4O44-4 M.441 417, 4-4 •-••11- ,WAR AFFECTS RESEARCH World activity in chemical re- search has slumped about 18 per cent since the outbreak of the European war in September of Let year, according to a report by Professor E, J. Crane of Ohio State University to the Am- ercian Chemical Society, The decline, as reflected in the scientific, technical, and trade publications of all nations, com- pares with a drop of about 24 per cent in the year following the beginning of the World War in 1919, says Professor Crane, —0— APPLE SEED CURE Apple seeds are rich in a muscle -regulating substance, prob- ably a vitamin, whose discovery was described last week at the University of Oregon Medical School. Eating ground apple seeds, or drinking the oil which is pressed from then, both caused remark- able recoveries in animals near death with wasted muscles. —o— BED-BUG BRINGS SLEEP Discovery of a bedbug which insures sound sleep—but the wrong kind was reported last week by the U. S. public health service. Tho bug, which Is the "grand- father" of all bedbugs because it is several times larger than the ordinary insects, carries the germ of sleeping sickness from man to man and front animals to men. The Duke of Aosta, cousin of Hing Victor Emmanuel and Vice- • roy of Ethiopia, commanded the Italian troops invading Bri- tish Somaliland, Modern Etiquette BY ROBERTA LEE 1, If a man is invited to a dinner, is unavoidably delayed and arrives after the other guests are at the table, what should ho do? • 2. What should one do when informed that a friend is i11? • 9, Is it all right for children to entertain for their parents on the Tatter's wedding anniversary? 4. When a man is introduced to a girl in the office, should she shake hands? 5. Is it good manner's to wipe tine silver on a napkin, before lilting in a public place? 6. What are a few things that very stout woman should avoid when selecting gowns? Answers 1. As soon as he has disposed of his wraps he should go dir- eotly to his hostess, greet her and offer sincere apologies. 2, One may send 'flowers, write a note, or call, depending upon how in- timate the friendship may be. 8. Yes, and particularly for the E5th and 50th anniversaries, 1. Not unless he offers his hand first; then it would be elabarrnss- ing to refuse. Otherwise, merely ray, "}low do you du?" 5. No. If the silver isn't clean, ono el, tend cull the waiter's attention to it, without attracting the at- tention of other's, re She should nvoid brightly colored or caccked patterns, also short wnis:s and tight sleeves, 4 Warm. Weather Plays Havoc With It No doubt you have noticed how Shiny your skin gets In summer. People with greasy s•klne are batt- ling againt an unbecoming shine; even those with dry or normal com- plexions find it hard work to keep their make-up smooth and matt in the beat of the sun, Shininess alone is bad enough, but the trouble does not stop at that! A shine indicates that the surface of the skin is very sticky, and dirt and duet accumu- late very easily on a sticky surface, The warmth of the atmosphere also tends to relax your pores; so that the grime Is able to work right into your skin. Black -heads for you, if you don't look out! CLEAN THRICE A DAY Never is akin -cleansing so Im- portant as it is in the summer. You should clean it three, even four times a day during the warm wea- ther, •++-.+.-.r++- • enve YOU HEARD? A very sceptical man frequently went fishing — but only because he liked to say they weren't biting. And ho never used bait because he didn't believe anything would grab it, anyway, Ono (]ay came the big surprise, He cast his line, and there was a Britain Removes sudden jerk, Something grabbed that lino and then started off to- Every Signpost wards the other end of the lake. The sceptical man fought that fish all the afternoon. Finally he landed the biggest trout ever taken in those waters. Puffing heavily, ho gazed clown at his prize that nearly swamped tho boat, "It's a lie!" he snorted, Antl he rolled it overboard, ••-•-•-•-•-•4-• 46-•-6,-•-•-•-•111,11-41.111. BY ANNE ASHLEY Q. How can I make a needle book in which the needles will not rust? A. An ideal needle book Is one that is made of chamois instead of flannel, as the needles will not rust in the chamois. ' Q. How can I mix whitewash? A. Fill a bucket half full of lime and cover it about two inches with water, Let stand 24 hours to slack, or until it is the con- sistency of paste. Dip out a por- tion of this slacked lime into another bucket and thin with wat- er to the desired consistency. Add one teaspoonful of bluing to % bucket of whitewash to clear and make white, and % pint of salt to make it stick. Q. How can I retain the orig- inal stiffness of cretonnes after washing them? A. If the cretonnes are rinsed in water in which rice has been boiled, they will retain their or- iginal stiffness. Q. How can I prepare a good toilet water? A. An excellent toilet water can be made by mixing two ounc- es of elder flower water with an equal quantity of distilled water, Q. How can I cause nails to stay more firmly in plaster walls? A. After driving the nails into the plaster wall, pull them out, wrap with n little steel wool, and then drive then) in again. Jerry; "It took me twelve lessons to teach Sylvia to try to swim." Terry: "Why, the little flirt; I taught her In six." Idea Is To Bewilder Ony Nazi Parachutists Able to Reach Ground Alive Any German parachutist who de- scends from the shies upon Britain won't know where he is for all the place signs in the Old Country have been erased, Even the Tbilisi often are not quite sure of their whereabouts, 'Phis is all because in recent weeks work has gone ahead to obliterate every indication of locality, NO STRANGERS ICNOW '1'IiELR A church dignitary noticed a lit- WHEREABOUTS 3Generations ago sign posts were tle girl weeping bitterly because set up along the highways and the she had lost a nickel, Search for Mures, and these stood at their sta• the lost money proving useless 11e tions until recently. The fingers of produced another to stay the tears these posts bore such legends as and soothe the hurt feelings, "To London, 10 miles" or "to 13ris- "Oh," she breathed in a shocked tol, 6 miles," ar, to take more re - tone. "You had It all the time;" mote places, "To Moreton -in -the - Marsh, 2 miles," or "To Stow-in-tltc- 1Voold, 1 mile." All these have been reinioved. Then, too, all along the old' high- ways stand milestones, which in the most cases have rested there for centuries, These, too, have been chipped out, First Mosquito; "What are you so happy about?" Second Mosquito: "I Just pas- sed my screen test." Grandpa gnashed his toothless gums indignantly, "There's far too much bad lang- uage used by the younger genera- tion," he wheezed. "Now, when I was a boy things were different —" "Well, said his grandson, "I do think we are much better today than in your time — better than they were thousands of years ago— even the babies swore in the olden days, "How do you make that out?" gaeped grandpa, "Why, replied the youngster, "It aye in tho Bible that Job cursed the day he was horn." A shopkeeper writing a debtor Remarked in the course of hie lebtor That he chose to suppose A man knows what he ose. And the sooner he pays It the bebtor, Slow Burning. CIGARETTE PAPERS NONE FINER MADE DOUBLE A� OKLET� • FEMALE PAIR Women wdsuffer painful, irregu- lar prosWihnrvu, moody e ells due to functional cause should find Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound simply mar- velous to relieve such distress. Plnkltan1's compound le made especfally to help weak, tired wom- en Over go 00,000 women difficult reported amazing benefits, WELL WORTH TRYING! A 1 A Totem Pole As Golf Trophy Tournament At Jasper Park Lodge Early In September Is Drawing Golfers From All Over the Dominion The Annual Totem Pole Goif Tournament will take place over the Jasper Park Lodge course at Jasper, Alberta, from September 1 to 7 inclusive, according to Jos- eph Van Wyck, general manager of hotels, Canadian National Railways, "T h i s tournament, which is played over a magnifi- cent scenic 18 -hole course laid in the Athabaska Valley in the heart of the Canadian Rockies, promis- es to be the most successful yet staged over this picturesque course," he said, Picturesque Course Representing the grand finale of the season's activities at Jasp- er Park Lodge, this week on the green has now become an insti- tution and ranks as the outstand- ing annual golfing event in the Pacific Northwest according to Mr. Van 11'yck, "The tournament is exclusively for amateurs and all players take part in a qualify- ing round during the first two days. Women are assured of the same number of games as the men, with many opportunities for friendly matches. The men's To- tem Pole Championship Final is played over 36 holes; all other flights for both men and women are 18 -hole matches," Round Trip Arrangements It is announced that arrange- ments have been made for all- inclusive rates over the Canadian National Railways for the bene- fit of golfers participating in this event. These rates cover round- * r i p transportation, standard sleeping car occupancy, seven days accommodation to the Lodge and return. Dominion Sees Big Increase In Building I In First Seven Months of 1940 = 46.6 Per Cent. Rise Over Last Year -- Ontario Has Largest Total Wnr activity and the construc- tion of buildings for military pur- poses were largely responsible for the decided increase in contracts awarded for the first seven months of the year throughout Canada. Total for the year to the end of July amounted to $1,54,741,100, a 46.6 increase over the 1939 total for seven months of $105,575,000, according to figures compiled by MacLean Building Reports, Ltd„ of Toronto, July contracts amounted to $29,- 305,000, a 32 per cent, Increase over the $22,129,700 for July, 1939. Ontario had the largest total In July with $11,955,700; and Quebec was second with $4,319,200. Build- ing in Toronto and Montreal con- tinued firm, and consisted largely of private activity, "It DOES taste good in a pipe!" HANDY SEAL -TIGHT POUCH . 1R '/2 -LB. "LOK-TOP" TIN • 65e also pecked in Pocket rins `+-H•wd-•-•-rote • •- 4-1tires t•-•-#+-;-+-- NEALTR TOPICS " 464-4.4'4.1,4-4•.401/41• 41.4-4 w 4 41 9i4+ CAMPAIGN FOR HEALTH "At this time of Empire crisis, it calls on all Canadians to shake off that apathy, to fight it in others, and to join hands in a de- termined effort to make prevent- able sickness a thing unknown in the Dominion, to raise the na- tional standard of heatlh and ef- ficiency, and to make it possible for every Canadian plan and wo- man to .take a full share in our national war effort" so states the Honourable Mr. Justice Riddell, President of the Health League of Canada in "A Message to Can- adians in Wartime" printed in the current issue of the magazine "Health," Mr, Justice Riddell's message reads: "A few days ago, the Hon- ourable .J. Harold Kirby, K.C,, Ontario's Minister of Health, stated publicly that a concerted health programme at this time is of the first importance if Can- ada is to prosecute the war ef- ficiently, Sickness—Fifth Column "Too much emphasis cannot be laid , upon this fact. Annually thousands of dollars are wasted, and thousands of working days lost because of sickness which is entirely preventable. This waste must be stopped and this con- dition rectified. Both money and man -power are needed now for the defence of Canada and the Empire, "Neglect of health is a "fifth - column" activity no less than more open and more spectacular forms of sabotage; and ignor- ance of simple health rules can- not be allowed to excuse such flagrant neglect of common pru- dence, "The Health League of Can- ada has carried on an active and determined campaign for public health during many years, and has succeeded in accomplishing great things in spite of the ap- athetic attitude of many of our citizens," The time and place of the wed- ding were kept secret, only the bride and a few close friends know- ing when and where it was to be — Canadlan Paper, After all, what's a mere bride- groom? — Humorist, r Sir Harry Lauder's Rules For Thrift Scottish Comedian Gave Ten Pointers On How To Save Money To a generation now counting the grey hairs, the personification of guid Scots thrift was that genial comedian, Sir Karry Lauder, He knew the value of a bawbee as few, others even of his countrymen did, and in a lifetime of trouping he put the knowledge to good use, His rules for thrift were pro- verbial in decades past, They might well be brushed up and brought to light now, writes .Ann Rutherford, in the Stratford Beacon -Herald, Here they are, all ten of them, as applicable now as when they were first pronounced: "1. Behave toward your purse as you would your beat friend, "2. View the reckless money speeder as a criminal and shun his company, "3, Dress neatly, not. lavishly, A hank pays a higher rate of interest than your back, "4. Take your amusements judi- ciously, You will enjoy them better if you do, "5. Don't throw away your crusta — eat therm. They are as strength- ening as beef, "6. It Is more exhilarating to feel money In your pocket than beer in your stomach, "7, Remember, it only takes twenty shillings to make a pound, and twelve pennies to make a shil- ling, "8, You eon sleep bettor after a hard day's work than after a day's idleness, "9. Always get good value from tradesmen, They watch they get good money from you, "10. There is as much pleasure la reading a good hand -book as a no- vel," ...CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS,., AGENTs WANTED 1,000 BORN AGAIN MEN, WOMEN, boys and girls to sell new kind religious mottoes, Made In Can- ada. Big dividends. Gospel Trum- pet, 2837 Dundas W., Toronto, Ontario, n;lhEll 4' EQUIPMENT II ,II,N'I' R BAi(EUS' OVENS ANI) MALI! IN. ery, also rebuilt equipment always on hund. Terms arranged Corres- pondence Invited. Hubbard fort able Oven Co. 103 Bathurst St. Toronto EYEGLASSES EYEGLASSES, L01V1:S'I' PRICES. Free catalogue, and eyesight test- er sent on request. Satlsftctinn guaranteed. Klee✓ Sight Optical Co., 577 College, Dept. W., 'Peron. to. 11.1111- CHICKS lilt AY 4-5 ►1•i;EiC i'UI,r,ETS \ViLI, make you money. Several breeds, mostly While l,eghorns. lmmcd- lnte shipment. Day old chicks to order. Bray 11a tottery, 130 John N.; Hamilton, (int, STARTED CHICKS A GREAT OPPORTUNITY TO GET some %veil started Leghorn pullets anis Barred Roel: cockerels tit rock bottom prices. Barred Rock cockerels two Weeks old $8.96. three week old $11.95, four to five week old 314.25. Leghorn pullets, two week old $14„I0. three week old $17.90, four week old $19.90, five wick old :'21.90. Also older pullets. Top Notch t'hickerics, Guelph, Ontario. STAIt'rlfl) CRICKS tIE'r YOUR S}IABD: 01' THESE started nhlek bargains before they ail go. Leghorn pallets two weeks old $16.90, four week old $22.90. Barred Rock cockerels three week pld $11.95, four week old $13.45, five week old $17.45. Also free range pullets all ages. Laden El- ' eerie Chick Hatchery Limited, Baden, Ontario. STARTED CHICKS' 1TIGH QUALITY started chicks nt rock bottom prices. Two week old Tirado "A” Barred ]locks, White ocks, New Irnmpshires $10.45, are)ec$8 95. Leghlornspullets $14.45, 17.40. Three week old acrd three cents. Extra Profit add one rent, four to five week old Barred Rock cockerels $13.95, Free range pul- let', nix weeks to 21 weeks. Free catalogue. Twaddle Chick Hatch - 1•a, Limited, Fergus, Ontario, masct'I(1c MOTORS CENTURY ELECTRIC MOTORS are best suited for rural work. Jones & Moore Electric, 291 Adel- aide West. Toronto, ELECTROLYSIS SUPERFLUOUS HAIR, MOLES AND warts permanently and painlessly removed by electrolysle, 17 years' experience, Anne Graham Logan, 140 Carlton Street, Suite Two, Tor- onto. Branches in Hamilton, Lon- don, Sudbury, Timmins, St. Cath- arines F11t5'1' CLAS!.; WOOL 11.4IIIIITS ANGORAS, 01NEST QUALiTY, first class wool producers, Docn $5.00, Bucks $3.00 each, 1t, Faber, 11.11. 1, llensall, Ont. 311E:N \V.4\TEl) A 1'1•:\V MORE M'AN'1'Elt TO ACT ns Agents: Must be convincing talkers to clearly explain advan- tages our Household necessities known as FA itILEX PRODUCTS offer to huh ars. Already selling in Immense quantities. Door to door r•rtnvnssinl;• nc"essarY to shote articles and take orders for same. Unusually loud ni Unlimited earnings possible. Everybody buys on sight. For FREE CATALOGUE AND DE- TAILS: t'AMILEX, 370 St, Clem- ent, Montreal. NURSING COURSE I'011 ATTENDANTS — Verdun Protestant }lospital gives n year's training for mental at- tendants. Requirements 2 years' high school and applicants must be 21 years of age, Apply, Direc- tor of Nursing, P.O. Box 6034, Montreal. Barn Roofing—Granary Lining SUPERT1TE STEEL SHEETS COST less, cover more, last longer, lay faster, save shething. Buy now from factory. Superior Products ducts Limited, 15 Nelson Street, Sarnia, Ontario, SEED FOR SAiE: NO. 1 GOVT. CLEANED DAWSON'S Golden Chaff Wheat nt 95c per bushel including bags, Ask for a sample, ICnoll VIew Farm, R. 11. No, 1, Scarl.'oro Junction, ntario, i SWiNE BERKSHiR1': SWINE: ALL AGES, both sexes. Right type, Lawrence Wyatt, Strathroy, Ontario. TOBACCO WANTED WANTED TO 13U1 LEAF TOL'AC- co. Send samples with priers for all you have, scraps included, G. Dubois, 374 Clarence, Ottawa. BELTING IIAI{GA1NS BE1,TiNG F011 THRENHER\i1:N, Endless rubber thresher belts, suc- tion hose, feeder c:un'ns, pulleys, hungers, shafting, motors nt very low prices. Send for price Inst. The York Belting Co., 88 York Street, Toronto, PHOTO FINISHING FREE! You Can Now Own complete set of benutiful rt,ver• warn nbsolutcty without cost, mnnufnctured and guaranteed by International Silver Company, Yoet absolutely aveu mayhfrec tbtys sendingcomtcyour films to Imperial. Send an order now and receive complete partic- ulars of this amazing offer. Six or eight exposure films developed and printed 25c, or 8 reprints 25c, plus your choice of a free enlarge- ment in onset mount or free silver- ware. To ret the best In quality end service send your films lo imperial Photo Service, Station J,, Toronto SALE t►1' PACIFIC SEAL COATS SPECIAL \'ALlrl: IN PACIFIC SEAi, coats; full swaggerstyle; black only; coat and lining guaranteed two years; sizes 12 to 42; 110 coals only; while they last only $39.50, 10 per cent. reduction for relatives of ex -service and service men; will send Inc examination on receipt of $5,00, Many other bnrgnins. Munro Fur Store, Vancouvur, R.C. Guaranteed CAR AND TRUCK PARTS Used — New Si'E(:IAi,I%IN(: IN REBUILT MO- TORS, POWER -UNITS, Hydraulic It o I o t r, 1Vincben, Generniorrc, Starter'', Mngnetoo, enrburetore, itadlnforn — I:xelinnge Service, Glace •-. SntIRfSMlon or refund, Levy Auto Porto. Dept. .1. Toronto. ISSUE 35—'40 rage 4. ( • 1 I, I 1 11 IIImeielvm THE STANDARD 04 Wednesday, August 2S, 1940. lief the Ministry of Information toll UT the truth about. the German Air Force. Our bombers always find their targete, INSURE NOW! AND BE ASSURED. Public and Continuation Schools 'here even if they aro h;�,ndreds of miles it was decided to commence the stud deep in Germany or Maly. Thein les on September 3rd. IE11iott1 ra n c e Agency 1 Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Duff and son, 'bombs are always on the marls. The destruction is always tremendous i Ray, Bicisate Buell, Edith Rymal and They never have any losses that mat- CAR—FIRE—LIFE—SICKNESS—ACCIDENT. \Vinnlfred Picket of Leamington, were ter. Our fighters don't get shot dowti visitors at the house of Mrs. Fred or if they do, the plots miraculously lZ°ss• I get home. But the Germans can nev Office Phone 104, Residence Phone 12 or 140, I Miss Betty Asqultu has returned i er do anything at all. Why doesn't Brom a visit in Toronto, the Government tell • us what really Air. Jim Prost, of Brussels, is visit - happens, We could stand the strain ing with friends here. 'if each of our confidence in what Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Johnston they have told us," ________ __.-- -- 'Mr. and Mrs. Ezekiel Phillips and Miss, So wrote the man of scien�co, �witn t■�ttity Laura Phillips, agent S nday in Tor his cool, Impartial mind, onto as guests of R. L. Phillips, who An(l how many other people in Brit - R• M. McKAY, R.O. is in training with the R.C,A,F, there 1 ish countries havo like him been ask - and who has just recently left the ing, "Is not this air news too good to GRADUATE OPTOMETRIST AND Canadian \Vest. He states that the be fru©" It is this question I want crops there are yielding a good return.to take tonight. First let me sum - EYESIGHT SPECIALIST. At his 'home 10,090 bushels of wheat marine what I believe to be the facts, had been threshed. I and let me say by way of fact that 1 Mr. Donau Ross is spending this ;°,un not a paid agent of the Ministry of _ week in Toronto. 'Information or any other department j 'Mr. and Mrs. Harry Yungblut, lir' of the state. 1 have always demanded and Mrs. Ivan Yungblut and son, Billy,' in Parliament that the Government tell of Zurich, wero Sunday visitors with the trat'h. I have always criticized - Mrs. Margaret Arthur. I them because before each of our ev- Mr, Bob Arthur has returned to his 1 acuations they have made us think home from Zurich. ' that things were going better than Mr, and Mrs. Jiel. Jewell, of Coi 1 they really were. And I believe I High Grade Glasses at Low Prices. born3 Township visited on Sunday know the truth about the Ah' Force. I' with Mrs, Charles A. Howson. Istudied air warfare as carefully as a I' Messrs Gordon Mille and Darwin civilian can do s0 for 20 years, I have One -day Service on Broken Lenses. llaclam, of Fergus, spent the week- seen it in Spain, in Finland, and in end with their families here, 1 other places. I have many friends our pilots and. their courage as troth• pl.E• fighters banked up above thein No Perscripticn Required, All we require is a piece ltrs, Win. noggin and daughter, among the ofifcera of the Roynl Air of the broken lens, and we will makehave Force and I see them often. I in else could do, lacked official op in the sky. But the six HurricanesDonna, have returned after a pleasantg visit in Meaford with Mi'. and Alt's. I checked up with the Air Ministry as I ttmiatn is a most foolish form of never faltered. One section, 3 Ota• A New Lens Exactly the Same. Ernest Knoeshaw, " Dutch courage, and with a fighting chines, attacked the fighters. The carefully as I can on their results, and Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Welsh of St. I• (lin certain that they are not over, force it .brings swift retribution in its other one went right in among the tracks. bombers. In a few minutes 3 Nazi ' stating bombers had been destroyed, the test, with a 'half swish of the great spoon Joss Helen Robertson has returned understate the truth. Air Ministry gives the Nazi losses bombers and Mezzerschmidts togetlt- the "chile sauce to be" is hoisted over to her home here after spending the Do you remember what those Figur• quite so fully. Indeed, it is not pos- er, turned tall and fled for home. Successor to Dr, C. D. Kilpatrick. the main lid of the stove for it's sins- holidays at Huntsville. les arc? In seven days last week, our aibl° to know for certain what they 80,JC0 miles of Plying, 3 bombers mering process. I Ihelalel Phillips and R. J. Phillips fortes brought down 570 Nazi aircraft are. With modern aircraft the aerial downed, many tons of }tombs wasted There's something about the odour were visitors on Monday with lir. and in Britain and around its coasts. Of I dogfizluts are so swift and sudden that in the sea, and NO results. What a of cooking chile saa.ce that rivals dm Mrs. Alfred Tobbutt, �blhis total 377 were bombers, and with the.ttmrmotl of scores of simultaneous picture for Goering to contemplate 1]r, and 'Mrs. Baroid English and scrlption on a chilly day. Coming up the aircraft Coer`ng lost 1400 of the combat is so great that not even the when his men got home! from the barn, the tangy smell of . M iss Etta, of Chatham, were visitors pilots and expert craw. In shooting most experienced .pilots. Dan always And my turd story is of a lone warm vinegar ...and cooking onions at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. Taylor theist down the R.A.F. lost 1111 fighter be certain when his enemy has been Blenheim fighter who went up to meet and spices ... reminds a person and .Mr. and 'Mrs. Gordon Taylor, ft, but 56 pilots escaped by par• I destroyed. No victory is counted un a Nazi bomber its the dark, lie found aircra of the days when as a boy he would The Service in St. Mark's Anglican i achute and regained their bases. Our I lass the pilot is quite certain, and um the enemy above a northern city, •1 i 'I sect him southward back again lu• AUBURN J. H. R. Elliott. Gordon Elliott At a meeting of the trustees of the BLYTH•-- ONT. "COURTESY AND SERVICE" Office at McGill's Store EVERY MONDAY FIRST TO SCHOOL— Then To Wettlaufer's For all your SCHOOL NEEDS Scribblers and Exercise Books. .2 for 5c, 5c, and 10c School Bags 50c Pencil Boxes 5c, 10c and 15c Trans-Vue Eversha"ps 15c Fountain Pens 50c to $3.50 Giant Pencils 5c Wire -0 Exercise Books • 10c SELECT -O -POINT PENS Choose your Style of Point Fine, Medium, Flexible. $1.25 HEADQUARTERS for TEXT BOOKS. WETTLAUFER'S DR. K. MACLEAN PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Augustine, were recent visitors with their successor Indeed I be into the depots of the kettle ... and Mrs. Alice Robb and Levi Marwood' lieve the ft;nres they have given ua But it. is not so certainT that our Office Hours: - 10 to 12 a.m. -- 2 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 8 p.m., and by appointment. Phone No.—Office 51. BLYTH -- ONTARIO. - sit patiently waiting for the chance , Church next Sunday, September 1st, loss in airmen over Britain was Chas less the ot'idence has been checked c ha to 91p a piece of bread into the kettle will be in the evening at 7.30 o'clock;t then Dr. C. E. Toll, LDS., D.D.S. � I "just 55. In machines we lost one to and counter -checked. Thus it is ab wards the north, rightserosa and then strolling as quickly as pos The. Rector will conduct the Service 51/2 lost by Goering. In Wren we lost 'solutely certain that there are many the country to the coast, and at last DENTAL SURGEON. and reach the Sermon. 1 to 18. (Germans who are not counted but shot him down when they were 40 sable into the back woodshed to avoid P Office Hours -9 to 12-1.30 to 6. i detection, enjoy the tastiness of fresh' I Miss Leis Benda! of Woodstock is But 10 these losses we must add who never reach home. And our Air »tiles out to sea, Wednesday—llonkton. I made chile -sauce on bread. Sooner or visiting with hiss Doris 41cKnight. the further losses of our raids against Command snakes no allowance for What damage have the Nazis fond Saturday 2 to 9.30p.m.—Dungannon. later 'he was bound to be caught ... 1 the enemy. During these same 7 days 1 them of any kind, Of course In all its by their raids? Everyone knows X•1tA1'ING A SPECIALTY. 1 and with a cuff on the lug dispatched last week, we lost in bombing opera- 'estimates of fighting it is right to Dr, Goebbels grotesque and lying Phones 124 and 118. to some task such as ,piling wood or Why British Airman Are tions in Germany, in German-occupied leave a liberal margin for mistakes. claims—German fighters, like swarms digging potatoes for dinner .. bmf Superior To Germans territory, in Italy, and in France, a That margin has been left, if only on of gnats above the streets of London the thrill of fresh "chilly sauce" was A telling explanation of why small total of 3,1 machines. That involved one side of the ledger. It Is a margin —our andromea in lhtns.-our ports GEORGE H. ELLIOTT worth it. numbers of British planes are inflict• the :oss of 130 of our pilots and our far wider than truth. out of setoff—oto factories in flames. Licensed Auctioneer For The County 1 On pickling day like this the din- ing heavy losses on considerably trained bomber crew.Wel, I have not seen a single German I am fortified in this conviction by of Huron,Wer may be just a trifle late and in',zreater numbers of German planes is Thus if we add up the total cost of i threw stories of last Thursday's fight plane in London. Two impartial a rather absent-minded way Mrs. Phil made in a speech by Captain Noel our operations both in defence and ' in; told me by air officers who were transatlantic witnesses, Helen Kirit- Correspendence promptly answered patrlck, and Virginia Coles whose Immediate arrangements can be made thanes ,getting it ready . . . Plainly Baker, British Member of Parliament attack it comes to 141 aircraft agains�tthems°luta concerned and who have thinking about the dile sauce all the who for many years has been a close ' the Nazi 570, with the ]oss of 186 per experience and feminine integrity is for sale date at The Standard Office, j I been my personal friends for many I their sufficient passport in many Blyth, or by calling phone 203, Clin- time. Usually, just after we sit down I student of air warfare. ;swine' against the Nazi 1400. One to years. she ladles a little into a cup ... cools I Excerpts from Captain Baker's tour in machines, 1 to 7 h/z. in mon. !lands, toured c►ar south coast here on ton. Charges moderate and sans• The first is of a Spitfire squadron Friday, 'Neither saw serious damage faction guaranteed. I it slightly and then sips. There's a •speech, delivered recently its a trans- These are tie figures as the Air Minl which met sotneUniug,over 30 German tense moment or two . and then Atlantic broadcast follows: stry presents tient to the press. Ani of any kind.' Helen Kirkpatrick told bombers on our eastern coast. The PHIL OSIFER 1 we know that the chic sauce is done Last week a friend of mine wrote on one stile they are complete, correct Germans had either come without me today that at Dover she saw eight LAZY as for a fleeting second a smile cornea to me from the north of England. Ile and final. Our losses are of course, Nazis crash biers her eyes. But she OF LAZY MEADOWS heir protecting fighters, or 'had lost saw no damage to the keyes or liar - (by Harry .1, Boyle) I and goes and she starts into the bust is a university professor with a world- all known and they are given in full. them on rho wa , and in 40 minute:! I wide reputation made for him by hist They are given in full for various Y hour. She saw one shell hole in a i1C5� of tilling up the sealers.the Spitfires had 'shot dawn 22 and • The Chile Sauce . . . "PlopPetY cool, penetratAng, .scientific• mind, 'reasons. But not least because to hide private house. driven away the rest, and had clone I The attack of our bombers in Ger- "CHILE SAUCE" plops"into the sealers and one by ono „W'hy can't you make the gas �bagslor understate them would demoralize so without the loss of a machine or o. Summer has gone over the peak', they are filled and lined up on the many is a very different affair. That a man, is proved by every report, whether - You can sep it ...and feel it ...Thu free end of the table. The kettle is The second story is of a flight of from pilots neutral or other sour.:es, tilted and then scraped and the last FRIENDS FOR LIFE Illurricanes, six machines, which met which is received. Proved by our Hun'" rays seem to he less varmint; ... and the breeze more chilling ...' Sealer filled and a dlishtal left over the biggest force of German bombers aerial photography, photographs which supper -time. set up to cool off for Burp they had ever seen. They said there we have made. It Is proved by th© .. ,and the harvest fields begin to Mr.,. Phil straightens up from her �> ,, rte•••• vete at least 1i l) of them. More than mass movements of German civilians and the leaves of ' :.: %s::.::,x.y;�s:::;.;:..::.>:•,;:: •::;>:;::;:,:;•:::•.::if;'s»; : s:;; .::;; look str:p;tcd work and with the back of her hands had 1 f ewer been soon together at Dun from the Ruhr district. Proved by the trees seem to mope in place of },rushes wisps of hair that have tune ..:..,,,••. � � , : kir.( and these bombers had a fleet o; ( continued on page 5) mile ...and you wear your smock blc�l down over her forehead. Then - ' to d0 the chores In the morning. And llr. Jahn Ross, Gordon, Dr. Annie ? �,.ii.`. "j,.; ; ;;:<•.-: then of course the most accurate sign she slumps r %: f''` !�'f'`` '.: f: there on the zinc rings . . of all is the fact that Mrs. Phil has (town in a chair with the towel that started making child sauce, site'; used to wipe the scalers off an('' The preserving kettle is hauled oat fraadmires her own handiwork. and the every day agar sack apron .nklyThey look good," I usually mutter, firmly anchored with a h;talness-like iryl,ng to think of something new and" bow and then "pickihtg" operations original to say that would really ex - are under way in earnest. Gleaming press how well the gleaning sealers sealers are b:on.;ht forth and 111011• of speckled red chile sauce really du tops unscrowcd and all neatly arrayed look , , . and thinking of the thrill mi the top shelf of the basic of the Ot ;peening them out over golden stove. brown fried hath on a frigid day in Rows of tomatoes that were neatly the winter that's bound to conte. laid out 0u the bottom panty shelf 1 --- yield their smooth hides to the boll- 1 EAST W AWANOSH Ing water and the -paring knife and Mr Roy Toll and Mrs. Laughlin, come out of the operation looking also Dr. and Mrs. C. E. Toll attended like bundles of red velvet laced with the C.N.E. on Saturday. red veins. Silver skinned onions arrj itev. George and Mrs. Oliver and, hell at a r cspectf al armslength, and daughters of Arva, visited Mr. and tears atre; to copiously as they are lira. R. C. McGowan on Thursday. it~?a;�>'.:: f;{{a>> de hided and chopped into minute , ,Dr. John ROSS, Gordon, Dr. Annie piece`!. All go into the kettle. Ross and Miss Clare McGowan re Tit .1 canes the secret, little form- turned on Monday from a trip to Al- ula such as chomin.1 celery ... a red berta. or green sweet pepper . ..the little I 1JIr. and Mrs. Robert Wells of 11111 - added touches that make folks ex- lett spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. claim next winter ... "What ever do .Frank Marshall. you do to make your chile sauce so good," ... and the lady of the house- nrORRIS TOWNSHIP hold P'Igets in a pleased way and Master Robert and John Clark. says, "why nothing at all, you have fresh air children from Toronto, have the same recipe I use." spent two weeks at the home of Mr. The batter or vinegar and su;ar is and Mrs. Thomas Grasby. They will poured over the contents of the ket- return to Toronto this Thursday. tle. Then comes the mysterious, little Mr. Frank Nesbitt of East Wawa - bundle of spices wrapped up_ in a nosh, is visiting with his aunt and cheesecloth bag to be popped down uncle, lir, and Mrs, Thomas Grasby. Christopher Lunt, one of the younger children evacuated from the United Kingdom, was In a happy mood when he reached Van- couver after travelling by Canadian Pacific steamship across the Atlantic and by Canadian Pacific train across Canada. He Is shown hero saying good-bye to his new found pal, Porter George Living- stone, who took good care of him on his long train ride. Christopher had a grand time on the journey and is now safe from German raiders. He will live with friends on the West Coast. 1, -4, t' J.!•1IJ•I•��1Jl�f•��If^ ����JJJ�lJfl.I� 1�1lJ�jJJf1J-.���.1.!-1.,► The World's News Seen Through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR An International Daily Newspaper is Truthful—Constructive—Unbiased—Free from Sensational. 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 Issues 25 Cents, Name Address SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST Western Canada Special Bargain Excursions FROM ALL STATIONS IN EASTERN CANADA Going Daily September 13-27, 1940, Inclusive RETURN LIMIT -45 DAYS TICKETS GOOD IN COACIIES at fares approximately 1 1.8c per mile TOURIST SLEEPING E PING CARS at fares approximately 1.%c per utile, STANDARD SLEIEIPING CARS at fares approximately 1 5 -Sc per mile. COST OF ACCOMMODATION IN SLEEPING CARS ADDITIONAL Baggage Checked. Stopovers at all point& enroute going & Returning. S(MII,AR EXCURSIONS FROM WESTERN TO ()ASTERN CANADA DURING SAME] PIIRiOD. Ti.kets, Sleeping Car Reservations anti All information from any agent ASK FOR HANDBILL. CANADIAN NATIONAL Wednesi1ay, August 28, 1940, LYCEUM THEATRE WINGHAM—ONTARIO, Two Shows Sat. Night THE STANDARD i • • Mr. and 'Mrs, A, Nethery, Hamilton, Fall Fair Prize List Out. with Mende. Prize Islets for the Blyth Fall Fay Mrs, Smith and daughter, North are now available to all who wish one, Bay. with Mr, and Mrs. H. Armstrong. Tito officers am1 d:.ectors have pre- 1. .aliases Anna, Jean and Fern \Ic• Thurs., Fri., Sat.—Aug. 29, 30731 pared a splendid list which covers almost everything' pertaining to a Clark, Edward Arnold In , Tyrone Power, Dorothy Lamour "JOHNNY APOLLO 1`all Fair. Anyone with any inellml� Mr, and Mrs, Wes, Stackhouse and ]Tow a father and son, after many experiences, learn that crime does not pay. Also "Miniature" and "News" Mat,: Bat, afternoon at 2.30 p.m. Mon., Tues., Wed.—Sept. 2, 3, 4 • Dowell and Mildred Thornton at Point 7 • -SPECIAL— Mickey Rooney, Fay Bainter, in "Young Tom Edison" The thrilltns.hunnan story of The. ma's Edison, one of A'merica's greatest men. Also "Cartoon" "Novelty Subject' r Day N.Y,,.. Reg.�. tion of showing articles will do well Ills Eva Stackhouse, Brucefleld, with to get in touch with the Secroctary- I \I r, and Mrs. Will McDowell. Treasurer, Mr, Earle \Villows, whore Reeve Raymond Redmond spent the they may obtain a list, There's lots week -end in Toronto. of time yet to prepare entries, The I \Ir, Norman Rodgers bus secured a, Fair Dates aro the 171)1 and ISth of . position in Goderich, September. Congratulations to Mr, and Mrs. Nelson Paterson on the birth of a baby girl, on August 1.Sth. Monday, A Holiday. airs Charles Rodger suffered painful Monday is Labour 1)ay, and a •public burns on Friday' evening at his home. holiday. ,All places of business in Owing to a back ailment ho was using, "Canada Carries On . Blyth will bo closed. gasoline as a liniment and was apply- ; The' Village Council will meet on i Ing it when it is believed the lumen In ' Iytn, Ontario. Tuesday evening instead of Monday, canto in contact with Che heat from the stove, and the treated part of his back was ignited. Dr, Weir was cal W,ESTFIELD led and removed air, Rodger to Code+ - ___._, Subscription Rates — The people of Westfield were shock- rich Hospital were at the time of writ Airforce dropped 300 tons of bombs on $1.50 a Year in Canada, $2,00 In Uni• ed and saddened by the sudden p.:=• i ing lie Is resi.in.,3 quite comfortable. the Ruhr and they tons oral{zed the si11,3 of one of our oldest and beloved i The turns being not as deep as at population and enormously reduced ted States; Single Copses, Ge.the quantity of arms which they pro; residents in the person of Mrs. John first thought. , Kook, on Saturday morning, after a I \Ve filled your School Supply needs tinted, !n the last uuohlh our bomb - heldvery brief illness, 'lite funeral was last year. We'll be glad to do it again era have dropped more than 400it ton;• held at the home of her son, Fred this year. This IS your personal in- and each bomb is fie' more 0fiective J. Cook, on the u4h Concession, on vitation to call around on Tueaday. , than bombs were 20 years ago. Ou•', Monday afternoon. Rev, Mr, \ViLon, ( \Ve, have what you want.; Wettlauf- bombing crews are steadily, rncrciles- pastor of tile United Church, was in. er's, I sly, surety, blasting German oil plants, charge, Ile paid high tribute to the 1 �owcastle are visiting at the home of . • sato Mrs. Cook, He said rite words o� railways into the chaos that will bring his text were typical of \Irs, Cook's Mr. ants Mrs. Emmerson Rod4er, Hitler to defeat. life, "Tho Lord is My Rock and M Mr. 1:eslie Budhanan, Jin, Roy, in my be - life, 13111y John and Lorna, received quite I say quite frankly that, Salvation, I shall not fear."Ste I(vet, tt surprise on Friday evening while lief, the R,A.P. have alreadw111a vin i jher fallll, who love of God in 'her daily Ilfe, All knew her felt the in- I driving along tlie road one of the front � Great Britain and That they [lu,enco for good. Ito read several wheels of the car carte off and rolled 1 the war, And if you ask ale why 1 passages from loiters she had compos - reminders 1110 ditch hitting a large tree. No believe this to be true, I would reply ed to lbs local 1V�\I;S, One was "Cos was injured as ho t�'ns not drivhl; that it is 1101 Che first time shatthings leave happened 1 t the lout; ►'°Answers Prayer," 'These were earis I fast at the lime,Ra ,Reids a cord of mankind's many wars. This ronliuders of the 11 [e being lived ,n is a test of mass against quality, of EYESIGHT SPECIALIST our midst, he said, FRIED HAM SANDWICHES d shear weight of men and metal :tgainst Registered Optometrist The whole community mourns airs. One and one half ceps ground cook I superior heroism and skill. The Spar- e Cook's passing as a friend and nelg'n• ed ham, 1 tablespoon lama Son vine- tails at Thermopoly, Themtstocles and hour She was a life member of the gar, 31/. talblespoons prepared mustard the Aa'hcnitrns at Salamis, Sir Fronds BLYTH OFFICE I;Drake IN WILLOW'S DRUG STORE i keen Interest in all our char I worst, shit, pinch black peper, 1-4 cup pre- Nelson at Trafalgar all showed how • whole Coalman- tree sails(' dressing. n Al Trafalgar a bty is extended to the family. I Season ham with vinegar, mustard, 'hundred I3rllfsh sailors closed the talk w�nlch you could feel but never / Slice bread 1•d inch thick. Spread I one, and so prepared the way for t•'' { of all mankind. It was their nns�polts N garve filo message, + i the ham mixture an slices. t Iain^ of the peoples which ensue:], en faith in the cause for which they r Mr. and Mrs. Carter, of Wood- nbutt together u ata el stely bre s• Fry I g In butter until delicately brown, Ser -p ° es f witnessing today the opening fl ill• It is Chat grin half-conscious ,. ,., ,o .,r the great Trafalgar of the ideat.ism which bears Vicat onwards easiest night and KENNETH WHITMORE, Publisher. immuumommeninui ROXY THEATRE, CLINTCN. { - NOW PLAYING—'•North of the Yukon" and "Five Little Peppers." - Monday, Tuesday. Wednesday "IRENE" j A Parisian model is mistaken for the year's leading debutante and intereslin3 complications develop t'nis gay musical comedy. Anna Neagle, Ray Mlllald, Roland Young, May Robson, Billie Burke. Thursday, Friday, Saturday "RANCHO GRANDE" A musical Western with a Mexican atmosphere Gene Autry, Smiley Burnette and June Storey. Coming: The Nazi invasion of Czechco•Slovakk Is portrayed "FOUR SONS" _ Mat.: Sat. & Holidays at 3 p.m, Agaimammiar REGENT THEATRE SEAFORTH. CAPITAL THEATRE GODERICH. NOW PLAYING—"Mutiny on the Blackhawk" and "Ma, He's Mak- ing Eyes At Me," Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Bette Davis and Charles Boyer with Jeffrey Lynn, Barbara O'Neil and Vlrclnla Weidler In the mag- nificent story of a deathless love. An Anatole Litvak Production. `All This and Heaven Too' Thursday, Friday, Saturday Bing Crosby, Gloria Jean and ' Charles Winninger, Two songbirds team with a com- edy -king for a roltcking funfestival "IF I HAD ,MY WAY" in COMING: WALT DISNEY'S "PINOCCHIO" Mat.: Wed., Sat., Holidays, 3 p.m. Page 5. NOW PLAYING: W. C. Fields and Mae West In 'My Little Chlckadee'i Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Spring Byington, Ken Howell and Chick Chandler The Jones Family puts Old Man Gloom on the run in another sprightly adventure "ON THEIR OWN" Thursday, Friday, Saturday Virginia Bruce and Wayne Morris Thrills and romance wing along to- gethet' in a shy -high action yarn, "FLIGHT ANGELS" Coming; John Garfield in: "SATURDAY'S CHILDREN" Mat.: Sat. and Holidays, 3 p.m. Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted Smart Glasses At low Cost Banish headaches, see any (ba- lances, read and sew in comfort WITH REID'S GLASSES •Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Rodger of German aircraft factories, German \M,�M.S. and Ladies' Aid, and roust n 2 tablespoons horseradish, % teaspoon i. ` hen he defeated the Armada, �. The sympathy of theCo i pared 1 1 1 l g unity can Trafalgar r ilows there was something beneath Wei Please make appointment with q Mr. Willows. TIME MARCHES ON TOWARD SEPT. 3RD and SCHOOL DAYS WE HAVE EVERYTHING YOU'LL NEED. Paint Brushes,. 4 for 5c Crayons .... 5c and 10c Erasers • , , , , . lc and 5c Pencils lc, 2 for 5c, & 5c Ink, Red, Blue and Black, at .. 5c,10c,15c Rulers lc and 5c Gummed Reinforce- ments ,.,,•....,, 5c Lead Refills. 5c and 10c Scribblers .. 5c and 10c Drawing Books and Pads 5c and 10c Mechanical Pencil , .15c Loose Leaf Note Book Refills, plain, regular and Science 5c Lse.-leaf Note i : :'_: s 15c Filled Pencil Cases 15c and 25c Fountain Pen and Pencil Sets 25c World Pencil Sharpen- Dip -It Pens Peerless Water Colours , , 20c Paint Refills 5c TAYLOR'S 5c to $1.00 Store PHONE 79. The aran'er service on Thursday horseradish 1111(1 salt and pepper to Inurow seas to the passage of the ileal•, id was their inner hnowled;4 evening was In charge of ll r. William taste• Moisten with salad dressing countless hosts of a conquered Ems that in their hands now lies the fete Walden. Rev. Malcolm from Brookin,Put slices Labo LONG r FARES END stock Mr. Gordon u o.t, Colltiant, Mr, and Mrs. Darwin Carter, Wood:. ve with green salad. stock, were vislto;s wita Mr, and Mrs. Between all points in Canada Fred. Cook. You'll always find the right article vegetable poup. Yottll find it gives a at 1Velllaufer's School Supply Coun' FOR THE ROUND TRIP ter, Look over the advt, on page 1, delicious flavor, For pies Well are better eaten cold 'Mrs, Pat. quality is far more important than Icing with Reeve Raymond Redmond, the crust, Pastry made with milk has., in any other kind of was'. Fifteen braces and states them all. In the '1l P t. air through the sto which above all things will save BO - Try adding two whole cloves to a And why are the Royal Air Forcll . Win and the world. superior In quality to Goering's hith- erto unbeaten mass? There are many reasons. But there is one that eat. Fare and One -Quarter O'Malley Toronto is vis• use milk ns the liquid ingredient its, Tickets good going from Noon Friday, Aug. 30, until 2 p.m., Monday, Sept. 2. airs, Rogers, Toronto, Miss J. 'Mloun• more lasting crispness, RETURN LIMIT to leave destination not later than midnight, Tues., Sept. 3, lain, St. alarys, with Mr. and alrs,al. 1940. henry Misses \linnle and Elsie Snell have returned to London, (continued from page dl self. I believe our airforce is super - c Mr. Glen McGill of Hamilton and Gorin eg's new announcements of Cut'' I for to the Germans in the quality of Mr, Ed. McGill, Woodstock, with Mr. dantental changes la his A.R.P, I its material of its manpower, of it and \Irs. James \IcGlll, in five mouths or k911S the Allied training and its morale, No one now denies, least of all the German pilots; ]'hat the spitfire is the finest fighter in the world. The Wellington, with its speed, its range, Its armour, its power -driven gun turrets, is quite as certainly the finest bomber. The men, physically and mentally, are the finest MINIMUM SPECIAL FARE Adults or Children ,,,,,.,....••..2 Full particulars from any agent. CANADIAN PACIFIC Why British Airmen years ago an experienced author said that a pilot in a 1925 machine could shoot down 1000 oponenls in 191 t 1110• dell with no risk or clanger to aim. • Maritime Provinces Have Holiday Appeal .arm have tho freshness of Canadian towns and cities. Tho charming Maritime Provin- ces have been particularly popular this year. Now Brunswick, reach- ed frotn Eastern Ontario in slight- ly more than half a day by the Canadian Pacific Railway, has all the attributes of a perfect holiday land. Tho outstanding resort in New Brunswick Is St. Andrews - by -the -Sea on bluo Passamaquod- dy Bay. Two splendid golf cour- ses, tennis courts, fishing and hunting in season, boating, hiking and riding are among the more popular sports but all of them take second place to a sheltered sandy beach—Katy's Cove, main- spring of summer activities at this world-famous resort. Ontarlo residents, although they - NJ have in their home province an unsurpassed holiday play- ground, are this year "discover- ing" other parts of Canada. Forced by war to stay within the broad bounds of the Dominion, they have found that, Canada has, among other attractions, a "Rivie- ra" at St. Andrews -by -the -Sea, N.B.; Old France in Quebec Pro- vince; a real Swiss village near Lake Louise in the Canadian Rockies and the fiords of Norway on tho Pacific Const. It has been no hardship for these travel loving residents of Ontario to stay in Canada. In addition to the atmosphere and Attractions of older lands, they Nova Scotia is most enjoyably reached from New Brunswick by steamer, the Princess Helene. Na- turally air-conditioned by cool ocean breezes, the province pos- sesses all the 'charm of the sea- side. It has scores of coastal re- sorts, two of the better known being Tho Pines at Digby and Lakeside Inn at Yarmouth. In- land, the Annapolis Valley has ninny claims to fame. It is the largest "apple orchard" in the British Empire and is historically interesting as the homeland of "Evangeline." The Cornwallis Inn at Kentville serves this district. Good roads t1irough the interest- ing countryside make driving an unusually attractive pleasure. SpecialBargain EXCURSIONS TO ALL STATIONS IN WESTERN CANADA GOING DATES DAILY SEPTEMBER 13 TO 27, 1940 RETURN LIMIT: 45 days. 1 TICKETS GOOD TO TRAVEL I N COACHES Excursion tickets good in Tourist, Parlor and Standard sleeping cars To those contemplating build. ,Iso available on payment of slightly Ing a Monument , . , Get my ilgher passage fares, plus price of prices before buying. Cemetery oarlor or sleepng car accommodation, Lettering a specialty. ROUTES—Tickets good going ria All Work Guaranteed. PortArthur, Ont., Chicago, Ill., or Sault Ste. Marie, returning via KING Stock Spray $1.50 gallon. 0, T. Dobbyn Phone 24. Monuments! 1 and most carefully selected types sante route and line only. Genes - which the British Commonwealth o9 oils optional routings. Nations in is long and glorious ills• ST0P0VmS—will be allowed at any tory 11as yet produced. They are point in Canada on the going or trained to navigation, shooting, fornul• return trip, or both, within final tion flying, tactics, to a standard limit of ticket, on application to which, quite evidently, Goering anti Conductor; also at Chicago, 111„ bit generals have never dreamt. - Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., and west, WANTED TO BUY The German machines are very good in acordance with tariffs of United Their instruments are the sante. Their States lines. Old horses and dead cattle. Mut be p Full particulars from any agent, suitable for Mink feed, removed pilots and their crows are obstlnale promptly. Elinor Trick, phone 907-5, and brave. But neither their sk111 not. CANADIAN PACIFIC Clinton Central, We pay phone calls, their knowledge nor their aircraft are39 EOW. emu! to the task they have ahead. And there is one other advantage Low Rail Fare which will be decisive and which is ' ours. Last night al 4.00 a.nt, I stood TO at a bomber station in the dewy fres"Tf' Hess of our August night and watch- ed some \\'elliugtone come home. 1 watched the superb precision of the EXHIBITION Pilots as they swept towards the flare paths and brought the mighty mons- ters safely down to earth. A few mint utes later I sat at break!;ast drinking' coffee with these quite young men, They had been through cloud and dar:ttless, tltt'ottgh anti-aircraft fire TO SEPTEMBER 7TH. and searchlights, over, above, around TO slaw• -Hide Horsewhip in Blyth. and through the German balloons, td RETURN LIMIT SEPT. 12TH Finder please leave at The Standard do their jells in Germany. They had passed through every obstacle to their objective knowing that if the gunners got then they had 350 guiles of cruel sea to trona before they could get - botne. They were tired, but not very - tired. They had been (loin; it for months but they showed not Ms. slightest sign of nerves or strain. To Chem their raid was just one more .lob accomplished, a fit sntl,ert for shop , talk and Shop jokes of the kind which John Grant CLINTON MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS LINTON — ONTARIO. Successor to Ball & Zapfe. TORONTO $3.35 GOOD GOING AUGUST 20TH RESIDENCE FOR SALE The Dodcl'.s Residence, on Queen St., Blyth. lleal Bargain for Quick Sale. Apply to J. II. 11. Elliott, Blyth, 00.3-11. ORGAN FOR SALE " 131Q1.L", Six Octave Organ in Good Order, Apply to The Standard. LOST CANADIAN PACIFIC office. young nten love. But with dhoti► as with all our pilots Dead and Disabled Animals REMOVED PROMPTLY. PHONE 15, SEAFORTH, COLLECT. DARLING and CO. of CANADA, LTD. Saving Ontario's Natural Resources No. 5 (By G. C. Toner) FORESTS AND FISHES The fishery biologist is vitally concerned with forests. He knows that trees and woodlands catch and hold the water during the time of the year when precipita- tion is high, releasing it grad- ually during the summer. In for- ested regions the spring floods are gentle; the streams run throughout the year, cool and Blear; erosion with its consequent silt is held to a minimum. Simply stated, to have fish, there must be trees over a considerable por- tion of the watershed that sup- plies the streams. Right Temperature The existence of the brook trout in Ontario is closely de- pendent on the forests. Like all other creatures they have certain definite physical and chemical requirements of the environment in which they live. Of these, tem- perature'of the water seems to have great power as a limiting factor. If the water in the stream is too warm, there will be no trout; if too cold, the food is scanty or non-existent and again there will be few or no trout. This temperature range is quite narrow, from 45 degrees to 65 degrees with a variation, either way of 5 degrees, and within these limits the trout passes its whole existence. Trees Along Streams Water from the earth is usually at 55 degrees, winter or summer. This is close to the most suitable temperature for the speckled trout. In shaded valleys the spring -fed stream is protected from the sun and wind but in the open fields it soon warms. Trees along the watercourses are an insurance against warm water. so a landowner, to keep condi- tions right for the trout, should plant trees along the valley, close to the stream, and should protect those that are already there. Farm Notes . After -Harvest Cultivation 9 11 After -harvest cultivation is one of the most practical and most effective methods of controlling weeds, states John D. MacLeod, Crops, Seeds and Weeds Branch, Ont. Dept. of Agriculture. Plants draw heavily on the food stored in the roots in order to produce flower and seed and they are at their weakest stage immed- iately after the crop has been removed, For the control of annual and winter annual weeds, shallow, thorough cultivation is recom- mended by using the plow, one- way disc, cultivator or disc har- row, Seeds are brought near the surface by this plan where they germinate and may he killed by subsequent cultivation. An abun- dance of moisture plus the meth- ods outlined above, will destroy millions of seedling plants of such Tweeds as Wild Mustard, Stinkweed, Ragweed, Fo:;.all, False Flax, Pigweed, Lambs Quarters, Shepherds Purse, etc. Controlling Perennials For the control of perennial weeds having deep tap root,, such as Bladder tampion and Chicory, deep plowing is recom- mended as soon as the crop has been removed, followed by cul- tivation, using wide, sharp shares which overlap. Thorough, fre- quent cultivation both ways k essential in order to cut roots and bring them to the surface where the sun will assist in de. stroying them. Two Objectives An abundance of moisture will prove favourable for the control of annual weeds but will upset all plans for the control of per- ennials, particularly those with underground rootstocks. Two ob- jectives should he kept in mind when planning after -harvest cul- tivation. (1) Practise a green 'Summer fallow when controlling annuals —permit seeds to germinate and destroy them later by cultivation. (2) Practise a black summer fallow when fighting winter an- nuals, biennials and perennials. Keep the ground absolutely black until frosts will make further cul- tivation impossible, Revenues from motor vehicle registrations and gasoline taxes in Canada in 1939 totalled $79,- 915,492, of which $27,961,132 was from registrations and $51,- 954,360 from gasoline taxes, In 1938 the total for registrations was $26,230,196 and the gasoline taxes $41,247,688, making a total revenue of $67,477,884. Seagram Gold Cup Comes Back to Him Slammin' Sani Snead, right, is shown as he received the Seagram Gold Cup, emblematic of the Canadian Open Golf championship, frons Frowde Seagram after his 18 -hole playoff with Harold (Jug) McSpaden at Scarboro' Golf and Country Club Monday afternoon. Snead won the trophy in 1938 at Mississauga Club after a playoff with Harry Cooper. Yesterday he carded a par 71 to McSpaden's 72. McSpaden can be seen peeking over Mr. Seagram's shoulder in the above picture. THE WAR •WEE K—Commentary on Current Events New Canada -U. S. Agreement On Defense Is Momentous History was made last week in a railway car on a remote coun- try siding near Ogdensburg, N.Y,, when the Prime Minister of Can- ada, Mackenzie King, and the President of the United States, Franklin D. Roosevelt, met for a four-hour conference and came to an agreement which is one of the most momentous ever rec- orded in the annals of this hemi- sphere. Mr. King and Mr. Roose- velt discussed the mutual prob- lems of defense in relation to the safety of Canada and the U. S., and, following their meeting, is- sued a statement outlining the three provisions agreed upon: es- tablishment of a joint U.S.-Can- adain board of defense; this board to "commence immediate studios relating to sea, land and air problems, including person- nel and material;" plans for con- sidering the defense of the north- ern half of the western hemi- sphere, Thus was cemented the closest bond yet set up between the two great democracies in North America. Toward Mutual Assistance Pact The significance of the new agreement was not likely to be realized in its entirety for many a long day. Political observers meantime saw in it an indication that a mutual assistance pact be- tween •Canada and in the United States might be in the making; that the Roosevelt administration intended to blanket the Dominion under the protecting folds of the Monroe doctrine; that the armed forces of the two countries might at a future date be unified under one command. Gracie Fields Visits Lovely Lake Louise Ardent movie camera fan. Gracie Fields said of Lake Lou- ise. "It's the grandelt bit of water I've seen." Here she is giving the camera a work-out from the bal- cony of her suite overlooking the lake, day before her concert at the Banff Springs Hotel in aid of the Navy League of Canada. —C.P.R. Photo. British -U.S. Union? The Ogdensburg agreement was followed immediately by a sensa- tional move on the part of Bri- tain. Speaking in the House of Commons, Prime Minister Churc- hill stated that 99 -year leases of sea and air bases in Newfound- land, Atlantic Islands (perhaps a reference to Bermuda) and West Indian points had been of- fered to the United States. Next day British foreign office sourc- es confirmed reports that the Un- ited States had leased the Islands of Canton and Enderby, (midway between Hawaii and Australia) from Great Britain as air bases. Seeds of the Future These developments gave an impetus to movements in both Great Britain and the United States working for union of the two great powers. Many prophets envisioned a coming world in which five mammoth groups of countries (English, German, Rus- sian, Japanese, Italian) would struggle amongst themselves for trade, combine and re -combine against one another to keep a balance of power. In his same speech to the House Mr. Churchill declared that Britain sought no advantage for herself from the offer to lease the New World bases, but he did appeal for "timely rein- forcement" of Britain's navy from the United States—an ap- parent reference to recent discus- sions of United States' aid in filling gaps in the British fleet with over -age destroyers. A Year of War Reviewing the year of war just coming to a close, Mr. Churchill found the scales heavier on the side of Britain. He acknowledg- ed that a "cataract of disaster" had poured out during the last three months—the Netherlands and Belgium conquered, France forced out, Italy in the war against Britain, Somaliland gone. But, on the other side, he said, "we have re -armed and re -built our armies in a degree which would have been deemed impos- sible a few months ago; our navy is far stronger than it was at the beginning of the war; our bomb- er and fighter strength after all this fighting is larger than it has ever been; our advantages an:I resources are enormous." (Bri- tish casualties in the first year of this war reached 92,000, includ- ing civilians, as against 365,000 army and navy losses in the first year of the last war). Speaking even as three waves of German bombers roared a- cross Britain's coast, renewing the furious assault of the Nazi air siege, Mr. Churcaill let fall enigmatic words: "We may be sure that Hitler will continue his air attacks as long as he has the strength and as long as any pre- occupations he may have in re- REG'LAR FELLERS—A Man's Man NO NONSitN4E NOW! YOU GO WITH YOUR LITTLE COUSIN 1`t TO THE HAIRDRESSERS i,11 AND KEEP HIM A./..7140,"'t1/4. COMPANY / war • Women Know Their Flowers (Vent a strange flower nam- ed? Call in a woman, not a man. Five women members of the Federated Garden Clubs of New York defeated an equal number of men in a "name - the -flower" contest at the Gar- dens on Parade exhibit at the World's Fair, Required to give the com- mon name and the Latin name for each of 25 flowers now blooming at the exhibit, the women rolled up 283 points against 169 for the men, apect of the Russian Air Force allow him to do so." (It was be- lieved Mr. Churchill was suggest- ing that Hitler might refuse to send his air force against Britain in a long -sustained campaign for fear its ranks would be decimat- ed, leaving Germany at the mercy of Russia's numerically powerful air force). Victory, Or Stalemate That Hitler would have to nchieve a victory over Britain by mid-September or concede a stalemate in.the war was the op- inion of Associated Press corres- pondent Kirke L. Simpson who pointed out that within .a few' weeks bad weather would be the general rule in the North Sea and the English Channel climax- ed by equinoctial storms• of un- predictable force and duration. During the week Germany pro- claimed a "total blockade" of the British Isles. Included in the blockade were Ireland and all coastal waters abound Britain. The area specified began on the French Atlantic coast approxim- ately at the mouth of the Loire, extended right around the Bri- tish Isles to North Scotland and down the British east coast, reaching the Continent again at the coast of Belgium. Eastern Hot -Spots Developments in the Middle East were expected hourly last week. The long-awaited assault on Egypt by Italy was believed not far off, led perhaps by an aerial attempt to conquer Aden, British -held eastern hinge of the gateway to the Red Sea (British Somaliland constituted the west- ern hinge). Tension in the Balkans also increased with a double-barrelled Axis drive in prospect, Italy to jump on Greece; Germany to march into Yugoslavia. But be- hind the scenes forces were be- lieved working to prevent such a push towards the Dardanelles and the east, Russia plainly was en- couraging Greece and Turkey to resist an Italian advance through Greece; which might result in Hitler calling Mussolini off be- fore he would take a chance on having to fight Yugoslavia, Tur- key, Greece, Russia and possibly Bulgaria. In order to prevent war break- ing out in Southeastern Europe at this time, Hitler appeared to be exerting pressure on Hungary to accept Rumania's final answer with regard to the disposition of Transylvania (King Carol offered For Better Desserts urham Corn Starch Prodvcl St. lowrsnc. Starch Co, ltd. P20 to trader some of the Hungar- ians in Transylvania to Hungary and to cede a strip of frontier• territory), And at the same time, reports were current that an early settlement would be reach- ed between Rumania and Bulgar- ia over the Bulgarian demands on southern Dobruja, China Suffers Three Years The undeclared war between Japan and China entered its third year during the week. In commemoration of its outbreak, General Chiang Kai-Shek deliver- ed a message to the Chinese people which reaffirmed his de- termination to carry on the fight against Japan until "all Chin- ese soil has been freed of the in- vader." Four days later Japanei.e bombers again attacked the Chin- ese capital Chungking with re• suiting inestimable loss of life— at least 25,000 persons were ren- dered homeless as incendiary bombs started uncontrolled fires in a large section of the city. dye bath that will contain enough liquid to cover the garment com- pletely without crowding. Stir with a glass curtain rod, Follow the directions on the dye pack- age implicitly. Rinse in clear water until no trace of color is LIFE'S LIKE THAT • shown in the water, Dry in clean muslin cloths, taking care that no two thicknesses of dyed material touch. Press on the wrong side under pressing cloth. Danes Curtail Farm Exports Huge Reductions Indicated as Result of Invasion Curtailment of Denmark's exporte of foodstuffs duo to war stoppage of her fodder Imports was fore- shadowed in a report of the agrl• cultural council early in August, The council estimated that but- ter exports would strop by 100,000 tons, slaughtered pigs from 180,000 to •l0,000 tons, eggs from 100,000,- 000 00,000;000 to 21,000,000, HOGS AWAY DOWN Exports of live pigs will decline from 4,000,000 to 2,000,000 cattle from 3,300,000 to 2,800,000 and chickens from 12,000,000 to 7,000,- 000. Tho report said Denmark must depend exclusively upon her own harvests to feed her livestock, 000•6000.01,0.1 ooe .00 o, 9. n///�b.I•`� 4e1.1ee..oa1,11, By Fred Neher ��900 4 e000ap Gu n hgga 0 "I'll bet you boys think I'm terrible." Italian Ships Are Following Example of Germany's Since war began the seabeds of the world have �cen receiving very frequent visitors — scuttled German ships. Now Italy is following the ignominious example—here is one of her ships committing suicide off Gib- raltar. OKAY! I'M COIN' WITH YA, BUT WE'U-. STOP A MINUTE AT MY YRiEND'S HOUSE! r SURE' PINHEAD , MY SISTER HAS AN EXTER ONE SHE'LL LET YOU --Y TAKE/ By GENE BYRNES ,,.. n .r--.,.11•11=1•••••1.:.2•161C•T : • • I'M NOT INSULTIN' IOU, THIS 15 111E oriel WAY YOU O EVER CATCH ME GAN' TO A PLACE 6IKE YHIi f f I M. Hi NRI CPI Ire DRESS -UP THE PORK ,CHOPS FOR "COMPANY" DINNERS If your taste and budget call for pork chops, cram them full of delicious all -bran stuffing and surround thein with slices of pineapple and sauteed apple, It's amazing what a wonderful looking platter it makes! Better have a good supply of chops, though, for they taste even better than they look'. Here's what the recipe says: STUFFED CHOPS 4 double thick pork, veal or lamli.1 egg chops 1 tablespoon water Salt,pepper 4 cups corn flakes 1 rcipe all -bran stuffing Fat Slit chops through the middle to form a pocket. Season inside with salt and pepper, Fill with stuffing and fasten opening with skewers or sew together with coarse string, Beat egg and mix with water. Crush corn flakes into fine crumbs. Dip chops in egg and then in crumbs. Season with salt and pepper and brown on both sides in hot fat. Cover and place in moderately hot oven (375 F.' for about 45 minutes or until meat is cooked through, Yield: 4 servings. ALL -BRAN STUFFING 12 cups 4 inch bread cubes 2 teaspoons salt 1 cup all -bran ',s teaspoon pepper 3 tablespoons minced onion '/: teaspoon poultry seasoning % cup fat 1',', cups stock or water Combine bread cubes with all -bran, Saute onion in fat and add to bread mixture. Add seasonings and stock which may be made by dissolving 2 bouillon cubes in 11,:,2 cups hot water, Mix well. Use with poultry, crown roast or press into baking dish and bake in moderately hot oven (400 F.) about 20 minutes. Lost Kingdom . CIHAPTEl NKR' 1ltary Melissa was on the foul tit rung down when Honey Bee dust- ed forward. The slim ladder tee- tered outward! 'Lissa screamed in terror. Below, Bob had a very non o.,v footing. It was not enough from which to exert a counter -balance on the ladder; to try it would send both people crashing down. He leaped instantly to a ,rocky knob a short way up, dug one toe and both hands into crush there, anti with bis free foot reached out and steadied the lad- der, swung it back to the cliff. It was a miraculous move, a plat- ter of seconds at tremendous risk, "Slide clown, (IUi,:k!" he shrill- ed, "To the ledge." From above Honey Bee had seen only that her fiat attempt was a failure, that the ladder hadn't fallen, She stepped again to the rim, leaned to take the ladder in her hands and literally throw it and the white girl down to destruc- tion. She was crouched for the determine( thrust when— BANG 1—a shot roared nearby, The ladder went over this time —and with it went Honey Bee herself! v 4, 4' FROZEN IN HORROR Mary Melissa had slid down a= ordered, clung now with Bob on the rock shelf no bigger than a table top. They stood frozen in horror nt the drama before them. Both the ladder and the Indian hurtled in wierd windmill. fash- $22 SENDS 1,000 "BRITISH CONSOLS" "EXPORT" or "LEGION" Cigarettes to any single Military Address Overseas ECNA.SF.UNITADIAN SaLDIERS N UNITS Mall Order and Remittance to:— OVERSEAS DEPARTMENT W. C. MACDONALD INC., Sox 1929, Place d'Armes, Montreal, Canada r subject to any ODOR n Government Rstulabaa t by MIEN ARNOLD • He Has His Pride • . . She Has Her Prejudice .. . WILL. THESE CONQUER LOVE? This Immortal ro:n.tnee e me; to you in the sal' - blitzed version of .1:utt' , .\usteu's ISSUE 35-240 L "Pride and Prejudice" STARTS NEXT WEEK "But don't let It bother you none. Why every trip usually has to have its trouble. This'n just got it over with early. Now wo c'n go on with our work, diggin' in this old ruins here and col - lectin' whatever pots and such truck as you're after. Ain't noth- in' else likely to bother. I c'n feel it." "Thank you, Hades, I—I want you to be top boss of our next expedition. The commander, P11 just do the archaeology, I'll let you do all the thinking when we come hac!o, and—" "How's that? You figgerin' on leavin' now? We ain't hardly got nothin' done yit." Uncle Hades was incredulous. "We're Going To Be Married" "No, no, Hades! Of course, there's the work. But I have something else extremely impor- tant to do. We'll have to go right in today, I --we're going to be married. 'Lissa and I, Hades." 'Lissa was much calmer now. She smiled up at the old man. She .would have spoken, but— "I know all about that, young feller! You been sweethearts ever since the day I seen you both in Blanco Canyon. You young fools jest ain't had sense enough to know it. Waal, ef it wasn't for th' license, I could marry you right now, myself, I took out pieachin' papers 20 -odd years ago," "Oh, Uncle Hades!" 'Lissa beamed up at him, His grizzled old head protruded over the rim in conical fashion, He was lying prone to talk to them. "Will you marry us? You shall! He's got to, Bob! i won't marry you unless he does." Bob grinned, "You hear that, Hades, It's war if you don't." The lleveiend Zachary "Hades" Jones was shining happily, and apparently none of the three gave thought to the amazing cir- cumstance, the position they held, clinging there on the sheer face oi' a great mountain like so many birds. Either Bob or 'Lissa could ion. Once, twice, three times, each of them struck rock pre- trusicns on the way down, slid- ing and crashing out of sight fin- ally into the mass of tree tops and broken stones at the cliff base. 'Lissa's involuntary reaction was a low, shudticrintt maul. Bob gripped her tightly, his muscles tense. The whole tragedy, from the first kick of the ladder unt;I now, was but a matter of .sec- on(15. "She tried to kill your' Bob breathed, relaxing a little. "She pushed you, the ladder! Then a shot—" )READY FOR MURDER "YOU ALL IU(;UT DOWN ')'HAI:?" A familiar voice shout- ed down at them. "Hades!" c':ied Bob. "Olt! . . Oh! Hades! . . . Hades! Yes! 'Lissa's trembling a little, b -but l'nt all right. l—I—here, 'Lissa, darling, sit down, don't sand. Slowly. Just sit down . on the ledge and try to relax. it's all right now. You're safe. it' a)I over. It's terrible. 1—" Bob Barry was it sti ng young man. Strong in heart and strong of muscle. But he had been 'trough ;1 great deal in the pint week. 1 -Ie had weathered enough crises to last must men a life- time. He needed white Wren's food and rest. Ile had a right i 0 be jittery there on that eagle's eyrie of a ledge, clinging ficrc.ly to the girl he loved. "Fust time i ever had to shout ar Indian squaw," remarked Andes Jones front the rim, conversation- ally, "but by dads she had it corr- in' to her! She'd n murdered ycm, ML,s 111'lis,y, of 1 hadn't t'hnt her." "Yes' \'e.<, Hades." 1101) looked) hip gratiladc. "1'!1 never far:ot. it. You saved her life. You were t here ! 'Thank God, Ilndes," 'Lissa herr' f was still spec h - less, appalled by the event, and Bob wasn't yet eii i e!y' rat i:,n•: . elle t!utuke 1 iladde: in a strained ut1natul'al yoicc. "Je=t set light tl:::r and blurs a spell," Rados counseled. "1'ou'1' back yore nerve loth:ket'n "-rabbi) Halle t,;t� as calm the (.lift itself. iii= nssnrapcs;, brought Bob have stepped four feet outward and fallen nearly 600. But tho second ladder top protruded there, steady and safe, a short distance down. Climbing Down Again "Th' old Territorial law al - TRIM, VIVACIOUS COTTON STYLE lowed people to marry and git th' to his senses. "You're right, Hades," he inter- rupted. "We'd be dead but for you, and your quick mind. I hope I can think as fast and move as fast when I'm your age, But— this is terrible." "Shore 'tis," agreed Hader. license later, as 1 recc'Iect," said Hades, "but that thar required a witness and we ain't got none. We got to hire more help." "Where's Scott Holliman?" de- manded Bob, suddenly remem- bering, "I'm not sure he'd do, but—" "Oh, hint !" Hades paused to expectorate, generously and con- temptuously. "Why he ain't here no more. I—i discharged him," "What for?" "Why, he talked too free. Ile expressed some opinions—I bet- ter make the de -tail report to you in private,.]3o1 —and he took out his pistol. Waal, the fact is, I shot his gun outen his hand, give him a canteen, and told hits ef we ever see hide nor hair cf him ag'in 1'll shoot his fool head off, and by dads I will!" "I—I don't doubt it, Hades! Thanks for settling that, -too." Bob was amused in spite of every- thing. "1 suppose, sweetheart, there's only one thing to do now. If you feel like it, we'll start climbing down, Hades, there are ropes up there; you can tie one to a rock and slide down to this point". "I would be strong and ready, Bob, if I had one more thing," declared Mary Melissa. She rais- ed her face toward his, He gave it to her, Twice, times, soundly on the lips, THE END T A B L E three K s 1 cup blanched shredded al- monds Sugar equal quantities for peaches. Peel and slice peaches, add orange, grapefruit and lemon. Cook for d hour then add sugar and- cook for 46 minutes 'until a marmalade consistency. Add nuts and flavorings; cook 5 minutes. Pour into sterile glasses; when cool seal with paraffin. If de- sired 'P• cup chopped maraschino cherries may be added. CANTALOUPE AND PEACH CONSERVE 4 cups peaches 4 cups cantaloupe Juice and grated rind of 1 lemon and 1 orange 1 tablespoon chopped citron peel • cup of blanched and shredd• cd almonds, Cook all the fruit for iii+ hour. Add sugar and cook 12 minutes, stirring constantly.; add nuts and cook 5 minutes. Pour into hot sterile glasses. When cool seal with paraffin, READERS WRITE IN! Miss Chambers welcomes per. sones letters from interested readers. She is pleased to receive suggestions on topics for her column, and is even ready to lir ton to your "pet peeves." Re• quests for recipes or special menus are in order. Address your letters to "Miss Sadie B. Chem. ers, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto." Send stamped, self- addressed envelope if you wish a reply. Home Hints By SADIE B. CHAMBERS More About Peaches Last year we went into the different canning methods for fruit rather thoroughly, hence I have been saying little about it this year. However since I have received so many letters com- plaining about fruit not "keep- ing," 1 feel duty bound to write a few remarks on the subject, for conserving fruit is of vital importance this year. I have no desire to sound boast- ful, but all fruit-. which I have canned is in perfect condition and once again I will repeal my favourite method. It is true we have had a very wet season; your positional selection of fruit must be done with the utmost care, never buying after heavy rains; all this is most important. How• ever, there are other matters very important. Be sure that your jars are all well scrubbed with a soft brush and soap and water, -- every corner anti crevice, rinsed thoroughly 811(1 if possible dried in the sun. Then just before Ofic- ial, your fruit in the jar, rinse with boiling water (be sure you know the trick how to protect your jar). 'These first steps are the most important to obviate all danger of spoiled fruit. Those of yo'.i who have filed an article from this column last year "Hints on Canning" refer to it; for those who have not these helps I might say 1 consider the next most im- portant thing is to be sure the cloth you are using (for wiping your jar's top anal elsewhere) cloth is sterile. Having tried kettle boiling and the different "pack methods" I much prefer this type, it is sim- ple, sterilizes and cooks the fruit perfectly but not to a breaking - up stage: By ANNE ADAMS Itcw wonderful to find n co- 1on frock that will carry you right through the calendar; that's (dually smart for at-home winter days and outdoor stunner wear. 1n other words, this neat, Anne Adams style, Pattern 4507' Just see all the figure -flattering details: flu' long front paael .. -the back skirt panel . . . the high pointed side -front 'sealgl� that keep your waistline ...mei and trim. The collar, which ms be in self -fabric or contrast, i, so youthful. A long sleeved ver- sion is also includes in this u,e- ttil and exceptionally smart style. Pattern 4507 is available in plisses' and cvomen's sizes 14, Ili, IS, 211, 32, :14, 3G, 38, .10 :aid •12. Size 16 takes yards 31.) inch fabric and 2 ,;: yards ric-rne. ;'en's Twenty (rents 120t'I in coin: (stamps cannot ho accept- ed) for this Anne .clans !int - 1 _, n. Write plainly Si::e, `:ants, dc!r.:. and Style Number. : ;n1 1 }•aur cyder to Anne Ad - ileo g 425, 73 Wes,: Ade - 1 S.., Toronto. Repair that sagging wire mat- tress by threading a length of ex- panding curtain wire through the mesh from end to end and from side to side, pulling the wire taut and securing to the frame with the hooks and eyes provided wilit the wiro. Remember that if you want to beat furniture in a room, a damp dustsheet flung over the chair will absorb the dust and prevent it from flying, Remember that a piece of oiled cotton -wool placed lu the cor- ner of the clock and closed up in- side for a week will clean It beau- tifully. There's DOUBLE 1 ENJOYMENT in delicious .. . DOUBLEMINT GUM Grease staius on artificial silk can be removed as follows: Get some scraped pipe clay on to a clean piece of white paper and lay the greasy part on R. Thou put some more powder over the stain itself. Cover with a thin white cloth and press with a warm iron. The powder, which will have absorbed the grease, can be brushed off. An old, shabby carpet always has some good parts before discarding it, cut these out in oblongs or ovals, CANNED PEACHES Choose ripe (net over -ripe 1 fruit without blemishes. Dip in boiling water, remove peels, clip in cold water and place itt jars in this planner. First a layer of sugar, then peaches in propor- tiuu:—''c measure sugar to one of peaches for medium syrI1.; for heavy syrup 'i sugar to ore cf peaches. 1 tablespoon of corn syrup added greatly enhances the flavor, Fill jai' with cold water to point of overflowing. Now place on glass tops, then tli" strew tops; Alae' in steamer or ,,;her aerangernent for oven. No'.v loosen tops 2 turns to the left; steam 20 minutes, Remove from steamer, scree: ions tig�►tly, test for leakage. The next day steam foe 12 minutes, follow steps for steaming as for the previous one, and be sure rind test for leakage before storing in a cool and dry phare. Never use a jar or glass top that is ct•ackcd or chipped ar damaged any tray. ('EACH CONSERVE large ripe peaches 1 lemon, 1 orange and 1 grape- fruit 1 teaspoon almond flavoring ';. teaspoon nutmeg • Every day millions find real pleasure in the genuine, long- lasting flavor of Doublemint Gum. Cooling, refreshing, satisf ingl Enjoy it after every tneall Millions do! tack down on to canvas that is lar- ger all round by four inches, and sew firmly with carpet thread. And then, with your rug hook and plain colored wool, work a border all round tho piece of carpet to cover the canvas. In this way you can make delightful hearthrugs at very little cost. It Is worth remembering that a little salt in your rinsing water will preserve the color of your dainty pastel summer frocks, This goes for lingerie too, but don't use muck salt for these. A warmed -up joint—often loso9 its moisture. It you wrap It in grease -proof paper that has beets greased heavily before you put the joint iu the °veil, it will reheat a better flavor and be jucier than It heated in the ordinary way. Would -Be Thief Says He's Sorry, It must have been all a mis- take. At any rate the person who broke into and ransacked the house of Maj. N. J. Shupe, in Pasadena, Cal., left a note say- ing, "Please forgive me. I didn't take a thing. A stranger." The Royal Canadian Air Force anning Depotwlllremain at official station in Exhibi- tion Park. See their absorb. Ing Ground Show, and the colourful "fleg•lowering" and "changing of the guard" ceremonies. Three delightful modal homes completely furnished and decorated, Red Cross exhibits, knitting bee. cook - Ing school, music, dancing, entertainment. See war vehicles, built for troops of the Empire. See what chemistry is doing to help win the war...learn how manufacturers of all kinds are joining the fight to win the war. A famous contemporary art show which has been on dis- play at the San Francisco Exposition—"Art of 79 Countries", presented by International Business Machines. Many World and International ' Famed throughout the world athletic titles will be decided is the big Goldman Band.This at the Exhibition this year. year it will be a feature of 1940 promises one of the the Exhibition—playing moot spectacular lists of nightly from the Band Shell. sports events In Exhibition Sit comfortably under the history. skies ant! Hotta —no gbarp. Tickets el Exhibition Ticket ORice, 44 Adelaide tii, W., WA. 222)1: Moodey'P,901►ing St. W., EL,1095; Roher'e, L5 Moor St. W.. Ki. 3421 CANADIAN NATIONAL EX,TmNN TORONTO ' 1940 s' ELWOOD A. HUGHES, Gener9I Manager Wage 8. THE STANDARD School OpeningSpecials Boys' Windbreaker, Zipper • , , , , , , , ,, , , , , ,, .$1.49 Pullover Sweaters, Wool $1,00 to $1,98 Boys' Long Trousers, Wool $1.49 to $2.95 Boys' Grey Flannel Short Trousers $1,00 Girls' Print Dresses 59c to 98c A Good Supply of Shoes and Rubbers. Olive McGill BLYTH PHONE 73. SIMS GROCERY GOODS DELIVERED, TELEPHONE 14. eatrtrr mem. SOWN (Imperial, Half Pint) Sealers (The Handy Size)Per Doz. , 95c SPECIAL!!! RED ROSE Coffee 1's 41c, hfs 25c Olive Oil 4 oz: bot: 15c 25c SPECIAL! 1 10 IbsGranulated Sugar 67c When You Buy $1.00 Order of Groceries (Prices Subject to Change without Notice) SALMON(A Tasty Supper• Dish (A La King) Tall Tin 27c SPECIAL!!!GOLD MEDAL oz T Corn Niblets 2(16 m) TINS FO/ 2 1 V Chow Sauce 6 Oz. bot. 13c SWEET MIXED Pickles, 6 Oz. bot. ion 41111111111111111...1 WE BUY AND GRADE EGGS. CASE TRACTORS AND COMPLETE LINE CASE FARM IMPLEMENtS TUDHOPE•ANDERSON AUTO•TRACS. WAGONS, STOVES, RED TIP PLOW SHARES. BADEN ELECTRIC FENCES AND SUPPLIES. VIKING CREAM SEPERATORS, C.C. M. BICYCLES. ELECTRIC WASHERS :; USED PLOWS AND A WAGON, A. D. Morrison Phone: Shop 7,7; Residence &1• Blyth, Ontario. — TRY - DURWARD'S DAIRY KRIM-KO A Delicious, Refreshing, Satisfying, Chocolate Flavoured Milk Drink rich in the food elements which provide energy and build muscle and bone. SCHOOL of COMMERCE CLINTON—ONTARIO. FALL TERM — SEPTEMBER 9TH, 1940, COURSES—STENOGRAPHIC AND COMMERCIAL. SPECIAL AND CORRESPONDENCE COURSES ARRANGED. /I'plicatiens for Cir il Service Examinations for Clerks must be filed by September 15, 1940, Write for Information. Phone 198, Clinton M. A. STONE, Com. Specialist, B. F. WARD, B.A. Vice Principal, Princlpalr Ttev, A. and Mrs. Sinclair visited in Dundas last Wednesday. Mrs. Fiterb. Castle of Clinton spent Sunday with her sister, Mra...Fawcett. Norman Sinclair is in Toronto where he is employed at the Canadian Na- tional 1Exhibition,' Mr. and Mrs, It, M, McLean of Dc. trolt spent .Saturday with Mrs, J. 13, Wat SOIL Mrs, Arthur Barr and Miss Annie Barr were •Goderich visitors on Mon- day, M,. and Mrs. Fred Il,aguoy and of Brodhagen, visited with Mr. Mrs. Sam Kechnio un Sunday. Mies Lois Robinson returned home Tuesday evening, after a motor trip Northern Ontario, h Doherty Bros. - GARAGE. WR PRE AGENTS FOR Plymouth and Chrysler Cars Auto -Lite and Hart Batteries. Goodrich & Dunlop Tires. Complete Engine Check. White Rose Motor Oil. Cattle and Fly Spray. PHILCO RADIOS ANI) SUPPLIES. s°n, Acetylene Welding. and W. K. Colquhoun of the Royal Bank staff, Clinton, was a week -end guest of A. E. Cook. I Misses Doris and Joan Waymoutlt e r isiting with their aunt and uncle, lir, and Mrs, 1iugh Ball, of Clinton, Owing to the illness of the Rev. R, Al, Weekes, the Services in the Blyth Parish on Sunday last were cancelled. Mr. and Mrs. Will Sf111b of Dungan. non and daughter, Mrs. Pentland, spent Sunday with Mr. brother R. E. Sillib, School Days always finds a dull pply of School Supplies at Wettlauf- 's. We'll sec you Tuesday morn. . —Signed, L, Wet:tlaufer. Mrs. R. M. Weekes who has recent- ly returned from the hospital is con- valescing at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Adapt Gorl, Goderich, Miss Alberta Richmond and Mrs. Me*, London, motored to Georgian Bay District and are enjoying the week in the North country, Sgt. Gordon Morrison of the R,C.O.C, the Elgin Regiment, Queens Park, London, spent the weekend with friends 111 Blyth, Mr. C. Haughton of Toronto spent last Thursday evening with Mr. R. E, Sillib, talking over old school days were both attended in Saltford, 11r, and Mrs. Harold Jenkins have returned to Windsor after spending Vodden's BAKERY. WHEN IN NEED OF BREAD, BUNS, FRESH FRUIT PIES, HOME-MADE CAKE OR COOKIES REMEMBER "THE HOME BAKERY" H. T. VODDEN. Ph. 71 - We Deliver, Hollyman's BAKERY AND CONFECTIONERY. The Home of Good Baking. Our Newly Installed Elec- tric Cooler will ensure you of Good Cold Drinks and Chocolate Milk. Ice Cream and Bricks d _, Always on Hand. Wednesday, August 28, 1940, Hot Water Bottles and Rubber Sundries at PRE-WAR PRICES Hot Water Bottles , ( 69c, 98c and $1.09 Hot Water Bottle Attachments ,, , , , , , 49c and 59c Invalid Air Ring, 16" $2.25 Enema Syringe 98c Ice Cap , .98c. Fountain Syringe , , ..98c Ear and Ulcer Syrings 25c Rectal Syringe 25c, 45c and $1.00 These Prices Good Only Until Present stock is Sold. R. D. PHILP, Phm. B. DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER—PHONE 20. Dimming -Room suites Many Beautiful New Designs to Select From in Walnut and Oak at Extremely Low Prices, An Attractive 9 -Piece Suite IN CATHEDRAL .HIGH -LIGHTED WALNUT FINISH is Displayed in Our Window This Week. For those who do not require full Matched Suites, we offer a Nice Selection of Odd Buffetts, Sets of Chairs, Tables, China Cabinets, Breakfast Room Suites, Etc., At Attractive Prices. J. S. Co ellew Home Furnisher -- Phones 7 and 8 Funeral Director, Wedding Cakes made To Order. WillOWS Drll We Deliver. Phone 38. Elliott's Sunoco wo weeks holidaAt at Goderich, Blyth SERVICE STATION. Port Elfin and St, Catharines. Arrh•Deacon Edward Haughton who has been visiting with his slater, Airs, F. A. Itogerson, left on Friday fof his home In Springfield, Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Herbison of Clin- ton, accompanied by their daughter, Mrs. Rankin of Winnipeg, visited for' a day this week with the former's sis- ter, Mrs• T, C. ,McElroy, SUNOCO PRODUCTS. Tobaccos, Ice Cream and Soft Drinks. Tires and Batteries. BLYTH, ONTARIO. sore Drugs, Tobacco, Soft Drinks—Phone 28. Shell-Tox Fly Spr;;. ..........................29c Fly -O -Gide ... ..............*,,.,.,.25cand50c Old Colony Toilet Soap 3 cakes for 10c Jergen's Carbolic Soap 3 cakes for 14c Vinola Castile Soap 10 cakes for 25c Wampole's Phospho-Lecithin $1.00 - Davis & Lawerence General Tonic , . , , , , , , , , $1.00 Scott's Emulsion Cod Liver Oil , , , , , . , 53c and 98c Kepler's Cod Liver Oil and Malt , , 75c and $1.25 Greeting Cards for All Occasions 5c and 10c Mr. and Mrs. llarvey S111ib, Mader- in Mrs. N. Keating, the president, TUN.�TEY'S ~Summer Time~ Male and Ellwyne also Mr, and Mrs. was In the chair. The minutes of the Foater of Sheppardton spent a day , previous meeting were read and ad- 1� last week with Harvey's uncle, 11, Silllb, of Blyth. Friends over the weekrend at, the home of Mr. Ben Taylor were, ,Mr, opted, Several convenors gave sug- gestions of what work could be done Individually on each activity such as an objective for each month in warSandwich Ham,. , per lb. 35c TRY OUR BUMMER DISHES work, t'he use of more milk and early and Mrs. Artkins, Mr. and Mrs, Ed, 'registering were somo mentioned. Dutch Loaf, per lb. 35c Home -Made Ice Cream eat Market Refreshment Time Taylor of Gampbellville, lir. and Mrs, It was decided to distribute patches Always On Hand, Chester Taylor and family of Luck.Peameal Bacon, per lb.. .35c now. Ifor quills to be made by different Boneless Picnic Let Us Serve Your Party groups. Tho Roll Call, "A new idea Mr. and Mrs. T. Y. McKay of Shel- } in awing or baking", a penny fine for Shoulders, per ib. 30c Requirements. bourne, visited on Sunday at the homo failure to respond was well responded Breakfast Bacon,lb. of the former's brother, Mr. It, -Al, j to, War work was also reported. Mrs, per 30c Cigars, Cigarettes, Tobacco. MoKoy and Mrs. ,McKay. They were II O. G. Anderson spoke on the Fedora- Whyte's Pure Lard, lb. 10c Soft Drinks, Chocolate Bars accompanied home by .h ' .hiss Alma Mc• lion of Agriculture and asked all to iDomestic Shortening,lb. I Kay Vito has spent three weeks visit -study this ponblem, Miss Helen Yuill 11e. BILLIARD PARLORS ing here. I was asked to take part of the social WE DELIVER. Tables Always pro3ram. A paper on Current Events _.__•,_in Al Shane. Mr. and Mrs, William Denham and. I was given by ,Myrtle YUIII. A vocal • daughter,duet byMarjorie andMarlene Mlblac- Lavona, and Mr. and ll r•i USE THE STANDARD, TO ADVER: SIBTHORPE'S TISE ANY ARTICLE LOST, . Drinks, Tobacco, Cigars, Cigarettes. OR FOR SALE, l3,lackler and daughter, Alice, visited !Kenzie was much enjoyed. Miss Beryl John 'M. and .Mrs. Craig on Sunday, Cunningham gave a very instructive Margaret and Carman Craig relurnina address on "Salt" telling where it Is to Kirkton to visit this week wltit found, some customs in Its use In their aunt and uncle, William and Mrs, other countries and ages, Several Lenham. practical uses of salt were also given. Elaine Walsh favored with a piano Visitors at Che home of Mr. and solo which was much appreciated by Mrs. Geor;e Cowan during the paat all. Lunch was served by the girls !week were: Mrs. 10. 13. itichardson, of the Institute and a social time en- , Merritt Richardson and Miss Mary joycd. Schneider of Port Colborne; Rev, hiss Mary VanCamp of Exeter, via. and Mrs. Auld and Miss F. Freeman fled with relatives hors. of Midland; lir. and lira. Calvin Illi -I Qaite a number from here visited len, Miss Edith Smith of Walton; Mr, the Belgrave member of tho 99th and lira. Kenneth Cowan of Christian Battery at Carling Heights on Sun - !eland, and Mrs, Thomas Evans and day daughters, Fern and Betty of Sirat Commencing next Sunday, Septem• ford, BELGRAVE The Girls of the Belgrave Women's Institute were in charge of the August meeting of the branch and a large at- tendance of merfraers and visitors gathered at the 'home of Miss ilolen --. YuIlI Tuesday afternoon for the lt:^et- • her 1st, the, Services in Trinity Angli- can Chitral, Belgrave, will be In the afternoon at 2.30 o'clock, The Service next Sunday will be at 2.30 p. m., and will be conducted by the Rector. In the absence of the Rector, thr' Service In Trinity Church on Sunday last was conducted by the Rev. F, W. Watts, B.A., L,Th., Rector of the Brussels Parish, r ROBINSON'S GROCERY No. 3 Peas, 16 oz. tin Golden Bantam Sweet Corn 10c Straight 22K Gold Decorated Handi Jar and Cover with Giant Bag of NewPort Fluffs 1 Giant Bag of Fluffs 1 Handi Jar and Cover ALL FOR 49c Crown Pint and Quart Sealers, KLEENIX TISSUE: Package of 500 Sheets Package of 200 Tissues D-'',ches Apples 10c 39c 45c 84c 29c 13c, or 2 for 25c Per Basket 15c and 25c E. S. ROBINSON Market Price for Eggs According To Grade. Phone 156 for Prompt Delivery.