HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1942-02-11, Page 1THE
VOLUME 16 - NO. 27,
LYTH ST ARD
BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, Lr'E13. 11. 19.12,
YOUR LOCAL PAPIJR,
Red Cross News Uncle Buried At Sherbrooke Royal Black Knights Clinton Play -Off Chances I MeetingI-Ield Here To
From Londesboro The following obituary, token from Meet At Blyth Dimmed By God erich Win Prepare For Victory Loan
Tho IAudcsbora Red Crossheld Ilio the Sherbrooke (Qua,) ]holy Record, ltlack
Huron County Chapter, R
monthly meeting in Community 1 101 refers to the death of an uncle of Mr. Knights of Ireland, stet In Myth Or _ A no dine was b' Id !n the llr u1r,r
on Fobrnn.ry Gth, with attendance of V, M. Bray, of Myth. 'Fite lino 011
was
A New Goal Tender For Thursday tat Hall, Itlylb, on llunl:ay night, i'n•
range Hall, on Friday, February GU1, Ito par,,, 1 of ur 1n!r.:11; a caun , u n
38. I]veryono la asked to save Bal 1)011 llruy, wn8 the last reutlnill(;
with a good attendance. The tallow Nlpht'0 Game, I r' 1' WHEREAS the Dominion Gov
uncle that Mr, Bray had on lila fnth- program for Canada's Se, awl 1'i' ;ury
Vago and got in touch with Advisory Ing officers wore elected; •rnment has proclaimed It is
en's side; Loan,
Board as to It's disposal.
N,Cl.11,: SI.. Kt. C. C. I'llgi•int, necessary to float a loan for ,
1'Ieaso leave all 1911 T�lcense P)ntes l.a.rgelynttensted funeral services 1.P,C,11,: Sir Kt. H. Flunking. The Cl4n(on f'a,ll/4' ch,unc0s n; ,;,t,.;,. \ n,.Uun'vidu pru�r:ant 11:;,j',
a; L +„ $600,600,000,00, to carry on Can -
were held from tiro late residence, 5 In • a berth I" Ilse 1I,n•ou•\1';lt,•rlu,) sit hl' d, ;:n1d It. IS f' 11. 11,:-1 in r. rd ada's War Effort; to c. ^fly our
at gaaagel, ll,C.A1,: Sir ICI, Charter) Stewart. Ln pal the l;u;u1 well ere,. Ili,• tut), i11
Tho t'ensuror reported a balance on StanleyAvenue to St. Peter's Church C, lteg,: Sir Ki, II, M. Hanley. Ilntermediatd,e fl. (I,rnrp Play-offs offs wc,, Armed Forces with the tools so
Vaud of $1),7,7'2, There will bo Bingo yesterday afternoon, (January 2Gth) C. Chap: Sh' Rt. 1. 1Vltllace.
greatly damaged when they lost ;;;; the tihurter;t. I;[r;rihl,: Gine, en h f that they can f1n!s;, the job; to
for N, Gilbert Bray, sell Itnunvtr Slier- n,rmicit,llity is pinuning 1t'; own Pah j
in the Community ]call on Friday
C. Tretas; Sir I{L, J, Ll, Raliw0.11, overtime lilt lo Ike Goderich Flyer; see that a steady and unbroken
night, February 19th, Also lunch Invoice trsldent, who died on Friday, C. Lea: Sir Kt. N. Sly, Sir fit. A. Al Mull -1.1 1 an 1lundny night. lir Hefty caunpafgu, fullo,hi' ulna 114: { flow of equipment Is being sent
In h1,y 82nd year, and the man at the virtue Of the twin for Flyers sl(;, aped lino Of that supplied by 141, is nein forward to the iron,: lines.
Counter, Work committee for 11arch, Ypeeves,y 1 iuu t'(,reuu,nie.; Committee.
hlonlbers of F•rloudly Sunday School funeral 118 well ns the numerous floral I C. Con.: Sir I{t, Thos, Grasby, Sir into third place in the (;roup, and the
tributes evidenced the high regard in Wallace.,Colts once again occupy the cellar. \ t-,(: ;I "11"ndance wa:; uul fur \ic;n• I WHEREAS the assistance and
Class, who are donating 5 quills, � g ICt. Robert \\llday niE,l,t's nlcc llu�, uad It.�e�rc \t'. iI.
A quilt was donated by AlOs, ]►lel•
which the deceased was held. I C. St, Brio: Sir Kt. II, Dexter, Sir I 'rite standing at the present. th1::
Tho services wrore conducted cc operation of every citizen of
VIII() to Red Cross and tickets are to I by Et, E. 1V(vbst.et looks like this: Jlurrltl, 11:ca1 chairman, pre;id: d.
Rev. Russel F. Drown, Rector, and
I lir. N. I'. Carrell wa.; ;ipl„i11ie.1 cur Country is needed at this
be sold on it. C. Pus: Sir Kt. C. Iteihl, Sir lit. (I, STANDING I time to make this loan the sac• j
Rev, Guy Marston, Curate of St. Pot- Cornialt, Secretary. rocs that it should be. '
A roll of butter was donated by er',s Church, I'alWearern wore S. (l, W I. 'I' I A I' After (un,:dcr.ible (1 ('II ,i in, It w;:,; 3
Airs, S. Lyon. Tickets were sold on It C', Cum.: Sir ICIe, L. Ruddy, E. ilole,
Newton', W. Mcflanamy, Dr. F. 1I.'A. Webster, A. Sellers, J, 1, Hopson', SeaQort14 , 7 2 0 4=' 33 II moved by Councillor 'ray;,r, '4i '( nl
the lucky ticket going to Mns. 11. Scott. ;Bradley, D1•, J. 13. Winder, C. A. Josltn , tWatorloo 4 I 111 a7 0 ed by N. II. \\'Illcw that the orr;ulq.
Proceeds from tickets on butler $3,15, F. \\atson, P. llurbnrt►, Goderlch . 3 •1 0 _1 u7, 1 int for a ,u(t;ri,le Patriotic program,
and J. K. Cobert, while the bearers 2 ' '
Tho ntoniberahip fee was handed In � wero P. M. Robins, CIIII:ai'd Bryant, Clinton . , , , , , , , r; 1 4'3 47 l , he held un the 0w' sing ,.f Friday.
and 34 names were put on roll, Two Gerald Wiggett, B, N, ilbltham, liow•RESCHEDULED GAMES February -0th, he left with the le::�•li-
quilts were. quilted. Lunch was Rory and Kennedy and Lennox Wilson, Another Record ors of 1113111 Continuation au;l I'ui)lie
ed by '1Irs. Townsend, Mrs, F. Shots' 1iyntu8 sung at the service, with F. Bill Johnston's hay pressers have1'osilp0n('d games have resullcd iu Schenk F''ach in14nleipa111y Is to lr.,ce
a reschedule as follows;
brook, Mrs, Is Ball, 1111',9, 1., 1Vcbster, :1lclearon at tho organ, were 'Abide established still another tceord, They i a "Beacon hire" bnt•idss, and it is
Dirs. W. Knox, lies. R. Yunyd)lu1, Mrs. \VIth lie' and 'Lead 1(indly Light.' in• baled 211,/4 tons of hay In (1 hours, on I
Fel). 12—Uodotich ,i1 Clinton..4)4(1rntd this beacon that the err in 44y
Melville, Mrs. P. \Voods, Feb. 13—Scaforth at Waterloo (at
torment was made in the family lot in Atourlay. Phe bating was. held at Earl will hove it's form. 11 ;; suggested
Lunch collection', $120, �, I 1StratfotdJ. W. 1!. MORRITT,
Uro Prospect Street Cemetery. Bentleys farm, Alessi's. Art. Marr, that n huge, outdoor bonfire, at :;;nor
rob. 16-4Iole,Ich at Cl:ntmi.
The following articles have been A resident of Shetcblrooko for some Bill Brown and 13111 Cockerlino did prominent or .safe spot, around wLic11 Reeve of
shipped from Londesboro Red Cross !sixty years, Mr. Bra was born in Port thejob, hob. ISc \Iateirleo at Clo,:erich, Blyth.
Y tho people. c . the conommi .y c•,r,:,ld
tramJanuary 1941 to December 11)41: Stanley, Ontario, and resided In Mex- ' Feb. 19'—Clinton at Sonforlb• "gather for the ceremonial, would be U' ^'' .'''''•' ,, m,, • ' + . •,'''' ,r.
389 pair socks; 244 pair gloves and �1co and Ontario before coining hero. _,,'•'•`-' hob, 20—Scaforth oat Goderlclt, in keeping with those Beacon Fires —
mitts; 911 sweaters; 54 scarves; 2d A commercial traveller, he represent ,
Is 01), 23—tfaterluo t tfodcrrich. of old, and, at the same tiute, l,e most
Gas Wasn't Stolen, So - Skating .Party Heid
helmets; 24 seamen's socks; Sea ed Forbes Brothers, of Montreal, tho 1•t will he noted that U► the stand. spectacular. In view of the unccrla`u•
mon boots; 41 soanien•s long stock- Whyte i'ackiug Company, of Montreal, Blyth's Honour Restored ing, (;oderich is leading Clinton by 1 I orf the weather, 11 1,; more iha11 The Poon. Petiole n• 111}•111 United
logs; 1 tuok-In; 12 alternative caps; and the Ingersoll Company, of Ontario, Roy, P. 1-I. Streeter informs us that Point. Clinton has three games left likely that any ceremony or program ('hurcl, belcl a t•(ry Sncrorr;.ful Skating
24 nein caps; making a total of 907 An enthusiastic sportsman, ho was mince our last publication, he reedy- to play, while Goderic:h has five.. j in lucnl (Pu!rid. will Lc held under Party at Che rink on Monthly night.
knitted goods; 32 dresses; 43 'boys' 1a nttentbor of the Breeches' Lake Fish ed a. letter front Rev, Aloes°, of It Is imperative that They defeat the cover. j (;olid ice W119 available, ;1.11(1 0 goad
shirts; 5 booties; 57 blouses; 211 j and Game Club, shot with a Domi11- Clinton, telling hurt that the gas 'flyers in 111011' next two m'etin'g;' 1:01', a, Sinclair and ,1, A. Cray crowd turned out. for an 0)011141g of
skirts; 11 coats; 21 knickers; 10 pull- Ion championship leans of the Sher• wasn't stolon from his air last \Veil- with Mont, and 111x° that they defeat combined Ina motion, ,;lout the iced
overs; 10 layettes, each consisting of brooko Gun Club 111 190G, and was a nosday night, but that It was later t110 Beavers 111 Soafoa•(h, a Job, which 1441) Brigade be made respo11.)111h' tar
36 pieces; 110 handk'orchlofl; 1 pair 1 former member of St. George's Club discovered to be a Iooae connection 011' 111014' record I.his year so fair, the placing and lighting of a ileacun1,
pillow cases; 75 night gowns; 3 seta and the Sherbrooke Curling Club, In tho motor which caused the break- looko liken big order, 1 which will burn throughout the (.'.am.
of combinations; 2 khnonas; 4 slips; I Snrvlving Mr. Bray are his wife, the down, Naturally when tile car 8101)- Going im!0 the third period at soot. ()mmiga1,
4 panties, making a total of 704 re. ,former Mary .11. Ltherington, two Son's', ped, the first thialg Mr. Moore, or any erich on Monday night, the ('ells The following committee, were Stormy I)ay For Bingo
fnge•o articles and 4 refugee cartons, lb'. iAollnrs G. 13tay, of Long 181a114, one else would think of, would be "no (wore trailing by •I to 1, bat at toe appointed:
()wins to the inclemency of the
and 214 quills; 19 men's dre.S.3111g CRY, N,J,, and B. Vivian Bray, of Min- 'gas", and where wa13• there any to bo and cif regulation' time they had tiers 1..rogsa11t: War Ica -hie; :San' of lite weather, the ilia •o sponsored otrat by the
o pair pyiamas, making 53 neapolis, Minn., a daughter, Nanny, ,secured. however, as. Mr. Streeter It up. However, tho Flyers (vere go -011 Public 0nd Oonsit iaoaa sc'h,oul, 1 I
gowns; 34 local Red Crisis, last Saturday afire.-
hospital supplies; 24 blankets and 1.11.1.s. E. Joslln', of Sherbrooke, a .sister, puts it, "Blyth's honour flus been 1'e- enough to score twice in the over-' Ite1ipin;1s ('ommittee; Tho 1l11134 noun, 'wasn't. as ,44uccessful no us.0l.
$1f13.G3 in donations; 17 knitted artic-,Eliza C. BraY, of Sherbrooke, a.s,tored" and everybody's happy again. time, and t';tlte the game 7 to 5, 1lI's of the different en44robe.).
The afternoon wFs very r4 -army, earl
les to local boys,
!nephew, Charles Betty, o[ Ottawa, all -d We west)talking„. - Punch AleNwan
('ll:o rn:' n of I'rog'rum fm 1111414
it tit c:' many rattle who w null othel't iso
icbruary :'0•—ItOeve c\lo,1. tt,
Proc!aiatioo
I REQUESTall co z_a', com-
panies, manufacturers, retall:rs
and vendors to fly the Union
Jack and any other decorations
on their residences and places
of huriness from February 16th
until the successful conclusion
of the loan drive,
-ti
dialing.
It was the flrnl skaltnl, on the n
this year,
The following Refugee articles have SIX grandc.hIldren,” this Wednesday morning, and he tells
been shipped fn. January 19`12.: •.�.,..�--� ._. us that a new t,oaltuule.r has landed
have ;r11(444ded,'vone unable Lo be pre
Moved To Ailsa Craig So I'u the pec; ram has not bean
sant .
British Civilians, 9 skirts; 20 at rho Chalton A141)ort by tin 410 -Inc of coulplydcd, but. will con,-'-�;I of nisei.
Mr, Hugh Pearson, ' who has been ��') (11110 has boort set for the next
blouses; 3 night dresses; 1 child's net W. M. S. MEET Tolley at the local Branch of Tho Burlingham. Ile was out for practise, cul and pa(11(11lc nunr':cl' . and short 13int 0.
of 1 tresis, bloomers, and 2 slips. Tho Woman's alisslonary Society of ICattadian Bank of Commence, has on Tuesday night, and according to ad(Ir0 Res. Watch nest week's issue
Refugee Articles -12 quilts, Blytlt United Church mot on Tuesday been transferred to Ailsa Craig, and Punch, looked minty gor,d. The Ns further announcement.
The following knitted goods have February 10, at 3 p. In. The meeting left on Saturday to take up his new Cants expect to have 111411 111 the nota
been; shipped in January, 11)412—Army 1 opened by ',tinging "All the Way MY duties. Miss 1 11Ien Robinson hass (ills (Thursday) Bight, when they • Gordon 1lfC(illl'lll President
and Air Force --8 scarves; 5 pair Saviour Leads Mo.'been promoted to Teller, and Miss
'moot the Flyers in one of th21r impar- Enlistment Hi3Lhest In Year Of Ontario Association
gloves; 5 pair socks; 5 turtleneck airs. Wm. Logan had charge of the Betty F lrservice, to Ledger, taut remaining games. Clarence In London District 1'
sweaters; 5 alternative caps, Neflnns, who has played goal for !hero 1 fin annual mooting of the Ontario
Devotional Exeroloos, the theme of Plowmen's, Association held at theSeamen's Comforts -9 aero caps; which was "The Bible, Our Guide to so far, was used on defence In '1'ucs•' The highest monthly total of 01)-
10 pater whole mitts; 10 turtle -neck ;Christian Pettit and Conduct.' lira, day night's, praclive, and may be usc'1 lisin•a to in more than a year in Mill- King Edwaril Flet° Yr' lOrday was
r�+'ven,ien3; 10 puts Socks; 5 pair sett I In Clinton Hospital there, providing the new goalie turn; ta:•y P1411'k1. No. 1 was recorded d'1t•• high -11010(1 by points of Interest to
McElroy gavel reading on Cltlnoso Af1\3. Archin Young was talion to out O,IC, Burlingham hails from the lug the month of J:uu,aty when 037 this distriol. incl,rded in these fea-
mens long stockings, ! Customs, A. Temperance Reading was
IClinton 1tos.pita1 last Thursday night West, and Just landed tills weak with mut were 0nitslcd for noire servi''o lure; 'vas lite el('011i01) 0f G0n•den )1c"
The following knitted goods have given by Aire', Pelts, Gavin of Walton as president of the
been shopped in February 1.942— rwhere, she underwent nn operation. a new bunch oq Airmen. In Ihc Canadian Army, These inducts
Tho third chapter of the Study Book Latest Deports are- that sl►o Is getting — (•41 recruit; enrolled at No, I ilia: 10t. a4'40c.oation, R. 1.. Cardiff. Brussels, M.
Atony Comforts— 5 ttuLionocz Lcpot, London, and No. 1 1),D. (Wind, P. for North 1100011, Percy Pas:noore.
sweaters; :i palr roc t9; 5 pair gloves; Public School Children 4or lletaehmtIU, as 'yell as 271 '!t' Exeter, and John 31, Fokent, of Sea -
entitled "Cities of Refuge' was given taloalg nicely,
by Mrs. Win, Mills, Mita. Wan, Johnet-
ton, Aire. G. Doherty, Miss Hirons and
5 scarves; 5 alternative Gaps.
Iraanchs who went 'active' at the forth, were also appointed I:he spoelal
Seamen's Comforts -10. turtle•ueck Airs. Pollard, Buying War Savings Stamps ('ham l41nand Kitchener liar do '1'4'.li n Iluron County committee to hark with
sweaters; 1.0 nem caps; 10 pair' whole .Next month the Roll C(� aLl will bo 1CC!1►' C A plan which 'vas inaugurated by Ing ('e-nh'es, the executive c4 the Ontario Plow,
mitts; 10 pair socks; 4 pah' ,seamen'sthe public school teachers of Myth iii s lrsocin1lon.
anawerecl by a verse e of scripture cort• a The January lo'ol exceeded 1)y a men'
lou stocking), g" p� . November, hula produced ,splendid re
g tabling the word love. substantial m;•gin the high 4110111 lily 'I'hc' asa0r'.alteet was 'warm 111 its
Quilt donatlotti 111 1042 -- 1 quilt RnUt,w', From November uutll the end
record for 1961 which ass establish• (''t'alse for the work of the 1-Tvroit Colin -
from Mrs. 1-1. Lyon and Ain't, N. Dur of January, the pupils co the Politic, r
y BLYTH UNITED CHURCH 0d last Jam: with a lural cf S92 re. ly Plowing 11atc.1 connn;:.tee III pre -
School had purchased npproxlmateli' cruils. 11 was more Hunt twice 1ho paring n1n; 1 quilt ton and bat from Dirs. H. Trinity Church Holds)a.rin for 1140 forthcoming In terns -
Annual Meeting
Sprung (quilted by neighbours); 1 Al Next Sunday, February 15, the Ser- '$4140.00 in War Savings Stamps, i rt;ai for each of the months uy Coto. 110110 1. As n rcenit a t'euer;ll furling
quilt Lop front Alts, M. Mecool (quill vices will be: 1)r r 1tn'd \u•ccrtnber last, year when of optimism was prevalent Gooughout
Tho annual Vestry .fleeting for rho day's proc.0rdings,
ed at February mooting); 2 quilt tops ]0.15—Sunday School, jai:oat 400 recruits o'�gncd up Fool
from Mrs. D. :11cCnllunt. (quilted at Trinity Church, B1ytri, was !told at the +j311'f }f 5' -
Y,very good attendance. 1 11,15 --Subject: "The Three Story !nearly (10111)10 that of December with•
January ineetiugs); 1 quilt from Dirs. Rector with a. House. NFh1UIT'[—In MorrisTow•ur;hi ), on , i a total 0f approximately W0 f,na• CUN(xIt:1Tl (T,A'I=IONS
17ncout'tlging reparts were received I
Stanley Lyon; 1 quilt from Mrs, A.I 7 P. AI,—Subject: `The Divided Saturday, F.bruary 7(14, 194_, tot J1natary's recruits wore reprosen-
Raclford; 1 quilt from 'Mrs. 13, Shob- 1front the Treasurer of the Parish, andCommittee:'
(laughter,
and Firs. John 11, Nesbitt, tTuts column is dedicated t0 111nsn
a L1ti
brook and Mrs. S. Lyon; 1 quilt tor;ve or nearly every dos town and
other organizations. The year closed . may wish to make use of it l0
aughter, village 01' Western (maim, while it
'who m cnmm0mnrat0 some passing event in
,with but little indebtedness, and that !considerable nunrbe0 also came from
and bat (Fent Mos. \V, Coder (mom • —
Devotional Exercises, rho theme of hos been cleated ofd since tho meet -
1 the lives of their relatives end
byneighbours); 1 quilt from member's ing,
TRINITY ANGLICAN CHURCH W. A. MEET Flt(' Unit di Sinicti;.
Military I`nslrict No. 1 now has n friends, 811011 as il14•lh('�;tys, Wadding
of Friendly S. S. Claes o11� Con, 8 and I Tho Rector, Rev. r. 1I, Streeter, Rev, P. H, Streeter, L.Th., Rector. The \Voniau'8 Association of thc'10to1d of substantially more than .\nnlversFries, or any other events
9 (quilted at February meeting); 1 pr°sided• Tho folowing are rho oft! united Chinch met ou Tuesday al'Ier•
Suu., [+fob, 111, 1942- Qutnquagesluta y ",n(r0 :army ROcrul1); sinor the out- that stn readers may think worthy of
quilt from Mrs. :Melville. Tickets are kers for the year: noon with a fair attendance. Mrs, 11'. note, Von are asked to '),e this col-
Watson,Sunday School -10 n,rn, hr0nlc of war. ,roe 0ercnt. u;)a•:rt;u ':f
befit sold on this quilt. Peoples Warden: Air, J. 13. V4 J, Mills, president, presided, r mon. \1'e think 11 would be a fine
g I vonsong and Sermon -7 p,m. enlistments, which continued 1iga:
Cash donations In 1042—Mrs, FIng• Rector's Warden: 31r. John Tierney, The Women's World Day of Prayer !fleeting opened by singing h3mtu through January. has now stimulated
Delegate to Synod: '11r. V. A1, Bi "Take 1I LI[e And 1 -et it lie', 1'11 gesture on your part to show your in -
:al
land, $1.00; Mrs, T. Adams, 50c; Mrs. g,. ny' will be observed In St. Androtvs, y in an Impart ant way by the recruit- (ores( ill your friends.
Sorrel, 50c.; Mrs. G. Carter's Group, Substitute: Mr. Robinson' Presbyterian Church on 1`niday, 1''eb• Lord's. Prayer was then repeated fu inc campaign otiose)! throughout the
$1.15. Vestry Clerk: Mr, John Tleruay' rUar 20th at 3 p.m. All wonted in` unison, The Secret.;•;• c"•1 Treasurer I ----'
11emubet's to the Select Vestry: Tho Y then gave reports during the busluc. ;
Hulling
durlug the month and is con
vlted, liuuung uuUl mid•h0btn:c,;•y. Congratnlnlinns to Mr. A. W. i
Church—Wardens, IJe'egate8 to Sy- �aesaion. The matter of looping otter 'Enlistments at No, 1 District, London, Smith who cele hratcs lits birthday on
b
nod, Messrs, Bray and Robinson, Mrs. ----•••'•— " 1110 silver and table linen
W11S 0014(4414
Farm Forum Meets 13) J. Powell, Airs. A, Quinn, 111r, Dex- up A short ddscu,;slin f 411011•e,l 1101
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH C. I'ow•cll G0:1orirh; II(•rb0rt 11. (I;,,
Fust 1Vnnvanosh Farm Forma rut ter, J. B. Nesbitt, 31i -s, Fred Hatter, re. action lateen. It w•as deckled 11 he
I 1'0l,lrrat►ilat(uns to 3114.44 '\laraa0et.
at the hbnie of 111', and Mrs, Daniel Miss Afar Lockhart, Miss Jos flue No change in the horn' of service: Iefl evil' 44(1111 next ttlec1htg, r:''", It,it. •t, \\'t 1 ('1n; 11 cher' it.
' Y 8 complicit, ('Llai ;at; Geuuefll Col '110111, lir3ttttls,
who celebrated her bb•lhday
McGorn�l,n on �1lbndn.y iu!ght. After .Woodcock, ,Mss Metcalfe and Air. J. Sunday School -10 41.nt, A motion to have Group Teas in the , m1 F\'n•u.1ry 1.1111.
i russ0l,ti; Pr;nikiln C. iloppcn, Wing•
listening to the broadcast, n discus- Tiet'nay. Church Service -11 a.nt, homes of tho nu'nilans was fro; gilt
loon; Albert 1,. Ttty;:n', a.11, Luclt-
slon was held. 'M:r, Dick Leggett gave Auditors: Miss A, Ilogetson and 141r, l3oyle will conduct the service, up and carried, to be coucludc:l by congratulations 111 Mr. C"orge Chor-
e talk on "Credit Union." 'Lunch was'Miss Metcalfe. Tho sessions and Boards of Manage- the first of :\Unit. 11011. ice, who, c0lebratr,; his birthday on
served bythe hostess. Sldoemen: Dr. Yokes, F. Stored'. (tient of both Blyth and Ilelgrave, will Airs. Charles Crosby, convenor of ; Trainle� Godnn Active at No. 10
Basic Training Centre, Kitchener Fhbraary 1,3111,
Next week's meeting will be addres• E, Qulun, George Powell, 11, J. Pow- meet with a committee of the Presby Flower and 'Visiting Ccn' unitl ' re- ' I -
s�ed by Air, Munk 'Matvhall on "Co,- ell, 1L Dexter, E. Cartwright, A. Darr, levy next Monday, In this church al ported: 3 bines; 11 small 41011111100 r: (',it1:raI1111)1(40F lu 31r•s. C. ego Colo,
Opcttiallve Buying." The meeting will G. Ilu4,14 0, lt,ud' J. C. 110nd0r•
g Cecil Cartwright, T. Grasby and Geo, 4 pati, 11 sympathy cards sent. out anal 2e FO,, nit, 5. Clinton;ininnW. J. McClure. cf )1clb:ntrn0, Ont., n visitor with DIr.
be held at the Mime of Mr. and Mrs. Batley.
The Women's Day of Prayer for calls made during the month. and )Ire. A. it', P. Sm1ih, who cele
Di -salmon; M. J. Craig, Aubur : ; G.
Don. Hnllalian, and everyone is wet- - At the conclusion of the meeting re- Blyth will be held in this Church on Meeting was brought to a close by Motel her birthday on 'Monday', Feb -
come,. rreshmonts were served. Friday afternoon, February 20th. singing (Ile National Anthem, 11, ''tl;wghan, Auburn,
g g 1 leaser 9th,
VOICE
OF TH
PRESS
GRANDMA KNEW THAT
One of the jokes that killed
vaudeville was the one about how
married men don't really live
longer than single Hien—it just
seems longer.
It wasn't a very good joke at
best, and now comes the awful re-
velation that it wasn't even true.
A large life insurance firm has
just completed a study which de-
monstrates that married men ac-
tually do live longer. They aro
also less likely to commit suicide,
drink themselves to death, and get
themselves killed in accidents.
The statisticians came to 'the
conclusion that the favorable bal-
ance toward longevity calve from
living "a normal family life,"
which anybody could have told
them anyway.
Little by little science is creep-
ing up on common folk knowl-
edge, and one of these days we'll
have chapter and book for every
one of those little things grand-
ma knew so well without a statis-
tic to guide her.
—Kingston Whig -Standard
--o—
DIVE IDEA COPIED
Dive bombing is a new science
in the present war, but duck
hawks and other species of birds
sae this dive method for destroy-
ing their prey. According to a
United States Department of
Agriculture bulletin, duck hawks
are the fastest flying birds re-
ported. "One of these hawks,"
says the bulletin, "diving on ite
victim flew 166 to 180 miles an
jour when timed with a stop
watch. Diving at a flock of ducks,
M a velocity of nearly 176 miles
an hour, an aviator reports that
a hawk, presumably a duck hawk,
pasted hint as though the plane
were standing still and struck one
of the ducks." Man has copied
the dive idea but has surpassed
even the duck hawk in speed, the
velocity of his descent being al-
most three times as fast.
—Brockville Recorder and Times
— o-
30 HITLER THINKS
Nine 40 buildings owned by
librwegiana who returned to Eng-
land with raiding British eom-
to ndos have been burned by the
Nazis, all their other property has
been seized and 100 of their male
relatives have been sent to Ger-
man concentration camps. Other-
wise Hitler has everything under
control, almost.
.—Windsor Star
— o—
KEY AS SALVAGE
(frim humor often appears in
Ilingland. Not long ago a man
sent a key to the Salvage office
of a British railway company with
the message "Tho house belong -
to this key has been bombed.
Please accept for salvage."
—Chatham News
—0—
HELPFUL!
!scientists say that a rubber
substance may be extracted from
dandelions. Well, we know sev-
eral lawns that would provide
1 my of raw material any
tt.
—Stratford Beacon -Herald
—0—
OUT OF ORDER
Such past sayings as "nothing
down and the rest when you
catcb me," are out of order now
with the new buying restrictions.
—St. Thomas Times -Journal
—0—
REMEMBER EIRE
M isn't quite a world war yet,
Don't think there are no neutral
countries left. Remember, there's
Always Eire.
—Windsor Star
Windowless Plant
Permits of Blackout
Completely windowless, yet
containing more glass than any
other such structure, a building
that is as long as 12 New York
City blocks (its area is 4,000 by
820 feet) and As high as a five -
storey building, has been dedi-
sated by the United States Army
at Fort Worth, Texas, relates The
Toronto Telegram.
It is for use in the construction
of $260,000 bombing planes; it
bee cost $25,000,000; it has a
huge assembly room without a
tingle pillar or obstruction. It is
without windows so as to permit
of complete blackout, and to pro-
mote efficient air conditioning.
The glass that is used is in the
form of spun glass wool, used in
the steel walls (27,600 tons of
structural steel were required in
the building), and which will not
only provide insulation but absorb
from 65 to 75 percent of the fac-
tory noises. It has been estimated
that the four -inch glass -stuffed
steel walls of the assembly plant
have the same heat and cold in-
sulating properties of an ordinary
brick wall thirty inches thick.
The plant will employ 16,000
men.
Creat Britain expects to obtain
between 4,500,000,000 and 5,000,-
000,000 pounds of milk from the
United States in the coming year.
SHE HAD A HISTORIC ANCESTOR
All set for her Feb. 16th launching against America's Axis foes
is the $80,000,000, 35,000 -ton super -dreadnaught Alabama, pictured
above on the ways at i'ortsmouth, Va. She's the fourth naval vessel
to bear the name, but one of the most picturesque of the Alabamas
never flew the Stars and Stripes. She was the famous Confederate
cruiser that ravaged Union shipping until sunk off Cherbourg, hrance,
in the historic battle with the U.S.S. Kearsarge.
WINTER CONVOY
By Lieut. E. H. Bartlett, R.C.N.V.R.
The fleet was at sea.
Behind us were the days when
Naval Control Service officers had
sent out coded signals, moving our
ships from berth to berth and port
to port until the moment arrived
when the ships were assembled,
ready for their sailing into the
war areas, Behind us, too, was the
convoy conference, in which our
commodores and our captains had
discussed their final strategies in
readiness to face the enemy,
Now the fleet was at sea,
Prom the grey shore line we
had left behind, to the far horizon
to which we were steaming, ships
ploughed their solemn way through
the waves. We were proceeding
1a "line ahead," for this was s
mammoth argosy, numbering its
Alps in scores and waiting until
well clear of shore before forming
oruising disposition for the night.
"Line ahead" and "cruising dis-
position" — good naval terms
those, but it was not a battle fleet
to which they were being applied.
Our fleet was one of merchant
ships, peace time carriers of cargo
Wbo to -day were getting out to
ran the gauntlet of torpedoes and
slbells and bombs from enemy
raiders of sea and sky.
So, eiuee the first days of war,
merchant ship convoys have been
leaving Canadian ports, In their
deep -laden hulls the ships have
osrried the food supplies, the sin-
ews of war, the vital necessities,
across the ocean to the Island
LIFE'S LIKE THAT
SECRET
��;
SERVICE
EMPLOYMENT %
, OFFICE. 0
r
;
/
...-
;//7//
Fortress which is Britain.
Secretly, for h1 secrecy lies safe-
ty, thousands of ships bearing
millions of tons of cargo have left
Canada.
Our convoy was typical.
Purposeful Preclelon
One night the port was filled
with merchant ships, riding lazily
to their anchors In the peace of a
sheltered harbour, The next day
saw a harbour empty. Clanking
wlndlaeses had raised the anchors,
churning propellers were driving
the fleet on its way across the
sea.
From the bridge of one of the
fleet's Royal Canadian Navy's war-
ship escorts I had seen the eailing
of the fleet -- and had marvelled
at the purposeful precision with
which it had been accomplished.
In the grey of an Atlantic morn-
ing we started to slip through the
opened submarine gates which
guarded the port. Signal penants,
whipping in a growing wind which
gave promise of a winter storm in
the making, identified each vessel
quickly for the scurrying launches
which, bearing the Naval Control
Service Officer and hie staff, were
seeing that the sailing schedule
was being maintained.
"We sail at 9.80 in the morn-
ing" had been the final orders
delivered the night before,
At 9.80 in the morning, to the
minute, the commodore'e ship had
started moving seaward, in pride
of place as first of the ships form -
By Fred Neher
"1 think 'm qualified.. . I've been married twenty years
wife still thinks I have a sick friend,"
an' my
REG'LAR FELLERS—Gets His Man
PINHEADS RUNNIN'
A COLLECTION SYSTEM f
WATCH ME HAVE
SOME FUN WITN'IMf
nli RI WWII) d,i4tit,
BIG -FIST RILEY cN1ES
ME A DIME/IF)bU
CAN COLLECT IT
FROM HIM YOU
CAN KEEP NNE
CENTS FOR
YOURSELF./
5'
ing "line ahead."
"We will paha through the gates
at so -many minute Intervals" the
night -before orders had continued
(and the Intervale wore marvel-
lously small.)
At the exact stated interval after
the connnadore's ship had shown
her stern to the Hurn on duty in
the gateships, the second ship of
his fleet was thrusting her how
in his wake,
These. were not ships of war,
mark yon, practised in fleet man-
oeut res and evolutions. 'flies()
were portly cargo carriers, their
deep -laden hulls thrusting sullenly
through the water which their sis-
ters in the fighting service knifed
cleanly.
Sullen of keen,
kept their statlou
put to sea 011 aeltedule.
Pattern of Protection
Ahead of it, sturdy minesweeper's
had assured a channel tree of
possible danger from the floating
deaths which the enemy lets loose
upon the waters. Around them,
Canadian naval escort craft circled
in ceaseless, vigilant guard against
submarine attack. Overhead, air-
craft formed their share of the
protecting screen which is given a
fleet at sea,
Our sea -most ships were rising
and falling to the Atlantic swell
long before the )harbour behind us
was emptied of our sisters, Up and
down the long line of merchant
ships the escort vessels steamed
in steady patrol, weaving their
ceaseless pattern of protection
which would not be relaxed until
the convoy was safely in the var-
ious harbours to which it was
bound.
Slowly, so slowly as to be al-
most imperceptible, We line of
ships commenced to alter for'm-
atiou. From the commodore's ship,
at the head of the line, signal
flags had whipped out. Veteran of
many crossings, wise in the ways
of a fleet at sea, the contmcdore
was ordering his charges into
shorter, more easily guarded col-
umns. His vice and rear com-
modores, working to plans well
prepared beforehand, were taking
over their own divisions of mer-
obantmen, manoeuvering them as
skillfully and as steadily as, 1n
other days (when they wore their
flags io ships of the fighting
force) they bad manoeuvred ships
of war.
The fleet came into station, The
one long column split into several
shorter ones and the size of the
fleet became apparent. To port
and starboard, ahead and astern,
were ships steadily steaming on-
ward. These were the ships that
Hitler boasted he was going to
sweep from the seast And these
were from but one portl
Supplies Go Through
We ploughed on through seas
growing steadily higher, and into
a wind which brought biting cold
with it. On our bridge, and in the
dissyingly swaying orow's nest on
our mast, keen -eyed seamen kept
constant watch over the waters.
On the bridges of the ships of our
fleet, their fellows were sharing
the vigil. At ear -phones in the
ships of war highly trained opera-
tors were listening incessantly for
the warnings their submarine de-
tectors night bring,
The fleet was at sea , , , a fleet
in which merchantmen as well as
ships of war maintained battle
stations,
Tho cold became more apparent
with the conning of night, In the
gathering dusk we lost sight of the
farther ships . . . of the high -
funnelled Greek and the newly-
painted
ewlypainted Norwegian; of the slab -
sided tanker with her tattered Red
Ensign and the useful looking
Dutchman whose captain was so
proud that he had saved his ship
from the Germans so that 11e could
carry on his country's war at sea.
They are international fleets sail-
ing under the protection of the
White Ensign these days, with all
the flags of all the Free peoples
represented among then).
Steadily the darkness blotted out
the ships, There were no lights
to give us away to the enemy, and
keeping station called for anxious
watch and constant alertness, The
experience gained in long months
of war and hundreds of such night
watches now stood in good stead.
There was no slowing of the fleet.
Daylight broke on a tumbling,
white -crested sea — with the ships
plunging steadily onward through
it.
The fleet was at sea, and the
supplies for the 1"i'ont Lino were
going through,
however, they
and the sleet
(DUFFT
COLLEXUN
AGI ENSY
t t.
NO MORE PILLS AND
POWDERS FOR US..WE'VE
DISCOVERED ALL -BRAN!
Says Mrs. William Brady, Pardee,
Ontario: "We have no more use for
harsh cathartics) When we found
out about ALL -BRAN we knew
we'd never go back to pills or pow-
ders any more. KELLOGG'S ALL -
BRAN is certainly the 'Better
Way'l"
Why don't you buy KELLOGG'S
ALL -BRAN? Try ALL -BRAN'S
"Better Way" to correct the cause
of constipation due to lack of the
right kind of "bulk" in your diet.
But remember, ALL -BRAN doesn't
work like cathartics, It takes time.
Get ALL -BRAN nt your grocer's;
in two convenient size packages, or
ask for the individual serving pack-
age at restaurants. Made by
Kellogg's in London, Canada.
ALAN MAtuuIcc
v) !R VIN . .
A Weekly Column About This and That in The Canadian Army
It's rather a strange thing that
a country whose citizens are able
and willing to spend 60 cents of
every dollar they receive on the
war effort, should know so little
about their Army—the biggest sin-
gle item iu their tie cents worth.
That sounds like a sweeping
assertion. It is a sweeping asset' -
tion, and perhaps, like most gen-
eralizations, slightly unfair, it
is occasioned by 11 couple of news-
paper clippings which show that
Canadian newspapermen are woe-
fully ignorant of Army terms.
(They should read this column),
Perhaps it is elevating the fourth
esUtto too highly- to judge a coun-
try by its newspapermen, so au
apology ntay he in order.
Tho whole thing grows out of
two abbreviations -- "K.1'." and
"A. W. 0. L." Both those terms aro
used a little too frequently in Can-
adian newspaper columns to please
old soldiers—this old soldier any-
way, for neither of them apply to
the soldiers of the King,
"KY." is the abbreviation for
a term current in the United Army
--"Kitchen Police" --it does not
mean sentries placed on guard
duty to protect currants and other
delicacies from predatory fingers
—it just means men who have been
detailed to assist in the non -tech -
Weal work In the kitchen.
tour of duty on "Kitchen
Police" is sometimes ordered as a
mild punishment, But the fact
that a man is detallee for a job
in the kitchen does not always
meals that he has transgressed any
Army regulations,
Iu the Individual Citizen's Army
of Canada, work in the kitchen is
one of the regular "fatigues" for
which all private soldiers aro liable
to be detailed in the ordinary
course of events and, since a kit-
chen in your Army is invariably
known as a "cook -house," this duty
"The Man Who Relaxes
Is Helping the Axis"
Ambrose Ifarle, Galena, III., a
munitions handler at the Arniy
ordnance proving grounds, Sa-
should properly bo relurred to by
newspaper writers and (Ahern at)
"cook•houso fatigue."
(As one who had his sharp of
cook -)house fatigue a quartet' of a
century ago, 1t Is probably unfair
of 1110 t0 point (lilt --lest some Corn -
mending Officer chance to look at
this—that nine times out of ten
it is a very welcome duty. There
aro such things as extra pieces t)1
pie, apples that can he snitched,
and other delicacies unofficially
available to the amateur cook-
house staff, which makes the whole
proceeding rather useless as a
punishment, even of the mildest
variety.)
The other abbreviation 1 cone
plain of in Canadian pa.pors be
"A.W.OJ.,," again a U.S. Anil,
torn), meaning "absent without of -
tidal leave." If the United States
Army cares to Indulge In such re•
dundauey it is all right with me,
but as all ex -soldier of an Army
in which leave is referred to pure-
ly 1111(1 simply as "leave," 1 feel
that Canadian newspapermen
should stick to the Army abbrevl-
ation of "A.W.L which meant)
obviously "absent without leave,"
If a man has leave in your Army,
it has been granted by higher au-
thority, Obviously then it does
not need to be called "oIllcial
leave," there being no such thing
as all unofficial variety.
All the foregoing may seem to
be trivial. Actually 1t isn't, The
Individual Citizen's Army is not
only the greatest investment ever
made by the Canadian taxpayer,
it is au investment which spells to
him or her the difference between
freedom and oppression, between
life and death. So like good 1t1•
vestors, it behooves us to know
everything we can about the enter-
prise 1n which wu should all bo
investing our 11101103', our work, oto'
brains an(t everything that we
have,
vanna, Ill., was commended by the
War Department for a slogan he
submitted for use in manufactur-
ing plants—"The man who re-
laxe:l is helping the Axis."
The Department said the slogan
would be used in plants working
on Army ol'der.s,
First in Line
YOU LEAVE IT TO U8, Mit.
DUCAN f WHAT WE G
AFTER WE GET •THAI
MY MOTTO f
By GENE BYRNES
•
•
Alt rtg5te tee. mei
A CIIIPONHIS
SHOULDER
! ud,nui,laSlY,k'
I"Tom had a swell case of
Caffeine Nerves from too
mull tea and coffee. Even hie
friends avoided him, Then
semen put him wise and
persuaded him to drink
• Postum, 'Thirty days later he
W.1% the most popular man iat
town, drat it!"
Afr, 2', N. Coffee Nerve:.
cif you feel upset, nervous and irritabld,
why not switch to delicious Pustunt
:l ht nwny? I1 has absolutely no caffeine
taect on nerves, heart or stomach.
Economical, loo. Order Postun( today,
BABES ON
BROADWAY
Adapted by
FRANCES BARBOUR
from the MGM Picture Starring
Mickey Rooney
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Tommy Williams . Mickey Rooney
Penny Morris ...... ..Judy Garland
Miss Jones .• ........... Fay Bainter
Barbara Jo .. .,,...Virginia Weidler
Ray Lambert Ray McDonald
Morton Hammond .,,Richard Quine
Mr. Stone .. . ...,Donald 'Meek
Alexander Woollcott .. By Himself
Nick .Luis Alberni
CHAPTER ONE
It WAS noon hour. Broaden). (one
veining to life for the day.
to and out of the Pitt -Astor drug
store ono as w' 1111 endless parade
of aspirants t0 acting fame, Soite-
;sliere among these young people
from all over the country, there
wore rho future theatre AIM'S or
t0111011'oso, 1110 George :1i, Colians,
tho Itatherine Cornelis, the mints
mud hontanncs•
'!'hey were t110 great army of
believer's, Without them, Broadway
would have been just another liIgh•
way for Ulelr hopes and paved lis
streets with Magic, their ambitions
!tad lighted it with fame,
All over New York City, there
wore hundreds of them, looking,
hoping, praying , , . weary, hungry
and homesick. Most of them would
have been satisfied with anything --
four simple lines and a cup of cof-
fee. No part could bo too small,
no possibility too remote. They had
amazing capacities for disappoint•
tng i11e80 young people. The salve
rounds over and over ugaiu. Not h.
Ing today, nothing tomorrow,
nothing yesterday.
But they (would keep on dream-
ing and struggling and believing
for the theatre was their heaven
and their goal, To get there, they
:'ore often humble, they acted in
hallways, lord—like Tommy 1V11.
Hams who had been a\ Vey from
life 110111e In Wisconsin t'or n year
now—they Fang nut! danced In
cellars,
At the moment though, Nick's
cellar spaghetti joint was distres-
singly empty III( T0111111y, along
with his pals stay and Hammy,
went t.lu'ougli their sassy college
routine, laughing, singing, step-
ping high—and • wondering about
the future,
1.
r Po
Tommy glanced around the
place. "DO you think the audience
likes us?"
"I don't !wow," Ray returned,
"but thank goodness they outnum-
bered us."
'Pommy nodded and once again,
qden 's
FINE CUT
Founded by the lato A. E. Cross
in 1885, the A-Sevoll Ranch near
Nanton, Alberta, is famous to
this day for the high-gradograss-
fed beef cattle which the ranch
raises and ships all over Canada.
BRAND OF THE
A -SEVEN RANCH
a7
1,.M7
PI72
glanced curiously at the pleasant,
nliddlenged NVolulul, who had been
coming there six nights in a row.
She was a nice "icky" he thought,
prob'ly from some Iiltlo town like
Waterbury, But then, anybody
would bo nice who showed that
much appreciation for the Throe
Musical Halts of I''lre.
Their act cause to a1 cud with
al flourish and they danced oft to
the dressing 000111. Any uliuuto now
Nick would conte in with the
"kitty." Maybe one of the costo.
suers had put !t dollar In it for u
change. Hoye, 1t sure (would be
nice to get a job some day (vith
n salary attached to It,
There was a knock on the door
tool Nick, tho proprietor entered,
1118 rowed, douhlo chinned face
Waft sorrowful. "Roy's," ile said
heavily, "1 wants you should re-
sign."
They all stared and Tommy said,
"You mean quit working bore? No
sir, Niok. We love you. We're not
going to leave you down In this col.
ler by yourself every night."
Nick sighed tragically, "Thou I
got to fire you." Affeettonately, ho
shushed their. "Look, 1 gotta da blz,
1 gotta da wife, I gotta da kids, I
gotta myself, I gotta you. Yes?"
"Yes," they said. This was all
irrefutable trut h•
Nick shrugged. "But I gotta only
four customers to oat do spaghett.
So I gotta go outta biz."
That set the boy's back on their
heels. Without hope, Tommy looked
Into the "kitty" which Nick had
brought with hint. There was a
nickel, a dime, a quarter and —
Tommy's oyes bulged—a five dollar
11111, "!ley," be yelled, what's this?
Who put this five bucket In?"
• * *
Nobody could even hazard a
guess. 'Then Tommy said, startled,
"Couldn't be the '1cky' from Water-
bury?" iio understood. "She prob-
ably thought it was a buck, We'll
have to give it. back."
Daintily and stay let out stricken
cries.
Tommy though, was at the door,
Lovingly, Ito looked at alto b111.
"Bate to do it fellows but things
aren't that tough, I better hurry
though before my stomach starts
bilking to my will power'." Outside,
he headed for the table of their
benefactress. "I'(11 afraid you made
a mistake lady'," he grinned, "11'e
found this hill In the 'kitty'',"
She adjusted !ler glasses and
looked ut it, "Anything (wrong (v1111
it? The 'kitty' says you take every-
thing."
A feather 1would have knocked
Tommy down, "Nott 1110:111 you . , ."
Then ho laughed self consciously,
"000, that's n pretty big telnlis5lon
just to watch us. You can see the
best show on ilroadway for four -
forty."
"I think your show is its good as
some 1'we seen on lleoad(way," (vas
the reply.
Delighted, Tommy sat down, "You
do, ell? \Veil, we think so too 11111.
the out of town trade doesn't gen-
erally appreciate ns. Where you
front? i mean what part of the
canto'?"
"Well, I was born in Wisconsin,
but.,."
Tommy almost turned a hand.
spring. "That's funny, 180118 born
in Wisconsin loo. My mother still
lives there." 11e smiled at (ler hap.
pity. "Yost know you're like Mom.
She always says Cod made New
York so the good people (would am
preciuto Wisconsin."
Now Hanan! and Itay joined him.
Tommy made introductions and
!.bele now friend told thein that
IIER lcaule wvas :Hiss Jones, Inter-
rupting each other, they regaled
DISLIKE WASHING DIRTY
HANDKERCHIEFS?
Ifero's freedom from your
most unpleasant task. , ,
Instead of washing dirty
UC handkerchiefs, (ilbson's
i Postpaid Tissues lure so cheep you
simply destroy them—
f germs and 81l! Order
TRIAL OFB'ER NOW.
~-
IGiBSON'S '!'ISSUES,
5 Clounlon Aur., Toronto, Ont.
Enclosed fled 1('c for generous
trial offer of 150 tissues In dis-
penser box.
1 Name .
150
SINOLI,t
TISSIII'1S
tddtes(
ISSUE 7—'42
C
ON GUARD
Machine gut pillbox is sentry
in Re flies Square.
her with the story of their aubl•
lions, slow Ihey were lryhl' and
tl'yiu' end some day their names
were going to he up in lights --
b0ot11!---eu(I they'd be all set.
Hiss Jolles rose to leave and
'Yonas handed her one of their
professlo(1(11 curds, "Nell, Miss
Jones front Wiconsin you've been
darned nice to tis and if you want
nnyhody to shot(' you around the
town or anything just let ole know,
1'111 'I'onuny Williams, Call ire any
time, 111 the 1'itt•:\stor Drug Store.
It's the actor's clearing house,"
Smiling benignly, 111(4(4 ,tones nod.
tied, '":hat's very 1(1(1(1, 'I'Otllllty,
1'111 notch obliged to you and , , .
don't he surprised, Pott may be
hearing from ate."
That night, the boys feasted on
salami, candy and fruit, 'Then
Tommy, feeling happier than he
had in (lay's, wrote !tome to has
mother,
"Dear Mom: Our act N'ila a 80n•
sation tonight and I thick we're get.
ting too big for the place."
IIo chewed on his pencil. Ila.tumy
was practising his favorite speech
from "Hamlet" and Ray was going
over u new song, [''rola down be.
low, 1n the corner shooting gallery,
there was the crackle of rifle shots,
Tommy adjusted has oar muffs
FIGURE CAMOUFLAGE
FOR MATRONS
By Anne Adams
It's time to do something about
those extra pounds!. If you can't
go on a dict, wear an Anne Ad-
ams frock! Pattern 4909 will
camouflage any extra width at
the waist and hips . princess
panels in front and back are the
magical trice(! .A lots waist seem
helps too. You can even make
the two front neck -to -hent panels
of contrast for a still narrower
effect, A half -belt starting at
either side of these panels is op-
tional. You'll enjoy working on
this dress with the helpful Sewing
Instructor to show you every de-
tail; you'll enjoy wearing it and
receiving compliments on your
new slim figure! For the frock,
pick a posy -print cotton and short
or long sleeves, and add the but-
ton trine if you like.
Pattern 4909 is available in
women's sizes 34, 36, 3s, 40, 42,
44, 40, 48 and 50. Size 36 takes
4 yards 35 -inch fabric,
Send twenty cents (20c) in
coins (stamps cannot be accept-
ed) for this Anne Adams pattern
to Boort 421, 711 Adelaide Sl.
West, 'Toronto. Write plainly
raze, name, address and style
Illltllber,
and wrote ow "But don't worry,
something 1(0041 will turn up and
when it dues I'll 1, t you know and
you'll 110 glad you had confidence
In 111e. 111118A you a 101 Heel '•.,;arc•
(ally lit night when the city, 1s quiet
before I go to bed."
'i'here 'w,l• :.!:ether loud eulburet
from the shooting gallery.
Tonuuy 1:;1(14 and lahuri na:ay
lint -11' d ell: "hove, 'Pommy,"
• * .
'1'111, next morning, le and the
buys drl[lod into the I'itI'.1'1or.
The piaci. was already t'00%% (I,
1.'4% eryone (('85 I't arllllg lite Ile•alre
news and trying to tool. Im-
portant,
Ail al once„ Tommy noticed a
girl In one of the 111)1(115. She
had bill -tilt coppery hair nod a
turned -up nose, Something click•
ed. fate 111,411 her ;ld 110 didn't know
(('sly.
She looked up and he caught
her eye. For 11 ailment Dor lashes
flickered, 'Thou, in utter disdain,
she turned away,
'l'otnnly got mad, all to hlulsolf.
"‘Veil, If that's the (way she feels
about a guy like me . .
"\Phut'lt 1t be boys?" Short}',
the counter man asked,
Automatically, they went through
their routine. Tommy asked for
steak, stay for fried cltiekeu and
Hammy for broiled squib.
blue on rye," Shorty
sang out. "heavy on the hail.,,
ile turned back. "Oh by t.lio way,
Tommy, there was it call for you
guys."
"It call?"
"Yeah. The Thornton (teed of-
fice,"
"Thornton 'teed!" limulus yell-
ed. IIe jumped to his feet,
Tommy pulled hint down. "'1'ako
1t easy bud." '['heti he spoke to his
Informant, "Don't you thlck It's
a little (ward for thoso jokes?"
Shorty hoisted his shoulders. Ile
was used to "at leisure" actors.
"Tho chino said Thornton heed
productions and (wants you to get
up to tho olllce before ono o'clock,"
The boys looked at each other,
thou at Shorty increduously,
Filially, stay made 0 decision.
"\Vett, what can wo lose? We've
been turned down by every shoe-
string pl'odliCeI'. It won't hurl any
more to be turned down by the
top guy In the business."
This seemed to make sense, but
as they wore leaving, Tommy
turned hack and said darkly. "Lire
ton, Shorty, if this is a gag, you've
made your last banana split.
Don't forget that."
He adjusted his hat jauntily,
then started off atter the boys,
(Is this really a practical joke
as Tommy thinks or Ls there a
"break" around the corner for the
boys? And what part will the
young lady with whom Tommy
was flirting, play lu hts life? Don't
miss the next exciting chapter.)
Pity Poor Brides
The United States is cooking
up some •bad news for brides—
no more dinners out of cans, An
impending order will prohibit the
use of tin for packaging almost
everything that can be marketed
In some other typo of container.
Among the casualties, it was re-
ported, will be such old reliables
as pork and beasts, spaghetti, can-
ned meat and beer -- not to men-
tion dog food,
FINE
LOURED PICTURES
stss
BRITAIN'S
FIGHTING PLANES
AND WARSHIPS
On attractive 8" x 10" mounts, each
with a description of the War
Machine portrayed.
Every true Canadian
will prize them
"Spitfire" • "Flying Fortress"
"Hudson" Bomber • "Defiant"
"Tomahawk" • "Besunghter"
"Hurricane" • Bell "Alracobra"
H.M.S. "Rodney" • "Ark Royal'.
"Hood"• "Warspite"• "Repulse"
"King George V" • H.M.C.S,
"Saguenay" • and Many others
For each picture desired, send a cont-
piete "CROWN BRAND" label, with
your name and address and the name
of the picture you '�
want written on the tAl\'!®
back :Address Dept. ,
J.12 The Canadallf/Ib n
Starch Company to\ _
1.t'1., 49 Wellington lRO1v,1,Rossc/t'OR6
St. E., Toronto. l I,nBRI
The Syrup with :�
the Delicious
Flavour '0,N6S sj /
1,(•E
•
CROWN BRAND
k",SYRUP
i.IF CWAp► S1.A 11YH 'COMVAN1 IIMllla
No Covered Wagon
For This Traveller
11 (011(4 a recently, arrived
European who called at the In-
formation Office of the Canadian
National Hallways in Ilolluventut'e
Station, and inquired: "At what
hew' can 11ea(•e for Cleveb nd?n
"Hy Iluffalu."' countered the
Information Clerk having in mind
((Illations in routing,
"Oh, no, by train," responded
the would -he traveller,
Watch Your Furs
Don't let fur coats get matted
and rumpled. The surest remedy
it to have It small -sized turl(ish
towel kept ready of the shelf in
the coat closet for the exclusive
purpust, of brushing your coat.
:1t least once a week, (wipe the
entire coat, inside and out, brush-
ing the fur gently with long
strokes in one direction. Go over
the (whole coat—heck, front, col-
lar and sleeves. You will he sur-
prised at the anoint of dust that
will collect on the 1ut'I(ish towel,
and also at the beautiful gloss
of the fur after its brushing,
On special occasions, if you
(want to look really elegant, have
another person go over the coat
the last thing after you have put
it on.
`Sheeing' or `Skeeing'
Is Outdoor Problem
Crowe Prince Olaf, of Norway,
is responsible for a problem now
interesting Canadian skiers, whe-
ther to "skec" or to "slice."
Prince Olaf, himself an enthusi-
ast of the downhill and trail,
raised the (luc'tion after a jour-
ney over the Ca:mi im National
Railways from the popular sk(
grounds near 11unt..iillc, Ontario.
Asked for the proper pronuncia-
tion of the word now Ill daily neo
throughout the snow be:l(4 of
Canada and the United Slates,
His 1113111 highness :.uggcsted
"shoo" rather tbaul "3'.or " adding
that "dice" i} Norwegian n while
"shoe" i> I;,:'0utn in e'if;ilt,
Dogs of War
Loy Anl;cics' most distinguished
dogs have hitherto been screen
stars, says Time. Many of them
are in the army now. 1'o guard
Los Angeles harbor defences,
twenty-five dogs are Lein;: train -
e(1 to (Gail( post. with Sentries,
sniff out spies and saboteurs.
More than 1,000 dog owners, in-
cluding Itis Tin Tin 111, have of-
fered the services of their pets.
Dogs of war must be: (1) big;
(2) intelligent. Best types: Ger-
man shepherds, Doberman pinsch-
ers.
SPARKLING
0�R
Et!
., ,given away
with every purchase
of 3 regular -size packages or
2 family -size packages of
KELLOGG'S CORN FLAKES!
SUPPLY LIMITED! Start your set now!
e Crystal-clear glass
e Ultra -modern
square -cut design
• Heavy base, not
easy to overturn
This is an offer you don't want to miss—so stock
up on Canada's favourite cereal right now! You'll
find real zest for breakfast when you dip your spoon
into a bowl of these crunchy,crisp corn flakes with
milk and sugar! That exclusive Kellogg's flavour
is going to stir your appetite! And you, too, will
echo the vote of 4 out of 5 housewives from coast
to coast who declare Kellogg's first for flavour/
Kellogg's Corn Flakes come
in two conveniently -sized
packages. When eating out,
ask for the individual
package with the
inner WAXTITR
sealed bag. Made
by Kellogg's in
London, Canada,
Page 4. THE STANDARD Wednesday, Feb.11,1942.
utt4ttrtgtateteto tttvott~attrte4+6att6 oi�lmmict lige ititutoct�comett4bitnat and Mrs. \V111 Carter,
J. H. R. Elliott. ',� ►t1lN--To 111. and lits,
Gordon IJlliott 1,l silt. 11, a Baby IJoy, Thursday,
INSURE NOW! AND BE ASSURED. g
1 a
to
li
IS
1
Elliott Insurance Agency
CAR—FIRE—LIFE—SICKNESS—ACCIDENT.
13L11'11—ONT.
Residence Phone 1'' or 110,
Office Phone 104.
there are four active units. Tho Aux•
Fi ost diary Circle, Mission Band and Baby
b'ehrtt- (land, reported a total of X32) 8001
01y ; 1,h. Congratulations. to the Ilra Treasurer, The Auxil•
Most of t he sehoolu in our neigh- luny regrelth'd the lost of choir very
hi/11100d are opening the schools at capable and cdficloul President, Mrs.
111 o'clec:e fast time, during the ts'Itt- ,I. 1', manning, during the year but
ter 11101101S.This nutic08 it better for hill . rtlly aer their new i'tt'3ldt�nl,
the children who have a mile e1. 11131.! Jl►•si\'. Lyonnd,
14 to wall; to school, llotv0lct' all' The Sunday school, which 18 lvelj
schools twill eventually ;9110 at the orngnized and ably' led by the Super.
daylight time. itltcndeut, lir, t'. Stewart, reported a
"COURTESY AND SERVICE" lb Mrs. ,I, ltclirine of (0(tericit, tviilt 'n(0118ful year with an average n1,
►� lir. and :Mrs. Is. Snell, teudaatce of tit; and a total of $3:;e
111:1%218170ai 1riNN)112filiki?4`;)1D44,41 //124)12.4NDID4ID NItar; /NNIDlapc;0,2a;-8.4;,.4
raised,
�. I The Woman's Association with Mrs.
. _ II. 5uudercock, President, with her
PI-IIL OSIFER WEST1 I ELD I 31 11. 'Tull ns; nd 81)101, the ek
group of willing workers, reported n
MEADOWS 'There was no service in the Putted end In Toronto' balance of t �3 on h.tttet
OF LAZY ME:1! r Church on Sunday owing to the eon• •ylrs, \Vin. Lyon and Miss \V, 11,
i Tho Young Peoples Society meet
(by harry .1. Boyle) 'clition of the wads. Kirk wore guest.'; at the home of Mr. eeory 1,100 10111;8 with Rev, A. E. Olen -
me
1 '.Ir. and MI6. 1•11gar 11 ovrt1 11,'1.1,' ,I. P. Manning. Clinton, on Sunday,
London visitors on Saturday.zies a, their leader. The total amount
in (Inde c to help swell the funds for
LON I) E SBORO
"Sugar Rations"
raised for all organizations for all
111.8. Alva 3ICP4'well visL'1 al het the group east of the
the• Red ('nos;, � ,qu
Saturday forth on tfirs. W. Kelly,pun,loses
The ;,torn str,,c'�c just ,tier dinn;,t, yrot village are putting on 0 Bingo Party
'MT. and Jtr�. A. Ncsifitt, lla.tcr.; in Community Hall, on I"riday night,' During the year the Church Prop -
:Mrs. Phil 1,1 r.: wa:4hing the dishes and ell), was .improved by the placing of s'e'lected to the committee of Steward+. supporting.
Frank and Lawrence Nes..,t. 11' "'+ 1•'001.0t 1.y 1:11 h,
Mas reading the nrn•spaprr. I"ue•e 1.1.1.101 G,xl1 1tit lisitar a steel roof' on the large aaul counnc:11-,'1'lt Pastor. 11cw. A. 1?. 31enzirs, re -
1
e :111 org:urizntlons et t1r Church
was the he.tdline about the rationing LONDESf30R0 CH.UttCH REPORT ions Chinch filled. 111•. Rclhert Scot: ported that, a ictal of I. i.uu111es 111„ 101,00 tendered diligent tidal faithf it
• (Mikes Amy 'Toll, P,...3—n \Invert,
cf sugar. It <:enu'd that just as the Messrs, Aubry Toll, Hugh 31ccYusty, .\t the annual llc;'ting of ti -c:‘ l'.1:t- and Win.Webster1011.1 elected to the 10 fellowship with the Church. I'1:0 8011101' during the past year,
headline calve into 11(141 everybody�atisfactor
attende'tl the Stratfatcl Normal .\t• cd church, y reports we're Session, and, Illu•ry Snell, 'Bert She• Church Choir have rentier.tl falthfal mulch was served at the close o
on the partylinc stunted to roll 11,1 home. 't•ee•'3V•c•d front all organizations. bbrouio Inhn Armshung, 1\'llLiam�tund officlfent service tinier 103 lead• 1 oetilg anti a Foetal 111,03 spent to -
their nci,;hbar,;. They all sernled
,Mrs, lounge of Ilelgrave, with 31r, i The W. M. S. organizat;on of which llianuhig mid \\'m. hulking, were iecship of llrs. Menzies and Is self gethe.r,
disturbed by the announcement that
tea would have to go short on sweet-
ening.
Oiit' ring came in — ''three longs
and two shorts"—and when the re-
ceiver was lifted you could easily
hear the din in all part.~ of tate roots.
(iradualiy order was restored on the
line when Mrs, Higgins, 1011080 voice
('terries esperially well cut through
the noise. "Look here," carne her
voice, "All tate chattering ail gibber-
ing isn't getting anybody any place.
In the first place I was using this
-telep lone and all the rent of you start-
ed singing in on 1110,". 'There was 0
huffed silence after that for a fele
seconds but the noise soon started up
again.
Mrs. Phil got on the line aga,tn and ,
I could hear occasional words sun
"What about baking?" . , , "IXar roe!'
\'au would think the government
would have laid in a supply of sugar.'
, , "Maybe we could grow sugar
beets and squeez; the sugar out of
them."
There was a worried look in Mrs.
Phil's eye as she came away from the
telephone. "Only that little bit of
sugar for each person and Aunt
Phoebe corning to vistt us next weeks,
She puts in a cup of sugar for every
clip of tea she drinks." My suggestion
that she mix a little salt with the
sugar for Aunt Phoebe so as to make
it go farther and at :tie stone time
cure her tendencies towards having
so much sugar fell on deaf ears. She
was lost hi contemplation of sugar-
less clay
The communications from the battle
front came potu•hlg in an day. Mrs.
Higgins discovered twat Murphy's
store was sold ottt of sugar. Cousin
Oscar, the man with the money on
the Twelfth Sideroad, nas seen going
home with a bag in the buggy. The
bag was all covered with a blanket
and everybody was conVIn0N1 it was
sugar. Some had a notion of calling
the police.
The sugar -war was too much for a
mere 111a11 to stand. I decided to go
out for a walk back to the bush. Our
year's supply of wood has not been
cut yet and it 81)1)0111..3 as it I am go-
ing to have to clean up some fallen
trees and haul them up to the barn
and "buzz' them for itexit winter's
fuel supply. It is impossible to hire a
man to go into the bush and work
those day's.
The .snow crunched under foot with
the rasp of the frost. The sun had a
February glint to it and a certain
warmth when you stood on the shady
side of a little knoll just east of the
bush. A rabbit scampered out and
went hippety-hopping across the
snow. A partridge flattened into ob-
security as she heard the footsteps on
the snow. it took several aminates to
discover her outline against the par•
tfally rotted stump.
Then I sale it. A bee tree that was
marked out last Fall and then forgot-
ten! There it loomed up as a poten-
tial source of sugar supply. Illac't
nnd forbidding in appearance, that
tree ha,s untold wealth 1n the way
of'lioney.
As happy e • if I had discovered a
buried hoar;; of gold I went back to
the house. :Mrs. Phil had a number
of paper saeks on the table figuring
out t:;, runt of 5.'1ar on hand, She
was lamenting at the sane time the•
fact that during the previous week'
she hadn't bought the hundred-p^untl
sack of sugar as she had intencl:-d.
She scarcely heard me when I ask-
ed if honey was any good for baking.
Then it dawned on her anti she looked
up sinning, "I know what your think-
ing about, but honey is too dear to
buy. Vesicles we don't want to do
anything (liat will be unpatriotic."
However, one of these nights I
think we'll cut down the bee -tree and
it 1vi11 be a patriotic act because It
30111 help to conserve the sugar supply.
m'aleosigmmmvxzemmvumomo
9VALENTIINES lc to 25c
Men's ( Young Men's Suits
New blue tones, darker shades 22.95
SINGLE AND DOUBLE-BREASTED,
g
OVERCOATS
For Men and Young Men
TWEEDS and FLEECES,
TIP-TOP SUITS
Made-To-Aleastu'e
K�
16.95
29.75
WETTLAUFXR'S
+..J'' 414,5 GAIOS4XJc0JAO X:JA1/4Jc�►`SJe Jc7.�J� Je'
The Spirit f
Th'
oth
•:«�: ,; : . y:1.:$:;>::
flaniesAnewToday
TIIINK BACK to the old clays — when Canada
was young.
Think of the high courage, the indomitable will of
those pioneer women. Within the stockade or in
the open field, they toiled— yes, fought—by the
side of their men for the safeguarding of everything
they held dear.
LI the h'carts of the women of Canada, this old spirit
flames anew today ! Gone are the heavy muskets,
the log barricades—but the love of freedom, the
stubborn resolve to win through at all costs—these
things remain unchanged, unchangeable !
Grimly quenching their tears, mothers say "God
bless yott" to their fighting sons—everywhere young
women are serving where duty calls—the women of
Canada arc bound together 111 o110 common Cause.
In thousands of Canadian 11011108, woolen are revising
their family budgets, planning new economies, slak-
ing extra sacrifices --so that more and more money
will be available for the purchase of Victory Bonds.
They know— these WOIIiCn of Canada — that every
dollar loaned 1101 means 11101'e tanks—more guns—
more planes—more ships—more of everything which
is needed to smash IIitlerisni and bring Peace to all
the family hearths of the world.
National War Finance Committee, Ottawa, Canada
A43
Wednesday, Veit 11,19'12,
; • ••1•'c• • ••> %•s••s•h• ,,.;.,err ,..s.,;, , ., ,.;,.;, .
LYCEUM THEATRE •;
WING 1AM'—ONTARIO,
Two Shows Sat. Night
Thurs., Fri,, Sat,, Feb. 12.13-14 >•
"Charles Boyer, Paulette Goddard,'.
BELGRAVE
The liolgrave I'iriiiir's l.ltrb met
at the home of 11r, and Airs. Cecil
1VIteol('r on 'I'uc'c;rlay evening for their A Iced Cross
1( gular mooting, but on account of 1''rl(Iny night 111.
road conditions the attendance was 181(1, OIL J'7uchra 11101 ('rok'nule tear,
shall. The President, 'martin Gra';by, l'J Joycd until midnight, after tv111111
Olivia De Havlland, In tvati ill the chair, The mluuley of the ,Airs. Thompson and her (laughter,
AUBURN
RED CROSS SOCIAL.
THE STANDARD
Social wa,s held nn
the hovi1 of I'Ircy,
"' prevlons meeting were read by the , Viola, served lunch, A SIlver roll a
.• "1110!11 I3acic The 1)1111'!!" .I. 190 0411.110y; C. 11, Coupes, 11111 M1C. 11011 was taken, 111111 tyllI l0 donatPd
ALSO NEWS '.1. C'10nagllan gave It very good report lo Elle Red Cross.
" 011 what he had heard and observed I The weak before, the Social was
":Matinee Sat, niternoon at 2.30 p.m ;; while attending the co-opuralive short held at the !ionto of Mr, wad 31rs.
Mon., Tues., Wed., Feb, 16.17.16.. ‘70111'30 held al Guelph during the I'laetzer',l. The gatherings aro C0111.
('hrislni to vacation', Jamas 11!0,11!0 posed of uelgh1)our1,
.; —DOUBLE BILL— ,f. Invited the Club to meet at his home _
"Jimmy Lydon and :ane Prelsser In.•t for 1110 'March !III Ling which will be
.: f1 . held on 'Tuesday, March 3, A vote or A pleac;;ud evening was spent at
'" 1Ienry Aldrich Icor 't' IIiaii s tyus 404 1.011{1V(1 10 11 r. and Mrs, the home of 11 r. and lies. J. C. Sfult2
"' J. in the form of a farewell party for
+ Wheeler for their hospitality. Lunta
1 President" +• mewaat Ameal Who has 104;1 1 111 vi•
:1. was served and a social hour spent, ,
;.& Geo. Sanders & Wendy Barrie In,.
The 1'anng People's Society Of Knnr, chitty for military training al ICI 1-
;mum
GAY hAI,CO" NUnited ('hooch held n snclal evening
II friends of the new recruit. During
chener. Airs. Stoltz served dinner to
Y1•' -• on Wei11ras(lay night 111 the. bar0nlrn1
,. Of 1.110 ('harsh. The social took the the evening ;n appropriate address
Thurs., Fri„ Sat., Feb, 19.20.21 >. form of Progressive eiok.lnole and a tuns read to the gueot t! honor by
-'Pat 0 Brien, Constance Bennett, InHarold Erase and a pen 11d1 irons:!
gond limo was enjoyed by (hose pre.
N cc ZONE"
mit, '1'110 high scores were won by set writs pro.ionted by l.lvin Plunkett,
;. SUBMARINE LONE )I i', and Mrs. Albert Vincent and the \Ir. Ament thanked his frlchuls for
their generous gift.
Mon., Tues., Wed., Feb, 23.24.25 ' Airs, N• Keating. Lunrh was nerved I '11;tny homes on the Base line of
Fred Astaire, Rita Hayworth, In .t. and a pleasantevening brought to n Hallett 110\0 n1AmrheIs or their family
De
sick with measles,
ccph
.t (dose.
"You'll Never Get Rich" .t. Miss Dorothy Galley, Grace Colley, I itobel't Craig, 11.CA:1.'., Toronto, Stl
*.V+++.8.4.6:0 44 464:4+r;..;rr;. • ++r;rr;.r;.r;.- j 11 Ile \\"tiI811, Margaret Coulton•, E111111 ripint the o'eel(-eiii1 with itis twenty, As
\Valln(:0, Kennoth \\ho001', Clifton .MI,, and Mrs, William Craig,
—
Walsh, Mr. and A1rs, C. It. (buttes, \1r. and Mrs. Arnold Craig, St. Au -
attended the "At Monne" of the Normal gustlne, have returned from their
:Schaal In Stratford held on Friday honeymoon trip to Oshluwa and Chat- Card Of '1'haI11is
low scores by Kenneth Umbar and
9i
w
rr
octorogi erc:reR,t;, 1ZI z.4'..d:r. 1„L,...n,r.,z,y„•, ,f,T., Rtpwrz'vtf,c4,4..;(Clckti.c4tore'rCvatzlSte..-ucLGilt"I:,r:,tP.+:4'.L C'C'3lc:4tatv.vatet6KtEtetdl
I, I)1)' if, 1 r, 1
.P
1'
I11Jr.A1.1>`L, CA1'1'I'A14 '1'11i :1'1'1U ic1';GEN1''1'l1I A'1'.i E
CLINTON. GODERICH,
NOW PLAYING: DANCE HALL & NOW PLAYING: Charlie Ruggles
CHARTER PILOT
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
Fred Astaire, Rita Hayworth,
John Hubbard, Robert Benchley,
and Osa Maslen.
lie jollier! the army to dodge 0 w(
man, hal !wound up a 1i 11 II,•I.
In his aria <.
"You'll Never (yet Rich”
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Adolphe Menjou, Carole Lands
John Hubbard, Charles Butter-
worth and Patsy Kelly
'T'he're i.4 something radically wrong
with you funnybone it' you don't
cote this the most hllartuu,; comedy
of the year.
"ROAI) SII01V"
COMING: She Knew All the Ans•
wers and Meet Boston Blackie,
Mat.: Sat, and Holidays, 3 p.m.
t-a-a.?/,s;1,,2(1,2;;DIZ Jia.2/'.1-'22..,4212,D'i2,e',:ii°d,A .2to,3 71;13"ol.?;:122117
in: Th^ Parson of Panlnlint and
Power Dive.
Mon., Tuec., Wed.—Twin 13111
Joan Bennett and Francllot Tone
in a I ri';ltI an l brl,l. ernlu!o
She Knew all the Answers
Chester Morris & Rochelle Hudson
"Meet Boston !Mackie"
Thurs., Fri., Sat.—Twin Bill
Rudy Vallee and Ann Miller
with a gre'al e0,-1 in a grl at musical
'rillie Out For Rhythm"
Rull, Bellamy &. Iviargaret Lindsay
"lalcry Queen's Penhouse
Mystery"
COMING: Dance Hall and
Hurry, Charlie, Hurry
Mat.: VPed., bat., Holidays, 3 p,m, Mat.: Sat. and HoI'dayr a'. 3 p.rn,
rf)
SEAFORTi ,_
NOW PLAYING: Roland Young &
Juan Blundell in Topper Returns
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
Phillip Dorn and Jeffrey Lynn
pr, 0(11 ;1 dramatic atic ;nlal,l,itiou of
Eris' Mania Iteul:uyu gr1'(e:nal
novel "I Ir,I.-;col"
"So Ends Our Night"
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Cesar Romero and Carole Landis
( „• +sere,! in (1 :;oat,' and
„rjr;Il llr;,iett t•unietly rulrlhi(('
"DANCE MALL"
COMING: MODEL WIFE
r
ii
I
tq
iy
N
YY
d
In ?ieniol'ianl
\IASIJ,N--In loving Int mory of
John .1. Mason, who died ': years
January ;i:$t, 1'J40,
EAST WAWANOS'H
.Mr, and Mrs, K. Irish (nee Annie night. haat.
Mr
ar lather, you are not forgotten
ough on earth you are no more,
If in memory you are with 00
you
always \yl'1c Ise lc»•e,
1.;
r'1
' 7,1
t,
1,
Iu
Sadly ori„sed by %vile and children.;
i
M•P
Parker) newlywe1r1, of Tomato, visl• ;Air. Robert A1lchl. of Aforrle under. 1 wish to exupr0ss lily s111:•erc appre
\ ,, , Pte. Orville 'McPhee, Uul/°1'i Novit
ed 11°1'Sister, Mi`35 \lily 1 arkel 011(1 went 4111 operation in Stratford (Heeler' ciatloll for the Many nets of
lilll(Illei;,
Scotia, with his parent
Mr, wId Mrs,
Mr. E. Parker, 011 Thursday. and sympathy extended to m0 in my
al hospital on Thursday wlien he had Thomas :McPhee,
'Mins 'I'lhelum Caldwell was 1101110 for an eye removed. Mrs, Cain•le A:rnlrsU'ong, \Voodstock, i'lud bereavement, for 1°4°1” of car.!
the weekend, \Irs. Viotor Aitcheton and twin ,11thJtrs ,loin An•thur and to the Rev.:1, Sinclair, and the
The Radio Forumwas held at the sons, 1)lck and Douglas, nre visiting
home of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Mc(lonv- her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Normae'
an en !Monday with a largo altendanch Walsh, -
The next meeting 1s to ho 1101(1 at the Mr. Harry 'McGuire went to Toronto ,J, W1lsrlar• hlg with prayer, ,1, C. S1011z 0.0.-; ap
llama of Mr. and Mrs. Dan. Manahan. Monday where he w'111 undergo further (J1ra. Fred Ross visited at Dungan- (pointed secretary, Encouraging re -
A cordial invitation Isextended to all, .un edlrtl treatment. 71011. ports were given by the 1-.0.:rita113 0:
There were 2'1 children at the Feb-•tho (liftmen!,societies. '11,1etro.u;.n
eatery meeting of the Mission Band ,,,r•'s report showed a substantial hal-
alJCalox United Church( 011 Sunday 1(1100 on hand. A letter wait read frc, 1
meriting. Following the call to 1Vor• 1(0)' T. W. Goodwill of Prince Edward 'ship, (filen Yulgblut.t gave the Scrip- (Island, a former minister, congraull-
litre reading and 43411 Craig offered ating the congregation on having the
grayer, Letteas of appreciation were church free of debt, and W.011 Mg thema'ead from 'Miss Lila Yungblut, R. N., ,continued success,
Hearst, dor n Christmas. bale, and Owing to 111 11°;11111, Alfred ll,)liln-
from Ilio Christmas Juniors Fund, son, who has been church treasurer
Ten paid their annual nt011)OlersliiP for a number of years,10ud.red 111-
fen. ,Mars. Hugh C, \Pusan told the u•esignation. Mrs, \\'illi001 T. Robison
story of a Wan' of honor' from the was appointed to fill the vacancy.
study book. The members of the session ere
The annual sleeting of Knox Pres- John Hasten, \V, '1', IL:ddell, .1, C.
bytel'hul Church was held •ilonday nd- ISlloltz, William Thom, J. .1. \\'Il ion,
tornoon. Tho minister, Hey.- A, 111„ the retiring managers, J. C.: Stoltz
Boyle, presided and opened the meet- and W. T. 1I1(1(el1, were re-elect _d,
. The other managers are \V, T. Robi-
son, William I oble, \Villlam \1'uguer,
4Jeorge F. Yungblutt, Ernest Ineking-
ladies for their singing, a100 the 1)101)
s1r, and 3l's. Iiarold Nicholson, Int, Ales. Au:;liu
Call, Mr. and \1r . Hugh Ben'nc'tt,
Port Albert, with Mr, and Mrs. John
Western Canada Special Bargain Excursions
1''1(011 ALA, STATIONS iN NMSTI]RN CANADA
Going 1)aily February 21 - Mar. 7, 1942 inclusive
J(ETURN LiMIT-45 DAYS
TICK,111',S GOOD IN Coaches, In Tourist Sleeping Cars or in Standard
Sleeping Cars at. Special Reduced Rates for 0\1011 class,
COS'I' 01' A('COMMODATJON IN SLi91J1"IcNG CARS ADDITIONAL
BAGGAGE CHECKED. Stopovers at all points en route.
SIMILAR EXCURSIONS PROM WESTERN TO EASTERN CANADA
DURING SAME I'IJRIOD.
Tickets, Sleeping Car Reservations and All Information from any agent
ASIC FOR HANDBILL
CANADIAN NATIONAL
Saving is now proclaimed a National Need
if Canada is to carry on, full -out in this war. Upon
the shoulders of each one of us falls some part of the
responsibility for helping to finance the war.
The sooner you use your savings book more than your
cheque book — the better for you and for Canada.
Take your income seriously. Put every dollar you can
into a savings account.
Save k Ateeriocze
CHARTERED BANKS
O F.:•.CANADA
4.
,,e yr a.y: .4se.>.yaey,. •.y•neo•n..,.pp,.r,>:-.. ;,. . .,.,}... ^, tw? ,e•,4•f. , , gra, x„y
r1
11
Va!enthe's Day
Valentine Folders,. , 5 for 5c, 3 for 5e, 2 for 5c, 5c
Novelty Valentines.. 5 for 5c, for 5e, 2 for 5c, 5c
Valentine Paper Napkins 1 5c
Valentine ,felly Beaus :-.:''!' Ib. 10c
Valentine Opera (>iunls . half lb. 10c
Valentine Cinnamon Hearts half 111. 10c
Boxed Chocolates 29c and 35c
6.9
bi
r'.
,i
rt
r.)
r
ri
Taylor's 5e to $1.00 Store4,
1.1
''1
r.
' ,: 1'.-. ,aiu cr,,"-I, : ,r l «.«..7t.-i, I ,nlr '1.•'-,"",«i4:c'3i' i i.:,: r«.:/:•.r'..«5, .^.:;)1 :'.i:.il"t S:.' 'ie: , ' t.-iii'lu•:Z17i+'li1i . •.
PHONE 71.
NOTICE '1'O CREDITORS
ri
In the Ec,late of William Henry Howe,' t1 STOVES ij
+I
late of the Village of Blyth, in th,i 1 N1) IIE:1'1'E1?S °3
County of Huron, Esquire, Deceased, i'
t.,
All Persons U:Iying claims a;,ius1 '; "T TE I ITCIIE SS"
t
1110 Et;tale of the above de; ett','d are 11-1'hlte enamel finish d
required to filo the smite will! I $89.0O !1
l r: ry
1l'Morn, Executor of the ,0,1
on en• before the
:1.1)„ 19.1y, aft, r wl i
wilt 1)e distribate l anlen'st t'•
ties entitled thereto, 110\11..'
only to the claims of wlI'e;1
shall have been given.
I'A'rl';I) ut ('lisllon this rill day (r'
lebruary, Al),,11112.
JIN(ILA.N'I), K.C., Clinton, Ont.,
Sulieitor for the (;aid I{1;laty,
INTERNATIONAL
there Mti souletllIl g about an hoar•
bolt(nn and Alfred 1101 Basun. Trus- 1natlenal 1'Inu•ing Match that a person
tees, ,Io111 1)00rr, .1, C. Stoltz and Her- never forget' -4, S'lagc,l In the ori:<p.
man Poor; delegates to the 001111.01 !Vail ale with the glory of autumn at
.committee, George 1'. Yung -blunt, J. C. ills fill peals the, International is stud-
Slolhi, and 11'. T. Itiddell; pu slt;hlug (led with highlights fon' the visitor ...
committee, Veranda Daer 010 ,I. t'. ; highlights that remain for many years
Stoltz; organists, .T0111 Huston, !clear and fresh in 1110 nlemary.
Donald loss and Josephine \Veit; 'I'her,.ulds of cars and trucks no's'
Plate collectors, ,John .T, Wilson and 'along the highways in the e;u'ly' morn-
John Ituslon; ushers, Robert Scott ,ing to converge 011 the site of the
Allyl l Ieran:w Urea, l uvltch. What wa; 0 peaceful, quiet
Place just before dawn soon hecolnes
a scene of hustling acl1411), The
\latch" Is 011 fur another day .. ,
The staccato hark of tractor nn,lin ,
warming- rp. the shuffling note of
Many thousand.; of feet, the cheerful
'clanging of Pans as the lunch booth
operator,.; prepare 1'0r an011,e1, rushing
day of buslncs8 ... ail sepia 10 merge
hl 0 salute to the new day.
The day i; mooched. .\11 nlurninc
and up until mid-aftentoon the cars
and 111;1; keep e;treanling iu to the
Morris Coun il Meeting
The Council Ines in the ha1 011 Feb-
ruary 9, with all the 1110101)00s present,
'the Reeve prceilding.
The minutes of the last meeting
W 1e tend and adopted on motion of
,Cecil Wheeler and Harvey Johnston,
Earl Auden:am was arlpoluted \:;.;(':;•
, soy for the township,
'Moved by Harvey Johnston., scc•01111-
'ed by Janlers \hichle, that the town-
-ship donate one hundred (lollies
(['10{1.110) toward the inlerlratiemt;
'Ploughing 'Lrtrh,—CarrlOd.
IMoved by Cecil \\'heeler, seconded
by Clr•u'le, Co 1110x, that the Reeve
attend the ('rood Roads Convention
F',obruary 211, 2,11.—Carried.
Moved by Charles C0111 103, seeaad1(1
by 3nanles :3lichle, that the auditors
report be accepted,—Carrled.
Moved by Charles C'oult15, seconded
by Harvey 101111ston, than. the u143(1hig
adJourn to alert again 011 March 11
1042, at '1 p. in.
The following accounts were paid:
Dr. Crawford, M. 0. 1I.
F. Duncan, IT. 0. 11. :1.110
P,'MrNab, 11. 0. 11, 11,11.l0fl'1
(1, AMarlln, 13. 0. 11. 3,tlu
Municipal World (. u'.-c:':''^:;s) (3;.(11101
Dr. Stewart ('back solar)') . , , , 10.00
Ontario Hospital (Indigent) 45.0o
It. 3, Lovell CO, (Assessors and
Tax rolls) , 13.'2'
T)lyt.h Standard (advertising) . , ,113
'I K1bbonls 1)rug Store
(fumigators) . 511;
i11as. Nellie Logan (relic') 2'4.11'1'
Airs. (log Graaf (relief) Dead and D• •,' 'i nit?'( is
b'1.0d Logan (after-care) 7.t' ff. , yc i ..rl !d ,' ,
A. 1I. Erskine (taxes) . 1,011
Jars. Shearer (Ploughing Match) 1011.00
Chas. Johnston (auditor) ".-'.00
Root. 31ol(inanon (auditor)
1lobi, McKinnon (postage and
stationery) .. 11.7.1' is
George C. 'Marlin, Clc1'i
parking lots. 'There 1 a liecrr-en lie^
flow of humanity 1111 and down the
wend rndd011 streets of the 'Penned
('ily where tie machinery (1+play$ 111.1,
congregated. I''arnl 010)008 (f ;111 11111:1
1.041', planes zoom overhead, people
tall( and laugh anti move on not 1( the
headlands to watch the plowing.
There Is a carnival spirit about the
International . . . and yet it IN ung a
carnival'. The directors of the Intern; -
110na1 Plowing \101011 have demon-
strated that serious displays of farm
m chinery a nl educational exhibits
le'slgned to help the fawner Improve
Ills methods of farming can he enjoy-
ed by all Blas )1c, of people, 1t 1s 11
a three-ring eircu1 au(l ye) you will
find that the People who atte•111 tl'
11111 tell are just as happy and Inv
hearted as 111)' wnlell iuc the e1111'. „r
IL el 1-011S. \\lly" llrcause thele are n,,
"gyp" games in the Tented (-11)- ....
More are 110 "eel-rich-nnir';"
to lure hard-earned dol'•,... --
instead infm'nl:ltioil pro -T.' •'
j
c^t f)n
, $56.00
faarrr' Size Quebec
I-Ieaters $19.00
C. T. Dobbyn
ty
6.4
A
A
rl
1•'1
)i✓ec(a;r l s.;a,►yr.7lcl ,oi:? c,1 7ea'r,3r m °'1c1arTJ;J
rH
'7
'4
'1
17
,',7. . CC :CIT •( ,n,,C IC. '4 •" :r,u CurCUs1 t t tlt"i ti tl
ti
Monuments!
To those contonlplllting build-
ing a Monument . , . Get my ti
prices before buying, C'ethetery'',j
Letter -7 a specialty.
A : ',Nork Guaranteed.
4,
John Grant
of
ty
CLINTON MARBLE AND
GRANITE WORKS 114
.;LINTUN — ONTARIO. 11
ti
eS
Successor to Ball & Zapfe,
vnlcrtaiuing way . , , information (hal
1111 man of the faun can 0)100'11 vas -
fly 14) ill- 01111 1311.13(51,
year the International flowing
\l itoli in Huron county Evill del i)8
share in supporting Ihv 10080 of tlse
Empire, Iced ('ross ho0th5 manned
by volunteer w•urkers from the district.
will caner to the requirements (If the
people 111 the way of food. .\11 pr`zes
will 1'1 paid 111 \\'ar Savings ('ertifi-
cafes, Farmers will be instructed in
how to farm in a 1110re efficient WILY,
'These aro hilt a few of the things
which 1'011111 be 1110utiou1'd. 11111 III101A
is ccrl;lin, hnlvever. The Interimtion it
1'luwyllrg 311ttch is being geared in 1 11 14
year of war to do the very utmost for
the war effort.
°duller 13, 1.1, 15 ;0(1 Ili of 194''1
3lark those dales un your calendar as
four red letter days 101' the solidly of
Huron and surr•nnn';lin•'; v.:11 11)10'T.
EDW'"RD W. ELLIOTT
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
FOR THE COUNTY OF HURON,
r' ,r .•. ,:, ,1.'< ,'„ 1'r'(1":1) Anawere:l
1•'1110(11111 ar•'in0ru1('iItR can Ila
111^ole fel' 811',' dol,' at Tho 1111•th Stan
, ,•11 n "01 ('limon
'•r :•nd
.r ntrn(i.
• Vt.... 1.111. ..,W..;..,,..,...:,. "_,. »- <-,.., _3 t,.:,.h:,,,..W'fl,t.,,.r,.,.,
REMOVED PROMPTJ.X.
PHONE 15, SEAFORTH, COLLECT.
DARLING and CO. of CANADA', LTD.
a( ma(mr tDiAB m110;marl»A7tNXII . DMilitisiri)INDIMasla;
Family -Sized Farm
To Solve Problem
E o o n o in I o Advantage of
Small Farm Operated by
Farmer and Family
The United Stated Dep:u'uont
of Agriculture, through radio pro-
grams and other media is impress-
ing upon ruralist 4 Pm practicality
of the small a(;ra ultural tract
which may be operated by the
farmer and his faintly with little
recourse to hired help,
'1'h:tt the plan is fcasibid, thou•
ands of farmers whose modest
acre l t:ntdetl with a mini-
mum er 'i.u•dsale to weather the
bleat, ; l:iutl of 193i to 1933, can
testit>, This tea: mailed no twlz•
aril! •, tits-itei.11 (e otherwise, In
inc..;l . ^s it ar•.un that the farm.
ur h re.11i::rd 1 h + eeoaoulle ad -
van( s 01' the faintly -size tract
Ione le lure the Department under-
noon ti) point it out.
boor years he had followed the
pen, • of not putting all his agri-
cultural eggs into one basket. He
raise,( wheat, cure and oats, but
In judicious oilmaitic maintained
a fru in flock and se'd poultry and
eggs; he raised pigs and livestock,
kept cows and marketed milk and
cream. In short, years before the
phra,,o grew' 10 11s present popular•
if y, he practised diversified farm -
Ing. Largely because of these small
but tit( -,:(1y Sotll'ced of revenue, he
w318 able w'h011 thy. S:111111l carne to
sleet his tax and other ohlii;atione
while his 11101'0 "progressive"
neii;hburs tw11o, lured by high grain
prices, had acquired land beyond
their power to pay, stew their
farms foreclosed.
Sleuths to lessons learned dur-
ing the depre-cion, the farmer is
re .ainiag much of what he had
lost. "C'hain store" agriculture,
groups of farms owned by non-
resident. investors and operated by
,paid labor, is gradually becoming
a thing of the past.
In calling attention to the prao-
ticality of the faintly -size farm,
the Department of Agriculture not
only points out the solution of an
agrouomio problem, but guards
against a repetition of the catas-
trophe which befell ruralists atter
the First World War.
Skirl 0' The Pipes
Cheers Fighters On
Soots The World O'er WIN
Thrill WI' Thle Stirring
Tale
The harsh, compelling sound ot
the bagpipes is not every one's
music; there is & story of
Frenchman 'who fainted when the
pipers played behind his °hair es
a mark of honor at a Scottish din-
ner. But 1)o those who are con-
scious of its appeal the skirl of the
pipes le heart -stirring beyond all
telling. Even the finest military
hand, with full apparatus of shouts
Ing brass and pounding mow
anon, cannot compete with the
elemental drone and wall that
ands the blood tingling and caUi
up an involuntary cheer. Emphati-
cally the pipes are Instruments
of war, meet to sound the charge,
to ,llyinu the victory with wild
abandon and to mourn the fallen.
In this war, it aoemed that the
pipes would be stilled, that Scots-
men would fight without their eery
summons—just as they were sent
into battle without the treasured
panoply of kilt, bonnet and sporran.
But when the commandos struck at
Nazi garrisons in Norway, lo, it was
a bagpipe that spurred them on!
True, It was an Lngtsihman who
carried It—Major Jack Churchill (a
good name; Corporal John bora it
before they made hits Duke of Marl-
borough), who had learned the art
of piping in Prance early in the
war But the effect upon the young
commandos was the same as it a
plpe•major of purest highland an-
cestry had officiated, "As the bar-
ges touched shore," one of the men
who took part iu the raid explained,
"most of us were slightly' scared,
but fright disappeared when Major
Churchill leaped ashore with his
bagpipes and began to play. You
know what the pipes be to a Scot.
Tonto change was remarkable, Every
ono of us was full ot confideuce."
There is a lesson here, although
'unfortunately Major Churchill was
badly wounded in driving it home.
The dehumanization of war has not
yet progressed to such a degree
that the music that makes soldiers
light can be lguored. Major Chur-
chill, Southern though he may be,
deserves an honored place in the
long roll of pipers who havo made
military history. And the pipes
have displayed again their strange
mower over the hearts of men.
Canada To Add
12,000 To Navy
Canadian Naval strength, now
standing at 27,000 officers and
ratings, will he increased by an-
other 12,000 by March, 1913,
Navy Minister dacdonald told
a presa conference recently. He
said this would mean that in just
over three years the navy would
have grown from less than 2,000
officers and men to 10,000, The
output of ships wnA "excellent"
and during the post mummer had
Averaged two a week of all types,
NOM JIM
GUARDING PACIFIC "GIBRALTAR"
Malayan seamen inspect spiked floats of the "boom" defenses
guarding channels into Singapore harbor.
Floating Dry Dock
For Atlantic Coast
Two million rivets and 10,000
tons of steel platen are being
put together to stake a floating
drydock at Halifax, the first on
the Atlantic coast.
Already the three base sections
of the huge drydock have been
launched and the job is expected
to be completed this spring. Up-
per work of two of the sections is
nearing completion. Launched
separately, the two have been
joined together and may be used
to repair ships before the third
1s added to them.
From the end the floating dry-
dook looks like a huge "U". A
ship going into the dock floats
into the "U", the tanks are pump-
ed out, and the dock rises with the
ship high and dry inside.
The huge structure, which
looks somewhat like an aircraft
carrier, will ba moored to a dock.
Heavy anchors will be placed on
the harbor bottom, and lines
ashore will Lead to one 112 -ton
concrete block and six 80 -ton
Meeks,
Spiking Rumors
Members of the American Leg-
ion are smacking war rumors
right on the button. Under their
anti -rumor campaign, the Legion-
naires listen patiently to tale
bearen,'then flash a button with
the inscription: "How Do YOU
Know?"
Saye Price Ceilings
Have Aided Farmers
Price ceilings have been of ma-
terial benefit to farmers, Profes-
sor W. M, Drummond of Guelph
recently told members of the
Ontario Vegetable Growera Asso-
ciation in annual convention.
Professor Drummond, head of
the agricultural economics de-
partment of the Ontario Agricul-
tural College at Guelph, said the
price ceilings halted the tendency
towards widening the disparity be-
tween prices of farm products and
those of commoditlee the farmer
himself had to buy.
During the First Great War
only 10 per cent of the national
income was spent for war pur-
poses, he added. Tho present fis-
cal year would show 45 per cent
of the national income spent for
war. Agriculture had not been
considered a war industry until
recently, but was gaining rapidly
in thio respect.
They Are Prepared
The story is being told of an
Italian tank captured in Libya
which was found to have three
reverse speeds and ono forward.
The British captor thought he
would have some fun with the
Italian in charge, "Why", he in-
quired, "do you have that forward
speed on there?"
"Well", replied the Italian,
"we might he attacked from the
rear."
THIS CURIOUS WORLD BFe gulson
1
-7isa
- et -t - SUCJ<I NG
- VAMPIRE
BATS
HAVE SUCH SMALL.
GULLET'S THAT TH EY
CANNOT SWALLOW
/D FOOD.
stj
12
,A•. DEAN I'J�(N�WUQ
OCILLA, GEORGIA,
TAMESPORCUP/NES'
AS A NOBBY,
PAPAGOS INDIANS
DATE THEIR YEAR FROM THE HARVEST
OF THE FRUIT OF THE
GiANT CACTUS.
k.7 COPS. 11)8 8)1,EA SERVICE, INC
A, D. LINDSAY took home a porcupine from the Canadian
woods some seven yearn ago, and the animal, "Rusty" by name
Is an affectionate pet, which, according to Mr, Lindsay, refutes the
contention that "porcupines are too dumb to be tamed," Another
porky, recently acquired, already is quite tame,
NEXT; What aro the favorite times of day for snow to fall?
POP --On the House
IT'S NO USG SUING
YOU FOR YOUR
WINE BILI, --
\AVI.L CALL Ir
PAID!
JEW
I.16REIS YOUR
RECEIPT;
SUNDAY
SCHOOL
LESSON
LESSON VII.
THE HEALING MINISTRY OF
JESUS
Mark 1:35-3:12; Luke 4:42.4.1;
5:12.39.
PRINTED TEXT, Mark 2: 1-12.
GOLDEN TEXT.—Ho hacl com-
passion on them, and healed their
sick, ' 1attltett'
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
Time.- 'I'he Spring and early
Summer of A.D. 2S.
Place.---l'or the most part, Ca-
pernaum, though the preaching
tour, of course, covered a great
part of Galilee.
Our ent ire lesson will reveal
au unceasing activity on the part
of our Lord, and the accoulplish-
ment, of a vast amount of work,
in 11 very brief space of time. The
lesson opens with our Lord far
out in the desert place alone,
early 111 the morning, praying,
That h111(1 long !Jay in Capernaum
needed sleep to restore His physi-
cal power but more than that it
needed solitary prayer 1111(1 con-
werse With God. Tho harder our
work, the more we need solitude
and prayer.
L'y saying that lie could not
tarry any longer in the spot where
He had just been ministering, hut
must goo 00 to other cities, Jesus
laid down a principle which 1t
would have been wise had the
church followed throughout all the
centuries of its history. Ile wish-
ed to preach where the Message
had never been heard; he desired
to save those to whom had been
given no opportunity for life.
1. "And when he entered again
into Capernaum after some days,
it was noised that he was in the
house. 2. And many were gath-
ered together, so that there was
no longer room for then,, no, not
even about the door: and he spoke
the word unto then,. 3. And they
conte, bringing unto him a man
sick with the palsy, borne of four.
4. And when they could not
conte nigh unto him for the
orowd, they uncovered the roof
where he was: and when they
had broken it up, they let (sown
the bed whereon the sick of the
palsy lay." To understand the
scene, it is necessary to remem-
ber that the house was most like-
ly a fisherman's cottage, low and
flat -roofed. The roofs were made
by laying first large beans, and
then across them rude joists. On
their were laid flat stones or
slabs of tile or dried clay, on
which was spread earth or gravel
rolled hard. The nlen first dug
through the earth and then pulled
up the tile slabs thus easily mak-
ing an opening. The roof is only
a fow feet high, and by stooping
down and holding the corner of
the bed (merely a thickly -padded
quilt) they could readily let down
the sick man.
5. "And Jesus Soong their faith
saith unto the sick of the palsy,
son, thy sins are forgiven." Jesus
recognized the faith both of the
man and of his friends. No re-
quest had been made but Jesus
read the heart; lie saw the yearn-
ing of the sufferer for healing,
not only of his body but of his
soul; he recognized the sorrow
for the sin which had produced
the sickness, and the anguish of
remorse; and at once he slim the
sword of pardon and of peace.
6. "But there were certain of
the scribes silting there, and rea-
soning in their hearts, of why
doth this elan thus speak? he blas-
phemeth. Who can forgive sins
but one, even God?" The scribes
would not speak out like men and
call on Jesus to defend His words,
If they had been sure of their
ground, they should have boldly
charged him with blasphemy; but
perhaps they were afraid that IIe
could show good cause for His
speech. Perhaps they were afraid
to oppose the tad(, of enthusiasm
for hili, So they content them-
selves with comparing notes
among themselves, and affect to
despise Ilial.
8, "And straighway Jesus, per-
ceiving in his spirit that they so
reasoned within themselves, saith
unto them, why reason ye these
things in your hearts? 9. Which
is easier, to say to the sick of the
palsy, Thy sins are forgiven; or
to say, Arise, and take up thy
bed, and walk? 10, But that ye
may know that the Son of man
RADIO HEPORTER
DIALING WITH DAVE:
With Daylight Saving Time now
general throughout tho Continent,
listeners 111 the Eastern Daylight
Saving Time zone, will actually get
the benefit of all extra how' of
radio entertainment, for a largo
majority of tho A1Iu ric:w network
show's eenttug into (':Meda, now
come one hole' earlier than former -
1y. Charlie McCarthy 1s heard on
Sundays now at eight o'clock --
followed by the Inner Sanctum at
eight -thirty. Dr, 111011's 'l'rne or
False show will be, broadcast at
8,30 Monday nights, instead of
9,30. The Radio 'Theatre — the
Music Hall and many of the day -
Hine shows will come into your
home the horn' earlier. lf, of course,
you've been 011 standard time,
such shows will bo hoard as usual.
• • *
'there have been a number of
important time changes In Can-
adian Network shows, which affect
all listeners: 'rho daily Happy
Hang show Is now broadcast at 1.15
to 1.45 p.ul. — three quarter hours
earlier than before, The Musical
Beauty ,lox with 1101) Munoz) con-
ducting, has been moved ahead
one hour on 'Thursday nights —
to ten o'clock, 14.1),S.'1' Share the
\Veep', however, will be brpadcust
at U(0 usual time, 8,30 Saturday
nights. 111111(10(1 Rhythm also stays
in its accustomed 'Tuesday night
8.30 (11110. WO will puss along news
of further expected changes,
Freddie 111111111, whose sweet band
was 11) sensation of 1941, really
has the knack of picking the
'Splotlight' tines: Ile was the first
hath authority on earth to for-
give sins (he saitl' to the sick of
the palsy), 11. I say unto thee,
Arise, take up thy hod, and go
unto thy house. 12. And he arose,
and straightway toolc up his bed,
and went forth before them all,
insomuch that they were all
amazed, and glorified God, saying,
We never saw it on this fashion,"
Strange it was that these so -culled
spiritual loaders of the people
should he so bitterly opposed to
the One who was bringing such
great spiritual blessing to multi-
tudes of people, which they them-
selves could not confer. But
Jesus kliew how to silence their
HORIZONTAL
1, 6 American
frontiersman,
10 Biscuit.
11 Branches.
12 Refrigerant.
14 Sphere of
action.
16 To possess.
17 To depart,
18 Scarlet,
19 Humor,
20 On.
22 Perceiving
beforehand.
27 Nostrils,
29 To damage,
30 Oak fruit.
32 Golf club.
33 Goddess of
vegetation.
35 To prepare for
printing.
36 Lines of ad-
vance,
38 To fix fast.
42 Tea tester,
46 Prepared,
47 Eye tumor,
49 Elk.
JI
to record 'Tschaikowaky's Plano
C'oucerto In the modern forst —
and around four months ago, did
It nice iliscing of hose O'Day —
the tune that's topping 'em all
like wildfire today, And an added
note; Freddie is now playing at
New York's elite \V:Idorf•Astorla
Hotel, and Dlnitln Shore, NBC's
"rime to Smile' songstress, hu
opened an extended engagement
with tho Martin Band, Freddie Is
featured, by the way, on C1(Oe's
dinner hour Parade of hands, ev-
ery friday at 6,30!
. • •
1150 listening tips:
\\'ith Hio IJappy Gang going at
1,15, ('l((C's Tolegulz, which
popular program, by the way, has
drawn close to 3000 letters during
It's first two wooks on the air,
goes to 1,45 o'clock, and is short-
ened to a daily quarter hour, With
the Breakfast Club going across
the board at nine is the morning,
80010 changes have taken place in
the nine t0 toll 0,1(1. shift. Jean
Giliard is now hoard at ten and
a new show, the Record Album,
will feature Jack Wilkinson dally
for half an hour at 10.30 — other
fixtures in the nine to ton Hour
have either been discontinued or
shifted. Eight to nine on Monday
evening is 0 stand -out quiz hour —
with the now streamlined "What's
On ,\iy Mind" being heard from
8,00 to 8.30, and Dr, harry Iiagen's
national "True or False" allow
following 8.30 to 9,00!
Record of the week is Freddie
Martin's "Rose O'Day!„
questionings, Of course only God
could forgive sine, Itis declara-
tion that 1110 1111111'34 81118 were for-
given had to do with an inner
matter, and his critics could deny
that such an absolution had been
accomplished. But for this ratan,
helpless with paralysis for years
to now stand up, leave his bed
and walk away, was an external
fact, which no plan could deny.
Jesus certainly meant, by per-
forming this miracle, that He, who
had power to deliver this man
from his paralysis, was also the
One, and only Ono, who had
power to actually cleanse a man
from his sins,
FRONTIERSMAN
Lt.
ST
HA
ETA
A 1 ,R
LIAC
E,H
Answer to Previous Puzzle
T IIR
NL5_15_11_ .
SEREU 'PIENS
D TfEAM ET
TI CAL OK
I_-, T' P Ell- I
L1F NIAP L
N N�E PiOPtAL
CAL,A O'DE
S iC
MAL ;: A LIEA
RIE A - C�U"0.1gIN Y_
NIF(ENICE
AIE3.A TAT S
50 Mother.
51 Shoe fitter.
53 Measure of
area.
54 He was an
or
searcher for
new lands in
Kentucky
55 He was
soldier.
VERTICAL
2
a
In
a row,
3 Midday,
4 S'ck.
5 Funereal
songs,
6 Bract,
7 Rowing tool,
8 Sheaf.
19 Bird.
21 One time.
22 Opposed to
con,
23 Mooley
apple,
24 Teller of tales,
25 Three.
26 Thick shrub,
28 Measure,
31 Rhode Island
(abbr.)
33 Bed,
34 Rigid.
36 Bashful,
37 To soften
leather
39 Northeast
(abbr.)
40 Sloping drive
in a building,
41 ).and right.
9 Four plus five 43 To fly
12 He was a — 44 Moldings,
or leader of 45 Electric unit.
settlers, 47 Feminine
13 Decays. pronoun.
15 His was a lite 48 You.
of hazards or 51 Senior (abbr.)
—s, 52 Road (abbr.)
46
50
Frel
1
WELL 1 WI -IAT ARE YOU
WAITING
FOR ?
2
(l:+lalre9 6y The aetl Prnd(c.le ln•.1
12 43 94 15
1199
52 53
55
By J. MILLAR WATT
ISNIT IT USUAL TO GIVE
A FELLOW A DRINK
WHEN NE SETTLES
HIS
ACCOUNT?
1
TSO PLACE FOR THIS PET
"If you don't need it, don't buy it," is the government's advice
to Canadians.
This is the year when it is smart to look shabby, mart not to
Thentertain lavishly, when it is smart to walk and not drive your car.
e people who maintain their usual standard of living are not
patriotic.
Many people have more money to spend now than they have had
for many years. This is the time they may be tempted to purchase
things which they will soon discover are just white elephants and of
little use in their households.
Although it is fun to spend money, war 1s a grim business and
now is the time to save not spend. There will be enough goo& in
Canada to go around only if people do not buy extravagantly but are
careful in their purchases.
Now is the time to save money for war savings' stumps, certifi-
cates and bonds. Save monay to win the war and when it is wog}
ind the Industries again begin manufacturing for civilians -spend
these savings and keep the w !cele of business turning.
Solve This One Modern Etiquette
John Byrne, itinerant black-
emitb, confronted tire rationing
effielala with this complaint:
Without tires ke can't travel
about to shoe horses. Without
shoes the horses can't replace
autos. Without horses some army
work will be held up, State of-
ficials passed the buck to Wash-
ington.
1. What type of conversation
is in good order M the dinner
table?
2. Is it all right for a woman
to speak to & man on the street
if she le not certain of hie iden-
tity?
E. If several members of a
family go together to buy a wed-
ding gift, is it all right for the
bride to thank one of them and
ask her to thank the rest of the
family?
4. Is it correct to remove fruit
pits from the mouth with the
fingers?
5. In what way should a wo-
man present a social letter of In-
troduction?
6. Is it obligatory that one
bring a gift when attending a
golden wedding celebration?
Answers
1. The dinner table Is the plane
for cheery, pleasant, happy con-
versation, fun; laughter, jokes,
anecdotes, narration of pleasant
experiences and current topica.
2. No. 3. No; the bride must
write a note of thanks to each
one. 4. Yes; they may bo re-
moved from the mouth with the
thumb and finger, or taken direct-
ly front the mouth with the fork
or the spoon. 6. She may mail
the letter, together with her vis-
iting card, to the addressee, or,
she may call and leave both the
letter and card. 6. Yes.
Early models of the bayonet -
about 16.10 -were inserted in the
muzzle of tile musket which' mould
not be fired till the bayonet was
removed.
J. Lawrence Starch Co. Limited
Easy Way to Relieve
RHEUMATIC
Aches and Pains
Hero Is a simple, easy way to get
relief from the agony of swollen,
rheumatic Joints and muscular aches
and pains. Go to any drug store and
get a bottle of Ru -Ma. If you are not
pleased with the help It gives you
-go get your money back. This le
a generous offer you can not afford
to Ignore.
Have You Heard?
A reforiner was watching •
trench being dug by modern ntu-
chine, methods. He paid to the su-
perintendent:
"This Machine has taken jobs
from scores of nlen. Why don't
you scrap that machine and put
one hundred men in that ditch
with shovels?"
The superintendent promptly
retorted; "Oh, better still, why
not put a thousand men in there
R'ith teaspoons'"
First irishman: "Which
would yec rather he in, Pat
-- an explosion ora collis-
ion?"
Second ditto: "In a collies•
ion, because in a collision
there ycz are, but in an ex-
plosion where arc yez?"
The discovery that a married
couple in his flock were liable to
quarrel upset the vicar. So he
decided to speak seriously to the
husband.
"You know, my dear friend,
that you and your wife should be
as one."
"As a matter of fact," replied
the other sadly, "we are as ten,"
"How's that?"
"Well, she's the one and I'm
the naught."
A story just back from
Europe Is that Hitler, Goer-
ing and Goebbels were out in
a boat. It capsized,
Question: "Who was sav-
ed?
Answer: Germany.
A small boy returned home
from school and told his father he
was now second in his class. The
top place was held by a girl.
"But surely, John," said the
father, "you're not going to be
beaten by a mere girl?"
"Well, you sec, father," ex-
plained John; ."girls are not near-
ly so mere as they used to be."
Young and inexperienced
father (looking at triplets the
nurse had just brought out)!
"We'll take the one In the
middle."
Seeing an advertisement for •
young woman to do light house-
: work, a city girl applied for the
I Job.
"I think the sea air will do me
good," she wrote, adding, "Will
you please say in your reply
where the lighthouse hi?"
Professor: "What is the
most potent poison?"
Student: "An airplane, one
drop and you're dead!"
A Sense of Humor
Saves A Situation
Stanton, secretary of war in
Lincoln's cabinet, told the story
of the President's need for laugh-
ter In the grim days of the Civil
War, says The Toronto Telegram.
On September 2, 1862, Stanton
had received a peremptory call to
a cabinet meeting at the White
House, There he found Lincoln
reading a book by Artemus Ward,
a "very funny" chapter of which
he read aloud. Having finished,
Lincoln laughed heartily -alone.
Undismayed, he went on with an-
other chapter, and then asked:
"Gentlemen, why don't you
laugh? With the fearful strain'
that is upon me night and day,
if I didn't laugh I would die, and
you need the medicine as much as
I do."
Then Lincoln, announcing that
he had "made up his mind this
paper was to issue," road to his
colleagues the emancipation pro
clanlation.
SERVES
TEN DAILY NEEDS
Montholatum brings delightful relief
for the discomforts of:
1. Head Colds. 2. Superficial Burne.
3. Minor Cuts. 4. Nasal irritation
duo to colds or duet. 5. Windburn.
6. Cracked Lips. 7. Surface Skin Irri-
tations. 8. Scratches and Bruises.
9. Stuffy Nostrils. 10. Chappell Skin.
M your druggist. Jars or tubae 90c. As
1 1
4RelieVes distress from MONTHLY .
FEMALE
WEAKNESS
Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable
Compound not only helps relieve
monthlypain but also weak, nerv-
ous feelngs-due to monthly func-
tional dlsturbances.it helps build up
resistance against distress of "drill -
cult days." Made In Canada.
What Science
1s Doing
WHAT ,SCIENCE IS DOING ....
PMN KILLED
How amine 21)0 surgeons
throughout the United States are
successfully performing u pain -
conquering operation is described
in The Header's Uieest for Janu-
ary.
Working like linemen on it far-
flung telephone network, surgeons
now operate on the nervous sys-
tem itself --during, delicate, mir-
aculously effective : urgery - to
check the pain of incurable dis-
ease or Klock the effects of hid-
den ills that cannot be treated at
their source.
Every pain impulse, wherever
it originates, must travel up the
main spinal trunkline to the brain,
When the pain cannot he elimin-
ated at the source, the neuro-
surgeon offers this recourse: in-
terrupt the pathway of pain. A
small incision is made at the point
just before the nerves of the pain-
ful part enter the spinal column.
The patient is deprived of noth-
ing but his sense of pain and
temperature in that portion of his
body. His tactile sense, or feeling,
le left whole.
-0---
ABOUT
o-ABOUT DOGS
That old fable that dogs pant
because they cannot sweat has
been "shattered" by discovery of
sweat glands in their skins, says
the editor of The Lancet, Britieh
medical journal.
J. G. Speed, an Edinburgh re-
searcher, has found sweat glands
in the skin of the lips, head, back,
thorax, shoulders, thighs and pads
of the feet, a finding previously
reported by numerous other invee-
tigato'rs but apparently not gen-
erally known.
Nevertheless, the dog does
pant, comments The Lancet edi-
tor, adding that it would be in-
teresting to know how effective
the skin sweating is and whether
all breeds of dogs are equipped
with sweat glands In their skin.
Absence of visible moisture on
the akin may be due to efficient
evaporation while the probability
et water vapor enmeshed in the
lairs suggests the reverse, The
Iwncet editor states.
Toujour Lamour
Helen of Troy bad nothing on
Dorothy Lamour. Helen may have
lad the "Uses that launched a
thousand ships," but Dorothy's
got that one topped. What were
• thousand Greek galleys tem-
pered to a modern bomber? When
Dorothy went to the Glenn L.
Martin aircraft plant to aid the
5.1.of defense bonds, officials
t her outside the gates. They
that any time a good-looking
Woman walks through the plant,
it torte them 1,000 man-hours of
labor. If Dorothy swished through
the place, they said, it might cost
them half a bomber. How about
it Holen-can you see all right
from way back there?
$s sea., el dnuW. privet 11 er massy beets
pINAPWEIU\
"IT lat TSE _1$
HANDY SEALTIGHT POUCH 450
ti/t•L'1.: � �' �� PTIN-
acket Tins
else
GROWN IN SUNNY,
HOW CAN I?
Q. How can I treat eyes that
water during windy weather?
A. Bathe the eyes In a solu-
tion of ten grains of boracic acid
to one ounce of hot distilled
water, and it will give relief.
Q. How can 1 keep the hair
brushes clean?
A. Make a habit of washing
the brushes at least once a week.
Soak in hot water with soap pow-
der and ammonia for five minutes.
rub the bristle' under the water.
Rinse in warm water and dry with
bristles downward, preferably in
the sun.
Q. How can I sweeten a musty
metal or enamel teapot?
A. By filling it with water, in
which a red-hot cinder has been
dropped. After letting it stand
awhile with the lid elosed, rinse
with clear water.
Q. How can I freshen sale
vegetables?
A. Soak them for an hour to
eold water, to which some vinegar
or the juice of a lemon has been
added.
Q. How can I make eertaIn
that lace collars will be a perfect
fit after laundering them?
A. The beat plan is to baste
the collars closely on a piece of
white cloth. Then wash in enday
water. This will prevent their
stretching and tearing. Allow to
dry, then rip from the cloth, and
prase with a warm iron.
Britain Sets Record
For Seed Production
Great Britain's extensive sugar
beet war crop Kae been harvested
this year entirely from seed
vown at home says the a.
Thomas Times -Journal. Before
the war, almost half of the eon.
try's sugar beet seed came from
abroad; the war has so developed
home production that Britain will
continue to support herself in
sugar beet when peace returns.
This year, with fewer workers
and remarkably bad weather, she
is producing a larger acreage el
alt kinds of vegetable seeds than
COUGHS
COLDS
4.
The new Improved Beckley Formula b all
mediation- ne syrup- acts Into ea
soughs and colds --siva you mon lot yew
money. But be an IsS the genuine . , '41.1
1
■
1
XTYIRE
SOUTHERN ONTARIO
a
ever before. The demand fog
them, when every householder 141
"digging," where he can, "for vie•
tory," is without precedent.
The most popular seed is onion,
with carrot, beet and parsnip fol-
lowing closely. Moreover, the
need for shipping space has caused
a great increase in the sale of
seeds for animal feeding stuffs,
like mangolds, turnips, swedes
and kale.
Scientists and Government de-
partments have co-operated with
the farmers and distributors in
setting up this year's record for
British seed production.
Told that it would take three
months to get parts to repair his
watch, a Londoner gave the watch
to a friend in the Atlantic Ferry
Service and got it back running
perfectly in three weeks. The
friend had it repaired in America
and flew it back on his next trip.
SAFES
Protect your 110010 aid EASEL
from FIRE and TisieN :S. We
• have • sloe and type of Safe, or
Cabinet, for any purpose. Vielt
er write for prices, etc, to
Dept. W,
145 Front St. E., Toronto
Eetahlished INsa
0.&CJ.TAYLOR L1MITE®
TORONTO SAFE WORKS
RECTAL SORENESS AND
PILE TORTURE
QUICKLY RELIEVED
If you are troubled with itching
piles or rectal eorenese, do not dola
treatment and run the risk of letting
this condition become chronic. Any
itching or soreness or painful pace.
age of stool is nature's warning an
proper treatment should be secured
at once.
For this purpose got a package of
Hem-Rofd from any druggist and
use as directed. This formula.
which In used internally is a email,
easy to take tablet, will qulckl
relieve the itching and soreness and
4Id In healing the sore tender epote.
Hem -Hold le pleasant to use, 14
highly recommended and it aeeme
the height of folly for any one to
risk a painful and chronic pI1
condition when such a fine remedy,
may be had at Duch a small cost.
11 you try Hem-ltotd and are not
entirely pleased with the resultsQ,�
your druggist will gladly returti
your money.
...CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTSI.,
BIG ROCK "PAY DAY"
CHICKS
make more profit, because they are
bigger -stronger, are sold 00 a
100% satisfaction guarantee,
Rocks, Reds, Leghorns, Hybrids,
as hatched or sexed, six week
old pullets, Write for prices and
free calendar. !lig Rock Farm,
Mille Roches, Ont„ Box C. (Where
Satisfaction is a certainty).
BABY CRICKS
SIX BREEDS CHICKS, CAPONS,
growing Pullets. Descriptive ca-
talogue, Monkton Poultry Farm,
Monkton, Ontario.
"FOOD IS AN TMPOi1,TANT \VATt
weapon" so says the Government,
Poultry -keepers play an import-
ant part, Rising meat prices make
good poultry markets. Order
cockerels now for February -
March delivery; also chicks;
9 week capons. Wide choice
breeds. Bray Hatchery, 190 John
N„ ITnmilton, Ont.
RPTCIIV:RS i;QUiI'MENT
FOR SALE
SAUSAGE STPFFERS MEAT
Grinders, one .third H.P. and
Coffee Grindere, one quarter
H.P. Write 11ieLeach, A & P Food
Stores. 135 Laughton Avenue,
Toronto.
BAKERY EQUIPMENT
BAKERS' OVENS AND MACHIN-
ery, also rebuilt equipment al-
ways on hand. Terme arranged.
Correspondence Invited. Hubbard
Portable Oven Co., 108 Bathurst
Toronto.
CARS -_ USED AND NEW
MOUNT PLEASANT MOTORS Ltd.,
Toronto's oldest Chrysler, Plym-
outh dealers' three locations, 682
t. Pleasant Road 2040. Tonga
t. and 1860 Danforth Avenue.
ur Used Cars make us many
rlends. Write for our Free Book -
et on pedigreed renewed and an-
alyzed used care.
FEMALE SELP WANTED
GIRL TO LOOK AFTER NEW
bungalow in Toronto and sixteen
month baby, live in, Box 16,
711 Adelaide W., Toronto%
FAitM EQUII'MEN'r
FEI3RUAIRY SPECIALS - I have a
few remaining bargains in Me -
lotto Creatn Separators, demon-
strator and rebuilt models 4 used
Grinders, 0" Fleury Engines; 22
and 38 H.P., Marshall and Deutz
Engines; Lister Surf Portable
Milking Machines; Myers Pumps
and \Vater Systems; Gasoline
19ng•ines; a few T,ister Tine and
Link Harrows; used Basins at
bargain prices; Melotte, Magnet
and Premier Separator Parts in
stock; Letz Mille and Parts and
other used equipment. Save
money. Purchase now while these
bargains last. Write me today,
S. A, Lister, Stewart Street, To•
ronto.
iIA1111)111,SSiN6 scitoo
LEARN HAIRDRESSiNG THE R013.
ertson method. Information on re-
quest regarding classes. Robert•
eon's Hairdressing Academy, 137
Avenue !toad, Toronto.
OFFER T(1 INV I:N'1'UItS
AN OFFER TU EVERY INVEN'T'OR
LIst of Inventions and full Infor-
mation sent free. Tho Ramsay Cc.
Registered, Patent Attorneys, 276
Bank Street, Ottawa, Canada.
I'ATENTS
FI:THE1tSTUN11AUU11 & COMPANY.
Patent Solicitors. Established
1890; 14 King West, Toronto,
Booklet of Information on re-
quest.
PERSONAL
ELIJAH C 0 111 1 N G BEFORE
Christ. Wonderful book sent free.
Megiddo Mission, Rochester, New
York.
ILtItI1LLS FOR SA1,11
BARRELS, CLEAN WOODEN, $3.00
each, f.o.b. Toronto. S. Barber &
Sons, 4000 Dundas St. \Vest, To.
ronto
ItIIUI MA'l'IC PAINS
IT'S IMPORTANT - Every sufferer
of Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis
should by Dixon's lti:itrd�. Sold
only 1dlunre's 1tru i c• ;;:3..
F.lght, Ult:tn. P. ,1':;i l il. n•
9
INIMICAL
GOOD ADVICE! Every sufferer of
Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis
should try Dixon's 'Remedy.
Munro's Drug Store, 835 Elgin.
Ottawa. Postpaid $1.00.
1 EGA'.
A'.
3. N. LINDSAY, LAW (1F'F'll'E• :`A13 -
Ito) Theatre Bulidtng• St. Tillman,
Ontario. Special Department for
farmers collections
MEN AND WOMEN R'AN'TED
FAST REPEATiNG BUSINESS
selling 200 Guaranteed Household
Necessities. If you are ambitious
You can make good money from
the start with a Fnmilox Route
and enjoy steady work. Golden
opportunity. At'T NOW. TO -DAY.
FAMILEX CO., 570 St. \ lement,
Montreal.
SAWVMiLI. WANTED
WANTED SMALL PORTABL1
Sawmill. Write for full particular"
and best cash price to A. Bakers
Grarcnhurst.
w
"PROTESTANT ACTION"
A monthly .iournal of frets invalu-
able to British Protestants. 71.00
per year. Samples on request.
11 (;lehchnlnte, Toronto.
FOR QUALITY
SERVICE
AND s.t'l'ltl'AC'1'ION
TRY iMPEILIAL
s or 8 exposure filets, developped
end printed, or 8 reprints, 78b.
Both with free enlargement,
1311.1:11iAI, PlIOTO SEitVICE
Station J, Toronto,
Germany is dncreasilig ite ship-
ments of Iron and steel to Switzer•
land, trhero they are made luta'
finished products and returned to
Germany.
ISSUE 7-'42
Page B.
141104(144Z4C14144104001404141041C11S1CII$4410,1x 1iK1C1Qlelt4 1414144411R1a10411111(1041441111/
SPECIAL CLEARINGS
1•Girl's Fur -Trimmed Coat, size 9 $6,00
1 Girl's Fur -Trimmed Coat, size 12 $6.50
1 Girl's Fur -Trimmed Coat, size 11 $6,50
1 Coat and Hat, size 10 $5.00
Several Misses' & Women's Coats at Special Prices
A Good Stock of Shoes and Rubbers for all the
Family, Always on Hand.
Olive 4
Fe
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•‘,0
SEMS GROCERY
GOODS DELIVERED. TELEPHONE 14. 0,
2 pkgs. 25c
per tin 05c
t
,,
,� Quaker Puffed Rice
Huskies (Whole -Wheat Flakes)
Big -Five Cleanser
Marmalade (Orange & Grape Fruit) 32 oz. jar 32c
Boneless Chicken per tin 30c
Lard (Whyte's) 1 lb. pkg, 15c
Ot,
Baker's "Dot" Chocolate (semi -sweet) 8 oz. pk. 23c
O'Keefe's Ginger Ale, lge. hot. 19c (plus 5c deposit :`'
I bag Wheat 4 b. 23c
Ivory Flakes (the better laundry flakes) lg. pk. 27c
per pkg. 13c 06
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10411a10teetZt'Z:1=1:100.7. oLtBtctClQinletelgICIClettle:90141141 Z. CteteiVene1Ewl rete E PIDE.D
Highest
Quality
Lowest
Price
Have Tour Eyes Examined
By Mr. Reid
At His Blyth Office — Willow's Drug Store
1. Our modern method. of examination with eeiontifio
instruments, assures perfect satisfaction.
2. Our glasses are ground in our own. factory, assuring
absolute accuracy in your requirements.
3. You choose your own price hero—we supply glasses
in every price range.
4. f.5 years experience behind every pair of glasses we
fit– your guarantee of perfect comfort.
10,
0 Re A. REID, R.O.
ulR
EYESIGHT SPECIALIST
e..`"r"ere. ro13.Dtw u3,=.1,�;a ra�t2.i',`:11:111s,ik X21:1ettraireikereeie)reterel` atbitairi te`iatrit°erkiN
A
0
12 pure breeds and several crosses.
"Xtra -Profit" and Standard
grades. See me for full particulars.
Place your order here.
A. L0 KERNICK
BLYTH -- ONTARIO.
61:2, ..1m....41 4. . 1 ....W1. .
&ses mt. eamatia
li
Takes Life By Hanging
Wellington Dow, a lite -long resident
of Ea:tt \Waw•aar ere took his own life
by hanging Friday at his home on the
Mb concession, He had been ht'
healtih for some time but ha(dl been
working as usual and at the time was
doing the morning chores at 1113 hemi
when the tragedy oecmrred. Fifty-
eight years of age, Ire was the son of
the late \1 r. and Mrs. Japers Dow of
Fast \i'alvane'th and hut .spent his
t1:t ire ire farming. Surviving are
his wife, the former Miss EcIera L'ee-
croft of East \Vawano=h and five chil-
dren, Ada, Eva, Nelson, ,11omald and
Iran. The funeral wa.5 held on Mon-
day, with burial In \Vingham ceme-
tery,
USE THE STANDARD TO ADVEIt•
TISE ANY ARTICLE LOST,
OR FOR SALE.
ROUND TRIP RAIL BARGAINS
1(;00,1 in Coaches Only)
FROM BLYTH -- FEB. 13 - 14 TO
OTTAWA MONTREAL QUEBEC
310.75 $13.35 $18.25
Trois Rivieres $15.90 Ste. Anne de Beaupre $18,85
(Cnvetument Tax l0 percent, Fxtra)
Return Limit Up To February 16.
Not gond en 3 p.m. trains from Ottawa and Montreal.
For detailed service etc.,
Consult Agents—Procure Handbill
CANADIAN PACIFIC
-
THE STANDARD
A recent visitor at the Rectory was
Pilot nicer G, Snider, of Clinton.
Mr. George Watt spent tlho week-
end with hie brother, J, Il, Watt, of
Toronto.
Gra, Freeman Tunnoy of Kitchener
spent the weekend at hie home
here,
Airs. Frociiut.n Tunney is visiting
with he'r parents, IMr. and Mrs,
ler, in Br eese's, this •weee.
Mrs, Arthur Barr visited with her
daughter, \lrs. Kitchener Finnigan, of
West \Vawancsh,
I\Iis's Wilma Watson of Stratford
Normal, visited with her parents,
and Nine. J. 11. 'Watson.
I On Sunday evening at 7 o'clock the
Rector of Trinity Church will speak
on the subject: "The Greatest Thing
in the World,'
\\'eeleend visitors at the Rectory
were Cpl. and Mrs. Thos. Ueborne, of
'Concerto. Mr, lisborno is a nephew
of \la's, Streeter,
,.\ITs, .1. 13. Watson and son, Eciwara,
spent the week -end with Mrs. Wilt.
Foti's mother, .Mrs, George Ashton, of
Gerrie.
Word has been recievod to the et -
feet that the Rev. W. 13. Hawkins is
improving every day In health. He
must however have a further rest of
three weeks.
Mr. Jack McElroy, of Kitchener, is
at the home of Ills parents, Mr. and
Aim, iI. McElroy. Jack has been ,sick,
hut we hope to see hhn up and arount,
very soon.
FOR SALE
Property of the late William Henry
Howe, on Dinsley Street. Also 1 bell,
Kitchen furniture, dishes, galvanized
tub, copper boiler, etc. etc. Apply to
Leslie 11 liberal', 27-2,
FOUND
On or a 'ovt January 23rd, a Buffalo
Robe, on Highway No. 4, narth of
Myth. Owner may have .same by
proving ptroperty, and paying for this
advertisement. Archie Montgomery,
phone 36.16, Blyth. C7df.
LOST!!!
Horse blanket, between Blyth and
1% milds eolith of Blyth. Finder
please notify Joe Lyon, Phone 21.3,
Myth or leave a4 The Standard Office.
ANNUAL PANCAKE
SUPPER
OF TRINITY ANGLICAN CHURCH
IN BLYTH MEMORIAL HALL
TUES., FEBRUARY 17
MENU ---
Pancakes, Maple Syrup, Biscuits,
Salad, Jello, Cake, Pie, Tea.
SUPPER SERVED FROM 4.30 TO 7,
Admission—Ne end 15c.
Mrs, A, Quinn, Mrs. 11. drown,
President. Secretary.
Blyth Beats Londesboro
llly'tlh defeated Lan(iestbero in a
hockey game played at tiro local rink
they Wednesday evening. ft was the
first hockey of t1he season here. Tile
score was 5 to 2 for Blyth. Twice be-
fore in .games played at the Londes-
boro rink, the Lcndenbcro lads have
defeated Blyth.
Craig - Hamilton
A pretty wedding was solemnized at
the l'recsby'terian Manse, Illuev;'hie, by
the Rev. I'`, G. Iliowler, vv'hem 'Maude
Elizabeth, daughter of the late Mir.
and Mrs. John Illainlltcal, became the
bride of Mr. John Arnold Oraig, of An -
burn.
The bride wore a street length dress
of dusty roeo with black atccessories
and corsage of white carnations, 'Miss
• Leone Deans, couein of the bride as
(hrlde'snta,Id, wore capon blue witlit wine
' neeeesories and corsage of pink car -
'nations. The groom was attended by
his brother, P. T. L. Melvin Craig of
Kitchener. After a short mo;!or trip
M1'. attcl. Mrs. Craig will reside near
Auburn.
Proclamation By Reeve
A Proclamation, issued by Reeve
1V. II. Morritt, calls on n1l places, of
buttincss, and householders, to decor-
ate the .same for the deeation of the
coining Victory Loan.
In 'c ew of the fact 11hnt illytlh's
quota Iran been raised from $18,040.00
to aimbtst $23,000.(10 for this
Ho11yan'S
�
B KERY
AND CONFECTIONERY.
The Houle of Good Baking.
Soy Bean, Whole Wheat
and White Bread.
Also Buns, Cookies
Pies, Cakes and
Honey -Dipped Doughnuts
Wedding Cakes a Specialty.
Doherty Bros.
GARAGE.
WH !„RE AGENTS FOR
Plymouth and
Chrysler Cars
Auto -Lite and Hart
Batteries.
Anti -Freeze.
Winter Check -Up On
Your Car.
Goodrich & Dunlop Tires.
White Rose Motor Oil.
PHILCO RADIOS AND
SUPPLIES.
Acetylene and Electric
Welding.
Vodden's
BAKERY.
WHEN IN NEED OF
BREAD, BUNS, PIES,
HOME-MADE CAKE
OR COOKIES
REMEMBER
"THE HOME BAKERY"
II. T. VODDEN.
TENDERS
Talcum will be received by the
undersigned up till 1;' o'clock noon,
Saturday, February 1 4th, for the
painting of the Sheriff's office in the
Court house, Godorlch, Ontario,
Particulars may bo obtained by con•
.taottng the County Clerk.
N. W. MILLER,
County Clerk.
26.2.
Godoricb Ont.
SPECIAL BARGAIN
EXCURSIONS
TO ALL STATIONS IN
WESTERN CANADA
GOING DATES
DAILY FEBRUARY 21
TO MARCH 7, 1942
RETURN LIMIT: 45 DAYS.
TICKETS GOOD TO TRAVEL
IN COACHE)3
Excursion tickets good In Tourist,
Parlor and Standard sleeping cars plso
available on payment of slightly
higher passage fares, plus price of
parlor oe sleeping car accommodation.
ROU'PIS--'rickets good going via Pott
.Arthur, Ont., Chicago, III., or Sault
Ste. Marie, returning via same route
and line only. Generous optional
routings.
STOPOVEiRS—will be allowed at any
point In Canada on bile going or re-
turn trip, or both, within' final limit
of ticket, on application to Conduc-
tor; also at Chicago, Ill., Sault Ste,
"Mario, Mich., and west, In accordance
with tariffs of United States lines,
Full Information from Agents
CANADIAN PACIFIC
Is felt that everyone nntst (lo his or
!her share to make the objective a sua'e
't•hhhg, For this reason it its necessary
to press holuo to the attlloot, the fact
, that we have an objective, and an ob-
Iligation, its a small part of the Do-
minion, to reach, Other places will
do it, so mist we.
Daylight Saving 0. K.
Very Lew complaints on the new
War Time, which went Into elect
Monday morning. Wo undero aund
.some of the district schools are re -
I ntatniug on standard time, es aro some
of the rural homes. Also 501110 of the
schools are going in at ten, and dis-
misning at five. It is diffictult for lit-
tle taokeats s to have a utile or more
to walk, this time of year. However,
nearly everyone in town cxprc°.3 n
favourable opinion on it. T1re C.Y.H.
train was nearly two holies late on
Monday, whether the new tiane had
, anything to do with it or not, we don't
knew,
Wednesday, reb, 11, 1942,
1041111E 1111a1E14 4,4911E ,144100411004141104 0Mttlt tYtatQtCtC!: VW.4b'ik'Iktt401i49Q144/
rI Kepler's Cod Liver Oil and Malt Extract 75c-$1,25
Neo Chemical Food $1,15, $2,45 and $4,45
Wampole's Extract Cod Liver $1.00
Squibb's Cod Liver Oil 55c and $1.10
Buckley's Bronchial Mixture 40c and 75c
Maltine with Cod Liver Oil $1.25
Four Vitamins with Iron and Malt Extract $1.29
4 Scott's Emulsion, 53c and 98c. Creophos $1,00
1
1 R. D. PHILR, Phm. B.
4
edasi} 41412 Biibf9ieieMli1i� ltee 8dai2/3410/,S13ti1'1;<1 X1.1;, tiek;21L.D gi£ltailit Tedi Velllai
FO Ti
Against Winter Ills
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER—PIHONE 2P.
1'
,clal,tit( LItetektt4Rt4ta1Cg 0041 (3444CteltCbiitCktINNII.ItfItatZtetatCle`rit4tt;141 W.14114041X 411CIC$t
41
Willows Drug Store
Drugs, Tobacco, Soft Drinks—Phone 28.
A.B,D. CAPSULES $1.25 and $2.25
IRON AND YEAST TABLETS 49c
ONE -A -DAY TABLETS 45c, $1.00 and $1.80
NOVA KELP TABLETS 79c, $1.39 and $2.79
Wampole's Extract of Cod Liver $1.00
D. and W. GENERAL TONIC $1.00
Bland Laxative Tablets 100 for 25c
Halibut Liver Capsules 75c and $1.35
COD LIVER OIL 40c to $1.25
Wampole's Phospho Lecithin $1.00
01
Di 7012 irX01)111 i1/112$tl 0/0)-Mira$40412,liini711142 13t2/AZONDi biDaL tJ(d,k.10l/00.
l t@,litBTtetFitakilt((Vat&ttItC1414t(VeRt4tCtb't.'w1Q.?t.�,:Eit0110 4tR ttikr.' tMt4t3ttC'4VCAtEtiltifi
Living -Room Furniture
We offeringnewdesignsChester-
field Studio'n 10 Ili yrs,
We are many in Chester-
field Suites, Lounges and Occasional Chairs,
upholstered in good quality fabrics at most attrac-
tive prices.
Book Cases, End Tables, Magazine Racks,
Lamps and Other Odd Living -Room Pieces, help to
make your home more comfortable and enjoyable.
We urge you to come in and inspect them,
whether or not you are prepared to buy at present.
0
Home Furnisher
Phones
hellew
7
and 8
Funeral
Director.
0
61/tit /X.700*iBA'liiki 001/40,k11i20Da DI2A$iLi11,0atrart'Jlidi aintr abli$i3MA9iiiPID01)01111
Liberals Win In By -Election
C.C.F. Candidate Defeats Conservative
Leader, Mr. Melgneii
Out of the four constituencies to
hold by-eledtions on Nicoll:1y, the L;I'i-
eral Party won three, and C,C.F, Can-
dirlate W, Nosow'orthy, defeats:A
the Conservative Leader, Mr. Arthur
\leiglucit, in South York.
TwO rece►vtiy'•a.ppainted Cabinet
ministers, Labor Minister Mitchell nod
.3 mace 1114iviger St. Laurent, were
clouted to seats. hr the 11oase of Com-
mon.. Also elected, was Cc'. Gaspae.l
Fauteux, one of the three amen Who
ran a,s lAberals in ,Montreal' t. Mary.
The Rouse standing new is I.lbeal,
1►16; Con hrclrvative, :is; Now Dontoc-
racy, 10; Co-operative Commonwealth
Federation .9; Independent Liberal, 3;
Lib(yral i'nc!;rearivo, 3; In(lepecedece
Conservative, 1; Indcpcndetit, 2; Can-
adian tinily, 1.
Coe seat 113 vacant, that cif Charlo
voix-Saguenay, which wk's 'held by holt•
mer Rate Secretary C:t gi'aln, bofera
his recent a,ppoiutm sit to the Qutface
Superior Court bcr h,
1111 dill ; l,l. S.i 111 ,11,.IN,II,IL .I.. .I I. 1, II -I .r ii, 1
Men of 30, 40, 50
PEI', VIAL, VIGOR, Subnormal?
Want normal pep, vim, vigor, vitality?
Try Oalrcx Tonic Tablets, Contains
tonics, stimulants, oyster elements—
aids to normal pep niter 30, 90 or 50.
Cct a special introductory size for only
;5!'. Try this old to normal pep and vim
today, For sale at all good drug stores.
1 1t(141i1Fi1RtMtCAl CWAVVillgreet 1Cttit$allotrt.'b't6'tit(i4tC'(iter4t Vitt°l t4tGralQtE;IIC tEbi
i STUART OBINSoN 1
Phone 156 for Prompt Delivery.
I Market Price for Eggs According To Grade.
I
Clover Honey 2 lb,, 4 Tb., 8 lb.
Pea Soup 13c, 2 for 25c
Chicken Gumbo Scup 13c, 2 for 25c
Chicken Noodle Soup 13c, 2 for 25c
Vegetable Beef Soup 13c, 2 for 25c
Soda Biscuits , 12e, 18c and 21c Pkg.
Dill Pickles 3 for lOc
Blue Ribbon Tea pkg., 43c, 2 for 85c
Lard, per Ib. 15c. Crisco, lb. tin, 29c
Nut Crush, Loose per lb. 18c
Bran for Baking 2 lbs. 10c
Purity Flour 93 lb., 24 lb. and 7 Ib. bags
Fr' -in Hood Flour 981b ., 24 Ib., and 7 lb. bags
Pt—try Flour 24 Ib., and 7 Ib. bags
Oranges, Grape Fruit, New Carrots, Cabbage,
Lettuce, Celery
irl,iolptsort Pktta ibt otiobtoz li$r b blit' atulairsiro tiirD Daa..aalk ii(i3 ur..riwl n