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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1942-07-08, Page 1THE LYTH STANDAR VOLUME 16 - NO, 18. BLYTII, ONTARIO, WED N ESi)A Y, .1 CTI,Y 8,1'11'2. IIullett Council Met On 7,182.((1 Prize Not (Claimed On Tanners And Workers Can; Monday Saturday Night Now Get Together Mr. Albot•1 „eller; 11111chtted al the i Tho regular tttiiIng of the Ilan,''' I'o\wut;hip 001/11/'11 \\'as hold in Ill,' 11.,111( Nilo Ilin '\• un ,';torch;; l','u1111,rlitf ' I1a1!, Lomb ,1 till), on \Inn• and 111 tlCO\w111;4 name; \wrr,' 1!,n\wn d;y, Jit!J 1;111, with till member.; put", Irian thou Pal 1-.1: en 1, and Itiiwi. John 1.1,:1;Asan in Ilio t:,.t a ,',arid'! (hot Chair, - tamos 1{utl, ll. '1'111, initntlt's of oho previous rogtilat• ;_.t,:, (1.,1d oi 'hili tt:, 'l'et'ting were .cad and t',ttttl•nttd nil Inet tlairn,:;.) mot jun nl' C11nncilluls Ilro\wu and Aral rt'I.+;,1 t;rIt .\ relit,. Voting. \los, Alar. Can Cali Village Clerk If In Need Of AssiEtancc, Anyone De_i.ing To Help Should Leave Nantes At Clerk's Oftice 11'IrS. John M;tins ' Estimated 15(1(1 Attend f 'Pili' (1tat) of on, 111 myth., .1,1, 1 I'i;iSt `1r;1wit111/Sl1 Picnic ;uul t,' ' It -1" -ft' rt: 'Iv"I, ii, Il, t' it i, i,,,itnite,l 'hilt about I:,n p -o Int• ,11 nl' \Ir•. omit! 3i iia-, --tit 0.)1 i,l,•, Ibt ,,,,iority of 111,•nt i' idtnt: of at hour h' mo 11, t1', tv 3linday, July ,;ill Ill,' tit,,,,,, hip, ;,tion it.ti tot annum , tullnttior, a !lotto•: iiia,,-, in 11,•1• Itie11ir 111' I., I \\'a\w:can-It 'I'n\vn:-hip. i ,,,-,tit y, itr. twit! w cii, 'rmittt kilo. tirt,lt''•. 11„ HO' I \IrS. \lain \\ho beton' hot "II' di 11111'„111 and ow'•ning of \1'o,t110-t1,ty, rialto \wa. ..\I•t:y .\011 \l,'t ;illonttb, wP• July 1S1. dangbler nt e ,It, „Ful1'toi 1....i1;1.11t 11.11 •tl)n 8 yo,r b:u, ,'i tl lu,,gb ;tial C;ubt rIlsine I\1'il .n.In, 11l11\:1 w'ut itictu,et, iu„ 111'nuith ;s i1l „ Neatpthe i t-Ironl, Karat foil'•, Kt ills :‘1111 rill, 111 •. t.•'sli,' .\ 1'l pot o11lalt\1, of the 'kion hin'''t horn 111'.11' \\'o.;Iti,•t,t.In IS:, 1111' Ill ,r :-- • th anutwti-,try of the iueorltoratinn 1 notion ly E. I''1ltflt ;mil Ir; 11:tii- ilea... of Agriculture \was in In.\en Iasi wto{i 111'11 Air. .\mitt.;, and Mimi '11;(0.1Y t11ilc el' 1114, 1'otwnlltip. Dud e,ira 11,'111• and tum, 111at wi renew our !turd !tinily Ili l»I'uthor, 1•\,113 H 11011! ty night is and !lade 11rtanll;,'no'11IS tt•ith \till;::•• 1111 rrstt!itt in 111)111, \!i' It sh,' 11a.1 ,,i,i,o•t ha,i ' 1, o 111;1{p ill planning ow twtfh IJnytl'ti nl• Landon, Ihrn aglt \l1. 'land; Nilo. and t; 110 • .fly \\•alits elf Clerk, ,1. 11. It. Elliott, Ii) haft anyun•' 'ti tt!t(1 1') 1.t sine •, „: ,;,;, ,•,• Iin,S. \I the June nu','I• i \\''Deno \bill the 1111111';x. \\;11y not 'toot yo.r \\'h) desire.; to as;;1st lural fa:Allors in \1111")'11 til' a ,Loi, t ,Ind +uuur uarailft; in:; or U,t IlOrnn Crotty c'nuuril. Ito' n Uutiun by lata. Iti•utvn and John share of Ilio litt,,'tt, and be „ltl nag the haying and hau•vt.1 op,'ralittti . Irate ,ti•t,u,itino, 111:. Mow.; ltd,. i't"liy the nml,, t' of Iia, l'•,nntJ• ('nnnLil pie, ,lrut,lronK, 111;11 Wt, pay Aly, 111..;111,.111..;111,.1.eut tv,I '\11,'11 sour \\inail, ; an, e.tlltd 'brit ne mu\with that, slat tag iht haul': '!tete-ltd in Iter ('/1 111'111. Shwa e - 1:11,• fie roll!e nit for dist%,leu. it'•eve ton the \1'1111 n! U111in, tial. Nunn 11pre.,. .10 be pre. ul to elaiut'111, tilt 11'• s,'rvi:'1'v \fill be avail;-' !e. 't+1' the' tot\' r,'tn:,ill ill , twlla asslr'"1 in It undid Ittdnuuid (WWII ruse Ia 1 ,J ,llotiuu by I''. I'ic,titt and 1. 1';111;'11, prim \\aen y.tnr name is drown, 1 Harmers 111 turn, are using! to photo. building Ilse Queen Street cher i.I ht- tett anti invttt•t1 tnentbt t tilt,! ell'i- Ihnl \vo 1''11111 all !!paid lazes to \It, Elliott \vhin destlon,; til hel{,, anti !'i,rut,'r1J' :i \Itlbndi'1, tltt .Ioiuld 111, vials. and 11,.11 t\ivt'S and famili in (;od1,rit• t. —`� be olid 1111'11 (1111 (11(1 anyone tvha bas 1'nilyd 1'linr1 h at the Illnt Id' 1'nil)11. ;uttml the 1';asi \Ya \v;uloSh picnic. i • iti,'ti I y Ila t.,n11 all(' 1't iIvIl, 111'11 Intl their nano-: wit.lt hint, She w,s ane of ow I.il', mtnlbtr of Itll'hI I';II1111_ I'll'-LTllll)n 'flit• iuvitaiit! w;= rtadtiy at-et;''lull. S, 31c\'ills' he paid RI.,:,I our p11sl 1';e. I I'ili8 '3..+ to ti:s been tont into tot the \Yana n' : .\11-•'an,u J Society, and ,aid this ;uigu;l 1 tidy bel ie,l awtll tale Mayor A..I. i1'ICMurray 1lid iun 1 J' uud :1:tn:;runt, held Ill Myth feet in !taut' 'twits and villages hail al\vays hien active in chorea ' Q(' Clinton }Hinson3 ; 'tioaint,,', tint! tow.; a prolninonl part I What Ftanit 'I'aniblyn be. appoint oil 1 The Itt,'hl i•'amily ant; th,'ir lar:4e throughout the district, and it; rt.porl• 'work, , In the ;I't1,tunun s!u'rt toS• .11 Ilio rootto.st of oho 3liutstel' of audile'• for 1:11'.1.111. ronnectien of family rti tttvi, helot cel twor;ttl,g v it v,':•y \vt 11. 1 '1'111, Lot .1t.. Jlains was the last 311)lio11 by Liotti! an•; I',clti't, I1111t thttr 111.utttn11 in Myth last Saturday.' 'There is nu dunbt that there are stir\tving utlut'or of a family of lino, nowpoints Ito 8.'•111.'1 for St;u'tft,'1'. '!'ie ';a'i'ling tt;Is la.gt IJ aU,tid,•d, manyfarmer; in this district Nebo art' Surviving. besides her h0...1•and. aro, boot! molly by R1,t\t itr,lnunul, hi:= Murray has been appointed Chairman Melita by Ib•u\\•n and .irinstruilt;, land Burin' file ;Woronoff Hr. .\grir,l• tih0rt•hand'(1, and non an(1 oho ()lam. '\\•u datn::hl,'1s„ mi.,. J. N. i ryani. 111. (.;anal, and til' official; of the '1',.w11; 'of the National \\'a r finance ('ontntit- that w' rd !urn until \ p.m, 'tidal !'ark war., Ilio . •1:it' of ;'•deity. buys in Ili' v!!lagt may he a!tlt- to Sll'atfnld. atlt \It:; .lnitit Al.. of (11 ship, and til„ <itrre.: with 'chit :1 it toe tit' ilio (1uuuly of Huron. '!!it yuan• l'i ici,Ilo;, all wen( home about For the I'Vrld11.:, 1111' 'AI (111 Illi 1 1.1'111101' a real servic' by volunteering lu\wa, tint nue Sou, R'w, \\'..I, .\!tett met. is iarg'!s ,Ito' to their ttfurt'•',uttittt has the very intpurtautt tants (it' CM, and retulttt •1 at x pout.tv;; 1111 1.1111. til' into r, : I, au'I 111 lar .' our farm \furl', \\huu1'w1'r it1' op'put• 1'01' Tt!Lnry. ,\ dar1ghtot,, \Iyrtlt', di,':! Tin, fall i!i,it it t:, au ;minim at'fair. t, Siti'''ng iht finaulciat ,.,1„;,•„,„„„,.. „it Mallon by 111111;011 Unit Armstrong, mint'„ r }„Ilherf'd toow to 01.nle1, lu (tinily presents itself, in inl',in,•)., and ti =out, ph,. G. E. 11,011., meeting with tbt approval of the rail, on, 1;ti\i ;•tuutut in not war ot'fort OM ford Peck''' i,t t ttttim,n fin' HIP til,' 1111.,;i1' of \\'a'lt's a;cht-;td. '1'111'' Liuve ynttr na.un', and the ho,u's \vas killed ill 1('t 1(111 in illi 7. .11So aur - ,It ytr,•. 'c'.,, ;IS Illany times \wt II:t\e,ih,uugb lilt sail' of \Yar Savings ('unit 0t' Ite1t'inn staling. ht 1x11 1t 'alibi' 1ntnnlen': 011 til,' Stamps :til,! 1'trtifivaues, as well a.; gathering hr01u' 1111, after a very 1'u• your services will b1' alvaiJable \villi wiviug aro Punt grandchildren. LAC. . Al; there n';r.; 110 ''eats, Cu tilt it ga!h1,ting by tilt tit,pit' l)1' the 1'0\VII- 1 1'i1•lory Itontis. I t ,iny;r tit ')('Lang, ;1,0111 I,1,:"1, 31 r, Elliott. Ile has lorul8 which batt' .ill;ul i(ry;1111, I d\vaud lir3aut, Rouuld ;11.101/111, d ;IS a (:11111.1 of 1{1'Vis11111 on i '''lit' pot'Std,'n' 1.1' Ili. cla ll i= W. II, to be filled 0111 1'01' ih' purp0SP.strip. 1 Th., \1r31urr;y , be...ides b'!ng ',fol :lhiri,•3• \i:ItnS. 'layer t; l' l'lintun. It;; .Ins! e0mplouvl n 0/011011 11' Artnsllang and Ranson, Richt of Stratford; 'ternary. I,•htt l huner,l st t'ilt's were 11'111 from het I';wtu tilt' \\tvath'rul:tit \\a' in an Motion 113 :Unlslrung and Ibn\wl)• Mehl, Gadsbill, :m,{ treasurer, 110',(1',''(tall' re•'idititt' all \\'ei!lesalny ;flet• ,'Beall Blit!!:, 1.,,,,as 1.114.4,1,0„.41sia,t'it,ci most sm.00sSfnl Red (`lass campaign ill Levy, ' it tttlu'd. 1'ndtr lilt dir.'cltutl tit= arra '1'uti•t. 110 tS 111811111a" 0f that actut1111 be sent to Murray Lomb Guests Of Port Ali)cl't noun, ,Inly ,111, at ^.:111 O'rll)1'k. Rot. 111 cat11'r Shortly after noon. Hie Clay Jrrain. lot' :'tanley Ituulnp and Botta \Valli, , 1,1. Siuelah rnudurtel the Service. 'Lube \\11S bright and snuny, nddiug matey - ;III, Sal,'alg' ('onuuitt'e and is Airmen TITIIsurrr and General \tanager of the Motion by 1'01 t;tit and Armstiittt,, 1111 following sports t \i til \ver:' rim floral t•lbntts wort tunny and Bola''• illy to the itt:liynu'rlt cl' 'he day. 'rhe following citizotS of Itlylh alt ('IhWou Sprint; Shaw, :Utter twenty that Ily law No. 11, 1,11„, be passed for ,off during tilt afternoon: 1111. c;hti\whrg the high esteem in 11'11 It'll ; Iterwe Redmond ,clod very capably 111. par{ 11,1 of her:1•\\iug naouey'tun) Isar, s 1;irl;, 5 year; and nu.l1'., Ittitt 1 the /puling of the lir, \Iafh'\\8 Il'crt ' 1 Nva; hold. sus rhairnunt I'or lily day, ;ISO ndditlg.eigItf years' S'twi1'' with tilt Intorno - 1110 Ilat;httl, 1':wi 11!1,1::; buy' Itnc!„r ('lul) IlutB' and The 11oU's'' 11ius' nl I 1'allbta.,'r; were, \itSsrs. Ja,. \\'alt, to the al'ternouns entertainuo,itt with tinea! Ilan aster ('`""1)""Y he iS "it' Brown, 111;1 lion -Alai (til.bous, miner Johnson; the It..\. P. I'u.t :11b1'rl on Salmday: ILtslio mown. Thu;, kernie,h, John seven'' violin seieelinns, and assisting conversant with the work of 0rganfra• Iatvt ow Giik to 7, 1•;it13,n (;14,11,1101..,1103•.44 t lteevc turd \11.1. Jlurrill, \Ifs. Item -tion. .\t present lie is busily engaged and L'Sli' Ihu'h.ulaul, and .111, 'I'aylur. in lobe Singing. '1 he early part of the I0 tort' 1'..(1- :, lu , Irvin Rich), 111;b11.\* St'111'1O ; ley, ,\. \\'. 1'. Santth, 1118. 11. Johnstliti, in organizing the various nuuaci{rait .I''lo\\er1,carers were Juhu and ldwau•(l ;I'terntinn 'vat, tuk.0 !p with ball YOUR LOCAL PAPER. Great p;'epara1ion fur Ilio (lay ll;d 1!11110.1, the I111u..1. 1.. Ilsley, \l r. NH,. the I':in of Aloud' 11. 310tiou 1.3 I'1,rl;tlt azul \v1' ;01 ',1)1 tilt petition to 'Young Itrain 1'01!ttou stt11 F;itit' .r. :\ uu'liotl by Raipson acid :\riii oro!:_. 111.'1 IC. doe\'ittie be Sault try In ;p .o. tor, and George \le\'Illkt be on the I'.,ard ( t item'''. (;iris, 7 to la,, Fern Idol'), Mona Ili' hl; Mrs' \\'• \\'Alit', 11i.;8 JO>cphiue \l':+ud- III•yant. Intorutont \va; made in Cu- ',mines and races. 11 r. Rodunnnd, in leS 0t' {'noon for this very important 11;,3'.;. In 10 11, \lurt.+3' lttrhl,'t,wart cock, Mr. hurl'Jlrs. E. It:datait .iii.;sus loll ('onti1(1), Blyth, ;his ,11111188 of welcome, 'x 111"Boll the \\ar. (1;1.1,1; Slu.,11 la,litS, Jt,ul \l ache, Hilda Ne -blot, Betty ('attt 't, 1, !r'r.c , appr'c i;+lieu til' ton' i t i tits t ho had 'ilradlptatrlerc; for the Huron County Alyrllt 1'.ii,'1; Single Wren, 1;;;011 ('ole, Eileen Itithitfsou, Edith Latkli ort, rec•.it ',I iil lunnretiun \vtih tilt itlt• 11th reign have been opened in ('li11- l1iPLL The0dort Iii hl, ,I r.; 31;1111t'il '.\lyrtle \\''lite, Jeuuittt (;IoiS tt't, Ann Mrs. Mdl tin Granby ton, miiilip8, ')tree'' 1'hiilip,, Hotly l'a'ir- ln'ati0n. (then sp'akerS were \fakir! The (loath 0cturri.,1 011 Sunday, ,tiny 01' Ih1, t'nnut3•. (;Purge Artnsirott+:. and service, I'ratcc-S Johnston and it tin - 1'x \Yau duns H. .1, Ito\\ maul, of Brits -11 j 5th, of Mrs. Martin Gras, y, al hit 3lclntyt't' sots and Percy I'a'stunrt, of l:x'tor. 'home. in 3lorris 'I'l)t\•nship, in her :,Illi 1 Fal oho evening a dour'. \vas hold, 'Your. �.0-O E. 1.. Cardiff„ morning. t'or'tutu! and waS ;au 'd'it by many of tho't' . The decoalt :'o t\•hu'c amide! Hann, \111.111. .1 ehil,lrtn choir from hir the Rota Itlyl,h. \lusic wa; furuis,h1,l by \vat' rat 'mine A. 1tnuh,tt•, tva<; the ,i''wn•'Iin Schools 1111(11'1' til' direction All. 'I'iliht curd his orchestra from Lon. (laughter of the late 11,tvivd A. Itunl,a)., til' \li`t Velma 1." \\1111. tit' 1{Ptgratve. dna. ;111(1 .\pars 1la1lida3•, of 1,..:„1 \Ya\w;1. •gave Pint' mmmbtrs and a !tale choir 01 nosh, !110-0 sell( Several nunlb'rs. hiss J0 srphit' ' \Veil., of ;kith -inti with 311;. 11. I''atlu\ving her marriage 1litrly y'11t'S J. Phillip;, ;IS arenmp;Hist, 'tint'; n ni 0, she 1';1111' with her husband lu . i-otn, auto Ilarwey \l1(;e', (';)ada'; \la'w's. where She has sone' resided. I shy ''•4411 a t'atitalul uu'mb'r tit' Knox ,' Ila 1'y I,au(1er, doltghtrd the ;antimer 'with his Sc11tch ;utd Irish wit awl l'nitcd ('hifrch, Brlgrawe. s, :Ic<. Mt'''. I'ht I” was hi' ;renin. itetidts h,'1' hull and She halves In • t i;t ;IS't. Six girls, 3largtt' oto ('Laren''' 1'1tl,;s: Nict;t1, oar,', Mrs.rs. I tnnufn, fhr1'' d;nchlrr.;, Helen. \1181 t+ 1'cana Huth Higgins, 1-'01.110 \rthtry. I;r+n R1' 31+11 lin, \Innis; luno, \IrS• Nln ora Ib id 'S, .\u(lr3 11c(;0'wnn ❑1111 ('ocil .U•mSilOng, Kiteh1,n'r, and 31:1x• 1heNKiNS In \1'in(ls0r, 1111 Sunday, 1:10)11.10.i.l'0nit exemplified til. Sailors ,luno 11th, to 31r, and Mrs. Harold 'Airs. James It. Cnullt'- ltrlgr:ivt'' Hornpipe and Saute Highland dancing• a also one brother, Joseph Hunba r, of 1IS. Jenkins, the gilt of Son, (Barry :East \\'attvunOSh. Ont h:olhor, \\'illialn, (R' otnit3' Clerk Norman \till'' and :\lexandtr.) COV' I'rauclS Bnnc:til, of 310rri+, prrdoeta'otl her 1,A.0 years ugu. di unulst•at'al the clog. lu music 1'nr•�,,`,;^.,�„-____. I Tho funornl was hold from the hitt Dished by Reeve Alex. 11cOouald of residrnee, nil 'I'uc:day, .Idly Ill, al CONCRATUI \:!lfitld. The \\''s7tfh'Id \i;ar gear. >r aATION p.m., to Brandon Cemetery. II'l,grave. with Rev, G1'0rgo H. Dunlop official- p.m., t Ltit d, ing On motion of Councillors 1'trliitt and svnmen, under In, 311.s. lateen Krng- :\imst•atia,", a t.porial nl'othtg 1'.1' lh:• maul ;u,i \I 1s. O1lv': Monti", \tarried ('cnnvit w:i; ';hell flit ,lu1y 20111, to (addles over In, \IrS. Stetvarl ;:,,With, consider Iht '1';1 Mr Train al 2 p.m.. 311;, 1;lin.;her, (;odtritIi; 3I it -Ltd Fltid Ilio \\'ilsnn Ilaain all 1 pont. '1'111' men, Fran!; ih•0'\'nilg, Charles \tat. fttgim'1'r I. to In, prose nt. khan; I'P:t gtttssing routtst, Gurdon (In !::,tion of I'ciltill and Itaps.)tt. Iti.hi, Ga 1.'1il1: \bo'n'ed Hien, fat, G1'/, Lir :\vn ;111:1 John .\rntstr„ug wire \\'tu. 11. Loon!, Ulivor wore; Boys and .;11111111111'11 a eunttnllIel! to soon til:' girt; Ihr'o 1, ggr(l carr, '1'111 ttithl and ('rusht'r for the tit of $,'1,01, it pus- -I?:Irl hishtt, \118. S0-\\ art Snlilii and tiiblc. ~'aunty Ito, 11; ('hiib•t tits Connell adjtiurn'll betwtin 11 and race, Fern Iii0111 and Mona Richt; 12 min. Toadies' 1;Xi!ttg •li;:pro, ,Airs. St'\tart ;'nitih, \t.+. (rtt,l hi.hrr; F.,e•yono'8 I1.Iselin tater, St:+alt t Riot)) aural 311 v, W. I. MEET Compulsory Service Age Raised 'Ito 4(1 Years .\ six•yeam extittion In cttll•n11 igit has loom -lint Iltlll efttut Utlllb'r t 111.0• elanuttiuu tabled it, the Homo; of ('anunon. yesti; data by \\'air Ser\ ioos 3!Iitkt'r 'I'h11,;011 \fl'i't; malt'; Single 1111'11 11 11(1 child Its.; \widuwels _u to 1I11 year,; old, intluoivo snbjt't to cont. pnistiry military St rvice in 1'.In,lila aunt its territorial wat,'rt. IAll nat0 i fru in yea/''; 11'20 to 11'22' \who wore single 0; widow'''s \vithuaal children on July 1rtth, 19 In, art Rabb, for call, Mr. Thorson :,lid, but thuso' burn in i:tit: will out he ti 11011 1111 11 1111'3' 1'1'11'1 1110 ago tit' :.'ti, Prior to the ptuchttnation 2I was 111, lo\vost atg' and :t the lligh,st at which (men \vet) called 10t' itmtpulstr3' ,;'r• wit's. For purpose of call-up regulations, turn married alter July 1:,, 1910 are considered to It' single, 311. 'Thorson tabled his pruel:una1il)n as the 1Iunse n'a'il the '11(l of its ticl'atl' o11 the hill which world giwo ,th' Government power to iutpo't conscription for ovtrsoas service 1;) - order -in -council. 31tautinie an official of the Ivor services d'.parlmvnt said that with the 'colloid() age extended to 10 y'at.., _':,,cOn men twill be (lulled for trailing .in August, Ito' greatest monthly tall made so far tinder the compulsory Ser- tice regulations. 'Heron. this Ili' highest r'i!tt'itiun mad' on the \ear "1'v'iu1'S d'p:tt'tnu,111 iu 0111' 111011 II by oho aunty was for this month, when 1:,,uun nun \v'w1' called top. Stewart -'total and Stanley Riehl, I'ht tl';alar monthly meting of the ~'.wart C",k' and lateen Krornt111; Women"( Institut(' was held at the ()most poison 11r1'Stul, 3' S, Mary holt. of 3Ir.s, (;'tor tail Thursday of- , lf 'Jlairhu; 3'0 til t child, :\!dory I:aut b,,,; tnrl„on, and \vols in ell:ltg:' of til. truer, 1 undr8horo; 1I nS 'Coro win. II u w I. i(. uuuluic'• nort, 1.:lurtnec Kiehl aril \Ir. S. pace. Niro;. .\. 'I':3'lti: and Mrs. \VIII. John- ston. Sari!. taiioniug \Nati out of the , S; .'rout' thoroughly it!,ctisscd, , . felts, as usual, conducted th' Fennel. (�llnlon Illlckey'Stalr Ipu ;titin (lI.in:-r. Weds \t', JI:111)1t)Il �.ive a Fe1olttlg 1111 \ ({till ','e ItIiti Inns plat'' at the ;/•lit bus to 'c 1111 uvers)•.t;. A 1'ntul Itis 1'.;tut�(lic«I i -it': mlage in 1 :tshtvutui. been 1'-p'tti I la s•t'uat eigarettis to tutu' when Ruth, y0un:ast d:nlghlc1 0f \!r, lot it 1 toys u' . as and anynn wl'a ,1101 ilr.;. 1:at\'id Tit matt. of I',t tug to cuatrihtiI' It this fund may was united !u tt,arri:a;;' lu Kelso loot, their duu•itions either wt'ith lir:; SIi'tt'I-i, tf 'nt:ottta, ittt of \it's• YesI:t II. ('. Jolty. tion cr \II•;. ('hone''•, Streets, of Clinton. 311 ,. '1', Fll' 111 ss -as the Inl•k3' win• 'rbtt bride eh ..11' at blur polka dial. nor in the draw and revolved a !welt, Snit and \Aare a tarsagt of Johanna flower toni.iln.r 1tiiril with flow':s. Hill rows. The attendants \\•'re Mrs, It \wa•- derided to tlisccu-thltti the plant' ('tial;, of \\''tido-0r, stt•t„r of 111 - draw and n•Autt. the teas, ionl'hliu'� btbl0, and 31!: Normal Slmcts. of lint loath to watt' -lime minimums. ('liutou, Sis?Pr of the groom. 'Mrs. \\'. \1 ,lilt gore a reading 00 a 1 I'ht y.rtum 15 0 fol m'r htrlt1,y hu :1!111 Magazine. tilt the Clinton (tall.., auto no doubt wilt be \vtll rentent u'rt it I y many through- out this disttitl. 'Ph1' .\ngtts.l /tooting will b' "Grand- mothers itay,” and will be hold at 111' home of \Ir;. 'I'unut3•-Taylor, the first frituntday in the mouth, Lunch committee. Mrs. 11. ,Iuhnstnu. \I: ('helletw, 3Irs. hall and lC'thttie. 'I'as Collections Sloe' Mrs. S. Thy Village Tax ('o.l'clni. 11. I). Philp, give; 11s the lnllu\witt';; ft4tti' ; Program (.'onttit itleo. '1'h' Grand. on Ih1, Local tax situation: nu:fliers. Every gttu tlauutli'r• in the 'rata{ 'Fax Roll $t2 11.1';3 -viliage and vicinity, it 18 hoped, will 'faxes Collected (;,110.15 31 ttty ratepayers have paid their full yours tax's, huts taking advan- tage of the rcllti'tiutt, 'Those who have not paid, au'' stroloAly urged to too So. Certificates Arrive Inletmeiiate ('erlifficates have been received for the following pupils com- pleting Courses in (;fades 9 and 111 of the 1113'11 Continuation School: 3lau'gar't S,huebottuitt, Ivan Itilbo-1'n. Certificates are available al '1'1le Stuudard Office, I3IRTHS 'I'A31:\N -.In Clinton llospilal, o n Thursday, July 21111, to I'tt, and \los. \\'t;ley Taman, a son. 1{.\I)101ti)--111 Clinton Hospital, on Saturday. July' .1th, to Mr. and lits. 1'nrg' liadford, 111' I1l3-tll, the gift. of a daughter. (11ItSON--1 n Clinton hospital. ou 'Lubar:slay, .Inly nil, to 31r. and Mrs. Glenn (tib -011, the gift of a (laugh- ter --Yvonne 31arit. Thr pallbearers «•ort'. \Ir:Sr.;. 11ot'h. \\'hetdti, ,Leos. Alb Flit. Norman \\'atlslt. IGur,;on \Vatsh. \\unto \'Ihery :uul thigh , C'at1,pt ell. !AMONG THE CIIITRCI-IES PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday School and ltiblr ('las'; at 11 ',Lill. Robert S1101111'0. Supt. I',iblir worship I2 o'clock. Rev. .\. Al. Itoylt will conduit the sot'\ice. TRINITY ANGLICAN CHURCH Rev. P, H. Streeter, L,Th„ Rector July I2'. It, 12. Sunday School --I u: 91 .\. 31, 1,:\ ening Prayer and Sornont- ::,t i p.ut. in of �,'aIOrtli. will officiate. BLYTH UNITED CHURCH 1 ast Sunday, July :Oh, Rev. \\'. 1Paid;oil. of Itrigditi preached in oho l'nited Church. ti' g;\1, a very spiel'. did address alt, "Ye Shall Recoil-. llh)err,” \which was greatly :t{,pri:iat- Mission Band 'lb Meet \ext friday aiming. July 10th. tilt Th' \lis,si0n Band will hold their l rr1'p;u tilt' y seri ire n iii 11'' held. regular tu'cliug on Saturday aIt'f .'Theft Mit he a iItt- jou ser, ire I'or noon, July I Illi, at ;; o'clock, au'\\ membl'1S. 'fiat' StSsion will nu et Arrives In England int ;;;0. On Sunday !turning, .inl3. 1°. Children will bring work books, licit - 31r. and Mrs. dames A. \ic(;ill of til and .scissors. Any children holt- the Communion Srrvict' will b' in'id. Clinton, have received word that their \ext Suud;t3 Suhjtels: datyiug in town or community, are lson, l;loon, ha arriwc(l safely in l„ 11.1:,; "'(bit' Satt'am'ut. ' �t.urdiall3 invited to ;'lead. , Creat Britain, ;,i;0: "Ito the Beginning.' tette gave s'I'rtiins that \yew mach ' ;Ind Misses Edith and ll\ven ('oak vor3' uir'ly, dkPlaYed til,' Congratulations to \ifs. Gordon I':I- dnirh 11;1111, :\1'f:h+n'S 01111,' tri and 'liott, who celebrated her birthday un ilio Gaily Jumpers also assistrd in the ;Sunday, .1111y :,til, ottrrncttan program. The final number tilt "Salute to til. fatted Nation's” by Congratulations to little Miss Linda a tna-sof{ choir was wary impressive. K,:iihlrtu Sinus, who c'1'brato11 her 'Lull,' sp'tf:ll Sptaket• 111' the al'IPt'- first birthday on '1'itar-day..luly 'undo noon was the Res', A. 1,, Itnd(2.,, 1)•i)., 0f ihamilton, a corium. fast \Vti\w:ut,•i-h Congratulations to Ray 1'0utig,tvh0 old hof. II' \w1101'0dueed 11y 11110111-totll- roltb;al'd Itis birthday on friday. as or fern'.' r'sidtnl of Ila' fo\wnsbip, ,Italy ;trd. lir. Joh; 11`"s'\whn\w r o orsfdts no ow '_in cunt't,Sion.. 'NH.ibulg''S addt' ress ,ngi';tnn l:tliu= to 1.,'sit' iluti'tlgt, \vas li ,toned 111 \with kwon inttrttI. 'oho celebrated his 17th birthday out 11;11'.11.2.;tbo evening dancing was Inn,' ..2.;11),enjoyed to lilt mit-ie of .trlhut's Or- i chrslr;a, 1 booth, uprraled 1 \ Lilt lullytit:ni, \\•m celebrates her birth- t'0ngratnlations to 3;1 : (lances 114'8' \\'wanuSlt unit of Lh' I''(leratioll'l ,I' ,tgi'icuiinro diol ;1 Ilu•t\'tnt; lotstn,'tt , day un Thurstluy..Inly (.,Iii. 'I'ownsltip (loll;.\lox. I'orititi'ld i; the editor of a booklet, relating to Ili. Congratulations to Capt. ('. H. and 1' ,4imy II Ilio 'Township, and the rtli--3115. t'ilpad•itk, will) 1111 'Thursday, Hon has bre! in groat (lt'nutli,l. 'July 9th. rtiehrat' their hath \voiding' Anniversary, i i I congratulation 111, and lira. Calf Club '11() Meet At 3Ym, G. Bell. \who trl'brnte their -lath Epllrlaln Snell's Home 'wedding anniversary on \YPduosday, \iotttb,t•s of the iilyth Peel Call' July Silt. (`haft will ate'( at the home of i':•ph• H n \ Snot!, on \1'eduesda} Congratulations to 111.,. .\lberla J. July I:'t i. at pout. ,Ponder, who celebrates her birthday Two classc; of liwosl0t•h mill it, on 'Thursday, July 9th. Also to l'te. avail,hlo for lodging pnrpn'o<. and all Edwin 1-7,, Bender, twill) '01o'.orated Itis ttt',a!,rrs of the ('Inh are rr,ueste41 10 birthday on 'i'urksday, July •:t..11. be !nra'nt' Cnngr;fnitOm' LLf,\Ir. Sate l:cebnio Mitt , •Iehratrd his birthday on S.t•t- 1: your label paid in advance': ,urda3•, .lily 4111. SUNDAY New Power to Move War Traffic SCHOOL LESSON LESSON 28 Adam and Eve; Temptation and Sin. Genesis 3. Printed text: Genesi, 3:1.13, 23, 24. Golden Text: "Vh. soul that sinneth, it shall die. Ezekiel 18.4. The Lesson in its Setting Time --We do not knot( whdzl the temptation of our first par- ents took Piave, oxcept that it was near the very beeinning of hu- man lii',t•+rc. Mans First Temptation 1, (a) "Now the .serpent war more subtle than any beat of the field w'lveh Jehovah God had made. 1. t h) And he said unto the woman, 'Teas hath God said, 1'c shall not eat of any tree of the garden?" it is Satan's de- sire always to ruin what God 11&s done and now to keep laud front redeeming mean. It is his pur- pose, on this occasion, to make ratan as Satan is himself, that is, one who d sobeys and rebels against God, Ile cannot expect our first parents to rebel against God without a process of weak- ening, loading up to such diso- bedience. Satan attempts, and sueccssfully, to insinuate doubt in the mind of the woman re- garding the word of God. This is the way Satan has always at- tacked the heart of titan, to get hien to doubt that God had spo- kelt. Listening to the Serpent 2. "And the woman saith unto the serpent, Of the fruit of the trees of the garden we may eat: 3, But of the fruit of the tree which in in the midst of the gar- den, God betel said, 1'u shall not eat of it, lest ye die." What the woman should have done, wan immediately to denounce Satan for his subtle insinuation, and tell hila that her trust was in God. Instead of that she began to ar- gue with him(. Appealing to Pride 4. "And the serpent said unto the woman, 'Ye shall not surely die," When a person believes sin will not be punished, thou all dread of punishment is re- moved, and the greatest deter- rent from sin loses its restraining power. 5. "For God doth know that in the day you eat thoreof, then your eyes shall be opened, and yo ehall be as God, knowing good and evil." Satan appeals to the woman by telling her that If she eats of this fruit, the knowledge she will thereby acquire will bo of such greatness, and of such a nature, that she will become like God. This apeals to the woman', pride. This desire to be like God has always been a powerful factor is the history of fallen humanity. Choosing Satan b, "And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit thoreof, and rid eat; and she gave also to her husband with her, and he did eat." Was there anything in the fruit itself which was harmful? Prob- ably not, 'l.'he harm did not come front the fruit itself, but from disobeying God, 19 such a simple thing as this to be called so great a sin as to bo worthy of death? Disobedience is disobedience whe- ther it pertains to something small or hereat. Eve disobeyed God and obeyed Satan instead. She chose Satan in place of God and !eve for God was replaced by A fow„ for evil, Consequences of Sin "And the eyes of their both n'u't: opened, and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves apron;. And they heard the voice of Jehovah God walking in the garden in the cool of the day; and the man and his wile hid themselves from the pre: ence of Jehovah God amongst the trees of the garden." Why should man now flee from tied': Because he had disobeyed God and felt the shame of his own re- br'lt: i oness and ingratitude. Blaming Others "And Jehovah God caked un- to the mean, and said unto him, Where art thou" 10, And he said, I heard thy voice in the garden, and I was afraid. because I and naked; and I hid mysel f. 11, And he said, Who told thee that thou wast naked? hast thou eaten of the tree whereof I com- manded thee that thou shouldeet not eat? 12. And the mart said, Tho woman whom thou gayest to be with me, she gave me of the tree and I did eat. 13. And Jehovah God said unto the woman, What is this thou hast done? And the woman said, The serpent be- guiled me, and I did eat." Adam not only blames the transgression on his wife, hut really puts the blame on God, for he speaks of Eve as the woman whom God had given to him. The woman blam- ed the serpent, she sign showing ]111('1'1'-4o f:1: t and pooerful j, locomotives of the latest type aro rolling out of the rhopi to speed up war traffaa over tho Canadian National Raiiw'ava. R. C. Vaughan (right), President of the National Sys- tem accompanied by John Roberts, Chief of Motive Power and Car Equip- ment (left), and other officers, in- spected the first of these engines. Tho president MIS keenly interested in the eab interior wlrieh includes now features designed by I\ Ir. Roberts and meulbea of the Motive Power staff. no inclination to acknowledge the guilt or to ask forgiveness. 23. "Therefore Jehovah God sent hint forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from whence he was taen. 24. So ho drove out the man; and he placed at the east end of the garden of Eden the cherubim, and the flame of a sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the tree of life," His access to the source of per- petual life is barred by a guard consisting of the cherubim and the flame of a sword, The flam- ing sword ie bho visible form of the sword of justice and the cher- ubims are the ministers of the divine presence and judgment— of his presence which was not entirely withdrawn from man; and of his judgment, by whlah ho was excluded from the garden of delight, The Burma Road was tenta- tively surveyed more than 100 yaara ago but was not opened un- ti1 1939. UORIZON'3M1 Late 4:11 440 h?* of t rc<ice. $quiVrit skin. 1� l'ioron, 18 Custoa', 14 Rogiodh, 15 Kind. 1 Fool. 10 Toward. lb Highly fia• vored sauce. 20 Mountain. (abbr.). 21 Fashions. it )t Outer coat. 20 Removed whiskers. 28 Sugar -cane stalk. 20 Sounds. 30 Catlike. 31 Pair (abbr.). 32 Measure. 33 Confining. 34 Opposed to coli, 35 Coin. 36 Sciences of plants. Mounties "Mutt" Is Well -Trained Dog The telephone rang. Smug- gled goods? Yes, he would go right over and search, "Mutt," the dog of doubtful parentage, hooked out a flea from behind his ear and then literally slithered into the police car with his owner. Later the member in charge of the "C" Division detachment entered the suspect's house, Unknown to him, "Mutt" had ambled in, nipped another flea, sniffed for a cat, and then lain down under the kitchen stove. The peace officer did not say a word. The suspect piled smuggled goods in heaps be- fore hint, An incredulous look spread over the policeman's face. "I give up, mister, I confess I enlugglud all those, 1 won't deny it, because I've road all about the Mounties' trained police dogs." Thu officer turned but head, spotted the dog under the stove, and wondered how "Mutt" had got there! l LEADER OF GREECE Answer to Previous Puzzle • .1, n� �R;DzAIR!1 "� E1,-,1Sr �1+:*E1I 1 14 Intended. 16 Undraped statues. 17 He was called the "-- mean of Greece." 10 Small depres- sion, 20 Rebellion. 21 Heaven sent food. 22 Salty. 23 Mine shaft hut 24 Upon. 25 He died of a ----- infection, 37 Pretense. 4 Insect's egg.recently. 38 To accomplish. 5 Mister (abbr.) 27 I,ear. 39 Gerni cell. 6 Coats avith 2.8 Gondola race. 40 Banquet. tin alloy. 30 Des!ine . 4I Advocate of31 La iron. 7 Roentgen Deputy. 33 Laul;hable. ren,li..m. 8 Roentgen ray'. 34 Dish. 431\Ioney facto- 9 Bronze. 36 flames ese. sect. ries. ' 10 Street (abbr.). 37 Writes. 41 Amidic. 13 Under his 39 School of 45 Reluctant. leadership his ('bale::. VERTICAL country -- 40 Pine tree. 2 Molding. Italian im•a- 42 Each 3 Skein of yarn, kion. 13 :\lyse] (abhr). f. POP ---Pop's Good Reason I WONT GO IN YOUR GLUES AGAi N, G,QLON1=L Convoy System Reduces Losses Drop In Ship Sint:Inas Along Atlantic Seaboard The 1..S Navy di. rlu•ed last wool, that for the past month it !(:1, beet: c+ nvu(ing merchant yes. ;el; ;don; the Atlantic seaboard w110re tit .east. 1.11) United Nation; -11111, hate !r''•4) blasted to the bottom by .\xi. undersea' raiders. '1 herr has been :in apreciable drop in ,flip sinking; in the area dorm(( reeent wick: , n decreaso beeieved tine largely to escort ves,elr and the Navy's off -shore piens and blimp patrols. The \:1'.y Department bail 110 comment beyond it.; brief an. nouncenl+'nt that "the Navy has been convoying merchant ships through the lanes of the eastern sea frontier for :approximately the past thirty days." "'I'lu' frontier" cover:; the en- tire coastline from Florida to ;ladle. Of the 1:,0 vessels sunk in these waters, at least 134 were emit to the bottom before the convoy system was instituted, 18 vessels went down during June, 13 fewer than the 31 sunk in 'May and 18 below April's bag of 39. In the fi1'4 three months of the underseas warfare, :Mother (12 ships (vent down. While the Atlantic sinkings aro decreasing, there has been an ao- conlpanying increase in submarine :tttacls in the Gulf of ,Mexico and the Caribbean, It is understood the convoy system will be extended to those areas s0011, s 0 o' ail G ■ S el A total til 1' toil; of salvage rubber lla5 been collected and shipped by tho troy Scouts of South Porcupine, * * r A permanent employee has been placed in charge of Aurora's sal. vage depot, as a result of the continued succuss of the collec- tions made by the Scouts, the of. (ictal salvage organization of the cotuulunity. Out of the finaucial returns to date the boys have made donations of $25 eacli to tho 110(1 Cross, Salvation Army Red Shield Fund and the Baden-Pow- ell Chine Up fund for British Scout war sufferers. A e50 Vic. tory bond also was purchased. w - Deliutlueucy among juveuilee has shown a sharp incrunse, duo to wartiinu conditions, according to Judgo 11. IS, \lose of the To- ronto Family Court, but the lioy Scout movement, is providing an effective means for combatting this, 'Scouting," said 3udgo Mott, "enables boys to plan and do things with other boys of teeir own age, and gives them a chance to share with others a training which t!'nds to equip them for a happy and normal 1!fo," + r r A 12uv 0110 wooded clump site located near She Canadian border has hetet presented the Boy Scouts of the Adirondack region of New York. 'l'Ite donor was Charles E. l'e+lforcl of New l'in'k 0 . 0 A Camp Call To Scouts .1 call 0, Buy etiou1 leaders ::t•ross the 1)0:uiniun to Overcome the leart!nlu problems involved and seeme a forUlighl'rI camping f+1r their Scouts this summer has been i=sold by the !executive loard of the Boy Scouts Associa- tiom, The obje01 is to eth)ure both the camp training that lis proved so v(!u;,,ule, and the health bene- fit of cilanged surroundings and the lull out'inor life, particularly for the y()ti ager Scouts, 01dor Scotts not otherwise employed will be (0 king on tarsus, For 110 ae are recommended camps in lnrnti+n,; now ((bleb the boys can !:o to their farm work, thus coin. blain;; farm:n.g iced some Seoul• alese. !'u1' the young Scouts, where tr:ul,pertal!011 is a difficulty, llr•:11'•tullllt conies are recommend. e'I. It may iie postblu to locate such camps on fain., where the hoy'1 eau 11051) with herr}' picking and other li:;l,t l:.ran worst, ('hair- nl':u tit' ;;•ua t Group committees are c•al1rt tion to du ev'ery'thing pa._>il;le to arrange camps and to Seven: tee deeded comp leaders. More th:tit one-fifth of the Leman raec i1 Chinese. ON OP YOUR "*.s. MGMDEI 5 T001 MY UMBRELLA AND LEFT THIS ONE IN ITS GG— Iv .leased by Tse hell Sy. 4: ,i.•, i ,- AAUIO REPORTER DIALING WITH GAVE: ('resident itoose(e,(. Under lbs Executive order, the crack ro. porter has been given sw'cep:n)C powfor the ctissenlirlal.inn aC (1.111'er nuw's! Recent 1•:11(011(111 highlight, ',eau the Toronto orientation of the Detente "Vox -Pop" program, from ('1'1111 to the Columbia network. Tummy Hagg( with his vuic4 'Betty Lou,' is now in [till CiI114.i of the nitrite and Allen sunlo)'r 311110, ti ay Kyser, Joan ( Valiant 1,011y) Blaine, petty Winkler and Elizabeth Roller aro sumo of the CBS stars who are collecting old records, having diene melted down, and then 10.recurding theta and giving the special platters to the boys in tho armed Cannel: Nice gesture' lien Bernie, the Old Maestro, is back on the air again, with 4 big troupe and tt daily quarter hour C11S Show'. - CIiOC, Hamilton, had a very interesting evening recently. Over 200 of the P1'(didelit,0 11101 Secretaries of leading Women's Clubs of liaulilton and district, gatherer) at the Studio for a social evening, and a bit of friendly promotion for "Soldier's Wife,•' the epic daily program of trio war -tinge Canadian home, broad- cast throughout Canada daily at 1J,3U a.ui, E.11.'1', An episode of the play was rebroadcast, the sta- tion's Commercial Manager, Guild outlined the part radio was playing on behalf of the War- "I'inlu !'rices and 'trade Board, and studio interviews with the stu.- tion's woman reporter Jean Gil - lard, were highlights of the evu- niIg, When all business hail been attended to, a studio tour was arranged, and the women %%e1,5 given a first-hand picture of what takes place during the broadcast,. lug from a top-flitu radio station! All in all, a very pleasant and unusual evening! MEET DICK LIEBERT Richard (Dick) 1-ichert, fatted youthful organist at the giant RRadio City Jlusic Ilull organ, is one of the nation's Most table and versatile console stylists. You hear his artistry on the 1111', 111 a wide variety of programs, rang- ing from the 'mood' 111115i0 011 many of your favorite daytime serials, to playing the mood 'neva- chord' accompaniment on mystery play's, Also, the weekly broad- casts from the Music hall, to the nation, feature Dick's unusual console styling. Some Interesting Sidenotes Dennis Day, more or less on holiday, while the Vestey show hetes its summer lay-off, is doing liinlaelf right proud, with guest appearauc05 on many of the net- works summer slows, A recent appearance on the Sunday "Pause that Refreshes" program added new laurels to the Day talents. Columbia's famed radio re- porter told news analyst, Elmer Davis, has become head of the newly created Office of War In- formation by appointment of OUR RADIO LOO TORONTO 5T.t.'rt0Ns (trim ANk, oar, 140k 10)C014 080k, CttY 11110k 11,9, IfIDTWOIIIOI W13AIr 4,11,O. Red 000k V AD1+1.11.(0.4a) a . 78k 0 11'Olt (M1,11.1.) 110k C.t'VADIAN STATIONS epos t)rvon SC 1400k 0IC00 llumtllo.A 1100k Ci1My 11ani11UOn 000k dlCTli St, Calk, 1280k 010OF' Mon trait] 000k 0E0 11 North I qy 12110k OP(14) Chatham 080k OM' , Loudon tet0Jkc (4'4O !PuSrger; ttford r e1'; 1400e ,11(1 Sault tr. 5l. 1400k CICAO Montreal 730k UUJI(tl), IC ktwa 1„ 100k OK CKK CI,1v tNX 1 U.S. WED t Wnt,etloo 1.100k thieve lark sna►Iw r TOk T 4 Sudbury 700k Ilrltmilorsl 1 k Indoor k Aban, 1. Olt ril ONII idiot() 1810k Iteekeater 1 11410k t,tnclanatl 700k iv0Yr SOtanaotady 1110k 4yA l' t)i til 1 Vi)llO180, k W}Hutto ak ii1 owel'1141-0k )'Itnetat100 THIS CURIOUS WORLD 6,...,0441.414 111 1110gi x,111 iN Tf4E UNit€D STATES. ABOUT 28 PERSONS DiE iN FUZE -5 Eva-xzv U E- EVE,QY Oji Y. SE DDT WAND/ 0511 England 0.611n 1190 I nalae1l 0.118m ae 1:nglrmd 11.T6m Q9 ' England 11,90un 08 England ie.14u OH England it.TIiln U 19psiim mains t1G 1 ,1'ugglasta tTJllea Q Spat* 0.48sa iaaA.pp ttluaaj.% 0004),,,, Iis Yi41 Il16aeZ� 10.18ui WOIA Ioken.e(edy 10.Y9sn WODXr WCAJI '°ItYlla. i0'd■s s Ely William1 Ferguson SEVEN THE U.S. BOARD OF TEA EXPERTS, BY TASTING HUNDREDS OF SAMPLES, DICTA'T'E; THE QUALITY OF THE TWENTY B/LL/ON CUPS OF TEA DRUNK ANNUALLY IN( THE U. S. r COR. 191411Y1'14 OCRVICE, INC, -P. lS HIGH IS COLDER, ON A YEAR.L.Y AVERAGE, "c4 'THE NORTHERN SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE? { ANSWER: The southern is slightly cooler. Compiled figures show the annual mean temperature of the southern hemisphere b1 be 55.94 degrees, Fahrenheit, and that of the northern hemisphere as 59.36 degrees, F'ahr'enheit BUT YOU MIGHT RUN ACROSS IT AGAIN I N THl=R6 y��� j , ,0*I; DONT ' WANT TO NE::T: A reptilian "quintruped," 4 By J. MILLAR WATT THIS ONE 15 MUGN B LTTE R a Economize • make tea correctly If SERIAL STORY WANT -AD ROMANCE BY TOM HORNER 11 1E STOR Y: Over job -raking 'want acts pretty Kay Donovan a,eet,' jobless salesman Ted An- drews on a park bench. Through at want all she is located by law- irrs MacLeod, Goldberg and !Flynn, friends of her inventor - father whom she sought. They Inform her that he has passed sway, leaving her $428.85, a lac• tory, and a million cans of all- Iurpose Wondrosoap, his latest nvention on which he worked with chemist Hans Stadt, now in Texas, and in which he invested all his savings. Refusing to liqui• date her holdings as the lawyers *deist., and determined to carry through with the sale of a product in whcih her father apparently had faith, she contacts Ted An - draws through a want ad. He heeonres sales manager of the Wondrosoap Company in ex- change for a fourth interest in it, is excited to find that it will clean all surfaces, including metal. They plan a teaser campaign through the want add columns. CHAPTER IV WANTl';1) — 1000 CUS'I'OMI';IIS for amazing new all-purpose cleaner and polisher — WON. DROSOAP, the cleaner of 1000 uses. The first 1 000 purchas- ers of this marvelous cleaner will receive one. can FUEL. L. See previous WONi)ROSOAI' ads for list of dealers, On sale for first time TODAY! Ted Andrew clipped the ad- 'ITI.sement from the paper, past- ed it into a black notebook, "There you are, little brainstorm. Last of a long line of brain -chil- dren. Now all you have to do is deliver." Across the desk, Kay looked up from her list of dealers. "You're not worried, are y0)1, Ted?" she asked. "We've put out 10,000 cans of Wondrosoap. Barely we'll sell at least a thou- tulnd. Maybe we'll sell all 10,- 00(1." "There are a thousand to by. Yiven away free," Ted reminded her. "Every person who gets a free one will sign for it, 'Then we'll pay therm for testimonials, after we get started." "'('hat's a swell scheme," she Paid, nodding her head "Each dealer gives away one ran to each of his first hundred purchasers," Ted went on, "We've 15 dealers signed up, grocery stores, drug stores, hardware btores, and one delicatessen. That's 1600 fret cans if each one tells his full quota." "'They'll sell it. I've had five rails from dealers asking permis- alon to sell it before the release date," Ted told her. "And we'L keep our promise to give away 1000 free cans, There's still plenty of soap in the warehouse .-989,999 cans, to he exact," They laughed together over the figure. • $ Wondrosoap was a hit. Even hlynn, AlncLeod and Goldberg had to admit it as they checked sales reports until late that night, Ev- ery dealer had sold his 100 free - gift customers and more, and one, the delicatessen, had sent it rush order for inol'e stock. Ted figured slowly on a scratch pad. "\Ve must have sold at least 2600 cans of Wondrosoap. 'That's $760 clear profit for us, less the cost of the 1500 cans we gave away. And wait until those deal- ers start reordering! You'll have the old factory boiling full speed ahead trying to keep up with the demand." "It's fine, hiss Donovan," Muc- Lcod admitted. "1 didn't think it could be done, I'll admit 1 was wrong." "Me, too," Goldberg claimed in. "We should get out of the law- yer business and go into \1'ondro- llloap." "Grand, girl!" Flynn's tear - moist eyes mirrored his pride in Kay's achievement. "Now you can start your state sales cam- paign, and ultimately go na- tional. The country is needing n cleaner like this. I'm going to take .some home and try f on my They left at last, offering to lake Ted into town, but he pleaded, awkwardly, that he had Blore work to do, and that he didn't mind the walk or the bus ride. Kay stood in the moonlight af- ter the lawyers had gone. The "dory chimneys cart long sha- dows un the gro,a(d Lefure her. The warehouse hein1('d black and bulky in the b8eheruund. "You've won, Dad," she whis- pered. "You (wore right, and 1'vo proved it. 1'nl so proud, proud to be 'Tial 1)onova n's daughter, proud to he fie owner of 'Tim 1)onutall's factory- "I'nl proud, too," a voice said beside her. "Proud to he part- ners with a wonderful girl." Ile took her in his woos and she did not push away. Ted's hying there, in the moonlight with her, made everything perfect. She ti11ed hyo' face, Ile kissed her, gentl}'. She broke ltw'ay f1'0111 hili he- ron. he could kiss her again, "\'o more now," she said. "'this is a business proposition. You're my partner, not my sweetheart. 1f we go falling in love, it will spoil everything. Pott can't mix busi- nes, and ron ante " sorry. 1 couldn't—" "Ihln't be sorry, 'Ted, 1 wanted you to kiss me then. 1 lvould have been disappointed if you hadn't, But right now we've got to sell Wondrosoap. When that warehouse is empty w'1'II talk moonlight, if you still want to. 1s i1. a deal?" "It's a deal," 111, was gone then, walking slowly up the road to the bus stop, his ))road .shoulders lost at last in the shadows. Kay walked slowly into the office. Iler lips still tingled from 'Z'ed's kiss, lie 118(1 probably kissed hundreds of girls, and quickly forgotten then). Perhaps he would forget iter, too. She wondered what he would think if she had told him that she, 23 years of age, had never been kissed before. 'ted phoned early the next morning that be was sending glary Marshall, a competent see- retary, down for an interview. Ataxy should make an ideal com- panion for Kay, and she could help with the hookkeepiug and office work. If Kay insisted on TOTS' AIRY ENSEMBLE By Anne Adams All sugar '8 spice is this Anne Adams twosome, Pattern 4022. The scalloped bodice buttoning matches the bonnet's brim. A collar or a lower neckline; puff or cap sleeves. Pattern '1022 is available in children's sizes 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10. Size 6, puff sleeve dress and bon- net, 2% yards 35 -inch fabricf flare sleeve dress, 2 yards 35- Jneh fabric. Send twenty cents (20c) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this Anne Adams pattern to Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto, Write plainly size, name, address and style number. ISSUE 28—'42 • KING'S RING Broad .smile and engagement ring worn by Princess Alexan- dra of Greece, visiting in Lon - 1(111, signalizes engagement to young king Peter of 1'ugu.,lavia, now in V. S. living out at the factory, nary would have to stay with her, Mary was all that Ted had promised and more. Kay liked her immediately. No two gills could have been less alike, and that was the basis of their friend- ship. i(ay was quick-tempered, either gay or in the depths. Mary was of at 11)01'e even lliSpO'i)tion, quiet, retiring. And Ted had told the truth when he caller) her a competent secretary. She took over management of Kay's affairs at once. "Wv'0 have to change this room around. Flow about. moving the office into the plant? 'There's room in the laboratory, if it were partitioned off, 'Then this could he our living quarters,,, Kay did not resent her sugges- tions. She had not liked the idea of having an office take up half her living 101)1)1, 1101' did s110 enjoy cooking in the tiny kitchenet off the bedroom. Vary seemed to assume that managing Kay's hoasehold would he part of her joh. 'I'Iwy almost clashed once, but strangely, it was Kay who gave in. 'Thal, was over her father's old, battered washstand. Mary wanted to get rid of it and Kay hated to part with anything that; had belonged to her dad. She fin- ally agreed that i! was an eye- sore, that it had no place in the route, but she fell a queer pre- monition when a second-hand furniture deafer paid her a dollar and hauied it away, it was four days after \Vondro. soap's introduction to the public than the trouble began. Ted was in the newly arranged office, filling orders. The tele- phone rung. Kay answered, "It's impossible!" she spoke into the phone. "I'll send Mr. An- drews over at once. Of 10111,00, we'll stand behind Wondrosolp, tell your customers You can that!" She slammed the phone down on the hook. "What is it, Kay?" Ted tasked. "Druggist on Sant Fe Street Says n customer brought Wondro- soap back and demanded her money, She said she tried to elm a spot out of her husband's coat and it ate a hole in the cloth." "1 don't believe it," 'Ted 1'181' ed. "1\'ait until I see that wo- man." Kay frowned. "Wait a minute, Ted. We tried Wondrosoap on brass and on window's 8101 china, Where's that handkerchief you used to clean the doorknob?" "1 don't know. In the laundry, 1 suppose." "i think you dropped it in the plant; we were so excited that (1)13'." She hurried out to the ware- house. In n minute site was hack. Ted read the answer in her face before she held up his handker- chief, well sprinkled with gaping holes. "She was right, 'fed. What. are we going to (lo?" $ $ 1 The telephone really started ringing then. From 10 a.m. until noon, )Cay, then Ted, thein Mary, took turns telling dealers that money would be refunded, that damages would be made gaud. The climax canoe when 111Rce Flynn drove up. "Come out here," he called, "I want you to see my cal'." Kay gasped as she caught sight of the Flynn coupe. Each fender gleamed in shining metallic lus- tre, without a spot of paint to mar its sheen. "I cleaned those fenders with Wondrosoap," Flynn said. "To- day 1 came out to get into the car. Every bit of paint is gone— disappeared completely. "Why didn't you test that stuff before you put it on the market? You'll have a thousand Lawsuits on your hands before the week Is over unless you get the stuff tack," (Continued Next Week) ' House Flies And The Garbage Can Many Diseases are Carried by this Prolific Pest Null 1; the Ural• to ),ill 1ho house fly, 1)ne authority Los er- 1inu0ed that a pair of flies be- ginning operation:, in April alas 1w the 34uyinitors, il' :ll: u(•1e 11) )i\1', Of sufil('I,nl 17ies to covet' the earth •17 feel deep by Aug- ust, says Stratford Jleacun•Ilerald, ono of the most prolifi(: hrved- ing places of the flies in cities is garbage. Fermenting, a 101 neg- lected garbage furnishes un ex- : rellent medium for fly breeding, , To prevent : ueh breeding, e'1/4 cry I }mewled?' ;.hould have a 1 ent number of g:l1i1 ge cans to Ialte rare of the (luny output. They should be tightly catered I and at short interlals they sLuuld lm thoroughly cleaned pith hot ' (cater and lye, says (;.:1)lltn Alaii, of tic Dominion Enlu(lo h v'ieal 1,ab(natury, 1(aioluup�, 11.1. Instead of piling w,,n'lage m dumps where rats, flies and other insects multiply, municipalities should, of course, incinerate waste nu0eriats that have nu sal- vage 01)111e. Ilcapo o1' decaying unions, other tegeta ldas, grass clippings and fruits as well as decaying straw and weeds will 1110" breed \'lies, Such breeding places should be sprayed with orf er burned, The chief importance e1' the house fly is as a carrier of dis- ease. Not only do its hairy legs pick up disease germs, but its filthy feeding habits result in contamination of everything it touches, Typhoid fever, eye dis- eases parasitic w'001n5, Summer e0)1111)11111t and tuberculosis are some of the diseases carried by house 1';a( ;. 1 The proper protection and dis- posal of garbage is a primary con- trol pleasure. All windows and (lout's should be screened. Fly traps, sticky papers and fly poi- sons all have their place. A very satisfactory poisoned bait is made of two or three teaspoulIsftll of formaldehyde to a pint of milk and water mixed half -and -halt'. A small piece of bread or a small sponge is placed on a saucer 11101 Fi01(1'8te'd with a 1111XtU('0, leaving a little liquid in the saucer. Kx- posed 0111 of reach of children or pet:, this bait will kill many flies, Present Was Put To Very Good Use Finance Minister J. 1., Il.sl1y picked the following letter from Gordon Hammond, Kessler, :\1ta., out of his voluminous snail bag, as the one be would remember when the task of financing (-'an- udit's war effort appeared temp. (gorily as too much of a burden; "'The wife and 1 were so pleased to get your letter of appreciation for the 111011es' sent, Being a vet- t'1a11 of the last war and too old, and 1 lost my right eye twelve years ago, 1 yet felt I wanted to do something to help. 1 was so sorry 1 could not buy a .550 bond sometime back but 1 did not thresh one hushed of grain last year on account of being' dried out—so you understand what a kick we got towards the end of )larch when we were given a sur• prise silver wedding anniversary party and a 30 silver collection was handed to us. So we came to the conclusion this was much the hest Tway to make use of this nice present." Hammond bought \Var Savings l'ertificat05 with his wedding;' an- niversary gift, Asks Non -Residents To Leave Hawaii Warning that the United States victory over the Japanese in the Battle of Midway "has given malty people a false sense of security", Lieut. -Gens, Delos Emmons last week urged all non-residents to leave the Hawaiian islands las soon as possible. Although American :lir and naval forces early this month routed the largest fleet Japan ever sent across the international dateline in what may have been an attempted invasion of the U.S. west coast, it is dangerous to as- shole the enemy will not return, said lien. Emmons, commander of the Hawaiian Department, t'.S. Army. Runner In Libya Wins Against Odds A South African soldier, rac- ing through heavy fire in Libya with a message for the Army in the front lines, was heard quoting odds on his chances of getting through. "6 to 4, 6 to 4, even, even, 10 to 1, 20 to 1-1've made it," panted the runner, who in peace time was a bookmaker's clerk. BORN 7Zk "otic( KriSpiCS ' is 11 registered trade nult'1' of Kellogg(.'un,pany of Canada Lirnite(l, 1c1 its brand of oven -pupped rice. (;ct time today, TABLE TALKS By SADIE B. CHAMBERS Just a Sprig of Mint This is the season when hint is plentiful and the wise cook puts it to all the uses possible. Now, that fresh peas are on the market di.! you ever try this, — place a small sprig of hint (crush the leaves) to cook with thele? If you are making sandwiches particularly lamb ones do you know the trick of adding very finely minced hint leaves to the spread? }Jere are a few other ideas for your mint hoarding, -- Mint Jelly 1 cup vinegar J'4 caps w'att's' Green coloring' 61.2 cups sugar I bottle pectin 1 to 3 teaspoons rpcarluint extract or 1 cup minced firmly packed mint leaves Measure vinegar dont water into tats; preserving pal; mix; add enough coloring to give the de- sired shade and stir until dis- solted, Add sugar and bring to at boil over hottest fife and at once add pectin, stirring con- stantly. Then bring to it full rolling boii and boil hard for 11,2 minutes. Remove from fire and add one to three teaspoons spear- mint extract or 1 cup mint, Let stand 1 minute; skim and pour quickly, Seal hot jelly at once with paraffin, 1f the fresh( mint leaves are used add 1 cup chop- ped leaves to the vinegar before boiling. Remove the leaves when skimming the jelly. Mint Crush 'I'0 00e small bunch of fresh mint add 12 0411) sugar and ',i cup cold water, ).'rush I('a'CS and al- low to stand for about one hour. Strain and add to 1 pint ginger plc, one cup grape juice and juice of three lemons. l'our over crush- ed ice and garnish with flesh mine leaves. Mint Sauce 11 cup milli 108008 l.s cup Water 'A cup vinegar 2 tablespoons sugar llix water, vinegar and sugar. Stir until the sugar is dissolved. Pour over Mint and let Stand at back of range for about 30 min - 11 10s. Mint Chutney :Hint Seeded raisins Salt Red 1'1.99( r Vinegar Wash 10111e mint thoroughly and shake well to gi('t rid of the Wit 1P1'. Strip oft the ie:w00 caul put 1 ,'2 0111,., through the chop- ping machine 80)) ;in equal quan- tity of raisins. Add 12 teaspoon salt, 918011 red pepper and 3 table- spoons vinegar and pound until smooth. Place in small jars and seal. Mint and Rhubarb Conserve 1 quart chopped taint 11/2, quarts rhubarb 1 quart sugar \Vasil and dry the rhubarb and cut into 81111111 pieces, then put into a preserving pan with sugar and mint, Cook until thick and place i1) small jars. Cover wit h paraffin. ,hods (Another" aeleumes per,unnl letters from Interested readers. She 111 pleased to receive suggestions on tupier for her column, and 1. \'n ready to listen to your (:pet peel es." Requests for recipes or special menus are In order, Address your letters to ")11ss Sadie 11. cham- bers, 73 West Adelaide street, To- ronto," Send 5Uuuped self-u(tdrewsed enwelone 11 you Nosh n rept'. Firefighters Go To Help Britain First group of Caulelian fire- fighters to volunteer for work in Britain sailed from 111) East Can- adian port on a rain -choked, blustery morning in June. Their safe arrival in Britain was an- nounced last week. Unlike the proverbial firemen on a trip, these "knights of the hook and ladder" were surprising- ly quiet and reticent. ').'hey re- fused to divulge their names or any other information, saying it would have to conte from Ottawa. About one hundred strong, they wore the blue dress uniform coul- imoll to firemen everywhere and on their shoulders red tabs that read "Firefighters for Britain". Officers were differentiated by silver braid on their peaked caps. They looked very business -like+ as they filed aboard the trans- port, carrying their gear. Ono did go so far as to say he was "glad" t0 be going overseas, while another vulntecre(. the informa- tion that all were "pleased we are being allowed to do what we are trained to do", Varnish Screens You can't get copper (wind")) screens? 'i'ry tarnishing your old ones to make then) do one metro year. By that time we'll grub. ably have plastic screens. A chem. ical product called "sa'a.r." is en- tering the field, United Nations Prayer God of the free, we pledge our heart•, and hoes t(,0at t,. l:t 111118e of all tree mankind. Grant us wic(uty over til(: tyrants who would enslave 111; ir0e men and nations. 10apt us faith and tinders:L nlding to chei.,sll :all 111150 who light for frect,018 as if they were 0111' hrulners. I.1',1u1 us brotherhood In hope and union, not 011,y for the ,pace of this bitter 10111', but. 111 the days to come which <11111 :and must unite all the children of earth. Uttl' earth IS but a small 5011' ill the great universe. Yet (,f II 111'' cal 1111151, if We ellOu21, at planet u111 (seed by war, 111u1'(Itte:ea by I11111gol' 11' fear, 1111diVI(te'(t Uy 1.4,1lSe'l1SS (liSUllt(1u115 1) 1')01', 10!81' of theory. Grant lin 111111 C101 Vogl: Itnd f01'esoe1142• 10 beg,11 111lr 111>(: 1.0 - day that 0111' e'hlidrell a11(1 0u1' children's emlu)'011 may be p10') of Hie 111111le of plat). The spirit of roan has awakened and the soul of plan has gone forth. Grant us the wisdom 1001 the vision to comprehend the great- ness of man's spirit, that 111lle1's and enoll1(5 so I1)lgety f01' a glai beyond his own oriel spall. Brant us honor tut' 1111' dead \silo (lied in the faith, redemption and security' ler all captive lands and peo- ples. Grant us patlean: with the deluded and pity for the betiaye.l. :tad grant tis the skill and the valor that snail cleanse the world Of oppression and the old 1(4150 doctrine that the strung' Must eat the weak because they are strong. et most 01 all grant us 01'otherhood, not only for this (My, but for all 0111' year: -11 01'01he'l'i1/0d 1101 01 wut'dS, Out 1)1 8,1s and ,lector. !%e 3)1'e all 01 US chil(trell of earth—grant JUS (1181 sill'ple Knowledge. 11 our brothers are op)n'cs=ed, (nen we are oppressed. I1 they hun- gel', we hunger, 11 then' lreeedol11 18 1:(51,11 10 ay, 0111' ll'('e'u1111 1101 secure. Grant 118 a co1111)10n faith that man shall know tweed and peace—that he state know Justice and righteousness, freedem and security, an mom op, (•r(un0y and an equal chance to (Io ills best, not only (1l our u .,1 ,.,u..s, i•t,t ah;u..:;,,,...1 (he 000r1d. .and in that 1111U) i((t 148 ular,11 w,•a,u (ale cocoa ''11id our hands cue rlulka, Amen Page 4. " tocitte+eta ctttocti ocittoctempottomat covitomoctivetombrottatatcatova J. H. R. Elliott. Gordon Elliott INSURE NOW! AND BE ASSURED. Elliott Insurance Agency CAR—FIRE—LIFE—SICKNESS—ACCIDENT. BLYTII-- ONT. Residence Phone 12 or 140, "COURTESY AND SERVICE" WESTFIELD THE ST,A i ?ARD 11 --- _ • ,��---- -- \V. Co T. U. Convention At ` ingr}lain I'h0 furly•fit•ih ('u,Jvt'ntlun of 1110 II11rull ('011111)' \\'0t11e11's Christ km Temperance 1'111011 wits 110111 In 1110 1 11(11 Church, \\'Inghlun, 011 Tuesday, June :23rd. I'h0 tlel()Ilona' exerelset; of both morning and afternoon sessions were unusually Inspiring and inArtterive-- the former by Mrs, (I(('\. 'Milligan, • 1 o Goderh•h, and the latter hy Hiss Itar[ool of \\'inghat. III the ah5ence of the p1'enillenl, A largo number from here attended idle induction Service on Friday night at Auburn United Church, when the new Intakter, Rev. \\'011. Ruse. It. A., \a.; inducted as minister Of the Au. 110011 charge, Rev. Hoe hall charge of the Service at the nine(' Church here on Sunday. ,\ mons choir flu•nl),hed special must(. g111', Nelson Patterson is Improving Office Phone Int, A his house with a lovoly new sun p.)rch. t 1Iis'2 Ada Starl(house of itlyth, is it)011.1fi81i� ID/biN)i)1�1211i11h2s9t�l�44111)4;D18t91DI)a) • 4alilD111 1D)/kiDiN) Dc)1 1N;3t 1) r i i l i n t lvi l h 'Mr. and \I rs. 11'111. 11 r THE FINEST EYESIGHT SERVICE YOU EVER IIADt; No hit and run methods he 0.l Your eye; are thoroughly examiu•I oil and yo I are told the trut111 'about thein. If gia-see are acre•, ( ears, you got the fine: l duality at) the lowest price;. 'Twenty -f v,; years experience in Optometry )out' guarantee of atisfae:ion In Willows ()rut; Store, Blyth. R I . ',AReid, R.O. EYESIGHT SPECIALIST Appointments with Mr. Willows PHIL OSIF1R OF LAra MEADOWS (by llarry J. Boyle) They. say t11.tt time changes things. A.; a fellow gets older be 1'uw011, _—.__- _�_. ---_.__.- +.' •-- I Ili=s El- ie Snell has returned to or three twig.; of rider , . , and they ,)'oruntu. eu.ioyed a 1110111 co11n1ry-s1)10 ... and \Ir. 81111 31rs. ,I. l,. Mrlh)well were \went away without taking a cunt of '(;•ot101ieh visitors on Monday. Money. They told tae to giv • then 1 311-:1 4 IC:hut and :Audrey \\'alsh of wages to the Ited Cross. They came lIIr11 all W,'re guests al the 111)1110 of out 011 both 'fhihrsd:ty 8011 1.11(18)' af• 31r. and Mrs. :\thud \\',11 bill over the ternuu11 about three o'rlocl( 8011 nock• holiday, cd until late . • • lust to help inc with Mrs. 'Tippling and Miss June Bu- nn, haying . 'They're regular fellows, thannou, of \\''ingham, ae, vis;!ting Iulh of them, lfestff0ld frlend;. 311- . rat ()'31•Illey, o[ 'Toronto, wil.h -110. Raymond Redmond. 31rs, \\'orihy Fowler, of (oderich, with 31r. aut,l Mrs, Gordon Mr('Ii11chey Next Sunday, ,1013 1.I1), Itau, 1lar( on Mand:8y, old Snell of Ethel, will preach both Those who attended Ihu picnic at 'morning and evening. 111 the evening the lnah liti(Ige reported a splendid he will address the 1,.U1.,, \1.1 will time, sleet its a body and occupy the cent(: 1 A large number attended the platy seat; at the 1:Ulit of the church. in Auburn, "Damsels in i)istress" put \Ira, \(ilio \1',Itson 1101 hero are on by the 1,oude.(horo Young Peop'c LONDES130RO ipendiig a few weeks with her (laugh - In aid of the Red C'rcass, and enjoyed ter and sister, Mrs. John Sinclair and a good laugh, family of Kipperp' ( The farmers are very busy harvest - Mrs. Medd and (laughter, Josie, of hog the abundant bay crop. The synipa't•11y of the community is -extended to the Mains tinnily in their sad bereavement. The late Mrs. llaiis Loudon, visited with Mrs. 1, '1'amblyu last week, 1105, \1'11. Gritfitlls spent the 11•cek- enJ with her son. Artll,o• 811.1 family, .lof Clinton. A,rt, roes into training j this week. 1 Hiss Joyce hairservicc and tor, trooper, of Woodstock, are holid:tyin:, with Joyce's parents, J1r. and 111.;, T. 11.1 ia11•service, be• .Miss Betty Ilruusdou is spending her gins to see the Wisdom of Hut holidays with friends at Fort Erie. it all I Mrs, Mary Grierson of Suudk;laid ot a sudden. 1t c clues over you gradii- is visiting with her 1,.1r01ts, 31r. and ally that poss0ti1y some of the ideas Mrs, J. Fiigland. you have is regard to maple may be ! Mrs. Elizabeth Lyon spent la. t ;u t a bit cc. .keytd, ,weelc with her sen', Will Lyon, and 'fake for instance the case of the family, of 'l'hOrldate. fellows in the village who opt;ate 1 l:r. Ki:k 1 yon, with Mrs. Lyon, and the st01es at which we do the biggest •31 V. aha :Mrs. Palley, of Leamington, 11!..)11Z.:1 1. 1'00 11011't just rt alizu part of our dealing;. .1s a lad, going spent a short time with the Doctor's 111 town i0 the ham with toy parents mother. Mrs. \\'iii, Lyon, on \100003, I had a :..•081 fear of these men. To 1110 they represent) d "big business,", Its the days long before we had tut au•lonlobile they Were driving 11p and down the ro11eessicn.4 011 Sunday af• lerncons 11•itlt ;n;)rting monsters ot Ina('hinet+), 1) 1011; to 'see them. Ou Sundays we saw 111(.01 sitting hi the front ranks of the church flock. They h• . front pews and they ,were desk(; out in finery 11'iltle our mothers and fathers wore the 48'1110 old cl&t'Ie.s ar after year. When father met the banker on the street Ile called the linker, 11r. Van Snort While the banker in a more 00 lc patronizing Way railed father 1y itis first nate). Sometimes lather Would ;:ram'+10 on the way home about the high (81(1(4 of in u.rest at the bank and .the 1111'rcib is way in Which =.0 and so 11a(1 been 1).0011 01f his farm, Tim Mut ply who ran the big store in the vIllcge was almost a legendary character to 111e. Ile had 8 gre-it, bushy beard and Orooping eye -brows that gave him almost a shag;)' 11;1.1 atm. ;t to:rifying LONDESBORO RED CROSS Mrs, \\'. ('. (''hrisl1l , 1110 viee•presidlnl, 111•s, 11. \\'. F, Beavers presided dor• ing bold) sessions. minutes were read, and repuIt6 from the following department suporinten' dents were received: Evangelical 8011 ('hrisIlan Steward- ship, Miss \\'elsh. /tiit(Nareotics and Me 11,'al 'I'entp(r• once, Mrs. \\'. Little \\'hil0 Iti!.boner, ,lliss Level;, Temperance in Sunday Seltuol ---Hiss .1. S. Murray Travellers AId—'3trs, ll, 11, Ilo11•i''l., \\''orld a 111 ('tnail lait )lis510118ry \vork--131 r;. (1tev.) 1100011, The Memorial service for those who had been promoted to higher service 18:1 conducted h'y \Ilse .1, I1, \lurray. These were 1105. ('elhorne, of (ludo. rich, Hiss 1I, Hunter, of lle.nsall 111111 1.01.(1.5 Ila)' is still 11 st0una h 1111 in Aliss Bess'ir Ilarinull, of lixeter. , purpose t•) sl:u0, one hnndrea perces:l In the afternoon the address of wel• - conte (01112 given by AIN. Hier.) 3111.- Inc Lards Ira} Ohs1'r1;un 1', 1 1 :wird it I and keep i1 holy in the 11(11111. 81.1 iu Lean of \\Ingh.am, and respou led to IIIc iby Mrs, Gborge Johnston, of (ioderieh. ru1L'tllllllitl'. The County treasurer, 1IIs. \falter. Itelievitg ILII Iferu, reported money raised 1•)' the is morally 10111 11 (monlf, (11)• 1(Hot ,. three unions of 110,111 til, 11(.ns11II.1' Xc '1t) •ulved that we 8811`11 pH I. 0 1t - ‘Vc(lnei(ia\', Jul.' 8, 111.12. Rayon Tablecloths 75c Bright 1'l)1i(is Women's Panties 391 Brevity Style Straight.Cnt Slips satin 1''inisll Men's Cotton Work Sox 2 Pair For 35c. 1.0 MEN'S SPORT Sill "v TS White and Colours 90c, 1.50, 1.85 WETTLAUFE sionmEssominnimm6stomnly meetings and 11.0:1(, 0 -timidity rl•nu'n1 tiering the Il.lders of 0111' gov(.rnnl''nl -. • Believing' that the 10'1.'11171 01 th.' (rISI i,ln rcu' h11). 101. 22 firm aur wits a former Westfield girl 7 $3111,11°. 10gfslat).,11 I' t 11'1 c;),.112,, ! I ' 1 ae;ter John Sfbihorpe of Wingbam, With All'. and 3Irs. J. 1,, 'Iclt'olvcll. The ('orrespon;ling-S1(relary' report- raft]) +, and Pingo, and at;; lotto c. 011 a nu 1°I)t ship of y:'. Also a 1111 Stub: of chalice. 1v'' urge all our t;, .t1• I'weeks' visit to Huron County by Miss hers 1 1 r1 a ..'1. to bus; 1 vht•; • or 111 111; 011ti11'10 Federation Of Ag- 'nuff, Provinc; l Field S0(retsry, vv'ho Way to 011(ou1,1g1. such Itro.11','(5, riculture Executive Meet yl)olic at Suiday Soh1)1)1(, Puhlic and High Scho01s, .\uxIllarie;, llisxiotl l \\'+' 11••111111 ft' (1111 '1 1 n, nn ;Circles and ('1100(11 (services, Besides (-)nIaghlcly I,11p",,1 1 111 the 111 (('118 speaking against drinkeiug ul:'ohuRc 1111'0, impartation ;111,1 sale 1•f 1)!; 1.1o1! ' beverages and smoking cigarcte, she hev)1ages and 1(11 fit ill our it !i1 f that slpolro strongly against gambling, in- fatal ;1I 11,1uce 1 )1' the 111;111'10 ,11 1:111 chling' 1111 gam's of 011000, prohibitiut for t11) nation s.11ongl) (1 I i1 ! 1 1:01 Two minute addre ;(.s were (1)1ive.: "1141' a' the solutfl 11 fill' the ed by firs. Johnston', \lies 11811'0ul awl'arisen front thf- menace 80(1 Ilia; 1 ; a ;Mots.; Murray upon the subject, "'1'111 1111) 8,.111. I;880(1., the in1111''I`.,1'1 now order and the Liquor 'Traffic" t('rnn'ut of pr..enl "'lift.' )1 the 001111e1151i4 of Opinions heir that 1vo111d suppurl 111e 1.2 11111 1111. 11 -Iris in the 111'11' order the 1,13000 'I'ral'ft(' lions 1.141111.S1011 11001 the F11111'111 11(11•. 'could have no pal's, jel•II111(';11 b1• a recent 01.;,1•'' ''all tti(0 1 1';) (lilt t.1 1;;' 20 11'1 222' .11')717 A delightful 6010—•'"(ilea the gates 11('pula111°11. 1' 'II. 1';7:1 icl, (11;1!,;7711, I' IG '. I, of the Temple" Was rendered by Rev. V1111,111 1'11 1leecrott, accompanied by Mrs, Bee- croft.1341( 1)()NN I The address by the finest spe;lkel, nl)(il.lIC11 Alli 1 11 1(1 Rev, E. 0. Gallagher of the :lnglienl Centre 1'14lltrance 1';estiI1s 'C''inn'clt, \\Ingham, (101)11 n-ltlt 111 ,liquor traffic in Ontario In Its effect cond►tlou's and the shortage of farmuponthe homes and the character GI GODEf,, ICH CENTRE ; in 1)11)• f(7;u ter, Go(lerich and \\'ingham to he ve-t on 0000011 as beim: )I'p.1. '1l lu u, ''More foot) product; will he wasted In Ontario this year than ever in the hi 'tory of the Province" said Ilarry I1, Scott, President of the Ontario Fed- 'crafion of Agriculture, following a meeting of the executive of tll'at or- ganization r- gatIti•zatioll 10(18 )', 1 "Pan' directors, reporting from mon.' sections of the I'rovtinee, were unani- mous in their opinion Ileal the yarns Ensor situation is even worse than was i1811k'ipated, even by those who 'have ;been wanting c"; of trouble aliead," 31r. Scott continue((. ''Last year we WOi'u favored by a 'I'Ite Monthly meeting of the Lon- short (Ic5boru Red C1.05 s was held in the I tions. Community (Hall, on July 2nd, with the from President, Mrs, 11, Fafrscrvice, pr(51d-,peak. iug, with 101 attendance of 30. crops Letters of appreciation were roo.td 'aekn''1vle(lgitlg (110 campaign money and also the $25,110 'tent for making of jam. 2 Thu i, 1(1511 ('Icilian quota, 11dk'hlg pear:lace. Ile was a hig rain with a (big (Moe and they 11S+2 11 (1) say 11)a1 W11111 110 bellowed al a 11)1111;: 1 111:‘01 - would 1181'0 .;001'011 lunch. Three quilts were quilted (luring the meeting, crop and ideal weather condi- At -the same time the exodus the farms had not reached Its This year We have normal with some adverse weather .\11111)•11 full+, ,121111(':; 1'11 betty. ,1"'I111 Collet , Nor .•u [Helm 1n, \Vanda 11 te',11o1Ill. dor'"'n I'i-her, Jute I.1;(rli'c. .\:: Ir v I;inu, 1011 a I;raf, I.nrullty II;1r,i;, kiith1rinI' 11,11, 1;. 1001 Ilollon;l, I: ut n 1 .len' in, \\ ft- • 1(� , ' I ,•.,8111 (1t:1 .11'1a1.u1, I .7 111 . 111;',.8, n. I '21111, .11 1111 \I (; 111 1111, Nat, y \Ir \r. 111, J;un1 11r1'bei', \iai111n01 \(ante,"tivL). 1)875' \Julphy, .luhn Ne1.1.1;110. I' tt Ncl .11, .I 11:1 6', 11,801''0. 1:nr,, i :•-•1 brato. I.. 1 1 Vu 11' 111 I'r.(i 1,11 f R :. nL)ti00 In 1:') ('f 1111' Ili::l Sr71'1111 I':n• I1,un 0 It":ul :t '11 \Vit' !WI I: `;11 1:.1 1 111,) .(111 \1 Hie, 14)h) 1•t I'arn 00 1)111) i tl 1)1 (18): vele 11 .11 1 Shcil,l Hill. l'e81r.,11 School, (11 t ' ll: !i; Scot 1, \ le!ul l.t f1AYFIELD CENTRE 11 . 1; percent 1.1. nt' . 1 'tot7.',11 ;lc L1 .2 h, 1111,1 111 i'' '(. 11.17 • is t:l. \I,,. v 'I' '.'1111. 1:1' 71. Yolk, undid.. • 11 woe cent 1 I ),;01 . 1111. 1'1.!122111..111(11 If 111. 111. ,'1114 \h ... 117'1- 1111 I (! 7 I:• 11.: 11 111. of 'f"1' :.1 1 -I'' 118)• nt the 11:111" of hi- , 1 1' \1 , 11 :11 'I'22,t11;1, 1st, labor I5 at Its height, lits partakers, 110 11'15 (1)3 notch ap• I`he I''ed0ra'tiott officials are of the preciated by hit; listeners. First-class honor.; 1 7:1 percent rr tl I!u' .1"1111' ); le 1 S 1'11. ;11, 01)1111011 that little can be done to 1111- I The officers elected for the 3010' • tu0ro)---'I'all'iI'i0 Church, ,I1'nle.• I l .11 \Ir ..11 fl'1 n, 111 Itradto.11, Provo Lite .Situation, in,lsmu(h as the ,191'-1943 are as follows. 'tor :10 toy's shirts was read. but it 51895 Federal Gover11ntent, c011v111'ced thatI Advil'o-y presidents, Mesdames decided to 50n11 $25.00 to buy some, the farmer will produce anyway, is Johnston, '1'10(11111, I.4oyd, Cooper, and \\'e have an extra large 11osp'tal and apparently not ready to effecl10(ly Knitting quota 011 gaud. All knitters mobilize the manpower of the country and ,stwers are urgently asked to help in order to harvest the crops. Only it ;as the need is very great, j food slun•lagc Will bring home 10 the The 'Trea.u•er reported a balance responsible people the ueces.:ity for of $1,1'11.111, action! 'lfcrk Committee for August — 11rs, I The I'edrration appreciates the mob- itoes,llrs. Ilan, '1r . 11cVittie. illzation of the high school stndenbt by the Ontario Government, This has 'Pickets were .otld on a baking dish presented by 13 ns, 1', 'I'aniblyn. Lucky ticket went to 'ors, 1,, Pipe. Pro- ceeds, $1.40, No lunch Was served, but a IOc col- lection was taken. Proceeds $.2.811, Also $l1'0. donated by Oro 'p that Ing at the will: 140 h 111 the fire bell n, -ed to ring 111) in the hall solver ,just hc11014' of the vihrati:nt. I can still see mother spending the ego -m nloy at the ((ante:, while father sat around the big -stove at the Lack of the store (talking to the dray -roan and two or titre:' loafers who always t•:1t around the a:.:v;' in HIP nintvr-time and 011 the 11.,nt 1 en'udah in the ,;'nnluer- tiume. 'Big '2.11 1vo111,. cone' out and spell: to Illy mother in a plca,a111 Way. '(:ten he would It .1n "1'( r to set' it ...lie had it lot ; list of groceries to buy. 1f it Was a r,1, ut s'iI:ply In would reach lie to 111)1 (and) (•as) and bestow 011.1 of those I,ig stn .,.e 1 bulls eye call lle,1 on Cash Donations For July: been the only bright spot in the pic- ture. I The Vedelatiou woe astounded wit11 recent statements credited to 31r. Ronald Gordon, Chairman of the War- time 1'rices and Trade Board. who 11011)', Juhn l<i'5I2ino, fent 11the-.'i' 'I'8Ib111'a Henry. 511)111 Hill. I'lrlthy \Ir. 11:1 \Ir. I''''1 I'1•,,' 111 '2 Il0ltnes. Kathleen 111,1111,':, ('Fri -nil•" 1!;1 '.:111.1, (''11.0110, f '1'11;11)10. 21' • 10118' ad R(1'•-'< at I!1'' house t I 3!I'. recf1 ('ha11u(1'y. .11'i5s Mtn•ray. Il,'ish11lan, .11an NIcl<ay1, 2'lea, n President, 11rs. \1', (1'. ('hristi0. 11art►n, William N1'Wcom! o, \111001) \'ice•l'ies„ Airs. II, \\', 1", Beavers, ',Diver, i'eler fatter -0n, ,1:1me< It v. ('(nice', unding.Seci'etary---Jlrs, 11, A. nolds. John Si li vanz. 2'1;n (2:) Se11'+, 11rook, Patricia Sinnott, Fret St 01(e:,, \1;11•)• Itec,-St irotary—lllss .\tulle ('on•ltt, Joyce Strachan, Flizabeth Taylor. 'I'rea surer—M is, \fatter Bern. Secnncl•(las.; 1101100; (t t0 TA per. Kvang, and Chrlstiaat Sleward;;hlp-- c(t1l—'11'illiam I'aec.1l1'r, H0nel1 Ile(t- 11rs, Grenslale, Godericlt' iia, Virginia Chase. Loris t' :Rim I, Anti -Narcotics and Medical Temper- ance—Airs. Ruth risky..., June t;arrir'a, .tarn):: P. \V. (1, 1'0;0'(0, E:xeter' Graham, Vary Glatt:tln, Harold liar - Flower 31is(sion-11rs, iter, Lucas, lv0y, \l8rie 2lawkins, Le tnard Metire, (Little \\'trite Itib!oneis—'Hiss 141,1vis, Christ0ml 11c.\lillaur, \\'ill':nrl fil'ler=. 111nglialnl. Earl . Lord's i'ay Observance anti Legisla• I 31 •= \'i1, ilia 811 I \I:. t(•r I22)2ie Chatnn1 y rl \\'i111-01' ;Ire : ;n'ndio:: the bolid lye •11 1110 110,11e 111. their too. 11..trefl1s. \Ir, and \Ir.;. It, ('h;llnit'y, AIL and \I �s. ('118•. 1'01.'11 81111 fly )f I a.1,1l11 (v1.1), (i,! holiday at Ib.' hent( of hi 1' s1 . Itc•hfn-an ,,.'.I .Ir1Yersun. I'I0?. Sam 'Phoma '011 1111 I 111'1( In ('2',) 44 are spending 11 1111, lulu a recent delegation that the far- ltiou—\Its, A, T. Cooper, Clinton. tl'a';; (10 to 11) perces'- 1101(11 .\ik• Irate at their 1,,111: 111'01', metre would be rationale if at the end I Medal Contests — \ins, Johnston, ('(111('111, ,1oy(t' .\St to . I'oneld 1)8x1)1•, of the war, they found themselves in Goderich, '1'hrlma ltelulel1. Marin):•i1' lilio'k. 111- days 111.1 wrel( with her gran lntu+il: 2', Mrs. .l. Fitt'gland, $1.00; Boys from as good a posI'b:on economically as Moral Education, .\lathers meeting';, gin Boyce, lladeline l'11i h.,lnt. 31110 - they are at the moment. 31r, Gordon 'Iloalth and 11eredily-/1lrs. 11, \1', also expressed the opinion that agri- culture could not become conlpetl1ivl' I 'Press-- Miss Louise in the labor market with industry, ham. 'l'lais tltc.in'$ in the opinion (.f our axe- Publicity and Socia( met"lin;( (--llr5. (.111100, that our farmers have to give 1t, (;, Phillips, Coderich. 01) thought; of sc 'cuing More help, I (Scientific 'Temperance in nay and in the end, %l1l result In al ceche- 'Schools—Mists J. 11. Alut'ray, "Pusan, Don of farm prodttccts. The hedert-1 Soldiers and Sailors-31rs. \V. ('o0'(, tion feels that it has clone everything E%etel', possible 10 e11tp1i(1 jze the serious ne- I 'I'eurpel.ulce In 51111183' Schools -- lure of the situation but realizes Brut 'Mks ,I, II, Jlu•ray, until official Ottawa is prepared to Travellers .111 and 1(8111vay E1111/10y- recognize the ir:'herent dangers nc)W eel—•sirs. now011, (lodericlt, facing us in tite production of food our World's and Canadian 111ssin11arY rue, frs, 1 think Tim 1111t•plly w.1S 1113 \\'Dods, quilted at Meeting, farmer,, must Face facts 811'11 accept p \tot'^—'Airs 1 \I Lloyd, favorite ('f thus) dressedaap cigar• . Meeting closed h • ,:in ging the Na -he edict that there Is little help in y ), t 1 liar Serr'ic0 11'ork—•Mrs. smoking 1.'.iagc business mets' ttonal Anthem, 1 night. 11t'ccL', Heu'sandl. In addition it is the expressed op- inion of our executive that the fight RESOLUTIONS: 1 for adegtta'te remuneration will ihuve \li ; .lean Robin:on :;pent a b W 'c'on, 13, proceeds from (lance, $30,00; Cron. 1.2 and 13, proceeds from Pot Luck Supper, $1'I,:':1; Junior Ited Cross of S.S. No, 8, proceeds of rub - bet. strive. Quilt Donations For July:8 1 quilt, from Mi s. \1'es, 110810111: 1 quilt trcm Mr \\''111, 11(11; I quilt from Mrs, May Smith; 1 quilt from 111 .: Gladys LeVer; 1 top from Mrs, \\'ill Gray, tied at mectin,:: 1 lining L1,0 A, Itadford; Ton, piece,) from Ited (Cross patches. hy 1i:;, );1 and Mrs, Ross, quilted at meeting; 1 top from 1105. ,1. llanning and 11rs. 1+', Carter, Wing - 1,11 0 cut '!s 1(?' were (1011 rh with 11113t11.4. (1 course our last Fir. d nein went to Ile air -force just after seed• ing 1:0' the pro: poet of 000:- gr'ltin; ,' the I' in se 111'•(2 like a ver)' re• EAST WAWANOSH It, A. to he ntaiutaiied with' full vigor. Our ''11'0, the tueMbe:'1 of the 1luron 11 r. John house 110.1 (laughlc;, 118• County \\'.C.'I'.t', 111 Convention usselm• Convention u„ . One \1'e(Inc lay afteruc in bel, of 'Muskegon Heights, 111th., 803 officials are amazed to find Ottawa so saltisfi0d with production trends bled on .lune 2:1rd, 11)4:, heresy re11f- 1) 1.111. 1 .-00 in .211:1t 09 1 50.2: (pitching visiting at the homes of his nephew.~, firma our loyally to our beloved Sor- t{, to the wagon to st . ants nuad)te f1. visualize the shuOL poli• go out and (Law n Mes.1 George and John CaldW8II. eroign, Bing George \'i and Queen lion' thus is (I(v01opilig so rapidly.' ,t al'11. It was the hanker and Lai 'Mr, house's sister. Mrs, Ilendersou' IEIlzabebh. 0011 ardently pray for the 111111\hy'; son who carries on at tho of Niagara Palls, is also dining Brun, ( safety of the 1(0381 gamily 111111 the lig 11111. ly I' mpor(un1. They 1.1(1 Rev. an(1 11rs'. Elston, of llrigden, i Brussels Man Honoured ]'rime 'Minister of 1110 British 0001- ecn1e out to give me a haul with (h:: are holidaying (vi'th the latter's (ince- Ou :Monday evening the busine:';• monweallh in these dangerous' and de haying. 111, Mrs..l. T. \\ Ilt-8)11, and other relit- men and firemen of Brussels present- structive days of war. 1 (115)1)vercd a lot last \\'ednc.4•1ay, Gives in the district. itev. El;tcn oc- ed I). C. \Varw'ir'k with a purse W, As prayer has been the cornerstone Those two fellows are real nl"n. 'They espied the pulpit of the Blyton United looney prior to his marriage in mid- of our work since its organization, and blistered their hangs and sun -burned Church on Sunday morning. 'July. ile was also presented with a shall be so in the years to conte, 500 their arms ... but they never said a I Misses liarjjorie and Lois i)ohetty coffee table by the staff of the Robert'would surge that our members otseI1a) 5001-11 ... except in a ,joking way. They t.;>ent a few (lays with Mildred Char- Simpson Co. in Owen Sound of which into. noontide prayer season andpt'- came down in the cellar and had two Iter, lie is the representative, (serve the prayer foundation in all our Mt's. ,I.,hn 111 :'lin. he), ,\u'.nr(. Make Better Jams and Jennies Honk 0/ 72 Tested Recipes ender label o/ ercry CI:ItTO bottle CERTO is Pectin Extracted from Fruit When pectin is used in making jinn and jelly, the Wartime Prices and 'trade iloard Order No 150 allows you to use sugar not in excess of one and one-quarter pounds of sugar for cavil pound of fruit. On the basis that "fruit" means "unprepared" fruit, this allows you to make your jams and jellies the Certo way Whirl) gives you approxi- mate)). two•thirJ5 more jam or jelly front the same amount of fruit. t )Z Ilrecitiescias-, July 8, 1942, ... 4. '• ,.4.4.4.4.4:1 I I 1114 ,1 I4Y(,IIi',UfrIIi CrIII11117'IZE '% \I I. 111)1 \111'.1\\• r'.1i!III a 11 d11-11 ;;i WING AM—ONTARIO, ?, St 't tor �'41i14r, nn+ .; 1 1)l 1 11)11 �' )41111 '1'1Y0 ShO\«'S Sat. Night. +_• II, 1,,,,,,o,_,�Ir.:li v \t' .I I':,I,' .,., Thur;,., Fr'., S.tt --July 1,'•10.1 I '_. .1 !lino nllurlri .' I„ u 1 to Ili ;riot 1 DOUBLE [SILL J. :01111ded Illy ('I, 111.1!on of ha.•1 \'a Miliian\ Boyd, and Alcly Clyde to.!. • r ,' .4 \v01111:-11 111.1114' al 111 11111 1)111' 111)11.1 ?:'Iti(lers of the l lnlhel'Iine •T• 1,,1 ,1„!t• !,1 .- THE STANDARD r Paget AI)IOlnt.l'(1 To 1)1111�;itnll()IIi, ,!7,,:,>rs,£'<:'",13+ ,:,t,wk;t if,r.;-•sulcal rz':istztZ!kl4tw°tcitCtG.te"d '.tGt4.G'.tP.tG'tStgtctP.tGtGttP.tdtfvc' 1'E',tt'.tEtgrPtC,t2tQtGrP>t6t<.rGlGtf,'cultPGt[! School 1') i11( )alShi!) ii 110,1' 1' '1"11l:A'1'!tl;, CA1'J'!'A14 7'H1'.A'1'It REGENT 'I'IIEA'1'.RE f,- + iJr CLINTON. GODERICH. SEAFORTH. 11 r. I;4',,,'t;o ('„++;111 •\ul, u'I, H 1111 ! F,1 NOW PLAYING—Robe. rt Stick 111: NOW PLAYING: "COME ON NOW PLAYING; "Sunset In Wy• fi h:l I t.,•1) ,111111 :', I In H1, i'::, .; t! i,i rt "BADLANDS OF DAKOTA', Fly1'd GEORGE”, and GOLDEN HOOFS. um!nyand Flying Cadets. 1,111 of tho I ),1:..11),1 a n ; , 11 ! t. !lo onrv111< \!r 111,111 n, I';I;;,1),'y LI1' Monday,A Tuesday, Wednesday Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday A 1 !'t Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor. A pPSter Lorre and Gladys George. Walter Huston, Edward Arnold •& Richard Arlen & Jean Parker 111'5' , , t..1 Ir -p •II 11. 1' 11 I •� l no ,• )1 iso „,) 1, h ley. a ifi `"I'Oltl'I;DO I{UA'i," ;t, \Ir. 111):1 Mr,. Ili ti sod ('iollin ill Chain Guarding' Sanford I'! ' i ,u,�l �' u,�, : 1.1. ill c)11:1 44,1;:' I ,,. , 1 i I. . ,! 1 t'' I. 14) 3)) l ++1'I,• 14o1•I, vi.,t,„, with: 11111 'I O I e 1 cn1Os'ed ;t; ALSO NEWS ,S ! /.Matinee Sat, afternoon at 2.30 11,11,•11 •\Ir. un+l 11 r,. (''111 Ihboll,o. I'llil 111)),.114' 11:3 chant 33:1 1)1.1111• '� "IiltO:11)�Sr.A ' J. Mon., Tues., Wed: July 13 1'1.15 .S. K1;not!I \\'h, 4 :,'r of It:1)11)111)11 '-3"m, 4,, ":11,1, • r 1 r , , . :?. •S. 111,' \1,'., idol ;t his 11,1111' lima., you fool `'alt a, yon wow! y1)) \\;v o;, !�, Thurs., Fri., Sat.— Double Feature :I I.I. 1 II:1 1 MON i\ —SPECIAL— t1,! Georc•e Brent, Martha Scott and ('.\N 111')'" .S. Mickey Rooney, Lewlc Shne .S; .\Ir . \Wil .\11,1)1: r ;n1'I'�' ;11)41 111, win Sal(rr,rd Inn II' ha'''. w".1y, )HI" Ih" F? ;S ,S, I'ut+'u '11,1( ;ud1i 1111, i, roan to h” r,•- i� Pau! Lukas. S, Ann Rutherford. in S .lark and ,sill. 11'141 14'1),11)+ 11 In II,1 it loll a ti !,' , 1 1,, �, o ,Illy'(,' 11 \? un l ;5,, ;S' un,rell. 11+'111 iu til,' \,4i- 1111)11. I •r I3,' Thursday, Friday, Saturday hum, in 1111)41)1), ,4111'1 4't. 1111)1; 11 111 r� your info:111))O,0 t!I,• , hahl \;,- 11.11,,, ; Gt "'1'111'}' 1)111(' Not Love" ! ,r Lou Costello and Bud Abbott \Ir. ,I ,1,tl ('o III, • r, the ,•ilia,;,• 1)111 1'1','1 loll .,Ira \'Dahl d I I t ,n -. 11 i F,! Joe E. Blown, Frances Robinson 1'51 .,-ill woo 11+ ; nolo-111..1(1d riot. %Vi)h a !all ;o.cill,'nl on I•'1) 1,1) ,'e. m)It'_ ,1)1111 ;li111,-I pro,) Ir,' a Link to ILIA 1;,t L:,'.Ik 1111,'), ;, 3:1114 r,l 111.1:,.4'3), 1, f11/i Ihi- 11441" it; 11 1341113! school. 1,•I,'at ili'I'I•. t.'1 \Ilii,' ;it 1!„' home 1'l' h , ,un..1 dill I. i., in 51),1;'1•. \Ir. 1' alba:, \h0 441, in It will Ii,' r, 1)!,111'11 Icy a 111'4+' chain r� i,/ �ho rlrit'4�t,'ay on Ib,' I:Iro flour, clan 1. 11 'i::hin Mil hull m I in. I,ot ;id to i, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday George Raft, Janet Blair and Pat O'Brien. +:111 .\lul•111;1'" U)i,I elinn,'roll` and Anne Shirley. / r - .1 r!(.,) i ;1111 1' : ),111 Ho. - 1 „1'1' —Flo. H. 1 11 and thrill:rig ,holy I ;11111'1 \\')•!, 11:1414' :t Itlllllll" 1111)1 1'113'1'),--11111, 'dell)) 4.. "The \lalte4( Falcon" Thursday, Friday, Saturday Bud Abbott, Lou Costello,, Martha Raye, Carol Bruce. Wlll.ant Gargan 11)11 I :1 ,Ill sur .1141 -111,1!1 it 1 I 't,4' '1':1: I,, n u' 1 4))), ly L, t.:')1' 1, 1 /4) 111 1!141;1..,1 I)i, ,ti: ,�, COUR I Sil l l' 01,1'I; \11.:11111 NII \\'. AND(' 1I:1ItI)}'"X 'j• \llsly Hardy i 1111'; 111,:1)1' I,. I ;1)'44'1;= ;;. allot h), 1111 .,. ,'; 111 bar)ai 111!)•")' 111 NI'\y \'Ill'.,. •: , Al Vitso Cartoon and Traveltalk, •, • hi' .1111111;4'1' III11 III,' 4)3)1 ono. _ ill:: by hp 111(155. 5411, ,Imol( 113 a 141/1111 /11.1 ItN ('11)),•01 nl':,1 timid ty, log', injuring it h Idly. '1'111' inlet :I Ulan 11',Is 511/014113 111 Mt. \1'in1'h,111 :'1.111115111 \VIII I f`i,inl0, \ hr'I'I (1! the 45/34)4)) pa • =i1):; 0\ or hitt 1:1., 5'541" Ill is a :u. .\Ir..l1'ir. of 110:1111la1 )5h1'rr• h,' is .1' 4 )1')111; 111'3)).41 '1'114' a11n)al t11),rl111•i:ll ,:1'')11'1' 14 Caro, ;111. 1'1'1114• 1) 111 1.: 0411• .l;t 1'a11', 1'411„11'ly nil Sunday n:ll'run:,n 114.1)', ul1111'. h:441 :;11,1)1 1!11' Qay \a, 1.1,41'1,4 :1111/1111-11 tills 11')'1);1/ 311'1- 111g al 11'' 1;4110 11111131'))'0. 11)11 front 'I'otunt), 14'1'11)1;-1I, 11110) ton, \\, iill,l)l)'lt, 111')))') held S, 111)51)), 111'1!1'' n li.:l, \1'hilo'hurl h, 'l'.i4i,tn1•Ii, I'llnt'1u The annual \II !kora 11 `;,51:11 1)",1S 111411) 11!t,u.;. 1'1' 1• \I-,1111'1• 3/i/ are 11 11 I'o1:1 ton. , i,, hell) at li5an'11 a ('1mo tory 1n ,land t1),' I'n0, r 111'=l' rl':.ulalions Ihl' )Irma' '1'11,11;11 nm 4'))1111 1))1l 1,5,' 11•, lucre. F?' :,all Ileo tirrtnutin; rnn:nultlilt. Iuly .'Ih, \hoe Ilton' was a good tit• jam 111.1 jelly')lakc1' i, ))111)1)111 1'u,''Itn1 in ul,'no,ry you 1111' 4)11!1 a .” II./ R1'4, .\. I?. ~11411 of til' IVa;lti':I 1, Pi') al\;1y \', 1'1' 11'1'4'11. e4' Ioad:moo pH -1'11). '1';)3: s 4',i)o is a1'- 3"111 one-Itn,trlor pnl0:.l., of ,'14;:11 t0 111),11)), 14'11111)111 1 1111 1'1"411',' 4411111' S '! I'tl)IgI'd 1'y thi' \\'min, 1'/ Instituto, Gm alt.!! 11),.11)'1 of flail, 14111')) pectin i Sadly mi.;.,; by "'iglu"' int 1 ono. c/ tho Baptist chili oh iiln)r. arionlpaniod "Keep, 1,,n1 1 lying•' COMING: Humphrey Bog Irt and Conrad Veldt in "All Through the. Night." "80 S/;l1 11'0111, 'i'illl(" COMING; DanLI'rously They Live. and, The Body Disappears. "hEli,1 '1';\I !''i.Y1Nl;" CiMING: Gary Cooper in: — — ii "BALL OF FIRE." Mat,: Sat, and Holidays, 3 p.m. Mat.: Wed., Sat., Holidays, 3p.m. Mat,: Sat Ai q pqp y ,and Holidays 31),m,q 4'T .'ry,.:,2'IL,'2.2..:11.:.r1.,:1•,Li,<1.:,,:•,D.::•Is'.✓r?,1.:.24/',6,IL,l,6ia1, ,.11Ls.11.: L,ICIGat n.:.:ilis l.. /V,?,O,dIL,IOi�IG, .:?... ..Vl�ld•L'IG,•NIL10191G4XA 11�101/:i1k1i VII l)ti One An(1 One -Quarter 1,h. - ' 4. - Stlt;'ar Alolwed '1'o I,h. Fruit ,,."0,,e,,z'�, ,�,>'rr�,.,'iz ,•, 1.,e,,.., „'s,�, , ; ,y 1 111 il'Ie11101'lillll i,? t CC P �PP,k 4"P'Prg,gtmre,grti'-N'etatGtClytgcf;tK,GtGtGtG+Gt�,tGy • I'll 111;1111' 111.111+' 111 111 11)111 jolly 1)1))11: I', ! I., NOHI I': In haft-. momary of our ; ('1 t (lair 1)14'!11,," lir-. .1,'11)1•: \M I,•. ,.� sugar )Il)) l 1:11 ;. TIL' \Val limo 1'1'1')'. 'CI 4+111) pa,. oil :1',);Iy iii,,, �, a1' a:'�'. July' . t), 1)'114'11 1'11' a1' 111 :,; and Trail. Il:1r)I 11;41' nradl• .11111'11 111th, 11111,io ',1 milk for Ihoni in rho now (-111;))1 1)r OILCLOTH— who 11;1 p1';111, art' .0.'1101 by 1111 f 5" wide, per yd. 39c; 51" wide, Per yd. •19c 4(1,111 moo -tors, :),111 thy l' ul'I'':') a„d. hy 11I s. It. .I, I'll :Ill.., 1„11 in Tho sot'. Hoard. slot'. (3. il,lnlr,p, 111.11)1' of Knox i '1'111' nlolll'rn hon,1\'if1' has barna( %k1). of stmt;. 'The s;'riplori. 155 s 51110 111 ('hint 11, nofoll :1; .11:1I'.11 Ill, ilial 5.1(11 Thr' 1)-o of ,o, t!1) rho 12,0 Ft. F, r G, WAITRESS WANTED I,4 1314. 1\1111 tin Mains (1!' 'I'ilhnry, ; ;111 1 sod In prayrr. Rot'. A. \I. 1'nylo, Inure' 1)33 t11 I jolly 11 111 tho : t.0;, 1':xoerien11 11(11 noon, -;try, \1 411y, 1) 'I Iu' :Ill;l1),.: "I•il' •'.; l;rrali:l .\n :loo,' \'i1,, 33341.11 by H,,%'. Ale. 511111. 01' IIID I'to,hylori;tn 1 3n4r'h, 13.45' on anlm11nl 01' 1 1111 1. and /1"'l 1111 IIS5S 1111 \'in;, 111•:tiun•all1. (11111.1),11. .\I -n Ing 1t., 'uppl)'+ri:Ilo ))111114' (1Iyin1-; ti Roy. mill.' .111,'111' in prop;h ''olt Io Ill/ 1'nr 51)+1.1 14'nnnl;1in. \11111)) In )viol•:, e \11',. \11'11'11, I'I' ''11010. .\!h, Ha, ;IILi 01LCi,O'1'I-J SCARVES REXOLEI':1I MATS JUTE RUGS \IOSQ(.'I'I'O N Ertl NG, white S('RI'',EN DOOR SPRINGS SCREEN DOOR ('AT('i1ES WINDOW SCREENS each 25c e each 19e $1.89 and green, }•t,1. 10c each 05c 15c 39c, 19c, 59c F.1 tl as ria tv 1'y %•i amount 111' jam sI1 1;1'15, __ I1 $ loo's5c to Mr. ;Old \l1'. .1.11111': 1111'0 11, 1',l' 1 :,n. lir. Irrolor, of the Aneliran Plain 11 1'c 0 .I cool \'1111 Mr. :lull \Ir: \\'illi,ltu T. Meant on Intltdays. ho \a • Inthlo to Ilon-, wivos aro romiudal ill 11 till ——_-�_.__ F.� 1.00 Store Ai ti r , r , , r a PiIONF, 79. y1 Ile pr, ,4.111, Roy. K. \i'1.min, 4,1' \\Virg• 114'4'11), recipes call for ; d1'f)uilo Pit( I I(..1'. I O (:ItI(iI)1 I OI{1'•i Ifo'. iron. 1'"13,21 1.1.. <"4'2t2,� i"<v3il-,WIu4d.1`al lDi'2., t1�•1 A2iDitNk,M,Lath+342rnr9441)17/12.1kat);124:i `: hare, was present and road Ihr Scrim anin:int of sugar rot. pound of primal.- : '. \1 r. 1)c I \)r:. ),noel Johnston at 111'0 1.1,-,011, Miss \'113na \1'11„ 1,...r 't! rill41, at. .0).11 113, 11) 1111 kin,( 0!' 11.1'1. 1,11111 1111,' cLri,1(;riag of 1111.11. gram, pr,,)d1d 4t th,. codon for Ih' ~11)1;)1 , 31)3 the i::1is that til,' %4urd "1)1111" In the Estate of Margaret Douglas IIanE,;lter, (./1 if. .\1)l"' I'nl11)314 111111' I i 111 g y 1':11ZDI FOR SALE co1�t"G1,1C1$1Gtt'r„?e�;eGr�tG4ellt4C1,041G1t(c. „I' Ihr 11\'1),1)~. l'I)I'lun \1';11.11 ~lull '.i 1)11'),1; till t” ,111'11 11'1111, 1'r !Hilt as Huckste late of the Village of 81 th,li damghler 01 Nor. oh I Mrs. 4', Valh'lin:; loon of tit. \I:u y: on i1:lId13'. uln, ao,oulpauie,f !.y 1113/31' 1\'))1,11 at pur,Ita;eQ from the ;lo;,' or in:u'I•./1, in the County of Huron, Widow, The I',111,,\in !;toil, are 01141(11 for u+ r 1 ` ' LA« N MO`'I EItS Many .\4th n, \1110:! 1o,i;, 44')111 hi; 1 the 4'5 1111• 11..1'1; of 11"1)1 ill 'he 44itlli 1 til' Deceased. ' ,•110 ! y 11)1,1"t, (1a11111y, \\'1•-1 1111!1 1)C , 3'11 ' ,4'11)1 11!)) 1)t' Ih) eomlu'))IIIV i:; I 11)t :: ;11111 I?;;1 Ilalf 111' Cul 21, Con- tit, 11.;)1) 1111(1 1�.i)u. A tnn110.1., Mrs. .Iehn Ailhur. 11)0/11!mg; of 1111' r11011:1t)'n 51,'11 Ih' 411)1/141 to Mr, \Lut)n Gra :11,t. :lull gn:uully of ";:;:u' i; u;,',! Ih,1 i; cal ;,„11;11) 4, '1'),5'1):1+i1) 1)1 ilnHitl, i'oun I'Ith;SFRVIN(: �' Alt . I':. 1; '104'11, 1'11 ,clang, with \1r. . 41111 \II.. VC, tar I awson ;11111 ,\Ir. 41111 'tinnily. in 1111 111 Ilh of All's. I;44 3,. Ira for in Illi. 111,111) 14'11111:. it 1)111 1 \I! per ons h:15'11), ,111111, against ly of 33 111 )) 1E'i"I'LliS - :All Sizes, fi nn 5uunay 4')4 nine. 1 hi' Hint mll:eri l that ino„a pectin Tc- the 1.:41:110 (4 1111' :1' n\. 11C!'1'11,011. ,1151' , I'1'nl;'r, 11),11 he ,uhmittod int all 01' 14, . „ Toas \t '1'rinily' Cir4.'11). 31)3'ill). ')'1.1!1''' rip'.; gats the 44.11,1111 1)t' ..111,4,1")•,,T. -1"111)1.011 In 1'33' 111,' ;:41)1,' 44i111 Leslie 4:1111 Fi1a11,1„..1a11,1„..4 r for 0,,,..14143,]1' l,,t, turd Electric ters toil r 1) pini of Hill;,Hn, 1)l' l;lylh. I)nl:4rio, on 1)r hr- 11)11/1 Ice in 111'. hand-. of Hi. 1111111• 9,1 :3.95 and .1.50. hi for' tho I"th day of .1111y', :\.1), 1':112, 11 , 1,1)' o11 tn• boron. 1111 2 111 July, ,44, 10 1114'1 \'111,1) )late 1111 ❑11:11; 44111 111 I:i42. 1l',`'u Copper• Boilers ,A(i 1(11-41)101/11 v11on 5) Ih4' 3)31.1)”1.11 1)11 1!11 ,ails 1,1 1111s 1114 1' IS ,till in \\'..I. '1 hl' 1 )3111-I 1.a'11o1' Aid '!':1111 day ,181.111,,,3) at the II 11 IC.Iithl,y. \11.,. :\nni' \\';11• in Thi (;lair alit! tilt. 11/4.,- 111)11:(1 porion ten-• 1111.11) 1,y Mrs, 1'1,1),11 1.an.-1/33 .,111 \11 . \\'. t'. 11ol,151.1)1). .1 pritylr 1),1, 4',1, 1l 1 by Mrs. 1'1111;!, . .1. 1111\' ,n. Ii, ),Jin;;: \els ;:i4eu :,4' \!I.. '111 I1,01'.:,y, 115,, 1.11-1 .\!r- Kni:;;ll, NI15. 1:;, 11 I.ailhhy. \Il-.. \\al• 1111' )',141 th" lr,pir 1',11 -hili 11111,•1 44.1., or),0. '1'111' .\4'341./l 111)'4:))3:; %4fll 1 o held 111 tho hold ' 0, Mrs. Frank 11a)tl,liy. \]3s.; .!1))11 and 1'4'1111 Soot( a1'. 5•)::(:I 4511 11 Ih,)r ) -II C. (11,1/1' ~,•,111. 111 11 .111)144')). N3)rs I,:'lly ,I. .\.- 1),)111 has :t,1•.•ptoil 1)11' 1 -•)I an a; 11'aihel al elle 11,'11• 0lillor 3)1,311ii school, \1r,. John .\lo 1.14.11, \'h1) ha, 11'31 1 h Inns" of her 1nn1!1er, Je3114 Symington, 51); able 111 r(((oan h'r I❑ :n1 on 'I'hn,': I ty. ,\l1'. ,Ind NIH,. N, :. un Ilill, Nlrs. .1; .Iso. (' Hol' ;Intl \lis.; ;'.1,111 (';1rt4•3 art. 4 141111) : at Part Elgin, \ )Ih 3,15. 411)): \ors. J0.1) ph Parlor, \\')II!;u; \Cl' •;I and 1(,111 -3 Pnr/.1')', •11 1'1-110)1, \ver' 1'1)'111 301'x1.; \')111 111. and 3,l ',:. ('hal'l's SI 1.11 .lr. and NIr+. M:Iill;unl :511'1) \•)111 111..1' I Mrs, \Villi.un 1'0;11” 1,f Flint. 'Lit; Pit 'AYH ,) of 1111'4'11 of (he I'nit,t1 4.11)35111 of ('an:111/ and mn•mller; of 4 '( .11,1)1 ,3'.1), 141' ii, 1)1)'.; 1'1 Het. liO10.l t (''111'14::1,1, of (larr)4', alt 1 1 1'5 .1.,.1)14.; Poaler, of \VroxPR'r, 1u'1 at ,1 1 nil. 1 ('131.111, 011 PI )day 'V '11)41,,. 11:,4 i'ar.t 1111' Rr5', 1\'!Ilisul (1. 13, ':', I'r.111'1ly 41 1I'116151ll1.', is f1'o (l:.10:11 I'I, ,tory. 11'4. Porti 411• dressed 131'' miliztir and it,'v. Popo- Ito: I ;.4ll:Icto11 and 411141 e,;:4 .I the•ton• gregat).:I. At the ('las' of 111' ':'411'1) .\' It 't (';'II;- '!I int end;t'.•I 111';. 11use, h!: (13),13 filers. N (4:•y 111)1 1111, aril hi.; sot„ I1ug1, l0 tl1")n1U'I'::a(!:In. \\'4;1- 1'.(0.1, I.'c1); „1'c:.Ii 4.1,11 A1hur4 (111:';r) - 3,,l)!'45 4511'1' all 5'I :1 1''I ,'.:4'1111'.1. 1.4 1 ,1 :1 .. ,, i I ., a' 1 .i, L. it .. BAN KS SELL THEM B WAR SAVINGS STAMPS FROM On. BANKS • POST OFFICES DEPARTMENT STORES • DRUGGISTS GROCERS • TOBACCONISTS BOOK STORES and other RETAIL STORES' s ` next Sunday al 11.;:a (.ul. Mr, \I"i1' 111)31. of 51;(l 453,), 1011 ;Wir)al', Look Well To Your Potatoes I Entrance Results At 1Vin1.),'hanl Ccnt.re The ('otllltl•y islee(15'i'helll ! til;:: 4, 1'1)1'nlr3l:re 1'a/'1!1'.1:1. 45111) Tho 1)t, ilont In)1 for I 111;nu4 s for tried 111 Tho \\'ing;tt1111 ('/n3r1 art a; 111111 1,1 111111 111111))11 1',,•n411111plit111 11113045s; -- p1a1c; a patriotic 1'o. pun ih!lity 1)111)1) ! 1'; ' :\1111' :':nn, Shirlr)• A1:111', 1311'• 11,431111 1)1 lo (alma, 111 ' 11111 Hlophy, Norma 11l'yrl.t;r:, 111/1,3; 1111 I crop fIo„lhl) in 1,11:: say; ,I, •I', Ilazol 1 ;Iml'11n, 1314)135 l'ampholl, ,1':l•. 1` 1111. Onta:iu I3' ,ll'lolent of .\gri ('.,11,4'51/, \Ltt'y I'! Pannell IIIon.); 1'lltnro, Toronto, ('3rc1o>•,m:ti )m 1'"lith ('(101i, Ph0''nr. ('4101e, (]'411)),11 1)111':iy)ng 11lolht:)) 45')11 t'/ duce Ito' trop ('1)(1k, Wanda ('05'))11, N•,rl0ltn 31'liii• I y at hell') :,n per 't 111 :111)1 to avoid tion, 1.01/4 I1,mIar, Joan This lu>: goo15/15 4411111)3 too \ell (0 I':4'1')'14, I(1•I1' 111)1,111, 11.11'v i'101' 3:!']) r11531ys al Ilio moiler I)tn. ,, Air. 1I1011.1; Isonal. Porton, \lary I'4':•-y1h. ('.I - .1(1 .11t)>, ' .1)1 by Fraser, .loan 31)")''. Rush 11(ey) 5:1)11: bare drla)).3 3,111111'm., ''tu11'tt, Huth Higgins (I 1.m.); 1.1333)4• 453)3)11 \111 fns in lower yi'Ids p'.• a'• ':'Ih 1'\•);, 1113111 1,4'1'1111)) '. '1'11'Ina: r'. '1'11),; 1111 h' 4'((''t t0 sant' 01' le '33 r' I,' lion.): Porn Nt'"l,'ry, !'rr•I by (.uornl -!)1.+)111;: :1n11 /1111)5,1ti1)'.!,,, (`h1). liml',;nu R1'<S (iiom.l; Holtil11 l;rtn')'rti 44 hu 11;14' not a 'op;; 01' (111• ,14'11411(', 1:\•;ma \\'4111,a'r, IIon.): Edna 111'10 1 Himont 01 :\':,ri'nitnr:' !t1)!• \\;IIk'r, 11'141)' \V'4lpnle, I'v,rothy \Voll•. 1'l)11 No. :I'm "Sipco .•(til (','talo 1'),t• .1'411 \\''I11uug;hlty, 1II,lU.1; 1444' (Motion in Oular)o" ':11. '3d it: 1:1)11 1%1011sho5, ling, into lien I11cii' .\;.)ri1111n;11 !tom' :sem BRUSSELS CENTRE Tho fulloning I', )11' 141')1' Iii,, 1'W:win I1t ors• uu ml of .1^pit 1)111)1', Toronto. Ih•'\•'r. Gordon Il1adsha44. '1'I111 1111/1in gator !'4111 dir'.:'!iou'; )241111') Itl'atlshuw4, Nancy 1 ;Inti/ll ! ri4'u0; \\'':111).1111)1);' 1(41'110: I; for spraying 311lat0'.; to proven! bate 111011.1; Ihn'0thy I)'nn15 (I!on.1: Rio I3orliin, I'11;irs; 1'1)) It'd: I'ietnri;: 1111,, 111, lel, null 11)1)11111 1'f 11).;1'1 prti(s. 'hell 1))114'11, I.11l).tn (lilts :n, ve.inees 11 !4i:tinc 31/I0111('11/ Irs: '3'11' linlICI itl 1111)),,: 0311 10) ''.It'd (lilliS' 1t'flliaw C0:1o11, ('ort i11111'y, ; Ilh1)nt: 1101111 'fable; 1; ICit,hPu i'Ilnirr: 3.1'5 aii(1 1.10. Q; 11114'0 1111 0 (0, hating 1'1 1110 only to ho ))hon! 21) 11'11'5 4'1' 4curl har04Vuu0thi ii LI Ih' claims of which 1101 leo shall 11144' 1111;11 and t\o ;prim4 144'3),, and 01) Ih1 01 Iloi e Collars find 1,:,,,,,,,,,i,,,11111:,,:17, 111) .'!ren. I•.3)5t hall' of sa)d Lot 21 there is still I I-IilrnesS halts. il I!:\'I'I?I) Ih)ti "1111 day of Vino ,1,11.:10 111 (Toole,! a )'irr( /lass hrieli house IIil1' Forks, Lines 111,1". and frame barn anis lull ;he's. gl Handles, Etc. ' 1 3. I I\(;-I,.\NI), K.('., ('lint,411. ()Mar- I,I1 said P1)'nl i, ,)tliate about ono- 4'0 to, Solicitor for the said IC,I111'.'. I, -:t, half mile from No, 1 hIllO)I ly. about lig V T• l�obbvn l one h; if mile from 6,hool ani! !,., 11' V T. ,, rKi ' 4'o 1)113" from the Village of 1.0mla.1mro. 142121a9i2t2/i21B1212t2i•Dt1, t2r212i21dtil$12t2,gt212,2 (i. E . 1'1' RS' SALE 1 '1'111'x' )4111, are tl'frrl(l 3')))' s.11r In .ilo;4 the I:,tate 03' the )ate 11rlt.l:unin ' e bi 111,1 or any 11'))1111 '�G t�tg)tF.tg4Gtatt"'"/tImflq,”gte/g4GtGtG/ tGtght OF HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS. BARBER '111111,:1111:::::,,:1::11,1;.INGy aerlple,l. Monuments' g EQUIPMENT AND PROPERTY, 1,', I•'IN131..\NII, K.l'., Clinton. Outer- � • o'1'111 un11lr,i::ne0 1•i\4rnturr 1)l' the i4', 5olir11111' for .\111111' 1\'lynnnith. NV 7b 1114'/0 contemplating build- g 0.141,' of the 1;t14' 'i'..1,, 111111i,.:11,11, 111141 '-in'viv)n::' I•Ix1'mt03' 1)1' Hen.ialuin lfua- itj Ing a 11onnnont . . . Get m)• ki it(;Irnel'11 'Taos. Country ,l'• Som, .\1)r- : 1'r I•:'Ialr• limn ors, to soli by I'M lir .\),clic n, on ' 1114 (juror Stroll pronli-o,, 111,111, alif Al) '.Mork Guaranteed. A Inlou Is. khat )1 14'),111 1101 ha41 .s1 111/1) ty A i at 11)11)1 al a \'1)111 time, they not ya John Grant h Mprices bttforo buying. Cemetery Letteii 'I 0 specialty. rho 10)11' of I.,)) pan., 011 st 1'6 SATURDAY, JULY 18TH HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS: - 1):4)111'; of sprays esu b' S, ;'nnnor)1- 'rl 4s Th1; i; LIV'ru'd b; the 14• ,1111. or ---110. %Vetter 111. \•o0lhiv, 111:' lar:,• 4r the tnnil10/' of /lusty/. in a 5t':1' run 5mr!) as (h)., which i; 11).1.413)• for blit;ii1 411d rot, tiprayin:; nuts! 1'•' eolti'nl'.(1 until Ihr plants 1144' fin- ished 111')1 brt,,,111 or boon out do;\1t hy frost, Port)' gallons pro acre may he tin1- 1')t'1111t 5(1',1) 10 c'uyor Wants I•h') ,/1)1:111, but lat.r `u to Ica g:111,111~ may' b1' r 331111411. K'rp (Ito piano 4 \'11 (•0V'I•ed \'ith >P'ily during no 1',,,45•:1).; 14 45) for 1111\Ilmltlll 1'1 :111; adri;es Harvest Leaves Not Likely '!'1115 Year l)tta5'a, Jul) '1 • (:'11111 \1111(141'1' 1taLilo11 said Inlay khat "111y info'ma• ,lion (nl.ttl.tl)n3 from ,Nal11)1:',11 ('frnet. 'lu'adal;:nlPrs to the effect that harvest 1 leaf' 14111 I' granted Illi; )'t.1'" I4 "11114"III0ri71,1 41111 3(14 (113 )1't." 1111 c:1.i'll It 1)111111; and (monition. al r4guirrnlrlt14 (1141145' it exlr(?11:1y • ditthllill i!' any liat'V':'l -I 1V' ran 11)'++' 1),11'1;1 am'! if 3re1(4,3 at till 31 %VIII I be on 11 most restricted Latii1,” Halston said. .\ e',1)' idora,',l' 1/ 111h1r of soldier; were 3114)11'; :;t"iul lease last y) Ir In help \•ills the h:u'vl'sl 1)4'1 last \'1''k a Defence I?,parlulollt x3111; 1011i ti.,:.1 11 5:1)11141' 1111111 Wit); 111111/5 ''I`1!;illPl'8t1011 for this 1.4"1'. 'I' h (' 1111111141or's 1'ltltrnleut today made clear lhal n0 \vide plan 14111 he possible this year altholg;h he )ud)- !eat'd leave mi33111 b' grams;) t0 a few 1 melt ill `pczi311 cil'C11111St.tnces, 1141)',4' Jut'hlim, Roth Jr\'ll II'Ou,); (Inch'' Ita11g1: Slot' I'i!tr,; I':lectrit• '.14'111) Ju1llt;lon 11/111 241rKclrbrr, .\y'.,2 -plat' !tango. will' Mom: 'iil'bn:n•d: lin' Nlann, \31151':ly \Ia(t1'son. 114'11'11 (.1111)1'111.11 1 Small 'fable13 I.in(1Irunl I'lmnhlgIon, Isabel! 5(llerr, 1111111 5 11'- Hug: l'ong:oleum 1331: ; 1111)11<. I'4i1::, \'Ir,u11, \141; Slilc14, lt11th Thom, 1111.3 1<1011rie iron 141))! flat Irons; 1110)1.1; ('halle;'I'lunu4ls. NI1rn''') \'411• fruit and Sailors; Itldrnnnl suites: Norman, 1"014111 \Villis Illun.3: 1<1i/a- 51114111 3104.1)113 51)4(4: S')y)rl4 2431/ 11,111 \\1111x, Jlar,4 \1'1114'), ((Ion.) !chino; ('arp0l"; \Ica) (;rinlicr; Iht11 11111'14: 1)3 31114 ('i'mnlnds: 10 ;;11. i(lalvaniz'il Iron Can: Small (Q3111Itily Native Dies 1\Voud: (g:ll4';In)Z'd 'I'r'a; ' itird ('ages; Snow 5hoyok, 1311114` 1':11',; '' Screed \eau)' 1'1111) is 3(1('11(1'1; 1111 1'11105:11 Moor i'addlrs; Roofing; Poland.1)1 ( I' \Ir \\'illian IChlg, hold from h'1', 13 ;no )1) 'I'I1'uherry. tilts was brought 'BARBER EQUIPMENT:— up in \lor5114 'Tnwc•'hip, Ih0 forall � -' I'vh'r ('h/h' : 11,1111111\lir- \1311•)' \I'Kin11'y, 1•'111'11 d;1)p;llg)'r 4'g tor.;; Small (1),'1111• Healer, 1'ith til' 1111' Jo.;4pb 11(JCinlu',4 410! I(lir;l 3'1(10/; ('0111111' and Show ('I/O, Ross. Iltr loft,' 1101 Ill'od"c''4si'd hot': :\'I"1'111•: 5.\NII; TIME .\Nit They celebrated theft . thole \311 b' nffor,'d for 4;)I', til" 24131•(•1) 1(1)'11"1111 I'ropt'lfy, consisting of year, tlu•" 1lpart1'111 '('his_prop'r(y will h' sold, subject t) 1 1'1<erye 1111 TERMS OF SALE—STRICTLY CASH. GJohn 3''ergll ol, 1.'sli. 3l!Ilun•l, I•:x4- entors. (1111)111'\' ,t. So14.\), 11o::,'^1's. 4741. by ono year. .11/tit \•4111111)',; 21, IU3`, She anniversary ( on was in h'1' x2nd ...air-conditioned comfort Suoday storm Did Sortie train TO THE WEST 1)amag'e DiRECT SERVICE (o WINNIPEG SASKATOON EDMONTON JASPER VANCOUVER VICTORIA CANADIAN NATIONAL' touts: JASPER PARK 1000E /UNE I5 — AUGUST 31 MINAXI LODGE !UNE 11 — AUGUST 31 Y4 11111,111; )et 111':1,1141 11111 ln'olu'rly 1)01' CLINTON MARBLE AND 4) )II T hey he :;i40n I4 111:1111-' to mi. )) E? A F'1 GRANITE WORKS di It ), re_mlt3)hle, with ow ;Ihuudonl 1',e ib ti LINTON — UNTAFI,ID. iG 11,),41 I Thal \:11' ))1111:),11)1. 111:11 141)'11 Flu To a 5(1) :11'011l ,I rake. The lino ill P Successor to Bali & Zapfe, di \\'',31'5)) (1113:1'1,, is ,0111i)105/33 high. t''r)r2r2r,2r2i212,2/212r2t2 ,12121212t2+2t2121P12ti 1? The World's News Seen Through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR An International Dail'(' Newspaper is Truthful—Constructive—Unbiased—Free front Sensational- ism — Editorials Are Timely and Instructive and its Daily Features, Together with the V'cekly Magazine Section, Make the Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Hunte. The Christian Science Publishing Society One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts Price :.11 2.00 ('early, or $1.00 a Alonth. Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, ,~2.60 a Year. introductory Offer, (i Saturday issues 25 Cents, Name Address SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST MILK CONTROL BOARD OF ONTARIO --- ORDER NUMBER 42.50—EFFECTIVE JULY 3RD. 111 4rrtlit sl14< of milk and milli products ;old by 11)111 dl1:h'i• 3nllnrs 31) (114 i'rollnr4 o1' Ontario shall he di,'outinusd turd all such Products ,hall be sold in exchange for rash or prc'p4133 111!1) tichols 4)111y, \I;1) that ito 'n ti:limn% ,.iht'r than a milli 3403 11., 5'ilh (ash 1)r ir1.4r1, \'ill h' accol)10d. DURWARD'S DAIRY '...VV,V.0k.'v1.14tb,4'ti 'VC''4'gt%1G10•4V-CIVI: )IVCCI CTGIGtE'G'ICCKtVATCT.;/VCCTCCICITCC 51n01ay 141.11103:'1 hr:144 rain 11))d tB 4111111 4111 14otn' (1)1)13' hl this 111 Dead and Disabled Animals i:)'I, althou3h it 111111:n•/(ltl' 14;0,41'1 as NI "4y451' 11, 1•' 11; ill 1)111)')' 0151, of \\''-.t- RE1IOYED PROMPTLY. l!/ �9 Frain \'1'r 11))11,), by hat 11111 111)111,1/1, 4$ 'Telephones; Atwood, 50r31; Seaforth, 15, Cu -Acct. t ether partially or totally put to iho !ground, and in Vi'\ of the I'n_Ih and iv •4tppin', of 111' ~fo)))es it i; dtnbH'tt1 1 II? DARLING and CO. of CANADA, LTD. it' 11 \'ill cotyle 1111 111;3)111, .\Istt 1hi' 011- 't`u42iYi r 1,1`.1 tc?i`.dN241Dt`tF1.'32ic21Dlet31ait2tDt2,M?t21,`i"ctiiiiilTtDg'dt).2(2!?tP1?t`d,":1441r3:r i* tern Ontario. Sam). 1)01)111)1 f')Ids of VOICE O F T H E PRESS SAVE A MINUTE Minutes make hours, hours wake days, days make years and years make a lifetime. So we all try to save minutes. Some safety wisard has doped it out. Take a man whose cumin. cur- ter hes 26 years to go. That stakes 13,148,640 minutes, (Fig. are it out, if you will. We did, showing for six leap years), We isah across the street against a light. If We Will, We save a min - eta. If we lose, we donate up to thirteen million minutes to Death. Kitchener Record, LIGHTHOUSE HEROINE Speaking of heroines, we think tire. Harold Fraser, ',wife of the lighthouse keeper of Ship Harbor, 14.SS., deserves some recognition. She has lived on a small island for 98 ears, brought up n ft roily fit five children there and taught them herself because titre is no school. And she has just visited the mainland for the first time in ten months.--11rockville Rec- order and Times. THE REASON WHY brederick C. Cesrhetter, trained 1j.P. correspondent just out of t(lermany, say's the w'ar can be tended this year by the new phaco of war just opened by Britain ill Vie air. in brief, he say's, the Germans cannot take it. The Britons did, but they were British, •.--tat. Catharines Standard. OLD-TIME SURGERY Dr. Allan Defoe has a good word to say for the old horse - end -buggy days. Many a time, its ways, he had to pull a hair out f hie horse's tail to use for a thread in an operation. He does not recommend these practices, bat says that he often had to twort to it in earlier days.—Ham- Son Spectator. WORKERS IN SLACKS Sound reason dictates the de- wli eon by Premier Hepburn that yfirle in the Ontario Civil Service y wear slacks or paint their to simulate stockings, if they w'fah to do so. After all, it is not yitat these girls wear on their legs that counts, it is what they do with their hands and their beads.—Windsor Star, CANADA'S FRONT While the military experts and others talk of the possibilities of second fronts in Europe, there is 1N, front that needs attending to right here in Canada—the Farm Pront. "Crop Commandos" can poet the crisis,—Brantford Ex- ,positor. LINGERING FOGS Weather men claim that most iwga disappear between 8 and 10 o'clock in the morning. But we have seen some humans remain "In a fog" until well on in the sifternoon.—St. Thomas Times - Journal, Chicks Hatching Despite Bombing Though Regularly Shelled Farmer Refuses to Leave Chicks are hatching, ewes lamb- ing and Lowe calving on a farm en the Dover Cliffs which it reg- tderly shelled by Hitler's guns, only 22 miles away, 8beile have fallen in and around the farmyard, the nearest In Britain to the Nazi artillery, M barrage balloon over it has been aibot down 60 times, and often all kande have had to shelter under their tractors and implements them machine -gunners in the sky o7erhead. But the farmer and his people stubbornly refuse to leave. • • • ?Zese defiant farmers, 11r. Gil. bort Mitchell, his wife and sister- In•1aw, took over Iteach Court Farm, 8t, Margarets -at -Cliffe, near Dover, a year before the war with Lk dairy herd of 34 cows. In 1939 fibey plowed up a large proportion .,f the 120 acres of permanent pasture to grow the feeding stuffs uo longer so easily obtainable from overseas. Defence works were put sap all round their form, but Mir - Ing the Battle of Britain they ssteadtastly refused to leave, Bath• wring in not only their own hats test but reselling crops on other farms which had to be evacuated, * • • Further defence works have bow been erected and must of keaeh Court Farm is being taken over by the military. But they are wrarryin owl with what is left, and 9r. cfilclull is managing for the ]Cont War Agricultural Committee an extensive area of surrounding farmland which would otherwise have borne no crop this year. His 19 -year-old sister-in-law, Miss (;race Harrison, tae joined the Women's hand Amy, and is now driving tractors, while: Mrs. Mit- l.:101 Is hute'liuc elt!rl;c in the writ tttr,'..; t,t,. ii . 1,, s in Bri- tain. ROYAL COACH, 1942 MODEL Britain's King George investigates the riding qualities of a U. S. Army jeep during a recent visit to American forces in northern Ireland. The jeep is being driven by Russel F. Mann, of Oxford, le, $DIyIDUA illieirs. al �1�ahl MAtirac 1t AVIN 1:11W A Wsekly Column About This and That in Our Canadian Army An Ingenious reporter made a boor of gasoline stations a few creeks ago an demonstrated how to buy gasoline without giving up e0.14,0114, $e wrote an article that was featured heavily in his paper and i number of readers spoke of it es a fine public service, To the Enforcement Counsel of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board the article looked a little different. They said: "It would have been w fine public service if the bright young man had brought the in- formation to us so we could act on it instead of telling 20(1,000 readers how to do 1t1" A narrow view? It wasn't that the lawyer feared 200,00e people would break the. law. Ilut he did know from sad experience that a percentage would. It's something like those "Crime Does Not Pay" movies, You bhow potential gangsters and racketeers how to do something they hadn't thought of and then point a moral. LIFE'S LIKE THAT Nine titles out of ten the person at whom the moral is pointed pays no heed to it. And those who do heed it don't need it! A somewhat similar situation arose a few months ago when a racket was uncovered in one Can- adian city. This one was operated by a man who took fearful chances with a drug which lie administered 10 young men w•ho did not want to serve in the army, Reporters who got hold of the story admirably, from a newspap- er's point of view, wanted to get their teeth into the story and on. coyer all the details. When, however, it woe.; explained to them that publication of these details not only might encourage other malefactors to start similar rackets but might also result in deaths from ignorant toying with dangerous drugs the whole story dropped from bight. This parallel between what we civilians do, and what happens In tho Army gets very strong et times, doesn't 'it? Yes, 1 mean just that, The deal - By Fred Neher ///;• J • •Y� ' • •• d • ss. ' A/Iyr'.R et 1n gasoline who aids a motorist to etade the gatullue regulations 1e every bit as dangerous to the war effort ns the tory character who aids draft violators to escape their duty, A number of people with vellum I have been talking recently have posed an interesting question. It le: "\\'hat is the lltt,erve Army going to do about Inco in rural districts and smaller centres who want to join but have no Reserve Army unit near them?" A few days ago I travelled for some time on the saute train as "Sam" Browne, 1►lrector•General of the Reserve Army, and that Willi 0110 M the questions we dis• cussed. At the moment the Reset \ e Axnly is s0 far below strength in the centres in which units are established that the first job to bo done is its recruitment up to strength end the training of men who are handy to the armories. lilxcept in towns where there are arutories it is hard to 111(1 sult- Nblo headquarters, Eventually, however, plans will be considered to woke reserve training available 10 as 111at1y 111('11 who fire not eligible for fictive eerviee as p0-• ruble, Majo'•Gemeral Browne was on hie tray to Montreal al to aldresb u meeting of the Recruiting Cone ntittee that has set itself the task of raking 10,000 men for the Re- serve Army in that city, Ile said that 41181a' campaigns in 'Toronto and the \Vest had been very successful and that they had reached their quotas in a very short time, A funny thing got into the papule a few days ago, It was a story from Ottawa saying that the Army would follow the lead of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board by prohibiting uniform trousers with cuffs and pleats. What's funny about that? Juat this, that it has been In the dress regulations for a long tante that officers' slacks roust not have outfit, ']'hey never have had pleats. So, as a matter of fact, the In. dtvidual Citizen's Army, in doing without cuffs and pleats on its trousers le following the Army's lead, not the other way round. Here's a piece of Citizen's Army slang for a change. This is to be found on invitations. It is: "13. Y. 0.'r." or "B,Y.O.C," or "B,Y.O,S." Thu meaning? Simple! Bring your own test, or Bring your own coffee, or Bring your own sugar. And why not? There's a war on! Best of all would be, "Come on your own feet"—there's plenty of use for gasoline in the Tank Corps, From Cricket Bats To Gun Furniture A north of England factory which used to make cricket bats has now turned over to produc- ing butts and stocks for 'Pommy guns and rifles, says The St. Thomas Times -Journal. It occurred to its manager when war broke out that his machines could be adapted for snaking the wooden "furniture" of guns. The suggestion was pooh-poohed at first; but he won the day and got his contract, Today, the machines, which three years ago were turning out cricket bats, are shaping four slabs of wood into rifle butts in AB many minutes. Other machines complete the ninety-two processes which are necessary before the butts and stocks go into the am- monia chamber to mellow. ']'hey are then treated with linseed oil. The eraftmen who made the cricket bats maintain that today, out of a pile of other rifles, a sea- soned war veteran will still choose their works for its "feel". Cow Helps Soldier To Escape Nazis A French soldier who escaped from at German prison camp in Silesia said that he had led a cow across most of Germany, and had been mistaken by Nazi patrols as a farmhand taking the animal to pasture, He and the bedraggled cow arrived in Amiens four weeks after he left the prison camp. He Paid the cow had nearly died of fatigue, and they had to rest sev- eral days in the Rhineland. Ile sold the cow to en Amiens but - just got a hunch!" ellen'. THE WAR • WEEK — Commentary on Curicni l:\e111 United Nations In Agreement On Plans For Conducting War Adolf Hitler has mill ''the de• ciaion lies in the Est," and in that direction last week a grand German bid for advantage ap- peared to be shaping, according toorchcethe New' York 'I'inles, A long - fn pincers drive ul\wautl the Middle East — the upper prong through the Ukraine and the Crimen, the lower' prong across Libya and Egypt— seemed to be pasting from a preliminary stage. Against the \Vehrmachl's steadily mounting pressure the armies 01 the Allies fell inch, 'There \was no cheer for the anti-aggre:,,ol peoples in the realisation that the Nazi aggressor --despite a Winter and Spring of setback and stale- mute—could still grasp the in• itiative, choose the field of battle. But there was hope that the line.- in Russia and North Africa would stif'f'en, that from Allied high par- leys, capped by the latest confer- ence between President Roosevelt and ]'rime Minister Churchill, would emerge a plan and a course of action to turn the tide, Middle East A Nazi conquest of the Middle .East --roughly the region running front the Caucasus through Asia Minor to the Nile Valley --would have fa' -reaching• consequences. It would: (1) gain for the Ger- man military end economic nm - chine the petroleum sources on which the Russians and the Anglo- American forces in Africa and Asia depend; (2) win control over the Mediterranean and Red Seas and thereby cut the British Em- pire in two; (3) open an avenue to junction with the Japanese in India or the Indian Ocean; (4) slam the Persian Gulf door of supply to the U.S.S.R. In short, it would spell catastrophe for the United Nations, darken their pros- pect of victory, certainly prolong the \var. Stroke Against Germany Against the Fuehrer's convic- tion that the decision in \Vorid War I1 lies eastward of the Reich's frontiers stands the conviction of the Anglo -American -Russian team that the decision must be sought in Europe itself by a concentrated stroke against Germany, ']'hat belief goes back many months, It was expressed in the Atlantic Charter, which held up Ilitlerism) as Enemy No, 1. It has been maintained despite the blows de- livered by Japan since Pearl I1ar- bor and by the need to disperse forces. It has been strengthened in talks between London, Moscow and Washington, An offensive against the Ger. man homeland—presumably syn- chronized from the first front, Russia, and a second front in Western Europe—would have ob- jectives as grand as those of Hit- ler in the Middle East. 1t would: (1) squeeze the \Vehrmacht in the nutcracker of a two -front war; (2) put into play the mil- lions of troops and reserves of materiel unused and waiting in tho British Isles; (3) relieve pres- sure on Russia and Egypt; (4) encourage revolt among Europe's subjugated millions, the restive "third front:" In short, it would be designed to knock Germany out of the war; then forces could be concentrated to (teal with Japan. Allied Strategy The translation of the broad Allied plan into action has had to wait on time—time to gear rela- tively unprepared economies to total w'tu•. In a sense, the military effort of the United Nations ev- erywhere has been a delaying battle until the aggressins' head• start in building armies and arms could be overcome, It seemed clear that last week's weighty dis- cussions its the White House were concerned with whether sufficient time had yet been won, whether delaying tactics must still be the chief Allied strategy or whether the threat to the Middle East could be countered by the opening of the promised second ]font against G(11)1al)y. Allied Setbacks The world map has turned a scowling face on the democracies during the past seven days. North Africa tells of a British disaster; the Ukraine of a savage Nazi at- tack that has pushed back the Russian lines; the Western .\t- REG'LAR 1;:' ELLERS—That's a Help / THE TEAM HAS 'LECTED I 'fOUTWO TOC,�OpAN'SEE IF THE BASEBALL GR0UI4 15 TOO WET TO PLAY('N, T14I9 AFTERNO !antic of a till u1:•Cif 01- nuu•ine pretdt nl; the \\ 'et.. re Pacific 1,1 n ,la,lpanese dope! ,f:at hangs filo:' every rtlli;in I11';, of land 101,1 water froth the .'\ 1 - lions to Nt w Guinea al,(1 fro10 u 1)0111 some ]tyle west 1e!' Mid",;ly Island to the trampled fall- of .t.:',0111 11 China 1111(1 the rainy ness of Burma. Defeat lie,•. ,e• hind the 1 sited Nation'-, ,lo•,ntu the 1nagnifiecnt fittlitio), of and the t'liin, , , the sit Anil." 1,101 Europe ; ori ear •• iia\';tl 1'Ielulie- 111 111, 1', 11 • ;aid "I'1' \i id\cuc. \\'t h \ e 1' •t• prep810 ! for 1001111 :, tl,;it'k• Well-itifon rated uliiil;,; ei 1'. huew ou,, of the rt;..:t,tt_ sir the o fetes:-, The yea trot 'e ehw';nuay' t\n5 Ih:it 1,11 -ids .1 d '11,1 h;ne enough rtr,'u; tai right riffle: ,tt the rn;.!;1 pl. 'niere hese :wee fni!nrt,. i1 eral,hip, It may he, ;,i' 1 , • ; tt we have hee1 dealing \'. lit p'• - eal laws whi011 no general, Les - gifted, could have eters :u in the time -o far at ",tr irs,p, •.1!. Non-military nations nu,y h,• a superior material and �piri',;..t1 strength, but this does not us 1) that they can easily and quh'.!y Bring it to the right 11111 of To win this war we 10 learn Ito',,: to do this, Coming Operations Neither the general public the newspapers which try to e o it 11111'0 enough in1'ortn t (n l e ',t.i• dawn a strategy fora world , le. That fearful responsibility - '-17,t duty to (410,31 yes 01. no to .spcc;fic plans falls largely on two teen, 1'lesident Roosevelt and ['rile Dlinister Churchill. They utast decide how much strength we 0011 join to the existing strength of China, of Irus�sia and of se.,-,rratl other fronts. ']'hese w ere ':he questions which they discussed to Washington, and the joint slot, - nlent which they issued recently declares that as a result of their discussions the United Nations „have never been in such healer and detailed agreement on plane for winning the war as they ars today." China's critical need If aid rcceiveel consideration. it Is promised that "conning 01)01'( tions" of the United Nations ".''ill divert German strength from the attack on Russia." 40,000 Children Died Fleeing Nazis !'ret French authorities 811.1 not long ago that 40,000 ohildrSn died on the roads of F'1aiir t June of 11140 in the exodus 31 refugees fleeing the Nazi terror. They quoted at statement made to an assembly of the Fret: h Red Cross Society held at N.':0 in unoccupied France. The newspaper Petit Nicois '.tab quoted as saying that the figures made public It the a."501111)13, "leave Its dumb with horror" "4(1,000 little bodies buried by the Red Cross in graves dug in the fields," the newspaper ex. 01811110(1, "How many others were killed and buried in unknn:'n gra ver ?" Spitfire Pilots "Take The Cake Every time Spitfire pilots eta- tio1ed at an airfield near London shoot down an airplane they lit- erally "take the calve". l'he Czech mess caterer bake; a :•peeial cake for every successful pilot—halt not until he has )e - slued himself that the enemy au'- craft was destroyed and not j•:'lt "winged". Until recently, the Czech, w'lto;e dame must remain secret bcca';;e+ hip family is still in Czechosio- wakia, prepared the food for ;ire pilots of the ''ace" ush•alian Nn. 452 Squadron, and two Of his 1,(:1 cake "customers" have been :squadron Leader "Paddy" bleu - c;10 and Squadron Leader Keith "Bliley" 'Truscott, Truscott, who has just returned to Australia, took his last cake with him to cat on the journey. "►'add]" Finucane who i.5 now :ending another squadron blued. at the sante airfield, received tris :37111 cake the other day. )) By GENE BYRNES WE DONT KNOW 6-9 Reg 0, t. 1 _t. Office 111 ,1,4, lerned HOME FROM THE WARS Wooden plugs and makeshift plates help keep sievo-like H. M. S, Penelope seaworthy as ship, chief target of one of heaviest raids on much -bombed Malta, conies safely home to British port. Hundreds of bomb and shell splinter holes pepper craft's side. What Science is Doing \VIRE SOUND RECORDER The .Armour Research hound:, ;ion announced recently develop. rnrnt and patenting of a (device that records sound on steel wire a., thin as a human hair and may, th, foundation said, revolutionize the technique of transcription. Ur. 1(aiuld \'agtborg, director of the foundation, affiliated with Zhu Illinois Institute of 'l'uchuol- ol;y, credited the device chiefly to .11trwin Contra:, 26.yenr-old ,Miff 11s.,19la11 physiRist, The recorder is about the size of a large portahlo radio and an dight -hour continuous recording fall be wound 011 t( spool five inches in diameter and two inches wide. It records sound magnet. loopy and there is no meihanicat change in the wire, which can ho demagnetized and used main, Once the recording is made, the sounds can ho played hack int - mediately without processing. Dr. Vat;tborg said the wire wouId ru- tairt this recorded sound potential for yeti's or could ho wiped clean instantly by the demagnetizing' process. Tho recorder, he said, can be hot to start and stop automatic• ally and needs no attention \vhilo running. He said these ndvant• age•, give it limitless practical ap. pliealiuna, such its: In airplanes, microphones plac- ed in the control cabins could pick up all conversations and com- mands, housed in an asbestos case, the recorder would survive a crash and tell the story of what preceded it. it could record millions of words of enemy propaganda at government monitoring radio sta- tions and reduce greatly the amount of critical materials used in making standard type records. The storage problem, too, would be minimized. In the home radio, the device could record a raytime program ---such as a baseball gmue—so that those far away could hear it Netter. Britain's M.P,'s Make Munitions Two 1nem1)01.5 of Parliament, one of therm a primly dressed wo- Ulan, worked side by side with Parliamentary clerks at their ben- ohes turning out war materials. 1t was only part-time work, but both I1iss Thelma Cazalet, a Lon- don Conservative, and Arthur Duckworth, Shrewsbury Conserva- tive, said it made them feel they were doing something extra to beat Hitler. Miss Caznlet was filing a small metal bar, while Duckworth was planing a piece of metal. "I •think this is the thing to do," he said. "Any avaihtblc time should be utilized. Many of my constituents work in munitions plants and I think it well that t should know how, too." Miss Cazalet, Duckworth and the Parliamentary employees first became interested in munitions work when they discovered an old latho in the basement of the his- toric building while on fire -watch- ing duty. After a few experiments, they decided turning out war materials was better than playing darts— heretofore their principal diver- sion while not watching for fire .bombs—and asked for additional facilities. Holidays Needed Eve:,i In Wartime Rest and Relaxation Neces- sary to Do Efficient Work At a time like this when war production must not be permitted to lag, 50010 people may say we should forget all about lholidnys this summer and stick to our task,, writes the Kitchener Re- cord, It a person were like a u,achinc that can be operated 24 hours a clay and seven days a week, It might be wisp to fore- go vacations this stllntIler. But there is a linllt to what the hu- man body can endure. It re- quires rest and relaxation to do of fiele 111 work, Medical men say holidays are more necessary this year than ever, because of the pressure under which most people have been working. This view coin- cides with that of tho British Government which made a study of the question, Working hours in Britain have been stopped up --but summer vacations go on be- cause vacations promote health, and health makes for efficiency. But there i3 one very import- ant point vacatiottiste should keep in mind this year. holidays should be pla01e( HO that the greatest, benefit is derived front them. Holidays can be spoiled from the start by not using common sense and throwing caution to the winds. Hygeia, published by the American Medical Association, offers some timely advice when it says: "A person unaccustomed to any forst of strenuous exer- cise other than strap -hanging in a street car obviously should take exercise in moderate (loses•" Besides cautioning against ov- er -exercise, Ilygeia list') other "Don'ts". ]don't spoil your vacation by getting painfully sunburned right at the start. The sun is good, hut N1100111 be taken in easy doses. Acquire that tan gradually. On a dull day, don't sit around for hours in a damp bathing shit. Observance of these simple rules will help to sake the holi- days enjoyable, Germans Wipe Out Another Czech Town The Czech community of Les- aty in Bohemia has been razed by the Nazis on the accusation that the village hid parachutists in- volved in the slaying of Reinhard 11eydrich, "protector" of I1oheumia Moravia, it was reported recently in Budapest radio broadcasts heard by a Czech government lis- tener in London. The Vichy French News Service quoted the Prague anouncenlent as saying all the adult male popu- lation was executed. Lesaty was described as a community of about 100 inhabitants. This was the second village wiped out by the Germans in ven- geance for the death of Heydrich, the Germans having boasted June 10 they had slain the male popu- lation of Lidice, near Prague, sent the women to concentration camps and the children to "educational" institutions. About 350 nett faced the firing squads in that village. Every Fifth House In Britain Damaged __— Harold Beresford Butler, now British minister to the U.S., bald last week on arriving In New York by clipper that at least 100,000 lives had been lost in she United Kingdon during the war and that every fifth house had been damaged or destroyed by bombs. "We tiro now hitting book had," he said in a statement. Butler, who will head the Brit. ish Information Services in the United States, succeeding Sir Ger- old Campbell, said in reply to a question that 68,000 British ser- vicemen were killed or missing ainco the war started and 44,000 civilians killed In air rattle. He said the defeat in Libya "will be a great disappointment to the British people." Ho predicted tho defeat never• theless would have "no disheart- ening effect" upon the British morale, adding it would instead "only harden it'. _v Modern Etiquette 1. is it well for a person to forst sudden friendships with peo- ple that one has not known but a very short time? 2. When one is a guest at a small dinner, should ono accept a helping of every dish offered? 3, What is the first rule one should observe in giving a succesw ful party? I. When people persist in talk. ing at the theatre, is it perntiss- ibit, to nslc therm to stop? 5, What woman should a man seat at the dinner table? 6. Isn't it poor manners to make extravagant remarks about a wo. man's new dress, when in a group? ANSWERS 1.. It is far better to proceed more cautiously, until one is het. ter acquainted, before forming real friendship. An old proverb says: "Beware equally of a sud- den friend and a slow enemy'." 2. Yes, We all have our likes and dislikes, but at a small (lin. Der it is embarrassing to the hos- tess when a guest refuses u dish. One can at least manage a small quantity. 3. To bring together only peo- ple whom the hostess is sure will be congenial. 1, \es, but (lo so quietly and as pleasantly its possible. If they resent the request• or ignore it, speak to the usher. Only the most rude and ill-bred people are guilty of this. 5. The woman on his right. 6. Yes. A complementary re- mark can be made privately, hut should bo avoided when others are present. STOPPED in a Jiffy •or Money Back ror quick relief from itching of ecaeme, pimples, 0th. Iste's Gut, scales, scabies, rashes andod,er externally soused skin troubles, use fnt•aeting, cooling, wtl. septi', liquid I). 1). 1). Prescription. Gre,selas, etainleas.Snothesirritatluaanil quickly atop, interne itchb,�ttS. 350+trial bottle tirorea it, or'none ' Lack. Ad your dnuggiet today fur 1).01). Pit ESCIII P110N, 4Relieves distress from MONTHLY. FEMALE WEAKNESS Lydia E. Plukham's Vegetable Compound not only helps relieve monthly pain but also weak, nerv- ous feelings—due to monthly func- tional dlsturbances.Ithelps build up resistance against distress of "diffi- cult days." Made in Canada. It Have You Heard? Jones and Smith were sitting In their tent in the African jungle discussing their skill as hunters. Presently Jones remarked that he would het Smith a pound that Its eould go out and kill a lion forth. with, Smith took the bot and sat book bo await results, About an hoot pa,oed, and then a 11011 put its 11(4(1(1 through the tent flap, "Do you know a fellow (ailed Jones?" it asked. "i (1o," said Smith, bucking away. "Ah!" said the Lon, "il•• o.ves you a pound." First Patient (pompously)1 "Well, 1 can really say I am a self•made man." Second Patient (sadly) t "You're in luck. I'm the re• vised work of my wife and three surgeons." Tho chief constable of a small town Wile also an expert veterin- ary surgeon. One night the tele• phone hell rang, The chief con. stable's wife answered, "Is that 41r. Jenkins?" naked an agitated voice, "Do you want my husband in his capacity as veterinary surgeon or as chief constable?" "Both, mudnm,'' come the re. ply. "We can't get our new hull. dog. to open his mouth, and there's a burglar in IL" Mike: "'Tis a fine kid you have there. A magnificent head and noble features. Say, could you land me a couple of dollars?" Pat: "I could not. 'Tia my wife's child by her first hub• hand." A Scot called at the cat's -moat Atop one morning, gave his ad- dress, and asked that a penny- worth bo left there In the after- noon. Sonia time later the vendor was auprised when the elan rushed in and told hint to cancel the order. "What's the matter?" inquired the butcher. "Is your cat dead?" "No, 110, Ito," puffed the 1na11, "he's caught a mouse." Witty Boardert "Ah, your steak is lilce the weather this evenintg... Rather raw." Witty Landlady' "Indeed? By the way, your board bill is like the weather, too. Un• settled." German Birth -Rate Shows An Increase German birth figures for the last year confirm the evidence of previous years that Hitler las at- tained 1) considerable degree of sUCCCS9 with his campaign to in. crease the birthrate. They show, Indeed, some small decline as compared with 1910, but the fact remains that last year's total of 1,628,000 births in the Reich (in. eluding Austria, the Sudetenland and Danzig) represents an in- crease of over 400,000 on the numbers born in the same tcrri- torics in the year of Hitler's ad. vent to power, IT DOES TASTE GOOD ............ INA PIPE ii'it1;1;ES1; 111,i i .1' ► 0 r' New Cafe Service For C.N.R. Trains "Coffee Shop" to Cope with Increased Passenger Traffic Cafe cars of a type new to Canada aro about to be placed in service on the Canadian National Railways, While described as a cafe car this new example of dining car equipment• bus also been termed a "coffee shop"rear. 1t is entire• ly different in interior plan front the standard type of dining car. Increasing passenger traffic due to growing wartime business has placed heavy demands on railway dining cats and these new unite designed by Canadian National experts are being provided to cope with that demand, These cars have been evolved in the stream line planner to ex• pedite service and to provide for tt greater number of patrons within a given time than is pos- sible with the more leisurely movement usual in the conven- tional type. Increased Accommodation The new car has kitchen and pantry in the centro of the floor space with a dining compartment on each side of the kitchen. In the dining compartments each accommodating twenty patrons there are tto chairs, sooting being provided by comfortable setoes placed along the side walls. Tables for two aro arranged in front of the setees leaving the centre floor space clear for service. Each dining compartment has accommodation for twenty guests and the total of forty which may be seated at one time is a greater capacity than that of standard diners, The majority of these latter vary front thirty to thlrby- six seats. Tables in the coffee shop cat% have smooth colored tops of sani- tary material quickly and saltily cleaned. Table covers will not be used, but naplchls will be provid- ed. Prices for all steals are being moderately scaled. Light Cigarettes With $100 Bills It ,,as everybody's party OR Corregidor when the job of des• troying the island's American and Filipino currency, including $100,- 000,000 of Philippine pesos, was begun a few days before surren• der to Japan, says Newsweek, In Melbourne last week, Col. R. a. Jenks, one of the last six Amer'. can officers evacuated from the fortress, reported: "One of the few joys the Corregidor boys had was to fulfil a life's ambition— lighting cigaret.s with $100 bills," HOW CAN I? Q. flow can I !eel r+' Kt ‘.a..1.4 from the hair;' A. A teaspoon of borax in N•111'111 \1'ilt(1 1vhe11 V. a:111111! the hair remove., grease and improves the appearance of the hail. Q. I-Io',v can 1 slake uerllh'.1 eggs? n" A. A good recipe for dovil..1 eggs is 1 tb0l+, of inu;tard, 'u - N), salt, 1 -tbsp, Hard hoiled. Cut the egg 1 In halves, smash the yolks, with salt, nal -lard, and add 'a. thsp. Melted butter. I'll the c:!g whites, Q. Ilow 000 1 keep the cut)r of the cook book 0101111? A. \lake a cover for the book of flowered oilcloth. This will coyer all its blemishes and at t1 14101)0 time ;give it a surface that may he wiped off easily in th4 future. (2, How can 10('Ilmove the paln.'r label on it bottle? A. It can be readily removed by first welling it and then hold- ing it near a flume of the stovo.. Q, How can I make a cleanser- for leanserfor wicker furniture? A. Good cleansers fo: wicker furniture are salt and water, or a .solution of warns water and +l little turpentine. Either solution will clean 01)1 the crevices ?Ike meek. Stalin's Son Gets Award For Bravery Joseph V. Stalin's 3011 Vassilya recently was awarded the order of the Red Banner for his service.' as a colonel in the Russian air force. The decoration awarded young Stalin, who still is in his twenties, was in a long list an- nounced on the CVO of Germany's invasion of ,the Soviet union. The citation read: "For excel- lently carrying out military pro- jects of the command In the front line battle with the German ag- gressors and showing at the sante time bravery and valor." Another of Stalin's sons, Jacob, a lieutenant, was mentioned Its (despatches list Aug. 16 for fight- ing with an artillery battery until his last round of ammunition was fired. SAFES Protect your 11001:8 and ('ASK from FIRE and '1'111EV115. We have n else and type of Safe, or Cabinet, for any purpose. Visit us, or write for priers, ete. to Dept. W. scJ.TAYLOR LIMITUI TORONTO SAFE WORKS 145 Front St. 1:.. 1 or"ntu Established 187,0 ...CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS... iIA1BY CIIICI(S W1:'1u1 READY '10 FiLL ORU1:11s 00 pullets and day-old chicks. You'll likely find need for these before omi of year, 80 advise early ordering. liray Hatchery, 180 John, Hamilton, Ont. IT 18 NO'T 'I'OO LAT:: to purchase wour Tweddie chicks. \Ve will be atching all through Ju1y and part of August. Five hatches n week, 19 purebreede, 0 hybrid crosses, and 5 breeds of turkeys to choose front. ]pay old, started chicks, and older pullets. Day old pullets reduced $9.00 per hun- dred for July and Attgust, Prompt delivery. Free catalogue, Ask for special price un 6 and 8 week old assorted pullets. — Ttweddlo ('hick hlateheriee Limited, Fer- gus, Ontario, 11,114.EItY Ent Ull'11ENT BAKERS' OVENS AND MACHIN - cry, also rebuilt equipment al• ways on hand. Terms arranged. Correspondence invited. Iittbbard Portable Oven Co., 103 Bathurst St., Toronto. CARS — USED AND NEW MOUNT PLEASANT ,MUTURS Ltd., Toronto's oldest Chrysler, Plym- outh dealers; three locations, 632 Mt. Pleasant !toad 1040 Yonge St, and 1650 Danforth Avenue, Our Used Cars make us many friends. Write for our Free Book. let on pedigreed renewed and an- alyzed used care. DYEING at CLEANING HAVE YOU ANYTHING NEEDS dyeing or cleaning? Write to us fur Information. \Ve are glad to answer your questions. Depart- ment H. Parker's Dye Works l,innlcd, 791 Yonge Street, '1'o• took,. ISSUE 28—'42 111:IC'1CS — 1'O\'FIACB ANDERSON J1cLAC(1IILIN I3UICK• Pontiac Ltd. the largest dealers In Canada for Butcl(s and Pon- tiuce are located at 1029 Day St., Toronto. You can always be sure of real high grade used care, at very reasonable prices, Cars that you can depend un fur coal ser- vice and with excellent tiros, We olio ' a very barge out-ot-town clientele; built up through yearn of serving well. It 10111 pay you to visit us when In Toronto, be- sides wo are sero wo can save you money. I'OO'1' la:\I,N 13At'811',t:1Ut F(lU'I' PALM destroys off 01131V(3 odor instantly, 4 o bottle. Ott111011 agent, Denman Drug Store, Ottawa. - 1'ItL'Lm CATALOGUE FRlllll ('.\'I'AL000B: OP RARE and Exciting books. Rev. Tyrer'e Great Work on Marrla -o Rola- Dons, $2.49. SUPER MAIL OR- DI:1(, 57 Queen Street West, Toronto, Ontario. IIEItfFOlti) iIULLS Yl!RL;I:le11D HERE F0111) BULLY fur immediate service. Due to ae- quisitlon of the herd of ttte late E. J. Thompson of Montreal, we have a large selection, 3'earlinge and older bulls, all of excellent breeding. l'rices from $100 up, Id. Crews, (.'alabogie Stock Farms, Renfrew, Ont. Telephone Ren- frew 637. )\'ANTED -11'1:L I1'(►OI) MAPLE AND MIXED CORDWOOD, also Hard and Softwood Slabs & Bundled Edgings. Ghee full par- ticulars. Walter Schiess, Nineteen Melinda Street, Toronto. 1110'1'0115 0v1H)I1AUL YOUR MOTOR WHILE you're driving: Love 301. gae and oil—guaranteed to restore com- pression. $2.00 deIly"red. Mike Ignasb, •141 Mnnitobn ♦1e, Win- nlp•.), \inn. 1)008 WANTED WANTED PUPPIES ANY IVIED, fpreferably thoroughbreds. Give ull dotal's, Ontario only. 1)0(1• - DOM, 560 Ray Street. Toronto MEDICAL. A. TRIAL—EVERY SUFFERER 013' Rheumatics ('ants or Neuritis should try Dixon's Remedy. -- Munro's drug Store, 335 111gln. Ottawa, Postpaid $1.00. (1L1) 3(1'(13 I4EWOV1N NEW RUGS, NE\V HUGS MADE PROM old. Dominion R)IB; Weaving Com. pony, 964 Queen St. \\'., Toronto. Write for boolrl•i. IIiIEI MATIC 11 AVM Y 0 ll HEARD A110111' Dixon's Neuritis and I2houniatla Pain Remedy? It gives goof] re- sults. — Munro's Drug Store, $36 Elgin, Ottawa, Postpaid $1.1)0. l'A'I•'LN'I'y ('ET11E11STONFL\UG11 S's COMPANY Patent Solicitors. Established 189(1; 14 1Cing West, Toronto. Booklet of information on re- quest. 1'1iO'l'OGIIAI'llY \VHY PAY MORE? YOUR F1i,MS developed and 8 glossy velot prints only 25c. Free 4 x 6 en- largement Included. Write for free mailers, Nation Wide Photo Service, 30 James St., S0 Cath- arines, Ontario. 1'110T0GRAPI1 DON'T TRUDGE THROUGH The (tent, Doha, or 11n11 HAVE YOUR SNAPS Delivered by Mall Any 6 or 8 exposure Mtn pertectl/ developed and printed for only 25e. Supreme quality and fast service uaran teed. IMPERIAL PHOTO SERVICE Station .1, Toronto Pale g, r TSE STANDARD . a ..'....I,...Iti. L..� t .......................................... r _ Hollyman's .HOLIDAY NEEDS— BAKERY AND CONFEOTIONERY. MISSES AN1D WOMEN Ails, Velma Naylor Is spending this The hlome of Good Baking. Slacks, Overalls, Sweaters Slack Suits week at her home here. ' Bathing Suits and Caps•, ;11r. KIM Hamm of 111tc'hell is visit• Soy Bean, Whole Whelp ti -„ A Ing relatives here this week. and White Bread. '; MEN'S AND 1301, \t R. Ilarry lirow'uo, 4111(1Eleanor' Also Buns, Cookies Tropical and Cotton Trousers, Sweaters, R are visiting relatives It \\'ingham. r :' Windbreakers, Bathing Trunks, A Good Pies, Cakes and ,Miss \tnriuu MoGIII is at Cramp al Honey -Dipped Doughnuts ': Assortment of Balbriggan Underwear. stupid, near Goderich, this wreck. 1IWedding Cakes a Specialty. g1 Mr. and Ml\., Gel). 1'ritzley aro vis- ifting' the former's mol -her hero this .t.,Olive McGilla• week, Doherty Bros. '_' fl l GARAGE. 3: 1s. \'erne Itulh4.ford and daughter. :1 k.0 !Anne, are visiting with lar. and Mrs. fni7ri)tDi91911.1at1hP41),91}1)r),91)191)iDIM19W2•41D41-1,)1919,M1d1)1)r)1241irA)r)9t)41 ):91. Rutherford. at Vermillion Bay. 1 MI ARE AGENTS FOR SIMS GROCERY GOODS DELIVERED. TELEPHONE 1'1. Spaghetti per tin 10c Aylmer Peaches per tin 17c Crosse & Blackwell's Lime Cup --- For Summer Drinks :30c ZINC RINGS AND RUBBERS. Cheddar House Cheese 12c and 20c Certo per bottle 27c Kkovah Jelly Maker 15c Aylmer Infant Food 10c PERSONAL INTEREST \L'. 1infold Wallace of Newark, :.J.. is visiting with relatives and friends in this vicinity. Mr. It. F Shaft', of Alliston. is vi: t- tng 11•ith former friends in Myth and 1 \iris, y• Sgt. Ilarry Gibbous of the Instruc- tional Staff, ('.S..\.'l'.C., tong Branch, int l'Cd11'pallj with lib, \wife and doll, vis. ited Myth on Saturday, the occasion thein, the 1Reihl Ise-t'nion, which was held in Myth during the afternoon ani evening. Mt::ly people \\•ill remtawler .Sgt. Gib' on be being a brother of (\irs. flex:(. r;'xtcr, Ile was on the r<taft' 01 'i''he illyt.h Standard \,'11011 the glaper \va: mutt'. the management of Rc 1:. Ile is now instructing officers and N.C.O.'s, who in turn ,themselves become it,tractor•!, Sgt. tlibhons informs us that it i4 a jc') the public don't hear much about, but none the less important. Is Now Flying Officer PERSONAL INTEREST Mr. Garth-Ddbby11 of Loddon, spent the ‘‘.eek -end with itis parents. Mrs, A. Fawcett was a Clinton Nis - her on \1'edne:alay. t11,s Jean Jiclntyre of ('livtcal, sl:cllt 'a few 4•lt : holidays with A1Iss Jost. - Mr. and \irs. G. E. \Ic'1'aggart of \\'attord are vi.,iting with Airs;. J. i1. 'I'iernay, Miss Ethel \\'illows of Forest 11111 is visiting with her brother and si,ter•ia- law, At'. and \irs. I':arle Willows. Plymouth and Chrysler Cars Auto -Lite and Hart Batteries. \Ils's Glady'1; Fawcett, of 'Toronto, Goodrich & Dunlop Tires. u iliows spent the week-entl with her 11101111,1'.11101111,1'.11101111,1'. 1 x ails. .\. Fawept l• White Rose Motor Oil.Dt o 'I'I'U ���e Mrs. Foster 'Stark and on, Foster, PHILCO RADIOS AND p Jr., of London. Is visiting with Iterv SUPPLIIJS. V mother, Mrs. 1C. A1Bclean. p Acetylene and Electric° )• ei Arte. Edwin E. Bender, London, was ° 13aC1C1'1tC 1�1(l.11l!1' I ills 50ePI a Sunday visitor at .the Home of Mr. Welding, 9 °� • \�ampole's Mille o1' Magnesia lac an(I 50c and flys. \\'Ighltltlall. Misses Dorothy (`rover and Wyllie V iVillllpole'S Magnesia 'Tablets 100 for 50c Wallace of Seafor111, spent a few days VOdden' S i,� I)i('lCholl'S stomach PI)11'(lel' 75c last wech with Miss '('110111111 ('stI Iwel1. v BAKERY. Ferny)! laxative 'Pallets 50c'Mr;. Dimon Laidlaw, of Guelph, is n"P , visiting with Mr, and Mrs, James Lnid. V "Irl" White SIloe Dressing 15c °P Iaw. r') 250. 299, :;:ic and '10c ii WHEN IN NEED Oh .i1 Bathing Capsil BREAD, BUNS, PIES, �; I riper 1 lata,, ( ups an(I Serviettes. it t.1 Vitamin 13., Plant, Balls each :)1)e it r, t Sweet Peas, Morning (11111'}', Asters, ZiiiniaN. r I-IOME-MAI)E CAKE i freta au last weep. [\ 1 p ,. . , ,. ,Mrs. Annie Clark of London has OR COOKIES LI�rO1C1e1.:1�rL,S.r:U,Clr:1/".1�1.:�..•1..,1: ,.. ,.•,�.,��1^..-"1✓lu,x'1l Iul,Vlf%,C,. .r,a: ,✓Ir,G,..,, iu, �. ...I_,,.,.^I.�Ir�i G,..t returned home after visiting for some REIVIEMBER weeks with her sister, M rs. ,JeanTavves•,,;-,.,;.C:4;. Crawford, "THE HOME BAKERY" .,A i i,, S0 V tri Mr. and \Irs• Mervyn Richmond of II S011101'111 y1811c(1 011 Sunday with Mr. t} Lo u e urn u e e g Aand Mra, A. R. Tasker. Hiss Donnar H. T. `UDDEN, i•" iy Richmond remained for a longer visit.. V We offer a pleasing. variety 1n StU(11O IM1Wt'' ', 8i Vil PERSONAL INTEREST fitted with Spring -Filled Ililltttr(�sSt'- 1111:1 ('ushi(,il,�, 11 IMastea• 1111110 Johnston is enjoying °ep covered 111 durable fabrics. y A a twu•weths' vacation with relatives we !4 in \1'altcrdow'11•i ti 14 1)1'ol)-haelk and Single Day 13(,(1s, 1aiI(tl'l'll 111 1 Mi'. 1111(1 Airs. Oliver \loore of Its,. i Smart,BrightCoverings.li troll, finch., are visiting at the home ! it of Mr. and firs. Robert Newcombe. o'? The , „ > >, , V l he prices are reasonable fano then Lutlnge:i i far. and flys. Jack Lowe, llrs. '\\''hilt playing at the botwling green eQ111'0 just the thing for 111(1111)1', Perch U;' Summer i; Gordon 11'orlsluuut, Urs. David Bast -on Tuesday evening, Little Miss Al nn• G� iy Ings, all of Brussels, vi6ited o11 Sum g'ferrite (all had the misfortune to n,+ Home use. al(.t day with firs, A. Fawcett.. fall from the fence, and break ler 6 afro. °t We urge you tU COiU ' 111 �lll(1 ills li'l't thein, i'l ,Mrs. A. fl. Pentland and daughter, q ei Margaret, of Dungannon, visited thio \lists Melia 310E11'oy, I1.:\., who has ''; ii former's brother, O• E. Auugustine, on been tailing a l'0urse, 111 National Do- p ti Satu•(1( r, ' r y fence l rccautou at Geneva 1 111 ;t, •V f y;• 110 i) Mr. and Mrs. Carman Xing, of Mark I(ifaloe Cou(hiching, is spending her va- • • ", ,t; ellr' ti rE cation at the home of her mother, >' Vri Halt, Ur, 1114 Airs, Llayd 13'urtldde, of ' to (., �\t•s. Edith E. he'll. I �9 home burnisher — Phones 7 and 8 — Funeral Director. 0. Godetleh, were visitors with I'S• A. ;► Al. Colclough 011 July 1st, A b •.•,,,� ...,,,.�.,,.,.,,,,1.1,.w. 111'.5. Ililhb, and Misses jean 811th \Ifs l'• �'�Yr�1rchr`�r�,0'mr'Jtri.•ry',r�•1:.�('?,c,r.a:;:)i:',.•l`.'tia.,i'1iio'roi�.�,la,��. c"r.,<,a',<��ic.,.,. � u;.>,.:ru.,. a.: ,:Ist2r(; i 11'c(luesday, July 5,191'2, 1l1V'.1l"i�1S1C141P,'31E1:'1141:(t'n'1.mit�14(k'(�'14k',141�(u'1C�11 i�'i��i'>rs°;ICF".'its'.�i''iv�4thtrtat:a,�r,n,,�v1�4;t3'1;41A'ts�l �► jb Summer Necessities uFor Use Around the home Or On Picnics. iti VACUUMBO'I"I'LI:S 19c rl 14 THERMOS10'1"1114ES 81.00i „- li OLi'I'IN(� JI1(;S (one gallon) $1,f.) jel STA -WAY INSECT REPELLENT :,`>c as ANTI -MOSQUITO ('REAM ooc 4 WEI,Ci-I'S (GRAPE 11I1IC1(: 35c io LI1\1E.JUICE - 1ilON'I'SERRAT' 1Oe ay c' LililIME JUICE - COR•.DIAt, 19c r� toll TAT lr, rt , , 1, t( AI AI\I IRAiS 30c t,, SPOTti ei 1,19 REMOVER1 5c and :;9cii dv V Films, All Sizes --- Eastman andSelo. ii U Developing and Printing, Done Quickly & Expertly `u ri • R, D. PHILP, Phm. B. iipi iDRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER—'HONE 2(. N do In,i,v,,aqlt,),i,LinDirz.,'i.,N).1),1):l.„+,.J,J,G,..,,L:24:;,✓�,.;I,.....:.oLi•+,•i(+,:.,.,...':,J,.L�l,,:i.,,2.1x1 141€14(CtG140411Q1C141C1tM1C14'(;1'44;tf ;4i1flt ;itZte.12'T-CI's'T; :'C' Z'f.n, , 1V.''3',Ve 'c,"d Drugs, Tobacco, Soft Dr'nks—Phone 28. 1') Mrs. \1'r:lter Cowan and Master Jerry of licirull, visited for a fete days with Mrs. 11. Cowan and Mks Margaret 11II1e \\'oodcock. 1 lir. \\'illi in Hopper of Seaforth, ll r, and \t•3, iCitchtcter I'inni;,:lrr'welt-driller, is drilling a well for and daughter'. Sandra, spent Sunday and Mills, and is reported to have a whit fir. and Mrs. Art Barr, big season ahead of him. A large turnout of Iadics quilled :' Mr. and Mrs, Jack llcl')achtu and guilts'au(1 Made curtains for the work. .daughter, Irene, of \\'iarton, t•is!ted rot -111 at the regular meeting of the with their cousins at the smilers Red C'ros:4 on 'I'uc.-day. house, anti with fire, Sadie Curling. 1 Mr. \1'iiliatn 11.01(11. a former resi• dent, has been successful 111 tendering for a mail contract in 31i't.chell, and is note driving iLit, No. 3 out of that town. The Bingo game had to be postpon- ed last Saturday fright, because of the Richt Re—Union stance which occupied tae basement during the evening, The .Army Bingo will be this Saturday night, with the proceeths to go towards; \t. and firs, V. 31. Bra}' have r4.- buying cigarettes and tobacco foi the y ceivcd word from their son, 11, Layton js Ct•er:eaS. bu' Bray, telling of his promotion to the! 1 '\Irs. A. M. Colclough while sending )•ani; cf Flying U:flucr, in the It.('.A.F. 12th Of July Celebration In the ,Missionary Bales to Cdu•da;tian Layton's many friends here ,will ex- 'Island, visited with I r, and .firs. lend hearty conglatrtatimis to him. Lucknow On Saturday James McGill, Clinton, Mt tubers of Blyth L.0,L, will attend the 1-_tlt of July Celebra,io1 in Luck- f1 r. and Mrs. Kenneth 'Taylor and now th!s Saturday. family, visited on Sunday with Mr. Red Cross Contributions I A lal'.;e crowd is expected al Luck- and Airs. Fred Middleton, of Goderic,I The lt':I;;twinl; contributions have Tow•nSa11n-Iaw•, 31r. and 'Mrs. Rohl. ut,•tt, and many fife and drum l:autll; 1), 4and lirotlier•i been rel.civ4.d during the month ofHogg, of ('hatstwurth, \1 r. Philp is as- tvill l-0 p. e:.r.n1. The Clinton('fPipers I Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Dalgllcsh and sisliug in the haying operations, a j.Il) .flute:— and the Luc;tnoty Pipe Band will also .daughter, Janice, of Stratford, vis'ied he has held down for Ih0 past twoNis4 Jessie S„1114.1':- :1,1.1111add to the prude, and attcrnoon cele- over the weekend with \1 r. and \1l5,'' 1(15, during his waculiut, Huum 1, Myth Public School,. brati;:a. Plan to epend the 12th in George Cowan. .s. No. 1, 1lvrris 10,t1t1 Lu(knon' this year. 31r. and 'Mrs. \\'• 1, Lyon, and Ken- -it, Philp, '1'rca,tu•0r. I Billie and Kenneth Evans of Strat• nets, of Thorndale, and Miss Bertha . for((, have returned home after spend r 113rogdeu, of bouton, were recent visit- ------- isit ` _-— 1. O H1TLh/It ! ing a week's holiday with their grand•' f Craig - (il'ael1S 1'v i in Ledic(, a (small CzechCzech vii parentis, 11 r, and :\11'S.Georgee Cowan. Iiors'loodat the home of Air. and ir:;. I)av:d y, Ken. reported at Planning lage, flat, Pool, Toronto, on June _llih, for ser • A quiet, though 'lrretty wedding\(1 f?redo e it dared to slap one Nazi rat! 110.,. Fine 1 canna. and \fru. George s:11 11111/'(1 at seal n u'el(ek on \lotr 111(1att, of :Atwood, firs. 'Phos. \llller vire with the R.('.A.h 1' iu ordered that bre wo:I4 forget (1.1y af.(.1r- m..1 u'y Oh- at the Rapti:i; it; name. and Jlaclt Miller of Itruasols visited ov- \Irs, Alarga ret Harrington, who has . church pa 1': lunge, Clinton, when Rev. I And thus you gave 1,y(1,1(2,,1,y(1,1(2,,undyill,, er the \yeek•end with f1r. and Mrs. A. E. F'il,cr officiated at 1111• marriage Premium 'Ttuutey. (been pending n coolie of months in fame. 'Sussex, N.11., has returned house n,. of Ruth Jlargaret, elder daughter of i11r. and Mrs. E. Grealis, Clinton. ant 1'uu claim you're more than 111815-'8 lir.;. A. E. Bender returned to '1'0. cotu'panic(I by her son, Arte. P. liar - Trouper Gordon Ivan ('raig, (ramp 1 thing divine! Hutto on Sunday after visiting with her rington, on litre days leave, and h1' Tlordeli, sr,fl of fir. kali fir,. Robert A "Tiling is right—a thing akin 10 mother, Mrs. Edith hell. and sister, was accompanied hack to London by ('rail:, of Rlyth.twill,,• Airs, Jamie Sims for the past two iris brother, George, It's true you're not a frau—•yonre n sweeks. Che bride was becomingly altiaed ! Al r. (.rune fodder, has signed up direase' with the It.('.A.I'., at Hamilton, and i; .0 a street -length dress ut pink chif• Ase( urge from Hell polluting every Mrs' ,Alberta (tender and Mk's l.il- ,Il. Elis : ( t (ireali:, was her '.41 breeze' ile Oa1•r, of 'Toronto, are spending their now attending school. where lie is talt- ,er's only 1 .t(IJalt. \Ir. 1'reciii nt ' holidays at the home of their sister, Tutiry. of 1113 ih. v,,,, be,l man. ;your every act confes;us you o'!nce.lt:', Airs. it, \1'ightlml, and Mr. \1'fgitt- A soured pervert, chocking cn 111.4 11111'1. garet Rabb, of 'l'eesw-elei', and fir, • Itobt, 3leQuarrie, Winnipeg, and Miss ------ - :Evelyn M1'Lca114, of London, t'isil:'rl o11 Sunday with MN. It. M. McKay and Miss Olive \11(1111, Mr, and Airs. It, 1). Philp and family. aro visiting with firs. I'hilp's .sister, Music Pupils Successful Alt pupils of Elizabeth Mills, A.T.C. :\I.. who triad music exam; were suc- iesful. The local ('e1111'0 W85 held at. Clinton, June :.'Cls, with 31r. Craw - fent. of the 'Toronto Conservatory of 1311S1c, examining: Grade S—:Norma Caen• pas.;. T'br'ry tried in winter, first 0185.5 honors. Grade i—Ferre Pollard, honors. Grade •Alarde Itadthby, honors. Grade 2—Margaret Jackson, first 'class honors; Joan Killotugh, honors. Ing a ,special course. For the pas:( year Lorne has held a respuIIsihlc (position with the \1'estInghous•e Peopl” spleen— I I in Hamilton. Prlor to that, he had Tran• tut will pray, and Ilse twi11 Mr. and Airs. Chester 3loi'rison and misted his brother, Harold, in the early on faintly are moving this week to the baking 011sines5, here. When you and all your super rats farm they recently purchased from the 1 Jen - are done: �\\'m. Austin Estate, on the Auburn 1 Mrs. A. Shipley 11111 Mrs,\V. Jen- 1(oad. khus enjoyed a few days visit la The blackest night mast always yield 1 Ins teh from their niece, Miss Margaret to 7110r11— I Ur. Cub Newcombe htfortns us that 5. Fraser, Royal Alexandra ifospil'tl, You are the night—ami freedom i:; he opened the (:ass :season by landing ;Edmonton, who attended the bdenni 11 the, 1 a.w11 three exceptionally fine bass, and Mr. Convention' of the ('11ladian Nurses' The. little 'town your henchmen tore INcweomlbe 'lays "this Is 110 fish story.” Aesociatlon held in Montreal on .lune apart, \Apparently Mr. Newcombe' is another 2'221411. (Site wail a delegate from 111e Like Bethlehem, w'111 live in every disbeliever In the many wild fish stor- Alberta Association of Registered Nur- heart ! 1Ce that usually go the rounds of the ses and the Alumnae Association cf —New York Daily Mirror. Village every fishing season, the' Royal Alexandra Hospital. y I 1 1.1 II10111,111. 11.I.111114.11c. ..,I..,.. r 111.11 Lr,.. 11 1... „., M 10 . Memorial Nall -Saturday Night 1 PROCEEDS TO PROVIDE CIGARETTES FOR BOYS OVERSEAS. 1 y I , 111,11 -, ,., 41.. _.44..I 4,.. I -,(.(11,...11, 1.11 IA i , LL 174, 1 ... ' , I .11 . I:J.....tll. SIL 1 1fYA:11u,Y 1 • 11, I, ..y / 1y7 Q(ql n1Y! ('^s,.,y,M1 ,n• v, �,�, r ^,c•enr-. > .�,:.1 -.,i • �, •, ` an . ,.n, ,o,yC. 1 � K;;;1., els "n.;>r, :1�(�;'v� €•�(<, .„�(�t.,'.,'e�,..., . ,.. ;�'a„'n .�t. .LiLS) 09 STUART °° Phone 156 for Prompt Delivery. ., Market Price for Eggs According To Grade. �o CHEESE, OLD AND NEW. le CORN 13c, for 25c PEAS, 13c, 2 for 25c. Green Giant, 17c. ✓ GOLDEN WAX BEANS 12c 1P TOMATOES 15 oz. 10c; 28 oz. 13c, 2 for 25c MEMI3A SEALS ' ' 4, 2 dozul lOc iy CERT() AN'I) CERT() CRYS'T'ALS. NEWi'ORT FLUFFS cif 19e, 25c, ;9c ✓ JELL-O per pkg. Sc, 3 for 2:';c t;- .IAVEX per b(111Je laic • KETCI-Illi' per bottle, 15e, 19c. 23c tg KING BUG KILLER per hal 'Lie and 15c as b, SWEET I1IX PICKLES, Li 1)()k.ile, 13r and 30c dl • Fly Swatters, Fly Ribbons, Wilson's Fly Pasts. a o lv ;.; ('."•,11rns�'d Coffee, Borden's ;)nil :�9c ti po HT ;RIES 1:►c25c, 2 t'or 25c Continental Noodle Soup Mix per pkg. 15c a n'ar2191N212,2,9i)a9tZair.i1VINDaiDarid)19inai9i2(e(9a)ioh91A9ailaiLVVI)1)(o,'12,91daai )iii 1 S nv el S A el 4(9 (1