HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1942-07-29, Page 1THE LYTH NDAR
'VOLUME lei - NO. 51.
0131'I'UAItY
First 'I'riu 11i) ','own Since
Last 1)ecenli)er
1111'1('1' 1\ii11'le (ii111111t011 \1'1' 141' r'' \try Ill;'I to Alr..1a•..
The r inirallly 1,l' Iht• community. t; ('!),lin`"" np IiWn "" T"'tat' all 'I•.
exiimile(1 11, 110', and Jar•. Minn IiI 11""11, ,\Ir. 1'!1111u'un Ila: 1 I.1'11 111 ;,I
Ilamilun, III Iht 11 Ith of lift;(• Il:lllgll• his hull(,' Milli((;; 1111' !a -t ...even month
IIT, 11;1 „Hi and he loll us 11 svie.II° Hi...! Iltll Ills
11\'114 In 1'irlo. is I 11,: (1!1;11, I.ctlllun, ull Ioern .,inrr I;I. I i:rr• I,!11'r W ll, n 11.,
'I'uI's(1;ly n;'rniu�:. ,lull :III, IulL,ltiu:;
al 11'1111141 (1rm',11 Illi• 1,1 1 ;;11T1 1,\!' il, 1.1.1 I'r!'la} 1110.1 •1•11,11 ;unt!,tiun '1.111011 ;11111 111iiliti1i1' W1'111 MI 11
I31,,YTH, ONTARIO, `VEI) N ES DA Y„11' 1' L\' 29, 1912.
The Charge of The Light Brigade
Helping Farmer George Watt
roll;im ((('tilt there, ;4111' !1:111 11ll'('lllhrl', {:Illltlnom 11th(( Itit•iti ;III \111'1!! 1 ,;ill Ihr :-111'1";(M clot him BHI' kir 1,
11!1111 in ill health for Ih" 11'1,1 110,11((( 11, sidle (I 111' tact that 111' has 111'1'1, 111 a -t •1 !0 ;.1110:0111gup"ralio11.• 111 III" 1.111I1'111. , ;fol 1;1'nr;:1•. 1\e ul''am
11'1(11 rhruu131ie irtr1', ;Intl W11"n h"r (('tile ill, Jlr, 1'(1(111 .'n lou( well, ani larul ni 110'. I;t(rg" 1\1111, 111111"11 11•;1!1, or
'a iolull 111,'ul ,
lir u
I 1111' rill 1 of his 11'1111 ‘.1 Tor, tl•illlll, 'Hite nI'lilt, Moll itt -itt M :;l.lr (t
runllitit,n 111'c;F11u' \'or.l' a tt1•!'.i ;1.,'n, I I i, Millris:;,
it \•aK 111,1,1,,! lila) 11° i1it,,I H.,,,,tin, II ;(0,1 111, toirl' (.111"11111. .1.11,,,,,i ,v 1111; 111 I!I'' g tar: 111'1''•, ,I, II. 11':11:1111, I;;i'. ;lir aFHI !IFt'•eti ,i to+Pa p,ir1 }+,,'till.,!!+. ',1111 ;,1111 ,I - r,!.II, !II" ;''11111 1!1,11 ;I 1.1';111•:' (ill;i'll \';II tl 11 Ilii rolllllllllli
•
tit Iii titin(';. III'!' rn041010t , ;1 rrll !Hill 10 (lay for lain(, it 1.0'1111; lit, l'tiht'ri -, 11 it!,I 1' 1111111, 11, 11. 110111 :il arl1', Tile!, -.0,1111';:1y 111•,1;;" 11',1:il 1,a11l11ir1't1Fai 1,1 !hi. 11,11!:4 11111 111• 11,.... in \1','.1"1'11 Itnlnrin Mnl•ing the
Shirley \vas I1 '41'1 -null iii•x °I `Fall; hill i t y, hull 11• ?Hod, Hi, Iril, .I..1. ('11((1111. I;m'llun 1:•110)11,111111 1(',I. I'll to I;"',i if ,ilii"( nl tl- (11th t !Ito i1::11,'alll'11, •1111'!(4. I'll'! ,1'1•:'1•1'1,11 Ilex! tbrl•1• \11•"!1 rill" 111111 Is air -all
.11;', ;Hill .lir:,. H.,mill0n, ;111'1 11'11., I'll',' op I'rnu !11001;:11 Ihr. 1.0'111 .y 111' .lir. \\ hillunt't', awl ••h',,,iit it1,'r :!x 1,ti i tod,'r, milt 111l111,n1:: '11 a 'i;,I;I,. ,roll' iu!urnl''11 111;11 1!11, n11
1.1er (P , I'-14,01.,iiia in al 14,01., !II" al'Irhl'
!rn 1,;11'1 of the
1'!';11':1 ow, ti Total I\,'I'llti'!i, and itt , r ll', \\'e 11.11 ,1 (Ilea io;tti 11 (HAI,- 110',. ill'', 1'(t1, 11(1!0 ;Hui 1,r1,1:111:' tion -1 !1,•, i•^1';II„II. 1'.;i11 Ili. 1.i,, ,,,h t 1' I'+;' it..,,, illlI;IIi yat
; nl!"1' ,1},/ i.' alit( 1';11,IIIil1 1;. 11. 1/w.1o11 of
!1111( lalrr 110,!"11 141(11 itt 1'nr' :It . 1111'1 health 11'111 t 11!;inlet' to h1' 14;1.• iiil'll 111 .111'111111,
111;(1 Ili -Il e,t merrilt• tit:((!!' Iileir W'.ry It .\Ir, 11',Iir;'I;,,nti1• chimed up lull Ii,• r1'I1,I. `" ,'1,!' !11'!aliou.
No 1 company i; 111 I,(11dnto ;n
IIII 1;111,•1111'111, ;III! !11.1( 11" III 11' 1',' ;111 t• 1;11111. 1;1' 111','' !t lit ;111,!1'1!\Ill lareit' ! : ;it1'a% ;1' 141 tai ,,1111 I;"i!^,' ' +! 'I, • I;' 1,;, rl,l,Illlrll "I III` '11'I`;inizali'lll x;iiig,• the remaining iiineI';It't'.
11(11"r nl' 11111 ; 0'.I' Ile 11111!1; li Ill! Ili, I I I
,' In ^,0'l 11111 ;III, ,' ;11':e• a1;Itl) I,Ir :,111111,111:', ;1'111 1111' 1,1 !f•1 ;III' !1'•I , . ' ,'
I 1 .\:!l"I Ill;la L- t,t I' ,II .I ill(`, I:II "I lilt' 11111,11'lu f''',I";alloll
II W';I, lilt 1, II , UIII, F I Il tit ;( ,Air. 11'Itll Ili'. A, 1111' 1,!,'.,'11' tilu,' III,' \-,'!,,0',,,,5'
fait axils. loch!; mt'Hlly, 11 r. K;'I'tt''',i itt . i1' 111 111,' 1'ill,(gt, an\In :: 1 , ,'r ilt lou', \II Ill, L'„i,l. y1'r, • ,1!11, 1' ;11111 r'. ttmlt1lr" in '6(„1((11 I,,1 .1tlg 11;Ili,r,1 ( oil o'ir,• .1.. 1•' ',1 n ' I•
1'!11' I; slll`114r,i 11y her I Ifllrl' ii nil I II atilt
sol;g' •11'11 111111 next 11',','11 he ;Intl 111', show 1111', 11111'11 IIII° Ih;11 ti111eeti aerei \\hu 1 1110:04llt \;t'' lollt'rille. ill 1!1111' 11,1 1 \:1• l,rn lghl up :lull .110'-. (1, I;
uoulhrr ,the In.nl"r 1114((1, JLur it 'I '1111'!• ;Ire " ,, ; r I;
' i 1 I'011!usnn u'o,,lll h1' o II ion,' It 1110' 0 itt 1(,111 �1:(rt„I 0'01111,'. 'Ht ' in 0111. cic11 •r ,,I III' fi,'I,t C' in„ :411•1 ngn' i•, un ' , ;Is t
II' ! IF,I'lll'y, ,!' 1;1; 11'1'1111) ;III, ;111 1,l( 1'1' II 111 Ilse ' .\t,(1,,',ott it,'I_i.,,,,,, W;(• ;11,1)(1111"'1 ' ' ,!0'l,•,,,•" ill 1iii' .1Balllir ;11111 1'',('ii.ii.
,•r(o;l Wa.; II 11 1' I' -- i ,rat i'1'I,r,,,,,,, ilii,•. .
I,
YOUR LOCAI. ,'APER.
Iluron Federation ! Recruiting, For Veterans'
,flet At ('linton (ward Thi!;1Veek
i1 :i1�11 1'11!1:!" 1.'11111',11 1(0) hilt! !•!'!111'/11, 11111 • .t'its' ..'\11t- .\ II Bile((•
1011 Thur 'Let , ,"11111;; ! II, 1.11111/;11/4 11 int• recruits for it10
in In, 1:-.1 'tillll'a! IIII ti -ti itiilll, r 1111- 1''t''I';ill „' (;n;l1d of Canada is being
ton. \lith l'It .1''11' 11t'!I..' tlt,t,;ua Lonn II"M Illi n''li itt .\lilil;1,'y Ili
i. it! In, t!i3!:', 1-1c.,1111 hI 1111.1 \II, 1, I,t' I•''t•rii11111;t 11''It-011111'.1 111'
1,1; 1 p't -''III \'1. 1 I'irllplily \'111'., pl'r,1'11111' sia-
\a I'i:'I'' 11,1;''11•;11. i"1'im frt(t'!a( \1111;.. I;Illlt'1! ;It SI, 1.1110': I101'lilrlis. \\'1111!•
, ni \�;11.1111:!!-,• 11"II. I, t'. It,1:'11!11
•tt' •, \';I• 1i 111 11:111!,Ir'1 Ian' f'"'irl111101l i-'111'FIIit1:' 11:tt'i 111';1 1tr11F1itti1rF1•11111P
IL Int 11'11'„!';1111 nl I 11'1'1'1;iilnll Ill!' t!
I I 11t11 111th nn 1,!LII'I•Ii11' 1,l' '.:'n1a re.
1!I" II 1,1 I1t'" irl•!L',tl! 11I,111•C ml WA ('1 IIII,, 1111"1• 111011111• 111111`z of the Vet -
111:1
'1't•
al: I yunll;''r sister, Lori ;line an 1 )'uM''u, 10.11 ..\I r. I ol!!11- nl \;I.di I ,, r I 1,l ,1 lit , 11,1 a it 111,11 I 1 Il 11111 Int ' II t u II' 1111'4( ill iuleruul1'nl caanP np1'rnlinns
pure almil! Mal, hour all', ;I Infill, I!I:' 11111'reen arr.', soli la, ,I
llii ',1 i 3 nc%.:1-n„ i!i11•ih -li
I.:'11nl'• Ti,,,•"t'rrl;i'y \3, la',1u1's1"M in .'ie"
Irl nllx"d „AI,: anal 111irlrt ,hl'1't1-'-'I!It,: 1(,11((111 Iii;,' IIII• 11;11 1 I1,l0' 11,•1';1 111 l'a;l;1,!;i anti 1111 ut1.1;1:;tt duly in
The remains re�IrM at Ilio 1';tellrW I I I!Ir pr"ss ;I ;�r,•;1,"r ;111',1111! ,.i meWr turion� parr "i Ih" I•:mpiri•. '11111'
tt,'i ' ;III Ilir,'it' 1111111' 1111 11111 ,(111th. t1';1111112 f^r, !nil ill 1111', !loft' ,111_11: 1„I' p!t,ilrlly 1rl(I'p Ki,
I'nM1'rlaliinl; I ;Irinu:., dnrtn•_ 'I'mrrll°} F'orps !s 111114 11"1111.' 1'u1u•E"M tt1 t;Hk"
1 , ,, am; III,' (;til`, tired, !,III proud. \vend. (';111 `!I,ol• he ;hall(' 1111• it'1•! !1!;'' i,7'
;11tH 11', dm ;;,t, ..r Ilial I'I!, 1111.14 lni>',al . r The fall"a'il,g 11,'0', 'I' , rinl"M In
I,uclt wood 1 ,I>, rail " I 0';111' (i ;oIMiF Ntti;tl I!IIli1': !,,'ill
't! Illi !r « ;I4 ;n ;,1e h.w,,', hi',d,,d try I ! sfnr„ I!,' 11"x1 holt' Wa• up. Ito , g
1• '•p'•al; il'1'r ;I Mi••i•il ralliu •(11(1111 mal
;•I It•I', 1.311'1' sal, 11"IS ,I;I Bell in II"P -I}; (it'll 'U !,
W
its -
1'1, of .0iiinilior tn\"I'S ;11111 sill'i11'ly 1';111111'1' (;r'ol'g,', ho !C•oli:' I;1nn1 .1 0011011s (iW'(Ii1' 11'01- Ili.. 1•II\
11.11111', ‘1,•111,1•„ I'lllll'I';t '4rl t'Ires win 111' 110,0� \• 1;1; III ,•"'r)"cls al 11,011 p In, , ;1111 .Jlill .'\1'1• ,11''' •u1111M1111; Ills• ,;Ill 11, Crt-
rnl,Mnrir,l Ihr:; 'I'h'i''dat' glom) 111, f ni in plP".;111;41 ;u•.;i1ta ant 111 .1,1,1,S;"1"11°
0 Snulll til Ill,.( as II;ir11, "1"1 I''r13p, hart!''.,'cl' !II,• _•111_. a' II'• Inl,• :11'"""
'""" 111 ' 1,"11 flat• "at'oi11g: 1'Inli it,'nnir k. IInWi' k
Iitlti.Ior' t'Ititri! ('IIIII'i'll, l,r111111•ilig', ;Ili
!lir .,ol!•Illllrt•I't! 10WIL 1111'11, !t 11 nit 11e 1,10.011', \1'11!1 Beige ;1111':11! ill !,'fall ii 1.111' t t' gilt ti ;I.'t'i 11' 111"
(aur I( Illi' 1(1111 .: 1,l' 11"1 11111(11^I•, Ih, I Inttn-(lip, .Ina}' _;: 11', li. Ilong.tl, iLlt'
Alta., fill mill the s,•Itlr: Lir Ihr• Ileo!. nrt''r 111/11/'11 ;I 11'1!1. Ib" Irani., Ilion ,nMlh•I111 Ill" irallnl 'unilnrul ,t1 !h1' I'it:htit .1'rli"1' ;Ind
• (1111!,11( Will 110 pen t0', ani( Ili" r'''' I0' 1\',..,(111; it ICaI!I!', n I .:till(!' I'll• 1111,'11 lip, _.In_ h(nMeM ;B op, 111111 t'. I",1o•1i1,, Aliosl J: \1`illiaiii Spell., t le gait tlll•nitlll,l; lilt ;I ',Midi!' ti(•I'.••'n.t 1"';'1" rh,•ir 1•, Hari 1;1 i"t'iik rnllihde-
nl3ius Will 11" iulrrrctl i1, l'olht'ru"' 11 11•0'i, 00(0°11-Iii:),,1 •1_11-I In: I� '1111('1.1 _r Ir"• t';Ipr;lin ll;lrtoll. 1'1!1'4 is dr.
g 1';. ', 111111111''1' id \I I'. it l \i '. .\I, Alr \\',111 snel;'";l(':1 I!I;II Itr ;t'a1 1111'1 \fill( 11 1111( ttniici11 11''111, t;1'11;'14 t'.•I;I I'b:• i1,. ' I'ttr•,I•I milli, :\tn 1 1 _'I.
l'ruu'11'I't', ! !iiia"!y nn, a !lin(' F,itaaM. !tut a
I';1,' pallhe;Hr,r; \\'III h 111';,;I;; ,'ill;i,e;, I t Ih' . irlge, ;11 ! LAI'. .i ittl,'s 1111( 01'1!"'4 on Ihr
vi t ills 111 \ehlle i1^ c;lllrll m Ir(il. This i; 1111,'x, Ibe ii!t. \: r1'ull 11;11 It1 pr, „nl'll!\'' I I',
01.1
1'. !AwltWuu,1, Ii,1',.\,1•'., 1111y s„11 "f ;111,1 the ;:111., son 0(1 lout(!, liar(; ti r: 1111 (;,Irt!i,' Ile didn't ,•41'11 h ill' ,I ' i i'iiii t1;I' in,v! i al nay, , Ivo ,lit
II"0. ;11111 111•g. 11;1111!'!(111, ;11111 Ben. iul"Uuutr, Ihr Oh M(n l rat ur,'r r a\e ;I ull,, nn Ih1' .1;1p'e 11
111'. '111,1 \i0',. 1'l,ilrl' • 1•'. 1. ,•I,tt Int, \1';II011 111111 . III fill, 11, ,i hr' Bili o I;1ii' ill. 111111; ! u ci ;IuyWtiitt Ih„ Wuom
illi(( '1'llt 011:1.; .lohn;l4u, II � � I I. 1 I'i� I;I:1,I hi =1!11;111'tll ;111'1 lil'IUI'In1'M Ih" \i_!1 ii
t 1
i1 tintlrtt. 1itial;o, 1(111'111.'11Y il' Idyll! 1, 1,ul1r1 , 1111 h1' ,,1,M it Inn so JI; •. •;1111( >n1ur1'M by 11;1111( -and with t1„ I,I' 1','t, lana r;n;1,'(I L open I" 11','11
grim!' Oar lie has b' em ;II•!""le'l In
;111'1 \Ili ; s.,i, ,inti,, tl lit' i lt' pas'1 10' 11'x11 Wnuliln't het', Olid rt•Inyi11'.11:11''14 (;enr�" - Tor Ihr rest (i the el•• i „ , un; nt1 r :,o year, of 11"1•, in our iti i!0' s
rllpr;'41 •I` !iii... ,,,,1111'11 of 11,' !31111' situ., •1, I1 nl' ('. 11th', 11;14'' •:1'1'4"11 11'11!1 the
' \\r1111i1111 Ruiuti(Ioii
of Ib,' (,!unci 111 it 11r.r.i,i i\'1, (1'!•111,•!; t;iii •jn•ail•,' In •s;110(
14X'11"'4 anti i;'tiro 'ming. III 1.;11 !lis les ;on: he'll srt1'ii ;Ilium in 111'•;01111
on ;tet t . ,1'111,' IIII' t\rniiitt alit, after Which 1104 it titi:'1 Iii trlwtlll ,t1' prin:,'i ant talc,' It e;l,y.' it tt 1 it Ih,' rnnl ;11111''11 Purr,•, in iall•It Thi,,,,, ori'
1\' ;did III;II the xillgieadrl'� ill 1'1.1.1.111 ,I,,,r•lil! 01,11,01/milit•: for irailos1110'll
\I'Rhaln 'I;lul11o; 1111111`•'11';1, 3 1(11!0• The ; ride. elt;lllnitl)'It' ;Illired In ;i \tat• hark I(I 111)111, "deli 1111' admiring providing' illel'e'-i 110 111(x" ,\II$11s ili,lttiinires 11;140' 111'1'11 I•elllo\ttl 11114
time 1rr,!i;eni and Iiii)i 1,'ss ilial( of Wvhi11 ;:!till guWll \\•;ill lar.,-; !hill, loll); illi olt'll stooks ;I;; he 1.assed itt I"iet1, 1;eid's ;mill((, for 1111' I•r;l of t111' trti•• to n \iii ( tinr'"nl"nl ;11111 11'1111"'4
Jlr, \1';1i1 !n!ti us lei ii HIL' tiit0•c 4r'wt, \\'r 0' (hal lin, ',!hots a0'" 1111!( working p;(t. N0. •i 1'ompinty !s recognized as
1.+lit'!(: iti';!, died 111 his !111111,' 1!li'I'r' v 'ti caught I4il'I ;1 (•t.'lirl it' nl'Un", g '1411'11 Culi .111 11`, 1411'11
r, Illllellt. I
on Jlnullat, 111;"1 ;1 I''n;_Ih4 ;lint' itt Mo.sr,tit ;Ind n, grin Wllile ,lip 11'1.0 ltrr(' ;III sl;lnrling Ihr n1'.\) nloruul' • w, !(inch( t iti !.1,"h \,I:, 1111111! t1,' ono of the outstanding nniis ttf the
I JI r S1.0vor til -10 01111111141 the Plansyolo1an:,' Cotard. Original)}• IIiIt1%110'1( nlti;lrt\411"s'I11l".'" ittnilii„ 11111nin
npelallull1111'101;111.1111; ,'.Ili Iv"11'. r0crull-
IIII' rotllliry
,\ rul 'll 111' 111' .10111 1'r11n411011 !F" carai'1; a sal"u•t•i• 1.1"10"! o;° rn,(,ti 11(111 Ihi; \\'14111"(111Y' '411111 11 \4t \'.'11 1(1111'1 intuit, \;I., itt reply., Sn in 11" hail;(! in•\iag;it t District, 11
I e: increased Sae o, Wal' stomps and
ha; helm ml a0ih•e service stnc0 .lune
WI ii-I;t:.,a' 1 W',I,'"tt an!1 c;lrriage nt111t• 'ill mixed i.dnrs tt1111 an:t:,!i'n hair s•looked nice ,,1111111, follow. - he then diept net ging light into the \•ir, , rtilu 11!1''4 ;1111( Si tit i ;hal ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,k,c I' of 1,0n -de -Iwo, ;I n 11 Alarg;iet ft ;n nn 1 11,A \'11:1 a largo 1,0\v of !ti'm'e( llro1111'1 inti 11-itrtl 11s If W;' itrl, 1'hitp, ,kirk \\'3(;00 anti ,1ae!t
and cheese' l',11'101'1' pal run'4 Will he
i iIa!;t1 !tl'unt;inn, he W';I'; 11111.11 near While 1III !.. \4mFld 111' a4aihtltl" sorer 1111111 Ftr'slI('ttititr stnok1'd tug"Iller, 011(1( had it asked 10;I,•ri'1tt vola;\; tity a pere„nf_
'IToronlo in Lsgll, ;1n11 11'lletl 1111 two 1 , \1'"I'i, III ,'.;" Ill his 1M;11'1', � i t;.'!it Bowl( Ili ;1 .`'y'it'iti !!I'll,;'„ III" "I'-'
JI! is Vila fila:'. 1.01lihridg,', 11';1`1 :I�" nl 111,'11' I'll 1101' ;11111 (•he1'se Illnll,'y
11'1' nils( hr Bina iii tit<1' K1'(, "11111 14 1 neer. Ilnrulll V„11,11.11 1111:( 1l nulit;lny (luring the current i'ic'rnhttal;
your; 1,l` ;F,0' he r.iu'• Willi Ili, 1x11 111111,' 'nail(, \',nrt11:; Bout 1"11.2.1 II gc'.tn 111 Will. -;atolls• I
Ill IS l i Ilnr(n 1'111111(4, ,'!let lire,( I'uylo W'anls a Bann out In 111'4 phi,. Isar. laih''ric look nor ,ide nl ih„ t !((rite in 1\'eslern Ontario,
1,l' pink '431111 Willi sll4"1 slipper; auM \1 Mint(! 1laarli1' voiced a motion of I
for a peri" ;II itti11urt, hater Ino4iri;; (:Ito to • ;( i,nn1 ort °I 1'!1111' ;Inti ,ln!i for 1'riiay evening, if the W"11ihe1' !s field ;Ill It, themselves, ;mil \1•llen the ;
), I ! a prrel:lion to the roomy cuonr!I for
to I. 0, 1!' 11 .ro. 11 ;11 Hat 11111', I!etl wall pink toll", 1'!t, s'0' rally 'round buys, and take it I etti 11t itt 0'`I (ronlmt-i labout
tl finished, !:I .r1,i .rail. The nre!'ling ❑lll,rnte(I r r. r
Jlr, Ifni; don \\-;is a ntar'lltnt:1 Ily i'I,y 1111(1( 1't tit it "W'e'll I1' 1111' ltt I I ; I II corner 1 ,1111( 11e 11111,111 loll 1,l' a co<I 1,l` 11111111101(1,11 3(01'Inl; Back I 0 rOli'11
111' ja,•I, Anti -hell, ILI'..1.1', of Left -
1, in a good Ito° bolo'; \11(11. hall Illi' II
troll", and fni many years aper;t0';1 I g; 1 111 tit 11, "11"1 W0' hall '
11, -
iv loge 1ta: best 111;111, phut in ;illi !!'beat ;Ind "} gs by a ;Pin-- , fir, ,lulu( i t0,,, sone month,
nen'?lint ;old 11ar:is'utith =hip in I.un I 1\'" ran hn;Iginl' 11.11 11111111 nett Ilt'rn doing ;III 1'teuillg. I;;t r. h3M11'I s.,u!alile nullllu'r (I I';Irntrr, lllrnngh ia_rr. ilort'!Itlstd tt 11wtllimg in Si"-
1 ,.:11;,1.0, hi ‘vii he It;ls ariit" moil T:0°lridigr'';rin ;111:1 bis anent(;illi Iv t'ii this lima', the above 111::1011)11",1 Untied 0 hair---W'liar a mail, Mato;(; oil the ruin(!• 1'0rt11 ;Intl itt ;ince r'tt i'i there. ha
01!!!;11( one year ;Igo, \•hl 11, his slr'•1gl'l Wore Ih'' u11)inrnt "l' tilt 16)Y 111 1'11113• gill'', are going t° semi mut 11 hold' beim:; slightly irorlly. Ilk!' myself, I mid 1111'1.111,11n1.1)", ;old 1'x reels In re
((1'111 :\i0' I ort;,, , .1 short executive 111""(111 I: 1•"IIoW'1`11 1
lapin., he rl'tirell from :relit" 4.01.1(, Ina! can for h"Ip, so any "t you 1111("• wits
!ter=pirillg qui)),
'Irr'1n"nlit'', "r
\i0'. 11'..1, Bale, seermary of the fell turn Io Illyih, null lake up re;idWnrr'
Ile \'as J11'ihn11ist am' later 1'Illie I After Ihr ceremony;1
a reception 11 l bodied ,nen Whow14"
feel like doing to• should say freely. I1'ruli"u, ‘‘.0,.: prrtient and recorded thei1, 1hot aparlm1'nl rerenlly \acaled by
(1111 11'11 in religion ;rod len! 1i; sol'• dinner \vas bell( :ll 1110 lino,' of 1111'1111'110111's Work sono" evening, jmsl Ie;lt'I On 1111' Italy 1111 to Ihl' hots". .lach'11rec"ediucs,
t:iill We ;hunt(, ;all It11n !II ;Fid 1'unrilfur 1lmrisnn ;Furl 1';11111(4,
vire ltt ;III CCM uumntl)' Welfare ut"4t• ;'irlr, Ir: r' nos. \Ir, ;lull \Ir;. I ur'i• tu'Ir 11(11111.Ss 111 T110 Ski nll;u'd Oflit'", I('i,tt;tn i
1111:11'; '1111011 1"11 fur ;1 hu110%mnnn ;11 111016, 11 r. 11";all Ir1Fid 11, al Ill,' 1111" of •ai't''Ill111, a rota' 1';0'11. 1;:11'. -raid hitt 11';' :11!"11(1 \\rl'(1(1111Q
In Is' I he marl i1"I .1101.'! 1Lc:ull, •ln-p+'1 !'ark 0n I 111' 1'acil!r r'rtrsl.'tt hint', Whit ll auul:mt'Ii in z I :tl, ,nm1'hurly had 0 horse ;chid;"! 10 1 l i(1' 1"Iill'i)O1 �ill(Ielll
Thr 111.111.' Wea. int a lives; of .1tr and the money %ca.) turned mei: Io Ih" IhroW down, he ',night lily dnittl and I JI,•, ;11111 Th'''''' I;ordo11 1'111'1111 111(' 1111 ,
Who s n'tiycs. Thorp 11('411 ur411 t I)ics In L,rash
'ell II, ,l°Ililr'1°Il•IF;11'IIIFg' wedding, held
I:LIo. It is anticipated that a large
aunt'aer of 1'1'1er;it4 of the last, war
\rill (alto III,, oplun•ilnil' In join III!s
I'oiii glut With rIt't• 11111' hal, local Rran(tt of the Red !'(11'4'4, us all tet it. 11'"11, ;u13Way, \te hall a 10I
three inns, ,I. Ilo\arll Ilruu"Mun' l'lln in I(mrx Presbyterian ('1111(;11 on 11'1'11• Atilt!• ((arbor ;11111"111, 1.:41'. 11', M.
tun; .\. :1. '1lvnlsdot. \C'mli'na, Sask.. I 'I'!1' -ii' p! leo of 0'1': i.11'ur1' Will nut h;' falure money \111 lie, nl' run. ;old Ururge Was \v'll s;lttt ir'1' ilurrison, of Tense, S;Ish., I4as Ihr cit
1;ur(ie 1lliull 1111111"11( he \'as 1111(• tin gel your 111111("'4 in Inst<. ;loll 141,'11 nI luy nlle'r11oun at 1 p.Fn., \h"u .
all 111"0'l firm; ;Ion, I omit, horn; 0'n" Ihr am al pros,:nl n • .\irerallsinan l 11'14 Ifohiuu, d;tllghter 11:.1.111.2\
i tar. ;111,1 tier of ;t1, ;(ir111;1u" t'raslt m0' S;loud;Hy
d'nlghlcr, Airs. !;(',Mad \'odd;'(, 110 I ,1(•ii\':': i ba ; ,in e Ili; n1111ThIg„ ling a I':ItI One. hilt 11 hark fired. \Then st(1e•sad11le lint to Kell. 'I';tyl0rs Ibis '
Ih" lira'! (•;11••10:111 ;1:'ri4e11 ;II the scene I'rid;r4 nigh;, for nlir1' fun ;Intl \ntlt Jlrs. .((1;1111 1%1 nl 1;11"11/11, \t:1'4 When, I,t utg 1014 iter tau' farm ref .I"lnt
let( Icwn�hip; ;lit I t!glhl f;:;uulrl111 111'1'11 Ir;ulsfer1e11 to ;I \0'W }13utsw!' II ueM 1,l marriage I I'e 11, 111 I Ili John -11 (111,111,
dtshuro ('1'ticii ('hurt{I anal Iter. \\'i!•
11001 Neal, Toronin, a friend,
liirrnu'nt \vas made itt 1.,t1 Its'Inr"
C1'1 1t'ttry.
Mrs. Neil A. Taylor
'Photl' ,lied 41',3 taaldl'nly nn ,101!' l'anadian Itarlk II', i'omnti'rce, In,:I'
'21' 191'2'01 her 11111111' I l''111111111"1111;"M on 1111(1.1111 "I 'I'iuslres \1'1tttnlur1' 1 11';11. 10 Ih, PI1111'!r itt 1111•°11'11 Ihr., ;Irking, '•\'lint about sugar for extra .I'rs's 10,1,1 h0rinn film(. \(',Irisin and"
1 n Ihr I:,aw, 11111( all piiz1's It('rr clainl'll nr\c (111(4 upon Illi' hors". Formerly lien rnl Ilitr,f during X;Ir\esi -
Street, Jlary 11111i:oh, Widow of lit 111111 1\'11!1,: I I j('r:iwford were rlosi• ir!en(ls.
\Rhin Ilan ttti iI e 1 III 1111111(1' inlei'v ii, , pig;' 11('1'4(("'4 1111 1101•11.11 11'0111 t'ht11a 111111 ; The 11111';1 s3I',at• "I'd'''. tram \1';10'• I
'ale Nell A, 'I';I)101', call daughter' °f 1'ttllnwinl; i; the list of prize Win• R"1'1(•s "11(1 Ti ('ra\i t i Was and
11 g !hi" first to
i
Schm11 Itnuks ,.•.. ,;;.-� Sih"ria supplied this e,,nli11e11t Wilil hill° Prices awl '1'1;1'1(• 11°31'41 deals;r•,';tett Ihr phut' and h" made n gollitnl
t1"e \ • Hoover, " ,I, ,11. hent and tion, 'I'oronio ♦.. , 1lhe right Idiot of bristle' for its four•: t \ills Iltis very '1'11'sltin, (';1111"fta11 'lll'nlpl fo rescue \Inrrisnn. Ile gill
Il .lallll;l II ° II, i t:, on Alts, \1•nl. 1irua'IL ifu011!It' 1,l' 111'11'4111'14 ;"01 brooms. I'ig; fano \'ulnen have heen s° in°p"ratIVO 'a; kir ;is Ihr 111101' of Ihr pl;11u' 111t.
lir:;, 'I'uylor tt;l'1 11 lift InnL; rrsidclll 1:1, til--'!lar4ty t'nik, ('uu't School Itonli, (1.x11
\t \t'llint 1111 t ('n,'I'oruolu, ('1111 l In Illi< rnllnlry 1111("11'1 grown 1 h in 10'ulatining Irirllt II'ithin their 0'h" flames ami heat rlrnrr him hack.
of 111311 ;Intl 1!"1011} 11;14in ; 11"011 110111 1 I. a iI;11'rc 1:iy;int. ,!;;III Iiind of bristles allhullglt 11(1!4 it ,Ile;t0' talion Iliai itt "hunnr system' .\ .incl; 1hit1'c of the ilio \\'a"0'
I Srhun1 ROnks I..I:'
, 1;1,1;11 ";10th 1L:11°1111 I\1111x. ,\14111 is I'1' mitten sotlll` are 11'i11� s r i I Illi• is 10 hr its"11 it en •III•, Iltl'It �Ilftil'lt'lli ,
in .Vurris 11111.11=,lap, Sep;cul':l'I' I.I, I I „. ; hil,hW'at•, 14((11'11 rens 1y the farm,
I'i it11011, 110''4, 1'r,lnh Hill, Jars, .i, (', (', tiOUW'41 lit. 1'111',' ori x1111
near i 1,11!11!1:i MI ; ol.
'1'111' film,'t'.11 \• is hrl11 Irvin i'Ie rc;1.
dl'nct nn 1\'tllnis41:lt' al'lermi nt ;11 _',ata
was "1111MFI,,1 BANK N1'I'1'� I)IZAIV ,
1314 lh School l�oard Dial
ed 1•y Nev. .1. I',. Alenzies of Iht' I.ti- \VAS \V141,1, 11'I''I'li',N1)I1;1)
of action, \\';Brun mot \'odd"u piled \\'I, Rant pirtity of help, ,so the 14nrji 11 ;gI furl A1br'rf, his molar
stun, I'Idt',1 son 01' Alr, ani( Airs, 11111-;ktl(Ilet1 ❑nd he erlsiied henti-in int"
out at the ;mad ;Illi; started lido ‘t'ol'l(. \1"•11'1 tae so Hard,
1 Thi Myth School Hoard (lel in Illi'
(III! "I III" 0'1nwl1:i "1 Ill" Jltnlurlal hall ,I01y ";'III ;t x 1'. JI.
s'm',un was itt li wit 1111 Sallu'liay night. ttilh 'I'rnrlres \(ills, JlrEhuoy,
011 Wert on hi0I al the tu\'ll and 11'101/more plrscllt, cult• is h" to relllro l i his rule of mil. It
11;111 \len ,a" 1' 0:, Nit" I:raW \\';t.; iing (vagons ;111(1 .4upplying transporia•'
oriel; Johnston. of (;(11"rlclt, lite ground. Ili.! plant intmedhltely
I'ullotting the rIriitt ", 0 reception Itlitke into Plantes, anti hurneM.
I?yr W!tun.ttses said Morrison Mill
t �1\r 1013 \;1s held nl 110 bride'.4 limn,, Ina; I':s
1(OItSE ,IAS \1111
T (� s,x .1tr. The young couple \\•ill lake ch•eled ;u•"nod, and it Was Wliilr try.
A� It11/ti1.11/'11 VII, \1'AIt ,111,',rid...tic, ill (;ll"Iph, tttt Iti 1!1111 hltlts('ll Tilt from ;I low all(•
I'll, burs, has ;I nit\\' 1i ;10' .l1,!,! N,II 1'hr' :rmm� i'4 a hrtii!tel itt` Jlrs. I'A• 1 lode, that his motor stalled, tithe
plan, Witt a 'I'igrr \loth training itt;tue.
I I � ' i Il.lol111!)11''
ill'lal),11111llln(inMi\ynwhose
levswheat
u0lhog
thea III people ml lillg1'r 011(1' IU 11 ply ,luteal 1 I)1 Ilalvesi (,l�
their c;1,;. Int he is also to supply , , near the !tarn, \'ilh Ernest Cralvford,
I I :11'illlahll 011 `11011111' �1'titelll 1 • \.-s n' JII r •;son's Who
'1'111, nnnnlr; of the
111'"\'11111'4 flee - , ., i ',' , 1, , 1
'
ing were ;rplittivc(i as Ir;rd on motion I
Jlr. 1C;11'r"M SI. I'ierrr, rrlril in;, of 'I'rnsli'rs Jltl{Irny and \\'hit r, ! o II lout . Inde nl t 1 I
',Canada \tiIIF brlHsb":.
manager ;11 Ili" i tt4ti (ranch of '1'11" Tho following arcuunls wove p;1.• All over Canada. farm lcouen oro
was s!"'nd!ttg a week -tui net iris falh•
1110 hole !'.11l4al'll I.,11111f;Fir ;111(1 Ills
i•••I:It I\•;Is Mill" itd nt IlelL(r;F4t' soap •
\\'hi11', All's. i1, \i';Ilt.
:1u,;lir;ul ( 111 11th, Ihv'emb"1 1, Isll7, In ( 1;11. 1 f IvInrnUin, Clinton ;'I,:,,
Nell 'Taylor, who, !then Brett "1 ,111',1 hi, I Leo \viii LI' ;:141'11 01\11!
II1111.,ti:titl
n''tt' 111.'11, ;am'I Ihr Into I.. Ililhnrn. I'rl'ighl 1111(( slaatp's _..11n
Illy Ih Was 3rridenlall3' li(((ed un Aral II. Ji(•I{troy,I1:I.u.\
is4ict day`, 1:.1;1111: of 1113th in',il" ylnn• part 1('11)01. ,l .,
11011 hi I i tt' thank Nlit I:r3ws by�� Kechnie, shovelling roil( ,.., . „,11
llrr d;tlghler•, Ann", uuw J11•s..1. 1', Iiirnishht'; you With tic!;,Is 14htn cin I •\letlhng adjourned o0 ttini!on -ttf
Rus,;, of iadt't, ()Mario, stir\ 14es Itti. (take 411'(1• pturh t -ies, fie sure to co. 'I'ruslrrs \llttitntule 01111 1101':11'113'.
:\lrti. 'Taylor \vas a mrru!'er oC IIIyiit curyotr fiiliils, and dexo' ;ti 111"11
(70(0'11 ('11111(•11 11011 frc;u 111011, 011t1 ill Illi' poxes in 1110 tlifl'1'r"t11 ';tort:.
a family ,i't'41et' ;ti her hnnm, her full'• 'I'h''n ht oto h;lnll I'110' the I::tn4, in care
vial was held on Sunday, ,111(4 .Il, I!t-h your name is ";(Ilei(. \'nn 113t'i only
111 ;1,:;n p, ill, ondl ltll by i(ty, .1.1 111 minutes l0 chilli the prize,
Sinclair.
t.e,slle 11ilborn. S ecrelart'•
W. 1. TO MEET
hued for the puip"<". in Ill(' Imran- sugar 10 ford threshing 1111(1 till', 1111.1iumlpitl from Iris (•ah ;1111( '•.
Iillll', IIIttt'tl'I', Ill;ittitt'aiiiivi'rs lune ;hip ,gttn,ts. fl•I01111'1' )1;11'-�r1,,iti, Quaid and ;I y0.040.0.1° 10,01itt1'
110011 1°i'rttl l0 111111 itt 'i0' e3r,, lo 11th"' 1'0' l gronil<. Iif 1'rawi' r'ii. nl o r+'11"11"!( Illi' u'l'llt'
I11011a 0'r,,, it Ill" 11111111;11 1,llli'.41o111, 1 111 11;41'I• 111 °1it11111 t!lis I'411'a ;114a1' ,f Itlr ;I''t•1de111.
:111011 I1111'1'. Ill'' 111111.'wite' 11111x1 serol l'I' \\'((;till sla"krM 111 �1r1n!i� ; 111p:11'1'1111y
11111-" ;,gain 1!10 horse has ris(m to :
'pool bel merchant n \unrher Isitllil;i' s lv'ii Ihr ;;rill Pion( tnhiug Pitt. 'rho
1'11111111 111 h" un,alisfa(•i11iy hu( ''1111'4,, ! ;ha; 1114'41 \hell 1111).1111-',sugtlr 1.°1` fire Ilrp:lrlmenl at the Pori.1lherl
tall hili;'' \Oleo nitxrd 1'1'011,11'(4 \ills
canning) to 10' signed by herself or .\i0' \;11'ig;lliun Srhuul, two 111111 one.
()tiler ;111111,..: .!' 11:1
IIF" ;trail;lllr Ile t';' iristlrs was lint-
IIII' p,'rs In nlmitinc Ihr pnrubasl' (in (lair miles north, was called to tale
too' Hoe stating 111' H).p" of t0>tituliun s,a'ne and had the bla•r,e txiIn-gn slietl
ell a `ali"l'actuly rlii,.tillltt, This Ila,
given horst' ,Fail' a new tlnporlaueo
and has Iwai!;(( in an ',tiler hcine
Thr \1'o111'11'8 lnslttnle Will 11,'1 'assl'rl
by the 1\'arliu' I'rir, ; ;1111(
','rade Iln;'(l controlling its Mi:•uihn•
"\;unpl", "I" harvest tturb"rs; 111„ ,died as n result of the crash and not.
;their .august mooting ural Thursday M;it' .'
-burns.
lion ;old p;'ir",
'I';lylor, Robert I'uWell, Rlrhert 11'11(!, lt�')11day Civic I-I011(111y ,;11'111111111!!, Aligns, I;Iit, ;11 Ihr intttr of i'hr' iruusr\tifr is rxpret,ii to coot I Itis" remains \yet'! sh!pprd from
Airs. 'I'uunl'y'I';1l1,t1• pule avruralely the amount of extra ,1.1111111( Sttndin• aftei'1iom to i'euso,
\\'illim ('uclitrli0r. Jack \\'111'4"11, 1s \'ill 10' noticed by o I'ruclalll:l• sng.lr t-rllutrr(1 114 Itte'<r 1111'11. "tor anal ,Cask,
R111it N(.:,1111i• lien ap a'artn • eist\'h"re in this issue, I '1'11; 1110etitg is the atutual Erin,( 1)a 1111) ('111th lies(
l 3Lrte her famil4•s weekly 11001a, ( ',\1',1!`,1111 Wa, a senior studrni, it
11(;;14"(1 Itt:14 Paul 11'111,',11 ;1111( iliitt Jlurrltt ha; 111 11ifuu'11 next, 111"Illrl':; (lay. and (Ter grandmother. „,,011 0'410, s"nut•itt.i, pttdtrs, m,,0' ,
in ;11111 around Ihr Village i'4 enrdiallt', 1 1 ;i< sugar Iint, , -rug is slriclly on 1\11, 1 h:.l•.T.�., Sky lliivix)r, and had
1,1111Y1 'I'J.tik('I'. ',Jk tlllrhll'. �111g11'4t 11('11, l'ICIt' Holiday. III a (1;1111!1 "111111, 11111 .1 \\'r I, imp,
'1'0'.'1 1111 "h 0111!1' ;}"'4I till'. ;Illi 1;11'111 \olll ell ;Ilntncl rt`•^0''i• 1.1 hit rnnrcn Ili(•
Interment Was 00000 iii Union Crntt• I iundurnl!ly with ,,Iter towns and vii• .int ilyd,
or halstutss Ih" ap111t,^1nI should \‘ lilt' -itithit 211 minutes from the time Alol'.
111' ttint11'x of Wo'kers and the titin• ,t'ison trashed.
of days present o1, hot farm, fur :\n inquiry revealed iia
Afarrisol
The pallbearers were: Jlv,srs, :111,
The meeting will commence at :,0111.
III 11111 W';Ii+'r 11' 1't - 11e 11'!1'11011 111111 :111 owl 1° rrnu'n,bl'r ;hal rellnrell d'al;tri is •\\'. h, Jlut'risen, of 1''u•�e.
(cry, IL'r> es, \'hu gcaterally libserte the day, 11,1s!1,. P011 tit'''. `. a-• r C1111S111111/11011 is sl Ill essential, Saslt,
THROUGH 'UIIE S•t,ll:I SUltl•:EN
The realistic touch of nmdorn warfare is evident in this photograph of Canadian infantrymen practising 4ayonet
charges through a thick smoke screen In one of Canada's largest camps. \Pith the menace of Askaggression being
brought closer daily to Canada's shores, servicemen are doing their training with greater purpose and determination.
\\•hen the test cOma they will be ready.
SUNDAY
SCHOOL
LESSON
ABRAM; A PiONEER IN FAITH
Genesis Ili 31.12: 9; Hebrews
llt 8.12
Printed Text: Genesis 12t 1.9;
Hebrews 11: 8.12
GOLDEN TEXT—"Fear not, Ab-
ram, 1 am thy shield, and thy
exceeding great reward. --Gen-
esis 15:1.
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
Time—The exact dates for
these early Old Testament events
cannot be determined, with abso-
lute accuracy, but the all of
Abram may certainly be said to
have been between 1900 and
2000 B.C.
Placa—Ur of the Chaldees was
a city in southern Babylonia.
Haran was on the river Belik,
an affluent of the Euphrates;
Bethel was a city in Palestine,
northeast of Jerusalem.
God's Covenant With Abram
1. "Now Jehovah said unto
Abram, Got thee out of thy count-
ry, and from thy kindred, and
from thy father's house, unto the
land that I will show thee." The
call of Abram consists of a com-
mand and a promise. The com-
mand is to leave the place of his
old and fond associations for a
land which he had not seen, and,
therefore, did not know. Abram
.has entire faith in the rsason-
ablonesa of what God propose,.
So with reason and faith he le
willing to aro bo the unknown
land,
kraal's Greatness
2(a) "And I will make of thee
a great nation." femora great-
ness ie not to be found In num-
bers. She has never been ono
of the large nations of the world,
She was great in giving birth to
those wonderful prophets, who
were the greatest religious teach-
ers of all ancient history. She
was great in that she gave birth
bo the Messiah,
Father of the Faithful
2 (b) "And I will bless thee and
make thy name great." The
treatnees of hie name is acknowl.
edged by every man. He, above
all characters in the Old Testa-
ment, is honored by Jew, Gentile
and Mohammedan, lie la refer-
red to more often in the New
Testament than any other char-
acter of the 0111 Covenant. He
is called the Father of the Fa ith.
fol.
God's Blessing
2(c) "And be thou a blessing."
All who came into the right to.
lajdonship with Abram person-
ally were l cased because of that
relationship.
3(a). "And i will bless them
that bless thee, and him that
eurseth thee will I curse." 'l'he
Lord calls those who have been
kind to Israel '1'e blessed of my
Father', and those who have !leen
cruel to Israel, he refers to a3
'the cursed'.
3(h). "And in thee shall all
tho families of the earth be bles-
sed." The great blessing that has
cmue to the notions of the earth
is the Lord Jesus Christ, who was
the Son of Abrani, the Son of
David and the Son of ,Mary.
Abram's Departure
.4. "So, Abram !vent, as Julio.
vah had spoken unto hint; and
Lot went with him; and Abram
WRd seventy and five years old
when he dcpared out of Haran.
5. And Abram took Sarah his wife,
and Lot, his brother's son, and
all their substances that they had
gathered, and the souls that they
gotten in Haran; and they went
forth to go into the land of Can-
aan, and into the land of Canaan
they came, 6. And Abram passed
through the land into the place of
Sechem, unto the oak of :quell.
And the Canaanite was then in
the land." Abram departed. We
do not hear of any complaints or
questions, but only of his art.
Duties are ours, events are Godes,
and we have nothing to do with
that over which we have no con-
trol. When God speaks we must
;peed. The cell:rigs of God never
hove a man Wiwi( Ow ilind
him, fur to stay tvhere he ia,
after God has bidden hint to move
on, is itself a backward move-
ment, though he take no actual
step. The further Abram went
from home and kindred the nearer
he came to God. Not that honsa
and kindred are hindrances to Hie
nearness, except when we cling to
them instead of to Hint. Obedi-
ence must ire absolute; when
Abram left Haran he left nothing
behind him, purposing never to
return, a purpose which he main-
tained,
Jehovah Appeared
7. "And Jehovah appeared unto
Abram and said, Unto thy seed
will I give this land; and there
bullded he an altar unto Jehovah,
who appeared unto him," Here
for the first time appears the re•
markable phrase, 'Jehovah ap-
yeared'. It Indicates that the
Lord presents himself to the con.
eoiousneee of man in any way
,ultable to his nature, It is not
confined to the sight, but may
refer bo the hearing. (1 Sun.
8;1d).
Th. Journey Continued
E. "And he removed from
thence unto the mountain on the
east of Bethel, and pitched his
tent, having Bethel on the went
and Ai on the east; and there he
buitded an altar unto Jehovah,
and called upon the name of Je-
hovah, 9. And Abram journeyed,
cooing on atill toward the south."
Prone hie encampment at Shoehorn
A.bv+ant removed by easy stages
to the neighborhood of Bethel,
urea called Luz, The Canaarites
may have regarded with suspicion
I 1
this stranger from a far country,
and made his position in the open
valley insecure; or the necessity
of finding fresh pasturage for his
numerous flocks and herds may
have obliged him to change hia
quarters to the mountainous dist•
riot between Bethel and Ai, towns
about two miles apart, Thu aite
of Bethel, now Beitin, 11,13 never
been lost. The village stand's
some ten miles north of Jerusa-
lem, on the great watershed which
divides the country, and from it s
steep incline leads down to Jerl-
cho eight miles distant.
Sugar Ration Coupons
Sugar ration coupons are good
any time after their individual
maturity dates, the Wartime
Prices and Trade Board said re-
cently.
The board said that while the
first coupon could not be used
before July 1, the second before
July 13, the third before July
27, the fourth before August 11)
and the fifth before August 24,
all the coupons are valid at any
time after their maturity dates,
However, all the coupons can-
not be used at once, officials
pointed out, because the sugar
ration regulations provide that no
one shall have more than two
weeks' supply of sugar on hand
at any one time,
Australia's Population
Australia showed a population
gain of 68,532 during 19.1. The
total population is 7,137,221.
THIS CURIOUS WORLD
By William
Ferguson
e
.1
MUSK SCREW,
OF AFRICA, _
G SMALLER 1
THAN AN
ff CPf-IA4NT'5
TOE NA /L .
.4
PORCUPINE
QUILLS.
DYED IN BRJGHT
COLORS, AFFORDED
STRIKING
DECORATIONS
FOR THE CLO'THINC3
OF PRIMITIVIE
INDIANS.
e^ HAT CAUSES
4•,f TIDES
COPP. 1939 BY Nte etRYICr, INC.
J!
ANSWi .I;: The attraction of the moon and sun. The moon has
much the stronger effect, owing to the fact that It Is much nearer
the earth.
NEXT: What Is "honey color"?
POP- --Must Be a Tearful Note
HERE'S THAT
ThLBGRAM
FROM INDIA,
POp
Lack Of Metals
To Close Plants
Only Essential Civilian In.
clustries To Gat Preference
\ new pi Millie; tee. a nt has
'10,11 e-1,1111 she'd 111 \\•:I,hfngtou
('ape \y101 a N.11111 :\ 111E1101111
,I11) PI)" ;frnatinn whish 111t 111114
\Ifnkt.•r 1 10W i. •:u Crfllea I
1111 1101'01," of ('•n1:01i.u1 tn;tnu-
;o, nisi 1,. Iln,l1110 to 011111 ill
ser _ L la's 111 1 ' rials_ (rule rho
t .til 'I SI Ile, to !, e!1 t11e it plants
Ir:luut�:
1'i. o iI uI1 i< mitis.,;," Mr.
ll.nt l I .t ev„.I; iu ;t
n 11 :eu,:•nne iu: Idle now alluc:t-
1 in -, 1 ell. • \\ !ion na,unli;(rt'Hers
.(ill I,,. nn .111.' to obtain-nlficieul
01,
II'�II 1. t lolls Niels l„ and
Supply Situation Critical
uitirialdt tic.1 (1:1tr11 the Pro•
duct inn Nequirennnl; flan, the
vet- definite quotas
for all manufacturers using more
than 5,000 worth of ntetah, in a
.In;u•ler of the calendar year. h:v•
erg• manufacturer so qualifying
mast tura in as report giving hie
inventory, what he uses the um•
lerial for and how much he needs
for the next quarter year.
\lanufacturers of civilian artic-
les will he supplied after war in-
dustries have been provided with
necessary- raw materials, process -
.'ll parts, machinery and repair
parts.
This means, Mr. Howe said, that
In many cases "they will get noth-
ing." Only civilian industries es•
seutial to a nation at war would
Ise given "any preference."
Supply Not Guaranteed
11'• 11. Fres, director-general of
it, ntunitiotl department's prior -
!ties branch, said primary eat•
phasis will be on metals for the
third quarter of 1912, starting with
July. There would be no change
in existing procedure for a few
special classes of companies, such
.13 those engaged in transpor-
tation, construction, twining, the
petroleum industry and public ut•
ility- services.
"Every large user of metal will
be required to obtain a quarterly
authorization for all Acarco ala -
tenial requirements under the Pro-
duction Itequirenteuts Plan," Mr.
Cron said, warning that a rating
under the plan did not necessar-
ily guarantee delivery, "Actual
ahiptnettts of United States mater-
ials will be governed by month-to-
month decisions or the \Vas Pro-
duction I3oard at \Vaaltington."
Companies under the new prior-
ities plan no longer may use or
extend preference ratings assign -
eel in nay other tray, except for
construction or capital equipment,
Collecting Birds'
Eggs and Nests
Hobby Should Be Discourag-
ed, says St. Thomas Times -
Journal,
I'h 1 collecting of birds' eggs and
nests, a common hobby In years
gone hy, is fortunately rarely pear•
tiled today. Education of the pub•
lie along the proper lines and the
•mfurciug of government legisla-
tion have succeeded in slaking
this old time hobby almost as rare
1s the coon shoots and husking
bees of pioneer days. Rarely dons
the collector of birds' eggs cor-
rectly label his collection with
the Dana) of the bird, location of
nest, height of nest, kind of tree
it ;vas in, and all these other de-
tails which make It of scientific
v...fur. Instead, ho gathers up a
lot of valuable eggs, probably
keeps them loosely In a few cigar
boxes, and when his collecting is
finished he still possesses ai;,=ulutu-
Iy nothing of interest or value.
"Ulm collecting of eggs and dis•
till bine of nests is prohibited by
the Migratory lairds Conventions
Act and breaking of this late can
ho strictly punished by law. Any -
ono engaged in scientific study can
,(•cute a permit. to collect the eggs
of migratory birds if his case is
l.orett to be a worthy- one.
The useless collecting of birds'
tia10,1 by young people should be
e1(e,rotunged whenever it crops up.
()'.11: of the hest ways of curbing
the practice Is to encourage the
ynuugster to take photographs of
u':sts and to keep detailed notes
of the nest building, egg laying and
development of the young, That
would be a much mote useful and
l' 1.e1' 1(11 hobby,
HASN'T 1 (:;t,: t:::
Qutch 1
••
RADIO REPORTflE3
DIALING
Phillips H. Lord, creator and
guiding genius of the NBC•Blue
Network's "Gang Busters", has
enlisted the listener's help to
track down more than 200 maraud.
Ing gangsters over tho nation,
Canadian -born Raymond Haar
aey is one of the nation's most
versatile actors, on cull by both
radio and theatre. Recently, h•
starred as "'1'lte Farmer" in the
first program in Stephen Vincent
11etict's "Dear Adolf" series,
(NBC -Red Sundays at 6.00 p.m.)
Star of "Abe Lincoln", "Cane
(lids" and other stage and screen
plays, .elassey's part in the recent
play was more or less tailored to
measure. He was born and raised
on a farm, and for a while be-
I•otu his distinguished stae car-
eer began, he sold agricultural
machinery.
WITH DAVE:
'1'110 !rouble with most
who run program, i; that. th
wait till the last nunette to dcei•i 1
On a guest star. There's sm:,
excuse for an occasional lapse; at
happens to evclyhucly. But III11
Steri,, nee sportscaster, is proud
to have you Icnoty that he Ilaa
his guest. st:tr set for the Atieu.t
Stlt broadcast of his famoes
"Sports Newsreel". It's (;orueia .l
Jlcliiliicuddy, otherwise and 11(1) 1
familiarly known ai l'unniu Hack,
beloved (1(1011 of ur,:a tri;:ed ba;e,-
ball. Every, year the genial qtr,
.;lack, as youngsters on the
dolphin Athletics call hint, tuake:s
an appearance on Stern's
It's usually his only radio Show
of the year, so sports fans eager.
ly wait for the date.
Soma very 'human happenings
in local ae well as national radio
bring hack to mind the fact that
radio personalities and titers ---
writers, producers and "voices"„
are human beings like the rest et
us, And often it is coincidence
that Impresses this fact strongly
on our minds. 'fake, for instance„
the case of the militant "Wonsan
Who Speaks on War" each Mon•
day night at 11,16 from CK00
is llamilton. On July 10th also
celebrated the completion of two
years on the air, fighting for
freedom with her pen and her
voice. On the preceding Friday„
her 22 -year-old son received his
wings at Trenton, taking to the
air to fight for freedom. Thus,
tho story—and thus more fight
and spunk than ever in each Mon-
day 11.16 pant, broadcast from
the woman who speaks on war.
OUR RADIO LOG
TORONTO STATIONS
CF1111 So0k, CDie 740k
OKCi, 880k, CMV IOIOk
11.9y. NETWORKS
WIdAP N.H.U. iled 660k
WJZ N,H.C, Hive 770k
WA110 (0.1144 880k
WOlt (M.11.6.) 710k
CANADIAN STATIONS
CEOS Owen Sd. 1.100k
01(00 IUunlllon 1150k
CHML Hamilton 000k
Cl('rH 81. Call. 1230k
CFCIS Montreal 600k
CFCH North ItOy 1280k
CFCO Chatham (180k
CI'I'l, London 1S70k
CJCS Stratford 12•lOk
erne I(Ingeton 1490k
C,Ii( Sault Ste. 31, 1490k
i
HORIZONTAL
1 Famous High-
land poet.
10 Grandparen•
tal.
11 To ascend.
12 Room recess,
13 Article.
14 Bed laths.
16 Goddess o1
discord.
18 To appear,
20 One that
snubs.
22 Postscript
(abbr.).
24 Thick slice. mistake.
20 Huge serpents. 45 Stated.
30 Right of 47 Laughable,
precedence. 49 Loves excese-
32 Rubber ively.
pencil ends. 51 He was a ---
33 Coin. by bit•lh.
3.1 Relating 10 53 Great lake.
vision. 54 Singing voice.
35 Decays. 55 Duration.
37 Type standard 56 Fiber knots,
CICAO Itoatreal 730k
UJK , ICtrkaad L, s6Ok
CKd Waterloo 1100k
CICO Ottawa 11t10k
CI(G11 Tlmmlae 14TOk
CK9ll Sudbury 700k
CI(1') nrglntford 1380k
CKLW Windsor 800k
CKNX Wlasgham 1230k
U.S. STATIONS
WLlllt Huffalo 1310k
%V iA111 Rochester 11811k
1V1.1V Clacinneti 700k
W(:1' Schenectady 810k
ICD1A Pittsburgh 1(t20k
1V1111
Chicago 780k
WHEN Ouffalo 1308
WUR Iluffalo 830k
WHIM Ueffale 1320k
IVJR Detroit 760k
8111111T WAVE/
09» Englund
08C Englund
0911 Englund
096: Englund
Usti~' England
090 England
091' England
113V England
IIAIR Simla
i1AQ Spain
IRAN Hostile
ItNE Itussla
RVNI floosie
Y,Sltr
l 1,,;5
11.9em
18.14m
IT.7em
15.11m
17.81 to
9.46m
e.t(Ihn
Nam
15.00m
18.ISa■
W01:A Schenectady
15.331m
W0 Philo. 18.27m
W
Hooted 16.15m
W , S. York 11.8O1a
HIGHLAND POET
Answer to
JJ0EDA
RIAJCE
'revious Puzzle
DA�DS�
58 Showy in
dress.
VERTICAL
1 Sun god.
2 Egg-shaped.
3 Ruby spinet.
4 Exalts,
5 Three.
6 Morsel.
7 Consumers.
38 Money drawer 57 He is called 8 Momento.
40 To sob. the — poet 9 heaven,
42 Makes a of his race. 14 He is the ----
10
2 3 4 5 b 7 8 19
1
author of
"Auld Lang
Syne."
15 To choose.
17 Grief.
I9 Places of
sacriflce..
21 Stitched
temporarily.
23 To undermine.
25 Things which
give stability,
27 Either,
28 Born.
20 He wrote of
--- things
and people,
31 To alarm.
36 Calm.
39 Legal,
41 Tiny skip
openings,
43 To bellow,
44 Bristle.
46 Church title.
46 Parts of
mouths.
50 Habitual
drunkard.
52 To scatter.
14
je. .,}'I I "4,ii
27 28 29
33
34
37
42
49
WHY
9
By J. MILLAR WATT
Tt-lt GUM ON TI -16
ENVELOPE
R7%: ISN'T DRY
VET
Lord
. II=L.,..e,) by 19.. DdI dynl1cst►, IDP 1
=r
"Here's the way
to conserve ea,
tea and coffee" i
You'll enjoy the robust flavor
of healthful 1'ostulu. Saves tea,
coffee, sugar—money. Instantly
mate in the cup.
POST ,: M
P202
diataNt
POSTUM
A -7C INIAL IIVIAAGI
•,Nf1f.1 14 /'Chios(
911.11.41 /00 CIO
Y, 01 IMII.M,1. IM 11.110
• SERIAL STORY
WANT -AD ROMANCE
BY TOM HORNER
THE STORY: Wont ads haw,
played an important part in Kay
Donovne's life. Through them
she loans that she has inherited
u factory and a million cans 01
all-purpose Wondrosoap from her
late invent0r•father; becomes
firm friends with MacLeod, Gold•
berg and Flynn, who were his
lawyers. Through want rids she
finds super -salesman Ted Andrews,
who becomes Wondrosoap sales
manager in exchange for a quar-
ter of the business and conducts
a successful selling campaign
through want ads. They recall
the product through want ads
when they discover that it cleans
too well, eating holes in clothing
and paint off cars, and adver-
tise for a chemist. Joe Benton
is hired to test the product, find
out what it really contains. Mary
Marshall, Kay's competent secre-
tary and living companion at the
factory, has cleaned up the place,
sold a disreputable old washstand
that had belonged to Kay's father.
When Benson's experiment with
Wondrosoap explodes, they decide
to seek Hans Stadt, who had been
Mr. Donovan's chemist.
« «
CIIAI''I'I';It Vii
150 REWARD will he paid for in.
formation as to the present ad-
dress of Hans Stadt, former
resident of this city now be-
lieved to be in 'Texas. It, is im-
portant that Mr. Stadt be con-
tacted immediately. Box 1(501,
Kay watched a workman lily
fireproof uhinglcs over the patch-
ed holo in the laboratory roof.
SUNDRESS OR JUMPER
By Anne Adams
Join the conservation corps—.
and make this dual-purpose Anne
Adams dirndl. f'atte'n 41 I3.
Alone, it's a sundress; worn with
the blouse, it's a juniper outfit.
Buttons in back.
Pattern 4113 is available in
junior miss sizes 11, 13, 15 and
17. Size 13, sunfrock, takes 21
yards 35 -inch fabric; blouse, 11/2
yards 35 -inch fabric.
Send twenty cents (20e) in
coins (stamps cannot be accept-
ed) for this Anne Adams pattern
to Room 921, 73 Adelaide St.
West, Toronto. Write plainly
size, name, address and style
number.
ISSUE 31—'42
c
Below hint, in du rebuilt roam,
Joe and 'Ted ---drafts l as an as-
sistant and thoroughly enjoying
it—were trying to solve the puz-
zle o1' Wondrosoap. There \void('
be no more explosions. Joe had
taken vitro of that. The acid was
carefully locked in a cabinet, well
away ll'orn the \tal'elu,ttse full of
Wondrosoap. and Joe was. care-
ful, now, not to leave open cans
of Wondrosoap where spilled re-
agents alight drop into them.
She pondered Jot's discovery.
Was it just one of those "lucky
accidents" that turn failure into
fortune, or had '1'!n Donovan
fully realized all the properties of
his product', Mans Stadt might
supply the answer.
I1' they could find Mans Stadt.
Although the old German chen-
ist had lived for years within
walking distance of Donovan's
factory no one seemed to know
exactly where he had gone. A
neighbor said he was a widower,
that he had gone some place in
Texas to visit hi., children. Ile
might have heard of 1'im Dono-
van's death, decided to remain in
the west.
An increasing fear troubled
Hay. Perhaps her father had
not known of \1'ondrosoap's ex-
plosive properties, perhaps he had
envisaged it only as the cleaner
he claimed it to be, Had Hans
Slant changed the formula, pre-
pared this gigantic arsenal of po-
tential destruction for some for-
eign sabotage ring?
But her father could not have
been misled that easily. He knew
chemistry as much as Hans Stadt.
This cleaner was his last, his
greatest dream.
Could Tim Donovan, himself,
have been inolved in such a plot?
Kay recalled her mother talking
of some relative in Ireland who
had fought in the Rebellion, died
in the bloody Easter uprising.
Kay was glad that she had
warned Joc and Ted and Mary
not to mention the fact that Won-
drosoap had exploded. Even
Mike Flynn and the other at-
torneys believed that, the blast
was only a laboratory accident,
'1'o reveal Wondrosoap as a super -
explosive now might bring' goys
eminent agents, restrictions, even
confiscation of her property.
Better too, not to 11101111011 any
of her fears, even to Ted, until
there was some word from Hans
Stadt. 'Then they )night be able
to trap members of the ring—i1'
such existed.
There should lie some trace of
Mans Stadt soon. Mike Flynn
was advertising in papers all over
the country. All she could do
was Wait.
« « I
Days dragged. Joe went on
With his experiments, but there
were afternoons when the foto' of
them—Ted and 1(83', Joe and
Mary—went picnicking, tried to
fish. And there were nights for
dancing. She loved this new
freedom and her friends.
Carefully keeping her promise
to Ted that there would be 110
romance )nixing with business,
Kay devoted more than half her
attention and time to Joe. She
liked the enthusiastic young chenl-
isl, enjoyed his endless store of
college anecdotes. She knew Joc
WAS her friend.
Mary fitted into the group
perfectly. Since Ted considered
himself Kay's escort on most of
their excursions, Mary and Joe
were often left to themselves.
But apparently she (lid not 111i11(1.
when Joe directed most of his
attention to Kay.
Everything alight have been
perfect had Kay been able to
forget her worries. And if they
could have located Hans Stadt.
The advertisements produced a
few false lends and Mike Flynn
flew to California to check on
the most promising, but returned
alone. The man was u chemist,
his name \\11 3)„1it, bill he litld
lie \v 1' \t'„14.1 1 111111 '6111 1hu;n\;I11.
IMC \l;I 1 al111 ,>1 lead:
the 4-l;c1,.
1 !"•n Ilan, Stahl came Mom,.
r. l d ,uii li Illy, 1111,01-
rli. ka1 (hough! 1,1• lV;14 ;1
P;11r141,I4114, ;1441.t1: 11,1 ;I .1,Ih, 1\ heal
he \(.4.1.11 into the uitn'e.
The 4,111 Ilial ll' ;Iltlll:, tl'1 11
du lt. 1 aveleIrn. III t'.li,+trd a
hath roil felt hall in Itis
"1'11 am 'fila'' ll:lu;'llt('r, 110'1
the iuu1Veil 11001 the )hail.
"Nall 31111- ” she 81811181 scream-
ed.
"I alta Stadt, the chemist. 1
have conte--”
"Ted! Joel. Mary! i(ay 11,11;,
shouting. They burst in from the
lab, "He's here! He's here!
11;111 has ('111(1(' backer
There was no possibility that
this 01;11 11;1(1 botr,(ye(I her father.
No pusibilit2' that he could he a
foreign agent or even remotely
connected with any sabotage )(lot.
1(113 knew that instinctively, 1(r,
she listened to hitt.
Ile had boon living with 10)
son on a \divot farm. A neighbor
had seen lay', ad, but the news•
1)11111) had dianppenred a0d the
veil;hbol's memory of details w'1('
hazy. Old Hans gut one idea
clear. lie \vas needed here. Tint's
daughter needed hint. iic set
out at once, hitchhiked 11011)' that)
a thousand mile.
* * •
Of 'our: e he knew about Katie.
Hadn't Tim talked of nothing else
and how they were going to make
a million dollar':: for her? She
was like I( (laughter to IJails, too,
he said,
\1'hy did you go a11,a3'" 'fed
demanded.
"'vial said everything Was com-
plete," Stadt answered. "We
would Wail. I wanted to see any
boy, my grandchildren, 'Then I
heard that 'Tint had diel, Read
it in tine paper. My boy needed
stoney for a combine. 1 bought
it with my savings for hint. 1
knew when you Wanted mc, you
would send for me. 1 knew 1
would come. 1 1(111 here,"
Kay realized that Ted and Joe
were waiting for her to ask a1o01
Wondrosoap. How much should
she tell him? The old elan talked
on.
"Did you help Dad make \4'on-
drosoap?" she asked at last.
"Oh, yah, yah. We made a
million cans of it, Plenty to last."
"llow (lid you slake it?' Joe
asked, "What's in it?"
"Not much. A little glycerine,
a little cotton, a little mineral
oil, some inert material too) an
emulsifier—"
Joc nodded. "Yes, go on—"
"And a little of the formula,"
the chemist concluded. "You add
that last—well, almost, last. 'Then
you let it jell and run it through
the canner."
"'1'he formula? What is the
I1'O1ti14ULA?" Joe tried to keep
his voice calm,
"I don't know'," Stadt answered,
It was if a full can of Wondro-
soap had exploded in their faces.
They had counted so on Hans
Stadt being able to tell them
everything about the cleaner -
explosive, and he knew no more
than they did—if as much.
"Don't you know what was in
1t?" Kay asked. "Surely you
must have mixed it, or helped
Dad. We have to know—"
"The formula was Tint's secret,
Not even 111e would he tell. He
mixed it himself, kept it locked
up all the time. I (lid not try to
find out., Tim had discovered it.
The formula belongs to hint and
to Miss Katie."
"A catalytic agent," Joe (11(11'•
mitred. "Something we probably
never CAW heard of. But it does
the trick."
"Is thele any way of find• ig
out what this—this formula is,
how if is made, 11r. Stack?" Kay
pleaded.
"Of course, of course." The
COOLER
)'sing dad's hose'eel as shower -
bath, ingenious young New
Yorker finds perfect way to
keep cool.
PQ FOR PERIECT
Canada offers in the war fat' -
tory sw'el.prtakos the young wo-
man being cnn1;'r1(tuIated by
Adclau'd liodhout, premier of
(luebec, after rec(rivnor 11 i'(2
button ---meaning• perfect quality.
old (1 (11 smiled at them. " 1'ii n
knew about his had heart. Ile
Wrote t".erytlli(g down fur you,
toad me where he had hidden it.
You'll lied evvr3'thi)1i 3118 l`': nt
to know in the old xash•Iano
in his I•edro0(n 11,
old washstand!"
Then a silence.
"And I male you get rid of
it, Kay, I'm so sorry°" Mary
Wax near tears.
"it's not. your fault, May. 1
didn't lil(e it, either." Ray com-
forted her.
"Well, that's that! Joey goes
back to work, now searching for
the mystery formula. 1t will
show in the tests, eventually,
Kay. Don't worry, we'll find it."
Rental turned hack to Stack.
"You didn't use much of this
formula, did you?"
"Only a little bit. About a
litre for each run, That is about
a thousand cans."
"It will take time, but with
111r. Sta dt's 11011)—"
"I'll) going washstand hunting,"
Ted broke in. "I'm going to
corner the market on old wash-
stands."
"There are thousan(is of them."
"But only one with that form-
ula in it. And w'e'll get that
one back."
Kay hoped he was right. But
it Was s0 east' t0 imagine 80111e -
one else finding those papers,
destroying them. And if some-
one had, the secret of 'Pint Dono-
van's discovery might be lost for-
ever.
(Continued Next Week)
Women's Magazine
Secretely Printed
Published in France to Unite
French Women Against Nazis
A young French girl escaped
from Occupied Franco to join too
Free French forces in Loaulon and
bring to Britain a story of a
secret women's magazine which
goes to press once a month but
contains not a litre of space on any
of the subjects in which woolen
aro usualy interested.
There is no fashion news, no
beauty hints, or gossip on home
furnishing or gardening, This first
secret women's paper to be pro-
(Buced 10 Occupied Franco 811100
the Germans marched into Pawls
has ony one purpose—to unite
French women against the Nazis.
No one knows; who is respons-
Ibe for the paper. But in the
queues )where it Is passed quickly
from one shopping basket to an-
other the houewiv'es call the edi-
tor "Madame Bonne femme."
Working from a cellar which she
has told her readers; Is "Some-
where on the outskirts of Paris,"
Madame !tonne Femme writes of
hunger with the realism of one
who knows hunger and of cold
with the grimness of one who has
seen her family shiver.
"The Voice of Woolen"
)ler magazine is two pages call-
ed, "The Voice of \\'omen." in it
she urges woolen to attack Gestapo
agents in towns where food cou-
pons are valueless because (here is
no meat or fat or bread to ex-
change for then). Madame Bonne
reunite tells the women just where
the food 11)16 gone with such lines
as:
"Fifty thousand tons of wheat
wee sent this month from France
to Germany."
She gives other features of ship-
ments from France to feed Nazis
—9,000 head of sleep, 0.000 oxen,
2,500 tons of woollen articles. The
information brought to London is
that German propaganda officials
have been trying for mouths to
learn where this information is ob-
tained, because the German excuse
to French housewives as they stand
for hours in food queues only to
face empty shelves is that bad har-
vests 8181 transport difficulties are
responsible for the food shortage.
Ana
7e5&
"Rice Krispies" is a registered
trade mark of Kellogg Compa ny
of Canada Limited, for its
brand of oven -popped rice. Get
some today.
TABLE TALKS
By SADIE B. CHAMBERS
Jams and the Sugar Ration
The topic of the (1a3' In "Sugar
Rationhlg'I, therefore one can
hardly plain any menu without
touching on the subj011. Our p11.
peril and magazines are full of 1t;
everyone Is talking ''Sugar." We
are receiving the best in ideas,
methods and recipes that all can
produce. 'These recipes come from
the laboratory of one of our finest
dieticians.
rw
4 Ills. strStaa\Vbberryerrics Jam
3 lbs. granulated sugar
Wash and drain the berries; re-
move hulls and any blemishes.
Combine berries and sugar and
heat gently until the sugar is dis-
solved and the juice extracted.
Cook more rapidly until thickened,
stirring often. Skim, pour Into
sterilized jars and sell.
Whole Strawberry Jam
1 cup whole strawberries
'Two-thirds cup sugar'
Juice from IA cup gooseberries
Add gooseberry juice to straw-
berries. Simmer until soft, Add
engin., 11011 to the jellying point.
Black Currant Jam
Wash currants. Put in a kettle
and add water to about one-fourth
the depth of the currants. Boll 6
minutes of iuttil soft ainl strain
off the juice, Measure the juice
and add an equal amount of sug-
ar. Boil five minutes, Add the
currants and boil 2 minutes. (Note
the short boiling after the cur-
rants are added. Long boiling with
sugar makes currant skins hard
and tough).
Red Currant Jam
1 cup currants
I cup water
% cup sugar to 1 cup cooked
fruit
Add water to currants and cook
slowly, 4feasure cooked fruit, Add
sugar. Boil to the jellying point.
Ripe Gooseberry Jam
1 quart ripe gooseberries
3 cups sugar
1 cup cold neater
Wa811 gooseberries 811(1 l'eIllove
steals and 1)1/)880111 ends. Add \vat-
er and cook until skins are soft.
Add sugar and cook rapidly until
thick and clear. four into steriliz-
ed containers and seal when cold.
Plum Jain
Select plums of a tart variety;
wash the fruit and drain. '1'o each
pound of fruit allow x'i of a pound
of sugar and 1 cup of water. Moil
the plums in the waster for ten
to litteen minutes or until the
skins are tender. Add the sugar
and stir while boiling until the
jelly stage Is reached. four into
stel ilized jar's and seal,
Peach Jam
1 cup peaches (cubed)
1>t, tablespoons lemur juice
IA; cup sugar
Cook peaches au41 lemon juke
Until soft. leasur1 the cooked
mixture. Add sugar and buil to the
jellying point.
Ginger Bread Marmalade
'I'o every pound of peeled and
cored pea's which hate been slic-
ed very thinly allow lb, sugar,
IX, ounce of green ginger root
(scraped or grated) and half a
large leucon.
Place the pears in the preserv-
ing kettle in layers, sprinkling
each with sugar, lemon juice and
grated ginger,
Allow to stand two or three
hours then heat slowly to the bull-
ing point. Cook until clear and
thick, If preferred the ginger rout
may be crushed and placed in a
little bag which can be removed
from the mixture before pouring
into the glasses.
MRN ChnInbers eveleoules personal
letters trona Interested renders. She
is plenoed to receive suggestions
on tomes for her column, and In
t'n ready to Ilsten to your upet
peeves." llequests for reetpen or
special menus ure Iu order. Address
your letters to "111ns Sidle ll, Chao.
bets, 73 West Adelaide Street, To
routo," Send stamped self-nddresast
envelope It you mala n reply,
Cost Of Milk
At the protest sleeting called
by the Ontario Whole Milk Pro-
ducers' League at Toronto, June
13, was a chart showing the price
of several beverages. The com-
parisons given on the chlt-t are:
Tomato Juice (40 oz, btl.) 190
Apple Juice (40 oz. btl.) 19c
Beer (40 oz. btl.) 51e
Gingeralo (40 oz. btl.) 23c
Internationally advertised
drink (40 oz.) 40c
Milk (40 oz, btl. delivered) 131
She Tipped Scales
At 800 Pounds
Probably the fattest W01111111
who ever lived was Mrs, Ruth G.
Portico. She died recently alter
nn operation to remove a fatty
tumor in her left thigh. Five
feet five and a half inches 1a11,
she tipped the scales at 800 pounds
and although she held the record
for her sex, Miles Darden, a North
Carolina giant who died in 1557
beat her by two hundred pounds.
Nevertheless, the blue ribbon for
fatness goes to Mrs. 1'011810, and
this because of the relation of
her height to her weight. }ler
mother wveigiled 720 pounds and
her father, a six-footer, 200.
Despite her enormous weight,
Mrs. 1'onticu consumed only about
50 percent more food than 11 nor-
mal person of her height.
PEACEFUL JAPANESE INVADERS
Tossed by storms and borne by ocean currents, glass globes such
as these, used by Japanese fishermen to buoy their nets, drift across
the Pacific and are picked up au ttu+ IstmkgAisit of islands elf the
California coast.
Page 4.
THE STANDARD
1Ve(lllesdat', ,duly 29, 1942,
tomitimtvglEctimpicivetectetvvimeteitcw
J. H. R. Elliott. Gordon Elliott
INSURE NOW! AND BE ASSURED,
BEI.(iliRAVE
.\ l(l' happy lime win; will on
y night when the members of
'dung NIin's 'Triple 1' ('lass enter -
wined Ihr members Of the Excelslo•
Elliott 111st1railce Agency (lid's C1;1 s Knux t'uited Church
ASunday School at a marshmallow roa,;l
31 Ilio river nth lien )lards. 'There
Awrr, about fifty in allendam.i. and
BLYTH-- ONT. :mllb;tu and other group gamestyerc
Office Phone lel. Residence Phone 12 or 110. g t'iiioyed ;fter which roe group formed
14 a circle ;ound the large camp fire
"COURTESY AND SERVICE"14A;Intl it sing ,ung was conducted by
sjothihlt,NNN?I?;1)41 ?1b1119,AN24)t21?iNN t as,1Pt2•IZ1?ratal)41?131DrillA4441,1PsDatltt l;ttltlie Wheeler. This was followed
1 by
Inns h of toasted martiliniallows
1 and cookies, )Iiss Itarbara )Ilchli
for it, land Miss L'tlllh )Icl'ltinaghan 'novel
I'r, make a long '! '1'y short . ;I ht';tu'ly tale Of thanks 110 the boys
Biddy didn't got away with he shut which wits rospuntled to by the girl.;
duggery this year, Last night I tya' ruining in the singing of Vol. they a1',.
-t muting at the cow•stable door after jolty (loud fellows,
mill:.itig staring off into >race ... try. ; The July meeting 0f ilio Itelgraye
Mg to 1'r 111211 er s,mtahin•; I tray \\',men's Institute was held on '1'11eF
supposed to do when I heath a -ionn11 1'l;iy afternoon at the home of Mr;, d. International Plowing Match Off,
CAR—FIRE—LIFE—SICKNESS—ACCIDENT.
THE FINEST
EYESIGI-IT SERVICE
•1 YOU EVER IIAD!
No hit and ran ne,thnd, 1).•e'
:;Your rye; are thoroughly rx-antimi,
ed and you are told the truth;
alwut thrut, it' glasses are ne:'ro
nary, you get the finest 'duality ate
the lowest prices. 'I'wenly•fiycl
:years experience ill t)I)IOitett'y is
l
your guarantee of Satisfaction
I In Willows Drug Store, Blyth.
R. A. Reid,
I R.O.
EYESIGHT SPECIALIST
,Appointments with Mr. Willows
1
PHIL OSIFER
OF LAZY MEADOWS
(by harry J, Boyle)
like little chickens. 1 1V11 11(41 ;tad (1. Anderson, Btlgrave. 'I'lle nl:'rlili. 'I'll, ,uuuntnr,umnl mud, 011
IIsi nett and sur, enough .... Biddy which was will ;Mended was Has as in monthly by I. A. f'a'ro)), tleneral
contes poking out from around the charge of Nlrs. Earls' Anderson, Ili N1un;leer of the Ontario Plowmen's
corner of the horse stable with five president. The program) 'vas arrang•;\ssnriatiun, t, ,he rllrcl That the
chickens. I pounced o11 her alirl found ell by )Ir,. Cyrus Seull, convenor on I'+I.' Iulorii iiiun;ll I'l,a'ing )L'ncll.
that she had her nest in an old wood- historical rc<e;n'ch. The grunlnn,itt•nII„ irh n'u lu 11:1".bt'ru ;I (latae 1't'.
en box under a pile of hnrdock stalks'ers of the community attcndcd as hon• cnl for Viral: Cuunl) this fall, had
which we had cut and piled up to dry Hired guest,. The roll call was re i I 1C{illll;' i{1 1rii s 'I'Odtll'
nc rtr pnsipunrd.
before we burned them. 'There were sounded to witlt the name of "Thr! I'hr \latch nay srhrdn►od In lake l3eC011leS I)itt11011(8 1)1111'
six more eggs, partly hatched and so first school I attended' and the name
, plate i)ct,rbrr I.. -II;, in Ilullelt yce e111
Biddy wt clamp,' fork on the nest of my first 'Teacher, fret Ilusillil o
htp, In t,tyn- a pit ;Ind PH` it up, is ❑"1'rol\1'ern l`iinl.nl and '
with a barricade In (foul of lour and lean! wa'; discus .ted and a cunnlllll.'e ', `':Iiin•III.lu;uim ;Intl nn,' Ilial '11011111 bo 11'111„ul
I`1), announrcnteut ,t` it's I'u,lp,ll,' 1'ered the:, du>,:, Nr,dlo,, pin',, II,Iir
)ins u ' r ,'' ( II a1';;.
this nuu•ning she is the proud m0the appointed Hied t ala}c murk, .n 1111 lift”! res 111rd Ir,nl ;In rxornliy,' ill "I.
of eleven ((tad}' chicks. she'; sUut 1 gnrstiunai:e on Lost 11'a\t'luluslt Pills and bu'•by Pill'r'r,l Um'nI ni1'1
rug ,I the Ont;Irlm I In\tnl"n s ,v,•••;(1.care, ,;Ivo them. Pili is Cap :Mk i1'
ting around now taking full credit and )(orris prepared by Mr,.
('1;111,11. 111'111 111 Tull)") r,. given oat by g..{..r111111'nl
anti forgetting the fart that at our Clothes was conducted I,t ,\i1 . shin -Tho dticf,in11 to 11'15111,11,' 1111' )11It01
time she was ready to desert six is ley Cook. :1 box full of cat out gi;Iron, lin 111111 ;tlnminnul 1r.' a1'.
watt illa,le Ill ,.'1,110
rff,ll'I I, ""11:";" the the in, 1;11 11 111111)• 111'1'1, i fol'
then(. (minis was brought (tont the Red wtth 1.111.
1 IC111111111011C1111111C111111111011iloyl'rotuu';It in Iho
Rooms and dislrlbutrd to mem• ( IILn11'' ;u;d t,nllcs. for 11111; nn.1 :'.,SII
i. ,1111,1 !hese ma. o III,' 1111 :I I:• I11-11111 Il '1'11
1/11'S for slaking up. :1 duel by 11.10y(1conselyalion of gasolino, ilia', and
man boons.
Here's r,, teat News For You
Wettlaufer's ARE
Going Out Of Business
Sale Started Jul 16
FULL LINE OF MEN'S WEAR
DRY GOODS, CHINA
WALL PAPER.
WE.'-TLAUFE 'S
— ; AUI3URN
Ilcoy communion mil
in Si. )lark's Church Sunday and Ihr hoard rxprt's:od Ihr hope
:1 paper wasgirun I•v Nlrs. ('yruS ,
'August 2. Stoll on the Life of 11r, Dunlop. )lis;, :I11;1t whoa m;Uchr; ;u•1' ri'irwe(1 ill'
.\ remnioi of the Wagner clan wasfie.t will ho held in Ilnrnn (''),lolly,
)Label ('utiles was In charge of a stud- , (leucrll rC,'rel will 1.,111:ll Im the
held at the farm home of NU'. andlin
Old Biddy is ill it 414,1111. 5111' is Ihr' g 111:11'1) \andc.h was 11'011 by Mr,. S• Iran.vidiariun ill lilt (lig malc!I, o!Ibneh
(',ik,. The five grandmothers prtis•' world rnndltintls had r;ul 011 sono'
tint each rr;ceived a bouquet tit' flow•
diligently for .me sign of bloodiness consisted of >I1'. and Jlrs. Harry 11a • cls.. 't len cent ciIlcclluu w;t.; rtierll.Ia11yersr c:iliri'm hl its cunnninity.
, and she fools us, she'll walk 11x1 of .\irhut•n, )Ir, and Mr;. Jani•'s 1'l and In11ch was sert•od by lite host.la1111 w•htlti Scutt' will 1'r;;ret Ilial the
laol:<un, anti Niargat'et of \1'alkerburit, css ;i .ststed h%' Mrs. S. Cnult ;in11 Mrs.,ttuUch i; cfi'. CIO' will reconcll, 1h1311-
;wound looking al usa il' t1'e wrl''t srivi s in boon Ins Ilial (111. war of 11311
C. Srnll.
f.; h"ing atdrd,
llibson ,\rtnslrung of Ne\v 111 iitthur';•
stout the \r'rar ;eun'uls hay, 1,1".11 ruing 1'n
w'cck•oud with relative.,
mer 'cul in this (11'111° Herman Pari•, by the enmity rnnunttt,'' to utat;l' Ilii
been a faithful hen .. as old a:; the hart'' tma11i milee of Ihr nn,;l m'dsulndi11';
Bills bat so. t of a household pet I'at fat uu'r of Ilre 'Win:" 111) tlt 1'u:ul re-
sure cone of us would musty soup mato,
p;'tits a splendid ramp, hi; tt'ieai hay• Jnr. on11 Mr Charlie Ander un of hat ha': kern held and they have 1'r•
from iter mid carcass. 1'rul'11) it Ing Yielded 40 bushels to the acre.
The •' •rhe •irr; c cherries
I 1'11 t m tort
t i fruit, , u l and 1 t
1 r
, 1
,n'UI r ( ,, 1'
tl 1 1 t Pulpit 'ill 'I I t
:and Lonna .\tiderson entitled "'lilt
Gurdon Nlrtlayln, ill' 11'n11un. is
rue your sung' accompanied h)• Jtiss''
Scrulott In Velma \\'heeler, was much enjoyed, prrsidrnl of lir, .1 et'ialimn this ):'a1'
most inconsistent hen the world has •\its. hrcd \\'ctgner. :1 soctul Uma was
held tltu•in; the ltfl(r11unrl. The party
ryes kuuwu. F1u'h year we watch 1):r
some kin.I of foreigners w 1111 no right Ilett", Minnie and \\'',11 ter \\'agnea,
in the barn•),nil or henhouse. \\'e be- Base I., Mullett.
gin to to 'I guilty. Alter all she has 1 Threshing operations have corn.
i 1 y I .
Then 1''1'1111' disappears. 1'011 don't are also a huanllt tl t•rup, 1 r'slle 1.111-
1101 IC(' 111'1" al tir;i hill rein" c'hautl;w, \\'cslfield, picked 111 ,Ir1'en
clay or Soto, cvcning suniell:ody imp, quart baskets and six six -quart has•
pens to ay 1 haven't seen Biddv krts of red cherries from one tree.
;wound lately. I n'ml,ler If she's halal• Ten c u•luads mf t it rattle were ,:hip• I
11111;; again.' Then we begin Ih' animal Pell frons 1`.( w, Auburn and I31)t11
search a,: in where she may be. during the past week,
For + , ':!le is"(1 hi set 10 the )1 1-- Helen )I ills. of Godrrich, Is
little ;ti vt' tinder the step, going visiting her ;randy:+reals, )Ir, and
u1'slair; iu tit' horsr•stahle, How, Mrs. I•'rcd Moss•
rye,,
qty .;t'(-iurtl 10 gel tired of that )11''. Ttiwti:i' Bradnucic of Scu[urhh.
!;Hely ... and h,..dd, , Tyr wrr(' ala;i%' 11.11
1' 1 with )Ir. and Mrs. \1'csbsy
c'•rt tin 1 fin,( het• there. On nova. Bradmtcic•
sinus she ns'',I 1, gi t Trp In Ihp 111,1 )I1 Nurina Marl' lvlth r''laliyrs In
buggy, lock in the lar end of the tlriv• Udet•Itlh•
iug eheli. Unci' we found her ic..titlg Mr ;end NIr,. I:1'+' and 1.'1111 113' Of Tnr•
nada 1111' S111'111 11'11 111 a 1111111111' of amus tilled Willi )11'.,. (lcurge l ktw
dirt and soros.. She also It•srt1 10 try sun.
;Intl nest In on, straw stack in the 1 )li'•;es .1 ono and fully Beadle have
ba Hoard.:returned home fruit a holiday spent:
Then i;Ist week mit, day we s'tw her in (luderi:'h,
strut aur,' -;s tit' b;ten•) iu' 1, )Its. Jelin :11elinIght and Luis Per-
t() tike a drink at 1111, pump. from ;I ee ou have l'"111."1 hr-tnc after vis.
little u1erflow• riddle • She shim(\ (ting at Christian Island for the past
her 111 rags down to i,te .ground and uiontlt.
broodily cussed the dog when lie at- I 'Airs. Keith Arnim. of Nile, is vledt•
templed to ruffle her up a lilt. I ling "'it'll Nkrs. .101111 Arthur.
watched her carefully. The only way Miss Iletty Craig of Godcrlclt spent
to du with 111141) Is to get her at'I i(he week -end with Nlr, ;turd )Irs, 11'.
Other moor her and (it' 111'1 ur else J• Craig,
corer her carfilly with a bushel bas. I lir. and Mrs. lfarvey NlcGee, and
ket or some such device. \'oil see.
)1r. and )1rs. 11, .1, Phillips and Alns.
the mother tn;tin'ct in 13iddy only Fred Itt's attended anniversary ser•
goes so far, :s iter the first ton' chicks vices at Lochalsh on Sunday where
hatch out s:'.tr loses interest and is'lfiirvey McGee was gue.;t soloist.
ccrtait la drag Iho first half duzrti or I Mrs. .1, (', Stottz Is visiting in Tur-
Sn m:f In 'i ,n,' olhrr hiding place, ()MU), where her Sun, Kldon, is illLly
leaving the half born and un.orn b.tliy a 'Toronto hospital.
chic''; to polish miserably, Mr. and Nlrs, Harold Nicholson and
1 s' +rly tta 111 going to let that old daughter, (Caren, 1,f Galt, were guests
lieu put anything eve': on me. tike over the wcek•end at the 11010e of )Ir.
seemed to sen'se that I was watching ;Ind Nlrs. .I. ,1. 1\'ilsin,
btic,ls, she .lust stood and watched I )1rs. Edward Sillery and init.',"
toe mit if one eye fur some time. I of Exeter, is visiting with 'Mrs. hairy
ir1c11 to look off 111 lltu other dhr_c,• Go\iet'•
tion, whine cavi, in let my eyes dart •,\It' , Cameron t"atliertigliatn and
hack as often as possible. She just
pecked at a fly on a weed leaf and
kept on watching. Sir, Timothy, the
red bull let out a terrific snort about
something ;'•-.l 1 turner( away to fin'1
ant. 1 f'+t;,ot about ilidrly momentar-
ily and Wien I carte hack she wilt
(laughter, Gail :\utte, St. Nlary's, are
visiting at the home of )f1', and Jirs
S. II. Johnaton.
Tubes On Beaches Needed
11 is Oa lined there are thousand;
gone '11' was away off to warm up of inter tubus used as playthings a'
the cg , and 1 was tontplelelly baffi battling beaches and summer resort
•
cd.
"Are these tubes more important a'
IPrl'ly has been getting an -ay with safety devices at beaches or as safe
her spcc'aI brand of (ricks for several guard; mil our war fronts?' Nations'
years now. She always scent; to get Salvage 11'e1lg11ar1111'S at Ottatva an
the (rest of us Wily... protoktng .. , iswers I'ac question this way, "N'e car
and a can'dldate for a soup pot, she obtain substitutes for these safety de
has e:c.lped 1 think for only one vices at our beaches, bol as yet we car
reason. \1'e had a healthy respect for get no substitute for rubber for our
her wiliness. Mrs. Phil often accuses war requirements. It's up to you, 1'J-12
Biddy of being lazy on the .rob. She vacationist.
says that Biddy wafts until she is
routing Into the hen -house, jumps up
on a nest where one of the other hens
liae laid an egg and then takes credit
U8E THE 8TA?DARD TO ADVER
TISE ANY ARTICLE LOST,
OR FOR SALE,
Bi.bctycon, spent S1111day 1%1111 cera• 1t•eivrd ru•nperulion all anon'4 iho lino,
lives herr. Ili' ('oinly 1'311111'11 ;Ina ntamy ntinl-
'1'111, amt't;ll Sunday c:'It'r,l picnic of vital councils in 1111. manly 11'it'1' t;iv.
Knox I'nilrrl ('hutch Smoky School tin finnnri II smpl'orl 'bun•in;; 11111 Ili
was held on 'l'Inu'sday afternoon al county v.a: right 111 'dud This
the Cu'm of )l1'. 11, )IeClrnag'h;tt) he' I 't'h1: 1111.1 dtu''11 is the death knell 'tf
side Iteigravt, 'There \t•as ;1 good at the Inl ':'tm i onai far the dnraliin mt'
lind'ince present and soft hall game.; Iho tsar awl tl Is i'xpeel1 1 Mai t•nuniy
races, clr. wore cujuyrd. 'There w'a; machos will 1111'1'1 a Sinlil a fife \,
h 1100111 nn Ihr grounds which was definite word has Irr„11 rtt''i1'rt1 n:-
wrll patruuized. Clutch of sanriwl.'h• yet hi r'g;u'tl to Nt.tll Hilton I'it;tt•in”
es and wirier was sensed at the supper M:1irh.
holo'. n
flet JL Scott of Ssi'Itia, spent Ili,'
w•eek•end al his parents Immo where F!iR
1I'
1111",, I; Iilpin I 1.11.1,' pit Ina
1 1I lat'I's.
Ihiug, Ur!' ,till nn Ili,' 111:11'
1(1'1 ;11111011it!i til s,i utt ' III ,I;I!:rr'- 1;11'111'
11:1;11' y i:. rbangint; 111'c.I ' 001 Ihr
disa1 p1 a:anro of stur111:0=. Von 1n 111
h„ 31111• to 1;01 Ho, 111tH ul I131: pins y11a
!itis' hoist', aid 1'(rU may It t 1..• ,1 1,'
111 ;1'l i t, -)II 1,111,1 i'nn's
!him; ;11111th,' of rn'1!'`1' 1, ,'1,-1'S' 1(11111
of luu, hold r llli!1u11'ut 1,;1111' 1111; of
amoral.
Ii1't inti 111„ II',bit ul tuti1,r, I.iIti!l.•.
1,1101O1 10' o,11'is1'. 1:x;its It ' !h1' ron-
Holy
1. ,11,
t',nl;11a1Holl runt .1-r111on
13LYTH UNITED CHURCH
.\ t; i'g,' coll:'s, :a'I.1lt ationa1'd
Inst ''utrI t) Ili n nit::. Thr
11•;1.111; ' e ,i01,1 i, t ,1 1o) Mr, \t'iili,rn
}{. 'I'hni'liinc•, t i ti rtl,t'11'!i. ;i r';iitlHl ' '
l'init.'1.
'!'iii.•. tv;t )Er 'i'ltortlir,t'', fir -1 a 'rrlt ,u
and 11!11' r rttY' tti tit tta- (High; 1
ttith ht ,111tif1'- and Ili' -piend l
manner in \still !I II.' r"nrt' ,•111 ,t t
ror11ic,,
1 lc L;,• ;h. 10 i•h'. i
his man v ft i, i.,t i;''i, 1),I ;,
IIII aliiii ,rt'.
'1'1.1„ 1 't, ' 1',':';r' i, •?i u';, •.
welcome ;1 ;1111 .111'. (1,-1- 0 Ili ;no
f •1' „1'l , 11 r. 1'I c11.111 :tea ill
111111y •'11-.,11 lo.)(1 til. ,.nl1r 1'i I.
Church ''v,1 , is .
111'11•;1 'Ii, ,t'• ! i )• ,,i!. 11,, 1
III,' a 11;11;1:
1111.
` t ,In1'I;.y. \111^; 1 :1111, Itov. \\'
I. .\I;t1?I•. , f 'I't:i1,1'y, ttil i,,rt' In,1 ill
rt i, +' at 11.!.'. 't',ir:1• \yin 111.
1 ,1 1:1,111
11'111.. ul Iho .111,t 1Ia0 ler SII';Iv 11111 • 1'1'.
111.i'll nr1'1111',1 wool o tlr'y will n
and c1ra11 Ibu„r alroady 1'n 1'1'11 tt itll
rul,•ry cloth or tl•llttto.'. Ity :-i\
thee' iim11'. ti's t 11” •11111'11,'•
t1'`Ill • Id sl
I II I
CH Cil
ANNOUNCININ
PIIES81'TERIAN CI-IUIIC11
\\IId1' .111'. I!•1ylo i:• 011 lu,liday< ell'•
service for the next two S Imlay- will
NA I, iN'1'111,1t t;S'1' bt' emntlnelyd ;It Ii,1' usual butt'. I"
his wife and daughler, are s11enrlin;;; 1'Isilm ; nn S.11[1(111 3' 111111 lir, ;Ind 11.11i1111, by Ifcy, 'I'. .I, Itnbin;,u, o
Ihr holidays, )its.:1r1'lnr I:u•r n•1':'t: )1r. and )Ir:, Stratford.
)Ir. and )1rs. ('. it. Coolies, )11.s. I. lidichtinrr Finnigan and daught" r.
R. C'uultes also Jnr, (_'mull \\'heel': Sandra. of 11'e.-1 1\'awain:11, )lr. Ro• 1 TRINITY ANGLICAN CI•IURCI•I
,brit Via', of \\'digit un. )11'. and Mr;:. (ice. P, H. St' octet. l_,Th., Hectic
nw;u'd \\'illitn"on and family, )liss .\nt;, 2, 11112, Ninth Sunday ;Illi r ,
1.inni0 Italic: awl )Ir Iiai 'r, of WI- ,')'doily,
spent Monday 111 Toronto,
Holy C.'ontntnnlun and Sermon 7:3b
I'. 31, in 'Triatty ('huroh, Sunday .111
gust 2,
!gravy, solidity S,'hnol Ie,;:lo .\, )1,
ANNOt iN
1"11; .
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ISSUED IN ANY
AMOUNT
An Wool authorized investment
for individuuis, conrpunics, eeno,-
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Complete Stock of Stationery Supplies, and
are Ready to Supply Tour Requirements.
A Complete Line of School Supplies and Text Books Have
Been Ordered and Should Soon Be Ready for inspection.
Your Patronage, as Always, Will
Greatly Appreciated.
THE BLYTH NANDA
Wednesday, •July 2.9), 19.12,
�; 1,1'C11;LI,11-I'J1EAT ItJi
WINCHAM--ONTARIO.
'1• '11'11 ShOtIVS Sat, Night
rri., Sat., July :0.31.1
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TARGET OF AXIS DRIVE
street seine in
by axis wellies,
great Soviet city of Stalingrad, now menaced
VOICE
OF IHE
PRESS
PROLIFIC COW
What is probably a provincial'
'record for calf production was set
a a few days ago by a purebred
Shorthorn cow, belonging to
Charles S. Atkinson of Anderson.
About this time last year the
Journal -Argus announced that in
the space of five years this cow
bad produced 10 calves. To this
numerous family twins were
added last week, bringing the
WWI total for six years up to
as even dozen,
—St. Marys Journal -Argus
—0—
SCRAP STEEL
The proprietor of an 500-roorn
New York hotel has recovered
1G,b04 used razor bladea weigh-
ing 800 pounds behind the dis-
poni slita of bathrooms and esti-
Mates there are 100,000,000
blades resting in all U.S. hotels,
Donated to salvage this amount of
high-grade steel should help to
give the axis a trimming.
--Edmonton Journal
—0—
THAT FISHING FEELING
When you feel the urge to go
fishing, and you'll never go fish-
ing unless you go fishing, head
your car buck into the country
and pull up alongside some field
where a farmer and his family
are working. Park your rod and
bait in a corner of the fence and
ask for a hay fork. And, brother,
you'll conte back home at night
and feel better than a two -year -
01d.
--Trenton Courier -Advocate
_0_
RATIONED OUT OF
EXISTENCE
In case you are grumbling
about the gasoline allowance,
this is to remind you that from
July 1 the gasoline ration of six
gallons a month to owners of
pleasure cars in the British Islea
will be entirely eliminated, Every
private car, therefore, will be
acked up till the end of the war.
—St Thomas Times -Journal
—0—
HOSPITALITY
"Grain Elevators Bulging With
1941 Wheat Carryover; Farmers
Storing Record Harvest in Homes,
Garages," says a Kansas City
headline. Next we'll hear the
famous farmer saying to the
equally celebrated traveling sales-
man, "Yes, you can spend the
night hero — if you don't mind
sleeping with a sack of oats,"
—Windsor Star
—0—
CAPITAL COURTESY
According to the Washington
newspapers It will soon become
necessary to remove all seats
from buses and street cars to
facilitate transportation in the
nation's capital. Looks like the
men will have to stand up right
beside the women now.
—Keene Sentinel
—o—
NOT RATIONING — WEANING
Gasoline rations have been cut
from five gallons to four, and
may soon be reduced still further.
That's not rationing; that's wean-
ing.
—Peterborough Examiner
Need Storage For
Big Western Crop
Present crop prospects on the
Canadian prairies are so good the
Western farmers will have to
erect additional storage on their
farms for more than 200,000,000
bushels of grain, "even allowing
for heavy deterioration between
now and harvest," Western Retail
Lumbernien's Association said in
a statement issued last week.
The statement said farmers
face a serious shortage of !umbel
supplies for grain storage and
barns to house "the steadily in-
creasing livestock population,"
and est'n1 ated lumber require-
ments for grain storage alone at
more than 00,000,000 feet.
Four Weeks Limit
Of Harvest Leave
All soldiers pay and allowances
will bo cancelled for the duration
of harvest leave, which in no case
will exceed four weeks and the
leave may be cancelled at any
time, it was revealed last week
in the House of Commons,
Only soldiers having experi-
ence in farm work will be allowed
harvest leave and it will be lim-
ited strictly for the purpose which
its name implies. Soldiers on
harvest leave will not be entitled
to medical or dental attention,
hospitalization or compensation
due to illness, injury or death
arising out of this leave.
All personnel granted harvest
leave will be required to report
back to their units not later than
October 31, 1042.
The grant of harvest leave will
bo limited, as already intimated by
Defence Minister J. L. Ralston in
the House, to the following for-
mations and units:
1. Home War Establishment of
depots
2. Veterans Guards of Canada,
less personnel employed in opera-
tional units.
3. Surplus personnel at depots,
less those awaiting despatch to
training centres or awaiting dis-
posal after completing advanced
or trade trainings.
Wire -Trailing Rocket
Wire -trailing rockets were dis-
olosed officially last week as one
of Britain's newest weapons of
defence against aerial raiders.
The weapon, which has been
in use to protect merchant ship-
ping for more than a year, was
described as an apparatus which
shoots a projectile that opens into
a parachute from which long
wires dangle.
The rockets, fired up as planes
swoop to attack, often force them
to veer off course or risk engage-
mtnt in the wires,
LIFE'S LIKE THAT
THE WAR • WEEK -- Commentary on Current Events
War May Last For Many Years
if Asia Falls To Axis Powers
The ln:gnitudr of this war luta
been indicated in the titles given
to its enenunteif-• The Italie of
France, the 11at1It of Britain, ihe.
Battle of t.ho Atlantic. An even
vaster meted is beginning to
take shape: The Siege of :\sia,
If Asia holds out the United Na-
tions can `vin a ele.u••cut and eon -
elusive vletory, teaps the Nov York
Thnes, If Asia falls the United
Nations will not lose the war In
the sense that they will surrender
to the Axis Powers: when peace
le worse done any form of war,
as a 111t1er pcslre would be, there
will be no surrender. But If Asia
falls to the Axis war will simply
become chronic, the chief occu-
pation of mankind for horrible,
endless years.
Battle of Asia
In the war of 1914.13 the Ceti -
teal Powers fought 1u61de a circle.
They still do so, though they have
vus1ie-d back the circumference. In
this war there 1s a huger circle,
Inside of which are the great land
masses of Rsi eln, China and Indi11,
containing more than 11 billion hu-
man beings. Rommel In Egypt,
the whole Nazi Arley on the Rus-
sian front, the Japanese in the
Aleutian Islands and all the way
down t he collet and through the
islands to New Guinea, are hats
tering et this enormous fortifica-
tion. The rest of the war, no mat-
ter how widespreasi, 1s an attotnpt
to lift the siege, The armies of
the British Commonwealth and of
the United States may be thought
of as relieving forces. When and
tt the Russians and the Chinese
are strong enough to make per-
manent rooccupations of lost ter.
ritory these advances will be
sorties its force,
Our first task is to see that the
beleaguered city of Asia, with its
billion inhabitants, does not fall.
Our second task is to raise the
siege, and in this task tanks,
planes and guns sent inside the
friendly lines play a part equally
with the hoped-for second front.
Second Front
Remembering that the urging of
a second front in 'Western Europe
goes back to the summer of 1941,
it Is easy to understand the im-
patience of the layman in Britain
and America as he sees the Nazis
driving close to Stalingrad. Yet
we niay be sure that United Na-
tions strategy has not overlooked
the importance of keeping the
Russian front alive, Wo must hope
that Mr. Churchill and Mr. Roose-
velt
ooso-telt will give the order for in-
vasion in the West before the
Germans can split Itussia,
Air Control Necessary
Undoubtedly, according to the
Christian Science Monitor, the
risks of landing a I3riti,slt•Autericau
force in France or Norway have
been carefully calculated. One key
to them le in the air, literally and
figuratively. For the clearest pre-
requisite of any invasion attempt
is an umbrella of air power. How
By Fred Neher
"Ste doesn't Leow rc're
takin' her to the D -E -id -'i'--.:.','."
. : ;t
LET'S PLAY 'MAT t;AME WITH
YOUR MANIA OVER YOUR. EARS
LIKE THIS AN' YOU HAVE TO
W55 WHAT THE OTHER
FELLERS ARE SAYiN'ABOUT
YOU/ YOU'RE 1T
• far over the continent the air
front can be mei is the
most vital quootien, I{r(luln
couldn't hold Norway iitc;luno Ince
short-range fighter planes based In
England couldn't protect her land
end sea forces there, while the
Germans, with short•hop land eont-
munications could base both
bombers and fighters In Norway.
One secret of Dunkirk was that
thorn the RAcontrolled the Bir.
It is well to remember that it re-
quired a week to tako 335,000 men
across the Chrome/ from Dunkirk
—withlout equipment. With }un-
proved air protection and prior
organization of transport, hun-
dreds of thousands of teen with
equipment could be landed in
Franco in a few hours.
Invasion Risks
It is such control that British -
American forces need for crossing
the Channel and opening a sec -A
and front on the Continent. The
ItAP and the American Bir foree
in still undisciesetl size now or-
ganizing at Irish and English bases
probably would be able to place
an umbrella over a crowing and
even extend it inland for fifty to
a hundred miles under present
conditions. But would they ile able
to hold it and blast Gorman mech-
anized forces moving up to a see.
and front should Nazi air power
be concentrated in the \Vest?
That Is the big question In
Washington and London when the
risks aro calculated, Clearly, the
longer British-Auser}can air power
ie built up and the farther East
the Nazis aro drawn, the smaller
are the risks in the West. We
trust equal attention is being giv-
en to the risks of waiting too long,
To realize how important it Its to
keep the Russian front alive, ono
only needs to try to estimate the
situation with that 2,000 -mile sap-
per of Nazi strength iwtuobillzod,
That danger might come quickly.
Military experts are agreed that
Japan 1s only waiting for the
most favorable moment to give
Moscow a second front,
Berlin's Nightmare
We truet, too, that London and
Washington aro thinking not only
of risks but of potential advan-
tages from a second front. It has
always been Berlin's nightmare.
It would help not only the Rus-
sians, who undoubtedly would
oounterattack simultaneously it ,
Nazi air power moved West, but
the Allies in Egypt, And visible
evidence of help near at hand
should double and redouble tate
strength of revolt and sabotage on
the Continent. Calculations are
necessary to avoid raising false
boons, or making futile sacrifices,
but wars are won by imagination,
R.A.F Raids Danzig
The Second World War began at
paints, the free city on the Bal-
tic at the head o! the Polish Cor-
ridor, on Sept, 1, 1939, Last week
the war returned to Danzig when
British four -motored bombers div
sd through a Summer thunder
storm in broad daylight to raid
the city at housetop altitude, The
raid—a 1,600 -mile round trip—was
significant of Britain's mounting
air power. Of more significance
was the desperate need of the Un-
ited Nations that made the raid
necessary.
Tho British fliers over Danzig
bad orders to attack one target—
the submarine building Yards, The
mounting toll of ships sunk by
submarines far away in the At-
lantic had made It vitally neces-
sary for the United Nat 1011S to
whip the U-boat, and over the
oceans from Danzig to the Gulf
of Mexico a far-flung campaign
was under way to that end.
U -Boat Toll
There were come good sighs
in the battle, The submarines that
had operated freely off America's
shores in the early months of the
year had been driven farther to
sea. Convoys had been instituted
in the Caribbean and the an-
nouncement had been made that
soon they would be organized in
the Gull of Mexico. But molly the
picture remained block, There
wlino long oval -water haute to
every one el the tfnited Nations'
battlefronts, England roust bo fed
by sea. And the unofficial total
of United Nations vessels sunk by
Axis sul,tuilued since the first
of the year had reached Sia,
Om; in, id ;it of the week point -
Will He Defend It This Year?
;,fit;^:: ., . ......_............
.tH,n'v<.\,) , •`.:^> cY<'i''.z2 4:p,f.%,.it':::-. '- ., t; : i:::..:ii'i i.: >:
The smiling gentleman is "Slam.
ming Sammy" Snead holding the
Seagram Gold Cup he won last
yoar . at Lantbtoli as Canadian
Open Golf Champion. Last year
was Snend's third victory in the
open and he would like nothing
better than it victory this year to
tie the record of four open wins
now held by Leo lliegel,
'Phe defending champion's entry
has not yet been received at local
golf headquarters, and for a very
good reason, Snead is in the
United States Navy, and permis-
sion must be secured from his
au erior officers to allow hint to
bake part in this tournament. A
request for this pet'niission has
been despatched through the pro.
per channels and it is confidently
expected that Snead will tee off
with the field at Mississauga on
August 0th in quest of IhLs fourth
winSince the House of Seagram
first presented the trophy in 1930,
the names of some of America's
outstanding golf star's have been
inscribed on the parchment roll,
1+irst there was Lawson Little,
then "Light Horse" Harry Cooper,
Snead's victories came in 1938,
1940 and 1941 with the 1939
crown going to Harold "Jug" Mc-
Spaden who is again entered this
year.
Standing twenty - two inches
from base to top, the Seagram
Gold Cup is ono of the most coo.
eted trophies in golfdont. It rests
on a massive base of onyx which
ed 1t all up in very hulntut terms.
In an exchange of letter's Presi-
dent Roosevelt and Prime Minister
Churchill had arranged to curtail
the flow of individual gifts and
relief supplies from America to
Britain. There just wasn't enough
room In the available ships for all
of them, and guns too.
To Fly Out Wounded
By Big Transports
United States War Secretary
Henry Stimson announced that
the Air Transport Command,
which, since June, 1941, has de-
livered more than 0,000,000 let-
ters and large quantities of sup-
plies to soldiers oversea;, now is
forming an organization to bring
the sick and wounded back from
combat zone.
'1'o be known as the Air Evacua-
tion Group (.'tledield), the new
organization will use transport
planes equipped as flying liospit-
nls for surgery, blood transfusions
and other treatment. The planes
will be able to carry as many as
forty patients.
One of the principal features
of the Transport Command has
bean to dclivrr bombes to war
thctltres, and Stint on stud tit
huge planes always go out with
a full load, mail tieing givcu a
high priority rating because let-
ters from home are regartic.l u:
cs.:cnlial to high morale among
troops,
contains a gold casket within
which is the inscribed parchment
roll of mutual winners, 1 he gull
casket is luutulted 011 hcavliy
chased eilt'el' icct with it t'uriu-
thitul column at alien cornet', 1 w'o
ileuvers act as supporters of this
casket told the l.luiaditin coat of
arms is beautifully executed un
the front, The cup itself 1,; of
Grecian design and malts of gold.
The superltttne workmanship and
exquisite design makes t h i s
trophy, whieh was made entirely
in Canada, one of exceptional
beauty seldom seen in athletic
trophies.
The winning players receive a
81111011 U 1'C of the cup for pennfa.
tient possession anti have then'
names inscribed uu 11112 parchment
roll which reposes in the base oi'
the trophy.
First prize mom's in the Cana-
dian Upcn is 1,1000,UO with an ad-
ditional sy20U,00 if the winner is a
Canadian, In all, 83000.00 is al-
loted to be divided among the first
fifteen,
The Canadian Open this year
will be held at Alississauga, just
outside of '1orunto, on August tith,
`illi and 8th, and us in previous
years the lield will include many
_milieus United States and Cana-
dian Golfing stars,
The entire net profits of the
Royal Canadian Golf Associa-
tion's operations for this year will
be donated to the Canadian Red
Cross Society,
An Innovation
Parliament at Ottawa witnessed
an innovation one day recently
when, for the first time in its
history, a Indy presided over pro-
ceedings in committee, says the
Toronto Telegram. The honor fell
to Mrs, F. C. Cnssciman, Edmon-
ton East, The compliments she
received were apparently well de-
served since she took charge with
evident capacity and within half
an hour had called lion. C. 'G.
Power to order, an experience
tvhiclm has rarely fallen to hint in
a long parliamentary career. "1
have novel'," Int, fewer ad111itte,1,
"been called to order in a men.
net. w'hic'h l appreciate as mooch
se 1 do in this case."
To Evacuate Poles
To African Homes
1'he 14iti,:11 radio reports that
)0,000 l'ul sh weal( a and children,
the itl..iikes of l,en, il,ur:6i';
trooi's servi,lg in the :Mid-
dle East, ale to be evacuated to
tamattlyli;ft and 1. g,onla Ill Alr:ca,
the Polish 1,"lacn and children
are .1t present ill 1 el'>iil 1111.1 tilt!
l3IIC ;Mitt Nat sutmie of than h: to
come through great hardships,
('amps widl he built for them in
their ne,', homes (.liirh r, iH be-
come smell Polish tt, i:;1'":
--... .s...,�_ .t ...... a. — . a...de..e�.........o.....w,,..�..�_ �....�....�..�„ .W. _-...�_ .....,�
is
•
PES FAKIN' / LIE CAN j r
PEAR evi rv( WORD !"
WE SAY/
By GnJF,N?", '':�!ca.►.��ar� J
L CAimNO r• / 1 C,5ldr)
E."/EN PEAR Gi•IE \'(-D
Ycu'Rt SPfit,' d
't
mbt
Nee. e, B. ht. oas* Aft right, mend • nt - `" }-ri-�'n -
..i.1'§
Ontario Fairs
And Exhibitions
1942
AUGUST
.lug.
rr)priul . . 21, 2!i, �g
Cuu;ulion 1•;tkeh,'a l
Wort, \\'ill hint and
Port :\rthul•) ........ s-11
(.'lulu
1'
poorn ;n, : t
liing,,ton .. ''1.'•,
]fain}' Iii\ cr 7-1
SEPTEMBER 1.11
Sept.
AIinontc i
Apsley ! I, i
Brampton 7
Myth 9, 111
Bruce Mine, ... 8, •,
Centreville ( Adding •
ton ('a,) I i, I
Chestet'ville 1,
Clarence ('reek !t
Della 7-9
I)ryden .1, ti
Durham 10, 1L
Elmira 4-7
rgus 11, 12
Georgetown 11, 11
1<iiti ouilt 1, ti
Lanark 11
Lansdowne
Lion's Head 9, 10
Midland 10-12
Milverton 10, 11
Neustadt
Newington 10, 11
Niagara -oft -Lake 11, 1
Oro 9
Orono 11, 18
Parham 1
Perth 4,
.Porquois Junction 10, 11
Port Perry 9
Powassan 11, 12
Richmond 10-12
Rosseau 9, 10
Russell 8, 9
South Mountain 3, 4
Sprucedale 10, 11
Sundridgo 10, 11
Tavistock 11, 1�
Val Gagne 8
.Vankleek 11111 10.12
Wellesley 9, 9
\Viarlon .. 10, 11
I4'ikwenlikong (Indian,
'Manitoulin) 8-10
SEPTEMBER 14.19
Sept.
Acton 15, 113
Allislurl 17, 18
Bilbrook 18, 12
Botlnwells Corners 17, 18
Bracebnidge 17, 13
Burford 16, 17
Burks Falls 17, 18
-r racIton 15, 16
Clarksburg- 15, t0
Clifford 18, 11
Cobden 15, 18
Coldwater 10, 17
Comber .1118), 19
Dresden 15-17
Dunchurch 10, 17
Englehart 1.8, 10
Exeter .111, 17
Gall'ttaa (Mohrs (Is.) 15, 11;
Hanover 17, 18
l:agawolig 15, 16
1 ilsyth 15, 16
1' incau'dino 1 7, 18
Lindsay 10-19
15, 16
M1'Itdale 10, 17
allaxvllle 17, 18
Merlin 17, 18
111etcalfo 18, 19
Diiddlewille I8
111ildtnav 15, 1,;
11oh:I'vk Indian Reserve
11)eseronto) Ili
31 omit. Forest 17, 18
New 1lanlburg 18, 19
Oakwood .11, 15
Odessa .17, 18
Orangeville 15, 16
Orillia 18, 10
11-10
Pari- 18, 19
Palnie15(on 18, 19
Renfrew 15-18
Rireville .15, 16
Meekly» 17, 18
Shannonvilln .18, .19
Springfield 17, 13
Stella 10
Stirling 17, 18
Stratu'oy 11-16
Stl'eetsvilk' 19
Sturgeon falls 15, 11;
'I'hessalon 10
Thorold 15, 1i.1
Tillsonburg 15-17
TroutCreek 15, 10
Underwood 15
Upsaln 1!i
Warren 10, 17
Welland 17-19
Williamstown 15, 16
Wooler 15, 16
Oshawa
SEPTEMBER 21-20
Sept.
Abingdon 25. 26
Ameliasbui' 20
Ashworth
(Stis(ed 11111) 21
Atwood 25, 26
Ayton 25, 26
Bnrrie 21-23
Bayfield 23, 24
Beachburg 22, 23
Beaverton 25, 26
Belleville 21-23
Belmont 24
Blackstock 22, 29
Bobcaygeon 25, 2G
Bonfield 23
Brighton 24
Caledon 25, 26
Carp .... 25, 26
FIRST C. P. R. BLOOD DONORS AT
OWN CLINIC
COMPANY'S ' What Science
Is Doing
The original sevUJ) Olen at Angus Shops to givo their blood to
the Canadian ]ted Cross Society through the medium of the company
blond clinic, newly -established at the Shops, ate pictured above im-
mediately after the "transfusions" had been made. They aro seated
in the Recovery Rooth Canteen,
On the left are Lawrence Robertson and John Huxley, both
boiler -room workers. Scutari in the group at the right aro, from
left to right, Howard I3, Smith, general accountant's office, who
was the No, 1 donor; Roland (Mueller, Albert Trudeau, Martin
Murphy and Frederick Wright, all in munitions,
Collingwood 24.20
Cooksvilla 29, 30
Drayton 22, 38
Desboro 24, 26
Emhro 21
Enhsdalo 22, 23
Galt 2.1-26
Glencoe 24, 26
Grand Valley 25, 211
lIlu'riston 24, 26
Harrow 24-20
Holstein 23, 24
IIuntsvillo 24, 26
Iron Bridge 28
Reulblo 22, 28
Kirkton 24, 26
Lakefield 22, 28
Listowel 23, 24
Lucknow 22, 28
McDonalds Corners 25
McKellar 22-24
Maberly 23
Manitowaning 24, 26
Massey 22, 23
Milton 26, 26
Minden 22
Norwich 22, 23
Owen Sound 26, 28,
Paisley 21, 22
Port Elgin 25, 26
Providence Bay 22, 28
Ramona 28
Bidgotown 21-23
Schomberg 25, 26
Sea forth 24, 26
Severn Bridge 25
Shedden ...• 28
Shelburne 22, 23
South River 24, 25
Spencervillu 22, 23
Stratford 21-23
Sunderland 23, 24
'I'ro'n 23, 2-1
'I'hl'dfor'd 22,
Zit
Thorndalo 23
Walters Falls ..........., 22, 23
Wilkesport 23
\Vyuiuiug 24, 23
Zephyr 26
/,oriel 21, 24
Olhwekcn Indian
Reserve 14-16
Rockton 10 and 19
Rodney 6, 7
Itoseneath 15, 16
Simcoo (Norfolk Cy.) 5-8
Toeswater 6, 7
Tiverton 5, 6
Walsh 10
Warkworth 8, 9
Woodbridge 9, 12
NOVEMBER
Nov.
Walkerton 23
INTERNATIONAL PLOWING
MATCH
Huron County, Seaforth
October 13, 14, 16, 16, 1942
Have You Heard?
it Ott a rule of the Bank of Eng -
Ian that every employee must sign
tip hla name In a book on lila arrival
in the horning, and, If tato, Hurst
give the reason, Fog Is given as
the chief cause of tardlnoss, and
the first man to arrive late writes
"tog" opposite his name, and those
who follow write "ditto."
One day, however, the first late
plan gave as the reason, "Wife
had twins." Twenty other late
mots mechanically signed "ditto"
underneath!
SEPTEMBER 28 - OCTOBER 3
Sept, Oct,
:1nc;t.ster 211, 30
Arthur
Aylnlct'
11eeton
Bolton
Cooksvillu 29, 30
Caledonia 1-3
Caulphellford 29, 30
Chesley 2, 3
Druluho 29, 30
Dundalk 29, 311
Dungannon 1, i
1, 1
1-9
1, 2
2, 3
Ehnvalc 28-30
Florence
1''ol'iI i011
Forest 29, 30
Fort Erie 29, 30
Gooderham 30
Gore Bay 29, 30
1Idertun 30
Leamington 28
Langton
Markham
'lm•nun'a
,Ueafnrd
Mitchell 20, 30
Napanee . 28-30
Owen Sound 20, 28,
1'icton
Port. Hope 30
St. Marys 30
S<utgeen Indian Reserve,
Chippewa Hill 29, 30
Smitiiville 30
Tweed ...... ...
\\'allacetow'n ..
\\'ellandpor•t ..
OCTOBER 5.17
An Englishman reports that
one of hie hens has lald an egg
In his piano. He has received
an urgent request from the
manufacturers of the Instru-
ment to quote this fact In
their advertising matter.
-0-
i was le a certain restaurant
not long ago, and they took a ter-
rible time to bring the grub.
The bloke next to u10 mist have
been Waiting even longer, because
when the waitress brought his
a4alisago and mash lio looked sort
elf surprised and said, "Are you
tate glrl that took 111y order?"
"Yes," she said.
"Wimpy! Yon don't look a day
olde1.,
-0--
Waiter; "How would you
like your rice?"
Old Maid (wistfully) !
"Thrown at mo, young man,
thrown at me."
1, 2 Smythe, on arriving at the iodic.
2, 3 Ings he had engaged by post, sur-
veyed the bedroom and ?toted the
absence or waslataud,
"And where," he asked in dight•
find tones, "do 1 perform my rub -
MMus?"
3 "if it's a new trick," replied the
3 landlady, sharply, "you'll not do
1-8 it iu these rooms, 1 had two chairs
2, 3 busted by a blootniu' acrobat last
1, 2 w eel(."
20
1
l,
1,2
1, 2
Oct.
\berfoyle 6, 7
Brigden 6
L'etensvilie 10-12
Chatsworth 8, 9
Cookstown . 0, 7
Denlorestville 7
Dochcster 7
1''e\'ershant 7, 8
Erin .-. .. 12
Fairground li
Ilig'hgate 9, 10
Ingersoll 8, 9
i\Iudet! 6, 7
Melbourne t)
Moravian Indian
Reserve 7, 8
"1 hear your daughter le
practising the harp. How is she
{letting on?"
"Well, her mother Isn't
quite so keen on going to
Heaven as she was."
-0-
The young soul 'vent into the
shop and said to rho cashier: "I
wish In pay the last instalment on I
the peranihulttor.' '1')143 smiling
ca8hier handed him his receipt
and asked: "And how is the baby?"
"09, I'm feeling fine, thank you,"
was the reply.
-u--
Joan: "Father, what's a
garden plot?"
Father: "The bugs and
woems planning to eat up your
stuff."
STOPITC
of Insect
Bites -
Heat Rash
For quiet, relief frena Itching of Insert been. heat
rusts, athlete's Girt, eczema null other external!)
retuned skin troubles, eve bot -set lug, tooling, autl-
septle, liquid 11. 11. I). I'rencriptlou. (ire:velem,
st alnlem. Soot hes Areal Iota and qulekl r st o)>.Int eine
ftohta;.
She trinl bottle proven It, or tnoeey back. Ask
yoerereeetst toils), for 0. 0, D, PIIESCUIt'TION.
QUICK FREEZING
A new machine that freezes
foods four times as rapidly as
previous methods, keeps the fla-
vor in and provider a protective
coating on the fond, has been de-
veloped at the 1'1)ivorsity of 'Texas
by Professor W. R. Woolrieli and
Luis 11. Bartlett. After doternh-
inins. Idly food.? nru (LIMaged by
4410,\' fr,'rzlllg, and studying all
existing curlllllel'cial prot't'dures,
the two di'relopcal their method Of
fast freezing. breezing is in fact
80 I'a;I that surface juices fr,'eze
at once and ferin all ire coating
that keeps them and their flavors
in, :\nor the Grails or v1'1;ela`.)les
are fully frozen and removed
from the machine, they are dusted
with a ,;mull nloount of dextrose,
This t hal)gee the ice coating to
a plastic material that adheres
tightly to the fool) and preserve'
1t perfectly.
WELDING MAGNESIUM
Northrop Aircraft, California,
reported the development of a
method of welding magnesium,
thus slaking available for aircraft
manufacture One of the most
abundant metals known.
While magnesium has been used
widely in engines, wheeis and
accesssories, fabricating difficult -
foe have prevented development
for primary construction.
Announcement of the discovery
was made by T. H. Piper, North-
rop process engineer, in an ad-
dress prepared for the American
Welding Society.
Piper said tho method had made
possible simplified manufacturing
processes "eliminating the use of
hundreds of thousands of rivets
that go into the conventional
plano"-and made available to
aircraft manufacturers the same
savings in time and cost which
have been experienced in welded
ship construction,
Says Polish Fliers
Are Best Fighters
The Polish fliers with the Royal
Air Forco are the "outstanding
fighters of the war," doalared
Hully Stirling of Davie, Fla,, who
hae returned from England after
fourteen months' service with
the R.A.F. Ferry Command,
Polhill aviators with the Bomb-
er Command never waste time on
target practice, Stirling asserted,
"Nothing satisfies them for a
target but a live Gel'inan, There
are certain areas designated for
bombing practice, but the Poles
always fly right over then and
head for Nazi bases on the coast
of occupied Europe,
The Polish pilots in the Ferry
Dixie is economical i•
you cut it as you use it
There's no waste.
Command are as e:u'like as their
compatriots with the fighter
squadron', ho said.
"When a Polish ferry pilot is
assigned to fly u fighter plane to
an operational centre, he gener-
ally gets there only after all his
fuel and ammunition have been
spent in a solo sweep over tho
Channel looking for to fight, Those
fellows go out of their way to
hunt gown Nazis," he asserted.
"i have never heard of any
Polish priot being captured after
his plane was put out of action.
Tiles° boys go down fighting,
ramming their disabled ships into
any German craft that is handy."
Modern Etiquette
1, When two men and two girls
ars dining together at a table
for four persons, how should they
be seated?
2, May wedding announcement&
be mailed a week before the
wedding?
3. What Is the proper way to
introduce a young man to an old•
erly man?
4. How should gifts received
during illness be acknowlodgllidt
5. When a young woman is tele-
phoning on a business matter and
wishes to Identify herself, whet
should she say?
6. Is it all right to serve hot
dishes at a buffet supper?
ANSWERS
1. The two girls should *twills
face each other.
2. No; they ahould be mailed
immediately after the wedding.
3, Tho young elan should be
preeontod to the older man, men-
tioning the elder man's name
first, as "Mr, Marshall, (who IA
70) this is Mr. Hudson (or 16d-
wltrd Hudson)."
4, If the patient is too 1!i be
acknowledge the gifts promptly,
notes of thanks should be written
as soon after the recovery u
possible.
5. "Mrs, Black, this is Mise
Green, who was talking with you
yesterday about our new supply
of drySsses."
f). It is customary to servu cold
dishes, but it Ls all right to serve
one or two hot dishes if desired.
HOW CAN I?
Q. How can I make a remedy
for poison ivy?
A, Use equal parts of eubcar•
bonat0 of bismuth and calomel.
Apply as a (lusting powder after
scrubbing the affected parts with
alcohol. Then cover with a layer
of absorbent cotton and bandage
lightly. This is effective eves
after blisters 1111Ve formed.
Q. How can I repair small
holes in a garden hose?
A, If the holes are tiny, paint
the hose on the outside with a
pliable roofing paint. This will
close the small breaks, and the
holo will wear for another season
at least.
Q. How can 1 remedy sour and
dry soil?
A. For sweetening sour soils,
the use of lingo is very effective.
To improve the moisture retain-
ing qualities of dry soil, incorp•
orate liberal quantities of peat
moss or humus.
Q, How can I cook green veg-
etables so that they will retain
their natural green color?
A, They will retain their color
if cooked in an uncovered sauca-
pan. Use only enough water to
aovor, and the mineral salts and
flavor of the vegetables will not
be lost,
Q, How can I insure a consist-
ently even marmalade so that the
fruit and syrup are evenly die-
tributcd throughout?
A. Cool the mixture botore
pouring into the jam jars, When
poured hot, the fruit tends to
float to the top of the jar.
...CLASSIFIED ADVERTIS}MENTSI..
AC'1'0JI0111LES - USED
USED CARS WIT11 0001) TIRES,
See us first. \Ve will ro-
tund your coat of transporta-
tion to Toronto, if you buy from
us. Mount Pleasant Motors Ltd.
Used ('al' L118 at 1650 Danforth
veuuu nail 2010 Yong() Street,.
lead Office, 63:i \1 omit Pleasant
ua d, Toronto, Telephone lllgh-
iau(1 2'131.
AliIIi''l' W1,\'17;11
LU 0011 1X0L181\'L, \IAUAZIN1II
Subscription ,agent in your own
locality. highest commissions on
all publications. Full or part-
time work, Write the Davis Ag-
ney, 75a Adcl:lide St. West, To-
ronto, 0111:1t'io,
le -
11.1111' Clill'Ii5
LINL 00' '\'LLE SEASON IIAL'OAINS
111 \81411 started 2 and 4 week old
nun -aged, pullets ur cockerel
Witch iu the followi"g breeds -
Whitt, Leghorn, Mack Minorca 3.
White Leghorn, Marred Much,
'White stuck, Now .1lump_hire,
Light Sussex X New Iluwpshuu,
Nuw Hampshire X L'urrcd 4010,
and Earl tat Ruck \ New Hamp-
shire, L'o sure and ask. fur special
price un 'assorted breeds. '1'w'u
week old light breed pullets as
law as $21.10, heavy breed pul-
lets $16.95 nun -sexed $11.1:,,
0010urels $1 toe. Nu demist1 re-
quired. Shipped C.O.D. anywhere,
Free catalogue. 'l'up Notch ?'hit 0 -
ellen, Uuelph, Ontario.
IIA111' 1.1111:IiS
STAlt'rEl, CHICKS 2 AND 3 W1::Eli
old and older pullets. There's a
shortage of beet and porta for
home eonsuluptiva, but '1'tveddle
clucks ;re not rationed, Chicken
meat and eggs will have to re-
piat'e purl; and beet un the Ladies
ul "gaud craters" e\•eryw•here.
Scud tar reduced price list tar
these started chicles. All popular
breeds iia 11011-t,e\1d, 41111118 01'
64(1411118114. AIsu true range older
1ulle15 4 weeks to 26 wools.
'1'w'eddlu Chick liateherle8 Limit-
ed, Fergus, Ontario.
11.411' CRICKS
L'1t.AV l'u[CICS Eon lMM1•;nL4ThI
shipment - started chicks -
001111' turkeys. '1'11e nuu'L•ets are
there tor puultrykeepet•s prepar-
ed with tho right stunts. Orders
tilled right through the summer.
limy Ila tette' y, 130 John, Ham-
ilton, Ont.
11 4 i. 1•.114' 401 U 11'311:N'l'
L'AKE1RS' UV ENS AN1) \lACLIIN-
ery, also rebuilt equipment at.
4%a)3 on hand. 'Tenets all'I'1111ged.
Cutespuudeuce Invited, llubblud
1'oetable C/4 en Cu., 163 tat ihurst
St., Tut unto.
ISSUE 31-'42
111:1.11Nt), LI'C, 1'1)I1
'r►tItEs1(1:It.1:N
II!)L'I'1NU FOR TIIItESIIN11IIIM19N.
Mindless thresher bolts, hose,
feeder canvas, pulley's, shafting,
hangars, bearings, motors. Sped-
lal-L'olting for traces, 2 inch 6 -
ply, 150 foot. All types of trans-
mission supplies In stuck for
immediate shipment at attractive
low prices. Merchandise gutaran-
toed and shipped subject to your
luspoction. Send your orders to
THE V0lt1' 1t1:1.1'1 N(; CO.
88 1'0111' ST1t1:1:'1', 1'U1tON'l'O
UOO48 WA \'dill
EXCELLENT COU11. 1N CI
llornu, Sloop out. $50 to
start, Phone M1. 5003 for appoint-
ment 01' w'rilu 11 l'au'lawood, To-
ronto.
11'l:I\l. fi 01,l1.1N1NG
1L\Vli YOU AN1'1'IItN(I NEh)DS
dyeing or cleaning;' \\'' rite to us
for information. \Vo are glad to
answer your questions,Depart-
ment. 11, Parker's 11y0 Works
Limited, 791 Yung° Street, To-
ronto.
4.411)4 1:111 I I'll I1\'1'
8:11U1 IX 3S 11.1'. LISTER FULL
Diesel 1,nglne, complete with
clutch and euoltn4 tanks; 22
lIlackst01,14; 25 11.1'. Doulz;
Ala rine engMe 25e ll.)'. 'Pine
anal 1anlc Harrows; l.ut-r. Combin-
e) tun treed Mill; 1935 stale body
Ltif crus) lona! 'Cruel.; demonstrat-
ing and rebuilt :debit))) Cream
Semi ators; paint, while it lasts,
41.50 per g1111un. The above aro
'ill .specials for July and August.
114101(1, \15guct and l'reutior
4 814:1111 Separates' f'ai'ls; Myers
\Vatei Synteuls; one only llanl-
nna- Mind; one only 25 cycle
.'unable \Milker. S. A. Lister,
Stewart Street, Toronto,
PA It 31 PROD L
STUCK FEI:1i• ANALYSIS 1'Lit-
renLlge,
01'0160 11.65, tut 1.27,
crude fibre 1.93; puffed wheat
sittings, thoroug103 cooked, $15
per tun. 14.:aveana4h Fuad, Toron-
to.
1'001' I{A1,31
lt.il'\l1:1'.'KA 4001' IIA?.\1 destroys
oftt•nsive odor instantly, 45c
bottle. Ottawa aa:ent, Denman
Drug Store, Ottawa.
PO It SALE
NI/1'111A, FINEST t.,1I1ALIT Y, 16
for $150; 1)1111' 525. James Byrne,
11.1). 1, Wootlslee, Ont.
1'01 811,11
1'0t'l:1'ttY, l'Ri'ITS, VI:) 11:'L'Al4W:S,
highway acres, new henhouse
colonies, range shelters, good
stable, brick house, :all l onveu-
ivac03-, 2600. Win. l'a•ace,
a1 l', that.
1'RII'1' 1'.110M 4'011 S.1 Lb:
in ACNP 1'16 1'1' P.\I15!, LOVELY
location. 0011inc I: ltd. large
home, suit enc Ul t0„ l;midi".
Apply Dux yl, St, Ietvul't.
-
LA :1 1'011 SA LH
LAND -$1.011 PER .frill - 1,600
:01.48 for !iN1)', well 111111111 ed tor
hunting, cattle or 48furestallot1,
situated In Ryerson Township, 10
miles wrest of 111u808 halls, ex-
cellent road 7 miles from C9.n•
adds N0liulltai 1t0i!rum!, l'arry
Sound district, situated between}
I00 lakes, quantity of void ,&t
pulpwood. 1:. 1. Zchr, TavlstoCk,
owner. For snta11 chnr.g8 parties
w•1N1111Ig to see it call on (180884
Davidson, Lurks halls, 11, 1.
MEDICAL,
w'AN'I'l:l, - 1•:VEI1Y SUFFERER
08 lth,:ttnl:,tie pauai; "r Neuritis)
0, try Dixon's Remedy. >lunro'e
1.41u4 Store, 335 lllgu4 Ottawa..
Post pa td $1.81.
MOTORS
OVI11111AU"I, 1•001) \10TU11 \\'111L1�
you're driving; stare 10',1• gas an
ail-gliarant'ed to 1.1`514 )0 corn.
pression. $2.11U delivered. Mike
lgnash, 411 Manitoba Ave.., 1V in•
nipeg, 11:11).
Old) Ill lOs 16:44 UI is\ 11:1V
111148, .01:4.1' It1 08 AlAI)I1 h14UM
old. Oouuu'on Lug \\*easing font.
pee}', 061 Queen St. 4.1., 'Toronto,
Write 10) bookl,.a,
T114.41111:11 14 A N'1' 111)
11tANz - \1'.\N'1'1;1) 1:X1'1:I:IL:NC-
ud male 110te.stalat teacher, "til-
itury exempt, holding lust -class
rertificar e, manual 11/11111194 (88
ll'(c lo, salary 1we) ve fifty. t'. 19,
S y la e s, Secretary -'Treasurer,
Franz, tint.
'rl1.11'11PR 41 .1N'1'10)
\VA'l'Eli l'UIWU 111011 SCIl1,Ul, Itl'0.
quires, male as:us111)11, cap;11)lu of
icarhing agrlcultue or science,
manual trailing, and boys' phyo-
1,•ul education, Apply, stating ago
;old 51114113', to Oho Principal, K.
.1. ltich:u'dson, \\'at11'lorti, Ont.
It 111.11 311'i'IU PAIN`
F001'1' .11'It'ES: 'rill: I'itl NC1PAL
him 'dtents In Dixon's Remedy
for lthounl:11ic trains, Neuritis.
Sold only NI intro's thug Stair
335 Elgin, Ottawa. l'ostpaid $1.00.
1'A'1'1:J'1'5
VET lll11ts'1'UN11AU11I1 Kc CUMI'AN!
1'ateut bullet tors. Estaabitehed
18911; 14 ling W est, 'lbrontq,
L'uoklet of Information on t1-
quesL
1,110I'OGltAI'll4'
DON'T TRUDGE THROUGH
The Ileal, Ruin, er 11811
HAVE YOUR SNAPS
!tethered by Mall
Any 5 of 11 expo:ile 111111 pet temp
du\ eloped lull printed for mill 250.
Suptenle quality and fast servioe
gnat lel teed.
IMPERIAL PHOTO SERVICE
atetioti J, Tut unto
Page 8.
r THE STANDARD '
•
11 (1110/;t00411(14141(141411 t004141C1;t,41110 tgtpitQlC111 414141410041410((111(14 M1041.t“10(tftill
.'1
HOLIDAY NEEDS—
MISSES AND WOMEN
Slacks, Overalls, Sweaters, Slack Suits,
Bathing Suits and Caps,
MEN'S ANI) BOYS'
Tropical and Cotton Trousers, Sweaters,
Windbreakers, Bathing Trunks, A Good
Assortment of Balbriggan Underwear.
Olive McGill
R
Miss Sadler and Miss Dlllt.man of
Hamilton
Wednesday, July 29, 1912, 1
1414ti�,tP,t4141atatytiit . lQtt;lt 114•4141�;t 1gt^1.tPit�'t''�t4t4tata 4141tat3'(Itela2 ctat4 141411.1&14t.11011t4
Holly�::an s - d
BAKERY Summer Necessities i1
AND CONFECTIONERY, 1
The Home of Goad Balling.
For Use Around the Home Or On Picnics:
smitten are visitors at the Rectory. - VACUUM 130'I1TLES /19C i,
Rev. A. M. and Mrs. Royle are hot'. Soy Bean, Whole Wheat THERMOS 130'1" PEES S$113.15(c)
+1.00 d
cyton; al Sitnhde Beach.
and White Bread. OUTING .LUGS (one gallon) x+1.75
STA -WAY INSECT REPELLENT 39c d
.dIrs. A. M. Colclough spent Thurs. Also Buns, Cookies + • 3 r .
ANTI -MOSQUITO CREAM ,3.rc a.
day ,with relatives in Clinton, Cakes and 11
Pies,i, WELCII'S GRAPE JUICE •,I)(
MIs Addle Walsh of Toronto, It vis Honey -Dipped Doughnuts LIME JUICE - A'ION'I'SI1;ItIti'I' 1')c do
](in her sister, Mrs, ,lobo lle(fron. ' ,
g Wedding Cakes a Specialty. � LIME JUICII, - CORDIAL 1`)e las
Pi 1
dlrs. A. W. Morrison is visiting _� _.�_ TAT ANT 'TRAPS ;i()ce d6
nwitlr Mrs. Campbell and Guily. Doherty _ �_ _�`�. Bros. F. SPOT REMOVER 5C slid ;!)C di
Jack McElroy and Jack Watson,
Films, All Sizes --- Eastman and Selo.
Developing and Printing, Done Quickly & Expertly
d;
Jr., are camping- this wwedlc al Black
Horse lean Kincardine,
P?,1r2aiDailDi r taiDatD.1,,N) d�ardrdiViii+drl.'di`r
4itrai ar)rd ia3r aaiDrdr5i aiDidtdr8td,i
'Mr. Grant Johnston, of Godei9,hlt,
was a visitor this week with his sits -
ter, and
ler, Mrs. Gordon Elliott, g
Miss Doris Cutter, of London, was Chrysler Cars iii
a guest. of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd \Pett• Auto -Lite and HartI!▪ f
hotter, over the week -end, 1
i"�`airl raD.Dt ia'�t" 21k12.1ci`G1.'�cl`a�f�ic'3i`ea'2,4inDlr11.NDi"dim+irit`N7,`11M-,l:.` t'o';r.'•,11-1.M.31/14i ci
GOODS DELIVERED. TELEPHONE 14. OBatteries.
,Mr. anil Mrs. Garfield Doherty and
daughters, Marjory and Lois, spent Goodrich & Dunlop Tires. tot4tatccomtett;tett;cctgtm-,ta;i tgte;+tip'tt;tItctat r c;ryt;',��;'„1i,tgrz' t9i{�zE;c�tpzgi�tgzq-�
the week -end in Wilford. ') 11HOWS1ii
Spaghetti per tin 10CWhite Rose Motor Oil. 0pr� are
Aylmer Peaches per tin 17c a few days tine firM• of the week, PHILCO RADIOS AND V
1,0 i'
holidaying at Menton'. SUPPLIES. §P Drugs, Tobacco, Soft, Drinks—Phone 2S. ra
I
Crosse & Blackwell's Lime Cup --- ; Miss Carrie Sims of Toronto, is vis-Nt #4
1 Ring her father, Mr. W. J. Slues, and Acetylene and Electric of I311((1'I(C Kidney Pills 50c '''
Welding.t
1, Mrs, Jamie Sims. �Vf 111 o1e''i Milk of Magnesia 25c still 50C 1
For Summer Drinks 30c _ _ w 1,,
•Mrs. M. Adams of Southampton, oft `Valli )OlC'ti .11111 ''11CFla Tablets 100 for 50c 04„,i
ZINC RINGS AND RUBBERS. .spent Tuesday with Mtss Josephine Vodden's or j �' `'
1 Woodcock. V i)icl(son's Stomach Powder 7 5c r'
0
Cheddar House Cheese .. 12c and 20c �Ml:4s Addle Andrews of llamlltom BAKERY. • i�ermol Laxative 'Tablets 50c ti
,
per sortie 27C visited her friends, Mr. and Mrs. Jack a "1'I"' White Shoe Dressing1 5c r;
Certo 1 Creighton and Harold, last week, Ga ti
15c WHEN IN NEED O)! r� Bathing Caps 2�i('. 29c, ,►:)c and 10c i'•
Kkovah .Jelly Maker Mrs. Harold Dexter, of Goderich, ., �, , • ? ,Serviettes. !o
. 'wlsRed during the week with her PIES. l) 18I)Cl Plates, Cups and ti
BREAD, BUNS, PITS. ,.�tr , i.i
Aylmer Infant Food 10c mother, Alis. Edwards, North sheet r,,i Vitamin B., Plant Balls
each •n)C
HOME-MADE CAKE s+ Sweet Peas, Morning Glory' Asters, Zinnias.si
Mr,ii
Grant ,Tolutslon, of Goderlch, � . r
%3.)41.1r1s1:-1..'i'.'�i1w,,,,,,,,a ai.3acd,iva, -,:viin ?,'a?,ib11:).1), i i . ot.:1;,.:o.:2.,.�::.:, Apz,':.cli,r.)'t .I
- — ,h•Itcd his sl':4tel', Mis. Gordon Elliott, OR COOKIES
during the week.
'Mks Zelda Scott returned to 'Polon- REMEMBER
,I,t{;umtG i vvve.',i zr,..m r•ocw-i'' ' .m.v • Ei ztzt i1'.t. ,^v. i'P,': •-.e or,•-e,,f, r," • �' iltr,,414
to on Monday after spending some 'THE HOME BAKERY” "' 0 ii
days with her father, Mr. R, Scott. rl ,M Inture A
IJnend
- r, and Mrs. 1 on -M LO 0
don:. 1131tcd for 11 few day s ,with Air, t1 iii
i
and Mrs. Jack Collinson, II- T. VODDEN.V CI
st We offer a pleasint variety in Studio 1�(G111 ;es Ir
1te,•. A. Sinclair conducted the ie
4 .. , , �• A
morning service at the Kincardine The Red Cross Society V f'tted with Spring -Filled Mattresses and (11,'hi^.r,
if
United Ohurch last Sunday morning. ARE HAVING A V Covered ill durable fabrics.
Rev.ev. A. and dins. Sinclair ,were vis- V
of Single in Mitchell 'Thursday of last Street h1'O1)-back (111(1 l)il\'
,week, CARNIVAL v
r, Smart, Bright- Coverings.
-
Wednesday Night V The prices are reasonable an(1 these Lotin,t,ves
AUGUST 12TI•I are just the thing for In(loor, Porch ol• Summer
There will be Dancing, with a Good Home use.
Misses Jessie Phillips and WilmaVI
Staiticni left on Monday of t.hls week Orchestra. of
for lleslpeler, where they will engage BINGO AND OTHER GAMES. 4'
in war work. 0
GARAGE.
R'Itl !1RE AGENTS FOR
SIMS GROCERY
R. D. PHILP, Phm. B.
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER—PHONE 2(',
d1i
6+'
Make Better
Jams and Jellies
1
1
/look of 72
Tested Recipes
under label
of every
CERTO
bottle
•
CERTO is Pectin
Extracted from Fruit
When pectin is used in making jam
and jelly, the Wartime Prices and
Trade Board Order No 150 allows
you to use sugar not in excess of
one and one•quarter pounds of
sugar for each pound of fruit.
On the basis that "fruit" means
"unprepared" fruit, this allows you
to make your jams and jellies the
Certo way which gives you approxi.
mately two•thirds more jam or jelly
from the same amount of fruit.
E52
WANTED
MEN AICD WOMEN
For Factory Work
During
TOMATO SEASON
beginning About August 25
MAKE APPLICATION 'I'0
Libby, McNeiII & L11thy
CHATHAM, ONTARIO
Applications from those engaged in war work
will not be considered.
Mrs. T. S. Marshall of Walton, spent
the past ,week ,vitt her daughter and
son•in•t:t,w, Reeve W. 1-I. and Mrs.
1 Morritt.
1Ve urge y'ou to come in and inspect thein.
Air, Nonman \Wightnian, Inspector R JO
of Schools in Welland, was it guest at Proc a�at�on the house of his cousin, Mr. R. \Wight- SO
1111111, on Friday. :p
• Home furnisher --
Mrs. 11, Mc'Kny and Mls.ses Olive
.McGill and Isabel Fox R. N., were
holidaying last week at the former's
cottage at lilntail.
1ajor and Alrs, \V. D. Spi inks and
Miss N. Hamilton, of Toronto, were
Sunday guests of Mrs. and Miss Ella
Metcalf,
Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Smith, Peggy
Smith and \lrs, Lottie rlleGregot• of
'Chicago, ill., were the guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Itoy Noble of Blyth,
Mr, and Mrs. Albert Bowen and
little .sou, Wayne of Exeter, visited
their mother, Mrs, 11. Bowen, on Sun-,
day.
- 1 Mr. Ray Dol>'byn who has recently
underwent an operation in Chalitain
_ General Hospital Is Improving and is
now undergoing treatment.
By the authority vested In me as
Reeve of the Corporation of the
Village of Blyth, I hereby proclaim -
MONDAY, AUGUST 3RD
CIVIC HOLIDAY
for the said Village and request all
business places and citizens to govern
themselves accordingly.
—W, H. MORRITT, Reeve.
PERSONAL INTEREST
Mrs. William While, accompanied
,by her daughters, Myrtle and Mavis,
and -Mts. Ewa 'Taman, visited her
daughter, Dorothy, at Virgil, over the
,week'end,
helle
Phones 7 and 8 — Funeral Director.
°dor`dihlsYt219iii3i"did,7A2is"+Yu.2.7ro,'dl`r11'�'i�"diiM3` isli'abi`di2r3t3,�7F1s 1�12,e 1c,2.r�iai?t"�1�t2i� i'c'�n,:',� �,«ic .:9
1 1 a ..:. 111 I . . 1 1 1 1, .1.4 1. I . 1 1.1 .1 ./1. • .
HURON GIULL
BLY'I'1I --- ONTARIO.
EXCELLENT FOOD. GOOD SERVICE.
Meals at All Hours.
FRANK GONG aula. Proprietor
11.1.11 .11.1.11
. 1,
11.• I 1 1 1 11. .1 . 1 I 1. 11I , Iu.. 11, 11 :1 11.11111 .11. 1 t
O
M,raft+ta' 'sf11C14t€1V111141e1C14'4'al' 1Clettliel a �.1:41(11101itZ � ;tgtV1e,�ot,i'nf�.,Im1a1�11E'V' ,. :ilf
`� to
•Miss Bernice McNall, daughter of Rev. 1'. IL and Mrs. Streeter and 17 STUART '�'` ��NSON
Pte. and Mrs. Jack McNall, is a pat-, daughter, Jean, and Miss Bunny V r
lent in Victoria hospital, London,'Granttalge, returned home on \Verities- It/
Phone 156 for Prompt Delivery: 3
et
where she will very shortly undergo day after an enjoyable holiday spent 4Market Price for Eggs According To Grade. 4
an operation. at Big Bay Point,
Grape Fruit .Juice 20 oz.,13e,2 for 25c r
1 Mr. 1..i. Cartwright and assistants Mt•. (tiltred Devereil of the It.C,,'t.l'. Fruit;, ,
Grape ,Iuice 50 oz., .�Ij(,
extracted a splendid supply of honey at llagerawillo Training School and i
ti
from the hive 1 Mi
,s. Tuesday. The s Devi: reit and diary Lou and 01 1- i< Schneider,s Cooked Dinner per tin 20e rai
Powder this year is of good quality', and ifred .ir., if Mount Forest, visited on Ice Cream I owder per pkg. 10c
quite plentiful.I To( .tday with Mrs. Deverell's ,Islet, i Ice Crean, Freezing Mix, Assorted Flavors , . ,10c A
Pte. Earl Craig of Kitchener, visited ylrs, nit -titer Morrison, and 111.W Golden Bantam Corn 13c, 2 for 25c ,
Ills mother, Mrs. Win. Craig, and Alorri uu• i/ Baker's Chocolate ....... .... cakes, 1Oc and 21c tfh
brother, Bernard Craig, and also Itis Beim eer Coffee tins,
George E. Cowan at,rmpanlcll by , )( and •t, L' i
brother, Bert Craig of Auburn, over his falba and mother and brothel, Peas , . :
the week -end. g �)C) till 10c, 1L 1-2( dll(1 1.7C e
iBillie, visited in Stratford on Sunday. A
Mrs. Alberta Bender and Miss Lillie Mrs. Bens'nt Cowan and children, op Dill Pickles28 oz., `Liet,.141 M. Carr wino have ,spent their holidays Judith amt Constance, returning with 5 Dog Food 10c, 3 for 25c 1
here returned to Toronto on Monday. them to spend a week with Mt. and g , '5
Mts. Rahert \Wightgntl, f Puppy Biscuits 2 lb. pkg. 25c
They also visled in Zurich and Gode-t.5
rich respectively. ' Butterscotch and Chocolate Pudding. Powder. Miss Genevieve Tiedemann, of De- x e
troit. Mr. and Mis. Gordon Hamilton, Br - :Ills each, 39e, 119c, 65c i3
ii
of Ilels'all, and Mr. and Mrs. George ', New Potatoes, New Cabbage, Onions. r$
Henry of Lucknow, Mr. and Mrs. Earl ill
and children of Bluevale, Tomatoes per 11). Sc, 2 for 15c AMrs, Wright and Anita, were recent r/df2i21Dt2i2ididt2i3rdt2t2i2i2t2i213r2+2,drdi2tai�iandrdiDt2t21;ki2iRr2r2ididi3i i2tu,dr2r2i •:5^.^"•2,o,ri
visitors with Mrs. Thomas lilllott. 1
-Misses Joyce, Jeanne and Janice
Scrlinhgeou'r, of Tillsonburg, and Nancy
Jean, and Murray Cameron, of Brus-
sels, are holidaying at the home of
their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
borne Scrimgeour.