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The Blyth Standard, 1942-08-05, Page 1THE VOLUME 16 - NO. 52. LYTH STANDAR MTH, ONTARIO, WEDN EWA Y, A LIG UST 5, 1912 OBITUARY Permanent Victory Loan BANK NITE WINNERS 'lloronto 'Wedding. Ceremony Retiring From Business Officers Appointed t prizenivwil, (dainvd at the , Tht. win h,„,.„ \VItti ()I. Interest Here • grrl of I Ili, 11,1.k1011 1 1. NV, .1. VW' 1111 (11011(01 The Saturday Night P.ink Nile Draw, (11 1111 1 The marriiig(• pli«,• recently ti1 iih Hair,- 111iis()11IltitIltiti ViclorY I.ttaii titil \VatSavings \Villtlets 1s'ere -- Mr. al a life 11111'4 1111111'e Ila keen Merged 11110 010, 1.1 • tkvIjhof ,.1)111., Mabel, (laugh- \Ir. *,1,1,, It op"r.itell a v,rocerY h°111" °I. 1 11" 111.1'11- "1"11111., meld Irian the giocery 1( idelll Iliti dish lel, aWay at iiis 1101110, I Insley 1-11rect. I 11)1 11, on Sunday, August 211.1, In hi ; Tani year, heath 0,1( ascii him from a long, and stiange 11111u55, 1 111011)01 Odell Air. .111,011 tititi 11Iw113"i 1111':111Y1 11 great ratimice and cheerfulness, For hymn -Iv-11" Yea" 111' 11,1d hero (..iilineil to bed, unahle to milli., Dom c,fect; 11 1)111) ht ialtIi some 11k011 le, 11•111i'll litil seeniiiiAly turned his bone and muscle I() slime, and rendered him a! 4olinely 1 lielple is, Illness I i rst struck him 1.1 oat linty ye:ft.; ago, and in spite of medical advice and constant care, 11( thing oaid 1 c (Ione for him, Taroughout all these years of ill- ness, i., lilS(111 Oa.; 10011 his e011 Siallt, elle(' fill, bedside cl'illna 111011. Thelr (Wt)Ii,' () chrislitin fortitude 1 has helm a source (if great inspiration to the many 441110 have ralli.'11 at Itt 1 1101110, 11011'11 through 1110 years. , :\lason was born near Lonliesi bort) ,111 I 1 1111el I To 1111s11 11. being 11 .S011 Of 1 Ili, late John Itsiiii iiiii Prot- ' years ago itt married Harriett Vor many years they kcal hotel tit (Talon and cummitive to itt Ittitivit is The Na - $11.(111 'Mrs, Aliller Itichinoild. $2.1111 -.lames \\h Ir "1: 1 1.''. .11111 1 '1 i'zi"r 1'1111 iti' l'i 11' bullies - her,. since 19 i 7. and is t lie liontil \\.tir Finama, t'ommittee. Th- • 1. Dizlei. In Mr. \\ 111111111 •\11•\;11111111. oldest . 'intim...us r.sident id lit' Y11- 1)11iolizalb01 (.1. I he Huron Count Y $1.1 11 "ill- 1 1ill 1 11111'11111111' Th°111ils Munro II f Tumuli,. „ill or mr„. ii. m. i„„,.. h.,t \ in,.., „mil,. hen, Nvith his par. 1 unit of this committee has just been ell, and olfire'; have been op• mai hi i'linton, .\lt'. A. J iIt.1iirctly is I 111, Huron County di:awn, and Cieufge1, Jellerson comity scerylary. Liical units of the Huron 1.01111‘v: VILLAGE OF BLYTH Chalon:1u L. llilborn, Aliss I,. I ivingslon. Ale,clitints anti Stamps --J. 11, It. Puldie Relations li. Philp, K. \\hit more, TOWNSHIP OF EAST WAWANOSH Chairman - Dustin' Ileccroft, \Ving• ham, .110x Porterfield, John Buchanan. TOWNSHIP OF MORRIS Chaieman ('ti \\"Iteeler, 11.11. 1 Rchert Shortreed, TOWNSHIP OF HULLETT Chairman Voss Alctivegor, lilt. 2, Senforth, \\'. It. Jewitt, \\'. J. Dale, Sailboat. The genial and hospitahl .1.101111 Armstrong. atmosphere which always stirroundeil them, created many friends, who iil- ways kept In Math with them from bride went away in a luggage tan and ' twig hi the•r loariii Ittil)leialeint Insttiliiietit . 1 Iter c-mgratillations the hride and 1 for a hottle of pop, or keeping sheep. If each of these men in 111c0. , Pitl 11 Still 1.1iiclituiget1 groom left for a 10 day motor trip. , 1,44 I( fikiiii( sl 1, suit ‘‘ i I mat, tin, Ian and White Ileci,:isorles. The 111'1(10 Illa felling Illinmar, 1 110si, rellillred for reldaeilintiat, the time to thne. They moved to Myth it chocolate bar, when they get in the main 11111.„ 1.\v„ lambs in addition to I.or travelling the hirde N4(0.., a ILI\ is a graduate of SI. Ilildii'S ( °liege, ' P.irin implementm still may 10, par- ensimile with 441ille 11ceessories. ' i \ve velour,. Hai both. Mat Hie ripl. 110er,ssary illerellSe Will he allailled, chased On Ole 111('.1 a 111001 i 11111 11 if 1(1 „„ , „ ,or Toronto, per vent or the seiiiiii; price k paid .1 lieu. friends showered them with 1'IlivyrsilY 'lint; will he 'minim, and that sims However, a great many floclt owners , on Men. rettilm they 44111 reside In confetti and hest 4vIslies. 1 44111 miss his (..riintes toR il, ad ‘ve have re aalready keeping all they can pro• in cash ohnnad i 1 n or e, elivery aim ; „ , , I no dmilit that he will, perly oecommodate, so new flocks credit terms do not exceed 2 1 months, (1,ONGItATtII,ArrIONS (;(,(1,11(.11 \vim., the groom has a re- 1 1 10WeVer, ii t', Sillls is 100 going far IntIst be established, Our objective act otding to \\',1 id imp Prices and sponsible posit Ion, Congratulations to Little Miss \I;tr. away. and there will ahca),s he a for 1942 is 1,000 new flocks,' said Mr. Trade Hoard officials.\\•iitson. '"I'lley should be establish- __________- ilyn 1<veknie 41110 eidehrati S her 1st i \yam welcome for Mai la many . Although slur., .\ ligied firA, eon. birthday 011 Sunday, August tith. tut in counties most suitable for sheep, homes 44.11ent,ver hi, cares to visit the smilers generally are I ring required 1)10Wing Match C()iiimittee to4vii. Vaising. t'ounties have been dled to nialo, heavier do4vti Pty"nts when 'I'n 1)isciiss Abalicl()iiment, - Jilt° Categories, A, II, and C. accord- . Itoberion, Don Alorrill, ;\ !TIM, l'oting., \\,1),Iiilif )Ir . (41011 St tibl..-i made the I 11'11‘v. ro. Itev. Georg,. P. hanks off ieiated Ili, f 1/10.1. „p„1.31„,1 :, 1,1:„.1,niiiii COOS! an' 1(1.(IIg i1510.11 (0 increas(- doing it in his usual elficient mailm.i., io 1 10, 1,,,..emony..00i 1,.0, laiii„,s toio. 1 ‘‘ ii,,,, 1),,,,I.1). 1 li.os, gli,iivo limy Thef,1) proam.tion. le, one million moro int..i.spersed \VII It a few 4vitty Jol.es, Ati,..4. .... that lient the large (Tow(' 111111101. ' the ‘v,,,lajm,,,, ato,..1.., The ,.„„,„, \,,i,,,• Air. star; learned H, tram,. \\Iwo i tura] officials state. requIreil I'm. 1 1143, agrieal- 44 Tunney, '11 T°1."111". 11111)e 1 stimil-;. and 44 ben he was old enough. sill" lire It. member, there 44 ill lie ;mother deeoratel ‘%.ith hydrangea tioi deJ. ilk. father „,.(.:iiiie really l'i• ii(!xt we(It's Ricky phiniums, post iii.,sti.,• in pi r Li Ontario fa rulers tuna! (lone an ex- YOIJR LOCM: R APER. Ont. Dept. Of Agriculture Opens Sheep Campaign 1,000 New Flocks OhJactive For This Year, States Live Stock Official, is facing a serious wool 1111'1 Ihe itt' A• M1111 i•nt.; 1‘7 1. \Oln only a year 0101. Parlilers Iron' 1103,1 tit winners, VINCENT-STEWART 1 Ili, bride, given III marriage hy her i.1 l'..oiSttililit',111'.;1.ik uvcr 1 bit' '11()I) til(1 rillYf':).(1,1(1.slitsloi'llithas ilii'll°11):"1:'11111".'1111•11gi-. i'gwgits1.1 11111111:; uncle, .11. \Viiimili (,;)(1.1atil, oi I 1: 1 --------- . onto. wow a whit.. silk 1..1..,.f.y ..„,.0,'‘..1.1. , \Vet le;arn with ..ven greater regret '1111'11.1e''l will' 111111 an' 11"”. bel1114 1 , twit .11. intends to li'ave town. and 44111 114141 to increase till. ''IlPt'l) "Pula- . .4 quiet hill pre! ty 4veilding Irani with matching halo hal and shoulder :, ,,, . : . , ,, , lion of the province Ily 21., Per (amb. place on Saturday, July 2.711 11 at the te,iii., wila ins (iliugliter. .ors. imrilti ' !length veil. and carried a hominid of • „ The Ontario ciampaign now getting j ale, of Setiturtli. During his years home of )1isi•i .11)11a Steep, Ontario , reit roses and houvardia. Mk', Itrenda : . : Stia,e1, Clinton, when Miss Edith it. „ in oasiness here he has been ve..y ju_ i under way. (..i under tlie personal (Ii• Crortei. was her sister's only allell(l• . 1 • i t• , .i reelioll of W. I'. \Val "ll 1,1 Ve Stock Marriage 10 Mr. .1011 11 Villeellt, a Stewart( Of ClilliOn, was united h1 ' , and f(0' Illany years served as a mem- ' 1 111111(11' ()Iltari" 1"al'himil I'''' Agri. iev..-11.11 in tio. wedare ol ine town, ant in ti turquoise Wm, silk jersey i gown with tuba II and carrying a Lel, of the local school hoard. 1 i , culture, 1i'. \Vat son states that the liaderich, At LI p.111., the couple who ,, imuoilet of carnations. Mr. \\"illitini , . , • , presi rat sheep population k approxi- i%as always Keenly interesteo in 4veri, unattended, entered 110, drawing Homo whore tiov. A. Laity. pastor or TillIlley, of TOronto, Was 1 110 best Mall. h,r,ai 1100,. parlicloarly iro„,baii, , mately 110,01,0 ;Ind 2,-1 per cent ill- ! \\,i,loy. \\,Ini church, ppri,ornied the 1 The rece10 ion \vas held al 1 hi, VII 1 he rel Pillion Of Inge .1eres, Erindille. Irs. Crozier 3a.(11:,,Ingl:::.:11.11;,1111)(sm.s,r(:[roiloi:Ill to‘1%.','Iill.;:ils1.1 lltillitt: ,1(1.1.1(Eil,ills1:1•1 ‘(\i'4i41.(.1. 11':i':111111/isrt.' 'ceremony, amid a setting of baskets renewed wearing a him, and whin, orally 10,00.,1 timm his stun, as a ,top. 1 Total sheep marketing,: last year of tall blue Delphinium, roses and ,, iigurial go4vii with white accessories Ilahys Breath, and witnessed only by approximatel)- 2 7,o,iton heads , and eOrsagi, of Oink (liana 1 1011S. The 11::illagii::,if 111))1%l::', 1.1i:11111(11:I:\ :1.1. gl 111:i.11.(:)ginisii.ii.1. , \‘‘."i'ilil: about hair el0S0 relatil'eS a Ild friends. The bride the marketings being groom's mother chose for her wedding a smart dusty , 111141 I'd ill a navy They could always took for ,t .hit „f .,1 Illill("4. "Tillti 111011 !IS,' said 31r, \Val- sin,,,I. dia,,..., will' iviiih. accosorips alld corsage of Tali:41111M l'OS0S. lark, or ;1 11 argamoill from ,lim. \vim ,,on, "1 Ila 1 Most of the 191-2 ewe lamb rose shetT hiclod frock with shoulder bouquet of pink ()plielia rose buds,, Thy youpi„ 1,,ft for ..vmsicolia and 1111 i they mitre or less considered as one 'cell) 11111s1 he salvaged for breeding ;or the boys, it Noll take them a totrposi.s• col.o.riiiwiiri; and Ilabys Breath, and hien. return will live in Toronto, Tile • , %voile to get oat or the habit or rim- 1 -There are :16,0iiii ontario carolers large rose hilt, Deceased IS slirviVell hy his willow. 4.1) sons„It.lin Edmund, retired liank manager, (if Cioderieli, and Parvey, of l'aylield; one (laughter, Prances, tti deceased. Also surviving is one broth. yr, \\Milani, and three sisters, Frank Haines, Ceorge Beattie, of I :union, and rs. Purest. Five grandchildren also sur• vivo, CIe'a Toronto; Margaret Mason, tiodei•iiii, Donald purilitising goods (in the initalinent l'ongra I illations I o \li', .1 inlrey _. Alason, Ottawa, and Alarion and Iton• plan, the original \1'.113,1 1. order con. The Huron County Plo44.ing Iiiiteli _, 1 nag of Toronto who celebrated her cji 1 :, aid Iii‘atti, Bayfield. . epritta._,, the ,;„te of farm machinery Committee met in Clinton on July ,141- ' - ot,(10iiillg 01)erations Are birthday on 1Friday, .Iiil‘. 11Ist. )n)ceecling. Nicely 1 2.1 1. ' i , t i f II , PIP' V11110'1'1 sorvires wr'111 11'111 from remains unchanged. the I 11 411i United Church on Tuesday : \viten the farmer parchashic, ma. International Plowini; Alatch by the - 4.1...'.. Phis i S illSt. to 1(4 the people know " . Congratulations to Mr. Harvey Iltil• . that the gang of would -he farmers camery 44.1shes I() torn In old equip- 11 '11 " " I ley, of Myth, who celeArates his lurth- afternoon at 2.11u o'cl()(.1t. Previously ' 1 i a short service \vas held al the house, meat on 1101V, 1 he a 11101111 1. all0W011 lar . l': ' F.' ' I ' lid IP 'Jet Vf)1("1 1 Isom Myth are still on the job, and condacted hy Rev. A. Sinclair, tissist• ' the trath,Tht „num( he treated m a 1 Resolutions of atilirecill 1 1011 10 \\''. I 1111Y 011 1' I'11111.4', August 7th. ett L. \\''llyti, and his neighbours in Hul- 111Itev. Dr. T. \\', Ntalooliti, \link- (o 1 )44.11 payment but is deducted from . Township for their (anoppration PERSONAI, INTEREST tpi. (4 .\101111t 0111(4 ProsbYlerian the total sale price of the machinery. 'lett lehureli, Brooklyn, N.1'., a friend of , i i Tms means that i pan is allowed In preparing for the 1\latch were tni• icon, Iletoria, NVellington and *I'orlt. INIks Betty t'tinipliell Is a guest this now, Last Pridity night a gang was all 1, (.°11111 is" ill 'II' CaleglirY when' Mr, Mason for many years, : ai imously adopted 011 a nivel, of IleW machinery costing- 1 1 • • Wt mill IIIII. 1.1.1011(1 , M IS S Marion 1 A l'.itge congregation assembled for $:10), the total price of the equipment 1 A resolution was also rIFSed that 1 \Ittson, al hayfield. I bind) mindietings were between 2,500 set to go to Ken, Ttiylors, bot the . ' the serviee at Illy elitirch. The hymns, will in, treated ;is 4vorth Slain mut tho Ai' Treasurer's books be audited lin- and .....0110 liist year, will be asked to Ir;iin spoiled elle phins, On Alondav (Am the \Vay 31)' SaV ion l' 1,01111.S 'Ale,' (10‘‘,11 payment will he 1101 10 -ls I. 1111 11 11110lialely and that 11 11 111011e' in I110 Pte. Borden t'ook of Aldershot Camp, establish at least 1110 nelv flocks per morning, however, four of the faith - and ilaagliter. Pierre. Sam Creighton, and 1<en. to4viiship. There include tlw counties and lirail, 1(inilly I ight,' 4vert, sun; t 1 1,80, ,o pm. cent of the amount, Itreasury be returned to the munielpid• 'wit',S.k spending his furlough with his fills, niiinely, Del. Philp, \Vilf. St. mid a beautiful solo, 'Near to the : ities. or to private inilivitinals fromof Pron I ena (., I raid inia 101. I lalt on, 1k11 11 or God', \‘',18 skull; 1):,' Mr, A, l'''' —.....-- 111111ell 11 W11S l'OeiliVed. P001, Perth, l'eler1101'011g11, W11 1011100 Whit more, arose bright and early cimk. 1)1111 The committip will meet again In Pa,rii, \c:troy, It.C..\.F., Ottawa, „ad \\01.0 hi tht, ham„t flew at and \Velltw(I'l 11. Mr, shiciah. watasttort ttatTs; 1,1sIn ;the near future to receive the autlit-. spent the weelomil with Itis parents, i'avlors almost on the stroke of eight. 4, All other counties not included in from 211(1 Timothy, 2iiil chapb,r, :11.(1 A litc:vard Training Plane from the ors report and Vill t11011 disband. No Mr, ;1 11(1 'Airs, 11(0,1). McElroy, ',Sion Creighton and Ken, \Viiitinore ahoy(' i'1 teg"ri" will he shied 10 PS- VOI'lle, 'I ,11(1111'il harillleSS 1IS ti good sol- \ 1 ,...y.iner :\Irport, made a 1.irced landing planet for faluro, plowing ;MatchesnAirs. worked 111011 ten, but lessi.s. Philp lahlisil 0111' 11('w 11"elis in "ell i"w11' „Arrives Overseas ! i -.\11,A. stewart of Ihnigannon visited Then on Tuesday night a real gang 1)11(91 for more sheep. They have - dier 1 1 .1eS, Is Clirlst,"rinollly tats all In Mr. John Sainkr•zon's Pasture1 111111 heing intuit, at the present 1 101e, 1101)1'1'1 li'Vis pi,,Visited \Vilh Dugan. and St' PiffIV SIIIY'''l W11 11 11 II 111 1 1 ship. --_-- 11011 friell(IS 011 tillnilay. ',dinner Dille aml finished a ten acre i Agrieultural Representatives are 1 L.1.1. talting a prominent Part in the cam 411111 her cousins, M ra . nd 31 )5, Te hos. I wnt to George shians farm and set Just completed a sheep survey and K0.11iek .1.111' a l'e". 1111Ys his w0 -'1i. Itio 111(01)' acres in little more than are in a position to advise prospec- t Wit hours. There was 1011 in the i i ye flock owners regarding suit able 31 i'. and Mrs. Norman Floody of are getting over their first set of blisters and siuntan very nicely, In fact some of (hem feel like veterans Ontario, Rainy ver, Renfrew, Sim - Mg to present slim) population.' Counties in 'A' category - where over 5,11110 lambs were marketed last year -will be asked to establish three IleW flocks per township, They in - chide liruce. ('arleton, Dufferin, IlGrey. Ilusting,s, Huron, 1.41111)- 'ton, Lanark, Manitoulin, invalid :mil coati! not Like part in his 011 the oncession til' tit count. 3"s bil les. fall took him Into Maud it p.m. on Taesday. The pilot, his 11.1' mid \vas a father to him. To an .\listraiiiin flyer. had iost his w0', he a Stilt:1er Ill Ti11101 Ily'S day was a and 4vas running law in gasoline. Ile ;\ telegram dated :1iigust 31.(1, from great anithillon. Putil encom•aged Tim• brought the plane down for a perfeet England, and received t y Mrs. Itowyn, othy hy Iihtl him, although he can- landing, liater gasoline 41a5 brought informed her that her son, Pte. \\•ally not he a soldirr In his counto"s ser• Irom the $1ty thulium. .\irporl, and llo4ven, had arrived safely in Great vice, Ite ran he a good soldier of .1(,- the next morning the plant, took off Britain, The telegram read: "\\'rit• and \vas flowu by to Aylmer Ah•port. Ing, keep smiling --all well and Silk'. • 'anti 1115 S112,1101 1))' Bow- men of genius, hit the world hats tic .% 'en was very glad to learn of her sons er hutiored tIt lis heroes. 111(0 15111d and },e )11 to Inc'. And one special sati' e arrival. Timothy haVe faced no guns and con- w"1.11 1%)111'1 he 1-',1" to the "" wh" 1111crcit 110 cities, yet in the great day w.ls his 1."1 iremP"olou through Etiloily ;Loot as high as those till these years. 1 le would titt' to Iter. Mission Band rr() Meet • whom, innws sarble tile nations, 'I could not have got ;thing withirit 1 '1'10, regular monthly meeting of the It is hard to be situt up In a sick you, You were loving and kind, and . I!,,,t t the ratted Church Tim children it . inn ,ty isit s with and ' hutch ‘vhich is always forthcoming AligliSt Sth, at 3 o'clock. \viten the stoohing is over, There are several places 011 1 he ,sus Christ. AVe find In history the records of , gang, and till showed the benefit of breeding stock. \\'indsor have been visiting this weeK , previous experience. Those who went with the formers parents. aim In pas.t veal's, parties wishing to . Mrs. David Ploody, were, Bort Tastier, Sinn Creighion.estahush flocks have invariably post• NIr. tool Mrs. Eric Johnston, of Floody, Jaclt t'owan, \Vilf St Pierr,. , ii i polled doing so 1111111 the fall months, ..e.„ev.ng that ewe lambs could lie Ilarold 1.otItleti. Herb. ".\leElroy. Norm. \Ir. anti \Irs, Gordon Elliott on \Veil- .leti. \\'llitmore. --"I:" --I a Purchased at towel. prices at that 'sea .in. Realizing that this situation Guelph, were visitors at the home of ,111ilite Cole, Jack \Vinson 1 fi i iiesday, I In all cases the crops Ila 1'0 110011 .1 r, and NIrs, J. IL Leith. of Damn- 1:1,(1:1 4Y, and when tin acre was stookeil 0 really was an acre. One very fine ton, 1\1r. and Mrs. George Leith and Jemmy which is ai\va.s limited 1.„1.. roam as 11' 11 Were s. prison. It is trite 111111 f"ithful. ' will he held on sa i oniay at* ternoon, family, and Airs. Iteinwold, of Listow- 1 ward to with fetish, is the lovely le i' I to feel thobs of pain shoot ' t'i1' we 1111.1' this w(1111 of trilmte to one whose me will live on 111thiS a community as one who endured 'hard- re asked to bring work books 11101 Airs. Herb. IcElroy, scissors and reminded to learn the mr. Harold Taylor. or Piviwring ness as ti good soldier of Jesos Christ . memory verse. Any visiting children has ileon a visitor this wi.ok with 104 waiting list. and it may he that the wolconte, brother. Th., and mi.,. Kenneth Tay. harvest will in, „vni. in,rnia, rho gang 1'11040 111111bs at current market prices. tor, Hy Pares on Friday to lake tip (.811 get around to them all. \Ve hope 1 Prospective purchasers tiro remind - those 44•011 put iii a call for help appre- led that although the price per pound (date the fact that many of those who !may be lower later in the season, the 1)1'1411, volunteer for service, fl 110 business- 'iambs will we more, with the re- throti!th Ihe system. Yet many endure stub 11.1rdness. They have gone through years of exhausting theunial- isms and other bodily ailments that have torn the muscles, paled the eheel,s and stoopeil the shoulders, Mr, Masons experience for so 1111111y years was 11 Striliing ex,ample of this. Through loit,; years of .suffering and handi:ap he never compllined, never spoke a cross Or angry word, Ile was r.ttiiit and cheerful and good nat- ured. IN was aiw„3,s glad to sec his, 11)r. Malrolin paid a ',I/1011111d tribute Rev. I 11% ;Malcolm followed with a beautiful adil;•ess on the continuity of life. This life has its sunset, but there is a beautiful sunrise 011 the Et- ernal Shore. This licily is litst the earthly habitation of the said, is Just the portal of that life which lasts forever where the soul will re- ceive the Immortal and glorified body. may occur again this year, the On- tario Department proposes to P11 1'. elms., good ewe lambs, on the market and in some of the larger sheep pro- ducing counties, daring the summer months. These lambs will be asseuili• led at strategic points so that a re- serve supply will be available later in the season, .11is planned to sell ClitifiCH TRINITY ANGLICAll CHURCH it position in Ot(awa, St.f.-Sgt. George )1eNall of N.S., is on leave. and Is visiting 111011, many of 41111)111 never know 1111- suit that there will be very little dif- ..te is, in,uthe whether they will formica! in the total cost. old friends In the village this week. 111 Itit' 1 ; I Airs. MeNall, who it "4 1' `011 Wit 11 111111 i lie able to go or not. ror that reason 1 ,F,we lambs purchased and assemb- Rcv. P. H. Streeter, L.Th., Rector. to idyll). inllY Particular Perq011 that we win be able for shipment to counties where lime ..epartment mill be avail - at Deltert, also accompanied hint Loin., 1 ii t., next to impossible to prtSmise lod by 11 friene.s. Ills mind was clear, Ills mem- to Al 1.• 11""" rm. his falth. his fine August llth, 1 1112. Visitot'S 1111111 the lissi,S :\ 10(111- Ili '1'0 at any particular time, but the local supply is insufficient to its of his friends. Ifortitutle, L meet. the demand, When lambs are „ily e.„,„,,,iient, and he eiijoyed iiie vis. 'courage, his patience and Christian Sumlity School, 10.'30 a.m. lend s and 3i;'it, Itoht. NIctiet, timing whenever ' a buneh can be asselllnled i i 1'01 10WIllg the service the remains .lorning Pi and sermon, Hint) the past week were, 'Mrs..). Chaniney, they will land somewhere where they ;shipped 111 carload lots between '111 1'1110 all On:, years he was upheat ' a.m. Nii.s. perdue fled may. and Mrs. \\.. J. are really needed. 'points Within 1 Ilo 1'1'0111100, or where by an Unseen Presence. Ile clung to were interred in the Myth 11111011 ------- (leddes, all of Itelgrave, \Ir. and Mrs. Special mention should lo' made of lambs are shipped in less than car - the wIrd of (lad, and prayer, and faith, (it l! 1 III, or Loudon. imit \It. inul two visitors, in our midst, Wilfred St.' load lots between points within the (') (der , The pallbearers 1vere, and ltit,, . cc, . c , , ., il i 3 ROL \Vint. Al). l'itylor, It. 11. Philp, BLYTH UNITED CHURCH Pierre, relieving manager at the Province located within 200 miles of D Irust«1 and hoped, His .\laster hTiloT"ylor JI IRElliottand as re- ' ' Next Sunday, August 11, there will Alis. 'on, as 11. , 0' '' .. , ank of tm 'ainehas ree. who vory each other, freight will be paid by s l. . . (a'il'ed him with, *\Vell done, good and i , , ;Iit, services in the United Church both Miss lone Wiltse and friend \Ir. willingly stepped into a strange dis• the Dominion Department. of Agricul- (it orge Bradford, Goderich. i ,Plowerbearers were, Joe Shadilica, raffia 11 servant, enter thou into the morning and evening. Rev. A. Sin- David, of litollener. 1..'. and li's. Ar- Diet, and is always one of the first ture. joy of thy Lord. thin. Douglas and (laughter. Barbara. to offer his services, The Dominioli Department of A.gri- 1 Paul \Vinson, Filth. and Bert Gray. elan. win be in charge. If he could Speak today as he leaves , 1 0:4 7,---1Sundity School. and Mrs. Willse of Stratford, and \lr, Plc nly, \vim is this wee1:1 111;01 nitN‘ i())11•1111:an propo'es to supply a ning and Bert Brun:4(10n. The funeral I culture also Ft ank Tatithiyit, Percy and \VIII. litti- this I,)wer scene, he would give this 1 1 : 47)-Subiect : "Abrahani. the Jitel: Bowes of Ingersoll, visited on ea!' tn. Also the Vollerable Vol era 11. rani for two yr ,rc, free of charge int - beautiful floral tributes were received. ,.,..,. .., Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. all part! -1 o hind, 'All my friends have been so I .uu-,bubject: Life's Possibilities. George Radford. . . ;mottling, and again Tuesday night, tablishing new flock's, . policy. to attended. and many very orpat nellever., t.',31 1 Creighton, who was out )1011day (ler a loan testimony to the friends lie left be 1was largelY. ARTIST PICTURES JAP MYSTERY PLANE Working from photographs of wrecked planes, Herman R. Bollin, art director "Flying," draws artist's conception of Japs' mystery "Zero" fighter. Ship carries 20 mm. cannon in each wing, two machine guns mounted on engine cowl. SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON ABRAHAM'S INTERCESSORY PRAYER—Genesis 18 LESSON 32 Printed Text—Genesis 18: 23.33 GOLDEN TEXT—"The supplies. tion of a righteous plan avail. eth much." James 5:16. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Timet Probably about 1900 B.C. Place: Hebron, twenty - two miles south of Jerusalem. First Intercession 28. "And Abraham drew near, and said, Wilt thou consume the righteous with the wicked? 24. Peradventure there are fifty righteous within the city: wilt thou consume and not spare the place for the fifty righteous that are therein? 25. That be far from thee to do after this manner, to slay the righteous with the wick- ed, that so the righteous should be as the wicked; that be far from then: shall not the Judge of all the earth do right? 26. And Je- hovah said, If I find in Sodom fifty righteous within the city, then I will spare all the place for their sake," Abraham is moved at once to intercede for these cit- ies which God had told him Re would destroy, a remarkably ac- curate prefiguring of the oompae- aion of the Lord. The friend of God is compas- sionate even of the sinful and de- graded. Abraham did not inter- cede for Lot, but for the sinners in Sodom. He had perflled hie life in warfare for them; he now pleads with God for them. Where had he learned this brave pity? Where but from the God with whom he lived by faith? How much more surely will real com- munion with Jesus lead us to look on all men, and especially on the vicioua and outcast, with His eyes who saw the multiudes as sheep without a shepherd. Indifference to the miseries and impending dangers of Christless men is im- possible for any whom he calls 'not serants but friends'. Thle passage k called 'the sublimest act of human intercession of which Scripture preserves a re- cord'. The object the patriarch contemplated in his intercession was not simply the preservation of any godly remnant that might be found within the doomed towns, but the rescue of their en- tire populations from the impend- ing judgment. Second Intercession 27. "And Abraham answered and said, Behold now, I have taken upon me to speak unto the Lord, who am but dust and ashes: 28. peradventure there shall lack five Of the fifty righteous: wilt thou destroy all the city for lack of five? And he said, 1 will not des- troy it, if 1 find there forty and five. 29. And he spake unto him ye again, and said, Peradventure there shall be forty found there. And he said, 1 will not do it for the forty's sake." Six times Ab - rah= returned to the charge, and as each petition was granted, his faith and courage grew. 1{e did not learn the vast extent of God's righteousness and mercy all at once; as he gained each point, he was inspired to dare another. 'fhe Almighty was obliged by tht demands of His own nature, to bring out of Sodom the or1!y per. sons that could, by any possibil- ity be accounted righteous, There were not ten righteous rnen in Sodom; but Lot and his wife, and his two daughters were saved. And God's righteousness was clearly established and vindicated in the eyes of the stn•roundine peoples. Third Intercession 30. "And he said, Oh let not tate Lord be angry, and 1 will speak: peradventure there shall thirty be found there. And he said, I will not do it, if I find thirty there. 31. And he said, Behold now, 1 have taken upon me to speak unto the Lord: peradventure there shall be twenty found there. And he said, I will not destroy it for bhe twenty's sake. 32. And he said, Oh let not the Lord be angry, and 1 will speak yet but this once. Peradventure ton shall bo found there, And he said, I will not destroy It for the ton's sake." The motives that prompted Ab- raham were twofold: first there was a natural anxiety about his kinsman Lot. Twenty years had passed since Lot had left him and now the strong impulse of natural affection stirred him to make an effort to save Sodom, lest hie nephew night be overwhelmed in the overthrow. Real religion tondr not to destroy but to fulfil all the impulses of true natural love. Secondly, Abraham feared that if all were swept away, the sur- rounding nations might have rea- son to reproach God and would accuse him of unrighteousneea and injuci.ioe inasmuch as he destroyed bhe righteous with the wicked. The Lord's Departure 38. "And Jehovah went his way, as soon as he had left off oom- muning with Abraham; and Ab- raham returned unto his place." Abraham did not here pray for Lot, but yet God remembered Ab- raham and sent Lot out of the midst of the overthrow (Chap, 19:29) so that there had been unrecorded intercession for him too. The unselfish desires for others, that exhale from human hearts under the influence of tho love which Christ plants In us, do come down in blessings on others. We help one another when we pray for one another. Is Japan Preparing To Attack Siberia? Japanese preparations for an attack on Russia's Siberian mari- time province and Vladivostoek are almost oomplete and if nacos• eery the Japanese could "press the button and start to move Into Siberia", a British source doctor. ad recently. Thio source said the occupation of islands at the western tip of the Aleutians resulted in a nee- ful strategic situation for the Japanese since it placed then? "on the flank of a possible American attack on Japan." While Japan has massed an army of about thirty divisions in Manchukuo, her milit..ary activity in Burma and other areas neces- sarily has been limited, it was pointed out, Siberia is the danger point of the Allied strategical situation in East Asia, this source said. "The Japanese will attack when it suits them, not the Germans," he added. lie predicted that Japan is pre- paring to throw at least 500,000 men into such an overland on- slaught against Russet's Siberian strongholds, POP SCOUTING.. Flying Lions badges, alts "Wings" of Scouting, were award- ed eight St. Thomas Boy Scouts and presented by Wing Comman- der B. H. Relies before a large gathering of military and trameng units and the public at Pinafore Park on Dominion Day. The boys were instructed by Civilian In- structor Jack Shepherd of the It. C. A. 1', Technical Training School. • • Many thousands of Sea Scouts from all parts of Great Britain have gone into the Royal Navy, and have made a fine record, • • • A now Sea Scout "land ship", the Venture, a training centre and central anchorage for Mont- real district Sea Scout., was "launched" with due ceremony in the presence of a large gathering of Scout officials and disting-s sashed guests. The latter included officers of the R.C,N.V.R. The anchorage is located at Valois Bay, on Lake St. Louis. • • • The fifth annual Boy Scouts' and Girl Guides' Sunday service at Montebello Park, St. Cathar- ines, was this year attended by 600 boys and girls. The parade to the park was led by a hand of Scout pipers. • • - Some 6,000 Scouts and Guides. of Leeds, England, attended a special Scout - Guide service on United Nations Sunday. The parade salute was taken by the Deputy Chief Scout, Sir Percy Everett, who ie well known to Canadian Scouts and leaders. With Sir Percy were the Lord Mayor of Leede, Lord Horewood and Gen. Sir William Bartholomew, the Regional ScoutCommissioner. 10,000 people joined in the ser- vice and witnessed the march past. - • • Like their brother Scouts of other blitzed British cities, the Scouts of Canterbury rendered outstanding service during and following the German air raide on that ancient cathedral town. Authorities in charge of several A.R.P. brunches called on the District Scout Commissioner to thank him for the valuable work performed by the Scouts. Must Not Waste String In Britain Severe penalties for those who destroy rags, rope or string were ordered by the British govern- ment, ranging up to £500 (about $2,225) fine or two years' im- prisonment. The Ministry of Supply said hundreds of thousands of tons of rugs were needed as raw material to make equipment for the armed forces. All rags, rope and string must be kept separately and not only must not be destroyed but must not be thrown into garbage cans or refuse bins, No Sense, No Feeling :4 nit 1'a: 10 As Reassuring News From Hong Kong Conditions Improved Accord• ins to Japanese Report Japan. se•hi. pired res surauees that conditions at camps where 1long i<one tear prisunors :ire held have intprute1 in the months side the farmer lirilish colony toll last I)econtber brought sumo ntcarstlre of coutfort to rotativos of approxi- mately 1,000 1': iii flans holii ved 10 ho prisom`rs 1 here. The 11101'1 u1' inr;noved condi- tions made piddle recently by the External .\fl'airs Department and credited to "official .l311a11es0 80)!)- c1s " asserted that pri,;oners cap- tured at the Far East baso are sat- isfied with their food rations, that disease has been chlrluvl and that the number of wounded patients hats declined frutn a total of 1,150 In January to 391 in inhOlarch, In less reassuring vein, rho re- port described transport difficul- ties as "acute" and said it has been "virtu:1lly in►poselble" to bring in largo quantities of sup- plies to 1Long Kong. Food and Clothing No complaints had been received about clothing, the Japanese ac- count claimed. Officers were re. quired Io pay for their clothing, but other ranks were supplied free, Similarly, officers paid for the food they ohtained. Food rations, while not identi- cal In all camp, were described as similar to the food given Jap. anese troops In the sante locality, Considerable difficulty had been experienced at first In supplying food in adequate quantities but by the end of March each man was receiving 1,139 grams (40 ounces) of rice, 470 grams (17 ounces) of fresh vegetables, 139 granas (tivo ounces) of meat—including fish and additional miscellaneous food, The Japanese report asserted that officers and men received a weekly ration of 30 grams (one ounce) of tobacco free, along with such necessities as soap, small cotton towels, socks and tooth paste. Plan Airport In Heart Of London A great airport surrounded by a spacious war memorial park may rise from raid ruins In the heart of London, according to reports circulating in the metropolis. Already, those devastated areas are being examined by govern- ment suveyors with a view to their development in this war, ac- cording to The Daily Mail air cor- respondent, who says there is be- lieved to be sufficient ground available for an airport provided that certain building restrictions are applied in the immediate neighborhood so as to ensure a safe aproach for aircraft, A proposal made some years ago for the roofing over of rail- way wards to provide a landing ground will also be considered. A central airport is unlikely to be large enough to serve the huge airliners which will maintain a world-wide service front Britain after the war, Large air junctions for these monsters will probably be distributed in various parts of the British Isles. The London airport would act as a "feeder" to the main junc- tions, but it would also be large enough for fast, light planes run- ning to Paris and other nearby European capitals, the corres• pendent hears. Obeying Hitler With Pleasure According to one of the tales carried from Europe and reprint- ed in The Canadian Unionist, Hit- ler and Goering were visiting an armaments plant and Goering told llitler that German workmen were losing faith in their Fuehrer, This Hitler denied and going up to a workman, handed hint his own revolver, and said: "'To prove your loyalty to ate, shoot five of your comrades." The man obeyed Immediately and killed five Germans, Hitler was delighted, and smiling at Goering said: "Well done, my good man. Where do you come from?" Swiftly the man answered: "Warsaw." I KNOW ! I FORCeOT MY d UMBRELLA C _y 1 t l' )P'•'1 ty 't i.. i , . r ;•r• , RADIO REPORTER DIALING WITH DAVE: Claire Boothe, the globe -trot - ling author, actress and war cor- respondent, who recently gave a vivid "LIFE" story on the Battle of Egypt, is heard quite frequent- ly on the air these days — as guest, special commentator, and war analyst! "Curlilocks" Phil Harris, or, u Jack Benny would call him, "Corny Joe of the Wilshire Bowl" —is about to be a military band- nutater. He might oven be wav- ing a baton over an Air Force or a Coast Guard band by the time you read this. At any rate, Harris, who is caught short right between the first and third draft with a self-supporting wife and a baby, feels that it is about time he does his stuff for the services. Who'll be Benny's Maestro in the fall when the series re -opens, le still a question. Perhaps Phil's band, with a proxy bandleader, Wright be a good idea. • * • The stage, the screen and prob- ably radio, will be all joining hands in making a gigantic na- tional revue of Irving Berlin's great hit "This is the Army," Al- ready a sell-out as a stage play, using army talent and men ex- clusively, Warner's have paid $250,000,00 down payment for ■ ■ IIORIZONTAL 1 Map of Asiatic republic. 6 Its temporary capital. 13 Visual. hter. S E E 16 Long 15 aperture. P A 17 Bathes. 19 Spirits of 0 streams. 21 Female fowl. E 22 Compendiums. D 24 Born. 25 Like. 26 Male child. 27 Smart knock. 44 29 Doctor (abbr.) 46 30 Explicit. 47 33 Gazelle. 48 34 Sickness. 49 85 Protrusion of 50 the lips. 53 36 Upon. 54 37 Ugly old. 55 woman. 88 Paid publicity. 40 Nothing, 56 41 Measure for print. 42 God of war. the screen rights, and will turn all profits from the technicolor production to the Army linter• gency Relief. Present weekly air dickers indicate that it will soon be heard via the air -lanes, at something like $10,000.00 a week cost. 'Truly An inspiring show, packed with fun, and with Irving Berlin in person singing his famed old song of his World No. 1 Re • vee, "Oh 1{ow 1 Hato to Get Up in the Morning," 'This is the Army" is destined to a great and healthy life, via the stage, the screen and radio. • • • Charlie McCarthy recently sold a bomber load of Bonds for Uncle Sam in his tour of Airplane Man u f acturing Pla ata. Jimmie Fidler gives a $25.00 Victory Bond away each week on his Sunday night 9.30 HollywoodCommentary, heard from CKOO and CKCL. Brother Bob is again at hells of Music Hall on Thursduy night's while Bing keeps an eagle eye ou his golf, his fishing, his swim- ming and IAs HORSES•-- some folks call that a holiday. Musical sensation of the year is young twelve year old Lorin Maazel, who has been doing some top-flito sununer conducting of such august organizations as the Blue networks sununer symphony orchestra, and othee. Somewhat reminiscent of 19th century brio• liance as exemplified in the Mo• tart's, Schubert's and Wagner's —all of whom produced and per- formed works of mirsculorw merit during their early years. Popular hits of the week in- clude a little jingle called "Jingle, Jangle, Jingle," and another ono that starts out "put, put, put .." Goslings Save Gas By Cutting Gras, Goslings have replaced motor mowers at the Norwich Grey- hound track for the duration. The mowers ate precious gasoline while trimming the grass. Thu goslings trim the grass and satisfy their appetites in the same gulps, MAP PUZZLE Answer to Previous Puzzle OBEPT1:IJR SALA I gig;© DQ SIC LI Saim U� 1'J 1'0= I 170 • C C�7irl► ORIAISS'• GM P WNW tIC•I Mn S :IN •iii( K•ln`ii.' iNT 0'`•.11©©.: t. Nil Pal P P ii lig E WA/ To halt. Adam's mate. Common verb, Eyelid. Sooner than. Ray, Secondary. Pressing tool. Important river in this land. This land's former rulers were the Manchu —•r, VERTICAL i 1 14 To place in line. 16 Huge con. mercial city to this land. 18 Poisonously. 20 Brown bat, 22 Period. 23 Baglike part 26 South Amer!. ca (abbr,). 28 Pertaining to the Pope. 30 Beret. 31 Hastened. 32 Ship's record book. 2 Pits, 37 Side bone. 3 Portrait statue 39 Genus of 4 Almond. herbs. 5 Indian 40 To bow. mulberry, 41 Occurrence. 6 Steep rugged 43 To sanction.) 45 Bound. rock. 46 Cupid. 7 Indians, 49 Epoch. 8 Nose opening, 51 August (abbr,) 9 Grain (abbr.), 52 Mountain 10 View. (abbr.). it Persia, 53 To exist. 12 Celebrated, 54 Into. 12 3 4 5 j6 I 7 8 9 10 14 Ig 17 18 19 11 IZ 1 -THAT'S TOO BAO By J. MILLAR WATT 01-1, I DIDN'T MISS IT UNTIL I TRIED TO CLOSE p I - �. Iiow t® Conserve TE& D C +" FF Ill're is a grand mealtime innTragc with a delicious, robust flavor all its own. instantly made in the cup - VERY ECONOMICAL. nfAN1 4 oz. size makes 50 cups, 8 oz. she makes 100 cups, 971a/ere /00 Cirri c2t%X01 is I.M,,, 144 Ulf (UP 515 "xi Y' fill? N1611r 4I I '- '`i1- ar smuaata ve.nsaoe m-. difratawt P ST A C[a[AL IIIVIRAGI Quality You'll Enjoy TA s SERIAL STORY WANT -AD ROMANCE EY TOM HORNER rHE STORY: 'fhrough want ads Kay Donovan discovers that she has inherited a factory and a million cans of Wondrosoap from her inventor -father; makes friends with McLeod, Goldberg and Flynn, who were his lawyers; contacts super salesman Ted And- rews to be sales manager of the product; sells it and then recalls it when they discover Wondrosoap cleans too well, eating holes in elothin and paint off cars. Aso through want ads, Kay and Ted find a chemist, Joe Benton, whose Wondrosoap experiment explodes, blowing a hole through the fac- tory; locate Hans Stadt, who had been Mr. Donovan's chemist. Hans explains that one ingredient of the mysteriously explosive Wondrosoap was Donovan's secret formula, hidden in an old wash- stand -the very washstand Mary Marshall, Kay's competent secre- tary had sold to a junkman when she Gleaned out their living quar- ters at the factory. CHAPTER VIII WANTED -Old oak washstands, Will pay $5 each. Bring to Wondrosoap factory or ad - drew( Box 206K, Ted was right. He did corner the washstand market, "Lucky you remembered it was oak," he told Kay as they re- fused a solid walnut antique. "Now if you can just remember some more identifying details." "But the buyer may have al- ready changed it," Mary wailed. "Ho could have put on new hard- ware and painted it. How can we recognize it?" "And how will we inlow if it has the papers in it?" Kay put in. "Hans says they are nailed in a secret panel in the back." "We'll just have to buy 'em and bust 'em," Ted decided. "'There will ho a lot of $5 washstands UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO School of Nursing For the session 19.1E-43 the following courses are offered: 1. .A three-year Diploma course: this Includes a general train- ing in nursing and special preparation for publi0 health nursing. 'd, A four-year Degree course (IL.$c.N.): this includes a gen- eral training in nursing. and special preparation for puha,• health nursing• or hospital supervision, NO'rl:; In both courses pre►uar- ation is given for Nurse rteg- istl'ation, 3. Certificate courses for grad- uate nurses, Scholarships and loans Are now available. Lor further Information address: TILE SEa•'ltE'rA1tY, SCIIOOh. OP NU'IRSING, 1.1N1vr.ltSI'rr OPTOUONTO ANNOUNCEMENT Although there Is no CAA:, tills year, 1,t which you can visit our booths, our Eucalyptus pro- ducts are still nvnllnhle, and can he purchased THROUGH 101'1 LOYAL STORE (4. (.. EXTRACT KOALA Jl1-JUl1ES KOALA EMULSIFIED EUCALi'1"I'U$ KOALA Itm'II (1,nnollne- Eucnlyptus) G. G. EMULSIFIED I:UCALYI'TUS It any difficulty IN obtnlnlns, please write us direct. AUSTRALIAN El1CALTYTU9 LIMITER 78-79 Duchess St., Toronto, Ont. reduced to kindling get through." It was amazing' how many wash- stands cause out of attics, cellars, barns and garages. There were big ones and little ones; lvash- sten(IS falling apart and wash- stands almost as good as new. They rejected all that were not oak, but they scraped paint off of fifty or more to slake sure they were not overlooking the right one. And they paid for re- painting. Joc Benton supplied the money. "I'ul in on this thing too," he said. "I'm going to find that catalyst or grow old trying. And 1'111 not doing it for you, Kay. 'Phis stuff may work with other chemicals, too. Your dad may have made one of chemistry's, big- gest discov'er'ies. We'll probably get a Nobel prize on it." before we It was Joe, too, who decided that Hans Stadt should be told that they had discovered acci- dentally and with a minimum Of damage, that \Vondosoap would explode, violently, They found the old chemist puttering in the lab. "Mr. Stadt," Kay began, "you have probably wondered why we are so anxious to find this form- ula Dad discovered. It's not only that we want to make more of the product, We've a lot of it 011hand „ " Mans nodded, waited for her to continue. "\Vc tried as a cleaner, and we had a little bad luck." The old German laughed. "It ate holes in clothing, no?" "Why, yes!" Kay was surprised, "And it took paint off wood and metal, no?" "Then you and Dad knew it would (lo these things. It isn't really 3t cleaner?" "Yes, we knew that." "Did you know," Benton inter- rupted, "that \Voml'osoap has ex- plosive properties? 'That it is more powerful than TNT?" Hans nodded again. "Yes, We knew that, too." • r r "It is a long story, Miss Katie," Hans said. "1 don't know when your father discovered this sub- stance you call Wondrosoap, May- be when you were a little girl. Ile had worked on it for years. When he sold his invention to the automobile company, he had enough money to spend for ex- perimenting. I came with him then. "1 had come to America from Germany after the war, 1 was in that war. I 111a(Ie poison gas to kill 111e11, I thought I was doing right, I was serving my country, just as your American selling Wondrosoap HAY FEVER SINUS SUFFERERS INSTANT 01111 1w I'EC'1'l1't; i)BLII:i''f G.G.EXTRACT Hood Cold., B,onthfth, Play Favor, Sinus COMBINATION25, chemists made nn0lit ions to k it German. , "When f cane• to America I found these people ((ere 111,1 "1y 1'1ll'11lI, 1, 14111 Illy fril011,. gave Illi' t\ irk. I ,e111 1111,111•.• ( bring all' 1'rll•d;1 111111 III\' 1111; herr, \\e 4Were ha11t1\. I hl .;tl e I1 0113:411. Ile paused to (11 ;Aid light I1 haltered bril. "fly boy, 011 1( 1114 Leel. I. 1, (' were :lweriran My ((ifs 1114!. She wanted to be buried :11 erirn, 4144 (4( 4 Falk, IIn1111. Gnus 1111111' lull. 1 1,,11E aiulU'. "'1'144 depre-1"o rlu11e, 1 1\;, getlIlI 0111. 1 11,:.1 1111 job. nil 511 (((1111. lid: in (,1 Tuan'' I)l('\• (Were n 1,, -r 1 amt y(.1• father, Tin: 1411(411\;111. lir gl1YI' 1110 1(u' it, 44 1. 4l l' 10 1'11. Ile 1\;t= Illy 11',1 1111." Elly ;lull Jet• v(;, , 11 1111!,, u;' . 1I•h'i nen` Moi.' S1,011', : Irl t' 11,! 111111 tell it ;1s •1111\1; a. i',1 1\ .-3111. "'1'3111 11(4110\nn l•.ted 11'1. Ile toll) 1111' : Ihont 111` in%1.11i1,111, dl: eu1'e,1' 111 41 L0,( 1 1(131..,'.1 . \\'e 11 1111,;('d (1 11 1,0.,1,1:11 1. It 11.a not all\W8y5 C;o bought chemical; in-te.1.I of feed. 'Troll] lay brntner, in ilernl;,;l(', 1 hoard of changes that 4.144' going on. Long ala, your LIII;I r said Illi• War must 001114. Ile c011111 see that. I could sec it. too. " 'When it docs 011m', 1181115,' ho said, 'it must not find us like it did in 1917. America must he ready. Thele must be shells, bombs. We must do our part.' "For years we worked, until we finnlly were successful. \Ve have an explosive -a super -explosive -that is safe and easy to handle. It can be stored in boxes like - like soap. It will explode only when mixed with acid, alcohol and water. You will find all three are necessary, Mr. Menton." "1 discovered that, rather sud- denly," Joe agreed. "As long as those reagents are septu'ate<i," Stadt went on, "there is no danger of any explosion. That snakes this product great. It will burn but fire will not detonate it. If an enemy tries to destroy it with another ex- plosive, he could do no more them scatter it, Even if he tried acids, it is unlikely that he would t•hiult of alcohol and water." "How did 1)ad intend using it?" Kay questioned. "In delayed explosion time bombs," Hans said. "In the fac- tory in Germany during the last war we made them, Acid and explosive separated by a thin met- al partition, The acid eats th1'oat:1i the 111etaI-1100111!" "Tine's bombs were better. 'the acid cut a -trnug spring, holding the separate panel. The panel ' -;lid and alcohol and water mix thoroughly, it reaches the ex• plosive . ," "And it's good night for blocks around," lienton supplied. • • r Kay was still puzzled. "Why did you and Dad keep all this so secret? Why didn't you sell the idea to the government? Why label it as 'Wondrosoap- the all purpose elenner'1." "That was 'a'im's idea. The gov- ernment w'asu't as interested in explosives when he liscovered this as it is now. There was danger that some spy alight dis- cover our secret. if he had an- nounced his discovery publicly, he could not have kept control of it -for you. Ile was thinking of you, Miss Katie, always, "As a somewhat eccentric in- ventor and a crazy old chemist, puttering around with tl soap that would clean anything, we were left alone. There was no danger. '1'inl built his factory away ant here, so that there would be roost to expand it when the time clone, You own all the land around. "'Pint had these 'Wondrosoap' labels printed for the cans, Ho priced it high because he never intended selling' it, as a cleaner." "'That wag my bright idea," h::y admitted. "\\'hat if someone had used acid . , ," "That's unlikely," Joe com- mented. "And the cans, Mans, You can take the lids off and drop thein into a 3 -inch shell case very nicely, can't you "That was part of the plant. We made a million can; of it so you would have plenty to sell at once, Miss Katie. We made it when we could buy raw mateials cheaply. We bought in small quantities, so no one tvould get suspiciotlS. Not even Mr. rpm knew how much we had in the warehouse." "After 1)ad died, Mike knew how many, but he didn't know what!" • • • Ted tossed the wreckage of washstand No. 75 into the fast- growing pile of kindling wood, "I don't think we're ever going to find it, Ted," Mary said. "You have pried the backs of all these washstands, smashed them into splinters, and what have we got? Twelve old newspapers, three love letters, two pictures-" "And five blisters!" Ted added. "Well, only five more to go, today. But there'll be more tomorrow. Eighty washstands at $5 apiece. That's running into money'," Ile lacklld another ((ith h:unulIr and ('14)54'1 "'that 11(111,,3 like IIIc 111141" .\l aro b(glui. 4111intl'rcd. \ni1a 11 1111 ter) ((r :141IelIkrll pr1110 l:. The bark of the ((Il4ll t.inll tient, then snapped 1.0e, .t large manila en - ,1 111111 , 111,11 ,(1111 a 'hark 5h0e- ((1;111.. (4' ! ;11 '1'4(15 11'1 1. (Continued NI 'It We('1) "n1' we Cast Knitting On And Off Loosely <, rnly Needs Sucks for Goyt With t-oug Feet II 111 1; 41,, 1111;1, 011100 1.4 (L1 I,nlll;n:' 1,0011 ;11 1,•1111;1111; 1;r :;Ile to 1:et 1111 lin, 1 I\ ; In' ` 11'1' 411 Lim! 1111 140') . \l ill l 1 1,(1;,(''1 1001 411,0 to It 4'1111111 l' oldiors 1'11(1 11mi ('40111- 411 5111 t `. :14111 4;14('1, ,III ;I;,'r( 1,(1 t hall. 11 `04',4,111 4(411 a pity to break (h, eagles 111 the 5.11('11, ;lid (hl' III 1 Lr (f sll'4';Ile1'F. rule, nl4irh, if fol. nail 114111i4I4 the cause fol such complaints: "In casting on 1,:'e 11111 111014 of wool for (\'(4y stitch. 31(0t knitters cast on 'y marking It loop over the 11111011 or forefinger of the left hand and knitting it with the right-hand needle. Measure off 48 inches for this left-hand thread; cast 1G on each of 3 needles. I hear you say you 081111(41 possibly use that much -it is too loose. You can; it is not too loose. 11 you use steel needles, make the first loop tight, and the others looser, Try using wooden needles; try using size 6 or 8 needles and then changing to smaller ones, '1'ry casting the whole 48 on a largo needle then knitting off 16 on each of 3 smaller ones, 'fake any sock you have recent• ly made; stretch the top as far as you can; measure a man's leg. Are you sure it is largo enough? Remember that the least feeling of a top around the leg becomes very painful after hours of weal'. For this same reason, never join w001 in the sole. No matter how thin you think your joining is, it will thicken after being thoroughly wet. As for casting off, here is a never -fail method, Knit 2 stitches together, pull the new stitch out at least 12 inch long, and put it back on the left-hand needle. Knit that and the next stitch to- gether, pulling the new one out long, and putting it back on the left-hand needle. Continue across in this way until all the stitches aro used. This makes a double edge that will not ruffle, and will not ravel easily even if broken. And one last word: 10w• and then, knit a pair of socks for a boy with real long feet. The Army has just lots of them! - V. S. in Christian Science Moni- tor. GAY TWO-PIECE STYLE By Anne Adams A summer star is the two-pieccr . practical, cool, comfortable. Pattern 411;1 by Anne Adams is a versatile style -it's a nice com- bination of trier lines and femin- inity. Take your choice of neck- lines. Pattern 4119 is available in plisses' sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 16, dress with collar, takes 36.5 yards 35 -inch fabric. Send twenty cents (20c) in coins (stamps cannot be accept- ed) for this Anne Adams pattern W Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto. Write plainly size, name, address and style number. "hire l'4rISpies" Is 11 regis- 11 red 1 rade [nark of Kellogg Cum1'any of C'uuula Limi- ted, for its brand of 0v01 - pupped rice. Cetsolne today! 1 ICE KRISPIES Old Hats Become Best 1942 Models This year's latest models 111 hats for British men and women are coming from relics formerly set aside for the old clothes man. This became apparent as re- ports filtered in that milliners. and hatters were scurrying through the streets competing with the used clothes collectors for the old head -gear. The cast-offs are realizing any - things from ten cents to $1,20 each. Once bought, they are stripped, sterilized, cleaned, reno- vated and then exhibited as 1942's top priced latest models. TABLE TALKS Ginger Ale As An Assistant Ginger a!(. used as a base with fruit juices and tea and "what not" is the ingredient which adds zest to any of these combinations. Although as a beverage it does serve a most important role on occasions, ginger ale will go solid with the addition of gelatine and makes 50010 of our most attrac- tive molds either for salads or desserts, carrying with it the same exquisite flavors which we get in it as a beverage. We hope you will find these recipes helpful in planning your summer menus: - Ginger Ale Delight 2 talble. goons gelatine ,0 cup cold water 12 cups ginger ale 1 cup 1(1(1lled pineapple 1 bottle maraschino cherries 1 cup line shredded cocoanut 2 cups canned apricots Soak gelatine in cold water, and place over boiling (eater un- til dissolved. Cool; add the ginger ale slowly, stirring until blended. Combine with fruits, diced or cut in small pieces. When congealed serve on lettuce with fruit salad dressing. Serves 8. Chocolate Ginger Ale 1 cup sugar Is cup ground chocolate as cup ]lot water 1 stick cinnamon 2 tablespoons strong coffee 1 teaspoon vanilla 1~( teaspoon salt Cool( sugar, 0hocula10, water and cinnamon together for 10 minutes, cool; add strong coffee, vanilla and salt. Store in refrig- erator until serving ti(110. When really to serve use two tablespoons of this syrup: 1 tablespoon heavy cream over la cup shaved ice 31111 fill glass with ginger ale. Ginger Ale Ice 1 tablespoon plain gelatine '( cup cold water 1'1, cups ginger ale ';I cup nutmeats cut fine Iv cup celery chopped 1 tablespoon crystallized gingen 1 cup assorted fruits tdrainen grapefruit, apricots, peaches, oranges) Dissolve jelly powder in hot w'atet. and chill. Add ginger ale which has been thoroughly chilled. When mixture is thick and syrupy fold in the balance of the in- gredients, '('urn into 111(411! and chill until firm. t IIIlIOld on crisp endive and serve with generous portion of mayonnaise. Ginger Ale Surprise 1?w cups ginger ale 21 tablespoons cornstarch 1 egg:' yolk 112 tablespoons sugar Few grains salt Whipped cream Heat ginger ale to boiling' point and stir in cornstarch which has been (moistened with cold water. Pour slowly over beaten egg yolk; acid sugar and salt. Return to rouble boiler and cook over hot water stirring con: tartly for 20 minutes. Fill baked tart shells with the mixture after it has cool- ed thoroughly, ('Hill and top with whipped errant for serving. Summer Salad 1 package lemon jelly 1 cup boiling water ' 1 cup ginger ale 1 tablespoon vinegar 1 cup pineapple 1 cup grated carrots ',k cup pecans (cut fine) 1 teaspoon salt Dissolve jelly in boiling water. Cool and add ginger tile. Chill when slightly thickened; add vinegar, diced pineapple, carrots, pecans and salt. Place in ring or individual molds. Chill until firm. Serve on lettuce with mayonnaise. Serves (i. Miss Chambers Welcomes personal letters from interested renders. She Is pleased to receive sugges(luus on fouler. for her column, and le vn ready to listen to your (/pet pee,cs," Requests for reelpes or special menus lire In order. Address your letters to "Miss Sidle 1t. Chum - ben, 73 West Adelaide Street, 'r1, ronlo," Send stomped self-addressed envelope 1f you Wash u reply, We Will Win! As surely as Springtime comes and melts the snow's into blossoms, we will win. As surely as the stns rises and drives away the terrors of dark- ness, we twill win. As surely as mother love com- forts the doubts and pains of little children, we will win. As surely as the storm clouds scatter 10101'4 the (wind and the world is bright once more, we will w'in. As surely as alight does not make right, and that virtue does win over vice, we will win. Yes, we will win. Doubt that, and you (1011111 everything that tilakes life possible. \Vo will win. And the more promptly, the more willingly, the more thoroughly you do your part the. sooner we will win,-Kiwanis Magazine. Some Day There'll be a day when skies aro blue again. There'll be la day when dreams c0(11e trite again. Yes, somewhere in the near or faraway, There'll be a dry. There'll he a day when we can say, "it's over.,' 1'14014'11 he a day when dream in clover, And though above us now the sloes are gray, There'll be a day. we 01111 There'll be a day of dawn and golden beauty. 111 nay to recompense our endless Csty, An answer to the faith o1' all who pray, There'll be a day'. -Grautland Mice in N.Y, Sun. ISSUE 32-'42 Page 4. teuctc m[oct•tuctit•mg itttNfttottostcloctoct 4►ccet ltmostmetetcct tttoct J. H. R. Elliott. Gordon Elliott INSURE NOW! AND BE ASSURED, g Elliott Insurance Agency CAR—FIRE—LIFE—SICKNE6S—ACCIDENT. BLYTII •-- ONT. Ottico Phone 101. Residence Phone 12 or 110. "COURTESY AND SERVICE" THE STANDARD 11 HULLETTRett III 1i,ttul's at owhome Of all'• (h1 \I'e(1u'sday afternoon, the reg. land \1rs. J. 1'. It 1111 on in'In(lt 11. \I r. alar monthly meeting of the \1'• M. S. iJ;teli Iles<;Irti and ..\li,s I'.IIU1 Spencer of \\'allaeel tit rg, Mr. and \Irs. ('lar• 14 1111(1 1...1 es Aid of iMac.; ('Lurch w•as en'e Jlhu'rs, \I r. anti \Irs. Jael( :\r 1i held at the home of Mrs. Peter Taylor 1u)I(l and gun, I.t'. intI, of London. NI with a splendid attendance, Grump R No. ;l had charge of the program. IMrs. Herman ('h; ina,'y, Eleanor and 4,lintnli ., nl' \\'Inllsor, spent Inst 1ve"Ic On 'Thursday afternoon, Group No. fiwith air. ;111(1 airs. It, t'hanuo'y. R of Yarns (church and some of the 1 neighbours met at the home of \l r; 1 I te's Mel Craig and . 111I'Thompson George (carter and quilted two cotton of Itarriefiel(l, were butte over the fi ' w'elt•ea(l, g!quilts and tied one woollen milli for fi the Ited ('cuss. ::\Ir. aim airs. ('alvtn Robinson, \l1, 5. '1'te I)..cviuu' week the same group Ruth and Roy Itohiason, of \Wind:'.u'. • _..._ ,-.. _.. - -... ". _.r _._.. �at�atalaa,arst.l.,atalalala)eta:.alalalala)ala;sista,alaral�lat31%a)ata)a)atal3tata),dlala)atala+Dl;d, - -- quilted (lope quilts at Chu belie of I spent eve; the holtd;ly 11•ilh filth lin" Mr', Robert Jamieson, rolafiwes. sound dainty ladies make whoa they'reI \lis~ Mildred Jones spent the we:yh ITHE FINEST EYESIGHT SERVICE YOU EVER HAD!: No hit and run methods \' �our eye. are thoroughly i' an11111 ed and y0.l are told the 1'utlt about them. If glasses are sary. you get the ftltt^I quality a' the lowest prices. 'Twenty-five years experience 111 Optometry i; I your guarantee of Satisfaction In Willows Drug Store, Blyth, �R. A. Reid R.O1 EYESIGHT SPECIALIST Appointments with Mr, Willows frightened by mice. :11rs• \\'m. Gunnell of Clinton, has ,,nil with her sf.,ter. Mrs. Treason Grandfatherused to hale a yeller• been spending a few days with Mr. slim:melon, al Peeve, ;toil' old chair that stood on the vice' ;tad MI's. \VIII. l';u'ter. i alis Shirley l'bomney, of Marwick, u andah during winter and ,i1n. ta'r ...' 'Mr. and \1r,. John MPl'I'ollaht Of visited at the home of her ;runt. Urs. rain or shine, Ile made it himself ,\Walton, visited on \\'eunesday atter ,tubi Thompson.from timber he cured shortly alter he noon at the home of \Ir, and al r' \I r. and Mrs. .1rn01(1 Cr lit; were hoist steaded of this ('0111e;stun. 1'0 George Cartel'. ihnn(l;ly visitor= with \1'111 hilar 'sa11uner afternoon= he would retire to friend,. j alis: (Gladys Jefferson. I1. N.. of and (laugh. \\'onal'4to(•I(, is spending; a ';teat ion at the chair WItill his corn -cob filled wilt i a particularly frightful blend of to• bacco which he used to make fro 11 leaf tobacco and as he pulled he would Toch ... back and t'ot'th ... ''(creak • ('reale • Creak'. 'Ther the creaking would slop' up ... the pipe would drop in one corner of his mouth and hitt head would lilt forward. A fly would come along and after rrm•ryltt through the matted braid land for a perfect set•,lowlt on his nose. Ont hand would come up with a terrific ,swat ... and the fly Would '/4)0111 away off up into the viics along the side of the veranda . the rocking would start up again. Finally it would lap• er off down' and with his piPe hang- ing from a limp arm over the side of ' the rocker he would doze in tilt' - -- - -- -- --j chair. PHIL OSIFER Of 'ours' squeikillg rocket', are OF LAr% NE %i'S really at thou hest in the Whiter. time. Take a frosty or stormy night ----- lin the winter when you're sillily!, 1 like the squeal; of a ruching chair. i ground after supper. The chores arc '\\circa so0 come in from the fields, finished Patricia Ann is prattling eat your Supper and then 1w'th that 'away ,(,Dant some pictures in a book feeling of healthful th•edne.:s, adjourn 1 vu1 yon have the rocker (Ira Wil up bo to the veranda. it's sort of comforting I side the kitchen table, Mrs. Phil usu• to be able to sit down it an old lush' Ially sits on the other 51(10 of the table ioned rocker and gently rock away. if I with some knitting. She'll reek , the chair squeak,; a little ... so midi Iiattul then IIi rock and the squeaks the better. A rocking chair squeak reenl to rhyme into a little melody .. scents to fit into the picture quite well. There's something homely about the squeak of a rocking (hair .. , sort of friendly like. Sit out there on the with accompaniment by tate steaming 1ea•kettle on the stove and the pur- ring of the eat behind the stove on the old rag mat. The wind whistles its arott11(1 the eaves and a coal e\• veranda on a night when the noon is 1 Modes inside the fiery cavern of the scudding itt 11111 out under soft clouds, i'stove. with the millions of night noises I guess the .sound of the rocking (crowding in on you. Crickets and June .'hail's is a homely sort of thing . . . thugs ... and the dog thumping on the ;but it is a friendly noise. Poi. solid 'verandah Iloor a, 11e bites for a pest. 'comfort there simply is nothing to "lies clustered on the outside of the I equal an old-fashioned rocking chair. kitchen screen and Stirring in 0 lazy. They seem to fit you where the fit• anlzzitg Way every time the door is ling is hest ... People don't furnish opened. heroes now w'ltlr chairs like our old Then there's the squeak of the rockers. They may he hound up in chap'. Senn', venerable old chairs Places with stove wire and the arms have 0 deep 1110011 %stile the more may pull out ... and they sag a little hi the wrong direction . . . but they (10 (Teak out in a friendly sort of way. fragile ones have a more femine squeak. Then there are the 01(1 bar- rel rockers .. . such as 'Pial Murphy has around his stove lit the big store in the village. They creak like the ancient timbers of 11 ship. 1 suppose they've heard so many tall tales told that they have a more or less attitude in life , . . displayed by their hoary creaking, nld Miss Abbot is a spin• iter. The 'hairs' in her place have a timid sort of squeal:. \inch like the WALTON 'ah'. and \I)'s. Russel Marks visited on Sunday evening at the home of George Carter, of LondesTboro. I\Ifss Jean Us(:ROnald of 'Toronto. spent the Week -end at the home of hot' parents, air, and Ates. John Uae0o1• a 111. WANTED DONNYBROOK air. a 111 Jtrs. 'Tett Mills ler, Joan, of 'Toronto, \vete week•t'tel her home here. guests al the house of her sister, air:. 1 'Allis 1)itwe Jeffer•:olt• 11.N.. 41110 11 1. N. 'Thompson. enlisted as 11 nursing sister reported' Master Pon tld Campbell has return- t.bi'i week at Hamilton.i,('(ldy. 0(1 front a visit with his sister, Mics. Jlis,: Nellie Flynn, of 'Toronto, 11'1'- I Mr. all"; .1rthur t.pciglcburg, at liit(heter. a visitor with her cnustn, \li::s (Tara . 1111 t Wednesday, August 5, 111.12. Here's Great News For You Wettlaufer's ARE Going but Of Busness! SIe Started Jidy 16 FULL LINE OF MEN'S WEAR DRY GOODS, CHINA WALL PAPER. NE ET '"L.-. U FR'S al'' 1 .1,1rd Jefl'er••nn mid eJtil,Irl n I.I In11'i'I ft to f ,;•';et. t,.;t.4. k.r 1i;f.:11; C1'1 Here Snul;ty l istlnl'; 11111) ll'li'll,ir. AT YOU AT YOUR P AND v'.;Cx!.Y: ,Ygj.Chi11��1Ct'+J/'•r®l�L�O�.•t :.1'/, N1 11 14T1 i'lf t'1:It'1'I1')1)1: 1:) ti Gy)fit , .•) V IVE I)(11+1.,‘I;r-s • XA1' 1'1"'1x' 1)1)1.1..\1: IV OP 11 ��.:t�.ki.::x K.:., �... `'�.i + N,".. ^.p,yvY^ , w......., .r xx. .. .. ' ..., .,"'�.it`.'.'PV•!T, YOU CAN NOW BUY WAR SAYINGS CERTIFICATES MEM AND WOMEN FOR IMME For Factory Work During TOMATO SEASON beginning About August 25 MAKE APPLICATION TO Libby, McNeill & Libby CHATHAM, ONTARIO Applications from those engaged in war work will not be considered. Through the co-operation of your local Bank, Post Office or Trust Company, you can now buy War Savings Certificates in the most convenient way. You get delivery when you pay your money, Just state the "size" of certificate you want, and it will he registered in your name. 'These are guaranteed invest- ments at $4.00 for $5.00—$8.00 for $10.00—$20.00 for $25.00, (Yost can also exchange 16 War Savings Stamps for a $5.00 Certificate.) INTEREST AT 3% • TAX FREE • • REDEEMABLE • • REGISTERED Nations! P'ar Fittarlce Commillee uuw Wednesday, August 5, 19'12. C�.4J�D�•: Did•1'b1'hi.p..�..�.1'Or0.�..�.•j.•�.•tP.O..•.,OJ LYCEU,i\I THEATRE WINGHAM—ONTARIO, Two ShoM's Sat. Night Thurs., Fri., SA—Aug. 6.7.8 b, —SPEGIAL— ;,AI:bo:t • Cost:llo, Kathryn Grayson'. • in "itlO 1tI'TA" >: • , ,l'• Costello in a Inillhful up -• Irlrrinl{s mule 11 ;..011 (l%', Also Cartoon and News. ,: .,Matinct Sat. afternoon at 2,30 p. tn." Mon., Tucr., Wcd,—Aug, 10.11.12 A Joan Bennett, Franchct Tone, In " 2, Knew all the Ans\\/ers;= r-• • \n shirt ii illy blight and 11133)• oughly ;111111.111 comedy. Also Andy Clyde Comedy and Set ten Snapshots, ,SI i .:.,..;..•,.•, .•. •. ,••...•, • .•. •, .•„•. ,,, , 441. ,, ,•1 •, .•. •.,•,:, 1.3,•1 , 111(113' 111133\\11 (0 e\1'ryunr in Auburn. k m1.1 altl'nlls 370 111.1' hOn,I'bnlll (111110, in ,. Toronto, were holiday. \'Isilors III th„ hon' ul \1l'. and Air,. Charles I.: S)(1111111. \\111(11 'h,' r-h3rc \% 11 hr. grand -II{,' \listi (;'are \lie (,u. N(I n \ionlllell. . is a nleln'(l'r 1•, v1,..11 ;mg 1111. 3):03(1, 11(1 11 11•;111 I. nlle31;,1111 ill K1111\ ('nit- bIul, It. N., ((1 ('h'lr.'ll. \Ir, and \I r. John \lis miry .\ \Hull ). (1' \1'111,0-A0.1i, 1,1 wllh \Ir. and \II 111. \('e'; rll(1 \\'1111 110{• 11111'1117, 111 ('lllltl). \11. and \Ir:. 11.113)11 I1• .\lunru. ri Miss Fern La\b'r of I'rrgus, with Ali*, 11('1(11 \1111-11 (1n3glile: of \Ir. \Ir. and Alrs, (;'erg' Lawler. \IIIrsIl. coulnu'ncl':1 .\Ir. awl \Ins. Ilar\\•in \larlanl 111111 \wood -lurk hu 1)13)1! family, of I"1rg117, vi -1 with 3111'1111 111'1'1' 1111'1' t 111' \\•I`C'I.-('1111. \li I.o:n'I 1('0113 113 lues rrt11rn^.I 1tus.l•1 Kjug of London al his hum(• 111111{(' at11'r kit i111; in .\1'i' i. 111'11' (1vi'r th” holiday wreck end. .1.11''; 1'!1111'1)., II 1, returned 111 \lit-; Air, and Airs. (;11r1101) 1'11111(', \1'illiiun 1f1 chill 1111(') \'1.13111.: \I r, and Airs. Al 11 nil (1eral(1 (3' hergi 7, \11h MI'. and kt ch! 11(,'1 110 3i• \Ir,. \\',trier .\31Irc\•;. IIar13' .\1311111, of \\' '1tI-lnr11, hi • mother, 11t,. ,In1111 Arthur, 0\•rr! – --� 11. \., I;u(I '1'f '11 111 1,11:1 1 ung 314.1 II til \i.I3 Lloyd. Irl gel •n1', :111(1 \Ir•.. It .11 Il;1 Beni ; in the \I' 3iII y. THE STANDARD ''• ` "Page 6, te:V!`'Cif!,,,c rzrz:?t..cbvil,!•mr..cilltre,tm,:{,.et.7,c1y1,!?•t vtlectctcg°IctP'ntf'.VECI Oi CI. 4 I 11;t�i6tf1V4teit� EZI•V4141CtZICLII4 VtlIC.I.t�'ntCIVCIetesti eta 1toXI .3.111;A'I'ltl';, • CAPI'I'A1. '1'IILA'1'RE REGENT THEATRE • I.1 CLINTON_ NOW PLAYING: Ann Sheridan in: "JUKE GIRL' GODERICH, SEAFORTi-1, (..1 AUBURN .11' \Ir, and 1I1 s. .1 111!1.; Ilenre ;1111 11' w, of 111111, Vi +il"11 nn 1;11II11 \It11 31 111111 .3Irs. 1'har1'7 SI•ntl. Al(rni!Ig ((ray'('!• 11131sermon in SI.' \Ir. 111111 \Irs. ,I,(;( ph Seidl, of 'Ivor, 111711'7 Chinch, ill 113 11.313. (111 lilllllllly, 1131111, \Cavi•' \ 1 111(1' 111,'1' 1111' \\ 1.1.1, -end .\ugnst llJi, \\dib \Irs 3'. .\. I 1(1\v: -on. \Ins. Jahn tiynlington 'cocci\ ed con- \li;s .\hll,l 11•itrll has rein grlatulalhilt. 113 111-1- ,�1r11 Iit)hday 031 3.11ln'dny. ,\1131 .\131'3', 11 .II,• i- 1(111- 'I'.)!uliI after a 1'1.11 \\'1111 I1''r 1�1;I,(�ItAVE \Ij,s 1111111 NI'tll('ry of 1.ondoi, sp1'311 the 113)1111713 (VI'I'I( -,'1111 wil11 11.{• Tuts, Mr. and Air'. C. \elhery, \Vano711. par- / i� lid .1 Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Victor Mat'.Ire, Carole Landis, Rita Hayworth, John Sutton. 11"1111111 ;(!i'I ('11'•Mlil( \1'311 li\, ill 11 1.1,''11;(- )•11':1'11 II'•\'('I- furvrt ,111' (I :1 I, S A l," IN TECHNICOLOR Thursday, Friday, Saturday John Payne, Mau'een O'Hara, Ran- dolph Scott Nancy Kelly and William Tracy 1'11' I e('lle'I!'r • I(I(• (' milia ;III(( 111, y'1'' nn th(' I'"'\v1 fur mono' . 311'111-. fi�ii'- ,11111 fink' "'F() the Shores (ll' Tripoli" IN TECHNICOLOR COMING: Al;bott iind•Cotello in: RIDE 'EM, COWBOY. NOW PLAYING: Abbott and Cos• tello in RIDE 'EM COWBOY Monday, Tues:lay, Wednesday He try Fonda, Olivia de Haviland and Joan Leslie In the (fit !hit ba- all Ilii• pr!or• di,- "The ti, in 1(33:11 111111 I0\iu. "The Male Animal" Thurs., Fri., Sat.—Two Features Bruce Cabot, Constance Bennett and Warren William ('1(1 utile tinr6inun and his uli.(Iu(c 77113 cru -ode 1n the \\n'(ly "Wild hill Hickok (tides" Joan Davin-, Jinx Falkenherp and Joan Woodbury 1' I' ( ,( 1(1.7311 pot nil -Ica 1 )0111'03' .'(1 bating From :1'lanhattan" COMING: Swint It, Solder, and Saloon Bar. NOW PLAYING: Olson and John- son in HELLZAPOPPIN. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Randolph Scott, Maureen O'Hara and Ronald Reagan, 1'1('se31 11 'I',•rhllirul)r frtl.t 113' 1'1111 'u(1 lidV1'111ure with the 111'311 (10g; "'TO the Shores of Tripoli" Thurs., Fri., Sat,—Two Features GEORGE FORMY, Britain's buck- toothed, hlues•blitzer becomes a bumbling ambassador. "SOH1 h American George" B.II Elliott and Luana Walters, ally wnh r(nu ul' (' 1(11(1 ;I(I\,'ul1n'(' in ":Across the Sierras" COMING: Rita Hayworth as: MY GAL SAL. 0 Mat.: Sat, ano Holid•tys, 3 p.m. Mat.: Wed., Sit , Holidays, 3 p.m. Mat.: Sat. and Holidays 3 p.m, j ..,'�,.:',.-:_�d,Ji.�,.:,.:(:+1..i.:,...h,c�.:1,c,�',.'��...1.:•.�1:1�',.l.c,.. �.: �•�,..,�I<,�,c,.:,�, �T, .. ., , 1.�.�,�1'.•�.p.a,c,�fQi L,i,�,,.��✓,�,d,o, Dli1(°-�i��.'-)l�l�lr}t�l'Jtlt"�lor�,trd7.�!>•iicl�Ia�l,�2 Kitchener, with r'•Iali\e- h( r(•. Mr. and \Ins. I1, \1'illiilnl. oil of 'Ivor• I \li-; N (1'{n:{ N1'1!1"•ry' 111' I I.unilInn. uc(1 30 onto, wllh \1{'. 1311 .\Ins. \I. IlrallhIu•11 101, l'('turn(•11 to 11(1 1111!11(' ;(11' r a boli .; 11111th'), anal \I r, 11131 \Ins. \eil AI'('t{'a. Illuy \\'ilii relative, here. ii I \I r. an(1 A1r;, 1''1'11 .1)111'1)113 037 Jelin 1'11311(-., \\11( •'\a -4'\( )1'17' 111 � .a .1 131'('(1 11 I'",1' \\'(37'1;' ;I;'.n l-'tlli1'-(l 1" i,1 L1 ilii home here o3 friday alter!! cot „ III,. \\as accompanied by Iii-, n31'," 'n, who \\'ill coil Ili 1111('311 111111. ;,p NI 1.31 i,1 OJ 1'1 59 1,G u (l 1.p V \la11e1 ('1111111; ;13{1 Edith \ic('lena- n, 61 1;11(11 was uphointed to Inoh (1'1('1' nl 1ili7. '1'11(' 'ilk' 111' s,)IVt;1' cn1111I/11 �W :1111011111 Hi In 111'('1' 'aIle. 1(1!ii 1.0111 1110 iv 1111'4 1111-S7 wa; disc11=-'d 1('30)1 3 3' i • \I1.. and .\li ,. ('1:{111•; ,\((Neil of 'PI'' E NOW are rati ;led by coupon The ration is one ounce of tea or four ounces of coffee per person, per week Coupons A, B, C, D, and E, on the Temporary War Ration Card, now in the hands of the public, are to be used, and are NOW valid for the purchase of tea and coffee. Each coupon will entitle the purchaser to one ounce of tea or four ounces of coffee - a supply for one week, If desired, purchasers may use any or all of these five coupons simultaneously, and buy up to 5 weeks supply at one time, on the surrender of the appropriate number of coupons. Numbered coupons ars: good only for the purchase of ;saggar and may not be used to buy tea or coffee. Similarly, lettered cor.y,;As may not be used to buy sugar. COFFEE CONCENTRATES AND SUBSTITUTES CONTAINING COFFEE One coupon must be surrendered for each quantity of coffee concentrate or substitute containing coffee, suf. ficient to make 12 cups of beverage. TEA BAGS REQUIRE COUPONS When purchasing tea bags, the fol- lowing coupon values shall be used: 2 coupons for a carton of 18 or 20 tea bags 4 coupons for a carton of 40 or 45 tea bags 8 coupons for a carton of 80 tea bags CHILDREN UNDER 12 YEARS OF AGE ARE NOT ELIGIBLE TO RECEIVE ANY RATION OF TEA OR COFFEE. SPECIAL NOTICE TO RETAILERS On and after August 3rd, retailers must establish their right to purchase new supplies of tea or coffee from their suppliers by turning over to the supplier currently valid ration coupons, equivalent to the poundage of tea or coffee ordered from the supplier • TC SW Ottawa, August 3rd, 1942 '1111(' 1'",11lit Ills('{ hp!, of I In' Ile1 3;(:31'' 111•d ('1'u,- I11('cti117 \V;1` 111.1,1 ill 1111' \1'(11'11 ('((111317 oil I','Iday 1111 I' - noon. The president. 3', 11. Coolie,. \vas in charge. II \•a; ilecidr(! to (1l;Mte _:, comfort hat:; rm. 1111 sniinr; 1(11(1 a con3nil3'''' \\•1313 \111)1'1 11111)1)') meeting closed, \l1';. .10113 .\l 'linirc i, spr•ndin7 a 1'.31' \\'1.1;; \fth 111'1. son, Nelson Ale. Colin., and family. at hoist( in. (Willson ,\rnlstrnn...'. of Now hamburg hill .lade .\rnlstrong of Itramplu3. 11( 3'' hunt1' for Ih1 week en(1. Iliclt Il•\•in ()I' the ILt'..\.I . who 1; 1111 111113' on 3111 ea'3 coast i; 110111' with 1117 parents, 11 r. ;0111 \ins. 11. 11.001, (111 a IWI) \cueh': I'lll•i01igh, 111 ; •11111Irw111 of 'Toronto, also home for the \\•sell -end. \Ivs. IC. ('a moron of 1,u(.1; now, vis- ited her sister, 1Ins. A. 1'10(.0111. 11r. and \ars. Niel Keating of Lun- din, spent the week -end with rel;111\'.: herr'. 11. n•i71) 10 thank the 11!1111)' 3111'11{17' and ac1111a1itatu'('7 101' the Icindnt ;s and sympathy sho\•n during our re - .1. 11. .\nd.r.;nn, over the week- ren3 sold hl1'01lV01n1'nt. \l;o for the 011(1. tl111i3' he111111331 31111'(1 11111131.;, 111111 Evening prayer and sermon in 'Trio- special 111anlcs to I)1'. II. A. S. Yokes, it\' Church at 7,30 p.m., .\ugn;t nth. 0101 11''. 1'. II. Streeter.--• \l1'. and Alt's. Norman Hamilton and nullity. 1,.11)1ES' «'111'TE PURSES $1.19 ('I11141)REN'S \V11ITE PURSES . ,19c 1,,1i)IES' CHIFFON IIOSE S9c LADIES' (,ISLE 11OSE :19c MEN'S WORK SOCKS 29e, :19c mid !9c MEN'S WORE PANT'S S1 19 MEN'S OVERALLS S1.9S Card Of Thanks PI-IONE 79. 1tcIK'ivtrC'f, zkvvr4bratf;ke.,otvete stctoct ctv 1'o \\'e \sash 10 1.x1(1'1'. 0.3' ,!ll"1'c Itp• Black Hoof Coal1in ib preri11tiou to the 111:1113' r1'Liti\' - 1111(1 °( Ifrien(1; for the kindness and sYnlPa111y ; 1 1 el' G81loil SJC shown throughout 111(' loot; 1113'',31 of , 9; Tractor, Funnels r; 11n(1 during Cu' time of oar here('\etnent. \•'• wish 311 1's(,l'1's7 thanks fur the many beantf• fol 11(11111 tributes, (1101 the loaning of \Ins. 'Ala son. aid I'anlily. Card Of Thanks \I1., and \Ins. ,1(111'31 \\'ightman and family were vi'flnt•; \with :Mr. and 1,0N DESBORO EAS'(' W'AWAN OSI -I Airs, Ilett' Itnyd of 'Toledo, (thio, hr..\11111' Ross and \Ins. \Ici<rr re- visited last \\•cell with her friend \lass 30)11)(1 1111 11)1(1(3' from spending 0 I,. Young, \veil; with friends 111 'Toronto. \Ir. and 111';. \\', ,I. Tamhlyn OI for- est hill, 'Toronto, spent the wccl(-,,tl,l .lir. 131 11 r'. Milliard \ICUo\•lut are holiday with his mother lull brother, si11'3{liIg a weeks vacation al the 1133111' 3')(111 'I'In11hlyn, and family. of \1r. and Mrs. .\1ex \Ica:ow';tn. 31rs. John Cartwright \visited last 111'11'11 and \Inrray Duffield of wrelc with M'S. 1 lllI'a Snn(1e1.('OCIc 310)1p11, 31 hi) 7pent 71 we.lc \•iili 111)1) and \Ins. F. Shn•hb1.{,t,lc cl;ln(Iparents. \Ir. and Nit's. \\'illllun 31i'ses N. and 11. ,1ailis0n, 'Toronto, 1•(•111', returned home Sunday. are home on 111111. holidays. I \I1'. and 31rs. Clarence ('lark of \Ins. (1011rg0 Itarr is spending aI istow'l, 'Pent 1110 holiday with 31r. month its ('011)orne Township near and \11.'. 141•slie Johnston., Air. Rid). (:oderich. eat Johnston returned with diem for 3lr, Chirl0s \'aynunttlt ami family a visit. e37 � Each $1.00 n rTractor Pails each ,$1.25 g 4P1'9 Cattle Spray. gal. $1.10 w l,1) Black .Vine and1.4 May Forks. 3:1 0? 437 01 ea op 3337 41) a. T. Dobbyn hatDIMADWANDIDi%D1) 2ldOWiml t NDiD;) :CtglF1(1)1'(ntZtA CPC( CtetilFyabJl>mlglFa CI$titP„ Monuments! V To thosn contemplating build - Ing a Monument . . , Get my. 11 prices before buying. Cemetery Letteri"g a '3poclally. Al) 'Work Guaranteed. Harness Paris Rug Finish, Etc. John Grant CLINTON MARBLE AND a§ GRANITE WORKS 1'a ;:LINTON — UNTARIU. ( lu In `k.a,$ral<.�I�r�ltr� 1�r�1: 721�r�1?at�lhl`d2�i2r�Ir131+t121! Successor to Ball & Zapfe. PERSONAL INTEREST .lir. and Mrs. (:.orgy Walker of Ilensall, ('1313ed nn \lnnday with their cousins, at the Somers 1101110, have returned In their home in the \Ins. .101111 Thompson 111111 Viola, 113'' I \Ins. Edith 11.11, hiss \lcl(1a \'ilinge, having spr0t the past Iwo of the .\11burn Road, \i"sited her sister,' three m011111; with his father, Allied \Irl?.1)113', \11.x. Jamin Sim; and dattgh 11 r,. John Caldwell, and family, 1111 \\'avulilltll• ~311(1(3'', ter, 1•indlt, 311'. 1111(1\les.Areliie ljyn 31is; Doris 11)('nol k holidaying (1.r, o 1'331.3311333, are holidaying at � \Ins. 1.3311O(1 11333')., ul' ltr0ck\ill:'. with her cols in 1'11yllis \lcl'ool. 1\i-itc(1 her ❑ant. \Ins, :\111')3 lluiu!t, 3;)(11(1 31'3r11(1 ibis \.etc, Airs. Charles Meyer; is spending on 11'1(1(3' evening. j Mrs. ,l, N. \(3'1331. and (1aughler. Pa this week MI It 11'1'11(1; near 11(:11'1'1. ; \Ins. `undercook of Loid(31horo, vis- Irleia, of 'Toronto, are spending 0 \l r. and Mrs. 1'. (fall i; 131 the home dell her Heirs, Mrs. Norman Ita(1I'o!•d, w•'ek; holidays with 3lr, and \ars, of their son, Charles hall, 1-11. Mary'. Boot 1e011, 1'itarles lull, 1I1.. Arl Ferguson, 10sU•ncting (133'1. err, It..\.I°. St. 'Phomas. spent 1111, week -end \'1111 his Cnnsi3' the Y(111 11g - h1111 Airs. l3tn•guss and 11iss 11111X1)11, \•ho' vkiled with 31rs. 11a1•garet \tanning the past \'eel; have rclln•ued 10 their home In 'Toronto, (Bev. .\. (1. \lnnries and family are tulchlg 3111713' holidays this 111011th and are al theft summer cottage at Sarnia. '('here wit he no preaching ser\ice o1' 'with( ' School thio Sunday, .\11l111st :1111. but on .\11gust 111 Incl 2:1 there will he serrice a; 3131111)1, On .\11gusl "n there will be no (in friday last. July 31s1, 33i;s i,ois \\'nod and a number of her little friends spent a pleasant afternoon to- gether it being the occa;f0lt of her li rthda3'. 1,0131 vathe ci31i0113 (11-if 11111(hi1)' 131311' birth\da31y sift'1; which • shy no d0uht will 3r':t;m'' 1'01• s('n)r '-„tp•tet:VCI-t1g!;,' orb'g,bA'grgt;;l lgrgrg!gtqtgtg:etgtgtgtgts;tgl4:glgrglClglt:1Igl(tCKICtQtClgt04tVP tittle. All returned homy tired but P 1171,,1)3'. Dead and Disabled Animals \his Lydia'l(tell n1' T)'1(1' her Al REMOVED PROMPTLY. Ihr \eerie -end 0t the home ,)f her par- � The World's News Seen Through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR An International Daily lti'rtt'kI''” is Truthful—Constructive—Unbiased—Free from Sensational. ism —Editorials Are Timely and Instructive and its Daily Features, Together with the Weekly Maga7ine Section, Make the Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home. The Christian Science Publishing Society One, Norway Street, Boston. i\lassachusetts Price $ 12.00 Yearly, or $1.00 a Month. Saturday issue, including Magazine Section, $2.60 a 'Year, introductory Offer, 6 Saturday issues 25 Cents. Name Address SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST cuts. 31r. and \Ins. \\'m. Ilett. )1 mi,,, lioryl Tarter 3; 1,,,11,1,11,,,'I'l'lei holler: .,11\'00[1, 50)31: Seilfortll, 15, CodeCt. with relatives and friends in Toronto, ' 31r. (lion ('11(101' of Ipperw•ash Lea 'h . r spout Sunda' aft,'rnoon with hi; par- , ^° DARLING and CO. of CANADA, LTD. cuts, Mr, tt n d 311' s. G e o l'g e Carter, I %a?I/kVa;aratltIfrat;tt na23t;riilt4ar,t;lt;r4i)t2-.2 ,`? "^tt 1.4t)ObliDat1'1a,:1C ti.. ()lod NO SCORE—YET Nazi torpedo bombers snoop M parents Sea battle which took down to mart level ort, place early In Ju ly, Ailicd convoy bringing (.anterial to Russia THE WAR - WEEK — Commentary on Current Events Hitler's Mighty War Machine Pushes I n t o North Caucasus Adolf Hitler's legions stood last week at the gates of the Cstueas• ai. Almost a month had passed, Nays the New York Time:, since the Wehrmacht launched Its great 1042 offensive in Southern Russia, Yor the U. 6. S. R.—and for the United Nations—the moment was She gravest since the enemy's SOU echoed over Moscow's sub - Fall. From the Rostov entrance to the Caucasus the Wehrmacht road move to two directions, both aimed principally at cutting the Soviet from its principal reserves alt oil and at ultimate penetration Of the Middle blast. It could strike directly eastward across the plains of the North Caucasus, a region of vast collective farms, offering easy terrain for mechanized units. Fbtr hundred and fifty miles away ]lay the mouth of the Volga, where it empties into the Caspian at Astrakhan. A march along such a line would isolate the Caucasus, drive a wedge between the Rod Army forces there and in upper Russia, put the Germans in posi- tion to intercept Allied suppllee coming up the Caspian from Iran• It would also give them a base to push southward, another 460 miles along the flat shore of the Oaapian, to the great petroleum wells of Baku. There they would stand 150 miles from Iran, From Rostov A southward march from Rot- tov, along the Black Sea coast, might net the oil district of Mai - top and reaoh Datum, terminus of the pipe line from Baku. The distance would be 400 miles, the route would take advantage of foothill shoreline and thus avoid the hazards of a thrust directly Into the lofty main Caucasus range. At Batum, the Nazis would be on the Turkish border. The upper prong of the colossal ptneere dive to the Middle East would be elosing in hard. A conquest of the Caucasus would not necessarily mean elim- ination of Russian resistance, The tiorlet forces beyond the Don were surely powerful and ready to apply ecorched•earth tactics if beaten back. The possibility of a counter -blow on the Wehrmaoht'e flank at Voronezh, 200 miles north of Roetov, could not bo overlooked. From bares across tho Volga, from the Urals, Turkestan and Siberia the Russians could draw supplies and fight on. But if 1-litler gained trite land between the Black and Caspian Seas there was no doubt that the Red Army's strength would be greatly impaired and that the Wehrmacht would gain a treasure house of raw materials to carry on a protracted war. 011, The Greatest Prize Overshadowing all other Caucna- lart resources—grain fields rival- ing those of the Ukraine, mince yet to be fully exploited—is oil. Three thousand years ago the dis- ables of 'Loroaster built shrines to the "eternal" fires lit by gas from the Caspian oil beds. Marco Polo caste to the Caucasus to see the o11 dipped up in skin bags, loaded on camels and carried off to feed the alabaster lamps of Persia, Alfred Nobel, who gave the world dynamite and a peace prise, came and built the first of the pipe lines that carried the oil of the Caucasus to the Western World. Joseph Stalin, a son of the Caucasus, knows better than say of his colleagues in tho gov- ernment what the products of the Caucasus mean to all the rest of Russia. Today, through every important Caucasian town run the pipe lines; every city has its refineries. Oil production figures in Russia are a military secret, but estimates are that in normal years the 1laikop and Grozny fields north of the main mountains produce 10 per cent of all Russia's oil supplies and the Baku fieldF, south of the range, yield 70 per cent. For A Mechanized Economy On this oil much of Russia's life depends. The highly mechan- ized Red Army must have it for planes and trik and armored oars and motor lorries. Industry wants it for transportation and power. The peasant end his horse have long since ceased to domi- nate Russian agriculture; today there are 500,000 tractors, 166,000 combines, 211,000 heavy farm trucks, all demanding oil to drink on pain of starvation for Rus• tune, Russia's oil requirements are w large that she imported oil in 1938 and placed her civ- ilians ivilians on rations despite the fact that etre le the second largest o11 - producing country in the world. To keep the oil of the Caucasus from the Russian armies, to win it for themselves, Germany has sacrificed thousands of German and Rumanian and Hungarian lives. On a front extending from Voronezh, far up the Don, reach- ing out toward Stalingrad on the Volga, and enveloping Rostov at the mouth of the Don, divisions have been hurled in relentless at- tack, They were not achieving enc - cow everywhere last week; at Voronezh the IRussians were beat- ing down German attacks, advane• Ing thentselvee, But the peril to the Caucasus overshndowed all else. Key Cities Stalingrad, where the Soviet dictator in the days of the Russian civil war organized Red Army sup- plies, ie a key industrial and communications center. As from Rostov, the Wehrmacht f r o m Stalingrad could attempt to out the Claucasue from the rest of Russia, With the city as a base, the Germans could also strike for the Caspian. Allied supplies from Iran and up the Cae1pien flow through Stalingrad. Rostov was captured briefly last year by the invaders; their subsequent with- drawal marked the beginntug of a Winter of bitter Nazi setbacks, It to a port ret high on the Don's bluffs, a city of more than half a million people, a junction of oil pipelines from the Caucasian retie, of railways tapping great wheat and barley forme. As the Germans hurled them- selves from many isdee at Ros- tov's lines, worried Soviet diplo- mats paid hurried visits to American and English leaders in Washington and London, There was no announcement of the subject discussed, but there could be but ono subject, The saute sub• joet was being talked about in petitions and at masa meetings in Great Britain and the United States. Foreign visitors in Russia heard it from the lips of the Russians themselves: "When will there be a second front?" "May Victory Be Yours" British and American officials had long sauce agreed on the "ur- gent task" of establishing another front in Western Europe to help eoae the pressure on the Itusslau armies. Beyond that there was no otfiotal word, no official action. Many observers had seen in the steadily worsening shipping situ• atton in the Atlantic a sign that a second land front could not be established this Summer. Others had noted that American forces in the British Isles were steadily being increased and believed that they would not be left idle. The mass -scale air bombings of Ger- man cities launched by the Brt- tts'h in June, which some obsorv- ers had seen as the second -front effort, had not been continued. From Moscow came reports that Rude, at any rate, did not seo in them the second front 1t had ex- pected, But Russia and the Caucasue worn not trusting all their hopes to the prospects of a second front; they looked chiefly to their men. From the days of T1mur the Tartar and his Golden Horde to the pre- sent the Caucasus has bean fought over many times, Its sons—Cir- oassians, Catucastans, Georgians, Coesacks, Tartars, Mongols—are warriors, Their traditional dress ham a cartridge belt sewn screw the chest and a dagger fashioned in front. From thne out of mind their usual greeting has been "Be v'lctorioua," and the usual reply, "And may victory' be yours," Stars To Compete For Seagram Cup When a dozen or more strokes under par fails to win fillet place in any tournament the boys are really hot, and Canadian fans are eagerly awaiting the meeting of Jimmy Demaret and Ben Hogan in the forthcoming Canadian Open Golf Championship at Mississ- auga on August 6, 7 and 8. When Bob Gray returned from the Hale America he brought the news that these two stars were planning to take in the Canadian Open, Should they both tee off on August 6th they'll no doubt attract a large gallery, and the fano can look for some sparkling golf before the Seagram Gold Cup finds a new owner, Fur Traders Need No Ration Cards The fur trader and the pros, pector who roam through Canada's remote northern territories, and Indiana and Eskimos living in the hinterland can still get sugar without producing ration coupons, The Wartime Prices and Trade Board has announced that opera - tore of stores and trading posts dealing with Indians, trappers and others living in "unorganized" areas may supply sugar to such groups for any necessary period on the basis of one-half pound per person each week. Persons in organized areas who come to trading posts or stores only once in several months for their supplies are not being pro- vided with ration cards, the Board said, and may buy sugar without producing coupons. Berlin Is City Of War Cripples Travellers arriving at Istanbul from Berlin said the German cap- ital is a city of legless, armless, eyelet8 war wounded, of cabbage and potatoes, watery beer and four cigarettes a (lay, and of plentiful money, but little to buy. Despite deteriorated living con- ditions, however, these observers feet the stolid Germans could carry on three years, or even more, if their army suffered no impressive defeat, REG'LAR FELLERS—A Bargain WHERE DIDJA GET THAT DOC(? WANNA SELL'IM ? 1 II1DIVIDUAI 1 rm ALANIPAVPN MitiIUI A Weekly Column About This and That in Our Canadian Army Some of the 111e11 who cnmo In for more than their percentage of W1 11001.11C118 In the C/111101 11111, or the British, 0r the American—and prohrobly in the German and Jap• nnese, for that nlattel—Army, are the lntellipcnce Olht( re. The r0a. 0011 1a 0110(01F --hill Ibe farts do01 suhl,ta1111111c 1ht kll1dinL. 'Pante vel 111• on 1 llt (111.-111e are apt to thick of "tie(1(1 Set r'if'e" and to cnnjur( up vis<ioo of din'. Ing sp1e4 w'hn di'?:ui t them-elve(, ns organ-„r1IuIe,r or vl,grtahle halnnl('n or gta111ei('11' ryre114 or something 111(•' that. People like E. Phillips Opp1 nheim are rospon- 81hle for that idea. 1 ant 1101 1+,0 in; Mat there 15 1101 n certain pi reHltagt or clever ecplonage work Bono by the. illtelli- genre staffs of all armies but I do know that for every disguised opera tlye who sneaks around hl enemy territory there are a hurl - red careful, meticulous workers who spend long horn's In offices at General Staff Headquarters sifting little bits of Information that reach them from many sources. They have a long, i rying and arduous Job to ego, a Job that calls for keen analysis, infinite pains- taking—which has been called "genius"—devotion to duty and practical imagination. Nothing is too trivial for them to note, noth• ing so big that it can hide wanted facts from them. As you follow through the organization of your Army you find intelligence officers at Division, Brigade and Unit Headquarters, all engaged 111 the vastly important job of gathering information that will be of value to the High Command, How do you imagine foo' iustaneo that our official communiques are able to state that "so many men and guns composed the opposing forces"? Don't think that some prisoner broke down and told it. To begin with, no individual soldier below the rank of a general would know it. And, it must be remembered, international law protects a eoldler from answering other than hie name, rank, etc., If he Is captured, That Is, of course, wheit you are dealing with an enemy who re. specte International law. But when you have a number of intelligence officers, trained in their jobs, questioning a largo number of prisoners on different parts of the front and rapidly for- warding their information through the channels povidod to a central point whore it ie all correlated and analysed it is surprising to the lay- man how much accurate informa- tion of incalculable value to the General Staff can be obtained even from anewers that adhere to tho instructions given to all sol(llers ito reveal nothing of their side's dispositions to their captors, The same thing applies to tho innocent little remarks omo of us make at times to our Mende, or to casual strangers we meet on the train or in a street car or at 801110 • gathering, We may think we are - being very circumspect, we may feel that the information that our next door neighbor's boy is (tomo on his last leave does not convey anything. It doesn't in itself, es- pecially if we have been very care- ful not to say whether he is going east or west—but, 1uu1 this is a big, but if 1n five or six towns five or six other people let out similar information something like this may happen Let 06 assume that the five or six soldiers referred to are from three or four different units. The inno- cent remarks are collected by ene- my agents and relayed to a cen- tral point, At once it is known that in the next few days a con- tingent of however many troops those four units represent Is going overseas. To that sante point conte little bith of other informa- tion—gathered, for instance, in a tavern or coffee shop near n rail- way yard where a yard foreman or one of his helpers innocently re- marks to a colleague that he has "to take up a 1l -car special to- morrow for the port of Such -and. Such," The central correlater of information has an approximation 8-.20 of the time and size of the move' meth, Thai's all he needs! The 11(.81 stop is to send word to rt raider eoninuu)d that within so many Clays a troop convoy may by ex- pected to move from "Such•and- Such.” 6 lnlple, Isn't 11? Se let's keep our mouths shut. And let's ash no questions of our Bohner, sailor and airmen friends. On the other hand, don't ferrel that the Intelligence Otlicer of thr Unit or Headquarters near 3(11 will be very inters,led in anything you have to tell him that you think may be of use in itis work. Anil, while Nye are on the sub- ject of helping people to do their jobs, here Is some intelligence ?WW1 We can do in the Individual Citizen's Army, The Wartime Prices and 'Trade Bonn) is fighting an enemy that will be as danptr• ono after the Wit as the common loos are today, the enemy called Post -War Inflation. The board n)nintalne an Wntolll- gelhee system on somewhat the same lines as the Army. Not a reg• intent of snoopers but a number of trained business men whose job it is to watch for the infiltration of uncontrolled Inflation behind our economic lines They, too, note little bite of unrelated information that filter in from all over the Country and from their correlation of these facts are able to deter- mine how to dispose their forces, If you know of anything that is contributing to higher prices toll the nearest representative of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board, He will hold your name in confi- dence and you help hint fight your economic battles, VOILE OF THE PRESS TEN SONS IN UNIFORM! Ten sons in the armed service of Canada. Such a record is in• deed oustanding. It reveals not only the patriotism of the sons themselves in thus engaging vol- untarily in the active service but also the spirit of the parents which promote this outstanding record of service. Such a family is that of Gus Shaw of Bloomfield, Prince Ed- ward Island. Three of his sons are in the navy, four in the army, two signed up and still awaiting their calls, and the tenth still too young to enlist in the active ser- vice army has joined the reserve, —Halifax Herald PRESERVING GOODWILL A manufacturer normally em- ploying 2,000 people writes the follo\ving to 1,(.1101111 Tin••• - 'I , or hundred of our people .(,(.,y 011 1)111' 401')(1'(1. 1(1111 11111-' • 1.111- vided for ,(1m 1, ihey ret' I 1111.r power to 11;1111111111 1110111 ' 1 •n 1111: w'a' 18 I,C'( l' i` 11('I,1'IIIIP' 11 1 1e presen.iit tun of our ;n ni,4 in. Therefore 111 111111•'1 C10.1111.0. t(1 advertise. 1 v( 1, i11 1'81'•'(1, 1101 wastefulIy 1101 10 111111 1'•.. tide extent 4' llirh trill pr ' I ur workers and 111e S1. 'I'h1.ri)a: '1'1111(., ;1' 11: - 1•- ]101'S Oh' TI -IE FAR el While 1 I...01'1iI imellt 11• 11'.111 given to (line `-1.111,111 ho,• '', -lay 011 the 1';(110', and so he.0 with t•ho harvt1t. 111(1-1 i vet 11(11((. which is 1,01111 r•';.1` man:. 1.:•1,11, it is 1lmv 11)1,1;'' fi,ril(•rs' auk; :111'1' taken t'ti it11p1' of the ill' -once of 111e 111011 Ft 10.01 l ,t 'S 1'14 : 1110 city to ro to the city, 111,•11,•,•hes, to take jot la 1l'_ 1'arl,,ri" . LOTS OF RFPLAC1 MY.NTS There i:. all trt'nlale ' It , (100,000 Jap, )I„\ e liven 1.111 •11 in the war with China, oil -t' five years, 'Tho item does n,,t, .ueait much to a (.ration of 80.000,000 prolific breeders. —'l, ('.'itluu'iues ;t,;lr,itu'(i ONE OR THE OTHER The time is hast who!, WO should have English Canadians, European Canadians, New Cana - diens or F'rcneh Canadians, We are either all Canadians er we aren't, —London Fr•',, Press —0 -- WHAT DOES HITLER CARE The Russians claim that 105,- 000 Nazis w'er( killed in the Se- vastopol campaign, but Hitler docs not worry about such. mat. ters. That's. why Germans were born, -- The New 7lrker "SUPER” CLASS Chinese j)1'((\ (11114 are :rh tits "stiper" class. Here is a eantplc 1 "Fool »lc curt, s1uttne on :,•ou, Feel isle twice, OM MC oil ale." —Kitchener kecord -- 0— THOSE CAREFREE DAYS Can you remember the care- free days when all they u,ed the U. S. fleet for was to take the President fishint'? —(Quebec (.'hrenicle-Teleeruph —0 -- MORE SLANDER Have you heard of the Scotch girl who powdered het' nose with a marshmallow 1,efore she ate it? —Peterborough Examiner —0 -- MIGHT BE WORSE f3tiIl it )night be worse If the o0rbstone expert(.. 011(1 parlor ,;en - ends ran the war, —Bramble Sun Infant Mortality A 40 percent lis0 in infant mortality over notinal in Nazi - occupied Europe w118 reported b-' tho British Famine Relief Com- mittee, a fact-finding organiza- tion of churehmcn. LIFE'S LIKE THAT By Fred NeherJ (�����/ P9 MRS. PIPS DIARY, rf,GWAN! `—ES A MUTT! HE AINT TH FIFTY CENTS ! ILC GIVE YOU A DIME FOR SIM THATS ALL HE'SORTH! •', V r "He's Ambidextrous." By GENE BYRNES YOU'RE CRAZY? THE MAN WHAT GAVE ME THIS DOG GAVE ME FIFTEEN MRS t JUS 10 GET RID OF'IM 0• • 7'. 1'- - f 1,, 1' 3 I: 641. eg', . d A .FAMOU .:BRANDOgd: en 's FINE CUT 0, , Oporatod by Pat Burton, twico winnor of tho North American and Canadian Calf Roping Championships at tho Calgary Stampodo, tho Burton Ranch in Southorn Alborta was ostab• Iishod In 1890 by F. A. Burton. BRAND OF THE BURTON RANCH 7/L Vessel For Navy Every 48 Hours Figures for British naval pro- 4uctlon given in London recently show that an average of w war- ship is being launched in Britain every 48 hours, according- to the BBC. The broadcast added that, now corvettes, Britain's fast antisub- plarine craft, completed since 1039, amounted to more than 120. '!'his covers war losses many times over. Nineteen new Oruisore have come into service since 1939. 75 percent of Germany's war Industry 13 located in tine Ruhr. Have You Heard 1're.;iden1 Roosevelt Ie reporlud to have onjoyt'd Ihn following par• rat yarn so touch that 11e slurred It with i'rinto Minister ('hu:eIitIl: A eallor walked Into an auction shop ns the auctioneer wag avl(Ing for hills 011 It 1)1t'r0t. dntl,a's," Hold 1110 14(111• 01 "•1'lvenly," ;:lid nnot.hor bidder. "Twenty -Myr.," said the s,illor, hurl y," chid the otli r bidder, "forty -fin','," sltld the sailor. No fnrlher bids worn heard, and the auctioneer said, "Sold." The sailor took the hird and rage, pal over the stoney, And 'That's an awful price to pity for a parrot. ('an he talk?" "('all lin talk!" exclaimed the ancllottr'or. ''\I'lly, sailor, list wai hi,lilnt•';i,ninr.'t you," Said Mr. Hobson: "A haby'a troublesome, that's true; but remember the hand that rocks the cradle rules the world." Replied his wife: "Well, then, sup pose you assume world•domination for the even. Ing while I go to the movies." —0— A worker due to talcs on a heavy job, was being examined by the works doctor who found an nu - usual scar. The man denied ovor having had an accident, but OA. tinily volunteered the information that he had once been gored by a bull. "Don't you call that an ace!. dent?" asked the doctor. "No," Haid the man, bitterly. "Ino (11d It on purpose." —0— "I say, old man, have you change for a pound note?" "Yes, certainly." "Well, Just lend ms ten shill- ings of It, will you?" —n— Three Canadian soldiers steep• Ing 1n a tont In an lInglish camp wero awakened by a terrific crash not far away. "What was that—thunder or bombs?" asked one of them. "Bombs," was the laconic, ans. wer. "Thank heaven for that!" chine. ed In the third, "I thought we wore going to have more rain!" DOWNHEARTED? NOT VERY Though flu' front their Nazi -oppressed homeland, thousands of loyal Polish refugees in Iran continue to work, fight and die that their country may regain its freedom. Polish "WA AC's" relax after (lay's work, Modern Etiquette 1. la it necessary for a woman to say "please" and "thank you" to her own servants? 2. When receiving an Invita- tion to a wedding that 1s to take place at a hotel, is a reply nec- essary? 3. Should ono pick up a drop- ped napkin when dining in a res- taurant? 1. When the guests at a din- ner are few in number, and they are all intimate friends, would it be all right for the place cards to bear only their first names, Mary, Elizabeth, Iielen, etc,? 5. How should the card of a doctor read? 6, Does a good conversationalist keep repeating: "Is that so? You (lon't mean it. Really" etc?. ANSWERS 1,There is nothing obligatory about it, but as it is such a trivial courtesy to extend to tho people • who are serving one, a well-bred woman will do so. 2. Yes. 3. No; let the waiter pick It up. He will also furnish a clean napkin, 4. Yes, when all the guests are closo friends, 5. Janes Walker, M.D., or Di. James Walker. 6. No; such a habit ie always annoying, We aoked a housewife What we could expect from these no - egg, no -butter, no -sugar reel. pee. And her answer woo— No cake, Dutch Harbor received Its name from the legend that a Dutch ship was the first vessel to enter Its bay. n7€ mCtaardoL cZll(me THAT WILL HELP A GREAT EANAD1AN UA115E This year, the Canadian Open Golf Cham• pionship has a significance far beyond its status as a major sport event. It will again present a spectacular struggle for the Open Championship and the Seagram Gold Cup; it will again foster international goodwill by bringing together famous golfers from Canada and the United States; but, in addition, the entire net proceeds of this year's tournament will be donated to the Canadian Red Cross Society., The House of Seagram is especially glad to be associated with the 1942 Open, which will be held at the Mississauga Golf & Country Club, Toronto, August Gth, 7th and Sth. And, u donor of the Seagram Gold Cup, the House of Seagram welcomes the golfers of both Canada and the United States to the fairways of international friendship. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 1('1'11111110NS WAN'I'ICD ACCORDIONS WANTED l ,•st ',dealt paid for plane accordions, twelve to ['un- til.. d and twenty hose, THE T. EATON CO, LTD. 1lualeal 111elrument 1)epnrtnten1 'I'oronlo 11 '1'l)11111111,Ia — USED USE..) I',1WITH (0)1)1) TI1(163, ;See u, fir t. We will re- fund your east or transporta- tion to 'Toronto, if you buy from u,. Mount Pleasant 9lutors 1.td. 1 red car l,ut., at 1I a Danforth Al.,•nu,• uu,l ..:1) 4U Y„n40 Street. llead 1)fflr,', 632 91"uat l'leasant (toad, Toronto. '1'eleplwne High- land :II ll. %I.1:N'1' %V.% VIED 911'; lit it 1:\,:1,1 311,'E MAGAZINE Sub1rriptiuu Agent in your own locaht9. Highest commissions on all publication, Trull or part- time work. 1V1110 the Davis Ag- ency, 75a Adelaide St. IVest, To• run to, Onturu, AGENTS 11'.1\'1'11D 1101'814%V 1 FE %1'M.) \VANTS '1't) supplement family Income. Witt- iness experience or full time not neerssury. Writ() to Avon Pro- ducts of Canada, I,itnited, 1016 St. Alexander SL, Montreal, Que. 11,111Y Chicks STAR'1' 'THIN PALL SEASON RIGHT with Dray chicks. We're prepared to hutch to order for delivery on nod after September first. May have a few started chicks avail- able this summer, hut write for particulars. (tray Hatchery, 130 John N., Hamilton, Ont, DAB Y (21111104 TWO AND 'THREE WV1;EIC OLD non -sexed, pullets or cockerels. Also older free range pullets from 4 weeks to 26 weeks old. Send for illustrated catalogue and price Ilst, 19 pure breeds, 9 hy- brid crosses and 6 breeds of tur- keys to choose frotn. Tweddle Cluck Hatcheries Limited, Fergus, Ontario, RAKER Y EQUIPMENT BAKERS' OVENS AND MACHIN- ory, also rebuilt equipment al- ways on hand. Terme arranged. Correspondence Invited, Hubbard Portable Oven Co., 108 Bathurst St., Toronto. r BEi:PING, ETC, FOR '1'IIRESIIEIIMEN BELTING FOR THRESHMDRMHl)1. Endless thresher bolts, ho feeder canvas, pulleys, ehattin�, hangars, bearings, motors. Bp DU—Bolting for traces, 2 inch ply, 15c foot. All types of trend. mission supplies in stock ter immediate shipment at attraotive low prices. Merchandise guarap• teed and shipped subject to yott! inspection. Send your orders to TiHE YORK BELTING 88 YORK STREET, TORONTO • COOIC WANTED) EXCII3Lf.1 NT COOK IN CHRI- Homo.tlau Homo. Sleep out, $80 start. Phone MI. 6004 for app" !tient or write 11 Parkwood, To- ronto. FARM EQUIi'MENT REBUILT 38 II.P. LISTER Diesel Engine, complete wl clutch and cooling tanks; II,P. Blackstone; 26 H.P. eytil` Marine engine 250 H,P,' 'bine and Link Harrows' Lets dombl at.iou Feed Mill; 1686 stake bo International Truck; demonetra - ing and rebuilt Melotte Cream Separators; paint, while it last, 11.50 per gallon. The above aril all specials for July and August. Melotte, Magnet and Premier Cream Separator Parte; Myers Water Systeme; one only Ham- mer MITI; one only 96 oyple Portable Milker, S. A, Linter, Stewart Street, Toronto, HOW CAN I? Q, How can I waah unpainted wicker furniture and preserve Its white appearance? A, Wash it quickly with a strong solution of oold water and salt and put in the hot sun to dry. Never wash wicker with bosp suds, nor allow it to dry slowly, ae it will result in a poor color, Q. How can I have a neater front lawn? A. Perhaps the reason it doss not have the trine appearance others have is the fact that the edges of the lawn next to the sidewalk have not been cut. .A tiny trench cut along the groes edge gives a neat appearance and crispness to the lawn, Q. How can I rid the kitchen of flies or mosquitoes? A, By placing a cup of vinegar on the stove where it will simmer enough to make an odor. Or, burn camphor gum on the stove two or three times a day. Q. How can I use less sugar when making applesauce? A. Add your sugar to the apple. sauce before removing it from the stove, and in this way much leas sugar will he required to sweeten the sauce. Q. How can 1 kill crickets or drive out ants? A. Put some cucumber peel, cut in thin strips, on the floor at night near their haunts. Nearly 200,000 tons of sun. flower seed will be crushed for oft in Argentina this year. ITC STOPPED asa✓i o •or Money Back For quiet relief from itching of eexems pimples, stk. late', Lot, ,sales, ecabiee, raskee and other extern**, sued akin trouble,, use fait.acting, cooling, and. septic, liquid I). D. D. Prescription. Greaseless, etainleee. Soothes irritation and quickly rtope inteaes hchin,3irtrialbnttleprovesit,ormon-e_LLb--aao--k.--L your 1rrist today for D.D.D. PRES4tui'r[ON. DYEING an CLEANING • IIAV1'; YOU AN(431)1NI; NEEDS dyeing or cleaning? Write to us for information. Wt' are glad to a;tawer your questions Ilrpurt meat 11, 1'a ricer's ON 1' Works Limited, 791 Tongs Street, '1'0• mato. 1'.tlt11 I'Itol)1 ('1: 5T(11'( ('1:1:11• A N.11.1'r,I:; I'I:It- e,ntUge, protein 11.1,5 tat 1.27, crud, fibre (,32; putted wheat shirt,•„ ln,runl:hl}' „n ltrd 816 per 1"n. Ji:,(:1ua1.(l1 1',,,,d, '1'uron- to. 1'1)0'1' 11%1,11 1;A 1'911:1: 1i .1 11x1'! 1;.11.).1 d,'.vaoyo often•:e,• „dor w-t;n,tly. 45o bottle. it; Iwo trent, 1n•ntnnn Drug ri,l ,•, Ilona.,. 1.1)11 .'.11,1: I;IUu'1:1:1' v'I'„I;L---- -'1;,o)I) IO• nti,n- „1,p„-1t,,,1i. u r re:11- 11,1111,11 (ti•ir1''t. 1'I'Iure 8800. 711',. writs l;o� 26, Vit. 'Phones,, l)n,nrru. 1'(111 (.%I,1: NCT111.5, 5, )'1N'(,'I' tjt .Ilse %, 15 for 31;,u; i'',Ir J:,nn', Ityruu, 11.1:. 1, 11',,,.d..l,,- tint, 1LU1) %%AN'1'1:1► \1'AN"1'l;D — 91.1111 1''1)11 GENERA'. house work, No children. Every Sunday "If. Good wage,. Mrs. C. 1:. l;rosskurtll, Weston, Ont. ,II;DII'AI, DON'T DELA Y! 11\'I?I(Y Sl'F'1'Elt- er of Rheumatic Tutus or Neur- itis should try Dixon's Remedy,. Munro's Drug Store, 333 login, Ottawa. PATENTS F'Is'l'IIER5'1'UNIIAal11 d UUMI'ANX Potent Solicitors, Established 1890; 14 King West, Toronto. Booklet of Information on re. quest, 1'IIO'J'OG1)A1')))' DON'T TRUDGE THROUGH The (lent, Hain, or Hall HAVE YOUR SNAPS Delivered by Mall Any 6 or 8 exposure film perfeetl” developed and printed for only '160, Supreme quality and fast service guaranteed. IMPERIAL PHOTO SERVICE Station J. Toronto IIDEUMATIC PAINS PROVEN REMEDY—EVERY SUIr- ferer of Rheumatic Paine or Neuritis should try Dixon's Rem. edy. Munro's Drug Store, 3811 Elgin, Ottawa. 01,1) (RUGS RI9WOVEN NEW RUGS, NEW RUGS BLADE FROM old. Dominion Rug Weaving Com. Pony, 964 Queen St. W., Toronto. %Vrite for bookl,.k, SEiRVICIC STATION FOR RENT KRA.MER'S GARAGE AND SER. vice Station, Deihl, for ren Equipment includes computot pumps, hydraulic jacke, acetylene welding outfit, tire vulcaniser, lathe, drill preee, emery motor0 valve refacor and ep a Apply to Suporteet Petrolltld Corporation Limited, London, o► Frank H. Butcher, Aylmer. TEACHER WANTED ,tJALIFIEI) PROTESTAN teacher for B.S. No. 7 Radellt) Appiy stating, experience at salary expected. Duties to qqoor mence Sept. 8. W. L. Waddlep ton, Sec.-Treas., Combermere, Q WANTED—FUEL WOOD MAPLE AND MIXIOD CORDWOQ also Hard and Softwood Blab' a Bundle Edgings, Give full p1 ticulare, Walter Sohlese, Nlnete Melinda Street, Toronto. ISSUE 32—'42 End Of War In '43 "If We Are Lucky" Capt, Randolph Churchill, soft of the British Prime Ministeet predicted last week that "if wt are lucky" the United NatiottoY� would win the war by the end of next year, "and if we're unluclgy bhen we'll win by the end et 1944." "We, the British, were only ono quarter ready for this war," 1W Bald at a press conference. "Gte>r• many prepared for twenty yearn for this war, The English have not been as clever in this war as the enemy. "Wo have been largely enthus- iastic amateurs in this war Na compared to professional milltaq men, We still have a lot to learn, but we are learning fast and we are going to win." Capt. Churchill said that he took a hopeful view of the Egypt- ian situation, SAFES Protect your 11001 (5 and CAS from FIRM and THIEVES. {Wb have e sire and type of Safe, fir tlnbinet, for any purpose. Vlstl us, or write for prices. etc. to Dept. 11'. J.a(J.TAYLOR LIMITED TORONTO SAFE WORKS 143 Proal St 1:., Toronto 1?.tnhnehed IF.. 'MIDDLE -AGE WOMEN UM) HEED THIS ADVICEII If you're cross, restless, NERVOUS— suffer hot flashes, dizziness—caused by this period in a woman's life— try Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound. Made especially /or women. Hundreds of thousands re- markably helped. Follow label direc- tions. Made in Canada. Pao V. 14HOLIDAY NEEDS— MISSES ANI) WOMEN Slacks, Overalls, Sweaters, Slack Suits, Bathing Suits and Caps. i;; MEN'S ANi) BOYS' .4 • • Tropical and Cotton Trousers, Sweaters, Windhreakers, Bathing Trunks. A Good Assortment of 13a1hriggan Underwear. Olive McGill • ,r MAItiaricir?{?IA`orDiin7t?{?laci{?c?{2r8iau+lit?()W.`{J12r,,11h)alP4,54 a NAiltNA;I40101at?c?lA*1 Retiring From Business After a term of many years in business in Blyth, I wish to thank my many friends for their patronage. We desire in early settlement of all outstand- ing Accounts. W. J. Sims Alpe, George Hest:, and \Ii's. Jack Mr. John Hartley, of ('Ihlton,,form• page, and two children, of Toronto, ler Sehoal Inspector cur this district, ! Spent the week -end a1 the home of Air. j naw retired, %vas a V11. Nor in 1OWII 00 George Sloan, J Wednesday. TEE STANDARD ' Lam_ ---1J Ho11yan's raj ron A BAKERY AND CONFECTIONERY. For Use Around the Dome Or On Picnics: The Horne of Good Baking. g -„ VACUU11130'rI'14ES 1Oc all,. G. D. 1vl1h of I,Istotvel, spent Soy Bean, Whole Wheat 4 '1'111+�1t11OS BOTTLES 1.(U) and White Bread. I�r OUTING {111(;,5 (once gallon) ' 1.7:1 Ig STA -WAY INSECT REPELLENT . :''Ic Also Buns, Cookies ANTI -MOSQUITO (TEAM, Pies, Cakes and iy 11,1 1('II'S (TAN,. Ji'i('1{; rr 1c .Sgt, Norman Sinclair of the MAY. Honey -Dipped Doughnuts!4°, c' JUICE - t'' ' \'I lt)1' ,, ii lla)ea pent last west) i►► New lark 1 I1'II JL I('l, J1'IO>\ I til+,Itlt: Pi ,1 Wedding. Cakes a Specialty. rP, LIME JUICE - COR1)1i . . . . . . . . . .. . .. 19e14 SPOT' 1 FiMOVl+;R 1 5c and ,;'Ic r' Doherty Bros. i GARAGE. S `,i r ,a ii el il ,i ,•i I1 ti isir{ 1^i r),l..)t:';W:N.1,:it;,>��•.t'lei:)at.'2'l:i'1:'{'?J;:1� t,s •. `: ,ti{, Z Y�1 Rev, A. and Airs. Sinclair spent the eek•end In Sarnia, Wednesday, August 5, 19,12, ,.....,,,,,...,,...,,,,,,.,,,,,....„,,,,,„.,:„,..,,,..,,...,,,,,,k,z,,,c. d Summer Necessities the ivcck-end wllli his wife here, Mrs, A, Morrison is visiting in Galt this we.'k :i 1C Airs. Florence A1olonalil and family are visiting her sislor, Mrs. Howard Tait. Ret. 1t, A, and A1t's. Ilrook, and son, Ilotvatd, of Ilensall, called on A1r% trashy last Thursday. Miss Eileen Rubinson and Airs. \Vin. hobherland of Seaforth, spent the weekend in Godericlh. Pte. Lois Robinson ('.\V,A,C. of Tor. onto, :pent the weelt•end tvi1h her parents, Mr. and Mrs. 11, 11. Robinson, Mrs, ,lohn Taylor, of Ingersoll, pending the holiday with her moth. r, Airs. lieu, 'Taylor, and Ali. 'Taylor. 'Bernice McN1111 Is recovering very ;ell from her operation, But will ave sound operation the end of this )peck, Mr. Roy :smith, 'daughter, Peggy, firs, James McGregor, of Chicago, t'e:e visitors with Mr. and Airs. \\'m, 1c(lregor recently. Ali.. and Air I:t•nie Coming and :amity visited with the litters moth— er, AirS. Robert Johnston, over the 'k -end. At r, and Alrs..1. \\'. Metcalf, (Lin h• ler Joyce. MI•. and Airs. Weldon, of London, were Sunday callers at the home of .\Ii's. Metcalf. Alias Ports Laking of hreelton, Allyl Allidred tinhorn, Air. and Airs. Robert 11'allace and l\Ivin, of Alorris, visited on Sunday with AIr. and ,Airs, I,, i111 - born, MORE WOOL 15 NEEDED for Canada's War Effort CO-OPERATE IN ONTARIO'S EFFORT TO PRODUCE MORE WOOL. HELP INCREASE THE SIZE AND NUMBER OF ONTARIO SHEEP FLOCKS RODUCiNG more wool to clothe Canada's fighting forces and her civil population is a vital task which deserves the earnest consider- ation of every Ontario farmer. A brief study of the wool production of North America and of world conditions occasioned by the war reveals an alarming situation that calls for straight thinking and forthright speaking. North American Wool Production 1941 North American Wool Consumption 1941 Canada 19,200,000 Ibs. Canada 109,000,000 lbs. United States 455,000,0001bg. United States 977,000,000 lbs. Total 474,200,000 lbs. Total 1,086,000,000 lbs. DEFICIT 611,800,000 lbs. You can sec that with shipping space at a premium and with every merchantman a target for enemy submarines, the situation is indeed critical. More wool must he produced at home and it's up to Ontario farmers to help produce it. The Ontario Department of Agriculture is working to effect an increase of 25 % in this province, To do this, all present flocks must be kept, and in addition, 110,000 ewe Iambs from the 1942 crop must be kept on the farm, If every present flock owner kept three ewes from this crop, most of the increase would he obtained. But since many sheep owners cannot accommodate any morc animals, the Department is asking Ontario farmers to establish 1,000 new flocks which will absorb all surplus ewe Iambs. Your Agricultural Representative will be able to put you in touch with men who have lambs for sale or then who wish to purchase them. in establishing 1,000 new flocks, it is intended that expansion take place by counties in proportion to the ',resent sheep population. You will see what expansion must be Accomplishedinyour county in the lists below, CATEGORY "A" i More Flocks per Township Required Druce Carleton Dunerin Durham Grey Ha,ting, Huron Lampton Lanark Manitoulin Middlesex Ontario Rainy River Renfrew Simcoe Victoria Wellington York CATEGORY 13" 2 Mnre Flecks per Toan,hip Required Frontcnar )taldimand Holton Peel Perth Teterboro Waterloo Wentworth CATEGORY "C" t More Flu k per nshi,, Required Algoma Mont Dundas Elgin Essex Glengarry Grenville ltaliburton Kent Leeds Lennox ta Addington Lincoln Muskoka Nipissing Norfolk Northumberland Oxford Parry Sound Prescott Prince Edward Russell Stormont Sudbury Temtskaming Thunder Day Welland THE RAM POLICY Any farmer starting a new flock of 15 ewe lambs or more may secure a ram for two years on loan from the Dominion Government, CONSULT YOUR AGRICULTURAL REPRESENTATIVE For complete information about securing ewes, ewe lamps, or rams, or about any part you can play in helping Canada produce more wool, consult your county Agricultural Reprep sentative or W. P. Watson, Live Stock Branch, Dept. of Agriculture, Toronto. HON. P. M. DEWAN MINISTER W. R. REEK DEPUTY MINISTER ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE \1'I➢ kR1; AGENTS FOR Plymouth and e{ Chrysler Cars la Auto -bite and Hart Batteries. ft Films, All Sacs --- i';aslnran and Selo, Developing and Printing, 1)one Quickly t,S Expertly D. FHILP, Phm. 3, DRUGS, SUNi1Rn s, WALLPAPER—PHONE 2P. Goodrich & Dunlop, Tires. woe'e,e White Rose Motor Oil. PHILCO RADIOS ANI) SUPPLIES. Acetylene and Electric Welding. Vodden's BAKERY. WHEN IN NEED OF' BREAD, BUNS, PiES. HOME-MADE CAKE OR COOKIES REMEMBER mrommreostarennammuesomur 3k.'.'::IS,,„ ;...,•.,-.•. , ,•.,.,.. 'fit;"} ilio +s Droq Siore ii ii ii Drugs, rl:ohacCO, Soft 1)rinks—Phone 2S. ',11 ,i r1 ;.'1 r'I rl Gi 13ackrite Kidney Pills 50c 1Valnpolc's Milk of Magnesia 25c and 50c Wanipole's Magnesia Tablets 101) I'or 50c r3 Dickson's Stomach Powder 75c ,) Fenno! Laxative 'Tablets 50c i "II' White Shoe Dressing 15c Bathing Caps 25e. 29e, :11c and •1Oc Paper Plates, ('ups and Serviettes. Vitamin 13., Plant Balls each '35c Sweet i'eas, 'Morning Glory, Aster,~, Zinnias. rs i5 r t'I 1'I ri ry h f4,a a. « ei p • a wx., .. •i ti h!'1'- t r� , n ft n. p p a....,, ,.. .i •. p p ,� ., r .., ...� ., fn,t Pl roiia41.1..{�,,ri.il.: fa-3glL'it-'i.:'1..lair✓,.=fa,•+t.lrf-Y<Jt.%irlt{rt..f.+IL{L{»•;3t»,.i�t.�,.:t:.l-.:.�t;.•�•; rs i..,L ,•.i.-{,,,,�(t71 tw'4!.�i'n'ii'u!4"f'{,^r;~' �'t�:,^'rf �t� t�cfr!�-r� carne r,: •//..rti e-•.n,n.i e�++t.. "THE HOME ]3AKERY" e1 H. T. VODDEN, • The Red Cross Society ARE HAVING A Street CARNIVAL Wednesday Night AUGUST 121'11 There will he Dancln(}, with a Good Orchestra. BINGO AND OTHER GAMES, I'ERSONAI, INr!'EREST 11r. K{ nneth Alaclr:nl of Lon dot 8))11111 li I•rict holiday with 1115 par. eels, Dr. 1<., and Airs, ALtcican. Allsscs isllltel lox, It.N., lsabcl and Mai'iun Me11111 and Edna .\rrltaurirulll are holldl'ylug at Kiutall this wr'ck, Alaster Claire Campbell is lulprov Ing follotvin„ a weeks Illness at Ills Ronne. lir. S. Iakler, of 11'atcrluo, Spent \Vcdacsday with Itis frIuiill, ,1. II, It, Iv1IlotL 0, AP I, f fid 911 Ej l+� k1 111 61 sl 1, Home Varnisher -- Phones 7 and Lounge Furniture \11(' offer a pleasing val'iety in Studio Lounges fitted with Spring -Filled i1iallresses :incl ('u: covered in durable fabrics. Droll -back .1n1 Single 1)ny lied;,, tailored hi Smart., Bright Coverings. The 'sl'ic'es ttrc' reasonable .111(1 dies)' Lounges are J1151 lhe think.' for Indoor, Porch Home use. 11'e urge t'nu (o Caille iii .111(1 Jll:ll>e('i thcln, s. hell Funeral Director. thir�a1�11314{�ICI�YI/R-f!J{f,..�/vim, l'I,LL AL�4,Gid{I J'�L{LW,UIl Yiv r.�'.:�r�12 i/ •t�ISia�, ✓,L',O iL'I�il�'~i GIG uJIG'ii �f', t•„a, .,,✓13f. t 1\I r,, 1�. Al. Stark and Sun, Donner, .I r„ have returns il to Loudon following a very dclI 11lfnl visit with her parents, ., .I)r, lip, and Mrs. Alaclean, \irs, II. Herrington returned home. from Ilul•;ston on Saturday, Recoup panted by her .Sister, Airs, \\'rel. Pat- terson. Mss 1111ut;he \\'111se of Ingersoll, - visited over the Holiday with her sis- ter, i\lrs. Giorge Radford, and Mr. Radford. .AIr. and MIS, Harry Brown and Mrs. I. McGihl on, of \Vinghain, spent the ween)-en;l holiday with Mrs. harry Drown aua Eleanor. 'Miss ,11.i1h 11llborn, nurse -in -train - lug, at Victoria hospital, London, sport; the week -end with her parent;;, A,e, and :sirs, 1.. Hilburn. 11 r. and Alts. 11illlln•d McGowan, of Belleville, visited for a few days with the former's parents, Alex. and Airs. McG 1wlui. Mr. and Airs. (I. 1). Philp and fam- ily, of 'Toronto, visited on \\'ednc'sday with the fornrer's brolher, Mr. and Airs. 11. 1), l'hllp. 'A1r, Benson Cowan of Stratford vis• Red over the holiday with Ills parents. IUr. and Mrs. George Cowan,, Mrs. Clowan, and Constance, relui'ned 1101110 wllh him after a n•r'clt's vocation I11 iJlytlt, Judith remaining with her grandparents for a week. a1 M u ,IY .I I:...N:il .., ilY J+.wWk I nil 4t 11 .CY C.. .1 ,l 1 ,1k. 1u016.1.,4Y.'C u .111,1 I t. HURON G1lILL BLYTII --- ONTARIO. EXCELLENT FOOD. GOOi) SERVICE. Meals at All Hours. FRANK GONG Proprietor .,. 11I ,:,I:.,YILII INNS • — .I , 11 .. .1.. , I ., I.I N . 1. I ' t :t�'I,�Im IgtQ,pyiry',o,Cf..,otn, ,•.,n,p•,n,f•tn r�tr�,a,L*,rr trf�ln,mlylgt.N rt!)A•tllnlM. In, ,c,�,r,,, �, 1 Iq{.r e.,-tr, •-„r ,} , n•,Y .•.. ;,„.3a,.,�ii +aau�+�,N1 aw'W' n„a.; r,•v.w. £fi ', �, cr°. +e ..,a "•','i ij 111 03 T Oi T RO I1VS 0 Phone 156 for Prompt Delivery. Market Price for Eggs According To Grade. (rape Fruit Juice .... , . , .. .20 oz., 13c, 2 for 25c Grape I''ruit Juice 511 oz., 30c Schneider's Cooked Diluter , , .... , , .. per tin 20c Ice Cream Powder per pkg. 10c Ice Cream Freezing' Mix, Assorted Flavors ...10c (olden Bantam ('ol'in l:;c, 2 for 25c Baker's Chocolate Reindeer Coffee .. Peas Dill Pickles Dog hood cakes, 10c And 21P tills. 25c and 39 per tin lOc, 12 1- 2c and 17c 28 oz., 2:ic 10e, 3 for 25c Puppy Biscuits Butterscotch and Chocolate Ii ;ills New Potatoes, Tomatoes . 2 1b. plc:)'. 25c Pudding Powder. each, illi, !9c, (i5e New Cabbage, Onions. per lb. Sc, 2 for 15c 141'Ili?121412r2r212rh12121B12i�t?1i 121'x121)J,?121aiF1fJ{6rIGIJ{UIdICIO,�CIFIGic I�i�'JIC{olhv1�IR1'.S�'� 1�•~Jr•Irl.it '5 ps fq is ,y ,;) '1