HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1943-03-10, Page 1THE BLYTH STANDAR
VOLUME 17 - NO. 30. BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MARC11619'1;.
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GOOD PLAY COMING!!!
"HENPECKED HENRY"
A COMEDY IN THREE ACTS.
Given by Members of Knox Presbyterian Church, Goderlch
IN THE MEMORIAL HALL, BLYTH,
Wednesday, March 17th
UNDER AUSPICES OF GROUP NO, 2, W.A., UNITED CHURCH
8.15 Sharp, Admission 35c; Children under 12, 20c
CHURCH
TIM
BLYTH UNITED CHURCH
Sunday, Marcel 14.
10:16: Sunday School.
11:16: Subject, "Light at Fventide,"
7 P. M. A Popalar Iiero.
RADIO FARM FORUMS
The Past Wawanay\ Radio Forum
\vas held on Monday evening at the
home of Mr. and Mrs, 1). McKenzie
int' 32 present.
tL, A ePorterfield gave an aduress
the -I:ar�,er School Area", An in
discussion followed. Lunch
was served.
The SS. No 1 Morris Branch of the
V Fatah Forum group met at tho home
of Mr, and Mrs, David Craig on Alen -
TRINITY ANGLICAN CHURCH day e,vening with 40 present, Mr,
Rev. P. H. Streeter L.Th , Rector Antler Richmond wa'i leader of the
net Sunday In Lent, Mar, 14, 1943, meeting. After the d1'cussion Mr.
Sunday School: 2.30 I'. M. l.orno Web gave an enliglhtening talk
Ilvensong and Sermon: 7:00 P. M. on the topic which was heard on the
radio.
V 'rite Forum was very appreciative of
War Auxiliary To Meet motion pleture•s which were shown
and explained by Mr. `:ebb, One of
The Girls' War Auxiliary will moot the Films was of Mr. James Scott's
on March 1'61h, at 8 p,m„ at the home Poultry Farm at Soafor•th,
of Niles. Dorothy Poplostone. Will the Lunch was served by the hostess.
members please bring crochet books The uex't meeting will be at Mr, and
and wool, finished work that 1.s out, Mrs, James Richmond's with John
and gifts for the Red Crass Shower Nesbitt, leader, and M111s J. Richmond
for girls in Armed Forces Overseas. leader of recreation. All Welcome.
V
Clinton School To Provide 'rho Hallett 13oundry Radio Farm
Forum mot at. the home of Mrs. Wm.
Program, Friday Night Shortreed on' Monday evening with 30
Mr. George Jefferson and a group present, Atter ltstening to forum
of pupils from Clinton Public School broadcast Mr, Bert Anderson led the
aro arranging a programme over discussion groups on Problems of the
Winghaan Radio Station CKNX for Homo Market.
Friday, March 12t.h, at 7 p.m. Mr. Following this Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Joffe'rson wtis unable to put on his Watson led the recreation period with
.programme ns arranged two weeks ago progressive crokinolo with everyone
due to bad roads. participating. Lunch was served.
Tho next mooting will bo held at Mr.
and Mrs, John Watson's, Elveryono
Day Of Prayer welcome.
On Friday, at 3 o'clock, in the Ang-
ltoan Church, the Annual World Day
of Prayer. All the women of the
community aro asked to attend.
East Wawanosh Council
'owing to the stormy weather, and
impassable roads, the February meet-
ing was conceited, Council convening
on Murch 2nd, with all the members
in attendance, the Reeve presiding.
Minutes of previous steeling wore
read and approved on motion of Coun-
cillors Black and McDowell. Com-
m :talccltions from the Ontario Good
Roads As'sociation', the As(sociatiou of
\ etcedeg Officers, the S'.c(k Children's
''e• pital. t'skler; for a grant In aid of
that ir=lih13iru1, the Canadian Aid to
It.is-l•1 i'tind, re ,srlpplying clothing to
,1 '.(1''t;rte Itu:=sinns, the County Treas.
:yea, with a Lit of properties liable to
e sell for taxes, owing in 1940„ wore
ordelred filed. The County Clerk wrote
sttrrting that trees for planting would
bo availeblo this season and any rate-
payer wishing to avail hhnself of this
opportunity can notify any member of
Council or Clerk, forthwith, when
these treeis will be supplied without
charge at diatributing places in con-
venient centres.
Five dollars as formerly was voted
as a grant to Auburn Library. Tho
treasurer reported being In receipt of
a cheque for $1,84839, being subsidy
on road expenditure last season. The
The auditor presented his report for
1'9'412, the same showing total receipts
cif $35y't^3.P8, with an expenditure in
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Pancake Social Was
Splendid Success
Tho annual Pancake Social, sponsor•
ed by Trinity Church Lidice' Guild,
and held in the Memorial Will on
Tuesday evening, was a splendid suc-
cess. A largo crowd. enjoyed pan-
cakes acid syrup, and the many other
delloacies provided by the 'good ladies
of the Guild.
A plearting feature of the annual
occastbn, which was accidentally
brought to our attention, is the fact
that the Guild never forgets to give
tie "old veterans" of the last war a
free ticket to the 'Social. AVG happen-
ed to hear two of tie veterans' talk-
ing. or we probably would never have
known about it. Anil, believe etc.
the "old sweats", as the veterans call
themselves, really appreciate this
kindly thought by the ladies of the
Guild.
V
W. A. MEET
The regular Monthly Meeting of the
Woman's Association of the United
Church was held on Tuesday, March
10th. ?'resident, Mrs. Harold Phillips,
presided, in tho absence of the sure.
tory Mrs. \Vm. Jenkins acted in that
capacity. Meeting opened by repeat-
ing the Lord's Prayer in unison.
Ihring the burineas session the
Popular East Wawanosh
Family Honoured
On \VC(Inesday evening, March :ted.
a Surprise Party of about fifty neigh-
bours assembled at the home of .\Ir•
and Mrs, Daniel Alc(iowatt, to offer
good wishes on their departure from
the neighbourhood. The evening was
spent in social converse and oid•fash•
lolled games. Tho following address
was read by Frank Mertshalt:
"Dear 3!r. and Mrs. McGowan,
Clare and ida:—
Ne:ghbotu's! \\'hal a beautiful
worst! What a wealth of tender re•
collections it recalls,—work and play,
joy and sorrow; plea ire and grief,
all shared together. \\'e are neigh
hours. We have gathered on the eve
of your departure, to remind you how
very much we are going to miss you.
and to exprese our gratitude for all
your kindness. Your door has eve:
stood wide-open with a welcome, and
young and old have enjoyed countless;
pleasures and ho:pitalaies in your
home, Dr. Rom and Dr. Annie, by
their kindly dispositions and admir-
able personal qualities, have endeared
themselves to us all, and our neigh-
bourhood Is undergoing a real loos In
their departure from our midst, You,
Clare' and Ida, have proved yourselves
to be gl.rle of sterling character anti
beautiful example, and cur lives have
all been enriched by touches of yon(
ittrfluence, One thought gives us Joy,
—the new home is not far distant, and
the constant pleasure of meeting, will
still be ours.
Mr. and Mrs, McGowan', we ask Yu
to accept this gift, as a slight token
of our esteem and good wishes.
Clare and Ida, this gift is not given
for it's value, but as a small reminder
of our love and friendship.
"Friendship is a chain of gold,
Shaped in God's all -perfect mould.
Eich link a smile, a laugh, a Gar,
A grip of hand, a word of cheer.
As steadfast as the ages roll
Building closer soul and soul.
No matter how far, or how heavy the
load,
Sweet is tiro Journey' on Priond 4111p's
Road."
(May you long be spared to enjoy
your new home together, and may the
Friendship Road from Myth to the old
neighbourhood often be traversed by
each one of you, is the wish of,
Your Neighbours,
At the groper tine during the ad-
dress, Mrs. Alex. McGowan presented
Mr, and 'Airs, !AIcG•ow'an with a beau•
tiful tri -light reflector lautp, and Ailsa
ses Ella Caldwell and lone Johnson,
Clare and Ida, with boudoir I;unp.+.
Mats. George :leUowan read the
following lines:
"From the Neighbour Ladies cf the
Red Cres'4:
Clare, t; you have cold feet, you
nu'6t have the quilt. Ida, if you have
cold feet, you nuts•t have the quilt, if
you both have cold feet, you must
sleep together."
Mrs. Norman )Radford presented the
girls with a splendid quilt, E•1eh n'.•1m•
her of the family thanked the neigh-
bours in a few well-cho:ten words, and
it "F They A Jolly Good
YOUR LOCM PAPER.
411111111111. .11111.11•111ManStisa
OBITUAItY I 'file Little 01' home Pacer IBIyth altulicipal ('ouncil
A'il's. I)llvi(i Co\1'ttll \\'I• are lnriebted Irl \Ir-. Jan .\ sett ; , !;I,,, Irl !,,• 4'r, inert
Moody, of IUtrlu`llr r, for Ile• I'onottjug t\a- lo.',i1 j;1 tli r i:nl i' 1'l :uli er o0
'1'111.s community lost one oI il'i vl,rr,l'. , on ill, { lo;11e '?'own \t,':11',1.;111-
-\e 11 ( ,
\ :u, ,l rile tt';,., I; ;,r, i,, t, ,.
ll (10.?, ;111(1 1110ti1 higal)' I',';hl r'll'll 11,1. \Ili,. lilted\' I1 ', IIUI ?;1\' 44,4 :11 \
i rel;;.,' :l1:'i I rail' ii! ,,i 11:'111'1.
citizens on 'I'hnr5day twilling, March 4,r she c)Ii.1) 1 the \er-r , or n ,:. 1!ulut and :I, I'„ ul.
1111, when Mr.;. David l.'otvan, pa.i,eri but Ile editor c('rtai11ly ;I;)l,rl'('iat,'. ,
away at Iles' hrnn, in Blyth, in her I'lu ?lit "'Irl; tt,( :u:' 1!11' POI I/11,0 111'
Ile senliuls'11t r0ulained Ih, 1 in. invl
tifltll y'l';11'. ruil.jrl,•I'illt• ;11,111, .I' ill;: • :,r" t Ir' ctrl,'
\+�I• ?rust that 4) )! rt'ulll'r. \ti11 ;11.0 I„ 0f ('!,•r!; and 'I'r(',,,nr, r ;ons tell^w',(l
!some \'cell'; ago r,hc hist contracted ilpprecial'' it: f I:rnpl .}, I.°;' per .
a sevolc cold which detcloped luta ---. \I1,: 1;, .I !,,1:41, Co •r'.:',• S;"1111 and
,pill'11111011fa, and at il('I' i(dl';1110\'d \Vhl•tl 1.1:1'1''' 1',•1111' 1,11111 41' 1011P 'Inv. �,I; , 1i1i1,1!,,; f,,,. tl,.. sur' -!tion. ),f , )r'I'!:
age, she had mol the Strength to A11' the abun,pl'•m b blue: nil 'I'",1'',Ir I t+, el Irl ±L, \?'-
throw off it's effectcs. She pasoied \V11en life''; no hcrl of r": -e,, ing 1'l,.rl;. '1''" .r p,i '.3! !-• in
pru'4fully away about 5 cern, 011 :A n' folic; 5) .:u done +.0 yu(1• Ip'et '4 by 11'!,1• Ifr ,unl I'•, ,:,, til its
'i`hur' Iay morning. I know what \rill 11u1'•:)' ),,'i sappy. „id c„n id, 11,; • „`.,•i, tun 3'!1 ,tt,'d.
Am' Oast' away Ile Unna - ,.,I
,r,; P. I' tii;,,,ll, :vended
i(ea(1 tat' 113114' 0!' ern': 1)!(1 'C I.. ; er;nt,;er,:;i', Il -It \le- I'.r:,rllr}' L.
1'1'U111 }'(1111' 0P 110)1)4' \Uw'11' ;IJ)l)oilitr,I (•lege ;111,1 '1'Ir. aS'lle!'.
1 • Before her marriage, Alrs, Cowin
was 3lai'g; ret ,lane Parker, daughter
of the late ,I•::nr,l Parker and Annie
('larke, residents of Ii,itst \\'awiuulth.
Ehe resided in the Township until
her mare:.ego to David Co\van, in
Blyth, on February 14th, ISS7, Since
that time she has r(5ided continu-
ously in Tllyth, where she 110(1 the re-
speet and esteem of a wide circle of
friends. .:lir, Cowan predeceased her
on September 1 •Ith. 1931.
Two daughters and one sun survive,
Mrs. J. .1. D!cic, (Annie), of Brandon,
\crap.. AIISs Alargaret, at home, and
\Nailer, cf Detroit, \tick. Also
viving MT five grandchildren,
one groat grandchild.
Fuin'ral sert'lces, which were pri-
vate. were held from her late resi-
dence, on Saturday' afternoon, Alone)
11th, at 3.00 pan. ire\'. A. Sinclair,
pastor cf the United Church, conduct-
ing the services, and speaking front
and Samuel, Chelpier 10, verse 1S.
Airs. Harold Phillips slang one of
Ale's. Cowan's favourite hymns, "In
The Garden,”
l',Illbeal•en0 were, Alhsolinl Taylor.
Jetties Richmond, 11, 31cEh'oy, Jnhu
Cowan, \Vatter 314(1111, and [10ri Tus-
her, hlaw•eraetu'ers were, Paul \Val -
suit and Donald ('owan
interment wee made In flytlt Colon
Cemetery.
You won't laugh abut the heiflin' '\ 1141 il. 11•'ste:',
1I11i1g3, srrunlei Icy I:. 11"rio'tt. tit It Ile (',vn-
I'hc (,apes' la to appoint (. 0~I,u1 , 'I!"•t :0 ('laic and
I ar every line's a plc s:,agl, and It. D. Philp ;!s Tit
!„!ill ; 41• ;, :it...1. \nlr.nd1n' il; car-
Frenl the of 1101111' far awi)y,
I:ten Sts' 1101• chicken (pup
\Tilt 1101 provide 0 (,mile \tear(? I) I.. Se 1 a nn, seconded
An' the great big oily dailies
ly 1'. II•,inton. that Litoloye 1.1:1hj1-
I,ie nn0l:ened u11 the whit('. it) lu,nran,, le i:nle'II,(I.
hill's girl ha, gone t0 college, 110 nlLn,'t;t t„ :he above u103100 try
Au' Joe's Ln}'.; huuu from Pr;nu. , F. \\'rj.'ll'. ': 1 1 l,t It. Il,' l . tho'
Che I.adieS Aid wail held 0 :,uci0► I'.11'1'I')y( 1 io'rill'}• In -'t 1!'r' 1)0 re•
sm.- :Au the 11;t;on's give a II':)nre,
ne\\ ell.
and Vie] u d, fr'13 11. .\llo•11)1nll'llt ('al' -
So you read the heed happemhtgs, Berl,
An' Never' Miss a lint, 111. s "3111"0',1 ''41tnr sled thus »tin-
:And cause Iley'r(' all your ne!gh'oltrs utr', cf tl,:, Ile .(!• �- :h'i'',r'rl (nal
You'!l be glad that (I l!. are fine. Shat it be n't,•d 111'••'„ wr'1e 10) ;1llpliel-
'1'ilell, 10 101')' 1'1)11 htiow 1t, holt, 1' )'• 311, ;I`1"rli, ttllr `1'4; t;l'1')" for
You've read it thro.ty'l and 11111)' the ufflee , of ('ler)' (nrl 'Cl'e'f'-urcr
An' all the word seem; brighter, 01111 that )!r, 11:! ' Il and 31r.
Au' lil'e scents good 11) you, h)•ritueeour ynte„ol'''1 one of ih:' ap-
So for a pill of plra:ure, plical tons.
To chase away Ile frown,
'fake the little or newspaper,
Hort your U!' )lone 'Town.
Veer—
Popular Westfield Couple
Celebrate Wedding.
Anniversary
The farm hone of All. and Airs,
\\'n. McDowell, Westfield, was the
`' scene u1' a happy gathering on Alar( h
11h, \viten filty friends, neiglu,0urs and
Mrs. 13. Mason relative,,, from DOng:luuou. lielgr.t\'c,
'l'he community wets ea,'delle(' elf and \Yes: field. gathered With the 110 -
Thursday morning when it 41•'(8 learned Dowell family, to celebrate the occe-
that a highly respected resident in the 'Sion of 211. and Airs• M('I:o yell'.' filth
person of Ales. 13enjatnht 31!1.011, had wedlliug atmliver5ary. Alany invited
Passed peacefully away the night be- giler18 0110 "01141 not 81(0114. u\\•ing 10
fore at her home on ?)Insley street. weather and road emd1110ns 5,'nt their
She was in her 7Sth yell( ICongr,ttllatio».; ly 1110!1 and phone.
I Shortly atter Air. 31.14011 depth, last The guests WI1e r""eired by Air. and
Jlrs. NOratran 2lcl:ow'ell, and their :.on,
'Ang;ust, Mrs. Allison's health begin to
Gerald. After the !fiend.; lead extend -
fail. She had gone to live with her ?hen itie;?o' I:i:,!1!
'ell greeting.; and eenetat»1;ltions to
,son, in Goderieh, at Chrl this, return, jth4 happy couple, the aflrru0,❑ was Is't 'in the shalt "
ing to her home here 011' Monday, Spout ill social i11ter.un3e 31101 1(111 1\'e haven't am lmn e than enough
where she could be attended by het rual to Inn 11, titre te11 31•n'eh. .\11;1
own doctor. Altlutugl her condition IillIse 111' user picture; ac -
taken to year, t
1.leo, The g11ests wore in\•tle,l t0 U1” it',- mighty 1lard st•1ff to got, and ac -
was known to be of it very (PI''(tll :i iia' 0nrdin 1,1 0 (.nv''1.(11"1.1 1 :1d\4rti-e•
prettily deeeratr,l dining real, where g;
lure, her .sudden 400111 was e �hocic, the buffet table \vas laid with a lac, 010»1 011 I'a:_r' :, of 3 !I1' i=�ne, we n10) -
not only to her friends, hitt to her int Le hurni»(", sir:,w n,'\I winter. \\'hen
mediate family. ctoth, centred with 0 three tier w•ed
ding cake, and dec:,rated with whl; , , we go n'stou!;in' c,,:», nest harV)':(,
1 Airs. Mason: was of English decent, and ruby streamers, caught at the we're •:i)) (:0'118 to tool, er0un(1 first
her parents, t?clinund Manning and eeiliug by a large white wedding-
'Fite
edding hell.Dud sec (1101 h,' has » �o,,d flock of
Ann Leech, having made the 1(^tg 4'oy' The b11ffet Inlehe,ln 0.a, ,erred n)• hardwood at the 11ae!; of the farm.
age from England. to take up lend on ,Hiss 3lfldred Thw'ntun, Little Alj" 111' he can't pay 11.5» ('.4)141 1111,,, per11aps
the loth concession of Mallett 'Town- G4t('ndolyu Alcihlw('11 std Airs, Usbat wr will lig glad to I Ike it', equivalent
ship. Ilex maiden 1101110 \txs Il.u'lelt dcnto11, :\Irs, J. 1,. 211'1! \yell poured 1i" sone des?. Thi,= '� 1(11 410 have 1'0)11
.E, Manning, and she was married !o tet(. The home was prettily dreortlted,for. \Vr netel :tepid hill'( stilled
,Air. .l,lsou, 54 y(ars ago, The ('ere- 01111 while and ruby carnations and Iii, iticl; x1130 (3.
molly being performed at Londes')oro. maiden hair fern. Air,, AlcDowell's I•.--v---
corsage
----V - --
Inunedlalely following their marriage, corsage being white ruse bud.,, 101113'
a sang, or Icy r(. , o y
they resided on the homeste•acl f irm' tions an'd maiden hair fern. A'I1`;tiloll Band TO Meet
yellows,,,
A delicious leathern). was screed by en
lollawing which they resided in (1111-I ,\mong the many' beautiful and The regulu' monthly' mc('lin, of the
the neighbours. 1)13 John Roes then ton, Salfford, Rothsay, finally coming uumcrou5 gifts, was a 101013' luungit'g 3?Ission (sul(1 will he hri)1 on Satar-
toolc the olgtortunity of commending to lll311 h1 1900, Fer l.wenty five chair and foot stool t0 ntateh, from 1
day afteruo,ltt,liarr t 1 at " o'clock.
die neighbours for the kindly spirit years, prior to his steatite sir, AlasOn Air. and .1115. Norman Alclnw('11. :1
111 children are a,kerl' t0 brine 801,;•
of helpfulness which preta114 through• had been an invalid, and had required beautiful chest of silver from Mr. )le•150rs and younger children their work
otrt the neighbourhood, and expte=s.id her toil attention, 'Their example of ])uw•'!1's bothers 3111)1 5i„lees, a»d au il)(,(>Ics,
his gratitude for kiidne5;s to h'm1 and cheerfulness in the face of constant 14.01)' ('l('etrie 01'1 31u 1:11)11' lamp, 1001'
)lis, during his six years.' ,511) a tlono adversity, had been a shining Iighl the near neighbors. — `—
them, All retuti d home, after spend- in ti's community for years, and had I Hannah Jane Stackhouse, daughter
ing a eery pleasant eveuiug, won for them 111(1 admiration and 101'e of the tate )ire 1111)1 3Ii's John Stack-
_____v_____
taci - CON ii ATI of a host of friends. \Ira, '3183eu's hol;ne, of \\•)'Sltiel(I, w'.(; united in This colsnul is dedicated lo t:hn•'
-1' cheerfulness, and devt'tI” to her hut;- marriage by the late R1'l•,'1'. B. ('op(• who may wish to mane 110 0f it 1.•
(laud, was indeed. a shining exemple land, to \\'illi:un Maitland McDowell, cemnuhlClate snniP has`=in^. men) t
of true ('In•lstta11 fol'titude. 5),11 of lh(' late Sire and Airs. belie Al c• 1110 lives of their relatives an''
S'ho is survived
11y Ivo .5(1115, ,1. 1'd ?'o ill, of \VesIfteld. Al the 1301'„ friends, (11111 0s Pirlh,l1y;, \,'cd lu'o
auund, of (lrnleuiclt, and ITartec Al. molly I0 ye:11•s ago, All's Ada Star',;• Anniversaries, 0r nn\' Other "c"n':
of Seaforth; also by f:; c _.:•.•••1•'tildren
U"',•'1 h\• 11,. \1'''i^lt 3rr•0nded 13'
Ii. ll,•xtt:, flat un'etiutc alljo»t'n,
I,. 1 it::r^-ton,
l,;(,,,1, The Snir't ITp!
1\l(,l yule' spirit: nr): Spring is
.lust :11'101101 the cnr»er! :And We're
5111•) 10.11,111g loll• the 00!'itel', \VI' 11;1(1
11 genii( 111011 is the ,,11)4`1 by who prn-
phe-Icd the ..rt:ll ;11 111, wealler !for
the 11,'tte! I to rent,' al,nt the middle
of 1larch. a here's loping. 'Then
another chap Mill to »s'. "dill you
tool: at the e lleud00'? 1141 you See
40?))) I•: -.rtes• i- 'e110101';l°-•the 2:0111
of .\pril' \Voll you never (lid see
Spring: w, 1114 r le fury 1'a0te1! \Ve
1110x; 1100e 'Another \Pinto!' lilt, Hie ono
a few 'years :Igo. \\-e hod cold w•oatll-
er right up until the enc! of .hale—salol
Ilio summer. and
matter of tinging the Bell on the sab• January War Savings Sales
bath wasbrought up. It was decided Show Increase Of December
•11 be .shelved and brought up at a tat- I Sales of \Var Savings Certificates
er period and bit'. George White be In Huron County for the month of
paid for his services. The Treasurer January amountecl to $17,107. an int- ('seta Watson, R.N., Toronto: Donald was ficw•er girl, and the l;ride-nl:li,l note. You are 841ed to use arts cat
the same period of $2s9,G70.24, $3,000.00 Mrs. W. J. Pette, reported quite an 1tl'ovente'nt of over $4,000 compare,) and Margaret Alison, of lloderlell, and was .Mary AleC11100e (The Laic 3115, tuna, 11'4 11111)11 it would he a fin"
having Mao been invested In' Victory increase in mehberlshtp. Mrs. Grasby, with December. January wee th? Illariuu and Ronald 11:Isoe, 0f Sen• Itebcrt 'Taylor) co'isin of the groom. gesture on yo111• part to Show your in
!loads, leaving a valance at the end of Convenor of Flower and Visiting Con. highest mouth since last Alaech when forth. Her only daughter, Prances, Air. Marvin McDowell, of Westfield, serest in your friends.
the year of $3,5'24:74. Assets are
mittee gave hos report: 1 donation, 5 $13,170 worth of Certificates were 31014, Wan. \\'ut5un, predcre;rsed her in cousin of the groom, was hest mut. s�ee
?placed at $f1,140�50, with liab111tiee sym.pa.thy and con'gn•atulation cards moll, In addition to lite Certificates, '191 S, One sister, Airs. \VIII. Gri1y, 111`,(1 Following; the marriage the wedded t',llg lntlll.lti.)u, ill Elaine Johnston
including' a John of $540,0.0, since re- sent out and 2 calls uredo during the Post Offices in Huron County report surticcn. couple muted to th,' farm. where lh 'y w'00 )'('lebl"t' ; 11er ';11(1 Mrthdoy 00
deemed at $:',2'�0.c3. month. (sales of, War Savings Sdnmps in the j Private (unveil Services were held still reside. They 1101e 0110 3011, Nut 11 t!
t;(t 1
This report was accepted on motion Meeting wits brought to a close by amount of $3,521. for Januaryas conn fromher late residence, 1)111(ley street, (nen. who will Airs. :McDowell and 'I'hnrsli ie. :
of Beecroft and Ruddy. The collec repeating the 3lizpah benediction. pared with $3,015. for December, an on Saturday altern0on, witdh the Rev. their two children. reside with them ,
tor's time for colleting balance of , ---V—s— increase of $5410. To simplify account- A. Sinclair, pastor of the United 111111 Air. and Air.;. 3lcl'nwell tut\'., ('o;'gratulotioe, to Bernice Johnston
1042' taxes' Was extended to April 6th,' ing procedure at Ottawa, seve:;il pos- Church, of which she w•115 31 devout beenactive ill community and Church
41110 et l b101(•5 her ''+h birthday on
A number of small accounts amount I RED CROSS DONATIONS tel districts stave been combined, and member, in charge. Pallbearers were life, and ;u•e valued menthe.; of the !'11'day• Al arch 10th.
Ing to $89,41 were ordered paid, after The following donation's was receir- Certificate sales for Blyth, Londes- Tiros. Taylor, Alhsolant Taylor, ltobt. \3'::field united Church it ea; !mete I
which Council adjourned to meet ed for Russian Relief: _ boro and Beigrave ambulated to $693. Watt, J. II, 11. Elliott, 11, D. Philp and est' -g to note that 12 persons who at Cou la:r.' :u -11.. Edwin Craig
(again on April 6th, 1liiss 0. McGill $2.00 in January as contparel with $4S4, in Lorne Scrimgeour. Interment wits tend"d the vecdding 40 years ago, were of Guelph, wee 4 'lebrated his irth-
A. Porterfield, Clerk. R. Philp, Treasurer. D0eean'ber and $807, in January, 191:' inutile ill Union Cewetery, tingain guests, id.:y on Thursday, ):..,e:1 1.,:(.
pause, of 111yth, cousin of the bride that our readers may think worthy
Red Cross
o SERIAL STORY
LUCKY PENNY
BY GLORIA KAYE
THE ST RY: Wealthy Penny
Kirk has returned from Paris to
Kirktown to learn something about
the great steel mills she owns and
the people who work in them.
Under the name of Penny Kellogg
she takes a job on the newspaper
run by Jim Vickers, whom she
had met in Paris but who doesn't
recognize her, One day a bridge at
the mills gives way, killing two
men. Money had been appropriated
to fix the bridge, but had been
stolen by a crooked city govern-
ment dominated by the C;stros,
a gang of gamblers,
a • +
PENNY KIRK AGAIN
t'llAi"1'EIt VII
Suuli;;ht had a Way of soften-
ing Peony's resolution:, She had
determined to be angry, ,and :o
raise the roof \hut she visited
the Kirk offices. Nov,twith the
sun's rays streaming across her
bed, she couldn't 1111(1 a frown in
herself.
"What's the smart alit oaell,,,,
she asked herself. sitting up to
greet the day, "I know. They'll
naturally think lint dumb. 1'11
Just play dumb.,,
She picked a well -tailored su,t
from her wardrobe. '1'o it. she
added her furs. Standing before,
the mirror, she practised a few
suitable facial expressions. She
laughed at herself.
Soinoow, she felt overdressed.
S11i would never visit Ktrlttow'n
dressed thus. At. the Kirk oflicrs,
though, she would he expected to
look the part she planned to play.
\Vhat a vast world of difference
eel/ 1111(.•1 Penelope Kirk and
Penny .elle!.',;;, she reflected,
The elevator lifted her swiftly
to she 11111 floor. A pleasant .'e-
t,eptionist smiler) a cheery "Good
morning. \fay 1 help you?"
From hes' repertoire, Penny
selected :a bored look, She managed
to tilt her nose a couple of nithes.
"'fell lir. Stimson that Penelope
Kirk Is here to see him. ,kinl
please hurry," she said.
lite surprises) receptionist. jun)p-
ert to her feet. "Yes, .hiss Kirk.
Won't you please be scared?" she
Clew to Mr. Stint; on's olfl' e with
the startling news.
•
Penny examined the elaborate
aln.l expensively decorates) recep.
tion room. Its rich carpeting and
maroon -leathered easy chairs were
luxurious.
Air. Stimson, perfectly groomed
as befitted the supervisor of an
industry so vast as :he Kirk steel
enterprises, hurried dos., the cor-
ridor to greet Penny,
"My, toy, Miss Kirk," he
ont of breath as a result of his
miusual Exertion. ."1'h!k ;s a most
HEADACHES
KILLED BY TRE
THOUCANDS
IN BRITAIN
In n survey recently made among
British women, these home -front
workers revealed they consider
Aspirin one of the three drug items
most needed for health and morale.
With more thousands, each
month, in war plants . . • making
the planes and the guns for fighting
men , .. there's no time for pain.
So at the first sign of headache,
neuritic or neuralgic pain ...British
women naturally turn to Aspirin.
They know Aspirin won't `'let
then) down." It's proven itself for
generations . , , eased literally bil-
lions of heada''hes ... effectively,
dependably, first. Aspirin is rated
asoneof the safest analgesics known
... and costs less than 16 n tablet
in the economy bottle, Make sure
-nu have i spit in on hand, for relief
of pair!.
Aspirin is made in Canada , , .
and "Aspirin" is the trademark of
The Bayer Company, Limited.
Look for the Bayer cross on each
tablet. 1f you don't see the cross.,
you're not getting Aspirin.
ISSUE No. 11-43
C
pleasant surprise. I haul no Idea
you were laar hvr1. 1
thought you were in New York,"
"New York," fenny s.1 id, "is
such a bore, '
'Yes. Yes. it is, isn't lt'. 111:
said. "\Vun't you rote) into my-
off!ce?" Deferentially, .!v led the
way.
".Are you staying .It Use estate?"
Slitnson asked. Ile didn't Wait sur
an answer. "Yes. Yes, You outst
be staying them. Are you quite
comfortable? is there anything at
all 1 can do to mane your stay
more pleasant?"
"You might give sue a cigaret,
old dear." Stintso11 was ohvionsly
flattered by her intimate saluta•
tion, Ile fi'It wore at ease, 110
snllled as he offered her bis riga I'd
case,
„Well, now that t tau here, I
suppose 1 should make the best of
it." 'I'hetl, reflectively, she said,
"There is something you eau do
Ior me, If you will."
"Just ask, Miss Kirlk," he said,
eagerly. "1'1l he, glad to clo any-
thing I van."
"Aly grandfather certainly had
SOW unusual ideas about build-
ing a horse, T want to slake some
cha)lges. Could you recommend
the best o.leh(tect in town?"
"Why, yes, Miss 1{irk," said
Sthuson. "i'd recommend Johna-
than and ,)ones. They're the archi-
tects who designer) my )tone. Shall
1 call them?" •
"No, thanks. 111 drop in awl
see thele. ,Iust something to do,
you know." She rose from the
("hab' that enveloped her. "Thank
you so much. 1 really must be
going. Ily the way, All.. Stimson,
please don't mention my visit to
the newspapers or to anyone else,
)'m here for a rest. 1'11 call yon
again."
Ile lamed low, regretted her
refusal !o have dinner ivith hint,
and promised to care for her every
whim. Sale knew he would breathe
at sigh of relief the 1 ' eat the
elevator door separated tb1:u.
Penny had leatrned what site
wanted to know about the execu-
tives of the Kirk mills. Even this
shot's visit re)ealetl how' little th0y
knew or eared aboet
Penny smiled su!'tly as site
thought of the surprises which she
was planning. She had spent many
rhiughtful horn's on a111 idea t.hat
was now beginning 10 tok form.
She found the other: 01' Johna•
than and Junes, ar0h!lec's. The
reception renal was sinal 1 and
practical. The girl at the switch-
board doubled as a typist. ?ler
greeting was business -like, brief,
"11r. Jones is in. 1\'ou1d yon
like to see him? lir. ,Johnathan
is nut of town," the busy tele-
phone operator said. Penny nodded.
"Walk right in. I.•1st 110o, t0 your
right."
r
Penny liked Charlie Joan; tIto
minute she saw itinl. lir, was in
his shirt -sleeves, studying two sets
of drat'r`.ng:; olfer)d to him hy twit
young men,
"Sit down. 1'1) be with you 111
:1 i•" a '.
mol, t
1 .. h l01
I Penny, hunt
t
l
interrupting, his study. Ile seg.
get -ted a change, askc'J a question,
ansI sent his assist:ink hurl( to
their desks,
"Now," he said, smiling pleas-
antly, "what can 1 do for you?"
"1'd like to tinder a nledel vil-
lage,," Penny said.
t harib, Junes was =.!rutin dumb.
"What what was that you
satid?" t
.Pena} laughed. "1 ,just said 1'd
:eke to order 0 model village."
Then she continued, eagerly. She
introduced herself, assured )tint he
wasn't dreaming, and outlined
briefly her plan. From her purse
she extracted a clipping*.
"Here's a stony," she saki, "about
the model defense village of 300
hooses built by an airplane plaint
to house its workers. The village
was heilt so swiftly that it was
finished h•'1'ore people in the vit:in-
ify knew what was happening. 1
want 5(11) houses, bunt the same
way, on the plateau above the
pre,7cnt she of Kirktown."
3 M e
When he had suflitent ly reeov-
,•retl his senses, he caught and
enlarged upon. Penny enthusi-
asm. '1'bi<, t'harlie ,tones assured
ter, 111,1 always oPen his greatest
=nnbftion in life. To plan, 10
!mild, to work out the details of
just such a projee.t. was 1110 Jones
idea of 1,, _o von,
They t:lll:(!1 abut f r"Illini Cable,
low-cost )louses, They talked about
pleasant, shady Week. 'Piney
located Morel; In a convenient
shopping center. They found room
for a (.w Minting 1 and play-
grounds. They were playing an
exciting game'.
"Only one thing 1 Inns' insist
1)1)011." slid fenny. "I Waal ahso-
1n1e `T(re)y'• Nobody is 111 15110w
JUL.! What e1'e doing tlutli
all
(10110. 1 want a go0,1 job. 1
wag! it i,lst. 1 want no nuhli('Ity "
('hor1111'' done, assurril her he'd
respi,'t her twi<hes. His eyes were
dancing for joy as he shook her
?land. she hadn't liven nit of his
01!lta- :t laini to before all his
%until a sts1:1'lts poured ,10111 their
cubbyholes 10 ll•lWd 11110 his tiny
work-rnonl, she knew she had
0(11111' to the right plaee and to
the right mon.
.
Penny's elrit) ball: 1) ler estate
was%11:1\111;:. 51tc visit:ilier11 .live':;
pride 011,1 !d1'.(<tl)',' 11hen bo should
see the 1101)1 1111: e of 1{Irlctown
for IIe lir-1 t:eic. She Was pleased
as punt It -he told herself. 511
11111 dine a good day's work.0
.\ taxi took her to t'te l:u:, stop.
The '-i1(W•,ll01•itr,g' Kiria:own "ex-
press.' llrnll)u'd her in front 111 the
courier u)Gee .lust as the whistle
blew fon the d o'clock 1(01), She
ship111.1 happily down the steps.
Mello, .nim, she. ,:(sited cheer-
fully. •:tiling 1! r st: 111 ha) ;me n-
ately toward a nail on the wltll.
"How., trick::?"
"Ilya, fenny," Jim smiled.
Jinn w'atellld her admiringly as
1201111y 511(104 easily into the rou-
1ine of Iter Wnrlc. 110 wanted 10
tell her 110W much hr had tulsyed
Iter, even fur a few hours --how
mucli he needed her. Instead—
"1)y the way, fenny. 1 01111091
104101," lit' said, "Y011 star(, on
your story assignment at the Kirk:
mills tomorrow. Everything's
arranged, provided you proluiso
to be good."
"I'11 be gond," she answered.
"(Coral and scared. Heaven help
the poor ivorking girl along in at
steel mill with 3,000 men."
(continued Next Week)
Chiang Studies
Western Thought
Friends of Madame '.;hiaing
-al-Shek tell of her interesting
the Generalissimo in Western
thought, and of the university
which then Wns organized for the
education of thi.5 one Ilan, writes
Leonard Lyons in New York
Post. The (likings selected the
10 most eminent professors in
suit subject . as sociology, ms -
tory, economics and political
science. 'These Wren gave a thor-
oug;), 1 0 -week course, consisting
of two-hour lectures followed by
questions put to then) by the Gen-
eralissimo. And when the JO
weeks were over and the profes-
sors and Chiang Kai-Shek were
satVied, the "university" watt
11 bit11(1(4 and the professors went
home.
SLIMMING SHIRTFROCK
By Anne Adams
For full-time service these busy
days, you need a triol shn'twaaister.
The front buttoning of Pattern
4229 by Anne Adams is conveni-
ent as well as slenderizing, for it
lets you in and out in a jiffy.
The inset waistband and soft bo-
dice flatter! The collar may
snatch 1)r etitth'n5t.
Pattern 4229 is available in wo-
olen's sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42,
44, 46 and 48, Size 36 takes 38,R
yards ail -inch fabric.
Send twenty cents (20c) in
,gins (stamps cannot be accepted)
for this Anne Adams pattern to
Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. West,
Termite. Write plainly size,
n:1100, address and style number.
BABY BUGGIES BLITZED
:,ilcnt symbols that nn,tdern war affects all ages are these peram-
bulators among the rubble of all English town. Nazi blithers raided
the area by daylight under cover of clouds,
Britain Receives
Food Education
Lord Woolton Claims Knowl-
edge Will Not Be Forgotten
Wood ctiueation is 0110 of the
most important contributions
Lord Woolton and the Ministry
of Food have made to the nation
and in the opinion of the Minis-
ter it Will have a permanent
effect.
Lord Woolton cited the case of
children to whom proper foods are
available to enable them to grow
to manhood and womanhood, free
from the ailments of under -nour-
ishment.
Before the War, he says, well-
to-do parents knew ivhnt foods
to give their children, but this
knowledge was not common
among Working class parents.
Since the war, an'l its consequent
food control, all families have
been on more or less the sante
diet and the Ministry has made
available to parents not only the
food but the knowledge neces-
sary to bring up healthy children,
"And this knowledge," he says,
`tis not something which will be
forgotten."
In the future, he predicts, chil-
dren will he more scientifically
fed than in thy past, and he ex-
pressed the hope that the limited
pre-war program of feeding chil-
dren at school oily if they were
under -nourished had been replac-
ed lot' all time by the modern
idea that all children at school
need hot noon -day 1110015,
British restaurants and factory
canteens are another War develop-
ment Lord Woolton expects to 10-
nlain. They have brought "lux-
ury' meals •Within the W01dt ng
man's means and their benefits
are such that they must continue
after the wan',
Black Market Chief
Has A Conscience
Soft luusic came from a radio
as New York police quizzed the
suspected leader 01 It ga5(1ine
black market gang about theft
of coupons for 111,000,000 gal-
lons.
The Strains \etc intcrru! 1011 by
the voice of a 11('151 c0(11(10lltaltol',
It was a fal10(1 111('11 rtpert broad-
cast by a police officer in another
room:
''horrible avows. .\ to n:dile
slaughter of :\lneric.an troop: in
Africa."
(.'apt. Richard hrnnelly ,aid
Louis \1o11;;n11 '.at a1.; thou'. i1 daz-
ed.
The report continued. 3!1.I
were ambushed and :lain I)e:ause
of insufficient gasoline to 41111)4
up relief troops and supplies. The
prisoner :tad police listened in-
, teltly.
Mongno suddenly ,jumped to
itis feet, Fenle11y 'aid, and
;fioutCll
"i ('didn't realize this \shun I
stole those stamps. I'm a1 )radio'.
1'11 take you where the stamps
are. ('one yith tic. Give sue my
coact. Shut that off. I can't stand
it."
).'du)))ly said Moment) led po-
lice to an apartulcnt 1)11(1 !u'oduc-
e,l three potato sacks filled with
thousands of ration coupons.
Future of British
Accent In Danger
'l'hc influence of Canadian and
American accents on the sper'h
of British children is becoming
worrisome to Geoffrey Whit-
worth, director of the British
Drama League.
So many North American sol-
diers are stationed in the English
country districts that the tradi-
tional British manner of speech
is being affected, Whitworth said.
'Phe league has begun the mak-
ing of phonograph records of the
irnditional British accent in order
to preserve it.
Axis Ship Losses
In Mediterranean
---
Allied forces in the Mediter-
ranean, including United States
planes, sank or damaged 248 Axis
ships totaling 626,009 tons be-
tween September 1, 1942, and
January 31, 11(43, A. V, Alex-
ander, first lord o- the admiralty,
said in a recent address.
The loss to the Axis he said,
incl0(10(1 hundreds of thousands
of guns, tanks and other supplies
consigned to German and Italian
troops in North Africa, Ile said
136 Axis ships had been destroy-
ed, 44 seriously damaged and 68
damaged.
3 Rescued After
81 Days Adrift
One American and two Nether-
lands survivors of an Allied ship
have reached Brazil, weak and
thin, after 81 days in a
a lifeboat from which two o1
their shipmates were washed to
their death by Waves. The boat
contained a few rusted fish-hooks
they had used with strips of their
clothing as lines to catch enough
fish to prevent starvation. Also
the survivors said, a few flying
fish junked into the boat. \Vhen
rescued by a warship they had
gone five days without water. One
of the liollandet's lost 70 pounds,
TABLE_TALKS
SADIE B, CHAMBERS
For Cheese Lovers
Cheese ]las an important place
in the diet', for it keeps well, it is
a concentrated food, a111(1 ordin-
arily it is an economical one, at
least When compared with other
animal foods. One pound of
cheese represents the rat and pro-
tein of a gallon of milk. It is one
form in w'h.ch a surplus of milk
may be stored satisfactorily and
cheaply.
Here are three cheese dishes
that will surely appeal:
Cheese Dreams
1!� cups grated cheese
2 tablespoons melted butter
'.•, cup ,Wilk
1 egg
1`
tablespoon
s:411('1
Salt
111)1lka
':.
teaspoon t mustard
31ix to a smooth paste. Spread
between rounds of bread. Fry in
butter, browning both sides. )brain
on unglazed paper. Serve with
bouillon,
Polenla With Cheese
1 cup corn -meal
4 ,:ups boiling water
1 teaspoon salt
1'z cup grated cheese
Pour one cup of boiling water
over the corn -meal and let it stand
until it swells, then add the re-
mainder of the water, with the
\1'orcestershil•c
THE CORN SYRUP
with the
Peadouata/tvio
A pure, wholesome sweet
that's always u treat
If your grocer is temporarily
out of stock, this dclicioos
Syrup is worth waiting for.
At present the demand some-
times exceeds the notch larger
quantity now being produced,
because many thousands )1f
Canadian housewives have
joined the great host of
'Crown Brand' users.
r
� '>nnrvr
a producl of /1153
The CANADA STARCH COMPANY, limited
salt, and ('1)015 over the direct,
flame for five minutes, stirring
colsta etly. 'Turn it into a double
boiler or fireless conker and conk
two hours; or into a greased bak-
ing dish and bake in a slow oven
(250' - 350°h.) for two hours,
Just beforo taking it from the
fire, Add the cheese aril cook un-
til it melts.
Cheese Fondue on Toast
1 cup grated cheese
3 tablespoons melted fat
teaspoon salt.
Paprika
6 eggs
6 slices toasted bread
Mix the grated cheese with the
fat and add sant and paprika, Bent
the eggs 1111111 light, :aid to the
cheese 111i5ttIl't', polls' 11110 11 sauce-
pan, set the pain in another pawl
of boiling water and cook, stirring
constantl;, until the cheese i5
smooth and creamy. Lay the
toast 011 a 1101 plate, pour the
fondue over it and serve at once.
11isn 4hnnth('rs neleon1el. pernanul
let torn from Interested readers, She
1s pken►ed o, reeel7 a .IggeslIonl
on took)* Ior her velum,, and 1,
alnn3s rend) to listen 10 .our "pct
pre yen." 114.1011'M IN roc rcripes or
spralal Merl s tore In order, .lddrens
)oar sellers to "Mss Smile It,
I:htunbt•rs, 73 Hien) .11101141e St.,
Toronto," "end suuuped sett-nd-
dressed rn,elope 1r )1111 nlsh u
reply,
1 U'
rs..,iH'?
Ccnadian Courser for Canadians
Across Canada non thoavnuds of Show
Gnuluaten a ho hose ntn,ined to tiwt, wr1l-
paid pu-itiwes toll notenur11;' ruceeeuen
in 101011,04, through show training.
Sb,w 1104)' Andy Courses provide prna
tical, thorough Lind rfticicnl instruction.
Stenographic Gonornttccountant(C.C,A.)
Secretarial Stationary Cnpinuring
Bookkeeping HigherAccounling
Cost Accounting Short Story Writing
Chartered Ins)))ole of Secretaries (A.C.I.S.)
1l'r,te far ('at,il 1i, . Sine Sr)u r,i., Deet 1115
hat/ anis Nor:, Sts, Toronto, Ont.
1'1,1:.sSt: 111:\'lisle '1'111" I'Al'I;II
Improve Your Health
by Correcting Sluggish
661
;
This Way is Swift, Ecolnort's:al
Few conditions can 11t,h1 ir health
faster than di,urdetcd kidneys and
iollantod bladder. Vont hark at his
miserably. \'ou have restless nights. Von
suffer leg (tamps and 1heur !atic pains.
R'hcn these things happen your kidneys
need help iu filtering out acids and
poisonous wastes that are undermining
your ealth,
e:i,'e them this help--gUi'lly---w)th
(;o1-) MEWL, Haarlem 011 Capsules.
GOI.1) 11L-'DAl. Capsules contain
accurately measured amounts of the
original and genuine Haarlem oil (Dutch
Drops). \'olt will 10 gratefully surprised
at the way they lelieve clogged kidneys
and irritated bladder.
Go to your druggist now and get a 40e
box, Be sure 1'011 ass: for GO). U MEI)A1,
Uaarlem Uil Capsules, '4
FREE! 80 Page Garden Book
Plant a Victory
Garden with
WEBBS'
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(aur )urge pnelset t;r,'h
or heels, creel!' )senna,
11 as Ilenns, Cnrrets,
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11ad1nh,
8 Large Packets
50c Postpaid
Mailed Free on Request.
EDWARD WEBB & SONS (Canada) Ltd. •
145 KING ST. E., TORONTO
SUNDAY
SCHOOL
LESSON
March 21
OUR LORD'S INTERCESSORY
PRAYER—John 17,
PRINTED TEXT
John 17:1.8, 1 8-2,6
GOLDEN TEXT—Holy Father,
keep them in thy name which
thou hast given me, that they may
ho one, even as we are.—John 171
11,
Memory Verse: Thou, Jehovah,
haat made ale glad, Psalm 92:4.
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
Time • 'Theisday evening, April
8, A.D. ;;"•
Place -Nat definitely ntoe,`,n,
possibly in the upper roust, pos.
sibly in the court of the Temple;
hardly oo any : trect in Jerte,aleni
which 1:.+d to he travel sed on the
lvay to the c,al'den at ( tl!o•ruale,
Christ's Prayer for Himself
"7'he•e. things spoke Jesus; and
lifhini; up hi: eyes to heaven, lea
said, Father, the hour is come,
Glorify Thy Son, that the Son
• may glorify 't'h'e 'This glorifi-
cation includes the acceptance of
the sacrifice, the atonement
made, the redculptienl received,
the roveisa1 of death and tho
overthrow of Satan,
"Even a, thou gayest hint au-
thority over all flesh, tlutt to all
%vhoni thou hast given hien, he
Fhould give eternal life." Not all
Israel only but all humanity are
the subjects of Messiah.
"Aln thi- is life eternal, that
they should know thee the only
true God, and hint whom thou
didst send, even Jesus Chr•ist.,,
The knowledge Christ speaks of
here arisen from experience with
God, from an tunderstalnd:ng of
God's revelation to muni.
"I glorified thee nn tenter, hav-
ing accomplished the (cork which
thou bast given Inc to do." Glory
was rendered upon earth by the
perfect devotion of a holy Manan
life, by .cord and deep and by
service.
Request for Glorification
"Anel now, lather, glorify thou
me with thine own self with the
glory NVIticli 1 had with the bo -
('ore the lvorld was," The glorify-
ing of the Son of Mini and His
assumption into the glory lie
had pith 1lis Father before lho
lvorld, ',elan with hi., resurrec-
butt.
Chrisl'c Divine Origin
•'1 manifested thy name unto
the men whom thou gayest ole out
of the aurid; thine they were, and
thou ga':est them to me; and they
have kept thy word. Noo, they
know that all things whatsoever
thou had given me aro from thee.
l''or the words which thou gayest
1110 1 have given unto them; and
they received them, amd knew of
a truth that. I came forth from
thee, and they believed that thou
didst send me," The"words" im-
ply all the separate utterances of
Christ as personal revelation of
tho character and will of God,
convincing tho believing receiver
of then) t.lalt Christ is divine in
origin and person, :and His mis•
sion divine.
The Divine Mission
"As thou didst send ale into
the world, even so sent I thong
Into the world," '.Tho on came
Into the world to love and re.
doom men; we are to have that
sante love for men and point
them ever to the same Redeemer.
"And for their sakes 1 sanctify
myself, that they themselves also
may be sanctified in truth," The
giving up of His will to God's will
in the agony of Gethsenicne, and
then the doing of that will in tho
obedience unto death, this was
Christ's sanctifying Himself and
us too.
Ono In Christ
"Neither i'ot' these only do 1
pray, but for then) also that bo•
Neve on ale through their word;
that they may all be one; even as
than, Father, art in me, and 1
in thee, that they also may be in
us; that the world may believe
that thou didst send ate, And the
glory which thou ]hast given me
have given unto thein; that they
may be one, even (19 we are 0110.
I in then), and thou in me, that
they may bo perfected into one;
that the world may know that
thou didst send ale, and lovedst
then,, even as thou lovedst ntc."
Notice the three stages in this
prayer; the Nord from the Father
to the Son, from the Son to Fis
disciples and from the disciples to
an unbelieving world.
When we receive the truth as it
bas been divinely revealed to us,
when we rejoice in the things in
which God rejoices, when we
have the compassion that possess-
ed the heart of Christ, when our
will is in perfect union with
Christ's will, when the holy Spirit
1s leading us in all things, then
aro \Ve one in Christ.
Love for "His Own"
"Father, 1 desire that they --i o
whom thou hast given 111e be
with me where I ata, that they
may behold thy glom'. which thou
hast given me; for thou lovedst
me before the foundation of the
world. 0 rightous Father, the
world knew thee not, but 1 knew
ROYAL DUTCH QUINTET
1 1'il(C(i 1 )1x1'griet Freneisea, six v.e•t ie- olid, sits for it l•ailllly
1(0 1reit 1viLh her mother acid father, Princes:; Juliana and Prince
Ilernhau't of the Netherlands, and ]ler two :inters, Princess Irene, left,
and Princess 11eatrix,
thee; lei these knew that thou
(titbit send me; and I mode known
unto theist thy name, and will
make it kno'.vn; that the love
\vherewilh thou lovedst aro tatty
be in them, and 1 in them," The
lova of Christ's heart tun be
satisfied with nothing less than
this, that Itis people, the lather's
gift to liim, ha with flim, forever
sharing his blessedness,
Dutch Must Work
For Nazis or Die
Labor conscription was recently
introduced openly in occupied
Holland with a decree issued by
Nide!, ('oln(ERssl(r Scycs-Enquart
and broadcast by the German -
controlled Dutch Hilversum radio,
a N:ctherlands news agency re-
ported.
OUR RADIO LOG
TORONTO SPAIN 1)N b
('(1111 80)8, (1.11, 71(110
121:(1. ['Sch., (_'111 10108
1',s. N1:111'oltl►s
ty1;A!' N.):.12, itcd 060h.
1' JZ, ;.1:.11, l;luu 7708
WA I1C (('.11,8.) 8801(
\\"011 ((1.13.8,) 7108
('AS_tHLtN S'l'.1'1'1O:1S
1;1'18 (rw.:u 8d, 14008
C1(0e i1:un11ton 11008
151(511, 1iahn iton 0008
(8(1'11 :+1, Huth. 15508
(`1•'1 '1 51.. r, t nisi 0608
(1F 1;11 North Bay 1230k
11Jt'S Nuatford 12408
t'I((V Kiiig tun 00118
1'hathatn 1301:
( ((8 London 10101(
a
i
HORIZONTAL
1 Great artist
of the
middle oges.
7 He was
by birth.
1.a Lane,
11 Ridge,
16 Maxim,
17 To pull,
18 Equine beast,
19 Parent,
20 Small tablet
21 Tree.
22 Wood apple.
23 Measure of
area. 40 Above.
24 To annoy. 41. Rabbit.
25 Finger 42 Benner.
ornament, 43 Striped cloth,
26 Writing fluid. 44 Visitor.
27 Mourning 46 Vein.
Virgin. 47 Wide smile.
28 Gaseous. 48 Duct.
element, 49 Pertaining
30 To fly, to air,
31 Weight. 50 Skillets.
32 Instrument. 51 His paintings
33 Widespread of the ----
fears. or Virgin
37 Within. Mary are
38 Formal dance. masterpieces.
39 Polynesian 52 His style was
chestnut, widely ----d,
'1(11(1 \1'a terb
llttaw1,
('l((111 '1'Itlniu,
('((8(1 Sudbury
L'rannritt
1V1111190P
( ' IC,"; X (((halt l,l
I_'111;N. 1'eterberh
0.08
11;',01;
1.11, S't':t'1' I U 1 s
(01:1:1t Iluffae, ie
W HAM. 11ochest(r 11.1,:1;
)1'1415' Cincinnati 7008
10'1,Y Schenectady 5108
Ii 1,11 0 1'ittaburi1 V:.01(
111,11M Chicago 7008
\\ 11MN Buffalo 0;10k
11"U11 lin ffah) 6:,01(
Buffalo i:,: tc
11'31: Detroit 760k
' I I (I l t't' SV ((1,
;SI: 18 gland 0,51111
I;a1' England 9,68m
(181) Eta; land 11.76m
C51:
Ecg land 11,861m
(181; England 17,79m
1;81' (11 gbind 15,31:n
EAI: ;pain 9.•18m
1tAN 1;t(Y51t1 9.50111
UNE 11u,sia 12,00m
1'1115 i i(1IZl l 95.00m
\t ct.t.:1 Scheaect,uly
15.33m
WI_'A11 Phila. 15,271m
\\'CLiX N, Yorlc 11.831m
\VIItIL Ruston 15,15m
MASTER PAINTER
Answer to
SWORD1
D�;E�
DO ATY
LL k...
I
N
IE
T(ED
EARE
N
F
B
Previous Puzzle 10 Confined.
S
E
G
U
S
_lei]) 20 His —s
Q L i_ E are greatly
S B A S E,S treasured.
T S `+
TA- Q 21 Noah's boat.
M 22 Coffin stand,
L I E N E 24 Small hotel,
25 Coin.
26 Electrified
particle,
27 Puddle.
29 Eternity.
30 Shoe bottom.
32 Sour.
33 Window part,
34 North
America
(abbr.).
35 Type of
artist.
36 Spread of
1111 arch.
33 Double bass,
39 Semidiameters
41 Chief.
42 Because.
43 Wild buffalo,
45 Pulpy fruit.
46 Grassland,
47 PIstol.
49 Indefinite
article,
570 Jumbled type,
L
E A SSE_
LOS) I OT
COL1BR1
HORDEM
ARS 5HE
DD LOS
5P TES
L
B
VED
VERTICAL
1 Sun god,
2 Pulpit block,
3 To drudge,
4 To hack.
5 Affirmative
vote.
6 To whip,
7 Subsists.
8 To join.
9 Behold,
10 Neuter
pronoun.
11 Preposition,
12 Nay.
15 Wlhile,
18 To request.
1
POI .3..; Arh'2d Bzquest
MY AUNT MATiLDA'S
DEAD) COLONEL
hpL•.0„d b, Th-. 41'11 7o •1, 111,•, In.. 1
French Population
Facing Starvation
Famine To Follow Months
of Short Food Rations
Atlee many Mustin; of short ra-
tions, Prance will face famine iu
Juno and July, asserts the Now
York 'I'imea,
Thu peasant will be able to
draw on itis stores, though they
aro growing smaller each season.
The manual workers will still be
able to eat—if ills extra food ciao
pons aro honored. Ilut those not
engaged In productive occupations
—pruductive for Germany its well
as for France—will know starva-
tion, and that moans the bulk of
the population—the middle class
white-collar worker, the pensioner,
the aged and the young.
For ono thing, there will be no
bread, which In France still forme
tho simile food, Tho reason Is sine.
pie. Tho l9.13 crop \vats mortgaged
Ln 11)12.
Al Mat time, Chief of Govern-
ment Pierre Laval had not long
returned to power with many
promises on his lips but no tang-
ible German) concessions In his
hands. Already unpopular, he
would have doomed all his chances
ha..d he spoken of restrictions.
No Wheat From Africa
The minister of agriculture,
Jacques lo )toy Ledurie--Ito has
res1gu(:d 1,1(106, possibly beet:mei
i
110 dared not face the future—
hint enjoined that bread grains
should be harvested and threshed
as early a5 possible 50 that the
Interval between two crops could
be bridged.
Vichy hoped that "eontelhing
would tarn up” In the meantime,
Instead of a Miracle canto a cahun-
fty, North Africa was occupied by
the United Nations, and Algerian,
Moroccan and Tunisian wheat are
uo Mutter available.
1''or another thing, there will be
a scarcity of fats. Olive oil canoe
from Tunisia and .'1Igerla, peanut
oil from Senegal and other parts
of the colonial empire which now
have seceded from Vichy. Animal
fats are scarce as Is sufficiently
shown by the fact that the average
meat ration for an adult Is lees
than ono•hnlf pound a month.
Butter Is scarce because of lack
of fodder and requisitions of
cattle for the Army of Occupa-
tion.
No Fats — No Soap
There being no fats, there Is no
soap and the French aro going un-
washed as well as unfed.
There is no poultry—and no
eggs—because long ago the bur-
eaucrats In Vichy decided that it
was a "crime" to feed fowl with
g'r'ains which could serve man,
Some observers fear trouble
when a starving people recalls
past ministerial promises and In-
sists on production of the wheat,
the potatoes and the butter "gen-
erously provided by the Germans"
for storing against loan months,
When Relohmarshal Hermann
Goering told the world that when
the worst comes to the worst,
Germany would see to It that she
was the last to ataa've, that pass-
age was delotod from the speech
as presented to the french. Very
soon they will not need to be told.
Nothing But Ruins
Left of Stalingrad
Stalingrad, once a vast indus-
trial centre whose name will al-
ways bo a symbol of the triumph
of men over metal, is a heap of
ruins and rubble, writes Henry
Shapiro.
There are no streets, no ave-
nues, no parks in Stalingrad.
Millions of shellpocked bricks
and mountains of metal fragments
aro all that remains of such build-
ings as the Dzershinsky tractor
plant.
In the last 15 months I have
seen ruins of cities such as Sera-
flnlovich and hundreds of villages
on other fronts. In those places
there are at least individual bricks
which still are useable.
That is not true of Stalingrad.
Adolf Hitler boasted that when
the Russians recaptured towna
and villages, they would find—
not towns and villages—but ruins
and debris,
That is one promise he kept.
The destruction at Stalingrad
probably exceeds anything since
Genghis Iihan swept down from
the Mongolian desert and laid
waste the great and flourishing
cities of central Asia,
IS THAT THE ONE WHOSE
GAT YOU ALWAYS
PRETENDED TO BE
GO FOND OE
YES !
RADIO REPORTER REX FROST
With the (lawn of friday, March
121:h, the llrst 1''riday in Lent,
wonut" a((0uud the world will pray
that the nations may be united
and that our leaders may be given
supreme guidance in their docl-
810115 which s1(111 carry the struggle
now raging throughout the world
to a victory In accordance) with
the spirit of Christendom. 1:aoh
year a different country selects
a programme of observance for the
occasion. in Canada the Inter -
board committee of the Women's
Mlsslonary Societies designs the
progrannlo for Canada's partici-
pation In this world day of prayer.
As a prelude to the event, Mrs.
Albert Matthews, wife of the
Lloutcnant-Governor of Onta:lo,
tweaks to listeners across Oanada
on Thursday, 'larch 11th. Mr.
Matthews will announce the pro-
gramme for Canadian women and
will tell the story of this Christian
custom since its inauguration. A
olioir will also participate In the
broad which Will be heard
over the national network of the
CBC commencing at 1.30 p.m,
Thursday, March 11th.
It has lung beeu said that the
environment of the 1101110 la the
governing factor of the character
of those who live within its walls,
Not by any Means the least of the
factors which play their part in
bracing the spirit of the Canadian
household is the color scheme of
the rooms. Aud so of particular
Interest to ladles will be the series
of prograultln+s to be hoard over
CI''RII, 'Toronto, every Tuesday
morning at 11 o'clock iu which
Betty Moore, well-known luterlor
decorator, will slake 'wartime sug-
gestions for brightening the at•
mosphere of the home, Roland
Todd, the well known organist,
will supply musical color to the
prosenfatIone,
+ • •
A IIoiiylyood fihu career to not
Just a dream but a plan of reality
for l'oggi Loder, youthful Toronto
radio star, who turns the pages
of "Tho Children's Scrapbook" for
()IBC listeners every Saturday
morning. Hlnoo 1938 Paggi Lu;lr r
has lent charm and peesonalite
m:sly radio •lramatisations, work -
Ing hard to attain her ambition
of becoming a full-time actress.
A. week or so ago a talent scout
from Hollywood - was in Canada
seeking a new afar to take back
to Hollywood. After interviewing
hundreds of girls in a room in a
downtown hotel In Toronto, ho
says lie got the thrill of a lifetime
when the door opened and in
walked "his now star" . , , tt was
just a matter of minutes for him
to slake up his mind that Pegg(
f,odur possessed all the attributor
he was seeklug . , , looks, person-
ality, (hurtle pleasant voice and
acting ability. 'There's one draw-
back to an ttnu(edtate trip to
Ilollywo(xt, I'(•ggi Is only 16, and
California requites all he resi-
dents, screen stars or not, to at -
(mid school until they aro 18, e.
Pegg) will complete Ler education
tt ILavergal College, Toronto, tor
another two guars, and then Load
for Hollywood and sereeu 01100 BSC
Meantime, you'll continue to )(ear
her on the Camel lett airwaves.
■ • i
1)I you belong to tae 1h1 it Jink-
131s': , . . that Jo company ot'-
ganized by Tell Archer and called
to order oler t'11f,, '1'arunu, evee7
morning at live pa:,1 5111(11. The
High J!tkers aur promoting and
pallor:Ipatine in 11 whole slew of
practical Infst'teets to Leap the
tear effort 4.t..111,0!1 n;, 011 the Lorne
front. '1'o become au :tctivc high
Jlnker ya:l. the ?i;lt:net, agree to
snake a delimit, contribution to
'"11 act.lvity and to 1eturn Ted
Arcucr inrinrlrs, your requla'it
]lntti+!er ran tlir early morning
. 1' ,1 toper,- that his grow•
11'11,,11 "f vobIuteers tau3(xl
from , ;rt! Il: pre-school 1141
to grist, : "aa 1t;:t,ddad�. On.: lad''
bultd ;131 (\tr., 1lalnen pie tar aa
;(1111 set vire , auteen right after
1111:b Jn1it> played " $y'n!phot,y.
for .itriag,.-" at lion renal 1,t.
4 . .
fur la::: 0115,
cuuducrc,i by '1'oulaly
Iran=Jac (•1'eniu4 10.15 over CLOC
. , , it's sir' -i uc(1 to help you cott-
trilrlite that extra bit to the !iotaa
00011 by lending a mote prualcal
hand around !la., 'louse , , , 30 W
11111 001 it it'.1 north gel Ling u►1
more 1utim1t11 terms with a pair
of i,liers, the :screwdriver and a
gimp+t, instl•ad of wailing around
for "the Man" to fix it, get a loaf
M Tommy Tl eeel'0 practical sag•
"For Men Only,"
'1 he crimson trail blazed by a
u:I. er bullet is created by celes•
t:1 , n mineral often used in !ire-
•'. e! .C9,
LISTEN TO'
"COUNTRY
NEWS"
Items of Interest From Ontario
Weekly Newspapers
EACH SUNDAY AT 2 P.M.
CFRB-860 on your dial
THIS CURIOUS WORLD
110 MATTER W
COLOR YOUR SVITHAT
Is, IT LOOKS GREY;
TO ,YOUR DOG(
By William
Ferguson
1
,,.ALL DOGS ARM - ;'.,
COLOR BLIND.
7, M. PM, 0. S. PAT. 071s
COPR. 142 BY NCA SERVICE, W0.
HIPPOPOTAM.U1
HAS SFA1AtLESi"
FJWFTHE OF ANY
ANIMAL, IN PROPORTION
TO TOTAL WEIGHT.
eII1EAVY CREAM IS LIGHTER.
THAN LIGHT CREAM; says
MRS. ROBERT HUTCHINSON,
BUFFALO, NEW YORK.
NEXT:' Have you a twin In your home',
DID SHE LEAVE
YOU ANYTHING
Bx J. MILLAR WATT
YES! f I
--THE CAT! ,mss .
..ar - — _..rte..• -
CANADA
IMPORTANT NOTICE
TO ALL HOLDERS OF
[SlaughterPermits and of Licenses'
To Slaughter Hogs
Because of the urgent need of securing the quantities of Bacon and
other PORK PRODUCTS necessary to meet the wartime require-
ments of the United Kingdom, and the consequent necessity of cur-
tailing slaughter for domestic use in Canada.
the following action has been taken under a new Order of.
THE I3ACON BOARD, concurred in by THE WARTIME
PRICES AND TRADE BOARD.
ON AND AFTER MARCH 1st, 1943.. .
1': rson; not already licensed to slaughter hogs tinder previous orders of 1'114: BACON
110.1.11 1), bot holding daughter permits from THE \\'ARTIMI) PRICES :\NI) TRADE
I1 )A III), shall not exceed 75 pet cent. of their 11111 average n•eekly irtn':yr of hoes, sltutgll•
toed by ca' for theta fou• stale or further processing in Canada, (See following paragraphs
for farther explanation regarding areas concerned.)
THIS ORDER APPLIES
... to all who hold slaughtt:r permits from THE WARTENIE i'RICES A;Ni) TIRADE BOARD
told who are located in what is generally known as Old Ontario: to all those holding .such
permits c:nd located in or slaughtering for sale in any town or city with a population of over
',.ia.a in the ,Maritimes, Quebec, \1.tnitoha, Saskatchewan, and Alberta, and that part of
Pril'sh ('o1II111 is known as greater Vancouver,
THIS ORDER DOES NOT APPLY ...
. . . to holders of slaughter permits in any part of what is generally known as Now
or North. rn Ontario. or 11rit'slt Columbia excepting the greater \'ancottver area.
• .. it does not apply to farmers s'ccughteri11g flogs for const1n11gpt1011 00 their own farms
rely. Tiles` do not require slaughter permits and are not subject to this new Order.)
11t rseus alrc tdy licensed to slaughter hogs under previous orders of '1'11E BACON 110:1111)
will continue operations under 111011' present status. That is, they are still restricted to
p,'rceat. of their 190 weekly average for distribution or vale in Canada.
Approved and Concurred
D. Gordon, Chairman,
The Wartime Prices and
Trade Board.
1 r
Approved:
J. G. Taggart, Chairman,
The Bacon Board,
J.
THE STANDARD
A
[effect that a hog producers association I `-ltf .- .-f/ivirlA
he formed \'as passed and Lyle 11ep• •' -
per and C. It. ('oulte.; to dr,lw up the ((.
stone and forward It to the Morr15 `..
1.01‘,11,1111.1 Federation of Agricnitnr0
Jlis�s Dorothy (lance ;old t:eorg.' f)
)liIhte led a discussion on 'I'own..11ip ;
School Iklard:, Ideas 1 oth for an 1 ((!
against were express.( tl. The next
1
Iltl`I'llilg \'III he 111'10 at the huller' ttl. 1i
'Air. and \lis, .Eames ylirhir. Lunde
was served at the close of the meet-
ing.
I (Miss Elaine \\Valsh. daughter of 31r.
and 'Mrs. Gordon \1'alsh has complett tl
her 11si11e:6 course and has accepted
tt position with the Powerlite. Devices
in 'Toronto,
1 r,5, Sanest Crawford left for \lone.
ton, N.I1., where her ht:sband Is sta-
tioned with the Air Force.
Plc. Sunt Thompson, son of Mr, and
Mrs, Norman 'Thompson, has got;• t.1
Kentttchy, 1':5.:1.,
where he will cow
linue his military training in no.cb-
a111cn1 training, after spending a time
11 +111ing in 10Idou.
Zonis McGuire, of London, sp011t•.1
few clays at her h0111r here.
Ross Anderton, rine c.1' Mr. and Mrs.
101111 G..lnderson, left on Monday for
Ilauuilto11, where he joins Iae lt.t'..\.I
Another euchre and dance, h' !d by
local boys 101' the Cigarette Fund, 0(:u;
held on Thursday evening. \\Tuners
for c'achrr were, \I r. and .Irs. Il;u'0111
Arl11111''s (lrchr;u•a furnish1'11
anis1c for dancing. A lunch counter
furnished 0(.11') ;hments.
1101y Communion and Sermon next
Sunday at 2:30 1'. .\I. 111 'Trinity
C'hurch.
DOI\ NY 131 OOK
Corp. \Ielvin ('1.1i,4 :and he, t,aa
Thent-.son o: 1 011(1011, and Pte. I':1:1
Leddy of ('ante l:;lr! •11 -.p.nt the,
1. week end at their home; 110:0.
Jlisse a Irene Robinsan, ("art Leddy
and Mildred Jones' of \fine,:Iain High
School \very house over 111!
\I�s. InglemtuI toll Miss Ihu1',;le
have rr.t.trned to their hum's near
�Gtlelph after visiting the fornl1'r'-,
6151er, ler'. Jefferson Sr.
11rs, Graham t'h:twtey and lit 11'
son, Pol.' y, of Listowel, ;1;1; vi=itis;
at the lh.•mc of Mr, :111;1 Mrs. It. Chain -
The Si. ..\ucustiny Ment, n'.; In •ti•
lute mel on \\'ednesday a'ternoo11 x11
the home of Mr;. I''3V'id (`halunoy and
despite the extrenu'ty cold w:,tlher
there \very eleven ladies present. Let-
ters of appreciation were reale from
time or another during the afternoon.
arlrteteKtGCtGtCtCtet6tC+4tC�Gtetl:+ftCte►eat'�CtCtetCtCtCtetet£tG'�+etetQte'04�K���C 1Ie once started to tell a story at sup-
Elliott Insurance Agency
J. 11. R. Elliott. Gordon Elliott
INSURE NOW! AND BE ASSURED.
CAR—FIRE—LIFE—SICKNESS—ACCIDENT.
BLYTH— ONT.
Office Phone 101. Residence Phone 12 or 140.
"COURTESY AND SERVICE"
pertime and at ten o'clock we all went
to hed and he still hadn't got around
t0 the point of the whole thing, 110
worked two weeks, or 1 ,S110ul(l ray
'resided at our place for fourteen clays
land left one Saturday night still coil•
tin plaiting about the fact that he hadn't
Abeen born of rich parents.
ti Ernest was an energetic individual
A who breezed in one clay and anno 111e -
A ed that he was going to work for r,3.
g1 -le was a live wire alright but he
11100 11aN )i)11)(114Da 44;NZt)a ()aa lldthltM21Dc211hWY41hry11t111)4,1r)aarltliN DIDOst broke 1110re axe handles and whiffle•
PHIL OSIFER
OF LAZY MEArt)OWS
(by Ilarry J. Boyle)
Now that hired men have become
nn almost unknown quantity it alight
be a good time to reflect on theta. i've
often wondered if we 1red mired men
as fairly as we alight have. It was a
1;imple platter of keeping them for the
Hard work season and then promising
them to 1'd and tobacco for the chores
in the wintertime. That seems like
hardly a fair thing to do. On Ole other
hand there Is the fact that farmers
in general weren't making enough
money to pay a decent wage the year
hound.
There have been some strange
characters here at Lazy Meul0ws and
some mighty good ones. When 1 was
a boy- we had an elderly gentlrnuul
s'hoin all st c•-' d to think must have
ORdet`Nctuk
BB/IyCN/C/fS
Jlehe!
No writing, No money orders.
No bother. Just call or phone,
100% live deliveryguaranteed.
A. L. KERNICK
BLYTH, ONTARIO,
(trees in a month than 1 could possibly
Indian blood In nes veins he was so ihave done In ten years. Ile alwayo
dark skinned and yet who claimed !wanted to be doing something . , .
Lancashire as his native heath, In ithe hard wily. Just when a fellow was
times of temper he would bawl his settling down for a quiet s11007,•1 01' a
words out bo a meaningless jumble of ibit of dreaming he would come aloe'.;
profanity but all would be topped a i with some fool idea.
creamy icing of Lancashire dialect, At These are o111y. .some of the chime -
other time he had a normal Canadian lets. We've had a lot of them her:
accent. at iatzy \leadow.s, Quiet, h1rc1 work -
'f0 the whole ieihh;oorhood he w'as Ing fellows who were willing to work
known as "Uncle Charley". Ile had at long hours at small pay, They %ver r
interested in the farm and would work
erybody in the country. Ile Was 1101 .fret as 41,11 I'd a5 11 they owned an inter•
given to gossip and I fancy had he 'l est in the place. They seemed to fit •
w•auted to. possibly he could have 111110 the family and we hated to see
given us all an earful about our val.-them leave. They minded the child -
torr, neighbors. His only (—fitmentrm1 and 111111ced the 000(4 and worked
would be something like this .... and then one clay nnev0c1 on to anoth-
!Jlrs. Higgins is a great hand with a er place.
10111011 pie. I always sayLs• if you find Cne of the things that has to cane
la tvonan' Who knows '00( to make alis that farmer, will be able to pay a
good lemon pie. not too tart and not steady year round wage for their hired
loo sweet you've got a will woman.' melt'.
Those for whom lie had little or no
use he would designate in the follow•
ing manner. "Mrs. Snaith is a kindly
woman 1n her way but she's no 'and
for cookie.' 1 always says that a 0(o•
mean who can't boil pita 10e); \•1(1101)1
1)111'11111' 0111 shouldn't' be a cools at
I tall."
\• r 0(a picked
,11 I , ,t cilarac t - 1 I pick ,d
up in town one Saturday night during
Ia particularly busy harvest season.
Oswald was a man who had to think
things out for himself and he usually
had to think them out in great detail
and it took him a long time to get his
thinking started and stopped with the to be as Last year, namely, Grades 1
result that it was easier to do a thing and 2 Dutch Set Onions; Grades 3 and
yourself rather than tell hilt to do if. 4, bouquet for living room; Grades 5,
Ile never would work after six o'clock 0, 7, and 8 collection of vegetables
and invariably fell asleep at some from home garden. A resolution ti
various tian'+s worked 101' almost eV,
\'
BELGRA VE
The Jiarch n1Eetin'g of the lielgrave
Farmer's Club was held at the how:
of Mer. and Mrs„ John \\'ickstoad, Mo'•
cis, of Tuesday evening. Card game;
were enjoyed and then the President
Lyle Hopper called the meeting to 01 -
dear and group singing was enjoyed. 1'.
R. ('oulte,s, the secretary. read the
minutes which were adopted. Forty
(1011(rs was donated to the Red Cross;
campaign. $3,00 to the itelgrave
School Fair for the prizes which are
4
{;l
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1043,
q. atrick Cards!
Don't forget "The Irish" on St. Patrick's Day,
DTarch the 17tH. Everybody likes to receive a St.
Patrick's 1)ay Greeting. We have a splendid as-
sortment of St. Patrick Greeting Cards, priced at
5c and 10c. Call in, and look them over.
Remember to write to your friends ---We have
Writing Paper at 10e, 15c and 25c. Envelopes at
ie and 1Oc. Both Linen and Kid Finish.
Onion Skin Writing Paper 15c and 25c Pad
11121,1!:'e Binding, Thumb 'Packs, Paper Clips and
Hangers, Marking Tags and String Tags.
Birthday Gifts
If in need of a gift for a young boy or girl' we
have a very nice range of Games and Toys.
A Complete Line of School Books and Supplies
Always On Hand.
The Standard Book Store
1.,,•.7.7.,.,x.'., Z%:,'-:' ,,Zt1MEtgt„ .IatMti..l:Mti(te. t teiCICICIC14t4IteltQKIC14R'RHtetQkDQtQ1411D(11
p
ria
Pcad and Disabled Animates
REMOVED PROMPTLY.
Telephones: Atwood, 50r31; Seaforth, 15, Collect.
I)ARLING and CO. of CANADA, LTD.
I;.",,..„ .kwin.n,i:,2Y7:°d1ThNDir.12..UNDID)}I21Dm22m"a}'J}D191m1`,m,,7191,:124, DlDlil 1*.I
1 m••. 0rel'Se its who had received firs. C. Chanlney and Mrs. 'AI. Arm -
1,1 1:1•
r'm-
1,11'1' 1.; sent them at Uhl'l;tlll'IS.
\Irs. Craig, reported
a Hie gen -,.rots rGsluni;e for toilet
t• ii. lea lot• \1'eilllell ill Service, lift''e
t1 rive' 111. C I t0 the 1)ullgannoll ltecl
strong. M04. Craig contributed In-
strumental music. The roll call was
answered by paying one cent tor each
letter of your name. luring the after-
(',rterc=tins; papers were read noon
0 quilt was completed for tho
by U. t''a:uuucy, Mr.=. A. Craig. I Rt d Cr ss.
CAN
Teas of Thousa,, of
OLUNTEER WORKER$
make your
Red Cross Dollars
Stretch Farther
e Toiling daily in selfless devotion Canadian
W0111en labor to make YOUR Red Cross dollars
stretch farther.
They sew and knit garments, pack food and
supplies, fill precious boxes for our boys in
enemy prisons.
Since the war began, Red Cross "Blue Smock"
workers have made millions of articles from
approved patterns, packed millions of cases for
lighter and civilian comfort and relief. '
Other volunteer woolen, specially trained, drive
cars, trucks, antbulances, help as nurses and
nursing aides, office workers and dietitians. Hun.
dreds of doctors, too, give their time freely to
help relieve human suffering.
The 857,000 members of the Junior Red Cross
also, are doing work of untold value.
These volunteers make YOUR Red Cross dollars
go farther for material, food, medical supplies,
preparation of blood serum, for our fightent
war victims on the world's war fronts.
This must go on. As the war expands, intensifies,
the need grows. Never was the need for YOUR
dollars so great,
CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS:
Gordon Ell:o.t, Ph:ne 104, Blyth.
iD CROSS
Reequldtt n .eaM q ea& 'sant a e4
IIVEDNQBDAY, MARCH 10, 1043,
•
TILE STANDARD
major operation Is turprovieg very
$4.4'*44.4444+F4•4,4.4.44+4444A WESTI+ IELD
LYCEUM 11,118;011E��' The harm Forum was held at the
W)NQHAM--ONTARIO,
'iwo Shows Sat. Night
Thurs., Fri., Sat, Mar, 11.12.13,
DOUBLE BiLL
William Boyd and Andy Clyde In:.
•
iA
"Twilight On The Trail"
& Judy Canova arid Allan Jones In
"True To The Army"
Matinee Sat. afternoon at 2.30 p. m.
Mon., Tues., Wed., Mar, 15.16.17
Bette Davis, Paul Henreid
Claude Rains in
"NOW, VOYAGER"
Bette Owls in one of her
groaleat roles
ALSO CARTOON
WE ARE PAYING
3½%
ON FIVE YEAR
GUARANTEED
TRUST CERTIFICATES
ISSUED IN ANY
AMOUNT
An Ideal authorized investment
For individuals, companies, ceme-
tery boards, executors and other
trustees.
THIO
STERLiNC TRUSTS
CORPORATION
)72 BAY ST. TORONTO
home of Mr, and AIr-, Wm. Carter with
an attendance of IN. After 1!,ttening
to the C,II,1., 13raat1e:e t and discussion
A1r. Harvey hiclowell gave a talk on
Rope Splicing and et e, flames were
enjoyed under the leadership of Mas,
I toward cntirpbe4l, bunch wits served
by Mrs. 13. Taylor, Mrs, Frank' Camp-
bell, Mrs. J. 13►►ei'au'non and Mrs, 1V,
Carter, MI report a very profitable
and pleasant evenin;I. The next meet-
Ing will be held at the home of Mr,
and Mrs. Frank Campbell.
There was no .wrvice In the United
'Church on Sunday owing to tho storm
and road conditions,
People In this district aro hoping
tho weather will shortly have a waren•
for them. In fact a good old
er smile
fashioned thaw would feel pretty good,
and rid its of ante of our high snow
banks,
:lir, George \Vightman had a letter
from his son, Ivan, who 1s some where
in England with the R.C.A.F. saying
he was fine and enjoying his work
and England very much.
0.;ss. Will, Alva, John L. and Nor-
man McDowell spent tho wet 1v end in
Toronto, where they sold a fine car
load of oltole,e cattle.
,Airs. K1Uough, of Dungannon, has
been visiting Westfield Mends this
past week.
Mr. Stanley Johnston was a recent
Toronto visitor.
very pleasant afternoon wns spent
by some 50 friends and neighbors oft
Thursday, Mardi stn at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Will McCowen, it being
their 40th Wedding Anniversary. Con•
gratulation ane extended to the happy
couple and may they spent atony more
happy years together,
"c are very glad to report thatMrvr.
Afa►nshal Stonehouse who is n patient
in Wingham hospital alter undergoing
nicely. Her many friend's are hoping
for her speedy recovery.
eAlr, and Mrs. Lloyd Walden vkited
their little daughter, [tonna, who is
still a patient In the Hospital in Lon-
don on Wednesday.
Mr, Clifford Carter, joined Itis utttt,
at Sussex, New Brunswick, after a
brief visit with his parents, Mt'. and
Mrs. John Carter.
'Pile congregational tuecting of the
Westfield United Church was held
with Rev. ft, W. Rose in charge. Ater
vin McDowell was appointed churei
secretary and was also reappointe..
member of the session to retire lu 194•
the session art
Other nteulbers of
\\'iliiam Mnrowell, \V. F, Campbell
William Walden and W. J. Parks
Douglas Campbell was appointed tt
the board of s':owords to retire In 19-P
Other members of the board n.re. Wa
•
ter C'ook, Norman Radford, John 1.
chanan, Fred J. Cook, Maitland ilenr
Treasurer, Roland Vincent,
Other officers Include; missionary
treasurer, William McDowell; trance
Fred J. Cook, Fred W, Cook, `.1:1,1:,
Taylor, Alva McDowell, Elha.rles Smi;'1
representative on official board, t!
bert Walsh; organist, \Vinnlfred Camp
bell; assistant, Graeae 3IcDowell
church officer, Roland Vincent; usher
Leonard Cook; Graeme McDowell, Er-
nest Sttell, Alvin' Snell, Merrily Me
Dwell; auditors, Albert Walsh and
Norman Radford.
The stewards' report showed $970.11
raised during the year. There was n
balance on hand of $2b3.4!S. The \\r,M.S.
'tent to the branch treas;r•er $10.1.39
and forwarded a bale to the supply
secretary valued at $14.00. The Mis-
sionary and Maintenance Fund of
$S13,A5 was forwarded to the treasurer.
The Mission Band sent $14.79 to the
branch treasurer and the baby Band
$22.59, The Ladles' Aid liaised $164.35
during the year and have n balance
WARNING
CANADA FACES A WOOD -FUEL FAMINE
NEXT WINTER
ARE YOU one of the Canadian householders who burned fences, doors.
and even flooring to keep warm in this winter's sub -zero weather?
Or perhaps you are one of the lucky ones who just managed to scrape
through?
In either case, you will want to be prepared for next winter when greater
ordships loom unless you take immediate action.
The shortage already has affected many communities ... total stocks 01
dry wood are nearly exhausted . , , in some places the small supply of green
'wood cut for next winter is being used 'tow to meet the present emergency.
Throughout most of Canada, fuel -wood is obtained not far from where it is
onsumed. Its production and distribution are the business of local citizens
The Dominion Government recognizes that the wood -fuel shortage is
,o serious that even with the full co-operation of everyone in affected com-
munities an adequate supply is not assured. Accordingly, it has been decided
;o stimulate the output of wood -fuel by assisting those normally engaged
n its production and distribution. To this end. the following measure,
ill be adopted'
1 , a subsidy of $1.00 per cord will be paid to dealers on all
commercial fuel -wood contracted for and cut on or before
lune 30. 1943, and held to dealers' account on that date
rhe Coal Controller has been authorized to arrange in his
discretion for the payment of such portion of the transportation
costs as he considers proper in respect of fuel -wood, particul•
,irly in cases where dealers, to procure supplies, find it necessary
to contract for fuel -wood at locations outside the arca from
which they normally derive their supplies. In order to obtain
any such reimbursement, dealers must obtain a permit from
the Coal Controller before contracting for such supplies.
3 The Coal Controller will repurchase from dealers at dealer's.
cost all commercial grades of fuel -wood on which a subsidy
of $ 1 per cord has been paid and which are still in dealers'
hands as at May 31, 1944.
4 Assistance will be given in providing priorities for necessary
equipment.
5 Farmers now on the farm, and who leave the farm temporarily
in response to this appeal to engage in fuel -wood cutting, will
be deemed by National Selective Service to be carrying out
their regular occupation as farmers and will be given all the
rights of deferment of military service which such an occupa-
tion now carries. Such temporary absence should not, however,
interfere with agricultural production.
Municipal councils, farmers, fuel dealers, individual citizens, service clubs,
and all other groups in communities where wood -fuel Is burned, are urged
to begin at once a rapid survey of their local situation, and to take imme-
diate adiott 10 relieve the shortage.
THE DEPARTMENT OF MUNITIONS AND SUPPLY
Honourable C. D. Howe, Minister
W.F. t
Page 6.
iCtem1'cumetett6tdtativ utrt emigigtoctcletcog vo cComogIvtcctvocietetes ! tven,z, ,r,zTv ire:,`,,,.. -,.,::::..,.-..r.,.,. .. ,1n-,rr'i
RO�►Y'I'HEA'i'ItE, CAL'I'1' 11. '1IIErl`1'1(E 1►1:(af: w'1' `li14t:•:1`I'.(tF.
CLINTQN, ODERICH. i;rAr i{ -r,., 11
w
NOW PLAYNG: HERE WE GO NOW PLAYING; Fredric March in; NOW PLAYING` t,.ctcr Mature in: t;
AGAIN, with Fibb:r and Molly, and I MARRIED A WITCH. SCVi rr 1,;‘,..:, t. [A : (C,
r Bergen and McCarthy, tt
'i
4 Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Mond;,,, Ti.e.itj. Weems:!,day Q3
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday ey
George Brent, Joan Bennett, Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor and Dorothy ti,,iour, o's Hut,! and
Pi
Mischa Auer and Una Merkel, Sydney Greenstreet, td,m� G, o1.:b�
lark through a series of rnat'ital Actio)! :ih(11111,11 111 t111i to v „t tl ti, ll,,lh, t,.' 1 ;t,, .'4: iii,, ,'1
r pals«ptv, „ ,,•il. 1,1 :,1.1 11 .r it
rt,;uty fist (1 nip haute+'.
'el
1 _______``rI'��IN BEDS" _ r
Thurs.. Fri., Sat, Two Features
f "Across '1'hc Pacii'ic" „ , , ,, ,,,t,
GEORGE FORMBY, England's ace Iz().+Ir 1)-„t:t()l. ! �) 1
• comedian, turns 'cnnper' and goes Thursday. Friday, Saturday lbws' cin d
y, rr a�,.l
y, rd ,y 3
• T"ON THE BEAT” James Stewart, Paulette Goddard f3•:rge,l andtf,r`„:a(!h!, 1=il)l,r'r rule• 1
f China.
t+preset Itna'l, the lifeline of and Horace Herdt, Ccr owl r,l;Ily :: t'•, centime. I
hbt't, Hurl Ilte heroic strugglt� to .sso ;1 ii ' ' , :' , .1:• ., ''r,,•, its lit
The story of a popular' el'r'�I+•S,lra ii It open i� ry �nbhrll' n t'trayed In
('ICUKAN" and lei rim! to radio tills, . t•' ; ! i
No wn t.fnfnrmn•l ner'on should"POT O' GOLD" '1'� r IiWI'AGAIN" 1
intra 15, ____ 1
P COMING: Bing Crosby and Bob COMING: Claud:tte Colbert In:, col••'i'0: Kb..Y 1<YSER'ISN:
I Hee,. in "Ti.n Pi -A.( to N{nrnrrn" MY F l+`!:)1: R Ti SPY,
✓ PALM BEAC-1 STORY
Mat., Sat, & Holidays at 3 p.m. vtat, Wed. _,. A. -tie,, . , ., �44t.-_S it. ;.rid 1-1(.1 ;�•,'.
• t`d7'etb'1772::.•rfRt'3t`d7b"i,'.`i'M.:t2 f,;r'(s1V))31.'4iai212tt,12:( i;3'iaf$7c,»4'.:,:'1::7 a;:?1�i' 1�,::'.1:.;•`•..v.. .
'r
'1
y
r---V-ter--.
AUCTION SALE
Of Household Effects and Property.
The undersigned Auctioneer has
received instructions to sell by Pub-
lic Auction, the household Furniture
bush. Apply to Julru,tr.e, ('r 1 e:0-
and Property, of the late Charles 1311r.phone 3s•,•1, Blyth. Ontario,
ling, the sale to bo held at Ills late
FAI?M FORS ":147;
pt. 31, 1lt11 cont•
1L'rr/;, goo,l buildin amt 1` 1, 1 n• t,
Land in good shape. with (; !«'r,• 0
11.11. 1, Auburn,
residence. Queen street, 131yth, at 1.30 _
1).111„ 011 Saturday, 'March lath, eon- ! COW FOti SALE
isisthrg of the following: 1 Good Alilk ('ow, t;uarantel-'l right in
Pictures; dishes; garden tools; two every way, to freshen atoll( \(arch
high stools; bedroom chairs; side 12th. Apply Lessard \h Null, t(.'Iotl,
board; cupboard; 3 ladders; clocks;
half dozen dining room chairs; piano
player and record, mud record cabinet;
i rocking chairs; 3 jaid(ocrc stand';;
4 .small tables; I bench, walnut; 1
book case; 1 clay bed; 1 Axminster JOHNSTON—le loving uts'nl,Iry o'
rug; •I stoves; stnok•ing cabinet; 3 our dear father, Natal tni'l. who h•f.
bods; ;', springs; 3 dresser stands; us three years u;n. :liar: :1 1ttii.
Iii 'Memoriam
.3
p,m.
..,..._...,......swat,. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
FAIZ1I
- - ----
,•t r 1 ' • .,1 inn 1
1 I1111tt, I,l;iji;., to !,, 11 'iu' Earl!!
of t'.,(' -'( l': r r •
R. Glib rITi-iS, �r..Trcasure ,
\'antral for
Yost,', ;1:1 .1 „1:, i,,,1, ill-,(
' I
',.,,,, ;II, I ',i;ii,
i
�' ,' :,nil . .•lIv•Ih
1; tent.
FLAX LAND WANTED
bedroom boxes; hall rack; magazine
11)11-I.liir;(' t ;.'a., o:' 1•1-.t\ kraal \Can.•
rack; 2 gramophone records; halltatFor1,`„til, .{i,i,'- ;,;ti,{:: ;it the of-
--'/?Ver reuirutlnvcll, 111111 :sadly uli ,c,l ct '1'11 I i'iu'. Alw.. myth.
•runner; radio; kitchen chairs; holler; by Family,..,,,,.:,
tubs; bedroom toiletries; stats; seal- r;t1..,1 i(,•; _--,—.. ____. _. - .-- -
res: lamps; 2 kitchen table:;; coal i ta', ,'i; red tri:!, 31 r. !'1, 1! '1'H; .I,,
oil :;love; paper rack; pillows; couch; •
pipes; blinds; euriaies; small cup- 11 r. Larne 'Poll ani .\h.. Ilettarll L r i ;' I'
board; ttvo gas engines; linoleum; Uoodfelluw of Nobleton, seem the u'. ,t'1, ,. \tr t;,'.,1.
spool tack; and other articles too
r
nnmcrous to mention,
EAST WASV:tI"1OSI-I ( \ir;. jun'
1'
ci itirlt
TERMS; CASH.
+1+ The Residential Property will ()Ise
serve bid. Terms: 10 percent at
1
be offered for sale, suhject In a re•
time of sale, au(l 1s,t1►utce itt 3(1 day';,
,Airs. Lena Crawford, Atitniul''.ttatrix.
Gundry and Son, auctioneers.
of $50;52 on hand. The Sunday school
raised $103.53 and at the close of the
year had a balance of 1;10.:'::,,
It was decided to hold the church
anniversary in June, the date to be
set later, Rev. G. W. Ito -.:e c1o..ed tate
meeting w1t1t prayer. 'Phe ladies set''•
ed lunch and a social time tva8 enjoy
ed.
LONDESBORO
Week -end visitors in tho village
wore, Miss Dorothy Little, of Toronto,
with her mother, Mrs, Robert Town-
send; Miss 011Ie Moon', of 'Toronto,
with her parents, Mr, and Mrs, George
Moon: Mrs. Beatty, and Mrs. Haines,
of Loudon, with their sister, tars,
tt'm. ltrentdon,
Miss Vera Lyon, who had her up•
pendix removed last woek is getting
alone; so well that she will bo Nonce
Mt Friday.
Mrs, Thomas Adams is visiting
friends in \Vingbam.
We are glad to report the improve
stent of Mr, J. H. Shc,bbreelt, who ha+
1. -ren 111 for some time.
Inst Satertltty, .Apr, and Mrs. 11,
ltrensdnn received an• Air-b'a.il letter
front their son, LAC. Melvyn of the
1,C.A,F., telling then of his arrival In
Vancouver, B.C. Melvyn enjoyed the
trip through the Rockies and he was
alt itt leve with the city. Flowers
were blooming, and it was so warm
there tisat he went around in ehlrl-
sleeeres, ale does not think be will
be their long as he may be sent to
Ala.sktt.
One of the woit l blizzards of the
winter, experienced ower the week -end.
once more filled In tete highway and
sideroads. Friday and Saturday there
was a steady fall of stow, accotupan-
ie,l by an east wind. Then Saturday
night arra Sunda;•, a west whit' sent
!the thermometer down I.,10'S' zero.
The 1)115 went south Saturday morning
and then was cancelled until 6 p.m. on
Sunday, after the snow -plow opened
the highway.
HAROLD JACKSON
Licensed Auctioneer.
Specialist in 1"1trnl and household
Sales.
Licensed in Ilurou and Perth
Counties. Prices reasonable; satis
faction guaranteed.
For information, etc., write or phone
Harold Jackson, R.R. No, 4, Seafor'th,
Phone 14081,
I~µ
',1//00, he's well again
and doing a war job.
"MY I-IUSBAND'S had a nervous breakdown --
lust worry. He left his job in the shipyard to go
into logging. But his health suffered and the doctor
says he's got to take a complete rest. But we haven't
any ready money. How can he rest?”
The bank manager listened to her troubles
sympathetically. IIe knew the husband, knew the
wife—both sound citizens. The bank advanced the
money on personal security ... on the good char-
acter of two honest, hard-working people.
In a few weeks, bred wits well again and work-
ing in the shipyard. '1'he loan was paid hack in
full, Because of bank accommodation he is now
getting financially on his feet again—and aiding
Canada's war effort:
This true 'story—only the name is changed --
illustrates how Canada's Chartered Banks, day in
and day out, serve the human as well as the final].
chit needs of Canadians.
a'
By banking during morning hours you can help the war effort,
facilitate your own business, and lighten the wartime burden
on the men and women in your branch bank. More than one-
third of our experienced men have gone to war.
SOME THAT HITLER DIDN'T GET
If e e
�a �-c•(R' o'(s 5 nay t ..,:: 1 Al ')mei , C; R'y : - , ,Tpp�:4p,S 4 c '� . t7ts..e'
.... fT<�•xi�rR)t$�viiiA •..t�e.,,'v"r4y:., ars... .,. ?. ..:.`.'.,'< x. ... 't',...?.n.``t. �`. d:ttlti`,':'. ?.�' �1.i4�i.. ',ty�'g'Y•'r. a�._ Tr. n`''�<,L.(„tow,•. s Y
_r'fl S - s -au ars-x -wcc ..- •r•- n .. z. t :eu x r xaroau�. .....;y.;,+,v.•r_...'a.- se
,rk'k.''"{�;K;':i & e'er "f: , } .rct �" .'�' :'6:. tip..: _. ,:., X•.•lt, t>;?+,.! . r•.�11'�'i� ✓�. »✓,t,t-... �:..:'✓,l`�i-¢`.v"C�i>:. .... .... ... •�
70".
�:�. t :ta�•r'1 :0: H. ^[:li � 1' JI•:X u. .F . ,. � .
u' tt --,4.6A111
rcekcd, sunken and crewlees vessels above are part offals French Fleet' that hauler didn't
get \\ hen he took over the great French naval base at Toulon. The photo, from an enemy- 'source,
shol'rs a German sentry looking over some of the ships scuttled by their own officers and crews last
Nov'. 2? 7,
Modern Etiquette
By Roberta Lea
1. What t:::ikes a good con'•'er-
ratiou:llist'.'
2. !What should a person do
with his lett hand while e::tu g at
the table'.'
3. Shmlld one always give a tip
in an ineenspicuous manner?
1, Is it rcpt prcper to give out any
explan:tt isle.: in tho e ent of a
broken e:,g`:agt'1ocnt?
5. What Fhould a girl do at a
party \t'hcn nn inebriated guest
insists upon ki itlg; her?
6. Is it correct to use a chaf-
ing dish at dinner,
1. A goad couver,atiocalist is
not merely one who talks well
hnhself, but ',vho knows how to
draw others into discussion, and
who kno,'s hew to give others the
opportunity to appear to advan-
tage in';teaai of attempting to
display his own superiority. 2.
Unless the left hand is in use,
which is of cour90 necessary at
tinges, it Should be kept in the
lap. 3. Yes, always, T. No; it Ls
much better taste to say nothing,
not even to one'3 stoat intimate
friends, It is wise to bear in mind
the words of the old proverb:
"Least said, soonest mended," 5.
Tell this 'guest frankly and posi-
tively, without displaying anger,
that his actions are objection.
able. If he persists, speak to your
host or hostess. 6, No, the chafing
dish is for a supper or brenkfaet.
A nautical mile is equivalent
to 6,080 feet, or nearly one-sixth
more than a land, or statute, mile,
WHAT SCIENCE HOW CAN 1 ? ?
IS DOING
COLD PREVENTION
Three :.Actors in. Minneapolis
have been conducting large-scale
experiments among students at
the University of Minnesotat to see
whether colds can be prevented
by taking substantial doses ot
vitamins, New Republic reports.
'!'heir conclusion is that they can-
not,
It is true that the :tudent3 who
took a multiple -vitamin prepara-
tion reported a decrease of more
than 60 per cent in the number
of colds during the fainter. Tho
trouble is that when a similar
group of students were given pills
of no therapeutic effect whatever,
they also showed an almost ex-
actly parallel reduction.
Tho doctors say that this effect
is noticeable with almost overy
sort of experimental treatment to
prevent 'colds among large num-
bers of people. Whatever you
give then!, even if it is only bread
pills, the number of illnesses is
much reduced.
Is this because many colds are
psychological in origin, and
something about the experiment
aids the psychology?
Ia it because people under ob-
servation take better care of
themselves than is normal? Are
they perhaps ashamed of catching
cold and do they, part of the
time, conceal the fast that they
have done soi
Here is an interesting prob-
lem of medicine.
DERELICT IN TOULON
hl.t, phot_, above, from an enemy source, shows the .4.t'at battle
cruiser, Strasbourg, once a proud unit of the French Fleet, resting
on the harbor bottom at Toulon. The Strasbourg teas ono of the
French warships scuttled by their crews last Ioall,
BASE METAL
AND OIL MARKET
Sits 1 tie e the shares of STEEP ROCK at
present prices are an outstanding purchase
in the base metal market.
Aiming the oils, the recently completed fins n•
sial arrangement for DAVIES and EAST'
CREST gives these companies excellent specu-
lative possibilities.
We also recommend NATIONAL GROCERS
CO. LTD. common stook for investment and
'apical appreciation.
Information on any of the above
gladly furnished on request.
HARAS CORPORATION
15 King Street West
TORONTO
By Anne Ashley
Q, How can 1 ren.,t.-o a heat
stain from a highly -polished ar-
ticle of furniture':
A, Apply the 10114,titi in or-
der, u, ing a separate cloth for
each: Kerosene, alcohol ,t nal stveet
or linseed oil, .Eula the last in
tvell until the spot i no longer
visible.
Q. Ilett' can l avoid I,e,s of vita-
mins when cooking icgt:tables?
A. :1 good way to cook vege-
tables is by steaming. This re-
duces the loss of nhinetals and
vitamins :and is also cc''nomical,
as one may cool; several .11ffere at
vegetables at the same time.
Q. Ilow ('1u1 I keep +.y'rtip front
crystallizing?
A, Any boiled syrup can be
prevented from crystallizing by
tho addition of a pinch of baking
soda while it is cooking.
A. What is a good cleanser for
brass, copper and pewter?
A. A mixture of salt with an
equal quantity of flour and vin-
egar. Apply a paste made up of
these ingredients and allow to
remain on an hour, and then rtth
off. Wash with water and polish.
Q. flow can I shorten the
time it takes to peel apples and
tomatoes??
A. Steep the apples in boiling
water for a minute. Tomatoes
should be placed in a colander,
then in hot water for a ruonlent,
and the skins will come off easily.
Didn't Have Jeep:
Not An American
A sign of the motor age: A
Senegalese soldier shot two Ger-
man parachute troopers who
claimed they were Americana. Ho
explained to his French command.
ing officer: '1I knew they were
not Americans because they did
not have a jeep,"
Tho banana grows either wild or
under cultivation in almost every
tropical region of the world,
RECTAL SORENESS AND
PILE TORTURE
QUICKLY RELIEVED
It you are troubled with Itching
piles 01 rectal sureness, du 1.01 delay
Ireutnieut fwd len the (lair or letting
thio condition bosoms chronic. Any
itching 0t sorenus5 tit pain rut pass -
ago of stool is wature's warning and
proper treatment should le assured
at once.
For this plll'pes° got a !melt of
!Lem -Rodd Crum no. druggist and
use as directed, This formula
which 11 used internally 13 u emelt,
easy to take tablet, nal. quickly
relieve the (1 citing and 502' 1;1,12 aunt
OW in healing the sure totter soots,
Item -Rohl is pleasant to use, is
highly recommended and It seems
the height tit' (ally tor any one to
risk ,1 pronto' and chronic pile
coed'tiun when such a fine remedy
may he had at swill 111;11111H cunt.
11 you try Ilene -Roll and Itre not
en Wel:, pleased with the resulta,
your drugi.,I t will l:Lilly return
your rnont•v
4Reiieres distress from MONTHLY -
FEMALE
WEAKNESS
Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable
Compound not only helps relieve -
montbly pain but also weak, nerv-
ous feelings -due to monthly func-
tional dlsturbnnces.It helps bttlld up
resistance against distress of "diffi-
cult days." Made 1n Canada.
•
Some Animals
Can Tell the Time
A fine golden retriever of my
minion tttllce 15 11 till: habit of
tapping at the door of his master's
hedr loaf in the early morning,
says a writer in The London Spec.
inter. The room for tire nlonlent
is a sick room, and the nurse no -
tieing the dog'3 punctuality took
particular care to test it. For the
first four mornings fo the trial,
which still proceeds, the dog crone
to the door at 7.22 a.m. precisely.
Soule of the stupidest animals
have as 51114(1111i'ly accurate a
sense of time. A shepherd whom
1 knew experimented with a flock
of sheep, into whose pen ho (1e -
posited a supply of roots at a
punt lung hour in the afternoon.
If :.e was 1t Illitlllte or two late
every sheep was on its feet; if
11 ' was the least bit too early
every she..p was lying down,
The "voice (if the stomach"
seems to be as accurate as the
voice of affcetion,
GENERAL WARMTH
Knitted cap and warm clothing
keep Gen. Dwight 1), Eisenhower,
chief of allied operations in North
Africa, in smiling mood on air
tour of Tunisian front.
Indian corn i. grown success -
below sea level on the Caspian
plains and at an altitude of 12,000
feet in the Peruvian Andes.
CLASSIFIE
11,111Y CHICKS
HYBRIDS FOlt Ex'rRA VIGOUR
21(1') popular purebreds. Complete
list, all ages, Fairview Farms,
St, Marys, Ontario.
Yet[']; UtIAY (..'IIII'IKS SIIOUL1)
pre -,ado stole of the 9000 long
h'ns of 01414 powder, front 63
1(21111(11 dozen cggu, to fill ltrl-
(:ain's artier this year. It's a hlg
order. rt 111,111114 snaking every
bird a r,:at tour wt'tker. immed-
iate or later delivery --order new
rlti;l;s, started chicks, cockerels,
capu01. Bray Hatchery, 130 John
N., Hamilton, Ont,
til 1;1:K1,Y l.'.\PACI'1'Y FUJI HATCH -
ink over 150,000 Tweddlo chicks,
but be safe -order early. hast
yens we had to in:reui,e our
liatchi ((i' capacity right In iuid-
seazul, and even then we wore
911v1'l. Nuw, we Till NK we're
e:uly fur tho biggest demand
ever but it's always "better to be
5:afe than r.orry." Your choice of
all the popular profit -mukluk;
tiro -Ale -inane crossbrcltI . Send
for catalogue, price list, Also
turkeys and older eullot,4.. Get
our special price on cuckerel5
while they lest, Twaddle Chick
.tlatclu•ties Limited, Fergus, Ont.
('IIICKS
11'11)1,11 itlt'(11;U PRODUCTION
1-'I'II.\INS - Chicks -largo Leg -
horns, Rooks, Meds, Australorps,
Su -sea, Leghorn Earles Sussex
tees from 1Lutded and blood -
tested breeders. Livability guar-
anteed, M.111TIN ('11II'K FARMS,
t1.0L'1',
11U111�S .t N0%1:1;1'1ES
MEN! SEND lee FOR .N'ORRLD'S
21ln2Leet Jule novelty and cat-
alug tie of sundries, 1,0(11s and
not cities. Western Distributors,
Box et 1''\\'1, L'egi1l., :ass:.
IIUSIN1:`•S 1011 SALE
BLACKSMITH SHOP 1•:QLrl1'1'1e1)
and stocln:d, els° Grist ittlll
equipped with International on-
glnu and Julliette grinder, all
under one roof. (good house and
lot included. Splendid farming
dislrit:t, Closing estate. Clarence
el•allury, Bloomfield, Ont.
CHICKS
EL:1D ['0(1 OUR RECORD CHART
Deo and ca talogue. Six breeds
chicks and all ages growing pttl-
lots. Government approved. Savo
money, early order discounts.
Prompt deliveries. Satisfaction
guaranteed Monkton Poultry
['aro,, Alonkton, Ontario.
111111. SAW 11':tN'1'I:D
'WANTED USi'H' "WADE" DI(AG
saw. State condition and pries,
Write Ledru Helsel, Drayton,
(Ontario.
11G(:9 WANTED
WANTED HATCHING EGGS ['ROM
(tovernnlcnt Approved and 0.13.8.
flocks, all breeds. Guaranteed
premium pai(i. Write for full par-
ticulars. Box 11, 73 Adelaide W,,
To Meth,
('((0T IIA1,I1
•
13AIJa1EI:KA (UDT I1.\L51 destroys
otre101ve odor Instantly, 46c
bottle. tut:me ,trent Denman
Drug snit e (111: tr'It,
('t 1t ('.\11111\(t
kltl:1( I'I•:al_\LES, SIL\'I;ill' lll,t'E,
Silrrr barn, k it, .e 1pril deliv-
ery. 1, n n1gs, supplies• Dand'a,
Swift l'ml'nt, Sank.
Have You Heard?
A large flustered wonlnn, drag-
ging a small boy, sailed through
the station barrier and approach-
ed her A'niting husband.
"Hallo," said the Haul, "You're
ate,
"Oh don't talk about it, Alf."
replied his wife, "I never 'ad such
a tinge! 15'hnt with young Bill
'tinging on ale 'and, ale 'tinging
on to the luggage -rack, the train
'ung u in a tunnel and you
'angin1 about in the station for
ale, 1 was in n regular state of
suspense."
A boy itnd fallen into a
river and the kind old lady
stopped until he was safely
on the bank.
"How did you costa to fall
in?" alio asked.
"I didn't conte to fall in,"
iia saicl, "1 carne to fish."
The mistress of the house
heard .the bell ring and saw a
('Linde peddler standing at the
front door. Quickly retreating,
she called out to the plaid: "'!'here
is a Chinese at the door. You go,
1?I1a,"
That was too much for the ped-
dler. Ile stuck his head in the door
nod shouted indignantly, "You
go 'ells yourself!"
Husband: "What extra-
vagance! You have two hats
to nl+tch that one dress,"
Wife: "Oh, no 1 haven't.
I've only one dress to match
the two hats."
An English tourist traveling; in
tate North of Scotland, far away
from anywhere, exclaimed to one
of the natives:
"Why, what do you do when
any ot you are ill? You caul never
get a doctor."
"Nae, sir." replied Sandy,
"Ws vo just to dee a natural
(?cath."
''You hammer nails like
lightnings'
STOPPED
QUICKLY
' tP otsatmaJnss(
61st :. � '�/',/`I�w,y�•
eukknikllnalltl 1plultkislrw
selot)u)ttK� 1
iii Defile, al dw ids provac It or menet bast
Roll your owners
go for Ogden's
Indians on the prairies novordis-
covered tho use of wheels ...
But old-timers cottoned on to
Ogden's. They soon discovered
it to bo a (distinctive blond of
choicer, riper tobaccos ... tho
answer to a roll -your -owner's
prayer. Try it today.
Ogden's quality for pipo smokers,
too, in Ogden's Cut Plug
"You mean I'm a fast
worker?"
"No, you never atriko
twice in tho same place."
Young father: "In your sermon
this morning yeti spoke 'nook s
baby being a new wave on the
ocean of life."
Minister, "'That's right, Do you
think a fresh squall would have
been nearer tho truth?"
SAFES
Proteel your (N10KS and CAsIt
from 1011111 and TIIIICVES. We
haves Bice and type of Safe, or
Cabinet, for tiny purpose visit
us, or write for ',Hees, rte. to
Inept. t1'
J.S&J.TAYLOR LIMITED
TORONTO SAFE WORKS
115 lrual St 11., Fortino,
Established 18105
ADVERTISEMENTS
1CIIS, It11)LS, WOOL
ri1111' US YOUR III1r15, 11'115,
Wool, Horsehatr, Top pricoe,
prompt returns. Pearlman &
Goldberg, ISO Front Street, East,
Toronto. Government License&
Wool Grading Station No, 22.
100111, WOOD WAN'l'la)
51APl.i1, BIR('11 A N D MIXED
cordwood, lc I r s t or beeond
growth. Also Millwood. State
full particulars and lowest prices.
\\'alter Schiess, 19 Melinda St,,
Toronto.
111111N11 ( CLEANING
HAVE' 1'UU ANY"r1IINU NEEDS
dyeing or cleaning? Write to us
tar Information. We aro glad to
answer your questions. Deport.
meths H, Parker's Dye Works
Limited, 791 Tongs Street, 'ro.
ionto.
HAIRDIIESSING SCHOOL
L 11 A It N HAIRDRESSING '('1116
Rubertson method. Information
on request regarding classes,
Robertson's Hairdressing Acad-
emy, 137 Avenue Road, 'Toronto,
1'.11111 FOR 1[111'1'
FA int FOR REN'!' ON T([(1 111011.
tray between Elmwood and Han-
over, Approximately 160 acres ou
lots south part 33 and 34, tam-
Ctrs:dona 7 and 8 Brant. The Krug
Bros. Coy, Limited, (.'hesley, Ont.
FOR SALE
11'1119 SELECTION THRILLING
and exciting storlos. Send only
fir. for 4 back numbers; West-
erns, t.ove, Candid Confessions,
'!'rue Detective Cases, Fun Par-
ade, 1''ai110115 Cringe Cases, etc„
by 11110 of Canada's largest Pub•
Is hers of Magazines, Send for
Free catalogue of hoop 1 711 MU 11111,
Post. Office Box 232, Department
Toronto, Ontario.
1I1:1t1I:1L ftl•13t11I)Y
LIVER TROUBLE
THOUSANDS 11.\V1•: Illel:N BEI
rid the herbal way, Why nut you?
Write Co 1110 'Pinna Ilerbaliste,
for 0 free sample uf our Thom -
liken Herb, 436 Queen Went,
l'urwlto:_-�
Dll; )lL''.tL
DON'T \VAI'!' --1::\'1:111' SUFFERER
uf Rheumatic Pails or Neuritis
ehuuld t t' y Lixvn's Remedy,
Alunru'a Drug Store, 336 Elgin,
Ottawa, Postpaid 51.00.
(111 islt '1'U INVENTORS
AN UPPER TO EVERY INVENTOR
List of inventions and Pull infor-
elation sent free, The ltnmsay
Co., Registered Patent Attorneys;
273 Bank Street, Ottawa, C(tusda.
I'ATICN'I'S
['ETHEI(STUNLLAUUII & COMPANY
Patent Solicitors, Established
1896; 14 King West, Toronto,
Booklet of Information on re.
quest.
MILK CANS RENEWED
RUSTY MILK CANS RETINNEI'
like new. Wo also buy old cans.
Montreal Tinning & Rettnning
Co. Ltd., Montreal.
I'EIRSONA1.
11 1,I.1 A 11 COMING BEFORE
1'hri.,t. Wonderful book sent free.
alcgiddo Mission, Rochester, Now
York.
ISSUE No. 11-43
I'IIU'1'nGIIA('(11
DON'T TRUDGE THROUGH
1'Iie
Heat, Hleltl, or (lull
HAVE YOUR SNAPS
Delivered by dull
Any b or 8 expusuru rum porfer:try
developed and printed for only 26e.
Supremo quality and fait service
guartillt00(1.
IMPERIAL PHOTO SERVICE
Station J. Vorontu
PATEN'ES & TRADE MAI(ICS
EGEIRTON 11. CASE, REGISTERED
united States, Canadian, !British
Potent Attorney. Booklet gratis.
Established over forty years. 81
Ilulsotn Avenue, 'Toronto.
POULTRY 1\' AN'1'lGD
HENS ANI) PULLETS WANTED,
good prices. Export Puckett, 511
Clinton Street, Toronto -Branch,
Brussels, Ontario.
• POULTRY
0008 PRICES ASSURED, RAISE
Cockerels, help meat shortage.
Blood tested, heavy type White
Hybrid Cock orals 2c, payment
with order. Prompt shipment.
Live arrival. !'rank Edwards,
Wirt lord, Ontario.
RHEUM Alit! PAINS
IIlUl11,Y Itl•:l'U11811:N[)ED - I:V-
er)' sufferer of Rheumatic Pains
or Neuritis should Cry Df1.ou's
Remedy. Stunro's Drug Store, 235
l9Igin, Ottawa. Puelpaid
11.1111701: KN1't"TING
1VAN'ITlI t-\\'081l•:N TO DO 51110-
viee knitting, etc., Itt home. full
directions and materials tient
postpaid anywhere. Service linit-
ting t'om:ern, 2128 Birch Street,
\'aun•ouvcr, L.C.
S'I'.1L1.IUNS .1011 SALEIf
POR S\L,b: -'1'W0 REGISTERia.)
gray mullions, 3 And 12 years,
priced to sell. Or val raker, Far -
run's Point, Ont.
TURKEY SADDLES
TU1t1Cl 0 SADDLES, 30 CLN'I'.)
each, (1rlivered. John W. Wild,
19 1,ausduwne Ave.. London, Ont.
til'! AR SUBSTITUTE
SIIGAIt SUIISTITU'I'E CAN BPI
made at home, At about one
fifth price of sugar. Information
free with purchase of hook.
Household Dints. Price unit'
$1.011, N, \Villas, Sapttul, Mani Lobs.
s(('Eltl•'Lltol:s IiAIit
LA DIES TROUBLED WITH SUI'r;lt-
fluous Bair and especially Gross
who have been disappointed in
Electrolysis, will welcome the
news that we possess an (x-
clusive, sate, new method which
permanently, and completely, re.
moves any growth of superflucua
hair, slight or serious, without.
any recurrence whatsoever. Pltnso
note particularly that ours Is the
only method currying a written
(tual'ltMee of peznlanency. lie,
ware of "guarantees" not la
writing, tree consultation. Free
estimate. Dermot Clinic (8th Year
in 'Toronto), 229 Yonge St., To -
1(11:o.
'1' it ACTOR 1'.t l 4
• TRACTOR •PARTS N 1: W AND
treed, fur all mattes of tractors.
Corners Auto turd '[Tactor Supply,
12 ['rederlck St., Kitchener, Ont.
WASHER & iII1l"RlGFIIJATOH-
WAN'TEll, !1t.11CTRIC \VASIUIIt
and 1412 21)110 tur; pay good price.
- Wtn, Little, Box 852, Ottawa.
WITH CALM BORN OF FAITH
Shielding themselves from the tropic atm with umbrellas, as imperturably as if being lowered over
the side of a warship in a battle area were a commonplace occurrence, sisters of the Catholic Order of
Mary Immaculate are pictured arriving: at Guadalcanal, Stationed on another Solomon Island, they
were captured by the Japanese and held until rescued by American forces. Two priests and a nun were
killed before the Americans arrived.
Plane Flies 2,000 Plight of Poland
Miles Without Pilot Under The Nazis
Crew and Passengers Ball
Out—Plane Flies On
This is the story of a United
States Army plane that flew
2,000 miles with no one aboard.
She reversed course and flew by
herself to crash in Mexico after
her crew and passengers hailed
out because tail flutter vibrations
threatened to tear the ship apart
In the air over Florida waters.
Two men are missing.
The four -engined plane took
off the night of Feb. 9 from
Southern Florida on a routine
flight to South America. Abpard
were the crew of six, two passen-
gers, and considerable cargo. The
plane was 80 miles out when a
bad flutter had developed in the
tail. Losing altitude rapidly, the
plane dropped from 9,000 to 5,-
900 feet, while the crew and pas-
sengers jettisoned the cargo in an
attempt to stop the vibrations.
Automatic Pilot Set
lnsea(l, the vibrations increased
end the pilot turned back toward
Florida. When the pilot thought
he was over the coast, he ordered
tho others to use their parachutes.
Then ho headed the plane out to
sea, set the automatic pilot for
level flight so the craft would
not become a menace ashore, and
bailed out.
Shortly after noon the next day
Mexican authorities reported a
plane had crashed in the moun-
tains of Northern Mexico -.— a re-
port whir); gave the Air Trans-
port Command a first-class mys-
tery for several days, because no
such plane was supposed to be
in that part of the world.
Men on foot finally reached the
plane and an investigation pro-
duced serial numbers which iden'-
titled it as the ship abandoned
off the Florida coos'. Somehow,
its course out to sen hail been re-
versed, and it cut ncross hundreds
of miles of ocean with no ono
aboard, crashing when its gas
tanks were empty.
Liner Yields Steel
For War Effort
The naval training ship Cale-
donia, formerly the Cunard liner
Majestic, has been raised from the
Firth of Forth to furnish nearly
90,000 tons of steel scrap for the
war effort.
She sank after a fire Septem-
ber 29, 19'39, but she was raised
on the first attempt after 1,800
portholes and all openings in her
hull were smiled for the project.
She had been towed inshore.
About 13,000 tons of high qual-
ity steel have been removed from
the hull and nt her breaking -up
berth it is expected she will yield
25,000 tons more.
200,000 Square
Miles Recaptured
An indication of the extent of
the great Russian successes of
the past three mouths is found
in the statement from Moscow
that 200,000 square miles of
Soviet territory have been retaken
from the invaders — the equiva-
lent of a tract 500 miles long and
400 miles deep, criss-crossed with
railroads and studded with im-
portant towns, says the Ottawa
Journal. it is a tract one-half as
large as all Ontario, land and
water, which has 407,262 square
miles, and roughly would cover
the area from the Quebec border
to Windsor, North to Sault Ste,
Marie and -the vicinity of James'
Pay.
The barbarous Boche conceives
of a Made -in -Germany "new or-
der" as a long series of restric-
tions on all the European peoples
crushed by the Nazi war machine
and savagely policed by the in•
fan>,ous Gestapo, says the Strat•
ford Beacon -Herald. Poland's
pitiful plight is a fair example of
Hitlerism running alnolc In a Ger-
man-occupied country,
The Polish Review lists some of
the cruel restrictions decreed by
German authorities in enslaved
Poland — the same brand of
tyranny as Canada would suffer
in the event of an Axis victory.
Hereunder are quoted some of the
"strictly forbidden" rules im-
posed on the Polish people, who
are not allowed by their German
nmsters to (io any of these things:
To speak Polish in public, or
use Polish names of cities or
streets..
To print any book, magazine or
paper in Polish.
To play or sing any Polish nm -
sic, or patriotic song.
To worship in church.
'I'o belong to any religious, sci-
entific or social organization.
To attend any school or college.
To go to operas, theatres or
conce'r'ts,
To visit museums, libraries or
educational centres.
LIFE'S LIKE THAT
To pursue any professional ca-
reer except medicine tinder Ger-
man law.
'1'o enter any public park or
garden or sit on any bench in a
public place.
To eat in restaurants or cafes.
To visit barber shops, except
those partitioned off to segregate
Poles.
To travel without permit, or to
use express trains and motor
buses.
'1'o use automobiles or ride bi-
eycles, except for cycling to work.
To use playing fields or swim-
ming pools.
To visit health resorts or bath-
ing beaches.
To buy clothing. or footwear,
except work clothes and wooden
shoes.
To shop except in certain stores
and at certain hours set aside for
Poles.
To buy imported foodstuffs.
'J'o own cameras, radio sets or
phonograph records.
To own or use hosts on anal 1rt-
tween the Oder and Vistula riv-
ers.
To own land or any real estate
whatsoever!
The surest proof of the mad-
ness of Hitler and his ilk is their
belief that a Europe robbed of
every vestige of human liberty
will accept the "New Order"
which the Nazi gangsters are el -
forcing on helpless Poland. Free-
dom cannot be obliterated for
long by bandits—as Ilitlerite Ger-
many will one day renlize.
By Fred Neher
111.1..4 1/ f.n.nlid.led Yr.. Pnl....r
"No, we don't know the game .. . but we know the neighbors."
Bluey and Curley of the Anzacs
HEY LOFTY, HOWABOUT COMING. \
OVER TO iH TWO-UP SCHOOL. AND
HAVE A GO AT TosSING THE PENS
THE WAR • WEEK -- Commentary on Current Events
The Race Between United Nations
And Axis Powers for the Offensive
1;01low nig up the recent state-
ments of both l'roAdelil Roosevelt
and Prime Minister church III that.
the United Nations will nolo carry
Lho war to the enemy, AI)n•rlean
and Ihitir!I generals and admirals
tr.unouuce that their armies, navies
and air for'c are parked to strike
"n all front, (ay's the Nov York
rimes. Admiral NIutitz.'s forecast
of an e;,rly air and natal offens-
Ivo a,;aln 1 ,11).p:u1 i:; matched by
the Lindon broadcast. to the
I+rench people that "the dale of
an Allied invasion of Europe is
not far tiff."
'Phis is rile crucial psychologic-
al limo at which to strike. '1'u de-
lay nm'!) longer may rust us dear-
ly later on, For our enemies are
not standing still. On the contrary.
Althour!' "1 int(shen1'u Is staging a
new ()Hendee In 1110 north, the
Germans, aided by new reserves
and ' (ill ral Alud," have already
succeeded in slowing up the main
Russian drive, ami in the eritIcal
Donets hash have ehrcked It com-
pletes)'. at least for the present,
,and the Japanese 000 not only
driving ahead in China, but 810
also massing forces north of Aus-
tralia for tvhat. may be 110 attempt
to invade that continent. Further-
more, while the Japanese aro rap-
idly developing the regions they
have conquered and aro thereby
growing stronger day by day, the
Germans have started out to mo-
bilize the lost reserve of the whole
Fluropean Continent for a final
desperate effort in the stupe all-
out fashion as the Russians did
int their own country. Finally,
Germany io obviously trying to
strengthen her political align-
ments, and has apparently suc-
ceeded in tightening her hold on
Italy-, and possibly Finland,
Axis Possibilities
The German Propaganda Min-
ister, Josoph Paul Goebbels, has
promised that the \Vehrnlacht will
again thrust east thls year to seek
tJle final victory which Hitler tae
Laid lies there. But there wore
signs that Germany would try to
hold in the East while she turned
her main forces west against, the
armies of Britain and America.
('1)0 l"nehrer himself, In a message
to his old party comrades on the
twenty-third anniversary of na-
tional socialism, promised only
mobilization "to an extent exceed-
ing that of any war in history."
)n the West, two directions of
attack were available, One lel to-
ward the British Isles, bristling
with gulls, guarded by millions of
determined Wren. Britain was the
hub around which all the Allied
military projects for Europe re-
volved. Fur that reason the temp-
tation M risk an all-out attempt
to take it might prove irresistible
to German military leaders, who
havo never shown themselves
lacking In boldness. But the cost
W1113 certain to be high.
Tho second lay toward the south.
lite objective would be to drive
the Allies out of North Africa and
secure the southern shores of
1Jm'opo against lnvnslol from that
quarter. It might take the font
of a giant pincers, one arm of
which would go through Spain,
perhaps bypassing Gibraltar, to
Morocco and the supply routes of
Me American, British and French
forces operating in Tunisia, while
the other pressed through Turkey
and along the eastern shores of the
Mediterranean into Egypt. From
,,SSwitzerland last week came re-
ports !bat (lermany was trans-
ferring troops through France to-
ward the Spanish border, and
Turkey's President warned his
country that the "war contagion"
might spread,
Allied Possibilities
01) the Allied side, too, there
were two possible moves. Ono was
an assault upon the northern or
western shores of Europe from
the British isles. The other was
an invasio11 from North :ifrica to-
ward what Winston Churchill has
called "the soft underbelly of the
Axis," the southern shores of
i')urope, Combined, these two
moves could forth a grandiose
pincers aimed at driving the
1Vehrnlacht back from all the Eu-
ropean countries It has conquered
onto German soil, From Sweden
last week saute reports that Ger-
He-Man stuff
NO &000 To ME,
TOSSIN' PENNIES IS A
FLAMiN' CISSIE GAME!
loan Lair uelervera had seen activ-
ity in Hellish harbors pointing to -
1 1.11 audacious attempt to in-
vade the continent.
The calculations of haul sides
hung largely on what would hap-
pen along the Vast F.asteru Front.
The Geral:nn,' ability to launch
now Ihrustr '.Mould depend on their
ability to halt the rolling offens-
ive of the Red Army. The Allied
plans dell t;rted on Russia's abil-
ity to tie down largo numbers of
German divi.Mi0118.
General Mud Enlists
'1'hc f:r1•1 signs of Spring were
seen last v,eek on the southern
roal•bes of the 1,000•tnile Russian
battlefront, Oa the Ukrainian
plains the Snows were melting.
Soviet soldiers look off their cloth
l)ellnetr, bared their heads to soft
winds from 130) Black Sea. 'rho
rich earth, Kurd 118 Iron during
January, was beginning to clog
the treads of Iced Army tanks.
Soon Ilussi.t's 811y, (Imolai' Win-
ter, woald give way to Russia's
foe, General Mud.
'I'o military observers the ap•
proacll of Spring to South Rue -
slit was important. Its probable
effect mould be to slow tho Rus-
sian offensive, already one of the
Most sustained drives In the his-
tory or modern war. Since Nov.
19 Soviet armies, trained and
equipped for Winter fighting, had
been :ullitlg over snowy plains
and frozen rivers that offered few
natural obstacles. Their avowed
purpose was to throw the Nazis
out of Russia Tho attack had
broken a, formidable enemy de-
fense bystein along the Donets
River, had smashed forward In
places 4u0 miles from its starting
point at Stalingrad. Hut ahead
stretched another 400 tulles of
Russian soil and another great
defense system based on the gine
of the Dnieper River. The task
?ming Russian generals --already
struggling with a major supply
problem- was (1) crack the second
defense lino botore Spring thaws
could bog down the Red Army -'s
momentum.
Words From the East
Last ~seek Premier Joseph Stal•
In, in an order of the day marking
the twenty'•fifth anniversary of the
Red Army. 00(02? once again that
Russia was bearing the main
weight of the war and that a
second front had not yet been 08-
tablished in the west. At the same
time he declared that the Rel
Arany 11a.1 been created as an in-
strument. '.af defense and not of
('01111)14''.).
Soni' tib, erVei'n slaw in this an
indica' ion t'ltlt the Russians would
halt their ;advance when and it
they ('0(4,1 their old borders,
thus Vr"o:ng Germain troops for
operations in the West. \Vith this
tiew President Roosevelt took
sharp !',sae. Front other Russian
sources rami?' p10411(tinns of a
joint. ticiory by the United Na-
tions that seemed to set aside
fears that. the Red Army would
slacken its efforts.
THE BOOK SHELF
EVERGREEN HOUSE
By Louise Platt Hauck
Attractive young Cynthia Bar-
stow is very hospitable by nature,
She welcomes, therefore the as.
sorted relatives, who have .been
drawn to the nearby city to en-
gage in defense work, into the
rambling old house which she
shares w•i111 her grandmother.
Then, she adds several young men
who have boon unable to find
living quarters clsew'h( re, The
resulting situation inevitably pro-
duces daily problems and comps•
cations, but Cynthia revels in
solving them. Even Evergreen
House itself catches the excite-
ment and festers several love af-
fairs, not the least of W11)011 i3
Cynthia's own unexpected ro-
111a11C1.'.
Evergreen Houle ... By Louise
Platt Hauck . . Dodd, Mead &
Company . . . Price $2.35.
Enlists u•nt.> of Canadian Na-
tional men in the active army are
sufficient to form Six infantry
battalions.
British Alcohol
Distilleries Idle
Most British alcohol distilleries,
including those normally used for
whisky, are out of use and are
being used in st"lago, says 111-
11ustrial 1111r1 Engineering Chem-
istry. Instead of taking; over the
whisky mailing plaints for the
manufacture of alcohol for mili-
tary purposes, the government
prefers to import alcohol from
the United States told Canada, as
a considerable saving of shipping
is effected by importing alcohol
rather than the raw materials re-
quir(d to make it.
They Did It!
They Were coming along the
desert road when they suddenly
spied a number of the enemy.
"Fix bayonets!" ordered the
officer. They fixed. "Charge!" he
yelled, and they charged ---their
officer leading them.
They utterly routed the enemy
and took prisoner 18 men of
Pommel's A frills Korps.
The officer was a Lieut. Hull,
transport officer to a battalion of
Green llotcards. The men he led
into battle were two middle-aged
cooks from battalion supply eche-
lon.
Hull and the cooks were bring-
ing up rations in a lor'r'y when
they spotted the Nazis in the
desert. 'There was only one thing
to do and they slid it.
ONTARIO
NOTICE TO TRUCKERS
HALF•LOADING REGULATIONS
Copy of an Order -in -Council ap-
proved by the Honourable the
Lieutenant -Governor, dated the
23r0 day of February, A.D., 1941,
Upon the recommendation of the
Honourable the Minister of Highways
and Municipal Affairs, the Committee
of Council advise that, pursuant to
sub -sections 3 and 4 of section 33 of the
Illghtvay Traffic Act (Chapter 288
R.S.U. 1937), the provisions of the Bald
sub -sections be declared to he applicable
to the Ring's Highways described en
Schedules A and 13 attached:—
SCHEDULE "A"
Highway
4 Hanover to Flesherton and Wing -
ham to Highway 9
6 Highway 21 to Tobermory
7 Wisebeuch to Parkhill and from
7 miles cast of Teterboro to Perth
7A Manchester to Highway 28
9 Orangeville to Sc?lomrorg
12 Midland to Orillla anti Beaverton
to Brechln
14 Belleville to Marmara
15 Elgin to Smith's Falls
ISA 'e:IngsvIlle via Lakeshore Road 1e
Highway 38
180 Ruthven to Highway 18
19 Milverton to Tralec
21 Forest to Owen Sound
23 AiltchelI to Elginfh Id
24 Guelph to Orangeville and Shel-
burne to 0011111 t nod
25 Millon to :Acton
27 Dundas St. (Highway 5) t0 Barrio
29 ,U'nprior to Smith's Falls
30 Brighton to Havelock
31 Ottawa to Alorrisburg
32 l;ananoque to Highway 15
33 Stirling to Bloomfield and Plctos
to Kingston
34 llawkesblll'y t0 I-auu'aster
35 Newcastle to l-llgtlnay 7
37 Belleville to Actlnollte
311 Cnlnraqu1 to 1Ilgitteny 7
39 Windsor via Nelle River to High-
way 2
40 Corunna to 91.• allies south
41 Plcton to Kaladar
42 Westport to Forthton
43 Winchester to Alexandria
44 Carp to Almonte
45 ('obourl: to Norwood
47 Stauffvllle to highway 12
48 Port 13olster to Illg,hway 12
49 Klelnberg to Highway 50
50 Highway 7 to Illghway 9
51 Caledon to Highway 24
52 Highway 2 to Peter's Corners and
Highway 8 to lllghwny 97
5.1 Duff's Cornets to Highway 20
54 Calnstllle to Cayuga
55 Hamilton to Ilil:hw'ay 53
se Blackheath to 1)Ighw•ay 3
57 Bismarck to iltghtvay 3A
59 Woodstock to Delhi
119 \therley to \Vashego
73 Dorchester Road to Port Bruce
74 13etmont to New Sarum
79 \Vatfn"d to IIleTway 2 via Both-
well
80 alvin<tnn to Highway 2
S1 Del.mv.re to Grand Bend
82 Port Franks to Hlrhw'ay 7
8" Brewster to Reereltnete
84 St. Joseph to Ncnsen
Sr, \mheley to Tliglnrny 7
87 Bluccate to Morriston
FS rinndhced to Bradford
Oft Primrose to Couksin:Vn
91 T)lmtrnnn to Blayne'
92 ';Imtab 1,, \Vasaga Beach
97,
97 '11ckron to f'rceltnn
93 Denrias to highway 24
Tilbury to Blenheim vla Merlin
Woodstock to Thamcsford
Thrrnceford to Highway 7 via
Kintore
Eglinton Avenue, Dawes Road to
�ca'hnrn
SCHEDULE "It"
All roads lying north of the Severn
Rnvr and north of Highway 7 from
Sondelland Corners to Perth and north
and ttc t of lib_h vnys 15 and 29 frotn
Perth 1f1 Arn111nr, with the exception
that 1111; '.'.111 not apply to Illghway 17
from Arnprinl 1'. Pembroke.
'tweet" Het. ri..• 1'. h. 1913.
\V;ncrlly 10 Highway No, 11
'LT mamma.
By Gurney, (Australia)
( wlteRE 1 COME FROM IN QUEENSLAND 1Nr BOYS
ARE SO TOUGH "NV PLAY Two -UP WITH
MAN •HOLE COVERS �//
y,�
is
N, 1
_ I jt'_ -
i =t� 19 1.
e"'S
TT
.413 r
PAN 0.
IMINIMIDIPMCWIWCWORROINKOSCUNKINKl41411410000111(140(tSlCletkitiltlCleCt{tOPC/0
rf1
Men's Work Shoes
$2,98 to 85.00
Growing Girls' Oxfords .`'8198 to 1.5(1
t, Children's Shoes - Oxfords - Strap - I-li lace Boots.
r3
07411- t btarBrkkailair3ikiNN)tkola breDt5ID4 4,-)/13,bt0tbrbrblbtbar:ilrltININN71DrAt)
SHOES
A GOOD ASSORTMENT OF SHOES
FOR THE FAMILY ---
Women's Arch Shoes $2.98 to $5.00
Olive McGill
a
DO IT HO
•
1
1
To produce more FOOD is as vital as to produce
more munitions. To produce more food we must
produce more FEED for livestock. The use of
FERTILIZER will produce MORE FEED) PER
ACRE. Fertilize for feed to produce FOOD!!
There will be at least as much SHUR-GAIN Fer-
tilizer available this year as there was last year.
BUT there is a growing shortage of labour, trucks
and railway cars -- so that shipment must begin
NOW if this fertilizer is to get into farmer's hands,
Order your requirements from your SHUR-GAIN
Dealer at once, for PROMPT delivery -- make sure
of YOUR NEEDS!!
Fertilizers Administrator's Order A-5.19 confine
sales of SHUR-GAIN Zone No. 5 (see below). We
are in deadly earnest when we say that, if you are
in this zone you should ORDER YOUR FERTIL-
IZER NOW!!
(Zone No. 5 is comprised of the Counties of York,
Peel, Dufferin, Ontario, Simcoe, Bruce and Huron
and the Districts of Muskoka, Parry Sound, Nip-
issing, Temiskaming and Cochrane).
Crnada Packers, Limited
FERTILIZER DIVISION,
TORONTO 9, ONTARIO.
,T$E STANDARD
:Hiss Hilda Nesbitt, of Toronto, spent
the week -end at her bonze in Blyth.
\les, Junes ('Lawford spent the
week -end with friends in Toronto.
Mies Dorothy White, of Loudon,
spent the week -end at her home.
Pte. Leslie (lnrniss, of Niagara
(rash, is visiting his parents. Mr. 811(1
.\Irs. deorge Garniss.
Airs 1:(lith
chener, spent
Koine here.
Lockhart, of near 1' it•
the week -end at her
dins \1'ilnia \Vutson of lladsliill,
spent the week -end with her parents.
\I r. and \Irs. J. 11. \Vatson,
Pte. Jessie Phillips, of the C.\V.A.('.,
Toronto, spent the week -end wish her
parents, \Ir. end \Its. J. II. Phillips.
I \Ir. Leslie Rutledge, of 'Toroilko,
spent the weekend with hi: parents,
Air. and \Irs, P. 1). Itullcdge.
\liss Jean Cruickshank, 1t.N., of
\\'inghain, visited tvlt.h 111sei (hills 1111 -
born, 1(.N., last 'Thursday,
\t'. William Bowes has returned
home after visiting for two weeks
with .11r. and \It's. Archie Collinson,
and Mr. and \Ire. 13owes, of London,
1A Irs. 1oluf MacFarlane of Stanley
Township, who has been visiting her
(laughter. \1r.s. ken. Taylor, returned
to her house last week,
Misses Nettie Campbell and Erma
Hair, of Clinton, spent the week -end
with the foriner's mother, Mrs, Ann
Campbell.
Petty Officer It. Macii'orkin(laie, R.
'C.N.V.Il., .Spent e few days this week
with his sister, anti brother-in-law, Mr
and Mrs. R. D. i'liidp.
M1ss Elaine Walsh has completed
her Secretarial Cotir e at Canada Busi-
ness College, Toronto, and has accept
ed a position with Powerllte Devices,
Toronto. Congratulations.
Flying -Officer Layton Bray, who
has been stationed in Alaska for some
time, has been tisansferred to British
('olunr:,ia. Ile flew down from Alaska
in one day.
Mr. and \Its. Mut rill
Hollyman's
BAKERY
AND CONFEOTIONERY.
Soy Bean, Whole Wheat
and White Bread.
Also Buns, Bread,
Pies, Cakes and
Honey -Dipped Doughnuts.
Wedding Cakes a Specialty.
Doherty Bros.
GARAGE.
Accetylene and Electric
Welding A Specialty.
Agents For International -
J
I1,Iw. WUWi, a. �.ww..•.d...:J... ,
IQ
Wednesday, March/. 1043,
-•,,.tSIiS .3"�
R OVERSEAS
Orders will be taken het.: for "Smiles 'n
ChuchlPs Chocolates for Overseas Mai ing.
The chocolates are packed in boseE of 1 lb.
5 ozs. net weight. The Excise 'fax is only exempt
when the chocolates are mailed direct from the
factory.
Total cost of Chocolates and Postage 99c
R. D. PHILP, Phm. E;,
DRUGS, SUNDRIES \\,\LI.!'. PER ---Pn(.N'.1' 21'
ill i6 1 d aid L .. , . i. •
(Harvester Parts & Supplies ,„tat,...,4 sy ; ,zg,c,,,,,t„ '4tck;:1at,;wtatemt,./t i „
White Rose Gas and Oil j
6
Car Painting, and Repairing
Anti -Freeze. to
f,1
Ee
-
Vodden's
Ei
tip
I./
�.t
:1
BAKERY.
WHEN IN NEED OF
BREAD, BUNS, PIES,
HOME-MADE CAKE
OR COOKIES.
i
REMEMBER .?
"THE HOME BAKERY”
II. T. VODDEN.
PERSONAL INTEREST
\I r. and Mrs. Walter Cowan, and
sou. of Detroit, \Ifeh., spent 1 i 2 week
,end in town, having been collet honti'
ltielunonil due to the dc•.tl't 01 Mr. Cuwnn's
have moved, with their family, to mother, the late Mi''. (''avid Cowan,
the homestead tarni on the 'Itis con.'
cession of Morris, Previously they M'. and dlrs. 1.1In11r1 M,; "m, and
have been living near Seafoa'th, where family, of (loderich, and Air. and Mrs.
Mr. Richmond has been employed Harvey Mayon, and family, of Sea
on the farm of \V. I,. Whyte, forth, were in town over the wee;( -end.
having 112011 called hove owing to the
Air. ilarol(1 C. \\'ight.m:ut, of Orillta, death of their mother, Mr,. Benjamin,
spent the weekend with itis parealtii, Mason, which occurred on \\'ednnoday,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert \Vighlnian. He
has just been accepted in the ArmyMissts Isabel Medill and Maureen
on Active Service, and commenced 'Moffitt, of Stratford, .spent, the week -
his training in Toronto this \Vedn.m• end at their homes. :li.s Montt is
day morning. teaching the Junior Rocco, and M'3s
CANpgA 005 M.%
MILL
ION POUNOS
o_ ..� xn4 E1�4LOSIVES
� .�Ats �� � 6
4� ��
.to•deut ZUaz %
Q a a end the only way inn
Canada of every epee
e of Fats and Bones Y (Cana wand [
e is by the ked, uncooked or ' bomb
There to a Nrtou an be of 8 scrap tat and every bone, coo joked to
,,Fish this shortage can
of ecrnp h exploelvee—e> p the tanks•
ing, every 4 ekes high boats, destroy
till of drlpp l ce,{pe and glYco, Toio sunk their U•
Fats make 9 Y Adolph, Benito, the Axis partnere— Also glue for war industry.
Boneep[oducelat. eWgAT YOU DO Slra►n
HERE IS 11e n be mixed to0ether.ot use e
dripping, All may outhed can. Donyou have
kind eel a rte clean wide.mouthed
cool place until tet u meats
Save every KeeQ tinto e(rigeratot of scrap (a(fr ` scrap have ►crouch an a pound co m Save all pieces of lett.over set Keep (look or paper container•
collected ° pound
nc� k d). more,oKeep jeParals from your ��
(cooked or cool place. r'' 1,, 1
hones (n s / ii:4
aONf.
HERE IS HOW TO DISPOSE OF FATS AND BONES
The Meat Dealers of Canada e° a patriotic effort, are co•operating with the Government in this
ell•important war work by contributing their collection facilities. Now you can dispose of your Fats
and Bones in any one of the following ways:
1 YOUR MEAT DEALERS will pay you
the established price per pound for your tat
dripping and your scrap fat. You can keep
this money for yourself or—
C; A
•
3 YOU CAN DONATE your Fate and Bones
to your Local Voluntary Salvage Committee in
any place where they collect them, or—
SAVE
.A[
1, MugwafIr • .
t; FA/realNES
uc ..
2 YOU CAN TURN THE PROCEEDS over
to your local Voluntary Salvage Committee
end/or to a registered local War Charity.
4 YOU CAN CONTINUE to place out your
fats and bones for collection by your Street
Cleaning Department where such a system is
in existence.
Every spoonful of dripping, every piece of fat and every bone, cooked, un.
cooked or dry, must be saved. 8'e a dayto-dey fob. Your contribution may
seem small and unimportant but even one ounce of fat dripping per person
per week -will give us 36,000,000 pounds of Fat each year for glycerine.
d oted, I edieuvtanI4— you4 dupflo4I aN;seistly aeedeii
THIS CAMPAIGN IS FOR THE DURATION OF THE WAR
DEPARTMENT OF NATIONAL WAR SERVICES
NATIONAL SALVAGE DIVISION
N4.I
McGill in the Senior Room of 111;
Illylh I'u? ;Ic ::•Fool, this week.
LONDES3ORO RED CROSS NEW3,
The monthly meeting of the Lon-
(lt.ls';;oro iced Cross was held in tate
Hall with a sw:all attendance, due to
the storm. The 'Treasurer repotted a
balance on hand of $389.03.
A quilt wets donated by Miss E
.\loins and it was decided to sell
) 'tickets on this. Tho committee to
look after it, Mrs. 11. Adams, \iI's. J.
Aril:otrong and \I ,I13. F. Pull.
Cash Donationc:
Miss 11. Kirk $1.00
Quilt Donations:
I quill form 11N. Jim Crawford;
I quilt top from liths. Lorne Radley;
1 quilt top from Mrs. \V. (toss, rinill'Ol,
an(i tat s•pplied by Airs. \V. Gorier.
The following donated Ilo•slecs3
money, ,,"c each: ,Mrs. .1. II, Shob•
brook, :qrs. C. ituddcll, Airs. J. F.iir-
service, Airs. \V. 1lrun6don, Allss E.
Mains, Mrs. A. Wells.
'Lunch collection,
V •
AUBURN
San(lay next Morning Prayer and
Sermon at IS:..10 in St. Mark's Church.
---v
Morris Council Meeting
The Morris Township Council met
on \larch s, ill the '1'oc.11=111p (tall
with all the nil10ers passant except
Harvey J(.hnston, The Reeve presid-
ed.
'The minutes of the last meeting
were read land adopter) on notion of
\V:n. Spelt and Jas. \nettle.
Moved by C. It Gauites, seconded by
James •\lir•hle, that Joseph Smith be
re -hired to run the township grader
for 1943. Carried.
Moved by James :Michie, seconders
by C. R. C'oultes, that the clerk bo
instructed to advertise for tenders for
crushing anti delivering 7000 yds. of
What is A home Without Furniture?
_Pooch Clothing and Shelter are man's 'most elem-
tary News: But shelter has to be livable --a man's
home has to have furniture.
Can anyone imagine living in a home totally bare
of ail; T o t the little comforts and touches that make
life worth living? Of course not.
re^al.ise in the final analysis a man has to have
something to work for, something that represents
tanribl3 fruits of his labors,
We are trying to hell) home front morale by con-
tinuin - to p1'ovide good reasonably priced furniture.
)r furniture gives the 11on1e front workers some-
thing sound and lasting in which to inyest. Some-
thing tangible to work for.
r {ti 6
•i Home Furnisher — Phone! 7 and R
•..:Itn7^:U..-..::::!•.;:,1i✓:-1. .11.tDantEal0trelit1G1IDiIL1ifitaiG1WS(YfDf elhki
. Chellew
Funeral Diroctor,
w..or.n....r.1611, I d,...,l..a.1I 1166 , 1. I a. .ui i 1 I do I . I ..0 ,i I d . .
URON GRILL
BLYTH --- ONTARIO.
EXCELLENT FOOD. GOOD SERVICE.
Meals at All Hours.
FR
NK GONG � Proprietor
.• W. +._4 1.1 1 Li. did u . 1 I i, , I,.I . i .L , ..I ,.
gavel. '(runners to be in by April if:, eatuling to the 1111161c of Norm ITan'is
1
1'143, Carried. 'and itis orchestra in' the Oak Room of
loved I y (.', R. ('oal:es, seconded the King Edward Hotel.
: y \\'tit. Spell., that the meeting ad- of the party was assured
jonrn 10 mut again on April 1'l, 1'J-13 number attending, among
:.1 1 p. m. (';writs.
The following arcounl3 were paid:
1':•pt. of llualth 1Ins:dhtl ,... $0,:13
.lunicipal \Vorld \:sestet anent
Roll) . 7.11
('.ill and Zapf(' (funeral ex-
penses) . , 55.00
Cccll \\'beet •r (canvtntion ex•
pens s and telephone call) 17,35
\Irs. Grey.; (relief) 15.00
1.e.;2111 (aftercare) 7.00
\(l}ion Higgins (pc.a.-ge) 10.0'-
Geol'go C. Martin, Clerk.
Huron County Juniors hold
Party
Members and friends of the Huron
('o.inty Junior A:s o_iation of Toronto
cn•;c c.l Cie evening of March 1st
. • •..r a,.�......
•
The .succes3
by the large
whom were:
Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Stewart, Mr. and
Mrs, (toward Purdie, Miss C, E111s. Cy
IIcllingishead, ;Mss Mary Dayman, N.
E. Cook, Mr. and Mrs, 13111 Robins, Mr.
and Mrs, K' C: Stambtu•y, Mr, and Mrs.
Cecil Hodgson, Mr. and 'Mr $. Frc.t
Beaman, Mr. Sana Corriere, Mr. and
\irs, McDougall, Me. and Mrs. WVe's
Meeittcheon, Mr. and Mrs. G. li. Fow-
ler, Miss Grace Sterling, Mr. Ted Ilar-
Iison, Miss Mary 'MacGregor, Mr.
ittle, Mr. and \lira. Fred Elliott, Mr,
and Mrs. Carl Lyons, Mr. and Mrs.
Jan'.(, Brodie, Mr. and Mrs, Ken
Rourke, Mr. and Mrs, Ed. Taylor,
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Parton, Mr. Ken.
Hazlett, Miss Bergin, Bert Meehan,
Mics Brewster, W. II. Somerville,
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Cox.
t-vv4;'c',' 7.Ui,;' 'a",'-l.c br g
ulf.zretc_o 'E4"..=cztozzci 'alta t f IS a
F DART ROBINSON
!1
Fr
1•�
6 Golden Fleece Pot Cleaner
I$3tl?tiat'atXIOM-2t tit.. bIta`4210111 1`rq
Phone 156 for Prompt Delivery.
Fresh Clean Prunes 13c, 2 for 25c
Kc1Ic 's Corn Flakes (with Tumbler) 25c
PEP .... 2 for 25c (SHOPPING BAG FREE)
Ccolf in!, Bran 20c and 25c Bags
Mince (Meat,... 15c per lb. (Bring Container).
Ncw, Aledium and O1(1 Cheese. Baby Foods.
Vegetable Soup, Green Beans, Peas, Spinach
and Beets, per tin 5c.
Pilncnt.os per tin 15c
Blue Rihben Coffee 47c lb. quart sealer
5c refund for empty sealer returned.
(' :pe Fruit 5c, 6 for 25c
Oranges per dozen, 28c, 40c and 45c
101