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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1943-03-17, Page 1THE LATH STANDAR VOLUME 17 - NO. 32. BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17,19' Red Cross Drive Expected To Go Over Top Here The local Red Cross Drive 'has met with a splendid response from tato prllbltc. Up to this Wednesday even- ing between. *'70,0.00. and $800,00 bad been recorded, and according to the Local Chairman, Gordon Elliott, ev- eryone is very well satisfied with the progress of the Drive so tar, and it ie hoped by the Society, that the Blyth Branch will exceed their quota of $700,(0 by a goodly amount. :Moet of the canvassing In town hos been done, and cctuva9sers report a splendid feeling of co-operation in nearly all cases, Only one country division has so tar sent, in their returns, and here a.g,aln the response 'h•aa been splendid. There aro still three Whiten') In the country to heir from, and it le expect- ed that when these cane In, the quota will be over -subscribed. \1r. Elliett, the Chairman, and Mies \Voodcoel(, the 'President of the Blyth Branch, speaking for the me•mbers, have expresned their gratitude to us for the response, They feel that our citizens most certainly 'aro aware of (ho splendid work being done by The Red Cross Society, if you haven't given your contri- bution, Oa it now, if a crin'vasser missed you, bring it to the local Ohialrnan, Gordon Elliott. Your con- tribt:Ilion may go a long way towards relieving tete distress of some Cana- dian Prisoner of War. Our boys aro patriotic enough to fight for us; w1) Phould have eno:agh palrlotI,nn to at least help etapply the Red Cros with hinds to keep the parcels rolling. -vr Promoted To Pilot -Officer 'Mr, and Mrs. Eli Holtzhauer'1)oing Their Share to Cheer Farm Forum Meets Tbo following clipping from a To•; 55 Years Married'Tile Boys Overseas 1 The Itailrt1 Ilonnilry Radio 1'oruul ronto paper, will 1)e of interest to our Congratulations are duo to Mr. and I amt at the home of Mr. and )1r:. Jelin readers, one of the young men men, Mrs. 1:11 lloltzhauer, of Illyth, who on Clinton Branch Cf Tho Canadian \\,llsou with ::' present, :1,'11 liar Cloned being a son of Mr. Arthur Sims, Sunday, \larch ::1,'it, will celebrateing 1° fnrnnl broad,•.I;t, \I r. I:, ', ,,::r• Leglen Bend Local Boys Overseas P011 led the (I!-cnHslonoup on landwho is well known hero, and an' annual .their 56th welding anniversary. A Steady Flow Of Cigarettes, t visitor In town, where ho was born j , , (roslon and cnnser+':Itl ,u. following I No ospechtlly elaborate ccleital(ou 1111,; Mrs. (leers:'' Watt 1:•11 the reeve - and lived for many years: ,ie planned for the occasion, "W. K, Situs and A. L. Turner, Lea- 'alien period with contests and coin - side buys, have received promotion to Mr. rind Mrs. Holtahmier were nun'• Thu Canadian legion, that splendid Inn/Illy singing. tied at the home of the latter's par- Society, composed ut' veterans of the I , the rank of Pilot Officer In the R,C, ' The nest 1311 mint will e A.F. Tho young airmen who enlisted eats, 55 years ago, iMi'. Holtzhauer I itwt Creat 11'ar, bah always been .lir, caul .tlr:;. I(1 111`;,t ;r,n'.,, is a .son' of the late John Holtzhauer to the fore hi times of need, and now'cue o'iil .\I together a little over a year ago, grad' and Elizabeth horn,, and was born in that the need for comforts and soh• uatod at Guelph early In December, both recetved their wings and the 1'Iattsvillo. ,Before her marriage, 5116, Piles, in a steady stream. is en argent. rank of Sergeant Wireless Mr Gunner Jloltzhauer watt Mary Plaetzer, laugh- we lied them right in the front Ilse and were stationed at Jarvle, They ler of 'Mr. and Mr3. John I'Iaetzer, of of FIIp1113' In contrih:utng eigaretteti Blyth, Tho wedding ceremony took to the hays Overseas, wore recently home on leve, at the expiration of which they reported to place on the 13th concession of Hul- The Clinton Branch of the Canadian \\•he'll tier iurgt t the wl take over now duties at Greenwood, lett Township, where Mis. Plnetzer's Legion is composed of veterans from 1\\•hen IhI tinllelt Ituundaly f•uIn i:1)• N.S. flying field: where they were in ixlrcnts thea resided. hollowing their that town, and since there is no ,;n1 w.I: •.1; niel.ry ,1. e ;alit h marrk•1 e they lived, 1n different )avis dirauch In Iilylh, our Ureal War \'1t• formed of their promotion. g I rrun!; 3110 illr,llaled t+Ilh the ClintonI'fle y travelled 11111)' Ho' drill.- uud Pilot Ceticor Sims is the son of Pf this district, and for twenty years I tluw on t 1e1y .\1°1"1"Y "'gill School Trustee Arthur Sims, and be- before coming here', they resided al 141111 1, 1'110 Clinton Branch Is nut fore enlisting was ^nnliloyed in Inc Niagara. In spite of advancing years only supplying Clinton and District To sonic IIh111111 nl, i'',1rgllla;uin ti the rh'ri 'hton y William J, Turner, 1'11 Runisey Road. the couple are in comparatively good buys IOtuseini with a steady flus+ ireaetide 5lunlciiltI1 Offices, Pilot orf)• health, although Mrs, Ilollzhaner Is of ciglu'ettes, but are also s0uding to The merle; ((3 1 :iv' I u• You know were OW' lflyt.ii and District boys, Need- by lout, or ,,!t'igh or cutler, eer Turner 1.9 the son of Mr. and 51rs, unable' to be out much, .\I r, Holtz. William J. Turner, 1,111 Rumsey Road. halter 1s' in his 804111 year. and Mrs. h+'!d 1(3 Every• SECOND EDITION OF FARM FORUM LEDGER v user of I:'-1 less to say that the necessary money 11111 this i)i( it •e11f(`nce w'(I, notliiug Ihloltzhartor Is In her 70th year. They required to pnrclui ,e 111d .scud these compared to rationed !hitt r, are members of the Birth United supplies !s alt raised by yoluIlary One night a group wa: coiling Ilam Church, and both attend whenever methods, 1331 entails constant Otanio,w„..1 fifteen on tri' sl i:.;h thy members of the Legion. Twenty- MacCorkindale - Walker :health will permit.• 'T 1 11'hnn all 1tI crier 1111'11 rya, a e.L:h ,On Thursday, March 110, at t.he' The, couple were blessed with a five yc.us ago 111,,,;0 snore Lrgio11aires 3 ;ung t3)) sus it were tine toy's bellied the guns 1n l'atr'c away, Anglican Rectory, Blyth, Ontario, by'fainily of seven, six of whom are liv I.ur+'n ++, 113 ane >1)l) flat on the rani; the Rev. 1'. 71. Streeter, Mary Isobel, Ing, \Ve,Ilington, of Guelph; Norman,. France, and they, teller Ulan any and all lit, people loo, elder daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Win. of Hamilton; Harold, of Niagara Falls; 0110 i 1s0, know how smoker;, 1u1d utter comforts, aim perhu.ps a few• little i II' 0re1 p1 rnly laughed will' glee and 11. Walker, of fort Elgin, to Robert Mrs, Fred Potter, Clara, of 1101111 s• S0-oalllee luxurlee, are appre(•lated by no one eta. 11 Ira -hue. John MacCorkindale, elder son of v1113; 511vt, Newell, Elsie, of Detroit, The 11 ;: 11)1 nvl lir of the crowd ,aril our boys 311 Active service, and far Mrs, (\fncCork4ndale, and the 1,11,, ,f, Gor(lon, whose addresa 16 not known 330)110, i 8 graund good =;wrt is she, 11. MacCorkindale, of Owen Sound. at tint present time. One boy, iter completed the re:<I of the jouru,•y (Vi The groove Is a brother of Mrs. R. 1'110 following 101101 from pit,. K. h., Berl, sassed on n fete yea's ago, \\'Ilstn, with the Canadian Army Over. 1101 chin ((p011 her lin''. s, 1), NOP, of Blyth. I The driver purvey McClure3wt(, as \\'e are sure that many friends; seas, Is a satisfactory testimonial iii throughout the community will join It Sister Passes At Seaforth Spring, Officially, Sunday Mrs. George Dickson, sister, of James Donhalnl, Blyth, and a resident of Seaforth for about 14 years, died in Scott Memorial hospital on Mon- day night in her &4th year, For the paet three years Mrs. Dickson. bad been to por be'allh, Born Lily Denholm, in Blyth, on Alt• rll, 18 9, Mrs. D:okison '. s the daugh- tor of the late John Denholm ant Lily Barr. She lived In Blyth until her marriage some 37 years ((go to George Dickson, who died about 15 years ago. After leaving Blyth she lived in Wal- ton and then come to Seaforlh. She was a member of Nor•thatdo United the wont being done by the Clinton with us 1n extending the esteemed Branch of the Canadian Legion. 1'le, couple our best wishes for continued mem" lived 111 this vicinity before It seems we've waited a long time, good health and happiness to:...Ober, joining up: but before another issue of The Stand- Dear Sirs, ---Just 1) few lint s la (tp- ard is published, Spring will be here A ---- predation, and regret, 1 1 1 I have officially, Sunday will be the first day W•Mark Ii'iftieth been able to write fur scan!' Iima ow. of Spring, but, unfortunately', that lug to the fact. that I was silo, some doesn't neecssarlly mean the arrival Wedding Anniversary time ago 1n tlto right arm, and have 01 beautiful Spring weather. .Mr. and MN. Chas Meld, of Illy th, just acquired the use of lily arm. I There are many signs of Spring In will mark, their Fiftieth1n the forum 1)1111• 'Wedding An- can hardly expre•is C10 full gratitude the air, Those who have tapped for ntversary on Friday, March 2-3th. Tho In writing for your cunsl int and Each night we llet en of half pa'=• maple syrup, report .hal the sap Is event will bo suitably celei:rated, with steady kindness in sending me eig• eight to the radio 101.11111 broadcast stiffing, and good run's have been re- a gathering of friends at the home of arettes, and I certeinly appreciate It And many questions are ausw•cred Ported on certain days. This, ofMr, and Mrs. Alfred Machan, on the greatly, and 1 win i y and write mora and many also a kid, course, would depend on the location afternoon and evening, of that day. regularly front now on, i must close Our young ambitious leader of tho bush. The crows aro out in for now. Once more than?ting you haute of (3001'ge \\'att droves, and It Is reported that ,some_V_and your organizall0)1. 1)irects some oilier member to keep of our citizens have already seen a carol as he coald be And brought us all 113110' safely with• out fatality. Nan:tits some other members have a talc Ihal could be told About the way they travelled and faced the bitter colt,, But now that time ie hastening 011 \V'e')1 tell you what we can Of the interesting objectives outlined YOUR LOCA! vAPER. Illyth 1!unicil)al Council ,dint; of till' 111y111 l'o'll: „ I iI the t'onnci1 111,1,11„1 .1 I: .'3 ,: .t) 1+;11! 1{,' '+•:' yl „I'I'i ! III 1!I, 113.,.!' .-31 3 t`oltn+•:'ir,rti 1::i3;,' 331(3 : r'rlut g, 113', In'1: Int. The !n," !ill., ++'a 10'111 for til,' par• i),e of o;,;r,:.;11x3 (11.113 an,', Treas.. nl ('r. Mr. \\"ri'lll n, ,'„,I ,ul a)Il 1t 11uent 10 the 1 lllrllllalr!,t mod, (01 \l,t!'c3 '1:1 ill 1 estier! of appointment of Treasurer t1! !h' eft- ('1 111:11 t1; Hui e I),Irw•a1.11 Le ,I:111'01110.4 TI rn • I:'e1', 1)11,1 .\i l'. I1. 7e) 01111•'1! > `3) ,,!11,'ll,llll-'!!: to Mr. 1:1:11!,`)1 3';I0'1'.I'd ::;:t f1):lner ;,frill a' i":I -.11o :;.I L, n,id 'i (1 and )Ir. s: ritoge ,n; :;;30 , :I. Am, :'1331' (1 1:1'•l,y; :\;,. 1, . , .!ft,, liltl) < 1.y lriiu 1•i. , ,. I:,+,•,l 11,'x1, r, eenndl :) i y 1:, \ i.^1t. t!I;.' Bylaw Nt). :1 1,,• i a' i ., i, •, :r ;10' \cling ing ('lent to 11•,'1 'l • et nit: c• aa31 :1;, 1i u f 101.',,:1 and i",,,',1(.11 I:13'e.tt and Airs. Lmlli e I'ul :;,,! ' . , .I 10:; the (1:3(1) of 1!,,.i,.• 1. Ly the church. robin. Tho poor fellow will probably Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. wish many mornings that ito had tat•• 1la.rold Lanford, Mary, Seaforth, and reed a while longer In a warmer cll. Cleta C:ekson, Senforth, and four mate, but ho probably got back early brothers, David of Seaforth, James, to get that "worn,". Wild geese and of Ply?.h, Russell, of Ft, MaciMurrny, ducks have been sen on ,several 0e• • There was n very' gaud ulteudaucc 3131 the problems of the farm To tbfu'; we'd barer 0.3011 ltl0h, } } t It t0 Otit' nt Alberta, and Roy, with the Canadian cattions 'headlii:g rort)h, The Spring at lit SLuoh unclrng of th( \1 ou3a u s Ind tell 11133 head officials that we'll As t 1 1 g 111 11'0",1 Dental Corps, ove:-&aa. A private Fair tanto is fast approaching. Clin• Saturday Urll w1) ur,tcr, funeral will be held Thursday after- ton Spring F;tir will be held on the noon at 2:00 o'clodk frc'm her home on 1st of A.prII, with llensail FHB. being Market street, Soaforth. Rev. 11, V. held on the 3rd. Farmers are busy Workman of Northside United church getting their work cleaned up SO ns will conduct the service, with inter- to bo ready for seeding time, The k,:ds meat in Brussels cemetery, oiled. It won't 'be long before they'll the Plant, The bill lay etposr(i to The victory qu111 which 1100' I T1 11,1 GANG. retain our prestige tun. 'Mr, and firs. wore former Two Schools To Present be pestering to go for that thvst swh)1• the elenteu'ts for thirteen dap; before completed 1s 10 be ,sent to Irr. Kilpal Vit, vont., my I'rirud3 101 us be l0ya(I'resident.s of Illyth. Cowan+'here Mr, rowan Program, Friday Night r } 1 i► to 1 1 b 1' 1 it 1, (' 1 i was employed About That Lost $20.00 Bill - Our readers wit remember that wo run an advertisement a":out three weeks ago to the effect that a $'20.1`7 bill had been lona 1n Blyth. \t„+,':I ! I:. \V, i•. fit. .4, (nude)( 1,y' iL U :.t, 1. 11!:1 n!" iu; xll aura, I, LINi,,t',•i,n), Acting ('lerlc. GUEST OF HONOUR RECEIVES ( 1F'I ,\I r. ;In;l ..I. I:.,!'r 1.111ertillli ll ,(3. 8)) 1 )I.l ,y Ii,i" >Ol1'i)er pal'Iy ,1L their 11, 1110• 1i : :. :•,..,),1 0')I, 013 run lay ui)'.I!. iu 11 /11 :/1111 of Mr It:nsou t'1)++.311• I, i l:,i;r ir.('l wile ha, join - el the Ito0: 3 I':,1 1;•,.,1:t .\`r I',nrr awl le.tv'.. tai (((''.1 to ')nnmeuc,• train• ing. Ji r. 11;i1.1. , (.01 :)11 aullh c exln', s. sing ! I <t 1'i b, .; I,1 the your; reer.'it and in behalf of :11. ..I: ;;• \i r. l malt; Flinteff pr, e.attr11 hint with a p1'11 nail pencil 81t. Cowan al' ,, rccei+•0 (1 a lovely gift. A s Inial time w;.. , njoyed• The foliow•!ng a'.ldr, s, :n was r) a)1: form, • BENSON • The lI l)' will anal he over, verse That, Nye ria r,n0ely inion': For 1tea ha., .lulu ;ll the Air force And n'ily;1l4 111' ',+Ili Yours gratefully, , us on the spot For near two 0181 we've known lrl.m 1101' E. 1\'iLSON, And get us into oar right groups ;\ piens: ire all the 1.1,110, IWhere dlsceasiuns will ensue I'1) hair hint wurhll(g with ns ""V—'' I And then w0 033 go right to tuwu to 1\'ills hi: ever ready smile. say what 1 d. n 1)u r e n 1 It's groat to air our thoughts this way I guess we were conceited W. I. MEETING 11 1 A HUb9c1'l+)el• )rou•g 1 it cation 031 lntrilt.utr, held at the home 03' Mrs, ! 1 I.1. driving our old fru"It, supplied the public with the concicaion 1 suffer no more halm to the rnystety, • than the col and ' Oster. TO 11,313(6 1011(1 So Willi tltt wee gill we tell him, In the absence of the Prr,si:lent, 1 lace of labour 100, airs. R. Fear, the Vice -President, J1rs, t'''hat The ;'2R.00 bill belonged le >lelv!nII' those, hit, guys still want to cal, ! Gooier, and it MI5 found 1:y \\''m• Gow A Taylor,presided.Tho"(I Letter see ns Ihroul h laying outside the turnip plant. WO w•111 ni1•- 1111 1(i we wish him all tile lnelc ill 111e 1%1 11 1348 decided to 6011(1 1110'0 '11',111.-1 wurl(I, >, And give to 315 n chance that's .;lir have had. the mettles out, and the GOYIM' had apparently pulled it (tont lades to some of our local boy.; over. \\'11er01.1r lm rltay gn• And they'll Lind that 1,,0'10 tine blur , Ilea \\-1-11,(s, bicycles are about to be greased and his pocket while dl\lwllrg unn'p31 to soars, 1•'I'o fight the cause of freedom and -----V Mr. Gow found It, and returner rick to e used 31 1t hospital for .ai- 10 the jut) wr havr 111 11111(,— I , cloyed with I.. •1, I owc,1l, up 1lilss liclen L. Mac(lregar and biles It's rlghltul owner. Needless to say, ninon Soldiers in England. \nrl du the best 1r cin, ;Is tillers 1)1 ,until the tine` he loft fol. Si'au',r,l. Ruth L. Whlk'c'm of School Section No. BIRTHS lMv. Gooier was very thankful that it The institute will also mala 50(13(11 the I;uul, \ 5 and 8, Hullelt Township, and a groat' had been found, small quills for sale. And some (10y ala 1'31311 date when ' 1 Isim.,LEl:3.i—In G"telptt General IlospiA. at theft pupils, are arranging a pro- 1Rev. Sinclair, pastor a the 1'311' RUSSIAN RELIEF tal, on Sunday, March 14th, to 5f', 'peace again shall re.il;n gramme for Friday, 'March 19th, at 7 Iori 011111-011, was guest speaker. And 8 We'll find our efforts brought lu 318 Thr f0onw•Ing (101131!011, won, nr- and Mrs, Harvey Ziegler, the gift , the meetingfCi was in charge 0l' Sinclair said P. 111. over Radio Station CKNX, Wing. I cd n son-13urvey Gilbert RADIO FARM FORUMS our rightful tut aunt gain 'List w e,'h VF`I10I' of ('113z011shlp, 11 r. Siuc►alr sulci ceivcd ,lurinf, the 1 ham, in the interests of War Savings he rccre;ttitun period i; gaud for one I'. during , C.eu Certificates tand Stamps. The Warm forum group of S.S.tiNo. one of the first 8t(lPuulcs of a grind and all 'Phoma, Colson : nn V 1 blortis, need at the home of 51 r. said citizen was to be n good ori;;11hour' It helps to nl:tkr its natural and all ""3.4/411-L.NM-4n Toronto, , on Friday', •\ins, James Richmond on 'Tuesday R. 1".1 11p, 'I'rea,:ur:'r. and he based his tall( on W( parable pretence fall, 1' — March 12th, to Mr. and Mrs, Orval evening, March 16th with IS present. of the Good Sanaaritan. Graham (neo Inoue 1MeDowell) the \\'c' loin rigid in the fun ++'1111 zest, I After the Discussion 51 r, John Nos 111 the pnral'rl0 1+e have 8 d18'hletir'e gift of a son, ibilt spoke on' the sublet of Co•0pera• traits of a good neighbour, 'yn,palhy, V—''"" .lives, Miss Jessie lticamond, recrea• approach, contact, unsellishnes, File. Mice, hosxpitallty, nlfl118(1') a1111 l'ai'r. BLYTH UNITED CHURCH Sunday, .March 21ot. 10:i1,-3unday School. 11:lcr—+Subject, At the Pool of Bethesda. 7 P. M,—Gubject, The Disaster at the 'Red Sea. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH lion lender, led 1n a 501103 0l St, Pal - t , Red Cross Work ,Displayed. ricks Day games and c0nteDt.i, which ' Three Seaman's jvaokets, the work were most heartily entered into, and of the local Red Cross Society, ,aro greatly enjoyed. Lunch WaS- served. on display in our south window. Next meeting will lea hold at S.S. These jackets have, all been made out No. 1 School horse, on Monday night., of material that has been donated to March 22nd. James Kelly will Ito the the Society, In bhe form of a fur coat leader, and Miss Katherine McDonald, and windbrea:kers. Take a look at the 'recreation leader. Everyone welcome. b'a.ndiwork of the Red Cross ladies the next time you go by. We think you'll :\rid )sty the games our very b,'st• CONGRATULATIONS Alt ucih'e nu'auhPl' in our group Is a soy whose nano' is \\'ick 110'5 always into ort chi11' and up to It 1.9 more blessed to give than to 1 every Irick, receive, and neighborhood is beyond lie's supposedto be of Scoltly;t bloodlimit. I, re! hr puzzles me a hit flans, 'Wagner, n favurllr 3111(1 1(0)01• Ilr,;uis0 nut i'v0u Ial could match lar baseball player, wos once offered ;that our readers may (111111; worthy of This culilnn i5 dedicated in thnc„ who 1nay wish to make use, of It t•1 (nihil emet•ale 50010 passing event 10 the lives of their 1., 'alive!! ane friends, 81011 as llirlhdlays, Wedding Anniversaries, or ;lily other )30c1138 $1,000.00 to hove his picture on a cig• him with his wit, note. 1'ou arc' a,ke.1 in use this col not, box, and his 1,11:1 1•:a "If my There':; Dorothy, liana, >la rgarct and 1111111. 11'e think it would 1,e a fin, eudtic0 0]10 young boy 30 SI1)01 [', then Picture on a box of cigarette.) /0013111 1 013111). (11) pretty girls are they gestin•,, oil your part to show your In, Anil ',aturlint0 cot 80 far away 1('‘ lerost in your f•1'1nd9. you couldn't offer me enough money "In( wilt c(1mr 11 dr w•aly. ,.,o:-„ neighbour. 1'110 you11 er childr,)1 tau are sweet.: agree with us, that they will certainly Tho East \\'awanosh farm Forum to have it there.. Ile was a good --- uur• Mrs. Harold Phillips sang Ne't Standay morning, March 21st, gladden the heart, and warm bhe body, was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. \1'e 11110 them Decry one, some11 11 --- enc,, his duties as Pastor 1)2 St of boy on Aative Service In the Clarence Johnston on Monday night. touching 8010, -won't you I -`ay And thrill to hoar tonal shouting in ! Rev. Dr. A. 0. Thompson will corn -prayer for the boys over there," dr their la)1;0ler and 31111)' fun. ('nn:;r:Uu':ati,'nG = l0 or(1.1n Nlronl,nn m Ain Navy. This is just one of the many There were 31 present, ?lay our Canadian children y:. forever ,,til 1;11, }.i,, ,t, r+on c 1''bratc his Tire Roll 0.111 w••1•t answered 1,1. ri11 • +• crws' Presbyterian Cltur ch. items the Society stake for the dif- Mrs. Falconer was the recreation bright 3113(1 gay birth,; -:1y ,";• ',3•':! 1 ;'•. '1110: h Service at 12 amt. fenenR Brandies of the Service. leader, and games and a spill n^ of much merriment. l uu(nt. Th(rc was ,11 •\rid may they never, 1 „•.., 1n Mrs. Anne camp. eation ice.n at ! ve' Beyer 111101' ill(' In o'ir other Ilett have a group of1' `1's s0 'r sadnrss of Iht clay + u:',^.; :(t uD V • ladies from lfullett on display 'match were enjoyed. A most enjoyable a Joke Contest. l iltiulay on a beautiful quilt, watare they aro bees evening wns spent. Lunch was sere The question box and a discussion A6 other children 11:1'.3'0 'n '0' '. ', , ' II, ,1, 1'1 , ;: , TRINITY ANGLICAN CHURCH f'1• awax•, ?1 1;18y, ':e eh _':rid, ling These ladles are also members ed• and recipe for butter stretching, The Rev. P. H. Streeter L.Th„ Rector, of the Red Cross, Tickets on the quilt' The next meeting will be at the singing of the Icing brought the meet- At .l now I'll close my little rhyme, r n •. h Monday Iblareh 22nd Dveryone is The April meeting will be held at So good -evening to you one incl 011. Irish Jolie or story 1111(1 1+'8:9 the cause \V. J. Cttillg, who 2nd Sunday !n Lend, March Dl 1943 may be procared d at the Standard Of • home of Mr. and sltrs. Bennlget on Ing to a close. 1 lthmtt much more ado, Sunday Sclhoal—,2:30 P. 'S1. rice, or from any of the 'ladies 111 t e evensong and Sermon -7:00 P. M. above-mentioned Group, welcoine. (the home of Mr's. A. Barr, April 1st, i and the best of luck to you, 1March Nth, eel, :.' rs hi . b:r:hdny on \\'ed-:sday, e RETURN OF THE RUSSIAN bleak ruins remain to greet him as a soldier of the iced Army returns to his home in town reta!;en from the Nazis, This dramatic picture is from the \larch of Title's "One 1)ay of War," docu- mentary film of a single day on the many fronts of Russia as filmed by 160 Soviet soldier -photographers, Have You Heard? The reporter limped in. "Well," said the news editor, "did you get the interview?" The reporter pointed t( a pair of black eyes. "We can't print a pair of black eyes. Where's the story?' Tho reporter lifted his hat and displayed a huge bump on his head. "Look," he repeated. "What good is that? We can't print things like that. Didn't you get the chap to say a few words?" "Yes," was the reply, "but you can't print those either!" Man (employed by an Aberdonian): "I have been here ten years, air, doing three men's work for one man's money, and now I want a raise." Employer: "I canna gie ye that, but if yo'II tell me the lad replied unthinkingly: "Yes. sir, very!" "Who was that you were talking to for a whole hour at the gate?" asked Mr. Simpson. "That was Mrs. Smith; she hadn't time to conte in," re- plied his wife. Buckwheat The reason for giving the name buckwheat to the grain from which buckwheat flour is made in very simple, says the Fort Wil- liam Times -Journal. The buck- wheat grain, while very nlrch smaller, is of the same triangllar color as a beech nut and naturally was called bockwheat or bouk- wheat at first, Time works its changes on language ns on every- thing else and so today this beech - wheat is called buckwheat, HORSEBURGERS ON THE HOOF Headed for butcher shops to help relieve wartime meat :homage aro these ex -farm horses in pen at Estherville, Ia., stockyards. names of the alter twa men I'll sack 'em," When the threat of invasion was at its height and all signposts bad been removed, a motorist stopped a country yokel and en- quired of him the way to a cer- tain village. •The yokel, pointing the direr. • tion, replied: "That were the way before the war, but 1 b'aint be tellln' anybody now." At the end of a lesson in general knowledge the teach. er asked if any member of the class could tell her what he knew about Lord Wool. ton. . One boy got up. "He's the bloke what tells us to eat lois of what we ain't got atone of." Little Boy: "I met Mr. Jones int. the street going to school, and IIM said he wanted to see papa about something, and he called • papa a walking encyclopedia." Mamma: "Indeed' And what 4id 111y little pet say to Mr. Jones'?" Little Boy: "I called him an old centipede and threw a snowball at him." "Hey, Mom," exclaimed the little boy, tugging at his mother's hand, "isn't that monkey just like Uncle James?" "Hush!" said his mother. "Don't be so rude!" "Ah; the monkey didn't hear me, Mom!" Al the mathematics professor fru working nut an example on fete blackboard, he noticed that one of the pupils wasn't paying any attention. So, he said sharp- ly: 'Board, harp-i''Board, Jeffries, board!" 1?ottsed from his clay -drew, the Modern Etiquette By Roberta Lee 1, Which wedding anniversary cane for gifts of crystal? 2, Should one ever oxpreas anger in a letter? 3, Would it be bad taste for a man to wear a tuxedo or dinner !acket to a formal dinner? 4, What is the correct attire for a woman speaker at an eve- ning affair? 5. l'vhen a girl has been going with a young man tor several months, and she knows hie birth- day, should she give hon a gift, if he has never given her ono? 6, What is the cors 'let way to oat celery? Answers 1, The fifteenth anniversary. 2. Neter. A person iihould develop enough self-control to suppress anger even verbally, hut in a letter it atands as it permanent record, and usually the person who writes such a letter regrets it malty, natty times. 'Yes. (_ illees he has formai evening dress he should not attend. 41, A simple evening dress, 5. Nu. '.l'he than should be the first to begin giv- ing gifts. Send him a nice birth- day card, 6. Pick it up with the fingers and bite into the stalk, HEMISAM WHERE'S YOUR MINARD'S SOLDIERS RUB OUT TIRED ACHES • WHAT SCIENCE IS DOING PARACHUTES OF GLASS Army bombers are using para. chutes made of woven glass fib- res to drop million candle power flares. The glass chute is blackened with graphite to shield the air- men's eyes against the glare. This chute has to stand the in- tense heat of the million candle power flares and, although the glass fibres are almost 0.3 fine and light as silk, they can stand a temperature that would soften iron. Many other uses of fibre glass aro secret, But a dozen aro listed which are not secret. On the sea coast, fibre glass goods are used in camouflage to stand extreme moisture. The Navy is using the fibre to coat one side of insulating boards used in warships' interiors, This has freed enough aluminum to make 200 four -motored bombers, as the glass replaces an insulating )material that had to be sheathed with aluminum. 'The signal corps uses field tele- phone cable made with woven glass, replacing metal and lighten- ing the weight. Ships and planes) aro using all sorts of cables cov- ered with glass cloth, sometimes pure woven glass, sometimes inix• ed or impregnated with other ma- terials, Planes use the glass cloth for insulation against cold. `.file glass makes warmer Army barracks, The prize exhibit ie the tent work- shops used in the Arctic, where glass insulation has reduced the bulkiness of the structural nutter - leis by 75 to 80 per cent, ITC STOPPED im a Jrlfy .or Money Beek Fa quick relief from itching ofeerema, pimples, Atte fete's foot, scales, scabies, rashes sad utheresteraall caused skin troubles, use fast -actin`, coding, and, septic, liquid D. D. D. 1'reecription. Groaaelep stalnleaa. Soothes itri taloa and quickly stops intense Italunit.55ctriatbottleprorealt,oralone? back. Ask your druggist today forD.D.D, PRESCRIPTION, HARNESS & COLLARS Farmers Attention — Consult your nearest Harness Shop about Staco Harness Supplies. Wo sell our goods only through your local Staco Leather Goode dealer, The goods are right, and so are our prices. We tnanufacture in our fee. tories — Harness, Horse Col. lars, Sweat Pads, Horse Bien. keta, and Leather Travelling Goods. insist on Staco Brand Trade Marked Goods, and you get satisfaction. Made only by: SAMUEL TREES CO,, LTD. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE 42 Wellington St. E., Toronto THROAT IS PREY TO MANY AILMENTS Lymoids' Quick Action Praised by Thousand! "LYMOIDS aro easing to the throat and relieve the hacking cough." So writes a Toronto resident.Thnt unsolicited testimonial is supported by thoueanda of other sufferers from throat ailments who have found quick relief with LYMOIDS. Use LYMOIDS for throat irritation, hoarse - nese and coughing. Its blend of soothing medicineloilsshould bring quickroliet. Ls -s Mort store) telt LYMOiDS to handy tine 10: and 25c boxes. If unobtainableC send sec In stant:4 a coin, to J.YMOil)S, 119 !inti Swat, Toronto. 'MIDDLE -AGE WOMEN (,1 a) HEED THIS ADVICE!! I2 you're cross, restless, NERVOUS— suffer hot flashes, dizziness—caused by this period In a woman's life— try Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound. Made especially for women. Hundreds of thousands re- markably helped. Follow label direc- tions. Made 1n Canada. HowCanl?? By Anne Ashley Q. How can I dry paint quick- ly? A. Ozonised turpentine makes the paint tcith (which it is mixed dry quickly. This is turpentine that has been exposed to the air and sunlight, Q. How can I give 11 shining appearance to cake icing? A, if butter is all ingredient in the icing for the cake, ice the cake and theft put it in the oven for a few minutes with the door open, The frosting will have a smooth, shiny appearance, Q. ilow caul 1 clean steel which has heconle very rusty? s1. First rub with n cut onion and leave for a day. Then polis1! it with paraffin or turpentine and briek dust whichever you happen to have on hand. Q. What can I use as a sub. slit ute when wax is not available for a flour that is to he used for d1111('111g? A. Powdered borax may he used, and ell! prove a good sub. stitute, Q. How should salad dressing bo served? A. 1f possible, scl't'e the dress- ing separately and let the guests help themselves. Not only (loos the lettuce wilt after the dress- ing hats 1)20et Qn it for tory length of time, but people have so many different ideas in regard to salad (1l'essing. The Calm Courage Of Women At War A naval officer had gone down from Portsmouth to l,on(lon with an important message to deliver without delay to the captain of a warship, relates the Windsor Star. Ile was to be picked up at the quay by a motorboat and taken to the warship. Coincident with the arrival of the naval officer at the base canto a blitz, As he took shelter in a porch, the naval than hearts the familiar put -put -put of a motor- boat. Steered and manned by Wrens, the little craft nosed its way to the landing. Saluting as meticulously as though on a parade ground, in- stead of in a blitz, the Wren in charge reported to the officer. The girls took hien out to the warship, (waited for hila and brought hint back right through the worst of the business. The Wrens took the duty in stride, newer worrying about bombs or da ager, ('0ilper, gold, ivory, tin, dia. ponds and paha oil are all found in quantity in the Belgian Congo, CL IT DDB'S TASTE GOOD INA PIPE I Even Mother Goose Rhyme Goes `Plastic' Plastic playing cards now, told plastic hair brushes; the nets' baby next door sleeps in a plastic bassinet; we small ride in plastic care when and if we ride again, and Mother Goose is due for re- vision. 9'ltel'e was a plastic 01a11, In a nobby plastic tile. IIe found a plastic nickel Beside a plastic stile. hl is plastic -lowing wife, She wore a plastic blouse, And they both lived happy In little plastic house. Plastics are said to date from 1868, when a printer made a bil- liard hall out of gum camphor and cellulose nitrate. It was as good as i101'!) in every respect but one, In collision with an- other hall it exploded, — New York Times. 3,400,000 Murdered By Huns In Europe The Inter -Allied Committee said recently that, on the hosts of persons had been murdered in oc- cupied Europe. "The figures are mostly Ger- man so the extent of the toll of human life and suffering is only Partially revealed," the commit- tee said. "Deaths at the hands of Gestapo agents are never reveal- ed and accurate information is difficult to obtain." The committee said 2,500,000 persons had been executed or had died in Polish concentration camps, and 744,000 had *been exe- cuted in Yugoslavia, Other totals include: prance, 21,000; Greece, 18,000; Czecho- Slovakia, 2,463; Netherlands, 2,200; Beigiuni, 193; Norway, 140 and Luxeanbou'g, 129, 'rho figures do not Include vic- tims of towns such as Lidice, Czecho-Slovalcin and others in Yugoslavia and Greece which were wiped out in reprisal for sab- otage or resistance. Reindeer Meat To Help Out Rations Glue + and other delights of t.1(0 gourmet are helping to solve the food problem. One piece of good fortune is the surplus of reindeer on Nuniwak Island, off the coast of Alaska, Front fewer than 200 animals the herd has increased in twenty five years to an esti- nutted 19,000, with browse enough to support only about 10,000 re- ported to be available. All buck fawns of the 1913 crop and surplus adults are to be killed and the meat supplied to the armed forces and civilians. Elk present a similar picture, In United States national park.') they are protected. During the present winter, co-operation of state and national agencies, fa- vored by weather and other fac- tors, lilts made possible a total reduction to 7,230 elk, '1'he nIeO1 of the killed anilllals wan conusnl- ed by the Indians and residents of Alontana, Although many different dia- lects are spoken in China, the written language is the same 10 all sections, HOW TO RELIEVE PILE TORTURE QUICKLY AND EASILY It you aro troubled with Itchtt,g piles or rectal soreness, do not de- lay treatment and run the rislt of letting tills condition becotne chron- lo, Any Itching or soreness or pain- ful passage of stool is tutture'e warning and proper tree (meet Should ba secured at 0006. Fur this purpose get a package of Hein -Hold from any druggist and 1010 ns directed. This formula which Is uaod Internally le a smell, easy to take tablet, will quickly relieve the Itching and soreness and aid In healing tho sore tender spots. Ilett.ItoId Is pieaoant to use, is highly recommended and It seems the height of folly for any ono to risk a painful and chronic pile condition when such a fine remedy may bo had at finch a email coat. 10 you try lien -Rohl and are r,ot entirely pleased will' the resin Pr, your druggist will gladly return your money, SSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 11.1111 CJIJCIIS II 1'131111)S F011 EXTRA VIGOUR al: e popular purebreds, Complete List, all ages, Fairview Farms, St. Mary's, Ontario. CIII ch. s W0111.1) RECORD PRODUCTION S'I'1RAINS— C'hic'ks — largo Leg - horns, )tucks, Meds, Australorpe, 51I.r8e.', Leghorn stocks tillaaex Meda from Banded and blood - tested breeders. livability guar- anteed, MALITIN CHICK FAlthtS, GALT, 1HARI' CILIUM (1.1YWoo US Q li A 1.1'1' Y C1[IX, Quality at reasonable pricua, Free catalogue. immediate deliv- ery. Produced from our own Mood -tested s 10 c k, Uuywood Farm, )fount llanil1ton. FUSS S AND POUI,TIlY ARE NOT among the rationed goods, They are needed 111 unlimited supplies —here and overseas. Make your flunks real front liners, every hen a war worker. Don't waft till the last minute to order What you want of chicks, cock- erels, poplins. Give n second choice to help with quicker do - livery. Pray Ilatehery, 130 John St, N., Munition, Ont, eitlTit'Al, :1 1 A T SI10RTAGE continues. Make Inoue!' with Tweddle (lhieks. The (neat sit- uation is definitely serious. 3lany retail butchers have closed • up shop fur want of (neat to sell, The outlook Is critical. Poultry nal eq'gs have conte Into their own. sloth bring prices that will lea we you worthwhile profits 1t you get the right kind of chicks and pullets, We have the capacity fur hatching over 100,000 chucks per week, but the dem tfd Is «ally Iremctidous. Send for 'l'weddle catalogue, naso turkeys and older pullets. Spacial prlcee on day old, two and throe week old started cockerels. Tweddle Chick Hatcheries 1,1miterl, Fer- gus, Ontario, 11001:S & NOVELTIES • MEN! SEND lac FOR WORLD'S funniest Joico novelty and cat- alogue of sundries, hooks and novelties. Western Dlatributors, Box 21 I'WL. Regina, Sask, COWS FOR SALE JERSEY BREEDERS II L I N (1 OVERCROWDED WE have a few purebred registered fully accredited cows for sale, high testers and excellent pro- ducers. Look them over and take your own choice. J3okarfarm, R.R. 1, \Vhltby, Ont, FOOT IIAI.51 l3AUMEEKA ('OUT [IAL.M destroys offensive odor Instantly, 160 bottle. Otte we agent. Denman Drug Store, Ottawa, lilt), HIDES, WOOL SIIII' L's Y0U[t )hIl)L•'g, FURS, Wool, horsehair. Top prices, "rutnut returns, Pearlman & PM I'rotit Street, East. rnre,nt.e. t:u(cr•nntont Licensed tw"•I t;i•„Iinu Station No. 22. FU111, WOOD SV.%1'1'ED MAPLE, 13I11U11 A N 1) MIXED cordwood, First ur aecund growth. Also :Millwood. State full particulars and lowest prices, Walter Schiess, 10 ylclludu 5L, Toronto. of FAN&, A GLEANING HAVE YOU ANYTHING NEEDS dyeing 01' miming? fling? Write to us tor information. We are gaud to aaswer your questions. Depart• meta 11, Parker's Dye Works . Limited, /SI i uuge Street, To. t unto. FOR S.t1,l3 365 AC1t1S 1..1ND .11.UNU RIVER, 100 cleared, well timbered, wat- ered, 1unced, equipped, bull. 11. Carruthers, .1au (lane, Out. GUN aA RIFLE SIGHTS WEAVER 1'1d11201'IC SIGHTS fur guns and rifles; all models; low prices, Win, Little, Box 862, Ottawa, Ontario, HAIRDRESSING SUI1l1OL L 1: A It N HAIRDRESSING THE Robertson method. Information on request regarding classes, /tubertson'e Hairdressing Acad• clay, 137 Avenue (toad, 'Toronto, IIE►tIL'I, It1Li114I1k SKIN TROUBLE THOUSANDS 11.t\'1S BEEN 11EL1'- ed the Herbal way. Why not you? Write to the Thuna Herbalists, for a free sample of our Thoro- K leen herb, 436 Queen (Vent, Toronto, MACHINERY CASH PAID FOR ALL StJltl'LUS machinery. Gilbert C. Storey Machinery Company, 26 SL Albano Street, 'Toronto, Ontario. MEDIC:t.I, GOOD RESULTS — EVERY SUP- ferer from Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis should Uy Dixon's Rem- edy. Munro's Drug Store 335 Elgin, Ottawa. Postpaid $1.00. OPFEll TO INVENTORS AN O1'F'ER TO EVERY INVENTOR List ot inventions and full Infor- mation ntoeenation sent tree. The Ramsay Co„ Registered latent Attorneys, 278 Rank Street, Ottawa, Canada. OATS OATS: CAN SUPPLY IN ANY quantity. Mabel and Culler. Registered and No, 1, R. Bruce Ness, Howicir, QUe, PATENTS FLTHLIRSTUNHAUGIl & COMPANY Patent Solicitors. Established 1880; 14 litng West, Toronto, Booklet of Information on re- quest. BULK CAN RENEWED RUST MILL, CANS RETINNED like new. We also buy old cane, Montreal Tinning & Retlnnlug Co. Ltd., Montreal, 1'1L11SOA'AI. 11LIJAi1 (.10511 N i3AIl'ORE Christ, Wonderful book sant ire'+. blcglddb Mission, Rochester, New York. t'l110'rs1GIIA1'111 DON'T TRUDGE THROUGH Tile tient, IUdn, ue hull HAVE YOUR SNAPS Delivered by Mall Any 6 or 8 exposure film pert rutty, developed and printed for only tae, Supreme quality and fast net vice guutuMucci. IMPERIAL PHOTO SERVICE 6ta1.101) J, Toronto 60 l'11UTO STAMPS OF S\\"PIC'1'- heart, Mother, anyone, only $1.21, 100 for $2,00. Send 10c (credited), for our Mora e and samples, Prairie Distributors, Dept, W.t'C, Winner, Bask., Canada, I0Ii1'1RINTS MADE 1'1(0M NEU. utIves 3c each. Enlargements size 0 :c 7, 15c; 8 x le, YOe. Prompt mall service. Foto Finishers, 423 ,Iurt'is 5t., Toronto. PATENTS at 'TRADE MARKS EU1.1t'1ON 11, UAW:, 1tEGIS'TLlttaU United Status, CaNathan, British Patent Atkorney, booklet gratia. Esta bi!shed over 1'urly years, 81 Balsam Avenue, Toronto. IlAltlll'1'i FOR Ono 1 Wlidl 5liN1.) COM.t'ld',l'F information: breeding, housing, clipping, marlceting; Angora rab- bits. A. E. ICias.sc•n, ilex 4, .1105 - en feld, Iles•enfold, limon. It 11131 11A'I'IC PAINS T1tY I'1': EVERY SUFFERER or Rheumatic Pains ur Neuritis should try Dixon's Remedyy- Muuru's Drug Store, 335 Elgin, Ottawa. Postpaid $1.110. 'L'Ui1KiEY EGGS W.tN'1'1ED WANTED -- BRON7i•J TURKEY eggs, highest premiums paid. Write to the Lindsay Efactrie. Ilatehery, 33 Melbournu St. West, Lindsay, Ont, T1ItitEY SADDLES TURKEY SADDLES, 30 CENTS ouch, delivered. John W, Wild, 1P Lansdowne Ave., London, out. SUGAR SUUS'1'I'r0'1'1i5 SUGAR SUBSTITUTE; CAN 138/ made at home. At about one fifth price of sugar. Information free with purchase ot Rook. Household hints, Price only, 31,00. N, %Villas, Sapton, Manitoba, TitACTOlt ('ARTS TRACTOR PARTS ' N IJ W AND used, for all makes of tractors. General Auto and Tractor Supply, 12 Frederick St.. Kitchener, Out. ISSUE No. 12-43 THE WAR • WEEK --- Commentary on Current Events Round The Clock Air Raids . Mean No Rest For Germany l;tr.ry flay since Felt 24 hag seen A111e1 oilmen over targets 1n Germany and German ooru',,' d territory hour ,)iter hour, round 1110 clock, conimenta the New \'"rk Thies. The Germans, who dnit0tt- ed large -settle bombing of big cities, were tieing blasted in the greatest rah' assault in history. ldritish experts, who estimate the weight of bomb:; dropped on Eur - 0P0 during 1942 itt 4,000 tuns; a month, assert that more than 10,- 000 tone fell in the same. area la:t month alone. The Opening Bars Behind This growing hn'y wero the slew; of a new purpose. There wero strong prospects of an Allied invasion of Europe in 19.13. The very prospect of It reflected the prevailing military opinion that air blows alone would not bring vie - tory. England, despite a ten-month air Blitz that shook her to the core, rallied and held firm. Be- fore a territory can be tvon, tit rho words of Lieut. (len, Joseph Stilwell, "a man must ho sent to stand on It." But the battering bombers have been giving German war plants, comntunication cen- ters and submarine bases can dis- rupt production and soften de- fenses against the day of invasion. Last week Captain Harold Bal- four, Parliamentary lJnder-Scere- tary for \Var in Britain, called the hombinge "the opening bars which will rise to the crescendo of the march on Europe," Arc of Combat Those opening bars were being played across a vast. keyboard. Great four -engined Lancasters, Sth'lings and Hal1faxes have roar- ed each night across the arc whose radius extends 600 miles from London, enclosing the greater part et Germany's war industries and those of the lands the Nazis have conquered. Ily day Amnriran Fly- ing Fortresses and L11o'intors have smashed et, targets nearer home bases. 'i'he nature of the targets sel- pciel by the Allied 1llgh Com- mand seemed to set the pattern for things to come. First of all tl:e assault has been directed 8Rmost the submarine, which has proven one of Iiitler'e most effec- tive weapons. Sine the first of the year Wilhelmshaven, the mari- time center whose shipyards are prodnedng U'boa1s, has been left hard three times and medieval Nuremberg, the holy place of the Nazi party and home of Diesel eneiun plants, once. Lorient, chief operating base for submarines on France's western coast, has been bombed ten times; while direst and St. Nazalre Have been hit ;wire each. Factory Centers Hit \Vac plants and rail and road networks have also P0011 battered. Cologne has been ridded four times this year, aid 113 times rinse, the Mill 1 or the war; i dan1111, a great rail center In tlerintiey, has been hard hit. Essen, home of the ICrupp armaments works, has been attncketl heavily. Hen- gelo, le the Netherlands, where factories are turning out war ma- terials for the Germans, las been plastered with bombs. Berlin A Target Last week a fourth 1n the cur- rent series of attacks hit Berlin. It was a "thunderbolt" raid, a abort sharp attack in which the full loiuls of the attacking planes were poured upon the city In half an hour. According to German re- ports many fearsome four and two•ton block -busters, perhaps aimed at the nearby Potsdam nt.ilroad station, fell along Ber- lin's Unter deft Linden, the wide and famous avenue that is flank- ed by palatial public buildings, tourist and shipping offices, motor- car showrooms and jewelers' Rheas. In the raid Allied airmen dropped more than 900 tons of bombs, twice the hightest amount the Luftwaffe t9 estimated to have dropped during an all-night raid on Britain. in one twenty -four-hour period of the "round the clock" bombing more than 2,000 operations flights were completed by British pilots, flights totaling 150,000,000 tulles. 111 these operations there were fewer planes than a year ago, but they carried more bombs. The German Defenses The Germans have built defenses against these attacks. They have antiaircraft guns that reach with remarkable accuracy the 20,000 to 30,000 feet altitude from which British night bombers make their runs over targets, and even the 30,000 to 35,000 feet from which American daytime fliers drop their bombs. German fighter planes, cautious because of the defensive power of the bombers, harry the attacking plan's as they make their way to and from the targets. There are losses. The heavy op- erations of February are estim- ated to have cost the Allies 171 pirates, twenty of tient American. They are losses that 111118 t be paid in weakening Nazi defeases for Lie invasion to +e R- But they are small when c+e" rtpctreti tc:t'.1 the ever -;rowing reservoir of Allied ail' 1 'ttgU1, The exact size of the .11iieel air forces is a milituay ;worst, but from public sure•11n•nt8 made by various officials some hints can be gie;ui' d, Ant' iIris exited:, to have all air force of 2,•1.,0,000 men armed with at least 21,000 planes I))' 110 end of Iola. 1111(.11(111) plane production, according to a report last week from tinder Sec- retary of 1Var Bober!. i'atterson, h11, T 5in1 In February, a Pale that )Wean; r1LUnrn planes, of ail types and 12,900 eolub:lt pl'laey it year, These ii1;111', s 111•ry be conserv- ative, Pine' British sources have estimated that America will pre - (lure 1uo,0tu plants; in 191.; and 13ritilitt 35,o1n, Axis Production Against this the Axis is estim- ated to have some 20,000 planes nitogefher, of which from 4,000 to 7,500 are (Lerman combat planes. Tho combined production of all the Axis nations is estinulled at 2,200 a month. 'I'ltis figure is ex- pected to slump by ,lune or earlier because Germany is taking more and more men from her faetories for herr ire on the front lines. Where Is The Luftwaffe? Is the Nazi air force short of oil or gas?, asks '1'Ite Providence Jot11'110. is It no lodger capable of putting 111) a strong fight? 1Jas It been forced to scatter its strength, and thus weaken itself, because the United Nations are now in a position to hit at Hitler from nearly all points 011 the com- pass at the 111110 tinge? Or can the 111)81('1)' of its recent. 1n1)ltal'- ent w'calcness lie hest explained by the theory that it has been go - Ing through a period of reorgani- zation anti re-equipping and that it is merely gathering 'fresh strength," as Goering says, in order to deliver surprise blows at "(Ito right hour"? lhtt how long can they wait. for that hour to come T7nere came a moment In the Luft- waffe's 1)1112 on Britain when well. Informed sources bad good reason to believe that the British would collapse If the blitz continued only a week or so longer than it did. 1Tow long can rho Reich stand be• ing blazed? What will happen to German morale anti production and communications and over-all abll• ity to light if the Allied raids show no letup, bot instead mount in severity day after day, night after night, week after week, for a much more protraotr+d period than the period of the Luftw'affe's effort to grind England Into rubble? SCOUTING .. Proof that Scouts do' not cease to be Scouts when they join the armed forces is seen by the num- ber who continue to assist in op- erating Boy Scout 'Proops where they are stationed, and 1'110 form Rover Scout C1'et1'S on their sta- tions. The latest to he reported comes from Cairo, Egypt, where former Scouts serving there have formed a Rover Scout Crew. —0 --- One of the most noticeable re- sults of the recent National Boy Scout Week was increased mem- bership in many sections. In Ot- tawa, one Cubnlastcr was amazed to find 22 recruits waiting to Join up when he arrived at his Scout Week meeting. 0.— The 6th London Pack of Wolf Cubs, which has an enviable rec- ord of war service docs not do things in a haphazard way, The group has already announced its plans for 19'13 war service, which includes donations to be made to Russian Relief, Red Cross, Queen's I'imd; Community Chest Fund and Chins Up Fund for British Scouts, Last year the Pack salvaged 23 tons of wastepaper and gave $111.90 to various war charities, Another British Boy Scout was recently, awarded the British Em- pire Medal. He is Scout John David Grix, aged 15. Scout Grix, for two nights during the heavy air raids on Norwich, rode his bicycle through the heavy bomb- ing to carry out his civil defence duties, and also directed firemen their troopa, introducing many and rescue parties through the devastated parts of the city. 1 HITCH -HIKER OF THE FUTURE Getting aboard a Sikorsky helicopter is an easy matter for a hitch -hiker or a tardy passenger \rho missed the take -off. In this demonstration of the windmill plane, which currently has been devel- oped for the 1!, S. Army, the pitet dropped n rope ladder and caused the craft to hover, motionless, while another ratan climbed up. Scouting is playing an import- ant part in eeno 11ting friendship between the people of Iceland and the American and British soldiers and airmen stationed there. Amer- ican Scouts are assisting Icelandic Scoutmasters in the operation of novel American ideas which are received with enthusiasm by the Iceland Scouts. Sweden, one of the few re- maining European countries not under the Nazi heel is also pros- pering in the field of Scouting. In the past three years, the number of Boy Scouts in the country has increased from 28,000 to 35,000, or 26 per cent. VOICE O F 1 H E PRESS HARD TO UNDERSTAND Itis ehffic,llt to under -rand the attitude of mind of parents who refuse to ..ion consent fortes for their children to undergo physi- cal examinations, particularly tu- berrulosis test.,, in the health pro- gram that in being inaugurated jointly by the Board of Educa- tion and the Board of Health. Such an attitude suggests that possibly those parents are 01000 urgently in need of examinations than their offspring -mental ex- tuniunti011$ --�1. Thomas '1'inles.-9oarnal -o — APPLE QUESTION Can you remember not so long ago when people were coaxed t0 help out the apple industry of Canada by purchasing and eating apples? Where are the good apples today at a reasonable price for the household? Oranges brought all the way from Cali- fornia are in much more popular demand than the Canadian apple. Even the Canadian black walnut has gone into the luxury class at 70 cents for a six -quart basket. -St. Catharines Standard —o— NOT SO BATTY Speaking in St. Thomas, 1)r. H. B. Hitchcock of Western Univer- sity, said hats could fly with their eyes blindfolded and not strike objects, and that they also had a keen homing instinct like the pigeon. Maybe bats are not do batty after all. —St. Themes Tines -Journal INDUSTRIAL ALCOHOL IN BATTLE IJRESS MOTOR cars become tanks. Luxury liners become troop transports. And ALCOHOL becomes a vital war necessity. Narrow indeed is the gap between the pleasurable things of peace and the fighting tools of war. Mixed with the gasoline of fighting aircraft, INDUSTRIAL ALCOHOL keeps 'em flying. In the radiators of army trucks, ALCOHOL keeps 'em rolling. United with guncotton, ALCOHOL helps to provide stabilized explosives for our shells. And in our hospitals this same versatile product brings comfort and peace to wounded men : ; ALCOHOL has gone to war, and to provide it in the fabulous quantities needed, the full resources of our mighty plants have been mobilized for the duration. Until peace is won, war is our principal business. HIRAM WALKER & SONS LIMITED oak FOOTWEAR MYSTERY School pupils in a t:hicitgo sub- urb are operating a shoe ex- change, to widen parents may bring ,hoes which tl,eir children ha\e oatF:ro'•tu but not, worn out, and receive larger ones in trade. Theoretically', it it tt fine idea. blit parents around here would like to 1:1io1', hots 1: the fastest growing yc,ung ire 1' manages to have it s.t-rilp of .se,es toil toes left by the line. he )!et: too big for Itis .10,•., \V'ioelsor Star -n-- HELPING HITLER Steel workers are back tit walk but 111111118 thio wave; they have lost and the Wren in the armed forces will also miss the 4,000 tons of steel which would have been made each day the strike was in progress. —Niagara halls Review —0 -- TWA OR THREE PERHAPS "Every U.S. soldier sent over gets a book on how to get along with the English." A elan natned MacTav'ish sent this in, with the remark that, "they should gie a medal as well tet the mon whit can :care that oot "' ono book." ---Ottawa Citizen Full Government To Territories "it would be sheer nonsense — ignorant, dangerous nonsense — to talk about grants of full gov- ernment to ninny of the depen- dent territories for some time to conic. In these instances it would be like giving a child of ten a latchkey, a bank account and a shol•gu ." — Hebert Morrison, British Home Secretary. SERVING THE UNITED NATIONS WITH WAR ALCOHOL " %�r,`- r. kak 9 f Bluey and Curley of the Anzacs 15 THAT SOUP YOu'QE. THROWING. our "Who's right?" IT TASTES LIKE VERY GOOD SOUP Tp ME / TNATS WHAT 1 5A A � 4t<;xr r1 By Gurney, (Australia) yuT THE COOK SAYS ITS COFFEE.. 1) r 9 r1=7 -1411w, 1, t R� v- • Page. 4. `' TBE STANDARD IWeilnegdLty, March 17, 1943. ,. - ..._.•� 11111014 iR 4401lVtINtc+EAKICK 041(1 t01,f11tEOMUNPVC)E1441{1(tcictC c10KCt Elliott Insurance Agency J. H. R. Elliott. Gordon Elliott INSURE NOW! AND BE ASSURED. CAR—FIRE—LIFE—SICKNESS—ACCIDENT. AUBURN 1 EAST IVAWANOSII Iloly Communion nut► Sermon next Alts, 1). Read of Gotlnean, visited Sunday at 10:30 A Al. in St, Mark's ('hurllt. at Iho home of her aunt, Mt:,. Daniel :McGowan, iii l family Iasi \merle. Th • \Vorld Pay of Prayer was held Neighbours are as.<isting Mr. I',utiel 111 i<nax\\l'uilte4 ('Inurhl twltltSpecial ll''s, MetiO tth's to mote to til it new home with A,Looe, Woods as leader, : pt c a J( this \\'ednc'sday and 'i'hursday 2 prayers were offered by Alm Thomas their tilcigits, AS. Johnson, Mrs, Frank Ralthby and Alt, George ('h<uter pent the wciya A Miss .(05.'phine Weir, Alts,, 1t. ,1, i'hll• I3L1 TH -- ONT.A lips I)r,,;idc•d at lite piano. The scrip - Office Phone 101, Residence Phone 12 or 140, 'RA tune was read by Miss 'Margaret King. "COURTESY AND SERVICE" The Baptist quartette, Mrs. Charlet, tDba91)iDt9:ANXII1)rDiDt)IN 11 .1. gINXII)M1111441)1.1r1Da ailia)i)41Dtl31a tbil)41)ia1%)aDIl1Pi 1 Howson, Alr.;. Ear) 'McKnight, Mrs, Earl Italth:y and Mrs. 11. J. l'hilllp5 sang "Blessed (lour of Prayer." Solos We aro glad to report Alrs. James were given by Alr,;. \Wesley Itradnock, '1'. Wilson is able to sit up a while. acccntrailicd by Alis,S Josephine \Weir Ali', Leslie Johnston disposed of 20 and by Airs. Gordon R. Taylor. head of choice cattle on Monday. I:\ paper on the "Need of Prayer At :\11 'Prune" was given by Mrs. ,lames �A COUNTRY EDITOR SEES WRITTEN SPECiALLV FOR THE WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS OF CANADA 4 JIM GREENBLAT, Editor of the SUN SWIFT CURRENT SASKATCHEWAN The author of Hifi; series. J:u1 Green' tat, i; the Editor of The dun, don, with Mr. and Mrs. J. Taylor. thriving \weekly n.'\'s;t.tper published in Swift Current, Stask, ile is a na• 1'ri\ ate Melvin Sleep, son of Alt% and live of \\'infer, Man., and attended public and high schools in Winnipeg. enol In Parry Sound. •Al's, T. Itiggerstaff spent. 'Tuesday, In \\'ingham, 1)r• John '1', llos,, is spending a Pett' days in London. Wooers. The olftring was received by Mias .11ar Ferguson and \Ars, Kari Wight. Ill In. Airs. Woods told the tidies that the World's Pay of Prayer was started in ISS'7 and hats spread through 50 countries. Alr, and Mrs• Lloyd 11. Ilailhby and Mrs. David Aemstrong ,is spending sons, Paul ant Cordon Il1:thily, Lon- a few days with her son, Cecil and and Airs. Armstrong in 'i'horndalc, The Young Peoples' Society Of Knox United Church entertained tho iuinrbet;; of the Young People's Asso- ciation of this .\nglitan Church, The evening was spent in games and con- tests, and lunch was served. Evensong and Sermon n:xt Sunday at :3u In 'Trinity ('horde, BELGRAVE Air. Norman \\'als11 received injuries on Friday wlu'n drawing hay. Ile fell from the load, and us a result, is eon - rued to bed, but we wish hint a upeedy recovery, Aire• ,\dant Steep, of Godericii town - the maw(d to Swift (',trrcnt :1:1 years 11 ;n, and studies: law until the outbreak stop, was a recent guest with •\J s. of the Fit•;: Great \\ r. lie then served iii the ('luradian Army from \\•fllill.m Hallam 1n Cafn;horough, Eng - 1 t!•1 5 ':ng•1;>15 to i;'1.1, and was wounded in France. Ile hu; been in the wee'ily land, mother of Alts, Leslie Hallam of newtpal:er busiacss since IfI:;l, and Is a I>.•.;t president cf the Sasl(atche- aubt•n. Stan division of the Ctnadiau \\'eel(ly Newspapers :\ssoc:idion' I Mrs. Charlie Scott, .Auburn, with .\t home, he writes a sprightly column, for the Sun, called "Swift Mr. and .\lrs. Jame, Keary, Windsor. Current Through the I.00!.ing (;lass", in which he has developed the highly I Mr. and Mrs, 11..1. Phillips, Ezekiel Phillips, M r. and Mrs• Thomas S Johnston in London. Airs. W. 'faros \\Atli her aunt, Airs, Jolla ICenn,sdy, 'le -stealer. 1 George 1(rophy has received word • from his son, Sergeant Joseph Brophy, oversY Is, stating lie had been wounded in action. friends will be glad to hear the wound is not serious. Two readable and inimitable style that he firings to this series from Ottawa. Before leaving C'ttawa, he left one po teriat 00 a brief raptly. It rend: hit of biog• f'on't like 'Toronto!' liditor's note. LOOKING INSIDE THE FNGINE, DON Is1171311,0OK The \\'. Al. S. tact on Thursday af- ternoon at the Church with nine Ia. ciic\s Itret•eat, The 0teetiug was in charge of the President, NH's. . tW. A, Campbell, assi.;ted by Airs. .tones, Airs, Arnold ('ntig and Alts. .1, C. Call me 1::ky or mit. but I'm just cote problems affecting our very months ago he \vas in an airplane Robinson. During the afternoon a nn ordinary' weekly new p per editor lives. ,lust remember when you shake crash bolt was not injured. quilt was completed for the Red (Toss. who w, -ss int•:ted to c: ne down to your head wisely at yo:a• neighbor and Mr. Prank Stalker, with his sister's, 1 Mr. I'M 'Thompson has returned (It taw a, that d1''f) but I•ai.Laling, say something about "them guys at •\Its. Maitland Allen and Mrs. \V, .1. from Sydney, Nova Scotia, nod is throb ir. wi:h energy W.1r h - IN el a Ottawa", that one time yon lett the Craig. spending a sew days at his hem here. 1)1ti.;n wlli(h is sack a swum 11 ant barn door open, bo r;y w.tn,Iered out Miss ,)can Campbell, Sty harbour, I Alt•'+, Arnold Craig 5 -pent the wcel(• ( nergctic I ir'.ncr of 1113 battling 1'ni• into the blizzard and you lo.,t yon•• with Mr. and Airs, :1ll'rert Campbell, end with London friends. ted Nation. I was asked to write n self a hundred bue;:s or so. 'Alis, William Moss and daughter,' Alr, and Mrs, Norman 'I'hantps'u series of omelet' for house con 'imp Our Living Standard: involved }tush, with Al r. and Airs, George Me -and Grace, were Sunday visitors with tion—that is, f.r the plata, honest -to• Kay, of Aloitktotl, stir, and Airs. Frank Thompson. fol'; in the t.1.tn.; and on the i;rllet e me, if you and I are to eon - God , -Miss Margaret Webster, Stratford, t.inue eating the nutritive foods u -fnans who con Onto Cie readers of with Mr. and Airs. :\..1, Ferguson. Canadian \wee:cdy n:twspapelY cessau•y to our complex organisms, to All'. and Als, \Pillion Lutz„ Betty, fortify tis for what may be a long and .\lacy, Shirley, ,toy, }silly ath(1 nose i didn't get any •:8:Iry for coating terrible War•pull (and 81(er the twarl; ha 1.0 a rid red here front Lin• down here, but they did pay my ex- if you and i •810 going to be able to wood. They ihave purchased the farm pe'n•ses. I felt somewhat like your continue paying and receiving wages owned by ('olin ('antpbell, now of 01• own nota.':cr of PaI11uncnt, eatiu' on adequate to a fairly decent continuing taws. The Lutz's furniture arrived Ithe train, h.lving the o:Id finger -bowl ,standard of living; if the producer by freight and neighr:tors took it to and prc:el.dit:; 1 was tts:d to it and and laborer is to reap in at 12ast some the farts by lc: 10 and sleigh. bavIng the 'loll hoe 'sir" ole to worthy measure the cff•hrt; of iia 1,111 Ordinal y Sea nun John Mugford with dc.ah, Yon 1IICW t:: Well 115 1 do 111t1 t• whiie this war lasts—iwithout a11y' his parents, Mr. tttul Airs. Joseph Mug - weekly. p''1 1' eCtor; at Bente are too explosive disruption — it will he t;)rd, ('aglow• mer(1) 5 " c,l. i ,It with the 1';ni. h 4:noise this ot;mnization thiol •;, llo. , AI! ,s,s Dotty 11. Craig, Clinton and of tic-, tu'tic•Ies, like R. 11, Bennett and conll»ues in its (what al'12iirs to Allss Ila 11• ('rung \Wir,;h:nn, rendered us.ccl to troy b: ore they .-t1 2k him in be) sincerity of purpose, let the chips a duet at a Fireside service in Wesley the Rritlsh hall of f.une, "1(c hall lila fill where they Marv. \\'lilts church Sunday evening. clay and erased to be", I I prat':;..^ tihi; series of artir'les to Privrrte Earl M rgforl, 1pperwash, 1 came la h it,, a personal, nnitt''n• Le ,just a pltin, unvarnished telling with Mr. and Airs. George 1'1, Tung• perctl, t•nc. `o(c', anprl(1 'aril look at of wliat 1 saw iu• Ottawa, A'nu're:il Wilt, the \\'at.•nu 1' 1° ; and 'Tr11111• i:oard and 'Tcroulo, I w'ou'ld IT(e to be able Airs. Norman Allen with Alm, Powell, and its me:: •I::in; what slakes the to tell you in the same way your own (aoderich. wheels go 'rola''. 1'-cw it affects the editor does when he'.; an the beam Aliss Jean A, Scott, Parkhill, with daily life, the routine and economIcl about something, 1 want to tell mutt Alr. and Mrs. Itc'hert ,I, Scott. cd you ami I. 1 011'1 CW3 a cent to thinks the head of the whole o.ltfit, Alm, and Mrs, Alex. Mantling, Bel- t'nyomm in r'ttawt from Donald Got'. Cl;aiimin cf the 1 rird• i'onnld Got• grave, with Mr. and Airs. James Craig. don down, in politic:; or ration cads, don, that big, (hark Sco'sn'aa who dy 1 Ila Il, liraig, \\Ingham, with her -r-o I fcel fit r. g'we you n'y own riot• mintd:.ally 14,1ds this organization and patents, pressinni, in laser], of this trenten• who, by the way, Wright look like the Mr, Jeslina Allen of Colborno Town - ('lust vft•,l thin; which '.s ordering hardware man or the blacksmith in „Ilii, and fatl;;;r of Maitland Allen, of out' very live, trying to kcrttn a mils )'our town, Ile talked to me as if I, Auburn, cel:i.rated his 87th birthday ahead of inflation and thus prevent myself, ole; nt something in this on Friday, Moo'c'h 121ih. the evils c,f deflation after the war, world, That, to Inc. was the C1 112 Carte Elanche —No Punches Pulled why even stenographers keep the mid- i i wasn't asked to pull p:lnches. night oil cutler,; in this organii•lt!on uu.ier standably, has a big ,fob and he's That show.' 1 don't loo y take a poli• —mad 1 do mean to work. concerned not'aly with the fellow who Belau. I was given carte blanche to Research Economist Phyllis Turner wants to gyp you and L Then there's look inside the engine, to ask eines- Then take Mrs, Phyllis (1, Turner, Dr. G. E. 13ritnell, a Saskatchewan lions, to interview the really big administrator for Oils and Fats for ut:wcrsity than, economic adviser to the Foods Adamindsteat(on, \\'hy that 111 I .1'.s 11011(1 Is a)Wa)e as full of hut• tei', (a.s, hogs, cheese, bc.,f and milk as (';uutda's farms collectively are, Ile sea; the picture more than he does statistics. More about that later, t.00, i:naglne rationing millions of peo- ple, cards 00:1 stuff. That would make your head swine at Montreal, and I'll try to exq)'..tin later, logically, how L. B. Unwin, a C.P.R. Vice -President, 011(1 h'a folks go about it. And what do you think Is in the mind of placid administrator (-1. I1. Bloom at Toronto, who handles what yott can get in farm m'fchiuery in this greatest of ag- ricultural countries? There were milany others. I've got a lot of stuff filed away lit my mind, but It's got to be boil'_.( down, all of it, to Make not too tir- ing reading that will give you an ap- preciation and understanding of what's being done to 1'Oi'-R way of life. On names who handle Canada's great wartime economy, and that in itself \was a thrill. :And Metre, take my \word fCi' It, you'd 1)e impresse(i like i was. Finn b.it'>r rationing to subsidies the men doing the Joh are in my opinion since, 3, s•att'rtic, 113.•(1 working and don't' let anycne gaff y.,a a':out poll - 'tics and b:.•reaucl•acy. It's all ;melt a color'al .tut ncce:ssary thin;;. They admit ntist.tkes have been made. They also admit they are ho• man—even the experts and economic advisers; b it they're all aiming to- wards the best deal for the greatest number, to involve the least hardship for all of us in a war which is bring- ing new alit ever hm re- ;Aug, inti• 1,40* !hilCiltZ5'. Jlehe! No writing. No money orders. No bother. Just call or phone, 100% live delivery guaranteed, A. L. KERNICK (MYTH, ONTARIO. Canada and a member Of the t'nitct.l Nations Committee on these vital conrntodities. She's a former chief re,3eareli t0000i1/:Ft of the Tariff Iloard; a stmi"tingly beautiful woman doing a tremendo•(siy S rig job in s:o•m:c'(tir.:g y'i t'll hi? 1;1101181y interest- ed to hear about later if you stick with me lcag caloagl hi Ed, '•01.10•;. Then Ihere'0 lic0110111 W. Taylor who 1 Lifted wits, Senrebury of the Beard, a \1c•Mnster elan, an economist of .standing, who certainly knows what it's all about, 111s type of per• ton (like the others) doesn't have to fiddle with politic.. And wo:nen readers will surely ba interested In r„:tat Byrn,' slope Sanders told me. She's be 171' llncwn CS Editor of Chatclnine and now heads Consumer,; b:' troch divi thin, with its farflung "watching" local committees. Behind her discerning, intelligent eye.s you mal•1 visualize her a: :1 young mons in the kitchen slicing around the pie how you react to the policies and reg - Cough. ultltieni laid lown may eventually de- pend that same way of life. hear wits ole through the following few weeks It:formation From Source Are you interested in hoarding, etc, and i'll do the best I can to explain You'd be surprised what I learned why and how they're doing it. from Fed A. McGregor, adinl nistratm• I And remember, we the people, only ,of the Enforcement division. You'd paid for my ham and eggs while 1 woe i take hint for your own church mints- , away from home. I didn't have to pat ter. He doesn't look like 111mmler anyone on' the back. I remain, like (and hates anyone who gets tough, but you, a small town guy or guyess, so 1he'S sure a firm guy. HIis division, 'stick around and tune in next wce'a, Play The Well Play, Attended "1ieipeclied henry," aterman's Pens Wehave been very fortunate in replenishing our stock of Wate 'man s '' Pen. The same high qual- ity ua1- ity and service still prevails. We have some lovely new Sets, beauty 1) rop town. Alp and individual pens. Exquisite style, alld design. in and ,See They snake these the next time you are a splendid gift. Remember to write to your friends ---We have Writing Paper at 10e, 15c and 25c. Envelopes at 5c and 10c. Both Linen and Kid Finish. Onion Skin Writing Paper 15c and 25c Pad Picture Binding, Thumb Tacks, 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 •J i r'.y(CZI,C,C.31S'CtlfG; ,C,C,C0:14'ttitC 1CW.14,C,C11'i•%I: Wednesday, March 17, 1943. 14.4444.444+44+444411044444 LYM1si'M qP EATRE WtNQK.(M-ONTARIO. Two Shows Sat. Night f 11•10. .11111•14•0 Thurs., Fri., Sat. Mar. 18.19.20 Penny Singleton, Larry Simms Arthur Lake, in "Blondie's Blessed Event" Enjoy the Bemstead Faanily in yet another come4y 11IICC0Hs. ALSO SHORT SUBJECTS, Matinee 8st. afternoon at 2.30 p. m,L Mon., Tues.. Wed. Mar. 22.23.24 y. Hedy Lamarr, Walter Pidgeon, in "WHITE CARGO" A drama of the Congo region. =i ALSO CANADA CARRIES ON M AND MINIATURE. +444444.444444+++++.1444144 WE ARE PAYING 3½% ON FIVE YEAR GUARANTEED TRUST CERTIFICATES ISSUED IN ANY AMOUNT An ideal authorized investment for individuals, companies, come - tory boards, executors and other trustees. STERLING TRUSTS CORPORATION 17! BAY ST. TORONTO WE'STFIELD ,Fred J. Cook entertained about 30 young people.. A very pleasant time was enjoyed by all, *4r. and Mrs. Duret, BenmIller, with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lockhart on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. itoland Vincent have received word that their only son, TB STANDARD On Friday morning the lacllee of this community met In the haseineut' of the United Church to hold their Red ('rocs sleeting and quilted 7 large quilts, Mrs. 11c\'Ittie reported that 12 little girls dressers and 6 pair of socks have been handed in to the. Auburn Branch so far in 1043. Tier Rrhy, who Is serving with the lt.C.A.F•, was a quantity of iced Cross liming been transferred to Calgary, and given out. A. pot luck dinner wai ell-' left 011 Thursday from St, Thoniae. toyed in the afternoon. The W. JI. S.' 1111'. and MI'S' Stewart Joh 'Ikon and 1V. A. held their 1,st meeting or spent Sunday in Clinton with Mrs. the year. The World day of Prayer! Brows, programme was followed with Mire., 1M1'. Robert McClinchey, of (;oder•ich, Norman McDowell in charge. Those at the home of his parents, Mi', and of her group taking part were, Mrs. Mrs, Gordon IleCl{nchey on Sunday. W, Carter, Mne. Walter Cook, Mrs, R. 1I'. Bill Buchanan, Godoricth, at his Vincent. Mis. Frank Campbell gavel home over the weekend. a very fine mei' on Prayer and MIse 111 r. Ralph Godfrey and family, and Winnie Campbell ,sang `a solo "The ,Mr. Clifford Sproul, Dungannon, with Beaulitul Garden of I'wayer." :\ire .. Mr. andMrs. Wm, McVittie on Sun• Walden presided at the piano. The day, President, Mrs. McVittie, took charge- titles flee Mason, lleiWeler, spent of the burliness. Atter the Roll Call rho past week with her parents, Mr. which was responded to by 18 mem-land MIS. Walter Mason, bers, several lettere were read, one I A warm welcome is extended to from Mrs, Rose, one from Miss June, Mr, and Mrs. Initz and family who Buchanan, and one from Mire. Col- have lately moved here from Linwood. slough. The Christian Stewardship , The recent thaw has made the roads Secretary, Mrs. F. J. Cook, presented, hero very bad. a list of "Ways of Raising 'the Allo- cation," which was adopted, first, by each member tithing, second, the usu- al $5.00 per group, third, the thank - offerings; 4th, a free-will offering teach meeting. A collection was taken for the boys Overseas boxes, watch nnl'ounted to $5.00. If WAS decided to have the Social Teas to swell this fund. Mrs. McV{tt1e was appointed to pack boxes to Ned Thompson end Ivan 1V4ghtanan, Both boys aro serving Overseas with the R.'C.A.F. 'rho April meeting will be in charge of Mrs. J. L. McDowell, and will be the FAtster Thank -Offering meeting. The ladies also intend having a quilting. On Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. The I''arin Forum was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. Campbell en Monday night, :Marvin McDowell gave a very lntere ting address. After a .social hour of games, lunch was sere ed. There were 40 present. The next meeting will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs, R, Vincent on Monday, March Sita, Everyone welcome, V - PHIL OSIFER OF LAZY MEADOWS (by Barry J. Boylo) Another St. Patrleks day roils around and we Find alewives think - 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 hardships loom unless you take immediate action. The shortage already has affected many communities total stocks of dry wood are nearly exhausted . .. in some places the small supply of green wood cut for next winter is being used now to meet the present emergency. Throughout most of Canada, fuel -wood is obtained not far from where it is consumed. Its production and distribution are the business of local citizens. The Dominion Government recognizes that the wood -fuel shortage is so 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 to stimulate the output of wood -fuel by assisting those normally engaged in its production and distribution. To this end, the following measures will 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 June 30, 1943, and held to dealers' account on that date. 2 The 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, partscul• arty in cases where dealers, to procure supplies, find it necessary to contract for fuel -wood at locations outside the area 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 $1 per cord has been paid and which are still in dealers' hands as at May 31, 1944. 4 Assistance will be given in providing priorities for necessary equipment. 5 Farmers now on the farm, and who leave the farm temporarily in response to this appeal to engage in fuel -wood cutting, will be deemed by National Seletttve Service to be carrying out their regular occupation as farmers and will be given all the rights of deferment of military service which such an occupa- don now carries. Such temporary absence should not, however, interfere with agricultural production. Municipal councils, farmers, fuel dealers, individual citizens, service clubs, and all other groups in communities where wood -fuel is burned, are urged to begin at once a rapid survey of their local situation, and to take imme- diate action to relieve the shortage. JHEDEPARTMENT OF MUNITIONS AND SUPPLY Honourable C. D. Howe, Minister W.F. 4 Page 6, tQtit4t4taticKtoatextatotTgg►4v4Katt6tatat6tctctutdictQKtat6tcteR(tvWClC itCte4tCtvetatctctr..tent't r.taidtz,t,:'c7 ''._ 7';." !,,.Z,f,!.,"„•,.•„�,T I ROXY THEA'111tE, CAP1'1' 1L '1'111�11'1'RF ' ItEGEN'1' '1'11I��A'1'.�.1': s CLINTAN,ODERICH._ srAF()iit'.4 sl 1 NOW PLAYING: Pot 0' Gold, v i i i The Andrews Sisters, Dick Foran, Thursday, Friday, :)r+turri;,y Joe g, Lewie and the Jivin' Jacks Joan Bennett, Don Amechc and and Jilts. John Loder. I I! ;I I:1';,, ill !.i':':i'i:;^ 1•.,ii'np, ;in A war comedy that Is hotter thaniniri_' hot with the top swing 1)8114 unit "Confirm Or Deny”five smash hits, `PRIVATE B1JCKAROO' ALSO: Rey Scott's authentic Chin- '',.1!� ere film in colour: KUKAN- Battle Cry of China. 1 COMING: The First Commar.-fo. Mat.: of days at 3 p.m. V1at, Wed„ Sat., Holidays, 3 p.m. Mat.. Sat, and Hol , ~_ .•t 3 p.rn, j ,hist`�ilienfliDt$i"dl`JdATa:i tlar'dl iikkihit2W10ii'1041DIDINDtilit1DIN.QiMli-dna`11`DV.La+ciDi2lr` i .D.,` ;'.'?t .`2.:':, .,..a , -' ..•..;:,i,`1 NOW PLAYING: ON THE BEAT, AND KUKAN, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday "ROAD TO MOROCCO" Sub) to pick cotton in Morocco, "'Turkey" Jackson woos a princr,is. Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour, Anthony Quinn. Thursday, Friday, Saturday NOW PLAYING: Pergen and Mc. ,� ';tarring Jarner Stewart, -I .44.4•4.-444-•••" � Carthy in. H 1= Ir L WE GO AGA IA. i Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Clacdette Colbert, Joel McCrea Kay Kyeer, SII: n Drew and ' and Mary Astor. Jane Wyman. 'i It a lain of 111811tal (Ili."' 11 and pr.: • alio:: In .11, ; ui or, i, ;u,.1 -.'i harmony in a setting of Florida Sou -hint. 1'l "I'ALi\I BEACH STORY" Thursday, Friday, Sat•day Brian Donlevy, Veronica Lake and Alan Ladd A chilling wy',tc'y from Ih.' inrilr pen of Uashi+.;I Iliunnn li, Ih• ".Thin Man" writ. r. 111,1!;:11•':11. i4i "11�' 1' avotlt'l(e Spy., ti As an added attr, sties the amazing Ji tctnes of A Freight_.. Under Fir3 . 'i 1 '4 •l 1 y COMING: The Gay Sisters, Sat,& Holidays "'i'IHE GLASS KEY" COMING: The Powers Girl, with Carole Landis. ing about the Auld Sod and all that. No matter {1011' we t n a ' 1 y disagree with some of the Irish I still find myself quite impressed by the heritage of be Ing of 11'Ish blond. I still think of my grandfather on every St. 1!atric'rc.s day. Fiery and re- bellious in his way stubborn and determined not to give in . . always getting involved in silly argil• mems and yet he had so1ne- tling that was alntcnt charming in its own way. Ile could, at seventy still dance a little jlg every time that some 011e w,h18110(1 a tune, Ile could take a jackknife and whittle out the mhos' engaging ,figures from a piece of or- dinary wood. Be could tell the great - .est et01'leti, Ills stories were something out of t'Iris world. \taut' Banes i've eat hunched up in front of the flickering fire in the old kitchen stove while the wind whistled and howled and shiver- ed around the eaves, and just listened to the fantastic and most engaging stories that you could ever imagine. With the leaser effort imaginable he could dip Into his recollections and bring up the Most engaging people possible. One minute it would be a warm but quite bare kitchen with a plain, scrub- bed floor, The next minute it would I be a most amazing castle on an Irish.' estate. There w'oeld be great men and women in the crowd and email talk and 111uc11 laughter. Starting from that he would weave in a shep- herd and possibly an Irish colleen, There would be great adventure and of course the plain fellow and the girl always managed to become the heroic figures in the .story. P';Iled with his own prejudice about idle people and all he used them to emphasize Just how hero's his plain, ordinary people were. The greatest stories of all concern- ed the pixies. The most amazing, Card Of Thanks 1 10,1, to thione till shy unil;h!r,ill", I',':; I, r ;':til t, :'.'ie, I I., end friends for their hiudae;S hoses r'ord of I iu.',i 1;: ,,1,., ,! 1'1 11 during my recent illness. 1111ipror•iit• 411•liv. rrt1 to 1.1' x. N". 1 \t un l NI the thoughtfulne-; very much. Ilull+•It, l' nrl i . 11 1'.' in ! ;ups 'Mrs. .lass..: \\'il<nn, of the r�r 1',:.;r}''l'1' :, n', r i•.u' TENI)ERS WANTED Card Of Thanks The famlily of the late Nil's, lien. Mason, wish to e'•lemd fist' fuser' thanl'r, for all n l' ' ^ • Ing their reef.... t - Prayer In Wartime 1 have no son for whom to pray, But oh, I dcu'e not turn away From. sweet communion lit T'.ty thron Until I pray for rids un''n'•',wn. Dear h'at.her, there are those tonight Who wring from earth in perlllc'd flight. And have no loved one's :Heat prnye To follow on the path; the:, i.ord, grunt them courage as they go Through desert scums u1' frozen Huuw. R. GRIFFITHS, Sec. -Treasurer, Cgn,1T�,K.E'.3 \VANTEP Tenders will b, r c( i1 d up ti, April , lot for tin- ; o '!i for th t• .f 1' 1J, I 1� TENT EPS F' R WOOD 'i', nd..r., will Lo rut.. {'•rd f..r 12 turd', of i t ins h „ i;nl, i r �. �', .11, Ea \\'a\n11o;l1 anti ),1'n 'i', nil •r; 11) to in rile li,tilil". 1,1 1111' Tran u1',. r 1, 'r 1. I:rn" •, 1. Nul•lll'11 And may they learn 11 trust in Thee RR. No. 'Which is the spirit's panoply. And even plough I hese no sons, There are a score of lonely ones Wile need a W0111811's faithful praYc'1',i Purse lost, on iayth Main Street, To bring them to a (100 who care;, on Satuhday night, containing a .iuut —(Tara {lernh,trdt• of money. Finder plea:-, it 'w,• at 'I'ltt, Standard 1)1110e. Reward oft.. rod. A Friendly English Greeting; 't'ENI)ERS WANTEI) Tonder,.';t: a flirt 1%11 o, will 1)r. re - PURSE LOST At evening to the cottage door Tile soldier made his way: Ile knew exactly, word for word, WI at he was g',ing to say: "I've conte 10 ccnt11tthndeer tonight Voir 'phone, one room, no more, '1'o halve, to use es (ISP, In a game we play of war. Then wide the door was opened, And a friendly looking 1111111 little people In the world used to Ia-1d: '^\lay i be of service'' come hopping and skipping out of 1 will be if I can." nowhere to star in his epic stories. No talk of commandeering, Little dandies dressed in wierd Of nuisance or of right, clothes they were the ones who trade But a friendly English gesture 11fe interesting in Ireland. There were To a stranger in the night, bad ones and good ones and they all Oh, there'is kindliness in England, lived so realistically that you couldn't. In the hearts of England's men, help but thrill to the story. That drags sten from across the seas Grand)tathel' for all Itis faults had a To 5181111 11'1(1 them again. warts heart. Ho was always bringing And stand they will while England stray people house with him, A man 04111(14, HOUSE FOR down on his luck . or a child Glut And that's for evermore— c.. ivcd by Jame; )Ic('uol. LoIu1)n;boro, Ontario., ('lens of Mullett 'I'osvtt hip, until :: p.m. on \lond,iy. April :411, l9.11, for crushing and hauling approx- imately 7,010 cubic yards of gravel 11'cm two pit, ill 1114' 'l'nwnAIIP. All Inlatcrial to p:tcs through a 2 -4 -inch Screen, and 811 wort; to be -under the 1 direetton and app. oval of the toad s pterintendent in charge, :\ 11uu'kcd cheque for $20u•110 mast acconl{only each Tender. For further p:u'tieulars apply to the ilea Superintendeat , WILLIAM CARTER, Concis'$ 11.0, Ontario, RENT Ine;h;ihle n 1'.3" Brick dwelling on needed a little caro . . .for that Mat- like the friendly lenglish greeting Queen :sheet, North, for rent. Apply ter, anyone who needed n helping - To a stt+,'u.ger at the door. hand. Isle was always clreful to uev 31-8. to Tho \lisscs bic('lelkuul, Blyth, Ont. or let 1l appear that it was iia own good nature that matte hint bring them home. Grandfather war -Intensely loyal to everything Irish, I must comes, thnt his owl. family, farther removed from the influence of the Emerald Isle used to try bion sorely sometimes with their attitude, which seemed to smack _ of sacrilege to hint. On there occas• 1 tons wrath would coque over him and Ills tongue would thicken with a nat• ural brogue and lie, would "lay the road of his tongue" on them. But somehow we've all inherited .Ramo of his Irisin. I guess we all _ think often' of his little people and his grand ladies and the poor shepherd lad who won the day. Colored and oxag• gerate(' as 11 1 s stories were !they were welcome relief from the matter of fact days that went by, Ile gave us a heritage of imagination. to•ourill..11••••fla•••• USE THE STANDARD TO ADVER. TISE ANY ARTICLE LOST, OR FOR SALE. HAROLD JACKSON Licensed Auctioneer. Specialist in Farm and Ilottsehold Sales. Licensed in Huron and Perth Counties. Prices Teasonaable; satis taction guaranteed. For information, etc., write or phone Harold Jackson, 11.11. No. 4, Seaforth, Phone 14r661, 11. S. T. You can take your fat drippings, scrap fat and bones to your meat dealer. }Ie will pay you the established price for the dripping and the scrap tat. If you wish, you can turn this money over to your local Voluntary Salvage Committee or Registered Local War Charity, or— You can donate your fat dripping, scrap fat and bones to your local Voluntary Salvage Committee if they collect them in your com- munity, or— You can continue is oa your Fats and Bones for collec- tion ollecttion by your Street Cleaning Departr'r't :';hese such a system is in effect. SF 4:I Rept:itment cf Naticial 1", r ..rvtces RATIONAL SALVAGE DIVISION NO TEMPORARY RELIEF FOR ME..I'VE SAID GOOD- BYE TO CONSTIPATION! OI'01 working lhardet than cvcr those clays. HnVe no time to be troubled by constipation clue to lack of the right kind of " tnllk" in my dict. Thank goodness there is a sen- sible way to corrin that condition . , instead of taking cathartics, tVhi:h only ;ivc temporary relief. no; try eating KELLOGG'S ALL -BRAN tvcry morning and sec_ o SERIAL STORY if this delicious cercnl doesn't help you become " rcgulur",..naturally/ Get your KELLOGG'S ALL• I3RAN daily .. • drink plenty of wnkr .. • and discover for yourself how caeily your old "trouble" dis- appears. Ott KELLOGG'S ALL - BRAN! Available in two convenient silos at all grocers'. I'Iadc by Kellogg's ire London, Canada. LUCKY PENNY BY GLORIA KAYE CASTRO AGAIN 1'11A1''1'I':R VIII For her visit to the kirk mills, Penny borrowed a slack sail from 31idge. \Pith a dinner pail under her arm and a pass clutched tight- ly in her fingers, she joined the men who passed the 1111' watch- man on their wiry to start Thu S n'clocl: turn. Against the vast background OI the stills, she felt tiny, lost, She didn't know which w•ay to turn. The 1001 ;tudi.d her ruriuu:`ly. One or two who knew her tipped their soiled calls and smiled hello, \\lido -eyed, Penny surveyed the strange new• world o1' furnaces and ladle: and scurrying railroad ears loaded with pre. ions molten AtevI. Oecasionally, guards chttl- lengrd her, \Then her credentiltls Fatisfied 1,11aw1, they \Vere helpful in directing her, serving' as guides anti answering her questions. The milk stretched in 011 end- iess maze along the riser, Penny was fascinated 04 she \atchvd the processes of steel hulking, When the noon v, Ilisllo blew, she was al- ren;1}• tired, her feet protesting against the exiended bine. .Men )dl;t 1 (1 out t1 l' the mill=, coated 1im•'tlsely0; 101 pile; of lum- ber, ant oeleued their lunch P011;ty w;,< ,]I:1' 1111' .I p!eusunt sot_ ',Eke. :\, ,he scurried a;r„ss a railroad `rill:;•, she lilerxl ; humped into 11x1) \1'tas11, \Phot in Iteavvn'a iai :0.1 you (loin ' here„” 1;ud drnuulded, when the terse shoe): of meeting. her had ended, "It's lo'!esonl0 at the 1''1,1.;,.1• of five," s'b.e told 'nim, 'so f thought 1'1) conic over herr to 11;11'1' 111111'11 with -nlllt' Ili the boys," „Glad to have you wall us," Idud said. warmly. "('oto' on over and meet the gang," Delighted, the shook hands with hi.; fricnri=. ":11 111(1 it.' 1 ,join you?" she ns!;e(1, "Not, at a11," they chimed in. One of the Wren dusted off a place on the lumber pile with the bark of his glove. "1t feels good to sit down." she said. "1'\•e 1,e en wanderillg around for hours." happily, she opened the lunch box. The sand- wiches Midge had made tasted good. She gave Bud one of the pears packed neatly into the kit. "You're not going to go wrong on 31idge," Penny assured Bud. "She sure can stake good sand - WAR -TIME hos depleted the tin supply — so glass replaces The delicious flavour and fine quality remain the same os ever ... always deserving yourchoice and preference. CROWN RRANO SYRUP floe of fie famous preducfs of The CANADA STARCH COMPANY Limited NE -2 J ...J •1111-/14.1111 1(!.,I I , +,. i„ul ISSUE No. 14-43 u c 'lopes." All the men lauLhell. That ?role the ice. She ',vas treated tis one of lite gang from that moment 1111, sllnl•Irlg in their chatter and in their .joking. The w11i$lle signalling their re- turn to work blew all loo soon, fenny ruturIII11 to the 1'011rier office to write her first gory about the Birk hills, a lidtt, per- sonalized feature story in which Ohl' `ti's -red the good Immo). 111' I.110 11100, ,1111) kV:1s rncuuragiug, helpful, 111 tool; time of l' It'otn hii pr10l'-re:ulil,g to suggest a ood 11011 paragr;tph, 110111 of thong were :rbsurhell in their work when they heard heavy footsteps clumping down the stair, . A heavy -set, short, s\v:„•thy ratan tvltlkcd in. lie held 11 rolled sheet of paper in his hand, "Hello, Vickers," he scowled). "1 want to see you, alone." "Hello, Castro," Jiln replied, coolly, "1'(11tl 's my partner, She's just. T14 i11t('I'1,-1 oil ns 1 ant in any - 1 him:. you have to say." "Okay, \'icker Castro an. xwered, "1 want to run a full- page 1111 in your paper this week," Then he !Wiled 11 roll o1' cur- rency front his pocket, pealed off 10 bills, :old lined them up on the coulter. Eitel) 111111 a value of 100. "What's this, Castro?" lint asked, quietly, "That's p0\•nient for my :1d," the gangster replied, impatiently, '':\ thousand dollar'," "Our rates are the slope for everyone," aid Jim. '111<1 ',;,fl n page. "I know that," Castro answered. 4'1 just \:ill yon lei know that 1 like 1•„11, that's tell, It'- your.,, \O stri)"s tied. "Castro," ,1iut told hint, wilII ice iu his voice, "You're ;I ;well guy itnd 1 like you loo. Put I'll give you just 1(1 seconds to fret out of here and stay out ' Dynamite blazed its l:astio's flushed face. fenny could see itis fists clench, 'Then he calmed down. Ile picked up the atony .)int had rejected. "Vickers." 111,.1ro said, •,•There isn't room in this. town for the two of us, I'm warning you, One of these days I'm going to blow you and your fly -by -nigh) rag Fo high they'll never be atilt to put the pieces together again," Ile turned oil his heel anal swung out through the door and up the stairs, "(;nor) for vol, Jiut," locos said, finally, "1 know• you're not just making a noble ge;tur0. Von could use that money.,' Jing swil0d w rily. "1'1) rather be broke," he said, "lieops me out of mischief," "Castro isn't the kind who throws „coney around promiscu- ously," fenny cautioned, "He means business, You're a real threat to hint. I'd watch out if 1 were you." ".Don't worry, Penny," .1i111 an- swered, grimly. "I've fillet his typo before. In Paris they were a lot smarter, a lot tougher, and a lot more dangerous. lie's right when he said there isn't room enough in this town for both of OF. 1 don't like rats." In silence, Penny returned to her story, 1t. was tough work, but when she had finished, she knew instinctively that she had done a good job, Penny would never forget the Thursday afternoon when her first story was published. She would always remember the thrill of watching the pre!-‘ roll slowly into lection, Then Joe. the press- man, lifted a page still wet. with ink. She saw her feature em- blazoried ort the front page, 'filer., too, was Jim's editorial alongside his story of the fatal bridge accident. Ile hadn't pulled any punch(.,. Involuntarily, Pen- ny shivered as she thought of the reaction Itis; words would provoke among I:irklnwn's poliiicianG. That first issue, together with her fir: t. tray cheque, Penny put aside as carefully as though they were her most treasured ow:ses- sions• Fhe (.veal(.) always cheris'1 them, Now fenny learned the joys that e 1, ;y creative canis) most feel, Iter will slur. had etn1111. the ,01,11 111 o1 Malty ryes in lirktnwn, People )tool nut of their %1st In meet her. Thr was as botch at 101)11' melt a: 1111101 -he 11:111 li1'e(I a1 1\410( 01 it nil her We, 1 Thu 11.51 x4:111 1)0rl" 1111`x' elle' fenny 15a5 happy in her work. Ilei first mill story begat, it series 1' new adventurer: for her, Every depxrtntelt! in the mills hail I1 we at( eft' shn'y rnatvrixl, rho yi itl d tho fteinillt!•, busy lithe tilts o „11111 111111 51((. 1110 n,ln 0 familiar ii;:'ure to the hard- V.or;;ing .,irelulIltit$ the P: 1'mll' 111(11111 I heir h,lllhn s, llxuy of the num were inventors. Some hall traveled extensively, and this tep"rtcd interesting 1•x- ocrlr'11e'1•,`, l'11•t'ry wlh`k, F)i,! lea111111'1', lou, nhnttl the grievances 1!1:1 dis- turbed lite teen's not ale. They wore petty things, mostly, Ideas, she found, were s:trcasticall,y re - :101e 1, 11eu were d;tr'oura :ed from trying new method; aid n'0: tvelin bolus, Respite ;!1e modern f:Iriiities in- stalled in 'awl elep:u•tmeut.< in the Mills, there wen, dill ;t fees 1,100e4 sxlrly dee'Iro: 11;1d peon u0l;leeted. '!'herr had I.. ,'n nn-ly thrill at-. titiny of the foremen and su- perirltenelent, were hur,llrllen, 01- 1'oganl, They aroused re•enlnient rather Ilmn loyalty, 'Then, too, leit•htow'n 01)'(.001) 1„110 recrell liana) 001101, ;111.1 i1 0 w•oi•ker.; had little in'1:nliV. for .-elf-improve- All these chines 01111 0110 1'1110}' slltions, She (1)1)11) 0111, 100, 0111 in the men 1010 \vork1l in rho Kirk mills there 1.114 the f0u1111a- 1i011 for I11'Uar.55 1111 L!rolvth. Steel making coursed through their blond as much :is printer's ink had begun to 1'1111 through 1111' 1.0111;4. Thu t;i0c wvl.: tuning•, soul), whclt I'cnny must ntttke lot' de- cision. Should she take 1111 active hart in management of the still.s'r tihnuld sit shoulder the problems, di eovOred in her iouVer- she knew existed;' 11ow would !t1 Kirk exoculives react:' And b t'•V %you'd tough, independent, sera' 1- I.y .`tc'ellnen feel about working for a frail girl who was a tiny - mite by comparison with them' She pictured herself diseiplin- ing n chin! worker tO1 )110 ahoy(. her. "II ill." ,110 said 10 Ilt.r:T if. la1.1g11 o fav,: I lily, "It mi thl 111 11th 11. 11;:11." (.m11il11ill Next \1•oele) :1t lent a million irregulars and 0,I111illa fighters are 1111 intir,; t- ans part o!• life 1 itIll ;0 arr.e.'d forco-t. SLIMMING TWO-PIECER fly Anne Adams TR: season, more than ever, the two-piecer is 1( "must"! Pal - tern •1:1:12 by Anne Adams is a snl;u•t 110\v version for norU'unS, designed fur style and comfort. A fabric remnant will make the optional bor ice top of the skirt, \\'car the softly -yoked blouse either belted or !slain, Pattern 1332 is available in 1.0- 1)Xn', sizes 32, :3.1, 3(;, 38, 10, 12, 11 and 16. Size 36 takes :1A yards 311 -inch fabric. Send twenty cents 1zOc) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this Anne Adams pattern to Ilount '(21, 73 Adelaide SI. West, Toronto, \Voile plainly size, n: au', address and style number, TABLE TALKS SADIE B. CHAMBERS Macaroni Batting For Meat liver and •p(ed) are primar;l ptotein foods, while macaroni, spaghetti and egg noodles are super-riell in carbohydrates awl are usually regarded its the "en - trio." liu:, you Must re- member that (.11011 member of this „energy trio" is also rich in pro- teins 1111:1 Ih:11 NVith the :lir) elf ,I,ns1/01:1tivrly small IpmnliliOS of toe cheaper meal rut;, en• Ir'I'1• over meals, delicious mid nouri.,h- ina• one -dish 010x1.s may. he pre- pare et, Thus macaroni, spaghetti 11111 egg noodles are ideal pinch hitters in the gens 111 11:11', short- :It;t s, ;11111 1101•).,4, Compare the cost per pain,) of \•nor favorite meat, tvilh the cost of a pound of macaroni, spaghetti w' eg'g• nuuIlles. 'Then glance over the fullow'in}; rrriprs non See how lar (hi; „energy food" will stretch when used with fresh or left -over meats., or chicken and 1)1JIr'I• nelessllry vegetables. Thrifty A1ncnron' Treat I':,tri,Iic hntlse\vive; w;rrlt' 110 ntrr.t, llere's a favorite way to combine left -over meats in It tasty, economical and ,:etierally pr•1:1J1u' dish: I1(, dhow macaroni Buttered bread crumbs volts around Icft-over 11111ts Pepper 0111 salt i;e ind meat and add 4easoniitg, tool: Illat'al•Oni in 1 quart of water or stock that is boiling \ellen macaroni is withal, Stir until all liquid is ;thsorbed. Sea- son macaroni and meat to taste, ))aloe a layer of hall' the nl:lcn- roni in bottom of a shalto\v, greased baking dish; then add a ):Iyer of meat ;„111 finish with the rest of the mae:u•uni for the top juycr. Cover with buttered hreall (.run ia.% Bake in moderate oven until crumbs are brow'i, flakes 4 good servings, Cost is almost, insignificant, Spaghetti -Chicken Chop Suey ller(''s 11 l'tiiteti Nations' dish 1h;11, warrant,; popular accentnnce in \vat: or in !wave.: 1i I1(, spaghetti 1 clip mushrooms, chopped 1 e'up conked rlticken, ,niweel 1 Bermuda onion, 11101f'ed 1 cup celery, finely shredded 1 clip thicken stock n1' 11(110(1 (Cool; spaghetti in I ! quarts of boiling sallel1 wider, Drain, but save surplus liquid. keep 'pag•- hetti hot. Add to the surplus liquid, the ehickctt ;lock, shredded celery, mine(.)) onion, chopped mushrooms and minced cooked chicken, look ;lowly.till mixture becomes "creamy,” !'lace hot F11110101; on platter, Iuutltl !t nest in centre into \•hied is poured the 'hot meat -vegetable Mixture. Season all with salt and pelmet., and sprinkle with Soy Sauce, Slakes 4 generous servings, Conk- ed veal 00 other left -over meals may be substituted for the chicken if desired, Noodle -Egg Pies Her.'; a them -saver that is ling on flavor and nourishment, but short ori Bost: 2 heaping cups hailed egg noodles Li eggs Cream, butter, sail and pepper Boil egg noodles in a small quantity of water so that when done all liquid \sill be absw•hed, Grease large muffin pans and fill the cups with egg noodles; form into a nest With noodles extending above the riot. into each nest break an egg, Place on egg. 11 tablespoon of cream, a doh of butter, salt and p0pp('r to taste, 13ake in hot oven, 1.1011 degrees) until eggs 11•e Sot. Hiss Chambers 1tvivurnem persuurll Irtlers from lolerrsled renders. she IN pleased to retel)e nu,rl;rsll,11r on inplrs for her eusunul, 111111 Is sitt11ys renily 10 Irstoo to your "ltd pre rex:" Iteque"tr roe reef 1101 or sprelnl menus ore In order. Address your letter, to "ells smile 11, Chambers, 73 Wett Adelaide St., Toronlo," Send slumped serf-ad- drrsied envelope 11 you t►Ish a reply. Feelings of German People About War The information in tetters found on the German dead, inti- mate and personal its it is, )eels to some striking dedu.tiuns, %%riles 31 111100 11 0 111s in The American Magazine. The people inside Gel' - many hale the wag' and ooitt it to end, They tore tired of hard- lhips, sick of sacrifice. They la- ment the inortd disintegration of their young women; they shudder at air raids; they weep over their dead. But nowhere do they bo, tray the least suggestion of Ger- man guilt or ;egret. for horrors which the, German ;„')hies perpe- trate. Ilard ;1, i:= their life, they 11l0)V neither sllu'vnti,ut »u1' dr;pern- tiorl, Nor 0111 they expect Ger- many to lose the war. To expect there at this time to revolt against )litter is as futile and puerile :IF to expect the Fueliver to live up 10 his prntlli1Cs Or 11.0':11.1(.:4, Diaries of the 1:Ormltti (leaf, particularly \n::i officer,,, sap,lnrl (hese conclusions, The (tns'iens have gathered thousands of these. SURE TO P111ND THE JUNIOR D CROSS TNIS AFTERNOON AN0 TIE AAR 011 SATUBA7RDAY/ NIGHT �BOYS, THE JUNIOR RED CROSS HAS BEEN ASNE D 10 S11PPL5 160,000 WOODEN SPLINTS TOR CANADA'S ARMED FORCES, ARC YOU READY TO TAKE ON Tit5l 9FORMGT WAR JOB? THIS BIG PILE OF CLOTHING IS GOING TO HEADQUARTERS AND ILL BE IN ENGLAiID 0105 SOON (rLENDIDLY GIRLS YOU'VE DONE wEII,CHRIS,WIIAT ARE YOU GOiNG TO DO WMTN TND MONEY YOU MSC i .. THISnME?/r r1'SAll (01A01oQu11JUNIOR REDCRCSS70500 840050 50101 HusIC(L INSleunTLNTs TOR PRISONERS!`u.. OF WAR t"'i `�,�,' GIYC GENEROUSI 0 1NE CANAOIAN RED CRO • 1'vt •�, „'r fl��', 1 hli� Lower Output Worries Nazis Experts Must. Find Mer:ns To Match Allied Production The Nai,i Minister or ill'. tion,, Prof, Albert Speer, is re- ported to have culled an urgent Totfereheu of 1.111 of Germany's loading economic espe1•I4 Iu 111S- cus$ itIVllli of nuttclt;np; the flood of war materials hcing turned out by 1'nited Nations arsenals. lieli;lble reports front Germany declare that production has been dropping gradually si1110 a peak was hit last 3I;ly and that in 1110 last two months the decline has hem) accelerated. The inefficiency of foreign labor is said to have been especi- ally disappointing to the Nazis. This combined w•il.lt heavy Ger- man losses at the fighting fronts, has forced )filler to declare "total mobilization" and to strike 0 care- ful balance between the urgent needs of the 1(1'Itly 111(1 ,war elus'tt 1, 1i001tittg the wheels moving with untrained personnel, especi- ally women, is the Nazis' stain problem, Forty thousand work- ers' 1ra111itlg soIMu1S leave beat 001);<h0d and Spe'r ha; ap- pealed for the good \vile of both workers and employers, Hitler, however, is not hand- ling the situation with kir) gloves,• He went ntit of his Way in 0 10- 10111 address to 151111) Of de;Ith 10 "sabuttti ' Ilrolldly, this meluts that OVory ohsit'u(a;unist f'; sub - (1' 1 10 exeCUtiutn fry GARDEN NOTES By Gordon L. Smith Food is ,just as ilnporl;utt 01 bullets in this war, and for that. reason gardening may almost he classed as an essential industry this year. Seals aro not going lo he hlcllti1(11 because formerly Canada dept idol to a large ex- tent on Europe for supplies and these, of course, JIM cut 1'1•i116pld sources now are front those limited sections of l'auada where garden seeds are grow„ and from the United States. in both areas the weather was very un- favorable last season due to the fact that there was too much rant at ItRt\.est Liine. Canadian sevdsinen, however, have hoer' 11,b10 to secure supplies. sufficient fug' »urinal needs it these are used carefully. 'There will not he the wide range of varieties usually obtainable, but in standard lines it is expected that there will he enou;;h to go around. Gardeners, however, are advised to order seeds early and to avoi(i any waste. In vegetables especially, begin- ners are urged to follow planting directions carefully, and 10 sow as thinly as possible. it is also important that the garden soil be well prepared, and at least a por- tion of the garden planted early. To get maximum result's ouc should spread plantings over S(1 - end weeks, This will assure more protection against early frost and will also give a large total yield 0f Vegetables, Tho,=e gardeners with very small areas of laud at their elis- posnl are also urged to concen- trate on those vegetables like beans,' carrots, beets, spivach,.ole., whioit give the largest possible yields ler the space occupier), Thin 4s like corn, potatacs, squash, etc., take up fur more room, and where space is limited, it, is ad- visable to purchase 111(.90 from reg11la1 50111.004 11111) to grow the smaller things in the home gar- den, 4 4 Scientists have been giving Its loony improvements in vegetables, Their \milt hits been carried out in Iwo dirvrlions; first, the in- troduction of vegtlable.i unfamil- iar to most Canadians and, second anti probably more important, vast improvement in those varic- lies (hilt )rove been grnw'n country for y'elp's, Corn is It good example. :11 one lime it w'as possible 10 got only one variety of Ilali:ult. Cubs 1Ver0 Sl1o1'1, and the season also. Now there ore offered three or foto' different I1at)111111 types, some 1,4(1.11 ('11'ly, some regular season, ,01110 )nit', (.'obs have been lengthened, kernels made bigger, One can enjoy the finest table corn for liver a ntnttt1 instead of but a week 110 two is in the 0111 days, Lawn grass Hurst 0'' n' early as most pruw(11 is 11111110 When the weather is still cool and wet, After digging, the ground should be allowed to ,et Ile for 11 few- days at least, and then levelled again. It is advbealde to repeat this pence,,: >cvetal tines, Thr. top ;oil should then he raked fine ant on a day 1\iiiltrit1 grind the grass sown a1 a lii.ernl rate, once )terns: and once i1'tl;:tht';l e. This double sus.'ing insures 00 even distribution, I'or pRrtn1111It lasvtts of deep green color 111,1 fine texture, high duality seed 1)071) a reputable Canadian seed 11110;1' is vital. Thrifty Scots • 'I'hritfly Scots have contributed ,1:3511,IIIl0,11(111 1:C1,175,01,O00) le1 Britain's \1'nr Savings (.nnpa!gn during 111e last. three years, Get Aspirin's wonderful fast -acting relief from headaches, neuritic pains, neuralgia, in Canadian drug- gists' bargain of 100 tablets for 981 1 Here's a bargain in a really fast way to ease head- aches, neuritic pain, neuralgia; and painful symp- of colds, that thousands recom- mend ... Aspirin . now priced for less than one cent' a tablet. Yes, eon/ Aspirin, one of the fastest reliefs front pain cvcr known . , . now only 961~ for 100 tablets! Hurry. Get Aspirin --in the special economy bottle—al your druggist's today. Hours of welcome relief may thus cost but a few pennies, so anyone can afford R. WARNING) Be sure it's Aspirin Aspirin is made in Canada and is the trademark of The Bayer Company, Ltd, If every tablet is not stamped "Bayer" in the form of n cross, itjs NOT Aspirifl, And don't let anyone tell: you it is. SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON March 28 THE APPEARANCES AFTER TFIC RESURRECTION John 20:18-21:25 PRINTED TEXT John 20:19.31 GOLDEN TEXT—I am alive for evermore,—Revelation 1: Is. Memory Ver;,e: 'Thou Jeh iviti, 1(;(4.1. made 1!11' 1;111. I':'ilI!II 112: I. THE LEOSON IN ITS SETTING Tlr,c—The first at,;o'trance Io the :(;senlbi''d (11.1'4(1144 (vas on April !I \l) :to, '1'111! second appearance (iu.-• the fIIll l•• li lir:;' day 0; the (veek, .lpril 14, The Nide:tl'ance to Ilse disc•iptes at the ea 0f (ia((1t. l(❑,, smite( illet later i1 the, month of .\;0'ii. Place—The I'Vo ;Imoarmlet.; to the tosenlil''d di>('ipier (Vern (II an upper 1'00111 i1 Jill sol"nl. p1,; ibly the room 10 wllfrh (be 1.04')1': tinppt:)' n'1)- in,1iI1110t1 'i'1)'' up. 10 ,001100 (u 1 14 11!:•011.106 011g Iged In liahing 14;15, 0i con's'•, 011 III.' Sea (11 (i:tlile( in \orlhel11 Poles - line. Christ Appears ' 11'11014 therelln'e it (Vu'. 1 vetting, nt Mat day, the fir l tiny 1(l' the wecb, and (T1011 1110 doors (':010 0001 (Theft' the disc'i(I's (•ern, for fear 1(l' lite Jews, Jews eanl• and 114011 in the ul0b 1, and saith unto limn). "Peace Ile 0(110 you." 11'hon 1414' Lind appear, tl (lith Ills "I't ace be 111110 you," Ito restored peace, hecai,4.0 Ile rosiorrli the •.1111•11 4(1 pardon for (1(: t :;III :111(1 01 fecnitilialiltll (('fth I:oiI. \\'iii• 0111 (his here 0;111 he no 1'011 for Ill,' ;+14141 01 111:10. Peace Be Unto You int idle') he hid said III(;, he :lowed unto Ilio i his hands (ill his (isle, The 11is1'iple, there- for,. were (;Intl. ((hen they saw the Lord:, l'llrini 4.410(01,11 1111.111 His hands :1(:d side to 00/4041(40 thein lle w1(, the Tory sant(' 1)('I•• ,014 1(110 11101 1(01.11 crul'ilil 11, 1!,(v. ine the s;tnl0 (0('1 ; ;(s tilt' wo'ds Just u4t01'e11 would assure ;heal, 111s hutlr'l was still the sante t0 thele. ''.11'14 !h,'r('rore said 10 no in fear(• he unto you: 1a. Ilio I"alher Molt sent ole, lien so send I you, And when lie had said this, he breathed on then), atd x(1111 unto then!, Receive y, the Iloly Spirit: (01(0x0 soevel' :,ins ye for. give, they ;1('e forgiven 111110 them: wluee soever . ti11c y' retain, they ;ire retained." I111011111(4 is the 110-1 manifest token of life; so that. in 'treat him., on the disciples our 1,0141 was giving 111014' in silo'' Itis unit life --the Ille 0f Cod, ife \V1'': .o possessed a itl !I!o Spm! Illat the very breath of His hnd). sllil'illill I'0ltlllllllliI' 111112' divine life, Thomas Voices His Doubts "I lid 'Phomas, one of the twelve, called I)idynins, was not 'illi them when Jesus cute. The other dis• chiles therefore slid' 1114114 hint, 1\'e have seen the Lord. lint he said auto them, Except 1 s'i'll see in hi, hands the print of the nails. and pal my linger into the 1111(11 of the 1111!,. 11Id put I11V, hand into his 4hlo, 1 will nal he- lio(e." \\'hy 'Phomas (04(14 1101 ((•ill the disciples we do not know but he (('1(1 1(l' a 1110'04.)' dfsposilfull ;ltd prub3hly \Vanted 10 ht' 1110110 'ill( his grief, 11 should he eare- ful1y noted that Ilse disciples did 1401 part front ''Tomas ---they were gracious and lender to him, tell- ing hint what they had seen and hear(', Thomas wanted to believe hut. he needed overwhelming pfortf of the reality of Christ's 1''s111rel'• tinn. Thomas Believes "And after eight days again Iris diselllles were willtin, and Thomas 'was (Vit'h 111,04, Jesut 0unt0tll, the doors heirg shut, and stood in 1110 midst, and said, Peace ho 11110 you, 27. Then soffit he to Thomas, Reach hither thy 11(1(40 r, and :;et' Joy hand's; and reach hither thy hand, a01 pill it tato my side," The narrative implies 111111 our Lord supernaturally knew not only of the doubt in Thomas' heart, but the (cords which ho had previously spoken to the dis• cfples in demanding physical proof of Christ's resurrection. "And be not faithless, but believing. Thomas answered and said unto hint, Aly lord and my Godo 'fhonlls recognized but 110 knew :also that his Lord was more than 11u41. The discipline of self-ques- tioitiag, followed by the revelation of tender coulpassion and divine knowledge, enabled 'Phomas t0 rise to the loftiest View of the lord given In the (10spels. Faith In the Unseen "Jests said unto them, !tortoise thou last scca 1114, thou hast be- lieved: blessed are they that have 1401 Seen, and yet have hollered." Thomas Willson' might to have be- lieved in the testimony of the rest. confirmed by all he hail known and experienced of Christ in past days, No man is 10)111out intelli- gent grounds for his belief. ['411th is the opposite of sigh' because it asserts what is not seen; the opposite of mast) in this sense. that it compels belief in an ohjemt. which reason alone cannot 1)p bend. hilt 11)011-114 the uuseell its own proofs which satisfy''1lt* believing mind and heart that there is all unseen and eternal. THIS WAS THEIR HOME r. grieving (00)011 look over the ruin:; of a Herber house i1) Casablanca after a raid by German bombers 00 Jlccellber 31, 'I'h0 at Lack took a heavy toll of live, because_ native house; aro 1(I' light construction. Purpose of John's Gospel "\louy other signs therefor, did Jess, in tit' presence 01 the dfs• ciples, lvlih'll aro not (((44¶(44 in this hook: bol (hese oro svI'itlell, that ye 1111)1 believe 1114(1 Jest's is Om Christ, the tion 01' (10'1; 0101 that believing ye may have life in his »ante" iI (01(4. not John's 1)141(4„• to (01te II (01plete "Life of ('hii:;l"; 11 was 1101 his 111'p0)w lo (v1110 fl "1,11'4'" at :111. ltltlher be would ('1)11';11)' just Mose facts 1•('¢1)0(•1• 100 ,145)114 witch would produce I1 siu•in0 faith in 111111 as the .\les• shill 11)d the Son of 1;011, One-['iftlt of the people of 1101 land earl their living 011 lie 1:1111, mostly on small !arms of 11'„ than 50 ]1'1'1's. ■ i HORIZON"rill, 1, 0 Expert U. S. RAIP'H /NEIL 1 iT A -LI If A N logger logger l (mini:; player. ALLEY AAS O ?_ MT�� ITO am')ng the t (Cetacean. T O hl s; A S S ;'I (:)?a -- or 000- PAD ''A5H ' 8EL prol'mssionals. 1 Coed -1)y, 1— ri I l Uu,hCoumo, l:3 Jargons, AR - i RK..R f'NG , , 1 • IJ 1{41,11 mountain I I NK;;�.PIETA 11 Ceremonial 20 Anglo-Saxon treatise, NF,ONSOA OI -- if; 1(!11,.• l611our (abbr.). TQ'N'+--TOCL®PANICS :!1 110(44 11N f: 8 A L L - U 22 Shortest. 1 1\Icasufcot N:,HARE :FANE 'ABA 2,1 Aroma. GQQEST":LOQE'1'GR IN 25 Fowl. WED SMAER I :? ANS 26'l'o e$:,orrhate, W• D ON ND 1 T AT E 27111 bed. 2,000,000 Plans In Plane Plant Over (1 quarter of a million of st4111're feet of drawings (Vere set up and printed in One 41011(11 1t10n0 10 the (Iraug'hting• office of the I>e 1111 villa ail Aircraft, 'Toronto, o0 the "1losquit1" bomber -fight- er. 'They have to be constantly adjusted to conform to parts and instrument, :Altogether there (1)e u couple Of million blueprints on file, in a department numbering .,() (len and 25 women, including (carr' famous c'ultur'al figures at tilt• drawing hoard;, artists, archi- tecls and civil engineers, also champion glider pilots, one of Canada's best etchers, musicians, famous yachtsmen and skiers, GIRL ATHLETE Answ 'r to Previous Puzzle 15 She i:; no r ,a type. 18 Chum. 20 Sense of touch, 23 To handle roughly. 47 Female sheep. 1'L11TICAI, 25 Lying in heap.; 49 Cora('island, 2 Fibber, 29 Spruce. 3 Small hotel.' 3l Shoe. )1 Indian, 4 ' 28 Wainscoted. 3013itter herb, 35 To employ. 36 Call for help, Ctll zea, 39 Tendency. 32 To shut in, 54 To sanction., 5 Artist's frame, 42 linger digit. 33 Valley. et Civet type 6 Dull finish, 44 Starch, 34 Deity of Wal'. beast, 7 Saying, '16 Singing; voice, 35 Relaxes, 56 Mud. 3 Weight, 47 Sour pitn, 37 French coin, 58 She is the 19.10 9 Wager. 48 Damp. 38 Kilns. — singles 10 Enticement. 50 Onward. 40 Fish, champion. 13 She first 52 Sesame, 41 Animal, 59 She is also the became 53 Before. 43 To sleep, WS.— ten- national --- 54 Yellow bird. 45 To whip. nis champion. in 1936. 57 Electric term. POP—An Old Hand at the Job ANY ;TRIP CARTOON I SIG WERE "Cracker Barrel” Farmers Warned Grandpa's Methods Not Good Enough For Present Time 1'1111. „ (1. L ('hi'i>l!e of 1110! \(!ri01,1111;A t'10110-0•• Gu, ipl1, 1(;): very oul.;ftulcl•u Illy 1010 t ' (''111)1", In Ihi' 100011101, 1,1 1111• 1114,11 Mil 111l'1Il Ifli'•n ((0140)1' l ion i'! 'I'll un 11(, (t 1), :1 10' 10111 1:11'111,•, , 11( "001 011 111,• )'1.10141.1' 14:11 , 01» 4,1 111'• (1114.4,0 s1011' " ;11111 :‘aid 141.11 r1.l0011a111, !'4. 0101 lid.. of lot min.; :1.'• enl gold eitotwh for 19 CI production. Ile particularly 11)1(b')',':ed 1!i, remarks 10 hug (14i;• 4(4., dH'r\ hell and t, la;11 (•Power`, and told them to ;1(1(4(1 the -e 'lengthy, 110(11110_' chat; h1,v n•, 1'0 14-.,•11 10 i1( p,•ac,'tiue•. \I• 1111414.11 Proreo' 044.1. (:1"11• firmed three 01,(.'0= u! 1,0110':., his 10((1101;, 1114 (1001(1 1114' 0,11:,11.10 of .(0(0)1)1 ap)110'I)fon. il,. 1)'0•• lir ularly Hied IO..•; of 10(111:, ((114''11 0110 wt 1114011 1(''((0 i 4011)), 1111'01101 inelliri,•nry, : a} The SI, ' 111111 014 '1‘1111- ,10111 11.11. .1 );1'1•;1! molly t'arntt I 111)1'• 111.1.1 educated 1)4 i110 (hnu .\rrul- lurel 4 011ege, 1(041 Ibe'lteri1(41• :(11fe011]; Iho host p"01111001', hl the country. icomvi!g the value of a (10ientitic training, they spud their :aim; ihere, and steadily the In O;iue,. i, d''• Vol(pi11 ; a race of 1'41'4'1 '1,111,'1 and fn11•Iliet'nt 1:(11('0'. There 111'1' 114;1411 fainter-, holy- evil.. olye((r. chiefly those 1(hn 1100u:;h 1114 fault 01' theft' (two, ptObidly 11(•11(11(4 the means 011' the lime, are 1)414140 11( I'c;;al'd the ,0ie111IIiP ta'nu'r %Hitt a certain deer( 0 of contempt, In fact, they 10011 '41,1411 111)00 these ..(Vhite (411:1'" torn! ers, IIs they Poll thrtn, :toll reg,0al them as '•;1(•)u elm 1''" !14014 (vin (1(111'1 lila getting their hand, dirty, 'They Ihiuh niece is 110 school Ilke experience; hat the II'OLhle is they simply 10110((' the methods grandpa (lid when he t'lett'r(1 the ground, e0,c1'pt to odd suite m;telline'y lo light 00 the load, Varmint; is a highly soionlitie industry. That fact 1400.4' not seOW 14( elltt r the minds of some fa(ul• ers. Soil and the raisin); of crops, a thorough understanding of lice. stock of all 1)1011s, of dairy work, 01' handling machinery, of storing and 1'ecduig, of 'miming what to do at the ri:;i(t Blur' and how, and many other things are all subjects it which the producers ought. 11, (110w ' 14 r I '1 lou II 'ISlit'T " (,I,, 1 n, ill 11) 14g111 of modern 0.cpel'itn0t(1 1111(1 l'1( bec011'' :4 !;killed craf15114.14, 1( boy 'los to .;pend several years with exporiel('(d, !rained men l0. for, he can he call('(! compile'', aad gel good wages. But any man can get a piece 01 land, shove seeds i:1 the ground and buy sonic1 11005o,, Caine a)111 pigs all call 1:104„11 a I:u•tler. .lad whet his sulfl doe; not bring the priers he !hides 11 should, he bl:(los the gOV(l•111111'llt---•^--• THE BOOK SHELF l3LACK•OUT 1N GRETLEY By J. B. Priestly Large -boned, dark, long -faced, and inclined to be sol('; intelli- gent rather than subtle; the sort who'd prefer a broad -axe to a rapier any day—Humphrey Ney- land, Canadian, was definitely not the kind of 141114n you would expect to find working for the 1irilish counter -espionage, But although he was by no means infallible, he was, as his Chief told him, both impudent and lucky, Certainly both impudence and luck in large quantities were called t'ot' on the Gfct.ley job, Sent down to discover who was collecting and distributing the valuable information that was streaming out of there, and to stop the leak, he quickly tangled with its dangerous la collection of homegrown and imported Nazis as you'd care to meet in a black- out. Culling on brains, brawn, luck and impudence, 110 dodged and twisted and bluffed, laid artful traps for the unwary, laughed and fought his way out of a number of tight corners; lost perhaps more tricks than he took but won the last in a fine blaze of action and quick -thinking. Black -out in Greticy . by J. B. Priestly . . . The MacMillan Company of Canada . . . Price $2.25. •+gra+ - IIADIO REPORTE If you enjo} a novelty pro- p -ram ;(0Il,•tlllr(4, a little different from tLe olden:(:: run Itf ru1io '').(41'111-, tote in /;o,. 11411• 141'4' 1(1 1 "Hobby Sho,v," heard ever'' 'lluo''.bis' (•('twin(;, ii o'clock 0100 1'.I''.l;.li., 'Toronto, It has a di-tholly original f1:(cur. It(•00ntly 11 11;0- feature,! an u,• sort trent (tt Ile old-fashioned (01141110 i"'(0 14'4'1''11 1101'0 Ih1 l 1,1,401' i1( 2ran(im.uthl't•'t, (la}'. In clu,it•,l III 1' 1 0111 11l'ul't'11ltl5 lava 1)01.1 :I 1)I,Illated 11111,j(•;11 [10(01101' intxe�, 1111'0:1)' \Veil 101 til( hu'r't',' 1411,14' 011hod".x y0t 01- !i„i! 1111411(4111'11 . 'Ili, music 11'x0• Mitt, (leen loaned ity »ditty 11(l' 114'' lilll'tture- of aS- ;i•)ir.r i11 this 1111iti140 musical I)u1• ;w'I(nu((led4.1.11mM i., 41,11,E of 110 tour'(' 0'•: s,, ex• t(')i'led, Anv read'''- of this ru1- 11)'.'0 ,(111' 11411111. 111)1)1)4'4 11, 1(11(1' 10'usual 1411);4'' boxes, J,a)'4', ullt. host, (('4114 It history hohind them. aro in';ite,l to 10:11 them to L'os; `'1011(14'4 fol iiclu,i,,” i1 till: 1401': lJ),h!,y mite'ra». \i'i ile hilt in 0,11.0 of ('11:11, l'otwoo, 4lt'- (n1(; lull particulars. it (0„11(1 he fain, don't you Ihink, to hear your "!11,141)' box played over the bit? From lime to time you hear uuuly. people 11);;141144 that t110 11)0'1 t..'i.ular 1;ilio pr1)i'0 (•s 111':,1(1 00(1• Canadian station: orig'inn'e from one or other of the bit; u(tworlcs ('1 the United States, '['40'n''s (''1111 of evidence. h04Vever, to shot'; th:11. many C1ul:01111111 pro - r:1115 61100 %Till it la14e,. to 11.1140 cuunU'\'-IVIdi ('1)141)04'14' appeal. "'Treasure 'frail” is )1 example. liclieve it 1(r not, 1:: million lot• s have been written 10 ''I'reus- ul, 'frail" in the low' y(':'!. and 0i le month, it has heel) 0)1 the Jt' you still (luestion (\hethcr ('all I'liat 10(1011 to pt ()grants tr!ritt;itiltg from n'ith1» the Do- minion and are still wiilitg to write letters ask the I),>;'o»Ister (ienernl 1(t' (':ttada -- it is esti• 111100 11111 one 'ft 111111100 1'1,14.0 pri(:'ram 8111114' 110.1,11(4111 )1 revenue 1.1- the post office dopa:'t 'nen! of REX FROST ri By ti3,)I),001l during' 110' last ;1 year.(. (1: interest to the i.uli'-4, '(''.41 V.0'10 1' (''1:14 !U10(4 .:n:ut'I 111(1,14) tilt' pra0licul ;ilk' '1: ;lip I'il,g up the food mipplieti of ('au. .111:1 'gill take p11(4 in lith 1 uclt• proga•:1411, "W1)1000, 1(11 1114 Jun," 1'rida}' afl0110011, 1!ar011 1:1, 11 1.!14 0011' 1110 ('I3c' They aro it farmer's 1v'it''• frorn `1•111;11,444 and a 1'4-V:•:0'."111 gill t(ioo :o11rn04 to 1:!1;0 the pl:rr of 010 1;o:to't'': Sol(', ((hr1, 1}t''1' 0(941 of f 10 ,.e4Ve in (':tll4d;l \\', 1:,•;14 it lot of comet 'eeltlu'y it mg, ks thew' days uro,0,11 tins 'boat to cull111r;TSlde rr;_'ili' 111 ;111• ! lust y series current:1y tieing 4)r::',tfrd over ti:,• Cohn (0(11 sys- 141'1, 1(('1 Ming ('hltlt, Toto oto, (1! )04ai tbrouirlt Friday:, at 1! 1J 144''041:' (':1(1.4(11, 'h, Mau. 0, England -born stage, "4000,) and radio actress, (('ho has (::r1',' 11 fame o(4 1400 continents, apparently is ndd111;,r to her laurels by her delight fully rendmred in- terpretations front current liter - 1114(0e, simply styled '',lllttleleine ('artoll Reads," t'I''IW has just instituted a new �,-1'i •., of programs, ":\1.St1l'illg Yue," hi iday nights at 1( o'clock, 111 .'( you meet a 11e19 personality, 11r, J'. It. or in other words, the Pet 1-014:41 Relations .Director, (0)11.,0 job it is 10 answer inquiyies and c'ritic'isms and to acknowledge the compliments which come daily to a busy radio station, i1 you are interested in a ]:lintp+e of wlt(lr. goes on behind the micro- phone, bow programs are design- ed and why, in filet, what "makes the wheels go rnul'd" in a radio station, t'a'ke It (0(141 of tuning in t11is new series, LISTEN TO "COUNTRY NEWS" EACH SUNDAY AT 2 P.M, URB -860 on your dial OUR RA : I O LOG '1'11111.\'I'U S'1' (THINS \5 10,41,, ('I:1, 7JUk ('ii\' 11101i ('.5, S1,'I'tt'1N145 (1' 1':.11'' 14.14.4', 10,1 11':1(1; 11',17, 1(.14)'. 1alnt• 7700 tt'.4(:t, (1',11,'4) S',0 1('014 (11,11.14.1 71)111 1; .1\.111.1\' 59'.1'1'111)5 ('1)141 t%% 4d. 111 4 ('J4(1C Hamilton 11;1014 ('1i(1I, ft/1111110n :tools (iI('I'ft tit. (':,til, 1.-,.00 \I"nu'ta1 66114 1 North 1,141' 12:fel.• ('.ICti tit! :1 third 12100 (.101')i .4:i(g,tof, :4(4110 (1,N 4 101(li (11 4131(41 1(01)01'4 1,•6'01 a • 1'0''1; 111 11!ihi, 1. 117(,11 t '4141, ('(4l'(! lit„ 1;'hUl1 ('141.\0 1(1.1.1,,,, solo; t'KN\ 1(411.'1'.01 '1)111 CIIL'1X l'cta 1'l '• ;:11; \('11111; L'ufI'.l. 4I (Itt \\11,1 J1 (\'1.11' Citiciluc,L ;VW; (1'141• Selt•n, eta'!' '.1114 141)14.1 1'111,hu1(41, '"21 k 11'1111)11 ('11',•1;' ;.1141; \1"1(1(;\ 1:11ft;11V 11301; (('111; Hitt o 1; 11'141:10 rot t;,l)., 1',201; \\'.1.1 1.',t ((' 1 7 1.1:1; THIS CURIOUS WC)) 5111 H'C 11'.1 1 IN (151: I:01' land 9.5ine GS(1':111;L1t11I 14.511!( U81' England 11.751(1 England 1 1.5(14) 111444 Eng laud 1 7.7 !'1(t Gti1' Emtland 15,4(10( 114.11; 14]'1)414 !'.'sal 11.1N ltussia 11.641)( 41x1•: 14(11,!:1:1 12.1,thot l:razil \CULL\ SrhenecL'"l' 1 4•., Yat \\'1_'.111 I'bila, 15,271n 10''11.1' N. foul( 11,5 314( 1;)1,4(0)1 i;.,);'al a By William Ferguson OLDER PARENTS ARE MORE LIKELY TO HAVE TWINS THAN ARE YOUNGER PARENTS. \ COPP. 194: 9) NEA 5EP(141 INC A LARGE DRAGONFLY HAS EYES AS BIG AS THOSE OF A MOt..tS�/ (1- YOU ,1\ULTIPL'`' THE Nus'4BER. OF KITTENS THAT LOST THEIR MITTENS BY THE NUMBEROF BLACKBIRDS BAKED (N A PIE, WHAT WILL BE THE CORRECTANSWER ?. 14. FEC. u. S. PAI, OFF, • 3„I I ANSWER: Three little kittens . , . four and 20 blackbirds , . answer, 72, NEXT: 1'he shortest tine between two points. GUT THIS TRIPE -�' UP INTO CONVENIENT LENGTHS 'ilrin�=�,t F.. ('4 • 41.••1 ; By J. MILLAR WATT 7.24 "1 A GOOD ASSORTMENT OF SHOES ICFOR THE FAMILY---tMen's Work Shoes 2.98 to ;510U srF Growing Giris Oxfords'1.98to$3.50 ;VWomen's Arch Shoes , ..$2.98 to $15.00 .`Children's Shoes - Oxfords - Strap - Hi lace Boots. L. t1:I0 Hitaial�ht sir,' 'atPr�lit.lfli,�.motli J+lr,Yr?rDr�iit�7t1s+31,x),)r�i 70441.)INNDihtAolvi SHOES Olive McGill 411 n THE HONOUR ROLL \\'e are proud to present for our readers a list of local and district boys who are serving in the Canadian Armed Forces, both a4 home and Overseas, This list is as complete as it is possible for us to procure at the present time. No doubt there are omissions, and we would be glad to know of them, so that they may be added to the list. These are the Nantes of those who conte under the Jurisdiction of The Blyth Iced Cross, \Ve would be happy to publish a Londesboro Honour Roll, or an Auburn honour Roll, if those Societies responsible, will be kind enough to furnish a list of the names. Blyth and District may Feel justly proud of the following sten and ;'omen, who are doing their part actively for Victory. OVVERSEAS Capt. C. D. Iiilpat•Ick, Trooper John 31cNaIl. Trooper iloward Leslie. Pte. 1•'. 11, Hall, Pte. I', \V. Ph111ips, Pte. Jack Hardisty, Pte. J. N. Naylor. Pte. W. L. Bentley. 'Sgt. C. A, Taman. Sapper. .Joseph Heffron. Pto. T. Thompson. Pte. harry Brown, ',.•Cpl, E. N. V. Johnston. Trooper It. J. Elliott, W.O. \'ern Rutherford. in India, Sgt, ,Major George McNall. Ger. \V, A, McNall. Cpl, Glenn A. Kechnie. Sgt. F'. S. Rutledge. •Gnr. W. J. Riehl, Sgn. Fred Fawcett. Gunner 11. W. Garnish, Pte. Walter .I. Cabe. Gra'. Earl G. Craig. M.Q.31.S., G. C. Morrison. Trooper 1'', \V. Kechnie, Pie, Percy Harrington. Gir-rer 11. T. Young. (:'p1. T. \V. Cole. Trooper J. F. Blake. Trooper A. D. Bowes. Grinner F. Chapple, Ptc. C. W. I3owen'. Pte. iioy Wilson, Pte. Norman R. Young. Trooper James Thompson. L.•Sgt. H. S. Curring. P.-0. H. B. Elliott. 'I'pr. Gordon Craig. Ned Thompson. Eddie Bell. Sgt. Donald McCool, Sgt. IL C. Tait. Peter Brown Scott Fairservice. Gnr. Ernest G. Young. BRITISH COLUMBIA Pte, 0. J. Lyon. Gni.. Ebner 1. 'Young. CANADA ,'Ronald Richards, 't, Hess Robinson. C. E. Toll War- Savings Certificates Milne Barr Hosts Thuell Sam Thuell d.e,�lfe Garniss Borden Cook Barrie McElroy Jack 1McElroy Edward Rouse Robs, Chalmers Carman Morritt Garth .31orritt Wesley Tainan Bert Kechoic Jack Morritt, Sr. Gordon Augustine Kenneth Lyon Gerald Bradley Lorne 'trodden Harry Bryant John Sanderson George Ilagglt.t Arnold Glon.sher i060ph Thompson :Tilt Lieutenant Lois Robinson. Jes.sle Phillips W. Archie Young •Donald Sundercock. 1''.•0. 'nylon Bray, TOE STANDARD Il r. \V, 1, Sims, of Staltort'h, was a visitor in town this week. 31r. Garllh Dobbyn, of London, spout the wwee'.c•end with his parents, Miss 3111dred Anderson of Dungan- non, wilted one day at the home of 31r. and Mrs. George Cowan. 31rs. A. Barr hos returned home after. 6pendIng a few days with her daughter, Mrs. Kitchener Finnigan, Jack 3i0•i'71roy, of 11,13IrC1.S, "York", Toronto, spent Mho weekend with his parents, 31r, and ,It•s, I1. 31cElroy. 't', and Mrs. Lloyd Wchlaufer have returned after visiting with the for - user's parents, in Burgos'ville. Mrs. Leslie Natter of St. C.ttharines vlylted for a few days last week with her patents, It•, and 31•s, Wm. Log u. Flt -Sgt. Norman Sinclair of No. 1 alarming Depot, 'Toronto, spent the week -end at his home here. \Irs. Gordon Augustine spent the week -end with her husband. (lar, Gov- don ovdon Augustine, at Woodstock. Illy. 1'erce Metealle of \\'aterdown purchased a team of ':lack horses fr'oin Mr. Frank little 00 Monday. 'Miss Olive 11c0111 is becoming nice- ly settled in her new quarters, the property belonging to `IIr, \V, J. Sims, airs. Iso'lcl Johnston is a patient in \\'ingham Hospital, where she was taken last w(•ek, We 'tope 611e W111 soon be able to return home. Miss Mary Milne, \Irs. 11. (', John- ston, I31rs. F. Balulooc, Mrs, .1, 13. Wat- son, and Master Edward \\'at:;on, were 1.(01(1011 visitors on 31enday. ;31r. and 'Mrs. Benson Cowan* and daughters, Judith and Constance, of (Stratford, visited last week with their parents. 3Ir. and I!•S. George Cowan anti 3fr, and Mrs. Robert \Vightinan. I\Ir. Stephen White has returned to his home here, following an operation lin Victoria Street 1lo::pital, London. We trist he will soon' be fully re- covered, 31lsscs .\1atu•een Morrill and Isobel McGill have returned to their rtudie.c at Stratford Normal, following a leech's teaching 111 the Blyth l'ubl:3 School. signalman H. I. G, Williams, Garrick, Sask., who Is stationed serving in rimy Barracks, Kin£hton, Out., of at is Alaska. spending a short leave with his aunt, Sgt. -Pilot Ernie Robinson (home Mrs, 11. C. Gidley. from Overseas Service', Ted Fear. Norman Sinclair. I arper Kelsey, .toe Marks. ,lames Walsh. John Sanderson. John Haig. 11.C, Gidley. Ptc, Rohl. Govier. Glen Tasker. NEW NAMES ADDED: Clare Vincent, Ray Vincent. Wilfred Stoclilll, \\'111ie Taylor, Bill Ross 11111 '.oilier. Leonard Caldwell. George Cowan, Robert Smith, 13111 Little. Jack Little. Ed. McGill, 31r. George Powell told fancily iu•e sot1lcd in their new home, on the farm, Routh of Blyth, and M1•, ant Mrs. ft. J. Powell, and Meth, are busy moving into the premises vacate' by George Powell's, over the store. Mrs. Harry Johntston Is ;loving into the Powell residence on Dinsley street, and 3Ir. and Mrs. Freeman Tuuney are busy fixing up their new abode, which will be in the south section of the Iluck,step property. They expcet to be mowed by the first of April. \\'e had a chat with 3t'. Augus 1101(1 this \Vedncsday morning. and he• eertaln)y came U'Irot:gh the winder looking fit its a fiddle, Ile also in- quired as to the state of mil. health. No doubt he got the impression that , awe weren't too strong when we spent an evening stooking with him Iasi Fall out at George \\'att'6 farm, Ilr. Reid was a good man then, and we hart n Ho11yan's BAKERY AND C.ONFEOTIONERY. 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 - Harvester Parts & Supplies White Rose Gas and Oil Car Painting, and Repairing Anti -Freeze. Vodden's BAKERY. WHEN IN NEED OF BREAD, BUNS, PIES, HOME-MADE CAKE OR COOKIES. REMEMBER "I1HE HOME BAKERY" H. T. VODDEN. note of thanker from Mies ('Inc 31e. (rowan, ill >. 3larsh)11 told a Plinio - kill story. The 3lission i''.nd 11.1:; ('t110S':11 11 1111010, and Is to 18' liliowll a:5, "The 3P�;:;Iou (land of Loving Sty- 'vico." The ehildren made geld use of time for hand work, 'T?u' nu'- la - closed closed by all .toiling hands for Friend- ship Circle, singing '''l'ot ch lauds around the rolling \\'orld" 111,1 r(;:.lt-� ing "\\'orld Frienship Prayer," Auburn Resident I)ies Auburn Mourns the &lath 01' 31rs. 1110100 Carter, a beloved lady who spent t O yc urs of her life in Auburn, and during this long period of time end:.u•cd her: -elf to old and ye'1:1; alike, Mrs, Carter has been in 11! health for 5 months during which time she has been num:1 by her only two ,daughters, 3liss Stolle, at home, and 31i's, Nel:on 11111, Goaerich. Mr:, Carter was In her 10th year and was formerly Mary Iletherinc,"on, daughter of Joseph Hetherington and Eliza'be'th Scott, and was ?:ori' at Nile, Orttarlo. She was married November 1, IS`2, 1) Jas»,; ('':urter and went 113 a bride to Kingsbridge where they resided fur one year and then ;loved to their present 11o111e in Auburn. Ur. Carter carried on n blackssnllh bus1- 11035 for many years. Wednesday, March 17, 1941 .' t1t itir:'w•• CIrii i l� :'•tAIST f•"r4 oei.' ...; ., „/ 1. li '►.Y• 8) F 'w OVERSEAS Orders will be taken het,; for "Smiles 'n Chuckles Chocolates for Overseas Maung. The chocolates are packed in boxes: of 1 Ib. 5 ozs. net weight. The Excite Tax is ;':n'y exempt when the chocolates are mailed direct from the factory. Total cost of Chocolates and Postage 99c R. D. PHILF, Phm. B. 1 Itl'(lti, SUNDRIES \\ ALid' 4l'ER--PEIONE 2P. ..,a._....1,I .,, w,, .11 Y. ..1 1, a r t ( it i v'" 4 '2•' `Z 11r B'y�:,1 r"St,T i;r1J;t:i ",7' � •,v ` n'.,1a� rcJt<",t;;:;4;�.,r. � ..:t„4:�3�'wr a;: ,1, IT CAN E POFE! To -day's task is to extend our efforts to the full that \VC May win a complete and conclusive Victory, We can all (10 much to Further this thought by accepting present restrictions and inconven- iencc., in the proper spirit. Although these restrictions have made it im- IY)'s;l.le to maintain normal stocks and delivery t32h('(11-Ilcs we can assure our customers that Civi- 1,: (\''.•) high standards of value will be maintained, je Chellew Nome i'',rnisher — Pboner, 7 and a —• Funeral Director. 0 ,'. ?i�l,.'.::.' :L.i •,�.c'..-''tt1'.::,`Jt'�,::ir ah3c1:57r°1+,alilaieliiiii�.l+g7�:`iiiha4+�i'�3)l`7'+`1ta�1'�iitila�i .1.1111,rw-a..r..,-iru,. IJ 110 1111 bI .I 1 V n•,i 1,1 i0 .I ,. .1 II 1 I N GRILL RLYTI-I --- "NTARIO. EXCELLENT FOOD. GOOD SERVICE. Meals at All Hours. I FRANK GONG lam Proprietor YI 1,........Y -1..- i.I m .1 i Irl 1. 1 1.1 1. I I ,I The World's News Seen Through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Arr lulcrrrrrliortal Deily Newspaper • is Truthful —Constructive--Unbiased—Free from Sensational. Edi:orials Are Timely and Instructive and Its Daily F,.rtureo, 'Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make the M' niter an Ideal Newspaper for the Home. The Christian Science Publishing Society One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts Price $12.00 Yearly, or $1.00 a Month, Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, $2.60 a Year. Introductory OIIer, 6 Saturday Issues 25 Cents, Name Address, SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST The 00••;x! • celr'.nated their Golden since that time there has premonition that he'll he just as \Veddiug Anniversary eleven years ago and rix years ago 31r, (':Illi p1s- Scd nwlay. The yu;ingest son, I1i11, paid the supreme saerificc in the First (treat War. Mrs. Carter was a nn'm- ber of iClIox I'nite.,1 C'aru•eh and mit!) the her wrier illness look an ac'h'e in - .lock Noble, good a man 1111 Fall. llrnold \Vightanan. (''p1, Edward Johnston. "Stick To Your post-war hard times. Every person ,s who Oasis; in a Certlhleate unneccl' 31ission Band was held on Saturday terest in activities of her c'hin'ch and r �''"'�"`�"""•' - _:r,x_ sarily, does an unpatriotic action, I 1.1�, +1-,-.,q,... March 13, with all attendance of 4b. coanannn:t.v. � � • ,:,.., �i��.:y' x„°t;;w„ *'xIctgt 'zar tg 'gcCzq` glgtgtgt r4,�,�1 tit n clients himself of Bart of its • .11 . awl I llnsides her two daughters, she 13 ' j1 weakens she shock absorber which I The meeting 01)0110(1 with quiet' it survived by a son, Joseph, of fort' u may save him; from n - sty post-war tousle by the pianist, Marjorie Doherty Elgin, two grandsons, (Renner Re;,'i11. 1 (i bumps. The Certificate for which, and picture study of tic Worship aid Carter, who 1s ow'ersca5 and ('pl. I. tr Ir you pay $4. now is worth $5, if you 1Screen designed and donated by Miss 11111 11111 of cal":.itear s'r.L'rs. All.,,.i, keep it to maturity. If you cash it,Ida McGowan. Duringthe \Corshi;l J. ('assidy, of Myron; Mrs. Robert 311 111 In after six months you only get $4, period, Gerald read the Scripture, the Dwain of N'lc; Il r.. Gem ge 3!!c:'ll-c I ii for it, Net loss $l. And actually you istory of Zacchoens, Gladys read the of Lc' ulirglon, and 'Mrs. Frank 1Priv- 1 i.Cr lose more than that, because by epned- ,Litany, and Donna and libel 11,27 i Ved kin, of Toronto. One brother, Cap ' i. ing your $1. at present high prices yon the offering. The 13i•tthday Song wa • tail Is(rat (Hetherington and one s'r• ;' get less value per dollar than you will sung for Barbara, The minutes wwer. (011, Mrs. George (:.t55idy, ptc(Iccea':ed 1, when prices are back to normal. read and approved, Jean Cartwright, her. 1, Mission Band Meet The regular monthly nlee(1n: of not been a p!.tw on it. I!ank.; are reporlc:I very '.op in pla.c.:, 111:11 wwitl:l (hc hard hack made by horse-drawn vehicle, i1 will be a prey;, toaisli proposition Ir 11)13.1111!; bai a c rterpillar plow, ''q• No better interest rates are paid on any Canadian war financing securities than ori. War Savings Certificates—if you bold them until full maturity, They are meant to be held, not cashed. Canada prem se(i that it would cash the certificates under certain circum- stances, but this was done to avoid hardship in en .InI cases, not because cashing a C,.tificatc More maturity was anything hat bad for the owner and ha'. for Canada. That promise will he : tpl of cour. the herald for Hungary, gave some The furr;nl st•rwlce iv. s held on is as Dominion I''armers have learned all about the 1 notes and showed pi'etures. Margaret Satnrdnv afl�rnclon at 1:0) o'clr,c:c Highway No, 4 is in .spendid (dial)°, and Is now as bare as summer, but the Lig banks, n grim reatlin(ler of one of the worst wfuter'e in yeans, are still pil(d high on the shoulders. of Canada inancirll obll,atious have differences in the purchasing power of the corresponding rc�re!ar , rend a always been kept—to the letter. But money, by painful experience! That i4 p g Y with Interment in (Tinton cemetery. 11 - ••too many thoughtless owners of War lone reason why they are among the 1, V---- I; _Sa.vingty Certificates are asking Can- least offenders in this matter,P Tho it is really worth, hang on to their War oda to give then back their cash now !group which shares this honour. withOpened. �; Savings Certidlcates like grin death! Walton Road Being witlttout any good reason, except fanners Is the financiald group—the It 15 the best paying th'ng alley can The County plowis busy trying to 41 that they want to spend the money—'men who each year buy the maximum 'find In Canadian war investment.% It open the road from lilytb to IValt ia. tif . and at a the when the money Is amount of War Savings Certificates is 'so good In fact that in order (0 1110• Me work ectrumeniald on Tuesday. badly wanted to fight the Battle of allowed by the regulations, (vent them buying huge amounts of Before the day was over they had Freedom. Every person who buys el The financiers to whom one•tenth . War Savings Certificates instead of broken an axle, and we understand _Certificate does a patriotic action, of one percent meaas a lot of money— Victory Bonds, the Government lfmlts they are hot yet two utiles on their at the same time gets himself a who understand the exact value of their purchases to $484. per head, per 'way to Walton... This road was kE;tt od,investanent and a cushion against money and interest to terms of what real'. open until, the. Iirg ''f .tile year,. ;but c�r T R ..,,, INSON ['hone 156 for Prompt Delivery. Fresh Clean Prunes 13c, 2 for 25c iclicg s Corn Flakes (with Tumbler) 25c 1=EP.... 2 for 25c (SHOPPING BAG FREE) Cc sing Bran 20c and 25c Bags Mime Neat,... 15c per lb. (Bring Container). New, Medium and Old Cheese. Baby Foods. Z'(� ble Soup, Green Beans, Peas, Sr.inach and Beets, per tin 5c. Pi;tmc'tl'Ers per tin 15c Blue Ribbon Cof ice 47c lb. nunrt sealer 5c refund for empty sealer returned. C ape Fruit 5c, 6 for 25c Oranges28ct40c and 45c Golden Fleece 3 3 0 e