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The Brussels Post, 1942-9-26, Page 3"Don't you wish we could shorten the wax?" He: "Well, in a way we can, you know." She: "But, George, we're not trained to do any- thing..." He: "Training doesn't matter for what I'm thinking about. I was wondering whether we couldn't put more of our ineeme into War Savings Certifi- cates." She: "And why not? We Wright have to go without one or two pet luxuries—but wouldn't it be worth it to bring back peace again?" He: "And won't we be glad of the money—and the interest it win have earned—in a world without war restrictions!" The help of every Canadian is needed for Victory. In these days of war the thoughtless selfish spender is a traitor to our war effort. A reduction 'in personal spending is now a vital necessity to re- lieve the pressure for goods, to enable more and more labour and materials to be diverted to winning the war. The all•out ep'ort, which Canada must make, demands this self•denial of each of us. 1 SPEND £ESS —70 OW MORE - •r — c COT COARSE FOR THE PIPE OLD CHUM CUT PINE FOR CIGARETTES the latter. This is called murder, anti not the thing to do, e One good way to step a rn'lnor is recommended by Reader's Digest, When you next hear a story, say: "That's a hot one, where'd you peat it, so that you can, copy it word end pencil and ask the teller bo re peat it, ro that you ea copy it word for word, Frequently, when asked to repeat it the person spreading the rumor, realizes how silly it sounds, and never repeats that story again. Saving and Raising More Young Pigs NOTE AND COMMENT stock dealers was to the effect that twenty-five percent would be deduct- * * * ed by the Government from an lil 1 cheques The local Banker Most of these effect the agricult- ural indestry as might be expected in an agricultural community, a. a t One recent rumor was that the Goverment was going to deduct ten Percent off all cream cheques. This had some cream producers really wended, The source of this rumor is this. When the recent; War env. ins Campaign was on one county cireulanized all cream producers, in - teeming them that unless otherwise instraoted, creameries would deduct ten percent of each ohegne to buy a bona. Another county -suggested that this be done voluntarily by the cream producers, Bence 'the rumor, entirely false or course. Anloioher ruiner that worried live- vea''Oo t was credited with making this state- ment. This rumor received wide cirevdation, reached a neighboring town, where a second banker phoned ,the one credited with snaking the statement,and proceeded to give him what le commonly known as "the devil." Banker number ono Was quite innocent, and had ryot even heard the rumor. 111E BRUSSELS ,.,OST Pan is U orouehly cleaned and eeala- ed distr./001ton b' much easier and effective ' SPetial Pamphlet No. 34 "Prevail - thin of Cilrenen 1 0 ee= in Young Pigs" can be obtained from Pablioity and Ie' tr •;t J n D'visi ori, Dominion Department of Agriculture, Ottawa. It gives detailed lamination an the. prevention of disease and parasites. It i particularly valuable at this, time when every additional pig rale - needed to supply 'bacon for Britain and pork for Canada. Arr e•ffeetive way as saving more of the pigs farrowed is by Prevent- ing parasites and disease. Young pigs live close to the ground and pack up parasite eggs or disease germs very easily. Good feeding and sanitation are effective against para- sites and. disease. With nursing pigs completeness -of the milk and copse• queutly tl.sease resistance of t,�he Pigs depends largely/011 the coin- pleteness of the feed given to the sow. Rations for nursing 'sows con - training ample protein., minerals ants vitanrin,s are therefore directly help- ful in reflaoing losses in young pigs. There is one exception, sows cannot supply nursing pigs with Iran. To prevent anaernita, which' is due to impoverished blood, pigs should be given iron in ,some form. The best means of disease preven, tion is sanitation. The objective is to destroy the parasite eggs and disease genas. As both forms of life, if present at all, are present in large numbers, the job must be done thoroughly: 'Sanitation of yards and pastures consists of ploughing, seed - in; anti finally keeping the young pigs off the oldyards for one or two years, Sanitation of pens, to be made safe for Damming pigs, re- quires thorough scalding ,and tlisin- .Decting. The scalding cooks the Parasite eggs, disinfecting, destroys the germs. Disdn5eting alone will not destroy parasite eggs nor will scalding destroy germs, urulesa done more thoroughly than' is possible in a pig pen. The two crust be com- bined for satisfactory results. Once a 5 * b Another rumor was to the effect that the Danner would not be allowed to kill his own pork, beef or lamb. T1his too 15 entirely a diluent l of someone's imagination. A farmer can hill anything en his farm, ex- c.eptiwg the wife, raids or hired man. Though he may tregnetly feel like Lookout! A Sick Liver Is an Do you have persistent headaches and backaches? Are you tortured by rheu- matic pains in muscles and joints? A faulty liver is clogging your whole sys- tem. Serious 111 health may result. • Your liver is the largest organ in yout body and most important to your health. It supplies energy to muscles, tissues and glands. If unhetttthy, your body lacks this energy and Ag• ain yo r ver pour out bilvim disappears. Again get rn y to reach Your blood. When your liver gets o reach your bl [L outof proper digestion he wastenthat stop—you're pp decomposes in your intestines. Nervous oisoYon arise from poison. becomecostipatd,stmchand kidneyscan't work ueely,The whole system d and %orfaa"y fl aactiy,dizzy,id feel ready prey for sickness and disease. •o houpands of people frost arehese miseries with won prompt F retia icon liver i"Improved pduup, the otl Liver Tablets.' function liver is. toned 1p good health results. TocIayLlY prd easing, Togas "Improved tablets. Tryryest selling liver tab Let "Fruit•a•tives" pyoutum Yourself NOW, feel lia new person. 254 50e.ag health-. "Always. In Pain Now Grand Relief,' I Buffered so badly from rhea-. matlsm and new, ride' could hardly close myt hands After taking Fruit-a-tives for four days the (ands ands I w a able to climb a ladder. I have no more andwadviseoeny rheumatism suffering asyh I have tot o use Fruit-a- tef. ghWiliiam J. give (Wick Toronto, Ont. "Sick Far Yeere s, In Hospltal— NoI biro a biliousness ad nd constant head- aches and back- 1:a:' ack aaches, I becqame hosplt 1. Noah Ina I tried Would help untIlletartel taking Fruit -a - tires. In a very short thine my troubles dinars - peered. Now I have no more headaches or backaches and ��ccpYa1n do my b. ,oink, London. heti. Do You NeedWaite! SCRAP METAL Wednesday, se ember 3rd; 1.84,2 it might be wondered wily, in Me land eD plenty, with lis huge de- posits of iron ore, there is so in• tense and important a drive for the callectlon and return to the mills of iron and steel scrap, Thele are. good reasonis. In the first place even in normal tines, it is custom- ary for the mills to use aerap metal in varying proportions of from 40 to 50 per cent. as against pig iron, for the reason that the strap oontaina =oh valuable alloy Material which can time be' recovered, With a shortage in the critical materials such as nickel, tungsten, chroniumr and the like (used for the many tyna,q of .allow necessary for the pro- ctiuction of weapons) such recovery becomes all the more imperative. At present scliap`to the extent of 5 per cent, of the gross material is being used. This means a very large -seal" contrihutien to the oonwervation of the eritieal materials. Furthermore while there's abundant ore available for the production of pig irony .much labor is necessary for the shining and purification. of this ore; further tabor drains are necessitated in moving it, and a huge demand upon transportation facilities, eapeciallY shippina, is exerted in bringing it to Ilia point of manufacture. For every reason, then, the scraP collection of the ferrous metals as well as of other Materials which careless citizens have been ac cnntomed to waste i•s vital to the Production for war. Its gathering by the individual or the. corporation, its collection and its prompt return to the mills are among the soundest and most important elements s1' the Wal' economy.. !f you need a drilled well we ars the people to see.. We guarantee to get water anywhere at a reasonable price. For particulars call- 9CEoyEROS. Phone 628;14 • Listowel, R.S. 1 or enquire at the Brussels Post Phone 31, Brussels GET YOUR Pe..MANENT ON THE NEW ZENITH HEATERLESS THERMIQUE End Curls $1.25 and $1.75 and $2.25 Including Shampoo Permanent $2,00, $2.50 $5.00 Including finger wave and shampoo and Telephone 55x for an Appointment IRENE PEASE OVER PROCTOR'S RESTAURANT Notice Clerk's Notice of First Posting of Voter's List Export Packers BUYERS—Of .All Kinds of Live and Dressed Poultry We will call at your place for any quantity. Also ---All kinds of Feather's & Horsehair. We have an expert on our staff who will cull your flock Free of Charge. Phone 70x Bruce , Ont. the tree of freedom, that the soil `' •' ' %+'riser fe: cora of water and .:t ha:, been vatered with the concentrated food; a special plated blood of martyrs aril fertdli•ze,1 with with 40 to 60 waterproof cartridges; rr'-• 12-our.''e aluminum mast ' a 3e, tram; a carrier pigeon •.- , -,r5-adc•ble container; and bellows, a whistle, a first aid kit, hand paddle, leak stoppers, a ficatiri torch. a cc'lapsihle rubber hailirg booked, a sporge for mill' ping np operations, and, finally, a waterproof canopy for the crew to erect over their heads if it is rain- ing. What! No. grain for the pigeon? their bones shall not be frozen Into eterrul barreness. God's Winter, stinging and chilling, ,nr, it come, ,and ,God's Spring will follow. We may believe, else, that there is a will not our own but -add- ing power to our owns that this other kind of Winter, which kills comas-, Sion, which freeze justice, shall rot come, In this faith there is no lover of humanity who carnet have solve share.. By co,.n'ege in shun nal home, by steadiness in batile, we may make a kir:d of Spring 111 January. Comnletn To The Last Detail Th's mar sound. Fkr. something Rube Goldberg thought up. ,but. se help us, it's true. When an R.A.F. bomber 1s forneri down on the oc•^'r, an inflIted rubber bnat le iannrhnd 1 1Va1111''0 for itq rrr'v M 1„nrn h,tn within 20 seconds aft -or 11 touch- es the water. Here's how it works. The boat, deflated, is etm'nl 'n 9, -ns.^nal cemnar'tnlent in the wine. .. gri�itcll 011. the lrnttn01 of rho plan•• the instant it touches salt water. tires a. c•grtrirnge. which nierreq d'sk in a car' -0" ,+e na?.lo fleck and re- lea.ea .h.iah-pressure gas into the collapsed boort, . Tht erter''ng gas forces ons'', the compartment curer Ca; ^sirup Patrol Vessel and Four 11Ierchantmian Lost ..,•. rie or more . enemy sub- marines in defence of a convoy of merchant Whips the °erectian patrol NMse i l5 coon is presumed lost with all bands on board, . an an- orneemr, t from l::;v,t =^"rine twee. 1111 r said on Monday. The Rac- :mlcfrrert of four t . listed ns '' '1 1• The statment, announcing "an in,crea. e in the tempo of enemy activity on Canada's side of the Atlantic." also reported the loss of four merchant ships with 10 members of their crews. FOR SALE - 1 "u..btied JeraeyCal• pyeFr`cid. fro-lenOet. r bred r: _,• 2 • ,ter, ..•., to F,•amhnn nnrl ',• ' : tr ?n srenr''q II."' i 1`" March 155th; 100 .year-old White Leg - boat tc behhile on the wave:. The horn Hens. equipment that goes with the lire- . r.,r 121-15 Tnor'�.e BIyth boat might have been planned- by a WINTER For the fourth time is this war men, study the northern skies for the first far shadow of the dark Wings of Winter. In the lowlands of the North we may still feel heat, but all round the earth, in Ontario, in China, in Russia, In Norway, trees are showing spots of Autumn color, anti frost has touched the four -thousand' -toot level, and below, in 1939 French soldiers were ,already feeling the first shivers of night's blankets; and w4thnint enough hope. In 1940 people in British cities pray- ed fol' tog and darkness as sailors 10 peaceful tines pray for tar" weather, Tu 1941 all Russians and all enemies of Nazi Genitally longed Dar an early and bitter Winter. to 1942—we/Italia is 1942. We do not know now whether Winter is our friend or our antagonist. The struggle sweeps across the hemis- pheres and back mod forth ,across the Equator. Our Winter is Sumrnsr in Australia and in mucin of South America. We know only this, that this Winter is for the strong of heart. for those willing to endure, for the soldier landing on hostile beaches, ftrr the civilian worloing and doing without, for valor that can sustain monotony •as Wein as danger, for a detelvniilation. no tweakeneti by cold and dankness, We fight against an- other Winter that is the devil's not God's, Unless we win, it will be the days or civiliation that Will grow shionter roe weary years to come, an- other glacial period that will creep. southward across all that free prep have done, and planned, anti dream- ed. The pale son will look down rlpon, a frozen earth, The roots of kirliinega, of beauty, of freedom w011 parish in the ground. Voters Lists, 1942, Municipality of the Pow•nehip of Morris, county et Heron. Notice is hereby given that I have complied with; Section 8 of the Vot- ers' List Act and that I have posted to at my aOCuee at R. R. No. 4 Brna'a- elsh 1942, the list of all persons en- titled to vote in the said Municipal- ity at Municipal Elections, and that such list remains there for inspect- ion. And I hereby 0111 upon ail voters to take it isnedbate proceedings to have any arsons or emissions oar - mated according to law, the last day for appeals being tine 1st day 0f October, 1942, Dated this 1st day of September, 1942. George Mastin Clerk of Township of Morris, Over the "natural season we, have no control. We 'sennet alter the mean temperature by the fraction, of a degree, We cannot say let there be snow dr let there berain and coast upon the weather to act ac - cot -direly. The, pagang and the "lona fare aline in, the hands of God. But we are not helpless in this climate of passdon.s and hopes, or exaltation and degradation, that fixes the retal.tenslrips or nran with male, at nation with nation, We tan here reiotve that Winter shall not e01ne, that the leaves shall net fall from SNAPS-1OT CULD PICTURING THE FARM 15 you wIt's welleworth Itcwhensubjects, o yuccaniake the time to get results like thisa farm. .t Working step by step—or picture by picture—In that fashion is an excellent way to approach any photographic subject, particularly one as big as a farm, because it keeps you from missing snapshot opportunities. And 14 you're look- ing ooking for just a few good 'plotting, perhaps to enter in a photographic contest or salon, it gives you many negatives from which to choose. But getting back to the picture possibilities on a farm, don't fail to get some pictures of the melt working in the fields—as in our illustration, for instance. Look for interesting angles as they plow or harrow the land, If you stand back Paula distance you'll find that a plowman makes a perfect center of interest for a landscape. Eeep your eyes Open and you'll find aetion, stilldl4e, animal, story telling and human interest pictures in abundance everywhere that men work in the country, r 389, John van Guilder PIOTURBi making on the farm is something that many town and city folk are likely to overlook. But it seems tome that a trip into the country, and a visit to a farm, is a fine thing for anyone with a ;cam- era—and a splendid way to spend a very pleasant day at this time of year. Slip a few rolls of fresh film into your pocket—some "chrome" film for outdoor enapshooting, and some fast "pan" for picture taking in- doors or when the light isn't very etron6'--and you'll be all set. Take along a medium yellow filter for your camera, and a lens shade too. Picture making on the farm 15 one ,of those things that might be- gin with 'daylight if you're up that early—though I'll bet you're not. in any 'event, the earlier you get !farted the better, because then you can make a aeries Of pictures as the farmer milks the cows, feeds the chickens, tends to the horses, and turas the stock out to pasture,