The Seaforth News, 1942-10-22, Page 7The World's News Seen Through
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THURSDAY, OBT9i3ER g, 1$42
THE SEAFOR '113 NEW$
magi SEVEN
TO HELP
PREVENT
Man. COLDS
FROM DEVELOPING RIGHT AT START
3 -Purpose Medicine a Success
4t first sniffle, sneeze or nasal irrita,
tam, put a little Va-tro-nol up each
nostril, Its stim i1ating action aids Na.
tine's defenses against the cold.
And remember •, when a head
cold makes you suffer, or transient
congestion "fills up" nose and spoils'
sleep, S -purpose Va-tro-mol gives val-
uable help as it (1) Shrinks swollen
membranes, (2) relieves irritation, (3)
helps flush out
nasal passages,
clearing clogging MKS��
MUCUS, Enjoy the
relief It brings. VA TRO•NOL
.Nov. 10 Last Date
For Christmas Mail
The Post Office Department has
announced that Christmas mails to
the Overseas Forces must be posted
not later than 10th November. A
huge volume of Christmas mail for
the Canadian armed forces overseas
is anticipateu and it is advisable that
gifts should be sent now—th eearl-
ier the better—to ensure timely
delivery, ,
Parcels should be packed well and
no fresh fruits should be enclosed.
It is illegal to enclose matches', safe-
ty matches, lighter fluid or any other
inflammable substance. Such a prac-
tice endangers all other parcels. .Any
postmaster will give details concern-
ing the regulations governing the
sending of' parcels or letter overseas
to the fighting forces. The weight
limit for parcels to members of the
Canadian fighting forces overseas is
11 pounds; to civilians, five pounds.
"Why don't you get rid of that hen?
You say she never lays."
"But she is an incessant cackler,
and that keeps the other hens at a
high mark."
Put Summer Clothes
Away Well Cleaned
In view of the fact that war . has
made the extension of the life of
personal clothing 'a national neces-
sity, now is the time to pay attention
to the, winter storage of summer gar-
ments. ,Although clothes moths and
carpet beetles'. are most prevalent
during the summer; they do. Consider-
able damage in heated buildings dur-
ing the winter months, Larvae of
these insects may develop in any
place where lint and dust collect,
such as, inverted lamp globes, radia-
tors, furnace air shafts, floor cracks,
behind baseboards, unemptied vac-
uum cleaners, and even in the mend-
ing basket. Effective house cleaning
is an effective prevention.
It is important that summer cloth-
ing should be' put away clean. Wash-
able articles should be washed and
non -washable clothes, dry-cleaned. If
the clothes 'are "only slightly soiled,
they should be brushed thoroughly,
careful atention being given to seams,
and hung outdors on a sunny day for
a good airing.
Suits, jackets, dresses andsuch like
should be placed on hangars with all
buttons or fasteners in place to pre
serve the shape of the garments, and
put in protective bags or moth -proof
wardrobes, with moth crystals, balls,
or flakes in the pockets. In addition,
a cheesecloth bag containing moth
balls, naphthalene or paradichloro-
benzeue in flake should be hung over
the neck of the hanger. The garment
bag or box should be tightly closed.
Actually there is no such thing as a
mothproof bag, carton, box, or other
container, so long as there is the
smallest pin hole or crack through
whichtan insect can gain entrance.
Bathing suits or other clothes
which' do not require .hangers should
be cleaned, folded carefully, and
either 'well wrapped in paper or
packed in a close -fitting carton, box,
or trunk. If any of the goods contain
ANIMAL'S DISABLED
Quickly removed in clean sanitary trucks. Phone collect
219 MITCHELL or Ingersoll 21
WILLIAM STONE SONS LIMITED
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PHONE 84
The Minister of Finance of the Dominion of Canada
• offers for public subscription
S750,000,000
THIRD
VICTORY LOAN
Dated and bearing interest from 1st November 1942, and offered in two
maturities, the choice of which is optional with the subscriber, as follows:
Fourteen -year
3% Bonds
Due 1st November 1956
PAYABLE AT MATURITY AT 101%
Callable a 101% in or after 1953
Interest payable 1st May and November
Bearer denominations,
$50, $100, $500, $1,000, $5,000, $25,000
Issue Price: 100%,
yielding 3.06% to maturity
Three and one-half year
13/4% Bonds
Due 1st May 1946
PAYABLE AT MATUItITY AT 100%
Non -callable to maturity
Interest payable 1st May and November
Bearer denominations,
$1,000, $5,000, $25,000, $100,000
Issue Price:100 %,
yielding L75% to maturity
Principal and interest payable in lawful money of Canada; the principal at any agency of the Bank
of Canada and the interest semi-annually, without charge, at any branch in Canada of
any Chartered Bank.
Bonds may be registered as to principal or as to principal and interest,
as detailed in the Official Prospectus, through any agency of the
Bank of Canada.
Subscriptions for either or both maturities of the loan may be paid in full at the time of
application at the issue price in each ease without accrued interest. Dearer bonds with coupons
will be available for prompt delivery. Subscriptions may also be made payable by iustaiments,
plus accrued interest, as follows -
10% on application; 18% on let December 1942; 18% on 2nd January 1943;
18% on lst February 1943; 18% on 1st March 1943;
18.67% on the 3% bonds OR 18.39% on the 13/a% bonds, on lst April 1943.
The last payment on 1st April 1943, covers the final payment of principal, plus .67 of
1% in the ease of the 3%bonds and .39 o11% in the ease of the 13/4% bonds representing accrued
interest from lst November 1942, to the due dates of the respective instalments.
The Minister of Finance reserves the right to accept or to allot the whole or any part of the amount
of this loan subscribed for either or both maturities if total subscriptions are in excess of
$750,000,000.
The proceeds of this loan will be used by the Government to finance expenditures for
war purposes.
Subscriptions may be made through any Victory Loan Salesman, the National
War Finance Committee or any representative thereof, any branch in Canada
of ony Chartered Bank, or any authorized Savings Bank, Trust or Loan
Company, from whom may be obtained application forms and copies
of the Official Prospectus containing complete details of the loan.
The lists will open on 19th October 1942, and will close on or about
7th November 1942, with or without notice, a t the discretion of
the Minister of Finance.
Department of Finance...
Ottawa, 16th October.3942,
wool, fur, or other material of animal
origin, which are most readily at-
tacked by insects, moth crystals,
balls, or flakes should be place in the
folds. Full information on the control
of some common species of house-
hold insects, Circular 637, may be ob-
tained by writing to Publicity and
Extension Division, Dominion Depart-
ment of Agrciulture, Ottawa..
CyclingIn The
National Parks
Seeing Canada's National Parks
'ou a wheel' rather than 'behind a
wheel' is becoming increasingly pop-
ular nowadays. Gas and rubber re-
iittictions are gradually compelling
motorists to put away their cars for
the chnatjon of the war, or at least
to cu tdown radically on the distance
they travel for pleastu'e, The result
is an army of cyclists on the loads,
and this army is likely to grow still
larger as motoring difficulties .in-
crease.
In the national parks cyclists may
be seen gaily pedalling along the
highways, enjoying the scenery and
the flower-scented atmosphere as
they never could have done from the
interior of a closed car. They see and
Bear and feel the country and are on
intimate terms with nature, They
have time for a careful survey of the
scenes around each bend in the road,
at tate crest of each hill, and down in
the quiet flowerbedecked valleys.'
Crom their bicycles they !tear the
songs of the birds, the rustling of
wild annuals in the . undergrowth,
and the tinkling sound of small
streams almost hidden in the forest.
They have a cheery greeting for
everyone they meet on the highway;
they imitate the call of the moose or
the cry of the loon .in the marshy
edges of a lake, and they whistle the
notes of many of the song birds mer-
rily singing from nearby. trees. Fre-
quently they are able to get glimpses
and perhaps photographs of wild life
which will remain.. a treasured mem-
ory of their 'visit to the national
parks.
These cyclists may be tirecl and
hungry at the end of the day, but it
will be a tiredness devoid of nervous
tension. Undoubtedly cyclists will
teel fatigued if they try toueover too
great a distance in a day, but it will
be a physicbi rather than a mental
fatigue. Usually, after the kind of
sleep which comes in the parks, they
are just as fresh and keen as ever.
Autumn is perhaps the best time of
the year for cycling in the national
parks. Motor traffic on the park high-
ways has by now diminished consid-
erably, The days, though beginning
to shorten, are bright acid crisp; flsit
are biting well and bird life seems
more abundant than ever.
MEAT LEFT -OVERS FOR THRIFTY
MEALS
Described by Mrs, Christine Fred-
erick, authority on household effic-
iency, in The American Weekly With
this Sunday's (October 25) issue of
The Detroit Sunday Times. Also
you'll find recipes tot' torn' quaint Did
English dishes which many an Amer-
lean soldier now in England will taste
and waist when he comes back hoine
after the war.
PTL Bi7LI''V1IS IN SIGNS
One of the colored troops of the United States Army now working on the
highway to Alaska is shown lettering sighs for the new road. 'Known es the
"Alcan" highway, it is already in Inc as a supply line to Alaska,