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The Huron Expositor, 1941-04-11, Page 3411:1 sti 14 a 11 J.1.� J! Death of 4, CatIllirOn . John: A'r :bald. 'Calneroz r 65, fa?s'itt of the l indersley distnsi,ot for 1.1 ars, raaident 'of ViCtokna. 2 yoarti previously, and of iSoatjiei'ti• Baskatc. chew= before tllst, "paSsed away in; IItG Saaltatoon !hospital, Tuesday, 'Mar. 715. Ile was born in Klippen, Out., the second son of the late J. S, Cameron and Mrs. Cameron, of Starll'ay, Towne. MAP. Surviving are his widow, 1 1iza-• 1b(3th; a son, Gorden D. Cameron, of Idnderaley; two daughters, Gladys E. I,meren, of Victoria, . B,C.;` .Mrs.. ]?� L. Garber, of Santa rNionica, Calif.; • NOW is the time to think about the profitable prices you're going to get for eggs next Fall - make up your mind to take no chances with your 1941 chicks! Follow the farm -proven Roe feeding method and''.,. watch them grow fast and strong=;' full -fleshed and full of the pep and vigor that means greater egg -laying ability. The safe start is Roe Vitafood Chick Starter -the palatable feed that gives them a "head start" in life. At 7 weeks, feed them Roe Complete Growing Mash -the feed that has all the vita- mins, minerals and proteins your chicks need to ensure steady profit- able egg production later on. When you order Roe Vitafood and Roe Complete Grocaing Mash, ask your Roe Feeds dealer for the valu- able free booklet: Let's Grow Better Chicks and Pullets. e Sold by R. KERSLAKE Seaforth L. SCHILBE & SON Zurich W. R. DAVIDSON, Hensall ALBERT TRAVISS Walton IRVINE WALLACE Blyth HEALTIj FARM' PROVEN FQR { 414 "I'll give you tastier bread... .free from Igo -les, doughy spots, sour taste" If you feel sluggish, depressed, liverish or are incimed tQ constipa- tion just 'try this treatment, for two weeks•• . Take enough Kr. aschen to cover a dime, in warm water every morning. .Nothing could be easier to take, and Kruschen is not harsh, but is a mild, gentle, laxative. Constipation is caused mainly by lack of moisture in the large intes- tine. Kruschen contains carefully blended mineral salts that bring back the moisture. Besides cleaning out stagnating poisonous waste matter,. Kruschen helps to, rid the bloodstream of other poisons result- ing from constipation. Get a package of Kruschen from your druggist and within two weeks you'll feel your old good health coming back.Two sizes ; 25c and 75c. four grandchildren; two brothers, Hugh Cameron, of . Clinton, Ont.; Peter. T. Cameron, of Kindersley, and three sisters, Mrs. George Forrest, of Alberni, B.C.; Mrs. Hugh Aikenhead, of Brucefield, Out., Wand Mre, Will Henry, of Clinton, Ont. The funeral took place in St. Paul's United Church on Friday, March 28, at 2 p.m. The. Rev. Mr. McMillan conducted the ser- vice, assisted by • Mr. Reg Fox. The many floral offerings attested to the esteem he was held in the district: The pallbearers were W. A. Connor, W. J. Nixon, H. R. Hopper, J. •Tunni- Cliffe, R. W. Bawden and H.' B. Quick - fall. 'B..Quick- fall. Interment : took place in the Kindersley cemetery. CKNX MOVES TO MIDDLE OF THE DIAL APRIL 15 The radio 'changes of March 29th were only temporary, insofar as the Home Station is concerned. CKNX, Wingram is making a much more significant,• move on April 15th. On Tuesday morning listeners will find CKNX on its new frequency, 920 hes., right in the middle of the dial. This is the - spot on the dial where WWJ, Detroit, used to be heard. When the Detroit station moved up the dial on March' 29th, it made room for the Canadian authorities to assign. CKNX to this channel. Whereas CKNX had to share its former spot on, the dial with some 83 Canadian. and U.S. stations, it will be the only Canadian station on its new channel. , "' -"Listeners with push-button radios can now have. the serviceman in to set up the buttons for CKNX. on ,920 kilocycles, and other stations on their new frequencies, as changes will...be permanent after April 15th. McKILLOP (Intended: for last week) • The W. A: -'and W. "M. S. 'of Duff's Church, McKillop, 'held, their Easter thankoffering on Thursday last at the home of Mrs'..Ross 'Murd•ie. Mrs. Wil- mer Scott presided and the meeting opened with the singing of a thyann, followed by the•Lord's Prayer in uni- son. The Scripture' lesson was taken by Mrs. John Gordon. ,The minutes were read by Mrs. John Hillebrecht and adopted as read. Mrs. R. W. Craw was the guest speaker and took for her subject, "The First Easter, which was "much enjoyed. A hymn was sung and .a prayer followed for the soldiers by Mrs. C. Henderson. The meeting closed with "God Save the King," and a delightful lunch was served. ••- o. BAYFIELD (Intended for last week) Mrs, Walter Grierson, of Waterloo, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Edwards, this week. Mr. and Mrs. William Ferguson ar- rived; home on Saturday from a visit with' their son, John, and wife • at Kingston. Mrs. Diamond, of Detroit, was here visiting her mother, Mrs. Tippet, last week. • Miss Rubie Fisher, of Waterloo, spent the past week with her aunt, Mrs. Edwards.• The Directors of the Bayfield Agri- cultural Society are holding their an- nual masquerade oarnival and dance in the Town Hall on Wednesday eve- ning, April 16th, Mrs. Lulu Crave and `son Ted, and wife, of Detroit, visited Mr. Richard Weston fast week. • The local Red Cross ladies meet in the Orange Hall on Friday after- noon. • . Mr. George Weston sponsored a dance in the Town Hall on Friday ev- ening last week, the proceeds of $25 goiiig to the benefit of the Telegram War Victim's' fund. The union prayer meeting was held in theresbyterian Church Thursday evening'this week. Mr. and Mrs. George Little moved on Wednesday to the Lakeview Hidte1 which they purc'hase'd and intend run- ning as a boarding house. The ice on the river broke up on Monday and cleared out, clearing the minds of the fishermen regarding any eprinlg flood. Mr. and ..Mrs. Percy Weston and Mrs, Charles' Thaws were in London on Tuesday on' business. Mrs. Stott, Mrs. Goldthorpe and 'Spencer • Irwip were tri London one i rr1. Getdthbrbe and daughter, Sandra, deft on Tuesday evening for Gosierieif ,,an `their tvay to Hamilton, Where she will r"emalfr With her another for s'oine thine, "ThP. peace Q the WPM ie cour.eiv ed ?in t!he ?tient of tlae 4015140a1 got yet hap earth oueoumbed to 'ban- dit powear.. A >xlighty host are they who do God's will.; For consolence rules the hearts of miilians still. God's ,,centuries make vain,.the tyrant's hour, In countless breasts. Is liberty en shrined, And myriad feet still walk the way of peace. Love's dream still lives and ever shall decrease; • 'Tis not in vain Christ's perfect light - heti shined. Lift up your hearts and quench your stubborn fears; The proud+ dictators yet shall face the night. Time digs the grave'yof those who ' spurn the right; They have their day, but justice claims the years, Lift • up your hearts and know that life is good, That God will crown His dream of brotherhood. -Thomas Curtis Clark.' Twentv-fifth . Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. George Pryce were honored on March 28th when friends and neighbors gathered in Winthrop to mark -the 25th, anniversary of their wedding. Mr. and Mrs. Pryce, were married in McKillop by Rev.' W. Craik. Be- fore her marriage Mrs. Pryce was Clara Crawford, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs.. David Crawford, and a granddaughter of the late John Crich. Mr. and Mrs,. Pryce have three sons, Reginald, Glenn and Donald, and. one daughter, Mary. The evening was sp$ent in dancing and, during intermissidn Mr. and Mrs. Pryce were presented with a silver -tea service, a silver casserole, silver cream and sugar and silver salt and pepper, and the following poem read:. The siren blared, the night raid's on, Each neighbor didtheir glad rags don, They came from far and near, With speed they all came helter-skelter To Winthrop Hall, the night raid shel- ter. Nor suffer cold, nor heat to welter, They sit in comfort here. The "all -cleat" sounds to end suspense To question, all did then. commence, Just Why they'dil were here. A voice spoke up and plainly said, Pointing them out with nod of head: "There's a couple here who have been wed For five and twenty year." "Their names? And are they decent folk?" Another voice the silence broke. "If so, they've naught to fear," Their names are George and Clara Pryce, • And decent'? ;.More than that -they're nice. Years past the pastor did them splice, Yes, five and twenty year. They've lived among us and we know You'll find no better where'er you ge, Than they who're standing here, You'll find no better in any clime, We're not saying this just to make rhyme, For they have stood the test of time, For five and twenty year. Well, George, you surely should be proud, - Much liberty you've been allowed By -this your• dear; Think of the time she toiled and $ tl (pial &, Stine feu self" •014p A 1914 fire w14 9 to* 4* ?l Q, Antd, voT y'o?t 'batt feOkrSi Not tamely did lie ',Ru entice or. l►liA you with o Mile divine, Bye kissed y;ou Dime, er wan it twice? In flue and twenty year, -You know some wives they do cpm plain, Of how they have to pindh and strain, Not so with you T hear, To Bankers you need not be nice, Nor on nt'oneyy matters heed advice, For why? You're always had the "Preree," For five and twenty year. Now we'll reverse the old +command," With sliver we will cross your hand, Your future now you'll shear, Much water has passed through the Mill, We see a couple, yes, they're happy still, - They've shared together good and ill, `,One five and twenty year. May .He who marks the sparrow's fall No turns deaf ear to pleading call, But always calms our fears; Grant to you and your gracious wife, Long years unspoiled by care or strife, Then bring you Home at last, where life Is not marked by years. CKNX - WINGHAM 920 Kcs. 326 Metres WEEKLY PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS Note.=CKNX changes f roma 123Q kcs. on the dial on Tuesday morning, April 15th. Friday, April 11-10.30 a.m., Church of the Air; 1 pan., Plaster Service; 7•, Deep River Boys; 8, Grain's Gul- ley -Jumpers. Saturday,. April 12-9.30 a.m., Kid- dies' Party; 10.3'4, "Dedicated' to Shut -Ins"; 1.30 p.m., Ranch Boys; 6.30, Blyth Sport Interview; 7.30, Barn Dance, from. Blyth: Town Hall. !Sunday, April 13-11 a.m., United Church; 2 p.m., Triple -V Class; 5.45, Clifford on the Air; 7, Presbyterian Churoh. Monday, April 14 - 10.30 a.m., "Church, of the Air"; 6 p.m., George Wade; 7, Jiininy Shields. Tuesday, April 15--11.15 a.m., "Ce- cil & Sally"; 7 p.m., Imlperial Quar- tette; 8.30, "Good Luck." Wednesday, April 16-6 p.m., The Corhuskers; 8.30, Clark Johnson; 9.30, "Canadians All." Thursday, April 17-11.15 a.m., "Ce- cil and 'Sally; L30 puma., Rex Ballroom ; 8.30., Piano Ramblings. BLAKE (Intended for last week) Mr. and Mrs Thos. Dinsmore and son, Jim, and Mrs. Douglas attended the funeral of the latter's brother-in- law a!t Strathroy on ;Sunday. Misses Jean, Mildred and Kathleen Hey, of London, spent Thursday • at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hey. We are pleased to report that Mr. Edward Stelck, who has been very sick, is somewhat improved. He has been taking treatments each week at Goderich. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Turner and son; Douglas, of London, vislted in this, vicinity during the week. Mr. Edmund Swartzemtruber, our local storekeeper at Blake, is greet- ing his customers with a broad smile these days. A young son arrived to brighten their home., A WeeklyR,evlcMn m>t ttie e[.9.0. 011tt11e, klome 'Pt'at!Ct. , Canal ,'a,, apeGial' anteregta it4 Owe of Nei o4mdlalid sa;('eguardnd. in s>appleroenf,a y piotgeol to • linatef States -United itini dQaau agreement covering 99.'yenr •agreement lease of bases. Protocol recognizes that de• fence of Newfound1a? is .11400 0.1 feature of Canadian scheme. of de- fence and therefore . of npecial eon cern to Canadian ,Governm:teat. IIr'ro- vides. (a) that in all actions taker in regard to base leased in Newfound - laud, Canadian defence, interests will be fully respected', (b) that nothing in agreement shall affect arrange- ments regarding Newfoundland de- fence made in,, pursuance of recom- mlend'ations by U.S.-Canada. Joint De- fence Board, (c) that 'in all consallta- tione. concerning Newfoundland aris- ing out of agreement, Canadian as well as Newfoundland Government shall have right to participate. (Under the agreement, the United Kingdom leased to the United States defence bases stretching from New- foundland to British Guiana in re- turn for fifty over -age destroyers). 2. War appropriation bill for $1,- 300,000,000 passes final Parliamentary stages. • 3. Production of Steel .ingots and castings in February rose to 172,698 tons .from 140,343 tons in February,, 1940. 4. Contracts awarded by Depart- ment of Munitions and Supply during week ended March 21st. numbered 1,- 860 and totalled $25,373,683. (Ships and, aircraft .Callen os: he largest orders. Yarrows Ltd of Vic- toria, B. C., got a. gshiplsailding order for $1,312,000. Canadian Car and Foundry, Montreal, got two aircraft orders, one of • $1,469,880; the other of $1,802,790.00, - United States orders amounted to $13,025,353). 5. Production of Canadian automo- bile parts, not turning out cars be- fore December 2, limited under order' of motor vehicle,,,centroller. 6. Decennial census to be taken on June 2nd. 7. "Save to win" is nation-wide ap- peal of the salvage campaign which opens April -14. Billboards, newspa- per advertising and radio commen- tary are to clri•,•e home the impera- tive need for avoiding waste. 8. Index number of living costs on the base 1935-1939 equals 100, fell slightly from 108.3 in January to 108.2 in February. Driving costs in •February were 7.3 per cent, above the level in August, 1939. 9.- Canada now producing enough aluminium to go into 50,000 planes an - 1 10. Department , of Munitions and Supply .places order for 39 flying boats. 11., Canadian Air Force announces uL>geTtt - deed Of . 2,000 radio teeh- *cisme who will be' given! • al, shggt intensive coarse ,ins radio work and sent overseas _to •teke ttreir Plano in the ground defence agai;gst aer- ial attack of the' British Isles. MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER The friends of 'Miss •Gnad'ys Ryck- man, bride-to-be, surprised her on Tuesday evening at her home to a evezgiil# prarlip after well, gaeeaxery'111 short addregs wassac to #be oRenedl t g➢f` brought te; tl}e a fl deeoratett 'in pualt ''?a11 Ryok1 n!an thanked 14.0.1 gifts In a very pie aiAa; eral rounds of bingo 'w!ell Q after whieh a dbiinty illneh 'W ed, -Exeter Times :A.dvocate . it The March of Science PUTTING nit VITAMINS BACK IN FLOUR At the present time, the people of Britain are -faced with endless' aerial bombardment, long hours in air-raid shelters, lack of sleep, lowered vitality, and consequent susceptibility to disease epidem- ics; Aware of the danger, the government recently took a very simple precaution': They ordered white flour to be fortified with a chemical called thiamin. Hardly an epoch-making event, you say! As a matter of fact, it was an event of the first his- torical importance. For the first time, the government of a great country recognized the necessity of supplying vitamins as well as bulk food to the whole popula- tion. Thiamin is one of the vita- min - bearing constituents of whole-wheat bread. It is not found in white bread, yet lack of it means all the difference be- tween vitality and fatigue, be- tween courage and despair, be- tween fight and flight. The addition of thiamin in crystalline form to white bread was made possible only in 1936, when R. R. Williams, a chemist in the Bell Telephone Laborato- ries, made thiamin out of coal tar. Now, riboflavin and nicotinic acid, two other essential constit- uents of whole-wheat bread, . can also be made in crystals. As a result, white flour will in future be "supercharged',' with „vitamins. It will not only contain the chem•- icais hitherto milled out, but carry an extra ration to help allay our unsuspected vitamin hunger. The man who made possat'b1e theaddition of thiamin to white bread, Robert R.' Williams, is di- rector of chemical research in Belt Telephone Laboratories. His work on vitamins is a spare -time hob- by. As a chemist in the Uniteil States government laboratories in the Philippine Islands just before the Great War, he was among those who revealed that the dreaded oriental disease, beri- beri, eiberi, is due to a lack of vitamins in polished rice. Unpolished rice, with part of the original bran still clinging to the grain and. eaten with it, does contain vita- mins. When he. joined the Belt Telephone Laboratories at the end of- the last war, Mr. Williams a m- tinued his work on vitamins is his spare time. The extractioo.*f thiamin from coal tar is one of a' series of successful experiment • Which he has completed. It is scientists of this calibre who are constantly engaged in research for the improvement of your telephone' service. rNo. 2 of a series prepared by H. G. Owen,l, h Bell Telepboue Company of Canada. ..SS 1 v Y rk'��`,f.iJjdsy 1 ETwIl�1l!/s jota8eaa4d BODGE KINGSWAY SPECIAL if VENTILATING WINGS ✓ DUAL HORNS • QUAL SUN VISORS ' ✓ QUAL WINDSHIELD WIPERS ✓ 10 BEAUTIFUL COLOURS if DUAL TAIL LIGHTS ✓ SAFETY WHEEL RIMS ✓ BIG TIRES if RADIO GRILLE and scores of other Attractive Feolures PLUS DODGE DEPENDABILITY, LONG LIFE AND LOW OPERATING COSTS L__ Seaforth,Qnt a' ii •s. 8