The Blyth Standard, 1942-07-01, Page 1THE LYTH STANDAR
,VOLUME
BLYTH, ONTARIO, WED NI';SUAY, .1('14Y 1, 19 12.
J3LY'11H CONTINUATION SATURDAY IL'tNK NI'I'I': ' Junior Room Pupils I;n,i
Ice (;ream 'Treat
SCHOOL i'ROMOTION,S WINNERS
TO GRAuE X, \\'iJu1'r:; I',it
1'nt\es, Ir\ i11,
Craik, Edilie 111'1111., III•,t., Fr.)
Falconer, :1111111(1,
Ulun,her, Jeaurll° t Alalll., !tisk)
Uutlrr, I'or'ot)ry IIlist.)
In': ;11111,, I •:1111'1'1.
:\1;11!1 Pr! I; illi I Jlalh., 1 1 [ ,1.I
AI ur:';ty. 13111,
Nm'oltt, (;rorgr
Ni •Id1 1, I liltla IS(.., Ili"O.
I(itold 1. the, Ili,1., I'r,J
1'1,'111', ,lien I(;on,., Iltst„
:+tinilt•r,'uch, !'.1111111',
Wallace, II'I\1,irll (ilttit,)
TO GRADE XI
.loIinstou, Frances (Coo.,
\I1't;lll, 1larian
;' itli'Iy, Joan.
I !1111111:,, fare" i 1 1..r.)
Slim:' 'rd, Phyllis.
'I'aniolyn, ,licit.
'\'all;1'i, Sllhl.y,
,lack.
TO GRADE XIII
\ill 111x1, w.1' 1 [''1111 v,,;
.r,1111 III g I I-ss1 I\t uell.
,1 ;I " I., 110 1;1.111 1111'.
:111
Airs. 1';:,111,111 Augustine.
$1.1m each " I.:i iris' N.•utl, \\';,111'1
Airt;[II, .,1111,1 1'ollin;cu, ,\Is't;'u'.I
1.'rawl'ord,
.111, 1 I'•,Ilarll ('111,:i ;ivied
',AO. a111y in the rall.11'ity of .1Lrstcr of
('il'1VU0t11t'?,
'l'lle IOC) 111,1 111.1 0,,1101' )'illre OW
1'1;11,' '41a:11'11 this yvir Inas !hove 'iron
ail inolai:nod prii,', ,11'•111;; well for
1110 Iin(:ulat'il)' 01 fail:, NII(' . Th'1"o't
day night In Myth, CI ioilr tit!tets
1111'11 yin 111,110. yon. pir"h:i' "i, Tho
11 only \t•ay you ::1,11111 ;1 chance lo will
1; 11'1' I;.Ilillf; Yu"Ilr,I !, ill t"'' It;it' )
I1.(tiet(11l'll 1' ill'lll(!1'N
Fri whin ow dr;la i= 1111111',
The 11111111' 1111.1 S( 111, 11 .1 .'11.!,11 lull
14x9 do, troll ul 111";11'111•'
1(011111 111111" approriati0n f1
did inn l 1111'5. 111x)'1"I in itt:' 1'111,10.
Sebum ('oiti'el"I, s(1 11 tett, decided 10
Hetherington - Jenkins
.\ tt.d(lin. I.1 uou 11:11 tar, I, - 11lh
place in III 11,,11: Iwo], :11 111'' ;1.•111
Irl' the 111'111„'- 1111,',•, li" 11 111.
)111\1:111, 1111,',•11 I;'i 1"l I;1}1!1, ,\lt, tl
,\larga:et I'dy'll, .11.:!btu'-.
All'. and .lir''. \VIII. .11 NH) t:ly;tl, )"t.'
1'1't. the I•tlll(Irl'n if, the Iliron t;ritl luv'1i1 .l III (;,'„rt'1• 1'. Iloilo.; itigi ,;1,
art,) Its 11 no III (i ler I'I'ealll. 't'ilirly• 'x011 of .\II', ;lilt 111 ('1111 II,•Ill,•Illlt;
nine :,c110,11 1.111ldren, 111„ (;rit•ce villi Hu. 1\ttI !I til, Itec. .1;(:1;11 �inr'i,ir,
tttu 1"o[}r.,,•ul;1titi+•s of the 1101111' and
I',I-lar 0f Ile' L'lylll 11111,',1 church.
,'.11•::1 ,11,.,tri:rllon tvcru pe,",oil. i111'li•'ialr(I.
\\'111.1 Iho 'I',rasirt'r wilt I0 ply Iho ! I',1.1i, 1., of cant...bury Il,'Ii 1,;1x1
111', (;111,); 11.1) ;1(I II'll I;II;1' ;ill\- 'Illi!', (11;111-11 Ili„
tiling for 1111' firty•Iw'u dLshe.; of 111, `iit1;e 'I've;'. foll11,',1 a 111
111;1x1 srr\ed, 11'1' feel111'1' Ilio ground. Th,, w, diliu;
ollililrtll ,tilt a{ ;irl'ciale `,t1". nig';: tt+111111; Irurr.h,
Idiot ;Irliun; Ii [, cl'rialii rho Homo mid •\II. ,1. I'.. t 'u•,.
i,•hinl ,1s“iciitjolt Ili,
Cactus In Bloom
Appreciate Rainfall
turl-iv, I.,lo n•
11';1- (II.,1'„l t+v
'1'111. iu idt•, (11.1':,:1'11 111 1101x1 1(111(
s11.,'1', 1,'1,11 tshir(' tit l'.+•1111( •. .:Irr.•'
Illg 1111 x111, !' oi1,1111'I ,If .\ merit ail
{1';1111 ,•.II
kl'I+1'11'1' 111'1 »111th
11111 In:•lll
:•111" 1%11 nod
Phis' itt!1 ;u•liclt• in the Rt' 'x11'11+her wedllinc, tbiltyfit„ yea;.,< ago,
YOIUR LOCAL PAPER..
Former Resident Of lilyth NEW 1300KS ARRIVI;
Elected i.0.0,i'. Grand RIR I'UBL1C LIBRARY
31astcr Vol' Saskatchewan j Iti;' Itose ,Aitken, I.ibrariai for itt '
1Luly 1.1-1,1'nt.• 01 L'1;Ili :telt 111.1
I1'i.l will r 1,1 III+• I''tII)\viig. r,•I:Iliit.;
I., the 111:11 11 'blur t,1•.iotved Moon a
to1'l,•1 t''•-ilit•lu, 111111 too-lderaLle
1111,, -urs', 1\', .1, ;;c1I is a s„» of Ib"
late 111. and 11;,; tames S.utt. iirin't•
re•ideut, ..f Blyth. ;Intl spelt! lit, boy-
odericll Public Library, w•;Is ill ltwu
it 111>tulay, btirtl;hrg with her m 111'11'
al1u11111e)11 01' Looltm
I•it,r:lry :\s -iodation, xlticll ttav,' been
placed on tht' I.ihrary shelter, alio!
i\ilt F1'1)111/11
there for
01 'i141.vi•01r1•I:•, for
lits• ('otl\ellll'nd'e
L,Ic 11,'X, tlirs't'
111. •1"l 111'11'. lalt•r 1"I tti t i0_ lu lion- 111011111
12,1111001. II'' 01111;11, 1"i .1 bll^111 ,'s , 'I'll. 11111'11111'111121,5. Llbi;tTj' t\>�nt'!a
(,11,11 lo g+a»i \\'est. 111' Is Ivnl ha- made ,itit'nttil I,rugr+•r• sire,'
of 11;. I{i.tt:t3'+I tv,it. 0t 11 11x1 ':-•1 •;11P11 ill .l:inti ari' of tlils'
1115.111. '111111 110110%1 'dig x1';11 b i Ua;„'» Year. The fir., 111.0 11110s runs!'led 01'
110111 lilt• 111111' 1`111 1-'.110 ul' 1111' 1{.r:,• �'I\le,'ll 1,11111'+ 1'x.11. 11111 111111' flit' Ilflm^
1,4.11 I f:,tl ha^ 111'1'11 incre;trod 1., ftt't'ttt ,lx.
\1' ,3 .1111. (die of int' {iriilllli,•tti S+" 1 til if 1111•"' bootis axe tti:fnrt alio,
.I; iz,•11 ' ,I 'I ;I Ir-11,tj•of la"1 w,• •k. at- acrd '1"u a1"} +•s+•rt. ;Ill are now It the
iained I.t III,. hi'LIt.'-i honour, that -le !t es 01' 111+' Myth I.il,t;u•y, Every.,
0011,1 i I. accorded to anyone in 111(1( one i^ IIt('i11'tl to collie ill and tti ii'rl
Fellow 11t11 is Ihts piovinct, \111''1, Ir. Ihi m its soon a.; {.,) 11)10, aiol when
•I and ul,taiied1 u, 1;1a11d !Looks from the .ls;ociate,a ,;e lat;+'n
1LI;ter of the 1.11.11.1', for Sa<1;attlle-',oil, they should be h:utrllttl carefully.
\lul ,'1111 a; themeeting of the Crain ;Intl returned ;Is (luiel l5. as possible,
IliaskI 115.1111' 11ur,ay, Il , , \1 111 -
.l I'.agl1', trrllten by 1111' local ! Ll.dge held in Sa,kaliwo last w•e"h !std that iht'v ,nay he avaiia.hie 1'111
1'111!111, 011 1.1;1(11,'1. and orals coudiliolt< hail. was the ol'it1.-1111111, \\'e;n1111; a
II III'.II 'Ilk, \\'1111 ;111,1 tie \visit Ii e101.11(1lrl itt 111111 0111' '1-01/0'0111' t'ii t'.
Ill;,
1 11 \
Mr, .. It. 'I'usket has a Carla; in she Ild he interesting leat:ing to lural ,dress of 1{111';1; Mille hex1111 -1 coaaratulattuns in ;rttaining The rolluwinc Is the nets list, now
II': rook gullet), I,elliu;l lat. 111sl u; I'nrnn'I,. ,\ppli('nlly tsley ct;;Ill hate ,,'111.1' nc.'1 ?01ier, ;Intl carried :I x111-
tl;t11 s01111' of 1111' exct.,,s rai11f;111 1111S I,niut oun111" of (t'htir' ' rratiuns, t''1
1111, e1,sc' at 1 Ir e 1"n 111. Sritl i; ;in Ci;ll I''eilttiv of , , The 1' Ilan, by f;t'ahaai 51'111,,,
lu !his honor and high office, ;Iv:1i1a111e to subscribers:
'lilt 'tti1• 1'1' 11• ill:Ariel l hall during No.Spring tli: tllr.. i . I I III IIt ,I \v' I.,
'nig, there ivory four 11111+','1= out, and "Tito ;11),x1,,1 1, of Ho, f11rm,,r, ui 1111, ! 111, l'il't. Mothers, litrevale, act;'(' y''':u•: stanliug, Itttt 1"'n initiatt•t1 'I'll'' \'tlko» 'l'i'nt,, Ily \\'illt;tti \tic•
1L;s, 't'asltir had .';tut,,:t al Ionia fifty I.1; g"inni'dnait. ink) 1111' utyti'riet and grand I'otttto'• IL,ersd Raine'.
1"l rlislrlet 11,1, been well rrliesetl :r;, Ili" " >ttlll uI. that 11rdee at Ilting';unnm. Unt.,1 The .\liddile 11'11111111, by 1)ltzabefh
111111 it1';ul( 11f the (111Z4ling rain all Illy I'011(,11'ing Ilse cerinuuty, n rec,'lr;ion
t1':I; II'': t ill Isle 'Filling
I'UIII11� '1'111' ,ill 11"r'. 111 1!11., f11' trilhfl't'I'ol( t0 i ititlgl',
Iii all proba' i'ity, by III. time any•''fuesday, followed by a IA1'11111'»1 t Ogenln IS;I•;l;.I Lotl:I. and in 1'1'•1 'I'rigstrat Ileal, by ife»ry Barnard
Ione !Tad this ;thiole, the buds will sluw•cr al nig{II that 111'1011 ;lbiut one I'll/11' 1;1; la;lt fully deco,;11:"i w•itll
1 init and w•llitt �tr.alut'rt, ;loll von- btraHle 11 charter member of the Host- tial'i'ord,
;hate hurt( iilu bla.,111, and \vitt bate inch of rain. I
„ Imv11 1;111p. and tool; the firs'( clmir The Kings of Iteacon 1111{, by Chrf;-
(ftatil,y, I•:\,Tell 11.'1%) rll .That n Il ort 111 , I I,nI I I, II; I ; 1•,11 1111,...,-; well' II 11 1"a I's''ll Illllllerll`II., 'red
11111 ,I 11111 1 111 111' 1, 1111111_ 1 ,11,1 ,
*\titti i Ilr1ii i , The grille's ,1111;111'1 received, wearing
:t; ifs Noble 1;1x1111. line \\'hilin:g I':urmelder,
* !that n 1,1111 nae illy i the life of a need. Lal the cunlinucll 1111x115. Ila\ ; Ile 1;:1: s1�rt,•.1 as 1Iktriel li.,111,5. Thi.; :\hove All, by Eric Knight,
111'1'.,,: Illi, !stabil. 1'!uul, bol ,,1111,' ID, y In•1 Hwy it wtlttonl raI11 eansed (itt i(1,,,H',It' an olitr' gr•,'eu figl11.1.11 :111; 111.0,:, Tut'' (;rand 1111;11'1 I'ur District \o. ":,,
*1'011x,11, (till, !; I .uril.te of ,link c;lrn:lliuns. 1s isl• 1 The 1•'Iii»g Carpel, by Itic•harll I1:1111•
\ury beautiful, ll\it'ly. 11 "1111' t .;..,111.11 that 11 wa .1
+•\\'hilt, I:or:illy' The Cactus i, Ila' Prickly prat \'11". impossible lu gal rain, bit Nis pre• lug in srrtlug \sere \I 't, I.t;lir 111'111• 1'11111 entailed the duties of In-1:lllinc,bnr'I011.
* elig;t''t!e for(;radutttiutt Diplomas. Iely, air; i tt '; of :'.al desert stock, +'iptlatlun, \\illi 1110 good ruin growth '1111'411111, '1.1'r'1111", 111-- (Ilit1, 1111111111*officer, >lurdrr Masks 111anti, Rufus Kin!;.
un. I'e,•e1'aler, 11111 111" 1'11111', 11. 1•a; elected (,rand \\'ardor, of ' 1.1';t Sunrise, by It itltlee» Norris,
h;u'tr,g been giteu Ir\ mt.s. 1.0,k°i• h)' cslaldiShed, praelle:ifly as:Iltr, nl 'Hie Li ).0.1.,. for Stisltalchewai In I 1'11:11 Day .Unnc, b Pierre \'cut
\ole ,Su'b•i1'rl, apiiititi ; in )nnrlc' 1'11111'11. Llyth. Y
;ul ;111111, Iltl11l; 111 Miul•lt_ai, who lith I,'tut some 1.1.111. '1'111' ri01,1u1. now
11u11s,' 'iaw in I;t111 ;Ind ill !illi was 1'arise»,
wt' after the 11111111':; fain' maty he 1"r' 'flit' groom's gift 1 , !he built' tt•;t; a
,TlIn 11 Ilse 11101110, 110111 1"i ;111 fiwo IS down In ;I good dept b.
II 101111 ,1'I. lu 1111' helde;nnti,l, a ''11'111'11 1,1111115. Cram! 11asler and 111'1 And Neal 111111 11'hcn Ire Sneezes, dry
1.11,11'11 in (t:"tater if the stide»t re• l � '1'111'111 aro rr;i'urt, ul' frost 11x11,:ll;" ; ` I has reached !he higl,e,l .coal 111 the ('lair. \lac\lurrny.
qutrrx 111115. ;a Icw nr.nl,; to cuutp(,,I„ Iho 11:'11'11 in 'Texa
1t ft:t\ is sc';rte I ttitllti,, but bt Ihiti ss
ore:(111 : it t sIt it 61'1, to 1111•
11 r. ;Intl 111,. 'I'asl;er ;Ire I'1" I'1' ;,sit• order in this Province." Ilow to develop a (rood \iemory, by
his ,I:uende in IIIc: ' ,l.; preI. II L; irighltonrhoad 11 ntt::t be. small, as groom -man. ;1 signet ritvg, :11111 to the
recommended Ilial pipit; 1111'1111'^ I'rr mended for the o,.uittl'll ;11111( Iran((
R
pinnis(, :r sten of t»natey --- obert IL Null,
Ihi+'e rxa»,Iti'itItns by rtutlyinr. on,, the grounds arum:iI Ihi' it:. ,t office \t1' Ila,,' 1111 yet '1'111.1(11'da11yuue;
1111' bis ,nl'fcre,l this i0,., (t tt'tI.t wet,' pl'e.cenl from 11111„\ale, r 'I'ht' Kintl,all Collection, by i'liaa•
half hoar per day during the Snit»"r pro:enL The IildIet,'ance (Il' III' 'It' ; Bl}'ill School Board Meet. 111'0, carbon.
ut0nths, I?111:5. pupil pl'1'p;wing !tint' grounds ,ales \,1111 Ill. he (in tie ill• I I'.,latucs Ilatr been rt'uz;'n down. Tee \valor. \1'b,t'tum, x11,1 'I'irunl,s•
'1'111. 11'111115. Piling "WI° 11'1'1 un ihr ; The regular meeting of the '3.1)•111
Lighted \\'fudnls, by b:ntil(r. I aring.
lake, and ,her;' sue I g11,4):::1(
e:Il ul;uly.,Ilcll 111111 11111' fa 11111,1' 11'111111; Ilial hl� hid ; g 'There's Dm, In l;err)• family, by
sell' surf:vividly \sill have the upper been 1+111 down ;a second lime, 1111, it ';til:, 11x111 fir Tin'''""). tit. L011;0'010,4. Scbuul 1111,11'11 was hell! in It'. \it ittu;.
tauity of writing. 111';1115. spots all u\,•1" Ih1' loan• I Prances Eise»bnrg,
is ,1111,, likely It they 1111 collieagittt, ,;u11td Ilot'
wI's or rte,, said tt ttti lit, Hie 101 Haft .lune _'0th, at 1', 11., wttlt
N. P. Correll, Principal' 'rho \\Intl on Tuesday ulgt'l \tat the bridle tt1'ariltg dark I'igur,'d slier:. 1110 I'011n\cing 'I'rnsteo, present: \\'.
Tragedy' in Prance, :lndre 1Llurota.
1,1)1"Ili. real, 11'1111 1\11111 aocrssurle;• hills, K. 11'111Unnrr, ',1', 11'111,1' and E. \'t,i Can't !lase heti' •thlig, by
Ierriflc and Ilio rale Leal lulu licitly 1' Katdcen Norris.
'crericeti That. had not presiuutly shown I On 1111'11 rt turn they 1111 reside nn (';11,111'1, hl.
' , Sell Picture 1111' e0um's 1'x1111, 1lorris Township. I The minntrs 111' Ihi' Irr\iui', meet—
! lig we„e approved OS read nn mal 1011 Ithlsnn Kcyn .
111, Churchill. 1'1,1111 Onedtlht.
Sally anti ttcr Ihinrnutlting, by May
\\'ot•tltt»gton,
,Tani., ,Insephine Itenttli;n»,
Mother \fest \find, "\\'here” sot..
'1'lrur11(on Burgess,
\\'alltirre 1,1" (told, by Phyllis Craw -
Miss Livingston 'Thanked
GRADE VIiI
('ontl'i1,'111, ('lair..
GRADE VII
1'ohcrly, I.',.:.
1'tItur''y, .\lar,iurli,
,.
]lul.yn,ar, I't;uu'rs.
Alums, It,thcrt.
1fct t1!,
Nes1)11 1, V r,utcea
Nelhr:'y, .Incl(,
I'n�l,er, Rusts,
11';11,4un, Ell ivtn n',
GRADE VI
I, A, Gray, Principal,
C irilen,, trees and shrubs are show•
.111,; Lena I,h•In cion received a
ciuuninir,11i0n l'cnt 1111' S,'rrcl;uy of ung II glurt(.;, growth of green,"
11111 Itiw'nt:nn'ille Ited Cross Sortel)-, ._
1'u Tut•:iIiy. exlr•e=<Iig 1111'ir !hanks to
her for a recent duration she !mule to 'reacher I-Iollolll'e(I I'1'ior r[1O
that Society,
Departure
The dloiitIItn 1a.; In the form '1' a \ s.n'lal c\enfng was rpcnl ;Ii S. S.
I CH
OINC
til 'Trustees Cartwright and 11'!tilntntr.
1'i'he iiit,wing" hill;; wore pregtnte'1
x1'11 11» 11101101, 111' 'I'ritstrts 11'11111 ;11111
Carl wrighI were ordered paid:
Ta, t;et•, insurance sta»tps $I
tit:nolar,l, Ines :hoot.~ paper . , ,
\Its.
1'', L'ainl0n, Iknneslic
honour of (heir (cachet.; Sunday School and
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH fot'll,
,paining, froil which the RO,t'il,,,,,, ,, No, 1, monis, 1111 Thill•.,hy e\ettlrg,, S:i1'ncr Ill slrndlfun :1.111.
'Society t'eallzcd the :um of $:',,011, ,lune "_,•111t, Ill d[ !tilde ('lass ;it 1iovt 1 hs Tru;i.1' t'•ai'tt\i'it,l!t, ser I'll. sluey 1nnl; of aircraft, by \1x111
'I'hcy were ill:l ti gral°rul In 111;x,; \118s Mary frau', who is leaving lo II :Ism, Itnbc:l Shorlrccll, Supt, trdrdl by 'lilts,., \VIlitnirre. and car: and \Ii;k;t 1'ctory, m,
1,1vi ; .-1;,» for her splendid :Iiittiott leach the jinlur .numlic 1.111;1,1i 1. o'clock. Ret'. .\.
1 1'111' (;real Story, 1311,1.,
tn (ic}i•ric I'Ilblir• Piddle I 1"i"11, ilial ;III children who arc nut
flan. School next 11'11111. \I, 1,,o, ti, will condor' 1111 scrt'ice, I; years old try Seldembir 1st of tin) I'It, i t!i of Peter Raboill, by lira
(year he re,I'rscd admission to the 1'uh- Iris I otter.
I. \ programme consisting of rc:td-
-
lugs, dances, ;Ind musical numbers
Receives Award
was enjoyed. After Ibis \Iks I',':tr
\vas called to the platform ;ttnl was:
\\'u1d Ila; ,Itisb hc•,'ii rec.l\e(I Iro»t (trc,ented \vitt' ;t chest ut' "old Col -
the (;rnnrai Itox111 ul' ltrtigiuns I':1111• 1115." ,Ilv,'rwace, The u11dre,s was
cation In 'Toronto, I11a1 '11111115. :ingli- read Ii' Alrs. John Spell. 111),1 the pre,•
ran Sunday School, is entitled lo ane 1,111:11 1011 tttudi Is)' 1Icicu Itiutuul. 11i;s
u',\t,t'd Iruut Iho, Rcli;;'u1;; 'I'l1(.1 Sit* rear (hen thanked hr). pupils ;11111
viol)' of Luntiti , I?igl 1'4 'I'l,.' pnpll ,school section very appropriately,
1"l:tilled lu rcct'itu (his ;Itvarrl is Pti!I it'it is the atldres.;;
11)'r1I,' ,1. \1':'111', 1111, in the rrl cap!
pear \IIs, feat•; 11'1', 1111' 111111[1,
(1. 11, lit l.. 1'X tttiI alien,, 11'.111111.'11
and parents of S. S. No, 1 \lor;'is, have
per cent, l'. ngralulal:.ns! gathered here to-nighl I0 spend a co.
'
( 1111 'vi'11i»g ,,'01st you. 11,'1111 to Punt
CONGItA1'ULA'I'IONS lea\ills IN, a, ala•, Iearhi'r,
,
13111',4 .i Czar 1 :\s gamut,, We w•Ish lu /haul; you
t ,t,v: tiIttltllor.; ti Jlasdor 1)1'1111111 11'1,1, Johns';0,t 11,111' n 111'x1 tviti far 5.x,11' efficiency; tar the happy al.
tit'\',ill, \\Ila veld;,:tes his lith 111'111- \Ir, Jrh11 ;mood, of ('tintnn, on \tun• ittit htt'e you have created 11 all
thy, on ,illy ;ltd,11;15. in whirl' \1 r. .h11111'1'.111.purchust„I Mitt', In our school and for tht' great
('ant, r'alulntiuns In \i'. George 1\1r. Wild's 11(dcl T. Turd. Interest )'o» have taken 111 everyp»pil musical number L) Thr' 11is.;iun 111rn11 md grain 111:,1 took one al (uit,il '1'11111 Johnny or .iconic can
11x11', \t au cciclrr;t ed his birthday, 011
nailer 3-011' charge and 1,) your ifl't' mind. \i1”, A. N. 1'1',,1;1 a:st 1 tint 11111;l1;glu lixeh° ,boulders, ;11:11 wusn'I 1111'11,'1 a )crud deal of plet,vttre from
Sunday„lime ��lh. ! Air. \ledd has been relieving for anleaching have set before each un,' Superintendent o f the 5111111;15. 111'x,'13- through gru\\'iug. 1 111 crop, ;a milli 11111111' x1111 a sand pile,
11r, Cartwright tit Ihi harleor shop the on Ideal which lime may dim, bit , Sc�uul presided, ill 1x11' east', will tun Iwo ions to Ilia you know that forevery in it•
CougraVIlaliuns lo Catharine Isabel! `
('i 11111, 11110 reiebtal.s her 1)1rlh(111y 1'1111 11;x)'1 111111 1111 l.ltcr Is ;nll'11titti it'ti erase, \ext Stnttlit .Iuli :,4 h, Rt' t, A. Si Thr art°, Su w. ate told, and n11 this .
customer a milk man gi 11 Is emt•
�,
NS 13'1:4, II WI i(nlv
,'lli; the circunI 1•; pupil,<, we are nuts, tatty Ih,tl lilt will �pcak an Ibe following sub- 1,111,11 growih Is !h° r°.'tatt o1' ih° alum- ridittiI that an extra five bottles ai-
on 1\'ctlnc•,day, ,1 1,15. tit, s'ur:01111 n ; the car, we can 1
t('-tt!;ratrlr.dloi"; to 1lorvey Alvin
l 5.011 have dcclded la 11'11\1 its, 1'1'11 „wets:
11;1111 moisfnry 111111,1::• the `print• needed to fill his requirements.
lir School,
TRINITY ANGLICAN CHURCH 1 lir 0,11(i1111 ut' 'I'rtl:dots While and
Rev, P, H. Streeter, L,Th,, Rector, !(\1'htt.more. Secretary was instructed
11115. :,Ill, 111.1 ' iu orders nap and 1'10(11' oil for use of
'('aret;tket.
Sunday School, 10•30 11,111, I 11'1 SO 111/0;41' Ilial every mill( 111 II
Meeting adjourned on motion of
No .-retice Itis Sinilti . oil the next in tie comtlry has the same difficulty
Snnday,Sc'r1'icr ;II .;.:II' pan, 'Trustees \\'Dile and Cartwright.
1,eslie II11b0m, SeereWI'S.
�.
n.; our local milli trtin. ile informs
. its that the rapidity with tvhloh his
!ilii het 1le keep disappearing 1S not
BLYTH UNITED CHURCH r only amazing, hal alarming, In \low
1 11un11)er Crop In 1 his :Iron
I.;t,t S11111111)' inuruiig there was an I of the Increased dil'firully in getfing
x11111 Session al` IDr Snnday Scbuul. ; •\II signs point to a 1),111111',' coop dew ones to keep rip Ito stock,
The I'nllua'ing phsgr;un was prepared in HOS district, both in hay :11111 .\ milli bottle around the hoose is
11y Thu \Iissi0n:n5. Committee, Ig'raln. a very handl)• container. One can
Srrtpinrc Lesson, .call by Alau aril ; A gentleman told its on Sunday keep things in them. or when tit.'
llaeat;,ll, 1,1,x1 De had a field of early oats that ni'ig)tomu•s land 1» 1,•111, a bouquet of
1'1x5.11, 11rs. It. \1'fghtnull,, I ,n 1liglt he was frighlenl'11 In I'luwirs, ono ca» always find a 1111111
1"ano Solo, Shirley Phillips,
1'1:v11;11'1; ihemtgh their frarl'ul lost he .1)i)11 le in n they, ttltiell so'tvS the
\lldlre:,: 111 \\'uldl'u, alight lure his \say. 11'1' wallie ('purpose 11,,, 11 a spare vase can be lo -
Milkmen Have hif f iculty
With Bottles
1"('.t;lily Imagine ,i.trl It;.w 111. 110a.1 have Tried to develop each ono of »,., I I.I:t; to the til tinting. • I Over two weeks ago, \i•, Joe Shad- ilottles are increasingly hard to get.
Snell, will relebraacd his seeond birth- hated lu Marl with Thr car. 'u 1',11y way, menially, physically aid .:111: '1'111' Proud Ititle1 Unhorsed. ,lick, of lamilesi,oro, brought i» t4onie If volt hau'o mor than two oil the
(lay, on Strtt'Ia)', ,Ilitit: morally which 1, 1111' aim of r\rt\ II,ul'[ct' (Ila! tlid'tstti'ei! :; feel, 4 illrl,c's.n
., 'x• iic1 elttaa II i your pal Hone
(',nttgili, l:ttlors In Ans. !heti''xylor, Ile told u:; on 'I'ucstlay I!al i1 had
wit-3cekInatei Iter birthday o11 11'til• tee» his {nide nod toy tar the 11:I�t
.true, teacher. 1\'1' have c11loyed out I :=1 'veck A11', Ernest 1vggi'tt Iwo- duly to gel (hent out. l)rnt't bother
11111, :wit 1111' t'xlra 111111,;, you baso 1311',11 Ited ('rosy Society dnarrfi a handful of wheal 111x1 nn';Is•,In 1,111 wash them, ,Phi, milt min
uln1'le;'u years.11Ile and 1111' \111111'1 'I', 1
111'•,1x5., July 1st,planned and snicts.+f»lly i nitcd all tie �hipllle1it 11,'11 exactly :, reek will gladly do that to get his bottles
w•e:e Ibe only one; brit i» the family. '
11,'5.1'1111 our school work --i» out. era [IF, 1'arntl'rt ;in' o»<y ml Ilse haying, and iNtck,
t\nil during those »inclt'c» yobs .\It'. '1'11° I'011uw•t11g 111111.1CA ;u•c Thr ,111110
Stratford
r 'ream r t I cuncerlb and work rut the Red 11'11. Olt' x111111(13111 crop, enupl1'11 171111 the 1 \»11 1 Iho 1a}', don't go selling out
Stratford lles,ree I U Uc•do had cared for [I ju.;1 as (11014;11 Rh'tpt»1'»t to 'I'11rnnlu, fruln Ihi 1,15.111
1 11I :11»11 nti�s yo», bit h0pr )1'i starch)• of labour, Is iva6fng it a ,cry 1.111 ordinary sealer•, expecting to gel
Confer 1)egree Here II bad 11ce11 one of the tat»tl' II-' Red fres, Surirly:
may be able to 11sil u, often, and 111111e 1111 111tl,. 1'11.11' it'1111'1 11e »111111 "a brand new iatltle in exchange, null
' ftan!t1y a11ittlll d to us !hat he would "s hays shirts: pair buys pyjamas:
ihr I.`c;,roe Ic:un a{ SU'alfu:tl I.+»Igo thus Iteep up our 111 'i (til tiIttiou•. rest IwIwooti Matin, and wheat itit•illui'1 t4e1 a bottle mit without a ticket,
be very lonely without it, hit ho I pair buy.; 11,1 111S; sweaters; 11'11111
\u. 3;i°, :1.1', :1.11„ :n1' In cnmt ships. Asa .mall lel;c'u of aur allUi'c t,'sttig ebit,i• \\'heal ftcids art be• el' 11'lt equivalent In ohmsge, and ex-
hall sit a in i.,. sail • t, Jelmstd:11 had bolt: ' 'id's cap; gh'fs (It•''-• '111111
plify the M.M. 11c(,rcc at 1 1)11 Lad r ef;tfau we IIS'li you to acccp1 Ihts gift. ginning to turn gulden airatly'• ;pot to gel milk, T1ti5 s'ott of thing
lal en him up, oluu0»•r•;: I womons tire,:;e:; ;l day-
ri,i 30 1, on 1111115. evening, July Illlh, '\1'i Irust they will teuitid Pit a1' m. ()no could spend a Short h011daF °isn't bring done any more, by order
111':, :1:1 picot', it int I; 1111111.;, 1 dteiiiit up and flown Thr ronces,fuu.' '
A very interesting and instructive 1 \\'r trust 111, Jchislon will handle ;Is yin Ilse thy! aid 111x11 i» your• ,I ;;n 1111 Lislt Itisrls; "_ 1 slit Of the \till; Control 1 n (•d of Ontario.
pillows:
evening i; promised, ;Intl all bte.thl't'ti it with c•atr, 1r he dmrt;11'1 :d may gr1 mind it;t»y happy »tet»oti s. r et Huron Comity. tl1. ;tlhniriug Thr crops.
of 11Rtlt Lodge are 111'1'(1 to be pros• cal ww"Is; 1 ;air futcc �\vcatcr: i.
6 hamcsick, and wend II', way bitch to Signed on behalf of the members I herr are a gond many Fannon: who "*"'"
east, A11 %dsitiin. brethren will receive Mr, \Icdd, and ('lintou, \\'e d,abt if of S. S. No. 4, lfurt'is. �p;lir ate lorcr _way mitts; ,111,1.' itt '1 the men i» ,11111 1111111 s.;,cnll 11
iecl( sweaters: 11 plir sucks; :1 "II''; Entrance I►esultS `VIII lie
a very hearty welcome. Refreshments a 1ellyr running ford of such ancieut The rent of the evening was spent \;. driving around in glle a hand in
jv1:itii1
pair se;uncus sr;l 11:1111•, 1till be served, exists 11111x5., in dnt►citg, j` bel; lug harvest the Crops, Found On PRS(` 5.
BOMBE/VS-EYE VIEW
Burning fiercely, crippled and out of control, His Mllga,ni-etas3 cruiser, one of Japan's hest, wal-
lows helplessly in the Pacific after the lads of limes ~ant's Navy had given her a going over from
torpedo n!anes and bombers, 'These ships usually ca rry a crew of 850 officers and men.
SUNDAY
SCHOOL
LESSON
LESSON 27
GOD THE CREATOR
Genesis 1, 2
PRINTED TEXT
Genesis 111.5, 24.31; 211
GOLDEN TEXT. -In the begin.
ning God created the heavens and
the earth. Genesis 1:1,
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
Time. --We do not know, and
never will on this earth, the time
when God created the universe.
We (lo not know exactly when
clean first appeared.
Place. -No one knows definit-
ely where the Garden of Eden
was located, but it is generally
agreed that it was somewhere on
the continent of Asia, and prob-
ably near where the Tigris and
Euphrates Rivers pour their
waters into the sea,
God The Creator
1. "In the beginning, God ere•
ated the heavens and the earth,"
The earth is the only particular
body in the whole universe that
is named. The heavens are defin-
itely and directly related to the
earth. Though ratan lives on the
earth, his thinking, his hopes and
his future, relate to heaven.
2, "And the earth was waste
and void; and darkness was upon
the face of the deep: and the
Spirit of God moved upon the
face of the waters." The desola-
tion here referred to is limited
to the land, to this earth, and is
not identified with the entire uni-
verse.
The First Day
3. "And God said, Let there be
light: and there was light. 4. And
God saw the light, that it wan
good: and God divided the light
from the darkness. 5. And God
called the light Day, and the dark-
ness he called Night. And there
was evening and there was morn-
ing, ono day." The first word
that proceeds front the mouth of
God in our Bible is the word
'light.' It is not said that God
created the darkness. Christ him-
self came to be the Light of the
world in a moral, intellectual and
spiritual way, as God here, in a
physical way, introduces light into
a dark world,
The Sixth Day
24. "And God said, Let the
earth bring forth living creatures
after their kind, cattle, and creep-
ing things, and beasts of the earth
after their kind: and it was so.
25, And God made the beasts of
the earth after their kind, and the
cattle after their kind, and every-
thing that creepeth upon the
earth after its kind: and God saw
that it \ea- good. 26, And Goa
said, Let us Make man in our
linage, after our likeness: and let
;hem have dominion over the fish
of the sea, and over the birds of
the heavens, and over the cattle,
and over all the earth, and over
e',ery creeping thing that creepeth
upon the earth. 27, And God cre-
ated elan in his own image, in tho
ineere of God created he itis(;
male and female created he them.
2 . And (God blessed them: and
(sod said unto thein, Be fruitful
and multiply, and replenish the
earth, and subdue it; and have
dominion over the fish uf the sea,
and over the birds of the heavens,
and over every living thing that
nun's' -h upon the earth. 2!I, And
(;od said, Behold, 1 have given
y')i every herb yielding : eed,
w'urlt is upon the face of the
earth, and every tree, in which is
the fruit of a tree yielding seed;
to you it shall be for food: 30,
and to every beast of the earth,
vat to every bird of the heavens,
arid to everything that creepeth
upon the earth, n herein there is
life, 1 have given every. green
herb fele food: and it was so. 31.
And God saw everything that he
had made, and, behold, it was
very gond. And there was eve-
ning and there was morning, ths
sixth day," As God ended the
work of each day, He declared
everything Ile had Made to be
good, which means that, origin-
ally, everything that was created
was perfect, that God manifested
fullness of wisdom in this
vast creation work. Of course, -
it should be remembered that wu
do not see the world as God cre-
ated it, for sin has for ages deep-
ly and terribly marred our earth.
We should obserie that rho order
of creation as revealed in this
brief description broken into a
series of six chronological periods,
is exactly in accord with the ideas
of modern /science as to the de-
velopment of the earth and life
upon the earth. We should know
that when God created man his
creative work ceased, and this also
is the verdict of modern science.
There has been no creative work
subsequent to the creation of
man.
The Seventh Day
1. "And the heavens and the
earth were finished, and all the
host of them." The two ideas of
cessation and perfection are em-
braced in the word here translated
'finished.' Not simply had God
paused in His activity, but the
divine idea of Itis universe had
been realized.
God's Provision For Man
The following factor should be
noted in God's perfect provision
for man's welfare as he began life
on this earth: (1) God made him
perfect, and that means he had
absolute soundness of body; (2)
he was given the great honor of
being made in the image of God;
(3) he was assigned dominion
over the whole earth; (4) he was
placed in an environment of ab-
eolute perfection; (5) he was
given work to do, and that means
he was equipped at once with the
Intelligence for doing it; (6) he
was commanded to replenish the
earth, and therefore knew what
God intended for him; (7) he was
forbidden to eat of the tree of
knowledge of good and evil, which
means, on the one hand, that he
was a moral creature, and would
be responsible for obedience to
that which is right, and, oil the
other hand, it implies the mercy
of God hi giving such a warning.
(Indeed it implies more, that God
is profoundly interested in mom's
welfare).
Few Men Rejected
By Canadian Navy
Surgeon -Capt• A..McCallum of
Ottawa, medical director-goneral
of the Royal Canadian Navy, said
in an interview in Winnipeg that
during the past 12 months the
Navy had examined 20,543 men
and only 11.4 percent had been
rejected.
The health standard of Canada
is "very high," be said, adding
the health picture was distorted
because sten rejected for military
service often were branded as
"unhealthy and medically unfit."
Surgeon -Capt. McCallum said
there have been reports that 40
percent of Canada's youth were
medically unfit and that "public
111011 have taken the figures from
the National War Services which
showed that 40 percent of 50,000
examined did not fall in ':1' cate-
gory.. .,,
He said reports that -10 percent
of Canada's youth were medically
unfit are "grossly exaggerated
through misinterpretation of fig-
ures."
"It savors of fifth column in-
spired rumors," he said.
A man may be rejected itt the
Navy because of color defects in
his vision yet he may be perfectly
healthy.
Great. ritain purchased 20,000
tons of cotton from the Belgian
Congo in 1941.
THIS CURIOUS WORLD
By William
Ferguson
i
DEl4T44 SONG
• OFA SVV7 r
1S NOTA NlYrboV.
WOUNDED SWANS HAVE
BEEN HEARD TO MAKE r4
MUSICAL SOUND
AS THEY SAILED
TO EARTH.
WA
HAT ARE
R MOCCASINS
• COVR IDN Err NEA SERVICE. INC,
SPHINX
MOT1-f-S
ARE NAMED FDR
THE MOTIONLESS!
SPH I NX• LIKE
. *91 POSES OF TH
LARVAE.
ANSWER. Water moccasins are semi -aquatic snakes infcstinr►
lagoons and sluggish waters of the southeastern United State
NEXT: The daily death toll of fire.
POP -Robin Holds the Trump
C`� {III 111 IIII
SASH
The Debunking Of
Charles Lindbergh
Predicton Made One Year
Ago Should riot be Forgotten
It tta' overlooked in all the ex•
ritenien1, bat the 1,Iloo•homber
It..\.I'. raid, on cologne and the
Itulu' marked an anniversary for
Phalle; .\, Lindbergh that should
not be forgotten, notes t\'aching.
1,111 merry -Go -Round.
1'.\acIly one year ago he solemn•
ly proclaimed at ;u1 .ltueriru First
rally in Ilollywood Hotel:
"The areu, 1110 terr;lins dud the
rlinlatie conditions of Great liri-
lain are not advantageous for fly-
tug.
lying. No matter how many lighting
planes lire 1011111 ill .\Iltl0'il"t turd
send to England, 11 is not possible
to base enough squadrons in the
British Isles to equal in striking
power the squadrons that Germany
can base on (tiu continent of
Europe.
"Suppose WO had all air fora
that wu could send to Europe.
\\'hero could it operate? Some of
our squadrons slight be bared lit
the British Isles; but it is physic-
ally impossible to base enough air-
craft in the British Isles alone to
equal to strength the aircraft that
can ho based on the continent of
Europe,"
Jlr, 1.iudburgh may be a disil-
lusioned elan; he is certainly a
discredited nein, says the St.
'1'houots 'Times -Journal. Everything
he predicted hue beelt wrong,
whether speaking as an aviation
expert or as a politician. ltecent
exploits of the Royal Alr ("0(00
must have been a shock to lila
amour propre. And the irony of
the situation is that he Is now
working for henry Ford to turn
out More bombers which will
prove hint still farther wrong.
SCOUTING .. .
The collecting of discurded
flower pots is the latest salvage
activity of Sarnia Boy Scouts.
'i'Ite pots sure washed and sold to
florists. The Money is used to
purchase Scout equipment.
r *
'l'he Boy Scouts of Belfast are
to assist in a "Searcher's
,Scheele," organized at the request
of the war office to operate in
that area of Ireland after enemy
air raids, 'l'he scheme was insti-
tuted to deal with inquiries re-
ceived from members of the
Forces concerning relatives in dis-
tricts where there has been a Naz'
air attack.
Following a collection of books
and magazines for soldiers' read -
Mg, the I3oy Scouts of Windsot
found themselves with five tons
unsuitable for the purpose. Sold
as paper salvage, a substantial
aunt was realized and contributed
to the "Chins Up" fund for the
war distressed Scouts of Britain.
* * *
Some English Boy Scouts were
delivering bundles of firewood, At
one house was a rather deaf old
lady, When she opened her door
the boys announced themselves
with a song beginning, "We're
the Paradise '.l'roop of Scouts."
Quickly the door was shut in their
faces. The Scouts left the wood
at a rear door. It later trans-
pired that the old lady had spent
a very had night, under the im-
pression that ''parachute troops"
had arrived.
* * *
A Boy Scout did tt good turn
on the running board of a doctor's
car during a recent 'Toronto
blackout. The doctor, on the way
to a home where tt baby was ex-
pected, was stopped because the
blackout sticker over his car head-
lights showed too much light, A
Boy Scout hopped on his running
boat'll and guided the doctor to
his destination with his blue -light
torch.
* s *
A $500 scholarship iu memory
of Sergeant Pilot Niall Burnet(,
It.C.A.F., a student al Presbyter-
ian Theological College, has been
established by his father, Editor
J. R, Barnett of The Charlotte-
town Guardian. The scholarship
will provide an annual award to
the student of the college doing
the most outstanding work in
youth training, preferably as a
Boy Scout leader, with especial
reference to the Montreal Chinese
Mission Scout Troop.
RADIO REPORTER
DIALING
GEORGIA DEY!
While many of the winter fav-
orites have gone by the hoard for
the summer holiday months, oth-
ers stay with us; and one of those
is Jimmie Fidler's Hollywood
Co0)111('1llarie5, :t1111et11, energetic,
dynamic Jimmie Fidler, has led an
active and interesting life, since
the lure of show business first
caught hint in its net some fifteen
years ago, Jimmie, for the past
few months, has been heard on a
network of Canadian stations on
Monday night, But his broadcast
of the 29th was the last on that
night -you'll hear hint this Sun-
day night at 9.30, and on Sundays
throughout the summer. Fred
Allen is holidaying, thlis the
feasibility of the new time.
* * *
There'll be some changes model
Thus went a popular song of not
WITH DAVE:
so long ago. .\rad when Charlie
Jlr('nrlh}''s program returns t�►
the airhun's oil Sunday, Scpti:tn•
her (4th, it will be quite 11 differ•
est show. Edgar and Charlie and
Ray Noble will he there all tight,
hitt :\bhott and Costello branch
out with the Andrews Slater; on
a :how of 1111.1/. „.vii.
* y •
The story of Parry Murdoch,
"Soldiers Wife," is the story of
Many women in Canadian hnuuOa
today; women whose tact( have►
joined the color.; -- women 1'.
are faced with a new, diffet'.'nt,
and often difficult world. Carry's
story is told daily on the CBO
network at 11.30 8.nl., under t14
banner of the 1Var 'Piste Prices
and 'Prado Hoard, Tlilla the pro-
gram heti double significance.
With coupon rationing now in
effect, the daily inemuges from
the Board, directed to the C;uia•
(tial) home -Worker, will help minty
woolen over the hurdlea of a new
war -time measure. You'll lik's
the story too --it's heard Monday
through Friday.
1150 Favorites
11any of the top-notch Cl Ot7
presented shows stay around (ler.
ing the summer months, including
the Sunday dramatic highlight
"Academy Award," heard at 6.13
p.m. The stirring "Songs Ous
Soldiers Sing," at 5,30 - Dr. 1:,
T. Salmon's news conunentnry al
6.00 -- and a number of after••
noon shows.
Two Wednesday night broad-
cast treats stay through the sum
neer too --- "Flying for Freedom''
at 8,00, and "The Bandwagon"
at 8.30!
OUR RADIO LOG
TORONTO STATIONS
OFAf 800k, CIII, 740k
OKOI. 680k, CUT 1010k
11.5. N1i'I'*OIUC8
Wl'AP N.H.C. Had 000k
WJZ N.A.C. mine 770k
WAUO ((0.11.0.) OSOk
WOO (JJLL) 710k
CADiAUf STATIONS
CFOS Orion 34. 149Ok
CIVIC ttr(mtltek 1180k
CHML Hamilton OOOk
CKTH St. Cath, 11130k
CFOP Montreal 000k
CF911,11 Say 1280k
covo Chatham 084k
OFI'L tLondoa 16TOkkk
c111.0slim``(}}toy 14Q4Qk
00(1 Sada 9!'.. M. 1400k
HORIZONTAL
1 Greek
goddess, also
called Diana.
7 Apollo was
her twin -.
13 Eel,
14 Dined.
16 Daily journal.
17 Entrance.
18 Wearied.
20 Otherwise.
21 Printer's
measure.
22 Prudent,
24 Connecting
word. 91 Adam's mate.
25 Negative, 43 Spike of corn.
26 Bovine animal 45 Changed.
27 Mother.
28 Uncle.
29 Diamond
cutter's cup.
31 Small duck.
32 Fray.
33 Because,
35 Circular
fortification.
37 Railroad
(abbr.),
39 Cloak.
CHAD Montreal 130k SHORT WAV,
uSI(L I((/kpad l,. 8OOk Gym I..gl.ad e.6184
Waterloo 1400k
CK Ottawa 1210k
C
taOnnB 'Mambas 14fOk
CK eadburT 700k
CICPD1yyy�� Ord 1 k
WWindsor k
MCP' Wr ■m 1 k
STATION3
WiC Dt.Halo 1&l0k
W (leekeeter 1190k
W Otaeletnati 700k
W ail' 11111 a.etsdy 810k
harsh 1020k
e 190k
000k
1
(110 Ragland WAN
001) Iinglaad 11.76aa
(101 iingl.a(1 11.8esn
481r 14aglaad 16.ldas
0110 17.7Pra
Q I1nglaa. 1L.&1ne
Q 1nrlita4 If.8lee1
OA Spain Milne
111A. Spain O.dd.,
tft�us4�ta tie0plee
MY ldaaafa 1�8.
WOEA S* .a.etady
iii4p pima. 16.0,5*
LOOM
GREEK GODDESS
T
Answer
0
•
AN
•
w
C
P_
T
R
IA
R
to Previous Puzzle 18 Towline..
•
AIT I 1 19 Not, bright,
M T 22 Dog
C
LuJ
T
L.1
f
A WKlL
1 LD
WTI
END
Sig AE
E
111
_ ,� 23 Eccentric
SHELF wheel.
P 25 She was
goddess of
weld
- .t
28 Hue.
28 Imbecile.
29 To expunge. \
30 Spanish coin..
34 36 Sle per's
couch,
38 Proportion,
40 Borough.
42 Guttural.
44 To do again.'
98 Contest for •
4 To gnaw. prize.
5 Form of "I." 47 Highest
6 Boat part. intellect.
7 Red vegetable. 48 Irish,
8 Alleged force, 50 Clamor,
9 To bind, 52 Marriage
10 To haul, settlement.
11 Formerly. 53 Verb,
12 Cereal grass, 55 Musical note.
15 Rottenstone, 56 Electric unit.
A
-r
1 2
.13
47 Modern.
49 To scatter,
51 Royal.
52 Male bee.
53 Helping.
54 To excite.
57 She was
goddess of
the --- .
58 She was a
4 5
--- of
animals (pl.).
4
I.7L.
14 IIS
VERTICAL
1 Wine vessel,
2 A round -up.
3 To decorate.
a
al
:25
31
37 38
' ;a\rdfi'.'i
7 48
j49
53
57
51
56
JUST FOR THATI
YOUNG MAN,
VOL CAN Go
TO MD •
-WITHOUT
'YOUR
DINNER,
By J. MILLAR WATT
Now ABOUT'
THAT MEDICINE
el HAVE TO
TAI,SC AFTER
MEALS
N.II syndlcntr. I0.1
•
rig
1
WILL LOVE TAKE LOY OFF SCREEN?
Honeymooning at Alianti Beach, film actress Jlyrntl Loy is nun•
committal about possible retirement from scree'', New husband,
John I). torero, Jr,, indicated wife's plan, didn't include film work.
SERIAL STORY
WANT -AD ROMANCE
BY TOM HORNER
THE STORY: Pretty, green•
eyed Kay Donovan, who has come
to the city to seek her inventor -
father, makes four friends and two
startling discoveries. The friends
are Ted Andrew, jobless salesman,
whom she meets on a park bench,
and MacLeod, Goldberg and Flynn
lawyers who advertise in the want
od columns for information as to
her whereabouts. From thein she
learns that her father has passed
atway, leaving her $428.85, u fac-
tory and a million cans of \Von-
4rosoap, the product in which he
had invested every thing. The
'kindly lawyers suggest that she
liquidate her holdings, but Kay is
determined to carry on the tsorlc
in which her father, along with
his chemist, Hans Stadt, now
sotnewherc in Texas, had faith,
even though she knows nothing
about it. She asks the lawyers
to find Ted Andrews for her, plan -
wing to make him Wondrosoap
males manager.
CHAPTER III
k:ALESMAN—Must he business•
getter with original ideas, your.
rhge to use them, to sell entirely
new product. Salary told coin -
missions, Only the best need
apply. Box 2013.
Kay Donovan waved the folded
newspaper under .attorney Flynn's
nose.
"'There, if that doesn't bring
bins in, nothing. wid. Unless he's
stopped reading the help wanten
ads. U'l ill:nks he's tops in sel-
ling; t.hat'criginal ideas at,d cour-
age to use thele' will cutch his
nye "
"You seem sure that this young
roan call sell Wondrosoap," Fly 1n
smiled patronizingly. "if he does,
P11 admit he's a marvel."
""Ted Andrews can sell any-
thing,"
Oqie"
FINE CUT
Down at Willow Creok in the foot-
hills ranching country of South-
western Alberta, tho Streeter
Brothers are famous throughout
the West for their fino Hereford
beef stock and the wild-eyed Brah-
man cattle thoy raise for rodeos.
BRAND OF THE
STREETER RANCH
000
i. s1.1ta,tlt
•I1e',, sold you- ern Ted .\n,l•
\"'," Ih1 sig Irl'hnuul Lun•h1'.t
1.1,11 ducked as hay hurled 11',0
paper at him, Il111 there (V,1'
i/,aghti r. '101 an1:er, 111 tilt' ',.1.1'1'11
eyes,
In alt. 1111'1'1' days he had k0u1\1
Katie Don0Vat, dike Flynn had
learned to lore the trirl. She
was much like her father --de-
termined, sell'-t'onfidenl, and once
she made 01) her mind there \ca,,
110 eh:m ting her lIVcistuns. ole
hn(I found that out when, \vitt)
11a(Leu l and I;ohlher;_, he hail
Vetoed the idea of her living at
the factory.
and tvht•re would be a better
place for Inc?" 16y demanded.
"1 have rent free. 1 can cool:
my (IVa meals, i tam's no hotel
lobby loafers uahling nie (1(1y
time I leave the elevator. I'm
going to plant a garden, too.
Raise vegetables., cut tlotV(l ex-
pense•.
:\lid that nits the (1 ay it turned
out.
(tight loot/, Alike was enjuyint,.
his cigar atter testing Iia}''x cull..
nary skill. He had to admit she
could cook. Not ('Ven 'Pint 1)ono•
van made tl hater Irish stew, Ili'
said as Much.
"\Iotlu'r taught ate, and she
taught I)ud too,," hay explained.
"It's the sane recipe."
Flynn tapped smoke rings from
his pursed lips. "Many the night,
hnti., your dad and I sat here
and talked about you. We grew
up together, 'Tint aid 1, in the
sante bloc!:. lrishtuwn they cal-
led it. \Viten It weren't fighting
the gang from across the tracks,
we fought Amon;;• ourselves, Many
the black eye 'rim and 1 gath-
ered together . ,
But Kay wasn't listening to
him. She rushed to the door.
"Alike-- .\ti. Flynn— there's it
can' stopping outside. 1)o you
think , . ,"
"Do I think it's that, young
lunatic that climbs up card tables?
Open the door and la's see. Or
would you rather be greeting hint
in the moonlight:",
Iiay blushed. An instant Inter
someone 'knocked. Then—
"I've found him This Andrew's
fellow!" Goldberg 1.110411!11,
A 1 *
Ted walked into the room be-
hind the attorney.
,"this is your future enlploy'et
—" the law'y'er began,
"You! Again!" 'Teti gasped,
"Why, yes." Kay was laughing
at his surprise. "1 inherited n
business. I'll an heiress—just as
,you said. I need the best sales -
ratan in the country, a nlan with
ideas aid"—she winked at Mike
Flynn—".outage to climb nut on
top of ten card tables,"
"All right, Miss Donovan, have
your fun," Ted tried to mako
his voice sound stern and bus(.
ness-like, "What's this high-pow-
ered sales job you wanted to see
me about?"
Kay explained, told hint about
her father, his successful patent
and his dreams for an all-purpose
cleaner. If Tim Donovan was
sure Wondrosoap was good, tt
would sell, provided it was backed
with a good sales campaign, She
alnted to know if he was willing
to give it a trial.
"And what do I get out of
this:"" Ted demanded. Kay look-
ed at Flynn and 1;oldh(l'g,
"You can have 211 11 week and
five tents cumuli` 11111 on every
oral of 11'oudrusoap you 1.11" --
Flynn and Goldberg smiled--- "or
you can loot. It ,loaner interel=t
in the business, and take the same
risks 1 rlo. I'll put up (lie east).
I'\ r )too :1;.4(H):'
The suaiie undorl0t lit ;t Iluici;
Iran, fornultion and beca0(e a
fi'ott11,
"Katie,'' hly'lul broke in, „you
can't hr giving away your busi-
ness life this- "
"If you sell," Goldbt•rg \yarned,
"this :1ndr(\\s trill take it\enty-
fiVo percent. and You'll s;l "
"You heard Int• offer'." as
\Voir( I.
"I'll tt(ke it the 2'.l percent of
the business, 101 salary," 'Ted
Stuck out Ili: hand. "ti;(,• your
lawyers draw up n eon111(1s ler';I
sign it tunlorrotl."
ata,- wailing for 'fed the
follot(in(4 morning 101(•0 lir caul('
110tt11 the road to the farlul'l.
"Nutt/ that you're part owner
of this outfit, you'd better have
a look at it."
"I'll hire to :ell \Von(bosnap,
not to wake it. That's your job,"
1w reinholed her.
She led hien through the plant,
At the mixing Val, somehow his
hand brushed hers. She flushed.
"'There are raw materials in the
storehouse to make another 1(1i1 -
lion cans of 11'un(iusoap," hay
said quickly. ":\t least so \i,,
Goldberg. gays, I don't know tho
formula, or the methods of mixing
it, but Ilan.,, Stadt will know, Ile
was Dad's chemist, ile'll lir back
from Texas soon and we can start
production again, 10a -cysts \V1'
won't need to right away, 'There's
plenty in the \'1II(lou'(•." She
led the way,
"11'10(( does this stuff look
Ted lifted a Lox from
the stacked rows, pulled elf a
hoard, extracted a can. He twisted
off the lid. "Loops like a greasy
shoe polish,"
Wondrosoap had little eye ap•
peal(, I1 \11(: black, apparently oily,
Ted smelled it, held the ran
under hay's nos.. She sniffed.
"No wonder it wouldn't sell,'
the super -salesman commented.
Ile dug some of the stuff right
out with his fingers, rubbed it
into the palet of his hand,
"Looks like a grease, but it
doesn't feel like it," Ile wiped
his hands with a handkerchief.
"Look! It doesn't leave a statin!
You'd never belowe there was
anything on that handkerchief."
"It \vill clean metal, too," lova}'
reminded Ilial, "Try some on
this doorknob." The knob was
dusty, blackened 11' grisly hands,
Ted applied the neater, wiped it
off again. The metal gleamed
like new br11s,
"Y011'e got something here,
Kay," h1 gri1ne.l broadly,
A BUSY -DAY DRESS
By Anne Adams
If you're a shirtfrock fun —
atld what smart women isn't —
you'1l want this Anne Adams pat-
tern, 1102. The yoked back
bodice is action -free; the front
yokes are in points. Collarless
version included,
Pattern 4102 is available In
misses' and women's sizes 14, .16,
13, 20, 82, 34, 36, 38, and 40,
Oise 16 takes 314 yards S5 -inch
fabric.
Send twenty cents (20e) ids
eoiva (stamps cannot be accepted)
for this Anne Adams pattern to
om 421, 78 Adelaide 8t. West,
Toronto. Write plainly sire, name,
addrese and at\y1s number.
"10.44. trot komoething here'
Mr. Andrews.
(tack in the office, Ted enthus-
iahticnlly outlined his Holes earn-
pl, ign.
"If you bale x plodurt Unit
you )cant to put (01 the market
with 11 holy. 11(114• 1could you 411)
11, Mhhi 1)ono%au?o
"1VI(y, I'd ;id It'll 1-e ll, of
(unnlr.'
"S1111,10-1 you "1101 1(1 create
interest in 11 cri ale a (holland
Ted wa
thinking 1(10101. "1'00
could use leaser ;Ids. That'; it,
Daily teaser-. 1\'e can start with
N'', N451 day He'll use 'WO',
then '\4(U' until lce'1'1• finally
spelled "ul '1V(udrosoap', Then
4\01 tell the co -towels (3(1(1, 11
1n and 101x1 It 1'1111 du. Iluy, (4,111
N, Mast tin ill off 'heir feel.
1Ve'li have them iwitahes 111 line
to Illy \\ uldrlr.— p, a(l..i Beat;ens
honlim.: ter nu,'e. It's ;a cinch,"
hay 11(1,1,'3 ,u el(11(11 a lure
"'That'• (1l mit rfu! idea," 111.
admitted. "ilii 1te can't aff0Itl 0
I) anti rid• ill;., rumpa(i; 0. That
ltutlld co,t noire Than n1' riot
,(1(9(11. I'ie o,lly .10(1 aunt 1 hale
to li4e (111 that."
Ted nodded glumly, his nubble
(•xp 0.11'(1. "1'11. (3111? 111 1111 len
bucks 1 Vol Inr fiud!ug you -hut
the ruun1 rent's due."
!loth o1' then( start d tit the
floor. Ted light, d a e1(a'11. The
drone of the electric fan was tin
4.0ly sound. 'Then Ted's grin re-
turned as he caught sight of the
lit wslialftr Kay' hold thrulV(( at
Flynn the night heron., still lying
i" the corner.
"iloney, ober! do 1"")1, e gu
when they want to get ne,Vspapet
0(14(rtl.vl1(4 for the 1(41(`1 money?"
I;ay ignored the "Hooey" and
ansn'eald "1 htoee't the slight-
ed ideal."
"\\'here you (' ent \l hon you
1(11(114(1 10 troop rue. \Viten. Flynn
and 31 o? od and Coldherg )Vent
I() trace you. \\het•. We 110111
Ott n1 to find joss, in the classi-
fitd section, It's a cinch." Ted
was ,shouting, his keen eyes bright
with enthusiasm.
"1Ve can reach all the customers
n1' (11 ed 1 1ste Want ails.
Welt mss the sante buildup, the
teasers, then give them the sides
message and every clay we'll list
a dealer. They'll let tis if we
promise e them a good profit. And
)let we can talk the classified
manager into n little pace one sox
on the strength of this campaign,"
Kay laughed. \Vood, 1-oan \4 as
on its, 41(0.
(To Be Continued)
Bonnet And Wig
Not Good Eating
It happened in ('hessinetott,
England.
The elephant. ((tls hungry and
the little old lady's straw bonnet
looked like food, so he tried t0
eat it, But that wasn't all ---
\\hell the elephant grabbed the
bonnet in his trunk he also lifted
away the little old lady's wig.
She stood there, bald and blush-
ing, until a clown of the ('h1ss-
iugton circles provided another hat
and wig. And worse, still, the ele-
phant found ncitlu'r hat nor 1Vig
to his likim,. He spat them out
(1) the sirens floor,
Fisherman's Luck
"•1•4,ht'ruhau's• luck," according
to Simnel Eddy, prol'c,,sor of zo-
ology at the 1'Aiversily of Min
uesnL'I, is 11. negligible factor in
fishing as compared with Ilo4cl-
e(1L!, of fish feeding habits,
methods of hied detection, and
seasonal (.11'(11^_c,•,
1\'riting in a recent 15.10 of the
Minnesota department of conser-
vation's offi(ial bulletin, Eddy ex-
plained that fish such as 1111,15,
sunfish, crappies and 1allheatls
,'al about (01(1('ut11 their body
%(eight per day during the sum -
Hier, and 1hal when this capacity
has been reached, a fi,<lt Will lake
little to no food the next 2) hours.
Walleye pike, he said, feed
store atter suusel and northern
mho often stop feeding at ,unset,
"I''islt usually feed bevaurit they
ore hungry, although some strike
because they are pugnacious," Ed-
dy said, "For example, 0 male
bags strike; at any moving object
near its nest although it does not
tat anything at this lime,"
All fish, he said, cous,nne more
food in hummer than in winter,
and in almost till fish growth is
slower iu winter than in summer.
Water temperature is the chief
factor in determining amount of
food taken and g1'owth, Eddy oar
1)111111(•1.
Lists War Aims
Of United Nations
The joint Statement of Roose-
velt and Churchill, known as the
Atlantic Charter, Look observes,
lists the war aims of the United
Nations, They are, briefly: No
Fssession of territories by force.
reedom and self-government for
all. Equal access by all to raw 1taberiale, improved standards of
ving for the world. Peace and
*adorn of the rens. Collective
eeeis4t t against aggression.
Ota
"iiice lirispies” is a regis-
tered trade mark of Kellogg
('onhpany of Canada 1,1(10 -
ted, for its brand of oven -
popped rice. Get some today!
KRISPIES
TAE TAL(S
By SADIE B. CHAMBERS
Summer Beverages
:1s n'1' consider the subject of
beverages, immediately we think
of the )0)1 talked of topic-- that
of ''Tea Rationing." Fortunately
it is summer and many ideas pre-
sent themselves to our minds. As
we acquire 11. habit of some of
the other beverages may we also
acquire the habit, of being able
to do without that cup of tea,
which in the enol may he more
healthful.
Iced Chocolate Milk
Mix equal part., o1' chilled mill,
and prepared cocoa as for drink-
ing. Add a teaspoonful of maple
syrup or ear;lau(•1 syrup. Shake
thoroughly. .1.111 one teaspoon of
maple ice ('1'(1;(11 in an iced coffee
Blas,<. Serve with a spoon.
Or try this ---1')101 a large tea-
spoon of Vanillas ice (1(14(11 in an
iced tea or cot' fee glass; add 'u
cup of milk, then pour in gingct
ale to fill the glass, stirring all
the while, Drink at 0110e,
Flavor iced milk \Vith maple
sugar, with brown sugar, or with
melted chocolate peppermints,
Heat 1ar(e chocolate mints in the
upper Dart of the double boiler.
When melted .stir Into the mi11;-
Mint Punch
1 cup dropped 1'((1(4 mint Icaves
l cup powdered sugar
1z cup lemon juice
4 cup,; orange juice
1 quart •4ingeratle
(Pushed ice and mint sprigs
Rub the paint leaves and 'ug11
t0gct1l1r until gal mixed. Add
lemon and (orange juice, Allow
to stand for at least 15 minutes
in a cold p!1cc, Strain and add
the gingernl1. four into glasses
half full of ericket! iec. Garnish
each glass with mint sprigs,
Wedding Punch
1 cups sugar
2 claps orange juice.
2 cups 1(1)1011 juice
2 cups pineapple punch
1 pint. bottle maraschino cherries
Ir.
2 quarts charged water
Combine sugar and fruit juices
and let stand until the sugar is
dissolved, add the cherries and
ice, Just before serving add the
fizzing \vat( 1•, Garnish with
slices o1' orange and lemon, Serves
30.
Spanish Chocolate
4 s(lua•es of unswetl(u.d
chocolate
2 cup: water
teaspoon salt
6 tablespoons sugar
(i cups milk
1 shale nutmeg
1 shake cinnamon
"It teaspoon Vanilla
(rut chocolate into pieces. Place
in double boiler over hot water.
When melted add sugar, ((alt, cin-
namon and nutmeg, i'IAce °Vet
direct heat, stirring constantly,
and 11011 5 minutes. Return to
double boiler and continue to cook
the chocolate as long as you can.
Slowly add the milli 0 little at a
time, stirring. constantly, 1111en
the chocolate becomes completely
heated beat it vigorously with a
rotary beater. Add \anilltt. Foam
and froth will forth — this will
give it lightness. Then serve and
there will he many calls for sec-
onds,
1)0 not serve heavy sweet crakes
or frosted cakes with this. Here
is a chance to be patriotic. Serve
light salted wafers or plain sand-
wiches.
The long cooking of the choco-
late, spices and the heating are
important,
M11s% Chnuuher, (4elronu•s persona!
letters front Interested renders. she
1■ pleased to revel%e .IKK-erlions
on toples for lier column, stud Is
vn rend,' la HMI ell to 'sur ::pel
peel es." its -quests for recipes 411
spceis,I memos are In order. Address
your letters to "Miss Sadie 11. t''tunn•
hers, 7:1 Rest Adelaide Street, 'To-
ronto.'' Send stumped self-addressed
eI(tlope If you (Gilt a reply.
Sows' Ears Make
Good Silk Purses
\Vito ;tit's you raat ;oche a silk
purse out of a .,oar's car'!
The \voltam 111101Iiers of 1311011(5
for :America challe(g( the old
saying.
A look at the products of their
sewing ('00111(1 ill their 25(1
branches scattered throughout. Hal
United States shows it can bo
done.
There's a t\ indbreaker, made of
leather scraps from old pal: -es.
Anil a child's raincoat and hood
made 11'01(1 al shower curtain, 111•
cnrate(1 with red rubber flowers
cut front an old pair of rubber
gloves.
Children's bedroom slippers are
made 11ou1 men's old lei( hats.
1•'or buttons, the women u: u
wooden rounds sawed from broom-
stick handles, crocheted fasten-
ings, shells and buttons (rut from
bones from the butcher's.
Bundles for America, with a
250,000 membership, now sends
some 10,00(1 garments a week to
the Navy Relief Society for dis-
tribution to needy families of
United States service men.
Their next concern i1 the cloth-
ing of the 5,00(1,000 110graut: who
are in need of help in mid -western
state;.
Their absolute rule 1(: Buy
nothing•, use only salvaged ma-
terials.
Clocks Time Before
Pulling Rip Cord
1.1. Walter Gallaher, :\1u1rican
fighter pilot in Australia, baled
out of ho plane at 25.000 feet
over Port Moresby, and calmly
consulted his 1VIlt(!1 to count the
seconds before pulling• his rip
turd at '0,000 feet,.
This story was recounted ru-
cently in a Melbourne radio
broadcast heard by CBS.
Lt, Gallaher's plane .was hit
during 11 "dogfight" with Japan-
ese 'Zero fighters and the pilot had
to jump. With a strong wind plow-
ing, he realized he had to delay
upon:ng lois parachute for several
thousand feet to avoid landing :n
the sea,
('locking himself whist hurtling
through the air for 5,000 feet, let.
Gallaher pulled the curd, and by
manipulating' the shroud lines ha
II18(iaged to land 111 the 101d1111 of
a jungle, 111' plane crasher! fivo
Aliles aorto'.
Canadian Spotted
Dressed -Up Nazis
This story is told in 1(11 l.ng(4141
newspaper:
\Vn 110.11, 44( 1lllg tit. •ua torn1.
of Nazi ,11111 11 ;Ind seldit , wall,
('11 in_(1 diel' 1111'nllgh \\'ort11i1(1;
st .1114 during the 40014.1',1.1 c1rr)-
1114 litchi (thrall h 1111,1)- 11(1i1P'.
iatdl's ar1(1,. 'They rep:(»(111.,1 .1
plr11hntist and a glide.. (In° 11x41
.'just. landed". No one teal; any
notice of thein. 1:1(in a pel'eemal
ate Idem no more tress:: a vers.
(try g11(101. 41'13,•; \ver. 1)4 ltIiali}
lopped 111)11 r11aIle111..;1 11 a (•:n1-
,011111 ,,oldicr.
The '.enemy- prat ((l to of (1n
t'anadi;ul snhlicrs \tin) 11,: - ou
their 11 (3 to git1' it iti 1111•) 111
t'PVil 1(1'(1111'e \Vollit 1s (1), (rte (11,.
11.'0 ion ut en1 my troops.
TOPITc
af/asecf
Bites—
Hcat Rash
l -or q,hlelc reset from It(1111•g ,.1 1ir••1•1 1 (11.:. 14•'n4
rash, athh•h'v h'ot. er4t''et "•a ):1eer'',11rnata
roue., >1,111 tr"uhl••=. u•1' 1n..1-,:rt:a •. 1'111,1.,•, nm(-
(ePtic. Ilgnl.l 11. 11. 11. I'rrer';,•1 wn 1;1', •.I•':•
ntalnlr�'- So.,1111.slrr11rl( II 11•d.,u!(1Jt,:o;l=lalrtr,,'
(using.:a:.,•trial bottle p-It,..rinn. t a.. A•4
rem-drii -(0 twin) for D. D. D. Pr1SCroP11014.
ISSUE 27—'42
r
Page 4:
iCt0{411000CICACIOCICtittttreteftietilttlitt4441004100641414111141t414(1001PMERVIRKII
A
J. H. R. Elliott. Gordon Elliott
INSURE NOW! AND BE ASSURED.
Elliott Insurance Agency
CAR—FI RE—LI FE—SICKNESS—ACCIDENT.
BLYTH— ONT.
Office Phone 101. Residenee Phone 12 or 140.
"COURTESY AND SERVICE"
t371NNIID;;ata NP,N)rirar2(N trot?I?Iotar Na i19iARlitItt),NNM)I tib)tell?tDtDt'tat1311t1dr;i18raialttPt
ITH E FINEST
EYESIGHT SERVICE
YOU EVER HAi)!
N0 hit and rim method., he -e.
Your rye are thoroughly examin-
ed and ya 1 are gold the Truth
about them. if gla,;sr; are 1)e;:
nary, you get the fine: t duality at
flit' lowest prices. 'i'wellty-ti\•'
year:; experience in Optometry is
your guarantee of Satisfaction
In Willows Drug Store, Blyth,
R. A. Reid, R.O.
EYESIGHT SPECIALIST
Appointments with Mr, Willows
PHIL OSIPHER OI11
LAZY MEADOWS.
BY HARRY J. BOYLE,
The Phil (tsifor family has just
been picked as the typical family of
Canada. Vint may be surprised at
that. Sul•;•rise, is 110 \y1);d to describe
my feelings when a car drove into the
Ianeway one clay and an excited young
(man jumped out and started ordering
100 around. ile shoved a card into may
hand a'.d a whole mouthful of words
and expected me to understand what
he las :.lyit:g.
Ihonyand and one idem in a minute.
We refused all of them and finally
they Started I0ening to what we tool
them at oat the 1•,(y we live On the 11
farm, 'l'hey were atoned. Finally,
they gave up their 1111eel' notions al'oit
the farmer; of Canada and made their '
filo, it just goes to show you how ,
'WI(' city people actually do huo\w
about their country cousins,
Finally he calmed down and said
that he wanted to take a fila of the
family and the general doings here at
Lazy Meadows. It seems that we
were pLard as the average Canadian
family and he wanted to start taking
Pictures ri_'ht away. We're all hlnna11
and tlt.:t y Jung moan had a way with
him. 1n .,pito of Mrs. Phil's doubts on
the Thole affair i agreed and the crew
a11'i%'e(: P9X1 ulurnin;.
BELGRAVE
The Red (';;i s su:•ir•ly held its an•
nual entertainment 011 \Wedacsduy
night at the hum(' of Mr. and Mit.
John McGill, lth line Morris. 'There
was ;1 large attendance present. The
prog1',itu \vas presented by a group of
It,A.I''. men, under the direction of
Flight -Lieut. Murray, from the Radio
School at Clinton. The concert party
was introduced to the audience by C.
R. Coolies, the I'rc;ideut. The musi-
cal program was much enjoyed by all.
Following the program, Mingo wa';
enjoyed and dancing with Arthur'.;
Orche-ara, supplying the music.
•
,lunch counter and refreshment Loath
al -o did a thriving business. Abu.11
Midnight the lucky licktt was drawn
for the call', donated Ly C. It. Coolie:
.anti the lucky winner proved to be
Cameron of \\'inghanl. 'i'lle Red
Cross Society benefited by over five
hundred dollars after cxpen'.:es were
paid.
There
ted Church on Sunday, owing to the
anniversary services in Brick United
Church. Rev. Reba Verne of Varna
was the gue3t speaker and gave two
very Inapil'i11g addresses. During the
morning service .Solos by Mrs. George
'T'ay'lor, and a duet by 3115. L. \Wigh.t-
nuul and Beatrice\ Beecroft were en-
joyed. At the evening service, the
male quartette, Ross Ander.:on, Clif-
ton Walsh. Norman Keating and (leo,
Johnston from l.ielgrave United church
ic. 'TI
\Wearing scale of the strangest
cloths I have ever seen in my life,
this gang' 01 young fellows swarmed
over the place like a bunch of ants
over a honey -pail Rd. They unloaded
crate after crate of complicated look-
ing machinery. 'Then the fun really
•started. \\'e may have been the aver'•
age fancily. ... but they tried desper-
ately hard to make us anything but
the average. They argued and hag •1
ed over •;illy, little pieces 11; paper
8101 what they called "shooting loca-
tions."
was no church in Knox 1)ui-
supplied the special mus 11'
011 111'011 was nicely decorated with
stammer flowers for the services.
James McCrea
Jlt'. Jack .\rmst.rong of Brampton. itor with his parents, Robert and
Gibson Arnt'st rang of New Illanlburg, I McCrcu.
',spent Sunday at their home here. I Miss Margaret Sparring of Clinton
THE STALhDARD i
Bank Nite and A Fishing Trip,
BY
J. S. MacKINNON
\l'hon the citizen:; of lilyth and surrounding country, certain Ineln-
'blrs of the Council, the Editor of the Standard and the Merchants
jolt forces to malt() a success of a plan it is a forgone conclusion
flat the plan twill become an accomplished fact.
This has been fully exemplified in what has helm designated as
', Rank Nite."
On a Saturday evening last summer I hall the plear;mre of being
pct •''rat on one of these occasions and .udging Ity the cpiuions I heard
c\pressed "a good time \vas hall by all."
1111 the afternoon of that particular day I \vas having a chat with
Mi, It. Sillib and the con\('( :Minn turned to the loin that was 11) 1011)'
place that evening in front of the 3leluorial hall. .\s our tall pro -
(cede'', I discovered that my mend had mode a consi,leraldle number
of purchases and as I had made a 1(1' we w'e11' eligible to p;u'1icipnte
in the draw Iturhlg our ronyer,::ltion it did not take us long 10 roll -
IOC(' 01115011 is that In the e%1'lling \ye would both be in 1111' looney,
a1.11
so convinced were Ave (hal we actually decide,' how 1t', were
going l0 ,-pend that money.
It is not Iheyallging any sccrl1 \\ hen i lay we \were going 11m a fish-
ing trip. hi the early evening 1 \vent over 10 Mr. tlitlib's and as I did
rot have any fishing tactile with n1., 31r. Sillib got his out, as he said
he would, and 110 certainly had an ample ;lssortmu+ml,
11'e t'x;unined the rods, reels, lines, flies, hooks rind shoot and
01 en the creel for bringing the fish holo \1'e diel not deride In
\\•hum we might give a part of the catch but if ,vi. bad 1 and care
Reeve \\''n. Jlnrritl should have some. James Sines Is such an ardent
fi(•:lelnt.ul he deser\ed a fe\w, the Editor of "'I'l' 5111ndard" should
001111' in fora share and we would have 10 keep • .,nu' for ourselves.
That 10, -kis 11(11' quite a big order, No rash pruuli.es wen, mule, taut
that might have been a possible distribution.
baler in the evening we \vent up town to get Ih,' money. \\'e
AIM not go up together but Ivo \y'en. both in the crowd. To 1111 it ((115
a teal pleasure Io (11x11 many 1liends 011(1 what is probably equally
in:pl/r•laltl to 1110.1ke ;sn111e Ill'\\' odes.
Mr, .1. A. (tray 1•as the 3111-101' of l'or01101105 that ',articular; \'1'n•
;11111 it \\' (5 ;,)11 11'1'111 that eve' ythlll, \vas 111 readiness our 1111
d:aw•. The Churn was given several rr%,Ilrltions and \I r. Sillib and
u,yiell \\•c'r1 on Ihh1 tip•1Ie of cxpeetati 1(1 and still confident that 111'
\\mild Le among the winners, even if 11 \very some 01 the 501(1111
amounts, and then we \void,' have that fishing Trip.
Air, Gray started 10 11111 out the names of the winners, and 1yh111
lohad finished \1 r. Si111h's nano. and my moue were con Lie:ions by
t:)eir absence, however, Ave had the pleasure of congratulating rumu'
of the "Lucky Ones."
'I'Itc next day was Sunday and it is said 11fish never trite 011
Sunday, the following day it rained and s:lo:'tly afterwards I left
ltlyth for 'Toronto and we never had our days 1lshhlg.
There is another day coining and if I am in Myth on a 11 Ink Nite,
I hope 'Al r. Sillib and 1 will be more fortun ole and that eventually we
will have that fishing trip, and if w•1 (10 1'e 1'111 wta:t oat (11th the
fishcl11lan's player on our lips:
"';.) give ns grace to valid) son11' (lull
15o lig that 011(11 I
In speaking of them ohm\•:11'(15
11ay 11ever veld to lie."
If the next lisle 1'. are 1101. smcc'e'•sful we c811 again 1111(1 the
satisfaclfon of cougr;tttllating 1110 Luc•:(ry persons, and perhaps in some
Away or other we may manage to lave that days fishing, hut we have
tint 810011 up lope of being "in the money" on some Punk Nile,
was a
week -end
vis -
I won't tell you of the scenes which
they' actually yid take. 11) place o:
that we'll talk about the ones which
they wanted and about 1.111011 we mode
nucha fins that they were finally de•
leted, 1 rya.; Iealin,; over to pick up
some chips i1) the hack yard when one
of the directors in the gang 6:11• the.
patches on the scat 01 my overalls.
They wanted to take a close-up of a
rear-1iew of me stooping over. \\'.
argued a' oat 111at for hours tut I re..
fo•o•d to give hi.
They. were glum and sour -IO )kIug.
One of the Wren chanced to go out In
the 1 •'ck (\ .0d -;led. Ile saw the old
tub in 1.111ch the S.11'n'day evening;
balk ritual is perforated. Ile turgor all
about the patch.;, \\'ouldn't I just
lake a bath in the old tub. It 1•ot11d
:mike ;n1 excellent scene. They fere
off in a cloud of rapture at the
thought uf having, the lathe! lig up in
that 1):l Iib. 11 1015 a inarv.lon:;
i)1ea. Of coarse they would do that.
I;y the time that I had a chance to
protest th^y w"re planning all the in-
timate clot •1;1 of it. They even hail •
the 1 set up i1) Ile. w'o 1(I -:;hod.
Aly ;Ira; a; of milking a fills were not
' I' at nail i refused and
th1; 111..41101. 1 ronliaard to refuse.
They '; tried. L'idn'l 1 \vat:, 10 10•0p•
Prate? All the 11.111y\cooll mimic act-
ors ant actresses were ready al a
laments notice 10 peel for a seem)
like that. It was so homey. I still
pt'r.i ,tel: in my refusal.
There were plenty of ideas like that.
They wanted Mrs. Phil and 1 to 1)050
in bell with long, cotton nightgowns
on. One of them( actually wanted to
cut a balf•ntoon in the door of the
little hoose in the back -yard to make
it seem more realistic. They had a
•
spent I1he
Wheeler.
Mr. and Mrs, ('tell :Armstrong of
Kitchener, with rol11tiv05 here.
week,. end with \'.lora
yea
Wednesday, July' 1, 19,12,
Rayon Tablecloths 75c
Bright I'11ti(l5
Women's Panties 39C
BI'i'\'ily Style
Straight -Cut Slips 1.00
satin Finish
Men's Cotton Work Sox
2 Pair For 35c.
MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
white ,tall Colours
9OC, 1.50, 1.85.
WETTLAUFER'S
The ('ro1111 t e union
w 1i 111 ,111 01 111:.
(1111.11 a '
loth line Midge un ;' Il11rd;ty
pienie was en•iuyl'd.
la Vali' min of Exeter :,I11'nt
f1(% days with regal;0:":.
EAS'1' 11' i'e',VANOS[I
Mr. u1111 •\Irs. Findlay \Ie:;u\van and
1181'1111)11 1)C 10lla\•a > 1;''nt ;t f' (0 d,ty;
with .\Ir. and \Ir,. .\lex. \Iotl,lw.tn.
;t Their (hi 1101 \I;1)}'..t r' I, (0111( ha+
I r1')I 11111'odl),g ,1 lord 11-51., ale 111.
p111111 (1 1111'111 1111 their 110(111 1111 5o111•
Kenneth \\'heeler of 1I 1llillon ,I'co11 day,
the we( Ic end \wilb his parnt5 I('te• mi„ \'ah1•I
I'hr lir'g1.11.e Selll:al Fair (\•i11 11.
111'111 011 Monday, 51.111 mler ':sl Ill•:
yl :Ir. .\ Ir\w r 'lin lIs 1(1.' ealerilig Thi:
year for the lint time, a;,11 the ,'h 1.
' 1'xlibiliI':; now 1. 11,1"1 Id' 5.5. ' 1.
1• 111, 11 and I:; 1(1 1•:,151 \\'.1(\ 111 0.11: .
I, and 7 111' Morris, 1'.'.S. No. 7. 1• 1 •1
and \\'1'.:I \\';I\\.ino-!,. and
Hill 17, Ia.l,l \\'a\%.ul,H11 811d \I'11'ri,,
•
I I, Idie \1'111' ler (Ow 51)1'01 the 11•I>1lyntr at \Cr•11111 University nal the
Ias1 f1 (0 \vetk5 teaeht1(3 on Ili -1 Ill
of one of lamilon's I'u'lir S, 11::111 . Ir0
(1 110 111,11 to his home here.
The regular monthly meeting •11 Cr.
1Srlgiaye Red ('1'1 s Sr:'i1.13 \vas held
in 111e w•.Irkc rooms 111' Thr 1,311,1, om Hind \)r. and \11',. 1;1104i. 1'1111111.111.
hridtty al'1ornonm. 1%1111 Thr 111'e,'1'n'. 'fu' 1 ((ns: 111" HSI of 111.1111111'
1', 11. (0)1111 5, 111 charge. 'I'lie sl ,l.. ti I:; for S.S. \' 1, 111. 1'":1.1 \\;tw•an 1511:
no•111 rat' the 1:ulertainnionl 11..1d \\'1'11.1 'I'o (1x111, t.I i Iys 1.1,w, lunnnr:
1(c-Ilay night w•es rend ed. .\ letter \I;ug:1i1'1 Mar -hall. 1(1(1'(.'5.
1)l' Ih outs, to )1r. 1001 \I N. ,101111 \1:' To 1.1ad1 1\'iIn11'1 Ill"t1 •! e', \111•
It:;l fur 1(1 use of their hem, and 111'1 d ('110'1'1. 11 1m en •. I1;•1.hv 1
g10011:(15, (v 01
as 01'4 fl'nln 111:' Sorl1 Iy, ( I'1) ItI'.1d : ,1,111'} 1(,111.1,'11, h n-
I'he Society i= (cry anxious that 1111x,' ours,
1(urlter5 laky n slime in the niakin:: 1'11 1;:ail•' 1 11111,1111 111i1.1. ''1) n•
of 1(11i1•lo0 and 11itling a5 .1 L11:'1 n0endpd.
(1(11:1:1 is being 05111'11 11'0111 1111 Suri(.•'1'11 1;",1111' 1 1(1.111.;"1111 10'11: 11111.
'I'o 1.r1d1'•
tips and 1111. nerd is \•"rt• urgool. I'0nua l.n(c.
I.rario 1-Sla111t y tO li h 1. I.11}:•11
No ,er(fce next Sunday in 'Trinity
1,Inus10 1 10111:'11
l'h trlh, but I11e IollIw•t11g Sunday. Mel.1)wan.
S1.rvt0e at I1.:.n 11.111.
Cold, I' :
\i 111'0 For gr;unlpmrl'ut \I r, and
\Ir,. It. I'. \lei10w•;tn on Thursday.
Alis, I'L•t.' 311(0(01 left im I rid Iy
I'1n (11( w1'01c, al 1.111(1(15 1.1-t Lud
,\111,-111:,11,
11: I'181I I.:n1:::1111I Tell on 'I'ur
day morning to ,p 1111 the vacation at
her to 01111 r', horn,', ('.1111. C. I{. 'Tot!,
raj Kira -11)11.
\Ir. It beet \let;,larriI, of 1linne.
I;c:1, aril til,-i,h•r, ,\Ir I1,Ihh. anr1
11 ,111. 111 '1.1.1 oat 'r, 00.111 ,1 un 1111 it
cousins, the >11t111wan:, 111 Mund ty
11111'1.11111111.
Mr \I thou and sun. .Alfred, of NI -
010r8 I all:. Oiled iter lite (0 l-
1.1111 will) \1 r. ;11111 \Ir;. ,1,1110 ('lldwetl
SUGAR RATIONING by CO
1
1.
IS NOW IN EFFECT
DO NOT USE THESE COUPONS UNTIL TOLD TO DO 50
1
1
PORI.. NO. 1(.e..)
DOMINION gir, CANADA
Temporary War Ration Card
Ratlonnement de Guerre Carte Tomporalre
Serial No,
No, de aerie
Name
Nom
(Leif Name—Nom ItrlemfI.) (First Name(,)—Pr nom(s)
Addreu
Adress.
Number—Numlto Sitter—Ru City—C114 County—Comt4
Ate it under 16 yrs.
Ate, au•deaeou. de 16 alt
teed b The WartimM
e oo. and Trade Saud
Lmta par 1.a Comm�en deo Arta et du eem,neree en temp. de Serra
SUCRE
1
Good Aug. 24
and thereafter
SUCRE
1
Good Aug. 10
and thereafter
SU AR i SUNAR 1 SUQAR
a
1
Good July 27 Good July 13 Good July 1
and thereafter and thereafter and thereafter
The above is facsimile only
aitd cannot he used.
\1,11::8) '•t
Clare Mi Ti' 11.111.r.
PON
SOME IMPORTANT POINTS
ABOUT YOUR RATION CARD
1. A Ration Card is required for each
individual person, regardless of age.
2. Each numbered coupon is good for
a two weeks' ration of 1 lb. of sugar.
3. Coupon No. 1 is good July 1st;
coupon No, 2, July 13th; coupon No. 3,
July 27th; coupon No, 4, August 10th;
coupon No, 5, August 241h,
4. Coupons cannot be tried before the
specified dates, but may be used any
time afterwards,
5. Only coupons 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 can
be used for sugar buying,
6. Do not use coupons A, B, C, D and
E, unless instructions are issued by The
Wartime Prices and Trade Board. Do not
detach them.
7, Coupons must be detached in the
presence of your retailer. He will riot
accept loose, detached coupons.
8. If you do the buying for your home,
or for a number of people, you may
purchase sugar for thein by taking their
ration cards with you to the store.
9. If you order by telephone, coupons
must be detached in the presence of, or
by the delivery man.
10, Retailers may hold customers' ration
cards and detach coupons for them in
cases where customers are not ordinarily
at home to take delivery; or in the case
of summer cottagers having deliveries
made by mail or express.
11. If you go visiting for a week or
more, you should take your 1 ..tion card
with you for your hmt to use.
12, If you are a regular boarder in a
house, you should turn your ration card
over to your landlady so she may secure
your sugar allowance.
13. You do not use coupons for the
purchase of sugar for preserving, can-
ning, jam or jelly making. Additional
quantities are allowed for these pur-
poses, for which you sign a special
Sugar Purchase Voucher, which your
grocer will give you.
14, You do not require coupons for
sugar that you consume in restaurants
or public eating places. Those places are
rationed and can only serve limited
quantities to their customers.
15, \lisp -e 1)l' r;lli011 rouputi; is illi
gal and offrndu•s are liable l0 pro(1'
cation,
16. 11e11l:r1 111 1111' nearest \V81 11lt1
Prices 101d 'Trade 1(0:1111 rl'fi1e 181 fl'
yu.l lose your earn, Thi if you change
y1 n mune 01' address,
17. II' additional ration cards arc need•
ed for new I0'110;, 1.r 11110 Canadian
residents, 1•rite to the n1'arest \\'d' -
time ('rices toad 'Trade Coarct office.
SR 4
1Ve(1nesclay, July I, 1942, '
THE STANDARD! "1 Pat &
•,.♦Lo0.":.+0.•♦•.0...........1..1.0...1.........0...1.0...1. 1 LON I) It;�i l OItO 1 1 1 1 (� i i SCI 10011 i wt ,;191°1, 'p!'r Tr y J 91N•; ,,,, 1) 1 1, r 1 1. s y�e y�+e+e �el�rl,e., �1e �t1s 0���cue� b
1/ ♦ 1 1 '1.11 R M . ''l,' 14'- t'.:VI'f. Ytv'W'C, -, v IYIe
lis r s r s r 5���r� .Ri' CtdtCle etc K'/Ct1: 4I t \ _ ►1 t/
1; L\ (1 11'1 IiI1,A I Ith� :`: ih :'11111,,1., 14 ,!I I:,;Id1M Party
1;N'I'Rr1N('l: Rl�,�l'l,'I'�, ItOX1"111E E 11tE, CAPITA', 111EA1.RL 1tEGEN7. T IJEA1.,11E
;t, WING AM—ONTARIO, t ,�, — CLINTON. GODERICH. SEAFORTH. A
14 r\ 1 , ;1: )\1111.11. a;t, III'i ;la Tae.^115 night 1 1.9 g
f' BBl\'lh (entre, ;,y Now— "BALL OF FIRE" with Now: "Ellery Queen & The Perfect Now: A t.rneiy and thrilling adven•
(� 1 WO s. 10\1\'h �Zlt. Night .• 1.1 I, ;11 (' ,i itt toil'; II'lll 55;1.• a !;�• 11.1- 1� Gary Cooper & Barbara Stan wyck. Ci one" with "81()01)11. Has Servant lure—"Secret Agent Of Japan„
rhurs„ Fri„ Sat., July 2.3• i:, 1 1 •,,;r, 1 . , it uul 1•, el y , 1.111 11,1101. First this.; Honours I i;/ ;)t cl'Md or il*' - Trouble," A
_floe E. Brown Frances Robinson:: 110.10 lu the 1.4110 ' + ul' the 1\'r.tllle,' 1101.1 1.14011.1) :\rc111uu14;11111, Ito: i� Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
(+ in i Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
';: «-� r r\ 1� Ihr prpllunl \ca: h' .I 1111)01.1. t'h,, Buchanan, 1;1111;1 1(1 1101':ill, llnLr'rt (� Edward Arnold, Walter Huston, Monday, Tuesday, Wednr.sday. 44 1„
': i S) 1111 Won't Tani, 111111 r, r nl; ,I.1'I nl' : ,r;1n'b','r.11'. and 1'trkrv. ti Jane Darwrll and Simone Simon. 1/,1��:� O1' 1/:�1tI��� �0IiJ,r (Zl 1111. ItilZlll(lS
'4,..','Thrills and I:ingh; in lid- 1 ,111,,I1.. ;ill Idiot:. ,l' ,;111!14, and I1Ih1'r 1,Ikit ' Second 1'111:. 1110101.; r v to 71 per lY �t `'tll'� 1`' �' II \ `r I"t li ' ,Ih', Ir Ill' -' 11.11 li II r u,h' • 11'1101 .1!.,, 1 brill1,1th Technicolor Irtu•ical set
starring Joe, E. Brown 5511 fully 1 1141 4 I by ; .I. The 111.1- 61.011 K(nnetll Brigham, I' 111111 cow. y 1 Thal
111” 1,-1,:Y*: ♦ n the enc 414 cattle
;at.4 ranches, of
♦Also "Comedy' "Sport Subject';. s a I''I,', I''rl1611 }111.1 1150 1.111:11''" Iia\tohalt cattle ranches,
"News" 1;1.101 551. 1141. p, I), I.1..!.; and \Ili'.," 110, 11114 (()11;0.1), .1()51.1. 111111. :111 I ILII) }1110( 1' (1111 11111' 1101 d o - 41 111.11•141 t3etty Grabie, Victor Mature and d
pr, 44, 011. 11 14)' 1110 .111111.0 I 11.;un:lli,• ' Pass (I;11 t , G:1 per 1.1.011 linrll'nl ''' Michele Morgan, Paul Henreid and Jack Oakie.
,Matinee Sat, afternoon at 2.30 1),m ;, 4t Thursday, Fr !day, Saturday May Robson.
`1'611.15, 15344 well 111151 ,I, I a, h
„H.,flr11dl(, 1'"Inlm IiI^;lt, .\IIIfo41 1("('0 :L • 1)1 Y
Ftp Robert Stack, An l Rutherford, Thur,. Fri., Sat.—Two Features-- °a9
;1Mon„ Tues„ Wed., July 6.7•Y=' 1:11,14 1111'11. p,4 I., well. 11 511`1 a R0h)rta 111\'tllif., K)1111 11011111, \II'x- LI
''Walter Pidgeon Rosalind Russel >, 611 Richard Dix and France;, Farmer, Thur., Fri., Sat, —Two Features— Edmund Lowe„ William Gargan, co, :1
;1•' ill IIIIlilpl!Ills play, and fully enjoyed by ander .\ 4hOr)•, .lealiella '11'11, fC'•n q' itLliirp :nnl 5'1. 1, 111, a 0115' Ln5 Thr 11:10 e ut n,t nlc' 1101.1 Ir,nI = starred in a tale of the air schools. Gy
��' ss , „ 11111. I.n'he am, a:1111)4 the II it 141.11.1 ; 41,,111 tilmlpld's, I,IOyd \1''1144.11, Ilan\ \ t'1) hl_ "lulu I,n' 1.1611:: 44111., mol 1101 �� t ,.r 5 I1 l
•1: Design For Scandal ► ;,� 1.h II' 1.1' 41 111.'11 ,5 Irl 11.1'1 (t (,:1 UI,1
ai lacked. The p:'0re"11, 01 the 1'\"4414,; \\i}':Illlnall, 1(41\ 1011411{. V 111,'1 ,1 01111',1.. ' • 1111'11 ,1 11.1\' f',t'1n41.- 41 lull 11i
t• n1) Gene Autryand SmileyBurnette 7gg
1 r , ,[,.,s 4
a., \ 1'011 l'l l'(,, III 1'1!:11!". \' :I; \\' III,,I'. 51'aS 111•;11' .� 1111,1;1, ----- '1.9 „ n ��(. Oill lt� (��, (111�Olt(t Iii 55',1 I';illllc and 414'1 ligllll, 111 it
,i, I'tdgro41 111! :Irl 1.1';111. ;I ti.,,,,,- I i..1. 13i1(llilll(lti Ol I)i1111)tti
lir. ('1111', ti 111(1 :rnl l and 1'1144111 , ;,, 1011111.1. camp.
.1. In'Ige Clinton (,ellll'('♦ (,� ---. ADC.1,r) ATTRACTION BEING r ��
,t; Fulhe1.l:ill, 01 Nia1;;,1.a I''nll+, ;u1. \is- SELECTED "Sunset In 1%ryii 1111''—
.1�Alr� Canada Carries On' and", a� J, y
'ilii; \\'fill 111 11 pa and 0111 •1 Ffr"t 1'1;15= 11111011 I'S (i:1. tatree 11 n C(ming: t-l''rlle ey Bogart & Mary
;?. "Cartoon' I A i I 1 ;,.,', Astor In "the Ma%.tese Falcon," COMING—Geor,e Raft in - --
• •' 1 / • • •,• ,.♦•1'11•♦ 1111'n1iti 1111, we11t, 011',,1 1110'1.1.0 \rmsirnn_', I.1'It) "BROADWAY COMING—Walter Huston in P3
.; .•,1.,,1,.1,♦.,,,, .1, .... o'. a . 1 .;.,,.,;' :• , , :,1,1.;1,;, ;,+ "ALL THAT MONEY CAN BUY" 1)y
The I , ' .r. 1(1.'\'. ,ll Hair 1, gave ;, Ih'nr' dun, 11'7,1.1 t'011'ntmn, 1111.1. n'et ',' Mat.: Sat. and Holidays, 3 p.m. Ma- Wed., Sat„ Holidays, 3 p.m, Mat,: Sat. and Hordays at 3 p.m. k!
1'!'I'\• III:;I111111 all!! instructive 71.
.1111,0 1 t1liitilitiIn, (',II'illall 11.11,', 1;1'.11', e 11111•- �_,•r-,1:1;12,�1.d(J161Gr1 ,Sr.DSi.,J+GL (.._1"l' )W.1.(<1�a2,2;a(�'s'aul''12,,211)1°�7:1.12+2.212,c,1:.3,a12121;),�,-2,An-.1,,o,2.mi11
1121212!2tii1212rd41,, id1A1a�1B722i
LI44
IIUI,1' Hie lirl11nr 11u,'.linu on "111:1'1)• 1100, Jean 1.'11111)1 I, Elinor Mew, And-
Un Friday 1.;1'0101;, .\l, and l 111..,, luuruing. I'' (1111'11•, 1' Hear 1(11111) 111111:1 in "r.,,',,,1Z1e.'C•1;5;'.'e'erf;'�re'e1CIFtgr ' C'C' e'C'C'Q.1;"�''C'e: 1gCle'C;CCI '.g'{'g+e1G+tit'4tgq;
('111; les 1'1055;1'1 111)1.1 1101.11 M loan- 11'1115, 1\'illlanl Hearn, :11.11)'4444 101611'1'. I' ,•
I,'
V
1,'1. of 1111.11. rel 1115(44 011+! friend- in Ii 4Imal Irwin. Jame; Jackson, Eleanor �,
lion n' of 1111'11• >';n, Kennrlh in,' hf;' AIJIBI'RN i.i,hus, 1'11(;1144 1L'1H11llld• Rn„ YOUR Estate ,;
111 ill.', formerly. hiss 1'1;1.1 '4 Pale, , Cun;;regations Say Farewell To 1!'Ichmalil10i. Middleton Roller!
• • • is Different
The friend's of Neorge Leith or Con- Rev, H. C. Wilson, 111:1,.1, ('liff0rd 440)1)1'1..
A9(.1
".91111 1'111• ; IlOumll; 1 i0 III i 1 per
( 1;1111.1. ;41.0 44'1'1.1• 11) 11(.•1' he Ilan 1)1'111)1'11 ll, 1011.1.44 1111 friend 01 Knil- Ix nl- from every other. Many prob• i,9
1.
I1 1;1 1 •I ul7 1,, s1er, 1110'11. I lull:llld. !ems are Involved — fondly and 1''
1;al.•`erred l0 the ho '111 Il for Ireal• 11,j t :4114•).11 .n1.;r;rl•!'.aliu11, also \1'(:11• y c
11(1itl. A 11!,001 II'4111s111:.all \1',l a 11 ' 104'1.1111 Pni 11'1', FI'1'd '1'1H'I'lldike, (;1.1'11 financial conditions, requirements 1,9
lir .d ant, 1'.111111'144;'();; c'n t:rlyalion.t, nl
dile' \1'11111., and objectives are different, No
.1 ,1111' ;1111 ill 111'1';1 'll ilia 1'4 11 11 11 11111 1111. 1 011 1' I'41;Q,' 1.\'.11111}; In 114110111' Iheil'II
1'11i-11- 1111 11111'..111 10 119 11)1' 1•,,111 - one person could be expected 1,1
k not gre,11\' inflow, ,-1. d' Pal 1ill;', 1'0-: 11•, 111 v. 11, C. \1'i17n1:.to e(ieclively deal with the many 1•'i
Host,.110011), Auld'.1'1II, Jean I'anl 14
11 I'. 111 1.1 11;n's11 art, 11 as 1'11:111'1111111duties required of an executor, n/
i,l'nonn', 110.1:1.1. (;;iron, I'\Alen (ilidd„n. !,9
The Sterling Trusts Corporation
r
lot. 1110 1.51.010::, :1111 the I'1'llu5ciu•, N
I e:teller 110110111'e(1 Melvin lirallain, Wesley Holland. \\'ul- brings to these problems the L1
plu,;r;lnl \\:I• run nil: 010, Cour{ " yl
ler Jervis. F11:4 .101);11.1,;1, 111.11.1. 1.1\\'• 1 combined experience of a staff
111 \\',.1141,,;1;,11•, \if'- I104.y1 curter. Million; \1'11111 no:riter, 1'''1.1:,)' 11.-' V
son, .L,hlt lla:!'nnald, 1'•,11;tldl AIuNa11, fully qualified to administer your 1.i
t1'cher of S. s, \o. l',, Tw•kelsn11111, I Iwl 11; tin Irl' Ile, \lks Sadie Carter, i;
1'•;11;11(1 .\Ifddlelon, linrlirm .111=ta.-,I, estate promptly and efficiently. I�
w'a; •111.14114.„,! Sown one of her 11:11)11:, 11 r, \\'jlsnn. 11 r•. I• /'d 1 ,.11'11•1' 111111 Nmi:fa 1'()601.11. 1101.)' Ellen I're,l, 1\'il• G
l' yell'11 •I''hn- ;Is'" :I 1111. :II ':'re` ; 111 111111 \i1.. 1':11 \\'i=11111;111, 'I'll'' chafe Name as your Executor 1.p
;1
11:1111 INCH, .I.1 11111S Snell. (;rare ;11.''11,
eome 10 the pl:,I, ::n ;11111 he sl 11 '11. 111m11 1111'11 1'111111 1(c.. 11. 1', a 1111 All -4. THE 03
K1'11111'1 11 \'6,111,,11, Ila,,
11,17,1.1 r-11, ;win then will a n!.e15• \\*ikon to 1111. front of the Clint(11 and �1t �1�+i }} ff //�I *11+9
wur)11( whir, \5111,11 44140 I'3'I c'nl 1111.511 1161'45\,11 of \\'1,111-.111 1.1.;1,1I I':Ir;.•; ander I1I pruvisf00s 0f !(4 $TERIiINC ,{R1STS
p 1441.11 and \vhirh 151,4 Sign1 h,' till 1110 an ;I.; Ires, 10 the !,1111►'' S\hicll "x- glllaltoll 1411.,1 1'!111'()1.1) 1'()()111.1..
1)l' I' while 1''0101.1. ,1.11• in.-4ou1 1'1'1.'441.!1 nu,:11 'd' regret al their do. 372 BAY ST,, TORONTO
4•1 her wt111 a gilt Irina h.1. ''1011, 110• 11.11111'1. 1111 0x1011;11;1 (111111 g.`nd 111.1i
1111::, in 111011' 11141' 11:111.11. J1,'s. I . 1'1 1\'11111-
uu1n presented Ihrn1 451111 a 1101'.;(' n!'
1'nll0\y114, i; the ;0111 01001.), It; \'. IL 1'. \\'il-:1.n math,1a
Ih',1. Hist Carter, - \\'0 pupil, Imo \1"111;110
11111.1.,,1) Ic ether 11ot 11()1.00441. 1111) 111.44, 11()1.1)00 ll.('linchev ,:;Ing a
)'
has run;, 11111 t0 11o11n1r gnu m:; Mir, , dnet. The meeting closed by siitgiii
the National Anthem. bunch was their members, 311,1, Helen naelt(r,
served. h+hle-folie, with II Pyres 144IIle. 111::
CORPORATION
13russels Bride -rib- Be
Showered
1'111' nlemhc,s 1)f I11e 1'itited church
choir, Brussels, met on 'Thursday 1.v -
(mink, for th(h• weekly practice, 111;1
11011 the opportunity to 1)1(44)111 04111 0f
1)1 pmr10,14 •((11::11 ;curlier. \\'" 1514411
t0 ( x111.".;44 011' ;it'l,reci;Iliun ant
I11.11k. to you f n' the touching 0I' su
nutty Ihii ,z:. Not r
1,1;1 the \\ tot In 1110011 'Training. I
;1114 sure all the '110111'.- are glad to he
1111( to hay), -molt a 1,' -!ice ;0, )'un.
\\'c all 1144015 hcinl; a II1611,•1. f• not
1111 4.111;11111 hut we Intim and 440;4
you 1\ill ;:1t along 04 \yell 144 yon did
Teachers Presented, ('a1 ti( I liigslun, lender of the choir,
.\1 the .\'.1444,0 1' lntinu:ot!un school read the address, anti Thomas Slralh-
un rliday morning, \lis;; Rath 13'114400 ;1n, mad( the pr1;(ltali011. 11Iss Ila"•
rc' 4! 111 141111.0.-'; 111 411041. 1)a4,11er, 11144,; Icor made a very 4411)1441,1" reply. thank -
3,44414 sharp, 5511:, has hoop t'a4,'h1,.i, iug 1 h choir members for their 10561\•
for nine ri ars. 'Pommy Sheppard gift.
OILCLOTH— h
'151/ wile, 1)e1' V(1, :19(.'; i) 111 wide, per y(l. -19c /.)
ao
OILCLOTH SCARVES each 25c
y
RI;IO1,EI'11 MA'T'S each t19csftd
di
.11"1.1'1', RUG$1.S ) 11
1IOSQl; l'I'0 N E'I" I'IN(�, white and green, yd. 10c a5'
SCREEN DOOR SPRINGS each 05c
r.
SCREEN i)OOR ('A'1'C'iIES 15c A
4
WINDOW SCREENS :39c, •19c, 59c t.el
es
Taylor's 5c to $1.00 Store
PHONIJ 79. ''1
1.l
4)
^.~,2.1,,.^,312,2,x,2" Nit',3,2 1 ,2, .2,2a2,i ."vr2,21M4Y.21,2, .:`,7,",aZil' Nai:1, 1:kaai2,D18,ar),24
I vr,tckit g etc k','.Cry .e.iimt4tet tC'CICCICIAtQ°:
—I ESTABLISHED 141 i
EXECUTORS' SALE lA ii
V BRANi)RA1i- 1
iti
51
�+
1 OF HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS, BARBER V 1-IENDERSON.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS EQUIPMENT AND PROPERTY. V Paints and Enamels.V i
The undersigned Executors oi' the. 14
In the Estate of Margaret Douglas estate of the late 'I'..1. !lockstep, 11 151. p Riverdale Paints 111!(11
Huckstep, late of the Village of Blyth, iM;n'0eted 'I'no•. 11101)1.5 k Son, :\141.- N Enamels, 59c and 69c Qt
in the County of Huron, Widow, I Hoot 1.r4, 10 sell by I'u''lic Auction, on aii ta
Deceased. the Qur'1.11 Street p''ulfses, Iflyih, at 11.44 "NU -WALL"
1 v A WASHABLE COLD•WATER 6
the hour of I..u p.m„ nn y1)
I l!9 PAINT, FOR WALLS AND $
All (1.1..01144 ng hayiclaims against SATURDAY, JULY 18TH i e CEILINGS. A
the Estate of the 1'.001. d,.c"ms11, ,411'.'' the tollu\yflg: -- i V g
.1'011114141 le filo the some with Leslie 'HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS:— °; Alabastlsme, Dust MOPS, -
111.6:,,.(','1 1I' ; Slt1rp with ;a 11..1\•"1•; llitie 141)101' 1111, bn '' eefaithful;
no''n\b"1. cd' Uu! choir for a num" 1)l' � 11111111.1, 01' 1,11111. 101;1.1(), on a1. hl'- 1'11011 \1'estinlhnM•e Radio; '' V4, Floor `Vag, LCIll011 011,
lin;:. 1 I .. 1;,115 of 1,10 1.x'.1111)1.01, c0n•1 lore the Isih day of .11111•, .1,I1. 1,112,'R,.•:;ii1, ('111):44: 1'11• Itch; iittor':;' g
here, w11) '4 1 you g0. \1'1. 151<h 1oll 111..04 1,,i to 1111 1i!'I. years, and 11i11 b( 1:)1115 0114444();! as ,, Etc.
II1Or 1511.11 11111( Ihr aswls Will lo1.211.ho•' 11,,:1101 : I; 111,110;: Boom chairs; ii —�-
In ❑ 1.11: Ih)se 1\50 tcw0ls as n 1.c• 5,1 F,S, \,L 9, 111111.!1, mi,,; horn AP look a \'11.) 161156 11;11 111 61101.1'11 !' 'T Dobb n
distributed alpnngsl HIP 110111044 cu 111110, Boom Table; I: Kitchen l'h;air''
\\';shoe, \1:,, ha; !1'1,111 1'101" 4,:' ruin' wont, +titled thereto, having regard only to 't2411,1,1 ,• It:tl,g': Store Pipes; Electric cA
)1 41.;, 40:11 I;'! ('4111 1 with an "1•':11.10 1111111 was 1;1156.1 apd It (.0(•111 lime the 01;111117 1)l' \\'1111.11 Wali"" :-.11;1 11 hay:' i_' -plat" Rangy, \51111 1500; si P'li :u•1); h + ' /r2r;x/,�r�i2ir)r2iardi�rli2r�r�'i2► i
1I, '• 1.r !a'I ;I by 31! holly 110ish and 1'lt.joyed, b"on giy0n. l'M1;h(ard; I 4401011 '1'11111.44: Linoleum
1tr ; Ithy�i, fall 1.1'.111 an a l ll'0 ; to 11:1.1'1:11 nu, "_lith day of .14411, Al). i Rug; ('lIgoleul ling; flishc., ('ails, :'ZlZlgtfl;1Ctr."'C411'0 'ClelClelGZClro-IClCICICteb:
111:1.; \\';11'91 win) has accepted. tQu' ' g
S1iOI)I)1'OU1C I'lcnoc 111.111 At IUl". bac.: I?lecn•tc Iron ;,n1) :f Flat frons:
11911e,glue schi101. C. FI\(i1„1'\11, K.('.. Clinton. 1)0111.• 1'rnii ;Intl Sealers; ^ Bedroom Suites;
(11r,.. Moore nl' Condi wit miss �' o Monuments.
roderich io, Solicitor for the said Estate, 17-::,', 111111 1141:1•tin;;' Stove; sewing 11a• y TO 1.11()441.. contemplating build -
111111k
tinny 111111'' On Saturday some forty descen• —_,—_ Ichinl; ('•arplls; 11001 (irind,,r; 11':111 y Ing a :Monument . , . Get my
111':; .11 on .1. nil, !tank 14 C•om-
da11ls of .f0hp and Apo l-'hobhrlro1c 11111.1: l 14111) f'"puuolle; im}aL
111111 C. 11'1144()0 on 44:101.1)1) whl'll 4401111 (l:111litl' '4 Prices before buying, Cemetery
0:.'111. stall. I';n'B!Iill, \\ill) 116r par tialvanized iron Can; f!i
Pothered at Harbor 111.11, (uulrri''ll' 111"100' \11.1.0() dam"111()1 of \Ir and "! Lolte1i^t; a gperialty, g
lne;e o'1u11•'' c,t i,. S. Na. n. 10611,.1.
:,11!'11. .'igtty I by the pupils.
This s,•hp:11 is to hl' I ; ,;ell from
la( I‘ of p• pfls and 111= i Carter has
hurt, "04.1,1 d at Ihr ori};1h14nuriug
ri 11001. \ ), 1, Tucker -milli, 111 \vitfc•11
mom” 111' the No. 1.i 101:411s 15'111 111(111.
Eleanor Jl,hns and Hazel t'ul(tnau
lilt Iwo I':ntr m',' 110111144 111011')1! Ihefr
crltifiradrs 1111 their year's w0r11. 411111
Inland going 40 l'0411 ;jaw in Sept:)p-
1,er,
(1911' Foes 1' nit. Sch.,'I;piiun 16111?
(1115, ll r. 1111 \Iis. (1. J, )_ 4, for i\\'pod; (r:tlyapfz(d'1';:'1; 11141('1,"44; g°
for the annual fancily picnic, Mr. ;111) 111x. 1111.()11) Sprung 01 1(1111.11 1011:1 5' All Nork Guaranteed.
t\vu w.rlt., yn:ati,llt• ISMO\\• Shovel;, Mikes, El e.: s6reen
H. 11144, shrr'h01014 (1110( to Canada 1101:1 ''. ship 111ca11111 Ihr 111'11)1 nl' 1,.31' Ih,,au- ; A
\o 441.1.1.11.1. in 111"Ir:; ('huch ; 111101 -; :' I :11)1).1.44: Roofing; 1'()1.01.1. �' �
next 44101);0, bol the (.11lun'in;; Stitt- I'."1 (itIQ i❑ I' 1 and 44(1:11.1) in the :•maul ti13p1(s of \1'101111101;. llalI!lnl a, John Grant
ria), .service ;it 111 a.n+, i
Township of IIIIli(IL �,^,1❑ of 11 r. and 111:-. \\', Staples, ui' BARBER EQUIPMENT;— 4 di
CLINTON MARBLE AND
I'h" 01114,;1 person 111'";"11 was Mrs.!1itlol;.h. Otttati°, " !':11!,1'1. ('hail-: l+oubb' 1:.04,1. 1111.• GRANITE WORKS
14)1110 Cartwright 741, of Loudcshorl) I nl s; tAf
small Quebec lleater. \\-1 1P — da
I'hr 11.111 6111144() nn attrarti5e Ilunr- �, LINTUN ONTARIO, Au
awl 1(" your,;r 1 was Helen 1larte length 4,0\\•11 0l' 4ln•;t11nfse Flu" 44114",,' Ilfpr; ('n:lI h't• anr1 Show rase. 1.p d1i
""1.1.. 441.51.0 u1m'Ihs old d.nlp,hlrr 0f ; '' Successor to Ball & Zapfe.
11
with pink rnr,a4,c ;11!1 white 11 . - sae- .\'I' '1'111': S.\111'; '1'1111::\NI) I"1..\('F' ,211,3,2,2,x,21112,2121 1$a212ii2i211,,,, $,„1Ptr?!
1' r. '1111 'Al 1.1. \1'1,1iam \icor:', of God -i los, hiss I',,ge.y Lan", 1.o11(101I, ;1; 111,':e 1\111 110 ol'1rr.'1 rot, ,...a le. ilt'
1 1.'.-h. Tile 11(1141 01,1.1 icd coup!,' was
hri(1esnlaid, was 1nwn011 In a rose lal- Iluck•irp I'r9perty, consisting 01' - ._ - •
11,'. a0 I Mrs, John Hour). Shp14hrooit' ! r,'ta floor -length go \\'11 and 15()1.1 a Ihr"" 0p.4rlmlut.. Phis prnp0rl) win
c',' Ilm!I,,11, ;old lh" yonuge:-L \Ir. and
\511111. (•017;1+;0, I'rf\;11. \\', 14, Sprung he 440111, 44111106'1 In 44 no...e •\'0 hili, end Women Over 40
11rs. \\'lll!am 3(01141, of Cod,t'ich. 'The' ! 111' Hebert, \.s., hrolhei of the bride, TERMS OF SALE—STRICTLY CASH,
•
,1 ;041 , ,,,,,iii, the 1;11(111.,1 dfsI ill.'( anenle,l 1110 4,1'0(1111. Feel Weak Worn Old?
Johp Ferguson, Leslie Hilburn. Exe- f 7
\5(44 \\'111;11 Smau'1.11m':"' n! Pul'1'is' I.pnn\51111 Ih,, ,."ietn1117 ;( i11„;,11011 ,'MIpt44. Want Normal Pep, Vim, Vitality?\
l;!nil:,l,.a.
' N';IX 111`111 .11 the 1191111' nl' Illi' III'I(1,''S 'J'll..•, (11111)1I'S' .� �0 , .\IIl'lhrllt'el'-, no,w ScraA, rmn,,,l, r.' 'lied rnnd111un main
'1'144 4'('51111; 1)t' the 1',11'044 15'1'1'(': 4,11'1; , yon rrrt (RG4ed out, 1,id:' •1.0. 0+11`1. l'nnr,(nr
Il'('lll,•, \\'111'1',, a 11'(':lditlg Iilltl'hP!III Ji•.;, 1 .10.SI 'plilen,rtm, cuntu, , pluk,Irdednnervitamin
I'Ir
1 1)n. Supplies .•, tr,m, ralrls, ( Vhn.phoruw, vitamin
:11111 I'•'11•�, 1, 11) i, 11011 tillll'l11'1'l'0l'It' \5';t, served 111' 111'44. .\II`x, \l11111(11g, : m1, Ilrllrv,•au,:rlr,rmaleT 1,,14 :tn111,•. In-
:
is (11,'P11.'2,; 1', to 12, I 'Ill (.Ilibing, , tale Hein d7r n.l noex rmal
i •I•r>eln nub• 356. Far
' ' LI'14,1il yl', and ill',. ('lar'MI.4 1'1x, Falr:e all n,1,d 11111; HON'S rvrrrl, herr,
:3: 1:1411 ('rich; married Hou, (1041 .1 \\'llilechlr,•11, mints of the 11rid,,, as• 11:11t1.o(�K
:1,''i' 1101,•; )Ding 11:4'11. Clifl'or,l 511 11. 4(t -10d by a ('011sim, 111.171 El -de Palter- -
11144'1:'1(, (111), : 11lh.M'u111t; 14161;104, the (111 'Thursday alt1.'lnnou the ladle: of r.
sol,, .\11'111.11, The 111.1)11.': moth, r 1.r• 1 T
•'!', 1•'1., 111.;, I'"rc\ (iill''''"g' Ihr",' 1'1011(1 Nn. _. of I1Mrn7 ('11111..11, net a1 11 I\IHR
1' ('0150)1 the 4,00.171 in 010.5 hlur sheer.
Irgg(d rare, Clifford `111;''1) ru9k, Pon ( Ihr burn( 1)l' lir (',,ter '1',1)1()1. 0011 )Ir. and 31rs..1411111'Cellar entertain -
lir. a41il Alt's. SlMplr, later 11'1'1 n❑
a1,1 1ln::h1ng; time 1.:t.(, 11ts. Fred a 11ene5pa,'nll i(1 he 4411,'01 in Guelph. .'Iuilted three quilt: for the Iced ('1.1'44. ,i1 \I r. :Intl 111.44, \\illinm ('11.11'1., ,lir.
s 4 111t10)1t, I ) On SO'mrda5, plan)' flint Ihfs n,,f.h' I
I rot, travelling fhe bride e to,1 a 11 4\v 10(1 lin-. (( u g1. 1'11.11.1. nl I.nu)1rsh91•u
I1:941rooll 11 'tdet 1111. 1.1111,611 wed l
—_” 11110 snit \\'ith white acce., '11.1144. •1'11,5- nal 11 r, 110611 Campbell 141 \1'adt011 011
\5 ill 11.,11;1 1111.11. 1'uUlre IunM1 iu 11'1101 ding or 11177 1111111 1tritton ;101 mi. 1'
Weddings 01 Interest �.\rchh' 1log,.1'th. at Com -lance, oSunday afterm.uut,
lM'�
Previous to the marriage, 111.44.
Staple„ 15144 tt'1111011'11 ;I 711415.1' ,II'
luveiy gilts from friends in 1.0114101),
A Iplfct wedding was sole11nizei1 at 151010 silo h11. h11(1 ;t po-ii oil for illy
St. i'aul's United Church lla:st, As- .past 10.0 years.
7ini11)11, 01) 'Tuesday ;afternoon, .lune \ll 61.1.1)11 x1(11, of mill( 1011 i111144 pr,>rl'ut. 44011) 115 milk Ili.;hi
1'1111, when Br. L. B. 11100, 001111) i1., hulnrs in 1(11 Province (1f Ontario shall be discontinued ;111(1 all such
I1111u;{age, RlOhaa•d Bertram\Vats,ln, 1.1 a1(C,i Over Service Station. 4..111
shall be 44411,1 in exchange for (;(44'(1 00 propll1) milk 1111;0144
i.011 of 111.44. 11'0. 51()111.11, of 1115111, 11 r. •i(1) .\owell ! 1 Il;"n over the i 4101)'.
and 3II,,,; Eisler Iluornsou, daughter or Sunoco Service Station 0,1 (!11':1 \lip Ibnl no container, , 1111..1 111;11 a milk 11()111(), with cash or
31r. lord Mrs. Carl 1luolusnu, of 'Twin +Street, aril gels pn44assinn inlnle,111l0 1 111.1111, will 111 ar6op1e1).
Valley, 1y. 31r, F1a;th Elliott, 11110 ho been
The bride (Hosea eery pretty dress ;0(1erating the Slat 1011 1'41. ;"5"1..11
of blue crepe a111) was attended 1,y,y0ars, has sold 0111, 11111' to military
Miss Jean Brown, 'reasons. Mr. \01\(11 is purchasing
T IRI-, '• -! 1-1 . ICI O, 1.0 d 1 IfJIT' 1 ICI 1^tcr�+rly+e�l,llle`-.it�`•�"4 `.C`fYt�W`1".i`0'Vt
The, groans was attended by Theo -;his equipment.'-•,le,,.,,',=';,tg•y$.CC.,,C;,,�o�,(ele•ClCleteod•CCwC•�w b
dere Ilnornson. brother of the bride. ; Mr. Newell came here front \\'fn::- 0
lfler a 011)1)104, trill, lir. and 111.44,
\\',atson will reside on the farm of 11r, jllilliard Parlour for lir. P. llnrrkon. '
ham, and has since leen operating the Dead and Disabled Animals
11'illiam Slor11'11, in hulk Glen, Sa. lc, 1 \\'e wish him :(l) 4 sur.l•s in hf:_ 44 REl'lOVEI) PROMPTLY.
110' venture.
44
1.4 Telephones:At\1ood, 501.:31; ;,oaforth, 15, i';►:Iec(.
STAPLES—SPRUNG V
ir. and 'Mrs. A. 1:. 'Tasker and fain-t,i'ACAN!D41-, 1 LTD
\ pretty marria\1'1
ge 71 solemnized .i(y speni Sunday with .lir. and firs. 1 DARLING and CO. of C. 1 t -�
at Knox United church 1111441. by Rev, jilcryyu Richmond. Ill :111',;1.111, 1 l...,V AINN)/D1)11 DMADM;kgt ,)1;41 i1n7ANN l t lXA--Dtig3iTANP1111h";?;1 71
dkall
cJ, cJ'
That ruhhA1'
Stamp means
ire can Say Ca1li,!1a's cotton textile in-
dustry is 11 times ahad of its war pro-
duction records of 191'1-18.
The industry is delivering about 215,000,-
000 yards a year of aii'ci'i t fabric,
ammunition pouches, anti -gas c10113,
camouflage netting, gun covers, parachuto
webbing, powder bags, uniform cloth, web
equipment and other essential nlatcriaa.
Dominion Textile is proud to have a part
in this. We also wish to report that our
plant employees are earning 28;'11 more
per !tour than in 1939, and We pay 5.1
times more in taxes than the total paid in
dividends to our several thousand share-
holders.
DOMINION TEXTILE COMPANY LIMITED
MONTREAL h ■ ..� • CANADA
WATSON—BUORNSON.
MILK CONTROL BOARD OF ONTARIO ---
ORDER NUMBER 42.60—EFFECTIVE JULY 3RD.
DURWARD'S DAIRY
VOICE
OF THk:
PRESS
IN AIRCRAFT OF 1919
At lung last a memorial com-
memorating the pioneer trans-At-
lantie flight of Alcock and Brown
In 1919 ie to be erected at the
spot in Newfoundland whence
they took oft' in their Vickers
.Vimy bomber, if 1•ligtlts by Ferry
Command require real courage
nowaduya, they Were !eats of al-
most superhunl:ul cmtiu1llee ill
the rickety aircraft of 19111, and
Alcock and Brown deserve all the
recognition and commentorati0n
that it is p0esible to give thein.
--elirockvllll: }recorder and 'rimes
THE MEN GOT OFF
When the 12.S.ti,Lexingum was
known to be beyond hope, there
was no exciting bawling out of
orders and commands. Instead,
Rear Admiral Aubrey Fitch leaned
Over the bridge and quietly said
$o his friend, Captain Frederick
Sherman:
"Let's get the mea off, Fred,"
And, so efficiently 4'as the
order executed, not a single man
was lost in abandoning the big
aircraft carrier.
-Windsor .a,'tar
DINNER IN A BALL
Dehydration has achieved a
new high In Britain. Farm pro-
ducts are being refined into
'green baseballs." In central
plants, cabbage and beets, spin -
sash and it carrot or two, with cal-
ory and onions for flavor, aro
tolled into one and reduced in
IrnJk so that a "baseball'' contains
hay food for an average family
dinner. It provides a new method
04 sending vitamins to the troop..
--Vancouver Sun
u
VIRTUE'SREWARD
The Man Down the Street, who
lam cut two new holes in his belt,
wants to know whore he can get
a cent a pound for the "spare
Pre" he is taking off by walking
to work,
-Christian Science Monitor
-0--
THE DISAPPEARING TRICK
And there was the Indian rope
trick performer who was discharg-
ed from the navy because every
time he climbed the rigging he
disappeared.
-Guelph Mercury
-0-
CHAIR WARMER?
Berlin is asking all Germans W
give use(1 clothing to the army
because so many clothes are be-
ing worn out in the east. That's
odd. Ours usually wear out in
the south.
-Kitchener Record
Fake Gods Vanish,
Real Values Remain
Principal R. C. Wallace of
Queen's University, Kingston, de-
clared the war will be of 110 avail
unless "at the end of it we can
continue a world of social justice,
where men may be free to develop
their highest. powers for the high-
est good."
Speaking at University of Buf-
falo's commencement recently, Dr,
Wallace said "we have learned
but little in this day of strife and
conflict if we have not learned
some simple elemental truths
about life and its values".
"We learned them in the days;
when Britain was on the eve of
disaster after France fell," ho
added, "Those who remember the
tension of those fateful days .. .
know in a tray that we shall never
forget that property, and wealth
and possessions and rank count
for nothing,
"Courage and fortitude and de-
rency and honor and a sense of
the eternal are all that matter.
Our false gods disappeared before
our eyes, end the real values re-
mained." ------------
U.S. Pupils Will
Study Aviation
About 500,000 boys and girls in
the United States - between 16
and 18 year: years old - will
'study aviation as well as history
and geography when they return
to high school in September.
Meteorology, air navigation,
communications, aerodynamics,
angine design and structure are
some of the subjects that will ab-
sorb the young minds of America.
Pre-flight training for second-
ary school consumption is part
of a nation-wide program spon-
sored by the Air 'Training Corps
of America. This organization,
working in conjunction with the
Civil Aeronautics Administration
and the U.S. Office of Adminis-
tration, will grant college credits
to those boys who join AT('A
units.
Fundamental aviation is so new
in high school curricula that even
the teachers have to learn about
it.
Teachers' College of Columbia
University is offering a special
series of s.tntmer course for
those who would instruct Ameri-
ca's futl:te fixers•.
NDIVIDUAL
ltlzeirs
rrn_Y
At.'1N MAf IICF,
A Weekly Column About This and That in Our Canadian Arany
"Puss, ti a lid !round., all's
stent" 1 suppose, aluug with "Irate
training ', that sonorous "O.K."
from a, scurry fuctug his lonely
beat has gone into the discard
naw,
It seen,: a pity- lila( matte o 1110
glamour can't be left whether It
ba la the Army, the Navy or the
Air Face. of course the latter,
even if 1t is a lusty infant, Is the
baby of the uniformed :urtica
and has hardly had lung enough
to build any 11aditiun cxrcpt that
of daring and bravery,
'Phare is buull:tlhing ithuut the
maintenance of old lo: ms and fine
phraecs 111 this day of streamlining
and curt, business -like speech that
reniude us that the glorious fu-
ture of tomorrow will in Ile turn
become Il glorious past.
What put this tutu my head
was the fuel that 1 put in some
Utile yesterday visiting grocery
stoiea to find 0111 how we soldiers
of the Individual Citizen's Army
were behaving about the new ra•
Honing orders. It was something
like visitins ecntriee 0t 110dr
boats - but more in the nature
or •'1'isilinr: !minds" than "grand
rounds."
'1'he result of lily tour biloWil
that ill the main WO are pretty
good soldiers. It showed also that
TABLE ILLUSTRATES EFFECT
OF PROPOSED INCOME T A X
(Amounts shown in even dollars for simplicity.)
R1C
nay
falti
Single Persona, Without
700 35 --15
850 57 1
1,00(1 87 5
1,250 162 5
1,500 217 80
1,750 273 58
2,000 34(I 101
2,600 4.75 151
8,000 622 202
4,000 955 214
5,000 1,332 896
7,60QQ 2,400 570
10,000 8,601 712
20,000 9,105 1,924
80,000 •..... _ 15,082 3,314
50,000 28,392 0,511
100,000 64,347 15,990
600,000 411,720 60,584
1,250
1,300
1,500
1,750
2,000
2,250
2,500
8,000
4,000
5,000
7,500
10,000
20,000
30,000
50,000
100,000
500,000
1,250
1,300
1,400
1,500
.1,750
2,000
2,250
2,500
3,000
4,000
5,000
7,500
10,0(10
20,000
30,00(1
50,000
100,000
500,000
Dependents.
20 20
58 58
92 80
167 100
247 120
331 140
441 160
626 200
824 240
1,274 920
1,728 400
2,97(1 600
4,312 800
11,029 800
18,396 800
&1,908 800
80,337 800
472,304 800
Married Persona, Without Children.
50 -25 25
65 -15 50
75 34 109
125 ata 161
175 56 231
225 91 316
275 12.1; 401
400 18.1 584
675 289 964
1,000 378 1,378
1,965 555 2,520
3,080 682 3,762
8,330 1,949 10,279
14,065 8,361 17,4.46
26,965 6,588 33,553
61,875 16,112 77,987
401,120 60,834 461,954
25
50
108
160
200
225
250
300
400
600
750
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
Married Persons, With Two Children.
25
:iii - !I
5 10
18 5
Gil 47
73 !10
115 102
215 119
41(1 218
785 327
1,637 517
2,710 636
7,890 1,973
.13,621 3,409
26,437 6,700
131,299 16,272
400,408 61,130
-6 16
16
21
25
107
163
217
334
1;68
1,062
2,154
3,346
!1,863
17,030
33,137
77,571
461,538
16
17
21
24
52
108
162
218
334
480
600
900
1,'200
1,'20(1
1,200
1,200
1,200
1,200
sellas
Jam0C4,
�1ro°g 'd;o
gFa6
cdg
40
116
172
267
867
471
601
826
1,064
1,594
2,128
3,570
5,112
11,829
19,196
86,703
81,137
478,104
60
100
217
321
481
541
651
884
1,364
1,878
8,270
4,762
11,279
18,446
84,553
78,987
462,954
32
35
42
49
105
215
325
435
068
1,148
1,662
3,054
4,546
11,063
18,230
3.1,337
78,771
46'2,738
NOTE: Lt calculating the above taxes it has been assumed that
all incomes up to $30,000 are entirely earned income, and that in-
comes of more than $30,000 include earned income o1 that amount
and additional investment income to make up the total. Payments
made by the taxpayer within the tax year as net premiums on life
insurance contracts in force June 23, 1942, or as principal payments
on a mortgage on one residence, or as payments into a pension fund,
retirement fund or superannuation fund, will be accepted as an
alternative to the liability to turn over funds directly to the treasury
as part of the mii1innnu savings requirement.
Wherever possible, income and national defence tuxes will be
collected at the source. in the case of wage and salary earners this
means that, beginning next September, employers must deduct from
pay envelopes weekly amounts estimated to pay within 12 months
the national defence and income taxes of all employees for 1942.
The excess profits tax on corporations is being increased from
76 to 111(1 per cent. effective July 1st. In essence this means that,
along with revised corporation income taxes companies whose profits
have not gone up since the :tart of the war will retain only 60 per
cent, of their profits as before. No matter how Itltleh their earnings
havo expanded during the ,vas, they will be permitted to retain at
the most, only 70 per 041it. of their normal pre-war profits.
Excess profits taxes on corporations will bring in an additional
$68,000,000 a year.
The budget also puts higher taxes on liquor, wine and beer;
cigarettes, cigars, tobacco, cigarette papers and tubes, soft drinks,
furs and playing cards. 'Transportation taxes, taxes on pullnian
berths, lung distance telephone calls, telegrams and cables are also
increased.
A whole new range of taxes at the Atte of 25 per cent. of the
zetail price, is placed on jewelry, glassware, china, fountain pens,
trunks, suitcases, purse:, handbags, clocks and watches. The taxes
do not apply to some of these articles selling in some cases, $L00
and in others below 50 cents.
there aro 501110 "lead -swingers"
amongb1 lib, 1)u you remember
"Iain -swingers'"! \\'e discussed
t.liwu in one of these columns
back in the Snow Shovelling days
and canto to the conclusion that
they were a pretty lute chub of
hounds who let other bold lel do
their hurls for them.
That's the w'ay t0 describe the
"load -Swingers" alit) try to cheat
the rest of us by hating no hon•
our when it costes to rationing.
Instead of feeling that they have
„put wee over on the Govern-
ment" when they guy 11101'0 then
Ole allotted ration 100 should sant.
lie that what they are doing is
vastly difterenl. They are "put•
ting uue over on us!„
Rationing is 111 effect in Can -
edit today on tea, coffee and sug-
ar, 1t is rationing in the denim
critic manner with each one of
us on our honour to use only the
amount allowed 118 by the rcgula-
(lons, '1'lle idea behind it is fair
and equitable distribution of sup-
plies regardless of rank or station.
Obviously then, the skunk who
Elea to get more than his or
Ler share, is not, only flouting
the laws of the country, he is
stealing from the 1052 of us.
To get back to "visiting rounds'.
Most grocers reported that there
was very little, if any, evidence
of increased buying of toe, coffee
and sugar, following Donald Gor-
don't radio announcement of the
rationing, What little there wae,
said some of them, seemed to be
done by "women in cars" who
were evidently ashamed enough of
their activities to buy only a
proper quantity at their own
grocer's but not ashamed enough
to go to a strange store for more!
Isn't that a sad counuentary?
The more so when you think that
the sone and grandsons at some
of tbeee ladles are probably over-
seas In the armed forces.
"No more 'hate training' " want
the headline over a recent cabled
story from England. Well, 1 sup-
pose the senior officers know
beat, but I remember -and so do
many of you -how much more
"beet" you could put behind a
bayonet lunge if you pretended
Wat fair guided dummy 1n front
of you was "Kaiser Bill"!
Periiape there won't be any
more training in 'hate' but you
oan't tell one that the brother of
a Canadian soldier in Hong Kong
it going to go about making war
in a calm and detached manner!
Anyway some of us are working
op hates at home and that's a bad
thing, we should sate it for the
enemy. The object of my particu-
lar hate ie the pleasure (iriver -
especlally when, as in the case
with far too many, he has the
manner's of a hog,
In my little noel( of the woods
there is morn Sunday driving
than ever there was and I don't
exaggerate when 1 say that more
than half of the drivers are as
arrogant as a young Nazi. They
honk their horns for pedestrians
to get out of their lordly way,
they skirt as close to hint as they
dare if he doesn't get out of the
way quickly enough and generally
do everything in their stupid
power to raise up u heartfelt cry
for a prohibition of all pleasure
driving,
And in .Malaya, Java, the Philip-
pines, Lybia, Ureece and 1''ranee
their brothers died hecauee there
was not enough gasoline.
"Nato training"', The soldier
doesn't need it, but some civilians
are acquiring it!
Air Chief Praises
New Canadian Plane
Operational flights of a new
airplane now being built in Can-
ada as well as in England, show
It is better than any aircraft puss
5e550d by the enemy, said Air
'Vice -Marshal Harold Edwards re-
cently.
Air Vice -Marshal Edwards has,
been on a tour of aviation and
Allied plants in Canada before re-
turning to active duty in England.
Ile came to Canada foto' weeks
ago to attend the United Nations
air conference at Ottawa.
"Aircraft plants 1 have visited
in Canada are making most useful
progress," he said, "\Ve couldn't
ask for more than they are suing'.
They are capably turning out sat-
isfactorily all they have been
asked to. 'I'hc ingenuity shown in
production of articles of war tt'ia
go a long wary toward reaching
the end we all ,.0014."
'THE WAR • WEEK - Commentary on Curren! tt en1
German Pincer Movement In Egypt
And Russia Towards Middle East
in the seven months that )t
stood last year, surrounded b).
Axis forces', and hurled baclt 111 cry
ubsrurl1, 'Tobruk became It (4311101'!
of tAiiiiiige anti resistance, IIs Hid-
den tall, coupled with the al -
/lost simultaneous leas of Nish:,
and Hit' E1 Gobi, is a hard slut..
The explanation of Field N irshal
161•ltill Rummers 81100058 01'111';11
too 4ealtnesr'es which Inn'c hescl
the British forces in Libya from
the start, In talks and guns Ger-
man) had 1)0111 numerical and
qualitative superiority. Her force;
excelled in the rapid repair and
servicing of mechanical equipment,
In the blitzkrieg technique ut 114•
Ing (auks, place„ and guns as all
integrated assault team, and in
resour,'efuluess of staff wort( :old
generalship, Above all, the 1lritis11
again suffered from the great
handicap of the united Nations
In having to spread their forces
too 11111113' over too many phaco:,
at the ends of long and perilous
eltpply routes 1n order to meet an
enemy tree to strike outw'ard from
the centre of the circle, says the
New York Tinges.
Pincer Movement
Presumably the Nazi campaign
in Libya is a prelude to a full-
scale assault upon Egypt in an
effort to drive the British from
We Mc(litorranean laud conquer
the entire Middle East. The drive
may be viewed as one arta of lel
en01'me1.1S pincer reaching toward
the prize of Middle Eastern oil,
tate other arm being the Gorman
drive in Russia. which has driven
a wedge in the defenses of Se-
vastopol. This is a dangerous
threat which must be occupying
a major place iu the discussions
now going on between Prime Min-
ister Churchill a n d President
Roosevelt,
'The loss of 'Tobruk itself is not
so Important as the circumstanc-
es surrounding that loss, Thu Nazis
claim to have captured 25,000 lieu
and large litotes of material, iu•
eluding supplies freshly brought
in by the 001100y Which came
through the bottle 111 the 1)1edi-
terraneau. If this 1s true it most
mean that Lieut, Gen, Nell ,11,
Ritchie's Eighth Army has been
seriously weakened and that. Mar-
shal Hommel has been strengthen-
ed, 'Tobruk is not vital to the
defense of Egypt, but Egypt is
vital to the defense of the Middle
Lust. The battle which now im-
pends will be crucial. It mutt be
won at all costs.
Anniversary In Russia
Oil the last day or the first year'
of their campaign in Russia, the
German armies lure still fighting
far ~dost of the goal they set out
to reach at dawn on Julie 22, 1941.
Behind them lie the greatest vic-
tories and the severest setbacks
ever to conte to Hitler's IVehr-
macht. The Russians have estim-
ated upttard of 6,600,000 Germans
killed, wounded and captured;
Berlin four months ago admitted
1,500,000 casualties. in the initial
five months of the year the
German soldiers overrun 500,000
square miles of territory with 42,•
500,000 people. In five months of
Winter war they lost one-fifth of
the conquered area to Itussiait
counter-attacks. The corning of
Spring hrought local battles on the
southern front; a Russian offens-
ive in the Ukraine, launched five
weeks ago, foreetalled, it was be-
lieved, the German plan for
resumption of a major drive east-
ward toward the Caucasus and oil.
Soviet losses, in the first year
of nal., were likewise emurnluus.
Six months ago, in an official
a, Herlitz 01/10hetveen
8,000estitu.1')10to1111)1 i(I,1On11,u100 K6ed Army
casualties; Moscow, more recently,
}las stint;1tl'd close to :1,01111,000
lost. Vet in those mutth,4 of light-
ing fie:adult soldiers found a tecll-
10(100 of resistance which, it ap•
pealed, blunted the lilitzkrieg and
for.•cd t a the (Ierlu:ul focuser un
001•e•letlahe11fug war,
Russia's Power
Last tl I el: the Soviet stjldi,•o's
pone: of resistance was, main
evident in two battles raging in
South 11us,+la. SetaslVital, 111'
stud! i ('11 the 4uuthw'eatern coast
of t11e ('rimes, was 5ti,'0 in Russian
hands after more. Ih.itl se0e1)
oto it.;r< of siege. For mere than
tau weeks the t;erul;uh4 had pit•
ted tanks and guts and !plant s
in an Miami al`,lack ;((must the
REG'LAR FELLERS -Pass the Medals
1 L4~'
VA
SAVE,
7'j
t'lly'., 114•I, Ildl'I'8 ('111' it 1'• IIQ
llun'4101 hill<. 511•g:, ('one
lieved I,1:
et' than '.l, ' I(10 tar -
Outs" u! the firs) 110 11 ,r. iI•,d
s h e l l ed tievastuj' '.. .,.1,. .
ankh tacit hull 1„ , ;: ,11! .c ••11
F1•111':111'11.!t Ila lank!, '14» ;no SII•
ddrll<.
The city's 11,,,1;, 11,11 vl
nut cnulllle,-s air .,,I, in 'I "•1'
cal e4 ,':u'v' I in tllc ',:- '•1'. 'u«
last sold•'0 had • 1•" 0
betide-urren,lerillg. •
Hereto I(It trhuv a " end
nein off, n,•iv,i lame in,: 4,. • u
511138 rasa appeared 1e 1.1, e
h1(11(11 .11 11 < the ll,'I"
The \V':.)'Amelo's 11, 1
had geed Iaullc1101, 011-e;
head, to I,rep•u'u Iii, , aur
1111 1(11•'nt eampaig t; I04'. l.he
Uuiels 11 ,411, wit!! , te''.In,g
lnda,t i, ,, tuw:n'd 11' - ' , , u':•
4'11\' 10 the (.'allt'a411s.
Aid From Ame•Icr,
This w.., the thr,•a1 'art•+ ')Y
the Russian nation ,u- the l-tssi
Army balled at tiet,u :"pal sad
iilharkov, '1'o help 111 1:;11 ins, I11
the d:tngei• direct aid ''t.•1 erasing
from the United Slates. Anlerisa11-
made tanks and pla1111) wet .t 1421
the Russian front; to ' oeee were
added --tete report came from.
'Pitney, roma Ins unconfirm ('1 •-
bombers of the Atnl ,'i,'an Army
Ah' t'urpn with Ann sisal' or•:'rc
1011 MI had flown to pa.rti',l'tate
1n the defense or tilt• ('1.i0lI1n1
bla5liou, i'roul bases In rue 1I:,I,tio
l art, m01'l•t'l'l'I', foul'-inutorr•'l -'C-
ited Stales "Liberators" had ;a:(sa
off for damaging raids. an i%1 Kt
oil fields and supply taunt;" sa
11111nauilt.
\\lien credit fur final l:',i' ly:
in this \cal. Is hamlet: eat :tenth
1011 go to China fns her .stoat
rltiistance t0 .Bipart, erg inning 1st
1937; Much to Britain for atand-
ing fast atter the rvit':natiun '1f
(Dunkerque; la very great Ileal ',u
!tussis fur slugging 1; out 'vtr,h
the Nazis after Juno 22, 1941. 'f U
only lair to say that 1. wa+ L.115
Ituseiaus, somewhere bit" eta, 'std
1Mieper and the Don, ,4 ho p001x1
that the Nazis could 1,1 ho,.eeu;
and that it was the lite -snots. lb.
admit() in retreat, :e:cutles, 121
attack, 4.114) gained 1'0: the
of 118 a secioil'o p(:11i1,1 o1 '.elms
'au which 10 gather 8114 rgth.
Russia's Unity
\Ve are 'raveling : figitor-
plane speed 1()ward '1,' ',44.1.'4
critical mouths. Ht!,t.', tli'4ae
words eau appear In p:int La
Nazis 11mt leave (inili(St!l.: the :1.11s•
Man defenses alt Mort. ':1111, ,ale
point, It is possible 1111,1
may be another g,', a:
1'etreat. Vet the twe11', nv :!tun
now ending make it side to n•a-
dict that though the Rsesi.w5 al+a)
be pushed back they w:'.l no Se
routed; and that ihouga they .na.y
lose men, materials, teal,-, e"iea,
farms anti factories !II(} ai!: ,lit
lose their lighting
Phis Much could no' ''' 5,.14.11
for granted It your it 1. \1'„ 'ltd
not then 111101 1104 Ilia, 0 '' try
existed among the Ito,: 0,ll pt• jilts.
\1'e could not be sure ':111 • 1)11~
of ,heat 4ould not
replace Si lits w'illt 11111i: 11'e :lint
110 means of testing 1114 .',11 sate
01 puhlic (49101011 in 11 (ssi:I, `!nv
we know what it is, ma. by ,ula
scientific pr0ces0 of . s;,nlp'ina"
but by the splendor of :
41,•
like resistance of w•11l,•i. 1, liiv'!letl
people 40411141 have 1,' , u 11: 110. -
able,
A Soldier's Jerkin
l'llcre rlhaay be a 1Ju!I/..1, Kral rah
soldier s,un011 here nus !w m ;ant
he interested to know tlu,t Jw,ait.tti
his grceni.-h Oilskin jc!'i; I,"are
in remembrance in
During tin',( etacuatiol, ., ,Mit iul;•
Call of 'I;1'It lsll troops
a French 1 (4r lielgiitn) ,.ay had
Ilus unlli who wren: ;• eein; 1,4)
the :,011, •Tbc husband, 1.': ,alt. a.v
by the t'(In.sille. Ull0 l'' :111'
dicrd >prcllcl his jerkin
I hese 1, 0 it it e8 reach( 1, nue 'tr t
la -1; tilt Iran) SUCCU 1'e,l; !)Int
',maths Inter his w'I'leP •.;Illi •: 10
I a4adcna, bringing 1101: (:rec'1ia0
oilskin. S!!,: gave it to '1,( L'rati!lh
\1.11' Relict• allure it now 111.11 , as
:air tribute out 10 that e110 lo!,li,!r
alone who, passing hy. ' and cared
for her hus,,tutd, but la !rasa and
all his cum?ralles 1n ;0( llrLielt
Army.
By GENE BYRNES
It;t*►+u►u'e�.rI�.rN�►,,,lj �Irl %�I
•• ,.,i
FAINAllffiril
't r ,,Itfq•, 6-10.
"igli1//4,
1,1
1,
4
W,. 11. M. fat erne. 111 504 ,,.,,,e1
FRESH FROM CANADIAN SHIPYARDS
Plowing through calm off -shore waters of the Atlantic, five Canadian -built Corvettes, fresh from
atabipva•ds, with the rivets on their plates hardly cooled, head for the high tical to be put through their
pace+ before being declared fit for service, .icores of these trim "pocket-size" destroyers, bearing
manes of Canadian cities and towns from coast to coast aro joined In the grins Battle of the Atlantic to
maintain vital life lines of tlio Allied Nations,
What Science
Is Doing
SECRET GRAMOPHONE
The "synchrophone" is one of
Britain's war secrets, say's Tho
Brockville Recorder and Times,
It is no secret that even the mak.
ers of the gramophone rocordh
which are part of the invention
do not see tho pictures which
complete it; not' are the picture
makers allowed to hear the rec-
ords.
The syicla'ophono is used fur
trAining certain service men. It
it the joint work of an engineer,
a recording expert and a man
skilled in photographic layout.
It is butter than a film because
It can be shown in daylight; and
this is not the time to say more
about it,
In other directions, Britain's
gramophone record industry has
been fully harnessed to the war
effort, Already many training
establishments in the RAI'' are
making use of records either for
the technical ground staff or for
flying crews. The sounds of air-
plane engines, for example, are
reproduced by gramophone for
future pilots learning "blind" fly -
nig; rtt'I the sound of machine
guns, of different calibres of shell
end of various signals are also
taught daily by gramophone.
Britain's recording engineers
huve added much to their know-
ledge in solving the technical
problems with which they have
been faced. The need to record
with complete fidelity sounds nev-
er before heard on a disc has so
broadened the spectrum of sound
that tones aro now being recorded
throe or four octaves above the
highest note on a piano to a full
octave below the lowest. Rec-
orded sound has, in short, been
pushed to the limit of the range
of audibility, which w'ilI Mean a
more perfect recording of music
when peace returns.
Advised To Sleep
With Window Shut
A heating engineer from tho
University of Minnesota is the
authority for this: Sleep nine
monde,0.;1)t of the year with your
'bedroom windows 01050d, You'll
not only reduce your fuel costa,
but you'll cut down the possibil-
ities of colds, sinus infections and
other disorder's. And here's why
--one window in your bedroom,
Weether'strippcd anti with a storm
window on and closed, will infil-
trate enough fresh air into your
bedroom (provided your door is
left ajar) to stake sleeping health-
ful and comfortable I'or four ad-
ults ill that room, 11r says a
house "breathes" just as a person
does and without the doors and
windows being open.
Men Needed For
The Reserve Army
Everyone Should Be In Ao-
tive or Reserve Forces
The Reserve Army wants the
banker, the broker, the clerk In
uniform as well as the butoher, the
baker, the candlestick maker,
Maj,-Gon, B, W. Browne, Dirootor-
General of the Reserve Army,
made clear not long ago.
The general said every eligible
citizen should be In either the
Active or the Reserve forces. That
means, he said, that mon of the
so-called "white collar claae" who
are moderately or well eduoated
are needed as buck privates em
well 1)e men who work with their
handl,
The reason its that the Reserve
Army must do Rs training In the
spare time enjoyed by its members
from their civilian occupations.
The more education a man has the
quicker he can absorb tnstrtlotton.
Thum it is possible to make a rea-
sonably efficient soldier out of a
elan who has a fair education and
1A aocuetolned to uelug his mind
I1) ]lis work in lee. time than re-
quired to bring a man with little
education and whose mind ie not
accustomed to abeovbing informa-
tion up to the same standard.
"After all, the Reserve Army
may have to do some fighting with
very little training," said General
Browne. "Tho greater results we
can show for the least training,
the better."
in some Reserve Army milts
mea are being divided lute clave. *
for training so that the slower
member's of the unit will not (told
the others back. Thus the man
who responds quickly to training
will not become bored by having
to repeat tato sante processes over
and over again until the slowest
men in the unit learn their lessons.
The Reserve Army recruiting
program Is rolling along well, Its
object is to bring all Reserve
Army units tip t0 full strength, a
total of more than 160,000 men.
America Seeks
Alaskan Spruce
Sitka Spruce ie Needed For
Airplane Factories
A ierica is turning again to her
spruce forests for vital war me -
.1 quarter century ago, when the
11x11011 last was engaged in a great
war, labor battalions went into the
woods of the Pacific northwest
and cult billions of feet of Spruce
for use 111 airplane construction.
Today the axe Is being sharp-
ened and the law set for the
spruce forests of southeastern Al-
aska, 'Pito government has called
upon western logging companies
to baryes(. the vast stands of Sit-
ka spruce for airplane factories,
Spruce grows more slowly- in
Alaska than elsewhere and de.
veiups longer, tougher fibres that
better withstaid the stress and
dh'ain of an airplane 111 flight,
says ('paries (1, 13tirdick, U. 8.
forestry official who has been in
the northern territory for 10
years. The wood is light and ideal
for use i11 planes, lie said.
Training ships are being made
principally of wood, freeing metol
for combat shi)s,
Burdick said the government
hoped to log 15,000,000 board feet
per month around )Cetr,hiklut with
lumber companies In \Vishingtou,
Oregon and other western states
doing the work on contract. Saw-
mills in Alaska will cul some of
the logs and the remainder will
be towed to Puget Sound mills
or to Portland. Final (Irlsi,iuu of
the wood will be done in north-
west specialty mills.
Britain Builds Up
Food "Laundries"
If gas should be used against
Britain, arrangements have been
made to safeguard the nation's
food supplies against contamina-
tion,
it has taken some years to per-
fect the countrywide service
which today stands ready to sal-
vage any foodstuffs which may be
exposed to gas, Air Raid Precau-
tions experts were experimenting
on the salvage of gas -contamina-
ted foods before war begun and
today, although no unit has had
to go into action, the serviee
stands at the alert, ready for
emergency.
The backbone of the service it
the growing chain of food "laun-
dries" for cleansing the food, now
built up throughout the country,
The "laundries" are staffed by
civil defence personnel, worldng
In co-operation with the local
authorities, It is estimated that
these decontamination unite could
salvage ninety percent, of bite
food treated.
Do You Remember?
The inaugural ride of the horse
and buggy sightseeing system Was
featured by a runaway at Niagara
Falls, The new sightseeing car-
riage turns tho clock hack a guar -
tor of a century when horse drawn
vehicles were last seen engaged
In the tourist business,
HOW CAN I?
Q. What can I use as a sub-
stitute for dog biscuits?
A. One can save money spent
on dog biscuits, as well as make
use of all leftover bread. Slice
the bread and put it into the
broiling oven, Allow it to get
brown on one side, and then turn
over and brown until quite hard.
This makes a good dog biscuit;
it affords splendid roughage and
is a good tooth cleaner.
Q. How can I be sure of an
even color when using a soap dye?
A. \Vlien tinting garments with
a soup dye, put the cake of soap
into a shaker and shake it in the
water until you have the shade
desired, This insures an even dye
and clean hands.
Q. How can I keep leather auto
upholstery in good condition?
A. 'i'o restore leather auto up-
holstery after it bus been rained
on, and to keep it in good condi-
tion, rub linseed oil into it occa-
sionally.
Q. How can I stop a leak in a
gas plate?
A. If you are using a gas plate
with a tubing that leaks or smells,
melt some paraffin wax and dip
tho leaky part in it, or dip it in
all over. It will be as good as
new. Painting metal gas hose
with aluminum paint stops any
leak and greatly prolongs its life.
Q. (tots cttn I prevent sticking
dresser drawers?
A. Sandpaper and varnish the
edges of sticking dresser drawers.
l'he varnish will keep them from
swelling and shrinking, 11 is a
good idea to varnish or paint the
inside of the drawers also.
MIDDLE -AGES
WOMEN GUI)
HEED THIS ADVICE!!
If you're cross. restless, NERVOUS—
suffer hot flashes, dizziness—caused
by this period In a woman's Ilfe—
try Lydia E. Ptnkltan's Vegetable
Compound. Made especially for
women. Hundreds of thousands re-
markably helped. Follow label dlrec-
ttuus. Made In Canada,
Have You Heard?
A young matron of our aa•
quaintance, taking first aid train-
ing, has reached the 10suscilation
stagy. One evening recently, re-
turning from 11 Iced Cross meet-
ing, she ohsorveil a loan, on a
darkened side sUrut, sprawled
f(lt'e downward.
''Alla," thought the Wallen.
"Prot idenee has sunt tae hither
W min :A.0t' to this poor unfortun-
ate." Parking her car nearby,
she ruhed over and began giving
the treatment for resuscitation,
Presently the 11)11)2 stirred, and
looked up, spoke with great diffi-
culty:
"(,tny," he said, "1 (1011'1 know
what you're up to, but 1 wish
you'd quit tickling ole, I'm hold-
ing a !astern for a guy working
down in this Inflnhule."--Quote.
Mrs. Jones: "How's your
son getting along in the
Army, Mrs. Smit(?"
Mrs, Smith: "What do you
think? They've promoted
Herbert for hitting a Berg•
giant. They've made him a
court martial."
Jack: "I've a friend I'd like to
have you girls meet,"
Athletic Girl: "What can he do?
Chorus Girl: "How much has
he?"
Literary Girl: "What doos he
read ?"
Business Girl: "What (tae he
accomplished?"
Religious Girl: "What churoh
does ho belong to?"
Spinster: "Where is he?"
Farmers "Let ole tell you,
my friend, that horse knows
as much as I do."
Friend: "Well, don't tell
anybody else; you might want
to sell him some day."
When the old grandfather of a
German family died, his sorrow-
ing relatives put the usual an-
nouncement in the local news-
paper. It ran:
"Ernst Muller has been called
to a better world."
And next day they were ar-
rested for criticizing the Nast
regime,
"What did the calf say to
the silo?"
"I don't know."
"Is my fodder in there?"
The bus was, as usual, crowded
and the party of five WAA1I"s
found themselves hanging on the
straps, Presently one bright mem-
ber of the company said loudly to
her friend: "I wish that smart,
nod-lookinan would give me
good-looking.
g pl
is seat."
Almost before she'd finished,
five melt stood up to offer their
ieltts,
Het "1'm thinking of get-
ting married; what do you
think?"
She: "I think it's a wonder•
ful idea if you ask me."
In 1936-37 the output of timber
In the Belgian Congo was doubled
and the maize crop trebled,
es
CUT EACH S
FR FROM H FRO SMOKE
AND HEPLUG
SAVE MONEY
WITH DIXiE.
Packers Develop
Dehydrated Meat
Product May Become Popo.
ar With Domestic Consumers
Disclosure that large scale lend
lease export of meat is at hand,
through a revolutionary shipping
space -saving method of propara•
tion, was heralded in the packing
industry its a major development
In the livestock -meat trade,
Meat is to be dehydrated and
shipped in containers requiring
only a fraction of the cargo room
needed for transportation of a
corresponding quantity during the
last world war. Packers estimate
enough meat can be packed into
a military plane to feed a whole
division for a limited period,
Of equal importance with tlta
space -saving feature was disclos-
ure that beef would be shipped to
American anion and armed forces.
This attracted special attention
in the cattle industry, since up to
now most lend-lease shipments
have been pork and lard,
Saves Shipping Space
There were some estimates that
the compressing of moat by the
new process wouldermit ship-
ment in one vessel of a quantity
equivalent to the cargo of ben
ships a quarter century ago.
The new rnethou, developed by
packers at the request of govern-
ment officials, involves grinding
of meat, pre-cooking, and dryitl�
in air dryers or vacuum, This
produces shall palatable pelletal,
to which it is necessary ot)ty tto
add water to snake a eubstance al-
most identical to fresh [gonad
meat.
Packers believe the dehydrated
product eventually may become
popular with domestic consumers.
Their kitchen experts have work-
ed out numerous menus for dishes,
including (neat loaf, hamburger,
hash and combinations with veg-
etables,
Nearly 32,000 ponies and hors-
es are now hauling coal in (nines
of England and Wales.
Modern Etiquette
1, l i R courteous for a 1.01011 l0
:1 store to tell u Clerk, ' 1 ant punt
looking around"?
2. When serving a breakfast be-
tween 11 a.m. and 12.30, should It
he in the fin in of a 0:eakfaot or
Iunc10011?
3. What day of the week should
a girl choose for her wedding?
4, What should a divorced wo-
man do with the rings given her
by her first husband, after she
r(luarries'>
5. itow long should a woman
remain when making a social call
on a new neighbor?
0, If a hostess Is gohtg t0 serve
cocktails, and has one or two
guests who she knows do not drink
1110111, what (111001(1 she do?
ANSWERS
1. Yes. The goods are on die
play, and the person has this priv-
ilege, wlthot buying; but one
should never handle the various
articles, 2, A luncheon, 3. This
is altogether a matter of choice;
she inay choose any day deslred.
4, Some women dispose of their
first engagement and wedding
rings, while others wear them ors
the right hand, 6. From 16 to 21
minutes, 0, Provide tomato juin°,
or something similar for these
g'ueste,
LABOR
WANTED
ALL TYPES OF FACTORY
LABOR FOR
WAR WORK
Ample Housing Available
INTERNATIONAL
MALLEABLE IRON CO.
GUELPH - ONT.
r
.CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS...
BABY C1IIUICS
WHEN YOU WRITE AN ORDER
for Twoddle Chinks you write
your own ticket for a grand
ehnnee to make more money per
dollar Invested than you over
elude before, July special sales
include day old and older chicks,
mixed, pullets, cockerels, 19 pure
breeds, 9 hybrid eross breeds, 6
breeds of turkeys. Make 1942
your banner your for prof ts by
buying Twoddle Chicks. Make
your "Chicken Money" with less
effort 1(11d lees time spent. Write
today for catalogue and reduced
July price list. No waiting.
Prompt delivery. Ttveddle ('hick
Hatcheries, Limited, Fergus, Ont.
BABY 1111CIir
BRAY PULLETS Wad. IIELI' YOU
on winter markets. Light and
heavy breeds available, also day-
old chicks, You'll help us by tell-
ing us now what you'll be need-
ing, and when. itray Hatchery,
130 John, Hamilton, Ont
ACCORDIONS WANTED
ACCORDIONS WANTED
Best prices paid for piano
nIcordions, twelve to bun•
dyed and twenty bass.
THE T. EATON CO. LTD.
Musical instrument Department
Toronto
11AI' Ell V EllUll'MENT
13A1ll:Its' OVENS AND MACIIIN•
ery, also rebuilt equipment al-
ways o11 hand. Terms arranged,
Correspondence invited. Hubbard
Portable Oven Co., 103 Bathurst
$t., Toronto.
BI ICK'S — l'0S'r1ACS
AND1:ltSON DicLAI'OIILIN 111JI('IC-
I'ontiac Ltd, the largest dealers
in Canada for lluicks and 1'on-
(hies are located at 1029 11ay St..
Toronto. Von can always be sure
of real high grade used cars. at
very reasonable prices. ('ars t hat
Sou can depend on for real ser -
%ice anil 111th excellent tires, We
en joy it very large out-of-town
clieutcic: built up through 3 cars
mf serving well. It will pay yeti
to t istt us twhcm in 1'01'0111o,•be-
>i,),,, rte ole sure \te can sane
you tummy.
ISSUE 27—'42
CURS — USED ANL) NEW
MOUNT PLEASANT MOTORS Ltd.,
Toronto's oldest Chrysler, Pty 1-
outh dealers; three locations, eat
Mt. Ploesant ltoad 2040 Youge
St. and 1060 Danforth Avenue.
Our Used Care make us many
friends. Write for our Free Book-
let on pedigreed renewed and an-
alyzed used care.
0i'1.1ING .+t CLEANING
ICAVI; YOU ANYT1LING NEEDS
dyeing or cleaning? Write to tie
fur information. We are glad to
answer your questions, De art•
meta 11, Parker's Dye Work,'
(,milted, 791 Yonne Street, To-
ronto,
D1)05 Si'AJT1:0
w'AN'r1;D 1'UI'1'11:S ANY BREED,
preferably 100:021 10i'ods. (Jive
full details, Ontario only. 1)00-
1)0JI, 560 Bay Street, Toronto.
1'1:1;1) 11151N1:55
1'1:11", LIUSI N 1:SS, 1:S'1'A 11015111(10
20 year's, must tel due to age
and 111 health, Principals only.
Box 39, Richmond 11111.
FUNERAL 11(1310
F1'NE(05I, 110911:, Wrrtl IWS1-
dcucc; mirage and two apart-
ments, central, Guelph; former
owner retired; excellent situation
and upportuuitg. $8.5 00—on envy
terns, or will rent. Frank Do,
noel:wood, Ont.
l'I1181 CA'T'ALOGUE
1'1{1:111
CATALOGUE OF RAM:
and Exciting books. Rev. Tyror's
Groat Work on Marriage Rela-
tions, $22.19. SUPER MAIL 011-
1)lat, 57 Queen Street West,
Toronto, Ontario.
"11.iNUY3IAN" J.il'I(
"HANDYMAN" JACK W1T1i 100
uses. Lifts tractors. buildings,
implements, stretches fence N.
l'upacity 6000 lbs. Free circular.
1.11. 11. horst, St. Jacobs, Ontario.
111>11I;FI)ItI) lll•LL5 -
1'1'Itl:l;lt1;D 11EL'1:FOltD BULLS
for imntedinle service. Due to ac-
quisition of the herd of the late
E. J. 'Thompson or Montreal. we
hate :t large selection, yearlings
1111) alder bulls, all of excellent
luec)iu Prices from WO tip.
1I. t'rt w l'alal,o Ie Stuck Farms,
I:em ft cw. (nt. 'Telephone Ren-
fretr 437.
MEDICAL
(100L ADVICE! EVERY SUFFER -
"r of Rheumatic Pains or Neur-
Ills should try Dixon's Re``nedy.
Munro's Drug Store, 335 rllgln,
Ottawa. Postpaid $1,00.
OLI) (RUGS Itlai'OVEN NEW
RUGS, NEW RUGS MADE 'mujrt
old. Dominion Rug Weaving Cord.
pony, 964 Queen St. w'., Torontb.
Write for bookl.c,
'1'0A1'III:It YVA3,'1'I.0
(40A1,l1'1I 11 1' 1t 0 T E STAN'
'Coacher for Encampment School.
Salary $750 per annum. Mrs
Dunr:ul Brown, Sect etary, Rich-
ards Landing, Ont.
•
ItAl1111'1'5
WANTED — DEITS AN Y WUAN•
lilt'; genuine 00)45(1 r4 p of
stuck. Ontario only: Inuncdiately.
11. Cullen, Weston, Ontario.
1(111:1 11AT I C PAIN s
11"S IMPORTANT! EVERY SUI*
fever of Itheuluutic Talus or
Neuritis should try 1)iuu0's Rem'
ods-, Munru's Drug Stole, 819
Elgin, Ottawa.
PATENTS
•
FE'rlIEns'I'uNHAUGH et CUM PAN t
Patent solicitors. Established
1890: 14 King West, Toronto.
Booklet of Information on re-
quest.
1'tl0TOGI .it'111'
W11Y PAY MORE:' YOl:1t F114t13
developed and 8 glossy veto)).
prints only 25e. Free 4 a 6 en-
1algement luellyded. will. for
free mailers. Nation wide Photo
Service, 30 ,lanes SC, St. Cath-
arines, Ontario,
1910'1'0011 A I'II1'
DON'T TRUDGE THROUGH
The Itcul, Itain, or 11ai1
HAVE YOUR SNAPS
l), Iltered by ,Mall
Any fi or 8 exposure film pertectty
developed nntl printed for 01111 25c.
Sup: eine quality and fast service
R uuranteed.
IMPERIAL PHOTO SERVICE
Station J, Tot onto
Page 8.
•
111111101111104111tetet0et0010ctatc+etaKKItttdt4PrAtaittkP ;tZ11141Kaaet0000144ttlWIKV
•
HOLIDAY NEEDS—
MISSES ANI) WO1N1EN
1lrs..\. I'awcett attended the Innve•
Slacks, Overalls, S\veatl'1'S, Slitek Suits, 1'ox wedding on Saturday, at Brussels.
Bathing Suits a11(1 Caps, Mr. Kenm+tdt AAnion of (.russets, Is
MI'iN'S :1N1) 1301'S' A I\'IsIIitt'g his stat.'', and brother-in-Ia.w,
Aal'•nar. r1\eea,st•
Tl'(►I)ical a11(1 COttoll r1'1'o1.1Se1'S, SW1.'atel'S, Mr. .luck Watson, Jr., had the ink
: \Vindbreakers, Bathing (funks, A Good fortune on alonday to fall front his
,. �., Underwear,
fi bicycle ;nd fracture an arm.
Assol tall nt of Balbrit,gan
,t; / 11'c hone received no word of the
•i'. Entrance Result.; yet As soon as w•e
T
: do `cy will he posted In our window.
_;
011v e C 111 l alis. J. D. Philp of Listow ed is (is-
+=I +4 sting with her son, and daughter -in-
t,•'
E:2411fDr.
t2t31DiXpi 1213f313.?;D1)171).Dai?,nrlfro7.:` SJiierDilINi13t313N)4121"et41A;ii1ADt10421 1:1 W. Mr. and a11Yi. R. 1), 1'11111)•
r.
THE
STANDARD " Wednesday, July 1, 1912.
mon
aimmusigammommiss
SIMS GROCERY
GOODS DELIVERED. TELEPHONE 1111.
Spaghetti per tin 10c
Aylmer Peaches per tin 17c
Crosse & .Blackwell's Lime Cup ---
For Summer Drinks 30c
ZINC RINGS AND RUBBERS.
Cheddar House Cheese
12c and 20c
Certo per bottle 27c
Kkovah ,felly Maker 15c
Aylmer Infant Food 10c
'1r, and Mrs, (', Fletcher, of
cago, Ill., are visiting with al r.
:Mrs. \\'m. Shiva eh.
Chi.
-j Mr. and alts. Hold, Vint of near
\l'hftechnreti are '.siting with 11r.
and Arthur Barr.
.lis,;
itavid and Patsy Pocock, of llcspel•
('r, are visiting their aunt, Mrs, It. .1.
1'owcll.
Ia1r. 1>,tviil \V. Sooners of \\'iu'ghan
is able to be 1.11(.1i at his work again,
following his recent illness.
Mr. and airs. Alex. Smith of Gude•
nett were guest:; of Mr. and Mrs, V.
A1. tinny hast Sunday,
'Mrs. A. E. Bender, of 'Toronto, in
visiting her mother, airs. E. Ilell and
sister, 11rs, Jamie Sluts.
\Ir. and airs. Alex. 'Taylor, of Port
Stanley, were isiting friends in town
last week,
11'iss II'i',,el Tents of Landon .spent
the week -end with her mother, Airs,
I. Pet.ts,
Ur. Reg. Argent, of 'Welland, is
home to spend the long summer vaca-
tion with his parents, 11r. turd ilrs,
Fred Argent.
- ..----- ----- - .._ _ ' \1r. and 1Ii's, Gordon Johnston of
Entice (toy, of Mullett, is va- St. Catharines, nue visiting at the
rationing at the (tomes of her uncles, (nems( of the fortner's brother. Mr. and
and : \Its. Eldridge Johnston,
or. alyrou I..:• Millar, 'reroute, and I)1..
Ralph Rogers, .Gest 11111. Iltw. A. 11. and Mrs. Boyle turd
lifttot
�,He
bushboy c°"'
soldier
ho'p'e' 114"9
'=
6c•r11E WAY I look at it is this, My boy
enlisted of his own free will. He's got to do
ithout a lot of things he's been accus-
tomed to. I wouldn't feel right if I
couldn't go without something tool"
"The least I can do is to work hard and
Sit%C.:Iy kitchen, my shopping bag, my
wor!; basket are the nearest I can get to
his battlefront. But I ran buy War
..rings Stamps — and lots of them —
('rcry week, so that he may lune the tools
to win. And that's what I'in doing! How
about you?"
lluy War Strings Stomps .from honks,
post of res, telephone offices, depart erten t•
stores, druggists, grocers, tobacconists.
book stores and other retail stores.
National War finance Committee
12-S
C\Irs. 'I'urnl:ull visited with the lat-
ter's brother and faunilly in Brantford
last week'.
\1r. and Urs, Robert Bell and fain-
, ily, of Stratford, visited with 11r, and
Mrs. (filbert Betrnes over the week,-
Miss
eek•
Miss Marjorie :\slip of St, Hilda 't(
School, Eriudale, recently arrived in
Blyth to be the guest of Mr. and Mrs,
V. M. Bray for the summer holidays.
'airs. \V1111am Denham, K1r1:.ton, vis
iced her sisters, Mrs. John' M. Craig
and Miss Iva Switzer, last wreck, re-
turning home Monday.
M1'. and Mrs. Alex. Taylor of t'or't
Manley, and Alis, N. A. Taylor, of
IlitlIt, spent last weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. \\'nn. Cool(e,Iline.
I:r. Kirkby, anti Airs. Kirkby, of
Bc!1;iave, were visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Watt, on Saturday even-
ing.
1h•, and 1Ir's. T. C. 'Putney of Ma-
ga! a F'lP';, it'+ve returned home after
spending 0 few days lad week with
Mts. •1. l'ctt,a.
\1r. and Mrs. Marty Lata• and daugh-
ter, Judy, of Niagara Falls, spent the
(V elc.cud with .\lrs. L+aur's aunt, 1111.a,
J. Putts,
\lr. and Mrs. Thos. bind and laugh•
ter, of Buffalo, N.Y., and Mrs. Harvey
Reid, of Auburn, vkited with Mrs,
It-:bert McGee, and the hisses Mc-
Clelland, last week.
Airs. Caen) ane, of \\'iugham, who
has been 11I at the home of the Jllsties
McClctllai 1. Is recovering nicely. Ilex
ne:ce, Mrs. Ito(;ert McGee, has been
caring for her.
M1s'; Danny uraud:+ge of St. Ililda's
School, 1 rindale, recently arrived In
Brant, to be the guest of the Rev, 1'.
11., and Mr;. Streeter for the sum-
mer holidays.
Ho11yan's
tQltatOCIC WtCKtdt'1 1told;tCtCCIVI,telt4tfitZtVCIZt3W>','.',t=-FM,':-NIGT; Tt't 'ti 1411.t41&G?'EICV i5
1
1
BAKERY
AND CONFLOTIONERY.
The Homme of Good Baking.
Soy Bean, Whole Wheat
and White Bread.
Also Buns, Cookies
Pies, Cakes and
Money -Dipped Doughnuts
Wedding. Cakes a Specialty.
Doherty Bros.
GARAGE.
WR AGENTS FOR
Plymouth and
Chrysler Cars
Auto -Lite and Hart
Batteries.
Anti -Freeze.
Winter Check -Up On
Your Car.
Goodrich & Dunlop Tires.
White Rose Motor Oil,
PHILCO RADIOS ANi)
SUPPLIES.
Acetylene and Electric
Welding.
.p„..,�.A.,,.,,..,�.,.,,..�.1,N� 1� I,U,H,.1,.1� .I.1,LIII�..i•>,. �H,Ir
Stop & Read ,
WE CAN SUPPLY YOU WITH ,1,
BUILDING MATERIALS.
»Metal Roofing, Slate -Surfaced,.
Shingles, Insul Brick Siding,
Insul Board,
Dressed Lumber and Trim,
Deep & Shallow Well Electric
Pumps.
Bath Fixtures and Supplies,
Pipe and Pipe Fittings.
Galvanized Woven Wire Fence.
` Estimates Freely Given on Your
>• Requirements, :.
:L. SCRIMGEOUR & SON:=:
=Phone 36. Blyth P. 0. Box 71f
•
+4
Vodden 's
BAKERY.
WHEN IN NEED OF
BREAD, BUNS, PIES,
HOME-MADE CAKE
OR COOKIES
REMEMBER
"THE ROME BAKERY”
H. T. VODDEN.
PERSONAL INTEREST
Mrs. Wellington ale\(tll is still con•
fined to her bed through !these,
SU
(1
liner Necessities
For Use Aroun(1 the Monte Or On Picnics:
VACUUM IIO'I"1'LES
'I'11I(a1tNIOS 1;O'rrl1i(;S l.00
OUTING JUGS (one gallon) 1.7;>
STA -WAV INSECT REPELLENT ;Oc
DI ANTI -MOSQUITO CR1::1M :;5c
DI WELCIi'S GRAPE JlT1('E :5c iq
1111'11: JUICE - 11ION'I'SERRA'1' 1Oc as
y LIME JUICE - CORDIAL 14)c of
TAT
r, r 1 ) :;t)e 1�
;1 IAA ANl 11.:115 ti
4 SPOT REMOVER 15c and .►1)c vi
4 '3
Y a
Films, All Sizes --- ((Eastman and Selo.
Plc
f Li
119
-'. loping and Printing', Done Quickly .t Expertly
a fi
r
W R, D. PH(LP, Phm. B. ii
41 ip DRUGS, SUNDRIES, \\'ALLPAiER— TIONE 2P. o
1"2af3fnai,t•,,3n2t.yuamltc,,�nat;..:lta?.b.,,b,D..L,.dC>I,u. dl:.,.tiitr, to: ,n,-��r.,r,al.,l:t.,.:,'!:.„,.,: ,a7naz �d,l,,..,.'VL'Iit
OA
1?
t,1)
6f1
of Bathing Caps 25!', 29c. :15c and 10c
Mows Drug yore
()rugs, Tobacco, Soft Drinks—Phone 28.
Backrite Kidney rills 50c a
Wampo!e's Milk of Magnesia 25c and 50c
Wanlpole's .Magnesia 'Tablets 100 for 50c
Dickson's Stomach Powder 75c
Fermol Laxative Tablets 50c
"IT” White Shoe Dressing 15c
n1)
Paper 11:t1('s, (Cups and Serviettes,
Viiami ' II., Plant, lial's each :15s
5 Sweet Peas, 1'lcrnlng Glory, Asters, LIIlUlas.
io
iy
D
''1
�i3,ila .`I.`l�li,Jlc,a,<,'��`'ic,cl�,<lulus,.:l.',,:,�i�.',%tutialm.✓,c,�,'..�,ah<a.^,.:',.-. �_��I%!"', r....,�,i u...-tcl�.Jl.
14
e
I.1)
of
O.R
n1)
V
eF
eA
Tt
op
w�
The 1)I'iC('s are reasonable 1111(1 tl1('st' Lt)1111("('S
rare just. the thing for Indoor, Pore.. O.' Summer
t�A
61)
1),A
up
o'1)
oa
6f
J. S.
nt
(tome Furnisher —
, ,minl , 71y,n ..^ro,-.,; ...., ,±•�,`ro,r, .j-'•+•�.,'<-', aG'i 'i•i .�'rr-•r{.�ql,C ry l�; q�
Lounge Frniture
We offer a pleasing variety in Studio Lounges
fitted \vith Spring -Filled Mattresses iln(i
covered i11 (lul'allle fabrics,
1)r(n-bath and Single 1)a`' 1 etl::, litilttr'(I ill
Smart, Bright Co\'e1'iiig,t,
Bottle u.:e.
Ave iirf.':e you to come
i11 111111 inspect t11('111.
ell
Phones 7 and 8
-- Funeral Director.
el
to
ou
/r1
114
ry
(4
Al
la
1^
b M1 tY C h'l ,t�.Y .•t a•., 0r'� t ,. ry ..V F.F. ., ,. h h!..H ,..ti F.\"• 1
�'`r.�'1�1�1�i31t°)1'LI'Y .73{3;2 sY,.,.'-.kv.: tihi hf.`•J`(�6otlblvt`tic.la,..lc,�,c.al.3,a,✓.c.o'.c,o..:. a....�,.:.a.a lam.. •..,a t. ,� ,.�t
Week -end visitors at the home of
111 es• Ed1Ilt 11:. link were, air, A. E.'
Bender, of 'Toronto, Mr, and Mrs. Antro
I'`aulhaffer of Toronto, Mr. and Mrs.
Ezra 13e»dcr of 1)a hwool.
The condition of Mr, Gustave 131s -
back has so improved ural it Is hope'(
lie may be removed front hospital to
the Inonte of hi:, brother, Victor lits•
back. on the Base 1.100, this week.
Jig, 111.0.ock has been a patient In the
Clinton 1I'o- ital for the past nine
weeks, following a serious operation.
\h. Robert Winters of 'Tile Bank of
Commer00 staff, Ottawa, spent Satin' -
day calling 011 old friends in town.
lk/h was formerly on the staff of the
local .lank of Con n ecce staff here. e1
911'. 1111 1 Pearson, formerly of the STUART1� ''�' r SON
staff of the local Bank of Commerce, a }ti) ;:
Mrr. Carman MorriIt of the Royal
('an•adian Navy, 11801ilton, spent a n1)
few days leave at the home of Ills f
parents, Mr. and Nies. ,ituute6 Merritt, Clinton Official, And Son
lulu week. He leaves for St. Ilya Roth Li The Navy
cloths, Que.. tliis week for a len week
pct rad of training. M. .f. Sehoenhals who for the past
tett years has been customs and ua- 9
on'dhntry Seaman Tommy Steep, of 110nal revenue officer at Clinton, hay ea
London, was a caller at The Standard applied a1 1 beet acc(+pted in the ser- i!j
Ori;ce. oii 'l'uo(day evening. Tommy (lice brtut•h of the Royal ('an.uli•ut �t
is a son of Mr, and Mrs. Andy Steep Naval Volunteer Reserve and i,; or- y
of Clinton. 'Touumy is takiu'g up wire- tiered to report for duty on July IS. 1)Q
less telegraphy, and quite calmly in- His son, Robert .1 ."Buddy" Schoen- V
'formed us that he would be the one dta1s, Is already in the it.C.N•\'.Il., in iu
to send out the SOS, in case of lis training at Loudon. Mr. Schoenhala n1)
tee ;. lie. along with tl tuuu!ter of is a veteran of the last war, and ht.
h'; buddies from Clinton. are all get- been secretary of the Clinton l.'nu'; �!
Eng their initial training at London. Chub since it was formed. At a ineet•
ile tells v.: that 11:11 Counter, .sou of ing Iii IIensall, iso tendered his resig-
Mr. ant Mrs. Morley Counter, of Clin- nation, and WaS presented with a set
ton, who has been on a mines -weeper of military brushes in a leather rase 4
for some time, is holidaying with his by fast ('resident \V, L. Whyte, 1'•1
parents, in Clinton. ibellalf of the Club, 1Sis'`ith?F2121)112/111-Bt2,X24,,1244t3131)t2.at;Ft$•larlti +Mnallikalltrkr)at?atti-21Drd 12kki
1 1 •1i 11. •, 1 •. Ohl 111 I r,l, II i.Il I :1r,: 11 .10 .. . I 1,,4l4'lli. ro,114,.1 r::\ • I ,1. •114.1., •
Ar
Memorial iall-Saturday Might
PROCEEDS '1'0 PROVIi)F (',1G - RE'I"1'ES
FOR BOYS OVERSEAS.
1
Loll .. - ■NU+. V.. 1.1 rt • ., r.:M-Y,'r 1 4.I14111,.Y•d,Ilr,rl i I 11 ,. ,J .I... I_ yl, Lit rJJ4.r.• .;... +14,
Mr. Itohrrt Mr( llt:tvrie of \\'innip"g.ton \lcnnl;ty night. \laity cid friend;
act! Mrs. I'.thh. ;Ind ali',s lean It;11L11, w ill rentctt!». r air, MctQtar it., an nl(I
11' 'Tccsu•al(Ir, Ivey!. visi (1i's in llly!h e1l=i11en1 of the tcvru•
Iclpt �!p lo':, n r,�.•�,r,7 , /r• nret 9,..y,e••r•c,glLL.,,oln9o,u,n,;,l m,�r.•t�'t•cc 1C '�tro.•.l-.,n,p�tm(yry:e"r.; it P:
4 titti'V �, yN.,t'-,t1) Fl n r�,••, N'Ntti al . w 'tia'6 t,'. l,•q',r a,'V ��,".i ,a tom,•, T,`� lU'ti U 4
and now of Ailsa Craig, was a visitor
in town on Saturday.
Phone 156 for Prompt Delivery.
Market Price for Eggs According To Grade.
i4
rn
a3
CORN, Golden Bantam 13c, 2 for 25c
PEAS per tin, 13c, 2 for 25c; 1.5c and 17e
GOLDEN WAX BEANS per tin 12c
SALMON per tin, 12 1-2c, 20c and 40c
TOMATOES per tin 11c, 2 for 25c, and 10c
N EW POTATOES.
BUG I(11.1,1(:R per hay; 2.e and -1 is
FLY COILS. FLY PADS. SWA'L'TERS
Zinc Jar Rings and .lar Rubber Rings.
(' to and Certo Crystals, Kkovah Jelly Maker.
PAROWAX per caks, 5c, l for 15c
SUI4TANA RAISINS 1:1c, 2 for 25c t.
LEXIA SEEDED RAISINS, 16 oz. pkg. 1'
14
+�F
It)
a3
19