The Blyth Standard, 1942-11-11, Page 1T E BLYTH
VOLUME 17 - NO. 1,1.
Blyth Municipal Counril 1 REMEMBER---
1'ANDAR
BLYTII, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, NOV, 11, 1912,
Salvage Collection This ! 'Taylors .ic To $1.00 Store I Orangemen Attend Service
It, . un c ;i coni. of Illyell flet Itr .nrniltcr the hole when Thu tray- Sattirday, Novem er 11t11i ,I)isc(mtinuiiij. Businessi On Sunday
01 Nltycan: (r 1 w1:11 R((Ve \Iorril1, eller; :1115 Tom plagIII of the nnr:bautl ;
aid Councillor; 'Taylor, \Iurrd'nn and lire. En't'ry floe you Iowie41 at the
Sllllharp(, iireselI 1(1,':or there was one either going out
'I1 hires of last 11111ding were con• or coming In, mail you felt Ilk
firmed on motion 1)I' ('uunrlllurs screaming at Ilial, and the traveller.
Poor follow, know 11, lou, Ile always
hada sort Of furtive look In Itis eye,
also), and Taylor,
Bfllo And Accounts Lot they were all good, honest felluwa
Jost Trying to get along, in what op -
'mitred to be an ove;•worked field. Also required Is old iron, uewsp:,•
Remember how, nine limes Out 1)f per; rags, anal catty other itt niS whi(i1
feu, you (1111114ill;pistil of Ilial, s) are listed on your salvage card, ill you
Ilial you (oui;t gel a1,ut; tvilh faire x•,1111 iay4 11.
IilpnrUnit twurll, 1
I 'file nsuatl splen;litl (u 1.:Hie1 Ino n
J IIt Holt', the war has chaulged all the pablic Is anll.:ipilid, in helping
111;11, with pt's many regulations, \faits factIlLtic the collection. Rc;nr'n1' e1'
things ole be(omin„ scarce; and nth -lac mel, or hay.;, tthi(h ever the re-:,
urs have entirely disatppeared. Itemenl roes be, are ennt'ib ding their time,
her hut'' we used t, I:, reale ;tiniest
andtruck , , 1 : the salnc ati you tor,
liotbyi, account $:1,1.1
J. :1, (rowan, salary for (lclnher 110,x(1
11'. '1'1111(11, salary for flclnaer 15.111
A. \V, P. Smith, assessing (lc, Sii,35
\1', 1I, Jlorritl, selecting Jurors '',00
S. lc(chufe, work un streets I.:,u
11. i1eI Troy, litre of home i•5
A. Barr, tvorl( on streets '.111
II, I l proms, tvorlt un streets . , , , I .S.,1
'Myth Stai lard, printing ,l'• nil', 78.10
II. \lot'rl''on, oil, gasollae
and t•:paii plugs 'x",40
„\lov'e,l by ('onniillt's 'Taylor and
illorrison, that 111•coolls as read be
14141.—Catrrlcd.
'Moved by Councillors \l0rrls(i 111'(1
'J'aylor, that Bylaw No. 6, I!I12, siting
lbrt'li dale of nomination and eltct'on
if requhrd, 11x1 now read three limos
be finally passed.— Carried.
\Ictal by Councillors Sildlhorie and
'Taylor, that. a ditch along the \vest
side of Queen 51rtel, be dug so a1', to
!provide an °olid from '\Ir, Irvin:±
11'
YOUR LOCAL PAPER.
Local Victory Loan Almost
Makes Quota
The 111)111 I''Irc Ile;; note 11 110 %.111s ; Ethel Taylor antiontees lids The members 1';l Blyth 1,0,1,. a.I•, 'flit' local 1'(ctory roan J)rive fell
condo(' lig 11 `'alvage l'aailalgn 11118 (('eek That she L dt.-cu111in11ag her 1''0111'x1 011 111' \1'ur,;1111 au S11 111111Y. i'jul $3,11'14. 111ur1 of 111akiug 11's
Salird,ty afternoon, Noweni'.e• 11th, ",( to $1.i.0 Store !,u.sin1 • 111 r,•, :ul I The sortie'. tell; 111'1,1 iu eululerllun 1luoto, 'Things looked rather riitiulttl
S'urage a:l'1'Irs ul:ula of Slop urs the store liar, all sad). chi:, 1'l it's door; with the nur1.;:'g service of the Myth as the campaign was veining to 0
'
the nto:•t itn,ulrlant ail all scilt•agi' al \il;s 'Taylor mi.: ;;;;Iii her emir flopped chord,. Ilse to heating diffl-'clew, w!111 only $14.1.un. showing on
the present I:m', and citizens are re•
quested to starih diligently for all a1'•
Endo; of steel en lh( preutis;,t.
Stoup, and I1 will he moving old 4iii,i ("I ti1's is the United ('hnreh, the ser- 'the ladder in The Standard ()ff((e
week, flier hurl to be held In lie. \1rlunriatl :window. Ilewever the lust two days
11;111, sats' it climb rapidly. and .: v,.,s 1101041
1 ,4111,11,1!1 formol (,f neWher:s of that the objective would be reached,
Iho Orarlgr' Order, r,;llesx'n(iittt' ol'i 11uch (rtvlil is dui' the local can-
tht' district. was present, as well ;is c,i,-s'', Miss .10;s!: I';tfllll•';, win
a la eel, coup regalion. The 11;111 %toe; worked diligently Ilroughout IJie
routluilairly full, ('auupaligIi. \lies Phillips rolri $1!1.04)0.
Alderman Leslie Smolders, o1' 'r,. and Iho bank handled the balance,
Taylor's have atlty;Iys carried al 511011. 1'01110, rya, Um sl0ri;11 S1(a1;rr, and 1 11 n'uu ('aunty again carne through
11111 81ot'1i, "1111'11 had "11 influence lu ROr. A. Sttclalr (utducleil N.tt sr vier, latn,l exceeded their objective by near -
bringing people to lean, \1i:-; 'Taylor's \Ir,;, 1!:uvld I'hilbi!t, mid miss '•!i1i ey •,1''t :r
I}' $.,, ,I , 1. Thu County subscribed
d0r(=ho11 to disco:Wont, Ion -Ones; will 11'a111act rendered as lovely doll. :over $:'.I no,1111r1, The o:,Jectfwe was
t 11 1 i l l 1 I1
tired of bananas and cream, sweet be 1'egt•r'11('tl 11y eyeryuae, 111• r. 11111'1ers 11'011'11 11 1111S111. :t $1,!'$1,!'$1,!'1:1,1'...,1),T1110,, 0 other 11111111C10:1 lItlUS
belling %t',hen you have everything_.
mind to the klug's boat, with white \ •1''siker of tdnt!rahle rl11111iltt's', a1111 iris failed to reach their oble•Iive, Utes
ready for thea when they call. address not only carried 1 me;;agt to:were \lurris and Grey '1't ;;:. :tip;.
sugar, tics holy 4.0'41 like enure nua•.I
lint tion wo'r'm getting quay from I'coplc 111 1!11 count nubs bring Arrives 01'el•seas tn'uthers of the Orange Order, but hall The comity total of $=,°68,1:,0 was
that fcllr:,v, 1!u' traveller, I'ho.rel8 a Ilhrlr contlbutiou to ihv I'1' u t on the ,\t'. and 'Mrs..1. II, It. Elliott hale„ a 811'1'1111 sigtrlficanee for till present. Made up a; follows'
Bell that tsar; sthttn 110 quarter tt'oelt \lnssly'llauris gr,tnnib .
Ifni.. other received a cablegram filen their sen,I \I r. Saun:l0rs It o111101' of 1110 Pro ;District Sales
Quetta
the g'.:rt' rationing enure. Into affect, dont lht,l Ir; also urgently needvl I; I'dltl•(1fl't''er 1l, II, Elliott, informing te,;lull .1cllon, and his ability as 0illlylh . $2iUti 1"1ota
11'4 ions ober listening to hall' a doz• :old rubber. An iulett,;ive croup:don them of his ,oife arrival Or(rsr11,;, soe:titer keep; hitt in comvtult de• 11'Iogham1 .. ] t,9,5U 119,6.54)
(u of Them one day, gathered hi the for robber was m:lndnc11i1 ito1 rceently, --1' u1IItd '1'urub(rry . , ,,,,..,. 49,6:,0 44 71
Meal hotel, all inflows who were p 181 hal therm may 114 sono ih;it was not ( / \\'awuwsh 1':, •C1,°UU 41,4800
military mgr.', and ars one of them put given at that time,
Gas Sl-rltions Closed at 7 >rl,ln, 1lowi(k „ I I'I,,}no 19U,i0t)
it, the government can't use ns for Saturday' Nights Missing WlllJ,rhanl Woman's Morris :,,,,!1;,11 55,2014
;wy par,;us(. 'I'dley wore all crowding, — flow did you final the gas lank on Body found In River ,Croy . , 6',GU0 51,140
;ula(('s dwelling,— Carricll, or well past, the fifty "murk, Slice'Annual Meeting rli0 Ilse 1-Ield Ism (4i• Ia1,;t 5undny uwrnin;. ill It Ii ;RrnsSo15 , . t»,:fUU 37,6,511
then runny of theta lin 'u 11b;atppe reJ t I'he sacs of Mrs I'aiza Marshall' ',lhflelrl , , .. . , , , , 71
3:,U 65,380
\loved by ('oun(Iller8 \InrrlSun and , , tVaSn'I mu'q)t}, you worm nuc.;y, I'll^
ctrl the road eatIrely, \\'e often won.111 ( Ililt(111 1;11,1,13,11,,,a
t,l 31 tt old \1'inghmn tcou)au' watt 11'itt ;inosh 1\'. 6:',U:,O 4G,,?11x)
Taylor, that we to now adjourn,— ruling Ihnl country* g:lsulium stations
('lu'rietl, der Just what they ore doing now. The Anneal \peeling of the !loran 411111(1 /Twain np1'u until nine tl.m, nli .pound In Ism \Iaillaul ritrr ahnlll I'or• Colborne It",400 48,1110
J, II, It. Elliott, (.'Ier4,
Right now a iratvelle' k a very County 1'`etel•altiJll of :\ ,i u tibttu•e tt•!II Saturdays was suddenly wllhlh;ltVll ! ly''I'e(t from shore northwest of ihr± (.oderich 31_,1(() 31';,,•1 ,')
(.1 .11. sia11(u1, 11 \\'tn,ghaum, on I"rldaty Tnelser,;mllt,h , , 79,500 ;15,100
welcome visite'. In any line of hast• be held In the 'remit Hall. Clinton, on and maty, penile were disappointed
--1'—Wednesday, November 1Mh, at I.:t i :11'Imrnuun, !.Ilci< Ito l 61,6:1'u :,9,•14(1
nes,•, And he walls in with 0 ;tri of Y, wheat limy drnvt up fur gas 011 Satmr. 1 1
important look hi sir, eye, tool rightly 1),tu• day n!g111., I'he cont'elu(nrc tVus a
:In !uh'm'4ive 5011(11 1'1)1' Ih( tiiSShUr tIn11ett . , 9:t,7,0 59,oU0
so, because if he has what you wail,I I'hc election of officers mill take great serylcm, t';u'Ilcnl;uly to I'arnurs
tvr,utast had hien rontlu(icd since her 5eafurlh ,,,,,,,, 13U,i;,0 1116,2;,0
you're a mighty lucky goy, place all Irl 0.11, 5peakm: a will 11', I)1'. f'u'n;lghu:u Iho summer months, int tlisap)/Viirume 011 lite evening of hri• Clinton , , 1-t ,,,.i0 J17,&0)
No longer dour 114 coax and try all II. Barton, ]:spuds \1in1e!er cl' /I'll,apparently during the winter months(111y, October 311411. when she distil)• Stanlr'y , . 7S:,t•,ti 66,301)
hrc_r out of you, in;lc'.ItI, 111 many culture, s'ubjc:'l, "N'allim( Agricull'ne the governmm l halt decided t0 1alle4l,'warm! from the home of her brother Guderich Twp, 70,,0,511 49100
cases, he tells y'011 what you can have. in Colluder"; \1', le, Haskins, 1•'c r:'I:n'y, the Saturday night opine;s. 5o int ihluaulue, Zurich & Ila a, 11x, John A. Johnston, of \\lug•,Ilensal' ,& 111)' E. ., 55,7,50 73,6(14
360
plan mumble and cu,;:; 1111(110. you're Canadian Federation of Al;ric:lttu•.. future, got "tattled up" surly, ;old y' \\'.. , , , 61) 4150 51,
breath, and we almost imagine be Hurl W. Porter, of ism N'1!r.ual :4(11( avoid ddsapinintIIei)t, .1I1 organized searching party cover- , I'sborue , . , . , . , , , , , 2, ,50 64,M)0
live Service, Ottawa. 1 ad'es are too e1 the \\'ingham area and the river Exeter , , , ..... , 120,150 99,4x)
per'ially invited to attend. 0 x04,300
I'.111 and I':d. 'Taylor commenced
Losiniss here ,jayt a' 0111 four yea.;
ago, They, auutrnlrr' 1 their 'aiming
s.tic for Friday nm11 Saturday, Nevem-
her I::Ih and lath, In Pots. It %vas
felt tba t a :,c 10 $I.till Store trail a def-
inite pisco to the cuntuouty, and
A Note hroni Russ. Shaw
11'e received a short code from 11t:;o,
w
Shaw Oils Telt, Ilu;s. Is u grand d tilnow, and iodic proud of IL Ile a +kea
to be remu:uberr.l to some Mil friends,
so hove Is his short letter:
"So sorry to (earn of Harry John,:
,'~tau Inc! ''ng away, and also that 1 was 1
unable to get over for the funeral.
Is rejoicing lir the tact toad the tab-
les have turned, and be has you on
81 III working us TUU percent, and my the 51)01,
day ell' is Sunday, So Can't very well Iiuslucs1 In general is hard lilt, and
ge,t over I0 see the Myth fit Ig lu the snuffler loans we notice 111
Ani lal(btg 111•y t•ouadlon I)ec0nibei' !st, :more. Myth has bad It's share o1'
but going mil to the c0) 4.1, and n day I ha 1'1 knocl-;I during the pail year.
or two 11lih Helen al C1,tii,hulul, Alda,our places of bu:;itess have closed,
51 III hope to get 101(14 In time to slip
over (0 Myth before 1 s'Lrl in again.
Give buy' best to Les, Hilburn, or
any of the o!(1 friends, —Russ."
Mr. Shaw Is the ,;tailluit agent a':
AIIIe?un, and was formerly (':1'.Il.
agent here.
hu -hely due to wan' restrlct :ons, and
the difficult), In replacing slo:k .t.
But when yea are want to grumble,
Just remember that other towns are
finding It Just as hard, and while o it,
tvardly They may not sonny It, Just
make 11 your11tisl11c:at to have at c11'-tt
1' with nom sometimes. Ten chances
to one you'll conte Monte lauding lie
W, A,1,1EET sunny dlt'pc's'lllol of yo:11' local mer-
'I'lte re ;alar Monthly \lenlii.t of the chant.
1\'amant's Assucladion of the United And ;1',3a beau' Iu 111111d (hat your
('':1u•(h a'1',; held 00 'I'ut's(1ay aft "A'• 10041 uicrchunl n0C'.s y00I' trade nolo
noun, Noveultae' I" Ih at the \lance. ns lie navel. did before. So when
I've. (411'11, \11:5. \\' ,1, 111115, presided, you're tI r:Ited to take a day off to
31(1liIt opened by s;nglitg Hymn go to .soum of the bigger towns, or
"Lead I(ir.11y LightAmid 'The Enetrel• to Scud that order to one of 1111 big to.or, 1,", The I,ortls prayer IVOOIcity hou.-Ct for Christmas good's, brit
O
111011 r(tled In Blit 'ai. .The. Intim- 'remember (1111 the fellow on front
t1'.; of the fut:n(r meeting were rear) street is d0;at'nilim'; on your biishne 'a,
and r;.:n'ove I. '1';1'( Joint Bazaar with and he has the stuff, If he hasn't.
Iho W. A. and \V, \I, 5, was dismissed .11 11 can s Ibatitute as well as the city
to he 1101,1 Sait:r,lay, November 25111, 'places, and you can see right off what.
A 'ruling was contributed by the tlie's 5) '511111tlag.
Lap's all get together, and 1101 send
ilallar ca:s;plc the community,Ire•
xnb"r If yon spend It in town, you
President, "A1 it Ail the 'l'ime."
Mrs.(lt.i 1 ; (11'a1 '1y, convenor of
Flower and 1'bl:ting Committee, re-,
ported 2 1oxc4, 3 donrations, 5 synl• 811°11a (1110(1' to get It 1:41114. ant it
pat•hy and congratulations cards sett ! Ie helping the (aaulmunily. On the
oil( daring the 111011(11 and5 cal's other hand, If It is spent out of town,
made. 11 is 00o+ to glory as far alt yowl uud
.\leeting was brought to a close by everyone 01,4e In the contittlity i_s of 104 Orange Order was hr:ld last
shtgi:ig the National Anthem, couce'ned, Sunday morning In the Memorial Hall.
Aldemrut Leslie! 11. Smolders, of '1'o•
ronin, gave a1 eloquent and ,;:11•x(113
adlivss. \l1', Saunders h v0"v mutat
The I', 1',l. 11'a.anno'1a harm ho '11411 in demand throughout the Pronto for
The ThaukOlfming Meeting of the Sunday Se olees, A largo num" c1' of
\\'canratl's :Missionary Society' of Myth met 111 the hula" of 31'r. 01111 \lrs. 1110 tonal Orangemen attended 111e ser -
Frank
United Church wo,3 hold on Tuaoduy, \Inrshull on Monday evening,
vice, with Robert Wallace, as \tau
Novel:11Kr ICth, 111 the manse, November 0th 111th 119 present.I
After the broadcast over CL'1, a dig- shall, Aftet the Eert'10c the Orange
1'hu Pruntlei •l, \Irs. 11'm, ,luhi8lml, I
v.11551011 was held, The remainderoleo n1atYh'ed bue14 to the Orange 11'111
nof
BIRTHS
I'll\!N'101'—lu Clinton Inc ,pilau, on
Thursday, Neve:o'r :'l, to Mr. tort
Mrs,i'rceman '1'uiney, at sun- -Ra;m-
n:d 'I'hemals.
Remembrance Day Quietly
Observed Here,
was seatrncd 0m severhi o01')tIons. StiphL1t , . tris, OU
About 2.30 on 1 riders afternoon 1 :i V. plod Albert R.A.b'. i,,160
(1 I'it►:ty with his son Robbie war; on ISk} ilurf`otu 21,350
the
riser when iki,ie 04111'41 his at. II.A.I'., Cllulon 30,1;,0
Remembrance flay rya.; just another I tcull0u 10 she body which was in 11• Centralia Airport•I,,,oUU
day in
Myth. 11'realhs 41•0re Wave] bout Iwo feel 1)1 water and held fI.sl _ 1'
on the Honour Roll In the 'Town Hall, 'as the clothing was caught on 0
tilit(1.(1:0011111: 11:11;111.11:1,1111,1'1'h(y called Constable Card-
Ih'y(ll a ho w(rc tuu1) close' HIS TEETH
OLD MAN WINTER SHOWS
lug to government reguta11ttis, illy in a boat continuing in the search. 01i1 man \\'later took advauitag,
Olhl'.r yen's 1'1uces 1',l' busier ;s were , ('ot'ouc.r lb., It, C. Redmond
was :IrolStice Uuy to shots his leen
11A1' d lying C'0'cei' an.' \!1's. l', \L alr,sed, bol 1111; yt.cr not loam the called and after 0 postmortem by Hrs.treat ftsidol for the first dine
111'. \I. Connell and \V. A. ('ravford year. .Illhomgb we have hail ., .
1001100 the arrival of I:telr dans-I The Legion sold floppies last `atIil'• it was decided tial Mss \luthhall I'hu'ri(s daring the last lent.e•of Onto
ler, Jo:1a Evelyne, at ('1'111. h01o11 day, and aecordtn,; to 1 )1
0:1011;, met 04 0 to her death by accidental bur and 1118(1 111 Novetub, today,
General Hospital, :Mat., on Nov, with a very gtnlruu; 1'c'I)(i.'.,, drowning
Sth, i.11.l . \lo:ilc: and baby doing I ---\'
CAPTAIN OF TORPEDOED SHIP 1
V----- BURIED AT GODERICH 1)river Charged, As Clinton
covered everything with a nice dean
Youth Dies In Crash Idankel of while,
The funeral of captain \Valter 31411' There's altwuye something Thrilling
Donald, Otto Inst his life when ha r•.'II) 1'trdiman:l ('au'lutl, 11'nzie avenue about the l'i'st snow fall, but by the
w,it torpedoed 111 the Atlantic Wenn. Guelph, was arrested 011 Muuday liy.time one worries through six months
took place from Rrophey's funeral Provincial ('onslabie Seibert on a a
chapel, (.udecleli, on To( 'day tiller-'clulrg)± of motor nuwslatlg'lller and
I
noon. 'rite remains were accurst:' iicrl ldangeous driving. The charges
from the ea41 00381 by his willow and tro7e oil of an accident near Iles- 1(n ono of our winters in this district,
inlet' on Scltn'day night 'Viten Thtl
Hay (ace Helen F'lai'l olds lu an, Scbnnla obstrved 11 a" a holiday,
nicely,
i1\'ednn,uIty, was the first real taste
of what Is to conte. About two inches
Of 811011• fell In the village, anti it
CCS[
OFNC1M[N
TRINITY ANGLICAN CHURCH
Rcv, P. H. Streeter, L.Th., Rector,
Noviulbea' 16t11, 10'12
'Sunday School --'141,::0 1t.u1.
Evensong and Sermon -7.3o pan.
'Pile Rev. (I. \V, ,\inure 1'111 offle:ate
and preach,
BLYTH UNITED CHURCH
A rpeclal service for the mn.u'hera
W. M. S. MEET
Farm Forum Meeting
of it, it grows downright tirsonte.
Incidentally, our friend, \Ir. Coag,
ae•oss the street, is looking forward
Iwo t•hildrmn,
Many beautiful floral tributos sur-
rounded the casket, and th(,;e, with
taint relish), lty the tinge he keeps
1 (11)1)111gtet, of Clinloli, lost iris life. 'tnn snow shovelled in front of itis
Lt.plinglnu, who WON employed at pm,014'. as well as 011ie McGill's, 411x1
lite large atcndawcc at the littoral, (;alt, was a passenger In ate (radon'\1'e(tlaufel's old stand, Il0►II atilt
were evidcuce of the sorrow fell by iev' when it loft the Toad and rows' In115tard, not relish.
the citizens of Ills native lawn in 1111' Inver several limps, Carlon was tali-
, 1
pau81ng of Ilie gallant 'seaman wo en to the Waterloo County Jail at
gave his litre In the lmri'e•utaut(r el Ills I Kitchener,
The unfortunate young man was a
iI Itev. Richard Stewart of Knox Tres;• son of \Ir. and Mrs. Thomas Lep-
byttrta11 church was in charge of the ptngton, of Clinton.
8(14(10 a11(1 there was ;t large torment
of members of Maillaud L.nigm, ,\.I'`, -- v
and A1\1. The pallherers were Cor Another Clinton Youth
don mm.1)011.tld, Norman Ma.uKay,
John Baker,II. C. ihutlap, George Pays Supreme Sacrifice
\lacl'icar, Coderi(It, and Robert Mac \1r. and \Irs. Fred \hutch of ('lin•
hay, Soulhamolon. Interment was in fan, t'e(r ivr(1 Ilir' Bad nclot; lanf week
Maitlandc(nmatoy. ilial their son, Flt.Sgt. Charles-- \' I Motes, had paid the supremo s Leri•
;lice. Ile was reported as having
HULLETT FEDERATION TO lbcen killed in uaUan at ,Malin, wise
CONGRATULATIONS
This column Is dedicated to 111.080
who may wish to ma'ko use of It to
commemorate some passing event 1u
Into lives of their relatives and
friends, such as Birthtllays, Wedding
Anniversaries, or any other events
that our readers may think worthy of
note. You are asked to use this col.
111111. We think It would be n fine;
gesture on your part to show your tn•
lerost to your friends,
Congratulations to Mrs, S. Cu1lfug,
who celebrated her birthday' on Mon -
BANQUET HERE, b( had been stationed for someday. Novontber , q
111,
opened Ihc. meeting with prayer, wh14't whsle voles of thanks i111d appreciation The nl^eters of Pie llullell Towle mollis as a l'Ighler-1111 1.
the evcnilt, tvr ; open( In games nn(1 n
was followed by the 'hymn, "In C"ri;t singing oilereI►I"1► booth was served
there is no East or \l'as't." 'fife 5'e'tp•by the haste:,';.
tore I.c';scn entitled. "'The Fruits of
The Heel meeting will he held at
the 1,11rit" was Odom frau) (Laotian.;the scute 0f Mr. and \(1's. Simon i111•
i,'llt Chapter. 3115. 11 Iliorn gave n When on Monday evening, !november
Witch itcht was a plea for [Wen -
1 0111, The 14110 for discussion, "NeIgIl•
dance at ntecl!n-s. "1 ('luu'ot Get foul's Must Work 'rogelher" Evcl'y
Away from God" wilt given by Alt's. body welcome.
Rev. cv. Sine:.lir lest in prayecommitteeThe following nominating committee 1'
was arr:otntcd: J(r.'t. 11111)01'11, \11'x4.
].cilli, Mrs. rloatly, and Mrs. 1Plght. 1M'1is3io11 Band To Meet
1111 II. \IrS, 1'hilllI'& 5111g a solo. \Mrs, The regular month ly meeting of the
L(slle \\'ighhn011 was the speaker and 3118sion Banti will be held on Saturday
gave a very inspiring address, ",Lord nile•noon, November I-11 11, at 3 o'clock
of the Lands Beneath Thy Bending at the !come of Mrs, L. Unborn. (1111l -
Skies," ma's& sung and J11's, Coletough dret are asked to bring taletl moiety
Closed with prayer, laud wurl4 books,
•est of the, ('oil;l•at111niIons t(1 \it•s. J. 11, \\'al•
were extended to the United Chum:t,ship Federation of "'It11rr will (It or was the ' Wont
for making the .s i'v1ee possihle, 0nd 1111)141 a banquet in the Memorial ILII fa,m113', anti is surtivcd by his father Noll, who celebrated he birthday on
old mother and three brothers, 11111, ' ' -.. November t
.to the rich• for the nudeh
. \Irs, llnr' this
Iritlmy et'(nitig. I` __ ..
010 l'hilllts1 and \lass Shirley \\'ullar;e Ahem 160 nu'ni'n'r; an, (xpmrl1'tl 11) Frank and Jack and a si:;l(tI
, \rs.l
Dick Jacobs,
Mc -
sang a very lino tinct, he present, and a gaud program lite;t'otlgt+ltlulalions to'\IIss isabell 31e -
Gill, who celebrated her birthday on
11'ednesday, November 11(11.
Next Sioolay, November 15111, the
.services will again be held In the 3101n-
tn'tal [tall.
10,1,5—'Sunday School.
11.i5--Se•vici conducted by Rev. 11.
J. Merriam, of Centralia.
The evening .service will be cancell-
ed.
The congregation greatly apprzciate
the kindness of the 11111 Board fur Ili
privilege of holding the services In the
111111,
been arranged. Special speakers will fir, is the funl'lh
also be present, .\ dance will lie (u•
joyed after 1111' btiti 10'1, tw1111 \1';tll's
orchestra furnishing 1111' tousle.
Ma', stank (long is catering for lh;
burnout.
(Milani boy who
.111441 recently his parents had re•
ceivt1 at letter .~tailing that he hoped
to be hone with Ittan soon,
v .
IIeId Successful Bingo °1100
The firemen held a very smccc.'sful bur'' on putting
Bingo on Saturday night, The gross sli •;'s, \piss?"
11 111 01111 1 utmost reached the $11'0,00) 1 -nth Dame:
mark, I1'Oi;3i I"
DUMB!
('onglalmiattoita to Wayne Chapple,
who celebrates his 2nd birthday on
Sunday, November 1."-411.
Congratulations Robert 0. Charter,
wh, celeh •llcs his birthday: on Salix -
Salesman: "What lo you fig day, Novnibcr 14W.
into a new pair of - _ -•
Congratllationa to \Tr. Orval Me.
"\\'ply, my feet, of Ge'r,-,-an, who ctiebrates his birthday
ion Sunday, November 1x't11,
BIG TIME CHEW
Extra Food Bribe
Used By Germany
Nazis Keep Norwegian Pa-
trlote On Short Rations
It becomes increasingly evident
as more and more reports come in
from occupied Norway, that the
Germans and quislings are maks
ing an effort to break the resist-
ance of the "Homs. Front" by
keeping the patriots on short ra-
tions. Afelnbers of the Nasjonal
Sanding (Quisling Party) always
have enough 5o eat, while their
countrymen who refuse to give
up their loyalty and patriotism
go hungry,
Special counters are set up by
German orders in many stores in
Oslo and the other large towns in
Norway—one counter for the Ger-
mans, another for the quislings,
and the third, mostly empty, for
the patriots, Othoi shops and
restaurants are set aside for the
use of the Germans only. By
plundering the larders and keep-
ing the No \vegians to a bare
minindund, the Germans always
have enough to eat.
Already quisling leaders have
threatened that unless the Nor-
wegians conte over to the "New
Order," blindly follow their great
"Filch/Tr" Quisling, and work for
the "enlightenment" of the coun-
try (that is slave willingly for
the Germans), "the bread basket
will be hoisted •even higher." It
is obvious therefore that the bribe
of extra food is being used to in-
duce these patriots to Yin the
Nasjunal Sainting, and thereby in-
crease the strength of the party.
But even though food is becom•
ing more scarce, and Norwegians
arc faced with a winter of suffer-
ing, they will not resort to this
method. and thereby jeopardize
the strength ,)f the "Home Front."
Hydro's Part In
Our War Effort
Dr. Thomas II, Hogg., chairman
and chief eugincer of the Hydro -
Electric Power Commission, said
"Hydro is the driving force be-
hind Ontario's war effort." adding
that Hydro haw spent more than
?50,000,000 on note spar=t notion
Since: the start of the ‘var.
:Is the result of various pro.
ie -t. Ind contracts the commis -
:ion has added 2;(,500 horse-
power to its rapacity since the
start of the war and by next year
will obtain an additional (35,000
horsepower from the Decew falls
detelepment on the Welland Ship
Canal.
reser re5,trictiut,snit into ef-
fect Scptt'mber 21) will se\e ap•
proximately 100,000 horsepower
dining the tall and winter, said
1)r. Hog. Voluntary saving of
power is expected to save nn ad-
ditional 150,000 to 200,000 horse-
power,
Have You Heard?
"Did you say the drinking water
here is unsafe?"
"What do you do when you
want to drink it?"
"first, we filter it.''
"Yes,n
"'Then we boil it.'
eyes.e
"Then we put some chlorine hl
it."
And then we have a glass of
beer."
"Were you nervous?" ask.
ed young Mrs, Hobson, "when
you begged Daddy to give his
consent?"
"Ho gave ale the fright of
my life," grunted Hobson.
She is still wondering what
he meant.
An American soldier in Eng.
land was giving some illustrations
of the size of his country, "You
can board a train in the State of
Texas at dawn," he said impres-
sively "and 21 hours later you'll
still be in 'Texas."
"Yes," said one of his English
listeners, with feeling, "we've got
trains like that here, ton."
"Isn't your friend Clark
pretty slow?"
"1 should say not. It took
him four hours to drive his
new girl 15 miles home from
a dance last night."
Late one afternoon an insur-
ance agent secured admittance to
the office of a big' business man
by dint of perseverance.
"You ought to feel flattered,
young man,' said the business
roan. "Do you know, T have al-
ready refused to see five insur-
ance agents today?"
"Yes, 1 know," replied the
agent. "Pm all of them."
Judge: "The sentence is
twenty years' penal
tude."
Prisoner: "But, my
won't live that long!"
"Never mind, just
best you can."
cervi•
lord, 1
do the
"Your methods of cultivation
are hopelessly out of date," said
the crop adviser to the old farmer,
"Why I'd be astonished if you got
even 10 pounds of apples .from
that tree."
"So would I," replied the
farmer, "it's a peach tree."
"I once Loved a girl who
made a complete fool of me,"
"What a lasting impression
some girls make."
Modern Etiquette
1. What does it indicate when
a person misspells five or six
words in a letter?
2. When a girl stenographer to
being introduced to a man in the
office, should she rise?
3, Should a guest always arrive
at a specified time, when invited
to dinner?
4, Isn't It discourteous for a
motorist to drive through a fun-
eral procession?
5, Should a person proffer ad-
vice to another without being
asked?
6. For what purposes is the use
of the knife permitted at the
table?
Answers
1, It indicates both negligence
and laziness. Every desk should
contain a dictionary, and it takes
but a minute to consult it. 2, No;
it is not required. 3, Yes. One
should arrive at least ten minutes
before the specified time. 1. Yes,
this reveals an extreme lack of
breeding and thoughtfulness. Ile
should be patient and wait, even
If in a hurry. 5, No. "Give
neither counsel nor salt until you
are asked for it." (1. Only for
cutting any food that cannot be
managed with the fork,
'BLUE COAL' IS THE COAL
YOU CAN DEPEND ON
The need for a coal you can
depend on Is ospeclally Important
in these tittles. And 'blue cont' Is
Just that, It Is a solid, ovcn•burn•
Ing coal that not only gives you
greater heating satisfaction and
comfort but reduees furl cost as
will.
Now !s the time to start enjoy-
ing
njoying the hest heating value money
can buy. Phone your nearest 'blue
cool' dealer today. 1To will tell
you Ila\v easy it is to got ,rester
comfort and save money, too,—
the 'blue coal' way.
THROAT IS PREY TO
MANY AILMENTS
l-ymoids' Quick Action
Praised by Thousands
"LYMOIDS are easing to tho throat and
relieve the hacking cough."
So writes a Toronto resident.That unsolicited
testimonial is supported by thousands of
other sufferers from throat ailments who
have found quick relief with LYMOIDS.
Use LYMOIDS for throat irritation, hoarse-
ness and coughing Its blend of soothing
medicinal oils should bring quick relief, L5-4
Most stores sell LYMOiDS in handy size 10c and
25c boxes. if unobtainable, send 10c in stamps or
rasp, to LYMO(US, 119 Pearl Street, Torvnle.
BATH TUB BLITZ
I'ur sheer fun, British evacuee children al the Glyndebourne
Nursery School, in Sussex, find clothing better than testing a stirrup
pump in this unorthodox planner.
More Men Sought
For British Army
5O Mile Limit
On Bus Travel
Younger Workers To Be Public Asked To Reduce All
Taken From Maley Industries Unnecessary Rail Trips
Britain, exploring every test
nook and cranny for manpower
for the fighting services, Into with-
drawn the deferment of younger
men engaged in trades which are
a stop removed from direct war
work or which have become um
essential,
Some 150 trades were affected
by the announcement of tho Min•
istry of Labor and National Sere.
ice, beaded by Drnest Bevin, that
men of two age classes. Under 30
who were previously regarded as
more valuable in civilian jobs will
be given medical examinations and
put into uniform.
The latest move hr a thorough
comb -out of unessential industry
will result in the calling up of nen
under 25 at the time of national
registration who hold certain Gov-
ernment jobs, perform certain
types of aircraft work, or aro em-
ployed In such trades as building
or cycle snaking.
Others in the same age class
who will bo called up include em-
ployees of blacksmiths, iron nd
steel founders, gunsmiths, toreat•
ers, locomotive drivers, glass work•
ers, electrIciana and even mem-
hors of the custodian staffs of the
Houses of Parliament.
Men under 30 who will be put
Into the forces include printing
operatives such as linotypists, ern-
ployees of all branches of boot end
oboe manufacture, clerks, otllce
workers, men in distributing trades
like neat, fish, groceins, milk and
coal, some workers employed to
food processing, full time civil em-
ployees, plumbers, gasfittere, raft
way workers, truck drivers, sad -
diem and textile workers.
Test Army Clothing
On Mountain Top
Army officers and scientists last
summer climbed North America's
highest peak, 20,300 -foot Mt, Mc-
Kinley in Alaska, to test Ariny
winter clothing and equipment,
the National Geographic Society
revealed recently.
The announcement said seven
of the 17 members of the expedi•
Mon succeeded In reaching Mw
summit of the mountain, the third
time in history the feat has been
accomplished.
The expedition, made up of re-
presentatives of the Quartermas-
ter Corps, the Army Air Force and
the r' ,y'el Canadian Air Force,
established a testing camp at tate
18,000 -foot level. The camp was
supplied by parachute packages
dropped from planes operating out
of Fairbanks, and more than 100
items of equipment were tested.
Retails were confidential, but
the party reported much of the
equipment made an "encellent.
showing'."
Two -Year Harvest
With One Sowing
The Moscow radio recently re-
ported Russian scientists had dis-
covered a new variety of wheat
— a cross between wheat and
couch grass -- which "can pro-
duce a full harvest two years
running without resowing." The
radio said the new type is immune
to blight and drought.
Tho Munitions and Supply De-
partment last week advised all pule
Ile vehicle operators In Canada
that, in order further to curtail
the nae of gasoline, rubber and
labor, no bus passenger !lay he
carried more than 50 miles in
one continuous journey on and
after November 15.
Passengers may still be carried
00 a 50 -mile round trip, and the
directive will not apply In localittea
where no other "reasonably direct"
form of public transportation Is
available,
However, no tickets may be sold
for any continuous bus journey of
more than 50 miles, lidless It is
made on routes approved by the
transit controller.
Whore buses are the only moans
of transportation, or where other
1009.115 aro "hopelessly inconveni-
ent," exceptions will be made to
the general order, each case be-
ing Judged on its own merits, the
department said.
The directive requires the dis-
contlnuance of any services whlor
unnecessarily duplicate other trans-
portation services, but routes which
supply essential local services will
he 1011 01 Wined.
It Is expected that travellers go-
ing long distances now will be 11n -
able to choose between railway and
bus transportation, thus throwing
a further load upon already crowd-
ed lailways.
Floe. C. 1). Howe, munitions min•
aster, recently asked the public to
reduce unnecessary travel by rail,
and suspend conventions for the
duration of the war.
Women Leaving
Bombed Germany
^
Reports reaching Istanbul from
Bulgaria said that 12,000 German
women and Children had arrived
at the Bulgarian Black Sea port
of Verna as refugees from heavily
bombed western Germany,
Ther are Just over 100 books In
existence which were printed be-
fore the sixteenth centry,
The fasting record is held by a
boa constrictor in the Paris Zoo,
which went without food for just
over four years.
SAFES
Protect your !MONS null CA SII
from 1I11l7 and 'I'IIlIV1:S. We
have n elze rind type of Snfe, or
Cabinet, for tiny purpose. Vlsll
ns, or write for prices, ete. to
Dept, W.
J.6 J,TAYLOP LIMITED
TORONTO SAFE WORKS
145 Proof St. t•:., '1 pronto
Established 1855
4Reiieves distress from MONTHLY ,
FEMALE
WEAKNESS
Lydia E. Plnkbam's Vegetable
Compound not only helps relieve
monthly pain but also weak, nerv-
ous feelings—due to monthly func-
tional disturbances.It helps buildup
resistance against distress of "diffi-
cult days." Made in Canada.
WHAT SCIENCE
IS DOING
BIRDS AND WAR
A curious effect of submarine
warfare, which is of more import-
ance than a casual reading might
sugge;;t, is noted by ]Roger T. Pet-
erson of the National Audubon
Society in the current issue of the
Audubon Magazine, It is that oil
set afloat by torpedoed ships
brings death to the birds of the
ocean — ducks, gulls and many
others. Several 1110115ant14 of
ducks have leen found killed by
oil off the Nova Scotia const
alone.
Science Service, commenting On
Alr. Peterson's report, says: "Nor-
mally, swimntig birds' feathers,
filmed with the birds' own natural
oil, keep their bodies rearms and
dry, no platter hew cold the water
they swim and dive in. But con-
tact with mineral oil breaks this
natural protection. Cold water
reaches their skins, and it they
(10 not die of chill and exhaustion,
pneumonia is apt to set in. In
any cage, 0 badly oiled bird be-
comes unable to fly, and hence
unable to seek its food."
"Oil slicks" on the water de-
ceive birds, fo the birds they
have :111 the appearance of stretch-
es of smooth water. They glide
down for a rest, They have alight-
ed of a death trap. In other in-
stances, ducks will dive outside
the limits of an "oil slick" and
surge to the surface in the middle
of one of these oceanic nil fields,
Again the oil, mortal snare'
Sea gulls are useful in keeping
,waterfronts clear of rubbish and
in other ways. Eider ducks aro
valuable for the light, Swann down
collected from their nests. It is
used for malting quilted jackets
for aviators, seamen and others
exposed to severe weather, Eider
ducks, particularly, were seen as
sictims of oil.
HOW CAN I?
Q, flow ran I keep apples
fresh?
A, If a little glycerin is rubbers
over apples, they will keep longer.
The glycerin can be leashed off
when you are ready to use the
apples.
Q. Hose should butter be !imm-
ured? .
A, Don't try to pleasure butter
for recipes by cramming, it into a
cup, thereby wasting qite a bit
of it. A pound brick of butter
is equal to two imps end alt the
various measures can be very
easily figured from this.
Q. What should be used fur
lubricating the egg heater?
A. 1OOiug glycerin, instead of
oil, when lubricating the egg
beater and meat chopper will
eliminate the possibility of im-
parting any taste to the food,
Q. clow can 1 make umbrellas
last longer?
A. Umbrellas should be closed
and dried upside down, When al-
lowed to dry open, the ribs are
likely to warp. Wiping down with
a soft cloth also helps.
Q. Should fish he allowed to
sock in water before frying?
A. Fresh fish may be leashed
off, but it should never be nllow'1 it
to soak in the water for eny lend;111
of time, as this will destroy the
flavor of the fish and cause the
flesh to he of a flabby texture.
India To Stand
By "Old Country
The Maharaja Jam Saheb, or
Nawanagm', representative of the
Indian Council of Princes on rho
War Cabinet, told Britons in a
broadcast not long ago that "India
will see you through."
Iso said n tour of Britain halt
shown stint the country is essen•
tinily the sante as in peacetimes-
"the
eacetime "the heart of the Old Country itt
still sound,"
Y'1
CLASSIFIED AIJVERTISEMENTS
.100011110ll.t'1'ION WANTED
WANTED HEW RELIABLY.: FAI1M-
ers, with stable accommodation
and good pasture, to stable and
feed bunch of young cattle dur-
ing winter and pasture them
during; summer, lceeping them one
year or longer for agreed price
of Increased weight. Write Poet
Office Box 576 Toronto.
AGi:NTS WANTiED
WANTED NOW! LOCAL AGENTS
in country and town — spare
time, 11'o operate a six hundred
acre nursery — stock the best In
fruit a n d ornamental trees,
shrubs, roses. Write Pelham
Nursery Co., 'Toronto.
ASTROLOGY
AS'I'ROL0G1'! 11tA7..iNG TRIAL
reading, Send birthdate and dime.
"Delmar" Box 29, Crescent, 13.0-
,1 U'I'011 O t111,ES—US17D
USED CARS WITH GOOD 'TIRES.
See us first. Mount Pleasant Mo-
tors limited. Used Car Lot at
21140 1'onge Street; Head Office,
032 Mount Pleasant Road, To-
ronto. 'Telephone H Y. 2181.
1IA11Y CIIICICS
Alt iIN -- A (REMINDER '1'O OR -
der Bray chicles for December-
Jannery delivery — now, A few
ready for November shipment,
Contest forms ready. Bray Hatch•
cry, tail John N., Hamilton, Ont.
DYEING & CLEANING
11.11'1; YOU AN1'TiIIN(; NEEDS
dyeing or cleaning? Write to us
for Information. We nro glad to
answer your questions. Depart•
mens 11. Parker's Dye Works
Limited. 79' 1'onge Street, 'Ivo•
roil to
P.11131 felt 8.11,E
100 .1t'It10, I'.\IBM, 2 5111.1 0,S \\'I:ST
„f fort Bruce on Take Road.
('rice Twenty -flight 1luudred told
1'l(ty Dolla r:+, Cash. Sirs, T.
Itttell le, SI. 'Thomas, tint.
voter 11,1 1,31
RAl'm1:l KA COOT IIALM destroys
offensiwo odor Instantly, 45c
bottle. Ottawa agent Denman
Drug Stec. OttottI.
i nt:CI:1,Es It1:11(►t'1:1)
T'RI? 'Kl.ES REMOVED INSTANT-
ly. New scientific method. Send
25e for complete 1nst•uctia11e.
itoc 1!ir, S:n piss ant.
II.111tIlItISSING SC11001,
LEARN HAIRDRESSING Till; 1101)-
ertsou method. Information on
request regarding classes. Robert-
son's 1taIrdres.ing Academy,. 137
Alinas ttuna, 'Toronto.
11E1111 111;1111I)11;S
TRY OUR .1S'I'IIMA ANI) RRON-
chitis Remedies — they're good
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°tin we. Poston id $1,00.
°PEE t To INVI:N'1'1►11S
AN O1'FE11 TO t;\'1:R1' INVENTOR
List of inventions and full infor-
mation sent free. 'rho Ramsay
Co., Registered Patent Attorneys,
273 Maple Street, Ottawa, Canada.
NERVE 1{1111EDV
WONDERFUL RESULTS
MRS. 8AN 1' O it D 't'HOMPSON,
North Brook, Ontario says:
find Nerve trouble is front run-
down condition and Anemia. 1 am
In good 'Health nowsleep as
sound Os ever again, this is
what
your fills have 'lone for roe."
100 pills 75e, Postpaid. Orford
1:. Morissey, 537 Main Street,
Saint John, N.B.
St101t'I'IL1ND
GREG(; SHORTHAND — SYSTEM
of Champions. Taught in leading
schools. (lregg Publishing C'om-
pany, Toronto, Ontario.
11 A(:II1NE FOR 9Ai.H1
AUTOMATIC 1'I11;SS (Kluge) FOR
sale, practically new, 12" x 18"
with electric sheet heater, extra
rollers and chases; motor AC. 550
volta, 25 cycle, 3 phase produc-
tion, 3600 per hour. BOK 269, 7e
Adelaide West, Toronto.
MINK FOR SAL29
•
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their actual value. Reason lack
of help. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Write today, h. A. Jones. 189 Tai-
bnt St., St. Thomas, Ont.
•
NEW I3tIIOSS17D PICTURiS
•
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embossed pictures, assorted sub-
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$1.00; medium, $1.25; large 11.50.
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write). Ace Art Service, Toronto,
01,1) RUGS ItEWOVVIN NEW
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old. Dominion Rug Weaving Com.
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Write for bookl..t
I'A'I'I:N'I'S
1'LT11ERSTONl1AuuH & COMPANY
Patent Solicitors. Established
1800; 14 !Ging West, Toronto.
Booklet of Information on re•
Alleys.
l'.1'1'17N'1'3 & TRADE MARI(S
EGEIR'TON R. CASE, REGISTERED
United States, Canadian, British
Patent Attorney, Booklet grntle.
Established over forty yearn. 811
Balsam Avenue, 'Toronto.
l'llll'I'(►ult:tl'lIY
DON'T TRUDGE THROUGH
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HAVE YOUR SNAPS
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Any 6 or 8 exposure film pertetL1
developed and printed for only 25c.
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IMPERIAL PHOTO SERVICE
St ti .1, 'rurento
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Radio Course—$2.50
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SIiI;i(P FOR SALE
DORSET HORN SIIEEP, EWER,
Ebro Lambs and (lams. Hamp-
shire hams. Write Joseph Bets.
Stott ffville, Ont.
•'a
STAMPS SOLD Oit BOUGHT
1'RE17 I,iST. BETTER VALUE FO
collectors and deniers. Cash matt
ed for collections or accumulke
tions. Atlas Stamps, Room 707.
137 Wellington West, Toronto.
11'A.N't'II)
SMAI,i., 1,s'TA'rn WITH COMFOR
able brick home with garden.
village or near town. State Q.
price and particulars. J. 11. Be
ter, ICIngsville, Ont.
ISSUE 46--'44 •
Stillwell's Chinese Prepare to Take the Road Back
Somewhere in India Gen. Joseph W. Stillwell's wlu'-weary Chinese army is preparing for a re:on-
quest of Burma. Driven backward step by step through jungles and over mountains; beset by disease
and weakened by lack of rest and food, these men never lost their fighting spirit. Now, tutored by U. S.
officers and technical advisers, they are learning to use new American fighting equipment.
VOICE
OF THE
PRESS
A BOY SOLDIER
A rosy -cheeped boy of 12 is a
bit young to be serving in the
front linos, but there are quite a
few in Russia. Leland Stowe tells
how ho met one little veteran,
Petya Kuputoviski, an orphan,
The boy escaped barefoot from
his village after the Germano
came. He had seen the Fascists
burn to death his mother, two
younger brothers and two sisters,
together with all the Jews and
families of guerrillas they could
find.
--New York Post
—o—
AD INFINITUM
Once upon a time the average
man could do his own bookkeep-
ing. Then ho had to hire a secre-
tary to keep up with Government
forms. Now, with questionnaires
and forms to make out for gas
and oil and food and pants, he
has to hire a secretary for hie
secretary to keep even with the
game.
—Stratford Beacon -Herald
—o—
AND SO IT GOES
Courtship
He broadcasts, She listens in.
Honeymoon
Oho broadcasts. He listens in.
Now
They brodacast, Tho neighbors
listen in.
—Windsor Star
—0—
WHY HESS FLED
Poosibly Rudolf Hess skipped to
England to get away from his
wife. We don't know the lady;
but, from what we know of Ru-
dolf, we'd be bettor able to under-
stand it if she had done the skip-
ping.
—Chatham News
—o—
JUST TOO BAD!
A German correspondent, at the
front in Russia, complains in a
broadcast: "What we have gained
one day, we must fight for all
over again the next day." Now,
isn't that just too bad!
—Hamilton Spectator
—o—
EDUCATION
You only got the foundation for
your education nt school. The
world gives you the education
proper,
—Quebec Chronicre Telegraph
Malta Saved By
Force of Prayer
Malta's long resistance against
overwhelming Axis odds was at-
tributed directly to the force of
prayer, by Sir William Debbie,
former governor of the island,
In a broadcast talk.
"During the two years of the
siege," said General Debbie, "1
was very conscious of the good
hand of God upon us. I am sure
that the continued safety of Malta
was ultimately due to His divine
protection.
Debbie, who held nightly 13ible
classes on bomb -scarred Malta, is
sure that he is not alone in his
convictions. "Many others share
It with me," he said, "and we are
glad to acknowledge it humbly
and thankfully."
"I am convinced that God does
still answer prayer. I believe that
recognition of this fact was the
secret of the spirit, endurance
and fortitude shown by so many
persons in Malta.
"Lessons which we can draw
from this epic story are: firstly,
a stout heart still produces great
results; secondly, co-operation in
efforts and a determination to
help each other is vitally import-
ant, especially in tines of stress;
and thirdly, acknowledgement. of
God through Christ and trust in
Him is now, as ever, the thing
' which matters most."
"Pig clubs" are supplying the
British larder w11h more than 7,000
taus of pork annually,
SCOUTING...
Boy Scouts of Kingston, On-
tario, operated a canteen at their
summer camp, and turned over the
net proceeds, $13.00 to the B -P
Chins -Up Fund to aid British ]toy
Scouts who have lost their homes
and Scout headquarters,
Patrol Leader Alan Mefobert,
13 -year-old British Boy Scout,
was paddling iris boat along the
seashore when he saw a Royal Air
Force plane crush into the sea
with one engine on fire, The pilot;
was able to free himself from the
wreckage but lost consciousness.
Alan hurried to the rescue, and
supporting the pilot on his frail
craft he brought him safely to
shore. One false move on the
Scout's part would have capsized
the boat.
* • •
To aid in the food production
program in Great Britain, Boy
Scouts of the 1st Lyons Troop,
Durham, have all decided to keep
and raise rabbits.
• • •
Because The Scout Leader,
official publication of the Boy
Scouts Association of Canada, is
included in the ruling forbidding
the mailing of newspapers and
magazines overseas, a campaign is
being inaugurated across Canada
to have Boy Scouts write regu-
larly to their former leaders now
serving with the armed services in
Great Britain and on other fronts.
• • •
Boy Scouts of Richmond, Eng-
land, journeyed to their summer
camp by boat to avoid creating
further problems for the railways.
• • *
Boy Scouts of Worcester, Eng-
land, make the most of opportun-
ities. They have operated a toy
shop and have built scores of toys
from material salvaged from
blitzed buildings in their city.
LIFE'S LIKE THAT
Wood Pulp Used
In War Powder
Smokeless powder is the pro-
pellent that hurls every bullet and
shell of ►nodern warfare.
In normal times smokeless
powder is 0111(10 from cotton lin-
ters, the short fuzz remaining on
the cottonseed after the longer,
spin Wilde fibers are removed in
the gin. But today's war demands
are so great that the cellulose of
wood pulp must help out. It is
coming from the spruces of Maine,
the spruces aid hemlocks of the
Pacific Northwest aid the slash
pines of the South. Much pulp-
wood, as well (18 prepared wood-
pulp, also is imported from Can-
ada. During the first half of 1.942,
more than a third of the cellulose
going into American military pow-
der was from wood -pulp and it is
estimated that in 1943 this pro-
portion will be 60 per cent,
Nazi Losses Said
To Be 4,000,000
Four million German soldiers
had been killed or put out of ac-
tive service by severe wounds up
to the end of August of this year,
Eduard Benes, president of the
Czech Government in London,
told his people in a radio broad.
cast on the eve of Czechoslovakin's
Independence Day.
He said these figures had been
obtained .through a "Quisling"
statement direct from Berlin.
He described Germany's food
position as comparable to that of
Imperial Germany in 1917 and
raid her internal transport was
"lamentable and worsening daily."
Benes declared that Italy was
In the role of the Hapsburg Em-
pire during the last Great War,
and had become the weakest link
in the Axis.
By Fred Neher
5– sz 4 or? i1/E-f/E,4•
"You've got me wrong, Warden.... The ladder is for these
climbin' roses!"
REG'LAR FELLERS—Old Stuff
L
I
TELL U5 ABOUT THE THEATRE
AST NICHT/WHAT DIDJA SEE ?
Seventh African
Campaign Opens
Britain's 8th Army Starts
Offensive Action in Libya
f;rindiug; their wa' through
the hotth neck that is Egypt's Ala-
mein I,11(tle line, Britain's cosmo-
politan sth :Army has launched
the se‘entii straight campaign of
the North African front which has
hem' blood soaked up by the wind-
blown ,:orals of the desert, all the
way frons i:l Agheila on the Bay
of Siris' to within gO miles of
Alexandria,
The fluctuating :.U•uggie thus
has raced east and west along a
straight line of 800 smiles, each
ucceelling campaign varying only
in detail and components from
the prey ions. This time, the 8th
Arany is confident, and, under
Lieut -Gen. Bernard 1.11W Mont-
gomery's order to "destroy Rom-
mel and his army," is aiming for
the storied shores of Italian Trip-
oli, clearing the dru'k continent's
northern shores to the border of
Vichy -controlled 'Tunisia,
Action first broke out on the
desert in the fall of 1940, The
French North African army was
immobilized after the Pctainist
capitulation and Italian Marshal
Grazian1 marched across the
lightly held Egyptian -Libyan bor.
der, )lritsih units fell back to
Side Barrani, on the Egyptian
coast, and there held up the Ital-
ian advance—rind held up, too,
the lorries loaded with Mussolini
statues which were to be planted
as victory mementos.
•
In December of 1910, Gen, Sir
Archibald Wavell sent his Army
of the Nile into the Italian lines
and swept westward around the
Libyan coast to Bengasi, a drive
of 400 miles. Some quarters feel
Wavell might have cleaned up all
of North Africa but for two ren -
sons. First of all, Wavell had
to weaken his forces for the ill-
fated campaign in the Balkans
and the evaporating Fascist col-
1l1nns underwent a back -bracing
operation with Rommel's appear-
ance in the field,
* • *
During the late winter and early
spring, the campaign bogged
down, When Rommel's Afrika
'Corp were ready for battle, he let
loose with his first famous drive
at the end of March, 1941. Tho
8th Army, such as it was, moved
back into Egypt faster than it had
gone to Bengasi, then stood fast
inside the Egyptian frontier. Of
the Libyan conquest, only Tobruk
held as a thorn in Rommel's side.
Through the late summer and
early fall, the battle -front was
static once aiain and then, at the
end of November last year, the
revitalized 8th Arany struck anew
with heavy equipment, described
in London as putting the armies
on an equal basis for the first
tine. Rommel suffered his first
defeat, He was driven out of
Cyrenaica beyond El Agheila on
the Bay of Sirte, and the heroic
siege of Tobruk was lifted,
• *
The fifth campaign was launch-
ed by Rommel last January after
a winter marked only by occas-
ional raiding forays, The Afrika
Korpn hit hard. But the 8th Army
still was strong and tine enemy
drive was held after progressing
half way across Cyrenaica, or the
"hump" of Libya. The fighting
once more apparently had bogged
down,
• • *
But in the heat of late May,
Rommel's mechanized units and
armored columns again struck
eastwards. His tanks hit the Bri-
tish flank at a well -defended de-
sert position and then swept into
Tobruk, where mobile columns had
been caught off guard as they pre-
pared for a counter -offensive.
Losses in man -power and mater-
ials were heavy and a fast retreat
set in. For 250 more miles the
8th Army fell back until the nar-
row desert strip between the
Qattara Depression and the sea
offered an easily defended line.
From July until last Friday,
the situation once more was a
stalemate. Rommel attempted to
break through for Alexandria
once during September but his
columns were splashed with heavy
losses.
IT WAS 4REAT / + ►
THERE WAS A FELLkR
COME OUT WITH A BIG
MUSTACHE AN YA OUC,I TA
SEE HIM DO TRICKS/
R ; 0. 1. ra.otGet Ae ri•Lt, runt
is
THE WAR • WEEK -- Commentary on Current Events
There Are No New And Easy
Roads To Victory In This War
::u ,w•Ift conquest of Po-
WM, Nor',t,1 ,,i the Netherlands,
Belfiiunl ;111,1 Prance many people,
says the New fork Times, began
to a.:, 101' that (le.l'tnany Bail come -
how charged the fundamental laws
of warfare. They belleied that be-
cause of the application of the gas
engine to military uses in the air
and 00 the ground, the great con-
t would he won or lost solely
in terms of (ler,ntul "Illitz." To-
day we van recognize that this is
a misconception. Both sides have
newer and deadlier weapons than
they h,111 in 1939 and 19.10. But
there are no new and easy roads
to victory. Every present fighting
front shows that war is still as
costly, as slow and as diffieult no
ever.
The most fluid fighting In this
conflict has taken place in North
Africa. Tanks there have plunged
back and forth across a thousand
miles of desert In a bewildering
coonp1ex of manoeuvres. Yet dis-
patcher; from the Egyptian front
say that the current battle remains
"a slow, intense fight like those of
the First World War." The attack
progresses front alit trench to
trench, In Russia, which the Ger-
mans first invaded with the mane
speed that paralyzed Poland, the
Nazi armies have been stalled for
more than two months before the
single Stronghold of Stalingrad.
The battle Were moves only from
(louse to house. Berlin communi-
ques give a conquered street al-
most the name importance that
they used to give a conquered
province. For seven months in the
Far East Japan swept everything
before her. But since then the op-
posing forces have hardly chang-
ed position. The fighting has In-
creased hi intensity; planes and
ships have been flung in prodigal-
ly. But Secretary Knox now Galls
it a "war of attrition." That is
what the First World War was.
The reason, of course, is because
both sides are approaching an
equality of power. That balance
will not be quickly upset. But the
rate of increase now definitely
favors the United Nations.
Phe toughness of the conflict
was conceded by all the men who
have met the Japanese in action.
Americans have cone to revalue
the once -despised Japanese fight-
ing man as a courageous, resource-
ful and thoroughly treacherous'
foe. He has learned English that
he plight shout confusing orders
to American troops. He will ex-
pose himself to machine-gun tire
in order to reveal the location of
the machine gun to his oomradee.
He will use a flag of truce to lure
his foes into ambush. He has risk-
ed valuable shipe in peacetime
manoeuvres, sending them chas-
ing each other blacked out hi
nighttime seas, that they plight
learn to fight in the dark. To beat
him calls for the best in American
fighting leen.
Tho Japanese thrust to regain
Guadalcanal had been launched
with such strength as to suggest
that Its real objective was to go
beyond the Soloanone. No longer
were the chief stakes an airfield
on Guadalcanal and a harbor at
Tulagi, frons. which Japanese
planes and submarines could mon-
ace convoys bound for Australia,
Fascists Celebrate
20th Anniversary
Italy's Fascist regime celebrat-
ed the 20th anniversary of He
rise to power on Oct, 28, and as
it (lid so all the ingredients of a
first•clnss revolution were at
hand,
The Italian record was not int•
pressive in two and one half years
of conflict.
With the death of Gen. Orst
on the Egyptian front Oct. 18,
the Italian Army has lost 82 gen-
erals since the outbreak of war,
The Italian Air Force, once
heralded as among the best in
Europe, has lost at least 4,000
'planes. Present production hare-
ly reaches 500 outmoded 'planes
a month.
The submarine fleet, which re-
portedly had more than 150 craft
at the start of war, has lost at
least one fourth of its original
strength. Warships lacking oil
and in need of repair stay in port
because of British naval and air
superiority,
HE TOOK OFF HIS HAT
AN' QUE55 WHAT ? HE GAVE
IT A COL/PLA SHAKES AN
MADE MONEY COME OUT OF IT/
REAL MONEY/
from whica Atom Ica could launch
futur ol'lt u::it 1•,s. The Japlun,se ap-
pe: F I l to he striving for a breach
1n the United Nations' Pacific
frontier.
That, frontier, uuchurel 1n Al-
aska's Aleutian Islands in thio
nurtal, conies down 2,300 miles to
Hawaii with an outpost at Midway.
Thence, moving soutl •w'crt, it runs
tlu'ough the ,1nlerical bases in the
South Seas - the Fiji Islands, New
Caledonia and New Guinea, with
forward positrons: in the New Heb-
rides and the Solownns. It Is a
long, loosely guarded frontier.
Submarines can slip through It
eartly, but beyond its principal
strong points large Japanese fleets
cannot move In safety. 'Thus it
stands effective guard over Aus-
tralia and New Zealand, the coasts
of North and Sonth America,
while the fighting along Its length
helps drain some of the Japanese
strength aimed at India and ('mina.
if the Japanese, by a decisive
N'leinly in the Soloiuons area and
a push farther to overrun Ameri-
ca's island bases 111 the South Pac-
ific, can puncture this frontier,
their rewards will be great. Ao -
t'alla and New Zealand will stand
isolated and in mortal danger. The
coasts of South America will lie
open to Nipponese raiders. It will
become immeasurably more diffi-
cult for the United Nations to sup-
port India and China in the tests
to conte.
These were the objectives for
which Japan sacrificed ships and
men as the tenth month of the Pa-
cific war ran out. For Japan it was
the opening of a new phase, one
in which they were seeking to re-
gain the initiative they had held
in their first five months of rich
victories. That initial phase had
been followed by five months in
which setbacks and stalemate had
stopped the Japanese rash.
Starting with the surprise attack
on Pearl Harbor and the sinking
of the British ships Repulse and
Prince of Wales off Singapore, the
story for the United Nations' was
one of retreat and defeat. There
was heroic delaying action in it:
the defense of Wake Island by the
Marines, the long and bitter re-
sistance of the Americans and Fili-
pinos on Bataan. But the initial
momentum of the Japanese and the
lack of preparation by the United
Nations were too unbalanced. In
Malaya, Burma, the Java Sea and
in the Philippines the Japanese
overcame all opposition,
For the United Nations only time
was gained to fight new battles.
The Japanese won a rich world,
When the aggressor's forces carne
to a halt, they were spread over
more than a quarter of the globe.
Through most of the second
phase of the struggle the Japanese
still held the offensive, but this
time the results were different, In
the Coral Sea and at Midway Is-
lands, Japanese efforts to extend
their conquests were decisively
defeated in sea -and -alt battles
fought over hundreds of miles of
blue water. In June the Nipponese
gained a foothold in the far Aleu-
tians, In August United Nations
forces took the offensive and lodg-
ed themselves In the southern-
most Solomons,
Hitler's Plans For
World After War
Vernon Bartlett, speaking at the
British Broadcasting Corporation's
overseas microphone recently,
said:
"I expect most of you have read
about the documents captured in
Libya from the Germans, which
explains to senior officers in the
Reichswehr how Hitler envisages
the future: A large German army
kept entirely for use against what
he calls the exterior enemies of
the Reich and a large private army
for use against the Germans and
non -Germans inside the Reich. A.
private police tunny consisting of
men very carefully chosen so that
they will never—in the words of
the document — fraternize with
the proletariat. A world always
nt war. A world in which mi!liens
of ordinary simple folk, Germans
and non -Germans, would be kept
in order by slave-drivers whorl the
London Trines calls the cream of
the scum,"
By GENE BYRNES
MY MOTHER CAN DO
THAT TRICK/ONEY SHE
MAKES IT t:OME OUT
OF HER STOCKIN'/
•
,11/1, t ..
mete trete>4:caa�c�a�c:taK+a>�+c+ct��a��a�ealaau�a:E�e+e�c�e+ttxaKa
'P J. H. R. Elliott, Gordon Elliott
INSURE NOW! AND BE ASSURED.
Elliott Insurance Agency
1
CAR—FIRE—LIFE—SICKNESS—ACCIDENT.
Office Phone 104,
BLYTH— ONT.
Restdeuce Phone 12 or 140.
"COURTESY AND SERVICE:"
Iiillt) etiriN;A41)141111), 1144), t)441)*tiADaai)aia:tiro,DlAia>tt)t)41.11DIMAIIDatitlika a1p1
COMPLETE
EYESIGHT
SERVICE,
Eyes Examined Properly.
Glasses Fitted Correctly,
Broken Lens:s or F,am:s
Repa'rcd or Replaced,
We Strai;hten and Adjust
Glasses of All Kinds,
Everything at Reasonable Prices.
R. A.Reid,R.O.
EYESIGHT SPEIALIST
For Over 24 Years.
At Blyth Office (MIss Taylor's 5c
Ito $1.00 Store every Wednesday
morning F.30 to 9,3),
Note.. (}wing to gas and Lire ratio])
ing, ;In,! uncertain \01,11(11, regular
-Patricia Alin coma along to climb •_I
on your knee and ask for a story, you
feel good. There'.; a clean, healthy
sort of feeling. known as aI1 out Bret
Il(6-s that you can really appreciate
after a day of plowing. '('hen into
bed between the clean sheets and
you're asleep almost before you real-
ize it.
\'
AUBURN
'No service
in St. Mark's
Churoli
next Sunday 011 account cf the I'rc ,,y-
1erlau Anniversary,
r TOR STANDARD Wednesday, NOV, 11, 1912,
Annual Meeting Of The Morris Township Council Children's Emotions Uesnit
Huron County Holstein The, ('uuI ll 110 t in the '1'0\1.011111
Breeders' Club ti oil \nvcunbt r !Illi lwilll 1;11 III
Ill Suicide
ontutu rs 1111',,•111. 'f .Ie lienee per. till II, Thr. -Inry nl' bury a 511RI11 play•
I''hu ntinntr; of 1 )n la•;I m1.lin, /41 0111111 111 Of1 IISycholo•
CROQUET
.\Ir. Juntes Lability handed us tho
following Nem for pobllcalton, It tuns
reference to the Croquet grounds,
111111ah, we understand,- were situated The annual meeting;' of the Ilu►•on
on Ilio spacious grounds, whore 11016113111 Breeders' C'hib was hold ingieal
euro read and
adcplc.rl on 110,141111 nl'
reaction; re.;ullin ; in
,0111.0 \1011111's store- t6 now located, Cite Agricultural lloard Roost, Clinton, Harvey Johntilon and Cr:ll \\'(111:1 elle>, 01' 0 }aunt buy and girl
I'1'he 1))1.10 is (10(0(1 August ': h(I, IS•i i, ,µ llh a capacity lln'uoul. '1'110 PI•u:;i• 1 Jiovecl ly ('celi \\'he,'Iei', r•,,:OUIle'I Wed Ill ;d:ly I,y 5111'1111I'•; of
and 111, Laidlaw believes that litany of <llsnt. J. 11', \'unl':gnrond. presided,by C. It, (:)01115, 111111 the 'I'u0u51t'h (101110,
the old timers will getn "kick" out !advance $14,1.1(1 la s, s, No, S fur I The violin ; III Ito' Ir;It,l'•1)• worn
of reading it again: A complete report of the year'.; lc• I,uyn►cnl It) "11111"t".
'out n'I u' d.'arrlr,(I. Iisied 11. pollee as Hobert 1':, (Ibsen,
At D. 13. llcliin'uon'<i, out under tho Ilvilles was given by the Secretary, ' nine, ;0111 his quant aunt, 11nry Helen
Hume C'lulton; President of the, Moved by tl, It. ('oalit's, 514'011(1'••1 Iticklcy, lu. .1s related by iII1•r.-.aria•
hayfield Fall 1'tir, 11'111, Spanks; Ind 1))' 111try ,104111s1011,104111s1011, tilt(1 (1 ,y Law \u. tion officers, this 1; the story:
by the Agricultural Representative, i Ile P:161-i0(1for holding 910111al1011 Robert accidrittaIly let his (11 10 t.
I trees,
'they have a place fixed up 08 nice as
y011 please;
All bounded with boards, and levelled
1 with sand,
Prepared for croquet -310n, 1l Is gran)
.1nd there all the day, from morning
I till night
To play at th'e game all take a delight;
The boys and the girl f, and even
grown men,
I:Think nothing so nice as a game now
and then.
Even thee,, who can't play' stand round
anti direct
Blow the balls should be et'uel<, and
.lay what is correct;
When the sent gels too )tot Johnnie
sprinkles the ground, \1', II. Lobb, Clinton,
,\Irs, Cherie-, A. It. ort 1141 1115. 11. If 1l rains then they lake their ant Trine main speaker George Clemens,
ILrellas around,
J. Phillips %Idled rt _cnlly with 11r, 'Secretary of the C'enadinn I lu!stein
iuml \h s. 1111 Jewell of Colborne.
Anil when it grows dark a lamp is I Association, liranlford, outlined 1110
1 brought out,
311. and 1104, (iDri it lt, TilYtnr advantages and dI adwan':'.tges of Ay".
,1ud 01)0)0 it id 1100110(1 Is carried
were recent 'Toronto visitors, 111411 inseminatIon. Ile meatinnc.J
;tbottt the fact that this scheme was galni)g
Mr. and Mrs. John Ilusto11 have re. There can nothing whatever rob the
ceive(1 word that their son, 'Sgt. James I game of its charm, favour In large herds and also In ce0.
C. Shearer. '1110 following officer:, and Election ifneees5103', Nulnlnlllin.l hull',, slip out of 11'.5 11011(1.1, 11(111 mnlr•
to be held 011 the 28111 by of 11;(1.01 111g a tent nail the 1(11111 -true's his
her.—('Idrried. 11 III•ycar old slate e
!; r near the 1y1,
IMuwc'1 h 101111,—' dll'hi', I .I She began eryin; and he il.;kcrl to 1.1
try Ilnrvny. Johnston,e
nston, that the netine
were elected:
111)11, I'�resident, Colin (`ant;shell,
Ilit)'fieltl; President, \\'illi< 1'allsg. y " c 5111 ui c
allowed t0 11'11)1 he hlou(i 11003' lull
mond, Clinton; \'Ice President, Leon 1,,11,1 the 0011111.
aril Leeming, 1T011011 "lid 1'111 I'rc5i• n(1Jonrn t0 ince! again 011 De:enter
'dent, 11', 1,, IVItyle, Srafu:lh, RR No,
, l.rth, I:+l'! at to al. ilio '4'011'1'1„l.
' ; Secretary, Hume Clutton, G(:derfch
The following arcounl5 0111 paid:
'11,11, No, 5; Directors, \1'nt, Sparks,
\\'hen she retnsed, ho ':I III: "\\'1';l,
111151:11; II:'1 fur 1111' 11
my tel;.',
Later Itubert 1005 fu,nnt leo:ging by
l3ay'flokd; Milton \1141tee, Clinton; (lo'- 011141110 10)51)1011, \Vo:111 11Irk, (,I.
II. P;1114tH l 3 pl nit the 11115 1'10111 a r:';,1' 1)01)1 l over the
+
don Bisset, tioderich; Allan f3c tlr t, .111111) of a tree, and was t :licit 111 1t
Itayflcld; 1)0. Kett Jackson, 1313(11; Advance 'I"11I0i, 11'ill :;rat (11;1• Itntipllul Open. be II!, 1 111' sOanguln-
; oltman Scl nde, \Tallon. Press 1,110 ing) , . .. .r,i (inn a ('(,w MI I's litter. '''hal was on
'Agent, ,1, C, Shearer, Clinton. Auditor, municipal \Tor1d (Supplies) 1.'11111'ednesday.
Ilullctt 'l'oo'n);il,l I\\'alloll I \tory Helen, who hail 111111 on al-
Drain)
l•Dratlll , . , . , . , , , • , ... , • , , 2:1.1.1' i 110151 1 I,l?;';III! yout:Itini,11 of I(4:be11,
J'osl I'ubll5'ling noose ladvel'• w15 deeply 01(511 by 11•11 Ira;(IV, Site
tisliig and S,Ipplle5 , , . , .. , , 1 I asked I(u.ier1's lather, 11. \1'. (111,5011,
S.S. No. s Women! to ('on -how i1 0.11 to be 51ran411.d.
1'00.101'. , 1'')1,11,1111 1 11(nhlrl's funeral 10.11 11011 un t'rl-
F. Duncan (Selc'tirg Juror;) , •L1)1 Ila)'.
E. Anderson (Seicclll:•, .1•10008
' 1'he 1';11011} left 11ary. 1111'11 at
(l, Marlin I'irlcrllug Jm'::r:;l I •I, 1101110, unaware of her c1n0tlon:Illy-
Iti'l1a►a'(1 AI:'ucis (1,;:115>ut I;raiaaa 700111upset condition. 11'hrn 111(3 1'1'1 11 rne,l
A. II, Erskine, taxes ...., ,,,.1.,.
„, she was missing.
Friel B.Ggilll, ;til, rein a, , , ;1 Her father, Geol'1,e 1Ticlsley, stare' 1
down 111" 1011(( 10 Iso11 for her :mil
Mrs. 001. Gross, relief 1-„I:.( •
found her haughty, from it tree by a
:toy 'I'nrvoy ',mown
11 1)11 t'
1' m
a
Y. Eluetuu, has arrived :0111} over-tain sections of the 1', S, A, However,
Ile it wet or dry weather, be It cold or
dsids to lilylh may 111(10 to be ear. seas. 1 be it warm. !11':1 herd of 20 female.; 110 rcc0n'nend
' Sgt.•laJor Harold and \Irs. AlI1u of And out. In the morning Ore breakfasted a continuance of 1410 011.1101 policy.
(lateen:1i v1511od with 31r. and Mrs.! gIr18 go. ,\it, Byron ienvey, tnger4:;ll, 1101
3laitlan(1 :Min. 11'hile there they wer; And have a 1111'11 al 11-111 stela Field man, )011111^d the (1111105
` ) d I Y Jove, now, ed marketing price, for Holstein call
;gu0, t3 of honor id a fowl dinner on I that's so!
.1le and dairy products.
lallyd,
‘Vo a(vlso you to conte
N0A\' and avoid disappointment.
I'hIL OSIFER Ithe occasion of their 27th wcd•.IJcg 'There's 311ss Atmore, the milliner, 1001
luutiwclrary. Jenny, the cook,
OF LAZY MEAI)011VS 1115. John I'. 1'unt,�b11)t has r0iarnc,f i3lh;s Mullen, a visitor, (led 80►uel11►tes
home after visit'ng 101th 31r. and 3Irs, Blob Cook.
-- • 'Percy Tungblut at Oakland. And J)nrmie, the
W'e're ploughing these days, Alter \115,1 ,11,1 A. Scoll of l':rr:shill, 011111 Lott, Ethane,
(11011 inn; the :online i5 to hitch lip Mr, 011(1 111.5. 11• J. Scott And JicQu(u•rte, the'blacl<smlth, comes
the tea's) Joel go put to Elle field once and again;
,,acre the plow is waiting and really, 1115. Col 111411 of Toronto was a re ,Dr. Cracey of course, Is there most o'
1 had a tractor in to do most of the 1cen
3011t , o
g ist wb"31 her father, E3lhrallti time,
e,
plowing this tall 'tut 1 still like to get I clow he attends to rho sick can't be
the old a•nlklng plow and do t:une of I The local garage ratan, Thomas S. told in this !Thyme,
it for myself, 1.1011 1114,1011, 0115 811101led on 5111111 ' Clara Shane and her friends go over
A cit)••nrtn can't understand the 11'(111 Ile was drivhlg (10011 L'awlers' ! there too,
pleasure there 1,.3 in plowing with one 11111 11001' Dur village to n;.e a laa•ge'And even A, 1:Idcr, when lie's nothing
of those old fashioned walking plows. t'ed fox cross the road In front of the I to do—
You'll See car; dtivc up the C1onces- ear. :But he's somewhat shy about going
Rion ... dew up and the man in the 1 In a recent letter received, 1.AC I there mud0,
ear watches you go slowly (101011 the \lords 3j(13111)ion, 8011 of Mr. and 31rs. For he rune opposition In Dry Goods
renew, turn and then start back up David McMillian, who is 11'ith the R,C. I and oueli,
the fiCil again. The chances are he A.P. overseas, 8late.1 that while on But \lass Atmore entices (tint once 111
r•ayi to IIIatself, "Inc:ven•s, lint that leave he and Ills friend saw some n while.
must be a nonleton0118 ,sot t of job, but pears for sale. They bought one and Fot' she's such a charmer, a 501111 slie'tl
is badly int -taken in his rcanouing it cost them I ehlllIng and two pence• beguile:
a')out Vint pint, 11orris say1 that bo.ck home he co;tld Sometimes when he's there, he'll leave,
Actually plowing Is one of the finest almost buy a tree for that price. lie ! as excuse,
necupa'ti0ns on the farm• Get a goad also mentioned having 00 itcd The zoo h16 horn to return for, but that rase
team cf 1. 151,:, your plow well set and and 3iatla e Turns 11'.15 lynx 110rk'1, I Is no use,
J fall ti. -.y and a man cauldu't alk for r � For all of us know what entices hint
nay more. Some times It may be a bit I I there,
chilly and wet . . . but this week we ' WESTFIELD T'were fee well he'd go boldly and not
have been having briglltt, fall daaya, I care a hair;
IL'a)•s when the 131;10 see1r8 to be soak- I key, "(I3118' 1lugh Wilson, 01 Trus- Ofthaes Sandie Taylor and Mr. Dopew
sols visited on Friday with 31r, and ,.
lug up all the sunshine it can to tale Who peddle around organs, stop over
it over the bleak days cf 01:'11. Hag -111 s, ,)ask L'uchanuon,
here loo.
gcd, wispy pstte. us of Izav; ; ;;t111 I !Lance Corporal Norman Rodger -1 of 1f We the least 'bit like rain, or near
cling to the trce3 waiting for late first
thy Harry J. Boyle)
a nil
'I'urrcy
:,l)
'3loving pietn'e:s were shown of out Dr, Crawford, 31.0,11. 20,0o
standing Holstein hard, from Coast to h, Duncan,
bat+ter, the baker, Coast, P. 111eNab,
1 iilteli 11'010 S('l'w1d lir fit., ,',,,l of }it., 0, 31;Irt1n,
C11111 1) Ilorde11 is 'Elting will) 111. and I the end of the week,
winter gales to come )loll-; and tear , \Ji' , l;mmers:on Rodgers, They strike out for Blyth and the cru -
Ahem urn'. i Mr, Graeme MCCowell Is a Toronto quer ground seek,
The 00111) 111105 over like a ion;, visitor. And play there like hurrah—'tis fun,
glistening snake. \\then we were 1 allows Ida and Clare 310.00wau of It 18 true,
plowing to the east field the hens all Myth and '31r, Douglas Ross of the Aud 11 8001115 as if .Sands,
followed quite diligently getting a It.C.A,1'', .ststloned at \'ancoul'cr, 11, C., •wiles Atmore in view,
iced 111,0 and 0K0i❑ le watch )'011 with Visited with Mr. nod Mrs. A. 11'015111 For though Uhe weather's not fit an'
their tails rocked up like question on Thursday, organ to sell,
5nark3 The crones are aiming politics \irs. .f. 1<illoug.h, of Dungannon, Yet lie can go and drive her out quite
in the : Waulp. Fontcbody is hunting visited with friends' here this pact well;
away over the river and 301) can hear weak, Alexander McNaughton, who rune the
the train w.ilstles, lung -drawn out and 1 11 r, and \115, \fill ;McDowell have telegraph,
clear in the brisk fall air. The collie returned home after visiting In BruceGoes out and makes long shots—you
is investigating all the groundhog I tet people laugh,
1114(1 the past week.
310103 in an effort to find If he can And D. 13. himself, and aim Ills wife,
have a little fun before they all go to
,\I r, Ray Vincent 01111 the 11.C,AJ''. Go out (there solnetatuee and enter the
VI j)e1I for 100 winter. Toronto. 311asler John \1'iioon, Bre 4.1 strife:
sets, ;Hiss Doreen Vincent, 13 15'1'1. els Anil \lalcolm, his brother, Who clerks
New that the leaves are gone the Iced with '11'. and 3105. Noland Vile
earth seems to be so wast and so clr,e, in the shop,
cent on Sunday. (toes out nut) plays too, you'd think
to heaver, that it would tic quilt! p 1.
elide in 510)11 on the top of the ilig I Mi,;s Norma Taylor with friend in he'd 110'01 stop,
MI an•I touch the sky. 1 gime.; that,; Dorchester, But ('1)080 are not all that go there to
M•hat mil' e, you think so mar :1 11;1111 1 Ws. .1. K. FII1', 111'..1'11. 101111 111'0 plaY—
)ou're plowing. It nlalle3 yon feel 11'<i (1i1'MI5 mr, a.11d Mrs. Frank Camlr.,r'IL There's Aldrich, the printer, comes
thlnl.ing. A fi Blow plant a lot of ' 1311, awl 3Irs, Jack tluchone^u warn most every day,
things 011 0 fall day when he's plowing 1\•Inglin'm vislloi+3 011 310013y. And Thompson, the grocer, and Stein-
.. , things like the crops hc'r, going to I ,31 es. Gordan Smith 1•'41 133110118 hof.( as 1011l.
N;%-ri- and(- lowlie ;'an get that butch Jean, of Godc:•lch, with Mr, and 311;. ire le station nwster—abut all 1 can't
of pigs to conte along a 1105! better J, L. \tcl.lowell on Sunday, tell,
Anna whether he Should sell the bay I Congratulations are expended lo M)•• Thore'e \1141115 and (takers and Tay
pare or net, 00(1 ,\Irs. Jack Lockhart on the birth 1015 go there,
You 11 0:k c f the folks at the hot: of a 111111 daughter. The squire and the painter, When
)lis, 1'0(1 111"1141111)! new 11015
10 I lis I Jnr. and 3l',. Inert 1'11111111, Itelernve, they've time to spare;
fall. And lust, but not teats(, If We fudge by
Can we pare 51(111e of the 0rea;n with \11'. and Aire W. \Talicii,
the hound,
and egg 1111)11.3' for 1'icto0y 110])ds- I A very Interesting 1'1+1111 Fon'm wan The auctioneer, Charlie, conies Jule
ratriela Ann h three years 0!41 new. heli( at 1112 home of Ji r. and MI t, W. the ground,
:'1'”' ''e going 10 801001. Will McDowell on 13Ionday eventing. And they stay there, and play there,
it be pc,.: Ole 10 get any help for the 1 the like's not been 5110
tv(:rl< nevi summer. A fellr'x thin: -r1 j --V--
ah 1101 the MI:. )1111 1l1'illr'0I11I'aIII0'! I Since the first of the reign of Viclorla
1:ay awl 0lc boys also 10-1110 back from I
111ieppe, I Douglas 'toes, e.C.A.)''., et3ti0u'^l
A'arist, he'ore you realize it, dark• at Vancoever, B.C., left 'Monday, after
Pe 4 is 14%11111111e to creep In over the : \letting 0:111 Iaie father, i;r. John Ross
Bills, 1'ou uihlteh and take the team and other relatives in the vicinity.
to the ser',le and do Me milking, I There will 'be a Red Cl'o M Qailting
tebere's a bright light In the kitchen I Bee at Alex, mcOowan's this Wed•
itnd the fire feels good and warm and ncs<lay afternoon.
you realize that you're hungry, N';hen I Mee. Wm. Radford has gone to Len -
;volt have a pipeful of tobacco ... and ' dcsboro, to spend the winter with
'fink down into the old rocker . , . and (Miss L. Young.
too, had
EAST WAWANOSU the Queen,
V
An old lady, visting an insane asp
lint, obeert•el the inmates at work,
Ono man was .standing in a corner,
Idle,
"Jty good man," inquired the old
Ialy, "why don't you work' Are you
crazy?"
"YEA, mum, but not that crazy."
program.
11,0 11
11,0 11
—oleo, 1'. 31a in,
She
was
dead.
;1.1'11 ''1.u1ay how Jim is 5o luck)' at card,
:100 and then loses his wiwlill) at the
:).aO race tract.."
"Not very fanny. ''h'•)• won't let
011 hint .511111111 IhI (005(14,•,
WOMEN T00—•
join "That mon ;nay fly," Cana.
dian women fill vital jobs in the
a.C.A.F, Women's Divleion, re.
leasing men for air crew duties.
/loctults ore needed, ago 10 to
40, physically fit, with at least
high School entrance. Many use-
ful and fascinating jobs await
you. No exporionce needed. The
Air Force will truth you quickly
intake your place with Canada's
airwomen. Full Information al any
R.C.A.F. Recruiting Centre, or
write address below for booklet.
A Veterasa, at .2
Back from scores of bombing raids over a dozen countries,
this young airman has found adventure in the skies! Just out
of his 'teens, an eager youth in years, he's 11 veteran in
experience. Ho's a first -lino fighting man, trained in the
science of war at 5-miles•a-minute!
He and his buddies in R.C.A.F. air crew arc team-mates.
Gunner, Wireless Operator, I3omber, Pilot, Navigator—all
work together as a smooth, swift "attack team" in a giant
bomber. Their targets accurately surveyed in advance by
daring reconnaissance pilots—their flight protected by the
blazing guns of fighter planes—the bombers wiztg their
relentless way to smash Nazi nerve -centres,
The expanded Air Training Plan has room for more melt who
want to bo with these fighting comrades of the skies. Right
now applications aro being accepted for air crew duty, at
R.C.A.F. Recruiting Centres throughout Canada.
1f you erre physically fit, mentally alert, over 171/1 and not yet 33,
you are eligible, If you aro over 33, but have exceptional
qualifications, you may still be considered. Lack of formal
education is no longer a bar to enlistment,
ROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE
FIGHTING COMRADES OF THE SKIE
For illustrated booklet gii ing full information write: Director of Manning, R.C.A.F,,
Jackson Building, Ottawa, or the nearest of these R.C.A.F. Recruiting Centres:
Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Saskatoon, Regina, Winnipeg, North Bay, Windsor, London, Hamilton,
Toronto, Ottawa, Monlrecl, Quebec, Moncton, Halifax
Wednesday, Nov. 11, 1912, 17f TE STANDARD
•t
..4..1.4.4,4.,.4.44,;,.;.,;,•;,a,,,;,.;.,;,,.;.✓,.o,.,•,;..;., The vvoning was ,hent In dancing our lnulultln opinion, apart from the, 1410CKICIttet~RtM141CICICtRICC13tC141C1'4(C%'(CICtdICcCKICtIP CtClitti1t6+1tait4+(1-4+rtktti tC4101414114041C4ttttGt614+6t4tdttt41C14edtG*(1
LYGE13111'i'I-I•EA'1'RE :_, w'::11 mu ;it; supplied by Heal 1:11ent, fact that It Is hastening tate end 0f Ilk, ti 1tOXY'1flFA'!'RE, CAI'1'1'A1., '11IEATRE • REGINT THEATRE
%' WINGHA,M-ONTARIO, ;t; bunch wits FYr4r:1 an,1 was followed „lar, I; thud 11 i.; a�p;uelllly hrfn;l11, _ CLINTON. _ GODERICH. SEAFORTr
' Sat.NightS; h}ashnt ad)1rc ; by Itr .r it relied to thin gallant Ras sot y, NOW PLAYING; ''Captain of the NOW -Abbott and Costello in: J
>; TWO Shows pf Clouds" in Technicolor, NOW - "THE SPOILERS" by
''Thurs„ Fri„Sat.--Nov, 12, 13 14 i; It' Nunn;; who l'a"1 1 .:e young cu';;11,, die ;; who have horn the hrul:t (.f the -----
Clouds" _- __-- PARDON MY SA� R�' VG _ Rex Beach li
>• Fay Bainter, Jean Rogers %t• In the platform and extend,gd to the.I (l1- t'tnali artily for •:) leu.;. ' Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Mon., Tues., Wed. -Double Bill
Edward Arnold, in ;; die hi,d wishc4 of all tar a long and — b' _r - {y Robert Stack, Diana Barryrnore, Don Ameche, Joan Bennett and
%• cc v ' happ warded lift n11d askel them to John Loaer and Nigel Bruce. Eric Blore Monday, Tue.day, Wednesday
Y, “THE WAIL A(�l�IN�t'l' y
1� ' The} fly oil wing; tit. 1 ravel•y, tile.;)' •1 ;,Cordal r•;IFI o!II 1111 appealing
:. 1, i+� ,tcccpl the large titan rr r,f useful and NI)L5I30R0 Claudette Colbert & John Payne
MRS. IIAi)I.. 4r beryl,; from Amer,e;r -.vim are hat• rr,;aanee
:'I`h!O y 0f a su:i(:y nutllor tubo:; d,rautiful gifts, The groom 1' )lir1 Mrs, Police Cameron of Cincinnati, Ming on 1-h)' ride of right, u ( » Ihesrnt the story of a love lIiit ld
'.1i'.11'1' nt:urp ae.lri11ahcv h:oug1lt on;• briefly ;old thani(c)1 all for their(.OI1111'n1 (1r Deily fluurishccl under udcerslly,
who has hc,011 vi,itl11q W'.1 11 her nnrlr i c. , , „ Henry Fonda, Gene Tierney and
::by 11,1 (elf, 1ically lou tits 11t:I';• 1 \))( rlons of good will anti hoped till \lr, win. ('aunpbe1l, 1.0orued to h(•, 1./ EAGLE 5O1JA1)ItON Laird Cre ar 1-c r' » f9
:•there :• a war and that the war in g Itemellll)Cr The 1)a
y”
visit them In ties tic ,v 1101111' hone on Monday, sh ,4v 4chn1 could huppeu in n y
;• valves 'tel. -ill. null her chlid1.P11' ' til some Hite in Ih0 future. P ' wins0lue rhent.
,Also PatE'no Pared:, Cartoon, Ncwt,' I \Ir. 111111 A1 I'S. It. 1'o'nlghlult and \Ir. i,p Thur•.day, Friday, Saturday „
�P R,in ,s On I -ler Flingers" Thursday, Friday, Saturday
:„Matinee Sat. afternoon at 2.30 p, m >• 'Pile Rea (',u s hrid ;u1c,t.ter vary and .\Ire. Willis 1lountain ,~pent Sal �f „r - , e 1►,
%` successful annual title, of produce, (lay with kr. and Mrs, I,. \lhftel at V ritE S1 OILE1tS Thurs., Fri„ Sat. -Double 8111 Bud Abbott and Lou Costello
"Mon" Tucs,, Wed. -Nov, 16, 17, 11-%' } �! William Gargan, Irene Hervey and headline ;I ca -1 of :lpe rb ruler.
%. halting and anything one wished to Corrie' y Itcv Reach's s;l':a of the great
,Melvyn DoucJlas, Norma Shearer, in!: n Truman Beadle
u , , ,,,:. 11unale t0 the car,;)', Ale. M. Gaynor,' Mrs, I.tly \1'e ler held a quilling it .11aslon gold ra=il, big in story and ec , y „ taiarrs i1( Ihr 'Motels fun fest
WI(. WIJ1tE DANCING":. ( gee;ll in cart. Bombay Clipper
A rouuutt c' drama with a new =, of itisnI 1-w'. again acted as enelioneer and tea un 'I'11esday al'1)'rucon for Ut:' 1 Marlene Cietrich, Rand.lph Scott, Jan:, Frazee, Mischa Auer f`I'ilyd(;Ii My Si relit;'"
•: 11 his able way donating his ,;;rvices 111, JI, S. ai John Wayne and Margaret Lindsay Leon Errol and The Merry Macs
is .111 cf roman(': .••
•t• Also Traveitalk, and Cartoon •t• for the day, 1'11)' 11{ inti band met 111 the �f "�'Ip(lllll light til Iia\1'illl" COMING Jack Benny in:
°• ('hnieli ;.rlwoltuom un Sunday ("1(.111" pc CO- MING; Confirm or -Deny and �•
,w, too.:••:•4.4••:•4,•:••1•:,4.4•,:.•;..:••:•.;••;•• :,,;,.;.,;t' \1!ss Edith Wallace sprtU the +veal!I, Our Life -
end CHARLIE'S AUNT
end al the Munn; of Mr. and \Its. A, for theft 'I'lt;cr;'.1.).;erin; tue.,Iing, !� Ringo On Her Finners, COMING: In This
�+ With Bette Davis,
-- \'111ccnt and \Ir. au;l \Its. J. 11'heelc,•, which 1 )111111'1:,:1'1 by a sir.; song u; p�' �'
BELGRAVE I 4'('1,11 Ir Mat.: Sat. and Holidays, 3 p.m. Mat.: Wed., Sat„ Holidays, 3 a.m. Mat.; Sat, and Heydays at 3 p.m, elf
3LL(xltAVL \1.,;.; 1')':11:1 ,Ichnston of Ottawa, is } tuts with Alis; Ilett} Iiruns 1;11 q •• n
; i � (1(411 at l.l('. list `; „d'Bl�la7�l�la;a al�rdtcir�l�"�"i�l°dr�1°`3tr}r�u,al.�,vl7�,c,'.�ii+,c?,�rc9(7ir'7i"Jtit.`?,�i .n loia,`�3t`ate'ial�°uI`aia2t`dtJ,�,'�I`d,�i`d1�t`�i°d,�rcr�ld'tOt$'1�1'21a''riih,`P,�d'i`sM'di�igi
pending a time Willi \Irs. It. Owens.Piano and MI's. Item I(2)
I'ho Rclgra.ve I at'mcr's l'I,Ib held hroolt , ' .
its flrit, meeting o: 1111)' season at the :Ibis Margaret 1 i1l4ly of Lona)'.;►oto Irn:.iditg• (ail AI hill ng veld
beano of Mr. anll :i+;. Jo:e;;h 1'uill, It the !wow of \Ir. and Mrs. fume' Cie , '1 1111'1')' ic,•;•nt 'I"tel11rl ~hob Card Of Thanks
rPate I,
l
is
p
41111 lou(' \loll;;, wlI-h a good ah)'ucl \!1('111)', for the w•rekt•rtd, 'brook an ht<trfrment al. Slide.; w k
I 4Cish l0 express my ; , ;n e nation I. ('. lilnrksl0nr, I'Luu, Toner and f PYREX
Puce present. :dr. :.;;u lin Ora: hy, the E-veIF otlg and sermon at 2,10 p.m, in r �:utwn by Itev. .\Icnzil s 1111 I3eerhar,t
,un(l thaulhs 11( ;til 1hine who sent we urgatl Repairer, will Le in tilos dos of
pI'U I(Cnt, cundu('le,i the meeting`: ('hurrh 11e\t Smttlay. Rev, S, `•010 by Tureen A1111:;tr;ntg• Peri 'cards and !lowers and all th',Iagl;tt ; filet a,.1in this week, order.; taken 14N
\\'. Jluuru ++111 officlale and 1)1P"IL Knox and Kra \1'or,sl tunic tip the ofl''r cm It Ft/
Wareki
which was c,pened with ('ounuut11lty 1 ' In!1'{ugfriedsduringyr,r;It hoe 11'1lilyth.or the L'ru.;sen= 1singing, The utinulc•; of the previous fug. Itev. \I)'nzi,4 cl0s) Ithe me)'t• illness, \'era 'I'le roti;'. !'r :t, Ilr•:.,sel,, iI.Ip hi
ing whit player. 1 ------ pf PIF i'
duetting weer ttdoit,ca. rvla'al !lent:; - - -- -- -- PLATES di
Airs, hello)' \\'atvou lipid a Red ' r 1f til
of I usiney,; w('re dls,:us,;e:I. L'rle'at.•.; War News Is Heartening 1 Card Of. thanks c ,► :- , !i
!, r HORTHORN BULLS FOR SALE
aero. named Io a'lend the railed h ('rn.;s quilling and Pot Luc:( supper °P 37C 455 and 67c ,
• 11')' vrnh'u 1-0 ;ay that the events on 'Tuesday afternoon, 1 Molt to 11(111 Itl', 111)111 , 4+:11, tis• 11 ' ij
4 armor's Convention it 'Toronto' 11rs, lied tile, and tient flowers, and made \\'e have a ununhor of hull~ of '''''•p. c ` 87c
Id the 116,1- two weeps have 1)11 a few Mr. and \In;. \leur,,de, callow, vis' v{\)'alae rages• sons of l"I. hu l 'd ', pf Custard Cup Sit..ii
11, Procter, ,an \ir;, C. \1(lark.. 1:1.1 :\n• enquiries for nu, during my re,•e It (
�dcrson, and James (lark. \1'illi;utl gra), hairs in that little mustache of fled on Sunday with \its. \Iclirlde's grand,;ire lora4vith Itoy (lmp.t, Su � i�a+t,�
sista', Mrs, Laura Puudervock. confinement {n the; Clinton hospital. Salmon Loaf Dishes it
--r\I.,. S.Int ('r,,k,itaa. Trent)' champion al the Highland S'aow pf '.l
ii
Scotland. Thr;)' hull; 1111' low set, us
P 67C find 71c. !i
! ONDES3ORO RED CROSS NEWS gnr,)1 heads and colours. A. ('. I,I;1'1' N 1j
FOR SALE •�• �,O\, Clinton, Onl, I:1lp 4 Casserole 96c and • 1.10ty
Pa
The Monthly .1Ieclittg cf I.ondesboro Small (durbe: real heater; Blas; V $1
lied ('los:; +v;1-, held 111 Couunutlfiy cupboard; cherry extension lu'Jle. 111(14
ii
II;111 on N04Cal'..ua ,i with I're=ideal' Icltlire at the Stuudard OJ'fice. I LI. NOVEMBER SESSION ,y ii
i C. T, Dobbyn
t\U's. It. hal service, prcr,:dlug, with c V r1
.u1- atluul,urc e of ,,,, I he m1- 1 Ihr},
I -I111'011 Gelidly Council,,t)r�iDaiDtar1213aratrAalnt�tDlttr ta1DIANDsata,31.,
CATTLE FOR FEEDING
The next nu'etiu>; of the Huron
DOES YOUR PIANO NEED TU N I N G 1 tlerg'C1CMCt3tCtq'e!,' �ec'C:C1gtCIClgrCl41.Ct4tC►44i
o J/df
fat'ul l:1 with a uncal solo which :\doll's, and added a few more homely
-W03 11111111 enjoyc,l, A vote 1(t' ItIttks ++condi('.; in t'nat 11a1,try mush of his.
was l)'ud,;e:1 :I r. and Airs. J. \'mill \fell we think. he'd better gel hold of
for Ihr'r hu:.pitulil}. AI r. 1'lncetd. 1011(' color,h;r h for his ha1r, and a
invited the (huh to his home for the good vaut;hing cr".111 1er,u's0 1i •
Decemimr meeting. r1 t1p011 01' ICu worries w•{11 multiply quickly front
CO 0111.1'1111V(' .\t1'!llatel thandtc,; now on.
electing 101)1 in 1'cterhoro wa,; given
The momentous nervy of the past
1)y Mr. Lyle 1loppe;, w•ho a(leudl"1' two weeks has been hr�u'tening, in -
The heating was eloye 1 with the Na- 1 deed. lir';l 11 was Uiu'mphant reale
tional Anthem 81111 1111('1 440.4 24(1141411 I el Oencral Ram;ncl's Africa f'el'l„
dry the ladies, 1 h} the British Sth Army 111 14hypt, (111
The hore:,tcrs hall wac4 the scene 'hen hot on the heels of this coaues
of a happy gathering 011 'I'uc:;lty the holding of America soldiers on
night, when a large numbor of rel0' french North Afr{cas soil, and the11'
tires and friends gathered togu:l'.ner oncCcss dere has been heariting.
in honor of ,.31t'. and Alas. \\'illiam One of the most gratifying aspects
1lilt('k, 44.110 were recon 1y
married. oi' II1'.r new phase of operaliolls, in
TWO YOUNG MEN
etiea j4ted ea 11 4
BEFORE the war, two young graduates in chemistry
faced the future with no assets but technical train-
ing and unbounded faith in themselves. They
planned to capitalize on their years in college by
manufacturing a certain chemical product. "But
we'll need some money to get started," they said.
"`Let's put it up to the bank."
'Their banker decided that their faith was well
founded in character, ability, energy. "We'll finance
you to start in a small way," he said. "Make a test
on the local market first."
Presently the product was being sold all over
Canada and exported to the United States and
overseas. Now it fills a wartime demand. The
enterprise etnploys a large number of people.
This actual example illustrates how this country's
Chartered Banks help creditworthy people to
benefit themselves, their fellows and their country
under the democratic system of free enterprise.
Banks, like any other business, exist because they provide ser-
vice which a community needs and is willing to pay for at a
rate which will yield a reasonable profit. Chartered Bank profits
average Tess than one-half of one per cent a year on total assets.
Few, if any, other businesses operate on as small a margin.
Bank of Montreal ... The Bank of Nova Scotia .. • The Bank of Toronto
The Provincial Bank of Canada ... The Canadian Bank of Commerce
The Royal Bank of Canada ... The Dominion Bank ... Banque Canadienne
Nationale ::. Imperial Bank of Canada ... Barclays Bank (Canada)
1
op-
ened by cringing "The Maple Leaf"
followo:l 1y Prayer for Peace in mei- Any per,4011 wishing 10 lake any cat• 'County Council will he held in the
son, Ile in t'or 1111' winter, by the 111(11111i. ('nnncil ('hatnbers. ('Dort house, (iode-
d.)'I'r's of u,,preeiul{ou and 11111111(S '81)1)1Y 10 \Varner Howatt. phone 20111, rich, commencing 111 2 p.m., Tuesday.
Myth. 1.1.1, November 17th, 19.12.
.111 accounts, 11011(es of deputations
PIANO WANTED ,laid oilier to bees„ requiring the at-
tention of (`ouucil should be in the
State Price and Name. ('all phone hands of the ('ounty (71erlc not later
119, or write Post Office box 5s, lilyth. than Faturdaly, November 14th, 1912,
l l".I, i N. W. MILLER, County Clerk,
13-2, Gtrdcrich, 0111.
for tie 1mi111,d goods were real! fro:n
\\'nn. Ross, I':..1. A14)'11, \Vali ;c161,y,
C'111'f Suudercock, John Sprung, Ted
Fothergill,
Gordon Radford (101181(11 a wool
blanket to the Iled C.'1uss, 'l'icicr;•;
are to be sold 011 It.
Committee to look after ('hr•islnms
boxes for boys overse.a,4, .111;.:1. Rad-
ford, MIS. 11. Sprung. 3Irs. \\'.
'Mrs.
C. \\raison, \:rs, V. Roy, .\i -r, J.
M(',Coal, \I'ss I.. Yong.
Treasurer reported a hal; ice on
hand of $`0-2.5S,
\\'o -r11 Committee, for Itr ('e'nll or,
Airs. C. \Valsot, Ales. 11. i prong, Air.4.
11. Adams,
'i'hrre will he ;t Bine() Int \1'ctlnes(la y
night November 1'I, to help 1 ,ay Over-
seas 11050o. Proceeds from la '1 Ming;,
The following have been Fh{;)pel: IC
comfort bags, containing 1 combin-
ation .soap, tooth brush and piwd:'r,
1 Allaying sdlclt, 1 razor, 1 pipe, lobar
co, chewing gum, hard candy, paper
and envelopo.4, I pencil, I story 1100k,
playing cards, 1 pair 14:11'14, 2 handker-
chiefs, 1 towel and w•a:•tt c10111, 1 11011,ve-
wife. The following also have been
shipped, 2 turtle neck sweater•;, l., pr.
mitis, :' t 0,'.1 ins, 2. are() caps, 7 v•nccl(
.',weaters, o long sleeved round neck
sweater.,, to pair service 0ccl(s. 11
pair seamen's long stockings, S pail
rive of the Octui.er hostesses don-
ated 50e emelt, Mrs. S. Lansing, \Irs.
F. II. Sprung, Mrs, \\'. Covler, \IN, \V,
Alountlitt, Mrs. .1, 1'uugt; luf, 311s.; Al,
1(02,4, donated;! 500 a .previous month,
Cash Donal'ons
Alr'.s, \V. (lovicr, 5C,e; Airs. S. 1.11'
,;Ing, proceeds from itcd (Toss 'Tea,
$1,00; \Ii -•c; 11. Kirit, $1.110; ('l,:l:es lou
I'2 and 13, $50.00; Hays of coleess!on
Pt, Piocee114 front dance $71.00.
GLOVES LOST
1beavy hid g'1 )vrs, uatur;I1 colour.
Lost 011 11111101Ve'r11 nig7.11. It' anyone
found them they are re pies'i(1 to
leave ,same at The Stai li l •d Office.
14-I.
FOR SALE
1 Jersey ('1144, Alill(ing; 1 II,'r.'fo:'d
!leiter; 4 yearling 11,11„r.s, spring
calves, young calve.;; 2s p ,11(0). Al1111 '
(filbert Ncthery, phone lis S, 11'31.11.
1I•Ip,
DANCE
In the Coln uuUnit y I1;tll, Myth, 011
Friday evening, November 13th, under
the auspices of the 11011111 reiteration
'of .lgricull)re, Dancing from II until
2 o'clock. Admission 24. 1-11p.
Clearing Auction Sale
Of Farm Stock, Implements, and Some
Household Effeel s,
At Lot (South 11a11f) 39, t'or essiuu
11, East \1'awaiosh Town:;hip, two and
a half smiles north-west of Myth, o11
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24th at 1 p.n1,
101IS IS - Gelding, ti y: -.11s old;
mitre, 7 year.; old; mare, I1 years old,
aged mare.
(1A'TTI)E,-'Durham cow, 7 years, due
i11 April; 1 1t'k roan cow, t; years, due
111 May; (fray cow, 0 yea) ;, due its
i March; Reel c'ow, 4 years, due hi \illy;
White cow, 3 years, calf at toot; Roan
Quilt Donations: Ihcifer, rising 2 yea's, due i11 \lay;
AIN, Il. Fai•srrvice, 1 crl,t (pill; Roan heifer, rising 2 years, due in
Mrs. T, Ncllans, 1 quilt; \Piss Mtn July; 2 white steers, rising 2 year;
:).nilh, I lop; Miss O. Letpu', 1 top; old; 2 Hereford steers, rising 2 year's
Irs. Pell) Beattie, 1 top; \11,4.• \V. A:a• o:d; Roan heifer, rising, _ years;
(Man, 1 lop qulltel at N ►\'culllel• White and red heifer, 1 year old; Mosul
meeting; Cancois{on 13, 2 (10{ d ;; Airs. steer, 1 year old; 0 calves,
I'i.lwin Woods, 2 tops. I d'1(1'S--i0 pigs, from 1211 to 110 ll•s,
Ticks'; \Cure sold 00 a towel dunat- 1-) Pigs, ten weeks 0111.
cd by ,11rs. 1.. \lCNall, the tacky Whet 1.\'ll`I l'a\ll ;'I'5 -International (lis:
going to Mts. S. Lyon. liceeNls 1,40. harrow; AlcCornl{clt-Deering hay load
\Ins. 'I',\1- Vnirscr4ice (Walled a or, used 2 seasons; international walk -
cake, lucky ticked going 1)) 31 0. lug plow, nearly new; seed drill; \I. -
Cowan. Cake was 50111. Total pea• H. mrawer: :McCormick Doering Mo4v-
c4eds 2.7:5 14110011 t'oIIc lion 3,17. or; sed of harrow; ci,aup : ' •1 buggy;
The 1'1'c,sidant, 31rs. It. Irair4('r+:-c, sit of double harness; Ivo n' 100 two -
invited all the Society to a Pot Luck furrow plow; lay fort(, pully and rope;
Supper at her home o11 1 1':d 1-y after- wagon; gravel box; siaift hay rack;
noon, Ne•rentber 6111. 1slocl( rack; sleigh and platform; light
One quilt was quilted and 0 large .wagon, rub,her tires; Clinton fanning
mutter of face lllaskl; were mtt;le, mill with bagger; binder; leddar;
Anyoire wishing to help with our clipper:;; pulper; grain grinder: cut- ""-
EIC
sewing quota can 0111111 material from ter, Etc.
Alt's. it. Yungblut. A few Household Effects.
\Peeling closed by singing (1tt(i Pave 11.1Y --About 30 lolls. i REMOVED PROMPTLY.
the King. 04tA1N--A quantity of mixed gratin
and oats. • Telephones: Atwood, 50r31; Seaforth, lo, Collect.
RECEIVING EGGS TERMS -CASH
PRICE 47c A -LARGE, f
DARLING and CO. of CAST :DA, LTD.
R. J. POWELL, GROCER. Daniel \icGow•an, Proprietor, $
-�
Blyth, Ontario. Harold Jackson, .\uctio11cer, 14 2. 1zW `tatDti
1 l
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE
Voters' List, 1942, Municipality of
the Village of Blyth,
County of Huron,
NOTICE It hereby given that I have
complied with Section 7 of the Voters'
Lists Act, and that 1 have posted up
at my office, 111 the Village of 1313111,
2'
on the rd day' of October, 19.12, 111
.111 persons having claims against list of all person's entitled to vote inthe estate of Mary Johnston who died the said Aluniclpality, at municipal
on April ;loth, 11112, at the Village of j elections, and that such list remains
Myth. are required to forward full there for inepec1lon,
pnrt!culaa'n of their claims, duly veil And I botchy ('011 upon all voters to
fled, to the undetrigncd on or before take imntedlate proceedings to 111110
the 11th day of Nove111hor, 1114'2', after
any 12110 s or outisslons corrected 8c
which date the assets of this estate cording to law.
will be distributed.
0;10(1 at (loherich this 2111.1 day of Dated at my office this 20th day of
Oel.other, 1942, October, 11142,
I,E:
R:\NIC DONNI,LY, Solicitor for
the:1)1minis4ra{rlx. 12_-,1,
J. 11. 1(, Elliott, Clerk.
12.3.
Stationery
A New Stock of Boxed Stationery at Attractive
Prices. Come in and see these.
Why not start planning now to give a Pen and
Pencil Set to that Boy or Girl for Christmas. There
is nothing more appreciated by the student. We
have a grand assortment, in popular price range,
and they are all new. They also make the ideal
gift for the grown-up, too.
We have just received a new stock of Writing Pads.
Why not plan now to give The Standard as a
Christmas Box..Many people send it to out-of-
town relatives, and it is one gift that is appreciated
the year around.
OUR CHRISTMAS CARDS ARE 11! .E
COME IN AND LOOK 'HEMI OVER.
The Standard Book Store
'�(e;t3�i'C���'•CtStR(S(6t4�:(C(CtR'CtCtRt�(C!',�tQ't(StRte(CtdtEte(G(CK(4(L(t�CtQ(E1i14(s;'•Q(
Dead and Disabled Animals
ALL -BRAN REALLY IS
h\ DELICIOUS AND iT KEEPS
3 US REGULAR...NATURALLY
Says Mrs. George H. Tremblay,
Chicoutimi, Quebec: "I can tell you
that I wouldn't care to be without
KELLOGG'S ALL -BRAN now.
The cause of constipation that's due
to lack of the proper bulk is banished
by ALL -BRAN. Yes, the best part
of it is that it gives more than just
temporary relief."
Why don't you try ALL -BRAN'S
"Better Way" to correct the cause
• SERIAL STORY
if you arc troubled by constipation
due to lack of the right kind of
'bulk' in your diet ? But remember,
ALL -BRAN doesn't work like
cathartics. It takes time. Eat it
regularly and drink plenty of water.
Get ALL -BRAN at your grocer's,
in two convenient size packages, or
ask for the individual serving
package at restaurants. Made by
Kellogg's in London, Canada.
MURDER IN FERRY COMMAND
BY A. W. O'BRIEN
BOMBER TO MONTREAL
CHAPTER
Clyde Dawson was repairing the
ravages of his stormy session with
the spy ring in the Turkish bath
of his Chicago hotel when, at
about 8 o'clock that night, a tele-
phone call was plugged into the
stearal room, It was the chief
agent of the F.
"Something of special interest
for you, Dawson," he said. "Your
good-looking girl friend boarded
a Canadian Colonial Airways plane
at LaGuardia Field in New York
20 minutes ago. Our Manhattan
office wants to know if they'll
have tine plane radioed back .. .
it will he over American soil for
about an hour more—it's the rug'.
ular evening plane for Montreal."
Dawson Made no effort to con -
teal his excitement.
"No, let her go . , . I've a sud-
den hunch and want her to have
a little more rope, My compli-
ments to your Manhattan office—
damn smart co-operation. One
more favor, old man, the War
.Supplies Office must have a Traf-
fic Routing Department. Would
you use your authority to find out
if the man in charge last night
was, by chance, asked for any
IN COTTON OR WOOL
By Anne Adams
This Anne Adams dress, Pattern
4131, is so slenderizing that you'll
want it in loth cotton print for
home wear and dark fabric for
town. The scalloped buttoning
curves into the front skirt panel,
One pattern part makes the back.
Pattern 4131 is available in wo-
men's sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46,
48 and 50. Size 36 takes :3%
yards 35 -inch fabric,
Send twenty cents (20c) in
Loins (stamps cannot he accepted)
for this Anne Adams pattern to
Room 421, 73 Adelaide St, West,
Toronto. Write plainly size, name,
address and style number.
travel information by Parole
Fiske'"
s
The G-man laughed outright at
the other end of the line:
"We're one jump ahead of you
there --1 was about to tell you
that we have received a report on
the very subject. it was a lucky
guess --she actually did call up
about 10.30 last night and asked
about flying schedules
"Where to?"
"This will tickle you ----she ask-
ed for the best route to New-
foundland via Halifax • .."
"1t fits," Dawson murmured,
" . and the 'Traffic lint] ting
officer suggested that, due to ex-
isting flying conditions, she alight
Netter take the train for New
York and fly tap to Montreal
where she would have plenty of
time to connect with the night
TCA plane for Halifax --it leaves
at 1.45 a.ni. Ile informed her
that her War Supplies Depart -
anent identification might get her
a spot on one of the crowded
steamers out of Halifax—other-
wise she would be forced to go
back to Truro, over to North Syd-
ney, across Cabot Strait and via
Newfoundland Railway . , ."
Dawson looked at the clock
overhead and whistled. 'There was
no time to be wasted.
From the Turkish Bath he
phoned directly to the Ferry Com-
mand headquarters in Montreal
and had then locate the Air Mar-
shal. Half an hour later Dawson
was on his way to at airport just
outside the Chicago limits, There
was an Arley Air Force officer
waiting for hint at the gate.
"I'n1 instructed to take you di-
rectly to the field, Mr. Dawson,"
he said crisply. "'There's a twin -
engined bomber being held for
you on Ferry Command instruc-
tions."
At Detroit the plane had to
land for customs and immigration
clearance and Dawson took ad-
vantage of the few minutes to
phone the Montreal bureau of the
Canadian Intelligence, He gave
instructions for the 1.15 TCA
plane to be held in case he was
late and if a reservation was made
for one Carole Fiske—she would
have to use her right name unless
she had a phony passport — to
reserve the seat beside her for
him. If the seat was already re-
served he ordered that Intelli-
Bence priority be used to secure
It was a rough trip, with the
plane flying into a strong head..
wind. But at 1.35 a.nl, the pilot
beckoned to-.awson and the lat-
ter squeezed his way past the
large inside gasoline tank in-
stalled for the transatlantic flight.
"We're over Dorval now," the
pilot yelled. "Sony it took so long
—that wind was plenty stiff."
Dawson hurried to the TCA air-
port office,
Outside the doorway, as elan
stepped out of the shadows. It
was a Montreal bureau officer.
"I've got your ticket here —
thought you might not want to go
inside because the girl is waiting'
with the other passengers . ."
"Nice going," Dawson cut in,
"go inside and tell the dispatcher
all's set for the take -off anytime,
and I've gone directly to the
plane. You hand in my ticket—•
they usually pick them up at the
desk."
*
Dawson heard the flight an-
icobac;
iT DOES TASTE GOOD
INA PIPE !
nouncemcnt on the loudspeaker
end saw the passengers filing
through the door.
Carole Fiske clone out alone.
Dawson ,tvung into stride be-
side her,
"Hello," he said simply,
Carole Fiske halted in conster-
nation as she recognized Dawson.
11 tit sire quickly recovered her
poise. One hand slipped out of
her muff and she held it close to
his body'. In 11. was a snub-nosed
automatic:
„Don't try to stop me from tak-
ing this plane, mister, or you're a
dead pigeon --1 swear it!"
Dawson laughed. "The surest
way of missing your plane would
be to shoot ale here, sweetheart.
Instcan of trying to stop you I'm
actually snaking the jaunt in the
next seat—chummy, eh?"
The girl was obviously suspi-
cious. Keeping the Ian trained
on him she hid it with her snuff.
"Very well, let's go!" she vont-
mended in lowered tone,
Dawson took her free arm and
gave it a playful squeeze,
"Let's go," he echoed.
\Vhen they reached the side of
the wailing TCA plane, Carole
Fiske slowed her pace and gave
an almost imperceptible gesture
with her head for Dawson to
mount the movable stairway first.
"Emily Post wouldn't approve,''
grinned Dawson.
On the second step he stopped
suddenly as t'roln the corner of his
eye he caught a quick movement
----a1 man had slipped up silently
behind the girl and pinned her
arms.
"Drop that gun:" he snarled in-
to her ear. It was the Montreal
agent told Dawson had completely
forgotten about hint. Of course
the agent had picked up the bit
of side -drama outside the waiting
room and ... 1)awson heard the
hostess conning through the plane
door, evidently attracted *by the
commotion, This tw(a5 110 tinge for
delicacy.
Jumping lightly from the sec-
ond step, lie punched hard and
true over the girl's shoulder
straight into the agent's face. The
latter reeled buck, stumbled and
made a flying leap and landed
piled into the snowdrift. Dawson
squarely on the stunned mean.
"Never mind the poke," Daw-
son hissed, "act as if you are
drunk and we're going in for a
little horseplay ..."
Both men began grUntiIig a1(1
laughing as they rolled, Dawson
finally yelling in a tone of mock
surrender:
"Enough . . , enough , . . you
got me, Joe."
'I'liey rose to their feet brush-
ing. the snow off their clothes,
Carole Fiske was obviously anlaz••
ed but she took a quick glance at
the frowning hostess and played
her part:
"Come on, darling," she spoke
impatiently, "the plane is waiting
—send your frisky friend on his
way."
* v v
With apparent unsteadiness,
Dawson followed up the steps,
checked in with the hostess and
sat clown heavily in his seat. The
girl' and he had the two end
spaces.
She was staring at hint coldly.
"Nice way to treat a Boy Scout
pal doing his good decd," she
commented crisply, "but why did
you wreck it?"
Dawson took from his pocket
an object which he tossed into her
lap. It was the snub-nosed auto-
matic.
"You dropped it outside," he
said. "Now come again with the
$36 question."
Carole Fiske shoved the gun
into her purse, frankly bewildered.
"I asked you why you wrecked
an excellent opportunity to turn
the tables 011 ane out there?"
Dawson puckered his lips and
tapped his fingers together
thoughtfully:
"Maybe it's because 1 like to
see good-looking girls given a
chance to achieve their ultimate
ambition in life. You, for ex-
ample , .." he turned to face her
squarely, "seen to have the burn-
ing and laudable purpose of killing
ane off. You put me on the spot
in Chicago, then you threaten to
snake lee a dead pigeon out here
—1'd never forgive myself if 1
didn't let you kill ale sometime.
But, meanwhile. ," his tone
changed, "if you start playing
with that peashooter again I'll
turn you over my knee, Under-
stand, my little Iamb?"
(Continued Next Week)
Dogs Trained To
Bark In Code
Dogs are Tieing trained to de-
liver secret army despatch mes-
sages vocally in London, with a
clog that can hark the number of
a taxicab in which he has ridden
acting as instructor. The dog
returns to training headquarters
and barks any given number of
tinges to a certain officer. This
code is translated into a message,
and is foolproof because the dog
will not bark for a stranger.
ISSUE 46-'42
C
TABLE TALKS
SADIE 13. CHAMBERS
Autumn Supper
Soups
Snlnetiines it seems 1111iicecsal..
to give recipes for soups now that
canned soups have been perfect-
ed, 11 is so easy to open a can of
soup and have ready n steaming
hot dish of soup almost before ,you
assemble the ingredients to make
a pot of your own recipe.
It is possible to make variations
of the standard type of canned
soups by combining a couple of
cans of different varieties. 1 like
for instance to mix green pea with
tomato and chicken and rice with
i11MIS111.00111; cream of mushroom
with tomato, rte.
As true patriots we have been
asked not to use canned goods
whenever We can possibly do with-
out, but in cases of emergency
I ant giving you these recipes,
Cream of Corn Soup
1 nleditml-sized on ion
1 can e01'11 cream style
3 cups water
3 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons flour
1 teaspoon salt
% teaspoon pepper
3 cups milk
Finely chopped parsley.
Dash of paprika.
If the canned corn is your own
canning use as pint jar.
Combine t.hc chopped onion,
corn and water. Cover and cook
gently for 20 minutes. Press
through a coarse sieve. Melt but-
ter and add flour mixing well,
Then add salt and pepper. Stir
and cook until thick. Add the
corn mixture and reheat \veil.
Sprinkle each serving with chop-
ped parsley :111(1 paprika. Makes
6 servings.
Cream of Pea and Carrot Soup
1 cup sliced carrots
1 cup (mined peaS (maybe
leftovers)
1 thick slice Onion
2 cups boiling water
3 tablespoons butter
8 tablespoons flour
3 cups milk
1 teaspoon salt
% teaspoon deeper
Combine the carrots and onion
with the honing water and cook
for ten minutes covered. Add the
peas and cook five minutes'longer.
Press through a sieve, Melt the
butter and blend in the flour;
add milk and carrot mixture, Cook
stirring constantly until thick.
Season to taste. Serve with a
garnish of a few carrot slices and
a few pens, that you may have
reserved. Serves 6.
Some reminders,—the leftover
vegetables along with the water
in which they are cooked, is a
splendid foundation for creamed
soups. Soups are one of the easi-
est ways in cooking to present
milk to your 'amity.
Mongol Soup
% cup split peas
6 cups boiling water
2 teaspoons chopped onion
14 cup celery tops
114 cups canned tomatoes
T,4 cup finely chopped cabbage
% cup sliced carrots
2 teaspoons salt
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour
Soak peas over 'night; drain.
Add two cups water, onion and
celery and simmer covered for
two hours or until peas are ten-
der. Add tomatoes anti cook for
ten minutes, Press through a
sieve. Cook cabbage and carrots
in 3 cups water until tender, 30
minutes. Combine with first mix-
ture, 111e1t butter and blend in
the flour. Add the hot vegetable
mixture. Cook five minutes stir-
ring frequently. Serves 0.
111Is* Chfinther* neleouteN personal•
letter* front InlereNtcd resudcr, !rho
Is ,lensed 10 receive *uggc*t loll*
on tholes tor her column, find I.
'En ready to Innen to your tipet
peeve*." Itet,ue*1* for reelpe* or
rpeelnl menu* sure In order. AddreHs
your fetters to "51im* Smile It, Chum -
berm, 73 R'e*1 Adelaide Street, To-
ronto," Send stamped melt-padres/tell
envelope If yon tri*h o reale.
BUNDLING
1 Snug fur parkas protest U. S.
Navy gor'i i- fron the frig id
blasts on Russian run.
(
A
ielightful
everage.
Trace you tried Postuut yet?
With each successive cup,
Postlllll's robust, satisfyilig
flavor seems more dclictous.
it's easily made, requires less
sugar, and is very economical.
And because Postinn contains
neither caffeine nor tannin it's
a safe beverage for everyone.
.4 OZ. SIZE MAKES 50 CUPS .. , 8
Canada Building
Newest Aircraft
Manufacture in Canada of four
of the most, useful and modern of
the aircraft nom used by the
United Nations has become an out-
standing feature of Canada's
munitions program, it was learned
recently.
While the production of aircraft
in Canada has never been great in
comparison with output of the
United Kingdon\ and United States
--and may not even he great dur-
C7tt
��li�lt
�lpit
POSTUM
n.ut IIV 66666
-%%,et48 a Proem'
♦ e -N
9/irA a 100 ape
• ,• uiu�'tiir,rr.�
OZ, SIZE MAKES 100 CUPS
P362
ing this conflict --present prepays
anions are for production of ma-
chines which are not expected to
be obsolete for a long tinge,
The program now approaching
the assembly -line basis calls for
production of Lancaster bombers,
the new Mosquito combination re -
co nnaissalce-fighter-bonlhcr plane,
the Curtis dive bomber and the
PRY flying boat.
In England and Wales there is
one acre, of land per person as
against two acre; ht Germny, 20
In America and 30 In Russia,
COOKIES CLICK WITH THE ARMY
By BARBARA B. BROOKS
With the conga chasers and the rhumba writhers, as well as
more serious minded youth, doing their steps in the Army, mothers
begin to wonder what the boys are eating. 'Thanks to the advances
of nutrition, the Army doesn't leave them a thing to worry about.
The soldier sons are getting all the calorics they need, and the entire
menu is worked out to supply the necessary minerals, vitamins and
other food essentials.
Paekages from home, however, will always get a lig hand from
the boy's in camp, for n Atony cook has either the time or the in-
clination to cook tidbit.. for each one's fancy. So, mothers, start
rolling out the dough, and begin cutting the cookies, 'Those old-
fashioned cookies are the best package -fillers anyone ever thought
up to send to a 1111111 away from home.
Baked in the home oven, there is nothing more satisfying for
a soldier to sink his teeth into than a rich, nut -filled coolie. Or, if
it's candy that's wanted, 'Toffee Squares will turn the trick.
Toffee Squares
8 oz. Toffee 51 cups Oven -Popped Cereal
2 tablespoons Cream (1--5% oz, plug. )
Melt toffee with cream in a double boiler, Pour over oven -popped
cereal in a buttered bowl and mix well. Pack in shallots' buttered
pawls and cut into small bars when cool,
Yield: 64 bars (2-8 x 8 inch pans).
Favourite Drop Cookies
teaspoon soda
11 teaspoon salt
3% cups torn flakes
teaspoon maple or vanilla
cup dried figs
% cup butter
1 cup sugar
2 egg's
11.4.' cups flour flavouring
Cover figs with boiling water and let stand 10 minutes; drain,
dry on towel, clip stems, and cult into small pieces, Blend butter
and sugar thoroughly; acid eggs and beat well. Add flour sifted with
soda and salt. Mix in figs, crushed corn flakes and flavouring. Drop
by small spoonfuls onto ungreased cookie sheet and bake in moder-
ately hot oven (400°F'.) 10 to 12 minutes.
Yield: 2% dozen cookies (3 inches in diameter).
Note: Cookies improve in texture and flavour by storing over-
night.
Honey Wafers
1,2 cup butter or substitute 1 teaspoon soda
% cup honey
'.:: teaspoon cinnamon
?4 cup bran 1'i teaspoon cloves
2 cups flour a,:( teaspoon allspice
Boil butter and honey together for one minute; cool. Crush
bran slightly, Sift flour with soda Intl spices; add to first mixture
with the bran; mix thoroughly. Chill. Roll dough on floured board
to about 1 /16 -inch thickness, Cut with floured cookie cutter; bake
on greased baking sheet in moderate oven (350"F.) about ten minutes.
Yield: 5 dozen cookies (2!11 inches in diameter).
Corn Flake Macaroons
2 egg whites 2 cups corn flakes
1 cup brown or granulated sugar cup chopped nut meats
!r. teaspoon vanilla extract 1 cup shredded cocoanut
Beat egg whites until stiff but not dry. Fold in sugar; add
flavouring, corn flakes, nut meats and cocoanut. Mix carefully, Drop
by spoonfuls on well -greased baking sheet. Lake in moderate oven
(350°F.) 15 to 20 minutes, llcmove immediately from pan, It
macaroons stick, place pan on damp towel 1111(1 rennovc 1(111earoons
using spatula or sharp knife. If macaroons become hardened to pato
they ants be returned to oven for as few minutes to softest.
Yield: 1% (toren macaroons (2 inches in diameter).
Lv ' rt°
7 .0i1S0s, a
7 I // L� �
Here's the Answer
to Your Question
If you cannot get Crown Brand Syrup from your favourite grocer
now and then, here is the reason. Because "Crown Brand" in
addition to its other uses is being very generally used to help
supplement the supply of sugar in Canadian Homes, the demand
has increased tremendously.
Though there has been a much greater amount
of Crown Brand syrup produced this year, even
this increased supply cannot cope with the shortage
of millions of pounds of sugar.
Don't hoard ...buy normally... we are making
every effort to supply the increased demand, and
your grocer will do his best to fill your needs.
t�1�11'ADA'sTANc1("taMVANY, 11Ma[f+ fX0'4REgt? YQONTa
SUNDAY
SCHOOL
LESSON
LESSON 46
THINGS THAT MAR FAMILY
LIFE
Genesi„ 4:1.12; 27:1.45; Deuter-
onomy 24:1-5; Malachi 2:13.16;
Matthew 5:31, 32; Marls 7:10-12;
Luke 12:13-15; Romans 7:2, 3;
Corinthians 7:10.16
PRINTED TEXT
Genesis 27:30.45; Matthew 5:31,
32; Luke 12:13.15
GOLDEN TEXT.—Bear ye one
another's burdens, and so fulfil
the law of Christ. Gab{tions 6;2,
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
Time. --Dates arc entirely un-
important in this le.son, and,
therefore, we classify the -e vari-
ous passages only in 0 general
chronological scheme, The fiat
passage concerning Cain and Abel
is located at the very beginning
of human history, 'I'le event \se
consider in the life of Jacob oc-
curred about 1820 B.C. The Imo;
of hoses were given some 200
years later. Malachi was written
about 400 II.C, :111 the passages
from the ( ospels refer to the
three-year period of our Lord's
public ministry, while the two pas-
sages from Paul's epistles, in this
lesson, were written in A.D. 59
ami GO,
Place, --We do lull know where
Cain and Abel tyere living when
the latter was slain, The fancily
of Jacob lived, for the most part,
in southern Palestine, Malachi
prophesied in Judah, All of the
utterances taken from the Gos-
pels ha this lesson were given in
Palestine, The Epistle to the
Romans was written from Corinth
to Rouge, ‘whereas the hint Epistle
to the Corinthians was written
frons Ephesus to the Greek city
of Corinth.
Deception
;10, "And it came to pass, as
soon as Isaac had made an end of
blessing. Jacob, and Jacob was yet
scarce gone out from the presence
of Isaac his father, tint Esau his
brother came in from his hunting.
31, And he also made savory food,
and brought it unto his father;
and he said unto his father, Let
my father arise, and eat of his
son's venison, that thy soul may
bless ate, 32. And Isaac his father
said unto hint, Who art thou? And
he said, 1 am thy sols, thy first-
born, Esau, 33. And lsaoc trem-
bled very exceedingly, and said,
who then is he that hath taken
venison, and brought it me, and
I have eaten of all before thou
t'onlcst, and have blessed him'i
yea, and he shall be blessed, 31.
\Vhen Esau heard the \\lords of his
father, Bless ole, even me also,
0 my father. 35, And he said,
Thy hrother came with guile, and
had: taken away thy blessing."
Isere the have a family broken
up by the outstanding vice of de-
ception. 'There is just one way of
avoiding such a danger in our own
lives. We must determine in our
hearts that never, no matter what
the cost, or what the situation,
will we stoop to deceive any mem-
ber of the household, and then,
as the years conte t.nd go, con-
fidenco is found to be secure,
faith in one another is always
assured, and no matter how de-
ceitful the world, and business
life, and social life, may be, int
the Houle each can trust the other,
and rest in tine confidence and the
Integrity of the entire family
circle,
Unfaithfulness
31, "It was said also, Whoso-
ever shall put away his wife, let
hint give her a writing of divorce-
ment: 32, but 1 stay unto you, that
every one that putter) :away his
wife, saving for the cause of for-
nication, maketll her an adult-
eress: and whosoever shall marry
her when She is put away cam••
titittcl.h adultery." Our Lord
taught that, in the purpose of the
Creator, tine two sexes were Horde
for each other so that both to-
gether made up the ideal of
humanity and that the holy bond
of matrimony was the recognition
of this fact in human nature, This
tie, which is by anything else in-
dissoluable, is by tine mere fact of
unfaithfulness dissolved.
Covetousness
13, "And one out of the mul-
titude said tanto him, 'Teacher, hid
my brother divide the i11lheritaunce
with me, 1-t. 13ut he said unto
him, Man, who made me a judge
or a divider over you?? 115. And he
said unto them, Take heed, and
keep yourselves from all coveto118-
nes;: for a plan's life consisted'
not in the abundance of the
things which he posscssetli,''
We are not told) whether the
man was making an unjust claim
on his brother, but he \tits cer-
tainly making an unjust claim on
Jesus, whose work did not include
settling. of property, The Haan
grasped at any means of obtain-
ing what he desired, invading
Christ's time and trying to impose
upon his brother an extraneous
authority. .)esus knowing that
covetousness was at the root of
the brother's unreasonable request,
takes the opportunity of warning
the whole multitude against this
prevalent and subtle sin.
This trouble in the family of
New R. A. F. Mosquito Bomber
First released picture of sen-
sational new de Iln\'illand "Mos-
quito" that i;, in the news right
nolo with its brilliant daylight
and nighttime raids over enemy
territory. Built by the 1)e Davit -
land plant in both England and
Canada, it is powered with two
Rolls Royce engines and is of
simple wooden construction, The
two men, (01(08e names are not
given, had already brought about
a spirit of bitterness in the heart
of one who thought lie had been
unjustly dealt with, so that al-
ready there is a disrupting. force
in this home, because of the burn-
ing desire in the heart of one of
these brothers for property, for
(((11lt.h, for visible things which
in part, at least, at this time were
in the hands of another member
of his fancily. He was more con-
cerned with possession of this
property than he was for the wel-
fare of his brother or the peace
of the home,
Here is another rock, the lust
for material possessions, on tvhich
many and tetany n home has been
wrecked and many a brother
separated from Itis own king for
all the years of mature manhood;
inculcating bitterness, prompting
one to speak evilly, maliciously of
those involved in such property
assignments. Deliverance from
this destructive force can be found
by slaking an honest living for
ourselves, by desiring to be right
n
dimensions of the -Mosquito are:
Span 54'2"; Length (overall)
40'9? "; height (over vertical
propeller tip) 15'3"; both the un-
dercarriage (a11(1 tail wheel units
are retractable, it has the de
3(awilluud three -bladed hydro -
made type propeller, Offensive
armaments may consist of four
20 min cannon and four .303 ma-
chine guns,
with God, by determination not
to offend others even though they
have offended us, and then, to
wait for God llimself to intervene
on our behalf if the right is on
our side.
Three Deer Bagged'
By King's Daughter
Princess .Elizabeth went deer
hunting with her father recently
In Scotland and bagged three in
one day.
The Royal faintly, It was re-
vealed, left Balmoral Castle, Scot-
land, after a long stay on the Doe-
skin because of the illness of
Queen Elizabeth, wino has now
recovered from bronchitis,
Tho Princess went hunting with
her father for an entire day, using
a telescope to sight the deer and
count their "points."
The biggest animal she bagged
was a 10•pointer. She ounce sight-
ed a "royal" l2 -polster, but did
not shoot the animal. Deer of that
type are left to breed.
STAR PERFORMER
HORIZONTAL - Answer to. Previous Puzzle
1, 7 Pictured G A K H
actress, T O e 0
12 Smell. i
13 Step, wIE UP R
16 Axillary. S L1
17 To leave out. IDLE D
19 Rowing paddle 0i 0 D
20 Bang,
rl E G -
21 Sustenance,
23 Of the nature =
of aloes, g L
26 Part of ti 0
bird's bill,
28 Wings,
29 Advertisement
31 Male bees, 53 Becomes
34 Spain (abbr.). yellow.
35 Line. 55 Sloth.
being 1940's
NL E,A L Tb best actress,
BOOR 22 Gaseous
E R SEO R,_ element,
S S M A RK �N I� 24 Musical note,
25 She is a
S YOUR -- and
S K L• finished
1 N R.' 0 r E performer.
R E I T R 27 Generalities,
30 Bee.
PLY AGA 32 Small horse,
1,11M �K{II ll �J 33 Coterie,
M -0C) I ln34 Salt.
N S 36 Soft mass,
40 Brother.
5 Right (abbr,), 44 To primp,
6 Field, 46 Medley,
7 Road (abbr.), 48 Measure
1
37 Silly. 56 Uproar. 8 Hehnet- of length.
38 Lava, 58 To cut off, shaped part. 19 Wand,
39 Selecting 59 Alms box, 9 Exultant, 50 Rodents,
men for 81 She stars in 10 Branches, 52 Child,
the army. --- picturoe, 11 Senior (abbr.) 54 Married,
41 To obtain, 82 She first 14 To spoil.
42 Pound (abbr.). gained fame 15 Body in
43 To let fall, as a -, tilt sky.
45 To accompligh VERTICAL 18 District,
47 Balance due, 1 Pep 20 Sun,
50 Myself, 2 Heathen deity. 21 She was
51 Lieutenant 3 Conventional. — the
(abbr.), 4 Soiled deeply. prize for
1 Z 3 4 01 5
13 I
18
24
ZO
20
55 Part of a
circle,
56 Ream (abbr'.),
57 Liliaceous
tree,
59 Form of ;'a."
60 Measure
of area,
6 q 10 II
I6
z9 30
.35
45 46
J51 i;z
56
61
lsz
POP—You Should See Her, Pop!
YOU SHOULD GET
MARRIED AND
SETTLE DOWN
11
Britain Garners
Miracle Harvest
Bumper Crop Estimated At
110,000,000 Bushels
Estimates of the "miracle" har-
vest garnered in the Halted Iting-
dom this year were contained In
a Dominion Bureau of Statistics
wheat review issued in Ottawa
whlrlr also predicted that the
bumper crop would mean curtail-
ment of Canadian wheat sales to
Brltaln.
While official figures of the
wheat crop which will relieve 11r1-
tadn's shipping problem were un-
available, the bureau saki that
private observers 11101 estimated
the production at between 100,000,-
000 and 115,000,000 bushels, lndl-
eating record yields per acre.
The pre-war per acre yield was
about 36 bushels on about 1,700,000
acres, but this year It appeared to
have exceeded 10 bushels on about
2,400,000 acres.
"Such a crop means much to
Britain in terms of valuable ship-
ping space freed to carry war ma-
terials other than wheat to the
United Kingdom, although it prob-
ably also means that Canada's
market for wheat and flour in
Britain will suffer curlailunent,"
the bureau said,
In addition to a record-breaking
Canadian wheat crop estimated at
615,000,000 bushels, the bureau
said that elsewhere "the high tide
of world wheat supplies continues
to rise."
The United Kingdom harvest
has been gathered, while a few
weeks hence another river of new
wheat will flow frons the farms
In Australia,
"In 1912 the bread -grain 6tlpplies
are stacked high in favor of the
United Nations, while Nazi Ger-
many and German-occupied Eur-
ope produced this year 15 percent
less bread grain (wheat and rye)
than a year ago, and 25 percent
less than the average of the tour
yea's 1935-38, according to a state-
ment credited to the British Min -
fairy of Economic Warfare," it
said.
The Australian crop Is e,'htiulat•
ed at 115,000,000 bushels of which
probably not more than 60,000,000
bushels will be used at home,
"leaving 85,000,000 bushels to be
added to the accumulated crops
which Is believed to be quite sub-
stantial,
"A high yield par acre in Aus-
tralia, ns in Canada and the Unit-
ed States appears to have more
thn offset the reduction In wheat
acreage."
Raid Leaves 5,000
Homeless In Milan
A Swiss Telegraphic Agency
dispatch said the recent R,A,F.
raid upon Milan damaged all quar-
ters of the Italian industrial cen-
tre, started 30 large fires and 300
smaller ones and left 5,000 per-
sons homeless.
The dispatch said Milan's fire
companies made more than 700
runs during the bombing in re-
sponse to calls for aid,
THE BOOK SHELF
RAINBOW AT DUSK
By Emilie Loring
Lovely Jessamine Ramsay, vis-
iting on her Aunt Ellen Marshall's
plantation, had always sworn that
she would never marry a soldier
—but that was before Major
Vance Trent landed on the lawn
by parachute. And she did not
know that Vance's accident had
been planned, that he had been
sent by his Commanding Officer
at Aunt Ellen's request to investi-
gate rumored subversive activities
in the Marshall mills.
Jessamine's life is complicated
by many admirers, Philip Maury
is anxious to leave his wife to
marry Jess. Barry Collins, super-
intendent of the plantation, is
equally anxious to marry her par-
tially because of revenge and par-
tially because of ambition, Johnny
Gordon, attached to the nearby
army camp, has been trying for
years to persuade Jess to marry
hint,
Here in Emilie boring's latest
book will be found romance and
intrigue, skillfully woven by an
author who writes vividly and en-
tertainingly of fascinating people.
Rainbow at Dusk ... by Emilie
Loring ... McClelland and Stew-
art Limited ... Price $2.50.
T WON'T MARRY
UNTIL S FIND A GIRL
LIKE GRANDPA -TUE?
MARRIED, POP.
RADIO REPORTER R7X FROST
Dinlble - Dumhle - Snip, You'd
hardly associate such a trio of
names with a radio programme at
first, would you? Sounds more like
the title of a "boogie woogie"
dance orchestra hit, But no.
Dimblc, Nimble and Snip were
three characters heard last Sun-
day afternoon over the C.B.C.
National network, 5,30 p.m. (in-
cluding ('131, Toronto) in the
Magic Carpet series. I bet that
Horny of you boys and girls who
read this will feel sorry that you
missed this funny story with Snip
the 'Tailor, Ditnble the rascal, and
Dumhle another rascal, last Sun-
day.
•
"Aside from war." That is the
title of a news broadcast current-
ly being heard 'Monday through
friday, 10 a.m. Chilli, Toronto,
Froin all accounts this interpreta-
tion of the news supported by the
friendly informal personality of
Maurice itodington is becoming
quite one of the most popular
morning newscasts. It is, as the
title suggests, aside from war, and
is built from news items of spe-
cial interest to the ladies , , ,
chatty human interest items con•
corning members of the fair sex
prominent in city and rural life
across the Dominion, chub activi-
ties and SO 011,
r M
And while v:e are speaking of
daytime programmes, the Coluin-
bla Broadcasting System has re-
cently started a novel series of
evening shows designed to ac-
quaint late listeners with the wide
range of its daytime fare, The
first of the new series was heard
last Monday, and will continue to
be u feature of C.B.S, outlets in
the United States and Canada,
Monday evenings 10,30 to 11 p.m.
The shows aro of exceedingly var-
ied proportions and are patterned
in such a manner as to make avail-
able to night-time audiences, pro-
grammes which have established
outstanding reputations during
the daylight hours, The series got
oft to u good start lust Monday
with Ben Bernie and Kate Smibh,
presented under the programme
style "Daylight Showcase."
• •
in the sphere of fine music the
Toronto Symphony orchestra hen
already established a splendid re-
putation. Lovers of better class
music will welcome back to tine
air wavey Sir Ernest 'incMillan's
aggregation of top-notch musict.
ons, which is to be heard this win-
ter ores• a special C. It.(', network,
Tuesday evenings 9 o'clock. 1115
orchestra's leader will appear as a
regular member of the newly
formed Canadian trio which in-
cludes Kathleen Parlotw and '/arts
Nels,1va,
Foe dancing and listening peace
of mind in Cu11ada, here's inter-
esting news, Mart Kenney and
his Western Gentlemen are start-
ing their eighth season on C.B.C.'s
national network , . , 8.15 Sunday
evenings. It is interesting to re-
call that several Canadian maes-
tros have gained continental fame,
have moved from the land of their
birth to the domain of the Stara
and Stripes, But Mart Kenney
has elected to remain in Canada
and play for the entertainment
of Canadians. It is now twelve
years since Mart Kenney made
his first hid for success,
LISTEN TO
"COUNTRY
NEWS"
Items of Interest From Ontario
Weekly Newspapers
EACH SUNDAY AT 2 P.M.
CFRB-860 on your dial
OUR RADIO LOG
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w�w tltrrroitc t7cok WCR'H"$ °7otk :
1 THIS CURIOUS WORLD
•
By William
Ferguson
1
IF AN AVIARY
15 A PLACE FOR.
B/AU: S:,
WHAT IS AN
� l
/K2
CEPPER TOMATO,
A VEGETABLE
PRODUCED BY
R(CC-fA RD DIENER o
ISACRQSS
BETWEEN A ra4447i,
AND A,
SWzy T BELL a4cpaz
µ-1
ANSWER An apiary 1, a place where
comes from "apis," meaning bee.
e0P11 1939 aV IE. SESVICt. $,
bees are kept. The name
NEXT: Is the earth's interior cooling off?
THEY DON'T NAVE
WOMEN LIKE
THAT THESE:
DAYS 1
2-4) t
, ;109
By J. MILLAR WATT
WHY, HE ONLY
MARRIED t-IER
at. LAST WEEK
{Released by The 11,11 5. 111{cat,, Ion.)
Page B.
_ — ,A. .
iiactoletochence,:.t4,(..Tztz,z.lce. �yty,v,nry,wlste,r..c y,:wtgteltcPect;'et'Bkttatatottctat t
.:.
WIN' ER NEEDS
Buy Vont. Winter '';'''.hint;' and Footwear Now.
We ?I;1ve a Complete Range of Underwear.
Me'lt's all(i Boys' Silver -fleece Combination,
Shirts and Drawers.
cil[llan'
All -Wiwi ball, (':Illl';itlati(►n, Shirts and Drawers.
i'olllhitution, Shirts and Drawers.
Shirts and Drawers.
1 'oiii fn.rc;"It ii'ool Kayserettes 59c
Ft;t)t\\ k:..,. (1!' .',11 '.Cillos. for Cold and Wet 1Vcather.
r. (q r ►1
ct r
' It
, •;I.,., S, raa...w-.r•..• use .wry .../e '.a.ran..wns:.a,rr .
cGiU
fi
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fi
fi
Fl
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ed
f,; In me front the Clinton hospital and Is
,-Iteadly improving afte,n• undl`rgoiug
a tieriutts operation!.
THE STANDARD
e\t•. runes Sluts of Seafo1 tet Ir; vis-
iting In town.
'.\Ir, and Mrs, ('harles Stnldereock
have moved into the dwelling recently
vacated by Rev. and Airs \ 11 Moyle,
Al r. Jack Rowels of Ingersoll spent
the \wt'elt•end with Ilia parents, I\L•,
and Mrs. \\'m. Powys,
.\lies hazel felts of Loudon, spent
the \weck•end with her mother, 'Alis,
\\', 1, felts.
Miss iss Vera Tien iay has returned
^1c•1n..^1o.n,,+1-ro1p1'J1 (� .e.mv1 In tlln l•t'f., Rhea estl 1)otlgla.s 31 'Nall
-. � N -... .. v 4'.. , b'N'U't.�b �'b'tl'Y.�U 1)•U J
CTw Ci.P!ti.
gc t.:a1
altilU =MC
,;I11.1 our entire stock, \\'e wish t1) :111-
!lttltp';t! no longer (alien for business.
t_. would lti t' it1 take this opportunity Of ex-
ltrcs..,! 1` t't Inii, Plan:: bind customers oar thanks
for.:tr.;l :il'irceciati(nt Of, their Patronage.
1 t het:, been a pleasure u'e f(1r us to do business
and v sincerely trust that you
have found it (pleasant and satisfying to do business
with us.
ti.iitcd their aunt and uncle, Alt.
fi 111s. Merl (.''t;i1g, wt Auburn, over
ii \weck•cud,
R
A
fi
as
fi
CEI
-
fi
\7,,r k:'^ 5e to 1o®O Store
v1
`...•
..a.Ie=n.•..I.--,v,•s.S,.e....:....... ........,>a.......,..a.,..,1 _
;inti il:ft its stain.
Tit: 1.1.. :it '1y tt
• (' .. u , it .. h . tl..ti I 11..,vc Iar joys of heaven.
t0 `01111' U i11•r.- 1C,III
t 11 _ I;
.,'I. t:. 1 } :i 1.
111 , ! 1 .un nn u; th:. sainted l;;uttl;
P ; 1 ! 'I' 11ny hl ,ill it frown Of fold is given.
Ili, :ii:l � I 1 ., , _ :1:. ,• .
'1'!11�•;I..11 ,, . 1, ; •,� I :' ei I'I1 :11�• !1.,;
Ito 1
in ;i 1 n11t,
.11111 a harp is in my 11:1 11:l.
I have lc:o n: d the song; they uiug,
\\ 9(,111 11 ;.1s itattl st t free.
.\nd the plcrions hills of Heaven re•
'1111.1
\\ i;1 my ue tt'un'n m:lody.
no :;r:el', no pain;
in my liajt y ht Ina;
Aly have fh I.
,1.1 in.
My hoar lt•inttlplt come.
... .a., MAIL .,1...IWYWMa... __._....r.1,...a1...,..,cr
ri• .l
,ell
Illy d0t1i;l5 are
1riends of mortal ycar:1
'"t't;t:ty I• cdcraticn of Agriculture
�
Y6 F�• t-
Meing
;e "2€ b yy) haverb'r 18
1912, at 1.:30 p.m.,,:
�lAr �R ' � Clinton
C('t'icers at 10.00 a.m.
til)elti;('1•''; will be: --
I
.IOSE=1711411r7"..-•7•.7, — --. —r, _
i-; rt .\rirr'11110,
:u I ...uLa.-
I .:11;::11;1 I1.: ration cf
...` (1' 1 . 1'..I .
10'.11(.1 to r.Itt•rrd.
\'., I \\ h'
1111 11111t•1' of I'le
.I, tate,
Pict' Irr II 11!. �c 'I'reasurri.
,: 5J 7;+
t';'a.ut►'�
Department of Labour
National War Labour Board
GENERAL ORDER
The D3minion Bureau of Statistics has found that
the cost of living index number for October 1,
1942, is 117.8 (adjusted index 116.9) as compared
with the cost of living index number for July 2,
1912, of 117.9 (adjusted index 117).
The Wartime Wages Control Order, P. C. 5963,
provides in Section 48 (iv):
"the 'mutt of the bonus shall not he
changed unless the cost of living index
i nlnt',cr has changed one whole point or
more sir.cc the last general order of the
Ito;ltt1 tl_t,nit1.1g an increase or decrease in
the ,111t:ant thereof.,,
irs.Oc-c member not having changed by one
whole poii.'.. ' r r; ,uc since July 2, 1942, pursuant
to the 1-r.t\.ir,:I,,,1 of P. C. 5963 as stated, the
National War Lak,ur Board orders that the terms
of its General OrrJf.rr dated August 4, 1942, shall
coraiutle to apniy the period November 15,
19-; 2, to 17c 1.;;;::Iry 15, 19.13, subject to the right of
etnp;oy cr; or employees to apply to a War Labour
Bontd ft,r autl;oaization of payment of such an
amount of cost of living bonus as a Board may
determine to be "fair and reasonable," under the
provisions of the Order.
FItJM1'IIFEY MITCHELL
Chairman, National War Labour Board
Ottawa, Canada
Novut her 4, 19.12
and
the
Nnr=ing Sister, K. AlcKorlclndale,
Ii.('.N.. of the Naval hospital Staff,
Halifax, N.-5., is visiting with her sis•
ter, Nils. It. I1, Philp,
11 iss. ilianche \\'iltse
visited over
i�ttr, Alia.
Radford.
of Ingersoll
the '.veek.end with her
George Radford and 'lr.
\lt isrs. Thomas Colson, Art Colson,
Nelson Lear and Harry Sturdy, of Au•
hunt left lat,t 'Thursday to do some
hunting at Itracebridge,
Ronald Sundercock, of the R.C:AI''.,
Manning fool, Toronto, spent a few
days le 't' With his parents, Mr. ata
Mrs. Chat•Ict3 Sundercock,
Mr. and \Irs, Harold Foster have
1 moved into M r. \Vm, .IohItston'3
house, recently vacated by 1)r, and
Jackson and family.
11., and 'Airs. llirclliouse and daugh-
ter, Anne Mario, of !.onion, visited
with 'Airs. MHrehouse's father, 31r. T.
11. Edwards, and 1fn3, Edwards, over
the weekend,
\Irs, 1''. Oster was appointed to the
Provincial hoard of the \Vonten's In-
stitute, and attended the meeting held
'I'111vtl:ty and Wednesday of t'hits week,
in the Royal York hotel, Toronto,
(1nr. i?arl Craig of Pel•ttwawa is
spending his furlough of two weeks
with hfr mother, \lis. \\'tn. Craig, and
brother, Bernard, also with his brother
Bert, of Auburn.
\Irs. C'. C). Kilpatrick and Miss Dor-
othy
loeothy 1'opleitoue were guests at the
' I antpoet—(Slone wedding in the
Thames (load United Church 011 \\'ed•
Ho11yan's
B,KERY
AND CONhEGTIONIRY.
The Hoene of Good Baking.
Soy Bean, Whole Wheat
and White Bread.
Also Buns, Cookies
Pies, Cakes and
Honey -Dipped Doughnuts
Wedding Cakes a Specialty., ,
1 Doherty Bros.
GARAGE.
WIQ .ARE AGENTS FOR
Plymouth and
Chrysler Cars
Auto -Lite and Hart
Batteries.
Goodrich & Dunlop Tires.
White Rose Motor Oil.
PHILCO RADIOS AND
SUPPLIES.
Acetylene and Electric
Welding.
Vodden's
BAKERY.
Wednesday, gov,11, 19.12,
. r 1 1 1.1, .1.1. ,- -
START NOW—
to build up ,,}'our resistance against winter colds
and ills, Below are listed some of our excellent
tonics and builders
Neo Chemical hood $1.15, $2.45, $4.45
Wampole's Extract $1.00
Davis and Lawrence Tonic $1 00
Phospho-Lecithin $1.00
Kepler's Malt Extract 75c and $1.25
Scott's Emulsion 53c and 98c
'Creophos $1.00
Beef, Iron and Wine 89c
Halibut Liver Capsules 89c and $1.50
Cod Liver Capsules 98c
R. D. PHILP, Phm. B.
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER—PHONE 211.
.I I,. I 11 II -....Ilul.. il...-•.
tGtQtG C10GIGteYt ICtIZOtt(ItCtetZWZIC GTCkit:AiZtQilyta•ca'a :,t.t t"atGteat(i'CLX .S .114tgKtt1
I1.4
Be the Fault of YOU
LACK of SLEEP May
V
WHEN IN NEED OF
BREAD, BUNS, PIES.
°f
REMEMBER
HOME-MADE CAKE
OR COOKIES
Take ten minutes to -night to inspect the Spring
and Mattress you sleep 011, then conte to our store
and compare What you 11'e using with our \Ville
selection of Box type, Steel Slat, and Cable Bed
Spring's.
Luxurious Inner Spring Mattresses, and
Lasting Steel Beds.
which we are offering a.t attractive prices.
D,J. S. Chellew
Il Home It urnlsher — Phones 7 and 8 — Funeral
Fy2aDtot`dt a2.,N)tBADIiD=DiDivai:eanm',',44:4•,:. ,n 2;'Vza 2tl=1`24.Do3a.D,Dalr 2;Dt
"CITE HOME BAKERY"
H. T. VODDEN.
ANNUAL FOWL SUPPER
St. Joseph's Church, Clinton
Monday, November 16th
SUPPER—BINGO—DANCE
..Supper 60c. , .. , ... , Dance 25o.,
DON'T MISS THIS UNE!
Substantial Donation To Red Cross.
nesday of last Week, Ontario and Quebec Join In
Huge Power Saving Drive
Ahs. (.httnet ilattin of North Bay,
also 11 r. and Mrs. G. E. 31cTaggat of Towns and v1lhtge5 and tsmali rural
Watford, have been guests of Airs, ,f lcotnntunities in Ontario and Quebec
It. 'i'iennny and family during the hast for many years have been among the
week, ( world leaders in the use of electric
Tower. Now, however, war industries
A1r. and :\Irs. James Morrill visited 'need for more power has grown to
in 111111til1.011 over the weekend with
their sons, Carman, of St. Hyacinthe,
Que., Garth, of Alanning Pool, Toronto.
and Jack, aero of Toronto.
1I r. George Radford is again con-
fined to his home through illness.
- Miss Isabel rox, R.N., has been in at-
tendance. \Ve are glad to report that
31r. Radford is improving nicely.
\I r. T. C. Rogerson has returned
home to spend the whiter with his
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and MIN.
.lames llorritt, after spending rix
months in Ills cabin' trailer at Point
Edward.
such an extent that householders in
these sections of the country must
conserve and economize in their use
of electric current. It does not tuean
that they should conserve today and
then walile electricity tomorrow. Rath-
er it boils down to using a goodly
amount of oldfashioued hor.5esense and
continuing t0 use it at all time;
throughout the fat and winter
ntonth,s.
Look around the house, 1f there
are any colored bullies replace them
with plain' bulbs. 'Phe colored 1)1111)5
absorb one third of the light. Instead
of using several low wattage 1)1111)5
in a room use one or two higher
Mr. Jamie Sims had his household wattage hnlhs planed to ensure the
effects removed to Kilcilteuer this proper antotutt of light for reading or
Wednesday, and \irs. Stuls and Linda. Sewing 01' \w1'1( in the laundry and
will depart for that city on Saturday. kitchen. A 100 watt bulb, for instance,
Jamie has been employed with the gives 50. per cent more light than
\(',NII• at 1(1te.hent21' for some time. four :1''5 watt bulbs, yet it use.i only
'Their removal from town is very much the saute amount of electric current.
rl grettc(1. .Proper wiring can mid in power
.sawing and also personal safety. Keep
corgis on any electrical appliance\3 free
from Ibend'a and kinks. Check all
wale of connections to avoid short circuits
and matte sure that there is no ex-
posed wiring anywhere. have those
frayed anti broken extension cords re• iI
Noma immediately.
memory's golden charm' If a fuse blows out find what cans- Y
Still binds myheart to ours below, .
y ed the trouble 1t may have been an gf
Till we meet and touch again, overloaded circuit, or defective wiring °4
rich link iee strong and bright, or a short circuit in an appliance or •
And love's elcthle flame fixtu•t. Ars soon 118 111111.4, toasters, 14
and other appliances are no longer
Flows freely down like a river of light, 4P
To the I f I [ needed disconnect them
J.
The trusted and the true;
Ye ttl•e walking still In the
tears,
But I await to welcome you,
Do I forget? Oh, no,
For
,3
r1
a,•
t
1a
(.'1
rt
e
r
Director. '
117
III I 11 -7 1 , 1
. I. 1 11 Y 1 1 .i111 011.1 1,1 IL I. n, 1, I
HURON G":ILL
BLYTII --- ONTARIO.
EXCELLENT FOOD. GOOD SERVICE.
Meals at All Hours.
FRANK GONG Proprietor
11 1.1 .711.s I 1, .i .1 r111 , u • ..I I; I1, i• mm 11.11 11 , u.a..M 6i. I,IL,I,InM1 III.11,17 I. 1., Ia,6,L..I.7
The World's News Seen Through
THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
An Itlleruatio,al Daily Newspaper
is Truthful—Constructive—Unbiased—Free from Sensational.
ism —Editorials Are Timely and Instructive and its Daily
Features, Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make
the Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Hone,
The Christian Science Publishing Society
One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts
Price $12,00 Yearly, or Sin a Month.
Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, $2.60 a Year,
Introductory Offer, 6 Saturday Issues 25 Cerus.
Name
Address
SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST
tVetC1Gr£'•G'•GIG o1G1etletCtS1 ii a'1200PntQ'1C1e tetetC1bt(lelinXt�1f.1•SICIZ 1000410.! otelgtit t"
STUART ROIL
he 11)mo 1(511 w hence 0111110.
Not only in the home, but in the
l:ro ye mourn when another star, office anti iA'.tn1. and even in the t°-Pf
Shines out from tine glittering sky, farm buildings hr rural sections power i!
Do ye weep when the raging voice of can be ,saved by lurking certain that �•'
war lights are turned out when, they are!
And the storm of conflict dies. not needed. At least 20 per cent of
t$
hhone 156 for Prompt Delivery,
Sardines 7c and 15c tins
Shelled Walnuts, Almonds, Cashew, Glace Cherries,
Cranberries, Spanish Onions.
Princess Soap Flakes.
Corn Niblets, Carrots and Peas, Mixed.
Asparagus, Tasty Cuts.
1'1
Ketchup 13c, 15c and 20c
tij
Ideal Silver Polish 25c
0.1
Creamy, Hot Chocolate.
t
i1
i•1
13
Gergen's Toilet Soap 4 5c -cakes for 17e
Cut Mixed Peel half -lb. 20c
Tomato Juice per tin, 10c and 25c
Dog Biscuits, Oranges, Lemons, Grape Fruit.
Then why should your tears run down, tine power used in homes must be(ih2MI�lDMPI2t1►tit;it�r2a>Ir$a2rDt?a2t212r2a2a2aa1212,2r n2t�r212a1at12r2121hr2h2r2a1h213a12a2a1:D1212a21
And your !heart be sorely riven. sawed and a similes reduction should --- --- — —
For another be the aim of every person working y
gem in the Saviour's . In' a war plant or office, or in farm PE1�30NAL INTEREST
crown
buildings. These savings over a J: r, Harold \Vighlman spent the
And another star in heaven,
long period of time will protect the
The eternal Cod is thy refuge and war production of the two provinces
underneath are tlto everlasting antis, 1 affected.
\\'eol1-end with lite parents, 31r. and
11rs, Robert \Vightimn.
Mr. and Airs• Gordon Elllolt, and
son, John, ,Spent the Wool( -end WW1
Alai, Elliott's parents, 11r. and Airs.
It, Johnston, of Godel ich,