The Blyth Standard, 1944-07-26, Page 1VOLUME ii'1 - NO. 50.
WEDDINGS
111(11„1(-1V1eNeill
LYTH STANDAR
13LYTII, ONTARIO, WEI)N ESI ):1 Y. J 111,Y 20, 1911.
151, (.church (;Moir Local Farmers Need Help 131ti'l) ;;drool 13o;lyd
Honour Valued Member Badly Seeking 11lusic 'Teacher
Subscription Rates SI.50 in Advance: 52.00 to U.S.N.
,.._
Wheat Yields 10 Bushel 'I() 1,oca1 11;w Shaken l `p
The Acre
In ltunaii'av
In Lili'1;.;,1'In Pail,',„ 1 Minot il. 111(11,11- „' 3.3 r n „,\, ,
,1 ,111 I�ri,l;lw 1•r11nn111;1,1, the nalnlbcrs 11'1' 11,11 u( 1�,I;II 1111, 11't',In1'•,Ln 'I1', !1;'nLn 1,1,&(1111: "f (111 11\III \111111 comment Irl, I,r1u 111 ;u'! „11(1,1, 11!,11, 1;11'1 ,'• ,, ,
(11 til. \I•t Ila(\ , t II n 11111 al lIlt llnlnc frill a 1.. ,II (,u int lot I ,II 1,l 1 inn- til I1,u1 1111,1111 \ ,1, 1'114 in ilk' \I' ul,1r 3111 odi'I :i'•Id of \\ Iit;11 '
11111, NII!\ It lel'. J. ( 1'.a 11"11 to,ldlllllll!', / '111 \n. �I III;'ll , 1,! „ I„,,� ,
1111' sert•i1•I', 1II'• 1„„11111,1' 1,,,'I, I I.Irc 1,11 1,1 M1-1 11'1. \1 i111•1111 ;11111 1.'U 1<ell1, IIIc 11,111(1„ ,1:111, TIit, 1r;irti1111,r 111,111 i• 1,11 hall 1,11 "fir ,"!,t\• (• 11 hill:', \\1111 1\'. \\;11, ill t I1"rt 11 o1 1'11\11. 3, 1..1,.'111,' I \1'1, I' 11'.}
July 17 1,1 \1.1l\ 1•.111 In, 11011'311,„• of „11•.1,„1(1( being a Irn',liltillion for NI r, alone (1l Ihr 3:11111, ;(11,1 Irl, jut fin, „..\li!I-., 11•. 'I I:':1 I1, S, 11111; Mot ata' I.',\I r, Iain, :,i I ";ii,, '1 i„ 1., hi :l.' 111,„‘
11r, and \I r,. `I11.1u1;1 1J1"`,1 i'I, 11,1111-.1:,111 11111)1 in I&rupuilion of his many „,hell dr,ntin,e ill .`II loads of 11;11, \111\ .\t111 'Hoy.' 11!1 .1 n'. 'pri,1 (1 ;111,111 ,1 ;Irrv•, 111,1 i1 1\.1- a !r:,
11:,11''- „f '1'r\'ir,' 111 ILS' rhtlir, the hart --1, \\'IlirI 1111 1 "1111 in 11„1.1,- Ally !11„111111 .
ilsl'n, :Intl I ;11111111 1111(•.., \I„! -rill, 'I '.1:(.1],\I
. ,11 Ills' pl'11n',I, 111111' Llloll'll in :!11\,11111 I!:,It :, \\'�'i!'I
h.(,\,\.It., 1!:IIII \, \1,\",1 ti'"„01;11 "•11' till 111' 1 p'I!"( 111 Illy I%l•ititl); Nati It•, i, "II Iiiiii in hill 1„1'1'1', 1 1 ;I, 1'';11 „11 11111
Il 11;1. 1111: 1\111 :11,11;, \r, I 111o1 3,,.. ;! 11,1,11111 tl"" 'l 11) 11,11, 1111''
of \Ir. and \Ir.i. Jalot, \I"rri11, I:\\II,. '1,1111 111 111:111111; 11ro)2.1.„ivc euchre, (A) acre; of crop, and i1 111 rain had of Trush (•. :\tu'.Irnnq and l rcl2:lll(:u. :In lir-t of :hi, N1117 .tool, thy, 1;111:'
'Ilrll'll'-3)1.1' 3!'!',t•-• 111'11' plr-•r111, III(' :11111' 1\:!It'll a 11111111. itiii i I1';15 ,el'\'I'd 11113 11111",'Ve'llr',1, Ili' \\'o111,1 II;I\1' 1„;iil Illy 111111,)1111.( ,,,,'1111113•• 1\11'1 „r111.1 i'11 , , I,,, 11111, :I 1 1 t ,111'„11,.1 '
1,1 11,' \11 I,1
• 1 h\- \li„,', Nur" I\1'111• :Iti l \Ial•y 1'11'4- many acres of (III, CI•u+ in III' ,111'11 ;yid 1111 111111,," „f 1111.11(• Hui. it ,III, ;1ru11I,13 Ill Int ht I 1,, Illy ,1. I', '
;111, r ret'• (1„1(11 1,1:!1 d 111 111 ;11 ! 111 home I 1'' I , t„ it,
an, 'I11,' 1lrizu %CH:mi., in cnchrt for chi, \Vc1!;, 1'r, i_llt"nl: ' \I1. 11, (;, 11
1)l the 16,1C 11111111 ."11 111
1.11
I'll,• hridr, 1,„3, 11 ;rn:11 It 1111 „;1111- 111' 1;111„:'., \I;1• 11 r,, '1111t1n;li I'.. 11'11.11,\'u 111,1 elle( al'I;ue Ill,• p1lint Ih,l3 ' 11.\l!! �I,11113,)1 3 ;1'l l„1• 'I'cn111•t; `1171 111"!'„ :I1 ''+!1! 1,!I I,, !. 111;, ; ,.,.1
c1•, 1\1111:1 •.Lori 1-1„1 I", ;111,1 I.:1. the Lents, \i1•, Labs f'Inlan. (arid Itch: i, (1c,p'r;(11') 1(111. 'I31 (;ilh'rl \1'Ihl,,•, 1•111111'1 on feu, 111„,11 \1.1., .,1111. 11111 i!:.' I,,,'.,1("
„! (111.1. het r
111(1 a h;llf-1,Ii ,i (111i1, ,!,.1,1 ,,,,,i 1,. ' 'I Ill' 11"„1111 thin proceeded to the Village 1,t;11G,hed unite a name for mild , . 1''.3111111 ( a ,1I, „l i.' :I" "1,,11,.11 , 1; ! ',
hair 16111 \1.11. 1ler Il"',.„ 1.,r, '1.!1• !',11"111, 1„11&1.t, 1•:;111 \31111 1,hrcl 3" li,• 11(11 (1)11 13(;11'1 11;11, (\1111, 111 1'ad 1111( (1'.I 111"tion ,.i 3 &d1, 'I Inu'I} and I, ! it \\ 111 t1 „11;,1,!1 I,1' •"! I I
1' +" t t, it 111 ;111 ;11111r1„ read 111' \It James of tIu nest Faun ("!11111;1ndo bales 11-11.1; 11(11,( 11,,;Ird I ' ,I'1,1'1•, 1 1til!' II 1111• -1111: Ir 1• t'1iv I ,1 h, , , 11, III.
1:,111;111 I'1,,'. ,, , I �� I ,11111 LI ! wit.... IJ,' I ! ! t, , ,
t 1., 11\, ;lad a pr'senlali,l of a 11;1,111111 In 111' Comity, ;'Id t1,, 11'(•11 1':arn111 1''1,1„1) IIr,11111 \ur,in� ,13111111' 1„ 111
In;1111 I,1- 111'n,,;l:•, 1\„I,' i1:,',. 1,:,:1';11' 1'�1,'. ,
Nil11 n1;i!111iu'; InLrt ;; ::1, I 111.1.
111, 1,11' lamp In- NI it, 11„1;1 Ileal'•, on con�;I;atIII:IIciI fur mu- \\'11x1; lt• 1111 .\.g- 1,'tl,r'r;tle,l Ity IL, 1',1!1111x. ENGAGEMEN'\' ANNOUNCED
I't,1,1.v 1'111,1L, Ihr I,: ,!• ,,;.,;'3, (1;1,ihlbali 1,1 Inv 1111(„1, \x;11 wade. rionllurll Itcpr1sc111:(1ive al that lilac,' 1111 'I
\•'',1 by rrr.I1'1 1'rt•icitton, se. Al;.,, 1.1,11:1, \\;l'.,, „1
111 1,1111.l,
1' u,n;lli-,;11, Ni111 1;13, to -\111'1(1,,:11 1;11:11, hl' ,urpri,(, Earl re- Jim Shearer., 1.;1,1 yi,111' ,ri,p, 11111 11,11111,1 hl '1111 Ace .\rnt,1roi1:, ;11111 car- \1.111. t1, ,111!1, un,'1 th1 11,_':t11';,I,,n• hi R+vv. P. If. Street►.'1-3!,, R(ctnr
11111(11, 1(11111t-11,111113 Itt, r,!rril13 t' a plied l,l')„1131 11;11ll,,,t the choir sin- light, 11,11 no help ryas 1(1311) 1111. This, ! ried, that 111' TI ILnalion of .\, J. 1i.. 1,1'111.''•,1 (i.11wilt''r, \I,,i \ Itl:ni, 111, }, 1',11
111'&113 foe their 1;!11!111!'„ Ila remember -1'1'11' a 1„;1111111 Crop 1; 1\';1111111( to be 111;1••`, ,t, '3!'!1,111, hr at.ceptl•d, : 1 1,11,11 \\'i11,,,,,,, „1111' „II „1 111• :1;1,1 ul'LI, +
I,'.'1, .t.1,+.
\I r,, \1'111i,nn 110',\, „1 I (}11!1, 1'„' I.1, .1 ".u' 1 11),„u, i. in ;,.11,.
\\•a, (1c,,,I II'.It,tIl. Ili, II,11, I•' \\t"',. uon1,l r,n1111111e' to he a member.
11)( ,;11111 plight ;l, 1111 ilial, 1111111111111'11 (l ilii ittu'1, 11,,,:1'11 :lillllurVl'I a 1'1'1111111 I I ,,;.
11,11111,•: to lat.( ,1,11,, 1 :1,1 C. (111
jack \lorritl, It,1',\,\•.t(., -t 11„';1- 1 `1 le' 1 111(i1111;1t 11;11.1 111 the t•vening above, l0 11 r, 3;Ober! Nether,e of 1111 1111„11- };11 ,1i .111:11,', i... str;atf"1'1. Si'. MARK';: C1lUIiCl1, AUBURN
\(',I- ,;�1t1I !ll Il,lt 1(1111; It) lil'I IIIIIC 1'0011 IS Wild' for 1'111i11'1•, ;!1111 loud l &nett, h, 1\\evil I1)& ;11111111111 paid In fee,
1„1,1,1, \lac., ,1,111 1.,''ll ,\11,rrIti, ILull ��� !i1 u;' err\i1, 111 11 ,11L'. 1 11111' 11 111„1,(, 11:11it .11,11 ,111,1:<, ;111'1 tap (lancing 113 i, ,qro\v1, on ,;lir 1111)1 , Nhirh in Illi: I'1 1111,1 in I''I,f ;11,11 1111 11,(1(1,1,( 1111„)• NEPHEW WOUNDED IN fItANCf:
\I r, Marr) {, .\Il+"I \1;1• :!' !111 "r- 111 'I'33''re,; ;!11(1 \1,11;111,1 1'11(11!1, community, 11,12 are proud In state, ;Ire !''1 1,1' hili( ti itt his School Sem ion. I,',I �u',!,11 !n ;,.;I;
\Ir,. ,\11,1,1' I I',„ Ir, 1111 \, 1 \\111,!
}au, 1(11'1 111,. !,' lir (,„ire \la,,:1}„_ of N;I:li 11,), 1111,, Se\'vral piano sol- Second to none i!1 the (•onnt\, \1',11 i .\luv'v11 Irl• 11 ",tees T'1)uc11 and .\r11- I Illi, \\,1i, 111,1! 11,1 1,1;,11,1\, ''.'.t 1\11!,1. 'I'ItINI'I`Y CIIURCI-I, I3El.GRAVE
i,t. (*.Litho!„ ;,lid fern,
church.
11 1111'., '11,,
n, I ., I,., ? illi •
'FR INIT Y ANGLICAN CHURCH
\\';111'1 3;) ,"', 1:.('..N.\'.1;"„ 13;1,1,„1("u, in'. Ilial, \\ill! die hope 11111 Ile ,till harvl>te'I, 1)1111 111,zelis 01 j;lrnllr, in 1111 nl,,liun t,1- 'I'rnit&1, '1',1,111 and
di rio.i1 thee hl' ,\lits .\111,1 I (•11,113, of Utihlitl, lye 111111 In I;noN i,---".\1•1 111111 a ,1 11(11, 111;11 1 I i„i! \vi111; ,I,Ivcrl! frill&& iti, „f I','tl•rl,,,ru, 11,1,1 11,'11, " I li1'ill' s„ 1•1;,"'' u' 11 ' 1,1111„\ 11.,'1'1
1)ere 1;11133)• c!!joycll, gr,,,,,, ,,j fellows NilIinl; to ,11;11.1( \I1,• i anent 111 placed in the 1111"111 Standard. 11,11111111,1 in ,I, 11 11 ill France, 'Pie •"!.111,
I \}I', J.r,('1111 I', I'li loll, 111 Cincinnati, rt'Sl,l,ll,1111111• ,11 I,rq;llll/Ilil; ;I Com- l ".\111111:',11,,:1, I't'1.1'I\1'I IT 11 1.111„ 111;11111.1, „1 •I•!'lolls111'" 1i
111 11('1'1' 1,„01„.1.1,„01„.1. 111(1',' 11.111" 1'11(' I I the 111(,:II,I
,311'11, 11'11.131 ;'111,,,,ri1' , ;mil 1' '1,11'1 Il 1„111111 rt',i111111 01- Illi, di,lirl•I, ‘‘,as Ilnlllllu 1'nret. 11111 also ll Ming to '.1,11,11 ' .\11::11,1 '1111, i')•! I, for music .mp11•\•is- 11);1, n„1 11111,1 ;131,1.
1•„ pre- 111 11)'.' t1) cvrlliltz;. al least (1111' 11.1.!.111 a 51'1'1.4.• ill 1(111 of 11r ill Illyth I'Itble School, ,110,,,, 11, ' B1.YTll UNI'J'EI) CHURCII
howitiel 14 HAI, ru,v., 'HR. III"Ih&• „ 1
I
I
1111 111111,11 N"I, III dill' ;;rein •ill;, 1":111 I„1'11\\„1,( i, :I 1„11 1,l the addrl'ss the 11(13;'Ibourinit farmer', 1„1111 If 1onun'•nr,• 5111;(1,1111, 1'1.1-1, BAND CONCERT RAINED OUT III 1 .1111!, I',II.
Sl!, let's hear train yu, \\'c call ;I1;11•-• 11&cti11); allioln•nt'll on Illuti,ltI of 10a1; .,!I':,I,!, X111":,!,
bei;;o :owes -wits, an, 1 \torr \'dein' 111;11 \va, 1',111 to 111' guest of honour; 1 1 111 \';Ind l_'„1111 I. \\ 1'„111 Na • ,t 11'.',}
rows, I1&:11 tail: it i, \vitll 1.11'';11 3)11.asnre antic yua a jol, . . 1 rtiItcls '1"111,.'1 ;u111 ,\rrtlslxnII'e• 111111 for the \Irnrl,t•ial 11;111 I.;Ir111 11 ' 31.15 ti'It,jrrl-.-"'1'111' t'131:4:;
1 ti of 1,i,l,.,r1"
111,11 Father \I10onald, and the mem r -I., llilhorn, tier', "!•., (;1:'1.1111
il„! of f;.1'I"
I"111 11'(111 n „„n 11,1, ,t';'I I in \In. • \ 1\'tnotsd;l) coaling, 11;1,1 l„ ,le 110.1
11&1, of Si, \I irh:o•I', choir, lac;e [his
I'o11o)) ttL i- 1 11111) 1,1- the rrsl•I;II;t 111,1 Ila.' 11, 1111 )1•1;11) ,I„tin 1 111 „j 1111 uuui•Ir' \,'ill r„ 1111,11 !111 r-
101ka, Ow brill" goin:' a\\ay il a bhlt' 1 Sister Dies , li„n 1111,'11,1 in 111 :1. I. („Lill; i"
1ophorttu,ly to 111 \\till' yon this even- Sister In Detroit
dress Nltll 11,„11 11111,1 Tilt. (.11.11r111 ;111 11111 111 . 1rrs 1',f '1'11'e
in:'•
Airs. Sam Ilam. rcrciv1,1 131 ,;1)l ' \\';I; 10 have imaii,lied 111 music,
1111111 Siho„I lto,n'l1 :- I h& 11,1,1111 tl ill b1• s1ac1
1,"1, iI,II'1' ;111 (1', 11111 n 11.1111113, 1)11)11- _ 11(11'5 I;I,t 11•l'r'L 111;11 her 1„1('11 \Ir,, JI ;ll •„lar
1)1 ;Ir tiers: -.\, I 1111•( Ili,pn,(11 of future 11;tte.
1111 ,1•l one chn'', ;1111 I\'( hope you 1\ill 11;11'113 I linth;nn, of 1)ttroil, \lull„ had nil• • ,,sts 1,l Itlytll, ;111,1 Nill shortly
li`11CIIIC' - 13cilflle • 11(„1,(1 in flat 111111,(', p;t„ell suddenly :Wray 111, IIII) I'!th.l i1•-�'-'
IC;I1'1 he \'1•l„ler to ill;(31 Int• horn( LONVESP')RO RED CROSS
11111'11, (Toil h. I lul!111, 11:1, bl•,Inti- j 11'1 h1,&\) 1113 1311111 actions of late She ryas 111 her 59111 1.1;11•.
11,1113 (1 1 i;I&,3 (1 1(11 d,I tllininnl, 1111,', c1,1\\•lier 1 liere111• tender Int r1IILI)a BINGO AND DANCE
I lila( loll must 11 considering 111311,;, Mrs, 11„)1(,;1,11 N'a, f11rnit'rl3 \liss tion as Tru,te,'.
anti (cru for 1111 1111(1 i.1,_,• ,,t1 \\'(,i . -- till (1ui13 lift, of a bachelor, ;111'1 ('(n- \'(IIIc 'I'urbeetill(, of 1';11111„11. I'110 I.,nul&siv,ro 11111 1'111!„
,h!1• aIle' a"1(u, 111!1" !11111, at 'Ilriul: into III:tt life ,1•f
.i11 11'11 '1•l 111 sr)rriu' 1,l) lunnerlion tviflt the
.u•cdd(d I'liss,
s,1- \lars;,;NA !.lit;i''1111, 1,nlr ,I:In1;11,' \\'t' 11'n;ralul;'Ic you, 1111 it is our 1\1111 Itl1t1 11\ ,tl-
kohcrt 0&11(1 „,', 11111- \1'i',II t h,tt you \)ill 11 happy and sue -
lett titvii,Ili11, to (Wore,:(br',(u1t!'I't' &t''•,lul.
Michie,11,(11• lou of 11,..;111,1 N11. -.I, 1 I'Iv;1,1 accept this 1,if1, not for it's
\I „clue, of 1lurris IoNn,hip. Tile bride' v',Ilnt, 1111 for the love and gout( 1\ishcs
\\Ito clllrrr,l 111 ro
11ur,I1 f Ihr ;u'!1, \)ill, it
of
11111 1111111 i1, Ibe ,11.:11!1, 1,1 !&,''tri .1.111 Members of SI. Michael's Choir,
dal l'horus fromL,'heie.fria 1'11yed 1
\!i„ \I ,1 Smith, I"„Lt 11 lo\elV in a
floor Ilu.;lh (311>-, „t \'.11111• 1,1;1!1 111y
('
fclta, In'r fin, 1 -lip )111 „111 1111th ;I j
11:111( hc'•lddrcs, :111d she cart .I 'a I ,u
1311(1 of red roes, T31 i
Miss
Is, Barbara\Ilrl,le, .!,111' 1,l 1110\I 1111 ;1:11111:1! sessions 01- the \I:IS•
brillrpro'on, Nor. ;1 f!o.t• },•0;,!11 11)', •' „Ili, t; ytttl i1113:1, belt& at the hnyal
of coral :.h1 "' 1\•1111 3i,111, I• -lip 1.111 1'' \ 1,, i, 11,111, I ur,tlltu, tllrn!Igrllnlll last
111;1111 ,I! tl lild \\ili'I r Ih 1\w1• 1„ \I';, liordlin \';Ili„It 11'1 ill. hon-
hrit(&-1:11(1(1,1 \3 l•. ;111(.11111d h) III . r, 11 -lour 1, ,:,,\xc(I on bin' 1.,1 11„1,1 111111,„1,1
III, I�n311I (111:h\', \I'tr'. ' I1,\\11•I,I ,. r
1 rvl (111,1,1 Sre'\\.1 I'll 1,t till' ;rand
:intct! (rand Steward
The (rand Lodge Of
Canada
and 11,1 11.11;‘,,,Nr'1 - I D';Irl
;Indlir,,",;) 11'1;1in, Hririrle 111,•
1 111 (':Inul:l, in the lit -mince of
ii,,. \I r, I?Itit•ll filled the poli.
iu1; .,I the 1•1:;,1'1•, 111'. .1, 1 . \Ice, tuna ,11 Itislrl:'; ,vermary for Alt, h,
1'111", "1'11 \\;111 It, si,!1 1'011 " \ ' It. I'ili!1t, 1110 has just cun(plcl(d a
1•r, rl'I'1 11 N:I, 11!'1,1 :11 11w 11 1(1111 "l Ih'' ' 1,l„,I ,11,'1.1 ssf til and enjoyable year
11111'1'', 11;1,11,1•, I;r1,'i)111, 111th 11111,1,, 311,1ru•I 11111,0e (;r;IlI1 \taster for
bridal couple 1',111 the bride's mother, the \01111 Il11:111 Gist ict,
L
wearing 1,1,n•ervin' with a )lir-;we of 1 '1.111 1,&N 11.11,(„,\I, for the ensuing
rose:, and III'' bri,lerfrooul', "'III'. in twelve ,,1111th, is \Ir. 11, I., Chapnlalt,
a navy printed crepe 11'111! 1'111•- ,'1 l.tstitllt.'I,
sage of ''t .,',. .\ huff„( hutch, on was
served to 11i311111' guests nests 111. \'is 1,
Wady-, 111.1 and Laura \.,'int•'', I."Iler VIAS LUCKY WINNER AT,
\Ir, 111111\!r-. :IliulI c 1111 on 1 11,1,111 1 1.;::L(�RAVE RED CROSS DRAW
trip 1,1 \1(:,;!111, ()Mario, 011 Ib1'ir;
return they will 11id1 01, talc brill, 1111. Olive McGill was the lucky
1;1'U0111', farm in \111!•!'1 • 'I•I,11'!I,IIIp, 1 tvien1 l• 1)l til'.' Calf 1':11111"1 last 11)111,-
Aug'llst Will See Peak Of
Demand For Farm Delp
The Month of .\hits t \\ ill '11
demand for 31'!1,1,1, 11 farm help re,!,•h
i1, p, al; for 1111 and Ili
)` I,nla;iurin11 111!11;,1111 t ill 11(111inn1 11:\til
till(' le :yes her hu,h:Iul, Iln•,'r, 1'111, 111. Inc;,1(111„11( 3 111111;11 ;11111 Hance 11, the,I3 - 111 l .,f Sri tcluhlr, ,al', .\l1I;Ic-
and t31'1( boys, Also nrvivill + ;;1•1 fop,• have
1'1'11 11('11 acolo1d III f
11
1
1
II,Cnnlllmnity hall oil .\11gust -1111• Pr„- 1,1r,.„. „1
„l IiIP (1:11;11'1,1 1';11111
sisters azul one brother, 11 r,, 1;rim.% of 11:11.111„III• 111111 Ihr „owl. nlrulber, am? (Ted, am) the r)'nt \\'ill be ;no! for 5lrrir,' I ori', in a slatrnn'nl appealiint.
su1'11yin.: I1): O3crseas 11„x I nod, t„ the 1,111:111 liliztn „f On1;u"in to
t
1)l • tewi ' of ',Hire shall ever rcnl:lin
a plc;l,a'll 11„n�lu in lilt. Lunrll Will I,1' ,,.dd• �h'n11 a 11;1:111 to 111(' ,••Illi" 1/1.1.••••1. (1 I,Irnl-
V-
That the 111111,1 may continue to
London; Air;. Sam l aa&r, .\&Hurn ;
\irs, Marlin ,'\.11lna11, I1t'r. 1.; \IIs,
lrcd f larris, L'ctroil, and John 3, 'I'ur-
bcrville, of r\111)111'11,
1 ulleral services were 11110 ill I )1'-
trt,it (111 «ittta;'ltity,
Sympathy i, extended to \1n -t. Data.,
(111!1 other members of 111 family i11
their sudden hercavenn'ni,
V
lunrliun In Ihr' 1111( int(,, of rt(11 1;1'1(Ie-'111)-13e ShoN'el'l'(1 � "11'1 i,:v1 1,1)11• h1f„r,"" said \1 r,
ration 111 this municipality ality r, Ill\' ,II- .111( 111,1 1ldrrd „1x1,1-;u11la11;r1l, "1;' ,n trt•,it ; demand for
cert' Ni,ll. 111i.Ll1Iours n:Ilhrre,l ,i tilt,bo;et• 1(j b"li,l,lx 1111,1 ,11;1r111111 j;11 tit N,1rh1r5
''ours (rllk, \Ir. 1114 \I r,, Joseph I111nucllr 11j :1• (1111'' 111'.1 111• .1111 in,:: 1111 harxl',L
-A, J. GI..\SS, iDublin, 1(n I"ri,l:ly cwenin3 3,, I1„11,'ur'''''''.'!!• Nut t 11l1 i, there int -red -ell
ti'-'_ their d:n':;Ilter, \liss Iron( Irisin, 113, tI1r,,t,:,' 111 many inlilort,lit crop,, but
11',11 \his Nerd: 11111,11 the bride "f
trop: ;ire Y"111' 11 he )ell" 111;!)1•. 13
A Letter From Earl Bentley \I r, I':1 I 1111111 of \11,11„, 'foNn 11;11, :111 ;Ili, rs,r;l:t 11i„•'d i, I„ 1,1 Il;u`rc,l-
AUBURN MAN DOING ITIS SIIAItE fill fall"t\'in,; brief letter, 131irh 1'n- I'1)& t'Vi'nin31 to1'I: till (,,1111 of ;1 tui••,'"3. N' nnl•I LI" 11)":-131,1. of a,111i-
01,1, man 11.1111 i, 111,„1,(; all ill his p1,w- closing a money order for rene\val of •t'&Ilancous shower :11d \li„ 3 lme:I),,1ion,11 1•.,1'11'1111 fatal N„rhrls. '1'111‘
e1• 11( relieve the labor ,1111,1 ;r is TItt' Sla:nlru',I, from \11•, EarlItcnllcl, 1111 tit( rcril,itl11 "f 11111111 11.&1((1 w..1•11111 1'r„p, 1',.\r 1,1 111 lake n ill :111,1
Iholllas Ilalla(I•, itt \t'It' it}fl (1 ;1'.'l'I'. "I (,;Ill, Nlll Irl' 11';1,1 111111 pl,;l,llre 111' 11„1'cl1' 1 511,, ;III Illlhr;111"II HI the 11;::11 Ih1 1111,111 I 11(!1,1! ,r, :11111 lillll t
On I rid;11 \Ir, 11:13 and 11111'1 I I tltlrs the InlIll • friend, t1- th1 btt,ntl''v's, Ivhn esteem in \)Lull s1)( is ,11,1 111 11('r;!anninc t1•„p•, inrin11i,1 (1111(. \\ ill ,n
In the L1'111 1)l his loll, ('hark, I L•Ill;un, just ;13,,111 a year ;11;1,, moved from 111, 111)111' rut,!Imlllitl• 1111 till •n i!1): 1'\- I lir Illi,lll!1 „f
community to („alt ; 'I`1)& &')hint; \t;!, spent 11;1n•inc 1r,,.''f'h1 onlx 11;11 (111,1 rt"p call b1•' •:n"
\shliclt( InNn,hip, Nhrr1 ht• sto„I;ell I I I
grain all n1or1'in1;. .Mier dinner \1r, („all, July _'III!, 113.1-1 31r'.'ssi)e euchre ;Iul other c:11nc, and','l i, Ill 111 111111 and Ill.,t
dl) !Irani ho;l I, Sof (1•h„11•! 1)1(11 ;1 t1r) 11(1111 battrll 1,111/ ,help 1•,1'! 1,1,11 11(1111' it„1,l 1br I„\\u,,
iLtllaul matte the retinal trip riot; and )„Vliet•-, There i, 1,,1 Wiwi'
I here art' sevt'raI sleep III I, 11( n13oli- I kat I�etl-i att los'd fin,' til. 11 11'- str)(d.
ate dinning the' 1.0111111 11.11, 1)l )}i &!Mire,, 111•'(\':0 Int' 1111'111 Standard. \\ t' 11(111( 1'� r available St,ll1't' 1'3 simply. 11 1, 111, 1,m
re -
Upon his return 11) .\)111111, he prolrt11' 1.111'11-.111(1 10 1111i3inp it 11„11 \\ eel:, and
CALLED TO THE NAVY the 1111';(1, pc 11111 I" conic to the ro-
etl six miles further to the Pllh adt, e'IIJIV it )eer)e much. \I.'. r'. Jat'k \\ als0!I and (till Hid. ''1111 „1 ; Ir (;trill( l'- 13 11'1 ;11'1 11, 11,1)-1'
farm in l'olh",rnc toNn•Ilip 1\1!11( hl' \Vt' last got hoax' from a \vccl:'s lard rec,ivcd their nolle( to report to 1' 1 (111 111,,.1 1!1,11 \O.",,n 111• 1,.1111-1'
1
drove a hinder all 1f11'I'lluoli, .\IteI' holidays, '1'11,, shop 1'10,&(1 for one London Iihis I\CIk, 111'111 11111', ,I 11111 netde'I before Ile \! \tllll''r 1. 1'1'1'1','
1w&cl:, so 111 Nrut 1.11) 11) ('olein • , \I,1,'Ln ten i'll!j,h,,-.i; 111 ilir nor 1•l
snpper the ry:list returned home, hay1;evoo') 1111} 111 Ihr I:o);II (`a1ul11ian \;I),\" sot 1
III} I%111.'l'll'tl 411 mill's in addition to ;I'll \V;Isn,ga Itrarll 1111 \IuIl1I;1v, 1(11111. •„fI II"„111 I\' taint t i,I'll':Id1, :1!1,1 tam
1111„1,1; a full tial', Noel:, cabin there, \\'t' \went from (here to int their call. • ounll;nndo bri, 1'lc ((,inlet -. l lnndred:
I of people \vill1nc: hi spend their II„li-
Il1,ut:•)illc, and \lu,lrol<a, then Bach to \'•----•-
--v--__.-
I3OWLING NOTES
Toronto, 1111(11 returning, 111(1,(1. \\'c
CONGItATULATIONS 1;11 t, •1• (,1,1 I, 1111,1 e
!
had a lovely Hip and saw some t,tt a 1.3:'11, 1.111 1t' p},911') (1?II'!!1v 111,'
I t t;1'l';11 1'111„1';IIIII:Ili„Its to I-;INI''llt•l• \cs1'itl
sight,, but l)1' are (lack to \),,:k ;wail,. 11,11 Sl'p11111br1', "i
`11:11• night at the annual Frolic of the The hest crowd tII the 1(;111111 \)as \w1), 11111)1 lti l Ili, 1'11111,1,)' 1(u '11111) 1,i„t "niacin an) mole 1&;01111, ;'111-
1 1111& 1)l)" trod.. I'n1 pipe-lillnl,e. II d;1,• cul)• 'Utll,
'--t" -- I„•In'1a\1• ,tell flu,,. ) 11, IhC 11•CS(Ilt a1 the I11(llllli; Cr(11 oil a 11db11 ,11111 1111(11 1)11!11 11,1\ "I , n
I I lie I 1 I. 1111( 11(;1\'1 Nl"I: and I have ;I (;111(,1
',n gr,Iulainm, 1,1 \r,. isad,• Sn1!I Inc ho I 1 n , t ,n ill 11 of 111„1,( an 1
'Hot* „1 sIablit<< (11111(11'. 11111 hay, 'f n(sday night, Considerable roll;!11, ho.,s, \\'c have a lovc11' honk herr I". I''
i'IiESBYTI:RIAN W. M. S. MEIi'f INIt„ (till rrltbr:111 1111 birl11d,1) 1(;l 11„111111 •111,1 111, \I 0"
\111ii11 seized the first. opportun- and watering has been dons' 0)1 the bot \ve still nl,ss 1111'111, and the 11,1', „II ;I 1;1111.
111111.1111), •11,1' _/,
T111.•3',v'lt tl1i:111 \\', \I. S. held their ity 1'rese'II&d to her, and ((1,•1Cli the green, ;Intl notict,ablc i1,1t'rot,n!(nl hael there. I ('1'1, rt:nlati„n, t„ 1(1(111,,1 11,111 Sib. 1•n,
July un','lin1; :?I Ihr homef \I'',. 1;111 111(1, rash, \I r, 11;111113 nLuk, of resulted. There is, honc)rr, (111111! I set' .113 yon,• paper 11111'1 have 11111 I ! .I":!! 1`1(111,!+.'+.,,,, u'' 1'1111,, 1) 11.1111 3,)
131„1't1l' \\lin i'l'l 1'1,11( 111 111'1' !'1!, Int"Ill-
,1,, \'";'' tlll'll' ,t':I I'& Illltt•. hall -11„11!1.1\•i
Laughlin on Satin' la ate •11"oil, \)ill' Vas( 1V; \yawls', purchased the calf trate n•orl: n(C(ssar,v. i s iclt llsnl,er, of lair -- 1111 ,11111 Ilan un 'l ul'1da) Intl 'till
a 1d tI tt iI3 111Co. \I r•. \VIII. I:ear for 1111, sunt o: tin11,1111, \II prospective 1(11,11&1- arc remit;'& t 11an.3,111 again, ;1110 1''111,1: Holt\ma , "1-i •)1)f; 11,'1,1, 11,1;';1,,' 1„ ,,11)1.1
t•11n1;rllll!II ,II l0 Ill,, ~'bell I t
per.-id1d, ell l0 11e 1t Ord 1„1111, Prill.ly 1,„111. scllin� out. Frank 31111 h( loA Ile
' 't r ,;', arc Ilccdvd ill 111 ,11 ,!nil,. 1!1 most
tCih, t'i;;ii "tl IIII U,I'1„ town, :111,1 chic-, In,'11 11111!-
I'b1 Srwrl,,r)'-'I'I&alnrer, 11rs, 11. tvh(n it IS IWIret1 to hart. 11 meclin3:' %1111\(11 bard there.
PItOI'ERTY CHANGES HANDS rlImulay, July 3Isl, i hit , &, 11;11•(. 11,1;1 ,1. " 1„ en,1111-
111r1in;;,1,u, 1,:tvu a un1,l cnlunral,inl, to t(ccidC 011 ,1131,11111 of does. 1'llis
•1111 Ncat11cl• ha, 1e•(n )rr1• t(,•1 here ('„uerntul;lti11ns to 11 r. .0\'I \Ir. '
report itt 1111 3:11;1!It''.'1 11(1' ll!t' 1'!1!'11'1(3 \I1 1!'11'1'(\' Iltli111' It!'. 31111'1111, 113 Is .1 111111('1' that Is \„III; '31)dill, ;In11'I!ut Ihe1' 1;01 ;, int of 1';1111 111 l01'11!ttn 1111,',1 :III'! ;•!.1 1'1
II'lll 01(
tilanlrl Siblhol pe N ho (1lt brill& 11'1„1' 1,11!(1, :It+! 1 t 1 r)" 1 1 i ' i,Ina1 \1 h" 1,.t:
year. A life nn'n!1&r,b;p c(rlifirat,' flit, r&:adcnti.d properly of the late for the 'alien' a( Ihr (:IIIb, ,Il,tul,l b1•�u"hcn tri 1111"' !here, If lv. had 111,1) isth 13„ming ;11111iv1.1m,5. 01, 11,,!1,1,11
\\ as 11,1 pr.,. toed to \I r,. F. `lull tie. 11 r,. 11''1,113 1'I;Ir(/11, alt Ilruunuund 'dt'cidctl 1111 as nuichly as possible. "had pail of it -,l1), pale lin!& i, ulcrd t" rr�t,llr
(1111' 1;111, 1.\11th the l"1,11 C o111III (tido t u111'1i111, e,
recently, 'Siem, east, S The Chili hopes to boast a member- \\'111, 113 h;1)t to ring off Ken, hope (',nl�ratnlalion< I„ \I r. IIIIb1'I 1111 11;11' 11.,1(&1, 111„„1' 111 Ihr On-
I'br nrsl 1l 111111 of 1111 ':,1 11'1v I,' •I•. I \Ir. and \Ir,. 31•. J, Ilollynlan !moved \tip of at li111 1%11,1) this )1;11, :tut this find, yon ;,11 in III' pink tut• In11111, Iifrnn1 "11"11„, 1tii1 celcbrllc Ili, hirtlld;lm' 1 I
nn the (11 1; 1111Ihg the 11111'. in India this 13(1'3 to the !I1)clliu, 013•1101 by one 1)151111,3, to become a 1111'1111(1 will as it 311)'1 us all Nell. 1,111) 1',11111 511 \ iii 1"„111, a1 Ibt 1111'-
31;1S C11%."1.(11113 111,4 .illi,• Toll. The ,\!r, J. 11. R, 1':Riot(, on north ()nee!' .he Ivelcolned. lolnen1(11 Sued 11', Jld)" .1(111.lbcr Ir., to the Myth frill:. I li;nnlul Ilnil,lin. ,, 11111 '1,1.1.`C :111 Ihr
Congratulations 1„ \I r, :!nil \Ir:. 1. j,,,1„hit 411;, 1!,.11 i, „13'111:1 1111 a1 11
August myelin:, Nin 111 in charge of street. V i'uurs truly, \. lira), ,)110lclrhrat&d 1111„1 .Ir'i \\t•d- 1
\IIs. \\•'n. Min 1.1(1, \Ir,. \\'esley 'f;lnl;n! ;1111 family are I?, l', III:\1'1.1';1'. 1.1!„•,1 ((1'111 (111,.1 1,h„ 1;111 Ii61 „1,1111
JI•Ilowilll.t 1(11 1111, lin` lunch 3115 o&- „„leis: \Ir:. ('rciplllon's dwelling o11 ADDRESSES KINSMEN CLUB
----.- -. dingy annitcrsarl nn i\`cilnr,il,iy', .I!!'1' (11,11 111 1u�:ll anJ Srl,t1!ubrr sholdrl
1,111. &Iii ,la& 1111( 111nIt i !111 :I 1111•
,1, ,11!1 '11 111,„1 to !11,11 1,11„1(. L1 earl.
served by the hostess. (LuFlthn:t :n 111,1' Al' Y.INCARUINL' RAIN STOPS HAS VL'ST \'11:!11 hi Mrs I''' ', litt'd the ;11
V -- OPERATIONS 111!1 1111.,,1, N toe; to 111.131 liarve'l the
-l1•' LARGE CROWD ATTENDS Messrs. Utorl,e \11\;111 and Kay Dail! commenced In fall in thi; emu- --- , lop- (.an ,11,1 :'11 fins( 1 place 10 1\0111
THANKS TURNIP PLANT FOR McGEE SALE 1)ohl'1•n.Ittcmhd 11 I".in'nten (111111;111- Intll!il) .11 no -n' this 1Vednl'sd;!), and S1'ALKS01' CORN GROWS AN I,t 1'1'1;•1;: in '„mill \milli .lir. \laclar-
CIGAitETTES SENT'
C111, of 1111 largest rroN"tls ever to 01111 held in Kincardine 1(,1 TlI In- liy :It lingo of Nr11'111 i, ,lilt coming 111(1\1, EVEN fool' IN Two \VEEKS 1''1'• 1'1„1,', at tl:c Parliament Ilniblinus,
allctd ,lit .1ti(tiun Salt. was ll alwen- night. \there Mr. \I1\all Ila: 111!1;ently, The rain will slow Il:lrt1'111•; ita I„1•,,n!,\,
1'11, \\•;1111' I1„Nen, '5,11:t'rvin;t 1,'1111 1:!1,11111 the farm sale of Mr. 1larvcyl'speaker of the (venin,, Ile spoke on'operalions up Inr ad:ty or so, bol the one is,1,e 1,f 1)'o 13111„' ago, nliirli 1,
the Canadian Forces in Pr: et', desirlt. \}1(411, 1,P;Ir auburn, on Tuesday a1-- the subjeel of "11'11 Henl1'Gtion and ground teas Unite dry, and greatly in i1) nrishiag in the e;arden of \Ir. .U- Mr, frill \Ir;, FL. C. lir,!,\, and. con,
Io exprc'•' his thanks to 111e Inlplo)11'1fel noon, The.,].. who attended re- nooby Traits," 1 snbjcct on 3131ii11 lit' need of moister.. Potato claps were ,\ 1 'n Sunil!, h'" grout, an cm, fool tare, of Palmerston, spent the wed: -
of the Illyth Turnip Plant for cigar -ported good Prices, and the list of is Well versed, Ili, 1111311:. 1)as 111- badly in recd of rain, :1111 a Ian:' per lin &\111;1)" ((3i Neel„ time. It It as Ind ai,'i •1,' ;,,• 11,1•' tnolhcr, at the
(Iles he recently nct•ived. they a'crt•`;ntielc.; was so large that the sale had tenet! to 1vi111 interest 1113 the latt31 rt,nla.It .'1 Ihr ",mall ones should 11;' nit 1;nr&d :I a hrigIll „I '1 I1.. I 11,(11 11or,, of \1t a:'1 Mr,. 'Leona' \ll:-
5rcatly ;1;'prcrc111'I, IIn bt• carried over into the second day,-b'a(hering, poilrt(," �tlri.. 11't•.lnrsd,l). \.til,
The ,1;1l1; 111 1',11•11 we mention,,1
THE SPQR TING THING
8Y L4N6 ARMSTRONG
•
.. '1r�a
•
•
t' tit.
,a.
M1"t
Ir;DI,t.M
RIAS rGt'oC9—
"Do you mind?"
SIDE GLANCES
By Galbraith
"Here come your Uncle Dan, Aunt Maude and the kids! They're
pretty prompt about paying back that summer visit!"
FUNNY BUSINESS
By Hershberger
';/�ij .IY��i,;ii,%..� ' Y;';;YG"i. Vii" vv• ;if
r
'1k -
,.. L.,
c•__-;, H� /• ./,w -
411, .17,-
4-'00w
-,, .�c gar•
- J%. '1♦:r j1, llil:��,".X;bt' i,.. •
t'
qa
."1J/rr
,,µ. eJ-t u •'4,M.-"4.1•Ni
•1-:N-. .V•4V•411.`�t�;'i; , .•
AA � � ,urJ�.J w � Lr1y� ttic...
V el 1, y.. ;j1 to 14 U.,lt
1. lAil,(J�f/f �lr irr�f'�� G
CON,. 1933 BY NSA SFPVIC! INC T M Pf6 U S PAT OFF
.Ate
W.*
"The contractor built this one with a bay window—it tr„kos
it more homey!”
PERSISTENCE
'l
rot', OVER TO
EDDIE 5ELLEi'::;,
PUTS FI^ICER ; ,r
TWEEN TEETH, AND
GIVES THE CUT
WHIST LE
NEIGHBOR CALLS
OVER THE SELZERS
HAVE ALL GONE
AWAY FOR THE
DAY
t
NEVERTHELESS
'SPENDS SEVERAL
MINUTES TOSSING
PEBBLE`-' P..1 EDDIE.'..
WINDOW
Wtt t, N55 (Copyr. ht. 1233 by The Hell eynitr.te Iec
By GLUYA3 WILI.(AhLS
wAlv.5 OVER UNDER
EDDIE%; WIllDOW
AHD SHOUTS"Nt,
COME!"
t.IAKES GIRGUIT OF
THE HOUSE,COMING
BACK TO FROWT
DOOR AND RINGING
BELL AT INTERVAL`:
FOR FIVE tAINUTES
GEVIHG HO AM-
SVJER,GOES TO
SACK DOOR ANO
G+'/E5 THEIR ONE-
LCaIG-AND-two
,NioRr RING
MUTTER'; WELL, IT
LOOKS P5 IF EDDIE
WEREN'T HOT4'
AND STROLL: OFF
LOOK AT THE LOCATION OF
MORIE YELLOWKNIFE
GOLD 17INES LIMITED
What an opportunity to buy a low priced
speculation. Centrally Located in the
heart of Yellowknife
Place Your Order Now!
Present Offering
100,000 Shares at 18c per share
—MORIE YELLOWKNIFE
1 -i 1 - -
J -
% - PtlIN& -
o&IZrI -. ,)
-MQR)E
oov -
ao
�r
tnt
hNeS0U5 _.
NB 41 Ua
J 14454N
21.11:4745. ?
Property and Development
OUR MINE MANAGER, J. W. BRISSON, REPORTS BY WIRE, AS FOLLOWS.
-
The property crrusists of six claims known as the Dora Group, numbered Dora One, Two, Three, Four, Five and
Six, adjoining the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company on the east. There is a strong vein running from
the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company claim, going through on west boundary of Nowita One and Dora
Twelve. I understand that Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company have received Grab Sample Values of $50.00
from that particular section.
Development work is now proceeding under the Engineering direction of Major Bernard Day, consulting engineer.
Major Day is one of the outstanding authorities on Yellowknife and was Engineer for B,E.A.R. and respousihtl•
for the initial Giant Yellowknife discovery and Jlevelopment,
SUBSCRIBERS SHOULD FORWARD THEIR CHEQUES TO THE HEAD
OFFICE OF THE COMPANY AT 114 BAY STREET, TORONTO.
ORDERS MAY BE MADE BY WIRE OR TELEPHONE COLLECT
USE
THIS
COUPON
To: Morie Yellowknife Gold Mines Limited,
414 Bay Street, Toronto, Ont.
I wish to subscribe for shares of Mad!
Yellowknife Gold Mines Limited at the present offering price of 18 cent; p
share.
I enclose my cheque for $.
NAME
ADDRESS
orie Yellowknife G
414 BAY STREET, TORONTO
W L.
Id fines limited
TELEPHONE: WA, 7053
1
Then there is the sailor ;vim
was asked the name of the new
girl he had out last night.
He sail: she was not a new
girl, just a rtpaint job.
"What did the calf say to the
51.:1 ? "
1 (1.:','t '.t o'.v."
,
., I -y la...._r In t,r.t.,
.r
The young tnan was discus-
ing his love affairs with a Byrn
pathetic friend,
"You say she partially re-
turned your affections?" a:,kr I
the friend.
"Yes; she sent back all the
Ltt:rs but :: pt the jew;i•.
Damsel: 'tYou'ra a s.tilor.
Have you ever been hoarded
by pirates?"
Naval Officer; -Yes, I spent
last leave at a seaside hotel."
I hail ;hi t'.', i1 heada:he
i;h;;Itt."
t'. I s:.w put; with Lcr.r.
4
OTTAWA REPORTS
That Canada Is Looking Forward
To Regular Sale Of Consumer
Goods With Russia
Russia's growing importance in
the Canadian picture is reflected
In the recent Government an-
nouncement that since April 1
nearly ten million pounds of lard
have been shipped to the U.S.S,R.
under Mutual Aid arrangements,
Russia, three times the size of Can-
ada, Is next to the United States,
our nearest neighbor. Unlike
Canada, she has consistently been
developing her farthest North
territories as part of her economic
plan. While details of our in-
creasing trade are not revealed, it
is known that weapons of war,
al unirium and nickel, raiiwny
equipment, machine tools cattle,
horses and grain have gone for-
ward from this country under
Mutual Aid, Outside of NI utual
Aid, Russia placed an order to the
value of 28 million dollars for
Canadian hydro -electric equipment
a short time ago, In addition to
exporj 91 Canr*dian pjalerial»
for the rebuilding of §'oviet heavy
Industry and her broken cities, a
regular sale of consumer goods
with the U.S.S.R. is anticipated
here.
S ' ,►
Canada's increasingly large ship-
ments of bacon to the United
Kingdom were probably a major
factor in the increase of the British
ration from four to six ounces a
week, according to Hon, J. G.
Gardiner, Minister of Agriculture.
An estimated 86% of Britain's
bacon requirements are met by
this Dominion. The quantity of
hogs marketed in the first six
months of this year ins 6,250,000,
an increase of 60% over the same
period of 1048, the Department of
Agriculture announced last week.
Up to July 1, Canadian Meat
Board purchases of bacon for the
United Kingdon totalled 461,000,-
000 lbs.
A contract to supply the United
Kingdon with a minimus) of a
hundred million lbs of beef over
a two-year period was announced
by Mr. Gardiner in the House of
Conrnlons on July 15. The Meat
Board bougl.t 88 million lbs, of
beef in the last six months for
shipment abroad, The Minister
geld that the new contract would
not bring back meat rationing here
as supplies are sufficient for both
contract and domestic market
needs.
The British empire covers about
one-fourth of the world's habitable
land surface.
WHAT SCIENCE
IS DOING
Burns
Doctors at a United States naval
hospital are successfully ti eating
burns with a material of which
the navy will never have short-
age—salt water.
The salt water u'lll is a double
strength solution of sodium chlor-
ide made up in the laboratory, but
the doctors say that in an enterg-
cncy, buckets of sea \v;iter could
be utlized ,after h(at:nl, to remove
bacteria.
Capt. 11'illiant Kirkham, chief of
San Diego's plastic st.rgery service
says the tip-off on the effectiveness
of salt water for combat burns
cants during the British evacntion
of Dunkerque in 1410,
Ile said burnt d men rescued
from the water aft(' some time
fared better than did men whose
burls had not hr en bathed in salt
water.
"The explanation is simple," he
said, "A Burn is, just like any other
wound. it has to he kept clean
and salt water keeps it clean."
The special solutions of salt wat-
er are applied in two ways: by sat-
urating light -weight dressings, or
by having , the burned rnen bathe
in a tub filled with the water. The
burns ore first cleaned with white
soap aril plain water.
Robots
(A tribute to the people of
Southern England)
They say that v‘c. are scared to
death,
They're driving us insane,
We cannon sleep by day or night,
We've robots on the brain.
These dark assassins of the air,
Without a human hand
Have paralysed us, every one,
On sea, and air, and land.
It won't be many days before
In terror and dismay,
We plead to Hitler on our knees
To keep robots awa),
They've killed so many children,
Old me.i and wooer too,
Th Lest 91 �f have all gone nuts
And (Ton t know what lo do,
If Germans will believe such stuff
They'd better soon get wise.
It' more of Goebbel's chloroform,
Based on a pack of lies.
Por every robot that they send
(This is a certain bet)
Makes us more angry, steels our
hearts,
And more determined yet.
We'll beat the daylights from the
I-Iun,
And not the Hun, alone,
The dirty Jap will take the rap
And sink just like a atone.
We're one for all and all for one
At top the mighty four;
So let the robots freely fly,
They soon will lend nq more.
T. 13. Cleave
'Maquis' Stir Up
Trouble For Nazis
The Maquis, the French under-
ground fighting organization which
is causing the Germans so much
trouble in southern France tools its
name from the appellation bestowed
upon Corsican bapdits in Napol-
eon's time, The word (pronounced
mackec) means undergrowth, par-
ticularly the thick brushwood that
grows in Corsica and that fur-
nished the bandits good hiding
places.
Mong the leaders of the Maquis
are high officers of the French
Army who refused to bow to Nazi
domination as relayed through Pe-
tain's Vichy government.
THEIR GAME IS ENDED
While their fellow -countrymen suffered under Nazi oppression, the
two French civilians in the photo above led a comparatively easy
life as rewar for collaborating with the Germans. They are hiding
their faces after being sentenced to life imprisonment at hard labor.
HAPPY MEETING IN NORMANDY
Canadian soldiers and airmen are seen here in happy conversation
with two women and a gendarme of the liberated town of Caen,
Modern Etiquette
By Roberta Lee
1. What kind of a person is con-
eldered a "bore"?
1. Should a maid be held res-
ponsible and asked to replace a
dish that she has broken?
2. Is it necessary that a wedding
gift always be sent before the wed-
ding day?
4. 11 a first invitation is accepted
from an acquaintance, does it mean
that one expects to include this
person who sent the invitation in
one's own social life?
6. When entertaining guests and
other people call, h it necessary
to ask them to stay awhile?
6, Is It correct to telephone an
acceptance to an invitation?
Answers
1, Thie is usually applied to one
who monopolizes the conversation,
who is always contradicting his
companions, and one who knows
better than anyone else about
everything, 2, This would depend
upon circumstances, If, as a rule,
the maid is careful and conscien-
tious, she should not be asked to
do so. B. Yes, always. 4. Yea;
a social favor should not be ac-
cepted unless you expect to return
it. 8, Yes; even if one does not
care particularly about these people,
It would be very inhospitable to
display the least annoyance. 6. Not
unless the invitation is extended to
you by telephone.
Eisenhower Presented
With Color Print
The four correspondents at-
tached to Gen, Dwight D. Eisen-
hower have given him a present.
It is a color print showing the
we of flying rockets bs the Bri-
tish Army 114 years ago, said a
London radiocast.
The correspondents bought the
print last week when they ducked
into a shop to dodge a flying bomb,
continued the radiocast.
STOPITCH
of bisect
Bites —
NeatRash
Quick! Stop itching of insect biles, heat rash.
eczema, (fives, pimples, scales, scabies, athlete 's
foot and otter externally caused skin doubles.
Use quick•acting,soothing, antiseptic D. D. D.
PRESCRIPTION. Greaseless, stainless. Itch
stops or your money hack. \'our druggist
stocks D. D.. D. PRESCRIPTION.
RHEUMATIC
PWASH a•
les. AWAY!THEM
DOES YOUR
BODY ACHE?
Here's quick reliet from miser-
able neuritis. rheumatic. ar-
thrltie and tumbngo pains —
Drink water abundantly and
rely upon •'B'WELL" herbal
remedy as an Internal cleanser,
As pain and fever prodtlelnt
acids are washed away — Palo
must got Relief may be telt
right at the start. Take Mut-
Teney's "EMELT." regularly be-
fore retiring and wake up each
scorning feeling tinel Sold by
,Ger 2 olio dru:cc;
YOU F`WOMEN WHOA SUFFERSNE FROM
HOT
If you suffer from hot flashes,
weak, nervous irritable feelings, are
a bit blue at times—due to the func-
ttonat "mtddle-age" period peculiar
to women—try Lydia E. Pinkham'a
Vegetable Compound to relieve such
symptoms. It helps nature! Follow
label directions. Worth trying!
LYDIA E. PINKNAM'S COMPOUND
Effective Notices
To Trespassers
A notice on the garden wall of a
house at Bray, County Dub-
lin, reads, "Beware of the Hydran-
gea," The resident, an old sea cap-
tain, had been annoyed by boys
playing football, Every time they
kicked the ball Into the garden and
climbed over the fence they tramp-
led on his flowers. After he put up
the notice he had no further trou-
ble, the youngsters believing that
hydrangea was the name of a
snake.
Similarly, an American farmer
has kept trespassers from his hazel-
nut bushes. A botanist told him
the technical name of the hazel, and
he put up the following sign:
"Trespassers take warning. All per-
sons entering this wood do so at
their own risk, for though common
snakes are not often found, the
Corylus Americana abounds every-
where about here and never gives
warning of its presence."
The tendon of Achilles, located
in the heel, can resist a strain of
1,000 pounds without breaking.
BABY CHICKS
Amimiammamminam.
Easy to roll; delightful
— to smoke
FINE CUT CIGARETTE TOBACCO
issammimmommieliaimage
Hon. Charles McCrea Predicts Great
Future For Yellowknife District
Hon. Charles McCrea, K.C,,
president, Negus Mines, Ltd., ex-
pressed the opinion. on his recent
return from a fortnight's visit to
Yellowknife, Northwest 'Territory,
that a great future awaits that
district when the war is over. Ht
found general expectation that all
the liveliness in claim -staking, dia-
mond-ririlhing a n d prospecting
will result in new finds during
the coining season.
When the war is over. re-
opening of the Con, Rycon, Ptar-
migan and Thompson Lundnlark
mines and the active develop-
ment of Giant Yellowknife will
mean exceptional activity in the
Yellowknife camp and them is
every indication of the becoming
an important gold area.
Mr. McCrea reports greatly
improved air service since his
last visit in 10.10. The prelimin-
ary operation of the new landing
field prepared by Canadian 1'ac-
iiic Airlines was a real recog-
nition of the importance of the
area, A through trip niay now be
made on wheels instead of by
wheels partly, and pontoons part-
ly, on the Yellowknife run,
Mr, McCrea expressed con-
siderable pride in the fact that
Negus Mines, started only in 1080,
had n e ve r t h efess continued
through all the difficult war
years. 1 -Ie was accompanied by
Mr. Watkin Samuel, A.C,S,M.,
vice-president and consulting en-
gineer. The Bank-Estra group
(Payne option) was studied care-
fully and adjoining claims staked.
Previous prospecting and explor-
ation of this group of claims un-
der option last season had dis-
closed a number of gold finds
and Samuel mapped out a drilling
campaign, A drill is doing ex-
ploratory work near Kant Lake
geological structure where favor-
able shears and veins "containing
gold indicate promise.
IIARGAiNS IN TWO, THIIREE AND
four week old started chicks.
Pullets two week old -White Leg.
horns 920.95 per hundred, Barred
Rocks 118.95. four week old Bar-
red Rocks $26.95. Shipped C.O.D.
Aho eight week old and up to
laying free range pullets. Top
Notch Chlckerles, Guelph, Ont.
WHILE WE'RE HATCHING ONLY
to order for dayolda, we havo a
limited qunnttty of started June
chicks for (quick ordering: cock-
erels, Leghorn pullets, and heavy
breeds, pullets and unsexed. Bray
1Iatchery, 130 John N., 1lranit!ton,
Ont,
STARTED C 1i 1 C BARGAINS,
pullets: Tittered Rocks four weeks
old $20,90, three weeks old $23.90,
two weeks old $19.90. Also non -
sexed and pullets In White Leg -
horns, Barred Ilnclts. Assorted
heavy, itgltt and medium breeds
at rock bottom prices. Alen free
range pullets 8 weeks to 1nytnt.
Free catalogue. 'Meddle Chick
Hateller' es Limited, Fergus, Ont.
COLLECTION AGENCIES
WE COLLECT
ACCOUNTS .AND NOTES RECEIV-
ablo everywhere. Use Canil rin's
lnrgest ngeney for best results.
Financial Collection Agencies,
Federal Bldg., Toronto,
DYEING & CLEANING
HAVE 1'ttll ANYTHING NEEDS
dyeing or cleaning? Write to us
for information. tVe are tlad to
answer your questions. Donart-
ment H. Porker's Dve Works
Limited. 791 Ynnge Street. To-
ronto.
II.AIRDIRESSiNG
AMBITIOUS GIRLS and
MIDDLE AGE
women, learn hairdressing at Can•
ada's finest and largest schools.
Refined, dignified work. Splendid
pay. Write or cull for free liter-
ature. Marvel Hairdressing Schools,
968 illoor Street. Toronto. Branches
44 King Street, Hamilton, and 74
Rideau Street, Ottawa.
L N) A H N HAI ItOIt6FSINti THE
Robertson method. Information
on request regarding classes.
Robertson's Hairdressing Acad•
emy, 187 Avenue Road, Toronto,
PATENTS
FETHliils'1't►NHAUe;II & COMI'AN1'
Patent Solicitors. Established
1890; 14 King West, Toronto.
Booklet of Information on re.
guest.
MEDICAL
STOMACH AND THREAD WORMS
often are the cause of III -health
In humans all ages. No one Im-
mune! Why not find out If this
la your trouble? interesting par-
ticulars --Free! Write hrulveney'r
Remedlee, Specialists, Toronto 1,
Mii1)ICAL
DIXON'S REMEDY — FOR NEUR-
Itls and Rheumatic Pains, Thous-
ands sntfsfted. Munro's Drug
Store, 335 Elgin, Ottawa. $1.00
postpnld.
SAUIMEEICA FOOT BALM destroys
offensive odor instantly, 45c
bottle. Ottawa agent, Denman
Drug Store, Ottawa.
READ T1ItS—EVi1RY SUFFERER
of Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis
should t r y Dixon's Remedy.
Munro's Drug Store, 135 Elgin,
Ottawa. $1.00 postpaid.
MEDICAL, PRACTICE — L11CRA-
tive, active practice of thirty
years' standing of late Dr. E. W.
Zumstein, 1(elhl, Ont, Complete
equipment. Good roads all year
round. Two hospitals available.
Apply Mrs, E. W, Zumstetn, Delhi,
Ont.
N11OTOGItAI'Yl1'
TIME TESTED QUALITY
SERVICE and SATISFACTION
Your rums properly developed and
printed
6 OR 8 EXPOSURE ROLLS 25c
REPRINTS 8 for 25c
h'INI'1ST P: NLAT2CSNC7 SER VICE
You may not get all the films you
want this year, but you can get all
the quality and service you desire
by Bending your titins to
IMI't'It1A1, I'i10'1'O SERVICE
Station J. Toronto,
DOUBLE SIZE Super Prints
0 or R Exposure Rolla Y7 49c
Del eloped null Printed
Double Size Only
REGULAR SIZE
e or S Exposure (tolls
Developed and Printed
39c
FILMS FILMS FILMS
Sent '1'o You Ily Return Atoll
No. 127—:I5et No. 120 or 020—IOc
No. 110 or 1110—Enc
These fetes- Include Eli Cents
I'or 11'rttluting and Mulling
SUPERIOR FILM SERVICE
ilox 401 Ilnntllton, out.
Expert Photo finishers for 215 years
1'Olt SALE
ATTENTION LADIES! 111: THE
cetrttr of attraction at nest hi ,tgr
party. 'fell your own and friends
fortunes. Wonderful amu,rnmnt.
Pack of Madam Signa Fortune
Cords with instructions, 11.00
postpaid. Nm t fly Dept. lto\ 191,
11lb:hence, got:trio.
4i01 DREA11S \WIT)( \ll:.\NI'OS
explained. Lucky and unlucky
days, 111•1111 m,.:oning nt num-
bers. 12o peg, 9, tcell•honlu!, Su,,
postpaid, Noi , lir r,' it. 1:0•. 11'1.
11 itt-h e tic r, Outaeio.
The 100 claims included in the
Payne group and in the new
claims will be maintaiurd by all
the work needed for that pur-
pose. 'Phis In in line with
Negus policy of continued pro-
duction at the mine and vigor-
ous exploration by drilling and
prospecting in the nen' area-,
Keep Firearms
From Children
Adults who own or have control
over firearms also have A solemn
obligation to keep thein from child -
ten in whose hands they might he
a menace to themselves and others.
Tragic emphasis has been placed
on this observation by a lengthy
list of recent accidental shootings,
Even with the sale of ammuni-
tion subject to priority permits,
there has been entirely ton much'
shooting by hays in and around
the city. A rifle and box of ammu-
nition around the house are an
ever-present temptation to a small
boy; a simple admonition to leave
them alone often isn't enough.
A ,22 rifle is a highly lethal wea-
pon and the carrying power of its
ammunition might amaze many
persons. It is not a toy. 1f you havo
firearms around the house, put them
where young children cannot pos-
sibly get their hands on them.
Headache
Nothing is moredepres,
(sing than headaches.,:
Why suffer?..,Lamb 'p
will give instant rel f
Lambly's isgood forcer -v/2.
eche,toothache,painsin %tL
back, stomach, bowels, Mud! t'
HEADACHE POWDERS_ is
1011 SALE
SLI PIT HARNESS DRESSING •—•
Finest leather and harness pre.
servative. Sliplt also has manyr
houeshold uses 25c up at most
grocery, hardware and chain
stores. A product of Lloyds Lab-
oratories, Toronto.
AIIMY BOOTS
NE\VLY RECONDITIONED BOOTS
of our armed forces, perfect con-
dition, $3,26 delivered, Ladles'.
army. shoes, perfectly rebuilt,
$2.25 delivered. Money -bash guar-
antee, State alze, send money,
order. Ruskin & Co., Peter bore
ough, Ont.
ELECTRIC MOTORS, NEW, USRD,
bought, sold, rebuilt; he 1 t I,
Pulley's, brushes. Allen Electrlo
Company Ltd., 2326 1)uffer'o St.,
'pnrontn.
I'ILO1'I:It'1'1ES WA1'I'I?II Tt► 11GY
WI: II AVP: I1i1YI:uS IYAI'l'ING
for chicken farms, market gar-
dens, and town or village houses
1n all harts of province. Send full
particulars In contid, lire at nnre.
We !Mike no rhargr unless we
sell, Powell and company., 5 St.
glair Plast, 'I;oronto,
11'.tN'I'Eli
11P:I. A%V (111 Fyt:\f,L I'ORT.\1i1,13
sawmill or pal t5, and 9'-1•'ord
Iruck rear n\lc. i'aI1 Johnson.
Dom Ices, one
SL.\IlS ;\Nit Rlo;INs;S. 4' 501,"I'
and lot rdw ond, Rtn to kind, rlunn-
tity, when rut and lowest Prirep
OP (Me's, Walt or Srhi,.ss. 19 Me-
linda Ntr,et, Toronto.
II 1:1,1' 11'ANTED
EXPERIENCED l't s llylAN ANI)
all round printer, permanent posi-
tion. Apply Pyle 11791\1, Near-
est s elect eve Service (Wire.
'rl;.(('ll I:ut'i 11'.1 N'I'I;D
Bllt'Ineass. 'I'I?:U'llt:It 1'tllt I't')1-
Iic school, grade, 1 to le. Stato
ttge, sarnry', exP,rwove nod Iefer-
el,res in :I0 -w er. S(•crt tit y
'l'rrasurcr, t'.S S No. 1, I:rnnit
Ind .\I:lisont 111e Ili Ps..
Ontario,
1'RIt'I'I:S't'.\X'1"I'Is.\ 'ill:ll \\'.\N'1'ED
for S. S. No. 111, ltapl:n1, 1150-
fl(ty ',only. Dot i, to 1,1n-
/nencr Sept, S. Apply t:ltRig
0a1:uy :1(1 ote.lffiratious 1n Ar-
thur t'. 1;enri,Ii 4r.-'I':(as.,
ll:,rd,toed Lake ort,
31.11,1; 'r1:.\('H1:II \\'.\N'i'I;II I's1R
311,11111 :I^'
1 ,m, ,
I1, lt,n, Rosidrntial
Scheel 3luw e}, 111 1. Manua)
9'raiuinp ,:senti>1. to Mg iii Si pt.
1rt. Atilt to the I'riurip:tl.
St'I'I:R\'ISINI; YIATRtiN I' o it
S, wisp Itn„m, ttnntrd for \bunt
1:t0e Tle.4101)tia1 Srhonl. 3lnn,•ey,
(Ent., to begin n,t moll n- pop_
sihle.
St'I'I:li\'iSUR fit( I'tt:'1'1'1'i.\N fort
Sluff 1Citc1. u, .11ouut !:I:,ii In-
dian L' >i,lrntil Seh"ut. t" h, in
pos: iblr. :11ydy to the
i'tint ipaI.
Pao 4.
I�+e�tae+este%atat�eec�eae�neae�x�eatec�aneaE<c�e�c�a�cmane��cx�c��e�c�a��e�r�c��
Elliott Insurance Agency
1
BLYTH -- ONT,
fi
brick With
the 1)iun,1e
THE STANDARD
a kitchen, big enough for
f,oril) to live in. It perch -
(Al tip net a et mem Iuundatiotl
out on the hi/n\ay. There \v.t' a bit
veranda nn tt\o side' of it bit; enotlglt
to 111;1102 a bridge over the river, It
L.. i
BELGRAVE
\I r. and \I r s Louis I Iayr, awl fam-
ily of 1'.Ilwria, Ohio, have been spend-
ing their vacation Leith NIT., and \Irs.
I. T. Itrydgcs and Joe and \Irs, kin -
lea.
11;111 fancy Cured tso,t,hturh %%1111 gar
a 1 ..
,—
i\Ir, and \Irs. Cecil Armstrong and
t o) Ill- out v hat -ant, and d ,o -dads
Itla,lrrr,l a'I t ver it. There \\a, •I tecta of Thorndale, ;hent the %vccl;-
KI tttrrel in out corner that Idol:ed soon•_ i troll North their parents herr. \I rs,
thins like a silo with \cindu%%, tarketi \rni,tlotg ;uul hula remained here
i ,for a few nto;•c• (lay,„
A, on 10 a h;n•n.
A 1 I houghs 1'rellin of London spent the
A •Plica there was the inside, llctwettt It;t,t week with his grandparents, \Ir.
)111)1213;)latetatnaa1Datararai3lra,orar2tar91Dta,arDtat11lDIDMItaMAalDlaDi i2iDa,DlD;a+ ts, ' (Letts and the contractor Ihcy ntatic it and \1 r,• 1'ccii \\•heeler.
iota ,ort of •1 1k111 mare, II rnullu't j \Liss \label (nttltets ;tad \lies, .1. \\'.
1
4
INSURE NOW ANI) BE ASSURED.
Car - Fire - Life - Sickness - Accident.
J. 1I. R. Elliott. Gordon Elliott
Office Phouo 104, Residence Phone 12 or 140,
"COURTESY AND SERVICE"
Dead and Disabled Animals
REMOVED PROMPTLY,
Telephones ; Atwood, 50r31; Seaf Orth, 15, Collect.
DARLING and CO. of CANADA, LIT.
G. R. AUGUSTINE
NI:1'NHSENTING
THE MONTREAL LIFE
"THE FRIENDLY COMPANY"
Associated with The Atlas insurance
Company, London, England.
LIFE - PENSIONS ANNUITIES
WILLIAM II. MORRITT
LICENSED AUCTIONEER.
Specializing in Farm and Houseliolt;
Sales.
Licensed for the County of Huron.
Reasonable Prices, and Sati6tac1ion
Guaranteed.
For information, etc., write or phone
1\'illtaut 1I. Morr(tt, phone, Residence
neat thing to Nazi,. I've beta read-
ing up a little, lately on the different
panic,, anal st•rt of keeping my judge-
ment to myself. Unc luting the CC('
Lias clone, and that's pat interest back
in politics. In this riding \we used to
\vake up at election time, some of us
anted and otos: of u, foregut about the
whole thing a, soon as the cheering'
was over.
This i, t roitttdalttnl \v;tw nl l' n111I g
at what 1 started out to say. I heard
a political spc,:ker make quite a talk
on rural housing. It ,renis the govern-
ment ba, become cow:erne!' aborti the
poor houses many f;Triners are living
in. 'I his icllo\w said we should make
this a point in the next election, Some
farm Incites area disgrace. 1 guess
he's right.
Ile started enc tltinl:ing about farm
:'3; Shop 4, Blyth. 4.4-tt 'lollies with his speech ;Ind un the \vay
--...(home from the meeting I was just
putting together the things I've seen
change in farm homes, lust take The
old Leslie, plate. \\'lien I was a little.
shaver paddiit: along on my %way to
school i call remember the ultl log
house they had. It \vas neat and trine
%with \vhite\ea,h and red \viudt,\v hoses
and ivy covering up the drab back -kit-
chen.
7'hitlg, picked up daring the firs)
\war ;end the t.ctlics made a lot of
money. liter decided they should
have a nc\e house so he hitched up one
(lay attd drove into town to hire a
contractor to build it for bins. Peter
wanted a big house and the contractor
ivas getting paid for the job, according
to time, Tabor and material so he ituiti
hilt a big ung.
They ;net this house lip 1111 a kltnll
where there were no tree, ;111(1 it w;1,
RC a castle. It was square and white
HAROLD JACKSON
Licensed Auctioneer.
Specialist in Farm and Household
Sales.
Licensed In Iluron and Perth
Counties. Prices reasottablo; Batts
1 u•tlon guaranteed.
For information, etc., write or phone
Harold Jacicaon, R.R. No. 4, Seafortt.
Phone 14r6G1,
PHIL OSIPHER
OF LAZY MEADOWS
By Harry J. Boyle.
Politics are beginning to simmer
again in this riling. "There's been a
few ;pc:chi, en the air anti the news-
papers ars. gre;;Ily worried ab,ntt the
Ill i.tet some of theta seem 10
think that th, (.( I' people arc just
Every -Day Requirements
REGULATION SOFTBALL BATS AND BALLS—
BATS FROM 60c TO $1.25; BALLS $1.90 EACH.
BLANK COUNTER CHECK BOOKS,.......... 10c EACH, 3 FOR 25c
INQUIRE ABOUT PRICES ON PRINTED CHECK BOOKS.
INK—WATERMAN'S AND SKRIP, All Colours, per bottle 15c
BLUE BIRD INK, Black and Red -.... _ ...........................10c
LePAGE'S and CARTER'S GLUE and MUCILAGE _...._ 15c and 10c
THUMB TACKS, plain and coloured ......... ... .. Per Pkg. 5c
DENNISON'S TABLE NAPKINS . Per Pkg. 15c
PHOTO ALBUMS ..... ranging in price from 1Oc TO $2.00
PHOTO CORNERS ........_......-....._........................ PKG. 10c and 15c
BABY'S OWN STORY, year by year. A book that will be treasured
in years to come, beautifully arranged, and ready to fill in
day-by-day events .. _.. _. PRICE 75c
ARMY SCRAP BOOKS—Scrap Book and Photo Album combined,
suitable for keeping souvineers of your boy in uniform $1.25
SNAP SHOT FOLDERS for Army and Air Force Photos... 10c Ea.
DRINKING CUPS, for picnic occasions EACH lc
WAXED PAPER -40 sheets 1Oc; In Handy Rolls, 50 ft. 20c; 100 ft. 35c
S,CRATCH PADS .. . 2c, 3c, and 2 for 5c
VENUS PENCIL, WITH CLIP, Soft Lead EACII 15c
OTHER LEAD Ps:NCILS .. 5c EACH, 2 FOR 5c
LEAD REFILLS, black and coloured -5c pkg, Extra Thin, 15c Pkg.
LARGE ECONOMY -SIZE CICO PASTE .... BOTTLE 45c
SMALLER BOTTLES, 10c.
LETTER CLIPS and MAGAZINE HANGERS 5c, TO 20c
PAPER CLIPS ........_.__..... PER BOX 10c
PASSE PARTOUT PICTURE BINDING .... ROLL 20c
':IG PAPE(`. _ ....... 10c, 15c, 25c AND 35c
ENVELOPES TO MATCH . .. __ PKG. 10c
DENNISON'S and BRUNSWICK CREPE PAPER, all shades 1Oc, 15c
SHOPPING BAGS—strong material ..........-_...._ .. ..... . ..... 5c
COMPLETE LINE SCHOOL SUPPLIES AND TEXT BOOKS.
WE SPECIALIZE IN FINE PRINTING OF EVERY DESCRIP-
TION. NO JOB TOO LARGE OR TOO SMALL.
The Standard Book Store
have bet n built in a more tnlhanlly smith spent '1 nesday in London.
%uty. .\ \%tun;ut would get tirc'l just ! .I.Ie, annual nut -door garden party
w;tlhiuc front ubt. pantry lu the I:itchcll
Tinder the auspices of the L'clgt'awe
table. "I here \\ a, a Lott;; hall I."""i"g 1e11 Cross was held at the home of
from the kitchen in to a front hall
%\ here the only stair\v tv was located•
Then on each side they had Reit hit(
living rooms. OIl yes there \%a, a diu-
ing roost lint you had to walk in
through this lona; hall to get to it.
''Plica they 1,111 tip a haul: kitchen
and woodshed bchintl that. It \\out 1
\1r, and \Irs. John tic(ii11, and proved
to be quite a success, ill spite of cold,
coldlater, wet weather. The prograut
was presented by the Jessie NI;Telireg.
or Concert (.'nmltany ;u1(1 consisted of
tsungs, musical nttnthcrs and nstgit'.
The calf, donated by C. h. ('unlles,
\vas dra',en for, tend the holder of the
have matte a great place to hold an lucky ticket will) \list Olive \lc(;ill of
agricultural exhibition lint as a farm Itlylh. 'fltr Inncli booths, also (lingo
home, I'm very dou'tttlid. Itcoitic ntcd 'lid a rushing business and IIIc dance,
to drive for miles just to sec it awl which was hell in the Forester's Hall,
they would stand %vith their months was well italt•nnized,
often and marvelat it, awl many of v---
tient went home and buil) monstrositiesCUBS ENJOY A HALF DAY
like it.
AT THE LAKE
The member: of the \\'elf Cub (rack,
tinder the supervision of their leader, ,
about rural heating alright hal Ire's not lice. I'. 11, Streeter, boarded the noon 1
rush in and build another round of nn- I train
this \\'cdncsday for (;udcriclr,
handy hooses to wear our women -folks 1 where'Ill enjt,}able few hoots acre
think ss." should do something
Wedncsdav, July 26, 1911. 1
WANTED
MEN AND WOMEN
FOR FACTORY WORK
During Tomato Season
Beginning About Augusi 25th
a
MAKE APPLICATION 'i'O
Libby, McNeill & Libby
CHATHAM, ONTARIO.
APPLICA'1IONS FROM THOSE ENGAGED IN WAR WORK
WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED.
FOOD FIGHTS TOO
0111. fora% homes ,litniltl be handy to he spend al the Lake, before re- hardly hamper the (un of the ambit- \anre, that a good time was had by
and comfortable ;11111 Ilnl 111',I111l11t'111, 1111'11111g lvtlill' 00 111e five 11•;1111.
huts young Cull 'Troop, and their lead -
ti mans desire to have a bigger castleIThe weather, unfortunately, was not
than his neighbor.ideal, but a trifling rain storm witttld t'1'. \\'t venture the prediction in
OF 0
tut -
illi.
Classified Ads. 25c.
ARE .OING To WASTE
IN T IS DI$T"ICT
UNIISS YOU AST NOW.
BLYTH -- It's Up To You:
This community is faced with the immediate task of
organizing to SAVE FOOD materials urgently
needed by our invading Armed Forces. '
There is not available cit this moment one half the
farm help required to save the abundant food
crops ready for harvest on farms in this community.
Yet these crops must be saved to feed our invading
armed forces—to whom food is cis vitally important
as ammunition. They can't win if they don't eat.
The man power needed to save this food can be provided ONLY
in one way; and that way is by the citizens of this community
organizing to provide help for its farmers; organizing the "spare
hours" of its men in the cause of Saving Food for Victory.
The organization has two parts:
1. Organizing a Farm Commando Brigade, with office and tele-
phone, where information can be given and the enlistments
of loyal citizens received and through which men niay be
placed on farms requiring help most urgently.
2. Enlisting every available man in the community who will
pledge his evenings, week -ends, holidays, half -days,--- every
spare hour — during this critical harvesting period.
The Department of Agriculture of the Ontario Government will
provide organizers and will co-operate and assist at every point
in the formation and operation of the Farm Commandos.
The need is Urgent! It Requires Immediate Action!
Unless such help is provided thousands of bushels
of vitally -needed grain will go to waste in the fields
in this district. '
*
Council You can lend, effectively,
the weight of your official Influence by
appeals to your townsmen; by proclaiming e
"Help the Farmer" holiday when the situc-
tion demands; by permitting municipality
vehicles to transport commandos to and
from farms; by giving leadership In organ -
tuition work.
Employers You can give vital
assistance by releasing a shift, or your entire
stuff, for a day or more; by impressing the
urgency of their going to the forms for the
period of release.
Merchants You can organize to
go in a body with your staffs on the weekly
half -holiday, evenings and week -ends; or
you could close your stores for an entire day
once a week to assist during this critical
period.
Clergymen You can Impress the
need on congregations; call organization
meetings of your men and boys; assist ser•
vice clubs and other bodies to organize
enlistments.
7k Mechanics Also artisans, labour-
ers, clerks, salesmen, students, You can
provide the greatest service because you
constitute the largest body of citizens. Assist
in organization wherever you cun, but par.
titularly in pledging your spare hours to
help on the farms.
Service Clubs You can add to
your laurels of social service by enrolling
members for this most constructive task; by
forming committees to work in co-operollon
with commando headquarters on many
phases of the work.
a HERE'S WHAT TO DO
Don't Let Our Troops Down!
WO600
Officials of the Municipal Council, Executives of Board of
Trade, Merchants' Association and Service Clubs should
arrange for an organization meeting as soon as possible. Ask
the Agricultural Representative of the district to be present.
He will be glad to assist and cooperate In every way. Or write
direct to Ontario Farm Service, Parliament Buildings, Toronto,
for information and literature. tet the farmers know what you
are doing, enlist choir aid in helping you to help them.
Act Nowl The Need Is Urgent!
BLYTH
DOMINION -PROVINCIAL COMMITTEE ON FARM LABOUR—AGRICULTURE-LABOUR-EDUCATION
h'1' editeS(Yayr ,1uIy 26, 19.14,
.51111111.1.11.11.1111111111
THE STANDARD 1 - Page 5.
M1lPFitIf iluf:rW:r D, t'o4 '.. ,sl,.. oit'r 004 Nc1 It's.
?bountiful lunch was served, 'I 11 ct-
LYCIEUII7 r, and Mr,. John Vincent, Gide- !ening was hrntrghl to a 1'111,,• by the
WINGHAM—ONTARIO, ,t. Ilea, wit) NIr. and Mrs. Fled 'lull, Isit►ging of Oki Lang Sync and, many
good w•iailCS t:: the Ilett ly tv1 (1••. TWO Shows Sat. N11;1.1t 't. Hat Nicholson, tieaforll withg
V.
111 s. 1I will) Nicloluul,
-+ Thurs:41., Fri., Sat, July 27-28.29 .+! •\Ir'•. Georg• 1iaulihnn wvith her bis -
Richard Dix, Preston Foster, in ,'rater, ;It Seafw'th,
WESTII'IELD '
"AMERICAN EMI'IRc" \I r. Jolla l; lh s! ie, of \VIIttcclun'rlt, Mrs. U. Stonehouse, I,1' Iilult•ri h,
:\ tcc,tt't'tt ]Benner ttitlt a '11 t;14 ,'' with Nit., 1.,,,,i;t1 1'lillip6,
I.:\(:. Donald Slanelou,e, of \'a"
u'tlinttll NI rs. Irrnc \\'rigll, George, NI argar- month, N,S„ Mr. and Mrs. N. (,;tisk'•,
_-: ALSO SI10R'I' SUBJECTS"
,, et, and Jack \\'right, ;It Si. Catharines. of Florida, wt re guest, on 'Thursday
Matinee Sat, Afternoon -2.30 p.m,t'I John Seer, with \I r, and NI rs, Rus -'at the honk of NI r. and NI rs. iTowaII
t Cans IhcII,
" (; sell Key, Nltrlell, I
.;Mon,, 'Fuca., Wcd., July 31 Aug. 1•l>t NIiss Ntddred Scott, I.N„ Stratford, Nil, John \':neem( of Goderieh i,
Walter Hus'on, Anne Baxter, in ;' withMr. and Mrs. Scott. bust' this %veil, wiring NI r. R•Iland
' "Tali: NOR'I'li S'1'Alt'' \its• 1L•ttu,1 :\Tacit, (iodericil, with Vincent's hott.e for hydro.
\l1., and \i 1.6, Nlaillauel A11e», • NIr. Keith Campbell of Ottawa, i-
1le 611"•,, 111 a village 0I Inc visiting
Dn,sian l'hraille, >4I NI r. 'Thomas Anderson, Sorel, (hue„ visiting lis grandfather, NIr. 11', If,
i. trill) his parent;, Mr. aid Nlrs. William Campbell, and his uncle and aunt, \Ir.
ALSO 'SHORT SUBJECT" W :\It(lt•„0,,, and Mrs. 1V..\. Campbell.
0.4.4444:u0.b0u0.8.4.A.hP..OJ..4.:..;o.:.P.4.4i NI r. and NI L1., Beverle • French and tFr • r r • 1.r r .. r ... r , . r . r .. r . a 1 Ni r, and NI rs. 'Emilie, of Lnt(Iin,
clatighter, of Detroit, Air. and Mrs. failed on the latter•'s uncle, ND-. Jae!,
l'lif ford Brown, \\'illiatn and Shirley, Buchanan, al:! NI rs, Buchanan, and
\\'alto», )sill Nlr, and Nlrs. George other friend; oa 'Thursday.
AUBURN
Paull 11'illi,tr'1 Nirr, infant son of Beadle,
1.:\(.', Le,lte \ire, \\a, dtaptt,rd ;11 fort NI ass Lucille Kellar has returned to
Albert air ,.11,1111 on Sunday afternoon her flume front (luecttston.
by Sy iii, Ldr. Scot NI orlon of thy i•.\('. Stanley NIe\all has returned
to Ikunlville i•.ftcr visiting his par-
ent,, NI., and \I rs, 'Thomas NI e all.
\Ii,s \nnie McLeod, 'Toronto, with
father and Mr, and NI, rs, Dalpll I)• her mother, \!1.s. John iIcI, nil who
Nlunrn \erre 1ltt• godll;u rot s. (tlher,rcccully moved to the louse purchased
guests avert• h.v. i iatold ;and NI rs. froth the estate of the Tate Mrs, Enl-
S»cll, \Irs. 11 "I \Idit'itbt, ; nil lir nn'linc-\i•ttsttong,
('apt, :\, \'. Pax, 'Donald, NIargarrt
and Ann Nice. After the eel enmity
luncheon teas .smell ;1l Ile lostr,;
house at fort Albert. Many gift,
Ft), El(' ul I.,.\I. was 11n. )o'I-
LONllESBORO
",erre received. On 'Thursday evening last about fif-
Nlr, and NI rs. Chalks I,it;lu(ou1, ty iticnds and relatives gathered at the
Stratford, w'iltl \Irs. l'. A. 1lowsort'home of Mr, Charles Stewart in honor
and Mr, and , J! 1.s, h .1 Phillips NIr 111 his son, Lloyd's, recent marriage to
Lightfoot was soloist at the Baptist lss Isabel Forbes. The evening was
Church on Sunday afternoon,pleasantly spent in playing games,
music, readings, etc. The newly mar -
Mr, and Nl1 s, I':n'a Schultz, White- rigid couple received utany beautiful
church, with \I r. and \Irs, Charles and useful presents, After which a
._y
ROXY'flIEATRE, . CAPITAL THEATRE 1 REGENT
THEATRE
1,1tE
CLINTPN.
NOW PLAYING: "The Tornado"
an.I "Henry Aldrich Haunts A
(louse,"
Men., Tues,, Wed.—Dual Features
"THE LODGER"
LI I. tht' Ril.pt r, Ill• ttvurlll', 1110,1
11,01 tt l,1, 1 ler, Ile'ni)!h 1„ life on
t11e .t reel, in a sinister melodrama,
Merle Oberon, George Sanders and
Laird Cregar.
ADDED ATTRACTION: Laurel
and Hardy as 'The Dancing Masters'
'Tltursday, Friday, Saturday
Olsen and ,Johnson, Cass Daley,
Pattie Knowles and a host of other
talent.
Ilollt'tt'rod's lunni'•st false 1111
Win )6111 1«1 nth -right star,, ,et-
rntrrttt't, and fire !rands,
"CRAZY HOUSE"
GODERICH, SEAFORT'ri.
NOW PLAYING: Olsen and John- NOW PLAYING: Kay Francis in:
son in "CRAZY HOUSE" "FOUR ,111.1.5 IN A JET:('"
Mon., Tues., Wed.—Two Features Mon., Fuer„ Wed. --Two Features
Franchot Tone, Ella Raines. Alan Franchot 'Pone, Ella Raines, Alan
Curtis, Thomas Gomez, Fay Helm, I Curtis, Thomas Gomez, Fay Helms
1)111I,1:' I, r\ IleutLlnmrll,t• Il'
Mr! l 1:. 1111. ,tort 11r„1'I,Itt1. 11 .1- I u u II l.n
the 1,•,t 'la's`t ( r)' l alta in tarn l• .t1-
"PHANTOM LADY" "PHANTOM LADY"
Gloria .lean, Ray Malone, George
Glcria Jean, Ray Malone, George Uolenr., Fay hlebn, Patsy O'Connor.
'
Dolcnz, Fay Helm, Patsy O'Connor, ! II'•n1,1n.1 , ;I1'! 11'-
NI', music, It's onnon ;11111 1t .
)o11t!t 11i ,t now t�n1 «ill •1'nnn11„ I.
"MOONLIJH'I' iN VERMONi"
t',111t11 •it a •el ring tots «111 rettu tuber
"MOONLIGHT IN VERMON•I"
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Dana And•ews, Richard Conte and
Donald Barry.
'I he astonishing Iir,In1;1 behind head-
Mat.:
1'.61'11 11,e1;1!11„'1 .t11111•d 1111,111
"PURPLE HEART'"
COMING: Olsen and Johnson in:
( "CRAZY HOUSE"
Mat.: Sat, and Hulida, : t :.'') p.m.
line.
Friday, Saturday
Martha O'Driscoll, Robert Quint
and Noah Beery Jr.
1.11 H.
1;n1 ';
,11111 1. '!i
I .111 11' 1t =•!Il.
'TEXAS TO TOKYO"
COMING: "Phantom Lady" and COMING: "Lady, Let's Dance"
"Moon I• ight In Vermont' starring Belita,
Mat.: Sat. and Holidays at 2.30 p.m. Mat.: Sat. and Holidays at 2.30 p.m.
NIr, and NI rs. \V. Starhhun,e, \Iia;
Eva, of !Iruccfield, visited on Saturday \I r. Japer `.I t'Brien, of (ioderich,
at the bonne of Mr, \\'un. McDowell, NIr,, f{d. Knrs' 111114 i, and children, of
N1r. and N1 rs. Douglas Campbell and 1 tctroit, were gttests on Sunday at
John, visited 'rt1 Sunday with NI r, and the home of Nit., and M rs. Gordon
rs. I:, Janrestln, of Ashfield, Snell,
Miss Shine;' Radford is attending \Its. 11. McLennan of Chicago,
the Girls' Can", this week ;it the Camp \alas ('(Iina Clark, of 51. ('ash;eines,
north of (;otle:lett, Iare visiting th:i1. sister, NI rs. \!;Irvin
NIr, and NI rs, Norman McDowell I Nlet)u(rell,
were London visitors on Friday,
Nlisscs Edna and Audrey \\';1!11 of Nli,s Hattie Gallagher, of Lucknow,
ilensall visited with NI r. and NI rs. A, i6 ri,iting a1 the honk of her niece,
E, \Vals)). \Irs, l'at•I \\'ightman.
Nir, and Mrs. Duncan McCallum, of NIiss Elsie Cool:, of Ilelgrav'e, spent
Idyll, and Mrs. Janm's I11'0\0r, of a few days 1;1.1 \Vest: with Mrs, \\'ai-
I'.dntont'1n, were guests 00 Sunday at ler
the home of Mr, and Mrs. \\', 1 . Miss Jcatt Campbell of Sky Harbour,
Gunpbcll,
Gide] it'll, Ila; completed her duties
• Mr, and Mrs, ITarvcy \IcI)owcll, there, and is spending a few days
Nir, and NI rs. Lloyd Walden, were tvitl her parents, Mr. and \Ir6. \V. A.
Godcrich visitors for the wcck-end. ('allphcll.
NIr. arid, Mr3. \\rill Nliller and Ruth, The 1'.I'.L', held their meeting on
... ask qaa4 ?% 2aei
'WEAR IT ON YOUR ARI
One look in your mirror will give you ttie answer 'main man oe
mouse .. , am I one of those who lets the other fellow face all the
danger, take all the risks? Look yourself straight in the eye and ash
yourself this one question ... Have I the guts? The guts to wear tho
G.S. badge on my sleeve—to fight that my home, my people may be freed
You'll need months of thorough training to make you f igliting•fit,'
Your place is beside every man who has the courage to see It througlii
Canada's Army needs you NOW, and needs you, for overseas service,
?.TFER TO'DAY
NE CANADIAN ARMY
OVERSEAS SERVICE
1•
\Wednesday evening ttith a good at-
tendance. (,ares trer.• conducted l,t•
](1.t'. 1I. Snell, after whirl, the de)•,.-
lional program Inas 11'! It\•
Cool:, S1 rll'tllt e lesson t1';t. read tat.
Eileen 'Taylor. Prayer b,' \\'it••tiri d
Campbell. Soli' b\ Shit ley Radford
\ bible qui/. was conducted by \!r.
local.
Margaret \\'lebltitan t'(e'll n
Tetter f1 nal her brother, 1.1)in, \\11" is
stations 1 at \ antimer, Gordon le-
1lot( ell Inst, aI ;minted to rrl.re"'tl the
Voting i't'npio 11I1 flue ('tittlllll.e 1''
nclkC.-!,lana for wir•iti the .but lt. '11;
meeting closed wit) the Ilenediction.
The monthly mn•cting of the \\'.NI,`.
and L'abv llama \1.a, held fru \\'rdue,-
day afternoon at the home of \I r•.
Norman hadlortl, trio led the nn•etit„
Scripture \1.a; read by \irs, 1'. .1. Cools.
]'rarer by NI rs. NIarrin
solo, Kaneet 'Mason, heading, L.ortia \T'i'll` =''i' n I. r. ,111\ 1,11 lion(
ti
Buchanan, Solo, 1)n1111a \Wa!!'t,, II'.Idetli• ul t! r ( '111'\ .•I 11111" •11 for
ing, Lois Campbell, RI•rttatiot, (lav, -n -.Ile lll,.iti t r t 11111} I' -•n t;11'1'' i r
dolyn \Icl)uwI'll, .\d(lress, \Mrs. !aent the 1 „ttlu} '.i ILI:• n.
if, Stell. Tl:is part of the ut•eting I le sac, 1 s,fol ,q'l'l,.att )(ill b
closed frith a hymn, ;Intl the president, rioted in the \ I1;le'' ''f Rasta,
\Irs. \V. NIr\'ittie, had charge of the .\11 applications 1.1 hr ]table 1, the
business, :\ collection amounting to Scattier Service, God.rtch. ((n: by.
111'('1 S,:8,00 was t;lkl'll for Ile boy, (1e- 12 0'1•l�'; e1. noon on alt'; 5th „ho, '
crse;ts bogs, Letters of appreciation August.
for boxes sem \\rete read front l'( ). .\1! ;applicant • tt ill h1 rel(11ir111 to al. -
Ned Tl•nnpson, lane, .\Ilan Ilnird, Pte. pear in perso n. ;It 1111' Lam 11o1,e,
Iran \\'ightntat, 1..\C. I'! i - Vincent. l iodrrirh, (Ittt;trio, I' NI.
It was dccidc'l to laic a quilting it 'I'ursd,ty, August Slit.
September. Mrs, Alva \I (• I /moult.
\Irs, sI.0 yin \It►)ow•cll seere appoint-
ed on a conoiittce to represent the
Ln 11enioriam
\1 \ 1'. I 1-5 le..
11 ;e .11. \t.!..
I t.lt •
I..0
';rt• , 1.11 t
I . •1t'1 :1:1111 a i - L. 1 It:... 1
\\! .tt� 11!'
- u. -,.,I 111
I., :n - 1•
FOR SALE
ih•,I'•. Id) '11i' \\.1 i„1 tt;')t
et•, in He ,11 111.1.lilio'. •\,,I,t,, , \lt .
G11t (,!h• .i1, "aeon 1 1',t,'!;, Finn 1.
\11..-1NTEt)
.1 •
\\',\IAS. and \V.:\ to slake 1,1ats for
tiring the church. 'I'lc sleeting r11,
rd with prayer by NIrs, ager.) Ilar'111
Snell,
NIr. anti \Irs 1\', Stackhouse, Miss
Eva, t'f Ilrucuicld, \I r. and \Irs. Stan -
ley Neale, and children, of Glencoe,
visited on Sat'rday trill N1 1. and Nit's.
Earl \\'ight10,tu
Nliss \largartl Lncl:w•ood of Clinton.
is risitMI; at tit honor of her uncle and
aunt, \I r. and \Irs. John Canter,
Miss Minnie Snell, who has silent
some wvicel:s with ler niece, \IIs, 1.. ' }cave, 1,, nl'.tl n their 1„ 1te r lilts
J;1r11itn, of I oiollt°, has returned 1', band, ,rte son, s' 't'tn;ltt, and 1110 gI',Ilnl-
\\'cstfielcl to visit her aisles, Mr,. J. ,rbiulrrn, \lis, NIildred -! t'•rnton, \elo
I.. \! el bowed and NI rs, J, I':, '1 aylur las made her l''nu' stilt them f 1'1. see.
I'RESENTATiON TO NEWLYWEDS c1.;tl �uI's, . Iwo Lroth.r', NI1, \ .1.f''t
tit;tckll.•11-n"t !;n iib rll, ;It t \Ir.
Friends of tilt. cn nitntntity met at the \lilt.•» `t,1.l.hons,'. "I. the \Wes', anal
Mottle• if \in. and \ars. Rolan.! \Ittcettt i �Ih111'1'3't, nl
"11 Monday evening and presented \!r, !1n111.
and NI 1.s, Harvey NI i(tllum, nettle- Funeral set t'.e, \\ ill he lel,) flout
\\ (ds, tank ;' nitscelhtneon, shownr,ilrr late •esi'l.,'ce ;1t 2 p.lu., on '!tttt
t ire gtu'sls tater recci\'eel by Nlrs, � la\'. !atrial \till Tal.. p•l,n'e ;tt Il,Ill';
Stanley (out:. 'hitt bride's gifts \\i'rc ('cnn•trrr,
shmrn be the bride and the bride's I he stntt•'rin .'f the ronlnntnil
mother. ride address teas given by Mr. i, t'xl Itdrd to tar 1:tnlilt is tlt.ir ,,ul
Leonard Cool:. After the 'Timing of 1lereavedient,
Illy lovely shower gifts, Mt•. \IcCallunt \1r, and NI es. Leonard foal,, and.
Applications Wanted
1,1
X11.2
\I'plicIlion, fon' the posit 1, of
usty S1111er\i,'1. tor the Illv11, I'nhlil
School w 111 b:• teem 11 up to t, 1'.1.,
August 20th, 1')-11. It tat.• to coin.
mune.: in S(1,1(tnh,'t'
\II applications should la- ;11.111 s -e.1
to 111” "Secretary ,'t alt. 111)111 5, 110..1
Hoard,
L1 sail. i 1111,'1t'n N -"'t -'I rr,t-.
till _'.
thanked the many friends for their
gifts and goo I wishes.
MRS. WM. McDOWELL
The comtnuttity was saddened on
Tuesday uuorrtil:g• Io hear of the pats -
sing of Inc of their most highly re-
spected residents in the person of NI 1.s.
\\'nt. \Icl)owel;, follossing a lengthy
illness. She \vas formerly 1faunalt
Jane Stackhouse, daughter of the late
,Jar, John Stackhouse and Eliza Tay-
lor. She \vats horn at \Westfield 1,7
)ears ago, and has been a life-long
,'csidcnl of this community in whirls
sae has taken an active )'art w\len
health pernnitted, hying a Sunday
School teaches choir !vada and or-
ganist of the \Westfield church for a
number of years, of which she was a
life-long mcntiier. For the past year
Mrs, Nielh.treil \vas in failing heait!t
and while ler demise itis not unex-
pected, nevcrt.n'Irss it cants as a de-
cided shock to ler fatal). and friends.
Fl(wers, not horns, sunshine, not
sbado\\ s, did -lit' st atter ever) where.
Troth was the inspiration of her lift',
and by kind'» ss she r\etli,lt('ed it's
great worth. \»tong its she tanked a
M1111;111 of ctt'Itire, refinement, s_tnt-
pa.tly and a kind neighbour, a de( 01(41
mother anti trot. friend.
\Irs. \Irl)owcll ryas married \lart'Qb
4; II, I't(3, to her now 'bereft husband.
ar'i in 1043 sett orated their 4011 wed -
ditty; anniversary, \Its. Mcl)ow'cll
NIr. IiI';id 11,'3. Mete ri,ttors over
Sunday ttitlt \I r. and \Mr's. 11at-1.l
Cool:, Colborne Tint
ORDERS TAKEN FOR PRINTED
CHECK GOOKS
SOLD AT THE STANDARD OFFICE
BLAFIK3 10c each, 3 For 25c.
s
0 SERIAL STORY
Murder on the Boardwalk
BY ELINORE COWAN STONE
Last Week: "Lucille" leads Chris -
Oe to Chandra, She realizes that
it was he who met her at the sta-
tion. He admits he is "partly res-
,aponsible" for Mrs. Talbert'a death
use he did not warn her of im-
pending danger.
CHAPTER XIV
"I don't believe it!" Christine
Cried hotly. "I don't believe that my
4oasin ever went to a fortune-
teller in her life. She was too—"
"Too sensible, you mean? I am
lorry to disillusion you; but Mrs.
Talbert has been one of my best
clients for years."
"And I let you make nu prom -
ha not to warn the police:"
Christine swung on the girl.
"Please!" the girl spoke swiftly.
"I brought you here because there
are things you must know that
only my uncle can tell you... And
this Is the only place in Surf City
where he is safe from the police."
Then a door opened and another
person came quickly from an ad-
joining room.
* •
•
Christine cried on a caught
),reath, "Jaspar'"
But this wasn't the caricature of
Jaspar she had seen Last nig:ut.
This was the same immaculate, de-
corous Jaspar she remembered
moving smoothly about his duties
at Cousin Emnna's,
"Miss Christine," he began re-
spectfully, "I had almost given up
hope of speaking with you until
you called my niece as I told her
to ask you the other night to do."
He turned anxiously to the girl.
"You'd better hurry- house, Lu -
Wilt," he told her in an undertone.
The girl nodded, and slipped
obediently out of the room.
"There wasn't any chance," Jas -
par went on, "even after I saw
at you had recognized me, Miss
Christine... That is—you did re-
cognize me, didn't you?"
"Oh, yes," Christine told him,
"I recognized you all right."
• r
•
For a moment Christine stood
speechless, her thoughts acatter-
Mg like leaves in a wind.
Apparently the butler was here
under Chandra's protection —
trusted confederate. Yet if the
slsirvoyant had learned about those
bonds from Jaspar, why had he
tried to warn her?... Or suppos-
ing he had really wanted to warn
her, why hadn't he given her the
Information plainly, in words of
one syllable, without all that thea-
trical clap -trap? Unless, perhaps,
he had some reason for distrusting
the butler, and wanted to make
sure before he committed himself..
Unless he had some reason for sus-
pecting that Jaspar was involved
In Cousin Ernma's death.
But when she had talked with
Chandra, Coinsin Emma was still
alive — at least, her death was not
public knowledge.
No, it's too thin, Christine
thought. These two are working
together.
I hope, )firs Christine." Jaspar
Cut a fine figure in jacket 'n'
frock for street wear! Whisk off for
sundress and new coat of tan. Easy
to sew—it's a summer essential.
Pattern ‘1.1'26 comes in young
misses' sizes: 12, 14, lee 19 and 20.
Size 16, sundress, 2d(i yds. 35 -in.
Contrast for jacket, 1' i yds.
Send twenty cents (20c) in coins
(stamps cannot be accepted) for
this pattern to Room 421, 73 Ade -
b ;dc 't. \\'e -t. 'Toronto. Write
t 'in'y size.sdelrrss, style, number.
went on, that you hasen't just
— left those papers lying around
— or that you're nut carrying theta
about with you:"
• • •
Su that was what they wanted —
to know• whether or not she had
the bonds here now... "Some-
one," the inspector had said, "who
knew he could get than front you
as easily as he left them."
Christine said steadily, "I turned
the bonds over to Inspector Par-
sons the first thing this morning,
and told hien where I found therm.
...And Jaspar, it seems to me that
you are the one who — just left
them around. Ilow did you know
where my room iva, aul how did
you get in?"
"'That was the siutpic-t part of
it, Miss Christine. You see, not be-
ing able to meet you myself at the
train,eI asked Nits Chandra, who
has been in Mrs. Talbert's confi-
dence for years, to snake certain
where you went. And at the hotel,
all I had to do was to find one of
the maids who used to work under
me at your cousin's home. 1 told
her I had been sent with a parcel
MILITARY MILLINERY
Fashions for robot -raided London
have taken a practical turn.
Here's the last word in new crea-
tions, a tin helmet that has been
be -ribboned, be -ruffled, and be -
feathered. Felt V's and Morse
code V-signs adorn the brim, and
red -dotted black veiling ties coyly
under the chin. A large bow and
a curled feather add just the right
feminine touch,
for you, and she admitted Inc to
your rocm without questicn.. ,
Mrs. Talbert had made me promise,
Miss Christine, that if — anything
happened to her before she sat
you, I would make certain that you
had the securities."
"But my cousin was killed last
night. You put those papers there
the afternoon before, Nothing had
happened to her then."
• . •
"I beg your pardon, Miss Chris-
tine — something had happened.
She had disappeared, I hoped," Jas -
par was going on anxiously, "that
1 might be able to get help to Mrs.
Talbert before — before it was too
late; and I had to get the papers to
you the best way I could."
"I should think the batik was the
place for them."
"Yes, Miss Christine." Jaspar
agreed uncomfortably. "But -- of
course you couldn't know thin —
for some time Mrs, Talbert had
been growing more and more —
well, strange, about things like
that. She insisted that you must
have them in your own hands."
"But if you knew she was in dan-
ger, why didn't you go to the p o -
lice;
••
'Because that was another thing
Mrs. Talbert had made me prom-
ise. You see, Miss Christine, she
had been expecting something like
this for a long time. Perhaps y on
wouldn't remember, but almost 12
years ago, her only nephew was
kidnaped in much the sante way."
"Mrs. 'Talbert paid a sweet ran-
som," Inspector Parsons had said,
"but the boy was never found."
"And Mrs, Talbert wouldn't have
the police called then, either," Jas -
par finished.
"Why should she expect to be
abducted?"
'Well, Miss Christine, lately
she's had — threatening letters —
just as the family did before Mr.
Earl was taken."
And who, Christine th',ught,
SHORTY—A MITEY MAN 1S HE
The British Tommy at right is pretty small compared to the tall
Heinics in front of him, but he has the situation well in hand. He's
pictured herding in two prisoners he captured in Caen battle.
would be in a better position than
you to see that 1110>c letters were
safely delivered?
For a moment she hesitated for
words, 'Then she went on, feeling
her way carefully, "Theft why
didn't you leave a note with the
bonds -- some explanation?"
Before the butler could answer,
a sharp knock sounded on the out-
er door. Jaspar and the medium
exchanged startled glances, 'Then
with a reasurring gesture Chandra
went out into the hall,
• R
Christine had never expected to
be gladdened by the sight of In-
spector Parsons; but when he carne
briskly into the room, she could
have fallen on his neck. Behind
hire were Bill Yardley — his eyes
seeking her out with a kind of an-
gry relief — Mr. \Wiltaet, and, sob-
bing miserably into her handker-
chief, the girt Lucille... In the hall
beyond, Christine saw several fig-
ures,
'Cite inspector looked Jaspar over
with a satisfied smile of recogni-
tion and favored Christine with a
glance that was far from friendly.
Then he turned to a uniformed
man.
"'Take this girl home," he di-
rected, indicating the butler's weep-
ing niece; "and see that she stays
there till further notice."
Ile swung upon Christine.
"Some of these days, Miss Thor-
ensr,n," he said coldly, "you'll learn
that, when murder's involved, it
pays to tell the whole truth,"
"\Wait a minute, Inspector!"
Bill's voice crackled. "I told you
that Miss Thorenson hadn't any
idea where she was coming to-
night, or whom she was going to
find. , . And a sweet chase you've
led enc!" he swung on Christine.
"1f Wilmot, here, hadn't happened
to see you following that girl, I
don't know how we'd have run you
down. It was pure luck — his rec-
ognizing her when she came back
along the Boardwalk."
* * •
Christine, out of that day of
sickening anxiety about Bill, rec-
ognized his bruskness for what it
was — the nervous explosion of one
worried beyond endurance. The
knowledge that her safety meant
to much to hint brought a glow
of happiness so warm that she al-
most forgot the danger that hung
over both of them.
Inspector Parsons had turned to
Chandra,
"I was on nny way here when
Yardley burst in about Miss Thor-
enson's disappearance," he said.
"So you do cut in on this after
all?"
"I thought you'd work around to
that idea, Inspector."
The clairvoyant's voice was
cool: but his tawny eyes were
watchful.
"When I talked to you this
morning," the detective went on,
"that dagger looked like a delib-
erately planted clew — and a pretty
stupid. one. I didn't know then
about your talk with Miss Thoren-
son last night... Interesting that
you should have known that Mrs,
Talhert's bonds had been stolen —
and where they were... And I
didn't know," he added very siow-
lyy "that on the night Firs. Tal-
bert disappeared, she was last seen
going into your Broadway studio,"
(Continued Next Week)
City Of Cherbourg
'Returned' To France
Lieut. Gen. Omar N. Bradley,
Commander of the American
Ground Forces in France, issued
the following statement on the fall
of Cherbourg:
"Our troops now occupy the city
of Cherbourg. It is a pleasure to
be able to say to the people of
France, 'Ilere is your first large
city to be returned to you.'
ISSUE 31-1944
SUNDAY
SCHOOL
LESSON
POWER THROUGH SELF-
DISCIPLiNE
SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
August 6
(Temperance Lesson)
Proverbs 1;7-10; Jeremiah 35: 5-10;
1 Corinthians 9; 24-27;
1 Thessalonians 5:22,
GOLDEN TEXT.—And every
man that striveth in the games ex-
erciseth self-control in all things.
1 Corinthians 9:26.
Memory Verse: He . . . Gareth
for you. 1 Peter 5:7.
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
Time.—\\'e may date the writ:.
Ings of Solomon approximately
1000 B.C. The event spoken of in
the book of Jeremiah occurred
about 604 B.C. The First Epistle
of Paul to the Corinthians was
written, probably, between A.D.
67 and A.D. 69, and Itis First Ep-
istle to the Thessalonians, about
A.D. 54.
Place. Solomon probably wrote
most of his proverbs in the city
of Jerusalem, where also the inci-
dent of Jeremiah 35 took place.
The cities of Corinth and '1'hessal-
onica were located in what is to-
day known as Greece; the former
in southern Greece, and the latter
far north, in the city now known
as Salonica.
Choosing Wisdom
"The fear of Jehovah is the be-
ginning of knowledge; but the fool-
ish despise wisdom and instruc-
tion." This fear is not the fear of
a slave for a cruel master, but the
reverence of a dutiful child for his
parent.
"My son, hear the instruction of
thy father, and forsake not the law
of thy mother." The bible lays
responsibility on parents to give
their children moral and spiritual
instruction. Reverence to our par-
ents and attendance to their teach-
ing is the first step in the fear of
God.
"My son, if sinners entice thee,
consent thou not." There is no
way of dealing with direct tempta-
tion except by stout refusal --we
must say 'no' promptly, boldly and
definitely.
Loyalty To High Principles
"And I set before tlie sons of
the house of Rechabites' bowls full
of wine, and cups .. , hut we have
dwelt in tents, and have obeyed,
and done according to all that Jon-
adab our father commanded us."
There is resolution in their reply
'we will drink no wine'—not even
a drop, There is no harm in just
a sip, says the tempter to someone
and believing hint, a sip is taken,
which leads to a long draft and
often enslavement to alcohol.
These people were pledged to
live a simple life, to eat plain food
and dwell in tents. By their siut-
plicity of life they were a perpetual
rebuke to the Israelites, whose
self-indulgent habits had such a
demoralizing and disastrous effect
on the material, moral anti spiritual
life of the station.
Necessity of Self -Control
"Knorr ye not that they that run
in a race run all, but one recciveth
the prize? Even so run; that ye
may attain." In the Christian race
all who trust in Christ for salva-
tion and keep right on to the end
till the goal is gained can be sure
of winning the prize which is the
gift of grace.
"And every mean that striveth
in the gauzes exerciseth self-control
in all things .. . but I buffet my
body, and bring it into bondage."
If these athletes show such self-
control to obtain a garland of fad.
ing flowers or leaves, how much
more should belies yrs. show those
sante finalities since their prize is
an Mem raptil,!e era, 11.
Danger o' Pr ............Pride
„Lest let a w mem
Blended for Quality
Pr 11
CH1ONCLES
of GWC FARM
By
Gwendollne P, Clarke
• • . e •
Berry picking. , , lost pails. , , the ly hclieve their eyes when I duly
II( livered the berries!
* • *
Now for the acrobatic heifers
she had recently calved, 'rite calf
Yes, the herder are ripe. Last twit, in the baruyard, the heifer in
week 1 made a reconnoitring trip,
taking with nu two of my neigh-
bour iricnds and, optimistically, a
good supply of pails and kettles.
Rain preveutcd an early start So it
was nearly five o'clock before we
got to the berry patch. lint the
berries were plentiful and of good
quality so we soon had quite a nice
picking. But isn't 11 funny how
the berries further on always look
better than the ones you are pwk-
Mg? Friend One said she would
like to go to the lop of the hill. 1
said 1 would go with her. So
Friend Two, who is not so good
on the walking, was left to look
after our half -fillet) pails, 111 a
little \elite we were back again to
find Friend Two had completely
lost track of the pails, \1'e hunted
and hunted but not a sign of the
pails could we see. We finally
gave it up as a bad job and re-
signed our -elves to the loss of the
berries -- plus one aluminium pail
and one enamel kettle.
After taking my friends home
the thought of those wasted berries
obsessed me — and 1 turned around
and went straight back to the
patch. 1 got over the fence at the
same spot, walked into the patch
a few hundred yards, stood con-
sidering a few minutes which way
to strike out, looked ahead a bit,
and there, almost at my feet, were
our pails. My friends could hard- you are here!"
antics of an acrobatic heifer — they
are the higlilighs of last w'eek's
actin itis'.
the pa,tnre. Once she brake
through tile rail gap to the yard.
1'artw'r put her out and fixed the
gap. 'Chen he went uttt for a load
of hay. It wasn't long before I
head a crash. Ifcifer Jean wasn't
going to let a few rail; discourage
her — no sir! The barn doors were
open in Juan Walked in and smelled
the itay, I fixed the gap to keep the
rest of the cows away. Hy this
time Partner appeared on the scene
— but Ivan had disappeared.
We found her way bade in the
straw mow where the floor is noth-
ing but bore board; and the barn-
yard immediately beneath, where
Partner and I stood wondering
)tow best to deal with the situation,
Then what we feared actually itap-
pcu'e!.:\ loose board gave tray and
two legs dangled above tts, The
heifer trice) to regain her balance.
there was scuffling and splintering
of wood, and, in a cloud of dust
and straw', the heifer carte hurtling
through spare. She ianded square
on her hack — turned over, gut up
and walked away'
Once he was snrc the heifer
w asn't hurt J'tetncr's anxiety
turned 10 wrath — and Partner Inas
a way of saying funny things when
he's mad. 'Phis time, for instance,
he turned to poor Jean and said
disgustedly- — "You darn fool cow
— what good will it do you now
I have preached to others, I myself reached the boiling temperature
should be rejected," Having chal- before filling jars. Fill each jar,
lenged others to follow his lead, to the brim as rapidly as pos-
Paul could not for any cause fall Bible•
out and lose the race. 3. Run a spatula down the
"Abstain front every form of sides of each Jar after filling. Re.
evil," When in the presence of evil, fill with more juice to the rine
let there be no dallying with it, of the jar,
Abstain from it, just as the total 4, Seal completely, at once.
abstainer refuses to touch. alcohol.
TABLE_TALKS
conneFruits
If you want to assure your family
of its basic fruit requirement,
then busy your-
self with put-
s ting up fruit at
home.
A hot water
bath is ideal
for processing
the fruit once
it is in the jar.
Use a regular
wast boiler, fitted with a rack to
keel the jars a half •ncl. •front the
bottom. A cover that fits tightly
over the canner helps keep the
steam in and does not waste fuel.
Steps In Canning
1. Wash fruit or berries care-
fully.
2 Fruit is pre-cooked for sev-
eral minutes in certain cases to
shrink it, and to give you a bet-
ter looking pack with as little
floating as possible,
3. Use a light or medium type
of sprue in which to pre -cools the
fruit or surd: in its own juice,
4, Pacic fruit into hot, sterilized
jars and add boiling syrup or fruit
juice with which - to cover the
fruit. Most juice or syrup is
added to within one-half of the
top of the j,tr.
5, Ajust the cap according to
the instructions fur the particular
type of jar you are using.
of sealing it will need.
6. For a holing water bath,
see that the seater boils during
the entire processing period
7. As soon as the jars finish
prucessing, remove them from
the cannel, set on several thick-
nesses of paper or cloth and allow
to cool. .-\11 jars should not be
inverted, so watch the manu-
facturers' instructions on this
point,
Open Kettle Canning.
11'omen n ho have canned for
years on end, still prefer the old-
fashioned, open -kettle method for
canning fruits. It gives a lus-
cious product, and if the canner
is careful, no spoilage will deve-
lop,
1. Wash :Wed sterilize al, equip-
ment. This means jars, rubbers,
spoons, sl atulas. fun rch, in fact,
any thin;; that tuna's in contact
with the toed.
Ji:u.e. , toe the food has
At The Funeral
Of Queen Victoria
:\t the funeral of Queen Vic-
toria the Royal Artillery horses
which were to thaw the gun car-
riage up the hill to Windsor stam-
peded and the .situation was saved
only by Sir lledwortlt Lanbton'e
guard of sailors, says The Win -
dor Star. '.They secured the frigh-
tened animals, unhitched them and
drew the gun carriage ftp the hill
themselves. Since this incident the
Navy has always claimed the right
to draw the body of a sovereign
to the grave,
You Will Enjoy Staying At
The ST. REGIS HOTEL
r(11oXT0
• lstery Noone er11h hath, Show-
er and rrtephune.
O single, $2.s0 up—
Double, s:i.no up.
Gum] foot), Dining and Danc-
ing Nightly.
Sherbourne at Carlton
Tel, RA, 4135
STOP SNEEZING
Hay fever sufferers say there's nothing
like NOSTROLINE for instant action.
You swear NOSTROLINE up your
nose, where the trouble is. Stuffiness,
sneezing, sniffing, irritation are relieved
immediately. Breathing is easy:
NOSTROLINE helps keep the nose
healthy. 50c at all druggists.
NSTRLINEOISOE
Good Way To Treat
Sore, Painful Piles
Ilete Is the chrome for every per-
son in e_'anada suffering from sore.
itehinc, tt titafttl piles lo try n simple
hunts remedy with the promise of
a rclirble firm to refund the cost
of the treatment if you ore not
satisfied telth the result:?.
Simply Ku lu Any druggist and
get 't bottle of Item.ltoid and use
as directed. )lent -)told is an intern-
al treatment, easy and pleasant to
use and pleasing results are quick-
ly noticed (telling and soreness
are relieved, pain subsides and as
tete t•eittntcut is continued the sore,
painful pile tumors heal uvet leav-
ing the rectal mentbrities clean
vtd healthy. lief 11 battle of Ileut-
Uaid today and see fur yenuselt
ictal vt easy, pleasant way this is
to rid }yourself of your pile misery.
\117'I:r I'he rpon!tor of tltl" melee
1" at reliable firm, doing huminr"m
In 1'aundn for over 211 )ear*. If duo
are troubled tvlth "are, IlrbIu,K,
painful piles:, Item -hold looms help
1011 qulekly or the ,mall pu:rhace
prier till he gladly refunded.
Mahe Buffalo Goes to War
BUFFALO which roamed the
plains of Western Canada In the
days of the pioneer settlers are now
a factor in the war effort of the
United Nations. At many points
along the lines of the Canadian Na.
tional Railways salvage dumps, as
shown above, have been established
to which farmers bring the sltulls
and bones of buffalo as well as
moose and elk antlers, some of
them long since turned up by theft
ploughshares. Bones aro valuable
in malting ammunition.
Scrap iron and steel ti om dis-
carded farm machines aro also
hauled to the railway sidings by
farmers and their families to be
delivered to the Government scrap
depots. 'I'hls youngster, at right, Is
busy In the war salvage job at
Borradallu In Alberta.
DESPATCH RIDER TAKES COVER
Delivering important front line messages, this despatal ri.ldr tv.3
fired on by snipers. Ile pulled to the side of the road and taok
cover while his Canadian comrades flushed the Nazi . , then he
carried on. Incident: France, 1944,
BASTILLE DAY IN NORMANDY
1
Near the ruins of a shell -shattered church in the Caen area, Major
S. Laramee, of Montreal, is shown conducting a Bastille Day Ser-
vice held jointly by Canadian troops and French villagers.
PARACHAMP
Pvt. Marie McMillin, world's
champion woman parachute jump -
or, is pictured as she celebrated a
year's service in the WAC. She le
now chief of a section of riggers
at the parachute school in Ft. Ben-
ning, Ga. Veteran of 690 parachute
jumps, including the women's re-
cord ono of 28,800 feet at Cleveland
Air Races in 1932, site hasn't made
one since the day before Pearl
Harbor.
THANKSGIVING
During a lull in the terrific fighting
on Saipan, that produced a record
number of American casualties, a
devout Yank fighter kneels before
a shrapnel -punctured shrine in the
Chamorro cemetery, near Garapan.
*
..1111..
GIS ARE PALL -BEARERS FOR GENERAL ROOSEVELT
Eight GI pall -bearers carry the flag -draped casket of Gen.
place in the military cemetery at St. Mere' Eglise, France.
A TOAST TO VICTORY
Roosevelt to his final resting
The Army and the Air Force drink a toast to the capture of Caen by Canadians in a street of tho
blasted Nazi strong -point. Left to right: Pte. F. P. Harwood, Turtleford, Sask.; Flight Officer J.
D. Orr, Vancouver, and Capt. H. L. Jones, Regina. The bottle of wine was given them by a liberated
Frenchman,
"HEY SKINNEY! COME ON UP, THE AIR'S FINE
A FAR CRY FROM THE OL' SWIMMING HOLE"
OFF TO CAMP FOR AIR CADETS
Air Cadets are in camp for two weeks on air flying training
schools where they will have the opportunity to fly with R.C.A.F,
aircrew trainees.
They will get trips in the Anson and Harvard training planes
providing they have the consent of their parents,
Cadets at Camp Borden and Hagersville will be under canvas.
Those at Brantford, Centralia, Trenton, Dunnville and Fingal will
live in station quarters. All schools except Fingal are service flying
training schools. Fingal is a bombing and gunnery centre.
Groups will go to camp at two-week intervals until Aug. 16.
The layout illustrates that portion of summer camp now holding
the spotlight for the cadets. In No. 1 from the co-pilot's seat the
Flight sergeant, the envy of the rest fo his mates, gets the gun from
an expert, the officer pilot, before the boys take off.
No. 2. What a thrill! Seated in the front cockpit of a 1!alvard
the cadet gets an unimpeded view as he flies the skies. The pilot
operates the aircraft front the rear cockpit.
No. 3. — The cadet sergeant with full accoutrement, harness,
chute and stead -set climbs on the wing to take his scat in the forward
cockpit. Flying in the RCAF's best known training plate, a top
notch pilot at the controls and the cadet himself part and parcel of
the whole business.
No, 4. — The porthole -like window of the Anson [Hark 5 makes
a fitting frame for the happy cadet taking his flip under expert RC
A F supervision.
No. 5. — Inside the aircraft are the cadets. Looking towards the.
nose the picture shows three of the cadets inside the Anson while in
flight, at the left can be seen the radio tramnn:tter-rc_civer and to
the right the chutes neatly arranged in rack;.
POO 8.
THE STANDARD
• - 1 --+`JL1-.•.J.���J
tt'LAS' into [toimtiitco 'iicamt iteti . itceitmtetext 'tcfli'i�'itogt rgtvccLlot
t
It 1
,t
MEN'S WORK BOOTS .
BOYS' WORK BOOTS, Leather Soles, Panco Soles
MEN'S AND BOYS FINE SHOES AND OXFORDS
A GOOD ASSORTMENT
WOMEN'S SHOES AND SANDALS
CHILDREN'S RUNNING SHOES,
i1
t Olive McGill
SHOES
$2.95 A N D
ALL AT REASONABLE PRICES.
mon
A \II,. I', lir,(•l,l' 1'i,ilt-I Il('n,:ul
$5.00 • 11.1.11.1' !fit' 11,(,; week.
$1.75, S3.25
fi t n•',t ,I!
C. '1'. Ini!,I,\tl', last heels.
$1.08, $7,00 Pi
yy \I i •,:u',Ili I ' ul,r o f 'I'orotttu
IY
\II, tli rtll IIn11h\n ut Lon,ll nl, Iia
\II. II'!nw \\ ,Lt -1' a of 1.0ntil '11 N.1,
nes, fist). rl:•Itlit r, \I r,, t', 16 it
A • !n •n u' 1„r the \\ els-end.
hi
v4
1b2t)tt' D-C).1DiV22121APiD,2171.isIX-.4: i:iA2in;:'i!....:11'i 1`alf:AD,%nr3tQam.v.Azi I71t;liylllinADI
tomtC tetcteletgii'Etvztvi 't. eletvxmetctztvcictctzk .-ctwt v.,,;' 1tttwt4':vvz.' ;!a CK::;
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\I1. ;01,1 \Ira. I:r:in!, Ilt'unttt Ili :11,
iV I a111,,ritie, \\ ere \l-il 't, II lest\il Hit
e4i
STUART ROBINSON
Phone 156 for Prompt Delivery.
Please Phone ,Delivery Ovders Early.
iMIorning Delivery. North of 1)inslcy Street.
Afternoon Delivery, South of Dinsiey Street.
Delivery Orders - $1,00 or Over.
CHICK STARTER. OAC. GROWING MASII
FULL•OF•PEP LAYING MAST -1,
FRESH HONEY •• •I•LB. PAILS
TURNIP GREENS 20 OZ. TINS 15c
BLUE RIBBON PUDDING POWDERS 2 FOR 19c
(Vanilla, Chocolate, Butterscotch, Carmel).
BLUE BERRIES FOR PiES 30c
NONSUCH SILVER CREAM . 25c
HEINZ PORK AND BEANS - . 18c
POTATOES DUG DAILY,Radishes and Tomatoes.:maid that a -rnluttr-Planner
;1
! Nla ! 'r N(rnrlll J1,Intston rlirnl the
,rh tit•! with \Ir, an'I \Ir,. I,It,v,l
h.il'III'\ it 110111011,
I11 i„ 11;1.0.1 Pt !t, r,'turnl',I II, 1,0I1,I 'n
I,n NI•'nl,y ;lift'). -pending a Ilrt•h:.
hI,'i.!I\ a \lith Int r mother, \I r •. ,I, Tett,,
\1i•, I.•on•,t i'itl,(atlll 11f (ill'iC1ich
,siert t tell Ids 1,1,1 t\e.h fettle \I r••
Doherty Bros.
GARAGE,
Acetylene and Electric'
Welding. ,A Specialty.
Agents For International -
Harvester Parts & Supplies
White Inose (las and Oil,
('ar Painting and Itepairin
r
ollyman's
BAKERY
BREAD, CAKES,
PIES and BUNS,
ALWAYS ON HAND
11'ednesday. Julj' 26, 19.14,1
••
11.11-I` II .Iv. Jux,+ ..111 ,L+I Ii�+w.JiJI, l• 11 III .1,1.1 + Ix ♦ di .• I,,Yv ,i.1ix. 111.111111. M1
Chocolates For Overseas
\V1: A!;:: ONCE MORE A111.E TO 'TAKE ORDERS
FOR CHOCOLA'T'ES FOR SI11i'I11ENT OVERSEAS,
SMIi,ES'N CHUCKLES WILL. BE SENT POSTPAID.
11.13• ;i 01.5, OF CHOCOLATES '1'O ANY SOLDIER
OVERSEAS FOR 916•,
Wrigley'; Gum for Yi verseas
YOU CAN NOW SEND WRIGLEY'S CHEWING GUM TO MEM•
i1ERS OF• ALL CANADIAN ARMED FOi(CES OVERSEAS
A'l' $L00 PER BOX OF 20 PACKAGES.
BOTH '1'IIESE OFFERS SUBJECT '('O
CHANGE OR CANCELLATION A'1' ANY 'TIME,
ORDER NOW WHILE BO'1'}1 OFFERS ARE AVAILABLE.
R. U. PHILP, Phm. B.
DRUGS, SUNDRI S, WALLPAPER—PHONE 2P.
r•I•w. ,1 .:Ii Y., I i,I,,..I III.L1�.1 IIA •11114 .r•I 1,1.•L w Ii1.11. !LW I�I�II ... ,.ur.eMw,,.
1i t r, :' '..
1 1 1 1 /�'1: v Kli,t' �t4 �4Iv aa�Vtta . t.. 1, M'w t . , a,ta, :4' w'7y w .•rl Y•'i
•S Nle. I,'a•11"n 1 ;•„'u I�t l'liuton Ii -it illl(1 ((►l1aCCOs, .s
r ! ' •n tinn'1;\ t11111 hi, nnt•It• ;roll :cult, '?
\I r. and \I r,, 'I'. I I. 1.1(1),‘ ;ads,
I'Ii()N F' 3Ji1 - lsiJ'i''I111,' I' PI
ei!
g !I, .\11;1,1)., tn.! and ILut;;!ncr,
K ' 9sut�ramn�'at;$rmn it •
Idle, n"re 1't• a11r, at \Ir,, (ir,(•h}';
• fit
,iurin� the tt", h. NEW STYLES IN CIIF.S'I'i?RFd1i.LD SUITES.
._ .1.1/\\ .. 1 ; a•....•1 .. - CEILI
ri. r Uphohtcred in Latest Pile Fab: ics al Attractive Prices,
1i;l6 :r,l„,„
a. rf1,4
'�Phieh i; n•n;tll\',1lar}or 11 1 any' .ittt1' \'ails• >!tu•11!1 n (Un.;till reel a.; ;t I'Itth teals. 'I'll'!:. !'1
when t!:cutin:, Ih1' (fe:'ar;tl!on fur ;t Ffrem)! it I•t i;L'.I ;1- inJl1,!1; e1 In(h\, tit1Il; lily' t'Itlllilta twee' :,Ill 1Iperk front,OLD SUNWOR'THY LINE es
0
0
'tti
Furniture
r.;unl \I r,, l' 'I'. Ilohh\'n, I 1)11) Litt '\til'::, I;;illnrl !n I!tn',!h11e, ;tit(.1..tive t•1v'Iritt", at
\I r,• \1. I, 11,"tt rr of I':11ntI Int''n, i,
tb I'i,iItll: !ttr Irrr,, `,I r,. IIlnr;ul \Ir
�$ t'alluul,
tv! Nli,, ir,ne \Ic('nllnlll i L11n1!on,
tb
dy ,in•nt Thr \tt is cn(I I\ilh Ilex I';u'r!;I,
and \Ir•, ituut•;ti! Nlct'a Ilius.
11)1 1 secs a rnrrerl veiling IO;II,I r ;t- it i
,) \I;1,trr I'rt:r Philof '1't'run!n, t' , IJ t•hnll I. Int' Iirunl'r teals 1It('tl
THL FIFTH WALL
OFEVERY ROOM.
PERSONAL INTEREST heti .\rtes ,.f 'Lh1ir!ItLlle, 1'i,ilt"I illi' frietl'1>.
fnrner', aunt, Nlr,, tit;t'•ht' lin N1,111-
NI I— Ilrt:;r ('am;ihcll returned to Isar, I NI i \'inl44 !111:t 1taty ,If Jantc,tl,tvtt
I •lr'nt" I'll ;,turd,(\' ;fitter ,Mending ; is visiting It'ith her cousin, \l i„ Irina
;11u 111Th- 111IIi•!a1'• 11'llll Irle'llll, all!! 1 t 11 I111,1,II;, till, 1\'t'l'k, 11( 'al', beer! art• ,'t1 t \I'.\\
\I r, filen 'Lumley nuc\' of Incer,nll h;t, 1'.\'1', 1-:k\; . this v, ;•, 1leine th,
rel;itilc• h:'rc. Itttn ttll 11u11) ritti ,1 tint of stat il�
.),,ante the 1,1,1 three t,;tr,. Iaer,-
IIla\', t\ilh hi- i10'n11er, \It,, Ilcnj, Ta‘.. \it•, NN "1i • trust, II )11-11.111 S• s" i!hiuc 1;I the liar 111 Illi' •r;l!lil:'• \'I
\It'•. Jnll; ,,t,rrl;1) Ittl11' 1111• :list, Itllt Hir'tils,
\lis, Ituth !trout:, E.\., 1,f IIensa'I• h r.
and \Irs, I'rnnah Mcrae:, of \ionktttn, ( Craig, (nil ne;,hel\r, 110hu an 1 1 1 ;nn(1Irtn,whey,
\\t'! • vi•itnt•, at the home (If N1 r,,. \Ir,• .!les C'anllihcll and il,tucitler, Craig, It i, Sar \•car, •1110' \Ir, tiuti'lt illness j h 111 t;t!.itt,t i'it \\;illll;tllt
ira.hv )(tit :11)-: the lrl,t week, .\1i,s ]trite ('an!,hcll, ti,aforth, Vi'file•! tta, in 1)ntari,' in the summed ni•'• ~ :,
LI,t wt'ch ttit!t their c,itisin, \Ir,. II111n having ;tln;t\', visited in the Ili. ter 1 u '
Nle,, faecal .1rnls!rl,rg and dan,ghttr, lti);• Ifurnu'r visit,,
'0♦0.,..:.•.,..;..•..O:.O.o:...•;..:.O,oo..!..0.!.d..:.0.1.1.,.,.,;..•.0..0.:.L•;.:.t.•,.9.•,.O.b.;.,,..•..O.SD..O.•,.'..0.•.,0,0,•..•.,..;,.0.0;,•0,0.•..•.••,.!. ✓..!. ,;.,;,.,, .;, r, .�, y, y„i Ft9 C.
PREST
,. ....o.. .... .. .. .. ,....
When is a Dollar Not a Dollar?
When it won't buy a dollar's worth of goods! For instance, o compared tpresent-day
p p y
standards, your dollar of the last war was worth, nota dollar
Illj
.. but sometimes
less than 1. Housewives, who went marketing in 1917, had to part with (r
fro four -pound jar ofjam which you buy to -day for L.:4?-
�:' 69• ... Dad's winter underwear
,"set him back
49 then as compared to the X29 ti• he could buy itfor to -day.
� J You get lot more for your money NOW 0 ... because price ceilings and
1911 194
�Id
otheranti•inflationary measures have keptthe value of your dollar HIGH!
That's
t -. will
- selfish spending IZ�
pay you
o see that
• price control in Canada. Remember, you protect your dollar's worth when you
(jou
use your money wisely when, pay rC t i t \;;:� refuse t
uy
•
heedless luxuries... give black markets ()wide berth • . and don't hoard goads.
7.R // " 77e" /% . /' l i /7/5.-
///02, ' ii i/ iii, ��i�
;7%;,,0'1..'%i/////////�/•//�i o/%inti•%�iij,�
I promise to give my support to keeping the cost
of living down. I will buy only what I need. I
will observe the ceiling whether buying or sell-
ing .goods or services. I will pay off old debts,
save for the future, invest in Victory Bonds and
\Var Savings Certificates. And I will support
taxes which help lower the cost of living.
%/Gi/fi/i////7�,/� %.,,, n/: 44-4444,ii,i/ ,
Published by TIi1 BREWING INDUSTRY (ONTARIO)
to help reveal the dangers that inflation represents for all the people of the Nation.
Phone 37.26,
1
111,1,11,1). 11 i;
rt It!' I,.\t•E 11'1.1: .N XII linl'I1IT. Ii\1' II!.ti \I \1'Iltl'
1,(11,,r(.1 I t ;,R;;It!. 11'' u'tt ('Ili l'!I'.', ,t' I.,Itt P:!t'. ,
\ ':It SI:.I 1't' fIt I,; 111 I fiat' \:;III`'\! 1 11 \1I;`�, in 1.1,1, !
v11iu. , I'!t I \111 I.:, 1,1lIl1; t \-•! 1.\til 1: 1. rip:, ;t:ll
II•I I()lilt I!\ i\1; !;III!,'tl 1'1I.( I
A CALL WILL CONVINCE YOU Oi' '('TIE MANY EXCELLENT
VALUES WE ARE OFFERING.
Bottle furnisher
1
1
t1
i9
t9
Phones 7 and 8 — Funeral Director. It
�:.t,.u.Ll,imic.,:L,_.,:,,-J::Is,J..ae�,e1J.LJ.x.-ra iris di.`:1'...�7.>,cis,IIIc,.:.uiuloLul-:•.I�,a,ol-I.f7aje iJid �b
µ,.1.0..E.1.1 r..,..YOo/11..1.•,
I•Ival'Ir ILt1 11; .ttL'lll r(
11\ill': 01(1
, \I r, I.o• K NI r. In.,,'ll I'llr'.Iu,
'Ili- .lull i,' I!I;h.', lull \II • '\I,!;t
Kell., ❑uru111' 1 till I !cal v l I•nlntl y
\tt 111.11,1 II :,I. tij!,'• (!Itttrh, Illlh-
lel, on \\,t!ui Il,ty ,n'r toss and t\e•,'
;I- I l;nt',;. :,i li 1' (huller in tht !III\;t!
LO(1DESDORO I11'1rl, \litrhet!,
,,, r,i 11,-;, i.iL .IIII •In.k nn „101+;-,1 i',I.+.Ii, 114,4iL/.1.1.41464. \It•, 1, .\, ,-1I III'(', 11! 1,, 0,1;1, It, I,
"lieil'liil • 1!Itlt-I';t, ill the, \It'll. \\It!t
llir;ll ).fated' • niittivr in tf.r 1.11t• lu-
-ut!nt•t' II':,i','t•-•, NI.... 1,, It. \n"u,t,ne,
b
eat's
BAKERY.
WI-IEN IN NEED OF
BREAD, D, BUNS, PIES,
110i1'114'.-i\'3A f )f CAKE
(}R COOKIES
RE21EMBER
"THE E I 1O.1E BAKERY"
NII,, Urn .et ',man an,l c'.;i'tll'1II
!ttrtl, 11 itis tilt• t' r -
1,'r' 1Jl•Jilier, •111 1.IIhe1t \\i"1111,1 11
1111 tsilh ,\I r, •'1111 \h'•. Ii1'Il'.'I 1' Il.ul
(,f L 1• t \\';i'\ 11-11•
Nir,. anit
u:'ll!I ;, .\li LI 11 111 III .elf's u '
the tn-st 111 IIIc ItI,,, it it tttt IIu1'-
"I, r, ,Lot -!(I,' NI! \\ , t , :ul1,,
ulll, , 1, 1,
11. T. VOJ)!.)EN i' " ';� Lt/t1 9 •M ';rF1' , ,
1 \/I� l l�Ir. ii' • If '111J 111}. �:i�tJ l'�
1.46•1-.•6•AtiJ.r1I/. .. , rY.m6r6Volirini.f•+,•-/.AMbv1
PERSONAL INTEREST
T
NI! -. ; , i".":101 Pe.y 1.:111'1 ,0'11• \I tar
stall, u) 111'' •'I,1' 1, \I- 11'',j ,I e I, 1!•
inrr • 't, •,!'u'! , NI r I'., 1, 1 :u'
an! N! r •, l',1' I •. r ,_'ht and Lt:111.., ,
\\ 1 ,1 e 1 1. i e I t :anthem. that, '
•ntlur'I .u,', • r,It'1, t\I' \\,;I I',1ic
1,1r ;11t• a ,'11111(1! i 1'tnher
I., ;-i;tr 11'ec t, , '1 iii• 1• Inc t i11
hu! ;Intl \\e It;tit
• t. ,In •ta for
; I,1' iiia':'' .,'I
• i.l 10•
NI r, ,in;l \I:••, ti r11•In 11111111 I "u .I''.r I i tall
I lila li:!1'• he!i '
children ,1,1'11' .`;nn1L,\ 11rt11 \(! , !'.I
.111\I•',,r '!r� ,l •II”
li('ll'r i,,Irtl' , NI r. ;1101 Nil it, ,1 il'1- -
,Ion, (i('llrii.•li.
I on till nllLl\' ,'1
.(I,
Nit', and N1r-
(tau:tlticr, ('arul\'r;e, (11 ...la :Jr.(
have re rtritel h"nn• a:1 'r n li
!cart tit L•I,t \vee], nils, t!I' t ',II.
in( 11,er, \I.,. 1. Putt.
,111•'
NI r, anti Nit- Ilart•ct• Met :Illl,lil 11-tt,
�1 .p
r•� W!••• 'AIM. v::�i«�.xHlwil �•il1.n. rMl
'� -1 t-
$ , ^cin
,,.,lt pitli.li
�LI
EI)1F H @1!t8A(,Ii TF ON'S
DECORA'i'OR'S SOI'PE
L' c,tty l Op .—s'tc K:;ruick's Gtocrry
v •It 1111- i'ni,- PHONE 158, BLYTiI.
r I'll 1 1 11;1111 III',' ...,..,•w, a.r..,.A.MA...NVw......a.r,..•.I...naworis i
fie a1 to h•-. 'G,a111i'iul-
rH . 13! \''i'tl STANDAR')
1 N 1'I NG OFFICE.
I. OR '1'11E FRUIT
Proclamation
civic Holiday
I II'r 11.' 1111 -t r:I',11i'rrt .).•Hilt the
Ily \'illUe (il Thr ve,lcd its Ire
returned dons flick Melfi}rl(I,•n. ••I"' 111;t'Ir ;11,1 11ii • t\'le the rvl.'Itily t- ni
1, ill ,L„11!1\' ().ere ills,+ Ow NI, l i 'r, ui a • kr,',r 111 .hr Nitwit filen l;l;' to the
•, IIIt'1'!., hit", I t ,1tiII'I•"i' „•, fait:
\ ii ,I ;r ul 111,11,. ;11111 in a1'ct)t'la',rc
1'erlt', II,ItI in'e11111t'I! 111' I" •,U i
-.\tr. ;tris \Ii. hila
,11111 nCi1,1,1 bedsit 1,111."1 in uthrr \11'11
rt; . t;•' r((.'11i i ;1111111111' .•'.11IIt t'•, I Ho ele. duchy, \1)010•1Y,
I 'i'' - 1 '.,'\ i'1, - r„l'i't. fir.' ,i Witt t It; t1 \n,'n •I ,111, ( 11„11,!;;” ;to I
1.1111' 1 1111 •,• Ise i, ,,;trIllhn� 11\11 111,•1. rItti , ,.f r.. )(lat' ti'- i.(tt NI( .\it•'r i,.•�1 ,,.1 !.fiat, ill hitt--lie J11'1 111
1• (ore „tali nn to \env 1'n1-1: 1Ot'I 1 •Illi'• IJ:1
II . t'1 uh star t'( ii ;I.N site!).
her in. tiler ani aunt trhere Ther , i ' '1 he tuts, r. •'re ;;rr (I i\ ;n rt e),ltr,!.
Itt-1! a, 'finita(' pntat, in i:,,' ;•111! !Hp, 11 •'III '!•
NI i s -\it ',t \''t ).nibs is i - (vin"
W. 11• hIORRI'I'1', 1:EEVE,
Vi iare t f Bly tet.
NI r. ;1'1:1 NI t',. •1('1111 NI. (r;11:, (;i r - a7tam.oa SLiainIIitszx-zzo.EL2�••y!ryiia s>..-. 1S yw+,,LL,I
11!an ;1'111 \lar:'tu,'t, NiI . iv;l Stttlr•'I,
tit- . 11,1101 ('i t t. Sr.. and N.Ir. \\'ilti;nl
tiulith, vi,itt••i )!r,. Iran C'otv,tr(I, and
NIr. ant! ,1It•,, ti.;utl'-u l'ti:t':t i, of (',-
i•,irtie Ton 'il,.h l,,I,tinnlla\'.
Mrs. john (r;1i:', Sr., \Ir. and NI;
! h l'r•li'I N ,111 ,: re and (• i•
. n I _. I r. ( t i l ,1 1 an,
\Ir, and \Ir:. ()avitl .�. (').;figs J•i\e.
I;r,die ;tall filen, ane! Mi...
!-nisei 'he \i:,r!t:tit (Fatuity he-t'niim, 1
held at the hotue (it' ii r. and Nit•:.
t'tanie\' :dacha!), hirer 7 otrn,hil,, n,i
\Vetlnt',11'tr. 1t:iy 1)111• -N very en -
HURON GRILL
13LY'I'II --- ONTARIO,
EXCELLENT
IO(
.
((() SL
IMIll
.
t uses at All Noun.
FRANK GONG ow P .°oprietm7
1 . 111 I1I,1I• I, 111,1• ,.tl ,il JI I16:4.1 „•1,.41!11,1„11 1..1101 I 1..11 1 1 - -