The Blyth Standard, 1945-09-12, Page 1V(
,)) - NO. 03.
41111,
T
BM I`11, ONT.\RHO, WE1) N ES1).1Y. SEPT. 12, 1915.
YOUR FARM LABOUR PROBLEM
Running; tt`;tcr -- in tht• Itr)tnt', the sl;tlllcs., llnnllry
ltull,('s ;utll i rt'culiriii.i' ',rives time, I;ll1t)ur tt1,1 promotes
Better and Iil,lltllicr li\ing cilu(litions.
NEW DURO PUMPS
are a1';Ill;lhlt' its t't't;ttcr IIItiiiittl,'- titbit, hut ,loriat!i' of 'Materials ;11111
Labour %trill not allow the 1)1, Facto: w In prt,lluct. enough to meet the
demand. :111 I htl•o Healer: are on a (plot:, bask and permit to purchase
must I)e appruled b1. \\'.1';1',11,
EN1C0 FIXTURES AND FITTINGS
rnr Iritchen, Bathroom and Laundry, Visit your 1?Inc) I)ealer
for availably stiles,
LEWISW} UTA- IEL
LOCAL AGENT
i'IHONE 110
DANCE
ON 'II E NEW 11'L001R IN Till;
WINGHAM
ARENA
Thursday, Sept. 1
RETURNING B\' POPULAR REQUEST
Clif Gordon & His Orchestra
ADMISSION ;10c. 1)11NCIN(; 10 TO 1
1'Iission Land ?sleeting'
I
The \li„ion Band f Lovina Service'
held their regular meeting ,'n Sattirlay, MI"-
St'tpcnlh,r 8, Iti111 an attendance of -ITk' '.ti'.
r\ kyr a period rf band -\lurk, tie lead 1 ilia."'"1
er called the tnteting to order, and to i'f la11
's
a tcntptrancc :•turf, "Slipllryekrrl" ; 1 1ill''
1)wing the \V. r.,hip \larg,trrt \Lt•.. ±it:itrirl,
lw;U soil.,
-; V tw;t t
\lar;:;,act \lar,ball, 1.31
Pale n' r awl Mrs lawn,: Senn rr;tc wt': -table ;mil I1,'IV i like it sere- e
!tla 1',•tt< rt,ti(bu•ted tl • (; •s -
Myth illunicinal Council
'111, r' :',II!:Ir 1;1•,'1llily Illi 1'11!I:4 ''1 110•
\I Ilei: lint C, !:!, it .•1 Illy
"t Ill. 1 i!I,I.'r 111 I:Itt!1 tt;t, 11, 111 ',
;•r;;tulL r lull' \t1th \Iorrill
;(1111 ( ,I;Iceil,,,r• B intron, 4.:vrllit.); and
Vtait.io 'wt. du,
\It11l111 , I 1.1.1
DAR
Subscription Rates $1.50 in Advance; $2.00 in the U.S.A.
FRIDAY IS FALL FAIR DAY
Corporal Gerald Maris Engagenient Announced
Arrives 1101111E \ir n'I lir•. I h )n;;!, I.;Ii,I1;15\,
Fall Fail Race Money
Doubled
t',•rp,,r,l I;trtlll Ilam, arri\e11 it 11101, o1u'n,, r Ott; tut!;,e.,nut „t
GOOD WEATHER IS ONLY ESSEN.
\,\ , .!, .i Ile te,';u, "'!, „I :'TIAL I'Olt BEST !Ant IN YEARS
wi \Il \\', -ley i:racom, I, r !1
Jti; r • ,i. ,111,1 tuttii'tiird VII IU"- Pk iII oil Tut -,lay morning allyl` Its„
lir:: of ( oink ;Tor Pairton, ',world ,e;lr, ,,,II r;i- •rrvit•e •licit ill 1':II;.,-1 \h
ed II\ 1' ,will I Ltriit•I;. CarrieI, 'laud, .\f.:,,;t, Slri;.', Italy ;incl ,', Ill,, \Ir.
t!Lta'ii'uillrHill"u,aver n'I1\ettresI r"11., I"'r".
L.,1'.\11',.',\. 1 uullrlllr r1 \\•ripll, Illat ,111• 1•;,!i 1:11 1l;ori, t'uli•ted on Septetn•i 1111• l'''''' ;!;" +' I,ILr I'i,u, II".
,., LII'er
(t •,inti 1 i\r t';r B1t1 l.ibr:t•y (t+•:ir l ler ••1111, 11)111, at London a i t traiut'1i :It .1'1ii1 r'1 S";'it, l'r.
it:. ..-i;al ,Istnitll .'rant 'Ii ?' ,tai \\I'I VI. ;r/ I Ile rkwill, hri"rr .coin 1 -----1'-----
nt't !I; .10,',!1,1, 1'11,1, I lI' Irl' ,e, e111 11t r
U„te,1 Iry ( un•ill r \Vrighl, ,,,,,i),1, i t„ .\(ru.l i, ,\,:e; 1, 1')•i,i, ;oil aril 01'11112'1' Service I o lie held
I ,1 1y t,•„u, iilor I\erniih, 111;1t Ills' ,,, .\trust ii t lrlol,l•r 19 .1,3, :incl „n t•, I In I )011(letil)Oi'(1
1'c,rivaalion , 11 1,"t I and ' in Mr"-1;-tirilt and Italy in 1Jccuniter, 1111.1. "I'bc 1:1 1t,',i:', s r\., . •!,'u•"r,(1 Ir,'
t : ina!),v Stn•t;': to Mr, Co.,rice ICa,I tact 18 •,, 11th- 1i \\;I, a scrt;(•,tnt '4 ' , ,;,I f t„II:.',' 1."d'.',• ".;;,r ti',.i awl c ,!1-
thc lath Canarli:in Totta, NI i, r Pitt, 11uder1 le, Tie light \V 'r-itipin! Pro
(':treirtl,
Ili nr, waded I,, the \\:,tern front I.. 11. Samul,r• of Inroni,', trill b:
Bills and Accounts 1„11 11:o•cil lit!,, 111.1:. 11•!'1 i!i 1.'a'ir•I'•rn k'tlitrll
(i, l.;l,vr, acv, lal),rin' .. . I,i.•?Ili ;'.,.ii r.,ll 1l,trri- t;tnlc 11,,lltc „n Ill!! Sill' •1;1y. aa0 r 11:11, ;?! I11. -;n .1.
1• B;rrr. 1,11)111!* 1.1,.;7'(_;I111r1'0111;111 ;ll,•ug \1 ill! -151n1 ,Ithcr •cr-I 1Ir,11i1..;l .I;ali !,eel ,t Ilk! Lodge
.\. \\', 1'. `mit', lire of car ?'•1111 \ ire Mena There \\ ere no oder ii,ii l , 1g., R "t, at In o',1,„ i;Ir.r.:'. ,Iridal,',
Merl \I' i;hos. Ilia of Inn,: ;,I;'J Ir nl ilii, Iii,ir!et un Illy boat 1 I:Vrre"Iv i, (-wdi:0ii\ in\i" 1" ;t!-, 1 .I.1 ;11nnI,I
\V 'Ilntvll, ,al;,:y iur .\ 11:-!11,t 15'1)1 II(' t\i..111, 1(1 1'11;1111, illi' l;11111Turnip Ir,'! that •erVit,. 1:111'!',,,,• !!1'' rare plir-i, in t' t iI'r-
111'1 •u 'i'Ihlr•, 1,11•,,
i, #
i 11• , ;,II' I;,1H1'. III, Iilt 111 ball lair
It .11"^I,! i'v tri,rled 1,r
1.1,. !!,,ll 1!a5,' rvt-r I,ien
11; ;,1'; ,!le tel"le Fair,
! ,''1 t 'i 'I•lor,,l;t1' and
I l.; 1 -lilt, i exp,C1Cd
;r,1 all n, point
,, r, "I .iiia r,11.,i1,'1'. "rhe only Ii},
;h t11,' olnr!11, n' i. ilr 111' „ 1,er1 n, flail
V,1r1-'!
fres+! , the I it ,11
been a lu;l-
•,i. II i-
tt,'athrrl!1;t1
'''n1 ll'
n:•It' e \V tt iusti;;ttcd
rut's: 2.1111 Plan' for cht;u'cllt., lr rrrrivctl from -'1'-' "' fi'•t \till! I!tr• hair, Solo,. ci trrpri,inn
J„l, (`„tt;ln. •al;n1' I"r .\ultn,t i41,1111 thein \\bile o\'el•seas
14 "chard Scott. kJ) 111.
1"t• I .\tin'^-
Il,ln'111 I'billip., rvi+air,
`loll l b,-!Iei\ 'pray +') lir){t 1'1•,
11 Phil;,, 11111:; ' rxliu:ur.,!trr,
I;it lie•Se 'grate, 1, t ii:ir r, I•'I
chemical t'llt:!IIt'
(1. ,\Il n•liue, 111;1\., t
arts riditra London roneruti' n,
n ;ire aorto;: Ill\ Il l -I;iT li-
1('.1(1 (',rr},,.t it 11, rt i,' parents lice iu
'iris Clinton and f, -r tilt' urxt 3(1 'lass he
'•-'') trill I), Visiting here ;old t iia Clinton
:.OII \Vc ;Ire v,ry glad to t,'clr"nte hint
'8Ii 11„tilt'
IIULLI:'1"1' COUNCIL
The regular it'rling of the 1lullt•tt,'
I,, ! -ii;, -,'tl, I; at1 , trio n gni hose, :Incl
i1ttCI1ditIl('C Un :1t Blyth ;L. I•'rr ill•.' ut an rxrra $''rN1,.00
SchOOI I i' pr' , ,1,11 i, , thy rare,. 7'bi
\Ilcrtrtalncl• at thy ItIttl .`rh of i, nits ,1 ' Ti-I,r„r' un'nc\' r'fivr•ed lir
up t11i, v•';Ir l','rtt' pupil- are attend..1w: . 1t1",111, 11!!'1'!! 1• on ,t par, and i11 no "t
111,• L„Ittitltt;ttil; it'll, n'1 ;Iild ;ill c III•"i--i•:,-' ;r' , rte t!1.It offered by otltvr
mew of 871. r1 i„rded in Ihr I'nblr jaw,. I."r,,1 ;r.rr It„!•r cllthu,,ia't;
Si11','d \li-• wing ;11111 NI'„ ('11!11 -1 -Ai Itl;l; 1!I!- ,1'-,, practically a,stll•e
togs 15,1, of the nett• teacher., are stay -'1 ;1 :. od r:r, ,:;Irv, Thr racy, e„n•ist
ing \villi Nle, Maitland Henry \li„ 1.'f •c 1,I, tr't 'r pace, and ;I 2,28 trot
, StitIrrl;l'I i' ,tayin, \with \I r• Bon- '•r pal.... ,\u ;,tl'lit „11,11 (t (J(I k given
„ illy racy h, ''• c coming the li,lt,q('1/4t
deal of improvement
Il;t- been done „n the track" and h \\111
gut itt 1'.wr•etlent ,tape for racing if
1,"nr,11'lr steadier prevails. Also the
1a1i,'n Coli1!,;11Itat 1Ft.t11 (',Innen Wirt „,1 :-.C111, 1,, 11)-15, in (Ilc'
n,tt
C 1' R ,e•I!e Ft est 5.(1(1 C•u1111MM y tial!. I.onlle,hnrn, the heave !\,
\f 11{'r,l by (', nncil!or, !Ki rtlick, ,e -and titre,' members of the coined he- G,
e„n,lt,1 h:. ('„lu'eill 'r, \Vrigltt, that ar- I ing pre•eut• 4 On Iiiiciii Bank Stall'
\1 r. I )•'u \I1,1 rif t has taloa, ;I 1,t'.I1
count, a, read le paid, t'an'rirrl 1 \lotion. I, It;i t n and Ictvitt ; That
\I"i - 11,1' Councillor \\Tight, ,rrrmll- idly Minora, of thy last regular ntcct-
;I, 111111„1 Inrn,htr "f ;Ile I,,c,11 (';uta
di;nl Rant: of ('t,nlnt;rce -ulff, 'Ili, nett harp, ttitt ,tabliti acrnnnnnrlali„it
ill n• I\t'I•ltii'I;, that ter ill) ire' hr al! pied as read. Parried' for 1' h,,rs tests been contplrlerl and
change in the :t;;if i, ,lite to the re;.ig-
Carried There Y: :eel' Itvi, rt:lr;tyCt, pre5,ttt i, a nor,.,i-Iteeed voucellltnry for the
(;orlon Elliott, (Teel; to report tilt In,, id cheep killed by
n;tn"n ui \Irs lir Ilarris
--\r_,^ rare men,
(I 't ,, ,\tier disru;,iuu ani! t';Irefttl
(dad To See
0ld Town Prol;'ressilm•
I'uo !".al h"r',e, \will be in the race,
c"n,illrr;ition the foll•'tlitt, tuotkns1 In Motor Accident Il'bri:t, ,,rl St:tU, tib,, in b('rn i!t
\tyre leu; through: \\lii!r rrlur) :nu :titer brim'inr her i l
• till lllnlls\ tl l 1 ll lith 1111, 11,1 , 1
11$,1 I(1 till it I'll 11it`tial' U#, IS•tl,tlg, \I :`, • I , • •• r ,'i11
\lotilnl 1t'11i11 ;11td 1 al,,1u: That he ill tlr '.11 alai••, With 1.1o\rl'1ilracy
Rt'tit\\t,Ig 111, ,Ilh,l'1'll,tl"I1, Mr 1Itiii1• its• ,I, 11111:, 1,ei,Itititi1 tkle stint of 1 "I'ttiitt;t \\:'"I`i l ltgtll't'tl itt a t!t''to:' '
i 'drit'inc, \11. Tor won ' first; and
I C Sloan, of Toronto, ha, the following IlVelwr ,I' li t; s for our steel, killed It acrid, nl ;It th; ,C110 '1 hoose corner,
1
t„ ';11 : I south I,t ti It •.bur ', : he approach foln'fb ;I! Ihr I (r:ru, f ;lir on Salm-
"
tit','. l'ar i it ll:
1, 1 ,rr ir,vn the paper Ilial tht n!il lotus I \lotion 'i, Ie,vtt 'url Brown: That led lily ''ornt'r, a cat' drivl'n ly N11%
a, tor.:int ileal', 11;1\'lllg r'lalli,hed ll,' ice p;lt lame, Nltd(I 111, sunt of i\w':I\•t, :Victor Kennedy dune ons of the ,i1le-
ne1C these I:i tort tt Itirit seem'• (o hr
I for a sh:cp It all, null -lc ran int" il.
(It)ll;n', ant fifty cents tt,ltnnl:' illi- "tit' -Mr' '1'nrwcy wa;
relelt, ";,tt'tt t;t!tt it'the 1'titll• gl'+lt'tlrg liuttl ';tl, partietll;tilt \11'• lt•itttyd\•', i
;killed by dog;. C.arri,t!' pint, ,l ag:c:u`1 Ile good pacer, Lady
I'l'l,"I•I, tilk"l'l'>, to the hell' \'rllllll'C ('t tt t i ittiC;lllu:i were
tlCll t','ad-,`\ 1\'l'rt- e`.ieit•Iwet+: ,1,,,,,,,,„„,,,I. bit 1 '1•tlllt-,
and nlav it 1`1o,,ri,l in Ile 1•e;t•, ahead ucle m, one rias hurt• liters,
Irlilr fr„'1; .1. 11, Erskine, re read
i' lnlered in'the '.-'` 'Trot or face n•in
N1,' ln'•1 ,etches 1n the felt' old buys, --V---
er', tial: "I Lards in :\rl'r;lrs of Taxes, br ih;lt'h 111a?!iritic;' localll tll,n,
:1!111 girl still li\ing in tie place Whet`'' \t,lc!nlirr Idle, 1!!I I1111i01' 11al'1i1C1'S 1 ild
I fir,.! rays Ille light of tial, t'+ttrseif ittl pae,r. Thi. I'•'rrr i, olrnrd h1' T R
\Irnicul 4, Prowl' ant! Iettilt : Thal Institute illeet I\1';Its' n, an,l is brin.l 11riv -n bs C,cnrgc
included 1Ii regular meeting "i the Junior
..,_,_\r ihr arro,ntts a, read h, paid. Carried. h;n•uur, ;Ind Inslitntr Hill br hell! in \Ir\:111• ]1111!, II,'n!ry l;l, been d'tint
\lotion 5, R,i1'snit awl Ittrlit ; That exceptionally Will 111 iltl: races ( Hili
1 , , the C'uuniil Ili' n,nc "Wiwi."' Carrirtl. die L'llth \!tr?''ri;ll II;III, tlli, 'I'lurs- 1
Mill th I.-sr-0-11_1
undo Intititu1,( ! we;ll,
(hi 'Thursday, tic rtrnther hili at '•til Acccunts lar cviniig ;II )+•,;11 ,\II member, ;try
sttrulEurcid t,t Icy 1,rr'.ent ;toll a spceiai in -I The Vail' Ground, >honlrl present
trite a carttiw;ll at5pe;trattcc this year,
\ 11 irhv:Iy, ftatu1'Ill the popular
Nlerrt•-Ii ,-R,'und, loll many. n other
5t ill Chid -1,1,11,w `loot Ile Irrok,'
i!1 lir t!iird brat, ''thertvi-n
bate had three first, In
p est ;It the hunt: of \Ir and \Irs Lorne Relit'(( _..._..
-d-t'ilnv;ctair the regular monthly meet-
ing "f th' \Vnrtul', luslilntc. teas hell!,
with iirc.itlent and steret;o•y condt,ttiu.:;
ift'.•r ,il:. itlg npeuin {)'1c,
!Irl reltetlitlg rit'., prayer in ttni,ntt•
'I•tvo \tome,' \\'t'rr appointed to take
";Ire t l clotllin• hen!" 1 (u'b I I for
I l !
ocr,ea• •hipn,'nt, namely', \It`,Ilantt';
\VIII 1"Irl,ttui ;Ind I, -criutge.,ur. \Irs
.yddiatt rel, rigid anotiyr box paclt:d
II sent to "Tin: l.'ilktl',t\-II 8nldll'l'"
at not lt;iVe :ally. near 1'r Aust
frieutl,• I'b,; \\•olntn'S institute lave
been f„rt\:trllin}; 1';11.11 month, ,heli ;t
gift b x and front letter s received
'awn; mother'', .
I. I ll I I i l l II made It 11,1
11 I
pl. \Ie,1itttt s 11 hill, I,'lul \\'arsn,
and b !lair:ton arc a (' rttttiiittt•t' t1' com-
pile the Lady '1 trcrrl,uluir Village. Scrip
1Bn 1;• liar to illness Miss O'('uiior
of ('i\ \ \ \\';Is ttnal)Ii to tic presrnl,
I r•tli;lilt llainton gave an out-
standing pap, r ,which will be pllhli,hcll
'at a Etter (bate in Thy Si;imlard• Nett,
sp;lrr Ilii, „'ct•I: WA:, to l'ru5\•drll t , in-
t
etitI Ill, !at ielt•
The S:,I,lin" Si -syr itnync( usually
held in Niter,11'cr Will be in O('tr,ttct'
I the ,late 1n be •t't at. the October mctt-
ti iu,c• \Ir; hired Itullcdgr drrtnm<Ir;ltetl
`i very e!t"•ctrl\• "Moder t"1' bulli: tlrt'sti-
I tit eking' \Ir, .\ 'T;tel 'I' it is Inrl;y goer:.
\VI
\\'• Tyndall ,,:vvrance damage
Rclnu'Iiv Drain ...-..
ii
.\ dams scw-.ancc damage
Kennedy Wain ..-...-_..
l (a'tt'r severance damage
hinnydy !train .
tier rgr Cowan tramps supplies .-
lute, 1 eishtll;tl ,Ilttp I:illcil
Jame, \irdd sheep hilted ....--
!ant:, \It' 1(1 sheep killed
Clerk \!orris id rks fees Young
1)r,lin ...-
Ih,uliniutl Roast \Iaclt Co.
Grader
No Il'r Supply (,u. culvert ......
I'elll;t' People
t'iU:tiun ,t) anl011V \t'i,hin; 10 joie.
50•(10 +
1V. 11. S. III EE'l'INr t,,tln , And :tt,'';letit,ns l\ ill be ,,n the
-15•ull The \1'oul<11! \I i 1 Sot,•, l of ,
the L'iytl unit, tl Church suet on 'roes- 'grounds.
dls afternoon, `t•pt,•!llhcr 11th, in the ,\ttr"Ilt, Hu- exhibit, of livestock will
_6.00br the 11nl,le'll-1 rit.;In Mel: and
ha,eun'nt of the church \Vitlt :r good al-!
(1.00 1\'Mite tit iv. 'There arc °eel' 1(11) e"-
137-00
, 1
L'.Ull t''ndanre 11 r, \1'illi;uu I Il t.l
ill rllargr of the deroti{,nal p;ul of rite airs in illi, ,I't'\t•, 'I'hrre mill al`o be
1125!1 the Blclil Sin rli,n't l'alf ('Inh i 'r -
1'a0 meeting ;mil \Irs Harold Phillip, had
charge of the still ou utissi cork hihit ;in'I fnll entries are expected in
i Ind conditions of life in Africa \ 'III tiler
f(L(1(l•' .\ ,"itl,,tll tort-ownynt betn•een three
nnuthct' of "Did you knott." ,cntcn'c:
\erre giri'tt by ;Pe!nlit'r The \l issiotl I"rnl tsar., it!s tri. Auburn awl West-
..
1'•I,C firth \\'ill be played during the latter
-til .\Ilgnla, C"I1'11,1`1leell 111 Ititiri, 119, I1,11'
1S't•55 rt of (tit' :Iltel•noon.
a nn'mltr,lip of 15,(It111 \I r, \\'igllt - '
1 tnmt
r ' Wider Iwa\
- -- nYlli -;1;11:1'
;tVv ;t tv'tt+t'rattt'v i't';itliitg lt;lr- • i
I iordnn Rathr'r l gas nil ittr grad.. ,11),00 ly ;II 1.,111 \,'illi a p:u adv of local ;1,111
1;1"rgc (';trier eul\'ert ........_". -. 1,20 lune and Ltik )."1.1":";.'
olcrty rcnlit'rcrl a \reef'
3.tM).11m' piano (hn't 1i -trim ,clouts I'' the gronids, hearted
Harold 11:.acten culvert .......... ... . b\' tie l.nrhn'nw I'ipi, land, \Ir train
Robert Riley \wrrlis (1.801 ltrs Sinclair had charge of the iusi- its ittrl \\ill igen Ili' bail, and \lr
George Radford levelling roads 115,110 nt ,.. part of the nlrcting :1 d;tiull' 'I' et Iir(rt .'I ('I \\ n'ill be \faster
William Carter siptrintendcitt. 411.)5 lunch \was srrlt(i r
A. Weymouth grader operator . -1.1.n7
F. Vanderburg \\Ted' . ... .............. _'•-ltl , W. A. Meeting;
i iyerge \fall treed, .. - . .. --. ;.1111 I be regular \I nntitly \I citing of the
lt'I.1"
\\'' 'nl:nt', Association of the 1.'nited
c, •t
_^.v Church \\a, bill on 'Tucsda\', tieptcm-
cr I II h, I'resil!t est, 11,t':. I. 11, )'tulips,
Nele r Section Foi'eliniii presided.
C. P. R. \lettitlg opal ell by all rcpyalin; the On Thr Merit .1rinstrong Company n'ill •
I.ItrrI ' prayer in nni•„i. The tulnntt's
Mr 1i.rhert Itt'nttr has received lilt' o3 tic I'or!n'r ntt'rtit \were rind ;Intl eutertttir), and the "dance tvi11 he held
ppuillllllt'lll ai Section 1'oreul- 1,11 ill Ile I,,tsrlllelll In!b'1\•lilt; the concert.
1 l P'r'ep ;1111 the I rea,lll--1•'S t•iprl.1
non In,+del re;ue,enled an+l rcrciVr'l a lite Canadian Pacific Itailtway freer, I iAll
rt+:t I.
It,ul to the
Blit t lair this
i gt1'rll. I)III'Itlg llC lllsllll'„ Wil'„11,11 it •\'t';I1', )h,,llt 111155 it, 1'I'I(1a1' 15 Ile 1>Ig
beautiful in,wln"t of gladioli
urrettlins, the late ( '•'+•le: Bell. 1\••I; hrunght forth that \Ir<, 1iilcw;
R1'll !'all 5V;1, ai'ncr,d t t "\11 1"tr- \I r. 1t,'\tcr's appointment is tt'cll
artier!, lie` I la1.11'g commenced employ.
- - - ' ` _
not \with the lural section g;mg in
'1',3. prior to that lints he \\'a5 twilh
lever exrh'ul¢r' \t 1be I'1011.111'1011 of 11 l l' 1 l' I I' 'I f"r rinnion of Alnico, llo(tand, win ccic.
I , rte., int' the 11'rnlan's .\„nriati 'n tt, he
Ihr merlin:; a drliglill"nl Illy tea \way tiVr yr;u<• br It,l his hirthdal• ort Monday,
;11 thy rt 1 .•t \ '
n',ic„r, being \Irs 1. tict•inl- Mr. (;Irl; ("nus n<. cif \c\aught will: tenlber lith.
11 r, .lrlctta Pr;u, 11rz E \trrh in (Irtlll rr, fm' the National I
take Ir 1)rxlcr'S glare a; ser"I)ct l'I thing collection ill C;ula,L1. j Concr;tnLtton': 1,1 M'ks Perm' Pol-
itic!' rl ill ,old 11 vs \Lu t;arei Marl::: ratan. \l r .111:;n I;r est is the junior l tt d \t ho will rrlrlrale her hirtblay
\les til ClIcnew at IIIc Ia,l three g ithi cone, onilV, (add; !Ire, of ;
Ili'!Itll'r of thy section g;tlt'• I'1„teit' :t!i t \ 1-iti!Ig: (,'ttlittlttre, rl'1'nrl-''II S;llllt'd;'t, St';Ititlll'et' 15th..
nitrtiuv, las tread interesting Blank N- i,ratulatioi' ;u'e dtie Mi'. Ite.\te!" 1 I ('on'.:r;i Iti'n, t,. Mr and \fry C, 1)
c,l for the pact ,two tuonth,, ru,iceti''+I !'
t'ereri!'ni'-t, and race starter.
.\ good adder,s system trill
hr ;tv;lil;tltir fo' annotnitcnlentt.
Si ore cards for the races will be
;IV;lil;ltle, and seating rapacity for
111111 assures a pleasant :Ifternool,.
In thy evening there twill he a Cntt-
rt rt ;nlll ll;inve itt the \I'-nlorial 11.111.
(croup \void(' cater b' the Lions C'Iub,dav,
1J..\ \ICI\ctli.:r, pre;ideal, eon -'t It airs tt ji t u
,',2,r,llnnt:•
S. ('lnlle\\ and \I i' , ,1. Brigham 'Welk' ' 11't
ti n dt•attir and Iuan1- Ilcllrfnl i,Ica, I I (t ,, ilnlati, u, in 1'lc, i ettt' liar-
:,,, I'lc nliuulr,;
lappoinlrl to lank after Iles' clothing
•I' an,lr tan , ;1 t:'u;I R. \\';It',
Int'etlit" \\ tie it ny ,it)a::
Hind' \I„rritt, Barbara i il- ,t . 1 1I I n + • Scouts. 'Rooms tilt' lu,l 1 • )
and I;, rni.'t• \Ic\;III :g;tve read- I.:your.
Shall al'tC I as pianist, owing to illy 11 { l'C't• ii`tt, 15,111 !old ;t •pl,ttthtl
!..0 )r1 alt Litt "TIle little L tt,iut'„ aril
scncr o1 Iran Mudd, Eleanor Brttvite i Nil's, tt ,rslal! 1 1,1 another Chapter
;uta 11;u'gnerit" Mali tial p;l,:;lg,, "11;d1, ut "Tonins 'I'tvo-\\'Ilt'cls" Joan l"n leiter" and card... from our lural on Ili, appointment
oct'ru'as b:,ys Neto haver rrrriVrll rint- 'li rent:, ,i Ii txt' 6 "mail donations, 17 l.eitli, of {.1st, "'t 1, \' !+n celebrate their
scripture, suitably t„ the commencing Philp called the roll, and t'weryonl', alt- 2 I'?Il \\ l'ilihllo :\Illllwl'I.;cel nil their-
ohtr,, oil: lrct;r err ,t'it lu Ilrnt ll'ont IN WINGHAM HOSPITAL b Hurt, ''f Ilot\ i r,, parr, I, "I Sunday
of ;rlt' !l, ,trout learn+±!,g awl ,wisdom, i;5\rred with a 1'ibli Vase on "Love', day, c ,lentlr^t ib.
Itrtcrt l't!;n•Iyr and jack 'I'yrvnuol re- Cllil'Irrtl arc reminded to he preparing lilwlll \\*tumor': lu,lilnlr. :\ hearty \I;i,ter 11cnl,i: \\'aynnolll, i< a 1' ;tiling to Shill-T1H, S (tel 1Ve11 vara; I
welcome i, eslenl'll to aIL (Mile ;Hill I'
Ilicllt its tltc t.1'iughattl IItt pita! \whir. is ,t out allyl made 17 calls, ('inr.11• ir" n, 'r \fr:. G Tl Lrilli
he tindyr,v'eltt LI'. operation for .tppl'ildi 1
'11'11111'1 \\;1, bri'ttv11 to ;l clr;e b\ nl l.. ,t ti ti tit ('l'1,1,1'all's hr" btrtl-
lnju+' a eery pleasant and hen,firi:d,
;Illcrnu `tl _
iritis Sunday nit;ltt. T all
repeating Cllr \lizpah il,nrdieti :n ''.1 on 5 iturday, `"i''' ''1 ,t I•
(wired the olio int;, Shirley Falconer for Ihr "Stile '•f \\'t,rk 'l'llc
read the seriltittie pa,"age, of the five nl'.'eliug cl,rcll hl' .III epcal'iig "\\'orld
loaves am 4 t\to 3i Ise:. the Birthday lritnttsllip Prayer,"
x •,
CK
Me
e Plague of
The outdoor man, nhether he he
farmer, truck driver, or railway
op"rator, is often subject to backache.
This may he the result of exposure
to cold and dampness or the result
of strain from the jolting and
bumping of the vehicle he rides.
To many people, lvomen as well as
men, it would 1 great to he free of
backache—one of the most common
and annoying of ailments. And here
is low you may he relieved of back-
ache and other symptoms of poisons
is the blood.
Chic ooh' Men
The treatment suggested is 1)r.
C'hase's .Kidney Liver 1'ills, ily
reason of their stimulating action ort
hath the liver and kidneys!, von have
two chanees to one of getting relief
from \'our backache by wing I)r.
Chasers Pills. The torpIid liver is
aroused to action, the Kidney's aro
stimulated and consequently these
organs help to purify the blood of the
poisonous impurities which bring
pains and aches anti tired feelings.
Keep regular and keep well by
using 1)r, Chase's Kidney Liver Pills.
3Let3. a box.
NABBED AT LAST
One of the last of Hitler's hench-
men to be taken by the Allies is
Martin Bormann, above, chief de-
puty of the Nazi Party, listed as
one of the most -wanted major war
criminals. Bormann rose to power
As Hitler's right-hand man after
the disappearance of Rudolph Hess
In 1341. He'll be an early defend•
art at the Nuernberg trials,
Britain's Clothing
Ration Shrinks
,,re-ident of
the C ,ar,l of Trade, a:: i i'.t:ced a
Cut ,ri ]ir.Ccin'_ a','3';
010'11,i ration.
Oft,
pr.-
,
: 1
Can
pv 1 11
r.t h•, r• ('1
p,pint • ..• t .,. ..:1.. 'f.,
get .1 "; ; .int • a man
in!1<t I ,. .."i from
the .. l ,; .. le•ri 01, and, 0104
„.J.,• ;,(1,1 fn N1 t: Vo t,
thr,•, "r,t!tl(•s" annually, and ,-(un'-
time- '1s many a= four.
OTTIMI REPORTS
That Coarse Grains Carry -Over
In Canada This Year Is
Smallest Since 1940
'\'his year, when Isle worn! food
-!:nation is in a critical condition,
the crop prospects for coarse
gait:, in Canada are decidedly
poorer than they weir a year ago;
and coupled with lower production
the smallest backlog of grain
carry-over since 1 941), The situation
is outlined in a report issued by
11' Dominion Bureau of Statistics.
In eastern Canada the carry-over
i, insignificant, and in the west-
ern provinces it Is 30'7, smaller
than a year act.
To alleviate the western sllort-
ago, shipments of coarse grains
to the east have been suspended
until after mid-September. The
great drop in prairie production—
amounting to 100,000,000 bushels
of oats and 30,000,000 bushels of
barley—has been caused by drought
and cool weather,
In Manitoba and eastern Sask-
atchewan crop prospects halo
been favorable, and in Ontario and
Quebec barley promises to yield
well, with average prospects for
oats. The yield of oats and wheat
in British Columbia is expected
to be good.
During 1914.45, exports, plainly
to the United States, have exceed-
ed those of a year ago. The Feeds
Administration has now placed
rigid restrictions ou the export of
barley and oats from Canada for
the present.
r. 4
This tial', war mcanorials are
2:,Ingt to serve Useful and valuable
The civic consciousness
by Canadians through
'oar ttf,rts will be turned to
I,i11in; pra(tical community pro -
such is recreational and cul
c -entre: (lerlicated to those
='d','e their lives in this war.
Substantial federal help in both
;draining and financing is p1'Ontl-
ivr•rl. .\ctually it is all part of the
Ilan for reconstruction and full
,•mp;uyment, and in order that
these plans c1111 he made efficient,.
the government lays down one
condition—construction must be
undertaken only when the federal
government. give.; the go-ahead
signal; otherwise a big project
might be commenced when the
Libor situation is tight. if, how-
ever, communities wait until the
employment graph he:rins to drop,
the work offered by the projects
will fill a vital need.
DEVASTATION UNLIMITED
That Is vista presented in this picture of bomb center of Hiroshima
after descent of atomic destruction from U. S. plane. Picture was
obtained from Jap Domei News Agency by U. S. Army. Note
Catholic church In foreground.
Conscription
R01nains In Force
In Great Britain
Prime Minister Says Germany
Defeated But Unrepentant
111 a straightforward statement
t., the British people 1'rinlc \lin-
i,ter Atlee ha; explained \vhy
con;Criptiun mint remain in force
in I':ngland ..to meet the coutinu-
in4 needs of the services and ill
particular to release tho-e who
hate been serving in the tsar,,'
Genitally is defeated hilt unre-
pentant: "\\e mint continue to
find large forces for the occupa-
tion of the British zone." :\ hard
and dangerous winter lies ahead
on the \whol( l',mtinent: " \1'e
must take our share in establish-
ing conditions which \t ill allow of
fees .n-tructiun 111111001 wiolcncc.1
* f 4
'then do 1 c are Britain's obliga-
tion; in the last: "The occupation
of lap;111 and the restoratior of the
territories of ourselves and our al-
lies will need substantial forces for
some time to conic:" Veterans
who have done the actual fighting
overseas, and who now leant badly
to conic hook, can be released
front the performance of these new
duties only to the extent that new
men are provided in the necessary
numbers: "The maintenance of
adequate forces by sea, in the air
and on the ground is vitally neces-
sary if we are to fulfill our obliga-
tions to our allies and if we are to
see that what has been won in the
war is not lost in the immediate
post-,\ ar period."
%+ 4 4
.\s \11'. Attlee reminds both his
people and our own, "those who
rcnit'utber the disturbed period at
the end of the last war will remem-
ber that one of the prime ditiicul-
ties of the situation was the ina-
bility of the Powers which had
t\ on the war to provide the neces-
sary forces for the prevention of
violent action by sectional inter-
est.; pending the completion of ne-
gotiations for world peace." This
time, "\1'c must not fail the world,
11'e have fought for democracy.
\Ve must insure that the condi-
tions for its exercise exist, All
this reacts 011 oar situation here
today.
Popular Popcorn
Americans Unls't like popcorn,
because nearly 300,000 acres of it
hare been planted this year; the
liking is growing because this is
an increase of 68 per cent over last
year's acreage.
You Will Enjoy Staying At
The ST. REGIS HOTEL
rono;v'ro
• Et cry Romp v.1111 limb, Shute.
er and I'elephone.
al Single, $2.nO op—
Double, Sam up,
• Hood Loud, Dining and Orme.
Ina Nightly
Sherbourne at Carlton
Tel RA 4135
WANTED
lD
Agents to sell from door to door.
We have four articles that will
sell to every family. Low prices
and big profits. Write
ATLAS SUPPLY COMPANY
37 Pearl Street
Boston 10, Mass.
for common ...s'
ordinary sore
throat ®n
>Z�S.0"U9
aS
sl
)
▪ „.
_; 14.;' Vii•
•
•
Sold by all Druggists -25c,
35c (tube), 50c and $1.00
!!OiNT-MENt
Here's a SENSIBLE way
to relieve MONTHLY
FEMALE PAIN
Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound
not only helps relieve periodic pain but
ALSO accompanying nervous, tired,
ltighstrung feelings—when due to func-
tional monthly disturbances. It's one of
the most effective medicines for this pur-
pose. Pinkham'sCompound helps nature!
Follow label directions, Try iti
o C O3 n4!`ha4na vcRU NE
COMPOUND
GOVERNOR-GENERAL'S FAMILY
Canada's newly appointed Governor General, Field Marshal Sir Harold Alexander, is well-known to
many Canadian soldiers who served under his general command during the campaigns which con-
quered Sicily and Italy. His wife, Lady Margaret Alexander, is pictured here with her three child-
ren at the family hone, "The Vale", In Windsor Forst, Berkshire, England. Left to right: Shane
William Desmond, 9; Lady Alexander; Rose Marie, 12; and Brian James, 6.
Paper Salvage
Still Necessary
Paper salvage will continue dur-
ing the post -tsar years, states the
Chatham News, In fact, it may
become a permanent institution.
Canada's wood pulp resources,
from which paper is made, are
fast being depleted, and until the
government undertakes a COill-
prehensiv'e plan of reforestation to
supply future needs, the shortage
IS apt to become even more acute
Paper is needed for many pur-
poses in peace as well as in war.
Salvage collectcrs are able to make
a nice profit from the sale of waste
paper, to assist in public and pa-
triotic enterprises which will al-
ways he necessary, and the paper
thus contributed is welcomed at
the mills where it is reprocessed
with successful results,
IIA.IIY CHICK'S
FREE RANGE PULLETS 12 WEEKS
up to 26 weeks, Day old chicks
hatched to order for Fnll deliv-
ery, Top Notch Chlcl(erlea,
Guelph, Ontario,
FREE RANGE PULLETS, TWELVE
weeps up to laying. Also day-old
chicks hatched to order for Fall
delivery. Tweddle Chick hatch-
eries Limited, Fergus, Ontario.
YOUR FALL CHICKS SHOULD DE
ordered now. have a few started
chicks on hand, i)ray HIatchery,
130 John N„ Hamilton, Ont.
IIf51N1:Fti Ot'l'OR'1'1'\1'1'11:5
R.C.E. PRESENTATION
HOME
215.1 Eglinton Avenue,
Toronto, Ont.
T:l'll,T EY VETERAN S.1PI'lsR 1'.
Del Greco. .1n exceptionally beau-
tiful modern home, gum wood
trim, hardwood floors, electric
refrigerator, range, lighting fix-
tures tiled sink and bathroom,
inlaid linoleum In kitchen, Vene-
tian blinds, attached garage. Pro-
ceeds of shares are to be used
to build a Memorial IInll as n
notional U'Ihutl' to all Royal Can-
adian Engineers, Shares promptly
In:1llerl, $1.00 each,
$7,000 OPTIMIST HOME
"MAY BE YOURS"
ALSO PARTICIPATE IN 150,00
monthly Pond draw. Other p1'1::1"5,
Retails on receipt. Shares 11.00
each or 6 for 95.00. Fend for
shares to Si, Catharines Optimist
t.'lub, Box 115-11., St. Catharines,
Ontario,
DYI:I\(1 AND CLI;.tNING
IIAV1: YOU ,1NV'1'IIIN(1 NEEDS
dyeing of cleaning” \Vrlto to us
for Information. We are glad to
a115IC1• your g11eStlntl9. 14part-
meet 11. 1':u•kcr's Dye \Vorlo
Limited, 79I Vonge Street, To-
ronto.
EA 1E11 11A1:11151:81' I'llll SALE
SA\V VEIL — MASSEY 11,0 \I.:It
Buller on rubber, with feeder
and blower in Ruud repair. Larne
Kew, 11, 1. Thames ford, Ont.
N1;\\• 1(111GGS & S'l'R.l'I"1'(1N .\IIt-
cooled gasoline engines. Most me
lo -date engine tu:lde. 1,1(0 cost.
Re:4lrrs ur111•1s rosined, Srnpc
Soles a'"., Ilex S,,!', Ottawa, (int,
25 1.51.1,0N 1011LK t'HII;IRN, DE
1,'1val. 14001 pies ('renn1 Separator
complete, Antique Shue, 1901 Pape
A11'nue, 'Toronto,
"VIKING" 1'114.\51 S1;1'.\1tATOI{S
011(1 repair parts aro always
aV:Iil(ble (:ith,:r at your local
dealer or dlrert f•not SW0111511
Separator Co. Limited, 720 Nutrc•
Dame West, Montreal 3, One.
FOR 5.11,1:
'41 BUICK SEDAN
1Y11,1. 1111 SOLD von 11.001 TO
holder of lucky ticket at I'ielter-
ing Rotary Fair, October 17. Send
11.110 for five tickets to Pox 200,
Pickering, 0111,
1942 PONTIAC TORPEDO
Si:D.1N WILT, 111: SOLD TO 1101,1)-
0' of winning ticket, to be drawn
In llespeler, Thanitsglving Day.
Tickets 25e, 6 for 91,00. Proceeds
Kinsmen Service Charities. Send
for tleltcts to Kinsmen club, Box
428-t',7.., llespeler, Ont.
26-1100101 111)T1'1I. 1"01t SALI': IN
Tfalartie, In Quebec mining dis-
trict, next to but: terminal.
Charlie's lintel, \L'tlnrtlo, t,1uehre.
ISSUE 37-1945
Britain Not Giving
Away Hong Kong
It i, apparent the .\ttlee Go-
vernment itt Great Britain has 110
iutcntinn of ligttidating the Brit -
Empire, comments the \Vincl-
sor Star, Pronouncements of
Prime Minister Attlee and Foreign
Secretary Nevin intimate that Brit-
ain i, going right ahead in as -
stinting It leading role in world
affairs.
Some people thought the first
thing a Labor Government in Brit-
ain \\•Quid do would be to toss the
British Empire to the winds.
Even with In(lia, Mr. Attlee has
been careful to explain that freed-
om will be granted India, as soon
as the people of India are fit to
govern themselves. That policy is
along the lines of former Govern-
ments in India.
FOR SA L11
U1' 'I'0 1)AT1: DRUG SPORE
equipped With Sorin Fountain
Service and Souvenir Shop, Good
business all year round, Reply to
I'oit•as Pharmacy, 210 101.4(1) St.,
Ln chute, Que., 15 miles from
10fontreal.
ELEC'I'ltlC 510TOIIS, NI:\\', USED
bought, sold, rebuilt; belts, put-
Ieys, brushes. Allen Electric Com-
pany Ltd., 2326 Dufferin St., '1'o•
root°.
ELECTRIC MOTORS
REWOUND AND REPAIRED. EX -
pert workmanship, Moderate
prices. Lloyd 111, Bet 1ger, \tunlc•
ton, Ontario.
D1'N-DACiI'S KENNELS, REGIS•
tered, for 1)achshun(1 puppies.
Write 136 Riverside Dr., \,'est•
mount, Weston, Ontario,
1':11t3IS F4I11 SAI,\;
75 .1('11E5 10011. 8.11J•:, 00011
buildings, 2 miles to Barrie, 8
acres wheat, 12 acres clover, 25
acres ploughed. Plenty water;
1001 feneed; hydro (\'l(Oahlo,
Possession Oct. 1; 92700 down.
.4 poly I:nrl Barren, Barrie, Out,
NORTH BAY 1)ISTR1("r — 1G0
atvrs, free and clear deed. Cloud
road to property, Good hunting
:and fishing, '1'o101 price 1500, II'
you want a quiet property in a
good place to relax, give me a
call. Several more properties 1n
none district, Geo, Wight, 303
('anadt( 111114., Windsor. Unt,
21 .1,'111;5 l'l'1' F.1 1131, 16 AC11I:S
of fruit trees, 1)010 modern 5-r0o111
(Iwelltn4 with 511ec abuse fur 3
additional rooms; large enclosed
veranda, double garage, 2 Iv 110‘
Hydro, modern conveuienee0, 9
1/111 terms to suit. ,1 bargain for
the shrewd bus er. 5. \'llJk(u\,
11.11. 1, School 11(1., N logos -un•
the Lake, Unt.
HUNDRED ACRE '1'UI1ACCO 1'.511 J1
for sale, sixty acres 'l'uhncco hold
11(111- kilns, g'rc'Nnhotl: e 27 x 11' -
ft„ bank luau ivits llnplcrw•nt0
Apply lu Paul I'aloth as, 11.1E
I'hamesvl1le, Ont.
1•'.11151, NEIN '1'(.)\\'NSIIII', CLOSE
Erin Village and 21 Hight%1IS.
Ilas building, spring eteelc, lalc1
(•ell:•, 51(1:111 0101110 hu: h. 9511 acre.
Open for offer. Int€resled In
quick sale. Lot 20, ('on, II, Erin.
150 ,lt'I;I;S 111' I:UUD I..\Nit 1011
sale on county 1um!, 14 mile to
highway and village, with 140011
buildings. Apply to Evans \\'ard
l'Inl'enlrtlnt, lint,
a11;DIC.11,
0001) 11ICsVLT1 — I1VEItV sty
0.11.1* front lth(1uuultic Pains lir
Nrurilts 1111001d tri fllxun's Rem-
edy. Jlunro's Drug. store, ;t 3, El.
gin, Ottawa. Postpaid 11,1111.
5'I'(Mat'11 AND 'l'IlDEAD 11'UIt11s
often tele the cause of III -heat!
Ih
humans, all ages. No one nn
mane! \\'ily not find out If fil-
ls you) trouble.? Int( (0511ng bat
llcul:ts—free! \\'rite \lulten V •
Remedies. Speen' lists Toronto :1
IBAtit111:1:1(A I'0O(41 11A1,51 Inti
stroys offensive odor not 13
45c bottle, Otto wit atter t Lento:,,
Drug Slot 0, 01 w
'1'115' 17'! 14\'I:1tY St'I'1'1•:111;8 0I'
Rheumatic fain:: or Neuritis
should try Dixon's 1tcn(dy.
Munro's Drug Store, 335 Elgin.
Ottawa, l'ostpald
TIIULY REMARKABLE is
the "!Radiant Boast" use:di
in the manufacture of
Maxwell House Coffee. It
captures all the flavor and
goodness because it roast:
every coffee beton evenly,
all through!
HOTEL METROPOLE
All Beautifully Furnished
With Running Water.
Rates:
$1.50 up
NIAGARA FALLS
OPPOSITE
C.N.R. STATION
11AI1)1)1114SSlt1G
L L A It N HAIRDRESSING THE
Robertson method, Information
on request regnrdln1 classes,
Robertson's Hairdressing Acud•
only 1107 Avenue Itnn(1. Tcronlo,
01t'SI(':\L INSTRUMENTS
('111,1 A. 11UDDiNG'rON BUYS,
sells, exchanges musical Instru-
ments. 11) Church, Toronto 2
1)I'I'11It'I'l:NI'I'I1;. 11)11 1111011,:A
BE A l-IAIRDItESSlilt
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING Sul Ball;
Creat Opportunity, Learn
Hairdressing
Pto3snnt dignified profession, good
wages, thousands successful Mat vel
gr:oluates. America's gren lest sys-
tem, Illustrated calnl0Ru0 ft ea.
\\'rite or call
h1ARVh:I. iIAIIRDR1:SSIN(t
Sl'l1OOl,S
3911 IILOUR 1\'., T11RON'I'(1
Iranches• 44 Kinn St. ilamilton
ti• 74 Rideau Street Mtn tea
('1111'11)4111 5 ('111
TRY CANADA'S LARGEST
PHOTO FINISHING STUDIO
Uel better tortures 111 soh ('0I cu: t,
Don't mite eh/limes with )oar fRm
rolls You can't lake "snaps" over
again
l'It05111' 51A IL. SERVICE
Any Size Noll — 1, or h Expo:ines
I)E0'EI.11I'I•:Il AND PIG N'I'ED 25c
A customer In (_'ape !Ireton 855), "1
have been sending 011(15 to you for
4 or 1 years. Would not send them
11(15 (• here else "
SIT.( -1/11. A1.13L!,MM ell-1-clz
New Style :\Intim With Prints
51101 16.20-127 If 29r
(le exHal 1= 00111 with film roll.
SI'I'Ct,\1, I'i:l('I:s ON
1'ItANI INC ANI) ('(}l,0111NG
Etna rgements 1 x G" 1)1 nott/11111(1
easel mounts, 't for 25e hrnmett
on ixet(• tin1('11 tun ts, 7 x 9" In
Gold, Siltet•. ('irr:w-in, Walnut ''r
Black I:betty 11(111.11 Ramps. 5!',• each,
If enl.lrceinent colored 79r e•o•11,
OLD PICTURES RESTORED
\\'e r:1n restore 0 n old one te staph
or 1napt•hnt and make any
number of prints (0 villa rgemenls
desltt(I The process food res the
(sorb 0t spilled nrh'-(s, but tho
cost Is reasonable Send us your
picture :old tell u- what you want
done and 501. wit) 1(1! }nu the cosi
before d(1ng the 4(.1.11
STAR SNAPSHOT SERVICE
:lox 12!1, 1'ns1a1 Termin:ll A. 'I'ot(nlo
Print Name and Addr001 I'1nlnly ort
TIME TESTED QUALITY
SERVICE and SATISFACTION
\'tine itlms propel Is 10leloped and
printed.
f 011 8 115 1'1)511111: [111,1 ,14 25c
I1l:1'111N1'S 8 for 25c
El NEST ENLARGING S1:11Vi('I1
1'011 may not Ret all the films you
10:111, this year, but you can gel 11l1
Ikt• gllality' and serVl,'e you deslro
by sending your flims to
(11I'1;t11,t1, Pt11I'I'(b 51;ltVICE
Sta lion 1. 'Tnrnnlo
PA'I'U:N'1 5
I'I';T115)114 01511.11(1111 & ('44111'155 Y
Palc01 Solicitors. I:slahlIshed
18!10: 1.1 Kinn W0:), Toronto,
Booklet ,.f !Worn10(ton on te-
nors)
WAN'1'1'l►
\y.\N'I'I;D-_1, 011 15 'IO:S GAR,
den land with rn1:111 (1%Yellin/I
and greenhnul1 and 100tet', Nia-
gara (lit- (vie( preferred: mibstnn-
tial cash. \\'rile T. C. I'iOher, 31
Hertford .5 vv., Tot onto.
ty:1N'1'51 111 l'i It' li,\sl': ('t'1.•
lett all nerds II (oil 8 (weeks ,111
In 1ty!111' I0'''1 priers pa Id. Apply
to !lox 35. 73 Adelaide 11'., To-
ronto.
PP
nullify 7tk
CIEZEHECIE'S
91 of FARM
LOUIS ARTHUR CUNNINGHAM
CHAPTER XVIIi
A few weeks later, toward eve
oink, just as they Nvcrc finishing
the evening meal, those at I'hili-
bcrt heard the raucous tocsin, the
croaking music of the horn on the
station wagon that had more lives
than it whole family of eats,
"Roger!" cried Pol Martin. "It
is floger returning.'.' And the ex-
cellent peach pudding that was
the dessert that night was at once
iorgottcn, and even madame join -
cel the streaming exodus from the
dining room and made her way
through the crowd on the steps to
bid hint welcome to hold hits in
her arms, to weep a little as she
saw the look on his (ace when
1[cridcl came to him and put her
arms about his neck and kissed
him.
"I always like to return at twi-
light," he said, mounting the steps
with I'oI Martin and Rosinc on his
shoulders, "it has always seemed
1.) me the best time for a home-
coming, I don't know why, may -
ht: the cheery lights and the warts
fire and—ah, it is good to be
back!"
His gaze had scarcely once
starved from Mcridcl. His eyes
had a hungry look in them, He
Iaughtcd and talked and made the
children laugh at his nonsense, but
when they had all trooped of to
bed, he stretched wearily in his
chair and closed his eves,
"Just," he explained, "so that I
arty open therm and see you all
about nuc, It has been so long."
His hand reached out and touched
Meridcl's where she sat close to
hini. "'Phis is real," he said as if
to himself. "A11 of it—real. And
you are going to be with ane al-
ways. Mcridcl. I thought some-
times 1 should never return to
you, that my Tuck would run out.
But it held — it has held so far,"
"You have done well, Roger,"
said madame, "\\'e read of your
exploits, saw your picure in this
paper and that."
1In waved his hand, "\\'e do not
reason why, madame, When we
are doing the things they praise
us for, they do not seem of great
importance, and when the world
finds them so—well, we are puz-
zled. 'Fell me, was there ever any
more word about Michel?"
"Nothing," said madame. "Re-
cently we read that his friend,
Kehl, was arrested by the Ameri-
can police, along with some dozens
of others and held on charge of
espionage. Perhaps he was among
therm. I do not konw, Roger "
"Strange, Well, I shall give it
up as one of the riddles of the
age. Tomorrow, Meriden, I want
to go shaping with you. I want
to buy you things—a ring—the
loveliest ring. I want to sec it on
your finger, then I shall begin to
think you really belong to me."
* * *
In the busy weeks that follow-
ed Roger seemed' to get as much
enjoyment as Mcridcl or madame
out of the nlutIfarious preparations
for the wedding. He was on hand
We recommend:
FORGES
YELLOWKNJFE
GOLD MINES, LTD.
(No Personal Liability)
Circular on request
Alliance Securities
Telephone ELgin 4104.4105
Four Colborne Street,
Toronto 1, Ont.
RENEWED ZEST follows
a cup of fragrant delicious
Maxwell House Coffee. It's
blended with masterly
skill from choice Latin-
American coffees to give
you coffee that is com-
pletely satisfying.
ISSUE 51-11145
the evening in .March when \le-
ridcl was to try on the wedding
(tress.
"It is lovely," said Roger, gaz-
ing at her as, like a young prin-
cess soon to be a queen, she walk-
ed with stately step toward him.
"So lovely—yet not half lovely
enough for her who wears it."
"You find etc beautiful then,
monsieur?"
"So %cry beautiful, Meridcl" I -Ie
came from the big window in the
living room, vlicrc he had been
sitting, and bent to her and kis-
sed her upraised lips. "My love,"
he whispered. "So soon to be 1113,
bride,"
Ile saw only Mcridcl. So it was
with Rudolph, with the bridlike
Mademoiselle Corbin; only old
Mimi Fabre's ageless eyes glimps-
ed the face that for a moment
came close to the windowpane and
then was gone, it was Roger who
first noticed the pallor of her
parchment skin, the whiteness of
her lips, the way her 11811(15 trembl-
ed,
'"Pante M inlil" Ile hurried to
her, hut she brushed his arm
away. "Are you ill? Is there some-
thing I—"
*
She tightened the grip of her
bony fingers on the knob of her
stick, "It is nothing," she said,
"Nothing. Just a little weaknes. I
shall go to my room and rest for
a while. No, 1 (Io not want anyone
to conic with me. I would be
alone.
Madame went slowly up the
stairs to her room. Her step was
firm, though her heart beat so
hard that it pained her breast. She
walked to the window and looked
out for a few moments. She could
tell that he was there; she could
aliost feel his eyes looking til' at
her out of the blackness. For only
an instant she hesitated, then she
lifted, her hand and beckoned to
him.
"Ile never before obeyed me,"
she muttered, tinkering with her
teeth that were misbehaving this
night, "Perhaps he won't now.
What in God's name does he mean
by skulking out there in the dark-
ness, peering in at window's! 1'11—"
she clutched her stick "—I'll (lo
what I used to long ago; I'll lacy
this across his thick shoulder's, I'll
knock some of the devil out of
hint. If 1 had (lone the right thing
— ani, there!"
* * *
She watched the doorknob tt,ru
slowly, the door as slowly open,
But he entered quickly, without a
sound, closed it behind him and
turned the key, I -Ie flung his hat
deftly at a chair in the corner and
grinned as it landed safely, He
wore a trench coat, a white scarf,
his hair was redder even than she
remembered it. I -Ie smiled at her
ane said quietly, "For once, Tante
Mimi, 1 obeyed you. I was about
to go off into the cold, dark, wind-
swept night, as they say in the
books, whou I saw your light go
on and your still lovely figure
standing in the window. \Viten you
beckoned to me I hesitated only
briefly; then I cause just to say
hello—and then good 1)y'."
The black eyes, hawk's eyes,
bright and gleaming, never left his
face. Every inch of it they studied
—the long jaw, the stubby nose
and wide Mouth, the blue eyes in
which the devil danced even as in
her own. Itis shoulders Milked
Mage inside the blue coat, lIe was
taller titan Roger, Ile looked, she
thought, like some Milcsian king
of old, Give him a winged helmet,
a jerkin of chain mail, a battle-
sX--
"Oc1)erlieutcnant Faber," she
said.
* * *
He clicked his Heels and bowed
stiffly, his fact like something
graven in stone. Tlien all the dis-
guise dropped from hint in a mom-
ent and the eyes sparkled again.
He gave her a neat salute 1,0(1
said, "Your mistake, madame—
Captain Hichel Fabrc, of the, Bri-
tish Intelligence."
"Michell" She had not made a
step before he had her in his arms,
picking her up as if she were a
child, kissing her and pressing his
rough cheek against hers,
(To Be Continued)
The ancient Greeks and Ro-
mans used to enjoy highly per-
fumed food.
S(11111.1 11111-11 1 1111111i that one of
the major problems (1)1 a fartp is
entertaining. Farm people, in com-
mon with eily folk, like to hast.
their fricuds cone' 10 with
than. And 11atu'ally, the logical
time for visiting is in the sunnntr.
Unfortunately, summer time also
coincides with the busiest season
of the year on the farm so that %v.)
who entertain are always a little
uneasy lest our friends do not
have as good 11 lime as we. would
like therm to have. The farm work
has to go on, Fortunately, to the
majority of folks holidaying In the
country, most feral work is a no-
velty and so they enjoy being
around and getting first-hand in-
formation on how the work Is
done — or they don't — 11 depends
on their personality! Our telco
Reify, for instance, had never seen
a cream separator work; her sis-
ter Joy, who is also staying %vitt'
115, 1)11(1 11111 111 interested In watch-
ing the manure spreader in
action!
4 •
Trying to combine work and
pleasure is another problem. Not
so emelt for the younger genera-
tion — their supply of energy
seems inexhaustible -- hutfor us
older folk who, although still
quite capable of enjoying good en-
tertainment, yet find it somewhat
exhausting if wo have a hard day's
work behind us and another hard
day's work ahead of us, Hut wo
try it just .the sante. Wo take in
the o(1(1 show or garden party; we
come home and enjoy a midnight
snack; we eventually get to our
beds,. but in an hour or two we are
out of them again and on with the
work — while our visitors, bless
their hearts, sleep blissfully on,
We don't begrudge them thee'
sleep — fa' from it — this is their
holiday, let therm enjoy 1t. \VO
only envy therm their opportunity
of arising each morning, refreshed
and Invigorated, ready again to go
places and see things, although
by comparison we are Bo afraid
they will find us dull and lifeless,
apparently thinking only of the
By
Gwendoline I) Clarke
..
1.1, h lu In• dune• :is if we had no
Wiwi. int 11.1 be}Hurl 11111' own
11111' ft ace.
• • •
11)1' forc)'oing real;o'k.l you
may 1;111 111i511 we hart, 11181 trying
10 worst and play loo. 'that's right
%';e II4111 - - 1 1,repl. l'arUiel', Ile
ts; 1;111', he rt ;'ot'nii,i's his limitat-
liol,s, (1111 ni?1)1 11(11) took u'; 10
I1:iniilton and w111111 there we %eel
to son "Tho \'alley of Dc•r'isiou'.
It. was a grand show and 11'11 On-
joycd every minute of our outing
even though wo did have a flat
tiro on the, road, 11111 1 thought
Betty was disappointed because
she hail not seen "Son of Lassie"
So 111.1 'twat day I took the two
girls to a neighbouring town and
there we stns "Son of Lassie". \1'e
followed Laddie right Through his
puppy days to his adventures 111
Norway and returned with hila to
his native nom's and safety. "Val-
ley of Decision" 1s a wonderful
picture but we all felt that, we
shall remember Lrnldie and Lassie
long aft( r the other show Is for-
gotten, There is an undefinable
bond between a man and his dog
that tugs at the heartstrings, %Vn
felt that, oven in the shot', and
we thought we just couldn't stand
it if anything dreadful should hap-
pen to faithful, trusting Laddle.
What a story to awaken children's
sympathies. The children In that
audience laughed and cried by
turns and 1 ant sure they all went
home wishing that each had a dog
like Laddle. The pity of it Is too
many children grow up lacking
the companionship of a dog, in
towns that Is often unavoidable
bet dogs, children and wide open
spaces surely belong together,
+ * *
Right here I might as well make
a confession. The men are draw-
ing In barley aid before going to
the field they flatted ale to see that
the rows didn't get Into the barn,
So I brought paper and pencil and
took up my vigil from tho back
seat of the ear. It was very cont•
fortable; the air was just pleasant-
ly warm; a soft breeze was blow -
Sure, It's Candy—and without Sugar
Ever beam of candy that's made without sugar:' found, almost too
good to he true, doesn't it? But here's a cleanly confection that (doesn't
use a bit! Jeet combine semi -sweet e1' sw'cc1 Ch( colatc with crunchy bran
for as simple and dclo haus aunty treat!
if you don't have children in your home who like just such an after
(111111(1 treat --lir ('veil if you do—hew' ;Lllllt haX of these
crunchy can(lie< to the nearest .\rinv hospital?
CRUNCHY CEREAL CHOCOLATE BARS
!: pound semi -sweet chocolate OR 1 cup all bran.
s' eet milk chocolate.
Melt chocolate over hot water; add all bran and mix well. Pack into
loaf pan which has been lined with wax payer.:\l1ow to set until chaco-
latc hardenc; cut into bare.
Yield: 4 bars (•I% X 5'i -inch part)
ing and before 1 knew it 1 was
asleep. So you see what 1 mean
when I say that work, pleasure
and late horn's don't go ton well
together! The wagon coming
home woke me up , , , 1 wondered
where on earth I was, Fortunately
the cows hadn't come down for a
drink so nobody knows I was
guilty of that unforgivable silt —
being asleep at the switch.
Oh-oln — now there's a bee in
the car. It's obviously time I got
out!
Defeat of Japan
No Mere `Incident'
Japanese history provides nu-
merous examples of "temporary"
setbacks in Japan's course of ag-
gression, says the Detroit Free
Press.
Germany, France and Russia
told the Japs to get out of Port
Arthur in 1 895 — and they got. A
stiff note from Woodrow Wilson
in 1015 blocked their Twenty-one
Demands on China, An American
army checkmated then) in Siberia
after the Russian Revolution. They
were forced to return Shantung
to China.
Yet in each instance they me-
rely bowed to superior force—
temporarily — and went right on
planning and preparing for world
conquest as outlined by FIidevosli
in 1,',92. They have never swerved
from his blueprint.
The Japs are tough.
The Allies have got to be tough-
er
They can't reform Japan by let -
ling it get away with the idea that
this defeat is merely an incident in
a 101) -years war,
MEN ICAO TJIINK OF TOMORROW Ai[E PLANNING "COOKING W1'I'H LIGIITS"
Miracles of cookery performed not by the heat of a fire, but by the heat of light, arc planned
for the kitchens of tomorrow! Ovens lined with "electric light bulbs" will cook your foods
better in shorter time with the even, easily controlled penetrating heat of infra -red rays[
It's better things for living such as this that your Victory Bonds will buy tontorrotol
Men who think of tomorrow say
"HOLD ON TO YOUR VICTORY BONDS
w+
"• •
o VICTORY BONDS have helped us to
fight and win a war.
They've minimized the danger of a
war -inflation economy.
They've formed a backlog of safely
invested buying power that will benefit
the individual and the nation when the
danger of inflation is over.
But remember: inflation strikes hardest
after n war.
What our Victory Bonds will do—if
rue hold on to them—is to keep prices
down until supply meets demand ...
when a dollar will buy a full dollar's
worth of goods.
Think of tomorrow before thinking
of cashing a Victory Bond!
THE ROUSE OF SEAGRAM
SAGE 4. THE STANDARD
•
•
, ; ; genet0000004EKVOetMMenke WESTIt'IELD
Elliott Insurance Agency
BLYTII -- ONT.
INSURE NOW! AND BE ASSURED.
Car - Fire - Life - Sickness • Accident.
3. H. R. Elliott. Cordon Elliott
Office Phone 104. Residence }'hone 1:' or 110,
"COURTESY AND SERVICE"
by \Ir. Cutrdot Snell Nva, struck njth
\Ir. (',onion ',et II and \1 r. ,cul Mr,- lightning and burned t , the ground.
Priest Silt II t\ err 1. ,mien \'1;11 ,, on , Tit, It' it c, r, ;tirr,tltle ha% in lllc bdrn
lllfff;tturd,t 'bttt iI,r,tnr1lVI' uo Biter building-
6.
� \I r. 1611'11 l -leer of ICerlfrt tv \ H•Hietl trete ,ut tnc "1' 'I'Ite Ir,lr!I \\a, par -
last \reel, t\ illi his hrot,ltr, \Ir, ruler„tial! rt':rretl \' jilt in-uranyr.
1•��t� htul.', 1'. \Ii-• f grit Campbell of Cutdericll -
I ,Iter' the \\rel -en l unit r the parental 1
\i! Nidtintl \ met s\' tit it, tl tt 'Ili I At'
rid.
1\,11 Viii: tit 1 ,':1,1 I; ,tit '.,lura.\\.
.\ nu:n,ln r,nn; t!,i. ti, Itis\ Ittte;,'.t 1
;Ittlll\cr,aty -cr\.et • ;,t It.unrttbr fol: on
I Sundt\. hhr S li'or titt,tt'tt•ttt' „f
fi \\"r tfitl,l. \l c--rs. .\'b,rt \\al»1i, .\It:t
-11MINNIOIN2rBWaNIt,1t3trtiiIN124BtAt9***DtatAIADt')tai)i)iliNat3i�t8t2aiNDiDIDaalk \I t I ".0 ;I 1. 1 \I hi 1 \\ el! anti \\'ik
LONDESBORO
\Irs. Victor R+ty steint la•t titck in
'T,tronto.
\fr Frank Hill left I 1 'I'htirday
to live with h'- u, \Ir. (lurk, hall,
in St. NI.tr_t ,•
\ir. aryl \Ir•• Ian Smith returned bt
!'nuts\ hitt
\(r'. Punt ham, I iin''it. nitlt NI r. an'!
.11rt. R T ern rml.
Mr. and \!r It 16e\, Gide!trlt,
v.ith Mr . CI! \\'arson•
\I i,. \label `hot,b•e"h, Varna, with
her iter, \1 r- Laura tinndentocl:.
\I r. and Mr-. .\i thur Iii' k, i (ill .,!ale,
\lichig.tn, awl \Ir. sued \It., \\'illi:nn
\Itntg :ter \,'int by, nitll \Ir. awl
.lir. I i1 Slit bolo k.
\lr an I \I r, \Ict'al', (i der1ch, with
11 r. and NI r- I 'tt 1.
\irs. 1.. I':,'c .hent a Ir\\ day, ;n
'London last v, eek.
\tr. 1{\\aryl ilrun,don :cul iii, tree
daughters, \1r:. ('laet"n Dixon and
Irate Print silo!) and \It'. It ,bcrt-
rvt. Calgary. ‘lith \Ir \\'jlliant Prints -
den.
Mr:. ilurgc-: T,tront t\ith \lr,
litrtzart' \I it t
\Ir. Jack .\rin.troniz left on Satu-
t'.ay for St R„ -c, \l,In t,-h,t.
Sundae vi i' tr- tv,til \li.. I:it/Ahct!
\fa:tts acre, \lits, Nora and .\nit Toll
Elia Up -)tall. Roe \II•Ilvrnna an'
Bertha Ilr,'t:den of London.
The \\'. .1. \tall hold their itt,mthl\
nteetine tat \\'t ine.t1i September 19
Rt 2.3(1 \'t lrck in the basement of the
Church. The hostesses are Mrs. \Vim,
Addison, Mrs. l'harle: \Vat:on, \l i.•
Flo: ie lautic',on, and Mrs. \\'illi:
�1nitntitlll.
•
•
LONDESBORO RED CROSS
The regular meeting of the Red
Cross Eva, hell on September Pith in
the form of a quilting bee. A pot luck
dinner was served and :ix quilts were
quilted. in the absence of the Presi-
dent, \1 r:. 5. Lyon tank charge of the
meeting. hymn (ea' was .ate follow-
ed by prayer by \i r:. \V. Lyon and
:Mrs. \\'. 1fe,k 'i'he minute, of the
past meeting \vert read and adapted.
In the hu Me.. i;erin'l it was carried to
accept t!,t boy. knitting \\nota which
eottsisterJ r't' 35 buy. pullover,, 25 hair
.boys scetk-. :\Inn girls sewing quota
EDITH CREIGHTON'S
DECORATOR'S SHOPPE
PHONE 158, BLYTH.
SUN WORTHY
Wallpapers
ARE INEXPENSIVE
LUXURIOUSLY DESIGNED
LASTINGLY BEAUTIFUL
PRICES ARE RIGHT
ALSO
PAINTS AND
ENAMELS OF QUALITY
RiDSMEL to Stop Paint Smell
SOLD iN ANY QUANTITY.
• • It
F. C. PREST
Phone 37.26, LONDESBORO
of 2? tunic tlrc. es, '? 1,4tu,ts• 1(1 1).,y,
untict•p;ot',, ',Ir,• 11e,k donated a
cl„ thr•hot•-e, ticket, \\ere .;,ltl an,l
\li„ I'lttlli, '„tC, of non the lucky
draw. \Ir,. !:• ,hatl,li -k \honored a
\cast h.".\1 tC errant pitcher, ticket,
here ,,,Irl, \I; , \\' \lanuiltg th •
lucky ti"•ret. I \e!I;III t' f cent
gilt. brought :I,?'1 .\ ,host Itr.,t,ratn
has then tally v i. ke;tding he \I
Yonne. Solo by Nil-. I'lltl'i' \!'t'i-!.
hue quilt don. tel b) Mr- l levier',
group of vest mid , f t on,-e,.jon :tail
$7.115 I11 tt'-i t't'lect:otl: I quilt donated
by \I r.• \\ at- tt', gra tilt, tte't „f til
I,u:c; 1 quilt if t1,tt1(1 Lt \Ir I'li/abed\
I.pn; 2 thrill, t!onat0d 1y \Ir.. t;
Carter, grout,)' and 't; 1 titp donated
by \Ir:. Laura Sand''rc-,ck, I)ties pay.
ing ho,tes• mons. y, \I r,. h. \'nnebintt,
\I.,. 'T, -nn end, Mr- \\' I'nos, \Ir.
h \\'oods, \Irs 1. \\'rbstcr, \!r, F
Bann \I, 1 ,t\ril a.•i-:c I in Om sect ice
of sone .It the ttt'I,i".' -mit it's'. Pity
trete t t'"nlit,ulit) h\ \I j„ \\'tnnifrc,l
Canplu II.
\Ir. \V,Irrr,t Bamford rt tnrnt,1 t • hi
ell, of :t ('rest ,tt ,1
BARN BURNS DURING STORM
hurjn_t the tycr, electric tt had and
ail .t, rut tt '.tier\ •'.ruck +Ili, set tion of
the c rutty\ to, Sattir,l,t\ eta nine the
it ilr, \tits „u: of cominis.i m for over
t',' et' hours,
haying It It t i! ucr i 11 S tntl:tt' notru-
ing. 5t %,'cal i rt es very' strut, a 111
lightning, bu• the gt', att .1 tragedy
tt as \tier? the Llrn on the lat'In ottut'I
i. 'tlrlt ,\\ ell, Mr.
\lnl l,'ut 11 vi•itr 1 „n tinnda}y
tt •ilt \I r. nl i \Irs li Came: on of
\Ir. and \IT. \jilt -„u liille,pi, \I r•
:mil \I r.. 1 lane 1 Fan ler and \\'ayne of
\\ hittc!t'Irc!t \tr re gtic,t• on Sunday
at the h tune of \i t'. and \!r•, tflarcnce
\.
I lit '1''nir-,i,ty ti1 ening, the members
t IIIc 1't !WHIM,It lnrt in the basement
of IIIc' \\t'.ii 11 i •itttt'cll 1st \\eiconit'
h„Hie
Fn. !.t'-i:t h"tl>;cr, recently re-
turn! 'rout Duel:till. (lite;• soldier:
trey' ltt•t sent \vette Rn,,el (' 'ok,
Jim \\a!•h, I)on;tld l"ooh. Stiv,rat
n n .d. of cr'kin de t\ ere p;;utell, after
of t'te forint' tt t tthick icy. il;,rolrl Snell sit Ise ;t fen•
maid. ,tf lyric, am. 10 Fi 1. Lc,lic Rod-
gct, nth„ re,1„.ndcd, thanking tho•e
present for the kiurhn's, in stinting
hose, ;End It tier.. Lunch Eta- •ervell
brut! a I,It a,ant t yening \\:1, brought to
`Vechlt'sdlly. Sent, 12, 19 tti
. , • 11 I 111 - 11 I I I 1 11 III 1 1 ..\ l
TREASURER'S SALE OF LANDS IN ARREARS OF TAXES
PROVINCE OF ONTARIO, COUNTY OF HURON
To \\ i! ;
.\ \\'.\RR.\\ I' a tilt r :he II nut of the \\':u•tlen
and Seal , i the County of I linion htatMg dose the Birk day of July,
1915, and to Inc ,lirected, c nuuandint,, nu to Icy} upon the lands num-
!Wiled in the follnning It -t, for 11 t' irs of last' thereon tG,gether ititlt
I' t.t•t' inclined, 1 hereht ;;nen lite t!l,tt a le„ the arrear. ,Ind
costs are "fain 11,1111. I ,11a1,1 Iu, ref .1 to -r 11 Olt •.,till 1,111,1 or as witch
Cal cid. a• ,h ill he ,til licit tit t„ dl,c! ai ,u''h , real- I iixt , and
charge diet con, at it t tf to iu the C tint house m the 'hitt!! of
1,, IIt'rich, t lttthltt' auction ti \,,t whet i,th, I'I1?, ai 1111' hour of Ityo
lr'cl, in the oilcan nn in totiipli:on'e tttth the statute, in that behalf.
Notice i, hereby furtht'r giten that if any of the ,,till land, lenlain
;UI adjourned \\j11 b, 111.1)1 1)11\),\,'nlhyr Lith, I'1J at the
>;,nu' !11110 and blare, ant! a1 \\kbit the \Inn;ci'atlitic. may rc,crre the
right to purcha,c' ant of the ',till lanai,.
VILLAGE OF IILY'I'fi
Mary 1, 1c1;1(.-1,..1 125, NieltoitIll St, Itt11) I1 23.;U 'tdl 2w1'
in u'rtiott)
1'111,l;,ln 11
in The Oni;trio (;, tic, :\\tit I l!, 1'ii: lone
.\\I) !'t'!'T!!!'! "I\ISI': \1)'1'11'1': ;Hal it i- the intt'ntion of the
":11 r;tti"H „f the \ il!at:e f Itlyth to hurt h;t,t thc'e land, at the time
f the la s Sale, utile-, all t•• -t' ale pair! by :he rt>1ttctive tit\nets.
MRS. LOU' SE DURWAR D,Treasurer, Village of Illyth.
GET A TICKET ON BETSY
ll'IE I'UREBRED HEIFER
singing the \'aiinual All- Don't n
on't let Fait Ilay go by itlow( se-
shobbro,d:, \I r• \1' \I1,ttntain, Mr,I
I.an in+;, \I r. S:truite. The nleetlll!: them, curing a ticket on Betsy, the i'ttrrbre i
elo•ed \\jilt the Nat iota;d .\ntlrrut, Several from this community tt
utity aend- 11o1,tein Ilrife', trhirlt i, being rd (ties! I.ient lt, ,s .11,111.11 t,,
b> the Itlt th Fair It ,:u• I Ilet,y tt ill he hr, they, Sot avI' 'I'lulcll
The Parkin,\ Committee of the R0,1 ed the \'trc lint bout- in \Vinghani tin csllib:ti,•n e.
('r,,,- nlct and hacked 11 quilts on 'tn !"rich; night, and rep 'rt :t good i Fait' hay tike i, lit m Sam int. been con) Mini to It,I,ilal
the herd t f \\' Long of (ioderich, ac- smut tittle due to ilhte,•
credited, and Irce front all disease:,
I hr
1111111C1' can havt the heifer, or
S75 iu call The dra\v tt ill be made lite
night of the F;l r, Friday
Visiting hi,
in Montreal
for
Yl tt lay, September 1(1.
,bun
MEAT R Te
�,4
-S NO IN EFFECT
As of midnight, SEPTEMBER 9, 1945, it is unlawful for any person to buy rationed meats and for
anyone to sell rationed meats except on surrender of valid ration coupons or other ration documents.
Sales between suppliers, however, are coupon free until midnight, Saturday, September 15.
ME T C UP
BEEF—Fresh or Cured
Round Steak or Roast bone in
Round Steak or Roast boneless
]found Steak, Minced
Sirloin Tip boneless
Sirloin Tip, Cubed or Minute
Steaks boneless
Sirloin Butt boneless
Plank Steak houcless
Strip Loin boneless
Rih Roast, 7 Rib Bones (rolled
whole) honrless
Prune Rib Roast, 5 Rib Bones
(rolled) boneless
BEEF—Fresh or Cured
Shank, Hindquarter boneless
Rump Roast, Round or Square
End bone in
Sirloin Steak or Roast bone in
Flank, 'Trimmed bone in
Porterhouse Steak or Roast
hone in
T-bone Steak or Roast hone in
Wing Steak or ]toast bone in
Rib Roast, 7 Rib Bones, Whole
borne in
Prince Rib Roast, 5 Rib Bones
bone in
Rib Roast, 6th and 7th Rib Bones
bone in
Rolled Rib Roast, 6th and 7th
Rih Bones, Outside ]toll
boneless
Plate Brisket (rolled) boneless
Brisket Poiret (rolled) boneless
BEEF—Fresh or Cured
Short Ribs, Ilr,aising bone i',
Plate Ilri sket bone ht
Brisket Point bone in
Round Bone Shoulder Roast
bone in
Blade Roast bone in
Chuck Roast bone in
Shank, Frontquarter, \Vhole
bone in
Shank Knuckle End bone in
VEAL—Fresh "+
Shank, l Iind hone in
4
VALUE CHARTI
All products shown below are derived from beef, veal, lamb, mutton, pork or combinations of them;
Any product or cut shown below has the coupon value indicated, whether or not it contains dressing.
PORK—Cured
Back (sliced) boneless
PORK—Smoked
Back Bacon (sliced)
Side Bacon (sliced) (rind on
rindless)
COOKED MEAT
Any uncooked G:uup l3 item
or (bone in or boneless), when
cooked
fork Butt boneless
Pork plant boneless
Rib Roast Rolled, 6th and 7th
Rib Bones—Inside Roll bone.
less
Tenderloin
VEAL—Fresh
Cutlets or Pillet !toast boneless
Strip Loin Steaks boneless
Front Roll boneless
Leg (toll boneless
Loin Strip boneless
Tenderloin
LAMB or MUTTON—Fresh
Pronuluarter (rolled) boneless
Rolled Shoulder boneless
Short or Cross Rib Roast bone in
Blade Roast, Blade and Back -
strap out bone in
Chuck Roast boneless
Neck boneless
Shank, Centre Cut bone in
Shank Meat
Stewing Meat boneless
11amburger
VEAL—Fresh
Shank, I find boneless
Rump, Knuckle Bone out bone in
Sirloin I3utt ]toast bone in
Sirloin Butt Steak bare in
Leg, Sirloin Butt End bone in
Loin, Full Cut, Plank off, Kidney
and Suet out bone in
Lain, Short Cut, Flank off,
Kidney and Suet out bane in
PORK—Fresh
Butt, Whole, Pieces or Chops
(rindless) bone in
Butt, \\'hole, Pieces or Chops
(rindless) boneless
11ani, Whole, CcntreSlices bone in
I last, \\'hole, Pieces or Slices
bone in or boneless
Picnic, Iluckless boneless
flack, \\°hole, Pieces or Slices
boneless
Side Pork, \\'hole, Pieces or
Slices hone/css
7'rini 11ings, Extra Lean (skinless)
'i'enderloin
Loin Chop or Roast, Tenderloin
Lind bone in
Loin Chop or Roast, Rib land
bonne in
Round Bone Shoulder Chop or
Roast bone in
Shank, Front boneless
Neck honekss
Veal Loaf or Patties
Stewing Veal
LAMB or MUTTON—Fresh
Sirloin or Chump Chop bone in
Loin, Whole, Plank off, Kidney
and Suet out bone in
Loin Roast or Chop, Tenderloin
End bone ht
Patties
PORK—Fresh
Picnic, l-locklcss bone in
Mutt (rind on), \Vhole, Pieces or
Chop bone in
PORK—Cured
Cottage Roll or Butt, Whole or
Pieces boneless
Picnic, 1luckless boneless
Ilan\, \Vhole, Pieces or Slices
bone in or boneless
!-lata, Centre Slices bone in
Back, Whole or Picccs boneless
Skinless Roll boneless
1lnut Butt Roll boneless
PORK—Smoked
Picnic, 11ock1css or /lock on
boneless
Butt (rind on), \Vhole or Pieces
boneless
IIam, Trimmed, Whole, Butt
Lind or Shank find bone in
Loin, '1'rintnicd (rindless),
Whole, Pieces or Chop bone in
Side Pork, \Vhole or Pieces
bare in
PORK—Cured
Picnic, 'luckless bone in
1 lam, '1'ri muted, Whole, Butt
Lind or Shank find bone in
Side Pork, Whole or Pieces
bone in
Shoulder Roll (skin on)
boneless
Dry Salt Belly boneless
Dry Salt Lean Backs boneless
PORK—Smoked
Picnic, I lockless bone in
-'`GROUP D'i:21/2; LBS P inCOUPON ;8 -OZ it1;PERTOJCEN'
Leg, Long Cut bone in
Leg, Short Cut bone in
Leg, Shank End bone in
Loin, Pull Cut, Plank on, Kidney
and Suet out bone in
Flank bone in
Tilade Chop or ]toast bone in
Breast bone in
Shank, Front bone in
Neck bone in
Forequarter, \Vhole, 7 Rih Bones
bone in
Rack, Whole bone in
Rack, Shoulderoff, Knuckle Bone
out borne in
Guar 3:fat.kit iOtTPO :ai o211rti tlroitts...
PORK—Fresh
Laconc bone in
Iiock bone in
Jowl
PORK—Cured
Iiock bone in
Mess Pork bone in
Short Cut Back bane in
Jowl
FANCY MEAT
Ileatt
, Tongue
SAUSAGE—Fresh or Cured
Pork Sausage
Commercial Sausage
LAMB or MUTTON—Fresh
Leg, Full Cut, Witold or half
bone in
Leg, Short Cut bone in
Loin, Whole, Flank on, Kidney
and Suet out bone in
Loin Rib Roast or Chop bone in
Plank bone in
Prontquartes, Whole or 1 lalf
bone in
Rack or Shoulder, Neck on
bone in
]tack or Shoulder, Neck off
bone in
Rack or Shoulder Chop bare in
Breast bore in
Neck bone in
PORK—Fresh
Picnic, 'lock on boneless
Loin (rind on), \Vhole Pieces or
Chop bone In
PORK—Cured
Dry Salt Long Clear boneless
Cottage Roll or Butt, Whole or
1lieces boneless
Skinless (toll boneless
11 ant, Centre Slices bone in
Ilam, Whole (skin on or skin-
less), Pieces or Slices bone in
or boneless
Back, Whole or Pieces boneless
Side Bacon (rind or on titaness),
\Vhole or Pieces
COOKED MEAT
Any uncooked Group C item
(hone in or boneless), when
cooked.
Ilam, '!'rimmed or Skinned,
Whole, Butt land or Shank land
bone in
FANCY MEAT
Liver
Kidney 1
Sweetbread
COOKED MEAT
Any uncooked Group 1) item
(hone in or boneless), when
cooked.
Loaves made from chopped or
minced meat. Cooked meats,
jellied meats, in loaf forth or
otherwise (excepting those
cooked or bellied Meats listed
in Group I)). -
Bologna
Wieners
Sausage, Stroked or Cooked
Dry Salt Short Clear boneless
Dry Salt Clear Back boneless
PORK—Smoked
Picnic, Ilock on bone in
Jowl
COOKED MEAT
Any uncooked Group I1 item
(bone in or boneless), when
cooked.
Brawn or headcheese
Liver Sausage, all types
Blood Sausage, all types
Creams Francais
CANNED MEAT (scaled containers)
Con&tincr
51115881' 1-1 1 oz.--( tokens
Contmhutrcd (Ground) Pork1-12 oz. -3 "
Comminuted (Ground) Pork1--16 oz. -4 "
Roast Beef
or.—•i ”
Stews, boiled dinners, hashes1-15 oz. -2 ”
Stews, boiled dinners, lashes1-1(r•'.-2
Pork Tongues 1-12
Container
Meat Sandwich Spread 1— 70z.-2 tokens
Meat Sandwich Spread 1— 3 07.-1 "
Ox Tongue 1-32 oz. -1 coupon
Meat Balls 1-16oz,-3 tokens
Beefsteak with Mushrooms 1-16uz,-3 "
Beefsteak with Onions 1-16 oz. -3 "
Beefsteak with Kidneys.., 1-16 oz. -3 ”
MEAT PIES
For any size Meat Pie, 14 or. per token;
MRA -6
�Vei�nesiYav, Fent. 1 ?, 11)1)
PRISONER OF WAR
1
1
•
r-
^.
b� a7////Y'
lss,rassw1.11.
5o 5o 'i' PLEASE
503 'niA-1)5 WHERE
Some- of MY
SuGAR WENT/
•
�'.
1 I 110,4.:011.IW0.1.11 11FIu.111 L
Morris Township Council
The \11u•! i, 'To\\ a hitt (otuu it tact
on \11n1.1.1y, `eptcnlhyr lI)ili. in the
fot\n,hifl I1a1; \\itll ;tll the iiient rer;
pt•c-•t'nl. Tin. I'e( \e presided
The minute 111 the i;I,t 'lief. ling
were rca 1 and ;!•In111ell 011 sloti'n of
\1'illianl Speir ,;u.l I,nm, \lirhie.
\loved by l'1 ;trlr, l'1'nhe , ,1 rondrll
by Janie, \I Iri!ie that Itltl! l ;til and
\\'inglianl I1 ? ' Sin, \\• each be l i\en ;t
pram! til ;2;1.111'. tarried
\loved h} II,u•\t'y I"lul-to!1• ,ecllnd
ed by 1.harlt, ('unite, that the .Hall
hilly a, presented by rt a'I >mperinten-
(lent he paid. harried
I , ,
PRICE'S fi iND TRAMS, BOA
11 I .1 1 1 1 ,1 1 1.1.16 id, 6 :.ISI .6 1.• I. 6 1 61 1 ..1.1 bl JY
\111\ed by 11;i1v( v John -ton, ,eC1111d•
cd h) I•t,nes \I t l!it that a committee
1...1nHi,tin.r• 1•j ( (•r;1 \\ Iu•cicr, Charles
('Imlte, ;out \\ illi;uu titu•ii• be named
fur the ;111rpoi.e 1'I , II111111'Illt' illlti tcl-
tlll:! ,tlllahle g11i, 111r returned >et•\i(•e
I11e11 and \\ omen, Carried
\I t.'• e 1 Janie, \lirhie, conduit
Ir\'
\\ lin Strait that, Iola\\ NII, 11.
time 11j n'mlinatill tine month
e,h1 r he pa -ed. ('•Il•rie11
\111\e1I h.% Il;lrvu\ I„hn,ton. ,(..cond..
h ('I!;lrle. ( unite, that the nnel
.1'11 .n n 1.1 meet ,te,lin 1111 October
15tH, 1''L, at 1 p.m.
The 111;1.)\\ iIII acclntnt, \\ cry paid:
\\ in+tllaul
Iltir-t•
Ct1 ST Q MER.
010AN O A FAVOthRI►t
DO ME
:'ill<� .•!,�
(l�
•
.111
Still\\, glint 12141111
111
oNa
alffic
THE STANDARD 1
i
i
RADIO
Phi111', ; take,
I)
1 J I W n, 1 "i,1 . 1.
FOR SALE
table model.
PIGS FOR
SALE
1
ROXYTHEATRE,
CLINTON.
NOW PLAYING: Dorothy Lamour
in "RAINBOW ISLAND”
In •T«linicolor.
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
"A ROYAL SCANDAL"
The ! \1' a l,'il, 11i Loin- hie the
(i11 ,1'• .11 !'n• i,1 are tl,•\ci ly t,r-
tr,n1.1 in t1r• p,.rhli!u rinnell)',
lir 11inr, d L\ I•.ru,t I.nh,t-ell
Tallulah Bankhead, Charlgs Coburn
and Anne Baxter
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Edwa.d (.• Robinson, Raymond
Masst.y and Joan Bennett
The ;hr!Ilit•o, haunting ..tory of a
\\•nmol wit ,r p1n•tr;tit ,lulled ruin
1.1. one nl.11 and death fur t\\11.
TILE WOMAN IN THE WINDOW
Matinees Sat. & Holidays at 2,30 p.m
PAGE 5
CAPITAL THEATRE REGENT THEATRE
SEAFORTH.
GODERICH.
Now Playing: Yvonne Dc Carlo in I
"SALOME, WHERE Naw Playing: IABenny in "Tile
SHE DANCED" HORN BLOWS 1' MIDNIGHT"
Mcnday, Tuesday, Wednesday
George Raft, Joan Bennett and
Vivian Blaine
f1 !I:n i"e1 llu., of-! .1111•\• .'1
1'i•u r \\ Ilt r, t:.el! 111,1: r11 a! lilt •n:111
.•1 .1
''NOB HILL'
Thursday; Friday, Saturday
Dorothy Lamour, Eddie Bracken
nr,d G I
Lamb
Pdl';IIIU 111111' tri �l. i. ;l ll;u'.nli-,•
1„\•., I,nt�h!,.•. soot ,ar„!1:'•• ul
.•, '.u!1 oho.
"RAINBOW ISLAND”
11i
COMING: Bette Davis in
"THE CORN IS GREEN”
• Mat., Wed.• Sat., Ilolidays 2.30 pm
Card Of Thanks
Monday, '1•ucsday, Wednesday
Betty Grable, Dick Hayutes and
Sid Silvers
L'1111 I l.t' )'a\ t ;ul.l l(reat, ,t !lit
u. • tii tiii kee• 1;t ill 11111
T,. hail ..11.1
"'THE DIAMOND HORSESHOE"
------------
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Dennis M..rgan, Dane Clark and
Raymund Massey
11.1'n 1 1 I,' h rt I. 1111' h1n11, ,I
file t..11t, :111 11 It•
1'•;le 11i1 nn'e
"GOT) IS MY CO-PILOT"
1
1
COMING: 'Tallulah Bankhead in
"A ROYAL SCANDAL"
Matinees Sat. & Holidays a.L,U p,ns,
4
F 4.4.4.4.4.4.,;.,;. 4. 4.4.4.4.4. 4. 4. 4.4..'.. 4. 4.4.4.4. t , •4. ,. 404.4 .4. 4. i; 1,. , ;. 4. r� i; i; i; 4.,, .;..i. �. 4.4..;..;41
.t.
': L1'C11t.UAI THEATRE •1'
\Ir. 1'. II• Taylor \\'i,hc, to ,hams ht �raji, ;i \ort, ui :\Icx;lt;t WINGHAM—ONTARIO..i ATKINSON'S ....
Marine and (;; uer;ll 1 lo,pital (ioderit II, >. Two S11(h\YS Sat. Night •t• ?: ,
OI!tarill. \1„1 t'1 \li„ R. :\. P;ttlt111, y' 's' 'i• 1'OOI, ROU1'I. ..?:
"'Thurs, Fri, Sat, Sept. 13,14,15,t, ' o:
It \.. stud \Ir•. Lc tic Naltcl, I. \.,;t; •:•
and \I r<. I;t.n \lontt'rit I, R. N., 11u ,.,Rita Hayworth, Lee Bowman, in t. ' + t
44 J.'; tiAl()1�l',1t ;� �U1 I)RIIt:S :j.
I'ONIGI'I'i AND EVERY NIGHT”? • ;1;'I`oh' ''CUti, CIf.','al'ettes, 1'01),.:..
'.; .\ Ino-:r:tl drama in tecluu„ ill. ._; :: illl(I Other i ::.:'ll'ie�• •;'
nnu \\II , I<iu111' renlcntbered her h\ " ALSO "S1rday SUBJECTS" 'i '='OI)l'll all (jilt' and Tries g.
.Maurer, Saturday afternoon, at 2.30.'1.
113 _ flowers, caul,, letter, and trust. ? "
,� � I' Street.
L1 til.
\Ir,• T. II. 'Taylor, 1 Rtlt, Ont. ,_�Mcn, Tues, Wed Supt 17, 18, 1° ;
3 I p, .1 SPECIAL I r ,44•,4,;4.;. r,, .,. ;..'',44; ;..; ;1
little pig-, l eedy t„ wean .\pply to '- Greer Carson, Donald Crisp, \. VA
' Gregory Peck, in RADIO IrOR SALE
13-I5, Myth IN MEMORIAM „ "THE VALLEY OF DECISION" w •
. \;11'1\ 1 1lhllllnli', •!' Itl�th
'-' I).\\'l --In toeing memory of our dear ;;'I'I!1' •pirtnrir.ti' 1 1.i \I;u'ria I)a\rn _•-
1larvey, \\11.1 flied :.uddenly Septent- "port's hovel about a j;tlnil\ 11f Pitt--' rv\
IIl,tll 1:411 Fair. grant 2u.un htr lull, I'),1 , l'trg steel -mill o\\Her. 1:1)1VARI) W. EL1,101 1
Dolt. (if IIcalt!;, insulin .-44 44... 1'ti ,'There will be two shows each night' 1.•'Li' \t'I alt t utul Pt'r 1Inron
Though tub your smllile II;1, golte 1(Irever rb k.al 7.30 p 111 and 9,30 p 111 ., I!ac returnld I'111I1 ,CI'CItL \11111 the
Kenneth 'Taylor (lamb killed) .. 1-111')
Walter Sh1n•lrcc11 I valuator, ices) 1.50 •\n,l Your hand, we cannot unit'',
Iter \Ic\au,gh' .m, sheen billed 5.111! \\e ,hall tie\'.', 11 I'( ,\ecet Inennlric,
1 :11 Of one \\1 I1t\'t4 ,n ntitdi•
\\•allarc .1g;u', valuators tee;... �
10.0) 1—I?ter remembered by Mother and
1)a.l•
the use of her radio.
Site( ial than!„ t„ \'icl,lria Street
l'uitrd :Thitreit and t.1 ali her friend-.
l'hone
Torrance rrance I )tnllia,, phone
KR 2
31
\el,on 1liguiu. Hostage, etc...
1 6111 - 1 .1
(;I•;OR(11. \I.\I"I•IN Clcrl:•
.THEyrRE
"GIVE 'At ARD TO Gill"
MIGHTY
1 1 1 ,11 1 1 1 1
R'S OVER,
"NOWTHE�AOR HIMSELF
EVERYBODY
YOU'RE NOT
0`� 01
rw) KN TO�t3
SUPPOSED
CEr tor
BUST lots ON
u
nSt.IP ME A
dPLE Op SHIRTS
CO RROTHERI„
rf
IT YOU 00
nHAVEN DER
S 001411 .f..
Tot
:1 1'
..NEVER MIND
THE PRICE' GI\1
I'LL PAY ANYTHIN
\t
,�yoyoovfcor J
3
u
Let's not deceive ourselves by the belief that the danger is over—just because the war is won:
And let's remember that inflation is always followed by deflation with its misery of bankrupt
businesses, mortgage foreclosures and unemployment.
It's your job and your savings that are at stake.
The danger of inflation, with its block shadow—deflation,—will remain as
long as goods aro scarce and insufficient to meet der,:inds, That may be
WE HAD IT BEFORE ao '� 6 months, 12 months, 18 months. Only time will tell. As quickly as controls are
unnecessary, they aro dropped.
0 OO•1 �O 111E BUBBLE After nearly 6 years of war, industry cannot switch over to normal production
a ♦ 1920 O BURST of civilian goods by a snap of the fingers. Reconversion takes time. The whole
a``'y .00 system of raw materials,Iabor and production kgs to be re -geared.
O PRICES * * *
Q �/ OOASIUMPED In the meantime, price ceilings, rationing and other controls are the safeguard
UNEMPLOYMENT ... for every ono of us. IL's everybody's responsibility to help make them work,
FOLLOWED 0
1922 *BI
¶, 9• OO♦
�`O0 �O
J .��0' 1918
°L,TSNOTHAV,T ATAGAIN
SO• Keep on watching your buying. Don't rush to buy scarce goods,
Keep on saving your money. Put it Into Victory bonds and War Savings
curtifIcates.
Keep on supporting wage and price controls, and rationing.
Keep on fighting Inflation and its black shadow... deflation.
Atr
This advertisement is (+surd by the Government of Canada to emphasize the Importance of preventing a further increase in the cost of Nino now and deflation and unemployment later.
r
'p; •;.,; .;� r;. •;� �..0 •;� •;� r;� •;uO.C.;. P;,;. J..;� ✓� i; D. ,;�.5.;�,;i 1 1� • ' \' • l i ( l l ! 1 � 1' l I t I \ I r F"r", ; I t t r l `yin b'
!r lutinni l:; Ili, iI tine. nrinp,tti t,
1, ( I'I.";1•'111e!.re promptly all-\vrrc'I.
hums Ili,t;e ar1;1n:;1 nit tit, can be ulalll.
Ills Sale, I!ate .1t The Suutdald ()thee,
OI Farm`tn1 k awl Implement- and
1'11. h•.' calling;
CANADA PACKERS LIV[ITED
REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS
The i' hteenth car of Canada Packers I imited closed March
29th, 19.15.
It was the sixth wag ',e,tr. Both volume and result of operations
were determined largely by war conditions.
In each \ear since the he, inning of the war, dramatic increases
have been achieved in Live Stock and general Agricultural pro-
ductitin. These were reflected in corresponding increases In
volume of Packinghouse operations,
In the year under review the increase In volume continued, but
at a reduced pace.
The following table sets up, for the last pre-war year (ended'
March 1939), - and for the war period, the record of Canada
Packers' operations in terms of :-
year
Ended
Marc!)
March
March
March
March
March
Marc!)
193'9
1940
1'041
194'2
1943
1944
1945
A.
B.
C.
D.
F.
Dollar Sales
Weight of product cold
Net Profit
Profit as percentage of Sales
Profit per pound
TABLE NO. 1
A B
I)onh,r
$ 77,225,732
88,205,639
110,291,839
144,509,202
169,141,071
206,155,938
228,398,111
Weight of
Product Sold
800,763,592 lbs,
913,251,116
1,091,263,352
1,228,029,942
1,328,616,840
1,582,932,568
1,698,326,055
INCREASE
1945 over 1039 106c,0 132%
1945 over 1944 11% 7 fo
• • •
C D
Profit
A6
% of
Sales
Net
1'rofit
$1,238,736
1,667,809
1,555,028
1,611,465
1,611,418
1,687,587
1,824,811
DISTRIBUTION OF SALES DOLLAR
TABLE NO. 4
Out of each $1.00 of Sales in the respective years, the
Ing sums were paid
'1'o Producers, chiefly for live stock
To Employees (salaries, wages and
bonus)
To Service Organizations
To Suppliers
To Bondholders
Taxes -
follow -
1945 1939
• 82!3¢ 80M
7V3 84
• 3 i?{ '1 y3
3 %3
1a/1,i
2
;4
Total paid to persons other than 985a¢
Shareholders
Set aside for Depreciation
Remainder -retained for the benefit of
Shareholders
E Set aside for Wartime inventory Reserve
I'roflt
per
Pound
1/6c
1/5
1/7
1/8
1/8
1/9
1/9
Remainder -Net Profit - - - 9!¢
Paid to shareholders as dividends - -
Balance retained as Working Capital for
extension and improvement
of the business - - - • �� ¢
47% CAPITAL STRUCTURE
8("o
WARTIME INVENTORY RESERVE .
Following World War 1, losses of the deflation period (1920-
21) wiped out the wartime profits of most Canadian Packing
companies. So severe were those losses that ultimately they
made necessary a widespread reorganization of the Industry.
By reason of intlation-control measures erected during World
War II, it is hoped that post-war losses will this time be much
less severe. Nevertheless, at some stage following the war, de-
flation losses seen! inevitable. Prices of Live Stock products
have advanced to levels which, -it would seem, -can not be
permanently maintained.
This view is supported by the following table, which compares
present prices with those of 1939.
TABLE NO. 2
COMPARISON PRICES LIVE STOCK PRODUCTS
1945 AND 1939
Good Steers, live, Toronto -
Hogs, B-1 dressed, Toronto -
Lambs, live, Toronto - -
Chickens, Milk Fed A, Toronto
Eggs, "A" Large, Toronto -
Creamery Butter Toronto -
Cheese, f.o.b. factory, Ontario
Average
M arch
1945
A verage
March
1:13;1
- $11.54 $ 6.78
- 19,42* 12,25
- 14.95 9.10
- .35 .241/2
.35 .211/2
.43 1/2 * .2194
- .23`k .11
*Subsidies, Federal plus Provincial, included in 1015 prices -
Hogs - $1.62 per 100 lbs. Butter -91/2c per lb.
Cheese -3c per Ib.
• • •
To meet the anticipated Inventory losses, in each war year a
sum has been set aside as Wartime Inventory Reserve. That
UM for the year under review was $581,000.00,
The total reserve set up during the war, period has been: -
Year Ended
March 1940
March 1941
March 1942
March 1943
March 1944
March 1945
Total -
•
•
- $ 579,000.ou
380,000.00
1,310,000.00
650,000.00
500,000.00
581,000.00
• - $4,000,000.00
This total of four million dollars may be too much or too little.
No one at present can tell. it is hoped it may prove too much,
In which case a portion of It will ultimately be transferred to
the Profit and Loss Account. That all of it might be needed
may be seen from the following facts: -
1. To convert this year's Inventory (March
29, 1945) to the price basis of the last
pre-war year (March 30, 1939), a reserve
would be required of
2. In the deflation years following World
War 1,-(1920-21), the four companies
now comprising Canada Packers, made
a combined loss of
$5,600,000
$5,500,000
Upon all the sums set aside as Wartime Inventory Reserve, full
Income Taxes have been paid, and except that they may be
needed to offset post-war Inventory losses, these sums might
properly be treated as profits.
Had this course been followed, and had no Inventory Reserve
been set up, Columns C, D, E in Table No. 1 would have ap-
peared as follows: -
Year Ended
March 1939
March 1940
March 1941
March 1942
March 1943
March 1944
March 1945
TABLE NO. 3
Profit
$1,238,736
2,246,809
1,935,028
2,921,465
2,261,418
2,187,587
2,405,811
Profit as
Percentage Profit per
of Sales Pound
1.6% 1/6¢
2.5 1/4
1.8 1/6
2.0 1/4
1.3 1/6
1.1 1/7
1.1 1/7
• • •
volume, was that of doing the job at a reasonable margin of
profit.
In respect of profit, the facts are not available for the total
Industry. Canada Packers is the largest single111111, and its results
probably fairly indicate those of the Industry as a whole.
A comparison has already been given ('fable No. 4) of the' ears
1939 and 1945. But a comparison of the six-year war period
with the six-year pre-war period gives a more complete picture.
This is presented in the following cable, No, 6,
TABLE NO, 6
COMPARISON OF OPERATING RESULTS
6 pear pre-war period, 1934-1939 inclusive,
and 6 year war period, 1940-1945 inclusive
Average Saks
Average Profit before 'l'a'ss
Average 'faxes
Average Net Profit Iafter
'faxes)
Average Net Profit as per-
centage of `+ale,
Id as to a)
Pre-war Period War Period 1'erceutnge
1931 - 1939 1940 - 1945 luereaeo
a.
b.
c.
$68,037,735
1,1;00,3011
379,985
157,793,7.18
3,957, 791
2,198,108
1,310,381 1,639,680 26%
1.9;'-;, 1.05% decrease 45%
in summary, therefore, the record k as follows:-
The
ollows:The essential job of processing increased deliveries of Live
Stock was accomplished without block, and without invoking
financial assistance from the Government.
Many war contracts involved large advances by the Government
for plant. And in most cases the contracts provided for a profit
NO (before taxes) of 5 per cent.
The profit of the Packing Industry (before taxes) was approxi-
mately 2.45 per cent.
Of this, 1.4 per cent was returned to the Government, as In-
come and Excess Profits Tax, leaving a net profit to the in-
dustry of 1.05 per cent.
During the year, effect was given to the plan of subdividing the
Shares, announced In the last Annual Report. The Capital struc-
ture of the Company is now as follows: -
Bonds -
None
'A' Shares, carrying a cumulative
preferential dividend of
$1.50 per share - 400,000 shares
Amount of dividend - - - $600,000
'13' Shares, upon which is paid
a present dividend of
50c per share - - 800,000 shares
Amount of dividend - - - $400,000
Total Dividend - $1,000,000
• • •
WAR AND POST-WAR PLANT EXTENSION
During the war years, due to greatly increased volume, the
strain upon the physical equipment of the plants has been
severe. Plant extension has necessarily been held to a minimum,
but expenditure for upkeep has been much increased.
Sums charged to Fixed Capital during the war period are re-
vealed by the following: -
Fixed Assets (Balance Sheet 1945) • - ;23,720,750
Fixed Assets (Balance Sheet 1939) - • $21,636,385
Additions to Fixed Assets during war period $ 2,084,365
Plans have already been completed for a substantial programme
of plant replacement and extension in the post-war period. So
far as possible, construction will be delayed until a slackening
occurs in general industrial activity.
0 • •
Following the close of the war in Europe, it is appropriate that
this Report should deal with two main subjects:-
1.
ubjects:1. A review of the performance of the Packing Industry
during the war period.
2. An estimate of the outlook for Live Stock in the post-
war years.
1. THE WARTIME RECORD OF THE PACKING INDUSTRY
The first, and paramount duty of the Industry was that it man-
age to process the greatly increased deliveries of Live Stock.
That this was not a simple matter, Is evident front the follow-
ing comparison of inspected slaughterings for the years 1944
and 1939:
TABLE NO. 5
NUMI3ER OF ANIMALS PROCESSED, INSPECTED HOUSES
1944 1939 increase
Hogs 8,766,441 3,628,369 142;
Cattle - - - 1,354,104 872,574 551/4
Sheep and Lambs 949,096 786,274 21%
Calves - - - 660,556 679,922 -3'
Increase in Total weight of meat produced 113',x_ *
*Average warm dressed weight of animals killed: -
1944 1939
Hogs -
Cattle
Sheep and Lambs
Calves - - -
Authority: Meat Board, Ottawa.
•
165.4 lbs.
502.1
43,5
1111.2 -
150,4 lbs.
466.2
42.3
106.6
Considering that plant capacity In 1939 was in scale approxi-
mately with then marketings, the task of coping with this en-
ormous Increase in volume was a difficult one.
Substantial extensions in plant were, of course, necessary; but in
the main the handling of the increased deliveries was achieved
by 'adjustments', especially by increase in numbers of personnel
and of shifts. Proof that the job was effectively done lies in the
fact that only in two short periods throughout the 51/2 years,
was the flow of Live Stock slowed up, due to congestion at the
plants.
Next to the obligation of processing this great increase of
• 0 •
2. OUTLOOK FOR LIVE STOCK IN THE POST-WAR YEARS
The increase in Canadian Live Stock production was a vital
factor in the Allied war effort. Credit for this achievement be-
longs entirely to the Canadian Farmer, The Packing Industry
can claim no part of it. The Packer is simply the processing
element in the Live Stock Industry. His volume is determined
entirely by the numbers of Live Stock brought to market.
Cattle and Hog populations are now at levels much higher than
those of any pre-war date. When war demand is over, the sur-
plus will be such that, unless outlets can be maintained much
larger than those of the pre-war period, the increased produc-
tion in itself might become a threat to the level of Live Stock
prices.
What, then, is the prospect for live Stock prices in the post-
war years?
Concerning the period immediately ahead, there is no doubt.
The outlet is assured. Great Britain has already contracted to
buy (at present prices) all the Beef and all the Pork product
which Canada can ship, tip to the end of 1946.
As to the period 1947 forward, the problems of Cattle and
Hogs must be considered separately.
CATTLE
Cattle production in Canada has always been limited by the fact
that production costs ai'e higher than in Southern hemisphere
countries, especially Argentina, Brazil and Australasia. For this
reason, Canada has not, in the past, been able to compete in
the open Beef markets of the world, The chief open market has
been Great Britain.
However, though excluded from the open markets, Canada has
had a measure of preference in the chief protected market, viz.
United States. '1'o that country, until wartime controls diverted
the flow, Canada shipped about 200,000 Cattle yearly. And
her production of Cattle was regulated roughly to meet Can-
adian domestic requirements, plus the 200,000 head shipped to
United States,
On July 1st, 1942, for reasons of war expediency, an embargo
was placed against this movement of Canadian Beef Cattle to
United Stales, 'Thereafter, the flow of Canada's surplus Beef
was to Great Britain. During 1934, shipments of Beef totalled
106,000,000 lbs. And during 1945, it is expected shipments
will be substantially heavier.
However, Great Britain cannot be counted upon as a perman-
ent market for Canadian Beef. When world supplies catch up
with world demand, it seems certain Canada will again find
herself unable to compete with Beef from Southern hemisphere
counties. If is hoped that Canada's outlet to United States by
that time will have been reopened, and possibly enlarged. That
outlet has always been, and will again be, of vital importance to
the Canadian Cattle Producer.
In the long run it may he necessary that Canada adjust her Cattle
population to the same principle as in the pre-war period: -
that of meeting domestic requirements for Bcef, plus agreed
shipments to United Slates.
But this does not mean returning to the numbers of 1939. Can-
adian requirements will be much heavier than in the pre-war
years. Per capita consumption of Beef has advanced from 53.2
lbs. in 1939 to 61.7 lbs. in 1944. And if purchasing power per-
mitted, Canada's Beef consumption could easily advance to 70
lbs, per capita. (In 1943 it actually reached 69.3 lbs.) Out of
the war has come a new understanding of the nutritional value
of meats as a protective food, also a new concept of the import-
ance to the nation of maintaining its chief asset, viz. the health
of its citizens, at the highest possible level.
An enlightened National policy should see to it that the ex-
perience of the '30's shall not be repeated, when great stores of
unsaleable food depressed its Agriculture, while at the sante
time a large section of its population went undernourished. The
establishment of a high internal standard of nutrition would in
itself he an important safeguard of the welfare of Canadian
Agriculture.
(Continued on Next Page)
CANADA PACKERS LIMITED
REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS
(Continced From Previous Page)
HOGS
As a ilog producer; (1anada's position is fundamentally different
from that in respect ul Cattle. 1'o1' (;;lilada can produce Bacon
flogs as cheaply as any other country, and therefore can meet
all hooters in the world markets. As in the case of 13eef, the
chief open market is Great Britain.
The end of the war finds Canada the chief producer of Bacon
type slogs. in 1911, Canadian production was probably equal
to that of all other countries combined.
In the past, Colada's position un the British l3acou market has
been a stihsidiary otic. The leading position was held by Den-
mark. In the ininlediatc pre-war period Denmark shipped to
Great I3rilain approximately double the quantity shipped by
Canada, and received a price approximately 8 shillings per cwt.
higher than that pail for Canadian 13acon.
The responsibility for this situation lay entirely with Canada.
Canadian Bacon was inferior in quality to Danish.
And Canadian shlplllelllti were irregular.
Three conditions are necessary if Canada, in the post-war
period, is to retain first position on the British market.
t. Shipments must he in substantial quantity, — al
least 1on,(uio,unn lhs. yearly.
2. These shipments must he in even weekly vol•
ins, — i.e. approximately 8,000,000 lbs. per
week.
.3. Above all, the Bacon must be at least equal in
quality to Bacton from any other source.
In the 13ritish Bacon market, the war has presented to Canada
an opportunity she never had before. When (in 1940) Danish
and other Continental shipments to Great 13ritain were cut off,
an appeal was made to the Canadian Farmer to fill this gap.
His response was such that Canadian exports were stepped up
from 186,o00,00o Ills, in 1939 to, —
1910
1' 041
1042
1913
1914
314,000,u0o lbs.
461,000,000 lbs.
525,000,000 lbs,
560,000,000 lbs.
692,000,000 lbs.
To -day, Canada stands first as the source of Bacon for the Bri-
tish market.
But she can retain that position only upon the three' conditions
mentioned above. And it is imperative that Canada begin at
once to put herself in a position to fulfil those conditions.
Fortunately, she may have the benefit of a period of grace. For
Danish Bacon hill probably not conte to Great Britain for a
period of many months, as it will be urgently needed on the
Continent.
11 is unfortunate that at this juncture deliveries of Hogs in Can-
ada are light. For the first seven months of 1945 (January to
July, inclusive), Iiogs processed at inspected plants have
totalled - - - 3,624,499
The corresponding number for 1944 was - - 5,648,956
A decrease of - -
or 35.8 per cent.
2,024,457
This decrease has been due chiefly to shortage of manpower 011
the farms. That shortage is likely to be relieved within the next
four or five months. The breeding season for Hogs Is now at
hand. Fanners can feel reasonably sure (hat by farrowing time
of Hogs bred now, the acute labour shortage will be past.
Canada cannot export 8 million pounds of Bacon weekly unless
breedings are stepped up at once. In Ontario and Quebec the
prospect for breedings is encouraging. For in these Provinces a
good feed crop seems assured.
However, the key area is the West. If Canada is to produce the
essential numbers of Hogs, most of them must conte from the
Prairie Provinces. Unfortunately, the crop on the Prairies is not
encouraging. Certain areas will be short of feed.
It is important that those farmers who have feed should under-
stand the issues at stake, To hold first place on the British
Bacon market is the key objective in Canadian agricultural
policy. A consideration of the basic facts makes this clear.
Canada produces, and must continue to produce, a large total
surplus of farm products. That surplus must be sold abroad. 1t
follows, therefore, that the surplus should be converted into
those products in which Canada can compete in the open
markets of the world. Of these, the two chief products are
Wheat and Bacon. in respect of Wheat, Canada's position is
assured. She produces the highest grade \Vheat and her cosi of
production is competitive.
However, if Canada's agricultural surplus were produced most-
ly in the form of Wheat, world markets could not absorb it.
That became clear in 1929. Therefore, another large surplus
outlet is necessary. The only other world product which Canada
can produce in competition with all confers is Bacon.
For the first time in her history, Canada holds first position in
the great open market for Bacon --- viz. Great Britain. But
Canada cannot retain that position unless she contrives to ship
approximately 8 million pounds of Bacon weekly. If she suc-
ceeds in holding first place as a Wheat exporter (which she
can) and al tile same time in retaining her present position in
the British Bacon market, Canada will have an assured outlet
for her total farm surplus.
• • •
These are, the facts which make it so important to increase }log
breedings during the coming months, — particularly in Western
Canada.
A further fact is of almost equal importance. The maintenance
of Bacon shipments at the 8 million pound (weekly) level
would in itself become an invaluable aid to rattle prices. For
such a scale of Bacon exports, by reducing the quantities of
Pork product available in Canada, would thereby increase do-
mestic demand for Beef.
In this report, it has already been pointed out that a Vigil
itnlne`lic denlln,l is the chief prop to (tattle prices in Canada.
• • •
The Directors feel that reference niusi he made in this Report to
the recent strike of Canada Packers' employees. The Report
goes to the printers in advance of the arbitration hearings.
Therefore, comment lutist be contined to non -controversial as-
pects of the incident.
The strike began at "Toronto on July 17111 with a walkout,of a
group of the Cattle Killing Division. On one point there is no
dispute. This walkout was in contravention of, the agreement
between the Company and the (inion, Had the grievance pro-
cedure been invoked at once, the point at issue would have been
settled without difficulty.
It happened that the National Officers of the Union were not
immediately available, and by reason of the delay, a secondary
point of controversy intervened. This secondary issue is to be
dealt with by the Arbitration Tribunal, and cannot here be dis-
cussed. On this secondary issue all the employees of the Com.
pany's Toronto plants walked out.
Later, employees at the Peterborough, Winnipeg, Edmonton,
,:tnd Vancouver plants declared sympathetic strikes. Ili each case
the sympathetic strike was called without any discussion as to
the right or wrong of the points at issue at Toronto. The dispute
was threatening to spread almost to the whole Packing Industry
of Canada when The Honourable Charles Daley, Minister of
Labour for Ontario, suggested a plan of arbitration to which
both the Union and Company agreed.
The Company concedes without reserve the right of employees
to he represented by the Union of their choice. Also, that an
obligation rests upon the Company to take all reasonable steps
towards co-operation with the Union. When difficulties arise,
which from time to time are inevitable, the Company pledges
itself immediately to invoke the various steps of grievance pro-
cedure, and to .implement promptly the decisions arrived at.
Such action will not avoid a sudden flare-up, unless the Union
is also able and willing similarly to invoke the grievance pro-
cedure step by step, and to enforce upon its members the deci-
sions arrived at.
The fact that an incident, which should have been adjusted in
a half-hour, blew up into a strike which threatened to close
most of the packing plants in Canada, suggests that more clear-
cut safeguards should exist for quick and sure adjustment of dis-
putes. It is hoped the pending arbitration proceedings will result
in the adoption of such safeguards.
The strike cost the Company approximately $300,000.00.
Loss of wages to employees was approximately $ 165,000,00.
• • •
'l'he Company has continued its policy of distributing to em-
ployees of all ranks, a substantial portion of its profits.
The Bonus distributed for the year under review
was - - - - - - $1,060,000.00
Dividends to Shareholders were - - $ 900,000.00
Total Bonuses distributed in the last ten years
have been - - - - - - $6,168,000.00
Dividends to Shareholders in the same period $7,400,000,00
J. S. McLean,
President.
Toronto, August tOth, 1945.
Extra copies of this Report are available, and so long as they last
wilt be mailed to anyone requesting them. Address to Canada Packers
Limited, Toronto.
AND SHE INSISTS ON BUTTER!
This is Baby, Baby Is a Siamese cat who lives In Chicago. Baby
likes corn on the cob, preferably Golden Bantam, with lots of but-
ter, She sneers at milk and cream and fish, She loves fried chicken
or beef. Mice? Don't be common.
NEW CHIEF OF GENERAL STAFF
Lieut -General Charles Foulkes, C.B., C.B.E., D.S.O., seated at his
desk ready to assume the duties of his new appointment as Chief
of the General Staff. Gen, Foulkes, who comtnanded the First Can-
adian Corps in Italy and Holland, succeeds Lieut -General J. C.
Murch(•,
LEADERS IN SOVIETS' `POSTWAR WAR'
Two of the Soviet's key commanders who fought Japs in Manchuria
and Korea long after Hirohito announced Japan's surrender, are
pictured above. Marshal K. A. Meretskov, left, directed the First
Far Eastern Army in Korea. Marshal Rodion Malinovsky, right,
led the Russian Trans-Bailkal Army in a drive from Mongolia
toward the vital Manchurian war centres of Harbin and Mukden.
FRENCH LEADER REMEMBERS WAR DEAD
General Charles de Gaulle, Chief of the Provisional French Gov-
ernment, placed a wreath at the base of the National War Memo-
rlal during a State vielt to Ottawa last week. He was a guest of the
Governor General during his stay In Canada's Capital.
DE GAULLE DECORATES CHIEF OF STAFF
Lieut. -General Charles Foulkes, CB., CBE., DSO., Chief of the Gen-
eral Staff, Canadian Army, was decorated with two of France's
highest awards, the Legion of Honor and the Croix de Guerre with
Palm by General Charles de Gaulle, Chief of the Provisional
French Government at a ceremony at the French Embassy, Ottawa.
General Foulkes commanded the First Canadian Corps in Italy
and Holland.
SPANISH ASPIRANT
Dr, Jose Giral, above, Is premier
of the newly formed Spanish Re-
publican Government-In•Exile at
Mexico City. Appointed by pro-
visional president Diego Martinez
Barrio, he replaces Dr. Juan
Negrin,
JOYFUL ACCLAIM greets
the hostess who serves de-
licious, stimulating Max-
well House Coffee. Avail•
able at your grocer's in au
All Purpose Grind that
suits any type of coffee
maker.
Look out for Trouble
from Sluggish
KIDEYS
Try the Original "Dutch Drops"
It is poisonous caste that your kidneys
should be filtering out of your blood that
may cause backache, dizzy spells, leg
cramps, restless, sleep -broken nights. and
smarting and burning. For relief use the
remedy that has won the grateful thanks
of thousands for many years—GOLD
MEDAL Ilaarlem Oil Capsules.
This effective diuretic and kidney stimu-
lant Is the original and genuine Dutch
Drops in direfully measured amounts In
tasteless Capsules. It is one of the most
favorably knower remedies for relieving
congested kidneys and irritated bladder.
It works swiftly, helping the delicate
filters of your kidneys to purify the blood.
Be sure you get the original and genuine—
packed in Canada. insist on getting
GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules.
40c at your druggists.
PAGE 8 THE STANDARD
irliNVENIXI+ tQail 1(i!CrOCliii! atlett1C1cileti Live lOCK!CCKtcte1cle tcct(i1(Ni1M
F
K
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Ladies Bathing Suits 82,95 to 81.95
Men's, Women's and Children's
Running Shoes 69c to 81.19
Women's SlacksSI 19 to 81.95
Children's Sun Suits 51.00 to 51.19
Mosquito Netting per yard lllc
Good Assortment of Men's, Women's and
Children's Camp Shoes.
HOLIDAY NEEDS
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Doherty Bros.
GARAGE,
Acetylene and Electric
Welding. A Specialty'.
Agents For International -
Harvester Parts & Supplies
White Rose (gas and Oil.
('ar Painting and Repairing.
•.-•,e�.�.,,�.40..14-44- •
Von den's
BAKERY.
N,� I.. I ;:1:'•11.1 l .1•.
WHEN 1N NEED O1.
sTuA - , - •: .\ll ,H I' ,1'11'1x:”, .':• I', ;i1fUx11 11•
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t r I i,l ;` 'al •1• xl x!,111 `lin; .1 ,
• 111., \ Ixlll 1t 1,11- 'le,' 111'.:1 I,I,I''• 11'0111E-NIA11.; CAKE
\11 I 1 \ .1 1(.1111.11x1
,111 ;n I.:•1„\\x! ,11111 .,1x01,50,' OR COOKIES
L: !'hone 156 for Prompt Delivery.
l:
:'
_. Please Phune Delivery Orders Early. :.: ,1 1,44 \\1t'1 ii,•1• \lt• k I1 I'iltitl REi1II��1II31t:It
m 'Intl \Ir-- 1'101;;1.
Morning Dcliwery, Kurth of 1)insle'y Street. \!I' ;1:,11 \I I., \Viii l,raillt', I• 1`i \toil "71'11 L IIOME BAKERY”
:.. Afternoon Delivery, South of Dinsley Street. ::: 1,`\,1l;1!, • \ rt,' "I•,n,`I,;,,, \1-i1x,1 \,1011 r , l 9
r• II. I. VODDEN • la
thin• 1• 1'l-'.11, \I r•, (.• ,llll 1 r5115k ¢)
Delivery Orders - 1.00 or Over. :i: 1
. t. 1 xl 1 I\.
t .• i�
, ,, •t• f' \I1• "\i;I''1•I 6111 I` • I ILII,', 1\\' ,III'! 1,11:1 I:•1:11,41:1•:••.•I: 4,4.:••,H:1:,.01•.1 4:1♦11+111.4♦11♦1:/♦♦1144
r: i\lilcaron1 -1 11)5. for 25c '_' \I r,. \\ x,lx\ Itutl: ,1111! , n. 11:155 '. „11 I •i.
>,.� A11 Lia COLE �:i w
4
a♦ '.' lea j11 -t retll'"I11 I it -illi 11x,,1.1, 111111' 1,
Rice. 2 lbs. for ''5c
.t. \ car. , , . 1.,:•;t . \I 5.:11; I r.. t "riuiclixl' r
1
•,, ' ♦ g 2;i •
1 1 \11,1!15x,11 •III1l \i 1 •-. 1 ;1tll-,I I) -\tv1. Ili •, '' ' �p
a,
Lux II lalies per pkg. 25c :1. R.O.
• "rd i, 111, \I.. 111111 \I r- \1x11. 1 1 4!• OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN '•
>: RIIISU ' per pkg. 5e
,0.11,„,,.t44x11 ,i"i11,r- „ills \I r. :111'1
:1
Gour.RtCl(—ON'T'ARIO, a
yJiffy Pic' ('rust ');� \Ir.. r 11 1':1,\;11••!• \xt• 1hx \\ ,.,,k_,,,1,1 of
:♦
�> — '•' Lyca Lxani.ncd anti GI-tsses Pitted, ;.
a: Reil -Rotie ('(►1 fee per 1!). -15(' , t� \151010 :5 Years L'xt:cricnce lj
' • lielgrave Fair Sept. 18th. \\ iI l.4 at
Lal!' (�►'i111}„'e 11'11 half,11). pkg. l:)c 1'h, Il1l,rav, X5'11• 1 11ut• \\ iii it,' i
111(. , ti..iciin!,tf l-tlt "ll,;. 1- 1l15,5 Hl- :i: R. D. Philn's Drug Store >:
1 omato Soup 511�.
'+• • \x 1u1:1i!xe .\I! f,n•u�l r .\�r:, 1!1111;11 BL1 TI -1, ONTARIO 1
IP Stu edded Wheat pkgs. for '?5e I l NEXT VISIT
:. ,.,,t1.,, nt Iti,'r. •1;x ,11,•0x, 1,1 Ilcn I
'i• '' r I E AY SEP'l'El\4BER 19th'
.. \Ir t ;11.51111, dirx5t, r „I I�;nr, 111 O 0- o.\V � UNFSn
. . • . . . . . .... .... .1..1.....1. .. ..... A. �.... ,. ...1. /.... ... .. .1 .... ... ........:... D- 1..4.....•.:...:..•.:•..1.....1. •. � 1 ' 111
'i• FROM 'L '1'O G P.M. '1" °)
1414 1414- • — ---- -I'III‘ .,I ..1i,i ,I •.L,1,1..•, 1. will 4'
TELEPHONE 2'?
Wednesday, Sent, 12, 19.15
"� • 14141414 — 1414-,•
• 1114m do u•1e,1 im �.
VITAMIN PRODUCTS
FOR . GOOD HEALTH
\(111• IS TI 1.1 NI 11, •1,400 ]11.111;'1:; r\;ja,uirt' ,11'•1111.1 \winter
511111, ,11111-il•1,nl .. The in.; IJinni.- all t„11,1111 a 11i,'ll
\ 11/111111 4„1111111
WAMPOLF'S EXTRACT
WA•TERBURY COMPOUND
NEO CITEMICAL. I'001)
sco'r•r'S EMULSION
CREOPIIOS
COD LIVER OIL CAPSULES
A.B.D. CAPSULES
VI'T'A VIM MULTII'l.E CAPSULES
ONE A DAY 'TABLETS
A. AND D. VITAMIN TABLETS
$1.110
1.151:
$1.15. $2.45, $1,45
50c anti 93e
$l.00
98c
$1.10, $2.00, $3.511
$1.75 and $3.110
45r, $1,00 and $I.80
• $1,09
R D. PHILP, Phm. B.
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, 1VALLPAI'E t—PHONE 2P•
i
1411{ttIKKICWCtPtdkitC(CICIb'Iattile4Q. !Pa CIalCt4• VCtV4'tett'.440„7kitf;4C CICt liiN'tCV,:!41CtCtOil1
taxi,( \,iI :11 •,I 11x 11re,e1lt
• r' Irrill,l,' 1.1 e Itl\,11 t1;lnI will be \,ill( 51`11110;1115,. ,Ii 1 :,,n ;uul r�111161, arc 1,,
Softball I ou►•namellt R. D. P11 LP'S DRUG STORE
011 11111• i)i1V „111 !111 .1'1\:5, 1 f 1,111 1'41111. twit 1 i tx,n:un ill 111,15, until
• A\ • 'it \;'1 t„:1r11aul.111 1/.1. \\ 4T11 111\, x5lalrl1I atter au n;lcrat 1111 IIt,, 1'01Z APPOIN'I'MLN'I'S• NP
:\t11111r11 ,1 :? 1 \\,'-.111111 \\111 In tee rel 11.\:' x- I ,I ll':l'II'YI- Ir:,111 0-11101111, \\ 1147,11 ICA 11 1 ', 1'51111: t pin:I1111'111 041•':'14•:001:41.:•:•1:1 0:04:14:44O4:41:441:4481)• hl
the fe:ll,l c at 1111 '.i n`• at the I'an• Ili 111,1' r 1,51,1. 11,1' I,e. n -r, 11551 11`5 the 1 r•;unx t I�, 1111x11\ R
Lining -Room Furniture
VII tem
We are offering Several New Designs in Ches-
terfield Suites and Occasional ('Mail's - upholstered
in the latest fabrics at most Moderate Prices.
A wide selection of End 'fables, Mirrors, 1-las-
so::Jcs, living -Boom 'fables, (Vail Brackets, Coffee
'fables and Other Odd Living-Itut)I l Pieces, \vhich
hells to snake your home more comfortable and 'n-
,loyable•
A call will convince you of the (many excellent
values we are offering•%
1±4 •11•H•1 ♦•11'1 •�1 • 1:1 ••• 1.1 ♦•• 1•H. I•H•. •'1 •' . ' • 1411•• 4•11•11'H�H•1:H'♦ •�H: ••• 1'H•H•1 •'1 •0111 •♦•:11.1 H•11•/ •11 1••11.41•.. 11.1 • . r. • 1.1 i 11 1 •'111. 1 i • i 1.11 •111 1•.11 i 111.1 1 r� •111.11 11'.1.1 11.1 1 •'11.11.1 , Iy11•1111 1.1 • 11'1 "111.11.1 •'1 •'1 ••1 ••1 ••11♦1 I♦11.1 I•11'11�•
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YoU =. Co.
OU AND COMPANY—you and
that family you work and plan
for! A small boy you'd like to send
to college—a little girl who's going
to have "the very best her old Dad
can give her!” It's the most im-
portant tiling in .the world, isn't it-
1''-:n:;ing for their future! And NOW
is the time to make sure those plans
come true by putting up a strong,
steady fight against inflation!
You and all of us must fight for
that future by fighting to keep Can-
ada's dollar sound. Unless we can
keep that dollar worth a full dollar,
You & Co.—along with the rest of
Canada—will face inflation! That's
why it's important NOW—more than
ever vow—to fight for a dollar that's
worth a dollar.
Why NOW especially? Because
now civilian goods arc scarce, and
money is plentiful. Now is the time
to FIGHT to maintain price con-
trols anti price ceilings. We must
support and urge the support of
rationing. \Ve must buy only t
what we need, and only at fair
markets,
If we do this, we can make plans
for the future as part of a Nation
that is economically sound. If we
don't, we're going to find some day
'that our dollar will buy only a
quarter's worth of goods. And that
means that dollar is only worth a
quarter. This is inflation!
Up to now, Canada's controls have
really worked, We've been able to
prevent inflation. But we must fight
now to keep those controls working,
until the supply of civilian goods can
come up to the demand! What
happened after the last war must not
happen again! For the sake of our
children, for our returned soldiers,
for ourselves let's keep up the fight
against inflation.
Published by THE BREWING 1NDusTRY (ONTARIO) to reveal the dangers of inflation.
Make this Pledge Today!
pledge thyself to do my part
in fighting inflation:
By observing rationing and avoiding
black markets in any shape or
form. -
13y respecting price controls and other
anti-inflation measures, and re.
training front 4areicssand mineces.
sary buying. 1 will not buy two
where one will do, nor s\111 1 buy
a "new” where an "old” will do,
By buying
Savings
ARFWIt;G-":
USTAy
.10
Victory Bonds and War
Grumps, supporting tax.
ation and abiding
by all such measures
which will lower the
cost of living and
help keep prices ata
normal level.
1!
'.4 Vs.1711)ant2t, IOIDIDi1111012t21ht: NBil•aa riDIDat3liiLiDa+D111iDiidi2ttIut::hutWil'11'?;''ot.liND IN
Chellew
Home Furnisher — Phoned 7 and S — Funeral Director.
t7
III Y. 1 11 11 1 • I 4 • •• : : n 1 ♦• 4 Y-di ♦I• 111 •I 04611,1 P. .111 11' .61 1 11 I
1.1.01.14'1♦•* I .1.4.14, 1•+••1:. ••14.1.414'1 ••1 •♦111. •'1.1 ••1.1040 ••• 1'• •01•. •1101141 ••11.11°I 1'. ••• ••1 •�. 1.1 •,1.0 • : •411•. ♦ 4 4,' •1 •1 I.1 ••14•♦ ♦,4 t 1,
•4
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FRANK GONG Proprietor :t.
'1:1•+.•.1•. ••1.•1 ••1.:1.•. ••1.0.•..•. •0 ♦•. ..•1 ♦4. •4.1.1141.•11:1 •:. 1•♦ 1.1141 ••1 ••1 •411••.•1.•1 ♦t• . ••.1•• ; 1 •1 •'.:. ••. ••1 •4.544 4'1 •. • : •. 4 •'•.•. 1
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HURON GRILL
BLYTII --- ONTARIO.
EXCELLEN'I 1F'O01). GOOD) SERVICE.
Meals at All Hours.
CHUIICH
UNC
13LY'I'II UNITED CHURCH
September 16
,.1111 1' to : 11,10 vc-1 1111114 ticrvir4
5T MARK'S Ci-IUIZCI-I AUBURN
tier\ I t a ililllrll\\ 11 1111 Ilelgrawe.
Further Information Re
Clothing' Collection
10.15: In Ll,t 44411,', i *nc \\a, publi,l,t'1!
I1•I5: t 111145 \1\\' \lanal;ell01 tot I1>t 111 rlutliin 11111.1 tU:;rn11c 1144111,1
i 11 in: in the l'alact•• h\' th1 ,le,Lllntc' in t!I, I uruIlc;u0 Alun
Thu \11111\ 4 ,at \• ti1 rwic4, \\ illhe 0511, I�inlll\ 111,11 that the lullu\\'in:;
can \(1•I 111 5,401 \cnint;
001x41111 ilrt amts, \\11111411', hat,.
ilre,, hat, and (1(1•h4,
I.xt u, 1;uc11 in mind that the 1.1"!11111;1
444 donate should he Servicc.tl,l.• (lean
;111,1 Sanit;lrl
1(1 a• : ,ltritlnl; I'1.rivet• x1111 S41'tttn111 j l'ru-1111'1it I"•r,4\'v11 r. rt'111\0'1 ul lite
t!'1:'1
!.4 ItcvIII\I :\ 1101100 11:11:;1
1 I:xutei. aitualiun in 1:1:ru 1c 1104 tirpttnthcr ;0,
tiu111'iy Scit.01. 1')I-1 50741 a, fl'll \\,—"\lilltii- of lieu•
'fRINI t'Y .CHURCH BELGRAVL 1114 1104 111`0 haver ctluut;h clutlii lu
then( \tarn(—in ucrullicll I':urt i i- ;ditto:4
Harvest Thanksgiving .1, many 11111101e have 11i«1 fr. 11 1x!0:,.
11.30 a tit : I .,ry -st Communion, \Ir tire due to lad: "f adequate 4luthhig 1
Ilunt, have (heti h'•'nt ,lar\'a1111ll
held Sunday, OI•tuhti 11,
TRINITY CHURCH BLYTIl
•. •111.1 ••.1•. ••1 •4H: ••.♦•. ••1 •: ••+1.14.1 ••1 ••• • : 44• ••1 ••♦ ••1 •0 ••1 .•1 ••1 ••H•• •: ••1 •'1 ••1 ••HO 101•• •:• 1./ ••. •: •,•1 ••1 •• ••• ••• ••• •4.1..4 •41 ••♦1.4 ,1l
Wendy's 5c is 31.00 Store
OIL CLOTH SQUARES,
SERVING TRAYS,
MEN AND BOYS SHIRTS,
HIND'S ALMOND AND •IIONEY CREAM,
WINfDOW SHADES,
HOLLYWOOD WAVE SET,
Many Worth -chile Specials
To Serve You Will Be Our
Pleasure.
4
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