Ontario Community Newspapers

Grimsby Independent, 15 Sep 1920, p. 5

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M. D. E. Kitching & ,Co. GRIMSBY Un UTIFIALNIA EY But it‘s always a legitimate question to ask the Furniture Man what is behind the varnish. t3 h What’S , ‘*N Behind ‘%f The V a I'IllS:h.* With this store there is never any masquerading. Oak is always oak, mahogany is mahogany and ash is always ash. If you pay for‘& certain quality you get THAT . qualityâ€"always. 8t n Did you ever see a hypoq&tfifil}pi’gcé of Furniture? 4. Carries a full line of Fresh and Cured Meats, and will.start to deliver orders on Saturday, Sept. 18th. All orders for morning delivery must, be in by 10 o‘clock, and all orders for afternoon délivery must be in not later than 8 o‘clock. Afternoon delivery on Saturâ€" days only. ¢ f MRS. HUMMELL‘S OLD STAND ‘Phone 259. LEAAA IALIALARLAIALRIAHH IJn" real__ estate ‘ security. . Both â€"Pfivate and Company. funds Valuator for the Hamiton Proâ€" 11 Furniture Dealers & Undertakers A. H. McPHERSON And behind our "say so" is a business standing that is ready to correct any mistakes that we may make. A reliable Regulating Pill fc a box. Sold at all Drug St« to any addréss on receipt c SCOBELL DRUG CO., Mor â€" vident and Loan Society > Insurance® and . Real | Estate Officeâ€"Main Street, Grimsby PHOSPHONOL for MEN Dr. DeVan‘s French Pills Restores Vim and Vitality ; for Nerve and Brain ; increases "gray matter;" a Tonicâ€" will build you up. $3ya box, or two for $5, at drug stores, or by mail ‘om receipt of varnish, something verywwt,‘ i Such Furniture as that nezyer fooled usâ€"and never . will. Thé sham is too easy to see through,‘}%‘. ©.."~ FOR‘ SALEâ€"One _ pony buggy and saddle. T afraid of nothing, any chil him. Also one heifer, H« thoroughbred Jersey. Th bought cheap for cash. H. at«_ arug stores, or by N2 22 TeX P uo price. FHE SCORELL DRUG COMPANY Montreal, Quebec. It pretended to be so hs%â€"-flbp' it it was REALLY, behinfi%éf' al}| 9 FOR SALEâ€"Six roomed house, elecâ€" tric ‘lights, good dry cellar, deep lot, some fruit and nice garden plot. Also square piano, two a,pyle pregses and good vinegar barrel. ; Apply Mrs. A. G. Williamson, Elm St., Grimsby. FOR__RENTâ€"â€"Mrs‘. Softley. Depot St., will rent half of Iier house, furnishâ€" ed, to two or three careful adults. All modern conveniences. TO RENTâ€"A five room flat, over J. F. Scott‘s store.. Possession given October 1st. Apply to R..I..Snitginger, ‘phone 408. £9y * " FOR SALEâ€"A hand vacuum sweepâ€" ‘_er, in first class condition. Cheap for quick sale.© J. A. M. Liv%lxg‘ston, ‘phone 36 or 379. R pFoRr SALEâ€"All kinds of home canâ€" ned fruits, pickles, etc. . Mrs.: M. Durham, Mapleâ€"Avenue. ‘Phone 43. «faoJa=Bn«Bo«BaoBe aBeaTe aBe oBe aBe oBe aBe «Be eBeaBe e iGe aBe eBe aBe aBe abe aBe obe aBeaSea$eaZeaJaaZeaTe aBe aTo afe aBe afe aSe afeafe afe ale ofeaZecSnaSeecTocecfe ofe \ TERRIFFIC _ STORM RUINS FRUIT *y .‘ CRoP § o \ _ _Far into the tens of, thousands. of . E!dollars is the damage wrought withâ€" Advertlse i Our wants in 15 minutes by‘a terrific hail and .? FUnV 4 ataninm â€" fh a +t m4mrnmxnk : Anerre +1 o+ Wednesday, Septembers15th, 1920 7OR SALEâ€"One cow, splendid milkâ€" " er. Apply Baldwin‘s Hardware. DORIS Cook Stov tion. ‘Phone 219 ton BUTCHER LOOK MONEY TO LOAN N mm mm i ‘PHONE NO..~7 W. B. CALDER Phone 72 WANTED b pt of price. ‘THI Montreal, Quebec in good condi or write P.. C ony, . harness, This. pony is child dgx drive â€"Holstein, and These ~ca H. Hilliet res P n e +. ONTARIO Women.> $5 or mai in be Motor trucks â€" and farm tractors are fast taking the place of the famous Georgian mule in the cotton belt section of that State. â€" A rustâ€"proofing process recently imported from England, where it was successfully used â€" during the war makes it a possibility that the motor car of thhe fture wil be :1ast proof. A _ "Sweepâ€"upâ€"theâ€"glassâ€"Club", â€" orâ€" ganized recently in Los Angeles, Calif., is made up of automobilists who have pledged themselves to stop their cars when glass is sighted and clean the highway of the tirb menâ€" ace. The perversion of the natural inâ€" stincts of animals, whereby they eat unseemly things, is assumed to be due to malnutrition. They need something that they are not getting. Egpgeating in chickens is easily conâ€" trolled by feeding them meat. The ration of these hogs was found to be deficient in protein. Two weeks afâ€" ter starting them on a balanced raâ€" tion they had become normal and the improvement.. of their â€" condition _ of health was remarkable. The imâ€" portance of a balanced rati n is not generally appreciated here was a concrete example. § Inmates of Auburn Prison in New York State, are working on three eight hour shifts, going day and night, to complete the 1,500.000 license plates required by motor vehicles in that State for 1921. Clean to handle. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and General Stores gentleman, this tale is tie strangest The following is the story, verbatim which Glover gave to the Reporter: ‘"We have heard ~of hens eating eggs, of sows. eating their young, limbs eating the wool off theit moâ€" ther‘s ‘backs, cattle chewing leather and trying to eat sticks, ~bones, and all sorts of rubbish, and they do say that goats clean up the tin cans in the abley. These things are all true with the possible exception of the goats, but whoever heard of pigs eatâ€" ing each ‘others tails? Do not allow yourself to become. incredulous â€" for this is also true. About thirty hogs were seen on a farm in Larimer County, in a very «unthrifty condiâ€" tion and every one of them had had his tail eaten off clear to t... back bone. i AND THEYâ€"~LEFT ~THEIR â€" TAILS j BEHIND THEM Dr. George H. G@lover of the Colorâ€" ado Agricultural College‘is. the auth ority for many things in the yveterinâ€" ary line but of all tales told by that T..OSTâ€"On : <«TLabor : Day Grimspy Beach corner by, a pocketbook.containin money.~ Finder will be r INDEPENDENT office. BEAMSVILLE CIDER MILLâ€"Will "~"commence running on Thursday of this week, and on following Tuesdays and ~Fridays until further notice. "Phone 106 ring 4, Beamsgville. °C. J. Crooks. M ‘VANTEDâ€"TWO or three. men for apple picking, for about six weeks. W. Wedgewood, ‘phone 136J, Grimsby. FARMS WANTED â€"We can give you an economical, efficient service that will help you to get into direct comâ€" munication with farm buyers. If you have a stock, dairy or fruit farm for sale, a property suitable for poultry and gardening, or a country home property and will send us a descripâ€" tion we will téll youchow we give you a service thatâ€" will interest you at a very nominal cost. Drop us a letter toâ€"day. John Fisher & Co., Lums\den Building, 6 Adelaide St. East, Toronto. A FARMSâ€"â€"If you. wisk: to .sell your | farm â€" commuricate .; with us â€"we have juyers now. It will cost you nothing unle:s we make a sale. Bell‘s. Limited, GRIMSBY, ‘ph ne 405 or 261. e OsSTâ€"On Grimspy TImS 11 LOST AND FOUND MISCELLANEOUS HELP WANTED lin n ind vard petween Grimsgâ€" 1 rom | droveé it Ohsweken.... ... Ancaster:..s. .;} . Binbrodk:...;}.. /.« Caledonia, ... ... NOTE:â€"Mrs. Shortt is a sister of Senator E. D. Smith of Winona, and was well known in the days gone by. â€"Editor. Mrs. Shortt is a tall woman of comâ€" manding appearance and most charmâ€" ing in @All respects. She is a great entertainer and hostess and is a socâ€" ial favorite in Ottawa. She is about sixty years of age and a regular atâ€" tendant of the Anglican Church. She resides at 5 Marlborough .Avenue, Ottawa.â€"Toronto Star Weekly. Mrs. Shortt is a most capable woman an able platform sneaker and possesâ€" eg a wide familiarity with world events. â€" > During her residence in Ottawa, there have been few public movements participated in by women in which Mrs Shortt has not been an active worker. She is chiefly associated in the capital with the work of the National and Loâ€" cal Councils of Women, and Rkas held many of the most important offices in these bodies. She was electod delegate to the quinquennial congress of the Na tional Council of Women held at Torâ€" onto in 1919, where her addresses well illustrated her extraordinary grasp on Canadian public affairs and her intimâ€" acy with the peculiar problems of woâ€" men. For years Mrs. Shortt has persistâ€" ently advocated the establish:acont of a system of Mothers‘ pensions patâ€" terned along the linesof the one now introduced â€"by the Government of the Province. Born in {the liittle town ‘of VWinona, Ontario; on Janu@ryâ€" 18, 1859, Mrs. Shortt whose maiden name is Rlizaâ€" beth Smith, received a private educaâ€" tion first, then attending Hamilton Collegiate Institute and later on at the Royal Medical College, Kingston, Ont. She received her degree of M. D. at the age;of twentyâ€"five. In 1886 she was married to Prof. Adam Shortt, now in charge of the, Historical Publicatâ€" ons <at the Public Archives, Ottawa, and one of the most noted educationâ€" ists in the Dominion. Mrs Shortt was instrumental i n having a seperate coursefor women instituted at Kingsâ€" ton leading to the establishment of the Women‘s Medical College there. She was engaged to lecture there on Medi¢éal jurisprudence and sanitary _ science from 1887 to 1893. Her boundâ€" less energies found an outâ€"let in other aciivities of the institution and she was for a time president of the Ladies Musical Club there while sh2> has also been honored by being elelted presidâ€" ent of the Medical College. Mrs., Shortt‘s career has been one of unwavering activity on behalf of the cause of women and socia . service work. It is not generally known that she is a fully qualified woman physician,in fart one of txe first woâ€" men in Canada to obtain her d=«gree of M. D. % It was a welil advised move on the part of the Drury Government to se= lect Mrs. Adam Shortt, of Ottawa, to act on the Mothers Pensions Allowâ€" ances Board, now launched in its praiseworthy work. No Warning There ‘was, nothing: to wiarn, anyâ€" one ‘of such‘‘a* cyclonic. storm. . It looked a little like rain, but that didn‘t deter people from going to the Beach ang to the lacrosse and baseâ€" ball ‘games! Those who went‘to Port Dilhousie, had a hard time getting home, for‘ the strieet: railway service was But OUt of commission . entirely by the trees blown â€"down and putting the trolley wires out of commission. mere vines entirely . denuded of leaves, and with bruised and, batterâ€" ed grapes; luxurioug peach orchrds, once aglow with beautiful colored fruits, have trees uprooted, others broken, and the splendiq _ peaches torn and gouged; even the . pears, and the hardy varieties too, suffered £ % severely. The tender plums were thrashed â€" unmercifully, and those that remain on the trees in the area swept ‘by the storm are simply not worth pickivyg. Even the cabbages «suffered. The force‘of the, hail and such as to split them asunder» literâ€" ally by the thousands. The force of <the ~storm was so great that it cyclonéd the roof of a cottage at Port Dalhousie + gainst . a heavy telepragh pole and smashed the pole as though it had Ibeen a pipe stem. Immense â€"elm and maple trees were actually uprooted. It is not hard, then, to imagine the effect the storm would have upon the peach and »plum trees. [ to t1 personsâ€"iay Dib a deptglx of three says he saw hail w&lnut, Threeâ€"q after, the storm I )1 Jt 4 AGERROE CE C y A CC EV UE n £ 353 _ PE BRO EL TLR LNA oorpmmzoorrmommmzrmmmzrize Far into the tens of thousands. of|} WX f 2 dollars is the damage wrought withâ€" j : in 15 minutes byra terrific hail and| P M 5 h y wind storm that swept over _the St. / c g Catharines district about 4 o‘clock) P s : Saturday afternoon. ' F f;:*, y A trip through the Northern section| . §# es t . | A of Grantham is enough to dishearten| & ; s s . an ,optimist.. What. a few days. ago| V MBE 3 /g%z T;_,,}_ wer luxuriant vineyards are now| . # { k 3%. 2‘ mere vines entirely denuded of| / MR S wa &r% leaves, and with bruised and, batterâ€"| V . 19 ‘éégg;,, ed grapes; duxurioug peach orchrds,| P s ”3 once ~aglow with beautiful colored Ei N. eA h fmu1its ~have froees â€" unrantod nÂ¥h ana ez PriRGUOUAILTLIVLAUOITIT Far into the ten dollars is the dam; in 15 minutes bya wind storm that sy Catharines district Saturday afternoon A trip through th of Grantham is en« an optimist.. What n WINONTAN 1 the w1 than. rstan fruits St st. Catharines from Granâ€" i a basketful. of â€" hailâ€"not but simply filled, in "the uite of events." â€" At ~~the iverage size of thehail was in. marbles..It isn‘t hard and what that would do to at some pointsâ€"at for by .many rt â€" piled on the st1 THE INDEPENDENT, GRIMSBY, ONTARIO ox _ BOARD OF NSIONXS® juarters (of an was over. : mage wWrot ‘a terrific swept over :t about inche Sept. 29â€"0ct. 1 ... . Sept. 28â€"29 J «a x2« 10Ct. x6 /‘ ¢..‘. «@OGt. 7â€"8 as One sands ght w hail putable eets â€" to ne man itive 10our man ‘ 1. . P. L & Tractions Co., | electric light service,. .. 105 65 p Stott & Sangster, % .. .. 75 [_~Firemen attending fire â€" at * Drope ‘School. ... ~!."~.... ; 7 50 Firemen attending fire at Alex.. McMillen.. .«.}.;.." 21 50 MiscellaneouSâ€" Grand Trunk Railway; <~proâ€" portion of crossing exâ€" penses. .. :x 2. t ald. q 20 ).. .ARBA. 24 K. N. Grout, taking census. 35 00 Insuranceâ€" .. â€"X. H.â€"Kirk,;, insurance.. on fitexIfuck. g. . <‘..} (2%. 5%a .l k €86â€"00 Printingâ€" The Grimsby Independent.. 81 31 By installing an electric vaporizer, ror>d tests show that a sixâ€"cylinder motor car hags made 63 miles on a gallon of gasoline and 90 â€"miles with a fourâ€"cylinder car has been _recâ€" orded. 1 j (By Gertrude Beresford) Black satin combined . with beatiâ€" fully embroidered net makes a stunâ€" ning gown for interesting afternoon functions. There is a (decided sugâ€" gestion o fthe harem mode in this gown. The black satin panel â€"that falls from the waist is drawn toward the bâ€"ck and attached just below the waistline. The net draperies show very rich embroideries and are bound with a narrow fold. of the ~satin. Broag revers and a â€"squre cut front of black satin give distinction to the bodice. This is cut with a_ kimona sleeve and its outer edges are outâ€" lined with black satin. Fi Team t] m t] How a fortune stands ‘between .the happiness of a young couple is dramatically portrayed in â€" Alice Brady‘s latest Sclect Picture}) "Her Great Chance," which will appear at Moore‘s Theatre, on Saturday night, Sept. 18. Lola Gray, who spends her time working hard, loves Charlie Cox New York‘s . Whiteway â€" sensation. Lola goes motoring» with Charlie afâ€"‘ ter work. They visit a road house| one day and there Charlie, â€"a little in toxicated, broaches ~the subject of! marriage to Lola, who bravely reâ€" fuses for© his sake. Thén Charlie starts on another "tear"‘ nd the next morning the papers are full of the news. Cox, Senior has his lawâ€" yer make a new will, and=~Lola hearâ€" ing of this now comes to Charlie as| his wife, determined â€" to transforml his «character, now .that her chance} is here. | Yyer ing his his $U »0 |) M § "HER GREAT CHANCE" . Arroult s of the uncil a nner:intrhich he chas pe: _duty allotted to ‘him. Ca Lccounts for Sept..:13, 1920.â€" neteryâ€" $ ‘homas ~Smith, flower pots for ; cemetery.=;."af.. ~..$ ird ‘of. Worksâ€" cott & Sangster, repairs to mower ang. cement mixer Villism Farrow, broom and flGer : ofH] L.". me s LNE *A w GRIMSBY TO APPLY FOR ticles »bert t1« irsh msby â€" Chopping ats, hay and bran anrd Livhtâ€" (Continued from ttâ€" & Sangster, â€" shoein> Total )1 very <H .‘ 4 tables ALICE BRADY Wray, sundry; ar;, nd â€"gas engine‘\ . . ldwin," sundry «~arâ€" nd automobile ‘tire . Hughes, varnishâ€" les and â€"platform .. i1j the curate I N hat tal bhe accepL« ongratu and "¢ the ing Page One.) Mills report of â€"the LOl@a nearâ€" Charlie as transform râ€" chance redi $582 83 Tm iyel Sel Uhthihth‘hlhthhlhthlhthlhthithUilhiflflfiGLnunnt in h‘th‘h‘hhhhthlihhfith!fFififlififlnlnipupueuen; ‘Phone 21 in stock we,.are opening a new expanding business. . We a take.contracts for all kind 20th: Wa wil hata 4" aditan IT DOES NOT PAYâ€"TO WORRY ABOUT SUCH AN IMPORTANT THING AS COOKING. THE HEALTH AND HAPPINESS OF THE WHOLE FAMILY DE PENDS UPON THE KIND OF FOOD THEY EAT. SEE AND PRICE OUR RANGES AND YOU WILL BUY ONE. WE ALSO HAVE HANDSOME HEATING STOVES. C loll |@BRIIIIIIIIIERMIND _ â€" â€" rrogetr | DOES YOUR RANGE COOK TO SUIT YOU. IF IT DOES NOT THEN GETâ€"RID OF IT AND COME IN AND BUY A NEW ONE. o BALDWIN‘S HARDWARE | It is aonther one of those "Chocolates That are Differâ€" s ent" put up in a full 16 ounce box at A NEW DEPARTMENT TTA LIAN. CREXM S ilson‘s newest chocolate creation. It McCOYS TEA ROOMS re opening a new department in connection with our rapidly z business. .We are now in a position to give estimates and racts for all kinds of electric wiring. On and after October will have a complete stock of all kinds of electric fixtures HAVE YOU TRIED ty pi 80 Cents per. Pound‘ a OUR HARDWARE WEARS ewest chocolate creation. lt is a wonder. ‘It alate tickling chocolate coated confection with beautiful cream centre and is known as Â¥ Grimsby, Ontario "The Store of 1oor Things. THE _ BAND AXIXIRIXIXIXIEREREEE «i5‘ Grimsby FIVE ( IÂ¥t % PF x 3} % X x x) ral ;ft‘]] H (x)

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