Ontario Community Newspapers

Grimsby Independent, 22 Sep 1920, p. 5

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NAAA SFAAUEAANHA W hat‘s Behind T‘he V arnish? But it‘s always a legitimate question to ask the Furniture Man what is behind the varnish. .â€"-â€".â€"uâ€"-â€"..-“_"_“ ukess T onteurif ce py Did you ever see a hypocritical piece of Furniture? With this store there is never any masquerading. Oak is always oak, mahogany is mahogany and ash is M. D. E. Kitching & Co. 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‘ckock, and all orders for afternoon délivery must be in not later than 3 o‘clock. Afternoon delivery on Saturâ€" days only. GRIMSBY WAAA s 444 Restores Vim and Vitality; for Nerv Brain ; increases "gray matter;" a T will build you up. $3 a box, or two f at.dru’% stores, or by mail on rece K;lce. HE SCOBELK DRUG COMP ontreal., Ouebec. A. H. McPHERSON PHOSPHONOL for MEN SCOBELL DRUG CO., Mont a box. Sold at all Drug to any address on receif f, DeVan‘s Freneh Pills It pretended to be so and soâ€"but it was REALLY, behind the n varnish, something very different. A reliable Regulating Pill for V Such Furniture as that never fooled usâ€"and never will. The sham is too easy to see through. FOR SALEâ€"American.. bushelâ€"basâ€" kets, with cover and crimped pasteâ€" board; Thirtyâ€"five Cents .each, ‘com* plete. Nice and clean. Can be used for shipments of any kind. Dominâ€" ion Canners, No. 7, ‘phone 38, GRIMSâ€" BY. f C T o sls o iaagg ig o FOR SALEâ€"Jersey cow, five years old, milking. J. H. Smith, ‘phone 69, Winona. * mahogany is mahogany and lways ash. If you pay for a Zertain quality you get THAT qualityâ€"always. FOR SALEâ€"Cottage on ~Adelaide St., 5th house West of Public Library. Will sell cheap if sold by Saturday. For particulars apply owner on premâ€" ises or ‘phone 269w, P. 0. Box 552. Act quick, this house must be sold. TO RENTâ€"Furnished rooms, break« fast if desired. Mrs. Lawlor;:Ontario Street. iTE _wod FOR |SALEâ€"Six roomed house and large lot on Robinson St., South. Apâ€" ply Box 464 or ‘phone 144. And behind our "say so" is a business standing that is ready to correct any mistakes that we may make. ' FOR SALEâ€"Sixâ€"roomed house and small lot on Gibson Avenue, price $900. Apply Mrs. Charlton; Got1 FOR SALEâ€"Good driving horse, or would exchange for good heifer. Apâ€" ply Dunn, Main St., West. s FOR SALEâ€"Steel range with water front, reservoir, oven warming closet, wood and coal grates; in good condition. Mrs. Sutherland, Robinâ€" son St., ‘phone 347. Eight young singing canaries ~Of good strain, for sale. ‘Phone 2 ring 11, P. Lellitam. s FOR SALEâ€"A hand vacuum carâ€" quick sale ‘Phone 379. quicksale. ‘Phone 379. FOR SALEâ€"Lady‘s nigger â€" brown all wool serge suit, size 38; threeâ€" quarter ‘length coat, can be worn separate and quite nev$E ‘Phone 262. Wednesday, September 22nd, 1920 & WANTEDâ€"Youths 16 to 18 y« age for day work. J. W. I ‘Phone 280, GRIMSBY. 4 LABOROERSâ€"Two or three ed at once. Radiant Electric Timited.> =. FOUNDâ€" day mornin may have } + JViNUâ€"â€"UnNn Main street on day mornifig, a bunch of keys. may have by paying for this p INDEPENDENT Office. efnoGe~LncQeaRecfe eGacle efe oBe efe abs D eP aBe ofe afe ihe obe ofe ofe oBe ofe «hn 2s se sBaeSaoQeaGeaQunle oBe cTe To «Sn oo aBe abe obe cBe oBe «Be cfacSe oge eB r efe che ce ofe ofe ofe Furniture Dealers MRS. HUMMELL‘S OLD STAND FOR SALE OR RENT BUTCHER LOOK LOST AND FOUND HELP WANTED Phone ealers & Undertakers Phone 72 259. Store iYfi ifUFLG | to ONTARIO n â€" Luesâ€" __Owner notice at & > THI Quebec ears of Dalton, n wantâ€" CoO:. REDUCED RATES M.C.R.8& T.H.8. Iflfipipipipipipipipinurs iflfifIffIfIAIqLALALALALALE FENWICK FAIR SEPTEMBER 29th 3 Speed Classes 3 $750 PURSES $750 Comedy Acrobatic, and Aerial Performances FARMSâ€"-If you wiskh to sell> your farm commuricate â€" with us â€"we have »uyers now. It will cost you nothing unleis we make a sale. Bell‘s Limited, GRIMSBY, ‘ph ne 405 or 261. Will the gentleman of the Tennis Club to whom I loaned a holeâ€"auger, some time ago, please return it at once, ag I need it. W. D."~ Warner, near wolverton mountain, ‘phone 22 ring 2. is decidedly better t] In British Columbia, i estimated at from fift _ _ 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 descrip: tion we will tell you how we give you a service that will interest you at a very nominal cost.. Drop us a dletter toâ€"day. John Fisher & Co., Lumsden Building, 6 Adelaide St. East, Toronto. __ _ commence running on Thursday of this week, and on following Tuesdays and Fridays until further notice. ‘Phone 106 ring 4, Beamsville. C. J. Crooks. pige crop of the Dominion, despite a large increase in Ontario over last year, now indicates a decrease of a quarter of a million barels over 1919 according to the September.report of the fruit commissioner‘s branch. The quality of the crop marketed to date BEAMSVILLE CIDER MILLâ€"Will _ _England; all details arranged, passâ€" ports secured, and prepaid tickets re: mitted to those in England desirous ot coming to Canada. A. Burland, agent for all leading steamship lines. ‘Phone. 64, Grimsby. DECREASE IN DOMINION APPLE CROP «Ottawa, Sept. 20.â€"Commercial ~ap ple crop of the Dominion, despite â€" large increase in Ontario over. las year, now indicates a decrease of : quarter of a million barels over 191 Man wishes few weeks work fruit picking, preferably where he can board. Address, stating wages, John Keith, Gen. Del., Kitchener, Ont. Eruitgrowers who require help to harvest the rest of their fruit, call Bell‘s Limited. We are expecting three or four girls this week who deâ€" sire employment picking fruit. Teleâ€" plhone 405. will hay iormal â€" FARMS WANTEDâ€"We can g@ve you STEAMSHIP TICKETS to: or from 1be lall. Owin mova il1 "~DONT DO NO ADVERTISING IN, THIS PAPER uniess wya; 2wANTA!PAN / mone/ _ "mcome TAxk !{ LtO TE onlÂ¥, PaPEQ MATS Got®" ) quru Beay Fo@ Popycnrm( Y irom )1 MISCELLANEOUS op of «all and s : only rop w l po 11 MICKIE SAYS 1( son NC I‘€ WANTED 0. hi poor English crop and restrictions on the ale of apples until Novâ€" will be tstrong incenâ€" L( h W 11M w "enccccâ€"3 stilhe enpoins / n 1 11€ th run +1 p rarketed to date than last year. the crop is now ty ~to fiftyâ€"five 7 w e m al prl xXportable period. baiance of t rices. Quebe ‘«cent:> of > tI exportable su wick will Dt dn balan W1l eason taDâ€" tern UI be 1 € f Â¥ feareeiy sarhels prace in s ons at 7 A Eudding Inshector. place in the sun A luxury. In the United States last| _ Little Harold had been thinking year jewellery sales represented only | things over, and at last burst out: two per cent. of the total value of| "Pop." transactions in soâ€"called luxuries. | ‘"Yes, my son." Apart from dollars and cents, purâ€" || "Why does a cow chew at night?" chases of jewellery, when not made|| "Well, my son, a cow takes food solely as a sensible investment of during the day, and then chews her funds, are investments of sentimentdâ€" ‘eud at night." of that finest of sentiments, friendâ€" isn‘t hoarding 10oo8P‘ ship, which cannot be considered a|~â€" 4t PP thnt luxury among a wholesome, healthy‘ and not altogether impecunious peoâ€" } 1 ple. | i( 241 piIVVISIONL jCWeIl@rs make a direct| ‘"***~ mu.l.unut; 4 RCME LR : return of ten per cent. on sales to the ltitntcd for the coconut government. xn e hi i * Bob Abdell Dick Binige At night the 19th, bang from St. Catharines provided a most excellent program of music on the High School lawn which was well received by the big crowd. Mr. J. D. Bennett, who has always been a great lover of music treated the band boys to a box of Tucketts best cigars and also to a feed of lovely peaches. On Saturday morning the 13th band renâ€" dereq a fing concert on the school lawn and again Mr. Bennett was host with a fine box of smokes and plenty of peaches, which were appreciated so much by the banda boys that they played a special selection in honor of the occasion ,it being that beautiâ€" ful old song "My Dear Little Boy". © On Friday night a grand reception and dance was held in the new facâ€" tory of the Premier Tire Co and it was one great and igrand reunion. Everybody was there and how those old boys ang girls did enjoy themâ€" selves. Johnson and Lewis, "the Jazz Kings" from Toronto supplied theâ€"music and as usual were the "hit" of the night. . The oldest young man Oof the town, J. D. Bennett showed the old boys that he was full of "pep" as ever when he grabâ€" bed a partner and lightly treaded his way through the musical maze of a lovely old fashioned waltz. Friday afternoon was one crowded with amusement for the visitors. Horse racing and other sports kept things going continuously. In the five mile foot race Tom Ellis the vetâ€" eran runner from Toronto again cop ped the silverware in the slow time of 29 and threeâ€"quarter minutes with Douglas, an Indian from Oshweken, second." On Friday and Saturday a parade of school children featured the opâ€" ening of the afternoon proceedings. On Friday the children from the diferent schools paraded in front of the grand stand and gave an exhibiâ€" tion of physical drill. The prize for this drill â€"was won by the Thirty school, below the mountain." The drill work of these scholars was parâ€" ticularly fine and drew forth a great round of applause. â€"~â€" The horse races on Saturday were the big centre of attraction and some fine racing was provided by the large number of horses on the grounds. Between heats the show horse classes were judged and the Boy Scoukts Bugle Band from GRIMSâ€" Boy Scoukts Bugle Ban BY gave the crowd ar high class<bugle band The results of the t was as follows:â€" Friday ,Sept. 17thâ€" 2:15 trot or pace, p John R. Hal (Swart: Phil Todda .(Cole) .. .. Lady Bingen (Mos) .. D1 Jessie I Little P Hrace I ran} r. M orma eddy ack J illis Woo Porter) . 0: ime ny imé JEWELLERY AS A LUXURY 1 1 Tmé BEAMSVILLE REUNION 1€ U H ) trot Abdell eld) ... McKin n (Continued from page 1cing was provl number of ho s. Between heat classes were jud (Mart Direct Bingen ingen 1a V re n n () 6 (1 THE INDEPENDENT, GRIMSBY, ONTARIO (I O1l A€ (I O b In ) p D (Wad (Hill) nl (] (4 2°, pulI vartz). l W/ n tW I TW 0 ork bition 1] 41 ty 1) ty L( O (L1 | / A year ago Americans were saying |that this was not an old man‘s war. And the old men, many of whom had been soldiers in their younger days, were feeling the same way and sufâ€" fering over it, too. Old women could knit, roll bandages, and do a hundred ether things quite as well as the youngâ€" er women. But what could the old men do? And because there seemed to be nothing for them to do, they sufâ€" fered more keenly than most people : knew. t« | HIS OPPORTUNITY TO SERVE New Synthetic Milk. A recently patented synthetic milk, that can be made into butter and cheese, is produced by boiling sepaâ€" rately, in three quarts of water for each, a grated coconut and three ounces of a mixture of rice and oatâ€" meal. When the water is reduced to oneâ€"half, the two liquids are mixed toâ€" gether and filtered. The process seems to admit of variation, and other vegeâ€" table material rich in oil may be sÂ¥bâ€" Submarine is Blind and Slow. In spite of the fact that the British have some steamâ€"driven 2,700â€"ton subâ€" marines, capable of a surface speed of from 23 to 25 knots, the submarine, as a weapon of war, is too slow and too blind when it is submerged to be considered a serious weapon of naval warfare. When it can see, elecâ€" trically, to a distance of 10 to 15 miles, while it is submerged so deeply as to be invisible to the airscout, and when it can steam 20 knots submerged, it will dominate the naval situation. â€"â€"Scientific American. j "I‘d like to buy your old rubber and rags," he said courteously, "or if you‘d give it to me it would be still betâ€" ter." But as the young men left there beâ€" gan to be work for the old men. Reâ€" tired farmers were needed to teach boys how to farm. Retired bankers were put on Thrift stamp and finance committees. All carpenters, whether young or old, were needed. And there came a new lookâ€"one of usefulness and happinessâ€"on the faces of the old men. But one of the most patriotic of all was noted the other day. The woman of the house glanced out at his push cart which was almost full of junk. "I‘ll try to find some thing," she began. The old man‘s face was radiant. "You see, lady," he explained. "I‘m an old soldier and I‘m on a pension go I‘m giving all my time to my counâ€" try. I get this junk for the Red Cross. You just go down and ask them how much I‘ve turned in and you‘ll decide that I‘m not a wornâ€"out plug after all." â€"Indianapolis Néws. The word pagoda is a Portuguese corruption of the Persian "butâ€" kahdah," meaning "but," an "idol," and "kadab," ‘"temple." In the far East, as in India, China and Burma, they are regarded as sacred towers, usually more or less pyramidal in outline, richly carved, painted or otherwise adorned, and of several stories, and are sometimes connected with a temâ€" ple. Such towers were originally erected over relics of Buddha, the bones of a saint, etc., but are now built chiefly as a work of merit on the part of some pious person, or for the purpose ofimpreving the luck of the neighborhood. In China pagodas are from 3 to 13 stories high (alâ€" ways an odd number). Their Draâ€" mmdh&m. indicates that they origâ€" "inated with the earliest races of Inâ€" €la, who inhabited the country previâ€" ous to the advent of the Aryans. The date of the great pagodas at Tajore is not certainly known, but it, with much probability, referred to the beginning Of the fourteenth century. The soâ€" ealled "Thousand Pagodas" of Bramâ€" banan in Java are obviously modeled on Hindu originals, either Jain or Buddhist. With new methods of refining, there is now a steady development of cenâ€" tralized ‘plants, and soon Indiaâ€"the aboriginal chome of the caneâ€"will doubtless take a place as a sugarâ€"exâ€" porting land commensurate with the gize of her cane crop. s BUILT FOR PIETY OR LUCK Two Reasons Assigned for the Conâ€" struction of Pagedas in Countries of the Far East. sugar annually Old Soldier Could Not Fight in Ranks, But Could Prove He Was of Some Use. Expect India to Export Sugar. Sugar making is one of India‘s most ancient industries, but the loss of threeâ€"fourths of the sugar value of the cane by use of primitive machinâ€" ery and the muddy character of the product, because religious prejudices prohibit the use of animal charcoal for refining, have confined India‘s sugar to local consumption, Says World Outlook. With nearly three million acres under cane, producing considerably more than a third of the world‘s total, India nevertheless exâ€" ports no sugar. On the contrary, in addition to her own stupendous proâ€" duction, she spends $25,000,000 for it, with much | [X . the beginning | 3 _ iry. â€" The soâ€" | 5 : las" of Bramâ€" | iz ously modeled | [X therâ€" Jain or | & {_:j C ort Sugar. x f India‘s most | § ; the loss of ;3 f igar value of | nitive machinâ€"] [X racter of the ff} us prejudices g‘ imal charcoal S ifined India‘s ;:,: ] mption, â€" says l x nearly three | smhis oo Dt\ emnenbmmncsieey reserome nommemcom cmd Ne Begg & Co. of Hamilton, invite all children of Grimsby and district to their big free entertainment of ‘moving picâ€" tures, cream puff eating contest, songs, comedies, etc. . BIG FREE SHOW : »Bo o oBe o oGe aZe oBe aGe o aigeaBeaGe o o oBeaZe aGeaBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aGe aBe «B aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe oBe aBe on ce oBeaReode GecjecJecfec§ Address. .. Fill in this coupon with your name, address and age and bring it to the theatre. ‘Remember ‘this show is free to all children. **, Agce Name..,.:~, : IT MAKES A DIFFERENCE 11 O1 1 Phone 239 hn ns n on n e e e reriha i ea iez l1 O€ Moore‘s Theatre he quality and artistic e stock. It makes a difference to ; on easily and smoothly 1€ ind attractive Thursday Evening September 23 1920 whole appearance OI OU1 TICES XDAHMIDININIHIN WALL PAPER . FARROW How To Get In designing that characterize he rome when you have clean M hanger, too. Ou HOUK i HIF Grimsby XIXDXIRERIRIHNIDNININRIE $ OQoul FIVE x ME Y 34 x 3 x

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