Grimsby Independent, 9 Oct 1935, p. 5

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‘WEDNESDAY, ocr. A SHORT STORY ABOUT TAXES Prior to 1930 the LIBERAL Governments of RT. HON. W. L; MACKENZIEKING â€" 14. 14. 10. 12 15. 16. Since 1930 Taxes Have Been RAISED by the CONSERVATIVE Government of RT. HON. R. B. BENNETT and HON. H. H. STEVENS Ir.nflhTuhw,M&cTwiMl! I-dll"l\sel-efl-&u--l'mh?filymu DoYuWadAn-filrfinYunq(MMm Taxation? UMNOWEY&WT.&IH&‘I‘BMâ€"- 16. ruongm-immmrfiiw-rmmmm COMP. m&uxwmrmmAummam PANIES OUTSIDE ADA. ... T mnmmxmmmmwnmuwmw mnmmmeAmw SPOWED TOTAL DEFICITS OF SALES TAX INCREASED FROM 13 TO 65. t POSTAGE INCREASED 1c ON ALL LETTERS. s NEW TAX ON CHEQUESâ€"3c ON AMOUNTS OF $100.00 AND 6e ON AMOUNTS OVER $100.00. NEW TAX AT 5%, PLACED ON TELEGRAMS, CABLES AND LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE CALLs. ‘ » TAX ON POSTAL NOTES INCREASED FROM 1e TO 3¢ EACH. â€" 24 A* * SPECIAL EXCISE TAX OF 35 IMPOSED ON ALL CANADIAN EXPORTS. SPECIAL EXCISE TAX OF 2e PER POUND LEVIED ON SUGAR; REDUCED TO 1e PER POUND IN 1934. SPECIAL EXCISE TAX OF 10%, IMPOSED ON COSMETICS AND TOILET PREâ€" PARATIONS. SPECIAL EXCISE TAX OF 5% IMPOSED ON AUTOMOBILES TIRES AND TUBES. SPECIAL EXCISE TAX OF 2e PER 100 LEAVES OF CIGARETTE PAPER AND 5e PER HUNDRED CIGARETTE TUBES IMPOSED, A TAX OF 10% PLACED ON RAILWAY SLEEPING CAR BERTHS, WITH A MINâ€" IMUM OF 25 CENTS AND 10 CENTS ON PARLOUR CAR TICKETS, § TARIFFS WERE INCREASED ON MANY PRODUCTS INCLUDING LINEN, COTâ€" oN LEA Wce C on e n ortoane san tnax VALUAâ€" TION OF GOODS. TAX ON TEA AVERAGED $1,500,000.00 PER YBAR. INCOME TAXES ON LOWER INCOMES INCREASED, EXEMPTION FOR PERâ€" SONS WITH DEPENDENTs rPotCED P OM $3.00000 To 5200000 AND FOR SINGLE PERSONS FROM $1.500,00 TO $1,00( J FOR CHILDREN REDUCED FROM $500.00 TO $100.00. . & DUTIES INCREASED ON AUTOMOBILES PRICED_AT MORE THAN $1,200.00. A SPECIFIC DUTY OF 15e PER LB. PLACED ON MAGAZINES AND PERIODEâ€" &bhxumnhulfi.t%hlzs, ostage was reduced to Taxes on cheques and receipts were reduced. Nuisance taxes were abolished. ® VOTE LIBERAL Liberal Candidate for Lincoln. REDUCED Taxes: â€" Aaron w'vvâ€"-fl”’ away at his home on the No. 20 highway after a ‘home, Station road, Winona,. She was born in Toronto, but had ressided in Winona for the last 18 years.. . Mr* Millar attended the United churc‘® at Winona. Surviving are her husiband; pne son, Clarence Wall, St. Catharrincs hnd her sister. ‘The remains arc T68tâ€" ing at the Stonchouse funcral hme, Grimsby, and the funcral service Will be held at the Fifty United church 08 Friday afternoon at 2 o‘clock. Interâ€" ment will be made in the Fifty cemeâ€" lengthy iliness. He was in his @2nd year and has lived practically all his life in South Grimaby. Besides his widow, he leaves two daughters, Mra. Albert McCollom, Smithville, and Mrs. Richard Theal, Grimsby, and two #0ns, Robert E. andâ€" |Hitom city and provincial police on a WOMAN IN HAMILTON BRUTALLY AsSAULTED BY UNKNOWN MEN elose to the Old Suake romd the car ‘Telling a story of having been bruâ€" tailyâ€"and criminally assaulted by two unknown men after she had been mmu‘..:.fl‘ miles into the country Friday night, a ’*.&,_.m Interment took place in the United PP ECA snn ts dn t 4 9 combined search for her attackers. She had been walking cast on York street about 10.45 o‘ciock, she said, -.Mm-.“‘“-- the block between MacNab and Park atreets. She was grabbed roughly and forged into an. suto which #uod at the over the high level bridg«, turned down Valiey inn roadend at a point atiack took piace Both of the mon ascsaulted her, the woinan Stated. She was drivee back to the city and ,H-‘dlhsavwllO"d Bay and Vork Streats. P s 4e . fimwusflv”flt-‘l satisfactory uescriptions of the pabr U Mrs. (Dr.) F. Walker, funeral took place on Monsay afterâ€" Mre. John W#illar After a short iliness, MrB John Milâ€" lar, sister of Mra. W, J, Kerr, of Hamâ€" police, She judged their agts as be tween 20 and 33 years {he make of the sito or license number war not Mre. Annic M. Y, Krick Mrs. Aunic M. Young Krick, widow of Solomon Krick, died Friday mornâ€" ing at the residence of her sister, Mrs. Jennie Griffith, 113 Melrose avenue north, Hamilton, at the age of 62 Victoria, B.C.; Albert Young, Toronto; she had been residing; Mrs. Clare Jarvis, Hamilton; Mrs. L. Bell, Cayâ€" is survived by three sons, Liovd, Hamâ€" ilton; Robert T. Toronto:; Howard, at City police immediately called. in prostaciai sfficers and Sergeant W. C. Oliver took charge of the investignâ€" red roses. Mr. Edwin Jerome was best man. Later the bride and groom left for Toronto and points east, the bride travelling in a wineâ€"coloured dreas and hat, tweed coat and carrying a biack suede purse, the gift of the groom. Mr. and Mro. Cowan are residing in Cowan, of Grimsby, ‘The bride was g:huu velvet mude in Marina style, with full seeves and cow! neckline which was caught with briliiant clips. She carried a bouquet of white carnations, baby‘s breath and fern. Her only attendant was Mrs. Edwin Jerome, dressed in may be, it should not be accounted great unless it is the result of a great Tho car was driven out York stroot OBITUARY gvze. " e & GRIMSBY. ontaArIO with bouquet of derit of the Ontario Asparagus Grow« ers Coâ€"Operative which has been so successful this last three years and now extends its operations to Simcoe, Burlington and Oakville districts. Eviâ€" dently his heart and soul are in his Ho'lwlhrcnnhlhq-nu-o‘ during the winter months, he is activeâ€" ty engaged in educational work for the betterment of the fruit farmer. One must not conclude however that, Alu-lfld’uu-ulthhh‘-‘ h..lnhuuun-fl.dflm‘ mour Lodge A.F. and AM. and beâ€" nbummm‘ Club. He has another, outside nll‘ interestâ€"the coming generation. As a family man and having for the past seven or eight years conducted a sonâ€" for boys‘ class in Port Dalhousic Unitâ€" e4 Church, of which he is a member, He is keenly alive to and concerned in the youth of the land and is endeayâ€" ensure that the boys and giris of toâ€" day shall have at leant as good a chance as he 4. an opportunity offering he entered the employ of the Security Loan and Savings Company in St. Catharines where he remained for four ‘wars. He left the firm when he v is about twenty.one and returned to his home where he went into dairy farming. ‘This evidently was not altogetbor to his wholeâ€"bearted liking an} after five years, he purchased the proâ€" perty he now owns and started in on a eareer of diversified fruit farming of which he has made a«puccess, His fellow farmers acknowledged this when they placed him on the executive of their various organizations for inâ€" stance; he has cocupied every execuâ€" tive position in the Fruit Growers Asâ€" The candidate obtained his educaâ€" tion in the local school, the St. Cathâ€" arines Collegiate Institute and the St. Catharines Business College. On leaving rchoo!, young Craise did not at once return to the farm. Apâ€" parently he was a little undecided as to what course in life to pursue and, from its inception in 1930 until 1933 and at the present time he is on the November 28, 1886, of ploneer Scotch parents who settled in the Township of Louth within a mile of his present Craise homestead on the Lake Shore roud where his brother, A. A. Craise, now resides, as well as being active in other business and for several years served the Township of Louth as Reeve and Lincoin County as Warden. He was a cousin of the late Robert Lawrie and a brother of the late Mrs. J. K. Black. The name has always been a symbo! of honesty, integrity (Continued from page 1) well deserving the honour, in recogniâ€" Lon of his sincere desire to serve his fellow man as evidenced by his many years of self sacrificiag and untislug efforts to obtain a fatrer deal for the fruit farmers of Ontario and partiâ€" Cularly those of Lincoin County whith admirably fitted him to be Lincoin‘s standard bearer for ‘the Reconstruc tonists and the more so because he has had an intimate association with the Price Spreads Commission, which commission will have euch far reach» in,; effects on political life in Canada. doward L. Craise is a native of Craise, carried on the farming busiâ€" ness on the farm now known as the sociation. During the years 1031â€"32 he was president and is still on the executive. In addition he was a memâ€" ber of the Vegetable and Grape Growâ€" ers‘ Associations to which he «iill beâ€" Kt. H. L CRAISE . M is also viceâ€"presiâ€" ~ SATURDAY, OCT. MAMMOTH LIBERAL BROADCAST Station C. K. T. B. â€"â€" RA DIO 11 P.M. to 11.16 P.M. â€" CLARENCE COLTON AT THE riaANG 11.18 P.M, â€"â€" A. E. COOMBS, THE LIBERAL SANBDIDATE â€" A. E. COOMBS Governments on behalf of the fruit industry. His efforts to better marketâ€" ‘The candi/e is married and has two children, one in the St. Catharines Business College and the other in the St. Catharines Collegiate Institute, back to fruit farming. ‘This year, in his official position, he has been tryâ€" ing to adjust the price of peaches. Mr. Craise has often appeared beâ€" Mix the chicken, minced very fine with the onion, olives and paprika. Roll the dough to 1â€"3 inch in thickâ€" ness and spread the chicken mixture. Roll up and baks in a quick oven, 425 degrees F. for 15 minutes. "Contemplation is necessary to genâ€" erate an object but action must phoâ€" Graham, on bebalf of the Auxillary, presented her with an initialed overâ€" night bag with an autograph album containing friendly thoughts and â€"..d-ndh-mm she was associated during her resiâ€" dence here. Miss Maisic Cullingford, president of the Auxillary, very apâ€" propriately commented on her splen did wervice to the society. Miss Mcâ€" Kay during her residence of six years here has been an active and valued member of various organizations inâ€" cluding the AuxilHiazy, the choir and Young People‘s Society of the United Church. Her many fViends will wish her bon voyage. ‘The selling of tickets for the LO. D.E. hope chest goes on unabated. Certainly the chest and its contents will be a wonderful prize for some one, ° It may be your good fortune to have the lucky number if you have bought your ticket, who can tell? The drawing takes place ~at Moore‘s ‘Theatre, November 1st. | Chicken|Roll â€" . ’!nfiunlodleuldm 1â€"2 teaspoon scraped onion, 1â€"3 cup minced olives, 1â€"8 teas. paprika. Method: Make a rich baking powder biscuit dough, using twice as much ‘The good of all mankind. A goodly thing it is to meet In friendship‘s circle bright, Where each shall seek the common On Wednesday evening last Miss Margaret Allan hospitably opened up her home to the Evening Auxiary of the United Church for a farewell parâ€" ty to Miss Marion McKay who is leayâ€" ing next week for her home in Scotâ€" land. During the evening Miss Bessic ‘The eternal question among women is what can I prepare for dinner or supper today. Doesn‘t this sound good. sist us in producing a bright, newsy ‘The Independent aske for the coâ€" operation of its readers in sending in news items, Have you been visiting or have you guests? Are you entertaining? ‘Tell "us your church, club news, etc., It will asâ€" at 9 p. m. PROGRAM: 9 P. M. TO 10 P.M. HOME TOWN RECIPES GOD SAVE THE KiNG 1200 KILOCYCLES THE HOME PAGE the Prico Spreads Mrs. Erb, Grimaby. . "It is sad that the phrase divine service has come so generously to ‘meaan public worship instead of daily deeds." ~â€"Mary Baker Eddy. Mrs. Gordon A. Sinclair, (nee Kathâ€" erine Stone), will receive for the first time since her marriage on Friday, meler, C:maby Beach, who has been confined to his home for sometime, is able to be up and about. Mr, and Mrs. Eickmeler are planning to leave next week for Florida where they will wpend the winter. Mr, and Mrs. Bert Greenwood and family spent the weekend in Smithâ€" field with his mother, Mrs. A. Greenâ€" Robinson Street, S., for a few days. ’Ma-mmmam citizens of Ontario and beyond. ‘The story opens in the year 1850 when in the magnificent forest on John Rowslaugh‘s farm a natural bowl!â€" shaped clearing was carefully chosen by the Hamilton Methodist Conference as a permanent site to be used yearly for campâ€"meetings which were outâ€" Mr. H. R. Elliot, Denver, Colorado, has been visiting his sisters, Mrs. Wilâ€" ‘The story will include to some exâ€" tent the historical romance of Grimsâ€" by Township and the fruit growing inâ€" dustry. We believe this should be of interest especially to the people of Grimsby and the surrounding district as well as to old timers who will reâ€" call wending their way to Grimsby Park in the good old days. A few fictitious familes are used to bind the story together, otherwise the Canada during the middle of the nine« characters people who lived here in THE HISTORICAL ROMANCE OF GRIMSBY TOWNSHIP By Myrtle A. Bean In next week‘s issue will begin the serial story of Grimsby Park, which in the 80‘s attaincd national fame, and l ons e i T beat again Sift together the flour, cornstarch and baking powder, add to the egg mixture and beat, add flayâ€" ouring. Put yellow batter in bottom of tube pan, and place white ou top. Hake in a moderate oven 50 minutes. YESTERYEAR AT GRIMSBY PARK And this delicious cake from Mra. Murray Fitch: Ange! Gunshine Cake White Part: 5 eggs whites, pinch sait, 1â€"2 tesspcon vanilia, 12 cup sugar, white, 1â€"4 teaspoon cream of tertar, 1.2 cup pastry flow?. Add sait u-*difl-l“ cream of tartar and beat until stif, add Savoring and fold in sugar and fiour. Yellow Part: 5 egge yoiks, 3 tablespoons of cold water, 12 cup pastry flour, 1 tablespoon cornstarch, 1 teaspoon Magic baking powder, 1â€"2 teaspoon extract. Beat the yolks until _,“.a__-u-d*.l A wite circle of friends will be Social and Personal

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