were entered and a bicycle stolen while at the home of P. E. Tregunâ€" mno acrozs the street, the cellar was entered and some food taken. It is reported that the latter residence was also robbed just a few days On Friday last G. W. am-\ den, Geo. Holmes, F. E Daiton and A W KEickmeler, of Grimaby BReach, apent the day Trout Fishâ€" ing in Georgian Bay. They engagâ€" ed Mr William Bracthwaite‘s boat of Meaford . They were successful in landing a fine catch, about nineâ€" ty pounds. A. W. Eickmeler landâ€" ed one beauty measuring 37 inches in length, and weighing 18 Ibs, 10 REMEMBER ozss. this being 4 ozs. heavier than the next best caught this season. Mr. Eickmeler may get the trophy for 1932 sesson. Here‘s hoping. Rev E. A. Earchman, B.A., D.D., the zrew minister of Trinity United 1981, and 4 Ibs. 2 ozs, heavier than From the Files of Auly 27, Lzz week two robberies &Mm“ww when it is anticipated large conâ€" gregations will be in attendance. Mr. E. J. Marsh, the general manager of Niagara Packers Ltd. mmmmuâ€"oâ€" -wummmm prospests for the fruit maurket there appear especially promising, the people being highly optimistic. The west has had wonderful growâ€" ing weather and the crops, accordâ€" ing to reports given him, are the best in years He stated that uww-m Carman (Doc}) Millyard has his tacrosse boys tuned up to the fightâ€" nm-fluflwmuâ€" m-ï¬mmï¬' manager, and coach, says his team when they started. Rev. George K. B. Adams, formâ€" er pastor of the St. Paul Street for the past four YeRIs EPMIT!U» p-d.wmwm ing at the residence of his daughâ€" ter, Mrs. (Dr.) C. ‘W. Eimore, Beamsyvilie, following an iliness of several months‘ duration. ...airâ€"conditioned comfort TEN YEARS AGO tain TO THE WEST THE CRIMSBY INDEPENDENT a different TELEPHONE 36 â€"â€" 1032 School Cadet Camp near Bolton, who are 54* tack on that town with all the grim intent Honey Can Help Out The Sugar Situation a pound per week per persom, ioA c c ic *« uns P honey has an added value, for it mmâ€".mmbm.mh'ï¬' can be used in many ways to reâ€" us now: Baedeker Bombing. How futile it is‘ Somebody‘s psychology place sugar. ‘Those who keep bees mu“mhmuï¬.'om-flmn mflbflhn.ï¬w!mm-aï¬â€œr Just in order to retain a certain muummcnwmdpâ€"mmum.mywr Gooderham, Dominion ml'o-qul“‘â€ummnw“’uâ€"-b Central Experimental Furm, Of.| sentimental, I hope. Mâ€".nw.hnymwm.dl.l tawa. can almost hear themn mâ€"mc.u:u.mn-:u honey seasofa mm!ï¬mâ€"mmm ‘t mind us ‘You go :o:-gow‘:’dm:“ w.-mq-‘lb‘flum.yum. And there management now are to .,,,-mumc-m--*mmu* every available worker busy and to| yet it gives one a queer, unâ€" that night, and T wongered what Mmmwrmmuudmmwm Well, I know now .:. the queen to provide repiacement®. | apart from worry about friends. It| some of it. And it‘s been a great Tohqmnhrnï¬- all scems too outragesusly improbâ€" | game, No Enemy can take that should be sufficient supers of| able. 3 know York; I‘ve lived near away, at least. There were jots of Mnmcmw-n-,flx.--mmummu:u vondv for us When needed. In placâ€"| up years in Bath nuflmlgmmuumm umt rama" Â¥ Pincimgg V > W vwa Vike evervhoiy clse. under -n.hnvymm'uuub now on. The importart points in management now are to keep m.vum&-uhrmll‘â€} provide sulficient laying space or hmhmw Gdrawn comb or full IOUNGREO® ready for us when needed. In placâ€" ing empty supers it is best tc place them below a partly filled one. It is general prectice also to add them as needed rathor than two or three at a time. | \ When it is found that the queen has filled the brood chamber, a frame or two of capped brood can be raised to the super above. They should be replaced with fully drawn worker comb in the brood Provision for fresh air by offâ€" setting the supers a fraction of an comamcs Rrssivthct. > tely t mumuu-n-.| Fresh water should be also be made available. If it is placed in an open pan a few chips of wood should float on the surface In this wmmfl.unm drowning. Extra care at this season of the year w‘ e well repaid in extra stored i~y. With sugar now rationed to half Here is a group of high school cadets from umm L l en Youthful Shock Troops Manoeuvre In Grim Reality REMOVAL OF IRON RAILS SEEMS LIKE DISLODGING OF SMUGNESS THOUGH GATES SHUT AT NIGHT comfortable, lying there in that green cup of the hills. It‘s queer : there is no place T can think of as ‘home.‘ I was trying to THE GRIMSBTYT never will, though I‘m still hoping! pleased I was to learn that Dath, like those other ‘bombed towns, could ‘take it‘ and as well as any! A trace of civic pride there, I think, don‘t you*? through the beautiful little park, training for our forthcoming papâ€" erâ€"okas«â€"â€"with me, not to be outâ€" done, panting along beside the sixâ€" footers. I expect they thought we who are staging a mock atâ€" "bo 2re Ce s their older their eyes sometimes in *the old days, I‘m sure. For instance, when we were to be seen, early on a chllâ€" wore all mad. Then they wore forever coming upon us crouched Ob aketchingâ€"stools, our earnest faces amudged with paint or charâ€" sual perpetuating those old monuâ€" menats. We were so untidy, too, I what with working twelve hours a day, ntrugpling feverishly for scholarships, and getting through the proionged agony of examinaâ€" tionsâ€"and feeling just a little )1 for weeks at a time in our anx‘sey. But it was fun In Bath â€" is a famous old building that is now largely rubble, I hearâ€"I went to the roum I swept * â€"rust) in my mnnunmu:‘m-“; secretly terified tripping over the thir:;;, despite hours of secret the prolonged agony of examinaâ€"| but, if we wished, we could copy Hmm.mnl-fldhwwnu&‘ for weeks at & time in our anx‘scy.| up to now. Yet I hope we shail But it was fun. In Bath â€" is a| first of all think of building things famous old building that is now | tYypical of our own age; why not? largely rubble, I hearâ€"I went to| For thus is history madeâ€"and apâ€" the roum I swept * â€"rust) in my Auwnddu.ltvh.w Mmlhngon‘m.“;:fl.‘mmflb-ofluhi secretly terified tripping over “hfll(l&.l-d.m‘ the thirs;, despite hours of secret | She doesn‘t moan about it. or even pract‘»s! Life seemed to open up Make any comment. She simply oooA â€"â€"â€"â€"~>] Maite S fhct, and Antahes: ‘atuast llu.'- Om.’fl‘s,,...' he ind uit stt mure 3 \a + country se C_.] Wasb Warn" (MAT) piac‘®. With her nice bouse en Weak, Worn: Old? Want Hormal Pop, Yim, Vitality ? § Old Days in Bath By MARGARET BUTCHER the High INDEPE ND ENX T umwtmflw“r-lthin:.†CGrimsby . were recently at the Bolton camp, where mdiments of ing. Wehave like everybody eise, snakes down again, w‘ll be as corâ€" rect as ever. I can‘t doubt it. There are things in Bath even more monumental than,the monuâ€" ments, believe me. | Real England ‘Then Exoter: real England, that town Iwonder how my friends have fared, poor dears? We so ofâ€" ten wonder that these past two tions. There was a certain young man . . . Ah well! He must be a middleâ€"aged old dear by now; and I must confess that, till this hapâ€" pened, I had not though of him in a long while. Yes, think 0: the most peaceful place you know, and then imaug s < it torn by horrors in the n‘gat. Then you will have some idea of the bewilderment one feels in reâ€" mev wring these old scenes, these parks and primroseâ€"spattered lanes. I said we were sentimental, didn‘t 1? Bu\ not too sentimental to put arst thugs first. We shall ‘build monuments of air own when this is over; and in a few hundred years‘ time, maybe, humans w‘ s we up at them and age of ours, 4s far as that goes, we could even rebulld some of the old ones, for we have this great advantage over the pastâ€"we have our photographs. Nobody knows qu‘te what a Sazon village looked like, and we are worse than vague about what stood on the site of St. Paul‘s Cathedral ceaturiea amaâ€" a 10.. C CC TSk purlife would take such a turn: hershe‘s risen to 1 prandiy, bleas .h'“hu.dflfl L“"‘t‘m' Phikine T at bedtime, and we take comfort from ons puts out the ." Grimsby high school cadets i:‘a.mp. where they studied the hand; and those who have shelters have made them all ready. And those shelters are no longer ugly humps of sand and earth and stones, for flowers are growing on them. People feel that if they must see humps in the garden they may as well be decorative. And why not? Sometimes there are noises and vibrations; sometimes the searchlights, swinging round, pierce the blackout and make the room almost as light as day; but with all these disquieting things there are lovely things as well, At last there is surhine and warmth â€" and one had almost forgotten what the cosiness of bodily warmth was like. During the day (the blackbirds sing: a couple of sturdy lads, treeâ€"top high, shouting deâ€" fiance to each other across the garâ€" dens.‘ And today ‘Gran‘ called me down to the garden, where we t=«a on the lawn with the sheepâ€" dog whinnying with pleasure. At the end of a day like this one‘s last bedtime thought is, Well, if it‘s the |umlmhnu'lh.l good one. And can one feel more than that? I hardly think so. The Allotment is ewake again. east wind has fallenâ€"at 1 dm 'hh:'d|;:"'-:m-:,"m‘: himself hugely. AU the Hittle l':"“.""."'“"h us d-dn-hummxmmmmmmu ning to shine with flowers andâ€"| Red Cross lets them """'dm mumâ€"mmmun’m°'°'-"“"“"“m disappeared One can bless the Hundreds garments n ‘nwmuwmmt.uuu.lw ‘c-n- mm&d ‘Muvmw-o.ï¬m'hï¬om"“ muflfl nasty little iron barrieds und| Halifax, as ind Â¥ln. Yorkshire, which Mr. and removal has a deep significance, M 4. Th o lument. Shoes and garments made llurn.‘- mtouy'un:m.'hm'â€"- .:H' Ar A ; children are received, unpackâ€" mmm ha-o‘.- cestle,‘| ed, sorted and sized in one wing. mr;muh&mumm A~ ts oo 4 come to be outfitted. The m'm“hhmâ€.‘â€h; on Canadian Red Cross clothâ€" ï¬lfl! ..' gets greater because as the paltry fourâ€"feetâ€"high spikes; coupon system becomes tighter the ‘keeping myself to myself®, so long |.wu m.rn! ‘ never been able to see much more lunm.maâ€"nxâ€"qd one‘s neighbours. with a flavoring l of personal conceit. Anyway. the what is the great thought behind these erections? 1 suspect that it is a relic of that curious, oldâ€" AuniMenaae 202. To OL Om â€" AMeep WWiige AH railings have gone, and with them amugness of the last centur; " hurosuis>1. ‘True, the laurel and Inmatates ts wn eatiy on it a hedge. It is a living thing, and :t_nhwnwgum Yes, J suspect that the disapâ€" md&.um....†tent; and it‘s taken a wocld war to _, _ }% S»out. But it would! hflbmmhuml -'l‘.!ï¬.' doz‘t l M m® mind, now that it‘s happened; and anybody "Mï¬hï¬ou well will agree that here is a revolution o mo mean order. There are no vailings sound the London namo L. 0 _0 00CCC perRe l'.nlhow'dc.'-hu. I“‘““, with Illimanns suse _ _ s ooo No AeeH w:mflnhm{ les but in every waere cit. -un.._",:vhm Across the Ya& I am toid tmrm‘_‘“h ""“"’Mmm, heC the gates at Right stil) per. is a diverting though.. CANADIAN RED CROSS LOOKS AFTER 30,000 country are being cared for Lere through the kinduess of the Canaâ€" dian public. They were snatched the Huns were invading the British Isiles two years ago. They are the sons and daughters of the Channe! TIslanders who have been left beâ€" hind as slaves for their German lml. Two years ago the chilâ€" ‘“mï¬wh"" sunâ€"scorched fields of their little islands. ‘Then the sky was darkâ€" ened with the bimcsk crossed wings of the Nazi raiders and the soij of fiotilla of mercy ships raced across the char~@4 to Britain carrying Tuat wis two years ago this summer. Many childreh were acâ€" companied »y their mothers. Many others were entirely alone â€" their mothers had sent them to safety but had stayel behind to look afâ€" ter their menfolks, Thousands of children without father or mother were brought to Britain‘s shores and officialdom scratched a worâ€" ried pate not knowing what to do with such a buge mobile orphanâ€" age. It was then that the Canaâ€" dian Red Cross asserted itself with fesdile »Cacconl 2 ns & t 8 the protecting arms of care and comfort. As each child landed he or she was rigged out in clothes people of Canada had provided. That was two years ago and that code of compassion has operated all in helping to solve the clothing problem," was the tribute of Right Hon. Lord Justice Du Parcq in the the Channel Isianders here, said to me, "By going to the assistance of these refugees the people of Canaâ€" pathy in a practical manner. We are knit together by a thousand period the people of she islands islanders come to be outfitted, The drain on Canadian Red Cross clothâ€" ing gets greater because as the give secondâ€"hand clothes away. NeBd Canadian Clothes mm&rhhfly appropriate for t Â¥Frenchâ€" Wdhw Empire they fAind the Engâ€" lish climate zmuc‘: movs severe lhhhhyclnh“ By GARRY ALLIGHAN ndon â€"â€" Thirty thousand chilâ€" peratb.e of thâ€"ir bloo‘?. One w.â€" man, w*»se husband is now slavâ€" ing . _ he Germans and is existâ€" ing & *zcad made from crushed beans, has just a*~:itrn the Canaâ€" Pn i on t hapied e you we we shall greater comfort ‘P_E“L:nh- alnce we left home. We wetrs very â€" 1eased to see the Canadian Red Cross mark on thbâ€"other garments because it was a Frenchâ€"Canadian soldier who gave your address to my litile girl. Margaret changed into some Of the things straightaway and N‘hï¬-bm. It was .. ""C Un in them to school, It was huh&.nmw “lhnn--l-hhm." dusmenne or of The Canadian Red Cross Hociety , B5 Wellesiey St, Toronto, Ont. hat‘s love." for 4 a duy July 30th, 1942. ted their deep symâ€" lahome