Thursday, September 2, 1943. CSE $PORTOLOG Y Business Directory Harold B. Matchett BUILDING MATER!ALS Order your roofing materials now. Ashphalt shingles, now available. Arrangements can be made for reroofing your house. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. If you are going to require Storm Sash, don‘t watt until the fall,. If you order is placed now you can be assured of prompt scrvice. Seeâ€"â€" C. J. DeLaplante CuT coarte FoRr THE PiPE "AGENCIES" Main St, W., next to Gas Office Phone 559 Nights 480â€"wâ€"12 Auctioncer and Valuer far Lincoin, Halgimand and We‘ ... SMITHVILLE PLUMBING and HEATING EsQUIRE Plumsâ€"SiXâ€"quart n Beamsvilie * ® Ontario | sixâ€"quart open, 76 cents AUCTIONEER & VALUATOR Pearsâ€"SBixâ€"quart lino, Licensed Auctioneer for the sixâ€"quart open, 76 cent Catharines. Commissioner for th4~| ieffers â€" Sixâ€"quart 4A« u.".".'-mnu or Grimapy | conts: aixâ€"quart open, 5 Plint i Bs pecnrer~ GVTE : quart fat, 92 cents. J. GOODMAN PETTIGREW 25 Main Street, West GRIMSBY Hours 9â€"5 â€" Saturdays 9â€"12 AUDITORS & ACCOUNTANT® Hours 9:00â€"12:00; 1:30â€"5:00 Closed Saturdays At Noon Open Wednesday Afternoon AUCTIONEER Vernon Tuck J. G. Pettigrew PHONE 100W erMHMVH LE P ONTARIO J. W. Kennedy For An Appointment oPToOMETRIST (Vision Specialist) HIGGINS OPTOMETRIST PLUMBER AVUCTIONEER «â€" fOf «â€"â€" LEGAL | ' Along the sidelines at the ba "A Doc. Schwab out there beâ€" hind the plate. The only ballet m:c::gm:-@“ in the Fruit Bell. “l | years old and still as nimble as a squirre! ‘nd Just as nutty . . . â€" WraY | "Jigger" Fisher looking the team over, Huâ€mdhfdlldm ‘b.n playing behind him and wishing he Was out there again . . .. Old | Smoke McBride calling them as he seesthem. Probably will be fone it til they carry him out feet first. Mas relired a dozen times NUL won‘t stay put . . . . Honey Shelton keeping 8C0r€. MM“Mâ€â€˜ so long he could do it blindfolded . . . . Rev. Fulher O‘Donnell coaching. off first and losing poundage every second . . Red Graham and his l'prlvmmndltlnd. Mmmwlmw....w Rushton ballyhooing all over the lot and saYing nothing . . . . Really is remarkable how some of these old timers X°°P &O!DE. Must be the mmm....:ummmmwu“ little Dyke Lawson was cavorting and whiriy£!@ging around in centre |ice. Now he is a papa. It will never be a pockey payer . . . . Don‘t mammwmmoumnwmflwm'“ | ter, Things do not look very rosy for the Arena to even open the doors A LOT OF LOOSE HOoeEY hacd ENOe CV RmPY OWn TOL ECS POf TBE o San sn c e .. . . Bowlaway opens for the season on Tuesday night next. Keglers will be happy then. mhmmhveh‘n-domnlooh like a big season at this popular sport rendevouz. Am going to take up bowling myself. mwmmmammmmm teams PRICES PEGGED fruit, and in every case may be added transportation costs of five cents per basket if taken to Hamâ€" lton beyond a 15â€"mile limit. Peaches â€" Sixâ€"quart lino basket containing a minimum of 10‘% pounds net, $1; sixâ€"quart open basâ€" ket with a minimum net weight of nine pounds, 87 cents. pounds net, 80 cents; sixâ€"quart opâ€" en basket containing minimum net weight of nine pounds, 67 cents. . CcONTINUA TIONS Pears, all varieties except Keifâ€" fers â€"â€" Sixâ€"quart lino basket conâ€" taining 10 pounds net weight, 87 cents; sixâ€"quart open basket with nine pounds net weight, 67 cents; 11â€"quart fiat basket containing 16 pounds net weight, $1.27. _ _â€" weight of 16 pounds, 80 cents. All the above prices refer to pma-pddtymwm- while those listed below refer to the prices to be paid by the conâ€" retail stores: Peaches â€" Sixâ€"quart lino, $1.15; «tzâ€"quart open, $1.00. when the fruit is bought in 60 cents; sixâ€"quart open containing nine pounds net 47 cents; 11â€"quart fiat basâ€" ntainine â€" minimum â€" net Sixâ€"quart lino, 92 cents; By Bons Livingston, & art lino, 98 cents; 76 cents; 11â€"quart â€" Sixâ€"quart lino ¢ 11 pounds net From Page One rt lino, 69 53 cents; 11â€" of 10 medium height, brisk, / movement. He smokes with a crisp manner as if he really enjoyed every drag of them. He doesn‘t seem to do anything wasteâ€" fully. Just as he seems to be inâ€" terested in everything any one says to him. He is known at home as a "good listener." It is reputed that he always listens until the other feliilow is finished before sayâ€" ing his say. ‘That ought to come in handy in one of the toughest Ministerial posts dur‘=g these perilous times in Canada. ‘That plus his courtesy. Mr. Daley runs a store in St. Catharimes â€" not a main street emporium but one of the neighborâ€" hood type. He also ran in St. Cathâ€" arines during one of the busiest periods in its history, the past five years when it got past that ‘teenâ€" For ten years he carried a card of membership in the carpenters‘ unâ€" ion while he was rising to the rank shopping centre of a prosperous| fm‘wmunwl industrial city. It had labor probâ€" | problem that such growth could evolve, But it didn‘t become one of Ontario‘s problem children cities, It stood on its own feet. Maybe it‘s becaus»s he helped build plenty of its houses that Charles Daley. Javes it _so _ much. Charles Daley gives the impres« n while sitting behind his desk m‘u‘ man. When he mupudwnlhqmndhh FIVE VOTES TURNED THE GRIMSBY of foreman of the biggest carpenter= uM EoE REaeient n Pm ECY & h.cmlalhedt&.mtwulï¬- er he quit school and during the period when he married Leola Elizabeth Dynes and they begAN having the family that now has one ow 00 7 RAREWCEN c daughter married Two mr boys, 10 anu 30, SiC still at home. Young carpenter‘s apprentice Daley joined the army during the Fereaees . iemenet C e s PCsE m last war and went overseas with the 4th Ammunition Subâ€"Park, to stay in France for almost exactly three years. His most important hobby, he in« sists, has been making a comforâ€" table living for his family. That is a heritage, probably, from his fruâ€" gflh.fllhpmmmm still St. Citharines reaidents. _ Just what lies ahead of him in that office, Mr. Daley won‘t guess yet. Already Labor has congratuâ€" lated him on his appointment. He sees nothing yet to be scared about. INDEPE NDE NT He won‘t discuss departmeni policy, He says he came to the job lhovye'.lflhqm‘ppllcgbkor not. Until deciding that, he won‘t Thorpe of Welland, formerly of Beamsville, is the youngest of three sons of Mr. O. J. Thorpe serving his country voluntarily. Onsie enlisted in the Air Force when he was 18 years of age and England has been for the last eleven months with the Middle East Forces as a wireless air gunâ€" ner. | HLACKETERERA Anyone who in any way breaks A price or ratloning regulation which has been maie to Koun\ the massen, is dealing in the Black Market, according to Wartime Lllo- and Trade Board authoriâ€" On July 12 his parents received a telegram from the Casualty Ofâ€" fice advising them that he was missing July 8. ‘Time went on, with its anxiety, and on Aug. 11 they rec/ ed a telegram dated July 26 as follown: "Safe and well; my new address is 16th Squad. R.AAF., M.E. (Bigned) Gasle." Imagine the feeling his family and all his friends had! Our Httle towa of Beamaville was joyous over the news, . However, the father immediately sant a telegram to RCAF., Ottaw. *elling them of this and asking a n to trace the telegram,. On M«turday, Aug. 21, the word carie back that they regretled to inf. him, but this enuble had hbeen 4 , .yed for over a month, and no fur.her word had been hoa=d of him gho» July 8, I ki»" well there is & war on, in every posalt‘s wey that £ woman could znow there is one, ano we are prepared to take all sorts of anoeks one way and another, ut why asould a boy spend his hardâ€" saraw‘ mobeyâ€"and it is hard earnâ€" ad by those boys in the Middle Enat â€"â€" auffering from dAysentery and "mppy gut," to send « apecial cable to his folks, who, he knows, are eonslantly tmnking of kim, and have it delayed this length of tume? It must have been sent beâ€" fore he was misaing, which meant at the least it was 35 days, Fadna Mheanerd TUESDAY, SEPT. 7 THE GRIMSBY B OW L AWAY All alleys will be open to the public all week as league bowling does not commence until Sept. 13th. Beamavilie, Ont THE CRUELTY OF Will Be Opened For The Season rried to a sergeantâ€" one boy in the army. r boys, 13 and 15, are ‘V'“ and cable are and Enough Twine, No More, For Crops; Navy, Merchant Marine Reserve Rest Merchant navy men aplice mnes of twine Ne a atring wroumd your Anger to remind yours and rope . ‘There‘a enough bin*ep bwine to the 1j i-_utbemphm«tuntmub\udn U u«-‘-uhwhmmmm caa help by using twine sparingly in good condition so that it will ou age. They can also help by caming Whs as pâ€"sitle. Alleys have all been resurfaced and many other improvements made, at considcrable cost, for the benefit and pleasure of the bowlers. DO NOT THRAW OR BOUNCE THE BALL ON THE ALLEY. â€"This is injurious to both the ball and the alley. This rule will be strictly enforced and bowlers who persist in breaking it will be refused service on the alleys. By adhering to this rule bowlâ€" ers are helping to keep the alleys in better shape for REMEMBER THIS « .x BOWL FOR ... Relaxation and Recreation twine sparingly and by THE GRIMSBY BOWLAWAY, Geo, Kanmacher, Prop. t WiH out threace cl-u" onl care of theirp rual U go easy on twine e up thiim year‘s cropâ€" that ned sparingly on the farmn ‘ making sure equipment is a cleanly and without wantâ€" their rope to make it Inst an mm I to SEVEN BHattop