Grimsby Independent, 30 Sep 1943, p. 2

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EIGHT GO NTINUATIONS WATEL â€"COMMISSION over August 1042. Power costs for this August were $173.12, as against $173.24, in 1942. Power Bill for July 1943 was $174.90. Water consumption in August was 10,027 gals; average per day was 323.341 gals; biggest day‘s pumping, Aug. 2nd, 425,000 gale.; amallest day‘s pumping, Aug. 16, 268,000 gails; decrease for month from Aug, 1942, 361,000 gais.; deâ€" crease in average per day over Ang. 1942, 36,871 gals. Township of North Grimaby conâ€" sumed 1,116,000 gals in August, a 1942. Christmas boxes will have a much longer distance to travel, enâ€" tailing more handling and reshipâ€"| rien ceive their gifts from home in time for Christmas Day, the Postmaster KC., M.P., calls on the public to Mail Early for Christmas Overseas â€"not later than November 1. The date is 10 days earlier than last year‘s closing time, but with many of our men serving in the Mediterranean areas, etc., the "deadline" has been advanced to meet the rapidly changing condiâ€" tions. The public are cautioned to lose no time but to Mail Early for Christmas Overseasâ€"now and durâ€" ing Octoberâ€"the earlier the better to ensure the timely arrival of the anxiously awaited gift, The more distant our Forces may be from Canada, the earlier their Christmas mail should be sent. Post Them Early ALEXANDER HARDWARE day and Friday afternoons froia TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21st. Golliers _ â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Cosmopolitan Cross Word Puzz‘ Detective . â€"â€"â€"â€" English Magazines Esquire . â€"â€"â€" * loves t> read : Hard backed books American Atlantic Time _â€" ""~I Trime ‘Btory â€"â€"â€"â€"*~â€" WOUNOPTME .e Women‘s Magazines Fortune Liberty Mac‘e .ns â€"â€" Magazine Jige®: "'“ln“ in D“ Mirror â€" Movies . â€" Nalwnal Nq . + ond! secommemeent 200 #;a%‘unal & Canadian Gecgraphios New YOTKOT .â€"â€"â€"â€" s NOWB WOBK â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" k :-':w GBound Ficton . k Picture Post [ J redamman > Popular Mechanics â€" y Pulp Magazines â€" tm w Puflah = _â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"~â€"~~~~~~~ RAeatdors Digest f Red BOOK _â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"~ Saturday Star We To enable all the Dominion‘s Magazines And Books Wanted Li 2«) Ahovicst Â¥ PA . Weekly Magazine, Picture anga Comic Please deliver at "'9‘{ Adress. Open on HEADQUARTERS NAVY LEAGUE GRIMSBY BRANCHâ€"(next to Eaton‘s) J, Chivers, Evening Post ; we give a list of the magazines the Digest Lize Convener. Magnets Clean Roads Of Nail "It will save a lot of tires in a year," continued the same official, "It will be particularly valuable on lmnl roads where horseâ€"drawn ltntflc leaves many horseshoe nails," Highway Gives New Here‘s good news for Ontario mwm.md-mauu. ways has equipped a magnetically operated nail pickâ€"up truck, which will scour provincial roads, It does a better job of gathering stray nalls and scraps of metal than would be possible with the proâ€" verbial fineâ€"tooth comb, operators "It‘s the first of its kind in Canâ€" ada," said a highways department official. "We tried it out on the Queen Elizabeth way between To. ronto and Oakville recently. It will clean up anything and everything in the way of metul on the roads. The highways department said that the new development was the result of an urgent need to conâ€" serve tires. It is patterned after similar outfits tried in various places in the U.S. kW + "It was developed particularly to patrol highways over which scrap metal is being trucked to the warâ€" time yards," the department said. "We have had many complaints of pieces of scrap and nails dropping from the trucks and destroying tires of autos." The truck was assembled in the Leaside repair depot of the highâ€" ways department. It has two large magnets which trail behind a few klnrhe.nhovemdlwel. These are powered by a gasolineâ€"driven genâ€" erator on the truck platform above. The magnets can be lowe.ed for cement highways or raised an inch or two for operation on rough gravel roads. ‘mrned off, and prestoâ€"the metal | harvest that would rip and tear ‘motorists‘ tires is dropped to the |mpmdy!orm, With a flip of the switch the opâ€" erator turns on the generator powâ€" er and pieces of metal weighing up to 30 or 40 pounds are swept up. ‘The mugnets are run over a canâ€" vas tray and stopped, the power ed of hoarding sugar, coffes, tea and canned foods was given a month‘s prison sentence and fined $100, _ ~"J WUIVES NEW ATFUCK |rict for the inast thirty YOArs, Tryout on Queen ElizabethPeter L. Zoeliner, sen., passed Way â€" Will Save Existing away at his home, North Grimsby, Tiresâ€"First in Canada, Saturday morning. . Phone 324â€"J, Grimsby. One Year In good condition in good condition Or« Year Three Manths In good condition In yood condition In good condition One Year in good condition in good condition in good condition Three Years in good condition Ons Year Thrse Years In good condition In good condition Two Maonths 2 to 5 p.m., commencing good condition goed condition good conuilion good condition good condition good condition good condition condition condition condition condition condition condition condi‘ion condition any any any any any any any Aity any any any any any eny any any any any any any any any any age any age sailor any age age age age age age age age age age age age age age ag age in 1035, | SBurviydg him are three sons; Peter, jun, at home; Samuel, of Hamilton, and John, of Detroit. The funeral took place Monday after;pon from his late residence on the Grimsby stone road, with interment in Queen‘s Lawn Cemeâ€" Il1 for only a few days, Mrs. Clifford Naish, of Grimsby, passed away at the Hamilton Geneval Hospital early on Sunday morning. mta-nqmlunut.dom in her 38th year and was born at daughter of the late David and Grace Best. She hod resided at Winona for several years prior to coming to Grimsby five years ago. She was a member of St. John‘s Anglican Chwirch, ‘Winona, Surviving, besides her husband, is a sister, Mrs. Reginald Conian, of Fruitliand, and a brother, Marâ€" tin Best, of St.oney Creek. Funeral was hcld from the Stonchouse Funâ€" eral Home, Grimsby, on Tuesday ‘nnemoon. Initerment being made in Stoney Creck cemetory, with ’M.T.N.Wedmmuton,o(- ficiating. THE â€" GRIMSB Y Casket beimrers were Donald Young, jun., Arthur and Morris Childs, Winoma, Clcrence L. Lewis, Frank Hitchman and T. Edward Mannell, Grim.sby. ANDREW J. SNYDER ‘ Cowley, Alta.. Sept. 11. â€" The funcral servicees of the late Andrew Justus Snydeir were held in the United churcih, Cowley, on Thursâ€" day afternoom at 2:30. Rev. W. H. Irwin of Belilevue conducted the services and the palibearers were J. Rhodes, R. Day, H. C. Morrison, Welsh. home, four tmiles north of on Sunday morning after having been in failing health for some time following a paralytic stroke. est esteem throughout the counrty and had many friends. For years he was councilior and reeve of the Livingston M.D. and for 14 yeurs was trustee of the Tennyson School District and was on the board of the Cowley United ci:mrch. He is survived by his wife and three sons, Clare, in the Army Ordnance Corps, Stanley and Harâ€" old, ranchers of Cowley, also three brothers, Fred of Cowl#y, Murray at Detrait, Brock at Grimsby and one sister, Mrs. toust of Toronto. IMlerment took piace in the Cowâ€" 10y cemetery. He was born at St. Ann‘s, Ont., on July 20, 1866, and spent his younger years in Grimsby. He married Delia Wismer in 1901 and came to Cowley,soon after, settling on his homestead, which he later enlarged, having one of the finest farms in the district. PETER i. ZOELLNER respected farmer of this disâ€" MR§ CLIFFORD NAISH Obituary His rhawi V away at his LNDEPE ND E NT In failing health for a long time the death occurred this morning of 22 tss :n ind sivcidliec ndcnnt Rev. EAiwin Burgess of Grimsby Beach. Rev. Burzess was born in Pictou County, .lova Scotia in 1858. Me began his ministerial enreer in 1889, after graduating from Auburn Theoingica Seminâ€" ary, New York. On returning, to Canada, he preached for a number ¢y.ugn8t..lohl‘lmb Presbyterian Church, Stellarton, N.S. After his mother‘s death in DiL~d Pepeue SnE e e s on t 1m.hl¢tflmneothuddld considerable travelling and preachâ€" ing in Western Canada and the Â¥Yukon territory, Shortly after the outbreak of the First World War, he enlisted in the Canadian army nnd went overseas in 1915 as chapâ€" lain. He married his present wife in 1917 while still serving in Engâ€" war he accepted n call to Zion Presbyterian Church, Kingston, Ont., where he stayed until his reâ€" tirement in 1928. After that he where he made his home. | When be was a young man he wrote a few religious books which were wellâ€"received by the Ameriâ€" car press, During his lifetime he also wrote a great deal for the press on religious and temperance matters, including several poems. The last bit of poetry that he wrote not long ago is as follows: We walk life‘s way together." He is survived by his widow, two stepâ€"sons, John R. and H. Leonard Douse, who are both in the army overseas, and one son E. R. Gareth, who is in the Active Army in Canâ€" Funeral on Saturday, September 25th, at 3 o‘clock in the Boys‘ Tabernacle, Grimsby Beach. Interâ€" ment at Grimsby, Rev. E. Burgess Passes Marital Disorder On The Increase ‘"While economic .conditions are decidedly better than in the deâ€" tendency for mothers and fathers to desert and leave their children and they do not seem to care what happens to them," L. S. Richardâ€" son, superintendent of the Chiiâ€" dren‘s Aid Society of St. Catharâ€" ines and Liscoln County, mainâ€" tained in a report on the alarming increase in family and marital disâ€" orders at the society‘s first meetâ€" ing the fall last week. j D\mmmdlmluly and August, Mr. Richardson reâ€" ported, it was necessary to take into custody 32 children. "Howâ€" ever," he continued, "it was posâ€" slble to discharge 32 children from almost impossible to have placed the new admissions. This constitutes an allâ€"time reâ€" cord. Similarly the nuwm‘er of family aituations that require acâ€" tion in their own home have tripâ€" led since 1941." "It is callousness which creates such misery in «. child‘s life," the superintencent â€" ieclared.â€" "There are other pareris who have used the war as an excuse for heevy drinking and promiscuity. It is inâ€" teresting to note that those parâ€" ents who are working hardest and who are genuinely interested in n P What â€"signify the wind and weather, I with His hand held fast in | part in 1. Work» f main« ommonâ€" Th s 28, 1943 flo-day, as always, the ‘Salada‘ label is your guarantee of a 5 t 2. a~~~ ssarliial Fofle getting the job done, these difficulties. n0-day, as always, the ‘Salada label is your guarantee of a uniform blend of fine quality teas. _ _ > m El RERERURE TCO omcs in reâ€"establishing a home for their children and there is an all too freâ€" quent tendency to senure work simply to escape responsibility of mmwmm" Keep Drums Farmers who really need steel d@rums for essential purposes will now be allowed to keep them, acâ€" mw-mw.r.r.s.m- FARSIGHTBD householders are seeing the urgent need of preparing their homwer now against this winter‘s coal shortage. They are acting now! ' repaired. Wes ~erstrip wherever it is w necessary. Consider seriouslv the insulaâ€" C J2» tion of ceiling and walls, M.nyhomecm«:umhu&%dhir!udvhr::shimfi- clent bulln‘ equipment, inadequate insvlation other heat losses. Winter is just around the scorner. Prepare NOW { it TO THE PEOPLE OF ONTARIO Friday, Sept. 24th 8.30 p.m. over the Ontario Regional Network of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and Affiliated Stations PREMIER CEORGE DREW ave onecitonriu fate loyed in inâ€" ull juterested will make a report â€"¢ EL A do not have io CBL & CBY T O R O N T O und HEATING SYSTEMS MUST BE EFFICIENT : HOMES SHOULD BE AbtQUATELY INSULATED. Eo uy h00 es on Shoutd & lave An oldâ€"timer is the one who can recall when the only law that govâ€" erned most things was the one of supply and demand. hi diitcont _ tow Anunn ty C20 1, United Kingdom from November 1, 1939 to August 31, 1942 amoU®" "" hmzu-flumnm have required 450 ships, each of 5,â€" 000 tons cargo capacity, to transâ€" port it. More than 70 _ «m food ration coupons are !4 sulation each week in Canadaâ€"1( for sugar, 12 for butter and 48 fir meat. Â¥ D

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