Grimsby Independent, 13 Sep 1945, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

c.oOnflEAnfinm aet your FARM TRES REPAIRED AT OnCE! Hamilten, Ont. Smail down payments. Interest at 44. Both interest and principa! paid in small --&N- ments, paid in full in 10, 15 or 20 years. your own home and pay for it the same as rent. For plans and other details, Telephone 559 PHONE 495 NATIONAL HOUSING ACT MORTGAGE LOANS CLASSIFIED ADV‘TS BRING SPEEDY RESULTS PRODUCE GROWERS! GEO. C. ANSPAGH COMPANY, LMMED to believe that tomorrow will never come. It will come inevitably, and with it all the uncertainties and problems of a new world. ;You prepare for tomorrow when you become a policyholder of the It Is False SsUN LIFE OF CANADA C. J. DeLAPLANTE A CVUMVLEDE GOOD’YEAR *IPC SERVICE A COMPLETE FOR TOP MARKET PRICES 74 Colborne Street, Toronto "UP.TOâ€"DATE SELLING METHODS®" Shipping Stamp and Pad on Request PALMER‘S GARAGE GEORGE 1. GEDDES MARK YOUR SHIPMENTS wurey! 42 MAIN STREET W. SUN LIFE BUILDING GRIMSBY MOUNTAIN TIRE SERVICE Royal Bank of Canada King & Yonge Sts. 3618; Res., 7â€"5518 CONTINUA TIONS AGE OF "MIRACLES" remedied when a new storage re uhumumcmmfl-'“dnhw out you will find that it is much easier to read and very much more Puzzles" issued for the past half ‘The Blue Folder contains arrival and departure times of approxiâ€" mately 1,100 passenger . trains operating between points on Canâ€" adian National Rallways, as well as those running in part over other lines to points in the United States. In addition, the consist of each train is shown, with information regarding parior and sleeping cars, and dining car service. enable the intending traveller to answer his own questions relating to such matters. Ruled lines will be eliminated from tables, except where they are needed to establish separation; borders will disappear, as well as leaders and other marks that confuse the eye. Reference symbols will be simâ€" plified and reduced to a minimum. ‘The index page, comprising table and six months‘ calendar, will also carry explanatory notes, which will assist the traveller to find his way through the folder. gave his life on a oneâ€"man charge on a Jap machine gun emplaceâ€" ment, enabling his rifle company to make an important advance on Iwo Jima. "Marsh‘s charge came when his 25th Marines unit was locked in a readds as follows:â€" "Disregarding a shell fragment wound in his arm, Marine Private for Turkey Knob, a key point in the enemy‘s defense. Heavy Jap fire had halted the advance over the shellâ€"pocked terrain. Casualtâ€" les were mounting. "The Iowa Marine spotted a Jap CHARGED JAP Roy Marsh, Mrs. Ciaude Bod and the Misses Marsh are aunts. yards ahead of his lines. It apâ€" peared to be the key to the Jap‘s fire power. Disregarding his wound Marsh climbed out of his foxhole and started a oneâ€"man rush at the "As he advanced, his weapon beâ€" came jammed. But Marsh didn‘t stop. He continued forward, throwâ€" ing hand grenades. He killed two :.pummm-uw ly as he stormed the emplaceâ€" maining Japs manning the gun, and the assault swept on." HEAT WAVE CAUSES | _ put to keep up an adequate supply of water for all users. While the supply failed no one, still certain sections of the town and township had very little pressure. Both canning factories are now running and the C.N.R. is using a lot of water. The heat wave caused more water to be used in the households but citizens did not help the situation any by living up to the lawn sprinkling regulations and consequently a great amount of water was used that should not have been used. 5 % xT ‘This heat wave has brought most forcibly to the forefront again the urgent need for a new reservoir of large capacity, As the situation now stands the present reservoir is next to useless as it will not hold more than half an ordinâ€" ary days supply and as a conse» quence the pumps have to be used every day from 10 to 12 and more Eenii Oe s C ALL hours. When a heavy peak demand for water comes then the pumps are operated 24 hours a day and pressure in certain sections is not what it should be. C e In other words there is practiâ€" cally no reserve supply behind the mpmfi-.-dlurlnll consumption occurs the pumps are strained to meet it and operating costs rise accordingly. _ ____ _ 1t must be remembered that the present reservoir was constructed in 1904 and while practically all the reat of the system has been rebuilt and increased in capacity to meet the growing demands of a growing town and district, nothing has ever been done to increase the capacity of the storage supply. When the Grimsby system was built 41 years ago it would have kept the then village scratching to have a population of 1,000, Now the town is away over double that size and the thickly populated secâ€" tions of North Grimaby, east and west, are also being supplied with water. "Inspired by his act, Citizens are asked to please conâ€" serve water on all hot days and thus help the Water Commission to give every user an adequate suppâ€" ly. N-tyurflwdunflolvfllh] From Page One with the Japs THE GRIMSBY INDEPENDENT out the reâ€" POSSIBILITIES lams, whose windows have recentâ€" ly been highly acclaimed for their Altar â€"plece in the Cathedral which carries the Gospel of the Incarnatâ€" lon in terms which are meaningful not only to the northern natives but to the white men of the north, traders, trappers and Mounties. Mhpnhn‘ncn living toâ€"day who has such opportâ€" unity to know the vast reaches of Arctic Canada as the Bishop, who expressed himself as profoundly imâ€" pressed by the possibilitics of the Eskimo for playing an important role in the life of the Dominion, leaving them alone just do not anical brains and that they are these days costly ventures of the Church of England in Canada and the Bishop of the Arctic ischarged with the task of raising a large sum annually to make tis work possible, an investment wiich in the years to come will be considered one of the most farâ€"seein; ventures of faith that could have been unâ€" idend far beyond presenthopes. On Saturday eveningthe Bishop spoke to a large gatherhg of men informally at the Rectay, where all had an opportunity tomeet him personally and to havea few words with him, South Township l In The Limelight Mach Lauphcd Abput Caiter termsof enlightened citizewship divâ€" Dunnville, Sept. 10â€"Quadruplets were born in hospital here at 3 a.m. today to Mr. and \rs. Hugh A. Smith, of nearby Calzor, ‘The bables, two boys and two girls, as well as being quadruplets, were literally like two at of idenâ€" tical twins. The first, a rirl, weighâ€" ing three pounds 15 ouncs, arrived at 3 a.m.; the other girl arrived two hours later, and the brys were born soon after the birth of the second girl. All were phced in an incubator. ‘The mother, who is aregistered nurse, is a graduate of Hamilton General Hospital, Befos her marâ€" riage she was an assitant to Dr. E. L. Mcinnis who "bought the bables into the world. _ ‘The Smiths have three other children, two boys anda girl, the oldest being five years old. The Commissioner B. Orases, Terriâ€" torial Commander of th Salvation er Than Grimsby Peach Army in Canada. "THE LITTLE SHOEMAKER® . . , SAYS ... HURRY! 1 have J-t received a shipment of preâ€"war quality «â€"â€"PEDALS â€"â€"SADDLES â€"TIRE REPAIR KITS â€"BUILT â€" UP WHEELS with Coaster Brakes. Complete Stock of other parts and accessories. "Honey" Shelton Next Door to Oymond‘s Drug mother and children are doing fine, the attending physician reported. Note:â€"One of the baby girls Growing W heat For 340 Y ears has since diedâ€"Ed. ‘The growing of wheat in Canada can be traced back approximately 340 years. A French settlement in the Maritimes is reputed to have grown wheat in 1605 and in 1616 Champlain writes of a fine sample of wheat being cut at Quebec for shipment to France. In the middle of the cighteenth century, Canada was actually exporting wheat, shipments in 1754 amounting to 80,000 bushels. Newfoundland and the French West Indies were the principal markets in which the wheat was then sold, but in 1770 export shipments to Great Britain were recorded. Toâ€"day, wheat is You can cuss the capitalistic countries, but the other nations alâ€" ways seem to borrow money from it when.they get in a squeeze. To All Blood Donors 2,347,000 blood donations were made in Canada, 1,423,000 in Ontario, through the volunteer Blood Donor Service of the Canadian Red Cross Society since the first clinics were estabâ€" lished in January, 1940. The lives of hundreds in the army, the navy and the air force were saved through this service. This record was only made possible through your donations of blood. We wish to thank you sincerely for your generous help at a time when the need was so great. Special thanks are also given to the doctors, nurses, transport drivers and all other wolunteers who gave so generously of their time and talents, The Volunteer Blood Donor Service is now closed as a war measure. A new challenge is presented, however, for many deaths occur in Canadian hospitals ‘each year for lack of an adequate transfusion service. To meet this need, the Red Cross is making a survey with a view to providing all Canadian hospitals with blood for transfusion purposes. To our thanks, then, we add an invitation to help us as we continue our humanitarian work. When the time comes, and plans are ready, announcements will be duly made. THE CANADIAN RED CROSS SOCIETY Thank You HONORABLE THOMAS -V'I‘I..Nkr.c.. K.C., viceâ€"chairman sponsprd 7"&0&- United October 1â€"20, for the collection of tm iy U NR RO clger tion by U.N NRA experts among dap: C,. BRUCE HILL *oviC Thursday, September 13, 1945 "So Well Remembered" By JAMES HILTON Author of "Goodbye Mr, Chips" Some men can even blow off $2.75

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy