Grimsby Independent, 24 May 1922, p. 4

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0:‘).0.0-()-()-()-()-0-()-0-()-0-0'0‘ | i BROKEN # VERNON TUCK, R.O. FOUR _0.()-().()“()-()-0-()-()-0.0-0-(0:0 || rjnidh +) y STG T m un m We have the plant and equipâ€" ment to replace' any â€"broken lense. . No matter where you bought â€" your glasses if â€" you break*a lenge just bring in *a piece of it and we can copy it accurately. attached. The new model UTILITOR is controlled by a varâ€" iable speed governor. # ’ ’ The hitches are simple and the implements easily own place. ‘The machine is economical on oil and gas. _ Does all oneâ€"horse work in Plowing, Grapeâ€"Hoeing, Cultivating, Discing, etc., and also does belt work. You can use a machine of this typeâ€"PROFITABLY We will be glad to arrange a demonstration on your COUNTY MOTORS LIMITED PHONE 180]J ~â€" _ GRIMSBY, ONT. D To prove that the Paris Seamless is Dry, we place matches in the Provision chamber, And after leaving them there for days can scratch them on the interior anywhere, * ) 4 There is no suspicion even of dampness. ~This is why. the * PARIS SEAMLESS "Guards your family‘s health." : Theâ€"Snowy White Seamless Porcelain interior is like finest Engâ€" lish china.â€" The corners are rounded. ~It is unbreakable, and easily cleaned with a soft damp cloth | f 4 §( (Registered Optometrist) BANK.OF HAMILTON CULTIV A TING J. A. CAMPBELL, MANAGER GRIMSBY BRANCH NEW RIDING MODELâ€"$245. DELIVERED GRIMSBY pypmcor w _ es | NC Wiempnnnbntcirponen o _0 _Pxrow 7170 0O IK ! DEMONST RATION LENSES / YOouU CAN DO ... MORE AND BETTER ESTABLISHED 1872 is there any one of th If tk box in ou" coulda not There is a style and size for every need. were to vOoUuU ere 158. PeN \\\ § PHONE 130 Oof vouLr this> shoul OfI ~our not in one a fire, or if a thief steal vour afford to house GRIMSBY 1 ne cold, dry air Circuiatâ€" ing through the Refrigerator causes these strips to sway back and forth. This is Real Circulation IDAY,. AISO â€"a ; MCNVELP OL LBS _ SeXddladl 6n sion and his party, came . to the Griinsby Fruit Belt® from ~Toronto, last Wednesday to view the blossom belt of the Niagara district. i The Brotherhood of the Methodist Church will entertain the congregaâ€" tion on Thursday evening next â€" at §# ‘o‘clock. The occasion will be: the annual congregational. meéting. The Brotherhood will serve .refreshments and all all church organizations will report for the year. Let, every home be represented. j hC The annual session of the Hamil_‘ ton Conference of; the" Methodist‘ Church begins in St. Catharines on Wednesday, May Sist at 2 p.m. The Conference will last approximately a week. Much business looking to legâ€" islation to be enacted by the General Conference in September â€"will ‘bhe considered. Popular attractions d}lr- ing the Conference will be the Layâ€" mens Banquet on Tkursday, June 1st, from 5.30. to 7.45 p.m.: Rev,; Géo. E. ‘Gullen, of Detroit, will\be the chief speaker. Bishop Quale of the M. E. Church, _U.S.A., an orator of, unique appeal,, a humorist and ‘sage will . be the chief visitor to. the conference. He will speak twice on Friday, at 9 a.m. and 8 p.m. to the young men who are to be ordained Sunday morning. On Saturday Bishop Quale will speak at 9 o‘dlock and in the evening at 8 he will give his famous lecture on ona (Use the FREE COUPON . to secure a tin of Chiâ€"NAMEL <at RICHARDâ€" SONS‘ HARDWARE on ,FRIDAY and SAXTURDAY. : & t 2 D ‘"Hamlet". He will also preach the ordination sermon on Sunday, June 4th, at 11 a.m.. The méetings will be in St. Pauls Methodistâ€" Church â€"and will be governed by Daylight saving time. ind Mrs i1 tt n oul 0 ilso O Tincé ol 16 1y L@qTry. martn ‘Ol NO UH mber of the commisâ€" party, came . to â€"the Belt‘ from : Toronto, to view the blossom f0o THE INDEPENDENT/ GRIMSBY, ONTARIO l 109 )nmimiss10] Martin of id a A.0 n oL ion W 11 i] n (VY The Municipal CGouncil: of the â€" Townâ€" ship of North »Grimsby will sit as a Court of Revision at , the: Council Chambers, in the Town of Grimsby, on Saturday,. June 10, 1922 at the hour of oneâ€"thirty in the afternoon, _to hear and determine‘ any appeals against the Assessment for the Year 1922. / THOS. W. ALLAN, # Clerk, Municipality of es North Grimsby. Tated" Max 99 %M10922 7|6 Any trial allowed before you them. â€" Satisfaction suaran The Sacrament administered at t A pioneer of the Grimsby district in the person of Mrs. Rosetta Prudhomme Smith,. widow of the: late. J.. Henry Smith, passed away at her home in North Grimsby on Tuesday, May 16. 1922, in :her , cightiecth year. Mrs. Smith was ~born in Beamsville in Smith was born‘ in Beamsville in July, 1842, the daughter of Charles Prudhomme â€" and â€" Maria . Boughner, and had spent the: greater part of her life in this district. On aâ€" visit to an aunt in Strathroy she met and. marâ€" ried Robert C. McGregor, living. in that town for a few years, and on his death ‘returned to Beamsville. / Nearâ€" ly half a century ago she married Mr. Smith, who predeceased ‘her in 1899, and for‘> some years they lived in Colorado ~where (he had extensive mining interests. Selling their inâ€" terests there they returned to Grimsâ€" by and built the beautiful home west of the town which was a social renâ€" dezvous and the scene of many brilâ€" mining inte terests ther by and buil of the tow1 dezyvous an marriage, was MIs with ‘her husband to Saltfleet, in " Scotland, and sett farm. During her country she made and by her lovable : tion endeared hersel had the privilege ance.: pesides ANer â€" 25c( ." HICDHCGALUs she is survived by a family of two sons; exâ€"Warflen Hugh Bertram, . Jr. and James; Bertram, of Vinemount, and three daughters, Misses Bell and Helen, at home, and Mrs. Roy Young, of Kimmins, Ontario. £3 Individual electric motor drive has been applied to drop hammers up . to 2,500 pounds in weight. A Swiss inventor has invented | a device that arranges rails in parallel layers by means of magnetism. ; COURT OF REVISION Dated May 22, 1922 10 11 THE REâ€"BLOCKED and CLEANED ) to a feV cellent h w hours TrIous n t it t] 0 p p.m 51 om ENCE mmer is here and your Straw Panama should be réady. PETER EDMOND VINELAND a Churches OBITUARY Ladies‘ or Mens‘ Highâ€"class Work. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Prices Moderate. p.m. URS. ROSETTA SMITH +1 THE VETE METHODIST CHURCH 1€ few M SHOE STAl was Miss husband t:> in " t and settl /ZINELAND ides he} D sâ€" On. MAY 26th In The 101 di 1CeI ertt Tay GUSH mile w« I 4 h 'i,'z"I ty zty Vs COF B TT uze am, prior: to . ner Mary White. She, ind family. came 91,; digect . from d on the Jardine residence ~ in this Rost of friends, ind sweet disposiâ€" t to all those who f her »acquaintâ€" aged > husband, . ‘family. of two Lh BRartram Ip f( 11 RA N was passin 1€ re district > death of inemount, Bertram, had been r death in g.° only . a sing away considered pay foi teed. ul ne e folâ€" quick d not 150 Wil TIS +1 J {en he1 efrt )@1 n Wed., May 24â€"‘*A Thqousand ‘to. One" with~ Hobart Bosworth "Love j and Doughnuts", a Sennet comedy. Sat., May 27â€"Pauline Frederick.‘ in ' "Roads of, ~Destiny‘", a : Polâ€" lard Comedy and . Government . reel. ¢ Mon., May 29â€"Forbidden Valley", a Kentucky romance. with . May McAvoy: ‘and Bruce Gordon, .. 8th Episode Hurricane Hutch" ‘ and Aesop‘s Fable. Wed., May ~31â€"â€"‘"The.; Lastâ€" of. The *« Mohicans by James Fenimore Cooper and a good comedy.. : Ja‘s. Montgomery, manager«of, .the Niagar® District Grape Growers‘ Limâ€" ited,â€"and. President Mahony, of the N, P. Growers‘, limited, piloted a delegaâ€" tion of some twenty: English school teachers who are on a trip to Canâ€" ada, through the fruit belt on Saturâ€" day. The day was not a: propitious one for seeing the beauties of the orâ€" chards, but the. delegation was more than impressed with the garden , of Canada jand will take ‘back home with them the glad . news. that. "Our Lady of the Snows" stands in favorâ€" able comparison with the best that old England can produce in natural beauty. ho , SUPPLYING t1 out Do not grasp the fork as if it were a garden spade or a screwâ€"driver. On the otherhand, gvoid the manâ€" ner of the overdainty folk who . hold the fork gingerly between first finâ€" ger and thumb with the other fingers curled in midair. Strike ~a . happy medium between these two methods. Jonnny .aDou while mothe1 ‘_The tendency nowadays is to. eat everything that one can with the fork, and the suggestion‘ has been. made that the ultra fastidious will soon atâ€" tempt to use a fork for hot chocolate. Ice cream is preferably eaten with a fork and for this reason it should be served in as solid a form as possible. In eating salad only:. the fork should be usedâ€"Ahever the knife. <It is permissible to cut the leaves of the lettuce or oOther green with the side of the fork if they are served whole. When you. have ~finished | with a course . the â€" knife: and fork . with prongs pointed .up should beâ€" laid across the right .side: of the ~plate. This should also be the . position of the knife and fork when passing the plate for a second helping of meat at a family dinner. , * f The fork should never be used : to ma.sh or mix the food‘ together.; To mash potatoes or other vegetables. in this way so that they will better mix with the meat gravy is in extremely bad form ;as is also the habit of using the knife as an assistance in loading the knife as an food on the fork Peas should: be not with a spoon nierced with the S( W Potal® fo worker. same load ladder all into think other folk well get ; Disgusted Professor;~ "What â€"did you come to college for? You are not studying." _‘ Student: ; "Well‘,mother ‘says / it‘s to fit me for ‘Parliament; Uncle Jim, to sow my wild oats; sister Helen, to get a chum for her to / marry ; ‘.and, dad, to drive him to bankruptcy!" d ‘"‘How can I keep my toes from goâ€" ing to sleep?" ‘ ~"Dont‘.let them turn in." f "I wish now," said the lecturer, "to tax your memory." . A wail in the audience: "Has it come to that." nd T TS 11 Whilst in ,sSpTIn fns. to reen doc MoORE‘S THEATRE ~ ~_ _ ATTRACTIONS n( )1 1 1( Up.., rtaifl stri able.â€"man ENGLISH â€"VISITOR® « PREC wee )21 lov PS : 0~mortal the time ETIQUETTE f1 111 B H «THE WHOLE DAMN FAMILY®" t] U nd . painti in# up the rinks th vyoun 21 TV1 at. ne aten with a fork; ind they should be es of the fork. not 1 0 ift] XATIO D In man‘s â€" fancy ‘s> _ turnsg"> tC ind dov ule the h up AWwnN: TrVIn hardw a 1 d 11 11 it 1( LC n1 the boss 1 nd )1 dn mm t td tttttind 8 8 C € § PHONE 157. GRIMSBY, § FOR RESULTS ADVERTISE PAY CASH! GIVE your stomach and your pocketbook a square : _deal. â€"What‘s the use wasting money on deâ€" liveries when you can carry your purchase home. Come in and see what you want and take it with you. And you pay léss for itâ€"don‘t forget that. ; _ _ We #% LEAMING, GOLDEN GLOW, WHITECAP, SOUTHERN SWEET, COMPTONS EARLY, ANGEL OF MIDNIGHT To SEED CO GRIMSBY FLOUR & FEED CO. hand. WE DELIVER NOW 1ave good stock of firstâ€"class beed Cor Germination 95 per cent. or better Free from Corn Borer.. â€" 1§0 sTomacu@ _A L A SQUARE ~DEAL C h ara n pparconny e oc enc | ut P Wednesday, May 24 Mw Ba KE A5rp)! & PAY LESS ! C ) N OIl ; 1922 $

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