The Navy League Needs Y our Help This beautiful Glen Ridge brick and frame home will be located on the West side of Ontario Street, South, near Rockcliffe Road, in St. Catharines, Modern in every detail the home will contain a spacious living room, tiled bathroom, kitchen and two large bedrooms. A model home in every respect. Value approximately $7,000. Holder of winning ticket can purchase house for $1.00. 2nd prize, $150.00 Victory Bond. 3rd prize, $50.00 Victory Bond. $50.00 Bond awarded monthly during sale. Bond winners are eligible for grand prize. Phone 7â€"7851 149 Main St. W. A.G. REFRIGERATIO N WALK IN, REACH IN STORAGE OR FREEZER ROOM EQUIPMENT PRECISION AND PRESSURE WELDING LAMPMAN 8 5H WELDING GDO LAMPMAN‘S ELECTRIC WELDING ST. CATHARINES OPTIMIST HOME ST., CATHARINES OPTIMISTS CLUB on all types of refrigeration. GRIMSBY, ONTARIO HAMILTON, ONT. Successors to for 595 King St. E. Phone 245 h INGO! That Red Headed MacBride girl came to form with a venâ€" Z geance last week and rolled a high triple of 843, with a high game of 309. Her three games were 309â€"240â€"294. . . . Peach Queen‘s league finished their schedule last week and are now all set for the playoffs. The girls have had a great season. Some of them showing vast imâ€" provement over last year and lots of them rolling games of 200 and over every week. . . . Vedette team last week in taking two games to one from the Viceroy team rolled a total score of 2745. Not bad, eh. . . . . Winners of the special prizes in the Queen‘s league this year, are High Score, Alice Neale, 383, for the St. John and Shaw war certificate. Doris MacBride wins the St. John and Shaw certificate for the High Triple with 8$43, while The Independent certificate for the High Averâ€" age also goes to Doris with an even 200. . . . In Saturday‘s bowling for the War Saving Stamps, Hilda Johnson copped the money for the fourth time with 262. In the men‘s division Harvey Lambert was the winner with 301. .. ; LET‘S START OVER AGAINâ€"They had Little Whizzer hangâ€" ing on the chandeliers on Monday night. »«The week previous they had stolen his ladder and then somebody stole the cash register, so Whizzer got up with the electrical fixtures. He needed to, For Pin Twisters led by that old campaigner of the Northâ€"West Rebellion, Jim Shakleâ€" ton, were out to take the wonders and they did just that. I haven‘t got it figured out yet how they did it, but they did. My hand of Sportsmanship goes out to Jerry Luey. Twice he has led his Wonders team into a league leading position and then got beat out in the playâ€" offs, He bowls a great game himself and his team bowled a great game behind him, but those Pin Twisting boys just seemed to have something on the ball, or was it the crowd, that got the Wonders goat. It might have been the fact of Old Age Mert. Zimmerman, the Peach King, tied up in bandages, rolling a 215 that turned the trick. I don‘t know. Take a gander over the figures of both teams and if they were not kegling then you come tell me. Take the Twisters, nine games out of 20 over 200, the lowest 211, their highest 274, and Uncle Freddie Simms with a 225â€"235â€"186â€"274. On the other hand Wonders had some sweet bowling, 10 games out of 20 over 200, but their highest was only 237 against their low of 200. Baker Boy Frank Hurst turned in four swell games, 205â€"226â€"230â€"233. If that is not consistent bow!â€" ing, what am. NOW, LAST WEEK â€" Vâ€"E Day kinda bawled everything up around The Bowlaway, like it did every place else, but nobody cared. For your information, Mr. Baxter, K.C. has sent his orange shirt to the laundry, Hep Cats mauled the St. Andrew‘s boys three games to nothâ€" ing and you cannot blame that one on Kasey for he bowled aâ€"lovely 211â€"211â€"258. He was the only man on the team that had a game over 200. Meanwhile that young bunch of hellers had five games over 200. Low 205, high 246. Class tells despite Kasey‘s sartorial decoraâ€" tions. YOU FIGURE IT OUTâ€"They are in the finals of the conglamerâ€" ated schedule of the Men‘s league. Hep Cats and Pin Twisters. On Tuesday night the Heppers took two games out of three away from the Twisters by eight points on the total, and that does not mean a thing, because three more games have to be played on Wednesday night and this column has gone to press long beofre the games are played. As it stands now anybody can win the league. Hep Cats in three games rollâ€" ed a 2898, as against the Twisters 2890. Three games to go. But it is not a case of points. As it stands the Twisters have to gather themâ€" selves two games on Wednesday night in order to tie up three games all, then points count. What a nutsyâ€"bugsyâ€"wugsy situation, We‘ll report next week what happens on Wednesday night, if it happens. Taking that Catsâ€"Twisters game on the figures, they were sure ‘bowling. That boy McPherson rolled a 604 with a 210â€"210â€"184. Nice going. But young Jarvis comes along with a 740 because he rolled a 197â€" 261â€"282. The Heppers should have won all three games by a million points because they had plenty of backing, led by that ten million dollar cheer leader Irvine Levine, but old age and experience stalled the cheer leader stuff off and just may pull out a win for the Twisters. Here‘s what they accomplished. Uncle Fred Sims rolled a 730, with a three game play of 269â€"252â€"209. Then along comes Wilbert Zimmerman with a 734, rolled in 220â€"299â€"215. Dune McIntosh rolled a 205 and George Sills to get even for cutting down the old elm tree, kegled a 244 in his third game. All told Twisters had eight games over 200 while the kittens only had five games over the double numeral mark. The difference was that the Twisters were terribly high or terribly low while the Hellers were pretty much on an even keel. That is the reason of only eight points difference in the three gams. What is going to happen Wednesday night the Lord Himself only knows. Even Little Whizzer cannot prognosticate. THOSE FEMALES AGAINâ€"Seems like I am surrounded by skirts. Now the information is handed to me by that pair of red heads, Sammy Curtis, president of the Peach Queen‘s league and her efficient secreâ€" tary, Doris MacBride, that there are still some fees due from some of the teams. Please chuck your dough in girls or else somebody is not going to eat and I do not want that person to be Kasey Baxter of Niaâ€" gara Packers who have again so generously offered to put up the conâ€" solation prize for you gals to battle for. Another column of this paper tells you the playoff schedule of your league. Pay attention to. At. Further information will be carried in thig column next week. For your information the Queen‘s will grace the dining room of The Pines hotel, Stoney Creek, on the evening of June 6th at seven o‘clock sharp, for the annual feedâ€"fest. Better pay your dues. Better see Sammy or Doris and arrange your own transportation. I‘m going with Kasey, then I know I‘m going to get home. Goodâ€"bye, May the best pollingâ€" pin heaver®win out. Peach Queens Bowling Scores Veterans Elbertas Ad. Dewey St. John .. Crawford . John Hale Viceroy Vedette Mayflower Rochester Vimy .. Valiant Victory Golden South Haven Vanguard ...... No such waterproof material has ever been invented by man as the skin of the body. This is so thorâ€" oughly waterproof that no moisâ€" ture can enter the body from the outside through it, yet it is so porâ€" ous that much moisture can leave the inside of the body for the outâ€" side through it. High single, A Neale, 383. High average, D. MacBride, 200. High triple, D. MacBride, 843. SPORTOLOGY W aterproof emoneluaaef i4 108 Drops .......909 710 (By Bones Livingston, Sportologist) THE GRIMSBY INDEPENDEN T 686 730 736 675 T41â€"2 731â€"740â€"682â€"1 768 802 8TT 585 479 639 677 611 833 915 1001 970 625 T58 542 599 851 780 T14 480 786â€"1 §11â€"2 874â€"1 9242 587â€"0O 6571â€"23 7138â€"2 702 â€"1 T17â€"2 677â€"1 895â€"1 838â€"2 784Aâ€"2 742 â€"1 Vimy ...s ... Vallant ... Victory ... St. John ... Vedette ........... Ad. Dewey ... Crawford ... Viceroy ... Mayflower ... South Haven John Hale ... Veterans ......... Vanguard ....... Rochester ... Golden Drops Elbertasg ............. Friday, May 18th * 7.30â€"Valiant vs. Vedette. 7.30â€"Crawford vs. Viceroy. 9.00â€"Veterans vs. Vanguard. 9.00â€"South Haven vs. Rochester. New draw to be made for the second round. When a wife laughs at hubby‘s jokes there is usually a guest presâ€" ent or she wants a new spring outâ€" fit. League Standing Thursday, May 17th 7.30â€"Golden Drop vs. John Hale. 7.30â€"Mayflower vs. Elberta. 9.00â€"Vimy vs. Ad, Dewey. 9.00â€"Victory vs. St. John. Playâ€"Off Games 61 59 56 55 51 50 49 47 41 38 35 29 29 27 26 p.44 Vote for Your PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE CANDIDATE At lastâ€"a farmer fights for fair play for farmers! For more than twenty years John Bracken, the Farmer, was the undefeated leader of a Farmers‘ Party. Toâ€"day, as leader of a great, national, progressive party, he is deterâ€" mined that throughout the length and breadth of Canada there shall be a square deal for agriculture . .. fair play for the farmer .. . on a permanent basis! Farmers have seldom had a fair share of the nation‘s income. Rarely do they receive a just reward for their endless labours. John Bracken means to st8p, onee and for all, the unfair discriminâ€" ation against farmers, the unjust economic practices which make it imâ€" possible for farmers to obtain fair prices for the fruits of their labour. "It is the responsibility of the nation," says the leader of the Progressive Conâ€" servative Party, "to see that this great imequity shall not be perpetuated . .. I know where I stand in the matter. Let me make that position clear. It is not foreâ€"ordained that farmers shall work. for less pay than anybody else; or have their children receive only oneâ€" quarter the chance of a secondary eduâ€" cation or oneâ€"tenth of the chance of a university education that other children get; or see their wives forced into lives of toil, often 12 but sometimes 14 hours a dayâ€"Sundays and holidays included. . . . The trouble is that no one with the necessary authority has determined to correct the basic economic ills of Agriâ€" culture." "Canadian farmers have never had a fair return for their labour. They are forced to .buy in a protected market at relatively high prices and to sell in a world market at generally low prices. What agriculture needs is not crutches to carry its disability; it needs to have the disability removed. ‘This can only be accomplished by permanent measures and long range planning." Toâ€"day, John Bracken, the Farmer, seeks the necessary authority to put into immediate operation the farâ€"reaching At Lastâ€" _ Fair Play for the â€"Farmer Pâ€"3 That antiâ€"typhus vaccine is being produced in Canadian Laboratories hy injecting the disease organism into hens‘ eggs. One thousand new laid eggs daily are needed for this purpose. That "Postâ€"War Planning" must be considered just as iimportant to the individua! as it is to Industry and Government. Buy and hold War Savings Cortificates. &€> / \\\\\ y e viy sys iz #7 q COU COUGCGLT TCO RNOW se se Y Y Progressive Conservative policies that will permanently ensure fair play for the farmer. Here are just some of the points in the Progressive Conservative plan for the definite, continuous and permanent protection of farmers against income collapse and wide exâ€" tremes of income fluctuation: It takes a farmer to understand farmers‘ problems. Only a farmer knows the full economic injustice from which farmers suffer. Toâ€"day, John Bracken is fighting for fair play for every farmer. The leader of the Proâ€" gressive Conservatives is determined to bring security and prosperity to farmâ€" ers permanently. Join in the fight. Help him to win his lifeâ€"long struggle to give Agriculture a place in Canada‘s prosperâ€" ity, not for a dayâ€"but for all time to come. A Farmer fights for you .. . He needsg your help. Published by the Progressive Conservative Party, Ottawa. The Farmer shall be guaranteed a proportionate share of the nation‘s income. A permanent policy for forward contract prices shall be guaranteed to farmersâ€"by law. The prices guaranteed will be calâ€" culated by a nonâ€"political council, and will be based on the farmer‘s proâ€" portionate share of the national income. These prices will be anâ€" nounced before the production seasons begin. This policy will increase present average farm income by not less than twenty per cent. Thursday, May 17th, 1945. CARLILINGS THE CARLING BREWERIES LIMITED m &