iv2 the georgetown herald wednesday evening september 20th 1939 ffte georgetown herald fhonk no t j st hooks editor and pa v garbeld l mogurray asstsnt editor a weekly newspaper devoted to the best interests of the town of oeoroetown and surnnmding country mcluding the villages of glen wll- baanstworvac lunehouae sfcwar ballliuuad and terra cotta issued r wednesday evening at the office on main st georgetown advxsttisxho rates legal notices 13o per line for r line for each subsequent insertion waders 8c perj km if in black face type so per line- additional notices sdbsorxption batbs j1j0 per year in advance united states 40c additional single copies 3c both old and new addresses should be given when change of address la requested j for first insertion jjerjlne for each notices qualifying as such as concerts entertainments society church or or- meetlngs etc 8c per line minimum charge aso reports of eld gladly inserted free in memoruui notices 50c and 10c per 1 i ja- i n small ad- coming events ajunsauon tneetii held glaajy insenea for poetry birth marriage mtlsements one inch or less 50c f6r first insertion and 25c fpr each sub- fieera for poetry birth marriage and death notices 50c wertlsements one inch or less soc for first insertion and 2 sequent insertion display adverttohjg rates on application although every precaution will be taken to avoid error the herald ts advertising in for of beraw its columns on the understanding that it will not be error in any advertisement published hereunder unless a iverusement is requested by the advertiser and returned to ofnoe duly signed by the advertiser and wlthsuch error correction plainly noted in writing thereon and in that cane if any error b noted is not corrected by the herald its liability shall not exceed such m propor of the entire cost of such advertisemeat as the space occupi ed by the noted error bears to the whole space occupied by such adver- xhe wfttti dobs job printing of all kinds on guard wars and rumors of war the clouds lour over the sea and a man must now be a man if ever a man can be wars and rumors of wars a cry from the flaming east 3br the vultures are gathered together and the lions roar over the feast tstarl shall we cinch shall we trem ble shall we shrink like cow ards from the fray better all britons were dead than then- glory passed away the clouds may be dark and louring u attain maj b l a l but the hearts of our men are true and the arms of our men are from the thousand years of glory from the grave of heroes gone comes a voice on the breath of the storm and a power that sweeps on a man must now be a man and every man be true wot britons stand together when brit ain has work to do rev frederick george scott no news is good news br c3eorce pabsoltb v loss and gain 1 sorrowed that the golden day was dead its ught no more the countryside ad orning but while i grieved behold the east was red with morning i sighed that merry spring was found to go and dorf the wreaths that did so well become her but while i murmured at her absence lot twas summer were i mourned because the daffodils killed by burning skies that scorched early posies jbut while for these i pined my hand or canada was rilled with roses correspondence editor georgetown herald georgetown ontario dear sir in your issue of september 6th you quote from the wlarton echo which comments on present day sunday con ditions in comparison with those of past years this raises some very time ly issues there is no question but that recent yearhave brought many efforts to- capture bunday for ordinary com mercial activitiesthere is still need to resist all sdqh attempts we should hold our sunday against attempts to throw it wide open to commercial pur suits your suggestion that garages enter into an agreement whe they ta turns remaining open on sundays such agreements are in effect in i number of places and prove satisfac tory they give garge managers and employees a larger measure of i jay freedom without interfering with service which some citizens seemto de mand on sundays furthermore citi zens could help the general situation if they would purchase their oil and gas on saturdays to carry them over sunday this is possible in mostc as- es leaving the sunday service to cases of emergency alone another suggestion that might well receive general consideration by the people of all our communities namely the purchase of their groceries and general merchandise earlier on satur days late saturday evening shopping makes for conditions that are unfair to vhopkeepers and their employees mer chants and employees would welcome the opportunity to close store and get to their homes before the saturday midnight hour sunday would be a better rest day in consequence in these days of strife and anxiety there is real need that we hold our sundays as free as passible from busi ness and toil it is necessary also they should be days or relaxation and re lief from the nerve strain of the week worship is a real factor in such relief to the individual and the community yours sincerely geo g webber i general secretary lords day alliance ff course said the smartly dressed visitor as she glanced about the almplyturnished sunshiny little room i cartimagipe your not wanting to work in winter you always did- jiate wading through slush or snow i remember and it must be sort of nice just to stay at home and take things easy while the mercury clings to zero but in spring well thats different again the bungalow aproned hostess merely smiled as she reflected that stoking a ftunace shoveling patfis tending to tpe supply of dry mittens leggings and stocking caps wool socjfts and warm scarfs for three active children wasnt exactly tak ing things easy you know you can get your old job back in a minute declared madeline miss burke said just the other day she would be tickled pink to have you in the french section once more that you were the beat saleswoman she ever had she even said that in case you were short of cash to buy a nice chic little dress for work shed make you a special rate on one of the sample models for she said the girls who get mar ried always are short of cash by the tirnethey have even one kid let alone three you better think it over dearie urged madeline drawing her smart crushed gauntlet gloves over smooth white hands any time before the fourteenth miss burke said to let her know my suddenly ex claimed madeline it certainly will seem like old times to be going out to lunch again with you and with phil in thn mart thrfp ujptlfg nttt nf half brokenhearted i bewailed the end of friendshlpthat which none had once seemedifiarer but while i wept ilqund a cloger friend -w- 7 and dearer tbusdld 1 learn old pleasures are es tranged only that something better may be given until at last we find this earth ex changed ptor heaven author unknown tomorrow he was going to be all that a mortal should be tomorrow wo one should be kinder or braver than he tomorrow a friend who was troubled and weary he knew trbod be glad of a utttand needed it too on him he would call and see what he could do tomorrow bach morning hed stack up the letters hed write and thought of the folks he would fill with delight tomorrow it was bad indeed he was irasy today and hadnt a minute to stop on his way store time he would- have to give others hed say tomorrow the greatest of workers this r would have been tomorrow tbe worldwould have known him bad he ever seen btrt the fact is he died and be faded from view and all that he left here when living was a mountain of things he intended to do i hnrrttiirnuy thr- f 46 wish you could keep quiet fcfcfle try grandma out i just rem fa far at you wouldnt re all is your job big enough grand river sachem i it is a very common thing these days to hear people especially young people complain that their job is not big en ough for them they become dissatis fied with the routine of each day feel that they should be doing bigger and more important things and that they are wasting their time on the hum drum jobs which they reel their bosses entrust them to do these are the peo ple who fail to realize that their job is just as big and just as important as they choose to make it to one sten ographer the job may be simply getting through the days work as quickly and as easilj as possible and woe betide iny employer who expects her to work live minutes after five oclock the let tersare dictated and typed out and mailed but they are carelessly writ ten smudged and unattractive to an other stenographer every day is an op portunity to do each task a little bet ter and a little neater and a little more efficiently is it any wonder that this second stenographer is moved up be comes a secretary perhaps an office manager while the first one remains just where she is a little more discon tented and a little more dissatisfied than ever how often we wander into a store and are struck by the contrast ing methods adopted by sales clerks one is always alert attentive cheerful patient anxious to please ready with a smile whether a sale is made or hot the other is usually busy with a fel low- clerk grumbling because his or her conversation has been interrupted- unfamilar with the stock and ready to argue with the prospective customer on the slightest provocation the one will never rise any higher the other is the material out of which future managers and buyers are made and so it goes that person who is always complain ing that his job is not big enough for gets that the job is just as big as he cares to make it and no bigger rra a fog jokk when someone blushes with embar- wfaen someones feelings are hurt when something sacred to made to appear commonplace when it to directed against them- flnnlty of someone when it to utteredia a bitter spirit when everyone cannot join in the laughter four you can get ott for some good times instead of being tied to the house the way you are now every day in the week just like every oth er day weekafter week month aft er month her visitor gone viola armstrong looked thoughtfully about one room after another of he little house she wondered if she would be able to pick up the new dance steps phil never wanted to go out eve nings during the week he was in from the rood it would seem good to go to a movie or musical show once in a while three hungry children trooping in from the sandpile in tlc back yard interrupted violas thoughts deft ly she prepared supper as the children ate viola once more thought of madelines words of miss burkes offer and she re flected that all three of the jolly browneyed youngsters would be fed and tucked into their beds be- fire she would be home from the ore if she went back to work in town there would he but cold com fort in buying pretty clothes and expensive toys for the children if she as never home to see them wear he clothes or play with the toys supper over the three laughing children trooped up the stairs to make ready for bed viola lucked each child into its own little bed or crib slowly she made her way down ihe stairs and into the silent living- room madeline was right it wasnt so cheery this hnving ones husband on the road three weeks out of four that is it wasnt so cheery during the three weeks the fourth of course was just like a gorgeous va cation that fourth week wouldnt be so much though if she were working in a store in town viola admitted to herself seating herself before the well- worn old desk the desk which had served phil throughout his college years viola took out pen and pa per just as she did every night thot phil was on the road phil wouldnt be home till after the fourteenth if she was gmng back- to work she must let him know suddenly viola remembered some thing phil had said not many weeks before i never fret about the youngsters honey he had told her i know you are right on the job looking after them instead of tear ing around like a cuckoo flapper i suppose its lonesome business for you but im telling you the kids are darned lucky to have a mother like you on the job 24 hours a day every day in the week fortyeight hours later a certain grayeyed young man tore open an envelope and eagerly scanned the closely written pages it contained madeline clarke called she looked like a million dollars and she tried to inveigle me into going back to the store no thanks no clock punching and waiting on fussy women- who have more time and money than they have taste not while ive such a grand job looking after the cunningest little house and the three sweetest children in the world to say nothing of writing to the nicest husband who ever lived so read the letter which strange ly enough commenced dearest phil today has been just like ev ery other sunday when you arent at home then really is no news at all y and ended p s fve gone all through my cedar chest and piece bag and tve found enough stuff to make enough braided rag rugs for the nursery new cushion covers for che davenport and for a coat for betsy what says we arent wealthy t iwrscottra wtti sweat thedz service np the great war in ready fulfilment of the offer of their services by sir edward beatty president of the boy scouts associa tion and prompt acceptance by tbe prime mintoter the 100000 boy scouts and scout- leaders of canada- are pre paring to carry out their obligation of dutyto god and the king by render ing every possible nonmilrtaxy war time home service that- this service will prove of value is indicated by the record of the scout service daring the great war but for which many important civilian activi ties would have moved at a much slow er pace particularly in 1914 in prac tically every city and town trained and uniformed scouts- were available in troops or singly to run messages on wheel or afoot to help at a refresh ment booth a bazaar a fundraising entertainment to usher at meetings or wash dishes in a bed cross kitchen as the general war work developea their activities broadened they were used in connection with victory loan campaigns and red cross ymjoa and other patriotic fund drives they met troop trains and acted as guides and messengers later they met the trains of returning sick and wounded carried their luggage and assisted in every way possible at halifax saint john quebec and montreal they met hospital ships ix the country districts they aided farm ers whose farm hands had joined up many city boys also did long weeks of farm labour through the harvest oi the fruit season without pay or turn ing their earnings over to the red cross the wives and families of soldiers overseas were looked after one toron to troop in addition to a large war garden of its own planted and tended 15 gardens for the wives of soldiers in smaller communities there was such service as the sawing of the winters wood for war widows doing chores and running errands over long periods for families without men folks number of scouts gave valuable ser vice in hospitals one winnipeg scout putting n a total of some 600 hours in hospital attendance one toronto scout was credited with 690 hours the folding and packing of bags at red qross depot when he was just four a young lad was very much interested in a wedding that he had seen for days afterwards he would speak of nothing else one night he asked daddy have you ever been married yes of course to replied is h very hard to get manled sonny continued no his father replied we did not find it very difficult after some cog itation the young son spoke again of course it was not difficult for your because you only got married to mamma but i must marry some strange woman recruiting note at the outbreak of the great war henry was a lad in bis late teens like many other canadians be was attrac ted to the army partly by the roman ticism proper to his age partly by the conviction that it was his duty to do bis hit toward making the world safe for democracy particularly appealing to his imagination was the ubiquitoua poster showing the goldenhaired little girl asking what did you do in the great war daddy though henry was not married at the- time he felt that some day he would hg and he was going to be prepared to answer that question without embarrassment so henry enlisted in the c e p where ho semad efflcently but without special distinction until the armistice then he resumed his interrupted busi ness career and except for occasions of battalion reunions vimy dinners and the like he gradually relegated the war and his part in it to the back his mind years passed and henry acquired in the order named a wife and a-golden- haired daughter rose rather to hen rys disappointment whuerose asked questions about every conceivable sub ject the great question remained answered until this year a few weeks ago rose who reads the newspapers and listens to the radio apparently realized that there were points of similarity between the world situation now and in 1914 quite sud denly one evening she came to henry with the longawaited question what did you do in the great war daddy henry smiled modestly and answer ed 1 was a soldier dear rose said nothing for a time but she looked at her father one could see that she was mentally comparing the natty militiamen whom she had seen on ceremonial parades with henrys now far from military figure her in nocent eyes rested first on henrys balch spot passed to the fringe of grey hair beneath and rested on his mid dleaged paunch then she laughed the printed word dtfjt time table standard time passenger 616 tf passenger and mall 10m m passenger and mail 645 p passengers for toronto 040 pi passengers sundays only 6j1 pi going west passenger and mau78j a passenger dally except saturdays and sundays 605 p saturday only 14s p passenger and mall 648 p passehger sunday 1119 p going north mall and passenger 846 a going south moll and passenger 6jb p life op a canadian bee the average life of a bee during the summer months in canada is approxi mately six weeks but in winter their life must be prolonged to at least eight months to do this requires a careful study of colony strength food supply and protection in relation to wintering at one time it was thought that bees could not survive the winter in many parts of canada unless housed in spec ially constructed cellars but the apia ries of the dominion experimental farms have shown that bees can be safely wintered outside in packing cas es anywhere in canada provided the colonies are properly prepared during the previous fall beatrice says she has seen but eigh teen summers well ohe always was unobservant summer time table effective sal june 24th leave gpoeto to toroato a 614 am 948 ajn 1148 am o 323 pjn 40b pjn 608 pm 913 pjn a except sundays c sat only to london x 935 am 905 pjn b 600 pjn x 7j pja x- connections for owen sound b sun and hol standard time tickets- and information at w h long phone 89 gray coach lines oj directory f r watson dd bldjl georgetown office hours 9 to 5 except thursday afternoons db j e jackson l dentist xray office hours dally 9 to s evenings 7 to 9 phone 224w georgetewbs leroy dale kc m sybil bennett bjl barristers and solicitors mill street georgetown ont coznlze and prescribe glaves consult optical needs vary there can never he a set rule for fitting or recommending glasses the human eye boa so many variations that every case is a distinct one it re quires training and skill to re- we specialize in eye examination and good o t walker ro optometrist ete8igitt specialist brampton who to at bobbs drug store georgetown the second wednesday of every month or you may consult t walker at his office in brampton kenneth m langdon barrister solicitor notary publle first mortgage money to loan offlce gregory theatre bldg mill st phone 88 georgetown georgetown fall fair september 27th and 28th haltons outstanding exhibition first night of show oonunenclnc at 800 pjn in the geofxetown arena entertainment by russ qieighton and his canadian mountaineers popular variety entertainers from toronto featuring singers tap dancers accordionist comedian ventrtloquist and other entertainment galore this promises to be one of the finest entertainments ever to come to georgetown fun and enjoyment for everyone dont miss it 1 program under direction of alex tommy thomson excellent sound system for entertainment admission adults z5c cbtlden 10c fair day list of events to be held in georgetown park excellent hall exhibits best livestock exhibit west op toronto midway baby show sheaf blndino potato race harness racing dont forget the parade of prise winning animals at 4 pm grand variety dance and floor show in the arena icnslc and flobinsnow by russ cre1ghton and his canadian mountaineers teavlar and wabknewa variety p ba of toronto noon showpbatdrs wbx clara pelly that sestaftoeaalairl singer dancer and acrobatic star deluxe everybody oom and enjoy a real evenlmpnf dancing and entertainment plenty of tbe very latest in modern and lot of old time dancing dancing and fleer shew fraav s41 to lm ajn st- admesbfon tte frank petch licensed auctioneer for the counties or peel and hshen prompt service telephones cheltenham 26 r 23 georgetown 61 r i post office cheltenham walter t evans co general insurance ocean steamship service real estate main st north georgetown monuments pollock ingham successors to cater worth gait ont designs on request phone 048 inspect our work in greenwood cemetery am nielsen tith xssr of praoue chiropractor xray drugleii theraput tad attendant office over dominion stora georgetown hours 28 730 9s0 bjb phone wir o a shred bet ttie benevolent 014 man ad trytaet to until the spirit at e aa obviously unanttausslitlo ohai my boy la2if secret of mo i aonwii butrat ear tod vtttri 52