Twin City Launory tog strape. LIGHT. _ INEXPENSIVE GUARANTEED _ Investigste W rite Smith Manufacturing Company " ... . and they‘re so careful with your things‘!" Yes, we pride ourselves on the fact that our reputation for high quality cleaning is remaining as steadfast today as ever! We know you‘ll be pleased with our work. FOR QUICK SERVICE JUST TELEPHONE #â€"8%33: ... Now A perfect method No elastic N« HELP US PREVENT WORK JAMS Klemnore Aâ€" Wells, 29 George St RUPTUREDT TIME To GET AUTUMN CLOTHEsS CLEANED! Mr. and Mrs. Howard Moser 70 John St. E. Twin City‘s Busiest Cleaners For Over 10 Years PRESTON, ONTARI Eetabhahed 192 Cleaners and Dyers ISN‘T IT THE TRUTH 2 649 King St Sutisfaction a Habit Just Call Alfwed A Canada would seem to be in a ; position to muintain exports of ; wheat in the 1944â€"45 crop year at a level approximating that of the ; 1943â€"44 season and still finish with | u ~lantial reserve stocks on hand ai the end of July. 1945. states the | Xuo tmy Review of the Wheat Siâ€"! tuation. The direction of export smlpments in the now season may sooa some change with larger | amounts going overseas and less to the United States, but the curâ€" rint apppraisal of the statistical ; position of Canadian wheat points to the availability of at least 350,â€" v00,000 bushels for export in 1944â€" j 45 without reducing the carryâ€"over to an undesirable level before the 1945 wheat crop is harvested. | Infections by ‘a common worm Services will be held on Tuesday parasite were found in approximâ€" ¢vening at 8 o‘clock. The Rev. J. ately 75 per cent of 1,090 pigs i.,[w. Behnken, President of the Advanced Registry Test Stations in | Fvangelical Lutheran Synod of Canada, states the Canadian Jour. | Missouri will be the guest speaker. nal of Rescarch. Most of these inâ€" *The conference will close on fvctions were acquired by the pigs Thursday afternoon, Aug. 31. during the preâ€"weaning period. | Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Eckersley The infections recorded were not ) and family and Clayton Seyler are definitely harmful to the animals. SPending a week at Long Point Studies on factors influencing this ;B‘aCh- . worm (Ascaris) are in progress. Dolores and Marilyn Knipfel are =â€"â€"wâ€"râ€"â€"â€"â€"â€"_â€"_____â€"__ spending a few days with Joan SHtel Sn â€"t Chimeiartoincs crve oomrermeeammmmmncememmeazmmns ASATCLE B4 RTSCRETET, DOW NING, STEEN and Co. 86 King St. W. _ Phone 4â€"4162 KITCHENER WHEAT FOR OVERSEAS GOOD GROOMING AND GOOD CLEANING STUDY PIG WORMS IN HAND! HFLORKRISTS HAND Kang St. N | _ Mrs. Allan Glaister and Adelia accompanied Mr. Sam and Miss ! Addie Harron of Millbank to the keme of P. A. Snider, Centreville, on Sunday. ‘ _ Mrs. Thomas Wilford spent a few days with relatives near Bright. WiTS. LZMOMES WINOIOG SpCHL a TCW i i s days with relatives near Bright. Unseen here this season as mltor |__Mr. and Mrs. Campbell Shantz| rowagâ€"q wearpe hydro wires frot ‘and family were Sunday visitors gou‘;ged nearby 'X"lim wfn-es l'..h†with _ Mr._ and Mrs. â€" Aylmer| 4900CaY motning. etter from the ‘Braendlc. Heidelberg. American "Soo", some weeks ago, _ Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Birming.{ informed us that some barns up ‘ham and Donna of Linwood, Mrs.| thete wetre adorned with scores of [Ed. Mitchell of London, and Miss, SWallow dGomiciles, so perhaps their |Jessie Hammond of Kitchner were Neetâ€"winged tenants are already ‘visitors at the home of Jchn L.| CONEregating on the northern shores Hammord on Sunday. : (-f.Lakg Erie, in mdmes. for groupâ€" _ Mrs. R. Foster, Laura, Mr. anc migration from Canadian climes, Mrs. Lerne Rennic attended the %arly in September. ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Campbell Shantz ‘and family were Sunday visitors with _ Mr. _ and _ Mrs. Aylmer .\Braendlc._Hgidelb_qrg. e funeral of Mrs. M. Winn in Elmira) The wall has now been completâ€" [on Friday. She wes a sister of the ed for another batn in place of the ‘late Robt. Foster. one recently destroyed on the Bruâ€" Pte/E. H; Rose of Nanaime, B.C..‘bacher farm, halfâ€"aâ€"mile west of |Miss Alma Roese of Gadskill were! Wallenstein. The _ replacement ‘recent visitors at the homes of|structure is 58 x 45 feet, an old \Henry Schmidt, Arthur Rank ane! barn near Bridgeport having been gGgg’rg(‘ Squire. __ w l ... _ ,, purchased for this purpose. August Bride At Waterloo By Miss Roâ€"cite Kaipfâ€"! | iChronicle Correspondent) The ministers of the Ontario disâ€" Itrict of the Missouri Synod will |hold a three day conference at the ‘Lutheran Church bere, next week. ceorr‘o egut, of Bright, and the late nm‘nt, and Thomas O. Wilford, onl{ son of Mr. and Mrs. William Wilford, Crosshill. The bride was dressed in a long, white gown of Swiss organza emâ€" bossed with embroidery. It feaâ€" fured a sweetheart neckline and long, pointed sleeves* Her veil of illusion was fingerâ€"tip Ien,th and ca\;xht by a headdress of white gardenias. She carried a nosegay of red Better Times roses and camation:./'ler sister, Mrs. Gordon Armstrong/of Bright, was matron of honor. She wore a blue chiffon gown | made with â€" a sweetheart neckline and deper blue lace boâ€" dice. It had long sleeves finished with blue lace. She wore also a matching headdress and a shoulderâ€" length veil and carried a nosegay of pink roses and cornflowers. Little Shirley Armstrong, niece of the bride, was the flowerâ€"girl. She was frocked in pale pink chiffon over taffeta with rosebud trimâ€" ming. A matching headdress and a nosegay of rosebuds and sweet peas completed her costume. Best man was Mr. Gordon Armstrong, brotherâ€"inâ€"law of the bride. A directors‘ meeting of the Wellesley Township _ Plowman‘s Association was held in the Hall, on Saturday, when Saturday, Octoâ€" ber 21 was the date set for the annual plowing match. _ _ The opening sessions will be held next Tuesday afternoon, Aug. 29. ‘Services will be held on Tuesday evening at 8 o‘clock. The Rev. J. (w. Behnken, President of the \Fvangelical Lutheran Synod of Missouri will be the guest speaker. (The conference will close on ‘Thursday afternoon, Aug. 31.. _ Mr. and Mrs. William Bootle of Brantford, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ottman and baby of Wellesléy were visitors at the home of Alfred Hahn‘s on Sunday. 2. A wedding dinner was served at the Granite Club, followed by a wedding reception at the home of tWe bridegroom‘s parents. Later the couple left on a short honeyâ€" moon. On their return they will reside on®the bridegroom‘s farm near Crosshill. Plow Match, October 21. e 4 Miss Elaine Grandy of Galt spent a day with Miss Adella Glaister and accompanied her to Toronto where they will spend the week. Miss Florence Hahn is holidaying with Kitchener relatives this week. Mrs. R. Foster, Laura, Mr. anc Mrs. Lerne Rennic attended the funeral of Mrs. M. Winn in Elmira on Friday. She was a sister of the late Robt. Foster. Mr. anc Mrs. Henry Schmidt ard; Eorothy spert Sunday at the home! of John Rose, Gadshill. § Walter Olley spent the weekâ€"end with his parents in Kitchener. Mrs. Sophie Rietz is spending some time at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Knipfel. PETERSEL RG CERTIFICATES WAR SAVINGS | Goldenglow is now smilingly : abloom but its foliage is badly marred with mildew. All; plants seem to have their recurring seaâ€" sons of either fungus or insect ‘blight. Some day this curse will be removed. "Newsy Notes" pled tumblingâ€"rods drove the noisy.i s dusty, gearâ€"covered threshing m-lls chine. a Wellâ€"drilling is still in progress just west of the "Blackwell Bluffs". on the Jesse M. Weber farm. The drill is now in rock, at slightly over 200 feet in depth. Cu Cups of joy distilled in darkness f:om the dews of night Fragile beauty, fleeting glory, Short the hour that‘s given; Yet each night and morning finds So much nearer heaven; Though the blossoms droop and wiâ€" Still the clinging vine Round each bar that lifts it higher Eagerly will twine; Striving, reaching, ï¬nping. holdâ€" ing, Upward, o‘er and o‘er, So the heavenly morningâ€"glories Seek their home once more. Let our hearts thus greet each morning, Joyous as the day; Let our souls thus climb to heaven From the earth away! On a number of nearby farms, Farvesting has been finished and also all the threshing Farming is speeding up since the more romanâ€" tic days of the humming horseâ€" pewer when its long line of couâ€" Last midâ€"week, approximately ninety armyâ€"trucks rolled smartly north along our local, dusty highâ€" way and soon disappeared in the encircling murky haze raised from the windâ€"swept roadway. Airplanes, some six and nine abreast, are now more frequently awing in our local heavens and tiey present an arresting picture in their wildâ€"waterfowlâ€"like flight towards faraway horizons. Pink and purple, snow and azure, Little chalices of beauty, Little bits of bloom celestial _ On the earth reborn, Rainbows have been unusually rare with us this year, only two or thrce inferior ones having attemptâ€" ed to register themselves in either the western or the eastern skies. A few years ago, we recorded seven rainbows in September. It may be merely coincidental, but a weasel and a screechâ€"owl have again begun their nocturnal questingâ€"the former for bats in the doubleâ€"boarded woodshed gaâ€" ble, and the latter presumably for mice and moles nightâ€"larking unâ€" der the gardenâ€"bordering twin maples, where noisy crickets. and droning grasshoppers sing to the lunar crescent and the silent silver, stars. According to the signs of the times, this present warring age is drawing rapidly to a close. Aireaâ€" dy the storm clouds of the Tribulaâ€" tion Period are beginning to settle down upon the world. This "day of the Lord" will continue for sven years, and then will follow the marvellous Kingdom Age when the glory of God will cover the earth as the waters cover the sea! "Morning Glories" WALLENSTEIN v,| s Mrs. Edwin J. Fergusson, Plattsâ€" ville, has received word that her husband Lieut. Edwin J. Fergusson, has been promoted to the rank of Captain. Captain Fergusson went west with the Oxford Rifles and in January, 1943 went overseas on transfer. At the present time he is serving in France. Two brothers, Lieut. Fred N. Fergusson and Sgt. R. W. Fergusson are also in the army. |__Mr. and Mrs. Clair Harmer were | weekâ€"end visitors at Kitchener and {Ayr + 0000 0 â€" An announcement which has teen made of interest here is the , birth of a son to Mr. and Mrs. Riâ€" chard Newstead at Paris Hospital (nee Bernice Ranck.) Mrs. Edwin Fergusson was the recipient of a beautiful piece of French silk dress material and also sume pressed flowers that grow rear the trenches from her husâ€" band, Lieut. Edwin â€" Fergusson. somewhere in France. on Saturday to a Kitchener Hosâ€" /pital in the g:nons of Mrs. Elvira Zinken and Mrs. Rebecca Farrow. \ Sincere wishes are extended for an {early recovery. seemingly no stint of gasoline. He also yisited a Canadian Club which he said he would not '.rLuto.de- scribe, but conclu%‘hh by saying Naples was "City Beauâ€" tiful" for him, being a great and grand resort. The August meeting of the Woâ€" men‘s Evening Auxiliary of Plattsâ€" ville United Church was held at the horge of Mrs. L. Milne on Tuesâ€" day evening. Following the openâ€" ing hymn the sFripture lesson was read by Mrs. A. &'uce Mrs. Geo. Edwards read a leaflet on the theme of the meeting, "Citizenâ€" ship". Three prayers were offered cne for the "country" by Mrs. Engâ€" lish, "prayer for women" and "for those who toil", by Mrs. Geo. Smith. During a short business period Mrs. G. Smith offered her heme for the September meeting. Mrs. Ira T. Battler and Miss Ruby Milne will be in charge of the proâ€" gram. â€" $ The guest speaker of the evening was William Ramsay of Vancouver, B.C., who is wsiting his sister, Miss Agnes Ramsay, a life member of the society. He spoke on "Our Duâ€" ty as a Christian Citizen". day afternoon at New Hamburg. Pla-tl.[szille and vicinity attended the Derby races held on Wednesâ€" «Miss Mary Jane Edwards of Lonâ€" don was a recent visitor with Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Edwards. las McLennan, Glen Woolkcott and Pte. Ju::,l::nu Jack says fl:; Wi'_.“’."“m“,".".m driving fine automobiles with Women‘s Evening Auxiliary Meets Mrs. West and two daughters of Hamilton, who have been visiting at the home of her parents, Mr. aud Mrs. F. S. Doan, has returned o her home. have Among them have been Pte. Dougâ€" The services at Plattsville United Church have been supplied during the absence of Rev. G. Kaiser, who is on vacation. Robert Elder of Piattsville and Chas. Coldham of Washington were among those who recently took charge. From time to time letters are reâ€" ceived here from Plattsville boys Mrs. Knight and friends of Brantâ€" ferd visited on Tuesday at the bome of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Daniels. Mrs. Poore of Preston visited her sister, Mrs. J. Grieves, the past week. Edwerd and Bobby Smith have been on a visit with relatives at Hespelor. _ _ â€" Friends of Mrs. Rebecca Farrow regret that she has been indisposed for some weeks past. _ __ The showers that fell cn Thursâ€" day, although not heavy in this disâ€" trict, will help some to renew growth on pasture and fall crops. A number of boys of the "Boy Scout Club" in Plattsville visited ‘"Teace Haven" Camp, Drumbo over the weekâ€"end camping while there. Weekâ€"end _ visitors here: Mr. Jared Stauffer of Washington spending several weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Habel and other reâ€" latives here; Mrs. Reba Sherrer of London and Miss G. Strome of Deâ€" troit and Mrs. Weir Graham and baby of Bright with Mr. and Mrs. kd. Harmer; David Elder of Woodâ€" stock at his parental home; Mr. and Mrs. Clare Hilborn and son of New Dundee with Mrs. Mary Brown and Miss Ella Brown; Harvey Blackâ€" more of Greenwich, R.C.A.F., on a two weeks‘ leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. Blackmore; Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Plant son Jacky and Betty of Stratford visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Rex Harmer. Those of the Canada Sand Paper employees enjoying this week‘s vaâ€" cation are: Roy Habel, Ed Harâ€" mer and ldridge Stewart. â€" Douglas Brown who recenlg unâ€" derwent an appendectomy at Woodâ€" stock Hospital, has returned to his home. Miss Margaret Stevenson _ of Stratford is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. Green. Mrs. Douglas Bergey and chilâ€" dren are visiting at the home of her mother at Paris. Mr. and Mrs. C. Hannenberg and son Darcy and Jack Koenig of Kitchener visited the Harmer famâ€" y on Sunday. â€" We regret to report that several Plattsville residents were removed Friends of Mrs. Richard Keutsch regret her recent illness. . Mrs. Keutsch was removed the past week to Stratford Hospital, sufferâ€" ing an attack of pneumonia. Mr. and Mrs. Leland Grimes and family of Niagara Falls, N.Y., are hnlid-yin% at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Ira T. Battier and the Grimes family Quite a number of residents from USsk UHRONICLE WANT 2D8 TO BUY OR SELL Mr. and Mrs. Siegmund Freiburâ€" ger and John Vanstone spent Sunâ€" day at Barber‘s Beach. _ s Bobbie Habel of Roseville has returned to his home after spendâ€" ing his vacation with his grandparâ€" ents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Wagner. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Harnack were recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Bitschy in Kitchener. _ _ Mr. and Mrs. Fred Zir;:rer of Guelph spent Sunday with . and Mrs. Peter Wilheim. Mary and Lorne Wilhelm of Kitâ€" chener are spending their holidays with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Harnack. â€" _ _ _ Olive Hergott spent Wednesday with her sister, Mrs. P. J. Bruder in Waterloo. Adelle Bauman has returned home after holidaying with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bitschy at Breslau. _ Rosemary _ Bauman â€" of _ West Montrose | is holidaing with her aunt and uncie, Mr. and Mrs. Norâ€" man Bauman. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bitschy and Charlotte of Breslau, Mr. Geo. Wilâ€" helm and children of Kitchener were recent visitors with the J. Harnack family. _ â€" . . how masters as well as pups {will learn the ABC‘s of obedience ‘in the new schools dog welfare , workers are setting up all over the country to carry on the good work started tgathe training of war dogs. Get Sunday‘s Detroit Times. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Schilling ard Judy of Dickie Settlement were recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Herman Schilling. _ _ ducted the services at the Shantz Station Lutheran Church on Sunâ€" Miss Julie Hartlieb of Toronto spent Monday with her sister, Mrs. Gus. Hergott _ _ _ _ _ Detroit, Mr. A. Hallman of Galt were weekâ€"end visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Herb Krieger. _ â€" Mr. and Mrs. Walter Schilling and Judy of Dickie Settlement, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kramp of Kitchâ€" ener, Rev. Mr. Heimrich of Zurich, Leo and Helen Bruder of Maryhill, Mrs. S. Freiburger and John Vanâ€" stone were Sunday guests with the Arthur Kramp family. Preserves, Pl to D26; butter, 70 to 13; tea ee, 14 to 29, El to E6, T30 to T38; sugar, 14 to 39; canâ€" ning suger F1 to F10. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kramp and family were guests at the Kriegerâ€" Brohman wedding at West Montâ€" rose on Saturday. | _ _ h Ration Coupt Due Dates Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bauman and family were recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bitschy at Breslau. Mrs. Stanley Harnack and chilâ€" dren spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Snyder at Fischer Mills. _ Mrs. Charles Wagner returned home after spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Willard Bowman «t Petersburg. o â€" Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Habel and family of Roseville, Mr. and Mrs. ies ‘Werin and Mary, Mr. Syl. FProng, Isobelle Wolfe, George Bone of Riverbank, Mr. and Mrs. Verâ€" nice Wagner and Carol of Blair visited with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Wagner and Mr. and Mrs. Billic Wagner. C â€" Jackie Habel of Roseville is spending his vacation with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Wagner. _ _ _ Mrs. Vera Hergott was a recent visitor in Kitchener. SHANTZ STATION Mr. and Mrs. Billie Wagner were recent visitorg with Mr. and Mrs John Bruder in Kitchener. e Read . . . in The American Weekâ€" ly with this Sunday‘s (Aug. 27) issue of The Detroit Sunday Times YOUR POOCH SHOULD BE POLITE There might be a lot you are missing because of faulty eyes. YOU MAY HAVE BEEN MISSING ease at your work and good times in the evening too, because of headaches cuused by eyeâ€"strain. . & * NOW IS THE TIME to quit missing the good things of life Have YOUNG‘S examine your cyes now. The benefits of clear vision and eyeâ€"ease and eyeâ€"safety far outwrigh the reasonable cost of eyeâ€"care at Young‘s. THAT TIME YOU DIDN‘T SEE a friend on the strect the time ?oï¬ picked the wrong number from the phone book . . . the time you didn‘t see that quick play at the ball park. WALPER HOUSE BLOCK Mre. H. A. (M&rnm: M r PiWP" "Maybe It‘s SlassesYou Need" The Quality Tea °* 188 King YOUNG‘S BETTER VISION GLASSES TEA Renkin The only way to make a satisfacâ€" tory living out of poultry is to have enough good birds to provide that living. The attempt to make a livâ€" ing out of too few hens is the most impractical thing in the industry. The greatest wastage of labor and the least efficient factor in the busiâ€" ness are the result of the number of people who try to make a living from 400 to 500 hens. They could just as well look after 2,000 or more. say officials of the Poultry Services, Dominion Department of Agriculture. JANSEN EYESIGHT SERVICE «"‘Dedicated to Better Vision" 10 Frederick St. Phone 2â€"2715 a very short time. Neither your prescription nor a reâ€"examination is necessary, just as long as you bring in the pieces. However, if you have not had your eyes checked recently, it will be wise to have this doneâ€"just to be sure the giasses you are wearing mow are correct for the presenms condition of your cyes. A broken lemu can Le Jug Ahated im Mary Taylor, 35 Union 8t sAaVE THE PIECES! POULTRY BUSINESS Kitchener, Ont. PRONE 2â€"1971