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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1947-04-03, Page 3H2,A SPENCER SUPPORT Designed Vspecially For You To relieve that nntlue fatigue; anti tired,, aching hack. Doctors' prescriptions par* fully MARGAR1T MacLtAN of Kincardine, Will be at the Quten's Hotel,. Wingham from A to 9 p.m. THURSDAY$ APRIL 10th Yep, yours for the askin • Photos.plans,down to earth information on c 'cks, pullets ii •,• Yf • :.%‘*1 .'„,,,g commit CHICK sunlit& ra Iwo i E 56 page book. • new, ,minable fully Illustrated book Written by poultry, mon for -Ortultrytnert, llli plena, photos, inetructloris and handy Nets • are '202*.01404/414,401.D pocket sized torn book answering ▪ t yout Itiettilens ham, prepatinit brooder henget for *tough qr0Winq your pulloiwo Culling, for laying Pahl, Clot it from your local Hoe reed dealer or write direct to iddtoos below ROE FARMS MILLING • ONTARI O • Thursday, April 3rd, 1947 1•1•1001110., • THE WINGHAM ADVANCE-TIMES moimenamm•••••• AlWM, PAGE THREE Look for This Seal prk.the Goods you Buy Motorists who seek and recognize value soon make .Cx,c, their headquarters for automotive supplies, They quickly discover that, while C.T.O. quality are low, the Products themselves are bpilt to. the ,highest standards of the Industry. You, too, may SAVE SAFELY' by .Making C.T,C. your first choice when supplies and replacements are needed., REMINISCING FORTY YEARS AGO April Council Meeting Notes:—The 'Western Foundry reported that of the 140 men they had agreed to keep, they have kept 63; this .being 37 short, they enclosed $870, as the amount of'shortg ne at $10 per man. Walker & Clegg reported that while they had agreed to keep 70 hands, they had kept a frac- Wanted Deafened Men and Women To make this simple, no risk hearing test. TB you are temporarily deafened, bothered by ring-ang head noises due to hardened or coagulated wax (cerumen), try the Aurine Home Method lest that so many say has enabled them to hear 'melt again. You must hear better after making this simple test or you get your money back at once. Ask about Aurinc Ear Balsam today, Your druggist has or can get Aurine for you. McKIBBONS DRUG STORE PIPES ALGERIA BRIARS $.;.0 Q. - $2.24 Several Styles • Haselgroves .SMOKE SHOP as ,•• Boss over that number, Church News;—Rev. W, G. How- son of the Methodist Church, may be expected to speak next Sunday on the following subjects, At 11 a. m., "See- ing Heaven's blue, when the days are dark." Those who are depressed in spirit are specially invited to this morning's service. At 7 p.m., "The sweet Relationship of knowledge and trust." The ushers will be .pleased to show strangers to seats. Eastertide Visitors; Misses Ada Howson of Toronto, Ethel Musgrove of Fordwich, Edyth Beemer of Tor- onto; Messrs, Will Jobb of London, Gordon Griffin of Toronto, Chester Hogg of Ripley, John Jerome, Orillia; Anson Robinson of Teeswater, Robert J, Plenty of Southampton; Mr. . and Mrs, Edwards of Hensall at Chas, Cook's, Mr, and Mrs, Wm. Showers of London at Mrs. Coutt's. Away for Easter,--Mrs. J. W. Dodd in Acton; Miss Bessie Marsailles in Clinton, Miss A, Jackman in Clin- ton, Miss Clara Mitchell in Hensall, Miss May Lloyd in Toronto, Mrs, E, Bosnian in Clinton, Mrs, Manuel and two sons in Bervie, Scott Gordon in Toronto, Miss Ella Sadler in Detroit; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tindall and son, George in Ethel. ' Sellers—,Casemore—The home of Mr. Geo. Casemore, Bluevale, was the scene of a very pretty wedding on Wednesday, March 27th„ when his •••••••PelmeemPlemeemeeleeeeeeeee.leepeePeomemee FIRST CLASS Watch Repairs For the Present, Watches Only, George Williams John Street Wingham Next to Masonic Hall .60.1911.44111111M14011101111110.111+NMOMM.0011.0 1111.111111111. daughter, Miss Maggie, was united in marriage to Milvert Sellers, youngest son of Jos. Sellers of Morris, Rev, G, Baker of Bluevale officiated. Wroxeter—Beri Ringler and family, who left here about a year ago for Michigan, have moved back again. Mrs, Wm, Laclde spent the Easter holidays in London,. ,Mrs. Miller and daughter have returned to town after TICE * FIFTEEN YEARS AGO Lady Bowlers Elect Officers—The ladieS'of the Wingham Bowling Club held their concluding winter' meeting at the home of Mrs. J. M. McKay on Monday evening. It was a "Hard Time" gathering and the ladies went dressed for the occasion, There were some very hard looking costumes and • Mrs. A. J. Walker won the prize for the "best" Hard Time Outfit.. After bridge and lunch the following offic- ers were elected for the coming sum- mer: Pres., Mrs. W. VanWyck; 1st. Vice-Pres., Mrs. J. A. Wilson; 2nd. Vice-Pres., Mrs. G. L. Brackenbury; Sec., Mrs. E. Armitage; Treas., Mrs. G. L. Baker; Convenor Tournament Committee, Mrs. W. A. -Miller; Assist- ants, Mrs. E. R. Harrison and Mrs. A, L. Posliff; Convener Jitney Committee, Mrs, J, M. McKay and Assistant, Mrs. G. W. Howson; Convener Entertain- ment, Mrs. W. J. Greer. Gorrie—Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Jef- ferson and daughters, Helen and Gwen, returned .home to Owen Sound, after spending a few days with 'bit. and Mrs. Geo. Foster. Miss Maude Higgins of Wingham, was a guest of her sister, Mrs. Wns. Gallagher, a few days last week. The "Pleasure Club" were en- tertained on Tuesday 'evening of last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. S. King; and the following were the ,winners: ladies, Mrs. R. G. New- ton; gents, Jack Musgrove; ladies con- solation, Verna Osborn; gents consol- ation, Russel Grainger, Wroxeter-Mr, Ed. Gibson, Lislowel, is home for three . weeks' holidays, Miss Mary Harris returned home last week from Wingham where she had been visiting, Mrs. Norman Brandon and daughter, Norma, of London, spent Easter with Mr. ad Mrs. Robert Stocks, Miss Jean Wells of Toronto, visited during the past week at her aunt's, Mrs. A. Weaning's, Whitechurch---,-Mrs. Geo. Tiffin of Winghatn, spent a few days last week at the home of Mr, and Mrs, Joe Tif- fin. Mr. and Mrs. David Farrier are spending a few days at the home of their daughter, Mrs, John T), Ross, of Huron Township. Mr. Adam Mc- Burney of Kingston, spent the holi- day week at the home of his father, Mr. Jos, McBurney of 'East Wawa- a•••••111•10 nosh. Belfast:—Mrs. Blake is visiting with her daughter, Mrs. Albert Alton. Miss Irene Woods visited last week with Miss Lena Hackett. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Gaunt spent Snuday with Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Sherwood. St. Helens—Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cranston and children of Strathroy are visitors with Mr, and Mrs. Hyde. Mr. Wilson Woods of Guelph, and his nephew, Bobby Phillips of Fergus, TIRE RELINERS for all pass- enger cars $1.65 Lock-On Gas Tank Cap , $1.79 Hydraulic Brake Fluid, 16 oz 69c MotoMaster Oil, Genuine 2000- mile premium Pennsylvania Gallon $1,14 ,5 gal. $5,98 SCREW DRIVERS-36 differ- ent styles for all types of work —for slotted, square head and Phillips screws. Unbreakable amber handles. Grease Guns, 26 oz. capacity, 8,000 lbs. pressure, $3.98, $4.49 MotoMaster SPARK PLUGS. Money cannot buy better quality, performance or economy 39c MorPower Storage Batteries 15 plates $9.70, 17 plates -$12.55 Ford VS $10.70 • MOTOR CONDITIONER restores power, smoothness, economy, and performance by re- moving carbon and gum from rings, bearings, valves and all moving parts 59c and 98c FLOOR MATS—Rubber with felt back, for many cars $1.39 to $1.98 Rayfield CARBURETORS Save 40% on this quality line. $5.98 up MotoMaster MUFFLERS and PIPES TIRE Sizes in. stock: 6.00x16 4 ply ........... 5.50x17 4 ply..................$15.50 8.25x20 10-ply truck $74.45 ALL Sizes of TUBES in stock were here for the week-end. Tell oar what you are busy about and I will tell you what you are. —Goethe A great part of the liapliines, of life consists not in fighting hattleg bust in avoiding them, A masterly retreat is in itself a victory. —Longfellow 4•110.1111/1.1:001011. FOODS • All flours, flour mixes and meals. • Yeast. • Bread, bread rolls, and bake- ry products. • Biscuits, except those com- pletely covered with choc- olate. • Processed cereals, cooked or uncooked, including break- fast cereals, macaroni, ver- micelli, spaghetti, noodles and other alimentary paste products. • Rice, excepting wild rice: • Pot and pearl barley. • Shelled corn, but not in- cluding popping corn. • Dried peas, soya beans, dried beans except lima beans and red kidney beans. a Starch. • Sugar, sugar cane syrups, corn syrups, grape sugar, glucose. • Edible molasses. • Honey. • Tea, coffee, coffee concent- rates. • Malt, malt extract, malt syrup. • Black pepper, and white pep- per, and substitutes contain- ing black or white pepper. • Butter. • Casein. • Cheddar cheese, processed cheese and cream cheese. • Concentrated milk products of all kinds. • Ice cream. • Salad and cooking oils. I • Salt. • Fresh apples — 1946 crop. • Raisins, currants, prunes, dried ates, dehydrated ap- ples. • Tomatoes, tomato sauce, tomato paste, tomato pulp, tomato puree, tomato cat- sup, chili sauce, when in hermetically sealed cans or glass. • Canned pork and beans, canned spaghetti and canned soups. • Canned corn, canned peas, canned beans excluding the lima and red kidney varie- ties. • Canned apricots, canned peaches, canned pears, can- ned cherries, canned plums, • Fruits and Vegetables in the two preceding items when frozen and sold in consumer size packages. • Jams, jellies, marmalades. o Meat and meat products, not 'including garne, pet foods, and certain varieties of cooked and canned meats. • Sausage casings, animal and artificial. • Live, dressed and canned poultry (but not including turkeys, geese or ducks, live, dressed Or processed; poultry spreads, poultry stews and poultry in pastrY or pie crust). • Canned salmon, canned tea trout, canned pilchards of the 1946 or earlier packs. • Edible animal and vegetable fats including lards and shortenings, CLOTHING • Men's, youths' and boys' coats, JL)ekets and Wind. breakers made wholly or chiefly of leather. • Men's, youths' and boys' suits or pants made wholly or chiefly of cotton or rayon. • Men's, youths' and boys' . furnishings as follows: — blouses; collars; , pyjamas; nightshirts; underwear, other than that made wholly of wool; dressing gowns, other than those made wholly of all-wool fabric; shirts, in- cluding sport shirts other than those made wholly of all-wool or all-rayon fabric. • Women's, misses', girls', children's and infants' gar- ments of all kinds (but not including—. (a) garments made wholly of all-wool fabric, (b) raincoats, or (c) jackets and windbreakers, except when made wholly or chiefly of leather). • Women's, misses', girls' and - children's accessories as fol- lows: dickies, bibs, halters, neckwear, collars, cuffs and aprons. • Knitted wear , for either sex as follows: undergarments, other than those made wholly of wool; circular knit hosiery of cotton or rayon. • Work clothing, including aprons for either sex, when made wholly or chiefly of cotton or leather. • Uniforms for either sex. • Gloves, gauntlets and mitts for either sex when made • wholly or chiefly of cotton or leather, except those de- signed as 'specialized sports equipment or for specialized industrial uses. • Brassieres; foundation gar- ments, but not including surgical corsets. • Diapers and diaper supports. HOUSEHOLD AND OTHER TEXTILES ' • Textile products as follows, when made wholly or chiefly of cotton or rayon: ,bath mats, bedspreads, blankets except horseblankets, cur- tains, dish cloths, dish towels, drapes, face cloths, luncheon sets, napkins, pillow cases, sheets, silence cloths, table cloths, throw-overi, toilet seat covers towels, wash cloths, window blinds, win- dow shades. • Floor rugs and mats chiefly of cotton. DOMESTIC FUELS • Coal, coke and briquettes;' until April 16th, 1947, HOUSEHOLD EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES • Furnaces, fire-place heaters and other heating equipment except portable electric heat-, err. • Jacket heaters and other water heating equipment, • Soap and soap compolinda MOTOR VEHICLE ACCESSORIES • Pneumatic' tires and tubes When sold for the purpose of or as original equipinelit on agricultural machinery. 1o, IMPORTANT COVE Respecting Price T tr The following is a convenient summary of Board Order No, 711—published for the guidance and protection of Canadian consumers. It does not give the full legal text. For full details of the law reference should be made to the Order. CONSTRUCTION PRODUCTS • Lumber of all kinds. • Millwork such as doors, sashes, windows, stairs and gates. • Plywood and veneers. • Pre-cut lumber products de- signed for use in residential or farm buildings, but not including fully pre-fabricated buildings. • Gypsum board and gypsum lath, • Wallboards and building boards, • Cast iron soil pipe and fittings, • Nails. AGRICULTURAL MACHINERY; IMPLEMENTS, EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES • Practically all items of farm machinery, including plant- ing, seeding and fertilizing equipment, plows, tillage implements and cultivators, haying machinery, harvest- ing machinery, tractors, wag- ons, . dairy machines and equipment, sprayers and dusters. • Articles of barn and barn- yard equipment. • ,Incubators, brooders, poul- try feeding and watering equipment. • Stationary gas engines. • Harness and harness hard- ware. • Barbed wire and other fenc- ing wire and fences. • Binder twine. • Wheelbarrows. • Feeds and feed products' of all kinds except horse meat, pet foods, straw, clam shell and poultry grit. • Fertilizers of all kinds, but not including humus, muck, manure, sphagnum moss or peat moss. • Gopher poisons, • Seed beans and seed peas. • Grains as follows:— wheat; barley; oats; :flaxseed; buck- wheat; rapeseed; sunflower seed; grain screenings. RAW AND PROCESSED MATERIALS • Basic iron and steel products and alloys, including pig iron, cast iron, scrap, ingots, bars, plate, rods and wire. • Primary, secondary and fab- ricated mill forms of the following non-ferrous metals and their alloys: copper, lead, tin and zinc, • All fats and oils, including Vitamin A oils, of animal, vegetable or marine origin but not including refined me- dicinal cod liver oil, • Glue steck, glues and adhes- ives of animal origin, • Starches, • Fibres, raw or processed, as follows: cotton, hemp, jute, sisal, all synthetic fibres and filaments excepting glass. • Yarns and threads of', or con- taining any of the fibres list- ed above. • Fabrics, over 12 inches in width whether knitted or woven of, or containing any of the yarns and threads re. ferred to aboire. THE WARTIME PRICES AND TRADE BOARD Summary of - GOODS AND SERVICES REMAINING SUBJECT TO MAXIMUM PRICE REGULATIONS As set forth in Wartime Prices 86 Trade Board Order No. 711—effective April 2, 1947 Any material sbown above processed for incorporation into, Or any fabricated component part of any of the"above goods is subject to maximum'prices. Also any set which contains an article referred to above is subject to maximum prices even though the remainder of the set- consists of artielea not referred to. DONALD GORDON, Chairman. Wortime Prices and Trade lidatcl. • Sewing, embroidry and cro- chet yarns, threads and floss of any of the yarns and threads referred to above. • Bobbinet, dress and curtain nets and netting. • Elastic yarns, fabrics and webbing. • Hides and skins from animals of a type ordinarily pro- cessed for use as a leather. • Leathers and synthetic leath- ers of all kinds. e Sheepskin shearlings, tanned, but not further processed than combed or sheared and coloured on the flesh side. PULP AND PAPER • Wastepaper. • Wood pulp, except (a) dissolving grades, (b) "alpha" grades of bleach- ed sulphate, (c) "Duracel", (d) groundwood and un- bleached sulphite grades sold for the manufacture of newsprint or hanging paper. • Newsprint paper except whed sold by manufacturers there- of. • Paper board used in the manufacture of solid fibre or corrugated shipping cases, • Boxboard grades of paper- board, except for wrapping newsprint paper or making newsprint cores. CONTAINERS AND PACKAGING MATERIALS • Containers, packaging and wrapping devices of a type used for the sale or shipment of products, when made from a textile fabric and including bags, cases, envelopes, fold- ers and sacks. SERVICES • Transportation of goods and services associatedtherewith. • Warehousing; dry storage of' general merchandise and household goods other than wearing apparel; cold storage, including rental of lockers and ancillary services such as processing charges in cold storage plants. • Supplying of meals or refresh- ;milts for consumption on the seller's premises, the supplying of beverages (ex• cept alcoholic beverages) by purveyors of meals or re- freshments; the supplying of meals with sleeping accom- modation for a combined charge, but not including the supplying of meals, refresh- ments or sleeping accom- modation by an employer to his employees, directly or through a servant or agent. • The packing or packaging or any other manufacturing pro- cess in respect of any goods subject to maximum prices, when performed on a custom or commission basis, USED GOODS • Used bags and used bagging and baling material, ww *a em a couple of month's an Toronto. • * • TWENTY-FIVE ;YEARS AGO ' Installing Wireless—We understand .. that Mr. W, A. Galbraith, Mr. A. M. Crawford and 'probably a couple of other Wingharnites are installing these new wireless wonders,. Personals—Miss Cassie Powell of Turnberry, is visiting at the home of her brother, Rev, P. E, Powell, Tor- onto, Mr. Harry Towne of Wingham, spent the week-end with his parents at • the Gorton House, Wroxeter, (Wrox eter News), Mrs. Hubert Chisholm of Oakville, was the guest at the home of her sister, Mrs. Richard Vanstone this week, Gorrie—F, C, Taylor secured the lot where the old gas plant was located and is having material delivered there for the erection of a dwelling. Mr. W. Whitfield recently bought a Jot from Mr. Armstrong with the intention of building a residence and on Saturday he bought the dwelling now occupied by Robert Spotton from Ed. Harris. Whitechurch—Mr. Victor Emerson IS moving to his farm in Kinloss this week, Mr. Thos. Cook of Hansall, is visiting with his sister, Mrs, Gei3..Cot- tie, Mr, and Mrs. Cecil Falconer and Miss Norah Falconer spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, Will Falconer of Bluevale, BelmoreMr. and Mrs. Ii3:ndinan of Gorrie, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Herd, Mr. Jas, Dewar of Morn- initon, is a visitor at the home of Mr. jamesand Miss Ellen Fleming, Mrs. James and Mrs. Douglas spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. Hugh 'Wylie, Blyth—Mr. John Bradnock of Cy- press River, Man., is visiting his bro- ther, Mr. Thomas Bradnock, East Wawanosh. Dr. Hearn of Toronto, has arrived and taekn up his residence in Blyth, and will practice medicine here. Blyth Lawn Bowlers Re-organize— The Lawn Bowlers of Blyth held their reorganization meeting and Mr. M. W. `Belies. acted ns chairman. The following officers were elected:—Hon, Pres., j. G. Emigh; Pres., Geo. Gar- niss; Vice-Pres„ G. 0. Leith; Sec.- Treas., G. E, Meraggart. BERME WINGHAM; ONT. Phone 184 Robin E. Campbell