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REMINISCING
FORTY YEARS AGO
McKibbon-Knechtel— A pretty June
wedding graced th6 home of Mr. and
Mrs. C. Knechtel, on Shuter street,
early on Wednesday morning, when
their eldest daughter, Miss Veleria,
became the bride of Mr. J. Walton Mc-
Kibbon. The nuptial knot was tied by
Rev. W. G. Howson, Methodist min-
ister.
Wingham Wins 5 to 1—On Friday
evening, the Unions of Gorrie and
Wroxeter played a game of baseball
here with the local ball tossers, and
although they put up a good game
they lost by a score of 6 to 1. Owing
to the absence of Herb Dunlop, the
rubber was in charge of Alex. Ander-
son and he pitched an admirable game.
Allen Wray did a good job of pitching
for the visitors. This is the fourth game
the locals have won this season, having
yet to be defeated.
Local Items—The Lower Town
Baseball Rockets again defeated the
Scott street team on Monday evening
by a score of 11 to 10. Miss Houghton
has a class preparing to render "Snow
White and the Seven Dwarfs," a juv-
enile Operetta, in the Opera House on
June 28th in aid of Wingham Hospital.
The indications at present are that C.
Lloyd .& Son will locate their new fac-
tory at Alliston in the near future, but
will also continue to operate their local
factory here.
Personal—Mr. and Mrs. John Van-
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Officeg and Warehouses:
Winnipeg Montreal Saint John
stone of Niagara. Falls arc guests of
Mr:and Mo. R. Vanstone, John was
formerly bookkeeper in the Union fac-
tory, On the 4th inst., in Chicago, he
was united in marriage to Miss Olsen,
and they are now on their wedding
tour.
Belgraye--Geo. Proctor, 5th line,
Morris, returned last Friday from an
extended trip to Palmerston, Mount
Forest, Durham and Owen Sound,
Percy Scandrett is putting up a wire
fence at the front of his farm. Mr, and
Miss Marshall of Belmore spent Sun-
day at Mr. John W, Shoebottom's, Mrs.
Ferguson and Master Jim, of Bayfield,
are visiting the former's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Peter Porterfield.
Blyth—A very pleasing event took
place at the home of Mr. Thos, Code,
on Tues., June 11th, when Miss Maud
became the bride of Mr. Alex.-Porter-
field of Marnoch, Clerk of East Wa-
wanosh, Rev, W. Hartley officiated.
Morris—One of those interesting and
important events of life took place at
the residence of Mr. Geo. Peacock, 1st
con., Morris, when his youngest daugh-
ter, Eleanor Mary, was united in mar-
riage to Geo. 0, Thornton, eldest son
of M. Nelson Thornton, Morris, on
Tuesday, June 4th. The Rev. iGeo, Bak-
er officiated.
*
TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO
McGuire-Stevenson — Married in
Winnipeg, on Saturday, June 3rd, Miss
Viola Stevenson to John McGuire, at
the residence of her father, A. P. Stev-
enson, Oakwood Ave., by the Rev. S.
Poison.
Local and General — The much
needed rains have come, and once a-
gain a kind Providence has bestowed
His goodness on the land, The farmers
in this vicinity are in hopes of a bumper
crop this year. Farmers are receiving
20 cents per dozen for eggs, 25 cents
per pound for butter and 28 cents per
pound for cream at Wingham, and
hogs are bringing $13.50.
Masons Elect Officers—At the last
regular meeting of Wingham Lodge,
A, F. & A. M. held on Tuesday even-
ing, the following officeres were elec-
ted for the ensuing year: I.P.M.-H. J.
Jobb; W.M.-T. C. King; S.W.-John T.
Stewart; J.W.-O. Thompson; Chap.-
E. J. Nash; Sec'y-R. A. Coutts; Treas.-
J. W. IMcKibbon; S.D.-J. D. Beecroft;
J.D.-W, A. Galbraith; I.G.-John J. Mc-
Gee; Auditors-Dr. G. H. Ross and A.
G. Smith.
Personals—Miss Effie Erskine of
the Post Office staff is attending the
wedding or her sister in Winnipeg.
Messrs. Fred Manuel and Allen Reid
motored over from Detroit to visit
their respective homes in town. Misses
B. Bennett and A. Imlay are visiting
in Detroit this week. Mrs. Marsailles
is visiting with relatives in Buffalo.
press of Britain for England where he
will visit .his mother in London. Mr.
and Mrs. Will Alton and Mr. 'and Mrs.
Dave McWhinney of Ashfield, were
Sunday visitors at the home of Mr. W.
H. Graham.
Wroxeter--Mr. -and Mrs. D. S. Mc-
Naughton and John, were week-end
visitors with Mr. and Mrs, M, S. Ai-
kenhead at their cottage "Bonnie Brae"
at Bayfield. Mr. and Mrs, Fred Kitchen
spent last week with their daughter in
Toronto. Mrs. Neil White spent last
week with her daughter at Port Elgin.
Gorrie—Mt. and Mrs. Isaac Wade,
also Mr, and Mrs. Norman Wade and
Robert, were Spnday visitors in' Drew.
Dr. Jas. Armstrong, Gorrie, has a Tulip
Tree on his lawn 50 years old, 45 feet
high, 55 inches in circumference and
with 21 feet spread. Visitors with Robt,
and Mrs. Cathers, on Sunday were; Mr.
Man sad ample* Mails Mini
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MUTUAL BENEFIT
HEALTH &ACCIDENT
I ASSOCIATION
P. T. EGG, District Massager
402 Medical Arta Bldg.,
N/TORENER, ONTARIO
FOR INDIVIDUALS
OR FAMILY GROUPS
STREET
CITY OR TOWN,
AGE OCCUPATION
THE LARGEST COMPANY OF ITS KIND IN THE WORLD
Tim WINGHAM ADVANCE-TIMES
IMPORTANT GOVERNMENT. NOTICE
Respecting Price .Control .
Summary of
- GOODS AND SERVICES REMAINING SUBJECT TO MAXIMUM PRICE REGULATIONS
As set forth in Wartime Prices & Trade Board Order No: 737—effective June 9, 1947
The following list is a convenient summary of the Wartime Prices & Trade Board Order No. 737
and is published for the protection and guidance of the public. It does not give the full text of the
Order, For full details reference should be made to the Order itself.
CLIP THIS AND KEEP FOR (An REFERENCE
Thu*laY, June 12 190
FOODS'
• All flours, flour mixes and
Bread,mYeeaasls
•
t:• 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.
•• sStarch.ugar
sugar cane syrups;
corn syrups, grape sugar,
glucose.
• Edible molasses.
• Tea, coffee, coffee concent-
rates.
• Malt, malt extract, malt
syrup.
• Black pepper and white pep-
per, and substitutes contain-
ing black or white pepper.
• Salad and cooking oils.
• Raisins, currants, prunes;
dehydrated apples.
• 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, macaroni
and vermicelli.
• Canned corn, canned field
beans excluding the lima and
red kidney varieties.
• Canned apricots, canned
peaches, canned pears.
• Fruits and vegetables in the
two preceding items when
frazen and sold in consumer
s; ze packages. ▪ Strawberry and raspberry
j uns, and any jam contain-
ing strawberries or rasp-
berries.
• Meat end meat products,
nor including game, pet
foods, and certain varieties
:If cooked and canned meats,
• Sausage casings, animal and
• Canned salmon, canned sea
trout, mimed pilchards of
the 1946 or earlier packs.
* Edible animal and vegetable
fats including lards and
shortenings.
CLOTHING
• Men's, youths' and boys'
coats, jackets and wind-
breakers made wholly or
chiefly of leather.
• Men's, youths' and boys'
spits 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 or
chiefly of wool; 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, (c)
jackets and windbreakers,
except when made wholly or
chiefly of leather, or (d)
dressing gowns).
• Knitted wear for either sex
as follows: undergarments,
other than those made wholly
or chiefly 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: bed-
spreads; blankets, except
horseblankets; dish towels;
face cloths; luncheon sets;
napkins; pillow cases; sheets;
silence cloths; table-cloths;
throw-overs; towels; wash
cloths.
HOUSEHOLD EQUIPMENT AND
SUPPLIES
• Furnaces and other heating
equipment, except portable
electric heaters, fireplace
heaters, grates, and baskets
therefor.
• Jacket heaters and other
water heating equipment.
• Soap and soap compounds.
MOTOR VEHICLE ACCESSORIES
• Pneumatic tires and tubes
when sold for the purpose of
or as original equipment on
agricultural machinery.
CONSTRUCTION 'PRODUCTS
• Poplar (aspen, balsam and
cottonwood) and soft wood
lumber of all kinds.
• Softwood veneers.
• Plywoods not wholly con-
structed of hardwood.
• Millwork such as doors,
sashes, windows, stairs and
gates,• but not including
screen doors or window
screens.
• Pre-cut soft lumber pro-
ducts designed for use in
residential or farm build-
ings, 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-
inemachinery, tractors, wag-
cms, !dairy machines and
equipment, sprayers and
dusters.
• Articles of barn and barn-
yard equipment.
• Stationary gas engines.
• Harness and harness hard-
ware.
• Barbed wire and other fence
ing wire and fences.
• Binder twine.
• Wheelbarrows.
• Feeds and feed products of
all kinds except horse meat;
pet foods, hay, straw, clam
shell and poultry grit.
• Fertilizers of all kinds, but
not including humus, muck,
manure, sphagnum moss or
peat moss.
• Gopher poisons:
• Seed field beans and seed
field peas.
• Grains as follows:— wheat;
barley; oats; flaxseed; buck.
wheat; rapeseed; sunflower
seed; grain screenings. '
RAW AND PROCESSED
MATERIALS
Basic iron and steel pro-
ducts and • alloys including
pig' iron; cast iron and steel
scrap, ingots, bars, plate,
rods and wire.
• Primary and secondary tin
and alloys containing more
than 95 per cent tin.
• All fate and oils, including
Vitamin A oils, of animal,
vegetable or marine origin
but not including refined •me-
dicinal cod liver oil and core
oil.
• Glue stock, glues and adhes-
ives of animal origin.
• Starches.
• Fibres, raw or processed, as
follows: cotton, jute, sisal,
all synthetic fibres and fila-
ments excepting glass.
• Yarns and threads of, or con-
taining any of the fibres list-
ed, above. '
• Fabrics over 12 inches in
width, in any state, whether
knitted or woven, containing
over 25 per cent by weight
of the yarps and threads re-
ferred to above, including
corduroy, but not including
other pile fabrics.
• Elastic yarns and fabrics.
,• Hides and skins from animals
of a type ordinarily pro-
cessed for use as a leather.
• Leathers of all kinds, other
than synthetic leathers.
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.
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 associated therewith.
• 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.
• The supplying of meals with
sleeping accommodations for
a combined charge, except
when supplied by an employ-
er to his employees, directly or
through a servant or agent,
or by a hotel as defined in
Board Order No. 294.
• 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.
r
Miss Alice Reading is enjoying a few
holidays in Detroit.
Hughes-Webb—Married at the Man-
se, Atwood, Wednesday, June 7th, by
Rev. W. Ii. MacDonald, Jean, only
daughter of Mr, and Mrs. W, C. Webb,
Lucknow, to Allister Hughes also of
Lucknow.
Why The Editor Left Town—Mrs.
W. Johnson read an article for the
Women's Club entitled 'Personal. Dev-
ils,"'and seventeen were present. 'Mr.
John Crouse shipped a car load of hogs
to Toronto last week and three of his
neighbors' went with him to make' up
the load.
Brussels and Wingham Football—
Brussels Football Team played against
Wingham Football Team in Wingham
on Thursday evening, The score was a
tie 1 to 1.
Gletiannan—Among the boys Who
went to damp at Port Elgin were
Messrs. Lance Lincoln, Tom Metcalfe,
Allie Lincoln and Cecil McNeil. Mas-
ters John and Walter Willits spent
the week-end with their cousins, Mas-
ters James and Alex. Marshall,
* * *
FIFTEEN YEARS AGO
Gibson-Jackson--The marriage was
solemnized on Saturday, June 11th, at
Mount Hamilton United Church, Ham-
ilton, of Ivah Marguerite Alice, daugh-
ter of W. F, and Mrs, Jackson, of Cath-
erine St., Wingham, to Mr. 'Kenneth
Fraser Gibson, of Hamilton, son of
Mrs. Gibson and the late Thos. Gibson,
of Wroxeter. Rev, Mr. Dickie officia-
ted.
Personals—Mrs, C. B. Armitage and
ils/frs. DaVal motored JO TOtofito on
Wednesday. Mr, 'Fred railer left today
for Quebec and will sail on the Entw
Any material Shown 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 subj•et to raasdinum prices even though the remainder
of the set consists of articles not referred to.
K. W. TAYLOR, Chairman.
THE WARTIME PRICES AND TRADE BOARD
and Mrs. W. Jardine and family, of
Brussels; Mr. and Mrs. A. Moffatt and
family, Wroxeter; Mr. and Mrs. A.
Thornton and Mr. and Mrs.' Hastie,
south of Gorrie.
Whitechurch—Mr: and Mrs. Lam*
Durnin of W. Wawanosh, spent Sun-
day with her parents, Mr. and Mrs,
David Kennedy. Mr., and Mrs. Archie
Patterson, of Lucknow, spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. J. D, Beecroft.