HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1948-09-15, Page 2Mitchell ,,...„ .. ..... ......0.-Sept. 28, 20
Drumbo Sept. 29, 80
Icirkton Sept.' 3Q, Oct, 1
Brussels......... ,....,.....,...........” ................ Oct, 1
Fordwich Oct. 1, 2
St. Marys Oct', 6, 7
Teeswater . Oct. 5; 6
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Closed Sat. afternoons
CIGARS
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MAGAZINES
Haselgrove's
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WILHELMINA CELEBRATES SO YEARS OF REIGN
Press Citidttit
to 185r6, when Queer. Vitilhelmiina. WAS enthroned as ruler of Holland,,
patted hetWeen the tanks of An honor guard of Sh
e
cadets, pie,
quay Unifotitied lit the Apparel of the period. She it shown past-".
fir through that tense honor guard as she celebratedher '68th birthday
td the 50th year of her reign as she enters the ttadittni to view itiilee .Princtss ‘Iallark 'whit ruteneded her mother' As viten
err •Withettoine abdicated *arty this week., is with her •.corisort find
&et lit the rear of the photo
PAGE TWO -Tng WINGHAM ADVANCE-TIMES
Wednesday, September 18, 1948
Wingbam Advance-Times ,T1.11 ) Wetat iteithist Premier Moham- opean Recovery Program for some
Measure of political .union, It would
not be a 'constitutional convention but
would prepare the ground for such a
convention,
Parliamentarians of the five Brus-
sels Pact powers took hold of the con-
gress proceeding with the result that
this union was brought into line with
Winston Churchill's International
Committee for a Movement for Euro-
pean Unity and with high level devel-
opments between the govermnents, In
so doing they largely destroyed -the
basis for the union's continuing ex-
istence as a separate group working
for a federal Europe.
* *
CANADA'S SURPLUS EGGS
GO TO BRITAIN
At present, the United Kingdom has
contracted for more than 95 per cent
of Canada's surplus eggs. The Canad-
ian people consume approximately one
third of the eggs produced in Canada.
Last year, Canadian hens laid three
million cases of eggs. Canadian people
used one million and the surplus had
to be moved off the home market in
order to keep the egg industry healthy.
Canadians demand fresh, not storage
eggs. Thus the retail price of eggs is
governed by period production. If sur-
plus eggs were allowed to glut the
Canadian market in a high production
period, the producer would be unable
to meet his high operating costs. "The
Special Products Board," says George
R, Thompson, poultry products in-
spector- with the marketing service of
the Dominion Department of Agricul-
ture, "keeps the Canadian poultry in-'
dustry on a sound economic basis.
"It does this through the mainten-
ance of the foreign market for Canad-
ian eggs." Canadian egg standards are
considered to be the highest in the
world and the object of the Special
Products Board is to maintain this
standard so that Canadian eggs can
successfully compete with ; those of
other countries. This is essential to the
to school when they could be sleigh-
riding. They may also be calmed in
their feelings by the remembrance of
those days when snow-wetted clothes
steam in the heat of the 'schoolroom
and they grow tired of lessons. They
may also be remembering that' the
smell of chalk has a nose tingling sen-
sation about it, and that after a time
the voice of the teacher breaks in on
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THE CAR 0171if YEAR The49
Pnblished at
WINGHAM ONTARIO
W. B. McCool, Editor and Publisher
Authorized as Seoond Class Mail
Post Office Department
Subscription Rate — One Year $2,00
Six Months $1.00 in advance
To U.S,A. 2,50 per year
Foreign Rate $8.00 per year
Advertising rates on application
▪ Vol, 76 --- No, 1
SOUTHEAST ASIA DANGER
SPOT IN TROUBLED WORLD
Revolt-swept South-east Asia is be-
coming one of the major danger spots
in a troubled world. Authoritative in-
formation reaching Singapore indicates
bite situation is far graver in In-
donesia, Burma and Indo-China than
-official statements admit. Both the
governments and the revolutionaries
are confusing the developments with
propaganda. The real situation appears
-10 be about as follows:
In Indonesia. renewal of warfare
(thin four months is a strong possi-
Talky- . The Communists have swal-
lowed up the Socialist, Labor and
Young Socialist Parties and may join
with the Indonesian Army and attempt
ed Hatta's moderate Indonesian Re-
publican Government. The Intiones.
jail Army a s to l'e Clo ,e1,y linked
!with former Premier Amir Sjarifool-
wh, has just declared that secret
iy h e has been a Com•munist since
1035. Diplomats believe that the Dutch
Army of 120,000 men would go into
action against the republic immediately
if it fell under Communist sway.
In Burma, the young Burmese Gov-
ernment, beset by four separate re-
volts, does not have the strength to
regain fullcontrol of the !country fur
the time being and neither do the re-
volutionaries, either singly; or united,
When Britain gained Burma inde-
pendence last ,Ianuary the White Flag
(Stalinist) and the Red Flag (Trot-
skyist) Communists had already be-
gun armed insurrections because, they
said, the more moderate leaders were
making too many concessions to Brit-
ain to win Burma's real independence.
In Indo-China, the situation also is
grave, authoritative reports indicate,
Nfilitary informants say the French
forces of 100,000 men are insufficient
Ito defeat the Viet Nam guerrillas who
:swarm over the countryside. Diplo-! !matic belief is that the French politic-
!ial offensive has failed too. Pro-French
:Gen, Nguyen Van Xuan's "Central
Viet Nam Governmene", which the
French promise to install with limited
'powers of self-rule, has failed to catch
popular imagination or support and so
has the idea of restoring the former
Emporer Bao Dai,
The weight of Britain's military op-
I erations is beginning to tell in Malaya,
!where the situation is not as serious
;as official pronouncements first indic-
ated. Some four or five thousand
'Chinese Communist insurgents and a
few Indian collaborators must yet be
hunted down in the jungle, but any
threat to tin and rubber production
appears to have passed when the Com-
munist's weapon of terrorist murders
to cause the general panic they
expected. egg industry.
*
:TOURIST TRADE ALL-
TIME HIGH
I). Leo Dolan, director of the Gov-
figure of 470,854 p„"rs.iits also was an
fo,r that in at' The
,r 1017, was 802,1.1'01'S
1.1)4o, 863,t1no,
.N.r. ,.f vv." cent
.e .. 7 . .3. t1Li• •'', 1. t
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Y1.••• • S' ;
?;
"r 1,447. •••
• " ta.17,' t.-1•••sts. ,.b.
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• WLiZy vterL,
wrt4F-41,1 r*.
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Harriston ..... ....---- ................... Sept. 22-24
Zurich — Sept, 27, .28
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By Harry J. Boyle
I saw them coming down the road,
They were walking along briskly
swinging their hutch pails which were
a strange assortment of everything
from corn-syrup tins with handles to
one which was obviously a "store
boughten" one. There didn't appear to
be any hesitation. They were on their,
tvay to school, It was different hoW-t
ever, because this was the first day
of school for the season and it was al-
so marked by the fact that we have a
new teacher in our school section.
Going to schdol on that first day
is the sort of thing that arouses many
memories in the heart of an older per-
son. How well 1,can remember the
first day of schobl and of how the rest
of,the family put me up to take a rosy
apple to the teacher. She turned out
to be a sourpuss who took one look at
the apple and said, "I can't eat them."
That put a blight on my disposition
towards goingto school for the whole
year. Next September we had a new
one. She was a pleasant soul 'ho ac-
cepted apples and smiled at us and
was convinced that just as soon as I
grew up I would ask her to marry me.
I might say just for the record she
married at the end of that term. Again
I had the blight placed on me but the
fascination of the summer holidays
proved to be a good tiling. I was all
set for the fall term and had forgotten
all about my unfortunate love affair,
The next teacher turned out to be a
man. He was a strict disciplinarian
and although I was not personally fond
of him I have to admit that he did
manage to get me to cram a great deal
of information in my noodle.
There is a great deal of difference
between the first day of school and
the second or third day, The enthus-
iasm does wear off for the younger
pupil who starts out with fire in his
soul. This is caused'
!
to a certain ex-
tent by the great lack of feeling that
the older pupils seem to have for
school. Remembering a summer of var-
ied interests, the boys in the bigger
seats along the windows seem to be
able' to dampen the ardor of even the
most inspired of the youngsters,
It may be that the older ones re-
member the winter days of struggling
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* *
• KNOW WINGHAM
Howson & Howson Flour Mill has
served Wingham and district well for
many years. This thriving industry is a rnment Touriet Bureau. said recently !
.that Canada likely will achieve its !valuable asset to Wingham and dis-
;Iii,tgest tourist year in history in 1948, i!trict.
iludications are that the number of
* *
WEEKLY THOUGHT it.)nrists may exceed 25 million, and
11e am mint of money spent in Canada 1 New friends are good but old Hends ain be ah.att 8250 million, an increase best. .ity
10 per cent over 1047.
Latest figures compiled by the bur- . FALL FAIR DATES eau .4 statistics showed thenumber of
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iela in autom' !biles in July had inc7eas- Hanover
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a year a, The bureau said the July Chesley .............. ...... „...„„_ Sept. 17, 13
Sept. 15, 16
Sept. 16, 17
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• Dr. Hess NICOZINE (Worm Powder) $1.25, $2.50
Dr. Hess P. T. Z. (Worm Powder 1 lb....$2.00
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a D r.Hess LOUSE KILLER (Powder) . .45c, 90c • • •
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30c,- 60c Royal Purple ROUP REMEDY
Pratt's POULTRY INHALANT 40c
EMULSIFIED EUCALYPTUS 29c, $1.50
Pratt's POULTRY REGULATOR 35c, 75c
Dr. Hess "Pan-A-Min" CONDITIONER 65c, $1.60
Royal Purple Poultry CONDITIONER, 30c, 60c
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Ask to see our illustrated catalogue of
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'PHONE 18 WINGHAM, ONT.
KERR'S DRUG STORE
POULTRY
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dreams of sleighriding and they often
find themselves without an answer to
the problem with which they are con-
fronted.
If I watch during the next two
weeks I am almost certain to find a
certain lessening of enthusiasm on the
part of the children who went off to
school with such enthusiasm during
the first day or so.
it •