Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1942-11-25, Page 4THE BRUSSFL.S POST Wedneeda,y, November 25t114, 1140 xp Pac kers BUYERS—OfAll Kinds of Live and Dressed Poultry We will Gall at your place for any quantity. Premium r rices paid for Milk Fed Chickens Before you sell your Poultry, call of phone 70X Brussels Also—All kinds of Feathers &' Horsehair. We have an expert on our staff who will cull your dock Free of Charge.: Phone 70x Brussels, Ont. ,21.0.112111 Notice to Creditors In the estate of WILLIAM HENRY McCU'rCI91r:ON late of the Town- , ship of Morris in the County of , Huron, Farmer, who died on or about the eecond day of October, AD. 1941, TAKE NOTICE that all parties hay - having claims or demands against the estate of the above-mentioned deceased must mail particulars and proof of sante to the undersigned administrator or to his solicitor on or before the fifth day of December, A.D. 1942, upon which date the said administrator will proceed to des - tribute the assets with regard only to those claims which. he shall then have received. DATi7D at Brussels this seventeenth day of November, A,D. 1942. Harry E. McOutcheon Administrator by his solicitor .0. JOSEPH BEN- SON, Brussels, Ontario, for Eimer 31 Bell who is absent on Active Service. Fanners Requested To Repair Machinery Western Ontario farmers can make a real contribution to the war effort by making sure that their equipment is in good repair and working order well in advance of the season when It is required, ad- vised H. II. Bloom, administrator of fare, machinery, Wartleue Prices and Trade Board, Definite plans have been, made, according to Mr. Bloom, to assure each area in Canada their fair share of farm machinery. "Application should be made at the nearest office of the Wartime Priees and Trade Board," Mr. Bloom. said „Approval of application, he con- tinued, "will not be dependeut on whether or not a purchaser can pay ter his equipment, but on how acute is his need." GREY Mrs, Eno, .Jeffery of Goderich, visited at the home of her parents, Idr, and iYLts. Wm. ItllaoaIt last week, On Mondayevening a eery succese- ful farm forum meeting was held at the home of Douglas Hemingway with 25 present. Bill Turnbull of the 16th was ,guest .leader. One of the ,nail points brought out in dis- cussion was that farmers need a guaranteed price for a definite Period after 111e war to insure ade- quate production during the War, Games, latch served by the hostess and social chat closed nit enjoyable evening, Be on Band next Monday, when "Manpower" is 911e subject Frank, Cardiff, Rd:, A F , who has bees stationed at Hagereville, was home over the week end, left for Newfoundland where he now will Deis .S s a f i e d A CIS train. Miss Violet Ellarntt was a visitor , last week with friends near Lis- towel. Jim and Mrs, Duncan, Detroit, has been enjoying a visit at the home of their uncle and aunt, Jno. and BOARDERS WANTED— I Mrs. Work and also Reeve Duncan IIigh school girls, apply to and the Speirs families, ,Morris, phone 104X. Brussels A Oiuistmas entertainment is under way at S, .S, No 3, Grey, when FOR SALE—~' a good program will be presented. .Any person wanting Cedar, $2.50 The November meetlug of the per cord delivered. Majestic Women's Institute was phone 12-r-15 Alex Brewer hell at the home - of Mrs. Aen Sherrie on Thursday afternoon, Sov. NOTICE— 19th, with a good attendance of All meat and pee are accounts are members and bgsitod5. Mrs. Thos, due and Payable at Ethel butcher Davidson, the president opened the shop. E. Thonrnson', meeting with the usual opening FOR SALE— exercises and then called on the FOR SALE OR RENT— Four roomed cottage Turnberry street, North. For further particu- llea•s apply to phone 774•4 1 Mrs. Alec Woodrow East Huron Produce Eggs, Poultry & Feeds P hone 66 Brussels HOG and POULTRY FEEDS Commercial Feeds Mill Feeds Bone Meal Oyster 'Shell Cod Liver Oil Grit Everything to make the hens lay 'A' Grade eggs we are the— marketet lrrer all kinds of POULTRY; "Flock Culling. A Specialty" Bring [Is Your Eggs Our Motto— Honest . Grade on every egg 1 FOR SALE— 9 Pigs, 6 weeks old, apply to phone 42-r-3 W. Blake jeet!" came the voloe of the boss tom the real of the butldtna. "Dl-, agnoee the ease as flatulency of rl Me perimeter anti charge it]m ae- l cordingly." 15 Barred Rock Cockerels. 'blood- secretary for the financial and other tested and Government banded. business -reports. Atter sense dis- phone 54-r44 WW1, Speirs - - cession it was decided to send a donation of five dollars to the FOR SALE— Central War Charities Fund to help Buggy, cutter, buggy'•tole, 'Nome in the purchase of a mobile kitchen lumber, two -wheel cart, and other for Canada and send, for Britain. articles. A. 1•I. Oakley Mrs. Jas. Arnlstrohg then gave an institute paper on the Government of FOR SALE— Canada. Mrs. John Spelt gave a Happy Thought Range with pickle report of the adea convention which shelf. apply et she attended at Kitchener on 0o - phone 90 John- Beteman's tober 29th and 30th. The rentainl- er of the afternoon was spent in finishing a quilt at which some of the ladies had worked during the program. Lunch and a social time was enjoyed by all. A quilting is to be hell at the home of Mrs. Jas. Armstrong Tues, afternoon, Dec. 1st. ETHEL Mrs. L. 1. Sinclair and Barbara also Mrs. McNair loft for Hamilton to vesicle., since Mr. Sinclair has been employed in that city, for earns time. They shall be missed in the village. We are glad to eee Mr, Welwyn Thompson, our vlllaga butcher, out again, after being laid aside 11110 a sore throat for several days, 1 Mr, and Mrs, John Allen .Tack and Miss Jean, of Hamilton (tailed on friends here en Sunday enroute from visiting in Brussels, Mrs. Bert Parker has returned from a few days' holiday with her daughters 14 Hamilton Mrs. Mer- ; vyn Grainger of Tameetown cared for her grandmother, during Mrs, Parker's absence. Week encl visitors, LAC Stanley Alexander of Trenton; Meears Stan- ley Wilson and Lorna Vocltlen of Hamilton; Mr, and Mrs. P111msteel of Clinton with Rev. and Mrs, Snell; Mr. Claire Michel spent. a day in Hamilton recently. i Sgt. Cecil Bateman of Burtch. Ont., was a Sunday visitor with friends i11 the village. Rev. W. A. Bremner of Seafortb delivered a fine address on- "Tempe- rance" on :Sunday evening in the Tenited church. Mies Elsie Franklin is spending a few days in Atwood, guest of her uncle, Mr. M. 7, Sleminon and Mrs. Slemmon. ' Mrs, Jos. Ames Is having a few clays' visit with her daughter, Mrs. Cecil Bateman in Listowel. Rev, H. :Snell ' of the United church, conducted the "church of the air" over Wingham on. Tuesday morning. He was assisted by mem- bers of the choir with Mrs. Wllbee at the piano. George Pearson soloist and Arnold Earl, violinist. Rev. Win, Scott, returned mission - cry from occupied China will be the speaker in Ethel United Church next Sunday night, Nov, 2910 FOR SALE— Timber Frame Building 25 x 60, 13 - ft, posts, heavy Rock Elm Timber; 1 Lean-to, 1 story, 14 x 36; 1 Lean-to 2 story, 15 x 25, the- above was used for a sawmill. P. Alnent. FOR SALE — .House and Lot No. 256-257 Albert St. 3iotate of the bate Annabel Heist. apply to John Simomns for par- i ticular0.' FOR SALE— Large. Dormer lot in the Village of Brussels owned by Lewis Russell on which there ie a good drilled well. Enquiries and any offers can be made at Russell's Grocery. WANTED— lPullets all ages and breeds, also yearling kens, also White Leghorn, Light Sussex, Black Minorca, New Haanpshire Barred Rock cockerels for breeders. Also wanted flecks to supply us with hatching eggs for 1943 season. Flocks culled and bloodtested freer Guaranteed bonus paid with additional premium. Write for full details. Tweddle Chick Hatcheries Limited, Fergus, Ontario. First Aid In Frost Needs Special Care MONTREAL, Nusember 25th. -Spec- ial study is devoted to the treatment of frost bite by Can'idiau Notional Railways First Aiders at this season, parttcularly those wbo contact the large unmber of their fellow em- ployees engaged in outdoor worie, according to A 0. Beck, Supervisor 0f First Aid anis- .A;ecieent Proven - teen for the National System. The proper treatment for frost bite, 1r. Beck said, is, to gradually . bring the frozen part to normal temperature and restore circulation meanwhile keeping the patient away from a fire and from over -heated rooms, After 're-establishing circulation, soothing ointment may be applied as to a. burn. it is especially wrong to massage, to rub the affected part with snow, or to apply moisture in 'any form. These general prin- ciples apply to all citizens. whether railwaymen or not. To Use Wolf Pelts Foe' Seamen's Vests The provincial deparl.lnent 09 gamey and fisheries announced re- cently that wolf pelts turned in by trappers for the government bounty will be retained by the department and made available tor use i11 the matiufactnre of seaman's fur vests. The pelts will he donated to orgaulgatione inter- eeted in the mannfaeture of these, vests for naval and mercantile morins ereWs.. 1110 YOU EVER WONDER ? How Wood Can Be Sent and Twisted Into Permanent Shape? If ordinary wood is bent or twisted it will dither break or will snap back into its original chafe when the force or pressure is removed. It recently has been discovered, however. that it is possible to "plas- ticize" wood,ethat is, to change it to form Which may be bent and mould, el. Plasticized wood, moreover, may not only be bent, as to form the curved back of a chair, but, also may be twisted like ornamental Iron and strips of wood may even be tied m knots. To accomplish this unusual result the wood is soaked in a concentrated solution of a chemical (urea) which works its way into the very struc- ture of the wool and reacts with the lignin (pure woody tissue, the es- sential part or tree cells and plant RUG'S) softening it. As a consequence of the chemical action, on the lignin, the wood, after dryljng, becomes capable of being bent, twisted and molded at tem- peratures of some 212 degrees Fa- hrenheit (the boiling point of water) and retaining its altered shape with a return to normal hardness and rig- idity upon cooling, Furthermore, it has been discov- ered that sawdust and wood chips, after being soaked in the plasticiz- ing chemical then dried also may he heated and then pressed into shape by molds. No glue of mucilage o1' other 'bonding'' substance need be added to the sawdust or chips to hold them' together ani keep them from crumbling, for the plasticized and lignin prove to form a self - bonding compound, Indeed, in this new wood product the cellulose fllbers are found to be more tightly held together than in the original wood. This plastjoizing precoss, develop• ed' by the 'Foreet Prelude Labora- toiy, Madison, Wisconsin, seems to have wide , possible cin•:menial ap- pileations in the field of wood -bend - and ti, the manufacture (from sawdust) of an inexpensive form of plastic material front which various types of objects iiiay be molded. SOME CHARGE "Hey, Sohn.!" called out the ser- vice station attendant, "Foul' clootol' is out here with a dat tire;" "Tndeed! , A most interest eg eub- p Car. of B La G. Siis ;:d?ud 7 rA to arrive Nov. 17th if YOU 1 'f ant ShilrOes Now or for next su wre1< er et them at once, cannot gu.ararrt;ae any 'farther dell v, "y S `r[i 8ctYy a3C "t' e: 3h West 'Has Record Yield Per Acre average figure, it shcl,itl be realized; Since this war started 'Western is an average one only. There will farmers have reduced their wheat be plenty of field:, in Western acreage by around 20 per cent., Canada this year that will run fifty yet the Dominion Bureau of Ste" bushels to the acre. tistics recently predicted the big- Incidentally the reeere yield per gest crop of wheat on record for acre this yea', confounds those Western Canada, says the Finan- pessimists who duri.it; the acute (tial Post. The total will be around 600,000,000 bushels but the real- ly significant figure In the estimate Is the yield per acre. For wheat this year it is 23,4 bushels per acre or the highest ever. Best pervious record was in the miracle year of 1915 when an average of 26 bushels per acre was harvested. And this drought cycle of 193"-36 main- tained that fertility of our Pacific wheat land had been all extracted, that the days of bumper crops were over. ----- FOR _,FOR SALE— Wood, some Ebn blocks. phone 412-r-11 Jas, Stevenson Car of Western Wheat On Hand $ 1.50 Cwt. Dm M. Maciravish Phone 46 DURO WATER SYSTEMS DEALER IS year will be a difficult one for your friend, the Duro Dealer. He is not able to supply the demand for Duro Pumps because present stocks are limited and shortage of materials curtails produc- tion. Besides, our factory facilities have been diverted to a great extent to war production. Your Duro Dealer may be able to supply a few Duro Pumps to those whose farm production can be increased with running water — but he will be mainly interested in servicing pumps -now in use to keep them hi the best possible running condition. Remember that your Duro Pump brings water, under pressure, right into your kitchen, bathroom, laun- d&and'barns, It saves many steps, much tint. and energy, Keep it in good condi- tion by having your Duro Dealer check it over and replace worn parts. He will gladly estimate the cost of putting it into first class condition. EMCO Quality Plumbing Fixtures are still available to meet your requirements. London EMPIRE ,BRASS MPG. CO., LIMITED las Hamilton Sudbury Toronto Winnipeg Vancouver