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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1947-06-12, Page 2THE SEAFORTHk'NEWS Snowdon Bros,. Publishers .11111 lllllllllllllll 1111 llllll 1111111111111111111111111111111u Radio Sorvice Repairs to all makes 24 to 48 hour service All repairs guaran- teed 90 days Walker Electric Phone 95 SEAFORTH rDEPENDABLE AT ALL HOURS, in all kinds of weather, she's at her post. You count on her and she's proud of it. With switchboards busier than ever because of the many more telephones hers is still "The Spirit of Ser- vice". More switchboards are being added and more operators trained so that you may continue to have the best telephone service at the lowest cost. THE DELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF CANADA FvERYBODY's BUSINE S S by Is the man who keeps in- formed on current affairs more likely to succeed? I believe so. Most of the men I know who hold im- portant jobs are interested in market trends, soil ero- sion, labor issues, politics and other topics of general im- portance. They can talk flu- ently and intelligently about such matters and usually their opinions are definite and well thought out. This is not a coincidence. Rather, I think, it is an indi- cation of a quality of mind which "thinks big." "But I'm not interested in politics. They don't concern me," you may say. The truth is — they do con- cern you and everyone inter- ested in preserving our democratic way of life. And other vital current issues have a similar bearing on your individual world. Enlarging our interests in these ways is not only good citizenship; judging by the examples of successful men, it also helps you get ahead. Here is a fact which every Canadian should know: The combined investments in Life Insurance by over four million Canadians are an important factor in stabiliz- ing the nation's economy. W.117 " THE SEAFORTH NEWS I. have purchased the Dublin Produce .Co. and would appreciate . your pat- ronage. Call Dublin No. 50, and we will pick up your EGGS AND POULTRY Ferg Stapleton, Dublin WA NTED ! Dead k or Alive DEAD, OLD OR DISABLED Horses, . Cattle, Calves, Sheep and Hogs PROMPT COLLECTION - WE DO THE LOADING DARLING & CO. ®LMITEiDA Phone COLLECT Seaforth, 16; Exeter, 235; Walkerton„135-r-6 THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1947 PROCLAMATION Town of Seaforth On instructions from the, _• Council I hereby proclaim that no dogs shall be allowed to run at large in the Town of Seaforth during the months of May, June, July and August. e. 7nder authority of By -Law #111 for the Town of. Seaforth any dogs so found running at large contrary to this Proclamation shall be liable to be killed and the owner or harbourer pros- ecuted. M. A. Reid Mayor FRANK -KIRKBY Licensed Auctioneer Satisfaction guaranteed. Reasonable rates Phone: Seaforth 842 r 24! • JOSEPH L. RYAN AUCTIONEER Licensed in Huron and Perth McConnell & Hays ' Barristers, Solicitors, Etc. Patrick D. McConnell, H. Glenn Hays SEAFORTH, ONT. Telephone 174 Alvin W. Sillery Barrister, Solicitor, &c. Royal Apartments ,Phone 173 ..a L IMPORTANT GOVERNMENT NOTICE. Respecting Price Control r 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, D KEEP F•QR EASY. 'RE.FERENCE • Summary of - GOODS AND SERVICES REMAINING SUBJECT. TO MAXIMUM PRICE REGULATIONS Or As set forth in Wartime Prices is Trade Board der No. 737—effective June 9, 1947 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. • Starch. • Sugar, 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, '0' 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 thelima and red kidney varieties. • Canned apricots, canned peaches, canned pears. • Fruits and vegetables in the two preceding items when frozen and sold in consumer size packages. • Strawberry and raspberry jams, and any jam contain- ing strawberries or rasp- berries. • Meat and meat products, not including game, foods, and.,certain varieties of cooked and canned meats. • Sausage casings; animal and; artificial. • Canned salmon, canned sea trtout, canned 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' suits or pants madewholly 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 alt 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 dr 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 beating equipment. • Soap and soap compounds. MOTOR VEHICLE ACCESSORIES • Pneumatic tires andtubes when sold for the purpose of or at original equipment on agricultural machinery. 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 eeferred to above is subject to maximum prices even though the remainder of the set consists of articles not referred to. 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 doorsor 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- inZmachinery, tractors, wag- ons, 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 fenc- 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. c. • dopher 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 fats 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; alt synthetic fibres and fila- ments excepting glass. • Yarns and threads of, or con- taining any of the fibres list- ed above. • Fbr' Fabrics over 12 inches in width, in any state, whether knitted or woven, containing over 25 per cent by weight of the yarns and threads re- ferred to above, including corduroy, but not including other pile fabrics. • Elastic yarns and fabrics. • Hides and skins from animals or 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 df bleach- ed sulphate; (c) 'Duracel", (d) groundwood and un- bleached sulphite grades sold for themanufacture of newsprint or hanging paper. CONTAINERS AND PACKAGING MATERIALS • Containers, packaging and wrapping devices of a- type used for the sale or ipment 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. 29s. • The packing or packaging or anyother 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. K. W. TAYLOR, Chairman. • J • USBORNNE . & HISS ERT MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Head Office, Exeter, Ontario Pres., WM. H. COATES Exeter Vice -Pres., ANGUS SINCLAIR R.R. 1, Mitchell " limber/ES Y JOHN HACKNEY .... Kirktbn, R. 1 WM. A. HAMILTON Cromarty JOHN MoGRATH Dublin, Ont. MILTON MgCURDY . Kirhton, R. 1 AGENTS ALVIN L. HARRIS Mitcliell f7 THOS. SCOTT Cromarty THOS. G. BALLANTYNE, Woodham SECRETARYYTREASUILER •v B, W. F. BEAVERS ' Exeter SOLICITORS Gladman & Cochrane, Exeter 'FLOOR SANDING Do your floors look dull or shabby • Now's the time to -have them resurfaced & refinished with our new Dustless machines. For Free Estimates :Gordon Muegge Phone 331 w, Seaforth HARTMAN—AUSTIN St. Joseph's Roman "Catholic Church, Kingsbridge, was the scene of a pretty wedding on May 17, when Mary Agnes Austin, second daughter of Mr. and Mrs.,,Cliff Aus- tin, Kingsbridge, became the bride of Ambrose William Hartman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hartman. - Goderich. Rev. Father Donnellan pastor of the church officiated at the ceremony with Rev.. Father Fal- lon assisting in the sanctuary. The altars were prettily decorated with spring flowers and fern. The bride, given in 'marriage by her father, looked Charming in a gown of white embroidered net, wearing" a finger- tip veil of dainty embroidered net, held in place with a wreath of or- ange blossoms. Her . bouquet *as of sunglow roses, bronze • and pink snaps, with white stock and carried an ivory rosary, gift of the groom. Miss Mary • Theresa Austin was her sister's maid of honor, wearing a gown of turquoise brocaded satin top with nylon skirt and matching hat. The bridesmaid, Miss Veronica Austin, sister of the bride, was gowned in pink on the same lines as the maid of honor, both wearing white elbow length gloves. carrying bouquets of light and dark pink "My Love" carnations. Mr. Terry Bedard, cousin of the groom was best roan, the ushers were Mr. Ed- win Myer, 'uncle of the bride, and Mr. Alec Donnelly, brother-in-law of the groom. During the ceremony, Miss Rose Marie Hartman, sister of the groom, sang "Ave Maria" and "Wilt thou look upon me Mother" accompanied at the organ by Mrs, Carol Snicker of Goderich. The din- ner was served at the. Bedford Hotel, •Goderich to 90 guests, with recep- tion held' a in the afternoon at the home of the bride's' parents, The bride's mother received the guests, wearing a figured silk dress with navy accessories, and a corsage of pink briarcliffe roses and blue lily of the nils. The grooms mother as- sisting wore figured silk jersey with black accessories, wearing, a corsage of mauve stock. ' GOODYEAR MAILER ALL•WEATMER TRUCK TIRES• With the extra advantaged of Goodyear'* great Hi -Miler AU - Weather ... no wonder .. . More Tons are Hauled on Goodyear Tires Than on Any Other Kind. 'See it today! YOUR GOOD, YEAR DEALER' Seaforth Motors Chev.-Olds: Sales• Service PHONE 141, SEAFORTH, �O:NT. .ir,• j.