Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1934-03-15, Page 4AGI .FOUR Z'HE WINGHAIVI ADVANCE -TIMES Q-umfor==itoemor==gtoimo' 0 KNOWS HIS ESKIMO 11- cents a word pert insertion, with a minimum charge of 25c. ib>ClOT" • ' 1Q�Q>_ O "AUCTION SALE of the. Household Furniture, the Estate of the late John Anderson, Corner of B. Line and Josephine Sts„ on. Friday, Mar. 23rd at 2 p.m, No Reserve. Every- thing to be solei. T. Fells, Auction- eer, 330 (O=0) (0=302, tins av the counthry, an, slrure, it wud trey done some av thim lads in Par leymint a lot av good to hev heered us, so it wud. I don't mane that we got annywheer wid all our talk, but naythe:r do the byes at Ottawa an Toronto, but at laist we had some broight oideas, arr fool noshuns, wh'iclrivir ye loike to call thim. Mosht av the payple in thewurruld don't ,know the differ. Pete Boggs said that the Tories si>ud hould all the aW'fices, laivin the Grits to pay the taxes, an do the bar- FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE 75 cedar fence posts, 8 ft. long, 6 in. top. Will take' wood in' exchange. ,Apply Advance -Times. FOR SALE—.Incubator, 160 -egg size. In good condition, Apply to Mrs. Walter Pocock. Phone 630-21. FOR SALE—Beatty Electric Washer rud wurruk. in first-class condition, also Lor- "Eh, mon," said Sandy Banks, "d'- raine Coal Oil Stove. Apply,to Mrs. ye no ken what trapped tae auld Phar - W. Ingham, Carling Terrace. aolr when he tried that game, mony HOUSE With FIVE. LOTS For Sala lang years` agpne?". in Bluevale. Apply to J. W. Bush- I tink rnesilf that me frind Boggs field, Barrister, WingEarn, Ont. wint a little too far, so he did. Thin we got shpal in about the de prishtu, an the gowld shtandard, an the •unemployed, an a lot av • other tings that 1 cudden't begin to tell ye 'in wan letther. Elam Nott. who is about as harrud a man :as ye cud frind annywheer 311AN WANTED for Rawleigh Route of 800 families in North Huron County. Reliable hustler should start earning $25 weekly and in- crease rapidly. Write immediately. Rawleigh Co., Dept. CN -125-S, Montreal, Canada. SEE Thos Fells if you want to buy 1 Said he didn't belave in shpndin so one of the best Cottages ` on Ed much money hilpin transhents an oth- ward St. at a bargain. All town im- : er fellahs who sbudden't hev wasted provements. i theer cash whirl they wus able to airn good wages. WITH Ten Dollar Hogs and One Ches. Nuttsaid he belaived in the Dollar VVlreat, now is the time to I gowld shtandard, an in ivir bod r sav buy farms tivlule they are cheap, T. Fells. iin , theer money, an puffin it in the ibanks fer a rainy day, so to shpake. Grane Wood said that gowld wus soon goin to be a ting av the pasht, loike the other Czars an Kaisers av the wurruld. He said that President I Roosevelt wus buyin up all the gowld 100 ACRE GRASS FARM For, Sale, Township of East Wawanosh; also suitable for cultivation. Constant water supply. For further particu- lars apply to J. W. Bushfield, Bar- rister, Wingham, Ontario. AUCTION SALE ! in the wurould an payin fer it widpa- 'Per . money, provin that payper praw- �mises to'pay wus jist as good as the Of Farm Stock and Implements will gowld, arr mebby- bettlier. be held at Lot 9 and 10, Con. 1, Mor- Bush Lott didn't belave in takin in- ris, on 'terest on money, at all, at all, but av TUESDAY, MARCH 27th • coarse he hasn't anny to lind. Phil,The' following articles namely: Im- plements: 1 single hay rack, 1 scff- Barines who houlds a few Governrnint ler, 1 Massey -Harris binder,. 7 foot; bonds said that if interest wus hoigh- 1 set double team harness; 1 set single er toimes wud be betther be rayson 'harness, 1 gang plow, 2 single walk- av payple havin more money to • ing plows, 1 pulper, 1 lawn mower, 1 buggy, 1 bed and springs; Cattle: shpind.. 5 Hereford steers rising 2 years; 5 I can't remimber half av what wus Hereford Heifers rising 2 years; 5 said, but we had a good toime anny- Hereford steers rising 3 years; 4 caly- way, an about mein o'clock me claw e9, 10 months old, 1 Durham cow, 5 • years old, due in June; .1 Durharn cow 8 years old, supposed to be in calf: 1 Durham cow, 8 years, due in April. Hogs: 21 chunks 4 months old; 1 (rinds. York Sow, due in May, 1 sow with t 8pigsat foot,1 hog2 years. All lours till shpring conies, above are. York bred. Two geese and Tirriothy Hay. one gander. Terms—CASH. James Taylor, . W. Jos. Henderson, THE CHEVROLET ter -in-law made us a cup av tay an gave; us aich. a sloice av her Christ Inas cake, an we all parted good Auctioneer_ Proprietor. STANDARD ARD SIX TIMOTHY MEETS " j The. Chevrolet Standard Six for HIS OLD FRIENDS 1934, lowest priced of all' Canadian u cars, yet. similar tothe famous Mas- ter Six except in wheelbase and a few minor details, is announced by Gen- eral Motors 1?roducts of Canada, Lim- Be rayson av bein out on the ould ited. farrum lasht wake, 1 didn't wroite ye The 'new Standard Six has a \vneel- anny letther. 1 wint out to look tings base of 107 inches, longer and wider over in gineral, an to see whoy the. Fished bodies ,and a greatly improv bye wussen't corrin across wid the ed 60 -horsepower motor. The resenib- rint more Peglar. Thin I wanted to lance to the Master Six is easy to fol- foind out if he w•us shtickin to the low in the slanting radiator, the smart Tory parthy, arr if he wus loikely to horizontal hood louvres, the deep - be turnin U.F.O. arr C.C.F. on ac- skirted fenders extending well over count av livin among: so inanny av the tires and covering chassis con- thim lads. Since me two dawters, ! struction. The new • Fisher Bodies Katie an Nora, got rnarried an wine have the exclusive Fisher No -Draft out to Alberta an wus afther lavin ,ventilating system and many 'comfort the Tory parthy as soon as they got and luxury features. theer, I can't thrust aven me own i" An ideal car for the fleet user ar:d flesh an .blood. I tink, howiver, that ,commerc.ial traveller, the new Stand - me bye is all sound it.. He has the :ard Six is not only economical from Y Y roight shtuff in him, but I wus afraid 'the standpoint of first cost, hut also that whin he wus attinclin' trahins lin respect to maintenance and opera- lasht fall he rrioight hev got some tion. As a companion car to the Mas- wrong °ideas in his head from. lisht- ter Six, it is sure to have a wide ap- enin in whirl the other byes wus peal among huyers who want a well- taIlein. built and economical car in '.he low - bracket. . Mo e available est -priced b c t Models I wus so plaided wid- the. way he l: talked that 1 Could him 1 wud trotw are the five passenger regular coach, fifty dollars aff the ri.nt if we cuci de- four -passenger roadster- with ru:rtbl. fate Charlie Robertson, an .another seat, five -passenger special coach and fifty whin we git Jarge Shpottnn the two -passenger coupe. elickted agin. That offer shod. kape I The Standard Chevrolet is being• t `built with the highest possible Can- tlic bye goin shtrargh . g pa b l Av coorse mebby I shuddent hey adian content. All cars bearing the been doin army worryin about the C. Chevrolet name are built of the same CF. an 'I.:.:F.O. byes for I am jist af- ;materials with the same precision and thdr raidin in the paypers that doter 'fine craftsmanship and on the same parthy has been shplit tree ways. 'manufacturing lines of General Mot - Now I hope it will be a straight ors of Canada, Limited, as the Mas- foight betwanc: Grits an Tories, but ter series. me offer to the bye shtill houlds I The engineering resources of--(hev- gaod. :rolet have been directed from year to Whin 1 wus out' on the farrum av year toward the perfecting of the coorse, I met a lot av me, ould nay -•;valve -in -head engine, with the result bers, Sandy Banks, Pete Boggs, Phil. that the 1934 Chevrolet valve -in -head Barnes, Sara. Hill an all the resht av power plant is the most efficient and thirli, some air thiin Grits, some Torte economical engine ever prolue 4 by les an some C,C.F.'s. We talked over Chevrolet, „placing it in , 'i*3sition of 'the pollytickie an eeotrotnick conlish- mechanical excellence far above that To the Editur av all thim Wingharn paypers. Deer Sur: rtiu� ti� Rt. Rev. A. L. Fleming, Anglican bishop of the Arctic, who has spent 25 years ministering to the interest- ing people of his diocese of 2,225,000 square miles. of any engine in the low-priced field. Some of the features which contribute towards this improvement are the new intake manifold and carburetor, new thermostatic heat control, and new 4 - point cushion -balanced engine mount- ings. Sixty horsepower is developed at 3,000 R.P.M.' and a feature of the performance is the smooth accelera- tion at all speeds. The Octane Selector is a feature of Standard Chevrolet equipiirent. This device permits the use of all types of gasoline with the greatest efficiency from the gasoline selected without engine knock. Improved Huck; -type brakes are us- ed and the'braking'area has been.in- creased. Front and 'rear treads are now 56 inches. Another chassis im- provement is noted in the stabilized. front-end construction, There have been several major changes in the 1934 Fisher Bodies on. the Chevrolet .Standard Six, all • of them adding material strength. As a protection from rain or snow when the No -Draft ventilators are open, a trough .has been placed at the top of each front door immediately above the ventilator so that it inay be ,pen - ed two or three inches without ad- mitting moisture when the ear is in Motion. The screened cowl ventilator now opens toward the windshield,. as suring. improved ventilation through the cowl. There are many luxury items in this low-priced car; the• sun visor is ad- justable to the front or the;ide, and models have rear vision mirror, wind- shield wiper, . dome light and, pocket, Closed models are wired for radio. SALT USED IN HOGS' DIET The part played • by scientific feed- ing in •raising hogs has been vividly demonstrated by the Dominion Gov- ernment Experimental Station at La- combe, Alta. Through tests conduct- ed during the past six yearsit was found that if pigs are fed salt regular- ly the time necessary to bring the an- imals to nimals.to market weight and high.fin- ish can be reduced- by one-third. Hogs given salt in the proportion of • two and one-lralf pounds to 100 lbs. of meal gained an average of 1.7 lb. a day, while those not getting the' salt ration gained only .7 lb, a day. The time necessary to finish .the hogs was reduced from 190 to 125 days through the regular feeding of salt. In addition to the' saving of feed, which amounts to more than two thousand pounds, is the fact that hogs wlrich.are early finished are of high- er quality for the production of bac- on. There is a better distribution of fat and lean required for bacon of good ,quality and texture, so that ear- ly finished hogs bring better pi ices. It is necessary, however, to exer- cise some care in feeding the salt, It must not be given in the form of brine or concentrated mixtures, brat should be thoroughly pulverized and mixed through the dry' grain as uni- formly as possible. •This practice should be followed even in preparing a wet feed. Through their investigation in rais- ing more than fifteen hundred hogs, the Lacombe Station officials rraye demonstrated • that Canadian farmers can raise hogs more economically and, ofhigher quality through the scientif- ic use of salt.. Maple Syrup 20 Years Old,. There has always been a strong contention among maple syrup sup- pliers that the syrup will not retain its flavor or color more than two cr. three years after the time of its mak- ing. Tuesday morning Norman Evans displayeii the fallacy of this statement in no uncertain manner when he ex- hibited ', a jar containing syrup which his father, the late Peter Evans, had bottled` in March, 1014 --almost twen- ty years ago.—S'tayner Sun, 13 TOWNS PASTEUR- IZE ASTEUR-IZE ALL MILK ','.he present state of pastettrizati.on in the Province of Ontario is as fol - Th are altogether twenty-eight cities in Ontario. The following cities require all milk sold in thenar to be pasteurized, niunely,. Toronto, Hamil- ton, Windsor,East Windsor, St. Ca- tharines, North Bay, Sudbury, Tim- mins, Chatham, Galt and Niagara Falls, maleing eleven in all. Of the. remaining seventeen, six of th.ern have their milk pasteurized to an extent• varying from sixty-four to ninety- eight per cent. This means that there are eleven cities in which the popttla- tion has no protection as far as. its milk supply is concerned. In the towns of Ontario, thirteen have compulsory pasteurization of 100 per cent and four have 100 per cent pasteurization without compul- sory legislation, making a total of seventeen towns in which all the milk sold is completely pasteurized. There remain, therefore, 128 towns in which the milk is only, partially pasteurized or not pasteurized at all. The population of Ontario is about 3,500,000 people. Of the cities, towns and villages which have either t'in't-' pieteor partial pasteurization 'there is a population of about 1,500,000 who are protected. Asa result of this there are about two-thirds of the people. of this province exposed to the dangers of raw milk, The failure to pasteurize milk ruay result in epidemics of the following diseases, typhoid: fever and paraty- phoid fever, scarlet fever, septic sore throat and diphtheria. Cases of bov- ine tuberculosis'. and undulant fever are disablying diseases which may be a result of unpasteurized milk`. Most forms of surgical tuberculosis in chil- dren are a direct result of unpasteur- ized milk: Ned:."He claims his wife made him what he is." Ted: "1'd never forgive her either:" U.F.O. WITHDRAWS FROM THE CCF. Elmore Philpott Also Resigns The C.C.F. in Ontario rocked with the violence of its own efforts at a complete housecleaning over the week -end. The long -discussed movie for a simplification of its make-up and the elimination of the communistical- ly inclined element within its ranks, finally took :form, with these immed- iate results:. The Provincial Council of the C.C. F. was suspended by J. S. Woods - worth, M.P., oods-worth,`M.P., president of the gyrational executive, as Labor and Club •sections deadlocked when no U.F.O. represen- tatives attended .Saturday's meeting. A new structure will be set ;up. its Tire.. U.F.O. announced rt, official withdrawal from the Federation. Thursday, M 1lrch: t5th, 1934: WAL imited reeeedeaeemedicaO Cotton Broadcloths NCIV ran .. of colors inthis splendid closely -woven. broad- cloth; . high glossy finish that wa; hes and stands wear. ac 3v inchea wide. Yard ,Cretonne and. Chintz Interesting colors and .resigns ie. these ;goocj weight materials, width 36 cinches, suitable for drapes, apes, quoting, etc. c Yard Clearing Fancy Blankets Mcst of these blanket's are pure wool, ..:-any have satin -bound ends, circ 60 by 80 in., 64,. by 84 inches; checked pat- ?°}e, terns,, E"cl; 60® Angel -Skin Slips You will find these of extra length good weight material, moatly form-fittinglines, sizes, small, ;med., large; colors, pink, white and peach; lace 0c trimmed, Eacha"4741-'9 Rayon, Underwear Fire quality rayon, that stands wear and washing, bloomers have: elastic at knees and' waist, panties are daintily trim- $c nie with lace. ,- Linen Glass Towels Pure Linen with colored bord- ers of blue, rose and gold, size 201:29 in., : good weight and are splendid dryers. 25c Each Miss Agnes Macphail, M.P., was automatically eliminated from both provincial, and national executives, be- ing, a U.F.O. representative. Elmore Philpott, organizer and- pre- sident of the Ontario C.C.F. club sec- tion, announcedhis resignation, in view •of his federal candidacy in Hal- ton as an independent sponsored by the U.F.O.l" ` Further develop PP developments appear to de- pend P on the advancement of a new and simplified constitutional struct- ure for the provincial organization by the national executive which is now in complete `control ''n Ontario. l 3 It is expected that this new set -u g• will be based on one single unit, with actual control at the head, instead of three autonomous groups loosely fed- crated,.as'has been the case to the: present. The new constitution for dis- ciplinary 'power in the central pro- vincial executive. 19-34. Chevrolet` has New Engine and Knee Action Wheels doodeeetiatitiaadiPaip ,Y • ;2,2,2,2,::><;:;::� �:;•>::>:::>::>>< • 1 'y9�Y.4'dn.. 'fit lt; :�•. l�iT: S. • MANY The Ch engine horsepower, cis, Orman extensively Chevrolet front an oil -filled to the efficient type Larger bodies by t picture special sed the toupe Chevrolet Six for 1934, with an e of new design delivering S0 hors r, with knee - action front icr ased all-round who and with n e u d performance, is considered the most exte improved annual model sincerolet Became a Six., The new wheel springs are enclosed tri housing attached rigid- ly frame, making a neat and of individual suspen- sion, and more luxurious Fisher, with improved no- draft ventilation, are offered, The above shows the Master Six • sedan, and, below is Seen brie ofpe Itimbdels,