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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1924-06-12, Page 2ThuredaY. 10th.;: 194 5 .57145,", MONY ON ALE YOUR •GROCERIES "One item" bargainS never attract the thrifty housewife. She Shops where she can save money on her entire Grocery bill. That's why a tnillion and more shop regularly at DOMINION STORES every week and are able to make a steady saving on all of their groceries. Place your entire Order this weelt..at your nearest Dominion. Store and note the savings you make. orseshoe Sall -non, 1 lb. tin 3Fic D. $. CORN -9111 KINQ'S PLATE 14c FLAKE, 3 pkts. SARDINES, QRAPE- NUTS - 18c KELLOGG'S 911, BRAN - - -"v‘' WHITE SWAN PANCAKE FLOUR 94,0 7 pkts. for - '1' KIPPER SNACKS 3 tins - - - CHOICE, LARGE PRUNES, 2 lbs. SEEDLESS RAISINS, 2 lbs. _25c _29c .25c HEINZ BAKED BEANS (with Pork and Tom. Sauce), small, 14c HEINZ BAKED BEANS '(with Pork and Torn. 1' Sauce), mediurn c 15 -Oz. Pkt SEED- LESS RAISINS, 2 for -29C MOUNTAIN CREST 2 7 CORN, 2. tins - C FRANKFORID PEAS, 2 tins - -27c Kraft Cheese AYLMER GOLDEN BANTAM CORN -LAM CANNED 1 • PUMPKIN - - JLQ.PC PEANUT BUTTER • Ib. - •- - - _3c TOY PAIL 9 PEANUT BUTTER 4.44.1C 4 -lb tin RASP. or an_ •STRAW. JAM -WM 1-1b. jar HARVEST 4) RASPBERRY JAIVI 40%. 35c NEW. CHEESE lb. BAYSIDE LOMBARD 1 and G. G. PLUMS - A e.P.0 C. C. SAUCE Bottle - - -414n. SPECIAL BLEND A c, - COFFEE, 1 ib. -:"Istno RICHMELLO 65r - COFFEE, 1 lb. - — COFFEE, IA lb. 3c RICHMELLO RICHMELLO 70 TEA,lb. - RITEGOOD (for Beer ,, HIRE'S making), small - - 90t.- GINGER ALE RITEGOOD (for Beer $1 60- HIRE'S m 'aking), la-rge - - . ROOT BEER RITEGOOD STOUT t1 r7C , and PORTER - -QP ayfield Machie Sliced Bac° WE SELL TO SATISFY 33c 33c 29c 24 WINGHAIVf ADVANCE-T.11411s , AVE • TIP,"• .1 offer—by carrying the message regu- larly ih the AdvaneetTinies.Classified CRISP • COMMENT ON THE WORLD'S CURRENT EVENTS Ad. Page, From, Near and Far, Outside Our •Own Community. Condensed To Male Clear, Concise and Quick Reading Possible. Tragedy invaded the summer home 000,000to try to save the young men of Harry Pepall (of Ameliiis Jarvis 6z from the gallows. Murder grows Co.) on the eastern shores of Lake when not punished and this may be Simeoe, near Roches :point last Wed,- a test case to prove that justice is Iles(14Y when fire caused by an ex- mightier than money, Watch this plosion in an oil stove swept through. column for further developements. the large frame dwelling, burning Mrs, x x Pepall and their" two children, Rose- If the sun falls into two parts how mary to would it do to have one half of it rise death, aAgedurli;al d tiogdetNheeg rd' Vlhedyear-' 8 thein old Eileen Pepall, ran for help and west? There need be no night then were saved., x x x Our idea of hard work is the task of a party Whip at Ottawa during a session on a nice June day, x x arid it would mean a great saving in gas and electric light bills, There is a merry war among the coal dealers of Napanee and coal 'is selling at $x 3,5o per ton. So far as Rev, Dr, C. MacKinnon, Haltfax, the average consumer is concerned he was elected Moderator of the Presby- would prefer this war about Novem- terian Church. in Canada, at the open- ber. ing of the 5oth meeting of the Gen- x x x eral Assembly in Owen Sound last Judge O'Brien told the Carleton Thursday. x x x Weston now boasts a "great, white way." The Light Coinmission ,re- cently "cut in 58 additional lights on the Main St. • x x x Word of a three -weeks -old roos- ter that crows, in the back yard of H. Robbins of Stratford, has aroused in - Grand Jury that he had a high re- gard for the jury'Systemtwhile at New Liskeard, Judge Hartman told a jury, who pronounced au operator not guilty, that he did not agree With them. Apparently Judges differ just like ordinary mortals. x x x Your wants are many here below. Use the Want Ad. page and 'get rid terest in that neighborhood. The of a few of them. x x little fellow is almost too small to tell x the difference between a bug and a Convicted on fan; counts of having performed an operation, Mrs. G. La - handful of crumbs but he. is a regu- , wrence was sentenced in Walkerton lar chanticleer, x x x •.• by Judge Klein to eight yeas in Kingston penitentiary. When the A romance that was born away sentence was passed Mrs: Lawrence hick in reirg, reached happy maturity Wednesday last, when the marriage of Dr, Frederick Banting, discoverer of insulin, to Miss Marion. Robertson of Elora, was solemnized at the resi- dence of the bride's uncle, Dr. J. G. Caven, Toronto. , Fourteen. hundred cartons of real beer arrived in Whitby and was load- ed front the railway siding ,into the hold of the "Victory" consigned, to Walter Hayden, Oswego, N. Y. sent and watched the tra.nsfer of the Mon- treal liquor into the boat, confident that the goods were not going to New York State, yet powerless ,under the Federal Act to prevent the shipment. x x • Why Buy At Home? --Because will publish the names of ,subscribers fainted and had to be carried from the court room. Charles A. E. Brower, Conservative 111,Y.P,, East Elgin, from 1905-1919, died at St. Thomas •last :week. X x X Every man should be required to live in this country three months be- fore referring to other immigrants as "aliens." • x x X. An auto driven by Wm. Clarke, of Stratford, upset last week at Peters- burg, and Reginald Beaton, a young man, was seriously injured and taken to%Toronto Gen. Hospital. After this Week Tile Advance -Times some part of every dollar we spend who are so mean as .to let their paper expire for a year or more and then sneak around to the post office and ask to 11 -ave the paper sent back re- fused. "Little things count." Where would a political machine be except for the nuts?- jeant,Kaye, Girl Guide' of St. Cath- . at home stays at home and helps work for the welfare of our home town. • • Two brothers,' Leo and Tony Wal- ney, of Detroit, were drowned near Windsor when they attempted to change places in a canoe. x x . • The defense of Nathan Leopold,-jr. and Robert Loeb, of Chicago, both University gratua.tes and youthful crines is to be presented with a me - millionaire slayers of Robt. Franks, al for bravery for plunging into Wel- himself the son of a millionaire, will be insanity The defence has an- land,canal and saving a boy- from ng nounced it is willito spend $t5,-`,arowning• . ' • ,OSSMIZEOCSVZISSEISMOI Z52:2227"Ei•Tetaritaautazulw....r..---, • 4,, .4. . - 41.11, ,,e PIM • r,111 "VIV .W,A O1.:4,, • •2121=85152110=91611251E151=5=0 S155•11aSEMS,,MOOMOM5=rarwalittE =num= Ex erience Cent iniy Tells in t td ' 74. king Tires You cannot go astray in your tire purchases if you buy this kind of experience: - 1894 -1924 Many a mart is driving a motor today who was not born when Dunlop Tires first appeared on the highways of Canada. Thirty years is a long • time in the Tire business. It is the Very beginning of the industry. 1888 saw the world's first pneumatic tire ; 1894 saw the industry taking hold in Canada. Doesn't it stand to rea- son, in view of the above facts, that we must be better equipped and bet- ter qualified to serve the exacting demands of Tire users? Knowing the past of the Tire Industry so well, we must have pretty good intuition regarding not • only the needs of the present, but the possibili- ties of the future. 30 Years in Canada Money cannot Buy More—Usage cannot Demand More—than what you get, with present-day Dunlop Tires. There's a Dunlop Tire for every purpose. —For Every type of Rim- -For Every Pocketbook. Dunlop De4 lers Everywhere Ready to Serve You • Also Makers of Dun- lop Rubber Belting, • BoSe, Packing, etc. Dunlop Rubber Tile Flooring, Dunlop Rub. beroleurn, Dunlop Tire & Ober Goods Co. Lulnited Head Office and Factories: TORONTO Branches itt the Leading Cities IChesley saw the best Soldiers' Re- union. Celebration there in years ,crowd of four thousand being present to enjoy the sports and fireworks. x It's hard to worry about Europe's troubles just after seeing a home star make a wild throw to first. 13ridgeburg.council has been warn- ed that it mutt install a chlorinating plant without further delay, the pres- ence of bacillus in the water being the lesson. • A good line of good goods of good service ,will never bring in the elus-, ive dollar unless people know about it. There's one sure, way of telling all the people just what you have to • Frank Hohner and the crown ;Morn- xxx Six hundred dollars worth of sto- lea clothing was found in a stump near Wottert, Forestry experts are Premier Ferinson has been referr- puzzled as to how the stuff got there. cd.to as anastute politician and close In fact after viewing the stump mouthed, We 'Wish 'he would 'sPeak declared themselves stumped, up now and let us know when and, x x x upon what sort of a measure we are The University of Ottawa s oldest going to vote on (if any) in reference graduate attributes his long life, to to the O.T.A, He has been dilly-clal-ithe practice of eating an onion a day, lying long enough, Certainly this would. Prove useful in r d as an effective means of 1 il'a . ' x N. C 0 V/ One Brontet Ont.; erithusi- keep ng potsbeerm-carriers at g ast , landed eighteen . herring using safe distance. worms as bait; Old inhabitants de- x x X clare it is an itneonventional thing Henry Warren, leaving a Wife and for herring tO do; but nevertheless, five children, was electrocuted, at the many others are out now in the hopes Deloro smelting plant near Velleville that these fish. have set a precedent, while turning on the power. x x x x x Rain is badly heeded in the Can- E. Herriot, last Thursday, refused adian West, Well, there's this to the preiniership of France. . be said about it: that down east here ' x x x • Inspector McCaffery, proVincial po- liceman, has been investigating, near d 0 t the alleged suicide of we're willing to do without any little thing that will help the West along: Preliminary steps in the organiza- GQ11 of the temperance forces in Sim- coe County, in preparation for the ex- pected plebiscite were taken at a con- vention held in Barrie, attended by 15o delegates from Sinacoe and a portion of Muskoka. x x His Honor Lieut. -Gov. Cockshutt, unveiled the War Memorial Monu- ment and made an appropriate speech at Whitby last week. Canadian strawberry crop is coming along nicely and the plants may yet astonish the natives by prbducing as a logical result of weather conditions, not strawberries but watermelons. . x x X It is estimated by authorities that over $25,000,000 is spent in Canada each year by golf enthusiasts. A por- tion of this could be used to advant- age by the unemployed.. - To Sell Summer Residents City people in the country for the Sum- mer can- be sold • gro- ceries and meats by Long Distance. S om e • grocers (and butchers) • call, up oat -of -town . toners once a week and get their orders. Deli- veries are made by truck a express. Some grocers arrange with their • customers • before they leave town, • to give this service. • They say they can well afford to pay for Long • Distance calls on weekly orders. Let us work out with you -a plan for the sur- rounding' district. toy .1:6tt rar.1)1201til tio • tong 7)i,ttonee Stcttit)ti ey has ordered the body exhumed. N. X, Any truth that prevails in a1101"Se trade is indeed mighty, x x x M.ontreal recently 'held a "No cident Weelc." Playing football for t weeks, with- out knowing hit skull to be fractured, Jones, aged :23, died in a Regina,. Hospital last week, 'r2 CON,,HOWICK Air. and. Mrs Joc Bennett visited at Dick Bennett's Sunday, Miss Doris Baker is laid LIP with an attack of bad' Q1d, 1\11', jarnes Stewart' has been laid up Mr. Albert Johnston from Ford- wich was in the burg looking for hay to press. Mr, Clieve Vittie and Mr. Delbert Clegg spent Sunday evening, at Ford- wich. , ....,......Mmokamowoommumexascualoameiailon UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN. ONTARIO7 te.!ClIteerIscteollaeldivta°nPcrrrhteuillr iatcYadtemailci. „. Summer School London, Ontario. June 30 to August 9. standing. General B.A. and Honor 'B.A. courses offered. .Astronomy, Englisli, Mathematics, History, Languages, Polittcal Economy and Natural Sciences -24 courses. Social and athiettc,progratu throughout mthaekeesntiroe.esisxunw,epaikers rri--l1 y. aSpesiesedriatpsiititieyshonipniuoiifiisdnitnadinbin;i:o.huctcunt ui: , 1,,. ' , , ' i,t11"., , - ;h. ; • the Direcor,sar Dr. K. ' . -,3*.x.-4--, I. ' '.*.4 4 R 'For information write 1,t2 E'-'' 1" ...... • 4 • P. R. IVeville, Registrar. '''''..--"* —7,..,,,,,NO_____,..r4..._1..-2--------. :4'."--" BROADCASTING. FOR MOOSE IN NOVA SCOTIA American Sportin Writ's in 'a:Nova Scotian liunfing Comp, 460U -0U -01.i -0U OU-ERAZ Ou-ou-ou-ou-ou-erakl Tight Ughl" Louie Harlow; Midnac Indian guide, stood up in the stern of the canoe with a birch bark horn pressed to his lips and sprayed the wilder- ness with this uncanny cry. "Ou-ou-ou-ou—ou-erak t Ou-ou-ou- .ou-ou-gralcl" was the perfectly simu- • lated call of a cow moose. "Uglil Ughlt' was the imitation of the grunt of a little bull, and the ;com- bination was designed to fool a big male and cause him to appear with- out unnecessary delay. - Long before the radio was hea of, Nova Scotia guides were broad- casting a moose love song with in- tent to lure the lordly moose within range of the hunter's rifle. Louie Harlow, of South lifilford, N.S.,. is the wizard of this wilderness wire- less, and he uses no complicated ap. oaratus, He cuts a likely scroll of • bark from a white birch, rolls it into megaphone form, length about a foot, and then sews it together with a strong and slender s ruce root re- sembling cat -gut. No seamstress could do better. There are smooth loops at intervals, the whole length • on the outside of the horn. Every knot is titcl inside, even at the sinall end. "How do I do it?" says Louie. "I ain° sayiri'. Nobody else knows how." These guides have their secret • tricks of trade and are proud of them. Louie Harlow is Nova, Sco- tia's greatest moose hunter anhas A Flag you Bull fAeOlte that fell to a 34tsebali Writer's Rifle Icilled or lured to the rifle more 'Although there is a vast area ot — I 4impOPPive-* • moose than any other guide in Nova beautiful country In Nova Scotia Scotia. Louie Is a half-breed Inc- along the. western and southern mac and „opines that his other half shores particularly, including tha is Scotch. He was born. at Bear famous Land of Evangeline, the till River on the Indian reservation, and terior is the moose hunter's paradisoi has worked as a ,guide under A. D. There are miles upon miles of lakes, Thomas of South Milford for 23 rivers, and -forests well populated by, years. Swarthy of complexion, with moose, deer, bear, and smaller ani - a black moustache and straight black mals. • A favorite approach to tit hair, he resembles an Indian Jess region is through South Milford, than his own son, but is master of easily reached via Annapolis Royal, Indian -woodcraft., He can hear a N.S., by way of Boston and YU,- mciose moving in the woods when mouth, N1S.,,or St. John, N.B., aut his companions hear nothing, and is Di‘...thy, N.S. The ride from Digby the first to sight a moose or deer and Annapolis Royal on the .Do iik swimming the lake or standing on ion Atlantic Railway to South lil the shore. "A moose -in ten days, ford is 'by automobile, and front or less" is Louie Harlow's motto, South Milford, the hunter or fisher, and it is said that he has never yet man, with a few portages, can paddle disappointed a sportsman who can in a canoe three-quarters of the way shoot Louie's siren song. will fool across. Nova Scotia to the Ntlantiat the wisest old bull in the woods, but Ocean. The moose season lasts frotA when he comes. within range the October 1 to November 15; starting with moose calling and endiut with' still hunting. A dozen ,guides, arnOug, them such celebrities as Louie Har - lo* and Sam Glode, both Micraa 1 Indians, work under the direction 0 A. D. Thomas along the shores 0 the Liverpool chain of lakes, Kedgo,‘ makpogee and beyond,i,Islova SW* the rest it brought‘ They were new is conserving its moose—a hunter I& to the woods, but they came out with limited to one 41 •a year—and it a fair share of moose heads, and mooSe country' wi 1 aiwkya te oo it voted the trip the best holiday they mtluse country becaUse that's a out ever had, •all it 13 good for, except trout fishi ng. hunter must do the rest. • Five of the most popular sporting writers of the United. States this au- tumn spent ten days with 'Harlow and his brother guides in Nova Sco- tia. They had " been reporting the world's aeries baseball games, and welcomed the quiet of the woods and • • • You know the wonderful reputation o2 the stivertoint Cord. Do you also know that we now produce it in Canada, and that its first oost is now no higher them that of other cord tires? Call on a Goodrich dealer "Best in the Long PM" IvitADE IN CANADA*TREY COST NO MORE Sold by GEO • T. ROBERTSOI °