The Wingham Advance Times, 1930-04-10, Page 477•:'
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Standard Formaldehyde
(Registered)
39c a pound bottle
McKibbon's Drug Store
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itTHESE
WANT AD'S
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RESULTS
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cents a word pet insertion. with a minimum charge of 25c.
BABY CHICKS and HATCHING FOR SALE—House and lot. Apply
Eggs, O.A.C. Barred Rocks at $20 to Mrs. L. Ruttan, Bluevale, Orit.
•
• per 100, and S. C. White Leghorns
• at $18.00 for April 16th and 23rd,
'from our own choice heavy laying
• pens. Our chicks may cost a little
• now, but in the end are much
cheaper than low priced chicks.
We have many satisfied customers
through the country. May Rocks
are $18.00; Leghorns $17.00 per 100.
• Reduction on large quantities. Eggs
$6.00 per 100, These prices at the
farm. If you are in need of brood-
• er stoves, feeders • and waterers,
please remember I handle the fam-
WINGHAIVI ADVANCE -TIMES
TOWN COUNCIL S. S. TEACHER REGAINS
HEALTH WITH SARGON
Continued from page 1)
ed by Coun. Davidson, "that we adopt
"I was In an awfully nervous and
recommendation of the Fire Connitit-
rundown condition for something like
tee aid appoint Arnos Attwood to
six months, but Sargon strengthened
the vacancy." Tarriedand invigorated me and restored me
Reeve McKibbon reported that the
to splendid health again.
Bated had now organized and had el-
ected their own officers and thoue
ght that the Council should officially
relieve Mr. *Wilkinson and himself;
who had acted as Secretary and
Treasurer.
Moved by Coun. Tipling, seconded
by Coun, Davidson, "that we accept
the resignation as officers of Wing
-
ham Town 13and of C. R. Wilkinson
as Secretary and 3. Walton McKib-
bon as 'Treasurer and that they be
authorized to turn the books and
funds over to the newly elected trees -
weer of the Band, Lloyd Hingston,
to be held in trust for the Town,"
Carried,
Mayor Fells reported for the Street
Committee that every effort was be-
ing made to clean up the main street,
that two trees had been authorized to
be removed at Mr. Mill's hoese, on
John Street and that a tree at Miss
McBurney's on Frances street had
been rdmoved to the rear of the Town
Hall. He also stated that he had se-
cured a power saw and had all the
wood cut. The dirt roads in Town
were in bad shape at present, He re-
ported that silent police were worn
out and thought that new ones shotild
be made from concrete. Prices on
calcium chloride were submitted and
it was decided to look into the dust -
laying problem at once.
• By-law No. 1007 to appoint Mr. R.
Patterson as engineer under the Dit-
ches and Watercourses Act, was read
three times.
Moved. by Coun. Wilkinson, second!
ed by Court. Tipling, "that By-law tto.
1007 be passed as read." Carried.
•Moved by Coun. Elliott, seconded
by Coun. Wilkinson, "Mat the Court
of Revision for 1930 be composed of
the Mayor, Reeve and Councillors
Tipling, McGillivray and Davidson."
Carried.
The matter of grants for 1930 was
introduced and after discussion it was
moved by Coun. Elliott, seconded by
Coun. McGillivray, "that the grants
for 1930 •be as follows:
Town Band $ 350.00
Hospital 400.00
Agricultural Society 50.00
Women's Institute 15.00.
Grant Athletic Sports 198.45
Horticultural Society 20.00
Carried.
In the matter of tax on gasoline
pumps, after reading letters from oth-
er Towns, it was decided to leave this
matter over.
In the matter of billboards, it was
decided to look into rents paid in.
Town before action be taken.
It was agreed that Mr. Alex. Fin-
lay be ISermitted to use vacant land
at rear of Fertilizer plant for •a gar-
den,
The Transient Traders' By-law was
discussed at some length. His Wor-
ship pointed out the hardship it work-
ed when the fee remained at $300 and
ratepayers could not rent their prop-
erty to any person starting a new
busine.ss. It was finally agreed that
the fee be lowered to the minimum
for the present.
13y -law No. 1008 amending the
Transient Traders' 13y -law No. 999,
and setting the fee for a license at
$100, was read three times.
Moved by Coun. Wilkinson, second-
ed by Coun. TiNing, "that 13y -law
No. 1008 be passed as read," Carried.
The meeting then adjourned.
Thomas Fells, W. A. Galbraith,
Mayor. Clerk.
At
Thursday, April 10th 19$0
TOWNSHIP OF TURNBERRY
• COURT OF REVISION
Please take notice that a Court of
Revision will be held in Binevale, on
Monday, May 26th, 1930 at 3 -o clock
in th afternoon, on the Assessment
Roll • oi 1930.
I. J. Wright, W. R. Cruikshank
Reeve. Clerk.
ous Royal line, which we are using
almost exclusively. Can also sup- AUCTION SALE
ply Purina chick feeds. C. G. Camp- Of Household Effects
bell, R. R. No. 2, Auburn, Phone.
FOR SALE—Hatching Eggs from
our Single Comb White Leghorn
The undersigned has been instruct-
ed by Frank Hill, Pleasant Valley,
-
hens. Large size hens carefully
tested for heavy egg production.
Our stock this year is better than
ever. All our males and females
are from British Columbia stock.
The kind that beats the world for
egg production. John Kerr, R. R. 2.
Win
gham to sell b r .ruotic Auction
SATURDAY, APRIL 12th
The following: -
3 dressers and stands, iron bed,
spring and mattress, 2 wooden beds,
springs and mattress, dresser, single
iron bed and springs, toilet set, three-
piece parlour suite, centre table, floor
lamp easel Newcombe player piano
and rolls, 2 congoleum rugs, parlour
FOR SALE -3 choice heifers, choicerug, fernery, genflemarrs smoker, din -
cow, 5 years old, due May 1st; i ing room table, six chairs, anti chair,
Bay mare. Chas. Potter. 7 3 rocking chairs,i sideboard, 7 kitchen
chairs, touch, 2 stoves, kitchen table,
quantity of oil cloth, Chevrolet sedan,
FURNITURE—Refinished, also do lawn mower, feed box, 6 pairs win -
Graining, Varnishing and Enamel- clow curtains, dishes, sealers, pictures,
ing, and Hardwood floors. 0. Lud- garden tools.
TERMS—CASH.
THOS. FELLS, Auctioneer.
FOR SALE — Barred Rock Baby
Chicks $16.00 per hundred; White
Leghorn Baby Chicks $14.00 per
hundred. Two hundred or over of
either kinds, $1.00 per hundred less.
'Hatching eggs $5.00 per hundred.
Custom hatching done, four cents
per egg or four hundred set for
$15.00. New and second hand in-
cubators and brooders at bargain
prices. Get your order in now and
get delivery when you want them.
I have increased any hatching cap-
acity. Call, write or phone Duncan
Kennedy, Whitechurch, Ont. Phone
611r42_,,
•
Consulting Engineer
S. W. ARCHIBALD, B,A.Sc. (Tor
onto), O.L.S,, RegisteredeProfession-
al Engineer and Land Surveyor, As-
sociate Member Engineering Institute
of Canada. Office, Seaforth, Ont.
ELLIOTT MILLER
AUCTIONEER
Sales conducted anywhere. Wide
experience. •Best efforts put forth
on each and every sale.
.1t..1...••••••• Phone 70, Lucknovi, Ont.
FOR SALE—Implement Shed, 24 ft.
by 60 ft., in first class condition.
Apply to Wrn. J. King, Teeswater
R. R. 2.
•
FRESH LIME, Gyproc wallboard
and prepared plaster on hand, also
second-hand cook stove and chick-
en brooder for sale. Buchanan
• Hardware.
FOR RENT -130 acres consisting of
• North forty acres lot fifteen and
North half of Lot Sixteen, Town-
ship of Grey. For information ap-
ply to British Mortgage and Trust
Corporation,. Stratford, Ontario.
IF YOU WANT EGGS NEXT win-
ter buy our chicks. They are pro -
et. , duced from culled flocks of heavy
.. •laying type. A large majority of
•
our customers conte bach to US
ta year after year. We are booking
orders now for April and May.
13arred. Rocks, April 17c, May 16c;
S. C. White Leghorns, April, 16c,
May • 15e. Mrs, Geo. D. Fortune,
'':•
R. 1, Wingham, Wroxeter Phone
612r8.
, e ,
33 •
HOUSE TO RENT -7 rooms, inside
• toilet, Garage, rent reasonable. R.
I. Galbraith.
LOST—On Friday, March 25th li-
cense plate No. EE 761, Finder
kindly lege at Advance -Times Of-
fice.
170 RENTAn apartment, posses-
sion given May 1St, Jas. Nichoisen,
Diagonal Road. •
IN MEMORIAM
•
Burg -man -1n loving Tut:ivory of our
• dear Son, Jack Burgman, who died
one year ago to -day, April Oth.
We mourn the loss of one WO loVed,
Our hearts are sad to -day,
To. think the one we loired so dear,
Was so quietly, called away.
Jack dear, we think Of you,
And think of how you died:
To think you could not say good-bye
Before you closed ,your eyes.
:Lovingly remembered by your
Mother, Father and Brother.
•
GEORGE WILLIAMS
Official
C. N. R. Watch Inspector
Repairing Our Specialty.
-Satisfaction Guaranteed.
Phone 5. Opp. Queens Hotel.
EARN $6 TO $10 PER DAY
Ambitious, reliable men wanted at
once. Part time pay while train-
ing for Aviation, Mechanics, Gar-
age Work, Driving, Battery, Elec-
tric. Acetelyne Welding, House
Wiring, Industrial Electricity, Ma-
chinist, BricklaYing, Plastering,
Drafting; Barbering and•Hairdress-
jug. Act quick, get your applica-
tion in now. Write or call for in-
formation. •
DOMINION TRADE SCHOOLS,
LTD.,
Eastern Headquarters, 163 King
St., VV., Toronto. •
Employment services—coast to
coast.
..moommeloitimilmime
• The
:Old. Huron & Erie
can repay every dollar to its
debenture owners and
depositors and still have the
large surplus of—
• $ 7,600,000
Huron & Erie trustee
debentures earn 5% upon
$100 or more.
Applications are accepted by
A. COSENS, WINGHAM
Mrs. Jas, Hamilton Finley having
lett his bed and board for no right-
eous cause whatever, he will not be
responsible for aeyedebts incurred by
het. April 106, 1930,
MISS MARGARET LANGLEY
"I practically lost my appetite and
sometimes the sight of food would
nauseate me. My strength and ener-
gy were far below normal. My sleep
was restless and mornings 1 was tired
and worn out. Sargon restored iny
appetite, 1 sleep fine, ain full of new
strength and have gained 5 pounds
in weight. My -friends frequently re-
mark how well I look."—Miss Mar-
garet Langley, 205 Erskine Ave., Tor-
onto. Miss Langley teaehes a Sunday
School class at the Church of the
Transfiguration.
Sargon may be obtained in Wing -
ham at McKibbon's Drug Store.
PRIZE ESSAY •
• AT CONTEST
Each week we will , print one of
the essays that received a prize at the
Medal Contest of the Temperance
Legion, held 'in the *Baptist Church
on Friday evening last. This week
we palish the first prize essay, writ-
ten by June Buchanan,
Why I Would Choose a Total Ab -
;stainer Rather Than a Moderate
• Drinker as the Driver of
• My Auto.
he drinks it is impossible •for him to
have this. Alcohol has a tendency to
deaden the brain. The optical nerves
connecting the eyes with the brain
must also feel the effect, and thus the
eyes fail to operate truly. . •
Alcohol will eventually overpower
its drinkers, and reduce him to a semi-
conscious state. Vv hile in this condi-
tion, the driver is liable to do and say
things, which if he were not under
the influence of alcohol, would never
have entered his mind. Take for ex-
ample an instance which took place
several years ago.
.Tom Lawson lived in a small min-
ing town in Northern Ontario, and
was known to the townspeople as a
good sport, and as one, who, as .they
expressed themselves, "wasn't afraid
to take a glass once in a while; but
had never been known to be drunk."
Although this last clause was true,
his anxious parents spent many a sor-
rowful moment, knowing that after a
time it would not be just one glass
once' in a .While, but many glasses
continually.
• One night Tom came home with a
sober and grave expression on his us-
tia'Ply happy-go-lucky features, an-
nounced to his parents that he had
just witnessed a bad motor accident,
which .had been caused by a blunder
from on who was under the influ-
ence of liquor; adding that he intend-
ed never to touch liquor again,
such dire happenings were the con-
sequences of drinking that fluid.'
Three years later on his twenty-
first birthday, Tom was given an- au-
tomobile by his parents,'who thought
he could' be trusted to drive .it; as
never since that memorable day, thre,e
years ago, had he touched liquor.
After he learned how to drive it,
he was away on a spree in it, with
a number of boys. Visiting a hotel
one of the party called for a glass
which contained the substance Tom
had said he never again would touch.
After this was done, treats were of-
ferred and accepted by all; Tom was
among the drinkers, entirely forget-
ting of his decision iti the excitement.
Upon leaving the hotel, they clam-
oured into the auto, and started their '
homeward way, Torn, of course driv-
ing.
Going over a particularly danger -
piece of road, Tem, who,, for some
time had been, growing more riotous,
and getting more and more Wider the
liquor influence, lost control of his'
auto. The car plunged head -long.
down a steep incline at the side of the
road, hurling all but one of its human
cargo into eternity.
Tom lived a cripple for the rest of
his life, bitterly regretting his folly;
arid knowing ie his heart that' liquor
hacl made him a Murderer.
This illustration only goes to eon.'
firm my • former arguments, and.
strengthens the case which 1 have
been setting before you against the
moderate drinker, and emphasizes the
reasons why 1 would have no one but
a total abstainer to drive my cae,
June Buchaean,
Among the many characteristics the
driver must have, those of steadfast-
ness and presence of mind are of the
most importance. it he. possess these,
in any case of emergency which might
arise (and there are many,) he will
be able to take the fore, or in other
words; do the right thing at the right
time, Of cottrse we know that in or-
der to possess these faculties one
must have a clear intellect, and at no
time, while driving allow his sense
of acuteness to be bombed. To order
to be in the aforesaid condition, the
driver must never touch alcohol in
any forth. Por, as we all know,- no-
thing' interferes with the work of the
brain as much as aleohol.
Another essential that the driver
must have, is good eyesight; but if
9
G
$14 000
S ,
A E,
Starts Promptly at 9 a.m.,
Friel April lith
Sensational Sacrifice
Stupendous Price Slashing
Canada's Finest
SHOES!
Tossed on the Market at the Mercy of the
Wise- Shoppers.
DON'T MISS THIS
See Full Details On Sale Posters.
"Does your husband ever take any
hard, exercise?"
"Well, last week he was oat seveti
nights renting,"
AP PE ARAN C 1E
APPEARANCE
PERFORMANCE
• COMFORT
VALIJE
THE designers of the new Durant 6-14 built beauty into its lines
just as they built comfort into its riding qualities and performance
into its motor.
The low -set body, long, flowing lines and wide sweeping fenders,
together with the spear -point decorative motif carried throughout,
account for the attractive appearance of this new Durant product.
You will best appreciate the Appearance, Performance, Comfort
and Value of this •new, rn.....0....ediurn-price, six -cylinder. Durant, by
accepting your dealer's invitation to drive it.
The Durant Four continues as all important unit
,am9ng Durant products
7,3140."%aft.-3
DURANT MOTORS of CANADA, LIMITED
TORONTO (LEASIDE) CANADA
A
0
Durant, Six Cylinder, Special Coupi
Model "6.14"
0
D
A
B. J. Beninger, Wingham
Robt. A. McLaughlin, Gorrie,