The Wingham Advance Times, 1930-07-03, Page 814
Thursday, July 3r
930
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JULY SALE OF
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BELGRAVE
The regular monthly meeting of
the i3elgrave branch of the Women's
Institute was held at the home of
Mrs, J. M. Coultes and was very well
attended, The president, Mrs. C. R.
Coultes had charge of the ipectin&
which was opened with singing the
Ode and repeating the Lord's Prayer.
The Roll Call "What am I as a mem-
ber doing for the Institute?" was well
responded to. The report of the dis-
trict annual meeting held in Auburn
was given by Miss Nora VanCamp
and Miss Edith Procter, and showed
what a great work the Institute was
doing in the district. Mrs. Forbes
favored the meeting with a couple
of readings which were much enjoy-
ed.: 'The; Institute decided to hold a
Bazaar in the fall, The meeting' was
brought town close by singing rhe
National Anthem. Lunch was serv-
ed by the hostess, assisted by. IVliss
Cela Coultes and Mrs, G. I•iiggins.
The next meeting will be at the home
of Mrs. E. Wright and will be in
charge of the girls of the Institute,
and promises to be quite interesting.
Miss Goodall of Toronto is visiting
with Mrs. R. Yttle.
Mrs. J. L. Stewart and Harry are
visiting with friends in London fl..r
a week.
School closed this week for the
summer vacation whjeli will be much
enjoyed by children and teachers a-
like. We regret to know that Miss
L. McKenzie who has been teaching
in the Iselgrave school for the past
four years so successfully, has resign-
ed We wish her cuntinued success
ice the future.
Twenty-eight students wrote the
Entrance examination at the Belgr•ave
centre. IVIr. Roy Stont•house of God-
erich was the presiding officer."
lfrs. W. EI, Armstrong spent the
week at the home of her d•iu.ghter,
Mrs. W. Mes ,er in .Palmerston. We
are sorry to know Mrs. Messer has
been quite sick and is under the doc
to
i s care.
Win Dunbar unloaded a car, -•of
coal this week.
Mr. and Mrs. j. Rowntree of Lon-
don visited with -Mr, and Mrs, J. A.
l3randon.
Mr, and Mrs. Donazd McKenzie of
Toronto were -visitors with the for-
rner's parents, Mr. and Mrs. " R. E.
McKenzie.
Mrs. J. Little spen'a few days with.
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Ged-
des.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm Budges and
Mrs. Thos. Shoebottonr spent it cou-
ple of days in Lond,n.
Miss Laura Robinson, R.. N., is vis-
iting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
V,T. Robinson.
Mr. and Mrs. R. C. AM'cGowan. of
Blyth were visitors with Mrs. C. R.
Coultes during the week. Mr. and
Mrs. McGowan Leave on Tuesday by
boat from Sarnia for tile coast and
will visit relatives through the Ncr-
thorn States and Western Canada en
route, ,They will go as far as Salem,
Oregon.
Miss Mina Bengough of Wingham
spent a day with Mrs. Charles Wil -
Kitson rccetitly.
Mrs. Carson of Wingham visited
with MVrrs, David`Scott for a few days
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Wes Jackson, Dray-
ton, spent the week -end with NIL and
Mrs. joe Brandon,
Mr, Sutton of Luca,a, visited with
Ills neice, Mrs. R. Yule on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. M. Lake of Fergus,
visited with Jos. Brandon on July lst.
Mr. and Mrs. Griffith of London,
spent a couple of days with Mr. and
Mrs. David Scott,
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1ONS'T.
GARDEN PARTY
Jnder 'atisl3ices of the United Farmers of North
Huron, will be held on the evening of
Tuesday, July 15t .
at his residence on the 4th Line of Morris
1% MILES EAST OF BELGRAVE
Supper served from 5 to 8.30 o'clock,
Mr. Robert McGee of Blyth, has
been visiting his mother,
Mrs:.
James McGee and other East Wawa -
nosh relatives,
' Ernest l� ivc'I1s
Leamington were visiting one day last was 4t sister of Mr. Yea, Forest-er.
with friends in Roelt wed.
Alis Dorothy Reed of Listowel,
;.
r11 11c.s e.
. � i home Week -end
t ler
spent the ween.e
c,u k
t
'The funeral of Airs Fred MacDon-
ald of Lnekuow, took place at Luck -
Mi., and Mrs. n of ,now ori Tuesday' Mrs. MacDonald
s
week with Mr. and Mrs. Wita I.irr Mr, and Mrs. Geo, Garton and,, 01-
I don,
kve and George, spelt the week -end
• Quite a number from here attended with their dui 'liter Mrs Arthur Hal -
1 the anniversary services at Langside and of Kitchener,
r Mr. and Mrs. Russel Reid of Brant -
are invited to St::Helens on Tlzttrs-
r
ford, are Here visiting with his moth-
a
A
Program supplied by the F
COWAN CONCERT CO'Y. OF TORONTO
■
- - two candidates w
addresses b .the
Twenty minute d y -
11i
for the coming election George Spotton, Con-
servative, and W .H. Robertson, Liberal.
Dancing after Program, Good floor, Good music. w
,Admission; Adults 50c, Children 25c.
i.' Rutherford,Seey..
i,� . J. I-lendei=soin, Pres. �VnY
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WHITECHURCH
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Snarling and
son, Douglas, spent. the week -end at
Kincardine with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ed. Browning.
Miss Annie Moore returned an Sat-
urday from Toronto, ~'there she has
been visiting for the past few weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Binksley and Miss
Robena Henry of. Toronto, spent the
week -end with the latter's ; ,parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Henry.:,
Mass Myrtle Beecroft, R. N., of
New London, Conn.,'. is spending a
few weeks with her mother, Mrs.
c
t leir
w al
1 'a
1 s
da : ulv 10th, t
0 14 x p
y,7 .
er, Mrs. Alec. Reid.
speaker, Dr. Helen Craw, who leaves
Mr. and Mrs, WilMer Nicholson of shortly as a medical missionary,
Auburn, visited orz Sunday with Mrs. Mr. Fred Lott spent the week -end
Jas. Sutherland and called :on Mr. with his cousin, Kenneth Lott, of
rl� d in Wingham hospital. Mr.
Suttre tng Turnberry, . •
Sutherland is slowly improving, lvLiss Mary Weir leave on Saturday
1
Mr John Steele of Woodstoc c, an for the hospital in Ram ton, vt
Airs. Jas. Cornelius and Amos ,spent she is training.
Saturday in Goderich with their els,- Miss Laura Robinson, R. N., who
ter, Mrs. Gray. has spent .the past few months in
Miss Merle Gaunt is visiting with Windsor hospital, has retia red, home.
her sister, Mrs. Norman Wilkins of. ' Mr. Cameron, Mr, Leitchbourn and
Wiarton. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Gaunt Mr. and Mrs, Orval Newby of 'Lon. -
motored there on Wednesday last. don, spent the week -end with the lat-
Miss Jean Kennedy spent a few ter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
days last week with her sister, Mrs. Lott.
Tichbourneof Goderich. Miss Myrtle Beecroft and Mr. and
The Anniversary services of the Mrs. J. D. Beecroft and Florence vis -
Whitechurch United Church, are be- ited last week with Mr. and Mrs. F.
ing held on Sunday, July 6th, at 11 L. Creighton of Detroit. -
a. in. and 7,30 p. m. Rev. Walter Mr. and Mrs. Breckenridge and Mr.
B. Craw, B.A., B.D., of Toronto, will and Mrs. Bryce of Ripley spent Sun -
be the special minister for the day, day with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lott.
and on Tuesday a strawberry festival - Mr. John Steele. and Mr. and Mrs.
isbeing held on churchl awn, Amos Cornelius spent last Tuesday
. the
when Mr. Craw will be the entertain- with friends in Kincardine
er and reader for the evening, a good Mr. and :.Mrs. Nathaniel Bolt and
rnusical program isalsobeing pre- Mrs. Milton Bruce visited with"Mrs.
: . -.
pared. John Purdon one day last week.
Miss Dorothy Pollock
were visiting with old friends in East
Wawanosh, Mrs. Small was forwerly,
r
onthe
ire
1c. and lived
Miss Rann� l u55 ), tl ti
1 i
tenth GoneesbtoAl of I', ast Wati xt l Ro,51
Mr. and Mrs, Jas, l'urdon and wil-
lie and Jean of St, Helens, spent a
cozy last week with his brother ,and
family, Mi:. Wm. Purdon,
Mrs, Arthur Newman of Hamilton,
i$ visiting with Mrs. 13, S. Naylor,
Mrfi. John Flannigan of Kingston
is visiting with her parents, Mr. and.
Mrs. `!hos. Inglis.
The Y, 1?, S. of the United Church
~!clef a social evening in the basement
here en Monday evening, when a
good program was given, after which
several games were played and then
cake and ice cream were served and
a social half hour spent, This will,
be the last meeting for the next two
months.
is visiting 1J:r. and Mrs. Small of St. Thomas,
To the Electors of North Huron
Ladies and Gentlemen
We are within a few weeks of an election
that will have far-reaching consequences, and the
electors of North Huron have a , right to know
where the candidates stand in their relation to pub-
lic questions. It will be impossible for me to meet
all the electors in person, or to address meetings in
every part of the riding, so I shall use the public
press to present my views on the outstanding is-
sues
of the campaign.
We all recognize that North. Huron is a rur-
al riding. But it is more than that, it is an eminent-
ly progressive
minent-ly'progressive rural riding. ,Its people have sprung
from some of the best stock that ever carne into
this country, and the general level of intelligence,
iindustry,enterprise and thrift is outstandingly high
It is no wonder,,then, that when, a few years ago,
the farmers' movement
swept over theProvince
this county, and particularlythis riding, took a
prominent part in the uprising that so profoundly
affected, and to this day affects,the business and
political life of Canada. On the business side that
movement brought the farmers together- in co-op-
erative effort. On the political side it drew atten-
tion sharply to the problems in whichfarmers are
most immediately concerned, it led to a more inde-
pendent view of political parties and political is-
sues, and it took a lot of the "bunk" out of politics.
The influences of that movement are still.
with usand there is no reason why they should not
be permanent. The people of North I -Enron have a
right to examine political issutes`as they see them in
relationto their own interests. The politicians are.
• all ready to admit that agriculture is . Canada's
greatest industry; but solie`of. them seem to think
that because it +is Canada's greatestindustry it
ought to carry all the others on its shoulders with-
out• complaint or protest. There is a limit, how-
ever, to what it can bear and that limit was long
,
since reached. So far as the people of North Huron
are concerned (and in this phrase should be includ-
ed the people of the towns and villages of the riding
whose interests are bound up with those of the
farms that surround them), they have a right to
see that their influence in the Parliament of Cana-
da is exerted in the direction of the betterment of
conditions affecting their industry --- of the reduc-
tion of taxation and of the costs of production --
of
-of the discovery of new markets and the expansion
of existing markets for their, gorsds, - : and gener-
ally of doing those things that governments can do
for the welfare of the industry which provides a
livelihood for so large a proportion of the people
of this county and of this Dominion.
In this and following letters' I propose to
discuss from this standpoint the issues of the elec-
tiori that is now upon us.
Let r ce
us consider first the British preference,
,
is not unlikely that :in years to cone this will
for it Y
be the issue that will: stand out most clearly in con-
nection with this election.
The harsh action of the United States
Government in an alread high tariff {�overnilaein.t raising y'„
a-
gainst many Canadian products makes necessary a
vigorous renewal of effort to secure a better mark-
et in Great Britain and the British dominions for
such products as can be shipped to them. Pursuing
this aim, the Dunning budget, introduced in Par-
liament at the last session, and now before the peo-
ple le of Canada for approval or rejection, makes an
extensive enlargement of the preference already
existing. In no fewer than 270 items of the tar-
iff the Dunning budget provides decreased duties
on British goods, and altogether there are now 589
items of the Canadian tariff -- nearly one-half the
total number of items on which no duty is levied
against British goods.
What does this mean?
It means lower prices for Canadian consum-
ers of these goods to pay. This will apply whether
the goods conte from Britain or front the United
States, for United States exporters who wish to re-
tain the Canadian market will have ' to meet the
British prices.
It means a better market in Great Britain
and the British dominions for Canadian wheat and
Canadian agricultural products generally.
It means, with more return cargoes, lower
freight charges on Canadian goods going to Great
Britain and on British goods coming to Canada.
It means a solidification of Empire interests
to offset the policy of exclusion adopted by the
United States.
The Britishp reference is distinctly a :Liberal
policy. It was introduced by the Laurier Govern-
ment in 1897, has been strengthened from time to
time under the Liberals, and has been attacked
openly the Conservative "
more or less ope �r by
party.
To its extension: by the Dunning budget in
the last session of Parliament the Conservative
party offered a united -opposition. In the House
of Conhallons Mr. Bennett, the Conservative leader,
' i. in debating• this question:
said, bq
goes to the British West Indies
"If a dollaa �o
that should go to a Canadian, it is no better than
if the moneywent to the United States."
(The British West Indies are one of the Brit-
ish possessions that give Canada a preference in
return for the preference given their products and-
er the Canadian tariff).
Mr. Bennett and the Conservative party are
still ildevoted to the interests of the manufacturers
who demand eticlusive tariffs against British goods
as well as against goods from the United States.
Since the Dunning -budget was introduced at
Ottawa, Bermuda has granted Canada special priv-
ileges in her market, and throughout the Empire
there is an awakening to the opportunities of in
terimperial trade.
The London (England) Observer says
"Canada's budget is one of those rare strok-
es of policy which illuminate the realities of empire.
Coming at a time when the difficulties of British
industry)are acute and when Brit`ail's economic
prestige is overclouded, this declaration. of Can-
ada's belief in Britain's ability to replace even the
magnificent American sources of. supply is indeed
a message of good cheer."
I believe in the British preference, and will
work to develop,p it still further in the interests of
the Canadian producers and of the Canadian con
suilners.
i' : R'O " 0rS 11N
JUST THE THING FOR YOUR
VACATION
Fine Basket weaves and Viyella fabrics, r
White, Blue, Canary and Green in new ■ .
summer styles, just received. Regular ■
u Y ■
values to $22.50. ■■
SATURDAY ONLY' a
i
$12.75
e Dress Silk ■
Special Prices on SummerMaterials,
Hosiery, Travelling Purses, Lingerie, etc.
■
.�.
,7,
SHOP WHERE THE SELECTION IS LARGE
■ • Wingham
L! ■
w
williammainsioNsinsioninisislimmunsassonsms
picnic on Saturday in Harbour park,
Goderich. During the afternoon, Miss
Olive Jefferson was presented with a
club bag on behalf of the Sunday
school of which she Inas been a faith -
fait member and officer. Miss Jeffer-
son leaves this week for Woodstock
to begin training in the General hos-
pital. We wish her success.
Mr. and Mrs. Grainger of James-
town, vQere Sunday visitors with .her,
uncle, Mr. Geo. Wallace.
Mrs. Pears :Thompson and children
of Wingham, spent a few days with
Mr. and Mrs, Bert Thompson.
Mr. John G, Chamney, accompan-
ied by his mother, Mrs. R. Chamney
and sisters, Mrs. John Thompson and
Mrs. Henry Leishman were week -end
visitors with friends in Oshawa.
Miss Marjorie Campbell was a
week, -end visitors with friends ` in Go-
derich.
ASHFIELD
Mr. and Mrs. Manning and four
children of London, arc spending the
holidays with M:rs. Manning's sister,
Mrs. Elmer Alton.
Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Love and Mr.
and Ivlrs. Chaniney and daughter,
are visiting with the latter's brother,
Mr. C, Carter.
Mr. Robt. Arbuckle of Toron.n, is
visiting at the home of his brother,
Mr: Wm. Arbuckle.
John ohn Elliott and Mr. and: Mrs..
Mrs.
Montgomery called on . friends in
Blyth on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Walker and Harold,
spent a few days in Toronto last
week.
Mrs, 1. Elliott and sister, Effie,
spent Sunday at Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
Anderson's.
Miss: G. Martin is visiting at the
home of Mrs. ' John . Elliott.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kerr are visiting
friends in Toronto. -"
Mr. B. Arbuckle has purchased. a
Chevrolet touring.
Shirley of Marnoch, spent Sunday
with- Mr. and Mrs. C.' Hackett; 70th
concession., -
Mr. and Mrs. Allen .Alton .andfam-
f
sly of Toronto, are spending. w
a et
'days With their uncle and atuit,' Mr.
and Mrs. John Mullin.
Miss Emma McDonagh of London,
visited at her home over the holiday.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Strong, Ver-
da and 'Olive; Mr, Arthur and sister,
Miss Ida Arthur, near Fordwich, Mot-
ored to Goderich one day recently,
and called on Mr. and Mrs. John Mul-
lin.
Mrs. Sans. Sherwood spent last
week in Goderich, with her daughter,
Mrs. James Barber.
Mr. Earl Sherwood of Detroit, is
spending a ,few weeks `with his par-
erlts; Mr. and Mrs. Sans. Sherwood.
EAST WAWANOSH
Mr, and Mrs. Leslie Buckman re-
turned home to Toronto, after spend-
ing a few weeks at the home of, J. J.
Kerr.
Mrs. Wm. Anderson is visiting her
daughter in Toronto, Mrs, Phillip
Dawson.
Mr, and Mrs. McBurney from Sask.
D0NNYB12.00I
The anniversary services of Donny-
bb'ook church will be held on. Sunday,
July 13th. Rev.. W. R. Alp of Otta-
wa, will preach both afternoon and
evening.
1 Miss Laura Robinson, R. N., re-
turned house last week from Walkers
will e.
Miss Margaret Cunnington return -
cd home on Saturday from a visit
with friends in Toronto.
The Woolen's Institute will meet
on Friday, July 4th at the home of
Mrs. John Mason.
Donnybrook Sunday School field a
For 'freebies
dee to Mid
eitnassilow
ft
6
A5
x
s
. 4u
3E
OUR
STOMACH
JUST a tasteless dose - of Phillips.
Milk of Magnesia, in water. That
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It's the right way, the quick, pleasant
and efficient way to kill alt the
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Don't depend on crude methods.
Employ the best way yet evolved in
all the years of searching. That is
Phillips Milk of Magnesia. Be sure
to get the genuine.
"Milk of Magnesia" has been the
U. S. Registered Trade Mark oft e
Charles I -I. Philips Chemical Com-
ppanyy and its predecessor Charles IL
Phillipa since 187
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during the hot weather and to those' who have trouble in o
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UNOS ARCH BRACES
_—W% ic h have proved to be a Real Panacea for Foot
•
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cording to the kind of trouble that requires correcting. N
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1 Every Tuesday evening at 9 o'clock, Winghani Tinte, tune
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"THE ENNA JETTICK SHOE SI-IOppl >, '!