The Wingham Advance Times, 1931-07-09, Page 3i11114Y4 i�fAi
YYYmearaassoeum4fpvs. o
l4N 4k114;tl fiW a�W:l"^-„r0.1F,4g7,1-i
V
Thursday, July 9th, 1931
:1
r -
AM YE,
•
IP RIM EOMILMIZ DC MUMS. 11.1(
COULD there be a safer
buying guide in choos-
ing the biggest -value tires
for your car?
Drive over today and see
our complete stock of
Goodyears. Two 'price
ranges—All-Weathers and
Pathfinders. Famous
Supertwist cord carcass
and long -wearing, gripping
treads. Our prices on these
guaranteed tires have never
been so low.
Wrn. Ingham
Wingham, Ont.
ut a'netv Goodyear Tube in every new casing
10th LINE HOWICK
Mr. and Mrs. Waiter .Horsburgh
and family' spent the holiday at. For
mosa.
Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Strong and
.family visited Sunday afternoon with
`Mr. and Mrs. George Baker.
Master Carl Binkle of Owen Sound
is holidaying with his grand -parents,
Mr.. and Mrs. Peter Litt.
The K.K.I. softball team were
beaten orr-Tuesday night by the team
from Greenbush, on the local diam-
ond, 18-20. We can't blame the play-
ers for not playing such a good game
as it was such a hot evening.
The Hardingand McKenzie famil-
ies attended a family re -union at
Stratford on Saturday.
Miss Pauline Litt is holidaying
with relatives in Owen Sound:`
Mr. and Mrs. Seb, Zurbrigg, War-'
ken and Morley, attended a family
re -union near Listowel on Wednes-
day.
Mr, and Mrs,` T. Binkle and family
of Owen Sound visited on Sunday
with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Peter Litt,
Mr, and Mrs.' Win; Holtom and
baby, visited Sunday with the latter's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Pritch-
ard of Harriston,
SALEM
A large number from here attended
the funeral of Mrs• Graham Camp-
bell of Morris, who was formerly
Miss Mary McMichael:.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Mines returned
to their home in Akron, Ohio, after
visiting friends around here,
Mr. Edwin Bennett had a success-
ful barn -raising. last Thursday;
The Garden Party held at the home
of Mr. Wm. Cathers on Jtily lst was
a decided success. The weather was
warm and a ,good crowd was present
to enjoy the programme given by ta-
lent from Teeswater:, Wingliam and
some from our own, community. The
proceeds were $113.
Mr. George Westlake had the mis-
fortune to have a horse killed during
the storm last Sunday night.
Misses . Hazel and Minnie - Weir
have gone to Muskoka to spend their
holidays.
GORRIE
Sunday guests of Mr”. and Mrs. M.
T. Abram were: Mr. and Mrs. Clar-
ence Young and son, of Lapeer, Mrs.
Eighmey and daughters of Saginaw,
Mich., Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Deyell
and daughters of Wingham.
Mr. and :Mrs. Ira McLean, of
Cookstown, spent Sunday with Mr.
land Mrs. Wilfred King. Mr• and Mrs..
King and son, returned to Cookstown
where they will visit for a few days.
Rev. and Mrs,' Stanely Johnston,
and family, of near Sarnia, spent a
iniumoinmilno0011 .1
117
Illi glut iii
ieetetW
5-
le row*
Put it on with
LED -HED NAILS
illustration shows
Preston Led-Hed Nail.
Note how lead on head
of Led-Hed Nail seals
nail -hole Making it
completely weather -
pro of. Note generous
overlap of Rib -Roll.
Preston Led-Hed Nails
are colored to Match
the teamg.
•
The beautyof Colored Rib -Roll
does not stop at beauty alone.
It safeguardsards your crops and
stock.
Properly grounded according
to the Ontaario Lightning ,Rod
�'
gives complete light,.
t•
Act, it p
ning •
gP
It is fire -proof, water -tight,
perm:aah.ent, economical, easy
to lay Flying fire brands burn
themselves out harmlessly on
this fireproof roof It cannot
warp, peel, crack, curl or
bulge.
e ev
•
•
1!
•1'
Colored Rib -Roll represents the greatest' advance of a quarter
of a century in the roofing industry. At very little extra cost
it adds to the duration of galvanized iron the beauty and
appeal of color, as applied by our own special process.
We also make:
Gaivanized.Rib-Rolland L' orr'ugated Sheets,
Preston Leet-fred Nails, Preston Steel Truss
Barns, Garages and Storage Buildings,
Preston Galvanize d Tanks, Majestic Verb, -
Fold Garage Doors, Colored Ridge, Flash-
ing, Cutter, Eave Trough, Conductor Pipe,.
Finials Ventilators,•
Eastern.
10i Guelph St., mited....._. ) Factories also at Ang
Tomato mad. Montreal
COLORED
:I B•ROLL
Fit.
tee Write today for free e,nes+,
sug ested Color schemes
u use t ul roo circivawTomato
Preston, Ont.
fcw clays last week with the fernt;er's
parents, Mr, and Mrs. T. 0. Johns-
ton. •
Mr, and Mrs, Gordon Jefferson and
daughters of Owen Sound; .are spend-
ing a few days with Mr. and Mrs.
George Foster.
Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Abram and
son, Vern, attended the McMain re-
anion held in Stratford park on: last
Monday.
Rev. and , Mrs. Craik and Norman,
left for their new charge in Go"derich
on Thursday, Their many Gorrie.
friends wish thein every success,
Mr. William Pyke spent a few days
last week with his sister., Mrs. Finlay
Lynn in Forwich and also Mrs. R.
S. Clegg in Gorrie. We are glad to
see Mr. Pyke able to be around
again after his serious illness.
The Gorrie Women's Institute held
a very successful strawberry social in
the Township Hall on Thursday ev-
ening. The evening's program was
given by local talent.
We welcome Rev. and Ivirs. Butt
and family to our village. Rev. Butt
has been appointed pastor for the
Gorrie' and Orange Hill United
Churches.
Mr, John Koine of Port Arthur, is.
home on his suriirner vacation.
Mr. and Mrs, Stanley Dane and
daughter, also Mrs. Grieves, of Tor-
onto, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. R,
G. Dane.
A large number attended the Ed-
gar Re -union held •on Wednesday
last at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Gladstone Edgar.
Misses M. and E. Thomson of
Harriston were guests of Mrs. M.
Ross on Saturday.
The L. 0. L. also True Blue Lodge
of Gorrie will attend. the Orange
Celebration in Blyth on Monday.
D. W. Dane and son, Whitney, of
Toronto, spent the week -end with
Gorrie friends. Whitney remained for
a few days' holidays.
Miss Pauline Ashton has returned
home after spending a week with her
sister, Miss Beryl, in Seaforth.
Mr. and Mrs. George Anger and
daughter, of ,Listowel, spent the
week -end with Mrs. Brown.
Miss Irene Bennett of Toronto,
spent Saturday with her cousin, Miss
Margaret Bennett.
Miss Dorothy Carr of Toronto was
the guest of Miss Evelyn Stephens,
last week.
Miss J. P. Stinson is visiting her
sister, Mrs. Barton in Toronto at
present.
Mrs. J. Wylie and daughter, Miss
Bessie, spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs• Lane, at Delmore.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Gallaher were
guests of Mr, and Mrs. Thos. Gil-
mour, near Wingbani, on Sunday af-
ternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan. Denman, Brus-
sels, Mr. and -Mrs. siert Cooper, of
Forclwich, Mrs. (Dr.) R. Montgom-
ery and sons, Leon, Rodger and Cam-
eron and daughter, Aileen, of Long
Beach, Cal., Miss Ada Gallaher, of
Wroxeter, were recent visitors at the
home of Mrs. and Mrs. W. J. GalIa-
her.
The regular meeting of the W. M.
S. was held at the home of Mrs. Wm.
Whitfield on Friday afternoon of last
week. The meeting opened by sing-
ing hymn 94, after which Mrs. Jas.
Anger read the Scriptetre Lesson.
The Roll Call was answered with a
verse with the word "promise" in it.
After which Mrs. Edward Galbraith
led in prayer. Mrs, 'T. 0. Johnston
read the Devotional leaflet "We
would Tesus
uld s Mrs, Watson sang
a solo "Face to Face". The study
leaflet "Oriental work in Canada"
was given in four parts by Mrs. R.
Ashton, Mrs. Wylie, Mrs. Whitfield
and Mrs. W. Simson. The plate
4f
next meeting to be the home of hairs.
Wylie. After singing hymn 288, the
meeting was brought to a close by
the Mizpah benediction.
Mr. and Mrs, George Foster, also
Mr. and Mrs. G. Jefferson, attended.
the funeral of Mrs. Graham Campbell
on Monday.
Miss 'Elsie :Fuller of London has
returned home after spending a cou-
ple of weeks with her friend, Miss
Margaret Foster.
WROXETER
Miss Cassie Harris of Toronto, is
the fittest of her sister, Miss Mary, in
town.
After spending a , few days with
friends in and around town, Mrs.
(lir.) Moetgoinery and family, who
motored hors T..onz Beach, Califor-
nia, left kr Wyevale and Midland
and other points east on tin extended
visit, before 'returning to their home
at Long Beach.
Miss Fraser, who teaches in the
West, arrived in town on Saturday
and is at present visiting with •her
mother and sister, Mrs. Joe Lovell,
on. the 2nd line of Turnberry,
Mr. and Mrs, Leslie Hetherington
of London, spent the ,week -end with
Mr. and Mrs. Sellers.
Mr, Ed Gibson of Ingersol; also
Miss Elsie Gibson of Winnipeg, are
spending the holidays with their mo-
ther, on Gibson st.
Owing to the appearance of a
storm on Sunday evening, the attend-
ance at the service for the Orange-
men was not as largely attended as
it otherwise would have been.
Philip Durst, Geo. Paulin, Ken Ed-
gar and Wm. Durst, spent Saturday
at T
obermory.
While motoring to Stratford, their
new appointment, Rev, and Mrs. Bol-
ingbroke received severe injuries,
•
'1 a-
Here and The::
Feeding tobacco to seep is the
latest device to check internal
parasites. The :tobacco is given
with salt in the proportion of ten
pounds of salt to one of crushed
tobacco leaf.
Latest available estimates place
Canada's forest resources at 224,-
804 million cubic feet of standing
timber, capable of yielding 424,637
million feet board measure of
sawn lumber and 1,121,993 thou-
sand cords of pulpwood, ties, poles
and other smaller materials.
Western Canadians are showing
resolution coupled with a high
degree of industry, was the com-
ment made by Grant Hall, vice-
president, Canadian Pacific Rail-
way, on his return from a recent
tour of the company's western
lines.
Trail riding in the Canadian
Rockies has made a strong appeal
to Lord Duncannon, son of His
Excellency the Governor-General,
who with the Hon. Arthur Pon-
sonby and Major Dollam have
been staying at the Banff Springs
HoteL
Intensive campaigns against
grasshoppers, wireworms, wheat,
stem sawfly, cutworm, potato
beetle, cabbage butterfly, root
maggots are being conducted
throughout the west this summer
and fall with a special organiza-
tion in the field.
"Buyers' Week," which has been
a great success in the past, will
be held for the fourth time in
Montreal commencing August 10
next. At the last one in February.
upwards of 1,100 buyers came to
Montreal and purchased in round
figures $950,000 worth of Cana-
dian -made goods.
A man catching a fish is not
news unless the fish is an outsize,
but a fish catching a man rates
a big type head. This happened
at Lake Minnewanka, near Banff,
recently when an angler was
pulled off the pier into the lake by
the sudden strike of a monster
trout. Constable James of Cal-
gary put off in a boat and landed
both fish and fisherman.
Six days, nine hours and eleven
minutes was the tinge of the record
run of the "Empress of Japan,"
26,000 -ton flagship of the Cana-
dian Pacific fleet, on her last trip
from Yokohama to Honolulu, while
a double . record was made when
the same ship completed the voy-
age from Honolulu to Victoria in
four days, nine hours and 16
minutes.
For the second time in the past
three years, Canadian Pacific
Railway police are all -Canada re-
volver champions. The railway's
Ontario .team defeated Royal
Mounted Police, of Leth-
bridge,
inMo
nada
Ca
bridge, in the finals for the trophy
recently. . The railway
police scored
i
1410 out of a possible 1500 against
the Mounties 1352 thus becoming
Dominion Open Revolver Police.
Champions.
Hon. Gordon S. Harrington,
Premier of Nova Scotia, and two
hundred of the province's leading
citizens, gathered at Varmr'i, h
June 16 for the opening of tha'
Lakeside Inn, Canadian Pacific
hotel. This hostelry is the third
of a chain across Nova Scotia
opened by the railway m the:
few years, testifying to the
in the tourist pnssibrhties o
province held by the Ca'.
Pacific.
F. F. HOMUTH
Plum. B., Opt. D., R. 0.
OPTOMETRIST
Phone 118 I arriston, Ont.
"The Best Equipped Optical Ea .
tablishi ent in this part of
Ontario",
.aa�i.�y,�j•YQ-r',,+ 9v4"2•E� 4,lF Aye•
oF/iT
ft
'We hc''" It for
ate
�� le st
ileal every rel y"
``Of course Shredded Wheat is
our breakfast every day in the
year and we sometimes have
it for lunch with luscious ripe
berries and crearn. Shredded
Wheat with milk gives the
childrenVitamin B and the min-
eral salts which theirgrowing
bodies need. Having Shredded
Wheat once a clay they are sure
of getting the needed nutritive
elements—also all the bran
in the whole wheat which, you
know, induces regular habit."
THE CANADIAN SHREDDED \NH) AT
COMPANY, LTD.
Cgnad iarr
Shredded Wheat
is 100% Canadian ,
grana, fiat TWO'
Shredded Wheat
Biscuits a day
and help Canada's,
Pr asperity,
�atf yr -.Y 4*1
ir...
.°oi
WITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT
when a tire blew out near Seaforth
on July 1st, and the car went into
the ditch. Mr. Bolingbroke was bad-
ly cut about the head and face, Mrs.
Bolingbroke had her back injured and
was badly bruised. They are being
attended to in Seaforth Hospital and
expect to be well enough to proceed
to their new hone in a few days.
Their many friends. here are sorry to
Near of their misfortune.
The induction of Rev. W. A. Fin-
lay into the United .Church parish of
Wroxeter and Salem was held in the
Church. Friday evening when a good
attendance greeted the new pastor.
Rev. Anderson of Blyth, addressed
the minister and Rev. Craw of. Luck -
now, the congregation;
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Morrison,
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. S. Leckie and Miss
Georgina Leckie of London, visited
Mrs. Morrison on Sunday.
Miss Beatrice Howe of Leaming-
ton. Public School Staff, is home for
the holidays. She was accompanied
by Miss Langfield and Mrs. Moore -
house and daughters, who spent a
few clays with the Misses Howe.
Not for some time have the people
of this community been so saddened
as on Saturday morning last when
they learned of the death in Wing -
ham Hospital of Mary Francis Mc-
Michael, wife of Mr, Graham Camp-
bell of Morris, and daughter of Mr•
and Mrs. Archie -'McMichael of Wro-
xeter. xet
e Mrs. Campbell was born and
raisedin this community and was
very popular and well thought of by
all. The sudden taking away of one
so young is a severe shock to het
rief- trice t
g ce i s parents, of whom she
was ann]
o child,and-
y to her hus-
band to whom she was married a few
years ago, who have the deepest sym-
pathy of this community She leaves
a tiny baby who will never know its
mother's tender care. The funeral
from her late home is Morris, oge
Monday, was largely attended, show-
ing the respect in which she was held.
atteiNt
PHIR. PS=
a"'�or M£s�v
Ferre 40 ads
INP'GESr'
ACIP STOMACH
ryEAGACNr
GA5E5-NAEA
L
the
ICK stomachs, sour stomachs as
indigestion usually mean excess
acid. The stomach nerves are
over -stimulated.
Too much acid makes the stomacle
and intestines sour. Alkali kills acids.
instantly. The. best form is Phillips
,
.Mille of Magnesia, because one harm-
less dose neutralizes many times its
volume in acid- For .iq years the stan-
dard with physicians e v erye h
Take a spoonful in
water and your
unhappycondition will probably end
in fve minutes.
Then you will olwa,'s
know what to
do Crude and harmful
at
methods will never appeal to 5ru
Co.
prove this for your own sake lI int w
Nave a great many disagreeable le ere.
Be sure to get the genua .: I girl ti's
Milk, of Magnesia prescribed by
physicians '1... irreotina e ec.A odds..
20 ;(3,
ISC
On Mat%a e4 i; ',f eas re Clothing
Throng!, a,. ez ccuzcrxv: tisx i see ciantthtng .Manufacturer", we
are able to offer for a limited time, this big discount (plus sales
tax) on made -to -measure Clothing. The regular selling price is
marked on all samples shown, so you know you are getting a gen-
uine discount These clothes will be made up with the •usual good
cloth and trimming and are guaranteed to fit, which gives you a
rare opportunity to get a Shit or Light Overcoat at bargain priees. •
Davers Sto
Wroxeter
;iS