Halton Hills Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 2 Apr 1947, p. 4

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Wednesday, April 2, 1947 THE Fi.SSHERTON ADVANCE â- * THE Heshertoii Advance PaMisbed on Collingwood St., neahcrton, Wednesday of each week. Circulation 1,100. Price JIB.O* R year in Canada, paid in *«Ka»c«; $2.60 per year in the United States. IUBMBBR OF THE C.W.N.A. F. J. THURSTON, Editor VANDELEUR (Intended for Last Week) The final meeting o^f the Farm ♦toruf winter series was hel in thed In the Community Hall on Monday 'Strang, March 24th, which was a â- loat enjoyable agair. The (president, •W5U Ratd^Fe, presided, and after reading o<f communications by the Secretary, Howard Graham, a brief jeriod was spent in answering the questionaire, and the balance of the evening was cQient jn profiressive crokinole and euchre, with ftve table* oS the iformoi- and three of the latter. The winners were: crokinole. Andy Fawcett and Mrs. Anigus Bowles, euchre, Lome Ormaiby ancl Mrs. Andy Fawcett. Each received a piece of glassware. Lunch awa served, during which music was provided by Lome Onmeby with the violin and Mrs. Carl Wilson at the piano. Mrs. Andy Fawcett thanked :'ie Forum for the treat sent her w lilj in hos- pital, and a vote of thanks was ten- dered to the president and secretary, '^hf president often took a sloigh- Lac to the inertings and took his ridU' to the hail, and ti'.c. secretary ha: not missed a meetiig- sin'-i; the Forum started six years ago. H was an interesting 3^;ries and it was un- a::ini..usly i<?ci .cl t^; h'-ld a meeting on-'e a month for at least part of the summer. It i3 hopsi to have a pic- ti>re show or lecture or something of that nature at each meting. Vandeleur Convm'unity Hall now has a piano. The Farm Forum coll ected a fund and Will Ratcliffe and Alex. Gilray ibrought it in from Mar*kdiale in time for the W.I. meet- ing Thursday afternoon. Mr. Chas. Boland of Walkerton spent a week with his daughter, Mrs. Earl iMbrrison, and family. The WJ. met at the Community Hall Thursday afternoon for their Mairch' meeting, with the president, Mrs. Ethel iHiutchinson, ,pTesiding. The roll call was answered with school-day- memories. Mrs. F. Free- man explained the motto: "The world without a Saihbath would be like a man without a smiTe, like a garden without a flower and like a home- stead without a garden. It is the mort joyous day of the year." â€" (Beacher). Mrs. Lundy Johnston, citizenship convener, was unable to be present, but prepared a siplendid paper "The iStranger Within Our Gates," which was read by Mrs. Geo. Shaw. Mrs. Newton Hutchinson gawe a reading "Why Worry?" and Mrs. Alex. Gilray conducted a snow contest. The next meeting will be hdd in the hall on the last Thursday in April. A petition to the Hydro Commission, afponsored by the Farm Forum, urging (priority of Hydro for rural homes, was sigrned by the W. I. Membeirs. Died NICHOL â€" In Owen Sound hos- pital on Monday, Apil Ist, 1947, John Nichol, Snr. of Priceville. At time otf going to presft this Wednesday morning the time of the funeral has not been announced. SE3ND IN TOUR RBNEWAL IMPORTANT GOVERNMENT NOTICE Respecting Price Contiol The following is a convenient summary of Board Order No. 711 â€" published for the guidance and protection of Canadian consumers. It does not give the full legal text. For full details of the law reference ^ould be made to the Order. CLIP THIS' AND KEEP FOR EASY REFERENCE Summary of GOODS AND SERVICES REMAINING SUBJECT TO MAXIMUM PRICE REGULATIONS Aa act forth in Wartime Prices & Trade Board Order No. 711â€" effective April 2, 1947 FOODS • All flours, flour mixes and meals. • Veast. • Bread, bread rolls, and bake- ry products. • Biscuits, except those com- pletely covered with choc- olate. • Processed cereals, cooked or uncooked, including break- fast cereals, macaroni, ver- micelli, spaghetti, noodles and other alimentary paste products. .-»^., ....vv|..k..i|^ vv..'.. r.*.... • Pot and pearl barky. • Shelled com, but not in- cluding popping corn. • Dried peas, soya beans, dried beans except lima beans and red kidney beans. • Starch. • Sugar, sugar cane syrups, corn syrups, grape sugar, glucose. • Edible molasses. • Honey. • Tea, coffee, coffee concent- rates. • Malt, malt extract, malt syrup. • Black pepper and white pep- per, and substitutes contain- ing black or white pepper. • Butter. • Casein. • Cheddar cheese, processed cheese and cream cheese. • Concentr.nted milk products of all kinds. • Ice cream. • Salad and cooking oils, • Salt. • Fresh apples â€" 1946 crop. • Raisins, currants, prunes, dried dates, dehydrated ap- ples. • Tomatoes, tomato sauce, tomato paste, tomato pulp, tomato puree, tomato cat- sup, chili sauce, when in hermetically sealed cans or glass. • Canned pork and beans, canned spaghetti and canned soups. • Canned com, canned pens, canned beans excluding the lima and red kidney varie- ties. • Canned apricots, canned peaches, canned pears, can- ned cherries, canned plums. • Fruits and vegetables in the two preceding items when frozen and sold in consumer size packages. • Jams, jellies, marmalades. • Meat and meat products, not including game, pet foods, and certain varieties of cooked and canned meats. • Sausage casings, animal and artificial. • Live, dressed and canned poultry (but not including tiirkcys, geese or ducks, live, dressed or processed; poultry spreads, poultry stews and poultry in pastry or pie cruat). • Canned salmon, canned sea trout, canned pilchards of the 1946 or earlier packs. • Edible animal and vecetable fats including lards and sbortenings. aOTHING • Men's, youths' and boys' coats, jackets and wind- breakers made wholly or chiefly of leather. • Men's, youths' and boys' suits or pants made wholly or chiefly of cotton or rayon. • Men's, youths' and boys' furnishings as follows: â€" blouses: collars; pyjamas; nightshirts; underwear, other than that made wholly of wool; dressing gowns, other than those made wholly of all-wool fabric; shirts, in- cluding sport shirts other than those made wholly of ,nIl-wool or nll-rayon fabric. • a .;: . It. ...:..- -.. , •!-', chudren's aiiu uiiduLo ^a. ments of all kinds (but not including â€" (a) garments made wholly of all-wool fabric, (b) raincoats, or (c) jackets and windbreakcrs, except when made wholly or chiefly of leather). • Women's, misses', girls' and children's accessories as fol- lows: dickies, bibs, halters, . neckwear, collars, cuffs and aprons. • Knitted wear for either sex as follows: undergarments, other than those made wholly of wool ; circular knit hosiery of cotton or rayon. • Work clothini;. including aprons for cither sex, when made wholly or chiefly of cotton or leather. • Uniforms for cither sex. • Gloves, gauntlets and mitts for either sex when made wholly or chiefly of cotton or leather, except those de- signed ns specialized sports equipment or for specialized industrial uses. • Brassieres; foundation gar- ments, but not including surgical corsets. • Diapers and diaper supports. HOUSEHOLD AND OTHER TEXTILES • Textile products as follows, when made wholly or chiefly of cotton or rayon: bath mats, bedspreads, blankets except horseblanket.s, cur- tains, dish cloths, dish towels, drapes, face cloths, luncheon sets, napkins, pillow cases, sheets, silence cloths, table cloths, throw-overs, toilet seat covers, towels, wash cloths, window blinds, win- dow shades. • Floor rugs and mats chiefly of cotton. DOMESTIC FUELS • Coal, coke and briquettes; until April 16th, 1947. HOUSEHOLD EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES • Furnaces, fire-place heaters and other heating equipment except portable electric heat- ers. • Jacket heaters and other water heating equipment. • Soap and soap compounds. MOTOR VEHICLE ACaSSORIES • Pneumatic tires and tubes when sold for the purpose of or as original equipment on agricultural machinery. CONSTRUCTION PRODUCTS • Lumber of all kinds. • Millwork such as doors, sashes, windows, stairs and gates. • Plywood and veneers. • Pre-cut lumber products de- signed for use in residential or farm buildings, but not including tully pre-fabricated buildings. • Gypsurn board and gypsum lath. • Wallboards and building boards. ' Cr. ' "â- ".". r..?!! pipe and fitt:..t^. • Nails. AGRICULTURAL MACHINERY, IMPLEMENTS, EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES • Practically all items of farm machinery, including plant- ing, seeding and fertilizing equipment, plows, tillage implements and cultivators, haying machinery, harvest- ing machinery, tractors, wag- ons, dairy machines and equipment, sprayers and dusters. • Articles of bam and barn- yard equipment. • Incubators, brooders, poul- try feeding and watering equipment. • Stationary gas engines. " Harness and harness hard- ware. • Barbed wire and other fenc- ing wire and fences. • Binder twine. • Wheelbarrows. • Feeds and feed jjroducts of all kinds except horse meat, pet foods, straw, clam shell and poultry grit. • Fertilizers of all kinds, but not including humus, muck, manure, sphagnum moss or peat moss. • Gopher poisons. • Seed beans and seed peas: • Grains as follows: â€" wheat; barley; oats; flaxseed; buck- v/heat ; rapeseed ; sunflower seed; grain screenings. RAW AND PROCESSED MATERIALS • Basic iron and steel products and alloys, including pig iron, cast iron, scrap, ingots, bars, plate, rods and wire. • Primary, secondary and fab- ricated mill forms of the following non-ferrous metals and their alloys: copper, lead, tin and zinc. • All tats and oils, including Vitamin A oils, of animal, vegetable or marine origin but not including refined me- dicinal cod liver oil." • Glue stock, glues and adhes- ives of animal origin. • Starches. • Fibres, raw or processed, as follows: cotton, hemp, jute, sisal, all synthetic ftbres and filaments excepting glass. • Yams and threads '>f. or con- taining any of the fibres list- ed above. • Fabrics, over 13 inches in width whether knitted or woven of, or containing any of the yams and threads re- ferred to above. • Sewing, embroidry and cro- chet yams, threads and floss of any of the yams and threads referred to above. • Bobbinet, dress and curtain nets and netting. • Elastic yams, fabrics and webbing. • Hides and skins from animals of a type ordinarily pro- cessed for use as a leather. • Leathers and synthetic leath- ers of all kinds. • Sheepskin shearlings, tanned, but not further processed than combed or sheared and coloured cr. the ficzh vAr PULP AND PAPER • Wa-tepaper. • Wood pulp, except (a) di-.solving grades, (b) "alpha" grades of bleach- ed sulphate, (c) "Duracel", (d) groundwood and un- bleached sulphite grade ^i sold for the m.inufncturc of newsprint or hanging paper. • Newsprint paper except when sold by manufacturers there- of. • Paper board used in the manufacture of solid fibre or corrugated shipping c.iscs. • Boxboard grades of paper- board, except for wrapping newsprint paper or makini; newsprint cores. CONTAINERS AND PACKAGING MATERIALS • Containers, packaging and wrapping devices of a type used for the sale or shipment of products, when made from a textile fabric and including bags, cases, envelopes, fold- ers and sacks. SERVICES • Transportation of goods and services associated therewith. • Warehousing; dry storage of general merchandise and household goods other than â-  wearingapparel;coIdstorage, including rental of lockers and ancillary services such as processing charges in cold storage plants. • Supplying of meals or refresh- ments for consumption on the seller's premises, the supplying of beverages (ex- cept alcoholic beverages) by purveyors of meals oj re- freshments; the supplying of meals with sleeping accom- modation for a combined charge, but not including the supplying of meals, refresh- ments or sleeping accom- modation by an employer to his employees, directly or through a servant or agent. • The packing or packaging or any other manufacturing pro- cess in respect of any goods subject to maximum prices, when performed on a ..-uston;! or commission ba&is. USED GOODS • Used bags and used bagging and baling materialj Any material shown above proceaaed for incorporation Into, or any fabricated component part of any of the above goods ia subject to maximum prices. Also any set which contains an article referred to above is subject to maximum prices even though the remainder of the set consists of articles not referred to. DONALD GORDON, Chairman. Wartime Prices and Trade Board. THE WARTIME PRICES AND TRADE BOARD .J In Stock For Safe HAND and ELECTRIC CREAM SEPARATOR^ Some good reconditioned Separators Milking Machines Hand Washers Walking Plows Smoothing Harrows Steel Wheel Wagons Rubber Tire Wagons Beatty Pumps, Cylinders, Fittings, iWater Bowk, Litter Carrier Buckets iand Bucket Steds Whedlbarrow Wheek and Bearings 3 H.P. WOODS ELECTRIC GRINDER Good stock of repairs for the following machines : Cockshutt, Frost A Wood, Fkury-BUsell, Beatty ~ Peter Hamilton, Renfrew Cream Separator and Stoves W. E. BETTS Phone 46J FLESHERTON 12th LINE, OSPREY (Intended for Last Week) We are sorry to reiport Master Wayne Maxwell, puipil oi iS.S. No. 6, bedifast, I>r. Lindsay in attendance. Now, that makes people think, when one in the house takes ser- iously ill on these back roads, with no doctor within miles. A drive has to meet the doctor and then drive to be made with horse and cutter him back. Surely, in the near fu- ture, we will have our roads open, so that we can take a look at the outside world in time of trouble. Mrs. Morton Sayers and three daughters visited over the week end at Beeton with another daughter, Edith, and son-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Alex. Maxwell, Shir- ley and Royden, entertained their friends and neighbors on Saturday evening to a progressive euchre party, when a good time was enjoy- ed by all. Miss Grace Wright, teacher at S. S. No. 6, is at her parental home this wepk. We understand that Mr. Lorne Wright has purchased a new tractor and plow. Good luck, Lorne- Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Dobson have invested in a new Super DeLuxe Ford for their health and enjoyment in the future. That is good busin- ess. You can't take the money away with you. Good luok. Mr. Editor, you know while there is life there is hope. W. L. Hamil- ton's snow plow i? winding its way in from the pipeline on the Meaford Road, working Ea.st. Mrs. Jas. McKenzie and lone vis- ited with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Lanktree. at Revanna. STH LINE OSPREY Farm Forum met at the home oif Mr. and Mrs. J. Crawford last Mon- day evening. Misses Helen and Naomi Somers of Mildmay spent the week end at their parental home hre. Quite a numher fi-om this line went to M«rkdale hoapital last week. Mrs. Walter Lawler tindex- went an operation Friday, Mrs. Fred Hale and Mrs. Mervin Davidson are also patients in the hospital. Mr. Jas. Ottewell went t" titut hospital Monday, where he received treat- ment for gall trouble, returning to his home Wednesday. Little Kath- erine Haley, who has been in the hospital for the past three or four weeks with a broken leg, is still ...xiiiv;. Vvu hope for all these foL. a very sipeedy recovery. A number of folk from this line attended the hockey game between Markdale and Shellbume in the Markdale arena Friday night. Mark- ale is champion of the Central On- tario League. We are glad to report Mr. John Stephens out again, after being quite ill with the 'flu the past week. We are very sorry to report that Ml. A\ex. Carson is quite ill at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Gerald Magec. Mr. and Mrs. E. Leggate are busy moving to the farm of Mrs. Geor?e Lawler. They expect to be eom- plctL»ly moved this week. We wel- come Mr. and Mrs. Leggate and family to our community. Miss Muriel Weldrick of the 10th line is attending to household duties at the home of Mervin Davidson. FEVERSHAM GETTING READY FOR SPRING "SUNWORTHY" WALL PAPERS The new 1947 patterns are ready Brandram- Henderson Paints Interior and Exterior Paints Floor Lustre Porch Floor Paints Varnishes and Enamels Paint and Kalsomine Brushes Floor Wax Self -polishing Wax Lemon Oil Johnson's Glo Coat Furniture Polish MEN'S WORK BOOTS A large selection of reliable footwear for heavy work; sizes from 6 to 11. Prices range from $3.95 to $6.50 F. H. W. HICKLING General Merchant FLESHERTON, Ont. T (Intended for Last Week) IMr. and Mrs. Henr>- Alexander _ spent a few days in Creemore last * week, returning Sunday with Ivan -• .Alexander and family. â€" Mr. Drope of the Orangeville ~ branch of the Bank of Toronto, is 1 relieving at the bank here for Mr. - Hannah, who is still confined to his * home. - We are sorry to hear that Mr.s â- * Mervyn Davidson and Mrs. Fred *" Hale are both coniined to Markdale * hospital. '" A large crowd from here attend- ^ ed the final C.O.H.A. hockey game Z. in Markdale Friday night. ... V * KK».'5?«»4it.

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