Halton Hills Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 28 Apr 1948, p. 4

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« ire4nesday. April 28, 1948 THE FLESHERTON ADVANCE THE fleshertoii Advance t^HHished «a Coliiar''ood St., Ittalierton, Wednesday of each weak. Circulation 1,100. Price t^HM) ft year in Canada, paid in adrft:.^e; |2.60 per jrear in tile United 9Ut«s. J. THUK.'m)N. Bditcr Aineric&n^ spend more money on ffum than reU(;ion. Maybo because (rum is used every day Eugenia W.A. Meeting TW regular monthly meeting of B»oeni I Woman's A.s3ociation was held a1 the home of Mrs. W. Gordor «• Wed., April 21st with 16 members mM thrc'f vkiitors present. Mrh. C Mji^ee presided for the devt)t:oiial ^oriod »«4i Mrs. S. Campbell for the re a aainder. Roll call was answered fciT an exchange of flowSr slips. Mrs. G. Ma^e gfHve a report on the eroc- tioa of the porch at the side of the diunch. The May meeting will be fceld at the home of .MJs. J. Ottewell. Mrs. J. Cairns conducted u contest wtoti was won by Mre. G. Mapee amd Uj... r,'. ?; •;i.. .â-  .iniuc'.oJ another <-«iit(s6t, which -was won by Mrs. F. Pedlar, after which lunch was served ky the hostesses, Mrs. S. Campbell JWd Mrs. R. Gonoe. Picture Show In Town Hall FLESHERTON TUESDAY, MAY 4th Public Cowboy No. 1 Gene Autry in "IN OLD MONTEREY55 Cartoon Little Black Sambo "Deep End" Kqiiatic Sort Subject . "Swinging Mallett" Daring H(j,-c;eniaiKship, the most exciting sport â€"Pol olO TWO SHOWS: 7 and 9 P.M. Admission: Adults 40c, Children ^^ e Tea aifht be the Tiedm of fireâ€" fire tliM eaa qniekly deitrojr yoor homi^ your bniinett, yoar property, your whole life'i work. Let Pilot Insnrance accept the riik'â€" ready and quick to pay any jnit claim. The cost ki very low. We write Pilot Iiuaranee to cover selected risks la Automobile, Fire, Personal Property Floater, Borflaryt Plate Glass, Pub- lic Liability and other general insurance. H. W. KERNAHAN FLESHERTON Representing ; PILOT INSURANCE COMPANY Vvalt. !>• '•. ' iL Rivtai 31";, more inilo:t)?o thnn l!r' Im^ mil uifie (lon-lyear it replactd . . . rttra bliiW(«iit |>ri)l(M;tion and super- trnci'fn. Dnvo in an^l iw tlu> new iiii' ^o?^^^ D. MacTavish & Sons, AUTMORIZID GOODl^EAR DEALER DEPARTMENTAL STORE Home of the Fisherman Men's Trout King- thigr rubber boots, Special this week $8.85 Rubber Raincoats $7.95 Jn.soles, Heavy All-wool Socks 75c and 79c Sweaters, Shirts, VVindbreakers, Sjiort Pants, Covercloth Pants, Cottoii Pants, Overall Pants and Overalls DRAPERY DEPT. Vei-y s 'i .1 sclectidn Drapes and Ojrtiins; Congoleum II' •• -mii liy the yard. V/OOL DEPT. V.f luive the best selection in years. MEN'S DEPT. Nand. . ',•• "f.Special" Ready to-W.M| Siiit.s, F.xcoptional quality. LADIES' DEPT. Excoplenal quality in Satin. Choice selection of new Sweaters. MADE-TO-MEASURE Men's ["'ine Shirts, nil sizes j $;i.75 While they last | DEPT. Some new samples; would i>a> ynM to look iheni over. I'liced .S:<8..''i0 to Si^SiO 2 I) »' Ladies' and ('.iris' Mouse Dresses 50c WHAT YOU DON'T SEE, ASK. WE HAVE IT. F. H. W. Hickling ^aeral Merchant FLESHERTON, Ont. â- c Just because the war is orei doesn't mean that women have given up heavy jobs. Mrs. Elvin Sammons is shown helping cut a stand of hardwood bush east of Shclbume oa Highway 10, with her son, Harvie, 8, doing his bit on the other end of the saw. Reproductions courtesy of The Globe and Mail and the Shelburne Free Pi-ess and Economist.) ters. Mrs. John UeUaa, SouthUnt, Art«mesia (Marjr) ; Mrs. David Ni«h- of (Christena) oi Prlceville, and JeAn of Montanna. Mrs. A. Flowers and Williaim predeceased her by sotne years. The funeral was held on Monday aifteiTioon and wa« largely attended by friends aixl neigrhlbors, who caane to pay their last tribute of respeet to a highly esteemed friend. Hev. Mr. Mclnnis of Durham conducted the service and gave a comforting message from the 23nl Psalm. The hymns used w«re "Shall We Gather at tihe River," "O God, Our Help in Ages Past," and "Rook of Ages." The pallbearers were: Wm. Nichol, Cameron Smellie, Elton McLean, John Cook, John 9hortreed, John Stotbart and Cecil Hunter. Flower bearers were: Mr. and Mrs. Gordon McQueen and Kathleen Mle- Lean. Ajnong those from a distance were Mr. and Mrs. Donald McQueen and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon McQueen ot Mt. Forest; Mr. and Mrs. H. McDon- and Mtrs. Hepburn, Mrs. Elsie Osuo- eron, Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Smellie, all of Durham, and Mr. Csuneron Smellie of British Columfcia, Interment was niade in the Pioneer Cemetery, Pi>iceville. A. 4 A- /*. 4, 4. 4 A t Annie Smellie Passes (l!\- Priccville Reporter) A highly respected citizen, in the person of .\nnie Smellie, passed a^^^'ay on Friday. April 23rd, in her 73rd year. She was a daughter of the late William and Mary Smellie and was Dorn ir, Glenelg Township, but spent most of her life !n Toronto. She had been in failiRg health for the past few years. She was of a quiet and loving disposition and \vill be greatly missed among her many friends. Shi- leav,-.-; to mourn two brothers, Duncan of Durham and James otf Port .\rthur, and three sis- Before the war, Japanese comuait- ted hari kari at the rate of 1,500 a year. A A One of the United Kingdom's un- -*â-  unusal e^iports was recently flown to East Africa by British Overseas .A.ir- ways Speed^bird sei-vice. It consisted ^ of a consianraent of ijO.OOO trout .^ eggs â€" the first since the war â€" re- • quired for restocking stx'eams on â- Â» high ground, 6,000 feet up, in Kenya. * The eggs were packed in a sfpecial ^ insulated bo.x, with arrangements fOp « ice to drip down over the shallow trays holding them, throughout their ^ air journey. The eggs travelled well * and began to hatch within two days * after their arrival. During the past winter Elvin Sammons' contract called foi making bush roads for tinuber teams to drag- out logs, and this meant cutting out stumps, too. K lumberjack since he was t7. Mr. Sammons farms in the sum mei in the Feversham area. Since this picture was taken the famil y havp moved back home. Husband And Wife Worked Timber Lot (The following article was taken from the Shelburne Free Press and Bconomist and was put in type sev- eral weeks ago, b\it lack of space prevented using it until now. Mr. and Mrs. Samnins and family have moved back to Feversham.) Ontario pioneer stock is still with us. Blast of here on Highway No. 10. is a 40-4icre tract of fine mixed wood bush, recently resounding to the blows of axes un<l the bite of saws â€" wielded by Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Sam- mons. In sight of the highway is a rough-'boaid cabin, built by the hus- band and the first he has ever made. The husband has the job of cutt- ing logs for a local lumlber mill. He doesn't have to do all the work him- self, for his young wife plays a man's part with woodman's implements, can fall a tree and handle her end of a crusscut saw with whoever steps up. The SaiTiimons come from Fever- sham and their one-room winter .residence houses also their one boy and three girls: Harvie, 8; Shirley. 9; Leola, 6 and Joyce, 4. The older ones can help out in the bush, too. "I've been working in the bush since I was 17." related St) year old Sammons. "I got my start in the Parry Sound district and have been at it every winter since. My wife likes to help a'ld pven has her own saws." ^ When the warm weather came the Samimons family went back to Fev^ ersliiim and IClvin will help on his father's farm and be back in the bush come next freeze-up. In the meantime the etforts t)f this hardy I'iiniily will do a biK bit to .supply lumber for Ontario's domes- lie 11(1 industrial l>uildin«' |)tv>nram this year, and- overy day logs are teamed out to await truekinK to the mill. Most of the wood will go into buildings i>f one kind or another, which draws a contrast to uses for which DulVeiin C'ounty timber has l)iM'n put in the years since the last war begun. a Thanks to the refonst-ation pro- i-i'aana put into ettect a score or more years ago in Old Ontario, the lands south of (ieoiKi^iii Hay Inirc Kdod stands of timber iiiidy for em- ergency u.s,. when the war begun in r,>;til. Within less than three years at least two million feet of maple l«eech, sprue, hemUiok and balsam were taken out of IHltferin Ciumty. with SOOOdO feet shi|iped out of the iioithern half of the county in on,' year alone, some from trees up to N(" feet high. Those were the <lay.s when the tree bad to be e.vaniine«l from the stand- point of it." possible use for plywood, which was coming into use for air- plane building and other special jobs and as each one '"popped up" it was earmarked for shipment under spec- ial consignment to the plywood mills. With the fine lumber going to build Canadian ship and army camips, most folks remember how glad they were to get the cull slabs from the mills and use them to help ease the haixl-fuel shortage. Today the slalbs ai'e well in vogue as fuel and local householders have gone one better in the peacetime battle against another fuel scarcity. The big sawdust piles in the mill yaixls are being tapped to supply sawdust to supply sawdust burning furnaci'M which have supplanted coal, hatdwood and oil in more than one home this winter. "Hut we don't have to worry about fuel," said hardy Mrs. Saimmons. "There's plenty of it hand just out- side the back door." Farmers Are Subsidizing Consumers In Canada In ortler that they acciu-ately ap- praise the food price problem, con- sumers who are clamoring for oleo should be informed thiat because of regulations Canadian farmers are sUbsidiaing Oai>adian consuimei-s to the e.vtent of 15 to 20 per cent of their food costs. If the cattle emibargo. which pre- vents the movement of our cattle to U. S. 'markets, were removed and coarse grains vvere permitted to roll in the direc.tion of higher prices, the Canadian e<'onomy would tiounce uip to the United States level and staple food products would cost Canadian consumers 15 to L'O per cent more than at present. Throughout the war, and since, food piiees in Canada have bei'ii kept lower than they otherwise would have been by Government subsidy and the beneficence of C'an- adian t"armers. Wheat growers have made a substantial contribution to lower fo(vd costs and our long-term contracts with Britain have created present day ceilings that have been bigiily beneficial to all those who consume rather than produce food. Butter and (deo are only n part of the complete foo(Ui)attern in Canada. The argument is not only of butter Versus oleo. k - Farmers' .Xdvocue. She had insisted on taking along eveiy garment she' owned. They arrived at the station loaded witli bagrage. "I wish." said the luib- and thoughtfully, "that we'd brought your piano." "Now, let's luit try to be funny," came the frigid re|)ly. "I'm not trying to be funny." he jaully explained. "I left the tickets on it." "FERGUSON SYSTEM" SPRING TINE CULTIVATOR QUICK, EASY ROW-WIDTH ADJUSTMENT to any "fi-ac- tion of an inch." ADJUSTABLE for CROP-ROW WIDTHS of 28 to 42 in. \E\V TYPE SQUARE TOOL BARSâ€" Improved Design. IMPROPED TOOL BAR CL-^^MPS Hold Shovels Rigidly in Position. ROLLING FIN' with Depth Control. Mole even penetration with ground-level control. Cuts trash and rolls over obstructions without damage. The 18 in. Rolling Fin with Depth Control furnished, as stan<l;i>.d equipment. ^M'oint attachment in less than a minutes. THE NEW "FERGUSON SYSTEM" ' GRAIN DRILL LARGE CAI'ACITY SEED BOX DRILLS THREE TO 13 ROWS CONCAVE DISC OPENERS RIGID, ONE PIECE FRAME PIVOTING ACTION OF AXLE AIDS PENETRATION i'OSlTIVE CHAIN DRIVE GRASS SEED ATTACHMENT FERTILIZER ATTACHMENT MOUNTED ON RUBBER TIRES For the first time in main yt^ius, a basic improvement for more internal run feed of the new Dempster 13x7 in. Single Disc Gram Drill for the Ferguson System. accurate seed drilling has been developed. It is the adjustable the new tVe^l eliminates cban-ing of sprockets or shifting of gear ratios wlien you want to change seeding rate. With it you can adjust seeding rate to meter any size of seed, from ckwer or altalfa to soybeens, with amazing accuracy and convenience. the new adjustable Internal run feed provides easier ohange of seeding rate than with a fluted feed. It provides even greater greater accuracy than the double internal run feed. "FBRGUSON SYSTEM" Grain Drills and Cultivators can be dehvered to you IMMflDI.^TEl.Y from stockâ€" \NO 'ralvcwia '^"' "* ^^RD'-PERCfUSON anTFERGUsSS MOTOR SALES & APPLIANCE DIVISION BEAVER VALLEY CREAMERY Clarksburg, Ont. 4 \ C. V. PORCH and FLOOR Oi\es gotid hard wearing surface $1.65 qt. C. \ Paint ...$5.50 gal., $L50qt. Sun.sct Enamel $1.65 quart We also have on hand Bicycle Enamel Aluminum Paint Wagon and Implement Enamel Varnishes Varnish Stains Paint Brushes 'rinpriitiiH" I'.rush Cleaner Paint Oil Hry Cleaning;- Solvent - Good Seelction ef SUNWORTHY WALL PAPERS We Phone 16 invite you to look over cnr .samples H. C. EBY FEVERSHAIW, Onl.

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