Flesherton Advance, 1 Aug 1945, p. 8

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

4 â- pp â- M Wednesday, August 1, 1945 THE FLESHERTON ADVANCE NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE MATTER of the Estate of Matilda Pedlar, of the Village of Flesherton deceased. . All persons having claims against the estate of Matilda Pedlar, late of Village of Flesherton, in the County of Grey, deceased, who died on or about the l.Sth day of May, i;)45, are hereby notified to send in to \V. E. Harris, Solicitor for the Admin- istrators of the estate of the said de- ceased, on or before the Kith day of August, li>45, full particulars of the claims. Immediately after the sai;! date the .Administrators will distribute the assets of the said de- ceased, having regard only to the claims of which they shall then have notice, to the exclusion of all others, and they will not be liable to any person of whose claim they shall not then have notice of for the assets So distributed or any part thereof. Dated at Markdale this 24th day of July, i;j45. â€" W. E. Harris, Markdale, Ontario, Solicitor for the Administrators. NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE MATTER of the Estate of Wm. Alexander Gordon, of the Township of Artemesia, deceased. All persons having claims against the estate of Wm. Alexander Gordon, late of the Township of Artemesia, in the County of Grey, fariper, de- ceased, who died on or about the 21st day of July, 1945, are hereby notified to send in to W. E. Harris, Solicitor for the Executors of the estate of the said deceased, on or before the 27th day of August, 1945, full par- ticulars of the claims. Immediately after the said date the Executors will distribute the assets of the said de- ceased, having regard only to the claims of which they shall then have notice, to the exclusion of all others, and they will not be liable to any person of whose claim they shall not then have notice of for the assets so distributed or any part thereof. Dated at Markdale this 31st day of July, 1946. â€" W. E. Harris, Markdale, Ontario. Solicitor for the Executors. Continental Europe Needs Food Imports The outlook for local food supplies spect of improvement. Continental Europe, according to the recent re- port issued by the Office of Foreign Agricultural Kelations, definitely in- dicates a large import need for th' remaining month (July) of the cur- rent consumption ju.'ar (August 1, 11)44 to July ;n, 11>45) and for the subsequent twelve months. The' United Nations, states the report, face a situation which holds no pro- spec of improvemlent. Continental Europe's supply of food from dom- estic sources in the consumj)tion year 1945-46 will be the s.mallest since the outbreak of war. The decline from the 1M4-45 level may amount from 5 to 10 per cent for the con- tinent as a whole. But total sup- plies do not tell the Whole story â€" distribution is equally important. In view of these circumstances, es- pecially the prospective decline in the production of food for the con- sumption year 194/5-4€ and a net de- cline in the production of food for the consumption year 1946-46 and a net deterioration in the effectiveness of agricultural and distribution con- trols, iniport requirements for a lib- erated Continental Europe will be large. Considering these require- ments, not in terms of probable ef- fective demand or availability of supplies and shipping, but only in terms of the quantity necessary to bring about some im- provement in liberated countries and prevent large-scale starvation in en- emy countries, a total of about 12 million short tons of food would be needed for the Continent in 1945-46. This total could consist largely of wheat but should also include sub- stantial quantities of fats and ani- mal-protein foods as well as sugar. {• t + Tt iTiifi iTi iTiiTi iTi -*"*- -*- -*- -•- »- -'--" -â- - -•- -•- -â€"--•-.•- â-  â- l • .». • • â- __»__*â- â- Â»â- â- â™¦â- â- Â»â-  .♦._»._»..», .T^j. * Ordered Clothing For Discharged Personnel Orders for Suits and Overcoats made-to- measure for members of the Armed Forces now receiving their discharge have beeh ac- corded priority in deUvery, zmd allotted spec- ial ranges of patterns from -which to make a selection, which are not available to civilians. On producton of Priority Certificates we shall be glad to take orders. TIP TOP TAILORS SUITS and OVERCOATS $29.75 W. R. JOHNSTON SUITS and OVERCOATS $27.50 $32.50 $36.50 Every garment made and tailored to your individual measure... Fit and satisfaction guaranteed. A good range of sizes and patterns in stock. Priced from $25.95 F. H. W. Hickliag They Are Coming Home Day after day, by boat and plaue our boys are returning home. Not by regiments or units, but singly, in pairs and in groups, to scatter In this order to their homes and loved ones across the Dominion. Gone are the days when the proud county reg- iments, detrained at the county town for demobilization with colors flying bands playing, to be greeted by the people, who saw them march away to fight. All the glamour of the past has disappeared. They arrive home and are met by friends and relatives, without fuss or public demonstration and quietly pass into the ranks of civilian life. Perhaps these hoys, who have passed through the horr- ors of a terrible war, would rather have it this way. They want a quiet and restful atmosphere w^ith their families rather than bands, sipeeches and cheers. During their excile from home, they have lived in strange places, endured untold hard- ships and during this period, when they had a few moments to' them- selves, their thoughts were centered on home and loved ones. Their letters prove this conclusively. Reading many of them which are brought to us from time to time, they modestly refrain from details of the fighting, ffhey may mention a few perhaps, but if you read them carefully, you will always find that their thoughts of home are uppermost in their minds. ^ Yes, they are coming home. This is their great moment and the one thoy have been thinking and praying for during: the years they have spent away from it. The bands, flags and cheering are absent, but the welcome home to our boys and girls is just a-i sincere perhaps more so, than the rublic demonstration of the past. orary pasture areas otherwise im- practical to fence, and the enclosure in the fields of untillable lands that otherwise might be wasted As a rule, one or two wires are sufficient to carry the electric current. One wire is sufficient for horses and cat- tle. Two wires are considered pre- ferable for pigs and sheep. The wire can be supported by porcelain insulators on 2 by 2 inch stakes sei in the ground 30 to 40 feet apart. Be Exorcised Electric Fendss Control Livestock In Fields Live stock as a rule need little training to keep away from electric fer.ces. Observations show that an- imals Jearn very quickly and do not approach a fence even when it is not "charged. On one farm a wet battery was used on an electric fence throughout the summer months la.st year for pasturing cat- tle. The cattle were well controlled no harm wa? done to the cattle or the attendant, and the battery was still charged at the end of the sea- son. The use of electric fences is gra- dually becoming more widely adopt- ed for pastures. These fences have many advantages but care is neces- .sary. in establishing the equipment. .Among the adavntages are reduc- tion of cost in erecting temporary fences, reduction of expenditure for wire, posts, and gates, reduction of in.iury to live stock; the adaption in the west to winding coulees or temp- WARNING Any person or persons found guil- ty of dumping refuse less than eight '8) rods from the road allowance at the Flesherton municipal dumping grounds will be subject to a penalty of a S50.00 fine. By order of â€"THE COUNCIL General Merchant FLESHEP^^N ♦♦♦+**+*********4.*4.******4.*.l.^.2.«*.I..;.<..:.^.ij..j.4..i..:..i... Closed THIS STOKE WILL BK CLOSED FOR ONE WEEK COMMENCING JULY ,30TH: OPEN AUG. 7TH F. T. HILL & Co., Ltd. M A R K I) A L E, Phone 7 ONT. The horrors disclosed by the cap ture of the Nazi concentration camps were at frist hard to believe. Almost desperately we tried to think they must be wildly exaggerated. But such a puny barricade cannot stand u,p against the terribje facts. The evidence is too conclusive. It will be a long, long time before our eyes will cease to see those pictures of naked corpses piled like firewood, be fore we can forget that scores of honorable, competent observers tell us they saw with their own eyes. What does it mean? That Germans are beyond the pale of humanity? No, not that. Mass cruelty in most revolting forms has not been confin- ed to Germany. We have seen photo- graphs that missionaries smuggled out of raped Nanking. We have read the affidavits of men who es- caped from the Soviet-held Baltic states and eastern Poland. We know, too, the frightful things that have happened in this country when lyn- ching mobs ran wild â€" things so hor- rible that they can be told only in whispers. No, the horror of the Nazi concen- tration camps is the horror of hu- manity itself when it has surrender- ed to its capacity for evil. When wtf look at the pictures from Buchenwald we are looking, to be sure, at the frightful malignity of Nazism. But we are looin also into the very pit of hell which men dislose yawning within themselves when they reject the authority of the moral law, when tliey deny the sacredness of human personality, when they turn from the worship of their own wills, their own states, their own lust for power. These memorials of Nazi infamy reveal the depths to which humanity can sink, and has sunk in these frightful years. They i-eveal the aw- -ful fate which may engulf all civil- ization unless these devils of our pride and of our ruthlessness and of the cult of force are exorcised. And they reveal that the salvation of man, the attainment of peace, the healing of the nations, is at the last a religious problem. The diplomats may mark out what boundary lines they please, but if man continues his self-worship, the pit yawns for us all. The foul stench of the concentra- toin camps should burden the Chris- tian ctiiiscience until Christian men cannot rest. Our contempt for the sacredness of lifa, our worship at the shrine of cur own power, has gone so far that it has taken these horrors to shock us into awareness of the tragic fate toward which we are stumbling. Buchenwald and the other concen- tration camps spell doom. But it is not simply the doom o(f the Nazis; it is the doom of man unless he can be brought to woi.ihip the living God. Grocerâ€" "Well, little man, what can I do for you?' Bo_y â€" "My mother sent me to get fhange for a dollar bill, and said she would give you the dollar bill to- morrow." FOR S.ALE â€" Eaton separator No. 6, in go'od condition, also cow chain 40 feet long.â€" Thos. Taylor, Flesherton. 9p2 IF YOU WANT DEPEKDABJLITY YOU WANT GOODYEAR Local and I'ersouai Master Bob Mc€racken is spend- ing this week at Watford. .Vliss Arlene Taylor of Toronto spent the past week in town. Miss Jean McCracken of Toronto was home on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Parker visited in Toronto on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Best m^oved last Thursday to the Hoy residence. Mrs. W. H. Thurston and Dell are spending this week at Grand Bend. Mr. E. D. Bentham and son, Dick, of Toronto are visiting the former's mother, Mrs. R. Bentham. Miss Louise Cargoe of Toronto is on vacation with her mother, Mrs. J. Cargoe. Mr. J. J. Benson of Hamilton vis- ited recently with Mr. and Mrs. R. Gorley. Mr. Clarence Alexander of Owen Sound spent the past week at his home. Mr. and Mrs. Fred McTavish of North Bay are visiting with the former's father, Mr. D, McTavish. Mr. Jas. E. Wilson of Owen Sound spent the week end with his father, Mr. Mark Wilson. Mr. and Mrs. Angus Avis and Joan are holidaying at a summer resort near Orillia. Miss Ollie McDonald of Toronto is holidaying this week" with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. John McDonald. Mr. Gordon McRae of Heathcote spent Thursday with his mother, Mrs. A. McRae. Miss Esther Magee of Thornbury spent several days last week with Mr. and Mrs. R. Gorley. Miss Grace Parker of Toronto is vacationing with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Parker. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Bennett and family of Toronto spent the week end with MV. and Mrs. G. A. Mc- Tavish. , Mr. and Jlrs. Willard McDonald and daughter of Hepworth visited over the week end with the former's father, Mr. Arthur McDonald. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Stewart and two sons of Windsor are holidaying this week with the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Stewart. Messrs. Jos. Field, Burton E. Field and Bruce of Toronto are holidaying this week with district relatives and friends. We are pleased to know that Burt is improved in health. Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Blakeley of St. Thomas have spent the past week as guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. W. A'dams and visited with other relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil McKechnie and family visited over the week end with the former's parents at Malton and attc-ndeh the McKechnie and Anderson reunion on Sunday. Jack Graham and family of Fev- ersham and Ernie Graham and fam- ily of Barrie and Bill Graham of Livelong. Sask., spent the week end with Minnie Graham in the valley. Mrs. C. Armstrong and twin sons, Robert and Ronald from Samia, Ont. are visiting their aunt, Mrs. V. Doupe and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. Haney, Eugenia Falls. Mr.- and Mrs. Robt. Gorley visited the first of the wpp.I.- with their niece. Mrs. Alfred Hill and Mr. Hill at Orange Valley. Mrs. Hill is re- covering nicely from her recent ill- ness. Congratulations are extended to Mrs. D. McLeod, who observed her 89th birthday on Thursday last, July 2fith. Mrs. McLeod is enjoying fair healtli and we wish her many more bhlhclay celebrations. Master Alex. Henderson is holiday- ing at Mt. Forest for two weeks. He took his pony with him amd also his little dog for company, so will have transportation to see the sights at Mt. Forest. He is becoming quite a horseman. Small Ads FOR SALE â€" Young sow due Aug, 16 â€" John A. Shortreed, Priceville. FOR SALE â€" Field of mixed hay.â€" D. W. Adams, Flesherton. 8c2 FOR S'ALE â€" 7 pigs, ready to wean. â€" Jim Magee, Eugenia, phone Feversham 5rlL 9pl FOR SALE â€" Hot plate, 2-bumerr in good condition. â€" ^Mrs. Z. Randall Flesherton, phone 43rll. 8p2_ FO'R SALE â€" Young pigs ready to go. â€" F. Eagles, phone 41r3 Flesherton. 9cl POiR SALE â€" Durham cow, 10 years old, due August 1st. â€" Fred. Russell, phone 30r4 Markdale. FOR SALE â€" Entire standing crop- of hay, wheat and oats. â€" Geo. Field, R. R. 1, Flesherton. 9p2. FOR SALE â€" Field of timothy and alfalfa hay. â€" Wilfred Lever^ phone 33rl4 Flesherton. 8c? WANTED â€" Aninukla raitable for mink and fox feed.â€" 'Bert Kclntosft Eugenia, phono, Fev«r8hr~i 6r25 NOTICE â€" No fishing, picking- berries or trespassing on lot 24» con. 7, Artemesia. â€" Harry Genoe, Flesherton. 8p3. FOR SALE â€" Stable and hay loft^ 31 ft. long, 27 ft. wide, 16 ft. high to roof. â€" J. W. MeMullen, Cey- lon, phone 44r2 Flesherton. FOR SALE â€" 10 acres of mixed al- falfa and timothy hay. â€" Chas. Newell, Rock Mills, phone Flesh- erton 75rll. FOR SALE â€" 10-acre field of fall wheat, good crop, clean. â€" A. F. Pedlar. Eugenia, phone Feversham 5 r 31. &p2 LOST â€" A heart-shaped yellow gold locket near dam at Eugenia Falls. Reward. Box 250 The Advance Office. 9p2. LOST â€" In Flesherton, leather key case with 3 keys, liberal reward. Finder please leave at The Ad- vance office. FOR SALE â€" 12 conub honey sup- ers; cow, five years old, with calf three years old. â€" Minnie Graham. Markdale, R.R. 4, phone Flesherton 73r38. 9c2 HOUSEKEEPER WANTED â€" By Sept. 1st for home in Owen Sound, complete charge, 3 in family. Send written replies to Box 275 at The Advance office. LOST or STRAYED â€" One beagle hound, black, white and tan, lame on left front foot anyone knowing whereabouts please notify Fred Brown, Feversham, Ont. FARM FOR SALE Part Lot .^3 and Lot 34, Con. 11, .\rtemesia Township, beside Eugen- ia Hydro Lake, containing 120 acre? with good buildingSi bank barn and frame house, hard and soft watei farm is well watered; about 20 acres of bush. A good buy for the right person. â€" Bert Magee, Eugenia. Phone- Feversham 5rll. 9p4' More tons are hauled on Goodyear truck tires than on any other kind. There's a reason for this fact ... a sound, logical reason. Goodyear fruck tires have proved fbeir c/epenc/ab/7/f/ ond superiorify to more fruck tire users. Yes, with truck tire users . . . men who know . . . Goodyear All- Weather, with the exclusive diamond tread design, have proved they give greater mileage . . . greater traction . . . lower cost-per-mile of service. HEADQUARTERS FOR GOODjfVEAR TIRE SERVICE D. McTAVISH & SONS FLESHERTON REPAIRS - VULCANIZING - RECAPPir 'vm^ ^Xi. NOTICE Flesherton Planing and Chopping Mill will be closed the week begin- ning August l3fh to .^.u^ust 18th. NOTICE TO CREDITORS LIGHTNING AND FIRE ARE DISASTROUS Consult GARNET MAGEE, Agent EUGENIA AUTOMOBILE, FIRE, BURGLARY^ PLATE GLASS AND GENERAL INSUR,ANCE Confederation Life Insurance IN THE MATTER of the Estate of Geo. McKe'izie, of the Township of .\rtemesia, deceased. All persons having claims against the estate of Geo. McKenzie, late of the Township of .Artemesia, in the County of Grey, retired farmer, de- ceased, who died on or about the 10th day of July, liM5, are hereby notified to send' in to W. E. Harris, Solicitor for the Administratrix of the estate of the said deceased, on or before the 27th day of August, 1945, full par- ticulars of the claims. Immediately after the said date the Administra- trix will distribute the assets of the said deceased, haying regard only to the •claims of which she shall then have notice, ttt the exclusion of all others, and she will not be liable to any person of whose claim she shall not then have notice of for the assets so distributed or apy part thereof. Dated nt Markdale this 31st day of July, 1945. â€" W. E. Harris, Markdale, Ontario. Solioitgr for the .Administratrix. BUSINESS CARi^S DR. T. D. PARK PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Graduate of Toronto University Office: Kennedv Block Phone 77 Flesherton WALTER E. HARRIS Barrister and Solicitor Markdale^ Ont. Walter E. Harris. J. Arkle Dunlop. Flesherton: Saturday afternoon. C. J. BELLAMY Commissioner for Taking Affidavlte Clerk of the Village of FleshertoB Issuer of Marriage Licenses Conveyancing Wills, Mortgages and Deeds FLESHERTON, ONTARIO -. WM. K\ITTING LICENSED AUCTIONBB* for the County of Grey ^ Parin and Stock sales our sp -"alty. Terms: reasonable. Satisfaction la gijarante'sd. Dates arranged at "Hw Advance office or phone ♦â- Â«!.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy