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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1955-08-17, Page 10!? SP’.ng© Ten Tlie Wingham Advance-Times, Wednesday, August 17, 1955 * TWO TRUCKS, CAR INVOLVED IN CRASH A three-vehicle collision on county line, north of Hanover, caused damage extirpated at $200. No one was injured. A truck driven south by Aldred Bweiger, Hanover, was in collision With the rear of anothei" truck driven fry Gerald Ahrens, R.R. 3, Hanover, 'ijmshing the latter vehicle into the badk of the car of Verne Snider, who bad stopped to permit traffic to pass before attempting to turn into his -driveway, police said. Constable Eldred Rodtka, of Han- rover, investigated. Lyceum Theatre £ ■ Tliurs., FrL, Sat., Aug. 18-19-20 “A Bullet Is Waiting” (Color) Jean Simmons Rory Calhoun No Matinee Saturday Mon., Tues., Wed., Aug. 22-23-24 “Here Comes The Groom” SCOUT CORNER M ■ is supervisor ofa =COTY here. their BARN DESTROYED Kincardine with County public were Sun- VISITOR STUDIES BRUCE SCHOOLS Casual Cologne in your choice of fragrance V Aimant, L’Origan, Emeraude, Tour billon, Cordon Vert Enough glass to provide four-foot by six-foot picture windows in 450 living rooms is in Imperial Oil’s new engineering building at Sarnia. Installation of one of the scores of huge panes that give the. low-slung, two-storey building the appearance of a glass and porcelain “sandwich” is shown at right, Another feature of the building, scheduled for completion this fall, is the circular lecture hall (left) lociSr-d in front of the main block. -I 1 ■1 1 : use y6ur ^av(,r,te vWVw Coty fragrance g a H Bing Crosby Jane Wyman _ ^fliiiBiiMnwiiaiiiaiiiaiiniiiaiilaiiiaiiiaiiiii f! r u 1 [ F- t ■ 1 j Sid i I &:lI / 4* s*-® £*..■ ■ mm?*®®?H|Al7HAT,C^a CA^lFTorCpTTAQE TiigN of a #■ HEATERS ip UK I ■ MOUNT circulators low as $69.95 big heaters with I optional •— □ ------ , $11*-^ I I £ $ Pattison Radio & Electric Phone 171-J Wingham Interest in Scouting in Canada has been sharpened recently by the coming World Scout Jamboree at Niagara-on-the-Lake, which starts to­ morrow, and to which about 11,000 Scouts from all over the world will be coming, As a result of the Jam­ boree, publicity for the Scout move­ ment has been appearing in news­ papers and magazines and on the radio for some considerable time. A recent article of interest appeared in the last issue of MacLean’s Maga­ zine, explaining why the Scout move­ ment had survived for almost fifty years, in spite of ups and downs and a couple of world wars in between. The writer attributed the survival and growth of the Scout movement to its universal appeal to boys of all ages and under almost every condition. People involved in the movement are expecting a great impetus for it in the near future, as a result of the Jamboree at Niagara-on-the-Lake. For never have so many people in this country heard so much about Boy Scouts before. A great number of people, many of them not now con­ nected with Scouting, will be visitors at the Jamboree, and it is hoped that many of them will go home and take an active part, in some way or other, in the Scout movement. . 6 - b - 0 Wingham Scouts are still hoping be able to attend the Jamboree visitors sometime during this week next, although definite plans have not yet been made. At first it was hoped that a busload of Scouts would make the trip, but Walkerton and Luck­ now Scouts, who it was hoped would help make up the busload, were unable to get organized, and the plan had to be abandoned. At the moment of writing it is ex­ pected that private cars will take a number of the local boys to the Jam­ boree, returning the same night. to as or 31/zc £ ONLY b 7 COTY Feel Cool Refreshed In Canada observing education methods, S. K. Banerjee, of Bombay, India, paid a visit to J. M. Game, Bruce school inspector. Mr. Banerjee, who education in'West Bengal, is in Kin­ cardine under the Colombo plan and finds the contrasts in schools and curriculum great. He has supervision of 46 inspectors, 12,000 teachers and 300,000 pupils. His education was furthered as he was introduced to a Canadian deli­ cacy, corn on the cob, while The Ontario Department of Lands and Forests is establishing a pro­ vincial park at Sauble Falls on the Sauble River in Bruce County. The park is two miles from Sauble Beach and will, provide a place where per­ sons, who come to the beach to swim and enjoy the breezes of Lake Huron, may eat their lunch. It will not solve the main problem at the .beach which is lack of toilet facilities, and places for swimmers to change clothes. perished that de- of Flet- Sixty pigs and nine calves Thursday in a $20,000 stroyed a barn on the cher Fisher just east Almost the entire hay Neighbors kept the fire from spread­ ing to a second barn, the house and a field of ripe hay until firemen ar­ rived from Goderich. Workers were threshing at 9.30 a.m. when the mach­ ine was stopped to remove straw that had been winding around the The straw exploded into flames it could be cleared. The fire ripped through the ing within minutes. One bull was led to safety but heat prevented rescuers from reaching the calves and pigs. blaze farm of Benmiller. crop was lost. shaft, before build' CARE OFFERS SPECIAL LAOS AID PARCELS CARE aid for “Bamboo Curtain” refugees and other needy people in free Indo-China is being extended to Laos as well as to Vietnam, where CARE was the •'first private agency to come to the aid of the Indo- Chinese people after the cease-fire. On information from its mission chief that actual famine conditions exist in Laos, CARE is now ready­ ing for immediate distribution to Laotian refugees and needy farmers who are suffering from two succes­ sive droughts a series of four special food, mosquito netting, cotton cloth-, ing material and blanket packages, ranging in price from $4 to $6. The special food package, available to Canadian donors at $5, contains over 25 pounds of rice, salted fish, sea salt and other nourishing foods, all chosen with a view to the dietary needs and customs of the Laotian people. The cotton package, at $6, contains ten ..yards of cotton drill, 1,600 yards of sewing thread, 25 sewing needles, 64 buttons, a towel and a pound of laundry soap; a 30 x 7% foot mosquito net is $5; and the woolen blanket package $4. Distribution of food and other packages for Vietnam and Laos is closely supervised by CARE Mission personnel and is strictly on the basis of need. Orders for any of these packages, or contributions in any amount to the CARE aid program for non-Communist Indo-China, may be sent to CARE-Canada, 116 O’Con­ nor Street, Ottawa. Donors who contribute the full price of any of these packages will receive the cus­ tomary CARE overseas receipt sign ed by the recipient family or institu­ tion. SCIENCE IN YOUR LIFE )< >< Twenty-four picnic tables placed in the park previous to day, July 17th, All tables were in use on Sunday, which as the park is not on Fifty additional tables the park before the Three wells have been several simple -iron fireplaces have been placed in the park. The park comprises of eight acres of property owned By the Ontario Hydro Electric Power Commission, with three-quarters of an acre owned by the Township of Amabel, hoped that the County of Bruce may also agree to eight acres of county forest being used for This land adjoins the and lies between the and the river. It is park, including the hydro and county property, will be large enough to al­ low tenting. There is a real need for tenting areas as these, as many fami­ lies prefer to vacation in this way rather than renting a cottage. • The Depoartment of Lands and For­ ests has set up a division of Parks in the fall of 1954. The division will ad­ minister the parks which have already been established and also develop new ones. In Northern Ontario desirable sites that are still in the Crown will be reserved for parks, but in South­ ern Ontario it will be necessary to purchase the sites. is surprising a main road, are to be in 1956 season, installed, and along It is park purposes, hydro property township road doubtful if the The hydro property at Sauble was used as the site of a generating plant that supplied electricity to the Town of Wiarton. A survey of property sites was made in the fall of 1954, and a number of ideal locations along Lake Huron and Georgian Bay were locat­ ed. Several along Lake Huron have very fine beaches. The various river authorities in the Huron District are also establishing parks, therefore, the survey did. riot cover areas in these authorities. It is very fortunate that the towns along Lake Huron are located on very fine beaches. These are open to the public. The following towns have ex­ ceptionally fine beaches—Grand Bend, Bayfield, Goderich, Kincardine, Port Elgin and Southampton. Many state parks in the United States have been donated by private industries. It is suggested that there are citizens in Ontario who may wish to leave a legacy to their community or the province and could offer their property to the province of the river authority to be used as a recreational area. . / MILL FOR CHESLEY The Elmwood Co-Operative has an­ nounced that the contract for the erection of its new feed and chopping mill on the Henkel Mill site, Chesley, has been given to John Fleming and Sons, of Hanover. Plans call for a Q building 40 feet by 70 feet, consisting of a one-storey Warehouse and a three-storey mill sec­ tion. Two 40-foot silos will be erected. It is expected in operation by ber. This building year-old flour mill destroyed last February. that the will the mill will be middle of Octo- re’place the 80- by fire Huron, BYPU GROUP . ENJOYS CAMP Camp Hermosa, on Lake north of Goderich this week is playing host to 60 Baptist Young People from Middlesex-Lambton Guelph and Owen Sound Associations. The BYPU members are enjoying a full program of activties which in­ clude swimming, Bible instruction, in­ terest groups, sports arid camp fires. Now you can be a spendthrift with your favorite Coty fragrance. New Casual Cologne brings you the true note of Coty "world-famous perfume at a new low price in a new large bottle. Use it lavishly for that wonderfully, fragrantly cool and refreshed feeling. PHONE 53 ' WINGHAM Y in FLANNELETTE BLANKETS Seconds of a Reg. $5.95 Line Size 70 x 90 ........... SPECIAL $4.44 Pr* Seconds of a Reg. $5.50 Line Size 70 x 80 ..............SPECIAL $3.88 Pr- €DIGHOFF€RS “The Friendly Store” Phone 71 Wingham Vacation Tips Vacation time can be fun time—if you make the proper preparations before you take your vacation trip. If you are one of the 28,000,000 persons who will be taking a vaca­ tion trip during the next six months, it is likely that you will take the family car and will clock some 1,000 miles on it before you are through. There will be sun-burned backs, upset ‘ stomachs, and car-sick kid­ dies and adults galore before the summer is over You can insure a happy vacation by following a simple check list of MUSTS 1 Check your dentist. A tooth­ ache far from home can be catas­ trophic. 2. Check your doctor Bonamine, lhe motion sickness drug, will keep car or air sickness from shattering your vacation. Clinical tests have shown that a daily dose of the drug will provide 24-hour protection against motion sickness This drug is now available in a convenient mint-flavored, chewing-gum tablet. Ask your doctor to prescribe a diarrhea remedy for you — just in case. Have him give you a thorough physical check-up 3. Travel light Carry the mini­ mum. but enough to give you com­ plete comfort and weather pro­ tection. 4. Name-tag all your luggage Paste your name and address on each piece of baggage 5. If you are going abroad, check health regulations of the countries you plan to visit. 6. Visit your neighborhood drug store and stock up on shaving cream, cosmetics, toiletries, razor blades, film, sun glasses, talcum powder, a fungicidal powder for athlete’s foot, mineral oil or milk of magmesia, ’ sunburn lotion, a poison ivy remedy and adhesive bandages. GOSPEL HALL Regular Sunday Services' Sunday School 10.15 a.m. Remembering the Lord at 11.15 , Gorpel Meeting at 7.30 p.m. Eac? Thursday eVeriingat8p.m. ■ Prayer Meeting and Bible Study .r 7 Good News for Homemakers CHICKEN CORN PIE LEADS FOOD-FASHION PARADE / % A new recipe like a new hat "sets a woman up", especially when it proves a hit with the whole family. A dish to prove the point is Chicken Corn Pie. Now’s a good time to use golden kernels fresh from the cob, but canned corn is fine year 'round, render chunks of chicken, left from Sunday dinner or poured from a can add flavor. And a luscious sauce, smooth and "chicken-wonderful”, comes ready- prepared in a Cah of condensed cream of chicken soup. Make pastry from your favorite recipe, or speed up the job with a prepared mix. Then the pie bakes for an hour while you attend to other tasks. 8 Pass spicy bread and butter pickles and tiny white onions with the chicken corn pie. A tossed vegetable salad, of lettuce, carrot rounds, radish chips, and tomato chunks adds its flair to the dinner. Complete the parnde, with home­ made ice cream. Make it with fresh cherries or peaches, and pass chocolate chip cookies to munch with it. When the family gets.a taste of this sump­ tuous meal," they'll declare it's a style to adopt. CHICKEN CORN Pll / small onion, chopped 2 tablespoons butler or margarine 1 can OA cups') condensed cream of chicken soup 1 cup diced cooked chicken 1 cup cooked whole kernel corn 1 package (9-owtces) pie Crust mix or enough pastry for a 2-crust pie, Cook onion in butter; blend with soup, chicken and corn? Roll half of pastry dough on floured board and line a 9-inch pie part;, pour in chicken filling. Roll remaining pastry into circle; place on top of filling; pinch edges together and make several slits in top to allow steam to escape. Bake in moderate oven (375 °F.) about 1 noun 4 generous servings* ■“* Red front (grocery Phone 590 Our Prices Are Lower We Keep Down the Upkeep MIRACLE WfflP SALAD DRESSING Free Delivery 32 OZ. 79c JELLO POWDERS & PUDDINGS 3 for 25c PUREX TOILET TISSUE....... MAPLE LEAF SOCKEYE SALMON .. TIP TOP PEAS (Choice Quality) MAPLE LEAF WEINERS .. MAPLE LEAF LARD ... MAPLE LEAF BOLOGNA * v . 9 rolls $1.00 7% OZ. .. 5 for $2.00 20 OZ. .. 7 for $1.00 LB. . 33c LB. . 20c LB. . 25c ♦ POTATOES .. SUNIUST ORANGES, Size 288’s......... ’• • • * • • • i «; . 10 LBS. . 33c DOZEN » 31c