HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1965-11-11, Page 2Do you have to ration
hot water on wash days
and bath nights?
-a COG de 40
0100Vic water h er
can- ohb oge t t
Cascade 40 has two elements: a 1000-watt lower element for
normal use, and a 3000-watt top element that surges into action
at times of extra heavy use, That's why the Cascade 40 can sup-
ply more hot water than the average family is ever likely to use.
Cascade 40 is flameless, safe and clean. it requires no flue so
it can be installed anywhere. The ten year guarantee on the tank
is your assurance of Cascade 40's reliability.
With a Cascade 40, the cost of abundant hot water is low.
For more information...
ask your hydro
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Imp pia1001443 posT, 131-tossna, 0.:i:TA440 `1111.T.RSDA,y, isoy: lltb. 9N
Scouts Will Tour
)Maritime Provinces
Some 250 Boy Scouts and their
leaders from this area will take
part in one of Canada's most in-
teresting Centennial projects in
the summer of 1967. Detailed
plans have been formulated for a
bus camping tour which will take
the boys to Ottawn, the World's
Fair in Montreal and through the
province of Quebec and the Mari-
times over a period of three
weeks.
Participating in the history-
making trek will be Scouts from.
the troops within the Saugeen
District, of which Brussels is a
part, District Commissioner
Archie Goveanlock of Walkerton
is tour chief and tour director is
Lloyd, A.ckert, master of the First
Kinloss Troop, Holyrood, who
was one of the Canadian Scout
Leaders at the World Jamboree
in Greece two years ago.
At the annual meeting of the
Saugeen District. Council in Holy-
rood Mr. Ackert outlined the
itinerary for the trip and showed
eolored slides taken while he was
making final arrangements as
he travelled over the proposed°
route during the past summer.
One of the highligrits of the
evening was the presentation
of a $20.00 prize to Scout Harvey
McFadden of Cargill, who had
stbmitted the sketch for the
crest which has become the
official emblem of the Centennial
Tour. It depicts a Boy ScOtit
hiking eastward across a map of
Canada. The crest will be worn
on T-Shirts ana neckerchiefs
during the outing and will be
'prominently displayed elsewhere
as art identifyin g insignia.
Preliminary applications will
go alit to all Scouts and leaders
in the district at the first of the
New Year and on the basis of the
teterne the arrangements fof
Meals, camping equipment: etc.
will be based,
Total cost of the trip for cash
partstiparit will he $125, eloene
Oftlita WI MANIA
ENJOY THE
LONG WINTER EVENINGS
watching or listening to
A NEW
"ELECTR0110111E TELEVISION"
"STEREO CONIBINATION"
from
MAC1-IAN HARDWARE
Brussels, Ont.
WE ACCEPT TRADE-INS
And Give
"SERVICE WITH OUR SALES"
0.4.05.0gomb,..ossis.,,,mcgr aissmannommannft.
money from their earnings for
more than a year in anticipation
• of the outing.
ELECTRIC CLOTHES DRYER
STOPS WASHDAY DRUDGERY
ever lifted the family auto-
mobile and held it over your
head?
Or hung a washing for five on tha
clothesline?
The same amount of energy is
required, it has been estimated,
to carry out both tasks.
Washday drudgery is a thing
of the past for homemaker with
an electric clothes dryer. No
longer does she have to lug heavy
baskets of wet clothes, stoop to
lift the clothes from the basket,
and stretch to hang them on the
clothesline. Nor does she have to
repeat the whole procedure, in
reverse order, to bring the dry
clothes into the touse.
Electric clothes dryers also
save time for the busy -home-
maker. With a damp-dry setting yt
on the aryer, clothes can be re-
moved wbent they are lust right for
ironing.. And neuch of the laundry
load does not require ironing If an
electric dryer is used. Towels,
dishclothes, and diapers, for ex-
ample. are fluffy and conipetely
wrinkle-free at the end of the dry-
ing cycle. Wash-and-wear fabrics
are dried and "pressed" at the
same time, recuiring only a
touch-up with an iron.
One of the most practical elee-
ri cal appliances in the home,
an automatic clothes dryer is
desienpd with the homemaker's
erowded sebeduIe in mind.
HURON COUNTY'S LEADING
FARM EQUIPIAnNee DEPOT
Lowest nossIble oric—: on heir
estel tractors, farm reachinenY
Me, Over 1.000 belts, and hund-
reds of pelleys, hearings, spitrk
plow sharps, etitivatot
points and other service items
in stock a,t, aiT Ohms.
John ]'Inca] I,H, DOW
6giv(1100 Fj.40014ii
eega--
teee•..:
.... : .. . . . • . .
Toronado, Oldsmobile's front-wheel drive car, is the most radical development in prodtictieli
automobiles for 1966. It is 211 inches long, but only four and one-half feet high, and its fast-
back design and long, low silhouette are the pace setters for the whole Oldsmobile line.
Toronado is an entire new series featuring great luxury, flat floors for more passenger space
and comfort, and its own unique version of the Turbo Hydra-Matic transmission and new 385
horsepower Rocket V8 engine with 10.5:1 compression ratite Flat floors are made possible by
front wheel drive. Elimination of the drive shaft makes the floor tunnel unnecessary and
reduces vibration and noise in the passenger compartment, All. Oldsmobiles, Ninety-Eights,
885, Sturfires and F858, have a more streamlined look this year, with new colours and neW
(118tindilln , Can height )1118 10wored and there ine rodoignod t.endors and It hoods,
1966 OLDSMOBILE TORONADO