The Wingham Advance-Times, 1951-06-13, Page 8ioliititomiii,,,,inommtio.,10411.-401000-010-1.00,11.11101..mn
Merkley Motors .. •
II
Chrysler and Plymouth Cars
i Fargo Trucks
U "PARTS and ACCESSORIES .,...
ii Ferguson Tractors and Farm Equipment i •
ii TRAINED PERSONNEL
ir ., Telephone-84 Wingham
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filisluoutoolaiiiinowslimunowiwitomonimanuianiommilioilimmiiilinimmiliki
ALL CLASSES OF MONUMENTS IN STOCK
Most Modern Equipment for Shoo and Cemetery Work
Inscription Work Promptly Attended to.
Brownlie Memorials
WILLIAM BROWNLIE, Owner and Operator
Alfred St. Wingham Box 373 'Phone 450
v."
Quality Always
Spare yourself the pain of "shopping around"
for a Monument to honour your loved one.
Depend on our reputation for highest quality
and fair dealings. See Us First.
"IL , •Eare
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He a going cow ern
B ILL IS ANOTHER enterprising boy who is
learning to appreciate the value of saving
for what he wants. Each week, he puts a
part of his spare time earnings ,in the bank.
And is he proud of his bank book!
Many a businessman credits his success to
the habit of thrift learned early in life.
Planned saving has helped millions of
Canadians to make the most of their own
enterprise and industry.
Experience has shown that the difference
between "getting along" and "getting
ahead" often starts with a bank account.
Use the chartered bank in your
neighborhood as a safe and handy place
to make your savings grow.
One of a series
by your bank 2 /
td V
OIL BURNERS ,
WARM AIR HEATING
WINTER AIR CONDITIONING
COMPLETE INSTALLATIONS - SERVICE
IN
HOMES, SCHOOLS, CHURCHES
WINGHAM METAL FABRICATING
PHONE 760 WINGHAM
DISIST ON
Autites—lutprrial
WARM AIR 111A111410 CO•1011LONING
YOU CAN WIN
A Boy's or Girl's BICYCLE • •
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&fete
New 1ST xidail THE eta K CONTEST
BOTTLE TOP
In jest a feW weeks time you can own one of these brand new
bikes . a smart table radio . . or many other valuable prises
just for saving lucky Kist Bottle Tops. Here's how it works"!
Whenever you get a Kist Bottle Top, lift the cork lining. U
you find a X-T-S or T printed on the inside metal surface .tave
that toP. Then go to your nearest Kist dealer's ... the Man 'who
sells delicious ice-cold Kist ... and ask for a copy of gist Contest
Rules. They'll tell you how you can win your new hike or one
of the many other valuable prizes.
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Get New Pep, Vim, Vigor
What a thrill Bony
limbs fn out; ugly laol.
lows fill up; neck no
longer scrawny; bear
loses half-starved, sickly
"bean-polo" look. Thou-
sands of girls, women. men.
who never could gain bo•
fore, aro now proud of
shapely, healthy-looking
bodies, They thank the spe-
cial YU:Or-building, flesh-
building tonic, Ostrex. Its
tonics, stimulants, invigora-
tors, iron, vitamin DT, cal-
cium, enrich blood, improve
appetite and digestion so
Nod gives you morn strength
and nourishment; put flesh
on bare bones.
Get Lovely Curves
Don't fear getting TOO fat.
Stop when you've gained tho
5. 10, 15 or 20 lbe, yoU nerd
for normal weight. Costs
little. New "get a011Ittill
sim only COs, TrY fAMOUS
Ostrex 'Tonic Tablets for new
vigor and added pounds, Oils
very day. At an druggists.
MacLEAN COAL COMPANY.
Pliant 64, Witigham
DON'T GAMBLEA 'blue coars'.bit ORA LIARANTtES' YOU At
DAIRY FOODS
as summer milt
Glorify your summer meals with
creamery-fresh dairy foods. They're
so delicious, nutritious, they make
every meal a treat to remember.
Break open a hot,
baked biscuit and
spread on golden
butter. U-m-m-m
it's meltingly good.
Arrange banana sT sAL.40 AR
quarters in a circle, top with tasty
Cottage Cheese. Add st rawberr golden y halves and rane sli Colourful ! Plavogurfdl ces.
Top fresh fruit pie with
his favourite cheese!
Good to eat, high in
food energy.
For mellow sauce for
tasty croquettes, use
creamy-smooth evap-
orated milk.
DAIRY FOODS SERVICE BUREAU
409 HURON STREET . TORONTO
).-
Tun VVINGIIAM ADVANCE-TIMES impnopmr, 951
Lawn Mowers Repaired and Sharpened,
New and Used Lawn Mowers For SMe
Liberal allowance on trade.ins.
JENKINS' REPAIR SERVICE
Minnie St. Wingham, Ont.
• Works like a Christmas
Club. Spreads out pay..
ments. No red tape. This
plan is the easy way to buy
your heat and enjoy fret,
dont, from aall.sit•once"
fuel bills.
COME IN Olt PHONE-TODAY
THE SOONER YOU
START THE SMALLER
YOUR MONTHLY PAYMENTS
WILL BE.
look always for the BLUE Color
mite coal' is the only coal colored BLUE
with harmless dye--a positive protection
for you ... an assurance that you're get.
Ling "the world's ,nest anthrticin0
MY 111111 BROTHER
A Minister was ,speaking to ,his
ciwreh io Xiariera, that part of New
York where the Negro people live,
"The children of our church have
had an invitation to spend part of
their vacation ii Verrnent," be said,
"Reverend Ritchie Low of Vermont
has given the invitation. You know
Wm. Well heeatISO, he has preached
in this pulpit and has lived among
us, He says that people in Vermont
will open their homes to seventy-five
children from Harlem for two weeks,
Will the mothers who would like
them children to go please register
their names at the church office on
Tuesday evening?"
The next Tuesday mothers crowded
the church office, Many more child.
reel than were invited were register.‘d,
From the names, seventy-five were
selected by the church. leaders.
One day in July the boys and girls
boarded the train in New York and
set out for Vermont. Some of the
children had never been outside the
city before. They were eager to see
what cows and pigs looked like.
On the Way to Vermont
The train rolled northward Lnrough
cities, suburbs, towns and villager:. At
last it reached the open country
where farmhouses and fields could ,
be seen, In the distance was a line
of hills.
Noses were pressed flat against the
windows as children looked at the
rolling green countryside, "I like the
country. I'm going to like Vermont,"
said a girl named Dorothy.
Some of the children wire not so
sure that they would like Vermont.
They were going to live in the homes
of white people whom they had never
seen before. They had known white
people who had not always been
friendly to them. They weren't sure
just what they could expect.
At a station in Vermont the child-
ren got off the' train and changed to
busses. Before long their journey was
over and they were tumbling out of
the busses. Friendly white people met
and greeted them. The visitors were
taken to their new homes, given sup-
per, and put to bed.
At the Lane Farm
Dorothy had gone to the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Lane. They li'Vecl on a
farm. The first night Dorothy found
it hard to sleep. There were strange
sounds all around. "Swish-swish-
scratch!" came from outside her win-
dow. "What was that?" she wonder-
ed, stiffening out in bed. "Cree-cree!"
sounded somewhere else. Other
strange noises came to her ears, not
at all like the noises of New York.
Dorothy felt all twisted up inside and
began to sniff. Mrs. Lane came into
her room.
"Wh--eyhat's the noise?"
Dorothy.
Mrs. Lane laughed easily. "The
scratching is just the big old maple
tree outside the window. The branches
are scraping on the porch roof. The
'tree-tree' is the crickets—you know,
those funny little insects that jump
around."
"Oh yes, like Jimminy Cricket in
Open or Glazed
Sash & Prefit
Window Units
MADE TO ORDER
Campbell & Gorbutt
Sash Manufacturers
Diagonal Rd. Wingham
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EAST WAWANOSI
COUNCIL
The Council met June 5th., with
all the members present, ,the Reeve
presiding, The minutes of the meeting
held May 1st., Were read arid 'adopted
on motion by Taylor seconded by
Robertson, Carried.
The correspondence 1 was read and
dealt with by the Council, Mr, W, C,
Attridge, C. A., Township auditor,
gave his report of the Township re-
ceipts and expenditures for the year
1950, receipts $63,142.67, expenditures,
$61,540.44, with an surpins of $1602.23.
Moved by Campbell, seconded by
McGowan that the auditor's report
be adopted and his fees be paid. Car-
ried,
A letter from the Department of
Public Works was read the meeting
to be held in Listowel on June 26th.,
asking Council to appoint a represen-
tative to attend and vote on the
Middle Maitland Valley Conservation
Authority. Moved by Taylor seconded
by Robertson that the Reeve, J. D.
Beecroft be appointed to attend the
above meeting. Carried,
Moved by McGowan seconded by
Campbell that the council accept the
collector's roll and the collector be
paid the balance of his salary.' Car-
ried.
Moved by Taylor seconded by Mc-
Gowan that the Road and General
accounts as presented be passed and
paid. Carried.
Road Accounts—Stuart McBurney,
salary, $216.00, bills paid, $5.36, $221.-
36; Leslie Buchanan, brushing and
Pinocchio." Dorothy laughed as she
thought of Pinocchio.
"Tell me what Harlem is like," said
Mrs„, Lane.
"There are rows and rows of hous-
es, all' paelted close together,' said
Dorothy. "People don't have a whole
house to themselves as they do in
Vermont. They have one floor of a
house or one or two rooms. There
aren't enough rooms for all the people
in Harlem. It's very crowded. But we
have a park,"
"What do your father and mother
do in New York?" asked Mrs. Lane,
"My daddy runs' an elevator in a
hotel," Dorothy said. "He wears a
beau-u-ti-ful dark red uniform. Once
he brought it home and I shined the
buttons on it."
"What about your mother?"
"She works in the same hotel. She :
does the beds and straightens up the
rooms."
"What do you do in the afternoons
when your mother is not home?" ask-
ed Mrs. Lane.
"Oh, sometimes I study and some-
times r play in the street or in the
park. I'm glad it's vacation."
"I'm glad it's vacation, too," said
Mrs. Lane. "And I'm glad Reverend
Ritchie Low thought of the plan of
inviting you children from Harlem
to visit in V"e"rmont. We're going to
have fun together." She went away
and in a minute Dorothy was asleep.
For two weeks Dorothy had fun
on the Lane farm. She fed the hens
and gathered the eggs. She drove the
cows up' the path for Mr. Lane at
milking time. She petted the calves
and scratched the sides of the pigs
with a stick while they grunted hap-
pily.
All to soon it came time to leave.
"Come again next summer," invited
the Lanes.
Dorothy did go back the next year
and so did many of the other child-
ren. The people of Vermont were so
pleased with their visitors that they
invited over eighty children the sec-
ond summer and they plan to ask
even more the third summer.
The story "My ,Little Brother" on
the radio program All Aboard for
Adventure, Sunday, June 17, over
CKNX, tells what happened to one
boy from Harlem when he visited
Vermont.
glthrert4 $94.50, BrAeSt Wallies, 4r4§4-,
trig, feflejp0 MA; p4r,
don Motors, 404 rOpOra,
544atp4's Hardware, s.hOvci
wire, 04,9p, g89.90; Chap. Hodgins,
truck repairs, PPP.; BelgraVe CO4).P.,
sprayer repairs, 'P35.981 H. .0. Thcanp4
sax!, truck permit, $2.55; Blyth Stan-
dard; gravel tenders, 70c; Geo, Rad-ford, o yards gravel, $19.50; Joe Kerr,
318 yds. gravel at 56c $178.08, 810 .yds,
gravel at 5c, $15,90, $193.98; Dominion
Road Mach,, Co.,'4 bolts, 53c; Caned-
Ian . Oil Co., oil, $48,02, fuel oil, WA
gas, $47,88, $184.30; Dept, Highways,
Ont,,c,$ tax3905,On 355 gallons fuel oil, at 4.1
General Accounts:—W. Cecil At-
tridge C. A., auditing Twp, records,
$100.00, auditing school records, $45,00;
$145.00; Frank Cooper, operating
sprayer for Warble Fly, 218.30; Can.
Industries Ltd., spray material, $555.;
Herson Irwin, bal. salary as collector
for 1950, $50.00, stamps and exchange,
$1..68, $51.68.; J, Keith' Arthur, 7 side
chairs, $112,72; R. D. Munro, relief ac,
count, $13.71; Thomas Jardin, 5 fox
pup bounties, $7.50; Ernest Walker,
1 fox pup bounty, $1.50; James Walsh,
2 fox yap bounties, $3.00; Howard
Walker, 1 fox bounty, $2.00; Austin
Cook, 5 fox pup bounties, $7.50; Jos-
eph Dunbar, 1 fox bounty, $2.00;
Township of East Wawanosh, rent
of sprayer to Roads, $250.00; Chris.
Ne0t030 her.y, inspector for warble fly, $1
Moved by Campbell seconded by
Robertson that Council adjourn to
meet July 3rd,, 1951, at 2.0 p,m., D.S.
T., at the Belgraye Community Cen-
tre. Carried.
J. D. Beecroft, R. H. Thompson,
Reeve; Clerk.
COSTLY AIRCRAFT MACHINE
The only machine of its kind in
Canada, the stretch-wrap former for
simultaneous stretching and forming
of aircraft "skins", cost the nation's
largest plane-bfiilder. Canadair Limit-
ed, more than $217,000. Freight bill
from California was $7,000 and an-'
other $20,000 was spent on installation.
Audiences attending the Festival
of Britain's Telecinema in London
this year will wear special polar-
ized glasses and will see colored films
in three dimensions.
HAMILTO14'
OPTICAL CO.
W. R. Hamilton, R. 0.
Optometrist for Over
25 Years.
Telephone 37
for Appointment.
Skihny Inc, worgen
gain 5,10, 151bs.
3 BIG ADVANTAGES
I
Convenient S-P-R-E-A41.) out pay.
intents • • easy terms to suit you.
No worries! Coal is, delivered in
Kos plenty of time . . you're all paid up
before next winter.
3 With this 'blue coal' plan, household
. budgetsrnn More smoothly all yeas
'round.
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asked
ho Else Wants PAID-UP
inter Heat?