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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1951-10-03, Page 811'11U14.1q5111181M11311,81 I.I9 1 69.I,Cdi t3.1 tYa zniu Ilm gill H ert r,ley 181 H Chrysler and Plymouth Cars II Fargo Trucks H ill PARTS and ACCESSORIES Ferguson T'autors and Farm Equipment TRAINED PERSONNEL Telephone-84 Wingham H El FG to ▪ ,AE I nil Ri:tiairairiiii11,1111119111111111111111111111M111111111111:ii ll l ~fl l~ l l '~ 'l l~ 'l l H ty 1 8 xiirjazio —4 ACCLAIMED BY MANY THOUSANDS OF OLDSMOBILE OWNERS! —1 PROVED BY BILLIONS OF MILES OF OLDSMOBILE DRIVING! 81 11 MOST TALKED ABOUT ENGINE IN MOTOR CARS TODAY! 17 11 SITER Mote: Super "Mr 2-dnir Sedan. *Hydra-Rath: 1lrirr optional at extra roil. Equipment, acces- sories, and trim subject 10 change without notice. The prey-off comes in the performance! AntI well be glad to put you behind the wheel! Because we have an engine that can talk for itself—in the proved and improved "Rocket"! "Power!" says the "Rocket"— as 135 high- compression horsepower surge into action! "Samos]]!" says the "Rocket"—as Oldsmobile Hydra-114a tic * delivers that power with effortless ease! "Quiet!" whispers th 'e "Rocket"—as you enjoy that wonderful hew Oldsmobile ""''•,••%.z.:=;•••••;;;;,, A GENERAL M )TORS VALUE ride! And we'll also be glad to tell you about "Rocket" gas savings! We'll be glad to prove that your best deal is Oldsmobile—only car with the "Rocket"! OLDSMO oLE " 0.8518 "gimr.orrawarmay Wingham Motors Telephone 139 40* PAGE =GUT THE -WINGHAM ADVANtE-TIMES WEDNESDAY, ociroritm 3, 1915/. PAGE =GUT THE -WINGHAM ADVANtE-TIMES WEDNESDAY, ociroritm 3, 1915/. 111.7•0 ion. how they grow," and the poetry of • IlSOn McDonald ,..assqi and .sir intitateil were the Bible has so fitsciaitted him that Food Dollar Now W 4 nt high :school P. a,„ui that double encores ins own peotie mould, andconsider-1 orth 0 cents aatianded mere poetit, uffusions from able quantity he has converted into I,• 'V TO 0 V HAS inghain By Peter k'isher ; tilt gated putt. impressive chants which he demon- 0. Cost of a basic weekly food budget - I Mr. MCI 11all.1 claimed that poetry ,strthv't tit piano on. the platform. for a family of four was $10.80 in N • i th 1111 1 r of the imag- .VRS ereitter than any of the sister , '' ' t a c t g ia g arts, eelnisin t; in importance, pa int.. Mallon is the highest language to ,March 1939, and is now up to $25.95; old. sculpture and music. With en- which man attains in seeking to ex-l according to Margaret Smith, Ph, B., thusiasin he said, "It's greitter than .1'1‘"5 I11° loftiest moods of his mind; 'M, Sc,, i drector, Nutrition Division, anything.- 1 and this visit of Wilson McDonald, Health League of Canada. H o c In body and virile in mind at Ile pointed out that the poet Is the .`apple true prophet. mentioning incidents of ! s1 years oh age, has been to those r Writing in Health Magazine, Miss the fulfillment of prophesies in the . who heitrd him, a stirring uplift of : tit scholars of Muth the public and • has put a vast amount of it into ; or Bed Patients. MRS. J. H. MeliAY PHONE 103 WINGHAM =:. ONTARIO 0.1=1.1...N.11. 4.0. 46110.0 /140,14.14141111, .1111141.1i 001.1141•1011.i. 4•11..1•4.1316. 1,A•rtunate Mcleod ',vete the many scheul children, and the tew adults, who hail the pleasure of listening to Wilson McDonald last Thursday morning ill the Town Hall. .7.-'er levers of pot try and inwntors I of verse it W:18 a rare ()evasion, and eiwn. was the personal magnetism ca the poet. as he dramatically portray- ed his poetic inspirations on varying themvs, that the audience gave rapt attention to each of his recitals and riceiferous applause at their conelus- "FAIRVIEW 1 Nursing Home for the Aged . I, Will -Accommodate Semi-invalid i, A Smeller Safer Softer Ride! GOOD,NEA lit hair "cadien Car-makers use and the public buys, more Goodyear Super- Cushions than any other low- pressure tire. i late somas is rib tread LOOK FOR THIS "HIGH SIGN" OF QUALITY 1110MISIPTAPIPILMINV 4117 AVAIL CRAWFLO MOTORS PHONE: 710 DODGE, DESOTO SALES & SERVICE 1* Regardless of chimney coil. dition, it takes but a few minutes to heat your home or ee room with a QUAKER. These two optional, low cost . olTered only by QUAKER ... assure You pat, automatic best all dur- ing the coining winter. 1. forced Draft — gives mash- mum heat output regardless of chimney by providing ample draft. Cuts fuel cost! 2. Heat Circulator—gently cit.. cuidies heat to every room corner. Automatic In action. NO WORKI QUAKER heat Is quick, clean. sure! No cool to bliovel. ashes to carry or wood to chop! LOW in PRICE HIGH in PERFORMANCE -9.444ecemet" Veouseie dcWdi The QUAKER "Challenge?' I'm through with Modeln 3 sizes. Beautiful baked enamel finish likerichrhand.rubbed mahogany,: now I hove a QUAKER! cantankerous heaters. See our demonstration at the Teeswater Fair, October 3 H1SELER & SON nghani - Ontario But westward look, the land is bright." - As is stated in Job, which is all poetry, "How forcible are right words." Wilson McDonald seems him- ' self to be the fulfillment of poetic prophesy as expressed by Austin Dob- son in his eulogy of Longfellow when !he wrote "Not to be tuneless in old age Oh surely blessed his pilgrimage Who in his winter's snow, Sings with a note as sweet and clear As in the morning of the year When the first violets" blow." Longfellows first power was just like a little crocus peeping out of rthe snow. As a very small boy he wrote this: "There was a little turnip and it grew behind the barn, and it grew and never did any harm." From parents, guardians and teachers, all the early upsurgings of desires of children to accomplish something should meet with instant encourage- ment and never suppressed by dis- paragement or ridicule. May it be said of some great-souled I spirit in the decades of the future. "He was born in Wingham and got his first impulse to write poems on hearing Wilson McDonald." 1REXALL DRUGGIST ANNOUNCES I FALL ONE CENT SALE Mr. J. P. McKibbon, local Rexall 'druggist, today announced plans for !his semi-annual Rexall Original One I Cent Sale to be held October 17 through 20 in his drugstore on Jos- ephine Street. "The theme of the Rexall One Cent Sale this Fall is: It's your Chance to Know Rexall and Save Money," Mr. McKibbon said. The semi-annual One Cent Sale was originated by the Rex- all Drug Company in 1914, and has become an international institution, he explained. According to Druggist McKibbon, hundreds of nationally advertised Rexall products will be available to the public from coast-to-coast in Can- ada on the money-saving "Two for the Price of One plus lc" plan. The products on sale will include packag- ed Medicines, vitamin products, oral hygiene needs, ocsmetics, stationery, household needs, firstaid supplies and hundreds of other Rexall items, "This sale means that the people of Wingham will be saved many hun- •dreds of dollars on purchases of ne- cessities for good health, good groom- ing and good housekeeping," Mr. Me- Kibbon said, "and it is the Rexall druggist's major contribution towards smashing high prices and helping to bring down the high cost of living," —Advt. Progress on far-flung battlefronts . . an accident in Western On" tango ... a change in government policy . . . All are hot news items . . . History in the making. Stay on top of world and local develop-' rnents. Hear the SHELL NEWS with PAT MURRAY doily at 12,30 noon on 980— CFPL, It's mode mailable for you by your SHELL IDeoier• .10-6•111.....1../1•••...M......11911.14/I01,101130.4.11.041•101.1.11.10.1.41 ft said he. reciting "Consider the lilies mad(' a great contribution to religious time, not now extant, called Bards of just to buy the groceries. the Bible. .'This is a serious situation from It is well worth an exhaustive rum- ! mage through second hand hook the point of view of the health of • the Canadian people," writes the vet- shops in big cities in a search for , one of these. elan nutritionist. "Many of our people are obviously unable to buy the Two outstanding men of our era made telling adaptability of poetry to foods they need for proper nutrition; great crises in recent years, In an and the situation is becoming inereas- impressive Fireside Chat by the late ingly serious as food prices continue Franklin Rosevelt he referred to the to rise. One particularly unfortunate great Battle of Britain in 1940 by feature is that inflation seems to hit quoting the American poet Longfel- hardest the home grown foods con- low. taining proteins which are absolutely "Sail on oh union strong and great essential for health and children's Humanity with all its fears, development." I With all its hopes of future years Is The current Health magazine food hanging breathless on thy fate." budget is one of the series which has The great Churchill looking west- traced the price rise of 55 foodstuffs ward to the United States and desir- ing "the tools to finish the job" eon:from $10.80 in March 1939 ,to $20.56 eluded one of his greatest speeches In January, 1948, to $24.46 in March ;1950, to the present $25.95. it leaves quoting Hugh Clough, "And not by eastern windows only !the 1939 food dollar with a market When daylight comes, comes in the ;value of a little over 40 cents today. • light In front, the sun climbs slow, how slowly, poetic literature in a priceless vol...and one-half weeks in every month Take y Halifax • Saint-John • Montreal • Toronto • Winnipeg • Vancouver HE BARRETT COMPANY, LIMITED • gesides Rock Wool Insulation your Barrett Dealer has a complete line of roofing and weatherproof- ing materials. ur building problems to your B ns lotion —4 POWER SENSATION OF THE NATION FOR OVER TWO YEARS! Gives extra fire-safety In Blankets, B tts nd Granulated Form Saves up to 30% on fuel bills "72eg'd Trade Mark matt Dealer poetry as the neglected art. A Long ago George Gilfillan, the emi- current average industrial wage of The utterances of Jesus were poet i c , neat Scottish preacher of Dundee $45 per week, must now work for two works of and Burns and oth- renaissanee in high thought Smith points out that the wage earn- cri= including himself, He described and noble heeling. or in such a family, working at the