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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1956-02-29, Page 3the passing 'of tests by the boys who want to get )440 presented that night. After the meeting* the Court of Honour met to discuss some on.- tortalnraoal; fox' the banquet, ' it )11 s IMOWNIES • After wondering for a Whole week•the mystery of what Party was, the Brownies found out at last Wednesday's meeting, It was a party eommemorating, "Thinking Day" in honour of Lord and Lady Baden-Powell, the foun- ders of the Scout movement, A most impressive ceremony with lighted candles, gatnea and refresh.) merits Made 11p the party. Ali the BrownieS had a grand time. The 1Brownies and leaders would like to thank the mothers who sent delicious .cup cakes that went so well with the ice cream. A CERTAIN DRUGGIST adver, thied a patent concoction labelled: "No more colds! No more coughs! Price 25 centa," A man who bought the mixture came back in three days to complain that he had taken. it all, but was no better, "Drank it all!" gasped the druggist, "Why, man, that was an •India rubber solution to pat on the soles of your boots," 4-111111111•WFISI ;he :he Ire ish ut- by ay, 4: 20; ay, Ins THIS NEWSPAPER FOR ONE FULL YEAR WITH . • • pa OFFER No. 1 2 MAGAZINES FROM GROUP: A 5 OFFER No. 2 3 MAGAZINES FROM GROUP A $4.95 OFFER No. 4 4 MAGAZINES FROM GROUP A $5.60 OFFER No, 3 2 MAGAZINES FROM GROUP A 1 MAGAZINE FROM GROUP B $5.50 The regular meeting of the 1st, Vinghani Boy ,Seout Troop was ,eld in Llw Wingham United `Mira), on Friday, February 24th, ..fter the opening ceremony the ioys played a knotting game with e Panthers and the Beavers the After the game cattle instruction sil:11 Rion) Scouts approaching' the :ea k'coxxd Class 'kelp all the time, min The forthcoming father and son nil einquet has presented quite a stir kY ay ell trs nd ,he Oil NEW LOW PRICES! satlisiny Nigh) (14-111.0.1ay) $:).00 111)(44.1nes Maga tine (211 issues) . 1.10 r 1 Canndinn Home Journal 1.111) Amerienn stunitsins 1.85 ; Chatelaine . 3.111.1 l'0001ar tiei1.11eV ..... 1.95 nn1111115,1 110011.!, (iftetlens . 1,00 1,00k 1.95 1;n1n11) Ile raid attic! IVeelds Star :1.75 unl 1 nit & in I'amtda . 1,25 (1,11,1 Litt. 1.85 1,101 et. IL r,rn .85 Iteilbonli. :king iszine .90 (.011 ice's (91-q,','1..IN 11 uninly 1>unipt,.'s (10 is.,nes , d.R6 lisnuirr ...... 11.91) Out tlocA• 1.1te . 1,75 Screen Stories .1.25 .8. ( Dwelt, Mags.e.ine .110 Samedi ( nen) .-- - 1.75 ,g,,', Xln.:;:xrine) 1.75 (11 rist lm, Ilera10. . .95 Mit) l'n 1 1;. , . 7,911 II inn» Iktinte I minninInn , 1,1)5 M 'n Int• 1,110 Ural' rip 1,:t mum. . 7.75 Taw SI ,ry l'itrenis' .1115g11./.111e ••• 1.35 I ;4,11114.1(qm Girt I, I C011111110, (10 . I Popular Gardening .1.85 Children's 11Igest (10 Issues) Newspaper and Magazines 1 year, unless term shown /few 4614. &pit/4'. Mark an "X" before magazine desired and enclose list with order. GROUP A O Maclean's Magazine (13 issues) 6 Mos. 0 Canadian Home Journal I Yr. O Liberty Magazine 2 Yrs. 0 Family Herald & Weekly Star I Yr. 1: Free Press Weekly Prairie Farmer I Yr. O Saturday Night (6i-weekly) I Yr. El Country Guide 2 Yrs. ID Chatelaine I Yr. • Farmers' Magazine 2 Yrs. • Canadian Poultry Review 2 Yrs, • La Revue Populaire' I Yr. rj Rod & Gun in Canada I W. • Modern Screen Yr. Mark an "X" before magazine desired and enclose list with order. GROUP B fl Rodbook Magazine Coronet El Maclean's Magazine • McCall's Magazine 0True Story O Canadian Homes & Gardens Sports Afield • Photoplay 11 Parents' Magazine I -I American Home 0 The Ensign American Girl [1 Christian Life (For Conservative Christian Loaders) 1-] Hunting & Fishing in Canada rl Outdoor Life Yr. Yr. Yr. Yr. Yr. Yr. Yr. Yr. Yr. Yr, Yr. Yr. Yr, Yr. Yr, ALL OFFERS ARE GUARANTEED ynonn.f. Plea4t, tillo c I 10 Fir,' 00014C, 01 MittmAine Iu ler!, p ONO. •111M111 CHECK MAGAZINES DESIRED AND ENCLOSE WITH COUPON Gentlemen: I enclose $.. Please send me the offer checked, With a year's subscription to your newspaper. Nome., Strout or R.R. Post Office B.Ra) gold (Fancy) 1.5 Peas • • 6 fox- $1 Clash's, 20 oz. - keg. 2 for 37e Pork.& Beans 6 for $1 Sun Brit° - Reg'. 2 for 57e Margarine . . 4lbs. $1 Florida, Seedless, Size 96 Grapefruit 10 for 39c Ontario No. 1 Potatoes . 10 lbs. 31c Bissett's Ice Cream .% gal. 89c ,TM.M:yosmr swam- s. sissi.s.WS•ssAae,& xis . • ••)'sr, • 'WEAW).41"14,40g e's one of the luc eople in town When anyone says to this mart "Cash. on the barrel-head," he can always plank down the money. He doesn't have to pass by a bargain or a sale for lack of ready cash. And how he saves money this way through the year! He feels himself one of the luckiest people in town! Why not follow his lead? Next pay-day, put by as much as you can and open a savings account at The Canadian Banl«)f Commerce. Add to it every pay-day and watch your balance grow. And then .. when you see a sale of any item you really need, you'll be able to purchase it outright.. Why not drop in at your nearest branch of The Canadian Bank of Commerce and open that savings account todaY Any of our personnel gladly help you. ie y .111Ore than 700 Imatches across Canada Wingham Branch, W O. Struthers, Manager THE CANADIAN' BANK OF COMMERCE Hililtiett:. 4.! .14 e011,0,ft Ns/J.176A mat Grocery Phone: Our Prices Are Lower Free 500 We Keep Down the Upkeep Delivery McCormick's, plain, salted lb. Sodas lb. 29c Jiffy Chocolate Drink 49c •••,, Mita() 3c OFF lb. Shortening 23c Holly (Fancy)" 11 oz. Kernel Corn 2 for 31c David's Junior Chocolate Reg. 39e Marshmellows lb. 19c itedbird. Matches ... 3 for 25c Bulk Macaroni .. 2 lbs. 27c Mother Varker's 2 oz. Instant Coffee 53c SEE CAMERON'S BILLIARDS for guaranteed ! WATCH REPA1R$. .Are yo_u. letting , io,00(Y,•i oi get away r 414:.,, ". St.,' it') • It's easy to let money slip., through your fingers, yo:* • I much better to put asidie,; small sums and let , grow. An Investors Synth ,-,' cate plan will help you Of financial security, Call Or' •1 I write: ..- •-ThOs. A. Jardin Box 1394 Phone 147 WINGDAM, ONT. Geo. D. Andrews. District Manager ; OWEN SOUND rutech•oitar „ ysicilie.-ztatiapf CAWAI!,k; Ap4Vit OFFICEMINNIP tG. OFFICES IN plop/v.1,4444. This man can dependable gn.iwv,lou deliyary of fr CHRTISIIAN MONITOR SCIENCE knternatieno, • in d. t Housewives, busineliniett, teachers, and students all Ovei the world read and enjd's 'thii" international newspaper, pub- lished doily in Boston., World famousfor constructive .n"Aws„ stories and penetrating :editotkili. Special features for the Whole family. The Christian Science I.,46riOr2. One Norway St., Boston Send your newspoof checked. Enclosed find 'rilyclitc.k.k.:-) money order. I year $16 0 6 rtm111140 3 months $4 ,1 Nome Address Cttr Zone, tarp), on.ie "The Only Way To Have A Friend Is To Be One" *(Author's name below) We like to think that all you folks who come to our phar- macy are our friends, That is why we serve you as we would a, friend, When we compound your pre- scriptions wq earefully check each step to make certain that we have done everything that one could do for a friend. When you ask us questions about how, best to use what you get ftntrt us, we are delighted to repay your confidence in its by giving, you a sincere honest answer. Depend on us, as you do Onjuiy, of your friends. • • Pick up your prescription if shopping near US, or let us deliver promptly without extra, charge, A great many :people entrust us with the responsi:, bility of filling their preserip» tions. May we compound yOuti,1 McKibbons PRKSCRIPTION -CHPMISTS *Quotation by gmerson (1803-1882) (70pyright 1955 (12W1) The wingham 44vap.c..,,,Timpar wednefway, 1000 To. More than 10,500 .children and teen-agers in •Ontario, afflicted by accident, disease or from birth, by crippling' conditions that usually Mean despair and dependence on Others, Mardi is the month of hope, Laster Seals go on Sale thin' month, through the members of More than 211 service clubs, as the mean)) by which the people of Ont- ario join in the vast task of making, life better for youngsters who would otherwise find it harder, if not impossible, to become self-re- liant, self-dependent young citizens. This year the service clubs have set an objective of 8625,000 from the sale of Easter Seals, The purchases of Easter Seals mean treatment and training, vacations in specially equipped summer camps, and all the other benefits that the 32-year-Ontario Society for Crippled Children has developed over its history of ser- vice to children. They mean a ()fiance for lads to take courses. at the internationally-known Variety Village, the' school sponsored and supported by the entertainment profession, where trades are taught boys unable to work at manual tasks. Down through the years, Easter Seals have paved the way for a program which now provides 21 specially-trained nurses who serve as liaison with the service clubs across the province, seeking out crippled children and directing them with home nursing skills, and teaching parents what to do to help their handicapped little ones take advantage of medically-pre- scribed plans of rehabilitation. In five camps, unlike any other camps in the country, hundreds of youngsters will have a chance at summer vacations, barred to, them otherwise because they can't play exactly as other children do. In OM camps, counsellors with clkfiino.roesw tlfoeodrge )e). ootlyfm themselves, ilts),,tivttegos ,Ideea,ar ntnecaihcohwxti tale many of them hope which their. Conditions, or even'. their .overprO, teetivo parents, had not aroused, faster Seats, too, enroll the set', vices of leading physIcians and surgeons, who give freely of their time and skills at the clinics which the Society Organizes at strategic centres in Ontario, whore local doctors may bring their young patients for examination and re- commended treatment. From the clinics the children go to hospital, if necessary, or back to their homes for a program of planned therapy or training supervised by. the Soc- iety's nurses. In the field of cerebral palsy, un- til recently a mystery even to medi- cal science, the Society's seals have made possible advances that are dramatic, even though the task is painfully slow and expensive. At Woodbden Residential Training Centre, near London, teams of nurses and doctors arc teaching children to talk, walk and feed themselves , . . even to' become helpful family members instead of helpless victims of a, condition that once spelled hopelessness. - Purchases of Easter Seals -mean membership for the buyers in a crusade of mercy and service to children •who, through no -fault of their own bear enormous burdens of affliction but who need only a little help to carry those burdens much more lightly. A YOUNGSTER whose love of history was not any too intense expressed his opinion on the inside cover of his history book: "In case of fire, please throw this in." Auxiliary to Legion Receives Members rorwwwl-i-no bfolosi Auxil- iary to Howielt Legion had the regular Monthly meeting' on Mon- day of last week with the Kest,. dent, Mrs. Mary Moore in the chair. Money plates were handed out to members. The mystery prize was won by Mrs. K. Madill. Plans were made to hold .a St, Patrick's dance in Fordwich on March 16th, music to be supplied by Clifford Rhythm- aims. .Two new members, Mrs. Arthur Thompson of BlUevale and Mrs, L. K, Madill. of Wroxeter were ac- cepted and two more applications were voted on. The Legion members joined the ladies in a social half hour follow- ing the meeting. ATTEND GATHERING AT ASHFIELD CHURCH FORDWICH --Dr. and Mrs. J. D. Fordo motored to Lochaish on Friday night when they attended a social evening with the congre- gation of Ashfield Presbyterian Church. The guest of honor for the event was Mrs. Forde's father, Mr. D. A. McDonald, who was an elder 'in the church for sixty years. A beautiful portrait of Mr. Mc- Donald was unveiled and Rev. Alexander Nimmo of Wingham, ad- dressed the gathering. Mr. McDonald is 84 years old and still attends church every Sunday. Teviotdale Wins. By One Goal. FORDWICH—The second game of the playoffs in the W.O.A.A. be- tween Fordwich and Teviotdale was played in Fordwich on Friday night, the score being Teviotdale 7, Fordwich 6. Scorers for• Teviotdale were Jim Jackson, 3; Ralph Ross, 2, one each for Ken Jackson and J. Tuck. For Fordwich the goal getters were Glen Johnston, 3, and one each for j. Stewart, B. Gibson and Don King. Greetings Sung for Three Members FORDWICH—The Silver Star Mission Band met in the basement of the United Church with an at- tendance of 28, The president, Velma Eurig and secretary, Fraser Pollock were in charge. The meeting opened with the Mission Band hymn, the Purpose and the Lord's prayer, The secre- tary's report was given and Mary Johnston marked the roll. The offering was taken and the dedica- tion hymn was sung. Birthday greetings .were sung for Lorne Wilson, Marion Hudson and Gordon Kasten. Mrs. Robert Gibson told the story from the study book and Mrs. Mel Taylor led the worship service. Poems and stories were read by Elizabeth Ann Cooper, Phyllis Wil- son, Sharon Pollock and Mrs. M, Taylor. The closing prayer was sung. GUEST SPEAKS OF COURT PROCEDURE FORDWICH---The Women's In- stitute met at the home of Mrs. Anson Demerling for the February meeting with the president, Mrs. Clare Harris presiding'. A letter was read from the at- torney general on the safety pro- gram and a number of thank-you cards were received, It was decid- ed to again enter the Salado., Tea project. It was also voted that the secretary attend a conference to be held later in Guelph. Plans Were made for the annual concert to be held in the commun- ity hall on March 23, Two girls froni the 4-11 Club who had attend- ed Achievement Day recently in Wingham had their project on eX- hibit and .both gave a talk on the work done. The new project will be on supper dishes. Mrs. An- son Demerling conducted a contest. Mrs. Howard Harris introduced the guest speaker, Mrs. Mollie Graham of Listowel, who gave a very interesting talk on courts and different cases. She explained that one should never be frightened to go to court, but keep cool and col- lected. Canadian justice always tries to be fair to everyone, Mrs, Graham is the editor of The Lis- towel Banner. Mrs. Clare Harris presented the speaker with a gift rind a delicious lunch was served by Mrs. Wray Cooper, Mrs, R. Nichol, Mrs, Ruby Fester and Mrs, Emma Williamson, • Mr, and Mrs. Harvey MeDerniat spent one day last week 'in Gait where they visited with the form- er's mother, Mrs, Clara Mc:Der/1111M who is at present .confined to the Galt .Hospital having suffered a fall at the home of her ,son, Harold. She received -quite a cut around her car which required eight stitches, She was a little better the day Harvey was down, Her many friends in the community wish her a speedy recovery. Mr. Al Fries spent the weep;-end with relatives in Toronto, The sympathy of the community goes to Mr. Roy Cullen and family in the loss of a wife and mother.' Mr, and Mrs, J, W, Hird spent, one day last week with Mr. and Mrs. 5, Hird, of Owen Sound, Mrs. Geo. Wipp and little son, Paul returned to her home at Galt after spending a week with her mother, Mrs. Pearl Patterson, Messrs, Warren Zubrigg and Marshall Armstrong attended the Milk Producers' annual meeting which was held in the Royal Con- naught Hotel at Hamilton two days last week. Mrs. Tom meemment and Ken- neth, Mrs. Albert Gallagher, Mr, and Mrs. Addisson Jacques and Karen visited one day last week with Mr. and Mrs. Jim Inglis in, Acton. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wilson spent a day last week in Kitchener. Mr. and Mrs. Doug Wildfang of Toronto visited over the week-bnd with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Simmons. Mr. Edward Doig of Chatham spent the week-end with his par- ents. Mr. Everitt Cooper of Hamilton, spent the week-end with his par- ents. Mr. Stewart Pattison of Willow- dale visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Peter Browne. Mrs. Mar- ian Kirby who had visited here the past week returned home with him. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Aldrich are leaving this week to make their home in Galt. David Aldrich of Gait, spent the week-end with his parents. Rev. W. R. and Mrs. Tristram, of Sarnia, spent a couple of days last week with Mr. and Mrs. Stan Bride and attended the funeral of the late Mr. Earld Patterson, Mr. and Mrs. Vern Hambly and family, of Guelph visited over the week-end with. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hambly. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Holland and children of Kitchener, visited over the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Everitt Allen. Birth WELLS- -In Victoria Hospital, London, on Monday, February 20th, 1956, to Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Wells (nee Eleanor Ashton), a son. Three Members Given Degree at L.O.B.A. FORDWICH—The members of the L,O.H.A. met in the Orange Hall for the February meeting. After the main business was taken care of, three members were given the order of the Scarlet Degree with Mrs. Freida D'Arcey, worthy matron, presiding, Thank-you cards were read from members who had been sick and plans were made - to finish quilts for the orphanage, The mystery prize was won by Miss Elva Fos- ter. A committee was picked to have new sashes made and to arrange .for a card party, Lunch was served at the close of the meeting. Death of Mrs. Cullen Shocks Community FORDWICH Helen Esther Hogg, wife of Roy A, Cullen, pas8- ed away in Victoria Hospital, Lon- don, on Wednesday, February 22, at the age of 31, following a short illness. Mrs. Cullen was born at Dun- troon, Ontario, July 24th, 1924, a daughter of John Hogg and Flor- ence Morphet, Ten years ago she was married to Roy Cullen, Surviving besides her sorrowing husband are three children, Grace, eight years, John, six and Doyle, two; her parents, Mr, and Mrs, John Hogg, of Stayner and a, sister, Mrs. Jack Ferguson (Marjorie), of Collingwood. Funeral service was held on Sat- urday at 2 p.m. from the Brethren in Christ Church, Fordwich, of which Mrs. Cullen was a member. Bishop Alvin Winger, of Gorm- ley, Ontario, officiated and inter- theist was iii )"ordwieh cemetery. The Canadian Red Cross makes sure that the hospitalized veteran is hot a forgotten man, Volunteer visitors provide many comforts during their regular visits. Easier Seal Purchases Mean Hope for Crippled Children FORDWILII Husbands! Woes l'Insisnotil of .ronples ere044., ;leek rti'llAY and P1'P1 lher feel-ran,dow);), ('1111011 1.10die$ lark iron!. at .40,t. fir,ry ,Ostre)c. Tonle Tsbleis today. ,4)1Peass.4,0P.11* caster vat, too, insy neva' to realist irA u J u ts, ssmass slid build-viz .erdir•• olsaY.. ITaXS. younger, "crt-AveasloteC sips, costs Asa web '"i-tFV•Ane size, Aral save 750, M all dru$41001,, Weak, Run-down, OM