HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1963-03-07, Page 14Page 6 -- Wingham Advance -Times, Thursday, March 7, 1963
Hay and
pasture mixtures ..
+ ti
Zeke went with Daisy Mae
for about 10 years but never
proposed to her because he first
wanted to own some property
and an automobile. At last he
could afford both so he called
her up.
" i -Loney, " he said, "I've got
a car, I've got a house and a
thousand dollars in the bank.
Now will you marry me?"
"I sure will," she replied.
"Who's this speaking?"
DEDICATE
GIDEON
BIBLES
AS A
ONTINUING MEMORI
May he donal^d through your
local funeral director
C' 4 1 'U 1. , 1 ul
HOSPITALS, PRISONS
Beautiful Bedrooms
You can have a beautiful bedroom
CHOOSE FROM THE SPLENDID SELECTION . . . at
Schuett's Mildmay Showrooms
o meet your
specific need!
Now — more than ever — the CO-OP Big Bonus Hay and
Pasture Program takes the guesswork out of selecting seed -
mixtures for higher yields; hence higher farm profits. How?
Simply by taking advantage of our new prescription mix seed
service. And it's so convenient .too ... right in your own area!
Here's how it works: just pay a visit to your CO-OP and discuss
your particular seed requirements with its Soil and Crop Spe-
cialist. Based on Department of Agriculture recommendations,
high quality name -variety seeds will be accurately blended in'
our NEW SEED MIXER! These specific mixtures will allow
for maximum yields of the hay and
pasture required in YOUR
livestock program.
BELGRAVE
CO-OPERATIVE
BELGRAVE, ONTARIO
DIAL WINGHAM
357 - 2711
PHONE BRUSSELS
388 W 10
loll CO -01P
BIG
•BONUS..
,,HAT t PASTJuq['
PROGRAA.MI
Ur ob!pc fhrve �s to fli
you morel suceessft
A BERRY DOOR radio -controlled garage
door operator is in use at the local curl-
ing rink as a "silent skip." Jim Cook,
right, engineer with the Berry firm,
holds the small radio transmitter which
will start and stop the unit to move a
broom across the ice when curlers want
a spot of practise and no skip is avail-
able. Lloyd Carter, who helped rig up
the outfit, is at left in the picture.—A-T
Photo.
Business and Professional Directory
John McKibbon, Phm.B.
Robert McIntyre
McKIBBONS PHARMACY
Phone 357-1880 Wingham
AM BULANCE
Service
CALL —
S. J. WALKER
PHONE
Day - Night 357-1430
BUTLER, DOOLEY,
CLARKE &STARKE
Chartered Accountants
Trustee in Bankruptcy
Licensed Municipal Auditor
44 NORTH ST. JA 4-8253
GODERICH, ONTARIO
A. H. McTAVISH
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
and NOTARY PUBLIC
Tees ater x Ontario
T tE 7373,Teeswater
W, e r—.Every Wednesday
afternoon, 2-4 p.m., or
by appointment
Frederick F. Homuth
Phm.B., R.O.
Carol E. Homuth, RO
Mrs, Viola H. Homuth, RO
OPTOMETRISTS
Phone 118
HARRISTON - ONTARIO
HURON CO-OPERATIVE
MEDICAL SERVICES
Prepaid Health Plans
at Cost
the . O.O! way
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
President, Fordyce Clark, RR 5,
Goderich; Vice -Pres., Gordon
Kirkland, RR 3, Lucknow; Mrs.
D. G. Anderson, RR 5, Wingham;
Mrs. Lloyd Taylor, Exeter;
Hugh B. Smith, RR 2, Listowel;
Lorne Rodges, RR 1, Goderich;
Roy Strong, Gorrie; Russell T.
Bolton, RR 1, Seaforth; Bert
Irwin, RR 2, Seaforth; Bert
Klopp, Zurich; Gordon Richard-
son, RR 1, Brucefield; Kenneth
Johns, RR 1, Woodham.
C. H. Magee
Secretary -Manager
Miss C. E. Plumtree
Assistant Secretary
For information, call your
nearest director or our office in
the Credit Union Bldg., 70 On-
tario Street, Clinton, Telephone
HUnter 2-9751.
GAVILLER, McIN-
TOSH & WARD
Chartered Accountants
Resident Partner
J. E. Kennedy, C.A.
Opposite Post Office
Dial 881-3471 - Walkerton
CRAWFORD &
HETHERINGTON
Barristers, Solicitors, Etc.
Wingham - Dial 357-3930
J. H. CRAWFORD, Q.C.
R. S. HETHERINGTON, Q.C.
J. T. GOODALL
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY, Etc.
Office—Meyer B1k., Wingham
DIAL 357-1990
Skipless Curling
At Wingham Rink
Skips beware! Curlers at
the Wingham Curling Club
haven't as yet disposed of all
their skips, but it could happen.
It will behoove all captains of
the roaring game to tighten
their grips on their brooms.
At the Wingham Club they
have a radio -controlled broom!
That's right, believe it or
not, and it happened like this.
Quite a number of the Wing -
ham curlers are employees of
the Berry Door Co., Ltd., a
firm which manufactures steel
garage doors, and a radio -
control unit for opening and
closing a door from an owner's
car.
Finding that club members
on many occasions would have
a bit of spare time, when no
game was in progress, Berry
engineers went to work. They
rigged up one of the door oper-
ators to control a broom, giving
the curling adict a spot of
practice without the necessity
of finding a skip.
In use the outfit is placed to
within a short distance of the
ice, over the target circles. A
boom carrying a moving chain,
run by an electric motor, car-
ries an attached broom across
the "house". The whole rig is
controlled by the curler at the
far end of the rink. He car-
ries a small radio transmitter
which will start and stop the
motor, placing the broom at
any desired location.
It might be nonsense, except
that it works. It also proves
the tremendous interest that
curling is receiving in small
towns and cities alike.
A FIRM BELIEVER IN
WEARING OF THE GREEN
Countess Markiewicz, born
Constance Gore -Booth in Ire-
land about 1868, grew up to
marry a Polish diplomat in
Dublin and became an artist
and actress. She also became
a fighting suffragette, socialist
and Home Rule rebel. The
Countess joined in the abortive
Irish revolution in 1916. When
the British captured her and her
120 armed rebels, the Countess
was wearing a green outfit,
with green tunic, green hat
with green feather, green put-
tees and green shoes.
Schuett's of Mildmay sell Bedroom Suites made by
*KAUFMAN'S *KROEHLER *KNECHTEL
*ANDREW MALCOLM *PEPPLER *VILAS, etc.
—Save at Shuett's—
Discounts of 20%
ON VARIOUS SUITES — Convenient Monthly Payments
Godfrey Schuett
MILDMAY and MOUNT FOREST
HOW MANY ARE BANK CUSTOMERS ?
A safe guess would be every one of them /That's because, in Canada,
practically everybody has regular dealings with a chartered bank / Deposit
accounts number more than 121/2 million—or better than one for every
adult. And on the books of the banks at any one time are 1,800,000 loans
for just about every personal and commercial purpose /Through
5,000 branches, from one end of the country to the other, the chartered
banks bring a full banking service within the reach of everyone.
THE CHARTERED BANKS SERVING YOUR COMMUNITY