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LOCAL ARMY CADETS OFF TO BANFF -- Ninety-four
specially selected army cadets from Ontario left last
week from London for the Banff National Cadet Camp
at Banff, Alberta. The young army cadets will spend
the next four weeks training in the Canadian Rockies.
LcArio right; Master Cadets Bordon MacRae, Clinton;
Mel Press, Belmore; Alan Brown, Walkerton; Hugh
Mundell, Bluevale; Doug Macaulay, Clinton; Dave
Lowry, Arthur; Ricky McGratten, Goderich, and John
Ferguson, of Kincardine.—National Defence Photo.
How are your
car's brakes
performing?
Don't gamble on brake performance. The
stakes are too high! Let us check your brakes
now ... tighten drums or reline as need be
for prompt, positive braking action.
Your car is in good hands here!
Wingham Motors
PHONE 357-2720
Wingham Advance -Times, Thursday, July 25, 1963 — Page 7
Bluevale Personas
Mr. and Mrs. Carl John-
ston spent Saturday in Lambeth.
Mrs. Edward Johnston returned
with them for a visit with rel-
atives here.
11,
Try
Canada's
est- eIling
and...you'll know why so many
people call for Black Label
say "MABEL,
.' BLACK
LABEL 1")
e
Mr. and Mrs. Mervyn Craig
and family have moved to the
house recently bought from
Elmer Sellers. Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Ross, former tenants,
are living in their trailer.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Fal-
coner and Chyrl visited at New
Liskeard last week.
Dail and Louise Kennedy, of
Ajax, are holidaying at the
manse with Rev. T. E. Kenn-
edy.
Ronald Jackson and family,
of Wingham, have moved into
the home on the farm on the
east boundary, owned by Glen
Golley.
Mrs. W. J. Peacock and
Miss Emma Jobuston are on a
trip to Calgary and other west-
ern points, travelling by plane.
Mrs. Harold Hamilton of
Port Burwell, and Miss Marg-
aret Curtis, of Belgrave, visit-
ed residents of the village on
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Elliott have joined Rev. Wm.
Blackmore and family, Port
Credit on a holiday motor trip
to the Maritimes.
Miss Margaret Detweiler and
Mrs. Grace Shearer, of Kitch-
ener, Misses Mary, Dorothy
and Marjorie Walker, of New
Hamburg, who have been
holidaying at Port Elgin, visit-
ed Mr. and Mrs. Bert Garniss
on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Street,
and family of Listowel, visited
at the home of Miss Mary Duff
on Sunday.
Mrs. David Brown, of Dunn-
ville, is a guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Wickstead.
Mrs. Jos. Horton, who has
been visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Alan White of Springfield and
other relatives, has returned
to her home here.
Mrs. Charles Hawkins and
Alan, of Guelph, visited Mrs.
M. L. Aitken last week.
Be Careful With
Your Camp Fires
TORONTO—Carelessness
with camp fires continues to be
one of the main causes of for-
est fires during the vacation
and picnic season, Here are
some things everyone can do to
help prevent them and keep
Ontario's forests green and
beautiful:
Build your camp fire in a
safe place on rock, sand, gra-
vel or mineral soil near the
water, clearing away debris or
branches. Keep the fire small,
using small sticks. Keep the
fire under observation at all
times and, before you leave it,
make sure it is dead out, The
sure way is to stir the coals
with a stick to separate them.
Drench the coals with water if
they are still hot. Drench the
ground around the camp fire to
ensure that the last spark is
dead out and won't start what
could develop into a major
conflagration after you have
left the area.
Dies at Lion's Head
Mrs. Marshall Bell
Former Resident
Mrs. Caroline Elizabeth Bell
of Tobermory passed away at
the Lion's Head Red Cross Hospi-
tal
ospital on Sunday, July 14. She
was in her 88th year.
Born in Blenheim, Carrie
Dennis was the daughter of Mf,
and Mrs. James Dennis. She
moved with her family to the
17th concession of Howick
Township, where she spent
most of her youth, and later
married Marshall Bell. They
resided in Wingham for many
years before moving to Tober-
mory in 1930.
Surviving are one son, Ivan,
of San Diego, Calif., a daugh-
ter, Mrs. Bernard (Vida) Jordan
of Tobermory, six grandchild-
ren and sixteen great grand-
children.
Mrs. Bell was predeceased
by her husband in 1927, four
brothers, Ernest, Henry, Walter
and George Dennis, and by two
sisters, Melissa (Mrs. Alex
Dickson) and Bertha (Mrs, Wal-
ter Welsh).
The funeral service was held
in the Settlement Church Pastor
Rhijnsburger conducting the
service, assisted by Rev. Hugh
Wilson. The pallbearers were
Baise Munn, Roy Hatt, Clar-
ence Spears, David Wyonch,
Whit Hopkins and Ricky Fitt.
Interment was in the Wing -
ham Cemetery where the pall-
bearers were Orville Welsh,
Harvey, Melville and Stanley
Dennis, Herman Casemore and
Fred Saint,
Relatives attended the funer-
al and burial services from
Toronto, London, Galt, Water-
loo, Woodstock, Sarnia, Tober-
mory and Wingham.
Race Meet at
Kincardine on
Civic Holiday
On Civic Holiday, Monday,
August 5th, Kincardine Kins-
men Club will be presenting
its twentieth annual harness
race meet. The Kinsmen were
the first service club in Canada
to sponsor the sport.
Racing in the lakeside town
of Kincardine dates back 95
years, in which time the track
has been in two other locations
before being moved to the
present scenic track overlook-
ing Lake Huron.
While harness racing is re-
garded in many places as a
dying venture, this is not so in
Kincardine where the Kinsmen
have netted at least $500 ayear
for their service program of
kiddies playgrounds, swimming
lessons and many other worthy
causes.
Many old timers in Western
Ontario may still recall the
name of Jack Gentles, one of
racing's first promoters in Ont-
ario. In recent years it will be
recalled it was on the Kincar-
dine track that the "Diplomat"
owned by Alex Parsons of Lon-
don broke record for his class.
Elmer Thompson, the Kins-
men Club's racing secretary,
reports all five races are filling
rapidly indicating that horse-
men enjoy racing at Kincardine
where they enjoy every hospi-
tality and facility possible by
the Kinsmen Club.
Erection of new pari mutual
betting booths on the grounds
this year by the Kinsmen is ex-
pected to be an added drawing
card to the picnic atmosphere
of Connaught Park.
THE COUNTDOWN
Time closes in on Canada's
centennial planning, says The
Financial Post. Only this
month, nearly two years after
the National Centennial Act
was passed, was a planning boss
picked. Now the new execu-
tive director for Canada's
100th birthday party is faced
with a host of undecided, un -
started, unsettled matters that
must soon be acted upon if the
whole centennial isn't to coll-
apse into confusion.
MASSEY-FERGUSON
DOES I T BETTER
Come in soon for a demonstration. Look, com-
pare ... you'll be a Massey -Ferguson man/
CHAS. ; ODGINS
WINGHAM
Massey- Ferguson
Sales & Service
PHONE 357-1440
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