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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1965-02-04, Page 12Page 1 2 - Wingham Advance -Times, Thursday. February 4, 196S PACK "A" Pack A Cubs met Tuesday night with 29 boys and four leaders present. Blue Six was NEW BOOKLE1' REVEALS HOW TO Improve Hearing Without an Aid Maybe you, too, can hear better without a hearing aid if you follow suggestions in new book, "How To Get the Most From Your Re- maining Hear- ing". It's full of facts like where to sit in church, and how to hear in a noisy room, FREE A NAME OR Quality for the hard of hearing HEARING AIDS 1. Box 510, Advanee-Times Wingham, Ontario. Name Address OBSERVE it% WHITE ANE WEEK February 7th to 14th DOWNIE S Sunoco Service DIAL 357-1554 Scogfigg activities the duty six and Sixer Doug Mason gave the grand howl. Akela and Raksha made inspec- tion and Doug Casemore won the special woggle. Practising and passing knots were the order of the evening. The hockey game in Kitch- ener was scheduled for Febru- ary 14 and church parade to Wingham United Churd will be held February 21. Steven Max- well brought in a bird house. 0--0--0 PACK "B" On Thursday 23 Cubs of Pack B were in attendance for the weekly meeting. There were two leaders present. Brown Six was on duty and led in the Grand Howl. Inspection follow- ed with the first three places awarded to the Blue, Red and White -Brown Sixes respectively. White Six, remanned now, tied the Brown Six in points. Roger Tiffin and Terry Har- court were received as new members of the White Six by Sixer Philip Beard. Just prior to the closing ceremony Philip's new charges were presented with white felt triangles for their sleeves, which they will wear from now on. The new chums will try some of their first star tests at the next meeting. Credit is due all Cubs who braved the cold and snow to attend the meeting. Brother Dies In Wyoming Murray Wellington McDon- ald of Wyoming, brother of Lorne McDonald of Wingham, died at his home on Wednesday, January 27. He was 49. Mr. McDonald was a process oper- ator at Polymer Corp., Sarnia. He is survived by his wife, the former Dorothy Moses, and a son, Dennis, at home; and his mother, Mrs. William T. McDonald of Wingham. There are five sisters, Mrs. Robert (Doris) Dilamartin, Miss Beatrice McDonald and Mrs. James Wheal, all of Harrington West, Mrs. Merill (Cora) Lotus of Brantford and Mrs. Kenneth (Shirley) Sutherland in Germany; two brothers, Lorne of Wingham and Ray of Stratford. Funeral service was conduct- ed at the McKay and White funeral home in Wyoming,with interment in Wyoming Ceme- tery. Y Agent: "When are you go- ing to pay for that tractor I soldY ou?" Farmer: "Pay for it? Why you said in a short time it. would pay for itself." TRUCK SPECIAL 1961 DODGE 3 -TON V-8, 2 SPEED AXLE 14 -FOOT STEEL PLATFORM, HOIST AND RACKS. ONLY 25,000 MILES. IF YOU ARE THINKING ABOUT A DIFFERENT FAMILY UNIT, WHY NOT TEST DRIVE ONE OF THESE: '64 CORVAIR CONVERTIBLE RADIO, BUCKET SEATS, AUTOMATIC. 7CI¶ CHEV. BISCAYNE 2 -DOOR. REALLY SHARP. 760 PONTIAC PARISIENNE 4 -DOOR, V-8, AUTOMATIC. McCLURE MOTORS LTD. WINGHAM - DIAL 357-3760 Council Agrees to Salary Increases The finance committee of Wingham's town council re- commended a number of in- creases in salaries for town em- ployees on Monday evening which were accepted. The clerk -treasurer will re- ceive $200.00 increase and members of the police depart- ment will have salary hikes ranging from $150.00 to $200. Street employees will be raised by 10 cents per hour. Other town employees including the assessor and the arena manager will also receivehighersalaries. Council also voted itself higher stipends. This action was based on a recommenda- tion of the 1964 council. Coun- cillors have in the past receiv- ed $100.00 per annum. In the future they will receive $200.00 with the reeve and deputy - reeve getting $250.00. The mayor's salary was raised from $200.00 to $400.00. ONE SECTION IN THIS ISSUE This issue of The Advance - Times contains one section only. The second part was NOT lost in the mail. Juveniles Have Lost Only One The Wingham Juveniles have done quite well through regular play this year. Out of 13 games, they have won 12. The team, has scored a total of 102 goals and has allowed 4'7 goals into their own net. On Friday, February 5th, Wingham will open its first game of a best -of -three series against Kincardine for the group final. The Wingham team was sor- ry to lose an excellent defence - man in Bill Dauphin. At a game in Ripley he suffered a dislocated ankle and a broken bone. The following are the statis- tics: Garniss Forster T. Deyell R. Deyell Johnston English Bateson Fisher Bismeyer Mitchell Kerr Strong Dauphin Gorrie G 21 23 14 10 11 6 4 3 3 1 4 1 0 1 A 19 14 20 22 15 3 5 6 6 8 1 4 5 1 P 40 37 34 32 26 9 9 9 9 9 5 5 5 2 Sister Dies in Clinton Hospital Rev. R. U. MacLean conduct- ed onducted funeral service at Knox Pres- byterian Church, Auburn on Tuesday afternoon for Mrs. Her- bert Govier. Burial was in Wing- ham Cemetery. The pallbear- ers were A, Kirkconnell, John and Bert Daer, Bob Phillips, Bob Daer and Art Youngblut, Mrs. Govier was the former Jennet Aitchison, daughter of the late William Aitchison and Elizabeth O'Donahue. She was born in Teeswater on April 5, 1886. Mrs. Govier had lived in Wingham before moving to the Auburn district. She was a life member of the W. M.S. of Knox Presby- terian Church, a member of the Women's Institute, and a director of the Horticulture Society. Her husband predeceased her. She is survived by a dau- ghter, Mrs. Harry (Sylvia) Eve of Leaside and sons, Charles Blatchford of St. Marys and Norman Blatchford of Sudbury; six grandchildren and twelve great-grandchildren. She is also survived by five brothers, John and Henry Aitch- ison of Mooretown, Thomas of Kitchener, Lorne of Mitchell and Harvey of Wingham. She was predeceased by a sister, a Three New Members Named To authority (Continued from Page One) of this service if it is required. The chairman compliment- ed the retiring executive of- ficers for their efforts and co- operation and thanked the field officer, Ken Musclow; the sec- retary -treasurer, Cyril Bamford; the superintendent, John Hazlitt and his staff for the fine job they have done. Fred G. Jackson, chief con- servationist with the Conserva- tion Branch of the department, attended the meeting and spoke briefly on several aspects of the conservation movement. He said that the completed reports of surveys made in the water- shed during 1963 should be turned over to the Authority within a couple of months. Ter- ry McCauley, Ausable Author- ity field officer and formerly with the Maitland Authority, also spoke briefly. Larry C. Scales of Stratford, zone forester for the Depart- ment of Lands and Forests, re- portedon reforestation areas s held by the Authority and being operated under agreement by his department. He said that 107,000 trees have been plant- ed on the 383 acre area of the Stapleton tract in Turnberry Township since March of 1964. Another 21, 000 trees have been planted on the Morley Y tract in Howick Township which is 100 acres in size. Mr. Coghlin, reporting for the flood control advisory board, said engineering studies have been carried out at the Lower Town dam in Wingham, and that the municipality has ap- proved a scheme estimated at $39,000. This work will be sub- ject to the 75 per cent grant from the Department of Energy and Resources Management. Mr. Coghlin also said that engineer- ing studies have been carried out at the Howson Dam in Wing - ham and at Gorrie and Ford- wich dams, Total cost of the studies is $3,300. Authority field officer, Ken Musclow, said snow surveys are being held twice monthly with measurements taken at three sites. lie said these contribute to a flood warning system. Water samples to check wa- ter quality arc taken at eight sites in the watershed by the superintendent, working in co- operation with the Ontario Wa- ter Resources Commission. John Hazlitt, superintendent, said interior fences have been cleaned up at the Falls Reserve conservation area. He recom- mended construction of a small dam at the Sunshine Wildlife Area where 9,000 trees will be planted this year. Ile also ad- vocated grading and seeding the north side of the Gorrie conservation area, W.J. Kelterborn, speaking for the public relations advis- ory hoard, said that exhibits had been set up at several fall fairs in the Authority last fall, and that various members had spoken on conservation at a number of service clubs and other organizations during the year. He indicated that a slide program is being built up. William Evans told the meet- ing that the reforestation board is considering the purchase of some further properties for re- forestation purposes. Oscar Nickle, conservation areas chairman, said that the board and executive have ap- proved the tentative plans of the consultant who has been making a land -use study of the Falls Reserve area at Benmiller. Harry Tebbutt, chairman of the land -use board, reported that the farm pond program set- up by the Authority had to be discontinued when the Depart- ment placed the administra- tion of grants for this purpose with the Department of Agri- culture. He felt that other act- ivities should be taken up by the board. The meeting then approved the placing of the re- sponsibility for wildlife pro- grams with the land -use sec- tion, rather than under the direction of the conservation areas board. The members voted to in- crease the $8.00 per diem to $10.00 per day. The secretary - treasurer said the complete fi- nancial statement would be pre- sented at the next general meet- ing, but he expected that the Authority would have a surplus of about $5,000.00. A tourist in the Far West complained to the hotel propri- etor about the dirty roller towel in the men's washroom. "I thought," he snapped, "that roller towels were outlawed many years ago!" "That there towel," answered the hotel keeper indignantly, "was put up long before that law was passed." Mrs. Joe (Emma) Mutch and two brothers, Lockie and Wal- lace. Mrs. Govier, who had been suffering from a heart ailment ' for a year, died in Clinton Hospital on January 30, She was 78. G. A. WILLIAMS, 0.0. Optometrist 9 PATRICK STREET W. 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LB. lb. pkg. of 8 33s 39` 49` 59` 45c 35c Maxwell House INSTANT COFFEE, 30c off McCormick's COOKIES, 3 varieties HEINZ FANCY TOMATO JUICE 48 °Z YORK PEAN BUTTERUT 3 LBS. 99° E. D, Smith PIE FILLING, 6 vara, 20 -oz. 3/$1.00 HOOD BIN HQUICK OATS Kraft CHEESE WHIZ Kam LUNCHEON MEAT Zip DOG FOOD Maple Leaf PURE LARD S -LBS. 51Y 16 -oz. 57c 12 -oz. 39c 15 -oz. 11/$1.00 2 lbs. 45c 10 -oz. $1.39 2 pkgs. 65c 351.00 - FROZEN FOODS SNOW CROP FANCY PEAS 12 -oz. 2/39c OLD SOUTH ORANGE JUICE 12 -oz. 47c RUPERT'S RAINBOW TROUT 10 -oz. 55c FLORIDA RIPE TOMATOES 14 -oz. cello 2/39e FLORIDA GREEN CELERY STALKS 24s 25c FLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT (White or Pink) 96s 10/59c Red Grocery Free Delivery: LIMITED DIAL 357-1020