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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1972-09-14, Page 11i 1 AuTtQn 'r-Jarn--a..- 1973 NORTHERN FEEDER SALES Wlarton--- Thursday, .Sept. 21.- 10 a.m.,, 3200; Thess:alon— Wednes- day, Sept. 27 - 10 a.m., 1000; Manitoulin (Littleurtrent)— - Thursday, Sept, 28 ,9:30 a.m., 2800; La Sarre (Dupuy) P.Q.- Tuesday, Oct. 3 - 10 a.m., 2500; New Liskeard-- Thursday, Oct. 5 - .11 a.m:, 900; South River— Fri- day, Oct. 6 - 10 a.m., 1000; Wiar- ton— T1u rsday, Oct. 12 - 10 a.m., 2500; Manitoulin (Little Cur- rent)-- Monday, Oct. 16 - 1 p.m., 300; South River— Thursday, Oct. 26 - 11 a.m., 500. For further information write S. MacDonald, Advertising Manager, Box 130, Huntsville, Ontario. Notice To Creditorsmrs r , _ BREWER; In loving Iiiernory • of our dear parents and grand* parents, William 11. Brewer, who passed away Sept. 8th, 1968 and Teresa M. (Robb), who passed away December 12, 1960. God saw you getting weary, He did what He thought best, With farewells left unspoken, Fre took you home to rest. —Always in our hearts, Betty,' Al and family. DEANS: In loving memory of Jack Deans, husband and dad, who passed away suddenly Sep- tember 17, 1971. —Ever remembered by wife Jean, and sons, Bill and Peter. NOTICE TO CREDITORS` IN. TIFF ESTATE (W WILLIAM KELLY ALL PERSONS .having claims against the Estate of the aboVe- mentioned, late of the Town. of Wingham, in the County of Hu- ron, Retired Gentleman, who died on September 2, 1972, are re- quired to file proof of same with the undersigned on or before the 4th day of October, 1972. AFTER that date the Execu- trix will proceed to distribute the Estate having regard only to tate claims of which she shall then have had notice. DATED at Wingham, Ontario this 7th day of Septerriber, 1972. CRAWFORD & MILL, Wingham, Ontario, Solicitors for the Executrix. 14-21-28 NOLT—At the Wingham and Dis- trict Hdspital on Saturday, Sept. 9, to Mr. and Mrs. Jonas Nolt, RR 7, Lucknow, a daugh- ter. VALAMPARAMPIL—At the Wingham and District Hospital on Monday, Sept. 11, to Mr. and Mrs. James. • Vala pparampil, Wingham, a son. LANE—Born to Mr. and Mrs. An- drew Lane of Toronto (the for- mer Dianne Ross) at -Toronto General Hospital; a son, Robert John, on September 2, 1972. mirn ; with year A resident of this area for the past two years, Mrs. Clifford Whiteside passed away at her home, RR 1, -Wingham, on Tues- day, September 5, following a lengthy illness. She was in her 69th year. Born in Toronto, Mrs. White- side was the former Adelle M. Cooper,,a daughter of the late Al- fred and Adelaide Cooper. She married Mr. Whiteside in Toron- to in 1932 and he predeceased her one year later. She came to this area in 1970. Surviving are one son, Clifford of Bracebridge; two sisters, Mrs. Lillian Whitfield of Antioch, Cal., and Mrs. E. J. Curtis of RR 1, Wingham ; anti ,four grandchil- dren. The late Mrs. Whiteside rested at the S. J. Walker Funeral Home untill Friday when Rev. Barry Passmore conducted the service at 11 a.m. Her body was then con- veyed to -Toronto for interment in Westminster Cemetery. Pall- bearers were six nephews, Peter Curtis, Edward Curtis Jr., Stephen Curtis, Paul Curtis, David Curtis and Patrick Curtis. OXFAM THE INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PEOPLE 97 Eglinton Ave., East Toronto 315, Ontario Wait dies in London Private funeral and committal service was held Saturday at the George E. Logab and Sons Fu- neral Horne, London, for Dr. A> - thur J. Watt, who died suddenly at his home in London on Thurs- day. Cremation followed in Woodland Crematorium. In memory of Dr. Watt, donations were requested for either the Capadian Cancer Society or the Ontario Heart Foundation, Dr. Watt will be remembered by many in this area, A©son of the late Rev. W. J. and Mrs. Watt, he was born in Manitoba 63 years ago while his parents were serv- ing a charge there. He moved to i:hi, area when he was a young child. Dr. Watt attended elementary school at Barrie and high school at Barrie and Long Branch. He was a 1934 graduate of the Uni- versity of Toronto Medical School and in 1935 went into private practice at Port Elgin. In1942 he went to London, where he worked with the Beck Memorial Sani- tarium for 27 years. For the past three years he has been in charge of the Provincial Chest Clinic in London. He was certified in internal medicine (tuberculosis) in 1947 and became a Fellow of the American College of Chest Physi- cians two years later. Dr. Watt is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Ray (Sylvia) Steels of London and one .son, Ronald, at home. • Also left to mourn his passing are three grandchildren; four brothers, Archie and ,ev. Robert of Toron- to, Dr. Donald of Vancouver, Rev. George of Oakville; and two sisters, Mrs. George (Muriel) Thompson- and Mrs. Millan (Genevieve) Moore, both of Whitechurch. He was prede- ceased by his wife, the former Elsie V. King in May of this year. REMEMBER F1ELP YOUR RED CROSS HIS WORSHIP, Mayor DeWitt Miller officiated"at the drawing of the winning ticket in the "Back -to -School" contest sponsored through local merchants by The Advance -Times. Ad- vertising man John Visser holds the box as the•ticket of Brenda Burchill of RR 3, Wing - ham is drawn. She is the winner of a $2.00,allowance-for each week of the school year, or 580 cash. (Staff Photo) D BY ALICE MULVEY Upon being a volunteer It is great to be a volunteer now that middle age is here. Yes,. one of the advantages of those middle years is the freedom to be able to. choose to do the things that you have often yearned to do, but be- cause of family or other commiit- frients, were just not able to do them. Although there are many .dif- ferent agencies and areas of work to choose from, they all have something in common. No one questions your age, race, ethnic background, religious or political views. They do -not care if you are overweight,•rather small or have freckles on your face. The chief thing is that you have been moti vated`by a sincere personal de- sire to givegenerously of your time and talents. The fact that rvice Director APPRAISING APPRAISALS ON FARMS • 'LIVESTOCK IMPLEMENTS Jack Alexander AUCTIONEER PHONE 357-3631 isimimmisselomer . ESTATE MARK SERVICES Auction Administrators Market Appraisals on —Furniture —Antiques Moderate Fees J. A. Currie 357-1011 DRESSMAKING For Wedding and Other Fabrics vI POOLS, ETC. OLS - PATI • SAUNAS .In and Above Ground Pools Easy Financing Pool Toys and Lawn Furniture Wm. R. Rintoul Construction Patrick St.,, Wingham 357-2628 Swimming Pools Above and Below Ground Complete Line of Pool Chemicals • RMSTRONG CHEMICALS Walkerton FREIGHT SERVICE". TRANSPORT SERVICE WALDEN BROS. TRANSPORT LTD. General Freight and Household Moving - To and From Anywhere in Ontario PHONE 357-2050 Wingham SALES AND SERVICE Lynn Hoy Enterprises Honda and Skidoo Sales & Service 16 Patrick St., Wingham Phone 519-357-3435 JAYCO & KAPLUN CAMPER TRAILERS Sales and Rentals Full Year Warranty on New Camper Bumstead Metal,Fabricating Phone 357-2272 PIZZA Freshly made to your order from a choice of Mushrooms, Pepperoni and Sausage - 3 Sizes Chicken & Sea Food Dinners RIVERVIEW DRIVE-IN 357-1360 1 FLOWERS Cut Flowers and - Plants IDEAL GIFT FOR EVERY OCCASION Handicraft and Flower Shop 318 Josephine 357-2023 GRAPHIC ARTS GUENTER HEIM GRAPHIC ARTS Interior and Exterior Design Commercial Art Signs v/ R`R 1, Wingham 357-3811 AUTOMOTIVE 1' C. E. MacTavish Ltd. Your Automatic Car Wash Centre Transmission Repairs.. Expert Repairs to All Makes and Models of Cars and Trucks PHQNE•357-2841 INSURANCE For you INSURA See or Cal WILLIAM S. REED 64 Victoria St., 351-2114 e i� INSURANCE All Types of Insurance 335-3525 357-2636 GORRIE WINGHAM BUS CHARTERS ARMSTRONG BUS LINES Formerly Pearson Bus Line Brand new bus available for Charter Service anytime. JIM ARMSTRONG 357-1651 ‘'in 4, Wingham THE SERVICE' PLUMBING HEATING Percy Clark Plumbing Heating and Sheet Metal Contractor PHONE 357-3080 366 Edward St., Wingham' i Leroy Jackson —Plumbing —Heating —Tinsmithiing 191 Josephine St. Wingham 357-2904 ELECTRICAL BURKE ELECTRIC Electrical Contractors " Motor Rewind and Sales • Household Appliances Josephine St. 357-2450 Emergency Service - See the Yelloyv Pages FUELS s BILL TIFFIN Imperial Esso Agent For all your Home and 'Farm Fuel and Lubricating Needs 357-1032 Watch Your Business Grow.. When You Plant Ycur Offer In The Advance -Times - Phone 357 2320 DIRECTORY you have chosen to lead a more `instructive life on some worth- while project is sufficient to be accepted. There is dignity and impor- tance, this feeling of being able to contribute towards the happiness or well-being of our fellow man. - Volunteers blaze trails when they expand their own lives, to serve, teach and learn about others. By giving to others what we have learned enriches our own lives. The happy life belongs to all ages and all people. By voluntarily contributing to human better- ment, we are helping ourselves to a happier life, more fulfilling. As. Montaigne wrote: -I gather flowers by the wayside, by the brook and in the -meadows, and Only the 'string with which I bind together is my own. To be a .volunteer is like going on an. adventure, it is exciting, stimulating and challenging be- cause you never quite know what to expect: It broadens your hor- izons, stretches the imagination It. and tests your creativity. Like t he • pioneers of "old, • volunteers, have courage (to try something new ), vision (of .a better life for others) and the eagerness to con- tribute. These middle -age years can be some of the best in our whole life span, they can prove to be the entrance into a new dimen- sion of living, a really exciting challenge. Being a volunteer means new faces and new experiences, dis- covering the quaint and the curi-, ous. There is an old proverb that says: "To live forever, get a cause." To be* a volunteer is to find a • cause, a new way of life • that not only helps others, but en- larges your own life. Whoever thinks that the best of life has passed with- youth hasn't.. learned that middle age brings its own re- wards; especially if you are a vol- unteer. There are many reasons why people do volunteer work: religi- ous or humanitarian connections, to gain - knowledge or social status, to develop a skill or. as a relief from boredom. Perhaps Christ Himself explained the need for volunteers best when He summed it up: "If anyone wishes - to come. after Me,. let him :deny, - himself and take up his cross daily and follow Me." Mr. and Mrs. Norman Heal celebrate golden wedding_. Mr. and Mrs. Norman C. Heal • of Minnie Street, Wingham, cele- • braked their golden wedding, anniversary at a. Sunday after- noon open house Sept: 10. The . celebration was given in their honor by their son John and his wife of Hensall at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. Danby in Sarnia. Mrs. Danby is Mrs. Heal's niece. Mr. and Mrs. Heal were mar- ried 50 years ago in Sarnia on August 30 by the Rev. R. Weaver. Mrs. Heal is the former Olive Culley, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Edward Culley of Blackwell:' Mr. Heal is a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Heal of . Petrolia. Receiving guests -with Mr. and Mrs( Heal were their son John and -his wife and "their two grand- daughters Julie, and Jane Meal of Hensall. Gold Decorations Buffet lunch Was served from a beautifully decorated table, with flowers and tapers in tints • of. white, yellow and gold. Wedding cake was wrapped in gold foil and served to the many friends and relatives who attended. Included with the numerous cards and letters were messages from Prime Minister Pierre Tru- deau, Robert F. Nixon, Premier William Davis and Murray Gaunt, -MPP, Huron -Bruce. Guests were present from Lon- don, Georgetown°, Wyoming, Oil Springs, Petrolia, Corunna., Thessalon, Elizabeth, N.J.: Wingham and •Sarnia. Mr. and Mrs. Heal have resided in Wingham:,for the past 30 years, where he was employedJas a sec- tion foreman ori the CNR. He re- tired in 1962. 1 MR. AND MRS. NORMAN HEAL of Wingham celebrated their golden wedding day at Sarnia Sunday when an open house was held and attended by many relatives and friends. The Heals have been well known resildents of Wingham for - the past 30 years. (Staff Photo) The Wingl►am ; c vance-' itn101111 Kowick resident dies folloiing long illness A .lifelong ,resident of Howick, Mrs. Wellesley Strong passed away at Wingham and District Hospital on Sunday, September 3, following a long illness. She was the beloved wife of W. Wellesley Strong of Gorrie, dear mother of Mrs. John C. (Janice) Mars of Wingham and Mrs. Kenneth W. (Patricia) Head 'of 1698' Murphy Rd., Sarnia. Also surviving are five grandchildren, Gerald and Joanne Marks, Kim, Tad and Kelly Head. There are five sisters and two brothers, Stanley and Mnr•ray A. (Jeanette) Hutchison, Mrs. W. (Mabel) Brown, Mrs. J. (Flor- ence) Strong, Mrs. J. (Zelma) McKercherNickel. and Mrs.. 0. (Jessie) She was predeceased by two daughters, Margaret Ellen and Shirley Jean. Mrs. Strong was ..the former Jean A. Edgar, a daughter of the late Alexander -Edgar and Flor- ence Cochrane. She was a mem: ber of the Gorrie United Church, a life member of the UCW, past president of different organiza- tions in the church and she took an active interest in all commun- ity affairs. - The late Mrs. Strong rested at the Moir. Funeral Home, Gorrie, until Tuesday, September 5, when funeral service was con- ducted by her pastor, Rev. George Sach of Gorrie United Church. Interment followed in Gorrie Cemetery. Pallbearers were her grandsor and five nephews, Gerald W. Marks, William A. Strong,, J. Perry Strong, Robert J. Strong, Dr. Alex E. Strong and Grant A. Montgomery. Workers should never wear perforated shoes, sandals or sneakers around any plant,. St. John Ambulance advises. Safety shoes are the best footwear as you can never tell when some- thing may be dropped. Fall pp hospitalize two Two children were admitted to the Wingham and, DiStrict Hospi- tal last week suffering painful in- juries in separate falls. John Kennedy, seven-yeavold son of 'Mr. and Mrs. Colin Ken- nedy of Teeswater, suffered a fractured left arm in a fall last Wednesday. The same day, 12 -year-old Thomas McLear) of Wingliath, dislocated his right elbow in- a fall. Earlier this week both children were said to be in satisfactory condition. Kenneth Acton, 24, of Owen Sound, was admitted to hospital on Wednesday of last week, with skull injuries. Mi. Acton was• apparently working at the swim-, ming pool at Lucknow when; he slipped on wet cement and fell against. the cement mixing machine,, Hospital officials de- scribed his condition as satiS- factor; earlier this week. Also in satisfactory condition is Joseph Deon of RR 1, Luck low, who was admitted to hospital last Friday. d Mr. Deon received inul- tiple lacerations to his left hand when he caught it between two chutes'on a cement mixer. - NTEE FOR `SALE Eight room Johns-Manvi 11/2 storey home with 4 bed- rooms located on large lot in Wingham. Oil furnace, 3 pc. bath on main floor, alumin- um door and storms. Low taxes, low price. Try ' us with an offer. ' ° ' Modern one storey, 4 -bed rQQpm home with 2015 sq..ft. of living space with fire- place, family room, bath and a•. half, attached double gar- age located on; 2 1/3 acre lot eiP on' main highway in village close to Wingham. Thisout- standinghome is loaded with extras. Seeing is *believing: Early possession with terms. "EASY LIVING Village store clean and well established business with comfortable, four bedroom living quarters. Gross sales $1,000.00 per week. RESTAURANT Busy little restaurant doing.a large turnover, seating ca- pacity for 30 people. There is a one bedroom apartment at therearof lousiness quarters, a 3 bedroom apartment above. FOR RENT Large home.. in the country with all conveniences, 5 bed- rooms. Suitable for two fam- ilies. Commercial building situated on a lot 100 feet by 100 feet, fronting on Highway No. 4. DON HOLST 'REAL ESTATE LTD. Realtors, Wingham "Rural Ontario Specialists" • OFFICE 357-3840 Wm. Adamson 887-6357 C. Sutcliffe 392-6969 J. Brewer 887-9039 50 ACRES si•,,I„ , Excellent retreat land located close to Wingham, new mod- ern one -storey home with three bedrooms, oil furnace, broadloom, tile and vinyl floors, .full ' basement, new drilled well. Bush has cedar, spruce and pine. Low down payment, easy terms and im- mediate ,possession. .A real steal, don't miss it. HOBBY FARM 50 acres with 40. workable with remainder • in mixed bush. Strong stream running through farm. Barn 45''x 50' with lean 15' x 30', tie-ups, loose pens, horse stalls, 1% storey brick home with 3 bedrooms, 3 pc. bath down and drilled well on pressU're. Located less than two miles from Wingham, this farm spells real value. DDD YOLTIPLE LISTINS SERVICE PHOTO LISTING SERVICE Contact: JOHN F. BRENT Phone: Office 357-1344 • Res. 357-1418 milisomemommommo 1 BROKER REAL ESTATE 176 DIAGONAL ROAD • 357.1117 WINGHAM, ONTARIO WROXETER HOME Full price only $11,900. Attractive home completely renovated not longago with new kitchen, carpeted liv- ing room, family room is panelled New 4 pc. bath. Up-) stairs are 2 bedrooms. Concrete basement, oil furnace. New roof. Heated garage 15 x 24 has concrete floor. Taxes are $73.00 per year. Good' value is being offered. 100 ACRE FARM 7 room brick home has bath, furnace and new roof. Barn 40 x 90, tie ups for 38 cows. 2 vertical concrete silos 16 x 55 with roof and unlbader, second silo 12 x 30. 70 acres of the land is tillable, roiling terrain, hot - ural drainage, balance maple bush. Good value is being offered for the full price of $25,000. 185,000 lb. Milk quota is available.