HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1974-09-05, Page 15By A. C. Gordon j
. ,1 nritii4s. !Pyra td . ,rh►tt .01trichx
lelection- ofdouble-wide and single -wide his on
*fast, et#er►t efficient
delivery
and set 4P by
professional
atalservicemen. price* „ssured by our volume'blin and
,easy, purchase,
plans.
ILI E RE
1 O.
,
R.RR 3; KITCHENER
No, 8 Hwy. between Hwy.:401:and'Kltcher*�G53,°
788
E.
ii
filek I the United States
and
world's completed one the
bridges, the Ivy
Leo biridge in the Thousand
ria o(t' St,,
The eventwas of such. - -
to
Oce that President
:Roosevelt came all the way from
W, s ton to help our Premier
cut the ceremonial ribbon,
Along pith most Canadians
.1
sat at the ,aid tial 4dar listening
;
to the. .speeches, Anytime
Roosevelt spoke in, those days,
ev 'yonelistened. ""mss bei e,'t
he said, .mis more than a
marvel of engineering. Utz. much
more than a traveller's con -
'11.. APPLIANCES
and Purnitui�e
SALES and SERV10E
Tru Colour. picture
tube .
• Solid State 90 chassis
✓ High. votfage Tripler
circuit
1 Plug-in transistors
✓ Colour tok automatic
fine tuning
• Tint Lok automatic that
cdntrol
• Bass and Treble tone
control
• Permatune pre-set
V.H.F. fine tuning'
• •Lighted Channel roll-,
calor
4 Variable video peak-
ing control
PHONE
OPPOSITE .ROYAL' HOTEL
i
RusseII ` is doing his
best to hold prizes,
down this week by
selling this Fleetwood
26" Colour TV for only
98 MACDONNELL ST.
ori Sept., 13
We'll make you. a deal
you can't refuse!
INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE.
We're reducing our inventory
of New Idea Electric Tractors
right now, to make room for the
new models. So, from now
through Sept. 13, we're passing
on company and dealer discounts
to you. That amounts to really big
savings if you buy before Sept. 13.
Chances are you'll probably
never be able to buy a tractor of
comparable quality for less than
you can now. So don't wait. Think
of all the fall and winter jobs a
New Idea Electric Tractor will do
for you. Like lawn mowing and
sweeping. Snow plowing. Oper-
ating chain saws, hand tools, and
more:
Come on in and test drive a
New idea Electric Tractor today,
during our Inventory Clearance
Sale. You'll save big.
Cleaner, Quieter, Safer.
Battery Power is B+tter
HARVEY KROTZ LTD..
TRACTOR AND EQUIPMENT DIVISION
HIGHWAY 29N PHONE 291.390D
ki
venienee. It OW' 'be au eternal
mertinatent to the fact that out.* i*
groat border
the world and a thrix
that greatnotOom con live kg
side without any fear of the en*
k
to devour, the
a day .w nearly ever! a r
Other int d borderbari and
wali
the speeches were en
to make a young Canadian L U
me than* God on bended knee for
all His preferealal blew*..
Besides nobody was. ,anti.
American in those days hut
cranks, and crackpot
*•Sunday, at the ihvitiation
of arson of Ohne who has atoll*
and a boat nea rby,1.finally prlllda
visit to Ivy Lea, "Thought you'd'
like to join us in having a lookat
some of the islands in the St -
Lawrence National Park," he
said. `"It's our tax money that's
keeping them beautiful," he told
me, "so how be we see whaat`
we're paying for!"
He has a lovely new eebm
cruiser, a footer complete with
cupboards and ice -box Qurfigood
ladies soon had these cranim d
w th groceries and drink, We also.
a doze or more hamb er
patties. "The park people have.
barbecue grills for .Y911
everywhere you go," I was told.
"They even cut the firew000d for"
YOU."
. It . sounded almost too good to •
be true, and it was. The St'.
Lawrence Islands National Park.
comprises 12 islands as well as a
part of the mainland, 270 acrep of
lovely wooded parkland set, in the
most beautiful waters in.
America. Parkland which is kept
scrupulously clean throughout,
and there are camping facilities
at every turn and public wharves
for your boat in almost every
bay. But would you believe that in
all that boundless Eden, we
couldn't find a single place where
we could tie up our boat and go'
ashore? Wherever we went,
every foot of docking space was
taken, and mostly by boats flying.
the Stars and Stripes. On one
particular wharf on Camelot
Island, every boat but one was
American.
"They come in a bunch, sort
of," the park attendant informed
us.
T�"'my do that. the
n a arae L
nwhile there'sstill roam d they
stay tied up like that for the whole
weekend."
He also told us that we were by
no means the first to complain
about it.
Nor did it sweeten our humour
too much when we finally tied up
to the limb of a willow on what
appeared to be adeserted island`
on the Canadian side only to be
routed out by the occupants of a
40 foot yacht who informed us
that they were the owners.
Now I agree that it is good to be
a good 'neighbour,but I wonder if
I could remind the great people in
Ottawa that the magnificent
parks are made magnificent with
our hard-earned Canadian
dollars, and that when we suggest
that we should have the first right
to enjoy them we are neither
selfish nor anti-American.
We merely want to be
reassured that Roosevelt was
right back in '38 when he came up
to Ivy Lea to tell us that ours was
one border where there would be
no devouring of one country by
the, other.
BY DOWnillY
ST. r alt MagerWled
Darr Dolt .
Sews like e►
gues with me, e other day 1'
had anAra, mmt about re.
mon with fry
she
started It,,I t
�hotOt . � algid
apologize, but she didn't. Why
do 1 ..alwaya. attract the
arguers? Incidentally* they
usually win.
Ar Q.
Women once had
higher church role
Women's lib has encour-
aged women to try for ordina-
tion to the priesthood and
other high office, but in the
abbeys and convents of West-
ern Europe, down to the 15th
Century, monks and nuns
pledged their obedience to
abbesses who wore the mitre.
The Renaissance and
Reformation, drawing in-
spiration from the Greeks,
Romans and Hebrews, top-
pled women from their lofty
position in the church and
John Knox argued it was
against nature and against
God fora man to be in obedi-
ence to a woman.
Early discovery vital
in Hodgkio's disease
Hodgkin's disease involves
primarily the cells of the lym-
phoid tissue and may start in
any lymph node but comm
ly is first discovered in the
nodes above the collarbone or
lower nodes In the neck re-
gion.
It is most important to dis-
cover Hodgkin's early in the
hope that it may be stopped
locally before spreading info
other areas. Xray treatment
Is proving successful in the
early stage
Dear A. Q.:'
If you are one, attract
one.
The uFPer loop on the letter
p classifies you.. You are as
adept and as agile at arm,
as the beat of `' tom, The
"squeezed" e loops keep you
following your own little pati
of conviction, as you habitual-
ly turn down the 'ideas. as ;of
others, wiithout reason. You
You -
simply feel that all thinking
should gravitateto your point.
of view.
And, anyway, religion,
itself, is a sore topic for •
cussion -- much less an argu-
ment.
argument.
Your impulsive nature,
seen in your far forward slant,
causes you to speak out in de-
fense of your ideas and of
eu'self' before you've had a
chance to think. While the
best way to win an argument
is to avoid it, you have to.
come out of your own confines
to know it.
Your game of life can have
a lot more zing if you spread
out your mental mechanism
t see both side before you
ing-Pong yourself into
another lost argument.
D. JI
dto*
manwho afJns. lk Is
ulgsr and nsda., f to
tell my and
don't
?00Ple ►' hamshe re.
to it and t'calla* on
the phone for ,days. She did
tell me that be foals b'*.
guide,�wya weal
Dear G.X.: n
Your daughter Monied this
,you 'didn't. As long a
she's trying to give it a "go,"
give her a, .
Yourpr , in
s�
the tall t'a, andyou are
ant toanything or anyone who.
interferes with: your standing
in your family om in.yonr tram-
• qty# When your da
"terra husbanad' walked into
your picture, he "hie d"
your framie. -
You'll have to admit ,fit
you're fault-finding . and
picky, seen in the consistentv
formations along the line, You
resent what has happened,
seen in the rigid beginning up-
stroke 011 M. and you are bunt
and candid invyour remarks,
seen in the lack of 'beginning
upstrokes. and the :open tops
on d and a. You don't hesitate
to "cut nose", whenever you ,
feel like it.
Just4etnember that behttd
all obnoxious behavior lies a
reason, So, with your " sharp
analytical mind, recognize
him for what he is. He's your
daughter's husband with a
problem,' not her problem
husband.
Y uJf
ox-
D.J.•
Agrkultural Tidbits
With Adrian Vos
. Union Carbide went on strike
and it cost the farmer money.
That may sound strange at first
glance. If the grain ' handlers
strike ,or, tete. meat,;pac s0140 13a
depressing effect on those
commodities. Well, Union
Carbide makes most of the
casings for sausage and when
they went .on strike the packers
curlailed°the buying of sows with
e resultant drop in prices. When
facilities at the packer are sitting
idle it .costs( him °money, so he
passes this loss on to the con-
sumer in the form of a small
increase on all his products. So a
seemingly unrelated strike in
industry makes for a loss to the
farmer and a higher price to the
consumer. •
I saw a picture recently of a
loin of hog of eight years ago and
one of this year. The dif-
ference is truly amazing. While
the old loin was almost half fat
the new one had only a very small
rim of this. It shows clearly what
great improvement has been
made over the last few years to
improve the quality of pork. The
Canadian hog has been truly
redesigned.
Here is a° quote from The
National Hog Farmer, an
American magazine. "Many of
us who are making the most noise
about :middle&tnUaa-$nc>Aabout
food atleat coill"dVet r phrase
that oft quoted comment of
Pogo's about pollution: We have
the middleman, and he is us. That
ghostly middleman is the
packinghouse . worker. He's the
retail store employee. He's the
truckdriver, the waitress, the
baker, the frozen pie maker.
Labor makes up nearly half, 48
per centf the marketing
charges on food. Hourly labor
costs of the food marketing firms
have increased 70 per cent since
1962. Part of that increase was
reduced by inciteased output per
man hour, reducing the ad-
ditional labor cost per unit of
product marketed to 47 per cent.
But that increase was not
achieved by working faster or
harder, it was achieved by large
expenditures for new plants and
facilities to a total of more than 3
billion in 1973 alone. Corporate
profits before taxes rose no more
than 4 per cent."
CROSSWORD
42
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A CR OSS
1 - Devices used In
popular sport
9 A gaited horse
10 • Begins a voyage
12 - Beast of burden
113 - Thick liquid
15 • Noah's vessel
16 - Varnish Ingredient
18 - Pale
19 - In reference to
20 - In favor of
21 - To harden
23 - Mus Ica t note
24 - Robin Hood's
"bullets"
25 - Tormentor
26 - Thrower
30 - To span
33 • Preposition
34 - Watery expanse
3s - Aquatic propelling
device
36 - Division of the
Bible (abb.)
37 • Louse egg
39' - Make lines on
40 - Three -friths
of "Dlaiti"
41 -Pause 5 -Aid
43 - Powder 6 - Musical note
44 - Sudden wreak • 7 - A cover
46 - Personal (abb.) 8 - Tardy
47 - Big winner to 9 - More refined
bridge (two wds.) 11 - To be frugal
12 - Long-distance
races
14 - Full of zeal
16 - Nolay dispute
17, Bern
20 - Young equines
22 - Tropical swinish
lo27 - Seoanimal
Segments
28 - College degree
(plur29- To speed
d
30 - Dull person
31 - Girl's name
32 - Destinations
38 - bioses
astattoo
40 - nannao
42 - Equality
43- seversie
45.1'a a
46. !+Loral Ni►th.l
DOWN
1 - Refuse
stubbornly
2 - Playing card
3 - Compass point
4 - Mistakes
Now Available oa.
1ST. AND 2ND NIORTGAc ,g
Anywhere.in Ontario'
oa;
RESIDENTIAL' COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIA.
and FARM PROPERTIES
Interim Financing 1 or New CeeEnref1 % Land Dew
For Representattives In Yew
Stone
SAFEWAY INVESTMENTS AND
CONSULTANTS LIMITED
(5 19)1444535 � T4435 ;lit
Head O.ff ice- 50 Weber St. ., Kitchener, 'Ont.
--We °Huy Existing 14ortga, for inset
r$.
et in
a Kodak
Pocket Iostamatic.
40 Camera Outfft.
Amimmmmiummumr
i Ko> lav
nstaniatIc
40
•
from the
Vi'oyal 1111i11 suers Teani
FILL IN YOUR BALLOT AT THIS
PARTICIPATING UNIROYAL DEALER:
JACKSON MOTORS
WHERE CUSTOMERS SEND THEIR FRIENDS
Home of the Complete GM Line
Wallace Ave. N.
PHONE 291-1730
Listowel
COME TO THE LISTOWEL FAIR
SEPTEMBER 6
ADMISSION FRIDAY EVENING $2.00
CHILDREN UNDER 12, 25c
ai�►'t1t,
uN�Rano�.
CEI.i tI&S
660 BELMONT, KITCHENER 743.1 X431
(fir„Mon., Teas., Wed., Thurs., • a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
may► a +a.mn. to 9 p.m.; Saturday u a.m. to 5 p.m.