HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1974-09-19, Page 21al
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ILE HOMES
DOUBLEINWIDE HOMES
.04.
n�� ..P' r
�, .. 1► e;3mNcl *ariettso .11ondix
*car s and *Ingle -wide moils on
lar. selection of +lo'►)en-t�ridR, and
*fest, .fficieainnt de)%v.ry and art upprofessional servicemen.
�emen,
*low prices cis lured by our volume buying; and easy purchase
plans. • .
•
MOBILIFE
4166 KING ST. E. R.R. 3, KITCHENER CENTRE
No: 8 Hwy. between Mev . 401 and Kitchener 653-8788
t4hl-c4xl briliiays -. Westai Ram Pndrgts
1
Phone 519.669-2496 after 6:p.m .
or write WAYNE GOWING
29 Kildee;r Rd.
Elmira.
women
play
By JO Bim
If Bobby Ifisclor goes
TIDE (World
f
. l' llit�a►n, there
won't be s m anywhere*B
4gible toplay hhn for the
„ ..This old
a 'problem the civilised
world, but 1 have a $0111 oo.
,1404 biai play woman.
For too long there's been en
,campaign of 'POP'
etiological warfare waged
: �women in cam. �rEven.
once boasted
able togive knight WO to any
woman .player and beating
hers t.
.Ile cid dO that
to„almost any man *VW,
7 own opinions about the
reason females do not take to
of a,'e le; (1) uinlike
bridge, it's a solitary game
requiting extended periode'of
silent contemplation,p and
most women would rather die
than live through such a hoc-
roe; and (2) the .game has
been peddled for centuries as"
an intellectual mystery, ergo
how can a mere woman poesi-
- bly do wellat it? (Nonsense,
Variumnumiriammuniiir
MciNTYRE
HEARING AID SERVICE
Hearing Aid Specialist
.hearing aids
.hearing tests
.batteries & repairs.
FOR APPOINTMENT
PHONE 271-9322
386 Cambria St.
STRATFORD
iwap
41 brats
Is Ss
all` Jeep
Keene `of
international master, Ray
*feminine read reason f
lack flan
meat ! chess is that) in
aspects ,winos
have been uppre ssed by
,iia) Low& the ,barrierssad
h will soon bove to take to
the ham, as in the interwar
era when the victims of Vera
Mid* included such male
luminaries as the USA's
Sammy Resheifsky, 4 It'.s
Sultan Khan, 'a d ex -world
champion Ma Bow,
This, one
Point of view. Holland's
grand, Jan Hein Don.
ner, has a variety of reasons
for the natural inferiority ,of
W0111011 in chess...
Donner was a participant in
the famed 1 Piatigorsky
Tournament, - Santa
Ica, Califs When he asked '
if 1 knew of the current a 1
ties of chess patron ° Jath
line a'iatigorsky, I ,said she=
seemed to be -concentrating
encouraging chess among the
y'ol,'r
"Ah " he smiled sadly, Ihe
trouble is the was not a good
player: If she was an Ameri-
can champion, she would
UMW promoting chess among
the masters."
If it does turnout that .all
which is needed' for a break»
through by women in chess i ,
encouragement, the answer
may soon come from K -.;
laud. Its champion, Jana
Malypetrova, is the wife of
ternational Master WORM`
Huston. The Hfaurt stons are a
striking -looking couple, cap
ble of giving to chess the sort.
of adrenalin, Paul Newman
and Joanne Vioodward serve
to cinema. ` (Mrs. Hartston's
womn
' was
butw Ielitcal fme eirersha wed
her h 's. Soon tl, reafter ruwed,
and seem Abd lt.,
" tlast,"
he fold fI' qai u toabeamswumuu - thank, t►d,
doesn't r a' abo utt
e "
`E P"*D, ENGLAND
044. CCli•KINDIAN
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31. Resigns
BTlTERFACT
It •wasn't :until coffee be-
cme popular in Western Eu-
rope in the 17th Century that
sugar was added.
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Wim;
Po not clubs along with him" The %t
thre 'words, SIO Wth" •," are,
sperfluous dbetteri Do not 114Y$ioaanamd`.e i area
popular breakfast combinaation"
Say, `"mon. and ,e iSa popular
beakfast combin*tion"oonot ;say, ",fust lane 1 tokl'y u,
the. boy is muh too rclesri"' qty,
"".fust AS 1 told you"Do not say, "1 oughtto of leftearlier than 'hire'Sary '"1 ought to
RAVE left carliet "than HZ*
OrrENMIrJONOUNCEDSolon (a lawmaker), Pronounce
soe-lahn, accent first syllableSomnolent. Accent FIRST syl1ble, not thesecond.Boatswain. Pronounceasboc-sn.
omparable, Accent FIRST syllable, <not,atbe second.
Obdurate,. Aunt is on FIRST
sylabic. not the secondQ N MISSP IotEDWithhold; two "h1Threhold;
only one "h" following the "s." Sep-
tuagenarian'(peron in hs 'seventies)Observe the ` "u,' Obeisance
(defereee or homage); abscrve the
"i." obesity (Corpulence). Mer-
tricious (tawdry); observe the "ret"
Mr.itorious (praiseworthy); "tit"
Indigent (impoverished" .needy);, in-
digenous (inborn; native).Affront
(to insult). Effrontery (impudence;
shamelessbaldness).
WORDSTUDY
"Use a word thretimes and it is
yours." ;Let us increase our vocab-
ulary by nuisteringOne word each
day. Wordsfor this lesson:
NONPL,IJS; to. dumfound; per-
plkx; baffle*"(Accent second syl-able). "The scrcity of clues has
nonplussedthe investigators."
DISCOMFITURE; :frustration ofhopes 'or plans; disconcertion; con-
fusion. "His dreams weredestined to
end in discomfiture and disgrace."
IT'S
HAVE THE TI
J P.
J
h ! �V
� d
.S. d i
6 ti
i
"P AN U CE -E T4 3hiy• ,i tr ';
WE WANT OUR 19T4 S1OCK OF NEW AND DEMONSTRATOR VEHICLES
SOLD BEFORE SEPTEMBER 27th, 1X74. WE MUST SELL AT DISCOUNT PRICES
DEMONSTRATORS
1974 PONTIAC PARISIENNE - 4 door hardtop,
400 V8 engine, air conditioning, power
steering, power windows, power brakes
six -way power seat, white vinyl roof,
black and white tweed interior, AM/FM
stereo radio.
GLEAMING
HONDURAS MAROON
EXTERIOR .
5,395
1974 VENTURA CUSTOM, 4 door sedan, six
cylinder, power steering, automatic
transmission, rear window defogger, tilt
steering wheel, white walls and wheel
discs. DENVER GOLD FINISH.
SALE PRICE • $ 3 , 900
1974 ASTRE WAGON - wood panelling, exterior
trim, roof rack, automatic transmission,
AM/FM radio, radial tires, 85 HP 2 BBL
engine, black and white plaid interior.
List Price $4,300.00
FINISHED IN
DENVER GOLD SALE PRICE $3 3,895
1974 PONTIAC LAURENTIAN - 2 door hardtop
power steering and brakes, automatic
transmission, 350 V8 engine, radio, rear
window defogger, wheel opening
mouldings,`white walls and wheel discs.
FINISHED IN PORCELAIN BLUE
SALE PRICE $4,095
N Eflll CARS Save Hundreds of Dollars on
the Last of the 1974's
1974 CATALINA -1 door hardtop, 350 V8 engine, power steer-
ing, power brakes, radio, white walls and wheel discs.
HONDURAS MAROON EXTERIOR WITH MAROON VINYL TRIM
SOFT GREY VINYL ROOF
SAVE I SAVE! SAVE I
1974 ASTRE Hatch Back -GT package, automatic transmission,
Landau roof, AM radio, big engine, SPORT STRIPES.
ASTRE ORANGE EXTERIOR WITH BLACK INTERIOR.
Save $350.00 On This Model
1974 VENTURA • 4 door sedan, 350 V8 engine, power steering,
AM radio, white walls and wheel discs, rear window de-
fogger. FIRE CORAL BRONZE EXTERIOR, PLAID INTERIOR
SALE PRICE - $3,925.00
GMC VANDURA six cylinder, standard transmission, six win-
dows, side and rear loading doors, heavy duty springs,
auxiliary front seat. BROIyrZE EXTERIOR, SADDLE TRIM
INTERIOR.
SAVE ON OUR LAST 1974 GMC
a
�1 g�
•
GOODWILL
USED CARS
1973 MERCURY Montcalm - 2 door hardtop, 400 V8 engine,
power steering and power brakes, radio, electric rear
window defroster, black vinyl top with sunset mist
exterior, black cloth interior. 21,000 original miles.
PRICE $3,150.00
1972 MONTEGO - GT - 2 door hardtop, 400 V8 engine, bucket
seats, special instrumentation. CLEAN CAR.
PRICE $2,775.00
1972 GRAN TORINO - 2 door hardtop, V8 automatic trans-
mission, power steering and brakes. Dark metallic blue
with vinyl half roof.
PRICE: $2,750.00
BEST OFFER
• 1969 FORD LTD - 4 door hardtop, power steering and brakes,
radio. Needs some body work. Sold without safety check
******
1971 CHEVROLET IMPALA - 2 door hardtop 350 V8 automatic,
power steering, power brakes, air conditioning, rear
window defogger, white walls and wheel discs.
$2,550.00
******
1912 CHEVROLET IMPALA - 4 door hardtop, 350 V8 automatic,
power steering, power brakes, skhite wolfs and wheel
discs, radio with rear seat speaker. FINISHED IN DARK
METALLIC GREEN, BLACK VINYL ROOF.
$2.695.04
lamissimmummimmummum
Wekham, Pontiac Buick Limited
Mcin St.,
Mount Forest
323-21 1 1
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42, a"'.i�-A• 11.Yre
43 To �ie►iii�
45 �-Jrw"ate.
48-linalmonag.
P Jerre Berton's television ser-
ies tin
er-iesen the btnlduugottbe .Ilwas
sot ieihing more than superb en-
tertainment: Not since Centen
nial Year and Expo have welad
any event which makes it SO easy
for unto lift ourselves out of that
ridiculous inferiority complex
which is supposed tobe our na-
tional trademark. And never
b
e-
•,.fore think�ve we been
made
yam
d yvyiac
:7
a r
e h
r
f -t
F igiatitade to 'thole
men
and women who with their blood,
sweat and tears and the boldest of
dreams, persisted until Canada
was.
Berton's "National Dream" is,
of course, peopled with giants -
with explorers and surveyors as
indestructible as the traceless
forests they were determined to
map, with plug -hatted politi-
cians ten feet high, and with en-
. gineers and construction men
who could look a mountain full in
the face and tell it to stand aside. .
But most of the men and wo-
men who carved this country out
of the rock-ribbed wilderness
were really unimportant little
people, people as unimportant
and as unsung as your grand-
father or mine. Indeed if you are
as old as I am you can probably
include your own father among
those pioneers who played some
small but essential part in the
birthing of this country. My own
father will soon be 91, still lives
alone, still remembers all that he
wants to remember plus a good
many things he'd sooner forget.
"Oh my mind may not be quite as
sharp as .it used to be," he tells
me, "but it's still considerably
sharper than yours is."
Well a few Weeks ago when I
was visiting with him there was
an item in the hometown paper
that he drew to my attention. It
was in that part of the paper
known as "Recalling the Past",
and it revealed that just 70 years
ago the telephone line was ex-
tended from the hamlet of Conn
in Wellington County to Cedar-
ville, a distance of about four and
s�My br+t44er n.;Char
ee :for tat rule e" he .t
me..And `:ttiegot the
"See flat min laid a meter
e was Perry.
le lhad ;no d of its
own so Dr. Perry. to take care.
of that village too. Trouble was
that between. the' two settlements
w asssa
riap a
a:
carti.nr0Y'
-,rnad %th1,4*-Pilkw
ng
simplywithdrewfrom Public life.
•, And Dr. Perry, who had some
bitter tales to tell of how bardit
could be for him to make his
rounds up Cedarville way,. had
practically demanded, that this
newfangled invention called:. the
telephone should come to his res-
cue, "!), linin to , Cedarville. will •
save lives!" he said.
So plans were made for the-
great event, and my father and
his brother got the job of supply-
ing the cedar poles at 15cents
each. They started cutting in the
summer, fighting•cloudsofblack-
flies and mosquitoes "so bigthey
could stand flatfoot and suck a
cow". They started hauling the
poles out of the bush as soon as
the bog was frozen enough to
sup-
port a sleigh. Their first sleigh
got hung up on a stump one day,
and when they fin ally got it un -
straddled, it was a total wreck.
But they got the poles out to the the
telephone men and in time. And °
the Doctor did get his telelihone
line. And to the Cedarville
country that was a tremendously
important event. More important
perhaps than Confederation it-
self,
tself, or the building of the CPR.
Brbonic plape fits
Nortleasiem Broil
Bubonic plague has claimed
at least four lives in northeast
Brazil.
The victims were believed
to be farmers who store grain
in their houses, attracting the
disease- carrying rats.
ATTENTION
FARMERS
SAVE $ $ $ on your
Feed Costs
Get the facts on the new
"MODERN MIL
way of building your own feed rations right on
the farm.
Ithproved "computer" blends and mixes ingredi-
ents smoothly and accurately. Contact us now and
take advantage of our booked shipment, and gave;
you will buy direct from Ontario distributor.
MODERN FEED SYSTEMS
Newton, Ontario
Call (Collect) : 595-8182