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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1948-3-10, Page 5THE BRUSSELS POST offers ev y a } a. fru.,�..'A'.1 ita'G'ar7iEnnoJ�,; 'n wards/ You'll learn about the operation of modern aircraft and technical equipment, You'll make friends , , . master a valuable trade under the guidance of experts. And while you're still young enough to enjoy 1t, you'll be able to refire on pension for the •• rest of your life. You need no previous experience or special training. And you draw full „,pay from the start. You'll have a chance to see 'Canada . , perhaps fake part in thrilling and important exercises such as northern transport Rights or summer photo- graphic surveys. It's a job in which you can take pleasure and pride, YOU GET . LL mac 6, • Continuous employment and pay. • Technical trades training. • Full opportunity for ad- vancement. • Progressive pay increases. • Sports and recreational facilities. • 30 days vacation a year with full pay. • Medical, dental and cloth- ing service provided. • Retirement income assured. r - CENTRAL AIR COMMAND, R.C.A.F. STATION, TRENTON, ONTARIO Please mail me without obligation full particulars regard- ing enlistment requirements and openingsnow available In the CA• F R, , , . 40n� NAME (nesse reap ADDRESS PRO,/ YOU ARE ELIGIBLE TO (u a Collodion dila. or ether BMW,mbi.rt LAPPLY IF YOU ARE l (=) Pny.irany fit (s) b.laeen nand J Jumbled Nantes Contest . . Winners Receive Cheques .A. detective search was carried out along tate hack roads of Grey township recently For Lox•ne :Tay- lor, 63 -year-old resident h3 the 16th con. o1 Grey, When the sleuths caught up- with him at Cranbrook, they did him no narm; their pur- pose was to tell him he had won first prize in .The Beacon -Herald's jumbled names contest, and - to ''re- sent him with a prize•nloney cheque for $100. Mr. Taylor was away from home when W. Lorne Matthews, circula- tion ,manager of The Beacon -Her- ald went looking for him Friday. With the aid of Wesley Rockwell o1 Walton, and others in the Walton neighborhoods a telephone hunt was carried out, which track- ed down Mr. Taylor% at Cranbrook. He had walked two and a half utiles • from. his home to f3•anbi ook, to post ,mail for some •of his . neigh- bors. • , The good• news and the 1100 caught up to Mr. Taylor on the roadway in front of Linycl 'Michei's general store at Crenbrcok. The winner worked three even twgs` to b'traigllte,.i :0111: , the .113 tangled namesin the contest prole,, lem. "Pd settle,.. clown to it right after supper, and work until it was time to go to . bed, nn+1 T put in three pretty long evenings at it," Mr. Taylor said Friday. Most difficult worir to get 'untangled, be found, was Tusdomennd, -- pd. 111ILdston. ' Mr. Taylor's winning entry was qualified with 3.6 subscriptions•.. to The Beacon -herald, He didn't ' go far from his own home to get theru; most of tlient came from a farm -to -farm canvass along the 14313, 15th and 160 concessions or fires, and the Gre'-McI{illop boun- dary. ounclary. For Mr. Taylor it was no novelty to be a winner; he took' first prize similar Beaoon;Heraid contest 10 years ago, and in the interval SURGE MILKERS DAIRY MAID Hot 'Water Heater GEORGE POLLARD REPRESNTATIVF: — r1RIJ:,SE.LB, first and second prlr„„ ar^ %•J'Y nearly neighbors. .11r. Taylor's homy is in the 16th con. of Grey, four miles northeast of Walton; Mr. and Mrs Aiexandet' live b3 II., 14113 con, of McKillop, four miles 'ontlteost o: Walton. AUCTION SALE Farm Stock and Implements will be held at lot 24, on McKillop boundry 1 mile East of Walton on MONDAY, MARCH 15th at 1,30 sharp HORSES 1 good working mare about 150OIbs work single or double CATTLE 3 heifers 2 yr. old • 1 heifer one year old 1 heifer calf 3 months old 1 heifer calf 2 months old PIGS 7 chunks IMPLEMENTS Massey -Harris binder 7 ft. cut International hay loader (good) Fertilizer seed drill with grass seed box Brantford mower 5 It. cut Deering mower 5 ft. cut 12 -plate disc Peter Hamilton cultivator Massey -Harris manure spreader Duane rake l01/4 It. Quebec sulky plow \stalking plow 4 -section diamond harrows I Land packer Wagon G -ft: hay rack Clinton' fanning mill Renfrew cream separator et sloop sleighs with rack be had been a prize-winner in a , puzzle contest conducted by a farm miagan ne. s The new presented Friday to Mrs, kldna Alexander, winner of accord piitze came as more of a surprise. She .had never before V been a content•w;:uuer, and had great hope of • being a prizewinner 2 this time, — not until the moment Friday afternoon when Mr: .1 Matlhrws of Tile 13encon-Herald 7 walked .into the kitchen, of her farm home, and handed ber a che0,nie for $50. try coincidence, the winners at H lb, scales Grindston Work bench • ice Turnip sower Double harness 22 -inch collar 0 -inch collar 34ncb plank -inch beech plank ergs quantity of good hay ” 0 bus. red clover bus. Alaska oats 0 bus. Timothy seed .. TERMS CASH ...... :....... ALTER DAVIDSON, .Proprietor AROLD JACKSON, Auctioneer t by Lottts .Dempsey 1 Of course, quite a few air force personnel got their faces smashed in crack-ups... But a girl ... well, girls have a very special feeling about their faces. And when they brought the tall slender. WD cor- poral•' into hospital—one of the eight of twenty-seven left alive out of a flight that crashed between Vancouver and Prince Rupert— she was about the most unrecog- nizable Airwoman still breathing in this country. They flew Helen—and Mary, an- other WD with a badly burned back—to Toronto's Christie Street Military Hospital, for skin grafts and burn treatment. A Red Cross worker told me she'd never forget it. The Red Cross room is in the heart 'of the wards, next door to the room those girls had. For weeks workers just tiptoed in and out on their rounds—writing letters, supplying stamps, cigar- ettes and chocolate bars to the patients. 'No Visitors' One operation followed another through the weary months in which doctors built a new face for Helen and treated Mary's back. 'The girls became great friends with the Red Cross workers. But they didn't want to meet people from the 'outside', right then. Even when the 'No Visitors' sign went down and Air Force boys and other vet. patients wheel -chaired and .crutch -tapped in, .they were still shy about seeing 'just people'. The Red Cross was different. Those women in the, deep blue smocks were part of their own submerged world of pain and ill- ness, yet attached to the country outside. They did the little things the girls needed—feminine bite of shopping, letters and messages, planned small celebrations. New Trades ' As the girls progressed, going from one hospital to'.another for treat- ment, ,the Red Cross was. always there: Supplying antbuiaiices' at first -later; -"escorts to hockey games, concerts,, plays, ,.Ot'ering quiet practical assistance whenever it was needed. Today Helen and Mary are learn- ing now trades. Helen can no longer teach physical education or model. Mary cannot continue her typing, because of permanently stiffened' fingers, But while .DVA prepares them for their now lives, the Red Cross still stands by as they do with all our Canadian veterans in hospitals everywhere, In proof that we, the people, have not forgotten. Red Cross Services include} Blood Transliitsion, Outpost I-lvapi.• to&s, Aid to Sic/r, and Disabled Veterans, Treatment for Crippled Children, Disaster Relief, Nutrition. Services, nom Musing Courses, Swimming and ?Bator Safety, etc. 4.4 The trot* of mercy never emits . , . Give generously to the CANADIAN DIED ClflOSS LOCAL CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS PHONE 68xr-2 4805C i Pam Stook ; e.:i Implements. at Lot 14, Con. I1, Secy. Township %2 mite; west of Cranbrook MONDAY, MARCH '2 pt 1 P,M, 1TOT1.91 0 CLEARING AU T!ON SALE Mafrhr•q team 1'rl,eron ris:ug 4 years rows 1 Iters rnw iia, March R yrs, I \x'11fte err,- dor' March. 9 yrs. 1 1(-d r•,., fits, 1T;:r..h. 4 yrs. 1 Red cr•n dzu' Ancil. 4 yrs. rATTLF a 5011 114. 1 'fr'r 500 11, 1 Dir -been hr.'s, 1 yr. edd 4 '31113:., P110 6 pita., 171 Thos . 4 pigs. 350 lbs. PrlrLTilY 75 1 year-old Sn<.nx Ames HARNF,Rq 1 ;:..t bras= mounted creeehin liars sec 2 collars Rra„ mrmnted bridles 1 Set tops 1 set driving harness 1. set slings and chains IMPLEMENTS 2 7 -ft. Massey -Harris hinders, good canvass 1 disc Oockshntt drill 1 out -throw disc 1 in -throw disc 1 set 3 -section diamond harrows 1 Deering spreader 1 Autotrac on rubber 1 2 -furrow tractor plow on rubber, Corkshutt narrow bottom 1 hayloader 1 side ralre M. -R. 1 walking plow 1 5 -ft. M,41. mower 1 buggy 1 street cutter 1 jogging cart on rubber 1 rubber tired wagon 1 hayrack and shift 1 set bench sleighs 1 sleigh, rack iS0-roti roll barbed wire 1. fermi/m,m311. . . 1 M, -H, cream separator, like new 1 oil brooder stove 1 range shelter 6' x 6' 1 stone boat 1 float' 2 root pmipers 1 ?a-Ii',P. electric motor Pig crate • 2 l•agginig chains Shovel$ 111ndh ;wood -working plainer Ripsaw' with a number -of saws Numerous other. articles, TERMS CASH - JAMES CAMERON, Prop: HAROLD. JACKSON, Auctioneer f'jo thitnatll , Rei'asf erect Optcinzet risif `1Vestern Gntat-o's AicsE(i • Modern Eye Sartuesei 'Shone .118; tlarriston 't'. tins• dY ., 3 -AI OLD, DISABLED OR DEAD irncds WS_ ,O.00 RORSES_,$E4OO HOGS OVER 300 LBS. - $3.00 PER 100 LBS. ACCORDING TO SIZE AND CONDITION Our Same Prompt, Efficient, Courteous Service SIMPLY PHONE COLLECT Brussels 72 — Ingersoll 21 AUCTION SALE Farm. Stock and implements Lot 29, Con. 12, McKI'lop 2 miles south and 1 mia west o Walton; or 8 miles north and 1 mile west of Seaforth WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17 HORSES—Team of geldings R and 11 years old, quiet, work either single or donble. CATTLb3--Holstein cow 7 years n;•i due in May; Holstein row r, years nid due in March; Holstein heifer 3 years oiet. fresh. sac.; Hnlsteh( cow 6 years old due in 'Merely Hoist ; (.'c'-kshntd 1411; inch grain grinder (nearly very) 50 ft. 6" rubber belt, 6 sections harrow with f Long and short stretchers; one" horse sourer; low wooden wagon; hay rack with half rank; set sloop sleighs; cutter; sett scales 1200 lb. rapacity; Clinton, fanning mill;. walking plow; 7-30-tb, milk cans j (new); Renfrew cream separator; 2 wooden water troughs; Jamesway fuel oil brooder stove; colony house 10x12; 3 range shelters; Stewart pivot rie clippers, sat of team bar. cess; 1927 Pontiac Panel truck good running condition and good tires; 1903 V3 Ford coach with recondi- tinned motor, and host of other - articles. GRAIN—Abort 150 bu. of Ajax rats tit for seed, about 100 bus. fall wheat. TERMS—CASH No reserve as farm Is sold. FRANK KIRKBY, Prop. - EDWARD W. ELLIOTT and FRED AHRENS, Auctioneer cow 7 Years ofd due In May; Hol• stein cow 10 years old rine in March: Holstein row 6 years old rine in March; 'Holstein cow 5 veers old, fresh, vac.: Tinlatatn ton 6 Years old, fresh; Holstein cow 0 Years old, fresh; Holstein cow 6 Years old, milking, due in ()etcher; Holstein cow 5 years old, due In liar Holstein caw 6 year-, old due in March; Holstein heifer ' 2 years old rine in April, vac.; Holstein heifer 2 years old, Tared March • 1. - vac.; Holstein ,heifer 2 sears olid due in May, vat,; Holstein heifer 2 Yearn old done in April, vac.; ROI - stein heifer 2 years 01d due in Marnll, vac.; Holstein .heifer 2 years old due in May, vac.; Holstein heifer 2 years old due in Octobe'•, vac.; 2 grass steers; 10 Polled Angus x Holsteitn calves rising one year; 1 Holstein heifer calf, vat.; Registered Polled Angus bull 3 years old, some spring calves. PIGS -16 chunks about 20 lbs.; 16 chunks about 160 lbs,; 2 sows due on May 17 and 15, registered York Inc. TMPL9)MBNTS — mangey -Harr', 102 G,S. Senior traotor with 12 inch Firestone tires (titre ❑ewi; iiieCor- mick-Deering 3 farrow adiustable plow; MrC:Deering dcnble tractor disk; stuff tooth cultivator; 13 -disk McC. Deering fertilizer drill; Masesy Harris drop head hay loader! Massey Harris side rake (new); McCarmielr mower live ft.. cut; Massey -Harris binder 7 ft. out with almite fittings and oil bath gear; •!lfassey-Harria No. 9 manure spreader (nearly EARRINGS As SHOWN 4.00 Aug PENDANTS BROOCHES ETC. THE PROUDEST NAME A MATCHED SET:— $12'5°' ET:$'2.50. OO 9 3urttar2ftar PERFECT! Po 714 OD rt BAEKER BROS. Mow S. Butcher Shop • ,a * * * . * • • * * PEOPLE WF KNOW • • o - 3 ,r. e . •, Leslie Lowry, Toronto. was zaleld Inane clue to the serious •cond5,tion of. his mother, , Mrs. George LowrY. * *.r Mr. and Mrs. James S.:tt mativng- attended the Diamond Wedding An- nirpi•sary of Mr. and Mrs, Matthew Armstrong on Tuesday evening of this week at Londesboio Hall. * * * Th" many friends of Mrs. George - Lowry are pleased to know that there is same improvement In her condition. She • has Leen serionaly • i11 after having suffered a stroke. * s • Postmaster Harnii Kerney, was stricken by a heart attach at the Post- offic, on Tuesday morning, He was attend<d ' by Dr. J. H. Harper. Aid was: summoned 10 remove ham to his home. Mr. Kerney's condition is reported as fair. G') • For Kai :,,d2 . M aka,.. Chesterfields and Occasional Chairs — REPAIRED and RECOVERED -- Also Rebuild Mattresses iN 20 ' FREE P1CK-UP A $D DELIVERY i• Stratford Upholstering Co • 43 Brunswick Street Stratford, Ont. Enquire at --- • A,RA;NN Furniture and Funeral ,Service. Phone 36 or SS