The Wingham Advance-Times, 1947-11-27, Page 3SUDS 'FOR DISHES AND FINE WASHABLES ;11840.E
re Z-piece KNIFE SET
Only 50c
and 1 Box Top
Hotchkiss & ngus
'Phone FOOD MARKET 'Phone
116 We Deliver . 116
.111=101/01011•11•1111111111111111•11,11.
AYLMER VEGETABLE or TOMATO
.SOUP, 2 tins fqr 19c
ROBIN HOOD OATS, 5 lb. bag 35c
For Dish Washing-VEL-large box 29c
Date & Nut Loaf, tin 23c
Catelli
SPAGHETTI, 2 tins 29c
Shredded Wheat, 2 - 29c
Campbell's Tomato
SOUP, tin ... .. - . 11c
IMMMINIMMI91
Standard
PEAS . . .2 tins 29c
Tilbest
TEA BISCUIT . . . .32c
PER PACKAGE, 30c
SODA BISCUITS-Weston's, Christie's, arid
McCormick's-Viesh Daily
KETCHUP - ALL MAKES
• FOR YOUR BAKING NEEDS ••
Lard, Baking Powder, Raisins, Currants, Mixed
Peel, Glace Cherries, Walnuts, Almonds, Vanilla,
Icing Sugar
TOILET TISSUE 3 rolls 25c
FRUITS and VEGETABLES
GRAPEFRUIT, 96s 5 for 25c
TURNIPS, lb. 4c Sweet Potatoes, lb. . .10c
Cabbage, Celery, Head Lettuce, Cooking Onions
ORANGES-size 288s . . . . 35c size 220s . .49c
"Marren
ouo"
PHONE 475
ChriStmas Cards, 5c -15c
GIFT WRAPPINGS
:TAGS • SEALS
All the Latest
BIBLES- St. James' Version
MOffat Translation
Choose Your GIFTS. •
for Christmas, Now!
Oil Paintings $6.25 to $27.50
Framed Prints $1.75
ORNAMENTS. VASES
from 35c to $12,00
WROUGHT IRON CANDLE
HOLDERS, $1.25, $3.00, $3,50
CHINA FIGURES ,.......$1.50 up
Cups and Saucers $1.25 to $$.50
TRAYS and PLATES
LAMPS
20% Reduction
TABLE LAMPS
Reg. $32.00 for $25.60
'$17.00 for $14,00
1 Pair $17.50 $14.00 pr.
TRI-LITE FLOOR LAMPS
Reg. $23.50 - $18.80
$22.50 for $18.00
C. C. McKIBBON
MEALS
LUNCHES
SHERBONDY'S
COFFEE SHOP
FOUNTAIN SERVICE
Delicious Ice Cream
Sodas and Sundaes
Bricks always available
Next.tat.ymo* Thesre
WINGHAM
It
AND
MAINTAIN
EMPLOYMENT
HOT %Ann [FATED s-Taerre goln*
tart but it you act qffiekly we can still
fit you out with a beater you will be
proud of. noo,thertn patented construe,
lion that Rise insures clear rialPin from
October to Ray Let us save you ,up-
wards of'i=ASi, on that heater.
MOTO-MASTER ANTUTREEZE sill.
ciency and economy is assured by using
genuine moto,master . Wili ,not Pell
RV'ay at normal mato: temperatures
Get your mipply now-be ready when
the weather breaks. Per 1.74 I-gallon sealed can • • •
MOTO-MASTER ZERO OIL -- Flows
freely in sub•yera temperatures and as-
sures constant and sufficient lubrication
at sill times. Gallon 1.29
THERMOSTATS - rhelr function is to
raise motor temperature quickly and
retain it for efficient hot water heats'
performance, For many popular .93.
cars
A COMPLETE RANGE FOR EVERY CAE
DEFROSTING FAN - Trice high speed
type. Keeps windhsteld clear of frost
and condensation
N
5.45
WINDSHIELD DEFROSTERS -
shields and electrical elements Four suction cups De luxe 2.98
OVERNIGHT ENGINE HENdERS
The best engineered and most preen•
cal engine heater. Very simple In-stallation, low operating cost . 459
KEROSENE OVERNIGHT ENGINE
HEATERS-A tested, proven heater for
those unable to use the electrical type
listed above ......... 3.98
FROST SHIELD SETS - Complete tot
all windows and doors. Assures clear vision and proves a revelation of effl•
ciency to new users. Here's low
cost protection that every winter motorist should have . , they're easy to install, too .39
32-PAGE FOLDER - ASK FOR YOUR COPY
Canadian Tire's new 1947-45 Fall and Winter Supplement . . . 92 pages crammed
with Automotive, Farm and Home shop supplies-winter Snorts Goads. Radii and Car Batteries, *to, Ask for your copy.
-611,
1-SERVICEI
Phone 184 l 'Z
CH
I
NI
II
1
1
1
11
1
1
1
TI RE
CORA'
A41; qvT EH
W1NGHAM, ONT.
Robin E. Campbell
GORRIE, ONT.
Phone 38 -1. R. H. Carson & Son
'My, Wow I've Chemged
NOT privy. have telephones been made to look
better, but more important, they work better!
The telephone has always bad one foot in
tomorrow. Thousands of inventions you never tee
or hear about have helped you get dearer, more
dependable, better telephone service. And more
inventions are always coming along; telephone
improvement never ends .
The service is expanding, too. We are compieto
ing unfilled orders just as fast as materials become
available. More telephones plus better telephones
and always at the lowest possible cost mean
more valuable service to every user.
11, 1 , .40.44111101•41!
Thursday, November 27, 1947
71.m. WINQHAIV1 ADVANCE-TIMES
PAGE THREE
WEDDINGS
Heal - Walker
A beautiful, late autumn wedding
was solemnized by the Rev. W. A.
Beecroft, in the Wingham United
Church, on Saturday, November 22nd.,
at two o'clock, Tall white tapers and
White chrysanthemums made a perfect
setting for the ceremony, when Olive
Joyce, youngest daughter of Mr. and
Mrs, A, J. Walker, Wingham, was
united in marriage with Mr. John
Edward Heal, only son of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman C, Heal, Wingham.
The bride given in marriage by her
hiller,. was lovely in a white brocaded
ruin wedding gown with drop shoul-
der effect. Her full skirt ended in a
itinStA,
groomsman was Mr. James A. ',Canter,
on of Winghant, and the ushers were,
Mc, John M. Hopper; of Wingham,
and Mr. Walter W, )(cotes of Sarnia,
cousin of the groom.
Mr. Claude Hughes played the wed-
ding music and Mrs, a L, Baker of
Parry Sound, aunt of the bride sang,
"The, Lord's Prayer" and "Beloved It
Is Morn".
The reception was held at the resi,
dense when the bride's mother looked
charming in a inalag,a crepe dress with
grey hat and gloves and wore a cot.,
sage of sweetheart roses, The groom's
mother was- dressed smartly in a fits-
chia crepe dress With black accessor-
ies and a corsage of Talisman roses.
Miss Agnes Walker, and Mrs. Wil-,
Earn J, Kerr both of Toronto, and
aunts of the bride, poured tea at the
large table centred with a three-tiered
wedding cake flanked by silver candel-:
laibra and white tapers.
For the wedding trip to New York'
City the bride wore a cinnamon brown
tailored suit with matching .accessor-
ies and topped by 'a sable blended
muskrat coat and corsage of mums,
The young couple, on their return from
the honeymoon will reside .in Wing-
ham.
Guests were present from -Toronto,
Sarnia, Preston, Parry Sound, Fort
Erie, Noranda, Quebec; Guelph, •Gode-
rich, Watford, St. Thomas, and other
nearby points.
Aitchison - Nickel
A pretty wedding was solemnized in
the Presbyterian Manse, Bluevale, on
Saturday, November 15th, by Rev. L.
C. Jorgensen, when Ada Beatrice,
youngest daughter of Mrs. Nickel and
the late Adam Nickel of Carrick, be-
came the bride of W. Douglas Ait-
chison, younger son of .Mr. and Mrs.
Horace Aitchison of Wingham,
The bride was lovely in a floor-leng-
th gown of ivory illusion over taffeta
with finger-tip veil. She carried a bou-
quet of white mums and maiden hair
fern. The bridesmaid, Miss Margaret
Nickel, sister of the bride was frocked
in a floor-length gown of pale pink
chiffon with a wreath of 'pink flowers
in her hair. She also carried a bouquet
of white mums and fern. The groom
was attended by his brother, Mr. Ayl-
mer Aitchison.
A wedding supper was served to the
immediate relatives at the home of the
bride's mother, For the wedding trip,
the bride wore a black tailored suit
with matching accessories.
OBITUARY
Miss Caroline-Wellwood, R.N.
Funeral services were held in Wing-
ham United Church on Thursday,
Nov. 20th, for Miss Caroline Well-
wood, R.N., who died, following a brief
illness, in Grand Rapids, Minn., while
on her way to Winnipeg. Miss Well-
wood had spent '38 years as a Mission-
ary in China, and several friends from
the West China Nission attended the
'funeral: Mrs, C. R. Cascallen, now at
Whitby Ladies' College; Miss Edith
Sparling of St. Marys, Rev, and Mrs.
Stanway of Brucefield, also Mrs. (Dr.)
Allen, Dr. Sibley and Dr. Kenneth
Burton, all of Toronto,
Mrs. Roger Self, president of the
Dominion Board of the Woman's Miss-
ionary Society of the United Church
of Canada represented that body; Mrs.
Moores of Belgrave, represented the
London Conference Branch, W.M.S.,
and Mrs. Tavener of Holmesville, rep-
resented Huron Presbyterial. The Ex-
ecutive of Huron Presbyterial attended
in a body and the whole centre of the
church was filled with members of the
Woman's Missionary Societies and
Evening Auxiliaries from Wingham
and surrounding districts, gathered to
honour one who had so often spoken at
their meetings, and who will be missed
by each and every woman connected
with the W.M.S,
in Wingham cemtery. The pallbearers
were: Fred Howson, Harv6 Webb,
Lorne Webb, all of Wingham; Dr,
Ross Howson of London; Newman
Wellwood of Kincardine; Fletcher
Wellwood of Toronto.
Benjamin H, Miller
The death occurred in St. Joseph's
Hospital, Detroit, Mich., on Wednes-
day, November 19th, of Benjamin H,
Miller, youngest son of the late Adam
and Christine Miller of Kincardine,'
He leaves to mourn his passing, his
wife, 'Mary E,, of Detroit, his sister,
Mrs, W. I. Stewart of Duluth, Mimi.,
and four brothers, Robert of Rockford,
Ill., John "of Paradise Hill, Sask.,
Adam and Bert of Kincardine,
The funeral was held Saturday, Nov-
ember 22nd,, at 2.30 p.m., from the
home of Mrs. Millers sister and bro-
ther-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. R, G. Gan.
nett, of town, with Rev. Alexander
Nimmo officiating.
The pallbearers' were his two nep-
hews, Ralph and Donald ,Miller and
W. A. Nephew of Kincardine, T. P.
Barron of Kitchener, Alex Reid and
A. C. Adams of town,
The floral tributes from Detroit and
vicinity were beautiful and numerous,
Norman J. R, Shackleton
While on a visit to his son's home
in Cooksville, Norman 5. R. Shackle-
ton passed away on Friday evening
last in his 75th year, after a week's ill-
ness. Born in Ashfield township, a... son
of the late Wm. Shackleton and Mar-
garet Stewart, lie lived on, the home-
tead on Con. 9. Following an accident'
one and a half years ago he was un-
able to continue farming. He and Mrs.
Shackleton then went to live with their
daughter, Mrs. Walter Scott and Mr.
Scott, Belgrave.
He was a faithful worker in the var-
ious offices of the church and taught
the Adult ,Bible Class in the Sunday
School for years, where he showed
marked ability and understanding
sympathy, which endeared him to all
with whom he came in contact.
He is survived by his wife, formerly
Elizabeth 'Ann Finlay, one son, Finlay
S Sliackleton, Principal of Cooksville
Public School, one daughter, (Alice),
Mrs. Walter Scott, Belgrave, and six
grandchildren, who were a source of
great pleasure to him in later years.
Eloquent tribute to his life and work
was paid at the public service held in
Blake's United Church, on Monday,
November 24th, by the Rev. C. B.
Wdolley. Mr. Shackleton exemplified
the spirit of love in all his relationships.
He was a modest man who nthde no
claims concerning himself or his work
and the community is deeply grateful
for his devoted service.
Thos. Blake, a friend and co-worker,
sang a very appropriate selection, "Be-
yond the Sunset" at the funeral service.
The pallbearers were, Isaac Crans-
ton, Win. Irvin, Ernest Blake, S. B.
Stothers, Chas. Hallam and Henry
Ho-ton,
Flower bearers, Russell Irvin, Percy
Blundell, Jerry Cranston, Boden Scott,
The body was laid to est in Green-
hill cemetery,
Mrs. Margaret Emma Attridge
slight train. The finger tip veil was
held in place by a coronet of seed
pearls. She carried a cascade bouquet
of white baby mums.
Mrs. John M. Hopper of Wingham,
was Matron of Honour, and wore a
gown of mulberry velvet with full skirt,
ending in a small sweep and fashioned
with scalloped neckline and cap sleev-
es, long matching mitts and halo of
braided velvet. Miss Marjorie French
of Wingham and Miss Nancy Chapman
of Fort Erie, cousin of the bride, were
similarly attired in turquoise velvet
gowns and accessories. Little Judith
Ann Fox of Guelph, niece of the bride,
was in a similar floor length turquoise
velvet gown. All the attendants carried
colonial bouquets of mums, The
Ontario's factories,,farms and industries are producing at top
speed, but their output depends on electricity. Save in every
Way possible.
When using your electric range, turn switch from 'high' to low'
whenever possible. When kettle begins to sing, turn switch 'OFF'
s stoterl heat will bring it to a boil. Use tat-bottomed utensils
With doseafitting lids. Use 'simmer' or low' heat for stews. cook
%overall foods at once in'your oven, using only the bottom element. '
Never leave a switch 'ON' a moment longer than necessao.
Turn 'OFF' lights and all appliances when not in use. Save_
all the electricity you can.
Wmgham
taffiesommission
The death occurred in Misericordia
Hospital, Winnipeg, on Monday, Nov,
17th, of Margaret Emma Attridge, fol-
lowing a stroke. She was in her 82nd.
year.
Born in Turnberry Township, she
was the daughter of the late Mr. and .
Mrs. Wm. Merklcy, pioneer settlers of
that district. In 1888 she married Mr.
Allen chapman, who predeceased her
Tice service was in charge of Rev. W. A. Beecroft, pastor of Wingham in 1906. In 1913 in Wawanosh she mar-
ried Mr. William Attridge, and with
United Church, Dr. Sibley, who had him in 1914 moved to Rapid City,
gone to China at the same time as Miss Man,, where they farmed until 1938,
Wellwood read the Scripture Lesson, when they moved to Winnipeg. Mr.
Romans 8: 31-39; Mrs, Roger Self told Attridge passed on in_ 1948. of Miss Wellwood's decision to be- Mrs. Attridge enjoyed good IteaIti
tome a Missionary, of her special
training, and then of her dedication
and appointment to China under the
Woman's Missionary Society of the
former Methodist Church.
Dr. Kenneth Becton of Toronto, Sec.
tectary of Overseas Missions for the
'United Church, was the main speaker,
Besides being a close family friend and
neighbour, Dr, Becton was associated:
for many years, with Miss Wellwood,
in West China, and could speak with
sympathy and understanding of her
splendid work there, She went to China
in 1908 and immediately decided that
her chief interest would be in the hos-
pitals and the nursing profession. At
,
that time, there were no woman nurses ,
in China, it was considered a very inn,
ial occupation, Anyone who has lived
i nan Oriental country knows the op-
position and traditions which have to
be overcome, Pinallyl Miss Wellwood
gathered a few Chinese girls and her-
self trained them as nurses, Because
of the great lack of hospital facilities
and equipment, she conceived the idea
of a new Mission Hospital in Chengtn
city. After much effort, this was finally
completed, having been built on a small
scale, after the pattern of Toronto Gen-
eral Hospital. A regular training 'class
for Chinese nurses was formed and
Marty of these girls now occupy impor-
tant positions in Chinese religions and
politieal life. They are also recognized
on this continent and are permitted
special courses it: our Canadian and
American Hospitals. This story of the
fulfillment of Miss Wellwood's early
ambition for girl life in China was all
told by Dr; Baton. Ikett. W. A. tee-
croft spoke briefly of the love and re-
spect which Miss Wellwood had inspir. a in her own &AUG thurch and in the
tbritinutilty. The choir then sang the
twenty-third Paalm.
Burial was made in the family 'plot
Oxford Inn
Pork &Beans, 20 oz., 18c
Pumpkin, 28 oz. .14c
Tomato Juice, 20 az: 11c
Post's Bran Flakes 18c
Post's
Grape-Nuts Flakes 18c
Kellogg's Pep
and Crumbles .2 - 25c
Tilbest Tea
Biscuit Mix, pkg. .. .18c
Jiffy Pie Crust, pkg. 27c
CURRANTS, 1b.
RAISINS, lb. I9c
SAVE BY SHOPPING
WHERE PRICES ARE
LOWEST!
Jack Wilson
GENE1 At.1188cHANT
BELGRAVE, ONT.
SPECIALS
4.1.401iimmiliiiii:LLW moroldowdri....
until lately and on November 11th,
suffered a cerebral hemorrhage from
which she did not rally. Her daughter
and granddaughter, Mrs, C. Blatchford
and Gwen visited with her this past
summer and left her apparently in good
health.
She is survived by four daughters,
Mrs. Howard Henry (Olive), of Al-
berta; Mrs, S. Gardner (Pearl), of
Transcona, Man., Mts. H. Tebbe
(Ereana), Winnipeg and Mrs. C. Mat-
chford (Maye), of Wingliam. There are
ten grandchildren and two great grand- •
children. Two sons, Will and Hartwell
paid the supreme sacrifice in World
War I, one son, John, predeceased Tier
in 1934, and her eldest daughter, Lil-
lian in 1917. She is also survived by
one sister, Mrs. A. K Runstedler
Wattle), Toronto.
The funeral service was held at
Kerr's Funeral Chapel, Winnipeg, on
Wednesday. November 19th„ with in-
terment in Brookside cemetery. Rev,
H. T. Reynolds officiated. The pall-
bearers were three stepsons, Roy, Al-
•bert and Hilton Attridge, Frank mid
Sam Gardner and Ed. Taylor of Win-
nipeg.
.COMPAXY OF (AIWA