The Wingham Advance-Times, 1964-07-30, Page 16Page 8 - Wingham Advance -Times, Thursday, July 30, 1984
Gorrie
ersonals
N1r. and :\1rs. e.;ttrdt'n !an:ie-
son tt' t;o`derle:: vAsited Sunda\
with '.\ir. and Mrs. 'rhos. I .
McInnes.
Mr, and Mrs. 1 wart \. hit-
icld, Mrs. 'olin. strong .and
'\1F.
and Mrs, e•iati i d:<ar
d
and Mr..
Thos.
• .tied .Mrs, t\.t1tt'r Charlrs
ccer:ai'awied iuii th, R:` -
?i11 and ' +,. '1 \QM' t:li r1es
!:.ne11`;11: r'.^, •.,tut!:'ta tt and
Miss ,., '..a°Fsea;:,
<; etiT :_it1:t..dt : t7iit rit h.
• And: Lorw.
I la:ad, N.V., r. ';'a ;1dui;' Tw,•
dia::.ia
ter -ii: -l:., ., and Mrs. `
t'"t. "%tab IsomU! . visit: J
and .,ir$. .":1-
11st. •'aledonia.
Viss ted.: „ lith spent .:
Pay.:: Neilsen.
..Situ.. ,at the
.ilii; . ..•.+'tit. '\i4 iitl
ro _ • ;:Brill Wheeler of
"r, .ird'.`rs Stew -
rt 1l,:rriston, Mrs.
id i'uvd and 4:etnnie ht more, ..'r. and Mrs. Lloyd
'• c:.l .Viii `airily, l'erdwieh,
i' ss. NieRel, T.•eswater.
'Yr. and "•'rs. Raymond
t, e.w'dv and Janna Ly tut spent
the week -end with `.1r. and
:'.'.rs. Donald Gilmar, .lncaster,
'.:r. and :: rs. George Se a: -
Hanover, ianover, N r. Harold sear -
son, Manituwadge, Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Eostwici: and Nit'.
and Mrs. Harold Drummond of
visitors of :,'r.
and Mrs. • Lobe•rt Searson on
Banda%.
COMING — August 13-19
THURS. tliru WED.
c�e opatra
BROWNIE'S DRIVE-IN
CLINTON
Ismassmelea
N'r. and Mrs, Carl least,
Clifford, visited Sunday with
N1r. and Mrs. Charles Koch.
:\'r. and N1rs. Alex Petrie
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
taitlev I'llit'tt of Listowel.
x?r. and \'rs. James Oliver
arse Jam , Pe trait, visited Tues-
day at the !•oilie t,t 'ter. and •
Mrs. E rifest !!orris,
•.'n. Andrew Edgar,
Mr. and Mrs, Robert Edgar,
Dale and Pia Ie returned Satur-
c9.: .tae: ih•liela int' at Port 1'l-
•tud Mrs. Ralph 6'lliott
','+'Iia t 4'f Ripley,
hili: a.ic riR+)t?ti,-
,attr, :rt,'1t! ildgat, i.ton-
'r• Ira
'.e.ait, t.I, ':I:itell `ti1141:1,'
ith :r. ,,n,J 'r?, Wilford King. i
Misses eS i' nne :tits l c -Ont: bails,
London, 'ilii a:`,ar.'1 King spent
a few d,a. .:f '::::,aerie hemi•
.'iss Jane T 111i0t, Moles-
worth,
oles-
worth, -peat a Tow days w th
tins• Jean Bre n,
Mrs. 1 .trl I easter, 'andra
and Joan of Relset,wn, «ask.,
visited the form r': parents, '.Ir.
and Mrs. Murray Edgar and oth-
er relatives.
''.'r. and :t'rs, Neil Baylor,
Burlington, Mr. .'tdam Nickel
and '`•'.r. Clarence Niciel of
Gowanstewn spent Sunday with
Mr. and : .irs. John Baylor, Pan-
nica Baylor accompanied her
parents home after spending
two weeks with her grandpar-
ents.
EVERYONE NEEDS WATER
Many persons do not drink
sufficient water for the body's
needs, Through perspiration,
glands, ducts, lungs and kid-
neys the body loses about three
quarts of water daily and this
should he replaced. Some
foods supply water but there
must be an adequate intake.
Because of variety in tempera-
tures, clothing and activities,
the feeling of thirst should he
the guide to the liquid supply.
Pine. ,Jungle Setting for New Zoo
WASAGA BFACI 1 -What start-
ed out as a roadside menagerie
of a few local animals now is
burgeoning into a major zoolo-
gical park covering 100 acres
near this Georgian Bay Beach .
resort, 90 miles north of Toron-
to.
Upon its completion in 1907,
Canada's centennial year, wild-
life from every continent will
he viewed by riders of a minia-
ture railway winding through
this jungle of hemlock and pine.
Even now, with only the
first five acres developed, visi-
tors sex out on safari past more
Jackson
GORRIE- Ir. and Mrs.
Graham Campbell Jackson were'
Married Saturday at 4 p.m. at
St. Stephen's Anglican Church,
Corrie. Rev. George A. Ander-
son officiated for the ceremony.
I`he bride, the former Thel-
ma Jean Bennett, is the daugh-
ter of :,lr. and Mrs. Chester
i.ennett, Gorrie. The bride-
groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon Jackson, Listowel.
The bride wore a white lin-
en <uit with snatching hat and
white accessories with corsage
'63 COMET, 4 -Dr., Six, Stnd., Radio
'62 FORD, Fairlane 500, 8, Stnd., Radio
'61 METEOR, 6, Stnd., Radio
'61 VOLKSWAGEN, Radio
'60 CHEVROLET WAGON, 6 cyl., Automatic
'60 METEOR, 8, Auto., Radio
'60 PONTIAC, Strato Chief, 2 -Dr., 6, Auto.
'60 DODGE, 8, Auto., Radio
'60 PONTIAC, 2 -Dr., 6, Auto., Radio
'59 FORD, Fairlane, 8, Auto.
'59 FORD, Six, Stnd., Radio
'58 PONTIAC, 4 -Door
'58 FORD, 8, Auto.
16 NEW 1964 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM
IILLOW'S GARAGE LTD.
HIGHWAY 86 — BLUEVALE
PHONE WINGHAM 357-3029
ennett
31 pink roses and fern.
The bridesmaid was Miss
Shirley Bennett of Toronto, sis-
ter of the bride, wearing a tur-
quoise street -length dress with
matching fiat and white acces-
sories and corsage of pink roses
and fern.
The grooIIlsIIlan was Neil
MacDonald, Mount Forest. The
bride is a graduate of the Uni-
versity of Western Ontario.
The couple will reside on
the groom's farm at Listowel.
Family Picnic
GORRIE-The descendants of
the late Mr. Alex Edgar held a
family picnic at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Stratachuk,
Brussels. There were 82 who
attended, coming from St.
Thomas, Rosetown, Sask., Sar-
nia, Wingham, Listowel, Oil
Springs and Gerrie.
GUARD AGAINST
VACATION HAZARDS
Do not store hazardous ma-
terials ... gasoline, oil, clean-
ing solvent etc. in beverage
bottles.
Keep drugs and articles such
ras suntan lotion, insect repel-
lent, out of the reach of chil-
dren.
Teach older children to rec-
ognize and avoid poison oak
and poison ivy.
Take precautions to avoid
excess exposure to insect bites.
Although snake bites are a
rare occurrence, all precautions
should be taken to avoid them
and each member of the family
should know the names of local
doctors and hospitals equipped
to treat snake bites.
Keep adequate first aid
equipment in the car, cottage
and boat.
v"k
enclosures than they'd find in
many a full-fledged city zoo --
and with a lot more atmos-
phere,
Lions and moose -- mon-
archs in their own right -- live
next door to each other. Close
by a pair of Asian water buffalo
look longingly at a pond built
by heaver which have free run
of the grounds. There are hip-
pos and bisons, cougars and
chimpanzees, and Arctic
wolves that howl in the night.
Among its feathery residents
are vultures and hawks and oth-
er birds of prey. And mallards
woodcocks, bluewing teals,
green herons and kingfishers
are just a few of the native
birds which make the beaver
pond their home in spring,
summer and early fall.
Spark plug of the scheme is
Cas VanEysinga, a Dutch -born
zoologist who started the mena
gerie and convinced animal -
lovers that a park should he de-
veloped.
Many of his new arrivals
come directly from lands in
which they were horn but soon
feel at home in Ontario's rug-
ged woodlands. Moreover,
through special feeding, about
which VanEysinga is an expert,
practically all the so-called
warns -blooded animals are able
to withstand year-round out-
door living. The lions which
restlessly paw the sand of their
cage in summer appear happier
rolling in the snow in sub -zero
weather. Nothing more than
thin polyethelene sheeting
wrapped around their cage bars
protect thein from wintry
winds.
IMIEN. 41•10.1
The Old Blacksmith Shop
It wasn't much to look at --
just an old, weatherbeaten,
rambling shop at the village
edge. Around it was a tangled
mass of old cultivators, wagons
wheels, sleds, plows and har-
rows. Inside, the floor was
black with dirt and littered with
hoof parings.
Overhead on the stringers
were rows of new shoes -- dain-
ty, lightweight shoes for Mor-
gan roaders and heavy ones for
big work horses. In one corner
was a heap of discarded shoes
plus a tangled mass of odds and
ends of metal. At one side was
the forge with its big leather
bellows; near it was the old an-
vil and the half tub of black -
looking scummy water.
The old smith talked as he
worked and told boys stories of
long ago when he shod as ma-
ny oxen as horses, Perhaps he
heated the :shoe again and
pounded it again for an exact
fit. Then he drove nails
through the hoof and the holes
in the shoe. He twisted off the
nail ends and filed the ends
smooth with the big rasp.
Old blacksmith shops are
gone -- gone with the wagons
and sleighs of yesteryear. But
there are men in office and fac-
tory who look back over the
years and remember the plea-
sant hours they spent in an old
blacksmith shop. -- Boston
lierald.
CL ARANCE
SUMMER
PORTSWEA
LADIES'
Swim Suits
Dresses
Shorts
Slims
Tops
OFF
MEN'S
Sport Shirts
Swim Suits
Walking
Shorts
T -Shirts
ALL
Seasonab1e
Merchandise
AND MORE
,t.`,�. ,.�_ `�,, ✓fit Ji �. .. t , v
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Dp.�.-IGHO FE_Jr •/t..�.. i:. /,•1. h. / 1 �. t.I+.. r•• :1. .- r Y.: L:
.
S
4•
(Wingham) Limited
THE FRIENDLY STORE
• ;;;;;..,:•: ! LIf':�� r:� :• : -L,t, �, �•t . i%f \:.1 Y� ,` :"
:.•..•.�'r':� :.t}�-�f!*'-.�,,�";� ?' i{'r`•�:•'!tet. .f�
NM. 1.61.1.41011.001.3.0•11.06119.0.11a 0.6.1.6.0.01.4141111i.
GRADE "A"
OVEN READY
3 -LB. AVERAGE
SCHNEIDERS
RED HOT
DEVON
SLICED
WIENERS a•
area
f
st
con
Le 34
35C
LB 63
MAPLE
LEAF
BOLOGNA IN PIECE LB' 33C
Schneiders TINNED PICNIC SHOULDER, 11/2 -lb. 99c
Del Monte PINEAPPLE -GRAPEFRUIT Drink, 48 -oz. .. .2/65c
Maxwell House COFFEE, (regular grind), lb. 79c
Blue Gold FANCY PEAS, 10 -oz. 9/$1.00
Case of 24 tins $2.59
New No. 1 WHITE HONEY, 2 lbs. 59c
4 lbs. $1.15
Club House SALAD OLIVES, 12 -oz. 29c
Bayer ASPIRIN, 100s 59c
Supreme COOKIES, (5 var.) 2 pkgs. 59c
Tide Powdered DETERGENT, King size ..$1.29
Pepsodent TOOTH PASTE, Super size 69c
KOTEX, regular, super or slenderline, 12s 39c
— FROZEN FOODS
YORK
FISH and CHIPS
24 -oz. 55c
McCAIN
FANCY PEAS
12 -oz. 2/35c
SUNKIST
PINK LEMONADE
6 -oz. 2/27c
ONTARIO LODI
COOKING APPLES
3 lbs. 39c
ONTARIO
CUCUMBERS
3 for 25c
ONTARIO
HEAD LETTUCE
18s 2/25c
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DIAL 357-1020
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