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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1972-06-29, Page 11i tlwfff►MM4MPMf.g0M”001•M►MMMM►fM.0.MN 04MM►MMf►►pfM fff►►MMNM► Coming Events tIo►►eeeeeq► PONY RACING The Blyth Trotting Pony Club will be holding a special race meet called Blanket Night at the Blyth Raceway on Saturday, July 1. Post time - 7:45. lENEFIT DANCE For Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gloush- er who lost their barn by fire. At Wingham Legion on Friday, June 30. Music by Ken Wilbee. GARDEN PARTY An Ord! lu ' rawberry Garden 7, 'arc held on the lawn of t SI )l' 'n'" thglican Church, Wednesday, July 15 Morgages First and Second Mortgages Available for Farms Residential, Improvements ftc. 24 Hour Service P. F. Cunningham Mortgage Broker ALL ENQUIRIES CONFIDENTIAL CaII Day or Night Kitchener 696-2920 Palmerston 343-3632 Wingham 357-1656 Harriston 338-3031 MMNe► from 530 to 7:30 p.rn. Entertain- ment by the Bennett Ranch Hands. Adults $1.50, children .75c. In case of inclement weather, will be held in church basement. RECEPTION A reception for Mr. and Mrs. Jerry deBruyn (Beth Scott) will be held in the Belgrave Commun- ity Hall on Friday, June 30. Music by the Alley Cats. Ladies, please bring lunch. DANCE There will be a dance in the Wingham ,Legion on Saturday, July 1.' Music by the Twilites. Ad- mission - $3.00 per couple. FAREWELL DANCE A dance for Mr. and Mrs. Rus- sel Gaunt will be held at the Whitechurch community hall on July 8. Music by Tiffin's Or- chestra. Ladies please bring • lunch . Everyone welcome. OPEN HOU',SE Mrs. Ray Meyer will hold open house at her home for her daugh- ter Ann on Saturday, July 1 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. All friends and neighbors are welcome to attend. RECEPTION AND DANCE A reception for Mr. and Mrs. James Inglis Jr. will be held at the, BeImore Community Centre on June 30th. Good music from 10:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. Ladies please bring lunch. Everyone welcome. • BIRTHS HUMPHREY--At the Wingham and. District Hospital ,on Mon- ° day, June 19, to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Humphrey, Lucknow, a daughter. WEBER—At the Wingham and District Hospital on. Saturday, June 24, to Mr. and Mrs. Ken- neth Weber, RR 1, Wroxeter, a son. MITCHELL ---At Guelph General Hospital on Saturday, June 10, to Mr. • and 'Mrs. William Mit- chell, a son, Andrew. Mac. • ervic FOOD ilw Freshly made to your order from a choice of ' Mushrooms, Pepperoni and Sausage - 3 Sizes Chicken & Sea Food Dinners RIVERVIEW DRIVE-IN - 357.1360 PIZZA i PLANNING A WEDDING? We Specialize in Wedding, 1 Anniversary and. Birthday Cakes Fresh Bread and Pastries Every Lay MacINTYRE BAKERY 263 Josephine 357-3461 DRESSMAKING Miss In Mal Smith j'esents bei moils in evening recital Miss Iva Mai Smith, LRCT, presented her piano pupils in re-, cital at Wingham United Church hall on Friday evening, June 23. The program started with the youngest pupils jn this year's class, Kim McGregor, Kendra Purdon and Lisa Sallows, all six years old. These pupils demon- strated two of a variety of games used in teaching pupils to read music notes, covering the entire piano keyboard of 52 white 'keys. The program was continued by the following pupils playing piano pieces from Grade .Twos to Grade To raveil plaque in ceremony at Brussels Friday On Friday, June 30, an histori- cal plaque commemorating the founding of the Village of Brus- sels will be unveiled at 7:00 p.m. in front of the public library in that community. This plaque is one of a series being erected throughout the province by the Archives of On- tario, Ministry of Colleges and Univeirsities, acting on the advice of the Archaelological and His- toric Sites Board of Ontario. Friday's ceremony is being,ar- ranged and sponsored by the Corporation of the Village of Brussels, whose clerk -treasurer, William H. King, will act as pro- gram chairman. Among those who have been 'invited to take part in the ceremony are Jack L. McCutcheon, reeve of Brussels; Murray Gaunt, MPP (Huron - Bruce) ; Robert E. McKinley, MP ( Huron) ; Charles Thomas, reeve' of Grey Tow,nship; William J, Elston, reeve of 'Morris Town- ship; Leslie R. Gray, who will. represent the Historic Sites Board of Ontario; and Mrs. Hazel Matheson, who has done much work on the history of the area. The plaque will be unveiled by, Walter S. Scott, the oest male itizen born in Brussels. Rev. Charles A. McCarroll, Melville Presbyterian Church, will dedi- atethe plaque. c c FREIGHT SERVICE TRANSPORT SERVICE WALDEN /Jr -'1` BROS. TRANSPORT LTD._ General Freight and Household Moving To and From Anywhere in Ontario PHONE 357-2050 Wingham • SALES AND SERVICE POOLS, ETC. POOLS - PATIOS - SAUNAS In and Above Ground Pools Easy Financing Pool Toys and Lawn Furniture , Wm. R. Rintoul Construction - 96 Patrick St.„ Wingham 357-2628 4 Swimming Pools Above and Below Ground Complete Line of 'Pool Chemicals ARMSTRONG y CHEMICALS d Box 56 Walkerton .Lynn Hoy Enterprises Honda and•Skicloo Sales & Servi 16 Patrick St., Wingham Phone 519-357-3435 JAYCO & KAPLUN. CAMPER TRAILERS Sales and Rentals Full Year Warranty on New Camper Bumstead Metal Fabricating Phone 357-2272 ACCOMMODATION WINGHAM MOTEL On Highway No. 4 South of Wingham 18 Fully Modern Units Phone 357-1342 Ten: Eric McGregor, Julie ]' - ton, Andrea Bridge, Gail Del - mage, Natalie Campeau, Stott McGregor, Rachelle Qualm" Roseanne Sallows, Lynne Bridget Mary Ellen Elston, Lglrie Purl d Heather Smith, Ruth Netball'', Sheila Shobbrook, Douglas Me, Gregor, Karen Smith, ,Alison Roberts and Mark Passmore, Some of the above pupils also demonstrated a game using a special keyboard with. removable keys and the written staff on each key. The program continued with numbers by the following pupils: Janet Whytock, Heather Currie, Lynne Haines, Janet Haines, Mary ' Jean Wilhelm, Maureen Stainton; Evelyn Morin, Ruth Ellen Currie, Sandra Currie and Catherine Chandler. Vocal numbers were given by four children singing together, Andrea Bridge, Natalie Cam- peau, Rachelle Campeau and Elizabeth Morrison. A vocal solo was sung by Janet Haines and several songs by the four Coultes sisters, Janice, Jo- anne, Karen and Andrea. Another interesting addition to the program were dances pre- sented by Heather Currie, Carol Wheeler and CatherineCardiff. At the conclusion of the pro- gram refreshments were served to the pupils and their parents. Mistdcen notions As any dentist woefully will tell you, there are many mistaken notions (none of which, we add, have anything to do with the Good Fairy) about teeth and tooth de- cay.. • It is not foolish to spend money on first teeth because they are felt to be temporary. The future. health and lining up of permanent teeth rests largely on the care of the primary teeth right up to the normal "shedding" time. • It is not a better idea to have a bad tooth out and be done with it rather than have it repaired. The loss of any secondary teeth may cause other teeth to shift position. This shifting could destroy the natural form of the face and even the good appearance of a person. ire.c.t or GRAPHIC AMTS 1 GRAPHIC ARTS Interior and Exterior Design Contmercial Art - Signs RR 1, Wingham 357-3811 APPRAISING* ESTATE MARKETING SERVICES Auction Administrators Market Appraisals on —Furniture _ --Antiques Moderate Fees L A. Currie . 357-1011 AUTOMOTIVE CE.WIacTavish Ltd. Your Automatic Car Wash Centre Transmission Repairs Expert Repairs "to All Makes and Models of Cars and Trucks PHONE 357-2841 INSURANCE INSURANCE All Types of Insurance 335.3525 GORRIE 357.2636 WINGHAM PLUMBING HEATING Percy Clark Plumbing Heating and Sheet Metal Contractor PHONE 357-3080 366 Edward St., Wingham Leroy Jackson —Plumbing —Heating —Tinsmithing 191 Josephine St. Wingham 357-2904 ELECTRICAL BURKE ELECTRIC Electrical Contractors Motor Rewind and Sales Household Appliances Josephine St. 357-2450 Emergency Service - See the Yellow Pages FUELS BILL TIFFIN Imperial Esso Agent For all your Rome and Farm Fuel and Lubricating Needs 357-1032 If Your .Business Is Service INFORM THE PUBLIC AND NEWCOMERS THROUGH THE SERVICE DIRECTORY GIRLS' VALEDICTORIAN and winner of the Catholic Wo- men's League special award at the graduation banquet Tuesday of last week was Joanne Schmidt. She received the award from Mrs. George Skinn, representing the C.W.L. Rev. E. J. Mohan was principal speaker for the evening. (Staff Photo) Rev. John Donaldson dies in California A clipping from the Costa Mesa (California) newspaper, sent by Mike MacPhail of West Sacra- mento, a former Wingham resi- dent, informs us of the death of Rev. John W. Donaldson who was rector of the Anglican Church in Lucknow in the 1940's. During his several years in Lucknow Rev, Donaldson took his turn on the Church of the Air prq gram over CKNX. It was also while they were in Lucknow that the Donaldsons adopted . their daughter Penny. From Lucknow they moved to Byron, later to Arizona and then to Costa Mesa. Mr. and Mrs. MacPhail went to Costa Mesa for the funeral which Mrs. Donaldson attended in- a wheel chair, having broken her hip a few weeks before her• hus- band's death. , The newspaper clipping reads tas follows: Rl.'( GEp YUKON PREACHER JOHN n1 NALDSO'N IME$ —Tall, sturdy, rugged and stern, 4r gentle and jovial as the time and place .demanded, the Rev. John W. Donaldson entered the world from strong, Episcopal Nova Scotia stock 64 years 'ago. He left it the same way Satur- ay, when death ended nearly 40 ears' service as vicar to Arctic illages and Southland suburbs He drove dogsleds through the rozen Yukon Territory to preside t funerals over settlers who ouldn't be buried until spring. He could, preach over a howling blizard in a backwoods chapel, or Beefbuvina•Ifor P o ance in Costa Mesa City Councilffer eloquent prayers for guid- 'home freezers Chambers. "He had a voice like Gabriel eatter,, Winston Churchill and rson Welles all rolled into one," ys a longtime friend. The solemn services will be for e Rev.. Donaldson Thursday hen high requiem mass is held 11 a.m. in St: John the Divine piscopal Church. Bishops from .the Los Angeles, ocese will officiate at rites for . Donaldson, whose term as ar since 1959 was his longest ywhere. He and his wife Kathrine, of 214 Wilson St., Costa Mesa, were igned fittingly to the town Spirit River in. Nova Scotia's ace River. Valley in 1935 after his ordination. Ranging on a circuit into the remote Canadian wilds, Fr. Don- aldson would sometimes ride 400 miles on a single Sunday during the four summer months. The other eight were too rough for travel. A native of 'Halifax, Nova Scotia, where his father was also a vicar, Fr. Donaldson served several churches there and de- livered the gospel by dogsled in the. Yukon Territory. .He traded the snowfields, mountains and frozen tundra for farmlands of Ontario in the .40s and finally for warm Arizona in the 50s, as vicar at Morenci. Transferred to Fontana in 1955, Fr. Donaldson came to Costa. Mesa' four years later where he erved until his death resulting from a long illness. Costa Mesans wishing to carry on the stately, gray -.haired Vicar4s. earthly`-' • work may give Io the Father John Donaldson Me- morial Fund at St. John the Di- vine Church. "He was a magnificent gentle- man"," remarks one friend of -the bespectacled, moustached minis- ter's sonorous invocations in City Council chambers.' - Survivors besides Fr. Donald- ' son's wife include a daughter, Mrs. 'Penny Goldstein, of Hunt= ington Beach, and a grandson David, of his grandparents' home. d y v f f.a c 0 sa w at 1)i Fr vic an E. iss of 1'e A side ofbeef has more deduc- tions than a paycheck. To avoid disappointment and confusion, consumers should calculate the actual cost. of take-home meat. Sides and quarters of beef are sold by "hanging weight" or "carcass weight". Few consum- ers realize that about one quarter , of the weight, bone, fat, and trim, is actually waste and carries the same price per pound as the ac- tual retail cuts received for the freezer. This is an established, accepted selling practice, not an attempt to mislead consumers. Unfortunately, if often confuses , consumers who compare price per pound of the carcass weight to supermarket prices. JIM McGLYNN, winner of the proficiency prize in VIII at Sacred Heart Separate School, receives his from the school principal, Mrs. Charles O'Malley graduation banquet. (Staff Photo) Grade award at the � yM The Wingham Advance -Tiles, Thursday, June 29, 197,14-.-P Femoral Tondo!, for A. 1. AlicKogoe Aeneral insurance nsuraniee agent who served Teeswater and the sur- rounding area for several years, Alexander B. McKague passed away in Victoria Hospital, Lon- don, on Saturday in his 73rd year. Though Mr. McKague had been in failing health for some time death was sudden. Born in Culross Township, 'Alex B.' was a son of the late Alexander MdKague and Hanna Hutton. He was well known in the area, having worked in the insur- ance business for many years, retiring in December of 1966. . He was a member of Knox Presbyterian Church, Teeswater. Left to mourn his passing are his wife, the former Avis Sillick; one son Ivan of St. Thomas and one daughter Connie of Toronto. Also surviving are three grand- children and one brother, Wilbur, of Culross Township. He was pre- deceased by one sister and an in- fant daughter. The late Mr. McKague rested at the MacPherson Funeral Chapel in Teeswater until Mon- day when- remains were convey- ed to Knox Presbyterian Church for service at 2:30. Rev. T. J. Mc- Kinney officiated. Inerment fol- lowed in the Teeswater Ceme- tery. Pallbearers were Bill Lindsay, Murray Lindsay, Ron Lamont, Lloyd Sillick, Don McKague and Art McKague. Floral tributes were carried by Tony Obermeyer and Bill Simpson. For The Handyman 11/2 storey 19th Century solid stone home on five acres of land. Listed at $10,000.00 wit¢i $1,000.00 down. Two Bedroom One storey masonite siding. Kitchen with cupboards, liv- ing room, 3 pc. bath, forced air oil furnace, situated 2 blocks . from main street. Priced low with terms. .Listings Needed We have many clients wanting small acreages; homes in the Town of Wingham and coun- try homes. If interested in selling your property, please contact our Wingham office. DON HOLST REAL ESTATE LTD. Realtors, Wingham "Rural. Ontario Specialists" - OFFICE 357-3840 Wm. Adamson 887-6357 C. Sutcliffe 392-6969 J. Brewer 887-9039 4-04 1 Tei sefogoords to prevent fires Every year, close to 700 Cana- dians die in fires and thousands more receive crippling and pain- ful injuries as a result of burns, according to Insurance Bureau of Canada. Many lives are lost as a result of home,fires which could be averted. Keep matches out of the reach of children at all times. Always practise safe smoking habits, and never smoke in bed. Ensure that heating„equipment is properly chosen, installed and maintained. Never smoke when using flammable liquids. Never overload your home's electrical wiring' system and have it checked periodically by a qualified electrician. Deposit live ashes in a safe place such as a metal container with a tight fitting lid. Be sure refuse and trash is; col- lected regularly. Ensure that youngsters are properly supervised and never left unattended: When electrical appliances are not in use, be sure they are turned off. sosimmissmisommommo FOR, SALE 11/2 storey,.3 bedroom stucco home located close to schools in Wingham. Kitchen, living room, dining room, den, and two sun rooms on main floor. Patio and garage situated on well -landscaped lot. A com- fortable family Jiome with early possession. Two storey, four bedroom home located on a quiet street close to schools in Wingham: This well - built dwelling is loaded with extras along with a well -treed lot. Being offered for the first time. Don't miss it. 50 acres with stream; 18 acres 'clear with 32 in hard- wood, softwood and cedar. Excellent for building or re- treat land. Just four miles from Wingham. 50 Acres of scenic land lo- cated in Kinloss Township with 22 acres clear and the remainder in good cedar and mixed bush. Springs on the. property. Road from front tc rear of property. it CI MULTIPLE LIITIII SERVICE PHOTO LISTING SERVICE• Contact: JOHN F. BRENT Phone: Office 357-1344 Res. 357-1418 . 6•BL T i Looking for Spaaous. LivLiving? Inspect this 2 -Storey Stately Brick Home 13 rooms situated on a '/2 acre, suitable for VLA hold- ing or retirement home. Modern and immaculate' throughout. Could be used as duplex. Kitchen and bath • on each floor. First Mortgage Iti” , $91 Principal and Interest. ced at $23,500 CALL K. WOLFE REALTOR 743-2893 e 22; 29b KEITH FITZSIMM BROKER REAL E 8 TAT E 176 DIAGONAL ARO %57 1'117, WINGHAM, ONTARIO • SCHOOL HOUSE Only $4,900 for this attractive solid brick building. Hard- wood floors, full basement with 8 ft. ceiling and concrete floor. Water is orrpressure from a drilled well. Grounds consist of a large garden area with lots of strawberry and raspberry plants. Seventeen mature maple trees border the grounds. In addition tb the school is a trailer 8 x 20 with modern conveniences which may be pur- chased for $1,500. extra. Good value is being °Mired for the listed price. 100 ACRE FARM West Wawanosh. 7 room brickhome has bath and fur- nace, also a new roof. Barn 40 x 90, tie ups for 38 cows. 2 vertical concrete silos 16 x 55 with roof and unloader, second silo 12 x 30. '70 acres of the land is tillable, rolling terrain, natural drainage, balance maple bush. Good value is being offered for the full price of $25,900. 185,000 Ib. milk quota is available.