Oakville-Trafalgar Journal, 19 Apr 1951, p. 16

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THE OARVILLE-TRAFALGAR JOURNAL Thursday, April 19, 1951 INSURANCE ELECTRICAL T. S. H. GILES INDUSTRIAL Real Estate and Insurance LOE 139 Colborne Street Feit | mIECTRICAL SERVICE 1S Melinds So. BROWN ELECTRIC Toronto - - - Adelaide 2761 vl Evenings - - - Oakville 712 Gord Brown. GENERAL INSURANCE BILL ANDERSON H. S. THORNTON RADIO - APPLIANCES Phone 874 Sales & Service Phone 521-M Lakeshore West, Oakville A. F. BERRILL "Oakyille's Active Broker" Real Estate and Business Broker Insurance Oakville, Ont., Phone 1233 PROFESSIONAL CARSTEN GLAHN, R.O. OPTOMERIST - OPTICIAN Professional and Technical Services essential to eye care HOURS: Daily 9.00 to 5.30 Sat. 9.00 to 12.30 Mon. & Thurs. eve. 7.00-8.00 163 COLBORNE ST. E. PHONE 1375 Dunn St. North - Oakville L. F. CLEMENT HOME ELECTRIC AUTHORIZED FRIGIDAIRE DEALER Commercial Sales & Service Livingston Stoker and Oil Burner Units Service & Installation of all Makes WORK GUARANTEED PHONE 1441 16 THOMAS ST. N. GENERAL ELECTRIC Oil Burners Commercial Refrigeration ales & Installation A. C. PE 94 Maple Ave., Phone 1544 Oakville WILLIAM C. MILLIGAN, R.O. Optometrist * Optician 69A Colborne St., Oakville, Ont. (Over the Bank of Commerce) Professional eye examination & prescription services, TELEPHONE 1507 Closed All Day Wednesday HOURS: Daily 9.30 a.m.-5.30 p.m. Thursday evening--7.00-8.00 p.m. or by appointment OAKVILLE ANIMAL CLINIC A. CAMPBELL, D.V.M. G. K. PECK, D.V.M. Maurice Dr. Phone 452W f No Answer Call 2177 OFFICE HOURS 1 to 3 -- 7 to 9 Sunday & Other Hours By Appointment w. CHIROPRACTOR 1. E. MACDOUGALL, D.C. CHIROPRACTOR Office Hours: Daily: 9.30-4.00 Saturday: 9.00-12.30 Mon. & Thurs. Evening 7-9 Closed All Day Wednesday 61 A COLBORNE ST. AKVILLE TELEPHONE 146 OSTEOPATH CARLTON GREEN Osteopath 63 Division Street By Appointment Only. Phone 826 Evenings, Wednesday After- noon, Saturday and Sunday. ORVILLE NEAL Domestic & Commercial ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING Fixtures, Ranges, Tanks 37 STEWART ST. W. Phone 1005-R BROCKWAY'S SALES AND -SERVICE Your Furnace is as good as your service man ELECTRIC SERVICE MEN Completely Automatic 24-Hour Service : FOR QUALITY SERVICE CALL BRONTE 168-M ROOFING NICHOL'S ROOFING New roofs & Old roofs applied Insul-Bric siding & Asbetos siding Insulation Materials Eaves Troughing Materials supplied & sold Peter P. Nichols A New Phone 2544 Burlington Oakville 1445 88 CLARKE AVE., BURLINGTON (Estimates Given) NURSERIES ROBT. NIELSEN NURSERIES Garden Design and Landscape Contracting TREKS -- SHRUBS -- ROSES EVERGREENS We Grow - Design - Plant Prune - etc. Oakville R.R. 1 Phone 1444-W LINBROOK NURSERIES Growers of High Quality Nursery Stock Designers of Fine Gardens -- Contracting BARRISTERS EIGHTH LINE N. Phone 137J ANGUS McMILLAN OAKVILLE NURSERIES Barrister -- Solicitor Notary Public 107 Colborne Street East Telephone Oakville 532 ROSS RYRIE Barrister Solicitor Notary Public 61-A Coihorne St. East Evergreens, Shrubs, Bedding Plants Landscaping -- Fruits Lakeshore Highway W. Phonte Bronte 56W WM. SEALE Custom Tractor Work Wood Sawing, Plowing, Discing, Ete. Telephones Phone 224-W Office 65: Resid 487-w REPAIRS D. A. McCONACHIE Barrister - Solicitor Notary Public 1 Reynolds St. N. Telephone Oasville 1304 JOHN F. ISARD Barrister -- Solicitor Notary Public Successor to W. N. Robinson, K.C. 142 Colborne St. East Phones: Bus. 15 Res. 216 JACK A. SEED Barrister-Solicitor Notary Public 27 Park Avenue 220 Bay St, Toronto PHONES: Business: Residence Oak. PL7821 1228 ACCOUNTING D. HAMILTON-WRIGHT, C.A. above Russell's Drug Store Phone 1399 Toronto Office, 365 Yonge St. Phone 4704 Pert Credit Office, 2 Lakeshore Road B, Phone Port Credit 4981 C. L. OLIVER AND CO. Accounting and Auditing Business Systems Installed Income Tax Returns 36 Colborne St. E. P. 0. Box 402 Ham. 7-8482 : Oakville 1268 To all types of commercial and domestic refrigerators and electric ranges. PARTS & SERVICE GUARANTEED E. W. BURBIDGE 136 Robinson St. Telephone 1423W Oakville TOWING "Equipped. To Look After Your Towing Needs" AL. JOHNSON 24-Hour Towing and Road Service Anywhere--Anytime Telephones 783-J : 783-W 71 REBECCA ST., CHAPTER 10 The heat spell continued for several days. We thought each day was hotter than the one be- fore. It seemed as if the jolly old sun had forgotten how friendly he used to be with all his people on earth and was trying to burn us alive. Then the change came. We had two days of rain, followed by cooler weather. The grass became green again. New buds burst forth on the plants in the south border and gay colors returned to the garden. Life was much pleas- anter now. Soon we forgot the awful heat wave and acted as normal human beings once more. "Thought sure I'd be roasted," Patsy grunted at me as I walked past her in the garden while I was watering fhe roses. "Leapin tadderpoles and 'fish-eyed monkeys that was the hottest bunch of days I ever remember in one bunch, Even thought I'd melt and run down a drain--but I didn't. The heat had been specially hard on poor little Pokee. It's hard enough for a mother dog to raise a litter of puppies in normal weather, but in weather like that it was specially hard. I made her stay in the big old garage where the cement floor gave her and her puppies some relief from the heat. In the evening when the sun went down I 1ét them out to play on the grass and chase boys in. the garden. One evening we had friends in to play croquet. This was one of our favorite pastimes for a sum- mer evening. We enjoyed many games that summer and Pokee's puppies enjoyed them also. As soon as the game had started the puppies heard the click and clack of the wooden croquet balls, and they came in all directions. Pok- ee and one pup came from under the big apple tree by the south fence. Dusty had been following old Patsy, her grandmother, and they arrived from the direction of the old stone well. The third puppy had been bothering her Aunt Fudgee, and came tearing across the lawn after the irate BOARDING KENNELS DEERHAVEN BOARDING KENNELS REG'D. (B. K. Snider) Upper Middle Rd. Clipping, Defleaing, Washing, 'Worming Special Attention To Dogs In eason All Animals Exercised BUILDING CHAS. WATT Local Representative J. Cooke Limited CONCRETE BLOCKS Aldershot, Ont. Phone 386J3 TURNBULL & HOLDRIDGE Building Contractors Concrete - Masonry Blockwork 1578W - OAKVILLE - 903 TORONTO - PLaza 5491 KITCHEN CABINETS Standard or Made-toOrder ESTIMATES GIVEN FRANK LAROCQUE, Mgr. TALBOT SALES BUILDERS' SUPPLIES Lower Middle Rd. Ph. 342-2 FLOOR SERVICE W. H. PARKIN Floor Sanding & Refinishing Phone 1058-W BY HERBERT C. The Cookee Column Book Three, Entitled: POPO RETURNS MERRY Fudgee, amidst many growls. "Why these pesky pups have to follow me around is more than I can understand," gasped Fudgee as she arrived almost breathless beside me. I would be ashamed to have Blackie Davis or Teddy Hannah see them in such close company with me. They might think 1 as their nurse-maid." "Oh don't let them get in your feathers," Pokee said to Fudgee as she joined the circle of onlook- ing canines. "After all, you could find a worse pastime than nurse maiding my kids." "Well, I don't know would be," said Fudgee. "Crab," Pokee called "Crab 'yourself," returned Fud- gee. "Quiet, you two," ordered Drib- i, "or welll chase you off the croquet green." For about a minute there was silence. At first the puppies were content to watch the wooden balls as they sped to and fro across the lawn. Then they wanted to follow. them, and they tore after them across the green just as fast as their tiny little legs would carry them. "Oh goody," said Popo, "that will freshen them out so theyll sleep nicely tonight. For once I'll have a quiet night and I-won't be puperized. "That will tire them out," Fud- gee corrected Pokee as she watch- what it ed the game. "Well that's' what I want," Popo said. "Tire them out into little bits so they won't get back into one piece until tomorrow morning." "Oh Po--you sure are a L.B. on the S.S.--a sad case if I ever saw one" said Fudgee shaking her head sadly. Soon the game was almost ruined by intruding pups. They got in the way. They moved the balls, and tried to eat pieces out of them. One pup chased a ball in under the Day Lilly plants only to come yipping out looking as if he'd seen a ghost. When we went to retrieve the ball we found what had frightened him. There sat Harold the Toad, just mind- ing his own business. "Well, we might call this game BY MAX TRELL "AH," said Mr. Punch as Knarf and Hanid, the shadow-children with the turned-about names, came into the room. "I've just been invited to two birthday parties." "Two of them!" Hanid ex- claimed. Mr. Punch nodded. "Two of them. But I can't go to both. And I can't make up my minds which one of the two to go to. The trouble is," he added, "if 1 go to one party, the other party will be insulted." Knarf and Hanid now asked Mr. Punch to tell them who were having the two different birthday parties, Mr. Punch answered: "One of the parties is for my good friend, Suzzy the Cat. The other party is for my equally good friend, Millie the Mouse. Will Be Mad "Now," continued Mr. Punch, "you can see as well as I can that it I go to Suzy the Cat's party, Mille the Mouse will be mad at me. And if I go to Millie the Mouse's party Suzy the Cat will never talk to me again." "Don't go to either 'of them, Mr. Punch," suggested Knarf. "No, that's no good. Then they'll both be mad at me. I'd rather have one of them mad at me than both of them." "It's too bad, isn't it," said Hanid to Mr. Punch, "that the cats and mice don't like each other. Because if they did, then the two birthday parties could be held together at the same time, and you could go to both of them." Mr. Punch looked quite sad. He sat silently for a long while, try- ing to make up his mind as to what he should do. Suddenly Knarf and Hanid saw him smile! "I've thought of it!" he exclaim- ed. "I've thought of the way to do it without hurting the feelings of either Supy the Cat or Millie the Mouse!" "How?" asked Knarf and Hanid. "Instead of going to either of their parties, Pll invite them both here." "But, Mr. Punch!" "You can't do that!" cried Hanid "They won't get along!" said Knarf. But Mr. Punch said he knew just what to do to keep both Suzy the Cat and Millie the Mouse from not getting along with each other. "Yowll see," he said. "The important thing will be the birthday present that I give to each of them. "Here", he said to Knarf, "you go down to the cellar and tell Millie the Mouse to come here right away for her party. And you," he said, turning to Hanid, "go outside on the porch and tell Suzy the Cat to come here right away for her party." Different Directions Knarf and Hanid ran off in different directions to carry out Mr. Punch's orders. Presently Hanid returned with Suzy the Cat, and a moment or two later Knarf returned "with Millie the Mouse. off," I said. "It's just ium." "Oh mo, oh no," laughed Polkee. "It's pupamomium for sure, it is for sure." "Red tape" Patsy called out from her comfortable retreat un- der the weeping willow tree. "That's what It 1s. Red tape. Why on earth aren't pups kept in pens so dogs can watch people play croquet? Jellied lizards' tongues, they ruined the game. That's what they did, ruined the game. CONCRETE BLOCKS ALL SIZES IMMEDIATE DELIVERY PHONE 1133 Punch Had Two Invitations --But He Couldn't Accept them Both-- Punch didn't know what to g The first thing that Mr. pupg did was to give Suzy the Caf her Dresent. The present was a huge bowl of sweet cream. Then he gave her 5 plate of meat, another bowl of sweet cream and another plate of meat. Suzy the Cat looked at {hg bowls of cream and the plates of meat. Then she glanced at Mills was better to eat Punch's presents than to eat Mj. lie. Mr. Punch's present to Mille was a great slice of Swiss cheese, At first Millie, on seeing Suzy the Cat, instantly wanted to run away. But when she saw that Suzy was too busy eating her presents to bother with a lite mouse. Millie stayed to nibble her Swiss cheese. And so both of them stayed, and both of then had a feast, and everyone had ¢ wonderful time. NOT INFALLIBLE Before judging a man by his associates, you might bear in mind that Judas Iscariot travelled in pretty good company. C.P.T. EUCHRE EVERY FRIDAY 8.15 p.m. sharp 1. 0. 0. F. HALL Everybody Welcome CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY OF OAKVILLE Dundas and Randall Sts. Sunday service and Sunday Schou at 11 am. Wednesday Evening] Service 8 p.m., 2nd and 4th Wed Jillc: nesdays, Public Reading Room open Tues days 3 to 4:30 p.m. You are cor dially invited to attend our ser| vices and to make use of the] Reading Room. FOR Quality Meats Fruits & Vegetables Groceries PHONE 1020 (Prompt Delivery) CARLOAD GROCETERIA R. E. Harris, Prop. WILLY DEE Hl, WOODY, DO YOU THINK ALONG WITH MI OAKVILLE, ONT. WORM..COME 1031 he Tagen frag By Vic Green | THOUGHT YOU \ WHAT COULD BE WERE WUCKY--- LUCKIER--=2 Z HATE WORMS! MAY T HAVE THE HONOR J OF THE NEXT DANCE, 3 MAE 7 ol (7 HBR TA N STEP WITH THE HICCUPS... OR THE MUSIC!

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