Oakville Newspapers

Oakville-Trafalgar Journal, 26 Jan 1950, p. 5

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the re. e town in the Oakville an Mrs, 73 ney library ear, an 300 vol. nt into re than 541 tit. telves-- r child. arly in. | present e being um de. LE. 3] WILLIAM G. MILLI THE OAKVILLE-TRAFALGAR JOURNAL WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELERY SILVERWARE Phone 1231 INSURANCE ELECTRICAL T. S. H. GILES Real Estate and Insurance © 189 Colborne Street Bast ville - - - - Phone 6532 19 Melinda St. © GENERAL INSURANCE H. S. THORNTON Phone 874 Lakeshore West, Oakville PROFESSIONAL CARSTEN GLAHN Optometrist -- Optician = 168 Colborne St. E. Phone 1375 GAN, R.O. tometrist Optician oor Colborne St., Oakville, Ont. (Over the Bank of Commerce) Professional eye examination & ? prescription services, Office Hours: Tuesday to. Sat- urday, 9.80 am. to § pam. 'Tuesday and Thursday evenings, 3 7.00 to 8.00 p.m. Telephone 1507 W. A. CAMPBELL, D.V.M, V.S. Accredited Veterinarian Hours by Appointment Home. Office 29 Herald Ave. Phone 390W * > Trafalgar Farms Office Phone 1344 "OSTEOPATH CARLTON GREEN Osteopath 63 Division Street By Appointment Only. Phone 826 Wvenings, Wednesday After- noon, Saturday and Sunday. INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL DOMESTIC ELECTRICAL SERVICE BROWN ELECTRIC CONTRACTORS Gord Brown Phone 1059 Oakville BILL ANDERSON RADIO - APPLIANCES Sales & Service Phone 521-M Dunn St. North - Oakville * L. F. CLEMENT HOME ELECTRIC AUTHORIZED FRIGIDAIRE DEALE 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 "Sales & Installation N A. C. PE 94 Maple Ave., Phone 1544 Oakville REPAIRS To all types of commercial and domestic refrigerators and electric ranges. PARTS & SERVICE GUARANTEED E. W. BURBIDGE 136 Robinson St. Telephone 521M or 1112W Oakville PAINTING PAINTING & DECORATING Prompt Service THOMAS H. EASTON 2 BARRISTERS Phone: Port Credit 4206 : ANGUS McMILLAN NURSERIES Barrister -- Solicitor RO EISEN i "Notary Public NURSERIES 107 Colborne Street East Garden a Landscape Telephone Oakville 532 TREY aE wots ROSS RYRIE EVERGREENS We = Di = Barrister - Solicitor Li Sl we Plant Notary Public 61-A Coiborne St. East Oakville R.R. 1 Phone 1444-W i Telep 'Office 65: Resid 1487-w FLOOR SERVICE McConachie & Jones D. A. McConachie Richard Jones Barrister - Solicitor Notary Public 169 COLBORNE ST. Telephone Oakville 1304 JOHN F. ISARD = Barrister -- Solicitor a Notary Public » Successor to © W. N. Robinson, K.G. "142 Colborne St. East Phones: Bus. 15 : Res. 216 3 JACK A. SEED Barrister-Solicitor 4 Notary Public 27 Park Avenue Telephone 1237-R FLOOR SANDING & REFINISHING LINOLEUM FLOORS LAID LINO-MASTIC-RUBBER TILE PHONE BRONTE 184 W. H. PARKIN Phone 1058-W BRONTE FLOOR SERVICE Floor Sanding & Refinishing ROOFING NICHOL'S ROOFING New roofs & Old roofs applied Insul-Bric siding & Asbetos siding Insulation Materials Eaves Troughing Materials supplied & sold Peter P. Nichols New Phone 2544 Burlington Oakville 1445 38 CLARKE AVE., BURLINGTON (Estimates Given) v ACCOUNTING C. L. OLIVER and CO. Accounting and Auditing, usiness Systems Installed Income Tax Returns 32 Thomas Street P.O. Box 402 am. 7-5452 - Oakville 1268 BUILDING THOS. SHIELDS "Building Contractor" 81 Colborne St. Oakville - Ontario Estimates Supplied Phone 698 SURVEYING H. D. SEWELL ONTARIO LAND SURVEYOR Oakville - Phone 1297-4 GLAZING, REPAIR WORK All kinds of Carpentry A. S. Wright PHONE 97J Evenings CHAS. WATT Local Representative J. Cooke Limited CONCRETE BLOCKS Phone 386-J-3 TURNBULL & HOLDRIDGE Building Contractors Concrete - Masonry Blockwork 1578W - OAKVILLE - 903 TORONTO - PLaza 5491 General Tin Went OUT TO HUNT SNIFFERS AND SNUFFERS BY MAX TRELL General Tin, the tin soldier, was about to march out through his secret door in the playroom (the door was hidden behind the curtain and you had to stoop down low to get through it). At that moment Knarf and Hanid came running up to find out Where the General was going. "Hunting, my dears," replied General Tin. "T'm going hunting." "Hunting what?" asked Han- id, "Sniffers and snuffers," said General Tin. "They're birds. They have three legs and they wear spectacles. But they're very hard to catch on account of they can sniff anybody coming from a long distance off. And when they sniff anybody coming, they instantly snuff themselves out. Like a can- dle," he added. Sniffers and Snuffers Knarf and Hanid said they would like to go along and help catch the sniffers and snuffers. And Teddy the Stuffed Bear, who heard the talking at the door, came bumbling up in great ex- citement and said did anybody mind if he went along, too? Nobody minded, although Gen- eral Tin thought Teddy always made a great deal too much noise when he walked to make the very best kind of hunter. So off they set, ome behind the other, Teddy was left with a bag of peanuts with General Tin treading softly in front, and turning around every few minutes to put his finger across his lips and say "hist!" "What?" asked Teddy, who was last, in a loud voice. "Hist means be quiet," explained in a whisper. "Oh!" said Teddy. And he tried from then on to walk tip-toe Hanid which didn't help much because | He saw a strange sight. he was always ' tripping over twigs and stones and falling flat on his face. They had come to the edge of a thick woods, and General Tin had said Hist! for the tenth time, and Teddy had just fallen flat on his face again. "All right, leave him there!" General Tin said looking at Ted- dy with a scowl. "The sniffers and snuffers live in this forest, We'll never catch them with all this noise." "I'm sorry," sald poor Teddy. "I won't mae any more noise, I promise. T'll crawl on my hands and knees," "Please let Teddy come," said Hanid. Knarf begged General Tin too, for Teddy's sake. But it did no good. Teddy was left sitting on a bit of moss under a large tree, and given a bag of peanuts to eat in case he got hungry. | The Cookee Column BOOK TWO Patsy's Kid Fudgee By HERBERT C. MERRY CHAPTER 1 I Want To Be Alone The sun was up early that morning. The jolly old chap came up out of Lake Ontario and sent his lovely warm rays up the Six- teen Mile Creek, lighting the crannies and crevices that night had darkened. Another day had started. The Basket factory whis tle would soon hoot out ii ing call, telling the early birds to finish their breakfast and hus- tle to work. Patsy was up before the sun. She hadn't slept well. She wasn't up because she specially liked to get up early. Although she really is an early riser, she just wasn't feeling well and decided maybe if she took a stroll around the gar- den, or went and sat under the little spruce trees by the fish ond, she might feel better. She mumbled to herself as she walk- ed very carefully down the ver: andah steps and ambled very slowly along the garden path. We got to the rustic bridge over the miniature river, she stopped and looked through the pine rungs. "T guess Tl have a drink of water." She mumbled in her very deep voice. "It can't hurt me--It probably won't help me any but, shucks and kidney jelly, 1 must try something to make me feel better." a trickle of water which overflowed from the fish pond up in the Sumach grove and ran over the picturesque little water fall and so on down to the duck in the lowest part of the den: Patsy drank from the cool little stream, then went and found a comfortable spot in the moist, cool earth, under a dwarf spruce tree by the fish pond. pond gar- An hour later I found her there when I came out to the rose gar- den to give the roses an early morning drink before the heat of the day became too intense. Come along Pats!" I called to her as I went by. "Come along and help me water the roses, Are you spending all morning hidden away among the trees?" "Well maybe I will. Yes, no, yes, no--don't know!" She pract- ically growled at me. "Cuttle fish and stuffed horsef can't a body be left alone to rest quietly for a while, specially when the body feels unwell?" With this she turned her back me and stretched out full length In the shady, cool spot. I got the hose and turned the water on. For a few minutes 1 said no more. I thought unless she felt very badly, she'd be out soon to watch the spray and gaze in on of Page 5 wonder as she always did, at the little drops of water on the green leaves of the rose bushes, reflect- ing the early rays of sunshine, It didn't seem long before I heard a slight rustle below me and IT heard her mumbling to herself. "Some people are so inconsid- erate, They never think of other people they are so busy thinking themselves. Self-important, important. That's what they are!" She came within a few Where I standing and crawled slowly up onto a low sel steps of garden stool by the bird bath. She a few wasn't reall was just using to get something gled her front right paw for moments, then licked the ken feathers along her legs as he continued her oration. She peaking to me. She me an exouse off her chest as that had been bothering her. "A poor body day by day, when "The trouble is, sha went on, has to carry on, they feal very: (Continued on Page 6) 0 Located in McDermott's Opposite Loblaw Grecetaria Colborne St. B, -- Oakville | Batteries and Re-charging Tires and Repairs Vuleanizing Oakville Batter! Tire .& Randall at Na: Service Sts, Ph. T14W Slowly she stepped down from the little bridge and approach- ed the tiny river, which was a and ght. Then the others crept off were soon out of Teddy's Big and Clumsy For a few minutes Teddy felt sad. "If only T weren't so big and clumsy," he sighed, "General Tin would have fet me go with them and I would have seen the sniffers and snuffers. But now I'll never see them, not ever . . ." Teddy finally felt a nap com- ing on, and after eating a pea- nut or two with a loud crackling and crunching, he curled up and went to sleep. He was suddenly awakened by the noise of birds all around him. He opened his eyes. Chatter and hopping up and down on their legs were a whole flock of sniffers and snuf begging for peanuts. Some w on Teddy's shoulders, some w on his arms and legs, and one of them stood on Teddy's head. | dy threw them all the peanuts he had, cracking the shells with a great deal of noise, and shout- ing for the queer-looking birds to come and get them! All at once the birds heard foot-steps coming back through the forest. They Instantly stood absolutely still, sniffing. next second they all vanished snuffed themselves out like the flame of a candle--just as Knarf and Hanid and General Tin ap- peared, You can't imagine awful General Tin felt when he heard that Teddy had becn feed- ing the sniffers and snuffers all afternoon! how. car's brakes, wheel your and electrical system. Church St. W. at Navy Winter Driving Is Hazardous | Minimize the possibilities of aceldent roads. Drive carefully, Put on your chains to increase traction And braking power whenever the ronds are covered with snow or lee. Keep your car In safe con dition. Drive in today for a complete check-up of Maxwell - Brown Motors on ley or wet allgnment, steering gear, Phone 6 WILLY DEE FM JUST NOT THE Fl TYPE... SPIKE, WOUL! YOU LIKE TO TAKE MY IN THE BRASS MITS BOXING CONTEST, AND FIGHT BINGO GHTING DON'T "By Vie Green HOW 'BOUT YOU, ) NO THANKS) NUNZIO, OL' PAL, OR YOU, REGGY, OL' BUDDY? 0/ YOU DON'T CARE IF T GET LICKED? | Ld! © DAILY SERVICE TO ALL CAMADIAN AND USA. © CHARTERID BUSES OFFIR IDEAL SERVICE FOR ALL S20UP TRAVEL TICKETS AND INFORMATION AY HALTON INN Phone 600 =A FINE BUNCH OF FRIENDS YOU ARE Pid [ BY WALLY BISHOP! WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT, GRANDMA? THERE'S NO SCHOOL RDA' AS OH, THATS RIGHT... BUT AS LONG YOURE ANAKE NOW, YOU MIGHT \Y.! AS WELL GET UP! I JUST THOUGH fl |OF A FEW ERRANDS YOU CAN RUN TZ Th, gee FOR ME! fll

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