Cramahe Archives Digital Collection

The Colborne Express (Colborne Ontario), 19 Jan 1956, p. 5

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THE COLBORNE EXPRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19th, 1956 Page Five THE COLBORNE EXPRESS H. A. Free. Publisher Published Thursdays at the Office, King Street, Colborne Phone : Office 44 -- Residence 32' Authorized as second-class mail by the Post Office Dept., Ottawa AUCTIONEERS CAMERON BENNETT General Auctioneer Belleville, R.R. 3 Phone WOodland 2-1991 a21-a21-56 BUILDING MATERIAL Rough and Dressed Lumber, Flooring:, Clapboards, etc CUSTOM SAWING W. W. MUTTON FUNERAL DIRECTORS BARNES' FUNERAL HOME MODERN EQUIPMENT Funeral Home Accommodation at No Extra Charge PERSONAL SERVICE Day or Night Phone 111 -- Colborne J. M. BLACKLOCK Grafton MOTOR HEARSE IN CONNECTION Day or Night Calls Promptly Attended PHONE 38, GRAFTON INSURANCE W. W. D. McGLENNON AGENCY COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE AUTOMOBILES FINANCED Representing-- Canada Life Assurance Co. Hamilton Township Farmers' Mutual BRUNSWICK BLOCK Phone 20 Colborne Ontario INSURANCE Auto Floaters Burglary Liability Fire Plate Glass, etc. WILLIAM J, TROOP JR. Phone 114 Colborne WASHING MACHINE SERVICE (any make) NEW AUTOMATIC WASHERS, DRYERS, IRONERS REFRIGERATORS, DEEP FREEZERS DeLAVAL and BEATTY PUMPS and STABLE EQUIPMENT WM. GORDON SMITH Phone 169 Colborne, Ont. LEGAL EDWIN HOWELL BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. Colborne, Ontario Office Closed Unit! March, 1956 WORK WANTED SEPTIC TANK CLEANING, modern equipment. Call Harry Anderson, Brighton. Phone 193, reverse the charge. jl28-q31x FOR SALE KITCHEN CUPBOARD DOORS and Drawers made to order. We have a full line of cupboard material to serve you. See us for your Sash, Doors and Pre-flt Windows, etc. Francis Sash & Door, Brighton, Ont. Phone 283. j5c &. D. HALL, Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, etc. Office and residence King Street, Colborne, Ontario. FROST'S RADIO and T. V. Sales and Service ELECTROHOME and MARCONI Television and Radio FAIRBANKS-MORSE Television and Refrigerators Easy Terms Arranged on T.V. Sets Phone 256, Colborne REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE and GENERAL INSURANCE ALF MINAKER Phone 76 -- Colborne CONSULT J. A. WILLOUGHBY & SONS REAL ESTATE BROKERS Head Office Toronto 46 Eglinton Ave. E. Phone HU. 1-3391 City and Country Homes Farms and Small Acreages Industrial and Business Properties H. L. FRANKLIN Is your local representative Phone 269, Colborne DEAD STOCK REMOVED HIGHEST PRICES PAID 24 HR. SERVICE Phone Collect: Cobourg FR 2-3721 Peterborough RI 2-2080 NICK PECONI, Prop. Lansdowne St. E, Peterborough BABY-SITTER WITH COLD The baby-sitter who has a cold should remember that a cold which is a minor ailment to an older person may be a serious illness to an infant. Therefore, she should handle the child as little as possible. She should not kiss the youngster and, before handling his food or his person, she should wash her hands. When coughing or sneezing, a disposable tissue should be held before her nose and mouth. Some authorities advise that anyone who has a cold should wear a mask of several thicknesses of gauze over nose and mouth when lifting or handling a small baby. Each mask should be used only once and then destroyed immediately after use. $730,000 REQUIRED FOR ADDITION TO HOSPITAL Final plans are now being made for the opening early in February of a campaign to raise $730,000 to provide additional buildings and medical equipment at Cobourg District General Hospital. , Because of the rapid increase in the population of the area served by the hospital, there is already a waiting list growing longer as the weeks by. The rated capacity of the hospital is 38 beds. By turning single rooms into double and setting up beds in corridors, 48 beds can be made available, but that is not nearly enough. It is the hope of the directors, through the generosity of the public, to increase the capacity of the hospital to approximately 100 beds, 20 of which will be for chronically ill patients. Many people have the idea that government grants and fees paid by patients provide the biggest share of the money needed for expansion. This is not true. The fees charged to patients are set to recover only the actual expense of operating the hospital. Being a non-profit organization, it must, therefore, depend on the generosity of individuals, organizations and all levels of government for capital funds. Grants from the Province of Ontario amount to $1000 for each new hospital bed provided. This is matched by the Government of Canada. Additional sums are made available for x-ray, laboratory and out-patient facilities. These grants provide, in total, 20 per cent of necessary funds to provide buildings and equipment, leaving 80 per cent to be raised by municipal grants and a general caftV paign such as will get under way in February. The services of the District General Hospital are not confined to the Town of Cobourg, but are available to the district surrounding Cobourg and are regularly used by most families in the townships of Alnwick, Cramahe, Hal-dimand, Hamilton, and Brighton. In addition, many patients from other counties, and even the United States, receive treatment at your hospital when needed. No family is immune from serious sickness or accident. It is then that the benefits of an adequate and well-equipped hospital are appreciated. It is in order to have enough beds and equipment available when required that the planned expansion is so vitally necessary, and the reason for the forthcoming fund raising campaign. GOOD TURNS IN TRAFFIC The Ontario Highway Traffic Act requires that before slowing your vehicle of turning or moving from one traffic lane to another you shall: (1) Make sure that the stop or turn can be made safely. (2) Let other drivers and pedestrians know what you intend to do by giving the proper signal; and (3) Make the turn from the proper road position. A new illustrated leaflet, published by the Motor Vehicles Branch of the Department of Highways, graphically shows proper methods of making right and left hand turns from and into two-way and one-way streets. It Illustrates also proper hand signals for both right and left turns as well as the slow or stop signal. "Good Turns in Traffic" is a crisp presentation of an important element in safe and courteous driving. Copies of the leaflet are available from the Motor Vehicles Branch, Department of Highways, Toronto. DUNDONALD January 17th, 1955. Service next Sunday at 11 a. hi. S. S. at 10 a.m. Mr. and Mrs. K. Mutton spent Wedr nesday with Mr. and Mrs. R. Waite, Hilton. Mr. and Mrs. A. Samons spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Basil Samons, Cobourg. Master Melvin Miller, Brighton, visited Mr. and Mrs. Claude Goodrich on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Purdy, Milton, were Monday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mutton. Mrs. Keith Stimers returned home from Montreal. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Potter, Brighton, were Sunday tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herbie Trottman, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Honey visited Mr. and Mrs. Alec Merill, Campbellford, Sunday. Mrs. Frank Chapman, Leonard and Philip were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Chapman, Osh-awa, and tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Turney, Bowmanvilie. Mr. Chapman returned home with them. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Montgomery, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hadwin and Bobby, and Norman Alyea were Sunday tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Cable, Cobourg. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dunk returned home Sunday from a two months' visit with relatives in Ireland. Mr. and Mrs. John Dunk and family, Shiloh, and Mr. and Mrs. Guy Dickens and family, Colborne, were there to welcome their parents home. Mr. Herb McDonald is able to be up again and had several callers during the week. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Fish, Creigh-ton Heights, spent ISunday with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Montgomery and Mrs. N. Fish. Mr. and Mrs. \Jay iSwain, Brighton, and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Irwin were Sunday tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. K. Mutton. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mutton and family, Colborne, visited Mr. and Mrs. Roy Packard on Sunday and called on Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Mutton. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Peters and Mrs. Fred Pearson, Salem, were Sunday tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Pearson, and also called on Mr. and Mrs. Walter Pearson. Mrs. Fred Pearson remained with them. Mrs. Fred Irwin spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Jay Swain, Brighton. Mrs. R. Chapman and Bill and Miss Margaret Haynes, Castleton, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mc-Knight, Toronto, and visited Mrs. Orra Harnden in the General Hospital. Mr .and Mrs. W. W. Mutton spent the weekend with Cobourg relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Lovett, Mor-ganston, were Sunday tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lew Mutton. Mrs. Mary Paylor, Toronto, visited Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Oliver on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Eldred Eddy and Peter spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wilce, Shiloh. Mrs. Gordon Honey spent a few days last week with Sgt. and Mrs. John White, Colborne, and assisted in the care of their infant son, William Lloyd. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Morrison and Mr. Leonard Dickens spent the weekend in Toronto and visited Mrs. Dick-is. Mrs. Morrison remained'. Mr. and Mrs. Don Chapman, Linda and Larry, Burnhamthorpe Road, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Lew Mutton. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Philp, Mor-ganston, visited Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Mutton and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Mutton Wednesday evening. Mrs. Frank Chapman and Philip, spent Wednesday with Mrs. A. Her-rington, Edville. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Chapman and son spent last Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Almonte Barrett, Castleton. SLOW DOWN AND LIVE The nation-wide campaign against excessive speed in the U.S., receiving active support from each state through its Governor and official bodies is regarded as a very long step forward in that Country's safety activities. Wm. M. Greene, chairman of the National Conference of State Safety Co-ordinators, points out that " 'Slow Down and Live' answers a decades-old prayer by every highway safety man worth his salt in the country, a prayer for co-ordination, co-operation and concentration of effort." Referring to a resolution adopted by the 46th annual meeting of the Governor's Conference, he said: "Most of our driver irresponsibility is associated with the headlong rush -- the thoughtless urge to get there first and fastest. On the public highways, this 'in a hurry* attitude manifests itself in excessive speed, speed too fast for conditions, improper passing, following too closely and failing to yield the right of way . . . "Slow down and live is more than a slogan. It is a new code of traffic conduct, to which we must adhere if we are to combine fine highways and fine vehicles for our enjoyment and our economic advancement." LAKEPORT January 17th, 1955. Mrs. Fred Baxter of Toronto spent the weekend at the home of her mother, Mrs. G. Peebles. Mr. Grant Yarrow of Kingston spent a few days of last week at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Yarrow. Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Warner were Mr. and Mrs. G. Dusen-bury of Brighton, and Mr. and Mrs. H. Winter and Betty of Academy Hill. Mr. and Mrs. R. Kirton wish to announce the engagement of their daughter, Sandra Beverley, to Donald Thomas Troop, son of Capt. and Mrs. Wm. Troop, Sr., of Colborne. The Annual Vestry meeting of St. Peters Anglican Church was held on Wednesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Warner. Excellent reports were presented by all departments of the church. Wardens for 1956 are: Minister's Warden, Mr. John Mul-dren; People's Warden, W. B. Warner. The regular meeting of the Guild of St. Peter's Anglican Church was held on Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Geo. Tutty. Mrs. John O'Rorke is visiting in Peterborough". Mr. Earl Mahoney suffered painful injuries when struck by a falling tree but we are glad to report that he is now much improved. Mr. John O'Rorke spent a few days in Toronto and attended the funeral of the late Mrs. J. F. O'Rorke. Alberta still has some 30,000,000 acres of unoccupied land suitable for cultivation. January 17th, 1955. Service at Sihloh United Church will be at 9.45 a.m. next Sunday. Mrs. Lyall McCullough and Bruce visited Mrs. Walter Ferguson on Wednesday evening. Mrs. Jack Purdy visited Mrs. Cecil Dale on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Philp, Mor-ganston, visited Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mutton on Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Mutton and Ross and Mr. Gordon Mutton spent Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Mutton. Mrs. Lawrence Mutton and Stephanie called on Mrs. Dean Chapman, Edville on Saturday morning. Mr. Don Richardson was a Sunday dinner guest of Miss Nellie and Mr. Hugh Mutton. Mr. and Mrs. John Dunk and family were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dunk, Dundonald. Mr. and Mrs. John Purdy, Milton, were Sunday night guests of Miss Nellie and Mr. Hugh Mutton. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Gillespie were Sunday supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. Hockley, Brighton, and also called on Mrs.. A. Down. Master Graham Mutton spent Saturday with Master Ross Mutton. Miss Madeline Wilce, Cobourg, and Mr. Ward Lee, Brighton, were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wilce. Mr. and Mrs. Eldred Eddy and Peter, Dundonald, were supper guests. Mrs. T. Gillespie and Mr. George Mutton visited Miss Nellie Mutton on Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mutton and Mr. Gordon Mutton were Sunday supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mutton, Dundonald. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Purdy and family, Grafton, and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Dale and girls were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Purdy. Farm Forum was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ferguson on Monday evening. Don't forget the first W. A. dinner in the School on Thursday, January 26th at 12 a.m. sharp. Cleanliness is next to godliness, they say. It is certain one of the ingredients in a good health plan. Disease germs may be collected on dirty hands, and from there transferred to the mouth with food. Every adult should make a practice of washing his hands before eating and every child should be trained to do so before he eats meals or even a between-meal snack, and always after visiting tha toilet. FINANCING A CAR? 49 Models to New Cars Only SAVE $ $ $ BEFORE you buy ask about our Low Cost Financing Service with Complete Insurance Coverage. W. W. D. McGlennon Agency PHONE 20W '. King Street COLBORNE PLUMBING and HEATING Free Estimates WORKMANSHIP AND MATERIALS GUARANTEED FOR ONE YEAR S. CARR DOVE'S LUNCH Day and Night Service Phone 131 Colborne Try Our Lunch Room for good food with prompt and courteous service! 24 Stools and Tables A Full Line of Soft Drinks and Smokes Wanted, An Assessor! THE VILLAGE OF COLBORNE REQUIRES AN ASSESSOR. INTERESTED PARTIES APPLY, STATING QUALIFICATIONS AND EXPERIENCE, TO THE UNDERSIGNED, BY SATURDAY, JANUARY 21st, 1956. Leonard Gordon, CLERK Jan. 20 Post's Groceteria Jan. 21 You Can't Afford To Miss These Bargains! CORN, cream style, 20 oz........... 2 tins 25c PEAS, standard, 20 oz. tins ...... 2 for 25c MARGARINE, "Golden Valley"......... 2 lbs. 55c KETCHUP..........................................2 bottles 35c STEAKS, all cuts per lb. 59c BREAD, sliced, white, " Brown's" ................per loaf 15c BACON, Canada Packers, rindless..................per lb. 59c BOLOGNA, Canada Packers...................... per lb. 23c Real Special - Canada Bread JELLY ROLLS, reg. 33c 29c We Are Featuring FRESH LAMB This Weekend NEW CHEESE, Warkworth........... .............per lb. 45c SHORTENING ................... 2 lbs. 45c COOKIES, chocolate mallow...... ................per pkg. 37c DOG FOOD, Kennel Club 2 tins 17c BABY FOOD, Heinz 3 tins 27c CARNATION MILK 2 tins 27c FLOUR, Shurflake Pastry ......................24 lb. bag $1.29 10c off - Package of FAB 5c off - Package of LUX We carry a Full Line of Fresh Meats and Garden Fresh Vegetables - ONIONS, RADISHES, CAULIFLOWER, etc. Phone 2 We Deliver

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