Clinton News-Record, 1958-02-06, Page 8USE NEWS-RECORD . CLASSIFIED ,ADS--IT WWI, PAY YOU
FARMERS
We are shipping cattle every Monday for United
Co-operativo of Ontario and solicit your patronage. We, will
pick them up at your farm.
Please PHONE COLLECT` net later than Saturday nights.
Seaforth Farmers Cci-operative
H. S. Hunt, Shipper
Phone 773
43-tpb •
436gAti.,
Clinton Memorial Shop
T. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON — EXETER -- SEAFORTH
Thomas Steep, Clinton Representative
— Phones —
Bus., HIU 2-6606 - - Res., HU 2-3869
• IN SPITE OF HIS EFFORTS
820 WILL DIE THIS YEAR*
Sixteen hundred officers of the Ontario Provincial
Police spend 365 days of every year covering every
mile of Ontario's highways—trying to stop motorists
from killing themselves! They do this by seeing to it
that car and truck drivers drive sensibly and safely.
By co-operating with your O.P.P. and driving within
the law you will help these men to make Ontario's
highways safer for everyone.
*Bated on figures for last 3 years. •
PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY OF HON. A. KELSO ROBERTS, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF ONTARIO
A girl -can be a target for
raised eyebrows or admiring
glances. That depends on lidw
well-bred her clothes are. Let
us keep yours feminine and
dainty—spot-free and .free of
criticism—with regular dry
cleaning. Call 'tOday.
This Week the Lucky
No. is 1994
Check your Calendar... If the
number matches, take the
Calendar to our office and
claim your .'3.00 credit.
For Your Convenience
Use Our
Down Town Office
on King Street
(formerly Simpsons-Sears)
railways' workers during construc-
tion of the C. P. R.
Discovery of the original pits
aroused wide scientific interest.
Details and photographs were sent
to scientists in all parts of the
world by Dr. J. Norman Emmer-
son and Prof. T. F. lgellwraith of
the University of Toronto and by
Dr. V. B. Moen of the Royal On-
taria. Museum. So far, however,
they believe there is nothing res-
ernbling the stone structures in
other parts of the world.
of the Royal Ontario Museum.
So far, however, they believe there.
is nothing resembling the stone
structures in other parts of the
world.
Dr. Emmerson reported to the
Department recently that since
the early summer exploration tour
an additional 100 or mere of' the
pits have been found, indicating
the Mongols did use the north
shore of Lake Superior shortly
after the glacial period in their
travels to the east, Some of them
it is believed, remained in the
Arctic and eventually evolved into.
the Eskimo peoples; others went
farther south to 'become ancestors
of present-day Indians.
LAUNDRY
&CLEANERS
zt6.1..eattdo,itate"
CLINTON • ()E.,e, Hu 42:7064
II. C. LAWSON, Representative
Phone HU 2-9644 Clinton, Ontario
• 1,
HOW HEALTHY
IS YOUR
ESTATE?
The condition of your estate should
concern you as much as your personal
health. Estate Administration is an
important undertaking—not something
to be handled by people unfamiliar
with estate management.
At &Ming Trusts we have experienced
Estate Officers. They will advise and
assist you in the planning of your
estate. Call on us at any time . . 4
or write for our free booklet
"Blueprint For Your Family'".
THE
STERLING TRUSTS
C O R P O R A T I O N
Heald Office: Branch Office:
37`2 Bay St., Toronto 1-3 Dunlop St., Barrie 5,7
ekft, N4) USE WAITING
ANY LONGEII.4; •
frozr ettNe# afar
/roe 960op eeer
) &Of
Our TUNE-UP SPECIALISTS
*ill make it purr like a, kitties
lli Test and service entire
' , electrical system -----
:
check Carbureter—.---.
Clean spark plugs, regap
land replace if necessary..
OrilriV -'---"'"-"Illajw se y Otigg Piiiit fusi Pedal ----. ,-.040,,,,,,,, , —
All Work Don* By -
fACTORY TRAINED SPEOMISTS
AUTO WELLS ELECTRIC
"Bill" Wells, Proprietor
KING STREET—"The Original Tune-Up Shop"—CLINTON.
With the new Gopdison
Master Mixer you've got
everything to provide
your livestock with the
finest in mixed and blend-
ed feeds. Over 2,500
Goodison Feed Mixers are
in use and years of manu-
facturing experience have
produced this highly com-
pact machinery, precision-
built for years of service
—ruggedly built for years
of operation.
You'll be surprised at low
investment required and high
profits resulting from the in-
creased preference shown by
your animals for custom, mixed
feeds.
Why not write today for il-
lustrated literature, prices and
specifications and learn how a
Goodis,on Mixer will increase
your profits this year and every
year.
•
Superior Products
Limited
500 Front North — Phone 1600
SARNIA - ONTARIO
5-6-7-8-b
.
1411. 'VAT: j(12$0
, ...$44tindruegn
y,;1%cfri• i'mosui les .1..11):e,
•
liN T. •... ,• •
•
Fish and Game
Club News imam
(By Don KITS)
C+lancing through the January
Lands and Forests bulletin, I ran
across this article that I think
will interest everyOne. This is
a strange mystery story of Pos-
sibly hidden ancient history here
in Canada:
Were the stone pits of Lake
Superior built "to combat the
Sioux Indians when they were on
their massacre tours?" Or were
the stone depressions found dur-
ing the past few years along the
Sdperior coast dynamite storage
pits dating back to the construct-
ion of the,Canadian Pacific Rail-
way?
How far do they extend to the
east from the Bering Straits whe-
re once the Mongolian peoples cro-
ssed to North America?
These are questions. now being
studied by rangers, conservation
officers and foresters of the Ont-
ario Department of Lands and For-
ests who are reporting discovery
of now pits in. Northern Ontario.
Orighially, the pits — eliptical
depressions of about nine by 11
feet on raised beaches of the lake
—were discovered by Cohn Mc-
Millan of Marathon and investig-
ated subsequently by experts. from
the University of Toronto and Roy-
al Ontario Museum. The Lands
and Forests Department was sup-
plied with photographs and mat-
erial about the pits and asked
to join in the search for others
which may establish that the Mon-
golian people, according to the ex-
perts, travelled into Eastern Can-
ada between 8,000 and 10,000 ye-
ars aga— and possibily longer.
Since June, when officials of
Marathon Corporation, the Univ-
ersity arid the Museum made the
first intensive search of the Lake
Superior „shore for the pits and
found nearly 200, Lands and For-
ests pilots and rangers have been
photographing the area and sear-
ching for more.
Only logical explanation for the
pits, it is believed, is that they
were used as crude and ,primitive
shelters by the nomads from Asia
and were built by the Mongols
who overturned their skin boats
atop the pits and rested, perhaps
very briefly, during storms on
Lake Superior.
Lands and Forests men report
a pit on north Limestone Igland
west of Parry Sound. "It has ev-
idently been there for a consider-
able period, as judged by the moss
growing on the stones. There are
some- stories relating to Indian
battles fought at the Limestone
Islands . . . ' the Department re-
ports.
Meanwhile another has •been re-
ported some distance up a river
in the Pays Plat area. (Most of
the ones• discovered to date haVe
been on the shore — the raised
'beaches of Lake Superior). In
the Pays Plat area local Indians
say this one and another near-
by were built to repel the Sioux.
Still another has been found on
Pie Island in Lake Superior while
another northeast of Redditt is
now under investigation.
A much' larger pit found in the
.Tackfish area is believed to have
been a dynamite cache used by
DAIRY FARMERS OF CANADA
409 Huron Street, Toronto
-to ApapAi
Aageett-l bakkj,
nemingway)
Every township was represented
at some inconvenience, I'm sure,
to many. ,Again, thank you. We
also appreciate the efforts of the'
townships., They,. too, did a good.
job in order to carry this vote
successfully. The experience, gain-
ed will help in all future votes,
I was very much interested in
a line or two in January 31 Free
Press editorial. "What, then, does
make jobs? The production of
goods, and services, at priPes' which
people, inside and, especially out-
.side Canada are willing and able
to pay",
This; I think, is a fact that
farmers, generally, have recogniz-
ed and as a result they are bap-
ically "free-traders." The -Feder-
ation of Agriculture 'has' continu-
ed to work for a parity income
for the farmers which is certainly
justified. It is my opinion that we
farmers would 'be much happier
to receive thkt increase in income
'by means of a.lowering of the coat
of what we pay for goods rather
than by ever-increasing prices for
what we sell. v.'
Every tinie there is an increase an the selling pribe of a product.
in Canada, there is a relative de-
crease. in • the available market
for that product, ReStriction of
trade both Within and outside of
a country may prove beneficial to
some vested interest but is never
beneficial to the general populat-
ion.
We are making great efforts
to find market for our products.
It Seems to me that we should
be using equal, energy to find pro-
ducts which we can purchase from
other countries. .Trade is a two-
way street„
Turner's United
Church Annual,
Elders Returned
Turner's United Church held its
annual congregational meeting in
the church, hall on Friday evening
with a fair attendance.
Rev. G. Mills opened the meet-
ing with several hymnsand prayer.
Ernie Crich acted as congregation-
al secretary. The reports had been
printed previously and were aprov-
ed.
The two retiring elders were
returned to office, also the stew-
ards. The books showed a sub-
stantial balance. A vote of thanks
was tendered to Rev. Mills by
Erlin Whitmore. The meeting
was turned over to the assistant
Sunday School superintendent,
Frank Falconer to elect teachers
and officers for 1958.
The meeting was adjourned and
the remainder of the evening took
the form of a social hour with
Mrs. Turner and Ross Crich play-
ing on the mouth organ, Rev. G.
Mills conducted an "I've a secret"
contest. The ladies served Itinch
and the meeting came to a close,
"SUPER"
IS THE WORD FOR NEW,
SHUR-GAIN SUPER CHICK STARTER
This year, you can get
10% MORE GROWTH ON LESS FEED'
NOW with a high level of stabilized animal fat SHUR-GAIN Super
Chick Starter has a new high energy level that means even faster
growth and greater, feeding efficiency than ever before.
Stabilized animal fat, providing two and a half times the energy
of the highest energy grains, has been added, at new high level to
SHUR-GAIN Super Chick Starter making possible 10% more growth
on 10% less feed per pound of growth.
Drop in to the mill soon and let's diScuss this new feed and what it
can mean to the success of your poultry operation.
What more could you ask
of a chick starter
• Fol. UNIFORM GROWN
• GOODFEaTiltRINC.1
• LOW 4100,467Y4
MADE BY
(hicks Themselves Will Tell You That OUR-GAIN
Assures All These , at flw Lowest Possible t'oit
Canada Packers Limited
Phone HIT 2-9301 Clinton, Ont.
PAM =MIT
Cf.f.404TO1N... =OAP
TX11,713SPAYs. .10.E./313VARY. 6r 1958
4••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Federation fieldman Expresses
Thanks For Wheat Vote Workers
(By 4. -Carl.
Last Thursday evening Nay and
Stanley Townships combined to
hold the annual meetings of their
Federations of Agriculture in the
Zurich Commimity Centre. Not
Many communities could acedm-
rnodate the crowd of some 350
who enjoyed the bounteous ban-
Vet.
However, in, any nrea,where pos-
sible, it .does seem to be a , good.
idea for townships to finite. -iDur
community is continually growing
in area and it is interesting to
meet our friends in neighbouring
townships,
'New I would like to express
my sincere appreciation and . that
of your county executive for the
very splendid - support from the
County directors in conducting the
wheat vote. I asked to call a
meeting of the county directors
on short notice so that the
wheat committee could lay the
plans for conducting the vote
LONDESBORO
Mr. and Mrs. Mac Hogert, EX-
eter, spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon Howatt.
Mr, and Mrs. Wilmer Hewett
were visitors with Mr. and' Mrs.
Mac Hodgert, Exeter on Monday.
Mr, and Mrs. George Neil of
near Kirkton called on Mrs. Bea-
com one afternoon last week.
Robert Townsend visited Mrs.
Townsend on Monday. She is a
patient in Victoria Hospital and
is 'progressing favourably.
YPU Meets
The Burns-Londesboro Young
People's Union met Sunday even-
ing, February 2, with 38 members
present and a sing sang to open
the meeting, The stewardship
and training grutip led by Arlyne
Powell, was in charge of the wor-
ship service.
The group will hold a Valentine
Party on February 14, and, are
inviting the unions from Wesley-
Willis, Ontario Street and Con-
stance churches. A toboggan party
will be held on Thursday evening,
February 6, on Welbank's hill.