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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1949-09-16, Page 6_Cw Sets Own ate at Five Mills,; •. 1 he regula3 latORthly meeting of de&&bore, Sept. 8, at 8.30 p,m. The �•uUett_ Tow std Council took reeve and all members of the coun- h. p Ileac ut.t.4a C4uhmunity� Sall, Lon- cil were in attendance.The min- Murphy in Murphy �tlal any in 'Colour with tom►✓ Peed louse IIVAC:SHABLE WALL PAINT rig • Loam N. Iasi Marie -. FLAr•,'SEMI-GLOSS • GLOSS Wide Selection of Colours IANOS FALL SALE OF USED PIANOS Such well-known makes as: • HEINTZMAN • MASON & RISCH • WEBER • NORDHEIMER • ETC. Special Prices and Terms during this Sale Write for list of bargains Heintzman Limited 242 DUNDAS ST. LONDON 4.04 14 040 Special aneeti ct1, E3 easel regplaareekiug (►:; were *read ad adopted nn MOM; Ity, Gen, V. Brown and •Ira flea- T1te f 11owhttf mot nantt were.. carried: •Jewitt and*, Dale: TWA set our towklshlp mill Crate at 'b 'mins. 'Brown and baler; That afi we have a petition to have past of the Garret-S•hohbrook Drain put in repair and as the work will cost less than $800, we engage George Radford to do the work by the hour. Rapson and Jewitt: That the council interview Frank Don nelly, re the Petition. of Jas. Medd to repair the 'Kinieirn SWAMP Drain. Brown and Rapson: That, as the Hydro did not place the stub anchor poles on sideroada 16 and 16 in Hullett Twp. as directed by our road superintendent, therefore this council will accept no re- sponsibility for damage to said poles during snow plowing and road widening operations, and. a copy of this motion be sent to the Hydro Commission, Toronto. Dale and Rapson: That the accounts as approved be paid. Jewitt and Dale; That we do now adjourn. Accounts passed for payment were: Bert Griese, mower repairs and gas, $74.13; Ray Cartwright, grader gas and oil, $119.79; Dom - ROE WWI EGG MASH BooST EGG PROFITS ;tTHE • J i N EXPOSITOR 1! f' o ace n N‘, Eradication of. rinderpest 'the cattle disease which kills some 2,000,000 farm animals .every year is .now a. practical possibility, the Food . and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), reports. During .the war American and Canadian scientists discovered that by growing the virus inside hen's eggs, speedy mass production of rinderpest vaccine is possible. Here, a FAO technician is seen harvesting egg membranes -rich in rinderpest virus, inion Road Machinery Co., grader repair, $12.50; Gordon Radford, grader and mower repairs, $23.48; Art Weymouth, trip to Toronto and waste, $17.50; Leslie Ball, •bridge reflectors, $38.50; Lein Caldwell, road superintendent and express, $60.70; Dick Bloor, mower opera- tor, $57.60; Art Weymouth, grader operator, $137.15; Ben . Riley, brushing, $47.25; Harold Beacom, trucking culvert, $5; Joe Vodden, brushing, $1.10; Arthur Hayward, brushing, $1.10; Blyth Standard, advertising, $25.50; Geo. W. Cow- an, part salary, $80. ROE FARMS MILLING CO., ATWOOD, OHT., You Can Get Roe Feeds from: W. R. KERSLAKE - Seaforth A. J. MUSTARD - Brucefield W. R. DAVIDSON - Hensall J. A. SADLER - - Staffa RUSSELL SHOLDiCE - Brodhagen Corn on the Cob Young people enjoying an old- fashieped corn boil on the beach on a fine September night aren't generally worrying about the food olpN INDus , ■ ■ L LIMITED • ... I KNOW HOW TO SPELL IT!" WITH LITTLE GIRLS, chemistry is just a collection of letters. To them it's smart to be able to put them together correctly. But chemistry means much more than just a class- room spelling triumph. A turn of the tap brings water purified by chemistry. The farmer grows good things to eat because hi land is fertilized ,by chemistry. Frocks and other wearing apparel are coloured with dyes; their fabrics are improved by chemical treatment. Chemistry helps make many other things ... brushes, paint, book -bind- ings, "Cellophane", nylon. Those colourful, useful plastics are also products of this great science. And it's going to make others, for the chemical industry is always forging ahead on the trail of newer and better things ... with the C -I -L Oval as the symbol of an organization devoted to serving Canadians through chemistry. ®p® a' 4Veai+eve*" held atvthet ba Stapleton -on ,' group of interee sent 'when, a 11.0et tine dispiaYed ane elle 1tt a y ni household, nteneils and too ,or- ders for ' purolt:u ee A ' deli ous lunch was Servecl. by tbehoe Zion.. Wemen'e Assoelatioit niet at tb.e .home of Mrs I,i . Aikens on W etlnesda� and`,' Thursday after- noons• of last we* and completed two quilts, president, {Mrs °A.. Whehasu:, was In charters of the m. actings: A deliclous lunch Was served b3r the hostess and her as- sistalltts Miss Mary . Simpson, who Cbas. been a student of Dublin Continual- tion School during the past three years, has returned to her home In Toronto and will continue her Senior inatriculation-'oourse at St. Joseph's Convent, Toronto. Miss Carole Ann Pringle, who has completed her second year at Dublin •Continuation School, will attend.. Galt Collegiate, while Miss Rita Murray and Gilbert Murray will enroll at Loretto Business Col- lege, Stratford, this term. Miss Mary Atkinson has return- ed eturned from a plane trip to. San Fran- elect), rancisco, .California. Personals: Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Cronin, Detroit, with Mrs. Eliza- beth Cronin; • Miss Betty Hanley, Toronto, with Mr. and Mrs. WM. Smith; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Meag- her at Vanessa; Mr. and 'Mrs. A. Whetham and family. at South Por- cupine; Mrs. Elizabeth' Cronin and Miss Bessie Cronin at Montreal, Que.; George Hamm, Blyth, with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Forster; Mr. and Mrs. Stein and family, New York, N.Y., with Mr. and Mrs. A. Whetham; Mr, and Mrs. McNally, Mr. and Mrs. Dietrich, Detroit, and Mrs. M. Writt, Stratford, with MT. and Mrs. D. McConnell; Leonard Fowter, Clinton, has returned to Dublin Creamery as buttermaker; Mrs. M. Shulman in Buffalo; Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Etue and children, Zurich, with Mr. and Mrs. Thos. J. Molyneaux; Miss Barbara Holland, Toronto, and Edward Holland, Lambeth, with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. E. Holland; Miss Mary Stapleton, Guelph, with her father, Carl Stapleton; Misses Mary Margaret and Patricia Ryan, Kitchener, with Mr. and 'Mrs. Pat Ryan; Miss Helen Flanagan, Wa1- lensteee and Miss Margaret Flan- agan, St. Clements, with their par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Flanagan; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Holland, Jr., attended the wedding of their sis- ter, Miss Dorothy Holland, in Windsor. - e?4 fAatxatinn watt fIgiliFiti ata value of the corn. But nutrition- Jets, utritionfists, who make a practice of study- ing these things, say that corn on the cob is a highly commendable food. It provides calories, rough- age and vitamin A . . and is al- so tastes good. 1949 FALL:FAIRS h. �•. 1 IMMrvr •,• • flu old.. ,.,,, ,•., • sept `27-2a 19 ••••••••••••• llai�t,; 29,00. II tltlilgagl}of , , . , ..., . , AN* 28_ El< er .,,,,«•.,,.,. Sept. 21 22 Ocruie<.. ' Oct. d 10r4too . - , I .. , . , ... Sopa. 29.38 Lond,,on, (Weatern Fair) Sept, 12 1.7 Lookgow , , , scot. 27- 28 Beans in the Diet Once upon a time in a fairy tale a boy named Jack chopped down a bean stalk. He did this because he had a giant to do away with, but modern parents know that Jack was being very wasteful. Beans are fine food containing, among other things, plenty of proteins. They are a cheap and useful sub- stitute for meat. Jack shouldn't have been so hasty with his axe. 40% #4, F a mces aetice 6 Wel % , OToet V, the t other a s't 1 gomau9 t abante " 1s 1 teen'" to time. ateellop all.:is 1 g�ae bl Cca, Cb , rut& 10O. . Meea�*Ot of ao �,r �es"os ,,.: patenC ° INE'' �` COOP ern pack- For '°�'` Iwo 'moat "y 'C$•F' f3� Te�'tva• � ane 1 'y No Physical Jerks You don't have to grind through a regime of "physical jerks" to keep yourself fit. Regular exercise can and should be taken in a pleas- ant and useful form. Walking, golf- ing, swimming or cycling are a few fine ways to help keep in trim. And tennis, riding and many other games will do the trick where facilities are available. Check up on the recreation program in your community. You may be missing a lot of fun. The Safe Way You'll have little need to worry about such diseases as bovine tuberculosis, typhoid fever, un- dulant fever, septic sore throat, paratyphoid and dysentery if you make sure the milk you drink has been protected by pasteuriza- tion. Pasteurization of milk makes it safe *without harming its food. value . . . and, medical science has proven that pasteurized milk is the truly safe milk. Your health is your most important possession. Regular medical check-ups will help guard against disease. Keeping the Goodness Nutritionists tell us that to bring all the beauty and goodness of vegetables to the table they should be cooked only until tender. They should be cooked in a covered pan in the smallest possible amount of boiling water in the shortest pos- sible time. Long cooking and ex- posure to air destroys valuable vitamin C in your food. Valuable minerals are thrown away when the cooking water goes down the drain. Your "family—not the sink —needp these minerals. Absence From School Research experts have found that by far the most important reason for a• -ences from school is illness. The p ,portion of absences clue to m ..r' _., ea -sots runs from approximately'. -0 per cent in Brit- ish Columbia Saskatchewan and Quebec to 1 . re than 60 per cent in Nova Scotia. And an over- whelming majority of these illness- es are diseases of the upper re- spiratory system. Cough, colds and other respiratory infections mean thousands of lost -school days each year. Protect your child from these illnesses. Simple Protection Last year 155 Canadian children died from whooping cough. They died needlessly because their par- ents failed to give them the safe, simple protection of vaccination. Vaccine may save your child's life from this most deadly of children's diseases. Don't listen to old wives' tales about vaccination. Make sure your children are protected. Vaccinatio1:fir free at any public health clinic. Most children should be vaccinated against 'whooping cough at the age of six . months. Ask yetis family doctor about it. Unnecessary Deaths - Last Year ,25 Canadians who had ai)ed to protect 'ihemaelves by Uitdzatfecl died from dipi�t£heria. o' o t1i'eo deaths was',neees" Itphthelria toxoid available ehdr 'e a 'any pubife'hcaltit Plinidr prbg1doteetesost 100 per cent "Ceti b ralmon against this diseaseChildmen • . are ealiecial.ly vulnerable ;to diel theria: Don't enciahger yotlr,tahiily through•carom' leseness xtnmunizatlon is a'bdtit as painfula mosquito bite, but It arety e&r Ur -life. 1101Atalte Cpnstrd+ Sob Man: "Can,1 have the afternoori -off to, go shopping With Coy„ lf.aD' Foreman: "NM" ConstrY etii n Maxx: , "Maths." SEPTEMBER $, ,0. ***Oa • . , • •- : • , Sept' 8Cot 22-23 St, . *aryl*. Oct, 5-, Stxatford ., , Sept. X9 M ZL Teeswater ... . Qat, 4 - !� Torolatq (lipiral. Whiter Pair' ..t,„ NOV IG -144 Good Garden Potato Crop Potatoes -seem to be a . wonder- ful crop this year, according to various reports received in this office. John Gibbings, Orange St., reports that he has potato stalks' standing five feet two inches tall, and underneath all this stalk are excellent potatoes, a good number and of a good size in each hill. Mrs. Jamhs Livermore also re- ports excellent growth in her pot- ato potato patch. She brought a six -quart basket into the office and it was filled to overflowing with only sev- en large potatoes. Mrs. Livermore also stated that these potatoes were of excellent quality and so far she had not found any that were hollow -centered. — Clinton News -Record. a Seaforth Moment Works T. PRYDE &. SON Memorial Craftsmen Seaforth Exeter Clinton Seaforth Showrooms Open Tuesday See Dr. Harburn for appoint- ment any other time, or Phone 41-J, Exeter. Upholstering Chesterfields and Qecasional Chahrs ": iiegaired and Eelaverec4 p'actory Guars tet p'ree tyle. up Clad sMlvery t r a Foo r Vpkolstering Co. 4'l -Brunswick St., Stratford :Per further ihformatkfl , • enquire at; BOX'S Furniture Store Your family • . maws, the... services of a trust company particularly valuable to you. Your wife will have someone with experience and understanding to lean upon if you name a trust company as ex- ecutor or co-executor with her. Your childrenwill be assured of the care and protection provided by your Will—wisely and thoughtfully administered. One of our Trust 011icers will be pleased to answer any questions about trust services or to discuss an estate IIsi with, yon at your request. CuATnvsT Company J. W. McLachlan, Trust 'Officer Dundas at Clarence — London, Ont. aie/• _ 1 You only fool yourself when you •feed stale � _ = mash, for -egg production suffers.. The National "Quality Mix" system is the fresh -mix system — it gives that tasty "eat -more" quality to your egg mash which is the only way to keep your birds in top shape androll out the eggs week after week. National "Egbilder" concentrate mixed fresh, at your NATIONAL Feed Dealer — is modern feeding. r ON CHOOSING A FEED Remember first that feed is a raw material used by the hen fo produce growth and eggs. Secondly, there's a limit to the amount of feed a bird can eat and digest in 24 hours. If the ration is stale or poor; your birds cannot eat enough to keep healthy and produce eggs. The result is that either egg production drops or health is impaired. So choose your feed carefully—a hen needs less of a high quality feed. That's why you should always insist on a feed made with NATIONAL qualify mix concentrate. ler ■.II murpo . NpONAL CON ENiN' K NATI"14. QUAi;1l'Y MeV I FEED COUNT ON See year load NATIONAL Feed Dealer teddy. • WM. STONE SONS LIMITED INGERSOLL - ONTARIO NGC 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 E d IX FOR POULTRY, TURKEYS, HOGS and CATTLE 1s si dal. BICC IOBM wal %;' . ra i+rrit� WWIie lir tst�a