HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1953-05-01, Page 641, *E. 4E,E.,"..E4,,E**E4.7.44,EcTiElig0
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oh All thO'Ote#084 146410 CI
inediShere' • —
lbaeliefilY,Sned WI*o twro•kr.
"Leafinvar" arid 'Slob* 'Me
14. deliebra Wavle of sands
Wiches and ' coffee was served by
the :ilea ter the Church,
ceietesry motions to the meeker
ot the evening were extended by
Dr. J. W. Shaw and to the men
•for the informative evening by Mr.
L, Ball of Wesley -Willis ()hutch.
Meatieg Pf the O.
•,: Tr*, #01, in St. James' School
40.11 Is. A pot -leek supper
reeeded the meeting. The Preiel-'
Pats Mrs. Leo Crernine was pre-
P?+4 With a corsage by Mae
•Pee* Fefinrianet Rev, A. P. Web-
restritilid adviser, addressed the
•ss. fgellere an the necessity of
—44',0401.10. werle l4re. C. P. Sills
•peeved, a vote of thanks to Father
• Weber for his inspiring address.
• The meeting was opened with
the League Prayer, said in unisex
ley the members. The minutes of
the previous month's meeting were
read by the acting, secretary, Mrs.
Johm, Hotham, Jr. Miss 'Marguerite
Dunn, third vice-president, report-
ed two cases of eggs sent to Mount
St. Joseph Orphanage and to the
louse of Providence, London. Also
13 dozen eggs were sent to famil-
ies in town. A box of baby cloth-
ing and a supply of postage stamps
were also sent to the Sisters of
Service- at Winnipeg, Man.
All correspondence was read,
which included •plans for the forth-
coming convention in Sarnia, May
18, 19 and 20. The treasurer, Mrs.
James L. Slattery, gave the finan-
• cial stateneent
An execeitive meeting was held
in March at the home of Mrs. John
Hotham. Business included a dona-
tion. of $15 to the Huron County
Overseas Flood Relief Fund and a
donation of 5115 to the St. James'
...Church Improvement Fund. Mrs.
Leo Cremin and Mrs. I. O'Leary,
who are leaving the- parish, were
presented with farewell gifts. A
social evening followed the meet-
ing. Cards were played and lunch
was served, by the hostess.
Annual Report
First vice-president Mrs. Joseph
(Continued from Page 2)
originating in the United States
have been subject to inoculation
treatments and strict quarantine
before bei -ng allowed into Canada.
•
Because of an outbreak of vesicu-
lar exanthema in hogs this regula-
tion was tightened further, and
since August 29. 1952, importation
• has been prohibitd, from the Unit-
ed States of swine, uncooked pork;
uncooked pork products, pork offal
and garbage. This regulation is
still in effect.
Other import restrictions still ef-
fective include: •
The importation from the United
States of bone meal, fertilizers
containing bone meal, feeding-
stuffs containing bone meal intend-
ed for consumption ,by cattle,
.sheep, goats. other ruminants,
Swine, horses and poultry. These
are to reduce the danger of the in-'
troduction of anthrax.
Special regulations apply to the
importation of sheep and goats of
United States origin as safeguards
against the introduction of the an-
imal disease scrapie.
Transplanting Vegetable Seedlings
Home gardeners* can have early
vegetables by starting them in
doors, or in hotbeds, and, trans-
planting them to the garden after
danger of frost is over. They can
then sow seed directly in the gar-
den for. later supplies.
According to "The. Gardener's
Handbook," a .new publication of
the Canada Department of Agricul-
ture, in many areas if only a few
early plants are required, it may be
easier to obtain them as seedlings
from a. nursery or seed Louse. In
all cases care must be used in
transplanting the seedlings to make
sure the roots do not become dried
out through exposure to the air.
, :The Handbook advises to trans-
plant seedlings when the first true
leaves are formed. Space them in
flats—usually two to five inches
apart. according to variety—or set
them in flower pots, strawberry
boxes, or paper pots. Do not al-
low the plants to remain in pot
containers until they become pot-
bound and checked in growth. Ex-
pose the plants gradually to out-
door conditions for several days be-
fore setting „them in the open. Wa-
ter them thoroughly several hours
before transplanting, and trans-
plant them during dull weather or
in the evening when the soil is
moist. Use stocky, healthy plants
with good root systems. Cabbage
Should have leaves from four to
sii-inches long, and tomato plants
should be eight to ten inches high.
If transplanting is from a straw-
berry hoe, cut the box at the four
corners and remove the plants
without disturbing the soil. If from
a pot, turn the pot bottom up in
the hand andl jar the earth con,-
taining the plant loose by tapping
the pot rim on something solid, If
from a flat box, cut the soil to the
bottoni in squares leaving hblodk
of soil' with a plant in the centre
of each. Dig holes in the garden,
at the proper distances apart, large
enough to receive the transplants
and place them carefully in the
holes without disturbing the ball
of earth around! the roots. Fill in
the soil and press it firmly around
the plants.
In drjaoil, water the plants'once
to soak it thoroughly and settle it
around the plants. When. thlg
dries cover the surface with a thin
layer of dry soil. If the plants
Were transplanted with no earth
'adhering to the roots protect them
by Plating a board on edge or
Sticking a shingle into the .soll at
each plant. This will break the
*Wee of the wind, and if placedfon
the sieuth side will shade the plants
rie well. Pack the soil firmly, around
ithe-P.Ittnt--vrherr it te dt -Ziff -be
• Seri:gel not to crush the tender
,
,the• oodeOrs., adlittbii0e • le
01,ginbie 6' id:Walt-graft /fifertitte
thilletekViepeiDeIPartillent of
,r
RmelanOPMeted 84 ineenhers on
the roll cell, • Seetind vicepreeident
Wee Rase porsery repotted a picnie
held in June fer the school chili-
dree, certificates presented to the
First Communion clase, graduation
pins were .preaented to Grade VIII
pupils. All ,school children receiv-
ed Christnies treats at their annual
Christmas party,
Third vice-president Miss Mar-
guerite Dunn reported sending four
cases of canned goods, two boxes
Of used clothing (value $40), and
$11 cash to the Jesuit Fathers. The
:Sisters of Service of Winnipeg,
Man., received mix boxes of used
clothing and a sum of used post-
age starape; 17 gift boxes were
sent to shut-ins at Christmas. The
secretary reported, a euchre party
in the school hall in April and a
strawberry tea and home baking
sale on the Convent grounds in
July. A home baking sale was
held in October; in November plans
were made for the Christmas
bazaar and sewing bees were held
in various member's homes, In.
February a successful euchre party
was held.
The treasurer, Mrs. J. L. Slat-
tery, reported a successful year.
The recording secretary, Mrs.. Lon
Rowland, reported sending 100
cardsthroughout the year, which
included cards of sympathy, get -
well, congratulation and baby
cards.
The nominating committee, Mrs.
C. P. Sills, Mrs. J. M. :McMillan
and Mrs. W. M. Hart, presented
the new slate of officers, which are
as follows: president, Mrs. Joseph
Rowland; 'first vice-president, Mrs.
John Jones; second vice-president,
Mrs. Gordon Reynolds; third vice-
president, Miss Marguerite Dunn;
treasurer, IMrs. James L. Slattery;
secretary, Mrs. Maurice Etue; re-
cording secretary, Mrs. Lou Row -
lad.
Miss Rose DOrsey moved a vote
of thanks to the nominating com-
mittee. The retiring president,
Mrs. Leo Cremin, was presented
with a gift. Delegates appointed to
the convention were Mrs. Gordon
Reynolds and Mrs. Joseph Row-
land. T'he • meeting closed with
prayer.
UN Delegate Speaks
To Clinton Men's Club
About "50 rnealbers of the Men's
Club of the Presbyterian Church,
Clinton, held its April meeting in
the church hall last Friday. Men
of other denominations were invit-
ed. j
.Rev. D. J. Lane opened the meet-
ing and called on Mr. Alex Cud -
more to conduct the program,
which included a sing -song with
Mr. D. Pegg as pianist.
Mr. J. Stirling introduced the
guest speaker,. A. Y.McLean, M.P.
for Huron -Perth, and Canadian del-
egate to the U.N., who spoke in
the work of the United Nations. He
introduced his subject with a de-
scription of the Lassembly hall in
New York. He stated "that de-
spite the many criticisms ef the
xeseres• ' alrititAt :**ar, IlharE3
4 44'
t‘
'r •
Girls' Club Meets
Girls' Club of Ontario St. Church
held) a successful Daffodil tea and
home baking sale on Saturday af-
ternoon. Mrs. M. Batkin, the presi-
dent, and Mrs. Eagle received.
Miss I. Courtice and Miss R. Pick-
ett poured tea; Miss H. Codrtice
and Mrs. Roy Plumsteel had charge
of the baking, and Mrs. J. Radford
and her assistants served lunch
and tea to the callers.
We hope for a speedy recovery
of Miss M. Gibbings, now in Vic-
toria Hospital, London, and Miss
H. Turner, in General Hospital, To-
ronto.
The ladies attending the Presby-
terial at Goderich from Ontario St.
Church were: Mesdames N. Carter,
D. Carter, McMurray, Webster,
Holmes, Radford, Townsend, Hog -
girth, Wheatley, Livermore, Aiken
and Misses E. Wilste, M. Wiltse
and R. Pickett.
'Plant for Pleasure'
Valuable tips on making the most
of the grounds around a home are
in a booklet called "Planting For
Pleasure," written by R. W. Oliver
of the Division of, Horticulture,
Central Experimental Farm, Ot-
tawa. For instance, Mr. Oliver ad-
vises:
When your lot is being graded
remember to save the top soil to
put back on top. Subsoil won't
grow a good lawn or flowers, so
you must leave room to spread at
least four inches of good top soil
over the rough grade. A long slope
from house to sidewalk is best, but
if a terrace slope must be arrang-
ed do not make it steeper than one
foot rise in two feet. A dry stone
retaining wall with solid stone
teps is the most attractive way to
make up difference in levels but
costs a bit more than a sodded
slope.
Ir. the house is attractive, keep
the planting at the front' simple;
just enough evergreens or shrubs
to soften the corners, frame the
front steps and break up large
wall spaces. Only ugly fdundatians
need hiding by a full bank of
green. Evergreens are good against
a light background but they .don't
soften ugly lines as well as loose
growing deciduous shrubs and they
won't grow where floods of water
and snow tall from the roof. Use
ash -leaf spirea or early flowering
hydrangeas in such situations.
Tall shrubs suitable for corners
or large wall spaces are lilac, tar-
tarian honeysuckle, mock -orange,
or in shade, highbush cranberry.
Medium; shrubs for framing steps
ere van Houtte spirea, Bouquet, or
lame Blanc mock -orange or gold-
en leaf mock -orange. Low shrubs
to plant beneath windows or in
front of others are Weigelia,
Rubber Stamps
and Stencils
MARKING
DEVICES
Of All Types
• '
Rubber Stamps
are essential to any
well-run business!
They save you time and
money.
Three Day Service
On Rush Orders
Stamp Pads, Daters
& various supplies
The Huron Expositor
Telephone 41 -:- Seaforth
G‘q
HYDRO HO t,11 E EC
SHOWERS FOR BRIOES
rkt
1e0,,, 4aIllePraltV. e,rE,A. shower
for a 'bride is a SPeCial kind of
party. You seet 1t is a' part of at
extra or. rcanance, good wisbes,
gifts, floW,rd eo4 formoiseau that
surroonde her wOding—guit trea,a-
liry of Mentories She will cherish,
all her 1ie rhe. party can he
quiet and simple but we try and
add a toucb, of novelty.
As the hostess, you set the time
after making the date with the
bride on sone •Pretext. Decide on
Thumbergi Barberry, Oregon Grape
or in shade, snowberry and early
hydrangea. Plant' all shrubs at
least three feet fro and
five feet apart or away from a w k
or step.
Evergreens have definite shapes.
Do not use large growing native
trees like cedar, spruce or Mee for
foundation planting unless you
know how to clip them regularly
and are prepared to do it.
If your hobby is growing things,
by all means have a vegetable gar-
den behind the garage with a row
of currant bushes or raspberries
to divide it from the lawn and
flower garden. In an informal lay-
out, borders should be varied in
width; not scalloped regularly, but
an outline of long sweeping curves
that lead your eye on to one at-
tractive view after another. Flow-
ering shrubs or a hedge form the
hest background for the bright col-
ors of the flowers. •
Prepare the soil in these beds
by digging -in well -rotted manure
the previous fall to a depth of a
foot or more. Plant mostly peren-
nial plants that come up year after
year but leave a few spaces for
annuals' to give bright color in July
and August after the majority of
shOWy perennials are finished. In
general, early blooming perennials
and` shrubs should be planted in
the fall; late blooming ones in the
spring.
For a copy of the booklet, write
to Information Service, Department
of Agriculture, Ottawa, Ont.
the number of ggests„, al friends of
the bride and the theme. Plea for
the presentation of the gifts and
for reshenents.
I.XNEN SHOWIER: ferquality
and lasheg levelinese, linens are
as weICOP2o, ate over. ;Preeent. the
gifts on a decorated elOthes rack
LAUNDRY `SHOWilfile Use .an
indoor clothes, line ate a gift end
on it peg pressin.g elotli, a peg bag,
starch, bag of soap and unaebe a
note as to ironing board and iron
gift.
CONDIMEN'i' SHOWER: Select
sauces, seasonings, spices, agat-
es, a mustard jar, mayonnaisedish
and relish dishes. Wrap them sep-
r" f
• WA -1101'.4
Jo4o, 4990t*NoMpf4., 10c4„
0S,
:04 pAlp.4.41•00qo"Ack4fir,
Povvx 41* ..1,010AO' 104,,,::04.0,
paper on WoossKpye.
.4„owc.40..b tr.4.0#g .ol00A with
alk. Make a stove pipe by. env -
900 OF411*. .404§1§1 With black
Paper. 4eraleSe the gifts enthe
t..9P,.44 thj attreeseterylilg Pep, tea
WU% sencePeP, deillble 'boiler With
egg lifter, ladle,(*betted 010./*/14. in
eleeetenelle. Yon Mee: elect *Chide
a apt of Medeen ro weep:dishes.
ODPROARD SHOWER: The
Otte Would. be such. 'Renee as, skirt
banger, shoe trees, blanket, .caaee,
clothes. covens:, hat boxes and trou-
ser hangers (since theee's going to
be fie wei, in her life). The :pre-
sentfition will be the moat amusing
feature of this shower. The clothes
closet may be filled as typical 191b..
:ber IMcGee's closet and have rolled
cotton packages fall out with a
orfr, ETE,1 714"1 ,
Ate e theta. Alftfir reett,Pli
It400llAWAT:POO lteet)1fimay be,
"gilt ilk P13, 104v,
PrideOW 49.ar,
Treeriatti Otte will help her de-
velop a "green thumb." TWO414.4
bitty be the ,pesreheeingegente fOr
the group andleiSPY 0,04 gte'deer
ng gloves, tools and gardening
hephs. ,
Here are other suggestions you
might like to try out: hobby s:how-
ers, .stleleer of giaatiWere ' On
helvee which may be constructed
Ring bricks and boards, cosmetic
ehower using a bridesmaid as a
model, picnic accessory shower and
a recipe shower with a list of
Staple supplies to be delivered 10
days after wedding date. And fie -
ally, one thought the bride will
bless you for—do provide her with
some kind of hamper to carry her
gifts home.
Take a Tip
1. Sandwiches may be made in ad-
- vance, provided you can wrap
•1
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0,4q9 .o0.0. 0" t.1104.
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• ,,,,..; ,9F, -.' , '•-• •.',,, '...1, , ., ,,r
,-0.
• ...,..On o layge s000Nsi.o.0,..otr0000ve
: • :, to .0 or 45 ngoo APO the stn
One inte 20 sliCeite
..... ,
4, floee- l'alrge log tFclulr4 % illiA
.butter and % ib. filling.
AIM° Allan invites 7,01,1p writ*
to, her., cis The Illtron. Exposit�r.
Sens In your suggestions on Thome.
Malang problems and watch Ulla
column, for replies.
tirrirtgl7M
EXTRA MILEAGE
11
is
"Fuck CAb
omethingi
/
'
Immediate
service"
IN YOUR LOCALITY
FOR
Estoite Planning
and Wills
Investment
Management and
Advisory Service
4% Guaranteed
Investments'
2% on savings —
deposits may be
–mailed
Real Estate Services
For prompt attention call
RAYE B. PATERSON
Trust Officer
Rennin, Ontario, Phone 51
or
any office of
GUARANTY -
TRUST
COMPANY OF CANADA
•'TORONTO • MONTREAL
OTTAWA • WINDSOR
NIAGARA FALLS • SUDBURY
SAULT STE. MARIE
CALGARY • VANCOUVER
RUCK CABS
- EVER BUILT!:
Now -« Ford Truck Engineering
Introduces New Driverized Cabs
Here's the newest, most advanced
idea in truck design .. . Driverized
Cabs—planned with the driver in
mind .. designed to reduce fatigue,
strain and discomfort . . . built to
promote greater driving ease and
higher efficiency. Check over the
all-new driving features .. . see for
yourself•how Driverized Design
makes Ford Economy Trucks the
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trucks on tharoad—the best trucks to ,
drive from the driver's point of view!
NEW 11SIBILITY ALL AROUND
New one-piece curved wind-
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than 50% in glass area gives
wide-angle visibility for safer
driving. Full -width rear window
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side windows give an increase of
19% in all-round visibility.
PLUS THESE
NEW FEATURES
OF DRIVERIZED
CAB DESIGN
„.111111s.,,,
I
NEW STEERING EASE
Shorier wheelbases
• and wider front treads
make all '53 Ford
Trucks easier to steer
than ever before .
shOiter turning radius
. . more manoeuvra-
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front-end stability.
SeeeT-erilre.'
m o MI c
POWER
• EOR
SMOOTH HANDLING
Famous Ford V-8
engines deliver
plenty of lively
Power for tough
haul§ . . . give
smooth, depend-
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mile after mile.
V7.66.447,'Ex, • .
NEW COMFORT SEAT
Finest truck seat ever built—
over a full 5 feet wide with non -
sag springs—provides roomy
comfort for three men. New
built-in shock snubbers smooth
out roughest bumps. Seat adjusts
forward and back—seat-back
angle also adjustable.
NEW CAB POSITION
New forward posi-
tioning of engine and
cab over the longer,
softer, more flexible
front springs gives
greatly improved
• driver comfort.
• Larger side windows with sills at arm -rest length!
• Wider doors open right out for easier entrance!
• New insulation seals against engine noise, heat and fumes!
• NOV roto -type door locks ...quieter, sahr, more durable'
• New fully weather -Sealed COILSITUdion...dust-tight, fume -tight, water -SOD
• New Curved instrument panel With easy -le -read "Cackpit" duster!
• New heating,and.ventileting system for added all-weather tendert!
• New push-button door handles ... easy to operate, more dependable!
Completely NEW-Fr`.53
EFFORTLESS STSCHRO -SILENT
SHIFTING — Synchro-Silent
Shifting on alemodels means
much less effort for the driver,
smoother operation in traffic.
Automatic Transmission* and
Overdrive* available in all
F-100 Series. (* at extra cost).
5 E E YOUR FORD TRUCK DEALER • Carty moreandcarryif.kriber...FOR EVERY TRUCKING DOLLAR
DALY MOTO
Phone,102
In .0 as
Seaforth, Ont.
LOOK FOR THE 1410 -
SIGN OF VALUE WHEN YOU BUY A USED CAR —SEE YOUR FORD DEALER
se
c6 du@ Maw
WELL 1 SEE YOU.RE FIGURING OUT YOUR .!
FEEDING COSTS, ANDY. 1 SUPPOSE YOU'RE
GETTING READY TO HAND OVER THE POULTRY
CHORES TO MA
YOU'RE RIGHT
DOC. FIELD CHORES
ARE COMING AND
ILL BE FAR
TOO BUSY FOR
THE PENS.
By Roe Farms Service Dept.
DOC i MY PULLETS, GOT
AWAY TO A GOOD
START ON VITAFOOD
AND NOW THEY'RE
ON VITA -GROW MASH;
BUT THESE IMPLEMENTS
NEED MY ATTENTION
WELL, ANDY, THERE'S
ONE GOOD THING YOU
CAN DO.YOU CAN SAVE
A LOT OF TIME BYSWITCH-
ING,Taitoe vitkottow
PELLETS THIS TIME OF
YES,SIR, YOUR BIRDS CAN GO TO RANGE NOW
AND YOU CAN SAVE TIME THERE BY FEEDING
ROE VITA -GROW PELLETS. THESE ARE JUST
VITA -GROW MASH IN A COMPRESSED.
FORM.
THAT A REAL IDEA,DOC.
SAVEcTIME AND F.EED, TOO.,
MY PULLETS WOULDN'T WASTE -
• ANY FEED.
PULLETS LOVE PELLETS:AND EVERY SINGLE BITE
IS BALANCED. YOU, CAN FEEDTHEM IN THE
MORNING AND NOT WORRY ABOUT THE MASH
BEING SCRATCHED OUT OF THE HOPPERS.
PULLETS EAT PELLETS LIKE GRAIN AND
THERE'S NO SLOW UP IN GROWTH:
THANKS, DOC . VITA -GROW
PELLETS SEEM TO BE A
REAL ANSWER TO A LOT
OF MY PROBLEMS.
'meg wet 'War
Save tiki and tfrainWif
THEY CONTAIN
THE LATEST
'GROWTH
FACTORS"
VG -6
W. R. Kerslake, Seaforth
Lorne Eiler, Hensall
A. J. Mustard, Brueefield
J. A. Sadler, Staffa
Shouldiee, Brodhageft
117
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a; •
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7
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41.