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The Huron Expositor, 1957-04-12, Page 6rL� acc ssio ety ne ate- the home of Mrs vin a er < n API* ,4. WS, gorge Stephenson had charge of 4e worship service, with an. Eras- entation by Mrs. Gladys a 4lrs Gordon Johnston, nd Urs. Cx Stephenson. HE-VITALIZE,0 CLEANING is Better.litan Ever at Buchanan' Cleaners MOUNT FOREST 'More Spots and Stains Removed Garments stay clean longer Will wear longer. 'tone 60 r 2 - Seaforth ANDY CALDER Agent MON. and THURS. MORNINGS Pis 40.0 on Colerri n. president,. took ar ch0;e of the business part off, the ,zneetmg The roil c tl was answered by nw'0Easter thought. A bell for the society was donated by Mrs. E. Webster. It was decid- ed' tec entertain- Goshen and form- er members at a meeting on May 2 - Ladies were appointed to pur- chase five gifts for Indian girls, requested by Miss Saunders. Cloth- ing for the bale, to be packed in May,., is to be left in the church basement. There were 2§ 'calls to shut-ins. Reports of the Presbyterial at Clinton were given by Mrs. Harvey Hayter and Mrs. Robert Stirling. The study book, "East From Bur- ma," was taken by Mrs. George Reid. At the close of the meeting lunch was served by the Front Road East gfoup and a social hour en- joyed. • i2N4e .4:15- SPECIALS FOR MONTH OF APRIL PUMPS SOFTENERS SPACE HEATERS BATHROOMS FURNACES Electrical Fixtures, Power Mowers, Gas Appli- ances, Paint, Etc. See our displays. BUY NOW and SAVE! Only a small down payment, then only a small payment monthly. You can enjoy these great advantages without delay. USED SPECIALS 4 -BURNER CABINET MODEL FRIGIDAIRE RANGE (like new) (our own). Can be seen in operation now (good price). 1 USED WASHER, BEATTY—Green enamel tub $30.00 1 USED AUTOMATIC WASHER—New mechanism and motor (cheap) 1 (New) SMALL EBERSOL HAMMER MILL—For use with 3 H.P. Ebe 1 USED SOFTENER 2 TANK 30000 GRAIN (cheap) (can be seenin operation) 1 USED SHOWER CABINET (like new) 1 USED TUB, 41/2 feet, on legs (only $15.00) COAL and WOOD SPACE HEATERS USED FURNACES, ETC. USED MOTORS — All makes and descriptions Guaranteed Vs HEAVY DUTY 1/2 HEAVY DUTIES — Specials 1 USED OIL BATH PUMP JACK—Like new CALL, WRITE OR COME IN TO SEE US TO -DAY! Gerald Gingerich's Sales & Service Heating, Lighting and Plumbing Electrical Repairing - Motor Rewinding Phone 34 - Zurich, Ont. ftev. 4 . lacll ,T4v'oer, Grand Bend,, was rn; charge:gf'the Sunday aAorca4og service ih. St.Andrew's `()•nited Church. Mr. and Mrs. Bert ThernSon and family visited on Tuesday of last week with the latter's parents, Mr. forth. and Mrs. Sam Storey, of near Sea - Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Kerr, Win- throp, were visitors Thursday with Mrs. Kerr's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Dowson. Mrs. Garth Mosher, of Ottawa, who visited a week with her moth- er, Mrs. N. McX.,eod, returned to her home on Friday. Master Ronnie Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Emmerson Anderson, has been confined to his bed three weeks through illness.. Mr. John L. Henderson, of Exe- ter, visited Saturday with Mr. Roert Cooper and Mr. and Mrs. Long. Mrs. Hazel Ross, of Niagara Falls, Ont„ has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Eyre the past two weeks. Mr. Alex McGregor spent a day in Toronto last week. Miss Louise Hyde, of London, was the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Alex Hyde, last week. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Lovell and Pat spent the- weekend in Chat- ham, and while there attended, the wedding of Ruth Ann Merritt to Mr. Richard Gilbert. Mr. and' Mrs. Earle Sproat, of Exeter, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Mellis. Mr. and Mrs. John Wade, of Royal Oak. Mich., were/ Sunday visitors at the home of the tat/ ter's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. John Cooper, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Taylor, of Stratford, visited Sunday with Mrs. Dinsdale and Miss M. Whiteman. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stokes and Lorne, of London. visited Mr. Robert Thomson on Sunday. Logan Council Logan Council held its regular meeting with all members present, the reeve presiding. Road ac- counts totalling $1,653.31 and gen- eral accounts amounting to $89190 were ordered paid. The court of revision was held on the Main Northwest Drain and Branches B, E. and I, and the ap- peal on lot 3, concession 12, was allowed, the acreage being lower- ed from 34 acres to 12, and the assessment lowered accordingly. The tender of Looby Construc- tion Ltd., Dublin, was accepted for the two bridges at $2,884.00 and $1,732.60, respectively. the township to supply steel and cement. Council adjourned to meet again Monday, May 6, at 1 p.m. USBORNE & HIBBER? MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. 'HEAD OFFICE — Exeter, Ont President: E. Clayton Colquhoun, R.R. 1, Science Hill Vice -President Harry Coates, R.R. 1, Centralia DIRECTORS—Martin Feeney, R. R. 2, Dublin; Wm. A. Hamilton, Cromarty; Milton McCurdy, R.R.1 1, Kirkton; Alex J. Rohde, R.R. 3, Mitchell. AGENTS—Thos. G. Ballantyne, R.R. 1, Woodham; Clayton Harris, Mitchell; Stanley Hocking, Mit- chell. SOLICITOR — W. G. Cochrane, Exeter. SECRETARY-TREASURER—Ar- thur Fraser, Exeter. HONOR MRs, MRS. FRED PEPPER; MARK 50th WEDDING ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pepper, Maria St.. Clinton, Wednesday observed their golden wedding anniversary, with a host of friend's, neighbors and relatives calling to congratu- late them. On Sunday a family dinner was held at the home of their son and daughter-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Wal- ter Pepper, Tuckersmith Township. when their wedding attendants of 50 years ago, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Layton, Clinton, were present. The Laytons are doubly related to the celebrants, Mr. Layton being a brother of the, "bride," and Mrs. Layton a sister of the "groom." Following their marriage, per- formed by the late Rev. Kerr, of Turner's United' Church, the couple Bayfield Girl Is Best Speaker The fourth annual public speak- ing contest sponsored by the Clin- ton Branch, No, 140, Canadian Legion, was held in the Legion Memorial Hall, Clinton, with 19 entries in three classes. Judges awarded first place to Catherine Welsh, R.R. 2, Bayfield, a grade 9 student of Clinton Dis- trict Collegiate Institute in the Jun- ior High School Section; to Margo Lou Goodfellow, a grade 8 pupil at the A.V.M. Hugh Campbell Pub- lic School, R.C.A.F. Station, Clin- ton, in the Senior Pubhc School Section, and to Borden McRae, a grade 5 pupil of Clinton Public School went first place in the Junior Public School Section. According to Contest Chairman Douglas Thorndike, winners in each of the three sections will compete at the zone finals. Judges were the Rev. Glen Eagle, W. P. Roberts and H. G. Manning, alI of Clinton. Certificates awarded to the first four winners in each class went to., Junior High School, Catherine Welsh, John Allan, Clinton R.C.A.F. Station, and John Bylsma, R.R. 3, Seaforth; Senior Public School, Margo Lou Goodfellow, Linda Tor- rance and Ann Sawchuck, Clinton R.C.A.F. Station; Barbara Inder and Teddy Bridle, both of Clinton, tied; Junior Public School, Bor- den McRae, Brenda Halward, Kathie Cameron and Nicol Oates, Clinton R.C.A.F. Station. Ty Ty TZ TZ Ty Ty TyT1,LTyTyTyTIT"TyTi T1Tit TyTyTyT3,TZ1TyTyTyTyTyTyTyTs A COMPLETE LINE OF POULTRY, HOG AND CATTLE FEED Made in Mash, Crumble and Pellet Form — A Saving in Cost To You• By Having Topnotch Feed Made Locally ! Per Cwt. ° Per Cwt. Tbpnotch 20% Laying Crumbles $4.00 Topnotch Pig Starter Pellets $4.45 Topnotch Chick Starter Crumbles, Medicated .. 4.45 Topnotch Steer Fattener 3.85 Topnotch Chick Grower Crumbles, Medicated .. 3.85 Topnotch Steer Fattener with D.E S 4.15 Also a Further Reduction For Bulk C - I - L FERTILIZER GRASS SEED and SEED GRAIN Save by picking it tip F.0°B. our Warehouse. All Varieties in Stock ALL ANALYSIS AVAILABLE INCLUDING BRANT BARLEY OPNOTCH FEEDS LTD. ne 175 Seaforth, Ont. ,;;;, ,,a hG Occ'Jla ."4 llV fr a ' T 'T T„41',01,1, .. .' ToCri, farmed on the second line of Tuckersmith Township, and three ', years later they moved to the farm where their son. Walter. now lives, also in Tuckersniith. In 1949 ,they LLretired to make their home in Clin: where they are members of the Ontario Street United Church. Both keep in excellent health and 'share similar hobbies. They enjoy !gardening, particularly flowers, in the summer months, with televi- sion as a winter interest. Their family includes. besides Walter, one daughter. Mrs. Austin Matheson. Seaforth; one grandson and two granddaughters. Mrs. Pep- per is the former Mary Layton, a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Francis Layton. formerly of Tuck- ersmith Township. while Mr. Pep- per is the son of the ]ate' M. and Mrs. Roger Pepper, also formerly of Tuckersmith. KIDNEYACIDS Rob your Rest.. Many people never seem to get a good night's rest. They turn and toss—blame it on "nerves'—when it may be their kidneys. Healthy kidneys filter poisons and 'excess acids from the blood. 1f they fail and impurities stay in the system—distal-fled rest often follows. If you don't rent well get and use Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's elp the kidneys so that you can rest better—and feel better. 136 Dodd's Kidney Pills ` i oh W .S; held their. l a n anko#fering service rn the church, o #bird 4, at 2:30 p rrt,' The presiden�,t,• Miss T'sn.Iue Dennis, opened the ajoeotjnC with the lav cation and llynnn 105 was sura;. The responsive reading was Psalm Na 719. Mrs. J R. holden read the serip ture lesson frprn John; chapter 20, which was his account of the resur- rection of Jesus. She - also gave :some thoughts on the scripture les- son. This• was followed with prayer. by Mrs. Ross Leeming. c A few words: of welcome to the guests, who were some ladies of Seaforth United. Chprch and also" Turner's Church. Tennie Dennis gave two readings and Mrs. C. Walden, of Seaforth, gave a read- ing on "A Prayer" Hymn $6 was sung and Mrs. 8.• Hillen favored .with a solo, entitled, "The Broken Heart." The thankoffering was re- ceived and cted'icated. The president introduced' the guest speaker for the afternoon in the person of Mrs, Andrew Lane, of Brussels. She gave a splendid address on "The Cross" She be- gan by saying that every day. vite see around us crosses; they may be on. churches, schools or in our homes, around someone's,' neck or arm, But what does the Cross mean to you? Mrs.. William Roe expressed thanks to Mrs. Lane for her Easter message and also to all those who assisted in any way. Hymn 164 was sung and the meeting closed with. 'the benedic- tion. A social half-hour was spent. LOCAL OPTION 1956 During the year 1956 the On- tario Temperance Federation gave co-operation in organizing twenty-three local option con- tests. Fifteen of these resulted in dry victories: Between Sep- tember, 1956, and February, 1957, nine out of eleven contests were won by the drys. Nine votes were held from December 1 to December 12. Four of these were on the same day, Never before had the O.T.F. been confronted with a heavier day's work. All four were dry victories. The story of the vote in Georgina Township, York Coun- ty, suggests one of the secrets of , success in such contests. Every minister in the area gave his support in the cam- paign and signed a letter urg- ing the voters to use their franchise. The result was the best dry victory for years. In Raleigh Township, near Chat- ham, the dry vote was greater than in 'the previous vote four years ago. It should be noted that The Trade has learned to avoid bringing on contgsts in any other than places where they feel confident of victory.— (Advt.). ictory-- (Advt.). W. G. THOMP,SON a HENSALL and Sons Letrttted a Phone 32 5, CLOVER and GRASS SEEDS We have a complete stock of ALFALFA, RED CLOVER, ALSIKE, YELLOW and. WHITE BLOSSOM SWEET CLOVER, WHITE DUTCH and LADINA CLOVERS, BROME GRASS, ETC. Permanent Pastore Mixtures Place Orders While Stock is Available We are quoting very attractive prices, and replacement orders would require higher retail prices. SEED GRAINS All varieties available in Registered No. 1; Certified No. 1 and Com- mercial No. 1. Treated and Packed in. New Jute OAT VARIETIES: Garry, Rodney, Simcoe and Beaver; Registered and Commercial Brant and Montcahn Barley ' High-quality seeds will be in short supply this Spring. To be sure of your requirements, ORDER NOW! FERTILIZER We'll Deliver To Your Farm AMMONIUM NITRATE IN STOCK 1. We are contracting for Malting Barley. 2. Registered Seed Oats. HAVE ,YOUR SEEDS CLEANED AND TREATED AT OUR MODERN CLEANING PLANT Your seed can be delivered and cleaned without being bagged. Phone us and arrange a date: to clean and treat your requirements. G. . THOMPSON & SONS LIMITED Phone 32 r ' Hensall COASTERS -. GIFT IDEAS - SERVIETTES THE HURON EXPOSITOR long, how and beavtifvl Dodge SSS THE STYLE IN ANY NEIGHBOURI100 uts you a step ahead of the crowd oe• •<.:,fc'S.r:%i;;:':i:y: f•i`'i'<:':F;•:ii:.v:�.::n�::::::::.....'' ;M. ..: ;>iitiP:;3� Bring home this dreamboat of a Dodge, and just listen to the neighbourhood hum! Hear those long, low whistles? They're for the long ,(over 17% feet) and low (only 43A feet) lines of that dazzling Flight -Sweep styling! Its soaring tail fins tell you right off—this big Dodge has a modern slant on motoring that makes it the newest in its field! In fact, everything about Dodge sparkles with tomorrow's touch. And "everything" covers Such firsts in the low -price field as push-butt6n Torque-Flite automatic drive. Thi most modern way to go is partnered with the most powerful standard V-8 of all low-priced cars, too! But best of all, wait 'til ydu put this road - You're always a Steil ahead in smoother to a ride test. Here's where you feel the biggest excitement! New Dodge Torsion -Aire Ride irons the bumps flat as a floor ... lets you whiz around corners without lean or sway .. . stops brake "nose-dive" cold in its tracks. 8"o come on in. See how easy it is to make the swing to DODGE! cars of Thai Forward Look bodge marks yeti as a a 'MODERN"...With its adv>al'nced-deSIgn V••13's or dependable SixrrrPlight- Sweillei styling ... revolutionary TOrsioth-Aiwa Ride ...` "orgee-Flite drive with ,ptl's e,Abiuflon Controls. CHRYSLER CORPORATION OF CANADA, LIMITED YOU GET MORE IN A THE BIGe, Rititt IFIIL".iUY IN THE LOW -PRICE FIELD! te. :G. fr 1 A a,