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The Huron Expositor, 1970-12-03, Page 13News of Correspondent Miss Mary McIlwain CARD PARTY A nice crowd was in attend- ance for the first euchre for the winter months held by the Canadian Foresters. The following people were the winners for the evening. Ladies High - Blanche Dalton; Low - Doreen Dolmage; Lone Hands - Mary Riley; Men's High- Tom Whyte; Low - Jim Buchanan; Lone Hands - Don Buchanan. Euchre Winners At a recent I. 0. 0. F. euchre the winners were: Ladies -1st. Mrs. McGregor; Ladies - 2nd.- Mrs. W. Coleman; Consolation - Mrs. Jim Keyes; Men's first - Zack McSpadden; Men's 2nd. - John Tremeer; Consolation - Lorne Dennis. Smiles . • • Home is where you go when you're tired of being nice to people. A baby sitter is a teenager who comes in to act like an adult while the parents go out and act like teenagers. The next euchre will be held in two weeks, Mr. and Mrs, John Mann of Clinton visited recently with Mrs. Irene Grimoldby. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Reynolds and family of Southfield, Mich- igan spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. John Thompson, Betty, Jim, Sharon and Bob. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Roggart and Tammy of Stratford visited over the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Hoggart, Todd and Troy and with Mr. and Mrs. George Hoggart and Harvey. Mr. William Webster of St. Helen's visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Verne Dale. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Riley spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Denis Lomax and Lisa of Han- over. Mr. Andy Thompson has been transferred from his job in London to Ottawa. We wish him every success in his new position. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Mann of Bluevale were Sunday visitors with Mrs. Irene Grimoldby. Mr. and Mrs. John Hoggart, Connie and Garry visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Arend Bakker of Monkton. Mr. and Mrs. Don Buchanan and family, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Buchanan and family attended a family dinner held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Cook and family of Clinton in honor of the 52nd wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Buchanan. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Medd, Mrs. Annie Medd of Huronview visited on Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Johnston and Bruce of Qranci Valley. Baby Jeffrey Jewitt came home on Saturday from War Memorial. Children's Hospital In London. Mr. and Mrs. Case WammeS of Blenheim were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. John Wanames and family, Miss Donna Riley is spending this week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Riley and family, while she is practice teaching in Brussels. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Glew of Dorchester visited on Sunday with Mrs. Elma Jewitt, Brian and Bev. and Mrs. Annie Leitch. Miss Doreen Riley, Mr. Mike Bannon of Stratford were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Riley and family. Mr. William Dale returned home on Saturday from his stay in the Clinton Public Hospital. We hope he will soon be feeling his best again. Scotch 'Pine Nicely Trimmed GORDON NOBLE Phone 527-0840 — We Deliver — tefitiVitegf Every week more and more people discover what mighty jobs are accomplished by low .cost Expositor Want Ads. Dial 527- 0240. wp THE WWII EXF'~OSMTOjR SEAFORTH, CONSTANCE SEAFORTH MONUMENT WORKS All Types of CEMETERY MEMORIALS OPFN DAILY T. PRYDE & SON Inquiries, are invited — Telephone Numbers: EXETER 235.0620 CLINTON 482-9421 SEAFORTH: Contact Willis Dundas Or Bill Pinder 527.1382 Bus. S27-1750. 0 .1. B w a B 0 N N N low PODS 1111117 liggiti*The Owneestin the Storile! Aktrfteld'Ergand Tablae Trimmiged ejV Beef ! m da h . ng • • 4, di .P d1.co • unt. *Consumer Care Service! We Guarantee Frehness! 4c4"Dawn-Dew" Fresh Produce! "GA " 6" ".'" '^"" ^"" :47 on7 ;OrntinrIZ " .• •:blor th%topdp!../ity in fresh fruo and e,bryd., sued. ; You cfm now, enjoy dixeouto itorings osi Top Quality and Variety! SHIRLEY GAY WHITE 24-oz. Loaves SLICED BREAD 5/99c (Limit 5 Loaves Per Customer) VAN CAMP (in Tomato Sauce) 14-or. Tin BEANS.with PORK 15c COUNTRY STYLE SHORT RIB OR ROUND BONE SHOULDER ROASTS FRESH CUT C ICKEN LEG OR BREAST Quarters (Limit 6 1 -lb. Pkg. WALKER'S Customer) SALTINES (Limit 2 Pkgs. Per Customer) RIB END (Whole or Sliced) PORK LOIN Avlebr.). LB. Froten Canada Grade 'A' Frolic, 14-S.lb. size) PORK TENDERLOIN . lb. 99c Roasting Chickens 4th to 7th Rib Canada Packers Boneless PRIME RIB ROAST lb, 89C Smoked Ham Slices S&M 9" COTTAGE ROLLS ,'!ovP:: lb. 59c. DELUXE PIZZA .. SWIFT'S (BY THE PIECE) SIDE 48,. BACON Cut Thick for Bragging BLADE STEAKS . . Dorern 1b. Sliced Side BACON 1 650 Coleman'. Football Style SMOKED HAM lb. . 69c INSTANT COFFEE (Limit 6 Tins Per Customer) FASCINATION 10-oz. Jar . KERNEL CORN FASCINATION WHOLE CHOICE APPLE JUICE ALLEN'S RECONSTITUTED 48-oz. Tin 23c 12-oz. Tin 14c (Limit 2 Jars Per Customer) BURNS WEEKLY SAVINGS WITH IGA'S LOW REBELLION DISCOUNT PRICES Everyday Low Discount Price Everyday Low Discount SHIRRIFF'S ASST'D ' Jelly 3.oz. pkg. Powders Aregrar00 Mar' Everyday Low Discount Price TERRY DOG Food Soft $ Drinks Everyday Low Discount Price Macaroni & Cheese 71/4-oz. Pkg. Kraft Dinner Everyday Low Discount Price Swift's Cooked Canned Everyday Low Discount Price Bright's Fancy Tomato 9' Juicetr. Everyday Low Discount Price TOP VALU FROZEN Everyday Low Discount Price Allen's Asst'd 48-ox, Tin 19 Fruit c Drinks Everyday Low Discount Price TULIP PARCHMENT Mar- garine Price Everyday Low Discount Price Carlton Club Awed, THERE IS AN IGA STORE NEAR YOU: WILKINSON'S SEAFORTH xmotawa4.,./4.:0),:ow.:.fagokwaeommastoikeduipzkv.Awitoomoga.i:ob U.S. NO. 1 ZIPPER SKIN (Size 176's) 3 Da 8 9' GOLDEN YELLOW CABANA OR Celery Stalks Each (Size 24's) 29c occ;KioNGns24 CHIQUITA Bananas2'1"25° PRICES EFFECTIVE INCL WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES NXWINESI Tr,WZETEZE2WCMNZVEVZrSraSZMM' CANADA NO. 1 Tins Per NOW OPEN EVERY WEDNESDAY ALL PAY CROSSWORD PUZZL Pork or Beef HEARTS 3 lbs. $1.00 mommommismems TOP VALU ORANGE JUICE 6 for $1.00 6 oz . feed bins, undermine stables and sheds, kill poultry, eat eggs and damage or destroy fruits and vegetables., A single rat will eat, spoil or damage about $20 to $25 worth of goods per year. In Canada, they destroy thou- sands of tons of grain, feed and supplies worth several mil- lion dollars annually. Rats and mice like garbage dumpS, manure piles, sewers; /*pens 'and' s 'otlier unsanitary places. And then they move on to homes, restaurants, bakeries, marketing places and ware- houses, contaminating everything they touch. Their feet, fur and tail carry millions of disease-producing germs and what they don't eat they pollute with their droppings and urine. They are responsible for the spread of many diseases. Bu- bonic plague, typhus, dysentry, tularemia, ratbite fever, lepto- spirosis, rabies, trichinosis and salmonellosis are a few. And they often carry such parasites as fleas, lice, mites anthticks. • They have been known to bite sleeping babies and invalids and to feed on dead animals. And if they're really hungry they will fight. and kill each other and eat their own young. Rodents reproduce at a sur- prising rate. Rats have as many as six or seven litters a year, with a _dozen or more young per litter. The common rat reaches sexual maturity in three to four months and has a gestation per- iod of 22 to 24 days. Under favorable conditions, a pair of rats could produce 350,000,000 offspring within Here's the Answer val8. 61 a M .L 1 a 0 NIXIa V XIV AA N O a 9 6 0 S N aim H N a H N 0 0 N _t_ I N a N w J. I H1 J. V 40 — and yet. 41 — and symbols 42 Petty quarrel 43 Simple 44 Spoken 48 One . 47 Legal hearing 48 Seines 50 Chop 0 B 9 .1. va e A as rig 01w 0 a d d 25 and the Ark 28 Musical Unit' 27 Ships' tonnages 28 -- and eggs 29 Rim 31 Girdles 33 Characteristic 98 Dress I 1 I 4 0 " IT it rl IIII it 13 zw 0 7 r• 30 2r 3Z 33 H I 33 41 H 1 ill1111 if s' III. Milli AMIN " There's absolutely no doubt about it! Rats and mice are the most widespread and destruct- ¤ ive pests in the world. They eat and contaminate vast quantities of food and other mat- erials, destroy •buildings and property and spread numerous diseases. They are useless, wasteful and filthy animals and should be destroyed at every Ww, opppyturtj,ty. i)rtY6,Arricfr.iler rA9ITc ab°1,t, them and ithev [- ,e t ructi,ve;,bab- its in a new Canada Department of Agriculture publication which deals with the control of the rodents. It is available without charge from the Department's Information Division. The booklet says rats and mice occur just about 'every- where, with only one exception mentioned. There are no rats in the province of Alberta. It is the only province or state in North America free of rats. Provincial authorities wage a relentless war on the rodents, saving residents an estimated $25,000,000 annually. In a sense rodents can be compared with icebergs. You see only a small part of an iceberg because its bulk is well hidden beneath the sea. Rats and mice are the same. If you see and about the house or barn, you can assume scores of rodents are scuttling about. They often live undetected in burrows under the floors and in the walls of buildings, coming " out only to forage, usually at dusk. They will eat practically any food and will gnaw at almost everything, including the insula- tion of some types of electrical wiring. They will raid graneries and Popular Pairs . TIORTZONTAI• 1.— end Mouse 4 Thick and 6 ills and — 12 Eggs 13 Italian capital' 14 Ancient Greek coin 15 Through 16 Pentose sugar 18 Removing 20 Removed the skeleton 21 Sister 22 Pitcher 24 Poker stake . 26 Russian ruler 27 Re and — 30 Paris stock. exchange 32 Gave a tenth 34 Evergreen 35 Nautical rope 36 Exclamation 37 Mast 30 Church recess 40 Lead pellet 41' Drink slowly 40 42 Struck 43 Educational fee 40 Dying 51 American humorist 32 Emden sea --53 and the shamrock 14 Glue and 35 Narrate 36 Moistens .57 Elders 000 VEATICAT. If 1 Contaid 2 State three years. Mice reach sexual maturity at six weeks of age, have a gestation period of 16 to 18 days and bear five to eight young per litter. Although rodents are night lovers, it's not too hard to de- tect their presence. They can Usually be heard squeaking, gnawing or scamper- ing about. They leave tracks on dusty surfaces or in the snow, They also leave droppings and a smell of urine, and they leave, greasy rub marks along walls and pipes. There may be evi- dence of burrows or holes. Homes and farm buildings can be made rodent-proof through the use of concrete floors and footings, tight-fitting doors and windows and wire screening over :basement windows and vents. Detailed instructions on the control of rats and mice are given in the Canada Department of Agriculture Publication 1370, "Control of Rats and Mice". It is available free of charge from the Information Division, Canada Department of Agricul- ture, Ottawa 3, WILKINSON'S EXTRA SPECIALS TOP VALU ICE CREAM gal 1/2 79 C All Flavors FRESH PORK HOCKS • 3 lbs. $1.00 PIG TAILS • • lb. 25c NECK BONES lb. 20c miummimmommommia FREEZER BUYS Sides of Pork Head off lb.49c PORK LOINS • 11).69C Cut to Order 3 DAYS NOTICE ON STDES of PORK PLhASE Wilkinson's IGA TRUE VALUE IS OUR BUSINESS • Almost 900 friends, fellow Conservatives and cohorts froth Queen's Park gathered at Huron Park for a testimonial dinner for Provincial Treasurer and member for Huron Charles MacNaughton. The $10 a plate "testimonial" raised almost $8,000. for the party. Shown above as he is congratulated by Seaforth Mayor Frank Sills is (left) Charles MacNaughton, his wife Addle, Premier Robarts, Mr. Sills, Mrs. Betty Cardno and Mrs. Sills. (Staff Photo) Rats and Mice Couse " Millions In amage ..L V M H S —1v n o N a a e 3 Large spider 4 Trailing skirt Part , '3 Musical ' instrument used in bands e Likenesses 7 Bird's beak 8 and obey 9 Black 10 Flowei 11 Vehicle 'laid on snow 17 European peninsula 19 Prosecutors 23 Bread and 24 Father (Aramaic) -