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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1975-10-30, Page 2ilk am Adv lima, Thursday, Oct ber 30 1975 meekly euchre BELQRAVE - Six to ,es of etithre were played in e com- npuinity /coats hast Wednes evening wi winners bei : lady, Mrs. J. McTa art; low lady, Mrs. William Taylor; high man, Gorman Murray; low man, Mrs. Herb Clayton (playing as a y man). INGLIS FARM DRAI NAGE Quality installation Clay or Plastic Free Estimates PHONE: 39276700 R.R. 3 Walkerton errrrnerrnErroxismz Art exhibits to be seen Arr. ii, :emends have been made with the London Art Gallery Extension Department to have two exhibitions off art visit secon- dary schools in Huron during 1975-76. Each 'splay will be in a school for approximately ten days. Information kits on the coming exhibition will be sent to ss the schools approximately two `weeks in advance of the display in order for teachers to prepare classes for viewing the work. The first exhibit, "Figure Variations", will be at the F. E. Madill Secondary School January 5-16. This will be followed by "Cape Dorset Prints" at the Wingham school from May 12-26. The public is invited to view these exhibitions while they are in the county. NOW IN STOCK New J & M GRAVITY BOX. Over 350 bushel capacity. Order now. Limited supply in 1976. New J & M WAGON AND BOX. $950.00 Special Year End Clearance Prices on FER- TILIZER SPREADERS. 3 point hitch and trail models. New 22 ply AIRCRAFT TIRES on 6 hole heavy steel rims. Ideal for loader tractors or Targe wagons. Only 10 left. $100. each. MAX A. RIEGLING PHONE 395-5107 EVENINGS MANAGEMENT OF THE FARM BUSINESS Canada Manpower and the Ontario Ministry of Agri- culture and Food are sponsoring a five week course on Management of the Farm Business. The course will start on January 19, 1976 in Ayton. This course is strongly recommended to any farm operator who wishes to im- prove his management ability. Subjects ,covered will deal mainly withJFarfn Management, Soils and, (rope Manage- ment, and Livestock Management. Approved students will receive a Canada Manpower retraining allowance. The deadline for receipt of applications at Ontario Ministry. of Agriculture and Food offices is December 5, 1975. For further information and application forms - contact the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food, Box 1330, Walkerton, Ontario, NOG 2V0, or Box 496, Markdale, Ontario, NOC 1H0. PROTECT... . Your grass, shrubs, and trees against winter kill WITH CIL WINTERIZER ... conditions against winter kill FALL GARDENING ES *Peat Moss *Fertilizers *Pottingand Planting Soil *Fall Bulbs (While Supplies Last) NOW IN STOCK: AMARYLLIS BULBS 1 Howson 8t Howson FARM AND GARDEN CENTRE Wingham - 357-2700 1 i / 1 1 1 1 ►4'1.41.♦b♦.1r1. +►.'►AM►►1� 4• 4• 4%, ��►A �1drr♦�♦♦�►♦�►♦�►1. �. �V..y MRS. LILLIAN DICKSON was the special guest of Rev. Bob Armstrong and St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church where she spoke on her missionary work in Taiwan and the "Mustard Seed Mission" last Friday evening. Her dedica- tion and compassion have made her well-known not only in her mission districts but also throughout the world. Ask your help The CGIT members will be canvassing for Unicef again this year. They will be visiting the homes in the Wingham area from 4:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. on Friday, October 31. The girls will be wearing CGIT middies and will be carrying the official Unicef boxes. They ask householders to please help sirs this very worth- while project. Unicef is a child's nes, not his age, ,religion„ sex or politics. The United Nations Children's Fund exists because over one billion children live in the developing countries of the world - children who suffer from hunger, disease, poverty, lack of education. A child has no control over where he is born and does not select the religion, government or culture for UNICEF in which he grows up. Unicef helps children in Latin America, Africa, Asia and the Middle East. Unicef is equipment and train- ing assistance, not dollars. Uni- cef contributions become water -pipes and pumps, high protein foods, medical supplies and vac- cines, chalkboards and pencils, bicycles and boats, in long-range programs to help. children: cef helps countries plan add lag. tablish sArrvices for their children and it supports the training of na- tional personnel by aiding train"- Mg rain=Mg institutions and by providing grants for teachers, nurses, mid- wives and other child-care per- sonnel. All aid is given under strict rules of control and super- vision. k' In the following articles, Grade Five writes about their class- room activities: Hallowe'en Some people believe in ghosts, but others don't. Do you? Mr. Kerr told us a story about an electrician who was working late in a house in Egmondville. He was working on the cellar stairs. All of a sudden he turned around and saw the ghostly figure of an attractive lady who used"to live in the house. 0-0-0 , We bought bags and pumpkins. We are going to make masks out of the paper bags and faces out of the pumpkins using apples, car- rots, cabbage leaves, onions, beets, cranberries, parsley and other vegetables. -By Heather McInnes, Stephenie Moir, Sharon Weigel, Randy Dillon, Tony Vien- neau. A Cranberry Special Last week, the Grade Five stu- dents did a paper called Cran- berry Special. Each student was given a cranberry to weigh and measure using metric units. We found the average mass and lengths of the cranberries in our group. -By Terry Carter, Wade McInnis, Brian Stapleton, Kevin Moore. Newspapers The Grade Five lass has been working with the newspaper. We are making a newspaper booklet of quizzes, ads, and collages of sections of the newspaper. Every Monday morning we get the newspapers. Here is a newspaper cinquain : Black and white Tell us news Getting people to read Words By Sheila Wharton, June Stam- per, Robin Rohn, Brenda Cham- bers, Sheldon Baker. Consumerism Grade Five is watching an edu- cation TV show called Captain . Consumer. It tells us all about what to buy and what not to buy. We usually watch it three times weekly at 9:20, just in case you want to watch it. We watch it so that when we go to the store we can save .money. Once we did a survey about soft -sell and hard - sell commercials: It was interest- ing. -By Andy Henry., Kendra McKague, Paula Cox, Murray Willis, David Shaw. Cross Country Results Junior Boys: 1. Grey; 2. Brus- sels; 3. Howick; 4_ East Wawa - nosh; 5. Turnberry. Junior Girls: 1. East Wawa - nosh; 2. Grey; 3. Howick; 4. Brussels; 5. Turnberry. Intermediate Boys: 1. Howick; 2. Turnberry; 3. Brussels; 4. Grey; 5. East Wawanosh. Intermediate Girls: 1. Howick; 2. Turnberry; 3. Brussels; 4. Grey; 5. East Wawanosh. Senior Boys: 1. Howick; 2. Grey; 3. East Wawanosh; 4. Brussels; 5. Turnberry. Senior Girls: 1. Howick; 2. Turnberry; 3. East,Wawanosh; 4. Brussels; 5. Grey. The run was held at Turnberry Central School on Tuesday, Octo- ber 21. Five schools completed and the Howick boys' and girls' teams emerged victorious. Hallowe'en Ghosts are in maple trees, Pumpkins on, the sills Black cats under tree leaves And witches chewing pills. Bats flying around the nest While children on the ground Are sneaking to the doorsteps And knocking too darn loud. Creatures are on the prowl, Horses on the run, Dogs and wolfs howling, And people with their guns --Mart McDougall Grade Six Missio ni guest speaker at centennial The Centennial Committee oft St. Andrew's Presbyterian hosted a very special guest last Friday: "the littlest lady with the biggest heart". Mrs. Lillian Dickson, mission- ary and humanitarian, was the guest speaker at the church. The meeting was chaired by Rev. Robert Armstrong and Mrs. Dickson's presentation was pre- ceded by a double trio ren ' • tion of "So Send I You". People - came from London, Listowel, Chesley and all the sur- rounding area to hear the 'wonder worker' of Taiwan describe her experiences and work with the Mustard Seed Mission she founded. She showed a film entitled "While It Is Day" portraying her work in Taiwan and Papua, New Guinea. The film's title comes from the verse from St. John's Gospel that con- cluded the presentation: "I must work the works of Him that sent me while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can work." In her speech, Mrs. Dickson commented on the small world of today. Jesus' command to • "go tell", she said, can be carried out literally by means of our ad- vanced system of communication and travel. "Should twelve business people sit down and concentrate on the task of spreading the gospel with 14 units still open in Brussels apts. Fourteen units in the new Brus- sels senior citizens' complex are still available, according to Village Clerk Bill King. About 20 of the 34 units have already been applied for. The $550,000 building is expected to be completed by Dec. 1. Although the postal 'strike makes mailing of new applica- tions impossible at present, the forms will be picked up in Brus- sels next week so they may be processed by the Toronto office of the ministry.. ` the same fervent zeal they plan business activities, It am sure the whole world could = evangel- ized," she said: "Lift up your eyes and see the harvest," The people she works with in Taiwan and her other outlying mission are poor and, in many ways, uncivilized. When asked whether she was not afraid to be wi : thenen, Mrs. Dickson an- swered: "I am no longer afraid of thieves, I have head-hunters working for me." Her mission has taken her into prisons, far-flung villages, moun- tain huts and leper hospi- tals. The needs of the people are many, and Mrs. Dickson works to supply both spiritual and physical needs, building schools and churches, training teachers, nurses amid m isslOnarlea. One of . Ph kson's major concerns is the children of her mission districts. "If you have children of your own, you realize that all the children in the world are in some part your respon= sibility,'' she sold. She concluded her message td the people with a f e u and: as here ate P trio s people in the -South Soas. schoo s. Thousituds came hgpor to hear the Gospel, W9 rnut share our good things or we mph' be strangled with their hate, .Ceasing to share is ceasiPg ceasingto care, for ts is the law of 1oye,., Take part in the harvest. Go tells God's message of eternal life, Work for e ILrard." Husky dogs like cold, snappy winter days. HEATHER ELIZABETH FARNELL, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Don Farnell, Wing - ham, received her Bachelor of Arts Degree at the 219th Convocation, University of Western Ontario on Saturday, Oct. 25th. Heather is present- ly attending the Ontario Teacher Education College, Toronto: Your forage doesn't have the ideal mineral ratio for top milk production. Your CO-OP does. Milk contains almost equal amounts of calcium and phosphorous. If your cows don't have the proper quantity and ratio of these two elements available in their diet, breeding problems will increase an& milk production will drop. CO-OP Cattle Minerals are based on research conducted by CRF (Co-operative Research Farms) and are designed to supplement the following forage feeding programs : Legume Forage: CO-OP HP Cattle Mineral (calcium to phosphorous ratio 1 :20) Heavy Mixed Hay or Haylage + Corn Silage: CO-OP Cattle Mineral AA (calcium to phosphorous ratio 1 :1) Heavy Corn Silage + Mixed Hay or Haylage: CO-OP Cattle Mineral (calcium to to phosphorous ratio 2 :1) Heavy Grain + CO-OP LPS: CO-OP LP Cattle Mineral (calcium to phosphorous ratio 5 :1) For a feeding program specifically designed to supplement your own forages, contact your CO-OP salesman for a CO-OP Dairy Feeding Program Analysis. And ask for copies of these booklets describing the many CO-OP Supplements available and forage production recommendations. Dairy Feeding Programs ... research proven for profit. We like to know our customers by name! 351-2711 BELGRAVE BRANCH $$7-6453 O UNITEL9` CO-OPERATIVES OF ONTARIO WAV 30W20a0 2000995M1 0 • • •