Zurich Citizens News, 1960-02-24, Page 5WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1960
ZUwwi 'n CITIZENS NEWS
PAGE 'FIVR
CLASSIFIED RATES: 25 'words
or less, 50c the first week, 35c
• for repeat advertisements. Lar-
ger advs.: 2c a word the first
week, then 1%c for repeats.
Cards of Thanks, In Memor-
iams, Engagements, same as
above,
Births, Marriages and Deaths,
No charge.
FOR SALE
CASE COMBINE with air-cooled
motor, in good working condition.
Complete with all attachments.
Apply to Andrew Rau, phone 98-
x18, Zurich. 7-8p
'SMITH -CORONA Portable Type-
writers and Victor adding machin-
es, priced reasonable. Zurich Citi-
zens News, phone 133, Zurich.
3x-tfb
TWO TRACTOR TIRES — 12 x
26, complete with runs, tubes and
fluid., Fair condition. Apply to
Avila Ducharme, phone .77r 2, Zur-
ich. 6-7-:8-b
COUNTER -CHECK BOOKS, prin-
ted or plain; adding machine rolls;
rubber stamps .and stamp pads;
magic markers. Call at Citizens
News office. 3x-tfb
BDCAUSE OF THE FINE res-
ponse to our film developing ad-
vertisement we are now offering
a. FREE enlargement from your
favorite negative. Just enclose
a negative along with your next
roll of film. Film developed and
8 double size, 50 cents; 12 double
size, 70 cents. Jiffy Photo, Clin-
ton, 49-50-1-2-b
INTERNATIONAL 300 tractor, in
new condition, equipped with hy-
draulic and live P.T.O., with
mounted plough, and pulley. Also
,one cow, due shortly; one Viking
,cream seperator; one Horn man-
ure loader; one 9 -foot Interna-
tional cultivator on rubber, new.
Apply to Franklin Corriveau, ph-
one 86r3, Zurich. 8,p
FARM EQUIPMENT
FOR SALE
GEORGE WHITE FARM Mach-
inery, Ebersal hay and grain Ele-
vators, Rotary Hog Feeders. Ap-
ply to Amos Gingerich, Blake,
phone Zurich 79r12. 30-tfx
MINNEAPOLIS Farm Machinery,
Twin Drialic Manure Loaders,
Firestone 'tires. See us for a bet-
ter deal. Emmerson Erb, 2 phone
.96r1.2, Zurich.
LOST and FOUND
TARPAULIN — west of Zurich,
last Thursday afternoon, February
18. If anyone has found it please
call Hugh Thiel, phone Zurich
93r4. .• 8,p
MISCELLANEOUS
CATTLE SPRAYING—For Lice;
anybody wishing cattle sprayed
for lice, contact Bill Watson,
phone Dashwood, 37 r 19. 50 -tib
FILTER QUEEN SALES AND
service. Repairs to all makes of
vacuum cleaners. Reconditioned
cleaners for sale. Bob Pectic, RR
1, Zurich. Phone Hensall 696r2.
18-20-22-24tfb
DRY CLEANING and LAUNDRY
Service. Ca11 Earl Oesoh's Barber
Shop. Pick-up and delivery every
Monday and Thursday. Brady
Cleaners and Laundeteria Ltd.,
Exeter. 22-tfb
SEPTIC TANKS, Cesspools etc.,
cleaned. Prompt service and rea-
sonable rates. Del's Sewage Dis-
posal Service, call Del Schwart-
zentruber, phone 26 r 17, Dash-
wood. 34tfb
WATERLOO
CATTLE BREEDING
ASSOCIATION.
"Where Better Bulls Are Used"
ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION
SERVICE FOR ALL BREEDS
OF CATTLE
Farmer Owned and Controlled
CaII us between:
7.30 and 10.00 a.m. Week Days
and
6.00 and 8.00 p.m. Saturday
Evenings — at
Clinton Zenith 9-5650
FLOOR SANDING, PROMPT
and efficient service; or rent our
sanders and do it yourself. This
is the time of year to have your
floors refinished. Charles H.
Thiel, phone 140, Zurich. 14-tfb
AUTOMOTIVE
Glass — Steering — Body Repairs
Lubrication, etc.
For Quality Service, see
DAVIDSON'S TEXACO SERVICE
Phone 320, No. 8 Highway,
Goderich 37tfb
HAVE YOU
RENEWED YOUR
SU'B'SCRIPTION
DON'T WASTE GRAIN
MIX IT! 'THE
FEED IT! ISHUR
- GAIN WAY
BALANCE YOUR GRAIN WITH:
SHUR-GAIN CONCENTRATES
M. 6. DEITZ and SON
YOUR BALANCED FEEDING HEADQUARTERS
PHONE 154 ZURICH
Special
ALUMINUM
STORM WINDOWS
With
Self -Staring
Screens
Only
$17.95
FkDdAIiiW..;
LUMe�R euro. s
SLI SES
WAITED TO BUY
PRIVATE COLLECTOR is inter-
ested in old letters, coins, and
paper money, prior to 1950. Write
Box 184, Zurich Citizens News.
7-8-9-b
EXTENSIVE
Auction Sale
Of Horses, Cattle, Tractors, Truck,
Thresher, Farm Implements, Feed,
Grain and Mise. Items.
On the premises, Lot 3, Con. 9,
Hay Township; 2162 miles east of
Dashwood and half -mile north, or
11/4 miles east of Zurich and 41/2
miles south.
The undersigned auctioneer re-
ceived instruction to sell by pub-
lic Auction on:
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9th, 1960
At 12:30 p,m,
HORSES—
Clyde mare, 9 yrs. old; Percher-
on Gelding, 10 yrs. old; both guar-
anteed sound and reliable,
CATTLE—
Durham cow, carrying second
calf, with calf at foot; red Holstein
heifer, rising 2 yrs. old; part Here-
ford and Jersey heifer, due first
week in May; Durham heifer, ris-
ing 2 yrs. old; part Durham and
Hereford heifer, rising 2 yrs. old;
Holstein Heifer rising 2 year old;
6 part Hereford and Holstein hei-
fers rising 2 years old; 2 part
Hereford and Holstein steers ris-
ing 2 year old; 2 Durham steers
rising 2 year old; 8 Herefrd, Dur-
ham and Angus yearling steers;
2 Holstein yearlings; 3 part Here-
ford and Holstein yearlings. Cattle
all in market condition.
Tractors, Truck and Thresher:—
M.M. Model "R" Standard Tract-
or, like new; 1956 Ford 600 Tract-
or in guaranteed condition; 1953
Ford half -ton pickup truck in A-1
condition; Waterloo thresher, 24 -
inch cylinder on steel, in good con-
dition., thresher belt, like new.
Farrar Machinery—
Cockshutt 2 -furrow plow; 30 -
plate Bissell tractor disc; 16 -plate
Bissell tractor disc; Cockshutt 11 -
run fertilizer drill; M -H. horse
drawn disc; 3 sets diamond har-
rows; 3 -drum steel oller; Inter.
3 -horse cultivator; .-section spring
tooth cultivator; 4 -bar Cockshutt
side rake on steel, like new; M -H.
6 -ft binder; Int. 5 -ft. mower; 3
team scuffler; walking plow; M -H.
1 -horse scuffler; Frost & Wood
hay loader; 10 -ft. dump rake; Letz
No. 80 X grinder, like new; 2 steel
wagons, flat rack, set of harness,
horse clipper, fanning mill; 135
ft. hay fork rope; hay fork carriage
root pulper, wheelbarrow,; quant-
ity of new lumber; barn jack; steel
barrels; 2 extension ladders; 2 -wh-
eel trailer; chains, forks, shovels,
Etc., Etc. ,
POULTRY -40 Rhode Island Recl
x Barred Rock laying hens.
FEED AND GRAIN -800 bushels
Gary oats, grown from Registered
seed; 60 bushels wheat; 5 ton
cob corn; 15 ton oat straw suitable
for baling; quantity loose and cut
hay.
HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS —Cook
stove, Beatty electric washer, din-
ing room table and chairs, kitchen
cupboard, Etc., Etc. ,
Terms—Cash
No reserve, everything will
John Cucksey, Proprietor.
Garnet Hicks, Clerk.
Alvin Walper, Auctioneer.
8-9-b
be sold
rr111111=116
wawea�s
WAITED
MONTCALM
BARLEY
RODNEY and GARY
OATS ,
FOR SEED
Contact
COOK B R O SA
MILLING CO. LTD.
HENSALL
BIRTHS
SMITH—At St. Lambert, Quebec,
on Sunday, February 14, 1960,
to Sgt. and Mrs. P. H. Smith
(nee Joan Merrier), a son.
BEER—In Clinton Public Hospi-
tal, on Tuesday, February 16,
1960, to Mr. and Mrs. George
Beer, Hensall, a daughter.
IN MEMORIAM
WEIN—In loving memory of a
dear brother, Raymond Wein, who
passed away a year ago, Febru-
ary 25, 1959.
Happy and smiling and always
content,
Loved and respected wherever
he went,
Always thoughtful, willing and
kind,
These are the memories he left
behind,
—Always remembered by his
brother, Robert.
8,b
WEIN—In loving memory of a
dear son and brother, Raymond,
who passed away one year ago,
February 25, 1959.
We little knew when we woke that
morn,
The sorrow the day would bring.
For the call was sudden, the
shock severe,
To part" with one we loved so dear,
Sometimes it's hard to understand
Why some things have to be,
But in His wisdom God has
Planned,
Beyond our power to see,
God gave us strength to fight it,
And courage to bear the blow,
But what it cost to lose you our
dear,
No one will ever know.
—Always remembered and sadly
missed by Mother, Erma, Carl
and Irene and Dorothy. and Chic.
8,b
CARDS OF THANKS
I wish to thank all my friends
and relatives for the many acts
of kindness shown me while a
patient in Clinton Public Hospi-
tal, and since returning home.
—Mrs. Lloyd Klopp. 8,p
I wish tothank all the good Sis-
ters who assisted and visited my
husband while a patient in St.
Joseph's Hospital, also Father C.
A. Doyle, Father Richard Bedard,
CScR,. and Father Sullivan. Also
thanks for the prayers, flowers,
and get -well cards. —Mrs. 'Adella
Regier. 6,p
I wish to thank all my relatives,
neighbours, and friends for the
spiritual assistance, cards, treats,
flowers and help in preparation
of meals. Also special thanks to
Father C. A. Doyle, and Father R.
Bedard, CScR., and those who
helped in any way. —Mrs. Adella
Regier and family. 8,p
0
Quilts And Pyjamas
On Display At Kippen
Institute Meeting
(By our Hensall Correspondent)
Kippen East Women's Institute
meeting for their February meet-
ing last Wednesday at the home
of Mrs. Stewart Pepper, had on
display some beautiful quilts and
DA.SHWOOD and
DISTRICT
(MRS. E. H. RADER
Music Pupils Successful
Miss Idella Gabel, A.R.C.T., an-
nounced the results of examina-
tions of her pupils with the Royal
Conservatory of Toronto, tried re-
cently at London.
Grade 8 piano: Rebecca Steckle,
honours; pass, Norma Geiger.
Grade 7, piano: pass, Mary Jane
Hoffman.
Grade 6, piano: pass, Eleanor
Prang.
Grade 4, piano: honours, Carol
Hendrick:
Grade 3, piano: first class hon-
ours, Janet Miller.
Theory, Grade II: first class
honours, Dennis Amaeher; pass,
Ruth Anne Rader.
Miss Erma Wein, Clinton, sp-
ent the weekend with Mrs. Herb
Wein.
Mr, and Mrs, Elmer Rader and
family and Mr. L. H. Rader spent
Sunday at Waterloo, with Mr. and
Mrs. Garnet Weiberg and family,
and Mrs. L. H. Rader.
0
Title Of Hay King
Will Be Awarded At
Middlesex Seed Fair
Agricultural Chemicals Limited,
London, will be sponsoring the
award of Western Ontario Hay
King. The competition will take
place at the Middlesex Seed Fair,
March 1 to 5.
The Western Ontario Hay King
will be the champion hay exhibi-
tor chosen from entries in the
Inter -County hay classes. The
judge for the class will be Dr.
Charles Rogers, Wooster, Ohio.
All farmers in Western Ontario,
which includes the counties of
Essex, Kent, Lambton, Huron,
Perth, Oxford, Norfolk, Elgin,
Bruce, Brant and Middlesex are
eligible.
The champion receives a sil-
ver tray donated by the manufac-
turers of Agrico Fertilizer. Entries
should be mailed to the Ontario
Department of Agriculture, 209
County Building, London, not
later than February 23. All ex-
hibits are to be in the Manufac-
turer's Building, Western Fair
Grounds, by 3 p.m., February 29.
Natural Sweet Honey
Is Good Food Source
Honey, which is sold in both
granulated and liquid form, has
approximately the same sweeten-
ing power as sugar but in addi-
tion contains moisture. Honey is
the only natural sweet and a
good source of food energy, accor-
ding to food specialists with the
Ontario Department of Agricul-
ture
Since honey contains water, it
is necessary, when replacing one
cup of sugar in a recipe by one
cup of honey, to reduce the liquid
by approximately one-quarter of a
cup. Honey is added with the li-
quid ingredients in a recipe. For
baked products, liquefy honey by
heating over warm water, (not
over 140 degrees F) before meas-
uring. Greasing the measuring
utensil lightly prevents the honey
from sticking and being wasted.
Honey should not be stored in a
refrigerator.
Besides its usefulness as a sauce
for fresh fruits, fruit salads, ice
cream, pancakes or waffles, steam-
ed puddings and gingerbread, var-
iety may be achieved by combin-
ing honey with lemon or lime
juice, as well as with nuts, fruits
or cocoanut. As a spread for
bread, toast, biscuits, muffins,
waffles and pancakes, honey may
be mixed with butter if desired.
For use as a sweetener in cold
beverages or punches, blend the
honey first with a little hot water,
to make a syrup, then chill. In
meringue topping, allow a quarter
cur) of honey to one stiffly beaten
egg white. Serve on a warm cake
dessert or a one -crust pie. In cak-
es and cookies, replace no more
than half the sugar with honey and
make the necessary reduction in
liquid. Honey tends to keep bak-
ed products moist.
pyjamas made by various gecups
of their branch, which will be
forwarded to the War Memorial
Children's Hospital, London.
Mrs. Alex McGregor gave a
demonstration of the sewing the
4-H Club girls have made, which
will be shown on Achievement
Day,
Roll call, "If I were a shut in,
how would I like to be remem-
bered" was answered by members,
Guest Speaker, Mrs. Edison Mc-
Lean, spoke on "General Nurs-
ing". The motto, "I lived with
cancer twelve years," was read
by Mrs, Eldon Jarrott. Mrs. J.
Lostell reviewed current events.
Mrs. Charles Eyre contributed a
poem, and Mrs. Arthur Finlayson
conducted a health quiz.
Mrss. Verne Alderdice submit-
ted the treasurer's report. Pres-
ident Mrs. Russell Brock chaired
the meeting, and Mrs. E. White-
house was co -hostess with Mrs.
Pepper. Lunch was convened by
Mrs, Campbell Eyre, Mrs. White-
house, Mrs. William Kyle and Mrs,
Wilmer Broadfoot.
RECORD HOP
IN THE
Community Centre
Zurich
FRIDAY, FEB. 26
9 p.m.
Admission: 35 cents
Sponsored by the
Community Centre Board
.Styled ty
Inter- Hationdl-Arterafts
o Acknowledgments
• Announcements
e Reception Cards
Wo feature
Thermo -Gravure Printing
(Raised Lettering)
SEE OUR
SAMPLE BOOK
AT
Z ;rich Chin, s News
ANNUAL MEETING
OF THE
HAY TOWNSHIP MUNICIPAL
Telephone System
WILL BE HELD IN THE
TOWNSHIP HALL, ZURICH
ON
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 1960
At 2.00 p.m.
V. L. BECKER
Reeve
REGINALD BLACK
Secretary -Treasurer
NEW LOCATION
QUARTER MILE NORTH OF KIPPEN ON NO. 4 HIGHWAY
(WATCH FOR GATE SIGN ON NORTH SIDE OF HIGHWAY)
REPAIRS TO ALL MAKES OF TELEVISION AND RADIOS
RUSS' TV SERVICE
Russell Faber
Phone Hensall 672r11.
R