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The Huron Expositor, 1964-01-16, Page 3INSPECTOR COMPARES EDUCATION FOR HENSALL WOMEN'E. INSTITUTE 1 M. J. G. Burrows, of Exeter, public school inspector f o r South lluron, was guest speaker at Hensall Women's Institute Citizenship and Education meet- ing held Wednesday evening on "A Year of Progress," compar- ing education in England and Canada. The speaker was intro- duced by Mrs. John Corbett and thanked by Airs. James McAl- lister. ODORLESS CLEAN BURNING FURNACE OIL STOVE 011 D. Brigh'trall FINA SERVICE Phone 354 Mr. Burrows, in' addition to a very informative and . interest- ing address, contributed two solos, "Walk With 'Me" and 4'Young Lovers." His accom- panist , was Mrs. Ottowell. Members answered the roll call with "a memory of school days," Mrs. McAllister conduct- ed a contest and the winner was Mrs. Robert Elgie. President Mrs. Beverley Bea- ton presided for the business, and Mrs. McAllister for the pro- gram. Program conveners were Mrs. James McAllister and Mrs. John Corbett; hostesses, Mrs. James Bengough and Mrs. John Skea, the latter taking the place of Mrs. Ella Drysdale. Refresh- nien_ts. were served.. • BACKACHE When ,kidneys fall to remove excess acids and wastes, backache—tired reeling-- distprbed rest often may follow, Dodds 'Kidney Pills stimulate kidneys to normal duty. You teal better, deep better, work better. 80 We Are Liquidating the Entire Stock of TSeaf�rth Lumber C. consisting of • LUMBER • TRIM • ARBORITE . • .DOORS -• PLYWOOD • SASHES • HARDWARE • PAINT • ROOFING • ETC. • 'BRICK ' This stock is at our EgmondvilIe Plant and is being offered at JACKSON ALUMINUM Ltd. Phone 74 Seaforth Mrs. Hyde Heads. London Chapter N1rs. Jim Hyde, of Hensall, was elected president of •the London Chapter of Cystic Fib- rosis Foundation at a meeting in London last week. Vice-presi- dent is Mr. George Bunion, of Petrolia. Other oiiieers and di- rectors are from Tamen, London, Tillsonburg,. Ingersoll. and Wat ford. Mrs. Hyde's tw.e-year-old daughter is a victim of cystic fibrosis. ,• .-.. AUXI Ilia ry Plans •` Red Cross Aid The Legion Auxiliary meeting was held Tuesday with-- Presi- dont..Mrs. William Smale pre- siding. There will be a joint installation of officers on Fri- day at the Legion Hall. The auxiliary will canvass the vil- lage for the Red Cross in March, and will cater for a banquet for the 4-H Leaders on Jan. 21. The mystery prize was won by Mrs. William Forrester and the guessing contest by .._Mrs. Helen Roberts. -Pingo was play- ed and lunch servedby the com- mittee in charge. Amber Lodge Holds Social The regular meeting of Am- ber Rebekah Lodge, Hensall, was held Wednesday with Noble Grand Mrs. Clarence Volland presiding. It was decided _that Amber Lodge would help spon- sor a student in the districtto the United Nations and also to attend the World's Fair in New York. This is a district pro- ject of the Oddfellows and Re- bekahs. After lodge, eight tables of euchre were played. The. win- ners were: ladies, Mrs. William Smale and Mrs. Norval Reid; men, Ken Elder and Ross Rich- ardson. In a draw for a cup and saucer; Mrs. Hugh Hendrick of Kippen was the winner. A draw on the box of groceries, Garnet Mousseau of Hensall was the winner. Lunch was served by the social committee. PROFITABLE HISTORY The most financially success- ful work written in England dur- ing the first half of the 19th century was the "History of England from the Accession -of James the Second," by Thomas Babington Macaulay, (who also wrote the still -popular poem, '"Horatius At the Bridge"). Macaulay's -history sold 60 thousand copies in the United States "in a few months" and that the __-British ' publishers, Longman and Company, sent the author a single cheque for 20 thousand pounds (worth more than one hundred thousand dolt lars then) in 1856. No single sum equal to that amount had ever, up to that point, been paid to an English author. ttnllttit111t111111nl1nlillllllt111111111 SNOW BLOWERS Foi Sale% Price $115.00 — Call — Frank Wright or Gary Triebner Phone: HENSALL 264 W 4 ttllll111111mumuI11y1111nIIIIIHIII SN 20% 'ISCOU T An JACKETS W .SUITS CAR COATS • SPECIAL CLEARANCE On Other Lines At Discounts of 10% to 20% 1\ / - -1,1k „ / 4 `�. ,�. 11 inti/ V-ra,LENTINES Yep` ie �f Advance showing of Coutts Hallmark and Rustcraft Valentines. Cards designed for every member of the family, for that personal card or for general use: 5c 10c - 25c • - 50c - !1.00 -Pk's. — 10c to 50c ftisb4.418A1,0N44.4t.-tr44. STATIONERY, StAF9lall NOW GIFTS - rim l �ril tlrl>M �►�1�►�>« > *Irk►inrstl oimp1t hili******0 , .�' • Ne a. ninnies . . THE CHILDRE 1'S CORER Prepare- For March Of' Dimes. Mrs. Jim Hyde, Hensall, was hostess for the Kinette meeting Wednesday evening, President \\ �� Mrs.. John Deitz chaired the meeting with 100 per cent at- tendance. • STICK WOODEN BLOCK SARDINE 'CAN Here's a feeding station you can easily make: Nail an empty sardine can to a wooden block with a stick, as shown. Fill the can with sunflower seeds, and hang, it on a tree. You'll save many a small bird from starving. Mrs. Stan Love was admitted to St. Joseph's Hospital with injuries, to her hip she suffered in a fall at her home. Mrs. Love was recuperating from a fractured hip when she the fall causing injuries to the same hip. She is a sister of Mrs. John Jarrott of Hensall. • Miss Carolyn Cook, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cook,. underwent an appendectomy op - Laboratory Provides Tests Of Product Quality' The only travelling labora- tory in the Canadian soft-drink industry will be in Exeter soon. The lab, operated by Pepsi- Cola Canada Ltd., will carry edit a series of "product control tests at the Tuckey Beverages plant, starting January 14. A unique venture in Canada, the lab is designed to help Pepsi-Cola bot- tlers from coast to coast main- tain uniform product control. Covering -some 35,000 `miles, the travelling laboratory visits an average of 60 bottlers a year, staying from three days to one week at. each plant. Its two experienced chemists advise bot- tlers on all phases of their op- eration, thoroughly checking mechanical condition's, plant sanitation and operating effici- ency. • - Housed in a 21 -foot, 7,500 - pound air-conditioned trailer, the lab is equipped with all the basic instruments used for chemical and physical tests. Bacterdolbgieal• samples are tak- en''Wein every' piece of equip- ment in the plant; from washed bottles up to and including the finished product. An engineering survey tests the efficiency of the bottling equipment. Each piece of ma- chinery is checked, sthrage fa- cilities and general premises undergo a thorough inspection. Bottled soft drinks are tested for Brix, gas volume and acid- ity. One of the most important aspect of standard quality—con- trol is water treatment. So, all water used in bottling process' is tested for alkalinity, organic matter, hardness or any other fault that may prevail, thus en- suring that the water used in the production of Pepsi-Cola is exactly the same whatever the local conditions, and that it complies with rigid require- ments. The lab is staffed by chemists Brian Donnelly, of Montreal, and Romeo Berube of Asbestos. Donnelly is a science graduate pf Mount AIlison University. t Both are well trained and pre- t pared to carry out their intri- cate task. r eration at St. Joseph's Hospital, London, on Thursday. Mrs. Eleanor '" McKenzie is holidaying in St: -,.Petersburg, Florida, for the winter months. Unit Four of Hensall UCW niet Thursday afternoon under the leadership of Mrs. James McAllister, who presided for the meeting, opening with a New Year's message and prayer. The devotional on Paul telling how to make the most out of life Was "'taken .by Miss M. Ellis, as- sisted by Mrs. Jarvis Horton, who offered prayer. ' • '- Rev. Harold Currie,: who gave: the 'address, spoke on New Year's • Resolution, with , its pointers, including attending• unit meetings, commend, defend our faith, study, befriend, ex- tend the Gospel, and bring heal- ing to the nations. The speak- er was thanked by Mrs. McAllis- ter. During the business period ,Mrt..W.-.13....Cross, in giving the treasurer's report, , stated that this unit had gone well over the top in their M and M allo- cation. A tentative date for the annual congregational meet- ing and supper has been set for - Wednesday, Jan. 29, The annual quilting' bee is planned for February in . the church. Mrs. Cross expressed appreciation to the leader, Mrs. McAllister, for her good work during the past year. President Mrs. Walter Spencer spoke words of -greetings and good wishes . for 1964. Miss Joyce Flynn favored with a piano solo. Mrs. Verna Twitchell has re- turned from a two 'weeks' visit with ' her daughter and son-in- law, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Iiocomo and family of Windsor. Mr, and .. Mrs. William. C. Smith, Fred Broadley and Jim Taylor. left Monday of ,this week by jet to attend the National Mobile Home Show at Louis- ville, Kentucky, which last. for a week. Mr. and Mrs. Smith expect to spend the weekend in Florida. The Arnold Circle of Carmel Presbyterian Church will meet Monday, January 20, when an- nual reports will be presented,,. also highlights of the Presby- terial held in Clinton, Tuesday, Jan. 14, will be given. Mr. and ,Mrs. Norman Smith of Marlette, Mich., are visiting at the home of their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, W. C. Smith, and family, Janie and Scott. President Ted Mock chaired the Hensall-Chisolhurst Young People's Union meeting Sunday evening. Doug Currie read sac- red passages and Miss Patricia Harris offered prayer. A film on "Workshop For Peace" was shown. Rev. Harold Currie led a discussion on the film's con- ent. Games were under direc- ion of Miss Patricia Harris. Lunch was served and Rev. Cur- ie closed with the benediction. Mrs`_•Ron Wareing, ,chairman - of the March of Dirties, reported that the canvass wotild take place Tuesday evening, Feb. 4, Mrs. Lorne Hay is Chief March- ing-.. Mother this year. A dona- tion was made to the March of Dimes. Mrs. Homer Campbell won the raffle, and after a .``"tasty lunch a successful bake"sale took place. KIPPEN kiss Marie Sinclair, 'Iteg.N:,` left last Wednesday -by air. for California, 'where she has ac- cepted a position 'on the staff of the Stanford Medical Centre, in Palo Alto, Cal. Mrs. Charles Eyre, accompan- ied .by her sister, Mrs. Robert McMichael, of Walton, spent a few days last week at Niagara Falls and attended the funeral on Friday. of the late Mr. E. M. Ross. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Littleton of Exeter were Sunday guests of the latter's sister and broth- er-in-law, Mrs. Russell Faber and Mr. Faber. Mr. Robert Thomson and Bert were in Toronto on business during last week. Many cases of flu are report- ed in the area. Sympathy- is extended Mr. James Armstrongof Staffa, a former resident of Kippen, in the passing' of his mother; the late Mrs.' Thomas Armstrong, who in her 92nd year passed away in Owen Sound General Hospital. - Mr. Alvin Taylor, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Taylor; RR.2, met with an accident before Christmas, .causing his left foot to be fractured. His foot was placed in a cast, and' he is now able to walk with the aid of crutches. ALL KINDS INSURANCE W. E. SOUTHGATE MAIN ST. - SEAFORTH Phone 334 — Res. 540 (J I _ Giant . at the ' CIRCLE 1J RANCH SEBRINGV1LLE, ONT.. Saturday Afternoons 'dnuq 1:30 p,m., Sharp • consisting of REPOSSESSIONS, BANKRUPT STOCKS and', Many, Many Personal Consignments, Consistilt g' ,of Brand. New Clothing, Furniture, . Appliauoe and TV CLOTH1NG—Auctioneer Leo Bird will offer for sale b auc- tion a large portion of the TAFFY STORE (LONDON) BAIVI£ItUPT STOCK, consisting of Ladies' 2 and 3 -piece Suits, Coats, Dresses, Slims, Slacks and Nylons. He will also offer, ‘,alarge selecting' Of Girls' Wool Dresses, Jeans, Socks, Coats and rackets, as •Wellah a• 'large variety of smaller children's clothing •for all age and sizes; truly an outstanding selection of Brand New CIothing. • FURNITURE—A 2 -piece Chestabed Living Room Suites that. folds out to a full %-size bed with a springfiiled mattress built inside; a 2 -piece French Provincial Chesterfield set covered in, a top grade nylon cover; 3 other assorted Chesterfield sets' with foam cushions; 2 9 -piece Coppertone or Chrome Kitchen -Dinette sets consisting of 8 chairs and a 72" table; 2 7 -piece sets coftsist- ing of 6 chairs and a 60" table with inlaid top; 1 5 -piece' Delinte Coppertone. Dinette Suite;, 3 Bookcase Bedtooin Suites, complete with b,. , dresser, chest.. of drawers and. a matching box spring and mtaress; 2 sets of lamps, consisting of a Trilight and 2 Table Lampsto each set; 1 set of Colonial Step and Coffee Tables in a natural maple finish; other Step and Coffee • Tables; 2 .39" Con tinental Beds complete with headboard and legs; 1 54" Continen- tal Bed complete; 4 full size 54" spring -filled^ mattresses; 2 Hos.: tess Chairs;._Platform Rocker;': -9x12 Rug; High Chair, Telephone •_ Table, Kitchen Step Stool, Chrotne Rocker, A.M: and F.M. Mantel Radio and Writing -Desk. APPLIANCES,. AND TV—A large refrigerator with a full-, cross -top freezer; 2 Electric Ranges, one being a Deliixe Model; a Long Skirt Washer with pump; a 15 cu. ft. Deep Fieeze that holds over 500 lbs. of ~"frozen food; Automatic Washer and Dryer, matching pair; Combination Radio and Record Player, and last of all, 7 different. Televesion Sets, 21" models, that have all been. checkedover and are in A-1 working condition. 'All the Appllancds' in this" sale are Guaranteed to be in A-1 .working condition when you Book them up at your home. -- DON'T MISS THIS OUTSTANDING .SALE. Auctioneer — LEO E. BIRD TERMS: CASH—Cheques accepted an Furniture 3', Sales Tax in Effect OFFICE SUPFLIES THE HURON EXPOSITOR. Phone 141 tSeaforth. jputkE ENiS Box Furniture Specializes. in , . . FLOOR SANDING and FINISITYIeIG • Don't W ri it Cali us to -day for, a FREE ESTIMATE on the cost of having your hardwood floors sanded and refinished. OX FL RNI'TU Phone 43 E Seaforth A new ear -for your family? New applianees for your home? Get whatever you need now --with a ---Personal Loan Pm the Canadian it,iperiai dank of . Commerce. Low interest rates. Life - insured for your protection. Conven- ient repayments. See your helpful Commerce- brant, manager today. enc btatachth't V • .. 114.1 • :In 4