The Huntingdon gleaner, 5 mars 1952, mercredi 5 mars 1952
[" se yi eter Years of love have been forgot In the hatred of a minute.i eee EIGHTY-NINTH YEAR THE HUNTINGDON GLEANER THE LEADING ADVERTISING MEDIUM IN THE DISTRICT OF BEAUHARNOIS HUNTINGDON, QUE., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5th, 1952 District Students Score Highly in Students Royal Show at Macdonald College Knowledge of Calf Club Work Stands to Advantage of Contestants Several students from the How- ick-Ormstown-Huntindon districts either topped the classes with animals shown by them or else led in the showmanship contests in the livestock section of the Macdonald College Students Royal Show.That show having been held on February Hirst of all, the students paraded their animals, all members of Mac- dofald College herds of cattle, sheep and swine, before the respective judges, who placed the animals on a conformation basis.At the same time other judges were scoring the leaders of these animals from preparation (of their animals) and showmanship standpoints.The official judges were: Sheep and Swine \u2014 J.W.Graham, Production Service, Department of Agriculture; Beef Cattle \u2014 S.B.Wil- iams, Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa; Ayrshires \u2014 S.J.Chagnon, Deputy Chairman, Prices Support Board, Ottawa; Holsteins R.Grant Smith, Fieldman, Holstein- Freisian Association.The Umpires as regards showmanship were Principal A.M.Barr, Kemptville Agricultural School, and S.B.Williams.As heretofore, the Management of the Royal Show was entirely in the hands of the Student body.The General Superintendent of the Livestock Show was Owen Ness, a senior student and son of J.Earle and Mrs.Ness of Terrace Bank Farm, How- ick.The Ayrshire Section The Ayrshire junior calf class was led by Macdonald Rose Sth, by Car- nell Pearlstone (Imp.) shown by H.Peckham.This calf was subsequently made reserve grand champion Ayrshire.The names of the other winners in this class are not available but the other exhibitors were: 2, Susan Wilesmith; 3, G.Brown, 4, P.Gault; 5, Patricia Irving (of Laguerre).However, these positions were changed considerably insofar as preparation and showmanship were concerned.In the showmanship contest G.Brown stepped up to first place with Patricia Irving second.The other placings being: 9, H, Peckham; 4, P.Gault; 5, Susan Wilesmith.Senior Ayrshire Calves were headed by Macdonald Merry Dimple 4th which was exhilbted by Bernice Ness of Howick.The exhibitors of the other winners were: 2, K.Clay; 3 R.Morrison; 4, R.A.Duffin; 5, H.Smith.The showmanship prizes in this class also went in the above order.The grand champion Ayrshire was Macdonald Marie 3rd, first prize winner in the mature dry cow class, and she was exhibited by R.Craig of Ormstown.The other winners in the mature dry cow class were exhibited by 2, M.McEwen (Orms- town); 3, Wm.Templeton (Howick); 4, Kenneth Roy, Howick, However, when the showmanship awards were made in this class Kenneth Roy won first; 2, M.Mc- Ewen; 3, Wm.Templeton; 4, R.Craig, Macdonald Merry Scholar led the mature class of Ayrshire cows in milk and was exhibited by N.Graham.The other exhibitors were: 2, F.Roach; 3, D.Evans; 4, R.Godbout.However, F.Roach came out first in showmanship with the others being in the following order \u2014 2, D.Evans; 3, R.Godbout; 4, N.Graham.Holstein Winners Details are not available of the winning animals in the Holstein Classes.However, three local boys made good \u201cshowings\u201d in the showmanship contests.R.Lalonde of Ormstown won first prize for showmanship in the class fOr senior Holstein calves.The first prize for showmanship in the yearling Holstein heifer class was A.Rankin of Huntingdon, while the third prize in that class went to M.Gerard, also of Huntingdon.Showmanship Champions The champion Holstein showman was G.Lynch-Staunton of Montreal while the reserve in that section was R.Lalonde of Ormstown.The champion Ayrshire Showman was Kenneth Roy, of Howick, while the reserve In that section was Bernice Ness, also of Howick, The other divisional champions for showmanship were: Beef Cattle, R.A.Von den Bau- men; Reserve, Col.G.C.Reeves.Swine, P.Chaplin.Reserve, A.B.Thomson.Sheep, Russell Dow.Reserve, M.Cox.Having won the championship of his own, the Ayrshire section, Kenneth Roy (son of Mr.and Mrs.Gerald A.Roy, Oakburn Farm, Howick) went on to win both the championship of the Dairy Cattle division in competition with the Holstein champions and then the grand championship of the show.The latter contest after competition with the champion and reserve champion showmen of the Beef Cattle, Sheep and Swine divisions, respectively.In the meantime, having won the reserve championship award in the Ayrshire Section, Bernice Ness (daughter of Douglas A.ang Mrs.Ness of Burnside Farms, Howick) went on to compete for and win the reserve showmanship championship of the show.In the Dairy Cattle division she was of course in competition with the two Holstein champions, while in the grand championship contest her competitors were the champion and reserve\u201d champion showmen of the Beef Cattle, Sheep and Swine Divisions.It may be of interest to note that in winning the grand champion showmanship award, Kenneth Roy had a score of T9, while Bernice Ness had a score of 78.The Beef cattle and Sheep champions each had a score of 73 points and the Swine champion had a score of 67.In the Dairy division finals Kenneth Roy scored 23 points and Bernice Ness 21 points.However, with a score of 20 for Beef cattle showmanship Bernice Ness beat Kenneth Roy by one point.In the showing of Sheep and Swine, that Howick pair scored an equal number of points \u2014 that is 18 each for Sheep and 19 each for Swine.In that respect we may add that the competitions in the championship contests had to not only parade their own animals first of all but also had to, in turn, parade their competitors\u2019 animals.Important Changes In Mail Service Truck Delivery and Pick-up of Mail Some changes in the mail service for Huntingdon have been announced by Mr.J.O'Hare, postmaster, which take effect immediately.The mail which used to arrive at 11.30 a.m.has been discontinued.Mail now arrives by truck from Montreal at 530 am.and is all sorted and in the boxes by 8 am.No other incoming mail is received until the C.N.R.train arrives at 430 pm.This mail is sorted by 5 p.m.Outgoing from Huntingdon there are by two mails, one by the C.N.R.train at 7 o'clock in the morning and one that leaves by truck at 6.30 in the evening.For mail to leave on the truck at night, it must be in the Post Office not later than 6.15 p.m.There is a direct dispatch on this truck for Valleyfield.On Saturdays only, the truck will leave Huntingdon immediately after the C.NR.train, at 4.45 p.m.Mail must be in the Post Office not later than 430 pm.in order to catch | this mail.The Postmaster suggests that you ; cut this out and keep it for refer-, ence as to the new mail times.i Further Particulars For Centenary Celebration Further particulars as to the plans for the centenary celebration, Tune 29-July 1st, for Huntingdon High School, have just been announced.The Sunday services announced in the last issue of this newspaper, will be in charge of the local clergy, the principal and Mrs.N.W.Sparrow, all of whom have gladly consented to play their part.The Monday program is under the chairmanship of Commissioners Robb and Ruddock.The parade on Tuesday is under the chairmanship of Commissioner Stewart; Sports on Tuesday under Commissioner Graham.The Re-union Ball \u2018is under the patronage of the entire school board members and their wives.Outdoor music is under the direction of Bandmaster D.Moore.The committee is fortunate to secure the services of Larry Edwards and his nine-piece orchestra.This orchestra is a great local favorite.The various heads of committees mentioned above will be approaching others to assist them in their various departments.The committee in charge of the Year Book which is soon to be published is very much encouraged by the response they have received with regard to advertising and subscriptions to date.Interested parties are asked to get in touch with the school regarding subscriptions or advertising space, Jury Clears Bus Driver No Crime Committed In Constable\u2019s Death After nearly an hour\u2019s deliberation a coroner's jury on Friday voted four to two to clear a Provincial Transport Company bus driver of criminal responsibility in the death of a Provincial Police constable near Mercier Bridge on Dec.15.Constable Raoul Giroux, 28, of 4515 Lasalle Boulevard, Verdun, was fatally injured when he was struck down in a blinding snowstorm by a bus driven by Fred Greer, 33, of Ormstown, Que.Giroux and another constable, Germain Rheaume, 27, of 303 Woodland Avenue, Verdun, were investigating the head-on collision of two private cars on Route 9C two miles south of the bridge when the bus hit the cars, then hit them.Rheaume was also badly injured and spent 48 days in Notre Dame hospital.Greer said at the inquest that he was driving from 18 to 20 miles per hour in third gear when one of the two cars involved in the previous accident loomed out of the swirling snow and he was unable to avoid hitting it.Constable Rheaume testified that he neither heard the bus horn nor saw its headlights before the vehicle bore down on them.He also testified that visibility at the time of the accident was \u201cabsolutely nil.\u201d After the bus had struck the two cars, it veered off to the left, bounced across a ditch and crashed into a wire fence 145 feet from the other two cars.Immigrant Inspector Back From Germany Norman George, former Immigration inspector stationed in Fort Covington, has arrived back from Germany where he spent about 14 months in the U.S.immikration service, stationed in Berlin for a long time at the embassy in Munich for three months.He went over by plane and returned by boat from Italy, enjoying both trips.Mr.George is married to the former Pauline Quenneville of St, Anicet, Que, and they have one son, Norman.The former local inspector is presently on leave, waiting for an assignment to a port in this country.(Fort Covington Sun).HOME ON THE RANGE CLARESHOLM, Alta, (CP)\u2014A colorful pioneer rancher, Pat Bur-, ton has sold his ranch in this dis- | trict and will move to Marysville, B.C.\u2026 where he has purchased a new ranch of 5,000 acres.Re SE T WALLPAPER DEMONSTRATION AT ST.JOSEPH'S PARISH HALL ET ARS AN I portion of those in attendance at [27th, at St.Joseph's Parish Hall, the Wallpaper demonstration held Huntingdon.This demonstration Pepe The above photograph shows a on Wednesday evening, February én : : , Yodo ©, Re was given by Miss Marie Fremont, interior decorator, Montreal, sponsored by Marchand Freres, Huntingdon.Annual Campaign For Red Cross Begins This Month Expect Drive in Huntingdon to Take Place Last Two Weeks of March This is the time of year when the Canadian Red Cross Society launches its annual campaign for funds.The objective which has been set for the Province of Quebec is $1,000,000.00.This is less than last year, but to succeed we shall have to collect more.$750,000.00 of this quota has been alloted to the Montreal area, so that the sum we confidently hope will be collected at points in Quebec outside of Montreal is $250,000.00.The Officers and Committee Members for Huntingdon District are as follows: Dr.Paul Girard, Honorary President, Mr.Erle Martin, President, Mrs.E.M.Wood, First Vice-Presi- dent, Mr.Adrian O'Reilly, Second Vice-President, Miss Lilian M.Rankin, Secretary-Treasurer, Committees: Work\u2014Mrs.L.Roy, Miss Lily Pringle.Organization\u2014Mrs.N.W.Sparrow, Mrs.R.Rolfe.Home Nursing\u2014Mrs.G.McHardy, Miss Ingraham.Veteran's Welfare\u2014Rev.W.8.Hatcher, Mrs.Mae O\u2019Connor.First Aid\u2014Mr, J.H.Prevost, Mr.L.DdVid.Disaster, Preparedness and Re- lief\u2014Mr.F.E.Cleyn, Mr.A.L.Sellar.: Blood Donor Clinlc\u2014Miss Frances, Walker, Mrs.E.Martin, Mrs.Ruth Rennie, Mrs.F.G.McCrimmon, Mrs.K.G.Cameron, Mrs.Paul Girard, Mrs.George Lefebvre, Miss Helen Paul, Mrs.C.R.Hawley.Swimming\u2014Mrs, W.McGill, Mrs.Leo Cappiello.Publicity Mrs.F.G.McCrimmon, Compulsory In and Entertainment\u2014 Mrs.W.| K.Pope and Mrs.R.M.Cosgrove, Campaign Committee for 1952 is presently being Erle Martin.The Junior Red Cross of Hun- tingdon is one of which we can be justly proud, and functions so efficiently under the Class Directors (who are the teachers of the Hun- tingdon Academy) that it is an outstanding example to all Members of The Red Cross Society in Huntingdon.Meetings are held regularly in each classroom and money is raised by candy sales and various other ways to make up donations to The Junior Red Cross.Mr.J.B.MacMillan supervises the work and the school displays the Purple Seal which is awarded for twenty-five consecutive years of service to The Canadian Red Cross Society.At the present time the Junior Members are completing an outfit for a child of five years.The articles are all new and Miss Heiken- nen is supervising the work.À collection of $23.89 has been sent in to buy a coat and leggings.This Is wonderful work.The Red Cross belongs to every Canadian\u2014and it is up to every Canadian to see that t he Red Cross is strong and ready to meet the needs of today \u2014 and the emergencies of tomorrow.Your Red Cross serves the community through its many vital services.Owing to winter roads and the large territory to be covered in Huntingdon District it was decided at the Annual Meeting to conduct the Campaign for funds locally during the last two weeks of March.Mr.Erle Martin, President, telephone 401, will be glad to furnish information to all those wishing to assist in this Campaign.organized by Mr.surance For Taxi Owners Bylaw Passed Will Not Come Into Effect Until January 1st, 1953 Huntingdon Town Council met on Monday evening with all members present except Alderman Foisy.Minutes of the last meetings were read and a large number of accouhls were passed for payment.Mr.Brown, engineer, meet with the council and gave a report of his findings after using the new tester for the water.He suggested that lime be used in the water in order to check the acid in the water at the Filter Plant.After using the tester he found that there was more acid in the water and this could cause corrosion in the water lines and lead to leaks in the mains.The council authorized him to purchase the necessary lime and to bring the water to the neutral point required.It was decided to buy the lime locally for time being.Due to Mr.YIarry Sandys having to undergo an operation, Mr.C.Brown is now relieving at the Filter Plant, it was reported.Milk reports of samples taken on January 29th were read as follows: Belle Vallee, no bacteria count, butterfat 3.4; Elmhurst, 64,000cc and butterfat 3.8; Salaberry Dairy.86,- 000cc and butterfat 3.7.A letter signed by Remi Varin and other witnesses, complained that the town rubbish dump is not being kept clean.He asked that the man presently looking after the dump be replaced by himself and offered to pay $10.per month for the privilege of taking saleable junk from the dump.The council decided that before taking action a committee would inspect the dump to see just how well it is being kept.A by-law to provide for compulsory insurance of taxis operating in the Town of Huntingdon, was read a first and second time and passed.Under this by-law taxi owners will be required to supply the Town with a copy of a policy showing that insurance is carried for $5.000.for one passenger and $10,000.for two or more passengers and $1,000.for properly damage.Unless such policy is forthcoming, no permit will be issued for the operation of taxi in the Town of Huntingdon.The new by-law will come into force on January Ist, 1953.A by-zaw to regulate the volunteer fire brigade was read a first and second time and passed.This will come into force fifteen days after the date of reading.It will provide regulations as Lo fighting fires, personnel and regulation of traffic while a fire is being attended to.The matter of the housing pro- Ject was briefly mentioned and it was said that the Board of Trade was working on the matter.The secretary was Instructed to write the Dept.of Lands and Forests to request a survey be made of the district under consideration in connection with making improvements.Marton\u2019s Sho.Store made a request for parking space in front of their store on the corner of Bouchette Street near the Hunt- ingdon Theatre.The committees connected with this are to make a check and see if something can be done In the matter.The meeting adjourned until March 24th at the same time and place.Russell Kerr, Fertile Creek Installs New Barn Cleaner Saves Much Time and Labor and Does A Splendid Job What is claimed to be the only elevator is operated by a 1 h.p.elec- the Chateauguay Valley Teachers\u2019 one of its kind in the Chateauguay tric motor.Mr.Kerr estimates that Association met in Ormstown Hign Valley, is a new type barn cleaner which was recently installed in the barn of Russell Kerr & Sons, Fertile Creek.Labor saving it is called and labor saving it is and also a time saver.Mr.Kerr has 54 head of cattle in the stalls and the manure is cleared from the gutter behind the animals in 13 minutes.Formerly the operation took one man two hours.The barn cleaner is set up in two units, a conveyor for removing the man- Willing for anyone interested to see | Miss Cumming, the business meet- ure from the gutter to an elevator his own machine at \"Kerrdale\", which finally dumps it into a wagon or manure spreader.The conveyor is worked by an endless chain system which has paddles the same {width as the gutter and placed every 12 to 14 inches apart.The manure is emptied into a pit at the bottom of the elevator and Is picked up by this system, also equipped with paddles, carried to the top of the elevator ramp and dumped into the waiting vehicle.To accommodate the elevator, Mr.size about 16 x 20 feet.out in the weather and this eliminates freezing in cold weather and facilitates the removal of the man- and jure from the wagon.The conveyor system is powered by a 3 hp.electric motor, while the he saves one hour and forty min- iutes in cleaning his barn with this barn cleaner, The work Is done in thirteen minutes.The whole of the operation is done under cover.The machine is sold by Forano Ltd.and made by Ideal Machine Co.St.;Cesaire, Que.Mr.Kerr is quite en- (thused with this piece of equip- ;ment and feels that more farmers {would be interested In it if they could see it in operation and is ;Fertile Creek.In another part of this issue photographs appear of this machine.| Valleyfield Entry Wins i Dufferin Feature Heat ! \u2014_\u2014 | TORONTO (CP) \u2014 Lady Virtue, ,owned by the Cruise stable of Shep- - Kerr built an addition to his barn, |Pérdsville, Ky.and driven by Jim Thus it Is 'not necessary to have the wagon \u2018my Cruise, and Dickie Dale, owned and handled by Theodore Turcotte of Vaileyfield, Que, took turns chalking up heat wins in the sixth and featured harness event at Dufferin Park on Thursday, February 28.In the first heat Dickie Dale Mrs.Lindsay, Hemmingford, accompanied by 24 pupils of Hem- mingford School, visited Hunting- don yesterday.They first toured the printery of The Huntingdon Gleaner Inc.after which they were escorted through the Fawcett and After their busy morning, which the boys and girls appeared to enjoy, they went to Ormstown where they had lunch before returning to their respective homes In Hemmingford.The upper picture shows a group Grant Limited textile mill J Cents a Copy Subscription: §3.per year, TEN PAGES PRINTER AND TEXTILE OBSERVING ENTHUSIASTS of the visitors viewing two automatic presses in operation in the Gleaner printery.In the lower plc- ture eyes are fixed upon a plece of cloth being carefully checked before being further processed at the Fawcet and Grant Limited mill, Farm Workers Influx Curbed Immigration From S.Robb\u2019s Rink Defeats Ray Reddick By 1 Point To Win Moore Areas of Infection to Halt | - oT UT OTTAWA, (CP) The Canadian! Government on Monday night an- | nounced a halt in immigration of farm workers from areas in countries where foot-and-mouth disease is known to exist.This emergency move, resulting from the outbreak of the scourge in South Saskatchewan, likely will result in a sharp drop in the number of farmer Immigrants Canada expected to get this year.About 25,000 farm workers entered Canada last year, mostiy from European countries.The announcement was made in the Commons by Immigration Minister Harris.He sald that any such workers now en route to Canada will not be allowed to go on Canadian farms until they and their effects are thoroughly disinfected.A boatload of European immigrants is expected at Halifax in a few days, he added In an interview later.Those who are farm workers | will be sent to a decontamination | station at Montreal operated by the Federal Agriculture Department.| Mr.Harris sald detalls of the new policy will be worked out with the Agriculture Department.The ban will not apply to whole countries, but to districts of countries where the scourge is rampant.And it will apply only to prospective Immigrants who want to work | \u201cCanadian farms.\u201cIf à farm worker wants to come | to Canada and Work in the city and! not on farms we may have a second look at him,\u2019 Mr.Harris said.! Chateauguay Valley | { Teachers\u2019 Assoc.Meeting | On Thursday evening, Feb.28th, School, with about forty members present.The Treasurer reported $96.93 on hand.Reports were given by the chairmen of the following committees: Public Relations, In- ter-8chool Activities, and Salary Commitee.Mr.Lionel Upton, Delegate to the P.AP.T.reported on the last executive meeting.After a delicsous supper served by the staff of the Ormstown High School, under the convenership of ing continued.After a short discussion it was moved, seconded and carried that the new constitution he ; adopted.Miss Getty was appointed | chairman of the Nominating Committee, as the next regular meeting is to he the annual meeting.| Mr.King then introduced Dr.Sutton, the guest speaker of the evening, who spoke on \u201cA Health .Programme in the Modern High | School\u201d.He outlired very carefully {just what can be checked hy the school doctor with tne facilities we have in our sthools, and the importance of having the family doctor examine the children who went to the front entering the back stretch, drew clear then led every inch of the way for a handy vic- Lvs, Trophy W.Hogg of Huntingdon Defeats G.Whyte of Fertile Creek in Bonspiel Consolation Event A frienqjy Bonspiel was held in Hunungdon Curling Rink for the Moore Trophy during the past week, afternoon and evening games starting on Wednesday, February 27th.45 rinks entered this bonsplel as follows: Huntingdon 11, Orm- stown 8, Beauharnols 7, Howick 5, Valleyfield 5, Aubrey 4, Lacolle 3, and Fertile Creek 2.In the main event Sherman Robb's Huntingdon rink won over Ray Reddick\u2019s Huntingdon rink by a score of 12-11, These rinks were composed of Sherman Robb, (skip), M.Mclean, Joe Boisseau, Ken.Pope, and Ray Reddick (skip), M.Duke, Chas.Faille, J.Godin.In the consolation play W.Hogg'a Huntingdon rink defeated Glen Whyte's Fertile Creek rink by a score of 7-6.These rinks were composed of W.Hogg (skip), D.Murphy, J.Galipeau, H.Whealon, and G.Whyte, (skip), E.Brown, M.Kerr, and Albert Brown, The skips and scores of the rinks in this Bonsplel are as follows: PRELIMINARIES, J.Blake, Huntingdon, 7, Auger, Beauharnuis, 8.G.Hood, Lacolle, 12, vs.I, Heath, Huntingdon, 5.8.Robb, Huntingdon, 9, Allen, Aubrey, 5.M.Gartshore, Ormstown, 7, vs.J.Gruer, Aubrey, 9.G.Goodfellow, Huntingdon, 11, Glen Whyte, Fertile Creek, 5.I.Barrington, Ormstown, 3, vs, J.Stewart, Valleyfield, 9.MAIN EVENT vs.R.vs.A.D.Goodfellow, Huntingdon, 18, vs.Z.D\u2019'Aaoust, Beauharnois, 5.J.D.Bryson, Ormstown, 6, ves.Douglas Ness, Howick, 13.jare found with defects so they can be helped.After a short question period Mrs.Thornton, of Howick, thanked Dr.Sutton on behalf of the group present.The meeting was then adjourned.Artificial Breeding Of Calves Growing Forty per cent of calves registered with the Quebec branch, Holstein - Friesian Association, in the last year came from artificial breeding.Vertel Smiley, president, sald on Monday at the annual general meeting of the association held at the Queen's Hotel, Montreal, \u201cThe future of the breed\u201d he said, \u201cdepends a lot on artificial breeding.As its use increases, s0 does the responsibility of those who operate the units.this work and keep the females in our herds at a high standard.\u201d bec came from Holstein herds.tory.and J.J.Murphy, Huntingdon.We must co-operate in Dr.P.E.Begin sald that 60 per cent of the milk produced in Que- Master Breeder certificates were presented to Hon.Donat Raymond B.Ness, Howick, 18, vs.T.Brooks, Lacolle 3.(+.Roy, Fertile Creek, 14, vs.G.Collum, Huntingdon, 13.McCormick, Ormstown, E.Elliott, Beauharnois, 9.F.Hope, Ormstown, 9, vs.B.Atkinson, Valleyfield, 10.G.P.Elder, Huntingdon, J.Hope, Lacolle, 13.11, Va.1, v8.First Round: R.Auger 5 vs.G.Hood 186.8.Robb 6 vs.J.Gruer 4.G.Goodfellow 11 vs, J.Stewart 2.Dr.Stalker 8 vs.E.Brault 4.G.Gwyn 11 vs.E.Goodfellow 4.K.Robb 8 vs.P.Soucy 8.Mitch.Ness 11 vs.A.Anderson 4.D.Goodfellow 10 vs.Doug.Ness 7 B.Brunet 12 vs.R.Ness 3.Boisvert 6 vs.M.Smith 13.Ray Reddick 17 vs.Don.Ness 5.W.Hogg 7 vs.J.Cluff 6.M.Robb 14 vs.D.C.Currie 5.Bruce Ness (winner) vs G.Roy.A.McMcCormick 7 vs.W.Atkin- aon 10.J.Hope 10 va.£.Rennie 8.Second Round: G.Hood 6 vs.8.Robb 9.G.Goodfellow 6 vs.Dr.Stalker 10 Gwyn 9 va.K.Robb 10 Mitch.Ness 6 vs.D.Goodfellow 10.B.Brunet 7 vs.M.Smith 8.Ray Reddick 18 vs.J.Cluff 2.M.Robb 10 vs.Bruce Ness 9.W.Atkineon 2 vs.J.Hope 11.Quarter Finals: Dr.Stalker 3 vs.8.Robb 10.I.Goodfellow 5 vs.K.Robb 8.M, Smith 5 vs.Ray Reddick 7.M.Robb 10 vs.J.Hope 8.Semi-Finals: Sherman Robb, Huntingdon 13, vs.Keaith Robb, Aubrey, 6.Ray Reddick, Huntingdon, 8, vs.Morris Robb, Aubrey, 6.Finals: Sherman Robb, Huntingdon, 12, vs.Ray Reddick, Huntingdon 11.CONSOLATION First Round: Gartshore 14 vs.À.Allen 7.G.Collum 7 vs.T.Brooks 4.E.Goodfellow 14 vs.E.Brault 7.J.Blake (defauit) vs.I, Heath.E.Filiitt 13 vs.F.Hope 7.G.P.Elder 16 vs.J.D.Bryson 6.Second Round: M Gartsahore 13 vs.Z.D'Aoust 9.G.Collum 12 vs.R.Ness 8.I.Barrington 5 vs.Glen Whyte 10.R.Boisvert 11 vs.Don Ness 10.A.Anderson vs.W.Hogg (won by default).E.Rennie 10 vs.D.C.Currie 12.E.Goodfellow vs I.Heath (default).E.Elliott 10 vs.G.P.Elder 4.Quarter Finals: M.Gartshore 8 vs.G.Collum 10.Glen Whyte 15 va.R.Boisvert 6.W.Hogg 14 vs.D.C.Currie 1, E.Goodfellow 3 vs.E, Ellict 12.Semi-Finals: G.Collum 5 vs.Glen Whyte 13.W.Hogg 9 vs.E.Elliott 6.Finals; Q.Whyte 6 vs.W.Hogg 9. Page Two The Huntingdon Gleaner Wednesday, March Sth, 1952 The Howick Ayrshire Calf Club, can well add another proud, outstanding credit to its long record of achievements.The latest record being as regards the performance of two of its members at the 1852 Macdonald College Students \u2018\u2018Royal Show\u201d.It might, of course, be assumed that since they are scions of families that have a long record of accomplishment in the breeding of Ayrshire cattle the two members concerned doubtless inherited their acumen and knowledge of Ayr- shires.Added to that, they have been in close contact with the intricacies of breeding, fitting and showing.all their young lives; have had as their patterns their fathers and several male-relatives who are well versed in Ayrshire cattle breeding, in every sense of that expression.However, the Howick-Ayrshire Calf Club has doubtless helped them to put into practise on their own, so to speak, their inherited instincts, learnings, etc., insofar as fitting and showmanship are concerned.OAKBURN AND BURNSIDE I have of course ben referring to Kenneth (Kenny) Roy, son of G.A.and Mrs.Roy of Oakburn Farm, Howick, and Bernice (Bernie) Ness, daughter of Douglas A.and Mrs.Ness of Burnside Farms, Howick.Their record in Calf Club work is indeed a spectacular one, both have shown their calves to leading places, including first and championships at Club shows and Ormstown Exhibition; both have taken leading awards in the showmanship contests, including several firsts and championships.PROVINCIAL CONTESTANTS In 1851 they were selected by the Howick-Ayrshire Calf Club, because of their top standing, to go to Sherbrooke Exhibition to compete in the final judging contests, between similar teams from across the Province of Quebec from which were selected the teams which would represent the Province at the Inter-Provincial Boys\u2019 and Girls\u2019 Calf Club Judging Contests at the Royal Winter Fair.That is, in their instance, in the Dairy Cattle section.It is true that as a team they only came second at Sherbrooke but the margin of points between that team and the winner was a very slim one indeed, and the winning team beat all the other Inter-Provincial Dairy Cattle Judging Teams at the Royal.MACDONALD CHAMPIONS This year they are both students 2 GETTING UP Getting you Down?If morning finds you only hall rested, still \u2014if sleep weary your tia) sleep usually suffers.To help your kidneys teqain a normal condition, use Dodd's Kidney Pills.Dodd's help the kidneys get rid of poisons and excess acids in your system.Then your uneasiness disappears \u2014you can enjoy restful unbroken sleep\u2014 and awake refreshed and ready for work or play.Get Dodd's Kidney Pills today.147 Dodds Kidney Pills Round Byre \u201cx, Ring By Frank Napier at Macdonald College, specialising, \u2018of course, in Animal Husbandry, and so it is that at the Macdonald College Students \u201cRoyal Show\u201d, they headed all the other contestants in the showmanship contests.Kenny Roy won first of all the Ayrshire Showmanship contests, in competition with the first prize winners in the various Ayrshire classes, then the grand championship of the Dairy Cattle division, in competition with the champion and reserve champion Holstein showmen.Finally he won the grand championship for showmanship.In the latter instance the winning showmen of the Beef cattle, Sheep and Swine sections were also in competition.Similarly, Bernie Ness was reserve champion in all three contests to Kenny Roy.In addition, Bernie showed the first prize Macdonald Dimple 4th, and likewise was first for showmanship in that class.In competing for the reserves in the Dairy Cattle and Grand Contests, she had to compete with the champion and reserve champion showmen of the Beef cattle, Sheep and Swine sections.Incidentally, whilst the animals were judged on a conformation basis, and placed accordingly, preparation and showring performance were the factors taken into consideration insofar as the showmanship end was concerned.It will be noted from the report which is given elsewhere in this issue several other students from this district were also leading prize winners.FOOT AND MOUTH The outstanding question, in fact anxiety of today, insofar as Canadian livestock-men are concerned, be they owners of grade or purebred herds of cattle, flocks of sheep or studs of swine, is the \u201cFoot and Mouth\u201d situation.Its present actual and prospective future repercussions.Nevertheless so much has been sald over the Radio, carried in the Newspapers, etc.that any comments on my part would not add very much to or be of any value insofar as that very, very vital situation is concerned.However, whilst Regina, Saskatchewan, the present seat of the disease, and we hope it will be held there, the repercussions have been far reaching \u2014 domestic trading has been interrupted and the United States has put an embargo on cat- | tle, sheep, swine and several other commodities which had found a good market in the United States.Let's hope that the disease will be arrested by an early date, in the district in which it originated, and in that respect I would say that the fight is being supervised by three men who have a very high standing as practical as well as administrative Veterinarians \u2014 Dr.T.Church, Veterinary Director and his assistant Dr.Wells; Dr.C.A, Mitchell, outstanding research specialist in charge of the Animal Diseases Research Institute.TRYPANOSOMIASIS Serious and all though it was, the outbreak at Thamesford, Ont.was happily not due to Foot and Mouth.It was diagnosed as being the above named disease, a tropical disease which is practically new to Canada, or at any rate never so diagnosed here.At least that was the diagnosis of the Federal Lab- oratory but the Provincial authori- And every time X think of her, I \u201cWell, at least I'm keeping up I've just caught up with her now! \u201cNow I've caught up Grandma was one of those unforgettable characters you read about.sayings: \u201cEarly sow \u2014 Early mow\u201d.Many years have passed since Grandma died.But just the other day something happened to remind me of that old motto of hers.1 was working over my budget, trying not to admit what the figures told me: My savings had slipped.At this rate, it was a cinch that some of the things I'd started to save for would have to wait.Suddenly I remembered \u201cEarly sow .L.\u201cOld-fashioned stuff!\u201d I told myself.Then I got to thinking.\u201cMaybe it is tough to save today.But it's still important .still my only hope of getting some of the things I want most.thought.\u201cThat's a way of saving which combines protection for my family as well.And maybe if I make an extra effort to put more money aside I'll reach my goals sooner.; \u201cSo here goes! I'll try again.I'll find some new ways to economize.Somehow I'm sure I can manage to be more thrifty.\u201d And you know \u2014 it's a funny thing! The moment I made that decision, 1 realized that Grandma's idea was not old-fashioned.THE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES in CANADA with Grandma!\u201d remember one of her favourite my life insurance payments,\u201d I and their representatives Need ties diagnosed it as Anaplasomis, also a rare disease, also tropical.However, whatever the name, jt would appear that, unlike foot and mouth, the danger of contagion is believed comparatively slight.While we are not aware of the exact nature of the disease, we understand that it is spread by some species of \u2018tick\u2019 and resembles Texas tick fever.The herd at Thamesford, Ont.which was attacked was comprised of 45 head of beef cattle which were purchased last fall at Calgary, Alta.at more than $8,000 in replacement of a Holstein herd.All the 45 head were shot and buried in a deep trench.U.S.AYRSHIRE NEWS A few items regarding Ayrshire cattle progress in the United States during the year 1951 will probably be of interest to a number of our Ayrshire readers here.During the year 1951 the Ayrshire Breeders\u2019 Association of the United States registered 25,463 animals\u20143,458 males, 22,006 female.New York State headed the list of registrations with 4,424 or 174%, with Pennsylvania next with 2,794 registrations or 11.09%.Heading the list of breeders who registered 25 or more animals was Willlam A.Gibson, Spencer, Mass., with 116 registrations.Also in that list are A.H.Hatch Estate, Gran- by, Mass, with 86 registrations; J.Willis McGee, Anderson, S.C., with 54 registrations.WELL KNOWN HERE Messrs.Gibson and Carpenter and the A.H.Hatch Estate are, of course, well known in that district in which they have been frequent purchasers of Ayrshires over a period of years.In fact William A.Gibson's connection with this district dates back some 40 years or so.After he first crossed the ocean, from Ayrshire, Scotland, in 1811, he proceeded to Huntingdon where he worked for a year with McMillan & Leggatt at Springburn Farm, after which he worked for another year or so for the late Dave Macfarlane of Kelso Stock Farm.He then took over the old Barrie farm on which he built up a pretty good Ayrshire herd.However, after some 3 years or so he went to Alta Crest Farms as manager, which position he held until a few years ago when he took over one of the Alta Crest Farms on his own.(PS.We regret to learn that at present Mr.Gibson is very seriously ill».MILLION DOLLAR SALES During the year 1851 a total of 3,269 head of Ayrshires were sold in organized auction sales in the United States for a total of $1,- 179,941.50 or a general average of $360.95.Aside from the 3,269 animals sold by auction there were 14,685 others for which transfers were made resulting from private transfers, making a total of 17,954 transfers recorded during 1951.However whilst registrations realized an increase that amounted to 1,227 over the previous 12 months, 52 fewer transfers were processed.AYE! AN AWFU' PRICE From Farming News of Scotland: Overheard in Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow \u2014 One lady to her friend: \u201cI see a bull was sold in Perth for 10,000 guineas\u201d.Her friend's retort was: \u201cAye, and at a \u2018sale\u2019 tae!\u201d Hemmingford HEMMINGFORD \u2014 The World Day of Prayer Service was observed in Hemmingford United Church on February 29th.This service was under the leadership of Mrs.P.Simpson, also Mrs.C.Jackson and Mrs.M.Brown.Those who assisted with the service were Mrs.J.Paré, Mrs.D.Andrews, Mrs.R.Hadley, Miss S.Brown, Mrs.McVey and Mrs, Geo.Brown, who gave a very inspiring address on the theme, \u201cChrist our Hope and the Power of Prayer in the Christian Life\".A few members of the choir sang \"My Saviour Walks With Me.\u201d This service was well attended and the manner in which it was conducted was an inspiration to all.The St.Andrew's United Church Missionary Society met at the home of Mrs.Margaret Pelletier on Wednesday, February 27th, with Mrs.Mabel Keddy.co-hostess.The meeting opened by repeating the 23rd Psalm in unison, followed by prayer from the prayer card.The two delegates, Mrs.J.Paré and Mrs.C.Cleland, brought to the Society, two welz-compiled reports from the Presbyterial.These reports were most interesting and were given in a very efficient manner.Mrs.Geo.Brown thanked the delegates for their splendid reports.Mrs.Herb Barrington read an interesting chapter from the Study Book \u201cNothing Short of a Miracle\u201d, which was enjoyed by all.It was decided to hold the annual St.Patrick's Tea in the United Church Hall.The meeting was dismissed by Rev.W.Holmes.Delicious refreshments were served by the hostess and a social hour enjoyed.Mr.and Mrs.Charlies Smith spent Saturday at St.John's.Mrs, Mabel Keddy is spending several days with her brother and sister-in-law, Mr.and Mrs.John Glass, Roxham.Mrs.Glass\u2019 friends Will be pleased to hear her health is improving after spending two weeks at the Physicians\u2019 Hospital, Platts- burg, N.Y.Miss Helena Ryan spent Wednesday in Montreal, Mrs.J.Wylie and Ian also recently spent a day in Montreal.a taxi to help you through traffic to slink ?VEUOW PAGES will find one- Quick as a wink ! DIRECTORY °°, Portrait of Young , - ; IN A TRENCH in Korea a youn watches the explosion of the Man Facing Death man is crouching.He loeks up and thering mortar fire that was meant to prevent him and his comrades capturing the trench.It is a picture of death going overhead and it was taken when the King\u2019s Shropshire Light Infantry of the 20,000-strong British Commonwealth Division drove strongly entrenched Communists from a 1,000-ft, high peak \u2014 Helping to Promote Dairy Products\u2019 Sale The fast expanding operation of Dairy Farmers of Canada Publicity Branch and the Dairy Foods Service Bureau were indicated by figures given by O.J.W.Shugg, director of publicity, in the report of the management committee to the annual meeting in Montreal.For the advertising and promotion of the sale of dairy products, said Mr.Shugg, 4,385 advertisements were used by 80 daily and 266 weekly newspapers across Canada.There were 126 10-minute dairy food broadcasts and 26 network broadcasts which included 39 stations.Of the network program, \u201cDown Dairy Lane\u201d Mr.Shugg gave survey figures indicating that this Dairy Farmers' program has grown in popularity until it is now one of the most popular daytime programs in most Canadian areas.Thirty full-color \u2018ads in women's magazines, 69 farm press ads, and 366 public relations ads in daily, weekly and farm papers were used during the year.In addition to this published advertising, 4,341 truck cards, 27,762 streamers and 193,114 others pieces of point-of-sale material were distributed.The Dairy Foods Service Bureau, under its food editor, Marie Fraser, distributed 101,000 English and 25,- 000 French recipe pamphlets; 35 food page stories with pictures and tested recipes were released.It was also noted that the increase in the use of independent dairy food stories and recipes by press food editors, was very marked.The bureau also supplied 120 English women\u2019s radio commentators with dairy foods material.It had also handled 5,553 English mail requests for information on dairy foods, in addition to hundreds of telephone calls, These requests had come from all parts of the country and some from outside of Canada.The work of the bureau was constantly brought to the attention of national groups of influential people, which include Dominion and provincial government nutritionists, home economists, nutrition directors and extension directors; provincial dairy commissioners, and the heads of home economics and dairy departments in Canadian universities.During the last year dairy foods promotions occurred in all but three months of the year.Fluid milk, butter, cheese, evaporated milk, milk powder and ice cream campaigns were launched, and in occurred.These were the ice cream promotion in May; National Cheese Festival in October: \u201cJune is Dairy Month\u201d in June and \u201cDairy Foods in Winter Meals\u201d in November, which promoted all dairy foods.In the first part of 1952, the January promotion was on butter, April will be on evaporated milk and milk powder, and the \u201cJune is Dairy Month\u201d campaign in June.The decrease in last year's June set- aside necessarily curtailed the effort in the first half of this year to some extent.During the last year, Dairy Farmers of Canada press releases received good coverage.These releases rated space to a value of $39,000.It was significant, said Mr.Shugg, that another $37,000 worth of space was devoted to independent reporting of Dairy Farmers\u2019 | activities, At the close of the four-day j meeting, Gilbert McMillan was reelected to a third term as president.Gordon Loveridge, president of Saskatchewan Co-operative Creamery Association, was elected vice-president.He succeeds John T.Ballantyne, of Atwood, Ont., who announced his retirement.The sec- man, secretary-manager of Manitoba Dairy and Poultry Co- Operative.Ltd.Autumn always brings a number of tasks to the home owner, especially if he is a gardener.A few days ago I noticed such a man preparing for winter.constructed a reel for his garden hose, impressing upon me the need to drain it after use, then to store it dry in order to prevent the rubber from rotting.Well, his idea is worth copying.Dundee DUNDEE\u2014Mr.and Mrs.Fred White and son Robert, of McMas- terville, Que., spent the week-end with Mr.and Mrs.Earl McNicol and Mrs.Eleanor McNicol.Mrs.Earl McNicol returned home with them and expects to spend a week with her relatives, Mrs.Eleanor McNicol spent three \u2018days the past week visiting in Hun- tingdon at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Fred Stark and Mr.and Mrs.Nicol Stark.Miss Isabel Stowell, of Ottawa, spent the week-end with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.T.W.Stowell.Mr.Guy Stowell expects to attend another Pish and Game Conference being held in Montreal, Wednesday and Thursday of thls week.Trout River TROUT RIVER\u2014Mr.and Mrs, James Bush of Verdun spent the past week-end guests of Mr.and Mrs.J.R.MacDonald.Mr.and Mrs.Lloyd Allen and children of Aubrey were also recent guests of the MacDonald family and Mrs.Dear.Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Peters of Montreal visited on Sunday at the home of their mother, Mrs.Mary Anderson.Mr.and Mrs.V.N.Elder, Dawn, Karen and Gordon, also Mr.and Mrs, G.P.Elder were guests at the home of John D.Elder on Sunday.Mr.and Mrs.B.A.Rankin and Mr.and Mrs.J.R.MacDonald enjoyed the day at Macdonald College on Monday.Beauharnois Trinity Anglican Church BEAUHARNOIS\u2014The annual report of Trinity Church was presented at the vestry meeting held recently.The rector, Rev.W.G.Walsh, presided.All obligations for the year were met and as a result of careful supervision of expenses, a small surplus was shown for the year.Attention was drawn to the fact that the number of families in the parish had doubled during the past ten years.The Women's Auxiliary again reported a very active season, being successful, both socially and financially.Sunday School attendance had been maintained at a high level.Officers elected for 1952 were: TI rector's warden.R.G.Tait; people\u2019s warden, W.MacLeod; gates to synod, F.Gwyn and M.Walsh; auditors, T.J.Gillians and H.B.Portér.Members of the select vestry are: J.A.Gillians, R.G.Tait, W.MacLeod, J.C.Courtney, G.Gwyn, M.Walsh, T.Hill, R.L.Hauver, and two members of the W.A.Mr.and Mrs.C.W.Kilgour spent | the week-end at North Hatley, vis- : iting their daughter, Miss Susan Kilgour, at King's Hall School, Compton, and their son, Master | John Kilgour, at Bishop\u2019s College School, Lennoxville.The Senior Woman's Missionary Society of St.Edward's Presbyterian Church met at the home of! Mrs.Robert Turnbull, Sr., Thursday afternoon, The World Day of Prayer was held in Trinity*Church Friday evening.The leaders were Mrs.D.C.Currie, Trinity Church and Mrs, R.B.Cailhoun, St.Edward\u2019s Presby- .terian Church.Prayers were offered by Mrs.M.R.Reany, Mrs.R.G.Tait, Mrs.R.N.Hauver, Trinity ond vice-president is Fred J.Good- | Alice Holmes, St.Edward's.Mrs.G.the | HAMPERS FOR CLOTHES His wife was just as handy, in fact she had converted a bushel basket into a clothes- Church, Mrs.F.S.Reany and Miss Graham spoke on the topic chosen by the Inter-Church Council of Canada, \u201cWhat is done with your | He had already neighbours.in a few minutes nailing the tops SHELVES for the basement ORANGE CRATES STACKED- FASTEN WITH SHORT NAILS.IF TO CARRY A FAIR WEIGHT FASTEN TO WALL.ALL SURFACES MUST BE SMOOTH TO TAKE PAINT OR ENAMEL.JOINS MAY BE GIVEN TOUCH OF GOOD GLUE IN ADDITION TO NAILS.CONCEAL ALL NAIL HEADS PLASTIC WOOD.WITH PUTTY OR 1E-TOP BOT GR MAT USE 1\" PINE FASTENED WITH CLEATS NAIL DOWN BOTTLE Hire ROUGH EDGES UP, TO COVER BOARD COMPLETELY.H el OTHE S HAMPER FROM BUSHEL BASKET - LINED WITH CHINTZ OR CRETONNE - OUTSIDE PAINTED.I envel- | 5 ope secretary, J.C.Courtney; dele- | Ç basket by enamelling the outside white, and the inside lined with colourful chints.This seemed to be the envy of her DOOR-MAT FROM BOTTLE TOPS There was a youngster in the home, the kind that thoughtlesaly ran in after school without wiping his feet.Dad soon corrected this by collecting bottle tops, then Chateauguay Valley Hockey League The final games in this league are now under way, the Athelstan Flyers after disposing of the Clydes Corners\u2019 team in the semi-finals, which to all of us was a major upset, to a team that had gone 80 far during the regular season, bu! that is what makes hockey the game that it is.Chateauguay West having defeated Howick in three straight games, met Athelstan in the first games of the finals on Feb.21st in the Ormstown Arena, Athelstan.winning this first games 2-1.In the second game which was played the following Monday night in Athel- stan, the Flyers were again the victors by a score of 4 to 3.On Thursday night last the third Money.\u201d Mrs.R.D.Beddoes presided at the organ.Mr.and Mrs.were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Kokko over the week-end.A delicious luncheon was served to guest Clubs \u201cat the Curling Club Thursday.Mrs.Morin, Mrs.Robt.Job were co-conveners.Tre Ladies\u2019 Aid Society of St.J.J.Marchand A.Edward's Presbyterian Church held.a successful Bake Sale in the Shawinigan Power Headguarters on St.Lawrence Street on Saturday afternoon.Mrs.E.Brault will visit Lachute Curling Club Thwsday with a | team from the local Club.Miss Audrey Lagden returned from the Hospital on Thursday.ui - ~d Lego The pause that refreshes game was played in Ormstown.In this game Chateauguay West scored two in the first period and again two in the second.The ice was fast and the Flyers could not seem to get going.At the end of the second period they were down 4 to 6, but in the third period things began to happen and before it ended they had rammed home three goals but not enough to tie it up.Those present were treated to all the thrills of a fast and furious finish.The teams are well matched and both turned in a good brand of hockey and met again on Monday in Ormstown, for the fourth game of a best 3 out of 5 series, in which Athelstan has now won 3 and Ormstown 1, Athelstan defeating Ormsiown 5-4 in overtime, \u2018There are 225 teachers of law in Canada.al, fr Let Our Experts Fit It RIGHT! + Unless you are a train\u201d ed electrician, trying to fix today's complex appliances is unwise .for you may make matters worse, and you risk getting a bad electrical shock.Let our EXPERTS doit.Come in now! S.J.CURRIE \u201cEverything Electrical\u201d Ph.418, Huntingdon N.F.MANNING MUTUAL FUNDS CONSULTANT P.O.Box 450, Huntingdon, Tel.731 Representing J.C.ROGERS & COMPANY LTD.WIT 4L INVESTMENTS Royal Bank Bldg., 360 St.James St.W., Montreal, P.Q.Telephone BE.2541 DROIT USENET TT SORE THROAT amateur he made a door-mat by in even rows on two > ® Don\u2019t suffer from common sore throat, when you can do something about it.Rub in soothing Minard\u2019s Liniment \u2014 get a supply, today! Get quick relief\u2014today! \u2018 INARDS \"KING OF PAIN\u201d LINIMENT the tops were nailed pieces of pine joined with a pair of noticed that ORANGE CRATES FOR SHELVES This chap turned out to be quite an craftsman, and he liked everything in order.He was very proud of two shelves he had constructed from orange crates, one to serve his purposes in the basement, and the second one, nicely finished, for the living room.FRAMEWORK OF 1/2\" SQUARE MATERIAL, REEL OF OLD BROOM HANDLES, THE CENTRAL ONE FASTENED TO THE UPRIGHTS WITH TWO BOLTS.SMALL WOODEN WHEELS MADE WITH A KEYHOLE-SAW.AXLE A HALF-INCH ROD OF IRON.ÿ THE HUNTINGDON GLEANER, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5th, 1962 Editorial N otes.A Dreaded Animal Disease threat of the worst kind to the whole of Canada was unfolded in Saskatchewan the past week, it was the outbreak in that province of the dreaded foot and mouth disease.Fortunately, so far, the outbreak is confined to a small area of the Province of Saskatchewan and if it is possible to keep it confined there, the danger to the rest of Canada will not be so great.However, all of Canada will feel the effects of the restrictions that necessarily were placed to safeguard against the spread of the disease.While the disease is peculiar to certain animals only, it is possible for humans to become carriers and thus transfer the disease from infected to non-infect- ed areas.There is the danger of the unknown quantity in an outbreak of this kind as it is impossible to know just how many carriers may have been in the area of if- fection and have by now transferred the disease elsewhere.Some animals may have been shipped out in ignorance of them having the disease or being in contact with same.Time alone will tell if the outbreak has actually been confined to the area now being investigated.Approximate measures have been taken in this area and it may be that the disease will be eradicated right on the spot.We hope this proves to be the case, for if it spreads, it could ruin a great number of farmers throughout the country.In any event, farmers are going to feel the effects of the outbreak because of the restrictions that have been placed on shipments to the U.S.A.and interprovincial points.Not only has livestock shipment been stopped, but also that of meat and various kinds of feeds.In this district a considerable amount of livestock shipping is done, thus the restrictions will be felt along this line.Large quantities of feed are also shipped from here and losses will be felt in this direction.It was announced on Satur- Education Week - ES, this is Education Week and the slogan of the week is \u201cEducation \u2014 Everybody's Business.\u201d This slogan has been in force for several years now and more and more it is realized that it is everybody's business.More and more the word \u201ceducation\u201d rises before us in various ways.There are reports that less high school students are passing out of the high schools and into the universities; those in the universities have very poor standings in many of the subjects.Then there is trouble in the teaching fraternity in many parts of the country for various reasons.Parents are dissatisfied with results obtained by their children and so forth.Thus is looks as if Education should be Everybody's Business.even if it isn't.This week from March 3rd to the Sth is set aside for a general observance of what pertains to education.Special programs are being sponsored by the various schools and parents and friends are being invited to attend the schools and see for themselves what is being done.But still very few parents take advantage of these opportunities.This is a time when they could visit the schools and ask a few questions and find out somé of the things that perhaps they have been wondering about.Only when everybody makes it his or her business will we know why many of the things are as they are, or can be bettered, or revamped for improvement.Questions which could well be studied during this week are: Why are there so day that the Quebec government had issued an Order in Council regarding the shipping of meat and animals.Certificates will have to be obtained in order to permit any shipments into this province of products coming under the ban, which includes livestock, meats and hides.It is impossible at this time ty tell just how long the situation will remain as is or if the spread has been checked.Warmer weather and the return of flies may mean that further outbreaks will be uncovered.There is no need to worry about stocks of meat in this province, officials have announced.for they are adequate for the present.In Ottawa circles the Quebec Order is described as confusing and it is doubtful, if the authorities here have the right to restrict interprovincial trade in such manner.On the other hand Mr.Duplessis told newsmen that he feels it is necessary to protect the farmers and the health of the citizens generally.It will be some time before the infected areas can be declared free of the disease and much testing and cleaning up will have to be done in those areas.How the disease was introduced will have to be cleared up also.At present it is thought it was brought here By immigrants arriving from European countries.Other probabilities arc that it may be part of a Communist campaign to injure our economy.If the actual source can be traced, it is possible that a complete check may be effected.In this way the outbreak will be confined and the greater danger avoided.Meantime the possibilities cannot be overlooked or treated too lightlv.Farmers in the business of rearing and caring for animals which could be affected.should be constantly alert for outbreaks and if found.should report them immediately, We can onlv hope that the outbreak will not spread and that a check has been placed upon it in time.Everybody\u2019s Business many failures in the upper grades of our schools today?Is the fault with the student, the parents or the teachers?Is the fault with our present-day method of teaching the various subjects or should there be more concentration on the fundamental sub- jetes\u201d Should psychology play a more important part as the child advances through the various stages of learning?Should there be an attempt made to find out what a child is most adapted for and thus whether he or she is receiving the right type of education to fit him or her in their after life?These and many more questions of like nature seem to be those most prominent in the minds of people today.On the invitation that has been issued \u2014 why not let everybody make education his or her business.We could lend our constructive criticism to the cause and perhaps many of the problems could be solved as a result.We notice in a dispute now being argued in Montreal.that the Home and School Associations have offered their services in an effort to help settle the dispute.We believe that much can be accomplished in educational matters if a spirit of cooperation is allowed to engender between the home and school.Thus the Home and School meetings are a proper place at which to discuss manv of the problems confronting education.Tt is felt that insufficient knowledge of school matters is brought to public attention and that if more were known, better results would be forthcoming in some disputes.War in Korea Somewhat (Overshadowed J VENTS in the past few weeks such as the death and funeral of his late Majesty King George VI, the present outbreak of Foot and Mouth Disease and other such important items, have tended to put the Korean situation in the background of the news.However, it is far from being a background event and is looming up in many ways to the fore.While the armistice is just about as far away as when the two forces were battling out the war in the fiercest manner.the talks towards such a truce are still going on.The latest development is that the Chinese Reds want Russia as one of the neutral countries to regulate the terms of the armistice.Officials of the United Nations negotiators will have nothing whatever to do with Russia being one of the neutral observers.Thus it looks like another deadlock in the negotiations and the war still goes on.It could be that the Korea war will ve more said about it in the Federal House at Ottawa that is presently meeting, especially in regard to the Sabre Jet F86, which Canada continues to build._.A laudable curiosity.Laudable, considering that when United States Air Force Chief of Staff General Hoyt S.Vandenberg returned recently from an inspection trip in Korea he made the following statement, quoted by the Christian Science Monitor: \u201cThe Russian-made MIG 15 which the Communists are using against the UN in Korea is a superior fighter and in many respects can out-perform our own F886, the only airplanes the MIG on approximately even terms.\u201d General Vanderberg added: \u201cWhat is momentarily discouraging about the performance of the MIG is its demonstrated ability to operate at speeds in excess of sound (that is 750 mph).The high quality of the MIG alons should prove a timely warning to all of us that Soviet technicians have mastered the design and production problems of extremely high speed aircraft to a degree which equals and in some respects excel all that we are able to demonstrate in warfare at the present time.They already have large numbers of supersonic aircraft capable of supersonic flight.\u201d \u201cMomentarily discouraging\u201d is bad enough.It could be far worse than that if, with the facts of the MIG before us, we went on spending millions on an inferior jet plane.The Huntingdon Gleaner Published by THE HUNTINGDON GLEANER INC.' ADAM L.SELLAR, President and Editor, Huntingdon, Que.Authorized as second class matter, Post Office Department, Ottawa.Subscription Rate: $3.00 per year, US.A.$4.00 Single Copy 7c Member of: Canadian Weekly Newspapers\u2019 Association; Ont.-Que.Division, C.W.N.A.Audit Bureau of Circulation a though every precaution wlll bs tak.sn to avoid error.The Gleaner accepts advertising In Ite columns on the understanding that It will not be liable for any error In any advertisement published here.unger unless s proof of such advertisement le requested in writing by the advertiser and returned to he Gleaner Susiness office duly signed by ths adver.si VE he tiser and with such error or correction plainly noted In writing thereon, and In that case, if any error so noted ls not corrected by The Gleaner, Its llability shall not exceed such a proportion of the entire cost of such advertisement as the space occupied by the noted error bears to the whole space occupied by such advertisement.Random Glimpses of The Past Taken From Gleaner Files 1890 July 10 The building of the new sheep pens on the show ground was sold to John Lanktree for $133.McGinnis Brothers are receiving at the station machinery from Toronto to refit their factory at Athel- stan for making lasts, handles, and the like.July 31 Ormstown\u2014New potatoes are now selling at $1 per bushel.The first supply of new potatoes sold at $1.20.August 7 Dundee\u2014The clerk of the weather Is making it hot for us these days.4th inst.3 p.m.just looked at my thermometer.and it stood 100° in the shade.I want you to know that my thermometer is none of your lazy kind, it goes to the top every time.Perspiration oozing from the forehead while wielding the pen, is a sure indication that there is an extra big fire somewhere.The Valuators finished their labors last week and made the value of assessable property in the village $377,500, and of non-taxable £73,760, showing a slight increase.The population they ascertained to be 1,217, an increase of only 34 in the past three years.The valuation of Godmanchester is one of the few townships that takes the actual value as its basis of assessment and its property foots up to $1,035,985.The Hinchinbrook valuation added $117.000 to the gross amount, chiefly by raising the value of property on the 1st, 2nd and 3rd ranges.The owners of gravelly land farms are indignant and the prospect is that the roll will be set\u2019 aside upon an informality.Elgin's valuation shows a slight reduction, being $532,405, against $540,955 in 1887.All the valuators complain of inaccuracies in the cadastre, several of them of a serious nature.August 28 A slight shock of an earthquake was felt on the night of the 20th.The noise was loud enough to waken light sleepers.Walter Paton has paid 60 cents the 100 lbs.on account of July milk.For June he gave 65 cents and May 75 cents.For the first time in many years, it looks as if the village was not going to have the addition of a single new building.There have been repairs and alterations, but no new and bricklayers say it is the dullest season they have known, the building in the country being trifling.September 11 Russeltown\u2014The county is in an intense state of excitement over daring acts of robbery.Some people are afraid to go to bed, others sleep in their stables with loaded revolvers beside them.Carriage wheels are taken off to prevent the thieves from taking the vehicles.September 18 Dr.Clouston, who has been practising in Howick for about three years, has taken up his abode here as successor to Dr.Elder.who leaves for Montreal.A bale of hops worth $75 belonging to the Cazaville company was stolen from White's Station on Friday night.October 2 : The sherriff sold on Monday the lot on Newfoundout, 96 acres, owned by Peter McNaughton, Jr., to Angus McNaughton of this place for $2,200.Huntingdon Academy again comes out first in the \u2018competitive examinations, having 10,000 points more than any other institution, It gets the highest grant for the current year, $500.October 23 Mr.Angus McNaughton, agent for the C.P.R.has been notified that the company ts now ready to issue tickets for trips around the world,! at a cost of $600.The journey is to be performed in 80 days.Verily the work moves.The exterior of the Academy has! undergone a transformation, having been cemented and striped and a porch crected.| October 30 The surprise, oft and long expressed, that Athelstan should be without a resident physician, no longer has cause.Dr.Rowat, a nephew of the minister, and one of McGill's best students and with four year's experience has settled in the rising village.November 6 The first car of anthracite coal from the west was received here last week by Boyd & Co.It cost 10c a ton more than that which comes over the Delaware & Hudson, but it | is of much better quality.It Is possible this district may yet be supplied direct from the mines in house has been built.Carpenters Western Pennsylvania.As A When the Japanese made their sneak air raid on Pear! Harbor they did great damage to the American naval forces, but at the same blow they completely destroyed their own industrial and world trade, especially in the manufacture and export of cotton textiles.From the First World War until 1939 the dustry was spectacular.mid-twenties it was exporting mainly to Asiatic countries, but it rapidly expanded its sales into virtually all markets, and by 1938 it had 40 per cent of the entire international trade in cotton textiles.The chief exporting countries to feel the impact of Japanese competition were Britain, United States, France, Italy, Holland and Belgium.For many years Britain had dominated the world\u2019s cotton goods trade.having in 1813 an export volume of 73 per cent of the total.From this high point she gradually descended to less than 20 per cent in | 1938, This decline was in part due to the growth of textile manufactures in many countries, but the major single factor was Japanese competition.Lancashire, as I myself knew it \u2018before the first war, was a hive of cotton industries.These were reduced to idleness and I believe that the unemployment that {followed | was responsible for the spread of socialistic ideas in Britain.But no amount of Socialism could have altered the situation.Other British industries suffered more or less in the same way.Ironically enough, Britain, hy her promotion of world trade and the industrial development of her colonies, put herself out of business.The Japanese, who are expert imitators, adopted British industrial machinery and were able to compete in world markets because of their abundance of cheap labor.Unlike Britain and the United States, Japan had no raw cotton resources of her own, but she was an astute bargainer and her cotton was usually delivered in low-cost Japanese ships.But the decisive competitive factor was cheap labor.Most of the female workers, who were about 65 per cent of the total, were recruited from rural areas under a contract system with their parents.They were lodged in dormitories under strictly controlled living conditions.In 1936 about 38 per cent of all women workers were 16 years and under, the average age being under twenty.The average monthly wage was $5.25, about 20 cents per day.At that time (1936) the average textile wage in the United States was 413 cents per hour, with a monthly pay average of $71.58.The Japanese contend that these money wage comparisons are misleading.They point out that man- hour productivity in Japan was much less than in United States, and that Japanese workers received free housing accommodation and other benefits.But, allowing for all those, the disparity between American and Japanese labor costs was estimated at not less than 8 to 1.These comparisons have no bearing on real wages, which reflect living costs.They relate only to wages as a cost ! factor in production to be translated into export prices.From the view- Weekly Review By LEWIS MILLIGAN growth of the Japanese textile in- In the: Japan Competitor | point of Western competitors, therefore, Japanese entry into any mar- \"ket was in the nature of an invasion which could not be resisted on a price-level, Unable to cope with this Japanese conquest of world textile markets, Western nations had to resort to tariffs and quotas to prevent a flooding of their home markets and the extinction of their own industries.Before the last war textiles accounted for no less than 60 per cent of Japanese exports, and recovery of that trade was therefore a logical aim.Since the close of the war, under American occupation, the industry has made a steady recovery, and the upward course of Japanese export trade is said to have been \u201cphenomenal\u201d.But the conditions under which industrial and commercial activities are carried on in Japan have changed rad- The Week At Ottawa.OTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Two events of historical were overshadowed last week by a situation equally unique but far from welcome.Canadian historians will mark down Thursday, Feb.28, 1952, as a significant date.For on that day the first native-born Canadian was sworn in as Governor-General, and shortly afterwards opened Parliament by reading the traditional Speech from the Throne.But those who write the history | books may add that while Rt, Hon.Vincent Massey was being sworn in, Canada's livestock industry was in the middle of what agricultural officials considered a national crisis.None was quite ready to guage just how seriously the livestock industry or the nation's economy would be affected by the discovery of foot and mouth disease among livestock herds in southern Saskatchewan.Wide Repercussions Whatever the long-range results, the immediate effect of discovery of the disease were these: 1.The United States border was closed to Canadian livestock, hay and straw.2.Movement of livestock out of the prairies to Ontario or British Columbia came to a halt.3.Eleven rural municipalities around Regina were quarantined.Orders were given to slaughter on premises where the 24 known cases were.4.Prices generally dropped on the country\u2019s livestock markets.5.A successful hunt located an immigrant German who may have brought the dreaded virus to Canada.He was brought from Vancouver to Hull, Que., for laboratory tests.The disease first was reported last November 26 at the farm of Leonard Wass at McLean, Sask, 40 miles from Regina.It was first thought to be severe stomatitis.\u2018'reatment failed to cure the infected cattle.Then Feb.19, the federal government announced an outbreak of \"a \u201ccontagious animal disease\u201d in the Regina area.A quarantine was clamped on nine rural municipalities in the Regina area.Six days later came the announcement that the outbreak was foot-and-mouth disease.Many Precautions That brought a stricter quarantine.Movement of livestock, feed cereal grains and articles used In caring for the animals on infected premises was prohibited.A 10th municipality was added Lo those quarantined.Movement of livestock out of the west virtually came to a halt.Then came the US.embargo which will continue until the US.agriculture department Is satisfied that the casily-spread discase has been eradicated.British Columbia added a similar embargo and included meat despite the refusal to take such action by the federal government.announced that the federal government had embargoed livestock movement from the west at its request.livestock.outside the quarantined area, and meat shortage.Pageant Subdued The pageantry surrounding the | feally.Social legislation has been can pattern, with trade union, labor standards and other laws, together with the decentralization of industry.Japanese competitive advantage is now said to have been reduced to the level of the basic factors of their new social and economic structure which are closer to those of the Western nations.Yet Japan enacted in accord with the Ameri-: Ï | in 1950 took second place in the world's cotton goods trade, being exceeded only by India.Britain has failed to recover more than a fraction of her former peak, and the United States has lost ground because of dollar shortages and increased competition from lower cost countries.The Gore THE GORE \u2014 Mr.nd Mrs.Donald Anderson, of Malone, were Sunday guests of Mr.and Mrs.W.J.Graham.Mr.and Mrs.W.C.Coulter were Sunday afternoon guests of Mr.and Mrs.Willard Anderson and Ross.Mrs.Mervyn Graham and Melvin spent Thursday with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Allan Ritchie and attended the Dewittville W.C.T.U.meeting held at the home of Mrs.Irwin Todd.Mrs.Purcell Fortune and Stanley, of Valleyfield, spent a few days the past week with Mr.and Mrs.Stanley Whaley.Mr.and Mrs.John McCracken, of Malone, have been recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.Stanley Whaley and Greta.Mr.and Mrs.W.J, Graham, Mr.and Mrs.Mervyn Graham, Melvin and Beverly Ford were Wednesday evening guests of Mr.and Mrs.T.J.Graham, Athelstan.Several ladies from this district attended the World Day of Prayer, held this year on February 29th, at the Rennie\u2019s United Church.The theme was \u201cChrist Our Hope\u201d.All ladies from the surrounding district Joined in this meeting.At the close of the meeting, a social hour followed in the Sunday School Room, when the ladies from the Rennie Church served delicious refreshments.LUCKY FIND NANAIMO, B.C.(CP)\u2014A pearl as big as a small pea was found by Barbara Edson while she was clean- significance to Canada Ontario Later, Quebec announced it | had placed a similar embargo on Western meats could still move to castern markets from packing plants there seemed no likelihood of any inauguration of a Governor-General was subdued for last week's ceremonies because of the death of King George VI.But it did not lack color.The new Governor-General hime self provided a note of color at the opening of Parliament.He wore a dark blue cloth uniform trimmed \"with silver on a scarlet background, a cocked hat with swan plumes and a sword.It was a sharp contrast to the formal morning clothes and black ties which predominated at the swearing-in earlier and at Mr.Massey's arrival in the capital.The Speech from the Throne, the government's traditional means of outlining its program of legislation for the session, contained no surprises.It reiterated the policy of combination of free nations for strength to ensure peace and referred briefly to the \u201cdistinguished service\u201d of Canadian troops in Korea and the dispatch of Canadian forces to Europe.The Japanese peace treaty will be submitted for ratification and parliament will be asked to approve a second $25,000,000 contribution to the Colombo Plan for aid to south and southeast Asia.Domestic legislation will include redistribution of House of Commons\u2019 seats on the basis of the 1951 census, revisions to the criminal code, a possible increase in veterans\u2019 allowances and power for the federal government to renew tax agreements with the provinces.Drew Feels Slighted , One incident marred the day of Mr.Massey's arrival.Opposition Leader George Drew skipped the welcome at the station by Government leaders and the diplomatic corps.His comment was that \u201can exain- ination of the printed program will show that there was no provision in the ceremony for the Leader of the Opposition.\u201d His action was interpreted as a means of stressing what some feel is a government tendency to forget that the Progressive Conservative leader is the official Leader of Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition, and not just one of three leaders of parties opposed to the Liberal government.pp \u2014 proper regulation.is under supervision you want.Our booklet is available at your or by writing our , Department, 80 Toronto, Ontario.A Law Helps Us to Help You ® Many people do not know they have the protection of the Small Loan Law.Canadian government passed this law in 1939 as a convenience and safeguard to any man or woman who needs to borrow from time to time to meet money emergencies.Before this law was passed, \u201cloan sharks\u2019 took advantage of people in trouble by charging exorbitant rates and using vicious practices made possible by the lack of The Small Loans Act has done away with all this.It protects borrowers by limiting charges and requires loan charges to be figured only on unpaid balances\u2014and for the actual time the borrower has the money.The business of lending sums of $500 or less Insurance for Canada.Organizations like Household Finance support the Small Loans Act wholeheartedly.It protects you from unfair lending practices and enables us to give the kind of quick, friendly, constructive money help we know \u201cMoncy Management, Budget,\u201d devised to help you help yourself, Richmond Street West, HOUSEHOLD FINANCE Corporation of Canada at NT The of the Department of Your nearest branch office Consumer Education ws meme on | This year again the Red Cross Appeal presents us with à challenge and an opportunity.New victims of war wounds, greater need of lifesaving blood transfusion services, the inevitability.of great disasters of fire and flood .all must find the Red Cross ing oysters here.ready.As the need to alleviate suffering grows, the generosity of Canadians grows too.But today the task is almost beyond measure.Therg is the challenge.The opportunity to help is before you.Give TODAY to carry on tomorrow's work of mercy $5,2 22 000 is urgently needed to KEEP YOUR RED CROSS STRONG Gifts fo your Red Cross are wisely used.Each year the accounting is approved by auditors of the Dominion Government.\" Local Campaign Headquarters: \u2014Canadian Legion Hall, Huntingdon Huntingdon Red Cross Branch Mrs.F.G.McCrimmon, Local Cam Miss Lillian Rankin, R.N., Secretary Mr.Erle C.Martin, President paign Publicity Manager PAGE THREE THE HUNTINGDON GLEANER CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Articles For Sale, Livestock For Sale, For Rent, Help Wanted, Cars For Sale, Lost, Found, etc.Cash Rate \u2014 3c a word with a minimum of 50c.Must be paid by date of insertion.If charged, an additional 25c will be added.charge of 25c will be made for all replies directed to this office.o\u2014O\u20140o Cards of Thanks: 8c a word with a minimum of $1.\u2014 for 33 words Or less.In Memoriams: $1.plus 10c a line for verse.Engagements: $1.per insertion.Display Classifi d at 70c per inch wit* minimum of one inch.Additional insertions at the same rate.o\u2014O\u2014o ALL Classified Advertisements must be in this office not later than 5 pm.Tuesday.== SEND CASH OR MONEY ORDER AND SAVE MONEY For Sale TWO SERVICEABLE aged Ayrshire bulls and R.OP.backing.Allan H.Wilson, Franklin Centre.| For Sale PIANO in good condition, sell cheap.Phone H'don.2997.GENERAL ELECTRIC cook stqve.Dial H'don.2831.SINGER SEWING MACHINE used very little; Grimm evaporator, storage tank, two gathering tanks; two drop-lenf tables; two iron beds with sprirgs.DB.J.O'Connor, phone H'don.641.TWO BOY'S SUITS in very good condition, size 12 years.Apply 65 Prince Street, phone H'don.5048.PILE of sleigh lengths, maple and elm, approximately 50 cords.Good deal, J.T.Elder, Athelstan, Que.GRIMM EVAPORATOR, 500 Grimm sap spouts, Grimm gathering tank, 1938 Ford truck with 5 good tires, in good running order.W.J.Scott, Ormstown, Qu-, Tel, 618r4.LH.C.CORN BLOWER No.12, pipes complete; I.H.C.corn harvester, new chains; IH.C.2-row corn planter; I.H.C.two-row cultivator.L.Watterson, phone H\u2019don.972.40 TONS of pressed hay; also 1936 Master Chevrolet in good condition.A.M.Rowat, dial H'don, 6217.QUANTITY of baled hay.Albert Rosevear, Sr, Athelstan, dial H'don.875.10 TONS LOOSE HAY and 5 tons loose straw.Arthur Gagnon, Lost | Nation Road, phone H'don.686.ABOUT 300 BUS.of mixed oats and barley.Emile Leblanc, phone H'don.5509.RED CEDAR PICKETS, all sizes.Phone H'don.636.TWO HIGH GRADE Holstein cows, five and seven years old, freshen about March 15th.Apply C.P.MacDonald and Son, tel.631r1-4, Ormstown.THREE JERSEY COWS to freshen shortly.Apply Myles Tillotson, Dewittville, Que.HOLSTEIN COW 4 years old, due to freshen shortly; also recleaned clover seed.Robert McNeil, Ormstown.3-YEAR-OLD HOLSTEIN heifer to freshen very soon; also one Holstein bull, would sell or exchange for dry stock.Wm.Irwin, Hunt- ingdon.4 HIGH GRADE Holstein cows.F.D.Stevenson and Son, Franklin Centre.20 NICE PIGS four weeks old.Herve Allen, Back Ridge, Huntingdon.16 PIGS 4 weeks old.Emile Boucher, phone H'don.2638.1947 1/2 TON Chevrolet pick-up truck, 20,000 miles, tires in good condition, four speed transmission.Apply Ferns Pringle, phone H\u2019don.5112.1938 DODGE SEDAN, good condition, radio, heater, fully equipped.Apply Nelson Beattie, phone 2582, Huntingdon.1950 FORD STATION WAGON.radio, heater, accessories; nearly new, very good condition, $2400.Easy terms if desired.Phone 235, Valleytield.1951 NASH COACH, maroon with white wall tires, fully equipped, low mileage.Phone 2987-W or 1866-R, Valleytield.1948 OLDSMOBILE SEDAN, 17,000 miles, heater, slip covers.James E.Barrett, 66 Wellington Street, Huntingdon; phones: office 4il, residence 407.SIX YOUNG high grade Holstein cows to freshen shortly, one Registered.Apply G.Gamble, Franklin, tel.10r1-2.CHICKS * Order early your certified and approved chicks from ORMSTOWN CO-OPERATIVE HATCHERY Hybrids and Barred Rocks For particulars\u2014 PHONE 146-J OR 98-R-2 Property For Sale 8-ROOM HOUSE on Church Street.Apply 57 Dalhousie St., H'don.THE MAKINGS of a new house, good location, complete with plans and sufficient lumber for erection of same.Bargain.J.T.Elder, Athelstan, Que.VACANT LOT 65 by 100 feet.Good location.Apply Leslie Hayter, Roosevelt St., Huntingdon.HALF-ACRE LOT, suitable for two building lots, water connection.Will sell all or part.Reasonable.Dial H'don, 2840.OLD HORSES WANTED We pay highest prices and call for them.Oscar Remillard Phone 540 Lacolle, Que.SOMERVILLE\u2019S CHICKS We offer White Leghorn chicks from our blood tested and care- full selected breeder flock.White Leghorns lay early, consume less feed and take less space to house than heavy breeds.Prices on White hom chicks are: mixed chicks $15.00 per 100, pullet chicks $30.00 per If you want a heavy breed chick, we can offer you New Hamps, Barred Rocks or NH.x Rx Hybrid from a reliable hatchery.Please ask for prices.Somerville Poultry Farm, Phone 307 r.3, _ HEMMINGFORD, QUE.Maplevue Hatchery Barred Rock Baby Chicks.Order early and avoid being disappointed.D.O.Taylor & Son ~ Phone Huntingdon 5566 x COAX ERY FO 1941 FORD Sedan 1937 PLYMOUTH Coupe 1948 34 ton CHEVROLET Pick-up 1946 FORD 3 ton truck with dump 1938 INTERNATIONAL 34 ton truck \u2018Huntingdon Motors Reg\u2019d J.F.SMYTHE, Prop.RP SALE\u2018: 1947 CHEVROLET Sedan with 1952 license 1942 FORD Sedan, Radio and Heater From heavy laying strain.= R.R.1, Huntingdon To Rent HEATED APARTMENT.Good location.Apply P.O.Box 184, Hunt- ingdon.5-ROOM apartment on Churchill Street.Phone H'don.2932.Work Wanted DUTCH MAN, married, one year in Canada, requires job in or around Ormstown.Experience in farm and office work.ingdon.EXPERIENCED WOMAN with son 12 years old wants work in farm home.$35.monthly.Available anytime, Mrs.A.McGibbon, 760 St.Martin St, Montreal.Personal UNWANTED HAIR permanently eradicated with Saca Pelo.The most remarkable discovery of the age.Saca Pelo is guaranteed free from chemical and drugs and will kill the.hair roots.LOR-BEER Lab., 679 Granville St, Vancouver, B.C.Help Wanted CAPABLE GIRL to work in Montreal home.Small family.Private room.Phone H'don.2007.- AUCTION SALE At the residence of Emile Leblanc, about 4 miles west of Huntingdon on Highway No.4, Thursday, March 27th.Full details in next week's Gleaner.F.J.Donnelly, Auctioneer AUCTION SALE To be sold by Public Auction at the resdience of Mr.Emery Payant St.Chrysostome on the Russelltown Flats Road THURSDAY, MARCH 6th The following property: 10 grade Holstein and Ayrshire cows due to freshen in Spring; 7 heifers rising two years old; Holstein bull rising two years old; six- year old horse; 30 hens; 5-ft.cut binder; 6-ft.cut mowing machine; horse rake; seeder; three plows; cultivator; disc harrow, 14 discs; leveling harrow 17 ft.long; roller; manure sleigh; 2 sets double sleighs; dump cart; 2 buggies; 2 double wagons; 2 expresses; 2 wood racks; 1 hay rack; single harness; 2 sets double harness; a new set of lines, 12 feet long; 1 cutter; 1 set of scales; 4 milk cans; corn sheller; 2 ladders; hay fork and rope; several feet of pipes; two sets of clippers; two chains; McCormick - Deering electric separator, 800 lbs.capacity; two cross-cut saws; two chains; a large tank for feed; two large tubs; forks, spades, crowbars; some household furniture consisting of beds, springs, bureaus, dining room table, six dining room chalrs, sideboards, commodes, three ten-gallon crocks, two churns, one round heater and many other articles too numerous to mention.Ali to be sold witnout reserve as the farm is sold.Conditions: $25.and under, cash; over $25, six months\u2019 credit on furnishing good approved joint notes and by paying 4 per cent from date on these notes.Sale at one o'clock sharp.E.A.Benoit, Auctioneer.\" AUCTION SALE To be sold by Public Auction at the residence of The late Angus Quenneville about 4 miles west of Cazaville on Lake Shore Road, Dundee, Que, TUESDAY, MARCH 11th The following property: 27 head of Holstein and Ayrshire cattle, consisting of 12 milk cows, 8 two-year-old heifers due to freshen in November, 6 yearling heifers, one 2-year-old bull; general purpose horse 12 years old; brood sow due to farrow now; 12 hens; 200 bus.of oats; 15 bags of potatoes; about 25 cords dry stove wood in shed; set of scales; lawn mower; fanners; double and single harness; buffalo and blankets; buggy: cutter; milk wagon; double and single sleighs; double wagon; two manure slegihs; McCormick-Deering cream separator; six 8-gallon milk cans; milk pails; wheelbarrow; hay rack; pig rack; sleigh rack; cultivator; seeder; disc and smoothing harrows; land roller; 2 single plows; gang plow; mowing machine; hay tedder; hay rake; new hay loader; binder; ladders; quantity of dry lumber; quantity of hay and straw; grindstone; 2 iron kettles; whiffletrees and neck yokes; new 1951 Chevrolet sedan with low mileage; forks; chains; shovels, etc.Household furniture 3-plece chesterfield set, nearly new; piano; parlor rug 9 x 10 1/2; centre tables; end tables; electric table lamps; box stove; floor board; heater shield; scatter rugs; pictures; dining room set; sideboard; six chalrs; table; buffet; fancy rockers; fancy wicker rockers and wicker chairs; fern stand; writing desk; sewing machine; stands; dishes and glassware; 8 day clock; 6 kitchen chairs; kitchen table, odd chairs; kitchen cupboard with glass front; chamber set; bed springs and mattress; feather tick; kitchen range; kitchen cabinet; oil lamps; extension table; dishes; glassware; cooking utensils; pots, pans, etc.All to be sold.Terms of sale: Cash.Owing to the large amount to be sola this sale will start at 12 o'clock n and will start on tim - tioned (sharp).© men Fred J.Donnelly, Auctioneer.State wages.| Apply to Gleaner Box 1700, Hunt- The Huntingdon Gleaner Wednesday, March Sth, 1952 co Financial Statement Parish of TRES ST.SACREMENT Balance Sheet and Income Statement for the year 1951 REVENUE Gen.tax at 75c Government grants re.winter roads $ 11,517.97 3,229.30 Interest on arrears .69.02 Miscellaneous revenue .43.56 $ 14,840.85 EXPENDITURES Maintenance of roads .$ 8,606.06 Fox skin bounty .105.00 Administration: Postage, etc .128.75 Salaries .660.00 Office rent .62.50 County rate .62.50 Charities .49.00 Discounts on taxes .397.81 14.71 20.36 906.50 Damage claims Miscellaneous expenses .Water-course Snow-fence .*.318.00 Surplus for 1951 .2,968.71 $ 14,849.85 RECEIPTS Cash on hand 1/1/51 .§ 6361.92 General tax: 1951 .een 8,411.03 Arrears .1,644.39 Seignorial rents: 1950 ER 785.67 Arrears .123.85 Water-course .188.47 Gov't.grant: roads .3,229.30 Interest on arrears .43.56 Misc.receipts .114,22 Taxes paid in advance .147.75 $ 20,920.16 DISBURSEMENTS Maintenance of roads .$ 17,285.17 Minister of Agriculture: Water-course 906.50 Seignorial rents .1,143.96 Fox skin bounty .138.00 Fencing .39.95 Administration: Postage, etc.91.18 Salaries .660.00 : Office rent .\u2026.62.50 Security bond .10.00 Advertising .16.60 Telephone .25.24 Damage claims .14.71 Discounts on taxes 397.81 Charities .49.00 Fire engine County rate Snow-fence .Cash in bank 31/12/51 .6.00 62.46 318.00 9,142.99 $ 20,920.16 ASSETS Capital Assets Roads, bridges, etc.$206,000.00 Snow plow, snow fence .4,848.00 Total Capital Assets .$210,848.00 Currents Assets Cash in bank Dec.51 .Accounts receivable: General taxes $ 9,142.99 3,594.01 Farm Wanted to Rent or on Shares YOUNG DUTCH COUPLE with two children who have been in Canada for two years would like to rent a mixed farm or take it on shares.Apply Gleaner Office | Box 1800, Huntingdon.Solve Your Vermin Problem with | Warfarin Rat and Mouse Also Floor Polisher which Seignorial rents .386.70 Water-course .19.17 Total assets .$223,890.87 LIABILITIES Capital surplus Accounts payable: Winter rd.A/s Dec.51 1,320.88 Surplus 1950 $8,854.27 Financial Statement Municipality of HOWICK VILLAGE Streets & sidewalks, salaries .Capital expenditures: Fire exting.$ 96.80 Office f'niture 95.00 Improve hall 139.75 New sidewalks 500.00 Surplus for 1951 RECEIPTS Cash on hand 1/1/51 .General taxes 2,189.75 Amusement tax .Rent of Town Hall .231.65 Streets and sidewalks .$ Street lights .Garbage collection 686.57 580.46 109.00 Tiles (Govier Co.) .100.98 Administration: Postage, etc.75.26 Salaries .286.00 Telephone .48.00 Surety bond .10.00 Light, heat .41.50 Printing .24.50 ATTENTION! ELECTROLUX (Canada) Limited Has An Office at 44a St.Laurent St., Valleyfield, Que.For Sales and Service Trays Paste Wax and Polishes without Killer A ready to use Product.A.L.LEVINE Phone 2980 Huntingdon Phone 2616, hard work.FOR DEMONSTRATION Without any obligation CALL THEO MYRAND Valleyfield 5 Ra acres.(buildings, 2 houses.FARM FOR SALE W.G.Trainer Farm, Chateaugay, N.Y.230 acres or if you prefer smaller farm will sell 155 Modern 140 ft.barn, large silo and other out- Electricity and spring water in 'house and barn.Can be purchased with or without stock and equipment.Telephone Chateaugay 3342 or 3945 for appointment to 5.30 p.m.Phone: Office 306 NOTICE I am in my office in the County Building, Hunting- don, from TUESDAY to SATURDAY, except THURSDAY P.M.when | am at Howick, Town Hall, from 2 ROGER FORTIER, N.P.Phone: Residence 2345 delivered at mill.Phone 230 =.at the small end.$9.00 per cord at roadside.ERS RP DEO OO OE COL OOOO Wanted 2000 cords of Bass Wood, 42 inches long, 4 inches $11.00 International Cooperage Co.Athelstan, Que OO OR 302.47 831.55 575.41 $ 4,07946 .$ 1,941.80 106.76 Fire protection .177.04 Discount on taxes .101.07 Charity .290.75 County rate .141.37 Seignorial rents .38.50 Disbursed on Capit.Acct.831.55 Amusement tax .64.56 Cash in bank 31/12/61 .1,810.06 $ 5517.17 Surplus 1951 2,968.71 11,822.98 $223,991.86 Capital Assets: ig.rent overpaid 99; Roads, sidewalks, etc.$ 48,500.00 Less Sele.© P | Fire equipment .9,200.00 Total liabilities .$223,990.87, Town Hall .-3,331.55 Snow fence .300.00 Total capital assets .$ 61,331.55 Current Assets Cash in bank .$ 1,910.06 Accounts receivable: General taxes .1,101.70 Business taxes 198.00 REVENUE Gen.tax at 90c .$ 3,08725| Seignorial rents .11.00 RE 682.07 Business own Hall .231.65 Total current assets .$ 3,220.76 Amusement tax .42.20 \u2014_\u2014 Int.on arrears of taxes 8.20 Total assets .$ 64,552.31 Gov't.grant: roads .22.6.00 LIABILITIES Miscellaneous revenues (Capital liabilities .$ 61,331.55 4,079.46 Current liabilities 40746 Accounts payable NIL EXPENDITURES Surplus Streets and sidewalks Surplus at end inte materials 384.10 of Dec.1950 $2,645.35 Strost.lights ee $ 580.46 1951 surplus 575.41 3,220.76 Garbage collection 100.00 -_\u2014 i >) Lens 100.\u2014_\u2014 Tiles (Govier Go) Total liabilities .$ 6455231 Postage, etc.21000 Salaries .6.00 Surety bond .1000 St.Chrysostome Telephone .48.00 Printing .2450 ST.CHRYSOSTOME \u2014 Mr.and Light .2450 Mrs.Camille Blais attended the Fuel .17.00 funeral of Mr.E.Ste.Marie in St.Discount on taxes .101.07 Urbain on Wednesday.Charity .280.75! Miss Ida Gibeau was called to the Fire protection .177.04 city owing to the illness of her County rate .141.37 mother, Mrs.Gibeau.Miss Alice Cusson of St.Louis spent Saturday at her home here.Mr.and Mrs.Gerald Turcot attended the funeral of Mrs.À.La- zure at St.Urbain on Saturday.Mr.and Mrs.Jos.Bergevin of St.Louis attended the funeral of Miss Laplante and spent the remainder of the day with Mrs.Soucy and A.Couillard.Roger Bourdeau spent Saturday in Valleyfield.Mr.and Mrs.Thomas P.Murray of Sherrington visited Mr.and Mrs.Poupart, Sunday.Fie taxes Cees Fr Mr.and Mrs.Raymond Payant Seignorial rent .33.50 and family visited their aunts, Mrs.Henry Ouimet and Miss Lilly O\u2019- Meara at Hemmingford recently.Int.on tax arrears .8.29 Gov't.grent: roads .22.00 Miscellaneous .6.00 Ormstown $ 5517.17 Mrs.Adam McNeil, Mrs.Jessie \"\" (MeNeil, Mrs.J.Wallace, Mrs.W.DISBURSEMENTS Harkness and Mrs.Thomas Duncan attended the annual meeting of the Montreal Presbyterial of the United Church in Canada at the Erskine American Church, Montreal.Presbyterian Ladies Aid .The Presbyterian Ladies Ald met on Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs.Harold Kerr.Mrs.Ward Rember presided and Mrs.Grant McLaren recorded the attendance and reported on the activities of the group.Miss Margaret Rodger led a devotional period reading from Psalm 121 and leading in prayer.At the business meeting, plans were made for a St.Patrick\u2019s Food Sale on the Saturday preceding St.Patrick's Day.Hostesses for the afternoon were: Glass Specialists We have a vast range of Glass in stock.All sizes and thicknesses available in cut stock.Will fill all your building requirements.GLASS SERVICE DUSSAULT Tel.2-3686 Beauharnois, Que.LEGAL NOTICE The office of the Late MR.DONALD M.ROWAT, NP, at the Court House, Huntingdon, Quebec, will remain open in the future as in the past.MR.COLIN J.CAMPBELL, NP, of the firm of Messrs, Rowat, Van.Vliet and Talpis, Montreal, Quebec, will be in Huntingdon at the said office of Mr.Rowat on Friday and Saturday of each week until further notice; other days by appointment.FOR APPOINTMENTS contact MISS GRACE CALDWELL who will be in the office every day.Phone Huntingdon 382 NOTICE I am not responsible for an debts to be contracted by my wife, Katherine Dease-Cavanagh, and I will not pay the bills unless they are approved by me.James Cavanagh Howick, Chaleauguay, Que.February 27, 1952 Mrs.George Kilgour and Mrs.Alan Hooker.Boys\u2019 Band Card Party A card party sponsored by the Ormstown Boys\u2019 Band was held at the Legion Hall on Wednesday evening.Conveners of the event were Mrs.John McKell, Mrs.Archie McCormick, Mrs.Thomas Dun~ can and Mrs.N.McClenaghan.\u201c500\u201d was played and high score prizes were awarded Mrs.Clifford Bar- rington and Mr.Sam Cullen, low score going to Mrs.Eddie Hooker and Mr.Sangster Lindsay.Mrs.Thomas Mather was the lucky winner of the chair prize.Refreshments were served by the committee.Mrs.John Roy left this week for Windsor, Ont., where she will make her home.She was accompanied by Mrs.W.Wood of Huntingdon.Prior to her departure, members of the Ormstown Ladies Aid called on Mrs.Roy and presented her with a going away gift.COSTUMES WANTED ST.THOMAS, Ont, the pioneer days to \u201cdress up\u2019 the Elgin and St.Thomas centennial spectacle to be held at the Athletic Park here in the first week in August.Women\u2019s Institutes have been assigned the task of locating such costumes.Q.S.H.L.Playdowns VALLEYFIELD ARENA Best 4 of 7 (2nd game) THURSDAY, MARCH 6th 8.30 BRAVES vs CHICOUTIMI \u2014_ (3rd game) SUNDAY, MARCH th 2.30 BRAVES vs CHICOUTIMI Reserved tickets on sale at 44 or 2173-R, Valleyfield Reserved tickets are always available at Valleyfield Arena.Make your reservations early.FOR PROMPT and : RELIABLE SERVIC PHONE 362 CLIFFS CABS Huntingdon D (CP)\u2014The search has begun for costumes of, Tatehurst TATEHURST \u2014 The Upper and Lower Ormstown Group of the Presbyterian Women's Missionary Society met on Thursday, at the home of Mrs, Alan Hooker.A quilt was worked on during the afternoon.Mrs.R.Gruer conducted the Worship Service and Mrs.Robert Ovans and Mrs.Eddie Hooker reported on the activities and made arrangements to remember the members who were ill.A buffet supper was served by Mrs.Mary McNeil and Mrs.Hooker.Attention Apple Growers of Franklin, Covey Hill and Hemmingford A Meeting will be held on FRIDAY, MARCH 7th at 7.30 p.min the FRANKLIN TOWN HALL to discuss the building of Cold Storage and Grading Stations in this district.All apple growers, large or small, are urged to attend.Notice The Annual Meeting of The Huntingdon Home and School Association will be held in H\u2019don High School - on - WEDNESDAY, MAR.12th at 8.30 p.m.The teachers will be in their various classrooms at 8 p.m.to meet with parents wishing to discuss their various school problems.Everybody Welcome Rev.R.D.MacLEAN, President W.R.WILSON, Corr.Sec.Card Party - in - Legion Hall, Lacolle FRIDAY, MARCH 14th at 2.30 p.m.Bridge, \u201c500\u201d and Canasta Under auspices of Ladies\u2019 Auxillary Branch No.11 ADMISSION 50¢ RESERVE Mon., March 17 St.Patrick\u2019s Dance Herdman Town Hall (Full particulars in next week's Gleaner) ANCE EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT Labelle\u2019s Hall 3 miles from Ormstown with Prairie Rangers Orchestra Music and Jamboree by the Prairie Rangers Orchestra at Ste-Barbe Parochial Hall SUNDAY, MARCH 9th Hotel Chateaugay Chateaugay, New York Takes Great Pleasure in Announcing the Return Engagement of That WeH Known Scotch Canadian Entertainer Stan.Carruthers Starting Monday, February 25 NO COVER CHARGE \u2014 NO MINIMUM dif Qi KY peg Wednesday, March 5th, 1952 PURSES Born At the Barrie Memorial Bal, Ormstown, Que.on March 2, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs.Norval Blair, Franklin, Que, a daughter.CHARD\u2014At the Barrie Me- Bal Hospital, Ormstown, Que., on March 5, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs.Roger Bouchard, Hemming- ford, Que., 8 daughter.ET \u2014 At the Huntingdon BEUXES Hospital, Huntingdon, Que., on February 27th, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs.Ferdnand Brunet, St.Agnes, Que., a son, (stillborn).HART \u2014 At the Huntingdon County Hospital, Huntingdon, Que, on February 20th, 1952 to Mr.and Mrs.Bernard Hart, Cazaville, Que., a daughter.HUGHES \u2014 At Catherine Booth Hospital, Montreal, on February o5th, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs.W.F.Hughes, Lacolle, Que, a son.JODOIN\u2014At the Barrie Memorial Hospital, Ormstown, Que, on Feb.29, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs.Real Jodoin, Ste.Martine, Que., a daughter.LUSSIER\u2014At the Barrie Memorial Hospital, Ormstown, Que, on Feb.28, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs.Tancrede Lussier, Ste.Antoine Abbe, Que., a daughter.McCLELLAND \u2014 At St.Johns Hospital, St.Johns, Que, on March 3rd, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs.H.D, McClelland, Lacolle, Que, a daughter.McLEAN\u2014At the Barrie Memorial Hospital, Ormstown, Que, on March 2, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs.Donald McLean, Nitro, Que, son.O'CONNOR \u2014 At the Huntingdon County Hospital, Huntingdon, Que., on March 4th, 1852, to Mr.and Mrs.Walter O'Connor, Huntingdon, a son.PERCY \u2014 At Brockville, Ont, on February 28th, 1962, to Mr, and Mrs.Harold Percy, nee Margaret Sloan, a son.PURDIE\u2014At the Barrle Memorial Hospital, Ormstown, Que, on March 2, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs.Eric Purdie, Ormstown, Que, a daughter.ST.ONGE \u2014 At the Huntingdon County Hospita], Huntingdon, Que, on February 29th, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs, Emile St.Onge, Huntingdon, Que., a daughter.TOBIN \u2014 At the Royal Victoria Hospital, Barrie, Ontario, on February 27th, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs.S.M.William Tobin, (nee Eileen Herdman) of Camp Bordon, Ont, a son.TREPANIER \u2014 At Ste.Agnes de Dundee, Que, on February 13th, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs.John Tre- panier, St.Agnes de Dundee, Que., a daughter.TREPANIER\u2014At the Barrie Memorial Hospital, Ormstown, Que, on March 2, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs.Marc Trepanier, St.Anicet, Que, a daughter.UPTON\u2014At the Barrie Memorial Hospital, Ormstown, Que, on Feb.28, 1952, to Mr.and Mrs.Lionel Upton, Ormstown, Que., a son.MT tA IEE (31 R.E.KELLY & SON Reg\u2019d.Funeral Directors Ambulance Service Flowers Tel.447 or 764 Huntingdon, .Que.Monuments in Scotch or Canadian GRANITE Lettering dong at, Cemetery A.Brunet Phone 31 Ormstown ar The Huntingdon Gleaner World Day of Prayer Service Prayer Service, held in St.John's Anglican Church, on Friday, February 29th, was well attended jointly by ladies of St.John's Anglican, 8t.Andrew's Presbyterian Rev.T.KNOWLES, Pastor Morning Service 10.30 a.m.\u201cMan! What A Chance\u201d Evening Service 7.00 pm.\u201cGo-getters for Christ\u201d Huntingdon United Church and the United Church congregations.The worship service was led by Mrs.George Hood, Miss Lily Pringle, Mrs.Charlotte Paul, presidents of the Senior Societies in the three churches.They developed the theme \u201cChrist Our Hope\".The Prayer responses were given by Mrs.» Charlotte Graham, Mrs.Sidney Smith, Mrs.Dan Moody, Mrs.R.D.MacLean and Mrs.Chas.Church, Huntingdon Rev.R.D.MacLEAN, BD, Minister Morning Service 10.30 a.m.dom\u201d © Evening Service 7.00 p.m.St.Andrew\u2019s Presbyterian \u201cThe Call of God\u2019s King- \u201cWeakness Made Strong\u201d Reid.A brief address on the topic of \u201cChristian Giving and What Your Money Does\u201d by Mrs.Stanley Ruddock, concluded the programme, The joint offering will be sent to Women's Inter-Church Council of Canada to be used in the furthering of the message \u201cChrist Our Hope\" throughout the neediest parts of the world.Miss Gertrude Hampson presided at the organ.=0- N.Y.C.Schedules Remain For Now Changes in the N.Y.C.train schedules which were supposed to take Married ingdon, Quebec, Died Hospital, Ormstown, Que, man, real, Burial at Ormstown Cemetery about 3 p.m.CHARTRAND \u2014 At of 68 years and 7 months.ruary 26th, 1952, Rev.Nussey.aged 78 years, at Brockville, Ont.LEFEBVRE-CLERMONT \u2014 At the Saint-Esprit Church, Valleyfield, Que., on February 23, 1952, Miss Francoise.Clermont, daughter of Mrs.J.O.Clermont, Valleyfield, to Mr.Robert Lefebvre, son of Mrs.Phil.P.Lefebvre of Hunt- BECK \u2014 At the Barrie Memorial on March 3, 1952, Elizabeth J.Cook- wife of Edward A Beck, Dewittville, Que.Funeral Services at Collins Funeral Parlor, Mont- at 130 pm.Wednesday.Anglican Ormstown, Que., on February 27th, 1952, Mr.Euclide Chartrand, beloved husband of Alice Miron, at the age NUSSEY \u2014 At Brockvijle, on Feb- J.G.beloved husband of Ethel Rule.Interment place on March ist have been postponed until April 26.=0- Mrs.Robert Milne is recovering from a recent heart attack and is spending a few days with her son and daughter-in-law, Mr.and Mrs.Arnold Milne.=0- Miss Emma Lucas of Plattsburg, N.Y, has been a recent guest of her sister, Mrs.McIntyre, at the Patterson Nursing Home, -0- Mr.and Mrs.Abe Rosevear were Friday afternoon guests of Mr.and Mrs.Arnold Milne and Mr.and Mrs.Albert Rosevear, -0- Miss Margaret McDermid, of Montreal, was the week-end guest of her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Steve McDermid.Mrs.Jimmie Yule of Verdun is spending this week with her parents, Mr.and Mrs, Steve McDermid.-0- Mr.and Mrs.J Arnold Bryson and ré Mrs.Allen Crutchfield.=-0- were Monday evening guests of their son-in-law and daughter, Mr.and Mrs.Arnold Milne.Cards of Thanks -0- Mr.and Mrs.C.O.Jones, Bedford, and visits during my illness.I wish to sincerely thank friends and neighbors for cards, presents Robert E.Chambers.I wish to extend my sincere thanks to Dr.Cameron, the nurses and staff of the Huntingdon County Hospital and to all my relatives and friends for cards and gifts during my stay in the hospital.Mrs.Gordon Harper.reavement.Their thoughfulness ER rile ths Funeral Direclor [ wn) > © Pd Hemmingford Office | Ro ee od Cosgrove FUNERAL HOME \u2014_\u2014 We Have Built Our Reputation on people\u2019s- complete faith in us, through faithful, Consclentious (Jorvie since F.H.Cosgrove Ft.Covington - Dundee Phone 6206 and 6288 deeply appreciated.We wish to extend our sincere thanks to all relatives, neighbours and friends for their acts of sympathy and kindness in our recent be- | Mrs.J.Edgar McKell.The regular session of the Canadian Council of the United Textile Workers of America was held at Brockville, Ont.,, and was attended by delegates from Quebec, Ontario and the Maritimes, is and other gifts on the occasion February 26, 1952.We wish to extend our sincere thanks and appreciation to all those who visited, sent greetings, flowers our golden wedding anniversary on Mr.and Mrs.J.H, Nussey.The Council deliberated for three days and heard reports of all current negotiations and new organization.One of the important items considered was the state of negotiations in the cotton-textile industry and ii was decided: \u2014 Firstly \u2014 to issue an invitation to a National Cotton of sunshine boxes given me; bed.It was deeply appreciated.I wish to extend my sincere thanks to all my friends, relatives and neighbors for the two lovely also for visits, get-well cards and telephone calls, since I have been confined to Eddie Rennie.Conference of all organized mills under contract with the National Catholic Syndicates, the C.I.O.Tex- Workers of America in order to unite forces to win a settlement in outstanding negotiations.Secondly \u2014 the Council went on In Memoriam record to give full support up to and including strike action to the local unions in Valleyfield, Montreal and garet Jane, March 5, 1950 \u2014 away.morn shock severe to die You are ours to remember, die.Sadiy missed by her Stanley and Ralph.O'CONNOR \u2014 In loving memory of our dear wife and mother, Mar- who passed away \u201cTwo years have passed and gone Since the one we loved was called Little we knew when we woke that The sorrow that day would bring, For the call was sudden and the To part with one we loved so dear And we wonder why you had Without a chance to say goodbye.Sweet and loving memories never Loving husband B.J.O'Connor and family Bernard, Virginia, Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, presently seeking contracts with the Dominion Textile and Cosmos Imperial mills in those districts.The Canadian Director, R.Kent Rowley said: \u201cThe cotton workers throughout Canada are completely fed up with the refusal of these companies to recognize the serious economic need of their employees and we are determined to win justice.\u201d The Council also considered the serious unemployment situation in various parts of the industry and adopted the following program:\u2014 1 Restriction of importation of competitive textiles in those lines where unemployment exists; 2 The elimination of credit restrictions; 3 Guarantees to the Canadian public that prices of domestic textiles shall not be increased because 6th, 1940 \u2014 \u201cMemories never grow old\u201d.BROGAN \u2014 In loving memory of a dear husband and father, John P.Brogan, who passed away March Mae and Stella.of import restrictions; 4 An immediate cessation of immigration excepting where prove- able need for specific employees is required; 5 Increase 50 per cent of Unemployment Insurance allowances, re- Obituary The late Mr.Euclide Chartrand He had made his home respected citizen.Stanislas; Leo, of Ormstown and ous other relatives.the parish cemetery.The sympathy of the comunity extended to the bereaved family.The community was saddened on February 27th, 1952, on hearing of the death of Mr.Euclide Chart- rand, who passed away at his home in Ormstown, after a severe illness.in Ormstown after retiring from his farm In St.Stanislas several years ago, and was a well known and Besides his wife, nee Alice Miron, he leaves two sons, Albert, of St.daughter, Leona, (Mrs.Chevrefils), of Valleyfield; 4 grandchildren Raymond, Robert and Tony Chartrand and Therese Chevrefils and numer- Funeral service was held on Friday, Feb.20th, in St.Malachie\u2019s Roman Catholic Church, Ormstown, where Rev, Father Poirier presided the Requiem mass.Interment in duction of waiting period from 9 to 3 days and elimination of discrimination against married women and payment of insurance benefits during legal strikes; 6 That the Government accept responsibility of unemployment by the allocation of public works program and cash payments to workers getting no more unemployment benefits.This program will be considered at unemployment conferences through the industry and will be submitted to Federal Members of MUSHING RECORD THE PAS, Man, (CP)\u2014Another dog mushing record was shattered as the fifth annual Manitoba Trappers\u2019 Festival concluded here.John Pranteau of Cormorant Lake won the 20-mile freight dog race in the fast time of 2 hours, 13 minutes, 29 seconds.a VERSATILE YOUNGSTER WINNIPEG, (CP)\u2014Twelve-year- old Ed Letinsky has some unusual hobbies.He spends his spare time sculpturing, painting and writing poetry.He also found time to build a model schooner from toothpicks and balsa wood.is | Muntingdon.Locals The 32nd Annual World Day of Carr and Mrs, F.G.McCrimmon family of Tullochgorum have been | used clothing to the March meet- recent guests of her parents, MI.ing The need for men's clothing is Mr.and Mrs.Murdoth Rosevear, were enjoyed following the meeting.Textile Unions Adopt Resolutions With Regard Unemployment in Industry Go on Record to Give Full Support Including Strike Action in Present Disputes tile Union and the United Textile !} Que., nee Betty Carr.Miss Florence left Tuesday by car for Houston, Texas.Miss Carr is taking a new position as Physiotherapist in the Hermann Hospital, Houston.The party plans on going by way of New York, Virginia, New Orleans and then on to Houston.Mr.and Mrs.Jones and Mrs.MoCrimmon | will return by car after a brief stay! there.Mrs.W.L.Carr will spend | the next two or three weeks in Be ford, Que.with her grandchildren.=0- { Mr.and Mrs.Leonce Arnout, | Filtex Mills, Huntingdon, will leave | New York on Thursday by boat for | Le Havre, France.They will spend two or three months vacationing in! different parts of France and at! their home at Lille, France.| =0- United Church | W.NLS.Evening Auxiliary Fifteen members of this Auxillary met on Thursday evening.February | 28th, in the church parlour.Margaret McCoy, President, opened the meeting and the usual business was conducted.Annual reports were read by last year's officers.Nina McClatchie, Christian Stewardship Secretary, read a letter from Miss Katherine Kirker, stating that the total W.M.S.allocation is $44,000.We also learned that our Prayer Partner is Miss Miranda Brown.Eunice Wallace assisted with the devotions.Margaret Mc- Coy and Dorothy Stewart reported on Presbyterial, held in Erskine and American United Church, Feb.21 and 22.As the delegates touched on highlights of the addresses and discussions, many interesting facts were brought out.The broader outlook was stressed, so we may learn to think, not in terms of our Auxiliary as a separate unit, but rather as an integral part of the missionary work of the Christian Church.During the evening, quilting on a crib quilt was completed.A number of attractive afghans, made by ladies of the congregation, were on display.These will be used by elderly people in church supported institutions.A quanity of wool has also been donated.A \u201cClothes for Korea\u201d drive fis being made by the Auxiliary and members are asked to bring clean, especially stressed.Refreshments and a social period =0- Mrs.Dora Donnelly returned to Cornwall on Sunday, after having spent some time visiting friends and relatives here.the House.The Council called for the nationalization of the Bell Telephone Co.The Council decided to arrange a special celebration for the 10th Anniversary of the Canadian District of the International Union.A financial report was presented by Madeleine Parent, secretary- treasurer, | Huntingdon High | School Notes | Fducation Week In observance of Education Week, March 3rd to 7th, open house will be held at the school on Thursday afternoon.March 6th.An open invitation is extended to all parents and friends to visit the school on that day as part of the observance of Education Week.Attend Career Conference On Friday, March 7th, thirty of the senior students will attend a career conference being held at Gault Institute, Valleyfield.At the afternoon program the Huntingdon High School has been allotted the responsibility of the nursing section.Marilyn Martin will preside over the section and Mrs, G.A.McHardy.R.N., formerly matron of Huntingdon County Hospital, will be the gues! speaker.Scores High Lila Palatini's friends and classmates will be pleased to hear that she led the class in mathematics in the entire squadron consisting of men and women of the airforce at San Antonio, Texas, US.As a result of this, she has been appointed assistant instructor in mathematics for the squadron.It is believed that the number in the squadron would be around 200.Lila is a former Grade XI graduate and we feel that congratulations are due her for this accomplishment.1 qi (town Branch of the Canadian Le- | during the cvening and some other \u2018| gion sponsored the annual Carnival\u2019 pe 7 NEW BARN CLEANING EQUIPMENT DOES GOOD JOB Above are two views of the conveyor system of new barn cleaning machine which Mr.Russell Kerr of Fertile Creek has installed in his barn.At left, the gutter behind \u201cBraves\u201d Goalkeeper Wins Lord Calvert Trophy Selection Made by Fans as the Most Valuable Player to Valleyfield Paul Leclerc, Braves' goalkeeper, is the winner of the Lord Calvert.Trophy for the 1951-52 season.Selected by the fans as the most valuable player to the Valleyfield team, Leclerc was handed the most votes according to the final count released today in the \u201cPlayer of Distinction\u201d campaign.The fans who acted as sole judges at every Braves\u2019 home game, were given the right to du the selecting for the first time.In a closely-contested ballot battle between four players, Leclerc was given a total 3,662 points for his playing this season.Kitoute Joannette ended « close second with 3,535.Larry Kwong was also in the thick of the race for the Lord Calvert Trophy with an impressive total of 3,358 while Andre Corri- finished fifth with a season's total jvener of the Membership Committee reported the number of members to}: ed sixth with 2,532 while Jacques date being 650 with 285 of the mem- veau was right behind with 3,070 points.The presentation of the \u201cPlayer of Distinction\u201d award will be made next Sunday by Jack Clifford, sales manager of Calvert Distillers, spon- \u201clocally the animals is shown before the manure has been cleaned away.At right, it is shown auring cleaning.The paddles of the conveyor can be seen ns they travel along the gut- jissue.for the first time, three points went to a first-place selection, two for a second, and one for a third.\u201cThis is a wonderful honor the Vallevfleld fans have paid me,\" \u201csaid Leclerc.\u201cl'm very grateful to ter.Should an animal step down into the paddles, they merely straighten out and go on by the fect of the animal.A story on this subject appears elsewhere in this Supper was served by the OHS.staff, The business meeting was conducted by the president, Mr.John Gaw.Varlous matters of business were discussed and satisfactorily decided.Dr.G.L.Sutton, Medical Officer at O.H.8.addressed the meeting on \u201cHealth Program in a Modern School.\u201d Barrie Memorial Womens\u2019 Auxiliary ORMSTOWN \u2014 The Annual Meeting of the Barrie Memorial Wo- them for giving me the Lord Calvert Trophy and I also want to ithank my team-mates for making \u2018this great moment possible\u201d.« Coach Toe Blake stated that Leclerc played effective hockey for \u2018his team in the nets all season.{Im delighted to heur that the fans | who acted as sole judges, made such \"a deserving choice.Tt was a close race and it could have been any- \u201cbody\u201d, he sald.In the final count, Georges Bougle cof 2,921.Jean Paul Bisaillon end- ,Deslauriers trailled by only 23 \u201cpoints.The first ten \u201cPlayer of Dis- \u201ctinction\u201d standings were completed \"by Marcel Bessette, eighth (2,493); men's Auxiliary was held on Mon- ; day Feb.25, in the Board Room of the Hospital with the President, Mrs.Cecil Bryson in the chair.All {those who have contributed to the successful organization of the Auxli- Mary were thanked by the President The Treasurer's and Mrs.Snuvé.{report read by Mrs.Parkinson and Mrs.Snuvé showed na splendid balance.Mrs.H.McMahon con- bers coming from Howick district.who reported for the Ways and Means committee reminded Mrs.M.Stalker and Mrs.A.Brunet us of Page Five Dewittville DEWITTVILLE \u2014 The February meeting of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union was held at the home of Mrs.Irwin Todd on Thursday last with 14 members and 10 children present.The president presiding.The meeting opened with a short prayer and the hymn \u201cTo the work, to the work, we are servants of God\u201d.Mrs, Ernest Martin read the lesson, the topic being A Call To Service.If wver this world needed Christian workers it is now.The call to servicg rings out clear and Joud.Have wg heard it?How shall we respond?Isalah was a prince at the palace, up in the affairs of the Kingdom of Judah \u2014 he saw that things were going from bad to worse and was much discouraged.He really needed a vision of God and the Knowledge that God was on the throne of the universe.He caught the vision of God and confessed his own sins, then those of his people, and answered God's call saying, \u201cHere am I-\u2014send me.\u201d God uses prepared people in His work.This call is not for a special few, it is for everyone.As Christian women, let ts be up and doing.After the business part of the meeting a short program followed to commemorate our beloved founder, Frances Willard.Mrs, Wm.Graham and Mrs, M, Tillotson are to prepare a slate of officers for our annual meeting in March.The meeting closed with Pledge and Mizpah.A hot supper of baked beans and brown bread was served by the hostess.Miss Pearl Holiday of N.D.G, Montreal, was at her home here over the week-end.Mrs.Thos.Goundrey attended the funeral of the late Mr.Edgar Mc- Kell held in Howick United Church, on Thursday.Mr.and Mrs.John W.Lowden were Sunday guests of Mr.and Mrs.Kenneth Steele and family, Nitro, Que.Dewittville residents were indeed sorry to hear of the death of Mrs, E.A.Beck in Barrie Memorial Hospital on Monday and wish to extend to Mr.Beck and his family their sinocro sympathy.the AA AIRIS QU ; a inal sors of the fans\u2019 voting idea.In |Blngo Ernst, ninth, (2488); and the voting which was conducted Paul Larivee, tenth (2442).the Bazaar which will be held in the Fall.New business was the unanimous decision to make the furnishing of ORMSTOWN \u2014 The annual Red Cross Campaign began in the dis- | trict this week with the objective | set at $2,000.the same amount as for 1951.Last year the district fell short only $170.of this amount.Canvassers are calling at the homes in all sections of the district and it is hoped that they will receive a generous response.Legion Sponsors Carnival On Thursday evening, the Orms- Prize winners in the various clas-, ses \u2014 1, Paul MeMahon; 2.Janet Cavers; 3.Geraldine Sutton; 4.Diane McCartney.{ 1.Davidson Family - Heather, Suzan and John.2.Gladys and Gordon Duncan.3.Brian Hooker.| 4.Grace Harkness.| Adults \u2014 Willis Bott.Races:\u2014 14 and over: 1.Gladys Duncan; 2.Heather Davidson.14 and under: 1.Dorothy Beattie; 2.Mary Catherine Hooker.Boys:\u2014 1.Lyndon Hooker; 2.Gordon Foster., During the evening, selections were supplied by the Ormstown Boys\u2019 Band.Day of Prayer Observed The World Day of Prayer was observed on Friday afternoon, in the St.Paul's United Church.Leaders representing the three local churches were Mrs.C.L.Taylor, Mrs.C.J.Bryson and Mrs.M.MacNaughton.Mrs.J.McMillan gave the address and Mrs.J.Wallace contributed a beautiful solo, accompanied by Mrs.Percy Osmond.Other participants were: Mrs.Gilker, Mrs.Adam Mc- Neil, Mrs.Robert Eastwood, Mrs.Mary McNeil and Mrs.Huntley Greig.Mrs.Alfred Greig read messages from the shut-ins.Numerous ladies were in attendance and the afternoon was most inspir- ing.Brysonville, Que.February 26th.Married OBSERVE GOLDEN WEDDING ANNIVERSARY Mr.and Mrs.J.H.Nussey of|they have resided at Brysonville observed their |ever since.Ite teen grand iden weddin anniversary On| seven ughters, \u20ac - Fe $ in 1902.children and one great-grandchild.They have seven sons, Ormstown Red Cross Drive Opens This Week For $2,000 Visitors of Mrs.Susan Murphy on Sunday at the home of Mr.and Mrs.I.D.Barrington were Mr.and Mrs, George Collum of Huntingdon, Mr.and Mrs.Christie Newman of St.Lambert, Mrs.Ernest Ouimet and Mrs.Bart Gillis of Cornwall and Mr.E.Finn.! Evening Auxiliary Mrs.Harold Kerr entertained the Evening Auxiliary of the Ormstown Presbyterian Church, on Tuesday evening.A quilt was worked on sewing done.Mrs.Alvin Gruer presided and Mrs.Frank Hope led the Worship Service.Mrs.Merrill Tannahill gave a detailed account of the annual Presbyterlal held in Montreal cently in the Ephriam Scott Memorial Church, Mrs.Archie Wilson gave an interesting topic on the work of Miss Muriel Judd, worker Chinese in Montreal, Delicious refreshments were served by thd hostesses, Mrs.Ivan Bar- Hd and Mrs.Merrill Tanna- ill, Y.P.S.Entertains On Friday evening the Presbyter- lan Young Peoples Society entertained local groups at a social gathering at the Brysonville Community Club.Games and dancing were enjoyed.Music was supplied by Mr.and Mrsme Jim Cullen and Mr.Gordon Foster.among the re.| the Lobby of the Hospital our pro- Jeet.Mrs.J.Davidson Introduced the in English and tn French on the work of a Hospital Auxiliary: ils pitfalls and objectives in a delightfully humorous fashion.work we were warned to \u2018let the Hospital Authorities be our guide.\u201d New money making schemes were brought to our attention, The Speaker highly commended the splendid organization of our new Auxiliary.Mrs.CG.Elliott, and Mrs.A Brunet graciously thanked Mrs.Catto, after which all present were invited to the Dining-room where delicious refreshments were served by ladies of the Service and Ways and Means Committees, The next held in June.At the Executive meeling on Monday afternoon it was decided to purchase a three plece chesterfield suite, two extra chairs, table, ash stands and draperies for the furnishing of the lobby.open meeting will he Barrie Memorial Notes The Barrie Memorial Hospital, Ormstown, Que., has received and acknowledged $10 annualsmember- ships from Mr.W.J.Brown, Orm- stown, and Anonymous.The hospital has also received the following donations: $500, the Ladies\u2019 Auxiliary of the Barrie Memorial Hospital to be used toward furnishing the lobby of the hospital; cans of applesauce, the Women's Insti- guest speaker, Mrs.Catto, who spoke In all our CHARLIE ROSEN has just returned from an extended voyage to several cities of the United States where he visited the most important designing firms.Mr.Rosen brought back to Valleyfield the newest and most popular 1952 styles for ladies and gentlemen.At 40 St.Laurent Street, Valleyfield, Mr.Rosen is now showing the most excellent choices in Coats, Dresses and Ladies\u2019 Suits.For gents: tremendous choice of samples and modern styles for ready- made or made-to-measure Suits and Overcoats.At your next trip to Val- leyfield, visit CHARLIE ROSEN\u2019S store where you will be delighted with the choice of merchandise in store at such low prices.Charlie Rosen 40 St.Laurent St.CVA.AL Orme te, Franklin.The CGIT.of V.T.A.town Franklin Centre made dressings : The Chateauguay Valley Teachers ,and Mrs.Floyd Stevenson of Prank.Phone 607 Valleyfield Association met on Thursday even- lin Centre was convener of the sewing at the Ormstown High School.Ing group on Thursday, Feb.28th \u2018cerrecerree 4 Now Open! Now Open.) F y - ary Kwong 3 Kestaurant - \u2018 A 76 Ste.Cécile Street LARRY KWONG (In front of City Hall) ® © © © © in to see us.French patsry PHONE 3022 LIGHT MEALS Lunches, etc Soft Drinks Cigars, Cigarettes Chocolates Sandwiches, etc.\u2014 e\u2014 SPECIALTY : Chinese Food of All Kinds At your next trip to Valleyfield drop cooks.Don't forget to order that delicious cup of coffee.! Larry Kwong Taste our famous made by our own 4 Valleyfield, Que. Page Six For You Madam WOMAN'S INTUITION IS NO MYTH All your life you've heard of \u2018woman's intuition\u201d and perhaps wondered whether it's fact or just fiction.John Kord Lagemann asks this question and answers it, after consulting top authorities, this way: \u201cIntuition is a normal and highly useful function of human intelligence.Though associated with high IQs in both sexes, it is more characteristic of women than of men.\" { MAX FACTOR MAKE - UP Smith Pharmacy 28 E.Main St.MALONE, N.Y.sa Why?Well, in adolescence a boy is - interested chiefly in asserting himself with action, while a girl's interests center around feelings, her own and others\u2019.From the understanding she gains of her own emotions she is able to relive the emotions of others.Intuition is a way of thinking without words.It's a short cut to truth, and in matters of emotion it's the only way of getting there at all.The great psychologist Freud once said: \u201cIn minor decisions I consider all the pros and cons.But in vital matters, such as the choice of a mate or a profession, the decision should come from the unconscious.\u201d Psychiatrists are agreed that the mind tunes into comsclousness only a few of the impressions it re- cejves.But it stores all the rest in the unconscious mind.Highly intuitive women, and some men too, use more of this store than the nonintuitive.Life is more Interesting If youre intuitive.Intuition gives you a much better understanding of others, and because of this you mean more to them.You can develop your intuitive powers, too.\"Take off the blinders of habit and open your mind to what's going on rz LEURS MONTREAL A WEEK any other of 8 d Velveeta box- or top from cone topped tin; from any \u201cJunket\u201d Rennet Powder or \u201cJunket\u201d Renuct Tablets; Tintex Color Retnover box-top; Tender Leal Tea box-top from a container of tea or ten bags; Bovril box-top or label; ReaLemon Vi-Tone can top; lemon juice label; Miracle Whip Salad Dressing Bromo-Scltzer box-top or label; Silver Gloss Starch box-top; Robin Hood Cake Mix box-top\u2014White, Chocolate or bread; Johnson's Pride Furniture Wax label; Davis Gelatine box-top; box-top or label; Zubes Cough Lozenges geper dise; Mil-Ko box-top; Ch anborn Coffee front panel from C10) Te your Big Chance to win the $1,000.00 First Prize or HYS LY INFORMATION SERVIGE \u2014$85,00000 PRIZE MONEY! Here's the 143 Cash Awards to a total of $5,000.00.Second prize is $200.00, third prize is 8100.00 and there are 140 prizes of $5.00 cach.All of these prizes will be DOUBLED if the Prize Winning Contestant has attached only one box-top, label or facsimile from any one of the following products: top; Crown Brand Corn Syrup label box-top | $1,000.00 BONUS | At the time of the judging, a Special $1,000.00 Bonus will be awarded to the first contestant, with correct solution, who has enclosed one box-top, label or facsimile from any six of the products mentioned above.The judging will continue, if necessary, beyond the awarding of the other 143 prizes until a correct solution is found which | Dye or label; Ginger- Lavoris qualifies for this Special $1,000.00 Bonus! age & Lo bag or metal strip from tin; Kraft De Luxe Slices label; box-top from an 8.0.8.container.You need just one box-top, label or facsimile to DOUBLE your prize money.And ou can win a SPECIAL $1,000.00 BONUS, too.Read about it under \u201c$1,000.00 BONUS\u201d.eadi CONFIDENTIALLY YOURS, the popular new week-end newspaper column, resents this Great and Easy ontest.This is all you have to do: Find and circle 19 letters of the alphabet in this column, which if placed in order, would spell CONFIDENTIALLY YQURS.Here's a winning Lip, just read back a few lines and you will find the word \u201cContest\u201d, Circle each of the first three letters and you are on your way to the Big Prize Mouey! You scattered throughout the column.does not matter.You may circle separate slip of paper write the c the key letters which spell out then be circled.In this way wish! Contest closes March ou 13st, and address.Only first class mail with sufficient Remember $2,000.00 is the First will find the remainder of the letters The order in which they are circled the letters in this column or on a omplete words from which you took your solution.These key letters must can send in as many entries as you 1952.Be sure to include your name ; ostage accepted.Prize if correct solution contains a box-top, label or facsimile from any of the above Froducte.THERE ARE 143 OTHER PRIZES FOR A GRAND TO Major prise winners\u2019 names will AL OF $5,00000! appear in this column within a few weeks.A complete list of winners will be furnished on request.Mail your entries and enclosures to CONFIDENTIALLY YOURS, P.O.Box 350, Station H, Montreal.Increase your chances of winning by rushing as many entries ag possible.Hoot Mon! But IL it's a bonny sight to me to see the way my budget i8 balancing these days.One of my thriftiest tricks is to serve Jell-O desserts \u2014 often.Try it, and see the family ap- 4 + plaud this economy .because JELL-O JELLY POWDER des serts are so wonderfully tempting and flavorful.With 7 exciting \u201clocked-in\u201d flavors to choose from, member of the family will have a favorite.And that fresh Jell-O flavor is locked right in each tiny particle until you release it by adding hot water.It's bard to believe \u2014 but perfectly true \u2014 Jell-O costs only about 2c a serving.Serve Jell-O desserts regularly.and sal \u201cPm Sitting On Top Of The World\u201d when I see - my cakes coming > out of the oven so \\ NX beautifully light, so tender and deli- cious- looking.And though I may seem smug, it's plain to see that anyone can have cakes just wonderful.Just use SWANS DOWN CAKE FLOUR.You see, Swans Down is made for Just that purpose .to give you tter baking results, to assure you of beautiful, moist, melt-in- our mouth cakes .every time.ke with confidence, the way I do.Bake with Swans Down Cake Flour \u2014 the flour that is sifted again and again until it is 27 times as fine as ordinary flour.Remember men love Swans Down Cakes .and the girls who bake them! \u201cHere\u2019s How \u2014 To Happy Travelling! Whether you are taking an off-season vacation or venturing far from home for ; any other reason, your money will travel in real ety if you oy it in the form of Travellers , Cheques.The BANK OF MONTREAL can supply * you with Travellers Cheques that can be easily cash- at many hotels and stores.And they're specially designed bo as to be no good to anyone else .only you can use them! Travellers Cheques come in convenient amounts of - ed at banks anywhere\u2014and +$10, $20, $50 and $100 .and for a triflin of \u2018My Baok'l So\u2014before and put your money into Voyage! BofM ou can buy them charge at your neighborhood branch you pack your bags\u2014call on the Boi M ravellers Cheques .for a truly Bon Does Your Husband wear a worried look these days?End-of-the- head-clearing cups Red Rose Coffee, too.It's \u201cThe Blues\"?HEPATICA will transform you the Ball\u201d in no time! It brin from headaches due to irr DOW woman.bring relief.auteure and safe arity, cold symptoms, stomach upsets or constipation.A glass of Sal Hepatica before breakfast or supper will make you feel You see, with Sal Hepatica there's no \u201cLaxative Lag\"\u2014that feeling of discomfort that continues for hours \u2019til ordinary, slow-acting laxat month bills are never very cheerful things .but you can banish his of really good tea.the job\u201d is RED ROSE TEA.There's so much loom with a piping hot cup he tea I recommend to \u201cdo ep and heart-warming flavour in this delicious blend .nothing wishy-washy about it! Yes, it's plain to be tasted that ] is good tea.And, because it's good, it gives more r pound\u2014so it's economical.You might try as good as Fun?Aren't you glad you tried this pleasant, effective remedy Yes, speedy, sparklin R Rose Tea Rose Tea.into the \u201cBelle of fast, welcome relief ike a tics is a product of Bristol-Myers who also make Foran pain ef tablots.around you.\u201d \u201cSee people as they really are, not as you think they ought to be.\u201d WOMAN'S RIGHTS By Joseph Lister Rutledge This phrase \u2014 woman's rights \u2014 which was so Vivid in the days of a generation or so ago seems to have lost its old challenging power.In those other years it was the rallying cry that led women from à frankly secondary position to full equality with men.Hardly anyone now would restate the arguments by which the dominant male sought to support the case that under his direction alone lay the safety and progress of a world.No one would reassert the claim that with woman's gentle hand appearing in the affairs of government appear.Today as women walk side by side with their husbands to cast an equal ballot, it is hard to remember how bitter and relentless was the battle to secure this equality; how readily women suffered indignity, imprisonment and persecution for the cause; how they chained themselves to railings in the open, in the galleries of the parliament at Westminster that their voice might indeed be heard.So it is a continuing surprise that women who could demand to be heard in the nations councils should be content to remain voiceless in those more near to them.Behind every worker in industry is the home he represents.The centre of that home is the wife and children, Their well-being is the reason for the worker's effort, the excuse for his expanding demands.The very terminology of the day is evidence: \u201ctake-home pay\u201d, \u201ccost of living\u201d, \u201cpensions\u201d, \u2018work hours\u201d, \u201cunemployment insurance\u201d.All of them lead back to the home, its interests and activities.Yet the women who is at the centre of this home has tacitly admitted here, as she has not admitted in public life, that there are decisions and actions beyond her understanding.When it is decided whether her man shall be permitted to work or not, and on what terms, she has nothing to say.When wages are succeeded by strike pay, she must make the adjustments.When strike-unemploy- ment leaves the family handicapped financially, it is her comforts, her dreams, her aspirations that are first to go out of the window.But she has nothing to say about it.Her opinion is neither asked nor wanted.Does she ever stop to question why?If the women involved are ready to admit they have no right to a Voice in affairs that make or break their lives and those of their children, then we have no case to make.No case other than the quite obvious one that\u2014when this is conceded\u2014a measurable part of womans dignity, and much of the rights that were fought for so gallantly, are back in the ash can.Garden Notes by Gordon Lindsay Smith What Will It Cost?Unlike golf, fishing, picture taking or almost any other outdoor recreation the cost of gardening is nominal.One can do wonders with a few cents worth of seed, a spade and a rake.For all the technical information necessary the directions on the seed packet and in the seed catalogue will suffice.These directions tell the gardener when to plant and how deep, and how big will grow the thing he has planted so he can allow sufficlent room.Of course those are minimum requirements and for just a tiny plot.A few extras like a cultivator or two and a little more variety in the seeds and plants will increase the satisfaction and enjoyment.For extra and detailed information too, there are excellent gardening books and government bulletins available.If one is really ambitious, one can expand almost indefinitely.There are literally hundreds of different flowers and vegetables at one's disposal, and more hundreds of peren- dening, perennial borders, rose gardens and garden pools.There are also power gadgets for cultivating, trimming, spraying, clipping, leaf \"(gathering and such jobs for the person who is mechanically inclined or who has a really big piece of ground.First Plantings Strictly speaking the first plantings will be the seeds started in flats on the window sill or in hotbeds or green houses.These are sown early in March and by the time they are ready to transplant to permanent quarters outside they will be six to ten inches high.Things that should be started early in this way the old, bad ways would surely dis- | nials, shrubs and vines and trees.i There are specialties like rock gar-) The Huntingdon Gleaner The Funeral of our Late Beloved King George VI at the Huntingdon Theatre Next Week Beginning next Wednesday and continuing for one week, the complete funeral of Our Beloved King George VI, will be seen on the screen of the Huntingdon Theatre, in detail Wednesday until Friday, March 12, Tuesday, March 15 to 13 and 14, and in even greater detail on Saturday, Sunday, Monday and the 18th, as Paramount have done an entire short feature on the Royal Funeral.double film program.This will be in addition to our regular Marchand Freres Sponsor Wallpaper Demonstration .A demonstration in Wallpaper hanging and tips on interior decoration was held in St.Joseph's Parish Hall, Huntingdon, on Wednesday evening, February 27, sponsored by Marchand Freres.Miss Marie Fremont, Wallpaper Counsellor and Demonstrator of Montreal, in conjunction with the representatives of the Glidden Paint Company, directed the event.The purpose of the idea is to promote sales in wallpaper, but it is also the contribution that wallpaper Manufacturers give to education.These demonstrations seek to teach women how to do their own interior decorating and in this way avoid having to pay high prices to have the work done.Miss Fremont discussed, with wallpaper as a background, colour schemes, drapes, curtains, rugs and wood finishes and showed the ladies how to overcome the most common of difficulties in wallpapering.How to paper ceilings, corners, how to go around an obstacle on the wall and how to paper around windows, doors and other openings.Due to the shortage of time, a discussion was not held but Miss Fremont remained at Marchand Freres on Thursday morning to answer any questions that the ladies might wish to ask.Tickets were given at the door and the following prizes were won: electric iron by Mrs.Raoul Duran- ceau; a certificate entitling the win- are those that if sown directly out of doors would hardly have sufficient time to mature or flower.Tomatoes, cabbage, peppers come in this category in the vegetables and petunias, zinnias, begonias and scores of other flowering plants.Many gardeners in the cities and towns are able to buy these as started plants in flats from seedsmen or nurserymen.But in some cases, of course, this is not possible.Then again there are some gardeners who, to make certain of particular varieties, grow their own plants anyway.Where the garden is large and several hundreds of started plants are needed it is cheaper to grow one's own.In this casg, however, a hotbed is advisable.For the construction of these affairs one should consult a government bulletin.For starting seed indoors use a good mixture of sand and fine loam.First planting outside will be very hardy things that are not afraid of frost and like to make their best growth in cool weather.Sweet peas are in this group, and grass seed and nursery stock.The latter is the trade name for young vines, shrubs ; and trees, ready for transplanting.One can hardly plant these things too soon.Short Cuts One of the easiest shorteuts both with flowers and vegetables is to use started plants as described earlier.These can go outside almost as soon as it is safe to sow ner to enough wallpaper for one room to be chosen at Marchand Freres Store, by Mr.Alex Bergevin, Glenelm, Mrs.Rolland St.Onge, 56A York 8t., and Mrs.Emile Le- gault, Huntingdon.Miss Fremont will pay a return visit here in the month of October and any organizations that wish to to do so through Mr.L.Fredette of Marchand Freres, Huntingdon.Athelstan Day of Prayer ATHELSTAN \u2014 The 32nd observance of the World Day of Prayer was held at the home of Mrs.Reese, with twenty-seven ladies in attendance.The theme for the service being \u201cChrist Our Hope\u201d.The prepared programme divided into five sections, viz: Adoration, Penitence, Assurance, Intercession and Dedication, was in charge of the local Presidents of the two Women's Missionary Societies, in which all present participated.A most appropriate solo entitled \u201cConfidence\u201d, rendered by Mrs.David Mawhinney, was much appreciated.Miss Alice Wilson gave a timely informative reading on \u2018What Your Money Does\u201d, The offering, which was forwarded to the Women\u2019s Inter- Church Council of Canada, amounted to $8.Miss Margaret Dunn returned to Franklin the past week, after spending the past few weeks at the home of her brother.Miss Helen Elder, of Montreal, spent the week-end at the home of her mother, Mrs.George Elder, Mrs.William Anders is at present a patient in the Huntingdon County Hospital, where she is undregoing treatment.Her many friends wish her a speedy recovery to health.W.M.S.The February meeting of the WMS.Auxiliary was held on Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs.H.A.Hampson.Mrs.Tully read the Sermon on the Mound from Matthew 6th Chapter and Mrs.D.F, Grant led in prayer.Ten members answered the roll call by repeating a verse of the Bible containing the word \u201cwitness\u201d.A letter was read, stating that our allocation for Expense Fund was $7.00 this year.It was decided to forward this amount.A list of names of workers on our mission fielus from whom our Auxiliary might receive monthly letters was read.The name of Rev.A.Reoch, British Guiana, was chosen, as he is personally known to many of us.A letter was read from Mrs.R.McCleery, retiring President of Montreal Presbyterial, in which she expressed her thanks to the Auxil- laries for their help and support during her term of office.Mrs.Maw- hinney gave a most complete and comprehensive account of the recent Annual Meeting, with special emphasis on the addresses given by Miss Ellen Anderson in the afternoon and Mr.Dunn in the evening.Those who were privileged to attend these meetings felt it was like a repeat visit, while those who re- seeds.If handled carefully one can have flowers and new vegetables at least two weeks ahead of usual in this way.Another trick | is to sow some seed of each packet a week or two before the normal time and then protect the young seedlings with paper caps, panes of glass or upturned flower pots until the weather really turns warm.Some people start a hill of melons, squash or even corn in a berry box indoors, then plant box and all outside without disturbing roots.Macle Ie modern way.\u2018SALADA TEA BAGS mained at home felt they had the highlights brought to them.The meeting closed with singing \u201cSoldiers of Christ, Arise\u201d, and the W.MS.prayer repeated in unison.Delicious refreshments were served by the hostess.Mr.W.Norman Clelland, who is an Elder in First Presbyterian Church, Montreal, visited Athelstan .Presbyterian Church on Sunday morning, to tell about the work of Church Extension and Christian Outreach.Mr.Clelland gave a clear outline of this venture, telling of the great need for establishing places of worship where none now exist.Following Mr.Clelland\u2019s talk, Mr.Mawhinney spoke from the text, \u201cIt ls more blessed to give than receive\u201d (Acts 20:35).\u2018 Mr.W.Norman Clelland and Mr.Colin Campbell, Montreal, were dinner guests at The Manse on Sunday.Mrs, David Watson is a patient in the Montreal General Hospital.WHY DON'T YOU FINISH YOUR CEREAL, \u2018 JACKIE ?HERE'S A TREAT THAT WILL MAKE ANY CEREAL TASTE BETTER \u2014 TRY IT NOW, JACRIE = AND TASTE THE DIFFERENCE / 0) wow! THAT'S TERRIFIC, MOM! WHAT iS IT CALLED 7 CAN | HAVE MORE ?ITS DELICIOUS ! OF COURSE, JACKIE \u2014 ITS CROWN BRAND CORN SYRUP AND IT'S THE BEST-TASTING- TOPPER ANY CEREAL A Eo % Lead i A D._ i OS CR Lu EVER HAD/ fil bat contact her for services will be able! | spent the week-end with his parents, | This leap Year, 1952, may be the last time we shall see a 20-day February.I don't mean it's the end lof the world, but only that a good | many people at the United Nations headquarters hope that a new calendar \u2014 The World Calendar \u2014 will be adopted and installed by 1956.| Which means February will thenceforth contain an invariable 30 days, land \u201cleap day\u201d will come in mid- \u2018year, at the end of June.| Leap years we shall always have, because they are a mathematical necessity.The extra dividend of one day is a device of the astronomers to keep our years in step with the sun and the seasons.Fact and fable are strangely mingled in the history of Leap Year.For an example of a Leap Year legend that would ordinarily be dismissed as pure fancy, take the time-honored tradition whereby man-craving gals may make their jown proposals of marriage during Leap Year.Most of us will be surprised to find that this privilege is based on actual legislation, enacted in at least four different countries several hundred years ago.According to ancient legend, it was all started in Ireland by St.Patrick the missionary, during the early part of the fifth century.It became the \u201claw of the land\u201d in 1288.In that year there was an act passed by the Scottish Parliament in which \u201cit is statut and ordaint that for ilk yeare known as lepe yeare, ilk mayden ladle, of baith high and lowe estait, shall hae libertie to bespeke ye man she likes.\u201d Tough on Bachelors A few years later a similar law was passed in France, Then in the 15th century, just before Columbus sailed for America, the tradition was legalized in Italy by \u2018the governments of Genoa and !Florence.In England the custom had become part of the common law by 1600, when the legal books defined it thus: \"As oft as lepe yeare doth return the ladies have jye privuleg of making love to ye men, which they doe either by wordes or by lookes, as to them seemeth proper.\u201d The Scottish law had a neat little enforcement clause to make sure the men took it seriously.It provided that \u201cgif he refuses to tak her to bee his wife, he shall bee mulct in the sum of ane hun- dredity pundis, or less as his es- tait may bee, exceppt and alwais gif he can mak it appeare that he is betrothit to another woman, then he shall be free.\u201d In old England, a man who refused a Leap Year proposal had to pay a silk gown as a forfeit.The reason for Leap Year is So This Is Leap Year found in the astronomical length of the year.A year is the time it takes the earth to circle the sun] and the astronomers have, worked this out as approximately.365.2425 days, or 365 days, 5 hours, 49 minutes and 12 seconds.So we have a calendar with 365 days in ordinary years, and every four years we add a \u201cleap day\u201d, which picks up the extra fraction and keeps our calendar in step with the seasons.(This still isn't quite exact enough, so we omit leap day in \u201ccentury years\u201d three times in Aubrey-Riverfield AUBREY-RIVERFIELD Mr.and Mrs.Erskine Orr and Linda Mr.and Mrs.Jas.Orr and Eric.Mrs.Agnes Curran, of Ormstown, is spending some time with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr.and Mrs.Jas.Orr.Curling Notes The curlers have been active in the past week, four rinks taking part in the Moore Bonspiel at Hunting- don.Three rinks skipped by Andrew Allen, Lloyd Allen and Keith Robb played down to represent the club in the Caledonia Bonspiel, Keith Robb's rink winning out to meet the outside clubs.On Wednesday evening this rink played Bob McGregor\u2019s Riverfield entry in a very close game, playing a tie end and winning by one shot.More games are yet to be played to determine the centre winner.One rink of mixed curlers, Mr.Kenneth Allen, Mrs, Keith Robb, Mr.and Mrs.Eddie Dinnegan enjoyed games and a social evening at English River Curling Club on Thursday evening.Games were played on Thursday and Friday evenings at Aubrey on the mixed bons- plel for prizes donated by Mr.and Mrs.Floyd Gruer and Saturday evening as usual, \u201cClub Night\u201d was held.The World Day of Prayer was held at the home of Mrs.Osborne Orr, when a large representation of members of the Howick United Church and the Riverfield Presbyterian Church, were present.The very interesting program for the occasion was followed with several of the ladies taking part.Delicious refreshments were served at the close of the meeting by the ladies of the United Church.On Friday, Feb.29th, Mr.and Mrs.Wm, Rorison and L.A.C.Caroll Rorison attended the Exercises of the Montreal School for Nursing Aides, when the sixth graduating class received pins and certificates and the seventh class, of which June Rorison is a member, having completed their six months\u2019 training, received their Arm Monograms.Mrs.Bert Hudson and Susan and Mrs.Dick Fletcher, spent Saturday in Montreal.Miss Elizabeth Rorison returned home on Wednesday after spending two weeks a patient in the Barrie Memorial Hospital, Ormstown.Mr.and Mrs.Eric Rice and family of Ormstown, were Sunday guests of her parents, Mr.and Mrs.John Milne L.A.C.Caroll Rorison, R.C.AF., St.Hubert, spent a four-day leave over the week-end with his parents, Mr.and Mrs.Wm.Rorison.A.Cl1 Raymond Cullen, RCAF, Trenton, Ont, has been enjoying a month's leave visiting relatives in this vicinity and at Ormstown.Hemmingford Mrs.Fred Orr accompanied Mr.and Mrs.Norman Stewart of Platts- burg, N.Y, on a trip to Florida.A report says Mr.Russell Williams got another wolf.Those animals seem to be quite numerous, Wednesday, March Sth, 1952 four centuries; the year 2000 will again be a Leap Year.) Many people have wondered why Julius Caesar inserted his quadrennial leap day in February.The explanation is fairly simple.The Roman year in ancient times started on March 1.February was the last month of the old Roman year; leap day was just tagged onto the end of the year.The New Plan Under the new calendar, the year will be divided into identical quarters of 91 days each \u2014 plus an extra day at the end of the year to be called Worldsday, De- cember \u201cW\u201d or 31.As it is proposed that The World Calendar would not de adopted until Sunday, January 1, coincides in our present calendar, the transition would offer no difficulties.The next occurrence of this coincidence will be in 1966.Dental Notice Dr.Marc Lefebvre Dental Surgeon 20 Chateanguny Street Phone 2939 Huntingdon PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY Dr.J.E.Caza SURGEON DENTIST 118 Chateauguay St.Dial 2000 HUNTINGDON Dr.Lucien Perron Ear, Eye, Nose and Throat Specialist Office Hours: Daily from 2 to 5 p.m., except Saturdays.Monday and Friday evenings from 7 to 9 pm.For appointment, phone MA.4184.3744 St.Denis St.Montreal Arthur W.Sullivan QUEBEC LAND SURVEYOR VALLEYFIELD P.O.Box 124 Bell Telephone 709 J.S.Gaw, B.V.Sc.VETERINARY SURGEON 19 Henderson Street HUNTINGDON Dial 381 Dr.Leo Belisle, V.S.VETERINARY SURGEON Phone 7 Ormstown, Que.Lucien Baillargeon NOTARY PUBLIC Successor to I.I.Crevier and A.R.Leduc, Notaries Public Office in O'Connor Block, entrance next to Popular Restaurant Chateauguay St., Huntingdon MONEY TO LOAN Estate and Succession Settlement Gabriel Poupart NOTARY ST.CHRYSOSTOME, QUE.Phone 9 Office every Thursday at Hemmingford Tel.5r 12 Roger Fortier, N.P.COUNTY BLDG.HUNTINGDON Phones: Office 306; Residence 2345 Erle C.Martin BA, BCL.\u2014 ADVOCATE 29 King St.Dial 401 HUNTINGDON Cossette & Cossette LAWYERS 168 Champlain St.Phone 43 VALLEY FIELD Meloche & Perron LAWYERS G.A.Meloche M.Perron 31 Market St.Phone 691 VALLEYFIELD PO.Box 1 Phones 500, 67 Gontran Saintonge, Q.C.BARRISTER and SOLICITOR 42 St.Cecile St.Valleyfield Middleton Hope & Co.CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS R.J.P.Dawson, C.A.John P.Lewis, C.A.Wm.G.Hogg, C.A.J.G.Elliott, C.A.388 St.James St., La.4141 Montreal Hebert, Legault & Co.CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS Offices: 48 St.Cecilie Phone 41 Valleyfield 10 St.James St.W.MA.4815 Montreal Armand ITébert, C.A.Henri Legault, C.A.Residence: 17 Alexander St.Phone 1859-J Valleytield W.S.Brown GR.DUATE OPTOMETRIST JEWELLER 146 Chateauguay St.HUNTINGDON, QUE.Phone 362 T.A.Laniel GRADUATE OPTOMETRIST 40 Market St.VALLEYFIELD, QUE.Phone 243 C.M.LaSalle, L.Sc.O.OPTOMETRIST EYESIGHT SPECIALIST Office every Wednesday from 2 pm.to 9 pm.ab E.AUBIN PHARMACY HUNTINGDON 121 Chateauguay St.Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted BUSINESS DIRECTORY JACK CONSTRUCTION CO.Reg\u2019d Building Estimates and Contracts Repairs and Alterations Modern Kitchens, Bathrooms and Asphalt Floor Tiling OUR SPECIALTIES Phone 2898 Huntingdon 24 Lake St.Laberge & Lalonde Ltd.T.J.Graham PLUMBING HEATING LICENSED AUCTIONEER Sas An Experienced Salesman will Government Licensed Roofing Supplies, Propane Gas and Wood Ranges 176 Chateauguay St.Phone 432 HUNTINGDON A.K.English FIRE and GENERAL INSURANCE Representative for Mutual Life Assurance Co.of Canada and for all forms of Insurance and Bonds.Phone 607r6 Ormstown, Que.Earle Radley ALL FORMS OF Tel.312r12 Hemmingford Geo.L.Collum Representative ROYAL LIVERPOOL INSURANCE CO.\u2014 FIRE \u2014 AUTOMOBILE Dial H'don.5062 LIFE Romeo Brunet Manufaci rer of REINFORCED and VIBRATED COEMENT TILES SAND and GRAVEL Phone 18 Ormstown, Que.W.Keddy & Son SAW MILL GRIST MILE, Fiour Lumber Milifeeds \u2014 Mr.Price Kavanagh was a Sunday gat gt the Leahy-Kavanagh home.Rl Bullding Materials make you money.If planning a sale, large or small, I will be pleased to discuss sale arrangements with you, no obligation.Phone Huntingdon.2442, or L.J.Graham, H'don.2289.E.Brault 87 St.Louis Road, Beauharnois, Que.THE GREAT WEST LIFE ASSURANCE Ov.Fire and Car Insurance Phone 338 Beaunarnous W.K.Philps General Insurance of all kinds at moderate rates Phone 2944 Huntingdon Webber's Jeweller WATCHMAKER and JEWELLER Westminster Chime Clocks Silverware i£ts etc.Phone 451 Huntingdon Machine Shop GENERAL MACHINE WORK 106 St.Lawrence St.Valleyfield Pattern-makers Shafting Oxy-Acetylene * Jlding ISAIE QUENNEVILLE él an lig M soi M.0 end me Ha T( \u201cR 2nd Act Mu wit Din \\ Wednesday, March 5th, 1952 .The Huntingdon Gleaner Page Seven \u2014\u2014 ning, whe.| : manchester was held on Monday, : Beaver Tipe 19 lee emo! Attitude of Press Auure ue ne Le eo pans on jnsenion, | Lacolle pier vw bd Mone\u2019 Hemmingford ., Mr.and Mrs.ohn Quenneville, \u20acll Tor future length of life since the beginning of [child of doting parents, was fussed _ le Members present except Coun.on Tuesday evening, Feb.28th, BEAVER \u2014 Mr and Met, rest Lucille and Raymond Quenney to Of Canadians this century.No such great advance [over and catered to, and any little participated in edly Yoonspiel Pringle; Mr.John A.Caldwell,|gt, Luke's W.A.sponsored a card Watterson Tock.Malone N.Y.on |St.Dorothée on Sunday and visited has ever been recorded before in upset caused a big to-do.By the held at Lachine on Wednesday.mayor, presiding.\\ party in the Church Hall.\u201c500\u201d was Mrs.Chas.ning, when Mrs.Cook Mr.and Mrs.Robert Grooer and| In a statement issued at the con- |history.Its effects are evident in [time Dick came along, the parents : aff Councillor Rankin was appointed played at 14 tables.Prize winners Thursday oe sister, Mrs.Watter- family.clusion of National Health Week, [every walk of life.Yet much re- [had more experience with children, Lacolle Immigration Stalf ASSo-|pro-Mayor for the next three|yere: ladies\u2019 lat, Mrs.Tomlinson, enterta day ton \u2018 Mrs.Elizabeth McMaster and Dr.Gordon Bates, general director {mains to be done.\u201d and there was less tension and |ciation were hosts at a banquet held months.son, à \u2019 Mrs.E.Watterson celebrates her pirthday every four years, as it falls on Feb.29th.Mr.and Mrs.Lisle Watterson entertained on Friday evening in honor of their mother, Mrs.E.Watter- son, some 25 relatives and a few intimate friends, to a supper and social evening.Best wishes to Mrs.Watterson for more such happy occasions.Mrs.Franklin Cameron spent Saturday and Sunday with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Stewart Vaugh, West- ville, N.Y.Miss Bella Armstrong, Dundee, was also a guest at the h home.vas and Mrs.Clarence Platt, Anne and Shirley spent Sunday at Grande ligne with their parents, Mr.and Mrs.Henry Hart.Mrs, James Hutchings and two sons, of Athelstan, Que., are visiting Mr.and Mrs.E.Watterson.Miss Mary Thomson, R.N.Vancouver, has been visiting her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Wesley Thomson.The Beaver Farm Forum Group met at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Harold MacDonald on Monday eve- George were dinner guests of Mr.and Mrs.Bruce McCracken and supper guests of Mr.and Mrs, Francis McCracken, Brooklet, on Sunday.Mr.and Mrs.Wesley Thomson, Mr.and Mrs.Louis Plante, Mr.and Mrs.Wm.Leslie, Audrey and Bill spent Friday in Cornwall, Ont.Nitro NITRO \u2014 Mr.and Mrs.T.Flynn and daughter Maureen, of Montreal, spent the past week-end with Mr.and Mrs.Elson, on Purvis Avenue.Mr.and Mrs.T.Collins, of Valley- field, were Sunday guests of Mr.and Mrs.C.Paige, on Riverview Ave, Sympathy is extended to Mrs.J.Senecal in the recent death of her father in Montreal.Mr.A.Boyce has returned to his home here after being away the past few months.Mrs.S.Chamberlain is visiting at the home of her daughter and fam- | ily, Mr.and Mrs.R.Laurier Avenue.A few ladies from Nitro attended Swartz, on Movies This Week In Huntingdon Huntingdon .Theatre TODAY until FRIDAY A Splendid Mid-week Double Feature Program! Cary GRANT and BETSY DRAKE In a Really Outstanding Feature Comedy Hit - - \u201cRoom for Two\u201d 2nd Action Feature \u201cCriminal 9 Lawyer Action-filled Story with - - - Pat O'BRIEN and JANE WYATT 9 FRIDAY Night YOU MAY GET $150.JUST FOR YOUR NAME! Sat.-Sun.-Mon.- Tues 2 Special Features! \u201cReturn of the Texan\u201d in Technicolor! Action From Start to Finish! Joanne Dru Dale Robertson 2nd Action Feature \u201cHunt the Man down\u201d Murder! Action! Drama! With - - - - Gig Young Lynn Roberts 3ième Attraction En FRANCAIS cc A Maître de Ballet\u201d avec Stan LAUREL Oliver HARDY O\u2019Connor .Theatre Today.-Thars.Fri.Your Favorite The Comediy Hit of the Year starring CLIFTON 9 WEBB 2: \"S\\N ANNE Produced by Directed by FRED HENRY » \u2018RANCIS - oHLMaR - KOSTER TONIGHT And Every Wednesday FOTO-NITE $380.FOR YOU ?In Cash For Your Photo k Vision shows broadcasted directly | j and equipment have been especially | television screens set up by these à public will see the CBC-produced Matinee Saturday at 1.15 Adventure and Intrigue in te Lis À Fos te ow Wi A PARAMOUNT PICTURE Based ne u slerp by Lems À Porter - Profoced by Tian 1 Poe aad ibaa C.Novas ONE MAN AND 200 WOMEN! Husband-hungry girls, seeking a futwre\u2014 forgetting à past\u2014braving untold dangers! Este M-G-M presents WESTWAR THE starring ROBERT TAYLOR DENISE DARCEL HOPE EMERSON JOAN McINTIRE ntinuous Shows in Both Theatres Every Sunday | to 11.30 p.m.Sat.-Sun.-Mon.-Tues of the Health League of Canada, expressed his organization\u2019s gratitude to the press and radio of the country for their important role in promoting the health of Canadians.\u201cNot only during National Healtn Week, but the year round the educational work of the Health League is greatly aided by the cooperation of writers, editors and broadcasters,\u201d said Dr.Bates.\"The best elements in the press and radio of Canada are giving steadily more attention to constructive coverage of health \u2018matters.And this is all to the good, because it is only through popular education that recent important discoveries in the realm of medical science can be put into general use.\u201d In an editorial in the current issue of the League's magazine, \u201cHealth\u201d, Dr.Bates adds this comment: \u201cThe already amazing improvement in the application of discoveries in the field of preventive medicine is shown by the fact that Among the challenges still to be met are the following, in which the Health League is taking direct action:\u2014 implementation of legislation making pasteurization of milk compulsory in every province (at present this is province-wide only in Ontario and Saskatchewan); reduction in the national infant mortality rate (Canada is now down in 13th place among the leading nations of the world); improvement in the nutritional standards of Canadian families «this has a direct bearing on reducigg the number of infant deaths as well as on improving the general health of all Canadians); expanding the practice of preventive medicine in industry, treating alcoholism as a physical disease and in its acknowledged relationship to other diseases; recognizing and dealing with the new problems facing Canada as its number of elder citizens rapidly increases.\u201cThe Health League of Canada has a separate division responsible for educational work in each of these vital areas,\u201d Dr.Bates pointed out.\u201cOther voluntary organizations associated with us, our own members and our staff are greatly encouraged in this effort by the readiness with which the press and radio in all parts of the country have shouldered their responsibility in this public service.\u201cThe favorable attitude of all publicity media augurs well for the future success of public health education in Canada.\u201d & tea held in the Anglican Church Hall on Tuesday, February 26th.All enjoyed a pleasant afternoon.Mr.and Mrs.P.Drummond, former residents of Nitro, have returned here to live.Miss Barbara Kerr has returned home from the Barrie Memorial Hospital, Ormstown, much improved in health.A few ladies from here attended a tea held in the United Church Hall on Saturday, March 1st.Mrs.C, Larner and Miss Ann Forbeck, of St.Timothée, also attended.Ste.Agnes STE.AGNES \u2014 The February meeting of the Zion United Church Women's Association was held on Wednesday \u2014afternoon, Feb.27th, at the home of Mrs.W.D.Fraser, with Mrs.Fraser and Miss T.Mc- Millan as joint hostesses.Miss McMillan, the President, had charge of the meeting and the devotional exercises were led by Mrs.Norman McPhee, who brought the meeting to order with the singing of a hymn, a Psalm reading and the Lord's Prayer in unison.The roll call, \u201cWhat I Like About Winter\" was responded to by members.There were also four visitors present.The Soclety was pleased to welcome one new member.A committee consisting of Mrs.V.Elder, Mrs.L.Watterson and Mrs.G.Sutton was appointed to arrange for a half-hour program to be presented in conjunction with Fort Covington later on in the Spring.Mrs, Lyle Currie reported on the plan to renovate the church kitchen and will bring scaled drawings to the next meeting.The buying committee was instructed to inquire into the price of clear plastic sufficiently wide to cover the tables in the church kitchen.Mrs.Lisle Watterson asked the ladies if they would consider purchasing an electric heater to help heat the basement on Sunday mornings for the Sunday School pupils.While a heater is to be tried out this coming Sunday, final decision on the purchase was left until a later date.At the conclusion of the business meeting, Mrs.Vernon Elder led a discussion paper on, \u201cWhich influences our lives more, Environment or Heredity?\u201d She stated that any trait, or any characteristic is never determined by heredity or environment alone; it is always the result of both.She explained the meaning of chromosomes and genes, and explained that genes are the units of heredity.A story was told of two boys, who, although they were brothers, were entirely different.Jerry was a frail shy, sensitive child who found it hard a to make friends, while his brother RE 75 I IVER Dick was placid and easy-going and MALGNE a great favourite with teachers and MALONE, NEW YORK Television Broadcasting Scheduled For March Montrealers will be given opportunity of seeing Canadian T-V broadcasted shows here in March.For five consecutive nights, from March 10-14, everybody visit- jing the All-Electrical Show at the Palais du Commerce on Berri Square, organized by Eastern Canada Exhibitions Inc.will see tele- the from the studios of Radio-Canada (CBC).Manufacturers of television sets invited to take part in this electrical exhibition, and it will be on manufacturers that the general programs, | This will be something new in Canada, because it will be the first time that programs will be broad- |casted to the outside from two of \u2018Radio Canada\u2019s three television studios.| The exhibition is open to the pub- illic from 5 pm.to 10 p.m.but the television shows will not begin un- ju 7,30 pm.continuing through until 9.30 p.m.The programs each night will be bilingual, which is to say the presentations will alternate between | French and English during the two-hour show.Although the programs have not as yet been completely outlined, it is known that they will include dancing, singing, puppets, skits and magic.After witnessing these shows the public will realize the extensive work that is going on in the stu- dlos of Radio-Canada in order that regular television programs may\u2019 soon be broadcasted from Montreal stations.The work is going on uninterrupted in the television studios on Dorchester St., and already complete programs have been recorded, exactly as they will be presented when broadcasting gets under way in the near future.-MOOERS- TUES.- WED.- THURS.anxiety when Dick had his little mishaps.He learned to cope with his problems and became a good- natured, independent child.So there are differences due to environment, even when two children grow up in the same family.Mrs.Elder then asked the members which would influence a child's IQ more, heredity or environment?Mrs.A.H.Praser responded here, giving several interesting facts about the growth of a child's mind.The marks a child receives In school, are not always to be used as a yardstick in testing the 1Q of that certain child, for his interests may be other than of a scholastic nature, and he might excel himself as an engineer, an artist or a politician.Several others contributed ideas along these lines also.A child's personality is due greatly to environment, and if your child is very much like you, it is because he has learned your ways, not because he has inherited them.Mrs.Elder also threw out this question, \u201cWhat is your opinion of heredity and environment in the home circle?\u201d Mrs.L.Currie stated that she believed the home gave the child the background he needed to face everyday problems.When a home is too nice to let a child relax in and to bring his friends HhômMme to, then it ceases to be a home and is merely a house.Mrs.Elder then went on to speak about diseases which have their basis in heredity, such as heart diseases, Rheumatic Fever for instance, and also diabetes.It is still an open question if the different types of cancer are products of heredity.Disease germs are never inherited such as tuberculosis.The most that might be inherited in that case is the susceptibility to the disease.Mrs.Wm.Fleming, when asked her opinion on alcohol and heredity stated that when it came to alcohol, environment played a major part.You have the social drinker, who can take it or leave it, and you also have the chronic alcoholie, who is a disgrace to society.Alcoholism is not inherited, and with sufficient will-power it may be overcome, even in the poorest environment.Mrs.Elder concluded her talk with these thoughts.\"For the vast majority.heredity will not be the making or breaking factor.Given a half-way decent set of genes, a person will become pretty much what the environment makes of him.For the average person, it is not heredity that sets the brakes on achievement.It is environment.For mankind in general, it is not heredity which creates most ol our ills.It is the environment man has created for himself.Progress for our children will be achieved, not so much by attempts to change heredity, but by attempts to change environment.The field is wide open, and the science of heredity has given us a green light.\u201d Mrs.Wm.Fleming, as chalrman of the Bazaar Committee stated that she has had excellent response from the W.A.members as well as from several non-members of the Society.This is indeed gratifying.There is now a fine display of aprons for sale as well as several other miscellaneous articles.If you want an apron and the ones on hand don't fit, just make your wish known and the committee will see that an apron is made to order for you.If you have a lampshade at home you want covered, bring it to the Bazaar Committee, they'll cover it for you\u2014at a reasonable price too.In fact, nothing is too much trouble for the committee.They have even had a few things picked up for gifts this coming Christmas.The ladies are willing to cater to the Christmas gift corner, and everyone is asked to keep this in mind.A delicious supper was served to members by the hostesses.The March meeting will be held at the home of Mrs.Lisle Watterson with Chateaugay\u2019s Modern Theatre \u201cTHE GAY\u201d Thursday .March 6 RUTH ROMAN and STEVE 2 BIG HITS Theatre THELMA RITTER | JEANNE CRAIN Mooers, M.Yin Shows at 7-9 pm.Closed Tues.| | \u201cThe Model and the fre .Marriage Broker\u201d ALSO \u201cThe Sellout\u201d with WALTER PIDGEON and JOHN HODIAK March 6th | \u201cAn American In Paris\u201d { GENE KELLEY - LESLIE CARON A Technicolor Musical i Benefit of Mooers Senior Class) FRIDAY - SATURDAY 0 Te | IY À Baba A 8 ! FRIDAY, SATURDAY, MARCH 7-8 starring DANE CLARK : CINECOUER! ALSO 9, WILD BILL ELLIOT in Women | ROBERT TAYLOR \u201cLonghorn\u201d DENISE DARCEL | A Super Western SUNDAY, MONDAY, MARCH 9-10 \u201cDetective Story\u201d KIRK DOUGLAS ELEANOR PARKER One of the best pictures of the year Matinee Sunday at 2.30 .Ruy MILLAND Helena Carter WED.- THURS,, MARCH 12-13 \u201cLaw and the Lady\u201d GREER GARSON MICHAEL WILDING Comedy COCHRAN in \u201cTo-Morrow Is Another Day\u201d PLUS A Western Picture \u201c\u201cNevada\u2019\u2019 Fri.- Sat.March 7-8 The Bowery Boys in laugh show \u201cWestward The \u2018Crazy Over Horses\u2019, Second Feature \u201cThe Lady From Texas\u201d Sun.- Mon.March 9-10 The latest comedy team on Radio-Television and Pictures DEAN MARTIN - GERRY LEWIS in \u201cThat\u2019s My Boy\u201d Come prepared to laugh Selected Shorts An old favorite story read by millions \u2018Lorna Doone\u201d \u2018Selected Shorts SOI in Lacolle Inn on Tueaday, February 26.A large number of US.Immigration and Customs personnel from St.Albans Division, Canadian Customs and Immigration officers, and local business people were present.After the dinner, the president, A.F.Lepitre, called upon several distinguished guests for speeches.The remainder of the evening was spent in dancing.Mrs.A.F.Lepitre was hostess to a number of little girls in honor of her daughter, Barbara's sixth birthday, on Feb.28.The afternoon was spent in playing, followed by delicious refreshments.Mr.and Mrs.Lawrence :toy, Linda and Lorraine spent the past week visiting relatives at Dundee and Huntingdon.A number ot men curlers took part in Huntingdon Bonspiel last week.The Ladies\u2019 Auxiliary of the Canadian Legion, Branch No.11, held their monthly meeting on February 18th, at which the election of officers for the coming year took place.They are as follows: President, Hazel Grant; 1st vice-, president, Eunice Cahill; 2nd vice- president, Ruth Smith; treasurer, Margaret Stuart; secretary, Phyllis Killick; Sgt.-at-arms, Betty Rennie; standard bearers, Beulah Derick, Shirley Fewster; chairmen of entertainment, membership and sick committees: Anne Marie Sturgeon, Connie Cahill, Ora.Van Vliet, respectively.Mrs.K.Wakeham of the CPR.Branch No.96, Montreal, will be present at March 17 meeting and will install the officers and be the guest speaker.The members of the Senior Branch have been invited to attend this meeting which will be followed by a soctal evening.Mrs.Watterson and Mrs.Clarence Platt as joint hostesses.Mr.and Mrs.Marcel Benoit and son of Huntingdon and Mr.and Mrs.George Lefebvre and family of St.Jean, Que., spent the week-end with their parents, Mr.and Mrs, J.B.Quenneville.Miss Barbara Roach of Montreal and Miss Isabel Deschambeau of Huntingdon, were week-end guests of thelr friend, Miss Evelyn McGib- bon.Mrs.W.Marchand is spending this week-end in Montreal.Mr.and Mrs.George Sutton and Fern were Sunday guests of Mrs.Sutton's parents, Mr.and Mrs.Geu.Coukman of Lacolle.Mr.and Mrs.V.N.Elder, Dawn, Karen and Gordon.also Mr.and Mrs.George P.Elder of Hunting- don were Sunday guests at Lhe home of Mr.John D.Elder of Athelstan.Council Meeting GODMANCHESTER COUNCIL A regular session of the Municipal Council of the Township of God- The council passed a resolution requesting the Department of Roads t continue building the road under construction through the New Erin Section, to connect up with the 5th Range of St.Stanislas de Kostka, instead of through sideroad, as reported.A sum of fifty dollars has been voted to the Canadian Red Cross Soclety.The following bills have been passed: Bertrand \u201cThe Florist\u201d $25.60; The SW.and P.Co.$22.98; Manning and Wilson $10.; The Canadian Bank of Commerce $500.; Jos.Viau $22.; The Canadian Red Cross Soclety $50.Crown Title Derives From Statute of 1701 The title to the Crown derives from the Act of Sectilement 1701 which prescribed that \u201cthe Crown shall remain and continue to the said Most Excellent Princess Sophia and the heirs of her body being Protestants\u201d (Sophia was Elec- tress of Hanover and granddaughter of James I».Subsequent succession to the Crown Acts have confirmed this declaration and, although the succession is not bound to continue in its present line, the preamble to the Statute of Westminster 1931 provides that it cannot now be altered except by common consent of the member nations of the Commonwealth which owe allegiance to the Crown, The inheritance of the Crown is governed by rules of descent which provide that the sons of the sovereign are in order of succession to the throne, and, after the youngest son or if there are no sons in the direct lines, the daughters in the order of thelr own seniority.When a daughter succeeds, she becomes queen-regnant and all the powers of the Crown are vested in her as fully and effectively as if she were a king.In accordance with the Constitution, Princess Elizabeth became queen immediately upon the death of King George VI.The succession is affirmed at a meeting known as the Accession OCounell, which 1s held for approving the proclamation of the new monarch.This Accession Council consists of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, the late King's Privy Council with numbers of other \u201cPrincipal Gentlemen of Quality\u201d, the lord mayor, aldermen and citizens of the City of London and the high commis- sloners in London of the other Commonwealth countries.After the order for the proclamation of the new monarch has been given by the Accession Council, it is read in London and in many provincial cities.Prince Charles is now heir to the throne.Under a Charter of 1337, he becomes Duke of Cornwall in the peerage of England as the first-born son of the Sovercign, but will not become Prince of Wales, until his mother decides to invest him with that title The last Prince of PROGRAMME THEATRE DENIS THEATRE ORMSTOWN Thursday, Friday, Saturday, March 6-7-8 \u201cThe Magic Carpet\u201d (color) LUCILLE BALL \u201cNo Highway In The Sky\u201d JAMES STEWART MARLENE DIETRICH Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, March 9-10-11 \u2018 \u201cSusannah Of The Mounties\u2019\u2019 SHIRLEY TEMPLE | RANDOLPH SCOTT , \u201cRich Young ; And Pretty\u201d | (color) (JANE POWELL WENDELL COREY i t PO POOOOPPSLOPLOOS 0008000990089 00.| I | i Counties of Huntingdon, Beauharnois, | Dufferin St.Wales, later King Edward VIII and now Duke of Windsor, was given eee.Roxy Theatre St.Chrysostome Tel.No.1 J.E.Cote, Prop.Opening Show at Last Complete Show 730 8.30 Thursday, Friday, Saturday, March 6-7-8 | \u201cThey Got Me | Covered with \"BOB HOPE | DOROTHY LAMOUR \u201cSilver Canyon\u201d with GENE AUTRY i Dimanche, Lundi, Mardi, 9-10-11 mars \u201cL'Enfant Perdu\u201d ! avec \"MICHELINE FRANCEY i JACQUES JANSEN.\u2018Carrefour du Crime\u2019 avec \"LOUIS SALOU - CLAUDE GENIA | For a Real Treat LABATT\u2019S is hard to \u2018Beat! h FSi Mr.LL ZL LEW LTE vertary, Labatt's Anniversary Ale quickly became a popular favourite.Try it today and you'll know why | agents Chateauguay Valleyfield \u2018Holmes 2nd, Mrs.Walter Keddy, consolation, Mrs.J.Paré; gents\u2019 1st, Mr.Harry Warner, 2nd, Mr.Beattle Barr, consolation, Mr.Petch.Chair prize, Mrs.C.Smirle.Refreshments were served and a social time was spent.Mrs.J.Heather of Outremont was a week-end guest at the home of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr.and Mrs.Charles Barr.Miss May Bennett entered the Barrie Memorial Hospital on Saturday and is under observation for a few days.Mr.and Mrs, A.Trotter of Dixie, Que., spent the week-end with Mr.and Mrs.Donald Orr.Mr.and Mrs.John Macdonald, Ian and Marilyn of Verdun were Sunday visitors of Mr.and Mrs.Aylmer Hadley and family.~ The churh service on Sunday afternoon in St.Andrew's United Church in connection with \u201cEducational Week\u201d was well attended and everyone seemed to enjoy the excellent address of the speaker, Mr.Eric King, principal of Ormstown High School.The February meeting of the Women's Association of St.Andrew's United Church was held on Wednesday evening, Feb.13th, at the home of Mrs.Marguerite Mc- Naughton with Mrs.Lynwood Cook- man assisting.Due to the very cold weather many members were absent.Rev.led in devotional service which took the form of a Memorial to our Iate King George VIA moment's silence was observed, followed by appropriate prayer and Scripture reading.Mrs.Paré presided over the busi ness meeting.Reports were given by committee conveners.Mrs.Donald Orr, rep.for the Hall Committee reported that a second-hand stove had been purchased for the Hall kitchen from Mr.L.G.Simpson, by the Hall Commitice.The work committee had material and stamped linen, to be given out to sewing members, to be made into articles for she fall Bazaar, Mrs.Derrick and Mrs.Kennedy were allotted the task of making pulpit and communion table covers.Mrs.Percy Barr and Mrs, Lyn- wood Cookman were named to represent the W.A.on the new Des- coness Building Board.This bulld- ing to be erected in Toronto for the purpose of training Denconesses for the United Church, |s n work of entire Church of Canada and enoh church is being represented and pledging its support.Later the hostesses served refreshments and a social hour was spent.Havelock HAVELOCK \u2014 Word has been received of the death of Mrs.J.Z.Hall (Jessie Greer) of Vancouver, B.C.Mrs.Hall was well known to the older residents of Havelock, being brought up at the home of the late James Frier.the title on his 16th birthday).Five nther titles devolve on Prince Charles by reason of his mother\u2019s accession; he hecomes Duke of Rothsay, Earl of Carrick and Baron of Renfrew in the Peerage of 8oot- land and Lord of the Isles and Great Steward of Scotland.Princess Anne is second In succession to the \u2018Throne, and Princess Margaret, younger daughter of King George VI.is third in succession.It is an accepted doctrine that, while a woman can receive an honor from her husband, marriage with à woman confers no honor or \u2018rank upon a man.Thus the consort of a king takes the rank and style of her husband, but the converse does not apply.In conformance with this doctrine, the Constltu- ton has never attached any special rank of a only ;sues \u2018tory, or privileges to the husband queen regnant, \u2018There have been three constitutional 1s- of this kind in English his- of which the last is found in the marriage of Queen Victoria with Prince Albert of Saxe-Co- bourg-Gotha, who was accorded the style of prince consort by letters patent 17 years after their marriage.; Formerly the death of a sovereign linvolved the dissolution of Parila- ment and the termination of all ! offices under the Crown, since Par- ;llament meets on the personal sum- \u2018mons of the monarch and all of- ices are In theory held at his or ;her wlll and pleasure.Since 1861, however, when the Representation of the demise of the Crown, both Houses stand adjourned only until i their members have taken the oath lof allegiance to the new sovereign, \u2018which occurs immediately after the yAccesslon Councll has made the order for the proclamation.In 1901, \u2018the demlse of the Crown Act pro- yvided that the holding of any of- \u201cfice should not be affected by the demise of the Crown and that no fresh appointment should be nec- pre \u2014e.0.0006000046047800000040404000 | essary.Tougas & Nicholson Phone 1038 Page Eight Allan\u2019s Corners ALLAN\u2019S CORNERS\u2014Miss Ethel Cullen of Montreal, and Mr.Harry Oullen of Bishop's College, Lennox- ville, spent the week-end at the home of their parents, Mr.and Mrs.Jim Cullen and family.Mr.and Mrs.Archie Peddie, of Howick, visited on Friday evening with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.A.A.Tannahill and Nelson.Mr.John Tannahill of Brome is spending a few days at the same home.Mr.and Mrs.George Hope and Mr.and Mrs.Frank Hope, Bobby, Betty and Billy were guests on Sunday at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Jim Hope and family, Lacolle, Young People's Societies Entertained On Friday evening, February 20th, the Ormstown Presbyterian Y.PS.entertained about 90 members of local Young People's Societies in the Brysonville Community Club Hall to a Leap Year Party.Societies represented were: Howick United Y.PS.Georgetown Bible Class and Ormstown United Y.P.S.A splendid program of games, contests, etc, planned for the evening was very much enjoyed by all.\u2018The music was supplied by Mr.and Mrs.Jim Cullen, Mrs.Robt.Eastwood and Mr.Gordon Foster.Much of the success of the party was due to the extensive planning done by the Social Committee composed of Mrs.Jack Rodger and Mr.Merrill Tannahill; the Games Committee, Mr.and Mrs.Bill Hooker and Miss Dorothy Hooker and the Refreshment Committee: *TME REAÏ HOSLANDS FLAVOUR Mrs.Alvin Gruer and Mrs.Robt.Eastwood.Mrs.Russell Kerr of Howick, accompanied by her father, Mr.J.J.McWhinnie, visited on Sunday with Mrs.Dougall McIntyre, Huntingdon.Mr.D.J.Ovans, Mr.Robt.Ovans and Mr.and Mrs.George Hope were among those who attended the funeral on Monday of the late Mrs.Kenneth McKay of Beach- ridge.The service was held at 3 pm.in the Beachridge Church and many were there to pay their last respects.Mr.and Mrs.Robt.Barr, Hugh and Jimmie of Franklin, were guests on Sunday at the home of Mrs.Helen \u2018Peddie and were supper guests at the home of his uncle and aunt, Mr.and Mrs.D.J.Ovans.Mr.Halton Levers visited on Sunday at the nome of Mr.and Mrs.Wm.Maither, Brooklet.Mr.and Mrs.Malcolm McIntyre and friends of Verdun were guests on Sunday at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Merrill Kerr.Farm Forum News On Monday evening, March 3rd, the Allan's Corners Farm Forum group met at the home of Mrs.Mary Cullen and John.There were 11 present to listen to the broadcast and join in the discussion on \u201cDo we need more Immigrants?\u201d Our Forum felt that, although Canada has many thousands of immigrants now, there is still sufficient room for many more.Euchre was played and delicious refreshments served at the close by Mrs.Cullen, assisted by her granddaughter, Mrs, Arnold McIntyre, Our next meeting will be held at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Jack Dooling.Mr.and Mrs.Merrill Tannahill and Keith, accompanied by Mrs, E.J.Hooker and Miss Dorothy Hooker, motored to Valois Gardens on Sunday where they visited at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Lyn Westman, BRIDGE COLLAPSE MIDNAPORE, Alta.(CP)\u2014The (bridge over Fish Creek, on the Sar- ,cee Indian reserve west of here, \u2018collapsed after a heavy truck ap- | parently hit the railing.Franklin Centre FRANKLIN CENTRE\u2014Mrs.Floyd Stevenson, convener, accompanied by eleven ladies, met at the Barrie Memorial Hospital on Thursday afternoon to sew.Miss Walsh, \u201cgoverness\u201d informed the ladies it is thirteen years since they first started this work.Formerly groups a year, now it is necessary to meet twice a year.McGugan of Burlington, Vt., spent the week-end at the Manning home.Mr.Yates, of Ormstown, has started a Class for piano pupils, at the Consolidated school, every Saturday morning.Several ladies and the CG.IT.group attended the World Day of Prayer held at Rennies\u2019 church on Friday PM.Mrs.James Manning met at the Barrie Memoria] Hospital on Saturday afternoon to make Surgical Dressings.Mrs.Inez Brooks was entertained at her home, on Sunday, in honour of her birthday, by Mr.and Mrs.Thomas Brooks, Joan, Mr.Keith VanViliet, of Lacolle, Mr.and Mrs.Fergus Moore, Freddie and Garth, Covey Hill, Miss Edna McKinney and Mr.McKinna of Malone, N.Y.Mr.and Mrs.Stewart Moneypenny, Lois Ann, Norman and Richard, Mr.and Mrs.Morrison Brooks and Janie, Miss Winona Brooks and Mr.Merle Brooks.Miss Margaret Dunn spent several days the past week at the Harvey home on her return home from Athelstan.Sorry to report that Rev.E.Davis able to hold services on Sunday, Mrs.James Manning and C.G.IT.group held a morning service in from outlying communities met once | Sgt.Arnold McGugan and Mrs.| The C.GIT.group and leader, is not well at present.he was un-| the United Church.Mrs.George Brown, last week.Sunday, Mr.and Mrs.Willard Vaincourt attended the funeral of her aunt, in Montreal Mrs.E.McNiece returned home after spending the past two weeks at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Egbert Bruce.Mr.Earle Mc- The Huntingdon Gleaner \u201cNO DIFFICULTX against any Russian-made tank it has met\u201d was the report from Korea of i the Brit.h Commonwealth Di- | vision on the British Centurion + tank.Pictured above is the Cen- ! turion, also claimed to be the best designed tank Britain has ever had, as it went through a tough test in Germany where the British forces also have it.Pictured left is Lieut-Col.Douglas Drysdale, Commando leader of Britain's Royal Marines, who has arrived in the - U.S.to be instructor at the U.S.Marine Corps School, Quantico, Va.Fighting with the British in Korea, he was awarded the U.S.Silver Star for \u2018\u2018conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action.P.M.BARRY type deafness.natural hearing, money-back guarantee 1460 Union Avenue EXPERT ON DEAFNESS OFFERS FREE PROOF THAT NO ONE NEED BE HARD OF HEARING Every hard-of-hearing person is invited to call at our office on the date shown below, to learn of the very latest achievements in hearing aids and how you can wear one less con- spiculously.Mr.Barry will prove to you that no one need be hard of hearing because of embarrassment or because they have never before found satisfactory relief for their hearing loss.Acousticon, the world's first and most experienced manufacturer of electrical hearing aids, offers you the choice of seven different models, every one designed to do a particular job, Prices range from $69.50 to $229.50, Here are some of the models you will see: SUPER-X-EAR \u2014 Designed to be worn four different ways \u2014 on the wrist \u2014 on a brooch \u2014 as a tie clip \u2014 as an ordinary aid.Microphone built on top to widen sound range and avoid clothing noise.Recommended for conductive or nerve .MODEL DR-1 RECEIVER \u2014 Designed to ald middle ear deafness.Worn with the appropriate Acousticon, this receiver lets you hear with nothing in your ear.Last but not least is Service \u2014 your purchase is not complete without service.When you choose a hearing aid, make sure that your initial investment is not only a partial one, but that you are assured of prompt on-the-spot service always.the most complete service facilities in Montreal \u2014 and all across Canada.EASY BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE \u2014 CANADIAN PRICES SAME AS US.FREE HEARING CLINIC For One Day Only, Wednesday, March11 10 am.to 9 p.m.MODEL A-152 \u2014 For severe loss where greater power is required to give you clear, MODEL A-200, CORDLESS \u2014 Revolutionary styling allows ladies to wear it with complete invisibility.No cords dangle down the neck, nothing worn in the clothing, no separate receivers or transmitters.Three days free trial.MODEL A-120B \u2014 For nerve-type deafness only.Sells for $69.50 with a ten-day Acousticon offers CHATEAU HOTEL-HUNTINGDON Acousticon of Montreal Telephone BE.5272 Niece spent Sunday at the same home.Mrs.E.B.Smith and daughter Mary Ann, Miss Annie Wadde]l and Mr.Lloyd Waddell of Montreal spent the week-end at Covey Hill with Mr.John and Miss Libbie Waddell.They were also Sunday dinner guests accompanied by Mr.John Waddell at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Egbert Bruce.Mr.and Mrs.Clarence Blair, Mr.Merle Brooks and Mrs.Inez Brooks attended a card party on Thursday evening at the home of Mr.John Elliott and daughter, Hem- mingford.Miss Donalda Waddell and friend, Miss Elizabeth Weir of Montreal spent the week-end with her parents Mr.and Mrs.Chester Waddell.Mr.Lloyd Waddell, of Montreal, visited at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Curran on Saturday, and accompanied the family on Saturday evening to visit their son, Harold, at the Barrie Memorial Hospital, Orms- town.The C.G.IT.group met at the School on Tuesday afternoon.The usual opening exercises and worship period was followed by a discussion on Worship.Miss Edith Stevenson gave a résumé of one of the chapters of the Mission Book.Several articles were turned in for the Fancy Work Sale and ajso for the \u201cKit\u201d to be sent overseas.The group started making covers for the Receipt Book which is being assembled by the W.A.the meeting closed in the usual manner.On Tuesday evening, Feb.26th, a specia] service was held at the Church of the Nazarene, Frantlin Centre.The guest speaker was Rev.Charles Muxworthy of Peterboro, Ont, who spoke on behalf of the \u201cHerald of Holiness.\u201d He was assisted by Mr.Leland Davis, of Ohlo, USA, Song Evangelist.There was also a trio by Rev.Stamford, Rev.Mux- worthy and Mr.Davis, Callers at the home of Mrs.E.M.Sharpe on Sunday evening were Miss Donalda Waddell and Miss Elizabeth Weir, Mr.and Mrs.Chester Waddell and son Clinton were Sunday evening callers at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Egbert Bruce.Brysonville Observe Golden Wedding Anniversary BRYSONVILLE\u2014Mr.and Mrs.J.H.Nussey quietly observed thelr golden wedding anniversary on Tuesday, February 26th, at their home in Brysonville.Mr.Archie Tannahill and Mr.Donald McCor- \u201cBefore MEALS for COOKING BRADING A La! Hoe O At BEDTIME BROWN STOUT NYINU 22 O28.mick called, and, on behalf of neighbors, relatives and friends, extended congratulations and presented them with an envelope.Other friends called during the day to extend best wishes.All this was deeply appreciated by Mr.and Mrs.Nussey 2 ell as flowers, other and greetings sent b; - {ly and friends.\u201d y the fam Those in the family who were present included: Mr.and Mrs.Alvin Nussey and Gwenyth, of Worcester, Mass, Mrs, Lorne Little, Ottawa, Mrs.Jack Raney, Donna and Diane, Mr, and Mrs.Jack Mc- Allister, LAC Kelvyn Nussey, Mrs.Nussey and Carolyn, Miss Phyllis Nussey, Mr.Douggie McGerrigle, all of Montreal, Mr.and Mrs.J.D, McQerrigle, Huntingdon, Clifford and Thelma, at home, Mr.and Mrs.John Nussey, Kyrke, Kleth and Marven, Riverfleld, Que.Notes From The Police Blotter Two men appeared before James E.Barrett, J.P., on Thursday morning, charged with being drunk and disorderly on Chateauguay Street near Brunet's taxi office, on February 23rd.The men were Rem Varin and Omer Primeau of Hunt- ingdon.The first was fined $10.00 and costs while the latter was fined $5.00 and costs.After about 15 minutes of games: pible Howick HOWICK\u2014Mr.James Anderson, of Bethune, Sask., is visiting at the home of his brother, Mr.and Mrs.Robert Anderson, also calling on many other relatives and friends.Miss Naomi Barrier, of Montreal, spent Saturday at the home of the Misses Henderson.Mrs.James Anderson and Miss Jessie Elliot of Ormstown, Mrs, Margaret Mann and her daughter, Mrs.Smith, of St.Lambert, were callers at the same home.Mrs.Alice Lewis, of Montreal, was the guest last week of her mother, Mrs.Chas.Gordon.The World Day of Prayer was observed in Knox Presbyterian Church on Friday, Feb.29, at 2 o'clock with a large number of ladies present.A special order of service was conducted by Miss Jean Ritchie, President of the W.M.S.-of Knox Church, assisted by Mrs.Edwards, President of United Church W.MS., and Mrs.Marshall, President of Georgetown Church W.M.S.Mrs.Edwards gave a very interesting address on the theme, \u201cChrist, Our Hope.\u201d The choir under the direction of Mrs.Wallace Logan, sang \u2018Count Your Many Blessings\u201d very nicely.The offering amounted to $13.35 which was sent to the Women's Inter- Church Council of Canada, Toronto, to help further the work of the Gospel.The February meeting of Knox Presbyterian Church W.MS.was held at the home of Miss Martha Goundrey on Tuesday afternoon, Feb.26th, with the President presiding.Meeting opened by prayer by Mrs.Carmichael, followed by reading by Mrs.Maude Reddick, Psalm 24.Members answered the roll-call by repeating a verse containing the word \u201cExcept.\u201d Minutes of last meeting were read and approved.Final arrangements were made for the World Day of Prayer.The report of the 38th Presbyterial held in Montreal, in Ephraim Scott Memorial Church, was read by the president, who had received it from Mrs.Finlay Milne, as no members from this Society had attended the meeting.Members were asked to help the Riv- erfield W.MS.pay the cost of sending second-hand clothing and quilts to Manitoba.The treasurer read a letter recently received from Mrs.Kenny McKay, Beechridge.Miss Goundrey read the special item from the new Study Book, entitled, \u201cMeet the South Americans\u201d, and \u201cThe Original Inhabitants and the Religion of the Incas\u201d was read by Miss Jean Ritchie, and \u201cDiscovery and Conquest of South America\u201d by Mrs.Carmichael.Mrs.W.Stewart read the Glad Tidings item, \u201cEighty Years in Formosa,\u201d which told of the growth of the Christian Church on an island, whose name means \u201cBeauty\u201d and also the Temperance item.\u201cThe Water American\u201d as Benjamin Franklin, the 18th century statesman and philosopher was called, who tried to prove to his colleagues that there was more flour in a pennyworth of bread and therefore if he could eat that with a pint of water it would give him more strength than a quart of beer.The Mizpah Benediction repeated in unison brought the meeting to a close.Mr.and Mrs.Frank Tillison, of Montreal, visited at the home of Mrs.Agnes Black and Mrs.S.Eerr on Saturday.Mrs.Melvin Carson, Franklin Centre, visited at the same home Sunday afternoon.Mrs.Agnes Black spent Monday in Ormstown visiting Mrs.Jas.Angel and calling on Mrs.Bella Stewart, also Mrs.W.F.Welch at the Barrie Memorial Hospital, A special oyster supper was put on Saturday night for the winners of the TwWeedsmuir and Fairbank- Morse trophies.The head table was set with the silver service, the Tweedsmuir Cup holding the cen- §[tre.Letters and telegrams were read.Everyone enjoyed the evening and special mention went to Mrs.rouge on the excellent oyster GOES TO FAR EAST SAINT JOHN, NB, -(CP)- D.H.Cruikshank, director of emergency housing for Saint John, was granted indefinite leave of absence following his appointment as a United Nations military observer on the Kashmir border dispute between India and Pakistan.- Sports OCKEY Goalie Al Millar of Shawinigan Falls was spectacular in the nets as the lowly Cataracts downed Valley- field Braves 3-1 in a Quebec Senior Hockey League before a disappointed crowd of 2,000 at Valleyfield on Wednesday, Feb.27.Cats.Bert Bourassa and Jack Ir- The only goal of the first period was scored by the Cataracts, when Goalie Leclerc, trying to clear the puck, slipped it into his own net.Read, who was closest, received credit.Bougie got that one back for Val- leyfield just past the half-way mark of the middle stanza, as the Braves completely outplayed the Cats.Bert Bourassa and ack Irvine assisted.Laliberte's winner came at the 5.33 mark of the final frame on a short pass from Head who took the puck from Lyall Wiseman.Grosse got the insurance goal at 11.22.Chateauguay World Day of Prayer CHATEAUGUAY \u2014 The World Day of Prayer Service was held on Friday afternoon, in St.George's Anglican Church, with members of St.Andrew's Church participating.Mrs.Jim Johnson and Miss R.M.McFarlane led the service of praise and worship, prayers were of - fered by Mrs.N.McGlashan, Mrs.Peter Styles, Mrs, Ernest Smith and Mrs, N.E.Jack.Mrs.Leonard Taylor, the guest speaker, gave an inspirational address on the theme of the Service, \u201cChrist, our Hope.\u201d W.A.Meeting The monthly meeting of the Woman's Association held Wednesday night, at the home of Mrs.E.R.Richardson with Mrs.Ernest Smith, Mrs.James Webster and Mrs.E.Moore as hostesses, had an attendance of 53 ladies.The president, Mrs.Gerald S.Adams presided.The meeting opened by observing a minute's silence in memory of His late Majesty.This was followed by a tribute by the president, in which she said, \u201cKing George VI was a gracious sovereign, a kindly man, whose simple dignity won for him the love of al] hise sunjects.In the darkest hours of his country's peril, he stood beside his people sharing their hopes, their sorrows and their triumphs.His devotion to duty and his courage should serve as examples to us all.Our hearts go out in sympathy to all the members of the Royal Family.One of the late King's favourite hymns, \u201cThe King of Love, My Shepherd is,\u201d was sung with deep feeling, by Miss Vernis Jones.Following the business period a musical programme was much enjoyed.A piano duet by Mrs.Hartland Rowell and Mrs.W.J.Davidson; Solo: Mrs.Stuart Trask; Reading: Mrs.J.S.Walker; Piano Solo: Mrs.Louis Smith.Mrs.Leonard Taylor voiced the appreciation of all to the artists who had entertained them so pleasantly.Refreshments were served by the hostesses.World Day of Prayer Mrs.Stuart Trask, sang very sweetly \u201cGod so loved the World,\u201d with Mrs.Hartland Rowell at the organ.The offering was received by Mrs.Peter Varley and Mrs.J.R.Dicken- son and dedicated by Mrs.Johnson.The meeting closed with the singing of the hymn, \u201cThe Day Thou gavest, Lord, is ended,\u201d followed by the Benediction.Farm Forum News The Farm Forum group met at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Eric Smith, on Monday night.Mr.David Reid showed 5 films, courtesy of C.IL., Montreal, which proved interesting and informative.Group members attended and enjoyed the winter fair at Macdonald College, St.Annes, last Tuesday.Wednesday, March 5th, 1952 First Period 1\u2014Shawinigan: Read .1938 Penalties: Read 13.24, Bourassa 15.39.Second Period 2\u2014Valleyfield: Bougie (Bourassa, Irvine) .12.20 Penalties: Rose 1.55, Hodgson 3.10, Oakley 11.28, Wiseman (mds- conduct) 11.28, Joannette 17.45, Hodgson 17.45.Third Period 3\u2014Shawinigan: Laliberte (Read, Wiseman) 4\u2014Shawinigan: Grosse (Hodgson, Mahaffy) Penalties \u2014 none.Stops: Millar .12 4 7-33 Leclerc .Ottawa Senators completed their home schedule of the Quebec Senior Hockey League Saturday night with a 3-0 victory over Valleyfield Braves before 6,20) fans, at Ottawa.- Goalie Nelson (Freckles) Little, playing his first game for Ottawa as a replacement for regular Goalie Bill Fraser, turned in a standout performance as he racked up the first shutout.First Period Scoring: none.Penalties: Redmond 9.25, F.Fraser 14.11.Second Period 1\u2014Ottawa: Stahan (Giesebrecht, Emberg) .2.22 2\u2014Ottawa: Dagenais (Robinson) .16,54 Penalties: Deslauriers 1.25, Ernst 5.02, Hudson 12.32, Stahan 17.23, Schmidt 17.29, Bourassa (minor and misconduct) 18.05.Third Period 3\u2014Ottawa: Gravelle .14.50 Penalties: F.Fraser 7.52, Hudson 10.42.Valleyfield Braves blanked fourth- place Ottawa Senators 2-0 as their Quebec Senior Hockey League Season came to an end on Sunday.Some 2,000 fans saw the Braves reverse a 3-0 white-washing they suffered at Ottawa Saturday.The Braves finished the season in sixth place with 54 points.Gaston Gervais and Georges Bougie were the Brave's marksmen.First Period Scoring: none.Penalties: F.Fraser 2.45, Robinson 7.10, Bessette 7.10, Bourassa 8.57.Second Period 1\u2014Valleyfield: Gervais (Kwong) .229 2\u2014Valleyfield: Bougie (Bessette, Irvine) .13.32 Penalty: Giesebrecht .54.Third Period Scoring: none.Penalties: none.On Monday night Valleyfield and Chicoutimi launched their best-of- seven quarter-final series at Chi- coutimi.Quebec starts its semifinal playoff at home tonight (Wednesday) with Ottawa.The series is a best five-out-of-nine affair.The only other importance attached to the game was the winning of the Vezina Trophy by Johnny Marois of the Aces.The Quebec goalie allowed three goals in the week-end games to finish well ahead of his nearest rival, Paul Leclerc, of Valleyfield, who won it last year.Marois\u2019 record was 168 goals against and Leclerc, 178.6 3 2-11 \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 Glenelm GLENELM\u2014Mf{Gs Mae Montgon,.ery has returned home after speng.ing a few weeks in Montreal, Mr.and Mrs.Carl Anderson and family visited at the home of Mr and Mrs.A.Goodfellow.\u2018 Mr.H.Wonfor was a recent gue at the home of Mr.and Mrs, E Salter.\u2018 Mr.and Mrs.E.Salter visiteg at the home of Mr.and Mrs, A.Watson on Sunday afternoon and foung Mr.Watson improved in health, Mr.and Mrs.Robt.Crawford Visited at the home of Mr.ang Mrs Vernon Elder on Saturday evening \u2014 GROCERY SPECIALS THIS WEEK 15 Chateauguay St.Phone 2050 Huntingdon 1% Pure Lard F 2 Ibs.by Maple Leaf & Molasses 40 oz.carton No.1 Hand Picked White Beans 5 Ibs.25 49 Carnation Milk 2 large tins Tommy Cod Fish 29 Ib 231 All kinds of fresh and frozen #4 fish during Lent.BUY AT PIVIN'S and\u2018 SAVE MONEY Ohe Little Shop Smart Spring Hats and Charming Easter Bonnets, in Newest Materials; Paris and New York Designs.Butterfly and Circle-Bar Nylons, noted for Beauty, Sheerness, Durability; New Spring Shades, at reduced ii Crepe and Lisle Hosiery.| Dresses, Lingerie, Gloves.M.McGinnis prices.Phone 483 83 Chateauguay St.Huntingdon } Quality LACOLLE, P.Q.TODAY More Than Ever YOU MUST BUY A REFRIGERATOR THAT WILL GIVE YOU A BETTER SERVICE FOR YEARS TO COME Take advantage of our offers now.We still have a few refrigerators in stock.GENERAL ELECTRIC e WESTINGHOUSE eo ROY e ADMIRAL e RACINE : All Guaranteed For 5 Years Styles of Chairs.See Our Electric Range, the Most Recent Model With All the Commodities Required For Modern Cooking.Nice Bedroom Sets: Latest Style, Walnut, Light, Honey, Silver Grey \u201cGRAND SPECIAL\u201d ON MATTRESSES AND SPRINGS Kitchen Chromed Sets \u201cSpecial Table\u201d 40\" x 84\" With Different 4 Colors to Match Table.| COMPARE OUR PRICES BEFORE BUYING Service DELPHIS BLAIN Ine.|\u2018 Economy TELEPHONE 930 PIVIN'S | GROCERY f§ à ?; og A i LR cn + Wednesday, March Sth, 1952 A whirlwind tour of inspection has recently been completed by Provincial Field Commissioner John MacGregor, District Commis- sjoner Tom Hargrave and accompanied on several occasions by A.D.C.Ken Aldridge and District Scoutmaster Fred Sherrington.A very noticeable improvement has taken place over the past year.This improvement can be attributed to the keen interest being displayed by all the group committees.It is felt that if such an improvement can again be effected this year, and we see no reason why not, the Chateauguay Valley District will again lead the Province.Since the formation of the Dis- wict Council, at which time there were groups in Ormstown, Howick, Beauharnois and Chateauguay, new groups have been formed in Val- ieyfield, Huntingdon and Franklin Centre.Contacts have been made in Hemmingford and it should not be too long before a group is functioning in that district.Boy Scout Activities peace With the District shaping up so well the District Commissioner and the Assistant District Commissioner have been drawing up plans for a District Rally to be held during the coming summer months.While it is yet too early to make public any definite date or location groups would do well to prepare themselves.A District.Rally hes been the dream of the District Officers for a number of years and we will have it this year or bust! We the Scouters of the District have two problems which cause us some concern.The first greater problem is that of keeping and concord in the home when we are frequently called on to attend numerous meetings without better halves.This of course causes the little ladies to feel glected and quite rightly too.second problem is that of having sufficient Council Treasury to meet current incumbrances.It writer that these two problems could be solved by holding a Scouter's Dance open to Scouters and interested friends.this affair could be left with District Council.funds in the seems to Talk this and The District Proceeds from over Lp fast, soothing relie! for sa Used by FHT PAINKILLE va NCAA) ORO PAINKILLER COUGHS, COLDS, SORE THROAT Directions with Bottle R with your Group Committee and have your representative relate your views to the District Council at the next meeting.On February 22nd the Valleyfield Troop held a card party which proved to be very successful financially and socially.The annual Father and Son Banquet was held by the Beauharnois Group on Saturday, Feb.23rd.A complete report on this function will appear later, but as a preliminary report a brief description follows: About 70 fathers and sons KC-5 Everybody's beer\u2014 Right through the year were in attendance gpd appeared to enjoy themselves thoroughly.The District Commissioner and his assistant were also in attendance and were royally treated to a serump- tious meal.After the banquet several games were played with the fathers and commissioners joining in the fun.Akela Amy.his charming wife and Scoutmaster \u201cSmoky\u201d |Sturton are to be commended along 'with their group committee for the jpains they have taken in making this such an enjoyable evening.Also on Feb.3rd the Howick Troop had its first official visit from the District Commissioner and the A.D.C.This visit was also to include a visit from the provincial Field Commissioner, but due to unforeseen circumstances he was unable to be present.Heretofore very little had been heard from this group and it was feared that not a great deal of progress was being made.We are pleased to report here that this is indeed not the case.Scoutmaster Bill MacArthur has .been doing a terrific job with the boys.When the commissioners arrived at the meeting the boys were busily engaged in several badge studies.One patrol were undertaking lashings, one first-aid and the third morse code.On being queried by the commissioners the boys proved they had a thorough knowledge of their work.The commissioner had a few words for the boys and the meeting closed with the boys reaffirming their promise to the Queen in the presence of the commissioners.Howick, you have a grand group.Keep up the fine work and let's get working on \u201cPlan Achievement.\u201d On Sunday, Feb.24th, the Val- leyfield Troop held a church parade in the Valleyfield United Church.The Scout Troop of Valleyfleld and the Nitro Cub Pack were in attendance.During the service Troop Leader John Ryder read the lesson in very fine style.Field Commissioner John MacGregor delivered the address and two scouts took up the offering.Following the service a fireside hour was held in the church hall, Commissioner Tom Hargrave acted as chairman.John MacGregor gave a short talk to the friends and scouts on \u201cWhat Scouting is and Does.\u201d An interesting feature of this fireside hour was the presentation by Mr.Percy | Sugden of a chaplain's badge to the Rev.Gault.Two piano solos were rendered by the two Osborne broth- ers, members of the Valleyfield troop.The duties of Scoutmaster in Ormstown have been assumed by Mr.A.G.(Sandy) Thompson.The district officers as well as the provincial officers are fully confident of his ability and feel that Orm- stown Troop will prosper under his leadership.The very best of luck and Good Scouting, Sandy.Through the medium of this column the District Council invites all interested friends to contribute to the financial campaign.Each locality has been assigned an objective which the Council felt could be easily reached.This objective is the amount that will be forwarded to the Provincial Headquarters for administration purposes.Everything above these objectives will be retained by the respective groups to purchase camping equipment and \u2018(material necessary for the instruction of boys.All donations of one dollar and over are deductible from income tax and official receipts will be forwarded from Provincial Headquarters for that purpose.No donation is too small and it will all be put to the very best use for the boy's welfare.FATHER & SON BANQUET BEAUHARNOIS CUB PACK AND SCOUT TROOP On Saturday evening, February 23rd the Beauharnois Wolf Cub Pack and the Beauharnois Boy Scout Troop held a Father & Son Banquet at the Beauharnois Intermediate School.This event is the continuation of the Birthday Banquet which was started three years ago hy the Cub Master Ernest Amy and was broadened out this year to include the Scout Troop which has been developed under the able leadership of Scout Master Smoky Sturton.There were twenty-one Cubs present as follows: Alfred Abbott, Jules Lemay, Gordon Sutton, Joseph Rubin, Dennis Hunter, Robt.Mackie, Robert Tremblay.Leopold Piette, Kent Hauver, Peter Mono- ing, Brian Sutton, Jonas Spence- Sales, Brian Smith, Robert Burch- more, Clifford Gregory, Richard Read, Brian Kemper and Pierre 7 igs J 1 bus travel by bus.CrP PP PPP ISPS PPP IP IIP rss ss sro = = Provimtiar To = HUNTINGDON TO: TRANSPORT ONE WAY and equipment, MONTREAL $1.45 QUEBEC 6.15 TROIS RIVIERES 3.95 SAVE 10% MORE \u2014 BUY A ROUND TRIP TICKET Economical i= a comfortable winter travel by convenient schedules direct routes You get more travel for your dollar when you travel the Provincial way.Highways are open all year round and heated coaches take you to your destination in perfect comfort.ere\u2019s no worry, no fuss, when you SKIERS) Direct services te all the popular Winter resorts , .Special compartments fo store skis See your local agent Jor full information, rates and schedules.LOBBY SHOP, Huntingdon Theatre PHONE 2939 Vranderick.The eleven Scouts present included Clark Anderson, Robert Amy, John Berry.Jack Hulme, Gary Hunter, Robert Piette, Ken Powell, Ronnie Thompson, Nick Vranderick, R.Gugeon and Robert Job.To keep an eye on their sons\u2019 activities during the evening the following fathers attended the banquet: Messrs.Abbott, Anderson, Kemper.Powell, Hauver, Job, Sutton, Mondvan, Spence- Sales, Burchmore, Smith, Hulme, Lemay, Sullivan.Read, Gillis, Downing, Gregory.Berry.Vran- drick, Rubin, Mackie, Tremblay, Piette and Gugeon.The tables were set up in the form of the letter \u201cE\" with the Reverend W.H.Brown, Chairman of the Scout Group Committee presiding at the head table.The dinner was prepared and served by the members of the Mothers\u2019 Auxiliary under the Chairmanship of Mrs.Piette.One of the added features of the meal was the work done by Mrs.Hulme in preparing two cakes with the frosting depicting the crest of the Wolf Cubs and of the Boy Scouts.At the conclusion of the meal Bill Kilgour requested the Ladies to come into the hall and thanked them warmly for the excellent dinner they had served.The thanks were made unanimous by the hearty round of applause that followed his words.In preparing the program for the evening the Committee felt that there should be concentration on games rather than on speeches and only one speech was delivered.Mr.Brown called on Mr.Thomas Har- grave of Valleyfield, the Commissioner of the Chateauguay Valley District, to give a little talk at the conclusion of the dinner.Mr.Har- grave gave a fresh aspect to the Scout program and pointed out the possibilities in Scouting for the Cubs and Scouts in the District.He also introduced Mr.Kenneth Aldridge, the Assistant Commissioner of the District.Mr.Brown called on \u201cSmoky\u201d Sturton, the Scout Master, who took the opportunity to call on the fathers for their hearty cooperation in encouraging their boys to apply themselves to their Scout work.Before ward.The Huntingdon Gleaner Covey Hill COVEY HILL afternoon, Feb.24th, the infant son of Mr.and Mrs.Charles G.Edwards was christened at their home by their pastor, Rev.Mr.Holmes, Colin Gordon being the names given.At the tea hour an interesting feature was a portion of the wedding cake, mellowed by time, which had been made by Baby Gordon's grandmother, Mrs.Cookman, for his parents\u2019 wedding.Yet another bobcat was killed last week by Mr.Roy Lowden.He saw it on the Gulf Rock across the ravine, fired and saw it roll down- Its coat of fur was quite handsome and he was paid $15.for the animal.He also sighted another.The Presbyterian Young People\u2019s Society was entertained last Saturday at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Aaron A.B.Churchill.Mr.and Mrs.Allan Lowden, of Montreal South, spent the week-end with relatives here.Mr.Chas, Robinson, of Montreal, paid a visit here on Wednesday, returning to town next day.Mr.Herb McComb, of Ormstown, was a visitor with Mr.and Mrs.Oswald Mannagh.On Sunday kinds.the game.games it was very clear that boys were eager for more, while the fathers were content to retire gracefully to van, John Sweezey, Danny Down- | the meeting adjourned to the games program Mr.Hargrave, the Commissioner, called the Cub Master, Ernest Amy, to the center of the hall and made a presentation him of the emblem of the Boy Scout Association on \u201cPlan Achievement\u201d as a reward for the progress of the lst Beauharnois Wolf Cub Pack during the year 1951, and he congratulated Mr.Amy very thusiastically on the work that he had done with his Cubs.The program then turned to typical scout games under the direction of Messrs.Amy and Sturton.fathers, At the conclusion the sidelines.a Billo NEW fo 52/ Roll along street or highway in one of these big, bright, beautiful Chevrolets and you'll know that you're riding in something special! rr to en- The the mothers, and the boys enjoyed the relay races of various tug-of-war, and Kim's of the the / CHEVROLET | [ a A GENERAL MOTORS VALUES The ban on imports of Canadian livestock, hay, straw and meat because of an outbreak of foot-and- mouth disease in Canada will be felt particularly at the Chateaugay customs port which is a major point of entry for cattle.Approximately 3,000 head of Canadian cattle passed through the Chateaugay port in 1851, it was Rockburn ROCKBURN \u2014 Mr.and Mrs.M.Searle of St.Lambert were guests Sunday of Mr.and Mrs.H.Welburn and Mr.and Mrs.Walter Welburn.Mr.and Mrs.Milford Oliver spent some days recently in New London, NH.with Mrs.Oliver's father, Mr.Arch: Granger and his old friends here regret to learn there is no improvement in his health.Mr.and Mrs.Arden Douglas were Sunday guests of Mr.and Mrs.Mc- Lenegan of Ormstown.Mr.and Mrs.Bruce Merritt of Oswego, N.Y., were week-end guests of Mr.and Mrs.John Oliver.Canadians Can Buy TV Sets in U.S., if - - - OTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Canadians visiting the United States now may take home television sets under the $100 duty-free clause if: The sets are carrted in the baggage, not shipped separately, and they are valued at $100 or less.Lifting of the ban was announced yesterday by a customs official.The $100 clause applies only.to Canadians who have been in the United States for visits of longer than 48 hours: a Y CENTREPOISE | POWER LL Embargo on Cattle Imports Felt in North Border Area stated.Possibility that tne cattle import embargo might increase the price of cows in this area was seen by some dealers.Chateaugay has a large volume of such imports because it is an inspection point for cattle, it was pointed out.Inspection of a cattle consignment was under way at the Chateaugay port at the moment the embargo order was received.Other major cattle entry points are Rouses Point, Alexandria Bay and Ogdensburg.At Rouses Point, Dr.L.E.Brun- cher, local representative of the US.Agriculture Department's Bureau of Animal Industry, said the government's ban covered about everything pertaining to livestock and meat and their by-products.He said this included hay and straw, hides, skins and bone meal.\u201cA terrific lot of stuff\u201d has been turned back at this border cross ing to Canada since the embargo was clamped on Monday, Feb, 25, Dr.Bruncher said.Meanwhile, veterinarians in New York state were on guard against any possible cases of the disease among cattle.The state's 25 full-time field veterinarians were alerted by the State Agriculture Department and were instructed to warn all veterinarians of hay and straw are farily heavy at this time of year.The usual Spring influx of calves from Canada will also be halted.\u201cIt's been a good many years since the last ban on cattle imports,\u201d declared Martin Holden, deputy collector of customs, adding that he couldn't remember just when the last one was.Several dairy cattle importers predict the price of cattle in New York State will increase because of the embargo on Canadian livestock, the assistant director of the State Bureau of Animal Industry said at Albany.Dr.Winfred 8.Stone said dealers had expressed that opinion to him.However, a spokesman for the Department of Agriculture and Markets Department sald there was no way of predicting a price trend.He said new methods might be devised to offset the loss of Canadian Imports resulting from the federal n.New York cattle dealers have been importing about 20,000 Canadian cattle a year.This represents about 80 percent of the state's dairy cattle imports each year.Cattle ure imported to replace cows that have gone dry or are too old, and to replenish herds depleted by death and slaughtering.Many dairymen also import simply to increase the size of thelr herds.The Agriculture Department spokesman sald more cattle might be imported from the Midwest \u2014 Wisconsin and Minnesota \u2014 and Page Nine business has been expanding.And, he added, the breeding of cattle tn New York State might be increased, as à result of the ban.A dairy cattle importer, E.Roy Fairbanks of Jamesville, said he expected the price of dairy cattle to rise \u201c5 to 10 per cent anyway.\u201d A good grade dajry cow has been retailing in the state for $450 to $500, Dr.Stone said.Fairbanks said the embargo would \u201cput us (importers) out of business for the time being.\"\u2014Ma- lone Evening Telegram.Skinnymen, women gain5,10,15Ibs.Get New Pep, Vim, Vigor What a thrill! Boay {inde fill out; usly bob ows up; body longer scrawny; loses bait-starsed, Moly nou- sands of girls, women, Iman, who never oould gain before, sre now proud of shapely, hesithy-looking bivtfes, Thay thank tho epee alal vigor-building, flesh.building toalo, Oslrex, Its tonton, stimyfanta, Invigors- torn, fron, Vitamin By, eal- cium, enrich blood, improve appetite and digestion no fond aires pou more strength and nouriatmment; put flesh on hare hones.Get Lovely Curves Don't fear getting TUO lat Htoy when you'va gaine the 5, 10, 13 or 20 ibe.you need for normal woilzht Conte \"tla.New \u2018got acruainted\u2019 sly - only 6800.(amous datrer Thnia Tablets for new vigor and added pounds, this very day.At all drussisis, from the south, where the cattle GEORGES LECOMPTE Electrical Contractor 176 Ellice St.Phone 429 Valleyfield, Que.\u2014 PROMPT AND EFFICIENT SERVICE \u2014 Estimates Submitted on Contracts \u2018 in their areas.At the Malone port, shipments of fresh ment, averaging about two carloads per week will be affected.Here and ot other points, imports CA ALIS TW TV for 1952 .the only fine cars priced so low mean by that.with Centrepoise Power .new method of mounting and cushioning the engine .© smoothness of operation, freedom from vibra- COSTS ONLY PRICED SO Low! PL1AEUUON .that they in closer demand fac- ction of the # to produce ¢ of pork pre- n continuous ASE chaired by P.Hlustrated \u2014 Styleline De Luxe 2 ick, Que., chair- ock Producers x Farm Forum \u2018ng committee bilizing pro- - meeting.And Chevrolet offers such a wide and wonderful choice of colors .and such gorgeous new custom-tailored interiors .with upholstery and trim in two tones of blue, green or gray to harmonize with exterior colors, in all De Luxe sedan and coupe models! For here are the truly advanced automobiles .and a single test-drive will tell you what we Moreover, we mean that Chevrolet supplies all these fine car advantages at substantial savings .for it\u2019s the lowest priced line in its field .and is exceedingly economical to own and operate.We mean the only cars at or near their price .that marvellous to provide almost unbelievable Come in; see and drive the only fine cars priced so low; and place your order now! tion, and protection from road noise and wheel shock.MORE PEOPLE BUY CHEVROLETS THAN ANY OTHER CAR bringing you the beauty of radiant, new Royal- Tone Styling .luxurious Body by Fisher! Extra-smooth, extra-dependable POWERGIide with New Automatic Choke for finest no-shift driving at lowest cost.(Combination of Power- glide Automatic Transmission and 105-h.p.Valve- in-Head Engine optional on De Luxe models at extra cost.) We mean the only cars at or near their price .and an extra-large, extra- C5528 Huntingdon Motors Reg\u2019d Phone 822 Huntingdon . Page Ten The Huntingdon Gleaner Wednesday, March 5th, 1952 Valleytield Skating Club To Present Carnival The VALLEYFIELD FIGURE SKATING CLUB with its 160 members is presenting its first fu]l length Extravaganza on Ice in its \u201cCARNAVAL OF 1952,\u2019 at Valleyfield Arena, very soon.After four years of intensive, training, the Executive and Directors feel that sufficient talent has developed to stage a show with outside help which will assure the public of ghorayg! colourful and enjoyabl Yrs BP entertainment.The show, ts about two and one half hoûrs which includes solos by the polar President, Mr.Peter Stranger, formerly Senjor Champion of the Singles and Pairs of the Montreal Winter Club.Also, Miss Francoise Primeau, the charming and graceful Champion of this Club.chambault and Jacqueline Boyer, some of the younger skaters will also perform.There will be a Pair by the vivacious Cholette Twins, Marie-Paule and Monique.A precision number called \u201cThe SYNCOPATED CLOCK\" will comprise 16 of the Senlof skaters, a number never before attempted on ice.Junior groups will perform in the Dutch Waltz number and a School number.The club is appealing to the generosity and interest of the public to assure a complete success of the Carnival as it is hoped to make this an annual event.It is for the benefit of the children of Valley- field.Valleyfield VALLEYFIELD\u2014The Red Cross held a business meeting in the Windsor Hotel, Montreal, on Feb.2Tth.Those attending from Valleyfield were Mr.Lemyre, President; Mrs.Roman, Mrs.Boy, Mrs.Dow, Miss Besner and Mrs.Lemyre.The guest speaker Quebec Solicitor General introduced by Col.Maurice Forget.Mayor Houde very graciously thanked the speaker for his splendid address.At the afternoon session different committees met and discussed the A complete line of Birds Eye FAST FROZEN FRUITS VEGETABLES AND FISH Fillets of Cod Fillets of Haddock Fillets of Sole Fillets of Ocean Perch Fillets of Flounder Salmon Steaks Scallops - also - British Columbia Salmon by the fish, Haddock Dressed for the pan, Fresh Herring and Salt Codfish.WHEN IN NEED OF FISH THINK OF US \u2018Coy Bros.~92 Huntingdon Provincial at the luncheon which Valleyfield members attended was Hon.Antoine Rivard, work, after which tea was served.Thursday, Feb.28th, a conducted tour was arranged to show the work that is being done by the Society, the first visit being at the Community Hall Swimmng pool, N.D.G., where a demonstration in swimming and life saving was given.From there to the Red Cross Laboratory where they showed the method of cleaning the equipment and the typing of the blood for hospital use, The next visit was to Red Cross Guest House at Ste.Anne de Bellevue, where a nice lunch was served.Afterwards the guests were shown through the handicrafts hospital and viewed a fine display of articles made by the Veterans.Buses then returned to the Red Cross Branch and everyone reported a most interesting and instructive day.Mr.Charles Dawe was a caller at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Chris.Mayoh recently.Mrs.A.D.Cuthbert spent the week-end with the Misses Jane and Anne Wilson.- The Valleyfield Home and School Association held their Annual Card Party after a short business meeting Monday evening, Feb.25th.It was very gratifying to know that the large attendance made it a great success.Bridge: Ladies\u20141st prize, Margaret Stewart; 2nd, Mrs.Gyrth Gar- wood; Consolation, Mrs.D.Montgomery.Men\u2014I1st, Mr.Nearney; 2nd, Mr.Johnson; Consolation, Mr.Hunter.\u201c500\u201d: Ladies\u2014lst prize, Mrs.Amos; 2nd, Mrs.Gilbert; Consolation, Mrs.McPherson.Men\u2014Ist prize, Mr.Laliberte; 2nd, Mr.Gil- Bart: Consolation, Mr.Tom CHf- ord.Cribbage: Ladies \u2014 1st, Mrs.Beale; 2nd.Mrs.Mayoh; Consolation, Mrs.Sugden.Men\u2014Ist prize, Mr.Omer Langlois; 2nd, Mr.Christie; Consolation, Mr.J.Cooper.The door prize was won by Mrs.Woodward and Mr.Hunter won the raffle on the basket of fruit.The Ladies\u2019 Guild of St.Mark's Anglican Church held their Shrove Tuesday Tea and Food Sale on Feh.26th.Wm.J.Shannon, Grand Master of the I.O.O.F.for the Province of Quebec visited the following Lodges recently: Feb.28\u2014Annual meeting District No.4 in the I1.O.O.F.parlors, Quebec city.Bro.Peter Miedema presiding.Feb.29\u2014Official visit Thetford Mines Lodge No.55.District Deputy Grand Master Bro.Howard Eager presiding.March 1\u2014Annual meeting Districts 1-2, Montreal.Excelsior Lodge Parlors, 183 St.Catherine St.E.District Deputy Grand Masters Bro.Don Nevin and Bro.Lucien Drouin presiding.March 2\u2014Annual District Church Service Ephraim Scott Memorial Church.Rev.Bro.McBride, pastor.Bro.Wm.J.Shannon, Grand Master reading the lesson.Sunday evening, Feb.24th, a service was held in the United Church at 7 pm.to honor the birthday of the late Lord Baden- Powell who founded the Boy Scout movement on Christian principles about 45 years ago.The 1st Valleyfield Boy Scout Troop, with Mr.Gerry Weller as Scout Master and John Rider as Scout Leader, were in attendance \u2018EED STORE Huntingdon We have a complete line of feed\u2014Bran, Shorts, Mid- dlings, Ground Oats, Barley Meal, 16% Dairy Ration, 24% Dairy Ration, 32% Dairy Ration, Corn Distiller and Gluten.Custom We do custom grindin Grinding g and mixing of your own grains.Satisfaction guaranteed.Quick service.Pioneer Chick Starter, Growing Mash, Laying Mash, Calf Meal and Calf Starter Grower.To Arrive \u2018Carload of Bran, Shorts, Middlings and Flour to arrive this week.Huntingdon Grist Mill J.C.PHONE 325 Renaud HUNTINGDON Miss Louise Lalonde, Mireille Ar- | > Leduc and Mr.and Mrs.Georges Above is the elevator system of a new barn cleaner which Mr.Russell Kerr of Fertile Creek has installed in the barn on his farm.The top view shows the conveyor emptying the manure from the stalls into a AC ey pit at the bottom of the elevator.The drive unit of the conveyor system and the returr to the stalls in the main barn.Also shown is the start of the upward journey by the elevator.The lower view 3 pa = \u201c5, wkd Sg Te dd ELEVATOR SYSTEM OF NEW BARN CLEANER .* shows the manure elevated to the ramp and being dropped into the wagon below.The drive unit of the elevator is seen at the top.Other pictures and story appear elsewhere in this issue.all wearing uniforms, also the 1st Nitro Cub Pack with Mr.Stan.Clendenning as Leader.Scout Leader John Rider read the lesson while Mr.John McGregor of Montreal, Field Commissioner of Boy Scouts for the Province of Quebec, preached the sermon, his text being, \u201cI beseech thee, show me thy glory.\u201d In bringing out the four points that Scouts have to keep in mind in order to be a good Scout were: Fun, Adventure, Comrade- sm and Code.The service closed with the singing of God Save the Queen.Afterwards the congregation went into the Hall where a programme of music and an informal talk by Mr.McGregor on Scout work was given.Mr.Hargrave acted as chairman, Two hymns were sung and Paul and Teddy Osborne each gave a piano solo.The Rev.D.G.Gault was made Chaplain of the Troop, Mr.Percy Sudgen presenting him with the Scout badge and pin.Mr.Lionel Robb thanked the speaker and refreshments were then served at the close of this fireside hour.Mr.and Mrs.Ernie Hanlon of Chateauguay, Que.spent Sunday recently with Mr.and Mrs.M.A.Horgan.Mr.and Mrs.Maurice Nicholson have gone to New York, where they will spend a few days before going to Miami, Florida and Havana, Cuba.Mrs.J.O.Clermont, Mrs.G.A.Meloche left Priday for a vacation in Miami, Council Meetings Howick Village Council Meeting called to order by the Mayor, Mr.Isidore Jeanneau at 8.15 P.M.All the Councillors present.Information having been received from legal Counsel that Mr.Norman Logan is the responsibiiity of the Parlsh Council it was moved by Romeo Dubuc, seconded by Alfred Allan and carried that the resolution of meeting held Feb.2nd., 1942 and shown on page 250 in the minute book, regarding the providing of a house for Mr.Norman Logan, be, and is hereby, recinded and that Mr.R.B.Ness be advised that the Council of the Village of Howick will not bé responsible for the rent of the house occupied by Mr.Logan, after May 1st 1952.The report of the Auditor was presented covering 1951, whereupon it was moved by Romeo Dubuc, seconded by Paul Laberge and carried that the Report be adopted, the Audit fees of $35.00 be pald and Mr.Theo Bourdeau be reappointed Auditor for the coming year.The report to be published in the Hunt- ingdon Gleaner.The following bills were ordered paid.C.Craig, plowing village streets $27.00: Carson Bros., plowing streets, $14.00; Shawinigan Water & Power, street lights, $48.63.was ordered that the Insurance on the Town Hall be increased to $4,000.00 and an additional $1,000.00 placed on the fire engine and hose, The plans covering Water and Drainage system for Howick, having been approved by the Health Dept.at Quebec, the Secretary was ordered to pay Mr.Vezina for his services according to contract.Garbage removal was continued for a price of 3200.00 for a year from March 1st, 1983.Garbage to be collected every 1st, and 3rd Tuesday in each month with the exception of July 1st, when the garbage shall be collected on the lst Wednesday of July.Meeting adjourned.Tres St.Sacrement Council Called to order by the Mayor, Jas.A.Cullen at 2.15 P.M.The following Councillors were present.Harold Ronertson, Emile Bergevin, Clarence Kerr and Joseph Gagne.It was moved by Harold Robertson and seconded by Emile Berge- vin that the various Inspectors and Officers appointed to office last year, having been appointed for a two- year term, no change be made this year.The report of the Auditor was presented and upon motion of Clarence Kerr, seconded by Harold Robertson was adopted and his fee ordered paid and that he be appointed for another year as Auditor.\u2019 The following bills were ordered paid.Baillargeon, gravel $351.00; Shawinigan Water & Power, Light on Bridge, $30.50; Central Ctee, chemin d\u2019hiver $105.00.The Mayor was authorized to sign the hospital card covering Mr.Norman Logan.A donation to the St.John Baptiste Society of $5.00 was authorized.Councillor Gagne was appointed to examine complaint of Mr.Irving covering fence damaged by the St.Louis snow plow.The meeting adjourned.FRANKLIN COUNCIL A regular sesston of the Municipal Council of Franklin was held on March 3rd.All members present except Councillors Dunn, Du- | mas and Fredette, and under the presidency of the Mayor, Lewis Blair.Ratepayer Gerald Beaudin came before the Board asking for the use of the Municipal Hall for Scout meetings.Moved and seconded that the use of the Hall be granted to the Scouts, free of charge, for six months, unless other arrangements be made for other occasions.Carried.Moved and seconded that this municipality ask permission from the Minister of Municipal Affairs to go on Daylght Savng Tme, com- mencng Sunday, April 24th, 1952, at one minute past midnight, until Sunday, Sept.25th, 1952, at one minute past midnight.Carried.Moved and seconded that ratepayer« Norman Towns be allowed permission to cut an elm tree on the side of the road opposite his property.Stump to be cut 6 inches from the ground.Carried.Moved and seconded that the following bills be paid: C.Dickson $40.80; Kyle Blair $13.75; Shawinigan Water & Power $51.00; Ray McMillan 45c; Gerald Cassidy $3.00; Clifford Lamb $7.00; Fred Sher- rington $11.10.Carried.Moved and seconded that the Secretary be authorized to notify Oscar Patenaude to clean the rubbish from both ends of the culvert in front of his residence.Carried.Moved and seconded that the Council meetings be held in the evenings at 7 p.m.from the first evening in April, including the first meeting in November.Carried.Dewittville Mrs.Gordon Smiles is a patient in the Montreal General Hospital and we wish her a speedy recovery.Mr.and Mrs.Norman Hodges have returned to their home in Montreal, after spending their honeymoon in ermont and the Lzaurentian Moun- ATTENTION SUGAR MAKERS Grimms\u2019 Sap Buckets, uts, Pails and Strainers, Syrup Care Tanks, Evaporators and Pan Cleaner.Robt.W.Cottingham Ormstown, Tel.631-r-6 TPN [yo \u2014 LE NOTICE It is our intention to carry on the Insurance vice accorded by this Business of the late John G.Rennie.Our desire is to continue to extend to the public the same courteous and efficient ser- company in the past.John G.Rennie & Company! Limited Insurance Brokers Mrs.Ruth Rennie, President Huntingdon, Que.T LOVES CURLING HUGHTON, Sask, ( CP)\u2014Mrs.Bert Oliphant, 67, has tossed stanes at the Hughton curling club since it was built in 1917.SCRAP METAL DRIVE HALIFAX, (CP) \u2014 The United Boys' and Girls\u2019 Club of Nova Sco- tia have opened a drive to collect scrap metal, to provide funds for improving equipment and recrea- Notice to Parents Parents who plan to enrol their children in Grade |, September next, should consult now, as soon as possible, with Miss MacIntosh, the Primary Teacher.tion facilities who include privileged children.for -their proteges, hundreds of under- Please be reminded that all such students must be six years of age on or before September 2nd next.| Was Nearly Crazy With Fiery ltch\u2014 Um 1 discovered Dr.D.D.Dennis amasiaghy \u2014_ tion.Wo fast pelief\u2014D.D.D.Presorip! ried CHARLES REID, Chairman, School Board of Commissioners, Huntingdon High School, Huntingdon, Que.ut ma, pimples, rashes, Tale 1tob frouples.Trial bottle, 456 Don ee aux \u2018drugkist for D.D.D aok.D, aioe\u201d (orders or oxtrs strength) 90000000000000700 000000000700 PTS OOOOH ARAN +R ER RN I SY XA Waa a aa a a a a a x \u2014 \u2014 re $50.\u201d TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD WASHING MACHINE WHEN YOU BUY | A NEW | | x CONNOR-THERMO Sh ph { oe 4 AMA po FE pie a, We recommend CONNOR because we know that it is | your best buy and it is BACKED BY THE STRONGEST | GUARANTEE IN THE INDUSTRY! 41 \u201clifetime\u201d features including the exclusive, patented THERMO tub that keeps all the hot water HOT throughout the whole washing cycle\u2014 mean dollars saved \u2014 energy saved \u2014 and greater freedom for you every washday.TOP PRICE FOR YOUR OLD WASHER To make it easy for you to own a CONNOR, we will pay you top price for your old washer when you buy a new THERMO.We'll gladly demonstrate in our store or at your home.| This week MARCHAND FRERES i offer you a big special in VENETIAN | BLINDS.\u201cIf you intend to change the appearance of your rooms, this is an opportunity you should not miss.These Venetian Blinds are Ivory color and are offered this week at 39c per square foot.Size Regular Speci Size * Regular Special 0 38x64 .$11.90 $6.63 32x64 .$ 9.80 $5.46 36 x64 .11.20 6.24 30x64 .9.10 5.07 34x64 .10.50 5.85 27 x 64 .8.40 4.68 Marchand Freres Phone 441 - HUNTINGDON 75 Chateauguay St.Reine "]
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