—Inflation has now —After a good meal, reached the point where one can forgive any- people ought to offer at body, even one’s rela- least a nickel for your tives. arry thoughts. —J. Gaucher. —Oscar Wilde. The THE FINEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER IN EASTERN ONTARIO ALEXANDRIA, ONT. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23rd, 1951 Ladies’Auxiliary Of Legion Branch Council Approves Four Generations At Mrs. Hugh A. Munro Greenfield Man Injured In Playgrounds Board Saskatchewan Reunion Dies At Apple A unique four-generation re- Car Accident Near Belleville Organized At Meeting Tuesday The new Park and Playground union involving former Glen- Mrs. Hugh Alex Munro, a well . • ' • ■ i Board was approved at Tuesday’s garrians is reported by the known and highly respected resi- Archie MacDonald, 28, Suffered Internal regular meeting oî Town Council. Rosetown Eagle of Rosetown, dent of Apple Hill, passed away on Officers Installed And 29 Members Initiated Wednesday, February 14th, after a Injuries And Shock When Car The « seven members of the Board Sask. By Provincial Command Leaders — are J. Y. Humphries and Earl lingering illness. She was in her Struck Tree — Improving After Operation Miss Joan Gormley Is First president Leroux, representing the Kinsmen Mr. and Mrs. Hector Brown 85th year. entertained on New Year’s Day The former Margery McIntyre, Club; Donatien Theoret, Josephus Archie MacDonald, 28,, son of Mr. and Mrs. Innis MsfcDonald, Green- Filion and Rolland Cholette, of the when the guests represented Mrs. Munro was a daughter of the The Alexandria Auxiliary Branch of the Provincial Command, Cana- field, is reported improving in hospital at Belleville, following an auto Richelieu Club, and Councillors four generations on each side of late Donald D. McIntyre and his dian Legion, came into feeing, Tuesday night, at a Well attended Ambrose Lalonde and Eugene Mac- wife, Jessie Anderson., accident Saturday afternoon on Highway No. 2 near Belleville. Mr. the family. They included Mrs. •organizational meeting held in the Hub Hall. Officers were installed, and donald as representatives of Town She leaves to mourn her loss, her MacDonald suffered internal injuries and shock and on arrival at the twenty-nine members initiated. It was announced that more have signed Council. The Service Club repre- Myles McMillan of Kerrobert, aged husband; one son, ancl four hospital he Was operated on for removal of his spleen, which was frac- applications for membership and they, with other, potential members, sentatives act for a two-year period, Sask., formerly of Kirk Hill; her daughters: Lome Munro, Mil- tured in the acoident. will he initiated at the next meeting. while members from Council are ap- daughter, Mrs. W. Brown and waukee, Wis.; Mrs. Dan I., McIntosh : * His brother, Donald G. Mac- (Mabel), Apple Hill; Mrs. William Miss Joan Gormley was elected* pointed annually. the latter’s son, host Hector Donald! of Kingston, was called to First set up two years ago under Merriman (Rubena), Sandringham; Alexandria Plant Is Belleville, and he reports Archie president of the Auxiliary, and ' Brown with his children, Carol other officers are: ’ Brewers Warehouse the Community Centres Act, the Mrs. Donald Dewar (Jessie), Dun- making good recovery. 1st Vice-President—Mrs. Stephen Board is authorized to make such and Vicky Brown. The other vegan, and Miss Cassie Belle Munro, Shortening Work Week Accompanied by a companion, .O’Connor, Jr. rules as it deems pecessary relating side of the family included Mrs. Apple Hill. Also survivirig are one Mr. MacDonald was driving from To Be Opened Here , The Guarantee Sports Garment 2nd Vice-President — Miss Lois to management and control of the Wright, Sr„ of Rosetown, her sister, Mrs. Paul Obrycki (Jennie Oshawa, where he had been em- playground. The first Board had Belle) of Westmount, Que.; two Co. plant at the station here, has Wright. A brewers warehouse will be daughter, Mrs. Ewen L. Mc- ployed, to Montreal. He had re- Secretary—-Mrs. John Malkin. three Kinsmen and two members of brothers, Isaac McIntyre, - announced a reduction in its work ceived a transfer to .Montreal and opened in the former Simon’s store week from 48 hours to 40 hours. Treasurer—Mrs. Doue Thauvette. the Richelieu Club, the two clubs Cuaig of Stranraer; the latter’s couver, B.C., and Peter D. McIntyre, purposed spending the week-end at property here, in the early summer. Work hours were formerly- from Standard-Bearer — Mrs. Her- Leasing of the property by the having agreed to 'alternate the odd daughter, hostess Mrs. Brown Apple Hill; as well as twelte grand- his home in Greenfield. At a point 7 a.m. to 6 pm., Monday to Thurs- minie Periard. Breweries Warehousing Co. Ltd., member every two years. and her two children. children. some four miles east of Belleville, Council' concurred in a motion The funeral, which was largely day, and from 7 a.m. to 4 r#m. on Executive Committee—Mrs. David was (/nflrm'ed early this week and To top it dff there was a third the car swerved from the icy road passed by Ohesterville Village attended, took place on Friday Friday, the -plant closing then for Lalonde, ’Mrs. Gordon Watson, men are to arrive next week to group of four generations at the and struck a tree. The accident Council and will support their sug- afternoon, February 16th, from the the week-end. The 7 o’clock open- ’Mrs. Bert Lalonde, Mrs. Albert begin alterations on the store party: Mrs. Wright, Sr., Mrs. occurred about 1.45 o’clock Satur- ! gestion to the Minister of Municipal home to Zion United Church, Ap- ing was' found inconvenient for the -V Peterson, Mrs. Harold Nyman, property. Ewen L. McCuaig, her son, day afternoon. Affairs that a provincial subsidy pf ple Hill, thence to North Branch employees and a change has been Mrs. W. C. Corbin, Mrs. Thos. The store will handle the retail Kennie McCuaig and his chil- cemetery for burial. Rev. J. U. made to 8 am. to 6 p.m., Monday . Douglas. sale of beer, at present in the hands 33% per cent should be paid on the dren, Gail and David. Pianist—Mrs. Albert Peterson. cost of all underground sewers, Tanner conducted the service at the to Th-unsday; 8 to 5 p.m. on Fridays. of the Liquor store staff, will supply Mr. Ewen L. McCuaig is a All experienced help is employed on district hotels and hbme delivery water supplies, and sewage disposal church and grave, and preached a Impressive Tribute Installation of the officers and brother of Mrs. D. N. McCrim- a piece-work basis. service and will also be used for unite to towns and villages separ- very comforting -message. initiation of the members was eax- mon, Mrs. N. B. MacLeod, Dun- The plant is now working on a warehousing purposes. Beer will no ated from Counties. Pallbearers were : Stewart Mc- xied out by Mrs. Long, president, vegan; Mrs. Robert Grant, Lag- large backlog of orders, Mr. Albert To Jovenin Goulet and Mrs. Richardson, secretary- longer be handled at the Liquor The appointment of Wilton Car- Intosh, Angus McIntosh, David dinal as Assessment Commissioner gan; Mrs. D. R. MacLeod, Alex- Coulthart, Lloyd Grant, Robert Levac, local manager, reports, and treasurer, both of the Ladies Aux- store once the warehouse opens. An impressive last tribute of re- to make the town’s 1952 assessment, andria, and Mrs. Andrew Fraser, Lang and Lorne Hall, has openings for additional help. iliary to the. Ontario Provincial No appointments to the staff have Maxville. spect w-â(s paid the memory of the Command, They complimented the yet 'been announced. was made at a salary of $500, his Relatives Were present from o duties to commence at once. late Jovenin Goulet at his funeral, ladies and members of the Legion Montreal, Ottawa, Cornwall, Max- held Friday morning from his resi- .Branch on the initiative shown, in A request from Ulric Lecompte ville, Monckland, Moose Creek, that he be made permanent fireman Lancaster Minister dence, Kenyon street west, to Sacred organizing the Auxiliary in so short Kirk Hill Calls Finch, Morrisburg, Avonmore and Heart Church and cemetery. Some a time following reorganization of Regional Meeting and caretaker of the fire hall and surrounding district. v jail on a full time basis, was re- thirty members of the diocesan the Branch. Many floral tributes were received Going To Joliette ferred to the Police and Fire Com- clergy were in the Sanctuary and Objects of an Auxiliary, they New Minister Of Association Held mittee for study. from: Miss Cassie Macdonell, 14th the large congregation included pointed out, are to support and The winter meeting of the Glen- Albert Bedard appeared before Con. Indian Lands; the Macdonell members of the Holy Cross com- assist the Auxihary Branch of Pro- At a special meeting of the Pres- garry Presbytery of the United At the regional meeting of the Council on behalf of men who had family; Mr. and Mrs. Dan I. Mc- munity from many sections of the vincial Command in carrying out bytery of Glengarry, held in St. Church of Canada, held in Knox French - Canadian Educational worked on the sewer project. He Intosh and family; Mr. and Mrs. diocese. The choir was made up their high ideals as well as to assist John’s Presbyterian Church, Corn- Church, Cornwall, last week, called Association of, Ontario, heldl in requested the balance of holiday Charles Rider, Kingston; Mr. and of members of the clergy and rela- the local Legion Branch in raising wall, Thursday of last week, a call for further increase in taxes on all Sacred Heart Parish Hall here on pay for- the men, an amount equal Mrs. -Donald McIntosh, North Bay,; tives. and co-ordinating the funds needed from St. Columtaa Church, Kirk spirituous liquors as a means of Sunday, February 11th, Remi Du- to the one per cent given them at Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Grant, and Mr. The late Mr. Goulet, a widely in their work among veterans and Hill, was addressed to Rev. A. O. “curbing the terrible increase of four Was named president, replacing Christmas time. Finding that the and Mrs. David Coulthart, Monck- known blacksmith here during a their dependenfe, as well as other Thomson, of Grand River, N.S. 'beverage alcohol sales in Canada.” Dr. Gerald Latour, who presided at Labor Relations Act calls for such iandl; Rev. and Mrs. P. J. Lambert, half century, died suddenly, Feb- projects of the Branch. The call was well supported and The evangelism and social ser- the meeting and' gave a resume of a payment, Council decided it Maple, Ont.; Mr. and Mrs. Paul ruary 13th, following a heart at- was sustained by Presbytery. The vice committee announced its con- Others who spoke briefly were the association’s activities. should be paid. Obrycki, Westmount, Que.; Mr..and tack. induction will take place on Mon- tinued opposition to “the open door Rev. N. P. Sharkey of Lancaster, During the year the Alexandria A suggestion by Police Chief (Continued . on Page 4) Rev. J. Albert Goulet, P.P., president of the Alexandria Legion Division of the . Association con- day, February 26th, at 2 p.m. The o liquor policy of the present pro- Vachon that the dog tax should ‘be Moderator, Rèv. D. C. MacDonald, vincial government.” The commit- Crysler, sang the Solemn Mass of Branch, and Dave Lalonde, vice- tributed $1,662 to the fnd,s of the increased, was tabled. of Aivomnore, will preside and in- tee report commended the Cana- Requiem at his father’s funeral, president. ■parent association with head- Council received a report on the duct; Rev. A. Gordon Faraday, of Late F. D. McCuaig dian Broadcasting Corporation for assisted by Rev. Raoul Rouleau, as Mrs. Long presided until after in- quarters in Ottawa. The funds were survey made by L. P. Stidwill as to deacon, -and Rev. Adalbert Lalonde stallation of the officers, after which contributed from the following Vankleek Hill,, will preach the ser- such programs as “Encores”, the s (Continued on Page 8) mon; Rev. N. F. Sharkey, of Lan- Born At Lancaster as sub-deacon. The body wps met the new president took the chair. places: Alexandria, $657.70; Curry “National SundJayi Evening Hour” caster, will narrate the steps lead- and the “Toronto Symphony Con- at the church door by Rt. Rev. Meetings are to be held every Hill, $35.00; Glen Nevis, $54.25; A native of Lancaster, who had Msgr. J. E. Secours, P.P., who also ing to the call; Rév. E. E. Preston, cert”, but felt that the CBC should second and fourth Thursday of th# Apple Hill, $33.35; Dalhousie Mills, served! as Pipe-Major of the Argyll recited1 the prayers at the grayç- S.C.P. McDonald Of of > Vankleek Hill, will address the curb the indirect liquor advertising month. $10.25; Glen Robertson, $119.70; Sf Sutherland Highlanders at Ham- side, Bainsville, $10.0.0; Dalkeith, $106.75; minister and people. of certain other programs such as An appreciated feature was the Dunvegan Passes Rev. Mr. Thomson was present ilton- over a long period, Mr. Finley The pallbearers were: Arcade large decorated birthday cake, do- Greenfield, $7.00; Green Valley, D. McCuaig died on Monday at his the “Wayne and Shuster Show” i — at the meeting and expressed his and “Stage 51”. Meloehe, Wilfrid Cadieux, Joseph nated foç the meeting by Doue $3.50; Lancaster, $62.00; Lochiel, A native of Greenfield, where he residence, 22 Rosemount avenue, $10.00; Martintown, $18.00; Max- willingness to accept the call. Vachon, Amedee Marcoux, Ulric Thauvette, a valued member of the conducted! a store for many years Hamilton. Born -at Lancaster, 71 , Rev. John MacKay, president, of ville, $63.83; North Lancaster, Presbytery congratulated the peo- Lalonde and! Major A. A, Mc- Legion Branch, and which was done before taking up farming in the years ago, he had been a resident the Montreal and Ottawa Confer- $18.91; St. Raphael’s, $27.75; Wil- ple of Kirk Hill on the despatch Donald. justice to following the business Dunvegan area, Mr. Sandy C. P. of Hamilton for the past 46 years. ence, addressed the meeting and liamstown, $22.00. with which the vacancy in the Chief mourners were Mrs. Goulet meeting when coffee and cake were McDonald died in Cornwall General reported on some of the changes charge was filled. The late Mr. McCuaig had been and all the surviving children, served. The following information was Hospital, Sunday, February 18th. o an employee of the Hendrie Cartage made by the 14th General Council ' ^ V, — 6 ' made known at the meeting: There of the Church. The speaker was brothers and sisters and many of Though in failing health for mbre Company since 1919 and had been, the grandchildren. are approximately 425,000 Frenoh- than a year, Mr. McDonald’s final introduced by Rev. J. H. Hamilton a Pipe-Major With the Argylls since Evidence of the widespread re- Oanadians In Ontario; 48,451 pupils illness had been of brief duration. Reg Cheney Skips 1903. A member of New West- and thanked! by Rev. Howard Ham- Native Of County take bi-lingual courses; 1,678 Sep- The late Mr. McDonald was a son ilton. ' gret in Mr. Goulet’s sudden passing Rink To Victory minster Presbyterian Church, he was to be seen in the many who \ arate’ School Teachers, 27 High of the late Charles P. McDonald was as well a member of ionic The following committee reports Schools in Ontario teach French, 1 called at the home prior to the Dies In Edmonton and his wife, Catherine McDonald. A Cheney-skipped rink Von the Lodge, À.F. & AM., and the Key- were presented: 152 pupils are taking Normal School He never married. funeral, as well as by the many Wilson Cup, second rankiïig trophy stone Chapter Royal Arch Masons. 'Christian education, Rev. Roland Mass offerings, floral pieces and Friends in Wïlliamstown and training in Ottawa University. Two sisters survive; Miss Flora in the big Central Canada bonspiei He leaves to mourn, his wife, the Kelly; education and candidates, messages of sympathy received. throughout the district will regret Slate of officers for 1951: McDonald of Dunvegan and Mrs. at Ottawa, last week-end, but this former Elsie Johnson of Montreal; Rev. W. Irvine; evangelism and Floral offerings were from: Eastern to leam of the deatlj of Duncan President—Remi Dufour. O. O. Lindroos (Jennie) of Alex- time it wasn’t the perennial winner, one son, Walter of Hamilton; two social service, Rev. R. A. Mitchell; Division of the Bell Telephone Co.; Grant, which occurred at Edmon- Vice-President—Rolland Cholette. andria. Dr. H. L. Cheney. His son, Reg., brothers, Donald of Niagara Falls, home mission. Rev. J. H. Hamilton; Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Laframiboise, ton, Alta. Mr. Grant was a native Treasurer—'Louis Chenier. The body rested at the McMillan was handling the rink which won Ont., and George of Vancouver, missionary and maintenance, Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Gareau, Employees of of Wllliamstoiwn. Secretary—Raymond Rochon. Funeral Hoftie here, until Tuesday, the consolation final. B.C.; three sisters, Mrs. Warren C. j Howard Hamilton; overseas mis- C. D. Parisien. Mr. Grant is survived by his wife, Directors — Emile Legault, Aza when the funeral was held to St. Reg. is rated a real comer by no Elliott of Alientown, Penn.; Mrs. sions, Rev. J. Maxwell Allan and a Among relatives present from a his father, Ronald D. Grant, of Chenier, Cyril Boisvenu. Catherine’s Church and cemetery, leks an authority than T. D’Arcy W. D. McNaughton of Hamilton; report on predbytery W.M.S. by distance were: Mr. and Mrs. Edmonton; one son, Norman Grant, Regional Director—Rene Legault. Greenfield. Rev. Ewen j. Mac- Mrs. A. A. Morrison, president. o Finn, managing editor of the Ot- Mrs. Jennette Douglas of Montreal Laurier Lâferriere, Mr. and Mrs. of, Beaverlodge Lake, Sask.; two donald, P.P., chanted the Funeral tawa Citizen. On a recent sports Rev. J. I. MacKay, home mis- daughters, Mrs. J. E. Smith, of The funeral service was heldl yes- Wilfrid Goulet, Mr. and Mrs. Theo- Mass, in the presence of many cast, Mr. Finn mehtioned Reg. as terday afternoon at the J. B. Mar- sion superintendent, also addressed dUle Goulet, Mrs. L. Clermont, Mrs. Victoria, B.C., and Miss Geraldine friends from the Dunvegan, Green- one of Jhe coming top curlers in the meeting as did Alex McLaren, R. Grant, of Edmonton; tiwo broth- Mrs. T .MacDonald iait. Funeral Home, with interment O. Latfeille, Arthur Leboeuf, Mrs-. field and Alexandria areas. Canada, if he sticks with the game. in Hamilton cemetery. former Cornwall YM.C.A.secre- Turpin, Mrs. B. Orr, Esdras Se- ers, John A. Grant, of Kindersley, tary. - s Sask., and Wesley Grant, of Port- co'urs, all of Montreal; Mr. and Mrs. Died At Lancaster Rev. W. S. Atchison submitted a C. D. Parisien, Mr. and Mrs. R. land, Oregon; one sister, Cassie pian for term insurance for thé Stocks, of Kindersley; and six Ice and Snow Also Have To Be Fought Tremblay and daughter, Michelle, The death of Mrs. Thomas Mac- board of pensions. The meeting de- Sr. M. of St. Giovanni, all of Corn- grandchildren. Donell, which occurred at her home cided to leave this matter over until His home was at No, 10158 - 150th wall; Sr. M. of St. Albert du Sacre- in Lancaster on Sunday morning, the next meeting 'of presbytery. Coeur, Foleyet, Ont.; Mr. and Mrs. street, Edmonton. «■ February 4th, was a source of deep It was announced that Rev. Wil- Eugene Goulet, Miss Marie-Paule The service was held at Andrews- sorrow to her numerous friends and liam Lister of Lancaster, has ac- McLaughlin Funeral Home Chapel, Landriault, Real Landriault, Mrs. relatives. cepted a call to Joliette, Que., and Marie Goulet, Hawkesbury; Rev. J. With Rev. J. E. Carson officiating. She was the former Annie Craig, will take up his duties March 15th. Intermént was mad® in Mount A. Goulet, P.P., Crysler. daughter of the late William Craig Presbytery adjourned to meet in o ■ Pleasant cemetery. and Jennie Higgins. She was born Newington next April 24th. Pallbearers were V. Lundberg, in New York State, but came to o D. J. McCaUum, H. W. Taylor, M. Canada at an early age, Lanthier Bakery Suder, D. Stewart and E. Speers. She was an active member of Beautiful floral tributes surround St. Andrew’s Upited Church and Show Colored Slides Needs More Space ed the casket' showing the regard Missionary Society and her life was On Home Improvement To cope with his steadily in- in which Mr. Grant was held and full of kindness. the regret felt at his death. The creasing business, George Lanthier The funeral service was held on A showing of slides on “Beautify- this Week began construction of a family received numerous messages Tuesday, February 6th, in St. An- and condolence. ing Canada” in the pig-h School 45x97 cement block addition to his drew’s Church, Williamstown, con- annex, Wednesday night, was Alexandria Bakery plant. Josephus ducted by her pastor. Rev. G. W. worthy of a much larger attend- Filloh, Green Valley, has the con- Irvine, who gave a comforting mes- ance than it attraotedi. The slides, tract for the one-stprey building, Local Salesman Has sage, referring to deceased’s deep with running commentary, were which will adjoin thé present bak- faith in God. shown by a representative of the ery on the west side.. The addition Samples Stolen In City V She leaves to mourn her loss her H. C. Uownham Nursery Co. Ltd., is expected to be. completed about t — husband, Thomas MacDonell; one Wilbrod Cardinal, a son of Mr. of -Stratford, whose local repre- May 5 th.. son, Lloyd, and one daughter, sentative is Mr. Harold Kitching, The new section will house the and Mrs. Edmond Cardinal., Alex- Janet; a brother, David Craig; and florist. bakery, storage room and garage/ andria, and a salesman for the. two nephews, Neil Craig, Lancaster, Many beautiful types of roses-, the present plant being used for Wood’s Manufacturing Co., lost his and Douglas Craig, Emmanuel Col- evergreens, shrubs and hedges Were pastries. lege, Toronto. wares to petty thieves in Montreal, shown in color and there were Mr. Lanthier has been expanding Pallbearers were George Jamie- landscaping pictures to show how his business steadily through the Saturday. Mr. Cardinal reported to son, Norman Bethune, A. L. Clark, If" these plantings should be used for years and now' has eight trucks on police that thieves broke into his Mack McRae, Gordon McNeil, Ani- best effect. Shots of Louis Brom- the road, four working out of Alex- car, parked at St. James and des eet Priepr. field’s famed Malabar Farm were andria, two in Cornwall and two in . Floral tributes were placed about Rivieres, street near the Queen’s also used to show how erosion can the Hawkesbury and L’Orignal area. the casket by relatives and friends, WINTER STORM off the west of Korea provided this example of bad flying conditions aboard the Hotel, and snatched four trunks of British flattop H.M.S. Theseus. Storm or not, the British flyers took off on their appointed missions be fought. An extensive line of bread, cakes, showing the regard, in which Mrs. The show was sponsored by the pastries and sweet g^ods is now sample clothing valued at $1,000. —as they have done since the first days of the war when a British fleet joined the^ Ü.S. forces. MacDonell was held and the re- Kinsmen Club. manufactured! by the firm. Page 2 The Glengarry News, Alexandria, Ont., Friday, February 23rd, 1951 — THE GLENGARRY NEWS — The Glory Has Departed From Caledonia Springs ☆- Member of: (JANE /. SPROULE, in the Eastern Ontaru Review) ITEMS OF AULD LANG SYNE Canadian Weekly Newspapers Association; Audit Bureau of Circulations Situated in Caledonia Township, That now is the season to visit the An old picture of Caledonia • •• • •• PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BY Gleaned from the Fyles of on the edge of the great Caledonia springs. Springs, depicts the Canada House, • • THE GLENGARRY NEWS • • THE NEWS PRINTING COMPANY marsh, which stretches for miles Then, pray, gentle readers, come list a large four-storey hotel, with wide ☆- P.0. Box 10 — ALEXANDRIA — Phone 9 the source of the springs, is Cale- to our call— verandahs and large pillars, set in -☆ We have something for each, we a sweep of lawn. Across the front, EUGENE A. MACDONALD, Publisher donia Springs. It is remarkable have waters and all above the ground floor, are three A FEW hours after reaching Toronto, where he was to that three distinct springs, saline, meet his son, Capt. Harold Macdonell of the R.O.A.SiC.,. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $2.50 per year, anywhere in Canada, payable sulphur and gas, should be so close Forget for a little the pursuit of rows of nine windows each. The in advance; United States and Foreign, $3.00 per year. together. The saline and sulphur wealth, springs appear to be enclosed in Mr. Allen Macdonell (Bailiff) died suddenly Wednesday bubble up side toy side and the gas And seek at the springs recreation square pavilions. Later these were evening. A native of Loch Garry, Mr. Macdonell had re- DISPLAY ADVERTISING RATES: Casual, 50 cents per column inch. but a few feet away. and health. replaced by round ones, with railing sided in Winnipeg until his re- Contract rates given on application. COPY MUST BE IN OUR OFFICE The Indians knew of the medi- Here, removed from the great city’s around, and seats inside the railing; TEN YEARS AGO : tirement three years ago when he NOT LATER THAN 9 A.M. THURSDAY. cinal properties of the waters be- bustle and noise. the saline andl sulphur in one pa- Friday, February 21st, 1941 returned to Alexandria. Louis fore the white man came to these If amusements you seek they are vilion, the gas in another a few feet Authorized as Second Class Matter by the Post Office Department, various and choice. Kemp, son of Mr. Thomas Kemp,. Ottawa, Canada. parts andi they had trails leading to away. The fountains flowed from has joined the Artillery at Petawawa.- Friends honored the springs. We have hunting, and fishing, lions’ mouths. The water that ran cricket and races. Mr. and Mrs. Francis McCormick at a reception held The first white man to discover away formed a creek for boating. ERIDAY, FEBRUARY 23rd, 1951 And beautiful ladies displaying the Thursday evening in Lochiel Township Hall. rA lifelong' the springs was the Hon. Alexander graces, The walk from the _ hotel to the resident of Dominionville, Mr. Simon P. Cameron died at THE FARM FORUM — THE BEGINNING Grant of L’Orignal, in 1806, while We have throwing the discus, and springs, was bordered on either side out hunting. It is known that the his home there, on Sunday.- Mr. Mansell Goodwin was tossing the bar, OF A MOVEMENT? springs were far famed for their with rose bushes. The springs were here over the week-end before leaving for South America, Restraining the courser, propelling If it were only a means whereby the opinion of the farmer mineral waters quite early in the open to the public and was a popu- where for the next three months he will act as fieldman for- a car, on many prbblems touching his livelihood could be accurately 19th century, and this was a papu- lar meeting place for the com- the Aluminum Company of Canada. Mrs. Dave Lalonde 1 We have pic-nics and billiards, guaged, the. Farm Forum would still be well worth while. lar resort for both health and plea- backgammon and chess. munity at large. A day spent at the and Mrs. Real Huot are in Montreal visiting Mr. Lalonde, sure. Guests came from the South- Industry has its Chambers of Commerce and the potent And many such things* you may springs was quite an event. And as who is critically ill in the General Hospital. On Wed- ' ern States and brought their Negro power of its lobbies at Ottawa and in the provincial capitals easily guess, nesday, Mr. Jovenin Goulet received word of the death of servants. the water keeps fresh for a length to make known its wants. Labor has its national congresses While at evening, within, are the his sister, Mrs. E. Gohier, in Montreal. Following, is the proprietor’s ad- of time, a supply would be brought and power-wielding leaders who can become extremely vocal ball and the rout, *#*.**. on occasion in demanding more wages for a shorter work dress written in 1834: There are fireworks and bonfires home, generally saline. ' week. The. time has arrived when by and rockets without. The only place for miles around  PONTIFICAL Solemn Mass for the repose of the soul of means of the press, With all such expedients we dis- where there were games and sports, ’the late Rev. Joseph. Aime Huot, was célebrated by The farmer has suffered from the fact that bis nèeds have Our friends, and our patrons, again never been emphasized with the force which Canada’s largest sipate care, young people wbuld drive quite a Right Rev. Felix Couturier, O.P., D.D., in the Church of the we address— Then on Sundays to church or to Sacred Heart, on Saturday. On Sunday morning at the industry should be able to bring to bear. Farming has so To remind them once more that the chapel repair, distance to spend an evening at the many different faces in Canada that it has always been diffi- springs. conclusion of the parochial Mass, leafs on the tree, And we must not forget among TWENTY YEARS AGO His Lordship blessed an imported cult to have agriculture speak with one voice. The ; wants of The bird on the bough, and the other good things, , The Canada House was burned Friday, February 20th, 1931 Marble Tablet erected by the par- one branch of the industry — say the wheat farmer —- may flower on the lea, The wonderful cures that are made some years ago. Gone are the Lov- That the cool zephyr wantons thro’ ishioners in memory of a beloved actually appear detrimental to another farming group, the at the Springs, er’s Walk and! bowling alley. .bower and grot, But these things are noted it boots pastor. Some seventy of Maxville’s leading citizens dairymen. . At present the springs are en- In recent years markèd progress has. been made towards That the streets of the city are not to tell united, Monday evening, in tendering a complimentary unity of expression through the Canadian Federation of Agri- dusty and hot, How the sore become sound — how closed in a plain wooden building, banquet to Reeve Dr. J. H. Munro, upon his election as That all nature is dressed in her the sick become well.. nothing artistic about it at all, and Warden of the United Counties. The banquet was held in culture and possibly the Farm Forum has contributed more' gorgeous array, So judge for yourselves,. and make than any other farm group to the effectiveness of the Federa- where once were well kept lawns the Orange Hall, T. W. Munro occupying the chair. And the waters as usual refreshing an inspection, Alexandria curlers took a 33-23 lead in District Medal play- tion’s efforts. In the we'ekly discussions of the small Forum Play, Here at least you will meet a most and tended shrubs and flowers, long groups there begins to emerge a broad picture of the needs That with joy . and with gladness cordial reception. grass grows over all. “The glory has on Saturday when two rinks from St. Anne de Bellevue and desires of the Canadian farmer and the cumulative effect the wilderness rings, —Author Unknown. departed.” visited the local club. T. J. Gormley’s rink won 15-10 over of these many group meetings' is to demonstrate how closely R. H. Angrove, while D. N. McRae was victorious over E. allied are the aims of the Western wheat farmer or rancher, Foy, 18-13. Mr. Dan McLennan, Dalkeith, is preparing the dairymen of the East. Three Rusty Nails Self Security to ibuild a new house this year and has unloaded a carload Forum, meetings are well publicized and their findings of brick for that purpose. The home of Mr. and Mrs. must be of special interest to the politician and to government (By BRUCE HUTCHISON, in the Ottawa Citizen) Comes High Clarenee St. John, Maxville, was destroyed by fire early on Friday morning. policy makers. There are, too, the educational and social As I was cutting today through how does the possessor hand it on By an economic disease we call advantages of these community get-togethers. Many an idea the trunk of a fallen, three-foot to others? inflation, old people are being shorn * * * * # first brought forward at a Forum meeting has resulted in an oak my saw suddenly encountered As never before the owner of of their security in a way that re- ÂN EPOCH making event in the history of Maxville took achievement in community improvement that might never the unmistakalble touch of metal. truth has the mechanical means of calls the harsh treatment of aban- With infinite labor, carving its wood communication. He has the printed place on Tuesday, when the town was connected up have been undertaken. doned elders by certain primitive with Hydro power lines and streets; business places and from various angles, I discovered word, the spoken word of the radio, tribes, asserts The Financial Post. Since the depression of thé ’30s a deep anxiety has been within the heart of the oak three the picture word of the movies and homes were for the first time lighted toy electricity. To nagging at the.farmer. He has been made aware of the strong It states: “A generation ago many ancient, hand-made nails. They television, and by these means we were able to accumulate $20,000 and celebrate the advent of electricity voice in affairs labor has won and the power over legislation had'been driven some 100 years ago, are daily engulfed in words, ham- retire in confidence and security on THIRTY YEARS AGO a public meeting was held that possessed by the “big interests”. Perhaps he feels that while ■tfhen the tree was scarce six inches mered by language until our hides the $1,200 annual interest that sum Friday, February 25th, 1921 night in the Women’s Institute in diameter. everyone el$e can wield a selfish interest over government are mercifully thickened and tough- would provide. Hall. Maxville’s full complement policy, he is expected to just go on working from dawn to Who drove them? A century* ago ened against them and finally com- “They can’t do that now. Not munication, for all its techniques, of 5% p.e. Hydro Electric debentures were sold at par, dark, keep his month shut and take it. there were few white men in these only do income taxes make the and all were sold in Maxville. At the next meeting of' < "• The Farm Forum is giving him an opportunity to meet parts.. Governor Douglas’ little fort communicates nothing but sound. accumulation of capital much more The nail aimed at our bark glances Glengarry Presbytery to be held in Knox Church, Corn- regularly with his neighibo.rs, do his beefing in a sympathetic had been founded only about eight dlifficult but low interest rates and years, the fipst rush- of Cariboo off and is never driven home. wall, on March 1st, the call to Rev. W. A. Morrison of Duh- ear, hear some constructive ideas and, perhaps, contribute high living costs combine to reduce vegan from the congregation of Spencerville, will be con- some of his own. These ideas may be circularized throughout mdnfers was still seven years off. Yet the income received from $20,000 someone, wandering in the unex- both in actual dollars and in .pur- sidered. Miss Millie McKinnon, nnrse-in-training,. all the Forums of the province and country and hâve an incal- A hundred years ago nails were 1 plored wilderness around Victoria, sharper and men were, surer with chasing power to a mere pittance. returned to Kingston on Tuesday, after visiting her culable effect on his fellow agriculturists. had paused here and hammered in parent^, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. McKinnon, 4th Kenyon. It is high time the farmer was getting organized and their hammers. You may be sure “Already inflation has gravely up- three nails. that the man who drove the -nails set what once looked like sound re- George H. Goodfellow, of Lancaster, recently shipped four- through his Forums, his producers’ associations' and on up to Was’ this the work of some de- into my oak tree knew exactly what tirement and estate plans based on teen head of high grade Holstein cattle, tuberculin tested,, his Federation of Agriculture, he is- going to exert a much ranged Spanish navigator? Did he was doing. He had. some reason savings, .bonds and insurance. Scores for foundation stock in the accredited herd of A. N. Clark, greater influence in the future. That will be good not alone Douglas, perchance, have an odd for driving them and! some reason of thousands of elderly Canadians Mountain, Ont.— Mr. Donald A. McKercher of McGill for the farmer but for the democratic form of government now habit of carrying hammer and nails for living, a sure grip on life and who thought they would be able to University, week-ended at his home in Maxville. beihg-assailed by powerful enemies. He and his fellows of to blaze his path? Or did! some In- no doubts about its future. He was take things easy in a year or two, the middle class form a buttress against all extremes of dian here attach three white men’s poor, he. had few tools and not will have to keep right on working. • • • • ' ' • political or economic thought. - scalps? No' one will ever know. many of the world’s goods but he But if the inflation of the last ten ARCHBISHOP CHARLES H. GAUTHIER, a native of The great pak, burying it each year understood himself and the simple years is to be repeated in the next Glengarry, will from this out preside over the destinies; in another layer of oblivion, has world about him. How .many mod- ten, real catastrophe threatens. kept the secret locked in its heart. ern carpenters, at $2 an hour, can Prudent men will have been maile of the Catholic archdiocese of Ottawa. In the presence of SUCCESS IN THE FIGHT AGAINST T.B. Yet surely it is more than acci- say as much? How many states- to look like fools and only the a galaxy of prelates and dignitaries of state he was duly The annual report of. Dr. George W. Gragg, superintend- dent which guides my saw by one men can be as sure of anything? spendthrifts and the speculators enthroned Tuesday evening. His ent of St. Lawrence Sanatorium, points up the successful fight chance in a thousand to the very Even the well-aimed Russian ham- will have been rewarded.” FORTY YEARS AGO Lordship Bishop Macdonell and a that has. been waged against the white plague, tuberculosis, in spot where the nails are imprisoned. mer often squashes the thumb of o Friday, February 24th, 1911 number of the diocesan clergy the United Counties since erection of thé San, In a matter of Had I cut an inch on either side the the man who wields it, as the point . / were in attendance as well as- twenty years the toll in T.B. dead has dropped from 49 to a oak’s secret would never have been of the Russian sickle is aimed, ulti- Europe and US. members of the family.—'-The twenty-icent piece which has. new low of 12 in 1950. guessed. Obviously some unknown mately at the wielder’s heart. been in circulation for years is seldom seen now. They are- hand had! left a message, some man Therein, and! not in outward trap- - Stormont, Blindas and Glengarry, then having one of the long dead had something important Two World Wars being gathered in and recast into quarters.^ The last highest death rates in the province is, twenty years later, pings, lies the essential difference issue of the Militia Gazette contained the announcement to tell me. So I have saved! the between th^men who inhabited this (Hartford, Conn., Courant) below the provincial average. Where beds once were at a nails but I cannot read their mean- that Mr. Martin” Lewis Shepherd, son of Mr. G. W. Shep- premium, the local institution is now operating below capacity wild land only a century ago and Mr. Hoover correctly says that we herd, is about to take a commission in the 59th Regiment ing nor decipher their black and us who have paved the wilderness can search all history and find “no and 46 eases of the 80 admitted last year were not district twisted callgraphy. Three rusty with streets. The man who drove parallel to the effect and sacrifice as signalling Officer. Dr. Cecil Sparrow, for many years residents. nails — what are they trying to tell the nails had mastered his environ- we have made” to aid Europe. And a resident of Alexandria, but now of Sydney, N.B., is visit- me? The lower death rate, Dr. Gragg ascribes to several ment and, though he did not know still Europe stumbles along in dazed, ing friends here. Monday evening Mr. and Mrs. E. E. factors : early diagnosis and treatment, few active eases much, that which he knew was indecision. Ballatier left Ogdensbnrg, N.Y., for Montreal, in the first spreading the disease, and the use of new drugs beneficial to To the thoughtful man, whose true, demonstrable and filled all his Yet it never seems to occur to us that throughout the lifetime of Am- winter balloon flight ever made in this part of the country. certain types of the disease. hands are not filled with wood cut- heed's. ericans now reaching middle age, While the fight against T.B. appears to be almost won, ting and the dailyi chapping of His house had been well and truly The balloonists landed at Tyotown the following morning it would not do to relax efforts to curb the dread disease and printed words and such worthless it is the home of western civiliza- built with1 nails driven home; tion in Europe that has taken the after having experienced great hardship. Later in the dajr stamp it out. The Sanatorium will play a continuing effective kindling, these nails are full of they returned, as they came, to Ogdensbnrg.——An epi- part in that work. allegory and rough parable. A whereas today we cannot build even beating while we are waxing fat. wood' and word chopper has time a political theory, a government Wie tend to talk among ourselves demic of measles has struck Williamstown. Fully half of as though we were just- one step only, to Observe that all men, like policy or an ideal of decent conduct the children are laid up.——Mr. Peter MeNaughton of the my oak tree, have some message, from the poorhouse, without a crust which will last more than five POWER TO LICENSE — POWER TO some broken nadls of communica- to eat if another tax dollar is ex- Schell Co., left Wednesday evening for Winnipeg, where CLOSE DOWN tion bip-ied in their hearts to die minutes. Our civilization, for all tracted from us. Is that true? Are he will be engaged in installing the new fixtures in the (Reprinted from “The Rural Scene”) with them, rusty and unread. The its shining domes and false facades, our hearts so shrunken and our minds so warped that we forget the main post office. chatter of one’s friends must mean is jerry-built from the foundation. The power to license carries with it the powér to refuse a blood and fire and death and dis- ###*,# license, and power to refuse a license is the power to close something, but what? The speeches The nails won’t hold because we of statesmen and the proclamations ease and! destruction that seared EMBERS of the executive of the Clan Macdonald came down any business requiring a license to operate. of government must contain a ray never know what we are building Europe while we were achieving the M The people of Saskatchewan discovered this when their of information if you can extract or Why. highest standard of living in all here from Ottawa on Saturday to make preparations government refused to renew the license of an established it laboriously from the words. Nay, Still, somewhere some obscure history? for the July 1st clan rally to be held on the Driving Park privately-owned bus line, for no other reason than that the even the editorials which one writes man is driving his nails home and We think we have been full par- Ground. A local committee, consisting of A. McDonald,. in the newspapers sometimes con- government itself wanted to take over the man’s business. history with its saw will discover chieftain, Alexandria; D. MeDon- What was done to a bus owner in Saskatchewan could he vey the ghost and shadow of. a ticipants in two world wars. Only done to farmers in Ontario, and probably will be if the-govern- thought to the reader who can them long hence and wonder why our honored war dead ^nd their FIFTY’ YEARS AGO aid, 25-4th Kenyon; Angus Mc- ment succeeds in its attempt to make the growing of crops pause a moment before turning to we missed them when they might families have been. Not a house nor' Friday, February 22nd, 1901 Donald, 24-6th Kenyon ; Angus R. the sports page and the comics., have held our house together. Arid a factory, not a field, not a person McDonald, Glen Robertson; Dr. a licensed industry in this province. Everywhere nails are driven into therefore, as a pitiful gesture in this country has been touched It is to be hoped that'before the 1951 session of the legis- our minds by unseen handfe in this A. L. Macdonald, John A. Cameron and A. G. F. Macdonald: lature is over, Mr. Kennedy will explain to the House exactly crucified generation, are overgrown, against the universe, I shall thrive by war’s four horsemen. were named to assist.——More power being required at what purpose is behind the recent orders-in-côuncil, requiring the three old nails into a young oak rusted and forgotten. When the After all, just how many . fewer MacPherson & Schell’s here, J. T. Schell, M.P., left for farmers to take out licences to grow certain specified crops. present age is cut open at the final sapling and perhaps some wiser steaks and refrigerators and nylons Montreal yesterday, to purchase a new 80 h.p. engine.——- And it is to be hoped that the farmer members of the autopsy it will be found full of man will break his. saw on them and Cadillacs and television sets do metal. The art of communication, House will be able to show Mr. Kennedy the error of his ways some winter when I’m forgotten. we have now than in 1930? The stables and (barns of Mr. A. Lalonde, 8-3rd Kenyon, and the end of the road down which he is leading the farmers. like the work of the X-ray, is to discover the old nails of truth (for were destroyed by.fire, Saturday afternoon, with contents: , there are no new ones, only thë old which included eight cows.—Prominent ratepayers met nails painted over with garish gilt) We Get What We Deserve with the Council of Lochiel on Monday, when the question NOTES AND COMMENT and, having read their message, to Colonel George Malcolm, Organizer of the March of drive it anew into the public flesh. Democracies are of two kinds, real and imaginary. of the abolition of the statute labor system" and to com- Massed Pipe Bands, to be staged in Scotland for the Festival This is not easy work. Only by A real democracy is one in which the people accept the responsibility mute same at the rate of 50 cents per day, was discussed. of Britain, 1951, would like Canadian pipers to take part. The remote chance, in the first place, and do the work democracy requires of them. The Board favored the Good Roads question but found that hands will march along Princess Street to Murrayfield for the does the saw of the philosopher or statesman ever touch the forgotten An imaginary democracy is one in which the people lack the the ratepayers were not yet in favor of a change. Miss- Highland Games on Saturday, August 18th. Col. Malcolm’s steel, placed there byi some unseen character and energy to do their part, and allow others to think and act Alice McKinnon, Breadalbane, left on Saturday for Pen- address is fiA George Street, Edinburgh 2. Any Glengarry hand, long ago. Then the nail for them. pipers making plans? dleton to assume the duties of school teacher at that place. must be somehow extracted and this In the one case the people get what they want. will take the better part of a life- —Messrs. Eddie McCrimmon and Angus Cameron of Bonnie At one time laziness was something for comment, but now time. Having the nail at last in In the other they accept what they get. Hill, have finished their contract of repairing the roads- even automobiles are shiftless.—Rotarian. his hand, having read its meaning, In both cases they get what they deserve. between Sandown and Skye. Page 3 The Glengarry News, Alexandria, Ont., Friday, February 23rd, 1951

well known and esteemed by all who served. Prizes for skating were knew her. WILLIAMSTOWN awarded to Miss Bernadette Major Regent 4-Door Sedan Mr. John D. MacLeod spent the and Alan Douglas, Miss Darlene 1951 ☆ ☆ NEWS week-end at home, returning again Major and Russell Major. OF INTEEEST MAXVILLE SURROUNDING the first of the week to Toronto and Miss Ann McCuaig, Bainsville, Summerstown senior hockey team FROM DISTRICT Western points. spent the week-end here with Miss played the Williamstown seniors Her many friends are glad that Kay Raymond. here on Thursday night. The score Miss Mary MacCuaig, who has been Norman Sharkey, Lancaster, spent was 3 to 0 in favor of Williamstown. Miss Jean MaoLean of Ottawa, Carnival A Success ill since a few weeks, is improving the week-end1 the guest of Michael Dave Larocque and Bud Alguire spent the week-end with her par- Friday evening, young and old in health. Molloy. scored for Williamstown, Larocque gathered at the “Rink” to have fun ents, Mr. and Mrs. Neil MacLean. o Miss Sheila Major, Brockville, getting two scores and Alguire one. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Graham and to help the Junior Hockey As this is the last game in the Clubs. visited her parents, Mr. and! Mrs. npent Sunday with her parents, Mr. ☆ ' Alphonse Major, over the week-end. Glengarry-Stormont League, the The costumes were many and McCRIMMON play-offs start this week. Williams- and Mrs. W. Montgomery, Gravel Anyone interested in Red Cross Hill. varied — little girls in their pretty i - town, Cornwall and Lancaster are costumes, funny little boys, and The Dodge Crusader Series also work may apply to Mrs. George Mr. D. Archie Campbell spent The front of the new Dodge is Miss Kay McCrimmon of Mont- tied .for first place, with Summers- both pretty and comical big and modern and massive, distinct- includes a 4-door sedan and club Clark, for material, as she is the town coming next. Sunday in Cornwall with Mrs. coupe. The real, spent the week-end at the distributor for this section. Campbell and infant daughter, little people. ively styled to look longer and lower. Its sleek lines are deftly (111” wheelbase) is available in home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. The Food Sale sponsored by the Mary. The skaters entered into the spirit a two-door sedan, and business The Red Cross sponsored a skat- of the Carnival, and both the con- accentuated with chrome. J. A. McCrimmon. ing party Friday night, which was Woman’s Association, and held in Miss Beta Vallee is spending her coupe. The popular all-purpose, Mr. and Mrs. Rory MacGillivrayt testants and spectators had a good The front window is wider, all-metal Suburban is again a well attended. Skating was in- Johnson Raymond’s store, Friday vacation at her home in Maxville. the corner posts are redesigned and family, spent Sunday afternoon time. Races were well contested feature of new Dodge showings dulged in for a time and was fol- aftetnoon, was a decided! success. Miss Ena Sporring of Finch, spent for maximum vjsion, and the at the home of Mrs. McGillivray’s and a spirit of friendly rivalry pre- across Canada. Completely new lowed by an exhibition broomball The display consisted of cakes, the week-end with her parents, Mr. area 'of the rear window has mother, Mrs. R. W. McLeod of Skye. vailed. been substantially increased. is the Dodge Suburban’s special game between the single men and small cakes, buns, pies, canned and Mrs. S. Sporring. deluxe edition being introduced Mrs. Alcide Tyo is undergoing an The hockey game between Fath- The Dodge Regent is offered women and the married' men and goods, etc., and the. demand was Mr. W. Elliott was an Ottawa this year as the Savoy. operation for appendicitis, in Dr. ers and Midgets was really out' as a 4-door sedan and club coupe. women. The score was 2 to 1 in excellent. The association will hold visitor on Saturday. Kelly’s Hospital, in Hawkeslbury. standing. Dads allowed the sons favor of the married people. • The their monthly meeting at the home Mr. Harvey Metcalfe is spending We wish her a speedy recovery. to have the upper hand. The boys crowd then repaired to St. Andrew’s of Mrs. A. L. Clark, on Thursday a, few days with his mother, Mrs. ☆ Mr. and Mrs. N. J. McLeod paid H.. Metcalfe. won, and the dads were kept busy I MARTINTOWN Hall, where a bean supper was evening, February 22nd, at 8 o’clock. applying the linement on Saturday. APPLE HILL a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Archie Mc- Miss MacBae of Montreal, spent Leod, on Sunday, February Mth. the Week-end with her sister, Mary Mrs. Robertson Millar is spending Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Laviolette and brother, John MacBae. February Meeting, W.M.S. After an illness of several years, and son, Walter, of Lochinvar, paid Miss Audrey Metcalfe spent the The February meeting of St. An- there passed away Miss Ella Berry, the week in Toronto. Mrs. Boyle of St. Albans, Vt., is a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Dan Crevier, week-end with her parehts, Mr. and drew’s Presbyterian W.M.S. was on February 11th, at the home of NEW held at the home of Mrs. W. D. spending some time at her home. on Sunday, February 18th. Mrs. V. Metcalfe. her sister, Miss Mary Berry, Mont- Mr. and Mrs. Rory MaeGillivray Miss Hughena McMillan spent the Campbell, with Mrs. Jas. Cum- real. She was born in Alexandria, ming’s unit in charge of devotions. Mrs. John S. McMartin paid a business trip to Vankleek week-end with her parents, Mr. and 78 years ago, the daughter of the Hill, on Saturday, February 17th. Mrs. Mies McMillan. After the call to worship and sing- late Francis Berry and his Wife, Dies At Martintown Mr. Laurier Lavigueur of Valley- ing, Mrs. Malcolm MacLeod, who Matilda Lagroix. She has made her The public school west of Mc- PONTIACS presided, read Gal., Chapter 6, and In Her 83rd Year Crimmon, was closed' Monday, ow- field, spent the week-end at his home in Montreal for the past The funeral of Mrs. John S. Mc- home in Maxville. gave the Bible lesson, “The Great number of years. ing to the sickness of the teacher’s Opportunity”, from the same chap- Martin, who died at her home, family. Mr. Robert McKfilican returned Of a large family, only one Saturday night, February 10th, was o and to Lachine, after spending the past ter. brother and two sisters survive — An article from the Glad Tidings held from her late residence at two week at his home. Oliver Berryi, Apple Hill; Miss Mary o’clock Tuesday. The service was ☆ Miss Shirley MacLean of Ottawa, was read by Mrs. Hawkshaw and Berry, Montreal, and! Mrs. Joseph CURRY HILL devotion^ were closed with prayer in charge of the Rev. Robertson is visiting her aunt, Mrs. McMillan. Bougie (Addle), Cornwall. # 1 by Mrs. W. Û. Campbell. Millar, pastor of St. Andrew’s Pres- G.M.C. Trucks Mrs. C. B. MoDermid visited Mr. The remains were taken from byterian Church, of which she was McDermid, in Cornwall on Sunday. Mrs. Malcolm MacLeod read a Montreal to the home of her Miss Kay Thompson returned to tribute to the pioneer work and a lifelong member. Montreal, after spending the past Mr. and Mrs. B. MacKay of Ot- brother, Oliver Berry, and daughter, Mrs. McMartin was the former IMMEDIATE DELIVERY tawa, spent the week-end with the home life of Mrs. MacQueen of Ed- Miss Edna Berry, Apple Hill. two weeks with her parents, Mr. monton, wife of one of our pioneers Jessie Airlie, born in Mulengavie, Matter’s mother, Mrs. A. J. MoEwen. The funeral was on Tuesday Scotland, and came to this country and Mrs. James Thompson. in mission work in our Canadian Mr. Duncan Ross s^ent a few Miss Eleanor Rowe spent the morning, February 13th, to St. An- 72 years ago. West. days recently visiting his sister, week-end in Ottawa. thony’s Roman Catholic Church, She Is survived by her two sons, The first of a series of articles by Mrs. Clark, Montreal. Mr. and Mrs. T. Scott spent Sun- where the funeral Mass was chant- Neil and Sandy at home, and her our council president and published Patrick Donnelly spent Thursday Morrow Motor Sales day in Athens. ed by Rev. J. R. Donihee, P.P. daughter, Jessie (Mrs. Boyle) of St. Miss L. Filion of Glen Nevis in our Glad Tidings, was read by last in Montreal. Burial was in St. Mary’s cemetery, Albans, Vt. Mrs. MacMartin will school, is spending the week-end Miss Alice Aird. Williainstown. Mrs. James Thompson and in- be long remembered by her family Phone 16 Maxville, Ont. With her parents. Mrs. Doig gave a . very interesting Pallbearers were: Orner Ville- fant daughter, returneij home from and friends for hfer cheerful and Miss Melba McLeod of Alex- mission study of our work in Can- hospital last week. neuve, Oliver Hamelin, Frank Cam- sunny disposition. •andria, spent last week at her home ada among the Indians, French, peau, Eddie Welsh, John Leblanc The pallbearers were: Messrs. in Dominionville. Chinese, Ukrainians and Italians. and John McDonald. George Kinloch, Hugh Robertson, Mr. C. B. McDermid returned An emergency call for clothing Relatives present from a distance Kenneth Barton, Dan McMartin, home on Tuesday, after spending for a new field near Portage La were: Miss Mary Berry, Mrs. Don- Gerald McMartin and Wilbur Mc- the past three weeks in Cornwall Prairie, was asked for.- ald McMillan and two sons, Mrs. Arthur. General Hospital. Meeting closed with singing and Claire Bennett and son, Robert* The sympathy of the community Friends will be. plea!sed to learn Mizpah Benediction. Gordon Berry of Montreal, and Mrs. goes but to the family in their that Mr. Dan Fraser is convalescing Joseph Bougie, Cornwall, às well as after his recent operation, in Royal sorrow. ☆ ☆ several friends and neighbors from o Victoria Hospital, Montreal. | MAPLE AVENUE | the surrounding districts. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Kippen and ^ — # Friends here extend their sym- family spent (Sunday in Morewood, pathy to the bereaved in their DUNVEGAN at a family feuriion in honour of Mr. Edmond Lavigne met with sorrow. Mrs. Kippen’s mother, Mrs. A. W. an accident, when his fingers were Mrs. John Mitchell, Montreal, Flu has made its appearance in Reveler, who is celebrating her badly bruised in a pump jack. The spent Friday at the home of her this place. A good many have been ninetieth, birthday.. skin and flesh were torn causing parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Mac- confined to their homes, and we are Mr. Gordon Winter of Eastview, severe pain. The doctor told him Donald. it would take some time to com- glad that they axe improving, al- spent the week-end with his par- Misses Elizabeth Cordon and ents, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Winter. • pletely heal. though some* new cases are re- Donna Mitchell, Montreal, spent the ported. Mrs. Bums Stewart of Cornwall, Mr. James R. MacNaughton, a week-end with the latter’s grand- Messrs. /Gordon and Earle Clark spent Thursday in the village with patient jn, the General Hospital, parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Mac- and Rae MacLeod motored from friends. Cornwall, for the past three Donald. Oshawa and spent the week-end at Mrs. O.1 O’Hara spent Friday in months, returned to the home of Mrs; Buchanan, Moose Creek, their respective homes. Cornwall. Mr. and Mrs. Bill MacLeod and family. visited at the home of Mrs. Alex Miss Daryl Hewston, Ottawa, Mr. Duncan McLeod spent the Mr. Delton Ross, Glen Roy, Ferguson, on Friday. spent the week-end at her hpme Week-end at his home in Maxville. visited John MacKinnon on Sun- Misses Agnes McIntosh and here. Many in the village are suffering day. Dorothy Cameron, Ottawa, spent a Mr. Donald D. MacKinnon, Reeve from the flu, but we hope the epi- few days last week here, and at- of Kenyon, and Mr. Donald A. Gray, Mrs. Willis Bush, Avonmore, is 1 demic is on the wane. spending some time with her sister, tended the funeral, of their grand - Councillor, left the first of the yreek Mr. J. fi. R. MacNaughton is con- Mrs. D. Campbell, and Mr. and Mrs. mother, Mrs. Hugh A. Munro. for Toronto, Where they will attend valescing at his home in Domdnion- Bill MacLeod and family;. Mr. and Mrs. Garnet Mockie, the meeting of the Good Roads ville, after his recent illness in Mr. and Mrs. R. J. MacLeod, Cornwall, spent Sunday with his Association. Cornwall Hospital. ' Maxville, were guests of Miss Mary parents, Mr. and . Mrs. Harold Mr. Donald H. MacLeod, Mont- MacLeod. Mackie. real, spent the week-end with his Mr. and Mrs. S. Scott, Mr. and Mrs. B. N. Helps and'sons, Cecil mother, Mrs. D. W. MacLeodi, and Valentine Tea Mrs. M. Scott and Melvin Scott, Helps of Gravel Hill, and Mr. and other members of the familyi. The Women’s Association of the Maxville, spent Sunday at the home Mrs. Gordon Crawford, Cornwall, We extend sincere sympathy to United Church, held a Valentine of Clarence MacLachlan. were guests of Mrs. Alex Ferguson, Mrs. Donald Dewar in the loss of Tea in the Church Hall on Wed- Mr. and Mrs. Alex Campbell, on Sunday. her mother, Mrs.. Hugh A. Munro nesday. Cornwall, visited Mrs. Alexander Mrs. Paul Obrycki, Westmount; of Apple Hill. A sad feature was The ladies of the district enjoyed MacDonell and famjly, on,Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Coleman and that Mrs. Dewar is confined to her a lovely tea and patronized the Vincent and Charles MacDonell, Mrs. W. E. MacDiarmid, Cornwall, room with flu and was unable to Home Cooking booth. were in Alexandria on Friday. and Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Mar- attend her mother’s funeral. jerrison, Neville, Sask., called at the •Mr. Neil Chisholm, Maxville, made home of Mr. and Mrs. P. D. Mc- several calls on friends, here on Intyre, on Friday. Saturday. Mrs. Fred Modler spent the week- Miss Dorothy MacDougall, Ot- "Small houses end in Montreal. tawa, visited her aunt, Mrs. M. E. Mr. and Mrs. Lome Hall and chil- Ferguson and family, on Sunday. dren, Morrisburg, spent Friday at Sincere sympathy is extended, tb can give the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Chisholm and family in Mrs. Hugh D. Munro, and Miss the loss of her sister, the late Miss big ideas Murdena Munro. Annie MaeGillivray, who passed Mrs. McKinnon and Mrs. Currie away on Sunday morning, after Blair, ' Moose Creek, called on several weeks’ illness. The funeral r friends here on Friday. was held from the home of her important nephew, John D. MaeGillivray of Kirk Hill, to the United Church ☆ and cemetery, Kirk-Hill, on Tues- TOLMIE’S CORNERS day afternoon. The late Miss Mac- ^ Gillivray, having lived several yeans can a man be! with Mrs. Chisholm and familyi, was H- A number of families in this vicinity are confined to their beds with grippe. Today, the Canadian Army Reserve Force assumes a place of im- Miss Margaret MacBae, R.N., portance to Canada’s freedom that is almost unparalleled in our Montreal, is spending a few days history. with her parents. Dr. J. M. Pollock, Avonmore, In order that this country may take its rightful place among free made some professional calls in nations of the world in the preservation of peace and freedotn, Canada “Sounds funny, I know. But never to let that happen. Sure, this house might have given there may be plans for paying this district recently. must be strong. Canada must make her Reserve Force strong! you the same idea I had — if old-age benefits to everyone Very sorry' to know that Mrs. you’d been in my shoes the someday. But I’ll need extra Meados Scaribeau met with a pain- From Newfoundland to British Columbia. Canada is calling men other day. income to make sure that I’ll ful accident at her home, when she from every walk of life — men who are willing to devote part of “I’d just dropped around be completely independent. fell on the ice on Friday, fractur- their time to serving Canada. with my son Boh and his fam- And the best way to get it is by ing her leg in three places. She is ily to see how their new house increasing my life insurance. in Hotel Dieu Hospital, Cornwall. Canada’s need for more men in the Reserve Force was never greater. was getting on. It seemed to “That plan seemed so logi- Mr. Stewart Morton, Ottawa, me to be just perfect for them. Visit the Regiment of your choice today and get full details cal I wondered why I hadn't spent the week-end at the home of Cute, trim and practical. But thought of it before. And about how you can best serve your country during these critical small. There certainly would- when I saw my agent I dis- Mr. and Mrs. Walter MacRae and n’t be room for anyone but covered how flexible life in- Bruce. rimes. Get complete information at your local Armoury now! them. surance can be—how it fits my Mrs. Alexander Buchanan and “Suddenly the thought hit own needs and my wife’s need Mrs. Whitney Fussee, Moose Creek, me — What if I had to move for protection. spent Thursday afternoon with Mr, in with them because I didn’t “So now I’fn building secur- and! Mrs. Boyd Johnson and Victor. ha,ve enough to live'on after ity for myself and my family Mrs. Fern Provost and baby, Ask for prices and samples I’d retired? the best possible way — with “Then and there I resolved life insurance !” Adele, visited with her sister, Mrs.

Hospital early Monday morning,, following an illness of a week. He; 400-Ship Armada Is Ready For Immediate Action underwent an operation last Thurs- MSllSliSiSl ‘ “ " day, from which he failed to rally. NEWS OF Active and associate members of ft the Sergeants’ Mess of the SD. & G. Highlanders marched, in a body t 1MT to the funeral home on Tuesday AND DISTRICT night to pay their respects to the memory of their departed associate. The casket was draped with the COMMENT SPORT Union Jack. At the funeral honorary and §§ active bearers were members of the )*o»o*o»o»o»o«o»o«c*ç Séo»o«o»o«oéo«o»o«ü«p*o*o«o«o«o«o*o«o»oèo*o»o*o«oi SSSS58?8SS?SSSSS58SSS85SSSSSS8SS52SSSSSSSSS8?SSSSS5ïSSSSSSSSSSSS8S?SS8SSSSSSSS?SSSSSSS;ï Sergeknts’ Mess, while a firing party, in charge of. Sgt. Alfred; Malyon, fired a volley as the body Three Strong Teams To Battle was placed in the vault. SHORTS ON SPORTS Rev. J. A. R. Rouleau, pastor, * * sang the Requiem High Mass. It Out For Glengarry News Cup PLAY FOR the hockey champion- Honorary pallbearers were C.S.M. ship of Glengarry and possession of Joseph Smith, C.SM. Robert Mc- Maxville And Lancaster Will Be The Glengarry News Cup promises Manus, C.Q.MS. Normap Jennings, Bolstered By Area Players For an excellent1 brand of homebrew C.Q.MB. Ben Dùmond, Sgt. J. hockey (with three well-matched Brown, Sgt. Charles O’Brien, Sgt- Round-Robin Series With Aces teams competing. Alexandria Aces George Cardinal, Sgt. J. Lemovre,. should have plenty of competition Sgt. M. Joubert, Sgt. Hugh Ken- The Glengarry News Cup, emhlematie of the hockey championship from both Lancaster Combines and nedy. of Glengarry, will be fought for tjy three strong district teams, it was the Maxville-Apple Hill All Stars. Active bearers Were C.SM. Gordon. decided at a meeting of interested officials here, Sunday. Lancaster and Fisher, R.SM. George W. Ducker, C.SM. Charles Fenton, C.Q.MS- Maxville will be bolstered by players from other teams in their areas for ACES WILL have the advantage of Henry Leduc, C.QM.S. George Edey: the series,' Lancaster Combines drawing hockey talent from Williams- play as a unit throughout the sea- son, but there will be a strong bid and Sgt. Robert Cameron. town and Summeretown, while the Maxville Combines will be a composite from the .All-Stars from the front, Members of the family from: team from Apple Hill and Maxville.*— Lancaster’s Rainbows adding other Cornwall and district and from out- The third entry, Alexandria Aces, colorful combinations from Wil- side points, as well as many local, Will ‘be practically the same team Wild Life Show hamstown and Summerstown. If A QUICK REPLY to would-be aggressors by the British is a reserve fleet of over 400 vessels, from and district friends, were present at; now playing off in the Long Sault John McLaren still has his, eye; for battleships to small craft, which, under a three-year program now nearing completion, lies m home JUJ the Mass. Others were present from overseasPports ready for short-notice action. No collection of rotting hulks, but an up-to-date, com- League, though they undoubtedly Set For Wednesday the flying sphere he will prove a Kingston, Montreal, Alexandria,: will have the services of Dune Mc- pletely refitted and equipped fighting force merely needing unzippermg, it has a vice-admiral and a bulwark in goal and Pete Bonne- staff assigned to it its stores indexed so that unfamiliar crews can take over immediately, and warm Ville LaSalle, Que., and other dis- Donald, the only local player on the The recently Organized Alex- 1 ville has the coaching know-how air being^pumped through the fire mains of some of its vessels. Pictures aboard the British ghosc «icci tant points, all present to show Maroons’ line-up. andria Rod and Gun Club is spon- to whip a composite crew into a are-Toif left •Vice-Admiral Sir Robin Bridge (hand to face) and staff holding their weekly conference their respect for Mr. Lauzon and. The three . teams start immedi- soring its first event next Wednes- team in nothing flat. to the battleshiD HM™ Duke of York. Top right: Small craft (destroyers in background) moored as an evidence of the. regret felt at ately on a round-robin series, which day evening, a Wild Life show tiongside H.M.S. Adamant, the fleet’s depot ship. Bottom left: Guns being protected by plastic coating. his death. Bottom right: Paint sprayers with protective masks receive instructions on a below-decks assignment. will see each entry playing a home- presented by the Carlings Conser- MAXVILLE’S COMBINES will be A great many Mass.(card®, spirit- jand-hdme series with the other two. vation Club. The show will be free, at somewhat of a disadvantage due ual offerings and lovely floral trib- Following this series the two top but to adults only, and the program to the fact that most of their play- utes banked the room where the; teams in points will meet in a best- gets Underway at eight o’clock, at ers haven't had too much skating Military Honors For body lay, sent by members of the. of-ÿthree series for possession of the Sacred Heart Hall. or stick work this season. They Maroons Take Commanding Lead family and numerous friends. Many- cup. Two. points will be garnered o should have scoring punch, though, telegrams, letters and cards of con- for each win and one point for a in Carmen Marshall, whose services With Double Win Over Royals R.Q.M.S. Lauzon dolence were received from friends tie. Goal averages will determine Keep Trophy Here will be sought for the series. Mar- at distant points as well as from, a tie and if they are equal a sud>- shall is playing with Hull and Alexandria Maroons made it two Full military honors were accord- local and1 district friends; den death game will be playedi. ed! R.Q.M.S. Joseph L. Lauzon, of Without ice this week due to the should be a threat either on the straight . in their best-of-seven Aces Drop Opener ■ The first games were set for rearguard- or the forward line. the S.D. & G. Highlanders Reserve In 1950 the federal Forestry Thursday night, Lancaster at Max- mild spell, Alexandria curlers made series with Kemptville Royals, at another successful .defense of the Apple Hill can contribute the Guin- To Chute A Blondeau at his funeral, held Thursday of Bfanch establdsbed a Forest Fire ville, and Saturday night, Alex- the Gardens, Sunday afternoon, Bankers’ Trophy, Saturday night, don boys and several other experi- last week from the Meldrum Research. Station in Newfoundland- andria at Lancaster, ice conditions enced hockeyists, While Lobb, when they skated to a 7-3 win on Alexandria’s Aces didn't like Funeral Home to St. Francis de o permitting. Other dates are to be when two rinks from the Hawkes- bury Curling Club challenged. The Fanny Guindon and other Maxville heavy ice. In the series opener at Tuesday’s heavy ice conditions at Sales Churdh and the vault at St. Canadian Red Croès Juniors sent decided, dependant on the fortunes the Gardens, evidently, as they Columban’s cemetery, Cornwall. competition was close, the total men will have the assistance of Kemptville, Thursflay, they Uadi Christmas parcels to 14,000 or- of Alexandria Aces in their Teague dropped a one-sided 8-4 game to score 'being all tied up at the 11th some up- and coming junior stars looked, even more impressive, with A native of Alexandria, Mr. phaned children of Canadian sol- play-offs. of tomorrow. Chute a Blondeau in the opener of diers in England, in 1950.. . It was decided only residents of end. Both Alexandria rinks rallied' a 641 victory which came close to Lauzon died at Kingston General to emerge with wins. being a shut-out for Ransome. tl)e semi-final series. It was a game Glengarry would be eligible to play, ■DUNG MCDONALD should add till midway in the second period Leo Lajoie’s four won 10-7 over The spring-like weather of this but some leeway will be allowed in scoring punch to the Alexandrians, with the visitors leading 2-4, hut bringing in Glengarry boys playing the M. McLeod rink, while Eugene Macdonald's local entry was a 10-9 and there, is the possibility some week wiped out other ' scheduled five more goals in that frame and hockey at outside points. The teams stars of. yesterday will be brought play-off gaimes. Cornwall was to one more in the finale went un- are allowed to draw only from the winner over Jock Robertson’s visitors. out of retirement to close any gaps open against Maxyille in Jubilee answered by the Aces, who could do RAW PHOSPHATE district more adjacent to'them than in the ranks. Rink, Monday niglit, but poor ice nothing right. from their opponents.' ' ’ The rinks and scores: ( conditions enforced cancellation. Art Crevier led the winner’s scor- IS SUPERIOR TO STABLE PHOSPHATE! ■While the play-off arrangements Alexandria— Hawkesbury— Maroons were to' visit, Kemptville, 1. G. Lefebvre A. Brand LACK OF ice may postpone Lan- ing with/a hat trick. A pair by R. IT CONTAINS NO POISON were ,made 'by only representatives caster’s opening visit to .Jubilee Wednesday night, but again the Larocque and singletons by G. Cur- of ,the three Interested centres, the A. R. Dufour H. Dunn weatherman interfered and this Apply % ton to 1 acre with manure, beside % ton of A. Charlebois L. Harcourt Rink, Thursday night, but colder rier, Albert Crevier and J. Crevier way was left open for any other weather is expected by Saturday game will probably be played Fri- increased the winners’ total. Stable Phosphate with manure. Compare the colour of, area team wishing to enter the E. A. Macdonald J. Robertson day or next week. The Royals are growing crop, the- weight of grain at harvest, the catch (skip) 10 (skip) when our Aces are to take on Lan- Rene Gauthier sank the lone Aces competition. A fourth team could caster in an open-air engagement Scheduled to come here, Saturday tally. of new seeding, the hay yields fdr 2 years at-least. enter the round^rotoin series under L. Lacombe P. Oavanagh nights Jos. Filion J. Hamilton at the front. Sunday afternoon’s Chute a Blondeau — Goal, Des- TRY IT AND YOU WILL BUY IT the same arrangements. W. Menard W. Fleming attraction at the Gardens will de- Sunday’s heavy ice seemed just jardins; defence, G. Currier, G. For information and supply to try it, write Six teams were entered in last L. Lajoie M. McLeod1 pend on the fortunes of Aces in made for the strong skating Ar- Larocque; centre, Cousineau; wings, chEhnbaiflt brothers, 'who tallied six yearns series but the dirth bfi hockey (skip) 10 (skip) their play-off campaign of the J. Currier, Vachon; subs. Art Cre- Long Sault league. Chute a Blon- of Alexandria’s seven goals. More vier, Ah. Crevier, R. Larocque, M. talent this year and the strength of H. F. SCOTT deau will be here If the Alex- than 700 fans were on hand for the 20 16 Larocque. DOMVILLE, ONT. GRENVILLE COUNTY the local Aces made It more feas- . 4 andrians aren’t meanwhile elimin- fixture, which was a good one to Alexandria — Goal, Courville; de- ible to cut the competition to three ated. Should they be out in the watch despite a rplling puck and fence, Periard, MacDonald; centre, more evenly-balanced squads, with cold, the Lancaster Combines will near-slushy ice. Maroons counted L. Poirier; wings, Lauzon, MacPhee; an earlier start it'is hoped also to be brought in to give them a warm' before the two-minute mark, made subs, Rene Gauthier, Remi Gau- c/lnnoundng ing over in News- Cup play. it 2->l at the first bell and again thier, Dolan, B. Marcoux, G. Mar- complete the cup quest, doing away Alexandria’s First in the second) outscored the dan- eoux, B. Poirier, Smith. with the unsatisfactory, conditions THAT 8-1 setback suffered by Aces gerous Royals 2-1. For good mea Officials — Pat Dunn and Charles of last year when the break-up RADIO TAXI here, Tuesday' night, is no inddea sure they raised the margin to 3-1 Bertrand. halted a Maxvllle-Alexandria final tion that .the boys from the Chute in the curtain canto to end up on First Period More Miles • • • 0 . , - series, which was tied at one win are that much better than the Alex- the long end of a 7-3 count. 1— Chute a Blondeau, R. Larocque O’CONNOR’S andrians. Heavy ice conditions un- each. The Archambault boys were in (Art Crevier) 11.40 doubtedly gave an assist to the extra good form, Roger collecting 2— Æ Chute a Blondeau, stronger skating visitors, but the five points via three goals and two Art Crevier 18.03 1 Aces just plain came apart at the assists. Conrad was right behind Penalties—None. More Smiles seams as any team will at times. with two of each, while Maurice was Second Period They have shown hockey good en- in another five points, one goal and 3— ^Alexandria, Rene Gauthier 2.00 ough to take the Chute a Blondeau 4 assists. Flannigan got the other 4— Chute a Blondeau, brigade and fans are still pulling Maroon marker on a pass from Road salt and calcium damage car paint •— 7 G. Currier 6.01 ^TAXIj for a last ditch victory in remain- Doug Webster in the first frame. 5— chrome mouldings — bumpers and all under- Chute a Blondeau, ing games of the series. One more The game might have turned into Ab Currier 6.55 carriage parts. Have your car regularly lub- m/o-mwe sewice defeat and Aces would be out for a donnylbrook, but referees Gord 6— Chute a Blondeau, R. Larocque the duration. ricated and washed for maximum car life and Expect a taxi at your door Pransche and Art Foster sat firmly (G. Larocque) . .rtv, 11.40 on the rough stuff in the first period 7— beauty. Chute a Blondeau, when you’vd barely put the THE WINNING hockey Maroons which saw seven penalties, all Art Crevier 13.11 receiver .down. It’s part of displayed in their last game of the minors, imposed. Thereafter, it 8— Chute a Blondeau, J. Currier schedule was not a flash in the pan, our new radio-phone service. was more hockey and, less hooking (Vachon) . . .v. 18.12 it turns out. They are really turn- Y with three minors being handed out Penalty—G. Larocque. °u 9 1/1 We ing it on in the Kemptville series CHAMPLAIN in each subsequent stanza. Forbes Phone— £ JL 4 —Follow and those Roytals must wish they Third Period was the badman with three trips 9— SERVICE STATION AND GARAGE Chute a Blondeau, Art Crevier could resurrect some of their early * i. Quicker — Safer — By Taxi to the cooler. (M. Larocque) 18.15 season success When they took a Main Street — Alexandria — Phone 391 STEPHEN commanding league lead. At Kemptville, Thursday night, ^it Penalty—L. Poirier. o O’CONNOR, JR. w’as another Archambault affray, LAURIER LEFEBVRE, Prop. THE ARCHAMBAULT boys have with the brother act in on five of One hundred thousand people Get YOUR TICKET Today v come into their own with a ven- the six Alexandria goals. This time were given transfusions of free — for the — geance and the other Maroons’ Connie was in for three, Maurice whole blood or plasma supplied by Specialized Auto Electric and LEGION-MAROONS’ CAR DRAW forward combinations will have to and Conrad getting singletons. the Red Cross during 1950. Carburetor Repairing step up their goal getting or the Doug Webster scored the other with Massena mob wifi be capturing the assists from his line mates. It Sô8ô8ô8ô8S8S8S8S8ô8S8S8ô8ô8ô888S8ô8ô8ô8ôSS8S8SS< Citizen Shield single-bandied. The looked like a shut-out for Ransome series is by no means over, how- until Pitt beat him in the, final NEED A SHAVE? ever, and Kemptville will bear frame with five minutes to go. Maroons took a 1-0, lead, in- watching in the rest of the games • A man came in creased it by four goals in the of the series. the other day, sandwich stanza and made it 6-0 climbed into the before the home team could re- BETTER OFFICIATING may be chair, handed me the reason, but whatever the cause, taliate. Thirteen penalties meted M -v a quarter. I said, out in the hard checking fixture in- the boys seem to be showing a “Mister, this is cluded majors for Doug Webster cleaner and more crowd-pleasing the first time I brand of hockey. We won’t be and Stewart for a second period have ever been We Can’t Eliminate Commercials .. really convinced that the improve- set-to and a 10-minute misconduct tipped in ad- ment is lasting, however, till we to Kemptville’s Craig for abusive vance.” see Cornwall Falcons and our Ma- language. “That’s not a . . . But we can make listening roons go through sixty minutes of tip, B u b,” h e a real pleasure, by eliminating hockey without a major flare-up. That would be the day. said!, “it’s hush the annoyance of poor recep- o Mrs. Hugh Munro... money.” tion. Service is rapid; the cost (Continued from Page 1) But the joke’s Mr. Bernard Cardinal of Ottawa, is low. Tubes tested and es- is spending a few days with his Mrs. P. D. McIntyre, and Mr. and on you if you KEMPTVILLE ROYALS parents, Mr. andi Mrs. Edmond Mrs. Wilfred Lagroix, the Woman’s don’t come in for timates given without charge. Cardinal. Association of Zion United Church, regular good Call us! Apple Hill. grooming. Seldom vs. Mr. Vincent G. MacDonald of the Dominion Marketing Service, Ed- She will be greatly missed in the a wait. monton, Alta., having completed a home and community, for she was • • • ALEXANDRIA MAROONS two months’ special course in To- lovedi by all who had the pleasure of ronto, spent the week-end with his knowing her. On September 3rd', brother, Mr. J. Daniel MacDonald, 1945, she and Mr. Munro celebrated Gerald McDonald Regular Prices For Reservations Call 262 Mrs. MacDonald and family, 4th their 60th wedding anniversary- BARBER CHENIER’S HARDWARE Kenyon, before returning to Ed- The sympathy of all here is ex- Mill Square Alexandria Phone 104 Alexandria *SS838383SSSS8S888$SS88SS8SSS8$8S838S838S8S8S8SSô!>S8S8S83838S8Sïô8SSSSS8SSSSôS38S8S8£>£iS8ô8S8S8!58 monton to resume his duties. tended to the husband and family. The Glengarry News, Alexandria, Ont., Friday, February 23rd, 1951 Page 5

JH STMT sir ☆ ☆ GLEN ROBERTSON ts TH E ^ ; ^ News of Interest to Women |NÇ|| TfrlXlHGr Glen friends regret the dteath of Norman McLeod of Dalkeith, which BOWL occurred in the Cornwall General 9 BY Hospital on Saturday. SOCIAL & PERSONAL First Message Datelined “United Nations, N. I'. 'ûnnf ûfÊcuu Archie McMillan, Lochiel, Was a HVPftO HOME ECONOMiVT business visitor to the Glen, Friday. Angus Kennedy was also here that Mr. and Mrs. John McLeister had Mr. and Mrs. N. B. MacLeod, day from Glen Nevis. fresh fish soaking in water, nor with them for the week-end their Dunvegan, Were business visitors to Hello, Homemakers! The new John McClusky, St. Anne de even place in water to clean as daughter, Miss Kay McLeister, R.N.; Alexandria on Wednesday of this chief of the Home Economics Sec- Bellevue, .was with his wife, Mrs. of,Toronto. week. tion of the Dominion Department the juices will be lost. McClusky, from Friday to Sunday. of Fisheries is our good friend, Miss TO GOOK FISH Pte. Walter Stevens spent the We are sorry to report that Millan Mrs. Efidie O’Connor left for her Edith Elliot. The Lenten season 1. Bake or broil fish quickly, allow- week-end with friends in Hawkes- McCuaig is in the* hospital in Mat- home in Malta, Montana, after will no doubt be a busy one for Miss ing 8 to 10 minutes per inch bury. spending the past six weeks with tawa suffering from a broken leg. Elliot who, for many years in public thickness of fish, with a temper- Messrs. Ray MacLeod and Earl her father,' Mr. Charles Stewart, We are told there are ladies who and Gordon Clark of Oshawa, spent life, has been keenly interested in ature of 450.° to 500°, Juices! set will pay $20 for a„slip, and then be Dunvegan, and her sister, Mrs. Vin- the Canadian food scene. on contact with high tempera- the week-end at their respective annoyed if it’s showing. cent McDonald, Alexandria. En During this season when fish is tures and long slow cooking is homes in Dunvegan. route she woll spend a few days with Walter McCuaig, St. Polycarpe, “on parade”, we believe it is time not required since there is little Miss Ida MacDonald, Montreal, relatives in Montreal and Chicago. called on Willie Fraser, Sunday. spent the week-end with her father, to review a few points about fish connective tissue in fish to For the past days, Rory McLen- Mr. Cormic Macdonell, Green which you may have forgotten. soften. For thick whole fish, Mr. A. R. MacDonald, and her Valley, is spending this week in To- nan has been on ^the sick list. A sister. Miss Bertha MacDonald*. TAKE A TIP lower the temperature after the section Of St. Martinis school has ronto attending the annual con- 1. Halibut should be bought like first 10 minutes. For dry~meated< Mr. and Mrs. Edmond Cardinal vention of the Rural Municipalitips, been closed! this week on account of motored to Montreal on Sunday to beef steak; too thin pieces of fish, such as salmon, sprinkle illness. which is being held at the King halibut become dry in cookipg— with cooking oil to prevent the meet their son, Wilbrod. On their Edward Hotel. After spending the first of the return they visited at Lachine with 1 to 1% inches is a good' thick- outside from becoming dry. week in the Glen, Boh McGillis re- Miss Isabel J. McDonald of Mun- 2. Allow 15 minutes per inch thick- Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Clement and ness to select for girlling or fry- turned to Montreal, Tuesday. roe’s Mills," spent last week the Mr. and Mrs. Maxime Biard. ing. , ness of fresh fish for boiling. Isaac Sauve of the Ontario Bridge guest of her aunt, Mrs. Donald Ed. 2. Frozen halibut should not be Allow 30 minutes per inch thick- Co., is enjoying a well earned holi- Maephee, Mr. Macphee and family, thawed before cooking. ness of frozen fish for boiling. 1 “The Bridge’’. “United Nations, New York” became the official address of the world day. .-n 3. There is no waste in fresh or 3. Steamed fish is easily done in a The Glen, took a walloping from organization last month after most of U.N.’s international staff had collander or in parchment paper. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Stark, formerly frozen fish fillets, and very little Dalhousie, Friday night, by a tally of Catherine street, have taken up moved from the temporary quarters at Lake Success^ to the new waste in fish steaks. Ohe pound Time requiredi is usually 20 min- Headquarters building in Manhattan. Watching Mrs. Christine Rieder of 13-1. We believe the cause of residence in the apartment abQve serves four. utes for fillets or steaks; about the defeat was .that some of the punch out the first teletype dispatch under the new dateline are 4. Canned fish is also waste-free. 30 minutes for a whole fish. the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Sarto (left to right) : Wilder Foote, Director of U.N.’s Press and Publi- main players were sick, for on Sun- For instance, the bones in can- Baked Kippers Leger. Mr'.’ and Mrs. Eugene A. cations Bureau; General Assembly President NasroIlalJJEntezam; day they defeated St. Telesphore. Macdonald and family also took up Acting Secretary-General David Owen; Assistant Secretary-Gen- ned salmon are good for you and 4 kipper herrings residence this week in their re- the skin is easily digested. (For, 1% cups tomato juice Miss Mayme Richardson had with eral Benjamin Cohen; and Thomas J. Hamilton of the New York her for the week-end, Mr. and Mrs. cently purchased home, the former Times, president of the United Nations Correspondents Association. the sake of appearance We re- ~ 3 slices onion Archie Lothian property, Kenyon move the skin when using sal- Salt and pepper R. Errault and Mrs. Ernie Hould'; street west. mon in a creamed dish). Half slice canned Mrs. Ella Johnson had Miss Evelyn Johnson; Miss Mary .Mclntee had FUI. — SAT. Mr. Mansell Goodwin of Napanee, 5. To freshen dried, salted fish, pimento. Roy Sisters Did wash under running water, then Prepare fish, removing the head, Miss Cecelia Mclntee, ail of Mont- spent la few days this week doing THE real. FEB. 23 — 24 some engineering work in town. soak in cold water 12 to 18 hours tail, etc., if not already prepared. While here he was the guest of Mr. Well At Festival with the skin on top. Place in a greased baking dish, add and Mrs. Bdgar Irvjne. 6. Do not cut or, shred fish with a pimento and fried onion to the Mrs. C. M. asks: How much milk Farm Scene Misses Jeannine and Agathe Roy, steel fork — always use a silver fish; pour on the tomato juice and is used for poaching fish? After spending the past three daughters of Mrs. J. B. Roy, did one. add salt and pepper. Bake in a months with relatives at Laggan, Answer: Fish cooked in milk. very well for thçmselves and their 7. Peanut oil is used in many fish moderate electric oven of 350° for Mr. and-Mrs. A. M. MacMillan left Cut the fish ready to serve; soak Written especially for teacher, Sr. M. of St. Rose, at the and chip shops for deep frying 12 minutes. on Thursday for their home in in heavily salted water tor 5 min- The Glengarry News Kingston Music Festival. and ' is also recommended for Salmon Cutlets utes, then place the pieces of fish in Juniata, Sask. Jeannine had 79 points in the By home use. 4 salmon cutlets hot milk, using sufficient to barely Mr. and Mrs. Royal Gareau and piano solo class, under 21, tieing for 8. It ( is economical to buy about 2 tablespoons peanut oil cover .fish, and simmer until well ROBERT J. McDONELL sons, Robert and Claude, and Mrs. first place with Miss Joan McIn- one pound extra when purchas- 2 teaspoons lemon juice cookedi. Eva Gareau and daughter. Miss tosh of Kingston, who won in the ing fish so that if any is left % cup fine bread crumbs * * * Mariette Gareau, spent the week- senior class and was awarded a No other point, perhaps, proves over from the first meal it can Celery salt Ann Allan invites you to write end in Kingston visiting Mr. L. W. scholarship. The adjudicator com- as forcibly the' ills of our agricul- be combined! with salad dressing Pepper to her, c/o The Glengarry News, Gareau, who. is seriously ill, and mented on “two very fine perform- ttcral^ economy as does the disap- to make enough filling ' for Wipe salmon cutlets with a damp Alexandria, Ont. Send in your Mrs. Gareau. ances”. Jearmine also ranked pearance of our export food trade. lunch-lbox sandwiches. cloth, sprinkle with lemon juice and suggestions on homemaking prob- Miss Mariette. Gareau returned to In a ten-year periçd Canada, has second in the class, 17 and under, 9. To store fish wrap it in wax oil, pat on crumbs and season lems and watch this column for with a mark of 76. her duties at Longueuil, Que., after dropped from one of the leading paper to keep the air from dry- lightly. Fry in a deep fidllet with replies. spending the past three weeks at food exporting nations to a point Her sister, Agathe, in another ing off the cut surface. Place peanut oil to a depth of Ü inch. her home here. where, with the exception of wheat, class took 76 points, ranking fourth fish in casserole and cover close- Cook 10 minutes on electric element Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Osborne we barely produce enough food to among 21 students. ly when storing in the refriger- turned high. will be in Kingston this week-end, feed our population. There were more than 8,000 en- ator to prevent odors affecting THE QUESTION BOX whete Mr. Osborne will attend a While on the one hand we pledge tries in the Festival and markings other foods. Mrs. R. T. asks: How do you cook - NOTICE - Cadet Instructors’ Conference. While the support of all Canada’s re- were generally lower than a year lb. Before cooking fish, wipe inside fish in parchment paper? in Kingston they will be the guests sources, food production is allowed ago. The high in piano this y<7jr and out with a cloth wrung out Answer: Fish in Parchment Owing to illness . of Mr. and 'Mrs. Marshal Brumèll. to deteriorate to such an extent was 83, compared with 93 last year. in cold salted water. Never leave Paper. the Glengarry Presbytery Rev. D. A. Weir of Vancouver has that if it continues Canada will in Wipe fish with a cold damp cloth JOHN EMERY-WAllACE FORD spent the past week visiting friends a few years bè competing for food and cut in suitable portions ,for DRAMA FESTIVAL servings. * JACK UMBERT-IARRY JOHNS in Lochiel and Alexandria. Father dh the already thin world’s market. to be held Aa AIlM frodxtoa • tr!

chester township; John S'. Thomp- Temperance Study Tuberculosis Death Rate Introducing The New 1951 Plymouth son, deputy-reeve of Matilda town- A Milestone In Sanatorium Board ship; Johnson Ouderkirk, deputy-^ Course Results Listed At Record Low reeve of Finch township; John D. Holy Cross History Names Committees Ferguson, reeve of Roxborough Winners in the National Temper- Steacy decline of the death rate township; William : A. McEwan, Holy Cross annals recorded! an ance Study Course for Glengarry from tuberculosis in the United Aid. Albert A. Doyon, acting- reeve of Maxville; D. D. McKinnon, event of great importance on Sun- County, in 1950, have been an- Counties of Stormont, Dundas and mayor and one of City Council’s reeve of Kenyon township; and Aid. Glengarry in the past 20. years is day, February llth, 1951. Six young nounced as follows: two appointees to the board of di- James Ross, representing the city. ladies, who had completed their Juniors, 9 years and, under: 1, reflected in the annual report of rectors, was named chairman of St. The following committees were postulancy in the English-speaking Ralph McKelvey, Glen Sandfield, Dr. George W. Cragg, superintend- Lawrence Sanatorium Board at the appointed: novitiate in Ottanva, received the 86% ;2', Maralyn McLennan, Glen ent of St. Lawrence Sanatorium, annual meeting in the institution’s Finance — Messrs. Shaver, Cam- holy haibit of the Congregation. Sandfield, 78%; 3, Bobby Woodside, to the board of directors. board room, Thursday of last week. eron and Durant. The combined death total from St. , Joseph’s Church, Wilbrod Northfield Station, 74%; 4, Marilyn He succeeds H. H. Ouderkirk, House — Messrs. Thompson, Rost- 1 tuberculous in the counties last street, Ottawa, lent its regal setting McIntosh, Dalkeith, 74%.. reeve of Finch village. and McEwan. year was 12, compared with 18 in to the ceremony. Very Rev. J. R. Juniors, 10 and 11 years: 1, David Vipe-chairman is William A. Grounds—Messrs. Ferguson, Mc- 1949, and 22 in 1948. The 1931-33 Birch, OJVf.I., Provincial of the McEwen, RJt. 2, Maxville, 99%; 2, Plymouth’s modern new front- features of the new 1951 models Cameron, reeve of Mountain town- Ewan and Ouderkirk. English-speaking Qblates, presided Audrey Guay, R.R. 2, Maxville, 99% ; average toll was 49. end styling accentuates its low which are being introduced. ship. L. Cameron Kennedy, United The chairman is a member ex- massive appearance. Wider 55 Plymouth offers eight new at the Clothing, The sermon for the 3, Jean Baxter, R.R. 2, Maxville, , The rate of death from tuber- Counties clerk-treasurer, is secre- officio of all committees. 99%; 4, Allistaire McEwen, RH. 2, culosis in the counties dropped inch windshield, which reduces models. The Suburban and occasion Was preached by the Rev. obstruction at the corner posts, Savoy are designed for those tary-treasurer. A. Unger, O.M.I., who had preached Maxville, 99%. from 72 per 100,600 residents in wide-sweeping electric wipers who want active all-round Other members of the board are: The Canadian Christmas tree in- 1931 to 14 per 100,000 in 1950. The the eight days’ retreat, prepara- Sèniors, 12-14: 1, Mina Craig, and windshield-wide defroster multi-use transportation. The F. T. Shaver, Aultsville,- appointed dustry exports more than 7,000,000 1949 rate was 20 per 100,000 popula- tory to the ceremony. Father R.R. 1, Cornwall, 100%; 2, Elsie vents all contribute to better, Concord series includes a two- by the Province of Ontario; War- trees valued in excess of $2,000,000 tion. Unger remarked that the world Urquhart, Dalkeith, 99%; 3, Alice safer driving in all kinds of door sedan and three-pàssenger den H. E. Durant, reeve of Win- annually. McKelvey, Glen Sandfield, 98%; In 1950 there were three deaths weather. The big, wide-opening coupe; the Cambridge which would consider it madness to give doors and floor-level sills permit features a four door sedan and one’s life for one’s faith. likewise, 4, Fraser Gumming, Maxville, 94%. in the Stormont area excluding the city of Cornwall; three from Dun- easy entrance and exit. Plym- club coupe; the Cranbrook four- would they deem it foolish, insane Seniors: 1, Anne Wopdside, outh’s restful chair-height seats door sedan, shown above; the for young people to leave the world Northfield Station, 80%; '2, Janet claè; four from Glengarry; and two with ample head room and leg Cranbrook club coupe; and the in order to follow a life of prayer, MdKilliCan, Maxville, 68%. from Cornwall. room are other owner-pleasing imported convertible coupe. obedience and austerity. The wbrld Juniors, 9 years and under: Helen It is estimated the provincial Cannot understanod how anyone Watt, Lancaster Public School, death rate from tuberculosis will be can choose to work, without earthly honors. 12 or 13 per 100,000. “This lowering death rate”, said The 1951 Plymouth reward, in a classroom, hospital, or- Juniors, 10-I2: Malcolm A. Mc- Joint Meeting Held phanage or asylum, but in so doing, Gregor, Maple Ridge School, hon-, Dr. Cragg, “appears to be due to generous souls imitate Christ, Who ors; Fay Newberry, Maple Ridge several factors; early diagnosis re- Is Now On Display sulting i in the,finding of eases when \camforted. and healed the sick in School, honors. At Kirk Hill still amenable to treatment; few The new Plymouth for 1951 has body, and fofgave the, contrite of Senior: Denise Gauthier, Maple active cases at large spreading the been designed with passenger com- heart. Leaf School, honors. Although low temperatures pre- disease in the coinmunity; and the fort as its primary consideration, it vailed outside, the welcome was very ■'these postulants, Father Unger is reported by John C. McGuire, remarked, have hearkened1 to use of new drugs which have a very warm in the home of Mrs. Angus ditional Psalms and sang a hymn definite beneficial effect on certain general sales manager, The Chrys- Christ’s invitation, “Come, follow A. MacGillivray, where a joint to Our Lady, “O Clear as the Sun”. types-of tuberculosis disease.” ler-Plymouth-Fargo Division, the Me”, issued to all, but responded to meeting of St. Columba Presby- When the novices returned to the Note Of Caution Chrysler Corporation of Canada, terian and Kirk Hill United by so very few. Religious life is church they were presented with However, Dr. Cragg interjected a Limited. •one of sacrifice, of immolation of Women’s Missionary Society was their Rule Book, their Manual of note of caution against over optim- The new line of Plymouth cars is -one’s personal will, feelings and held. Prayers and their Chaplet. As a Lm_ at the low 'death rate in 1950. on display this week in the show- gifts, both physical and mental. In Mrs. John Archie MacGillivray proof of their neiw dignity a new “It IS unlikely such a Low figure •dedicating oneself to: God in re- rooms of Shepherd Bros. and Mrs. Donald John MacGillivray name was given to each novice: will be seen again for a few years”, ligion, !all these gifts are returned , Mr. McGuire points out were leaders for the period) of Miss Hilda Kierans, Sister Mary he said, “but I do not think that ‘to Godi for His glory, to be used in while passenger comfort has been worship. Mrs. John Archie Mac- of St. Miriam Hilda; Miss Elizabeth the increase, if it ctoes occur, will the service of one’s neighbour, for the main consideration in planning Gillivray was leader for the open- Marchildon, Sister M. of St. Fran- be verÿ great. Also I anr confident God’s sake. By daily dying to one- 5 the 1951 model, the new Plymouth ing exercises of “The World Day ces Oâbrini; Miss Agnes Lavery, that the general trend will be down- • self, the religious can truly say features a smart appearance, lux- of Prayer” service which followed. Sister M. of St. Paula; Miss Eliza- ward and that, with the exception with St. Paul,. “I livg, now, not I, urious new interiors in latest color The theme was, “Perfect Love beth Burke, Sister M. of St. Stella of a very few years, as low or lower but Christ, liveth in me”. harmonies, and outstanding en- Casteth Out Fear”. Mrs. Donald Maureen; Miss Ellen Scanlan, Sis- death rates will be seen.” The postulants were reminded gineering developments. John MacGillivray led the latter ter M. of St. Bernadine of Sienna; Dr. Cragg disclosed that for the they had a long way to go, but that half of the programme; Mrs. Neil Miss Florence Kelly, Sister M. of past three years and more especial- “Its exciting modern design is they had unselfishly and generously completely practical”, Mr. McGuire Blair was pianist; Mrs. Willie Mac- St. Kathleên. ly in 1950, beds have been available Gillivray and Mrs. Robbie Dewar chosen a life, whose difficulties had 'Solemn Benediction of the Blessed said. “Doors are extra wide, and heen plainly pointed out to them in, at the sanatorium when required. received the offering. Sacrament was given by Very Rev. Occupancy in 1950 was 92 per cent wi:l8-opening for easy entrance and their days of recollection. Father Intercessions were led by Mrs. Father Birch, with Rev. D. A. Kerr, of capacity, the lowest since the exit. Seats are chair-height. Their Birch congratulated them publicly Willie MacGiilivrajy, Mrs. James P.P., St. .Raphael’s,, as Deacon, and sanatorium was opened in 1937. special design gives driver and pas- ■on their spirit'of unselfishness and Grant, Mrs. Neil Biair, Mrs. J. W. Rev. Leo Devine, O.M.I,, Ottawa, as Cf 80 cases admitted in 1950, only sengers comfortable, ereqt support; generosity. MacIL-eod and Mrs. R. J. MacLeod. suh-iDeaeon. 46 were local residents. gives the driver increased over-the- Father Unger called priests the A paper was read by Mrs. J. M. Several members of the clergy A continued drop in new cases wheel vision.” right arm of the Church, Sisters the were present in the sanctuary, for Allan of an inspirational and in- left arm and he demonstrated how discovered was also reported since “Big, super-Jcushion tires, syn- The smoothest custards, the creamiest mashed the ceremony, including Rev. 1940. Only 17 new active cases Were formative nature, on the Missionary crippled the work of the Church chronized springing and double- Task in the Far East, and Far East potatoes, the temptingest pumpkin pies are made with Father Monaghan, O^ÆX, P.P., of discovered last year, compared with would be without the help of the acting, airplane-type shock ab- in this critical hour in the world’s St. Joseph’s; Rev, Jos. Scanh.ell, 73 in 1940, There were 34 new Evaporated Milk. It’s rightly called the food of 1001 Sisters. Then Father Unger con- sorbers contribute to the Air Pillow history. OMX, of Canadian Martyr’s parish, cases considered inactive,, compared Ride, The sturdy frame, and all- uses! Use it to make white sauce the way your family gratulated the parents of tbe gen- She then toldl a few human in- Ottanva; Rev. Father Gallagher, with 84 in 1940, This condition steel body, wider windshield and erous young women who were giv- terest stories , which revealed the likes it... velvety smooth, delicately flavoured. Try C.SS.R., Ottawa, and Rev. Father had materialized in spite of in- rear window, feather-light steering, ing back to God a precious gift, changed conditions of mission work it in luscious cake.fillings and frostings! You’ll never Flynn, Renfrew, and Rev. Father creased clinic facilities and an in- powerful brakes andl Safety Rim confided to them by Him some in China and Korea. Her brother. Kerr, St. Raphael’s. crease in the number of examina- Wheels combine to give greater be without Evaporated Milk again. It’s another yeans before. Since congratulations Parents, relatives and friends of Rev. Donald Faris, and her son, were in order, he extended felicita- tions made. safety”. nutritious dairy product that’s really good for you. the novices occupied places of More Expense Lieut. John Maxwell Allan, Jr., had tions to the Sisters of Holy Cross honour in the church. Interested “Windshield wipers are now elec- arrived in Japan about the same Dr. Cragg suggested that both the Write for tempting new recipes made with evaporated milk. who were seeing the fulfilment of a friends and parishioners filled St. trically operated, assuring depend- time. The brother was on his way new project. In conclusion, Father provincial and federal governments Joseph’s Church to capacity. Dele- be made aware of the additional ex- able, constant speed and safer driv- to Hong Kong, China, and the son Unger expressed the hope that once gations of pupils from Iona Acad- ing vision in bad weather”. en route to Korea. the lakes and shallows of religious pense entailed by an Increase in the emy; St. Margaret’s Convent, Alex- number of patients requiring treat- “A highlight of the interiors”, In Hong Kong, her brother found life were traversed, they might say andria; Apple Hill sclfool; St. Felix with gratefpl hearts, “It is good for ment in the event the St. Lawrence Mr. McGuire adds, “is tire new in- the way closed into China. Chinese of Valois school, Cornwall; St. seaway and power project goes strument panel, proportioned to ac- leaders in educational and mis- us to be here”. It , is wisfom to Gabriel’s Academy; Renfrew Sep- serve God as He Should he served, through. He suggested provision centuate the wide, roomy front sionary work who had been anxious arate School, swelled the crowd for the X-ray examination of every compartment. Its attractive reced- for his return, were not now in a DAIRY FOODS SERVICE BUREAU and to those who serve God will one of young people. day say, “You have chosen the bet- workman employed on the scheme ing surface frees the driver from position to facilitate his entry. As 409 Huron St., Toronto Representatives were sent from ter part; it will not be taken from and his family. ‘instrument glare’.” their personal safety would have the various religious communities of The superintendent noted a de- been at stake if they had attempted you”. women in Ottawa. Numerous Sis- Plymouth’s modern front-end The future novices, dressed as cided shift in the preponderance styling accentuates its low massive to do so, the plans to enter China ters of Holy Cross witnessed the had to be abandoned. The son met brides and carrying lighted tapers, of tuberculosis from women to men appearance. The grill has been re- Clothing of their newest recruits. during the past few years. When in Korea a young Korean minister, made public their desire to receive .ilesigned to give a clean tailored 51 1 who was destitute, he having, With hove a the Holy Habit. The officiating Sister M. of St. Andrea, Superior, the institution was opened and in appearance, in keeping with the Evopo'0' priest blessed these Habits and gave for tvyenty-four years teacher at its first five years of operation, 64 functional design of the new Ply- members of his congregation, been driven by the Communists from them to the aspirants. ' Iona Academy, directs the new beds were aUoted! to women and mouth. A special chhir intoned the tra- novitiate at 245 Laurier E., Ottawa. 48 to. men. Last fall it was found Seoul. The last time the young necessary to reverse the order, with Fenders that are bolted on, are men had met was on the campus the men getting 64 beds and the retained in the new car as an econ- of Toronto University. The Korean Women 48. omy feature. Officials point out was studying, for the ministry, and “No logical explanation has been that minor scrapes, do not mean the Canadian taking an Aits course HEGoodnch offered for this phenomenon, but major repairs with the new Ply- preparing for Law. The young mis- /Mif téfthm the fact is that the incidence, of mouth. sionary! said the stories that it was SUPER HI-CLEAT tuberculosis among young people All Plymouth models are powered possible for the missionaries to get 1 is becoming gradually less and less”, with a six-sylinder 97 horsepower along with the Communists were said Dr. Cragg. “It was in young- engine, with 6.7 to 1 compression false. He told of the sufferings and jUumthflowchtoim!'' TRACTOR TIRES er age groups that the greater num- ratio for extra power and, eco- bloodshed of his colleagues. For- ber of cases of tuberculosis among nomical operation. tunately the Canadians were able “It saves me time and' steps; keeps me / women were seen; and this may The new line - features eight new to help out with his immediate in touch with my family and friends; have some bearing on the situa- models, Mr. McGuire adds. These needs. Later on the arrival of the tion.” are the Suburban and Savoy for Princess Patricia Regiment the is always ready in emergencies.” Other Groups young minister, David Chung, met thoae who want active all-around AND ITS VALUE keeps growing all the Dr. Cragg also noted a decided another Canadian friend who was transportation and facilities for time. With more- and more families'get- shift toward the older age groups light hauling; the Concord Series a chaplain of the battalion. ting telephones, you can reach twice as in those being treated for tuber- which includes a two-,floor sedan Hymn “The Day Thou Gavest, many people as you could ten years ago. culosis. A few years ago the bulk and three-passenger coupe; the Lord, is Ended”, was sung and of patients were below 40. Now the Cambridge; which features à four- benediction closed a very inspiring And the traditionally friendly service is number of those below 30 is steadily door sedan and club coupe; the hour. Lunch was served by the being steadily improved. decreasing, while the number of Cranbrook’s four-door sedan and hostesses, Mrs. Angus A. MacGil- Yet today your telephone actually those ibelow 40 is increasing. club coupe. livray and Mrs. Ray MacGillivray, Extended ease finding facilities, takes a smaller part of your “In more than a quarter of a and a very enjoyable hour of fel- family budget than it did some respiting in lowered infection rates, lowship was spent. century of producing automobiles in years ago! are consequently resulting in’o low-1 Canada, this is the finest Plymouth In a few Well chosen words, Mrs. ered incidence among young peo- we have ever presented”, Mr. Mc- Donald MacLennan thanked Mrs. Friendly and efficient telephone ple. Guire said. “Its design is practical. Angus A. MacGillivray and) Mrs. service, at a reasonable price, is Of 80 admissions in 1950, a total Its performance sets new records. Ray MacGillivray ifor their hospi- one of today’s big bargains. of 51 were more than 30. Thirty- YOU GET Its luxury is that of the highest- tality. three were more than 40; 19 were priced cars. Its economy makes a past 50; and 12 were more than 60. hit with thrifty motorists.” GREATER Of 182 patients in 1938 and 1939, only 21 Were more than 50 years TRACTION of age. use of this clrug”, said Dr. Cragg. During the year, 54 patients were Diagnostic services were expand- When Your BACK discharged. Eighteen of them left ed and 478 examinations were made Higher cleats, deeper bite. against advice and two of them by the' u:e of miniature films. In •A Better cleaning, extra traction. later returned. Six of 10. patients regular clinics, 1,807 examinations Begins to Ache A: As much as 1/5 more wear. who died! were more than 50 years were made of 1,3^2 individuals. jlr Smoother ride. of age. Nineteen were transferred All told, 17 new active cases were REACH FOR hr More tire service per dollar. to other sanatoria. discovered, while 72 showed evi- Treatment services show an in- dence of healed tuberculosis, seen creased trend towards surgery, for the first time. Forty-one pa- made possible to large extent by tients previously! known to have had the use of streptomycin. The anti- tuberculosis were considered to have If you haven't yet got service biotic was used on 57 patients and active disease anf, 346 were con- You can be sure your neighbour- results were termed encouraging. Ndered to have inactive disease. hood will be served, and your place Dr. Cragg reported the Christmas T. PILON In 34 per cent of the cases, results BECAUSE— on the list protected. Taking care AGENT MASSEY-HARRIS Seal campaign was handled by the were excellent. In another 26 per JT Backache is often due to of people without service as quick- STE-ANNE DE PRESCOTT, ONT, cent distinct benefit was experi- St. Lawrence Tuberculosis Associa- ' ' an upset kidney condi- ly as possible is one of our biggest enced. tion with excellent results. tion; and for over half a century Dodd’s and most important tasks. Aided Several During the year, three radios were Kidney Pills have helped bring relief from “Several cases which ordinarily provided by workers of Howard backache by treating the kidneys. Get Dodd’s Kidney Pills today at any drug THE BELL TELEPHONE FIRST *N RUBBER would'have gone on to a fatal con- Smith Paper Mill, while the local COMPANY OF CANADA clusion are now discharged from | counter. Look for the blue box with the red Legion branch' donated a player band. You can depend on Dodd’s. 155 w. the sanatorium solely through the piano. J The Glengarry News, Alexandria, Ont., Friday, February 23rd, 1951 Page 7 Complete Federation Argument Farm and Market News On Needs Of Dairy Industry Florent Patenaude On Thursday of last week a prices are not frozen in an un- large delegation from the Fed- favorable position as compared with C. P. A. eration of Agriculture met the the wage level of skilled workers. MONTREAL LIVESTOCK MARKET Urge Fall Fairs Dominion Cabinet. and presented Safeguards the annual brief; outlining the Dairy farmers do not ask for CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT MONfERBAiL, Feib. '19.—Trading was fairly slow and prices were con- views of organized farmers. Here special favors or privileges; they To Modernize is the complete section dealing ask only for treatment equivalent sidered steady to weaker on calves on the Montreal livestock markets today. with the dairy! industry. to that accorded a host of other in- CORNWALL AND HAWKÉSBURY Offerings were 653 cattle, 49 sheep and lambs, 339 hogs, and 392 Prize Lists dustrie; generally recognized as be Current developments in the ing no. more important to the well calves. 52 PITT STREET 75 MAIN STREET Oommon to medium quality cows mâde the bulk of the light cattle TORONTO, Feb. 10.—Suggestions dairy industry confront Canadian being of Canada than the dairy in offerings at steady prices. One load of good steers with some medium that Fall Fair prize lists and pro- dairymen with problems of the first dustry. They feel that the lack PHONE 1051 PHONE 646 of substantial protection against sold at 31.50, just medium 27.00-30.00, and common down to 25.00. grams should be brought more into magnitude. Total milk production Medium heifers brought 24.00.-29.00, and common 20.00-24.00. Good cows line with the times were heard here per capita in Canada has been fall- cheaply produced foreign oils as ing for eight years. In 1950 per used in the manufacture of mar- were 25.00, with some tops at 27.00, medium' 22.00-24.50, common 20,00- this week at the annual meeting of 22.00, canners and cutters 17.00-20.00. the Ontario Agricultural Societies. capita production was 20 per cent, garine, is a discrimination in na- Common and medium quality also -made the bulk of the calf offer- Addressing the gathering as a less than eight years ago. The plain tional policy. It has been a policy FARMERS and DEALERS of all governments to provide rea- ings, where vealers brought $1 to $2 lower in some cases. Good vealers representative of the Junior Farm- facts are that dairying as a whole sold at 40.00, common and medium, 30.00-39.00. Grassers were 24.00- ers, Don Milburn of Peterborough, has not paid Well enough to main- sonable safeguards and assistance tain production psfrticularly for to the dairy industry for more than BRING YOUR CATTLE TO THE ! 24.50. said that too much of the time in milk used in’ manufactured prod- 80 years. Lambs were mostly 30.00, and sheep 10.00-18.00, according to quality^ judging competitions was spent de- Hog prices were not established. ciding the better of two good cows, ucts. The Dairy Farmers of Canada with not enough to their actual The Dairy Farmers of Canada simply ask the Government for a ALEXANDRIA productive ability. Similarly with discussed the problem of the dairy continuation of this 80-year-old beef cattle, he said, which were too industry at their own annual con- pohcy by providing for an excise TOP GRADE EGGS QUOTED HIGHER highly fitted at sbows to be prac- vention, a few days before the an- tax upon all foreign oils used in COMMISSION AUCTION tical for ordinary farms. nual Federation meeting at Cal- the manufacture of margarine. This ON MONTREAL PRODUCE MARKET Mr. Milburn said,, also, that the gary. Our convention discussed tax should be sufficient to enable HELD EVERY TUESDAY declining place of the horse should their official policy statement, and butter to compete on fair terms with a few amendments endorsed with margarine. AT ALEXANDRIA 3794c to 38c. be recognized by those responsible At Montreal, egg receipts during that statement, which we summar- On Butter the past few dlay® have been only Potatoes—75 lb. bag, Quebec $1.10 for drawing up prize lists. “It is very difficult for many ize as follows: The present price support pro- Why not give us a try, and we assure you of the high dollar in fair volume, resulting in grade A to $1.15, NBi' $1.35, PEI, $1.50. Price Control gram for butter, our dairy farmers large stock bringing slightly higher Poultry — To dealers, delivered: young men to understand how, in for anything we have to sell. these senior exhibitions, the horse Should price controls be necessary feel, should be continued but they prices, and an advance of a half fowl, top quality, 5 lbs. and up, 40c dairy farmers are agreed that they are strongly of the opinion that the cent on other grades. Receipts at to 41c, second! quality 36c to 39c; still command's approximately the ALBERT FAUBERT, Auctioneer. OMER POIRIER, Prop. 1 same percentage of the prize list should be applied in such a manner floor price should be increased to one session were 376 cases, in com- 4 to 5 lbs., A quality 36c to 39c, 2nd that whatever sacrifices shall be 62 cents per pound!, with a further Tel. 105-J-5, Alexandria. Tel. 14-R-4, Lochiel. parison with 1,171 cases a year ago. grade 36c to 39c. Leghorns, all as it did 50 years ago”, he said. Geared To Full entailed shall fall with equal weight increase • during the season, if ne- The market for dressed poultry weights, 28c to 35c; broilers, 2 to 234 upon all classes. No attempt should cessary, in order that the Board is reported strong. Receipts are lbs., 28c to 34c; 3 to 4 lbs., 37c to Dr. G. S. H. Barton, special assistant to Agriculture Minister be made to control prices unless may obtain control of a substantial light and retail demand good. There 40c; young ducks, 4 to 434 lbs., 40c. wage rates are also controUed. The portion of storage stocks. Pro- is a special demand for heavy Dressed weight, to shippers for Gardiner, said) that this might not be the time for Canada to engage Dairy Farmers of Canada, through ducers feel that this procedure chickens and fowl, with prices up box-packed quality, capons, over 5 the Canadian Federation of Agri- would be in the interest of both in some quarters. AH other grades in a general program of greatly in- pounds, special miHafed 59-61c, A culture, should be represented on producer and consumer because the are firm. milktfed 58-59c; broilers over 2 lbs., creased agricultural production, but it waa a time to make certain that any advisory bodies to boards whose price range between Summer and The Montreal market is firmer special -'milbfed '45-46e, A milkfed duty it will be to fix prices. Winter can be held to a minimum. LUMBER ANSWERS for live poultry, except for broilers, 44-45C, B 41-43c, C 28-32c; under 2 domestic and export requirements 'Should general price control be Cheese Surplus which are easier. lbs., special milkfed 41-41c, A milk- could be met. Canada’s agriculture instituted prices should not be The dairy producers request the fed 40-42C, B 34-41c, C 26-30e; should be geared to full production. YOUR Price Quotations Future of farming is largely de- frozen arbitrarily as of a given date. assistance of the Government ser- chickens over 5 lbs., special milk- Costs of production should! be the vices to dispose of any cheese sur- Eggs—Grade A large, 49c; medi- fed 57-58c, A milkfed; 56-57c; B 44- pendent on the success of fairs and um 47c; pullets, 44c; B, 43c; C, 35c. other projects, said President Ben major consideration in establishing plus in the British market, and if 52c, C 35-40c; 4 to 5 lbs., special prices for dairy ^products. Care necessary have the Agricultural To producers for ungraded* eggs, milkfed 51-54c, B 42-49c, C 33-40c, Bleecker of HalloWay. Superin- BUILDING NEEDS delivered, cases returned:. Grade A tendent J. A. Carroll of Toronto, should be taken to see fhat farm Price Support Board support the 3 to 4 lbs., special milkfed!. 42-44c, price of cheese in line with the large, 44c to 45c; medium, 43c; pul- A milkfed 43c, B 34-40C, C 25c, said! last year was not a particularly lets, 39c to 40c; B, 33c to 40c; C, good season for fairs. Lateness of price of other manufactured dairy Whether you’re building a new home or Fowl over 5 lbs., special 46-48e, products. 30c to 33c. A 45-47C, B 43-45, C 31-33; 4 to 5 farm, work kept crowds down and Distinctive Names For remodeling an old one, you’ll need lumber. Butter—Open market, No. 1 pas- lbs., special 44-47, A 43-48c, B 41- many societies had to apply for bad Legislation The Dairy Farmers request the Top quality lumber is our specialty—and teurized Quebec fresh 65c, storage 42c, C 26-32c; 3 to 4 lbs., special weather grants. He felt there was New Dodge Models a Heed for more careful study and Government to > take steps towards our prices are reasonable. Call on us today. 58c. Jobbers; prints 6014c to 64c. 38-41C, A-37-40C, B 33-37c; C 16-30c; x Cheese — Wholesale, Quebec col- planning, and said it would be well The complete Dodge line for 1951 an early clarification of all legisla- No order is too small to merit our careful old roosters, A 28-30c, B 26-270, C will be introduced here this week tion affecting dairy standards. They ored, 3712 0 to 38c; Ontario colored 16-23C. to get all activities started earlier. • attention, none too large for us to handle. Commercial features of fairs were with new styling, safety, perform- strongly urge legislation prohibiting discussed by F. A. Lashley, associate ance and luxury features and a the use of any fat other- than butter director of agricultural societies, completely new_ range of names, it fat in any manufactured dairy and in the late afternoon delegates is announced by A. J. Shaw, gen- product. They urge also that the ALEXANDRIA SASH & DOOR broke up into discussion groups. eral sales mahager, the Dodge-De- sale of any non-dairy product un- GLENGARRY COMMISSION AUCTION They talked over society projects, Soto Division, the Chrysler Cor- der any name closely associated ROLLAND CHOLETTE, Prop. FARMERS AND DAIRYMEN midways and attractions, financing poration of Canada, Limited. The with a dairy product be' prohibited. and advertising and year-round use new Dodge cars may be seen locally Dairy producers oppose any re- Corner of Lochiel & Bishop Sts. Phone 150-J We had a good sale last Monday. Veal Calves brought of grounds and buHdings, at Sarto Leger’s garage. duction in the present minimum OPEN ON SATURDAY NIGHTS $25 to $40; yearling Holstein Heifers, $60 to $90; open While the men studied the prob- The haa been re- butterfat content in ice cream and two-year-olds, $90 to $135; Beef, 17e to 27c per lb., lems in their field the women’s di- named the Coronet. The Dodge its products. according j^o quality. Springers suitable for export vision of the Association, under^ Special DeLuxe is now the Regent. trade brought $225 to $275. their president, Miss Ina Hodgins The (11834 inch of Carp, were looking into the fem- wheelbase) is now called the Crus- We have good demand for all Livestock inine side of the fair. ader; the Dodge (111 inch wheel- We could use another 100 Open Heifers “We must always keep in mind base) the Kingsway. the objectives of the women’s sec- The popular all-purpose all-metal your partner Any farmer wishing to dispose of his herd, would do tion to raise ^standards and teach Suburban is again a feature of new well to consult us. The herd we sold last week, sold standards for individual products, Dodge showings across Canada. well and the consigner was very well satisfied.- to encourage a love for the beauti- Completely new is the Suburban’s Special DeLuxe edition introduced We can get you top prices for your Livestock ful, to establish new and improved practices and to add new classes now as the Savoy. SALES EVERY MONDAY related to the specific needs of the “We feel that these new Dodge times”, Miss Hodgins said. models wiU add to Dodge's reputa- Telephone — LANCASTER 286 — Telephone o tion for dependability, safety, econ- omy andi long life”, Mr. Shaw said. “We introduce the new line proudly, with names as distinctive as the New Facilities At models which bear them”. “The Dodge line for 1951 retains St. Lawrence San the features which have set new automotive standards, but intro- St. Lawrence Sanatorium has. duces new features and many re- established a school to provide finements. The result is the finest therapeutic education and to start Dodge line in our history”. rehabilitation of patients who wiU “The is Still the eventually be discharged and will, lowest-priced car with Fluid Drive in many cases, have to change their as standard equipment. The Dodge occupation. Coronet is also available with Gyro- Establishment of the school was matic Transmission as extra equip- disclosed by H. H. Ouderkirk, re- ment”. tiring :board: chairman, in his an- Mr. Shaw explains that Dodge nual report. Gyrol Fluid Drive gives smooth, Setting up of the school follows even acceleration, without jerks or, a pattern carried out in other sana- jolts, since engine power is trans- toria in the province. Approval has ferred to the rear Wheels through been granted by the provincial De- oil. There is greater control on Farm improvement loans can be used, for fencing, partment of Education. slippery surfaces, since the gradual It is felt the school fills a long- steady application of power through drainage and other improvements on your farm. felt want in the sanatorium and Gyrol Fluid Drive helps prevent Amounts up to $3,000 may be advanced under will aid greatly, not only as an edu- skidding and wheelspin. Gyro- the plan and the money repaid by instalments cational and rehabihtation pro- Matic transmission frees the driver spread over one, two or more years. The rate gram, but also as an occupational from using clutch and gear lever in therapy project. all normal driving. charged is 5% simple interest. Ask for full par- An appraisal of all equipment has Wide, high doors permit easy en- ticulars at our nearest branch. been carried out by an appraisal trance and exit, without crouching. company and an accurate detailed There is ample head and leg room. FARM IMPROVEMENT inventory is to be set up which will Seats are luxuriously upholstered, Did you know that the familiar call, "do-si-do” had its origin in the be available at all times. and knee-level. Front seats have French expression "dos-a-dos”, meaning "back-to-back”? LOANS New Pump a foam rubber pad for extra com- v can also be used for An addition to the existing pump- fort. Many square dances and calls were adopted from the lands of our New implements, machinery house Was completed and! a new, Focal point of the beautiful in- forefathers.-You can learn many of these for yourself—by writing for and equipment. larger pump installed'. It has re- teriors on ail mocjels is an ultra- the yREE booklet "How to Square Dance.” It’s packed with easy-tOT sulted in improved water supply to smart, modern instrument panel. New foundation or breeding the institution. Designers have eliminated reflec- follow square dance calls, instructions and how-to-do-it pictures. livestock. A new dial telephone system was tion of the instrument panel on Square dancing is fun . . . and it provides recreation and wholesome Construction, repair, or installed in the institution and has the windshield, for better night exercise for all. It’s another Canadian Way to Good Health! alteration of any building on resulted in a marked improvement vision. the farm. in telephone service throughout the The efficient parking brake is sanatorium. easily operated by a “T” shaped Farm electrification. The federal Department of Health lever within easy reach. Fences, drainage and other intailed a new photofluorographic The powerful Dodge engines re- developments. camera attachment to the X-ray tain the features pioneered and equipment which will be in satis- proved by the Chrysler Corporation, BEADING'S factory operation when adjustments Mr. Shaw points out. Among are made to the tube. these, he lists: four rings per piston m ■ lUf THE ROYAL BANK Dr. W. Stevenson, of Avonmore, for greater economy; oil bath air

has been engaged as sanatorium cleaner; exhaust valve seat in-, BRADING BREWERIES UMITED • OTTAWA ANB WINDSOR dentist, replacing Dr. W. J. Gunn, serts for efficiency and long Hfe; OF CANADA who retired through illness. Weatherproofed distributor and ig- A retirement pension fund was t| . ç_||_ rifinrA '^ri,e *or amusing FREE Booklet containing pie* ca* fautA OK tAc nition system; pressure cartridge- rQ brought into operation for the em- type oil filter on the Coronet and llOW TO JlfUQlC uanie tures, instructions, and popular square-dance call»; ployees, with back premiums paid Regent; permanent by-pass cooling by the sanatorium on all eligible system; floating power engine BRADING BREWERIES LIMITED DEPT. 3, 265 VICTORIA STREET, TORONTO, ONTARIO frt* ALEXANDRIA BRANCH J. p. MULLETT, Manager employees. mountings. « ' Page 8 The Glerigâfrÿ News, Alexandria, Ont., Friday, February 23rd, 1951

I0»0»0»0*0#0«K>I iSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSæSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSiSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSîSSSSSSSJSïSSSSSÏSïSSSSSSSÏSS! i0*0*0»0»0»( J. W. Houston and the Rev. James If this was impossible, then we Stevenson. • should donate our surplus food. i Mr.Norman McLeod Mrs. Robert Clarke The pallbearers were four grand- Unity also thought we should send sons, Reggie Clarke and Garry through the Red Cross, United Na- Was Ex-Railrcader Dies At Renfrew Clarke, South Porcupine, and Mor- tions or other world organizations, News” Classified Ad section ris Clarke, . Bobeaygeon; Ormand gifts of our surplus food. Glen Mr. Norman McLeod of Dalkeith, ment Was in Horton cemetery. Sandfieid said we should set up a SSS2S»ôSô8ôSô«ôSôSôSS.S28«SSSSS8SS*2SSSS*8ô8SSSSôSô2ô8ôS*2ô2ô8SSôS*8ôSôSô2?.SSô»ô2ôS*SôSc85£ôSô»ôîôSôSô8S8ô2ôSôî;i;ïôSôî!S*2*S*i•oSoSoS*-' î8S8S8*2S8ô2Sj Mrs. Robert Clarke passed aWay formerly of Kamloops, B.C., passed at Renfrew Victoria Hospital, on Smith and Melville Eady. Inter- dlstributory board through the U.N, away in Cornwall General Hospital Monday, February 5th, following a They-, suggested agricultural experts CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES on Saturday morning, February month’s illness. be sent to poorer countries to teach (Effective January 1st, 1951) Charles W. Mair 17th. He was taken* to the hospital Mrs. Clarke was in her 86th year, the people how to help themselves on the previous Monday, when his and had resided in Renfrew, the County Farm and we could send machinery for For Sale, To Let, Wanted, etc.: 50 cents for thirty words or Ws; S Dies At Lancaster condition -syks pronounced serious last three years. She, with her them to work their land. Quigley’s 2 cents each additional word; extra insertions, 40 cent minimum, j and little hope for his recovery was husband, formerly resided on a Forum Findings said by helping them improve their held. farm near Castleford, Ont. Mrs. farming, technique it would result Births, Deaths: No charge. Cards of Thanks: 75 cents. In Mem- J The funeral of Charles W. Mair oriam: Minimum, 75 cents, 10 cents per line of verse. Public | •Leaving his native County of Clarke was bom in Kenyon Town- in their producing enough food for Notices: 12 cents per line, first insertion; 6 cents per line sufoser took place from his residence, in Glengarry when a mere’ lad of 16, ship, Glengarry County. She was Would a World Food: Bank solve themselves. quent insertions. 10 cents extra if not paid in advance; 25 cents Lancaster, to St. Andrew’s Church, he worked for a short time on the the daughter of Alex Wm. McLeod the world food problem? TMs The next topic is, “What Has extra if Box No. used. South Lancaster. Mr. Mair, agedi 57 farm at Carman, Man. He then and his wife, Christena Campbell. proved a very difficult question fox I.F.A.P, Accomplished?” years, passed: away in Cornwall embarked on a railroad career with She was active fn all church work most of us to answer. We* were Copy far Classified Ads mtrst be in this office not later than noon General Hospital, where he had the C.P.R. For some 43 years he anü a member of the United asked what steps did we think Thursday, to appear in current week’s columns. been a patient since the end of railroaded7 In B.C., during which Church. should be taken to solve the world “The Work of Mercy Never Ends December, time he was elevated to the position Surviving! are her* husband, food problem. . . . Give!” is the slogan of the BIRTHS HOUSES FOR SALE The service was conducted by of locomotive engineer. Through- Robert Clarke; three sons, Myles of Quigley’s Forum members said Canadian Red .Cross Society in its Rev. N. F. Sharkey. Hymns sung ojrt his long service in the Rockies South Porcupine; Hiram W. of Van- Mrter with countries needing food. annual appeal for funds this March. MASSIE—On Wednesday, February —Good Dwelling with 2 acres of were, “The Lord Is My Shepherd”, he performed his duties without be- couver, B.C.; Campbell of Befocay- 7th, 1951, to Mr, and Mrs. Gerard land, good sheds, garage, hen house, “The Old Rugged Cross” and ‘‘Blest coming involved Si an accident. geon; also one daughter, Mrs. J. J. Massie (nee Yvette Legault) — a etc. Wired for lights and stove. Be the Tie That Binds”, all fav- His wife, the former Catherine Laventure of Braesidé, Ont.; sev- . daughter, Marie Diane Nicole. All in good condition. Two wells on orites of Mr. Mair. McKenzie, predeceased him on eral grandchildren, and two sisters, property. For further particulars, Pallbearers were George Vaugh- March 16th, 1949, at which time he namely, Miss Mary McLeod and MCDONALD — At Hotel Dieu Hos- apply to PAUL CHEVRIER, Gleii an, Cornwall; Bert Smith, Jack pibal, Cornwall, on Tuesday, Feb- retired from the railroad and took Mrs. Lexie Holdbrook of- Vankleek Robertson. 8-2p Pierce, James Dufresne, William up residence in liis home in Dal- Hill, Ont. Marathon Liniment ruary 13th, 1951, to .Mr. afad Mrs. Dufresne and Ebby McNaughton. Jas. A. McDonald, Glen Norman —Dwelling for sale on Kenyon keith, where he was born. He was The funeral service was held at Left to mourn are his wife; one; a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. A. the Cochrane Funeral Home, Ren- —a daughter (Cheryl Marie). Street W., Alexandria; all modern daughter, Mabel, of Hamilton, and Soothing, Penetrating, Antiseptie* W. McLeod, and would have been frew, at 1.30 on Thursday. Rev. conveniences; also House and Lot five sons, Lester, of Cardinal; Nor- MILLIG(AN — At Hotel Dieu Hos- 65 years of age in April. He was a George Puttenham of Trenton, ! con- • , Use it for Rheumatism and Sprains -— and on Elgin Street W. Apply to DR. man, in England; Raymond, of pital, Cornwall, Monfay, February member of Kooteney Lodge, No. 15, ducted the service, assisted by Rev. M. MARKSON, Box 295, or Phone Brantford; ^ance-Corporal Ken- for Athlete’s Feet 19th, 1951, to Mr. and Mrs. R. P. 116, Alexândria. 1-tf A',F. &; AuM., Chapter of R.A.M., Milligan—a daughter, Mary Per- neth Mair, Signal Oorps„ of Kings- ancT Knights Templar, No. 61, all of ton, and Melvin, pf South Lan- 4 oz. Bottle—50c 12-oz. Bottle—$1.00 cival. WANTED i Revelstoke, B.C., and also a mem- Carnival Crowns caster. ber of Gizeh Temple of A.A.O.N.M. DEATHS —Motor Mechanic for general re- Mr. Majx and family moved to Shrine in Vancouver, B.C. Conferred Saturday pairs anci body work. Must be Lancaster from Ormstown, Que., in •Surviving; him are three sisters: 1928. O S T R O M ’ S MACDONELL — At the home of qualified, with certificate. Apply in Mrs.. Jessie- Sandilands, who resided Crowning of a King , Queen, Burial took place in St. Andrew’s her son, Mr. Joseph Macdonell, writing to BOX S, c/o The Glen- with him iff Dalkeith; Mrs. A. S. Prince and Princess was a feature I DRUG AND JEWELLERY STORE cemetery. Greenfield, Ont., on Thursday, garry News, Alexandria. 8-2p McMéekin, also of Dalkeith, and of the big ice carnival in Glengarry February 22nd, 1991, Mrs. Donald ■Elm for cheese boxes, ^ize 16” Miss* Christena McLeod of Toronto; Gardens,'Saturday night, sponsored four brothers: William McLeod of 'by. the Recreation Association. The s John Macdonell (Saddler), aged up, TO’4” long—5’2”, $60.00 M at event was a success from- the view-, 79 years. The funeral will be held mill. Also Basswood Heading, size White Bear, Sask.; Jack M. Mc- Tribute Paid Late Leod of Quesnel, B.C.; Donald J. point of colorfully costumed kiddies t Sunday afternoon leaving Mar- 6” up—3’ long, $10.00 cord at mill.- and grown-ups as well as from the ooux and Morris Funeral Home at D. OOULTHART, Monkland, Ont. McDeod of Dalkeith, and p. D. Mc- Leod of Cornwall. attendance angle. 2.45 o’clock for Libera in St. Fin- 7-4c Mrs. John Coleman nan’s Cathedral. The body will A large delegation of Masonic: The principal prizewinners receiv- be placed in the vault for burial Many friends of the family paid brethren from Vankleelj Hill and ing crowns were: in the Spring. POULTRY WANTED tribute to the memory of Mrs. John Alexandria lodges assembled at the: King—Bradley Stimson. Coleman, by, attending the funeral home on Sunday morning to pay a Queen—Carole Brunet. —The buyer will call at your place on Monday afternoon, February last tribute of respect to their de- Prince—•'Oviallace McDonald. CARDS OF THANKS bn Monday or Tuesday of each 12th. parted brother. Many messages of Princess—Jeannine Lanthier. week, if you leave your name and Mrs. Coleman passed! peacefully Mr. and Mrs. Alex W, Chisholm sympathy were received and numer- They go to Ottawa on March 9th address at S. LAPORTE’S STORE, away at the Cornwall General Hos- and family wish to thank their Alexandria, Ont. 49,-tf ous floral offerings, among them to vie for Ottawa Valley honors. pital, on Saturday morning, at the friends and neighbours for the being several sprays from Mr. Mc- Other costume prizewinners were: age of 84 years. Her husband pre- many acts of kindness and mes- MALE HELP WANTED Leod’s affiliations in B.C. Best Clown—Wilton Cardinal. deceased her in 1944. sages of sympathy extended them The. funeral was held on Monday,. Best Lady—Miss M. Curran. Gyro-Wash, Gyro-Rinse: and 1 ATTENTION, FARMERS For many years she lived at during the time of the illness and February 19th, to Kirk Hill United 12 and xmder—Elaine Dubois, Specdkpih Vapour-Drying Action •We will be pleased to pick up dead Apple Hill, until nine years ago Church, service being conducted by mean the whitest,, cleanest, at the death of Miss Annie H. Mac- or crippled farni animals. For im- Bradley Stimson, G. Hay. Gillivray. when she and her husband went to Rev. R. H. Kelly of Glen Sandfieldi, driest;wash:you: aver saw. mediate service telephone collect, 16 and under — Annette Bedard, —The Chisholm family. live with her son-in-law* and in the absence of the regular pastor, ■ Lancaster 229; Cornwall 3730. ST. Muriell Charlefoois, Carole Brunet. Completely automatic. Dunvegan, Ont. 8-lp daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Mae- Rev. Mr. Allan, now on holidays. LAWRENCE RENDERING- CO- Diaimid, 132-Sth street west, Corn- Rev. N. F. Sharkey of Lancaster, 16 and over—Vivien Graham and Guaranteed by the' makers st May we take this opportunity to LTD. 6-42p wall.' assisted in the service and! rendered Rene Lalonde; Mr. and Mrs. Harold the famous CONNOR-THERMa thank those who aided us materially She leaves to mourn, two daugh- the solo “Life’s Railway to Heaven”, Stimson and Wayne, Elie Chenier. in removing the furniture at the NOTICE ters and two sons: Mrs. P. D. Mc- a hymn dedicated to railway men. Prior to the judging, the minor time our house was destroyed by —All accounts owing Dunvegan Intyire (Mary), Apple Hill; Mrs. W. Pallbearers were; A. L. McKenzie, league boys displayed their hockey Chenier’s Hardware fire. Their kind help is very much Garage must be paid on or before E. (MacDiarmid (Loraine), Corn- J. K. McLennan, J. A. Fraser, A?. R. prowess and there were skating appreciated. February 28th. 8-2c wall; John Elias Coleman, Alex- McLeod, .A, N. McLeod and OaHmm races ais well. Phone 104 - Alexandria —Mr. and Mrs. Harry Franklin. andria, Indiana; Arnold Cameron •McGillivray.: Laggan. 8-lp MISCELLANEOUS Coleman, Cornwall; also seven The remains were placed in the granictehildren: Mrs. Charles Sloan, vault for burial In the Spring. The family of the late Duncan D. M & N SCRAP DEALERS Alexandria, Indiana; Donald Cole- o MaoCrimmon, Laggan, wish to ex- —We buy everything in scrap, such man, Sommerville, N.J.; Mrs. Wil- press sincere appreciation to neigh- as machinery, scrap metals, bags fred Lagroix, Orval A. J. MacDiar- bours, friends and relatives, for and rags. Apply at Campeau’s for- mid, Donald Ernest MacDiarmid, Council Approves... mer garage, Guaytown, north of BUSINESS and PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY théhvmany acts of kindness during (Continued from Page 1) Alexandria. Phone 14-R-13. 8-10c Mariana MacDiarmid and Fred their recent bereavement, with Coleman, Cornwall; also five great- property rights along the east special thanks to the neighbours grandchildren. shoreline . Of the lake. It was found PHYSICIANS AUCTIONEERS FUEL AND STOVE OIL who opened the road to the house. New Committee Is The funeral took place from the that the property owners have 8-lp .home of her daughter, Mrs. Mac- rights only to the land mentioned A. L. CREWSON, WILFRID VILLENEUVE Planning Concert Diarmid, with burial in North on their deeds, and Mr. Stidwill has M.D., C.M. (McGill) L.M.C.C. FOR SALE Branch cemetery. Rev. C. R. Rudd, staked out a street allowance be- EYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT LICENSED AUCTIONEER -TEXACO- A St. Patrick’s Concert is planned B.A., B.D., of Knox United Church, tween Derby and Lochiel streets, Glasses Supplied and Fitted Glengarry - Stormont - Dundas —Grey Gander for sale. Apply to along the stretch now being filled Telephone 1245 Bilingual PRODUCTS MRS. DAN GREVTER, MacOrim- for the night of March 16th by the Cornwall, officiated! at the home in as a playground. Weather con- 132 West Second St., Cornwall, Ont. — R.R. 1, GREENFIELD — mon, Ont. 8-lp Entertainment Committee recently and cemetery, when he gave a very Please make appointment with Fuel Oil 18c per gal. organized to plan events for Aléx- impressive message. ditions have curtailed the filling Phone: Alexandria 6-W-3 the secretary Stove Oil 21c per gal. —7-year-old Bay Mare for sale; ander Hall. There will’ be a one- The pallbearers were; Raymond operations and it was decided only Office open #-12, 1-5, Saturday 9-12 20-tfc act play and variety numbers. Lynch, . Ralph Grant, Fred Ed- the street allowances should be weight about 1,050, lbs. Price $50. TAILORING Can be seen at the LOUTS CAR- All sections of st. Finnan’s parish wards, Morris Fitzpatrick, Arthur completed before Spring. BARRISTERS are represented on the committee, Villeneuve and Jim Earner. Council received a notice from MUSIC LESSONS RIERE, Jr., home, Elgin Street, R. P. MILLIGAN, K.C. Alexandria, 8-lc which is headed by Dr, D. D. Mc- Among relatives and friends ffom Raoul Lalonde, owner of the build- P. GUINDON & SONS Intosh, chairman; and Angus R. a distance present ' at the funeral ing, that rental f6r the clerk’s Office D. J. MacDONALD, B.A. ALTERATIONS DISTRIBUTORS —One Baby Carriage and one Desk. McDonald, secretary. Other mem- were her son, John É. Coleman, would be $45 a month after March Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries LADIES’ AND MEN’S Apple Hill — Phone 25-J-3 In good condition. Apply to G. G bers are: Lome Whelan, Mrs. R. j; Alexandria, Indiana; Miss Ada 1st. Half of this amount is paid 165 Pitt Street TAILORING AUBRY, Alexandria. Phone 225. McCallum, Mrs. Harry Keyes, Mrs. Johnson, Ottawa; Mr. and Mrs. by the Public Utilities Commission. CORNWALL, ONT. — PHONE 2775 ELECTRICAL . ' ' . 5-3c Arch. M. MacDonald, Mrs. Peter Wiffred Marjerrison, Neville, Sask.; Relief .accounts for January tot- ALEXANDRIA OFFICE: AGNES VALADE McPherson, Mrs. J. P. McDonell, as well as many friends from Corn- alled $1,248.52. Insurance Bldg., Main St. North KENYON ST. W. PHONE 189 —Baled Clover and Grass Hay, Stuart ^McCormick, J. miter Mc- wall, Apple Hill, Monckland, Avon- Thursday of Each Week, 9-5 ALEXANDRIA, ONT. ELECTRIC MOTORS 19-tf three wire; also government tested Dqnialdî Leonard Cuthbert, Howard more and surrounding district. — also — NEW — REBUILT Clover Seed. Phone Lancaster 3031, Morris, Hugh McDougall, J. Daniel Many floral offerings and mes- Repairs and Rewinds > D. MASON MacLENNAN. 8-4p Something New INSURANCE Violin, Hawaiian and Spanish to all makes and sizes MacDonald, John V. McDonell and sages of sympathy Were received by Guitar Lessons Dan Q’Oonnor. the family. INSURANCE — Prompt Service — TO LET o THE DRUG STORE Fire, Life, Sickness, Accident, Auto- WELDING SERVICE SURGESON & SON mobile, Plate Glass, Dwelling, Fur- 29À Second St. E. Phone 502-J —Two rooms for light housekeep- Five million dollars is needed by ☆ ☆ Noxerria Special niture, Theft, Wind and Farm Cornwall, Ont. ing; centrally located. Apply to your Red Cross Society this year to Buildings. QUICK, EFFICIENT RAYMOND CHENIER, Ottawa St., carry on its work of mercy at home Noxema Skin Cream Alexandria. 7-tf and abroad. , AHS CHIT-CHAT MORRIS BROS. ' ☆ ☆ Large 10 oz. .size, Phone 33 Alexandria By RUBY MORRISON while they last ELECTRIC MOTORS Hi! Welcome back everyone. ANGUS H. McDONELL WELDING Repairs — Rewinding Last week, due to the epidemic, Dr. Life and Automobile a Specialty SERVICE Dolan, District Health Officer, ad- $1.00 85 Sparks St. R.R. No. 4 NEW and REBUILT MOTORS vised thé dismissal of school until R 411 2-3525 Tel. 105-R-l You’ll save time, work and FOR SALE Ottawa, Ont. Alexandria Monday. We are glad the teachers REVLON money, if you let us handle are all back now, and there is a “EVERYTHING IN INSURANCE” regular attendance among pupils. AQUAMARINE MIST 10-tf your more complicated APPLIANCES Revlon scores again with HERE’S YOUR CHANCE TO GET STARTED We hopfe everyone is burning the Chartered Accountants machinery repairs midnight oil. Why! What else but something new and different Wiring of All Kinds ON A PROFITABLE CAREER! that exams are due from Thursfay in Toilet Waters WHEN YOU HAVE A BREAK You don’t need'experience'or an advanced education! PHONE 228 W, ALEXANDRIA You can learn - while - you - earn from our proven until Saturday. ■ at -—— methods that doesn’t eliminate anyone who is mech- Congratulations to Jeannine Roy>, N. Lacourciere, CA and we will be ready to give you anically inclined and ambitious. Graduates say the who has just competed in the East- EUGENE OUELLETTE theory is easily mastered by our specially prepared B.A.; L.Ph;; M.COM.; R.I.A. immediate attention. Electrical Contractor illustrated engineering assignments. Our free employ, ern Ontario International Rotary 50 and $3.75 ment service is ready to assist YOU to find a bettei Festival of Music. She has tied 1st and worth it. CHARTERED Main Street Phone 247 >aying job! There’s a chance in diesel for a real in the 21 years and under class, and iuture. Get going today for bigger pay,! ACCOUNTANT ALEXANDRIA' ALEXANDRIA We also Teach Electrical Refrigeration — a 2nd in that of 17 years and undér. REVLON Adjudicators were William Clock Air Conditioning—Gas and Electric Welding DREAMY-EYED MAKE UP 45 RIDEAU ST., OTTAWA Chicago Vocational Training Corp., Ltd. and Gordon Thorne of London, WELDING SHOP CONTRACT WIRING 504 Dominion Square Bldg., Montreal England. Our congratulations also The right colour for every LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE: go' to Agathe Roy, who won 4th mood anti costume in Former Graham Creamery Building — and — 935 Weston Rd., Toronto 9—714 Time Bldg., Winnipeg on Armouries Hill. 12520-102 Ave., Edmonton—422 Richard St., Vancouver place in the 13 years and under Mascara :— Eye Shadow Bernard Cardinal, B.A. APPLIANCE REPAIRS Transportation is paid to one of America’s class. Eye-Brow Pencil Largest Practical Shops. Our boys are eagerly waiting to TEL. 174 ALEXANDRIA Wilfrid Lefebvre, Prop. Refrigeration Installation at begin the play-offs 'in hockey, so and Repairs let’s, hope the ground-hog hasn’t PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS TO THE CHICAGO VOCATIONAL failed us by this threat of spring. We handle General Electric TRAINING CORPORATION LTD. We want a bit more cold weather to McLIISTER’S MAIL Please forward complete information and a McKECHNIE, BOLES AND MacLEOD Commercial Refrigeration THIS FREE LESSON put the ice into hape for our fast- DRUG STORE CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS NAME flying champs. Alexandria Phone 52 Donald F. McKechnie, Licensed Trustee in Bankruptcy Your Satisfaction Guaranteed COUPON Watch for our annual Open ADDRESS House, which will be held on March GLENGARRY FIRE INSURANCE BUILDING AGE OCCUPATION 22nd. The teachers in charge are Main Street North ' GNA-8-51 planning a better than ever display FOR APPOINTMENTS CALL MR. CHISHOLM MacINNES ELECTRIC this year. Everyone is welcome. HEAD OFFICE 186 BANK STREET, OTTAWA TEL. 21d29 SALES AND SERVICE Plan now to come. BRANCH 113A PITT ST., CORNWALL TEL. 4587 Phone 22 — MaxviUe 8-tt