# What woman wouldn’t en- • Exhibitors who win at a joy a new Ute after being Seed Fair must have fair years behind a curtain? The Glengarry seed. ONE OP CANADA’S AWARD-WINNING- WEEKLY NEWSPAPER’S-

yOL. LXIX — No. 13 ALEXANDBIA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MARCH 31st, 1960 SINGLE COPY lOo Wife Arrives From Poland St. Isidore Alexandria To Be Featured On Bank Robbed Police road blocks were set up Television Show Over CBOT Alter 33 Years’ Separation in town and county early this Alexandria is to be featured on a Paul Pawlicki, who farms on Lot locate Mrs. Pawlicki in Plovna, afternoon in an attempt to in* television program over CBOT Ot- tawa, Friday, May 6th, complete 8-2nd 'Kenyon, is reunited, with his Poland. tercept two men who robbed the More Than $700 wife after a 33-year separation. with interviews with the editor of Efforts to bring her out from be- Bank of Nova Scotia at St. Mrs. Pawlicki reached Montreal this paper and Major Angus A. hind the Iron Curtain finally were Isidore of a reported $67,000. McDonald. The program is After- from Poland on Tuesday, there to crowned with success and arrange- For Red Cross be met by her husband and con- ments made thidugh the Red Cross St. Isidore is some six miles noon Edition, which is seen at 3.30 pm. on Wednesdays and Prldays. veyed to her new home in Glen- to reunite her here with her north of Maxville. From The Front garry. 'Pile show is recognizing the husband. Details of the robbery were editors of four VaUey newspapers Theirs is a story all too common' First returns in the County Red Before coming to this area five unavailable at press time, but which won honors in the Better amoirg the peoples of Central years ago, Mr. Pawlicki had been Cross canvass are in from the front Europe. there were reports a good des- Newspapers ccmpetitlons of the operating a grocery store in Mont- Ontario Weekly Newspapers Asso- of Glengarry, reports Harold Stlm- Mr. Pawlicki emigrated to Can- cription of the get-away car son, campaign chairman, and they real. He is on the former Jim ciation in February. They are in ada in 10OT and was employed in Rafferty farm which he purchased. had been obtained. total a respectable $71030. Montreal. His ■wife and daughter Alexandria, Winchester, Renfrew were to join him soon but then His wife likes what she has seen and Carp. The program taped here Included are returns fromi Glen ■came the depression and there was of Canada and Gleixgarry, Mr. by a TV crew Tuesday morning will Walter, Lancaster, Siraimerstown, mo money for passage. Then came Pawlicki declares, but she cannot Legion Notes be the fii-st of the series to be East Front, Bainsville, St. Raphael Worldi War n and Russia’s in- speak English and she is lonesome sho'wn. and North Lancaster. James A. ■vasion of Poland. AH contact with i for fier daughte- and three grand- AH ex-service personnel and their In addition to the personal inter- McArthim, Lancaster, organized the ihis wife was broken off and it was children. ■dependents are in-vited to take ad- views, the program -will show cam- oanvass in that part of the county •only last Christinas that the Inter- He hopes to bring them to Can- vantage of a free Legion service. era shots of Alexandria. A camera and late returns are expected to inational Bed Cross ■was able tolada next year. Mr. H. W. Moyer, Service Bureau crew wiU come here after the snow swell the total. Officer from Ottawa, 'wlU be at goes to take pictures of the park, James Wightman, county presi- Legion Branch Clubrooms on April churches, industrial plants and dent, and Mr. Stimson were out 12th next at 5:30 pm. to give skiUed other photogenic features of the Friday organizing the north end advice on veterans’ benefits. Any- towi. Retain Capital Punishment Say one 'With questions on war disability of the county and canvassing in pensions, war veterans’ allowance Edie Howzer and Dave Scrivens, this area is now underway. Some Five Of Seven In News’ Poll (burned out pension), treatment, or who are featured on the show, scattered contributions have come hospital care is urged' to call or headed the five-man crew which in, but no final returns from can- AN EARLY 'WINNER' — One of the early winners in the Kinsmen By a majority of more than 5-2 f write the local Service Officer, Com- ■invaded the News office Tuesday vassers. Music Festival at CSirnwall,, Tuesday moming, was 'WILLIAM morning with special lighting ef- Kews’ readers say retain Capital rade Larry Slcard', who wiU arrange VTIiTiFlNEUVE, eight-year-old son of Dr. and Mrs. Bernard 'Fffle- an appointment. In a recent issue we reported Pimishment, results of our poU fects, camera and tape recording neuve, Alexandria. He gleefully disiHaiys the First-Place certificate Sympathy Shown apparatus. Mrs. HoWZer inter- Mrs. James 'Wightman, Alexiandrla, :show after two weeks’ returns have Veterans in possession of draw had been elected the new presdient won for boys’ vocal solo, eight years and under, in which class he been assessed. tickets are again reminded to bring viewed the editor on matters con- scored 83 points. Sister Barbara was a gtoid medallist in piano solo, cerning the Ontario Weekly News- of Glengarry Red .Cross. A man is There have been 78 votes oast, a them in together 'with receipts be- 10 and under, while Kathleen was second in her piano group, six In Tragic Death papers Association, weekly news- at the helm this time, in the person healthy 46 having been received fore and not later than April the and under. —Gut courtesy Oom-wall Standard-Freeholder. 6th, the night of the general papers in general and on editorial of Mr. Wightman. since last issue, almost all by mail. meeting. writing. o Of these, 27 answered “Yes”; eight Williamstown Boy voted “Yes” with reservations; 11 The règret and' sympathy of many The Zone G-4 Bally wiU be heldi' Major McDonald was interviewed Won Newspaper in Legion Clubrooms on Sunday by Dave Scrivens outside the office said “No”. relatives friends and neighbors in WroT^rff - - - and the presence of the camera and Mrs. J. L. O. Sabourin, Kenyon Perth Shoe Plans To Start , 'The breakdown for the two-weeks the accidental death of James Ian audio effects was of considerable Macdonell, 10, of Williamstown, was All veterans are urged to attend street, had a possible $1,5(K) in her ■period is 4S “Yes”; 13 "Yes” with interest to passers-by. The Major grasp Tuesday night when her evidenced during the ■w’ake and at these meetings, as there are several reservations; 20 “No”. was asked about the early settle- needed number turned up in an the Saturday funeral. ' important matters to be discussed Training Operators Soon Again this week there have been ■ ment of the td-wn and couirty and Ottawa paper’s newspaper bingo. ’Ihe son of John Angus Mac- concerning their interests and the interesting comments on some of branch in general. put in a plug for the Glengarry Her prize dwindled to $100 yester- Easter week is the target date for the baUots. Writes one, “Yes, and ; doneU, a teacher at Char-Lan High, MAJOR ANGUS MCDONALD, Highland Games, of which he is day when at least 15 ■winners hod start of the training program at 3 also favor prohibition and' the end, Miff bis wife, Kathleen Fehrenbach, PR.O., Branch 423. chairmen. , reported In. Area Talenl the Perth Shoe Co. plant. We ex- ■of aU alcoholic beverages”. ' An-j the youth was fatally injured at pect to start training a few oper- other “Yes” voter is a bit sardonic I noon, Thursday of last week, when ators Easter Monday, reports R. M. with “Try ’Em After” which might'he feU under the wheels of a hay Showed Well ID Braid, and- actual production of indicate a negative attitude. “The wagon being dra'wn by a tractor. Glengarry Seed Exhibitors Dominated Annual shoes will follow soon- after. The accident occitrred as the lad judge and jury are paid to assume A News’ reporter visited- the plant attempted to climb onto the first Music Festival the responsibility, not the people”, United Counties Show At Chesterville, Monday yesterday to inspect progress on ■opines another. dï two hay w^agons being drawn by a tractor. PeUow students at WÜ- At least Rw gold-medals came conversion. All lighting Is com- Prom ‘one who has suffered’ Myles MacMillan of. McCrimmon. for the United Counties and the liamstown Public School saw him to Alexandj^, thÿ -week from the pleted and machine wiring is now comes this thought—“Yes I do. Is was named grand chagapion ex ' first held in Dundas. Kinsmen Pesti-val at Oom- In progress. The cutting depart- there any way to bring back to life beneath the wheels of the Forum Visited Its hibitor for the second straight year, ! Dr. Tossell outlined, some of the wali, which -is stfil underway. Gold ment is all set with six cutting a 14-year-old girl raped and mur- second wagon which crushed his and Hugh Fisher of Maxvüle, was j proced-ures used by business organ- chest. He died while betog con- medals are awarded, those scoring machines. Model C Clickers, and six dered and' left In a field for animals premier exhibitor, as Glengarryjizations in taking stock of present 85 points or better, and there were handi-cutting tables ready for the to prey on?” veyed to the oflice of Dr. Woelber. Former President seed men swept most of the top'and future prospects. He advised Pupils of the local Separate many others close to that flgme. first trainees. Among those voting “Yes” placings at the United Counties j local farmers to concentrate on 'Winning the coveted medals were Many machines are in place and reservations, is this comment “I am School, accompanied by their ’The members of Lochinvar Farm Seed Fair held Monday and Tues- maximum ■ production of high- teachers, attended the wake Friday, Barbara 'ViUeneuve for piano solo, another stilpment is due Satiuday. in favor of capital punishment, but Forum journeyed to Alexandria on day at Ohesterville. 1 nutrient forage crops. not the hangman’s noose”. Accom- as did the various classes of Char- Monday, March 28th, to visit with 10 years and under, ^ points; But there will -be a lot more In- panying this vote is a poem plead- Lan High School. PellO'W' pupils of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. McMillan, on Bill Franklin of Laggan, copped ‘Keep up your supply of hay and Groce Morris, piano solo, 11 years stallations before the three work ing for kindness to horses. Winiamstown Public School attend- the occasion of his birthday. Plans the Alexandria Lions Club trophy silage”, he said, “no matter what and under, 86 points; Billy Morris, lines are complete. ’The plant will “I do not”, resolutely 'Wkltes one ed the funeral in a body and formed were made for next year’s Forum in junior seed judging to make the modifications you make in grain vocal solo, II years, and under, 85 boalst 318 machines and! Vork sta- who is against capital punishment. an honor guard. and Mrs. William Fraser and Neil Glengarry s-wteep complete. crops. points; Suzanne Viau and Made- tioBS when in full production, but “Have we a right to take a life”, It was held' from his late home Blair were appointed a committee This was probably the most suc- He recommended putting green leine Besner, pupils at Maria Gor- not as many employees as some will asks another, who adds, “put them at 10 o’clock Saturday rooming, to to open Farm- Forum. Roy Barton cessful Seed Fair in area history. oats or grain com in the silo if the etti Academy, vocal duet, 88 points. be operating three or four until full capacity is reached. behind bars for life and let it be St. Mary’s Oh-urch, where Bev. D. is treasm^r, and Mrs. May Mac- ’There were 121 exhibits by 46 com- season. ^ turned out to be one that An incomplete list erf those scor- B. McDougaU, pastor, chanted the for as long as they live; no release Donald, secretary. The dues for petltors and' there was standing yi^)l®ff little hay. ing from town and county foUows. A new feature along the celling Requiem Mass. Rev. D. A. Kerr except the grave”. “Certainly not! 1959 were sent in and the treasurer room only in ChesterviUe’s L^ion This was the first year the event These are in addition to the first is a plant--wdde dust ooUeotor or No! No!” a -vehement voter ex- and Rev. Leo MacDonell were pres- gave his report. A euchre party was Hall, Tuesday afternoon, for the included a showing of hay samples. placings scored: by the four gold extractor which will suck all d:ust presses his or her opinion. ‘Wtites ent in the Sanctuary. planned for Monday, April 4th, in program of addresses, presentation And the sponsoring United Coun- medalists: from the work area to be bagged another, “Anyone who followed the Interment -was In St. Margaret’s McCrimmon School. of prizes and' auction sale of seed. ties Crop Improvement Association outdoors. Coffin case wiU have -to vote No”. cemetery, Glen Nevis. was congratulated on the response Piano Solo Those present listened- to the “I think the frmdamen-tal thing A humidifying cabinet for “last- Editor’s note — 'With all due re- Six altar boys of St. Mary’s parish to the addition. Class 1, 6 years and under — 1st, spect for the opinion of the writer'acted as pallbearers: Huntley Mc- Forum broadcast, followed by cards, to do is to reassess alt aspects of Nicole Poirier, 81 (daughter of for- ing” the leather has been built on winners being Mrs. Norman Mc- farm crop practices as production Among the highlights of the the floor and a cement vault Is to of a letter to the editor in this ’ Donell, Hubert MicDonell, Kenneth trophy presentation ceremony, con- mer Jeaiinine Roy); 2nd, Kathleen issue, we have found the resffits of McDonald, Wendle Lefeb-vre, Doug- Neil and Mrs. Donald Fraser. A units”. Dr. W. E. Tossell, depart- ■Villeneuve, 80. be erected- on the east end of -the gift was presented to Mr. McMillan ment of field husbandry, Ontario ducted- by J. YT. McRae of the On- plant for storing all inflammable this poll interesting and informa- las Jarvo and Gerald Jarvo. Class 2, 7 years and -under —. 2nd, and a hearty vote of thanks ex- Agricultural College, told farmers tario Department of Agriculture in materials and liquids. tive and feel most of our readers Chief mourners were his sorrow- KemptviUe, was the presentation of Susan Conway,. 75. ing parents; one brother, Roderick, tended to him for his -Work with of the United Counties at the Seed would agree with us that the sur- i H. Harris McNish awards to men Class 4, 9 years and imder — 1st, Miss Janet Byatt of St. Raphael vey -was worthwhile. The results 14, and two sisters, Mary Catherine, the Farm Forum. A delicious birth- Fair. Is already on duty as stenographer- day cake, made by Mrs. Roy Barton, ! from each county nominated for the Mary Conway, 82. we deem newsworthy and so make 17, and Barbara, four. It was the third annual Seed Fair 'honor. Stanley Fraser from Stor receptionist and three local men no apology for front-paging the Ian was bom in Timmins and was enjoyed, and all sang “Happy Class 16, 10 years and under — have been taken on staff after pass- BirthdaY’ to Mr. MoMiHan. mont, Gerald Adams from Dundas, 3rd, Barbara VHleneuve. story. (Continued on Page 5) and Harold Blaney of Glengarry, ing the aptitude tests. Assisting in Lions Had Annual accepted the framed certificates. Vocal Solo—Boys machine -wiring at the moment, Ray Teen-Agers Night George Suffel of Moimtain, di- Class 170, 8 years and under—1st, Charlebois wijl be the first cutting rector of the provincial OSCIA, WUliam', VUleneuve. 83. room trainee while Jacques Le- It w'as Teen-agers Night at the acted as chafcman, and introduced Vocal Solo—Girls feb'vre and Benoit Leroux will be regular Lions Club meeting Mon- the seed judge, John Russell of the Eleven years and under — 2nd, on machines. day night when some 25 youfhs plant products division, Canada De- Prances Macdonald, 84; 3rd, Jeanie ■When the plant set-up is com- from town and district were guests partment of Agriculture; Neil Stos- Morris,. 83. plete, Perth Shoe plans to hoW an of individual members, many, of koph, field husbandry department, Violin Solo Open Day when the public will ie them with their fathers. |KAS; and William Ewing of ’Vahk- Invited to Inspect the factory, and Class 53, 11 years and under — see how shoes are produced. in addition to a satisfying sup-lj««^ <«f^6d the out- 2nd, David Mutch, Maxville, 79. ■per the young folk enjoyed ^n Choral Speaking—^Rural Schools illustrated talk on Japan by Rev. On Monday evening there was a Class 210 — 1st, Charlottenburgh, Dr. Cheney Saw Alex McDonald, S.F.M., who showed | special program open to the public, Summerstown, 84 (won Peter Tor- his striking collection pf colored I with 'W. R. Milne of OAC as guest rance ’Trophy); and Munroe’s Mills, World Curling slides depicting the people and speaker, on the subject of saving 82 (Apple Hill). scenic shots of country in labor In the dairy barn. There was An Alexandria curler of old, Dr. which he serves as a Scarboro a panel discussion on dairy proc Duet H. L. Cheney of Ottawa, is home missioner. trees by J. Y. Humphries, Larry Class 191, 12 years and under — following a 10-day trip to Scotland Donoghue, S. E. McLeod-, Wflfred 1st, Gordon Roberts and Carl Beck- by a group of curlers who, witnessed VaUance, Millard Grant and George stead-, Martintown, 82; 3rd, Darlene the Scotch Cup curling matches. ■Suffel. Cai'son and Richard Amelotte, Max- Among the party was Mr. Ciu'ling, Moose Creek CNR Complete results of judging will tinto-wn, 79. Ken 'WatsoB, of Wmnii)eg. Station Entered be found in another, column. Jtor the second time in a month Goi^tti Academy Pupil Dates Announced For Immunization the CNR station at Moose Greek was broken into Monday night by Wins First Place thieves who unsuccessfully tried to • In the district competitions held Clinics, Pre-School Children rob the safe. in Hawkesbury, Miss Marcelle ”1710 Stormont, Dundas and Glen- ALEXANDRIA — Alexander Hall, About 4:30 a.m. Tuesday pro- Béguin ranked first among 21 can- garry Health Unit has armo-unced Tuesday,' 2:00 pm., April 5th, May vincial police noticed a window in didates, aU Grade Xn -wimiers of dates for immunization clinics for 3rd, May 31st. (Sacred Heart thè station had been opened. The the “Concoru-s de Français”, in infants three months of age and Parish HoU, 2nd Clinic). back of the safe bore chisel marks, Eastern Ontario. over and pre-school ' children. NORTH LANCASTER — Separ- but fhe thieves apparently had Miss Séguin, .pupil of Bev. Sister The imm-unlzation is against ate School-, 'Wednesday, 9:30 am., been frightened away before any- M. Paul, CS.C., of Maria Goretti diphthei-ia, whooping cough, teta- April eth. May 4th, Jime 1st. thing was taken. Academy, Alexandria, is the daugh- nus, poliomeyeHtis and small pox. GREEN VALLEY — St. Mary’s It is not known if the intruders ter of Mr. and Mrs. Romeo Séguin The three clinics in seven Glengarry Church basement, "Wednesday, 10:45 LOCAL SOLDIER IN GERMANY—In bitterly cold weapons efficiency and physical toughness. Check- gained entry through tire window of Ste-Anne de Prescott. centres wiU be held os follows: weather, coupled with high winds, infantry and am., April 6th, May 4th, June 1st. ing cooking stoves in the bivouac area are, from or by using a special key. The finals will be held in Ottawa APPLE HILL—^L^on HaU, ’Tues- GLEN ROBERTSON — RO. armoured troops cf Canada’s NATO land force left, Corporal Donald MacDonald of Apple Hill; On March 8th thieves moved the during Easter week.' A scholarship day, 9:30 am., April 5th, May 3rd. carried out field firing exercises at Hohne Ranges Church basement, ’Wednesday, 1:30 Rifieman Lome MHliken of Red Lake, Ont., and safe 300 feet from, the station and award of $300 wiU be ■presented to May 31st. pm., April 6th, May 4th, June 1st. near Hamburg, Germany, recently. More than 300 Cpl. Norman Bastin of Hamilton, Ont. concealed it in the snow. It was the winner by the Association de MAXVILLE — Community Hall, soldiers of 4th Canadian Infantry Brigade Group DALKEITH — R.C. Church Hall, found unopened by the provincial l’Enseignement Français de i’On- Tuesd'ay, 11:00 am.. April 5th, May Wednesday, 3:15 pm., April 6th, were engaged in the exercises designed to Increase ■ —National Defence Photo. police. tario. 3rd. May 31st. May 4th, June 1st. Fape 2 J The Glengari’y News, Alexandria, Ontario, Thursday, March 31st, 1960

1 T O R I A Here is a common ED IT’S OBR OPINION LS sense rule of nayPlfiv :^aie. tVlMUfV MmJMeU)Mowing Before Drink Dnving and thumb to guide social drinkers ^fter Thia Number WAIT THIS MANY HOURS BEFORE DRIVING Let’s All Go After That Weekly Cheque who may have to af Drini FARMERS are usually the least likely to to be inserted in their individual books. drive home. he found aboard the government’s gravy There’d be a bit of change left over, he Roughly two Itl points out, and you could keep that for your I train but we hear of at least one who hours sobering-up earns enough Unemployment Insurance trouble. Get enough area farmers corre- 0 time is needed stamps through the winter to make him sponding and it could mean a considerable WITH OUR eligible for the weekly cheque while he sum with which to meet your grocery bills. after two drinks, DO operates his farm in Spring and Summer. Come Spring, he continues, you’d fire all says the RAMBLING Knowing something of how public money these correspondents and forward them Alcoholism is being squandered through this scheme we their Insurance books. Then they’d apply REPORTER for similar work and such being totally un- Research should not have been surprised to find a by ED. farmer who draws Unemployment Insur- available, what could those obliging men in Foundation, plus DODO ance., But we were a bit shocked; and that the Unemployment Insurance office do but a further two- A Sunday driver may not be can be taken as a com'pliment by farmers start mailing them out their cheques. hour wait for ODDOO much on religion but he ca" sure scare hell out of a lot of collectively. If they as a class are not get- Chari b for average 140-lb. prrtnn. There they’d be, raking in the easy each additional folks. Those 25-30 Iba. lighter thould add ting this dole, so easily available, it must be money even as they raked their hay. And, drink after the n/$M. SM. I$« because they still retain a bit of pride in our alter ego reminds you’d have your wkUlcry S ton or S Soule ona hour- Thoar the tame atnoiml second one. •berry «I beer heavier eotild deduct one hour. Not The Answer their independence. They hesitate to stoop grocery bills paid. • This is the machine age but that to it, perhaps. Sounds implausible to you? Well, maybe doesn’t mean mechanization is al-' But if almost every other class of society a better plan can be devised. But let’s get’ ways the answer. is to be paid to rest through a winter of to it. Let’s figure out some way in which Keep Them Off Tractors Like the local restauranteur who idleness why should not the farmer get a every farmer, every factory worker, every installed a cigarette ■vending ma- bit of the gravy, too ? white-collar office slave, finds him or herself LETTERS (Toronto Telegram) chine in order to save his hired help eligible for Unemployment Insurance and The Ontario Association of Rural Municipalities will ask the Province the long walk to the coimter every Our alter ego has been busy studying the to the time someone wanted to buy a pack.. situation and he has come up with a plan insistent on getting his or her share. 'to let boys of 14 drive tractors on public highways. The appropriate answer Why should some of us slave to earn the to this request is simple and unequivocal. Boys of 14 shouldn’t be allowed It wasn’t a week before it was whereby sons of the soil, hereabouts, might EDITOR to drive tractors at all. being given up for a bad job. He be enabled to fill a book with those Insur- money to pay the taxes that are needed to A tractor is a dangerous machine. Between March 1st and August was losing a cent on each pack and ance stamps next winter and rake in their keep millions of dollars flowing each year 31st last year there were 304 tractor accidents in Ontario. Seventeen the girls were being called to the weekly cheques come Spring. The plan may in and out of the Unemployment Insurance Objects To Poll people were killed, eight maimed and 201 injured. The loss of work counter anyway to make change for: not be foolproof yet ; it may require further fund? Why should some of us be forced Editor, The Glengarry News. resulting from, tractor injuries totalled 3,800 days. The accidents cost the machine. polishing; but here it is. to pay into that pot without any expectation Sir: I do not quarrel witb your $34,500 in hospital bills and $200,000 in property damage. Why don’t you, he suggests to us, hire of ever getting anything back; while others right to conduct a survey on thé This is a machine for a child to operate? Smely the Association can To err is human; to cover it. farmers wholesale next fall as correspond- are milking it as fast as it’s filled? subject of Capital Punishment in better usd its time than in drawing up requests like this. up is, too. ents for your paper? Their mailings each Let’s get so many applying for Unem- youi own paper, though I disagree ■week might be restricted to inserting a ployment Insurance that the egg-heads who with it in principle. But to intrude Edward, For Peace couple pf bucks in an envelope, and with are nuining it from Ottawa ,will run for a blow by blow description of it into Preface To Liberty Week • An alert reader of the Durhanr this you could purchase an Insurance stamp cover. my home, under the guise of front Chronicle has suggested to editor- page news, is a step I regard with (The Durham Chronicle) George Oadogan that the Queen, abhorrence. and Prince Philip should have If Mr. Villeneuve seeks the guid- We read a book last week! Before you sneer at the unimportance of that remark, stop and think. called the new baby Edward, rather Help Lions Help Crippled Children ance of such polls in the casting of than Andrew. his vote, he will fall far short of How long is it since you read one? . There are ways and ways of reading a book. To our mind, the best Then, he points out, the initials No doubt many of you have responded Help had to be sought from the Ontario what I expect of our elected repre- of the Royal family, Philip, Eliza- sentative. way is to have a nice, riew-looking. book that appears not to have- been already to the Easter Seal fund spon- Society and as a result almost $1,000 of the too much read by anyone else. beth, Anne, Charles and Edward,., sored by Alexandria Lions Club. If you $1,200 raised in Glengarry last year for On- E. DOUGLAS MacMILLAN The next thing, is to have a clear sweep at it. None of this, dipping would speU PEACE. have not yet sent in your donation it is sug- tario’s crippled children was spent right Glen Sandfield, Ont. in 2 or 3 times a day. What we like is to carry that hook everywhere with Edward is part of the new baby’s; gested that. there is no better time than here in Glengarry by the Lions Club on o us, to the table, upstairs and down (you know what we mean) and to bed. name but he will be known ass right now. Glengarry’s crippled children. Not Fool-Proof To be absolutely munersed in that book and' blind, deaf and dumb to every- Prince Andrew and we doubt not. Right across, the province 222 Service The fund is used to supply leg braces -'The automobile is a wonderful thing else. To have the characters in that book so real that real people but that the Scots appreciate this, boon to man, when handled cor- around us seem to be the unreal ones. Know what we mean? naming of the young prince after- Clubs are working in their communities and treatments, special boots, to meet in- their patron saint. with the Ontario Society for Crippled Chil- ordinately heavy medical treatment, for rectly. But it is not fool-proof. To begin that book with delight and to finish it with a feeling of Thousands of reckless drivers kill sorrow that a delightful experience is over. To come back to the world Latin scholar that 'we are not, we- dren. They are sponsoring the fund raising transportation to hospitals and summer cannot help pointing out to friend'. through sale of Easter Seals and remitting camps where the province’s crippled chil- or cripple themselves . every year like a sleep-walker coming out of a trance. proving this. — Trenton (Ont.) In these days of rush and hurry and meetings and work and television George that the Royal family al- half of the amount raised to the Ontario dren may enjoy a holiday under qualified iCourler-Advocate. and telephone, the time to read a book comes all too rarely. ready had peace in its latin form Society to help meet its province - wide supervisors. before Andrew was even thought of- service work. Your donations are channelled into “Pace”, it’s spelt, and if the Royal family Is like any ordinary family Half of the proceeds remain in a special helping rehabilitate the young among us it will have less peace tmtil Andrew fund to be disbursed right here in Glengarry who may be doomed to limp through life DO YOU at least gets through the teething to aid crippled children in many ways. It unless we who walk with ease lend them a Syr^e stage. is worth noting that last year’s Easter Seals helping hand. * * REMEMBER? drive in Glengarry brought some $1,200 In this season of lenten self-denial, what Gleaned from the fyles of THE GLENGARRY NEWS Living a double life gets you into the Lions’ Club special fund. Half this better way to distribute lenten alms than nowhere, just about twice as sum was retailed, but it proved inadequate to-help finance tlie fund- for crippled chil- Ten Years Ago . Church, Cornwall, who is now pas- the establishment of another in- fast. tor of Our Lady of Angels parish. dustry. here in the near future. It *«4:*4<*>$* to meet the local needs because of one seri- dren? Make that donation now to the Friday, March 31st, 1950— ous case in Lochiel Township which proved Crippled Children’s fund of Alexandria Moose Creek, was presented with a is a paper hag factory on the prem- We’re All For More Sense; Greenfield and Dunvegan ai-e to purse from his former parishioners ises of the new match factory a heavy drain on the fund. Lions Club. at a representative gathering in building. — J. À.. Macdonell, K.C., In the Dollar have street lights m 1950, Kenyon's • It kinda goes against the grain Clouncil has decided. — A native of ■Corbett Hall, Cornwall, on Tuesday has given the contract for erection evening. Father Cameron had been of a substantial addition to his to agree with something said by Dunvegan, Major Donald MacRae, Premier Frost. But your Rambling What Was It Like In Your Day, Dad? ED., Montreal dentist, has been in the parish for 12 years. —,M. C. present modem home, to J. J. Mc- Intosh, contractor. — Business is Reporter tries to be, fair. So when appointed* 'to command the Cana- Cameron scholarships at Queen’s NE of the more readable columnists in University for the best Gaelic schol- humming at the Munro & McIntosh the Honorable Leslie aims, his um- O critics, and gangsters named Legs Diamond, dian Bisley squad 'which will go to brage at the exchange rate between the daily newspaper sphere, Jim Bishop, Dutch Schultz, Alphonse Capone and Dion England in. June. — Rev. J. M. ars, have been awarded to Miss Carriage Works. Already this year Edith Ferguson and' Miss Catherine upwards of 2,200 carriages have the U.S. and Canadian dollar, we’ve, was recalling in a recent article life as O’Banion ran the social life of America from Fleming has resigned his charge at got to give the devil his due. it was lived way back in 1927, when you behind machine guns. Alexandria United Church. — Am- MacLeod, boith of Maxville. — A been manufactured, an increase of transaction on Monday, was the 800 over the same period last year. This time he’s talking sense. and I were young. And it left us wonder- brose Lalonde ■was appointed chair- Those ■were the days when Gene Tunney, disposal- of his store and property — On Wednesday a carload of “The artificial value of the (Cana- ing whether we really have a teen - age an ex-Marine, was guaranteed a million man of the- park and playgroimdj dian dollar is manipulated by a few- committee 'Wednesday. It was de- by J. A. Bradley of Dunvegan, to horses, shipped from the railway problem today, whether our juveniles are dollars to fight Jack Dempsey for the second D. A. Fletcher, also of that ■village. works of D. R. McDonald, MF.P., international financiers”, he told', even as, delinquent as some of their parents cided building of the road would the Legislature last week. It is time; when Greta Garbo starred in “The be the first step. — Racey p. Mac- at La Tuque, reached Alexandria. may have been at a comparable age. k it it They -will be shipped to Saskatohe- ridiculous, he is-reported as saying,, Flesh and the Devil”. It was in 1927 that Millan of Laggan 'has sold his farm that a country that had to borrow The kids of today, it seems to us, have Charles A. Lindbergh flew from New York to Ewen A. MacMillan and leaves Forty Years Ago ■w'an, where Mr. McDonald purposes operating a large farm. — Charles for its capital development and that a lot more on the ball than we had when we to Paris in 33% hours. That was the year in May to reside in Western Can- Friday, April 2nd, 1920— had; a trade deficit had a five per were “sweet” sixteen. They know a lot of ada. The farm had been in the Gauthier of the Ottawa College, is Allen Churchill writes of in a book called the guest of his father, J. N. Gau- cent premium over the dollar of family for 150 years. — Precisionj 1/^ Councillor' H. L. Cheney and things it took us a lot more years to learn. “The Year The World Went Mad”. But thier, 4th Kenyon. the wealthiest country in the world.. And if some of them seem a bit off the j mad isn’t the word for it; wild would be tools valued at $700 were lost Fri- J. A. Macdonell, K.C., represented The Premier' suggested the fed- beam, recall, through the memory of Jim. a better one. Everything in the gin and day in a fire at M. L. Casey’s shop Alexandria on a strong deputation k k k eral Government should “throw in Miaxvllle. which went to Ottawa this week to Bishop, how many of us might have been sin era had to be bigger, better, and dizzier Sixty Years ago. away some of the economic books request that the Federal govern- and get do-wn to common sense”. thought real gone goons by parental stand- than ever before. ☆ -tr *' ment provide half of the cost of ards of the 1927 era. Friday, March 30th, 1900— Here we liave the unusual situ- It was the year Babe Ruth hit 60 home Twenty Years Ago building two bridges at 'Vaudreuil ation of Ontario’s Tory leader flay- This -^vas the American scene in the era runs. and Ste-Anne de Bellevue, Que., to 1/^ A large crowd of our citizens ing the capitalistic state. And Friday, March 29th, 1940— between depressions ; in the days when pro- enable motorists and others to use gathered at the station on Tuesday ■what’s more, the leader of the Lib- hibition prevailed and bath-tub gin made As Bishop relives it, maybe even our sin.s a direct route from Montreal to On- to see a detachment of the pro- were bigger than they are now. At the El !/* The Liberal sweep of 1935 was ei’al Opposition, and your Rambling millionaires out of mobsters. What was it repeated Monday when Premier tario points. — Rev. Ewen J. Mac- visional regiment, cn route to Reporter, agree -with him there’s like in those days? Here’s a sampling of Fey Club, a man who wanted the band to King’s government was returned donald, who had been taking a Garrison Halifax, which passed something, rotten in the State of ithrough. Five of the Ontario men what Bishop recalls: play “Always” was e’xpected to hand a $100 ■with a majority of 125. Dr. W. B. course at Washington University, Denmark; if the poor Danes have- bill to the leader. If he offered less than MacDiarmid of Maxville won Glen- Washington, D.C., arrived in town' ere from the 59th Battalion, among anything to do -With it. My pet, those days are still going on. $10 to the headwaitCr, and less than $5 to on Tuesday. — Owing to the illness the officers being Capt. A. G. F. I strum the ukulele, humming “Who’s sorry garry for the Liberals, with a pliu- ■\Ve never could fathom inter- the captain on entering the club, the money ality of 1,757 over J. W. MacRae, of T. W. Mimro, John D. McRae, Macdonald of Alexandria. — Adé- national exchange rates and all that now?” Some of my arthritic girl friends do National Government candidate. — manager, Moose Creek, was in lard Gagnier, 4th Kenyon, has horsing around' by .the House of was often returned to the sport. taken over the Canada Atlantic the Charleston -when the weather is right. Damage estimated at $2,000 was charge of the Bank of Hochelaga, Morgan and the Old Lady of John Dundas stirs the gin in the dish pan. Drinking was against the law, so every- done to Alexander Hall here Mon- Maxville, early this week. — Dun- Hotel, station, and the former Threadneedle Street (that’s the one drank. Most people drank to excess. day. — Easter week-end visitors can McPhee, Montreal, spent the owner, A. L. MoKay, has moved into Bank of England). What was it like? I’ll tell you. Skirts Even women were found stupefied in alleys weekend ■with his parents, Mr. and town and will continue his practice were worn above the knees; stockings were •here had to walk or use sleighs to But even before Frost came outa and along curbsides. Night club gin sold reach the station, as a result of the Mrs. Robert MoPhee, Glen Robert- as veterinary surgeon. — J. A. Mc- the groimd to make things rough, MUlan has been appointed' agent rolled below. There were two kinds of men : for $20 a fifth'. Ginger ale cost $2 a glass. worst two-day blizzard of the win- son, .prior to taking up his duties we wondered why the U.S. dollar finale hoppers and shai-pies. The finale ter, which struck on Saturday. — as wireless operator aboard an for the Canadian Cycle Co., also was worth less than ours; even as hoppers wore trousers with 23-ineh bottoms What was it like in our day? We seem Clergy transfers in this diocese are ocean liner. ■the National Cycle Co. — G. H. S. we depended on mUhons of dollars Miller and G. E. L. McKinnon of and heavy brogans ; the sharpies wore pinch- to have lost track. We of the 1927 era were as follows: Msgr. D. R. Macdonald, k k k of Wall Street Investment money Alexandria; Ed' Munroe, St. Elmo; waisted jackets and trousers skin tight at plunged into a decade of depression when P.F., Glen Nevis, to be chaplain at Fifty Years Ago each year to keep the Canadian., we were forced to learn that life is grim rtiie Monastery here; Rev. A. L. WHI McDiarmid and Howard Mun- economy buoyant. the knees, flaring into bell-bottoms. roe of Maxville, are among the Mc- Everybody chewed gum and the rich and life is earnest. If we hadn’t had that Cameron, P.P., Glen Walter, to be Friday, April 1st, 1910— Some of those financiers are mak- sobering influence, though, would the crazy pastor at Glen Nevis; Rev. C. A. Gill medical students who are holi- ing- a pretty penny, we figured, by kids had cars with rumble seats. Some of Negotiations have been under- daying at their homes over the fixing this exchange rate. A lot of chicks of today even have a place to roost? Bishop. P.P., Gi’eenfield', to be pas- way which if successful, will mean the things going on in the rumble seats tor at Glen Walter; Rev. R. J. Mac- Eastertide. little fellows are' garnering them- caused deep rumbles at home. Lee Tracy Thanks, Jim Bishop, for reminding us Donald, curate, St. (Jolumban’s, to selves a nickel on every doUar by was on Broadway in a show called “Broad- Oldsters that once upon a time we, too, were be pastor at Greenfield and Mox- flooding Canada with U.S. silver. way”; his understudy was an unknown in the groove; and it was fun. The kids of ville; Rev. Corbet McRae, Lochiel, Flip almost any coin you find- in. named J. Cagney. Alexander Woollcott today will soon enough have to settle into resigned owing to ill health; Rev. THE HANDY FAMILY BY LLOYD BlliMBiOMAM your pocket and it may turn up and Percy Hammond were the premier their ruts. J. A. Wylie, P.P., Dickinson’s Land- heads or tails; but it’s almost cer- ing, to be pastor at Lochiel; Rev. <500D &RAVX CORA- tain to show it’s been minted south Ewen J. Macdonald, rector at -St. NO WONDER TWE5E \ WE NEED of the border. KNIVES L06ETHBREDSE'/ A KNiFE There’s- a nigger in the woodpfle, Finnan’s, to be pastor at Dickin- THE WAY THEY'RE / BOY, THE GLENGARRY NEWS son’s Landing; Rev. Dr. W. J. JUMSLEP TO

capital punishment system, trying to beat the income tax with some life to it, we’d need would not be fined, but given by more candidates. These could hard labour on bread and be acquired by returning to the water. Tom Don ' ' %•%'' ; ' : •':*-‘*f> •• . • I more virile fashions of former k: i- -k • times. For example, blasphem- Shrewish women would have a 1* 'p-'.: . . ';x'l ' ers would be stoned to death, half-inch snipped off the end of AND HE CALLS SIMPLY EVERY though there’d soon be a short- their tongues. Wife beaters would age of stones. Heretics would NISHT..CSI6H) THE POOR s get a going-over from a professional IM^SINE? THE STAR BOY MUST BE HORRIBLY IN be burned at the stake, prefer- pu-gilist. Business men caught pad- PITCHER ON THE BASEBALL LOVE WITH ME. ably at Hallow e’e n. Rapists ding their expense accounts would TEAtA..DID NOU SEE THE would be tossed into a pit of ■get the lash. Known alcoholics WAV HE LOOKED AT ME ? rattlesnakes. Traitors would would be put on a ducking-stool have their entrails removed and and held under water for three burned before their eyes. minutes, every time they got into the stuff. Now that we’re getting into the swing of things, I must admit I’m Maybe that’s what’s wrong growing enthusiastic. While we’re with society today — our penal at it, we could tighten up our en- ^ code has become soft and slop- tire code of punishment. No more py, like everything else. People of these 10-year sentences for bank tell me capital punishment is a robbers. Cut off their gun hands deterrent to would-be murder- at the wrist. It wbitld' be a real ers. Perhaps juvenile delin- shot in the arm for the artificial quents would be deterred from limbs industry. . beating people up if they knew the pimishment was to have t People taking trout and deer one foot lopped off. out of season would be trans- ported, with their families, to Let’s give it a try, anyway. We Canada’s artic wastes. We’d could start by branding “THIEF’' soon have some thriving settle- on the foreheads of children ca'ught ments in the tundra. People stealing apples.

“PLASTIC FILM AND YOUR CHILD’S SAFETY’’ ways of misusing the material has been to substi- is the theme of the folder being given to Mrs. ' A. tute the air-tight plastic for a proper crib mattress AlacCorquodale, shown with her son Wesley at the cover. A baby, pressing its face against the cling- Salvation Army’s Grace Hospital, by Nurse Sherry ing plastic film, can suffocate in less than one Sargent. minute. Hospitals throughout the province have given Distributing this folder to new mothers is part wonderful support to the Ontario Safety League by of a large-scale public education campaign which distributing their pamphlet to every mother of ' a has been conducted nationally since August, 1959. new bom baby. It contains simple rules to guard Plastic bags, like so many other useful house- AND against misuse of ultra-thin plastic, which has hold objects — matches, medicines and appliances, SUEEOUNDINO caused death by .suffocation to over 20 infants in should be treated with caution, for the sake of our MAXVILLE DISTEICT Canada during 1959. One of the most common children. *

Mrs. BaioW Fitzsimmons of Vars, spent the weekend' with her mother, ST. ELMO siient Tuesday with Mirs. V. K. Mrs. G. Fleming, and brother Metcalfe. Donald. Her many friends are glad to Miss Alice Wickenden of Mont- Clifford Austin of Alexandria, know that Mrs. Dimcan J. Mac- SUGAR real, was a weekend guest of Mrs. visited his parental home on Mon- Leod' is making a good recovery Wlm. A. MacEwen and' Peter Mac- day. from her recent illness. AND Ewen. Airs. N. B. AlacLeod spent the Jack Campbell, Ottawa, and Miss SPICE Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Urquhart of weekend in Ottawa with her daugh- Mary Campbell, nurse-in-tralnlng _ by BILL SMILEY Rrescott, visited! with Mrs. Annie ter, Aliss Gladys, and son Rae and at the Royal Victoria Hospital, Uiquhaxt, last week. Airs. MacLeod. Montreal, spent the weekend with Alan, we’re a bloodthirsty lot, we Miss Audrey Metcalfe, Ottawa, Among those home from Ottawa their parents, Mr. and Mrs. John could do is shake the choices up over the weekend were Aldlcolm W. Campbell. Canadians. Here I’ve been going in the warden’s hat and let the NEW SPEEDWAY BULK GODIERS spent the weekend with her mother, around for years, thinking we were Mrs. V. K. Metcalfe. Dewar, Gordon and Airs. Kippen Stanley Campbell Is spending a murderer pull one. DE LAVAL PAEM TANKS and Miss Sherrill Ferguson. brief holiday at his home here. a mild, gentle, civUized' people, the Mrs. Osie Villeneuve spent the milk of human kindness fairly drib- ... all stainless steel inside and out, are manufactured in •weekend' in Hawkesbury with her bling out the comers of our mouths. He’d have a chance at: the Peterborough, and are available in 20-, 27-, 35- The Young People’s Society of and 44-can capacities son Ronald Villeneuve, Mrs. Ville- Miss Dorothy MacDonald St. Elmo, and St. Andrew’s Church, headsman’s axe; being torn to neuve and family. pieces by four wild horses; the See or Cali your Authorized HE LAVAL Healer Died Friday, March 25th Maxville, held their bi - monthly We’re not like that at all. Mrs. Stanley Winter left Dorval meeting at the home of Mr. and We’re a real Old Testament, guillotine; a bullet through the back of the head; being pushed in front on Tuesday for New York to visit The funeral of the late Miss. Ml'S. John D. McLennan, IWdcDon- fang and claw, eye for an eye, her daughter, Mrs. Jim Anderson, Dorothy AlacDonald was held here aJd’s Grove, on Friday evening, with blood and guts gang. Behind of a train or over a cliff; being D. c. Murroy & Son Mr. Anderson and family. on Monday afternoon from the those good, gray exteriors lurks impaled. a good attendance. At the close of i Phone 623-E-2 o home of Donald M. AlacLeod, to the meeting. Rev. Mr. Maciver a red-eyed avenger who would MAETINTOWN, Ont. Kenyon Presbyterian Church. Rev. ii-tf DUNVEGAN showed slides. Lunch was served make Attila the Hun look like Of course, under a wide-open Iver Alaclver of Maxville, Interim and a social hour whs much en- a divinity student. Moderator, conducting the service. joyed. Services were conducted here on The late Miss MacDonald, after Simday by Mr. Dennis Mahood, o I didn’t realize what a snarling several months’ Ulness, passed away tiger lay within the bosoms of my student of the Presbyterian College, on Friday at the General Hospital, Eoads Needed Montreal. fellow Canadians imtil I mentioned Comiwall. The large numb» of It is trué we have only a fraction casually, in an editorial a couple of Mr. and Mrs. John Chalmers and friends and neighbors present testi- of the province’s population residing weeks ago, that I didn’t believe in ALEXANDRIA OUTFITTERS’ son George, of Dorval, Que., spent fied to the esteem in which de- in our area. How could it be other- capital punishment, and asked for Sunday with Mrs. Chalmers’ father, ceased was held, as did the many wise when the country needs to be the opinions of readers. Kenneth MacDonald, and sister, beautiful flowers. We would con- developed; when roads are badly Miss Jessie. vey our sympathy to bereaved rela- needed for the development?— Atl- What a Pandora’s box that Mrs. Whi'. Carpenter, Mon'treal- tives- and friends. kokan (Ont.) Progress. Going Out of Business opened! I received only one reasonable response — that is, one opinion that agreed with mine. The rest of them howled for blood. They ranged from curt suggestions that "rope, Insurance rifle or gas will do”, to inter- minable epistles that dragged in everybody from Aloses to my means small daughter.

I was belaboured by Scripture, torn from' context. I was under boles of newspaper clippings about the latest murder cases. Many assured me that all murderers serv- ing prison terms were just busting to get out so they could go and knock off somebody else. Others tried to sell me on capital punish- ment because it’s cheaper than IS STILL GOING ON feeding a murderer.

Now the fact is that I never mentioned murder in the first With Still Further Reductions place. I just stated that I didn’t think society had the right to take a human life in cold blood. As a result, none of on Many Items Still Unsold the arguments affected my opinion at all, because every- COME IN AND SEE WHAT YOUR DOLLAR CAN BUY body went haring off after murderers, deterrents, paroles, One Lot Broken Sizes sex fiends, insanity, liquor and the cost of jail meals. Ladies’ Spring Suits $1 Besides which, as my wife has TO CLEAR AT ... * ^ pointed out on Innumerable occa- sions, and again when we discussed the subject: “Nobody can tell you Balance of .. . anything. You think you’re so dam’ smart and you’re not. You’re just pig-headed.” Men’s Dress Shirts and Sport Shirts S | .98

Just to prove slie^s wrong, and that I’m a reasonable fellow, a true democrat when outnum- bered 50 to 1, I’ll reverse my VISIT OUR GRAB TABLES stand. Let’s have capital pun- ishment, and lots of it. But for for your choice of articles at pity’s sake let’s get a little variety, a touch of colour, a strong vein of tradition, and a dash of imagination into it. 25c - - SOc - - »1.00 For the Homeowner: Today, insurance is contents are adequately insured against making it possible for more Canadian fami- sudden loss replaces worry with Peace of Only a primitive people would EVERYTHING MUST BE SOLD TO THE BARE WALLS lies than ever before to enjoy the security of Mind. stick to such a crude,, dmb coup home ownership. ■de grace as secret hanging. I would It will be Worth Your While to Come In and Take Advantage of the Last year, the companies writing fire, auto- also abolish those other pedestrian Without the protection of insurance against mobile and casualty insurance paid out more death penalties of today’s society— LOW CLEARANCE PRICES we are ojB^ering fire and other disasters, probably few of to- than 500 Million Dollars in claims across the chair and the gas chamber. day's new homes could ever hove been Canada — real evidence that insurance in- Ordinary murderers must die, started. Knowledge that a home and its but I think the condemned man deed means Peace of Mind. ALL CANADA Alexandria Outfitters fWSU^NCt should have a sporting chance ALL CANADA INSURANCE FEDERATION to pick the manner of his de- Phone 106 MRS. LEWIS GREENSPON, Prop. Phone 106 CD bebaU ot more fhan 200 compeling compom'es wziting mise. In this age of bingos, Fize, Automobile and Casualty InsuiODce. draws and raffles, the least we Page 4 The Glengarry News, Alexandria, Ontario, Thursday, March 31st, 1960

land, Murray, Martintown. Irvine, Bi-inston; 12th, Lome Hen- inson, ChestervUle; 16th, Ray Bell And Hydro Macdonald Rink Class No. 29, Grass Hay — 1st, derson, Brinston; 13th', Osborne, Irving, Winchester. Vankleek Hill Ousts Alexandria Angus Smith, Chesterville; 2nd, Brothers, BainsviUe; 14th, Hugh Total number of exhibitors, 46. Used Ice Saturday Clarence Morrison, North Lancas- Fisher, MdxviUe; 15th, M. O. Rob- Total number of exhibits, 121. Alexandria ice surfaces were Won Alexandria ter; 3rd, J. D. MacArthur, Lancas- serving service men Satm'day when ter; 4th, Hugh Fisher, MaxviUe; In Three-Straight Games 5th, Hugh Blaine, Mountain; 6th, tlie Bell Telephone hockey teams Favored Alexandria fell before men. from Montreal and Ottawa met at Curling Trophy Hai-ry WiUiams, Mountain; 7th, Vankleek Hill in -three straight ' In the other bracket, Lancaster the Glengarry Gardens in their The handsome trophy donated to Finley T. McIntosh, Martintown; $83yl36 is a Lot of Money! games in Border League semi-finals. topped' Willlamstown here Sunday annual combat. This time Ottawa the Curling Club last year by Town 8th, Neil A. MacLean, Maxville; 9th, The locals were eliminated last 3-0 to tie the series at one game skated off with the honors. Council, will remain in Alexandria George Suffel, Inkerman; 10th, BiU That’s what medical bills totalled for Ontario farm night at the Gardens when they each. The teams were to meet last At the same time Hydro per- for at least a year. Franklin, Greenfield. people in,jured in accidents during March, April and dropped a 5-4 decision to the Hill night in Cornwall and again in sonnel from all over Eastern On- It was won lost night by the rink Class No. 30, Second Cut (Any May, ’59. Glengarry Gardens Sunday after- tario were holding their annual skipped by Gene Macdonald in an Mixture) — 1st, Gerald Adams, noon. curling bonspiel on the sheets here exciting game which saw Aime WiUiamsburgh ; 2nd, Hugh Blaine, And that was only part of the expense ! Clement Investments Lancaster’s Picard and J. Mc- and at Vankleek HiU. Menard’s Green Valley four beaten Mountain; 3rd, Lyle Allan, Moun- Donald notched two fast goals in Hugh A. MacDonald of Alex- on the last shot of the last end. tain; 4th, W. E. Graham & Son, Ill some eases, where the farmer himself was hurt, hired Separate and Public the opening minutes Sunday, and andria, skipped the wirniing rink Playing with Skip Macdonald South Mountain; 5th, Hugh Fisher, help was needed to run the farm until he got back SCHOOL the game then went scoreless until to capture the Lunny trophy. Play- were Norman MacEtonald, lead; Maxville; 6th, Bill Franklin, Green- on liis^ feet. Colem.an counted- on a breakaway ing with him was Norm Matheson Doug Baxter and W. J. Periaid. field. DEBENTURES with 43 seconds to go in the final of Lancaster. The Menard' rink was made up of Class No. 31, Grass Silage — 1st, If you were hurt in an accident, could you manage to Lucien Lefebvre, Jim Wightman, Interest Up To frame. Cormic McDonell, Green Valley; keep your farm going? Thistlethwaite one for the visitors Jim Gallant and Aime Menard. 2nd, Finley T. McIntosh, Martin- In last night’s game here, the in the first ten minutes of the third Finals of the Scotch - Irish' - town; 3rd, Douglas Durant, Ches- CIA could help you pay the bills through 7.1% first period went scoreless and Kent and the best Alexandria could do French competition will see Harold terville; 4th, Marland Murray, Mar- McSweyn put Alexandria in the were singles by Harold Robinson Moran’s Irish rink meeting either tintown. CIA’s ACCIDENT and SICKNESS INSUR- CONTACT: lead early in the second. Another and Kent McSweyn. Aime Menard or Paul Roy, who Class No. 32, Corn Silage — 1st, JEAN CLEMENT goal by Gilles Lefebvre was sand have yet to declare a French ANCE. wiched; between two by the Hill’s J. D. MacArthur, Lancaster; 2nd', FURNITURE STORE finalist. Graham Smith, ChestervUle; 3rd, Leduc. St. Denis got two and Play is proceeding in the mixed For full details call: Phone 43 Main St. South Results Of Stanley Shaver, Dixon’s Comers; competition for the Lancaster 4th, Donald McLean, Ingleside; 5th, Township trophy and President’s Dave Patterson, Mountain; 6th, prizes will be played for before the Seed Judging Russell Suffel, Mountain; 7th, Alex McDonald season ends April 15th. Class No. 1, Early Oats—1st, Neil Rowat Jones, Winchester; Sth, R.R. 2, Alexandria Phone Collect: Lochiel 15-K-15 GASOLINE A. MacLean, Maxville, Lanark; 2nd, Angus Smith, ChestervUle; 9th, Neil A. MacLean, Maxville, Fundy; Class No. 18, Timothy—1st, Myles Caryl Cooper, Brinston; 10th, Geo. 3X GASOLINE for Regular and High 0*7 3rd, Angus Smith, Chesterville, MacMillan, Dalkeith; 2nd, Ho Ward! Suffel, Mountain; lltli, Douglas Compression Engines..PRICE PER GALLON "*.90 dintland'. Snider, Bainsvllle; 3rd, Hugh Fisher, ... plus I3c per gallon Government Tax Class No. 2, Medium or Late Oats Maxvine;; 4th, Han-y Williams, —1st, Cecil MacBae, Maxville; 2nd, Mountain; 5th, Bill Franklin of 4X GASOLINE for Extra High Compression Engines Bill Fivanklin, Greenfield; 3rd, Neil Greenfield. Sold Restaurant Sssa WE INSTALL LICENSE PLATES FREE A. MacLean, Maxville; 4th, Hugh Class No. 19, Timothy (Registered Fred Joanette of Glen Robertson, Fisher, Maxville; 5th, Lome Hen- or Certified) — 1st, Hugh Fisher, has sold bis restaurant there to derson, Brinston; 6th, Harry Wil- Maxville. Jean LauriaiUt of Montreal, who Laurier Lefebvre’s Service Station took over Monday. For the present liams, Mountain. AH pri2:e-winning Class No. 20, Red Clover (Regis- To Better Serve You United Motors Service Distributor — Champlain exhibits were Gariy. tered or Certified) — 1st, Hugh Mr. Joanette intends moving back Oil Products and Gasoline—Guaranteed Repairs Class No. 3, Rodnéy Oats — 1st, Fisher, MaxviUe, Laaalle. to his farm east of Glen Robertson. With Gas and Oil Alexandria — > Phone 391 Myles MacMillan, Dalkeith; 2nd, Class No. 21, Alfalfa — 1st, Hugh C. L. Rowe, Maxville; 3rd, Finley Fisher, MaxviUe; 2nd, Myles Mac- ' your IMPERIAL ESSO agent T. McIntosh, Martintown; 4th, Millan, Dalkeith; 3rd, Graham Hugh Fisher, Maxville; 5th, Neil A. Smith, ChestervUle. Electric Motors MacLean, Maxville; 6th, Harry Wil- Class No. 24, Best Peck of Oats— BEPAmS and REWINDS Vincent Barker liams, Mountain; 7th, W. E. Gra- 1st, Campbell Murray, Martintown; to all makes of Electric Motors ham & Son, South Mountain.. 2nd, Bob Williams, Mountain; 3rd, NEW and USED MOTORS For Salt is now equipped with Class No. 4, Barley — 1st, Myles J. D. McArthur, Lancaster. All Glengarry Gardens’ MiacMillan, Dalkeith, Parkland; prize-winning exhibits were Garry. OUELLETTE 2nd, George Kinloch, Martintown, Class No. 25, Best Peck of Barley Electric & Hardware York; 3rd, Nell A. MacLean, Max- — 1st, Camipbell Murray, Martin- DUAL-PUMPER Schedule ville, Brant; 4th, C. L. Rowe, Max- town, York; 2nd, Henry Kinloch, Phone 247 Alexandria ville; 5th, Hugh Fisher, Maxville; Martintown, York; 3rd, Charles System 6th, Harry Williams, Mountain, Kinloch, Martintown, York; 4th, Port. Bob Williams, Mountain, Port. Avhich will carry both fuels and gas Class No. 5, Winter Wheat — 1st, Class No. 26, First Cut Alfalfa — Friday, April 1st Anflual Camival B. Brunt, Williamstown, Gennessee. 1st, Angus Smith, ChestervUle; right to your home tank Class No. 7, Spring Wheat, — 1st, 2nd, Hugh Fisher, Maxville; 3rd. Oscar Paradis Saturday, April 2nd Myles MacMillan, Dalkeith, Acadia; Hugh Blaine, Mountain. wishes to announce ♦ L0Cllj6l'Njj[llt 2nd, Hugh Fisher, MaxviUe. Class No. 27, Other Legumes — I now have a supply of Class No. 8, Buckwheat — 1st, 1st, Angus Smith, Chesterville; 2nd, he has opened a Sunday, April 3rd — Hockey: Hugh Fisher, Maxville. NeU A. MlacLean, Maxville; 3rd, Bill Class No. 10, Feed Com — 1st, Franklin, Greenfield. WILLIAMSTOWN vs. lANCASTER Gordon Cooper, Brinston; 2nd, Class No. 28, Mixed Legumes and Farm Tanks & Pumps for Loan Caryl Cooper, Brinston; 3rd, Hugh Grass — 1st, J. D. MacArthur, Lan- BARBERSHOP ♦ Public Skating 7:30 to 9:30 Fisher, Maxville. caster; 2nd, George Suffel, Inker- on the Mill Square Class No. 11, Registered and Cer- man; 3rd, Finley T. McIntoÆ, Mar- Phone 542-R Alexandria Mon., April 4th—Broomball Play-offs, 8 to 10 tified' Oats — 1st, Neil A. MacLean, tin-town; 4th, Neil A. MacLean, Corner of Ottawa and Maxville, Rodney; 2nd, Neil A. Mac- MaxviUe; 5th, Gerald Adams, Wil- Wednesday, April 6th — Hockey: Lean, Maxville, Garry. llamsburgh; 8th, Clarence Morrison, Catherine Streets for prompt service Class No. 12, Commercial No. 1 North Lancaster; 7th, W. E. Gra- ☆ LANCASTER vs. WILLLAMSTOWN ham. & Son, South Mountain; 8th, Oats — 1st, NeU A. MdcLean, Max- YOUE PATRONAGE Friday and Sunday, April 8th and 10th ville, Garry; 2nd, Hugh Fisher, Hugh Blaine. Moimtain; 9th, Mar- Maxville; 3rd, Lome Henderson, WILL BE APPRECIATED (ESS^— Public Skating 7:30 to 9:30 Brinston, Garry; 4th, Neil A. Mac- 13-4p Lean, Maxville, Fundy; 5th, Neil A. Saturday, April 9th — Minor Hockey: MacLean, Maxville, Lanark; 6th, L. Allen, Mountain, Garry; 7th, Hugh S.A . MONTREAL vs. ALEXANDRIA Blaine, Mountain, Garry; 8th, Don Sirvage, Chesterville, Garry; 9th, Fire Injectors Sprites — Pee-Wees — Bantams — Midgets Eric Casselman, Chesterville, Garry; 4 Games — 8:30 On — 4 Games for 25c 10th, Leo Coyle, Chesterville, pass the 42,000-mile mark Fundy; 11th, Leonard Masterson, on Wed. and Sat. — Free Public Skating, 2 to 4 Chesterville, Glenn. REAL FAUBERT’S Class No. 13, Commercial No. 1 Sunday, April 10th — Hockey, 2 o’clock: Oats (Rodney only) — 1st, Hugh 1958 Ford Taxi Fisher, MaxviLIe; 2nd, Neil ,A. Mac- Mr. Paubert notes— WILLIAMSTOWN vs. LANCASTER Lean, Mjaxville; 3rd, C. L. Rowe, (1) Good ECONOMY; Maxime; 4th, Finley T. McIntosh, (2) DURABILITY — ordin- Martintown; 5th, W. E. Graham ary spark pings lasted & Son, South Mountain. only 12,000 miles; Class No. 15, Commercial No. 1 LOCHIEL AGAINST THE WORLD Barley — 1st, George Ehnlooh, Mar- (3) INSTANT STARTS — tintown, York; 2nd, Nell A. Mac- blazing acceleration and Lean, Maxville, Brant. motor power; Class No. 17, Red' Clover — 1st, (4) 5 times longer POINT Myles MacMillan, Dalkeith; 2nd, LIFE. Lochiel’s Night So next time you replace your Finley T. McIntosh, Martintown; 3rd, Hugh Fisher, Mdxville; 4th, worn-out spark plugs, replace of Harry Williams. Mountain. them permanently with FIRE INJECTORS Only $10.74 for a set of 6, Winter Sports instated CONTACT YOUR LOCAL DISTRIBUTOR MimEiKi YOU CAN SAVE 30% OR MORE . . . Check Saturday, April 2 CHARLES LEROUX these LOW, LOW PRICES. UNCONDITION- ALLY GUARANTEED against blowouts dur- R.R. 4, Alexandria ing the LIFE of the vehicle on which they Phone 82-J-3 ore installed. All seams ore constructed at to prevent DANGEROUS leaking exhaust fumes. Mode of heavy gauge steel through- out for maximum strength and service. Similar terrific savings on tailpiipai, exhaust GLENGARRY,IGARDENS pipes for all popular cars. 7.30— Lochiel Sprites vs. Kenyon Sprites 3.00— ^G-len Roh’s’n Pee-WeesTHEORET vs. St. Joseph’s MOTOR SALES AS LOW AS 8.30— GENERAL SKATING 9.40 Main Street, South — Alexandria, Ont. CHEVROLET 6 41- 5.80 FORD V8 58-59 53 11.25 CHEVROLET 6-8 58-59 7.75 MERCURY 52-54 12.55 9.00— Phone 159 CHEVROLET 6 54- 7.25 MERCURY 55-56 57 Fancy Skating 11.95 DODGE 6, Small 49-59 7.98 MERCURY Dual 55-56 7.98 20th ANNIVERSARY in GLENGARRY FORD V8 42- 6.49 PLYMOUTH 6 49-59 48 Exhibition 5.80 FORD, METEOR 49-54 6.30 PONTIAC 6 42-50 6.10 HI FORD, METEOR 55- 7.75 PONTIAC 6 51-53 56 6.03 9.15—Crowning of Queen Specials fot* This Week FORD 6-8 57 9.10 PONTIAC 6 54 7.25 Wi FORD 6-8 58 9.40 PONTIAC 6 55-57 (All A-1 Oars) PONTIAC 6 58 7.25 and Princess FORD 6 58-59 9.10 PONTIAC, 1958, six cyl., sedan . . . radio 9.30— BROOMBALL — Mayor Simon and ALSO AVAILABLE FOR FOREIGN CARS. CHEVROLET, 1957, eight cyl., sedan . . . radio, INSTALLATION SLIGHTLY EXTRA his Cohorts vs. Reeve Roy MacMillan’s Belair Gang CHEVROLET, 1957, six cyl., sedan . . . radio CHEVROLET, 1956, six cyl., coach . . . radio 10.00— BROOMBALL —FORD, Lochiel’s 1957, eightBELLES cyl., sedan vs. Dalkeith LOVELIES FORD, 1967, eight cyl., sedan . . . radio, Fairlane 10.30—TUG - OF - WAR — McCrimmon PONTIAC, 1953, six cyl., sedan MAULERS vs. Lochiel Footballers ANGLIA, 1959, four cyl., coach />TIRE AND AUTO SUPPLY LTD. MORRIS, 1954, four cyl., sedan ASSOCIATE STORE - MORRIS, 1953, four cyl., coach EVERYBODY WELCOME 10 Cars In Stock PAY WHAT ŸCTü LIKE Come and Make Your Choice This Week LYALL COSTELO; Prop.

%SSSSi*SÎSS2S8SSSSSS8S2SSS2J2S2?SSSSÎS8ÎSSSî8Sî?SS88SfSS8?SSSS8ÎS5!?SSSS8SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS 25 Main St. — Alexandria — Telephone 341 The Glengarry News, Alexandria, Ontario, Thursday, March 31st, 1960 Page 8 Sister Ida Served Sympathy ... Queen Acknowledges Order 58 Years ■ (Continued from Page 1) cmmZ Sister Ida (MacDougald), who COLE - MacLEOD Gift For Prince had been a resident of Willlams- received the habit of the Congre- town since 1994, when his Glen Mr. and Mrs.: William Roy Cole gation of Sisters of St. Joseph at Nevis-horn father joined the staff wish to announce the engagement St. Joseph’s Academy to 1902, died still an ardent knitter though SOCIAL and PERSONAL of their daughter, hferilyn Jessie of Char-Lan High School. His at Bethany Convent to St. Paul, now in her 80s, Mrs. James J. tragic death came as a shock not Mr. and Mrs. "W. B. Wîiite and Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Mutchler and Cole, to Mr. EUis Williams Mac- By C. A. Dean, M.D. Nolan of Montreal, the former Leod, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Minnesota, February 26th, 1960. only to his immediate .family but D. Edgar MacRae, , Lacïüne, and family were in Montreal over the MEDITORIAL: Skiing is be- Rachel Sayant of Glen Nor- R. MacLeod'. Marriage to take Born to Alexandria to 1886, Sister coming more and more popular to many relatives an-d friends- Miss Lenore St. John, Ottawa, spent weekend. place April 23rd, 1960, at 2:30 p.m. Ida made her profession to 1904. man, was the surprised re- throughout the area. the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Leo Mr. and Mrs. Allan McDonell, and for good reason too. Unfortu- cipient of a letter from the to St. Luke’s Anglican Chiu'ch, Since then she had taught in many nately along with more skiing St. John. Bobby and Diane,. Waddington, Ottawa. of the schools conducted' by the Queen, written on Her Majes- Mr. and Mrs. John E. Morris and N.Y., spent the weekend with the comes more skiing accidents. DRESS UP YOUR HOME Sisters, among them St. Anne’s This year there will be about ty’s own personal notepaper. children, Richard and Paula, Mont- latter’s .parents, Mr. and Mrs. Z. School to Le Sueur, Minn.; St. It was in acknowledgment of Courvil'le; also with them were four million skiers in the United ^with NEW real, visited with Mr. and Mrs. You And Your Aloysius School to Olivia, Minn., States pnd many in Canada. The some of her handiwork, a pair Duncan Morris over the weekend. Bruno CourvlHe, Ca.p de la Made- and Immaculate Conception School number of injuries resulting from of blue baby sockees, sent by Miss Helene Lafrance, Normal leine; Mrs. Rozon and son Ronald Child Subject Of in Watertown, South Dakota. skiing may reach 300,000., With her recently to Buckingham DRAPES School, Chicoutimi, spent last week and Miss Jeanne Courville of Mont- After her return to St. Paul to this striking number of injuries Palace, as a gift for Prince Smart new Spring shades to with Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Gallant. real. expected, all skiers should be Andrew. compliment your home. I>onald Gormley, Stratford, is Mr. and Mrs. Lee McCormick of PTA Address 1930, Sister taught in several of the city schools, including St. Luke’s, aware of the hazards of the The letter, transmitted to her As low as spending a week’s holidays with Ottawa, spent the weekend with •Rev. J. B. Quinn, O.M.I., Ottawa, sport. spoke on “You and Your Child”, St. John’s, St. Mary’s and St. ■via Government House, Ottawa, Donna and Dr.-, and Mrs. W. B. Miss Bessie MacDonald. A recreational skier may contained an additional ack- I Robert J. MacDonell, Toronto, when he was guest speaker at the Mark’s. She also taught at Holy 99c yd. Villeneuve. travel as fast as 30 miles per nowledgment from Prime Min- CaU NOW for FREE Estimates. spent the weekend' with Mrs. J. A. Mai-ch meeting of the Catholic Angels Academy and the Basilica hour. Speeds of 45 miles per Mr. and Mrs. James L. Masterson ■ ister John Diefenbaker. - FREE Measuring Service. of Deep River, visited with her par- Kennedy and Florence, Glen Roy. Parent - Teachers’ Association, held iSchool in the Minneapolis area. She hour and even higher are retired from active teaching to 1954 ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Chisholm, Mr. and Mrs. Jean L. Rouleau at St. Andrew’s School, St. An- possible for professionals. Loohiel, over the weekend. and son Richard, Cornwall, and drews West. and thereafter served as assistant The faster you go, as on the CLEMENT Mrs. Eva Gareau, Alexandria, visit- Remarking on the improved re- j at St. Raphael’s Convent to Crystal, highway, the more serious The forests generate one-quarter FURNITURE STORE Mr. and' Mrs. Harold Pope and until iU health forced' her retire- ed on Simday with Mr. and Mrs. latioruship between home and the injury in event of acci- of all the income of all Canadiang. Mrs. Kenneth Patterson, Montreal, ment to Bethany Convent to 1958. dent. Inexperience and poor Phone 43 Alexandria are -holidaying in Florida. , Isidore Secoui's, Glen Norman. school. Father Quinn pointed out ' Mrs. Harold Laplerre and son that the better the co-operation Sister Ida was loved by everyone. physical condition are major Mr. and Mïs. J. L. O. Sabourin the more the child will benefit. She has been described as the epi- factors contributing to skiing John, Montreal, are spending a accidents. ■were in 'Wi’ightville, Que., last week with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Mac- He reminded the parents of the tome of the perfect religious com- weekend ■visiting their daughter, bining as she did sanctity with The sites of the injuries are 'Kinnon, whUe Mr. lÆpierre is to importance of the father being the either the ankle or the knee in Mrs. G. Gavord. North Carolina. established authority to the home. | cheerfulness. Her kind and under- standtog heart and rare sense of the majority of cases. A bone Tessier Florist & Gift Shop Allen McPhail and the. Cleary The mother, the heart, is called ] just above and attaching to the ■humor contributed much to her children, St. Andrews, spent Sun- upon to play many and diversified; ankle, known as the fibula, is 13 Main St. ALEXANDRIA — Phone 269 THE day with Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. roles, while to the child must be ' success to the teaching of little often subject to breaks. Severe Morris. taught respect lor authority evenj children, which was her life’s work. sprains or actual tearing of liga- A full supply of FLOWERS a»d PLANTS REGULAR MEETING Mrs. Lee Mossie and Mrs. Aurore from the cradle. ‘ The Rev. Joseph Kuncl was cele- ments frequently occur. These OP THE Beaulieu have recpntly returned Father Quinn was introduced by brant of the Solemn Requiem Mass can be more serious than a FUNERAL A WEDDING from five weeks’ vacation to Rev. James A. Wylie, P.P., and in the Presentation Chapel of the broken bone and may require DESIGNS ^ FLOWERS Florida. thanked' by Mrs. Frank McPhail. Provincial House on Monday, Feb- application of a cast. Glengarry Ml', and Mrs. Alex Quesnel, Mr. Father Quinn was to St. Andrews- ruary 29th. A choir made up of * * • EXCLUSIVE and PRACTICAL GIFTS end Mrs. Wilfred Cuerrier and West conducting a three-day Re- seventy novices and postulants sang (Q) “What is rheumatoid Aime Decoste and family spent last treat for Grades IX to XII, to St. the Mass with reverent devotion. arthritis? Is there a cure for Flowers Wired To All Parts of the World Andrew’s School. Burial was to Resurrection Ceme- It?’’ Historical Society weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Mrs. D. Leduc, Rigaud. The meeting was presided over tery. I will .be held 0 'Mr. and Mrs. Scott E. Bird, by Dalton McAlear, president, who (A) Rheumatoid arthritis is a *O«O«O*O«O«O*O#O*O*O«V*O*O«O*O»O«O»O*<.'<'«O*O*Q*O*C»U»>0«O*O*O*<7*'Q»O*O*U«O*0< common type of arthritis, but the Seattle, Wash., are spending a few announced that the scholarship MARTINTOWN fund had been successfully raised. cause is unknown. Crippling can Tuesday, April 5th days with her sister, Mrs. Arthur result in severe cases for those Patterson, before returning home Mr. and Mrs. Jack MacDermid untreated. There are no available Home anil Commercial Swimming Pools at 8 p.m.. after an extended world tour. They medicines which can cure rheu- in the and- son, of Crystal Falls, Ont., will also -visit her brother, Arnold Baby Christened spent two weeks with his parents, matoid arthritis although there Board Room McDonald, in Cornwall. On Sunday, March 27th, at St. Mr. and Mrs. H. MacDermid, the are many forms of treatment to Mr. and Mrs. J. D. McRae, Ar- Finnan’s Catliedral,, the infant Island. relieve' symptoms and prevent Agricultural Office crippling. Some cases seem to kona. Ont., are spending a few daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Mr. and Mi's. Lyall Graham and improve spontaneously. ALEXANDRIA weeks at their home in St. Raphael. Morris wsis christened' by Rev. John sons, Ottawa, were w’eekend guests SPEAKERS Mrs. Frank Jackson, Montreal, McPhail. She was given the names of Mrs. D. H. Campbell. MACK ALGUIRE and children are visiting her par- Mary Jo-Anne Jemima Catherine. Mr. and Mrs. Van Camp of Ii;o- ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Cardinal, •CORNWALL Sponsors were Richard Morris and quois, were Sunday, ..guests of Mrs. dollars was voted to be sent to the for a few weeks. Frank Jackson Cairene Cleary. Baby was carried Presbyterial WA. and Clyde and Mrs. McIntosh. was also here for the weekend. by Mrs. J. Emmett Morris of Mont- Mrs. K. McDermid is to Montreal Twenty-four jüke containers with MISS LOUELLA DUNLOP Duncan G. MacDonell, Ottawa: real. Ml', and Mrs. Peter J. Morris this week attending the WMS Con- milk powder wei'e purchased' and WILLIAMSTOWN Mrs. Lloyd Reynolds, St. Raphael, entertained the guests to dinner at ference. sold to the members. Now MANUFACTURED and DISTRIBUTED EVERYBODY WELCOME and the Misses Theresa and Harriet their home on Elgin street west. MacEtonell, Apple Hill, attended the It was also decided to cater to a in Canada ^ ° The regular monthly meeting of wedding in May. Mi's. H. Nicholsqn funeral of their great-aimt, Mrs. St. Andrew’s United Church W.A. —Made of Indistructable Fiber Glass. Margaret Shatreau, which was held offered her' home for a tea and food W.S. Campbell Of was held Saturday afternoon at the sale to be held on the afternoon of —Guaranteed for Ten Years by Lloyd’s of London. from Donaldson’s funeral home, home of the president, Mrs. L. C. Mossena, N.Y., on March 26th. April 16th. ■ —No Painting, Chipping or Scraping. Martintown Dies MapArthur. . Fifteen members re- Plans were made tor the Presby- Mrs. J. M. Leroux has retmned sponded to the roll call. —Color Impregnater, and Water Filtered. to her home on Kenyon street, after Funeral services for Wilfred terial meeting. spending the winter months at Stewart Campbell were held at his The meeting was opened with The meeting was closed with the —Never Emptied — No Connections with Water Mexico Beach, Panama City, with home recently and conducted by quiet music by Mrs. C. R. McIntyre, WA prayer. As it was the first System or Sewer. F/L and Mrs. J. Bene Leroux and Rev. Robertson Millar, minister of followed by scripture readings from meeting to her new home, Mrs. family. With them she visited Mr. Martintown Pres.byterian Chinch. St. Luke’s Gospel, and meditation MacArthur served refreshments. Completely Installed from $2,000 Up and Mrs. William' Connor at Day- Rev. J. Brownlee of Apple Hill service by Mrs. Reynolds, Mrs. Hugh Financing Up To Five Years tona Beach, Florida. She was later United Church, assisted'. McDermid and Mrs. C. Murray. Mrs. McIntyre sang a solo, which CINEMASCOFE joined' by Mr. and Mrs. J. Hector Mr. Campbell died suddenly at FRANCHISED DEALER Leroux of Wrightville, Que., and his farm near Martintown on was appreciated. FRIDAY - SATURDAY Miss Ida Leroux of Ottawa, who March 21st. He was 50 years of The minutes of the lost meeting •went on holidays to Florida. age. were read by Mrs. K. McDermid. . the, Bernard J. Bogue April 1st and 2nd Mr. and Mrs. Peter Campbell, Born on the same farm, Mr. It was decided to ask Mr. Rozon, Telephone ME 2-2382 or 2-3827 Carole and Michael, of Repentigny, Campbell was a son of the late of Williamstown, to do some plumb- store, for. “The Kettles On Old Que., spent the weekend -witlh her Colin Campbell and the former ing work. New' curtains have been HAWKESBURY, ONTARIO mother, Mrs. Dora Brabant. Gertrude Dempster. He 'w'as edu- made for the church hall. Five McDonald’s Farm” Mr. and Mrs. D. D. McKinnon cated to the local public school and Cornwall Collegiate. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Campbell, Comedy were in Valois on Tuesday, visiting her mother, Mrs. Harriet Campbell. Taking a very, active interest to Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Campbell, Mr. Marjorie Main Donald MoKlnnon and Bill Trim his community, Mr. Campbell was and Mrs. Vernon Morris’, Mr. and Parker Pennelly called on the McKinnon’s Wednes- a trustee and former chairman of Mrs. RoHo Campbell and family, all THE TOWNSHIP OF LOCHIEL day en route from- Toronto to the Board of ’Trustees, Charlotten- of Ottawa; Mrs. Bussell Kittle, Mrs. Montreal. burgh Township School Area, a di- Edith Dempster and son David, and PUBLIC SCHOOL AREA NO. 1. MONDAY - TUESDAY Rev. and • MrsL Stanley Andrews rector of the Ontario Cheese Pro- Mr. and Mrs. Baxold Nelson, of VB ApfU 4th and 5th and Joan, were guests of Mr. and ducers’ Association and a member Cornwall. Lftoies'm^ SHOPPE Mrs. D. N. McRae, Main street of the Board of Managers at Mar- Many fioral tributes and messages north, on Friday. ttotown Presbyterian Church. of condolence were received by the Financial Statement “Imitation General” family. 502 Montreal Roacd Comedy - Drama He is survived by his mother; his ■wife, the former Margaret Edn.a For the Year Ending December 31st, 1959 Glenn Ford - Taina Elg The remains were placed to the Cornwall Watson; two sons, Colin and Stew- vault at North Branch cemetery to SEE OUR WINDOW art; end' one daughter, Mary. He await burial to the Spring. RECEIPTS EASTER also leaves two brothers, James G., WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY NOVELTIES of Cornwall, and Hugh, of Port Grants from Provincial April 6th and 7th Credit. GoA^ernment $19,201.76 By JENNY LEND Pallbearers were Duncan Christie, CANDY SHOPS Municipal Levy (14 mills) i'. 13,662.50 “The Man Who Could RoUo Campbell, Gordon McDermid, Hugh McDermid, Kenneth McDer- Superannuation Deducted ... -.. 1,175.50 Cheat Death” mid' and Moses Richer. Honorary Cash Refunds 181.68 Wilfred McLelster paUhearers were Stuart Blackadder, (ADHUT) STATIONERY Ross Munro, Oliver McGee, An- thony McIntosh, Duncan Grant and All Stores $34,221.44 Horror Drama - Color SHOPPERS’ NEEDS Anton Diffrlng - Hazel Court P. H. Torrance. Balance On Hand ALEXANDRIA, ONT. Friends attending the service from distant points included Mr. December 31st, 1958 10,204.00 and Mrs. Galer, Ottawa; Mr. and Mrs. Hilmer Halverson, North Bay; $44,425.44 ENTRY FORM in Alexandria EXPENDITURES GLENGARRY FARMSTEAD IMPROVEMENT COMPETITION Teachers’ Salaries $19,591.86 Instructional Supplies 1,707.29 Name ARE Administration 1,456.70 Address.À;.' Township THAT NEW H-BOMB Plant Operation 2,286.55 Plant Maintenance ... .• 1,853.18 Lot Concession SHOULD HAVE THREE LETTERS Auxiliary Services 65.57 AU entries should be maUed to: ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF AFTER THE 'H" Hi Capital Outlays 1,597.90 AGRICULTURE, P.O. Box 579, Alexandria, Ontario. 12-3c OPEN TILL 10 p.m. Transportation 3,614.86 $32,173.91 FRIDAY NIGHTS Balance On Hand Clement Furniture Co., Ltd. December 31st, 1959 12,251.53 Phone 43 Main Street South, Alexandria, Ont. Phone 43 SPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK Regular SPECIAL $44,425.44 CHROME SET — Six chairs and table $169.00 $119.00 REFRIGERATORS — Boy, 10 CU. ft 289.00 199.00 Donnelly & MacKillican, Auditors. FREEZERS — Fairbanks Morse, cu. ft 439.00 339J)0 ra^ECTRIC RANGES — Crbsley; made by Moffat 269.00 179.00 Filion’s E. DOUGLAS MacMILLAN, WASHERS — Easy; ^iralator with, pump 209.00 13.91)0 ALEXANDRIA TV — 17" RCA table model, installed with Aerial 269.00 189.00 Chairman We have a large selection of Bedroom Sets, ©hesterflelds, Davenports, Jewellery Co. Ltd. BOARD OF TRADE Chrome Sets, Mattresses, etc. J. K. MUNROE, Sec.-Treas. We give 20% oft anything you buy in our store Alexandria DATED at Dalkeitli, Ont., Feb. 12th, 1960. TERMS OB CASH 4-lOp and Vankleek Hill Page 6 Tlie Glengarry News, Alexandrda, Ontario, Thursday, March 31st, 1960 LOCHIEL bury, -visited during the -weekend at the home of her aunt and uncle, Hugh P. MacMillan motored to Mr. and Mrs. Lucien Theoret. Ottawa, Friday, and was accom- With Major and Mrs. Wm. A. panied home by his sister, Miss Morrison for a few days, recently, Marion MacMillan, R.N., who spent was his sister, Mrs. Rod- M. Mc- News from Het*e ànd There Leod, of Alexandria. the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. MacMillan and family. Miss Hugette Brazeau of Mont- d'âmes Ma-ePhee returned' to Ot- real, -weekended at her parental MOOSE CREEK resident of the Moose Creek dis- retary - treasurer, Mrs. Currie È. tawa, Sunday, after spending his home here. trict, was bom in the Seventh Con- Blair. holidays with his parents, Mr. and ArmaJid Paulin cession of the Township of Rox- ’The meeting opened by singing Mrs. Donald A. MaePhee. Misses borough (Moose Creek West), a son the Institute Ode and repeating the DALKEITH Former Agent Dies Mildred and Anna Margaret Mae- of the late Charles Pilon and^ his Mary Stewart Collect, and . the Phee, Montreal, were also home for Priends of Mrs. Oallum MacGil- The death of Armand Paulin, a wife, Philomene St-Denis. Lord’s Prayer. ’The minutes of the the weekend. livray, who went into the Smith retired! .Canadian National Railway He was a successful farmer and last meeting were read and ap- Mr. and Mi's. R. Stilwell and chil- Clinic Hospital, Hawkesbury, for a^ent, occurred in the Ontario Gen- carried on that occupation until proved. Roll call. Correspondence dren, and Miss Edna Lacroix, Moiit- treatment last week, are wishing eral Hospital on Wednesday after- retiring a number of years ago was received and considered as real, visited Mrs. Jessie Lacroix and her a speedy recovery. noon, March 23rd, after an illness when they came to reside in Moose read. The organization will be other members of the family on Mr. and Mrs. .Alex MacMillan of of six days. Mr. Paulin suffered a Creek village. He was the last sur- celebrating the 45th anniversary on Sunday. Martintown, visited with to. and cerebral haemorrhage on Friday viving member of his family. June 16th, 1960. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth MacQueen Mrs. Hector Perrier on Sun-day morning and was conveyed by am- ■ He is smwived by his Widow, the A nominating committee was ap- and Glenn, of Ottawa, spent the afternoon. bulance the same day. Without former Miss Agnes Aube of Moose pointed to name a slate of ofBcers weekend with Mr. and Mrs. A. W. gaining consciousness he passed to. -and' Mrs. R^A. Denovan re- Creek West. for the Society for the year 1960. MaqPhee and D. A. turned' home on feday last after peacefully away on the above date ■ Thp remains , rested at his late Mrs. MaoPhail, who is convener Miss Shirley McDonald, Montreal, spending a couple of weeks at To- at the age of 67 years. residence from where they were of Citizenship and Education, pre- is spending a few weeks’ holidays ronto and Oakville. . Mr. Paulin was born at Embrun conveyed' on Saturday morning at sented an Interesting program. with Mr. and Mrs. J. J. McCormick. Mrs. Jessie Sandilands returned Ont., on June 3rd, 1892. He served 11 o’clock to Our Lady of the Several Ii-ish songs were sung with Mr. and Mrs. Basil McCormick, Ot- to the village from Montreal last the public as railway agent at Angels Church, Moose Creek, where Mrs. E. A. McKillican presiding at tawa, were also home for the Week- week. She spent the past three Greenifleld for a number of years, Requiem Mass was celebrated by the piano. Mrs. Wilfred Montcalm end. months with relatives in the city. later coming to Moose Creek, where R,ev. Aime Leduc, parish priest. prepared a paper on “Education”, Mr. and Mrs. Miller of Montreal, he served as agent for 14 years. He Burial took place in the Moose which was presented. Mrs. D. A. GLEN NORMAN spent the -weekend at the Manse served one year in Ottawa before Creek piarish cemetery. MacGregor, a delegate to a Confer- with to. and Mrs. Leo Hughes. retiring a year ago. * » <■ ence held in Guelph for the Feder- Mr. Paulin’s fh'st wile, Elizabeth We are pleased to learn that Mrs. Others spending the weekend Mrs fîiVipniilt DIP® ation of Agr-ioulture, was the guest •Rochon, predeceased him. Peter MacKinnon has returned -to with relatives were to. and Mrs. A iSS IS I— w •“ r ” our midst dining the past week, Walter Henry, Miss Dianne Perrier, He is survived by his widow, the held on Tuesday morning to Our Farm and m the Heme”. A nurse-in-training at St. Mary’s former Miss Antonia Eavaria; seven after being a -patient for the past Lady of the Angels Church, that of conducted by Mrs. few weeks in Hotel Dieu, Cornwall, -Hospital, Montreal; Miss Barbara sons, René Paulin, Gilles Paulin, of Mrs. Gibeault, widow of the late fanleyjrroved, enjoyable. Mi-s. D. MacLeod of -the Ladies’ Teacher’s Deschenes; Maurice Paulin of Flor- where she underwent surgery. Ernest Gibeault. She was formerly t ffrqu- Mr. and Mrs. Raoul Cardinal had College; Miss Gertrude Ma-cCrim- ida; Paul, with the Canadian Army mon, teacher, Ottawh. Adeline Hurtubise, daughter of the chosen captams, and Mrs. with them during the weekend, in Germany; Andrew Paulin in the MacGregor’s team wlas the winner. John Proulx, Kirk Hill, disposed late Mr. and Mrs. James Hurtubise their son, Rene Cardinal, of Mont- BCAP, Gimli, Man.; John Paulin A contest, “Namiirg the largest of his 160-acre farm recently to of this place. real, and' their daughter. Miss of Edmonton, and Robert Paulin of Born in Moose (3reek in 1898, Mr. number of Irish songs”, conducted Lloyd Howes an-d son, for a good Moose Creek; and five daughters, by Mrs. E. A. McKillican, was won Simone Cardinal, of Ottawa. Gibeault predeceased her two years rice Marten. Miss Blanche Pardo, who is vaca- figure. Mrs. Yvon Landry (Ceoile), Irene ago. (by Mrs. Albert Villeneuve. A con- Winners of two contests were ' tioning at home in Canada after a Miss Doreen ’Trottier of St. Mrs. Lionel Dallaire, and Claire ’The Breadalbane broomball team Of a quiet disposition, a lover of [test_ was conducted' by Mrs. Mac- Mrs, Petterley and Mrs. .Alex number of years in Hong Kong, Michael’s Academy, Cornwall, was Paulin of Hull, Que.; Mrs. Roger challenges any team in Glengarry music who had been organist for Phail. Twenty-one kitchen uten- Armour. China, as a missionary. She had With her parents, to. and Mrs. -Ar- for a game or series. Contact G. Belair (Rita) of Laval des Rapides, cade ’Trottier, during the weekend. many years in her church, she was ; sils were pli in a cotton bag and Miss Bonfill gave an interesting motion, pictures of many interesting Goulet. ■and Miss Lise Paulin of Moose _ the contestants had to name as things seen during her stay in Jack MacKinnon arrived- here a loving mother, sister and grand- talk on “Safety in the Home”. Miss Flora A. MacDonald, R.N., Cre^. Two sisters also sinwlve; China; also many souvenirs of the during the past week from Sudbury, mother? Diiring the" tinTe'lhr tody I “ po^ible of them by the Mrs. B. C. Lang gave a short re- of Detroit, is considering having Mrs. Raymond Rochon, Hull, Que., customs of the country and people. and is at present with his mother, r.ested at her .late home many called ^ feeling the closed cotton port on the short ’course she at- her house here remodelled into a and Mrs. Irene Angrinon of Dorval, bag. ’The winner was Mrs. Elmer tended in Pinch. The course was Miss .Anna Williams of Ottawa, Mrs. J. H. MacKinnon, and other as well as 17 grandchildren. to offer -prayers and extend sym- convalescent home. She has had pathy. MacDermid. “Ways of Making Fancy Sand- was home for the weekend -with relatives here. The remains rested at an Ottawa Miss Elaine Larocque of Hawkes- ((Continued on Page 7) ■'The funeral was held at 10 a.m. A delicious lunch was served by wiches.” Mr. and Mrs. Rod McCrimmon. funeral home, where they were the hostess, assisted by a number Plans were made for the meet- conveyed on -Saturday morning for 'Tuesday from her residence to Our Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McDonald of Lady of the Angels Ohurch, where of members. ing on ’Thursday, April 21st, at the funeral service to Our Lady of the Mrs. MacPhatl was thanked for Prescott, were here for the week- the Solemn Mass was chanted by home of Mrs. Wilfred- Petterley. end visiting their parents. ■Angels Church, Moose Oeek, where her kindness in having the meeting All mem'bers will be hostesses, with Requiem Moss was chanted by Rev. Rev. Sylvio Gibeault of Montreal, Miss Donna Mae MacLeod, Mont- assisted by Rev. Aime Leduc, P.P., in her home. a “Pot Luck Supper” to precede the The BANK of NOVA SCOTIA Aime Leduc, parish priest. ■ real, was home for ■ the weekend and Rev. Elzear Danis of Pinch, as ■meeting. Members are asked to Burial took place in .the family take their O'wn dishes. Mrs. Orland- ■with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan deacon and sub-deacon. AVONMORE McLeod. plot in Greenfield cemetery. ■Kyle will be social convener. The »' » « Surviving are four sons: Paul E. o— and Jacques Gibeault, of * Moose W.I. Met meeting will feature election of MEET Osias Pilon Dies Creek; six daughters: Sister Ade- With a large number of members officers, payment of fees and re- KIRK HILL Relatives and friends of the late line de la ’Trinité (Theresa) of La- in attendance, the monthly meeting ports from the conveners of stand- UNEXPECTED Osias Piton were saddened to learn vigne. Ont.; Mrs. Armand Gauthier of the Women’s Institute was held ing committees. Motto for the Gordon Obleman is a patient in of his passing away on Thursday (Denise) of Ottawa; Mrs; Royale at the home of Mrs. Wilfred Fet- meeting will be Stand up to be the Ottawa Civic Hospital. His EXPENSES morning, March 24th, in the Mc- Bourdeau (Dolores) of Limoges; terley. Mrs. E. L. Filion, president, seen: Stand up to be heard-: and friends -wlsh him a speedy recovery DoneU Memorial Hospital, Com- Mrs. Rollande Lalonde (Eîvelyn) of was in the chair. sit down to be appreciated. Maggie and .Angus MoGilli-vray, ,wall, after a lengthy illness. He ■Cornwall; Mrs. Yvon Fortier (Adri- Mrs. B. C. Lang, secretary-trea- The meeting closed in the usual who were laid up -with flu, axe up was aged 86 years. enne), and Mrs. Leo Besner (Lor- sxuer, read the minutes and corre- manner. Mrs. Stanley Wert moved and out again. Mr. Pilon, a highly respected raine), Moose Greek. Two sisters spondence, which included letters a vote of thanks to the hostess, for Archie McRae was a business also survive, Mrs. J. A. Poupart of from the Chesterville branch of the the use of her home and her kind visitor to Alexandria this -week. Eastview, and' Mrs. Raoul Theoret, Canadian Cancer Society, and Miss I l^ospitality. ■After spending six weeks ■with his -haeiachtf Moose Creek. Nancy Pritchard, -local home econ- brother Willie, Hugh Dewar re- fitted ovfi Burial w'as in the parish ceme- omist. McCRIMMON tm-ned to his home this week. *-resf distvrbedS tery. Floral tributes were many Mrs. Margaret McKinnon was ap- John D. McRae attendÿ the in- ARE ALL and beautiful. pointed District director to the One of the old sayings was that surance meeting in Alexandria on with a low-cost loon through Spring meeting at Osnabrück; on Many friends here extend warm March w'ould break the backbone of Saturday. April 8th. Mrs. Wm-. Campbell was winter, but it took 28 days to do it WIVES sympathy to the sorrowing family. o FED UP? named alternate. < this year. Newfoundland, with an area of itiar When they are troubled by backache, Miss J. B. Bonfill was social con- ■Mr. and Mrs. John Ross Mac- 152,000 square miles, has a popula- that tired out feeling or disturbed rest, W.I. Met vener in the absence of Mrs. Mau- Leod had as an overnight guest. tion of 435,000. Duuiy, many women hun to Dodd’s The Miarch meeting of the Moose Kidney Pills. These conditions can be Creek branch of the Women’s In- caused by excess acids and wastes in stitute was held in the home of • / the system and Dodd’s Kidney Pills Mrs. Ernest A. MacPhall, on Thurs- sthnulate the kidneys and aid their normal action of removing these excess day evening, March 17th. Owing acids and wastes. ’Then life seems to the absence of the president, brighter, housework lighter! Why don’t Mrs. C. Walton, the former presi- you, too, try Dodd’s? 63 dent, Mrs. Elmer McDennld, occu- pied -the chair, assisted' by the sec-

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ACROSS measure 25 God of war 53 Attacks 1 Entice by 61 — and downs 28 Obtain 55 Infiuire artifice 62- Japanese coin 29 Peels 56 Magna —— 6 Tall crown of 63 Form a net- 30 Movie acting 57 A constellation upi>er Egypt like fabric awards 69 Rays of light 10 Weakens 67 Unruly 31 Levantine 61 American 14 Cognizant of . outbreak ketch Indians 15 Interpret 69 Surround ' 32 Girl's name 62 Analyze 16 En[ipfoy with some- 33 Approached verse meter 17 Chess pieces tiling solid 34 MilitaTy unit 64 Observe 18 Part of play 72 Harem room 35 Hindu 65 Old Roman ipl.) 73 Ripped • • cymbals date 20 Seaport of 74 Group pulling 38 Fruit (pi.) 66 Story Algiers together 40 Nautical mile 68 Worthless 21 Victim 75 Badger-like 41 Places leaving 23 Head covering animal 43 Combining 70 Prefix: new 24 Faucet 77 Emmets form: sea 71 Unit of energy 26 Preposition 78 Male 45 Warning 76 Denoting 27 The self (pi.) offspring fpl.) devices unfit ship 29 Through 79 Aquatic birds 48 Fall in drops in Lloyd’s 30 Over (poet.) 50 Drunkard Register •31 Transgressor DOWN 34 Mark of omis- 1 Wet sion (pi.) 2 Pitcher 38 Form of 3 Walking stick 4 Cerreianvo 37 Gentle heat of either 39 Bags 5 ARirmative 42 Mohammed* answer » an priest 6 Extent of 44 Withers land (pi.) 46 Narrow road 7 Canvas 47 Tended shelter MODÇL ILLUSTRATED: SUPER 88 HOLIDAY SPORTSEDAN. A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE 49 Point in 8 Holland 0-1060-8 an orbit commun* — 51 Decay 9 Rankle See your authorized Oldsmobile quality dealer today! 52 Mistakes 10 Store 54 Cooks la ^ 11 Atmosphere certain way 12 Talk idly 56 Fish 13 Spanish title 58 Those in 19 I’musehold power _ 59 Wagers V 22 Strong 60 Land longing CLENCARRY MOTOR SALES PHONE 238 ALEXANDRIA The Glengarry News, Alexandria, Ontario, Thursday, March 31st, 1960 Page T

Denovan, “Dennyland Farm”. ☆ ☆ News from Here Dalkeith Farm Forum axnpleted Former Lancaster its activities Monday evening with FARM FORUM and There . . a card; party, after an interesting FINDINGS Resident Dies GLENGARRY Continued from Page 6 and beneficial season. ☆ ☆ Mrs. Maj'y Lalonde, 72, resident February 1st topic, “Farm Adver- of Lancaster until the death of her COMMISSION an estimate from a contractor and LANCASTER tising — Does It Pay?” husband, Aldeman Lalonde, seven may proceed In the near future.' years ago, died' Monday, March Mir. and Mirs. Clifford Jehu and Dalkeith Forum felt that com- Mrs. Hugh Dewar of Dunvegan, modity groups should adopt Na- 28th, at MdcDonell Memorial Hos- AUCTION is spending some time with her sons of Liachine, visited' friends in South Lancaster during the week- tional Advertising, and groups of pital following a lengthy illness. Lancaster, Ontario sister, Mrs. Neil S. MacLeod. Born Mary White at Lancaster, end. different products should do their Archie MacRae, carpenter, is en- own advei-tising. she was a daughter of the late • gaged the past week with John Mrs. Allan Derry spent last week with her daughter, Mrs. W. Frier, February 8th, “Family Farming; Peter White and his wife, Melepine Prices paid for Livestock Mr. Frier and family, in I.achine. Can It Survive?” Laframboise. Donald Gumming left last week Both forums felt that emphasis Chief mourners include one son, March 28th should be put on the level-of-living I Claude, and one daughter, Mrs. for Neelin, Man., to attend the • funeral of his brother, William approach, as long as we bring in John Pearce (Della), both of Com- enough to put out. They also felt VENTILATORS Cumming, who passed away after I wall. Calves, Beef and Dairy Cattle that RuraLUrban Migration should an illness of several months. Four grandchildren and one in good supply Miss Helen McDonald, Montreal, be discouraged. Both felt family I great-grandchild survive as do two spent a few days last week with farming is resourceful enough to brothers, Levi and Lawrence, of Prices on Beef strong her aunt, Mrs. J. Walsh, and Mr. provide an adequate living for the Lancaster; and two sisters, Mrs. Walsh. farm family. I Albert Prieur and Mrs. Hugh Weaner Pigs $6-$9A0 each Miss Bertha Hebert spent the Lochlnvar felt that keeping the jMunro, both of South Lancaster. weekend in Ottawa with her sister, family farm is the best way of life, Feeder Pigs $10-$1S each even at present day prices, but this The funeral was held Wednesday, Mrs. Angus Roach, Major Roach leaving Miller’s Funeral Home, Market Hogs $15-16,50 cwt. and family. is not accomplished without many hours of labor and careful count- Cornwall, at 9 am. for Requiem Sows $9.25-$14 cwt. Mrs. Herb Derry and son Ralph, High Mass at St. Joseph’s Church, McMastervUle, spent last weekend ing of pennies. Calves— February 29th, “Education — A Lancaster, at 9:30. Burial was in Under 100 pounds $16-$22 with Mr. and Mrs. E. McPherson. the parish cemeteiy. i / Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Gamble of Job for Farm Organizations”. Over 100 pounds $22-$29 All felt the questions on this topic Dundas, Ont., axe visiting the Bulls $18 Misses Gamble, Oak street. are very effective for farm organ- Sixty years ago it took 100 man, izations, especially short courses, hours of work to produce 100 bush- Beef up to $19 night classes, folk schools, radio els of Canadian wheat. Today the Springers $165-$230 LACCAN and TV, and by leadership courses. man hour requirement, because of March 7th, “Safety On Canada’s machinery, is 25. The robins have arrived, so it Farms”. must be Spring. They felt individual members 12 inch — $50.(k) Malcolm N. Grant called on should apply safety rules in their 14 inch — $55.00 James R. Grant on Simday after- own homes, and on their own noon. “Tonn honsebroken?” 'farms. Shotild advocate the facts 16 inch — $60.00 Mrs. Sara MacKinnon was in of thè present accident survey now CLEAN YOUR BARN 18 inch — $65.00 Hawkesbury on Wednesday and had conducted in Ontario, through part of her cast changed. She ex- j MacSweyn from the Ottawa Tea- oued a child from a slave-dealer, Forums, Federation, 4-H Clubs, and AUTOMATICAllY 20 inch — $80.00 pects to have it removed in a. couple j chers’ College. led the district’s exalted' Mandarin CSA Approved especially films or slides, that would WITH THE of weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Will Campbell and to accept Christianity. When war show up hazardous roads, gateways, Harry Franklin is in possession Barrie, - of Alexandria, spent the with Japan broke out, her dangers machinery and barns. Have these of a new Envoy oar, which he pur- weekend with the latter’s parents, increased, for loyalty to Nationalist shown at some farm organization J.H. Sauve & Fils Mr. and Mrs. K. W. Nixon. China caused' her to spy on the in- chased from Glengarry Motor Sales meeting. BARN CLEANER '238 St-Laurent Dr. and Mrs. J. W. McMartin and vaders. She was cruelly beaten, in Alexandria last week. It might help to have a National famfiy, of Montreal spent the week- ^ Then, as a fugitive without money FARM ENGINEERED Valleyfield Ransom Nixon was home for the Farm Safety Council. end with the latter’s father, Dan or food, she led 100 homeless chil- THERES A weekend from Ottawa; also Kent March 14th, “Farm Organization TO CUT THE MacLeod and Mrs. MacLeod, ’ dren to safety in the epic journey Story in College”. BADGER DRUDGERY 0 I across wild mountains which has -They both felt that many of our BARN CLEANER ON YOUR MacDONALD ’S GROVE ; been chronicled in both her biogra- graduates have not sufficient under- FARM —— : I phy and the Hollywood film. standing of the function of farm FOR EVERY Announcement . . . The The Young People’s Society of lUness forced her to return to organizations upon graduation. Gordon Church, St. Elmo, and St. England for a time after more than Lochlnvar was in favor of basic SIZE BARN Andrew’s Church, MaxvUle, met at 20 years of service in China, but training instead of short courses. Alexandria Commission Auction the home of Douglas MacLennan, now she has returned to Formosa March 21st, “The Consumer and on Friday evening last. for more work among the National- the Parmer.” SALES BARN has been appointed an Mrs. A. G. MacGregor, Mr. and 1st Chinese. 'The 140 children in an j-' Mrs. David MacGregor and daugh- orphanage she directs there are Lochlnvar felt the consumer does Assembly Yard ter Laurilea spent Thursday in among the more than 13,000 sup- understand the losses a farmer Cornwall. ported through World' Vision. ‘‘We | to face. They don’t under- by the Ontario Hog Producers’ Co-operative convenient, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Wilkes visited are honored”, says Dr. Bob Pierce, stand how many middle-men there lew cost, Badger with Angus and Miss May MacKay President of World- Vision, “to have | sre between the farmer and con- ''P»y as You Chore" Plan. SALES ON MONDAYS — 8 a.m, to 5 p.m. on Tuesday afternoon. , this pai't in the work of ‘The Small, sumer. If the hi-between could be Jens Jensen, Misses Marie Jensen, Woman’, and wte are glad' to make eliminated. Joan MacGregor and Ina Urquhart her available to the churches of | , ’This was the last broadcast for See ifMi/i. ùiaUted Speckdut. J were in Montreal on Saturday. Canada as part of our organiza- I the season, and sincerely hope we tion’s ministry of missionary chal- wiU have more Forums to hear LAYOUT - INSTALLATION - SERVICE STEWART’S GLEN lenge.” ' from in the Fall season. AUCTION SALE For Complete Information and Estimate call your (Intended for Last Week) Glengarry County authorized De Laval Dealers GOOD HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE Sincere sympathy goes out to Norman K. MacLeod and other South Terrace Street, LANCASTER, Ontario members of the family, in the loss ☆ ☆ ☆ (Near C.N.R. Station) of his brother Fred, Whose funeral ALEXANDRIA COMMISSION AUCTION was largely attended' on Monday in Dunvegan Church. D. C. Murray & Son SATURDAY, APRIL 9th, 1960 Recent callers at Riverside Farm Held every Wednesday at 1:00 pjn. were: John D. MacRae and Horace Phone 623-R-2 MARTINTOWN, Ont. L’Islet white enamel kitchen eaus; 2-piece chrome studio set; Marjerison, of Apple Hill; ^ John at Alexandria — starting at 7:30 p.m. range; 5-plece chrome kitchen electric washing machine; Singer Alex MacRae and Iimis MacDonald, set; chrome rocking chair; Mc- sewing machine; hot plate; of Greenfield. We will pick up cattle for our sale at $1.00 per head Ciaxy 9 cu. ft. refrigerator; Ad- 7 cords of dry maple stove wood; Mary and Joan Sinclair of Ot- over any reasonable distance. miral 21" cabinet TV, with rotar odd tables and chairs; rocking tawa, spent the weekend at their entenna; modem 9-piece dining- chair; clock radio; 8-day wall All hogs between 180 and 220 lbs. sold are tattooed clock; dishes; glassw'are; kitchen parental home. I'oom set; 4 good beds, with By all appearances, Lionel Ville- with Government Grade. spring - filled mattresses; bur- utensils; tools. neuve is preparing to tap again this TERMS - CASH year. Everyone longs to get a taste PAUL SAMSON, Prop., Lancaster, Ont. of the new fresh maple syrup. Telephone 14-R-4 OMER POIRIER ALBERT PA'UBERT, Auctioneer. Phone 410-J, Alexandria. lucent callers at Willie Clark’s ONTARIO DEPARTMENT 'OP HIGHWAYS were: Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. Diincan Clark and THE HIGHWAY IMPROVEMENT ACT La’wrence, of Pembroke; Mrs. Joan Clark and Mrs. B. Bickerstaff, of Maxville. PUBLIC NOTICE Catherine Robinson of Crysler, is YOU CAN visiting her sister, Mrs. Norman M. PEDIGREED IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to The Highway Improvement MacLeod. Act, 1967, an Application will be made by the Minister of Highways SEED to the Ontario Municipal Board for the approval of the closing Mrs. Tena Cameron is at present of the following roods in the Township of Lancaster, county of with her sister, Mrs. Wilfred James, • Fore-bred seed of recommended varieties fully pro- GUT COSTS CO-OPERATIVELY cessed by modem refining methods is the first, funda- Glengarry, where they intersect or run- into the controlled-access who we regret is sick. highway known as highway number 401.— mental step toward the biggest and best crop, be it Grass or Grain .... NOTE:—^There wifi be a service road provided on the North side of WITH THE RIGHT Highway 401 from Lot 34 Easterly to the road between Lots'! and 2, Concession 1, and on the South side of High'way 401 from the road Famed ^Small allowance between Lots 31 and 32, Concession 1, Easterly to Lot 9, OATS, GARRY, Registered No. 1 Concession 1. Woman’ To Speak Oeresan treated per bushel '$1.75 1. The road in Lot 34, Concession 1. OATS, GLEN, Registered No. 1 2. The road allowance between Lots 31 and 3Z, Ceresan treated per bushel 2.10 Concession 1. CO-OP At Avon more 3. The road in Lot 30, Concession 1. OATS, RODNEY, Certified No. 1 4. The road in Lot 28, Concession 1. Gladys Aylward, who rose from Ceresan treated per bushel 1.70 5. ’The road in Lot 26, Concession. 1. the position of a London parlor- ' BARLEY, HERTA, Certified No. 1 6. The road at or near the line between Lois 9 maid to become a legend in her own Ceresan treated per bushel 2.10 and 10, Concession 1 (not much used). life-time through heroic service in TIMOTHY, CLIMAX— 7. The road allowance between Lots 8 and 9, war-ravaged China, will speak in Certified No. 1 per lb. 26c Concession 1 (not in use). St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, Such Application wifi be heard by the said Boatd at THE FEED PROGRAM Avonmore, Tuesday, April 5th, at ALFALFA, VERNAL— US Certified No. 1 per lb. LANCASTER TOWNSHIP HALL, NORTH LANCASTER, ON THE 8:(X) pm. I 65c 21st DAY OP AiPRIL, 1960, AT ’THE HOIHi OP 9:30 O’CLOCK To cut costs co-operatively, we have reduced Miss Aylward, “The Small Wo- ALFALFA, DUPÜITS— IN THE FORENOON, at which time and plface all persons claiming the following brands of feed : man” of the best-seUer under that US Certified No. 1 per lb. 70c to be interested or affected may attend and' be heard'. title and whose story was condensed ALFALFA, RANGER— By order of the said Board aU persons objecting to the said Calf Starter Grower $89.95 per ton in the Reader’s Digest and' por- US Certified No. 1 per lb. 45c closings or claiming that their land will be injuriously affected by 16% Dairy Ration 62.95 per ton trayed on the screen in “The Inn of LADING CLOVER— the said closings must FILE PARTICULARS OP SUCH OBJEC- the Sixth Happiness”, is now on a TIONS OR CLAIMS (stating their Lot, Concession car Registered US Certified No. 1 per lb. 80c Plan number) with the Ontario Municipal Board, 145 Queen Street Dry and Fitting Ration 64.95 per ton speaking tour of Canada. She is BIRDSFOOT TREFOIL, EMPIRE— the guest of World Vision, Inc., a West, Toronto, referring to File Number PJ’.M. 10294-60, and with Sweet Cattle Mix 59,95 per ton service agency giving emergency ’ Certified No. 1 per lb. 70c The Land Surveys Section of the Department of Hlgh'ways, Par- Canadian and Lincoln Brome — Orchard Grass — Meadow Fescue liament Buildings, Toronto, Attention: Mr. V. E. Conway, ON OB 32% Dairy Concentrate 79.95 per ton aid to more than 75 missionary or- | BEFORE THE 11th DAY OP AiPRIL, 1960. The hearing to deter- ganizations. I Ottawa Valley and LaS'alle Red Clover—Alsike and White Dutch mine the amount of such claims 'wiU take place at such time and We have a Complete Feeding Program She dreamed- of going to China Clovers — Viking Trefoil, Etc. place as may be subsequently fixed by the saidi Board. for all classes of livestock and poultry as a missionary, but whs unable to j We have them all and will make blends according to A Plan P-3178-6 showing the portions of roads proposed to be obtain backing because of her lock j any formula which you may wish to suit your purpose closed may be seen at the oflice of the Clerk of the Township of . . . plus a Complete Credit Extension of education. So she determined to Lancaster, at North Lancaster; at the ofBce of the Clerk of the Program for growing pullets, egg pro- go anyway without help from any- VUlage of Lancaster, at Lancaster; at the office of the Department one. . of H^hways, at 110 Lisgar Street, Ottawa, and' at the office of the duction, turkey, hog and beef raising Planning Eiigtneer, Planning and Design Branch, Department of In 1930, equipped with railroad] Highways, New Administration Building. Downsvlew Avenue, You are welcome to come in and discuss tickets , her Bible, ninepence in DO'WNS'VEBW, Ontario, dming regular office hours, up to April your Feeding Programs at any time coins and two one-pound traveler’s 21st, 1960. cheques, Gladys Aylward travelled William Ewing across “impossible” Siberia. Company, Limited DATED at Toronto, Ontario, this 4th day of March, 1960. Glengarry Farmers’ Co-Op Her life in a remote moimtaln THE HONOURABLE FRED M. CASS, Q.C. town of northwest China became a AGRICULTURAL SEED SPECIALISTS Mill Square ALEXANDRIA Phone 347 series of dramatic events. She stop- Phone 263 Minister of Highvrays. ped a prison riot alone by calmiy VANKLEEK HILL, Ont. facing an axe-wielding inmate, res- Page 8 The Glengarry News, Alexandria, Ontario, Thursday, March 31st, 1960

Township of Charlottenburgh — For RESULTS Use — Glengarry County ’The Annual Meeting of the Glen- NEW CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES garry Telephone Oompany, limited, TENDERS for GRAVEL CLASSIFIED ADS Red cedar fence posts. Phone: A baby’s crib with mattress, if in will be held at the Township Hall, Sealed Tenders, plainly marked Lancaster 4382. I3-3o fair condition. Apply to: Box Lochiel, Ontario, on WEDNESDAY, on the envelope as to contents will For Sale, To Let, Wanted, etc.: 60 cents for twenty words or less; “K”, Glengarry News. 13-2p THE eth DAY OP APRIL, 1960, at be received by the undersigned up 2 cents each additional word; extra insertions, 40 cent minimum. the hour of one-thirty o’clock, for Births, Deaths: No charge. Cards of Thanks: $1.00. In Mem- 18 double windows, used, very rea- to 10 am. on sonable. Apply to: Alex Mac- 32—Business Opportunities the purpose of receiving the report oriam: Minimum, $1.00, 10 cents per line of verse. Public of Directors for the preceding year ■WiXiNESDAY, 6th APRIL, 1960 Notices: 16 cents per line, first insertion; 12 cents per line subse- laren. Phone 236, Alexandria. 13-2p Stores for rent, choice location, and- any other business that may be for the cimshing and laying of ap- quent insertions; 15 cents extra, if not paid in advance; 25 cents Markson block. Main St., Alex- brought before the meeting. proximately 12,000 cubic yards of SPRINGTIME on the farm extra, if Box No. used. Classified Display: $1.00 per column inch. onoria. Phone 92. J. J. MORRIS, gravel, about %rds of which' is to means, among many other Evaporator, 14x3%, with a new ex- spread on Township roads, the bal- tra pan; also 5()0 to 600 buckets Secretary-’Treasurer. ta^, the occurrence of vari- 33—Apartments, Flats To Let MALCOLM N. GRANT. Pres. ance to be hauled by To'wnship ous ailments among livestodc, Copy for Classififw Ads must be in this office not iater than and a new 500-gallon reserve tank truioks; gravel to be taken from and spouts. Good as new. Price 12-2C such as SCOUIW.4A calves, foot Wednesday night to appear in current week’s columns TVo apartments — heavy wiring, William Lapierre’s pit; an material rot, inflamation in the uddn $225.00. Apply to Gerard Massie, to pass through a round screen ’phone: Lochiel 26-R-3, 11-2p complete bathroom. Apply to: of cows, and many other ail- Leo Lauzon, 57 Kenyon St. Phone PUBLIC NOTICE -Grushed material to be 70% coarse ments. Today, modem medi- 1—Coming Events 9—Personal 14—Autos For Sale 185. 11-3C TOWNSHIP OF LOCHIEL and the remainder to be grit or cine gives ns many new items ” (Continued) Half Loads In Effect sand - Truck loads to be limited which are quite specific for The regular meeting of the Lochiel 1938 DeSoto — radio, heater, excel- Six-room flat, on Main St.; equip- to 10 yards. the above mentioned and Township School Area Will be Bargain prices in “Security Lock” lent running condition. Also 1953 ped with furnace In cellar. Avail- Owners of trucks are prohibited Stripping and' levelling of pit to other sicknesses. ■ held in Dalkeith School, April •Aluminian and Steel Roofing; Chev. head complete. Phone: able now. Apply to Mrs. Alex from carrying more than half the be done by contractor and all work 7th, at 8:30 pm. 13-lc also eavestroughs, fittings; build- Alex 327-W-13. 12-2p Quesnel. Phone 596. 12-2p tonnage capacity of trucks or other to be compieted' to the satisfaction Stock Up NOW ing and carpenter work. Work vehicles on aU township roads until of the Road Superintendent not and Be Ready guaranteed. Call: Fred Hamble- 15—Farm and Garden Produce 33—Apartments, Flats To Let such time as said roads are in a later than 1st September, 1960. The regular monthly meeting of Scour Tablets, Penicillin, Mons Lodge, No. 348, L.OÆA., ton, Dalhousie Station, Lancaster proper condition to warrant full Pull partioulars may be obtained McCriminon, will be held on Sat- 4475. 13-tf For Sale — 800 bales good mixed 4-room apartment, available May capacity loads. from Wilfrid McDonald, Road Sup- Black Leg Bacterin, Hoof urday, April 2nd, 1960, at 1:30 hay. Apply to: Elwin McDonell, 1st. Apply to; Mrs. Adelard By order of Oouncdl. RR 1, Dalhousie Station. Phone: erintendent, RR. 1, Summerstown, Rot Remedy, Syringes pm. Members, please note. RUG AND CHESTERFIELD Lalonde, 16 Peel St., Alexandria. D. J. MCMILLAN, Ontario, Telephone: Lancaster 5431. 13-lc Lancaster 35H. 13-lp 13-lc Hoad Superintendent, and Needles, Mastitis CLEANERS Tenders to be accompanied by a Ointments, Milking Tubes, Cost very low; all work guaranteed; 13-2C certified cheque for 10% of the J>on’t forget, the Big Carnival is on For Sale — New crop maple syrup 36—Teachers Wanted Tonics, Uterine Boluses. furniture ready to use In 2 hours. —^buy early and buy the best, at amount of the tender or a satis- Friday night at the Glengarry AH work done electrically in your factory performance bond. — AT — Gardens—costumes, races, prizes. my camp. Real Lacombe, 9th A qualified teacher wanted for S.S. NOTICE of MEETING own home. Call today tor estim'- Concession, Dalhousie Mills. Lowest or any tender not neces- Fun for all. See the prizes on ate, Phone 296. 13-3o No. 3 West, Lochiel. Duties to The annual meeting of Glengarry display in the store window of 13-3p commence in September. Apply County Farm Forum will be held in sailiy accepted. IX3-.A. Two valuable door prizes. to: Morlin Campbell, Sec.-Treas., the Alexandria High School, Friday, W. J. MURRAY, McLEISTER’S KAY’S HAT BAR For Sale — A quantity of baled hay. Rexall Drug Store Special prize for largest family RR 1, Dalkeith. 13-2c April 8th, 1960, at 8:30 pm. Cer- Olerk-’Treasurer. representation at the Carnival. Please have your hats, to be re- Apply- to J. A. McRae, Greenfield. Prescriptions a Specialty Phone: Maxville 180-J-l. 12-2c I tificates will be presented at this Williamstown, Ontario, 13-lc paired or remodelled, in early. 37—Help Wanted, Female meeting to tree fanners who quali- PHONE 21 ALEXANDRIA We have a good choice of new 14th March, 1960. ii-3c 16—Poultry — Livestock fied during 1959. Guest speaker for 2—Births Spring Hats, also Hat Trimmings MOTHERS — does your budget fall the evening will be James D. Coats, and Corsages. Kay’s Hat Bar, For Sale — Holstein heifer, 2 years short of your needs? Represent Sec. - Manager, Ontario Forestry GAIÆiANT—To Mr. and Mrs. Alban 127 Main St. Please use side old', freshened March 26th. Apply AVON in your spare time. We Association'. A good attendance is Gallant (nee Janet Gauthier), on entrance. ll-3c to: J. A. McIntosh, RR 1, Dal- train you. Areas include Dalkeith requested. Lmch will be served. and Apple Hill. Write Mrs. Nancy March 27th, at the Ottawa Gen- housie Station. 13-lp ARCHIE MCRAE, Sec.-Treas. TOWN OF ALEXANDRIA , r., eral, a son, John Charles Alban— Place your order now to have your Pordham, 13 Old Orchard, Corn- a brother for Janet Elizabeth. Watkins fly spray on hand before 18—Fuel For Sale wall. 10-lc; 13-lc; 16-lc GORDON MCLEOD, Pres. 13-2c the flies arrive by millions. It HARAMIS — To Mr. and Mrs. Nick kins them. I Will also have other Mixed slabs, 14", 3 cords per load, Reliable girl or woman — general Haramls (Marion Villeneuve) of Watkins bargains for you. Wait delivered. Apply to Ken Mac- housework for approximately six BuiMing insptclw MaxviUe, on March 28th, at the my visit. Eugene Legault, 96 Main Lennan, Dalkeith. Phone Lochiel weeks, starting May 9th. Refer- IRON & METAL Victoria Hospital, Renfrew, a son. St., Alexandria. Tel. 531. 8-lOp 12-R-25. 52-tf ences. Phone: Maxville 211. ■S 12-2C • • APPLICATIONS for the appointment of BUILDING 7—Cards of Thanks INSPECTOR ■will be received'by the undersigned up 20—Farm Machinery WE BUY all kinds of SCRAP Registered Nurses required for until noon— MiaoLEAN — I wish to express my ONTARIO For Sale—^Ditching blade for Allis- Smith Clinic Hospital. For fur- • • sincere thanks to relatives, friends Chalmers tractor, snap coupler ther infor.m£rtion, please contact and neighbors Who remembered' HOO PRODUCERS hitch. This blade is new and is Mrs. P. Foreman, ME 2-2711, or W. MORRIS, Manager Monday, April 4th, 1960 me witti cards, letters and visits an excellent implement for mov- P.O. Box 1690, Hawkesbury, Ont. while I was a patient In Ottawa Assembly Point ing snow and all types of soil. 12-30 Phone: Lochiel 49 Applicants are requested to give full particulars as to Civic Hospital, Ottawa. These Apply to: Kenneth Campbell, RR qualifications and experience. acts of kindness wiU always be For Market Hogs and Sows 3, Vankleefc Hill. Phone: Lochiel, 38—Help Wanted, Male remembered. Line 13, Ring V-2. 13-2c P. A. OHARLEBOIS, —^Mrs. Duncan MacLean. Sold on Dressed Weight March 23rd, 1960, CLERK-TREASURER 13-lp and Graded basis 22—Farms For Sale or To Let TRACTOR DRIVERS Raymond Ouellette at Alexandria, Ontario. Commission 40 cents per hog POIRIER — Rev. A. Poirier, 160-acre farm' for sale, good build- Experienced Men Required ELECTRICAL Pastor of St. John Bosco parish, ings, electricity, good water sup- for Vegetable Farm. Contact CONTRACTOR Cornwall, and his family wish to Every Wednesday ply; 4 miles east of Maxville; express deep gratitude to all those — at — stock and machinery. Will sell P. BAKX—MOOSE CREEK Remote Control Installation who have expressed their sym- complete or farm' otily. Would 13-2C Residential and Commercial pathy and prayers on the occa- GLENGARRY exichange for a property in town. Farm Help Wanted — Experienced Wiring :d