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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 20 Oct 1949, p. 7

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I'URDA, OBRE 20. 1049 SOCIAL AID PERSONAL I Phone 1«3 lM Mrs. L. J. Barton spent several Mns. C. E. Hanna, Miss Irene in days wlth relatives ln Oshawa. Hanna and Mrs. E. R. Hanna, To- 1c .Mrs. Reta Pender, Oshawa ronto, were Sunday guests with dr Was guest of Mrs. Muriel Dunn. Mrs. G. E. Pritchard and Helen. da Mr. John Quinn, Burlirigton, Mr. Wm. Reid, Newtonvllle, gi, N.J., Is visiting bis niece, MIrs. C. sustaied a brokén leg when he tu H.Papineau. was thrown from his cart in the tu Over 25% of Port Hope's mun- roadster class at Port Hope Fair. be lcipal taxes for 1949, as of October Two Newtonville ladies were an lst, have still to be cllected. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Nichols and Mr. and Mns. J. D. Fluker, Vivian, Mr. Jack Hoar and Mr. rei Brockville, were weekend guests and Mrs. Green, Oshawa, spent at of Mrs. Gus Bounsali. Sunday witb Mr. -and Mrs. Ste- M( Mrs Vrn BglyToonophens at Campbellford. wi s. Veraksina gleyT ro ndo, Darlington Township Public is Mset Blksglvig ih r.adSpeaking contest will be beld in to Mrs Bul egly.the basement of Hampton United cai Miss Lurana Sleep, Toronto, Church on Friday evening, Octo- Ca visited her parents Mr. and Mns. ber 28. nec M. A. Sleep. Owing to mechanical difficulties 1 Miss Olga Tod is visiting ber several colurnns of news, includ- NO sister, Mrs. Arthur Wright, Ham- ing considerable country carres- at Mlon. pondence, had to be held overth Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Buckley and tili next week. ter Paul, Peterbono, visited ber par- Dr. H. F. Potter, New York at ents Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Dudley. City, visited his sister, Mrs. L. W. $ 1 Mrs. Hance Hamilton, Lynn, Dippeil. Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Neil,ne Mass., spent a week's vacation Orchard Park, N.Y., were also e with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Conners. recent visitors. wiE Mrs. Edward Foley, Dorothy Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Elliott at- the and Donald, Maple Grove, spent tended the Eastern Ontario Hydro 1 Saturday with Mrs. Bert Colwell. Convention in Ottawa last week. hiai Mrs. Wm. Quick and Miss Mr. Elliott was elected a director 011 Lenore Quick, Toronto, wene re- of the Association for the second me cent guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. year. Toi Quick. The many people who bought vil] Miss Peggy Dippeli, University tickets on the Port Hope Yacht the of Toronto, spent the weekend Club boat will be interested to wei with ber parents Mn. and Mrs. L. know the boat, motor and trailer Mr W. Dippeil. went to W. A. Hagerman, Port Of Messrs. Claude Kilmen, Dave Hope. ing Higgon* O. F. Robson and Joe M hs oino . .cal Jollison are away on a week's stationaen,. ndr. Robinson, R sl huntng epediion.are on a holiday trip to WinnipegOU Mr. and Mrs. V. C. Wallis, Wel- where they will visit their son ]and, spent Thanksgiving week- who is with the Hudson Bay Com- end with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Mc- pany. Donald. .Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Read, Fern- Mrs. W. Armitage, Toronto, sor dale, Mich., were weekend visitors Mrs. M. Vassuer and Miss Jeanne cor with Mr. and Mrs. E. Brummell Vassuer, Cresten, B.C. Mr. an Ro and Mr. Joe Larmour. Mrs. A. J. Lymer anýd family visi- r Mr.andMrs C.H. apieauted Mrs. Mina Colwell and Mrs. -ha were in Coiborne on Sunday at- Br ol4.get tending the funeral of Mr. Ed- Mr. and Mrs. Stuart R. James StOe mund Quinn. and Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Pickard ly *winners in the draw conducted at attended the Silver Wedding PortHop Fai lat wek. rs.anniversary celebration for Mr. Boughen won an electric kettle and Mrs. Roy Perguson. Blak-D and Miss Norma Stark won an stock, October 15th. si electric shaver. Mrs. G. Mclntyre, R.R.7, WQod- Mn. Percy Williams, local man- stock, was winner of the Port st ager o! the A & P Store, is in Hope Lions Club car awarded at Bostn, ass ths wek atýningtheir street fair last week. Local TI Batoanarss. tis eek tend folks holding tickets on this draw was can now throw them in the waste ivit, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Junkin, paper basket. larg* Bobcaygeon; Mr. and Mns. Ernest M.adMs Go .Jms-ai AkiserSunerlndwer gustscelebrated their 30th wedding reg, of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Brooks. anvrayo atra vnnand Mn. and Mrs. Frederick Hughes Oct. l5th, when they were hon- Rec and son Jimmie have retunned ored guests at a family dinner ew to Toronto after visiting ber mo- party given by their children at dlot ther Mrs. Geo. E. Pritchard. Adelaide House, Oshawa. dre. mot. Sonwtob (hure SUNDAYI OCTOBER 23 REV. R. R. NICHOLSON will be in charge at both the il a.m. and 7 p.m. Services. Sunday School at 12:15 p.m. Fireside Service 8:15 p.m. MR. FRANK VIRTUE will show motion pictures which were taken this summer on the European trip whieh he shared wlth Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Siemon. TRINITY UNITED CHURCH1 3GBc Lis CEN TR E Ontario St. TUES. - FRI. FR1. SAT. m m Dowmanville SERVICES 8 p.m. - Bible Study - 6:45 p.m. -Children's Twilight Hour -8 8P.n..-- Christ's Aminbassadors (Young People) 8 8p.rn. - Prayer SUN. - 10 a.m. SUN. - il a.m. SUN. 7p.m. THURS.- - 8 p.m. - Sabbath Sehool - Moming Worship - Evangelistic - lst and 3rd Thurs. each mnonth W.M. S. Paistor: E. JOHNSTON h I ~ iI *" witl othE the Bov for orde may beer beld 27; at7 use In was THE C<A?#AfLA STYA 'PM1*A ?. (W tf? t %mA U Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fpley, Dorothy and Donald, Maple zrove, Mrs. Bert Colwell, Ted and 'win and Mrs. Mina Colwell rere dinner guests of Mr. and rrs. Ernest Foley on the occasion >fMn. Foley's birthday. The Community Council is naking plans for a jumnbo Hal- owe'en Party for ail the chu-. tren of ]3owmagville, on Mon- ly. October 3r. rizes wiil be yven for the most original cos- ume and the mosf comical cas- ume. So corne on kids, there will elots to eat, good entertainment, nd fun galore! Miss Mavis King was bonoured ecently by ber fellow employees tthe Canadian Bank of Com- ierce, when they presented ber itb a white blanket. Miss King being mannied on October 22 Mr. Reginald Green o! New- .stle. The couple are léaving !nada on Octaber 26 to take up asidence in England. The' financial statement o! the orthumberland Forest Ski Club tCobourg reveals that during )e period April 19, 1948, to Sep- =nber 30, 1949, the club opcrated ta loss of some $777.45. Wbile 191.73 of this was spent for a ew tow rope which bas flot yet ýen used it can be assumed that le paon skiing weather o! last nter was directly the cause o! Le lass. Mt'r. and Mrs. George W. Gra- am Sr., Second Street, were hon- red Sunday evening when ,mbers of their family from )ronto, Oshawa and Bowman- le gathered to celebrate with em the occasion o! thein 44th « edding anniversary. Mr. and rs. Graham were the recipients many lovely presents includ- 9a beautiful two-tier wedding 1e, flowers, money and other table gifts to mark this joy- ioccasion. HOME NURSING CLASS A Home Nursing Class, spon- 'ed by the Red Cross, will be nducted at the Nunsing Resenve DO, Bowmanville Hospital. t r.Withenspoon will be in i arge o! the class. If interested in touch with Mns. V. H. orey. Teiphone 308, Aèt-prompt- as the class is limited. 1ressmnaking and nocking Classes tart at Lions Centre ____ t The Lions Community Centre ;3 ia veritable buzzing of act-f ty Friday afternoon when a a ýe number of young mothers V and a few grandmothers, too, t istered for the dressmaking c dsmocking classes, planned b h creation Director Vince Math- ~ on. With the nising cost o! V )hing, and panticularly chil- O n s clothing, it us a wise young b ther Who acquaints herself t, th the art of dressmaking and tr needlewonk. fi n esponse to the invitation of ni Commrunity Council some 39 M wmanville women registered si the dressmaking classes. In m lr that alI who are interested riE yattend, arrangements have ei m made for two classes to be g: dcommencing Thursday, Oct. ti the first at 1:45 and the other I: 7:30. Mn. Mathewson expeets A scure sewing machines for the a., o! the members of the class. st nterest in the smocking class te salmost as great as that o! the tc * ressmaucung dapartmant . . . 29 hisnarm and moveci ta bis present iadies regaistered in this group. home and job. Smocking classes will commence Around In a Jeep on Monday October 25, at 7:30. You wiil find Ed to be a very Ail departments will meet at the straigbtforward persan with a Lions Centre. A very capable in- neady wit and a iyen for taiking, structress for bath groups bas when be knows xyhat ha is talking been engaged in the persan of abaut. This is certainly the case Mrs. G. S. Buchan. wben it cames ta reforestation, conservation and his farests and tree-plantad fields, so you may Plenty of Material listen with confidence to ail he Turn U For as to say on these topies. Now Turn p Foryou have met Ed, let's go and Imperials Team take a look at the projeet. Since thare are roads o! sorts running Mike Osbonne's Imperials bad threugh the forests, aur guide 1hi is oku !tesao will take us along in bis jeep, in Tbursday and over 25 boys turn- sobler touncoeftegreatst os ed out. Mike reports that ail weresbiam ntogoud Sin top shape and will be a rugged Unusual Forest bunch to beat. Hie seems quite A short drive up the road, a confident a! victory, perhaps be- turn, and we are in the Durham cause o! the manpower ha bas on County forest. Almost immediate- hand. A partial list o! the young ly somnebody wiii say, "This bopefuls includies: Max Yourth, doesn't look ike the woods V've Don Gilhooley, Bob Bird, Guy been in before-therc's something Peters, Deug Jury. Bill Bagneli, different!" Buck Cowle, Dan Rundie, Bill He's rigt-there is samething Johnston, Red Krantz, Junior diffenent and it is quite notice- MeMullen, Irwin McCullougb, able. There isn't any o! the usual Bud Hooper, Bill Rowe, Tim Cox, underbrusb or bodge-podge seat- George Piper, Tom Depew, Bill tering of tracs in this forest. In- Sbetley, Bob Wiliams, Gond stead, you can sec for a bal! a Sturrock and Flash Flinto!!. mile or more aiong straight rows A sebedule a! the team's activi- o! carc!ul-plantedi pines, seem- ties will ha found later in The ingly growing from a level bcd Statesman. o! rusty-red pine needles. This isE because these trees were natt RECREATION CALENDAR planted bere by nature. Each onea o! them was planted by hand ors Thurs. Oct. 20-7:30 p.m.-Bas- machine in long nows, foilowings kethali, Higb Sehool Gymnasium, the natural contour o! the land. i maie. Some o! these pines are aven 25e Friday, Oct. 21-7:30 p.m.- years aid, having been among the l Cammunuty Choral Society, To wn first that were pbanted uin 1925,s Hall Auditorium, aduit. wbcn the value o! reforestation f 8.00 p.m.-Sat-Teens, Hay ride was first realized. S and dance. Leaves Community Scotch Pine A Weakllng p Centre at 8.p.m. Dancing and "Yau'll notice tbat these trees I* refneshments ater-sharge 50c, are mostly red and white pine,"0 9.00 p.m.-Club 15 Dance, Hugh Ed comments. "Pind grows better S Sehool Auditorium, adult. ýn this soil than mast other trees Sat., Oct. 22-9:30 p.in.-Boys and wilh show a good profit when s Bowling League, Martyn's alicys, the trees are !inalhy eut dlown and ' smooth soled shoes only. Boys sold for humber. The white pne 0 9-14 (public sehool). is rather easily in!ected with white a 8 p..--Sat Teens bay ride if pine rust -but by scattering it s it nains on Friday nigbt. througb the red pine, that can be t 9 p.m.-Sat-Teens dance at kept pnetty wcll unden contrai. r Lions Community Centre if it Yau wili notice the occasional nains both Friday and Saturday Scotch pine in hee-there's one nights. naw. Sec [t? The littie short onep Mon., Oct. z4-1.45 p.m.- there? That's the trouble witb t Smocking, Lions Community tbem. Tbey grow sa slowly th-at Ui Centre, aduit ladies. they get ovensbadowed by the î 7 p.m. a- Waodcra!t, Centra] bigger trees and become dwar!ed Sebool basement, adult. when the sun can't get at tbem. Tues., Oct. 25-7 p.m.-Leather- Most o! tbem have died out." craft, Lions Community Centre, On we go. Along concession a aduit. roads and township lines, whiciuS( Wed., Oct. 25-7 p.r.-Bays Ed names !but nobady dan nemem- of Gym Class-Public Sehool boys, ber, we ride on through mile a!ter High Sehool Gymnasium. Running mile o! forest, most o! it the same hc sboes essentiai. neatl3« planted type we !irst saw. a Tburs., Oct. 27-1.45 p.m.- Occasionaliy, bowever, we notice a Dressrnaking-Lions Community a patch of natural woodlanc te Centre, aduit ladies. which abounds with ail types of bc 7:30 p.ni.-Dressmaking-Lions srnall plants and shnubs in addi- dc Community Centre, aduit ladies. tion ta tthe trees. st 1, a.*w ..n..v a.a.. .n~PAGEn Ed. Touigman Ti On Tour of Ganai ReveaJ.sAdvantai Standing at the top of Towe Hil, the bigbest ýpoint o! grour in this portion o! Central Ontani( you can see for miles in any di rection, if the day is dlean. Onec the outstanding tbings a pense might notice in such'a vie*w the preponderance o! foreste, lands in the midst o! badly erodei fields in the areas ta the west.1 isn't difficult ta see the erodeî pontions - the open, sandy field and the deep gullies runnini tbnougb some o! tbem show ul clearly against the background o green trees. Looking dloser a these fields, bowever, it migh be seen that there are furrow running tbrougb them, neatly fa] lowing the contours o! the land. This land you are loaking dow on is the Ganaraska Watersbec on a portion o! it, and thse largi belts o! trees are tbe Ganaraskz Forest and the Durham Caunt3 [Forest, the results o! the wark o: the Gariaraska Conservation Au tharity, the first such ta be estab. lished in Canada. Perhaps yot would like ta take a dloser lool -a tour o! the properties? Highly Suitable Guide First, let me introduce you tc your guide, the best man availablE wba is always avaîlable. 'Hie iý Ed Youngman, manager of thE Durham County Forest and onE o! the originals In soil conserva- tion in this area. He lixýes a fexw miles east o! Pontypool on what rnight be refenred ta as a farm, i. there was any actual farming dome tbere. Actually, Ed's "fanm" con- sists o! unbraken miles o! forest, and fields planted in trees, under his supervision. He works for the Department o! Lands and Forests, as fan as work is cancerned, 'but loes flot feel that he is neally working for anybody other thar he people o! this land and, more mportant, the generations which wiii ifollow. In At The Beginning In 1904, Ed 'came fnom Ireland as a young man (no pun intended) and; after working anound the country and serving with the Carladian Army in World War 1, ettled on a !arm near Manvers. in 1919. He had little money but plenty of spirit an *d at the end a! twenty years be owned bis !arm and was in a comfortable rpot financially. During that time he .cquired a wife (a city girl a! whomn he is quite praud) and, be- tween them, they raised sevel -hidren, ail o! whom have le!f horne but Bob, who is now 13. Ed irst became interested in conser- ation practices in 1925, when he bserved the first reforestation eing done in this country, ibe- ween the villages o! Orono and Pontypool. Aitbough skeptical -.t irst, he readily admitted bis er- mr when he saw how the trees Nere growing in the loose, sandy )il and realized the good they ,ould do the land. He started 7forestating bis own farm a bit ýach year and was in at the be- linning o! the Ontaria Conserva- Jon and Reforestation Association. In 1946, when the Gananaska .uthority was formed, he %vas iked to take on the position o! ýupervisar o! the forests. He hesi- ated at fiu'st, but finally gave in o the wishes o! the majority, sold ythmt. On Top Looking Down "You may nat notice it," he -continues, "but we are gradually u dniving uphili. I arn taking you to k the top of the Ganaraska Water- shed where yau will be able to see where the trouble stants that we are trying to cure with ahl this 0planting o! trees. It's up there ,e wbere the smail streams that ev- ýs entually become the Ganaraska eRiver have thein beginnings." e Taking a look around, yau can rýtice that the gnound is an a siape. A clearing through the ~trees (which have thinned out as you leave the repianted areas) e guves you a view a! surroundingi land and it becomes abviaus that yau are ruow on much higher rground than that which you stant- * cd on. Soon, even the fields along ;the raadside seem ta be falling Sa way from yau. Then, off to one side, you spot youn destination. 1Tower. HilI-a rounded hump o! *ground aven 1,000 feet above mean sea level. Although, less than 100 yeans ago, Ibis whole area was al forest, it bas been 50 completely 1 stripped that even this secluded rise is now graced by anly anc small clurnp o! trees. We drive te the top and look around. Fields Disappear "Boy, are You ever lucky!" Ed Êexclaims. "There anen't ten days in a yean that the view front here is as good as it is today. Most of the time, if there isn't low cloud up bere the, ground beldw bas fo, or mist on it. But, this will give you an opportunity to see what bas been done down there and what needs to be donc yet. See that field down there? Even at this distance you can notice the gully running through it. Only 65 years ago that field was as levei as any in this area, but a srnall triekie started in there as the trees were stripped and it event- ually becamne a small stream whicb bas eut away the sou f0o such an extent that most o! the field and the land below it is just a big bole in the grou-nd. And that's net the worst one either. Let's go down and bave a look at the strcams and their effeets." Much Done In Short Time A short distance down the bill we corne across some o! the most recently planted ground. Long furrows bave been contour- plowed across them, by machine on fairly level ground and by horse-drawn hand-plow on the gradients. Evcry six feet a small pine tree rnay be seen, none of- tbem more than a foot bigb. Our guide points them out and states, 'These are the trees planted since the formation o! the Ganaraska Autbority in 1946. Although I have been supervising the job witb odd gangs doing the work, the Boy Scouts from many points in Central Ontario bave done a lot o! the planting. You will r..atice lots bere and there wbich arel marked as baving been done by Boy Scouts in 1947, '48 and 49. The Authority, incidentaliy, now owns about' 3500 acres o! land and the Durham County Forest about 1375 acres, a large percent- age o! wbich is already planted in trees of varying ages. We pianted approximately 1,000,0001 trecs in 1949, but because o! the terribly bot and dry weather in June and July there was a 25 per cent loss-much higher than us- ual. O! course, we expect to make up for that next year but t adds lot o! wonk when you censider the planting season oniy lasts about four weeks, or possibiy six Damnp Spot Starts Ganaraska We move on down the fields and soon corne to one so badly eroded and eut away that even. the jeep won't take us through and m* have to get out and walk,! sinCe Ed insists an showing us somnething down at the bottom of ut. A!ter crawling down a dlay clif! Some forty-odd feet high, he leads us to a short stretch of sandy soil about two feet wide and sixty feet long. He points to a moist Spot in the centre o! it and ex- plains that this sm*all patch of water is one of the beginnings' of the Ganaraska River. It Seems bard ta believe that this trace a! moisture is the stanting point o! a body of; water that bas washed away tons of soil from the farms roundabout and has !looded towns in the. southern portion o! the watershcd1 to the extent that, in past years, miîllions a! dollars wanth o! dam- age bas been done. 'Yet, night at that spot is the evidence a! the1 Powers o! ru.ining waten-the nrickle we are IiDoking at is sit- uated In a deep gully. that it bas aormed aven the years. (Ta Be Couitinued) Canadian Boy Scouts have sent amessage o! greetings to the Scouts o! Japan on the occasion of their first Post-wvar conference. Hamnilton, Ontario, Rotarians have.presented a six-man skiff to alocal Scout Troap, tagether with cheque for $500 ta provide ma- trias ta renavate the Sea.Sout boat house. The Sea Scouts wiil do ail] the work in impraving the structure. j ,id o0, ji- of n is ed [t -d [s tg Lp :f [t t .5 ,e àkes Press Reporter aska Watershed le of, Reforestation Some Trees Undesfrable Again our guide speaks up. **These are patches of land the county or Autbonity bave bought w 'hich were already planted in trees. They saw noa reason to cut these down just to plant more, so they just left them stand. ing and are gradually clearing out any undesirable trees. Uin- desirable trees? Oh, the big shade trees that sink their roots in one small spot and then shade bundreds of square feet of gnound around them so no other trees can grow thene. Tbey don't do much goad as fan as holding mDisture in the ground is concerned. when you consider the amount of ground they take up. Binch trees aren't any good, either, because thein moots don't spread and, therefore, don't bold maisture as we like see on it under a single large Ibuib). IAs migbt be judged by the win- dow decorations, Clary eventual- ly intends ta sell a line o! sport- ing goods hene as well as sport at tbe tables. At pnesent, boweven. be is experiencung the samne trouble ln praeuring goods for sale as otber dealers in town and New Amusement Emporium Opened By ClaryKing There is now a wider field o! endeavour for the "black bail in the side pocket" devotees in Bowmanville'- that new log cabin on King Street is tbe home a! Clary's Billiards, whicb recent- ly opened for business. Owned and managed by Clary F. King. the bouse caters only ta, the "Snoaker" f rade, wbicb game is similan to billiards only in that small balis are struck witb a long eue. However, snooker is a much favoured game by the more inept players. Clany's Billiards 'looks mare like a sportsman's idea o! a lodge in the northern woods, with walis panelled in knotty pine. Tbfà tables are ail lit witb fluorescent lights which reduce glane (and make it difficult ta spot the bal business moving. Must Pay Teachers Lack of financial inducement Canadian Medical Schools is r~ spontible for the senious sborta* a! medical teacbers, aecordingj er in medical research and ne Dean o! the Faculty of Medicin a M VITAMIN B-i1 TABLETS 100's, 300's - reg. 37c, 79c 27c -57 HYDROGEN PEROXIDE I.D.A. Brand Reg. 15c, 39e 9c - 23c MRON & VITAlIIN 1 COMPOUND 240 Capsules-- là-oz Capsues --------- Tou can depend on your I.D.A. Druggist ta f111 youn doctor's prescription accurately wvith fresh, patent and quality drugs friendly, Courteous Service CASTORQIL I D.A. Brand IWT 48oz. - reg. 25c, 45e BRYLCREEM . Ca.nada'.. . hair dresslng gives hair a %mart weIl- groom.d look, a nafural gI.aming lustre. NO GUM 0 NO SOAP a NO ALCOHOL e NO STARCH HANDY TUBES ... 9, 49~ Bayer's Aspirin ---- 18e-29c-79e Frosst's 217 Tablets 35ti-75c-$1.50 REGULAR LARGE (Chase's Nerve Food- 69c-$1.79 Chase's Kidney & Liver Pis 43e ÇASHME RE' TISSUE ConPletely wvapped Soft Pure White 700 SHEETS ta the rall S 3for 30 ..._..._.. %v-.in:roIe's imagnolax ... 50c-$1.00 Agarol ------------- ---- 5c-$1.49 FSoft * Scife * NeatI -. Chrisfmas * Cards * Box o! 12 fine cards, Al1 * different with envelopes. Box o! 18 Supeniar Cards -- ------ 49e Others ----- 98e, $1.00, $1.25 Persanal Cards, from your negative $1.00 doz. $1.25 $3.75 $1,25 Lanligen "B"J for Catarrah, Sipus, Etc. No injections- No operations No pain- No drugs WHITE Embrocation 4& 8 oz. - reg.' 29e, 23e - 39e 49e ANALGESIC BALM I.DA. Brand 1'4-az. tube, reg. 25e 19e CALAMINE LOTION I.D.A. Brand 4 and 8 az. Reg. 25c, 45e ----- 19c-37e I.D.A. Brand 4 & 16-oz. - reg. 25c, 65c. 19C 4e SYRUP FIGS & SENNA I.D.A. Brand 3oz. - reg. 33o 27c 2 sizes ... lguIar, junior Box of 123 napksins 5 QUELQUES FER (Proniounced -Ke ka Flu HOUBIGANT 4- t.. Parfume - $18.50, 12.50, 7.50, 3.5, *.* Eau-de-Toilette - $3.95, 2.50 Sachet Powden - $1.75 Bath Softener - $2.50 Taicuum Powden - $1.00 Dusting Powder - $2.00 PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY ALEX McGREGOIR Vour Local l.D.A.RVGS D rugglst a, We Deùver is not sure wben he can get the at Queen's University, Kingston... bytbesp at o! light on can usually s I d I ;~ $,~ I Phone 792 1- -1 1 F. IDAFER

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