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Port Perry Star (1907-), 10 Apr 1958, p. 5

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Oo @& rid Ladies Wednesday 'Night Bowling APRIL 2nd. Hurricanes i 27 'Mustangs . . 26 North Stars ............ siento, 28 Flyers AY + BomMberB Liisa 31 | Jets rd 19 "" Sunderlands ......... NAR I 18 . Spitfires ross ins 16 . Lancasters ....., 14 " KIttyhBWKS voovecicin iii 11 Mosquitoes sreenisnie ~10° Helicopters ..iii.u....muinniuiinn 4 «Over 200-- : wie Louise Carnegie 352, 200; Doris How- sam. 268, 286; Jean Armstrong 248; Frieda Cochrane 247; Mary Eden 247; Gladys Hayward 247; Mabel Cook 245 Josey Hamilton 238, Dorothy Gordon 226; Ruth Short 217; Shirley Chilton 216; Helen Heard 216; Marion Geer »213; Betty Collins 209; Beth Oke 206; Shirley St. John 203; Madeline Ing- ram 203; Ruby Leask 202, Over 600 Triples-- Louise Carnegie 739; Doris Howsom 658. | = : i abi 3 The New Telephone Director The book of the year will soon 'be ers for Port Perry and district tele- phone customers. | Copies of the 1958 telephone direc- tory for this region are now being {delivered throughout the area -and the old books should be thrown away as soon as the new omnes arrive. "There are many new and changed listings 'in the new directory", J. W. Lowry, Bell Telephone manager for this region, said this week. 'Con: tinued use of the old. one will only 'lead to wrong numbers and unneces- | sary calls to Information," . One of the best ways to avoid con- fusion, Mr, Lowry said, is for each customer to bring his Blue Book of Telephone Numbers or other personal lists of numbers up to date immedi- i ately, Free copies of the Blue Book may be obtained by calling thé Bell's business office. The cover of the new direitory. fea- ~ Port Perry Chamber of Commerce - ANNUAL AND ELECTION OF BOARD OF DIRECTORS Thursday, April 17th, 1958 PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Guest Speaker: DR. D. E. STURGIS, of Oshawa MEETING | Fodlilogu Swe Ww gw anv a 4 tures a sketch of Victoria Hall, Co- bourg's town hall. This replaces the illustration of the McLaughlin Public Library in Oshawa which appeared on the cover of last year's telephone book. Port Perry residents will receive about 60 more copies of the directory this year than last. Initial distribu- tion here will total 1390, compared with an initial output of 1380 in 1957, Total distribution of the directory | in the area served by it will be 43,- 6578. In 1957, 41,152 directories 'were delivered. Oshawa last year received 20,250 copies, 1450' less - than this year, N The directory also 'serves Oshawa, Ajax, Cobourg, Colborne, Port Hope, 'Bowmanville, Pickering and Whitby. ! Ladies' Monday Night Bowling (2nd. night of play-offs) .... .... Wolves 2 Elks 6 Tigers 0 Bears 7 Squirrels b Camels 2 Foxes 0 Beavers 7 Skunks 7 Elephants 0 Racoons 2 Lions 6 High Single-- Janet Vernon 273 High Triple-- Janet Vernon 611 Ovar 200-- Janet Vernon 278; Lorraine Raines 263; Wanda Durham 252; Teresa Hall 226; Margaret Hayes 221; Ann Falconer 217; Ber- nice Dowson 214; Marie Foster 212; Grace Hasting 204; Camille Crozier 203; Mary Amell 208; Elsie Pogue 203; Grace Hunter 200; Emily Ba- dour 200. Men's Bowling Team Standings for Play-Offs-- 5 RR SGA SRE AEF SA ar Bsr br A a bas steered a car to splintering col. lision, If a boy is attracted to a girl he feels an overwhelming desire to secure her approval at every possible mom- ent. In a car a natural reaction is to try to excite her admiration for his superior skill and "courage". As long as she keeps up her part of this game, with little gasps and fluttering eye- lashes, the danger of serious collision mounts. If she knows she is not im- pressed by "kid stuff" driving she may avert an accident that could kill or main several people and premanent- ly destroy the self respect of the boy driver. : "eo + Every passenger in a car has a re- sponsibility toward the driver, and all other road users. A responsibility to see that his own behaviour does not contribute to unnecessary distraction, or tension. And to see quiet influence to discourage any attitude or be- haviour of the driver, or other pas- sengers, that could constitute or de- velop 'into a hazard. The responsibility weighs heavily on an attractive girl, out in a car with an impressionable boy. : ONTARIO SAFETY LEAGUE Geophysical T eopnysical Iear, Canadian Club "Topic Dr, J. T. Wilson, Professor of Geo- physics at the University of Toronto, will'address the April meeting of the Canadian Club of Ontario County to be held in the Piccadilly Room of the Genosha Hotel, Oshawa, on Tuesday, April 16, at 6.30 p.m. Dr. Wilson will spéak on "The Geophysical Year and What It Means to Canada." A graduate of the University of ----t Em iBT Ed ds TA Yon a Hoh A eM TY . rR Fak Kr How lo Help With Problems of Old . Persons! : In every community, however small or large, older persons and their re- latives and friends are faced with problems with which they. cannot cope alone, and "must have help. How does an old person find out I RAE by dig A dn er, a a oe a £34555 45 8 Sg THE PORT PERRY STAR, THURSDAY, APRIL 10th, 10685 The effort of fertilizer elements in 20 hay tests, over a period of thirteen years on different soil types in Carle- ton County, varying in texture from sand to clay loam, indicates the fol- lowing results. Applications of nitrogen to the oat crop produced an average decrease in the yield of first-year hay by 232 pounds of dry matter per acre. Phosphorus treatments increased the yield +of hay, particularly on the finer tevtured soils, showing an aver- where to apply for a pension, find a room, get nursing services or a home. maker? How does he apply for a nursing or old age home? How does he get assistance in obtaining den- tures and glasses? ; ' Where does he get a job or offer to do a community service? Where does he get medical appliances, phy- sietherapy, or find a doctor who will take a medical welfare card? How does he get to a hospital? Where does he find a club? Hundreds of these questions are needing an an- swer. Who knows the answers? No one knows them all-but it is the business of the Ontario Society on Ageing, 4 St. Thomas Street, Toronto 5, Ont- ario, to provide available information | to local groups (church, employer, employees, community service), wha) may ask for it and receive it with- out charge. Hay Yields As Affected By Fertilizer Dr. B. J. Finn of the Field Husbandry Division of the Central Experimental Farm in Ottawa says the intelligent use of fertilizers is as important with age increase for all tests of 771 Ibs. in lJ to. x " of dry matter per acre. Applications | toPic "Let's Make it Legal". fo potassium resulted in a slight in- crease in the yield of hay on all soils) a8 necessary in buying or selling a except the clay, loams, the dry matter per acre, in all tests, by an average of 1456 pounds. . The farmer interested in grain alone, should apply nitrogen. in addition to phosphorus and potassium, but when the grain crop serves as a companion crop for a legume hay seceding ,a re- latively lower level of litrogen will he required, with emphasis on phosphorus and potassium treatments. Grass and legume crops provide pertilizers. Farmers are advised to fertilize hay according to Provineial recommendations, Is Legal Advice Necessary 5000 farmers across Canada report ed to National Radio Forum on the [ ing arrangements. 97% of. the forums thought legal advice farm or arranging for a mortgage, The majority agreed that it was also advisable to obtain legal counsel when making a 'father and son' agree- ment or when making contract farm- 809% felt a law- yer's advice would be helpful in" the case of expropriations or easements. Where wills are concerned 95% of the forums said that legal advice would be advisable. rm BA og a de more and better hay if use is made of Black Jacks .......cveernrerinene 20 Toronto, Dr, Wilson did post-gradu- | hay crops as with any other crop. : ay ; \ inci ber of Commerce. Whiz Bangs ate work at Cambridge and Prince-| Among the factors to be considered FIFTY AND ONE in Milton. He has been elected "Man Provincial Director of Ontario Cham \ 5 Meteors 8 'ton. During World War II, he ser-|in determining the quantity of ferti-| George A. Dills of Acton, Ont.|of the Year" by the Ontario Weekly Ticket $2.00 each Time 6.4 Pm Stars oo... ved overseas with the rank of Colonel | lizer for any particular crop are the | started in the newspaper business in| Newspapers Association and is shown 3 Goofers and later held the post of Director| nature of the soil and the previous | 1907. During his fifty and one years | here being interviewed by John Mac- £ DeLuxe of Operational Research. He ,was| treatment of the land in manuring and | in the profession he has done much kin, reporter for the CBC radio's This Thursday's Schedule -- Deputy Director of Exercise Muskox [cropping. Information relevant to to help make Canadian weekly news- "Assignment". This program, which Whiz Bangs vs. Stars in 1945-46, soil texture, drainage, lime require-| papers what they are today. Mr. [is heard nightly Mondays to Fridays ; EVERYTHING IS 100% GUARANTEED AT Goofers vs. DeLuxe In 1947, Dr. Wilson was Chairman | ment, and the availablity of plant food | Dills is now editor-in-chief of two on the CBC Dominion network, is re- ; ») 2 : : Meteors vs. Black Jacks of the Arctic Institute of North Ame- | constituents is most helpful in decid- | Ontario weeklies: the Acton Free ferred to as "a Sunday newspaper rica. He has been awarded the Ame-|ing the fertilizer needs of a crop. Press, and the Canadian Champion | supplement published every day." : \ rican Legion of Merit, is Director of : - NN i the Canadian Geographical Society, a . \ = a member of the Engineering Insti- , ! tute of Canada and of the Canadian [] Institute of Mining and Metallurgy. = : : z pd This meeting will conclude the We / [ SA SPECIAL - club's activities for the current sea- 3 OV ® RAVE Ie SUNT Sally's 24 0Z. THE GOOD DRANER son and it is hoped that a large at- EE) , Marmalade 3 JARS $1.00 a. ; tendance will be on hand to hear this \ lt N Yi ln 0s ; talk on a topic of 'interest to all LL _ SAVE 6c. SWEET TREAT | SPECIAL Passengers Have a |canadians. = 1 3 20 OZ. bY ng nfeg | Crushed Pineapple .....3 5% 6%. |g bility Too! £gc for a nai rus Pp esponsibility Too!| rg. fora pair of SAVE 16c. OAK LEAF FANCY SPECIAL : A gulf of bitterness that can never h A [ Ti , : ' 3 12 OZ. 89¢ i be crossed flows between many next- S oes ) Sparagus Ips terre TINS : door neighbours. The boys from one tiie Viehine VJ a house killed or mutilated, the girl Thi Kim Hoang is a little Vietha- S SAVE 5c. . HORSEY BRAND ; SPECIAL from the other when she was hurled | mese girl, six years old. Her father Bl d d Juice 3 48 OZ. $1 00 forward through his 'windshield. Her | died in 1955 leaving' her mother to on HALLMARK OF COMFORT AND QUALITY en e -. 1b 312302 TINS : parents can never forget, nor forgive. | support five children herself. Money : AND : SPECIAL Yet she may have been partly, even | is scarce, food is scarcer and shoes THE PICCADILLY 'SAVE 6c. HORSEY BR 48 OZ $1 00 mainly to blame for the eras that | and socks are unheard of in her large ¥ took away her youth and scarred unhappy family. ] 8 95 Orange Juice sess 00 00s 3 TINS ° minds of four parents, Many a pretty Now, to the average Canadian Dack Custom Grade 23 b girl who has never touched a wheel | there is nothing nicer to see than a A superb SAVE 1le.- DELMONTE JUICE - 48 2 eL _ | barefoot child playing outside a pret- dress oxford 1 &F fr ' 3 : $ 00 ty suburb home. Such. is not the Pineapple & Grape uit ! Ns ! ag Wn case in Viet Nam. Bare feet spell in supple imported oalf h ECIAL S B Id danger, disease and often death. Over 100 other styles from $15 to $50 SAVE 6c. CULVERHOUSE CHOICE i =z C cout Bul ing ua Gininiens stn Sin Diced Beels 3 TINS 2%¢. R Fund to walk barefoot to play and school I. lar y through the thick, oozy muck which | ? SPECIAL MONDAY, APRIL 7th-- covers the lanes and roads in her \ Ravi SOLVEN DEW " ' --$7000 village. Her feet are constantly ex- N Margarine cee .. . 2 LB. 49c. posed to such things as worms in- -- i . : ant p festation, snake bite, cuts from sharp 1 D k Li . SAVE 7c. LYNN VALLEY STD. SPECIAL : "| --se600 hidden objects and worst of all, lep- Comp ete Dack Line Ladies' Dress Shoes 4 20 OZ. hy - rosy, According to a well-known AVAILABLE Dessert Pears .......... TINS b --$6000 Jaen 810s of the Sandy baie MANY LINES IN STOCK PUMPS -- Small, Medium Heels, Black : = caug roug --8 Patent, Navy, Beige, Brown. WEDGE 3 A Loe DLOFT PLAIN - 16 7 Bo, --$6500 ns Lo seen of Tl Bint $16.00, $17.95, $23.95 HEEL SPORT SHOES, nice styles $7.9 i 2 1 7.95 Cheez Whiz sececsesseso.la JARS 98c. Foster Parents' Plan, Inc., has re- M . ITAN BRAND --$6000 cently Jaiinehed a SEmmalign "; ao Bata Shoes for en . h . SAVE 6c. PUR vide shoes for these unfortunate BLACK and BROWN Gracia S oes for Ladies 16 OZ. 49 youngsters--one hundred thousand of ! UI hy Be f Stew 20.800 0900088 yi TINS. C. #3450 them! They are supplying them with , te U - i Yoirs fashioh- ° ° Health Shoes in Pumps and Oxfords, in FROM OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT --$4000 Padi Viel pass, 0 ome Asi: en Brel IAL k ot ri i betroors SISMAN and DOMINION $9.95, $10.95, $11.95 i SAVE 6c. DEVON BRAND . SPEC i slipper. These are the only kind of |} (Ixfords and Loafers : hoes | - aki LB. . 69 : : : shoe the heavy muck will not suck off. : S S Ch Id A | ee Rindless Bre ast acon C. $3,225.06 Best of all, 'they are sturdy and rosy RUBBEL SoLes | $8.95 avage oes or 1 ren : "FROM OUR PRODUCE DEPARTMENT $3000 strong and ean protect u small foot EL WY Ki) arti, Piel wie Ses im sateral 3 : NE against a sease . . B - " , $4.95 ROSE BUSHES -- CLIMBERS AND TEA ROSES -- $2600 You can buy a pie of hoes to hey Men's Black Jet Bools Widths K : : Vietnamese child wa safely . ' ALSO GLADIOLUS AT LOW PRICES z | a "hs , : through her daily life . ., Fifty cents i Odd P $9 95 AVE 4c. SIZE 216s - ' ~ SPECIAL i 42000 provides one pair of. shoes. which will Si : w k B { Men S ants ° M de. 0 Nh c a last about three months and two dol- 1Sman wor 001S GREY, ETC, { DOZ. 45 ° --$16 lars will supply shoes for a year. SEVERAI POPULAR STYI ES h . M 3j232c2 : . i i 4 € , B Shs arrannne 3 exican ranges ; Send your contribution to FOSTER ~ 4 $6.95, $7.95, $8.95 BOYS PANTS, 8 to 16 years, $56.35 Il merchandise sold at your Dominion Btore ls o PARENTS PLAN, P.O. Box 06, Sta- ® ® OUR GUARANTEE- A i ---- guaranteed to give you 100 per cent $1000 tion B, Montreal P.Q. ; "satisfaction. | Clk Phone 43 Values. Effective at Your Port Perry Dominion Store | HONE, SATURDAY, APRIL 12th | . So is . = Port Perry, Ontario 3 wl w tP : : 7 S ! ' Dominion Stores Lid. ort Perry || AR y | ov | ? gu Re ; : Pi 5 (\ . bh. @® | We Deliver WEE] ; Phone 345 : ol ; crm | I ---- | -- i; Ls ' ' ' Ny 4 Ea & Aye

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