COURTICE Woman's Association Members Lay Plans For Annual Bazaar Thompson; Consolation, Mrs. T. Gladman; Getta a C. Arch, er; consolation, T. Gladman . , Mrs. H. LaChapelle, next euchre will be announc- ed at a later date. E. Warburton, superintendent of Courtice Sunday school, will t speaker at Brooklin United Ehurch on Sunday at 11 am. On Sunday at 7 p.m. he will speak . to our Fegation at Courtice. The theme as chosen for both services is "Men and Missions." Congratulations are extended to Mr. and Mrs. Harold Graham on the birth of a son. Mother and tng along fine. e are pleased to hear Mrs. M. Brown has her mother, Mrs. Allin home from Bowmayville Memorial Hospital. : Neighbours - and friends of C. Ci er will be glad to know he is home after being in Oshawa General Hospital for quite some Sorry to hear Miss Dorothy Bar- ber amd little Vivian Odair had the misfortune of broken bones. Many families are tied in with an epidemic of chicken pox, do hope the will all be well again soon. and Mrs Aldo spent Friday at the home of Mr. a . 0. Robertson. . TO SHOW SLIDES On day evening, November 27, Mr. and Mrs. G. Osborne will be at Courtice United Church to show 'slides of their vacation to and from Arizona which were tak- iss | Mrs. en this past summer. Don't miss this ty folks to see these interesting pictures. Come along and do your Christ- | Association pouring tea and serv- son; Recreation convenor, mas shopping at the bazaar which will be held at the Courtice United Church Thtuday, December 3, at 2 p.m., under the auspices of the Courtice Woman's Association. Quilts, fancy work, . us and , daughter Catherine of Reaboro | mas parcels, fish pond for the Chin home cooking, and last he tea room which I'm The CGIT and Explorer's met at the church on Wednesday night. Preparations are being made '|the Christmas Vesper Service to be held on December 6 at 7 p.m. The candle lighting ceremony was rehearsed games were play- ed by the girls supervised by Mrs. C. Penfound. The meeting was ned by the president, Mary Carolyne Warbur- ton, with the CGIT Purpose, Hymn, and Prayer. The minutes were read by the secretary, Beverley Burgess and a short business per- iod followed. Arrangements were made to 'at- tend the Fireside Hour Sunday ev- ening at Simcoe United Church. Girls were urged to at- tend the pictures of ti trip to {and from Arizona to be shown at the church Friday evening. Plans to make a scrap book next meet- ing were arranged. Contest points were tallied by each girl, which is under way with team captains, Wilma Kearn and Eva Evans. The officers were surprised with an initiation ceremony. A. MEETING 3 «The Courtice Woman's Associa- tion held its regular monthly. meet- ing Thursday at 8 p.m~in the church. The president presided and the service opened with the theme song, followed with prayer by Rev. . Somerville. Mrs. A. Wilkins gave a readin on "Fellowship." e Bible read- ing was given by Mrs. R. DeCoe. Thank you notes were read by Mrs. DeCoe from the sick. Re- ports from sick committee, treas- jurer and roll call of members Herne Birth t app, ay was sung to 0. Robertson who had a recently. Mr. Somerville the ladies of the Woman's birthda; | thank ing lunch on the occasion of the laying of the corner stone of the | new. church. | Every was reminded of the bazaar which will be held at Cour- children's tice church on December 3. Mrs. Service committee, Ken Tink and wear, aprons, country store, Christ- Claude Tues of Bowmanville will {Shirley Antil. CROSSWORD PUZZLE i 3 ii i E ite Sail PE wpe o : [HHH gees 2 il in (HEY Hi BEER if i L 4 vi | 8 t § 9. "w " 8 | 8 .. | _N ». nn. =» + o». 0. on. =». we oo". ". - «®» ij for ed of Christmas gift parcels not November 27. next meeting will be held in the afternoon on December 10. The nominating committee, to BEng 2 slate of officers was a| d, as follows: Mrs. A. Wil- , Mrs. R. Barber, Mrs. C. Simmons and Mrs. R. DeCoe. The members will meet at the home of Mrs. S. Kinsman, Decem- ber 1 to price articles for the ba- zaar. Members were also remind- over twenty-five cents for bazaar. Committees for bazaar are as follows: fancy work convenors, Mrs. A. Wilkins and . P. An- til; Quilts, Mrs. George Barber; aprons, Mrs. E. Essery; children's counter, Mrs. C. Simmons; country store, Mrs. J. McKenzie and Mrs, W. Warburton; Christmas gifts, Mrs. A. Hoyt, Fish pond, Mrs. H. Scorgie and Mrs. O. Robertson; [tea room, Mrs. S. Kinsman | We were favoured with a piano |accordian number by Janet Bar- ber. Mrs. Simmons gave a very |interesting description and talk on their summer vacation in New- foundland. Rev. and Mrs. Somer- ville showed slides and gave also a very interesting talk on their family's vacation last summer and the scenes were very beautiful of different places they had been,:in- cluding one picture of Mr. Som |erville fishing. Lunch was served by committee in charge and all spent a social time together. YPU MEETING The Courtice Circuit People's Union held its meeting, Monday evening at Ebenezer Unit- ed Chuch. The meeting opened ! with the Young People's Purpose. | Followed the election of officers. The officers are: President, Miss Dorothy Somerville; Vice Presi: | dent, Miss Greta Snowden, Secre- | tary, Mr. Ron Brooks; treasurer, | (Miss Lois Antil; Faith and Evan- | |gelism, Miss Phyllis Adams; Mis- {sions and World Outreach, Miss {Rae Johnston; Stewardship and Miss Marjorie Somer- izenship and Community Young | wang, ville; Cit |Service, Mr. Ken Tink; Publica- | tion convener, Mr. Allen Thomp- Miss [Marion Wyman and Ron Osborne. | During 'the business period it was decided to have an operetta. The devotional was in charge of the Citizenship and Community | The Bible reading was taken by {Shirley Antil. The story was given {by Ken Tink, "Put your Hand In- {to the Hand of God" Wollowed by |a short prayer by Ken. A story | "The Bible" was given by Shirley. The recreational period wag charge of Marion Wyman and Was enjoyed by all. he following meeti will be held at Courtice United Church, | Monday, November 30 at 8 p.m. SIMCOE HALL THURSDAY, NOVEMBER | PIANO LESSONS AND PRAC- tice periods, 4 to 33 om. GOLDEN AGE CLUB, 6.30 to 10 p.m., for men and women 70 | iyears and over -- Cards, games, | {dominoes, checkers, movies, re- | freshments. | TEENAGE BADMINTON CLUB, 6.30 to 8 p.m. WEIGHT LIFTING CLUB, 7.30 to 10 p.m al, 7.30 p.m. | wo eA BADMINTON CLUB, 8 to p.m. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7 NURSERY SCHOOL, 9 to 11.30 a.m. Children § years of age. CHILDREN'S PUBLIC LIB- ri 3.30 to 5.30 p.m. | REN'S M , 4 oo B p.m. BOYS' GYM CLUB, 3.% to 5.90 | p.m. | BASKETBALL PRACTICE, 5.3% to 7 p.m. JR. GHTS OF COLOMBUS, 7 SaTuRo SA AY, NOVEMRER 28 SPEECH CORRECTION CLASS For children 9 to 12 nooa. PIANO LESSONS, 9 to 1 p.m. MUNDINGER ACCORDION AC- ademy, 9 am. to 5.30 p.m. SIMCOE HALL BASKETBALL League -- 9 a.m. Simcoe Hall Jr. Grads vs CKLB; 10 am. Police Association vs St. John Cadets; 1 am. Jaycee White vs Jaycee Tue. JUNIOR CADET CORPS, 10.30 fo _12 noon. INDUSTRIAL BASKETBALL League, to 1m. 'CA BADMI N,- 3 to 5.30 p.m. DUTCH ASSOCIATION, 7.30 p.m. 000,000 worth of tobacco; Germany has accepted an outright gift of $15,000,000 of soybeans and tobacco. That is all. ford extra imports, their own currency. The terms of the offer stipulate that the produce must not be used to replace exist- ing trade agreements. "dumping" of American surpluses in Europe might throw the entire years ago, only the geese were unhapp; sease {Canada's Atlantic coastal waters. | {curse of boatmen and bathers. | {ate the tender roots. When it began ito disappear in the early 30s geese (tion. As each of the flat, lelastic blades dry, tiny cells lock 0 give the n insulating material and is the weed its insulating qualities. The silica, which the dried grass contains, makes it fire-proof, and the iodine in it makes it imper- vious to animal and insect pests. When used as insulation, the grass | covering stitched into a quilted mat. The !died by the thousands. and insulated with the sea also being used in schools. Halifax firm is shipping it to cen- tral Canada. LITTLE THEATRE REHEARS- | : Offer Of U.S. Surplus May Wreck West Market LONDON (Reuters) -- Western Europe so far has refused to take | trie more than a nibble at a United States offer of $130,000,000 worth of surplus farm produce. Britain has agreed to buy 2. est gram. UMS UP REACTION The general Euro) Principal reasons for the luke-| "evi up by warm reaction are: 1. European countries cannot af- Er who said: food im 2. What some Europeans term European market out of balance and seriously hurt producing coun- Ss. Under the offer, designed to cut down United States surpluses, non- Communist countries can pay for the produce with their own cur- rency. The money then would be used for the U.S. foreign aid pro- an reaction olland's agri- culture minister, Sicco Mansholt, "To accept the offer would mean either cutting down ports from abroad or in- creasing home consumption. We are not prepared to do either." Most of the European countries which have been offered surplus stocks are anxious not to harm their own contracts with other pro- ducers or their own markets. The situation in individual eoun- tries: Denmark: Has turned down the offer of about goods. organizations claimed the might impair the entire market. Belgium: Still is discussing the offer, which originally got a mixed reception in government circles. Beligum is worired about the con- dition that the purchase would be over and above existing ogree- ments. Britain: Still is thinking over the offer, but any purchases besides tobacco are expected to be small. France: The French government is expected to make a decision shortly on the offer of $15,000,000 rogram uropean | $5,000,000 worth of |an adjunct to a play. It should All . leading Danish trade | never detract from the actors and the play itself, most-sought-after set designers. a playgoer, the designer has failed to do his job properly, he says. thing. Costumes shoul Sifved to feel aft them scenery for a new, pertoty nald in January. He leaves behind him THE DAILY TIMBS-GASETTS, Thursday, November 9, 008 9§ Decor Designer Can Help Toronto TORONTO (CP) -- Scenery is four plays running in London's west end for which he designed the decor: T. 8. Eliot's "The Con- fidential Clerk," 'Escapade,' 'Dear Charles," and "Birthday Honors." His first design, when he was an art student, won the approval of Alex Clunes of the Arts atre of London. He followed Tanya Moiseiwitsch intor Oxford, later was with Bris- to's Old Vic and did the "Two Gentlemen of Verona" for Lon- don's Old Vic. He also did the decor for '""The Merchant of Ven- ice" which opened the Stratford (England) festival this summer and now is on tour. says Hutchinson Scott. cnrrently one of London If settings remain in the mind of are the be de- the period, and er dress rehearsal the actors y be able to forget all about "Actors and the act 3cott is in Toronto to design . Po\nanent re- theatre which Murray and Davis are opening early of supplies. which faces | from French farmers. Goose Food Used For Insulating HALIFAX (CP)--Until a few when a mysterious di-|and has no odor. estroyed zostera marine in Zostera marina is muddy-bottomed waters. It is the [LONG ens he: The particularly brant, eese, pu through a long fore it can be use Now the grass is being used as |in air. These air cells a basis of a growing industry. Last year 100 houses in Wuiifax | 88 in Saint John, N. B. were | rass. It is One laced between is a resistant to decay, fire-proof and is unaffected by insects, vermin It has been used for centuries by fishermen and coastal farmers commonly to back the stone foundations of known as eelgrass, a marine plant [their homes, as a fertilizer and that grows like alfalfa in shallow, |as bedding Newly-gathered Selgrass must be ing process for insula- greén Y.W.CA. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28 BADMINTON CLVB -- for men and women. Memberships obtain- ed at "Y." Courts available at Simcoe Hall, 8-10 p.m. SO-ED -- So-Ed a social re creation program for young Tey jand women. Speakers, instructio) | periods, socials, refreshments, each evening for eight weeks, 8 p.m. ART EXHIBIT --- Water Colors', All day. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27 NURSERY SCHOOL. -- for chil- dren 4 and 5 years of age, 9.30 ing, leathercraft, feltcraft, weav- ing, etc., 9.30-11.30 a.m.; 2-5 p.m. | INTERMEDIATE LEADERS' leadership course for irls, 4.15 p.m. AR HIBIT "Barbadian Water Colors', all day. OSHAWA CHESS CLUB, 8 p.m. The Straits of Gallipoli separat- Corps -- teenage E Eelgrass is one of the oldest blacker the cured grass, the better | ng Europe from Asia are between insulation materials. It is highly 'the quality. one and five miles wide. "Barbadian a.m. { HANDICRAFTS -- glove-mak- | | { | AND SAVE! SPECIAL! CLOVER VALLEY SPECIAL! BUTTER CHEESE ww. 63° Va-Ib. 23 Golden Whole Kernels OAK LEAF CORN 2 -.27* NEW WAY to keep your kifchen with lots less work ! spotiess / ] Today there's a new: kind of cleaner for your refrigerator, range, cabinets, walls and woodwork ! It's a magic blend of special detergents and wax--and it's called Johnson's Jubilee Kitchen Wax! 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