Halton Hills Images

Acton Free Press (Acton, ON), April 26, 1956, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

i r thursday april smttv 1906 t the acton free rressk acton ontario page seven pollock and campbell manufacturers of high grade memorials memorial engraving 62 water st north ait tojophom 2mb 13 grass fires while last week was a busy one for milton firemen when it comes to looking after grass fires that get out of band it seems the week was a busy one for firemen throughout the wholeof the county milton firemen reported three fires as did georgetown and bur lington had two oakville two and trafalgar two acton had one 1 m m f spring festival of massed choirs in the public school auditorium wednesday may 2 800 pm featuring the acton and brampton christian reformed church choirs auspices christian reformed church of acton civil defence and the new weapons near record run of suckers nofecl at sixteen mile seventh in a series of 24 articles the evolution of weapons with greater and greater powers of de- vastation has made civil defence as vital to the small community as it is to the large city basically the danger threatened byavar is the same as ever destruction death and injury but says f f worth- ington federal civil defence co ordinator while the overall effects of a triads saturation raid such as took place in the stumer- of 1943 on hamburg was tremendous the at omic bomb is capable of creating the same degree of destruction from one bomber and one bomb in a natter of a few minutes in con sequence our danger is very much greater so civil defence today is differ- eral coorduiator that civil defence pllanning had to be revised em phasis was shifted fram a policy of duck and cover to one f ev acuation where time permits thats where the smaller commun ities come in they must be pre pared to offer assistance to stricken cities but what really brought the small community into the changing civil defence picture was the after math of atonic bombs nuclearra- diation when the fireball of an atomic blast touches the ground it pulverizes everything brick steel stone earth in its path these highly radioactive particles are sucked into the air as high as 80000 feet air currents catch them up and carry them until they slow ly drift to the ground as fall- mackenzie news speckled trout season opens april 28th legal size daily limit best bait 7 inches is trout patience best time whenever your wife will let you go our usual st marys cement 125 per bag gla mortar mix for use underground 130 per bag sla mortar mix for use above ground 125 per bag ackenzicd ison- cnt in many ways from that which was used during the second world war it has had to change as the threats of new weapons changed the single atomic bomb that fell on hiroshima in august 1945 des troyed 62000 of 90000 buildings and damaged 6000 more beyond re pair as a result of the bomb 80- 000 of the citys 250000 population died the first hbomb tested des troyed everything within three miles severely damaged everything within seven miles and lightly damaged as far as 10 miles more powerful bombs have since been tested it became apparent says the fed- 11 new took opening thursday april 26 pecial bolgona b friday night only 69 pi limit 3 loaves per customer ledgers i g a i out this fallout may cover an area 150 or more miles long and 40 miles wide depending on air i currents the danger it presents al- so varies depending on the length of time it has drifted in the sky animal life touched by fallout ra diation may die or becomd severely ill but this threat is far from hope less the radioactivity of fallout decays rapidly and danger has largely disappeared usually with in 48 hours a community could escape the danger if it were pre pared first it must have means of learning when and where the fall out may appear then it must be prepared to take adequate shelter quickly for at least 48 hours a community would then need to know when it was safe to come but it is because of these new dang ers to even the small outofthe way community that civil defence planning has been extended to in clude the towns and the villages and the farms as well is the situation hopeless civil defence says no selfprotection measures become even more important since many more people are likely to be af fected community- organization is more essential than ever to take care of large numbers of casualties and evacuees and cope with a greater amount of destruction than heretofore had been anticipated see ad on next page four bronte men netted more than 50 suckers within 10 minutes underneath the queen elizabeth bridge at the sixteen mile creek recently a nearrecord run of- suckers has been travelling up stream and at times fishermen can pick them up with their hands every year the ontario depart ment of lands and forests is de luged with inquiries about this spring phenomenon when and where to- find em whether theyre good to eat they are and how to cook them suckers average one to two pounds and occasionally may be more than 18 inches long they have a suckerlike mouth overhung by the snout and directeddown ward theyre found in almost all ontario lakes and rivers from the great lakes to hudson bay in the spring the suckers move from the lakes into the streams to spawn one female may simply re lease anywhere up to 50000 eggs over stony or gravelly shoals square or circular dip nets usual ly are ued to catch them ducing the spawning rim on some shallow creeks the fish may actually be picked up by hand at this time the flesh is excellent but bony later many claim its too soft and muddy for eating suckers are classed as coarse fish and so there are no limits on wise preserved the bones may be eonnosed or redsided sucker softened by boiling or cooking uni rangers and conservation officers der pressure more frequently the fish are filleted tor some years the department has been trying to find a wide commercial use for suckers which are somewhat repulsive in appear ance- dr f j fry head of the experimental station at south bay on manitoulin island has filleted and fastfrozen them so success fully that many have mistaken the fillets for anything from speckled trout to codfish many claim that the sucker is a predator which feeds on the eggs of other fish principal foodhowever includes aquatic insects snails and other molluscs worms and aquatic plant material not infrequently some fishermen on speckled trout streams may be given a real tussle by a sucker which has hit at a dry or wet fly the sucker is also said to provide food for some of ontar ios more highly prized game fish maskinonge pike and pickerel eat suckers and expert muskie fisher men claim that a large live sucker still fished will attraet a muskie a mile away the white sucker and the long- nose are the two main types found in ontario waters the longnose is more frequently caught in the com mercial nets in the great lakes it in the far northern areas smoke suckers over a hardwood fire for 12 to 48 hours indian trappers dry them for use as dog food or dice them into small portions for bait in the sturgeon fishery of the al bany river despite the tremendous numbers taken annually in halton and all over the pro by commercial fishermen anglers small boys and others suckers never seem to dim inish theres many an old resident who recalls that the first fish he ever caught was the lowly sucker halton manor the number which may be taken is sometimes khown as the north- they may be salted down or other- ern sucker the finescaled sturg- ekrsisrswsswkssstw vr s parking poem jonly attraction a place to park is valuabls oil im just one of those country hicks edmonton cpi ribbons of who come from away out in the brightlycolored cloth hanging from sticks trees and bush in albertas desolate to voice my woe and make a plea muskeg country testify that the geo- for all the other boobs like me physicist the seeker of oil has come we work like heck six days a week and ronc and when were done we like to the ribbons may ncvcr be soen streak again because no one is likely to to our home town to buy our eats and meet our neighbors on the street we cant take off no working day and if wo do theres heck to pay you folks in town dont do that way you do your buying every day and thats why i dont think its right to hog the streets on farmers night youve got your cars parked on the street before we hicks sit down to cat then we must slop hogs and feed the sows coax all the juice from bossy cows pick up the eggs coop up the hen shave off the whiskers if we are men dress in overalls and calico- sincc wheat has gone so gosh- danged low crank up the flivver give her juice then start for town but whafs the use the streets are lined far up and down with cars of folks who town who seem to think its treat to sec the rubes street live in quite teachers pupils from college hold meeting on tuesday evening april 17 a group of teachers and students nine in number came from lome park college to hold their regular mqnthly meeting in the chapel with the residents of the manor thoir chairman was raymond goheen and the accompanist for the sing ing of the hymns and for the vocal numbers was joan elliot these vocal numbers were enjoyed very much and consisted of a solo he bought my soul at calvary by bcrlain and donna lee stecnburgh love divine by ruth williamson and margaret chamberlain and a trio number living for jesus by marie hockney margaret cham berlain and donna lee jsteenbough the chairman raymond goheen read psalm eight as the scripture lesson and miss whittaker a tea cher at the college offered prayer a number of very interesting col ored slides with mr john sigs- worth reading a commentary on each one were shown these slides showed the work of missionaries cf the free methodist church in the belgian congo in africa raymond goheen conducted a musical qui based on the first lin es of wellknown hymns muriel thompson thanked these young people of lome park col leger for this pleasant and instruct ive meeting regular service owing to circumstances beyond his control rev j l blair of st pauls united church milton was unable to come to the manor on sunday afternoon april 22 to dealing with the relations vhetween conduct the regular church service features of the earth and the forces j the chapel arrangements were that produce them geology deals made however for rev r f sny- with the earths crust i der pastor of emmanuel baptist muskeg a word donated to the church milton to conduct the ser- language by indians living in the i vice mr snyder brought with him peace river area of northern al- three very talented musicians from bcrta means grassy bog it is just j mr blairs church to provide the that an area of plant life in various i musical part of the service these stages of decay ranging from one to j musicians were mrs fred hay- follow the oilsearching crew into the harsh inhospitable country it- only lure is the treasure beneath the forbidding surface steaming heat from the swampy ground and hordes of flies and mos quitoes plague the men in helmets and high boots during the summer in winter a biting cold covers the land problems of weather and insects are- hardships that these hardy men have learned to contend with now with the aid of modern machinery the frustrating mtiskey can be beat en the search fur oil and gas is con ducted by genphysicists and geolo gists geophysics is the science of is like 300 feet in thickness it sponge rubber to walk on a the machine that takes the geo- i physicist and his crew over the mus- slagger up the eg is called a bombardier they run on heavy rubber belts and come there are presently less than 900000 horses on canadian farms in 1921 there were nearly three lki save4 big bonus bargains go lore wv friday sat m0n tub april 27 28may 1 2 suits 285 ladies spring assortment ladies allweather coats were 2595 special 215 f women light wool spring coats 3295 26 95 bonus special quality pur silk umbrellas beautiful plaid colors bonus sale price bonus special genuine ttxmaid flannelette blankets special sale size 70x90 mildred bell ladies and childrens wear where quality and style are high and prices are low phone 22c j acton 41 mill st open friday nights til 9 pm v r ii with butter jars and eggs and different sizes for various jobs cream but say it takes a lot of steam to lug that stuff six blocks more you walk until your feet get sore your shoulders ache youre live happy life teat jtvsftt home woss lake bc cp its fun teaching school and publishing a you wish that you were bed arid then you spy that yellow paint weekiy in a anal log thats put just where the autos girig town y mr and mrs edwin amt nelson v i5 wh thcre mr- nelson is principal arid his th rfsfi 1 p blondt wife a teacher in the uu that there mark momentary school and they also et i 4 1 lout the seedling in this town of wertopendor sejs vancouver bands in- youatched us ong enough to ward mrs k foster and miss heatherahne hayward mrs hay- ward and miss heatheranne hay- ward who are mother and daugh ter blended their lovely voices in a beautiful duet grateful o lord am i mrs k foster accompanied their duet at the piano and played for the singing of the hymns in her usual very talented fashion after reading verses 1320 of chapter one of pauls epistle to the r mr snyd choao verses we need a parking place by gee- tension course having received his 1617 of this chapter as the text of his sermon in a very scholarly and earnest fashion mr snyder explained the circumstances sur- rounding pauls writing of these verses and the significance they have for true christians these verses were written by paul to a small band of christians in the great city of rome which was the capital of the roman em pire and the centre of the world at that time paul speaks of his own personal eagerness to visit the christians of rome and tells them that he is hot ashamed to go to forest fire protection and forest management in the 430squarc mile canadian army camp at gagetown nb is the responsibility of the forestry branch department of tote soil from a stream bed that may northern affairs and national re- be a mile away and that makes the sight of flowers or even growing vegetables a real pleasure said mrs nelson v we have electric refrigerators and electric stoves indoor plumb- bachelor of education degree this rome to preach the gospel of sal- year and is the originator or active vation the same situation holds head of nearly every citizens ore- i true in our own day for anyone anization 1 who preaches the gospel of christ if you want a garden here you but we mus oeleve in this gospel sources and surrender our lives to if be lieving also that the gospel of christ reveals the righteousness of god acton welding and repair expert welding at reasonable rates des orourke rr 4 acton says mens rights in and such conveniences but lack ell i roads if you want to get outside tcjudlly important you just have to take a long succes sion of rides by a rough jouncing electric car then by boat then by car again and then by boat we buy 14 quarts of milk at a time- it comes in by refrigerated rail car and groceries are brought in by the case three tirnes a week a doctor visits the settlement mr nelson said some of his clas hes have only one student and last year there were orily 43 undents in all t wool ship collect to our registered warehouse no 1 weston ontario reliable grading direct settlement obtain sarrks and twine without charge from archie kirrt rr 2 acton clarence denny rr 2 acton or by writing to canadian cooperative wool growers limited 21t bay street toronto canada calgary cpi women loday are robbing men of their masculin ity says b d treat educationist of flint mich wprmn he td a marriage guid ance clinic htc have taken over wnokinig drinking many jobs and even the modes of dress that once vert masculine symbols he outlined the methods to re establish men as men in our cul ture beginning with expectant fa thers and their feelings tjhe fcel- jng4 of the prospective rnother has always been taken into considerat ion h said tut no one ever txith ered to think about the father he said the father should be taken through the maternity word before the child is born and after wards he should be allowed to handle the child and help look the power of prayer after it that something which keeps you i mr treat said children can do i froth speeding away a tht elementary school lev- from all problems which enter to develop a rrfans personality y jl since to the child the father repres- is the faith which still is a guide maacuimity nhe outside world and competence p o e f s co rn er for each day to replace at once strie all inward the educationist said parents should not tease children about j thus if stormy days seem to lessen adolescent love affairs hemwsu your joy aclon one sure way to cause a just recall that prayer taught in f in chim parent thin- your youth to never let trials your great faitli i what we do to adolescents is destroy j terrific h said their love al- buufotever- live close to god- nan m much to them as ours i truth thalia rochlitz situation u sad j do to us and our treatment of the m pt j

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy