PAGE T1OUREEN ~W é~AVA~IAW mAUD A - ~~DA ,n v a ,m A - ~ -- -- ~ W W3.jI VA~I~I~ IJSV 5J5J~ éUV.5WA~5L X~ ~ t N~U Hospital Insuranoe is Explained by Speaker NESTLETON STATION - A large attendance of members and visitors gathered at the 1eeof Mrs. Lawrence Malcolm fïr the September Women's Irititute meeting. The Presi- dcr;t Mrs. Davison welcomed ail. Several business items were deâit with. Mrs. Steel and Mrs. Gibson volunteered as Re- ception Commîttee and group leaders will arrange with their mnembers re the lunch of sand- wiches and cookies for the Speaker Service in Nestieton United Church. The Aduit Polio Clinic was announced and a motion was made to take from \V.I. funds for the 25e addition- aW F.W.I.O. fee. A short course "Working with Wools" was tabled due to the lack o! girls to form a club. It was decided to forward aur funds af $7.25 from our travelling apron to the C.N.I.B. campaign. The report af the Fair Exhibit Was made, thanks tendered to ail who had helped and two g oems camposed by Mrs. Adel- bert Beacock were read. The one chosen, for the exhibit and suitably mounted was presented to Mrs. Beacock. This poem won first place and with another by Miss Gwen Wilson ail will be1 placed in the Tweedsmuir His- tory, which also won first place. The sweater was forwarded1 with the others for Ontario Re-1 lief and the cancer dressings1 were taken to Port Perry Centre.q Tickets for the Hospital Aux- iliary Penny Round-up were dis- tributed and aur share o! $4.50 aidot the Dstict Scrt ay for t the Centitl Floatasy Bills weme paid and thank you notes received from sick and! bereaved. A qullting will be held ta finish a top already sold and Mrs. Vine distributed blocks for the members ta applique the pattern she had already prepar- ed. Mrs. Vine also pmesented an idea for a quîlt which has been ordemed and sold for $20. The Area Convention will be held Nov. 5, 6 and 7 and a delegate will be appointed at the October meeting. A splendid response te the Roll Caîl "Give a Quotation on Health" was. made. Mrs. H. Mc-' Laughlin Convener o! Home Economica and Health had pro- cured Mr. R. G. Moffat, Orono, Secretary ai the Durham County Co-operative Medical Services, to address the meeting on the new Ontario Hospital Insurance plan. Mr. and Mrs. Moffat were întroduced by President Mrs. R. Davison. Mr. Moffat explained what Durham ,County is daîng and said that rural people were the last ones ta be taken into the graup. The Federation a! Agri- culture put the pressure an and the government decided they'd better do something for the rural people. The three plans were explained and many questions I .1 New & Used Car Bargains only 3 New Plymouths Ieft at Best Deals of the Season ALSO a few good USED CAR BUYS '56 Plymouth 6-cyl. Sedan Looks and runs like new ___ '55 Beivedere V8 2-Door Hardtop Radio, Powerflite, new tires ___ '55 Plymouth 6-cyl. Sedan - A Bargain- '54 Windsor Sedan, radio, automatic Good tires, clean '53 Meteor 2.;Door, radio, directionai signais, mnirrors, good tires - Perfect ___ '51 Dodge 6 Sedan, 2-tone_______ '50 Po ntiac 6, 2-Door Radio ______ '47 Dodge 6 Sedan - Runs fair _____ '52 Fargo 6-cyl. ½l ton Panel ______ 3..Ton Fargo, stake body ~1,245.00 1,595.00 8,45.00 4455.00 845.00 445.00 295.00 495.00 Mrs. K. Samelis' group pro- vided a bountiful lunch and a social hour was much enjayed. The October meeting will be held at- the home of Mrs. Fred Bruce, Caesarea, with Mrs. H.' Vine, convener of Agriculture and Canadian Industries in charge o! the program. Yeu » la Chrysier - Plymouth and Fargo Truck Dealers'n. ' 20 King St. East Phone MA 3-5L87 Jane Parkcer APPLE PIE Large 8", 24-oz pie each 49< Reg 39c - SAVE 10c Success LIOUID WAX 6c OFF DEAL pint tin 4 9C Reg tin 59c - SAVE 104 SUPER-Rg IG4MrTSPECIAL S BEEF ROASTS B LADE MeBm e.Rmoved SHOULDER Fii(ut SHORT RIB ROASI FRUITS £ VEGETAILES No. 1 Grade large clusters, California'a finest for flavor, Tokay GRAPES 22 5 C Ontario grown excellent for cooking and tatine WrmEALTHY APPLES 3-1 celle bag 19 C a qt. basket 659 l39C Mealyr lb45C McLaren'* CORN RELISH 13oehi%ýe CORN SYRUP A&P Orange Peko. NECTAR TEA BAC Iona PEAS A&P choice WHOLE BEETS Ann Page 3 Varioties BAKED BEANS Choie Quality AUP PEACHES Reg. tin 35*-BSAVE 4@ 15-oz tin 31c Reg. tin 31o-SAVE 2c 2-lb tin 29c Reg. pkg 89c-SAVE 140 MS pkg of 90 75c Reg. 2 tins 29a-SAVE 90 4 20-oz tins 49c Reg. 2 tins 31o-SAVE 74 4 i 5-oz tins 55c Reg 2 tins 27e-SAVE 9o 4 i 5-oz tins 45c Reg. 2 tins 37oc-SAVE 70 3 15-oz tins 49c Prices in this ad guaranteed througl. Saturday, 8.ptemiber l3th, 1968 _______ I 1-7 Modern Tower of Bubel (ÔTT 2) CORNWALL, ONT., SEPT. 5 - UNVEILING, - The St. L.awrence Power Project was officially opened in Cornwall, Ont., today. The project bas adjoining powerhouses - the Robert H. Saunders - St. Lawrence Generating Station, on the Canadion side, andi the Robert Moses Power Dam, on the American side. Left te right in'this picture are: Premier Leslie Frost of Ontario; Mrs. Robert Falconer, daughter of the late Mr. Saunders, Chairman of the Hydro.Electric Power Commission of Ontario from 1948 untit kas death in 1955; and James S. Duncan, present Chairman cf the Commission. (CP Wirephoto) 1958 (Ontario Hydre) Community Gives Party Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Begley ENNISKILLEN: A large num- ber of local friends joined with seveal relatives from other parts and chose the Community Hall as a meeting place for a party to honour Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Begley whose mar- riage took place this summer athe home af Mr. and Mrs. C. Milis, Mapie Grave. Shortly af ter their arrivai Mrs. J. Griffin and Mr. Lawrence Wearn presented the popular couple with a corsage and bau- tonniere. Little Misses Susan Wearn and Betty Jane Werry pinned corsages on Miss Shirley Milîs and Miss Arlene Begley also. Mesdames M. J. Stainton, L. Stainton and F. W. Werry planned a program; and the MC for the event was Mr. E.A. Werry who opened the pro- gram with a short speech. Mrs. Earl Trewin and Mrs. Roy McGill gave humnorous readings. Mr. Ray Ashton play- ed a delightful piano solo. The Enniskillen male quartette, Me- ssrs. Ross Ashton, 0. C. Ashton, E. Wright and J. Siemon, with Mrs. E. Wright at the piano sang two appropiate numbers "Love and Marriage" and "Two Arms, Two Lips, One Heart", and a parody composed by themselves on Tha'sMy Weakness Now". Alter the honoured couple ENNISKILLEN 1Mr.and Mms. Wilfred Benne tt, [ Newcastle, visited with Mm. and Mms. Rass Page. Mm. and Mrs. Frank Kelly, Carine and Paula, Port Credit, spent the weekend with Mm. and Mrs. George Irwin. Mm. and Mrs. R. J. Ormiston. attended Orono Faim and were tea guests aif Mm. and Mrs. J. D. Brown. Mm. and Mrs. Fred Toms were recent guests af Mm. and Mms. Wm. Steele. Raglan. Miss Linda Bmock, Bowman- ville, spent Thursday with Mas- ter Dale McGill. Mm. and Mrs. Floyd Beckett, and family attended Bethesda Decoration Services, and visit- ed Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Weaving, Thomnhill. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brunt. were Sunday visitors at Mm. and Mrs. Robert Pmeston's, Maple Grave. Mm. and Mrs. N. E. Wright, is visitîng Miss Marguerite Wright, St. Catharines. Mr. Clarence Stainton, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Stainton attend- cd the baptismal service at St. Paul's United Church, Bowman- ville, on Sunday morning when their little granddaughter Vel. ma Ann Dickey was baptized after which they were dinner guests a! Mm. and Mrs. Eiwyn Dickey, High Street. Mm. and Mrs. George Rahm, 'Saintfield, Miss Helen Rahm, Oshawa, visited Mm. Leonard Bradley and Mm. and Mms. Ross Page. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Oke, were with Mra. Jim Oke, Bow- Mrand. Mms. E. A. Wemry, were Sunday visitars with Mm. and Mrs. Willis Woods, Mili. Mr and.~ Mms. Rosa Sharp, were guesta at the Skeldin ':g-Lake wedding on Friday at St.' Geo- nge's Anglican Church, Newcas- tle. Mm. and Mms. EarI M asters and girls, Bawmanville. Miss Ruby Virfue, Taronto, Mr. J. A. Wermy, Mr. and Mrs. H. e GlJoe and Garth weme with GiM.an Mrs. Ralph Vîrtues. Mr. and Mrs. Harv Collacutt and Joanne, Bowmanville, wit-h Mn. and Mrs. Gordon Yea. Mad Mrs. L. Winkwo'rth, Brie, 111r, and Mrs. Earr Bot- trell and children, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Saridercock and famlV. iNewcastle, with Mr. and Ms C. Ferguson. Messrs. Glen and HiaroldSpy were escorted te the stage Mrs. Lawrence read a nicely wrd- ed address- to the guests-of- honour, Vera and Bil. A lv- ely green platfom rockingý chair and china tea pot were t.ne gifts chosený- by Mesdames J. Griffin, A. Sharp, A. B'runt and F. Beckett an behalf af the community. Ail jained in singing "For They are Joily Good Fellows", Vera and Bill expressed their appreciatian and extended a cordial welcome ta ail to visit them in their home. An orchestra composed cf Mrs. H. Stevens, Mm. Wallace Stainton, Toronto, and Mr. L. Stainton provided music for dancing. Mrs. L. Ashton, Mrs. R. McGill and Mrs. A. Brunt were in charge of tea and caf- fee serving for a deliciaus lunch which inclucied a treat of ice cream and cake by Mr. and Mrs. Begley. Mrs. Begley was also given a cup and saucer shower earl- ier in the season at the home o! Mrs. B. Reid, Bowmanville. Another memorable event last week for Mms. Begley was the graduation af her daughter,- Miss Shirley Mae Milîs, as a nurse from Peterborough Civic Hospital. Roohester, N.Y. spent holidays with Edgar Wright's and enjayed ,a motar trip ta '>7soranda, Que. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Begley, Mm. Chester Milîs, Mr. Bruce Milîs, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Werry, Enniskillen, Mr. Bryce Larke, Kingston, Mr. and Mrs. Ceci! Milis, Maple Grave, Mm. and Mrs. James Gibson, Acton, attended the graduation exercises ai the Peterborough Civic Hospital at St. Peter's Boys' School Auditor- ium an Wednesday afternoon. They were guests ai Miss Shirley Milis, one ai the 35 nurses ta graduate. The ecepion was held at the nurses' residence aftem the exercîses. Mr. and Mrs. W. H-. Moore have returned home from apend- ing two weeks with R. J. Weav- ing's, Thornhill, and with his twa sisters at London, also at- tended the Golden Wedding An- nîversary o! their cousins Mr. and Mms. E. J. Gregory at Water- loo. Mm. and Mrs. Cameman Oke, Oshawa, with Mr. and Mrs. A. Oke. Mr. and Mrs. John Oke and family, Oshawa, with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Oke. Mr. and Mrs. Gardon Yeo attended the Decoration Services at Bethesda on Sunday. Misses Betty Revelle, and Shirley Milîs Peterborough, were Friday visitars with Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Begley. Con- gratulations ta Miss Shirley Milîs. She is now a Registered Nurse. Mr. and Mrs. L. Winkworth, Barrie, accompanied Mr, and Mrs. C. Ferguson to visit Mr. and Mrs. R. Bottrell, New- castle. Mr. and Mrs. Eanl Trewin, Doreen -and Donald, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Toms attended the Omono Fair. Mr. and Mrs. Keith McGill attended the baptismal service at St. Paul's United Chureh, Bowmanville, of Sharon Ann Piper, daughter o! Mm. and Mrs. Karl Piper, Maple Grave. Mm. Milton Sleman, Mm. and Mrs. Lloyd Slemon, Haydon; Miss Rase Mountjoy, Mr. and Mms. Lorenzo Mountjoy, Nest- letan, weme teu guests a! Mr. and Mrs. Fred Toms. School opened here on Sept. 2 with an attendance of 46 or mare wjth Mrs. Taylor o! Blackstock as aur principal and IMrs. Calnan as Junior teacher. We welcome Mm. and Mns. Cal- nan ta ar-village, who have roomns at Mmr. and Mrs. H.A- tan's. Wallace Stainton, Toronto, spent the weekend with Mm. and Mrs. H. Stevens and visited other relatives. Watch coming events for a hot turkey supper in October. answered. The Durham Co-op- erative la Iooking ater -those who have been members but welcomes- any new mexnbers who care to enrol with them. They are collecting hospitaliza- tion funds free gratis to mcem- bers as a free service. Recipients of public assistance are already enroiled. Those wishing surg- icai *must apply now. He also told o! the free medicai checkupa1 which the County Service has given to its members. Aiýl hospital insurance ln various comparnes expire, as the governient wiil reserve al public wards in ail hospitals for hospial care. Wards wiil net have more than four beds, serv- ice will be up to public waed standard and the extra cost wil be your room. You pay the difference. With the suppos- ition that hospital room costs wiil soar, the speaker urged every family to have a medicai plan and stated total coverage for a family would be $98.40, a single person $49.20, total surg- ical $38, and major medicai $10. Mrs. McLaugblîn and Mrs. Davison voiced the pleasure o! the meeting tQ. Mr. Moffat who had explained so many apsects of the new Hospital Plan. Mrs. Adelbert Peacock gave a splend- id talk on the day's motto "Domestie peace can neyer be preserved in family jars". Other items on the pragram were: a reading "The Woman's Way", Mrs. H. Vine, and Mrs. K. Sam- ells, "A Woman in a Hurry". Mrs. C. Gist favoured with har- monica selections and -Misses Gail and Bonnie Malcolnm ac- companied by their mother, Mrs. L. Malcolm, sang "Be A Little Sunbeam" Route Is Secret For 60 Sports Cars I MusIkolka Color Reg Towers, Telegram Practising for the Muskoka Sports Car Rally, jean Charal plats hem course at the wheel of a Marris 1000. Members of six of Toronto's leading sports car clubs will take part in the rally on Sept. 27. By DAVID GRENIER When the competitors dlimb peeled for information checks relegram Staff Reporter into the cockpits o! their ma- -perhaps the date chx a church chines, all they'll have ta go or achool in a village they're Sparts car race drivers will an will be route instructions in paasing through, or the name be do!fing crash helmets and sealed envelopes. And then af a service station operator. leaving their racing machine.-y they'hl be away on a combina- Sometimes he'll be equired te at home when they enter this tien of paper chase and scaven- plot his course by grid refer- month's exciting new motor- gem hunt. ences on a map. spart event -the Mu sk o ka Competitors are to arrive In Many of the carp wvil carry Sports Car Rally. the right place at the right time an extra deck ef instruments, Laid out along a secret 150- - othemwise they accumulate maklng their interlors like mile route, the rally will take points penalties. Checkpaints bomber cockpits-wlth, com- 60 campeting cars on a winding set up al.ong the route 4are pass, automatie speed pilot, back roads course from Brace- manned by marshals who time stop watches, map boards,' bridge te Huntsville. the competitars., Eàrly or late slide raie and other equlp- It wfll test not only thc driv- arrival at a check point is penal- ment. Ing and navigating skili o! ized. Safety will be one o! the sports car pilots but alsa the Speedlng or Infraction of main features--.competing cars raad-hugging qualities a! their theo Righway Code means Im- stress-flot just the safety o! low-slung machines. mediate disqualification. their curve-holding machines Tlhe ralfulilwe tek end . Opening the first. sealed eu- but the safety a! drivlng at ligh ofa fll«wee en ofvelope, the competitors May average speeds af bctween 18 motor sport which will help find instructions reading some- mph and 40 nph. raise the curtain, Sept. 27, on thing like this: "Proceed north It will take nearly six heurt the ninth annual Mushoka on Highway X ta Highway Y ta complete the Muskoka valley' Cavalcade ef Celer. and !ollow Y eastward. If you course, or an average speed o! Other events include a spec- were traveling at the correct under 30 rnph. ail the way. tacular sparts car gymkhana., a average upced, it wauld take Competitors wil take Part concours d'elegance and driving you 4 minutes, 42 seconds ta Sunday la an atternoon Con- skill tests. reach the intersection o! X and cours d'Elegance in Huntsville. Events are being staged by yAt the ffhtafclgt Rpeettvso h rts six of Toronto's leading sparts omthe ft tor aerage Epresentativesubf he Britis car clubs, which aim te put sfrom comsart, youm aereEre luMotCr Club, Ok Own- acrass their sport-one o! the speedtbeaesognal-tvirdgterarsalub garLgCar Club, ortslle fastest-growing in Canada - t nt h orgina aveagCarafClubadLight Ca CubnSOrts the enerl pulie.Having campleted this sec. ers Club have collaborated on 2 IN CAR tien, competitors might find the project, under Bill Moffet. Rally cars will leave the stai;t- quickfire instructions-proceed Officiais e! the Muskaka Cav- Ing ramp in Bracebridge round at 17 mph for 2.25 miles, then alcade cf Celer welcomed the about Saturday lunch-time, at change te 40 mph at 13.6 miles, idea et holding a sports car twa-minute intervals. Each wiii change te 27 mph, stop, cross raHly and other events in <the carry a skiiled driver and navi- bridge, fork left at 20.9 miles, Muskoka regian. gator. change to 18 mph and se on. They have insuredhn Mhfa Bath wil have their work eut While the driver makes sure facilities and wil'l b ce lg f eut steering their way ta Hunts. <the speedometer needle doesn't ane cf Huntsvillle's f2 streets villc alang a route that wauid vary even-by one-tenth of a mile te provlde fuîl view of the get the average motarist lest from average speed, the navi-j Concours dTlegance and d.riv- wLthin ag coulq « -. - - gator vilhave oe Wqlai' oU oàà By Lewis Millilgan 4'The WORLD IN SPACE"I Is the title o! a new bock whlch tells "The Story o! the Inter- national Geophysical Year," by Alexander Marshack. It is typo- grapfiicaily a spacious book with plenty of space between the Uines and expansive illustrations. That word, "Geophysical," is enough te scare the average reader who is iooking for something light to read during the holidays. But the story is illuminated with !iery blaze o! the sun, the gentie rays o! the moon and the myriad fixed and unfixeçj stars o! the unfiverse. "It's a little world!" Is a com- mon exclamation of surprise; but littie do we know how littie this world is until we contemplate the vastness o! space and realize that ours is an insignificant orb anud the innumerable solar systems o! the MiUcy Way. We reaily dlld not need the modemn geophysicists to remind. us o! that fact, for, before Galileo, Job said, "He hangeth the world upon nothing," and the Psalm- ist considered the starry firma- ment and said, "What is man that Thou art mindful of him?" Indeed, it is remarkable how much modern science owes to thinkers down through later times who did not caîl them- selves scientists. Isaac Newton at the end ai his lufe regarded himself as only a boy playing with pebbles on the seashore, "whilst the great ocean of truth lay ail undiscovered before me." And yet the latest feat of science was based upon Newton's specu- lations on what would happen to a cannon bail if it were fired with enough force ta leave the earth. At that Newton wrote: "The greater the velocity by which (a cannon bahi) 'is pro- jected, the further it goes be- fore it falîs to earth . . . If we now imagine bodies projected pamallel ta the horizon at greater and greater heights . .. accord- ing ta their velocity they wil go on revolving through the heavens in those trajectories, just as the planets do." Sa that the i'dea o! an artificiai satellite is not ne'w. The boast- ed launching o! the Soviet Sput- nik was based upon the mathe- matical formula worked out nearly 300 yeams ago by an Eng- lishman. (Tell it not in Moscow, whisper It not in the wastes o! Siberia.) Modern science and mechanics owe everything they have ao. complished to the preliminary explorera of the unv&rae, andi especially to the disclonures of the power of electricity and the secrets of the atom in the nine. teenth century. There i3 plenty of room for further inveatiga. tion and the application of those 0owers w'thinhs z>IAM~t and 4t tmosphee. 0* n has been up therea 10 ' e andi has served us weas the "'effulgent lamp of night" and tide-operator, a nd scientlsts know what it is composed of. They don't have to go to the moon to p*rove that It la not made of green cheese. These geophysicists tell us w. can learn more about cosmie rays, the cause of the aurora borealis, and the composition of the ionosphere by rocket excur. sions. Yet at the same time they are polluting the upper and lower atmosphere with deadly nuclear fail-out, which may de. stroy the human race before they can make use of that knowledge. It is ail very interesting from the news point of view, but science is in danger of over. reaching itself in its curiosity. Man needs to recail the fate of the Tower of Babel. The Statesman SoId At Following Stores Reg. Edmund's Store, Bethany Johnson's Drug Store, Newcastle T. Enwright, Newcastle S. Brown, Newtonvjjje Porter's Gen. Store, Newtonvilfl C. Pethick, Ennisklllen -T. M. Slemon, Enniskilien F. L. Byam, Tyrone G. A. Barron, Hampton Trull's Store, Courtice A. E. Ribey, Burketon Biyth's Gen. Store, Blackstocb Keith Bradley, Pontypool C. B. Tyrreli, Orono Wm. Turansky, Kendal HIenderson's Book Store, Oshawa House That Jack Built R.R. 4. Oshawa - Bownianvile- R. P. Rickaby - "Big 20" W. J. Berry Jack's Smoke Shop Rlte's Smoke Shop Goheen's Handy Store Jury & Loveli 11 'é_ 4ý, - 1 1 m-.7-id qqermanàlqp- oý làdb m»