g â€" Interested parents and dyed in the woo!l ‘hockey fans to the 7. number of more than 400 watched morz than 175 boys from Woodâ€" f‘5 bridge and surrounding district strut their stuff at the Memorial *‘ Arena on Friday night. Fivehours of hockey showed a fine deâ€" + ~,.velopment from the four squirt teams to the fine juvenile team z. who finished the evening with some excellent team play, and scorâ€" *‘ ing punch that showed the results of not only the coaching they are *‘~ geceiving now from Ron Burns and Ted Goodman but of coaches * since they began playing at about age 9. Their score of 6â€"0 over _ NWobleton, in spite of the sensational goalkeeping of the Nobleton ‘~netâ€"minder, finished a fine evening of bockey. ie Resu j £o #â€"â€"â€"_ ce cclczZ2c2z2lc.__.._...._ ‘ I:Qm ;'ï¬'.“ï¬g fallow} er, Kay Larsen, John McCallum ‘ Rangers 1 â€" Hawks 0 and Bill Fox.. Coachâ€"Mr. Rusâ€" ____ Bcore by Turnbull, assisted by |S€ll Rowntree. * _ _ Jackman. No penalties. \ Mn M se neen : Grand Start To Minor Hockey:‘Week ~Exciting Tournament At Woodbridge fl‘ Professional Directory Canadiens 0 â€" Leafs 0 No penalties. a Leafs: Norman Tayles, Roger Garriock, Grant Archibald, Bob Anderson, Jacky Jones, Darwin Armstrong, Barry Thorpe, Daâ€" vid Manuel, Gordon Ainsley, Bruce Bullock, David Redman, Jim‘ Sturgess, Ricky Cork, Alâ€" len Cornell, Glen Saunders, David Armstrong, John Haws= trawser,.Jim Sturgess. Coachâ€" Mr. Ross Kennedy. Canadiens: Paul Hayhoe, Tom Rowntree, Geoffrey â€" Saunders, David Booth, Brian Hales, John Glassford, Ken Anderson, Doug Sturgess, Bob Weatherill, Ricky Schultz, Donald Coomb, Wayne Orange, Paul Busby, Ken Walkâ€" Hawks: Brian Forsythe, Paul McKie, Trevor Webster, David Nixon, John Tocker, Billy Slack, David Dobson, Larry Manuel, Warren Brownlee, Glen Olson, John McLean, Ricky Guy, Marâ€" tyn McNeill, Doug. Snelgrove and Ricky Sturgess. Coachâ€"Mr. A. Guy and Mr. W. Bennett. Rangers: Richard Lougheed, John Rowe, John Sturgess, Garâ€" net Troyer (goal), Don Whitely, Terry Bourque, David Jackman, Robert Nixon, John Robertson, Bob Sommerville, Allen Shepâ€" pard, Barry Turnbull, Allan Elâ€" ford, Robert McFarland, Danny Soper and Ian Bourke, Coachâ€" Mr. Fred Jones. WESTON The imperia! Bank Building, Mobleten Tuesday from 4 to 6 p.m. WILLIAM H. C. BAMLEY, B.A. BARRISTER and SOLICITOR AURORA INSURANCE AGENCY IY?. WOODBRIDGE â€" Phone ATias 8â€"1186 R. E. McAFEE, B. Com. CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT PINB STREET woonsripes PMONE EM. 44031 Fraser & Simms BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS Bank of Nova Scotia 2 ATLAS . 61453 Resident Partner of M. 1. JAMIESON LB MAY & co. PINE STREET â€" WOODBRIDGE â€" Phone AT. 8â€"0571 WILFRID R. SCOTT Cor. §1. Clair & Old Weston Rd. PHONE 6 TOWNSLEY T. ROGER 7â€"0661 Roya) Bank Building, Teronte Stanley McNell WE HAVE A SUPERâ€"GIANT PRESS TO HANDLE ALL KINDS OF SHEET METAL OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY $. FREEDMAN & SON LTD. for a complete Survey of ALL TYPES OF INSURANCE Bus. â€"â€" Parkview 7â€"4692 Chambers 7 Main St. South Authorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Dept., Ottawa, Ont W. R. Scott Funeral Home PRIVATE SEDAN AMBULANCE SERVICE Published every Thursday by , Principal Publishers Ltd. 878 Lakeshore Read, & Teronte 14, Ont. R Publisher: V. J. McMILLAN Member of the Canadian Weekly Newspaper Association cast â€" _ TIN â€" All METALS WANTED CH. 1â€"0111 HIGHEST PRICES PAID Hawks: Laurie Blgke, Wilâ€" liam _ Booth, Richard Duzak, Laurie Redman, Chris Carman, Garry Sandles, David Metcalfe, ~l!%o¢on: Bob Chamberlain, Douglas Lougheed, Lawrence Ring, Skippy Ford, Bobby Robâ€" ertson, _ Larry _ Moore, Jerry Brown, Wayne Kitchener, Edsel Allen, Glen Brownlee, Paul Garâ€" seau, Dennis McClelland, Terry Kaiser, Arnold Robert and Verâ€" non Wilson. Coachâ€"Mr Percy This game was the best playâ€" ed of the minar series. Both teams had good team play, play alternated from end to end throughout. The> goal keepers were sensational at times and the final marker came with 20 seconds to play. * PEEâ€"WEE SERIES Rangers 3 â€" Hawks 2 Scoring: Rangers, Kitchener from Moore; Rangers, Kitchener from Ring; Hawks, Blake from Carman; Hawks, Haynes from Korton; Rangers,. Ring unasâ€" sisted. No penalties. Canadiens ‘. Rangers ... Hawks ... Leats ©........: Referees for this series: Lawâ€" rence Ring and Norman Troyer. . Ernie Brock & Son Kirby Brock COMMLETE INSURANCE .SERVICE J MAPLE â€" Phones :â€", Bus. â€" Maple 11 _ Res. â€" Maple 300 _Chartered Accountant . Mawman Avenue, Weedbridge Hours 9 a.m. to § o.m. 9 a.m. to neen Sat. or by «ippeintment Phone ATlas 8â€"0511 J. KENNETH KIDD BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. 371 Bav Street â€" PMONE: BM. 34097 â€" ATiss 80413 JOHN T. FARR GENERAL INSURANCE 392 Albion Rd., Thistletown Phone CHerry 1â€"9230 w. M. MYERS GOURLEY L. HOWELL Barrister & Solicitor Pine $t. â€" Wooedbridge FRIDAYS 4 â€" 6 o.m. PHONR ATins 8â€"0621 wOODBRIDGE ROBERT E. SCOTT The Ldaies‘ Auxiliary of the Canadian Legion Branch 213 held a very successful Euchre party last Tuesday when the following lucky ladies received prizes. Mrs. Mary Moore and Mrs. Dick Parâ€" rington. In the men‘s division Mr. Stanfield and Mr. R. Ross were the major prize winners. Elmiea Ratepayers Association are holding a meeting on Februâ€" ary 4th at 8 p.m. in the Elmlea Church. ‘The speaker for the evening will be Mr.. R, Bush, councilor for ward 4. Birthday greetings are in order for Linda Jones of Golfdown Dr., who will be 12 years old on February 6th. Another name on the greetings list is Fred Prior to whom we send belated good wishes for his birthday on Jan. 25th. â€" Get well wishes of the district go to Miss Lucas of Islington Ave., who! has been laid up in St. Josephs Hospital for some time now. Sunday morning service at the Elmlea Baptist Church was ofâ€" Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. F. Woodford of 20 Golfdown Drive on â€"the birth of a daughter last Tuesdzglr. The welcome adâ€" dition to the family will mean a new sister for young Sherrie and Billy. _ Mr. Bert Barager, formerly of this community; now of Toronâ€" to, is in St. Michael‘s Hospital undergoing surgical â€" treatment and his former neighbors wish ‘him a speedy recovery. â€"â€" Mr. Peter Muir has recuperâ€" ated nicely after his recent apâ€" pendectomy and we wish him good health in thg furure. The Borden A:/b. Home and School Association/ held a sotial night last Monday when the members and thfll‘ friends reâ€" laxed from the /usual business session and enjoyed games and contests followed by delicious The children of Mr, and Mrs. Chas. Lee spent the holidays at the home with the lz:umpl and then Mrs. Lee unfortunately took the same malady and has been very ill. It‘s nice to know that the whole family has made a complete recovery. f BANTAM GAME North York League Game Schomberg 7 â€" Woodbridge 3 Scoring: _ Schomberg â€" B. Graham from Burbidge. Schomberg â€" Breedâ€" on. Schomberg â€" McBain from Sampson. Woodbridge â€" Presâ€" ton. Schomberg â€" Thompson â€" McBain. Schomberg â€" Thompâ€" son. . Schomberg â€" Breedon. Woodbridge â€" Phillips â€" from Thornley. Woodbridge â€" Philâ€" lips from Preston. Schomberg â€" Sampson from Burbidge. Penalties: Well, folks, this looks more like a good old fashioned Canaâ€" dian winter instead of that bananaâ€"belt weather that we were getting too accustomed to. This will make those who have gone south feel that their long trips were not all in vain. Our Irish immigrants (recent arriâ€" vals) were beginning to, disbeâ€" lieve us when we tried to exlain wintertime in Canada. There are so many ill folk in Humber Summit just now that it would take this whole column just to mention their names and wish them â€"well. Mr. John R. Baker didn‘t fare so well. He also suffered from bronchial pneumonia but also took a reâ€"action to the penicilâ€" lin and has been in Peel Meâ€" morial Hospital for extra treatâ€" ment. Mr. J. Henry is ‘bapk on his feet after a bout of bronchial pneumonia suffered during the holiday season. Hawks ... Leats ... Rangers .. Canadiens Canadiens: Hando Told, Doug. Gee, Harold Attfield, Doug Mayâ€" nard, Errol Burton, John Budge, Jim Ferguson, Arthur Ireland, John _ Radley, Doug Hagan, Chuck Metcalfe, Ken Evans. Coachâ€"Mr. Hanes. Referees for these games Mr. Ford and Mr. McFadden. Leafs 2 â€" Canadiens 2 Scoring: Leafs, Ward Boddy unassisted; Leafs, Cutler from Pinder and Covell; Canadiens, Hagan â€" unassisted; Canadiens, Told from â€" Evans and Budge. No penalties. Leafs: Colin Elljott, Lorne Armstrong, _ Bill Powlesland, Garry Pinder, Calven Covell, Jim â€" Thaacker,~ Peter Aiken, Paul Gundry, Norman Phillips, Richard Bourke, Brian Robart and Ward Boddy. Coachâ€"Mr. Moore. T John Kersey, Fred Hanes, Arâ€" thur Morley, Brian Garbutt, Wilson McKane, Terry Korton and David Ross. Coach â€" Mr. John Fisher. Elmlea and Humber Heights Mrs. A. GCARBIS Peeâ€"Wee Standing Won Lost Tied Pts. mm & 8 0 16 P ouoc® 3 3 13 A and Confectionery, deceased. are hereby notified to send to the undersigned on or before the 15th day of Febrvary, 158, their names and full particulars of their claims._Immediately after the said date, the estate will be distriboted, having regard ‘anly to the claims of which notice has been réceived. and Clarence Lorne Fraser, Executeri, Bay and Melinds Streets, Torents 1, by Fraser All persons having claims against the estate of the aboveâ€"named deceased, who died at the City of Torente en er ubout the 13th day of Nevember, 1957, in the Estate of EDWARD PRICE BEACH, Any news for this column ‘should be phoned into AT. 8â€" 0296 by. Thursday evening of each week. Your coâ€"operation is asked in this matter so that we can prevent any disappointâ€" ments about the doings around }'our community, > ficated by Mr. Bruce Moorehouse who continued his study in the Old, Testament and comparing it with passages from the New Testament. Next Sunday Mr. Birthday wishes are sent to Bary Turnbull, Dale McManis, Chas. Johnson and any others who have already celebrated this month. Watch this column for news from the Wellâ€"Baby Clinic held the first Monday of each month at 2.00 p.m. in the Pine Ridge Presbyterian Church _ Hall. Watch also for the advertiseâ€" ment just prior to each Clinic. There is pleasant news to reâ€" port ~regarding the Polio and Toxoid needles for‘ preâ€"schoolâ€" ers from this community only. Mrs. Marg Schultz has ‘been pestered with the flu bug, laryâ€" ngitis head cold, and a virus inâ€" fection in her throat during the last month and a half but is Mr. and Mrs. Les. Robb have also been victims of the flu bug but are able to be up and about again. 2 s Mrs. Norma Jones is another member of our society plagued with illness. Hurry and get betâ€" ter, Norma. _ Service club backing and the Arena Commission all had a hand in this community effort and the continuing interest of parents, Rotary, Lions, Légion and Arena Board will finish the approaching playoffs in these series in the best ever. refreshments. Sympathy of the district is extended to Mrs. H. Parkes in the loss of an aunt at Mt. Denâ€" nis last week. > Congratulations to John Gibâ€" son of the North York Fire Deâ€" partment who has recently been promoted to the rank of Capâ€" tain. showing improvement now, we are glad to say. Miss Mary Ellien Devins celeâ€" brated her> first birthday on Dec. 28th with one pink candle Thanks of the town go out to the committee of coaches and managers headed by Mr. Elmer McFadden for the organization of the evening. Publicity in the News and over the radio was arranged by Mr. McFadden and Norn Garriock. JUVENILE GAME â€" Woodbridge 6 â€" Nobleton 0 Scoring: *L Woodbridge â€" Evans from Broadhurst. ‘Evans. _ Williams from Bradford. Broadhurst from Evans. Bradford. Evans from Bradford. Penalties: 3 Nobleton â€" Chamberlain. Woodbridgeâ€"Halstead . â€" playâ€" ing with broken stick. Referees ..â€" Thompson and Ford. Refereesâ€"Mr. Ford and Mcâ€" Fadden. , zloodbridlo + Hayhoe, Twedâ€" die and Thornley. Scoring: â€" King City â€" Hill from Rawâ€" lings. Woodbridge ‘â€" Williams from Walton. King City â€" Broad from Cutler. King City â€" H§ll from Rawlings. Woodbridge â€" Panasick from Medon. Penalties: King Cityâ€"Cutler and Archiâ€" bald Schomberg â€" Thompson, fluiw- son, Kaake, McBain and Sampâ€" Refereesâ€"Mr. Ford and Mr Raney. Woodbridge â€" Panasick, Seaâ€" ward 3, Medon and Kitchener. DATED this 20th day of January, 1988 Notice To Creditors CH. 1â€"9260 MIDGET GAME City 3 â€" Woodbridge 2 biscuit. . se We t O on ) c 90 y-v""-" " ‘ Magical .. influence â€" evil/of discase remained largely a 6+ unknown | 459 . â€" But a little over a w« |Woihe: ‘Aisting: "and i m ago, two men began a mp. | forees, jealous‘ godsâ€"were early revolution â€" wh They. mpâ€" | believed to cause disease. Treatâ€" | gig po; fully comprehend. Semâ€" ment called .fOr knowledge and|melwels . insisted that â€"clean red» forces.> The| hands could break the chain of phcnuono!fluuloml inf i8 W e a Mr, | courses â€" of© illness ptono\meod' 4 ““"l db lcnt.-.h his e Itho treatment‘s success or !lil-}n, wartd. * Lister ":“.u" Lis 10400 uÂ¥Aimis C 2R T _ Down‘ through the ages into ‘modern times, the true causes | The medical works of Hippoâ€" / ‘crates combined the knowledge\ |of the Mediterranean peoples, of ‘the Orfent,; and of hi own pre-i | decessors.* Already | a legend | !during his lifetime, Hippocrates | |rules of medicine lasted almost | \unchnnged for.the next two and ‘ ‘a half centuries. â€" | m"*n,lflnhhlw then have nofiew. > * day of February, 1958, after which date the ertate will be distributed having reâ€" gard enly. to the claims of which the undersigned shall then have notice, and In the matter of the Estate of Georgina Ortavia .Campbell, late of the City of Torente, in the County of York, decedsed. AM persons having dlaims against the sstate of the aboveâ€"named whe died on the fourth day ef September, 1957, are A number of residents of Elmâ€" leaâ€" are confused by the Woodâ€" bridge bus ‘schedule. The service will be even less during the day but rush hour is being increased. Schedules may be obtained from the bus drivers. The Thistletown Coâ€"operative Nursery School is to be opened in February in the new Sunday school rooms of the Thistletown United Church. For further inâ€" formation please contact Mrs. R. Begley,. CH. 45250. Mrs. W. R. Sleigh is celebratâ€" ing her birthday at the end of this month. Best withes to all those who are also having their cwn special days during the rest of this month. Kennedy will be in charge of the service. . The Young People of Pine Ridge Presbyterian Church meet every Sunday evening, in the church hall. After a short devoâ€" tional period, light refreshments are served and a social hour is enjoyed by all. The senior memâ€" bers of this same church group meet on Saturday evenings at various activities and have a purely© $0¢ial . gathering. Any young people will be welcome on Sunday: evenings and any married couples will receive the same hearty welcome on Saturâ€" days at the church. The only trouble encountered was the fact that Mary Ellen was all for eating the candle and ignoring the cookie comâ€" pletely. _ Mrs. A. E. Doan was convenâ€" er in charge of the January meeting of the Alma Pricé Eveâ€" ning Auxiliary of Woodbridge United Church this month. The entire evening was carried out in a Japanese thenme even to the refreshments. . Miss Nancy George was able to return to school after the holidays, luckily with only a slight .limp in her right leg. Nancy was knocked to the paveâ€" ment of Borden Ave. by a car, when walking with her chums on the proper side of the road, just before. Christmas. The change in the bus scheâ€" dule here has caused no end of inconvenience to our inhabiâ€" tants. The Kindergarten chilâ€" dren have no way to travel the highway now at noon unless one of the parents or a teacher drives them home. It is also difficult for anyone working late in the city. One must be at Runneymede and Dundas by, 945 p.m. or wait until 11.15 _‘ Twentyâ€"five hundred years ago, in Greece, the theory of magical causstion gave way to the beâ€" lief that health ‘is harmony among the substances of the body, iliness a disturbance, of that harmony. Symptoms, Hipâ€" pocrates stated, were the body‘s reaction to disease. Four eleâ€" ments, or humors â€" earth, fire, air, water, eachâ€" possessing its own particular quality of cold or heat, wetness or dryness â€" composed the body‘s substance. (The above news was intended for last week.) pork and shellfish was probably founded on accurate knowledge of â€"the â€" dead lly trichinosis these foods transmitted. intricately mixed in many anâ€" clent cultures. Egypt‘s rules of hygiene, covering nearly every daily action, were in the form Rocts and herbs were given to the patient in an attempt to soothe these powerful forces. Their curative value was imâ€" puted to their.shape. . Magical medicine is still practiced toâ€" day, ‘authough chiefly amofg peoples apart from the main stream of civilization. believed to cause disease. Treatâ€" ment called .fOr knowledge and placation of these forces.> The courses : of iliness / pronounced the treatment‘s success or failâ€" ure, just as. it‘ still does. Magic Mumbe Jumbo _ 'SIWr Band On The _ Magica) . intlvence â€" eviijot dbense remaines hseay ») @@UY$ PVOSIOCNE Of Notice to Creditors Rebert torme Blatr by his sefeiters Parsons & Lewle, 18 Terents §t., Then came the . broadâ€"spec. trum antibiotics,. single drugs capable of eradicating whole groups <of discases. Terramycin, for example, routs more than 100 human infections and Signeâ€" mycin strikes disease organâ€" isms which resist other antibioâ€" tics. Science at last found such a drug in penicillin. But the need for specific cures did not end there. Penicillin, is ineffective against certain germs. So the search for other antibiotics was intensified, The next discovery was streptomycin, chiefly effecâ€" tive against a very old enemy, tubezï¬xlosis. . With infection largely under control, medical science today has turned more attention to other major health problems. But the curative power of sulfa drugs was limited and many patients tolerated them poorly. The search was renewâ€" ed for drugs, more potent against disease, less harmful to man. What causes mental _ breadâ€" downs, heart ailments, and the many diseases which seem to stem from upsets in the body‘s delicatelyâ€"balanced . chemistry? Doctors do not yet know all the answers. But already drugs have been developed â€" to calm onceâ€"unmanageable mental paâ€" tients, to aid victims of heart trouble, and to ease the painâ€" burdened arthritic. â€" The age of magical medicine has been replaced by the age of "miracle drugs," and by the knowlédge that in his fight against disease, man must learn to control not the perverse whims of the. gods, but the fortes of nature. ' A chemist, Pasteur: was emâ€" ployed in the study of wine disâ€" eases, a serious problem in France. +He concluded that yeasts â€" tiny living organisms â€" were responsible for the ferâ€" mentation of grape jufce into wine. The next important phase of his worl involved vaccinaâ€" tion, the innoculation of sheep ’with dilute anthrax germs to protect them against the fatal }disease. The nature of bacteriâ€" al illness was known, but until the third decade of this century, most doctors believed we would never produce specific cures for all the infections that best man. A new medical era began in the 1930‘s with the sulfa drugs. Until that time, medicine had measures against certain of the larger intestinal parasites, but otherwise its drugs relieved only symptoms.. With the sulfas â€" specific agents against disâ€" ease organisms â€" doctors had a way of destroying disease withâ€" out destroying the patient. Menâ€" initis mortality dropped from 70 to 10 percent; several forms of pneumonia were quickly and easily curable. _ A% I antiseptics prevented fatal surâ€" glcal infections. Both Bad Jearnâ€" ed to ‘fight bacterial infection, but not until Pasteur‘s work in the latter half of the 19th cenâ€" tury was the nature of this fight fully known. PHONE CH. 1â€"5211 Wedding Drop in and See Our Catalogue of Samples TIMES & â€" GUIDE All cards styled by Interâ€"National Artcratts â€" giving you complete assurance as to quality and correctness of form. The prices are exceedingly low for quality such as Artcraft INVITATIONS ANNOUNCEMENTS RECEPTION CARDS THANK You cArDSs CAKE BOXES NAPKINS MATCHES â€" (RAISED LETTERS) tonation of the band is good. All these facts bolster the bandâ€" master‘s, plea that the Weston Silver Band should hold its| head up and the members be! The Band President, Mr. Robâ€" ert Wilson, revealed that during the past ‘year much improveâ€" ment has taken ‘place in the There is good balance in the different _ sections, the band plays well in tune, and the inâ€" Mr. Dobney also paid tribute to the former bandmaster, Horâ€" ace s:i_n,bt_xrz. 0_ S The toast to the ladies was proposed by Bandsman + Ben Macari with humour, and was responded to by the president of the newly ‘formed Ladies‘ Auxiliary, Mrs. Earnest Halâ€" _: Mr. Clark, Mayor of Weston, brought. greetings from the town council. ‘The Mayor congratuâ€" lated the band for past perforâ€" mances and wished them sucâ€" cess in the future, congregation of the Westminisâ€" ter United Church. â€" Head . table. fld- at the banâ€" “t, held in Weston Legion Hall, were Mr. and Mrs. R. Wilâ€" son, Mr. and Mrs. L. Sainsbury, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clark and H{. ang Mrs. Albert Dobney. the greetings from the Associaâ€" tion. He thanked the band for â€"Mr,â€"Lioyd Sainsbury was the M.C. of the evening and introâ€" du_c_od‘ Ehn various speakers. The band is on the verge of a new era, in the of the. town, declared the president of the Weston the annual banguet of the band, Thursday, Janus 44 MAIN SOUTH i W.P. GRAHAM & Sons Interesting opportunity full or part time. Coâ€"operative fires and casualty insurance company has sales opening, for person over 25. Training provide_d. Attractive commissions Write giving age, qualifications, etc., to GREENKHOUSESâ€" ~ STOREâ€" 2 â€" 919 SCARLETT RD. 24 MAIN NORTH 4. CH. 1â€"9103 CH.1â€"1231 CH. 1â€"3411 The Rev. Mr. James MacKenâ€" Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere > Coâ€"operators Insurance® Association â€" HELP WANTED c/o 155 Gracefield Avenve., Toronto 15, Ont. MALE OR FEMALE AT YOUR SERVICE VICTORIAN ORDER NURSES ~â€"â€"CH. 1â€"1581 + :‘ o o o $ . \ § :"»: Ey he l â€" C. bag iss coamer w brought A very curioys andâ€"conven arrangement has been made nature to accommodate the son fang of the adder " it is not required for use. a rule, says the Book of Kn edge, the adder does not these fangs when biting % food, so they are laid flat in the roof of the mouth of the way of the ordinary tet In some of the other poison snakes the fangs are fixed : cannot be tucked away like t band, the musical w the members, and € serve . others, assure t Weston . Silver . Band is verge of a new era, in ‘4 ical history of . the cluded the Band Presi Mrs George McCaul: e tained the guefts with cost recitation of Little Albert R bottom and the Lion and a Small story. proud of the HUMIDITY . PROBLEM ? ADAM GOLL HEATING AT. 8â€"0750 Drive Carefully POISONOUS SNAKES‘ EATING PROBLEM