FIAT A RL Rh eh Sh ? 5 A het PRY Amos > "3 $ Ren BI X % 5 3 AY TT Ys fan A PRS mc bh al a a 5 A he dame TY AACA LANES 4-THE PORT PERRY, STAR, THURSDAY, JANUARY 8rd, 1067 LOCAL NEWS Engagement Prince Albert On Sunday our minister, Rev. R. H., Wylie, delivered a suitable talk of great value to we individuals before opening the door into a new year, At 8.8. we are grateful to Mr, Me- Crea who led in a Bible discussion. What's Cooking in Canadian Scouting SCOUTS USING STAMPS TWICE - Canadian Boy Scouts are getting double duty out of postage stamps. Upwards of ten pounds of used stamps COMING EVENTS Paper Salvage Please put out your papers for the Boy Scout Paper Salvage on SATUR- | THE CHURCHES 7A Le ry y Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Taylor an- . . is . DAY, JAN. bth by 1 Please | Mrs. E, fymyread the theme story collected by Cubs and Scouts, arrive oN nounce the engagement of their] CHURCH gr ASCENSION tie oy package adi d Pa fling entitled "The New Year." Mrs. Les monthly at Canadian Scout Headquar- daughter Jean Christina to Mr. Bruce R (Ang ican) Beacock" "and son Donald deposited ters in Ottawa. They are sold to stamp Eg? Re Arnold Houghland, eldest son of Mr. ev. K. W, Scott, L.Th., Rector their birthday money in the paper dealers and the proceeds remitted t . Sunday, Jan, 6th-- 11 a.m.--Holy Communion and Pe Sermon. A Sunday School, \ - the Boy Scouts International Bureau® in London, England, and applied to the expansion of Scoutig throughout the world. Many Canadian business firms, as well as members of Scout < Ladies' Auxiliaries and other organ- izations are helping the Scouts to get {dotible duty out of postage stamps. church. New Year visitors with Mr, and Mrs. G. Hunter included both their parents, Mr. and Mrs, A. Robertson and Mr, and Mrs. A. Hunter, Mr, and Mrs. N, Wilson attended the turkely dinner at the home of her sister, Mr. and Mrs, Jas. Rodd, in Oshawa. This gathering of twenty and Mrs. Ernest Houghland. The marriage to take place quietly on February 2; 1957. Births a. CARTER -- Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Carter are pleased to announce the No Annual Euchre Plan to attend the euchre in aid of the Cancer, Polio: and Tuberculosis Fupd of the 1.0.0.F., and Rebekah Lodges to be held in the Lodge Rooms on Friday, Jan. 18, 1957 at 8.30.p.m. "ntertainment and Lunch to follow. PORT PERRY UNITED CHURCH Rev. R. H. Wylie, B.A., Minister . Sunday, Jan, 6th-- 10 a.m.--Sunday School birth of their son on Tuesday, Dec, 11 a.m.--Sacrament of Lord's Jauny i iy F9sing vas a havpopof- vig 25th, 1956, at the Oshawa General Supper " dds' wedding. anniversayy, F d S Hospital. A brother for Janis and 7 p.m.--Evening Worship, Mr, and Mrs. L, Beacock and boys 00 ense Ann enjoyed a turkey dinner with others i ' a. at the home of Mr. and-Mrs; J. Bea-|- by Corrine' Trérice, Director of ST. JOHN'S Causeway Lanes cock, Nestleton, Nutrition, Bakery Foods Foundation LEE -- Rev. and Mrs. Kenneth J. TRESBYTERIAN CHURCH PORT PERRY Relatives with Mr, and Mrs. N. Wil- of Canada, . Lee (nee Roberts) of Warwick, Ont., Minister : son included Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd GET IN THE ACT Get in the act with riboflavin, one of the B. vitamins. You need it if you want to take a bow for better health, 'Riboflavin (vitamin B2) can be more than a co-star, if you get enough of it. It takes on the job of stage manager Miller, Joan, Murray, Robert, of Col- umbus, and friend Miss Beryl Palmer of Port Perry. * We all extend sympathy to the wife and family in the sudden passing of the late Mr, Russell Hood. Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Birnie with Mr. are pleased to announce the arrival of a son, Kenneth James, a brother for David, at London Hospital on Dec. 217, . 19566, Rev. B. D, Armstrong, B. A,, D. D. Sunday, January 6th-- - 11.00 a.m.--Sunday School 7.00 p.m.--Evening Worship OPEN BOWLING Tuesday, Friday, uary and February, two groups to serve at each. More carols were sung and meeting closed with the Mizpah benediction. Group 4 served a de- Wild Life L LANDS AND FORESTS KERRY--Mvr, and Mrs, Ivan Kerry, PORT PERRY BAPTIST CHURCH - nee Isabel Cudmore, 24 Dominion St. ' Truro N.S. announce the birth of a son on Dee, 256th, 1956. for Virginia and Lloyd. Pastor: Paul Delaney Sunday, January 6th-- : Sunday School at 10 a.m. Morning Service at 11 a.m. Evening Service at 7.00 p.m. and Saturday Nights / ------eW and Mrs. Ferris for the holiday. Mr. and Mrs. Lou Bond entertained all the family New Year's Day. Mr. and Mrs. David Holman and two little daughters, of Toronto, enjoyed Christmas with their aunt Miss F. lectable lunch, We extend our thanks to Miss Holman for her hospitality in opening her home for this very pleas- ant evening. Mrs. W. Someyville spent the Christ- mas week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. HESPLER. -- "Good hunting five, ten,, or twenty years from now de- pends a great deal on public opinion today," says Conservation Officer C. V. Horton, Mitchell, Ontario, of the Ontario Department of Lands and in your body. The result Other food substances may be used more efficient- ly. Ao Without this member of the vitamin B troupe, the protein foods 'you eat could not be properly used in the Cards of Thanks We would like our friends to know how much we appreciated their friend- ly calls and the lovely cards and beaut- iful gifts received upon the occasion of our Twenty-Fifth Wedding Anniver- 'sary. Our thanks to you all. Pat and Ivan Haugen. |. L. Collins, and where Mrs. H. Collins is now residing, Birthday greetings to Mrs. Lillian Mark, of Winnipeg (a subscriber of Port Perry Star) for January bth, WildLife LANDS AND FORESTS Holman, Mr. and Mrs, Bev. Smith, Linda and Richard, of Toronto, spent last week- end with Mrs, G. R. Smith and Miss Spence. - On Wednesday evening at the Cause- Way Lanes, Mrs. E. Martyn treated her Sunday School class of twelve boys or more to a few games of bowling. The excitement was keen and plenty of fun, too. The Christmas meeting of the W.A. Forests, "The more people who bet- [ter undérstand the principles of wild- life conservation, the better the chance are that we can have outdoor fun with a future many years from now. The future lies especially in the hands of those who control land-- farmers, lumber companies, real estate concerns, for there are more sports- men each year and less land available for their sport." manufacture of new body cells and the repair of old ones. Riboflavin also helps set the pace in your show by assisting in the release of energy from fats and carbonhydrates. If there's too little riboflavin in your meals each day, cracked and sore areas may de- velop at the corners of the mouth. Burning and bloodshot eyes, which may be unusually sensitive to bright light, may also occur. Slight de- ficiencies of this vitamin: may cause The United Church of Canada SCUGOG PASTORAL CHARGE MINISTER: Rev. J. K. Braham, M.A., B.D Sunday, Jan, 6th-- : 10.16 a.m.--Scugog Church (Grace) Church and Sunday School. 11.00 a.m.--Scugog Church (Head) Sunday School. 11.16 a.m.--Manchester Church * SCIENCE IN . YOUR LIFE lls Of Space . Space flight no longer can be con- sidered the sole property of science fiction. It is a reality. Pat and Ivan Haugen wish to thank Rockets have already punched all those who helped them with the 115 - Chosen and Sanday Scag. fhrough the Slinostere to an alt} was held on Monday evening, Dec. 17 SUDBURY--Rising in popularity as --_-- "+s J other symptoms which are not always Silvey Anniversary. Special thanks t ag rp ee School iY miles. And. even |at the home of Miss Flora Holman. |a vacationland, this area attracted 272 LANDS AND FORESTS visible, but which usually are accom- to Mrs. Wm. Carnegie, Mrs. M. B, 2.50 . 3 an ay Is % ' Os now, engineers of |The president, Mrs. Grant Hunter, pre- | purchasers of summer resort locations : : panied by a generally lowered state of Dymond and Mrs. Irene Henry, also ' DA are ure (Hea y I a new breed are |sided. Three carols were sund fol- | this year, Crown land officers, of the | "TORONTO -- While Ontario forest health, - reduced efficiency--and- less to Misses Muriel Luke, Carol Ann oe re hk 0 : Ba '| Planning artificial [owed by prayer. Mrs, G. R., Smith | Ontario Department of Lands and wealth frequently is thought to be |earning power. Carnegie and daughter Sharon for| "ome and brea road with nsp.an *y Tue garaliiies SB read the Christmas story from Luke, | Forests report. The French River | ooncentrated in the northern parts of | Riboflavin is an easy-to-get vitamin their assistance with the tea, and to] Yeceive a blessing. : 7 ' La La 4 circle the "j,04 chapter. Mrs. Beacock read the [country is the most favoured with 36 |}. Province, forest products are in- | because it is widely distributed in our brother Frank Henry and son Nor- BE EX $e "These are un. |minutes. A motion carried we send $6 [land parcels sold, followed by the | reqging in importance in the economy | common foods, Healthful require- man who received the guests at the PENTECOSTAL CHURCH - 2 oJ manned projects, |to the Missionary Society. Treasurer|Trout Lake area, 31 and the Nepe-|o¢ Southern Ontario, according to Lake | ments may be met by using moderate wassi Lake area and the, Georgian Bay Islands where 25 and 24 parcels re- spectively are sold. On Kukagami Lake, 21 were sold and Lakes Wah- napitae, Penage and Long were well up, however. Before man himself can safely roam through space, science must solve a_ number of unique problems. ' p Man, for instance, has never been reported nearly $160.00. A motion carried we send $10.00 to Albert Col- lege Fund. A motion carried that we cater to the Teachers' Association exposed to raw radiation. In space banquet in May. A motion that we flight he will have left his protec. [have two suppers, one each in Jan- tive layer of atmosphere. behind. ; ) Even ordinary sunshine could roast 2 Ar the spaceman like a chestnut unless engineers find cooling devices or re- flective paints to ward it off. Other staggering hazards are posed by the speed nt which man would travel through space and the altitudes he would reach. At the speed he would be moving, - even small particles could puncture the most efficient space craft yet de- _ vised, with fatal effect. 4" Man himself would be prostrated with motion sickness unless potent new anti-motion sickness drugs like Bonamine are made effective at the fantastically high altitudes space travel would entail, for rockets tum- ble through space in an end-over- end fashion. ] A serious problem, but more a psychological one than a physical one, will be the weightlessness man will encounter in space. : Weightlessness is the puzzling condition which exists when the force of gravity has ceased to oper- ate. In space manand materials will . have mass but no weight. In the opinion of space medicine special- ists, weightlessness 'will not harm the human body much, if at all. But it will take time and condjtioning for people to learn to move weight- less limbs without overshooting and to enjoy sleeping strapped down. © ~ Until these proidems are solved, therefore, man will still travel "~~. _door. | care in_selectitig foods from each of the. basic food groups in Canada's Food Rules. To make certain that riboflavin will 'get in the act', liver and other organ meats should be on the shopping list often. In fact, chicken liver, calves' liver, pork liver and kidney are our best food sources of this vitamin, Mushrooms, spinach "The Twentieth Century Church with the First Century Message" Rev. Harold J. Williamson, Pastor Sunday, January 6th--- 10 a.m.--Sunday School. - 11 a.m.--Morning Worship: 7 p.m.--Evangelistic Service Wed., 8 p.m.--Prayer & praise service Fri., 8 p.m.--Young Peoples "A Warm Welcome Awaits You. In Memoriam ~~ MARTYN--In loving memory of a dear mother and grandmother May Frances, who pased away Jan. 5, 1955. If 1 had all the world to give, ' I'd give it, yes, and more, To hear her voice and see her smile, And greet her at the door. I wish to thank all thé kind friends who sent gifts of flowers, cards, ete. and visited with me while 1 was in the Community Memorial Hospital, A special thanks to Dr. M. B. Dymond and the nurses and staff of the Com- munity Hospital. Sharon Haugen. . Deaths ASHTON, Joseph--At the home of his son Sydney Ashton, 196 Solina St., Oshawa on Sunday, Dec. 30th, 1956, Joseph Ashton, beloved husband of the late Mary Clou in his 89th year. Ser- vice from Chapel of MeDermott-Pana- baker, Port Perry on Wed., Jan, 2nd. | But all I can do, dear mother, Interment Pine Grove Cemetery. Is go and tend your grave, ' i. \ -And leave behind tokens of love To the best mother God ever made. I like to think when life is done, Wherever heaven may be, That she'll be standing at the door, Up there to welcome me. Sadly missed and ever remembered by her husband Howard and family. 'What's Cooking in Canadian Scouting TWO JAMBOREE TRAINS - Two special trains, one from the Atlantic Provinces, and one from Ont- | through space-in fancy rather than ario, will carry over 600 Canadian| in fact. . : Scouts and Leaders to the Fourth ; os American National Jamboree at Vall- : 4s ey Forge, Pennsylvania, next July. CUSTOM ROYAL IS GLAMOUR CAR OF 1957 DODGE LINE It will be the largest Canadian Con- Commencing January 7th, 1957 the stores will close on HOOD -- Suddenly at Community Hospital, Port Perry on Monday Dec. S1st, 1956, A. Russell Hood, beloved husband of Mabel Ashbridge Hood, dear father of Glen of Scugog Island, Audrey (Mrs. Elmer Lee, Port Perry), Jean (Mrs. Ralph Laing, Oshawa), Joy (Mrs. John Ballard, Port Perry). Stepfather of Ruth (Mrs. Chas. Har- rison of Toronto and Donald of Scu- gog. Service from McDermott-Pana- baker Chapel, Port Perry on Thurs- day, Jan. 3rd, 1957. Interment Pine Grove Cemetery. Monday, Tues., Thursday, Saturday, at 6.00 p.m. | on Wednesday at 12.30 p.m. and will remain open until 9 p.m. {on Fridays WOON, Mabel Irene--At the Com- munity Hospital, Port Perry on Sun- day, Dec. 31st, 1956, Mabel Irene Mark, beloved wife of the late Rich- ard Woon and dear mother of Harold of Stoney Creek. Funeral from Chapel of McDermott-Panabaker, Port Perry, Ontario on Wednesday, Jan. 2, 1957. Interment Pine Grove Cemetery. tingent ever sent to an American Jam- boree. The Canadians will present typ- ically Canadian Camp Fire programs during the gathering of 50,000 Scouts. DOUPE'S GENERAL STORE Prince albe:t, Ontario A Cotnplete line of Meats; Groceries, and Sunbeam Bread and Cakes, School Supplies Leman, of the Ontario Department of | Lands and Forests, + This is so especially in' the five counties in the' tario, Dufferin and Simcoe. "In these five counties, 603 plants -y were 'engaged in manufacturing wood x ; : : with payrolls totalling $25,024,993 in [and beet green are also excellent - 1954. Selling value of the products |Sources. Supporting roles in the daily ' was $89,657,406, the largest percent- . eggs, milk and cheese. , Rei County.. In all probability there have| In recent years riboflavin has co- } ie %0 4 been further increases in the past two | Starred with other members of the R= 7 : \/ years," says Mr, Leman, y : : white flour and bread. Enriched white 5 . : . bread; made to government standards, Dairy scientists have discovered contains more riboflavin than most larger quantities of hay than is gen-|ig such a commonly preferred and eco-* erally believed and still support a highymomically available food, most Cana- level of production. This information |'dians get plenty of this 'better health' consumption by cattle, at the grocery store, (with Diethylstilbestrol) ° ° ° Gives far faster weight gains - : . than ordinary feeds Diethylstilbestrol, is designed especially for fattening cattle for market--and it really does the job. Tests conducted over a four month Master, 30% Steer Supplement gained an average of one-half ound more per day than steers more you feed only two pounds of Master 30%, Steer Supplement per day and make up the balance mean a big increase in profits to every beef producer. Be sure to keep a supply on hand. $n . Ni 1] ) S PORT PERRY PHONE 1 Simcoe District Forester. Arthur W. Lake 'Simcoe district--Peel, York, On- j= products, employing 9,300 persons and riboflavin health show are played by age in all cases foncentrated in York vitamin group 'in the enrichment of that dairy cows will consume much whole wheat breads. Because bread will be used to try to increase forage vitamin without spending extra dollars /STEER SUPPLEMENT Master 30% Steer Supplement, containing .0011% period showed that steers fed fed on regular rations! What's n grain feeds: Results like this Your Local: Master Dgaler / M-56-6 20, proof door handles, deep-hub steering wheel" double-ball mounted rear-view o£ "on ad, as optional Qiiipment, seat bel's #8 a cushioned dashboard. The series comds in four body styles; the Custom Royal, which is a four-door sedan, " - Greatly increased glass areas, high sweeping tail fing and radically new headlight treatment, make the 1957 Dodge Custom Royal series a standout oO jn any company. The new low Silliodetie is further rmphasized by the new 14-inch wheels. Torque- : Flite we Tt Bl transmigsion is* standard on .and the Custom Royal Lancer, which is offered For Free Delivery Phone 485 w this Custom Royal series. Fingineered for safety, in a two and four-door hardtop as well a» the Dodge Custom Royal features new aécident- a convertible, FEEDERS WHO KEEP STZIIIIZIIIIIII=I =$333233333333333 MASTER RECORDS USE