4* PHONES:â€" WINONA 61; GRIMSBY 444; BEAMSVILLE 22 Vou Get ALL THREE with ‘Think of it! intense lasting ".E.‘.:"..:.‘__":‘E‘.':E".!!'.‘!:' known. Be happy Think of it! No dirt to get on floors, no smoke to poison the air, no soot to clog up pipes, almost no ashes, no clinkers, no pitch or NIAGARA PACKERS LIMITED N. C. WARNER 28 ELIZABETH ST. TORRIDHEET Oil Burners pyOoNE 605 Yen, 108 SS CC _ at 1. 28 for the Listen s“ww CRMSBY FUEL & SUPPLY BRICK, BLOCK and CEMENT WORK Star Cleaners 16 MAIN WEST GRRRY ~ _ Jar SsNAPPY SERVICE In at 11 â€" Out at 5 «â€"â€"â€" FREE ESTIMATES â€"â€" FOR FURTHER INFORMATION â€" FREE CLEANING ! «««â€"â€" CONTACT â€"â€"â€" ENTIRELY AUTOMATIC (Small Extra Charge) PHONE 607â€"W INSTALLATION By Experienced ‘This is one of a series of articles | submitted by the Children‘s Aid|! Society of the city of St. Catharâ€"| ines and the County of Lincolin.| Our purpose is to further communâ€" | muu-mmuwmmuu1 all programs dedicated to raising the standards of child and family life in our midst. "BUT DO WE REALLY NEED A CHILDAEN‘s AID socieTy?" mwmu-m ul:“n.-.ena-hufynw mm‘m-umumuu under six years of age huddled beâ€" wide a cold stove; the minister tmd'lummum mmmlvnmfly evtcudhnllyeoudwcluhub- and who was out of work, his wife and three children; the school teacher who every day wonders nyywng.lohunyhnoundlool-‘ ‘Ingmdcfl--oudlyhel-ud in the school yard. Oni might say that while the Children‘s Aid Society is a comâ€" munity service in itself, it is also a Maison or "go between" service mmaunh.lhelcho":l.t‘l:: inics:" ME ADNUAAINTETTLNV Y : ) > uy ic eatirmay cssc Loggers and sawmill workers around Fort William, Ont., are threat« “m“'-d‘:r-lu-hrmmlflnyï¬qwi\lmofl: to 1,000 men this because, they say, timber concessions are gran to the pulp and paper compr : and nct «=;~="‘\ timber londs are left pecween UHe M eC o police â€" department, the Health Unit and other groups coming into contact with the ll-ll! both colâ€" lectively and individualy in varâ€" CHILDRENS AID SOCIETY A COMMUNITY RESPONSIBILITY It is our 4 to study the we‘ue Cole > ty the child‘s . back®""""" his home life, how he BÂ¥ ( Aith ...m...-w-du-n-- lly, his playmate mn.lfl.’ * PCO caalth*? In N1} P Coadl sns d pnery n s some health ? Is there his pbysical b4#""" ~" 0/ "yor his Ont P " llkv ren‘s Aid Society bAd ®05 "w""‘m * uhi and in some reapects "OF on wdmllt fnuystane or the P40 95 0C "" / C nce aé AN 9 yen ®" strive yen *"*" CC Mrive to eliminst® ww.m WW"'"â€"-‘, chain of C ...M"" Loggers FaceUnemployment parent f THE GRMSBY INDEPENDENT ° invariaby W are but 8 such is the nake M m of tThe ok into and back ground, one time U" ot point of '."HM'I ¢ us engaged a few '."ߠaue to ® in 18 which ; poor preparation for marriage, cramped living quartera ercessive drinking, limited income, inâ€"law interference and the inability of one or both of the parents to assume their fair share of family responsibilities. When these factors are present in any home to the extent that they are out of proportion to the good and constructive things which go to make up family living, then someone is bound to suffer, What more likely subject then is there, than the innocent, physiâ€" cally weak, and inexperienced, im« mature child. The wife frustrated over how to cope with an alcoholic husband takes out her feelings on the child who "is in the way; is always getting into mischief or erying for attention." The husband in turn, upset over the fact that his wife is "always nagging or is a spendthrift" trans« fers his resentment to the . child who "shuttles" back and forth beâ€" tween two disturbed parents. tween two disturbed pMiTIUS When conditions of this kind versist over a period drnm. the "child in the midst" cannol . 90L help revealing some of the tendenâ€" cles of his parents, Likewise he is more than likely to go unattended outside, to keep late hours, to take out his frustration on the neighâ€" bour‘s new shrub or flower gardâ€" en, or to lash out at the child next door with a stick or burst of proâ€" fanity _ When this stage is reached in "family disintegration", then the outside world begins to be in the know ani complaints start mm-‘ ing into the Children‘s Aid Society. Elimimation of neglect, yes. How»« ever, of prime importance is the getting at the root causes of the family tmuble and assisting both husband and wife to start building on the good and atrong points of SS ES Aclak isw lalh ced ccprniar 79057 We ® their maried life, thus drtmnu‘ their atteition and emphasis from: the factos in their wedded . life which hae proven in many case® almost inbearable, Thusthe Children‘s Ald Society endeavoirs to take its rightful place inthe community with other agencies and forces for good, alâ€" ways baring in mind that the characte of no u-unz !.- M_\! weeme en C ACBT _Gentra) Pross Oanadia® Thdiatest in parschutes 18 tho new extended akirt" type, Chyl8 that wil} become standard U.8. quinent for pilots of Jet and othie highâ€"eed planes in early 1980, Th6 paratute, which _ has 8 fening % duces the _ openink thack m‘ nfers who are forced 1 descs to who SS 1t ball 6 of their fast.moving s P 0 N s O R E D WHEN IN A PRINTING QUANDARY â€" PHONE 36 cS&CT T lof it‘s a good idea to have a 6‘“ Surrouymhnvowlutyonfodbagoodoppormï¬ty which calls for bank credit. If one bank cannot see it elsewhere, you‘re free to * Banks compete to serve the most diversified needs, no matter how specialized any of them may be . . . personal, business, or farm loans, money transfers, collections â€"to name just a few. More than 95 out of 100 bank loan applications are decided "right in the field"â€"in the branches â€" bank managers who take a personal interest in serving their customers‘ individual requirements. THE CRIMSBY INDEPENDENT .’“ifymu‘inkyouc.n'fllwww TELEPHONE 36 â€"â€" YÂ¥ O UR B A N K