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Receives Certificate
Photo by Ringenberg
Frank W. Smith, of North Pease Road, Woodbridge, is shown holding the Golden Sheaf Certificate which he received at the meeting of the Woodbridge Grange on January 24. This award is issued by the National Grange of the Patrons of Husbandry for fifty years of membership and service. Mr. Smith is in his eighty-second year.

141 Main St.     Tel: 3868
Rogol's in Seymour
Shoes for the entire family

38 Fountain St.     Tel. 3-1690
Heritage Shop
Watch for Corot Jewelry on the Vanity Fair Television Show Tuesdays at 4:30
Jewelry by Coco
Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.
Krum's Candies Fresh Each Week

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Jackson-Marvin Hardware Store
843 Whalley Ave.
Westville

Hobby Show --
(Continued from Page 1)
grade; another group of over fifty horses collected by Joella Downs of sixth grade; banners submitted by Tim Vaill of fourth grade; and a collection of miniature shoes owned by Susan Vaill of fifth grade.
Mrs. Stanley Downs exhibited a group of china and glass chickens, and Mrs. Henry Riley had arranged a collection of tiny pitchers which she and her sister, Mrs. August Hock, the former Hazel Tuttle, had made. Mr. Wesley Doolittle submitted a head sculptured in stone. Mrs. Irving Clark, who is well-known for her interest and skill in gardening, brought three potted orchids in full flower.
Mrs. Henry Treffers provided a number of items of Lincoln memorabilia in honor of the holiday. A collection of metal trivets and a framed groupiong of rare coins were presented by Mrs. Edward Kusterer. A number of interesting beer steins, and several unique wooden steins made in Sweden, were shown by Mrs. Theodore Wolfe.
Two of the most interesting exhibits were photographic displays arranged by Mr. W. L. Sanford and Mr. Thomas H. Brown. The work of both Mr. Brown and Mr. Sanford showed great craftsmanship and a wide variety of subjects. Many of the photographs were in color, and some showed scenes familiar to Bethany residents. One of the finest was a portrait of Mr. Brown's grandmother, which he had enlarged from a tiny photograph taken more than one hundred years ago.
Mrs. Maria Preston of the Home Extension Service of the New Haven County Farm Bureau discussed the value of such worthwhile hobbies and introduced the members who described their exhibits. Mrs. Henry Riley, President of the P.T.A., conducted the meeting. The hostesses were Mrs. Stanley Downs, Mrs. Theodore Wolfe, and Mrs. James Harrison.
Judy Svirsky, Kay Harrison, Virginia Laborde, and Joyce Winter managed a very successful cake and cookie sale for the girls' 4-H clubs.

Bethany Notes --
(Continued from page 2)
Hill Road at 4:00 P.M. One group of girls will practice sewing on buttons, and the other will make "Melt-in-your-mouth" muffins.
The Bethany Homemaking Group of the Farm Bureau will meet on Tuesday, February 20, at 10:30 A.M. in the Town Hall. Mrs. Max Hirsch, Jr., and Mrs. W. O. Hamister, who attended Leader Training School in the subject, will demonstrate Chinese Cookery and Customs. The two ladies will prepare a chinese dinner for the group. The hostesses for the meeting will be Miss Bertha Nettleton, Mrs. Charles Mason, and Mrs. Franklin Atwood.
Harriet Calhoun, daughter of the Reverend and Mrs. Robert Calhoun, spent the mid-term vacation with her parents. Miss Calhoun had as her guest Miss Joan Perry. Both young ladies are students at Wellesley College.
Pvt. Daniel Bonnett, son of Mrs. Stanley Downs of Carrington Road, reported for millitary service on January 17 and is now at Camp Pickett, Virginia.
Corp. John C. Harrison, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Harrison of Carrington Road, is now on duty with the 502d Reconnaissance Platoon at Eighth Army Headquarters in Korea. The platoon is charged with the safety of the United Nations field commander, Lieut. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway. Corporal Harrison, a graduate of New Haven High School, entered the Army at New Haven in August, 1948, and went to the Far East the following year. He has been with the 502d since its arrival in Korea early last July.
Corporal Sidney Russell is spending a fourteen-day furlough at the home of his mother, Mrs. Arthur Russell.
Among those confined to their homes by illness during the past week were Mrs. Victor M. Cutter, Jr., Mrs. Howard C. Williams, Mrs. George MacKenzie, and Marshall Abell.

55 Broadway     New Haven
Broadway Bowling Alleys
(Fountain Service)
Telephone 7-5606

Complete Line of Cold Cuts -- Frozen Foods
Lou's Delicatessen
1350 Whalley Avenue
Tel. 3-0229
Open 7:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. weekdays and 7:00 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. Sundays

Bullard's
Midwinter Sale
Big savings in every department
Elm Street at Orange
New Haven

Seymour Notes --
(Continued form Page 1)
performance that night.
Note -- Anyone wishing an audition for the big Community Talent Show to be given in Seymour on March 8, please get in touch with Mr. Harold Donovan.
The Seymour Basketball Team will play a game against East Haven on Friday evening in East Haven.
A sophomore assembly was held at the Seymour High School on Wednesday, February 7, under the direction of the sophomore advisor, Mr. Irving Galis. The program was called "United Nations on Parade". Nine countries were represented. The students who took part in the program were: Russia -- Leighton Lambert; Poland -- Therese Fitzgerald, Eugene Yish, Pat Cox, and Perry Nystron; France -- Carol DeGeorge and Flora Redunko; Germany -- Marion Fritz and Betty Jane Yanett; Italy -- Dominick Guliuzzi; Ireland -- Diane Donovan; Mexico -- Joyce Lucas; and England -- Charlotte Lederman and Collette Delmar.
Two sets performed a square dance to represent the United States. Those making up the sets were: Gale Keller, Betty Dilly, Marion Fritz, Joyce Lucas, Patricia Bryant, Nora Barbera, Carol DeGeorge, and Jeff Behuniak, George Waldron, Terry Nystron, Al Agello, Eugene Yish, Dominick Guliuzzi, George Lautenschlager, and Daniel Brennan. Charles Tarby was the caller, and they were accompanied by Betty Jane Yanett. The program ended with the singing of the United Nations song.

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Interior Decorator
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910 Whalley
Phone 3-0691 or 3-0135

Tel. 3-0842
Harriet Davies Mulhern
Marian Hulhern Albrecht
Style Beauty Salon
Specializing
Permanent Waves
Cold Waves -- Hair Styling
22 Fountain St.     New Haven, Conn.

Woodbridge Notes --
(Continued from Page 1)
mon are scheduled. The regular meeting of the C. Y. O. is held on Tuesdays at 7:30 P.M.; Children's Instruction is at 11:00 A.M. on Saturdays; and Confessions are heard Saturday afternoons and evenings.
The Women's Auxiliary of Woodbridge Post No. 120, American Legion, will have a social meeeting at Legion Hall at 8:00 P.M. on February 20. The ladies will sew on layettes as part of a program to provide available rehabilitation supplies. The hostesses for the meeting will be Mrs. Susan Frisco and Mrs. Hazel Miller.
The officers of the Regina Caeli Guild will meet at the home of Miss Josephine Mar-
(Continued on page 4)

M. Palmieri
Range and Fuel Oil
1372 Whalley     New Haven,
Atlantic Station
Tel. 3-0920     Res. 7-3487

Peter - Paul Market
1279 Whalley Ave.
New Haven 3-1310
Servicing Bethany and Woodbridge Tuesdays & Fridays
Full Line of Quality Food Needs for your Kitchen
Prime Meats Our Speciality
Free Delivery
Orders Must Be Phoned In by Noon on Day of Delivery

Race Brook Road     Orange
Telephone: SYcamore 9-2288
Pyrofax Gas Service
Complete Gas Service for Homes Beyond the Gas Mains
New and Used Ranges, Refrigerators, Water Heaters, and Heating Equipment

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Gillmor Motor Co., Inc.     320 Whalley Ave.     New Haven