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The Blyth Standard, 1946-05-29, Page 1LYTH STANDAR • VOLUME 56 - NO, 10, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 1946. Subscription Rates $1.50 in Advance; $2.00 in the U.S.A. Blyth Swings In Line With High School Area Plan. National ClothingCollection Lions Club Hold Annual Live Wire Forum Held Nominations 24th Picnic To Get lE.,eol Support The Myth Lions Club met in the fhc live \Vire Farm Forum Group With Fall Term Memorial ball Thursday evening, with of the 13th Concession of Mullett held •the very important business at hand i1 very successful picnic at hall's Grove WILL BE HELD WEEKS OF of nominating a slate of officers for olt May 24th. The group assembled 'N. P GarrettDecision Made At Joint Ses- JUNE 17 TO 29 4he year. The President, Lion Dun. in time for ,ginner. One of the arms adrret Appointed To Stoll Of School Board and thtodd, had charge. A few songs in- jttg features was a contest, who- could Clinton Collegiate Staff sion the supper hour, and in the cross the Maitland river the quickest Council, Thursday Night 'absence of Tail -twister Georo,e Mc- (any way). First prize in this event R, D. Philp On Clinton !wall, bion Bill Watson took his place• trent to Bob Glous;her, serood, IlclenBoard Of Education 4 A joint sessi •n of the Municipal ' The following guests were present— Howatt, and third, Jimmie Mowatt Council and the `chord Board was Harper Kelsey, John 1 fardisty, Gloria After dinner a series of sports' ev- ' i in the Council Chambers on May ;Sibthor,e, Ron. Philp,John Sibthorpe, encs were staged, with the follow�in • Mr. N. t . Garrett has been appoint- 2,ird, to decide the inap .rtant question ! P't ed to the staff of the Clinton Colle- Jack Kyle, Bill Manning, and Mis•scs results (it.aces)-1st, Billie Crawford;of entering owe of the newly -proposed Ida and Clare McGowan, Miss Eliza- 2nd Charlie Crawford;n3r 1, Arlynl gi•oc 'lilac ante, duties to co:•unencc high school districts, The matter was beth Millsleas at the piano. A brief Powell. Boys and Girls 6 kit 8 -1st (with the beginning cd the fall term in th, roughly di.soi.„.4 and a motion 'musical programby some of our young Muriel Shobbrook, 2ttd Jack Howatt, l September. A1r. Garrett has been passed by the School Board to the ef- artists of the village added to the en- Girls, 8 to 12 -1st, Vera Lyon, 211(1,i Principal of the Blyth Continuation feet that f;lyth emit the Clinton 1figlt joyment of the evening. Miss Gloria Muriel Shobbrook. Boys, 8 to 12—tst, School for the past 18 years. School Area. 'Sibthorpe sang a solo, "Santa Maria." �3crt L utt; 2nd, Mr. Garrett will take a snnrltncr Immediately after the session was t y Gordon, Howatt, course in Guidiuncc John Sibthorpe gave a cornet solo, Cirls 13 to 161 --1st, Frances Lyon; 2nd a new course of over, the members of the village con - 'and ryas called back for an encore, Thelma Shobbrook, Boys 13 to 16— study, ,+t Toronto. ell, consisting of Reeve i3ainton, and Roti, Philp and Jack Kyle rendered a list,Murray Lyon; 2nd, Rae 5hob- Friends will be pleased to learn that Councillors f lollylna n and Whitfield duct, and when called back for an en- brook. Girls 16 and over -1st, Mrs. Air. and Mrs. Garrett will continue to met, wit h the following results: sang a number on James Lawrie Bert Shobbrook; 2nd, Mrs. GeorgeIreside in Blyth, Moved by Councillor Whitfield, se- coretta.l Walter Mittel), she words being Powell, Gents, 16 and over -1st, Jack Afiss Margaret Cumming has accept- conduit by Councillor Ilollyinan, that lowmposed by Ron and Jack, Clarke; 2nd, Bob Glom:d cr. Wheel- (e.`1 a position on the staff of the Fork the ohimving resolution be passed: • All these numbers were greatly en- harrow race -1st, Frances Lyon and Township Public School, adjacent to "Resolved that we !oiliest Hu- ' joycd and appreciated by the Lions. Stanley Lyon; 2nd, Mrs, George Toronto, duties to commence with the Fon County Council to set np a 1 The Secretary read the minutes of Powell and Bert Lyon, 'Three-legged fall term, Aliss Cumming has been Jligh School District to include the previous meeting which were ad- race -1st, Jack Clarke and Thelma the assistant teacher in the 13•lyth Con- t his municipality along with the bpted on motion of Icons Jack Elliott Shobbrook; 2nd, Mr. and Mrs. Bert titillation School for the past year, Town of Clinton, the Township of 'and Jack Watson, 1 Shobbrook. Ladies kick the slipper— Air. R. D, Philp has been appointed Stanley, and portions of the Tott'r- Several communications were read 1st, Frances Lyon; 2nd, Mrs. Stanley as a member of the Clinton Board of ships of Mullein, Goderich, Tuck - among them being a letter from Mr. 'Lyon. Public: speaking contest — Education, by the Clinton Board, to ersmith, and any other municipal - George Watt, with a contribution of Ladies, 1st, Mrs. Stanley Lyon; 2nd, fill :w existing vacancy on the Board. ity which signifies a desire to be $10.00 for the Band. The letter cond Alts, Joe Lyon. Gents, public speak V included, and that the Blyth Con taired some complimentary remarks frig -1st, Clarence Crawford; 2nd, Ar- B.C.S. Report, Spring Term ' titillation ScIl of pupils he permit - which were appreciated by the Club, Our Clarke. 'Treasure hunt for Sen- GRADE IX ted to attend Clinton- high School A letter was also read from the ',ors, also one for Juniors. Irma Wallace, 84,9 this September, 1946." Carried. Blyth Branch of the Canadian Legion, The attendance was recorded at 34. Shirley Phillips .,,.. 80.1 • —`V thanking the Lions for their donation After the races, the committee treat- Daphne Dawson ...._ 76.5 OBITUARY to that newly -formed organization,, ed the crowd to chocolate milk and Grover Clare 75.4 A card of appreciation was real from Cookies, bananas and oranges. Geo. 13111 Johnston 73.1 the McGowan family, expressing their 1'Powell and Wilmer Howatt were in Shirley Radford 68. Mr. Frank Wood, an esteemed thanks for flowers sent during their Charge of sports. Isobel Thuell ..........-.._.._...,66.1 resident of Hullett Township, passed recent bereavement. A letter from y—. _. Mary Kyle 64,1 away at the home of his son, Edwin Dalt hIiggs was also read inviting a Jean Cartwright 60.4 Wood, on Friday, May deputation of Blyth Lions to a District Receptive Audience Greeted Mary McCaughey 24th, in lets . ) y ....__....•-....._ 58.8 80th year. A-1 rally at St. Thomas on Jule 3rd, Minstrels At Wingham Don. Johnston ........ ......... __.._AU, r The secretary also read a letter from The Lions Minstrels played to a good Mr. 11 ood was a son of the late an Atwood citizen who teas seeking house in the Wingham Lawn hall on GRADE X George C. Wood and Catherine Wood, information on a minstrel show which Monday night The net proceeds are they are planning to organize, and not yet available, but should be in the asking the Club for a copy of their neighbourhood of $100.00 for the i3lyth To Take Effect Beginning Because millions of people have suf- fered and died from lack of food and ,adequate clothing because little chil- dren may never have a chance to grow up, Canada again answers their heart- rending call fur help by its extensive food program and by its, National Clothing Collection. From all over our country, Cana- dians are asking, "What can the in- dividual do to help;" The National Clothing Collection provides the opportollity for every citi- zen to make a personal gift to a needy person; the privilege of handing an old coat or pair of shoes to someone whose very life depends upon them. Canada's answer will lift the hearts .of the people whose bodies are war - emaciated and whose feet arc bare kind bruised, and will conte back to echo: "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the (cast of these, ye have done it onto Alc." SOME FISHERMAN A new addition to the local fish- ing fraternity, Mr. Gerald Harris, has local fishermen biting their nails and tearing their hair. We've known fellows that were noted for their fish stories, In fact a little stretching of the truth about the "big ones" is quite. percnissable. But there is nothing "fishy" about the ones Mr. Harris catches. He "brings 'cm back"—we were go- iug to say "alive"—hut not quite that good. Nevertheless, he brings 'em back, and proves his stories by giving them to friends for Sun- day dinners, The editor and fam- ily enjoyed one, a 15 -inch beauty on Sunday. The largest one he has caught weighed over 3 pounds and measured 15% inches. Fisher- men here are devising ways and means of shadowing hint as he goes about his business of catching the big ones that always got away from the other fellow's, BLYTH WILL DO IT'S SHARE start to listen in after that, wouldn't Will the people of Blyth and vicinity t be wonderful to get a trip to Europe, once_ more rally to the call for assis- after all, my dye came from there and tance front the war -devastated coon- ,l feel sort of related to them." tries of Europe? During the last Wool Dress— campaign you contributed nearly 3,0(N) "It would he wonderful to really lbs. of clothing and our (hearts were know' that you were doing some good warmed by this noble response. Let in the world too, even a dress likes to t,s again lead a hand in this noble know it is appreciated. Life is pretty cause. In order to facilitate collecting doll in this cobwebby attic, I'd rather and packing locally, a meeting of the be thread -bare on someone's back heads of organizations, or rcpresenta- then hang here and just get limp from tines of same, is being called for in age," the Memorial Hall, 'Thursday evening, Tweed Suit— June 6th, at 7 o'clock, "Ilene is a list of the things most urgently needed over there: suits, ov- IF CLOTHES COULD TALK ercoats, uniforms, work clothes for By Edna Jaques men and boys, infants' wear of all Is This Your Attic types, coats, dresses, aprons and The Setting—A n attic somewhere an smocks for girls and women, shoes in Canada where the lady of the house I• pairs (tied securely with string), caps, has the hoarding habit, good to a der-; felt hats, knitted headwear, gloves and taiu extent, but dynl111ite with millions mitts, woollen socks, underclothing, of peo,de in Europe suffering fromPiece goods, blankets, sheets, rem - lack of warm clothing. Of course this I sant,, All washable garments should couldn't be YOUR attic , , , or could be clean but not ironed. Other gar - it? mews need not be dry cleaned. The President instructed the Scere- show' Old Tweed Suit-- Letters of good -will and cheer may nary to write Mr. Watt a letter, ex- Goderich, Here We Come To a pert number on the next clothes be attached to gifts. These people are pressing the appreciation of the Club ..McKay Mall, Goderich, is the nest hanger. ',here 1 hang, month after hungry for a word of praise and synm- Ion his kindly gift. The other con- stop' for the Show—this Thursday and month. The only time I ever sec the 1>athy, they've suffered much ;old en - sunlight were also dealt with, Friday night, Due to lack of any sunlight is when the misses takes me dured almost beyond •human strength, t k -n Carman Kilpatrick was called place with large enough seating ca - down and hangs nee on the clothes Further announcement will be "lade 'to the head table and -presented with pacity, it was deemed expedient to line in the back yard to air . , , then as the campaign approaches, his certificate of membership. hold the show two nights. We hope back I came into this attic , . . I'm so V - Lion Stan. Sibthorpe spoke a few there's enough people interested to go sick of attics I could split a seam."'Farm , aris Forum Groups Hold 4vords about the minstrel Show, round the hall both nights. ' Nominations: No Trouble In Brussels Slick Little Wool Dress— Local Rally A date for Brussels was finallyset "Mc, too, sister I the young lady of The President spoke briefly about the family, Miss Nanny, bought nuc to East Boundary harm Forum spoil- hominations, and explained that the for Monday, Jute 3rd. Word from go to a ball game four years ago, she sored a Farm Forum rally in the B1y11 J)irectors had prepared a slate of offi- "Ike" Bann, of that town, informs us Memorial hall on Frilday night,when 'eers for the ensuing year, Lion Norm, that already their hall which scats wore IlhC once, just once—had a fight a fair number turned out for an cv- Garrett had substituted as chairman around 400, is a sell-out. "Ike" called with her date and said 1 brought her ening of entertainment and dancing. tlf the nominating committee due to up to find out what he world do. bad luck and here I've hung ever since, The evening consisted of a splendid 1 A consultation of the cominit- with only the occasional airing to keep 6 Wilfred the regrettable illness of Lion Lcs• booking program, with \Wilfred Shortreed as Hilborn. tee here was held, with a resulting the moths away. The way I feel now, master of ceremonies. Mr. Shortreed The following slate of officers were telephone conversation between "Ike" .I wish the moths would get me, at gave a short address on the value of1 George McNall, chairman of the least I'd be useful for something, if +proposed: mill Farm Forums. President—Lion Norm. Garrett. booking committee. We heard Geordie only to slake more Moths." The program included a cornet duet _i 1st Vice—Lion Frank Rainton, say, "hold it any place big enough, Tweed Suit-- by irnma and Marjorie Watt, both are 2nd Vice—Lion Bert Gray. a ten -acre field will do if nothing "The first place the missus.wore me members of the Blyth Lions Band, 3rd Vice—Lion Bert Tasker. else." When he hung up he said they was to some sort of a limiting party. they were accompanied at the piano Secretary—Lion John Henderson, would probably hold it in the town I was fresh and new then and the by their mother; Misses Margaret i Treasurer—Lion Stan, Chellew. park, providing the weather was fay - master said I looked 'chic' whatever Marshall, Irma Watt and Marjorie Lioln Tarter—Lion Stan, S'bthorpe. ourably, otherwise it will probably end that means, The mistress had, aLyon- It introduced James Lawrie and Tail Twister—Lion Bill Watson, with two nights in the town hall. derful time and then got sore at me Walter Buttcll as Mr. , Gallagher and Directors—Lions Gord. Elliott, Ken. Developments this Wednesday ev- because she said I was "'really too Mr. Shear, 'These two gentlemen gave n\Vhitmore,"Bun" Ifall, Stuart Robin ening have the shone booked fur the warm for steam heated houses' so hereutheir own interpretation of the welt- Son and Jack \Vatson• Brussels skating rink. I've hang like a side of beef ever since. 'known song of a few years ago, in- . The election of officers will take Hensel! On June 7th I sure wish I could get out ;uul be 'chiding complimentary verses to co -1 at the next tweeting, Unless something unforseen trans - some ttsc int the world." 'operatives, Farmm . Forums, the local After the meeting everyone remain- pires Friday, June 7th will be the Last Wool Dress— cheese factory and its executive. They 'cd to view the pictures of the Min- spring showing of our Minstrel Show. I like going o" hikes and picnics responded with another duet, aceont- tstrel Show which had been taken by I That night it will be staged front the and ball games too, after all we're only panied by Miss Elizabeth Mills.'Miss Clare McGowan. These pieta cs I I Hensall Towu Hall, vender the aus- young once. I'm such a nice color too, Mr. Harvey Johnston, Walton, show -'vete taken in colour, and were pttt pices of the Hensall Agricultural So - you don't get these rich browns every ed several reels of movies from the on the screen much to the amusementciety. day now. 1 go well with autumn days, National Film Board; Shirley Brad- of those present. The ladies are to be ! The booking committee are now rusty colored leaves and golden rod •burn and Mrs. Arletta Fear each con- invited to see the pictures after our looking for fall dates, and if these war - are right up 013, alley. I wish the tributed a reading; Doris, Johnston, a -next meeting, rant it, the show will be resumed in young miss would take ole fora walk piano solo. V—r-- September, some day or give' me away to someone hollowing the program all joined in who twoul , appreciate Inc." dancing to the music of Mrs. Harvey DIES IN MANITOBA BIRTHS Tweed Suit— Brown's orchestra, There passed away at he,r home in SHELL—.In Clinton Hospital on Sum "Yesterday the attic window was fAfordan, Manitoba, of the 18th day qday, 'May 26th, to Mr. and Mrs. Jack open to let the air through and I heard ' CONGRATU•LATIONS 'of May, Allie Swallow, beloved wife of Snell (nee Marion Nethery), Lon- tmvo women talking on the sidewalk Congratulations to E. J. Crawford An -drew McNabb, in her 76th year. desboro, the gift of a daughter — right in front of the gate and they of Hullett, who celebrated his 77th IThe funeral was front the United Barbara Kaye. were having a real go of it. birthday on Monday, May 28th. 'Church on May 20th, and the remains RICHMOND—In Clinton Public Hos- One of them said that there arc Mal- Congratulations to Arthur Sims of (were laid beside, those of her daugh- pital, on Sunday, May 26th, to Mr. lions -of people in Europe who needt Toronto, who will celebrate his birth. 'ter, Gracie, in Hillside Cemetery. and Mrs. Mervin Richmond, the gift w'ai•m clothing. My dear, did 1 cvcr day on Thursday, May 30th. 'Mordan, Man. of a sou—Terry Nelson. Frank Wood script, That would be a mighty diffi- cult problem. The Blyth Lions Min- strels never had a script. They don't need one. Lions, The members of the cast, over 40 in number, were in good form, and many complimentary remarks were extended by those present, after the Alice AlcKcnzie Mildrecl Charter Joan Whitfield Marjorie \\'att Lois Doherty ittarjorie Doherty Jim I-Iodd Murray Lyon ..._ Olive Craig ._� (Edward Watson Delores McNall John Pollard Frances Hollytuan Bob Leggett ._ Barry Lear _.._ Ross Tasker GRADE XI Irma Watt $5.6 Lois Grasby ................. 67.5 Lois Brown 65. Enid Brigham 63.8 the home of his son. Rev. Penman of Alargaret Marshall 60.3 Londesboro United Church, of which GRADE XII Mr, Wood was a member, conducted Ferne Pollard ..... •. 67.4 the service, Mr, Donald McNall sang Archie Watt .........65.6 a solo, "No Night There." Joyce Rath 64.3 The pallbearers were, Messrs. Dun- can 'McCallum, Willis Mountain, Wil - 91.9 87.4 87.3 82.5 79.9 77.9 77.1 74.1 72.6 70.5 66. 65. 64.7 60. 56.7 53.4 and was born in England. He came to Canada when a lad of 4 years, tak- ing up residence at Islington. I -Ie later moved to Colborne Township, be- fore taking up residence in Hallett. Until he moved to Londesboro a few years ago he had resided where his sort Edwin lives, In 1999 he married Rebecca Town- send, who survives along with one son, Edwin, and one daughter, Mrs, Wil- liam Alarming, Londesboro. One sis- ter, Mrs. A. Lyddiatt, Blyth, and four grandchildren, also survive. The late Mr. Wood was a very sue- cessful farmer, and an outstanding breeder of fine cattle. He was said to have the best Shorthorn herd in Can- ada. Funeral services, which were largely attended were held on Afoldamy front Engagements 'Announced Mr. and Mrs, C. Lorne Dale, Sea - forth, announce the engagement of their eldest daughter, Margaret Caro- lyn, to Arthur John, sot of Mrs Lillian Wright, of Bruceficld, and the late Alexander Wright, the wedding to take place. on June 8th, in North- side Unitcji Church, Seaforth. Mr, and Mrs. Russell E. Shaw-, Al- liston, Ontario, wish to announce the engagement of their daughter, Rhea Marguerite, to Donald George. Alder- son, son of Mr, and Airs. Austin Al- derson, Alliston, the marriage to take place quietly, June 221d, 1946. A FREAK CALF Calling to pay his subscription to The Standard on Wednesday, 11 r. John Watson, of Walton, told us of a freak calf which was born recently on his farm. The calf is perfect with the ex- ception of having no eyes. The cyc sockets are there, and it blinks it eyelids over empty sockets. The calf is two weeks old, and otherwise perfectly normal. PAT1ON COUPON DUE DATES Coupons now valid are sugar -pre - se. ves S1 to S14, butter RI to R9 and nlc:,t M29 to M39. harm Bromley, Frank Little, Howard Armstrong, and Robert Yunghlutt. Flowerbearers were all grandchildren. Burial took place in Union Ceme- tery, Blyth, V Mrs. George Leith Suffers Fractured Hip In Fall A regrettable accident occurred on Alonday evening, when Mrs. George 'Leith, Sr., fell at her hone and suf- fered a compound hip fracture. Airs. Leith, who is in her 86th year, lives alone, and had gone to the barn to get some kindling when the acci- dent occurred. She crawled to the door and attracted the attention of a neighbour, John Staples. He and his daughter carried her to the house, and summoned Dr. D. G. Hodd, The injured lady was removed to Clinton hospital. Her condition ryas reported on Wednesday as being as well as could be expected. EXHIBITION BALL GAME RESULTS (Exhibition Games) Softball --- Blyth Girls 7; Brr.-;c?; Girls 18, Hardball— Auburn-Birth Combines 4, Clinton Radio School 4. Both games played Well' 'lay night, HOOVER SEES WORLD GETTING FAMINE RELIEF BURMA 75,000 TONS 1 --,,,7.• SIAM i �o • -' -- - UNITED STATES 195,000 i 4,220,000 TONS - •' A TONS 1 1C` i i .�I�.Q • Indian AUSTRALIA Pocilic Oceans TONS - Ocean 2,00 CANADA • ` - 2,300,000 TONS UNITED I;INGDOM 200,000 TONS - Atlontic Oceatl BRAZIL 200,000 TONS OTHER WESTERN HEMISPHERE STATES _ 40,000 TONS ARGENTINA 2,375,000 TONS MIDDLE EAST 100,000 TONS Pacific Occnn PACIFIC OCEAN ; AREA ''. 1,910,000 TONS ; ; / EUROPE 8,390,000 TONS Atlantic Ocean •• LATIN INDIAN OCEAN AMERICA - AREA 1,000,000 2,886,000 TONS t , U t ' TONS SOUTH AFRICA AND NEW ZEALAND 198,000 TONS 4 Maps above show, top, possible supplies of cereal foods available for distribution to the famine -threat- ened areas shown below, as described by HerbertHoover in his recent report to President Truman after a 35,000 -mile tour which took him to 22 food -deficient countries and to five which have sur- pluses. Figures on lower map show his estimate of the food import needs of these nations as from May 1 to September 1. Hoover points out that cereals, particularly wheat and rice, are the primary need, as they can furnish 85 per cent of emergency diet. Note that there is a deficit of 3,587,000 tons between food available and total amount needed. PAID IN CASH When Ulric J. ("Spud") Arsenault, veteran prospector, recently sold six mining claims in Canada's Yellowknife gold rush area for $i00,000, he insisted on payment in cash. Above, he's pictured in To- ronto with his money—and an understandable grin. 37,000 B. C. LUMBERWORKERS STRIKE Strike of 37,000 British Columbia logging and sawmill workers went into effect May 15. As well as the lumbermen, the strike affects €0,000 workers in other industries. The strike follows breakdown of negotiations between the International Woodworkers of America and the B. C. lumber operators. Lumberjacks like these men mov- ings logs down a rushing stream reduced their demands and offered to go to work for an 18 -cent hourly wage increase and a 40 -hour eek. Operators offered a 12! -cent hourly incrcas for three yca;s if other demands were dropped. Workers rcfused The automotive industry is cel- ebrating its SOth anniversary thin year. Highlights of the News On The Strike Front New:Tapers in \\ 1ur11 Ca Hada and United States face newsprint shortage as 50,000 ntunhcrs of In- ternational Woodworkers of Am- erica (C. I. 0. ) threaten to strike for 121/2 -cents -an -hour increase. About 37,000 members in British Columbia continued their strike which has forced a reduction in size of many western papers. 5,000 ruiners in Lake Superior district returned to wort: this w•eelc as settlement of wage demands ef- fected on basis of 181/2 cents -an• hour wage increases. Strike threatened for J unc 15 by seven C I 0 and independent un- ions in the maritime and longshorc industries may affect 161,000 wor• kers. The National Maritime Un- ion, C 1 0, is demanding a 30 pc; cent wage increase in new com tract. The International Long shoren>en's and \\'archouscmcn'- Union, C 1 0, has wage ci,sc below Presidential fact-finding hoard. Hard Blow for Britons More belt -tightening for the people of the United hingdomt the prospect when Herbert ..\1 (.1 rison, Britain's Lord President oI the Council, concluded an agree- ment with President Truman whereby another 200,000 tons of British cereals stocks will be di- verted to the world ;tool to avert famine. ?'dr Morrison told a press con fcrence in Washington that he was not sure whether the contribution of another 200,00Q tons of cereals from British stocks would mean bread rationing in the United 1.ingdom. But he said it would be a "hard blow" and one he was sorry to have to impose on a people who VtTE WMh 11112 had suifcrcd war shorl.igts so many years. Only a few weeks ago the Brit- ish Government to help out the at- tenip to avert famine abroad, per- mitted the diversion to other corns• ries of 2011,000 tons of cereals des- tined for Britain, on the under- standing the deficiency would he made up Later by Canada and the United States. No similar condit- ions were attached to the present loffer to divert another 200,000 tons. Gandhi Approves Mohandas K. Gandhi, spiritual leader of millions of I1indus and elder statesman of the All -India Congress Party commended to the people of his country the British t ;.binet \lksion's proposal for a union of India. Gandhi's approval of the plan, culmination of seven weeks' negot- iations, was voiced at a prayer meeting at which he said "There arc some who said the English V, ere incapable of doing the right thing, 1 do not agree with theta, The mission and Vic- eroy are as God-fearing as we our- selves claim to be. "Recess" at Paris Last week for the fifth tittle iu eight months, a major effort to SUCCESS FOR A PARTY is assured by serving Max- well' house. This su- premely fine coffee de- lights guests because its blend contains all the stimulating goodness of choice Latin-American coffees, 1\ rite illi fiat peat c treat, - ul 1\'orld \\'ar 11 ended iu la Mire. The Foreign N1 Misters of the L't.; Four, meting in ('.tris sine.. .Mail 25, had agreed 00 certain surt,ree gtu.stiotts, But they had 1,n111 1 impossible to agree on fundan', m- als, to hri''ge the gulf heat e. it the Nu, sian cotossu ;tall the \\ -I ern wand. :1t Paris thl '11111,1t- herr con- fronted with the sante problems that the previous efforts had tailed to solve: the wvriting of drat1 sof treaties Nvith Italy, the ex- \xis Balkan countries and hitdand. The meetings opened itt a mood l.1 cordiality. As dearllocl: piled on deadlocic the feeling of option -in dissolved in gloom. When it became ..bvions that no real progress was being made the Big hoar agree.; to rect..: until june 15. We arc a fortunate people. We walk the middle road. Through our Government's wise measures of control, we have, by resisting the temptation to rush after luxuries, been able to enjoy them in moderation. We have, by keeping necessities at the top of our buying lists, kept the prices of both necessities and luxuries at the bottom. Hardly another nation in the world today can pointto so tine a retard. Yes, we are a fortunate people because we is all. the middle road— the road of moderation in all things—in our thinking. in our actions and in our pleasures. In the years of greater abundance, which are so surely ahead, The House of Seagram believes that moderation. as always. will continue to be a quality essential to the welfare of the nation—and the individual. THE 11011S12 OF SWAM ' e/�6e>1 (Ulla g/l (!l/' tl'r i'Jl nl'J'(((t ...9?Prt 4;1F' . (/((/l'(/4N M4S CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING It 11t 1111( Its J'111: I, . I'I,I \II'- , bull! v,iiii Top Notch. .Any flock is wilt a, good n, the rhe l,, it was st,,llr,l 11o11. '1'1,:111: t1 h': Ism Nr) 1111/),)11 ;1111. 1" 1(1111 l,t . , , tvi111 '1'.,11 Not, h ,111(.10+. I•'nr ,-cart• Top Notch chick Is a lo •111t1y chine. a citefutk bred chi l., embodying ;III the 'test china, tiriatie1 of it>, pnlluruul e',1, 11 Government, Approve,( hr,.it 1's, Order your Top Notch chicks today, Brief-, greatly 1'e - du. (Al for June. No waiting 111. 'Pup Nutrh, a'u ("111 Farr prompt 11e11 \cly (111 /111 the popular hIl 1),1114 111111 hybfltl cro),r's, Aesu richt ((((11 lu 211 11'1•,•11 old ptltets. catalogue, Top Notch Chick - el i, ,uelph, Ontario, IN \ i l' \114N7' I I'::1:•.11'1.1' , 1i, 1,, you ',1011111 n•+t tlrla y 111 1,111, ring to get d.'liiery and L1. d you \('ish t1'c'11 11111'0 1;,.;' ,110100 of breeds and crtf,s- Li „Is, Bray ll:Meller(, I 3u John 1 ,n)ilton, (Olt, T\\ 1:11ILf: ('1111:1 T.1t is ,11.1. tl, !tarif l\ hrUler it be in Ibr ',tie or in the foleii. tuull<rl '11\„idlu finch will pay its IVay, The hint delirious poultry Meal and the targe nutritious egg'. (halt 11.11!( front 'I'1leddle chicks t‘ in for you 1 large 'dial 1 111 the profits to he mad,• 11'0111 the I - pully increasing ru:llkcts of tu- d,1t. 1.'o1 '1'tvrIlle Iloe.s not it*. 1,11 lurk to produce tine chicks, .111 the skill of nludei11 puuliry se,1 nee is brought to heal un the pl„1tuetlnn of 'Ft\edllle chietco, Polio/dim te.ted Uowrinment Ap- inoc,d bittoolort or known ilta- lidily and productivity are care. fully choke(( to 1)10111 erel'y '►'wed• die chic!: you ardor. June chi0I<s t:r,:ttly reduced in price, 1'ron111 delivfly on all the popular pure Lr. , ds and hybrid el u14.os 111 (1on- 141.\111, p1IRrIS or eoel<orels. i•'tr,, 1.a01$l,,g1w. Also eight weelt Io 211 old tree range pullets, '1'111 (Idle t:hicht Jlalelteries Limit- e1t, 1'crgus, t)nt:irl„ t_ HEAVY BREED PULLETS 20c. sq -,t 0, Sussex X Ihltap., Hoek N Ramp., New Emily. and Barred Etch pullets 2no., June 1 7c, Book our order NOW, $ LUu per 100 de - p1 -It. Order from this Ad, Huron- dair.• r_htcic Hatchery, London, Ont. BARRED ROCK PULLETS 15c, 1:',11(11 I 0 a10 ofclelred b)' 11 1 commercial po0111y-1111'11 be - .,11',C they ('1411 111) 111.11).1111‘41 on 1' alter year for ptolitable egg .alucllun laid then tering lop 1,1 \viten sold for heat, \Ve male pronlpl ',1111,1110(11 of bit; hu,hy p1111e1s ;1( a1a.11 per 111(0- 111, d. \Vr11e for 7+1 ic,•-11,4 Today. ;:ic Bock Parti \tills Ruches, dnt:n (1. 25 FREE CHICKS 01 P. I7.\Ill' C111Ul S Ai1i: THE I•!Oecily of I'owel:Hien and Ito - g i-ter(•d L'a'ds. All Breeders blood- t...ted. Prices front lie to 25e, All 11:0:tntced eNrellent layers. Don't delay, order 11015'. l;oddard Chick 1hitc110r10S. Rritnl;ni:l 1le1ghls, 1 11.1. LAKEViEW CI'JICKS 5I'17( LIIJ%I:U 1111l'1:1►IN(t PL.1N'i :000O Alli:1:I)I:Ili your coder :or 11:1y or .9ulle, w1111 the seareitt of !wort, there v.111 he a big demand for BottIt'y and lsg1s this fall and \1'Inter at attractive prices. It will pity you to put In an e\ta brood of 1 !deist; this y car. 1'Itnwtl''1' DK!,I11,at1' — with n ca- p.clty or 61,100 1,akeview Chicks t1ee111 , we expect we can give prolupt deliver( after May 15, Mut to be safe, kook your order at once for flay, ,lune or July. SK\1) 1)I:POSIT — Fur quick ser- vice send deposit with your In - gutty or order, and we will book your order at our prices which late very reasonable. We will promptly mall you an acknow- 1 alf.te lens of your order, and If it shouldn't snit you we guaran- tee to return your deposit at once. This plan will gIee you better service, 'THE Itl•:s'1' AVE t•:VI:It Inti) — Neil 11clnnnel, Uoderich, Out. Colin Campbell, New Richmond, Que- bec — Well satisfied, lost 4 out of 10 1, Hope you Dan SUPPLY utorc. As high as 106 eggs front 115 Leghorn pullets. Wonderful pre- hillion reports Reuben Kennel, Shakespeare, Ontario. Illti:i:uS: Large 'Type White Leg - horns, Pure Sussex, Sussex X N,.w Humps„ it. Rork X New Hemp., Rock X Leghorn, Sussex X Leghorti, Leghorn X New ]lamp„ New 1L'unps., and Barred 11001(s. LARGE WHITE LEGHORNS Day old started up to 4 weeks old. Lakeview Leghorn', tiro the large type. mated with cockerels from 1'011, stud: — "!teal Egg :Machines." SEND 10011 R'CI•:1(1,1' LIST) — u Special Prices on day old chicks, pullets and cockerels, and start- ed chicles. MAY, .11318E AND FA1,1, 11:1'1'C111.:U Muni( your order for May and ,tune, or full !latched Chicks NOW, LAK (:VI1:88 1'OUl'l'It1 VA 1131, \Vein Bros., Exeter, Ont. LARGE TYPE LEGHORNS 12c. Legila'h Pullets 21e., after June 1st 21e. Ali Breeders double 1-hlndtested and backed by high i edlgfeed foundation stock. Many 11111'0udnle customers report best chicks I ever had, Walter Morton, Dryden — We were well pleased with the pallets we received front you lust year. ['inlets lai(1 well. Heavy Breed Pullets 20c. Sussex X N. (lamp., Rock X N. !!loop., Barred Rocks, I't:re 811050x 1111(1 New Hampshire pullets 2(1 ., after June 1st 17e. titre Sussex )nixed 14e„ Sussex X Hamp.. Rock X Damp., Rocks laud Nett Ham's. mixed Etc., after Juno 1 le. less, Sussex X Leghorn, Itocic Leghorn and Leghorn X New limp. mixed 12e., pullets 22e., after June 1st (nixed lc, less, pal- lets 3c. les5. Assorted pullets 1Be., June 1Gc. Assorted Mixed 1Oe.. Juno tic. Cockerel and started prices on request. Order from anti enclose this Ad. 01.0!1 per 100 de- posit, HURONDALE CHICK HATCHERY London, Ontario. 11(111,1)1'1(: SI'I'I'I,IES C1'lIEN'I' 11111!'!1 11A('111NE 8" ANi) 10'', Gilbert l', Storey 5tnch,ttery, 25 SL Allan's Street, Toronto. 111 .l\I''. u1'I'ntrrl 811.1(.: 11181:Irr1H.:1: 0\.\1 r` 'ell 1(IN. Irl mime,. within :u 11111,•, 111114(1! '1'nl1)111u 11Ii111n, il"4:1l,tO r-I:In(I,II- 111 1,111.11,• :.)woIll : 1111ge 1,1 1...1ito p111puse:, Ste, p hill, 11ve1' bank wt' 04 VP! pit 1. :reit tui hlrl<,fnp. t'tepared 111 pay for prt1IIi 4-4 , Not <t club or de 111.1. 1,„,4:':t, 73 ,\delaide tt, 'I'otunln, DYEING AND CLEANING I1A1'l' 1'00 ANY'I'111Nt7 Nt;EnS dyeing or cleaning? Write lo us for Iutolmation. 0Vo are glad 10 11111411 e1your questions. Depart- ment 11 Parker's Dye Works Llmlled. 7:11 \'onge Street. Tri• ronto. P1)11 S.1 L1: 1,;•1711 IN'I't•:I1N.1'I'iON.11, good ttotl<triO older. 11, Duff, Al- m', int, It. It. :. N I: 11' IIAI'(J1 11.01111N.1TION !land cultivator, Hoe and Plow available in alniest unlimited quail( Bios for sltip- uu.nl, itstributedMa- ki ..111ce pod, I„•rllrung- tun, 10113r'io, 1'annthl 1'elelitating so year, business u1 saner loca- tion and nano', \1'e ',1111 la 1 1(1- ,•10, departmental, '1011 and seed huurer. Nee your 1!..310 I dealer. h:Irdnarr 1411o'r of (\'rile its al once 11' 111•:11, 14 4 pl'1rr14 ti111pllu l 1S made ole dart' 01'/11'1' 1'01'011(0. 81', N. .\1,•Ken/i1' 1'0 . ince 1 phone 2 L.eiuuinetun, Uol. S'I'I':.\\i GoVI•:ItN(o 1'(11: sAi,h:, 4” Noble, $Iol,na It. 1:. Richard- son. St. .\ndretcs, N. L. 1'111:11 '1'1:.11"1'111:, 1'I,I)t'I:1W, L'U1V- er"p cult iv ater. 1'. Pat m', New- ea—Ile, 1'RENI11'51 A, ('t,\'1)I.;oh.1L1: S'1'A1.- lioll, 27 110 I'yvie ltenotvn, En- rolled for :l years. Brown, white markings. Sell cheap or trade for stock, Foaled In 1031. Atex ('r:nvtnrd, !Sox 74, Russeall, Ont. 15 1U1'I'S 1'1101%1 3'' '1'O 7" tops, Apply 13 & ( Lumber Co, Subsidiary Ilogdon & Gross Fur. whore Co, Ltd. Wallcer'ton, Ont. C'UNSTRl1C']' Y01)15 OWN TELE - scope to study the stars vlew cra- ters on the moon. lilt includes 2!'," object lens, 3 foot tube, eye- piece and Instructions for assets• bly. $2.50 postpaid. 8, .lanes & Co. 512 Canada Building, Saskatoon. TURKEY POULTS — PROMPT DELIVERY 11'e can sire prompt delivery on L'road Breasted Bronze 'Turkey Punks, or book for May and June delivery. ('0u1ts hatched from hboudlested, pullot'un1 free breed- ers, under ideal conditions In most modern 1915 model, all electric rued 11tt1011111tically con- trolled turkey incubators, anti hatched in separate, new turkey ail' conditioned Hatchery. Send for Price List and full particu- lars, No orders aeeepted less than 5u, ,\C'I` (,►111CICL\' — 1tOOIC YU1111 ORh)EIt WHILE THEY I,AS'I' 1,A1CG\'Ii;W Tummy RANCiH, Ilox 183, Exeter, Ont. Phone 179. HYDRAULIC TRACTOR SEAT New 1011:011 E-7 Ride Tractor Seat. Passenger cur comfort, eli- minates ride fatigue on your tractor. L'ursaw Tractor Co., \Voadstock, Ontario. EI.I:c'1'itlC MOTORS NEW, USED bottght, sold, rebuilt: belts pul- leys, brushes, Allen Electric Com- pany Ltd., 2326 Dufferin St. Tor- onto, Ont. CHOICE PROGRESSIVE EVER - bearers 25 for $1,00; 50 for $1.75; 100 for $3.00; 200 for $5.00. Pre - {told Iliverside Nursery, West River, Nova Scotia. FOR SALE --HOUSE ON14-S'T'OREY PRAMI;, SIZE 24x18, and :.'2 x 11, Apply !Sox 2, Ulen- eoe, (int, INTERNATIONAL iHA1t\'1•:S'TER P.D. '10 Diesel unit, In good work- ing condition, else 13'' Moor Bros., single head grinder and necessary shutting, bearings, ele- vators, belts, etc., to make a com- plete chopping unit; splendid op- portunity to start 0 chupPing' business on a lost' cash outlay; will sell as a unit of by separate items, Sliver Bros., ('niunt'llle, Ont. ATTENTION FARMERS For Sale: Tractor Tires, made or rubber, suitable for bolting on steel wheels, 810.00 each, When ordering state diameter and width of wheel. National Rubber Co, Ltd., 5 Wiltshire Ave„ 'Toronto, Ontario, 10141(119 holt SALE SIIIILALUP:N JERSEY FARM REG- Istered, Accredited — 15.0.P, — City Milk Shipping — 200 Acres Good Soil — Tractor, and Imple- ments — Modern Brick I'louse at Village, and Station, Jas Cowan, West Bromo, Que. 'C\VO HUNDRED ACRES 1ENCEI) eighty workable, sugar bush largo hank barn, spring water, large house, water, sink, tele- phone. In between two towns. Brazier, South River. 150 ACltl; (`AUDI, I3U UNDER . cultivation with or without stock and machinery. Ned Mc- Namara, Masson, Quebec. 150-AC1t17 !'ARM POR 8,\L1:, 11 miles from t'ollingwood; over 1011 nares, good working land, 30 •,rtes hush, balance pasture: goon buildings; price $5,500. Apply J. S. 'Tompkins, Executer, Sineltamp- ton, Ontario. IINIt HUNDRED ACRES IN EX- cellent condition, good Iluildings, plenty of water, thirty acres crop sown. Immediate possession, For full particulars apply Geo. 111e - Connell, Moorefield, Un111(10. NEAR GODERICH 90 ACRES in a magnificent grove of slalely old trees 1s a cha1-0)10g brick home which was a showplace years ago. It has better than 10 large roosts with natural fire- places in most of the roosts. We offer this estate, having 90 acres which include 5 acres of orchard, large woods running. down to the river, barn, well with electric pump, for $10,000.00, Cash, Op- portunities like this are rare. ('all 3-3538 or week -end, (loderich 315, FOSTER & ROIIAP.'l'S Ri AI,1'O17S WINDSOR ISSUE 22-1946 11.►1It1)nl:..sIx(1 I,L.1tt`; II,\II:DI1I?`51517 '1'[011 Method 1uf01nott011 on !chill•',' rtcardin; cl,ls:-oh. It„hr t 1,on'., Ilalydiessing Acad• only, 137 Avenue Itoad. Toronto. 111;1,1' w.1 8'1'1:1) oPLi:.(TING 1100\1 011)11.1401 AL - s ITh -(chiral nu,l I;en,•131 buts (:roses for 1•oI(1 Count)' IIO-thtal, N,•11.1ilal 1: cl, Out, Slate In first kite!' salary expected. Apply to Sllpel ultendenl. COON UI:NI:1:141, AND MAX 1'0i1 gardening told to 11011 In house, 10 live 111, !!dente apartments sup- pled, !amity of three. ('rite or phone 1. M. \Yall:tce, Oakttlle, 1)1?:todario. ilt.0Nll, `1:1(;),1:, NUN-011OIC- rl, 11f1'Iitoi• espe1.0•111'e, for dairy f 11tH. 11,•1.111 :ilia 111, 1;r„r;;r- 1 x,11 11, 11111'11 111, HOUSEKEEPER AND MAID I'erin:ulel,t positinu.;, best wages, omforlable hnnlo, Lugo grounds. '1.11 01O,1 minutes (1111!! dwwntnwfl 't' soul,,. Two adu11s one -(heel (,1111. I:teellent Opportunity fur tt 1111•11, Older daughter 114 maid, ttto .:i',tors els. 11'1!(1 .\dterliser, .1'.1 1:11:h•an„11 to , 'l'nrolltu 8, 1111' •11 11, 111:1)11'.11, 11 8\T1:I1 -. IC\ h;ltr tit .11•T:11 of 17111-unu1ltc P•lul, 01' Neuritis to (1: 0s tis Remedy. 1lutro's wog Store, ;{35 Elgin, 1)IUIw'a. 1.0.-t paid (1.1.1n. 5'l'U11.101I ANI) '1'11 READ WORMS ()(11(1 are the clause of 111 health In bunulns, all ages. No one tun. mime: \Vhy not find out If MI.: to Your trouble, Intelesling partleu• Ear's — 1'1c01 Write Mulveney's Remedies Specialists, Toronto I. 1'171.1'1' Jt'ICI:5: '1'111: 1'1lfN(:IUA1. ingredients in t)txon's Remedy for Rheumatic Pains, Neuritis, 1lunro's Drug Store, 335 Elgin, Utt•Itt•a, Postpaid $I.11l), 3I ISCI4IJ,:1 NEOUS GUNS 11Et'AIRI:U. SCOPES mounted, Special twelve gunge shells for deer. A. fierrgott, Gun- smith, \\'oodstoclt, Ont. 00'11,1, 1 a)NSIDl;ft S\\'.\I' UI.' 3011 (('01de', 221) or 500. Cost $627 --never used, Por best car or station wagon offered. Ilox 94, 73 .01 1aide Ft, 11'., Toronto. 111:5((:141, 1NS'1'It1181IIN'TN 1''I:I:D A 1311UDIN(i'1'ON 13t/Y8 self, exchanges musical Instru. meats, 111 Church, 'Toronto 2. OI'I'OIt'1't'NI'1I(IS 1''01( 88'((81 ION (3L: A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profession, good wages, thousands successful Marvel graduates, America's greatest Sys. tent. Illustrated catalogue fres, Write or call MARViSL 11AIItDRRESSiNG SCHOOLS 358 131oor St, W. 'Toronto Branches: 44 Ring St. Hamilton & 74 Rtdesu Street. Ottawa, IIATENTs i'h:'1'!!011185'UNilAU(01 & COMPANY Patent Solicitors, Established 1890; 14 Ring West, Toronto. Booklet of information on request, 1'11O'I'0GHAI'IJY TIME TESTED QUALITY SERVICE and SATISFACTION lour films properly developed and panted 6 OR 8 EXPOSURE ROLLS 26e. REPRINTS 8 tor 250. FINEST ENLARGING SERVICJ➢ You may not get all the fume you want this year, but you can got all the quality and service you desire by sending your films to IMPERIAL I'lIO'TO SERVICE Station 1, Toronto, [FILMS DEVELOPED 25 CTS. (WA- ranteed one day service, ,NO B'AI'TING, tial' Photo Service, North Bay. SUPREME SATISFACTION can only be attained by having your films processed by highly skilled technicians using the very best materials and modern nruhhle'y, .111 is obtainable at lowest prices. Roll developed and 8 prints 25c, reprints Sc, each, All work guaranteed. TRANS -CANADA FiLM SERVICE Toronto 13. WING'S PHOTO SERVICE All prints with deckle edge. 6 or 8 exposure rolls 25e. Reprints 3c, each, Box 2, Station J, Toronto. CAMERAS — IMMEDIATE !'REI: delivery on Faultless Miniature Cameras, complete with Eveready case $5.25. 127 film for above 27c, hree Price List Photographic Supplies, Write: Dept. L Cameras 13y Mail, Shelburne, Ont. DON'T RISK LOSING "SNAPS” TIIEY CAN'T 1313 TAKEN AGAIN Any Size Roll -6 or 8 Exposures, DEVELOPED AND PRINTED 26c 3 MOUNTED ENLARGEMENTS 26c Size 4x6" In Beautiful Easel Mounts Enlargements 4x6" on Ivory tinted mounts; 7x9" In Gold, Silver, C(r- rn831nn Walnut or Black Ebony finish frames, Lite each, If enlarge• 111011( coloured, 79c each. Reprints SInde from Your Negatives Sc. Each i)14111', NI STAR SNAPSHOT SERVICE !lox 129. Port Orrice A, 'Toronto. PH (1 Name and Address l'L'tinly, S'TA111'S IN 1919 THE CANADIAN GOVERN. stent put out a 05.00 War Saving Stamp. Will pay 050.00 for each copy offered In undamaged con- dition. Good stamp collections also purchased. i3ox 3660, Station II, Winnipeg, Canada. 1;11011. 1)1.0 STAMPS WANTED BY Collector only. Small or larger lots. Can pay more than Dealer for items I can use. !lust be good. Pest of ieferences, E. Symond, Roeant'Ille, Saskatchewan. WANTED (VANTED — Ex -officer, wife, one child urgently need house or 1-4 room apartment, anywhere within 50 miles of Toronto. Write P.O. Boa 160, Stoney Creek, Ont. Atom Blast A Big Test For Cameras Every Precaution Being Taken To Protect Photographers And Equipment \\ i I'll the .\ri11w a1111 'cavy ex- plode atom bombs on 1110 1'a(ifie Still!, phottenaphy will he literally' and figuratively „r the spot. Hun- dred- 111 rautl'ra, s'. ill ?;c focused uu the bomb 10~14 and thou -a11115 of e\111,•urc- (',ill he made — to retard ou film the atomic 1,1.ist that e. ill infhtrn(r ewer(' !4114 thing 1111 tbi, I,l;uiet. 11 ill l,h0tu(:1,<pily be .(1,10 to stand the 11-1' \\•hat new dis- (11140rie, in atomic power will it retottF 1 rhe numbers of auto- matic talnrtas will operate—and radio -controlled robot planes will cam.' robot cameras right into the edge of tlio 10l,ln•intl area. Protection For Cameras �o intro -c w 111 be the light that 1wi!I heal/e over the Pacific --;Ind 511 int(n'c the heat and r:lin-ac- tite effel1 that extraordinary !ne- c:uttion.; arc bring taken to pro- tect photographer,, filth and cam- eras alike. Batteries of (1:111111 (Ai aur to be mounted 00 top of 100 - foot steel 'utwer1 on sever;!) is- land, five to ten miles ;way front the target si ps in the Bikini atoll, Ai:tr lia 11 island,. "fro protect the cameras, rooms with thick lead scalls are being constructed its the towers. Inside the lead roosts, the cameras will be additionally protected by air- tight waterproof boxes. Even the portholes will be shielded with lead. They will remain open until the flash goes off, the portholes trill close automatically before the outward spreading wave of radio- activity reaches the towers. Radio- active waves trill be turned hack by the lead sheathing. No photographers will be in the towers—the cameras will be started b1' radio front a distant ship—and it may he several wrecks after each test before any human being will be able to approach them, because of radioactivity. "Freckles" on Films Int the fiat pictures which were released to the public after the New ticxico atom bomb test, big "freckles" — big 1lack spots — sllowed u;1 against the ' gc of the explosion. U.S, camera magazines, after asking the Army and its photo- graphers what caused then(, pub- lished the very interesting explana- tion a few issues ago: Although the cameras which took these pictures were shielded in concrete dugouts six miles awal', the heat of the ex- plosion, focused through the lens, was so great that it literally, blis- tered the filth. These blister spots showed up huge "freckles", This time photographers hope special equipment will prevent a recur- rence of these atomic blisters. EXTRA SPECIAL 4 enlarged prints for 10c—Send any 4 negatives of the mono size (up to 21,O• x 4%) and the will return to you immediately 4 enlarged prints on Velox paper, negatives returned with order. Send nega- tives with this lad and 10c in coin today. This ad must itecontpntty older to receive extra one prem- ium coupon. LONDON PHOTO SERVICE Box 551, Dept. W., London, Ontario. WANTED TO BUY Best prices paid for good wal- nut — either standing trees or logs. Telephone 4-4754 Kitchen- er or write: PANNILL VENEER COMPANY, 42 Edward Stret, Kitchener, Ontario, Poultices of Mecca relieve pain, bring out cora, heels quickly, no seer. 25e, 35c, 50c, 51.00. 'MECCA" OINTMENT ct ALL IaONLY tSOwr DOU STORES IN LONDON FOR BIG CELEBRATION Recent arrivals in London for the V -Day anniversary celebrations are these troops from Malaya, seen as they march out of Waterloo station after leaving their train. +H �r ►� rte- s•a•••-41•111-H SPOTS OF SPORTS By FRANK MANN HARRIS ("A Six Bit Critic") ...,, Bad: house again iti !England af- ter a brief look at the skyline of New York — particularly that of dison Sipiarc Gardens — Mr. Bruce Woodcock states that lie feels that lie (could have won if it hadn't been for a butt in the head received in a clinch. Well, far be It from us to disagree with Mr, Woodcock, who was much closer to the scene of action than wc, and in a better position to lame, what went on. Ecru in these tithe; when speedy air travel has become such a com- monplace, it secured rather strange to ('cad of 11'oodcock being back in London less than 48 hours afte:' listening to the account of hits fighting in New fork, But this business of being able to stake a speedy getaway should give pres- ent-day overseas fighters a great advantage over their bretheru of just a felt' year back. They should ) BREWIS RED LAKE MINES LTD. have commenced DIAMOND DRILLING OPERATIONS \Ve recommend Breads shares as a Risk Capital Investment BREWIS & WHITE 200 1171y Street, 'Toronto 1, 0111. 111,• 7225, Please (nail your latest infor- mation concerning 1(11088'1S 1(1:1) LAKE MiNES I,IMITEi), and also copy of your uet1 ]led Lake. map. Name Address BONDS - INDUSTRIALS - MINES - OILS T. L. SAVAGE & COMPANY Specialists k Unlisted Securities 9 Richmond St. E., Toronto AD. 6185 19) -f• -My be able to take house at least sotne small fraction of the money won— which is more than a lot of the old-timers were ever able 10 do. Still, ‘‘e wouldn't be too sure of that, The inside story of how much actual casts boxers get to personally handle and pocket out of the fortunes they earn tlould be almost incredible if they weren't so common; and w'l111 )'oft hear of some fighter, who made hundreds of thousands in the ring, being broke or dying peutilc',., it doesn't alway., follow that he was nothing but a Cioodtintc Charley, who tossed it to the (winds with boat lands. The chance are that he never had it in his hands to toss; for o(!tile the gentle art of "putting the bite" on a successful athlete is by no means confined to boxing circles, it is in those circles it has been brought closest to ultimate , r'fcction, especially in and around New York City. 4 4 4' Now there's no doubt that bots- fighting is a manly and character - building sport; at least it is accord- ing, to the text -books, and crib are we to go against them? But some- how or other it seems to have the power of attracting around it more creeping and crawling things. in human forst, than any other pas- time we know—including e'CII horse -racing and playing the mar- ket, which is taking in quite a stretch of rich territory, In fact it is the environs of boxink that we are recommending as a wonderful potential market to a young chap we know who is working hard t1) perfect what should be an epoch- making new invention. Ile calls this a "dc -humanizer" — and says it is for the benefit of dice that are bothered with people. 4 f' 4 We had always thou! all of the old saying "distance lends enchant- ment to the view" as applying to such situations as the dare who looks so wonderful across the street and who tarns out to be considerably less glamorous when you get a close -tip peel:. But now it seems as if it applies to sports 40 (well. For instance, it a recent is- sue of that widely -read family publication The Saturday Evening Post there is a story built around— of all things!—the sport • of cock- fighting. 4: 4: 4: NOW it was a very readable tale —even if bringing in a small boy and his mother as interested spec• tators of the battle did rather shock our old-fashioned sensibilit- ies. ;:ut we couldn't help wonder• Mg just (what tvottbd have been tilt reaction of '1'hc Editors if some. body had submitted to them a Storz about cock -fighting as prac tiseti—at (east so we have heard— in such places as around the baro! 1',i Dufferin Park, Hamilton of Fort Erie Race ']'racks or sevcra other such localities we migh (Mention. 9: 4: However, the locale of the pub fished story happuled to be Th, Philipine Islands—and we take i that the eight thousand miles or s of distance between there an some of our Eastern race track purified and cast an cncllant0ei over the sport. and made it fit fe general reading. It's just on more of those things that are la much for us to understand. £'AGE 4. .,.l..-141 ..-,I,1f Elliott Insurance Agency BLYTH- ONT. INSURE NOW! AND BE ASSURED, Car - Fire - Life - Sickness • Accident. J. H. R. Elliott Cordon Elliott Office Phone 104. R1:sidence Phone, 12 or 140 COURTESY AND SERVICE. THE STANDARD BEL(;RAVE The May merlin\; of the Ile!gra e Branch of dm 1\'uiii ii.; Institute was held at the hone of NI rs. I. 11. ()mites vith the I,re,irlent, \Irs. J. S. Procter, in the chair. The r, 11 call \\;r, \\ ell re- si•ondccl to by i;i'i'iti; a proline; n a I•• \\ith milk. \It's. Norman he.iiini.i. of � \\'int,*Ii;:m utt, ;l t er resident herr gave i1. n ):aper on 11te m.1tt,', 'Ile!; make On- , S;ir u more heaut'int". Miss lean na i'.raver pla\ ed a couple of pi;uto '010; ',Odell .\\ ere enj,'vell. NI l':". Ric11;1t•I1 p. !!1)tif1041 BrADiftitRIADt)tisiaNDiINNAB:NADIDIiANDIDIDI at2tAXABID;DIXDININADIR Flt Prl Iter gave an allure„ on the tual.in;g III( :horse. S!cr uisplaye,l scleral AUBURN 1l it;tl, 1.011(lott. t.� BLl'TIi UNITED CHURCH tienirr, fur Ince 21111. 111.l3: Snuday School, I I :1 .1 he Road t Certainty." 11,\I.. =_1_he Salt of the Earth." TRINITI', CHURCH, BLYTH Ascension Day (Thursday) las.?tl a. in.: Holy (` nnnnnion. Sunday after Ascension 12 noon: Iloly Communion and Ser- gi. ' 11. til, : Sunday School. i..i.l 11. in.: Evening Prayer. TRINITY, BELGRAVE 1.45 p. in.: Sunday School and samples of the product 111 the proves: 1 f slaking. \Irs. J. S. Procter, \Irs. l`la, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gorier, Jo and \lis; Ruth :\rtltnr, Reg. N., gratin- I':arl Anders, n, \Irs. \1'. Felly and '"t'I II• n;.: I:\rniut Prayer and Scr- Ilill Gooier, wish Mr. and \Irs Ed- ated as a public health nurse at \\'est- \Irs. N. 1Iii ;ins were ;11,1 (Milo! to ;It 111i'11` yard Sillery, Exeter. Tilt l' diversity On \1'e(Inesu;l}. Gucsls ST. MARK'S, AUBURN end the tlkir.C1 ;unutal in :\111)11:11 on \[r, anti \Irs. i(cty Bentley, (;'tic of sIis .\rlhltr were For mother, 11rs, luny 21. Mrs. I. \I. (nines and Mrs. I �I'`I� a. in.: Sunday School and Ilil,lc tick, with 11 r. ut�I Mrs. Russell Bent- John Arthur, I. Frith Arthur, of :\u- i(i Ilittins volunteered to rare for the (.1;1-).. Icy. burn, and Mr. and \In. (i,rilcn \Vail, 111.•;11 p in ; \Irruint Prayer. )flower bed i11 the Ill;utdon cemetery, Mr. A. Cullins01 and his sister, \Ifs, of iiulyrood. \Iia, Arthur has gree; t- if the enures i, filled \cult sea field- , ,lilt• and -evils aero exchanged. Collinson, \with IeLi'.ives at 'I'oro::tn cd a pos:tilnt \sill' the Victoria tlydcr nc, for the painters, service will he The still, of ti,, wit, donated to the l'an- and Scotia. cf Nunes at 11'indsor. held in the (/range Hall. l•er Fund. The neem:; was closed Miss Sadie Carter is reported utak- \Liss Mildred Scott, Reg. N„ \lit- with the singing of the King an I lunch ing a speedy reeovcry from a recent chcll, and Mir„ Ivan A, Scott, Gude vas screed. operation and early this Geek will be rich with Robert and hen Scott. I \liss Edith Procter has been a pa - able to leave Goderich hospital. Miss Betty Marsh attended the tient in \Viuglt;(nt 110'1)it;11 during the Pat and Bob \Walker, Toronto, \vitt.' Bible E;Ifi'I' WVAWANOSI-I Misses Filna am t Audrey \\'alsli, of 1len ,a11, and Ilan of \\'itgliaut, spent graduation cf her sister, Miss June past week: 1 the week -end with M r. and M rs. A. d Air. and \lrs. Emmerson Rodger. 11 r, and Mrs. C. R. C. idles, Mr. and 1 \\•aL b. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dodd, Gode. Marsh, daughter of \I r. and Mrs.loan Cio\•ier spent the week -end rich, with Mrs. \Vilhamt Dodd B \I I \I I Bert .ars t. rs. ,,outs R. l nttlt(s rind \Lute were Wrednesd ', no' 29, 1916, Fruits and Vegetables CALIFORNIA ORANGES, BANANAS, LEMONS, GRAPE FRUIT, CABBAGE, CARROTS, TOMAOES, LEAF AND IIEAD LETTUCE, ASPARAGUS, CELERY, COOKING ONIONS, NEW POTATOES, NURSERY PLANTS, RENNIE'S SEEDS, BULK PEAS, CORN AND BEANS, MANGEL AND TURNIP SEED. BLOCK SALT, FINE SALT, ROYAL PURPLE CALF MEAL, OYSTER SHELL, ROBIN FIOOD, FIVE ROSES, MAPLE LEAF, PURITY AND PRAIRIE ROSE FLOUR, PAT-A•PAN, PACIFIC, HURON AND MONARCH PASTRY FLOUR, GENERAL STORE BLYTH, PHONE 9, WE DELIVER. \\ith her s ratctlparcttt•, Mr, and Mrs., \Irs, lI, Stonehouse, Mr. Donald teitlt her friend, \liss 1.1(hta \Ittstard, 'Sunday •visitors with relatives at Varna. C Stonehouse and \Irs. 11. hrctsinger 11f1 of Itrueeficld. Mr. and Mrs. Sydney i tensing, Lon- The :\\thorn fire brigade look all l'al''aell. 11 r. lark :\rot tr n, is a 1oient in Godcrirh, visited on Friday with 1fr.� \Ira, .lnnic kill ugh of I)nng:uuunt ticsboro, with \frs. Frank i,ansinh., the equipment to the \laalant river, \\ Ingham 111,1it;11 havinghad hi, al,_' \Ir. hi\nclnti1 Redmond a;,(1 \i r• and 11rs. Ilcrl'fa}lor. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Crain;, Mrs. :\r- and the outing proved that the outfit 1.itii std McConnell, spent a collide was a week -end guest at the home of chic l�obinson, Bobby and Betty Lon is in pendia remove 1 on Sunday 111or11itis. ,Mrs' Nnr11utn 1\'i�ht11uul of 1\'cli:wu, \I r. and \Irs. :\It;1 McDowell. } good workin' order. :\ large Scr\i.. tte\t Sundat ill ixn11\ l' nit- of day, lid:, Week w'tlt \Ir. and Nits. Robinson with friends in Uetr•it, number of persons tvcre present to sec 1 11;11 O'\lallr), `I'oronlll. visited 9.11 Friday with \Ir. iiid \Irs. Miss \I;uneen hl,; x of hilchrnerl rd l'ha;ch gill he particularly interest- \V. F. C':uu\hell and other friends. ..;w111 Sunday ‘villi \I r. and Mrs, \V. Gordon Ruthb}, Cuiuloii \\illi \[r, the test. \li;, \larjl ric \Ic\'ittie, lllythl an111 Ing to alder residents in the ctlnnnntt l}' t . \Liss \liunie Snell, of 'for.lnto, i; .\. l';unp',rll. and Mrs. Jeremiah Taylor. M',Se, Ihn•oticy and 16,1Pcrla McVillie, r......_....... as two former residents Re\. :\. Al, (;. derirlt, s visiting her sister. \Irs. I. I., Me1)o\v \I r. and \Irs..lint Smith of Goderich, Harry Arthur, and \[iss Ruth Ar- pent Sunday with \Ir. nttd ells and other friend.;, Budge of Il;uuilton and V. II. (unites thur, Reg. NN., London, and 'lir. and Brother Passes In of Calii,sruia wit lake part in the ;t.1•- Nil's, \\'illi;nn \IeVittic. •pent Friday with \Ir, and \Irs. C. Mrs. Gordon \Nall , Holyrood, with - \I r. and NI rs. John Vincent of bode ('IIx. Springfield, Illinois «'l' S'I'F'ILI'D 1 richt Mrs. John Arthur. ,� tvcre ucsls un Sunday al thrl \Ir. and \Ir,. Duncan McNichol and Donald Ross has returned to Galt Mrs. Frank Rogerson rcceited \t(trrl -\ - Mr. Kenneth Campbell of 'Toronto, home of \I r. and \Irs, R. \'inreitt• laughter of \\'alto'', spent Sunday after visiting his mother, Mrs. Fred of the rlcatlt t}f her hrot1ur, .\rrhdca- Malii Street 17arked Out ''il,'ttI the week -en 1 with his parents,' Mr. and Mrs. Melhnrn ('(tx of Huuc- with \Ir. and .11r... M. Iiosntait, Ross. cion Edward Haughton, at Sprin.g�fiel.l, For Cill's 111:. and \)rs. 11'..\. Campbell, iltrtn, were tl)tests tat Snnday at the \Irs. Howard Campbell was in 'I'or- I1frs. Albert King has returned from lll;ncis, ;n \lay 23rd. 1'11\'1 Ili; re- \Vnrlancn werehnsil} engaged \li„1's I)•,rothy and Norma Nclhcry home of \I r. and\Irs. Clarence l'ox. onto on Sunday, vi,itint her father, Goderich hospital. tires ent two years ago, Rev. 1laugh. marking out ln•oper parkin spares on were guests on S1111'1ay at the home or .Mr. and \Irs, Arthur lircoks nil avh is ;1 patient in otic of the hospitals Mr, and Mrs. John Houston, Jean ton was for 35 years Rector of St, the nta:it street on 'fne•il;iv. I \Ir. and M'•s. Ir. I. look. `grauddaugltter, \larlene I's, of Ti r-' there, having undergone a serious op - Houston, and Olive Young attended l'attl's Cathedral, Springfield, Motorists would do well to oh,crvc \Ir,. J. I':. I';Ilis of 1.1x(i)Wel, visile(I onto, visited last week a':tlt Mr. and oration. the graduation of Miss Frances Hous -Ile will he remembered I,} jricn!, these markings. On the cast side f int Friday with \Ir. ;old Mrs. 11', F. \lrs. \lauricc Bosnian. .1 Ir,, \Lion a t, of Itl}'t11. 'Mrs, liar - tile ton, Reg. N., who has graduated as an here as he spent part of his vacation - stain Utr.rr.m+ Marl angel parking . Campbell. I Misses Edna an -1 Audrey 11'alsh of I old Sprung and \Ir•. Ernest Patterson instructor of nursing. ;hiss Houston eachs permitted. On the west side ear d \Ir. Raymond lc(.':- n Tel of Mullett 1lensall were weed: -end gtie is :it the I of 11nlle11 '1'owu•111p, visited on Sat - 1 year with Ile. and Mrs. Roger-howners must pari; their r,',ct th,\i,c 'I'ownshi;t is t;sitin at the home of hon'' of \I r, and \Irs.:. , t. tuda} with their si lees \les. Clarence has occupied a position at Victoria sun, > A. l?. \Val.) cion; the curb, � Mr, Rayntnnll Rcdntoiit, Miss Ilia 'faylor spent a few days Cox, and \1 r, Cox. , . , 1111 ,61, .Hill 1 I I. IC.441.•.. MI JI ,li.Ml.., IAM IR 1 I e . e , i lI .1 1I 5'!'H e J0UNE�,td eke ota0r fo's etiPt. AO*00,‘. eN 00 83 900 00 IN CASII PRIZES The National Barley Con- test is being conducted to help overcome a serious barley production situation resulting from art extreme shortage of seed andsteadily deteriorating quality. By stimulating quality barley improvement, Canada's do- mestic needs will be met and successful re-entry into world barley markets as- sured in the future. To encourage the growing of improved quality seed' and malting barley in 1946, the brewing and malting industries of Canada arc of- fering substantial cash awards to the farmers of Ontario who produce the best barley of certain ap- proved varieties. PRIZE AWARDS - $3,900.00 COUNTY PRIZE AWARDS IN ONTARIO TOTALLING $3,000,00 INTER -COUNTY PRIZE AWARDS IN ONTARIO TOTALLING $400.00 INTERPROVINCIAL GRAND PRIZE AWARDS TOTALLING (ONTARIO AND QUEBEC) $500.00 Ontario awards are confined to the following Counties: - Bruce Glengarry Lanark Carleton Huron Middlesex Essex Kent Perth Grey Lambton Renfrew Prescott (Russell Russell Simcoe North Simcoe South CONDITIONS: All bonafide farmers in the recognized malting barley growing areas of Ontario will be eligible to compete. Farms supported by commercial or Government organizations are excluded. The contest is limited to the following malting varieties of barley: O.A.C. 21, Mensury (Ottawa 60), 011i and Montcalm. Final date of entry is June 15th. For entry forms and additional information, see your Agricultural Representative or write to: ONTARIO CHAIRMAN NATIONAL BARLEY CONTEST COMMITTEE Crops, Seeds and Weeds Branch, PARLIAMENT BUILDINGS, TORONTO M I 1111 ,.11 I. IMM 111 .11 ■ 11.t 11 , Ii 111.1111 111 ,11iY mill 011 . �iMdour.itiegouttmtP • Down by the sea on Canada's East Coast That window beside your seat on a Canadian Pacific train.,, it's a travelogue in technicolor. It's a window on natural grandeur,..on horizon -spreading farm Iands...on industrial vigour...it's a moving panorama of this great land of ours. And it's the way to travel in Canada -the comfort way... the friendly way..,the way tens of thousands of Canadians have learned to know their own Dominion better, Soon Canadian Pacific will bring you even finer travel luxury...in new, deluxe editions of Canadian Pacific's famous trains. For information about vacations in any part of Canada consult any Canadian Pacific Railway agent. Wednes iaY, )'Tay 29, 19-10, LONDESi ORO 11r. and \Irs. (i,, rose \\'r!11, of t ,- lir Il'1 11, tl F, u. gis, \Iirliigan, t'. \ I, did aids �' , tl week -end with the 1,1111, 1 .'• ter ;HO \It-• 1'en111'UL brother -in -la !I r. and '2,1.; . I. I I \I I.tcl•: \lot and Vicki 111 TOMATOES, PEAS, WAX BEANS; I Lois lt:,u i, ; endin.' :t lett day, with DICED CARROTS & BEETS, II„, tlic rnur', 111 thee, Mrs. W. Lyon. AYLMER BABY FOODS \li \I;tr\ (•aldttell, \liNses Beth HABITANT SOUP I Elva Grier, M i,, Fern 11'atsrlrr TOMATO JUICE, GRAPE JUICE, mid \I i-, 1 )orotht I.ittic were bonne I GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 1,,r the steel; -end. ROBIN HOOD & PURITY FLOUR \Ir,. L'etithatn, Oshmwa, spent the Toronto, ,;cut the In r parents, Ret', and TIIE STANDARD .1 GROCERIES Shobbrook. \J i„ tyccl•:-end in 'I' r nto. \I r. and \I r . \\'. 1 I. 1.: on, Thorn - dale, ~,lent :hr heel, i nil t.11t the 'torr,tct's utothvr and .iter, \Ir•. I•:. 1.yon anal NH,. ( partes \\;t -on. Jack Snell ;, \\ calm: a broad -mile \t''ll,-end ttith her sister, \Irs. 1t. the e Clay, --it is ;t little dau.int,'r T. 1111 , n 1. \Ir. and \Irs. IL•ury Veer \iaear;I NH-. It. \l vlay, Tondo.), spent the Tall,, spent the \Neel; -end enh Mr. \,lel.-enl ttith NIL) 11. Kirk. Wheat Flakes & Cooked Cereals LAUNDRY & TOILET SOAPS TEA, COFFEE, TOBACCOS, and \I r,. J, I :n.l,nul soul \l1-, Alice \Ir. and \Irs. John Snell, \Ir, and FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES \Ir. and NH, \lel..c0 Pine l::vvr, v:si:, : iris ods • \I :. McCabe, stere in Galt on Sunday Ethinier, visiting \Ir. and \Ir,. Ray Fisher. h, t e on \I i-, Latina 'I','ronto, spent Egg Grading Station & Locker Storage Pioneer Feeds Shur Gain Royal Purple Calfineal Feeds EAN.k1 i ,hl+? t' 't• 111 (i_:,.EK NMI JUNE 3 TO JUNE 8 The co-operation of all citizens is requested in cleaning u1) property during the week of June 3, to June 8. During that week all property owners and tenants are requested to have rubbish, such as ash- es, tin cans, and other refuse, removed from then' premises to the village dumping lot, and to gener- ally improve the appearance of their property. Your co-operation will 1)e appreciated. ---By Order, J. A. Cowan, Police Chief, Corporation of the Village of Blyth. JIJJJJ. 1 L oluoaol '00111101 Eullaols NOIiVBOddOD S1S(i�l JNI1J31S 3H1 4f; V4111I a111 ;inrinp .I,nitunu iure,l.t.nn ,taA,1 110 01 0.tuti )st su 111).1 01 111,)1 Jo .111 .11111 ,1.\1 •1n,m1 -Jit111111111 )11:ts) Jo .14111(11 .�.IaA,) tltl.tt .n:Ipun:J 111115 11 .{1( 10111.:;1 .1,1.tJ(0 ,11111.,) .toliln; 0 JO 110111,)1111 pinwl,)d our:; ;nj1 ,hk!aaa.r s,)! 11 ! l!l -01,01 0111 'Hums ,1)) ,).)t.n:I rr 011114,1 00 .I.111)."1.51 'I)1\� 'a(qu(Imtt .),)1Ata,-; 1;01( .1t(( .1,)110 0 01 %mt.l (4 op ;1.11 `1:.1011,)as,) s1 '1111 '.0110111100 lNn.t1 isa1.11V1 ;nit aJ 01 0.1111411 (o11 op ;I1\\ 3ZIS 31/4 /o due June 1st 1949 HAVE BEEN CALLED FOR PAYMENT JUNE 1st 1946 These bonds should be presented for redemption with all coupons of later date attached. No further interest will be paid on these bonds after this date. - Di You may never sell Gas to U.S. motorists Ir.11:1 °(— Iffte e CANADA'S TOURIST BUSINESS is YOUR ,btisiness Tountsr miincy spreads around. Tito garage maxi, the grocer, the farmer — everybody benefits directly or indi• rectly. Tho tourist industry is profitable business—worth protecting. Especially this year when the impression American visitors take back with them will infltt. cncc Canada's tourist industry through all the years to come. CANADIAN TRAVEL BUREAU D.partment of Trade & Commerce, Ottawa A. L. KERNICK WE DELIVER—PHONE 39. Notice EFFECTIVE JUNE 1ST TIIE PRICE OF MILK WILL BE AI)VANCEi). TO 6c A PINT ANI) llc A QUART. This is due to the Govern- ment lifting of subsidies, DURWARD'S DAIRY Card Of Thanks 1\'e %yish to express our thanks to 'neighbours and friends for the lovely floral tributes, the message; of sym- pathy, the loaning of cars, and all other kindly acts extended during our bereavement. Also we wish to thank 1I r. Donald .McNall for his lovely solo. 1f rs, F. Wood and Family. Card Of Thanks Mrs, \\', F. Campbell wishes to ex- press her appreciation to neighbours and friends for flowers and cards sent to her daring her stay in (; 'derich hospital. Special thanks to 1)r. 1Vcir and I)r. Graham, and her nurses, for their services. FOR SALE A corner lot, shade trees all around sidewalk, across the front. Apply to phone 116, Blyth. 10-1p. FOR SALE 5 Jersey bull calves, cheap. Apply to W. M. Henry & Sons, phone 150, Blyth. 40-1p. GIRLS WANTED As waitresses in dining roost ; good wages. •1f cals included ; a goo,( dish- washer also wanted. Venus Restaur- ant, Ltd., Gcdcrich, Ont„ phone 170. 40-2. TEACHER WANTED Protestant teacher wante,l for S.S. No. 6, Mullett, for terns 11)46-47. Please state qualification and salary expected. Apply to John 11. \Irl?wing, R.R. No, 1, Blyth. 40-2. • TENDERS WANTED TENDERS are wanted for labour on woodshed floor of S.S. No. 6, 11111 - lett Section. \\'ill supply all material needed, Tenders to he in by -lune 15th, (o Secretary -Treasurer, John 11, 11c - lying, R.R. No. 1, Blyth, 40-2. COMMUNITY SALE NOTICE A community sale will be held in the near future at the Oliver Inlple- innent Lot. Anyone wishing to offer articles for sale, please leave the list at W. II. Morritt's home, on of be- fore June 8th. W. H. MORRITT, AUCTIONEER. Sunday with her parents, 'Nit.. and, ;Mrs. T. Knox. Youth Rally In Constance Church The third of the Special 1'oung People's Meetings being held in the 'churches of the Londcshoro Charge will take place in Constance Church on Sunday evening., June 2nd, at 5:15 (DS.'I'.) The choir of Burns' Church will be in charge of the musi- cal part of the service, and the hand master of the Blyth Band, A. C. Rob- inson, will contribute instrumental selections. All are heartily invited to attend this Youth Rally. Mrs, B. Mcl(av, Temperance Pro- vincial secretary, of the \V.C.'i'.U., gave a very interesting talk on teun- 'perancc and showed pictures at the Sunday School anil, Monday morning she talked to the pupils at No: 8 School. Sgt, 1)onald Holmes, Dresden, is 'visiting his grandmother, Mrs, H. Lyon, ROXY THEATRE CLINTON. NOW PLAYING; "The Great John L.," Greg McClure, Linda Darnell Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Dorothy McGuire, George Brent and Ethel Barrytnore, Ti 111 ;t ma -lei -piece of 1111 slcry that hill Leel pill on the edge of your scat, "TIIE SPIRAL STAIRCASE” Thursday, Friday, Saturday Gene Tiernay, Corncl Wilde and Jeanne Crain. Hie film torsi 11 of Ilen Aures ham-.' tvidcly-read novel dealing ttith the mime 111.01, ,tory of a jealous woman. "LEAVE HER TO HEAVEN" in Technicolor COMING; Bing Crosby and Bob Hope in "Tho Road To Utopia." PAGE 5 , CAPITAL THEATRE GODERICH. NOW PLAYING: Claudette Col- bert in "GUEST WIFE" Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Charles Boyer, Lauren Baca!! and Peter Lorre. I:spio11 1! , intrigue adventures feature int dramatic and ha,ar l 11' this ,wilt-111ov- "CONFIDENTIAL AGENT" Thursday, Friday, Saturday Bing Crosby, Bob Hope an] Dorothy Lamour hadio's favorite thrush retunts in a rib -rocking, toe -tickling riot of music and laughter. "THE ROAD TO UTOPIA" COMING: Gene Tiernay in: "LEAVE HER TO HEAVEN" REGENT THEATRE SEAFORTd. NOW PLAYING: Deanna Durbin in: "I'LL BE SEEING YOU" Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Gene Tiernay, Jeanne Crain and Corncl Wilde. \ drat parl.a.'c of toolmili(outs r- taininrnt d,mte in hr,l!i:mt '1 d luti color photography. "LEAVE HER TO HEAVEN" Thursday, Friday, Saturday Jennifer Jones, Joseph Cotten and Anita Louise, In a story ,.f lot Iett,t, written by proxy and a buildup tliat tunddc•d dots u. "LOVE LETTERS" COMING: "Hold That Blonde" and "Three Strangers" Matinees Sat. & Holidays at 2.30 p,nl.Mat., Wed., Sat., Holidays 2.30 pm Matinees Sat & 1lolidays at 230 1.111. JNJJNJNJJNJJJJJJNIJNJ.NJJNN hN1 JNIJJNIJI1/JINIJJNN +,••..1v♦••.♦t..1.10.•.OH•.++.1•♦]I1•.++T+++_ H F•'H••♦•..•.♦.♦•••♦♦•..•H•.OH•..f••.♦••♦I••1•.♦;.♦•.+++4. ENTION!LYCEUM THEATRE 1 WINGHAM—ONTARIO. .t. ATT .WE HAVE ON HAND— ,. • • : :; MASSEY-HARRIS REPAIRS. DRILL TUBES. PUMP FITTINGS and TAPS. .t: t :!:A. W. P. Smash =• : •. •t• PHONE 92, BLYTH 56.32 f NOTICE COMII'IENCING JUNE 3rd we are planning to open a HOT DOG AND HAMBURGER STAND (Nights Only) at F'RANK'S BAKERY GIVE US A CALL. Ken. Staples FOR SALE Seed buckwheat, about 50 bushels. Apply to phone 18x9, 13lyth. 40 -Ip, AUCTION SALE Of Farm Machinery and Miscellaneous Articles At Lot 13, Concession 4, \l orris Township, 3 miles cast of Bclgraye, FRIDAY, MAY 31ST commencing at 2 P.1l., (Daylight Saving 'l'ime) Consisting of ; Massey -Harris spreader, good condi- tion; Massey-Ilarris binder, 7 -ft. cut; hay loader; Massey-11;u•ris dump rake, 11 ft.; Massey -Harris dump rake, 12 ft., nearly new; Massey-1larris out -throw disc ; Massey-ilarris spring tooth cultivator ; Deering 13 -disc fer- tilizer drill, good condition ; 4 -section Diamond harrows and cart ; turnip wwcr; snuffler; 2 stone boats; tvagon; set sleighs with flat bottom; gravel box ; wagon box, new ; 16 -ft, roller hayrack; plow, No. 21 Fleury; 2 -fur- row riding plow; C'linttan fanning trill with bagger and screens; grain grad- er; hay fork and ropes; Melotte cream seperator, good condition ; brooder stove ; bngn'1 ; cutter and robe; 2 horse collars; double set har- ness; single set harness; long ladder ; 2 logging chains; 2 cross -cut saws; carpenter's tools; some household ef- fects; shovels; forks; crowbars; neck yokes; whit fletrees; and many other articles tc,) numerous to mention. No Resrervo As The Farm is Sold. TERMS—CASH DAY OF SALE. Mrs. Alex King, Proprietor. 1larold Jackson, Auctioneer. Robert Patrick, Clerk. 39-2. MUTUAL BENEFITS CAN BE HAD FOR Gc A DAY. Will Pay Dr's and Hospital Bills For You and Your Family, And Also Guarantee. A Regular Monthly Income. JOIN TO -DAY! PROTECT YOURSELF NOW! •e• IN FOR MATTON FROM JOE MARKS BLYTH — ONTARIO. Nog NOTICE Court Of Revision Township Of Morris Court -.f Revision for the 'fow 15(1ip of \I orris is now open. All appeals on assessments must be in the hands of the Clerk by June 10, 1946. 1 Final sitting to be held on June 17. at 4 P.\1,, at the Township hall. L 39-2, GEORGE MARTIN, CLERK. :4 Two Shows Sat. Night Show starts regularly at f; P.M. ' Satuday at 7:45 1'.\I. "Changes in time will hi noted below_ "Thurs., Fri., Sat., May 30, 31 -June 1. "DOLL FACE" Carmen Miranda, Perry Como 1 The sir st.ry of a group of talented., „dancers and singer, looking for a,. '111•:ty to bit Broadway, Yi /lir? Mat Saturday afternoon at 2.30. Mon., Tues., Wed., June 3, 4, 5 DOUBLE BILL Vincent Price and Lynn Bari, in ,"; "SHOCK" A psychological drama. James Craig, Frances Gifford, in 4"SHE WENT TO THE RACES 2:\ comely mixed with plenty of 51(1,1. •♦♦•11•H♦♦11.1.11.11•• 1;H 1.•H;111�.1� 1•♦ 1•HII .♦. ♦•1 ♦;H � � •.111•H� ALSO CISTERN & STOCK PUMPS Plumbing Fixtures and Supplies. BUILDING MATERIALS. Estimates Freely Given On Any of the Above. L. M. Scrimgeour' AND SON. Phone 30, Blyth. P.O. Box 71 PAINTING 11y the hour, or by contract. Expert workmanship. Apply to Jas. Ilirons ' or Howard 'fait, phone 56, 131yth. 37-4. GOODISON - PAGE GARDEN TRACTORS (:quipped \\'ith Cultivator, Rubber Tires, Gauge Wheel, Guide handle Worm Driven Transmission, Gears and Clutches Enclosed. No Belts! No Chains! Balanced for Handling Ease. Three Sizes- 11 H.P., 2 H.P., 3 H.P. ,Vfl'ACi l \1 ENT's : 7" plow. Lawn \1 ower, Sprayer, 1 Row Seeder, 11" Disc, I:n11er, Cutter liar, Snow Plot', Spring -Tooth Cultivator. Complete Line of Oliver Farm Equipment. Limited number of Manure Loaders to fit Row -Crop Tractors. Complete Fleury -Bisset Line, in• eluding the famous Fleury Plows. W. H. MORRITT DEALER • Phone 4 and 93. CHECK YOUR LABEL 114l. +O..+1tHL;.1;. +Mr;..;++++.!•++++ •1•'••0.1 'iIIk iril►I)C' POOL ROOM. .2 • ,t, :: SMOKER'S SUNDRIES 2s ::'Tobaccos, Cigarettes, Pop, : and Other Sundries. ;4. ::Open all day and evening•: ;;Main Street. Blyth.:, 11. 1• .• 4.11.;1.;•.1 ;1.;.4.4. • .•1.•11••.•1.;1♦♦..•11.1:4. .•.•.. . . •.,1.;1.;..;1%•. ♦ . 1 . . . .. Notice To Contractors '1'1'.NUI'.I:S will be received by the Council of the 'I•ottn,hip of 1•:a,t \\'a- wait, ,h f,,r the construction of tin• I•::t,t and West \\'antanos11 Township Boundary Municipal Drain. Plans and specifications, Etc., may be seen at the Clerk's Office, Lot 29, Concession 5, East \\'antalosh. .\ll tenders must he in the hands of the Clerk 101 later than 3 1'.\1., June 4th, 1946. The Iott est. or any tender not nc- res,arily accepted, R. R. REDMOND, Bclgrave, Ontario, 39.2. Township Clerk, TENDERS WANTEI) TOWNSHIP OF GREY TEN DER S, will be received by the undersigned up to 2 o'clock 1'.\1., on Saturday, June 1st, 1916, for the Welk of repair and improvement of the fol- lowing \I unicipal brains :— llcauchatnt, Creek Drain— Estimated Cost $20,000,W South llranch Deancbamp Estimated Cost $2,700.00 Turnbull Drain, estimated cost 2,350.110 Plans and Specifications may he seen at the Clerk's Office, at Ethel, Ontario. The lowest or any tender not nec- essarily accepted. Security will be required, J. H. FEAR, CLERK, Township of Grey. ETIHEI., O\T, 3(1-2, FOR SALE Cook stove, in good condition. Ap- ply to 1lrs. Fred Crawford, or phone 40-1p. 174. LEWIS ROWLAND AUCTIONEER. Licensed for Co. of Huron & Perth. Satisfaction Guaranteed Prices Reasonable. For information Phone Lew Rowland, 830r 24. Seaforth. or Write RR. No. 3, Walton. Arrangements can be )lade for Sales at Thy: Standard Office. THE McKI LLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTH, ONT, Officers President, F. McGregor, Clinton; \'ice President, C. W. Leonhardt, Brod- hagen ; Secretary -Treasurer and Man- ager, M. A. Reid, Seaforth. Directors W. R. Archibald, Seaford%; Frank 21cGregor, (lint on; Alex. liroadfoot. Sea forth; Chris. Leonhardt, Born- holm; E. 1. Trewartha, Clinton; John L. Malone, Seaford); Myth; 1Tugh Alexander, \Walton; George Leitch, Clinton, Agents John E. Pepper, ltrucefield; R. V. McKcrchcr, Dublin ; J. F. Pructcr, Brodhagcn ; George A. Watt, Blyth. Parties desirous to effect insurance or transact other business, will he prompt), attended to by applications to any of the above named officers addressed to their respective post of- fices. Dead and Disabled Animals REMOVED PROMPTLY. Telephones: Atwood, 50r31; Seaforth, 15, Collect. DARLING and CO. of CANADA, LTD. TURNING POINT /2i Mary Imlay Taylor SYNOPSIS ('It.tt"i i:it .\I tili'I:IIa!I t'utuntecrd Rherwtn's real u,"ne, ,I„hn 5hertt•lu. "no Is wrinted roe inurdering his unrle.t' Srwthael drrrarr-. CHAPTER XI "Do you know why I'm tv;uttcd?" Sherwin asked, still =lauding. The old fellow nodded. ''Seen th' paper you had in your pocket, Sherwin. You'd marked the de- scription, and it dropped tot her day an' 1 5:1w• it, Th' sheriff talked some, too, when we were goin' to look for tet' place where !order jumped the creek. 1 ain't askin' questions. You sit down an' cat." Sherwin sat down. "You're a good man," he said chokingly. I'll old," said \IarDowell quiz- zic:dly. I ain't deaf ret on punish- ing other folks.' "I:xet.pt lurd:ut,'said Sherwin. \I ac laugltcd, "\fell, nlybee1 Eat, 5011, you may have a long hike, Von can't take tet' trains; Cutlrr'lI have your picture up in Sherwin nodded, rating in silence. Half an hour ago, with Jane's eyes clinging as they look- ed at hint, food would have choked hint, but he was hungry note and he ate mechanically. Old NI ac, sit- ting down opposite, filled Itis pipe and lit it. Neither of them spoke for a while and the lige` began to fail. It was still daylight outside but the little roost was in the shadow of the big ranch -house and it was so dim that Mete rose, got a lamp, lit it and set it on the table. Sherwin had fininshed his meal and he thrust his plate aside, look- ing across at the old man's face behind the camouflage of tobacco smoke. At last he spoke hoarsely, forcing himself to it. 4 h "Von said a while ago—when you were tending my aria—lhat— M.is I; eller was to marry Stenhart, Is that true?" MacDowell considered, pulling on his pipe. "I've heard Jinn say so You don't like Stenhart?" "He's my cousin,' Sherwin said in a flat emotionless voice. The ofd man started and took his pipe out of his mouth. "Gosh!" he ejaculated, and stared at the young man dumbly. "11e's my cousin and his testi- mony sent me to jail for life," said Sherwin, and his voice shook. "lie lied. He Iicd me out of the way for fear I'd break our uncle's will. He got everything." ".\n' you're accused of killin' th' uncle because he'd cut you off, ain't that it?" Mac leaned his elbows on the table, looking across it at the shadowed face of Sherwin. The tatted nodded. "The old story," he said shortly. ''Uncle was killed in thc garden. He was stab- bed while he slept on the old bench by the cedars. I'd just found him when Max came in the gate; he'd been up thc street at the news- stand. He swore I had the knife in my hand, It was perjury but he got away with it. Uncle and I had had a difference the day before, and people knew of it, 'That went against sic, and :\ fax swore inc into jail for life. That's ail." Mac was silent for a while, then he grunted. "Did you tell Jinn about it:" Sherwin laughed bitterly. "Ile wouldn't believe me if I did! The jury didn't. I've served eight years. I was twenty-two when f was sen- tenced. Ever been in jail?" lie asked ironically. "Colne mighty near it once, son. Punchin' a rogue's head got Inc ar- rentcd, but somehow the judge kinder agreed with me that it need- ed Punchin"' "it's like being in hell—to strut a healthy ratan up behind stone walls for life," Sherwin said bitter- ly. "1 won't be taken if I can help it; I'd rather die—only I've got something to do first," The old man looked across under the lamplight again; something in the white face opposite moved him deeply. Sherwin was a stranger, Ile was an escaped convict, yet— "Don't do it, son," old Mac said gently, Shewin, st:u tied. raised hif bloodshot cycs to his. "You know?" "I reckon do!' Sherwin rose and began to wall: al out the room. "I carte out here to find him. Ile wasn't itt his usual haunts in the city—so they told me and I'd tracked hint patiently, tracked hint to Kelier's ranch, when l stumbled into your accident and motored you here. It was pure luck, I thought, to get here so easily -without credentials. too!" .t acDotwell nodded. "lie's geltin' well an' he's sure to ham; :tround Jane." Sherwin s,iii! notating. but his !rands clenched until the nails bit into tate paints. In the silence the little roost seemed full of Jane's presence. Again he saw her eyes change, sats he. recoil! .\ shudder ran through 1,ii i, fury leaped up in hint, he remembered Stcnhart's white fare, his cowardly cry: "I)on't let hint kill rue!" Again he ;laced up and clown. No words were spoken, 0Id Mac sat thinking, his pipe in his hand. It was still; then one of the men began to sing out under the trees, a Spanish song. in half an hour the moon would rise, 110W it was pitch dark outside. Old It1tcl)uwc11 ro-c ,!Dryly, stretching his uninjured arid. shcrifi'll be around here for a spell, maybe thirty-six hours. You can't hardly miss hits if you try to get out nut'.; 50111C of 'ern will meet up with you. 1 tell you what I'll do—you conte along with me now, before moonrise, an' I'll fix you up. I've just been figurin' it out." Sherwin stooped in his pacing and looked at hint, strangely touch- ed. 'How about Keller? /le wanted me to get out at once." "You ain't goin' to stay on th' r:.nch; you follow Inc." Mac picked up the food -pack and opened the door. A sudden gust of wind Klett out the lamp. In the dark Sherwin pressed his hands over his eye,; Ile was trying to shut out Jane's face! They stepped out into the eight, dark before moonrise. L i g It t s streamed from the ranch -house windows. They could hear voices over there; once some one laughed loudly. Alai: touched Shertwin's hand warningly. "We're goin' to tit' stables; ain't ut one there, an' tee can saddle tilt... "I can't take a horse from here!" Sherwin exclaimed sharply. "Easy, son, 1'11 lend you mine to• night," said Mac. "I can ride one of the ranch horses; etre ain't goin' so terrible far." They went to the stables and old MacDowell brought out the horses. .shcrwin hated to lay a hand on one of thele but he mounted when the old man told him the roan was his own property. Silently, after that, they rode past the ranch -house and out ou to the twisting mountain road. Five stiles up in the red- woods they passed the limits of 1.a0; 1.'alomas. The wind from the hills grew cold, but the sky was brightening; the highest peaks were already touched with moon- light. Sherwin turned in his saddle and looked down. Below him lay the ranch; he could just see the iights in the house, stere pin -points of brightness. Darkness, like a velvet cloak, had fallen ou the valley'. Ile drew a deep breath. Jane was there, Jane, who had re- pudiated him with her chill look, and Stenhart! itis hands clenched, Stcnhart's lie had scut hint to prison, it pursued him still. Resolve was hardening in hint. he could not go until the had killed Dint. fie rode on again but, all the while, he was aware of those lights down there in the darkness. Ile had lived eight years in prison but he was still young, The girl's eyes, her voice, her soft hands on his wound- ed arm, had kindled a flame; now the flame was made fiercer, more terrible, by jealousy. Stenhart was with herd! Tlicn soddenly he was roused from his fierce revery. Old Mac drew rein. "Get down," lie said briefly. "\Ve can hobble tl ' horses, we've got to hoof it the rest of th' way." (To be continued) Outstandingly Good IlsALAD TEA QUEBEC VISIT His excellency, Viscount Alexander, Governor-General, and Lady Alexander, pictured as they arrixed in Quebec City on their first official tour. Following a three-day visit to the uehec capital they went to Montreal. CHRONICLES of GINGER FARM ilave yon ever tackled a job with foreboding and dislike and finished up by really enjoying the work? I ant sure you hate—we all sur- prise ourselves once in a white, Well, I was on what I thought would be an unpleasant job but I soon found myself getting quite a kick otit of it. it tool: me into homes where I had never been; brought me into contact with people I had never niet and show- ed me a please of life whick 1 had almost forgotten. lucidentally, I walked into one (louse where there was measles—rule adult recover- ing, one child still in bed, anti a baby at the sniffling stage. Since it was my privilege to have tneasles myself a few years ago 1 traded on the assumption that i was lherfore inununtecd. e: 4: e_ The places That I visited ver: Lunn hones and three of them were occupied by young couples, each with a family of three little tots, all under school age. Sotne• how it gave me quite a lift. 11ere was young Canada growing up. llere were husky young fellows with -1 hope—enthusiastic and op- timistic young wives who were not the hard but satisfying job of being afraid to have babies, nor tc tackle a farmer's wife. :WI the children were such darlings, and obviously well cared for, One little two-year -old, tt•' r, his mother said, nearly, always "made strange", came tod- dling over to etc almost as soon as l Stt down and held up his wee arms to be picked up. it scare! to me there was great hope for the future of rural Canada—social un- rest notwithstanding—while there are farm families around like those ( saw that day. 4: t In contrast I also came across some very lonely folk, There was one poor old fellow, living alone, his barn burnt to the ground, itis son in hospital, no one around but he and the dog working amid the charred and blackened rubble of what had once been a splendid barn, and which, at the tife of the fire, had housed the season's crop and some sheep, all of which had been lost, 1 stood looking at the tragic retrains of a life time's work as the old mail told me his story. t 4 t• The next call was a lot more cheerful. 11erc was an oldish couple, happy in each other's com- pany as the sands of lift run slow• ly out. I imagine that was now all they ,sanled—all that a lot of aged couples Nvapt—lo lit•! rift their lives together, * e: * Then I saute to a farm woluatt living alone—except for hired help. She seemed perfectly content ex- cept for her worries in getting car- penters, paperhangers and - extra farm help. "But Yet," I remarked, "in spite of all these difficulties you persist in carrying on?' " \ty goodness, yes. \\'hat would 1 do aw"'y froth the farm? Imagine etc in a little two -bo -four in town!" I could see her point all tight bccauses even as we went around to visit her chickens, two little pet lambs gambolled along behind us, occasionally bleating plaintively because they knew it .as nearly bottle tints. Living on a farm undoubieds ! gets to be a habit. Or shall we sa, the roots one puts down arc like tap roots, If any attempt be made to dig up the plain root there is still lots of life in the runners. Many Larnt folk are past doing thr !lard work incidental to [anoint_ butyet there are still so ntant 13y Gwendofine P. Clarke * « • s small roots that are still active, Love of the outdoors; the satisfy- ing sense of working with depen- dent living things; the perennial fascination of watching Nature at oork-all tied up with, and an ins !rotate part of our daily life. For instance, one gets fat' more satis- f•tction from watching a tree in bloom in one's own backyard than by driving through the Niagara fruit belt in blossom time, That admittedly is a feast for the eyes but in our own backyard one takes as much interest in the tree when the blossom is dying as when it is in its full glory, Watching to see if the fruit has set; guarding against tent worsts; watching the small fruit grow and devclopc. This year—c-pecially the apples! TABLE TALKSUI Canned Rhubarb The rhubarb, .lativc of the Prov• it,cc of Szechwan, Kansu and of Tibet, was eagerly adopted front the Chinese. It was an important feature of overland trade with Ancient Lnrope and in 1750, three precious parcels, containing rhu- barb seeds were brought from the \Vest b3' a Russian Caravan, to be sent as a gift of the Russian Gov• crnntent to the botanical societies of England, Scotland and Ger- many. Rhubarb, although it is so old and has travelled so far from its native habitat is the first fruit to appear is. the Can; -Ilan gardens acid brings a welcome change in (Le dessert pattern. Early rhubarb, rosy and tender needs very little cooking and also little sugar, which is an advantage in these days of rationing. If the garden contains a large batch of rhubarb, canning part of it would prove to be a boon next winter, It is wise to can rhubarb trhile the starts are young ;.nd ten der. Later on in the summer they arc apt to become woody. 'rite home economists of the Consumer Section of the Dominion Department of Agriculture recom- mend several methods of canning rhubarb, 11ere is one method that will trove a favorite when a serv- ing of fruit is desired for lunch or supper. It is called the "dry sugar method", and is a real short-cut, For 1 quart of canned fruit, use: 4 cups rhubarb, cut in one -inch lengths, ,r cup sugar and boiling water. Pack the quart sealer halt fuli of cut rhubarb, add about ci the sugar. Continue to pack scaler with alternate layers of rhu- barb and sugar. \Vltcn full, cover with boiling water to within one quarter inch of top of sealer. Seal tightly, and lilt gently hack and forth to dissolve sugar. Loosen seal slightly, and process in boiling water Lath, allowing fifteen min- utes for pints and twenty minutes for quarts. Remove scalers from water bath, complete the seal and allots to cool in an upright pnsitiam. Remained Aloof A shell buried eight soldiers alive in a dugout: two were English, two S ittish, ttvo Weld] and two Irish. When the rescue party finally extricated them, the Scots were praying together; the Welsh were singing; the Irish fighting, and the Iwo Englishmen hadn't been intro- duced. SluLduy School lesson Expressing Our Friednship for Christ Mark 14:3-9; Luke 10:38-42; John 11:1-3. Gtddctt 'Text,--ltr!uvcd let Its love tole :..'nthcr: fe,r 1• -lye is ut (incl. --1 John 4:7. Mary's Act of Devotio t Mary ;,noted over the head of tlhc Lord the most precious thin(; she po'sessed, spikenard. This was 1 pure liquid (ointment, the costliest ;tnoiuting oil nscd for the anointing of mints, To the mater- ialistic minds of the disciples this act of 1Ltry's was a sheer waste of stoney, They it crc WWII to the higher valor of love and devotion. Jesus highly commended itlary for bet act of devotion, to the cut• barrassnice,t of her critics. '1'Itat tvliiclh tray tuc:ut it. their ryes was 1o:twiful in Christ's This rvo• n,au s :tet loaf for its motive a Ecr- vant lot c, auul that love made it a good Is nrlc itt God's sigh,. 11c de- clared the filitcs. of Iter act as fuses had ''1 ing I tis approachittg death at,d burial. he account of Mary's love and gratitude has gone forth int,. all lands. Ctirist Among Friends Our Lord is upon !lis great journey which is to end at Calvary, and here we tee Hint i ntcriug the village of Bethany where lived His friends Lazarus, Itlartlta a id !nary. The fact that M,trtltr. received Christ into their house implies she was the elder sister, 1Vhile Martha is busy with the cart of the house. hold I`t:.ry "sal at Jesus feet", an- xious to IeLrn sonic fresh lesson front Ilis lips, Martl,a clta"gcd her Lord with being indiffercot to her cares. By teaching \Lary, itlar'lta felt lle was encouraging Mary to neglert the household duties. ,lartha Is Rebuked Jesus gently rebukes Martha not for her active servic•, but for being so full of care and trouble that her service for Christ instead being a pleasure had hecct,ie a burden. A srieviotts sickness had over- taken their brotuu' Lazarus and Martha and Atary were sore dis- t,essed. They did not say, "Lord, conte at once and heal our brother" they simply told Hint the fact that he was ill 1'o On: that loved it was enough to send tidings; enough that h1e knew it, for Ile does not Ir s -e and fo sake. Princess Wears Mother's Clothes Loudon's first race meeting since 1940 brought the sunniest Easter of the century, So there were record crowds at Hurst Park race course. The ling and Princess Eliz - beth were there. They moved among the crowds around the pad- dock with as much unconcern as any of the holiday-makers. No ostentatious bodyguard; no uni- formed police, The Princess, now 20, wore blue serge coat, blue hat an I veil. Many commented that it was hardly suit- able for such a hot day, But the Princess suffers froth the lack of clothing ration coupons, as does everyone else, She posses - es few clothes specially made for Iter. Most of her wardrobe was originally her mother's and has been altered to suit her, ISSUE 22-1946 1 Length of Foot In Inches Is Size of Nylons Here is I,tuc timely advice from the manufacturers of full •fashioned nylon hosiery to those women who have heel complaining abuul their nett' nylons being small in foot -size, Most retailers are advising assn's to buy a half size larger in nylons, with the result that they arc not getting proper fit in nylon hose. It is out only the length of the foot but also the heel fit which is important. If the stocking is too long, the heel splice will he pulled up too high and rice vet sa. The answer to the problem liet apparently in making sure of foot sizes by measuring your otvu fool accurately. The length of the tool iu inches should be tltc size of you! full-fashioned nylons. If your low, is very Wide, however, you may bt more comfortable in a half sizt larger; if very micron', possibly i lrtlf size shorter would be a bettet fit. But to get the correct size in your glamourous new hill-fashiuuee nylon hose, nlal:e sure of your owl foot measurement. MORNING BLUES are banished when breakfast includes !Maxwell House. This gloriously rich blend of extra -fine coffees is "Rndiattt•Roastetl" to de- velop the full goodness of every coffee betl. Tru 11 111 rainy Slaying Al The St, Rees Hotel • • • rnuuN'r(► 1.:ier) 1lonni it It Itetle, Ahower 111141 Telephone. $IIIgie, $ii,50 up — Ilouble, $3,50 up, Condi Food. dining nod Minc- ing 111grh1I, . she'rbnurnt• ut Curtin'. 'rel, IIA, 4i:Ir Smart Girls Always Carry Paradol in their Handbags Thcv know that Paradol will re. Iieve them quickly of headaches, and other discomforts, as well as help lo check colds. Ono girl writes,—"Until I used Paradol every mouth I suffered al. most unbearable pains. It is the most quickly effective relief I have ever used and there is ino disagreeable after effect." "Fire? Goodness, nol Since I've been serving Grape -Nuts Flakes for breakfast, my husband decided the stairs were too slow." "Would you believe it, I've found that same thing everywhere I've call- ed tttls morning — people rushing downstairs to taste that malty -rich, nut -sweet flavor of Post's Grape -Nuts Flakes." "And you should see my family tear into the day's activities on that good nourishment Grape -Nuts Flakes give them: carbohydrates for energy: pro - tents for muscle; phosphorus for teeth and bones; Iron for the blood; and other food essentials." "IImm .. , may I step in for a bowl- ful?" "Certainly—and I want you to try the simply grand )puffins I've just finished unakitir front one of the recipes on t' ' grape 'tad...Flake/ pack^" JUST IN FUN Nowhere Vittt Irishman: "Which would ycz rather he in, Pat --an espinsion or a collision?" Second ditto: in a collision, be- 441ust in a collision there ycz are, but in an explosion where arc ytz?" Not Hie Coat "Ha, ha!" laughed Bingham "Poor old Ilcnpeckcdl 1 raw you yesterday sewing a button on your coal. "You're a fibber," snapped hen- pecked. "J tell you I did," said Bingham, 1 raw you with my own eyes." Henpecked gave a superior smile, "You didn't," he replied. "It was my wife's coat," STUFF AND THINGS Very Very Slow As the master of the house smoked his pipe th, obi gardener was busy at his digging. Suddenly the old clap straight- ened up with a jerk, seemed to think hard for a minute, then gave the spade a vicious kick. "What's the trouble, Macl" asked his employer. "\\'cel, sir, ye mind that Annie, who was plaid Ihcrc about twenty year ago? replied Mac, angrily. "1 was standing at the hack door wi' her one 'nicht and she said she was (atilt; su I gied her lily muff- ler, Whiles, she said she was still could, so 1 gi'e 1 her my coat An' it's just struck plc that the has wanted me to cuddle her. I'm that wind I didn't think of it before." The Time Had to Come A friend of ours lunching in a crowded Midtown restaurant broached to his waitress the sub- ject of a second lump of sugar and got sternly turned, and dressed down, When she had gone, he felt a tug at his sleeve and looked up into the eyes of a fragile -appearing old lady in a choker collar who had been sitting at the next table, "Here you are, young clan," she said in a conspiratorial whisper, and pressed into his hand a lump of sugar that she had undoubtedly dredged up from a large mesh reti- cule she had with her, "I always carry some. In case 1 meet a horse, you know." Too Fast Johnny "I fell in a mud puddle," Jdother : "What, with your new pants on? Johnny: "Yes. I fell so fast 1 didn't have a chance to take them off." His Name The boy was being interviewed by the rector of a select Glasgow school with a view to his enrol- ment. "What's your name?" he was asked -and replied: "Pa'erson." "What did you say your name was?" the rector demanded severely. "Fa'crson," repeated the boy, add- ing, "with two t's." Partly Understood A young wife, wishing to an- nounce the birth of her first child to a friend in a distant city, tele- graphed: "'Isaiah 9: 6." Which passage be- gins: "For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given•" Her friend, unfamiliar with the Scriptures, said to her husband. "Margaret evidently (las a boy who weighs nine pounds and six ounces, but why on earth did they name him Isaiah'' No Chances A newspaper reporter was invited to take his first airplane trip with a stunt flyer for the films. He was filled with dismal forebodings, which increased when a parachute was strapped on to him and he was given careful instructions regard- ing its use. The stunt man also wore a parachute, and when he put a heavy leather coat on over it the reporter asked, nervously: "How can you use the parachute with that coat on?" "Oh," replied the pilot, nonchal- lantly, "I'd have plenty of time to lake the coat off when we fall." They went up and flew for sev- eral minutes, until, feeling warm, the Muni man began to remove his coat. "Hot, isn't it?" he said, genially, but there was no reply. The report• er had jumped overboard. Publisher HORIZONTAL 1 Pictured pub- lisher, -- \'ER77CAL Gordon 1 1 Beverage 12 Space 13 Female deer 14 'tangle 15 Howl 16 Tavern 17 Erbium (symbol) 0 He was a 30 Dined 19 Doctor of famous — 31 Mine Science (ab.) 9 2000 pounds 32 Electrical en - 20 Near 10 Five and five gineer (ab.) 21 Therefore 18 Rodent 33 Aperture 23 Egyptian Fun 20 Excitement 34 Tree fluid gorl 21 Street (ab,) 35 Sorry 24 Accomplish 22 Either 36 Vegetable 25 Print measure 25 And (Latin) 37 Measure of 27 Give credit -- ■ was a leading 1 Jelly 2 Winglike part 3 Units of length t'two er to t're,tnl,v 1,,, 4 1e E.0RrtY F,lou+4TH F1LQN1= A!I-1l_EP {. A4_,�.rATITr LIE,. g 1 ERI,_Rtl,t�ISj_.. VA t T o US AMY ECL_ A 11-_,.s N4"' Ak. 4P R N T DIV( n R a -. N'.• OARS - ER A _t" ., ,/:v Y_ I ALLEP gER t L. TERS h1Ai:E A 4 State 26 Myself cloth 5 Brought up 28 United Service 38 lnternationa) 6 Lampreys Organization language 7 Short sleep (ab.) 94 Equal 45 Position 29 Make speech 31 Kitten's calls 35 Guide 39 Biblical pronoun 90 Indian army (ab,) 41 Symbol for gold 42 Behold! 43 Notary public (ab.) 99 Palr (ab.) 96 Doctor (nb.) 47 Seecl container 40. Fuel 51 Born 54 Upward (comb. form) 55 Nevada city 56 Anger 57 His Journal 47 Kitchen utensil 48 individual 40 For 50 Uppermost part 52 13ef ore 53 Ever (contr. '.:'HE SPORTING THING BY LRNG 4AMSTRONt3 Adier-itrrI r "You of cut-up!" STUFF AND THINGS rJ,w,� "Oh—it's some fool stunt he picked up in the army!" "You're new here, aren't you?" POP—Forced Labor ..)44g o WILL you FIN0'?!-tt4 MAN 'TODAY W1-10 - ICE OF THE PRESS Guttling (letter Calgary Herald thinks that by the time the government returns our compulsory sat Ings, r,nc third of the recipients will be dead, one third in jail, and the rest will have spent all their's in ad%;incr. 'I 11;11`; better than the last estimate the saw, tthich had 'tin all dead. -Ottawa t:itiien, "Striking" Fact It is a "striking" fact that the standard wage of John 1„ 1.rwis's soft coal ruiner is .Ga 40 per week, -St. 'i"homas Times- Journal. Sombre Thought In those planets where life is now extinct, the scientists prob- ably got just a little farther than ours have got. -Dublin Opinion. 7'hey Also Ran Most pr„l;le who follow the horses Let on the horses who follow tlic h„rres. -7'inunin Press, 'Mornin' "11urnin', 111," "Aforuin' Si,' "(low's 111;11 city fellri you hired fer the summer giltin' ;lung?" "Ain't trot hint no more --he went back to the city.'' "Fire him?" "Nope; he quit," "\That'd he quit (cr.:" "Guess he was afeared I'd µark the Daylight Savin' outa him." "Mornin', lli." "Mornin' Si.' -11ank in Si. Thomas Times - Journal, Waste of Flour tic cause re_taurions-and many housewives as well -think that the only tray in which to slake a 11ala- tahle sandwich is to cut off all the crust, vast quantities of bread are tieing wasted every day throughout the length and breadth of this country. -Brockville Recorder and 'Times. TIIEY'LL ALL IIURiRY HOME if you serve Max- well House. This exira- delicious coffee is bought and enjoyed by more people titan any other brand of coffee in the world. /T CERTAINLY TAKES 77/E WORK ,4ND WORRY OUT OF SR.EAD BAk'/NG j Mode In Canada """ NEW Faster Acting ROYAL Ends Overnight BotherThsk! NE\V Fasr Rising Royal le here! The modern baking discovery that lets you do all your baking In a few hours . , . by daylight! No "setting bread" the night before -no baking disappointments because dough spoiled during the night when the kitchen tem- perature changed. New Faet Rising Royal is ready for action 10 minutes after It's dissolved In water! -R Fu4E5 -Tp J-1 LP HlB WIFE WAS! -I DISE G 7 And the rich, home -baked flavor of bread baked with New Fast Rising Royal will make your family brag about your baking more than ever. You got 4 packets in each carton of New Faet Rising Royal -4 large loaves to a packet. Stays full-strength, ready for Immedi- ate use, for weeks on your pantry shelf. At your grocer's-nowl By J. MILLAR WATT MUTT AND JEFF—It's Either An Early Summer or a Late Spring 0111.1..- 013 BOY! 'AM I GLAD `WOKE , UP! /WHAT A DREAM! GOSH, IT wAS,So REAL! JUST LOX 1T REALLY HAPPENED! WHAT WAS iT, MUTT WE WERE PooR•• WE DIDN'T HAVE ANYTHING To EAT AND WE WERE STARVING! I WAS So • LIN6RY I DREAMED I WAS REALLY EATING THE MATTRESS FOR BREAKFAST! By BUD FISHER REG'LAR FEI -I .ERS—Standing Order WELL, YOU KNOW HE'S TAKIN'A COURSE FROM A CORRESPONDENCE .SCHOOL' iBiilili'rii!t;il;;3#Iilfil By GENE BYRNES TOW( TH MAILMAN MADE 141M 5TAND ON THE CORNER! r, . ,I .•, !1R "ib,. ,w.,M. PAGE 8 it 1 , , , ;i ; , , NEW MATERIALS— FOR YOUR SPRING ANI) SUMMER SEWING HAVE JUST ARRIVED. A Good Assortment of Slub Silks and Ginghams in plain colors and floral patterns. Spring Shoes for the Children, Arch Shoes for • Men and Women - Sisman, Greb and Hydro City. Work Shoes for Men and Boys --- Men's, $3.95 to $5.50 - Boys, $3.25 to $3.50 OIive McGill 1 >IWtIt,' ADMIDOPI ddltAlt)fa)t *714,4114 Dtany►D1D IM;tit .1114Pikat INDINNDM)13krai 'Ob' . "i'++++1.+k' ,Qb'is:b1 '1'•i 444. 4.:41i+.,•'•O4.0,8Hi Oi.444♦..i 4 40. i•M♦I•. ei - Superior -- FOOD STORES -- KELLOGG'S BRAN FLAKES . SMALL PKG. 10c ROBiNHOOD OATS, QUICK COOKING . .. 5 LB. BAG 25c GRADE I BONELESS CHICKEN ... 7 OZ. TIN 53c SELECT CHICKEN DINNER ... ... ..... . . ... 15 OZ. TIN 39c SELECT CHICKEN STEW ....................... 15 OZ. TiN 25c ORANGE MARMALADE _.. 24 OZ, JAR 33c CANNED PEARS AND PEACHES .- ..--.- . - ..... 20 OZ. TIN 20c SNOWFLAKE AMMONIA ..-_...... . ............. . ..... PER PKG, 05c ODEX BATH SOAP ..........................._......---..-_..... - 3 BARS 17c LIPTON'S ORANGE PEKOE TEA ...... HF. LB. PKG. 40c STOKELY'S TOMATO SOUP 3 10.OZ. TINS 25c w THE. STANDARD s .� —�.- PERSONAL INTEREST Doherty Bros. Mrs. \W. Dais of Toronto is spend ing the week -end with her sister, Mrs. GARAGE. Uackerlinc, and \Vill. rs. Louise Anderson spent the ,cock -end with relatives in Palmerston ..___ Acetylene and Electric and Listowel. Welding A Specialty. Mrs. Clara Brown, Toronto, spent a few• days with her sister, Mrs. J. Agents For International. Logan, this week. H`irvester Paris & Supplies Dr. and Mrs, Leslie and daughters, e 'Toronto, stere visitors at the home of White Rose Gas and Oil. Mr. and \Irs. John tills last tvicek. \lr. and \Irs. IIarry \Ictcali, Pais- Car Painting and Repairing. ley, Mrs. \V. J. Purdy, Sarnia, add sliss L. Purdy, Port IIope, spent T'l1cl- day with Mr. and Mrs. George Haines. Rev. I, B. Raine, London, visited at the home of his uncle. \Ir. John Mills. \I r. and \Irs, \l. Cassel, lleaford, spent the week -end with \Irs, 1... J. \Williams. 1f r. Benson Cowan, Stratford, spent the holiday with his parents, dr. and r• \Irs George Cowan, and bather, hill, Benson carte by bicycle, making the trip in three hours. Ile left Saturday for 1lensall to visit over the week -end >+' with his brother George and. family \!r. Ivan 1lilborn returned to the Univers;ty of Toronto at Ajax on 3:Sunday after spending a few (lays with 4. his parents, Mr, and Mrs, Leslie IIiI- 4. b. rn, :i; t Urs. Ed. 'Taylor and son, Paul, Clin- x ton, visite! last week with her parents, •_• \I r. and \Irs. L. 1Iilborn. M r. and Mrs. Frank Whitmore, Hamilton, spent the past week -end with relatives in the Clinton arca, and 4. also part of the time with Mr. and Mrs, )_, Kenneth Whitmore, in Blyth, GARDEN SEEDS, TURNIP AND MANGEL SEEDS �_� 1 mi Elin'rc Winslow, London, NURSERY PLANTS. •11• spent the holidays with her elniin. LiFETERIA AND PIONEER FEEDS. t: '\Irs. R. Newcombe, and also vis:tcd FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES. 't \other relatives an.l friends. J. ' \i r. Percy Harrington, Waterloo 4. We . r� .i:..,,,. E. c ROBINSON. -- Phone 1 t;(; 's '. /Mrs, Margaret Harrington, who is ill spent the week -end with his mother It• 4441141•414H4H+4441.•i"14,+4..444:11i.44iH:H:11/14:+`i •V (, .444:0-4044+4+4444 08. 4:..8++♦•HO+�H� +j{+�H�H�HO.�/ at present. I)r. and \Irs. Ross of I3aden vis'ted Vodden's BAKERY. WHEN IN NEED OF BREAD, BUNS, PIES HOME-MADE CAKE OR COOKIES REMEMBER "TI -IE HOME BAKERY" H. T. VODDEN. .MNrN1NI/N///N/Nt/I'/'/ /INN'N 1 ••I NO I MI al d d km a I I•1 • lad What Do You Read? When in need bf Reading Material for IIoli- days or Evenings, visit our Magazine Counter. All the Popular Magazines in Display. Extra copies of the Toronto Star Weekly available, also the Montreal Standard. A new supply of Birthday Candles and Holders All Colours. The Standard Book Store Notice to Bicycle Owners TAKE NOTICE that under instructions from the Council of the Corporation of the Village of Blyth, Chief of Police Cowan is instructed to prosecute any person or persons riding bicycles on the side- walks within the Corporation. By-law No. 8, 1896, provides as follows:— "That any person or persons found riding his or her bicycle on any of the sidewalks in the Village of Blyth be subject to a fine of from $1.00 to $5.00 upon conviction thereof, before one of more Jus- tices of the Peace in and for the County of Hu- ron, and Province of Ontario, and in default of payment of such fine to be imprisoned according to the laws laid down in the Statutes, The Highway Traffic Act provides as follows: "Section 39, Sub -section 13, which reads as fol- lows: 'No person riding on a bicycle designed for carrying one person only, shall carry any other person thereon.' " Any person, or persons, violating this provis- sion of the Act shall be penalized, on conviction, as set forth in the Highway Traffic Act. 40-2. BY ORDER OF COUNCIL. Girls' Softball Grouping Shuffled Shorter Travelling Distances Make Set -U- More Favourable For Blyth Entry. G. R. Augustine, manager of Blybh Girls' Softball team, annc unr,,s latter's d:am rod. According to reports a shuffling in the groupings which the \Wes'.field team were decidedly off makes tate set-up much more favour-' colour, and errors were re;p ti;ibk, July 11: Goderich Twp. at Londcsboro. able from a Blyth stand -point. for many of the rums scored against Jtdy 15: Dungannon at \Vcstfiel'1. Blyth has been re-group•d tti•'t!t then). IIIr•'cy McDowell started' on July 1G: ilenmiller at Auburn. Brussels, \Valton, Clinton, Goderich the mound for \Vestficld and gave up ( \' Townshi;, and Goderich, which makes six runs in the two innings he tw Irked• Junior Farmers Judging the trap ypor1atioll problem much less 11e was relieved by Tont Jardine, who difficult. fini lied the game. Competition To Be Held Previously the team had been group- ' Westfield line -up --Bill Carter, c: At Clinton, June 15th Westfield Lost Opening Softball Game Westfield lost the o enter in their softball fl -.op 011 \londay night when Ithey came out on the short end of a the 14 to 9 score against Bcnntillcr on the 1 a while on the 24th of May with Mr. xM�,, /,r,,�/�N//�/,.. and Mrs, William Ct ckcrlinc. A. 1. COLE R.O. OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN GODERiCH - ONTARIO. Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted, With 25 Years Experience will be at R. D. PHILP'S DRUG STORE BLYTH, ONTARIO. NEXT VISIT WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26TH FROM 2 TO 5 P.M. TELEPHONE 20 R. D. PHILP'S DRUG STORE FOR APPOINTMENTS. M r. 1I, 1). \(orris and Sgt. and Mrs. Ernest Insley, Toronto, spent the ? tveek-end in Myth, and with other friends in the district. \ir. and Mrs. William Lyton of Thorndalc were tveel:-end visitors with friends and relatives in Myth and '5 Lonrlcs,mro. Mr. Glenn Gipson and Mr, N,ble Holland motored to Guelph last week to attend the annual fox show and S convention itt the O.A.C. \Irs. E. Leggett kvas in St. Thomas last week attending the funeral of her brother-in-law, \Ir. J. Butterworth, i)r. and Mrs. G. Ferguson, and Madeline, Tcronto, spent the week- end in Myth with Mrs. J. Logan, Mr George Sloan, and other relatives. Mr. Carman Haines underwent an ,operation for appendicitis in the Wing - ham Hospital on \f onday. Arr. and \Irs, \V, r;. \Vavnlouth, \Vindsor, spent the week -end with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sundcrcock, Mr, A. C. Robinson, of London, our 6-y and g'rls' hand leader, i' spend- ing a week's v;u:aCo11 in our midst. Mrs. \William 1lesk is vis'Nng her niece, \Irs. (:harks Sundcrcock. Mr, and \ir=. Douglas Greer of Georgetown, vi:,ited their aunts. \irs Robert McGee and Mrs. J. Cochrane on Saturday, Softball Schedule The following schedule of ganger has been released for the softball league, comprising entries front Au- burn, \Vestficld, 1; nclesboro, 11enmil- ler, 1)1ungannon, and Goderich Town. = sh;p: 1 May May " May May June June June June June June June June June ;! June June 1 June June ,lune June July 28: Goderich Twp. at Auburn. 28: Westfield at L'enmiller. 30: Auburn at Dungannon, 30—Bcnntillcr at Goderich Twp. 3: Goderich Twp. at \Vcstficld. I.icnnlifier at \Vest field, b: Londcsboro at Goderich '1'w,>. 11: Dungannon at 1.•-ndcsboro. 11: \VcstPeld at Auburn. 13: Goderich Twp. at Dungannon 13: Londcsboro at \Vestficld. 17: \Vestfictl at Dungannon. 18 : Benntiller at Londcsboro, 20: Dungannon at Auburn. 20: Londcsboro at Bennlilier. 25—Goderich Two, at Bcnntillcr. 25: Londesbor at Dungannon. 27: Auburn at \Vestficld. 27: llenntiller at Dungannon. 2: Auburn at (iaclerioh Twp. July 2: \Vestficld at Londcsboro. July 4: Dungannon at Goderich Twp. July 5: Auburn at Bcnntillcr. July 8: \Vcstficld at Goderich Twp. July 9: Londcsboro at Auburn. July 11: Dungannon at Bcnn,illcr. ed with \Vingham, Ripley, Kincardine 11 ?McDowell and T. Jardine, p; A. On Saturday, June 15th, the Intron and Tiverton. A schedule of games Cc:k 21): E. Snell, ss: M. McDowell. County Livestock JTrlLrituz C:vineti'i':n t ----V SPECIAL TRIS WEEK. VEAL CHOPS. STEAKS. CUTLETS. ROASTS. FRESH PORK SAUSAGES - 25c. HOME -RENDERED LARD. Delivery, Wednesday and Saturday. H. McCallum Wednesday, May 29, 1940, 1 THEY ARE BACK! THE FOLLOWING ARE NOW BACK ON THE MARKET, AFTER AN ABSENCE OF SOME MONTHS. SOME ARE STILL iN SHORT SUPPLY— SCHICK ELECTRIC RAZORS $18,00 and $21.50 ELECTRIC HEAT PADS $5.95 CUPS AND SAUCERS . $1,00 to $2.25 HAVOK MOTH CRYSTALS 49c LARVEX 85c WELCH'S GRAPE JUICE -. 35e POLISHING CLOTHS 25c FLAXOAP ... 25c FILMS (ALL SIZES) THE NEW DESIGNS OF WALLPAPER ARE NOW IN STOCK. MAKE YOUR CHOICE WHILE OUR RANGE IS COMPLETE. ▪ R D. PHILP, Phm. B. DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLP,M'ER—PHONE 2tk, 11. • 11 1 . u vocti IatgoEt4tnctfmulltowictomigtQkitfotooctocict u{tmetetcga QKtcco t( of ■ : We offer a pleasing Variety in Studio Lounges, fit- • ted with Spring -filled Mattresses and Cushions, • covered in Attractive, Durable Fabrics. LOUNGE FURNITURE For downright comfort, try one of our Lounge Chairs. Upholstered in high grade Velour Covers, they are built to last a lifetime. A wide selection of Occasional Chairs in good covers, at popular prices. A call will convince you of the many excellent values we are offering. 1 J. C ell W 4 Furnisher urnisher -- Phone 7 and 8 — Funeral Director. Dt AIIIIMDtatAialitltD IOND>DtAAIr5ttiDM9 tlltlr2 I D 3tD•,2tNrat2tD13t1DMMItDtDt2r10)t)tit)1 '1.,{1:.•:14 44+4H 144 40.••:II:44:41:40•:0.4:I•:11,{44.: .:4•:1 .: 4:44. 414 0.4 •:..:111.:1.:•1:1 .`+:H:11 •_. 4t. >, • iY :. :. :4 • >, :♦ • • >, it HURON GIULL BLYTII --- ONTARIO. EXCELLENT FOOD - GOOD SERVICE Meals at All Hours. FRANK GONG Proprietor �,{+,H+1.:1♦♦H,I.•I+,. r,H+1 •H/••,{ 1•H,1 •,11,11,11,1.11,/,+1 r:H0i,1+:11:11:1 i:11:11:1•:H::+:1 •:.+:{ •:11:H01:I I:H:11:1i:11:i1:�•0 ♦:H:II:i♦1H:H� 1:♦,�I+:H:11:H:•♦:H:.1�1:11:1•:11:1.:11:11:11:.�+11:H:H:11� 1:11:I.:H:1 •:11:11:11� 1:• 1.1 �,:1 •:.1:H:1,:11:11:1�{1� 1:1 •:11:11:11:1.11:•1:H�H�11:1' .-. ._♦ 4S, Butcher. Phone 10, Blyth. 1;:: 1. Y0kX11.:1 MA II.L,.,SI i1. 11 .W :+ - •♦ ::• • :• • 1 New Samples Are Iti WE ARE PLEASED TO AN- NOUNCE THAT OUR NEW SAMPLES QF SUNWORTHY WALLPAPERS • HAVE ARRIVED. Your Choice in a Full Range of Beautiful Designs In a Wile Variety of Prices. MODERN WAY OF REMOVING WALLPAPER. PAINTS AND ENAMELS OF FIRST QUALITY. ••• F. C. PREST Phone 37.26, LONDESBORO :_; 14 4;. I1 ••• N and judging will commence at 9 a.ut, The competition is open to all young :. men between the ages of 12 and 26, ;. who have not completed two years or •• more at an Agricultural School or :_: Colle(•,c. All entries will be divided in -2: to three sections according to age and °• previcus c x,l, e r, e T I r e. There are t' ill n- i:1:H:HIH,1•:H:H.:H:1H•H:H1H.:/�:H:HHHHH.•HHHHHHH40❖:;+I;1��,yv:O::i:::::':,Hv::O::C:C:,*....H,H, Ale cash prizes in all classes and a special Challenge 1'rize donated by I Clinton Lions Club for the high town - shill team. EDITII CREIGIITON'S DECORATOR'S SHOPPE PHONE 158, Bi.YTH. • 411P • : • • • :• • • • • This competition, the first of its kind that has been held in the County since 1941, is being sponsored by the Huron Federatinn of Agriculture, so it k to be hoped there will be a large number taking part and snake the competition a successful one. 3b• J. Snell, 1f; Don Snell, cf; Jim will be held at Clinton. Registr:....,, , for the group will be drawn up this Walsh, rf. will take place at 8:30 a.m., E,D,S•T., Is Your Subscription Paid? . i• 1111 1111 111. 1 1 ,1 ..01 .11 1 .1 l/tttlti "SAVE" WHEN IN NEED OF A PAIR (W SLACKS, SUN SUIT, STRAW HAT, DRESS, PICNIC SUPPLIES, COSMETICS AND GARDEN TO:`LS. SAVE and join OUR SATISFIED PAINT CUSTOMERS. Wendy's 5c to $1.00 Store HOME-MADE CANDY — FRESH SALTED NUTS.