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The Blyth Standard, 1950-02-15, Page 1VOLUME 55 NO, 21, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, FEB, 15, 1950 Subscription Rites $1,50 inAdvance; $2,00 in the U.S.A. S3m3 Real Old Coins Calm • Canadian L:igion Ladies' 1 Rev;. G, Murray Wyatt New Officer Begins Dutis'i i DEATHS , Newly.Weds Tendered ' To Light This Week- ' I, - • Auxiliary . Met 1 . Gone To Kenora II , The following loon will be read with 1'Ai Y—Mrs, Annie Healy, wife' cif Public- Reception During. the pat week the I:d!tcr has The regulur sleet ng of the i.ti'it s' Rev, G. \lurray \Vya+tt,, si)tcc Iasi interest by th,�S't. ,who remember G. R.1 the Tate 1tr. Peter hlcaly', Massed A in crowd gathered in the 14etit• kol(ed over many old coins, a^al talu- Auxiliary to the Can, Hiatt I•egioa was A1ay rector of the Alotglican Churchi 1hrris, who was a - merchant here be- i ate f in `xcott \ctiioriall)11us,)ital, aria) Hall on Friday night to tender laled them for it1,lication• This week's held in the Legion Home on \fitoda at 191)'th, Auburn, and Bcls;rave, dy fury joining the. staff of the Otltar.o Sea rth, on Tuesday, 1 c ru,ry 13• a public reception to 111-, and Mrs, p )' Department of Lauds and bore.ts as' Airs. )teal), suffered a broken hip a r list includes, nitre very ancient cna, February 6th, at • 8 pal, Corrode livered farewell messages to his ► ern - it !cd \\oszczyuski, recant newly-weds, _anti almost clintil'tates any further pob- PhiJi; s, the Pre:ide,•,t, �pres'ded an.l gresations on Sell:toy, prior to Icalhl(, a (aloe- alt"1 fis11 protective officer,tree); prior to her death, land who are now residents of Aiorris licat:on of t:nything earlier than the 22 members answered the roll, for kenos, where Ile has been all- i{• 1farris, newly-ap;oiit.1 con 1 1uueral from the home of her son,' township, (170,1's), unless they are of some spec- 1 uo card parties were, discussssl pointed to the parish of Kcuura• i servation officer for Perth for the fish liar), an Thursday mooring, butt-! J'i)e evening was 'Peine dancing to ia1 nature, • Comrades manni'g, Hall, Bowes an•I., Large crowds were present for his' and wild lite division of the Ontario; era) Hass at lU a.nl.,�at St, .\lief- the music of Jim Pierce andHisWes�t- Mrs. Albert I3rishain banded us the Tasker 1cs;:pnsiblc for the first one oil final message, and at 'Trinity Church department of tants aur} forests, .begin aci's Church, lil)th, fern Maud. During the coarse of ev- fo:l'owin; list: Canadian; 2.`c-,iece; 5c Feb. 17th, awl Comrades, M, 13e11, Illytl►, Rev. 1V. J—Rogers, pastor of his duties in ill's district (Stratford _--- t•_ _ ones the young couple were called to piece with picture of King Edward on Smith, Clavier ant' Ma.:d cks for the die Myth United Church, assisted in Mitchell) on Saturday. Ile reolwees \V, 1 they front and while ltrs, Louis Pha4= one s'de an 1 Queen Victoria Crown on second on March 3rd. the evrn:l11' serviet i':1 '11•:n'ty Chu. -ch, E. \i arc, r'ho some tittle ago trans- Ujl\val'd Price Pressures an rc•:u1 a suitable address, Millar reverse; lc '.Nett{ Brunswick (186;); A letter was read acknowledging and marl)' front the Unite.) Clot cls department to the forestry dtvisin:- of the Disappear Richmond, and Mike Healy presented lc Prince Edward (''rood (1871); 'lc the Christmas box sent to out adopt - as were in the co:,g.egat1 IA as voile fireman (or Perth, n� thein with two individual purses of \'o:'a Sc:a:ia (18611; lc Newfoltnc!latiO <41 'war vat, . C:olnra:',.s Salter,"])owes, as that ch:n•clt concedes! it's ...slat; I lttl'c11 aril Oxford. :1 native of (Tn.,A con:'inutd hi;;h I". 1 of nroduetien matucy, one frau the friends and (1f80); lc Cana''ct (1P9); Half penny, Wl,o-i and '1'asl;d• here 111111 (1 a ser't':cc, fill, \1 r, Ilam: came; to rbcs (11 11 Ct •,tnrl iel41ivcly m:cltant,oA price les„Lis ineighbours, and another from the Pr)�fnee of Corwin (18111; Pen ty, committee to pack a box for Vilritttnc )tat•, and Mrs. Wyatt left on Sun- f•ani Lions Ilea'', "ere he ''pent al- were the main features of Cal:ra•.:ian chisarce gang, w Bank of U±'p.r Canult (1151); hag c,;ty for hint, day evening for 1 ni1:n where they most two )ears as cottgervati, n c•ff. ec�at nr:c lilt in 1911 ricer -ding to the In replying Ted remarked what a list) shill's!, 3 -;tetter,, G-p"^c:., all illi- Cc nuadr \farntn; g"v: a rep?11 on tt•,11 vs:t Inicay wi•h \irs, Wyatt'a C r. Prior to p111is{ the dolor':"'flit annual report of the )look of f.'anacla wonderful rousts) Canada teas -- it c'J (1889) Qu,;'en \`iitvri t vintage; 6- estimates of h tl)!insr c:lph;arils, atoll it tttr';her. They twill also visit at other 1'!)) u1 1w)7 years as�o he nal a s'or� issued h Graham Towers on Feb, 33, wits ,worth living. for, worth ssorkiil for pence (19'0) 1'irt'ria 111110 da'C1 m7tirat. was nut'. in lam- of buil:ling. On ;arts co 1:res before woo; to talc. k,',Pei at !i'•.:h go.. Morels now i, In presenting the )bank's iuu nal and worth diem;; for. Iic and his (18'8, 1870, 18';9, 11'10); l3alf pennies the 111 1 oards, 1 tip their oorl: at Kenc'ra late in Feb- , 1 t•11 at \l'c •1'.•1: tr;i! Irs wife• and Statement of accounts to the \ftnister• bride a; prtciated the great frlcnliness (18'2, 158, 1902,1 , Fart hitt; (18°5) Lt�l \leiter Fran \f'ss 1(uy1' was read ;mar)", •t.cr year-tol ',+) :ht r Any 1^•In 'cs , 1 1•anat:ce \1r, '1'otwers report..it that1slinttn than by .all the ):caple. S. 1 cent (1852): )ictal-Kn:•1; piece; and a reminder of the zone lolly on The hearty -a1211 rector, Re:', 1(1';crdi:ua ..+ a!:! 1'.h regulon,. ,,!the physical otb:ptot of all goads and Belgium (1O), Chinese 20 sen, 2 'en, April 11, in Gnde ir.h, I John Roberts, cif \lirrcr, :1lberta, twit ++iaa he .11 rtwarded to 1) 1 there, ll I, rev:ccs teas nearly 3 per'ent hi;,rher and 1 sett; Straits. Settlement 1 cent, The s'ee'm, c! 'sad' and 1•111cwoog assume his duties in the parish (11 said 11111 lues nc could to) r{+ t m than iu 19:8. L'pttard price trressures Hullett )flan Heads Goderich to Ameba. 1 I ' d loos)) «,'h him by tc!c;'ronin,. zul!ea lar•;ely disappeared for ti'e first time School Area' Board since the beginning of the war, The ' (11',71); Gorman 2P1 (1831), • this the Legion atilt the r wiv:s w-erc t ln'f tt . Mrs. \Viii, 1)111rytoplc,; American In. cn'.er'ainc11, Pro;r'ss've coshre at•7s dia1:,it; n•)y I!h a); East folio Company enjoyed and h•tlrh was served by tlt^. 1 -cc i` (F45); Gmt)ad'an V;ctorio 1. committee, News From The Kyles .First- Blizzard Of Brief cent (18r9); one Franc, paper money; •---•--v ----- a whither of Chinese cons, • \\'rill:.); to renew his subcliption to Duration V Bill Cowar4 l.orde:')oro, soit of Mr. Huron County Old Boys Lay The Standard, N, \V. Kyle offers the and Mrs. C.^n gc Coyle,: Several7 fcCa,wiug rcn:arlcs, These of us who had lolled oursel- pieces Irish free State money (current l RIBS For Golden yes int) the (hope) that 1101-0 tt•oulcl F Anniversary\re you bawls_, ane 1\ inter up be tic, Snow this MIIter were reels. ismle), Penny, 11ahE 1 en �y, 3 pens) 1I1ert;? -Down here there 15 113 sign of shot ked by the weal: erman on Mon- nd G -penny,, The lrltcrinr�� is in C; 'I 7lte Ifuron County Old Boys As- snow at do only mud. For the past day aftenumn and eves-ddog twhca this i;;! 1918, L'ncnlplo)rnrnt ryas same-'Aolthetd; 17, D, Moor°, \Vest 'Wawa- lo,also an English half 1i,thi'• r nosh; \, Patterson, last \Vawancsh; g snciati)at of `Turontn, iindc- th ; ).oiler- col:p.r of •,Ise es 1 have been runninS ,listri•a, and a'p; arently all at \\ .stern +what above the very low level of 19,8. ` ' (177x); nisi a 193`!`liasl African Sc' ship of Mrs, Doris Parton, 31),p l'resI- tl.e 1Vest land sub branch mot it loofa tont:11 0 ex'ler111111I the winter's first undoubtedly 111110 had bccu sols. 1:, Bisset, Huron. County; J. A. Snider, Piero, minted d :'it g the r:'t,n of T d" dent, is pi:tonin one interestia � ev- its if that is going to be my Goderich Public School Board; judge r r � `� + g b >' jpl,• 1 blizzard. Althou;eh it was of brief .difficult situations in particular 1•:ca1• J ge wart) \ I:1, As far as \[r. C awart onus to celebrate. the Golden Auniver- hope s') as it is just like living buck i0' chi;'tion, it reminded ns that old matt' 1)ics and industries. " i T. \I, Ccslc,ln, Separate School Board, knot.' there are only about 50 r.f these sit-) of its urgiu;;lizatictu' lift) years age, ;t stip town, 1\'e are right across the tr:n':e- can take charge )f the wrath- j \I r. Totters compared economic con-� All members were )resent except colts .in' circtl,atimt. Alyn it Qu�rtt For the first Cm' in its histor�• the rcwul frau those new !tuts like inter \I r, Bisset and Nits Hodges. H. Af, Victoria Ula11tond Jultilee coin dat^clHarvester, plants er on a moment's notice, The snow dinnns in the United States and Can• (1F,$7), iib the Iur)erhtl Cent of Arils :1s:,cciation is headed'by a memb� of 1 1(1rnal 1lai, ester, I iinde alba 1)at:c'h, `really blew amtlit<l int the good c»ltt- i oda •durlug 144'). • ''Ghon..' in U, S, herd «as elected vice-chairman; and CM it, it is a silver G pence oral is the the ,air sex, Airs: Parton Who prior Libby, \Ic\t 11 and Libby, Cautpb,ll trifles.) wintery wily fardel Ills ev-: busitress cowl:•tic-1s normally exercise A. R. Scott was re-a119011111ed secre- rr11y siker coin that was stinted bear- to her Marriage was Doris Parton. dough Soup, etc, that 5011 pass 0n 111e road enrol, Inst by morning the sting wag a very strong influence on the Coul- ter tory-treasarar, of \I is ate,) NI 1,.‘"). Hugh 1iill of 'to \\'iudscr, \\ tth the exception of gone; a11(1 it was sleelinrr Rain fell dian situation,' the Governor coin lits the Its:es l Coat of Aran, ,3d ev Cowan believes to detach. has, duringthe past few friday (pay days) when the office is 1' ern'i'tcnr1y during' Teesdty, awl I mooed, "It is a matter of some in - it's value is arousal been a fait1) n1 ac(1 enthusiastic a tntd bcvae for about. an h6tn• or so, ito-rhv, \Vcdnesdav, it is fair, but cool' ,crest, therefore, that there slom,Idh•tve OBITUARY $.5 co,• svhsleotle price inclex ('ec'hted about Arthur Grange, Mullett township, 2 percent, and the cost of livltt; index, was elected chairman. of Goderich rose whom 1 i:ercent, 1)istrict Collegiate institute Board at Althotnalt the gen.erai econccntic sit- I the inaugural meeting. - nation was good in 1949 1110 report 1 The Hoard also- is composed of the perioral out that in certain respects the; following: I1, \f. hord and F, T. Arm- piclure had not been completely situs- strong, for Gaclericlt town.; Geo. C, factory. The physical volume of our 'Giros Gcderich township; E. E. Rob- exports was 3 percent less in 19.49 that,' ertson, Colborne; George I-Iodges, Worker in the Association and is well the rest of the days are very easy and enough to freeze rc:ldcrfoot and nbake been a sharp contrast betwr'en the WILLIAM CLARK John 1iar:!ist} : a otte,d liar bill qualaied to give the organization Cap- you has e a' chance in talk to your ems dr,v,tte and walking treacherous, . trends esd•!ent in the two c:onssinies (18)8) a rather odd looking,Tcharacter, aide leadersh'p in its Gulden Jubilee tuners, in fact if they comb in early : The boys o11 the east side of main during 1949.' William Clark, aan employee for 20 to -day; shlnp'aster (1870); four-�penlig year. in the morning WCusrally bye a cu;); street were squawking, as all the soCanada, lie said, did not show any years of the Goderich lllanufacturin piece (1813); half faithless ('$11); Other executive officers recent),' el- of coffee for the first feat custontci's•.p{icd ole that sit of the tllorrnr^hfarc,�scrintls effects from the `rather sharp ars died in rllexalsktra•Hospital Shilling, George i1( (1$20) ; • Coterns:v ectal for 11;50 werg,' First Vice•Pre l,, \Ve drive 00( from the )pain branch 'something, that do:sn't haopcti tea or -1 recession' which took place in the U..� on Sunday .venin;g in his 70th year. Island (8 doth)..') (18.4);• one Penns' dent, \lama;ur R. C::atiolin, formerly each morning and hack after three and Oiett in an; ordinary winter, Naturally I S. The estrtituted high level of .con- I Ile was horn in \\'idiom, and had liv- (IC06); Province of Canada 1121"k Tok- of Exeter; Seers) Vice -President, ,J, finish off the' day's syork there, \Ve the lads on the west side were quite otitic activitt- in Canada cotad be at- cd in Goderleh for the past 25 'years. ell a^I: 1'emny ,0,87); \a;"lens llt, Ilarvey \lesser (Wiugham); Secret like Chatham very mach and I lotoe pleased with the situation, trihnted its part tu•the fact tdnat the He was a member of the Free ltet(t- Cnlltt.(1861); >}�cs't1 Scotia, tl!C. .CL'tlt ,t;ll'y,• i' 't;I1'lt (,• Stalb!)l11'y (1 xetor ; ga111Cd 111'aSl of Ili)' nl(J .tdnlj p^P,i fir' em......./.....4. ^�• O;!ISt t-11):'rcIt and of thc,Caltad?a'1L OC - accumulation of war -time • demand fore. cp ).ic c r`L • A sus:ant 5c:r.:nry, miss hwa Rrin'u cxanrp e have been top bowler or goods and sorrier' in Canada was der of foresters, J3esides Itis wife, Sona Boal 011 Oit•I7 ((}russets); Treasurer, Elgin Coots the iritic team )n several of sur Inglis; C,'I'nlon District Collegiate worked off ,more slowly, and a more formerly \lacy Mitchell, he is survived While visiting; n Em'4land a year (1Vir,ghanl), Thr seism District Chair- games, \Ve play every 'Thins 183'. Ily gradual process of. decontrol after the 1 by one daughter, \'r,ra of Goderich; Igo, Mrs, Alf. Nesbitt. fell he' to a nett are as follows; Myth a d District, the .sole sr(I clipping- you will src'tdtat t Boar(1 Sets Up Committees tear had spread tbt. up«acd pressure , ttwo brothers, Charles Clark, of Fres- few, coins, giwcln her by del mother' I o':er� Lriter; llrussels and District, .the' Kyle family can s't'ill get theft! 5 It.i c on prices neer a longer period of lima no, Cal., Egitest of Port Huron; alnkl One of these is particularly old (doted \lis' Vera Gardiner; Clinton and Dis- name in the paper, 1� ndest rers-nal . t, t l in, cc n,;nitte'rs fur ll5J were In addition, there was the strength int -I two sisters, \Irs, Myron Matthews, 1134), 1t is not too distinct but the 'britt, Fred Elliott; Exeter turd' 1)is• 'regards to you and to all our woo 'a' 1)�►•ntcd at the Febrl ary nnect:ll ; of t ) out \Irs. Floyd Belcher, bath of Port word :"Rrhannia" and. the piercer' trim, hernc McLean; Goderich aid) friet:ds in lllyth and cmnntun'ty, Ii the Chtton� District Csilegiate Insti_ Iarted to our economy by the res.,arccl; )' discoveries of recent years, The ick- i Huron, probably oil the Kiln ;t rl Queen of District, \Irs, 1). '['h ul,p-on; Seafdrth Doctor I-Iotot. comes back to Blyth be- Kate Beard, Ali members were in at' up l' eenns''1'hc. funeral service was held at tlto that date, are quilt distinct fpont and and District, \Irs, J. A, Brod' \\'ins- fore le toes back to ]ian.itgtun liar- tendallace and chairman A. Al, Kuiprat outictaetivityednririg1t'recllatter statrmonths T3r)phey funeral home Tuesday at 2 back of the 'coin Gperhaps sonuo t0 hail 81:ul District, Mrs, \, G, Smith, hour, tell 111111 he has• to conte to see pl,lsidcd, tet of the year had erased a cc>r snlerable" p.tn, and was conducted by Rev, W. can tell t s the name of the Kir(,* and, To opcu the year's activities it social' us in Chatham. Very sincerely—Norv. I s 1 t .tt, committee, consistulr, of „ Crawfont Cowherd of the Free Meth - Queen roster; (i. 1„ falconer, ;11x1 :\, )'art of the divergence which appeared c Queen of that date), Mrs. Nesbitt al- evening is being planned for Saturday,( W. Kyle.furls',* the. fhst lullf of the year odist Chgrclt. interment was made in so has a stil'l'itg dated (1697) and two February 25th, at the West End \'.M,1 \I. Knight, presented the following re.. The growth of the Canadian cotta_ Colborne cametery, others of the rotie t i oast old/ n t C,t1., College and Dovercourt Road, t tat! he to following the c congratulatory g efers in de- r.ttnuttnce chairman) +h ntt+ln c,t t rcpertty)t('l 1 f first roan '_,. ,r_ r ._ dist'tr_t; she has two 7.I) (serf,y ) • Property, i duly was highlighted }n the report by ( Porooto, 'There will be cards, games, Falconer,...mg.; initis; cots (1831) farthin;, and ore meat in last weeks Standard, to Jit.k,i0. R. Foster, M. Richmond, J. I:. \lc -'a �cmparison )f fi,,nrof fur 19x8.9 atr,d HOCKEY TEAMS NEARING u fascist, (old time snit modern) and the yot'at;est member of the Kyle Cant -!Kinky; finance, .1, E. NIcKin10 G. L.11928-9, he volume of personal eon- PLAYOFFS (1913) farthing. refreshments, , r )') 1 Suntptinn was about 80 percent great- '1'he editor also has a few old coins, I ily, ( lith(( is -self-explanatory Reic1, hr v. 1i • J. ivc>;crs, G, 1.; hi'cun� ; er on the at rh.us in 1948-9 than20 Other events being arranged aro.' tl c'rIn site_ of the mild 'winter hockey ' one .of which he 1)'s hen cat•r'lrg 'n 1\inner of the Kent County t)rat• er; study and welfare, G.' 12, Foste:,t1 Y t, al'asal costae itton for the AlcLarcn c,ry Contest last'niglit «as Jack 1Gyle, Rev. W. J. ):ager', Rev. 11. C. 1Vils;u,' years ago, After, allowing for the to; trams have been fortunate enough to his ltckehtlltrint the past few tweaks, 1laphy for the euchre championship \'ictotia Avenue United Church, H; 1rvi1le 'I'cbbitt; tran'p^rtatirn, I. Trb-'crease in population, the irnrrcitse t� routs( out most of their scheduled It is (we think) an old English coin, hf the Association, to be held in M,trch thysical cons::on )tion The date Is (1673)and is quite distinct cooped the Foliar at the litterdettom- butt, \C. Rielimond, I), McKenzie, J.18 1 I per ca;tita was games by working overtime vvhe)t the l a and the Amoral Picnic which will prr.b- ivalianal Young Peoolc's Fcl'ows',i) W. \'M, 1' roarbout 30 percent in. this perird. weather was cold. The date, the 'Cont of Arms, and the ably be held at high Park ata. Friday,; In reviewi(:�r moilciiary ronditlons Londeshora 13.-e1.s wound u t their letters "C. it, S," rpoear cart one side, of Chatham in St, t\ndrew's 1'n'te(1, f1 depintanatu reprrscut1ts I)ayfiel( 1 t June 1Gt11. Church. '1'hc •+-icty venture of co.o err r\grim?feral Society addressed the duritu, the year, Mr, Towers noted! regular schedule on Tuesday night itt and ott the other is a Crown, two v✓that there had been a• small increase in: + crossed arrows and the . inscri )ttou, ation 1)0100en the County '1'entperar.�cc' Board, requesting co-operation fn al- a saute at Brusse.s, which tliep Josh. 1, or, 5:\L The coin (s co;,tcr, and . 9 { Organization and the. City Young 1'e) low the students of C.I).C,[. to exhibit, atom 5mbpply and on halon:. some They start t'?1c ata) -offs an Friday „ „ . i t T r1 ' United Church W. M. ►�. isle's Sscleties proved Idei:ly success at Bayfield Fall Fair, Consideration 1 decline iib public holdings of other n:eft against Teeswater, awhile Ilrus- - ahaut twice the weigh( of a ..fe•p'ec2, liquid assets, The increase in char- sols and Drayton meet in the other \Ve have a number of other coins dat- Meeting ltd. ` Rev, Clifford Park presented the was prcanised, i y' • Ina from 1800 up, but these arc hardy 1 g! Ibored ))aorto loans and nonGoverumc+tt half of the -semi-final rounud. Cup, provided lir the County Or r It-' A[cr thy 1•,0,1.., Cliuton, was granted the Feontary meeting was held om izafion and to he lu'!t by the \sitrn►n, ;)rintisslo►n tt7' use the anditutiuttt of investments in 1949 was considerably] Clita:rl;t Colts have enjoyed a good worth ntetttitining'. Monday evrttiti the lath at the the school' on 23 fora social •less tltaln in recent years. There was season this year, having not lost in a. church for a year, Thr four contC.aa large volume of urn)-Goverement se- single group scheduled. game, New ...........r...117.6...•••••. home -of of Mrs. \Vm, Logan, Mrs. Keith ants from the city were Mo. Ky''e evening. AMONG `i'hIE CHURCHES \\'ebster presided for the business Mr; Fragile Wales, First Presd)ytcriatt Principal 1: A, Fines' report for curity issues dttrittg 1949 which was Hamburg appears to be their toughest meeting, I-Iyultt "Spirit of the Living Church, who presented '(The Case .laniary showed an enrolment of 247 absorbed by public intc�t,.rs rather group oP3Tosikion, • !MYTH UNITEb CHURCH Gee. was sting. Gifts of clothing for 1 Against' Intemperance" ; 1[iss Jean and an average attrndan'; of 233,1, nr' than the banks whose hri�din4s of such; The \Vinghant Staunton -Spitfires 'Rev, \V. J; Ro ers,.Alinister, children aria) infants In Mission School�. 9.4 per cent. , investments showed, some decrease on have been; equally successful ht their Martin- also of First P es,byter:an 1 10;151 Sunday School, ' at, Cross hake, Mara, are to be brought , Church, speaking on "The Need for 1 - o 1 the year, trout,), having only lost one gable this 11115; Morning Worship, to the. next meeting, Mrs, • Holland sestet- Lit'hn;"; and miss Laura Dca-i V""`'-' ; season, to Listowel. 7:30: Evening \\"orship, had charge of program, hI ani "\1c\re i, Huron , Farther north, the Walkerton Iron - t p S can, Alliance Tabernacle „Ito asked Tun or Farm W111 Love to Thee" was stuns,*, Mrs, Philp the question, "Am 1 My Brother's! ' BOWLING ALLEYS ARRIVE hitentettt seem to be the class of their t=are a piano solo, Assisting the lead " • , Visit Toronto - , group, and many local sports who have Krc{ er+ (n his \sinr„rt; oration lfr, Mr, Frisk Gongs bowling alleys seen them go are preddcting that they ST, ANDREWS PRESBYTERIAN er twee. Mrs, ilililrpy, Mrs, AI Cal- byte drew `a picture of social groups ( Two bus loads of yv.utg farmers and arrived last week, and are 14:nv stnrcrl CHURCH loin and Mrs. 13righant, )firs. Frank t 1 b ' ` tool take an; awful lot of beating be- 12cv, J, 1lone}'titan, 13,A,, U,1)., Minister ',Marshall- had charge of the Study whose congenial fellowship was first young farenerettcs are to go to Tu- in the basement of his building, which fuer 1lie are eliminated from O,II,A. Years," et:+,�ancecl and then destroyed b; � l-oltto from Huron county Feb. 27, ac- Ile intends immediately to start cull- Inter titers tr (I3) mated competition, Miss Sidney Phillips, Organist.. [look, Graving with the false and illusory enjoynncnt of alco-,cording to plans now being drafted by \erring into a modern bowling alley. ._.._ v._.._••,• Stutday School' at 10:30 aan, s eh'al�ter on' christianizing the social or- hot. Perrp'e drink primarily In -scare Ute i)eparfulrut of Agriculture office The building was forauerly occupied 1\'orshlp Service at 11 a.m. der, The church is working in 1I,C a. sense of inferiority or to loosen their' at Clin on: The. et;u:atioatcll tour of I by \Vasnuatt's bakery. Malting List Corrections seri t "1lretlt:cn, lty IIeart's De- and all tiirottglt Canada to tlte. east t.ongnes and pot, themselves at ease int Toronto will take boy members of May Be Delayed sire, Conte and hear the Truth of coast, helping to look after homeless acleeo he said "butt unfortunately al- • Junior Farmer c:hubs to see the Canada .lite Word of God. , : men tbntf woolen, opposiltg liquor attd 001)01 Is no cttre for itufetiarity psychic, Packers establishment an:11 Massey- HOME 1+'RO11 HOSPITAL ile-cause of the stress of rush job gamblin.l'u'lls, trying 'to keep good tnaladjustmriit, Instead it produces a Harris factory in Toronto; the girl Albert \Vasson, son! of Sir. and Airs. printIt it may be impossible to bring; TRINITY CHURCH, BLY1'14 . movies, ant' prevettt Sabbath being disintegration of personality which in- t n1an:'hers of the touring party, meas- Gcomge \Vasson, retuntte)b home (ram The Standard mailing lists up to date '1'1t,=l;ietnt, L'•tlar(hllg,• 17,(;,A,1%., l ccnilncrcial'Izecl: School fatties assist ltr.nsif1es the very evils it promise; to 1 while, will be slaking conducted tours /the Clinton hospital on Sunday, after I for the next two or three weeki. If Clinton, in Charge,, and agricttltetral methods 1telp hmorove relieve and brini7s a host of personal' of a big (la,artntent store and of a undergoing an operation • for appens•' you're label is not changed, don't Miss Alice Rogerson, Organist: and 1 conditions 'at' home and abroad, Loper' aryl 5001',1: t:isabilities. Cont)cler young.' chain grocery headquarters. dicitis. I worry tntd(dy about it. • -. -- Choirmaster. • are looked after by Missionaries ac:0ss •(tea; le whether total ahstairnan^e 'dal Boys and girls are to join forces for;• This is fiu•antial statement time and p.nt,3 Stinday..5chooh Canada and around the world She not, on every basis of ud,;ment, the a visit to Queen's Park to see the Congratulations to Mr. ;(onset Cook most of them, practically all of Butt,- . 3 P.M. 1 s'cllicaT Prayer. i church is helping. A delightful htneh wiser way," Mr. Kyle concludes. Onta' io I.egis!ature. i of 1_ontesbaro, «lin celebrated lits arc rush. jibs. Everything else has to TRINITY 'Ct1URC11,, BELGRAVE ., was served by the grout hi chart.. of , r "re lig the board" until theyare Ir,•0. )s. laticaster; Retrtor;• \V9h'sthain r, Mr. \\m :floor • of [llenhcint, 1 resi=: Eight boors and eight girls from each birthday, Sunday, February 12111, the meeting, Thirty-six were presenf' (lent of the County Temperance Fed.' of the five Junior Farmer units in the Con ratulations to 11r. Leonard eout.P.'cted, 'Mss .Norte .\TanCainp,';0rganlst •.The 'Myth %lion meeting for Wo. • , orad Cbnirnm i ter. erahon, was in chairse of the contest, comity are to make tit) the 80 mem- Cook of Blyth, who celebrates his Right now we are Mister than a fano. - tu0)) s \Nardil Da • of Prayer mill be 1 t30'1),tn, t Stutslay•School, held Friday afro limit, hebr:tary 24th. judges aver. -array . init 1, lir. I3'sr- bers of the party. The Jui�.'ior Farm.' birthday on Monday, 1�ebroary nth. ily of beavers building a clam.. :30 pair.1 Stiiid 1±(ti Prayer,. gess of Voiotia, and Mrs, Henderson er dolts are at Exeter, Dungannon' Congratulations to Mrs. Richard v —� 3a N11.k'S eniig CN; AUBURN' to the United Church school room. of Blenheim. Mr. Snaith presrn'ed Clinton, Ps:lgrave noel in I-lowirk town- Leggett of East \Va«•anaslt, who cele- Purchased Farm t:=l..ieitt. Harding,' 1t,C.A,h.; Clinton. ,, - } the tees -wet of the judges, i.1iss'J. mar- ship.. 'Clinton is to be tut main as- I)zates her birthday an Thursday, 170- jr's. Gordon `Tit i;r, Otgntiist and P1 1..SQNAt1 INTEREST tit* was a close second, 'and Frank nimbly point for the party. Fred Wil- roars' l6th. Mr. ;and Mrs. James Scott iltave'put* ' • • Cho'rntastet: ' . lir, 'and Mrs, R. ,W: Madill and Wales avas. placed third. to addition son, 'assistant 'agricultural represen- Congratulations to Evelyn Young of chased Mrs. Albert Drigham s fartu ilii :3') ti,lio;,-Stinlay_ School.: ` family s'?cnt Sunday with relatives at to the cep the winners were presented tatire fcr Huron, is to be the ccmd:c- Auburn who celee)rat4s her 14th birth- ' the 13th concession' of I-itillett, aatt�i : 'takes possession the first of-Itfaredt, ' .(1851) Republic f Guatemala('8 ') l I I b' f Cancer Information Becomes More Available. -Controller Leslie Saunders officially opening the Little Red Door, Canada's first cancer information centre, ' Mrs, Egmont L, Frankel, chairman Toronto Women's committee looks on. The centre was opened with the approval of the Canadian Medical Association, and a graduate nurse will be in attendance at all times, • As part of her duties at the new centre, the nurse will make available to the public all inforination, booklets and other ma- terial pertaining to cancer control, will interview patients and direct them to clinics for the proper care. TIIEFMM FROT Jo Every paper 1 pick up nowadays teems to be full of tales regarding farmers and Government subsidies. Practically all these stories tell of meetings of poultrymen, milk pro- ducers, grain growers and so forth, ,all unanimously agreed on one thing -Ito matter how much the proposed subsidy is, it isn't nearly enough, * * And I don't blame them a bit. "Ask for twice as much as you expect to get" may not he a strictly moral sentiment, but it seems to be fairly practical, the way this cock- eyed world of ours functions these ,days. * * Still, it never does much harm to look at a picture from several angles: and the fact that the fol - I lowing editorial is from The Finan- cial Post shouldn't blind us to the fact that there might be just a tetny mite of sense in it. The editorial was titled BEHIND THE SUBSIDY. * If a farmer in Ontario wants to grow more wheat he goes ahead and sows it without asking anyone's permission, It is his own business how much or how little wheat he grows and most people will agree it should be his own business. After all it Is his own farm, machinery and labor that are involved, * * * But across the border from Ontario, in New York State; in a country which prides itself on being the freest in the world, these matters are handled differently. There in the name of a local com- mittee a Washington appointed bureaucrat decides how much wheat and a great many other things the farmer can grow, Various allot- ments are issued and if exceeded one finds himself without a market. * * * One owner of a 200 -acre farm thought his allotment of 13 acres for wheat was on the small side. When he applied for a larger allot- ment last fall he was told he would have five minutes on a cer- tain Tuesday afternoon to present his case. He was also told that if be failed to appear, the authorities might consider such failure as a waiver of his right to appeal. t * Naturally this sort of thing a used some resentment in New York farm circles but when the law was questioned came the real shock. Because the wheat growing was subsidized with taxpayers' money the Government had a per- fect right to regulate the industry, the farmers were told. And when one thinks that over, why not? Otherwise the Government would love no control whatsoever over the spending of the money it collected from the public. * * * That is something we should remember in this country. * * * In recent weeks there has been a lot of loose talk in Canadian agricultural droll!' about subsidies for various farm lines. Farmers have been told about the many advantages, of how the prices would . stay nice and firm even when the market was just the op- posite. But they haven't been told mush about the other side of this subsidy busiaeel, of the state dictation that is certain to follow. * * * So much for Mr. Financial Post. Now let's talk about something not so theoretical, I know that a lot of my readers are interested in the possibilities of commercial sun- flower growing; and although this Government advice was addressed specifically to farmers in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, there's no reason Why it shouldn't apply just as well to large sections of Ontario, * * * Sunflowers -the bulletin says - have become an important vege- table oil crop in southern Manitoba during the past few years. There has been a remarkable increase not only in the acreage involved but also ini the number of growers and the extent of the territory. Many useful practices to aid in the production of the. crop have been developed by research workers and by the growers themselves, says NV, A. Russell, Dominion Experi- mental Station, garden, \fan, * ,t * Due to a shortage of first genera• tion Advance hybrid seed, a con- siderable acreage will be sown with second generation seed. The grower should know the germination of the seed he intends to use, It is an approved practice to treat the seed with either New Improved Ceresan or Arasan at a rate of 1% ounces per bushel, * * An application of fertilizer at seeding time has usually given at least a shall increase in yield. The fertilizer hastens maturity. Thus re- sulting in a lower moisture content of the seed at harvest, Ammonium phosphate 11-48-0 should be ap- plied at a minimum of 30 pounds per acre or, if seeding on stubble land containing much straw, 16-20.0 should, be applied at a minimum of 70 pounds per acre. The fertilizer requirement varies with the , soil type, available soil moisture and soil temperature. Every, farmer should do some experimenting of his own to determine what Is generally the best rate of applica- tion for his land, * * The increase in suIIflDller acre- age has been accompanied by an increase in diseases. Sclerotinia root rot has not caused great losses thus far. Nevertheless, traces or more of it were found in 75 per cent of the fields examined in 1949. A rotation wherein sunflowers are not grown on the sante land more than once in four years and where they do not follow other susceptible crops, such as potatoes, sweet clover, beets, peas and alfalfa will help control the disease, * * Rust has been more prevalent TRACTOR $149'° Delivered to You Twelve months is pay, Order now gnu IFS score when too need It, Two rear, �ba,rantee. Very narrow for eloee lzttint, A CHILD CAN OPERATE 1T Over powered with most modern Willi ale cooled engine. Light plow• lab eultivating, eenffline, Billing and wee. eeetroi. Power -take -off for other toss, Kmple, strong and enmity handled GARDEN POWER TOOLS LIMITED West 1110 (Nearborn), Ont. in the part two n, on the female parent in' crossing CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING blocks, The 1psses from this disease Ian be reduced - by seeding early, by not planting sunflowers on:the same land in two rucceselee years, and by ploughing under old sun- ,. flower stubble to bury spores which live over the winter on this trash, Volunteer sunflowers shottld be destroyed early in the growing season by cultivation or spraying with 2,4-D because the rust may start to reproduce on these plants. Since this disease is most destruc- tive in the _main sunflower area, most profitable returns from cross- ing blocks can -she expected where the crop is less concentrated, * * * Further information on sunflower growing may be obtained by writ- ing to the Dominion Experimental Station, Morden, Man, Why Mine Gold? In recent times, with the intro- duction of managed currencies and the control of prices of Many things, people have asked "why mine goldi" It is often accepted as a faot that gold is mined from the ground with great labor and at the expense of much money and mat- erial, only to have the gold buried in the ground at Fort Knox in the United States. It has been said that the only good purpose to which gold has been put is to fill teeth, These, of course, are very super- ficial and short-sighted views of the significance and value of gold,. In spite of the fact that many govern- ments and politicians decry gold as useless and even dangerous the vast majority of the people of the world continue 10 regard it as precious and to seek it and hoard It, As so often happens when rulers deal with people they fail to allow for deep-rooted instincts which are of- ten sound, There is no person in the world today who will not ac- cept gold In any form or shape in return for goods and labor. In fact, .these arc people, many of them, who have goods or services to sell, who will not take anything else, There are excellent reasons for this attitude. These reason; are outlined In detail in a bulletin prepared by the Canadian institute of Alining & Metallurgy, a non-profit organiza- tion composed of engineers and technicians. Copies of this bulletin are available without charge by \%'ening or telephoning to Brewis & 1Vhite Limited, 40 Adelaide St. VV,, Toronto, Ont. Teachers, stud- ents, libraries, lectureers and others Who may wish to broaden their knowledge of financial affairs would. find this bulletin useful. Before the Romans finally con. d;uered England and \Vales in A.D. 85, Britain was subjected to mmiler- ous invasions by various tribes. Ro- man rule lasted for 400. years, and then continuous invasions began again by Teutonic tribes., Things eventually settled clown with seven kingdoms in , England, The Celts of \Vales, the Picts and Northmen of Scotland, and the Scots of Ire- land were in control of their own territories, And the RELIEF 1S LASTING For fast, prolonged relief from headache get INSTANTINE, This prescription -like tablet 'contains not just one, but three proven medical ingredients that ease the pain fast. And the relief is, in most cases, lasting, Try INSTANTINE just once for pain relief rind you'll say as thousands do that there's one thing for headache 1 t , It'e INBTANTINEI And try INBTANTINE for other aches, too , , , for neuritic or neuralgic pain .. , or for the pains and aches that accompany a cold. A Bingle tablet usually brings prompt relief, Gel InitentIne today Ind Malys keep II bendy nstantine 12 -Tablet Tin 25t Economical 48 -Tablet Bele 691 ISSUE 7 - 1950 - AGENTS WANTED FOR BALE ,�� Oi'I'IIRTUNIT11t•9 1'011 MEN *Kr 1Y AGENTS, .e11 popular 98 nee extiniufeher ! , Wholesale or dtreot, Liberal profit., mit- -1,81+14Resort, good location, wonderful soli-•''• aE A 13AIRDRESSER'' % _.__ te Ito. 14g, 40 ocean of land- Write Mrs. Lena JOIN CANADA'S LEAPING' Sf'•H001 Great OpHalypodreortunelllnys Lea earn L,. Pleasant dignified profeooion, good wages • thousands successful &larval graduates America's groateel syelem. hluelrated cats' logos free. Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS 860 Dlaor Sl. W , Taranto Branches, 14 King St Hamilton h 72 itldenu Ftreel, Gnaw MP-KILLERLookout, Ont,, Canada, OhriatInk, fax 57$, MAO). Like, Sioux 6011 Boat" Avenue, MontrealONE A.C. OENERATOU 3000 Walt with SECURITY THE EASY WAY -BY 0111ing Ilquld•cooled 4 cylinder motor, 'feed about EUI9LEIC product., We need agents In your 60 Bout.. Apply 11, Cooney, Dox 661, Peter - locality or In your ,ourrounding rural area, boro. Equipment needed for a rural route, Experience PUT THEheaven. In song. Illustrative card not necessary -we will tell you how -Very lit- free on request before you buy, rice 50e, tie capital required, Beet advantage. offered 'Address "Ditty," 6400 So, 119 St„ Seattle, for your $UCCE0$-'W, lio today for tree de- IL, Noah. tall.-1'A5ILIEN, 1000 Delorimier- MONT. "VIKING" REAL, Cream Separator EARN MONE1' AT 110311iapare or full -tied* IIARI Ulllhlte Now le the time to cheek over your cream money -making, Leorn to make dandy ae IIpro CHICKS from blood foaled high egg either eeparalsparelp rte attachment,orou vtanaelectricsupland need ledla orrespondencern• while nlcoursereNational e m14• Producing Plock. Liwabllny guaranteed, .ee your local 1'1K1Nfl dealer. 1f you Intend 'dilute ot• Confectionery Res'd„ Delnrfmler Mixed 1o(t f0 Per 100, 500Pulandn 1o6 r, Oot Ten to purchaoe a now separator this spring get P,O., Box 152, Montreal, Quebec, percent off for orders b00 over, goddard Chick hatchery, Brit/111111R Heights, Ontario, full partoeulnre nn the V11CINO LOW ELEC. LEAIIN piano playing p' hmno tho new ea LAYING Policia will be profitable properly In TRIO II uo l Ynay there i e e is no 'et 1'UId.E1a way -the chord oyetem. Aa a special Intro. the Sumpter and 1"all of 1950. Hod for earl 1'IHratI uora nay market, is no better eleclrle- duotory offer you may naw have a CepY of our Y sepnrnlor on the makrl• fort!' lesson Simplified Piano Conroe for only Chick delivery price 1111, Alao Turkeys, Started S11'I111KII 1iE195IL''I'(IR CII, Uri»„ Tweri , Older • 1'tcheri ' Free Catalogue, 720 1\'cat Nntro-llnune, Alonueah Clue, One unllar Write; Simplified • Afndern Plano Ontario. a Chick Hatcheries T,IniIled, Fcrgue, HT e • - Course, pox 61, llanover, Onta'lo. Ontnrlo, LZGHT choice tasting Golden No. 1 II0NI V, - twelve 1'e-10,00, 1lncilannge, Lurknov t,It 1Ii ,01161ENDA'FION for -poultry Pru0te Ontario, in 1950, Cull your hens 15% Buy 90%F leap . chlcke, but buy the beet you can secure CAMELLIA I'L11R'EIIlIl '1'11111:1{IIUd 11110- 11.0.1% II11.0.1', Sired aro more prolllable limn chicks GONIAS•-0orgeous double flowers. Easy to aired by ordinary males. Start your chlcke grow, k'or early 11100111 gel them Started in, early. Send for early booking prtcellst. Free doors, Planting Inetl•uctione Included Choice Caningue, Also Turkey Paints. Sinned of colours. Scarlet, pink; roue, orange, yellow Chicks, Older Pullets, Top Notch Chlek Sales, white, Salmon, Giant (lowers all summer and Guelph, Ontario,' fall, Extra Inrge bulbs, Guaranteed In bloom. BU1' YOUI1 1960 Oldelro fy'on n CnnaOa Ac- Order now, 5 for 91-1'I for 11.71, puetpnid. credited Hatchery, 11.0.1', Breeding Farm Cash with order, Holland Ruth and Nursery 100 pullorum clean 11.0,1'. Sired, Barred Company, 1'.0, Putt Credit, Ont. Servino rate Rnrka find npprnved lied x Rock rro**brwts, adian Oai.Jeno from const In c000l. WI•Ile far folder, prkrea, N'estntdu I'ouluy' A "N11011 BTOlU llL'$INI•:SB" In ynnr Farm, Neuoladl, Ont, pocket: We will train you to make Hlg ADAM]' (net fonlbering Derrell Ifo ks and Money Free Sample Outfit, with measuring (le- Croeobrede Glamp x Rock) are bred for vice enab:e* .1'00 10 Ili our line nunllly shoes high production and Inert Clean blood test perfectly, write todnyl Capital Shoe Cone for three years Sinned enpond a ave. -laity puny, 861 Ilnthuret St,. Termite, muerte, Adams [Jarred !locks, Perla, Ontario ANY QUANTITY of hay 118 Per tan, loaded T00 many hone are being sold now. This on cars, Herold Moony, Bloomfield Sl., means high prices for eggs later Order King's Cn., N,II. Phune Ilnn,plon 10.24, Dally chicks and get In on this market. Ills'L1' 11'r1N'I'En Durance Laying strains and Broiler cockerel,' _ available now. Write for catalogue and price; FARMERS _ T Durance 1'urms.ilatchery, Sarnia, Ontario ' DO You Need Skilled hill)) Help*/ Experienced MONKTON CIIICKF-uove.nntont Approved, Practical Farm Luho•, families or single, Breeding quality, one 0) the best. Don't available this spring, Write us now, Latvian Kneen, be certain, Write for prices and cola, Belief Astoclntlun, 320 Bay Street, Room 1104 Iogue, Monklon Poultry Parini., Monklon, Ont, Toronto, Onterier. BUSINESS OI'I'luI(TUNITIEd 31EUIC3I. AN OFFLIt to every Inventor -List rt Inven HAVE YOU HEARD about Dixon's Mite and roll information sent tree. The Neuritis and Rheumatic Pain Remedy? Ramsay Co Registered Patent Attorneys. 276 Bank Street, Ottawa It gives good results. . MUNRO'S DRUG STORE, DYEING ANI) CLEANING 335 Elgin, Ottawa HAVE YOU anything needa dyeing or clean. $125 ExpressPrepaid. Into Write to us fo Information, We are ' p glad to viewer your queetiene Deportment POST'S ECZEMA SALVE H, Parlor's Dye worksI,Imlled• 791 Ynnge Banish the torment of dry eczetns rashes Street, Toronto, Untnrlu _ and weeping akin troubles Pool's Rooms FARMS FOR KALE Salve will not diaappolnt you 126 ACRES Raleigh Township, Kent Counlyl tching, scaling. burning eczema. ache, rine• 100 nares Raleigthiphenia (General Farming); C); 100 worm, pimples and athlete', foot, will respond t. anree Zone (tobacco); 15 acres Wonderful get- rregally to of h etnlnit4,nless, nen hoess lessointt ei rich onion ratio. Erlenu, Reach Frontage- seem haw �wlhmn m hopeless thea Store or cabins. Invest wisely in land and seem be euro of Income. 1Vrltet Chatham Real Es- 1111110 MeV JAR S tate, Exchange Ilealtore, 021 King St., Clint.em Poet Free oq Racepu of Price Chat - am, Ont, Telephone 100, POST'S REMEDIES Man quern at I;,, Carne, n1 Iowan tamaleATTENTION! WONDER SALVE! Heals when everyll,lug else fallol Order nowt Agents eecemelt, 50e n box, Merry Monickers Mfg., Box 405, Elmwood, Cnntat•Io. t'A'ENTS FETHERSTONHAUUII 5 I'untpanp Paten' Sntteltnre Eatahllahen I8au 860 Ray Street I'oronln Nonklel nl 'nh'rmulion an request A. 111, LAIDLAW, MSc., Patent Attorney, Patents of Invention, 60 Spnrka St,, Ottawa. T11111i1;1'S ORDER yuur Broad Brooded Bronxo nouns now, !Jacked by 21 years careful selecting' and blood teeling. Volturno) free. One of the oldest and (argent exclaotve all turkey farms In Canada All breeders rnngo raised giving you stronger poults and better Ii•nblllty; 500 scree range land. Visit our mefcrn hatchery. Veapra Turkey Form, A. D. I'nlleroon & Sone, Box 101, Barrie, Ont, WHi9'E- HOLLAND poulte and, eggs from blood tested Government Approved breeders, Broad breast and high Ilvnh11116' poulte can be expected from Bunny Acre., Turkey Form, Anthorstburg, Onlnrlo.- IJROAD•BilI4AATED, Bronze turkeY poulle, Breeds are Government approved and puller- an clean. Aldershot 'turkey Branch. Aldershot, Ontario, 100 ACRES, north of Brampton, good land, locality, buildings, immediate poese*slon, 912,600. Owner, 830 Runnymede, Toronto, POO dALH NI:1R' JOHNSON outhoard Motor,. Canadian Canoe Co., Peterbo•o Boats, Canuee, ,Trail• ere, bought, sold, exchanged. Large stock used motors. Repairs by factory -trained mechanics. Open until nine except 5Vednredny Strand Cycle, Hamilton. GUNS -Large assortment new and tined. Bought, .old, exchanged, Guaranteed repairs. Scopes, eight. Installed, Fishing Tackle, Hunt - Ins Equipment. Sporting Goode. Spe' lal Team Prices, Open until ,line except Werineeday,. Strand Cycle, Hamilton. MOTORCYCLES Harley Davidson, New and usedbough' sold, exchanged. Large stock of guaranteed toted motorcycles. Repairs by factory -trained mechanics. Bicycles, and com plate line of wheel geode, Open evenings until nine except Wednesday Strand (gels & Sports. King at Sanford. Hamilton. NEW OLIVER 99 -Used Oliver 99. Tractore In new condition. Rest offer Garnet Ur Falls, Centralia, Ontario. LOCOMOTION lege, arms, braces. Precision built, No shoulder straps necessary. Guar anteed. Acme Artificial Limb Co„ 64 Robinson Street, Toronto. GOLDEN clover honey; twelve 4'., 19.00. Amber, 70.1b. can 97 00 Wilbert Link. Delaware, Ontario. TUDICHY l'OULTS AND woos, Government REAI, Photo Postcards for Hotels, resorts, approved pullorum clean gecko. White 1101- camps. Send negetivea or good snapshots, land crooded with Beltsville White, Tome sell like hen Free Llet-Old Shape and harbor. Photos of s. Oak genua Poultry form, Atnhereh the Great Lakes. J W. field. 274 Fourth burg, Ontario, Street, Midland, Ontario DON'T EAT LESS "Eaunoro" Cereal, Five grain, three minute: hot cereal with a new thrill tante, All the nourishment of natural grains. Mildly laxative Thousands of daily ueera Pour -Pound package postpaid 81, McFadden Cereal Store. Smiths Falls, Ont. ` 100 ACIIES, 8f -tillable loam, balance good pasture, well -fenced, Bank barn. cement stabling, cement olio f.og' house, excellent water supply, Two mike tweet of tlnleovet school one mile, open rond, rural moll hydro available, 13,000 ,Tames Clinton. 9 Dieppe Rd., 'Toronto. soorroUN8. Finley finished Doubles 870 up A few available for immediate shipment. Photos, details on requeat, Bhlerlav hurry Importing Armntnr, 1101' 11711, mouton, Alin ALUMINUM ROOFING COIt11IUA1'ED and ribbed for runlhng and biding nheele 0 to 16 feet lengths, 36" covered 32" wide, 21 gauge, Bend roof mensurementb for free estltnate and Illustrated folder gh•Ing full Information. Samples: on rcrnneet, ltnnie• dlate delivery Eton stark. .5, L, Gouu•t'Ille Mfg., Dept. 18, Chnretle, P.O. NIIItST:If1' STOCK RESERVE now for Spring Delivery -Chinese )1Im !ledge -will grow 2 feet first year -25 planta sufficient for 25 feet (12 to 20 lushes 'bushy) 82.98-eeedlinge 12 Indica high 84.50 per 100 (Want 6 Inches nenrt)-Olnnl 17xhlbi- lion Peonies In colora red, white or pink, 3 for 81,89 -Apple trees 2 feet high In verlellee McIntosh, Spy, Delirious, 3 for 81.68 -Plum trees 9 fort high In violellee Burbank mid Lombard, 4 for 82.08. Free Colour tlnrden Guide with Every Order, llrookdnle-It Inge. way Nurseries, Rowmnnvllle, Ontario. TIIIICK, Trnctnr and Form Equlpmenl ngrllcy for ante In, thriving community In Eastern Ontario, Owner must sell On nevount III hrnith. Nell or rent properly. Dox 55, 123- 18111 SI., New Toronto, - NA11'llfll 111C111SEIt1` ,1N11 KUI'l'LIEY PRICK Saw Cnrrlagrs and Edgers, Frick 1,w; Turner., Trhmner*, New Bond and Chenill • llesnwn, Nely Ball Bearing Planer bmf dlnlcher, Stem, Ons or Diesel F n, Ines. Rubber, Leather or Canyon Belting, Steel, Wood and Cast Iron Pulleys.. Shafting, Derr - Ings, couplings, Callare, Rix, 11, % MIER- MAN At CO„ LIMITED, nnyvlew Road, Ottawa, O01, FARMERS' Tbla yens clean your Beed properly We curry nil sizes of screen In both zinc gad wire State Moe of perforation and front and elde dimensions of screen. From Chatham 51111 Soreee, 51 1VIIIInm St. N„ Chatham, Ord HARNESS & COLLARS Farmers Attention - Consult . Your nearest Harness Shop about Staco Harness Supplies. We 1011 our goods only through your local Staco Leather Goods dealer, The goods are right, and so are our prices, We manufacture in' our factories - Harness, Ecorse Collars, Sweat Pads, Horse Baan. kete, and Leather Travelling Goods. Insist on - Staco Brand Trade Marked Goods, and you get satisfaction. Made only . by SAMUEL FREES CO., LTD, 42 Wellington St. E., Toronto WRITE' FOR CATALOGUE BELTSVILLE White breeding tones, Putlortinl tested from etoek rigidly selected, Noel Wood, DP111nn3', Onlnrin, ff no, send 10e for ant 50 page illustrated t!ATAOGUE OP JOKES, TRICKS & MAGiC. COLLINS JOKE It 3145010 SIIIIl' 1175 Somerset St, W., Ottawa \I'holeenle and Retail WANTED REGISTERED NURSES I'or 0RNEIL11, S'I'AFP 11'111(11 S -lions I»nly, 0-Ilnt Nick Salary 8100,011 I'rr 11ontlt flus Alnlolrnnnee IIrpI) SU PT, Ii EN ERA!. HOSPITAL KIOVR 1.0111i1/17, ONTARIO ' SALWAIIEN SALESMEN wanted to Introduce maty product, Heal for house to house belling, full time 01' *ldeih,e. Wanted In evety home Unusual Profit lippormnity. IPPR, Mime I li I, ',lu,h'rV Hardware lhn,Iuit:, Blenheim, OM, \VAN1.1:0 M AprHI Drone) 50 ncree with good house, barn, etc., hydro, writer, some bush, Stole ell mnrtirulnrs as in location and prlae In letter. Box 50, 123 -18th St,, New Toronto. SAFES Protect your ROOKS and CASA from FIRE and '1'111 RV RS, We have it elle and Iypu of Safe, or Cabinet, for any purpose, Visit us or write for priece, ser„ sn Beni, 11'. J,IXJ,TAYLCIR LiMITED TORONTO SAFE WORKS 115 Front St, 2„ Toronto Establisluvl 1553 RUB IT WITH . Just heat and rub in M1NARD'S, and note the quick relief you get. - Greaseless, feet.drying, no strong or unpleasant odor, LARGE Get a bottle today; keep ECONOMICAL It handy, site 8190 15••16 Was Nearly Crazy With Fiery Itch Until I discovered Dr, 13, D, Dennis' amazing- ly fast relief -D, D, D. ggProscripption. World speeder, pence end' comfort'fromlcrueldItching caused by eczema, pimples, rashes, athlete's foot and other itch troubles, Trial bottle abs drat application checks even the most Intense Itch or money bark, Aek druggist for D. D D, Prescription ;ordinary or extra Strength)., • WANE UP YOUR LIVER BILE - Without Calomel - And You'll Jump Out o1 Bed in the Morning Ruin' to Go The liver should pour out about 2 pinta oft bile Juice Into your digestive treat every day, 0 the bile in not flowing freely your food may not dlgent. It may Just decay in the digestive tract. Chen gee bloats up your stomach. You get constipated. You feel sour, Bunk and the world Tooke punk. it takes those mild, gentle Carter's Little Liver !'Ills to get these 2 pinta of bas flow. Ing freely to snake you feel "up and u ;1 Oct a package today, Elfeetive In ms bile flow freely. Ask for Cuire'e Little Ivey Pills, 351 et any rinuntere. DO YOU HATE somorootte# CHAiYl'" So many women between the ages. Vegetable Compound to relieve of 38 and 52 have good reason to such •symptoms, 'Women by the hate 'change of life' -the time thousands have reported gratify - when fertility ebbs away -when ing benefits. No other medicine' embarrassing symptoms of this of this type for women has such nature may betray your age! yp If thla functional period makes a king record of success, you suffer from hot flushes or RegularuaeofLydlaPlnkham'a makes you feel so weak, nervous, Compound helps build up rests - restless, hard to live and work tance against such middle -age with -try Lydia E. Pinkbam'e distress, The woman's friend! LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S Vegetable Compound ROLL YOUR OWN BETTER CIGARETTES WITH 1' cicaRErrE Tomo ANA • Ae Scholarship Pays Off—Say you're a student in a certain school on New York's East Side and you got grades of 90 or more, or just B -plus or better, Run your report card over to ice creast dealer Sam Miller and tick tri), free, a half pint of frozen custard, 1f your grades are lower, you get the cold shoulder, Miller is seen cloi'ng a rushing business after posting. his sign offering ice cream awards for scholars, Boxers Who Take On All Comers t In Britain front Portsmouth to Inverness and from Cardiff to Hull, on every fairground of any size the caravans pull in and the canvas theatre is set up, With its boxing - ring inside,• Then, over the blaring music of the fair, over the shouted invitations of other showmen, the age-old challenge to all corners is repeated again and again, The boxers are on view, standing In line on a platform outside the booth, lending point to the barker's reiterated phrases: "Any weight from seven stone to fourteen! Pick your own man." The charge for admission is small, generally a shilling, but even then it is difficult to get the fairgoers Inside until they have seen a con- testant come forward. I-Iowever, the delay is seldom a long one nowadays, Young men who have boxed in the Forces are always eager to "have a go." Be- sides, every town and -village has its favourite local boxer, who can gen- erally be relied on to acceept the challenge, As soon as a fight has been arranged the paybox becomes busy and the shillings flow in. Seats arc seldotn provided, and the grass of the fairground field is the theatre's floor, In the centre the boxing -ring is roped off, and the crowd stands around it, With many ceremonial phrases the contestants are introduced and the bell rings, Long experience and continual practice give the booth boxer an initial advantage, Also, he knows and has to know, every trick of the fightingtrade. True, he may face a top -rank amateur in need of a little practice—and that night's pay will be hard-earned, But generally he is on his feet at the end. For if the booth boxer loses too many fights, SAL f,4 4SA4UIES ,.,f'w �. w.. w •w•I.,,..w "You can put a lock on the los box, Mother. artnrWe're married," or is often knocked out, he ceases to be a booth boxer, It is a 'hard life by any standard, Yet sten stay in it and like it. Joe Beckett,. later in the championship class, was a booth boxer for years. Jack Lockycr took on all colliers at fairs until he was long past fifty, Red Pullen, a " welterweight, 'has boxed with a Wood's saloon for twenty years, and is still going strong. They say that habit becomes sec- ond nature, and that may be the secret. Certainly my own first booth encounter. was with a grizzled, fat- tish pian nearly twice my age, writes Jim 'Phelan in "Answers." His midriff region looked so soft that it seetned a shame to take the five pounds. When he concentrated on covering that soft spot, leaving his Jaw unprotected, 1 pitied the poor, fat, old man. But I smote that uncovered jaw nevertheless, Nothing happened, and I smashed at the wideopen point again, He still hung back, covering his vulner- able mid-region, and it was plain that he dared not risk even one punch on his. solar -plexus, Where- upon I myself risked everything in. one terrific slain at the rock -like • jaw, Just before the punch landed I Saw' a knowing glint in his hard, small eyes. That time he did leave Itis titidriff unprotected. But I didn't know anything about that until after kcame round, He knew no better hove, that. grizzled man, and it served him well in a hundred different fairgrounds. Night after night that unprotected jaw lured strong young boxers, as a I had been lured, into the ail -or - nothing venture that ends with . the monotonous chanting of ", . seven —eight—nine—out." But what kind of courage must it take to go on doing that for years in the fairgrounds up ctnd down the country? It is difficult even to guess why Wren stay in such an occupation. Money is not the answer—the booth boxers seldom get any large sums. Nor it le mere love of fightin, either on the part of the booth boxer or of the man who accepts his challenge, That type would not fast long, There is something deeper, per- haps resembling the snap -and -slash play of dogs or foxes, which le really a training for the bigger struggles of life. Certainly it needs a vast reserve of courage to face a different crowd each night with the offer to take on all corners, To take on all"comers—it is not a bad slogan, for a man or a nation. Closet Held A Fortune—Millionaire hosiery manufacturer Stan- ton Sanson and his wife, Maxine, look into the hall closet of their New York apartment from which thieves emptied eleven jewel cases while both were out. Mrs. Sanson, an ex -model, said it was a million -dollar haul, k tit police sealed the figure down to 901000- Do Their Dancing On Their Knees Goulimine, a former Foreign Le- gion outpost on the southernmost fringe of Morocco, is the only place in the world where the ghedra is being danced, And the ghedra is probably the only dance in exist- ence during which the dancer re- mains on her knees, without moving legs or feet. 1 was recently staying at Gouli- mine as guest,of the French Com- manding Officer, and•on my second night' my host arranged the ghedra, the dance that I had travelled hun- dreds of utiles to see, writes Ron Landau in "London Calling." We were about a dozen Europeans, chiefly French officers and their wives, and after a ceremonial din- ner at the officers' press, we moved into an adjoining reception roost to await the dancers, It was nearly midnight when they arrived—tiny, dark women, exquis- itely dressed in floating, night -blue robes that covered them front head to foot. Though by profession they ranked not so much as dancers as courtesans, they behaved with the dignity of duchesses, and moved with the grace of gazelles. There were'about twenty of them, and as soon as they had shaken hands with us, they let themselves glide onto the cushions prepared for theta on the ground. Meanwhile, in front of the dancers a semi -circle of musicians formed, magnificettt- looking Blue -nun, with the eyes of hawks and the faces of eagles, Goulintine is the heart of the Blue - men country, so called because of the exclusively blue garments worn by the population, Sometimes, the blue dye penetrates their skin, and gives thetn a dramatic appearance unlike that of any people I had ever seen, , Though there were over a dozen of these men, only one of them played an instrument—natnely, the ghedra, a large, earthenware jar Used as a drum, The other men were to provide the singing, and especially the hand -clapping which forms the main accompainment to most Berber dances, Each woman dances solo for about ten minutes, and is then re- placed by another one. Having re- moved her top garments, she now exposes the traditional silvery jew- ellery that covers much of her front, and her complicated hair - dress of scores of little plaits, in which tiny jewels and ornaments have been entwined. Kneeling on the ground she dances chiefly with her arms, hands, and fingers in rapid, jerky, but beautifully sensitive movements that respond to each beat of the drutn and of the clapping, Each new sound ushers in a new movement and a new pose of the dancer, • You will naturally wish to know why the women crouch on the ground, The ghedra is essentially a love dance; originally it was danced by one woman for one particular man, Since the desert Berbers all lived—and, to some extent, still do —in tents that are low and not very spacious, • there was not enough room for the woman either to stand up or to move about freely, and she was forced to remain kneeling on the ground. But because of these limitations, site put all her, artistry Into the movements of torso and hands, and I should be surprised if many tent - dwellers could ever resist those hypnotic staccatos of head and tor- so, and the evocative rhyme of those tiny, supersensitive fingers. Parted 25 Years Reunited By Radio (The author of this real-life story, Nina Epton, is in charge of B.B,C, broadcasts to French-speaking Coe ado, and here ,the tells how s chance encounter on an island is Quebec Province led to a blitzed Londoner being reunited by radio with' the family that had brought him up many years ago.) In radio, as in"any other profes- sion, one can go plodding along at one's normal routine for weeks and even months without anything par- ticularly exciting to remember until, suddenly, the unexpected happens —the "highlight" of an unusual oc- casion, an extra good "story," an encounter, perhaps, that snakes you realize just how worthwhile the medium of broadcasting can be in helping to build up friendly inter- national relations. That is how 1 ant feeling at the moment of writing, after having organized a reunion between friends who have not sten each other for 25 years—one in London and the other on the Island of Orleans, in Quebec Province. I It started while I was on a visit to French-speaking Canada, seeing seine of the people J broadcast to nearly every evening in our London contribution to the French "Actu- silty Review." Unspoiled Part of the Country • Just before we left Quebec for a tour of the Island of Orleans, down stream in the middle of the wide St. Lawrence, one of the chief announcers stopped us to remind us "to be sure and call on M. Eudore Letourneau, in the Village of Ste, Fantille. We called on hint at the very last minute, because there had been so many other people to see on the island, which is perhaps one of the most unspoiled parts of the country near Quebec, This is still the romantic part of French Canada that has retained its old-world charm. It is only'a few years since Orleans was joiner[ to the mainland by a steel bridge, and that probably explains how the inhabitants have managed ' to keep up the 'old, French-Canadian traditions and way of life. 1 arrived on a bright, crisp, autumn day, and the maple leaves were flashing crimson between the fir and the spruce, almost the sante color as the apples which Aladante Letottrncau was carefully polishing in the barn when we called. Her husband rushed out to greet its, very pleased to meet somebody from Great Britain. , He said English visitors to the island were rare, very rare—in fact, the only English person he had ever seen on the island was his prot4ge, a ratan called William Pearson, who hail come to his farm as a boy and had grown up with his own family. He scribbled an address on a piece of paper: "Wil- liam Pearson, Reginald Road, Dept- ford, London." Could I, when I got back, find out what had become of hint? Pearson had left the island years ago -25 years ago, to be precise. They had corresponded intermittently up to the Second World "War, but, since then, there had been no news from Deptford. M. Letourneau was most anxious to know what had become of mon petit Anglais, as he called the now - mature William, and one of the first thing I did when I got back to London was to try to locate him. To my delight, after a few inquiries, I found him. He had been blitzed, RP I 'had feared, and had sustained an injury to his spine which means that he can do only light work now. 1 wrote and asked hint to come to the B.B.C. and discuss the possi- bility of broadcasting a message to Eudore Letourneau. i doubted, of course, whether he would be able to remember any of his French after such a long time, but perhaps, with a little coaching, he could read a short script. To my amazement, 1 discovered that William Pearson was perfectly capable, after a little preliminary discussion together, of broadcasting in French an unscripted interview with me about his memories of the Island of Orleans, ending up with a personal message for Eudore and his family, and he spoke French still with the accent peculiar to the island. I had cabled over to Can- ada before the broadcast so that Eudore Letourneau and all his friends on the island were advised beforehand, and they all sat and listened in, as they wrote after- wards, "with the tears streaming down our cheeks." Since that day, the two of them are corresponding regularly again. Personally, I feel sure that William will manage to see his beloved island and adopted family again. With A Volcano As A Neighbor Onae again Nature hal declared war, On December 2nd, as dawn was breaking, Mount Etna erupted from new craters, and the people of Bronte found a stream of molten lava five hundred feet wide and twenty feet high advancing upon thein at the rate of half -a -mile an hour. They knew that no power on earth could stop that advance, and they did the only possible thing. At ten o'clock that evening the town evacuated its 20,000 inhabi- tants. Eighty times since man started keeping records Etna has caused death and destruction, The last time, was in 1928, when incandescent lava completely obliterated a railway and destroyed the towns of llascati and Nun zia ti. Living on the slope of a volcano Hurst be like living in a house on a frontier and knowing that an enemy's entire heavy artillery is trained on the house, When hos- tilities break out you will be the first to be bit. Why do people live there, know - Ing that at any moment they and their posseesions might be destroy- ed' One good reason is that the sides of volcanoes are often the most fer- tile areas in the district. The slopes of Mount Etna, for instance, are so fertile that as many as five crops are raised every year. There are between three and four It's Cocoa Time -- Belted and bloused, this pure silk shantung afternoon dress, done in tvarin cocoa with white embroidery, is shown in the French design- er's salon. The full skirt is topped by a belted blouse fea- turing the dropped shoulder line and full, long sleeve, hundred active volcanoes in the world and the slopes of most of them are inhabited. In some cases the people know from past exper- ience that they will receive good warning before an eruption, but in others they may have less than an hour to clear out with whatever val- uables they can take with them. Vesuvius is one of the most un- predictable, In A.D, 79 it erupted so quickly and so fiercely that three' towns—Pompeii, I-ierculaneutn, and Stabiae—were completely destroyed. Pliny, commander of the Roman fleet, sailed at once to Herculaneum to try to rescue survivors, • but found the harbour completely chok- ed by ash and lava..He sailed on to Stabiae, only to find the population dead, suffocated by fumes. So well did Vesuvius do its work that all three towns were effectively buried in lave and ash. Four hun- dred years later their very sites were forgotten and the stories of the eruption were treated as a le- gend They lay hidden until 1860. From that day in A.D. 79 Vesu- vius was quiescent. To all intents and purposes it was an extinct vol- cano, and towns and villages were built on the slopes while the people used to picnic on the lip of the huge crater. Then, 1,450 years later, in Decem- ber, 1631, it awakened. Without a moment's warning it erupted, and 18,000 people died. Since then there has hardly been a year when Vesuvius has not belch- ed flames and red-hot lava. Int 1900 the explosion was so terrific that 607 feet of the summit was blown of f. The people of St, Pierre, on the slopes of Mount. Pelee, in Martini- que, had plenty of warning but took no notice of it. The volcano grumbl- ed for several days, and then cover- ed the town with a,layer of fine ash. A few days later it erupted, and 150 people lost their lives. Then a sister volcano on a near -by island erupted, The people of St. Pierre thought that the fireworks were over attd continued their leisurely lives. But thirteen days after the first grumble, Mount Pelee exploded, and 40,000 people died before they could reach safety. Best Way To Send Coins In A Letter Next time you want to mail a quarter, dime or half -dollar to someone, you'll probably wonder just how to do it. Many people use adhesive tape or Scotch tape to fasten the coin to the letter. But an editor says: ''Don't do It that way. Tape sticks to the coin and causes trouble. "Better way," he says, "is to wrap the coin in a piece of paper. Then use transparent adhesive tape. The coin won't shake off or out," Tett years ago a Dutch scientist, Professor S, W. Tromp, set out to prove water -divining was nonsense. Now he has published a 534 -page research report confirming the popu- lar belief that there is something is it. - He thinks the power to detect underground water may depend on the elrctrical resl+tance of the skin. Diviners can increase their sensi- tivity by rinsing their hands in salt water, What's Cookin' In TV—Mont can cook her hath and watch it on television at the sante time, with this combination gas range and television set. Mrs. Bea Reeder above, shows how the cook can stir up a delectable dish simply by following a step-by-step instructions on video. By Arthur Pointer 1 1.••••—••• Ladies . -- Ladies Wear New Spring Print Dresses, Just Arriving. New Spring Skirts, in iCC cream 4•1.snls and wSiirla vay gats. New Silk Squares for Spring, Nu -back Girdles, Wonder and Gothic Bras, Holeproof Nylons at New Low Prices, 42 Guage $1.35, 51 Gunge 51.75, 15 denier $1,95, Lavenda Yarn, will not shrink or mat, skein, 43c Gents Wear Have you seen the New Kitchens Jumbo Overall made from heavy 8 -oz, sanforized Denim, Tough, roomy --- Fully Guaranteed, • Made -to -Measure Clothes by Cook & Nash Tailors, Stetson Hats, Morgan Hats --- $5.00, W. J. ' effron Phone 211 ---Sanitone Dry Cleaning--- Blyth. Spe�ial! SMOKED PORK ROLLS SSC Lb. Arnold Berthot MEAT Telephone 10 --- Blyth. • FISH i 11 I..I11J1 1 . 1 11.1 (ll, Y.I., I1 .11.1, STEWART JOHNSTON Massey -Harris and Beatty Dealer. See our Complete Stock of Pipe Fittings, Beatty & Massey -Harris Repairs - Pump Repairs, all kinds. Dealer for Imperial Oil Products. FERTILIZER A SPECIAL SAVING ON YOUR FERTILIZER If Taken During February Don't Pay till end of April 1950' CONTACT THE OFFICE AND GET YOUR ORDER IN EARLY T6 OBTAIN THIS SAVING, Carman Hodgins, Manager. Blyth Farmers Co -Op Association TELEPHONE 172 • BLYTH. • 1 THI STANDARD . ' Wed,, February 15, i956 1 ✓ AUJI31JItN 1 WESTFIELD \1', S. Cmig of Stratford Normil Mrs. K. C:unero'. of Belgrave visit - with Mr, and Mrs, W. J, Craig, ed last week with Mr, and Mrs, \Vm. Miss Mae Ren.iff of Stratford Nor, Walden, coat with lier parents, ' Miss Eileen Taylor spent a fewdays 1)oc:old Ross of Galt with Alrs. Fred last week with M iss Norma Taylor of Ross. \Vin;hani, Mr, and \Irs. Charles Jones of Mr. \Vw, 'Alelowell spent last week \Windham with dr, and Mrs, Roy Fin- with Mr. and Mrs. \\'(:dry Stackhouse nigan. of BruceficId, Gordon Rutledge of G.d.r:ch with Mr. and Alrs. James Boak areal babe his sister, Mrs. J. Tay:or and Mr, Tay- were London .visitors, on Friday, tor, I M r. ilarold Sprung. of l lullett visit - Miss Ruth Arthur, V,O,N., of St. ed on Sunday with \1 r. and Mrs. Oar - Thomas with her mather, Mrs. J, Ar- eller Cox, thur. . \Ir. and Mrs, Bert Taylor visited on \1r. and \Irs. Duncan McKay and Friday with Mr, arta Nil's. M. 11, Mar - soli John McKay, of Kintail with t)r• tin of Godcrich. 13. C, Weir.I Mr. and Mrs, Norman McDowell Mrs. Gordon Stewart has been a pat- were Stratford visitors no Friday. - fcnt i:' Goderich hospital, i \rr, John Gear of Kitchener spent Mrs. h(1 it Lawson gave her home the week -era with AI r. Armand Me - for the February ineetict;,of the AV. Burney and visited his mother, Ws. M.S. elf Krox Pre b;':erian Churt'h, 'Phos. Gear of \Vii',;hint. The president, Atrs, \\'alint,;lton Goad \I r. A. F. Cook of Illytlt visited on pies:ded. The devotional period was Sunday with Airs. Fred Cook and fai- led by Mrs. Good and Mts. Little who fly. also of.e.ed prayer. I Mr. and Mrs.. Albert Campbell at• \irs. '1', 1). \Icl:'veen gave gleanings tended the funeral list week -end of from the Glad 'I'ulita,s, followed by the latter's at'1•I:, \fr. 'Phos, Agar, of ',he 'r'1'idin•,;s" prayer read in t:nis_Lit Ilranitcn. Mrs. John 1-Ious:on discussed the f.rs'. The Mi'sim Bahl mel Sunday after - chapter of the new study S.00k, "T:-' noon with a good altendarze. The war„s A New Dawn In Japan.” Tho roll call was answered by a verse of Scri;aure containing the words "1 ant," The offering; was resumed by kali Little, A .letter from the Presbyterial sn., ply tc:retary was read. It was ct:- cic'ed to have a quilting at the home of \Irs. J. C, Stoltz, next 'Thursday The ince1i,:v closed w:th a Ignite I and 1. he Lord's Prayer, The hostess as- sisted by :Hiss Minnie .\Va.iner sersel lunch. • met in the school room of the church.• I The fl ',P,U, will hold their monthly on 'Wednesday for a quilting, Three meeting Sunday evening at 7.30 o'clo:k quilts were completed. 'These gni'd: in the .Sunday School room, Everyona are for overseas relief. A pot Ire'' welcome, dinner was served at nIon, 'There •"+ •Choir P. stents C3r.cert 1 be another ml'ltin•; on March 8 h when there Wil be 3 more quilts to do. St. Mark's Anglican Church clioir Mrs, \\ni. Poudreault and sc...., Rod - presented a sacred concert in the dy, Mr. Charles Brc her. and Mw, church under the leadership of the or- Brother, s-., visited last week with '± ganist, Mrs. Gordon Taylor, Rcv. G. the latter's dlin •liter, Mrs, Jce 1170:11.' ,\I. Wyatt presided for the following and Al r, Brophy. program: Selection by choir, "Fairest' meeirg opened hy repeating the mem- bers' ;•trpose. Scripture lesson was read from \lade 10:13-16, by 13arh•n•a Smith; Prayer shy 'Mrs, Norman Mc- Dowell; Readings were given by Bon. all Soe'I and Lyle Smith. The Chap- ter in the Study Book was given. h:i Nit's. Chas, Smith and the story was • told by Mrs. Nornyin Ntepnw•el', The _--_�� nteet'llI el1sed wi'h Pray'` "INICIVVVC4ti 6Nt+r"lettielVelstmK►4 ►tt!(rt4tatEt400(16' t4KtEk►414K141Ny Twenty-four ladies cf the carmtctity 1 For The Lady Who Likes GOO' SHOES Murray WE STOCK eel Mugger XFO 'hI, D5 THESE: SHOES ARE BUILT WITH A HEAVY , STEEL SHANK TO GIVE YOU ' GOOD INSTEP SUPPORT, ' SKATES SHARPENED, Madill's Shoe Store BIyth "Be Kind to your feet, Wear Madill's Footwear," Lord Jesus"; organ selection, '‘Conte; `t Thou Almighty Kin;", Mrs. Gordon Taylor; solo, "Stranger of Galilee",' 11ELGRAVE regu'ar weekly mitre was held\Is, Lat-a \Ity 1eerand; d et 1( "Sweet Hour of Prayer", Misses Edon in the Com't'a:lity recut on \lochs >Et and Lila Daer; choir, "0 Sa`c To th, ca!' ni;lhlt with 11• tabl:s in Ply, '1'I Rock"; organ, "Scherzo in G Minor',high scores were won hy Mrs, Cec'I Nies, G. 'Taylor; duet,'cThc Ninety and Wheeler ad John Anderson and lou' Nine", Misses Laura May Letherland '1; `� Nits. C. l ur(.cn and CI'fford an.1 \laiioa' Tayl:r; solo, "Come Ye `IIF, and 11'rs, C. R. Cotr'tes were t Blessed", \Irs, Gordon 'Taylor, accom- panied by \[rs, 12. J, Phillips; • choir, Sunday visitors with .M r, a:'d Mrs, Chas. Anderson at Teeswa'er. "Lord Of All Hopefulness"; organ, Preece ;11, ores w•ho has heat ou a ''The .. itet", Mrs. G, 'I'aylir; clivi 7g ' \\'e'vc A Story To Tell To flit Na- months holiday Troln the R.C.N. re - kions"; solo, 'Bless 'This House', Alis ltuttr.kd to 'his post near Halifax cit �ret5t2110�tAHatbl;st�I�iD�lt�tail�Ihlat:oloolntat>:1tDI�t�Iousittptm7tilaNt�tponbatDtt+dlipi Edith Dacr• choir girls "The Clime' \Innday. ,,N.,N.�-NNN----.,.•N.- EXCLUSIVELY CUSHIONIZED KROEHLER'S stunning upholstered Furniture is especially designed for to -day's Living Room ;for to -day's modern -minded couples, It gives you exclusive Kroehler Cushionized Construction, The most amazing comfort develop- ment in upholstered furniture. Yet the price is very moderate, Check our window display for the latest Kroehler Comfort. Jaiues' Lockwood FURNITURE •— COACH AMBULANCE — FUNERAL SERVICE Phone 7 or 69. Blyth • , .' In the \\'ildwood" ; cr,an, "Lead Rind- Mr. and Mrs. Lloydlcyd Taylor'lor and j, *""*"."4"'"'w•••4#####•4*""*"."4"'"'w•••4#####•4=, ly Lig' d': choir, "0 Sl -i of Malt"; dalrlliter !Tent the week-ontl with Id- ' . ' Solo, Miss Marion Taylor; choir, "Now parents, Mr. and Mrs, 0. E. Taylor. the Light Ilas Gone Away," and Mrs. Taylor will remain for a l 1c.',hler vi':it, M'es, Mary Asgtith Stratford Hospital , Bcdtniul Farm Fortran met at •the Pharmacist ' home of Mr. and Mrs. J, C. Procter on Miss Mary Asquith, Auburn, was I Mondrny night, The radio pr gThir appeitatcel by the Stratford Gclteral . w^as listened to anrb t he gttr,kions for llasl•'ital''Trus.t Friday n'g!i: at i'•s resit- aiscns'sklt ('Cha''ed. Fo'lolt"i•ir this p".'1 - lar nieet'ng as ;'ha ina^lst for the Few gross}ve ochre was enjoyed with Mrs. Stratford General ITospita.l She w:Il Richard Procter and Jas. Coultes win- . take over operatin•'i of the pharmacy at tiers of h}:h prizes awl Mrs, C. R. LONDESBORO next chapter front the Study Book. I-Iymn 172 was than sung. Francs : SOCIAL EVENING HELD Lycra gave the treasurer's rep:irt. Min- U'tcs of last nieeting were read by Sc - On Saturday evening a social even- cretary, Thelma Shobbrook, The roll Bing of the Young People's Class was call was aau;wcred with a Bible verse held in the basenietit of the Church to begituninis with "F", with 22 present. honorer Mrs. F. Tannblyn on. her re- Mrs. Fangra;t gave a 'Temperature tirentent frclnt teachings that class. The story. The Christian Stewardship classes of Mrs, Latns),t; and Mrs. B. story by Mrs, Alin ShacSdf:k. Th- Shobbrook were also present, The meeting closed with Hynl 1 351 and evening opened with a sing sor.,a con -1 prayer by Mrs. JCC Sha:Mick, after ducted by Mrs. Brenton, after which w•liich lunch was served by the hostels - (the -new lto;pital. It is not dcfinitcly Cool:es and Ro'it. Procter the l' -.w known when hiss As•Ittitlt will as- srrres. Lunch was s'ir'ed by the .sumo her duties, but the date is ex- hostess. pectca to be ah: ut a nmiith before the Ails; Pearl Jamieson, clue teacher. in opening of the .now hospital, the senior school, has re'urrrd to 11.r A graduate of the Ontario College of position, after an oitcnrced holiday Pharmacy at Toronto In 1942, Miss As- having 111(1 her appendix re'no"e•1, (gait' has managed dispensaries in Two interesting Ii ghlitz its of thn commercial drug stores in Toronto and London. She was the chief pharma- cist at the, St. Mary's Hospital, Kit- chener, where she was employed fr:an 1945 to 1949. Miss Asquith has also I:aken past -graduate courses in I rspi- I'tal pharmacy and comes highly recom- Intcl::Iicd to her new position. She will work on a yearly contract, A native of Auburn, Miss As-u'th attcnd:•d Auburn public and ccnt'titta- ti.on schools and the Godcrich Colle- giate Instlitntte. She is president of the Canadian Society of hlcspital Pharma- cists and is a member of several phar- inaceutical organizat}cns its Canada arr.l the United States as we'l as of several University cf Toronto organ- Plans were mad` for tt variety n}�tht izations. Ito he he'd March 28, iionerary p•e,i- She is a ,',au•thtcr of M r, and Mrs.! `lent C. R. Coultes s'tckc to the mem- Charles E. Asquith, of Auburn, hers, c11'ferili,•r s• -rite lielpfu) criticisms. The program included a Inonologtte by Clifford Coultes, piano selog, T, -I's Btirch'lI, Franc -1v Walker; v-ical It -ot- hers by the girls' (I•-aible rein and the boys' quartette. George f?n'eriyco 1 read the club p.lper, ss li'ch he had ed"e 1. Retreshnterl's were served Kitlix United Chu -eh, B;"'grts'e, had a very suxrssfttl year, as all reportF show'e'd at the annual nicotine?, The newest onganizatinni of the church, the evening, auxiliary of the has a membership of 27, Edlowit:r, is the personnel of the official board: ses- sion, .moderator, Rev. W. J. Moorca'; Abram Procter. J. T. C• ".l'es, 1-1.rrr•' AticCleI.a liar. James 'Af'chie, Stewart Procter, Albert Vincent. C' Iris. 1\eg'8i• err, Edgar 1Vitila'nnri, \V'll'a•it Yell - Gordan Walsh, J. C. Procter; board of (stewards, Iia -old Procter, G^or Ihrtitt, 'George Michie, A. Coultes, A. North Huron junior Farmer B: 13,'s ire Imre, 'held in Forester's Hall were a talk by Rcv, G. M;rirav Wyatt of Blvth of lis work anrr11T the Indians in 1he'Yt*k^at, and a (lobate, "Resolved that a 109-a'rc fain eau nav for it - pelf an -1 s•"pport a family." There were 70 flit attendance. Fre(l \Nilson, assistant age en'tural rep-eren';ative f -r tit'a'n co•n'y, ac- ed as Speaker of the llcuse for the 'lobate, with Harry i ear and \Va'lac' Bell representing the party in per•"•er and 1f urro,!; Bradlh,:rw and Jac',( C••r- de as I'he o• position 'I'hc v^t° r1f tlt� "House of Assembly" gave the decis- ion to the ctro!lition. LONDESBORO 6 o WALTON 5 (By Jack Webster) Londesboro 13.-A.'s canto through with another win last Wednesday n'ght when they beat \Vattop 6 to 5 in the Bruss.ls a!•ena. Lee set the glace for the 13.-A,'s, collecting four goals, while \Vildfong collected three for Walton. The game was packed with action and numerous penalties were handed out a short programme was enjoyed, Fol- ses, Miss I:dythle Beacom, Mrs. 'Penn during the game, lowing this Mrs. Tainblylu was asked !Allen and Miss Thelma Sho!ibror,k. ; 1st Period: LQ-udc 'boro, Lee; \\'al- io conte to the platform and an ad- I The Mission Band will hold their /cn, Travis; Londesboro, Lee; Walton, dress was read to her by Doreen Ann- 'meeting on Sunday; Fe'.:ruary 19th at \Vildrong. strong, and Jack Webster presented 10:39 a.m., itt the basontent of the 211(1 Period: Lnaudlasbore, Lee ;'\Val- lier with a lovely c4a:1 table on behalf church. torn, Bennett; \Yaltctt, \Nildfong; Lon - of the class. •Mrs. Tam !l, la, rcp:ied 1 Miss Mary Ellen Prest of Stratford , desboro, Arnistron•t. very fittingly. Gant:s were then ett- spy ent \Nodnesila • afdern on at th; jcyed and a delicious lunch was sprverl.�rd Period: Londesboro, Cart 1r; honto of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\Valton \Vildfong: Londesboro, Lee. I Fre1l Prost. ' 11.1 I .. I ,6. ,.1 , II The )immesh Mission Circle 101i Linc -up: Londesboro: Goal, Clare; Biemaini H. Vincent, R. H. Cra/tes. their February meeting on Tuesday, Mr. and Mrs. Meredith Yotiriz awl defc:ace, 1), Snell, 13. Riley; cerotte, � Georgie Johnston, Les'1',. Belt; trustee; cession was he' 1, February 7th, at tire home of 'Alis ,aanlil•y, 'Mr. and ,Mrs. Clifford. Shot).- Lee; wings, Johnston, J. nell; sults, board, A. Vincent, C. Nteth"r',,• At ,with aacollecticn., Ftl the, Beacom, with the President', took aitd Charlie, visited last Sn.nka! Armstrong, Carter, Radford, Millar, i Grasby, 5, E. McCalhun, H. Wheeler. ' Carel t ii Ma -ch Lois wood', in the chair, The nlett- will M». aid Mrs. Jack Partridge at Tt:nnev, Shartlick, I ---Ar----- i irlg opened with Hymen 112. Th \ViI'gs Rest, Brantford, Walton: Goal 'McClure; defctu'e,' `''hent( was "Jesus the I ^rd ct..l i'••" 1 1 4 •t munization Clinic The Huron County Health Unit will again be holding Immunization Clinics in 'the schools as per the following schedule: FEBRUARY 20th, 1950 S.S. No, 5 Hullett 9'15 A,I\f, S.S, No, 8 Hullett 9:45 A.M. U.S.S. No, 11 Hullett & East Wawanosh 10:15 A.M. U.S.S. No. 3 Morris & East Wawanosh 10:45 A.M, t Blyth Public School 1'15 P.M. Infant ,and pre-school children who started these immunizations at previou§ clinics may attend. Smallpox vaccinations will also be given on this date, This will be the last clinic at the above schools for the present, , - ' -# # ## 4 INININNNI##.0......##M#NNN IN• 11 11 .11 11 • .11 111. 11.114.)1, 1 1.1 ■ ,11a. ■ I14 .. o f YJI k 1 i Distinctive Portraiture TO SHOW YOU AT YOUR BEST, KEEP FOR TO -MORROW THE MOST MEMORABLE MOMENTS OF TO -DAY, 44-. . 4444+444-44 e44. 44-44 •• 4-4-e+•444-••-•44-4.-•-•-•-•-•-• .4444 OUTSANDING SPECIAL ---of 3 4x6" Black and white Portraits, plus 1 6x8" All -color Portrait, AT $6.95, IS STILL IN EFFECT. 44 44-•-•-•-• *4-44-44 4+0444444 *0444444 •-•-•-•-•+- +444+4444+ Take advantage NOW by phoning Clinton 203, for your appointment, Reverse -the Charges, Portraits taken in the Studio, or in the privacy of your own home, • D. HYSLOP CO. PHOTOGRAPHERS -- - CLINTON, (Behind the Post Office), i we -e enjoyed by served. Marks, 1aT.1 LIVE WIRE FARM FORUM —y Ilett'es, C. t•t'C, \\'} (1'on i The 1: ve 'Wire Farm lrorttt.i rust at I , The offering was taken up, (larinr, wings, Travis, Penno!t; sub:, Marks, games were p.hycd, Lttlnrlr was sert- which JoyceF ngra.d favored withD Il W C1 I R arta ere ' hcsn2 of Air, and :,ft-4.'Clrenne Craw•-, BOUNDARY FARM FORUM tvltich was followed bore of Mr. n;tt'1 Mrs, Earl Watson! end doi;rrlerf to the with 20 ,..csetut, '� of Mutes, Games" The to►i'c for ilk- , and lunch was ctt;si^ni was "Is There i tto'�gh Land," • •, with Earl wlats.rn actin,! as conve''•Icr. Folio -wits; the discussion, a variety of 1 a , avore a Fess^ , ta71 ices, , ed. 'The next nteet'rta, will be held at Bozo, Mrs, Brentdtn ford rn Alondsly n'ering, Fr t. 13, with The gul•tr meeting of the B•_ -it- ' presented the Is Your Subscription Paid? \tcDoital(1, Humphries. ,29 present. After the broadcast aells-chary Far, rent Forton was held at the \\•il(red and Mrs. Sltortreed's, • ' • Wed,, February 15, 19 O, Commercial Restaurant NOTICE OUR STREET DOOR•ENTRANCE IS NOW OPEN. We are sorry for the inconvenience to our customers while we are decorating, but we will be open as much as possible, • Thank You, -Mrs, Helen Luke, Arthur Reath. final report on McCall drain, 163,00. • llarvey C. Johrston, Geo, C. ?1artitl, Reeve, Clerk, East Wtiwanosh Council Council stet Feb, 7t11 at 1:30 o'c'ocic = at the Bel;rave C:atintinity Centre, with al nrenthers present, the ReeYe presiding. \11iu tes•0f the meeting held Jan. 9th were read and adopted on GIANT_SIZE 67c Illoti011 by Robertson and Campbell. Corre ' ondcnre was read frrm, Tri: • Mnn"c:pal World, The Beck \leino•ial 5'a•ct'rr'unl, \I orris Township, 1)e-art- nlent of Highways, St, John Ambu'- ' an'e, \Tillage of L'1cknmv, \Vinghr11 High School Area, Green Cross Ione -1• ti i'a Clew Treasurer, Roy. Toll. - \Tr. Nelson Patterson was present to FEED CORN FOR SALE discuss some matters.re the Grdcrlr•It High School Area, also requesting a gra'•t for the Auburn .tenurial hall, Mr. E. Cartwright asked for son." assistance t0 Cleall out the Quinn creek WE DELIVER - PHONE 9 as the road has surface water running • into 111's err loved h•; Ta •lo' an I McGowan that council help by $25,'0 the a orem: ntione.l tvork as the Township hl) oat share tob be dour to the satisfaction. of Read Sti9t. Carried, Roland \'i11Ce11t, 111C Torvtn:Elly) as - t ,. PAC ""*"HN•"N•.' BOXY THEATRE, CAPITA;. THE T. REQ REGENT THEATRE 8EAFORTii, NOW: Jan's Paige, Wayne Morris ins "THE YOUNGER BROTHERS" Technicolor. CHESTERFIELDS AND OCCASIONAL CHAIRS REPAIRED and RE.COVERED, FREE PiCK.UP AND DELIVERY For Further Information Enquire at J. Lockwoods Furniture Store, Blyth Agent, Stratford Upholstering Co.; , ..ereI'IINNN4,...pet.4 NNs11' 11I #f I+ Wh'Ie or•Ye'Iow SUGAR, 10 Lb-, 95c Ready•Cut MACARONI ...,.. 2 Lbs, 23a Lipton's TEA CANNISTERS 7.c 5 BOTTLES SPICES WITH HOLDER ... ALL FOR 69:. STEWART'S .I GROCERY . I. I l I i-_ .. „ . . III. II I I SEE THE BLYTHE ELECTRIC for • Westinghouse, General Electric REFRIGERATORS, RANGES, WA:HING MACHINES, RADIOS, VACCUM CLEANERS, RANGETTE 3, HAMMER .MILT 8, GRINDERS & RO1E7S, Featherweight & F,itowef:ht IRONS. Co'nnlet3 Stock of All SMALL APPLIANCES, Contact Your Electric Shop for Satisfaction in A:pliancy, Se:vice, ,and Wiring, 11 nil I a, . ,C Morris Township Council The Council 111et in the 'I'orr11snip flail on hub, 6th, with all nlenlhcrs present., the Reeve presiding, \Iin-I utcs of last uteet.,nr were read 811(1' 11(10,)teil 0(1 motion of Sant Alco,.k and Bailie Parrott, Movedby ..has, Ccultes and \\'u1.1 Peacock, that a gram: of $15.00 be giv-1 oessor, was present ana discussed his salary on account of extra work tak- il•,r the 1)(:)1l1iti011 C:'11s11s, \loved by Robertson and Campbell that the assessor's salary be $?59.00 r., to the Huron Crc,t Improvement 1950 incl.nling the taking of Dr.ptt- c`latir;', census, Carried. Ass::elation, Carried. Moved by Bailie Parrott and Sam \loved by Taylor and McGo'.van that Alrcck limit the membership lee o f Council pay the member fee of $503 to the Ontario Association of Rural \l 1111 55.00 be Anal to the, Good Roads As- ic' rtli'ies, Carred. sociation� and that $25.00 be allowed Moved by Robertson and Campbell Stay "1"1')cr of the Council who u,fshcs that Belgrave and Aubtt-n libraries b: to • at"" the Coavc11aou. Carried. •� \;caved by WI". Peacock anti Nine Air. iimy d 100) cacti. the PCar i'lar Peau'e, I ar;ott that a gra,rt: of $25,0;1 be given Ltd., addressed the council exp'aining TENDERS FOR CARETAKING the Salvation Army, . Carried, his Car,zany's culverts, Tile ccunc:l decided that Harvey Moved ht• Robertso••1 aid Cant'b 1' Johnston and Sant Alcock interview that the Road and General accent -4s caretakers at the following schools itt as presented be passed and paid. Cur- S::onsored by East \Vawanosh, duties to commence >' ', and las, ricd, TRINITY CHURCH LADIES' GUILD on \larch 1st, 1950: Coultes and \Vnt. Peacock interv.:ew The Roach Su;,t, was instructed to on. Union 3, 1\'in;h:m in regard to Fire I'rutect'u:t advertise for lenders to crush 7000 yds.Union 6, for the ratepayers of the Township. ' of gravel at five-e'ghths-inch size. TUES., FEBRUARY 21st Union 7, Mcved by (las. Coultes and Bailie I Road cheques: Stuark \lcBurttey, Union 16. Parrott that the Court of Revision on salary, 35.2), bills paid, 4,52, 39.72; Union 17, the 195'.1 Assessment Roll be ,row open, - Campbell's garage, tire foot pomp,S. 9 Carried. 1 i0,t30; C. M. Pardon, grease 'and valve - S• b, 8, There were sevcrctl changes made in truck, 3.35; 1 Ear°I(1 Kerr, bulldozing at S d f S S 13 the assessment. I C. Smith's 109.0); Alex. Robertson, Applications to the undersigned ,\ioved by Wm, Peacock and Chas, shed rent for grader, etc., 17.50; Can- Coultes that the Court of Revision on • adi,an Oil Co., Ltd., 20') gals feel oil, the 1950 Assessment Roll be tloscd.! 35.89, 290 -gals. gas 69f 2, 105.42; Geo. Carried. - 1E, Radford, inountingf's,'c)w plow 56.65; Moved by Sant Alcock and-I3ailie Joe Kerr, trucking culvert, 5.0), load - Parrott that the road accounts as pre- , ing and trucking gravel, 397.44, 576 yds. sente�'I by _the Road Sn,)t, be paid, 1 gravel at Sc, 28.81 Cyril Tone, 1 Erin!: Carried, ' 1 1.18 S. P. plow, 876.96, mounting. ad - \laved by \Vnt. Peacock and Chas.! justment, 2).03, V03.95. General cheq- Coultes that a grant of $15.00 be gi'�-1 nes: Alva McDowell, 2 fox bounties, en to etch, llclgravc„ Blucvale and 4.00 ; Gordon Snell, 2 fox bounties, 4.0) 1Ilall, Stafl'a, until three P.M, Monday, \\Talton libraries. Carried,. Wendel \IcCallinn, 1 fox bour:ty, 2.00; TIIE VOICE OF TEMPERANCE I ,March *th, 1950, for approxinuateh loon A number of other properties for , Moved by Chas, Coultes and Bailie Tutvttshl,p of 'Morris, 13elgrave street A leading Canadian n(hlstri1ist thousand c,ble yards of crashed gray- sale, Particulars upon request. White Rose Gas and Oil Parrott that the Clerk be instructed lights, :,8.14; Minkel; al World, 7 sub- states that alcoholism roots Canadian el, delivered on the Township Roads, •.++ 'r n.... n..:..t.s...:..,..a Repairing. to advertise for tenders for the ran- I scriptiocs and su,:plies, 30.54; Win i.!:stilstry $8,03;,0"0 a year. According; three-quarter incl. crush, flat rate. ►tract. of sttflplyhtg, crushing and haul- ham Achance-Tinges, printing and sup• to researcher intoxicated workers U: Torr -?:ship pay •for the gravel, lanes +� i1'tr approximately 15,00) yards of gray- plies, 25.2); Beck Memorial Sanator- worker's who are se-fferin, a hangover � gravcl'ed to be included at contract ed, crusher to be equipped with three into, annbulance fees, 27,C0; Belgravc rause accidents resting industry close price. SEED CLEANING AND {tuarIer inch screen and work to be library heard, grant, 10.01; Auburn to $10,000,003 a year in C' nada. No' A marked cheque for four hundred 'rR,EATING (Hie to the satisfaction of the Road library board, grant,'1t1.00; Alex. Rob- wonder an increasingly large ntuul'er' dollars is required. Superintendent. Tenders must be ac. -1 ertsou, acct, paid re ian Hammerton, of industrial firths in Caiia(1.1 and the' Lowest or any tender trot necessarily OUR MODERN SEED CLEAN- ' ING by a certified cheque for 2,C0. U. S. a-�e sponsoriutg the treatment of accepted, I ING PLANT IS AVAl1.A13L1: TO $2C0. ,Carried, I The Township •fe,nt:e-wiett•ers are Ed alcoholic employees with the new drag THOS. D. WREN, Clerk, of the FARMERS OF THE DISTRICT. Moved iby Chas Coultes and •13•:tilte Mellurney, I-Ienry Pattison, John M. antabuse.-- But wouldn't an ounce of Township of Ilibbert, Crontarty, R.R.1 PLEASE MAKE ARRANGE - Parrott that the reading of the Govier Taylor, David Loc'chart, Neh!311 Pat- prevention be worth a pound of care? No,'1, 21-2. . \1ENTS IN ADVANCE terson) John l-Iallahan, Reduce the outlets --curtail the sale- IF POSSIBLE, Drain report bc.ltc�d cet'llarch 6th at FOR SALE 10 am. Carried, \lowe(t by 'Taylor and Robertson cut down on consumption ,•-there is uo 2 electric brooders (used only 2 sea- •GORDON FLAX, LTD. "Moved by Bac Parrott and \Vaal, ,that council adjourn to acct \fart h other way' sorts), r\p;l.y, Mrs. Alf. Nesbitt, phc'n: • Phone EARLE NOBLE, Peacock that the meeting adjourn to 7th at 1:c0 o'clock at the hclgaavc meet again oa March 6th at 10 a.m. Community Centre. Carried, •. (• 30-18, Blyth. .0 2i' 114, Blyth, gto on Manch 1st and 2nd,1959. Every • _ Carried.. D. Beecroft, R. I3, Thompson, Reeve. C(crk, township tit Httron Cotunty is entitled APPLICATIONS WANTED , Walter' S1tortreed,' (fox botu'.ty) to one voting delegate at this Couwe:a• Applications {or the following poli- - -^" _ 2.00; Witt. I-Iarnrtn (fox hot:-n`.y) 2.01; ( . •'lien. This gives Huron Cotutty six- tions�it- 11o'•rls 1'orvush'p will be re-' wrrM�Mt...rrM►M..r�s►,►r.+N+r.►++ R, G. Bennett, grant to Intron County FEDERATION NEWS itern votes on all questions discussed. 1 celved by the undersigned up ttnt,•1 10'• CECIL WHEELER, Crop Improvement Assoc'ation, 15.00;' , I The work done by the Ontario Vogl a.m., February 18th: ASvance-'fiat:e•s, . at\,frntisin.•r, 4.75; by Gordon M, Greig, Sec, Fieldtttan, Producers' Organization has ,been of I :assessor to assess the Township for Brussels 'Telrij Looe, tolls, 4/ii; Fab Huron Cottrity bedor'ation Agriculture. e•reat value to all farmers who produce the year 1951 at a salify of $3C000. vation Army, grant, ;5.00; Co. of IN- ` The Huron County Ilog Producers' -hogs in large or small n;nt'ters, The Spray Supervisor to 'supervise the rot:', indigent fees, 2).20; C. P, Cold- held their annual meeting in Clinton present .subsidy on hogs would never Warble Ely Spraying. Applicant to les, trip to Guel,h olid. plume call, on February 10th, with a good at•tett- leave bcoa( granted if it. had not been; supply- It's own transportation attd 15.75; Geo. Martin-, ie'ephone calls, dance present, The ,guest speaker for • for the strong representation made to j state wages c pectcd. 1.65; \lunic'tral World, sttb-ns, us, the, occasion, was Mr, .\V, Bishop of � the Government by this organization. GEO. MARTIN, Clerk, 1600: Harvey Johnston, tc'e )hoit� Norwich, Oct. a Director for The On -1 The Organization is itrt satisfied with 20 2 R.R. 4, Brussels, Ont. bills, 2.20; J, C. Maines, dog tax refund :aria llott Producers organization, He 1 the results they obtained and are con- ,..- -.---.-_-- 2,00; John- Bowman, dux, tax refund, gave an interesting talk on the cttt-;'tinning; to strive for this subsidy to be 2.f0; S. I3, Elliott, relief acct., 11.11; Ioak for. the hog intlast•rj• for the cant- increased to bring the marketing tato: TO THE RATEPAYERS to year, ITB a',so• at'e • some inter -L? of Mrs. Ps. Simtl, Blucvale 'library, g . g 15.00; 'Rev, W. J. Moores, Bclgrave estiu, facts and roasotts why the or- ganization 15,f0; Mrs. Po-cv Holman, g'atnization has hot been able to lune- library, library ..15.00; Pea;•son,- Ed: tion as ofSectively.as it sltonid. - hog dressp:l' floe hundred and fifty IUs. residence of Mrs. \\'i'diam Lcgan. wards & Co„ sup -lies, 7.75: Cecil The Ilrg- Coranittee for I-h:ron a farmer received $5.25 s't!tsidy on that1 Office clays and hors: Tttesdav, County for 1950 is Mr, Orval Taylor, particular h•fg. In order to get that Thursday and Fri.l'ay, fp Wheeler. Gr.Cicr Ara`, •1, 9.00; Dave ( from 2 to 5' .m., Craig, Gov'er drain, 16,00; Mervin chino -11 Mr. Alf. \Varner and Mr. $5.-25 Per hag the farmer pays 2c to the; and by appointment. Telephon4 63. (loader. Govier drain. 5.00; George Nes- Harry Sturdy. Members. and Mr. Win organization responsible for ebtainin t' 21.1 GEO. SLOAN. hitt 501: Ottari, G -o1 Roads Ass'n., ltant Young, Blyth, Its Secy -Treasurer. this subsid+y. Yet srnne farmers ask, , ' The animal meetitvz-of the Ontario "What 'has this organization done for - Clerk -Treasurer, fee, 5.(0; R. W. Code, inspection and Flog Producers' will be held in Toxon us?". Village of Blyth. -'•"' fkq CLINTON. GODERIGH, NOW PLAYING: Thurs., Fri•, Sa•.: Robert Dou las NOW: Errol Flynn and Technicolor; " g , HD �Wcst:ort 'THE ADVENTURES of DON JUAN' HOMICIDE l _____..____-_ .___-_-_ Monday, Tuesday, . Wedne:da, In,rid Bergman, Charles Boyer, Charles Laughton the great bre a tory that caught the heartbeat of our time Erie Ma•ia Remargue'a Mondry, Tuesday, Wechesday • Humphrey BOGART ort "KNOCK on any DOOR" Adult I ntertaln:neat. Thursday, Friday, Satrrd'y Bobby Driseol Barbara Hale, "TIIE WINDOW" "The Arch Of Triumph" Thursday, Friday, Seta -day Joel McCrea, Virginia Mayo, Henry Hal a hard-hitting tale of the West, janl- med,with rugged action, and breath- tak'rn; hack grounds. Mcnday, Teesdsy, Wednesday Glenn Ford, Nina -Foch, Barry Kelly packed with sus, ruse and dramatic story that will hold your interest throu3twut. The Undercover Man" ' Thursday, Friday, Saturday y Virginia Mayo, Eddie Bracken and • Rcnald Reagan, Fizzing with un a: cI babbling with in, fee tions situations, you %t•itt enjoy every moment with "Co!orado Territory" 'The Girl from Jones Beach' COMING; Betty Grab'e, Dan Dal yl --------- -- - - •___- 'WHEN MY BABY SMILES AT ME' `` COMING; BETTE DAVIS IN; CPM:NG; l urcphrey Bogart in; \gat. Saturdays and Holidays 2:30 p.m, I "JUNE BRIDE" "KNOCK ON ANY DOOR" • 11.~4 lY1tNNIvNMIN/ NI4NHV•4'. #4•## 4 U'--4'#4 NN INrI11NIyMININ�IIINI{W�IINoyn►�W N�#,,y - r-»- snn.e ,..r,n.......-.•wyv,n••ivw .) - ( Separators and Milkers, Discs, Plows, Manure Spreaders, Lime and Fertilizer Sow- ? ens, Spying -tooth Harrows Land Packers, 1 • Rubber -tired Wagons, Oliver Tractors, both wheel tractors and crawlers, Plows, Discs, Spreaders, Mowers, Hay Loaders, Smalley Forage Blowers and Hamm Mills, We also have repairs for Oliver-Cockshutt Tractors -, Renfrew Cream We have a good supply of corn on the Cob, Ground Corn Meal and Cracked Corn, at•all times, Crstom ten Shelling and Grinding, Anyone wanting alfalfa mets ground, get in touch with us, II, McCALLUM, Phone 204, Blyt`1, EUCHRE PARTY inSponsorcr.6 by Myth 1..0.1.. No. 963 if you arc gr to be in the market • a�loin the Orange Hall, Blyih on for steel roufin„ we are local agents for TISSON STEEL, manufactured by FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17 t RollINSON-IR\VIN, of Hamilton, at 8 o'clock. 1 MORRITT & WRIGHT IMPLEMENT DEALERS FOE OLIVER IMPLEMENTS 'Telephone 4 and 93. Blyth, Ontario ATTENTION, FARMERS! SILVER COLLECTION, Lades Plea`re Bring -Lunch. Everyone Welcome. Prompt Service. \\'e do the work, Ordcr Early For Best Service! LEONARD COOK, Phone 177, Tllyth, 19-5p. LYCEUM THEATRE WINGHAM-ONTARIO. - _ Reid's •.1 Two Shows Sat, Night y, POOL ROOM, i Pictures subject to change "t without notice, ) Two Shows Each Night starting At 4 i 7:15 , :] Saturday Matinee at 3 pan, Changes in time wIll be noted below . W� ._�--'----SUNDRIES:] - -- -'� -Wed., Th ars , Feb, 15, 16 - 1cigrj,'; "THE GREAT SINNER" (Adult Ent, rtainmcnt) ` t; and Other Sundries. Friday, ratu da-, Febru-r/17, IL 'MY FRIEND IRMA" . ' Marie W''s n, John Lund, - DiniL- FOR SALE -- �- 1 Baled oat straw. Apply to Ggrdon Flax M-rdw, Tues%a•7,-Fel. 20, 21 _1 limited, phone 114,Myth, lU tf, 'MAN ABO IT THE HOUSE y (Adult Entertainment) Ki•ron Moore, Dulcie Gray! _ AVON PRODUCTS Wed., Thurs., February 22, 23 + 'COME TO THE STABLE" Requires lady to,service customers in 1 orettn Young, Cel•ste Holm I I31yth. For particu'ars write, the , , I \fan .ger, Mrs. \V.. E. Stock, 55114 ' J. C. BLACKSTONE, I Queen St, S., Kitchener, Ont. 21-3. Piano and Organ Tuner, will be in Rlyth the week of Feb. 20th. Pho:'e 110. _ 22t-1. ';'ENDERS will he received by the LOST -� undersigned, until February 18, 1950, for a supply of hard body wood, beech 1talf-grown Collie pup, white and or maple, fourteen inches long. In the brown. AI•isw rs t" I c to name a ( of "Las- gbantllies indicated at each school. sir", roti leather collar with a tat on Union 17: 15 cords; 2 cords cedar, it, Iloys pct, Anyone kmowin'� the Union 3: 10 cords; 1 cord cedar, whereabouts, plicate 11-11, 'Myth. 21-1, Union 6: 10 cords, MMNMM�.\N,Yv1•LMINNIMNN.I Union 16: 18 cords, Union 11: 18 cords. Gordon Elliott WOOD TENDERS J. Ii. R. rlllott I S. S. 13: 15 cords. Union 7: 15 cords. • S. S. 8' 15 cords. S.S 9; 16 cords. wood to be delivered 011 or before June 1, 1950. Applications to the East \Vawanosh School hoard -Chairman, A. E. Neth - cry; Secretary, C. H. Wade. Post Office, llclgravc, 0111. 19-3. • FOR. SALE Sinter sewing tnachines, cabinet, Pancake Supper Applications will be received until 1 storey frame, instil 'brick and portable, electric; also treadle ma- February 1$, 1950, for positions of y dotal -clad dwelling, situated on the '.chines. Repair to all makes. Singer ma - tort!' side of Hamilton st., Blyth. Sewing Machine Centre, Goderich. 104 acre farm, near \\Talton, first 51-tf, ,, lot off highway', small instil brick house, hydro, 4 -piece bath, hard- R. A. Farquharson, M.D. Wool floors, drilled well, barn 40x50, centeut stabling; 94 acres, level, arable land (medium clay loan.), in the - drive shed 20x20, Blyth •Memorial Hall. S ' 150 acre farm on 6th con. Mor- rooms; for- 2 p.nl. o 4 pan, H.. 'T'..... 2 -storey t._t_,. house, 7 I 7 nm to 0 nm • ELLIOTT Real Estate Agency BLYTH. THE FOLLOWING DWELLING F()R SALE \VI'TIH IMMEDIATE POSSESSION; L'rrsseIs, Pailie Parrott and Chas, _CoultesinterviewI31 tl t CI PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Ho•Jrs Daily Except Wednesday and Sunday. Supper served rola - roans ; barn 4{)x50, cement stabling, Telephone 33 -- Blyth, Ont, Lot cast -half of 34 in 'the third 47-52p. 4:30 to 7 pan, -The East Warwattosh School Board, concession of the Township of East - Admission 50c and. 25c. Chairman, A. E. Nethery, : Wawt•anosh, 100 acres of lah(l, about , rame Doherty Bros. Secretary, C. H. Wade. I 5 acres scconct-growth bush. On Everybody Welcome Post Office, llclgravc, Ont. 19-3, t tiaclling,e llbarn. ouses is a r stone wall, able f with GARAGE. TOWNSHIP OF HIBBERT good stabling, Possession, FOR SALE •- Acetylene and Electric Hornet Chain Saw, in fair condition. TENDERS FOR GRAVEL. One -and -ore -half a -half storey brick kik, Reg. Schultz,hone 34-1?, dwelling on Morris street. Otic ac- Welding A Specialty. : ,1 h i Tenders will be received tit:. roan- re of land. Small stable. A good , lllyth• 21 -Ip. lar Ccnuncil meeting in the 1'owustlip buy, and possession as required. Agents For International - myth. Harvester Parts & Supplies of a her; nearer. the 1949 level. The subsidy at present is $3.50 per - Until further notice the Office of the one 4t1s1re-d lbs, of pork sol(l..lf a t Clerk -Treasurer will be located at the A. L. COLE R.U. OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Goderich, Ontario • Telephont V Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted, With 25 Years Experience THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTH, ONT. Officers ' Phone 88 President: Chris Leonhardt; Via - Pt esident, icaPtesidcnt, 1-Iugh, Alexander; Secretary Treasurer, and Manager, M, A. Reid, Scaforth, Directors of Robert Archibald, Seaforth; Frank A McGregor, Clinton; Alex, Broadfoot, Scaforth; Cltris. Leonhardt, Born- holm; E. J. Trewartha, Clinton; John 100 acre farm with brick house. (L. Malone, Seaforth; John H. \icEw- furnace, good bar95 workable. all ling, Blyth ; Hugh Alexander, Walton; ;n rrrass, gond n,. well, close to school S. H. \Vhitmore, Seafnrth; Harveyand village, hydro available, Hullctt 1 huller, 1:R. 2, Goderich. trop, Sec this farm before you buy. 1 Agents -John E. Pepper, Brttcefield; R. F. i hteKercher, Dublin; J, F, Prueter, ; Brodhagen; Geo. A, \Vatt, Blyth; Selo ' wyn Baker, Brussels., Parties desirous to effect insurance 1 or transact other business, will be prontply at'ended to by applications to any of the above natned officers (addressed tt their 'respective post Of, - Realtor Blyth, Ont. 109 acre grass farm, plenty water and shade, Morris two. bargain for quick sale. A good insut brick, insulated, fully modern ' dwelling, bathroom, fur- nace, hush -in cupbiards, gara' e new, dll in .A-1 con litirn. Po:ses- 'ioa arranged. • Also other chwellinngs in Blyth, and ore in Brussels. More favour? That's because it's better tea "SALADA" TEA ANNE 141RST -*tut liana/ Cououelot --, "DEAR ANNE HIRST: Perhaps sty problem is an old one, but it is heartbreakingly tragic just the sane. My husband drinks, and when he does he is brutal to n►e, even striking me be- fore the children and using un- printable langu4 age, "1 have tried to be patient, hoping he would some day realize how this is is affecting the girls, *When he comes home drunk, the oldest one cries, and begs me to leave ihm , , , I have petted hire, and humored hits—when 1 felt like hav- ing hien jailed, (He scoffs at Alco- holics Anonymous), "I -le has never taken the children anywhere, even to school functions I have tried to bring them up properly, but how can 1, when he goes on like this? 1Vc've been mar- ried 14 years, and 1 love hint dearly, and want us to stay together, especi- ally because of our fancily, When he is sober, he says he loves me too. 00. HOME? "1 would be welcome back home with the children to live with my parents, but I'm not sure enough. He doesn't think I ever would leave him, "I don't feel 1 can overlook all this any longer, I'm at the end of my patience. Help me! "DESPERATE." No mater how you love your husband, !mow loath you are to leave him, the welfare of the child- ren should be your first consider- ation, Living day after" day in in anxiety and fear, these girls are under a nervous strain which must inevitably affect their healthy, de- velopment, as it must also give therm a distorted picture of mar- riage, As their mother — really their only responsible parent— you cannot allow thetn to con- tinue to witness the recurring bru- tal scenes which their father cau- ses. Tell your husband that the 4945 SIZES 12-20 Tops in style! Tops everything! Cut a coat becoming to you and all your clothes. Swagger air, rounded front edge—it's that flare - back topper you must havel Pattern 4945 comes in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, Size 16 requires 1% yards 54 -inch fabric. This pattern, nay to use, sim- ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has complete illustrated instructions. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS (25c) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER, Send order to Anne Adam', Box 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ontario. ISSUE 7 — 1910 • * next time he comes home intoxi- * cated, you intend to take the child- * ren and go home to your parents, * It is your last wanting, * He will not believe you, I ex• * pect, and you may have to leave, * physically, before he realizes that * he has driven you all away, (Pre- *{ pare your parents for your corns lag,) Not alt, your pleas ,and ar- guments have fazed him, He must it seems, be met with. the fact that he is alone. He will undoubtedly try to per. suade you to return, making all kinds of promises, Be firm, and convince him that he must prove, and for a reasonable length of time, that he has stopped drinking * at all, before you will consider * consider coming home again. * This really may make him for- * swear alcohol entirely. So before * you start divorce proceedings, give * him this last chance, When divorce must be consi- dered, it is the children's welfare that should come first, If you are threatened with this decision, let Anne Hirst's wisdom help you make it, Address her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Tor - Onto, Modern Etiquette By Roberta Lee Q. Is it now considered proper for one to- light one's own cigar- ette before that of a companion, so as to avoid the taste of sulphur in that person's cigarette? A. No; this taste is in evidence only during the first flaring of the match. Light your match, and if you wish, wait just a second before applying it to your friend's cigar- ette—then light your own, . , , . , , Q. If a woman is wearing a cor- sage pinned on her coat when entering a restaurant, what does shedo with it? A, She takes it off and pins, it on her dress where it will show off to much better, advantage. Q. Is it proper to have ushers, when having no bridesmaids, at a church wedding where about 100 guests are expected? A, This is not only proper, but necessary, Q, How does a young married woman introduce her mother to another person? A, She must be sure to give her mother's name, saying. "This is my mother, Mrs. Jones," so that the other person will know what to call her In speaking to her. Q. What refreshments should be served at a reception that follows the christening of a .child? A, The menu is the usual one for an afternoon informal tea, with' refreshments served in buffet style, Berlin Brightens Up A Bit—The Berlin ratan -in -the -street, long accustomed to Russians and rations, got anunexpected treat when a fashion store in the British sector hired live models to advertise its new stock of nylon hosiery, WIDAY SdiOOL LSSON By The Rev, R. Barclay Warren THE FIGHT FOR CHRISTIAN FREEDOM Acts 15: 1.6, 22-29; Gal, 2: 16 Golden Text: Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage— Gal, 5:1. \Vhat we learn in childhood, sticks. The customs of childhood tend to gather a halo about them, which in later life we conic to re- vere, So, with many of the Jews who became Christians, it,was diffi- cult to turn aside from the ceremon- ial laws of Moses, Paul was a notable exception. He saw with per- fect clearness the relation of the law to the gospel of Christ, To the Galatians who were beginning to trust in their works to save them, lie wrote, "Before faith came, we were kept under the law, shut up unto the faith which should afterwards be revealed, Wherefore the law was our schooimaster to bring us unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith, But after that faithis come, we are no longer wider the schoolmaster," Gal, 3: 23-25. Once Sadhu Sundar Singh enter- ed into conversation with a Hindu "holy man" lying on a bed of spikes, For eighteen months the Hindu had been torturing his body that he might crush the desires of , self, He admitted, "1 have not yet gained my object, nor is it possible to do so in so short a time. Many years, and indeed many births, will be necessary to acconmplisit it," Sun- dar Singh reasoned with him and testified as to how he had found deliverance and peace in an instant, but the other man replied, " I can never admit that salvation can be obtained as a gift, and in one short e," We can do nothing to merit salva- tion, Joining the church, paying money, trying to live a moral life; none of these will bring God's peace to the soul, We are saved by faith and faith alone, It is not what we can do but faith in what Jesus has . done, "Jesus paid it all, All to Him I owe— Sin has left a crimson stain. He washed it white as snow." w�•s..+awa+ HRONICLES ' ii1N6ER ARIA iD� Co►vo cLoltne . Ctacke We had a houseful again this week -end and the fun and chatter that went on was a welcome change from a week of considering prob- lems that were concerned only with falling farm prices and the eccen- tricities of the weather, Daughter was home and is great form—quife well pleased with her housing venture, but still wondering how she can cope with the various things that need to be done—all of which cost money, But, as she says, even if she doesn't make a fortune, at least she has a comfortable home, The young couple, friends of Daughter's, who occupy the ground floor rooms have been helping with some of the decorating, "Just wait until you See my Bubble Room," says Daughter, "It's swell." "Bubble Room," I echoed in be- wildered surprise. "t'cs, that's what we call it," laughed Daughter. "You see, we got a bargain price on some real good wallpaper but *hen it came to put- ting it on,, it was so heavy that it wouldn't hold' the paste properly, So, because of the various places where the paper didn't stick, we called it 'The Bubble Rooth'," Electric wiring has been another of her worries, The house, being old, has insufficient circuits, "So," said Daughter, "until I discovered the trouble, we spent most of our time blowing fuses," Partner has already nicknamed her "the Land- lady" and before starting back on her trip to Toronto yesterday, Daughter proved the title was well deserved, It so happened the wind had got up, and it was also getting quite a bit colder, "Olt, the dickens!" says Daughter, as an extra heavy gust hit our house, "I hope that wind dies down—it's going to be hard on my oil furnace!" What a lot more interest a person takes in the most ordinary everyday affairs of life, if he, or she, has to foot the bills Joy was also here aid her big worry was staking out an annual report to the Board regarding her nursing activities—and anyone who has dealt with annual reports kfiows what a . headache they can be, Then Johnny came in for Sunday dinner and his big problem was whether or not to head for the West again in time for spring' seeding, Partner and I have our prpblems too—major and minor. The trouble is one cannot, always be sure which are major and which are minor, Minor problems very easily become major, whereas it is possible that major problems have become major only because we.,are all at, little in- clined to make mountain' out of molehills. Now if the typesetter gets all that straight, 1 hope you can figure out what I mean, - I imagine quite a lot of mountains and molehills will be given an air- ing at the .annual meeting of the Federation of Agriculture being held in Niagara Falls this week, Apropos of that gathering, I like the headline to Lotta Dentpsey's colnnn today --"You can't tell an editor from a farmer at the Falls," After all, what does an editor, or a farmer, look like? I am not going to stick my neck out by giv- ing you my idea of a typical editor, but I do know that some folks' idea of a typical farmer is a pian in overalls, pant legs rolled over rub- ber boots; wearing a smock or windbreaker; cap pulled down over his ears and a beard admittedly a little. on the fuzzy ..side, Yes, and you can find this type in any small town in an agricultural area, be- cause naturally, each - man must dress according to his trade or pro- fession, If the farmer had to shave and change his- clothes before going to town — and then change back again before starting his chores or going out to the field, then he would sure lose a lot 'of tune. But when the farmer is through wig with his work for the day and in- tends going out; or when business or pleasure takes hint to the city, then, as Lotta Dentpsey saga—"You can't tell an editor from a farmer" --the editor also having shed his workday clothes,. and given his ink, stained fingers a bit of extra scrub- bing, We treed to be careful in our use of the word "typical." I remember getting into trouble 'once by saying that an unknown visitor had the ap- pearance of a "typical insurance agent l" Many women are subject to weak, aching bank, Often tho kidneys are to blame, for your kidneys, along with the liver, must filter out Im- purities from the bloodstream, So if you feel tired, worn-out, head- achy—with the nagging pain of an aching back—look to both your kid• diens have been lrelysinglt on Cana. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills. for over half a century, . Give your eyetem . a chance to work properly, Try- Dr, Chase'. • Kidney -Liver PWe today,. The name "Dr. Chase" Is your assurance, 1 Dr. Chase's KIDNEY -LIVER PILLS ��kitn s ��sier; Speedier with Wonderful New Fast Rising Dry Yeast! tEtSt}AHtS '-n rkj016 D RYYEAST DR STAYS FRESH MM1110I �taen,e •W Wl„1 •Y.MW,N CINNAMON BUNS Measure into large bowl, 1 c. lukewarm water, 2 tsps, granu- lated sugar: stir until sugar is dissolved, Sprinkle with 2 envel- opes Flelschntann's Royal Fast Rising Dry Yeast. Let stand 10 min., THEN stir well. Scald 1 c. milk and stir int V2 c, granulated sugar, 1r/4 tsps, salt, 6lbs, shortening; cool to lukewarm, Add to yeast mix- ture and stir In 2 well -eaten eggs, Stir in 3 c. onwe•sifted bread flour; beat until smooth, Work in 3 c. more • once -sifted bread flour, Knead until smooth and elastic; place in greased bowl; brush top with melted butter or shortening, Cover and set in warm place, free from draught. Let rise until doubled in bulk, While dough is rising, combine 11/2 c, brown sugar (lightly pressed down), 3 tsps, ground cinnamon, 1 c, washed and dried seedless raisins; Punch down dough and divide into 2 equal por- tions; form into smooth balls. Roll each piece into an oblong 1/4" thick and 16" longi loosen dough. Brush with melted butter or margarine. Sprinkle with raisin mixture. Begin- ning at a tong edge, roll up each piece loosely, like a jelly roll, Cut into 1" slices, Place Just touching each other, a cut -aide up, in greased 7" round layer -cake pans (or other shal- low pants), Crease tops, Cover and let rise until doubled In bulk, Bake in moderate oven, 350°, 20.25 minutes, Serve hot, or reheated, • No more taking chances with perishable yeast cakes that have lost thelt leavening power! New Fleischmann's Fast DRY Yeast keeps full strength and active right till the moment you use It, Needs NO refrigeration -- keeps safely In your cupboard. Try its marvellous results in your next baking. Orders months su$$ / WRITE TODAY FOR NY NEW DELICIOUS CROWN 8RANiD RECIPES* ... FREE::RANI ASHLEY OFFERS .YESiEGU t) HER - Send q Poston, tot HOME .$EIiVICE DEPT.; The atiada Salt t Cpm tin , LImii d, tRECIPE5— P. 0.6ex 29, Montreal, PA • SIRT e1T IC This item has nothing to do with sport, but ' we think, it is worth noting in print, for all that. icor on a Sunday evening a week or so ago we chanced to hear what struck us as one of the finest pieces of unconscious humor we have run across in softie time, * * 4 It was one of these big network orchestra programs and the leader, in a solemn voice, was introducing a number, We didn't happen to take his remarks down in short- hand, possibly for the reason that we cannot write shorthand, but they went something like this; "Tomorrow marks the 40th anni- versary of the founding of the Boy Scout Movement in America, 1 personally used to be a Boy Scout, and I 'have three sons who are going to be Scouts when they get big enough, So now I would like to dedicate our next number to that great .and worthy organization," * * • Cance a brief pause, during which we wondered just what fine, stir- ring outdoor or patriotic piece we *ere about to hear. Then the orch- estra blasted into—of all things— "The Lullaby of Broadway." • * * That leader—we didn't happen to catch his name—certainly knows how to pick the appropriate ones, If he had to play a piece in honor of Joe Stalin's birthday, chances are he'd select "Peace, Perfect Peace" or some such, 4 * • To the surprise of almost nobody, the sports writers and sportscasters have acclaimed John Harrison "Jack" Dempsey and George Her- man "Babe" Ruth as, respectively, the greatest fighter and the greatest ballplayer to appear, up to now, In the Twentieth Century. i * 4 Just a column or two ago we took a shallow dive into this ''greatest fighter" business, coming op with the strictly personal opin- ion that Mr. Dempsey ranked no better than third behind Jack John- son and Joe Louis, However, as the Romans used to say, "de gusti- bus non est disputandum" which tan be roughly translated as "when arguing over box-fig(fters it's every than 'for theirself." .. * • • The Mauassa Mauler had more Color—not the skin pigmentation kind—than the other two put to- gether; and it's box•ofTlce color which makes the turnstiles get red- hot bearings, Even at his worst Jack Dempsey was a more mem- orable figure than either Johnson or Louis at their best, which pro- bably had more than a little to do with how the voting went. * * o The baseball ballotting turneu out to be strictly a two horse race —and not touch more of a race than the one when Man O'\Var ran away and hid on a Sir Barton; and the fact that Sir Barton was in such shape that he should never have been allowed to go to the post, that long -ago day at' Kenilworth, has nothing to do with the case. * / 4 • It was bound to be either Babe Ruth or Ty Cobb; and when the returns were all in and counted, it was discovered that these two had drawn all but 24 of the 393 votes cast, Final results showed the Bambino with 253 votes—more .than double the number marked for the 'Georgia Peach, who had a total of 116. * 4 M Lou Gehrig finished third, attrac- ting a grand total of eight votes. Walter Johnson, "The Big Train"— and the only major league pitcher except Cy Young ever to hurl over 400 victories—finished in the fifth slot • with seven votes, Five experts voted for Joe DiAlaggio; two for Hans Wagner; and two for Christy "Ilig Six" Mathewson, No other player gat even a call, FOR QUICK RELIEF AEYOND BELIEF,,, COME OUT. FROM UNDER THE SHADOW OF PAINI tot relief from the pale of ARTHRITu, IHIUMAT1SM, NaVaiTtt, et ICLATI A get a bottle of DOLCIN Thbten today. DOLCIN gab telleved the pains of thousands of sufferers. DOLCIN 'llfbtets Ali not batmtul, easytatake, reasonable le cost -100 tablets for 12.391 the large economy -size bottle of 900 tablets, 810, if rout druggist cannot supply tioLCIN .tvtlte to DOLCIN • iMITED,Totoato 10, Ont. DOLCIN TAM AR! Tatman' tv4e, DOLCIN 1e he ret rutty u.demu► or tete product, , Hollywood Visitor—Ars, Eleanor Roosevelt, making one of her rare night-club appearances, chats with actress Janet Blair, who is a friend of the former first lady, Mrs, Roosevelt asked that her party be given at a table in a quiet corner. 2 1" TABLE TALits .1.01 .-044.4„ clam Andt'ews. Maybe the groundhog saw his shadow, and maybe not. In our part of the Province the sky was overcast most of the . day, and if the little weather prophet ven- tured out of his hole, he wouldn't be scared back again for the pro- verbial forty days, or whatever it's supposed to be. Still, judging of the future by the past, chances are we'll have quite a few chilly days and nights before Spring is actually here; and some of the recipes I have for you today are especially good in cold weather. For example, this one for making: CORNBREAD / cup flour 1 cup yellow cornmeal Vs teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon baking powder 1/2 teaspoon soda 1 tablespoon sugar 3/4 cup hour milk 1 egg 2 tablespoons bacon fat, Method --Melt the fat in a bak- tu pan. Sift the dry ingredients. Add the beaten egg and fat to' the milk. Combine the two mixtures. Bake in a 400 -degree oven for 25 minutes. Instead of sour milk, sweet milk with a teaspoon of vinegar added may be used. • `. , Careful attention to your season- tttgs Makes all the difference in creating a meat pie that's just so-so —and one that brings loud cries for an encore, The following recipe Possibly the funniest thing, about the whole business is the Hans Wagner vote. We've heard dozens of arguments among old-time base- ball men who saw the immortal Dutchman at his best, and the gen- eral consensus always seemed to be that if Ty Cobb wagn't the greatest of all time, the bow-legged -Pitts- burg shortstop undoubtedly was. Yet Wagner draws the imposing total of two whole votes, "Out of sight oift of mind" might be the oslution; • for it couldn't be that sports experts, just like ordinary mortals, are pretty much like a fleck of sheep in their reactions, * • However, nobody's going to put up much of a squawk over the vote ..for Ruth. Like Detitpsey, The Babe had • scads of color, His personal popularity had a lot to do with saving 'the game when it was in a very bad tvay following the Black Sox scandal. He was one of - the two or three best left-handers that., ever toed the rubber=how good he might have been if he'd stuck •to pitching nobody will ever know. He took a cut at the horsehide that was positively thrilling even when 'ht: struck out, And—best. of all from the standpoint of some—he never was the sort pointed" out as an example of what pure living and , strictly moral conduct could accom- plish, • ▪ • . • Whether or not we . personally agree with the tanking that put .Ruth first and Ty Cobb second is a matter of little or no importance. However, since nobody asked us, we'll tell you, Let's put it this way. Should we be offered the pick of the bin, and were a clubowner chiefly interested in big gates and bigger profits, we'd choose Babe Ruth without the slightest hesita- tion. # * * But if we Were a, club manager, whose salary, '16b and future pros- pects depended on winning 'a pen- nant, we'd grab Ty Cobb first, Hans Wagner second,—and after we had them safely roped and tied, then maybe we'd start considering a gena called Ruth. is one that has been tried with many successful variations—for ex- ample, mushrooms may be added, when available. Make it in a large- size flat glass baking dish, Serves four, • ee MEAT' VEGETABLE PIE 2 cups diced (not chopped), leftover roast beef,. •lamb, . pork or chicken . , 1 cup leftover ,gravy, thinned with 1 cup water or 1 cup canned consommb diluted with 1 cup water and thickened or 2 cups stock thickened to make gravy Salt and Pepper 1 cup cooked, leftover vegetables or 1 cup celery, carrots and onions, diced and parboiled 1 cup diced, boiled potatoes (optional) BISCUIT TOPPING 2 cups flour 4 teaspoons baking powder / teaspoon salt '3'tablespoona shortening , 1 cup milk 'teaspoon Worcestershire sauce , Method—Butter baking dish, and arrange meat and vegetables in it. Cover with. gravy. Top with dropped (not rolled) baking pow. der ,biscuits made as follows; mix shortening lightly with salted flour, add liquid slowly, stirring to make soft - dough. Drop biscuits on top of meat and vegetables. Bake 30 minutes at 375 degrees F:, longer at slightly higher heat if a very brown dish is desired. * 4 • Although this recipe comes ori - Ws so afferent today g:naliy from the deep South, it', a favorite supper 'dish with lot, -Df Northerners top. It's for: CREOLE RICE CAKES 4 silces bacon, chopped 3 tablespoons chopped onion 3 tablespoons green pepper, chopped 1 teaspoon salt / teaspoon pepper 3 cups rice, cooked 1 cup flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 can tomato pulp Method—Fry bacon . crisp, leav- ing eaning fat in frying pan, Combine bacon with onion, green pepper, and rest of ingredients, Mix thor- oughly. Shape into cakes and fry these In bacon fat. "CHILDREN should be seen but not heard" was a popular saying in grandfather's time, But today the youngsters hail with noisy delight that scrumptious, TWO.GRA1N cereal, POST'S GRAPE•NUTS FLAKES, They love its crisp, sweet-as•a•nut flavor , , , its tasty goodness of sun. ripened wheat and malted barley. awacti., Easy to get— easysto serve— easy to digest — POST'S GRAPE -NUTS FLAKES are wholesome anil good for all the family, They supply nourish. ment both young and old need daily , , , useful quantities of carbohydrates, protein, minerals and other food essentials, Ask your grocer for POST'S GRAPE -NUTS FLAKES today, • OlVe/6••• 6F-289 l°�te REM THE STRENGTH AND VITALITY of any nation stems from the character of its people. Canada, stalwart champion, of democracy, draws its strength from the peoples of many nations and its variety and colour from the blending of their racial and cultural heritages. Rich in natural resources, Canada has enriched herself culturally by interweaving the national charact- eristics of these many races, whose cotntnon'bottd is citizenship in the Canadian Family. Greece, cradle of democracy in 1 the Old World, has fought and suffered through the centuries to retain democratic freedom.Today, many Greeks enjoy the security and privileges that Canadian citizenship affords. Inspired by their natural love of independence, many have started their own businesses and built then into successful enterprises. Greek literature, architecture and philosophy have contributed much to Canada's culture and the thrift and progressiveness of her people have won, the respect of all Canadians. Calvert DISTILLERS (Canada) Limited AAMHER$TBURO • ONTARIO Calvert, Secretory of State to King James 1, and head of the famous Calvert family, founded one of Canada's first colonies in Newfound- land in 1622. Calvert and his descendants fostered the principles of religious tolerance and democratic freedom and thus helped sow tho fertile seed of democracy In the New World. • PAO)8 it rr -, FOOD STORES For Thursday, Friday, Satu:day, Feb 16, 17, 18 WALLACE'S Dry Goods -Phone 73-- Boots & bi1oes SEW and SAVE When you spelid your precious time se\v ii , you'll want to use dependable materials. \\'e try to carry the best. J, & P, COATS SHEEN AND COTTON, CLARK'S STRANDED COTTON, LIGHTNING ZIPPERS,' NEEDLES, DOMES, HOOKS and !EYES, All so necessary with your Prints, flrc•adc!oths, a full ran7,e of cokes. Beach Cloth, Poplit:s, Crepes, \VoaIleii , plain and Maid. 1 N^N4.1`Ir41,11 444N4••••••41,44•0 4/ y. 4.•:-1.:40 •;,, ' ;11 1:1 8AAi PERSONAL INTEREST Mrs. 11'-I1:un Phir of Be!grave s;•citt the ,week -en -1 \\':th Mrs, Jolri Pett. Dr. an::1 M :s. 1'. 1). Kilpatrick an l family of Listowel spint S:•n lay \v'Itl Mts. Ki';iatrick's lister, \Liss Prat' y P cs'r'tc Mrs. Fred Somers left for her home at Timt i ns last \\'e lnestliiy after v sit- inur h:r Lltlrr;, Mr. 11. llerd:gton for 'the past three months. • \lrs, G. R. Augustine and Doreen ; en: the tveelc-end wi.h the fcr.rer'• sister, \Ir;.. G. \Nil{;inscn, all 1 Mr. 1Vitkinsoa ar.d flintily, of London, Mr. G, 11,. 1)dih)1.'I of Sartre, and \I r and Mrs. Garth 1):11.1,yn an.l of Chatham, spent the w v'c•cna \I r, and )les. C. T. I).hbtn. Hullett 'Township Council, I`he regular nicn:111; meeting of tli Mullett township ern :1,l was held on Feb. (ith, in the Community Hall, Lon. de Kura, at 1:30 p.m. .The Reeve and all mcm':er; of the.Comwil were pros• ent. The minutes of the last regular meet h'{ of Jan. 9 were read, Motions; 1.eil cr-11ro\1•n : That the in notes of ;% Jan. 9 ire:titi be adct,teil as r•earl. Carried. 16 OZ, JAR ?5c " • .1 k:ter from the Salv'atirn Army :1 CRUNCHiE SWF,ET MIXED PICKLEreclnesl'n.; a Fr:uni, 11•a•; then r: ad, "; AUNT JEMIMA PANCAKE FLOUR .......................... PER PKG. 17c i Ilrow 1,1ewitt : That we make a d rl KELLOGG'S OVENI-FRESH CORN FLAKES 2 8.Oz, PKGS,'25c +'• ii;tti,,;i of $ :5.t1) to Salvat!on Army CRISCO 1 LB, CARTON 35c 1;; Ca:•.ric.l. • HANDPICKED WHITE BEANS .._ PER LB, 10c ;', , ,Tell itt-\'dine;: 'Rat Ave refund Frank LILY BRAND CHICKEN HADDiE • PER TIN 27c >• 'I'yr,(L•tll the ;u:11 of $'.(10 a:ror in d.d:. o>;;, tax, Carried, t"; CROWN or BEE HIVE CORN SYRUP ..... 2 LB. TIN 27c, 5 LB, 5:c ,x I Ile:\\•nl e'per: That the a:'d'I,r, ,` SWIFT'S ALL -SWEET MARGARINE ........... 1 LB, CARTON 32c ;ettd his report to the I'r:nle s to be', r; LIBBY'S SAUER KRAUT .......- ..................... . 28 OZ. TIN 18c,t; ; Wired. Cirricd. i Rl 3• I At this time the tenders f -,r the JELLO DESSERTS 3 PKGS, 25c k I (; a ellin; Contract Were ):'e; d an l nl GOLDEN NET FANCY COHO.E SALMON.... 3 Half -Lb, TiNS 51.00 e I cowdde:ed. '1 t'1•il'-1.e'; cr : That w'` hire (;e 'r:.e Fresh Fruit -- Fresh Vegetables, ' R,,,wird in errs') and (!elver approxi - ;t" ;I :_; Imnelr 12,0;:0 yards of gravel c\•t the Pioneer and Lifeteria Feeds, 1 ir.tirett 'Townshi�i reads at a pri'e of d (i1e per yvird. Wo:; to hegira not Irit- :' ' er ilian ,lune 1. Carried. We Deliver. ••E. 5. ROBINSON, -• Phone 156 ,�; i At this time the forme: Rut..., Joh', 4.44.11.44.14.04.844444.0"... •r:4 i.i.i.. 1.yH:• •044. •i. 1•+i.L..e.:••• •••'�'yC•40.,0 0.114•••11. 1,••O O1,r :lrmstron„ who \va; in ath'nd.lnr,' a ' I the niee(iis', \vas called to the c Ion' i di table. Mr. \\i n. Dale, the pr' e'itPhone 37.20. LOIIDESBORC y Ii, T. VO[ItiCn, Proprietor Blyth, Ontario beeves addresser! hint roma presented O him with a canlhinrltion rltrarctte. > BRUSH AND SPRAY PAINTING q I ' rise..and Ron;oo lighter, su'ta'"1.. i;; 'Sunworthy Wallpaper rii Palr.ts and Enamels, ••r•+••rt/444#It•INs++e•NII++N•►PI•^'+1•I+a✓ISKNN,.•I+I+wl+rvrlvrk•,. Y1kId renal t1U' (nul11 a l"llyl (�Ifll'll,ti 4.4., 4.4..'1•'„••O•J••.11.4,•,.4.•••t,i•;44.. 'H• •.p0,••M•,••••:64;11:.�4.' .•,••.4. P1•lw•P •J•,1••y,� ,•I !lid's;( 'I'all'rsh°;,, \I r. :\riii rat,• '"'" "• b received th., presentation and 111'1 .1 T. t1N � ` \'el'1• f'ttin'r:'\'.'s.....11.r.•N,�Iw.I++I•.1•.r++.N.. '�, ''1 fit }'ILL Jc11 int I'ra'n!,; : That we pay c?rte- X BLZ"j`Ii ••.. ONTARIO. gate's ripenses to the Rural \rooted' INTRODUCING ' pil'ties C• nvenii-n and a'so .Good linP(Is ('OIII'el,ti -o, to 'll; amount of the New % ;" Special Low Prices on Full Course Meals s�:.n�i, fr; mono of cnara':u or t�►- DI:;Ii-U•CtJRL w � cid � F able In attend. Carried, M Jcllitt-1.c1, c . '1'h.t (.;co, ler i\vn at COLD WAVE PERM ANENT 45 Cents And r' `gs tend the F're I'rd fcctinn :\red alci : u, as head rf Cr uracil 1,u the a•,•r.n Far Teen -Asses and Carver GAO' °j ea at l� � ��ye of the l er e nn Fe'., 7, 1u0. ('addled Gives ycu sail, lustrous curls at y , FRANK GONG, Proprietor Beauty Shopped Wc(14 February 15, 1950. III 11 .1,l 1.n.rvN ilii YY 1. mho i 11.11,1,0 1,� i,1011164111111410144o- CIleara���ce dale The fI.113\vin; Prol: cts arc Pr'c; d' for 'Quick Clearance: CUTEX NAIL POLISH (Old Style) ............re;, 25:, CLEARING 19: • PERMANENTS • NYAL, COD LIVER EXTRACT..........._.._ r•o3, $1:73, CLEARING 85c DAVIS & LAWRENCE .TONIC ................_. tog, $1.t0, CLEARING 75: DIAMOND DYES ....................................._.......,,. rej, 15c, CLEARING 05: EPHEDRINE COUGH SYRUP .............. ... dog, .0c, CLEARING 35c NYAL BABY TALCUM re;, 23c, CLEARING 15c MILLER'S VAPORIZING SALVE reg, 25c, CLEARING 15c MILLER'S TEETHING POWDERS ............ reg, :5c, CLEARING 15c FERM3L RHEUMATIC TABLETS rag, $1,(0, CLEARING 50c FERMOL LINIMENT ........................... re-, 5"c, CLEARING 75c EVANS IRON end YE 1ST TA -LETS ., reg, 59:, CLEARING 35; Machilleless, . Cold Waves, and Machine Waves. 'Finger Waves, Shampoos, Hair Cuts, and Rinses. Olive McGU. J phone 1Blyth, 52. .N•I•N4104. ,14~INNI~•~4~r• rim i IT'S NOT TOO EARLY-- `l'o start you Spring de- coration plans, Nothing adds a.3 much happiness to the horse as bright, (lle2r'lul walls and ceil- ings, When thinking of de- !, orating, either wallpa- per or paint, include us in your plans, All work corplet�'d with neatness and reasonably priced, Ask to see our samples. F. C. PEST I1 R D.RHILP, Phm. B. rtr�tire, Sl'Nt1111F;R \t'.�I.t,PhPl�.11•-pfinNT 20 '_..Y....,••t,•/•fi1.1.1,,.% ,. «_. .. u..l/IY...w!w.a:Y.�.M.WM1.M✓A4W-wU,N/W...-.. .. ... 11MI~~~ifr#N AMP eNIN.#N•I ee .'+-KIWI e11I'N0INt•I'NI'fNNNN TRY OUR FRESH RASPBERRY OR CHERRY PIES. HIGH RATIO CAKES. BUNS AND PASTRY. FII.ESH WHITE AND BROWN BREAD, Plain or Sliced, YOUR PATRONAGE IS APPRECIATED. .-,.. ,•rd..✓a,1-4., a. A. ., .i , 1,..k 1.•4 �.u,u i.ni uh,l The SIO ;E ;t:AKERY TWWO TELL YOU 140W TO GET Feed'Shur-Gann Dairy ', at'ii CONTAINING RICH MOLASSES AND ALL NUTRIENTS SEQUIRED FOR HIGH MILK PRODUCTION. Farmers Everywhere Acclaim Shur.Gain Dairy Ration. DAIRY RATION (Sweetened) 320 DELIVERED IN TON LOTS, $64.00, DAIRY RATION (Unsweetened) 310 DELIVERED IN TON LOTS, $62,00, T. B. ALLEN, L0NDESB0R0, ONTARIO. Jewitt -Young •1 h ii we a�lc'erl 3c GREAT for Tenders for elle'-loft ri':1::.a.1 • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • ,0„ly4 ..,.../.4.4..04.7,4,1. *4:41:4.4 441:4441: 0:Y 1:4144 ,i 1,.i •1,11.•1:41:444 11114:4•,1.:4.:1:. •, 1�• x041401:14•. O•14•••••:14444 truck, Tender'; t'� he in by \larch h. 11,:aluirc Now at•I••Ivr••+++••I++r•I• xf11#,,I_,I.,,.,.,,4N..,�.�.NN++'.+NII• ( je int-1'nitttg: 'rh.l• we amend 11y- , `RAY'S BEAUTY SALON ; eiran's N ` ard;!are 1x11' Gln. :\,i). tr);tl !, In SCt lidq ,\,• i ��y lessor's salary at •$30J.00 for the vea: 4 Phone 53, hlylh, 11150. Carried. Also Machine):es and MacAtie i.eiper-Jewitt: Tiilt we pay the at- Wa es, .'.cdlp Traalmen e, Hail c r. rats Young -lir as u'r„:,' n : nee'That d. Carr\i•eied.ni'n to C u, Wa:06.Shamp:os, and Finger ad o meet \larch .5 at 1:;0 pini. Car' 'I•. Ac':aunta44I4444.•44444Jr1•414.N1446,441•I•4••••'Ir•• r; , I,t e '~are- / Gen, W. Cn\v,ln, 1';trt s,dat�', 40,60t L'l', \Ives held on Saturday, deb:nary na ,_ .. ;< e t� \Iunici;:al "icirki' 4 s'ihsc r;ptioll:,, Ith at the home of Marilyn; Holger. �` 1(1,01; Clin•t-n News -Record advcrtisicg 3.P.:5; \Vcnc'•all i-l,,']ucs, stl;;l�li; ;, I!t: i ; The umccta.A. was wooled by sIng',n;; . - 1•\'i!lage of Jileth, firi protection area, i "Jesus 13:cls .L's Shine", fo":htwcd Ly WASH BASINS r 65: ('),l1tl; Co. Ilttr 'r,, hu; lit,; ':i'inn, 35,C.0; call to worship. 'l'he scripture was DISH PANS 1,f5 BREAD $„XES .................... 1.49 Borden Brown, eche` 22,8t; d• ';rad by .Mrs. 11azcl\v.lcd followed by a WATER PAILS 2.13 STEP. ON CANS 1.; 9 ] r1, n , , TEA KETTLES 315 , i Tyndall, rebate dor tsx, 2,C0: Sava. prayer. The cal to worship was cn:l '' ' ;.'tiara Army, grant, 25.0); Morris limn• I cd h0' siiuing 'Breathe on Inc Breath dart'' Acct„ 733.I ; Bert 1)'.er, plank of Gott." The Nosiness pari of .the , and labour, 1.25; Geo. P.:u!for,l !travel meeting was c1 erred \vith the ttiint:�tes BLUE PYREX MiXiNG BOWL SETS ..,....... ..........................__...,_.....,$1,95 and repairs, •1.1.41; Doul, lid, Mach Co,, secondee1 by liar,hara Patterson, The _, grader edges, 27.77; Gordan Ralf rd, picture of the Church the members lights and re rales, 41 fi5; Ken. Rapson. drew \vert- Jud:;ed. Leona Johnston culverts, 4.95; Luther Saunders, \vast;- and Marilyn Bolger are to redrn`1v FORK TINES otic, 2.00; Len, Caldwell, road su;lt., therm larger. It was, decided to have 73.5!!; Art Weymouth. ;*rarer operon- a dull call 'at our ntectitlgs by answer- - or, 30.03; Cordon Radford,in; \l ca s Foredoit \lissicu Field, for PITCH FORK -.....................1,10 grader rc' fh:rc we-rc 16 MANURE FORK ...:.................... 1: 0 pairs, 15,10, the next mcrtii" BARN FO:ZK 1,93 (eo. \V, Cowan, Clerk. ii'etnlvers present at this meeting awl - • / - ' �_-`.__._ also s�sne vis!!ors. A thank -you nve ,,,,#....„.......4.44,.."".........."......m~.1.9.3 �r•IrI� N•I was read teen►' Mrs. \l Ar-thur, Dori;NUMalialla «rAL'l'UN11, den i, .. it Stevens offered to have the next meet- y,� 1i1 „•,,, I.11. i q,,, ,, A ii N,, !1,1. in;t;, \Ia o:'ict \IcAnit►;ttr, G:nta �'la"' I Holland's �gG�po 'Food Market' The February meeting of the C,G, lii;d duel P,o: is Stevens \i crc aq,p�itt.:cd ••r••Nr•rMrlrrl•N!•4`#~#~N•A•r•rNrr•••rrrrlNJ Nrr• •, Inlix 11 ..i di,n Id ..a 4 116.4.1i11.1. , 1, . 1 Y eu .1 .i ► THE nRr�TRlllrincl r17T THE PHONE 24. BLYTH, EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE. WASTE BASKETS .... tiic h Nature's Beat Choice Corn ,'• •15,oz., 10 for $1.00 '. Blyth United; Church Choir MOIMMEMINIMINNIMINERINIMMIIMIra 14.1 (,1,11,SJIIMEMINIMMEnr take great pleasure in the presenting the following - °-'' 1 I - OUTSTANDIN+G AEETISTS OF TORONTO; Elliott lnsurance Agency LILY McVEIGH, L,T•C.M., SOPRANO, i WM. BUSH, TENOR, and SIMEON JOYCE, PIANIST, ill a PUBLIC CONCERT BLYTII - ONT.' INSURE NOW! AND BE ASSURED. Car - Fire - Life • Sickness - Accident, J. H. R. Elliott Gordon Ellioc� I ti Office Phone 104, Residence Phone, 12 or 140 in the United Church Audito'riun1, Blyth, COURTESY AND SERVICE, , A Thursday, February 23rd i)! itDMIsIASri:MADlonWfieri`J!)t*t'i**7)0110*Fa*Or iDalliiitmia \ _ _. 1 • at 8;15 p.m. WILLING WORKERS MET _ Ilrnwn, was vleasantly surpr:scd will' The Willing Workers met at the the gift of a pearl necklace and match I Tickets are -obtainable from members of the Ghoir;:l, _ _.___ ,, - home of Mrs. Harold Badley on Fdl-' irit; ca rut's from the ladies of the Admission. 50c' Public. School Children,, a. c. • 1, Nary 8th, with a good attendance. The Linc. t to fll:rl a\fccinatun al]ota' the c. act.! tests, ell,* '1 he valcnt'nea were theft af,'.erno11 \vts Siert; gttiuing after The next nlre;ais1 will be 'held at IDon't11 s, Hazelwood told its' ,what the alis rout -td aniottg the girls, Tlii` Miss This Outstanding Progratii. 1 Ta; s. a pot hick suprer was cnjc:yc 1 the hone of Mfrs. John••rairservice on sh:cid of Ili? U1:sited Church -'rattans. nncetin; leas closed with Ta,s. A' dei by all. A departing iuetnber, Mrs. W., March 1st. • ,-me-•rrI+*N r• t.'•Eder....+rrr r•.N4. .•~4.• , •u++I+N++•Nw ` The girls enjoyed some games,' on j lhclous', lurid; •.was seed Glen Valley Pork and Beans , , . • , 20 oz2. 2 ,for 19c Nature's Best Choice .Tomatoes,,. 1 • , 20' oz.' 10e Tip -Top Pumpkin , ,1111, • , 1 , , • , , ,1 .28 oz., :10c - Assorted Cream -filled Cookies I1 1 0 • per lb. .Campbell's, Mushroom Soup : '1 1 , , ; , 2 for 31c, Jelly Powders • 1 .. , , ,, per Pkg., 5e, 6 for 25c Rose Brand .Feed' -= Pioneer reed.- Salmon Steaks, Whitefish, Bird's Eye Fillets, • _ Telephone 39 We Deliver -