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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1951-06-13, Page 1N. ANDA TH VOLUME 57 - NO. :37 BLYTI-I, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1951 Subscription Rates $2.00 in Advance; $2.50 in the U.S.A. iiimmoftmooroora Parcel Acknowledgement Froin Phil Phillips, Korea ._.._—,. --- WEI)DINGS --- PERSONAL INTEREST ' Llcal Census 'faker Busy Dukes Tumbled 9 To 5 A. II. ERSKINE APPOINT- ... Mrs. !)avid Craig and Ahs. Ida' 1. Craig visited their cousins, \Irs. Camp - 1;e11 and M iss Belle Cattti bell in Sea- , forth, and Rev, and Mrs, 11'. A. Gar- ! diner, I?; niondville, last week. \1 rs, It, :\, F;irquharso11 had an operation performed on her hand .in Victoria Hospital, London, in \\'ed- ncsday, Miss Norma Daer flay to Boston recently \vhee she spent a few day:,. She was joined in Boston by her cousin, Miss Ruth Mayes of Si. Pete•s- burg, Horida. One of many interest - ng highs gltls o1 the visit was an op- portunity to attend a Pops Concert. featur:n•, the ret',wncd Boston sync• phony Orchestra, conducted ' by Ar. thug Fiedler, the guest artist being the fatuous violinist. Albert Spalding. \I r•, and Mrs. Fred Rutledge visit.^.cl with M r, ail Mrs. ken. Rttledge, of first such service for sante years and \\'alter 'Paras, Sattndcrcock worke,l er Clerk N. 1\', Miller, three months Toronto, \Ir, and \Irs, Fred Rut- the members of the congregation, back of the plate, Freeman 'Fiume), ago, by \I r. Erskine. with \1 r. Berry went the distance for Blyth on the accountant in the engineers office, as ledge, Ottawa, and also otherfriends Sunday Schcul and Church org;ulizra- i 1, deputy clerk and deputy treasurer in Grafton during the past ten' days, tions are co-operat'ng to make this •a ntouml, Bert Gray rl:I the receiving. I ) 1 ) Blyth lineal,: Fisher, Gra}, John - time \Vork in the clerk's office has been \fes, ikyd \Vettfaufcr and (lutgh- scr\fec that win be rernen'bere`I in s sailed an without remuneration b tet, Rhonda, of Burgessyille. site at time to come. Special music, both in- 1 • t+•n, I lesselw.00d, Watson, 1'unncy, y struntcntal and vocal, is being , 11)ohcrty, \ hitnore. Madill, Mr. Erskine, a�nrl council unanimously last week with the formers parents, p rcpar- \Ir, and Mrs. J. If. R. Elliott, She ret• The junior choir will lead the I Londcshoro: Taros, Saundercocic Lee, Archatitbault, Carter, Riley, Mil - The Lades' Auxiliary to the Cana- STOCKiLL • SITTLE dian Legion, 131y111 Branch No. •120. The following Flipping was sent its sent a parcel to Phil Phillip's, who is , Ly Mrs, I)o is Stockill of Toronto, serving with the Canadian Army in former!; (:f Blyth, and refers to the 1G:r•ea. PH is a son of \I r, and Mrs. ntarr:a,4c, at Las \'v;,as, Calif., of her Karol( Phillips of Iil�Wth, This pa'rt� sun, 5egeact Ernest W. Stockill, \\•IiJ AVIS writ in 11ay and the followint, is tii-w in Korca letter was received on June 9th: Korea, \lay 2)th. 1951 Dear NB's. !tall: ,lust a few lines to let your know that I t 't'cived the par. cel sent by the Ladies' Auxiliary tc, the Canadian Legion, and to thank yon for it and also tell you how very we!• come it was. Now for a little gmssip) about the ccuntry, '1'o mart with, I am like a lot of other people over herr, I don't Henle tnttch of the country, \\'e lave three or four days hie weather, then lcdtnan, including "Claire de Lune." a clay's rain, so it's either dusty or. The wedd:n_4 march from "Luhengr:n" muddy, The country is quite moult- was played at the organ for the pt'o- t;vinous and Ilse natives have utili'/ &1 sessional, every s'.(uare foot of tillable land, they Bishop Thomas Adams of the First have even hewed patches out of the vtt'd LDS church officiated at the hills for rice paddies. There is one double ring ceremony, which was per - thing they certainly know and That is formed before the altar decorated with irr'gat ;cn, They nsc the most printf- palms and gladioli. The bride was five implements to farm. with, and given in marriage by her father. after seeing the trout they till, one For her wedding, the bride chose a understands why modern machinery lavender net gown over taffeta, fash• would be no good, It would hog down, ione(1 with fitted bodice and full hoof - The houses are unbelievable, You fans skirt in ballerina length, which w•oade1' why there is not more disease was Whit with a matching net stole, Hirt) there is when yctt see the filth She carried ,t shower bouquet of gars of the h:nus. They are mostly straw derails, centred with an orchid, awl roofed 'nmol louses, The "Popa San" tied in shower effect. 1 -lis wife accompanied him on the trip Mrs. Harvey McDowell. puts up a frank !minima or any wood 1 (er only attendant was her sister,Ias far as Subury and is enjoyhtg a N1 r. and Mrs. \lilts and fancily of miss Norma Sittle of Las Vegas, w'Ito holiday with her aunt there, Granton called on \1r, and Mrs. 1V. \I t•. and Mrs. Adolph I f, Sittle of Las Vegas announce the tltatr.age of thc:t• dau;thtcr, Joanne, to Sergeant Ernest \V. Stockill of the Nellis air fore(' base, formctly of Toronto, Can- ada, '1 he bridal couple exchanged vows in an impressive . cc: emony which took place 011 Sunday evening, !larch 25th at the Little Church of the \\'est of the Hotel Last Frontier. i\ p.rclivie of organ music was played by George ND.. G. R. Vin•ent, census taker for By Londcsboro B.-A.'s ED CJ,,ERK-TREASURER til:rah is busy making his r .oils. Ile 111yth Dukcs sustained their first l f ' 7 IIUI�ON CO. COUNCIL anthe est more than half completed defeat, and Lundes,br,t,t li,-:\.'s ,!sept I 1Ittron County Council at it's opett- aud is getting atom)! very uirrly their vin column intact, when the ittg session on Tuesday approved the Census takers in surrounding towIn- two teams met at Londeshuru \\'cd recommendation of the warden's cont - 511 ps are: • ncsday evening of last week, mit tee that the offices of clerk and I?ass \1'at\:uu,sh: ,lack Baahanaan, The 1t.-A.'s walked off the diamond treasurer be combined. Gordon Netltcry, Jam's Lttrric• i with a 9 to 5 win tacked away after The Council appointed A, 1-1, Erskine I lullett : \I rs. \Veslcy ltradnock, trine • innings of good softball. )as clerk and treasurer at a salary of William Lciper, 11rs. Neville Forbes.i The Dukes led 4 to 2 up until the $4,460. John G. Berry was appointed \I orris: M iss `.lary Phelan, Stewart last of the seventh inning when Lon deputy clerk treasurer at a salary of l'rncter and Harvey Robertson. dcshoru finished strong with 4 rusts $3200, effective June 1. \Vest \Vawanosh: John Foran. Wil- in the seventh and 3 more in the At the request of the road contutit- liaun Stewart, 11rilli;un llcCrustic• eighth, at the sante time holding 131yth tee, \I r, Berry will continue to sup - To ! to a single tally, e vise the accounting in the engineer's TU Ho1.d I''lower Show ! 'I'hc score hook shows Lundes',two office, and his salary will be appor- :1 special committee of Myth Uni- ! ‘vita 9 runs, 8 hits, and 3 errors, as tioned as follows: ,2,700 to be paid by ted Church is busily cngaecd mot against 5 rims, 11 hits, and 5 errorsthe general account and $5011 by coun- preparations for a Hower Scrvicc to for the Dukes, I)' highways, be held in the church on Sunday For Lnudr•sboro, Glenn Carter start- The work of both offices has been morning, Jnne 24th. This twill he the ed on -the mound, and was relieved ,y carried on since the death of the form - returned home with \Ir, \Vcttlaufer cit scrycc of praise. Sunday, V WESTI''I LD \I r, Fred G. Somers of 'Timmins, .•r•, Patterson, Co\v;t11. • DUKES TRAILED 4 TO 0 Ontario, is in Ottawa, attending the \liss Jean Youn;blut of \Vest \\'a- In an exhibition game at Clinton General Assembly of the Presbyterian w•anosh spent Sunday with her aunt, Radar School that was washed out at Church held fromJune nth to 13111, Mrs. Gordon Snell, the end of four innings on Saturday Fred is Clerk of the Session, and is Ni iss Mildred 'Thornton of \Virg- t afternoon, the Dukes were trailing by the representative. from their c:hur,:h, haat visited on Sunday with Mr, and 5 to 0. The gamic was a feature of the big day at the Air School, which was greatly hampered by showers, The Dukes platy hosts to Port Al. bert on the Blyth diamond on Friday night, game time 8:30. They plivy away against Union on June 18th, he can find, leaving squares of about 4 inches all over and then they just slap the mud to 11, the older the house the thicker the wars, The people themselves are small and fihtdty, 'That is the best way 1 know of describing them, It seems queer though, the farther north you go the better the country. I think the North wore a silver glue lace dress of hal-I Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Yorke and chit- \• Campbell on Sundity, lcrina length. with i.corsage of pink (iron, Currie ;and Marlyn, of Parkhill,11 iss Mattie \Vightman spent the rosebuds, 1 visited on Sunday with Nil., and \[rs. week -cud with her friend, Mrs. Alae 'The bridegroom was attended by Walter !Intel'.Newton and .11r. Newton, of Gorrie, Vern Sittle of Provo, Utah, brother of Afr, auul Mrs. Richard Phillips of Air. and .Urs, Carl Deans and An exhibition game with Clinton the bride, who served as best man.daughters of 'Vara, visited on \Vel Radar is being played on the 13lyth . He asked all committees to keep Mrs. Adolph IL Sittle chose a frock Ailsa Craig, \fr. and NB's. NI ay, (>f nesday \vitlt \[r. and Mrs. Norman diamond this \Vednesda night. within their estimates, and to expedite ]:xeter, eisi'cd a•t 3, tIday with Mt, Y p of watermelon colored silk crepe with and Nil's, \\'alter Buttcll 1lclhniell, business so that council could attend mist have had more iIttltIStt'IeS than a corsage of gardenias for her laugh ,\I r. and Afrs. James 13uak and Jamie Retired Frolll Service I the federation of Agri'culttire day the South, becatsc one sees more ter's wedding, \Vayne I -I, Sittic, of Mr. Spence Chappell of Teeswater, of Crewe visited on Sunday with in Exeter, 11'cdncsday. and hew, :!rubor Chappell, pelt, visited ori 1f r. 1\ nllianl Lyon, C \.h, station buildings fait, could have been factor.; long Beach, California, brother of the p 1 Airs. Fred Cook and family' ;agent at Thormlafe, has retired from At the request of the warden, ment- ies, but then you never know as the bride, w•as all out-of-town guest at Sunday with \Irs, Frank Metcalfe, Messrs. 13i11 and Roy Buchanan ,hers observed a minute's silence in Reds take everything with their and' the wedding. l Mrs, Frank Rogerson and ![iss Al- were London visitors on 'Thursday. recti cactive s\la)r29ttlts retirement being ef-memory of Clerk 3filler, burn the villages, � The ceremony was followed by a• ice R.c(;erson, a:eompanied \Ir, and \I r, ancLMrs, Chas. Smith and taut- Council endorsed recommendations + Mr, Lyon was C.N.R. station agent To -day we crossed the 3Pth so from dinner honoring the bridal party held, Mrs. Chas, McNeil of Godcrich and. fly, Mrs. J. 1„ McDowell, \fr. Gorden in Blyth for many years, and was of reforestation committee that a by- noon I guess tic re in enemy ter• in the Rotttoma roost of the Hotel I Mrs. Chas. Asgitith, of Auburn, to '1'o- Niel/well attended the 'Snell re -un- late be ppassed approving thepurchase ritory, but ft's never so had it.,couldn't Last Frontier, Sergeant and Mrs,!ronto, to attend the wedding of Mrs.! ion al Londesboro on Saturday. gee igen the rail service between of the 141 -acre farm of Kenneth 3lor be worse,' Stuckill left on a honeymoon trip to' 1'Rogersott's nephew•, Mr. Ilaugltton ; Kr, Ross Taylor•, Mr, Lewis Cook Clinton and \\ i war.ant He and Krs, was discontin- 1 hanks amain for titc lovely parcel, Santa Monica, California. The tray- Clement. to ,\l iss Jean 3, orrfson, an nd 13curby, stere London vvisitorss on ued during the lasast cis iu Colborne Township, that the cctrnt and local municipality' .It was swell of the ladies to send it cling costume of the br:dc was a or- Friday, in Eaton \lemorial Church, ' rich', - Lyon moved at that time to Thorn-) p y each pay dale, \VC iride'slaitd that they will 50 per cent of the costs to assist itt- and l certainly appreciate it, quoisc gabardine suit, with which steel Miss Ella,,\fctralfe of Loddon spent Airs, \1'nt, 'Taylor returned to her continue to stake their home in Thorn- in- dividuals who planted reforestation Yours sincerely, wore blue accessories and a corsage Sunday with her mother, Mrs. Frank home at St. Helens on Tuesday after dale, plots on theft farms, subject to an ap- P111L• of orchids. Metcalfe. spending a couple of weeks with her V proved agreement being signed by the �' Ott their return front a honcyutoon Nit's. Peter Gardiner, London, for- brother, Kr, \\'m, \CcVittic and Krs. individual. Council approved the pur- trip to the coast, Sergeant and Mrs, tnerly of Blyth, rvisited her cousin, \[c\'ittie' LORDESBORO chase of a tree planter to be tnade Stcc.cill -were honored at a reception Mrs, ida to Craig last week at the Apr. and Mrs. John \fair and sons, available for such plantings. held Saturday evening, April 7, at tate homes of !)avid and John Craig, also Joe and Jim, of \\'ingharn, visited on The regular meeting of the Londes- A communication from the Depart• In ate of 1)r. ,and Mrs. Darryl N. Leav- calling on friends in \Vingham and Sunday with Mr, and Mrs. Arnold baro \\,.A. oil( be held in the Sunday licit of Lauds and Forests seeks an itt, 1225 Smith Eighth street, The Blyth. \'int, - School room of the church on Thus• expression of opinion from counties bride is the cousin of Dr. 1-eavitt, v >i .Messrs. W. A. Campbell and Ken- day, June 21st. Program committee: before taking action regarding resi- 1Lall hair.wait Mrs, Robert Fairse'+ice fat About 100 guests were received dui.- meth Campbell were 31icaig,ut and \frs, '1', \pillar an(I \Irs. J.ansiug. the chair, I , prs. dent licenses to shoot groundhogs, The meeting opened with 0 Canada ing the evening. Refreshments were Echo Bay visitors last week, return- hostesses: Airs. E. ,I, Cra\�'iord, land and other unprotected animals and W M S Meeting C. Crawford, Mrs. 3L Young amt t served from 11 table spread with a ittg homy by way of Manitoulin is and Auld Lang Sync awl all rcpea:c It Urs, F. Prost, A cordial invitation birds, the 31a)' Stewart Cott ct, J'hc min- : a( white lace. cloth, centered with a The.- June meeting was held in the land, 'lbbernutt) and \\ factor,• The Departiicnt of Municipal Af- ales of the last meeting were read• tiered wedding cake anti decorated sclnohoonn of the United Church 31t's, J. • 1„ 31clowell, Nt', 'Gordon is given to all the ladies of the con- Grips, in a letter, approved the appoint - and the business discussed, The cop- with \\ante tapers and bouquets 01 \lunday evening, Mrs, Keith Web- McDowell visited on Sunday with gre,ganion to be present. !richt of Elsner Pickering and Thomas respondence was read and a bus tri', pints sweet peas, Assisting with the stet presi(Icd in her usual happy and AG, and Mrs, Elwin 'Taylor of 13rus- 3frs, \\m, Lyon yisiteii with Mrs. Dougherty as plant disease inspectors, serving were Mesaanes Lawrence sols. Snaith, Kitchener, for a few days last i ,( was planned for later fn Jiinc. capaltle manner, Jlymns 55 and :.61 1'hc University of Western Ontario Rev. 1), J, Lane from, Clinton ryas! Leavitt, Darryl N. Leavitt, ice Lcav- were used. NI rs. George 31eGowan Mrs. \V. P. Crozier, MIS, Nash, of \+'eek• stated in regard to an inquiry made of present as guest speaker. 11c spoke itt, \Voodruff Leavitt, and Van Leav- react the scripture and Mrs. \Vighttnan London, Mr. Clifford Crozier o f \frs. J. H. Shobbrook spent part of J. 13, flay at the January session that on citizenship and chose as his topic; itt. Mrs, Ira J. E'arl was in charge fed in prayer, Mrs. Mills gave a read- Crewe, visited on Saturday with \[r. last week at the home of her (laugh John P. Metras would be ready to re - "The Luggage of Life," ]lis tall: wt; of the guest book, and Miss Leola ing "The Touch of the Master's and Mrs. Arthur Spciglcbcrg, NIr, IV, ter, \frs. Orman Radford and 1[r, sftonct to invitations from any high gave everyone press 'Leavitt arranged thc-gifts, !land". 31rs..1, C. Ross was at the 11. Campbell and Mrs. W. A. Camp- La(lfoi'(I, Parkhill. very inspiring and y p school principal or athletic director, 1'hc bridegroom plans to leave short 1)1(11. ' \f r, Jos, Carter and Sadie and Dr, cut foo(! for thought i piattu, A Lifc \{cmbcrship was pec The re\'15e(1 estmatcs for 1951, sub - seined to Airs, \Vatter Buttcll J'hc members of the Mission Band 'Weir, Auburn, with Mr, and Mrs. Bet 'fritted by County Treasurer A. II, were entertained on Saturday after- :Allen on Sunda)", Ni iss Clare McGowan introduced Erskine, and referred to the finance noon by the Mission Banca of the 13rick ,\G. and \Irs, Emmanuel T`'on and Mrs, Grierson, the guest speaker of committee set the rate at 9 trills, made Unftcd Church, family, Detroit, 1[r, 11114 Mrs. Arthur the evening, :\ former missionary in Mr,._and 'Mrs. John Hildebrand and Kcrslalce and Phyllis, Exeter, \fr, and alp as follows : 5.5 mills for general ac- Korea, Airs. Grierson described that soil, EIdo, of Jordan Station, Mr. and !frs, Staulry Chcllew•, Blyth and Mrs, count and 3.5 highway account plus country and people. Until recently it\Tat aha i.yot were visitors with Afrs, the cost of secondary schools to those Mrs. D. J. Hildebrand, of Choritz,townships or parts of townships not was called the Hermit Kingdom and Manitoba, hiss Agnes Hildebrand, of Nellie \Vatson. Sunday, wanted to be loft alone, only about 1,,-;,,,, ener, Nil., Ted Clabttrn and rhe Young People of \Vinthrop included in high school areas, one-fifth of land is tillable and is friend, of Toronto visited on Sunday will give the play, "Ault Bessie Beats 'Total estimated expenditures are with -Mr, and 3lrs, Earl \Vighttuatt, the Band,' on Friday, Junc 15th, in '334,G1G,68,"and estimated surplus $265, 31r, \Vit, dcl)owell visite(! on Stun- the Community ILall, Loutcsboro, un - day with \ir. and Mrs. \Vestey Stack- der auspices of Burns' Church. \V.A. Memorial Booklet In approved that the salary for the past three months, $1,000- be paid to Mrs. N. \V. Stiller. Reeve R. 13. Cousins, of Brussels, chairman of the committee stated! that the salaries of clerk, treasurer and est• ginecr's accountant totaled $10,700. In the new salary schedule they total x:9,400, a saving of $1.300. Warden Arthur Nicholson stated that Duron was upholding its reputa- tion as a banner county, for he never saw it look better in his life, Referring to. the -death of Clerk N. \V. \tiller in a motor accident while on county business, his worship paid tribute to his efficiency and extended sympathy to ,\ars.-3liller and family. LONDESBORO W. I. The regular meeting of the Londes- baro \\ronten's Institute was held on Tuesday afternoon in the Communrt' The roll tall was taken everyone ly for overseas duty .with ' the air answering* with memories of our fav -I force, In his absence his bride will oritc school teacher, we were then tun;tin in Las Vegas and continue, to favoured with a musical number on' make ace home with 11cr parents, at the piano and guitar by ,Alisscs Dore -1527 SouthFffllt street, She plans to en Austin and 31argaret '1'rew'iit, l resume herwork at the Nellis air force Afrs. Fairservice then conducted abase shortly,. sock darning contest, There were! The bride is a native of Las Vegas, only three entrants. and the Award it tltcitilter of at widely »nowt! south - went to Mrs, Lloyd Pipe' much to the. ern Nevada fancily. She received ail amazement of Iter husband, her elementary' and high school eltt- 'l'he meeting closed With God Save cation here and was -graduated with The King and all went to the based the class of 1948, In high school she 111ent where lunch was served after ;a held tncntbei•sItip in the Latin chili, baking and apron sale, the 1 -Honor club, and the Spanish club and was active in dramatics. Following her graduation, she was a Mrs. Ina MacDonald returned to student ;at the University of Southern Tenaganii for the Summer months, California for two years, • The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Doris Stockill of 'Toronto, Ile re - AMONG '1'ilE C;IUR.CHES •ceived a11. of his education in 'I'o•otto before coating to the Untied States in - ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN I94O, 7 -Ie enlisted in the air force a- . CHURCH bout two years ago and was stationed Rev, John I-Ioncymau, Minister, at the Nellis air force base until re. 2:30 put,: Sunday School, 3 p,ni.: Church Scrvicc, THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Gently, when he received crde►•s for overseas duty, .11••••••,••• Annual Decoration Service, Blyth, Ontario. Sunday, June 24th Rev, Charles J. Scott, B.A., Minister. Sunday', June 17th, 1951. The annual Decoration Service at 10:15 a.m.: Sunday Seltooh Blyth Union Cemetery will be held at 11:15 a.n►.: Morning Worship. 3 o'clock on the afternoon of Sunday. 7:C0 p.m.: Evening -Service, •rune 24th, Rev, NV. J, Moores of Belgrave will It is expected that Rev, Charles J. aerial is also acceptable, \Vial also preach at both services, Scott, United Church Minister, and send clothing lot• babies and children, CHURCH OF ENGLAND ' Rev, John llone)unan, Presbyterian '!'hese may be left with Miss TTirons 9'IUNITY C[IURCII, BLYTII Minister, both of Blyth, will have supply secretary, or brought to next • Miss Alice Rogerson, Organist, charge of the Service. meeting, 10:30 a.m.; Matins, The public are cordially invited to About sixty were present and lunch ST, MARK'S CI-URCII, AUBURN participate, was served by Mrs, Ga•rett's group, Mrs. Gordon Taylor, Organist, ' about the size of Southern Ontario, They are a quiet, peaceful people, One fourth of Korca was given to Cana- dian \fissions and wonderful Christians house of 13ruceficltl \Ciss Ella J-Teffron, Blyth, was a re= , foamed churches and were outstann- Preparation ,\1r, and Mrs, Harold Sprung, Mr. cent visitor with Mrs. Bert Allen. The committee in charge of the ing in sincerity. After the war the and Mrs, Glen Patterson, of liullett \frs. \\run, Gorier spent a few clays Memorial Organ Fund of the United northern part was under control of township, visited on Sunday with Mr, with her dattghter and son-in-law. Russia and arbour two million refugees t Church of Canada, Blyth, are busy went from north to south .antler con- and Mrs, Clarence Cox. \f r, and \frs. Spence !lain, Kitchen- ,preparing the Memorial Organ Book trot of the United States, Nearly all 3I r, and Mrs. 13crt Vincent, of Bel- er, returning Sunday. let to be issued in connection with grave yisitcd 011 'l'ursday with Mrs. J. 3fr, Jack Knox, 1\'Ingham, with the fund. It is expected that the churches and school •.buildings have L. McDowell ;and Gordon,• \fr, and Afrs, \Una, Knox, been destroyed in north, UNRA, and copy will be ready for printing within churches are 111it iced is The Y,P,U, ort on 'Thursday even- Afrs, \V, T, 13runsdon has been the next few weeks so it is requested helping, ittg with Lois Campbell in charge of quite ill for several days. Her dattgh- great• the program, and Violet Cook at the ter, Mrs, R. Vodden, Clinton, and Miss Janice Moffitt sang a solo, piano. Scripture was read responsive- \T1s. Bert 13runsdon, have been in "\Vial the Roses Bloom in Iletven," ly with prayer by Rev, C, C. \\'ash- attendance. accompanied by Miss Rhea blot! atington, 'Topic was taken by Gordon the piano. , 3fcllowelh Reading by Lois Camp- . 1 t was decilcd to send a number of bell. The social activities were in "Dees", which is Korean style baht' layettes, '!'hese are about two yards long and one yard wide, factory ct%• ton or flamocictte or two bags sewn logelttci•, Also strips of cotton 2!f' or 2 34 yards long and the yard wide divided in three, to be used to tic the baby on mother's back. Coloured uta• Airs, Sundcrcock nail Al's, William 12:0 noon: Mathis, CONGRATULATIONS Logan, associate members committee TRINITY CHURCH, BI LGRAVE Congratulations and a happy birth- welcontell those present, Mrs, C. Wade, Organist. day to laic Allen, son of Mr, and Alts, Next meeting will be 'hell with 1'I 2:30 p,nt,: Evensong and Holy Bap- G, 0, liradley, Brantford, --wpm cele- Mission !land 011 Monday afternoon tism, orates his birthday, Wednesday, Jute July 9.th, at 2:30 at the home of : rt.: Rev. J. A, Roberts, Rector. 13th. Webster, that all memorials be turned in to the committee in 'charge immediately, Al- so if.there are any further donors wlto would like memorials printed in this booklet it is asks(! .that 111cy contact Bank Clerk Transferred the treasurer of the fund. Mrs, N. P. Garrett as Soots as possible, charge neighbours Violet Cook. mouths past been a member of the The first copy of the memorial list I'ltc ueigni nuts amt friends met out _ Canadian Ilautk of Commerce staff will be placed in the - vestry of the *The evening at the home of 3f r, and Mrs. \\'nn, 31eVittic to spend a ' here, has been transferred to the church for the next. tett days or so 1 .\litchell Branch, his transfer taking and the co-operation of all donors is social evening and wish them well in requested in checking the wording of their new home at Blyth, :An address e•lert Tucsuli' was read by Mrs. Marvin 31c1)owcll itis removal is regretted by all, and you• own memorial, This will prevent expration for tile he will he particularly Missed in the any Itlistakcs,' in the finished copy. helpe31ns. McVlittie ltaslgiaen 101)1 in shorts sphere, Bill was a valued Phis shoufds'bc (10111 e iliotthiamintstetr thei g member of last winters Juvenile hoc.;my mist t.(s pct 1 t e Charles church and the \1r,\l,T, and \ars• key team, playing centre ire, and this of the , ltirch or the treasurer of the Smith and Mrs, Norman Mc- key. has hecn working in nicely at 1:m1(4 -before the last Sunday in June. NIL Bill Fisher, who has for some Dowell presented Mr. ancf Mrs. Mc- taird base with the Intermediate Vittie with a table tri -light and pin- kali team SUFFERING FROM PETROLEUM soft - up lamp, Mrs, McVittie replied suit \\'e wish hint continued success in ALLERGY ably, Lunch and candy were served. Iris banking career at Kitchell, Mr. Irvine Bowes has been forced V-"—" l► to suspend his work at the Sonoco Mr, and Afrs, Bert Marsh, of Kit- NOTICE Service Station because of a skin hr cbener, spent the week -end with their The office of G. r\lan Williams, Op- „,tlection which is caused by a Petrol- d1t'gater and son-in-law, Mr. and totnet'ist, \Vingltam, will be clocum allergy. He is under the care of `•ars. Howard Wallace, Mrs, Marsh J from Saturday. 16th Juuc, to Wednes- day, a London skin specialist, Fortunately remaihed for a longer visit, day, 27th June, inclusive, 37-2. the ble donot cto - , his bed.trou.. -.cs��:.�tt_.li.ra;.onfine�.D+d►ltitn41.i 1:11 ST with 'amity �'v nabs► -6=-- "DEAR ANNE HIRST: I haven't a friend I could tell ply trouble to, so I ,come to you, \1'e have been mart•ir(l 20 years and have • two teen-age child- ren. \Ve have al - nays been a per- fect team - ex- cept that I was always the dem- onstrative one, not my hit baud. Now l ;an des- perate. Lately we have Leen going out with another couple. The wife thro\VS her husband at ale, so that she can try to get aline! And my husband, though he declares he loves pie, says he gets a thrill out of seeing her, "Does this mean I have lost hits? He has been drinking a good bit lately. (I've been crying my eyes out.) Ile shows no affection for ale at all, I would be content to have things as they used to be, before this happened. "He knows he has hurt me, but says little about it. I ant sure we will not separate, but I can't stand not having a little affection from hint, for I love hint with all my heart. 1 should tell you that we ANNL ,1U.'\11` One easy day of sewing snakes your whole summer's ironing easier, Mother! This dress opens flat, is done up in a jiffy, Your little girl can dress her own self too. Better make several! Pattern 4674 comes in sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Size 6 frock, 3 yards 35 - inch; panties, '/s yard. This pattern, easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- plete illustrated instructions. Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35c) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to f3ox 1, 123 Eighteenth Street. New Toronto, Ont. It's ready for you! Our new Anne Adams Summer Pattern Bookl Read all about your new vacation wardrobe, how easy it is to sew! Glamor - fashions, illustrations of thrift patterns in all sizes. Sent Twenty -hive Cents for your copy today! Free Pattern of a Jr. Miss sunsuit printed in hook. CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1, Electric light 4. Simpleton 7, Assert 12. Constellation 13, Utilize 14. Reddish - orange dye 10, Protective garments 17. Stroke gently 10, 101 19, Was carried 20. P:xcept 21, Seed container 22, Curve :3, Genus of the mouse 24, Male child 20. Sunken tepee 24. Gentle birth 20, Football position (ab.) 30, 100 years 31. Engineering degree 32, Childish 34, tang of Judah 35, Beheld 3G, Unity 37. Parts of r. play 30. Dccp holo 30. 11tttt of work 40. Philippine tree 41. Jewish month 42. Aerllorm fluid 43, So. American • fish 40. Wild plume 47, treated 48, Palin leat (var.) 49: Article of hello! 50. Female sheep 51. Openwork fabric DOWN , Wing , Culpable . Circle around the moon Sand hill 1lonkey both think the world of our children, Can you advise plc? ":A LONELY WIFE," AVOID TEMPTATION " 'l'hc first tiling to do is to stop • seeing this couple, making one " excuse and then another, * It is not a sign of weakness to " avoid temptation, even to run " away when it pursues. if your • husband confesses that 11e gets 0 thrill out of seeing this woman, it is time to keep out of her way. 1t he is not strong enough to renounce these two because it is the right thing to do, then• he should remember he is the father of two youngsters who are at an impressionable age. They adore their father, and they look upon 11im as the embodiment of all goodness, As things are now, how can Ile face then( without feeling guilty? The time to stop is before ht is tempted too far. Even a man with a new thrill must acknow- ledge this logic. Now is the time for hits to show he is a man, not a wreak creature lett on the string of a scheming woman. Try to be calm through this period, and convince yourself that hope, Crying and pleading will everything will come out as you to him' through his love for the only weaken your cause. Appeal children, and stop there. Von have my deep sympathy. "Dear Anne Ilirst: I've been go- ing with this boy for a long time, and now we are engaged. 1le knows my family well, of course, but he ',vi11 not conic to my Home nosy! "Every time, his excuse is that he is out with the boys, or he is ill, "I'm sure he loves ate, hat I ani at the point where 1 don't know what to do. "He also (wants ale to give up smoking, now that we're engaged, 1 smoked long before 1 dated him, and I can't see why it matters now, "1 am desperately in need of vont• advice. "f .RR," For 0 man who is, engaged to marry, this young man is behav- ' ing strangely, 1' agree, One would " expect him to be more attentive * than ever, for you two have plans * to make together. He should not let you doubt for a moment hi? * increased devotion. * You should ask for an explan- ation. If he doesn't conic around, * write him a note making the date, + As to giving up smoking, many * boys and mein accept a girl as * she is -until they decide they * want to marry her. Then they are " apt to set new standards for the * wife she is to be. If you are wise, '' you will not refuse; it is a little * thing to sacrifice, isn't it? Appeal to the highest and best in your husband, and lie is apt to respond . . . Anne Hirst is under- standing and wise, and is here to help you. Write her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., Ncw Toronto, Ont. NO WARNING On a sentimental pilgrimage to their old house town an elderly couple lingered at a street corner. "Do you remember, John," the old lady sighed sentimentally, "we always used to meet here when we were courting?" "Yes, my dear," replied her hus- band, "but that sign wasn't there then." And he pointed to the notice which read: DANGEROUS • CORNER -- GO S1.,OW. ----- TILE REASON men in public of- fice play politics is that men and woolen who vote expect them to play politico. -Lake Mills Graphic, 4. Ourselves 11. Anger 7, Informal von- 28, Afflrmntive yersatton votes 3. Alloy; 30. Cry of the 9. One index- crow nitely 33, Corpulent 10. Undeniable 34, Deed 11. Girl ,;t7, Manner 16. Uneven 33. 14y 17. Small pimple 39. Direction 20. 1,Ight fabric 40. Appointment 21. Hawaiian food 42, Turn to the„ 22, An Island • right 23. Gulden 43, Bovine 24. Crafty 44. Devour 26. Book of the 4G, Along Bible (ab.) 47, That man !f j4 5 6 7 8 9 10 II r i 13 14 Answer Elsewhere on This Page New Slant On A Vacation -Tony and Ann' Baker believe they're, standing straight, but they don't look it, as they try out the "Won- der Spot" at Wisconsin Delis, An unexplained phenomenon makes you feel plumb out of line when you enter a small cabin built on the "Spot." r. 1-fir."�-""-�-�•-` HRONICLES INGERFXRM cy ewer\ .c)li.>,c D Clavkc it will be quite a surprise to rue if my column this week is even in- telligible, what with one thing and another.- First thing we know I won't have time to work , , , not if we have many weeks like last week, with everything happening, one right after the other, with no let-up in between, Canadian Club, W.1. District Annual; Church -sponsored show; two -weeks' washing, one day house-cleaning; shopping and getting my hair done -and 111211 our niece's wedding in Toronto on Saturday, followed by company over the week -end -in fact one of our visitors is still here. Yes, that's the way it went and in the middle of it all Partner turned the cows ottt to pasture for the first time this spring and in less than three hours one of the cows was bloated as big as an elephant. We had to send for the "vet" and then sit up until 1:30 amt, to give the prescribed medicine to the cow. Only it wasn't done as easily as I can tell it. With every dose it was a hard won fight as the cow was a hard one to "drench." Once. she twisted around and got Partner pinnal up in the manger. Was 1 thankful that some months ago we had had all the cosy., de - horned! At the Canadian Club Ethel Chapman gave• a splendid talk on "The Appreciation of Poetry." I had heard it before but it wasn't any hardship to hear it again, • Miss Chapman is one of the best speak- ers, and the easiest to listen to, that I know. The District Annual was held in one of our new township halls and it was a splendid building for such an occasion, The chairs were com- fortable -and that means a lot -the hall airy and the acoustics perfect. The programme was interesting and did not appear to drag, The visiting officers were 'excellent speakers, As for the lunch , . , it was wonderful, 1 think the chefs at the Royal York should visit some of our country and ;small-town banquets and find out how to.put up a good meal! The show we went to was "I'd Climb the. Highest Mountain." I'm glad we didn't think we were too tired or too busy to go. It was a grand, heart-warming picture. The humour was excellent, while the story throughout was an epic of courage and great faith -and very human, Friday I was doing, all the jobs I hadn't done during the week and also making preparations for getting away the next clay. Saturday morn- ing saw me on the train heading for Toronto, as Daughter's house was one of our gathering places. Babs' wedding was in the Chapel at Sunnybrook hospital and the re- ception at Partner's brother's home hi the Moore Park district. It was a small wedding but very pretty. Babs wore a dress of white net over egg- shell satin, It was most attractive and everyone was thrilled when they learned site had made it her- self. Not every girl would have the courage to tackle a job like that. I was proud of her. Joy, tile'bri(ic's sister, was Waitron of honour, acid wore blue figured net over blue satin. The men of the party all wore grey suits. It can't be much fun heinf; 0 man, when it comes to special occasions! 'l'lte minister Was the Protestant padre at Sunny - brook and 1 don't think 1 ever met anyone with a more kindly expres- sion, 'There were about forty guests and, at the back of the Chapel, quite a number of 'white -clad nurses were Bells On Her Toes -Three-year- old Monica Leslie tries on her fire engines, which are in fact the latest in children's slippers. Those of the "Zwieback Set" have their choice of racing cars, locomotives, or fire engines. seated in the back pews, And from the solarium many nurses waved their farewells, There was an air of quiet dignity in the chapel and the service was beautiful in its simplicity, And the reception -mingling of guests, fun and laughter, more to cat than was good for tis; „fruit punch (minus the "kick" that some- times accompanies it) confetti, fare- wells, car jacked up off its hind wheels, but no noisy horn -blowing, thank goodness, Finally the bride and groom were away -on the first lap of what WC all hope, will be a Tong and happy married life, After the last of the guests were gone the "father of the bride" tool: eight of us out to dinner• at a rather unusual hotel or restaurant -I don't know which it was. -- Its main feature was in the nature of a "smorgas- bord" -but I'm not sure if that is the way to spell it, and I have no way of finding out. Anyway they charge a flat rate -so much a plate -you help yourself to any number of the various dishes provided, and go back for more if you want it. The food was excellent. Around midnight foto' of us ar- rived back at the farm -and we are now on the way to recovery( WHAT SORT OF PEOPLE? The Governor-General hit the ball squarely down the fairway its Kitch- ener last week end when lie high- lighted the shortage of Canadians in this country, Viscount Alexander was talking about quantity, and it's obvious that we could use many more citizens. But another consideration is -- quality, Canada seems to have done pretty well since the war's end in screening immigrants for quality. The steady influx of Grade A Ncw Canadians has undoubtedly had a ver real . effect in increasing production and stabilizing Canadian prosperity. Canada doesn't need just more people. It needs self-reliant, indus- trious, ambitions people, But to believe that iutnigration possibilities are unlimited is to make the grave error of confusing people with statistida! traits, It's all very well to sly Canada's population may be 50 millions in 100 years of so. It's more to the point to ask. if and when -that goal were reached, what kind of Canadians they will he. - From The Financial Post. Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE 74),11,11iNSC11001: Q. is it ever permissible to send , .� : � ., • LLSSON printed or engraved "thank you" cards? A. I myself, always have a let- down feeling upon receipt of such a card. It gives the feeling that the recipient of your gift or favour doesn't think enough of the gift or of )'011 to sit down and write y0i1 a personal note of appreciation. Q. 1 know that ice cream, when eaten alone, should be conveyed to the mouth with a spoon. But how is the ice cream that is served with pie a la mode eaten? A. Both pie and ice ete:all are eaten with the fork. Q. Should a bride have brides. maids when she is being married its a traveling dress? A, No; although she may have a maid of honor, Q. Is it all right for the mother of a bride-to-be or her fiance's 111o• ther to give a shower for her? A. Neither one of these persons should give a shower, as this would be in the nature of inviting gift donations, Properly, only close friends of the bride-to-be should give showers for her. Q, Is it necessary to mail out engraved invitations to an open house one is holding in one's honk? A. No; this is an informal type of entertainment, and you may ex- tend your invitations either person- ally or over the telephone. Q. Is it correct to fold napkins in a cone shape, so that they will stand upright? A. No; this custom i obsolete. Q. My wedding is to be very small and doesn't warrant the mail- ittg of engraved invitations. How should I word the short notes of invitation to those friends I would like to attend? A. l hey may be s\ ordcd exact- ly as the engraved invitations are. Q. When a man is walking in the rain with a woman who is car- rying an umbrella, should he offer to hold it? A. Yes. By Rev. R. B. Warren, B,A„13,D, The Spread Of The Gospel Acts 1:8; 4, 5-12; 28: 15-16, 30-31. Memory Selection: Ye shall be wit- nesses unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost parts of the earth. Acts 1:86. \Vhcn Jesus died on the cross, Ills cause seemed lost. Many of the disciples had fled. But on the day of Pentecost, ten (lays after the ascen• sion of their risen Lord, the 120 in the upper room received a new dynamic, God gave them the 1101y Ghost, purifying their hearts by faith. (Acts 15:8,9). '.Ploy were en- dued with power from on high,'I'hc holy Spirit, the thrid person of the Trinity had come in all 11 is fulness to abide in their hearts. Peter, who on the night of the betrayal, had denied iris 1,ord when a maid identi- fied him as one of the disciples, Was • now bold and fearless. Aren't you thrilled as you hear him declare be- fore the ecclesiastical court, "Be it known unto you all, anti to all the people of Israel, that by the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom. ye crucified, whom God raised front the dead, even by him doth this man stand here before you whole. Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other dame given atflong men, whereby we Must be saved." . These men and women went everywhere preaching the Gospel. Paul, the greatest of the apostles tool; the message of Christ to l:otnc„ the heart of the Empire. 'Though he Wrent as a prisoner he preached the kingdom of God, and taught. Among the converts were some of Caesar's household. Christianity is for the whole 1lorb!. It is not just one of the world religions, it is the plan of salvation provided by God through Iiis Son Jesus Christ. if you have ilial, then you will want others to share of Ilis grace. 1'c are witnesses. How To Lighten The Work On Those Dreaded Washdays If you're out of those lucky women who has an automatic washer and dryer (and may their tribe swiftly increase), don': bother reading this little piece. Bat if you still keep company every Monday with an ordinary washing machine, I can tell you how, given a bright, blowy they and a washing that isn't too whopping, yott can finish it and a lot of your ironing and still have energy left to bake a pie for supper, writes Lois J. I•fm•ley in "Wallace's Farmer," It's just a master of relaxed nerves and a little change in the commonly accepted system of hand- ling the job. So, in the forst place, don't strain yourself to be the first one in the neighborhood to bit the waslline \with the sheets. Have a good breakfast, with a leisurely second cup of coffee. 'Then, if it makes you feel better, spread up the beds and pick up in the living room, This will take you until around nine o'clock. Now to the washing, which you've previously sorted and soaked (if,you're a soaker). Go right thrugh with it, without stops and delays to hang it on the line basketful by basketful. That's the big difference, Keep it all back and hang it all out at once. And tidy the basement or 'atm - day before you taste out the wash. That way, you're all through with the watery part of washday, and you don't have the hateful chore of go- ing back to empty the tubs and sweep the floor. By the time the clothes arc on the line, it'll be around eleven -thirty or quarter to twelve. Go its acid fix lunch, You won't have anything very fancy or time-consuming on Washday, so this won't take very long, While you're waiting for the nun to come in, or while they're finish- ing at the table, go out and take down the clothes that you want to iron that afternoon, and fold then into the clothes basket, t 1 Men sure go for aF,4, MAGIC cake erov Nth 1,1%4 1'lhcy should be just about right for ironing, without the time -con - stinting sprinkling and folding oper- ation. Now, clear away the wishes attd lie down for a half -horn', \'es -I said "lie down," Forty winks on washday are especially important. '1'Iten get out the ironing board - you've a good two. hours, and you can put away a'pile of rough iron- ing in that length of time, Don't iron much later than four o'clock,. You've supper to get, and there's that pie 1 promised yott. Get it its the oven, Then go out and take down the folding clothes that don't have to be ironed, and carry them, sun - sweet, right up l0 drawers and linen closet. Sprinkle and fold away the starched things, of which there won't be too many, if you're smart at choosing your summer fabrics. There! You've almost finished the week's biggest task in one day. Only a couple of horn's' work left for next day, The rest of the week is clear and free for the many jobs ahead. You're tired, of course, but not too completely fagged. Just ready for a good night's refreshing sleep, with the comforting thought of s big job well clone, Up:idedown to Prevent Peeking 13413M311119N9.0 V38 1 ?lL9�Sb93019 j' V I ' .l. 1 I'.l bSS .L dT 1A 1 N 1 0 1N 1 V 1 d 1 1 1 IR! 0 d n 1 n d 1 N n e N3 3 9 SN a 0 V N 0 3 d 1 V 3sn®03'7 Mba ab b. ISSUE 24 -- 1951 co��.G V"Yn . oLt:woYi �/y�y'y2����+�, a��saj � COCONUT FUDGE CHIFFON CAKE Mix and slft into a bowl, 1 c. plus 2 tbs. once -sifted cake flour, 134 tsps. Magie Baking Powder, 34 tsp, salt, c. fine granulated sugar; mix in 34 c, desiccated coconut. Make a well in the dry ingredients and add in the order given (do not stir mixture), X c. corn (salad) oil; 2 unbeaten, egg yolks, e. plus 2 tbs. water, 1 tsp. vanilla, 234 ounces unsweetened. chocolate, melted and cooled. Stir the liquids to intermingle, thou stir in the dry ingredients; beat until batter is smooth. Measure into a large bowl j. c. egg whites (at room temperature) and sprinkle with 3. tsp. cream of tartar; beat until the egg whits aro very very stiff - much stiffer than for meringues, angel cakes, etc. Add flour mixture, about a quarter at a 'the, and fold after each addition until batter and egg whites aro thoroughly combined. Turn batter into an ungreaoed 8" angel cake pan; bake in a rather slow oven, 325°, about 1 hour. immediately cake comes from oven, i'•:err pan and suspend cake until cold. AG1c A!, Yt4 lowpvilt Horse Won Famous Steeplechase Then Fell Dead Just Past The Post A hundred and lit acro scars ;Igo, a Liverpool innkeeper had a bright idea for pepping up trade, 11e could hardly have dreamed that he was about to found the ';realest sport- ing spectacle of modern tinges. As well as owning the Waterloo 110te1, William Lynn was lessee of the nearby course at Aintree, where meetings were held regularly on the flat, Ile had noticed holy the St. Albans Steeplechase packed cus- tomers into the 'Turf I lord of that' town, and he decided to do some- thing about it, advertising a 'chase to be run at Aintree on February 29th, 1836. Conditions were: :\ sweepstake of 10 sot's, each with 80 sovs, added, for horses of all denominations, 12st. each, gentleman rider:;, second horse receives back his stake. Win- ner to be sold for 200 sous, if (le- manded. Rather different from 100-1 Gregalac 1's Grand National in 1929. the prize was ;:13,000 — a record that still stands, as does that of the huge field of sixty-six starters. Brought Telescopes! That first race was a great suc- cess, not only attracting a vast crowd to Liverpool, but also, it seems, adding a little tone to Ole racing there. For, in the words of one reporter, "the assemblage was composed principally of the middle classes." There must also have been quite a naval atmosphere since, he adds, that a great many people had provided themselves with tcic- scopesl The National has never looked back. The following year "the con- course of spectators was exceed- ingly large"—despite the fact that there were only four starters. The winner was a Mr. Potts on The Duke who "came in winning by about thirty yards at a severe pace, This result, so totally unexpected, has mulcted 'the knowing encs'• in heavy sums, The race occupied fif- teen minutes," The present record is tinder ten, Irish Take a Hand Even in those early days, Irish , breeders took a hand in the Na- tional and have continued to do- minate it ever since. In 1838, Sir Williani was ridden to victory by its owner, lfr. Alan McDonough, of County Galway, Tales of his rac- ing exploits reached England while he was still in his teens, and he was soon riding there with great success. So much so that jealousy crept in among certain English jockeys. One of them named 13a11 deliberately rode on to a course one day where McDonough was competing and knocked him end- ways, Jilstice was meted out, how- ever, by a certain Captain Lamb, who chased Ball and gave him "the father and mother of a thrashing." Next year, the 'Liverpool Stan- dard' publicized the race with a piece of stirring prose, anticipating "such a long list of nobs at this chase as has 'not hitherto dazzled the optics of our townsmen. I have heard that one hundred beds have already been booked at the Adelphi and Waterloo and that hotels are likely to be as thronged as four in a bed." The writer was correct in his surmise, So great was the gallery ' that the race, scheduled for one o'clock, was not started until three! It was Lottery's year. I -Ie romped home at 12-1, and in the words of one rider could trot faster than the rest of us could gallop." Carthorse Winner Lottery later developed into something of a legend among 'cha- sers. Bookies grew tired of con- tinually paying out on hits and frequently managed to freeze hint out, Conditions of a race would read:- "Open to all horses except Lottery." He rounded off a glori- ous career between the shafts of a cart at Neasden, "And so ended," writes Argus at that time, "the best horse that ever looked through a bridle. 'We shall never look upon his like again!" Also ran in Lottery's National ' was au animal named Conrad, who came 8 crupper at "a nasty jnntp— a strong paling, next a rough, high, jagged hedge, and lastly a brook about six feet wide," Con,'ad's gal- lant rider was a certain Captain Becher, whose lune has been eclip- sed by that of the brook at ',which he fell, since named after hint. When Grimaldi Fell Becher is certainly the best -re- membered rider who never won a National. In Ills 'fay he was very much a leading light, immensely popular with a public who never hesitated to throw a (caw' !hinge at any jockey lvho didn't incei with its approval. He also appears In have had a flair for histrionics. Af- ter Grimaldi carried him to victory in .the St„Albans Steeplechase of 1836, only to fall dead on passing the post, a connnentator Wrote. that "the leading elan of the Adelphi and Surrey (then the homes of melo- drama) might have inlbih,'d a use- ful lesson from the attitude of ;agony which the Captain displayed when gazing on the dead favourite." Becher's title of Captain was largely a courtesy one. lie was, however, able to put up one medal —for being on duty with the Duke of Buckingham's Yeomanry at the coronation of George iV, Physic- ally he was spare and trine with natty side -whiskers. Apart front his ability in the saddle he was some- thing of all entertainer, for "there was 110 sound of the farmyard that lie could not produce with startling fidelity." lie finished his career ra- ther on a note of anti-climax—as Inspector of Sacks on the G.N. Rlyl 11echer's great rival •lint Mason, who steered Lottery to victory on so many occasions, combined bril- liant riding with a (lair for foppish- ness. lie never rode without wear- ing white kid gloves, and was so fussy about his boots that he in- sisted on having the tops and feet made by different craftsmen. Dandy or no, he spared neither self nor horse when going al fences. On one occasion, when Becher ;and another well-known rider of the day, Toni Oliver, had landed in a brook at Aylesbury the Captain was heard to shout:. "Duck your head, 'Tons; for jim's a -coiling!" By 1850 the National was very much as we know it today, Then a grey named Peter Simple --later to become a dual winner in 1853 —was first past the post in a race that was not outstanding for thrills. Perhaps the chief feature was the honesty of the winning jockey who weighed -in with the story that , a certain gentleman rider, who had been lying second, screamed suc- cessive offers at him of one, two, three—and finally four thousand pounds—to "pull" the winner! 1852 saw the first- mare to tri- umph — Miss Mowbray, described as "only a rat of a thing," Although rejected by several experts as "no good for 'chasing," she not only won the National but was second the following year, Her swan -song sounded two years later when she broke her neck at notorious Be- eper's, Sending Messages To Planet Mars Can we send a message to Mars? The possibility has fascinated astronomers for half a century and now Russian scientists are suggest- ing that conlnlunication might be made by means of the flashes given off by atomic explosions. Some years ago the Russians planted fir trees in Siberia in the form of a huge triangle with sides fifteen miles long, assuming that if intelligent beings did exist on Mars they (night have telescopes with which to spot this deliberate man- made marking on the earth's sur- face. But so far no corresponding marking has appeared on Mars, The German mathematician, Karl Friedrich Gauss was the first man to .suggest a practical cleans of communicating with other planets. ✓i�.trru .aa w „ RockyBye-Johnny — Rocky Graziano stares at•the prone Johnny Greco, champion Canadian welterweight, who had just taken one of Rocky's special sedatives in the form of a straight right cross to the jaw in the third round of their fight in Montretal. Johnny slept quietly through the count of ten. Scull Session—Jack S. Guest, Jr., right, 18 -year-old holder of the Canadian and American sculling championships, is shown above with his father, Jack Sr., in England where he will compete on the Diamond Sculls next month, His father won the Diamond Sculls back in 1930 and hopes his son will follow in his footsteps this year. ,11e decided ,that the nature of the Message had to be such that t conveyed beyond doubt two points —that the message itself was tie• liberate and not an accidental for- mation, and that abstract thought was behind it. lie suggested a geometrical fig- ure in the form of a right-angled triangle with a square over each side. Such a figure could not be an accident Of nature and its mean- ing should be clear to every living being in the universe capable of reasoning, 11) the Sa111C t'a'nner 8S, Mall. '1'he Austrian astronomer, Litt - row. suggested that the Sahara Desert would be the perfect place from Ivhich to send a Message, IIe proposed a set of trenches, one circular, one square, one hexagonal, ;utrl one triangular, which were to be filled with water, Enough paraffin to barn six hours was to he poured on the water, and one trench was to be ilitu mated one night, the other the following night, and so on, Finally all the trendies were to be illuminated at once. l.ittrow's plan was never carried out. Other scientists objected that since Mars at its nearest point to the earth was some 35,000,000 miles away, even a trench of fire 100 miles long would not be noticed by any intelligent beings tvho Wright exist on the mystery planet, Without meaning to he snooty, or anything of the sort, ivc would say that the chances are your know- ledge of Australian National Foot- ball rates about zero. But don't let it worry you. 1f zero is your rating, it puts you on a level with ourself. Or even slightly higher, if you must have the truth. • •w '( Still, as one who has been for years deploring the way some of our own most popular sports seem to have slowed down—largely through the efforts of coaches who put their own reputations ahead of the cus- tomers' interest—we couldn't help being rather intrigued, if that is the word, by the account of an after- noon of football as played down under. Evidently, clown there, they believe in action and see to it that they get same. The following para- graphs, taken from the account of something called the "Jubilee Cen- tenary Lightning Premiership" will give you a rough idea of what we mean. 1' All 12 teams in the Victorian Football League took part and 11 games were played from 11,30 a,m, till 5 p.m, The games were of 20 minutes duration -10 minutes each way—and spectators were af- forded the opportunity of seeing all State champions in action. This was quite an event, for the season was only three games advanced. De- spite a boisterous, wet day, a big crowd attended the Melbourne Cricket Ground—where all the stellar sports attractions are pre- sented—and each vital point scored was wildly cheered. * s A "foreigner" witnessing the "lightning" games for the first time would probably consider the series was well named. Speed was the predominant characteristic, as play- ers were anxious to "play on" and keep the ball in motion, No fewer than 220 players were seen in action during the afternoon, and the two teams to reach the final' each play- ed three matches, * 'k 1' The final vias the best match of the day, and from the first um- pire's bounce in the 10 -foot ring to the last kick of the day it was "anybody's game," Melbourne's goal was the only score of this hard battle until 20 seconds before the final siren from a scrimmage (not a rugby scrimmage) a Col- lingwood boot pushed the ball over the goal line to equalize amidst wildest excitement. The ball came back to the centre and I11 the last seconds the Demons battled the ball to their goalbase—but the siren screamed! It was a tie, and under the rules, the ball had to be brought back to the centre and bounced by the umpire—the . next score would win the game. r r Melbourne had first chance as they grabbed the ball from the bounce and a hurried kick trav- elled goalwards. The Collingwood backs, however, got possession and worked powerfully to clear. The ball slowly travelled around the wings as each team handled it, until finally Ron Richards, the Magpies' plucky rover, dashed through the pack and started an attack which sent the ball into the goal mouth, where rookie Jack Hickey "flew" and marked the ball on his chest only a few yards from the goal. One point would do and he had 21 yards width to score it! He needed the minimum as his punt kick split the centre for a goal (six points) and Collingwood won the Jubilee Lightning Premiership. * The recent serie.; amply demon- strated the terrific speed at which ' National Football is played and !low remarkably free of injuries, There is plenty of body -contact, speedy dashes through packs of players, daring hand pick-ups from the very toes of opposing players, high leaps from which players do not always land on their feet—yet only one player was forced to retire through injury; and he because he slithered over the wet turf into the iron fence , . , and the fence is 10 feet away from the playing area, * ') * Well, of course, it all happened several thousand miles away, and possibly the old one about distance lending ench.tntment may he appli- cable. But from where we sit, it sounds' like an afternoon of sport in which there would be few dull moments or opportunities for get- ting bored, In fact, the way our Canadian football is becoming Am- ericanised—and decelerated—maybe it mightn't be a bad notion to bring a few of those Aussie teams over to show us some real speed. What do you say? ;:'IRA';; 750 MI. 3 HRS.,,, ,?:.: FLYING TIME UWAIT, Ready For Trouble — Newsmap above shows air distances to troubled Iran f r o m Cyprus, where Britain's only paratroop brigade, now en route to the Middle East by ship, will prob- ably be stationed. The brigade will be on hand to rescue any British nationals threatened with violence In dispute over nation- allzation of Anglo -Iranian 011 Co. holdings, ..Classified Advertising.: II.UIY CliteliS I'1;OSI1"1' UI:LIVERY on Iiigh quality t-an4,1mo Approved t'hl-kt, from Pub lornm l•; et. smelt in all papular breeds. Nun ar•s,•d, 1,11114n, eochereie, Aim; 'Tar• key Tomlin, older I'nneix, gree ("Ida. Legge. •— Tap `:etch Chick Sales, Guelph, Ont. BO'1'II 1;';t;S ;ND )'Ull1.'1'R\ SLI;A'1' nry good prlcee now, and we predict x(111 higher pekes this fall and winter, Don't 1(110,4 out, TBI. fa ono Seat• you are Grar.ticalll' taro that yon will m,ako big money out of both egg. awl poultry !neat. Providing of curse. that you .tart with good ,111, lot much ns 'Tweddle R.O.P. Sired, \V,, have cps,': al breeds for luyvr,,, others for broilers, and roasters. Alco 'Turkey ''nulls. older Pullets. Prompt delivery, ''rest analogue -- 'rweddte Chick Hnt- eherlex Limited, Fergus, ant. 11l'SIN15t4 (tI'POR '1'(I311'1ES 91OS'r m01010 fully equipped 5-tahlo pool room and tohnrcn huolnes%. Nino year lense. Petco $13,000, Old established 9• tahlo pool room, Lunch counter, tobacco. Price $21,0)0, tonna. 0IrIc's Real Estate, Chatham, Ont. REAL ESTATE IF IT IS REAL ES'rAT1; BUSINESS of any kind In which you aro Intoreated either as buyer or seller -- hooses or farms — write to Philip Seung, Realtor, 17_Fre_d,rirk Street, Kitchener, Ontario. TIIiIN 81'ARE 'r131E Into dollars selling Inxcluel(u Lighting Needs direet to Um - ern. Sten or women, fell or part -tine. complete training kit rnpplled. Repeat Beninese, n0 1nve,tnnent. Department 150', 1'.0. ilox 294, Hamilton. Ont. --- DYEING AND CLEANING HAVE you anything eeede dyeing or clean - Inez Write to ue for Iuforinntlon. We are glad to answer ynur questions, De. pertinent H. Parker's Dye Werke Limited, 791 Yemen St., Toronto FOR SALil HARDWARE ARU' OIIUSINIESS FOlt SALL Established 1898; also adjacent plumbing and thtxnithing chop—with tools. With or without building. Apply Res 195, Hawkes• bury, Ont. __ _ GENERAL Store, 840,000. Down payment 320.000, balance terms, 818,000 stock on hand. Cnr•ying complete lines of ladies', men's and children's Ready -to -Wear as lye!) as grncerlea, hardware, etc. Heart of tourist district. Phone Minden 42 or write Wm. Penrose, /linden. BEAUTIFUL, 3 -storey log lodge, 25 rooms and content& Hardwood floors, all city conveniences and 12 housekeeping cabins; 150.000, 120.000 down; mortgage or terms on balance, iII health venom for sale. William l'enrone, Minden, Ont. POMERANIAN Pups, pedigreed, male and female. Apply Kingston Pomeranian Kenneln, 82 Sixth St., Kingnton, Ont. JOHN 01:E150 BAILER WITH MOTOR, automatic wire tie, plck-up, All in new condltlon. Box number 76, 123 -18th St., New 'Toronto, Ont. (RAN''' WHITE PEKIN day-old Duck- lingx. Available weekly year around. Ux-Spring T'nrms Limited, Uxbridge, Ont, ICJ'. CREA3I CABINETS Buy dhect from manufacturer while sup- ply lasts. Cn,h or terms, Every cabinet guaranteed, Write for free catalogue, Modern Dolce,' Sltg. Co., 1226 St, Ur- bain St„ Montreal 18. TWO PiNTO SIAR0S, one part Arabian, ono Western; also other paddle home and ponlea, 419 King St, w'„ Oshawa, Ont, GARAGE, on Beaverton • Fenelon Falls Road, Including stock, equipment and dwelling, good tourist trade. Selling be- cauxo of Ill -health. Apply William Mc- Innis, Olenarm, Ont. I'Alldl IMPLEMENT AND j'AILTS Dual - noes; Excellent Dealership in Machin- ery, Plumping and Electrical Suppltcs. Appllancea and Ilulldera' Suppllea; main street in progressive lermtng community; Store and Warehouse 027,000. Stock ap- proxhnately 315,000 extra. Liberal terms owing to Illness, Berge Jame!, Broker, 25 William Street, OrIllla, Ont, Sometimes It "Rains" Strange Things 'Tropical tree -frog which fell front the skies during a rainstorm on to the deck of a liner at Buenos Aires has been sent to the London Zoo. It is white -lipped hyla, a rare species. But how did it get into the clouds in the first place? Said an expert: "Frogs are some- times drawn upwards by a rising air current and have been known to be carried many miles before coaling to earth with rain." Still stronger currents occasionally raise multitudes of small fish, caterpillars and worms into the air's upper reaches, from which they descend as soon as the force of gravity overcomes the vertical wind. Shepherds a n d cottagers in North-west Ireland saw masses of herring fry, which had been sucked up from the sea. dropping on Cruckmore Mountainside in 1945. A sudden shower of what at first seemed to be pearls astonished the people of a Spanish village some years ago. But the "pearls" proved to be the eggs of reptiles. Japan actually experienced a real pearl shower. The pearls had been car- ried inland by a strong wind from an oyster bed, where the shells con- taining the pearls had been opened an !lour earlier, One of the strangest living things ever to drop front the sky ir. a hail- storm; was an ice -encased turtle, eight inches long and six. inches wide. It plunged from the clouds at Bovina, Mississippi, Weather scientists decided that the turtle must have been borne aloft by a tornado. Showers of golden, red and black rain have been recorded. The golden rain was pollen from pines and fir trees; the red rain was red sand sucked up by a whirlwind passing over a dessert. The black rain (ex- perienced in London in 1913) was found to contain pieces of carbon an eighth of an inch long; it stained all it touched with soot. SMART GIRL She was going to her first dance, and before leaving, her Mother told her that she should not just dance silently; talking to her partner was also a part of the social picture, During the evening her mother noticed that each time the music started the sante boy tore across the floor, bowed to her daughter and swept her away. Later the mother asked why the same boy chose her for ever, (),trice "Oh," she explained, "1 was telling !him a murder serial," FOR SALE M'YI'olt CRUISER — 32' 1,\V1. x 9' 61', 3 cah,nn, 110001( G, completely equipped, outboard motor, dinghy, etc, 83,000. Do- Iivery arranged. Pictures, full lnforna• tlnn. Write Olrouard, .,, Lnurentlrle Ave., Quebec. P.O. FOit SA1.0 — fully equipped dairy farm, lot 26 con. 7 Ops. Victoria, hydro, modern house, water no top. 2 miles from LimIsaY, .apply Hugh Murdoch, 15.11. 8, Llndrry, Ont. I'OIt SAI.i3 011 RENT — gmieral store, In Dunnville ,Ilatrlct, good turnover, For Information writ() to 0, C. I'lmnoo, R.R, No, 1, liuniiville, Out. 1949 COCRSIIU'I'T 30 TRACTOR CREEP - 100, gear, nye power take -off, Rettaon- able, will exchange for (1v(;xtoclt, 10, 51. Llchty, JCR. 2, waterloo, Ont. SII:IIIC.11. DON'T WAIT — Every sufferer of Rheu- matic Pains or Neuritis should try Dixon's Remedy, Munro's Drug Store, 335 Elgin, Ottawa. $1.25 Express Pre. paid. CiRESS INGROWN TOE -NAIL SALVE, Your Druggist eelln none better, SUFFERERS from Rheumatic or Arthritic peen': If you cannot get relief, write: Box 123, Winnipeg, Manitoba. POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH tttt torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles. Poet's Eczema Salve will not disappoint Yon. Itching, sealing, burning eczema, acne, ringworm. pimples and athlete'' font, will respond readily In the etalnteae, odorless ointment. regnrdleas nt how stubborn or hopeless they aeon. 1'RiCF, 81.00 1'EIt J.Ut POST'S REMEDIES Sent Poet Free nn Receipt at Price 880 Queen St, 1:,, Corner of Logan. Tornio ol'I'O.RTUNi'I'IES FOR - S11:N ANI) WOJIEN BE A HAIRDRESSER 101N CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profession, good wages Thousands of eucee:eful Marvel groduatee America's Greatest System llluet'ated Catalogue Fres Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS 358 lilonr St. W„ Toronto Branches: 44 King St., Hamilton 72 Rideau St„ Ottawa MAKE MONEY THIS SUMMER selling sheer Nylons with amazing guarantee, (ileo Lingerie, Men's Iionlery and acces- sories). Liberal commissions and bonus plan, Free Sales Kit, Duro-Test W2, Hamilton, Ont. PATENTS LN OFFER to every Inventor—L1et of In. nations and full Information sent tree. The Ramsay Co., Reglatered Patent Attar. nems, 273 Bank Street, Ottawa. 6IITHERSTONHAUGH & Company, Pa- tent Sollcltore, Eetabllehed 1800, 880 Bay Street. Tannin. nnoklct of Inform& (ton nn request, PERSONAL QUIT CIGARETTES — The envy way, Uae Tobacco Eliminator, a scientific) treatment, quickly eliminates the craving for tobacco, ride the system of nicotine, King Drug Pharmaceutical Chemist)), Vegrevllle, Alta, Write P. 0. Dox 673, London, Ont, STAMPS TIlil STAMP IIUNTIOIL PAYS $1,000,00 and up for Canada 11: penny stamp (not 12c), good condltlon, 850.00 for 1019 35.00 green war saving. stamp. Good collections also . purchased,. Tho Stamp Iluntcr, Station B. Winnipeg. Canada. TILLCIIEI1S 1VANTED TEACHERS WANTED — Malo Princl- Dale In School Area No, 1, Yarmouth, Elgin County, duties to commence Sept, 4, 1951, Salary schedule Minimum 02000, Maximum 33500, Degrees Recognized. Sherman Smith, Sec.-Treas„ R.It, No. 5, St, Thomas, Ont. WANTED—NURSES PUBLIC HEALTH NURSES . QUALIFIED sTAr'r NURSES required for Peel County Health Unit, Salary range 32200.32800, Atlawanec for ex- perience. Write 0,0,11., Court Ilouse, Brampton. MATRON and 3 graduate nursoe requlreo Immediately for 10 -bed hospital; salaries 3200 and 3160 respectively plus full main- tenance; 1 month's holiday en'i 1 -way fare from Toronto refunded after y'ear's sails. factory service completed, with oppm'• Wattles for Increnses, Apply SIr, L. Fet- ter, Secretary, Eastend Union Hnapltal, Eastend, Saskatchewan, REGISTERED Nt1ItSI:S General Duty Nurses needed for Lady Stento Hospital, Chaplain, Ontario, Salary 3140.00 for 7.3 and 3160.00 for 3.11 and 11-7 per month will full maintenance, App1Y Superintendent of Nurses. (hn- pleau, Ontario, ISSUE 24 — 1951 PAGE 4 THE STANDARD �- , 1 _I_l i i I�,I , , . 1r�. - !_ �..'»'-� ! ul'lll�• �.ial+u.. ....r... • . � - '_ -�-Illiliii,lirrll --�- - -. • � 4 1I . , Iown.i/ -++4-G+#$4 $+404-0.O+41+ O -O-$ 0+0444+0 O+• ~s,•. 1111.14 . lily n,l gm 1 1641,6 ud:,Im4Y,I a ,L LI LAW.+r ili.11l s l,r r6.�uA I .•'1 '# ••,'�1r�M„,Ma•IN•N�MMm#444,N•ItNNeN4'i#NtMN'r~••w•4 Wednesday, June 13, 1951 i COOKED CHEESE: Pkg. No (WITH CARAWAY) Arnold Berthot MEAT 111111110 Telephone 10 --- Blyth. FISH 444 -O•.++.444 -04O+. -N.40 -.-...+s s+O-O444-+$++4. +4-44444.44+• Blyth Farmers (o -Op Association TELEPHONE 172 • BLYTH. Haying Is Almost Here! GET THAT TRIP ROPE AND DRAW ROPE NOW! BEFORE TREY ARE TIIE CAUSE OF AN ACCIDENT. PITCH FORKS in short, medium, and long handles. GE'r A ;FIRE EXTINGUISHER FOR TRUCK AND TRACTOR. LONDESBORO at the Radar School, Clinton. The 1.ondesboro Sunday School is planning, for a strawberry social in Blyth Branch No, 420 Canadian Legion 5th Annual COMMUNITY PARK, BLYTH, ON acv S 1) JUE 21st - PROGRAMME - SOFTBALL GAME, commencing, at P.M. HAPPY COUSINS CONCERT TROUPE, Elmira, A ONE-HOUR SHO\V CN 'r13E GROUNDS. Music, Vocal Solos, Quartette; and Comedy. GAMES AND MANY OTHER ATTRACTIONS. DRAW FOR .$500.061 IN PRIZES: 1st: 7.FT. REFRI:,ERATOR. 4th: ICI LBS. SUGAR. 2nd: KROEHLER ROCKER.sth: El..?CTRIC TABLE :r.l: P.t. WOOL BLANKETS. LAMP, On Display in T:cskcr'a Furniture Sb'e W'n now after M:nd-•y, May 23 Tiekets may lie procured from any Lczil:m \Icinber, 25•: each. ti for $1. Band in Attendance..Dance in Memorial Hall After THIS EVENT WILL BE HELD REGARDLESS OF WEATHER. /L :,IiPI. 11,. 111.•16.,11 {:161.I •• .11.1+:..•1Y116 Jo1111L1d 1-•1..1 .IL 111 :11.ii 1J• • 14.1 Y•I.- N11/ 1.6.m. .61111 •• l 0~10~04 0N0.04NP0,04•0Nr Vit. COMING EXTRA SPECIAL TREAT : IN Y.F.C. TUESDAY, JUNE 26th Watch your Local Paper for Particulars. -AGENT FOR - CENTAUR "AG" ,AGRICULTURAL TRACTORS • AMERICAN BANTAMN FARM MACHINERY. Centaur "AG" Tractors are powe••ed by Ills bums ''Le Roi" 14) engin°: and equipped with M:nr:c" Hydraulic System, • APPLY TO GERALD WAT"ON 1 `� ' Phone 4(]R4, lllyth. 22.1 0d4.rrN4Mi.r~e#4+'4`4V 'N'r'Irlrr. I •NNrrrrrrrNNrlrrlNlNrdN rrrrlrNrrNrNrrr NrrrtrrNMlNrNrrN.. Remember'Father On June •17 With one of the Following Suggestions- SLIFPEI,S, ideal for Lounging around in the evenings, IN ROMEO, Z1.1.'PLR, Olt OPERA STYLES PRICED FROM $2.35 TO $4.50, ' SOCKS OF VARIOUS SHADESSTYLES Blended Wool and Nylon, Long 1'Vearing - Easier Washing PRICED FROM 1,25 Ti) $1.,75, • adiE!'s Shoe Store Blyth "Be Kind to your feet. Wear Madill's Footwear." L.1NNNININtNrrrNN rr•r 4,000.1.•••4'04~0#1#0,•#4'04,000.1.•••4'04~0#1#0,•#4'0#04,000.1.•••4'04~0#1#0,•#4'0#0,i2 rN4.romm er.nllNss,e4~NKevs•wrrNr~wwsNrlrrrrNlrrNrN, Tin Ne(ediecraft S ofpe BI,Y'1'H - ONTARIO. NOW IS THE TIME FOR WEDDINGS - Choose your gift for the bride from out' wide selection of cushions, wool blankets, pillow cases, towels, luncheon sets, chair sets, buffet sets and doilies (large and small). 1 • 1r0.0.44-.-.-.-.•0.-04+4-0-4+.-O.O-..-O-.+O+•-t.-O-. + •-•-•44-04+,44-14-3 *4444 (Too late for last week) Mr. lien Allen is making extensive 1 \irs, NIarglaret Manning, \1t•, and Mrs, Fred Prest spent the week -end June. alterations in his dwelling and instal Mrs. \V. 'I'amblyn, visited with Mrs. .-moa, ,�w "� 77. "'• Saundcrcock and Weldon' , „ Leith her mother, ''irs. 1:. J. Crawford., \l r. Clift. lin, a bathroom. \\ tlliam Grat on Sunday, Shutt iu l , i Mrs. Dr. Grierson and June Man• . 'Tyndall arc making prcrarations to I i D;ay" Mrs, Gray has been °shat -in It ning were in "Toronto with friends for start building; an egg grading stati �n� Glaris C'u;lper of Clinton, with her - storage locker plant, The grandmother over the week -end. I for some year hot never complains. a few drays. and cold, .tci•c,.r lu i Miss NI ;try Caldwell, London Mrs. Laura Sandercock of Sebring- location is on No. 4 highway, I M iss 1.. Knox, Toronto, with hcr ,-end with her mother. spent the tvecl vine was home for Sunday. I Mr. Bert Ih•unsdon is working atipa parents, Mr. and, Mrs. T. Knox ov,r \Irs. Gtldwell. \(r. \Pillows Mountain is empioyed the Radar School, Clinton. 1 the week -cull. Miss 011ie Moon, 'Toronto, with her father, \Ir. George Mooti. Mr. and! MI's. 'foot Caldwell with Mrs. R. Caldleell. East Wawanosh Council .11 1 I 11 611. 1 .11 1., 1. 1 1.1 I. 1 l 1 �. Father's u 1 111.161111 L1 1 6,61111. I 1 6 I•I.. .1 11111.1 411.1.1114 .11._I B.,4.,�1...L ONE DAY A YEAR -SET ASIDE TO HONOUR DAD. -DON'T FORGET HIM. HONOUR IIIM WITII A GIFT THAT IS ALWAYS IN GOOD TASTE, AND SOMETHING HE WILL APPRECIATE. "BE WISE AND BUY WISELY," WIIERE BARGAINS RULE SUP- REME. MAKE YOUR SELECTION FROM THE FOLLO,WING ITEMS, OR BETTER STILL, COME IN AND SEE TIME COUNTLESS ITEMS IN- CLUDED IN OUR COMPLETE STOCK. SPORT JACKETS- TIES - SATIN GABARDINE CORDUROY MOUNTAINEER CLOTH SUEDE HORSEHIDE $6.95 U.P. SPORT SHIRTS - SHORT & LONG SLEEVES GABARDINE NYLON RAYON $2.98 UP. (Seven Shades). ADAM HATS - $5.00 UP. SLACKS - All -Wool Gabardine, Rayon and Wool Gabardine $9.95 TO $1.7.95. MEN'S SUITS - All -Wool Gabardine Worsted and Rayon Gabardine $39,95 TO $59.50. $1.00-$1.50-$2.00. SPORT SHOES -- Men's Sport Shoes, (in wine and blue) sizes 6 to 10 $3.95. MEN'S LEATHER BELTS - $1.50 - $2.00. 'SOX (Diamonds) - All -Wool Nyon and Rayon 98c TO $'2.75. DRESS SHIRTS - Forsyth, McGregor, and Bluestone , $2.98 TO $5.95. MEN'S T-SIIIRTS'- $1.49 TO $2.98. The cad With Branches in Blytli and Brussels. tore Telephones -Blyth 211; Brussels, 6 j 1 The Council met June 511i with all members present, the reeve presiding. ;Minutes of May 1st meeting read and adopted on notion by Taylor and Robertson. Carried. Correspondence was read and dealt 4 with by Council. 1\". C.:\ttrid ze, C.:\„ Township awl.iter, Rave his report of the Township I , Ireceipts and expenditures for the year 1 19:1,1: Receipts $53,142.67, Expenditures 1 561,540.44, with a surplus of $1,602.23. \lotion by Campbell and Mc( owatt that the auditor's report be adopted ' and his fees be paid. Carried. •A letter from the Department of ,. Public Works re the meeting to be held ip Listowel, June 261h, and asking Council to a; point a representative to attend an 1 vote on the \fiddle Mait- land Valley Conservat'on Authority; Motion by Taylor and Robertson that Reeve Ilcecroft be appointed to at - 1 tend above meeting.. Carried. I tl resolution passed by Clinton Town \lotion by McGowan and Campbell Council on 'Tuesday night favored the 1 that Ccuncil accept the Collector's erecton of an ;uldtion to the Clinton Roll and Collector be paid the balance District Collegiate Institute at an es. of his salary. Carried, tintated cost of $235,OU)• Motion by Taylor an.l 'McGowan The Board will be instructed by 1 that the Road and General Accounts council to proceed with plans and I as presented. be passed, and paid. specifications for said addition, It is understood by passing this re - E L E c T R Y c SMALL, MEDIUM ANI) LAIi(;E, TO ACCOMMODATE YOUR HERDS. A COOLER THAT WILL DO YOUR JOB MOST EFFICIENTLY. FULLY 'AUTOMATIC AND ECONOMICAL. M I L K c 0 O L E R s LEWIS WHITFIELD TELEPHONE 130 BLYTiI, FOR INFORMATION. 444+0++1 .-0+44+4-4. N++-.-+-$44+.•Y•.•$1+r+.H-+t4, +-$- - -++***.4 44 2f5,'0) ADDITION TO CLINTON COLLEGIATE APPROVED BY CLINTON COUNCIL 1 1 ICarried. 1 S. Mclturncy salary, 216.00, bills paid. 1 5.36, 221,36; Leslie Buchanan, brushing and fencing and culvert, 94.50; Ernest • \\'alker. brushing,. fencing sf)ad ctrl- ; vert, 42.00; Pardon M otors, truck re- pairs, 3.75; Stainton's 1-idwe., shovel. 5.95, wrie. 8.,f.0, 89,95; Chas. Hodgins 5 i truck repairs, SOS; I3elgrave Co -Op., sprayer repairs, 85.98; R. H. Thomp- son, truck permit, 2.55; 13101 Stand• ard, gravel tenders, 70c ; Geo. Radford • 30 Huls. gravel, 19,50; Joe , Kerr, 318 50l111i011 that the town will be respotr Bible for its proportionate share of the Clinton Institute Arca assessment and furthermore, that ;all debentures for this project be issued by , the County of IHluron. The present Collegiate was built in 1926 to accommodate 180 pupils, the The Huron County Road Commis - old school will he definitely over- Sint reported that spring conditions crowded next year with an enrolment and heavy traffic damaged gravel estimated at 300. At the present 'time roads in the north of the County. classes are being held in the auditor- it ivas recomcndcd that a by -la yds. gravel at 56c, 178.(.'8, 318 yds, grav tum and in the library, he rasscd in ;l1comrdauce with nett' let;iw• el at 5c, 15S0, 193,98; Dont. Rd. Ata- I To date, councillors were told that station obligating the county to main - China)! Co., 4 b-1tS. 53c; Canadian Oil of the eight nutnicipal:ties in the arra lain links of count;' roads in urban Co., oil, 48.62, fuel oil, 67.80, gas. 47,88. six have approved, However, the nuunfcipaltiets, malting ;ulditions of - 16.1.30; Dept. 11igltw;tys, tax 011 355 Township of Stanley al:proved, only ,\Iain street in Seafoth, Qnccn street gals. fuel o l at I lc, 39.\\(15. 1 on condition that the Town, of Chu-. from Tau•nberry street to the easterly General Accounts : '. C. Attridge • ton assume an extra still of the ex- and westerly limit in Brussels ; and ex - auditing two records, 100.00, auditing pcnse' Stanley at present sends (d; tension of County Road No, 35 6th school rereads45.00, 145.0); Frank students, the sante number as Clinton, 1<ing street and Goderioh street in 1 Cooper, o.'crating S^raycr,for 1Varble to the high school, and is slightly Clinton, 1'1y, , Can. dues 1.td., ay'' higher assessed, Also that the read and bridge cut materia218l,3); 555.(1'): InVersostrin Irwin, sprhal "All townships in the arca," are de- off by diversion of Highway 21 at Bay- 1ance salary as Collector for 19511, 5(1.(10, riving the sonic benefits as Clinton," field be reverted to municipalities in' stamps and e chanrc, 1.68,. SI,G4; ,l. said Councillor Morgan Agnew. In tvhicln it is located, 1 1<cilh Arthur. 7 side chairs, 1 R I ticw of the nay the town tatcpayers Estimated expenditures on road; 1). Munro, relief acct,. 13,71 ; 121..70;, D. I voted on the public school by -haw, (a , are : Construction, ;$71,000; bridges, i I: 3ardin, 5 fox pup bounties, 7,Er- i 6.:9; lard \Valker, 1 fox bounty• 2.00; Aus- est \Talker, fox pup bounty, 150;.50; Jas.n erection of a $il)3,000 new public majority of 103 ,were in favor of the $33,300; ' urban rebates,$15,63 \Valsh, 2 fox pup bounties, 3.00; How'- t school) 1 feel that they are behind. the high school project, but not ac, tin Cook, 5 fox pup bounties, 7,50; copting any extra mills," • Joseph 1)unh.ar, 1 fox bounty, 2.00; Council was told by the deoutatior, APPOINTED BANK MANAGER 'rw•p, East \Vw'atiosh, rent of spray- that 1Jullett Township Council did not er to reads; 2.'0.00: Chris. Nethery, int discuss the school proposition at its Spector for 1Varhlc Fly, 11+0„0• councl meeting, Replying to Mayor Alo•cd by Campbell and Robertson I cc. w, Nott's question if the amount that Council adjourn to meet Jule 3rd cf cost could be lowered, he was told at 2 p.m. 1)S'I'., at the 1ti'grave Cony that a Department of Education tech - reported to be doing exceptionally well, and growth is excellent. Some farmers have commenced hay:ug operaticns, but the movement s not yet general as growth is still continuing vol hay is quite sappy. An exceptionally heavy hay crop is practically assured. Gardens planted earlier have taken good root, and are showing good growth, but hater planting is slow, no doubt due to the exceptionally colt , nights. The first tame strawberries appear- ed in Myth steres this wreck. MAINTAIN ROADS HURON ADVISED ntunity Centre. Carried. J. D..Ileccroft, R. H. Thompson, Reeve. Clerk, DR. W. A. BEECROFT ELECTED CONFERENCE PRESIDENT O The Rev1)r. W. A. Beecroft of \Vinghant United Church was elected by FO'' (I.:legates 01 'Tuesday to the presolency of the London, Conference of the United Church. Dr. Beecroft was e'ected , en the third ballot over five other nominees. He succeeds Rev, Edgar J. T oulstoc, St. Thomas. Meal advisor gave the board a reason- ably safe estimate. The council was informed by Frank Fingland, K.C., town solicitor, that chic to a revised statute of the Department cf. Education high School Art, 1951 the financing of all high school area business in the future would be done through county channels. • CROPS SHOWING RAPID GROWTH Friends' here will learn with pleas- ure of the promotion 'of Mr, Douglas Ross, who has been Accoiiittant' at the Imperial 13an!c 13ran:h at Mathe- .son, to the position of Manager of the Branch at Pickle Crow. Word to this effect was received front him by Airs Daniel McGowan this week, MOVED TO FARM Mr. and Mrs. Chester Morrison and fancily have moved to their new farm home, the forager Sloan farts, in 1lnllett township, The previous owners, Jakttbovic taros„ Joseph and Alex,, to eticer with - families, have talccn up residence in Blyth, occupying part cf Mr. and Mrs. Good's house, on Queen street,. Without exception field crops are north. • Wedneadny, June 13, 1951 1..1 , I,pjt.. 11 Y r" ,I. L,„r ,_ ,h.1.11►I.-iv'{ BLYTH ELECTRIC ! Have the Answer to All Your COOKING, REFRIGERATION and APPI.LIANCE PROBLEMS, with WESTINGHOUSE & PROi)IJCTS, OIIr BURNERS INSTALLED IN COAL FURNACES. Water Heaters Installed on Request. We Ser\'il'e Our Appliances. ,1 ......Y G., .,..Z .4ir.. THE STANDARD ." - - rs/t- ,L'e�/,e'O�p /�� /�/'s .s..A1.' semi / ,�/1- �./1��/)� �p���Q�Q� /'r�/ 'f �/�/,��/. 1,110 ,4..4,. Y. , 4 i J. . ,i I 1 . wood ctomite�W 'mulct mmilitetvat N` •gtor Ymitaitotto itch dell tc,cMotif.t N.`ermo w^4Wtocult `R`M ictorA'amic1 '11� � `A tcictitioc ti �1 / tcuxx 'tttt':�'�'Ztt, '1111E PARK THEATRE CAPITAL THEATRE REGENT THEATRE �,r:'lil'iU�I THEATRECLINTUn' GODERlC1l •• PHONE 1150 t30DERICH, BEAFORTH. WiNGNAM-•ONTARIO, NOW PLAYING; (JUNE 14): -� " - NOW: "The West Point Stor Story" star. N'OW: Chan Lightning", Humphrey NOW; Abbot! and Costello tn: r I'wo Shows Each Night starting -Ai "BREAM6; R I -IES Bo art,as a et' ilot, "HOLD THAT GHOST" ring James Cagney, );1J -- JUNE 15 AND 16; "THE SKIPPER g ) p -' Monday,�Tuesday,Wednesday Changes in time will be noted below` SURPRISED HIS WIFE" Mondry, Tuesday, Wednesday Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday y Adult Entertainment Lex Barker Brenda Joyce and Rosalind Russell and Ray Milland -________• - - Mon. and Tues.. Limo iR nut! 191 f'eld, Patricia h.t al and Albert Dekker, Comedy drama at its best, when a . , Lu. .J ..,a r L A I I iLal Jchn Phyllis Thaxter , y'Ullllg dean U1 a women's college falls y �'1'hc kill( of the jungle hecomcs in "►P1lE PETTY GIRL', A new kind of romance with an old Out on the Pacific coast a deep-sea t'olved with another thril`!hig adltc,l- (c in leve (lith a newspaper man. ` fashioned ending starring, fisherman lames a strange cargo to turd from the pen of Edgar Lice Bur - Hely Lama,•r, Robert Cummings and: port and wins for himself an I roughs. Filmed in Africa. Wednesday and Thursday Ann Sten. adeentur: u; destiny. u t , „' �� . ' �� Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. - « BREAKING POINT, Tartan s Magic Fountain' Mon,. 'Tues., Wcd., June 18.19.20 Wcd. and 'TI►-t•a., (June 10 and 21) The BRE tr _' , "Abbott and Costello Meet Thursday, Friday, Saturday "111-1E , CAT" - f� , Man" IIID LAT' Thursday, Friday, Saturday Gordon MacRae, Julie London and The Invisible "LT Next Voice You :\ Iltral:ng iit:a til the bottler and !le f Jack Holt. Fridayand Saturda „ 7lte DEVIL'S S DOORWt1Y . r Hear" htlat:d, with \ western drama in Technicolor, 'cl• Spencer Tracy, Jaynes Stewart and Dcn Mc:7ala;er & Fagty Ann Garner Ilistnr'rll Western of the Civil War lint the slur of a sheriff's non tvito p John Hodiak. James Whitmore _ N. Davie - Fri. and Sat., (June a2 and 23) Period. in which a Yount fncfian sol �' diet learns that va) ur dd c not over-; tt'tls bctraycd by his closest iricndl. A rugged tale of two men who got "THE �11T, tome racial bigotryi" vital rubber from Japanese -held (lets , VENTURES 1'hrrs., Fri., Sat., June 21.2!-2Z )V1" N I URES Return of The OF T►Robert 'Taylor, ;Paula Raymond Frontiersman" cf plantations. fr "PAGAN LOVE SUNG" i t -I GALLANT I3ESS" and L.u's Calhcrn. I rontiersman_ hIALAYA_ IN COLOit COMING. "The a COMING: 'Young man with the Horn' PAGE $ Joan Caulfic'.d, Robert Cummings �'' I Woman In Question" COMING: "Stage to Tuscon". Howard Keele • Esther Williams Cameron Mitchell, Audrey Long and uA Technicolor super -western. Kirk Douglas ouglas and Lauren Bacall. FuwryKt. Dramatic! Clric( . ...____ Ilj!yr �,lbYtP'1ti4'4v.;tiVi11pt/tpitftetCiCt4aps,Qly °uarWtZ`qqM/e �'r-m,tittOytoq.ICCIMels {V;i F,t1t4tW4ICIVCC It'cleXtt ett(ielettIClCt{tMZte`p b'Yt/tWtCletClCiCtCtC1CICKW TY FOR SALE - (';11,1;;;!,e plants, Copenhagen Market and a Special 11;01hetol, 1 doz, 18c. 2 r r'51 .i for 59e, to for re, and 101 it r $1.11;1; (gar:lill:meet% selected Snow - FOR SALE � hall, 2c each, treated, above and be - 2 tint -tiers 1('x10, 14 feet Itnlg; al.;,, low. \I. 11olt/hatter, Blyth. 36.2p. 2 cental( p:c; (loll ,IIs. 3 fl. luic. FLOWER S11OW AND TEA :\pply 'Phos. Lawrence, phone It, -di • Myth,_ 37 i' hold it's annuli Flower S!ur,v and Tea Your Sub:seriptiOn Paid'? in the MythMentor:al hall, on Sat. ((rill, lune 2?rd, 3`t2,'. I'lte Illy t11 11 orlien! (Mal Society twill Is T-.,,.-aM..b.M.M..M-„.,MIWiw.w • 0 a 0 cwt arca'' r�1-ul lei b• • 0% u4 ct z <tLij �h c5 >II aw t73 ). t ni 1/49w Ytz 1 W7_ of u -t 112 i- \i1 \ \�w2a HS ., z 0 c::i't �f 11.1= A 658 W �Q .,Z > CLm Z.co‘. 1-o 0'l. z agog �f•LL STRAWBERRY SOCIAL ( Former Church Moderator lotion Elliott AND THREE -ACT PLAY "TRUTH TAKES A IIOLIDAY" Dies At Wingham Rev. (:harks H. MacDonald, 6S, died Saturday evenilig in the \\'ing- hanl General Hospital aiter a Tong ill- ness, Ur. 1I.Ic1)r.nald NVitS horn 111 Culrass township near lecstvatcr, .\t the time of his death he was minister under auspices of Sunday in the hluevalc and Behove charges SCl1031 at Londesboro of the Presbyterian Church in Canada. Dr. \1acl)onald vias twice married 11 is first wife was the former Helen Martin of Smithtille, who died in 1)e- ccmber, 1940. Of that union tltere were four children : Rcv. R. Douglas \l ac Donald, 'TillsoIll urg; .'lrs, \V. A ( Margaret) Henderson, \\'alkcrton ; \tics Marian \l acl)onald, B'luevale; and \frs, James 0, (Helen) Bristol'', Belleville, 1 lis seccnd wife was for - 37 -1. nlerly Katherine \l acl)ougall of Luck- _.. now. Dr. MacDonald was inducted NOTICE TO CREDITORS into the pastoral charge of hluevale' In the Estate of Emma Wright, Tato of and Ile:more iu Fehruar , 1950, after' serving as pastor of 1.tickltow and Dungannon churches for 25 years. ile also was minister at Crecmore and penetanguishene. He was ex-ntoder a tor of the llnron•Mai11and Presbytery, and moderator of the synod of Ham1- .1011 1•1011 and London, and was a forme(•. moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Can- ada, elected to that position in 19.17 at Calgary. FRIDAY, .TUNE 22nd Supper to commence at 6:30 pan. Admission 75c and 35e. ALL ARE WELCOME the Village of Auburn, to the Coun- ty of Huron, Widow, Deceased. All persons having ckt1nts against the Estate of the above deceased are required to file the sante with the undersigned) Solicitor for the said Es- - 'tate, on or before the 25111 day of June. A.D. 1951, after which date the assets w.Il he d'strihttted 'amongst the parties ult,,Ietl t'•ercto, having regard only 1) the claims of which nufice shall have been given. 1)ATEl) at Clinton, Ontario, this 1st day of June, A.D.• 1951. F. FIN( LAND,' K.C.. Clinton, On- tario, Solicitor for the said Estate, ,:6-3, Dr. \l acIonahl was a graduate ot'I Knox College, 'Toronto, and obtained' his 1).1). degree from Knox College in April, 1948, ile (vasa former Light Lodge A.F. and A.M., Luck- ncw; Lucknow R.R.A.\f.: past grand chaplain of the grand chapter, Royal Arch Masons of Canada; and served for several years on the Lucknow school board, The 'funeral was conducted on Wednesday. :\ service at 1 ;30 p.m. FOR SALE TENDERS FOR COAL AND COKE was held in the Rluevale Presbyterial( Seed buckwheat. Apply to C. L. Church, followed by one in Lucknow at Hollinger, phone 45-5, Brussels. 37-1p Federal Buildings -Province cf Ontat to 3:30 p.m. Rev. P. A. Ferguson of S:l•:ACED TENDERS addressed. to Hensail, acting. moderator of the IIu-I LOST OPTOMETRIST the undersigned and endorsed "Tell- ron-Maitland Presbytery, had charge I Ladies' gold. wrist watch, with gold JOHN E. LONGSTAFF derfor Coal" will he received until 3 of the funeral arrangements. Burial expansion band. Finder please leave Optometrist. 1 nl. (E.I),S,'I'J. Thursday. June 21, was in South Kinloss cemetery. same at Standard Office. Reward, Eyes examined, Glasses fitted 1Phone 791 1;51, for the supply of coal and coke 37 -Ip. MAIN ST. SEAFORTH for the D,:minion Buildlings through - member of Old J. I -I. R. Elliott ELLIOTT Real Estate Agency BI:YTH. I41E FOLLOWING 1'R0PERTIE:- FOR SALE: 11�• and 1 storey frame, asphalt hingle clad dwelling; hydro, small frame stable with garage attached :Mall piece of land; situated 01 ,,est side of Queen Street. 1 storey, frame, instil brick ant' meta: -clad dwelling, good well, hy- dro, full cellar, cement and frame stable, about 1 acre of land, situat- zd on north side of Hamilton St. 1'A• storey frank asphalt shingle ,clad and brick dwelling; water pres- oire, lb-dro, stable with hydro and tvater, about 5 314 acres land, sit- uated on north side of Boundary Road, 11/' storey, frame dwelling with hydro and water pressure, stab!( 33x26, and hen house, about 1 acre 11 land; situated on west side of Queen St. Reid's POOL ROOM. SIMOKER'S SUNDRIES Tobaccos, Cigarettes, Pop, and Other Sundries. FARMERS Be sure to get your help in time. Small and large Dutch families are available for hlarvest. Apply now. C. de Haan, Belgrave, Ontario. Z3 -8p. FARM FOR SALE 50 acres, on the Auburn road, 11/4' miles west of Blyth & close to school. Hydro available, good water supply. 20 acres spring crop. Good farm build- ings. Possession arrangements can be made. Apply, Mrs. Mary Siding, phone 18r5, Blyth, R.R. 1, Auburn. 33-2p. TWEDDLE HATCHERIES Offers Government -Approved R,O,P. Sired Chicks, Day-old or Started, 13 pure breeds and 15 cross breeds to choose from, Order today. Phone or see our representative, J. Armstrong, photic 170. Blyth. _Y 36-2, SEWAGE DISPOSAL • - 1 am now equipped to pump out your FOR SALE septic tank; Also do all other kinds of Duck eggs, 7 cents each. Apply, Rus- puutping, such as flooded cellars, etc. sell Bentley, phone 34 33, Myth. Coxon, Milverton, phone 75r4. 34-4p. 34-6p. FOR SALE Extra good feed oats; good , drop- OPTOMETRIST, head hay loader. Apply to 1). McKen- PATRICK ST. - \\IIING/1AM, ONT, zie, phone 189, lllyth. 37-?. ;E\'I:NINGS BY APPOIN!rMENT. Phone: Office 770; Res. 5. G. ALAN WILLIAMS, Professional Eye Examination. Optical Services. AUCTION SALE Hours: 9 - 6 out the Province of Ontario. IN MEMORIAM 'cd, Sat. , p., Forms of tender with specifications Of Property and Household �ffecle, T\1hursday9-12:30; Evenings, By9a.ntAppoitont9mentm, and conditions a'ttacIled can be obtain- BURT -1-11 loving memory of a deal' of the talc Mrs. Thos, Nbbk, in the cd from the Chef of Purchasing and husband and father, Alfred! Burt, Village of Blyth, on R. A. Farquharson, M.D. Stores, l)clurtutcnt of Public Works,ttho passed away one year ago to- SATURDAY, JUNE 16th, 1.951, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Ottawa, and the District Architect, 3b clay, June lith, 1950. at 2 p.m' Office Hours The properly consists of a seven - forms St, East, 'Toronto. Out. itis life was full of kindly deeds Daily Except Wednesday and Sunday. Tenders should be made on the A helping hand to. all in need, room frame house with bath, hard - 1 tvoodt floors, built-in cupboards, base- 2 pent. o 4 p.m. corms supplied by the Department Sincere and true in heart and mind 7 p.m. to 9 pent. and in accordance with departmental A memory sweet he left behind, 111eltt, hard and soft water; stable; Telephone 33 -- Blyth, Ont. specifications and conditions attached four lots, garden, small fruits; alsp47,52p. -'Treasured memories es by his wife, household furnishings including elms- thereto. Isla Tainan hurt daughter Evelyn, and son, Harold, 37-1. tcrfield suite, dining room suite; ex-_ � _ The Department reserves the right b to dei Land f rem any successful tender- er, before awarding the order, a- se- curity deposit in the forst of a cerci• tied cheque on a chartered bank in Canada, made payable to the order of the 1-Ionotlrable the tIiuister of Pub- lic Works equal to 10 percent of the amount of the tender, or Bearer Bonds of the 1)onlinion of Canada or of Odle Canadlian National Railway Company and its coll5tittle111 C011b;1allies unco11- ditionaily guarantced ns to principal and interest by the Dominion of Can- ada, or The aforementioned bends and a certified cheque if requ'red to malts tip an odd amount. Such security will serve as a guar. aatce -for the proper fulfilment of the contract, ROBERT FORTIER, Acting Secretary. Department of Public \Yorks, Ottawa, May 28, 1951. 36-2. Skinny (nen, Women gain 5,10,15 lbs. Get New Pep, Vim, Vigor What a thrill, Irony limbs Oil out: ugly hot- lotra an up; heck no longer scrawny; Trolly loses linI1'atarved, sickly "bran -auto" look. Thou- sands of girls, women, men, who never could gain Le - fore, aro noir proud of shapely, healthy -looking bodies. They thank nue ote- chat vlgor•bnlldlog, Ocsh- bullding Jolie, ()Ares, It, tonics, stimulants, invigora- tors, iron, llnmin 31„ cal- etunl, enrich blood, improve aprenlu and digesL'rn en foul gives yon two strength and nourislunent1 put flesh on baro swum. Get Lovely Curves Don't fear getting T00 fat. 81oo when you're gained the 5, 10, 15 or 20 lbs. you need for normal weight. Costs little. Noir "Get acquainted.' size only 60e. Try fatllhtta Ustrex'node 'Onhlets for 11 rigor andnddedrounda,1'11 very (lay, At all drugg'.ts, SEES Stewart Johnston e \ • For POWER PACKED ATLAS BATTERIES Get greater power caps• city, get better cold weather starting and longer battery life with an Atlas! WRITTEN GUARANTEE With every Atlas Battery you get a written Guarantee backed by Imperial Oil, It's made good by 38,000 dealers wherever you go in Canada oR the United State& t; Stewart Johnston Massey -Harris and Beatty Dealer. Phone 137-2 - Blyth, Ont. tension table and chairs, china cabi- net and buffet, coal or wood range,- quebec heater, coal oil stove, small tables, couches, spool bed, springs and Mattress, three beds complete, dres- sers, washstands, and many other ar- ticles, TRMS The property will be sold subject to a reserve bid, 'Perms to he made known 011 day of sale. Chattels cash, Mrs...C. Rath, Belgrave, Proprietor. \Vin, H. Morrill, Auctioneer, 36-2. MORRITT & WRIGHT. Oliver Sales & Service Deniers Telephone 4 and 93, Blyth. Inquire About Our Line of Machinery: --- Oliver Tractors, both wheel tractors and crawlers. Plows, Discs, Spreaders. Smalley Forage Blowers and Hammer Mills, Also Renfrew Cream Sep- arators and Milkers. Fleury -Bissell Spring - Tooth Harrows, Land Packers and Fertilizers Spreaders. We also have repairs for Oliver-Cockshutt Tractors • GARAGE. Acetylene and Electric Welding A Specialty. Agents For Intexlnational- Ilarvester Parts & Suppiles White Rose Gas attd 1 Car Painting alta Repairing. .Ys.tar..++s A. L CO.LEI R.O. 4 OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Godericlt. Ontario - Telephont 3 Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted, With 25 Years Experience THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE - SEAFORTH, ONT Officers: President, E. J: Trewartha, Clinton; Vice -Pres,, J. L Malone,. Seaforth; Manager and Sec -Treas., M. A. Reid. Directors: E. J. Trewartha, Clinton; J. I,. Mal- one, Seaforth; 5. I -T, Whiti)lore, Sea - forth; Chris, Lcondlardt, Bornholm; Robert Archibald, Seaforth; John H. McEwing, lllyth; Frank McGregor, Clinton; Wnt, S. Alexander, Walton; llarvcy huller, Godericlt, Agents: J. E. Pepper, Brucefield; R. F. Mc- Kercher, Dublin; Geo. A. \\ratt, Blyth; I. F. Prueter, Brodhagon, Selwyn Bak- er, Brussels. Parties desirous to effect Insurance or transact other business, will be iirontply attended to by applications Ito any of the abore named officers addressed to their respects' i posit t1ti flees! Slang Words With Stories Behind Did your wife buy any while elephants at the sales earlier this y c a r': You've probably never thought w'hy this seemingly inap- propriate terns should be applied to usele , hits and pieces. Huai white elephants in ancient 11nrata and Siam were regarded with ,uch awe that they had the title of lord and their households were superintended by high-ranking ministers. Naturally, the upkeep of such heit: was expensive, and tnon- an•c:ts •,vho wished to punish their courtiers in a rather subtle way, burdened them by giving then one of these sacred animals. Most everyday slang has an in- teresting history. Stealing some- one's thunder or getting the credit for another person's work, goes back to the late seventeenth cen- tury. John Dennis, a critic and drama- tist, invented a new kind of stage thunder for a piece of his own. After his play had failed, he went to watch a performance of "Macbeth." and to his intense dis- gust found that his invention had been stolen. "See how the rascals use mc!" he exclaimed. "They will not let my play run; and yet they steal my thunder." Lick into Shape Raw National Servicemen are licked into shape by a sergeant - major. This saying comes from old European folklore. It was believed that hear cubs were born without shape and were given form by the action of the mother's tongue. Human unlicked cubs are often hauled over the coals for some mis- demeanour. In mediaeval days, whn English kings needed extra money in the exchequer, they ap- proached the Jews. Should a elan prove awkward, he was literally hauled over the coals of a slow tire and gradually roasted, Sir Walter Scott alludes to this bar- barous practice in "Ivanhoe." Probably, as a result of this treat- ment ,the victims kicked the bucket. At least two good authorities main- tain that this colloquial way of saying that a man has died, has been borrowed from the farmyard. A bucket was another word for a beam or yoke, and in East Anglia as applied to the frame from which a newly slaughtered pig was sus- pended by its heels. "So Long" An alternative and rather doubt- ful theory is that the bucket is the pail kicked away by a suicide. Some people prefer to say that a man has pegged out. This term is borrowed from croquet, in which a peg is hit with the ball as the final stroke in a game. \Vhen you remark, "So long, old chap," you are actually saluting a pedlar. "So long" is said to be a nautical distortion of "salaam," aid and "chap" is an abbreviation of ehapman, the old terns for a man who peddled iris wares about the country. )fob is an abbreviation, too. It conies from the Latin "!mobile vul- gus" which means an excitable able crowd. There is a story behind most slang, but the odd thing is, no one can tell us how the word "slang" itself originated. ROCKING THE BOAT Teacher (showing the class a copy of the picture of Washington crossing the Delaware) : "Now, can any little boy orr, girl tell me the name of this picture?" Small voice in the rear: "Sure! `Sit down, You're Rocking the Boat'!" lyaaF tLi s eR a a,7 xt^: .iwo:2 ..r�wkJ•A.�`�^' . . .. . Wings For The NATO—The vanguard of 1400 airmen from Western European nations being trained by the Royal Canadian Air Force was graduated in the first North Atlantic Pact class at Centralia, Ontario. Here, officers of the RCAF bears the flags of six nations in the North Atlantic Treaty Organ- ization represented in the class of 84 pilots. Flags are, left to right: Belgian, French, Italian, Dutch, Norwegian and Canadian. "TABLEektm TALKS Cottage cheese was probably call- ed by that name because it is so easily prepared—m fact has been prepared, for centuries, in almost any small rural dwelling tt'1iere there is a surplus of milk. Not only is the process- of manufacture very simple, it has the advantage of re- quiring no curing. The fresher it is, the better. Long before we had re- frigerators or cold storage, country folks conserved their oversupply of milk in this flaky, delicate cheese, which needs none of the skill or special conditionsnecessary for some of the "big name" types. a :A cottage cheese with a larger lump and a fresher, less acid flavor, has replaced in ,many parts of the country, especially on the West Coast, the more familiar type, with smaller, softer lump and more pro- nounced flavor. * * ,, It is made by the short -set method—that is, the skint milk, af- ter the addition of the lactic acid culture, is incubated only four to five hours, or less than half the time required by the older process. It is this shorter set that develops less acid, The milk is helped into be- coming cheese so quickly through a little rennet which, not incorpor- ated in the other procedure, has great coagulating ability. Not only is cottage cheese timely through its traditional association with spring menus, but also because it is an excellent economical source of high-quality protein—of the sante kind of protein provided by the meat that is now so expensive. Five table- spoons of this cheese furnish pro- tein equal to that in one loin pork chop. Add ... ,-t,rotein 1I- L II, : I, R It ,( its Int Juvenile Jet Genius — At the age of 13 most boys pipe dream about building rockets and other high-speed conveyances, but Ronald Wheeler, 13 -year-old high school student has done some thing practical on the subject, He recently proposed the addition of a third combustion chamber to the ordinary dual chamber jet unit which would greatly increase the speed of jet planes. Jet -xperts were amazed by Ronald's "remarkable thinking" on the 't-ject, and they invited him to G.E.'s jet center where someday his proposal may be put to use, value and thrifty cost its low -calory content, and who could ask for !tore? A third -cup gives only about ninety calories, less than eight ounces of orange juice or an unbut- tered English muffin. , 4 4 Now, with the preliminaries over, here are a few cottage cheese recipes with a "foreign" accent, all well worth your trying. Russian Paskha 3/4 pound dry cottage cheese 1/2 cup sour cream / cup butter 1 cup chopped nut pleats 3/4 cup candied orange peel / cup seedless raisins Method: (1) Sieve the cheese if lumpy. (2) Blend all ingredients together. (3) Line a turk's head or other mold with muslin, Fill and put a weight on top. Let set over night. Unntold and serve with fresh fruit and plain or whipped cream. Yield: eight servings, Hungarian Cheese (As appetizer on lettuce or as salad in a ring of tomato jelly) 1.cup cottage cheese 1 cup butter 1 tablespoon caraway seeds 1 tablespoon capers, minced 1 tablespoon chives, minced. 1 tablespoon dry mustard 1 anchovy, chopped 1 tablespoon paprika Method: (1) Put the cheese through a ricer or fine sieve. (2) Cream the butter with the crushed caraway seeds, capers, chives, mustard and anchovy aid gradually add the cottage cheese. (3) Forel into a Mound; sprin- kle with paprika and garnish with greens, Yield: fonr servings. * * k French Cheese and Potato Pie 2 cups cottage cheese / cup sour cream 21/2 cups freshly cooked potatoes, riced / teaspoon :alt Pastry made from two cups flour or one package pastry mix A little milk 1 tablespoon butter. Method: (1) \\'hip cheese until it is smooth aid run through a tine sieve, (2) Mix with sour cream and add potatoes while they•are still tvarnt. Add salt, (3) Cover bottom and sides of ten -inch pan with pastry, rolling the edge to form a border. (4) Fill with the cheese and po- tato mixture; brush top with milk and dot with small pieces of butter, Bake 1t1 a 1t1C(lit1111 oven (350 to 375 degrees F.) about forty-five minutes or until brown. Yield: six servings. *. * Now, to get away from the sub- ject of cheese, here are a few assort- ed recipes I feel sure that you and your folks•w•ill find to your liking. * * * Brunswick Stew Stew together a large frying chicken which has been crit into pieces and one-half pound of diced salt pork, When chicken can be slipped from bones, remove bones and re- turn chicken to kettle with salt pork, two cups diced potatoes, one cup sliced onions, two cups fresh lima beans, two teaspoons salt, one-half teaspoon pepper, one-eighth tea- spoon red pepper and a half clove of garlic, Cook until beans and potatoes arc tender. Theft add two cups fresh or canned tomatoes and cook until well blended, Lastly, add three cups fresh corn and cook 10 minutes or until corn is done, • Keep enough water in kettle to Fashion Note cook without sticking, but the stew should be thick. :M 1 1 Chocolate Polka Dot Pie 1 envelope unflavored gelatin 1/4 cup cold water 2/3 cup cane or 'vet sugar 1 tablespoon Edwardsburg corn- starch 4 eggs, separated 2 cups milk, scalded 1 package semi -sweet chocolate morsels 1 teaspoon vanilla flavoring 1/4 teaspoon salt 1 J0 -inch pastry crust Method: Soften gelatin in cold water, Com- bine one-third cup of sugar and cornstarch. Beat egg yolks slightly; slowly add scalded milk, Stir in sugar mixture, Cook in a double boiler, stirring constantly, until mixture coats spoon. 'fa one cup custard aidd three- fourths package semi -sweet choco- late morsels, Stir until chocolate is !melted; set aside, To remaining custard add softened gelatin. Stir until gelatin is 'dissolved; add va- nilla. Chill until the consistency of unbeaten egg white. 13cat egg whites until stiff; grad- ually beat in salt and remaining one-third cup sugar. Fold into custard gelatin mixture. Stir the chocolate ntivture, and turn into the pie shell. Turn gelatin mixture over choc- olate layer and chill until firm, Scat- ter remaining morsels of chocolate upside-down over pie to resemble polka dots. * * Chocolate Dumplings 1 cup water 1 tablespoon cocoa 1/8 tablespoon salt 1 tablespoon butter 1 cup sugar 2 tablespoons flour 1/4 tablespoon vanilla Method: Heat water to boiling. Mix other ingredients and add to boiling water. Cook until thick. Set off the flame until ready for the dumplings to go hi. Dumplings / cup flour 2 tablespoons beet or cane sugar 7/4 teaspoon vanilla / teaspoon baking powder 1/4 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon butter 1 egg 2 tablespoons milk • Put flour, baking powder, salt and sugar in a bowl and work but- ter into it. Add beaten egg, vanilla and milk. Have the syrup boiling, and drop in the dumplings. Cover 'and cook 20 minutes. Don't stir. Serve while still hot with cream. Sqitable Colors, Naturalness, Simplicity, Are Keynotes of Good Grooming' Naturalness and simplicity are the keynotes of good grooming. ,Make-up !mist never be artificial. It should define and not distort Your features. 11 is natural for lips to be red, cheeks rosy, and com- plexion smooth, As a rule one should use make -op sparingly. It must always he blend. - ed delicately so as to leave no lines of denmarcation. It nntst never be obvious as slake -up. First, here are some helpful sug- gestions on shopping for your cos- metics. Most cosmetics companies put out color charts and employ trained sales girls to help you, Powder—For naturalness, select powder the exact shade or just a tiny, shade lighter or darker than your own skin. It must blend and harmonize so as not to show np as powder. You can determine your true. pigment on your inner wrist or inner arm approaching your elbow. If you are stn tanned or a brun- ette, you'll want powder with lots of ocher, If yon arc a redhead with freckles, or excessively florid, shop for a bisque or beige with no pink in it. This will conceal the freckles and give you a lighter appearance. Many brunettes have white or ivory, as well as swarthy olive com- plexions, while blondes may be very dark or sun tanned, as well as fair. If you cannot Lind your shade of powder, you can mix sev- eral colors. Powder Base—Do you use a powder base? If your Bose persists in being shiny and your skin is not smooth, a powder base is help- ful. Powder bases come in liquid, paste, and solid form and should also match the color of your powder. Astringents and Lotions — You can try different types of astrin- gents and lotions, wlticlt cleanse and act as fresheners, to see which type you like best, '!'here are especially prepared skin fresheners and cleansers of saturated cotton squares w i t h which you can renew your !take-up several times a day, if necessary. Cold Cream and Lotions -1f you use a powder base, you will need a deeper cleansing aid that just soap and water, There are many deep pore washes, complexion brushes, or cleansing creates, but a cleansing creast will not take the place of a night creast which has richer oils. Lipstick and Rouge—Of course, you'll want lipstick and rouge, even if you use ever so little. Buy them together to snatch aid blend with. your own skin and with your nail polish. They are oitainable in li- quid, paste, stick, or dry -cake foram. As in the solar spectrum, red shades which have blue, purple, vio- let, mauve and orchid tones blend with each other and also with rasp- berry, plum, pink and rose, all of which are more suitable for pink - and fair complexions. Reds which have orange, flame, yellows, tans, and browns blend with each other and harmonize with redheads, sun-tanned, swarthy olive, and brunette skins. Eye Make-up—While buying lip- sticks, you might as well treat your eyes to a little delicate dainty make-up also. Select a tan or brown eye shadow to blend with your own skin color, or a contrasting shade of green to go with the orange -type rouge. Violet, blue, aid gray shades con- trast with pink and deep red shades. If your skin is a neutral or a fair shade, always play up to the color of your pupils—lo intensify them— by using mascaras and shadow of the saute ora blending shade. :An eyebrow pencil, light brown, brown, or black, can be used spar- ingly. A little eyebrow inrush is :woes'ary, :A camel's-hair ponder brush is good for dusting off excess potvdcr. Scrren ntakc-up has introduced srrl• brushes and many use (hese ativo. Learn Morse Code The `Code -voice' Way A\"ltcn Columbia's undergraduate school for nen recently decided to give a course in Morse code it called on Fred' S. Keller, Professor of Psychology, for assistance be- cause during \\'orld \Vas 1 f Keller had developed a new teaching tech- nique known as the "code -voice method." This is now widely, used by the armed forces in training radio men and others who !lust know the. Morse code. In carrying out the code -voice method the student, after hearing a signal, is given three seconds to write down the equivalent charac- ter. The instructor then announces the letter or number that has been signaled. if the student has cor- rectly identified the signal, he does nothing; if he has failed to answer or made a mistake he writes the correct signal underneath the space he should have filled in correctly. The signals are sent until a run of one hundred has been completed, with all thirty-six characters repre- sented at least twice in each run. :At first the students make many errors, but after eight hours of instruction 95 per cent of the sig- nals are correctly identified at the rate of five five -letter groups a minute. In developing the code -voice me- thod Professor Keller applied what psychologists call the "reinforce- ment theory." This was developed after thousands of rigidly controlled experiments were conducted in the past twenty years with white rats, pigeons, chimpanzees and human beings to find out how the higher species respond to stimuli in the presence or absence of a reward, or "reinforcement." Shoulders, Etc.—The men of the heavy cruiser Los Angeles prov- ed they know art when they see it by christening movie actress Andrea King "The Shoulders!' Their findings concurred with those of Yucca Salamunich who ,recently proclaimed Andrea the possessor of the most beautiful shoulders in Hollywood. It's Hitched To The Stars — Like a weird machine from another planet is the meteor camera built to catch "shooting stars". , The 5000 -pound camera is expected to photograph 40 times more meteors than sky cameras now in use. Here, Graham Wallace operates the controls that aim the huge lens, Rich Goldfield Bear's A Curse Will the "curse" which has ap• parcntly doomed all-fforts so far field in the British Commonwealth to locate the richest single gold - dog the footsteps of the fourteen - men party tvhicll has just set out for the fabulous Lasseter 'gold reef in a trackless, almost n'aterless arca of Australia's Northern '1'rrritory? These gold -seekers of 1951 carry with them 111111.s laboriously made by a lrug-dead, skilful gold pros- p:clot. I., harry 1.:tsseter. 'Store dead than alive, he emerged from the desert to Alice Springs in 1897, to tell the amazing story of gold• bearing outcrops of enormous rich- ness. ]tis maps contained full technical data ---and h %vent hack with then) determined to overcome the physical hardships and (Ian - gess whicil had prevented him from exploiting his great discovery in inediately. But Lasseter never returned a second time, A relief expedition found his body, t'rackcd by dysen- tery and sandy blight, in the de- sert tvhet'e he hat (lied after en• countering hostile Aborigines and being deserted by his camels, The maps and technical data were found intact. Lived on 'Tadpoles Since then the so-called "curse" . has prevented other explorers from finding his dream gold, .Many lives have been lost, Thousands of pounds have been lavished on expeditions, Sonic prospectors tried to find it by 'plane, 'flu' 'plane crashed. A ground party with a huge desert Torry got near the reef as des- cribed in his diaries, Then the lorry broke down. Men crossed moun- tains and chasms, were attacked by nomad r\borigires and weakened by desert sicknuc —but failed to find the gold, Australian Government officials themselves have taken f art in the hunt. Bard -headed mining experts who laugh at superstition have had a go, They all knew that in his last message to his wife Lasseter wrote: "Darling, do not grieve for Inc. I have (lone in:: best and peg• gcd the reef , .." New Queen's Principal - Ap- pointment of William Archibald Mackintosh, C,M;G., M.A., Ph.D., LLD„ F.R.S.C., as principal and vice-chancellor of Queen's Uni- versity, effec'ive September 1, has been announced by J. M. Macdonnell, chairman of the University Board of Trustees. Dr. Mackintosh has been widely recognized as an' out- standing economist, educator and administrator, Other uni- versities have sought him as their head, but his heart is with ueen's. He was honored by the King with the C.M.G. for his services to the allied cause in World War II. He is a Ph.D, of larvard, 'an LL,D, of Manitoba Jniversity, a Fellow of &he Royal iociety of Canada, He is vice- trincipal of Queen's, Doan of he Faculty of Arts, and director if the School of Commerce and Administration, OW • BEEN lluIMB Gordon Smith Easy On The Salt, Chum—Army veteran Alfred Furniss, a victim of rheumatoid arthritis, sprinkles salt on his food with an eye dropper.as part of the carefully measured metabolic unit investiga• tion being carried out in various hospitals across the country. Nursing Sister Helen McLean is shown with him at Sunnybrook Veterans' Hospital. Patients ha ie every bite of food measured down to the last milligram so that research doctors of The Canadian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society can find out exactly what happens to the food in the body and what influence drugs like cortisone and ACTH have on the disease. The Canadian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society is campaigning for funds this month to continue this and other research programs and to add to the number of clinics and mobile units across the country designed to bring more and better treatment to the thousands of victims of the disease. Two of the reef -seekers were !iv- ing on boiled tadpoles when a R,A.A.F. 'plane found then) in the desert, 1t is believed that a native tribe who came upon Lasseter transferred ill luck which had dog- ged them for years to hits and his expedition, and that this curse in- evitably descends on all who try to follow in his footsteps, But the fourteen: men now on their way to Lasseter's reef believe they will find "conclusive evidence once and for all time" that it exists. They remember the discovery near Victoria many years ago of "The Welcome Stranger," one of the largest masses of gold ever discov- ered (it contained 2284 oz, of flnc gold-, and they take heart. They know that all then who have sought gold in Australia are convinced that much more gold than the 72 tons (worth $30,000,000) which passed through the strongroom of the Bank of Victoria, at Walhalla, in the "roaring fifties" of last century still awaits discovery there. How To Attract Mosquito Bites 11 you Want to be delectable in one sort of way, wear dark, dull, sweat -soaked clothes, This attire is guaranteed to pique the appe- tite of the most blase mosquito, Prof. Anthony \V, A. Brown, Uni- versity of Western Ontario etomo- logist, told the American Mosquito Control Association meeting last week i11 Chicago. Brown had spent last summer touring Canada, which has a com- plete set of mosquitos, accompanied by an assistant and two dummies - 12 -gallon electrically heated water tanks on stiltlikc legs. Setting up their dummies in likely spots and dressing them in various costumes, the experimenters would count the number of mosquitos that alighted and futilely . ttempted to feast. (Afore discriminating insects got easy meals from the two scientists who excluded l'epllalts for fear of spoiling the experiments,) A 111 o n g Brown's conclusions were: Moist clothing is torn' times as attractive to mosquitos as dry gar- ments, And sweat has twice the appeal of (,lain water. 'White or green cloth does not draw mosquitos so strongly as dark- er hues. Such shiny textiles as rayon satin or nylon are significantly less ap• petiziug, And luminescent dyes, which glow in sunlight, discourage many mosquitos. BY • r HARNEAROLDTT REPAIR PNCEFlogs ROTTED BELOW GROUND WITH LENGTHS OF ONE -INCH GALVAN- IZED PIPS AND PIPET APS, AS SI40WN, CUT' 114E i PIPES LONG gfibOdil TO EXTEND 3 PES INTO GROUND TII1FARM FONT \Vhenever dairy or cattlemen get together the subject Of artificial in- semination—its advantages or other- wise—rectus almost bound to crop up. Dr, John B. Merrick, a noted United Stales veterinarian recently pointed out one of the main advan- tages—namely, the control of ven- ereal and other disease that can be spread from herd to herd by an in- fected bull, • • It is possible, of course, for such dread diseases as brucellosis and trichomoniasis to be spread by arti- ficial insemination as well as by natural service, But field experience has shown a decrease in reproduct- ive diseases when artificial insemin- ation is used. C The reason is that artificial breed- ing personnel pay close attention to sanitation. This strict attention to disease control in artificial insemination studs starts with the purchase of the bull. Managers of the bull studs check breeding records, make sure the bull is free from disease before he is added to the stud. And the bulls have little chance to pick up diseases from a sterile artificial vagina. As a double check, bulls can be given periodic laboratory examina- tions for brucellosis, vibriosis and trichomoniasis, * 9(t \t Methods of iuseminatiou now taught by the colleges and bull stud personnel stress the importance of cleanliness and sanitation. Insemin- ators are shown the great need of using sterile inseminating equip- ment, scrubbing boots and carrying their own disinfected water. 111 the early rays of artificial iii• semination, the seinen was deposit- ed in the horns of the uterus, This method licld risks of infection, 13111 now inseminators use what is called the deep cervical method. Usually, there is some uncus present in the cervical canal. This traps any micro- organisms, allowing the sperm to move along the canal and fertilize the egg. Y: C' • The very small chance foi spread of disease through artificial insemin- ation is a sharp contrast to the op- portunities for spread of disease through natural service. * • Natural services gives the bull a chance to pick up a disease from a cow and pass it along to each cow he serves. 'Trichomoniasis, one of the most serious venereal diseases of cattle, is .spread mostly through service by a ball. JITTER Disease can be spread from cow to cow within a herd, even though the bull does not breed any cow outside the herd. The danger of spreading disease through natural service by a bull is far greater when a "community" bull is used,' * * A bull that travels from farm to farm has a chance t, pick up in- fections and diseases from each • farm, And he can carry those germs along to other farms. t' s: • In I-Iolland, for instance, use of community bulls is a commune prac- • tice, But there is also a high rate of venereal diseases of cattle. * a 11 is hard to understand twlty com- munity or travelling bulls are used when superior bulls are available to dairymen through artificial breed- ing centres. Certainly, one of the twain advantages of artificial insem- ination is the control of diseases of the reproductive tract. +• * [Os a fact that 8 to 10 per cent of all cows in the average herd have some sterility at one time or an- other. Some of this sterility can be attributed to the bull. Therefore, means of controlling these venereal diseases of cattle are of real econ• optic interest to farmers. . # • To switch from cattle to pigs, here is a suggestion for swine sani- tation, which might be of. great interest to the farmer who feeds large number's of hogs on an en- closed, paved floor feeding shed. Periodically, the floor is thoroughly cleaned and disinfected. \Vhcn the floor is dried, and before the pigs are allowed in the pen, a corner of the pen floor is wet down with water, This wet corner is invariably used by the hogs for toilet purposes, leaving the remaining ;pace dry and clean where they can rest comfort- ably. This method also saves labor in cleaning out the manure, As in the case of domestic cats using a sand box if given an opportunity to do so, hogs are easily trained to clean habits. DINING OUT A man and two children entered a restaurant and ordered three plates and three glasses of water. Then they took out sandwiches and began to cat. "Here," roared the manager, "What are you doing?" "And who are you?" asked the diner. "I'm the manager," "Good," said the stat, "1 was just going to send for yott. Why isn't the orchestra playing?" Growing coniferous evergreens from seed is one of the most re- warding ways to use the garden space that is set aside as a nursery, Some of the Monte -grown seedlings will be large enough to trove into permanent quarters within four years. Since evergreen seedlings are too delicate to be entrusted to the full strength of the sun (luring their first year, a partly shaded corner of the vegetable garden snakes an ideal nursery area for them, if there is no natural pro- tection available, alternating strips of light and shadows can be fur- nished with a lath shade, * * * Good garden soil is suitable for the seed sowing, but soil that is heavy and sticky needs sand and humus added to make all easily penetrable, non -crusting germina- tion medium, A solid of proper structure will also reduce the clan- ger of plants' roots being injured by frost action in the winter months. * * The seeds are covered lightly %vitt] soil, the depth varying ac• cording to their size, and the bed is covered with burlap to conserve moisture. They may, take a month or longer to germinate. When they are due to appear, the bed should be inspected frequently and the burlap promptly removed at the first sight of green. a * 4 During the first growing season, especially, it is important to sec that the plants never suffer from lack of moisture. The surface soil should be stirred as soon as it be- comes workable after each rain or watering. Over winter the bed should be carefully mulched with excelsior, hay or pine needles. 1 4 * Evergreens that develop more slowly and require additional years in the nursery, plot need not be spaced that far apart when trans- planted the first time, but should be set two feet apart when trans- planted again two years later, At all times they should have ample roost to insure symmetrical growth. No tree should be moved to its permanent quarters until it has as- sumed the forum typical of its kind and has proved satisfactory in every way. (' (: 4' 'While it is possible to move small evergreens successfully with bare roots, provided they are shift- ed immediately into a new hole, without undue exposure, 1 always prefer to dig even the smallest seedlings with unbroken balls of soil. I ant then certain that they will suffer•no setback. Letting the roots dry in the air is always a dangerous risk. In the new location the plants arc set at the sante level at which they were orignally grow- ing. • �: • \Vatcring is essential to the, suc- cess of transplanting. It will also be necessary during any summer dry spells to maintain continuous, even growth of the seedlings. Once the young specimens are in their permanent places, a mulch will reduce the need for watering. 4' 4 Seeds of all the coniferous ever- greens—arborvitae, hemlock, fir, pine, spruce, and the various ce- dars; as %vcll as the one 'deciduous conifer, the larch ori tamarack— are handled in the sante way. Gath- ered directly from the trees or from newly fallen cones when ripe, the seed is stored in a dry, cool place until planting time in spring. A point to remember is that th( horticultural varieties will not come true from seed, Only the species of conifers can be depended on to produce new trees which resemble their parents. k A' * Seeds of desired evergreens often can be collected from specimens . found in one's own neighborhood. Then there are dealers %vim make a specialty, of such seeds. F , t'ersons who lack the patience to start from scratch, but who still would like to assume a share of the work that is usually under- taken by commercial growers, will find seedling trees in various stages of development available from some nurseries. These also are grown for a year of two in nursery rows in the home garden before they are set out as specimen plants, LOOK,HON6Y- SOME GADGITSI ' 1 PRETEND 70 PICKA QUARREL "i NA OUSTS THINK' DICKED UP ON 711E WAY HOME -THIS WITH THE GUE515,.. FLY IMO A RAGE 1V5 THE Raustc.cov 15 A TRICK VASE! ,i LAND START 5MASt 6-•• , • 5 ' OW!. IT'LL PANIC '.' 'EM1I • The "Plain People" Au Amish mail emerging front the sidewalk telephone booth -- house telephones are fo:'bid11011 waved cheerfully to a young couple passing in a buggy. After marriage, the buy will grow a beard and bots* will ride in a gray, box -like wagon like those whirl) lined the street. Their preliminary courting is at Sunday night sings, where five hun- dred young people. may gather, using the beticltes set up for morn- ing service , . , Officially, they do not listen to the radio or go to the movies, but the word gets around somehow. They can, how- ever, visit the circus, if it has a menagerie; it is proper to look at the different animals God has )Wade. The Amish do things their own way. Their clocks usually run half - an -hour fast, so that they will never miss a bus or keep anybody waiting. Under daylight saving they must remember "fast time, slow time, and our time'. They invented prefab- rication. At a house -raising in a Maryland colony started in 1939, a reporter asked why they con- structed sides for the houses flat on the ground; ins:ca(1 of the usual way. "Oh," said the foreman, we'll have 400 to 50 here tomorrow, the sides go up easy," Outside the hotel in Lancaster, 1 stet an Ancient - Mariner with wandering gray locks and clothes of rusty black. Ile is the nearest approach to an Amish press agent, a correspondent for the local press and Amish newspapers in other States. We had dinner together. "Did you know that after every service, we have dinner for every- body—free?" he asked ... "Schnitz pies—hundreds and hundreds of them.,' I asked about household conveni- ences. "Some have gasoline stoves and washing -machines and water in the house," he said. "But no electric. Did you know that we use the Gregorian chant in our services— and the oldest Protestant hymn book, printed in Switzerland in 1564?" There are one hundred Old Order Amish churches in the United States, with about ten thousand members. In Lancaster County, there are eighteen hundred Old Or- der Amish, all farmers except a few carpenters, broom -makers, car - pct -weavers, and harness -makers. The Amish newspaper correspon- dent used to have a cheese business, and what is still more unusual, he has been around the world. I asked why. "\Vandcrlust," he said; adding after a moment: "And to follow the missionary journeys of the. Apostle Paul."—From "That Old-Titnc Re- ligion," by Archie Robertson. VALUE OF FATHERS She—"My father's a doctor. I can be sick for nothing." I-Ie—"Mine's a minister, i can be good for nothing." WINNIE WINS ONE—Winston Churchill leans forward to get the good word before the race from Jockey T. Gosling, who rode the British statesman's , horse, Colonist II, to victory in the Churchill Stakes at London. Colonist II finished two lengths ahead of Above Board, owned by King George, Star-Spangled Banner finished third, By Arthur Pointer PAGE 8, • WALLACE'S Dry Goods --Phone 73-- Boots & Shoes Housedresses in Print and Broadcloth. Silk Headsquares and Necksquares. Lingerie by Mercury and Kayser. Ankle Sox (wool or cotton). prices from 25c to 98c Girls' and Boys Jeans -- Boys' Scampers. Men's Overalls, Work Pants, Work Boots and Rubber Boots, all Reasonably Priced. WE AIM TO PLEASE. 1. 1. 1, II II I Pi I. 01;1 • •11.1.1,1. 1.1. .1 . 1 .11 I II 1 .1 11 THE STANDARD 1 PERSONAL INTEREST I, mi.. and Mrs. Albert Stead and. son, r) with Nir. Rolwrt Newcombe, and NIr. Leo, of Chithani, visited on Sunday beauty shoppe .\t i, Robert \Vallace and Alvin at the \Val:ace Turkey • Nlr, and Alex Nlairling, John, and NH-, J. S. Chellew attended the Iii,einatiunal Trade Fair in Toronto on \\'etlitesilly of last weds. \\'eels.-enil visitors wish NI r. and NIrs, tiariAl Ph Lips \\ ere, Miss Shir• Nlaser David Clinton. NIrs. Gerald 1 !anis ..int 1<ristine. Nlitched, \Ir, and NIrs. Gor- d.'n Holland knil Harold, \\'.alton, Nli, and Mrs. jaeli Ilipi and Joyce, of Stratford, and Nir. Bolo Phillips, of' Brussels. NIr. and NIrs, Frank Tyreinan, Jack and Carol are on a mot' r trip to ltrand,:n awl Rivers. Nlanitoba. The) viIl rb,uagn11'd .11 rts"..()C\c‘t.•.Liel k(')Ike, c I London, -4~11*..444~#####41~.14144`41#~#411.1*~~#4,1,114,1~1~."04^41.4•1:. visited their allot, mrs. \\'. M ill recently, -Su rt -• FOOD STORES -- rw Kellogg's Rice Krispies 2 pkgs. 31c Maxwell House Coffee 1 lb. bag 99c Ellmarr Peanut Butter 16 oz. jar 35c Clark's Irish Stew 15 oz. tin 29c Golden Corn, Cream style 2 15 -oz. tins 19c Nabob Jelly Powders (7 flavpurs) ....3 pkgs. 25e Carnation Milk 2 large tins 31c Crunchie Sweet Mixed Pickles 16 oz. jar 32c Cascade Fancy Pink Salmon .... 7 31,1 oz. tin 27e Aylmer Peaches 20 oz. tin 29c Fresh Fruit - Fresh Vegetables. We Deliver. -- E. S. ROBINSON. -- Phone 156 1 V.P.P4ste#4••••4~~#4 •••••#.10~•###seIste.".#4,.Pi'd‘I.,•••1#•.0NM•1~,#,,e.,###.1... Morris Township Council NIcCutcheon, 'Currey Drain, 43.01, Geo, Wesenberg, Brussels Fair, 50.00 Council met in the Township Hall NIrs. F. Galbraith, Myth Fair, 40.0(1 on June 4th with all members present. : Stewart Procter, Bel ;rave Fair, 20,0) Afinutes of last meeting read and ad- E. S. Robinson, relief acet.,,M.CO; NIr:. opted on motion of Bailie Parrott and R. Craig, relief, 20,00; S. B. Elliott Sam Alcock. relief acct.. 18.84; ,Gordon Nicholson Moved by Chas. Coultcs and Sam spraying, 71.20; Geo, Hetherington Alcock that tender of G. Radford to I 149.50; Nelson I ligg'ns, unemploymen. clean and repair Kelly Drain accord- I staillPs and Postage, 45.:0. likg• to engineer's specifications for Harvey C. Jchnston, Geo. C. Nlartin Reeve. sum of $34\30,00 be accepted. Carried. Clerk, Nfoved by Alcock and Peacock that Brussels Agricultural Society be given a grant of 1i:59., Blyth a grant of S40., and Be'grave a grant of $20. Carried. Peacock and Parrott tint Reeve Harvey Johnston he appointed as a reoresen Wive for M orris to at- tend the meeting in Listowel on Tues- day, June 26, in rega;.! to the Nliddle Maitland Valley Conservation Author. ity. Carr:ed. Ntoved by Coultcs and Alcock that the road bills as presented by the Road Supt. be paid. Carried., Ni (Wed b)' Ccultes and Parrott that the sprayer be made available to the June. Federation of Agriculture in the fall M r. and Nf rs. James Nfichie le rt for spraying cattle at 15 cents per head! week for the West where they and for spraying stables at $5.00 per spend a few weeks milt relatives. linur or a minimumcharge of $5.00 m r. and lis. John wr,ehst ead for any one job, Carried. for Winrjwg on Sunday. Moved by Peacock and Parrott that Mrs. Tom lirydges had the misfcr The meeting hdjourn to meet again B E1.G RA IT Nir. John G. Anderson went ,tc Westminster Military hospital o Sunday afterm'on where he will liar, treatment for arthriti3. Albert Coultcs is a patient in Winghain hospital following an acci- dent on the tam when lie got hi hand injured in machinery. Miss Joan Brydges entertained ntErher of friends at a shower for Niiss Nlurlel Cook, a bride-to-be of la' Wi I le 't tune to fall at her home on Friday am; on July 211d at 1 p.m. Carried. suffered bruises and tont ligaments • The following accounts were paid: but escaped any broken bones. W. VanCamp, fox bounty. 1.50; John Kelly jr., fax bounty, 2.0); John. Rhin Mrs. J. S. Scott is spending a time fox bounty, 3.00; Frank Alcock, fox with her son, Peter M. Scott and fam- bounty, 1.50; Harvey Cifok, fox hotm. ily at Barrie, ty, 7,50; Wm. Floc,d, fox bounty, 2,01; Belgrave United Clitirdi Mission G. Martin, hydro for hall, 6.07; Blyth Band and C G,I.T. members were Standard. Kelly drain, 1.58; Belgrave guests of the Brick church Junior Co -Op., derris -powder, 402.CO; Fred members on Saturday. QUAKER 'Maur ni FREE INTRODUCTORY OFFER WO%L, ED All Wool EhiKed to JACKSON'S is Graded Seaforth and nil .settlement mcde for them. do GET AN (Individuzilly Patterned) 1' MANENT AND HAIR CUT. to keep your hairdo neat • day in aid day out at '4$ live , i LE ALT Y SHOPPE phone Ryth, 52. 4M31. !1-071-S-IiE A S AL 0 N Look Attractive • with a • NEW. PERMANENT Machine, Nlachineless, - and Cold WaveQ, Tihampoos, Finger Waves, • and Rinses. Hair Cuts. PLEASE PliONE, BLYTH 53. RAY MeN A LI 1 1 hi. Jackson Mr. and Airs. Nfac NicNoillsey, of Toronto, are visiting this \veek with N1r, R. F. SIM), SEAFO RTH, Phanas: Days ce •-w; Nights 3-J WITH THE COMING OF HOT DAYS AND WARM EVENINGS EVERYONE WILL BE TAKING TO THE OUTDOORS. We have Just Received a Nice Selection of Featherweight AluminumLounge & Porch Chairs IN YOUR FAVORITE COLORS. COME IN AND SEE THEM TO -DAY. Lloyd. E. Tasker 1 URNITURE - COACH AMBULANCE - FUNERAL SERVICE Phone 7 Blyth . . . . smsr.remmmwm,gromsoomwers4•,••••~* SUNDAY SPECIAL -TURKEY DINNER, $1.25 Full Course.Meals at All Hours, Excellent Service -- Satisfaction Guaranteed. UN GILL BLYTH - ONTARIO. WetIneklay„June 13, 105! . . .."0041.10n.....,!••••1..eneraMsa.rumemmo . .... . .. . , PM •441~#~#~44~~04.4~~4~#441.1N41•04PMe#I.PIWIIIY.PINV 1 "POPS" ARE "TOPS" - JUNE 17 • FATHER'S DAY We make the following suggestions as Gifts for "The Man of the House" Pipes ... .1.00 to $5.00 Billfo!ds , 85c to $5.00 Cigarettes (Flat 50's) $1,00 Playing. Cards 00c to $2.60 Yardley Shave Bowl . $1.25 Metric Razors $27.50 to $36,00 Pax Watches. $3.50 Shaving; Sots 65c to $2.00 Shaving. Brushes 50c to $2,00 Ughters $1.50 to $6.8 Tobacco Pcuch 402 to $1.50 ••• R D. PHILP, Phm. B. DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLP A PER -PHONE 20, 1 'tow.t.ormre.re•sm.ennt#essest.tem•sess,momm.es.m.e.s.ost000m.est#rnev, *1111.1111111111111•11.111.1.11 . 1 • I FRANK GONG, PROPRIETOR. 1 ....L.! 1 1.1 .1.1. ly g I L. 11.11.1.....1•mg go 111.11,.. LINC, 1 .1., mi..111.. m111J/1.., 1 • 11.1.101.11.1 dog• . I ‘0414.004`41N14,114444,4`4NONI4,4,4Nt#1,14,P#4`*000.1.1INVP...44`4,4*###W4 0#4,4`41444W.P.O####.44*1 den's Bakery FOR THE BEST IN Bread, Buns, and Pastry l'ItY OUR --- CRACKED WHEAT BREAD I u • • u il I I II, • d 1111..11 11.114 11 1 ....1,1,1 1 1 1. .4.. N.11., I .1 The HOME BAKERY II. T. Vodden, Proprietor Blyth, Ontario .1,1 Speiran's Hard • i WI. .,1. 4 .1., 1 1 1, 1 .1 1 1,1 4 1.11 .1111.1.1. go,,J .1. 1 • .1 1 1 •. 1. I 1 g 1,. 11 1 1 1,1 gig I Ji I 111 11 ;ft are PHONE 24. • BLYTH. EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE. Gaylen Hose 14c ft., coupled (50' lengths) $7.75 Wagons and Tricycles. Window Screens, Screens & Combination Doors Electric Fans. Carpet Sweepers. SPECIALS: HAND SAWS $1.93 HAMMERS $1.09 SCISSORS. • 75c IRONING CORDS 49c HOUSE BROOMS $1.00 ,,,,,4•••••INP#4,0.44.4,4~.P4.0Vt•MS.:#0,4•444.0~•~4,04.4.4'#4,4~. Miss Isabel McDonald is -recovering EAST WA1VANOSII front an attack of measles at the home Kenneth McGowan has t he : of her sister, NIrs. Gordon Caldwell. .\l Kathleen Hosford, B.A., of ' Grand Valley spent the \reek -end with her mother, Mrs. A. llosford. Nliss Mildred Charter, nurse -in - training at Victoria Hospital, London is sPend:11g three %mks' vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Char- ter. Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred 'Fischer of Grey township spent Sunday with her parents, '.fr. and NIrs. A. Ward. Nlaster measles. • No - NM NMI - NO NM INN RIM NMI NIX INN INN MI NM NIB INN Mil INN MN NW INN III 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 BRING THIS COUPON TO OUR STORE QUAKER MACARONI INTRODUCTORY OFFER Buy one Package Quaker Macaroni at Regular Price and get one Package FREE Simply sign your name and address below and bring.this coupon to our store. We will then sell you one Package Quaker Quick -Cooking Macaroni at Regular Price and give you one Package absolutely Free. Customer's Name Address TO THE DEALER: When you and your customer have complied with the terms of this offer (as above) your Quaker salesman will pay you for the free package at your shelf price, plus q for handling. Coupon void unless custotner's name and address clearly filled in for reference. purposes. My shelf price of Quaker Macaroni Is • {4. 0 no gio lom no ow ma ins ' - sou In on Ns stsi Emi los meal eio Stewart's r e PHONE 9 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 BLYTH WE DELIVER. AUBU RN M r s. Ilernard Case of Petrolia, Mrs. Wiles and Misses Collinson. Mn.* and Mrs. William Medd scn, Bert, of Godes with NIr. NIrs. A. Rollinson. NfisFes Collinson and Mrs. Wiles with Mr, and Mrs. Frank Slorach, 1 Friends Wei'(, shocked to learn of the death of Gilbert Shaw, of Toron- to. He was the only son of Mrs, Shaw and the late Alex. Shaw, and Wa Fr a gr a 11 dsOn of the late Nlai•tin Dyer of „„",",mm",#~,",‘,„,.-„,m,m,"~"~",„m".„...", Auburn, The burial took place at • . *####NIIINPS#41~~~..444~~~ • 1}all's Cemetery on Saturday after- I - noon, A number of Auburn friends attended the 'burial, Mr. and \I I's Lloyd B. Raithby with Mr, and Mrs, J, Taylor. " Mr. and NIrs. J. C. Stoltz have re- turned frcni Am•ora, Mrs, (2, E. Asquith at Toronto. Miss Jetrid Anderson, Reg. N., or Port Colborne, with Mr, and Airs. W, '1'. Robison. Nfargaret Jackson with friends in Toronto.. NIr. and Mrs. Herbert Nfogridge with Mr, and Nirs, Gormley 'Chomp- scin, of Brampton. Mr. and Mrs, Clarence Walden of Mr. •and Mrs, -BoltOn, Scaforth visited at the home of Mr, ' 1 Percy Walden on Sunday. of Valton, Mr, J, J. Walden spent a few days • Donald. Haines of Blyth with Ids daughters, in London, last Week, He al 30 attended the wedding A WARM WELCOME Phone 31.26, ' .1LOIIDEillioR • • ,- . AWAITS YOU. of his grand -daughter, Miss Joyce I Slaughter. ..store.odr*,...~.•4‘.44.......8.044~4444.• • with and and .1. 0,110.11 101 1 .1.1... 11 Holland's old ..11...11 1, 1:14,1" 1,1 .1.11 .11 11.1 .11 • Food Market lull,. . 1. •I • 1, 11 111i.l. 111110cl 011,1 I 11 .1.11111: Maxwell House Coffee 1 lb. bag $1.03 Green Giant Niblets • 2 for 33c Post's Sugar Crisp 2 for 35c Talisman Strawberry Jam 43c Helmet Corned Beef 43c Old South Orange Juice 2 for 35c Old South Blended Juce 2 for 33c Old, South Grapefruit Juice 2' for 29c Vel 39c and 78c. • Super Suds .. 40c and 71c I.G.A. Royal Guest Coffee lb. 96c Dr. Salisbury's Ren -O -Sol Tablets, Prevents Spread of Coccidiosis in Chicken Flocks. 1 Telephone 39 -- We Deliver CHURCH OF GOD pAsTot, G, 1. BEACH, Blyth Meinorial Hall SUNDAY SERVICES: -ChEdren's Meeting at 2:30 p.m. Prizes given for Attendance. CLASSES FOR ALL, Service at 3:30 p.m. SPECIAL MUSIC SPRINGTIME IS DECORATING TIME As always we are in a 1 position to give you prompt service in both In- terior and Exterior De - orating. If you are plan-, rang spring decorating,* t will gladly give an estim: ate and show you samples.