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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1953-01-07, Page 1tl. VOLUME 59 - NO. 12. -Authorized as second-class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa Lions Club To Hear Disirict Governor Vic Dinnin N,'I'he Blyth Lions Club will welcome \r.clor Dank of Znric'i, District (;uyernor of D:strict .\-1, Lions 111- tcrnational, w:rich includes 42 clubs in this section of Ontari a; their regu- lar nlec'ing 1) be held in• the Mcluor- ial Hall on 'Thursday, night, .Dis;ri, t Governor Vic, who has for several years served as Supveris:ng Prinei;gal. of !-lay •Towns:,ip School Area, has recently been a;1) in ed Zone Man- ager for inwes•ors Syndicate of 'Can- ada. Limited, Ile is a cllar,er member of the Zurich Lions Club, 11e has held several offices in the %Ankh Club an) served as. Deputy D:sli•ict Gover- nor of Rcg'oi 2, 1951-52, A mem- ber of the Masonic Order, he is a Past Master of Huron L:dge No, 224 at Ilensall. Vic, Dinnin and his w'fo, Lylyan have tt son 13111,, seveli years old. Lion D:iulin is 'one of the 248 Dis- trict Governors who supervise the ae• tivities of the 9,783 Lions Clubs. Lions International was for- . really founded in.1917 in Dallas, Texas and (luring the past 35 years has. be- come the largest, most active, and fastest growing service club organiza- tion in the world. There are Lions Clubs in 39 count; acs of the world with a membership of nearly 4.18,000. During the fiscal year ,of 1951-52, 9C9 neivLions'Clia'ls were organized - a new! club every 10 bolo's. In- tecleeming this dignitary o f Lions international, Illyth Lions "Chi's are proud to be.a part of an organizi- ticn which is dedicated to community betterment in all is aspects; to n'1- •tional and economic, social and lied• lural progress ; and to the promoti•'11 of international - understanding and amity. .. • Special Speaker. For W. I. 'Ile 131sth Women's Instilu'e arc having as their: special speaker, Miss Gladys, Houck of , the \V. I. Roundup, London Free Presse Mrs, Oster will give a . denionslration, Special music will be-proyicled. Plan 10 811(91(1 this meeting, Thursday, 'ja'wary 8. PERSONAL INTEREST LAC, 11, C, and Mrs. Phillips of Ed- gar visited last week with the form-. er's parents, NH-. and Mrs. J, 1.1. Phil- lips, Mr, and, Mrs, Barry Ellington and family of 'I'eetcr•ville spent New Year's Day with the latter's parents, ,\1r. and Airs. A, C, Kennedy, A,.I endiii' the funeral of the Tate \Irs, George •I:hnston held at Nia- gara Falls on Wednesday, Dec, 31st were, Mrs, W. Cockerline t, of Blyth, Mr, Harold McClinchey, ?Ir, and Mr;, Wilfred Pah iikc1', au! Mrs,. Leather - land, all c f Auburn. Mr. and Mrs, Earl Harrison and sons spent New Yeas with the fo m- er's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Robert Harrison of Borrie, Mrs, Jean Kechnie spent Nt w Years will her daughter, Mrs, Fred Chapple, ?Ir. Chapple and fainly of K'ppen, • Aliss ,\larjorie Doherty of the St, Thomas hospital ;tali spent `the New Year's It:diday with her parents, Mr, and \Irs, Garfield Doherty. • CONGRATULATIONS Con gra'ulations to Mr. and ?urs, ,lames 1', 1Larringtoneof 1(trhener on the birth of twin girl., two little sis- ters for Maria and Dana, Congra!u'aations to AI r, Johnsloal Crane ford who celebrates his birthday on Thursday, Jalma ry 80, Congi•alulalions to 'Miss Florence Lush who celebrated her birthday 011 Thursday, 1) c. 25th (Christmas Day), Conga'ulations to Bobby Carter of \Vee:field who celebrated his birthd ty on New Year's 1)8)', January 1st, Congratulations to Donald Young of Nile wiio will celebrate his birthday, on Sunday, January 1 1th, Congratulations to Mr. Chester 1-Iig• gins who celebrated his birthday on January 1st, (New Year's Day). Congratulatiins to ,Mrs. Frank Tyre - man who celebratedn her birthday on Sunday,. January ,6111, Congratldations to ?I r. 1)onahl Mc- - Kenzie, •.tc'ho celebeated his birthday v on ,\[onlay, January 7th. AMONG THE CHURCHES .Congratulations to Miss Gtenyce Batmen, who celebrated her birthday cm NIondaj', January 7111. C-nga1udaticns ' to Mr. i enne'h 11'anuu who celebrated his -birthday on Alou(lay; January 7th. . Congratulations to Robert Galbra,th who celebrates his birthday on. ,Fri - clay, January 110, Congratulations to ' Mr, . N. Lear 'ST. ANDREW'S ;'RESBYTERIAN • CHURCH 10:30 a in,: Sunday School, 1 1aim: : \VoryIi p Service. R. G. McMillan, Interim' Moderator, Godcrich, .•- .THE UNITED' CHURCH . OF CANADA Blyjh, Ontario, -Rei'. C, J,'Scott::13,A,,'13.1).,.'tlinistcr, who celebrates his -birthday on Sun - Sunday; January 11th, 19:3 day, January 13th, 10.15 a.m.:'.Sunday School, • 11:15: 'Morning Worship, • United Church Annual7:C0 - li,ni, : "\Vedding• Bells Reim • - . ion," Soloist, Mrs, (toss. Hamilton. Meeting, .Januar'y 14th 0 Ccme-and Let Us Worship," ;ANGLICAN CHURCH Blyth United Church will hold their Sunday, January 11, 1953 annual meting for the year 1952 in Blyth ; 10;30.8 in, : Matins, - the inisetnent of the Church on \Vcd- Auburi : 12 o'clock' 110011: Matins. nesday evening, January 14, 1953. The }3e4 rave•: 2:30 p.m,; E'euisong, meeting will be in charge of the min. All welcome, istcr, Rev, C. J. Scott. \V. E. 13RAM\\'ELL, Rector, Reports of the various. groups - and CHURCH OF GOD departments of the. Church will be McConnell Street, Blyth,presented and plans w11 be made for. Reye G, I. Beach, Minister. the work of the Church for the new 10 am,: Sunday School, year. 11 is expected that the, meeting ,ill c,cntninc ; a 6:30 • ),ut. when •su• 11 eat,: ?[orniug Worship, will c t 1 p 7:30 pial,;' Evening Service,_ wig be served as in past years, - 8:1)0 p.m., \Vednesdir Bible Study • Youth Fellowship Service; Friday Best Wishes From A ,at t? p.m. • Former Blyth Boy . and Prayer, TIIE BOOK ,NOOK (A, review of, new. books in the local library and. pi esenledas a•scrviee to the reading - public by this paper). LEAST:OF ALL SAINTS •By Grace . [rwiii This 13. an appealing; story of a young 111811 who •heeon1Cs a servant of people. rather than take a poli- tiC-n as .;;111 •executive, in 'tete family glass . company;• It teas trot only n sliock to b_isefamily. but to,hisr many friends: . This ,story, exceedingly' well: writ-. ten In graphic language, is Most in- 1,eresptig; ..• The' brilliant young man lost ` roe time. in securing' a1)0511ion that suil'cd his'necds, Fcr years he performed' :his du -tics faithfully al. '' . r -•;,..though;. he :;.did' not bell vc in the sttn tity.'of his s nik; 1 -Toa ever after fnlliitt in .love with a; `r' whom he Beard ritizittg lit• a.callege ball .he- Undergoes a men al and spiritual colt fli l, (`'14-1-2 Pott will want to follow -hila in his '., advetltttrin'(s,'`Ju fart you will want Writing to renew his su'bsc►•ili:i :n to The Standard, 1-[ug:1 C. Settlers, of Winnipeg,. Manitoba,. sends along the accompanying cheery • note of. greet- ing 10 old friends; - 275: Beaverbrook Street , BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JAN.j; 1953 >w . Subscription Rates $2.00 in Advance; $3.00 in the .. SPORT SHORTS \\'itttry weather has pel)ped up lagging sports en husiasnt in rand a- round 13lyth this tveek, and the Com- munity Centre Arena, where a good sheet of ice is now ava Iable, will probably be the ecn're 'of all activi y, at least whenever mild wcath:r d:es- n't intervene, . Local teams teams swung into acti: n ov•' er the week -end. On, Saturday night the Londcsboro I3,-A,'s' •j„urueyed to 'l'ecswater and absorbed a Toss to the tune of 9-3, -0-0- On A1:inlay ni;ht the Blyth \lill- gets had better Lick, also in.'I'cestt•at- er, when they held the Tee s'a'cr Midgets to a 2-2 draw. Bob Carter scored both g.'als f. r B:ytlr; It was practically the first time the Illyth team had been on ice, and CGach Ray ?fadill voiced his pleasure with their. showin t, 'There is a wealth of mater• sal available for this true, and Coach Madill expec's to have a real con- tender for group honors, . The line-up en Monday 11iglit, which is su',ject to revision," was as follows : Goal, Wilkinson ; Defence, Camp- bell and 'l'antan ; Centre, Carter ; \Vings, l'eekitt and ,Chalmers ; Subs : Charters; Tyrenlan, Cook, . Jackson, Craig; Sub goalie, Morrison. - While the the ?iidgets were at it in 'I'ecswater, the "Bush League" was ringing up the curtain- 111 the 131yh arena.. The first )lon(Iay night dou- 1,1e-headdr was played, 13lyth and Auburn played an abbreviated 0-0 tie. The Auburn team iced only six men iand dill very well • to hold the Blyth aggregation bff the score sheet. The second • game brought together last year's finalists, Walton and the • OBITUARY Mrs. Wm,. Thuell Installed MRS, JOSEPH MILLER As Ladies Auxiliary President Alaliy friends in the district heard ' with regret of the passing of M rs, Joseph Miller; of Blyth, 011 Saturday, January • 3rd. 11rs, ?filler passed away in the \\'inglianl hospital where she. Iwas taken o11 'Thursday, morning hitt? sh 112111 suffered a severe s:roke. . The tete Mrs. Miller was formerly Ante passed away very suddenly a: Ante Elizabeth 1)aer, daughter of the Public Gtneral 11ost,ital, Chatham, On - late John Dacr and Elizabeth Claus- tario, December 14th, 1952, Garth 1)ol- iti i She was :,,!torn in Hltllett town- sen I)ohbyn, elder son of Mrs. Cecil ship and•uutrricdlaier not(' bereft h s_ I)obbyn, and the late Mr, Hobby 11, •hat,d ot1 January -11th, 191 1. Follow- Irl 11is 3Cth yyear, Nit-. Dobbyu suffer- ing: the marriage 'the couple lived in Toronto for 11 years ant then moved ed a heart seizure, from which he fail- • I(t; the farm 011 )ad the Auburn !t . ed to rally, The late Air. Dobbyn was born 211 1'lkyja retired to -111),.11in April, 1950, Newbury, coming to Myth with his Ilcs'iles her sorrowing husband, she parents at the age of n'ne years, is :survived by - three sons, Ed,, of He received his education in Myth. \Vijulior; Lloyd of London; Gord,Il and London, after which he secured of •Aubun, and one daughter (Marie) a position in that city, remaining there• Mrs. Edward Strau;hai, of Lond'n. until five years ago, when li'e-went t.) and four• grandchildren. hour broth- Chatham as an accountant in the P1ib ers'and two 'sisters also survive : Sam tic General Hospital, which position Dacr, r\ubmn Road; Herman Darr, he held until a year ago, at that Clue 131 -til ; Robert Daer and William he resigned in order to accept a sim- Dacr, bolls of Godcrich ; (Margaret) alar position with the Chatham Coach Mrs. S. Thibidcau, of 1ngerscll; Lincs, and (Rose) Mrs, EdelVillin of Gode- ?Ir. I)obhyn was a member of tile rich: %stt•o brothers and one sister \'ictoria Ave, United Church, also a predeceased her. ' member of the Kinsmen Club, a fornl- The funeral was conducted by Mr, er secretary of the club, and at the Clayton 1)insda1e of Kitchener from t1111e' of his death was their treasurer the 'Tasker metnorial chapel at 2:30 1 -Ie was higl1l' esteemed by a host 1;111, on llcnday, January, 5;11, 111;er- of friends in church and social work trent was made in 13lyth Union cense- of the Kinsmen, tory. Floral tributes were many and most Pallbearers were s i x nephews : beautiful, Louis Dacr, Roy, Daer, John 1)aer, He. leaves his wife and two children, \Vatter !)air, George \Vallis, harry Ronald.; and Lois, his mother, and 1)aer, Flcwerbcarers were, Major brother:Ray, of London. \'onngblul, Clayton Ladd, Gordon ' Services were held on \Vcdnesday; McClinchey, and Harold McClinchey, Deceniber 17th, 1952 at 3,30 p. 111. con- ducted by Rev, Clifford G. Park, at the' John G. Stephen- Funeral I-Iome, MRS. CHARLES• RiEHL Kinsmen formed a guard of honor at the Funeral Home, 'cemetery, and Following a lengthy illness, Mrs, grave side OBITUARY GARTH DOLSEN DOBBYN 13th of 1-Iulleft. This was a ding -cling Charles Riehl died at -her home in Interment was made in the Maple battle With the result a one-sided vac- Blyth, on •Monday, January 5th, She Leaf Cemetery, Chatham. tory for the 131 h. The score was ,was in .tier 86th year, 13-2 in their favour. Formerly Lydia _Phare, Mrs. Riehl Every Mondaiy night is "Bush Lea- was. a daughter:-- of the late Mr,. and gtte" night at Blyth ,Arena, Mrs. George Thare, of Rostock, She 0-0,-- was, born in Ellice Township on Sep - Blyth ;\fidgets are entcrtaininaf teniber 21st, 1867:"-' 1)elnl:re at r the arena this \Vednes- 'Oiil March 27e11, 1893, at Austin, , clay evening.. . . : s :NI i ii.---ehe.:married ; Charles•-°•Riehle esenitlg,..lanit.uyl.,tb.at 8•octoek; ttiti:. der the leadership of Gt 1, ?ld: , , -0-0- Following the marriage vows the cc n- ., ,r ' {'°'tt4 Londesboro 13; A.'s entertain the plc lived at Austin for a tithe before Walsh and Mrs, Chas, Jolibstou:; The •.z Brussels tcan at Blyth arena Fr:day returning installation of officers wfll take place g to Canada, settling on a farm night, - .. near West Monkton, later living at at this meeting, The roll call to be The o...t,, -0-0•- Mcnkton, \Val:on and Bayfield before - answered by the ‘paynlcnt of dues, Alt tcmetrist, Pa One of the feature attractions cat - and are asked to please attend will be closed January .1?' iv, and all ladies of the congregation are cordially invited. - United 'Church W.M.S. The annual meeting ' r NV. c uctu ofS. 1 the \\ , M. b c of the- United Church will be held in the church school roost on Monday On Monday, January 541; the regu- lar meeting of the Ladies' Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion, Blyth Branch No. 420 was held and Corlrade Edythe Phillips very capably installed the fol- - lowing officers for the present year ; - _. )President: Cemradc Ruth ThuehI. Past President: Comrade' Luella Hall, 1st Vice President: Ccntrade Luella AlcGowai, - - 2nd Vice President: Ccntrade Ann Sundercock. Treasurer: Comrade Jean Coble. Secretary: Comrade Jean Fairser- v'ice. Standard Bearer: Comrade' Mary - 'Tait. Executive Connnittee: Comrades Mabel Smith, Gladys'.Thuell, May' Hadley, and Lois G:vicr, v A Word Of Thanks The Standard desires to express a wort) of appreciation to the Rev, C. J. Scott and the Rev, W. E. Bramwell for bringing a Cliristinas and New Year's Message to' it's\ readers. • . \\'e know that Allis annual con- tributi n is appreciated 'by the readers of The Standard, as it is by the Editor and Staff. HOME FROM HOSPITAL ?Irs. Kellaud Mc\'ittie returned home Wednesday of last week follow- ing an operation at Victoria Hospital, London, where she was confined al most three weeks, \\'e are glad bo report that she is showing continued, improvement toward good health, • - v Normal Students Teaching/ This Week Misses Loraine I-latniltol : [ir-• gucrite . 1-Iall, •students .iet tratft rd Normal School, ;;re' Aching reprec- tivclya at S.S, So. Y, I11orris, and, at. the Kiuburu St week,,,:Scv . r gluten a• arc Is oral other \.; , a o, getting : s •) r' ra>r_tiCail ~''experience=' •.tt rious.t rictrschools this 'week, v •c of G. Alan Williams', Op- trect, Wingham; nd 14 corning to Blyth 30 years ago. Mr. Richt predeceased her on August 27, 1951, ' The' late Mrs. Richt .is survived by four daughters, (Caroline) sIrs,•Albert I-Iaggitt, (Mary) Mrs, John Scil:ng, (Elizabeth) Mrs, Alfred Machan, all of Blyth; (Sofia) Mrs, John Glcush- er, of Godcrich; and five sons, George and Daniel, of Fort Erie ; Albert of Godcrich; \Vilfred of \'Vingham, and William, of 131yth. Also surviving are 37 grandchildren, 22- great-grandchil- dren and 2 great -great-grandchildren. Surviving also arc two • brothers, George, of Rostock, and Jack, of Cuf- tly; Sask., and two sisters, Mrs, Car- rie Knetchcl of \Vinds.or, and Mrs, Lavina Lutz, of Baden. ' The funeral will be held from the Tasker memorial chapel at 2:30 ti clock on 'Thursday, January 8th, with the Rev. C. J: Scott of Blyth United Church and, Rev. G. 1. Beach of the Church of God, officiating, Pallbearers will 'be, Earle Nob:e, Ed, I-Iaggitt, Gilbert Nethery, Norman Knapp, Herbert Dexter and George Sloan, - Interutent will be Made in Blyth Un- ion Cemetery, Sympathy is extended to this large family circle in the passing of a loved one. LIVE WIRE FARM FORUM ing up at the' Arena in the very near future is the show by the Stratford Skating Club on -January 16;11, -0-0- The Clinton Colts have always been favourites with more than a few fans throughout this district, bttt this year's edition of ,;he Colts liavc found the going a bit rough, Could be that the Colts need some new mat- erial in keeping with the playing standard that now scents necessary (Jr successiful competition in tlic Iutcrnediate (13) ranks, • -0-0- ` Rumour has it that the \V.O,A,A. Intermediate. entry from- Blyth has raided its wings and that some of the. 131),th - players .have been, or are con- templating, trying out with the Brus- sels intermediates, The folding of the intertnediate Italie leaves several play- ers stranded, A ruling in' the "1.3u%h League" bars 'players who competed last year in organized intcrniediate hockey. -Several of the Myth players we have 111 hind, played. for Londee- boro last year. They cannot play for Londcsboro either because that Leant is competing in Class (1)) hoc- key this winter which is for centres with under 500 population. The 131)111 Legion had contemplated the entry here. Lack of enough playing mat. trial is given as ,the reason for witli- dratval of ,the 'entry, - - 11th? Editor; Glad to ?creta my sub- Forest, Ont., Twins' Birth - !'aper, and to wish you and yours .the • Have Local Interest best of everything in 1953 for 'yourself The birl,!1 of twins, a boy and girl, and .the good old paper. • Wish all any hat. Victoria 'Hospital, London,, just as old friends' a real good hello for ane. the New Year was being Iieralded in kindest regards, held special Interest for Blyth resi- '' HUGI-1' C. SOMERS, - (1e111s, - - • Always glad to hear from former The little boy and girl were born 'to Blyth people, and on behalfof'many' Mr, and Mrs. Francis Spading, of scription to the good old !-Ionic 'Town "The Cost of Marketing" was the tcpic.for discussion at the Live \Vire Farm Forton held at the home of Mr. and Mrs, George Thomason on Janu- ary 5th, 2 groups -were formed with Mrs, Ted Flunking and Mrs, Lorne The Legion New Year's Eve dance flunking as leaders. There was not proved just as popular as ever this verfood arty tullicecssary costs existed year•. The N1 tutorial Hall basement of /the groups, Cards Were played. New Year• was welcomed in with the WEDDINGS - BRYANS - MacGREGOR BIR'T'HS Burns United Church, Hudlett town- . ship, tlecorated with 'standards of CLARE -In Palmerston hospital, on white 'mums and red carnations, pro• Friday, December 26th, 1952, to Mr, vidcd the setting for the marriage of and Mrs, Grover Clare, jr. (nee 1-Iclen Laurinc MacGregor and Stuart' - Joyce Andrews, Clinton), the gift 01 Francis Bryans. The bride is the a daughter -Susan Patricia, daughter of • sIrs, Frank MacGregor, ' 1 " Londcsboro, and the late Frank Mae- LEGGETT -In St. Joseph's hospital, Gregor, The groom is the son of Mr. London, on Saturday, January 3rd, and Mrs. Edward Bryans, Blyth, 1953, to Mr, and Mrs. Richard Leg- The marriage was solemnized by gett of Dorchester, the gift of a son the Rev. \V, Gaudier. Mrs. Joint -a brother for Gordon and Sydney, 13ryans, Blyth, accompanied 'the sol• = ist, Mrs. James IIc\iveu, ' of St. Catharines. Gordon MacGregor gave his sister in. marriage, She wore a floor -length gown of white silk velvet with a cir- cular skirt. The fitted bodice. featur- ed inverted heard. neckline with stand'• up collar and tapering sleeves.,-,7J,.,C, -.,• fingertip veil of nylon net was held by,` "' ;Unaided headdress of white velvet and she carried a white Bible with red carnations, , . Mrs, Gordon MacGregor, Londcs- boro, matron of !tgnor, and rule brides- maids, Miss Edythe 13cacom, Londcs- boro, and Miss Margaret Leach, To., route', chose- identical floor -length gowns'. of ruby red silk velvet with braided velvet headdresses and mit- tens, fashioned ou lines 'similar to that of 'the • bride, They carried"bou- quets of white carnations,.__ .Miss Lynda .Bryans• was flower girl; wearing a floor -length brown of moss green taffeta with circular skirt trim-. - need with corded piping. She carried., 'a arried - `a nosegay of White,.and red carnations. Harvey• Bryans, London; was- his brot'her's groomsman, and, the .ushers ttt clstt•i)utgn, was the opinion was jautRledl for the event, 8(14 the were John Bryans, Blyth, and James l A[cNivcn, St, 'Catharines, ].ouch was set wed to 35 members and tooting, of horns, and the t aditional The bride's mother received at her ` old friends here we .send greetings .Forrest, Ont,. :,IC proud father is a back -to Mi'. Somers trills'this issue.- brother of Mr. Grant Spatting of cllild►cn, The next meeting will be at back-slapping and hautd-shaking, home in,Londe boyo wearing a gown Ed. Myth, The attending nurse, \Liss the home of Mr, and ?[rs, Gco, Pod James Pierces orchestra' provided of navy crepe and lace with' gray tr-`. Lenora Higgins, is at (laughter' of lir, ell the music, cessories and a Corsage of 'carnations. The lucky draw for the suit of The groom's mother assisted, . wearing clothes, on which tickets . had been rosewood crept' and lace dress, with sold tea.s made, • and John T. Stew- gray accessories and - corsage 'of car - art, of 13101, held the lucky ticket, nations. A quiet wedding ceremony tookFor a trip to the Southern States place in Hertford, England, when fn the bride chose - a gray suit with lutttt-' grid Whyte, daughter of Mr, and Mrs, er's green hat,' and black alccessorics, Gottfried \Byte, Stevenage, _Eng- The cotti4c wil reside in Mitchell.- In - Ind, was united in ?larriagc to t1 r. - Donald C. Stephenson, London, Eng- AI'tehcll F. Hepburn, (other Prem- 10 -MILL, TAX' RISE FOR CLINTON.. • land, son 'of .Mr. and Mrs, Lco Steph- kr of Ontario, died suddenly at his Councillor Morgan J: Agnew+,.,.lire-. ,:. cnsou, Scaforth, Mr. `Stephctt,sott is St: Thcanas farm home on Monday, dieted a 10 -mill rate • increase:. for - the studying in London for his toaster' of Ile was 55 years old. town of the Clinton at the towti.ccitn arts degree: After a hlcncytnoon .. in •' Mr, Hcpbttrn's fiery tenure of of • cil meeting held our .'l[omlay' night, Switzerland, .Mr..:and . Mrs, Stephen. Tice in Canadian politics will long be The rate increase! wot Id be :largely` . son twill reside in .London until their remembered and his r coutparativ 1y due to the town's Rew $310,Q00 1tublic :. return to, •Canada. - early demise, is_generall regretted, • schcvl he said, ":.. .' `-' Back To Normal Again! \\'ell .now that we've knocked the staffing clear out 'of the Christmas and New Year's Turkey we can re- turn to normal operations again, It is indeed a very happy season, but .we would be a sorry lot were we to eat the year 'round as we do dur- ing ithe Christmas and New Year week. Even SO WC didn't hear of one per- son succumbing at the table, Appar- ently our 1-Iighways are still the No, 1 killers during vacation periods. . The working class have a good long unbroken stretch ahead of -thcut now. The next holiday is Easter. • Easter Sunday falls on April.5th this year. John Stewart Holds Lucky Ticket For Suit and Mrs. Chester. Higgins, also of Clinton RCAF .Group Cap• Bly'I,li, The girl was born at 12:01 tain' E. A. D. Hatton Dead a,nl, and the little brother was, born 19 minutes later. Group Capitaiu E. A. I), Hutton, CI), Friday's Free Press carried n ptc- 43year-old Commanding Officer of ture of Nurse Higgins lidding• the the Clinton RCAF Station, .died at ,the new-born babes, while Daddy Spa r - station hospital Monday night.. ling gazes fondly through the glass RCAF olTicials said he ditid 'of . a partition, - 'cerebral hemorrhage about'6 p.m. o,. read' this book the ,second time:_ A veteran of 18 years' service, in the RECOVERING FROM ILLNESS ;:'Tltirt ;i the first :stofy by :a prom- RCAF teIeconunttiecatioll 'fiehl,`.Grottp Little 1)oris' Mittcul, four • months ;titticGnu. writer, ht is set in Cue:alit 112111on 'asstlnitd cnnmtt tat at ohs daughter of: Norma and Bill Rin- ,tJt -t1 lcasy 1920's and yen can het, a Chalon,. August 18, 1111,. Uude1 • h1;1 1,01110 tvlto has been critically .ill In the crsoilahacgtainl:tnce with the many di►•cotioR; the Clintcu S;;;ItiOnetet•tered Vuigham Hospital for. tee: j)ast .three' -characters as the story unf:lds, - ' one of the greatest periosts of its ex- and a half weeks with spinal -menta• ansioii, . I gills, is Row• recovering, t --C, Jt S, p 4v. WED .1N ENGLAND Former Ontario Premier, Mitchell F. Hepburn, Dead Hand Froze Solid Inside His Glove . In 1922, Cyrus Lord Bryant set out with his wife and four children to drive his wagon and six horses nearly 1,000 miles from Washington into the heart of British Columbia. It was a tough Trip, lasting many months. Win- ter, with all its viciousness, hurl- ed itself upon then without warning. A biting, stinging bliz- zard raged on the little family before it reached Alexis Creek. Driving into the teeth of the blizzard, Cyrus's left hand froze almost solid inside bis leather glove. In the growing- darkness he swung the leading horses around a narrow bend high up on the edge of a deep ravine. The rear wheels of the wagon slip- ped on the icy road, and for one heart -stopping instant a rear wheel was suspended over space as the outfit stewed round. Forty Below Zero The horses struggled gamely' on. Inside the wagon, huddled Mrs. Bryant and the children, trying to keep warm with the aid of a coal -oil lantern, The temperature had dropped to for- ty below zero—seventy-two de- grees of frost, Their limbs were almost past the hurting stage and a sleepy >Aumb feeling was slowly dulling their senses before the driver pulled the horses to a stop near the cabins of Alexis Creek, Bryant's wife and children were rushed into a house for frost -bite treatment. The f r o s t- covered horses were given attention, and the lantern was left burning be- neath the wagon to keep their food from freezing. Life Savings Lost The fifty -below -zero dawn of the following day revealed trag- edy, The lantern had set fire to the wagon, and all that was res- cued of their possessions—inclu- ding their life savings—was a crowbar, an axe -head and a few horseshoes. The position was critical. A friendly rancher lent them food and what clothing could be spared, In. a month Cyrus had hacked enough logs out of the bush to build a two -roomed cabin for the family. Later they moved .on to Tatla Lake. For years—as is vividly des - d by Richmond P. Hobson, m ,rn frontiersman, in his book "Grs,s Beyond the Moun- !ice' }jRte • h: RCAF Looks Back—As 1952 drew to a close, the RCAF could look back on a year of achievement and expansion. New operational squadrons were formed, new training stations came into.beirig,'and new aircraft and equipment were brought into use. Personnel strength rose from 29,552 at the close of 1951 toan estimated 38,500 at the end of 1952, and for the ' first time Canadian fighter planes were based in Europe in peace -time. The following pictures give an indication of the activities and strength of the RCAF. (1) The RCAF continued its search and rescue and mercy flight programme, 'and many humanitarian flights were carried out by air force crews. Here an RCAF helicopter takes aboard a sick patient. (2) A recent addition to. the RCAF is the C-119 or "Flying Box -car," which is invaluable for carrying heavy freight and equipment. (3) The departure of 439 Squadron from Uplands airport for North Luffenham, England, .typifies the extent of the R.C.A.F.'s commitments overseas. Two fighter wings are already based in Europe, building toward a 12 -Squadron air division on the Continent. (4) The Minister of National Defence, Brooke Claxton, right, announced that Air Marshal W. A. Curtis, Chief of the Air Staff, centre, will retire at the end of January, 1953, and will be succeeded by Air. Vice -Marshal C. R. Slemon, left. (5) Symbolizing the importance of women in the modern RCAF, this picture shows an airwoman directing a. Sabre pilot to a safe landing. (6) The maintenance and expansion of an efficient air force calls for a vast construction programme, including new barracks, runways and hangars such as this massive concrete structure, (7) Another important aspect of Canada's contribution to NATO is the training of air crews from other member countries at RCAF stations, Forming a camaraderie which bodes well for the free world, two French and two Danish students examine navigation instruments during their training in Canada, tains" every member of the fam- ily worked from dawn till dark. Cyrus was able to hire out - his horses in return for cash, cows, sheep or vegetables. His wife sheared sheep, spun woollen gar- ments for the family and neigh- bours. The children worked with axe, saddle -horse and rifle; and altogether four years of unremit- ting toil, courage and privation passed before the courageous little family wereoutfitted again. • BLETALIIS )40LAA,, iAD ITS 'PLACE citing in The ' Christian Science Monitor Laura E. Blod- gett has an article about the use of molasses In - cookery ' which carried me back to my younger day so fascinatingly that, with permission, I'm reproducing it re. • r • In Grandmother's day molasses was used by the jugful. It was spread on slices of home-made bread for the children, it glazed the sweet potatoes and the ham, It sweetened the baked beans and theapple pie and, Oh, how the delightful' odors floated through the house! Hardly a day passed that' Grandmother did not use molas- ses in something that she was Preparing for healthy young ap- petites, I can see her yet sliding a gingerbread into the oven or ii overinj,otrer a pan of molasses tpa,'d6s while the Sunday pud- ding steamed away on top of the stove. Blustering winds and chilly days conjure up - memories of these good things and set us to searching for the old cook book that held so many of her favorite recipes. When the, book is found we turn the stained and yellowed pages and, in memory, we live again in Grandmother's wonder- ful kitchen, A worn and bat- tered section reveals a recipe for popcorn balls and another for molasses candy. We dream for a while of taffy pulls and Christ- mas trees hung with globular confections and wonder if ever there were more delectable good- ies than these. * U • MOLASSES TAFFY 2 cups molasses 1 cup sugar ' 2 tablespoons butter 1 tablespoon vinegar Flavor if desired Boil ingredients to 260° F. or until., a Little of the mixture be- comes bright when dropped Into ' cold water. Pour into buttered pans to cool. Butter hands and pull until candy becomes light\in color and hard. • • * POPCORN BALLS 3 quarts popped corn 3t cup molasses tlte's Got A Fur Coat—The penguin at right' seems to be the topic of jealous conversation for her more formally -clad companions at London's zoo, (The very idea, Wearing a•fur coat and putting • on, airsl) Actually, the furry bird isn't being a high•hat. All young penguins are covered with clown before acquiring • their soup. 'n' -fish suits of feathers, • TEST YOUR INTELLIGENCE Score yourself 10 points for each correct answer in the first six questions. 1, Find the word below which does not match the other three, —Hour —Day —Minute --Wristwatch 2. Which country was the first to use gunpowder? —Russia —Holland —China —India 3. Which of the following documents is credited with being the foundation document of Great Britain's democratic government? --The Stepp Act —The Corn Laws --••--=-.the Magna Carta —The Exclusion Act. 4. The smallest state in the United States is listed below, Can you find it? —Delaware—Vermont —Rhode Island —Long Island 5. if a tie vote occurs in the United States Senate, who is permitted to cast -his vote and break the tie? —The President • ' —Chief Justice of the Supreme Court —The Vice President —The Secretary of State . 0. Puppets are operated by inserting the hands inside the doll, Marionnettes are operated with • —Magnets' —Weights . —Strings —Levers 7. Match the following national symbols to their particular coun- tries, Score yourself 10 points for each correct choice, (A) Bear —England • (B) John Bull —France (C) Uncle Sam —America (D) Cockaded hat —Russia Total your points. A score of 0-20 is poor; 30-60, average; 70-80, superior; 90-100, very superior. ANSWERS TO INTELLIGENCE TEST 'aouut (a) :uatxaury fa) :pue12ua (E) :trlssnll (d)-1, '211111S-0 '}uaplsatct ao1A aux- 'punisl apogg-4 '511n0 t;u2aL4 01-1.-g 'rrultj3-1 'tlolmlsilM—I 11/2 cups sugar 12 cup water 1 teaspoon vinegar /t teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons butter 1 teaspoon vanilla With the exception of the but- ter and vanilla, boil ingredients without stirring tb 270° F. or until a small amount becomes brittle when dropped into cold water. Add butter and vanilla after removing from the heat, Pour the sirup over the popcorn and mix well. Form into balls. Makes, about 36 balls, 6 inches in size. • • * Another page discloses a recipe for gingerbread and beside it is' a penciled note; 'This recipe took a prize," MY BEST GINGERBREAD r/i eup sugar rt, cup shortening . 1 egg 1 cup molasses 21/2 cups sifted flour 'tall-pur• pose or .bread flour), 11/2 teaspoons soda 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon ginger ?s teaspoon cloves ii teaspoon salt 1 cup hot water Cream • the shortening and sugar, add beaten egg, molasses and the dry ingredients which have been sifted together,. Last of . all, add the hot water and beat until smooth. Bake in a moder- ate oven 325° to 350° for• 35 , minutes, The batter will be thin, but. this recipe makes a delicious old-fashioned gingerbread, When baked in layers arid put together with sweetened whipped cream and sliced bananas .or, whdn spread with boiled frosting and moist coconut' this gingerbread becomes a party dessert. • r * The recipe for n pudding at- tracts our attention, for beside it we find this notation: "This was John's delight," 'KENILWORTH. PUDDING 2 cups bread crumbs /2 cup suet 1 cup raisins 1 egg 1 cup milk 1/2 'teaspoon cinnamon 1/2 teaspoon soda % teaspoon cloves 14. teaspoon salt 1/2_ cup molasses Mix .spices with the sugar and add. to th, crumbs, suet, and raisins. , Dissolve soda -in . milk, beat egg and mix all ingredients together, Pour into ' greased -double cooker and boil for 2 hours, Serve with orange sauce. r. •• ORANGE SAUCE 1,4 cup sugar . 1 tablespoon corn starch Juice and grated rind of 1 orange 1. cup water 1 teaspoon lemon juice 'Mix sugar and corn starch to. gather, . add other ingredients and boil for five minutes, Serve hot.' 4. • * Grandmother's cookie jar was always being refilled with de- lightful' surprises but we always decided. on. the gingersnaps..tut oitr • first choice, - AUNTY'S GINGER SNAPS 3.4 cup shortening 1/2 cup sugar • Legg 1 cup molasses 1 tablespoon vinegar • 2 tablespoons cold water 41/4 cups flour 1 tablespoon soda 1 teaspoon ginger Cream shortening and sugar, add beaten egg, molasses, vinegar and water. Sift dry ingredients 'and stir into first mixture, Some may have to be added by knead- ing. Roll out and bake in a mod- erate oven, 350° to 375°. Rolling the mthin makes a fine ginger- snap but by rolling them thick, cutting out stars, crescents or other shapes, and sugaring them, we have a Christmas cookie that delights young and old. No household should be with- out molasses, no-sir-ee, not by a jugful. 1J)MY SCIIOOL LESSON By Rev, R, Barclay Warren B.A., B.D. Confessing and Following Christ Matthew 16:13-25 Memory Selection: Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Liv- ing God. Matt. 1G;16. Mohammedans believe that Jesus was a prophet. Nearly all people believe he was a good man, Christians believe as' Peter confessed, "Thou art the Christ, the . Son ' of the living God," It is one thing to have a mere in- tellectual acceptance of this great truth; it . is another to know Him by revelation of the Father. 'Only as we' yield our hearts to Him, do we _ really know Him, It is on this rock- like confession that Peter made, that Jesus is building his Church; or, if you wish, it is of people like Peter who half- received this Divine revelation that Jesus is building his Church, The man who does not believe that Jesus is the Son of God has no place in His Church. The Church will prevail. She does not always appear victori- ous, but ultimately, she will emerge as the abiding Victor while sin goes down to defeat. Peter was granted great au- , thority in forbidding and al- lowing; an authority shared with the other apostles as seen in Matt. 18:12. From the statement regarding prayer in the verse following, the challenge of pre- vailing prayer and hence author ity, seems to be thrown out to all the Church. After Peter's great confession, Jesus began to predict his own sufferings and death, The cross was looming up before Him, There is a cross for all His dis- eiples, too, "For whosoever will save his life shall lose it; and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it," No won- der selfish people are unhappy, They lose their life in saving it. But he who loses his life , for Christ really finds it, The way of confessing and following Christ is the best way, no matter how you look at it. And that goes for the life. that now is as well as for th& 1±(e ;which is to come, It is a'pitg that men continue in their bljndnel3s when the Gospel is so near and so precious. What Shakespeare Really Looked Like What may be the only auth- entic portrait of Shakespeare in existence has been discovered in Capetown by Professor G. Wilson Knight, who is Reader in English at Leeds University. . It was probably painted in the •i>',; poet's lifetime by G. Paulus van • Somer, court painter of James I. It shows Shakespeare wearing a white collar and a black doublet, Scholars all over the world are excited by the discovery. If the portrait is really of Shakespeare it will give them the best impres- sion of what he looked like that has yet come ,into their posses- sion, Hundreds of spurious portraits of Shakespeare have been "dis- covered" at various times, but this one has every appearance of being a genuine contemporary ' painting, a Tit -Bits man was told, The Chandos portrait in the National Gallery — presented to the nation in 1856 by the Earl of Ellesmere—is the most familiar of Shakespeare likenesses .• and the best authenticated. The late' Sir Sidney Lee, expert on Eliza- bethan literature, declared that there was no portrait of Shakes- peare which could be said with certainty to have been painted In his lifetime, and only•two por- traits were known to have been produced within a short time of his death. • But even in 1052 we still have only a slight idea of Shakes- peare's true physical character • - istics, although the Capetown dis- covery may help to throw light on them, It has been seriously suggested that Shakespeare's re- mains in he church at Stratford - on -Avon should be exhumed In the interests of Shakespeare , scholarship, Then there could be a scientific -examination . of the remains and his bones could be measured, But some superstitious people recall the lines above the grave ending with "curst be he that moves my bones." Others in favour of exhumation believe the "curse" could be avoided if women did the work! Fit For A ` King -Beaming royally over his culinary triumph, Sweden's Crown Prince Gustav Adolph exhibits a .gingerbread man which' he fashioned with only a little assistance from hip -^s... sister, Princess Christina: The royal baker spread more flour over, himself Id the king's kitchens, in Stockholm, than he managed to introdr ce into the gingerbread dough; but cookie connoisseurs claim the confection was a princely treat. • Freedom Of Enterprise 'The highest standard of living in the world and the fullest development of freedom of conscience and the dignity of the in- dividual have been achieved on this continent in the atmosphere of freedom which is generated by the system of private competitive enterprise, The Canadlan Chamber of Commerce again records its unswerving support for that system and its vigorous opposition to socialism or -to any otlier political or economic system which weakens or destroys the responsibilities, rights and freedom of the individual citizen, Further, the Chamber reiterates its intention to do all in its power to encourage a wider public appreciation of the virtues of the democratic system of freedom of enterprise, Freedom of choice and freedom of action, within the limits of the public welfare, are inalienable rlghts • of the individual, The Chamber is, therefore, firmly opposed to every kind of state and bureaucratic control of those activitles which are properly and traditionally the .province of the individual citizen. The Chamber believes that Canada can be great and prosperous only if all in- dividuals have the incentive of adequate reward for hard work, in- itiative and enterprise and the right to enjoy the products of their thrift and foresight. Freedom is indivisible. The individual cannot be deprived of his economic freedom and retain his politcal freedom, The rights of free citizens to offer their services and the products of their labors cannot be surrendered to the state without a loss of personal liberties such as few citizens would be willing to accept, The Chamber reiterates its belief in the application ,of free competitive enterprise to all phases of the Canadian way of life, It believes that a system which rewards individual effort is funda- mental in the democratic form of Government. The Chamber also believes in the right of the individual to conduct business in ac- cordance with- his beliefs and judgment and feels that producers should continue to exercise full freedom in the formation of co- operative buying and selling organizations. It believes that these • organizations should be voluntary in nature and subject to the same tax laws as other forms of business rather than compulsory by legislation or monopolistic governmental bodies; It believes that delivery,quotas and Governmental marketing monopolies should be limited to .times of extreme national emergency or a state of war. The Chamber believes that all producers should have complete freedom of choice in the marketing of their produce, It' believes that governmental marketing agencies established to assist producers in the marketing of their produce should be voluntary marketing agencies and not compulsory and monopolistic in character and operation. 'Bureaucracy never can p'o s s e s the initiative and dynamic qualities of private enterprise which must of necessity have strict regard at all times for economy and efficiency in its operation, and be under the constant stimulus of competition. Private enterprise Is always aware that any inefficiency, if not corrected, will result In financial loss and eventual bankruptcy, _ Social security as provided by the state must not become an end in itself, Canadians must beware of looking to the state to pro- vide security to the extent that the individual loses incentive to provide, for himself, The Chamber recognizes the responsibility of the individual in a• free society to exeit every effort to solve his own economic pro- blems and deplores the grpwing tendency to look to government for help In every difficulty,. Approval of the principles'of social welfare does not mean that it is the business of .the. state to •provide those services which are properly the responsibility of the individual, - The Chamber commends the growing awareness of Canadian business in the field of social welfare, as evidenced by the number of employer-sponsored plans for retirement' pensions, health in- surance, holidays and' vacations with pay, and , similar • welfare measures 'now successfully operating in companies - throughout Canada. The increasing number of such programs attests to the support of business for social welfare ideas. Demands for ]ower taxation are incompatible with demands of increased government services necessitating heavy spending. The Chamber points out that high taxes make personal'savings increas- ingly difficult, discouraging the virtue of thrift„ Excessive taxation, excessive bureaucracy, and excessive. governmental control'all tend to stifle freedom4if enterprise and, consequently, must be avoided. The Chamber reaffirms its belief that the appeal of the citizens to the courts is a fundamental right of democracy, and emphasizes its deep-rooted convictions that governmental exercise of arbitrary powers constitutes a real threat to individual liberty andto the freedom of Canadian institutions, Further, the Chamber recognizes that individual freedom, which rs a spiritual heritage of the citizen of a democracy, carries with it a duty to put forth an effort to maintain a high standard of etlbics in the conunthnity," Declaration of Policy approved by •The Canadian Chamber of Commerce at its 23rd Annual' Meeting. Is My House On Fire? Dramatic Appeal .Over TV, Odd things sometimes happen during television programmes — • especially in the United States. The other day. Mrs. Mary O'Connor was a guest in a cer- tain TV network programme. While she was being interviewed .and brightly answering an an- nouncer's questions, a sudden terrifying thought struck . her. She began to worry whether she had turned off the electric, iron in her apartment!, She whispered her fear to: the announcer in full view of the viewers; He was a man of ac- tion. He appealed to the viewers near ,Mrs. O'Connor's apartment. to find out quickly whether Mrs. O'Connor's living -room was on fire, Men with a ladder close to the building acted protnptly and, gazing through the window of the room, discovered that Mrs. O'Connor's fears were unfound- ed. The iron was off. They 'phoned. the television studio and before the programme finished she. learned with relief that all was well. 10. Start 33. Japanese ooln • CROSSWORD 20, City official 40. Tropical 22. Grinding fruits �' tooth 41. Radium PUZZLE 22. Shade tree otnanatlote • 24, Fish eggs 43, Breathe • '25. li.ind of heavily In ACROSS • 4, Cultured evergreen sloop • • 1. Encountered 6,1'oo111 ` 27. Hue 44, Heron rt Fasten 29.0141 card game 46. Silver coin 4. Ribbed lnbrlq 7. nook of main. 30. Wing 47. Jump 7, Colnchdi 8. Mythical inn 31. Rodent 48, Topaz hunt. 12. Plum _ 9. Roam • 83, Remainder ming bird 13,l'Inla1 10.7tather than . H. One of nn 49. Large rocop• - . 14. Coronet • 11, Organ of • ancient Euro- taclo 16, Gratuity henrtnrr pain race 60. Implore 16, 1" inh'o stvitn• I L it ti q. s 4. . -. • . 7 5 9 10 11 piing organ 'i:. 17, Stratum ' 1. • - 16. Minister It :�`t 1! .+'cY IM 20, arown boy %::::::: 21. wading bird Id 1;::, 1 : ; : 17 2L, SuperiorltY :: In contest 114, Imre , 10 19 28, 1V11d p1htum 29, Equality • 11 32. Grief 34, Cry of A cat 26. 'Poo had 87. Roman house- hold gods 19, Bullfighter 41. Intelligence • AI 46;,Detor 3 46, Eating 47, tisane 90. invhte 61. lTtnh hill 61. Sherpllke 63. AuFtrallau • bird 64, Native motal 41 49 66, Sheets of glass' 60. Turn right 67. Molted tnbrto SL DOWN 1. Contest • 1. Ancient Roman official t1 r1h11,1rev Answer Elsewhere en This Page . • Blessing For Nine Lives—Msgr, Touze, Auxiliary Bishop of Par s, blesses a reluctant Iron cub, during ' ceremonies marking the 100th anniversary of the first performance of Paris' renowned "Winter Circus," the first performance of which was held for Napoleon 111. Msgr,. Touze celebrated Mass in the circus ring, in commemoration of Winter Circus performers who have died through the years. From Monster To Emperor Newspapers a r e notoriously fickle in their likes and dislikes, and on occasions have been know to change sides completely. But in all tihe history of jour- nalism no change -over has ever been so quick as that executed by the French ' "Moniteur" in March, 1815. It started on March 9th, after Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from the island ,of Elba, where he had been exiled after the defeat of his army, and began his march to Paris, "The monster has escaped from his place of banishment," an- nounced the "Moniteur," The following day's bulletin was in much the same vein: "The Corsican ogre has landed at Cape Juan." On March llth the "Moniteur" announced: "The tiger has shown himself at Gap. Troops are ad- vancing on all sides to arrest his progress. ' He will conclude his miserable adventures by be- . - Baffling Business in Baffin Land corning a wanderer among the mountains," "Terror Seized All" March 12th: "The monster has actually advanced as far as Gren- oble," March 13th: "The tyrant is now at Lyon. Terror seized all at his appearance." March 18th: "The usurper has ventured to approach within 60 hours' march of the capital." March 19th: "Bonaparte is ad- vancing by forced marches, but it is impossible that he reach Paris," • March 20th: "Napoleon will arrive under the walls of .Paris to -morrow." March 21st: "The Emperor Na-' poleon is at Fontainebleu," Thus the change from monster... to emperor was affected. The - following day's announcement stated: • "Yesterday evening His Majes- ty the Emperor made his public entry and arrived at the Tuiler- ies, Nothing can exceed the uni- versal joy,". Crewmen of the icebreaker East - wind and natives of Baffin Island had a wonderful time when the huge ship' made the earliest trip ever to be effected, to Davis Bay and Baffin Bay, last May. The Eastwind, engaged in a special hydrographic mission, was finally grounded in ice 10 feet thick, some 25 miles from Baffin Island, near Cape Christian in the Cana- dian Northwest Territories, While oceanographers • completed their search'for information via dog- sled, the remainder of the .East- wind's crew whiled. .away the time by building igloos, 'and in- troducing their native visitors to the delights of food from ' the "south," and to the rare treat of sound movies, first that some of ' the islanders had ever seen. TllFAM I'RONT ki?uea Using a stop -watch for, sheep;- ing purposes, a well knowrr:farm economist found soma illuintnat- ing facts regarding how Charles Cowan was able to cut down dairy -chore time in a bank barn. • • • A check of 16 farmers with similar arrangements had shown that their average chore time was 75 hrs. a year per cow, But Co- wan had cut this figure to 55 hrs, per cow for 15 Guernseys and Byers set out to find the reason. * « a Cowan's speed was due mostly to the ways he had adapted his bank barn to ease his chores and take advantage of the walk- through milking arrangement. His milking parlor, milkingroorn and loafing area are on the bot-• tom floor. His feed, room is on the second floor and feed can be unloaded there from trucks and wagons without elevating it, His feed mixer and grinder are close to his feed -storage arca and mixed feed is dumped into a 700 -lb, feed bin, A chute ori the bottom of this bin drops con- centrates directly to the milking parlor below and each bin sup- plies two stalls. 4 • « The homemade milking parlor is a four -abreast walk-through with the millcroom adjacent. « * « Hay is dropped from the mow on the top floor of the barn into racks in the loafing area, • • * With his milkroom in the base- ment level of the barn, Cowan found himself faced with the job of lifting this milk cans 0 steps for loading onto the trudk. He solved this with a can hoist of his•own design which cost him $35, It has a'4' reach—is pivoted to swing cans from the cooler and lift them to the top of the steps, a distance of 8'. • • • The basement -level milking parlor and milkroom also makes a comfortable working area the year around. Itis warmer In win- ter and cooler in summer, • • •• Best use of antibiotics on the dairy farm is in treatment of scours, say experts of Cornell University's animal husbandry departmenENThey donot think there is -any present need to in elude them is the rations WI dairy cows. • • • Calves on antibiotics over ut 3 -yr, period grew more rapidly and had less dlfficulty irons scours and digestive distur- bances, As an average, calves 0* antibiotics gained 22% more rap- idly during the first 8 weeks than controls. The latter groups scoured an average of 10 days u compared with 4 days for those fed the drug. • • • Intake of starter feed was 30% greater for antibir tic -fed calves but there was no difference is the amount of hay consumed. Cost of feed required to make a unit of grain was reduced 9%. • • • • Scours cases were decreased is number and were less severe when antibiotics were used. However, this treatment did not prevent all cases nor did alt animals respond favorably. Where calves were .paired for study, there was ne difference between control and treated calves in some cases when rate of gain, incidence of scours or general appearance were com- pared, • • • Number of unthrifty animals may be decreased under antibio- tic treatment. End result is that all calves do about as well as those making normal growth. Even with antibiotics, it remains important to follow good feeding and management practices and to avoid overfeeding. « « « Accidental doses of antibiotics do not affect milk production or change feed intake -- nor were they transmissted into the milk. When an excessive amount o[. aur'eornycin (0 times that nor- mally found in commercial feeds) was fed the cows in grain. they refused to eat the grain._, But a somewhat smaller amount had no effect on their feeding habits. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking 13�v 99� S3N 3�0 nW9 3N / a'ol 0/9 lig NINl0 -V8� N9S 2100y1, s9. v M9W 00ia► 3015 AZ31 N 2f3Av b ei d 33v9 - 0 A 0 b v Irtil v W W N a 0213 dal Id d d31010 321 13 1 Crew members of the Coast Guard icebreaker Eastwind build igloos while "aground" near Baffin Bay., • _ This knife -and -fork business is a nuisance. Fingers Their first experience of sound movies delights Baffin Islanders use. 4 NINO ., J111111111116, 411111t1111N1111► Elliott Insurance Agency BLYTH — ONTARIO. . INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident Farm Liability, - WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE. Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140 1 SALMON STEAKS ' mug STANDARD ti" AUBURN I Mrs, Alfred Nesbit, Alr. and Mrs, Frank Nesbit enter - Several letters have been received tertained the fallow'ng, for NewYears, from Al r. and \Irs, M. Davies and Mr. and Mrs, Leonard Harris an I Mr. and Mrs. F. 0. Mcllveene, W33 sons, of Kirklun; Mr, and Mrs, Al ' ' are spending the winter in hl.nid'' feed Nesbit and Lawrence, Mr, Jim They are enjoying evcry'hing esl•e Ilarris and Miss Barbrae Page c f clotty the warm weather, Lcndan, and Ross Gtvynn. Mrs. J. C. Chapin, has returned to Air, and Mrs. 'foam Kirkconnell of ' I her :caching dtt'ies at \\'tng'oau'' Frank Alta,, spent Chra'nnas wi h Mr, and Airs, W. S. Craig have re- turned to Toronto, and Doaald Ross his brothers, Andrew and David Kir k - to Oakville. council. It is 35 years since Mr, Kirk- t 'sir, and \irs, E.Iis I.i',tle and fain- Connell spent Christmas with his fanc- ily, of 'Thornbury, with Mr. and Airs, ily in Ontario. Gordon W, Dobie. \ir, and Mrs. Louis Blake of Brus- Mrs. Duncan McKay, Iltrba•a and sets, Mr. Harcld Kirkconnell, 'Miss John .McKay, of Kin tail, and Ruth Gloria God of Goderich, Mr. and Reid, of G:derich, with 1)r, B. C. Mrs, Charles Sne'ling of Bruceficla, Weir.Mr, and Mrs, Earl Kelry and family of Blyth, spent Christmas w:th idr. and sirs, Andrew Kirkconnell and family. Mrs, S, IL Dacr, \taster Ross Dacr, spent New Years in Detroit, Mich., with Mr. laid Mrs. Martin Ashman, Air. David Kirkconnell spent Circe weeks at the liome of Ws brother, Air, Andrew Kirkconnell after being a patient in the Lis'owel h •spital, I Ie is visiting now with his sister, Mrs. Snelling of Bruccfield. Mr, and Mrs, Andrew Kirkcanne'l and family spent Ncw Years with Mr. and Mrs, Snelling of Bruccfield, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Nesbit took their son, Lawrence, to Ridgetown lnt Sunday, where he is attending an agricultural College. 1)r. ll. C. \Veir spent C1 ris'nris VARIETY OF FROZEN FILLETS. with his son, John R. \Voir, and his wife, at Ottawa. \1 r. and Mrs, T. S. Johnson, with \lr and Mrs. R. R. Farrow, of Mit- chell. Mr. and Mrs. Wan. Medd, of Godc- rich, with Mr; and Mrs. Alfred Rol- linson. Sympathy is extended to the MIILr fancily. Mr. and Mrs, Gordon R. Tay! •r and Marion ' are expected home this week after a trip to Dayton Beach, Flor- ,,,,.,_ ida. 'l'he annual school meeting of U.S.S. No. 5 1iullett was held in the sch of . WALTON Edwin Miller, Regina, 'returned cn Wednesday afternoon, William L. daughter, Mrs. Chcpp, and fancily. hone after spending the ChristmasGaig was elected trustees, rep'acing \ isitors with Mr, and Airs. N. B. L. Dennis, Calgary, with Ethel, holidays with his parents,\1r. and Gordon Taylor who re'ired after nine Bell for New Years were, Eddie 13e11 Teanie, Wilfred and Elmer Dennis, Mrs. Fred Miller. years' service. The other trustees a -e and family, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bewley Frank Kirkby is in Victoria Hospital Kenneth McDougall and Maurice and Carl, Mr. raid Mrs. Fiank Kcnar- London for an operation. Bean, Frank Raithby is secretary- ski, 1larol& Ferris, of Brussels. Jerry Dresell, Toronto, with his treasurer. i '— grandmother, Mrs, F. Ennis. 'Mr, Lawrence Nesbit has returned TRAIN -TRUCK CRASH VICTIM \V. C. Bennett, Clinic'', with friends to Ridge:ott'tt Agricultural School af- here. ter spending the holidays with his A 28 -year-old Seaforth truck driv- parent s. er, Leo Johnson, was the victim of a \1r. and Mrs. George Gray- and truck -train crash on the Chatham - Tuesday night wars the coldest n'ght Susan have returned to Toronto after Camden town line on 'Tuesday in a so far this winter, arcund zero. spending the holidays with Mr, and fatal level -crossing accident. Arnold Berthot MEAT .0 FISH Free Delivery: 10 a.m. and After 4 p.m. Telephone 10 --- Blyth. i Wednesday, San, 7,1953 SOMETHING YOU. MEN HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR --- HEAVY WORK SOX of 80 percent wool, 20 :'percent nylon AT ONLY $1.04) Madill's Shoe Store Blyth "Be Kind to your feet. Wear Madill's Footwear." h•.• -N •-•-•-•+. t,-. •-•-• *44.* •-•-•-•-• N••-•-•+•••11+.44 •-•-•-• •-•-•-•-+++.4-4; HULLETT • Mrs. \V. 11. Bell spent the Chris'.- - mas holiday in Detroit with her Miss Tillie Dundas, New York, with friends here. Miss Betty Lou Kirkby, London, with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kirkby. Mr, and Mrs. William Summerville have gone to Florida for the winter, Rev, G. Hazelwood, Lane and Linda, of iiount Forest, visited Mr. and Mrs. Percy Holan. AN111111111111101101IMIMMIMIIIIIMMMIN11111111.1k THE ARCADE STORES SENSATIONAL UARY CLEA:AN SALE • INN To express our Sincere Thanks to our many Customers and Friends who have helped us to en- joy continued success through two years, we are offering this Sensational Clearance Sale. Quality and Low Prices go hand in hand to make this the greatest Price Event in Huron County. Come and bring your friends. Sale Starts 'Friday, January 9th. ••••4444-+ •-•-•-•-• 44 4-4- N-4-1++++4- H •4 -••+N••• -N•+ 15 25 50 Percent Off On All Goods In The Store SALE STARTS FRIDAY, JANUARY 9th 50 Percent Off On The Following Goods Only! Every Women's and Misses' Better Dresses in the Store; All of last Season's Summer Dresses; Also all of last Season's Ladies' Shortie Coats. 175 Yds.of 54 inch All -Wool Coating Material; Al- so Circular 54 inch Wool Jersey. 25 Dress•Lengths in Crepes, Jerseys, Nylons, Taf- feta, Gabardine. Women's and Children's All -Wool and Gabardine Ski Pants., Opening•Day SPECIALS (Friday) - 9 to 12 o'clock noon 25 Pair Kingcot Flannelette Blankets (Seconds) 80x90, Reg. $7.95SPECIAL $5,95 Indian Blankets SPECIAL $2.50 100 Yds. Flannelette Shirting, SPEC. Yd. 50c 500 Yds. Print,. reg. 59c, SPECIAL Yd. 35c Full -Fashioned Nylons of . a $150 Line (Subs)' SPECIAL 79c. , N•�+-t•+�-++��+t�.�-.•H+r1-H+fir. •1,•►+++�-�+s• 15 PERCENT OFF ON ALL MEN'S & BOYS' WORK CLOTHES IN THE STORE, . INCLUDING MEN'S, BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S OVERALLS, MEN'S LINED AND UNLINED SMOCKS, MEN'S BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S LINED AND UNLINED JEANS, MEN'S &'BOYS' WORK -SHIRTS. • 24% Off on the Following Items: . MEN'S, WOMEN'S AND BOYS' SUITS, MEN'S & WOMEN'S WINTER COATS, MEN'S, BOYS' AND WOMEN'S STATION WAGON COATS, CHILDREN'S SNOW SUITS, WOMEN'S AND MISSES CREPE AND NYLON BLOUSES, WOMEN'S AND MISSES SKIRTS, ALL -WOOL AND PART - WOOL BLANKETS, AND THE BALANCE OF OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF NUMEROUS ITEMS. • THERE WILL BE ABSOLUTELY NO CHARGES, NO REFUNDS, NO EXCHANGES, AND NO ALTERATIONS DURING THIS SALE ONLY. ALL SALES FINAL. 1 44-.4.4.44-444-.444-4444-.4-44-404-4.4-44.444-. .+4444444-4+.4444-44-4-.44444.4.4...44....444-4+4++++++44. STORE -WIDE BARGAINS FOR THE °ENTIRE ,FAMILY. ' STORES IN BLYTH and BRUSSELS THE ARCADE STORES t4 • The Needlecraft Shoppe BLYTH -ONTARIO. Rubber Snow Mittens ' each 98c 'Woollen Mittens each $1,10 to $1.?5 Plaid Lined Jeans, 3 to 12 years... . $2.98 to $3.9S Corduroy Boxer Trousers, 2 to 6 each $2.59 Butterick Patterns .. - .. - . , - , Mercury Nylons • . r.+.;•++.+ •-•-•-+fie•-'+�.-•-•+•+•+rr • ARE YOU IN THE MARKET FOR A GOOD • SECOND-HAND TRACTOR? FARMALL "M" I.H.C. TRACTOR, Completely Reconditioned. 102 MASSEY-HARRIS TRACTOR, Mechanically Good - New Paint Job, FARMALL "A" TRACTOR, Priced Reasonable. CASE TRACTOR SPREADER (ON RUBBER) 1 Year Olcl. Don't Forget to Drop in and See our New Line of TRACTORS ; COLT, MUSTANG, and NO. 33 STEWART JOHNSTON MASSEY-HARRIS SALES & SERVICE BLYTH, ONT. .4 +•-•++4-• •-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•+•-•-•-• •-• • •-•-•-•-•-•••-•-•-•-•-•-• tf f+1-.. 4444:4 +4 44.4140:4 44.1.:44:..:44444+084+4144+0+44+018.4:4 +484 4:14 441"40"444,44W WI .^IMIMNN NNP4WW.Wt.W.MNNI FULL COURSE MEALS AT ALL HOURS. i Excellent Service -- Satisftictiop Guaranteed. HURON GRILL BLYTH - ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. WESTFIELD Wesley Stackhouse of Bruceiicld. Mr, Armond McBurney is spending Mr. William Walden is visiting at the winter with friends in Michigan, the home of his daughter, Mrs, Reg. Mrs. Fred Cook spent the week -end Denning and \[r. Denning of Detroit, with,her daugrter, Mrs, Jim Boak and Mr. and Airs. Douglas Campbell and Mr. Beak of Crewe. fancily visited on Tuesday with Mrs. Airs. HarveyMcDowell, Mrs, Dfar- \\'nt, Radford of Clinton. via. \IcDotvclland Mrs, Aka AtcDonv- Air. and Mrs, Chas. Sun'th and fam ell visited on Friday with Mrs, Sid - Mrs, Hugh Smith of Molesworth, • Mr, and Mrs, Carl Deans and Airs. Emerson Rodger was 'a London daughters, of Guelph, Mr. and Mrs. visitor on Monday. K. Dawson and Karen, of Dungannon, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Vincent of spent Ncw Years with Mr. and Mrs, Blyth visited on Friday with Mr. and Norman McDowell, Mrs. Jack Buchanan, Mr. and Mrs. Gear and children of Mr, and Mrs, \\'alter Cook visited Kitchener, spent New Years with Mrs. on .Monday wi h Mr. and Mrs, Albert J. L. McDowell, Walsh of Blyth, Guests a the bonne of Airs, Fred Mrs, Frank Campbell and Miss Cook on Ncw Years Day were, Mr, Winnifred'Cantpbell visited cn Tues - and Mrs. George Ccok and fancily, day with Mr. and Airs, N•:rman Car - Mr, and Mrs; Charles Cook and. babe, ter of. Clinton. • Mr, and Mrs. Norman Cook and child = A{isses Mary and Jenny Yuuko re - fen, Mr. and Mrs, Ben Huskinson and turned. to Toronto 'on Friday after babe, of ilelgraye, \[r, ;incl Airs. Jinn spending the week with Mrs. Fred Walsh and children, of Blyth, Mr. and Ck, 'Mrs. Jim Boal and children,.of Crewe, Air, and Mrs, Jack Buchanan visit - lir. A. E. Cock of B;yds, MissVioleton Sunday with •Mr. and Mrs. Win. Cook of Goderich, Govier at the home of Mr, and Mrs. visit - Mr, and Mrs. Earl. \Vightnan visit -,Earl Caldwell of Blyth, , .• ed on Sunday with Mrs. H. Aiathcrs of ,Mr. and Airs. Norman Radford of Lucknoty' Parkhill, Mr. Ross Radford of Sarnia, Mr. and Mrs, Bill Rollinson of To -. u` \Irs, J. Shobbrook of Londesboro vis - Mr, spent New Years with Mr, and` iled on Friday with AIF, and Mrs, Mrs, Emerson Rodger, � Walter Cook, Mr, Wn, McDowell spent a few �4ist; Vanflcet of Brussels and Mr. clays last week with Mr. and Mrst tKiii:.;AiacAllister of St, Augustine, Wesley dSe Chas. Bruccfield. `•'Stratford Normal students, are teach - Dir, and Mrs. Smith and .fan-. inn; at the Westfield School this week, ily visited on Monday with Mr. and g Mrs, Bill Smith of Brussels, - The Indies of _,the Westfield Farm \[r, and Airs, Albert Campbell,' Mrs. Forum are receiving leaders of appre- Fitzgerald, Mrs. Gardiner of Aubut n ciatioti front the patients of Beek spent New Years with Mr, and Mrs. Memorial San.•fn London for Christ - A, Spiegelberg, utas Cheer boxes received' at Chrlst- The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper inas-time, The. ladies packed 36 boxes, was adniiuisdercd at the church ser- 34 going to the San, and 2 to shut-ins Nicc on Sunday, in \Vinghatn. The Foran does not The young people are taking:advan� forget the Spirit of Christmas when tage of the cold . weather which lis' ,Clitistnas is nvcr, but carries the. spier• --- frozcin the ponds and doing consider- it on " through the ycat as they set'nl able skai fngy at'dhc'rate of ,freta 2 to 4 boxes each Messrs. F,arl and Elvin Wightntan month and ,are entering into the/sixth visited recently with Mr, 'and Mrs: Year,in this work of pleasure.i i 1. Wednesday, Jan, 7, 1953 THE STAN }A1tI) M Page ty'1'• r4+ 0 0 +00 +0..0 0,..: + d.' 0�+ 0�014,0,.0 0 + 0 , 8,0 0 , 4. 4I J + r u+' e +I!"i1'+O+I+,T+Ohh1 hO,,,M,M,1',0,r+,'i+4MM0i'„+/'Ohh1,40i'1'4 � TO ALL BRIDES ANI) GROOMS OF I952 LYCEUM THEATRE J1 ROX c THEATRE, THE PARK THEATRE CAPITAL THEA" FORMER , WINt3 /1M• -ONTARIO+ GODERICH •• PHONE 1150 GODERICH. AND OF' It ORMEt R YEARS -- Now PLAYING (Jan. 8.10): "STEEL NOW PLAYIA'Gt "THE - QUIFT NOW PLAYING: "THE FORBID. ; 4 i fwo Shows Ea -ch Night starting At I I U W:V' in I cchnicolot ` star ring MAN" Jc;tn Wayne, Maureen 0'. DEN LAND" with Johnny Weiss. You are invited to attend our Annual __•—•1414__ John Lund_and Ann Sheridan, Hera, Barry Fitzgerald, Technic;Tor molter ae Jun_gle Jim WEDDING ' Mondiy to Saturday, January 12.17 I— - - -- --- Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday �• �DIIIN BELLS REUNION ONE WEEK ( Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday +. The nr+gnificeul Technicdor comedy ;• th•anta � IN BLYTH UNITED CHURCH, Sunday, January 11 1953 -� 24 :. , "4 at 7:00 p.m. t Preacher: Rev. C. J. Scott, Soloist: Mrs. Ross Hamilton. • (A service of worship to remind us of our Wedding Day), 70"1.4"1444.4":":40+444.0+++++++04.0.1444+00004:400440:+1"; :+ Everything I Have is Yours' "STORM OVER TIBET" tufHE QUIET A1,i%I ' 1I.G,AI, presents a brilliant new lane Adventure ;t.l rrmancc high in a Sib - 1 Iere you w:Ii Lino at(''tne charm and I ing tntn,ical ft, Ittrinb� ohne talcs:cd Cham ,ions ;only-:. ca;$:'od:7iopular en- erian mountain range, where lhuus- : • . • beauty of old Irt`IOntl'plus a story that , �,,, 1414 • gout; of tons of ire may become an Tburs,, Sat.ill enthrall you,' John Wayne, a re- tcrtainet•s. ,, 1.dclin�color. Fri,, , Jr,Jan. 8.9.10 > awesome menace tired fighter returns to the land of his Marge & Gower Charijpion and Rex Reason, Diana Doug'as and ' " , u . biro, in search of t :tied and calm but Dennis O'Kccee, g SON OF I ALEI� ACE his Iluvc affair twilit his ncit,�hbuur, -'--_1414 ___ 1444._.__.. Ivan Tors. laurecn O'llara, and hi; battle twill: Thursday, Friday, Saturday Thursday, Friday, Saturday her brother, provide no dull moments John Lund, Joyce Holden and Janet Leigh, Carleton Carpenter I either for him or for loose who sec I Scott Brady Keenan Wynn this film, .Action -Drama - Technicolor, Anew 5romt the news of -y 4 + ♦ +0++ 0.+40 40�0�i+0 O.+h0.0.4.4.4+.00 4.4.44 4.4.4.0 4 4.x0+4.0.0 ++4.0.00++00. 4 4+ + ++,�4.„44,+.4,,.,,+..,,.,,,,44,..+,.,,,,.,.•h4� Renew your Subscription ♦i` ,t, CE FOLUES' .j. 1414 +4 t • presented by the Stratford skating Club (40 MEMBERS) In Blyth Commuiiity Centre Arena, On Friday, January 16 Sponsored by 'Blyth Firemen, Blyth Legion and The Blyth Lions Club. Final arrangements have been made to have the entire Cast of Stratford Skating Club present their show, on the above date. Plans are also being made to have the seats reserved for this event. This is a Colourful Performance that All Local People Will Waht to See. Entire proceed in aid of the Arena+Fund, ,1414 .,+,..,.,,..',,.,, ,1414+,1414+1414..,.. .•+-.�.'i' •NNrNNrNN4N4,IINN4404.~~41 NNNNt.INttNutt tr,IlNNrrtNt t / N(1TICE ' The. next meeting of the Huron County. Coun- cil will be held in. the Council Chambers, ' Court :Goderich, commencing TUESDAY, JANUARY 201h, 1953, AT 2 P.M. . All accounts, notices of deputations and other t business requiring the attention of Council should ' be in the hands of the County Clerk not later than ' January 17th,1953. ERSKINE, ' 12-2. County Clerk, Goderich, Ont. •MRS. FRANK LITTLE Airs, Frank Little, 63, of the 401 concession of Morris township, died • on Alonday at her hone, She had been in her usual health and had prepared the noonmeal. \Viten Mr, Little re- turned to the haus: at 00011, she w.'s lying on a couch in the kitchen. Un- a• ble, 10 reuse her, he called a neigh- bor and the doctor, who pronouncmd N 1 the Bob Hope -, Jane Russell • John Wayne, .. O'Hara, Barry I and excitingoutdoor adventure story story e )'o ttg u oviticiee who entered .,e,a m with Fitzgerald, Victor McLaglen and about a hard•I:ding son of the West, a tante lion in tcw, Ward Bond, CARD OF THANKS \\'e w'sh to express our sincere thanks to the relatives, friends and neighbours for the many acts of k:nthess shown during our recent sad bereavement in the I,ss of a loving %vile and mother, 'Thinks also to D:•, Street, 12-1p, Joseph Miller and Fancily. CARD OF THANKS IVa wish to extend 'our s'nccre thanks and appreciation for the many messages of sympathy and- beautiful floral tributes received during o::r re- cent sad bereavement, -Mrs. Garth l)obhyn. Mrs, Cecil Dobbyu, and Ray J) hhyn. 12-1. CARD OF THANKS Jlrs. \\'illiatit Gorier wishes to sin- cerely thank everyone who rememher- ed her daring the Christmas season with cards, boxes, flowers and gift:. All these are gry;ltly appreciated, 12.Ip, IN MEMORIAM • CI-ii\\INEY-In 'gad and Io\'ing mem- ory of cry dear wife, June, who pas• sed ;:way soddenly on January 9th one year ago. Ever remembered by Gordon. IN MEMORIAM ,ESP1E - In loving memory of our dear mother 'who passed away three years ago, January 6th, 1950, and our dear dad, who passed away nine years ago, January 15, 19.44. :daily a lonely heartache Oftcn ;t silent tear, But always a beautiful memory Of the ones we loved so dear. -Ever remembered and sadly missed by Alarg., Betty and Sadie, -12-1p, FOR SALE •' Electric -heater, in good condition` Apply to Mrs. Frank Tyrentan, phone 110, Blyth. FOR SALE 1 Th•cr used wash'ug machine, ex- ceptionally good condition, Blyth El- ectric. Phone 5, Blyth. ( First showing at 7 11.01. each evening) "BRONCO BUSTER" "FEARLESS FAGAN" COMING (Jan. 19.21): "THE IN: COMING: _"PLYMOUTH ADVEN• VITATION' with Dorothy McGuire TURE" in Technicolor with Gene ii COMING: "HAREM GIRL" w_idr Matinees: Sat. -&Holidaysp,m. Tiernay, I• Joan Davis and Peggie Castle. ' ,t0CICKIC+ClenietKKttRitttlMtQtatetttl{K RtctRK tl +ctiKKigt4 RilKKot Ct6totIVIICICAt19i:2110tligith97MiIPaaiMi::31 W#'Nt#'NttttlNNt•PI INtINrt Start Planning Your Spring Decorating Now! The turn of the year makes everyone look to the future, We would 'appreciate being consulted about your future decorating requirements.. Our' service is always at your disposal. F. C. PREST Wallpaper, Paints, Brush and Spray Painting, Phone Myth 37-26, Londcsboro vY000~.v ~440.v. MORRITT & WRIGHT OLIVER SALES & SERVICE Telephone 4 and 93, Blyth. FARMERS ATTENTION the following tractors for Sale: • 1- 201 Tractor, Massey - Harris.. This tractor has an almost new motor, and is. in -.Y_try goad G---h--vi~:.:..._._. 1- 80 Oliver Tractor. This tractor has_four new tires and runs like new. 12-1. 1- 77 Oliver Tractor, her dead of a heart attack, — -_ FOR SALE • years Old+ just like new. She was formerly ,Maisie 1's''scll .n•I Bays tube skates, size 2, in good f Custom Farm Work was born at Walkerton,eMai daughter ofs 11'illiaut and 'Mary Ann lasell. She condition, Apply to phone'208, 13lyth, married Mr. Little 30 years ago. 12-1, A Specialty. Surviving besides her husband • to Telephone 4, Blyth. a br,:dher, 11ugh, '1'orrr.nto, and 'three sisters, Airs. Jessie Johnston, 'Toron- to; Alrs, E::a Johnston, Walkerton, m,, by Rev, Norntan A. Elk, of Sl. and M rs, Enema Schuler, Sonthantp- John's Anglican church, 13russels, Is Your Subscription Paid? :4444 tM••. • ♦4•-•-•••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-• ♦44-0-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-"•-•-•-•-•-+•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-• f+s+N•�+♦ ton. • '1'hc funeral was conducted from ' f her late residence, Wednesday at 2 p. 1 I.G.A. WEEKLY SPECIALS MI YOUR I. G. A. SHOPPING GUIDE FOR THE YEAR 1963. Talisman Strawberry Jam, 24 oz. 41c • Zest Sweet Mixed Pickles, 16 • oz. 29c I.G.A. Peanut Butter, 16 oz. , . , , 35c Carn't'n Milk (baby tins) 11 for $1.00 Franco -American Spaghetti 15 oz. 7 for $1.01) I.G.A. Blended Juice, 20 oz. tins, ' 8 for $1.00 Aylmer Fancy Applesauce, 15 oz., 8 for , , $1.00 "Miss Canada" Choice Strawber- ries, 15 oz.. . . . , . . . 4 for $1.00 Campbell's Tomato Soup, 10 oz., 8 for ,,,,,, $1,00 Campbell's Vegetable Soup, 10 oz., 8' for $1,00 Challenger Fancy Cohoe Salmon (halves) , , , , , . , , 4 for $1.00 White Swan Toilet Tissue, 8 for $1.00 I.G.A. Choice Golden Bantam Corn 20 oz. • 6 for $1.00 Green Giant Fancy Peas 15 oz. 5 for $1.00 Jello Powders 11 for $1.00 Monarch White Cake Mix 16 oz. 3for$1.00 MEANS Boneless Round Steak or Roast 73c Tender Juicy S'rloin Wing Steak or Roast 73c Lean Minced Beef 45c 1141 ,1414.,,, Meaty Side Spore Ribs . 33e Pork Liver ......... 23c Stowing Beef 45e Swift's Brookfield Sausage (skinless) Ib. pkg. 45c' Kleenex (chubby or regular) 5 for - $1,00 Old Colony Maple Syrup, 16 oz., 47e Libby's Pineapple Juice, 20 oz., 2 for - 30e Aylmer Choice Peaches (halves) - 15 oz: .,, „ 19c Libby's Chicken •Haddie, lb. lin , , 27c Habitant Pea Soup, 28 oz. , , , , , , 16c Lifebuoy Soap (regular) , , , , , , 09e, Garden Patch Whole Kernel Corn 14 oz. „ , 2 for 33c • Blue & Gold Fancy Wax Beans 15oz. . ,,, „2for 35c Libby's Fancy Sauer Kraut, 28 oz. . , , 19c McNair's White Beans (cello) , 16 oz. ' 2 fo'r 29c Marshmallows 16 oz. pkg. 37c • Club House Minute Tapioca, 6 112 ozs. 15c Lipton's Chicken Noodle Soup, 2 - 25c I.G.A. Deluxe Steep Coffee Bags (20) • 69c Hawes' Lemon Oil 12 oz. 29c , Hawes' Paste Wax 1 lb. 53c FRUITS .& VEGETABLES Bananas ,, .,,..,. 1 lb, 19c Grapes (red emperors) . , .2 lbs. 29c Celery Hearts . . ......... . . . 25c New Cabbage ... , , .. 2 lbs. 19c Londesboro,I.. AStre ' PHONES: Blyth 24-17, Clinton 803-12.--Sundercock & Tyndall, ProprietoAmmiiimminmenr II 24 CARD OF THANKS The family of the late Garth 1)olsen Dobbyn %visit to express their very heantfelt thankfulness to their many friends for the comforting words of sympathy shown then: in their sad be- reavement, and loss of their loved one, alsd for the beautiful floral arrange- ' ment front the old neighbors and friends in lllyth, •1Vords cannot ex- press our rw• ttitutle for all which has been shown us, which helps so couch to lighten the burden of our loss, The , Dobbyn Family. AUBURN MRS. THOMAS DOYLE The funeral of Airs, Thomas Doyle watt held from the J, K. Arthur fun- eral home, Auburn, on 'Thursday with Rev, C, C. Washington of Knox Uni• - •ted Church conducting the services. - The pallbearers were Edgar Lawson, Charles Asqui:h, R. D. Munro, Charles Scott, Robert J. Phillips, and Russell King. Mrs, Doyle, who was in her 93rd year, died Afonday evening, in Winghant .hospital, where she had been a patient for three months, She was formerly Annie King, daughter of the Int e Mr. and Mrs, William King, • Dorn near Peterborough, site carte with her parents when a young girl to the first concession of East Wawa- . nosh township, Sixty-one years. ago - he married Thomas Doyle. For some time they . farmed on the Auburn-- 131yth boundary, and Tater near Aub- urn, retiring to Auburn, wltcre \fr, Doyle died 26 years ago. Mrs, Doyle lived alone until four years ago when she went to live with her daughter, Mts. Harry Anderson, Lucknow, She _ .was a member •of Auburn United Church and the W,ALS, She is sur-' vivcd by one daughter,. Mrs, - 1-Iarry (Alarjorie) Anderson, Lucknow; one granddaughter; and a sister, 'fiss Aiargare( King, Auburn, A dmtg'hter, Mrs, William (Zelda) Mairs,' died out - 1)eccuthcr 31, 1950. She was also pre- deceased by eight brothers; Burial was.in Balls cemetery, TIMKEN SILENT AUTOMATIC OIL BURNERS SALES & SERVICE HISELER & SON WINGHAM Telephone 426, 33-11. SEWAGE DISPOSAL 1 ant now equipped to punto out your septic tank. Also do all other kinds of pumping, such as flooded cel lars, etc, Irvin Coxon, Milverton, phone 75r4, 21-34. FOR RENT Floor polisher, $1,00 per day; Vacuum cleaner, $1,00 per day; Cement mixer, Wheel barrow, $3.00 per day; Cattle clippers, IOc tier head, beef clip; 20e per head, dairy clip. Sparling's Iiard- ware, phone 24, 131yth. 01.1. WANTED Alan for steady travel antoug Coo - smilers in 1111r;;1 County, Perman- ent connection with large manufac- turer. Only reliable hustler consider- ed, Write Rawlcigh's Dept. A-136- 131, Montreal, ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION For Artificial service from this far. nor owned, licenced; non - profit, growing, co-operative Association, from top quality bulls of all breeds, the rates are: $J5.00 for a life mem- bership, $5.00 per cow for members, and $6.00 per cow for non-members, Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association, R,R. No. 1, Waterloo, Ontario, rot Service Contact: Charles J. Brandon, Clinton, phone 633r5. - 42-58 .NOT! -•••••-..........., 'i the party who took the. wrou ._ - tcp coat at the Legion Dance in B,yth Corn on New Year's 'live, kindly; bring 581n0 Ridgetown, .$4211 to •'f'hc Standard Office,. Illyth, for 1Vrite or phone "'111ii `, Branum, exchange. 12 -Ip. Bclgrave, ono, phone 622w2, \\n,,;,... 10-3p, J+FNfNNtttrtttNN w\oravttttt. A. 1. DOLE R.O. OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Goderich. Ontario • Telephoni '3 Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted, With 25 Years Experience tttNtNNttttt�rtl Reid's POOL ROOM. --'-r--- Smokers' Sundries Tobaccos. Cigarettes, Pop - Other Sundries. ."ttttrttrrtrMNtNNttNNtttt tot -- TONE CLEANERS -- 1\lount Forest. Call Monday & Thursday --at Needlecraf t Shoppc. NttNttt INNItt+ NOTICE . Royal Scarlet Lodge will meet id llclgrave on • WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14th Election of Officers. Bring lunch. l2-lp. ALBERT"SELLERS,. W.C. FOR SALE 'Crib, trucked up fro:n per ton delivered. BAILIFF'S SALE Otic 1937 Nash Sedan w:I1 be offered for sale by Public Auction at the White Rose Service Station, Blyth, at 2 p.m. on Saturday, January 17th, 1953. TERMS CASA, \V. H. Morritt, Auctioneer. Bernard Hall, Bailiff. 12-1, FOR SALE Used men's C. C. Al', automobile skates, size 9. Apply to Mrs, C. J. Scott, '1'Ie Manse, phone 43, Blyth. 12.1p. FOR SALE Ladies' white skates, size 6, Apply to Mrs. L. Tasker, phone 7, Blyth, 12-1p. Lionel H. Cuthbertson, i Representative _ METROPOLITAN{ LIFE INSURANZE COMPANY Office 51 Albert Street, Stratford. On( Residence, 40 Victoria Street, Goderich, Ont. ' Telephones: Office 922, Residence 1147, • FARM FOR SALE I00 -acre farm in East \Vawancslt: Township, good clay loans, 10 acres . bush 65 acres plowed, balance _in hay and ' pasture; ample water supply; Good • farm buildings, hydro installed; half utile from school. Priced right for quick sale. Apply for information at The Standard Office, 11-2p. LOGS WANTED We are paying highest cash prices for Togs and standing timber, Jas. 'I'. Craig & Son, Auburn, phone Blyth -13r24. 12-2p, FOR SALE 2 set of sleighs, choice of bench or sloop, flat rack on sloop sleiglis. Ap- ply, Clare Vincent, phone 24.10, Blyth. 12-1p, FOR SALE Oak kitchen cabinet; 45 gal. oil drum.- Apply phone 190, 131y1h, 12.1p, WANTED Fresh ,lack Rabbits, quantity need- ed, Bring to Norman Gowing's, Blyth, Ont, . 13.1p, TENDERS FOR WOOD TENI)ERS Will be received by the undersigned, until \\'cdnesday, J1111n; ary 21st at 8:00 p.m. for a supply of beech and maple body wood, fcurtecn inches long, to be delivered in the in. (Heated amounts at . tie following schools, before June 1st, 1953: Secticy, No. 9 East \\'awanosh : 22 cords, ' Section No. 10 East \Vawanosh : 15 cords. Union No, 7 . East Wawa«oslt : 15 cords. Section No, 13 East \Vawanoslt: 12 cords, Union No. 3 East \Vawanosh ( 12 cortls. Union No. 17 East \Vawanosh : 18 cords. Union No. 6 East \Vawancsh: 15 cords, Union No, 16 East \Vawanosh : 16 cords. 'fenders may be made fo more th.tu one school; lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. CLARENCE H. WADE, Ilelgrave, Ont., Secy,Treas., Township School Area of East 12-2. Wawanosh, OPTOMETRIST JOHN E. LONGSTAFF ' Optometrist. �) Eyes examined. 791 Glasses fittedPhone � MAIN ST. - SEAFORTH 1 Hours: 9 - 6 Wed, 9-12:30; Sat, 9 a.m, to 9 p.m. Thursday Evenings, By Appointment, G. ALAN WILLIAMS, j OPTOMETRIST. PATRICK ST. - WINGHAM, ONTT EVENINGS BY APPOI,NTAMENT. Phone: Office 770; Res, 5. Professional Eye Examination. I Optical Services. 1 THE McK.LLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE - SEAFORTH, ONT,. Ofpzers: - President, ,J. L, Malone, Scaforth; Vice -President, J. I-1, McE\ving, Blyth; Manager and Secretary -Treasurer, M. A, Reid, Seaford'. Directors t S, H. Whitmore, Seaford': Chris. Leouhardt, Bornholm; E. J. Trewar- tha, Clinton; Robert Archibald, Sea - forth ; John 1-L McEwing, Blyth; Frank McGregor, Clinton; Wln, S. Alexander, Walton; J. L. Malone, Scaforth; Harvey Fuller. Goderich, Agents' J. E. Pepper, Brucefield; R, F. McKerchcr, Dublin; J. F. Prtieter, 13rodltagcn; \Vm. Leiper, jr., Londes- boro; 5, Baker, 8,ns+cls. ANNE I4IPST vouit Fand4 anAnheigt--- "Dear Anne llirst: 1 ala broken- hearted. For over a year I've gone with a boy who calls me every other night. Ile comes over once a weer, he's with me on weekends, and buys me beau- tiful gifts, But he never has said he loves me! "He has ask- ed me to go steady; if I date anyone else he has a fit, a n d says he can't trust me, He will hurt my feelings if he can, and when I object he says he's just teasing, "Other girls have a ring, or a pin, or something to show they are going steady, but though he owns a class ring, I have nothing, The girls all wonder why, Also, he claims he would see me more often, but doesn't want me to fail in my studies. (I'm in my senior high school class). I love him very much , .. Does he love me, or what? I am so worried! Dore" YOUNG DICTATOR • So Icng as you submit to this • boy's domination, you are go- • ing to be miserable. When • wIll you girls learn it is you • who should make the rules? $ This conceited young man ▪ tells you when he will see you, • and expects you to be waiting, • breathless, • for that magic me- * merit. He demands that you • desert all other boy friends and • spend lonely evenings at home ' UNLESS he condescends to • come over—And he adds the • usual insult of claiming it is • for your own good! • What is he giving you in re - 114.1 Look! 7 Potholders a turn for the, doormat role? • Not:.Gye1kttlles;.satisfaction of " hetgr41.1i t, spy he loves you! • No)r�;e k'-Atepvcaring of his • ring,; W chi=you long to show • oft fo,yotir•questioning friends! • —And do you' know he is not ' dating other girls too? • All he wants is for you to • be HIS GIRL, with no assur- e ance that ho will not change • his mind overnight and leave * you .flat. ▪ To be sure, you love him, * That is why you allow him to * run your life. All you want is " to know that HE belongs to * you, as you undoubtedly belong • to him, I do not believe you * can be sure of that so long as * you crawl to his orders and • submit to his overwhelming * egotism. * You will have to assert your- * self.. Date any nice boy you • like whether you enjoy your- * self or not—if only to show him ° you are popular with other * men, are an individual in your • own right and will do what '' pleases you most. He needs to * be taught that he cannot coin- " ntand a nice girl es though • shc'belonged to him, unless he o gives, you the same loyalty he demands. * No matter how much you " love, you could never be mar - 1 ried to him as he is today. He a must learn that he has to de- * serve your love if he would ' keep it. ' You will not relish this * counsel, but if you hope to " win hint for your own, this is ° the only way you may suc- '' teed. 1f you fail, you can. be • sure he isn't worth having. If a girl spoils a lad, how can she ever win his respect—and that she must do if he is to be a worthy husband ... When you are troubled, tell Anne Hirst about It; she knows most of your, problems and can guide you. White her at Box 1, 123 Eight- eenth St., New Toronto, Ont. Painting A Wall? Start At Bottom When you wash or paint a wall, do you mount a stepladder and start at the top? If so, you'd Sunny Thought for Winter Days—Joyce Johnson didn't do anything special—didn't win a trophy, isn't "Miss Something•or-Other." She's justa pretty girl, relaxing in the sun at a Las Vegas resort hotel, That seemed reason enough for the photographer io take a picture with which to cheer the folks who are chattering through another rough northern winter. �J• L, .140 RONICLES NGERFARM if this column seems a little disconnected the reason is not far to seek; Yesterday we were a family of seven and here is what happened. About 7,30 a.m. Bob took our two visitors to the train as they were spending the day in Toronto—that, of course, was after a mad scramble for early morning breakfast and going away preparations. Then Bob came • back, finished his own last minute packing, which consisted of piling all his possessions into his car, and then he was ready for a long trip North. While this was going on Daughter and Arthur came down h,u n t i n g breakfast and Partner came in from the barn where he had been wrestling with a fresh cow with a hard quartet', Ahnost im- mediately afterwards Bob set off. better mend your—• _ on his trip and it is quite nos- � - " si'61e- ive -may fief s'e`e hili again • A ti�>;rtl''he jj,S; General —ices Administration coin- cides with advice from experts enced wall painter's. A wise house- wife will start at the bottom ! This is not so unreasonable as it sounds, When you wash a wall from the bottom up, you just. easily and neatly clean up the muss as you go along, never 'add- ing muddy 'trickles to soiled sur- faces and never accumulating more dirt in streaks, If your lower surfaces are entirely clean' as you operate on upper wall areas, dripping sponges will do less damage and any small trickles can be wiped off at once, with no remaining stains, Similarly when you paint on an upward spiral, there is little danger that too much thinning will occur at the top in contrast with heavy paint surfaces due to accumulation of downward drip- ping. Don't be a doubting Thomas I Try the improved method ! - fWk& Pattern-ful of gilts! The gayest, prettiest, most , unusual potholders you ever saw. Fun to make l Easy l Use scraps of fabric, rickrack, binding and em- broidery thread. Pattern 524; transfer motifs for r --yes, 7 fun -to -make potholders, Including mitts, Perfect gifts. • Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In coins (stamps cannot be ac- cepted) for this pattern to Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and AD- DRESS. Such a colorful roundup of handiwork ideas l Send twenty- five cents now • for our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalog. Choose your patterns from our gaily illustrated toys, dolls, house- . hold and personal accessories. A, pattern for a handbag is printed right In the book. MILLIONS OF LIVES SAVED Dr. Edward l', Knipling, a leading specialist in the use of insecticides, estimated this week that the use of DDT had saved 5,000,000 lives and prevented more than 100,000,000 illnesses since 1942. The benefit of con- trolling diseases, he reported to the American Association of Economic Entomologists, must be balanced against the calculated risk of using any insecticide. Not one serious illness or death had been caused in people exposed to DDT during Insert -control ef- forts, he said, Royal Rehearsal—Getting ready for the big day, British footguards and Household Cavalry go through the motions of Queen Eliza- beth's post -coronation return parade to Buckingham Palace after being crowned, Seen above, turning into the Palace, is the State landau in which Elizabeth II will ride. for six months, The rest of the day was comparativc:y quiet -- Partner, Daughter, Arthur and myself just talking—family talk, over this thing and that, After supper Dee and Art set out for Toronto and then the whole house was very, very quiet. I sat down with my thoughts and a needle and thread to mend a pair of pyjamas that Partner had fallen through. I wondered as I worked how soon Partner would be up from the barn and whether our friends would be late getting buck from Toronto. And then the telephone rang, A friend that I thought was a hundred miles. away asked if I would like a couple of tramps for the night 1 "But why .. , where are you?" I asked in surprise, My friend laughed --"Well, as a matter of fact we have taken a house down here—only just at present we are here and the furniture isn't." Of course 1 said to come right along so inside 6t fifteen minutes Lillian and her daughter were on our doorstep, leaving the man of the house to wait for the furniture and look after things. Of course we had to do a bit of hustling •.. , beds to make , ; . and the furnace given an extra stoking against the cold north winds. A nice hot cup of tea com- pleted our w c 1 c o m e. In the middle of things Partner came in from the barn, our other friends returned from Toronto, all of then wondering at the sudden flurry of activity and who the newest arrivals might be. Now it is the' morning after and we are still busy• getting ,ourselves sorted out -and of course attending to the baker, the dairy man, the egg - num and the vet—all of whom seemed to arrive one after an- other. It is really a great life if you don't weaken --and if your supply of sheets doesn't give out; and 1f you can keep awake long enough to be properly polite, The trouble is what stn I going to do LOGY, LISTLESS OUT OF LOVE WITH LIFE? Then wake up your liver bile ... jump out of bed rarin' to fo Lire not worth Iivinr? It may be the Ilverl Itsa fertl If your liver bile le not flouring freely your food may not digest .. , Ree bloats up your stomach .: , you feel con• stip*ted and all the fun and /purkic go out of life. That's when you need mild, gentle Carters Little Liver Pills. You gee Carters help stimulate your liver bile till once again ft Is pouring out et a rata of up to two pinta a day Into your digestive tract. Tide ehnuld 9: you right up, make you feel that happy days are here again, So don't stay gunk get Carton Little Liver Pala. Always have trues on hand. Only SSc from any druggist. after everyone is gone? Getting back to cooking for two after having been used to five — or seven—isn't going to be so easy. One new arrival 1 haven't men- tioned—and it has given us more fun than a picnic, This new arrival is in the form of a little clockwork bear. Wind it up and it ambles slowly across the floor, its head keeping pace ' with its heavy foot movements. Honey, Tip and Mitchie-White think it is a wonderful plaything, but their reactions are very different. Mitchie evidently thought ,it was some sort of kitten and, was quite ready to play with it. But when its little motor ran down and it showed no more sign of move- ment Mitchie lost interest al- though he did try licking it back to life. Tippy wanted to grab it and shake it like a ground -hog and we had to rescue the poor little bear, It was Honey that caused the greatest fun. She whimpered at the noise of the motor. Then, greatly daring, she pawed the little bear with her foot and rolled it over.. The .legs still kens, moving' and Honey sat - Latik m surprise. Partner said, "Fetch it here 1" Honey waggled her stump , of a tail in delight, nosed the bear this way and that, • finally found that its tail was easier to grab than any part of its mechanical body, so she picked up the bear by its tail and bore it in triumph to Partner. Later on, tired of playing, Honey sat down beside the bear on the rug. Presently Mitchie-White cane in; and Honey growled as loudly and fiercely as if she were guarding a nice, fresh juicy bone. Maybe, come Tuesday, I shall be glad to have Honey and the bear to amuse me, as after that day Partner and I will be all alone, that being the time when our friends wll leave us, as they are crossing the border over to the United , States. On the other hand I may not have time 'for amusements — you know how sewing and mending has a way of piling up when one has company. around. What with Christmas and everything I have got so that I look the other Way whenever I pass my mending basket. • Took The Chorus Girls Out Of Tights ---Put Them Into Skirts Instead Just a hundred years ago, ac- ' did not run fur two years .!ie eo dinr to the records,.in (Ictnuer thought he had staged a flop. of 1852, was born the showman The manager, unlike some other who had a bigger impact Reps, The theatrical magnates, had little the British stage than nnybc4 -.::;Idea of the value of money He else. Genius is not ton big -;;wanted the very best, no hatter word for him. ::'tivhat it cost, Naturally, hie wan Ile was not a dramatist; be was not an actor; but he had 'a wonderful flair for knowing what audiences wanted, even if they did not know themselves) As an, instance of his craving for perfection, take his action when one of his shows had reach- ed dress -rehearsal stage and he suddenly took a dislike to the "set" for the second act, He ordered the whole lot to be scrapped, and a new set to be built and painted. The scenery was not finished until time calve for the curtain to rise on the play, there was a small delay, • resented by the gallery, but George Edwardes had had his autocratic way, Walked I,i,:c t);:::,. He brought glamour and a kick to the/ chorus, and created the famous "Gaitey Girl," Up to then, the chorus of a musical show had been the butt of every cheap wit; the "back row of the chorus" had been a synonym for • knock-kneed inefficiency, Ed- wardes selected his chorus girls with the greatest care. Beautiful "creations" took the place of the old -tyle cotton tights, and Ed- wardes was astute enough to know • that long skirts over frothy, frilly petticoats had in- finitely more allure than these. The girls walked like queens; their poise was wonderful, Ed- wardes saw to that, Before they were allowed to step upon :the stage of the Gaiety or Daly's they were taught deportment, dancing and singing — every- thing, in fact, to make them more glamorous. illusical Corneas canny, Edwardes is generally belies, - cd to be the inventor of what we know as mtisical comedy, but that is quite wrong. The idea sprouted in the fertile brain of Frank Osmond Carr. Carr was among the first of the current composers of light music, and already . had "Morocco Bound" and • "His Excellency" to him tuneful credit. (He was the com- poser whom D'Oyly Carte pick- ed to collaborate with Sir W. 8. Gilbert when that temperamen- tal author had his notorious quar- rel with Sullivan.) Carr saw that the old-fashioned burlesque or operetta was doom- ed; why not have a musical piece in which everybody wore mod- ern clothes? Edwardes would have none of it. Blot Frank Carr believed in his idea, and kept Edwardes until the manager con- sented to give the mad thing a trial. "In Town" was produced at the Prince of Wales over which Edwardes then had control, and the public "ate it up"I Musical Comedy was born. George. Edwardes ran Daly's as well as the Gaiety, and was so successful that he only put on eleven shows in fiften years, People said that if a Daly's piece Aeumatic PAIN Good news for those who long for relief from rheumatic pain, but feel hopeless) Thousands get speedy relief from rheu- luattc and arthritic suffering by using T -R -C's, Don't let dull, wearisome aches, and sharp stabbing pains handicap you any longer. Try Temoleton's T -R -C'. today. Only 65c,;1.35 at druggists. T-044 sometimes hard up. One of those times was just before he pro- duced "The Merry Widow" at Daly's, All In the theatre knew that things were desperate and feared for the beloved "Guv'nor." But the show ran for no fewer than 778 performances! Franz Lehar, the composer, it first objected to Joe Coyne being engaged, and was told that the comedian was " a very funny man." "I have not written funny music," scowled the great musi•• elan. Money Didn't Mutter Part of Edwardes' disregard for money was shown in his ec- centric generosity, Seeing u chorus girl looking rather lugu- brious one day, and being told that she felt far from bright, he said: "What you want, my dear, is a breath of fresh air. There'll half an hour before you are want- ed—so jump into a hansom and drive up and down the Embanks nient." And he promptly gave her two pounds for the fare! He arranged with the proprie- tor of the famous Romano's rem• taurant that his girls should dine there under a special tariff. He paid for their hair -do's at the best places in the West -end, in fact did all he could to exploit the loveliness of the Gaiety chorus. The result was• that it gained a reputation for glamour that no chorus had had before— or since. "Any man can find v.'ork it he'll only use his brains," said the efficiency expert, "provided, of course, he is ready to adapt himself to circumstances, like a piano -tuner I once met on the Canadian prairie," "But even if he was adabtable," protested o n e listener, "ha couldn't make piano -tuning pay with pianos so few and far .be- tween." "Admitted," replied the ex- pert, "but he made quite a decent living tightening up barbed-wire fences." Eczema Skin Troubles Give your skin a real lone to get well. Cr to any good drugstore and get an ot�pnal bond. of MOONE'S MERALD 011.—it lute nag days because it is highly concentrated. The Itching oI Ecsema—Salt Rheum—Ruble —cracked toes and feet and many other skin troubles — is quickly stopped. Pimples — akin eruptions dry up and scale off in* very few t Moone'a Emerald Oil is a clean, peneuatIng Antiseptic Oil that dries right iu— staldea, You mast be satisfied or money beck.. Send for FREE RING SIZE CARD and name of your neared Rosepoint dealer.. , . There aro of course no obligatlone on your port. Write to OSEPOINT V 4 Mutual St. Toronto S ISSUE 2 — 11)53 Goctltt (I 49 -1 34 TIDE HOUSE OF SEAGRAM MEN WHO THiNK OF TOMORROW PRACTISE MODERATION TODAY iNECaNPrf SPORTS COLUMN $lficeic ercgudait • 1 was traveling not long ago with a National I-fockey League team, and the boys, an their way back home after a hard game, were having breakfast in the diner. One player had ordered a full double cut of ham, which is quite a lot of ham, a few poached eggs, and coffee, this being preceded by orange juice al d cereal, and the other boys were twitting him on what they seethed to think was a prodigious appetite They should have seen the late i1arry Mummery tuck in the provender. That was something to talk about, Marry was a big fellow, weighing about 265 pounds when in condition, a great chunk of loan, who played fur the Quebec Bulldogs when they were Stanley Cup winners, later with Canadiens and Il am i ton, When he reported to Canadicns his first season with that club he brought along his meal labs from Ilic diner, en route. The club in those days paid for such meals, Ile handed the bulky packet over to the late George Kennedy, who then owned the Montreal club, for inspection. George went through the list carefully, tren cocked a rather quizzical eye at Mummery and enquired; "Do you keep cats?" "Why no," said the surprised Mummery, "I don't own a cat." "Then" thundered Kennedy "who drank all this cream?" "Why, I did" answered Mummery. "I always drink a pint of cream after each mea'. It's an antidote for Ulcers. Besides, I like cream." I was walking from the old \Ves1inoun1 rink with M u Ineer after a game one night. "Would you like a steak?" he asked, "11 would be only a light snack for two" he added apologetically, "for the steak weighs only five pounds," i asked him where he could get such a steak, "At my boarding, house" said harry, "1 boy it in the afternoon, After the game, I take it to the basement, wash off the coal shovel, cook the steak in the furnace and wash it clown with a pint of cream," Not wishing t'o deprive a hard-working and hungry athlete of his victuals, 1 declined the invitation. Not long ago, Frank Boucher of Rangers told rete that on a trip west, they had met Harry Mummery at a railroad station, He was a railway engineer, "Come upto the locomotive" the invited Boucher, "and I'II cook you the finest steak you ever ate over the coals, on a shovel. ft's a 5 -pounder, but 1 have two of them, so we can both eat," Harry Mummery was the one-man power play in his day. He could skate with more speed than you expected of such a giant. When he got the puck, he would wheel off down the ice, brushing aside all checkers with his great bulk. When he got about 30 feet out, he would throw a cannonading shot at the goaler. If it went in the net, well and good, But he kept right on going goalwarde in his own powerful fashion, and if the puck bounced out, Mummery would be right on it, and slam another block - busting shot. He scored quite a number of goals that way. And also he knocked many a set of goal -nets right out of their founda• tions In the process, as he crashed through Your comments and suggestions for this column will be welcomed by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Calvert House, 431 Yonge St., Toronto. Catvttt DISTILLERS LIMITED AMHERSTSURO, ONTARIO Historic Clothes Now On View Great -great -grandma's• ankle - length panties and a waspy Bikini, Granpa's coarse woollen combs anda modern strapless bra— these are to be among the ex- hibits at London's newest mu- seum, a Museum of Costume to be opened in London in time for the Coronation. Nearly twenty-five years ago, ItIre. Doris Langley Moore was given an 1877 ball gown for a game of charades and found it se charming that she became a specialist on historical costume, Today she has over 4,000 gar- inents, nucleus of the new mu - num. They include austere white linen nighties worn by Queen Victoria, white embroi- dered waistcoats once worn by the menfolk, and rare embroi- dered stockings from the naugh- ty ninties, Many of the dresses have been 1llscovered in dusty attics and trunks. Two perfectly preserved dresses over 160 years old•were found in the cupboard of a house in South London, the one house in the entire block to escape bombing, Neatly packed, another ex- quisite eighteenth -century gown was recovered from an old deed - box. An eighteenth -century set of corsets, and a man's_ suit in violet velvet are other show items, A set of Coronation robes Is at present on show In America, earning dollars to help pay for museum equipment, Some dress- es are too fragile to travel. When an early nineteenth-century dress was lent to the Brighton Regency Festival, it fell to pieces after being exposed to sea air. Have, you any interesting old clothes to spare? The museum wants long-trousered sailor suits that little boys used to wear In the early 1020s,,and the "straight up and down" frocks of their sisters, Polio -Beating Pair on Poster—Because Pat and Pamela O'Neil have made a complete recovery from crippling attacks of Infantile Paralysis, the sisters, aged six and five were chosen to illustrate the need for funds on the March of Dimes Campaign poster. - Daughters of Mr, and Ars. Clarence O'Neill, the girls were stricken In 1948 and received help and treatment through the March of Dimes fund; Bathing Beauties and Bath Tubs—Canoeing off Miami Beach Is clean sport for bathing beauties Jean and Jo as they take to sea in their Tight -weight bath -tubs. Originally designed for house trailers, the tubs, made of fiber glass and Plaskon, weigh 20 lbs. each, "Tub -riding is fun(" the girls agree. When Fourteen Judges Couldn't Agree The trial of William Joyce (Lord Haw -Haw) aroused great public interest because of what everyone in England knew about him, But it was not the notor- iety of the man, or the details of his offences, or the punishment awarded to traitors, that made the case memorable in legal his- tory, It was the . peculiar combin- ation of circumstances affecting his status, which had never oc- curred in exactly the same way before, and ori which his judges had to decide before he could be condemned. Rex versus Joyce will be a leading text -book case long after public memory of Lord Haw-haw has faded. If you want an example of how our law really works, go to the other extreme, and consider the case of a man named Ashwell, There was no drama there, un- less the triviality of the whole affair can be thought of as turn- ing the law into farce, yet the dispute was a very fine one, and the result a very close thing, And it affects the property and freedom of many people, It happened, in 1885, when Ash- well, being hard up, applied to a friend to spare him a shilling. Gold was currency in those days, and there was little difference in size and feel between a sovereign and 'a shilling, Anyway, the friend, agreeing , to , the. request, made a mistake and handed over the gold coin. Ashwell himself did not • find out what happened until later, when he came to look at the gift In a good light, and then, instead of going back honestly and de- claring. the error, applied the whole amount to his own needs. As . a result, in due course he found himself arraigned before a jury on a charge of stealing nineteen shillings, and after legal directions from the judge, the jury convicted him, There was no Court of Crim- inal Appeal in those days, but where tricky points of law were in doubt, it was possible to have a trial reviewed, In this case no less than fourteen judges sat, for thought the facts were not in dispute at all, it was realized that the'points of law were tricky indeed, Theft or Fraud? The definition of larceny was the same then as it is now, .A person steals, who without the consent of the owner, fraudulent- ly end without n claim of right made in good faith, takes and carries away anything capable of being stolen, with intent at the time of such taking permanently to depi'ive the owner thereof. Tiow, argued appellant's coun- sel, can that definition fit the con- duct of Ashwell? Admit, if you like, that the owner of the sov- ereign gave no consent to its be- ing taken, admit . that Ashwell acted fraudulently and . without claim of right, but lite case must till break down over his intent t the time of taking. For at that moment he, too, hought the sovereign was a hllling, and was perfectly in- ocent, ' No amount of fraud, ccurr'ing later, could alter his tate of mind at the time which 1e law • said was the material ne. ' Victory for Sense Oh, said the Crown lawyers, s a 8 n 0 tl 0 but here we must understand the time of taking to be not the time of the physical handing over of the coin, but the moment when he discovered the mistake and decided to keep the whole twen- ty shillings for himself. We can- not tell exactly when that mo- ment was, but we can deduce with absolute certainty that It must have existed. And it was then that Ashwell broke the law and became guilty of larceny. At this point another consider- ation came in. It is a broad prin- ciple of penal law that judges must not read into any enact- ment, to the disadvantage of ac- cused, more than the words that are actually there. The Common Law can be con- strued to fit the different circum- stances of different cases, but statutes are therein black and white, and must be taken to mean actually what they say, The Larceny Act said there %must be a guilty intent "at the time of taking," and the time of taking, in the ordinary meaning of words, was the time when the money passed from one hand to another. So the argument went back and forth, and in the end the judges rose equally divided, sev- en on one side and seven on the other, Unluckily for Ashwell, it needed a majority to reverse the affirmative act of conviction, so he remained guilty, Taken all round, it was a victory for common sense, but it was only achieved by making the law look slightly ridiculous. Four- teen of the queen's judges had listened for hours to a case in- volving a few shillings, and fin- ally had not been able to agree amongst themselves, And yet I don't know. Each of the fourteen judges was acting according to his oath and his conscience. It would have been alI the same if ten thousand pounds had • been taken, instead of less than one, And as for making the law look ridiculous, no doubt the Bench were conscious of that, too, If so, there is something rather magnificent about their scorn for appearances. Only a system f untied can afford to feel absorb, SALLY'S SALLIES I iTZ Dog] "E -R -O -T -S G -U -R -D? Why, I'm in the wrong store!" BRONCHIAL COUGH Are you kept awake by a nerve-racking bronchlal cough? Is phlegnt so tightly packed in your bronchial tubes, no amount of coughing seems able to dislodge 1t? Templeton's RAZ-MAII capsules are especially made to loosen phlegm, so It comes away easily and you are relieved of coughing and wheezing. Get RAx•MAu for quick teller. 65c, 41,35 at druggists. 146 ..Classified Advertising.. eAa CUICMII TOUR key to greater chick value 1s 'hick' with )1,0.P. breeding back of them, )(,member to reduce coati, Worn, Profits. ■ e other shlcki have proved more effeo• tire than A,O.P. DIM chicks, Twaddle elves you a wide range of breeds and grades, We have 8.0,1', sired sbleks for We mulmum In no productlop, dual purpose breeds for eggs and meat, special broiler chloks. We have .Licks low In price, sired by approved males. Chick' with lots of 11.0,1'. breeding back of them at alightly higher prices. Also turkey poulls, laying and ready to lay Pullets, Catalogue, Send tor early order booking discount, TW1:DDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. 1PERUUB Ontario ORDER those Purina embryo -ted •chicks from Gilmore's. Fully r u a r a n t e e d, quality chicks from a real breeding pro- gramme, Attractive early pullet prices, Write for prices and catalogue "Which Came First," Gilmore'. Poultry Breeding Farm, Barrie, Ontario. 281c Sussex x lied Pullets 1810 Pure Sueeex and Sussex z New Nampa for Jnn. 16th, delivery: 19o. Inquire about other dates and breed,. Alio HEAVY COX. LAKEVIEW HATCHERY LTD., EXETER REGARDLESS of breed er cross, Top Notch Chicks are hatched of proven breeders on both aide.. We have been lnsieting that the smartest single invent- ment any poultryman can make is in chicks of the highest quality hatched from both alder of the mating. Our low prlcee, and high quality of our Canadian approv- ed chicks and turkeys' will please you. Non -sexed chick., as low as 312.9s per hundred, Turkey. a. low an 171c. Send for complete price list. TOP NOTCH CHICK SALES GUELPH ONT. OVEIN° AND ELEANINO S AVE you anything needs dyeing or clean Ing? Writs to a for Information. Wi ere glad to gnawer your questions, Dee 'artment H. Parker's Dye Wnrke Ltmlted. 'el Tonle Ft. Toronto, FIV HALE CRESS WART REMOVER — Leaves so genre, Tour Druoglat sell. CRESS, - LARGE stock of parte end acceeeorlea for all care and truck.. ,If It's hard to get we can get It for roil. Prompt service, Guaranteed savings. Canada Auto Stores, 361 SL Paul Street, St. Catharines, Ontario, Mutual 6.6690, NYLON 806IEer for women. Latest shades, all slzes, Perfect Gift, or resale. Selected seconds', 36.00 dozen, Louie Ru- binstein, 1061 Home Htreet, New Tnrk City 69, New Torii, HOW CAN 1? Q. How, can 1 take proper care of the carpet sweeper? - A. Be sure, when cleaning the carpet sweeper, to cut all the lint and hair from the brushes. After the b o x es have been emptied, wipe them out with a cloth dipped,- in kerosene, and also rub:so>Rit;.cif the oil over the bristles -oE ,ttfiilbrushes; this will prevent ,d1.1,1 (':'from rising while sweeping: ' Q. How can I remove all the sand from spinach? A. When it Is the intention to cook spinach immediately, wash it several times in hot water in- stead of cold. The hot water is more effective in removing the sand end dirt. • Q. How can I clean a pen point? A. Keep a small bottle' of am- monia at hand. Dipping the pen into this will make It as bright And clean as new. Q. How can 1 freshen leather furniture and keep It from•crack- Ing? A. Put into a bottle one cup of vinegar and two cups of boiled linseed oil. Cork securely and shake until cream y, Apply sparingly and rub into the leather with a soft rag or flannel, and polish with soft duster, Never use gasoline to clean leather as it will crack it. Q. How can 1 makeuse of spools? A. Splendid holders for towels, aprons, and such things, can be made by screwing several large spools on the back of the cellar door, This type of holder elimin- ates any possibility of rust, Q. How can I avoid knotting the end of the darning cotton when mending stockings? A, A knot is unnecessary if the end of the darning cotton is moistened to prevent its slipping through. Avoid making knots in the thread, as they are hard on the feet, Q. How can 1 mend broken marble? A, Make a very stili paste by mixing Portland cement with water, CIean the edges of the marble thoroughly, then put the cement on both edges, press to- gether very • tightly and tie to- gether until the cement 'has set. Itch...ltch...ltch 1 Was Nearly Crazy' Until I dlecovered Dr. 17, D. Dennis' amazing- ly fast relief --D. D. D. Preecrlption World Popular, rpeace and' comfort from) cruel itching caused by eczema, pimples, rashes, athlete's fool and other Itch troubles. Trial bottle, :Inc. nreaeclees, First use soolhce, checks raw red Itch or money. back, Ask druggist for D. D D. Preecrlptlon (ordinary or extra strength I. MEDICAL GOOD RESULTS — Every sufferer bars Rlteuntatle Pains sir Neuritis should fry Dixon's Remedy, MUNRO'S DRUG STORE RTS Rigln Ottawa $1.95 Express Prepaid TLPEW0I1118, pinworms, cause serious ralseaseal could be your trouble) (hour sande helped, Free literature doecrlbia oondRton and remedy, Write Mulvaney'■ Remedies Limited, Dept WV.8,, Toronto, Ontario, "PEP UP." Try C.C, b B. Tonto Tablet, for low vitality and general debility. M Drugrlsti one dollar or FEASEL AGEN- CY. 11131 • 92 Avenue, EDMONTON, ALBERTA. UL'PURTUNI'I'IEta 1'IIII MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER 1U11e CANADA'S I.EADIN( $t'Jlnnl. Oren, Opportunity t.enrn Halydresslna Pleasant dignified profession. good wager. rbouaands of successful Marvel greduele. America's Greatest tiyetem illustrated ColoIngue Fre. Write or Call U Ali VEL HAIRDRESSING sit o'I 968 Rlonr St. w Toronto Rranehee. 44 King St., Hammon 73 Rideau Ft , ()news PATENTS AN OFFER to every inventor— 1.Iat uI in- venting and full Information sent tree, Mae Ramsay Co„ negl,tered Petenl aur,,. ley.. 271 Flank Street, Otto we PETHEItSTONHA DOH e t a,mpnn) 1 ,- tent Solicitors, Entntolanei 1,91, 560 Bay Street, Tnrnntn nnnklr, ret Ira 'nout- Jon on request PERSONA! ASTHMA Now Asthma Relief In minutes or your money back Ask your Druggist for an Asthmanefrin Set 1lneondltlonally >tunrenrr+d It MN NEW ruga made from ruu, uw ,uge .ud woollens. Write for catalogue and ones Hat, Dominlnn Rua n'envInt rnmuany. 1477 Dundee Street Went. Tnrnnrn rent, QUIT Cigarettes rosily as thousands of other. have done. Use Tubaeco Ellmin- ator, a seven-day 'scientific treatment that quickly eliminates all craving for tobacco. Yor free booklet write C. IV. Bing Phar- macal Ltd., Box 673, London, Ontario. WANTED SALESMEN Direct male' to turmer, of Oavernmcnt Regletere.I Minerals, tort- dltleners, Ionian and Veterinary M.:divines. Every farm with livestock a rronpeci Cominleelon. Age no factor It naive. ADP)! Bell J' son? Canada Mil., 151 )neon rt,, Montttul. WANTED! "Currier k IVES" lithographs, flood prices promptly paid. Especially want large folio Winter, Rallronrl, Horns Racing, Hunting and Sailing Ship scenes. All correspondence answered, Offers mode, A, R. Davison, East Aurora, New York, Good Advice if You Suffer with Piles When Joab'Dllea Itch 'and burn so Jou • neat sit. walk or stand wit natant discomfort you should use .e, ,oici ' L(,, relief that thousands ,ba found en soca -' and so quick. See how- est Len -Ulna takes eat the ere; -.yeller,, Itching and families pain. Why In 'Suet no time at all you forret, about roar plies. One application g ives bourn of comfort. Don't ena'cr ■ eedlemslr—ge get Len -Dint right now, Only SSo at all drug stores. Now! A Pleasant Tasting Cough Syrup For. Children PINEX—a familiar remedy for generations of Canadians—goes to work fast to relieve that distress- ing cough, So pleasant tasting that children like it. Pinex gives Quick. effective relief. Now you can choose either the new ready -to -take PREPARED PINEX or the money -saving easily mixed PINEX CONCENTRATE. In both forms, PINEX' special blend of proven medicinal ingre- dients must help you, or your money back. Why let your children suffer with a distressing cough?—get a bottle of fast acting, pleasant tast- ing, PINEX, today PINEX FOR CHILDREN'S COUGHS EAT ANYTHING WiTH FALSE TEETH If you have trouble with plates that elle, rock and caws ,oro gutaa —try Drlmme Phalli -Liner. One application makes plates at snugly ufalour ponder or pale, becnu'e Itrlmme Flaetl-Liner hardens per- manently to your plate. It relines and rents loon! plates In way no powder or pato can do. Even on old rubber plaice i-ou get good result, alt mouths to a year or longer. YOU CAN EAT ANYTHING, Simply lay soft drip of Plastl-Liner on troublesome ,upper or lower, lflte and t8 molds perfectly, linty to use, teeteleee, odorless, harmless to you and your pintee. Removable as directed. Plata cleaner Included. Aloncy back if not completely eatlened, It not available at yotu ding ,tore, send 81.10 for reliner for 1 plate. • WILDROOT LTD, FORT ERIE, ONT. NO, TW ISSUE 2 — 1953 ' 1.6 ill AGER 11111111111111111111 WALLACE'S *Goods Goods --Phone 73-- Boots & Shoes WE HAVE A FULL STOCK OF BROADCLOTH AND PRINTS FOR QUILTING - ALWAYS ON HAND. WINTER FOOTWEAR FOR ALL THE FAMILY. Dry Cleaning Service Twice a Week Tuesday morning and Friday morning at 9 o'clock, 1 I • r- 1 11•11•1 "Casey's" Superior Food -Market Extra Savings For Your Week -End Shopping AYLMER TOMATO CATSUP®� 11 OZ. BOTTLE FRY'S BREAKFAST COCOA HALF. LB. TIN , . 39c. 1 LB. TIN b9C AUSTRALIAN SULTANA RAISINS • 2 LBS. FOR 37c GREEN GIANT NIBLETS CORN 214.OZ. TINS 370 SEA LORD COHOE RED SALMON 27314 OZ. TINS.,,,, 57c "TREAT" CHOICE HALVES PEACHES, 20 OZ. TIN 24C Fresh Fruit - Fresh Vegetables - Cooked Meats Lifeteria Feeds. Smoking Sundries PHONE 156 --- WE DELIVER. Watch Our Windows For Bargain Prices. WEEK -END SPECIALS - ork & Beans -.end Corn 2 tins 25c Kellogg's Corn Flakes 2 pkgs. 29c Bluebird Toilet Tissue 5 Rolls 49c Florida Grapefruit (yellow) 5 for 25c Florida Grapefruit (pink) 4 for 25c California Oranges 2 dozen 35c Monarch Mixing Bowls each 24c GROW BETTER AFRICAN VIOLETS with .Royal. Purple Pot Pills 100 in pkg. 25c Royal Purple Calf Meal - 25's, 50's, 100's Stewart's Grocery Blyth 'O'` • Phone 9 -We Deliver "THE BEST FOR LESS" how. C 1. . 1, oil 1 11 1 lyth Farmers Co -Op Association TELEPHONE 172 • BLYTH. NOW IS TIIE TIME TO ORDER FERTILIZER ORDERS TAKEN NOW WILL BE GIVEN ' PROMPT ATTENTION, DUE TO THE DISCOUNT IN JANUARY 'AND FEIBRUARY. WE ARE AGENTS FOR -NEW IDEA HORN FARM MACHINERY. • • 'THE STAN$AR1i Wallaby, Jolt, ',1953 PERSONAL INTEREST \[r, and Mrs, Gcorgc Caldr:ell spent Ncw Years with NIA-, and \Irs, Mach Cardiff of Brussels. Mr. and Mrs. Earl McKn'ght and Garth spent New Years with M r, acne &I -s. Chester Fcagan and family of ngs:de. ?Jr, Glenn Yungblut rete nod to the University at Kingston on '' outlay af- ter spending the Chri ttnas holiday, tvith his parents, Mr, and Mrs, 1l. Yungblut, Mr, Art \Vaymottta, Mrs. C. Sun. dcrc•)cl; of Myth, Mr. and Mrs. Reg, Collar and family of \\Ingham spew Saturday with 151r, and Mrs. J. C. \Vaym,:nth of Stratford., New \'tar's vis't.rs with s1r, an,l \frs, Earl Ca'dwcll and fancily and Mr. and Mrs, \Vnt. Gavicr wire: Mrs, 11 Alice (;:)tier of :\ubu:n ; \t r,. and Murvin Gorier and family, M+•, Ger- ), old Goyicr of Myth; 11r, and 11rs, Charles Anstay and family of Godc• • rich;' Mr, and Mrs. \Irl Good and family of 13cnnliller; Mr. and Mrs, Robert G:vier and daug;ter, June, of Londesboro; Mr. and \Irs. worlo I•f:al; and family of l.11yth, -; Mr. and Mrs, Alan Grant and f tn- ily of 'i'illsonburli> Mr, A'bert McCul- 4. lough, spew Christmas wilt Mr. and Mrs. Sic. McCullough. t Mr. and Mrs. Clarence \Vh'tfield of Meaford spent Chris'mas wi h the lat.- ] ter's parents, Mr, and Mrs, W IniW1- 1-ush of East 11'att•an:sit, Mr. and Mrs, \V liner Lush atien•1• cd the funeral of Mrs. \Vm. Pc ry of lfcaford on \loudly, December 29th, Al r, and \Irs, Maurice Bosom of 13clgrave; Mr, and Mrs. Cliff Shot). brook, Charles and Margaret Ann, vis• ited on Sunday w:lh Afr. and Nit's. Meredith Young. and family of N le. Rcv. told Mrs. C. J. Scot, accom- panied by their son, j 111, and \frs. R. 11. Smith, spent New Year's Day in • London, guests of Rev. and Mrs, E. R. Stanway, Miss Jean Mills of _south 11•adiey, \fns;., spent the holiday w'th her parents, 1lt•, and \irs, Earl \1•lls, al- • so visiting, her grandtn"the•, Mrs. J. \V. dills on Sunday, leaving on M..n- - day to resume her duties. Visitors -at the home of Mr, and Mrs. George Cowan and Mr. and Mrs, \\'tit. Cowart and fancily for the holi- days were. Mr. and Mrs. George Cow- an, Ted and Gregory, of Bradford, Mr. Benson Cowan, Connie and J'111, of Stratford, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cowan, Carol and Elizabeth Ann of \I idland, • Mr. and Mrs, Walter McGill spent New Year's day with Misses Olive McGill and Isabel Fcx, of I31•O, •'Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Edgar, Nit', and Mrs: Alvin Orvis, Mr. and Mrs. Art Edgar, Niel and Donna; 1lr,-and ' a Mrs. Harvey Edgar of \Vitighani i • iY r; and \frs, Maitland Edgar and 15[:•, and Mrs. Lewis Stonehouse spent New Year's clay with Mr. and -Mrs, Char- les Johnston ;,nd family. • Mr. and Mrs, Harold Badley, Shir- t ley and Richard spent New Year's' week -end with Mr. and Mrs. Schecrer 1 of Guelph. e Mrs, ;Margaret Harrington was ▪ thrilled Saturday evening when she got a phone call front her son telling her = that twin girls were born to them on i Saturday, January 3rd. 151r. Paul Watson of the High School - Teaching Staff, Cheslcy, spent the the Christmas vacation in Blyth with j his parches, Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Wat- ' son. How often have you tvri'lten 1952, instead of 1953 during the past week, Let's put the error down to habit or poor memory. It couldn't possibly he that we are getting older, and dislike seeing the years spin by, --Or could it. Mr, and Mrs. Fred Rutledge spent New Year's Day with \irs, W, Hum- phries o!. \Valton, Mr. and 15Irs. Chester lliggins spent the week with their daughter, Miss Lenora Higgins of London. i Mr, and Mrs, Joseph Higgins and family of Mitchell spent New Year's clay with th,: former's parents, Mr. '' and Mrs. Chester Higgins, and the latter•'s father, Mr. Leslie bear, DONNYBROOK Mrs, Verna Derr, of Niagara Falls, slpcnt last week -end tvi.h her parents ,The W.M.S. and W.A. will meet on Mr. and Mrs, R. Chutney, Tuesday,- January 13th at the home Elcancr and Jim Chauutey have re - of Mrs. Narntan Thompson.,The meet- turned to . their home at Windsor ing will be in 'charge of the President, after spendinty'the holidays with rcla- Mrs;: Edward Robinson. tives here arid: in Goderich. BELGRAVE Mr, and Mrs. Goldie \Vheele', Geo, and Ann, orf London, were holiday vis- itors with relatives here, ,11r, and Mrs. Leslie Vincent told family, of London, spent a few days with relatives Mr, A. E. Coultcs, Ray Hanna, Stanley Black and Norman Shiell have been patients in the \Vinghtun Gener- al Hospital for the past week, \1r, and Mrs, Elliott Fells, Smooth Rock Falls, and Miss Fairy Fells, of Fort Erie, have returned hotne after visiting 'relatives here and, :Onding the funeral o{ their at ut, the late Mrs, Cyrus Scott. " Mr, and Airs..J. ;. 1lcCal'ttnt spent New Years wilt their daughter, 15It's, Jones, Mr, Jones and fancily, in Lon; don, 151'r, and Mrs, Jack ArnisCrottg,, of Montreal, A1r. and Mrs. G'bson Arm- strong and family, of 1.on(1oh, \vete holiday visitors with ,1It•, and Mrs, 1), Armstrong. Mr, and Mrs. Kenneth \Vheeler en. tertained the' "Club 20" at their home on Friday night, Mrs, Harry Rinn and baby son have returned hone froth \Vinghain General hospital, • Residents of the -4th line and cent- ntuuity were shocked to hear of •tlte sudden death of Mrs, Frank Little this Monday at noon. Mr, Little on en- tering the house for dinner found Beauty Shoppe GET AN (Individually . Patterned) PERMANENT ▪ AND HAIR CUT. to Ica p.your hairdo neat dayin and day out. at - Olive McGill BEAUTY SIIOPPE Telephone Blyth, 52. 1.1.114111 •1,11.1 .1111 -ii l.• SII ShI.i i 1+J RAY'S BEAUTY SALON -- Look Attractive -- with a NEW PERMANENT Shampoos, Finger Waves, Rinses and Hair Cuts. Please Phone, Blyth 53. RAY McNALL that site had passed away as she lit' on the coach a;te• hazing prepared the noon -day meal. She is survived by her husband. Funeral arrangements arc not ccmple:e . The hams Forum meeting which was 10 have been held at the home of \Ir, and \lis, James R. C:,ultes \lcn- day night was canceled owing to \Irs, I.i.tle's death. The next meet- IFF YOU BUY BREAD WITH YOUR iiig will be held at the home of 11t•. S,' sC'ROCrRIIJ not Nit's, Richard Procter. GROCERIES). r C. R. Comtel is in Toronto attend- ing site annual Provincial Ircde•alicn convention. C. R. Ccultes; James R. Coultes and YOTJR PATRONAGE WILL BE Norman Higgins, attended a meeting ih Torowo .Tuesday, when the hog t APPRECIATED. marketing problem was discussed, MRS. CYRUS J. SCOTT Funeral services for the late Mrs. ; Ca tits J. Scott, cf 11eigr;tve, were I 2411NNr•NNNNNfNIINNwMI{INIIN•N'41NJJAWI.MMIM~N: THE MOST BEAUTIFUL IIAIR IN THE WORLD is kept at it's loveliest with the magic of a good shampoo, • 1ludnut 1:;;,;; Creole 75.: and $1,25, Lustre Creme 35c, 65c, $1.00 halo ..................... ... 39c, rise, !l;le Rayve....................................•..... 65c Uretic ............. _... ............. $9e, 6'h• Marlene T his• Warm;.; ....... $1,29 13rech (I)ry, Oay or Nor_\'erne I'crmanont I� t $3,0J )nal flair) R5. (Refill $I.75) Ti:ch's . .. 39z, (i'., 9$c 1lii !it it l'crtnant -..:-. $3'5 (Refill ,ent1,7l<i5) Shad -w \\'ave, Prem, Toni Cream ............... 39c, 65c 1t;,l, i and Pinwae, , \Vildroot ...._ •13e, 73c 1 R. D.PHILP,Phm,B DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLI'A PER—PHONE 2U. J.WS,111 N.I 11`4INJNNNM0MN. MINN 111,1 1.41141#4~,014Nt Vodden's Home Bakery PHONE 71 R 2, BLYTH, FRSEH BREAD - CAKES - PASTRY ALWAYS ON HAND. hcI( front, Currie's funeral hence, at , \\'inghain on \Vednesday afternoon, 1)ecember 31st, at 1 o'cljck, wi h n'• tcrhtett follow:ng in Brandon Cone - tory, Bel;rave-, Rcv. C. Cox, pastor of 1(nox United Church officiated, assist- ed by Rev, \V. J. \loores, of Thames Read, a former minister, Mrs. Scott passed away in t':e \\'inghant hospital following a lengthy illness, She- was horn in 1-lullett township a daughter of the late James Cunningham a 38 years ago married Cyrus Scott of East \\'awan:sit t.wn- ship. In her 75th year, the la'c 151rs. Scott hall been active in various ccnc- inuhity activities in and around Bel - grave.. She was a member of Knox 'United Church, and a former Insti- tute member, Site also figured prom- inently, in the organizing •of the 13b1 - grave School Fair of which organizer• tion she was secretary for a number of years. Surviving are her husbanil, also one son, Bruce, on the holues ead and one daughter, Mrs. Harry (Mac) Rinn, of East \Vatranosh and five grandchild- ren. A brother, John Cunningham of \Vaterloo, also survives, JOSEPH YUILL Funeral services for Joseph Yuill were held on, Wednesday, December 31st at 3 pan,, from the Belgrave Uni- ted Church, with the Rev, C. D. C.x officiating. Interment was made in Brandon Cemetery, 13e1gravc, The late Mr. Yuill was 6) years old and died in the \Vit:gham Gecera1. Hospital on Monday, December 291h.' i• Most of his life had been spent in farthing on the 4th concession of Morris township, Originally he was a native of the Tceswate• area, and f:1r the past year had lived in 13c1,rave, Isar, Yuill was a fdrnler number of the Morris Township. Council and was al- so an active worker in tre 13elgrave School Fair for a number of yca••s, 1 -le was a member of the l3clgrave United Churl -h. Surviving are his two sins, R?be't 61 Clarence of Morris lo,5i�nship; four dattglcters,15lrs. Michael'Rezansoff, of `St, Catharines; .Mrs, Edward Mcl3ur- hey, East . \Vawattosh; Mrs, James 1Varwick, Blyth; Mrs, .Afar Johnston, I3clgrare; one sister, Miss ,15tirgaret •Yttill, Carleton Place, Itis wife, the former Mabel Proctor, 'predeceased hint on February 515th, 19E2. .Pallbearers for • the funeral were : :Ifcrbcrt and Jesse \Vltcc'e•, IZay ;Crawford, Martin Grasby, \Vol, Me- '151urray and Frank Little, '"'Flowcrbearcrs were: Chester. Ge3rgc and Jack Higgins, R, J. McKenzie, Bct t .Yttill amt. Glen James, LONDESBORO 151x, and Mrs. Kenneth Scott•and children, of Niagara Falls, 'and ,Nisi and Mrs. Alister 13roadfoat, 'of • Sea - forth, spent Saturday last at the Eine .of Mr. and Mrs, John Scott, Londes- boro, Mr. and Mrs, Robert Yungblut, Mr. and 15lrs, Bert Al'cn were the guests of 151 r, 411141 Mrs, \Van; Wells, Clinton, on New Years Day, Mrs. J. H. Shobbrook spent the Neth Year at the 'home of her daugh- Holly Peas, 15 oz. 2 for 33c Heinz Catsup 25c Campbell's Pork and Beans 2 for 31c Tip Top Tomato Juice 2 for 19c Sockeye Salmon 38c Matches • 3 for 25c Robin Hoocl Cake Mix 29c Nabob Coffcc , 92c Mixed Cookies per lb. 33c Ivory Soap (personal) 4 for 22c Hollaud's Food arket AND LOCKER SERVICE. Telephone 39 ' WE DELIVER ♦r„ ON DISPLAY ;IN OUR WINDOW Mr; and Mrs, Dresser, l '1*1-.'Bed, ' Ohiffonier and i;ha Tul,le: : 1141-F'A- - ; LA-�` ST.IT.YI• SPECIAL WITH FRIDAY AND ANY SPRING 0 VAT AT HALF L1oyd:E.:Taske 1 URNITtJRE — COACH AMBULANCE FUNERAL SERVICE Phone 7 ter, ,llrs.. Piny. Gibb!ngs, and 11r, Gibbin;;s;-of Clintr.n, EAST 'WA W.A N'USrd • Mr, anCtMrs, John N'otlt have re- I i\Crs, llcsford and 'daughter, ,Katlt- turned aftcl• visiting 4,t the home of lees',:slient a' few days at Guelph,' M s, Mr, and Mrs, Frank Rii e;ton, Sea- 'H'osford ret.nnicd on Monday:,;: ° .,,, forth, • • • t ' 151r, and Mrs, Shepherd/and \Viluiu, . The regular meeting of the Loa- i 1511'. • and Mrs Reid'and . Mtn'ray, t)f desboro W. A, will be held - in the ' Hallett, fwd Mr, and .Mrs. Don Yung blut spent Saturday with 1[r; and- • Mrs,•1r.:Marshall • Rohcrt Marshall and; Robert. Char - school roam of the Church on Thurs- day, January .15th. The prcgr iti'cetn= mittee, firs, Clark, Mrs. C,' /jy,ford, Hostesses are, Mrs, 1,Z, Ytinglilittl; Mrs. ter returned from Guelph on 'Friday, R. Townsend, Mrs,. T. Allen and .Mrs, • L. Webster, A cordial invitation is 1 gives to be present, MORRIS TOWNSHIP • \Cr..1)avid Nrs!litt'is ill 'Willi'jineti�' monis, Cou;ratulatiotts to Mr, and Mrs, 1:d - ward Johnston -.who celebrated 'their: 24th 'wedding anniversary on. Saturday, January 3rd,, 15ir' and Mrs, \Villows \loun'ain spent New Years at the h -me 'of 11r, and firs. E'g'n Joslitlg and (tinily., Mr. James •.Uesselwood is sill quite poorly•at the lictne of his sister, ND's, J. Melville, ,