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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1953-01-28, Page 1THE BLYTH VOLUME 59 - NO. 15. �itsig rizedlas SecoI1(1 li;5oi� w� BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 28, 1953 Subscription Rates $2.00 in Advance; $3.00 in the U.S.A. Mrs. B. Hall Appointed Zone Lions Asking For Rummage Commander For Zone 11 Sale Support Ladies' Au!fi iary Housewives had better keep the Honour has bout best ewc(I on ii clothe closets locked, and the dining • member of the Blyth Lades' Auxiliary room table nailed down fru' the n.xt Branch to the Canadian Legisn, and couple of weeks. An advertisement through her, the honour is.reflr.c ed on page 8 of this issue is composed by on the Branch itsolf. M:s. Bernard n('llc nttei flat Lion Norman Gar , rettwho !las is:oinked to do 'eveiy Hall received nsticc from the Pro- 1' wom:, s spring house-cleaning just so rincial Secretary-Trcasmer that she he can get hia lurches on furni use had been novo:dite:I Zcne Commander of "/.one !l on January 22nd, at an and items of clothing for the Lions executive sleeting of the Ontario Pro• Big Ruannungc S:dc wli c:l talo con; February„ vin(::;li Command Ladies' Auxiliary to (41-„°” rnl N•orm;ul teal Fehavebruary help f �r his the Canadian Legion, B,Ii,S,la., held sl;il!dully planned at'ack on the village in 'Toronto. The Ladies'Auxiliaries were re - clothes closets, Oilier Lions have zoned last October so that they wow()promisedlC' .accompany 111111 OIL 1115 correspond more acs Iy to the Cana- round,; Friths: evening, February 6.h, • widen i i'Js will be made at the dwel• (riot bogies '!,ones, /,one 11 c nl• ling:; in the v'llage'for suitable runt- prises Bly:dl, 13ritsscls, Clinton, Exeter` urtge side ar.itles, Goderich, G:rrie, 1!ens;tll. Kincardine, we know that the lady of toe Lucknow, Seaford) land \Vingham house \will uo operate to the full in this Auxa'arirs l he appointment of s: v venture of the Club, which, all. j .king era! new Commanders was made ne, aside, is just another way of rais:'n.t cssary bccawle of•.the re -grouping pro- gram, much-needed funds fos c.amuunity cn Mrs, hall has been quite active in (lea vous. .. SPORT SHORTS ,. ..h.d0a.d0....�- -... ... .a,. ..4....h..d....o. ---. .-. IP �.•t•1.l1.1•1011•111MII- f Huron County Council Standing CoinuiLte:s Executive—\V, 1i. Merritt, J. Al- laire, 11, 11, Smith, 11,. C:otv(ly, 0. Tay- lor. The Blyth "!lush Leaguers" get S.Lc;islalivo—E. Graham, J. Kerr, j. keener every weer: and dond;ty Csraluun, A. Gibson. R, E. McKinney. night's tussles saw larger ercw(Is in 'Finance—\V. J, . Kerr, !\L a::endance with enthusiasm reaching .rich, C. Rowiand, A. McBride. pc;lk as,the two top tet ts's, Blyth s Reforestation—C. Rowland 2, E, and Auburn came together in the se- Graham 1, A. Gibson 3, P. 1). Patter- con(1 half of a twin bill. 'I'3:ese teams sdn, G. M. 1lontgornery, had stet once before but Auburn 001)- Property—E. Campbell, IL Gowdy, ceded the victory on that occasion \1'In. 'McKenzie, A. Mlcllride, J. Fs - because they had no; ye really or- cher. ganize(I for league play. This was far C ,nity Home—Il. 13. Cousins 2, •W, from the roe Monday iiigi. The I-1. Morrit(t 1, II, Gowdy 2, J). Bcuer-' Auburn bays, led by a three -star per- man 1, Earl Campbell 3. , forman:e by young 11.11 McDsnal.l, ' Children's Aid Society—John ,Gra- jumped into an early and commanding ham 3, A. ll offatt 2, A. W. Kerslake 3-0 lead and altlliugh the T3lythi•,e„..1, Rev, R. G. MacMillan, A. 11. Er - made it as cl SC as a brant new s'haV1', skint, J. G. Ihrry. , • ' they failed by one goal to knot toe Aoriculturc-1)( Beuerluan, E. Grigg, score as tittle ran out, The final score 0. Taylor, 11. 13. Snaith, \V, Ilaist, was 3-2 for Auburn amt placed them ' i,ibrary-12: E. Pooley 1, 11. 13. in a firs: -,:lace tie for t::c Lague load,. Smith 2, N. Scorns 3, \V. T. C•ui_k- 'I'he fan were on the el;c of their shank, Ralph Mlunro, R. 13. C,u•ins, seats for this one which ended in a ',Wardens—H. Johnston. J. Graham, the work of Blyth Ladies' Auxaiar)' ' Just t•hc same, we hope seine lady tingling power play put on by Blyth E. Campbell, J. Mlorrisey, V, Pin - Brandi since it was formed in Nov- has a nice fat iroun;. ready for 'Lim in an effort to get the e1ualizcr, combo. ( Norman and lis staff when they call Good !toads --\V. J. Dale 1, J. Nedi- eutber, 1'47. She was the Branch; '1'h(! first half of the twin -bill saw2 on February 6:h. ger H. Gaunt 3,• Secretary for three years and Presi-For complete details, read Lion \Vatten and the 13th of 1-Iullett tall- Board of health—E. S. Snyder 2, dent for two years. At the present Norman's advertisement on page 8 of gte, but niuch of the competitive sp 0• It, Johnston 1.. M. Crich 3, \Vnl, Me- . time she is Immediate Past President this issue, and start digging for sal:- it was erased from this gime when . Kenze 3, W. A, Galbraith. of Myth Ladies'•Anxiliary, able goads( -goals you will be glad to Walton showed up minus sonic of their Airport—J. Graham, A, Moffatt, R. (dispose of, but among \which will be regular players and filled in with E, McKinney, maty articles other people may be some \V,O.A.A:signed men soy as to . Criitliitit1 Audit—Judge T. M.'Costcl- . seeking after, snake up ;j team.. \Valton's Bush- lo, A. It Erskine, E. S. Snyder, League cJigiblcs also play midget for Consultative -11, 13. Smith, k, E. Brussels and were away Idoilda)Pooley, J, llcerircy, night. As a result,. Walton forfeited historic—J. Allaire 2, H. C. John - Level tale game to the 13th before it start- sten 1i A. W. Kerslake 1; Chas; As - ed and the 13th are now in a contend- quith. l -I. McCreath, Gcorgc Jefferson. On Tuesday the Fred Davidson well ing third place position. The Walton (killing first had .reached a depth of boys arc cruts'ng along at the Forum) ' 160- feet in their search fora water of the Pack. They won the cup last Friends will join \vith uS 111 coh- gratula:ing her on her appointment to this high office. Breaks Leg While Skating At Blyth Arena A most unfortunate accident occur- red on Saturday night at the Blyth arena when Mrs. Laurie Scott had he Pollee Constable; John Cow- in to fall while skating and supply for the town's new fire Sys. year and we iulagine 11181 before the I in so (king fractured her right leg fn (001, work on which will commmciice season Is over they will take their an, Of .Exeter, Injured two places. with the advent of suitable weather, rightful place as contenders again. • In Fall If we could induce Imperial Oil to President of the League, 13111 Eno. set up an oil (frilling rig alongsole, pey says that in all probability the' Word was received here Monday excitcnneut would be at a high pitcdt. first and third and seeon. icor fourth I night of an acc;dent which befell for- _ peke teams \'.11 be pitted against each t sur Town Constable John A. Cowan, attotber. just below the knee, The 1 ' tither in the semi finals, with the two who trowelsoidi•i.• :similar ',tuition in lower break was such that it could not Huron County Library winters goiter into the finals, The the Town of Exeter. Mr. Cowan be set and on Monday morning Mrs.Service Grows - • teams eltterct' the second half of the a patient' in Victoria Hospital. Lon - Scott underwent an operation to Have schedule Monday night. don, ,\\'here he was taken for X-rays. the bone pinned, She is res in; as comfortably as can be expected and \will be.a hoapi:al pat-, icnt for at least a week, A somewhat similar accident occur- red last winter when . David Nesbit was Hospitalized. with a broken leg after a fall at the arena, Well Drillers At 160 -Foot She was attended by Dr, Street and then taken to Clinton hospital for X- rays which disclosed two breaks, one at shoe Op level on the lower leg, and AMONG TIIE CHURCHES ST. ANDREW'S s'RESBYTERIAN CHURCH ' 10:30 aur.: Sunday School. 11 amt.: Worship Scrvice. R. G, MIcllillau, Interim Moderator, Goderich. THE UNITED CHURCH • OF CANADA . Tilyth; Ontario, • Rev, C. J. Scott, 13.A., B.D., Minister, Sunday, February .1st, 1953 10.15 a.m. ; Sunday School, 11;15: M[orning Worship, 7:C0 p.ln.: Evening Worship. 8:00 pan.: Talks on Counselling Con- tinued. • "0 Come and Let Us Worship.” ANGLICAN CHURCH Sunday, February Ist, 1953 Blyth: Matins, 10:30; Sunday Schocl 11;30 a.m. Auburn; Matins, 12 ocicck, Belgravc: Evensong, 2:30 p.m. Sim - day School, 1 :45 p.m. • 11l1 welcome, W. E, BR•AM\VELL, Rector, . CHURCH OF GOD • McConnell-, Street, 13101, • Rev. G. h Beach, Minister, 10 a,m, : Sunday School, 11 am,: Morning Worship, 7:30' pan, : Evening. Service, 8;00 pant,, Wednesday: Bible Study and Prayer, Youth .Fellowship Service: Friday at ••8 pan,- ' - THE BOOK NOOK UP MEDONTE WAY ' Idy Kenneth McNeill Wells; with dra;vings by 'Lucille DiI'c This book pictures the life' of the artist and •.his wife as they settled on a Illcdoiite COncessioll to escape the turbulent life 'of the city, It.,\vas their hope to enjoy the pace of country living, Country- living is well p:rtrayed, It shows two irrepressible country dwel- lers on their rolutds of. work and pleas- ure, Mr, Wells' himself is a realist, I -Ie. tells . of •tltc fine agony of getting cut of . a warts bed: on a cold inorithig to .of his. goats and dttcks, . When he •goes gn'to tell of -his experietices while tending his bees or his appre.' dation 'of the beauties of the atttuntn eveititiss he practically has you con- vinced that this is the full and the rewarding life. • Even if you don't enjoy reading the book, yolt can't help but feel 1110 wood carvings ',by his • wife, Lucille, are well worth a perusal of his good novel.. • The annual Huron County Library report, presented to County Council League Standing Thursday by Mrs, A. J, Eckntjcr,.coun-, ... ty librariam. showed that Oft nest' Blyth bcrship 110w ccuaiSts of 34 libraries, Auburn 1)1 deposit stations, 192 public school 13th of Ilullet .._. rooms, and three high schools. \V,,! ,Constable Cowan fell its he was leav- ing his office at the town hall, Exa- '\\' • • I. 7:...•_p teseotln(I . dislocated. hjs. s•hcttlder. Vo, 3 1 0'. 6 undersottid that the dislocated mem- 3 1 0 6 Ilei has bceti hard to replace satisfac- 2 2 0, 4 torily, requiring several X-rays. 0 3 0 0 Retired Chief of Police John Nor - ;Expansion of outlets during the year 1 ry. after three weeks' of retirement, included: Fireside faint fo':tun, Kin- Take a stl•oa ftp to the arena some is again in uniform until Constable burn ; Dungannon public school, ttvo Monday night. You'll ccrtaiuily get Coteau is able' to resume his duties. rooms; 13urns Young People's So- you're nho.ney's tvorth and the mens- ciety; SS. No. 10, 1-Iu:lett; S'S. 10 Mo. bers of the various teams will aapre-, ICillop; 16th Grey farm forum. elate your support. Circulation statistics for the year: CONGRATULATIO1;S (lictic•n, 2y,644; classed, 4,280; juven- Jrm Scott, .c number of the 13th of Conti by ide, 115;)!3; total?, 141,837. This teas Ilullctt "Bush I,cagticrs" suffered a `1'i(tnhttiais are extended to were wan the following. Miss Vera Mrs. Jim -Scott who celebrated - her '1'ierna)', lucky number; Mrs. Quinn, birthday on \Vcduesda+s, January 28tH. smallest foot; 1lrs Ken Taylor, larg- Constratuhtions to little Christopher eslt foot; .11rs, McArter, smallest John Cowan who celebrated his first waist; Mrs. holden, most grandchil- birthday on Saturday, 'January 24111. siren; Mrs, E. Cartwright, perscn cont - Congratulations t o -Master T e d ing farthest, and Mrs. Nicholson, fait Cowan 'of Bradford who celebrated to arrive, his 8th birthday Wednesday, January The meeting INS honored with the 24th, presence of I31yth's oldest lady. 'Mrs. Congratulations 16 Gcorgc Vermin F. Metcalf, who seemed to enjoy her - Cowan ,who will celebrate his 4th sell' immensely. . birthday on Sunday, February 1st, The next regular meeting will be at the hone of Mrs. I3. McArter on Jawt- ua•y 29th, Blyth Lions Club Meeting Mrs. L. M. Scrimgeour Heads Local Society The regular meeting of Blyth Limos Club was he'd in the Memorial hail on Thursday. The Ladies' Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion' was in charge of the supper Arrangements and serv- ed a (101ici sus supper. Several matters of importance to the welfare of the Club were discus- sed and plans made for the annual Farmer's Nig11 program on March 6. Present plan: call for a profitable cv• ening when the local club plays host ti the farmers of the arca, Rev, \V. E. 13raniweli of 'Trinity An- t,:lean Church was the special speak- er and he gave an interesting talk on some of the lighter and also more sob- ering experiences in a parson's life. Be drew on experiences in England, Hawaii, Australia and Canada. The speaker was introduced by I.ion Stan. Chellew and thanked by Lion Secre- tary Lloyd Tasker, Mr. Aubrey 'Poll was the guest solo- ist and renderer! scvcia1 appreciated numbers, Inc was ace: nlpanic(1 on the piano by Mrs. Jack .N1cDju,a11, the Club pianist. A very enjoyable evening was held in the Orange I-Ia'l, 13lyth, Monday everting, January 26:'11, when the local Ilor1ic111 ural Society cc mbined their annual sleeting and election of offi- cers with a social meeting. • In her address the prseident, Mrs. L. 11. Scrinngcour, thanked all who Ind helped to slake the year such a sue- cessfill one and is very grateful to all who assisted with the beds 0n the in- tersections. The erecs ion of the :Memorial Pion- eer Cairn had been the mainsprojcct. Mrs. Ei nerssii Wright. secretary - treasurer, reportelj104 members and an expenditure for civic improvement of over .$400.00. Mrs. H. Phillips presided for the election of the following officers, all by acclamation : Past President : Mfrs, A. Lyddiatt. President: Mrs. L. M. Scrimgeour (returned for 4. h year), 1st \'ice: Mrs. Chester Higgins. 2n1 Vice: Mfrs, John Bailey. , Secretary -Treasurer; Mrs. Emerson Wright, Directors fcr 1953 and 1954: Mrs, Chapter Organization To Be Wnt NteVilti„ Mrs. Clayton Ladd, Considered At Blyth I Mrs. Keith Webster, Mrs. Fred Rut- ledge and Mrs. Ida Potts. Directors for 1953: Mrs. Garfield Doherty, Mrs.. William Thuell, Mrs. E. Logan, Mrs, Luella McGowan. M rs, Duncan McCallum. Following the business mee,:ing and election, several games of euchre were enjoyed. High honors for ladies went to Mfrs. S. Shannon; Consolation, \frs. \V. Mills; Gentlemen: high; .Earl Noble; consolation, Jack Creighton. 'There has been considerable en- thusiasm evidenced over the 'proposal to organize ,t Chapter of the Or:ler of the Eastern Star in I3lyth and it's environs. A sleeting to consider this matter further has been called for Tuesday evening, February 3, 1903, and will be held in Blyth United Church I -1a11 at 8:15 pin. A chapter was organized recently in Clinton and is progressing very well. A similar one is functicnutg in \Ving- .ham and fns an enviable record. In talking with those in the village who arc already members of the Star, we learn that only Master Masons' wives, daughters, sisters, widows, and mothers of Master Masons are eli- gible to receive the degrees of the Chapter, \V0 have also been informed that a miiihntut of fifty persons are ACCs• - sa•y before a. -group can receive it's Charter from the Grab(' CIVer, Jer, It is the hope of the steering conumiltz& that an enthusiastic group will attend this meeting to consider the matter further. Former Auburn Undertaker Was Master Of Many • Trades The Standard is in receipt of a let- ter from Mr. John J. Tuberville, at present residing with a cousin near Petersburg, but 'who spends bis sum- mers with his sister, Mrs. San Daer, of Auburn. With the letter Mr. Tub- ervillc sends along a clipping from the Kitchener Record which deals prin- eip1j3;�with one, L. \\rettlaufer, one time undc,T.tii';.;,,at Manchester, and ... according to,the •rep master of Many trades: -Air; Tubervillc' eves that the -reprint of the article in Thee'' -s. Trinity Church Ladies Standard would interest maty in this Held Dinner Meetingdistrict: Here is .the reprint: On Thursday, January 22nd, , tl,,c "An advertising handbill dated 1886 ladies of 'Trinity Church held a (Tit- has come into the hands of A1d. John ser, meeting at the home of Miss Cook, Musty and yellow with age, it Margaret 1Iircns. After a very love- is still as easy to read .in its big bold ly dinner, a short meeting w8S held print as the (lay it was printed but follc•tved by a few contests. These the wording and Layout is quite a con - an increase over the total for 11931 of painful accident (luring a game last 21,562• \Vednesday night when Ile struck his During the year,, 2,579 books werehead on a protruding door hinge and added to the collection (517 fiction, opened a forehead Cut that required 353 non-fiction, 1.700 juvenile); 1,152 medical attention, and 13 sti.ohes, books were discarded (239 fiction, 57 Jiliunie 'missed the game on Monday non-fiction, 856 juvenile), The total night as a consequence, but you can't book collection now stands at 16,608, keep a' good main down for long. 1 -Ie Total receipts were $15,767.25; .cxpcu- had the last of the stitches removed (I 1lres, $14,861.32. on 'Tuesday and will be a-08si1' to g,-) The Blyth Public Library is a !nem- conte next Wednesday night, The bcr of the Huron County Library As;Bush Leaguers have to shift their date sccation and it's fact U,le'5 are indu(,d from Monday to Wednesday next on the local library shelves for the tveck again; to stake way for a Midget availability of subscribers at no extrahome game Monday night, cost. BIR'T'HS FEAR -- In \Vinghain hospital, on Saturday, January '24th, 1953, to Mr. and Mrs, E. V. Fear, of Bclgrave, the gift of a son—Owen Roger, a brother fcr Wendy and Rhonda. -. GROUND HOG SHOT LAST WEEK Mr, Herman Daer is our informant to the effect that (luring last week's mild spell Garth McClinchey of the \Westfield district shot a ground hog, The ground hog was 'leisurely munch- ing grass when Garth caste ,upon it, Now perhaps it won't make any'tlif- ference' whether the .ground ho{ sees it's shadow next Monday, February 2, or not, More normal winter temperatures set in over tie week -end and the cat- erpillars, house flies, and other insects _which_ The Standard reported on the loose last issue, .were sent scurrying for cover, Although the temperature dropped, -snow is still beilig dished out in smolt quantities, 7.'lte changeable weather has been responsible no doubt for a number of colds and o'her ill - 1105.305 which have been plaguing indi- vitluals' and 'entire fatuities. .WEDDINGS' WESTON -- ROLLINSON A- pretty wedding was solemnized in Toronto o►1 Saturday, January 2411,, when Mary Isobel, only daughter of, Mr, ,incl Mrs, Alfred Rollinson, Au - barn, was united in marriage to ,Mar, Alfred G.• Weston, son of Mr, and Mrs Alfred .\Vcsitot, Toronto, After a wedding trip to Buffalo, they will reside in Toronto, —0-0— Incidentally those satite undefeated Blyth midgets had a harrow squeals at Beltnorc last Friday night when they eked out a close 6 to 5 twin over the Belunorites, The soft ice slswed the speedy 131ythites down, and after they had led comfortably through the first and second periods, 13clmore put oto a grand spurt in the third period and took a one -goal lead which Coach Madill admits Iookeds nliglity big on the soft ice surface.- However, the Blyth team showed their' superiority, and crashed through with the equaliz- er, and just before time ran out, ran in the clincher•, "Still undefeated," is the battle -cry of the MMidgets. But they , probably have their biggest lest coming up over this week -end, On Friday night they play host to the olassy Howick midgets, and again on Monday night, Tecswatcr midgets will be int town for a game, 'I'Ite fir: meeting at Teeswater'resttlted in a 2-2 draw, That woe early in the schedule. It will be interesting to see which team l;as rade the most progress since that tints, As• for the 1-Iotvick team, they have been in organized hockey for some years, and have established quite a name as always having a real con- tender. ' The 131ysth kids, many of whom :u- cideutally are not 13lyth kills, butt \v1 o cone frown various points 111 this dis- trict, heed' your silo -Port, vocally and finailcially, 'There was a very fair re- presentation of 131yt11 and district fans at lite last !hone game. hake the kids f. s1 gond by at least doubling the attend•;'rce for these week -end games. Yott aro. sure of seeing a butted) (.f young 1 Ida doing their "hottest-tu- (Continued on page 3) 80 Children Li Care Of Children's Aid Society The Huron County Children's Aid Society reported to Huron County Council that '80 children are in care, Fifty Bine adoptions were complete(! Earl Caldwell, Mrs, Govier is in iher 93rd year and lives alone in her own home at, Auburn, tier son, Mr, \Vrih. Govier spent a couple of days with her and then had her removed to the Cald- well honk. M rs. Govier is a remark- ably active woman for her age, RECOVERING FROM PLEURSY Mrs, Alice Gooier of Auburn -is re- covering from an attack of Plcursy al the home of her granddaughter, Mrs. in 1952 and 20 other children placed in 'homes for care, , Many of the "problems" in family \work \vhjch needed immediate atten- tion moved into the county front oth- er centres, and there was- i consider- able turnover of the families within Huron, it \vas reported, There were 50 children brought to the attention of the society .n these family problems Miss Alic Hayiuk, daughter of Mr. and necessitated 15 court cases, • and, Mrs, John Hayink has completed her practical alai theory trailing at Clinton Public Hospital where she has trained as'a practical nurse for 1 year, en(101' the supervision of Miss A. Sinclair and Miss D., E. Mlarquis. V COMPLETES PRACTICAL COURSE COUPLE ESPECIALLY REGRET EMPRESS OF CANADA'S DESTRUCTION ' Mr. and Mrs, Alfred Nesbit of East \Vatvanosh were especially sorry to learn of the destruction by fire of the Caoa1iitn Liner Empress of Canada. Mr. and Mrs, Nesbit crossed the Atlantic to visit their homeland on the Empress of Canada two )'cars ago. They remember their trip vividly and also the beautiful lines au(i lovely in- terior of the great ship, Engamement Announced 1111', and Mrs, Richard G. Shoeb•rt- , 10111, Clinton, announce the engage - stent of their Duly dntighte•, Margaret Lucretia, R.N., to Flight Cadet Denis John Godley, RCAF, Station, Clio- ton�only son of lar. and Mrs, J. \V. Godley, Kenya, East Africa. The 'wedding will take pl;tce in St. Paul's Anglican Church, Clinton, on Satur- day afterttoon, February 71h, at 2:30 o'clock, — •-..-•• P OBITUARY MRS. R. J. CAMERON 'Mrs. R. 'J. Cameron, of Lucknow, passed away in \Viughan hospital, where she had been since fracturing her. hip last October. She was born at Auburn, formerly Sarah Essic Flu- ker, and was 74 years of age, attll ilad lived in Lucknow SI11CC her marriage to R. Ji ,Cameron in 1909. Mr. Cam - Cron (lied in 1943. r Mrs, Cameron was a member of the United Church, Ladies Legion Attx- ilittry and the Women's Institute. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs, Nel- son Bushel, Ltle n ow; two sons, iKen- neth, of 1:uckttow, and Stewart, of Pont Colborne; two sisters, Mrs„k. Taylor, Clinton, and Mrs.' Frani;s, llamilton, and three grandchildren, interment was in South Kiuioss ' ce- metery, trast with the modern version. "Tile bill was Put out' by a furniture a n tl undertaking establishment a t Manchester, Ont., which cou1 ndnity Ald. Cook says is now known as Au- burn, near Goderich, "It appears practically. every ,under- taker in small centres years ago was also in the furniltire business. Many of them made and repaired harness as well. The advertiser on the 1886 printing specimen was L. \\rettlaufer, •under- taker' and manufacturer of 'all kinds, made of best materials and. -latest ., styles. Will supply the public at low- est possible living rates. - "Assurance is given that "all kinds of work and repairing are done with neatness and despatch. "Another accomplishments of the firm is 'picture framing of every des. criptiol; churns that cannot be beat- en.' "Most surprising, perhaps, is the portion of the bill dealing with funer- als. - i in exceedingly' large print the ad -1 vcrtiser informs the public that 'fun- erals are furnished on short notice with a good hearse in attendance." "ANL Cook said he believes tho short notice asjleCt was quite impor- tant 111 days gone by, • "Undertakers in small communities at least made their own coffins and some undertakers, \who were not up m the hit might get behind or not have the facilities to turn' out a coffin 'in the short time required following a death. Thus the reference to funerals being furnished 'on short notice' was a factor worthy of. an important place 111 any advertising. "Immediately below 'the strip deal- ing with funerals, the ad turns to the. capabilities,, It promises 'sates with any kin(( of teeth will be gummed to give perfcet satisfaction. "And, like any modern establish- ment, the display enols with 'be sore to call, compare prices and be con- vinced" - W. I. TO MEET The Blyth Women's Institute are holding their February meeting, Feb - nary 5th, at 2.30 p,nt., in the Memor- ial Hall, Mrs, \V, Logan and Miss , J. Woodcock will be' in charge of the ,utecting. Mrs; Ed, \Viglttntan \wild he the guest speaker.— Hangover Cure Takes Herring -Do; Balm Sounds Worse Than The Bite By WADE JONES NEA Staff Correspondent Paris -- Visitors seeking balm icor too much over -celebration might get a tip, from a few of the curious cures of Europe, On *he other hand, they might just tleel worse. Some of the remedies seem worse than the ailment they're supposed to cure. In fact, they seem to be based on the theory that if the cure is awful enough, the patient will forget all about itis original indisposition, Fish, for instance. In parts of Germany, where a hangover is »ailed a katzenjammer, and in several other north European countries, it's the custom before xetiring to gulp down a whole Aterring dipped in chopped onion. The technique is pimple. You ;just take the herring—prefer- ably raw—by the tail, lean your Bead back and swallow it down, }ft's supposed to absorb the al- cohol in the system and make you awake up in the morning 7!eeling like a million marks. + + In Germany, fish thus eaten are called rollmops, but have more the effect of vacuum clean- etrs. Most Europeans subscribe to the theory that an ounce of pr•e- •'ention is worth a quart of cure. So they eat a lot before and -while they're drinking. In countries like Belgium, :Holland, Norway, and Sweden many people eat a chunk of but- ler beforehand if they haven't had time to eat anything more. In southern Europe they often eat several slices of bread dunked b. olive oil. After a party in Holland it's often customary for the host to give you something called "uits- aiyter," which literally means something to get you out of the brlace with. It usually consists of ead and butter and fried ham and eggs. + * + In France, which boasts more running feet of bar space per person than any other country In the world, people also eat a lot while they're drinking. And that's despite the fact the coun- try has 580,000 bars and only 49,000 bakeries. Parisians, young people par- ticularly, like to go to Les Holies, the great market place, after a hate party and eat onion sgtrrp; ' When foodial.ts,-00",,Hough, Euro- reans -fgreat believers in the it -of -the -dog theory. . The French have two words ler hangover which are good yardsticks in the matter, One is mal aux chevaux," which means aching hair, and the other Heavy, Heavy, hangs the hang. over of Frenchman Raoul Pres - ate, here trying an international cure, to wit: a raw herring to be followed by hair-of-the•dog (in glass) while he wears American- made hangover hat compart- mented for ice, aspirin and other panaceas. "gueule de bois," which is mouth of wood, If you've got either of these it probably means you're grievously afflicted and can take stern curative measures, Louis, of the Crillon Hotel bar, recommends what he ' calls a Smiling Joe—one part lemon juice and three parts vodka, with ice, The French workingman will probably step into the corner bistro and call for a rince co- chon, which is white wine and seltzer, and which picturesquely means to wash the pig out of the system, Jacques, head barman at the swank Relais-Plaza, unhesitat- ingly recommends a mixture of ice cold beer and tomato juice. "But not if you've been drink- ing scotch the night before," he adds. Jacques is firm on the point that the only morning - after cure for too much scotch the night before is a drop more of the same. But Jean, bar chief at the Tan - gage Restaurant, doesn't entirely approve of the hair -of -the -dog business. "It doesn't cure the hangover," he says. "It only postpones it, We once had a client who came in here, a genteel type. He drank every morning to postpone a hangover he had acquired 20 years before. One day he forgot to drink and the hangover caught up with him—a 20 -year- old hangover, my friend—and he just sort of exploded like this— pfft. They could not even find the little pieces of him." Some Strange Bets People Have Made It probably started when Eve provokingly bet weak-willed Ad- am that he daren't eat an apple off the . forbidden tree. He couldn't resist the challenge, and since that memorable day the betting habit seems to have caught on. Sometimes a small amount of money changes hands, sometimes fortunes. And on record are the wagers of those happy-go-lucky betters who have had not only to eat their words, but also their stakes. William Hendricks rashly said of a certain baseball team,: 1f - it wins that pe.xt-match I'll eat u " ��, -?�, The team won, Wil- liam, being a man of integrity, promptly made arrangements to fulfil his promise. Inviting witnesses home he took his favorite straw hat, drop- ped it into a saucepan with thin macaroni, added onions and to- mato sauce, and boiled the lot for fifteen minutes, He ate all except the hatband, To an anxious audience he exclaimed; "Boy, I feel simply fine!" Far more painstaking and sci- entific was the learned professor who had to eat his shirt when he lost a bet. He disolved the shirt In acid with another chemical, The poisonous part of the concoc- tion was filtered with a specially built apparatus, The diner spread the result on a piece of bread and ate it. Some time ago for a bet, a Dutchman, Takkenberg, travel- led from Amsterdam to Mar- seilles, roughly some 840 miles, by somersaults, The man won his bet and statisticians estimated that 2,000,000 somesaults were required for the whole distance. Bottle carrying used to be a popular sport in Deptford. This branch of athletics entailed bal- ancing a bottle, or stone jar, neck downwards on the head, Champion in this form of en- tertainment was James Fowler who once raced George Golding to Brighton and back for a £50 wager, James won easily by the decisive margin of twenty-five miles. The coming Presidential elec- +'>* ilk MISS NORMA HOBBS, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, W. II, Hobbs, ane MR, DONALD GORDON, C.M.G., LL.D., whose engagement has beer •,nnouneed. Miss Hobbs is a graduate in Arts of Alc(;ill University. anc served with the W.R.E.N.S. during the last war. Alr. Gordon is Chairmar and President of the Canadian National Railways, and former Depot} Governor of the Rank pf Canada and during the war Chairman of the War- time Prices and Trade Board, The marriage will take place in the Spring (Me, (Jubb✓ photo bp AJry,,t Studio, Capital Calligrapher—If you received an Invitation io the Inaugural Ball, chances are it was written by this smiling Washington letter - artist, Fay King, She wrote nearly 10,000 invitations in highly ornamental script, For Harry Truman's inauguration, Miss King • turned out 30,000 in 39 days, Using a special type of pen, she keeps spares, seen at left, always available. tion in America will, for a cer- tainty, add more unorthodox bets to the list; perhaps one that will cap that of the Detroit woman in a past election, This woman lost her bet and had to walk across one of the bridges clad in long woollen un- derwear. Then there was the girl from Boston. Her part of the bargain was to walk through the streets of her hone town wear- ing shoes and a barrel. Oddly enough the modern business man's short -tailed coat came into popularity as the result of a wager, Years ago, the then Lord Spencer wagered that he would cut off his long coat-tails and walk about the city, thus setting 'a new fashion, He won his bet as can be seen. Every once in a while, espe- cially during the silly season, one reads of a conscientious loser pushing a peanut for miles with his nose, wheeling a companion from one point to another in a wheelbarrow, nudging a small pebble from here to there with a matchstick; but when a lam- bler plays for real big money and refuses to admit defeat special mention must be made of Col- onel Edgeworth, who served un- der William III, One evening, having lost all his money at a card table, he took himself to an adjoining school where his wife sat play- ing. A whispered word in her ear resulted in husband and wife locking themselves in another room. The Colonel emerged a short time later carrying all his wife's clothes, including her diamond. buckled shoes. Re-entering the game, using his wife's clothing as stake money, he ran into a spell of good luck and managed to ruin back all his losings and return the good lady's wardrobe to her, Electronic Glow -Worm Shines Again, Recharged -in Pressure Cooker Lane By ltii'hard Kleiner NEA Staff Correspondent Nett/ York—A souped -up La►n- pyris Noctiluca (glow-worm) is causing quite a stir along what's left of Tin Pan Alley. This en- tomological ditty is "The Glow - Worm," the hit song of the 1910s that's now back with a set of electronic lyrics and a new lease on life, It's a smash. But it typifies the current bleakness of the musical picture, when lyricists are hav- ing to dip back 40 years or so to find singable melodies. "The Glow -Worm" has been selling well for more •than four decades. It's long been classed as a "standard"—the publishers, Edward B. Marks Music Corp., sell some 60 different arrange- ments of it, for everything from a saxophone quartette to a flute - piano duet. But few modern songs stand a chance of lasting so long, "The Glow -Worm," and other melodies of that era, were simple. "Songs used to be written," says Herbert Marks, head of the Marks song publishing firm, "for people to sing around a piano. Today, they're written for trick effects on records. It's hard to sing something like 'Jamhalaya,' for instance, even 11 you could re- member the words." Marks points out that there are plenty of song -writers around. His crowded waiting room is evi- dence to that. Brut they write melodies that sound goo.; coming out of an echo chamber, or being howled by a weeping tenor, or strummed by what sounds like 17 guitars. Songs, today, are written for mechanical reproduction. And they're written under pressure. It's gotten so one commentator things they ought to rename Tin Pan Ailey "Pressure Cooker Lane." To -day's song -writer has to work fast, He makes far less money now than. he did in the good old gather -around -the - piano days. His chief source of revenue—sheet music—is selling just moderately well, And the writer and publisher get, at the most, only two cents from each record. Figuring a million rec. ords, which is good, that means the publisher and writer (or writers) cut up a 820,070 melon, And, a million record song isn't too common. So the song -writers grind them out tis fast as they can, and when they become hits, it's generally because of a recording artist and a recording arrangement, rather than because of the quality of the song itself. "The Glow -Worm" is the ex- ception. Marks poo -pons those who talk about it as a "lucky hit." "After all," he says, "it's the work of top artists, Paul Lincke, who wrote the music, was the foremost composer of Berlin in his day. And Johnny Mercer, who wrote the new lyrics—well, I don't have to tell you about Johnny Mercer, It. wasn't luck— it was skill and talent and hard work." Lincke wrote it in .1002, and called it "Gluhwurmchen," which even the Mills Brothers couldn't have done much with. It came over to this country in 1905, got a new name and new lyrics and eventually found its way into a Lew Fields show, "The Girl Be- hind the Counter." From then on, it's been a•semi- classic. Children learned to play the piano from it. Little girls danced to it in school plays. Big girls took their clothes off to it in burlesque houses. Little shav- ers sang it, and so did big shav- ers in barber shop quartettes, Then Johnny Mercer gave it a lyrical transfusion, and the Mills Brothers record of it be- came one of the top sellers of 1052. Marks, hopes in the new version, it'll keep glowing for another 40 years, Or at least as long, as the new lyrics put it, as the little bug with the neon tail light contin- ues to turn on the AC and the DC. Just Like Ottawa "Here", says a Washington papel', "are comparisons of the wordage in some rather famous pieces of writing:— .The Ten Com- mandments 207 words: The Lord's Prayer 58 words. The Declaration of Independence .... 300 words. T h e Gettysburg Address 260 words. OPS Ceiling Order for Cabbages ....., . 20,911 words.' TABLE TALKS y Jane Andrews. Too many of us, in these days of gas and electric stoves, sacri- fice a whole lot of good eating by trying to do ou" cooking much ton speedily. For instance, n browned, ten- der pot roast seasoned just right and served with plenty of brown gravy is popular in almost every family, But, be sure to take time to cook pot ronsts, Swiss steaks, short ribs and other less tender cuts of beef slowly to assure tenderness and to retain the juices, « + Whatever cut of pot ronst you buy, roll it in seasoned flour and brown it on all sides in a small amount of fat in a deep, heavy skillet as your first step in roast- ing it. When it is well browned, slip a low rack under the meat and add 1i to 1 cup of water before covering it for a long, slow cooking, If you like a spe- cial seasoning, add a few slices of onion, a bay leaf and 2 or 3 whole cloves. Then, covered, put it In a 350°F, oven to cook for 2 or 3 hours. For the last 30 or 40 minutes of this cooking, add whatever vegetables you want to serve with your roast—carrots, onions, potatoes, turnips, etc. « + U There are several cuts of beef that are especially desirable for pot roasts, The round bone shoulder roast which has only one small round bone is good. The blade bone shoulder roast usually called chuck is , ood, also, but is difficult to carve across the grain, The boned rump is one of the best pieces for pot -roasting, and a boneless sirloin tip is ten- der and easy to serve, though it often lacks the fat that adds so much to the taste of these slow - cooking pieces of beef, « In the slow -cooking steak field, round is the most popular cut in almost all parts of the country, It is from the round that Swiss steaks are procured, for a Swiss steak is a round that has been cut from 1 to 2 inches thick and then pounded or "trenched" with seasoning and flour. Brown a Swiss steak well and cook it slowly in tomato juice, beef broth or any other savory liquid until you can cut it ,with a fork—and you'll gain a reputation as a spe- cialized neat cooker! O 0 + oti If you want r special touch to your Swiss steak, add to the beef broth liquid onions, mushrooms, tomato sauce or a combination of these, And be sure to cook it a long time slowly and serve some of the sauce you've cooked it in with each portion. + * • POT ROAST IV1TH VEGETABLES 3 pounds beef pot roast Flour ?!i cup fat 2 teaspoons salt i/ teaspoon pepper 1 cup water 6 potatoes, cut In half 6 medium carrots, pared 6 medium onions, peeled 6 small turnips, pared 1/4 •cup flour Coat beef on all sides in flour. Brown in the fat in Dutch oven or heavy skillet, Add salt, pepper and water. Slip low rack under meat. Cover and cook at 350° F. 2 hours, Add vegetables and cook about 1 hour longer of until meat, and vegetables are fork tender, Arrange meat s.nd veget- ables on hot platter. Add water to kettle to make 2 cups broth, Mix the i,'a cup flour with 1,i cup cold water, Stir and acid slowly to broth. Boil 5 minutes, Season more if necessary, 0 * 1 If you'd like an entirely new taste to your, next pot roast, try fixing it this way: a + • SWEET SOUR POT ROAST 3-5 Found pot roast 2 tablespoons fat Vi cup sliced onion 1 eup vinegar 3a eup brown sugar, firmly packed ?i teaspoon nutmeg 8 medium turnips 2 cups cooked peas Butter or margarine Brown roast in hot fat in heavy skillet, Add onions and cook until onions are transparent, Add vine- gar, sugar and nutmeg. Cover tightly and simmer 3-31 hours or until fork tender, Thicken liquid for gravy, Serve with but- tered peas and turnips, « 1 Short ribs may be browned, seitsoned and covered, with a small amount of water added, and baked at 300° F. for 1 - 2 hours, or they may be fixed with spices for a special meal, 0 « •r SPICY BEEF SHORT RIBS 2 lbs, beef short ribs 3 tblsp, lard or drippings 1 medium onion, sliced 2 tblsp, butter or margarine 2 tblsp. vinegar IA cup ketchup 1 tblsp. Worcestershire sauce 1 lblsp. brown sugar 1 tsp. prepared mustard cup water cup chopped .celery 1 teaspoon salt Itt teaspoon pepper Brown short ribs in lard; brown onion in butter or margarine. Combine onion with a]? ingredi- ents except meat and simmer until thickened (about 30 min- utes), Pour off drippings from ribs and pour over the ribs the simmered sauce. Cover and sim- mer or bake at 350° 1'. about 2 hours or until tender. Makes 4 - 0 servings. 0 + + If you would like to serve a flank steak for your next buffet supper, try it with this special blue cheese topping, Buy a top quality flank steak and remove membrane from both sides, Trim off excess fat and uneven edges. Place trimmed and scored steak in a shallow pan and pour over it this mikture: 1 cup salsa oil, 2 tablespoons vinegar and 1 mashed clove of garlic. Cover and keep in refrigerator 8 to 24 hours, turning steak several times so it will absorb dressing, At broiling time, remove steak and rub each • side with cut clove of garlic. Broil one side in preheated broiler about 3 inches from heat for about 5 minutes. Turn and spread other side with mashed blue cheese (you'll need about 4 ounces). Continue broiling until cheese is bubbly hot and lightly browned. Carve very thin slanting slices, Ferried Over, He'll Walk Back -Dobbin, junk cart -horse and cart driver Abe Schabffer pay their ferry fare for the last time and get ready for the final ride across the river on the East Boston "Penny" Ferry, Discontinued after 120 years, the "Penny" Ferry, running in the red, went to sea for the last time. It made its first trip in 1832, Electric Heating For Eskimo Igloos 'l'he sante fiskhnos who bought Iceboxes are about to get another modern invention, Only this time the developers hope Eskimos won't be so in- genious in adapting the product to daily requirements above the Arctic Circle, "They use refrigerators to store food o it won't freeze," ad- mitted Tex Ziegler, a pilot who has spent the past seven years flying everything from pressure cookers to ogruk skins in and out of the frozen north, Mr, Ziegler, in his small plane, arranged to carry a supply of radiant heat panels and a couple of brand new combination light and heat fixtures called the'mo- litcs, Destination: Kotzebue, an Alaskan village some 50 miles above the Arctic Circle, This seems a radical change for an igloo formerly heated by burning seal oil or maybe wil- low branches, Yet one of the overhead heat -light fixtures is earmarked for the one -room sod igloo of an Eskimo W011111n. "She can pay for it b) making Eskimo dolls," Mt'. Ziegler ex- plained. "I can sell those to post exchanges, Electric heating will do her a world of good," Electricity is provided from the town's generator, The cost of seal oil being what it is today, Mr, Ziegler• figures the Eskimos will regard electric heating as a saving. "The elcctriglass heating pan- els will go in Archie Ferguson's house first," the flying trader explained. "IIe used to run the trading post in Kotzebue. I need skins from him anyway." Mr, Ziegler traded most of the refrigerators for reindeer skins. The Eskimos promptly discover - cd that the insulated boxes were ideal for thawing out meat, Pressure cookers have become a popular kitchen item in the Pot Roast Always Gets a Hearty Welcome rix DOROTIIY MADDOX REEF pot roast is a timely menu suggestion, With good supplies of beef In the markets, most beef cots, particularly the chuck and rump, are economical meat buys. Other pot roasts may be the boneless sirloin tip or round steak, cut at least 2 inches thick, Look for a good covering of fat and atreuks of fat in the lean of the beef for a more juicy roast, In purchasing a pot roast, allow % pound of a bone -in roast or 1/4 pound of boned roast for each serving. Because tho leftover pot roast is so good and has so many uses, you will probably want to purchase enough for at least two meals, Good seasoning, slow, .moist -heat cooking and colorful vegetable accompaniments are the basis for a flne beef pot roast. Cover the meat with seasoned flour and brown thoroughly in a little fat in a heavy kettle or a roasting pan. When browned on both sides, place the meat on n trivet or rack and add 1/4 cup of water, a thin sliced onion and 2 bay leaves. Cover and cook either on low surface heat or In a moderate oven (350 ,degrees F'.). After 2 hours cooking, add prepared vegetables, such as quartered onion, scraped carrots, strips of green pepper and pared, whole, small potatoes. Cover and continue cooking 45 to , 50 minutes. When ready to serve, remove the meat and vegetables to a warmed platter and thicken the meat broth with flour to make a rich flavorful gravy. Here is a variation of the conventional pot roast and vegetable combinations: CREOLE I'OT ROAST (Yield; 6-8 servings) Thrce pounds beef pot roast, 2 tablespoons fat, 1!; cups tomato puree, I,4 cup olive liquid, 2 cups sliced .onions, 34 cup sliced stuffed olives. Melt nit fat in a heavy skillet. Brown the meat well on both sides. Add the tomato puree and olive liquid. Top the meat with onions and olives, Cover tightly and cook over low heat tot 2% sparsely populated area too, Es- kimo women use those in the accepted fashion, The igloos arourd Kotzebue are made of sod blocks instead' of ice blocks, so for the time being, at least, there is no pos- sibility of a gullible Eskimo turn- ing his house into a puddle by installing wall radiant heating. "They like to keep up with the Joneses the same as we do," said the former soldier, who has his own trading post at Igloo, halfway between Nome and Kotzebue. "From seal oil to ra- diant heating isn't as far-fetched as it sounds." TllIFAM FRONT Jo • LOOK WHAT FRESH WATER CAN DO DURING WINTER A simple thing like fresh water can put an extra 10 pounds of gain on your pigs this winter, so tests at Iowa State College show. Three bunches of pigs were put on test for 40 days last win- ter when temperatures averaged 16 degrees, One bunch got water by the old method -it was just poured out to them each day, and usual- ly froze a . few minutes after it hit the trough. Two other bunches were serv- "But 1 thought your name was, Mrs. Gasbag; Daddy calls you thatl" CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Animation 4. Throw lightly 8. Excited 12. Wrath 13. flussian tnountfI,s 14. Masculine nickname 16, English letter 18. Mature 17, Before (prefix) 18. Withdraw 20. Billow 22. Blur earl hen - WA re 24, i4tanzn 27. Flat nap 80 tic situated 82. imitate 33. expanse 34. t('aget 35. Asterlbk 28. Sinal: swallow 27. Affirmative vote 33. Minding material 39. Red card 41. Edible tuber 43. Shoal 45. french stew 19. Feminine name 61, Minus 63• ()sen lever 64. Touch 66.dlledlctnal1►14nt 68. Serpent til. Abound 68. Mares teethe, 69. Town In New Qu DOWN I. Dock 2. Civello 8, Nuisance 4. Tower 6. any winnow 4• Juice of n tree 7. put to depth ed in style -- iron) automatic, heated warterers. They had water whenever they wanted it. The bunch that had just ice most of the day gained 49.1 pounds per. pig, while the two Lunches drinking from heated waterers averaged 58 and x10.2 pounds per head. Did the warmth of the water make any difference? No, say the researchers. As long as 'you keep it from freezing, that's enough. Water will help put cheaper, gains on your pigs too, they say. Pigs that had water all the time not only ate' more feed than the others, but they also made more gains per pound of feed eaten. So there's a double pay-off. FEED EXTRA SUP1'1.EMEN'L' WHEN YOU HOG -OFF FIELDS Corn and soybeans make good feed for hogging -off, but you still need to feed some protein sup- plement at the same lime, tests at Virginia Polytechnic Institute show. .[t's the sante story for peanuts and corn planted together. They give good hogging -off gains, but the pigs still need that extra sup. plement, But the posture tests told u different story. When growing 'pigs were ou good ladino clover, they didn't need any extra pro- tein. Boils down to this: They need proteins, either in or with feed, 8. Century plant 9 Produce 10,Canadian province (ab.) 11, turn tight 19. Notion 21, Salutation 23 vapid 25, Box 20. Weird 27. Smash 28. Body of water 29. Witt!' answer 31, 4'hnt tttiva ;14, (hist 86. Mingled smoke and fun 37. Dincu 38, Obliterates 40, Domain 4h. lncendlarirtn 44. horizontal 46. Oen. 47 The near 49, Printing tonne ID. Salamander 50. (soli mound i2 Old musical tante - I 2. 3 t'•`r 4 s b 7 wt: 13 9 to II B. +• 1•14• }`� r B9 k17 shy '2 ' 15 f y¢• (l• e.:,.. 18 19 V,.kV y'5" to LI{ .R!''•'; ;• :; :: Y'u 23 .2 z 4 }A. :dr. ID L. es ,.:.:ss h~r} sr {.Y.} '.43 41 � • 7 49 h 5e ,y • •::. 5,i II ,¢: }`� r B9 Ae1111Wer Elsewhere on Thb'Tag, Savory pot roast with vegetables, an Ideal cold weather meal. hours. Serve with hot fluffy rice in true Creole style. if gravy is made with the pot roast use only 1 tablespoon (lour mixed with I/4 cup cold water for each cup of broth. A teaspoon of curry powder mixed with Vs cup water, a hew shakes of pepper sauce, and a dash of Worcestershire sauce will give added evidence of the Southern influence. TEST YOUR INTELLIGENCE Score your self 10 points for each correct answer in the first five questions. 1. One of the following men is not a playwright, Can you name him? -Elmer Rice -Norman 'Phomas --Robert Sherwood -Maxwell Anderson 2. Coffee is ground from which of the following? -Pollen -Berries -Roots 3. Which of the following words does not match used to describe parts of the eye? -Iris --Retina -Fouea 4. 'Thomas Jefferson's home was called -Monticello -Mount Vernon -The Hermitage -Shangri-la .5. Which of the following boxers won a decision over Joe Louis? -Randy Turpin -Maxie Rosenbloom -Max Schmeling -Sugar Ray Robinson • 8. Match the following canals with the bodies of water which they connect. Score yourself 10 points for each correct combination. (A) Suez Canal -Aegean Sea and Ionian Sea (B) Panama Canal ' -Red Sea and Mediterranean Sea (C) Sault St, Marie --Pacific and Atlantic Oceans (D) Corinth Canal -Lake Superior and Lake Huron ANSWERS TO INTELLIGENCE TEST 'Bas uBluol pull Bag uia2a\ (a) 'uo.nlj mites putt .oltadns a)lerf (C) 'stump ai1UB1WV puts oUlaBd (13) 'Bag uUauuna3ipaW pull Bag pat (V) --ll 'SUIIaU1tlos xByq --g '0119DAuoylI-y '9Ial.41.1aA-'g 'salatag-7, 's1U1og1, UUUIJOM--t -Leaves the other three -Ventricle NEW TES'1' WILL SHOW IC COW IS PREGNANT A quick, easy -to -run pregnan- cy test for dairy cows has been developed by Oregon State Col- lege dairy scientists. While they admit there at'e • bugs to be ironed out (a cow will test positive for three weeks or so after calving), the test proved 91% accurate when tried on 130 cows hi the college herd. Some animals were tested suc- cessfully within 10 days after service. A urine' sample is needed in making the test. The sample is treated with a solution contain- ing this jaw breaker - sodium benzenoneindophenol. If pregnant, the cow's urine turns green, stays that color for 5 to 10 minutes, If she's not preg- nant, the urine color reappears within a matte' of seconds after the initial color change. When the test is developed to a point where any dairyman can use fl, it should cut heavy losses, "The number of dairy cattle stilt to slaughter as sterile and non -pregnant, but which are ac- tually with calf, amount to 10% of all dairy animals butchered," says J. 11. Byers, one of the re- searchers who developed the test. PEED COWS SILAGE AS THE ONLY ROUGiIAGE? If they have to, dairy cattle can do their job of producing calves and milk, with silage as the only roughage. 1n ether words, they don't, necessarily have to have hay or pasture. In tests conducted by• the Bur- eau of Dairy industry, U.S.D.A., eight grade [holstein and Jersey heifers were split up, One bunch was raised on only silage and grain, the other- got a regular grain ration plus alfalfa and tim- othy hay, After freshening, the Holsteins on silage produced 12,141) lbs. milk, compared with 11,408 for Holsteins on regular rations. Jer- seys on silage made 10,316 pounds compared with 9,585, on three milkings chilly, 365 days. Off -hand, you'd conclude from these records that it's better to feed silage and no hay. But folks running the tests have this to say: When corn silage Is the only roughage, you have to feed more grain to boost the total digestible nutrients. • One other thing --carotene is essential for a cow to produce normal calves. SIlage is' low in carotene, so there',' a chance that feeding it as the only roughage might cut down the calf crop. FEED YOUR TREES HAY? Don't give up on those non- productive apple trees just yet -not until you've tried mulching with high -nitrogen hay. 11 works like a tonic; restores vigor, gives trees all the plant food they need, and in just the right balance. USDA horticulturists tried the idea first at Beltsville, Md., on some 18 -year-old York trees that were on their last legs -pretty sorry looking. C. P. Harley, in charge of the experiment, used orchard -grass, but says that you can use brome, alfalfa -any meadow grass. Just be sure to fertilize that grass well, so that the nitrogen con- tent is high. Harley put on 300 pounds of ammonium nitrate per acre. At heading time, just when the stents carried the biggest amounts of nitrogen and other plant nutrients, Harley cut the grass, end spread 200 pounds of air-dry hay under each tree. He saw results quickly -foliage be- came dark green and thick, fruit spurs increased, and the trees started bearing. Unmulched trees still limped along, even when Harley gave them commercial fertilizer equal in plant food value to nutrients in the hay. "We've been using this meth- od of handling trees for several years, and the response has been nothing short of amazing," says Harley, "Trees on their last legs that would not respond to other treat- ments, made remarkable come- backs. "It's the hest medicine that we know of." tl'ONI)ts'tt DRUGS DO,N"l' MAKE MORE EGGS Anti -biotic drugs may matte chicks grow faster, but they won't stake haus lay any more eggs, That's what J. S. Carver and L. R. Berg have found out at Washington State College. They ran three tests with White Leg- horn pullets, and drew blanks 0n1 three scores: The anti -biotics didn't. raise egg production: they didn't make the. bitds any heavier; and they didn't cut down death tosses. And when the pullets were elated to produce hatching eggs, anti -biotics in the feed fulled to make any important difference in hatchability of the eggs. This apparently means that there's a limit to what even won- der drugs will do. It looks like your hens will do just as well on a good, standard laying ra- tion as on one that's fortified with drugs. --- RIGHT LIGII'1' BULB HELL'S EGG GRADES The kind of electric light you use when you carton or case eggs can make money for you or lose it. That's because sorne lights show up tinted eggs better than other lights, There's nothing wrong with tinted eggs -that isn't the point. But customers, whether they buy from you at retail or wholesale, like their eggs to look alike -all white, all brown, or all tinted. They'll pay more for a uniform pack. A daylight fluorescept bulb is the best light for showing up tints, according to tests made at Cornell University. Next best is a white fluorescent, and after that cool, white, deluxe bulb. Here's a tip: Shade the bulb, and hang it low enough so none of the Tight shines in your eyes. Catches and Bands Geese by Hundreds On November 22, Jasper Wil- son Miner, who was in charge of banding Ducks and Geese at the Jack Miner Sanctuary, Kings- ville, Ontario, made a record catch of Canada Geese when he caught 844, 251 had been banded in other years, 189 had been banded previous- ly in the fall of 1952 and 404 had never been banded previously, making a total of 844 in the catch. Each bird was banded with a Jack Miner band which contains Jack Miner's name and address, date and serial number. No Wonder: Man in Brixton was going bald. "Move to Hampstead," a skin specialist ad- vised hills. He did and his hair grew again, Said the doctor; "I found he had been living next door to his mother-in-law." (14 II�AY CIIOOL LESSON By Rev. R. Barclay Warrent B.A., B.D. Possessions : help or llhhdranas Matthew 19 :16.26 Memory Selection; Take heed and beware of covetousness: far a man's life consistent not in tiles abundance of the things which b' possesseth, Luke 12 ;15 in the Bible we read, "Give me neither poverty nor riches; feed me with food convenient for ane: lest I be full, and deny thee, and say, Who is the Lord? or leak I be poor, and steal, and tale the name of 1)1y God in vain.' Proverbs 30 : 8, 9. Some one hes said, "It is no disgrace to be poor, but it is inconvenient," hlcwever a man's character is determinett not by what he has but by hist attitude toward what he has" "'They that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and into many. foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in des- truction and perdition. For the love of money is the root of aU evil," 1 Tim. 6:9, 10. The rick young ruler in our lesson failed in the most crucial hour of him life not because he was rich but - because his heart was so set upon his possessions that he could not give them up for Jesus' sake. He was a clean respectable young man but the coin was so close to his eye that it hindered him front seeing the value of following Jesus at any cost. We have no record that he ever' altered his decision, He gained the world but lost his soul. "How much did he leave?" ask- ed one who had just been in. - formed of the death of a man reputed to be rich. "He left it all," was the reply. There are no pockets in a shroud. We are only stewards in thin life. Let us use what we have to the glory of God. Let the richt remember that "It is easier for the camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God." Let all others remember that when the disciples asked„ "Who then can be saved?", Jesus replied, "With men this is im- possible; but with God all things are possible." The salvation pro- vided by our Lord Jesus Christ is adequate for all. LONG RUN An electric motor to be used in the first atomic submarine engine has been operating for a year and a half without a break- down, the Westinghouse Electrle Corporation reports, The motor has been sealed in a tin contain- er to test its performance during the eighteen months, (Upside down to prevent pecking) •9V7 SNV.L W39 dS 9 Add S .Ln09 1101110- d AZ1dv 3W3 3d1 3Sd 7N 3 9 0 S V V M 9 7 b S 7V 9,8 l 3 '73 ,dl 3a' 3 l ta bb O 9 van' d sol S3 Rae Substance Over Shadow -Mrs, Herbert E. Smith (right) spends a few moments with her five-year-old daughter, Linda Carole, in Memphis, Tenn., before the child carried out a court order by receiving rabies injections. Linda had been bitten by a rabid dog but her parents refused medical aid because, they said, "God has cured her." A Memphis judge ordered treatment. No one contested the action. PAGE 4 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 • SALMON STEAKS VARIETY OF FROZEN FILLETS. Arnold Berth MEAT u- r.l. FISH Free Delivery: 10 a.m. and After 4 p.m. Telephone 10 --- Blyth. ....N.IbN... ....W NMI N...... .. I.•NI•I.v.V Nss-#44 ..,/ FULL COURSE MEALS AT ALL HOURS. Excellent Service -- Satisfaction Guaranteed. HURON GRILL BLYTH - ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. Tilt STANDARD Wednesday, Jan, 28th, ing at WIL STF IELD • BELGRAVE The congregation of the \\'estfcld 1'he January mcg ing n! the Bei- jing toted Church held their au•ntl m.et• grave \1'rmtn's ln.e ing Was h Id in in,g with a pot luck supper on Thugs- grave Cont-turn's Crn're on '1h ki in /:ay, January 2nd, w•ah a good it_ afternoon with a good attendance Arcs. tcndanec, Supper teas s:rv�d by the , ens. The pros dent, Mrs, S. Cook, pro. ladles, after tvhich the mec'ing *open- sided and cpencd the meeting in the ed h�• ,ingin; "Pooh of our Fathers,” manner, Theminutes of the I .N. ;, -d by prayer ley the past t',' prcviutu mcc!inl; and trca� aegis's rc• Rev. C. C. Washington witl, the Lords' port "s received. 'd t roll call le' Prayer in unison. The Srri,tturc los well responded to by naming a frust son was read from Psr.'m 103. A filet • "Let me ring it;' wit n the s try re or vegetable and i s v tain.n contort. vt was decided to 1101(1 a c. ncerl In t'.e corded \vies of murine interest to all. A near future and a committee was ap porn arrange ntemJria1 service teas enn(10cted in I to f r i''fir: pro- ntcmory of the members who had pas• sed on. After the nt'nister had given his re• port to the con;re;ation Ire r.snrn.cl the chair while, the t•ar:ott; other re- ports were presented. Al depart • meets showed encouraging progress during the year. 1'. c'11 rep: rt showed a substantial balance. The relief, w: rk bales vent to 'Toronto during the ye'.r were valued at $71),(17. • Mr. Marvin NIcl) v'll was re -el• ectcd to the session for a five•year term. Roy Nnbl: and Lloyd Walden were re-elected to the Ilcard of Stew- ; ;refs f: r a three year (-rm. Jacic Buchanan was t'e-appointed• ch':rc'n treasurer. Nlarvin MC1)0=11 a church secretary. \\'m. McDowell a: Ni. and NI, 'Treasurer. Organist. Win- , nifred Campbell; assistant, Graeme 1 \lcDowell. Church Officer, Fah:a 11Lt'wl11 Rcprescn'ativc on the Olfi• cial Board from the Board of '!'tits• tees, Alva NIcI`ow•ell, The meeting closed with prayer. N[r, 11'arcld Bcsm-n of Toronto spent the week -end with his parents, M'r. and Mrs, Maurice Bosman, Nlr. and Mrs Hugh Smith of Moles worth visited on Tuesday \vide NI r. and Nlrs. Chas. Smith. Mr. Ken. Boyd of Brantford spent the week -end \vitt' Nis. and Mrs, Ken Campbell. NI r. and \frs. 1)-uttl s Campbell an' family visited on Sunday with firs. ' Annie \\Talper at the home of Mr and Nits. John Daer of Auburn. ♦N#MN.I f####~~I0NTINNNIMN•I,NiM MRS. T. A. G. GORDON work of the church unto her health failed. The funeral was held privately at 1.30 Saturday, conducted by the Rev. D. G. Campbell, Burial was made Mrs. T. A. G. Gordon, Ole former Minnie MacKay, d!ed in London co Trursday, January 22nd, after an ill- in \faitlandbank cemetery, Seaforth. ,less of several months. Sympathy of many friends here is extended to Nit.. Gordon in his be- reavement. She was born in North Carolina and was a sister of the late Dr, Charles MacKay, wro was well known here. She ,Harried 1'. A. G. Gordon in 1937 in Toronto, She was the last re - maiming member of her fancily of which one borther and two sisters pre- deceased rer. Her husband survives her. _Mrs. Gordon taught school in El- mira, Clinton and Seaforth for 35 years. She was a member of First Presb)tterian Crurch, and active in the v--- Mr. and Mrs. Le:nard Cook and Mrs, Gertrude Dennis attended t'1e funeral of Mrs. Cook's aunt, Mrs. An- dy :Ulan of Clifford, on 'Tuesday, l[rs• George McNoll, sr., fell on the steps of her apartment last Friday and broke her arm. She is recuperating at the hone of her daughter, Mr;. Bert Craig, of Auburn. EAST WA1Y.ANOSH Mr, and Mrs. Hilliard McGowan of Oakvelle spent the weekend wilt A[r. and Mrs. Orval McGowan and Ken ne'Jt. NIrs. Frank Marshall v'sitcd wilt her daughter. \frs. Yungblut and Mr. \'unt;'hhtt at London. Ou'door skiving is being enjoyed on Charter's pond, :\ good time was had at the euchre and dance at SS. No. 10 Fri- day evening. 12 tables of euc',re and 1 of Lost Meir were in play. Prize winners were: Gents high: Frank Marshall; Gents low: Jack Ca'.tlw•ell; Lac'.ies high: NIrs. IIilliard McGowan; Ladies low: \frs. Millar Richmond. Lunch was served its charge. by the committee NNI.N•N..I'.N..NN.. MNIII'I•••N•NIII•JNMMNII1fINMINJN•IINNNNMI1 a� n �■ 1, i 1. , r wJ .,. . „ u, . CLE � r SALE JANUA Y This is your last chance to take advantage of this year's January Clear- ance Sale. There are still many bargains throughout the Store. Thrifty Shop- pers will be taking full advantage of these prices this week -end. Come in and look around. There ii no obligation to buy. Don't miss this opportunity. ALL 59c AND 69c PRINT IN THE STORE . SPECIAL PER YD. 35c & 49c MEN'S DOESKIN ,WORK SHIRTS, Sizes 14% and 15 , . , SPECIAL AT $1.98 1 RACK OF CHILDREN'S DRESSES & BLOUSES .... SPECIAL AT $1.00 WOMEN'S All -Wool JERSEY BLOUSES, red, grey, gold, beige SPEC. $3.95 WOMEN'S All -Wool SKI PANTS, sizes 14 to 20, reg. $5.95 ..SPECIAL $2.98 MEN'S HEAVY All -Wool BUSH SHIRTS, reg. $7.95 SPECIAL $4.50 The 25 Percent Discount On All Goods In Our Store Still Holds 50 Percent Off On All Ladies' and Misses' Dresses 15 Percent OSI On All All Work Clothes The Arcade Store STORES IN BLYTH AND BRUSSELS, • • • gram is to be presented by local talent. The guest st:caker ,vas M i..s M ary Love, Reg, N. of the County Heal h Unit and she spoke on "The valuer f Proper D:et inn' Ilcaltn•' She st:es•ed� she 'ntpnrtanee of h'nvitt mills, e .�s.l butter and meat in the dict, of avo'd• ing tvhi:e sugar and whits bread and of havin ; lots of raw i u't: and ve e• tables. ,\Irs. Art Scott sang a solo with \Irs. C. \\'acle accompany:ng her at the piano, M rs. \Vote conduct( d 'If' Sh®e Stage • Blyth Mad0 S ranged by \Irs. C. Wade and Mrs. C. Purclon. The singin s of the Qu :en el. sed the mcetirg and lunch was serv- ed by M rs. C. \\'ade, Mrs. E. Wight - man and Mrs. C. Purdon, 4-4• o 44 • 444 4 -4-•••44+•4~4+44-.444-•44~°+++•-•-•-4444' s•-•44-4-4-•-•-••444-•-•-•-•44-• •-•••-N••-•••• • •'•+•-•-• f•'+ •-•-•••-•-•-•-•-•44.4. 1 JUMPING JACKS BY SAVAGE -- At Our Store "Be Kind to your feet. Wear Madill's Footwear." 1 Reggie I'urdon,'elder son of Mr. nd Mrs. Clif, Purdon, was injured on •Tuesday afternoon while sleigh ridin 1, down the Orange Hall 1'11 in the vil- lage, He and I111y Scot were on the sled which curved off. the s'd:walk and bit a tree which Reggie bit w•t't his head. Iie was taken to \Ving'•am Hospital where he was f:.und to have a slight cont'n:sion and X-rays show- ed vsmall fracture. '\Ve are glad to report he is showing improvement. His mother is unfo:tunately confined -10 bed with the mumps. Mr. and Mrs. Don Lobb. Vane Aver.. end Mr. and Mrs, George Henderson, Brucefield, with Rev. C. and Mrs, Cox, The annuol erecting of Knox United church was held 011 Wednesday after - !iron in the basement of the Church. Rev. C. Cox presided and Kenne,h Wheeler was secretary for the meet- ing. Financial reports were given and ;t substantial increase in givings was .h_wn• The following were elected to office: 'o the Session: Edgar Wightman, Al- bert Coultes, Martin Grasby; to the Board of Stewards, 3 year term: Stew- art Prcc'er, Clifton Walsh, I-Iar,•Id Vincent; Board of Trustees, 3 year term: J. E. McCallum, Jesse Wheeler; Plate collectors: George \[:chic, Geo. fart Harold Vincent, Kenneth Wheeler, Robert Grasby; Ushers: Jack iliggins, Cliffford Coultes, Mat- tie Grasby, Ernest Michie, Jose Wheeler; Authors: Jas. R. Coultes, Geo. Michie. The minister's salary was ' raised to $3,200 fcr 1953. The meeting was closed wi h the singing of a hymn and prayer by Rev. C. Cox, At the progressive euchre party here in the Community Centre Wednesday night high prizes were won by Mrs. Fred Cook and C. R. Coultes, cnnsola• tic"' prizes went to Mrs, hIcrb Wheel- er and David Armstrong. Bruce Scott, Garner Nicholicn, Bob Vttill, Ken Wheeler, Herman Nethery, Cooper Nc'hery, took in the bus trip to the Ontario Crop Improvement Convention in 'Toronto on 'Thursday. Lloyd Anderson, of Toronto, spent the week -end at his home here. '.lir. Cecil Chimney is under the doctor's care at his 11:111(2 here, Jas. R. Coultes attended the Ontar- io Provincial Annual Convention of the Hereford Breeder's Association in Guelph on Friday. Mrs. Robert Grasby and baby daughter returned home from Wing - ham hospital on Sunday. The 9th line group of the \Vcnien's Association of Knox United Church 111(21 at the honnc of Mrs. L. Stone- house on Thursday'afernoon. Plans were made for the next meeting. Jt was derided to meet on the 4th Wed- nesday. , Mrs. Clifforl Logan and children were London visitors. Bodmin Ftu•Il Forum met at the home of Mr, and Nit's, Clarence Ynill on M'cnday n'ght. The radio' broad- cast was listened to and this was fol- lowed by an address by Reeve Harvey C. Johnston of Morris who gave an interesting talk on Conservation. Mrs, H. Wilkinson was chosen as cliair lady for the 1110111h of February. Pro- : gressive euchre was enjoyed with Mrs, Rae Crawford and Bob Yuill winning the high prizes while consolation J 1 • prizes went to Mrs. J. C. Proc;cr and Howard Wilkinson. The next meet- ing will be held -at the Home of Mr, and Mrs, J. C, Procter, Lunch was served. The ninth line euchre club met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence 1-lanna Friday night. hligh prizes went to Miss Edith Procter and Lewis Stonehouse; consolation prizes to Mrs. Harry Cook and Albert Bieutan, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wheeler, Iv- an, and Mr. 1-1, Wheeler, spent Mon- day in London. A dance was' held in the Forester's Mall here Friday night, sponsored by the Athletic Association.. Geo. Smith's orchestra supplied music: for- new and old time dancing. Mrs. Harry Adapts left on Monday fcr Florida tvhe:c s'ic will spend a 1 month, • Patsy and Ralph Logan have been . 1aic1 up with the chicken p:x this week, The Needlecraft Shoppe BLYTH -ONTARIO. JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE JANUARY 22nd TO JANUARY 31st. Wool Skirts & .Junipers, 7 to 12, reg. 4,50, Sale $3.75 Wool Plaid Skirts, 7 to 12, reg. 5.75,. . , Sale $4,50 Wool Plaid Skirts, 2 to 6, reg :3.98, - Sale $2.98 Long-sleeved Pique Blouses, 7 to 12, Reg. 2.35 Sale $1.9S Plaid -lined Jeans, 2 to 6X, reg. 2.98,Sale $2.69 Plaid-lined.Jeans, 8 to 12, reg. 3.98 Sale $3,69 Plaid Shirts, Reg. 2.49 Sale, $1.9S Wool Sweaters, 2 to 6, Reg. 2.98 Sale $2.59 Wool Sweaters, 8 to 12, Reg. 3.25 Sale $2.79 Wool Pullovers, 8 to 12, Reg. 2.79 • Sale $2.39 Full-length Hose. 6 to 9%, Reg. 89c Sale, 69c See Our Window for Other Values. �.... 44+4-1-•+44 411+•+4+4-♦ ♦♦ •-•44-4tr1-r•l+N44•4-•-•••-• • ARE YOU IN THE MARKET FOR A GOOD SECOND-HAND 'TRACTOR? FARMALL "M" I.H.C. TRACTOR, 2 Completely Reconditioned. 102 MASSEY-HARRIS TRACTOR, Mechanically Good - New Paint Job. FARMALL "A" TRACTOR, Priced Reasonable. CASE TRACTOR SPREADER (ON RUBBER) 1 Year Old, Don't Forget to Drop in and See our New Line of TRACTORS - COLT, MUSTANG, and NO. 33 STEWART JOHNSTON MASSEY-HARRIS SALES & SERVICE BLYTH, ONT. 1 .4444+$-N++++++ !-4+4•H-•-••N444 +•+1-f44` N.NNI N.i.v.a-1' # . ..•NN,M.I.• ATTENTION FARMERSe Now is the time to plat your order for a CEMENT SILO with Hugill Bros., Contractors for 22 Years. With a Cement Shortage`in Sight, place your Order Early. For information, write, HUGILL• BROS. Box 70, Goderich. 14.2p. Blyth Farmers (oOp Association TELEPHONE 172 BLYTH. NOW IS THE TIME TO ORDER" FERTILIZER ORDERS TAKEN NOW- •WILL BE 'GIVEN. PROMPT ATTENTION, DUE TO THE DISCOUNT IN JANUARY AND FBBRUARY. WE ARE AGENTS FOR NEW IDEA HORN FARM M &CHINERY. Wednesday, Jan. 28th, 1953 - THE STANDARD Pale 5 I the Y,P•U, which is a n:w crAaniza- � 1 A=t4t4414►4t4d4014140KK14etl1111talKteiK'al4 IfK01Ka G0lt4 +4 41C�tMe� il10410110“1140000/161011111(11111 L(1N1)L5130It0 , , ROX THEATRE, THE PARK THEATRE CAPITAL THEATRE LYCEUAI THEATRE ti:m, but has bed' very active du ing t \fn, sand Mrs. I?choler, I';u It'vcr• the pail year. WINGMAM•—ONTARIO, _ CLINTON, _ GO_ DERICH •• PHONE 1150 GODERICH, were visitors wilt Mrs. Chas, Watson The election of the Se,siuni sand , :-- —'" ----------- i NOW: "SALLY AND SAINT ANNE" Two Showa kach Night starting At. NOW PLAYING (Jan. 29.31): 'Walk NOW: "A YANK IN INDO-CHINA" on Sunda)'• tite\vard, were (kit ‘‘,..til, some nd ,v • .with Ann Blyth and Edmund Gwenn ' �' 7:15 East On Beacon' with Gcorgc Mut-. __.__.__.___._._..-..... _. ...-.., with John Archer_ and Jean Willis, NH'. Harold Sprung of \Ianin on, laces being elected, Tru nteetin; i -- — - --- - phy'..A I>.illiant spy drama. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Monday, Tuoaday, y \lanitoha, i; wivitin•; his uncle, '\Ir, throughout wits very gratifying and ` Thura, i r'•, Sat., Jan. 59.90.31 Wednesda .'red Sh :bbrouk and other relat'v- is dlui'e interest ng, I'h: p:astor v_ic:d c fit 1,r ', , ,,t > -`- Loretta Young, Joseph Cotten, here. I i N 1 ht ,_ i.' C t1) Gdl\ C� Qn Cecil Kellaway , "VIVA ZAPATA" his pleasure, being \yell plea .ed wi h g ' Mr:, , 'feet., Wcd. (Fel ruary 2.4) Mrs, Gecrge Beam in, l.i,ta•w.I +tl•: rwports \vlaiell shamed 14 0.)(1 \work -_---__.__------ ' -Au ry — _ __- - i " T u, :1 'Technicolor c:IIIIIIy about a girl "WHEN IN ItOA1i1, with a well spfi,: per,conrslity whd, :1 stirring biography of tIt,. et Im•ful assent sa. few days with her sister -in- and much ' thought ;:sill lir tight ,..\I„day, 'Tuesday, February 2-3 �. �• •. i tires of hc:11 prim and prcdictab',:, 11ex1c;utrzealot who fought with Il;ut- BUthrt to Knock”! .1 htsuuut, hc:11twurm fig story c t La th law, Mrs. \lacy Ileac in and Harold, a year of ;ulivuy to a claw, .Meet 161)311'f, oho Villa to end the tyranny of \[r, and Mrs, William- Goyim. visit i11 closed \\i.h prayer, after ah'cltand gon•g,vcncss to d against 11 c hack _ — _ Porfirio Diaz. ed \\'i 11 Ws: J. Radford sand M r, ;and lunch was ser \ed by IIIc 1alis ;111(1 a I:ldnit I'.ntcruainmentt) g:o.nul of Route lino, Holy Wear, _ Marlin Brando Jeans Peters and Mar lyn Mcnr_o Richard . • HarryJoao h Cnll:ia. _. __. .-- _____._-_-._._.-. __--___- . ' Wednc�.day, Thursday, Feb, 4.5 ; p James Cagnev, Corinne Calvet and -Thursday, Friday, Saturday . _._____. ___._____ __ Dan Dailey Tom Duenn, Jean Adams and This IS a new ver;inn, in 'I'eclutic.11ur, Fuzzy Knight of,•thc lintel pLty shout 1Wordl 11'ar 1, 'fell, a fast-moving adventure story. \\'herein a new ca t c u r:cs un the conccrnin'4 the most durable number fabulnu; furdin' 11' fightin', of a rebellknts outlaw clan, "Last of the Duannes" "I-IALF ANGEL 1, Clinton. Rev, \\r, G:utdier's da"glacr and son-in-law and children of Torun' 0 spent the weekend at the Paris n;1( c, The f.ondesb.n'j Uni'ed Church held their annual cougrcga ion -1 meeting on Tuesday', Jan, 20th, wigs a fair at- tendance. Rev, \V. (iand'er was elect- ed chairman ;and filled the chair fit tingly. Mrs. L. NIcNall was the Sec- retary. After the pastor made a few remarks the ineet'n;g opened \vita prayer. \Irs. \IcN;all read the ntinu;,,s The Auburn \Vonten's Ins flute ;re of last year's meeting, Tho Rpm is of holinig a Concert in t'•c the many dei•artntents of the chock FORESTERS HALL, AUBURN. ON rIOTI.E were given, Mr. I -pert '1',wns;mi,lTHURSDAY EVE., FEBRUARY 5th Cylinder lock resetting, runbin;atiuns Church 'I'teasurer, }ave the e' arch rc• 8.15 p,nt, , CARD OF THANKS • - --"She's Wol'1ang Her Way — _. 1 w:s:l to thank the nci.,ltbours and - Through College"Thurs., Fri., Sat. (Fab. 2.4) Fe',. 5.7) friends \vha ron.inhcred Inc wit!\ ' Audie Murphy, Faith Domergua and cards and treats whit: I was ill ;at my Vii ginia Mnyo_ R:maid Reagin 1 home. Special thanks to Rev. (. 1. - Bvach for his calls, 15 -Ip. \Irs, Eve'yn (i bb. CONCERT • Ste; hen McNally. Friday, Stturday, February 6.7 ' All the suspet'se ;ta action \' a cools "Holiday for Sinners" \wish fair this 'I'echn color drama stag- "WHAT PRICE GLORY" ed amid the rocky grandeur of theGig You'll . Janice Rd() - i rugged West. . e11ew R your Subscription Slnarh• changed, keys cul. Dmi't throw away tart in which all.bli"'.fico w •r • met I he program im.Iud:s a debase with a balance ovd n Jack Iambi n t. c t. your old cylinder locks. \\'e can re- s wed thr.t 1.:dies are NI ore Efficient 1,;ar them like new, Your sultrily' ti- the of the `.onlay Sc'ool, gave Car .)rivers than Viet'"; a \IinstltI n1,rro\w is our IMAM'S.; today. Bail the report for the 5:nulay Seltosl Show, Drills, and U,iter Nu.nhe s in and Jluteh Hard\\;u c, Clinton, Ont, which showed an increase in attt n. costumes.. :Vdmissi .n 35e, Children 14-3. dance and also in giv`ngs, \irs. Birt 2()c• 151, — y `)hobbrook and NH's. Pip:' gave the rc- Lionel L. LAthbertSon, port for the \V, A, which was a vety - •-•••••-o-•-•-•-•-• •-•-•••.••••••••-•-•-•-•-•-•. Representative busy year for them but w'th N 0 T I C E hood re- METROPOLITAN LIFE sults with a suhstaniial balance lel: INSURANZE COMPANY over. Mrs. Chas. \Vatson reported for The Annual Meeting of ; Office 51 Albert Street, Stratford. Ont the \V;\i,S. which also went , over ; the Blyth Agricultural So- Residence, 40 Victoria Street, the fop. \frs. E. \\'sod gave the NI is- , Goderich. Ont. • slot' Circle which also did well, fill ' ciety will be held in . 'r'elepliones: Office 922, Residence 114? \lissicn Band report was given by MEMORIAL HALL NI Joe Shaddicl< \\Ilio almost daub- '' s Icd their givnigs, Mr. Clare Vincent gave a talk on BLYTI-I 011 • APPLICATIONS SArT'URDAY, ' TOWNSHIP OF HULLETT •IANUARY 31St ' The Council of the Township of 1f:llett \will receive Applications far n ', the position of \Varble Fly lisp."c'ot , commencing at 1,00 p.m..' for 1953 in the 'Township of 1lullel!, The Council will pay for this Posi- tion $1.1)0 per hour at.d .05c per unit: for mileage on inspccticn duties, All Applications to be in the hands of the Clerk by 2 P.M., -Monday, Feb' ruary 2nd, 1953, GEO, W COWAN, Clerk, 14-2, Londcsbaro, Ont TENDERS TOWNSHIP OF HULLETT The Coniieil of the 'Township of Ilulle11 \will receive Sealed '.'enders for the Spraying of Cattle in the Township for Warble Fly. 'Tenders to be for 2 Sprays at so much per head. Work tD lie clone according to the rules set down for the control of the \Varble Fly and to the satisfac- tion of the Warble Fly Inspect. -r. All Tenders to be in the hands of the Clerk by 2 p.m., February 2, 1953. Lowest or any Tender not neces- sarily accepted. GEO. W. COWAN, Clerk, 14-2. Londesboro, Out, S. P. Hallahan, President, Mrs. A. Berthot, Sec'y 14-2. •• 0+000 ♦ 4 ♦ +0.0 0.1•.-0 a 0•-0 0•••0.0•• •4 7tAeumatic PAIN Good news for those who long for relief from rheumatic pain, but feel hopeless! Thousands get speedy relief from rheu- matic and arthritic suffering by using T -R -C's. Don't let dull, wririsonte aches, and sharp stabbing pains handicap you r,nv longer. Try Templeton's T•R• C's today. Only 65c, $1.35 at druggists. T.1344 FOR SALE 1),(' storey frame and brick dwelling cit Morris street, One acre of land and stable, Apply, Eilio.tt Real Es- tate Agency. 13. OPTOMETRIST JOHN E• LONGSTAFF Optometrist. Eyes examined. Glasses fitted Phone 791►r.+�+�+�^�_+_++_�±+±�++�r^..o.'. MAIN ST. - SEAFORTI-I Hours: 9 - 6 Wed. 9.12 :30 ; Sat. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m Thursday Evenings, By Appointment COMING: Lana Turner and Kirk COMING:' `UNKNOWN WORLD" in 'THE BAD AND THE i Science -fiction at its hest, Matinees: Sa'. & Holidays 2:,30 p.m. BEAUTIFUL." MICIOCKICKICtetetMICtOCIMICsIgtteCK OateKICGIetOeIMOCte.►;ieleIeVNIGIK Mcee:OK'sIMDIA) aagtoirawmitimiA IStart 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 \Vallpaper, Paints, Brush and Spray Painting, Phone El'th 37-26. Londesboro 568: • Any or all apphrttaons not tiecessar- 'FARMER.S ATTENTION \\.\l,: \vox, Bto. \v, c, Ba►1, ily accepted. I.P.M,: \VoC, l3ro, \V, R, Jewitt• Union 3; Union 6; Union 7; SS. 9; the following tractors 5.W.: lIro, \V. V. Roy. SS, 10; SS. 13; Union 16. I.1\r,: V. mt..tiro. \V. D, wens, — East Wawanosh School Area f01' Sale. Treasurer: Wor, Bro. \V, R. Jewitt, Board. Alfred Nesbit, Chairman, RR, 1- 201 Tractor, Massey- Secretary : \\Tor. Bro. William Leiper, 3, Blyth, Ont, C. H. Wade, Secre FIRE INSURANCE CO Chaplain: Wor. 13ro, George McVittie. tarry, Bclgravc, Ont, 15-2, Harris. This tractor has D, of C.: \Voir. 13ro, R. M. '1'ovnsend. 4 an almost new motor, and S•D.: Bro. S, C. Jones' WANTED HEAD OFFICE - SEAFORTH, ONT. Man\•anted Lir Rayleigh business, Ofe.:era: J.D.: \Ver: 13ro, Allen Shaaldick, IS in very goad shape. LG.; Wor, 13ro• Oliver Anderson, Sell to 1500 fmilies. Good profits for President, J. L. Malone, Scaforth; S.S,: \1'or, Bro. J. W. Armstrong, hustlers. Write today. Rawlei,li's Vice -President, J, H. McEwing, Blyth; 1- 80. Oliver Tractor'. This . J.S,: Wor. Bro, Willows Mountain. Dept. A -136-S, \Ion'real, Manager and Secretary -Treasurer, M. tractor has four new tires I'yler: 13ro, J, C. Saundcrcock, — •----- A. Reid, Scaforth, Directors: G. ALAN WILLIAMSAuditors: \Vor. Bro. George Mc\'ittie, which included vocal solos by Sharon S. I-1, \Vhitmorc, Seaford': Chris. and runs like new. Mc\licharl and Billie Hamilton l:i Lconhardt, Bornholm; E. J. Trewar- OPTOMETRiST. Wor. 13ro, J, L. Shaddick, Robert Archibald,Sea- ano seta by Audrey 1(acl:well ; read- tha, Clinton; ,•,•,,,,,•,..## MM,,,,,•,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, PATRICK ST. - VIINGi-IAM, ONT. 1- 77 Oliver Tractor, '2 J ings by Mrs, G, McGain and Mrs. K. forth; John H. McEwing, Blyth; -- Buchanan C'eallers -- EVENINGS BY APPOI.NTMENT, years old. just like new. �'VALTON McMichael; motion song by junior Frank McGregor, Clinton ; Wm, S. • Phone: Office 770; Les, 5, Alexander, Walton; J. L. Malone, members of the mission band,J Mount Forest.�cScaforth • Harvey Fuller. Goderich, Profcaaionnl Eyc Examinatirn• Custom Farm Work \feta• than 100 attended the. annual Stewards re-elected are William y Call Monday & Thursday Optical Services. ,.\V. Agents: A Specialty. congregational nuctin;, of Duff's Uni-Knox, J, 13enncl:t, Herbert Kirk- 'Akre E. Pepper, 13rucefield; R. F. -- at -- WANTED ted Church, held in the basement of by and Douglas Fraser, Special cont- McKercher, Dublin ; J. F. Prueter, Needleeraf t Shoppe.Listings of properties for sale. No 'Telephone )hone Blyth. the• churclt, A potluck supper was mendation was voiced cf the work of Brodhagen; \Vm. Leiper, jr., Londes- I l i served, and a program was presented George NI cTaggart, caretaker in 1952. - boro; S. Baker, B:usrels• .+...+.•.o..+."#•••• +#woe•m#0,.•.•.+.1 charge unless sale is made, Elliott Real Estate Agency, Illyth, 13. l '�-__.###~._._..—. ~#44NN p',N '. ,..••u••D•,0.0.0,••d•♦:0•D• • • .•• 4 ...4J•0•.•- •:.4•♦O .:.4•:.0.0•.0.0 440d4♦ h.:00004*.O D00i00J•444404444404444404400444Y •-•-•-•-••4-4,444-•+•-•-•44-•-•••••-••-• 0 44 $-•.0.0•H-0-0-0-0-++• *44*, 4++ 4+4.64 -•+0-0-0-•-0 0-+++.4-44-40-0:0-4, ++04+0444 MORRIT7. & WRIGHT OLIVER SALES & SERVICE Telephone 4 and 93, Blyth. ABSENT THROUGH ILLNESS xlbsent front their places .of business for a couple cf days this week have been R. D. Philp and Clarence Urqu- hart, Nothing serious \ve hope, lust tike prevailing bad c:Ids which re- quire a few days of warmth and at- tention. HULLETT MASONIC LODGE OFFICERS FOR 1953: TIMKEN SILENT AUTOMAT10 OIL BURNERS SALES & SERVICE IIISELER & SON W1NGI-IAM AIILCOLE R.O. • OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Goderich. Ontario • Telephone V Telephone 426. Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted, 334f. c With 25 Years Experience • SEWAGE- DISPOSAL 1 ant 110W cquippcd 10 pomp out "- your septic tank, Also do all other kinds of pumping, such as flooded cel lars, etc. Irvin Cuxon, Milverton, phone 75r4. 21-34, FOR RENT Floor polisher, $1.00 per day; Vacuum cleaner, $1,00 tier day ; Cement mixer. ! Wheel barro,v, $3,00 per day; Caale! clippers, 10c per head, beef clip ; 20e per head, dairy clip. Sparling's .lard• ware, phone 24. Myth, 01-1. , FOR SALE One Liukweld 180 Electric Welder (new), (louse for sale, solid brick, 2 -storey, all modern conveniences. Ap- ply to Harold Phillips' Blyth, 15-51). CARETAKERS WANTED • The Trustee Board of East \Va\wa- nosh School Area request applications for position of caretaker at the fol- lc- ing schools,•,duties to begin March 1st, 1953, Following is the list of 1953 officers Applications to be received by un - for the 11ullett Masonic lodge No. dersigned until February 20th, 1953, Reid's POOL ROOM. Smokers' Sundries Tobaccos. Cigarettes, Pop - Other Sundries. For Artificial service from this far- mer owned, licenced, non - profit, growing, co-operative Association, from top duality 1)11113 of all breeds, the rates are: $25.00 for a life mem- bership, $5.00 per cow for members. and $6/J0 per cow for non-members. Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association, R.R. No. 1, Waterloo, Ontario, For Service Contact : Charles J. Brandon, Clinton, phone 633r5.' 42-58 THE McK LLOP MUTUAL ,1 Moi ii ,i11 I1ill l.Y,ii• 1 ill,/ x+11 i11i 1i 1 i 1. .1 .1, 111. 1 1 1,1+111 1,. 1i 11.111 i+,1, ,I• ..1 +11.I14 111 Il ,Ii 1,I� 161. WEEKLY SPECIALS Give your Pocket -Book the Break it Deserves -Try the LG.A. Way of Shopping —You Get the Most, When it's the Freshest. For the Least— I.G.A. Orange Marmalade, 24 oz. 32c I.G.A. Peanut Butter, 9 oz. 26c Hereford Corn Beef 12 oz. 43c Libby's Pineapple Juice, 20 oz., 2 - 31c Aylmer Fcy. Apple Sauce, 15 oz., 2 for 2i'or 29c I.G.A. Ripe'N Ru;ged Peaches, 20 oz. ' 24c I.G.A. Rip'N Ragged Pineapple 20 oz. 33c Libby's Fruit Cocktail, 15 oz. , , , 25c Brunswick Sardines 3 for 23c Campbell's Chicken Noodle Soup 10 oz. 2 for 35c Maple Leaf Sockeye (ht's.) 39c Palmolive Soap (regular) , • 4 for 29c I.G.A. Choice Golden Bantam Corn 20 oz. 17c Kleenex, regular or chubby , . , , 20c MEATS Boneless Pot Roasts 45c Swift's Premium Bologna 29c Swift's Prem. Franks 1 lb. cello 39c Aylmer Choice Peas and Carrots 15 oz. 2 for 37c I.G.A. Ungraded Peas, 20 oz., 2 - 39c I.G.A. Choice Tomatoes, 20 oz., 2.39c Blue & Gold Fcy. Cut Waxed Beans 15 oz. 2 for 35c Frontenac Serviettes 2 for 37c• R•inso (regular) 35c Jello 3 for 29c Libby's Dark Brown Beans, 20 oz. 17c St. William's Pie Ready Apple 20 oz. 24c Old Dutch Cleanser 13c Lipton's Purple Label Tea, hf. lb. 54c Johnson's Paste Wax ...1 lb. tin 65c Royal Guest Coffee 1 lb. 93c. Quick Quaker Oats 3 lbs. 35c Kellogg's Corn Flakes .. , ,12 oz. 25c NO r' ' .lil'l .,WI ( � 11e S o1( 1�t1 e - , FRUITS & VEGETABLES Bananas per lb. 19c Lemons 6 for 23c Tomatoes 14 oz. tube 19c Carrots 3 Ib. cello bag 25c Cooking Onions 3 lbs. 23c Stalk Celery 2 for 25c Londesboro I.G.A. Store PHONES: Blyth 24-17, Clinton 803-12.--Sundercock & Tyndall, Proprietors. 1 .1.a �. na .rcin • ,1 . ir I i Oki# OLD TYPE SPINNING "MULE" Once standard equipment in a cotton mill, the old spin- ning "mule" has long since gone by the board, Dominion Textile's manufacturing equipment is now among the most modern in the world. Machinery bought by our 7,239 shareholders (94,7 of them Canadians) help us to turn out top quality goods and provide jobs for the 12,500 Canadians working in our plants. But equipment improvements, such as replacing the mule, aren't everything. We have our troubles trying to compete with the products of other countries which pay lower wages. In Japan and India, for instance, wages run about 15 cents an hour, while we pay well over n dollar an hour, DOMINION TEXTILE COMPANY LIMITED Dlaur farlurrrf of ///��� rrodrrru . y.. S(/GL(/ 16ait• e ed[ N VJJ lo, &ea "SAL1.; TEA SAGS r Illar..y ...: CArk,:11111Path HRCNICLES ° GINGERE%R �o� v'z.rt3ottr e 13 C'rn.rk We used to have ct neighbour, very active in various social or- ganizations, who was often heard to say -- "Well, I can't work and .run around too so I guess I'll have to quit work!" And that is just about what he did, 1 thought of that neighbour last week as I listened to accounts of all the various farm meet- ing that were taking place -- Federation of Agriculture, Crop - :Improvement Association, Milk Producers — and a few others that I have forgotten -- and J wondered how on earth farmers had time to attend so many meetings. And then John Brad- shaw said he had received an- nouncements of fifty annual meetings that were conning up within the next month! Looks as if there should be at least two men on every farm during the winter months — one to work and one to run around. Any one farmer could quite logically be- long to ten or twelve associa- tions. Could it be that farmers as a class are over -organized? Can they afford the time and expense thus involved? Attend- ing meetings regularly takes time. As for expense, the Federa- tion of Agriculture -asks for 2/5 of a mill on the assesment; the Cream Producers one cent on every pound of butterfat; the Milk Producers 11 cents per 100 lbs. of fluid milk, and I suppose there is an equivalent charge for other organizations. The point is are all these organizations necessary -- isn't a certain amount of over -lapping inevit- able? We have a Federation of Agriculture. Isn't the main func- tion of the Federation to improve and protect the farmers' interests in every line of agriculture? Certainly the present threat of synthetics to the dairy industry is a challenge to the Federation of Agriculture to prove its strength. If synthetic dairy products are allowed to flood the markets there won't be many farm meetings called because there won't be many farmers left to attend them. Dairy farmers will either be in bankruptcy or absorbed by industry. Actually, the basic economy of our entire country is at stake. If the feder- al Government is too absorbed with defence projects and fin- ancial juggling to realise what is, or maybe, happening to ag- riculture then there should be a hue and cry coming frpm all farmers. And who is better qualified to raise the sunt total of that hue and cry than the Federation of Agriculture, pre- ferably with Dr, H. II, Hannam as its spokesman. Dr, Harmsen has done wonderful work for ag- riculture in the past. We are sure he will see the Tight and hope he will be equally successful in this present emergency. We don't doubt his ability at all but that ability will be considerably strengthened and increased if given the whole -hearted sup- port of the farmers. In the meantime there is that problem of over -organization to be considered, which the farmer' can solve to a certain extent for himself. Farming, like cltar-- ity, begins at home. 1 have in mind a farmer who was an ac- tive member of a certain live- stock improvement association. Came the time of one particu- lar annual meeting. Before leav- ing home this farmer asked his wife to take a look at Bossie, a pedigreed Shorthorn, while he was away — she might calve during the day. A neighbour was coining in to do the night chores. At noon his wife, who knew next to nothing about livestock, went clown to the barn. What she saw frightened her. She phoned for the vet, but .he was out. It was nearly 3 'oclock before he get there. It was 1 a.m. before the farmer got home. He looked in at the barn before going to the house. The calf was dead — and so was the cow. The vet had done what he could but the poor cow, through lack of at- tention at the right time had been unable to survive the or- deal. Well, one thing is certain — Partner isn't likely to attend too many meetings. He doesn't get time for the ones he would like to go to ... so he reads about them instead. He has been to only one meeting this year — and at that the chairman told his audience "the outlook for the dairy farmer was promising!" Our big worry lately has been water shortage. The outlook was 'serious. And then cane rain — enough to start the creek run- ning and to almost fill the cis- tern. And this district was par- ticularly fortunate. The ice melt- ed off the trees; there was no power shortage; no plugged roads and no ice to slither around on. We are truly thankful and able to enjoy to the full the Christmas -card scenery. luscious HONEY BUN RING Quick to make with the new Fast DRY Yeast to Hot goodies come puffin' from your ovea is quick time with new J3Ielsdrmann's Fast DRY Yeast! No more spoiled cakes of yeast! No more last-minute trips • this new form of Fleischmann's Yeast keeps in your cup, board! Order a month's supply, • Scald 34 c, milk, tFr c. granulated sugar, 1/ tsds. salt and % c. shortening; cool to lukewarm. Meanwhile, measure into a large bowl / c. lukewarm water, 1 tsp, granulated sugar; stir until sug- ar is dissolved. Sprinkle with 1 envelope Fleischmam's Fast Ris- • ing Dry Yeast, Let stand 10 mitts., THEN stir well. Add coolest mills mixture and stir in 1 well -beaten egg and 1 tsp. grated lemon rind, Stir in 2 c. once -sifted bread flour; beat un- til smooth. Work in 2 c. (about) once -sifted bread flour, Knead on lightly -floured board until smooth and elastic, Place in greased bowl and grease top of HONEY -BUN RING dough, Cover and set in warm place, free from draught. Let rise until doubled in bulk. Punch down dough and roll out into an oblong about P wide and 24" long; loosen dough, Cotnbine 5i c. lightly -packed brown sugar and / c. liquid honey; spread over dough and sprinkle with 34 c. broken walnuts. Beginning at a long side, loosely roll up like a jelly roll. Lift carefully into a greased 8r2" tube pan and join ends of dough to form a ring. Brush top with melted butter. Cover and let rise until doubled in bulk. Bake in moderately hot oven, 375°, 45-50 tninutes, Bruelt top with honey and sprinkle with chopped walnuts, Lucky Fish—Held high by his captor, pretty Mary Timet, this fat fish has a smug look of satisfaction. The curly-haired girl holds the title of California Tuna Queen. Her main claim to the crown is the 15 -pounder dangling from her line. Apparently hooking a poor fish is no problem for Miss Timm. Men's Socks That Need No Darning Mrs, housewife—throw away that pesky darning needle. Pre- sent the sock stretchers to Jun- ior so he may use them us boom- erangs. Get rid of your darning yarns. With the introduction of the new wool -nylon socks you're about to be emancipated from one of the most tedious of house- hold chores—sock darning. The latest news in working- men's "fashion" circles is that Canadian, hosiery manufacturers are - now making heavy work socks of nylon staple yarn and wool blends. These socks will outlive the ordinary types sev- eral times. They are„wartn, com- fortable, non -shrinking, or will shrink very little when being washed—depending on - the amount of nylon in, the blend. But even with the slightly - shrinking blends, sock stretchers are not required. There are several nylon -wool blends on the Canadian market today -10 per cent nylon and 00 per cent wool, 20 per cent nylon and 80 per cent wool, 50 per cent nylon and 50 per cent wool. One Quebec yarn manufacture' is producing a heavy 100 per cent nylon staple yarn for work socks. According to laboratory abra- sion tests, the 10 per cent nylon blend work sock will outwear an ordinary wool one by two to two and one-half times. The 20 per cent nylon blend will last four to five times longer. A 100 per cent nylon staple sock is mildew and moth resistant and is non - shrinking. Manufacturers of nylon -wool htend and 100 per cent nylon staple work socks foresee a ready market among farmers, oil and bush workers, trappers, pros- pectors, hunters, hikers, skiers, bachelors, and, of course, the married men whose wives con- sider sock mending as the chief barrier to domestic bliss. Buckets of Tears In Old.Time Songs TILE other day I was singing as 1 made the beds, and my small daughter, who was stand- ing by hugging her doll, began to laugh. "What's tunny?" I said. "You singing that song. If you think you're going to make me cry, you tvon'I," write "J.P." in "Answers," Then l remembered. 1 was singing a song my mother used to sing when I was a very small child, It was "Alice, Ben Bolt," and every time she sang it 1 was reduced to tears, Strange that my daughter's reaction should be so different from mice! t was brought up on tears -- buckets of then, Perhaps I . was more emotional, or maybe my mother's rendering was more poignant and her voice more suited for heartrending ballads, but the fact remains, her bed- side lullabies and recitations cried me to sleep night after night! "You take to- the boats, lads, you save your lives" — remem- ber that? Couldn't I just picture that galant sea captain standing fast to his sinking ship, issuing orders to the loyal crew to save themselves because "I've got no one to Iove me, you've got chil-' dren and wives," And couldn't I picture hum going down "in the angry sea with the ship I love." Then there was the battlefield One: ISM !r — 1953 "Side by side in the crimson tide in the days of long ago, On we dashed and our sabres flashed as we conquered every toe, One by one ere the clay was clone I saw my comrades fall, And 3 was the only one left to answer that last Roll Call " 'That's daft!" 1 did not have the analytical mind of my daughter, who said that it was a daft song and not possible, anyway. I believed pathetically in "'l'he Flight of Ages," "The Banks of Allan Water," "The Better Land," "Be- cause I Love You," and "Break the News to Mother." Like Alice in Wonderland, I fairly wallowed in tears over: 'There'll come a time some day, when 1 have passed away, There'll be no father to guide you from day to day. Think well of all I've said, honour the man you wed ..." Perhaps the tune had • some- thing to do with the effect, but this was always a sure winner! Then the poems, which were fully in keeping with the vocal efforts, were enough to have stamped me for ever as a funer- al director's assistant, "The Garn- bler's Debt" — that harrowing epic of u bad man who gatnbled through the night and returned in the morning to find his wife and child frozen on the fireless hearth, "The Little Match Girl," the story of a lovely but unloved lit- tle girl who had to sell matches in the bitter weather — how she watched other children enjoying their Christmas party, striking the while her matches to keep her little hands from freezing; how she was found the next morning frozen in the snow, her last match spent, My young daughter's sanguine temperament, so different from my own, will not suffer thee moribund ballads and poems, In fact, the last time I found my- self singing with much feeling "Silver Threads Amongst the Gold;" she interrupted even be= fore I'd got to the end of the first verse by saying "Oh, mummy, try 'Sugar Bush,' You'll feel much better!" to,do I di 1111,! .,. WOO.. .u,i ANNA RIPST "Dear Antic Hirst: Here are the facts of my problem: I am in love with the mother of a col- lege mate, and she is 20 years older than I ani, She admits the idea Is crazy --but she loves me, too. "We have about everything in common: Religion, love of art •and sports, our sense of humour is identical, and we even get along with the sumo people. We hold marriage as a sacred trust, and 1 am sure I can be true to her forever. "The only reason I hesitate is I'm afraid some of her friends will scorn her for marrying a man young enough to be her son; I honor her too much to expose her to unpleasant rciti- cism, She says she ran take it. what do you think? T.R." DON""t' ' As a regular reader of this * column, you know that I am on the side of lovers whenever • I honestly can be. But 1 am * not on your side today. ' Nature requires That men • marry women of approximate- • ly their own age or younger; • to flaunt this law is to invite • trouble. You may stay true to * this woman for a number of • years, but after that, the age * dill'ermce will transcend every • other problem. Try as she may, • she will not be able to assume • a youthfulness she cannot feel. • You will 'find yourself more at ' ease with women of your own " generation, and, though you • may hate yourself fo it, you • will be powr Jess to prevent • it, • • Meanwhile, this woman will '• have endured the censure of • her contemporaries, as you * will have become the laughing • stock of yours. • Psychologists sometimes • blame the another complex for the fact that so many youths * become enamored of older • women, It is a common habit. • Properly approached, it can mature and benefit a young • man in many ways; to contem- • plate marriage, though, is to * go off the deep end indeed. • No matter how willing this + woman is to become your wife, • you will be doing her no kind- * ness to encourage it, I hope * you will stop seeing her im- • mediately, Seek your friends • among your own generation • and temperament. You will be • surprised to find how soon you * will attract another love and * another inspiration. It Is foolhardy to act agatssusi: nature's own laws. Not onll• you, but the other one lnvolvea will have to pay for It, Consult Anne Iiirst and know you eau trust her judgment. Address k at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St,, New 'Toronto, Ont, A cleric in Lincoln, England, who had appealed to his congru•• gallon for a stuffed owl to put in his church belfry for fright, - ening bats received so many aptr- cimens that he had lb advertftut to get rid, of them. And the RELIEF IS LASTING For fast, prolonged relief from headache get INSTANTINE. Thls prescription -like tablet contains not just one, but three proven medical ingredients that case the pain fast And the relief is, in most casts, lasting/. Try INsrANTENE just once for pal relief and you'll say as thousands da that there's one thing for headachy ► .. ft's INSTANTINEJ And try INSTANTINE for othee aches, too ... for neuritic or neuralgia pain ... or for the pains and acheu that accompany a cold. A single tablet usually brings prompt relief. Get Mainline today and strays keep It handy nstantine- 1 2.tablet Tin 25 Economical 48 -Tablet Bottle 7ILO best recipes ids ode �Y to better made ith��,IC �' • CHEESE CORNMEAL FINGERS Mix and sift into bowl, c. once -sifted pastry flour (or 13fi c. once -sifted hard -wheat flour), 3 tsps. Magic Baking Powder, of tsp, silt. Cut in finely 3 tbs. chilled shortening and unix in ?i c. yellow cornmeal, of c. shredded cheese and •rear 2 tbs,-chopped parsley. Make a well in centre, pour in e( c, milk and unix ry`" lightly with a fork, ICnead for 10 seconds on a lightly -floured board and roll out to ai" thick rectangle; cut into 12 fingers and arrange, slightly apart, on greased baking sheet, Bake in hot oven, 425°, about 15 ruins, Serve hot with butter or margarine. Yh'td —1 dozen fingers. Ila], .e ,.Il,y ,L.1, iiia 1 111 1 i1 A 1 1 „I 1111 1111 . .11 .11 111 NAR Winter Sailiitgs to E Now in effect—special\Thrift-Season rates on all sallings to Britain and Europe,... with arrival at a convenient English, French or Irish port. ONE WAY RATES TO BRITISH PORTS First Class from $192 • Tourist Class as tow as $140 leave leave NEW YORK HALIFAX Jan. 23 Jon, 23 Feb. 6 Feb. 7 Feb, 13 Feb. 19 Feb. 20 Feb. 25 Feb, 27 Jan. 25 Feb, 6 Feb. 15 Mar, 1 VESSEL TO QUEEN MARY - SAMARIA MEDIA SCYTHIA QUEEN MARY FRANCONIA ' QUEEN ELIZABETH PARTHIA QUEEN MARY ASCANIA Cherbourg & Southampton Cobh & Liverpool Liverpool Havre & Southampton Cherbourg & Southampton Cobh & Liverpool l Cherbourg & Southampton Liverpool , . Cherbourg & Southampton Cobh, Havre & Southampton CORONATION. A chance of a lifetime ... witness the splendour of the Coronation procession ... make your sailing plans NOW. Consult your local Agent—No one can serve you better, CUNARD STEAM -SHIP COMPANY LIMITED Corner Bay & Wellington Sts., Toronto, Ont. ssrawmerasse.acs+:.unas . TNECaIVPtt SPORTS COLUMN beyEime' ?enqu¢oa it was a dark, muggy sort of morning, the way Boston gets when fog rolls in from the sea on March days and nights. But it didn't stein possible it could be time to get up, and still be this dark, when the knock sounded on my hotel -room door, I)ruwsily arising, and brushing sleep out of my ryes, I °poled up. 'There stood 11otvie \Iorenz, fully dressed, I said; "Howie, don't you think it's a little early to be getting up? ]t'1 still Clark, Where are you going;" "I'm not gelling up" said Howie. "1 lat'en't been 10 heel yet. I've been out walking around the streets, thinking about that play I missed, I lost the game for the team, and Ihrrt's no u,e going to bed, because I won't sleep," And Howie dropped into a chair, burial his fair in his hands, Ilk shoulders shook, because he was crying like a little boy, The night before, Canadicns had battled a gr;m overtime play- off game with the Bruins. Both clubs had powerful teams, there was little to choose between them in playing strength, and nothing to choose, either, in the ba'ance of that particular game, There had been a face-off, and Cooney Weiland, a great little centre -ice payer who at one time held the scoring championship of the National League, faced Morenz, The pack shot into the air as the sticks clashed. Weiland jumped swiftly, batted it down with his hand, pounced on it like lightning and blasted off the shot that won the game, all done more quickly than you can write, or even read, the words describing the play. Morenz was heart -broken, 11c felt that he alone was respon- sible for the defeat of the team, because that'' the kind of player, that's the kind of man he happened to be, Ii1 all the history of hockey, there never was a more sincere competitor. Nights of till important game, indeed, on the night of any game, Morenz would be at the rink at least an (tour before gaine time, restlessly pacing around the long promenade, as high-strung as a, thoroughbred that is being readied for a race, Howie Morenz died as he ss'ould have wanted it, in the harness of the game he hived, At least, he sustained in hockey the in- jury which led to his death, hurtling in on an opposing goal, he tripped, fell, caromed skates -first into hoards, shattered a leg. A great competitor, even when his blazing speed was losing glittering fire. He lived for speed, lived by speed, and for spccd, he died, The hockey world (still recalls Morenz, but few know lie came into big league hockey against his will, over his own tears, in fact, But that's another story, and some day it will be written, right in this Calvert column. Your comments and suggestions for this column will be welcomed by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Calvert House, 431 Yonge St., Toronto, CaLvet DISTILLERS LIMITED AMHERSTBURG, ONTARIO SPORT �i am.T.0 Twenty-five years ago anybody t;a'edlcting that a human being would some day run a mile in 41 minutes or less would have been told to go and have his head examined, But today that "un- lattainable" 4 -minute pinnacle is getting slightly wobbly. In fact ;before 1053 has run its course, oomebody will have done the trick, and that somebody—in all probability—will be an Austral- ian University student named John Landy. • • • Landy has already come with- in seven -tenths of a second of equalling the present' world rec- ord of 4 minutes, one and four- fifths second, set by the Speedy Swede, Gunder Haag back in 1945. And already this year the .Aussie has been showing such m lot of luck that it looks as though "it won't be long now." And what follows is a play-by- play description of his latest ap- pearance, in which he took all the worst of it in the way of weather, track conditions and ;lock of competition, • • * e • Although Landy would have preferred it cooler than the day's temperature of 71.2, a blustering wind did not help matters, But thief deterrent was the, condition of the crushed scoria stone -Sur- faced track. A soaking on the previous day would have con- solidated the loose particles, and a rolling would have completed the job, The student -runner Maid in Europe it takes severa' men two or three days to prepare the I tracks for record attempts. Aus- tralian athletes have to tackle their tasks the hard way! 0 • • Physically the runner himself was not 100 per cent, Other spe- cific points worthy of note were the several incidents in the race itself in which the 22 -year-old champion had very little assist- ance from pace -makers, except in the early stages. Les Perry, Australian three-mile champion, was in the field and carried Lan- dy along from the quarter to the half, but thereafter the only "as- sistance" the runner received was from the urging of the ex- cited onlookers. • • • With the inside running, Lan- dy surprisingly took up the run- ning in the first lap, and his fast long -striding pace told the rest of the runners he meant busi- ness. He led at the quarter in the slick time of 58.4, which was .8s. better than the first lap of his record run, then Perry shot past Landy to "pace" the recond lap, Approaching the turn into the home -stretch Lundy went ahead again and covered the half -mile in 1.59.4 (in the record run his time was 2m, is. at the half). Strike-Bound—utomobiles are parked across the out -of -use trolley tracks in Philadelphia_wherea transportation system strike paralyzed city transit. More than 2,500,000 people in the city and suburbs had to solve the travel problem for themselves. Fabulous Toy Tree of Caracas—Tor Seidman, above, never saw a tree That bloomed with toys bock home but he isn't dreaming. The only person who is dreaming is the toy vendor. He's for- saken his toy stand on a street in Caracas, Venezuela, to enjoy South America's cherished siesta period. Since almost everyone else is snoozing, .there's not much danger of the "blossoms" being plucked by possersby, Landy had to run the last hall on his own and quickly ran to a lead of 100 yards. At the end of the third lap his tirne for three- gt.arters of a mile was 3.1— probably the fastest ever to that stage in a mile race—and the excited crowd cheered every stride as Landy entered the final lap, Along the back, with the breeze behind him, his long strides appeared the same, and he passed the 1500 -meter mark in 3,44.4-8s, faster than Joself Barthel's (Luxembourg) Olym- pic record—but' the tiring run- nel' had to face the wind In the home stretch, so it took him 18,4s, to run 119 yards 2 feet— from the 1500 -meter mark (1640 yds. ift.) to the tape. • • • In his record run on Dec. 13, Landy finished much fresher and ran the final lap in 50.1, against the more recent last lap of 61.8. Some overseas cables have been received in Australia gl;estioning the ti.nes created by John Landy, but the "Doubt- ing Thomases" will have their answer by this repeat perform- ance, « • * Bettering the Olympi' record for the 1500 meters during his run, John Landy achieved great distinction, and no doubt could have bettered this time had that been the specific distance record he was after. In the Olympic race, moreover, two runners fought a titantic battle to the line, as R, McMillan (USA), sec- ond, was credited with the same time as the winner, J. Barthel. Had Landy the runners to pace it with him, one wonders just what time he would have made. • « • Maybe it will, be different when the next attempt is made: the track will be watered and rolled, loose patches ironed out, the atmospheric conditions ideal for the test, the race competitors capable of extending. Landy, and the champion physically and psychologically ready to do him- self justice, Been Baptized 3,000 Times Did your great -great-grand- father have eight wives? Do you • know that the chances 'are he's now a recognized Mormon? With- out your permission — and cer- tainly without great -great -grand pa's—he's probably been baptiz- ed .by proxy in the Mormon Temple at Salt Lake City. Maybe you've forgotten who your great - great-grandfather was, yet the Mormons have him taped with a micro -film record of his name, birthplace and date of birth. TCnlns of 'genealogists are busy in Scotland right now • searching for more potential Mormons, tracing ancestors through 3,500 volumes of Scot- tish parish registers. Names are checked against a master index in Salt Lake City. This strange situation has arisen from the Mormon tenet that one day they'll meet their ancestors in a better world—and it's just a3 well to have then of the salve faith to avoid squabbles. Day by day in the old-fashion- ed little rooms of the Mormon Temple, scores of men and wo- 'men act as stand-ins tor the bap- tism of ancestors. A carpenter in ordinary lifer one man her been baptized for 3,000 forebears — and the queue at the font already extends back to the year, 1320. IT RELIEVED iN A JIFFY or money back Very first use of soothing, cooling, liquid D.D.D. 1'reecriptton positively relieves raw ted Itch—caused by eczema, rnshes, scntp Irritation, chnfing—other• itch troubles, Grew - less, stainless. 43c triol bottle must Batley or money back. Ask your druggist for I.D.D. rRESCRIr1'IUN. Booster Shot—It takes a second look to see that Tom Hunt k not giving his oponent Bob Harbert - son a boost toward the basket. "ONE TOOT ANI) Maestro Toscanini is not one for reticent behavior when a musician plays n wrong• note, The NBC orchestra, however, remem- bers one such occasion when words actually failed the tem- pestuous conductor. It was during a broadcast of Beethoven's Leonore Overture. All was going well until the cue came for the off-stage trumpet call. No sound came from the wings. Then, three measures late, a shrill, spluttering noise blared forth, The maestro braced him- self; the orchestra men sat rigid. Again the cue came up, And again, first nothing—and then the off -beat splutter. At the first break in the program, Toscanini charged backstage for the kill. • There was his trumpeter, beat- ing vainly against the armlocic of a burly night porter. "I tell you you can't bldw that damn horn here," the watchman kept insist- ing. "There's n broadcast going' on," For Quick Cough Relief Mix This Syrup In Your Home Thousands of Canadian house- wives have turned to this well- known recipe for relieving coughs due to colds. It's easy to prepare, and gives you four tines ns much for your gooney, Your usual drug counter can supply you with n 2'A ounce bottle of PINLX CONCENTRATE. Pour this into n 16 ounce bottle and fill up. with granulated sugar syrup, or honey or lnaple syrup. To stake the sugar syrup, simply mix 2 cups of sugar with one cup of water ... no cooking needed, and it takes but a minute. Now you'll have an ample supply of fast acting, effective cough syrup for the whole family, so pleasant tasting the children will like it, PINEX — a concentrated blend of proven ingredients—must help' or your money refunded. Get a bottle today! PINEX FOR COUGHS—EASY— ECONGMICAt ISSUE 5 — 1953 ..Classified Advertising.. AO7iNTE1 WANTED HONEST, tellable agents to »U chinks for a well 'stabile/Rd hatchery. Geed ,ommhelon, Royal Farm Hatchery, St. Jacobs, Onlerlo. HART CRICKS "OXFORD" Canadian Approved Chick", Live, lay and pay. Thry are the results If twenty -ave lura of careful selection and breeding, They have to be good, because we want the very beat kind of. Chicks for fur own flocks—big, vigorous, and early maturinr, We 'trees ger 'lie and unitorm- ItT• Barred Rocks, White Leghorna, Sussex, white Rock, Columbia Rock, New Hampshire, ;lamp a Reek Crosabrrde, Rock z Leghorn Croubreda, New Ham) x Sussex Croeebreds, Write for free folder. The Oxford Fanner,' Co-operative Pro- duce Company, Limited, 434 Maln Street, Woodstock, Untarlo. OJtI)lat those Purina rmer)•o-ted chicks from Gilmorie, Fully guaranteed, quality chick" from a real breeding pro - ermine. Attractive early pullet prices, Write for price" and catalogue "Which Came First." Gilmore's Poultry Breeding Farm, Barrie, Ontario. J'ur.Ll:'l's, Cockerels, Limited number 'darted thick". breed" for layer, broil. en, dual purpose. Prompt shipment, Ask for particular', price, Dray Hatchery, 124 John N„ Hamilton or Falrbnnk Feed, 7355 1eufferin 8t., Toronto. iI G AND CLEANiNG HAVE: you anything needs dyeing or clean• a, lag? Write to us for information. Ws are Mind to answer your queetione. De - pertinent 11. J'arkcr', Dye Work, Limited, 191 Yonne St. Toronto. FOR hAl.1; SNOWSHOES. All sizes and idyls.. Bates' HUMANE 8nowehoe Harness (Pat.) No more blletered Mee 1 Folder, "Snowshoe. Inc In Comfort," on request. DATES' SNOWSHOES, Dept. W.. Metagama, Ont, PREMIER Strawberry Plant" 13.00 per 100: 100 Blooming tilze Gladiolus bulbs 41.21: Free LiNt, w', .1, Witney, Elora, Ontario. lF YOU WANT the maximum In egg pro- duction try our R.O.P. aired Rhode Island fled or Rhode inland Red x Barrett Rock, White Leghorn x Ithode Island Red, Light Suo,,x x 11h00 island Red, TWEDDLI; CHICK i1ATciruBIE8 LTD. Fergus Ontario CANADIAN Approved Turkeys et Prices that will Nave you several dollars per hundred. All popular breeds, Non -Nixed chicks as low as 413.20 per hundred. Turkey,' an low as 671c. And all ouallly Mock. Cntnlogue, 101' NOTCJI CIIICII SALES Guelph Ontario SHREDDED Foorn Rubber Bed Pillows. Largo alze, 28,10, approx. 6" thick. Pre- paid direct from mnnutacturer, 12,60 each, Lacey Co., Hoc 728, Akron, Ohio, U.S.A. MOTOR OIL, 30 per gallon. You can re- claim used motor oil. Secret Process One Dollar. Ray Porter, 765 Brady Avenue, Los Angeles 22, California, U.S.A. CRESS CALLOUS SALVE — Now get relief. Tour Druaglet eel's CRESS. MEDiCAL Read ihls—Every sufferer of Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis should try Dixon's Remedy. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 Elgin Ottawa $1.45 Express Prepoid PnEls•. , , 11051E DOCTOR BOOR Limited edition. Helpful Information, horoscopes, Medical facts, dreams, plus effective treatment" tor common ailments, Regular price 60 cente. Regain health and Youthful vigor, Write to -day for "free copy", Book of Health. Dept. 10 health Producte, Kelowna, U.C. TAPEWORMS, pinworms, cause serious dleeaecet could be your trouble) thou- sands helped. Free literature deacrlbee condition and remedy. Write Ltulveney'e Remedles Limited. Dept W 8., Tomato. Ontario: "PEP UP." Try C.C. h B. Tonle Tablele for low vitality and general debility. At Drugglete one dollar or ',EASEL AGEN- CY, 11124 • 81 Avenue, EDMONTON, ALBERTA. • FEMINEX • One woman tell, another. Take superior "FEMINEX" to help alleviate pnln, die - tree, and nervous tension aeeoctated with monthly periods, 15.00 Postpaid In pinln wrapper POST'S CHEMICALS 180 QUEEN ST, EAST TORONTO POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema reahes and weeping skin troubles Poet's Eczema Salve will not dlenppolnt you. 1tchlnt, scaling, burning eczema, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema, will respond readily to the etalnlees odorless ointment, regnrdle,s of how stubborn or hopeless they seem. PRiCE 52.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES Sent Poet Free nn Receipt of Price 889 Queen Sl, 1:. Corner of Logan, Toronto Pile Sufferers Get Quick Relief %A'I,'n the Itch, burn and oaln of Ore keep, eoll awake et night, drives you almost frantic by day—go lo any drug More ono) tet a, nucknte of Len-llhlt. Fee hail fnsl this AVOW'µ tette, antiseptic ointment conk Ihr fiery hunting, relletce Itching, soothes pain. Vou tet relief In one minute by the watch. One npollrm Don gives hours of comfort, Irl Len. (lint light now 11 any drag store; Enough to keen Intl happy amen' weeks. only t10o. ARTHRITIC PAIN Don't suffer night and day—with dull, wearisome aches—or sharp, stabbing pains. Lead an active life again. 'fake Templetott's T-It•C's, Canada's largest. selling proprietary medicine specially made to bring longed. for relief to sufferers from arthritic or rheumatic pain. 1.841 $i 3s TEMPLETON'S T -R -C's ROLL YOUR OWN BETTER CIGARETTES WITH OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN ANI) WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER 10124 CANADA'S LEADING HCIIOOI- Greta Opportunity Learn iinirdreeenlg lea.aant. dignified profeeeton, good wellee, Thousand' of Ipcceaeful Marvel graduates America.'" Greatest Syetem illrutrated Catalogue Free Write or Cell HA RYE!, HA1RD)IESSINO sCHOOf,F 761 Moor St. W., Toronto Urnnclu•a; 44 King St., Hamilton 71 Rideau S1., Ottnwn__ MARE MONET fast; Pictures of I1, l[, Queen aulznbeth lowly priced for quick sale. Every hump boys Nev. Erna for Illustratlona, p,•Ic:e, l:nllel Alt, Toronto ID. - ATTIflNT10N Cigarette Smokers, Get your Free Copy of "How Harmful AN Otianita." Mend Today. (Any Donation Appreciated). P.O. Box 41E5, Routh Ed- monton, Alberta, PATENTS AN OFFER to every Inventor—Llet of In- tentions and full information sent tree. The Ramsey Co„ Registered Patent Attor- aAys. I73 Bank Street, Ottawa, TLATHESTONHAUGII A Company Pa- tent MollcItore, Eetnbllshed 1890. 180 fay Street, Toronto. Booklet of lnforma• lion on request. ASTHMA . Now Asthma Relief Is rnlnute, or your money back A,k your Druggist for an Asthmanefrin Set t'nr:ondlllnnelly eunrahlrr.t PERSONA 1. HANDWfl1TINO annlyele. Complete char atter reading. Send twenty lines in ink, unlined piper. Enclose f1.00, Melte John- stone, 49 Rosemount Ave., Weston. STOP SMOKING I NO PILLS. 11.00 MONEY HACK GUARANTEE I O. Harms, 3247 Ebony', corium Christi, Texas, QUIT Cigarettes easily an thoueande of 'there have done. Uee Tobacco Elimin- ator, a seven-day scientific treatment that quickly elltntnates all craving for tobnccn, Ter free booklet write C. 1V, King Mar - meal Ltd., Box 877, i.nndon, Ontario. BUSINESS PERSONALS SLIP ON THE ICE? Avold danceroue belle, wenr Ire Creeper Straps under anY footwear. 11.00 Post- ►ald, Materiel, Shnwbrldne, Quebec, RUGS NEW rugs mnde from your old rug" and woollen". Write Inc catalogue and price Ilet. Dominion Rug Weaving Company, 3077 Dundee Street West, Toronto, Ont, TUGS—Sharply reduced priers. 9' x 12'- 179.60 delivered; 61' x 91'-147.60 de- livered. Made of ane rayon carpet yarns, fa exquisite oriental patterne, on wine and red background. Will ehlp C.O.D. Refund If not used. Fromly Textiles (Rev'd), 1057 Dundee W., Toronto, 8TA y11'S 115 DIFFERENT sumps. booklet Stamp Collecting, 126 llIngee and perforation gauge, IOc to approval appllcnnte, EI. !emery, R.R. 1, victoria, n.C• POSTAGE STAMPS KR SALM 11,000 different Memel' one rent each. Better trade British Colonies halt catalogue, SU3151EiSS, 42 Daly, Ottawa, Ontario, WANTED WANTED! "Currier & IVES" lithographs. Ootid prices promptly wild. Especially want large folio Whiter, Railroad, horse Racing, Hunting end Sailing Ship scones, All correspondence answered. Offers made, A. R. Davbon, Boat Aurora, New York, TAIiORINO SAi.ES2IEN Sell Park • Fletcher tallored-to-meneurs clothes. Earn mora money, your Personal clothes tree. Full or spare time. High oommiealon, popular pricer', tremendous choice of cloth samples. Write Immediately for free sample outfit, Inalructlone ant exclueh'e terNtory. Park•Fletcher Clothes, Dept. tt'., 1' n. !lox IOC i lnll"n N„ Mont rent. FREE AT LAST OF BAKING SODA HABIT s "Nothing I ata agreed with me, and though nothing was organically wrong—my stomach would blow up with gos after almost every meal," says Mrs. Georgina IEkinn, 881 Craw- ford St,, Toronto, Ont. "I practically lived es bnkingeoda,whidi Ihnd totakemoroend more.m. "Then a friend told mo about Dr. Piercer Golden Medical DGcovery. 13y taking this wonderful medicine 1 soon hnd a real desire for food, and my system would take care of IL Pretty soon I forgot nil about the soda, and I now feel bettor than in years.". Thousands of people who eulTered from gag pains, heartburn, stomach distress, duo to as organic comae, have tried Dr. Pierce', Golden Medical Discovery with atnazing termite. and no wonder. Tide great medicine line a wonder• ful stomachic tonic action. First, taken regw larly It promotes more nomml 'tomer* activity, thus helping to digest food better me you won't hnvo gas, heartburn, acid etomaclal Secondly, with ettnunch activity improv you can eat the (node you likn without fear ifter-dinlreae, Gonemue Supply Ffll EI You can prove what this medicine will do without rlekln5 one penny. For a Inrgo 31.35 package twilled free—send your name and addreil to Pierce', Prdprictgrlee, Inc., 30 Centnel Ave., Fort Erie S., Ont. BACKACHE May beWarninq Backache is ollrn caused by lazy kidney action. When kidneys get out oI order, mesa acids and wastes remain in the system. Then backache. disturbed rest of thsl tired -out and heary'•lueatled feeling may soon Iollow Thal', lite lime to take Dodd's Kidney Pills Dodd's stimulate the kidney, to normal action. Tlten you feel Keller—sleep Netter — work better, Get Dodd's Kidney fills now, 51 CiQARUM TOBACCO 3 ruiprosiommommommaharaserlso WALLACE'S Dry 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. I 1 -..I. Y..I 111 Ir 11 .1,II I . I 1. YI1 1 1 Y. 11 Y 11 1,4 I. 1,1,1 • o. YI IIYI /Y "Casey's" Superior Food :arket Extra Savings For Your WeekEnd Shopping NEW DOMEETiC SHORTENING PER LB, 27c Green Giant Fancy NO BETTER SHORTENING Peas 2 15 -oz tins 35c AT ANY PRICE = QUIX WITH PLASTIC CLOTHES FINS PKG. 35c other's" Apple and Strawberry Jam 48 oz. tin ..Y.,,......, 71c Tuffy, New Plastic Pot Cleaner Each 25c NEW AND DIFFERENT PHONE 156 --- WE DELIVER. Watch Our Windows For Bargain Prices. IYI •11 Wahl IYIII 1.111 I II 1 + E OFFER THE FOLLOWING ITEMS AT A WORTH -WHILE DOLLAR SAVING: 1 Coleman Heater (New) 1952 Model 50,000 B.T.U. Regular $134.95 .,,,Y,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, $90.95 1 Coleman Heater (New) 1952 Model, 50,000 B.T.U. Regular $116.95 $79,95 2 Coleman Heaters (Used) 1950.51 Models In New Condition, 51,000 B.T.U. $65.00 Roy Thermo Heater (Used) 45,000 B.T.U. , $30.00 1 G.E. Electric Range (New) 3 -Burner' Aptt Size, Heavy Duty, Reg. $205.35 , .. $179.50 1 G.E. Hot Point Range (Used) in. Excel- lent ,Condition $45.00 60 Qts. Interior Paint, reg. $2.40, 2.20 and $1.65 per Quart .,,.,,.Y.,,1 ,.,,,,,,Y,,,, $1.00 This represents the balance of 3 lines we are dis- continuing and we offer it at this rediculous price to clear our stock of each color. Our Complet Display of Kitchen Handy Gadgets We Offer at 20 Percent Off to Sell. Sparling's Hardware Get A Free Package Of FA WITH A PURCHASE Of A GIANT PKG. OF FAB YOU GET ONE LARGE PACKAGE EREE. FRESH FRUITS -- VEGETABLES COOKED MEATS. Stewart's Grocery Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver "THE BEST FOR LESS" I., • THE STANDARD PERSONAL INTERlE S'r s[rs, \V01. Blair of Bclgravc was a visitor in Myth on 'Tuesday. Mrs. \Viii, Logan rchnard Tome Friday after spend ng a (,tv days with !ter si,ter•in-1aty, \Irs, (;Jewell, 01 1,on(1011, ]Hisses Olive \IcGill and Is::'tel Fax spent 1!!z week -end in 1la111111111, MI', and \(rs, CIi•Irles J.( nslon, \I,trilyn sold Nancy, were i11 1),!0•uit over III; week -end and on Saturl!ny attended the Johnslrnl•:•Yll:: ksnan tvell- din; held in Itedfu;•d ILip'.ist Church at 7 p.m. The groan, Mr. ,las. •11L11 st: n, is a c_etsin of A1r. Chas. John - stun, Mrs, \\'nt, ltchinson has returned hcnle to Lucknow after spending two months with her daughter, NIrs, C. \Vheelcr, and \I r. \Vhecler. NIrs, :\. R. 'Tasker spent last wale v,ith 1l r, and Airs. Ross Taker, in Toronto. NIrs, J. C. o'underc•-ck sp nt the week with \Ir. G. 1i.sk and Airs, \\', S. Gipson, in Turf n'o. Mr. and Mrs. Les'ie Dalglieslt, Jan- ice, Diane and Bradley, of S ra.f ar;I, heel Sunday with the latter's par- ents, \1r. and NIrs. George Cowan. .4::d \1r. and Mrs, 11:11 Cowan and (am'ly•• NEW I'ERMIMANENT \Ir, and \irs, Fred Chapple ant children v:s;ted un Sunday with NIrs. Chap) de's mother, Ntrs, ,lean 1<cchnie. \Ir and Mrs, Neil Th alas of \Vind• sor visited last week with NIrs. Luella NIcGovan. \Irs. \\'illiant' J;:hnston of Burford, is vis'tit with Ntr. and Airs. 1.es1 e Johnston, and o•Iccr• (muds here. \I r. l)ouglas Ross, manager of the cards of Thanks, also a lc:ter from t':c Ch'1'i:•cn's Aid S:ciety, G.Aderich, thanking he Instittre fur gifts, 11 Iva, dCCidetl lo hold a concert in the near future. Nlrs. 11'illiatn SU•;nt'.h- an displayed patterns of pot police's. 'these were d'stributed to the members and each one is asked to make on:. Mrs. A, Nesbit read a leiter fr, nl the secretary of a 11'nnen's lnstittUe in England telling of \V. 1, work there. 111 es ale with \Ir•. and Mrs. Raymond NIrs. C, NI. Straughan won the prize Whitmore, 41.1 1 1 ANY 1 III 1111... 11, + . I.I eauty Shopped CET AN Individualiy Patterned PERMANENT AND HAIR CUT. to keep your hairdo neat dayin and day out at Wednesday, Jane 28th, 1058 :t Olive McGill BEAUTY SHOPPE _t Telephone Blyth, 52, 4 (I 6.1•: IIv .a.I�.I.�,Il .l ".I.'I I..II I..ILYV. 11 aul .al I Ii RAY'S BEAUTY SALON *** Look Attractive -- with a Shampoos, Finger Waves. Rinses and Hair Cuts. Please Phone, Blyth 53. RAY McNALL Imperial Bank of Canada at Seven, IS'ands in the Province of Quebec, holidaying for a few days with It's ;11111 I, NIrs. D. NIeGowan, Nlisses Clare and Ida. \1r, and Mrs. Gordon F;li:11 spent tihe week -end tvi'h 11r and NIrs, Har- vey NlcCallunl, at Nizara Falls, \1r, and 'Mrs, Kenneth 11'hitntore and 1)olglas, spent Sunday at 1 -fol - AUBURN Mrs. Marr}' Govier with NEr. and Mrs. Earl Caldwell, Nfrs. \Vi6!iam Straughan spent a few days with \1:'. and Mrs. E:u•I Alliston of G3dcrich, Airs, Riddell (nee Minnie Naeg!c) of \Vestcrn Canada, with Mr, and NIrs. Edgar Lawson. 'Nir, and NIrs. F. 0, Alcliveene, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Davies wlu are spend:11g the winter in Florida, can hardly be- lieve that we are having such good weather, without too much snow, so neighbours donned 'straw (tats, Niles! up shirt sleeves, got out the rakes, hoes and lawn mowers, while the sun was shining bright and tempera - past elle 40 mark iaet 1Vednes- clay, Jan 2 st and .had their pictures taken to send to the hofidayers. '1'h:'y put the straw hats away on Sa'u day. The January meeting of the 1Vo- nlen'S institute took the form of a birthday party. The Forester's Hall was decorated with flowers and n large imitation 'birthday cake with catteUs centred the stage. The president, Mrs, 11'esley Bradnock, presided, with Airs. R. J. Phillips at the piano. Alt's. Nlaurice Bean pve an interest- ing talk on the Si. Lawrence seaway. 'Mrs, Alfred Nesbit gave a paper on the Institute arca convention whir] was (held recently. :11 rs. 11'esley L'radnock spoke of the, Institute rally at Seaford!, Ntrs, Emmerson Rodger sang a solo and Janette 1)obie recited. Mrs, Frank Nesbit' played a pnt110 se- lection and Mrs. 1•Villiant liaggit1 gave a reading, 1n the absence of the secretary, the minutes were read by Airs, Albert Campbell. Correspondence included for the 011e lvltose b'ethd•(y was the closest to the day of ,meeting. Lunch. ,including birthday cake, w Is . served by the 11 ::stcs.s, Mrs. Welling- = ton Go: d, NIrs. 1Vcslev liraduock, Mrs. \\Tinian' 1)udd, Jr.. Airs, Kcnnetn McDougal, Nfes, J. C, Stoltz and Mrs. Keith Nlac,han. WILLIAM TH'OM. Following a lengthy illness, 1\'illiant 'I'h:111 died in 'Godcrich hosp'tal, Sun- day, in his 81st year. The body is at the J. 1<. Arthur funeral home, Anb• urn.. The funeral was held \Vednes• day afternoon feral I<n:x Presbyterian Church with burial in \Vin„hanl ceme- tery. I-Iolstein Calf Project Revis- ed By Huron Club A cananittlie of the Huron Comity Holstein Club alert ng 00 Fr:(lay '11 Clinton for the pttl•pJse of organix. ill; calf clubs in the county dccicl!'d the chub 110111(1 dispense wi.h the coun- ty calf club this year lend would in- stead emphasize having as many . c:tll• club numbers as possible in each arca. 1'hc county el!;at wi'1 pay ti a for re- gistered and $2 for grade 1•l:15112ll calves to boys and girls who. c:nlple(e Choir club project by exiltibting their calves at achicvumenl clays. '1'Ite county club is urging all menl- br.rs, who belong to the Holstein - Friesian Association of Caftada to at- tend the annual nuee'ng in Toronto, on January 28 ,to seaport the I-luron County delegate, 1V. Hume Clutton, R.R. No, 5, (-odeticit, who has been nominated as a director on the nation- al association to represent this area. S, C. Galbraith, of Blyth, was in charge of tete' meeting. ('d# INPO# NWNI..N INN? NrNrIIrM� AUCTION M MAGE SALE TO THE HOUSEKEEPERS OF, BLYT'II AND Do you you realize that "House -Cleaning ',lilac" is just around the corner? How We hesitate and even dread to turn that corner! That attic and store- room, even the basement, are so full THAT it seems futile, even dangerous, to attempt to restore order. Where shall we begin? There are so many things that you have `cussed' and threatened to burn be- fore the dreadful ordeal of organizing should again descend upon you. Is there a solution for our problem? Yes, the members of the Lions Club have very carefully con- sidered this ]natter. This year they propose to as- sist you with that distasteful task. .On Friday, ev- ening, February Gth, a truck will call at your door, two or three husky lions will roar in, and, with your permission, will remove some of those articles for which you no longer find use. These same articles may be ,just what John Doe wishes to buy at the. Auction Sale to be held in the basement of Memor- ial Hall, on Saturday, February 7th., . Tell any member of the Lions Club that you wish the truck to call and your requests will be tak- e1I care of. ' Again we seek and thank you for your loyal support without which our efforts would be nulli- fied, ---THE BLYTH LIOINS CLUB. Gift Suggestions --- Clothing, Furniture, Antiques, Any Saleable Article. THE MOST BEAUTIFUL J-IAIR IN THE WORLD is kept at it's loveliest with the magic of 'a good shampoo. 1luthlnt Egg Came 75r and $1,25 Mala ........ 39c, b5r, 98e 1)rcne ......... Lustre Create .....,.... ,35c, 65c, $1.00 Rayve ,... b5c 39c, 69t' Marlene flair \\ray:ti:g $I.3') Bred; (Dry, (Ily or Nor_ neat flair) .................................. 85c Fitch's .......................... 39c, (;)z, 98c 1\'ildro',t .......,................... 43o, 7,k Toni Cream ...................... 39c, 65e I'c•ni Permanent 1<11 ................ $3.00 (Rciill ;1.75) 11u(!nut Permanent hit $3.25 (Refill ;1.75) Shad 'w \Vave, Pant, Bobbi and 1'inwac, R. D. PHILP, Fhm, B t) UGS, SUNI)Ri1P;S. WALLPAPER ---PHONE 20. Vodden's Home Bakery PHONE 71 R 2, BLYTI.-L FRSEH BREAD - CAKES - PASTRY ALWAYS ON IIANI). IF YOU BUY BREAD WITH YOUR ' GROCERIES, ASK FOR VODDEN'S BREAD, YOUR PATRONAGE WILL BE APPRECIATED. '••'••'NMYIINgrevrPNJ',iroe.p N•PSN.►Nw.►wrWI.NI.INYFN**444.Nsti,oso#1r1'I'NINI' f Libby's Tomato Juice ' 48 oz. 29c Carnation Milk 14c Campbell's Vegetable Soup 2 for 25c Cohoe Salmon 27c Campbell's Catsup (13 oz.) , , .1,,,, , , , , , , , , , , 25c Oak Hill Tomatoes 19c I.G.A. Ease per pk'g. 29c I.G.A. Soap Grains per pkg. 29c Jello - Lusthus Jelly 3 for 29c Mixed Cookies . per lb. 32c olland's Food ' arket AND LOCKER SERVICE. Telephone 39 -- WE DELIVER NrNNr!Nv'N'N'INrrrNN1~### ee Our )isplay OF TABLE LAMPS, PRICED FROM $8,00 TO $15.00. HASSOCKS .,$3.75 to $14.95 (for a Hassock SewingCabinet) AN EXCELLENT ASSORTMENT OF ODD PIECES OF FURNITURE --- SMOKING STANDS, CUSHIONS, AND CHILDREN'S KINDERGARTEN SETS. A GOOD ASSORTMENT 'OF DOMINION - LUGGAGE. Lloyd E. iaskei• I URNITURE — COACH AMBULANCE —• FUNERAL SERVICE Phone 7, Blyth -- SPORT SHORTS (Continued from page 1 gosh" best to give yott a good show,_ o•—o,— Incidentally, Satttrdiy night will be hockey night again at the Blyth arena, Once again the 'opposition will be the toughest trent in ;Ile \V.O.A.A• inter• mediate grcatp. The Londcshoro 13, A.'s will play I1, 'st to the visiting Cur- rie intermediates, From their record this year the Gorrie team are consid- ered the strong team h1 this group and Londesboro wit be out to knock then Off jttsl the suite as, they humbled llie Ripley visitors last Friday That game on Friday night was a "PM -dandy" for those who like their hockey rough, tough and nasty. Ter,, busiest men 111, the arena were the' penally time -i i,pers, and ..the penalty bzcc looked more like the players bench at tines as it bulged with offenders front' bo:11 teams, The ice was soft and c.nduci'e to roti 11 piety. The 13.-A; s proved the' best uutdders, and walked off with a handy 9-3 victory for their evening's tt•ork. 1t. was sweet revenge for nit eclrlic.r defeat they suffered, in- Glenn nGlc-nn Atkinson, a termer Blyth resi- dent and sportsman, was among the kip. ey cheering section, Glen,, as tau kit:w is seeing to ,it that the peo• plc of the Ripley, district get their eggs fresh and .clear, 1t was good to sec Ilius again, even 11k -ugh Ile is in the enemy camp, Local fans can he choosy 51)0111 their h:ckev this eve k -end. 'I'Ite wenn nev- er was better, Lend sor support to Tical sport by attent14: all, or at ',cast some, of these fine week -end gatucs. 4 1