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The Blyth Standard, 1953-02-11, Page 1
VOLUME 59 - NO. 17. LYTH Authorized as second-class trail, Post Office Department, Ottawa Councils Held February Sessions BLYTII COUNCIL, East Wawanosh Council Tne Counel stet Feb. 3rd with all the The regular meeting of Council w•;1 1116m,1)crs present, the Reeve presiding, held in the Nientoriad li:dl n Nlon- the 11r notes of meet(n; held ,jail, 12 clay evening at 8 o'clJrk, w't:t Wheel' were read and ;A0001011 motion by Morritt, counca6.rw• s Ilus'11, \\ heel ' NIct,Iowut and Hanna. and \Vnitficld present. Itlotion by Nlacd by Buchanan and Nv..'don of Itcicr and \\'4Ieetild that miatutc' that a grant of $20.1)1 he given to t. c of last regular meeting Cart•'cd. Assoe'ation $10.00 ant ti, tic \Vltite- Mr. Aihert Gray was pros:11t regard gr church Public I,!hInt and $10.09 ing 1i:enien's salaries and Libr''ry member fee to the Onta:iu Association grant. Mr. Gordon Davidson, \Vin;- of Kura Municipal:ties. lain, was present to give report •11 Council ordered 810 IRs, of \Varble well drilling. \lotion by Rowson ;incl hly 1'� wider frcm the Canadian Indus. \Vhee'er that NIr, 1)tt'id'J-n arrange tries, 12(1., and orde-cd 1000 feet of for a test pump for we.l to show CR• snow fence and 75 steel pests from the pacity ars!. draw (Lawn, in accordance Lundy hence Cu. tvfth 1:n;;ilnecr's spccificata,ns. .tr- Nfored by NIOGowan and 11811118 tied, that the Road and General ;recounts as be amt )t`tl' Huron Crop tool So:1 improve'', it Nlot`!on liy Howson and Wheeler that the members of Boards for 1953 be as foll.,ws — Ccnt111un11y Centre, Nfrs. 1-1. Plt'.Ii'ps, Nits, ScrinP,cour, Reeve Nlorritt, L. \VhitfL'ld, C. \Vheelcr, G. McNall, L. Rooney; I-Iall Board, Mrs. 13. Hall, Mrs. Scrimgeour, presented, be passed and paid, C:r- r:ecL Mi:ved by Hanna and McGowan that Council advertise for tcmde:s f• -r 8,001) yards 'of crushed gravel, f vc- eighths size screen, and,dclivered, ten- der to be accompanied Wth a $300.0( marked cheque, ;also adve:tis: for a Warble Fly luspetor at $1.00 per hour. Carried. Road Cheques: Stuart Nlcl)t,rney. salary, $150.00, ball pard, 3.00. $153.05 ; Ernest Walker, wages, 163,00, less U, 1 deductiA, 21c, 15.79; Wm. '1'. Irwin, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, FEB, 11, 1953 • AUCTION - RUMMAGE SALE A SUCCESS SPURT SHORTS •••• An excellent crowd re.ponded to NDAR the 1't iis ucti-11Rummage Sac of ' Subscription Rates $2.00 in Advance; $3,00 in the USA. iu uw-,. OBITUARY NORVAL W. KYLE 1Vilh the exception of the "Rosi\ fort which was staged ill the .lcuwr- Friends throughout this community League" doubleheader which was hell i ial hall an Saturday a:lernottu, heard with s:ncere regret of the pas• Nlunda night, Ir clay at the lo:al to 1 lite collection trade by the Lions sing early Saturday morning. at his y on ',Friday night resulted in a walt!t home in Ciheticun of N.'rval \V. Kyle, era hits been 11:n -existent during the of fine articles being dt.natcd by the former manager of the Bank of Com - past week. citizens ,:.f Myth and community. By nnerce here. slr, Kyle was 57 years As is always the rite, the "8"'"„ rosin on Saturday the basement of frac old,League boys gave tt goad sized Mall tock on all the aspects of a gen- Ile was born al Paisley, Ont.. son audience the`r m0ncy s -worth, 85 Uhe11 eral merchandisin:; sore, and shortly of the late Joseph Kyle and Vary knocked off the list (Luhlc-headerpoast one "cr, before they Howe' into the play; Ifs, ock the crowd started :1:nken. Itis lifetime bank ng career Thr first g,une was between :1111>nrn'arriving. took hint to many centres in the coml- . and Walton and certainly was a free• 11e overall o'cture war a lively one try and before coating to Myth, he scoring affair which the Auburn boys wan by a one -goal margin, 10 to 9. . 'These two tants must have c'tab- es.: Above the thin of wises could be Mr. Kyle succeeded V. M. Bray 's \'shed :a goal•scor`ng roc -Jed, In the heard the 'ricef Aucti'.;neer manager of the Myth Branch in 1943. last period they banged in bctwecn them less than I1 goals. \Villiam Nfornitt who auctioned such lie left here in October, 1949, to 1).-- them nosgam was au overt me ileitis as furniture, hardware, dish 5, conte manager of the west -end Branch fixture between Myth and the 13 h ail many otlur articles. , ui the Canadian Dank of C ntnner(e nccssicn of Iiullctt. ('he 13th set :1 oraw was he'd for t«.1) Indian at Chatham, a position he still held at Co co a 3ion lead an the early eta:•es' ,t blankets, and winner, were: Mr. G. the time of his sudden pass ng. upthis game ;utdscc11tcd well on the Way I erry•, a vision. at the Riordan home, Friends here remember tip: late NIr. to victory.' :\ 2081 scoring splurge by and 11 r. Nelson Lear, of the 13th of Kyle not only its the gcn`a) manager Ham •1 • of our bank but as one sof the prints the 1311th Lads in the third Irauuc tie l l \1'thcthcr you bought or not, it was movers in many community project,. to a as members at the bions Club sorest as clerks white patrons sized u;, the articles and made individual purchas- I was on the staff of the Dank of Cl: min errcc at Coboconk, 1.akefie'd, \Velliagton, 'I'i-ronto, and NIidlan•1. the score ,and Duh the te,un, in scoreless Overtime period. The !anal a good event t,o attend, The Lions a' a sure was 3-3. meet'appreciative for the co-operation Mrs. McCa.2:nn, Reeve Nlorritt, G. Finns Stand'ng: Radford, 11. Parrott, 1. dowser' G. Each tart played 6 games, and \I'cNa!1. Library Board, Mrs. Garrett, 1 g:u30.00, X here is the final standing: to $� Mrs. Hall, Mrs. J, \V arson, 'Rev. C. J. '.('earn \V L '1' Pt;. Scott, K. \Vhitmore, R. Madill, Albert Auburn ...• 4 5 1 0 10 Gray. Cemetery Board, W. i1. ,Mor- Myth ' rift, F. Howson, G. Radford, C. 4 3 1 5 \Vhccler, 1„ \Villa:cid, G. Brown J. 13th ) 3 1 5 � � plowing snow, 13.5(1; Alex Robertson. Walton 0 6 0 0 McG1:wan, 13: Parrott. I rent of shed for 1952, 35.0)); DRNICO. 'M0t(un by Whitfield 811(1 Wheeler I grader overhaul and parts, 401.20; Fire! Play -Off Game To•!.mght: that accounts as read be paid. Car- Can. Oil Co,. 35 gals. gas, 11.65, 250 Follow:6g the game representatives ricd, ' Igals, fuel oil, 49,09, 60.65; Dept; li:gh- Of the four teams met bnieily to ar• W. Riehl, salary street foreman, ways Ont., tax on 250 gals, fuel o'l, range play-offs. It was agreed to 122.92; \V. Riehl, salary, c:tme1aking, 27,50; Ross Jamieson, 19 hrs, snow- play a 2 out -of -3 series in the srnri 25.0(; \V. Thud, salary, P.U.C., 70.00; , plowing at $4.0O3 76.00, final round with Auburn meeting the I1. Letherland, salary, weighntaSter, I General Cheques : M unic'pal World, 13th Concession, and \\Talton meeting 45.00; Gerald Ileffron, garbage.collec- supplies ;Ind 'exchange, 23.15; Twp, of 1311th. • lion, 81.00; Blyth Postmaster, 676; Morris, Bclgravc street lights, 37.50, In view of hockey games to be play - Doherty Tiros., acct. fire truck, 16,00; upkeep, 8,67, 4.'3.17; Village of 1311th, al at the arena by other teams, ar- Manning & Sons, cement, 8.15; I1!y0.1t relief paid. 71.36; Stanley Marks, 3 , rangements Wire only made for thz Telephone, refit 8nc1.: set., 2860; Rat'( fox Inunt10S, 6.00; Cordon Smith,1 ( fiat doubleheader which will be play - ice Equipment Co., acct., 1.35; 131;1 11 fox bounty, 2,00; Fred Deacon, 1 fox ed to -night, 'Thursday, with \\ta1t,m School Board, 1,300,00; G. Sloan, bounty, 2.01); Out, Assn. of Rural meeting Myth in the first game, and_ham; Mayor W. G. Cochrane, Exeter, clerk's account, 5.99; \V. Thiel', re• Municipalities, member fees, 10,0); Auburn and the 13th opposing each and John G. Berry, Goderich, pairs and labour,' 15.0); Sparl'Ig's Huron Crop and Soil Improvement _other in the second halt. After considerable discussion a Man. Hardware, acct., 8.til ; Stewart's Groc- Association, •grout, 20.00; \Vhitechurch • • • age'tnent Conn !tree was set up .to car - cry, 3,23; Albert Gray, firemen's sal -Public Library, grant, 1953, 10,00; 13c1- The L:B nrlcsboro .-A.'s el -se out ry out •the organization of this drive ;tries, 427.20; F. i'unney', 19.00. ( grave- - Community Centre. rem. 01 0, 1 , ' . \lotion b1 •\V�hitficld and ]iutvst,tl coerce for 1953, $.0the •rcgutar schedule • with a game at tvhic'Ir it; to be known as the l•toren that we du now adjourn, Carried. ,loved . b9 l'$ .0 n end 13ttcl:analt the 131y111 arena 011 Friday night with County Overseas Nord Relief Fund. 1110 high -flying Neustadt team. The Committee is made 110 8s follows: that 'Council adjourn to meet March Following tlis tussle it W:dl be play- Chairman: 1)r. E. A. Mc\[aster, 3rd at 1 o'cleek, at the BclSrave Cont, oIT hockey for this group too, We Scaforth; Secretary -Treasurer, John numity Centre. Carried, have not been informed so, but we G. Berry, Goderich ; Committee NIem- AMONG THE CHURCHES Orval 'Taylor, Reeve. - Clerk. R, 1I. 'l'hontiaon' beiic'c,,that 1ondesbo;o, 13russ'ds and hers, Mayor D. Miller, \Vingham, I rendered 113th btu those who contri- 1ie was a tallied member of the Blyth Liras Club, the Myth United Church. Myth Branch No. 420 of the Canadian HULLETT F1RE-SIDE FARM FORUM The lire -side farm forum met Feb- ruary 9th at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bob 1)811011 with twenty-two adults present to discuss the topic "lull an• derstandimg between farm and city” I. \Ve believe there is fairly good understanding and friendly relations between the farmers and the people in our neighbouring towns and tea• lases. This is partly chic to the fact that so many of the residents in the towns were formerly farmers, or child- ren of farmers. \Ve have no large city close and they people intermingle at many social functions. 2. The methods which help improve understanding in our area between farmers and town people. (1) The joint committees in church crganizatiuns, Iligit School Area Boars, Agricultural Board, Lions 'farmer night, \\'ontcn's lnutitutesti Legion gatherings, etc, (2) Our local newspapers and ra- dio give space and time to reports of farm meetings and forums. Unc mem- ber wished the Crum news night some time have space on the =front page o1 the paper. (3) \\'c believe there should be luted and th•:se who patronized the I (gi:at, and 1313'th A. it, & A. NI. No. store farm women active numbers od event. The gross proceeds amounted 1303. '1'o all these he gave unstintingly 1 the Canadian Association of Cc 11511111 - of his time, no doubt at times to the detriment of his own personal health. He had returned to vis't in the village Huron County Planning Aid 0n numerous occasions since going to For Overseas Flood Victims Chatham, and often spoke of his de - On Friday afternoon, February 6th, sire to return here his a resident at at a spec'':al meeting called by the some future time. llrardcn of Huron County, a comma - tee Kyle served in 'World \Var I in tee was set up 10 organize a drive far the lith Battalion and during the last foods for the eicthus of the recent war was active in the reserve unit in floods overseas. • The meeting was :attended by the following personnel— Warden A. \V. Kerslake. I-1'ensall ; Verne Pincoulhe, Usbornc Township; Earl Campbell, Hay Township; Mayor \Vm. Miller, Clinton; Deputy -Reeve' Jos. Allaire, Goderich; I1. C. Johnst:n, Ntorris township; John AlorriSSey, Stephen township; Mayor D. Miler, Wing - George Sloan, Clerk. ST. ANDREW'S t'RESBYTERiAN CHURCH 10:30 a 111.1 Smutty School, 11 8.nn.1 \Vorship Service. The annual congregational meeting on Saturday, February 14t11, at 3 peon. 1t, G, ,1[eMillan, Interim Moderator, Goderich, THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Blyth, Ontario. Rev, C. J. Scott, 13.A., B.D., Nlinistcr, Sunday, February 8.h, 1953 10.15 a.nt.; Sunday School. 11 ;15 i Morning Worship, 7:00 pan.; Evening Service. 8:C'0 p.m.; Talks 011 Counselling, "0 Conte and Let Us \Vorship." ANGLICAN CHURCH Sunday, February 1st, 1953 Myth; Matins, 10:30; Sunday School 11:30 a.m. Auburn: Matins, j2 oclock. Bclgravc: Evensong, 2;30 pent, Sun- day School, 1:45 11.111. All welcome, W. E. BRAM\VELL, Rector, • CHURCH OF GOD McConnell Street, .Blyth, Rev. G. 1. Beach, Miuistcr. • 10 a.m.: Sunday, School. 11 a.m.: Morning Worship. 7:30.p.111.; Evening Service. 8:00 p.m., Wednesday: Bible Study and Prayer, Youth Fellowship Service : u Friday • at 8 p.m, - - THE BOOK NOOK - DOCTOR ANGEL By Jeanne Bowman "It -was ironic that I)orothy Gray's name should have been the sante as that cf a woman known for beautify- ing young girls, 'for if there was 'ever a drab, lumpisch, muddy -complexioned girl it was Dorothy . . , Until Dr. An- drew Angclisti came to Lakeville, Dorothy was resgncd to her drudge's fate, 13th 1)r. "Angel" the ratan made her actually ;t=are of her failings, ev- en as the dl:ct:r sought to find ways and means, of bringing out her latent prettiness. • "I i ,ale by little Dorothy _blos'sonted, only to find that the doctor now need- ed !ter help in a battle sof--his oW11, 1',,hiCh was even I110:e dramatic. than the one sjie ltn1 jttst wolf for herself." Quoted frcm the flyleaf of this book, --C. J. 5. HULLETT COUNCIL The regular monthly meeting of the 1-IttldMt 'Township Council was held in the l.ancicsboro Community Hall at 2 pent, on February 211d with the Reeve and all numbers of the Coim- cil present. M'nutes of jnangura1 meeting of January 12 were read, Mot!onsi' Rapson -Jewitt : '!'drat minutes as read be adopted. Carried. $2CO.00 Grant To Cl:nton' Legion At this time a Delegation from the Clinton Legion, I)r, NIclntyle and Ephriatn Snell, approached Council re- garding a Grant for the Legion Mem- orial I-lall which is now under con- struction at Cl:nto11. 13rown-Jewitt: 'Rat. We give a grant of $200.00 to the Clinon Legion for the new Legion \[cmoria1 11a11. Carried. Clinton Man Gots Sprayinp Contract At this time the Tenders for the 'l'cesw•atcr will meet in the play -;,FTs, Mayor \V. Moller, Clinton, Reeve 1.1, C. Johnston, Morris Township. Further meetings of this manage- ment committee and the committee as a whole Will be held this week and fin- al plans for ,slaking the appeal to the pu)tlic will be made 1t is sincerely during the Easter week. The event, hyped- that one and all w'11 help in which is -.the fourth annual, sponsored this chive. by the Godcrich Lions Club, is ex- ..—v pected to be bigger and: better than ever, and a cordial invitation is being extended by the Gotha -jolt sponsors to all Lions Clubs to enter Pee \V0e teams in the tournament. A 1311.411 entry, if one was made. woube ore n Group "C" whichld is for• lolvns twitait ;i population of from 500 to 1,500. Each groat) win- ner will be presented with a trophy, and only one entry will be acccptul front each community. All entries trust be in by March 14. and any boy born on or after August 1st, 1940. is el'giblc. All players cei.- tificatcs listing players must be accom- panied by birth certificates of listed players, Each entry is to be acccrn- Spraying Cattle in the Township forpanted by a cheque for $10.00, pay- able to Goderich Lions Club, said cheque 10 be returned when teams have completed first scheduled games. En- tries should be mailed to R. G. Inner- Local Collegiate Students sots, Bkx 86, Goderich, or 'Tory Gregg. Compete At Toronto \Vingh81t, Ontario. * * * Rob Yumghlut and George \\'right, Blyth Midgets lost their first game of Auburn. and Allan \\'ijson of Car - of the season on 'Tuesday n'ght, when low, comprised the junior teat sent they played the final game of the recently to represent the Goderich schedule against the 1lowick Lions in Collegatc institute at a ping-pong the Gorrie arena. to,urnantent held at 1 -fart douse, To. Goalgetters for Myth were Jimmy ionto, 'rite - boys played 27 individual re \Varble Fly Powder. Jewitt -Lei- Chalmers with 2, and Ilustcr Peckitt games, winning 22 of , them, which k per; That We buy 1000 llrs, of GI•eett with 1. 1t was the second su000SS1;e an excellent record. They also attend - Cross Warble Powder fr:nt R. N. '\I- game iu as many night's for lite mid- cd the hockey game •at Maple Leaf gets.. Monday night they p1ao:ed at Gardens o11 Saturday night. The boys exhibi1:on gone with \VingInnt anal left Friday morning and returned on dropped it by one goal.. 'Ih0 tart i Sunday night. Incidentally, 1301) and roster was badly depleted for the George are both valued nlclnlicrs of \Vinghann gauze as 011 the sante night the Myth midget hockey team. several of the tuidget players were playing for Auburn against ,\V:dlo11 in Heifer Goes Berserk the Blytlt' "Bush League double- header. Joe and Ted honking had a rather Incidentally the loss on 'Tuesday harrasing experience one day last night did not affect the group stand- wreck. Joe Was leading an Ayreshire 131yelt midgets topped the league. heifer front one farm to the other, Coach Ray Madill informs tis that when the animal' got unruly and at- 131yth Will sleet 1-1owick Lions int the tacked hint,' finally brcak'ug away. first round ' Jf 'the playoffs which in Ted came along in a truck and sec •ng all probahaity will get under Way be- the difficulty came to his brother's aid, fore next week's issue ,comes off the whereupon the 811'111;t1 to.:k a rAttn,I press, but at time of writing no play- out of him, Both men were brn:sett off d•tis have been aunotmced. as the Itoifcr attacked with her lam, Keep your Dar to the ground for horns, She was finally subdued, and The xtllicld to be given to the school the (late; of these gauzes. and 0.1110 theft, according to Ted Went al:ng making the most I),:ints in the Fest:- to the vista to see the kids play. They q;,itc peacefully. The boys Were at a val. Carried. - need your support if they are to tw.,I loss to know just what had caused trete (Continued on page 4) group hcnors. I animal to go suddenly berserk. they being "C" tants. \Ve have received a communication from L. 0. Whetstone, of Goderich to the effect. that Young Canada \\'cele Will h0 held at the Goderich arena Warble Fly were called for. There were four tenders, V. A. Hargrave, Brucefickl, Lours Blake, Brussels, Jack Little, Clinton, and R. England, Mil- verton. Brown -Leiper: That We give jack Little of Clinton, the contract of splaying the cattle in 1-lulielt at 12 scut, per head per spray according t.1 totter. Spraying to he dobe to. 'h0 satisfaction of the \Varble Fly" In- spector. Carried. . -.• R, N, Alexander 'approached Coun- cil, representing Gran Cross Products Reception Tendered Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Staples .\ large crowd was present in the Blyth Nfemorial (fall on Friday'iignt for the public reception tendered Mr. and Nil's. Kenneth Staples, of 13101, recent newly-weds. 1)amcing occupied the major portion of the evening's program, with nntsia supplied by Janes Pierce's orchestra. Mr. and NIrs. Staples were the re- cipient of a purse of money, the gift eltaton being 1118(10 by laddie McNall, while John Pollard reail the address. Ken replied, thanking those present for their l.:ncincss, on behalf of his bride. Nirs Staples was the former A[iss Shirley Ives, of Colborne township: cxandcr at $7.75 per bag. ' Carried. George Pollard, Warble Fey Inspector Applications for \Varble Fly Inspec- tor Were called fur, There were 7 applications: A[r. Chas. Riley, Kin - burn; William 11cgg:art, Clinton; Newman • Garrett, Clinton; George 'Pollard, 11,1,;611: Feed Fowler, Lomdes- born; Leonard Archambault, Auburn. and George Le'tch, Clanton. 13r4tt•n- Jewitt: 'That we appoint George Pol- lard- Warble Fly Inspector for 1953, Carried. Shield• Frr Hul'ott Musical Fositval A letter t��.ts read front the Mullett Cutvnsh'p \(tis'cal Festival C,,.mn1:1- tee t'eJording a shield for the Pest:' - 4 al, Jewitt -Leiper: That we &nate. a Shield to the 11ullett Afuvic Festival, M idland. Since going to Chatham he was a member of Victoria Avenue United Church and secretary of the church board of stewards, a member of the \Veilington Masonic Lodge No. 46, A. F. and A.Ni., and also a nttanher of Branch Nio, 431, Canadian Logi,:at, Surviving besides his wife are 11e (laughter, Nlary Elizabeth; two sons, Andrew Joseph, of Saskatoon; and John Alexander, of Redlakc; Sask. A funeral service was heic1 on Tiles_ day 8ftermox 11 -at 2 p.m. at the Har- vey Steven funeral home, conducted by the Rev, ClifTford, Park,- Burial was made 111 Nlaple Leaf Cemetery, Branch No. 431, Canadian Legion, was in charge of the graveside services. Those attending the funeral from Blyth included, Nlr, and Mrs. Frank- lin Bainb:n, NIr, and Mrs. J. G. lle- Dougall, Mils Mary Nlilne, and Mr. Grant Sparling. '\rile sympathy of many friends thootigltout this district is extended to Mrs. Kyle, and the family. MRS. ALICE BROWN A funeral service for the late Mrs. Alice Drown was conducted from the Tasker memorial chapel, Blyth, on Wednesday, February 11th, at 2 p.m., with interment following in 1311tH Un- ion Cemetery. 'Rev. Gordon Hazel- wood of Mount Forest, formerly of Walton, ainducted the service. Pallbearers were, Roy Farrow,. Mit- chell, Edward Armstrong, Shclbourne, :\b. 'Taylor, Goderioh, Jack Johnston, Bailie Parrott, and \Vat. Cockerlinc. The many beautiful 'flnoral tributes from friends in this district, as well as from Toronto and London, were a silent testimony of the esteem in which the deceased Was hcid, Mrs, Brown passed away in St. Jos- eph's hospital, London, on Sunday, February 7t11, where she had been -taken for an operation the first of January, She ryas in her 76:11 year, The late Mrs. Brown was born 10 East Wawanosh township, a daughter of Robert Johnston and Margaret Brown. In 1894 she married Robert Browu of the 9th line of Morris town• ship, tvho predeceased her 35 years agto. To the anion was born two sons, \Villia►u, of Blyth, 811(1 1-iarvey of the 9th line, and one daughter, Mrs, Frank (Edna) Stoneham, of London, all of /01101111 survive together with five Joan McNall, 4 -year-old daughter grandchildren. She. was the last sur- of Mr, and Mrs. Ray MeNall, , of vivor of a family of nine. 113Iyth, is a patient in the Sick Chit - Following the marriage she lived dren's Hospital, at London, Friends tvith her husband on the 9th Zinc of hope she will soon be able to return :Morris until' his death in 1918. Until home again. 1924 she o0ntinued on at the farm with her son, Ilarvcy at which time she took up residence in Toronto. Ten years ago she moved to iiaandon where she lived with her daughter. Mrs. Brown was a member of IIoty- and Park United Church, 'Toronto, and until her removal to London, had been quite active in various phases of the work of that church. ccs. (4) People from both rural and ur- ban d'stricts should be more open minded, trying to understand the ad- vantages as well as disadvantages of the other persons' way of life. The school buses, talcing so Hoary rural children to the town schools are a fac- tor in good relatiou ship. (5) An. exchange of speakers be- tween farm and urban' organizations helps, but working and playing to- gether creates a more friendly feel- ing. \Vinncrs in prcgresi'we euchre: most games, Nlrs. \Ves!cy Hoggart, Bert 1-loggart; Ione hands, Mrs. Bert lioggart, \Vc!,lcy I1,oggart; consola- Jion, Nlrs. Babcock, Don. Buchan:,11, Nlrs. Nlansei Cook invited the group to her home for next week. OBITUARY JOHN LAiDLAW' A funeral service for the late John Laidlaw, who died Tuesday, Febru- ary 4t111 in Mitchell, was held from the 'Tasker memorial chapel on Friday afternoon, February 60i, at 2 p111., with the Res'. R. G. AlcMillat, inter- im Moderator of the Persbytenian Church, in charge. :lit. Laidlaw was in his 84th year. 1)eccascd was a sou of the late Roh- ert Laidlaw and Christcna McCallum, lie was born, one of a family of nine, on the 9th concession of Morris town.• ship where he farmed and lived until the retired to Blyth in the fall of 1944. The last few years he had resided. with a nephew, the late Gilbert Mc- Callum, and a niece, Mrs. Rokuul Achilles, near \Valton. Mr. Laidlaw, was the last surviving member of His family. 1-Ic was never married. A quiet, friendly man, his chief 1t1- terest in life was his church, He was a lifelong member of Blyth Presby- terian Church and an elder. and lat- terly ase honorary elder, for many years. Interment was made iu Blyth Union Cemetery. Pallbearers, were, Messrs. Alfred 1-laggitt, Alex \tanning, Ken- neth 'Taylor, William Morritt, Walter Sltorlrecd and William Blake, OFFICIALS AT GOOD ROADS CONVENTION Members of Blyth Municipal Conn - oil, as well as Clerk -Treasurer George Sloan, spent a few days in Toronto this week, as did surrounding tott•n- ship officials, attending the annual Good Roads Convention. IN HOSPITAL BIRTHS E\IPEY—ln Clinton I-Iospital, ,tut Friday, February (ith, 1953, to Mr. and Mrs. William Empty, of Blyth, (nee Christene Armstrong), the gift of a son—William McElwain. IN CLINTON HOSPITAL CELEBRATE 62nd ANNIVERSARY Mrs. Frank Metcalf is a patient int the Clinton hospital. Friends hope she will soon b0 able to return home aga111. Mr. and 'Mfrs. George King of Bay field celebrated their 62nd Wedding an- ltiversat•y, February 4th. Nirs, King was formerly Annie H. Barr, daughter of Mr. acid ;firs. Alexander Barr, of 1110 13th concession d Hallett, and Mr. King is a son of the late Mr. 811(1 Mrs. John King, of Bayfield. They have resided in Baty -field for over 50 years. CONGRATULATIONS Congratulations to Bonnie Bell wino celebrated her 611t, birthday on Mon- day, February 9111, i12&IALKS Coffee -Raisin.. Pilau. is a Delicious Dessert Although the old - fashioned two -crust pie is hard to beat, the "open-faced" kind has one great advantage. It has "eye -appeal" in addition to its other attrac- tions, and the number of different fillings you can put into an al- ready -baked shell is almost end- less. Here are a few fine fillings which I'm sure your folks will smack their lips over., DOUBLE LEMON PIE ;5 Cup Sugar 2 Tablespoons Flour % Teaspoon Salt 1 Egg Yolk 1 Cup Scalded Cream 1 Package Unflavorcd Gelatin 3/4 Cup Cold Water '/l Cup Lemon Juice Grated RInd of 1 Lemon '/2 Teaspoon Vanilla 2 Egg 1Vhilcs 1 Baked 9 -Inch Pastry Shell Combine sugar, flour, salt and egg yolk. Add to scalded cream In top of double boiler. Cook un- til thick, stirring well, Dissolve gelatin in cold water. Add to hot mixture, Cool. When 1 nixture jells, add lemon juice, rind and vanilla. Beat egg whites until stiff, Fold into filling. Pile into pastry shell. Chill. Cup Sugar 31 Tablespoons Corns': '/ Teaspoon Salt % Cup Water Juice of 1 Lemon Grated Rind of 1 Lemon 1 Egg Yolk 2 Tablespoons Butler Combine all ingredients except egg and butter, Cook and stir un- til thick, Pour a little over beat- en egg yolk. Return to hot mix- ture, Cook 5 minutes. Add but- ter. Cool and spread over filling. a • • APRICOT - GRANGE MARMALADE PIE 3 Cups Cooked, Unsweetened Dried Apricots (or Canned Apricots) 1 Cup Orange Marmalade '/a Cup Apricot Juice 1 Tablespoon Quick -Cooking Tapioca % Teaspoon Salt Pastry for 9 -Inch PIe Drain apricots, Combine ntar- mala4e, juice, tapioca and salt. "Casbah" Cutie — Modelling a pair of black pedal pushers and bra, desittned in North African style, Joan Bell also displays the smart sleeveless jacket and hat at a fashion show. BY DOROZln, MADDOX DID you ever have pilau? It Is a concoction of rice, spice and a varying number of other Ingredients that range from meat add fish to fruits and nuts. Try the following dessert pilau. Your family will love it. COFFEE -RAISIN PILAU (Yield: 6 servings) One package pre-cooked rice, regular strength coffee, 14 cup golden raisins, 1/2 cup chopped walnuts,.% teaspoon salt, % teaspoon nutmeg, 'h cup brown sugar firmly packed, 1 cup heavy cream, whipped: Prepare pre-cooked rice according to package directions, using coffee instead of water. Stir in remaining ingredients except cream. Mix well, Cool. Fold in whipped cream, reserving enough for gar- nishing. Spoon into isherbet glasses, Top with remaining whipped cream and chopped walnut meats. Everybody likes upside-down gingerbread. Try it with pineapple or pears. • PINEAPPLE -UPSIDE-DOWN GINGERBREAD (Yield: 9 servings)' Toppan$: Two tablespoons butter or margarine, 1 cup molasses, '14 cup 'sugar, 6 slices canned pineapple, 6 maraschino, cherries. Melt butter or margarine in an 8 x 8 x 2 -Inch pan. Blend in mo- lasses and sugar; heat just to boiling point. Over this arrange pine- apple and cherries; set aside until gingerbread batter is mixed. GINGERBREAD BATTER One and one-half cups sifted enriched flour, 1/2 teaspoon salt, ?y teaspoon double-acting baking powder, 14 teaspoon ginger, 14 teaspoon nutmeg, '/a teaspoon cloves, '4 cup shortening, % cup sugar, 15 teaspoon soda, 1/2 cup molasses, 1 egg, 1 cup sour milk. Heat oven to 350 degrees F. (moderate). Sift together first six ingredients, Cream together shortening, sugar and soda. Add molasses Stir in / cup of the flour mixture. Beat in egg. Add remaining Pour over apricots and mix, Pour into unbaked pie shell. Top with lattice. Bake in hot oven (425°F.) 10 minutes. Reduce heat to 350°F. and bake 30 -minutes, * • TUTTI-FRU "1'I PIE 1 Cup Grapefruit Sections 11/2 Cups Orange Sections 1.s Cup Drained Crushed Pine - Apple 1 'Iedium Banana, Sliced 1/2 Cup Maraschino C:serries, Halved 2 Tablespoons Butter ;3 Cup Sugar 3 Tablespoons Quick -Cooking Tapioca ?i Teaspoon Salt Pastry for 9 -Inch Pi. Combine all ingredients except pastry and butter, Pour into un - baked pie shell. Dot with butter, Top with pastry, Bake in hot oven (425°F.) 10 minutes. Reduce heat to 350°F. Bake 40 minutes, • • • ORANGE -RAISIN PIE 2 Cups Seedless Raisins 3 Tablespoons Lemon Juice ' Cup Sugar 1 Cup Water 2 Tablespoons Baths 3 Tablespoons Flour '/ Teaspoon Salt 11/2 Cups Orangr Sections Pastry for 2 -Crust Pie Mix raisins, lemon juice, sugar and water in a sauce -pan, Simmer slowly for 15 minutes, or until raisins are plump, Melt butter, Add flour and salt, beating until smooth, Gradually add some of the hot juice from the raisin mix- ture to the flour, stirring until smooth, Pour into raisin mixture, and cook until thickened, Add orange sections. Pour into pastry - lined 9 -inch pie pan. Top with pastry and brush with milk. Bake in a hot oven (425°F.) '0 min- utes. Reduce temperature to 350 degrees F. and bake 25 to 30 min- utes. 11'IIAT HAPPENED AT JERICHO People might have been told "to go to Jericho" when there was, in fact, no other pl,ace. For British and American. archaeolo- gists now excavating in Jericho have proved that it is a town .at least 6,000 years old. No other town in the world can claim 6,000 years of contin- uous existence, Moreover, the walls of Jericho were not all . blasted down by the noise of Joshua and his men. There were several walls round Jericho and it is one of the walls that has now been uncov- ered to provide the evidence of 6,000 years of age, Most of this wall was made from stone slabs, but some preshaped bricks were used. . So man learnt to make bricks before even pottery was invented, 1:,.<'.ti:l: Keeps Smiling — Although her legs have been kept in traction splints since Jan, 12, eight -month-old Jerrl Ellen Burkholder keeps a cheerful smile on her face. A fall broke her left leg above the knee, but both legs are raised to keep hes-from turning. Bangkok's Buddha - Watching serenely over the Thailand capi- tal is Bangkok's famous Buddha, well known to the city's teem- ing population as "Wat Indara Viharn," An idea of its height can be estimated by examining the tiny human figures in, the foreground. Danish People Can Smile At Themselves Denmark consists of the pen- insular of Jutland as well as 500 islands, most of which are kept apart by bridges, the bigger ones, at , any rate, A bridge between Funen and Zealand is the only one lacking for the present. Denmark is low-lying — from approximately four feet below sea level to 570 feet above it, It makes up for being low by being beautiful. At any rate, it is a pleasant country to look at. Den- mark has a smile for everbody who likes to see a smile, just as some other countries shout with laughter or look sad or even pos- itively gloomy. An'English writer once declar- ed that Denmark resembled a. red cow in an enormous green field, Add that it is a gay cow and a pleasant field and the re- mark is true enough But there are also broad streams and blue lakes about the country, idyllic fiords, beaches where water laps the white sand, unexpected cliffs that you can fall over if you lean out too far; there are stretches of moorland so slat that you stop ' believing the world is round, dunes with, masses of san 1 al- most indistinguishable from a sample of African desert, damp rich marshes, woods with pale green beeches and picnic baskets, and Rebild's heather-covet'cd hills and dales. Dotted about amongst it all ate thousands of . gardens, surrounding thousands .of small white farms, and ancient rarlcs s u r r o u r ding ancient cas`les, . . . There, are hundreds of Fay, queer, amusing towns, where gay, queer, amusing people go a r nun d speaking twenty different kinds of Danish, Time is a waterfall in Jutland, It is four feet high, There are rocks too—but these are all kept on the island of Bornholdm. A visitor from Florida once said that Copenhagen had ttvo winters, a white one and a green onc. The statement is a bit un- just—From "We Danes and You" by Mogens Lind, illustrated :by llerluuf Jensenius. The National Travel Association of Denmat'k, 1052. Coffee -Raisin Pilau bilghtens any meal, even midnight snacks. and late afternoon lunches. dry ingredients alternately with sour milk (about '4 of each at a time). Beat 'h minute. Pour batter in the above pan over pineapple and cherries and spread to sides and corners. Bake one hour or until done. Coot 15 minutes before removing from pan. Note: Pear -Upside -Down Gingerbread: Replace pineapple with pears in the above recipe, Authors' Aliases Novelist Agatha Christie has completed fifteen years of pub- lishing books under another nom -de -plume, Mary Westma- cott, Miss Westmacott came into being for the author's straight novels; Agatha Christie has al- ways been the writer of detec- tive stories. And few of her mil- lions of readers know the author's real name, It is Mallow - an, for she is the wife of Profes- sor' Mallowan, the archaeologist, Authors often use pen -names because they are shy.' 'Joseph Conrad's real name was Joseph C. Korzeniowski; George Eliot was a woman—Mary Ann Evans —in real life. Arnold Bennett wrote many -articles over the sig- nature of ."Jacob Tensor'," A certain "Mrs. Horace Manners" who wrote learned articles turn- ed out to be Algernon Charles Swinburne. And the author of Alice in Wonderland, Lewis Car- roll, was an ' Oxford Don and mathematics • lecturer named Charles Lutwidge • Dodgson. In 1931 the literary world was surprised to learn that novelist "George R. Precdy" was really Miss Marjorie Bowen (Mrs.. Ar- thur Long), Said she: "I wasn't trying to work a hoax, I wanted to get away from the type of - writing done by Marjorie Bowen and to try something different." COMEBACK; When Jerry Wald, now a pro- ducer, was writing his radio col- umn, "The Wald's Have Ears," he devoted much space to attacking Rudy Vallee, He avalanched some caustic and belligerent letters from Vallee's loyal female fans. Jerry took a bundle of the most juvenile and badly written let- ters, tied them with blue ribbon and sent them to Vallee, with the note; "Read these and you'll see what kind of fans we have," Val- lee sent the pile hack with the note: "Read these ands you'll see what kind of readers you have," Big Money In The Lecturing Business With a car salvaged from a Southampton scrap heap, a sec- onhand movie camera and a year's savings, an American schoolteacher named Austen Steers spent his summer holiday making an amateur movie of Britain's scenery. Then he went home and be- gan lecturing and showing his one-man movie to schools and women's clubs—and so far he has talked his way along a cir- cuit of 35,000 miles and grossed $15,000. Another young man named Russell Curry lectures feminine audiences on "How to Dance" and takes his elderly mother along with him, When he has explained the intracacies of the rumba or samba, he grabs Mama to show how simple it is, Since she's about the average age of the audience, the show goes over big—and he's netting $12,0.00 a year. These are just two success samples of the gift of the gab, instances from the gib boom in talk. ' The great American lec- ture business is chattering pros- perously into another ten mil- lion dollar season. Every winter an average 25,- 000,000 Americans listen to some 3,000 professional lectures. In small exclusive groups, in mil- lionaires' drawing -rooms, and in enormous crowds in vast muni- cipal auditoriums, this year they'll lap up the lowdown on everything from atom spies to the Queen's coronation, Ever since Charles Dickens crossed the Atlantic with his little reading -stand and earned $282,000—equivalent' of - to -day's £ 100,000—British ' speakers have been prominent in the gold -rush. Talk is one of our export trades, Sir Gerald Campbell, former, ambassador. in Washington, went back not long ago and earned $500 every hour he . spoke. An- thony Eden made $1,200 with a brief chat in New York. Nice work if you can get it? In fact, the lecture business means travelling hard, sleeping badly—and indigestion, Beverley 'Baxter was once snowed up in Texas when he was supposed to be 'arriving in California, Even- tually, after juggling 'plane rind train schedules, he arrived at his Los Angeles auditorium only a few minutes late to find his audi- ence patiently waiting.' Lecture agents pay the travel fares but take 50 per cent. of the fee, At an annual slave mar- ket in New York, professional lecturers give ten-minute sam- ples of talk to hundreds of as- sembled committee women. The • ladies weigh these human trail- ers one against another and choose their personalities months in advance. Would yolt like to lecture? Provided she, can sparkle as well as talk her head off, lec- ture agents say there's a real box-office opening in America to -day for a genuine , BritIsh house -wife. There's an opening, too, for Mr, Winston Churchill, He has been offered the biggest lecture contract yet—a fee of $000,000—if he will make a tour ,of the States and speak. on any subject he chooses. What a rage he would be if he were in a position to accept. Don't forget that it was at Fulton, Missouri, in 1946, that he advocated his "fraternal association" of the English-speaking peoples, How Desert Plaints Search For Water The great art of how -to -do - without . . , is an art both the desert plants and the tiesert ani- mals have learned to pi setice, but it is the plants' appearance that has been most obviously modified by it. Most of the birds show no outward signs that they live in a land of little rain, and the quail who sit thirty feet +Ap in the saguaro, pecking moisture from its fruit, look, on the ground, as sleek as their cousins who drink when they like, . , , Almost every plant, on the other hand, has modified itself in some visible way and announces to the most casual beholder that moisture is precious. . Certainly the lines along which the plants have worked are few and they are directed toward three simple ends: to get water, to conserve it, or to get along most of the time without any... To get water, one may of course send roots deep; this is as might be expected certain trees do, though the method is the more remarkable in certain plants, notably the yucca, whose above -surface size is modest, Up the slopes of the gleaming gyp- sum clones in White Sands, New Mexico, one may see the yuccas lifting their oddly lush masses of lily blossoms above the burning, , bone-dry powder in which it does riot seem possible that anything could live and in which, as a mat- ter of fact, precious few other things can, The secret is a root which may, I am told, go forty feet down to the soil below the gypsum. Sometimes, on the other hand, it is hardly worth while for a plant to go down because there is little water even at forty feet. Hence, the kind of plant which grows In any given desert region depends in considerable part on whether there is water beneath the surface. Ten or fifteen miles north of where I am settled, the yuccas grow everywhere in the loose, rocky soil of a mountain- side where there is little earth but where the loose gravel al:* lows water to soak in, Here, on the flat, packed sand, they do not. The saguaro flourishes be- cause its method is not to go deep but to seize quickly and to store up what falls In rare, brief, sud- den downpours that run off quickly without penetrating far below the surface. These mon- ster cacti, sometimes as high as fifty feet, sometimes +•eighing as much as two tons, and sometimes living as. long as two hundred years, have no real tap roots at all. Jut belony the surface of the soil, as flat disk -like network spreads for yards around them; when a rain comes they quickly take up the water from a wide area, swelling visibly. and some- times absorbing -as much as a ton of water from one rain. After that they may go a year, if neces- sary, without _taking in water again.—From "The Desert Fear," by Joseph Wood Krutch. TIIItIFT An Aberdeen woman went to her kirk one Sunday and heard an impressive sermon on the God Samaritan. So impressed was she that on her return she said to a friend, "I'll never turn a beggar awe' frae my door ony main" A few days later a tramp knocked at her door, P nd, true' to her resolve, she ran indoors and cut a slice of bread from the e lodger's loaf, Ammunition for Flue War—Workers supervise final slc,:s in the production of influenza vaccine. it meet the demand for vaccine caused by the nationwide influenza epidemic, more of the vaccine has been packaged and shipped in ten days than is usuolly pro- cessed in a year. • TIILPAMFROM (Two !dears ago, Associate Edi- tor Dicta Davids, visiting Swed- en, ran across two scientists there who were producing giant rabbits by treating sperm with chemicals, Farm Journal has kept track of this research ever since and now presents a pro- gress report, dealing with hogs. —'I'he Editors,) A big white boar, lazying away at an experimental station in SwLden, nlay go down as the most famous hog in history, "Eber" (the name means boar in German) was born, unprom- isingly enough, in a litter of ten, weighing a pound less than the others. But at one week he'd caught up, and at three weeks he'd grown past all bis litter-. mates. From there on he grew even faster, He reached 200 pounds in 14% less time than average Swedish hogs and on 85% of the feed. Eber is the first hog ever to have his germ cells radically changed by man. He's • a "trip- loid," has half again more chrom- osomes than the usual or "dip- loid" hogs. The two Swedish scientists, Professors Gosta Haggquist and Allan Bane, who produced Eber, didn't set out to breed a super - hog. They simply wanted to prove' a point to other scientists:, that colchicine (a powder used in treating gout) can be used to change germ plasm in animals just the wad plant breeders have used it in recent years to pro- duce those giant flowers in your wife's ,garden.- (" 1'etrA" snap-, dragons, for instance.) Colchicine has revolutionized plant breed- ing, because it produces com- pletely new shapes and colors and occasionally enormous size and vigor --in a single genera- tion. - Starting first with frogs, Hagg- quist mixed colchicine with the sperm, and produced tadpoles. that kept right on growing to enormous. size, but never chang- ed into frogs. • On rabbits, they produced oft - Humility For Mahatma ---British Socialist , leader Clement Attlee removes his hat and shoes in reverent respect before laying a wreath on the tomb of Mahatma Gandhi in New Delhi, Attlee was en route to the Asian Socialist Conference at Ran- goon. CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACnOSS •9 Wlttteenen t. (hat of weight 5G r ornterlr. 56 Age 6 !least 01 • 37. Actual being burden D0( Nb 1. Not so mileb 11 City in Nevada 13 Stake 14 f;aet t:tdetong shares 15 Singing voice 16 Literary bite 17. Orating 16 Mediterranean rrtinnd !0, Wrath 22 lige ' ' th. Devoured 31 Man -servant• 20 That woman 27 fond of fur 9. Direction 31 Rodent t! Blunder 32 .tunable to find. the wad 65 Shelf over a fireplace 35 ^frees. 19 Maslen! dro.Unt 41 Expose to moisture 13 Cheering' 'y11-nhle• 44. Operated 45, Depart 47. german rivet 4h American Indian pp On the.oetae 611 itoman emperor S1. Toper 3 4_ springtwice as big as their par- ents, These rabbits bore young, too, but they were dead at birth or died shortly, Two years ago they tackled hogs, and, working with farmers in Sweden, treated sperm in scores of litters. Some pigs were freaks, some died or were born dead, others looked no different from the usual. Jt seemed as it the pig experiment was a fail- ure. But a little later, Eber start- ed to wall; awry from the others in size. Since then, the scientists have produced five other triploids, three of which got foot-and- mouth disease and had to be kill- ed. (That disease has played hav- oc with Swedish res:,'arch.) Will Eber be a giant? No. At a year and five months, he weigh- ed 572 pounds, although he'd been kept thin to test his repro- ductive powers. His rate of gain, compared to American stand- ards, is not phenomenal. Can Eber sire live pigs? That's a question the Swedes had anx- iously awaited. Eber's first litter has nine healthy pigs. One that was lain on and killed had chro- mosomes about half -way in num- ber between sire and dam, A younger triploid boar has served a sow which is pregnant, The third triploid, a sow, has. just far- rowed eight pigs. Whether or not Eber and the two other living triploids can found a new race of foster -gain- ing, more efficient. hogs is ques- tionable.. We may already have U.S. strains as good or better. The important thing is this: We now know that colchicine works on animals, and with it, we may have a tremendous new tool for' breeding better stock, whether Eber and the other hogs in present experiments work out that way or not, —From '"The Farm Journal," Changed His Story Saved A Girl's Life A famous British surgeon once found a slowly -dying girl read- ing,a newspaper serial in which the heroine suffered from the same disease she had, He hurried to the author and asked how the serial ended, and was told that the character died in the last instalment, "Can you alter the ending so that the heroine lives?" he asked, and went on to explain his theory. He believed that if his patient read of a similar case surviving she might find the strength to combat her disease. The author wIllIngly agreed to' change his story, and the serial's, heroine and patient both lived, That is only one example of the power of suggestion, Some doc- tors believe that suggestion is the cause of many human ail- meats, A patient believes himself to be ill, and makes himself ill simply by worryi,ig, Many people believe that cof- fee prevents sleep, due to the, presence of a drug named ' cof- fein, Doctors at a London hospital decided to find out how much sleep was prevented by the' drug and 'how much by suggestion. A selected group of patients were given coffee one night, and the'next night, at the sante hour, they were given milk. All the patients reported that they went to sleep quicker and slept more soundly on the second night. They were never told that the milk had been mixed with three times as much caffein as was in the coffee, t. Tell 21 Wotntin's title 3. Ducr'e horn lab,) 4. Debatable 30. 51:111 5. Camel's hair 32. Auricle cloth 63. Chief 1. Charactet*FUc 14 Different one. of old nge 35 Teacher 7. Look f.xedly 36. attar nut 8 Shlp'e record 37. Dlhce 9 Pnrrnf'e out 38, Incline() 10, Slender, 40. Short to, 11. Sweet flag 42. Vex 19 teller UI P'acllitr 21. Ilvertattu,g IS Meaty 25. insect 50 Ureek letter 5 6 7 ti:g 9 10 II 15 t►) lir ' • 30 • 38 3 04 41 4Z 4b 41 441 6t . 84.. 5 S7 • 'Mower Elsewhere on.This page • .1114 tt i.a 1214 •.f:• '•,r,.; /4 gars•~' e e i'r. 1. i ir�ta.et sr • 1. Glowing Example of Ingenuity—Bernard J. Patton has fashioned the glowing out-of-doors room, above, of revitalized fluorescent lamps. Patton has devised an electronic device which gives new life to about 80 per cent of burned -out fluorescent lamps. The feat, once considered "impossible," gives as much as 2,000 hours of usefulness to the tubes, and has supplied Patton with a fast- growing business, Lack of Nails, Lumber, Boosts British Crime By TOM A. CULLEN NEA Special Correspondent London—(NEA)—Largely f o r want of some nails --and some lumber to put • between them— Britain is slowly losing her bat- tle against lawlessness. A shortage of nails, lumber and other building materials has led to an acute lack of housing, Experts claim the housing probL.' lem is a big factor In England's growing crime rate. It's .partly to blame, for in- stance, for a shortage of 10,000, policemen. SIr Harold Scott, Lon- don police commisioner, says . the lack of homes is an obstacle to recruiting, '"I can't get : enough men," he complains, "Indeed, I even ' Iose: a lot of men I already have. All because there' are no homes for themselves and their families," 0 ••' Aside from its effect on police forces, the housing shortage has helped hike the divorce rate. And with so many "broken homes," there has come the usual rise in juvenile delinquency. Law -breakers meet the housing problem again when they're caught and sent to prison. 13ri-, fish prisons are more crowded today than they've been for 75 years. More than 4500 inmates are sleeping three to a cell for lack of space. The annual report of the Pri- son Commisioners lists 24,000 in- mates, the most since 1877. The number has been rising steadily -for three years, sometimes at thcrate of 300 or more a month. • • n Three-fourths are ':repeaters," with one or more previous con- victions. They're in and out of custody so often that some ob- servers have facetiously sug- British Bobby — There aren't enough of them because there isn't enough housing. artER WHEN YOU 911911 sllov¢LING IN FRONTCLFAN THE BACK WALKS. gested that the prisons use re- -volving door's. The governors of the Stafford and Lewes reformatories report a continued drop in the quality of young first offenders, At . Lewes, they're "less alert. less reliable." At Stafford, the governor says: "A number of lads to whole I've spoken about their futures have said, 'I hope I don't come back,' almost as if they had no power of decision as to wile- • they they would or not." The director of a regional training prison chimes in by branding the attitudes of young prisoners "appalling.' 0 0 0 "They regard the State as ap- parently possessing an Unlimited number of hotttlmless coffers," he says, "which are there to supply their financial needs ' whenever they feel like it." The prisons can't handle the influx. All available rooms and huts in 23 prisons are being used for sleeping. purposes. But the commisioners report a need for at least six new 500 -man instl- tutions to siphon off the excess. Restrictions on capital expen- ditures and staffs, however, have ruled 'out much -expansion, The first new prison under the build- ing prograin will be started this year, but may not be ready for use until sometime in 1957. Until then, the Prison Com- missioners say . the situation stands to get worse, not better. A11 for the want of some nails. Wants To Take Your Birthday Away Js your birthday on '. March 31st, May 31st, August 3Ist, or December 31st? If so, Elizabeth Achelis wants to take it way. She is the found- er of the World Calendar Asso- ciation of New York, which be- lieves that its new calendar will come into operation on New Year's Day, 1950, by order ot the United Nations. And if it does, those four birthdays will dis- appear. For years industries and gov- ernments have been worried about our calendar, with its months of varying lengths, and red -letters days falling on a dif- ferent day of the week every year. It has meant that in some years workers have fifty-one pay days, and in others fifty-three, The Inland Revenue, the rail- ways, the Board of Trade, and siniilal' organizations dealing with figures of daily trade, find their nnnual statistics see -sawing because the number of Satur- days and Sundays varies from year to year. :flee new calendar would bring order out of chaos. Every year would start on a Sunday and end on a Saturday, as would each quarter, In earli•guartcr the first month would consist of 31 days, and the other ,two of 30 each. This system leaves year rather short, and to make up the lost days Elizabeth Achelis has an idea which everyone would like. When the last day of 1955, De- cember 30th, arrives, the first day of 1950, January lst, will still be twenty-four hours away. Between it will come a nameless day, with no date and no descrip- tion! The clan is to make it a World Holiday on which all the member ,cations of U.N. woud dedicate themselves to peace. The nameless day between the years would occur annually. In a leap year another holiday would come between Saturday, June .90th, and Sunday, July 1st. The World Calendar Association points out that for all nations in the Northern Hemisphere (the bulk of the world's population) a leap year day in midsummer, making a long week -end, would be far more popular than the extra 'day in the wintry weather o: February, Apart from those who would lose their birthdays there is op- position to the proposed *calen• dar, Religious groups are ready to protest at a scheme which inevitably will affect the days of many religious observances; while the two extra holidays, ac- cording to their views,. tamper with the divine order of six days of labour followed by one of rest and worship. Calendar and diary manufac- turers also wonder about the re- sults on their trade. No one will ever need to, consult a calender to see on what day any date falls, It will be the same every, year! Several nations are supporting the plan, and it is likely to cause a lot of discussion before the General Assembly in the months to come. 7'4 • ri., _ /�• U?(DAY SCllOOt LESSON By Rev. R. Barclay Warren B.A., B.D. Gaining or Losing the Kingdowt Matthew 21:33 - 43 Memory Selection: Fear net, little flock; for It is your father'tr good pleasure to give you tha kingdom. Luke 12:32. The kingdom of God has been described as the "reign" of God, "the kingdom of right relation- ships," and "the regime in which love reigns." Jesus teaches about the kingdom almost wholly in pictures. There are three pie.: tures in today's lesson though. only one is in the printed por- tion. It is the old story of abused stewardship. The men to whom the vineyard had been let are intoxicated with a sense of greed at the time of harvest, The ser- vants sent to receive the owner'N portion are beaten, stoned or slain, Then comes the owner's son. Surely they will respect hint. But no; recognizing that het is heir, they catch him, lead him. out of the vineyard and slay him. They think they will have the inheritance. But the Owner hex another thought. These wicked husband -men are slain and the vineyard is let to others. Jesus makes the application to the Jewish leaders. God's king- dom will be taken from this nation so richly blessed because they rejected the message of God's profits and are even now plotting to slay IIis Son, It hap- pened that way. The message ot the Kingdom went to the Gen- tiles, many of whom gladly re- ceived the .truth. The day of the Gentiles was ushered in. But God hasn't forgotten His ancient people. They are gathering back to the land promised to their father Abraham, Some are turn- ing to the Messiah, Israel is e tiny country, but none is so im- portant. Watch for God's deal- ings with this people. Not all the Gentiles are receiv- ing the kingdom. Many aro sneering at God's commands and promises. Disaster will result. "Be' not deceived; God is not: mocked; for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. For he that soweth to his fiesk shall of the flesh reap corrup- tion; but he. that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap lit. everlasting." Gal. 0:7, 8. (Upside down to prevent peeking) Bringing Up Bridget—Buffalo Zoo attendants'brought out a block and tackle to get Bridget back on her feet after finding the full- grown giraffe sprawled on her cage floor one morning. Curator Joseph Abgott, at 'right, makes a final adjustment of the rope. . Due to their bone structure, giraffes are unable to rise. li kNOW,.,WU't2t; GIVINGIN6M WHY THSY'a6 Too DUMB oRDSRS 9Y RADI070 A sir INSTALLED I�ITT;i's HAT, BUT HOW DO YOU tri RNAl.I2C THAT IR TM`, USTTH5Mro MINI/ � ' . Q11rft COULDN'T DOANYTHING AgoUTlet By Arthur Pointer • IAGE4 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 �..• The Needlecraft Shoppe BLYTH -ONTARIO. Wool Plaid Slacks, 8 to 121 $4.50 Gabardine Strides, 8 to 12 $4.50 Pastel Plaid Wool Skirts Only $2.25 Coduroy Overalls, 2 to 6 $2.39 Corduroy Babyalls $2.98 Mercury Nylons -- Butterick Patterns ) I N INNN•M• SALMON STEAKS VARIETY OF FROZEN FILLETS. Arnold Berthot MEAT - -- FISH Free Delivery: 10 a.m. and After 4 p.m, Telephone 10 --- Blyth. ••.••�•••Nk••�+.1 VfN•++JJM•••vN►•�rh` FULL COURSE MEALS AT ALL HOURS. Excellent Service -- Satisfaction Guaranteed. HURON GRILL BLYTH - ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. STEWART JOHNSTON MASSEY-HARRIS SALES & SERVICE BLYTH, ONT. , COME IN AND SEE THE NEW NO. 33 MASSEY-HARRIS TRACTOR NOW ON DISPLAY. • •-.-.-•-s-.-••t * •i -r+. HOG PRODUCERS ELECT OFFICERS At the annual meeting of the Huron Hog Producers Association held re- cenhly at Clinton, the following offic- ers were elected: President, W. R. Lobb. Clinton; Vice -,Presidents, 1-Iarry Sturdy, Au- burn., and Orval Taylor, Belgrave; Secretary -Treasurer, William Young, Blyth; Township directors include: East Wawanosh, Orval McGowan; West Wawanosh, Wm. Good; Tuck - 1 erstrAth, Donald Dayntan ; Goderich Township, Alfred \Varner; 1-Iullett Township, Arnold Dale; Stanley. Township, Alvin Itau. Although the Association was oppos- cd to the new central marketing ag- ency proposal, now in effect, \V. R. Lobb pledged the best support pos- sUble for the scheme. "If it don't work we're going to buck it, and if it docs work we're go- ing to support it—but first we're go- ing to give the thing 'a fair trial," said Mr. Lobb. PRE STOCK TAKING SPECIALS COME IN AND SEE THE MANY BAR- GAINS WE HAVE THROUGHOUT THE STORE. LADIES' DRESSES AT HALF PRICE. 25 PERCENT. OFF ON LADIES' COATS. 1 WOOL JERSEY BLOUSES AT $3195. BALANCE OF 35c PRINTS STILL HOLD GOOD. THESE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY REAL, BARGAINS AT OUR STORE THE ARCADE STORE . STORES IN BLYTH AND BRUSSELS. ' • TIIE STANDARD - COUNCILS HELD • FEBRUARY SESSIONS Continued font page 1) • Court Of Revision Jewitt -Rapson: That We. adjourn as a 0 tnc:1 and re -open the Court of Revs:. 11 on the 1953 Asses. meat Roll, W. M. S. Meeting Over 50 were in attendance at the meeting cf the W.M.S. held Monday evening in the Blyth United Church. Mliss ,Margaret Ilirons, simply con- vcnur, reported several qu its were in the process cf mak'ng for overseas 1 e • , lief, Airs, R. Vincent, - Carried. ( Temperance con- venor, in her report slhte(1: "N 1 on'y should temperance people pray fer- vently ;tad earnestly, but get out ,ul work just as hard." otT the Assessment of James T. Scott, •'\ nominating conunittce for 1933 on Lot 1, Cl: n. 4, as the barn has blown was set op namely : 51 r;, J, Fairser- (lowo and the back kitchen removed. vice, Mrs, Ida Petts, M rs. Eli abeth Carried. I Pollard, Mrs. Leslie Juhns1..n and On appeal from Gus Bisbat•k on Lot Mrs, Keith Webster.42, Ccn. 14—the lean-to on the` barn' The roll call for the March meeting had been removed. Bn:wn-Rapson ; will be a verse of Scr'pture relative That we reduce the Assessment on to the Lenten season, Tile president, Gus. 13isback's barn by $150.00. Car- ried, ar•• Mrs W. McVittie, drew attent'on t, the World Day of Prayer to. be held ri Rapson -Brown: That we close the. Friday afternoon,. Feb. 20th, in III; Court of Rev'sion and re-,: pen as at Chinch of God, with M ss Attie Tull, Council. Carried. special speaker, trs. G. Doherty and Airs. C. Gal - Gavel Tenders braith, leaders of Gr.up 2, were in Leiper -Rapson That we initruct the . Wednesday, l+'eb,11,1053 • .••-.•...•..-..•.•.+.-•-.�,+++.-..-.-.•.,++.-.+.+. 1 The Appeal of Jantes T. Scott on Lot I, Con. 4, was gi"cn rec.nsidera- tion. Jewitt-R;tpson: That v,e take $1200.00 charge of the pr: grans. Airs. G.tl- R:;ad Superintendent to call for ten- I braith read 'the story of the Passover dors for crushing of 1000 yards of feast as recorded by St. Mark and St. gravel, material to be c:tushed to John. Mrs. Ida Petts favored with a three,quarter inch. Gravel to he crush- `reading and Misses Ida and Chre Mc- (,owan contributed a duct, aco:nlpan- ied by Mfrs, Walter 13uttell, c(I, delivered and spread on the road; to the satis;action of the Rl:ad Sup- erintendent. Tenders to be • in the hands of Road Supt. by March 2nd at 3 p.m, Carried. Leper-13rcwn : That the acc:unts as approved be passed and ordered paid. Carried. Brown -Leiper: That those attending the Good Roads Convention or the Rural Municipalities Association meet- ings, be allowed $25.00 expenses. Car- ried. Leiper -Jewitt : Thal we now adjiatirn to meet March 2nd at 2 p.m. Carried. Accounts ' Supplies, 2.40; Salaries, 125.00; St. lights, 172.50; Adnlini;stration, 25.00; Grants, 200.00; Fex Bounty, 6.00; Roads, $218.68. George \V, Cowan, Citric, Morris Township Council The Council met in the Township Hall on Feb. 2 with all members present.' Minutes of lust meeting read and adopted on motion of W>n, Elston and 13ailie Parrcht. 'Moved by Chas. Coultes and Bailie Parrott that we join the Association of Assess:ng Officers. Carried, Moved by Elston and Parrott: Be it resolved that for the purpose of certifying employment by the Town- ship of Morris as permanent in ac- cordance wth Paragraph (1) of Part II of the First Schedule to the Unem- ployment Insurance Act and of special orders made by the Unentpl.)meot Insurance Commission thereunder the following be and they are hereby authorized to issue such certificates: George C. Martin. Carried. Moved by Coultes and Parrott that Svc enrage George' I-Ietheringtcn as Warble Fly Spray Inspector for 1953 at 90 cents per hour and 10 cents per• anile, Carried. Moved by Sant Akoek and \Val. El- ston that we advertise for sprayman and helper for 1953 warble fly spray- ing. Applications to be in by Mar -•h 2nd. Carried. Moved by Bailie Parrott and \Val. Elston that we -advertise for tenders to supply, crush and deliver approxi- mately 10,000 yards of gravel on Mor- ris Township roads, crusher to be equipped three-qurter inch screen and certified cheque for $200 to ace:mpany each tender, Carried, Moved by Chas. Coultes and Bailie Parrott that the road accounts as pre- sented by the Road Supt; be pail, Carried, 'Moved by Chas. Coultes and \Vat. Elston that the meeting adjourn to meet again on March 2. at 1 p u1. Car. ' ried. - The following accounts were paid: Damage to lands and crops, Kelly Drain,—Mrs. M. Kelly, $54.0); B. Craig 69.00; L. Scott, 63.00; J,: C. I-Iailnes, 13,00; L. Cronyn, 55.00; I). Craia., 16:00; Association of Assessing Offi- cers, 10.00; Ivan McArtcr, broom for hall, 1.65; Hydro -Electric Power Cont - mission, street lights in Belgrave and Walton, 195.00; Municipal World, sub- scriptions, 1800; Jas. II'owes, Smith Drain, 350.00; Geo, Martin, telephone calls, 3.60;, Cathers & Gallaher, Pea- cock Drain. 27.50; Village of Blyth, Mrs, R. Craig, relief, 63.85; A. I1, Ers- kine, colecting tax Govier Drain, 5.00;Grant.s on Govier Drain,— F. Os- ter, 23.78; G. 1-Iaines, 352.70; D. Craig, 277.41; A. Nesbitt, 39.63; K. Webster, 305.31; M. Govicr, 116.24; J. Nesbitt, 47.56; E, A. McMillan. 17.17; Dept, of I-l.igways, 80.86; Q. W. Hanna, re- lief fcr H. Whitehead., 62.87; Dr. Shaw, 'safe, 25 00. Harvey C. Johnston, Geo, C. Martin, Reeve.' • Clerk, LIVE WIRE FARM FORUM ((Too late for last week) The topic, "The Farmer and the. Public," was discussed at the Live \Vire Farm ,Forum meeting held at • the hrcl ne ' of Mr. and Mrs,. Harvey 1-Iu•nking on Monday evening. All agreed there is a good under- - standing between farmers and- the people of our neighbouring towns and villages. After a social • recreational period, lunch was served. to 37 adults and chil- dren.. Next meeting meeting at .the home of Mir. and Mrs, Lorne Hunking. Mrs, J, Walpole 1:1(1 of the "IIeal- ing Ministry" carried on by.the Mis• sionariesof Angola. Africa, wllcre she stated, there is an average of 10111y one doctor for every hund 'cd thousand people. In Canada, life expectancy k 67 years, but in Angola it is only 20 years, for tuberculosis and leprosy aro the scourge of Angola. W. I. MEETING The February meeting of the Blyth Women's Institute was held on Fe- bruary 5 with a large attendance. 'I'lle meeting was opened in the usual way with the President and Secretary pre- siding. Minutes and correspondence were read, A committee was formed to get further information on the Penny Rowed Up. Mrs. Clem, Gal- braith and' Mfrs. Ed, AlcMfilhul will again be leaders of the Garden Club. Airs. K. 'Taylor and Mrs, Ben Walsh were appointed leaders of the Short Course "A Club Girl Entertains". Mrs. L. Scrimgeour will correspond with our link from an institute in England. Hiss J. Woodcock took c;bargc of the program. A lucky draw was made by Mrs. Gerald Harris, of Mitchell, with Mrs. L. Scrimgeour be- ing the lucky winner. Mrs. W. Logan gave a reading on St, Valentine. Miss Woodcock introduced the guest speak- er, Mfrs. Ed. Wightman, of Belgrave, who chose as .her topic "Nutrition". This was well done and many help'ul hints will be taken from her topic. Mrs, W. Logan thanked the speaker and Miss \Voc:dcock presented her with a gift. Any member wishing tickets to the Canada Day to get in touch with Mrs. Scrimgeour. Mrs. fl. Phillips favored us. with a lovely solo accompanied by Mrs. C. Wheeler. The weldpaper dconcos trah len which was left over until spring has been with- drawn. Mrs. H. Phillips, Mrs. E. Mc- Millan, Mrs. F. Oster and Mrs, C. Johnston were appointed as a com- mittee to look after the arrangements fcr the 'supper. Several members vol- unteered to cater to the Lions on Feb- ruary 26, A. donation was given to the Flood Relief cf 11,:lland. The March meeting will be in charge of Mrs. F. Oster and Mrs. Chas, Johns- ton, with Clinton W. I, as our guests, Each member is to bring a dozen sandwiches, The meeting closed with G:tl Save the Queen, A delicious 'lunch was served by Mrs. \V, Cockerline, Mrs, II. Phillips,. Airs, Ray Madill and Mrs. D. McCallum. EAST WAWANOSTd Mr. and Mrs. A, Ward, Mr. R. C. McGowan, Mrs. Charter and Mrs, Hoo - ford spent Wednesday afternoon at a quilting at Mrs, \Van. Gow's, Atr, and Mrs. Aubrey Toll spent Friday at London. visiting f'hcir little (laughter, Cheryl, who is still taking treatment at the hospital, They were happy to note a slight improvement in her condition, _ .Master Gordon Charter, Mr, and Mrs. E, McAdam ,c,f C4:nton, spent Friday in Toronto attending the Hob- bies & Crafts exhibits at the Coliseum, also attending the Iqe Follies t'I:e same evening, Mr, Robert Marshall is on a trip to Cincinnatti, . Mr, and Mrs. William Jenkins (,f Galt called on her cousin, Mr, R. C, McGowan, on Friday, Mrs. Reg, Schultz is • a patient in the Wingham 1lhspital. (Too late for last Week) .. We are sorry to report Mrs, A. E, Quinn has been under the doctor's cars for the past two weeks, Her daugh- ters have been taking turns staying with her. . Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Walsh attended the wedding dinner of his niece, Miss Audrey Walsh and' Mr, -R:,bort Haugh at Dashwood, on Sat., Jan. 31. Mr. and Mrs. George Caldwell of Blyth, and Mr. and Mrs. Mack Car- diff of Brussels, visited Mr. and ,Mrs, G. Caldwell on Sunday, • The euchre party was held last Fri- day night in SS. No. 10. High ladv was , Mrs, \V. McGill, low, , Mr,s F. Marshall; high man,'Mr.•Calvert Fal- coner, low man, Robert Charter. Dancing and lunch Were enjoyed, 5 PERCENT DISCOUNT ON OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF LEATHER MITTS, li'RI. - SAT. ONLY . adill's Shoe Store BIyth, "Be Kind to your feet. Wear Madill's Footwear." *4444 +4-44 4-44-.++ 444+.•14+4..-4-•-• 1+.+.•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•11444-•' ••Y••• 4, ••I•N••••e."~/N m4,#• INJMNI..4,4~4,• ••NNN• MIN .4,4~4,•~-~ c 0 in X00.0© Prizes -- TI'IE GAME YOU PLAY AT I-IOME Sponsored by Wingham Kinsmen Club First Number to be drawn on February/89 At 930 am. Announced Daily over Station CKNX at 12.24 Noon Published Weekly in your Local Paper FULL HOUSE PAYS $400. 1st Person Completing Line Under "B" $20. • 1st Person Completing Line Under "I" $20. 1st Person Completing Line Under "N" $20. 1st Person Completing Line Under "G" $20. 1st Person Completing Line Under "0" $20. RULES: 4, • Person may purchase a card a11)' time •(luring game for $1.09 and secure back num- bers by calling 1110 \Vinghain between 13aur5 9.30 a.nl, '- 11 8.nl,and 2pm, -4pan. 5, Forward $1.00 in' self addres-• sell stamped envelope t0 K'ivinen stores listed below and ycur card was be for- warded. 3, When you 13ingo call 160 • 1, Each person purcha,iug one or more cards at $1.00 each l'I1tit:ed t0 play. • One number drawn each day 8.1 9.30 8,n, at CKNX until full house i s conlplctc(I. Numbers broadcast over. CK NX daily at 12.2.4 noon ' and published weekly in your Ir,cal paper. 3, $20.00 prizes will lie paid persons Ct lUplet:al'; above lines while playing fu:I house. 2, \Vinghanl - between. 9 30 8.111. II a.m. and 2 p.133.. 4 pin; Everyone will have an cqual chance to B'ngo. PROCEEDS To Be USED For WELFARE WORK .Game open to everyone except Kinsmen and immediate families Cards obtainable from these Wingham Kinsmen Merchants: smith Groceries Groceries 1313rke Electric . Temoleulan Dry 1,ou hlean Barber Sll,)p Cleaners ' Bate Ian Dairy Walker's Ilomc Fur- Crossett Motor's Ltd. Shaw Gmcctcria nishings Nelson CunninghamCurries occterurc Craw ford Motors Beaver Lunlber Co. Callan Shoes Thomson Appliances Edighoffers Store (Keep This Advertisement for Reference) Clinton Monument Shop Open Every Friday and by Appointment Representative: J. J. Zapfe, Phone 103, Clinton. T. PRYDE and SON Clinton -- Exeter -- Seaforth Phones:, 103 41 363J , dhu.a, 01i il,ialiI Id , m Airs, Nelson Lear visited last week few days this week. at Hamilton and St. Catharines. - 'Messrs. Harry Liar, David Nesbitt Mr. and Mrs. Iicrb, Dexter and Mr. and Robert Marshall accompanied and Mrs. Harry Gibbons were London Rev. C. J. Scott to C'ncinnatti for a wsitcrs on Saturday, tk Matv6 maibt w••. W vw..• r The Canadian Bank of Commerce 1322 • Feb, 11, 1953 TSL" STANDARD P g 5 +.NrN�rN####M OM#0i4PiwN####.4 4~.###~4 1 ) mnin[tt■tgtogu■■ giefttipirt IRKK U etC41 IMIVI KKt(gIKt4t WWWW W4 0 LYCEUM THEATRE BOXY THEATRE, THE PARK THEATRE CAPITAL THEATRE . Farmer's ':� air Show . WINGHAM.—ONTARIO. _ __ o __AYCLINTON.obs �14 s GODERICH • PHONE 1150 __ _ GOOERICH, Two Shows Each Night start ng At ` NOW. W PL a NG (F 12 ) NOW: Anne Baxter and MacDonald NOW (Friday & Saturday): "SABU" "FEARLESS FAGAN with Janet and Lite Baran in "SAVAGE 7:15 Carey in"MY WIFE'S BEST — D UMS" In the Londesboro Community Hall, _ _._.__.____ _ L•eigh and Carl►cn Carpenter, _FRIERi)."_ __R MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23rd, AT P.M. Thur" Fri., Sal., Foy, 1 �13•:4 Mon, Tuu, Wed, (Feb: 16,18)+ --'—•-...._.,_._011__1 Wednesda ___ hitt Mop., Tues,, Tthe Capital KANGAROO "SALLY & SAINT ANNE Monday Tuesday, �)'Y I I I \ „huns'cal ro,nedy drama ab, ut ,: "APRIL IN PARIS 4l'heatre will rima:n closed foss dal, I14aureen G Hara • Peter Lawford' . In Technicolor , • ,, ` FEBRUARY r Y s:.r;;cotis galwi O had a pe,sonal pull each week, during the entire mouth 111 the Walton Community Hall, __ __ ___ _._.._..._... _._.. __1111.. _ _. I h a saint. This 1, the new version of "Princess ' Mon. to Thurs, Feb,Fcbl0.19 O'Rourke", the rollickin; ntuiscal ro• of February. WEDNESDAY, I+ EBRUARS 25th, AT 8 P.M. Ann Blyth, Edmund Gwenn and mance that tickled audiences several "THE SNOWS OF Jolts Mc;nti:e, Fridayand Saturday --•-- seas; ,ns ;tato, Sponsored by Lovell McGuire, Surge Dealer, Wing- KILIMINJARO" " Thurs„ Fri., Sat. (Feb. 19.21) Doris Day, Ray Bolger and Lon McCa!Ister, Wanda Hendrix and Virginia Mayo, Ronald Rea3nn and Claude Dauph'n. Pressen Footer hale, and showing the famous Dr, Peterson film, (Adult Entertainment) Gan. Nelsen. ..... Thurs.,Fri.. Sat,—Hi:brical Qrama : Ave Gardner, Gregcry Perk and _ Cemplicatinn; arise nnen the queen of '1'.his '1'eclnticolor western portrays the " STRIPPING" Susan Hayward' the tnidlvay becomes a campus coli: Gary Cor, er, Meri Aldan and adventure; of a prospector who wit- NO IIAND STRIP I ING Richard Webb. \dmssi:at : Adults 75:, Children 35c . with literary aspirations. nesse: a brutal killing and captures • , Parlors — - _ �- - • "She's WOl'1{lll�, Her Way Deep in the FloridaIc'icls a Also Short Subjects and Films on Millon Pallor s _the murderer Friday, Saturday, February 20.21 r �t deadly swamp fightt•r lads his turn and Syphon Systems, cc » Through College') agtainst the Seminoles "Montana Territory" ' + ' l'' Fibred in Technit'olor iVI EN IN ROME Everyone Welcome. Lunch will be Served, ' In Technicolor DRUMS" NIIINIIrMMMNJ�N,N•1N.tItINofNUN.M�.IIIMN�INN� N. 4 +, ,�, ..COMING (Feb. 23.25): "ROSE OF .__. "DISTANT ___._.__ _. _. COMING; "VOODOO TIGER" Van Minton . Paul Doug :a •_ ;'S CIMARRON" with Male Powers, COMING; Jeff Chandler and Alex A dratltruic adventure. Renew ��..,.._1_111_..-- it..,,.,..,.,�.,................,,,..,.., .1,�,,;.,..,,,,,.,.,,..,.,,..,..,,.,.,..,..,.,..,.,.,,,.,,.,..,,.,,.,..,..,,.,•..,•..,•..,•,.,..,�,,,.,..,..,..,, Matinees: Sat. & H olidaya 2:.30 p.m. Nicol in "RED BALL EXPRESS ' _ , , ,+ • ,your Subscription cerewte;tet�+c+ctt;�cuttrrt�t;•eta►cte�c�eteulctataK�a+a�+ctcutacat�c�e�+ctr+ceKte+cce+cue+cK�rst»t�tm,aays,�t�l�to,�z;al�t I IREMEN'S ST. VAI,L'N'1 iNIJ'S :4 Wednesday, .4, :. • :. :. : ;. 4 i. :♦ :. • • ;. :. :. >. >: :. i. :4 :. ;4 :. >. 't• .A CE Sponsored by the Blyth Fire Brigade In the Blyth Memorial Hall, on ;, :, FISHER'S BABY CHICKS Order y ;ur early chicks now, to get those high summer e: g pikes. Agent for Fisher's 11:Cchcry, W Waal J. Bakker, phone 152. 131ytit. 16 -!Op. 'NI •fdr4.~ e4PANI,II•`IfI♦II04`NIII'. IStart Planning Your Spring Decorating• Now! The turn of the year - --- -^ makes everyone look NOTICE, to the future. • We would appreciate i.nyal Sca•kt Ledge w:ii sleet in being consulted about :4 Blyth on February 14;11, Instal'ati•.n FRI., of Officers, All members must be your future decorating 1 17.ip. ALBERT SELLERS, W.C. requirements. WAN1TED Our service is always at your disposal, Reliable utas' as Dealer Huron mon >! :. :. 1 County. Experience not necessary. A • :,1 fate opportunity to step into old pro• F. C. PRE ST fitable business w'iere kawie:gh, Pro•• ducts have been sold kr years. Big profits. Product: furnished on crcd- it. Write Rawleigh's Dept. 13-136.163, \lontreal. i. Phone Blyth. 37-26. Londesboro N. I.II.I.04~./.NN ,~4.14 W,MIsh Admission At Popular Prices, SURGE MILKERS ARE SAFER•1, for your cows. They do milk faster �•� ►.4.4.....��.,0044+44440++ie+.; 1:4444004,6444.*0440.4.;4...X44844440.,044444844*4444-4„' and etre easier washed. O:'atact 14:' - ell ,,1cGuir.e, phone 593\V, \Vingham. TRUCK DUALS DAMAGE CAR ilill Weld's motor vehicle. The duals, Surge Scr•v:c. D;aler• A truck passing through train street1 rammed the back end of the car cans-- r••.NN1.• w.«NN.+.++•++++++1 on Friday morning lost its dual wheel, ing damage and the truck cause to a just as it approached '1':,nn Constable I stop right side up. MORRITT & WRIGHT Music By NORM CARNEGIE AND HIS ORCHESTRA :Roy McCreight, Floor Manager. SPOT PRIZES --- LUNCH COUNTER Dancing Starts at 9 p.m., Modern & Old Time Wallpaper, Paints, Bfush and Spray Painting. Blyth Farmers (o -Op Association TELEPHONE 172 • BLYTH. OLIVER SALES & SERVICE Telephone 4. and 93, Blyth, 7 FARMERS ATTENTION M++$.++4+ 4*44++4++++++++ 4 ARE YOU HAVING A +j{ Birthday, Wedding, Or Anniversary? we will stake y.-.tt a decorated 1 'Fruit Cake for the occasion, or if you prefer to Make your ons cake, we will decorate it for you. Mrs. Russell Cook, PHONE 35.11, BLYTH, TIMKEN SILENT AUTOMATIC OIL BURNERS SALES & SERVICE HISELER & SON WINGHAM Telephone 426. 33• t f. FOR SALE - One Linkwcld 180 Electric \Vclder (new). (louse for sale, solid brick, 2 -storey, all modern conveniences. Ap- ply to Harold Phillips' Blyth. 1S -5p. FOR RENT Floor polisher, $1.00 per day; Vacuum cleaner, $1.00 per day; Cement mixer. Wheel barro,v, $3,00, per day ; C;t;tle clippers, 10c 1•er head, beef clip; 20c per head, dairy clip. Sparling's Bard• ware, phone 24, Blyth, 01-1. WANTED Listings of properties for sale. No charge unless sale is made. Elliott Real Estate Agency, Blyth, 13. NOTICE :\ Directors' Meeting of the Blyth Agricultural Society. will be held in the 13lyth \1rinorial lfall on Saturday af- ternoon, Feb. 14th, at 2 o'eb:rck. 17-1. AUBURN 44.4 No .NN INrIrN.•#####......44 A. L COLE R.O. • OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Godarich. Ont.trlo - Telephone V Eyes Exarc:ined and Glasses Fitted, With 25 Years Experience Reid's POOL ROOM. Smokers' Sundries Tobaccos. Cigarettes, Pop - Other Sundries. PIANOS Shipment of new apartment -sire pianos just arrived in various stakes. See and hear these at Garnet E. Far- rier'st, Whitechurch. Ont. 'Trade-ins accepted. No obligations. Phone 711J1, \\'inghant, 16-3p, DANCE! : The Mullett Federation of Agricul- ture are holding a i?uchre and Dance in the CommunityHall,Londeabol•o, on FOR SALE The Women's Institute presented a the following tractors 1+F� storey fraise and brick dwelling splendvd concert last Thursday night FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13th cn Morris street. One acre of land in the Formers Hall. Al r. Marrytot' Sale: Sturdy was the chairman, and Mrs. R. Cards at 8:30 p.m. and stable. Apply, Elliott Real Es - J. Phillips was accompanist. The NOW IS THE TIME TO ORDER 1- 201 Tractor, Massey- talc Agency. 1i' highlight of the evening was a debate, PIERCE'S ORCHESTRA • Harris. This tractor has "kestved that women arc more cfii- :\dmsion 50 Cents. ` an ahno�t new motor andPANCAKE SUPPER cisint ear drivers than men, 'TheEitTfllIZ1E af- firmative was taken by Mrs. Alf. Nes- EVERYONE WELCOME - goodTrinity Church . is in very shape. This Under auspices of lr } hit and \Irs. Archie Robison,while 17-1, Ladies' Guild Carl \gills and Arthur Grange upheld 1-80 Oliver' Tractor. AMERICA'S FINEST DRESSES Blyth Memorial Hall the negative The judges, , a 1., M. tractor'' has four new tires Scrimgeour, Miss A. Kenny, and Bert Again available in Canada.. North • TUES.,FEBRUARY 17TH Gray, all of Blyth, gave their decision American Fashion Frocks, advertsed and runs like new.byall your favorite magazines, can in the affirmative. + r r _ i C } SUPPER SERVED, 4.30 TO 7.30 Other numbers o» the in • now be ordered from y: ur local Tepee• DUE.TO 1 TIL DISCOUNT IN JANUARY 1- 77 Oliver Tractor, program seutalive. Paeans afternoon re ee- AND FDBIZUARY Pancakes, Maple Syrup chided a trio by 11 sscs Lila, girls years old. just like new.'• and Edits Doer; a number by the girls ening and 1 will arrange to call on you, Salad, Pie, and Lal{e. or come in any time, and 1 will gladly WE ARE AGENTS FOR NEW IDEA HORN Admission 50 Cents of Na, 9 sehnpl, lltnletl; ;t p »rami»e Custom Farm Work t , )- by Janette llobic and Allan Craig show you the new style cards. Mrs. - Children 1_ and under, _5 Cents. „ ten Armstrong, Blyth. 17 1P. A Specialty. 17-1. with Mrs, Enmterson as soloist ; (-Tits J from the Roaring 'Twenties" by Mrs. Telephone 4, Blyth. Gordon R. Taylor and daughter Mar- Lionel H. Cuthbertson, NIJJ� w.4LONDESBORO ion Taylor. Representative The president, Mrs. \Ves 13ract:cl;. METROPOLITANS LIFE �+�4+ 4 - + 4..4,.4-�r.4•4444444444+4+� •o• + .4 -+-4 + +4.•*.* •� F444-�-+-H•o++-�-�+++'+. The Londesb:ro Women's institute INSURANCE COMPANY welcomed the audience and thanl:cJ ., 1..,,i . 41. 1.1 ., i,i Ya., i, d + 1 •ni• 1 1 .l•, 1 x.,11 d..:106' 4 .. 111041,, 1.141. 11..14L414:114 J, 1 , d,i Lill di .1 4 J ik I.i ii. 11,L held their annual family night supper all who had helped its any way. A Office 51 Albert Street, Stratford. Ont Ei.E,.KLY SPEC1AL‘S ' ;:nd concert in the Cont:»u»tiy 1 -hill, number was presented by 10 young Residence, 40 Victoria Street, i, .< : � Irriday night, with over one hundr'-d ... „tamer ; a valentine drill was given by Goderich. Ont. I1A ;sitting eV.„n to a bountiful supper. the girls ,who are taking the course, Telephones; Office 922, Residence 1147, :j The tables were decorated for the oc- "Cottbus may be smart," a project i casiott by Patsy Peckitt and Phyllis sponsored by the W. I.; Miss Jo. n OPTOMETRIST McCool. After supper a short busi- Mills did a tap dance; and a mins4rcl t cess meeting was held. It was decid-JOHN E LOF show presented by 12 women metol- Optometrist, •.l i ed to have a "Penny Round Up", this cd solos by Mrs. William J. Craig amt being a project taken up by all theEyes examined, Glasses filled ' i Mrs. Gordon Taylor, a mouthorgan Phone 791 t Challenger Fey. Red Sockeye �' Ontario Institute Branches in aid of select, by Mrs, Everett Taylor, lass • I.G.A. Salad Dressing , , , 16 oz. 43C35c : mental ,hospitals. 1t was also decided b Mrs. George Million and Mrs. MAIN' ST, - SEAFORTH g 'half lb. Hours: 9 - 6 Alymer Catsup 110z. 21c t I � to donate a oompetathc shield to the Gordon McPhee; solo by Mrs. William Wed. 9-12:30; Sat. 9 a.m, to'9 p.M. Natures Best Creain Corn Ilujlctt 'Township iluslc Festival, Mr . 1-iaggitt; duet by Mrs. erred Plaetzer Rose Sweet Gerkins 9 oz. 35c 15 oz. till 2 for 25c ' S. Lansing and Mrs. L. Shobbrook and Mrs, W. T. Robison; duet by Thursday F.Venungs, By Appointment, . I.G.A. Peanut Butter' .... 1G oz. 35c Fair , were appointed to take the spring In- Mrs. Gordon McClinohey anduMiss G.ALAN "WILLIAMS s Pitted Dates 1'ic • .l•stitute Project. \Irs. t\r,ihur Colson Salic Carter; quartette number by ' • Mazola Oil 1G oz. 39c Baker's Premium Shredded ; I gave ;t wei} interesting ;cull iustructhc , , OPTOMETRIST. Mrs. bred Ilactrcr, lies. W. T. Reid, All Sweet Margarine 11b 39ir:1 talk on the life of Queen Elizabeth, Mrs. PATRICK ST. • WINGHAM ONT. g Cocoanut 4 oz. pkg. 18c sort, William Craig and Mrs, Catelli Spaghetti , , , , , . , 2 for 27c;June Manning and 11'arp Lear sang George Million, EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT. Aunt' Jemima Pancake Flour , , , 21c two duets, and Jackie Powell sang a Phone: Office 770; fie:, 5. Hereforrd Corned Beef' 43c:\ wale .of thanks was extended to Monarch Pie Crust 33c s:lo, Tom Allen showed pictures the program conlntttee, Mrs. R. J. Professional Eye Examinati ln• 'Libby's Chili Con'Carne, . 1.5 oz. 32ewhich were very interesting. Several phillils Tl Libby's Deep -brown Beans(., Mrs, \\. T,, Robison, Mrs, Optical Services. I.G.A. Whole Chicken,Canchildren gave piano numbers. These Gordon DlcClinchc}, \its, 13raduock, 20 oz. tin • 2 for 37c Were, L'eUh McL,vingr, rlrl}n Powell, For Artificial service from this far- - 3 114 lbs. 1.99and ;\Irs. Oliver Anderson, for their I 21c Creaniette Macaroni, 8 oz,,.2 for 21c ; Myrtle Knox, Barbara Peskin, and untiring efforts in preparing the con. :ler owned, licenced, non-profit, I.G.A. Frain Olives . 6 oz. lb.'' Gloria Allen. Mr. Allen showed more growing, co -o )crative Association, • Salado Brown Label Tea. hf. 54tycert. A lunr.t was served to all who I pictures showing scene, th:ou.ottt On from top quality bulls of all breeds, • LG.A..Orange Juice, 20 oz. tin, 2 -' 29e Royal Guest Coffee 1 lb 93c ; I (ado, ;tntl the eveningwas brought to ,t"°k part.- _•$.r g the rates are: �.UO for a life mon- , Fey. Apple Sauce, Sunny Morn Coffee 1 lb. 88c - I a close ,with a dance. bet -ship, $5,00 per cow for members. 15 oz., • 2 for 29d1 The regular meeting of the \V.df•S• WALTON i and $i.00 per cow for non-members. Pride 10 oz. bottle 89c will be combined with the World's r, Campbells Vegetable Soup ,2 for 25t,Kellogg's - \1 Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association, Vallety.Pack , , , , , . 39c ; Day of Prayer which will be held on The C.G1:l'. stet ;,t the home of R.R. No. 1, Waterloo, Ontario. For Rose Cranberry Satire : , . 12 oz. 25c Halo Shampoo. large• 39c• Fricta} Irrbruary 20th at 2 o'cicck in lune and Audrey J1nck,well, ,with a• Service Contact: Charles J. Brandon, Princess. Soap Flakes 2 for 63c Rex Artificial Vanilla 8 oz. bottle 19c the Sunday Scho:1 roonl'of the church. boat 20 members present, Plans Nver e Clinton, phone 633r5. 42-58 Spccal leaflets for the Day of Prayer made for it skating party on Feb. 17 - ' program will be provided, 'Phase hav- in the Seaforth ;ucna. Arrangements THE Meu'�LLOP MUTUAL MEATS FRUITS & VEGET.�BLES ing the \lissionary 'Monthly please were also made for an Easter pageant. FIRE INSURANCE CO. bring them along, Our pastor. Rev. A lunch was served by the hostesses, HEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTH, ON's, 28829c Gaudier, will give ;t short address. assisted by \larg Achilles, Ruth Ann Round Steal{ Roast, boneless. ... 7�3C ( )Sun Kist Navel Oranges . , The Ahssia» Circle and Woman's As -Ennis and Barbas Pnttcrson, Of�'zers: 252 Fhrida Juice Oranges .. 29C sociation are invited to sleet with tis. Miss iva Fraser, Stratford, with her President, J. L, Malone, Seaforth; Boneless Pot" Roast, shoulder C ) g 45e Grapefruit, 96 marsh Florida Also every woman of the congrega- parents, Mr. and NI.rs. M. Fraser. Vice -President, J. I -I. T erg, Blyth; and plate ' • • ' p Manag 6 and Secretary-ry-Treasurer, M. 55c'seedless - • 5' for 29c tion will be welcc»ted, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Johnst' n 'n A. Reid, Seaforth. Cottage ROTI, pCilltlealed I Ills. Thomas Mocn, London, was a Kitchener visiting Silas Johnston, »h., Directors: Swift's Premium Bologna Head Lettuce• 17c 1 week -end visit'or tvitlt Mr. and Mrs. 's a patient in the K -\V hospital, 5, H. Whitmore, Seaforth; Chris. Sliced or in piece 29c Great Cabbage, Texas .... 1 -Ib. 08e - ' .lances McCool. Miss 'Marilyn Iohnstan, who was a Lcouhardt, Bornholm; E. J. Trewar- Mi s. Robert Caldwell— has. been patient • in the Sick Children's Ilospic ttiacor,Clintoti .Robert. Archibald, • _: Celery 1 bunch 10C _ I spen(ling some tiiue at die house o. ,11, Toronto, for several weeks, ha. ' Mier son. Iles and Iles. Leonard Cold- returned haute, and is reported int Craik McGregor, Clinton; Wm. S.Alexander, Walton; J. L. Malone, a ,well, on tlic f;uut.- proving sadisfartat'.'dy, although" she Seaforth; Ilarwcy huller, Goderich, T 1I} the Mission • Circle stet at the par • will be absent from school for some Agents: II_oi• es oro i'0 �or�i . f sonngrc on Monday" night for their .time, J. E. Pepper. gfrttceficld; R. F. 1 jtvitthty sheeting.' 'guerre 'was a good Miss Leona Johnston with friends in 11icKcrchet, "Dublin; .J. -'F. Procter, PHONES: Blyth 24-17, Clinton 803.12.--Suddel'cUCI{ & Tyndall, Proprietors. .1 turnout. Guelph, liradlmg;en; Wm. Leiper; jr., Landes• _ bora; S. Balser, Srtisrels' ... ,_ ' ORDERS TAKEN NOW WILL BE GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION, FARM MACHINERY. Where Quality, Freshness, and Economy Go Hand -In -Mand. ANNE I-UPST —*tat Family Couetheicrt,—, "Dear Anne Hirst: Can a hus- band who has never been faith- ful for any length of time turn over a new leaf? My husband gets out of the service in a few months and I am wondering whether I want him kelt. It has been one girl after another ever since we married three years ago, and I don't know how much more I can stand. "In spite of this, I love hint dearly and I guess I always will. Ho insists that he cares for me; he is crazy about our baby, and in every other way he is good to us. His family are on my side, and they've tried to talk with him; he admits everything, but says he can't, help himself, For Boy or Girl! 4-4>td.-410., Everything, but everything your boy or girl needs is in this thrifty pattern! Weskit, skirt, overalls, playsuit, long -and -short - sleeved shirt with button clos- ing for boy and girl! Use thi3 pattern again—so simple, it's a joy to sew! Pattern 4678: Child's Sizes 2, 4, 8, 8. Size 6 skirt, 1% yards 35 -inch; blouse, 13'e yards; wes- kit, Vs yard; long overalls, yards. • This pattern easy to use, sim- ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has complete illustrated . instructions. Send TIIIRTY-FIV CENTS (35¢) In coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS. STYLE NUMBER. Send order to Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. YOUR CHILD MAY BE A VICTIM Sleepless nlghta, crossness and fidgeting may be elms of pinworm,' and lnteestinal worms , • • ugly paraeilee that infe;l children of all ages, leaving thorn run- down and nervone. Pleasuut-taeting MULVENfY'e hlo'I'llElt'S FRIEND) dispels these peals ... restores appetite, children noon feel batter again. MULVENEY'S S'WELL (For adults) A natural herbal tonic that settle' upset stomach, tones up the liver and kidneys, aLao ezpele pinworms and intestinal worms. MULVENEY'S REMEDIES Available at All oruygisls "Do you suppose there is any chance he will behave himself when he come home? DONT LOSE HOPE • I, for one, never cease to be • amazed by the enduring faith * of wives like you who, meeting * disloyalty repeatedly, refuse * to admit failure even when the " man himself gives up hope. I • have seal them rewarded, too. • Your husband has been in o service ever since you knew " him. Faced with the respon- • sibilities of a wife and child, " he may buckle down to domes- • ticity and prove of your trust. " Take it for granted, anyhow, o and let him know you do. If ° anything will keep hint • straight, it will be your belief ° in him. o Stay close to his people. Whatever happens, they will " stand by and help see you " through. G f 0' THOUGHTLESS MAN! - "Dear Anne Hirst: My new husband already presents a prob- lem, He has the habit of coming home at any time he pleases, not even telephoning first. I an not suspicious, but his office rou- tine is established, I know. Why does he linger downtown passing the time with the boys? "1 should say that he is an or- phan, and has lived in boarding- houses and furnished rooms since he grew up. Could that account for it? TUOt.itiLIdJ?" o I expect you have the an- o swer to your problem. Never e ]laving had to observe a family " routine, your husband has no ° idea how his thoughtlessness ° upsets yours. • If there is to be order in the o House, a wife has to follow a " convenient schedule. If her o husband interferes, it is bound ° to be upset—to say nothing of e a cold or spoiled dinner to fol- * low. Explain this to your hug- " band, reminding him that his " business requires a routine " and running a house in an or- o derly way is a wife's business. o Ask him to set a convenient o hour for his dinner, and try ° to be on time for it. * Don't make an issue of it, ° but let hint know that you can- o not run your household prop- o perly without his cooperation, o I'm sure 'all he needs is your mentioning it, ° Many a roan loses faith in him- self, but so long as his wife be- lieves In hint he keeps on going. Hold on to your faith in your roan; It inay save him yet. Con- fide in Anne Hirst and she will comfort you. Write her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Tor- onto, Ont. Mysterious Fish The discovery of a coelacanth (supposedly extinct 75,000,000 years ago) in South African waters two weeks ago 'has spur- red ichthyologists to re -study of the modern fish market. Accord- ing to Science Service, a number of fish caught in Baja Califor- nia waters have been sold in Mexican markets in late years without having been identified by fish experts, More than fifty new species have been found in the Gulf of California recently, The new California species range from tiny creatures no larger than a fingernail to large edible fish of a bright crimson hue. From the Gulf of Mexico, it is reported that the scale of a fish found three years ago might conceiv- ably have been the scale of a coel- acanth. The fish scale was .pres- ented in 1949 to the National Museum. It was from a creature still unidentified. The trouble with being unem- ployed is' you never know when to quit, SS (( *• •..: �f ... {,A:. r••` 4} �:t. nii'r:Svi"i ni:yj4 jai 4' They're Simple—and Simply Delicious with MAGIC 1111i1i(fi�iUlrf((Ilill I�•jiIjliV/ MAGIC RAISIN SCONES Mix and sift into bowl, 1>4 c. once -sifted pastry flour (or 1 i c. once -sifted hard -wheat flour), 8 tops. 1`ingio Baking Powder, )4 tap. salt, Cut its finely 4 tbs. chilled shortening and mix in c. washed and dried raisins and i4 c, lightly -packed brown sugar. Combine 1 slightly -beaten egg, )S c. milk and a few drops almond flavoring. Make a well In dry ingredients and add liquids; mix lightly with fork, adding milk if necessary, to make a soft dough. ICnead for 10 seconds on a lightly -floured board and pat out into greased pie pinto (7;4" top 3 inside measure) and mark into 6 pie -shaped wedges. Bake in hotoven, 425', about 18 minutes, Servs hot with butter or margarine. Yield -6 scones. S. I i iNIIIlilIiiell♦11,1111tIlIIplpUtililllh111111lllli11111p111141p sss s Wear Wire Wheels—Our car owners can imitate foreign sports cars equipped with wire wheels if some manufacturers have their way. Seen above, being fitted on standard car wheels by Virginia Martin, the snap -on hubs simulate the much more expensive European originals, and will cost our drivers much less. A %rc j HRONIC tS 'r i1NGERFARM Gaenclot. e. P C:t&vk.' '.t'hc wind was howling around this house yesterday at forty miles an hour — and we didn't enjoy it one bit — especially as we had company from Islington, Niagara Falls and Toronto. We don't go in for half measures around here—either we have no visitors at all or we have sev- eral at one time. The same thing is likely to happen next • week- end. I was quite amused last Saturday, I met my sister off the early morning train — in a pea - soup fog, which was not amus- ing. At night I met the Hamil- ton bus at 7 o'clock, the Toronto bus at 7.20 and took my sister to the train at 8.30 p.m. It is a, good thing Partner doesn't drive the car else how would he gel his chores and milking done? My sister gave us an example of one of diose queer quirks of fate, too strange to happen in fiction but which occur So fre- quently in real life, Sister K. is working at the Parliament Build- ings, in an office that deals with the issuing of • licences and per- mits, such as a mechanic's li- cence. Last wools she was busily opening the applications and suddenly found herself reading her own nephew's renewal ap- plication for his shovel opera- tor's licence. 111 other words it was from our son Bob. There are nine other girls in that office and thousands of applications come in every day so you sec it was quite a coincidence that the one frons .Bob should conte to her desk, (Excuse me a minute while 1 remove Mitchie-White from my typewriter. A kitten on top of it playing with the keys doesn't help a bit. And, since I have been interrupted I might as well go out and feed the hens.) Well, here we are again — chickens fed and Mitchie and Honey left outside to work off some of their surplus energy, It is it grand morning, cold and still, Very different from yester- clay and far less dangerous. Yes- terday morning, just as I was turning away from the barn door, a sudden extra strong gust of wind almost took me over the• edge of the steep dump. Queer, when you think of it, how the things that don"t happen con- tinue to bother you. I managed to regain my balance yesterday, and I didn't go over the dump, and yet, for quite awhile, think- ing about it bothered ane quite a bit. I had visions of myself lying • there helpless, with a broken leg or a 'broken neck maybe, mid no way of snaking Partner hear above the whir- ring of the milking machin^s. Mitchie-White almost met her Waterloo ycstcrday too -- 'got LOGY, LISTLESS OUT OF LOPE WITH LIFE? Theo oaks up your liver bile .. , imp mit of bed ruin' to ie Life not worth living? It easy be the liver! It's a Cacti If your liver bile ie not flowing freely your food mey not digest . -• pe Noate up you stomach . . you feel arcon- situated sad al� l the fun ,dspeckle go out of life. That's when you� need mild, gentle Carlen Little User P1W You see Carton am stimulate your bile till once again it is paining out at a rate of up to two *its day into your digestive tract, 'lois ehoui fix you r4ght up, make you feel that happy Carlen Utile Liveor Pills. Alwiysyhav Ulm o• hard. only 3&o hoot env drupe!. mixed up with the cows' feet but managed to get away and out td the barn in a hurry. I don't think• he suffered any nervous reaction! Sometimes a chance remark in this column brings forth in- teresting little stories from its readers. Remember a few weeks ago I was .sway overnight and sone of our visitors who looked after things in my absence said on niy return — "Next time you go away take your kitten with you — he missed you so much he was a regular nuisance." Well, as a result of that remark along - came this interesting story from a reader. This is what she says — "Some years ago I had a friend who was very fond of clogs. She had a very cute little dog herself, pure white but of many varieties. One day my • friend went to town and left the dog with. ine. She was gone all day and when she returned the dog would n o t go to her for for quite awhile. When he did Ile growled and growled just as if he were scolding her for going away." Thank you, Mrs. E. W. for that little story and your. good wishes. Since you did not give me your new address I ata afraid this is the only way I can acknowledge your letter. And now for a word about ad- vertising. Don't you think manu- facturers have queer ideas in re- gard to. advertising their goods? Cereals for instance. Remember the cornflakes that had those awful faces on the outside of the package? Horrible, grotesque faces that were meant to be cut out and used as masks to amuse children! They were so awful I used to paste a piece of plain green paper over the side of the box. Just to look at those faces used to 'turn me against my. breakfast. I was on the point of buying a different cereal when the company started advertising flatware instead. Then there is the radio -- "Don't you touch that dial, no slrree ..." Naturally I shut off the radio just as fast as I can reach it. Advertising has a great res- ponsibility these' days — it can either educate or annoy the pub- lic, But alas,. so often it chooses to annoy, both by sight and sound. 'Are more goods sold that way? I wonder! REALLY STIFF "There Is a case," said the stu- dent of ancient history, "where a Roman engraved a curse on a slab of stone and sent it to an enemy—" • "Sent hien a stiff letter, eh?" A Family Remedy For Coughs hs — The Pleasant Tasting Pinex Way When anyoils in your family is distressed by winter coughs, use this favorite old Canadian recipe. Easy to prepare,yet gives you four times as mucfor your money. Get a VA ounce bottle: of fast - acting PINEX CONCENTRATE . from your. favorite drug counter.- Pour ounter.Pour this into a 16 ounce bottle and f111 upwith simple sugar syrup. That's all there is to do ... no cook ing needed, yet you will .have an ample supply of efi'ective cough re- lief for the whole family, so plea-' sant-tasting that children like it. For. convenience, PINEX is now also available in ready -to -take PREPARED form. Either way, PINEX must help you, or your money back. Get a bottle today... be ready for winter coughs ahead. PINiX PREPARED' for CONVENIENCE PINEX CONCENTRATE for ECONOMY ISSUE 1 - 1N$ HOW CAN 1? Q. ilou' can I relieve tired eyes? A. Cup both hands several times a day' for three or four minutes over the closed eyes, and it will rest them and also• discourage crow's feet. Keep the fingers tightly closed to prevent any light reaching the eyes, and place them together so that they meet in the middle of the fore- head, with thumbs place just back of the ears. After holding in that position for a while, slowly stroke the forehead with ward toward the temples. .. Q. flow can 1 frost glass? A. Dm method of frosting glass is to apply a solution of six ounces of magnesium sul- phate, two ounces of dextrin, in twenty ounces of water. Q. How can 1 polish tan shoes that have scuffed toes? A. Try painting the scuffed spots with iodine and then polishing as usual. Q. flow can 1 render clothing fireproof? A, By dissolving one pound of ammonium phosphate in two quarts of cold water and soak- ing the garment in this for five minutes. Remove and allow to dry. This solution will keep, is harmless, and can be used for several articles, Q. Ilow can I keep the cover of a book, clean? A. Make a cover for the book of flowered oilcloth. This will cover, all its blemishes and at the same time give pit a surface that inlay be wiped off easily in the future. Q. clow can 1 mend a leaky vase? A. Take some melted para- fliin and pour it into the vase and allow to harden over the spot where the leak occurs, It will not leak again. Q. How can I tltoroughla clean a tobacco pipe? A. Soak the pipe in cold coffee for an hour, cleaning out the stens with pipe cleaners.. The coffee will soften the caked ma- terial in the bowl, which may then be pried loose with a blunt instrument; Stale pipes can al- ways be cured with this, treat- ment. Q. How can 1 be sure of an even. color when using a soap dale? A. When tinting garments with a soap dye, put 'the cake of soap Into a shaker and --shake in the water, until it is the shade de- sired. This insures an even dye .and clean hands. Q. flow can I remove iron rust? A. Iron rust Is easily removed by applying a mixture of salt and lemon juice. Rub thoroughly. IIOW YOU SPENT) YOUR LIFE Someone with a flair for statis- tics has arrived at the conclu- sion that in an average life of 70 years the time would probably be divided as follows: Three years spent in education; 8 years in amusements; 6 years at the din- ner table; 5 years in travel; 4 years in conversation; 14 years in work; 3 years in reading; 24 years in stleeping; 3 years in con- valescence. Valuable Fingers Before every performance Andres Segovia, world's great- est guitarist, prepares his nail!: with a fine snadpaper such as silversmiths use. This lull, serious - looking Spaniard with thinning hair uses his fingers so, magically that he has been .called Rubber Fingers." Say •the critics: "In his hands the gititnr sings like an orchestra." Segovia was only sixteen when he gave his first concert in Gra•• nada. He recently received a rap- turous ovation in the Royal Fes. tival Hall, Lonckon. At flfty'' eight Spaniards call him "The Father of All Guitarists." Ile has always been independent and Is impatient of patronage or ad- vice. When someone once tried to tell him how a certain piece of nutsic sliosIld be played, he merely smiled and said; "Pardon ale, but you needn't try to ad- vise ale. I'd rather make my own mistakes." Segovia likes to quote Chopin who once said: "There is nothing more beautiful in the world than a guitar—save, perhaps, two. And lie will tell you that Schu- bert used to rehearse his immor- tal songs on the guitear before breakfast, And the RELIEF IS LASTING For fast relief front headache get INBTANTINL For real relief get INSTANTINa. For prolonged relief get INBTANTIN!I Yes, more people every day are finding that IN3rANTiNE is one thin] to case pain fast. For headache, for rhetunatic pain, aches and pains of colds, for neuritic or neuralgic paia you 'cars depend on INsrANTINa to bring you quick comfort. INSTANTINE is made like a gra- acription of three proven medical ingredients. A single tablet usually brings fast relief. ' Del Initanllne today and always keep It handy nstantine 12 -Tablet Tin 250 Economical 48 -Tablet Bottle 750 BREAD Your with Wonderful fast -rising DRY. Yeast! You're sure of tempting, de. Below bread when you bake with Flclschmann's Fast Rising Dry Yeast! . This wonderful new yeast keeps its full-strength end fast -acting qualities with. out refrigeration! Buy a month's supply!' WHOLE WHEAT BREAD .‘ , • Combine 3 c. boiling water, g c. granulated sugar, 4 tsps, salt and ' 1 tbs. shortening' stir until sugar .' and salt are dissolved and shorten- ing melted ; cool to lukewarm.' - Meanwhile measure into a large bowl -1 c. lukewarm water, 1 the.. • granulated sugar; stir until sugar is. dissolved. Sprinkle with 4 en- • 'relives Fleischmann's Fast Rising Dry Yeast. Let stand 10 minutes, ;!'HEN stir well. Stir in cooled sugar -shortening. mixture. Combine 5 c. once -sifted bread flour and 5 c, whole wheat or graham flour. Stir about half of the flours into yeast mixture; beat until smooth, Work in re manning flours and add addition: fit bread flour, if necessary, to Make a.aoft dough, Knead on lightly -Poured board until smooth and elastic. Place in greased bowl and grease top' of dough, Cover and set in a warns place,, free from draught. Let rise until doubled in- bulk. Punch down dough,.grease top and again let • rise until doubled in bulk. Punch down dough; turn out on lightly- . floured board and divide into 4 equal portions' form into smooth balls, Cover lightly with cloth • and let rest kr 15 mins. Shape into loaves; place its greased loaf pats (4/" x,8%"). Grease tops, . cover and let rise until doubled in bulk..I3akc in hot oven, 400', for 20 mins., then reduce oven heat to moderate, 350°, and bake about 20 minutes longer. • illi 1 d ,1•0.11.111.16 ,,,o11 i L, CaLvet SPORTS COLUMN pity E4ue'& eot • Russian publicists claim everything was Invented In that country, from the electric toaster to baseball, and most other sports, for that matter, And one which they haven't yet boasted of devising, hut one lo which they're entirely welcome, is the "fire the coach" system which, at- that, does sound like a Itussian conceit, Not long ago there filtered through the Iron Curtain,, via Berlin,' where the curtain mist be thin in spots, stories of a series of "investigations" that followed the Olympic Gaines, and a series of dismissals of trainers and athletes, Students of the decadent democratic version of this lire - the -coach process will be struck by the more stringent, Mus- covite variations. For the more drastic Itussian regulations likewise carry more drastic penalties, because in Soviet Russia, /ports are tied directly info the scheme of Russian defense and Russian propaganda; they are affairs of State, and as such, are directly under the supervision, not of a graduate manager or hired coaching expert, but of the Russian Secret Police. It may seem a trifle drastic, and in poor sporting spirit to even the most biased, anti -coach groups on this contin- ent, to complain of a hockey or football coach whose team falls to win all the lime, or a track roach whose athletes don't capture every event, But the Russian system allows no such weaknesses. Either you're a winer, to the greater glory of the invincible state; or if a loser, you're just a low-down traitor who Is disgracing his country, and should be shot at sunrise fn the Red Square, as a lesson to all who can't go out and beat the rest of the world, "Soviet sportsmen" said a recent ofllcial crt.tique, "are proving the superiority of their country's government -by their achievements." So when the cry of the comrades echoes out on the night sir, "Fire the coach" it's really the cry of the Secret Police, bucked by a state where "win or else" is the sinister policy. No use the coach and his proteges trying to still such voices by promises to do better at the next Olympics, or European championships, There is no next time, The coach, and probably the losing athletes just go out of that business. Next stop, the salt mines, Or, if Uncle Joe happens to be in a merciful mood, the firing -squad,' • So let's give Russia a monopoly on the flrc - the • coach system. It's a slily, and unfair and non -sporting idea to start with, and as such should fit smoothly into the Russian ideology. I Your comments and suggestions for this column will bo welcomed by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Calvert House, 431 Yonge St„ Toronto. Calvert DISTILLERS LIMITED AMHERSTBURG, ONTARIO SPORT Arrangements are practically complete • for the 1953 Canadian National Sportsmen's Show to be held in the Coliseum, Toronto,. March 13 to 21 under the auspices cd the Toronto Anglers' and Hun- ters' Association in the interest - 1sf conservation, it was announc- ed by Frank H. Kortright. • • • "Judging by the large number Al commercial exhibitors who have taken space, the new acts and entertainment in our stage and water revue and theuadvnnce Inquiries for tickets, the 1953 show would surpass all our pre- vious efforts," stated the presi- dent of the Toronto Anglers' and hunters' Association. • • • "Profits from the Sportsmen's Show, as has been the case in the past, will be used to carry on a varied program to conserve our natural resources of forest, field and stream," he continued. • • • Since the first Sportsmen's Show was held In 1998, the Tor- onto Anglers' and Hunters' As- sociation has carried out an ex- tenaive conservation program and, at the same time, has fin- anced a number of conservation. projects undertaken by other or- ganizations, • ` r' • Among the highlights of the 1953 Canadian National Sports- `-..' men's Show will be a boat show, motor show, travel show, cot- tage show, conservation show and two dog shows. In addition there will be bowling demonstra- tions and competitions, a sports demonstration area where all sports such as tennis, badminton, golf, boxing, fencing, archery and so forth will be demonstrated by experts and champions, a demonstration casting pool, square dancing and other attrac- tions. • • • Again this year the four floors of the Coliseum will house hun- dreds of commercial exhibits in- cluding boats, cottages, cars, trailers, ultra -modern television sets and the latest equipment for all sports, travel and camping. • 4 • During the eight days of the Sportsmen's Show a new and dif- ferent stage and water revue will be presented twice daily in the arena of the Coliseum, As producer of this review, General Manager 'Loyal M. Kelly, since the 1952 Shote concluded, has been seeking outstanding acts and talent on both sides of the U.S,—Canadian border, Some- thing spectacular at this year's Sportsmen's Show will be racing ostriches, never before seen any- where In Canada, • •" • During the last four _days of Music In His Ear—An enchanted (union Japanese cups his ear to catch every note from the first music box he has ever seen. He noticed it while walking through a Tokyo department store and opened the lid, His feeling of awe and wonder is clearly visible in the wide-eyed expression on his two-year-old face, Develops Cheaper lion Lung—Prof. Hideo Itokawa, of Tokyo University, opens the side door of the new "Duralmin Lung" which ho invented. The device is built to sell for about one third of the price of iron lungs made on this side of the Pacific, Ouch—Slugged with a left to the head by Lester Felton, fighter Del Flanagan winces in pain during the third round,. Felton won the bout in the fourth round by a technical knockout. the Sportsmen's Show, March 18, 19, 20 and 21 two dog shows will be held for the benefit of the Toronto Humane Society. Some of the most outstanding dogs in both Canada and the United States will be on display during these two shows. • • • Officials in charge of provin- cial playdowns leading to 'the round-robin competition for .the Canadian curling championship, have announced dates for On- tario and Northern Ontario. • • • -Play in the British Consols competition for the province of Quebec got underway at'Quebec City January 28 and continued until January 31st in conjunc- tion with the International Bon - spiel. At the same time winners ' for Nova Scotia were declared In a Consols competition that got underway. in Lunenburg on Jan- uary 27 and concluded on Jan- uary 29. • * • Winners at Quebec City and at Lunenburg will journey to Sud- bury for the Dominion competi- tion, which will be held March 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, Eventual vic- tors in the Canada -wide contest will take possession of the Mac- donald's Brier Tankard, won last year by Manitoba's Billy Walsh, • • . • Dates for Northern Ontario and Ontario are as follows: Playoffs will be held at Kirk- land Lake among the three Nor- thern Ontario regional winners February 16, Playoffs among Ontario divi- sional winners will be held at Toronto Granite Club on Feb- ruary 12, "TIMBER" There are a thousand and one everyday uses for wood. So many, in fact, that the world Is using. more wood than it is growing, A hard wood like the oak may take longer than a century to (nature, so that those we use now will not be replaced for more than a ..hundred years. Soft woods, on the other hand, can be replaced tri twenty to thirty years. Even this, with our modern needs for building and pulping, is a long time to wait, so forestry Pile Sufferers Get Quick Relief When lite Orli, linen' and pain of pliers keeps lou awake at night, drttes sou almost • rrnnllo by des—go to an drug More anti get n pnekage of Len-Obtb See how ?lost title soon•-w•hIle, antiseptic ointment cools the Seery burning, relieves Ilr'binr, coolhee pelt!, Von fret relief In one minute by the watch, Ihte_Bppllcatlpn -&tree, hours of comfort, (lel Len-IIInt rlaht now est any dont "torr, Ennnah to keep you bnppy emend necks. gulp 08e. experts have been trying to speed up the process so that a tree can be ready for cutting in about ten years, One of the first steps in this direction was to cross -breed the trees. About a quarter of the ex- periments made have proved suc- cessful, which is a good meas- ure in this work, As is the case with all hybrids, animal or vegetable, there is a great increase in vigour when the cross -breeding is successful, Cross -bred pines five and six years old are already twice as large as 111e average "pedigree" pines of the same age, Birt fast growth is only one of the advantages of cross -breed- ing. For some purposes wood without knots is necessary, so that sidebranehes, must be dis- couraged, By careful breeding, pines can be produced almost devoid of branches. There are age-old enemies of the forest, such as drought, fust and weevil, which are being fought 'by the new trees. Thus a species has been de- veloped to combine the fast • growth of one tree with the drought -resistant qualities of an- other, while others are being produced for their qualities of resistance to the weevil and rust. In Britain's Forestry Research Stations emphasis is on the fast- growing Corsican pine, beech, European larch, Scots pine, and Sitka spruce—rather than our native hardwoods, Other countries, too, are, spe- cialising in the kinds of wood they most need. Swedish scien- tists are working on aspen for paper pulp. Denmark is concen- trating on producing dwarf fruit trees for indoor growth. Australia and New Zealand are especially interested in import- ing foreign trees and acclimatis- ing them, Canada, a great pulp - producer, is working on fast- growing poplars, Eventually, with the help of these hybrids, the world .may produce two or three times its present volume of timber. M. 11, Whether there's a rainbow around your 'shoulder or not the odds are almost 2 to 1 your favorite color is red, The odds are 7 to 1 your favorite hate in colors is yellow. If you are a man you lean a little towards blue—not the mood, the color. HARNESS & COLLARS Farmers attention—Consult your near- est Harness Shop about Staco Harness Supplies, We sell our goods only through your local Slaco Leather - goods dealer,, The goods are right and to aro our prices, We manufac- ture In our factories: Harness Horse Collars, Sweat Pads, Horse Blankets and Leather Travelling Goods. Insist on Steco Brand Trade•Marked Goods and you get satisfaction, Made only by SAMUEL TREES CO, LTD. 42 Wellington 51. E., Toronto — Write for_Catalogue — ..Classified Advertising.. AORNTs WANTED HONEST, tellable stents to well "bloke for a well estabilehed hatchery. Good eomnlaelon,• !loyal Yarm Hatchery, St, Jacobs, pntarlo, TAiLORING SALESMEN tell Perk • F'letcber tailored -to -measure olothes, Earn more money, your personal clothes free, Full or 'Dare time, High commission, popular prlyss, tremcndoua "bole" of cloth wamplea, Welts Immediately for free sample outfit, Instructions and excluiive lerptnry, Park -Fletcher Clotho, Dept, W„ P. 0. Box 109, Station N., iWnntrral, A 1'l'1,F. IIUTTElt ABSOLUTELY pure, no sugar added, fresh fruit fillers; neele, peach, clerman prune and peer avallnble In each, 60,60 10 lb. Pail. f.o.b. Macintosh apples No, 1 Fenoy, 13.70 ba„ r.n,b, Deer Park Farm, Roe 038, Grimsby, OA BY CHICKS "OXFORD" t'anadian Approved Chick", Live, lay end pay, They are the results of twenty-five yonre'bt careful selection and breeding, They have to be good, because we want the very but kind of Chicks for our own Dona—big, vigorous, and early maturing. We &frena egg mlze and uniform. It', Barred Rock', While 141horne, Buena. White Rock, Columbia Rock, New Ilempahlre, IInmp x (tock Crossbreds', Rork x Leghorn Croe'brede, New name x Senses Creaebrede, Write for free folder, The Oxford Panner's' Co-operative Pro- duce Company, Limited, 134 Sintn Street, Woodetnek, Ontario. ORDER those Purina embryo -fed chicks from f;llmore'e. Fully guarantee 0, quality chlcke from a real breeding pro- gramme, Altrnctive early pullet price", Write for prime and catalogue "Which Came First." (Atmore', Poulin' Breedlna Farm, Merle, Ontario, CANADIAN Approved Chicle. Barred flocks, New Ilntnpnhlree, New Hampshire X Barred Rock, Columbia Rock X New Hempehhr. Throe week old chick. always avallnble, heavy day old cockerels 06.00 per 100, Write for price 11et end folder. Lincoln Chick hatchery, 2 Race Street, St. Cnthnrinen, Ontario. YOU meet have uncclnl breed" and alralne to make the maximum out of egg pro- ductIon today, The name thine appllee for broilers, The breeds and walrus suitable for lessers, do not, glee you the moxlmum Profit for broilers. We have 'pedal breed" for layer" and 'special breeds' for brollere. Send for catalogue. It explalns e11, Also turkey poulte, 'MEDDLE ((TICK iTATCH191n1'Ps LTD. FERGUS ONTARIO WE'VE been hatching chick" for props - glee poultrykeepere for yearn, Profitable markets demand enrly chicks growing to catch them. February -Meech chlcke, Price', etc, — Rrny Hatchery, 120 John N„ Ham - Ilton. DIMING AND CLEANING HAVE you anything needs dyeing or clean - Inv/ Write to us for Information, We are glad to answer your questions. De- partment iL Parker'" Dye Works Limited, 791 Tongs 5t, Toronto, FOIL SALE $NOWSIIOES, All sizes end style", Bates' HUMANE Snowshoe Harness (Pat,) No more blistered toe. 1 Folder, "Snowehoe- Int in Comfort," on requeat, BATES' SNOWSHOES, Dept, W, Metagama, Ont. PREMIER Strnwberry Plante 12,00 per 100; 100 Blooming Site Oladlolum bulb' $1.261 Free (.let, 8r, J. wttney, Elora. Ontario. 70 LAWN ORNAMENT AND • Novelty pattern" $1. Lawn chair Patterns 1 for 11, Catalogue free, Moebro Patterns, 44-1V Victor, ktlmlco, Toronto }4, Ontario. "CRESS BUNION SALVE — For nmazlnt relief. Tour Druggist Bells CRESB, )OUR WOOD! 139 Cord, Bold es charcoal. Send for "Making and Selling Char- coal," 11,00, Gordon house, Hoa 21f, Cambridge A, Maas, AAfAZTNG PLASTIC RATON TOWELS. ideal for Drying Dleltee, Dusting, Pol- lehing and all Household Cleaning Joba, Lcavee NO Lint, SiX large Peatrl Colored Towels — 01,26, 11, & I{„ Box 141-W, Reglna. 1IEDiCAL GOOD RESOLUTION — Every sufferer. of Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis should fry Dixon's Remedy. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 Elgin Ottawa $1.25 Express Prepaid TAPEtt'ORAIS, pinwarma, cause serloue dleeasee; could be your troublel thou - sande helped. Free literature describes condltlon and remedy. Write klulveney's Remedies Limited. Dept tr 5 , Tamest", Ontario. • FEMINEX • One women tell' another. Take euperlot "FFMINEX" to help alleviate pain, die - trees and nervous tension associated with monthly periods, 85.00 Pollen's! In plain wrapper POST'S CHEMICALS MI QUEEN ST, EAST TORONTO POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping akin trouble/ Poet's Eczema Salve will not disappoint you. Itching, scaling, • burning 'eczema, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema, will respond rondlly to the elnlnteee odorless, ointment, regardle,a of how stubborn or bootee, they neem. PiOOE 8"•.180 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES Sent Poet Free on Receipt of Price 189 Queen St. E. Corner nt Logan. Toronto "PEP UP." 'try C.C. is B. Tonto Tablets ,for low vitality and general debility. At Drugglele one dollar or FI7ASEL AGENCY, 11124 - 82 Avenue,EDAION'rON, ALTA, ASTHMA Now Asthma Relief in minute/ or your money back Ask s'nur Orugglet for an Asthmanefrin Set Unconditionally auarnnteed SAFES Protect, sour 1100115 and CASII from EIRE end. THIEVES, We hale a elle and type of Safe, or Cabinet, for any our- poer, Vlelt Pie or turtle for peke, dm, In Dept. W. J.b&J.TAYLOP LIMITED TORONTO SAFE WORKS 143 Creel SI. IS„ Toronto Estnblleltet, 1833 OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JUIN CANADA'S LEADING SC1111(11. Great Opportunity Learn ifalydrraaine /leilaut, dignified profeeslun, Mood willies. licousande of ■uceeeeful Marvel graduate" Amrrlcn'e Greatest hystem Illuatrated Catalogue Free Write or Call leAItVEL JIAiRDiIESSIN0 SCiioO1.c 161 Moor St, W„ Toronto Brunches; 14 King St., Ilnmllton 71 Rideau St., Ottawa MAKE' MONEY fast; Picture" of iI. ►I, Queen Elizabeth lowly priced for quick male. Every home buys 'one. Send for IlluetnlInne, prices. United Art, 'rnranln 1B, MOTHERS( 1'11E819111T your Babe's "hoes permanently with genuine brone- Ing, Writs for fres dencrletin folder, Kett - mart Product' Co., P.O. nos 172, tinker*. field, California, COURSE on Farming cover" acrryUdng In farming—chicken., hogs, Write for de- ta11s. C.O.D.'a accepted, onuses, 06.09. tlmon Co, 1111 North Ween err t, In- dianapolis, Indlana. EARN $100.00 or more per month ed - dressing envelopes' In spore Minn 1,1 born by hand or typewriter. Send $1.00 for Information and Inalrurllone, Money- back guarantee. Universes' Servlre, Dept. 34, P,0. nos 11, Somerville Winter 11111 Branch, Massachusetts'. WOOD by malt Plane, 1'Inlahlnu mnler- lal., Wth" for price hest, Dei 1, w., TI . Pine Shop Ltd., 22:0 !fenny Ave,, Men- tial fl. PATENTS AN OFFER to every Inventor—r.iet of in. Tontine and full Information cent free, The Rntn'ay Co„ Regletered Patens Ano"• neym, 272 Bank Street, Ottawa. F'EATHESTONHAUGH k Company Po- tent Solicitor's, l:atnbllehrd 1900, 250 Bay Street, Toronto. Booklet of Infermn. tion on request. PERSONA 1 HANDWRITING analysts, "nmtdrte char- acter reading. Send twenty !Ince In Ink. unlined paper. Enclose 11.00, (tette John - "tone, 10 Roeemnunt Ave„ %Veetnn, 01,09 TRiAL offer. Twwny-live deluxe Personal requirements. Lntert Catalogue Included, The Medico Agency, line 124, Terminal A, Toronto, Ontario. , BOOKS FOUNDI French f'nmullan,'any sublecto, Huge ecarch 'service, No Obli- gation. Write yottr wants to me now. John Williams, 106 - 1rd Street, Hoboken, N.J. FOOL your Friends) We'II remelt your lettere from Weet Virginia, U.S.A., :Le. Russell Ferguson, Itoek Castle, West Va„ U.S.A. ' LET ue permanlze that treasured snap- shot. Sealed in eparkllne clear plastic. Coat le per square. Inch, Ralph Side, 1 Wilt Sed St., Chteter, Pa. QUIT CIGARETTES sadly a thoueande of others have done, Vest TOBACCO ELIMINATOR a even day scientific Treatment that eulekly eliminate' all craving for tobacco. For Inc booklet write C. W, King Phar- macal Ltd., Box 173, London, Ontario. IIUSINESS PERSONALS SLIP ON THE ICE? Arold dangerous tall., wear Ice Creeper !trap. under any footwear. 11.00 Pnet. Paid. Material, Sltawbridge, Quebec. ItLOS NEW rugs made from your old ruga end woollens. Write for catalogue and price list. Dominion Rug Weaving Company, $417 Dundas Street Weet, Toronto, Ont. RUGS—Sharply reduced prices. 8' x 12'- 070.80 delivered; 01' x 8I'—$47.10 de- livered. Made of fine rayon carpet ram.. In exqublte orlental patterns, on wine and red background. Will ehlp C.01). Refund it not used. Fromty Textile" (Reg'd), 1067 Dundee W., Toronto. BTAM 1'F 1111 DIFTERENT stamps. Booklet Stamp Collecting, 126 Hinge. and perforation gauge, 100 to approval applicant", 81. Emery, 11.R, 1, Victoria, 11,C, POSTAGE STAMPS Kill SALE 10,000 different .tamps one cent each. Better trade Ilrllleb Colonies, halt catalogue. SUMMERS, 49 Daly, Ottawa, Ontario, IVANTEiI WANTED( Palomino horses. Send full Particular's, price and pictures to; A. E. Bong, 019 Queens Ave„ London, Ontario. If You're TIRED ALL THE TIME Everybody gets a bit run-down now and then, tired -out, heavy -headed, and maybe bothered by backaches. Perhaps nothing aeriously is ong, just a temporary toxic condition caused by excess acids and wastes. That's the time to take Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's stimulate the kidneys, and so help restore their normal action of removing excess acids and wastes. Then you feel better, sleep better, work better. Get Dodd's Kidney Pills now, Look tor the blue box with the red band at all druggists. You can depend on Dodd's. .32 IT RELIEVED N A JiFFY or money bock Very fust use of soothing, cooling, liquid 1LD,D. Prescription positively relieves raw red itch—caused by eczema, rashes, scalp Irrhntlon, chafiog--other itch troubles. Greaee- ess, etatnless. 43c trial bottle must eathfyy or tnonnY back, Ask your druggist for D.D.D, PRESCRIPTION. WHY YOU SHOULD NOT TAKE SODA e If you suffm from acid ludige.ttoo, gag heartburn, *dentine eny baking so,Io can adcl to your upset, destroy vitamins, cause Aston", seta rebound. "Alter reseals I had tudigustiun and `as pains', end I practically lived on baking soda," nays Peter George, Lethbridge, Alta. "Then I started taking I)r. t'ierce's Golden Medical Discovery and the pains went away sad 1 could oat and enjoy my simile twin. 1 gained 30 pentode and felt much better," Thousand, who mirrored such diettes,, due to no. revel; causes, tried Dr, Pierce'. Golden MenAa1 Diee ovary nitb amazing molts. Over 80,1)00,000 hollies of lite great eon -alcoholic medicine, with Its wonderful stomachic tunic action,' have hems sold to date. And Ito wonder. Pira!, taken regularly, Il promolea more norinnl slmmach activity, (hue helping to digest food bettor su you *eel have gas, hcer(hurtf, sour eluntach. Second, wi.,,,nt.mnach activity Improved, you an eat the hood' yoy like without fear of after -d hares", Try il..-(Irl Dr: Pierre's 4iolden Medical Discovery sl your dntatiet, lolat ISSUE 'I -- 1953 iAGE 8 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. "Casey's" Superior Food Market Extra Saviugs For Your Week -End Shopping 11 I Y n .11 4-, Aunt Jemima Ready -Mix for Pancakes ...pkg. 19c Kraft Velvetta Cheese , . , .. , , , , . hf. lb. pkg. 29c Gold Seal Sockeye Salmon, , , , , . , , 7 314 oz. tin 37c Dewkist Choice Golden Whole Kernel Corn 8 20 -oz. tins , $1..01 Campbell's Soups (Veg. or Tomato) . , 8 tins $1.00 Green Giant Fancy Peas , . , , , , , 5 15 -oz. tins $1.00 Stokley's Tomato Juice 8 207oz. tins $1.09 Glen Valley Pork & Beans . , .. 11 15 -oz. tins $1.00 Sunbrite Margarine 3 lb. pkgs. $1.00 ▪ Carnation Milk 7 large tins $1.00 Kleenex, regular or chubby 5 pkgs. $1.00 Giant Breeze (with Tea Towel) 75c Large Breeze (with Wash Cloth) 38c We now have in stock the Best Grade Crosse & Blackwell Sockeye Salmon , . in 1 Lb. Tins 89e Also "Chef" Fancy Cohoe Salmon 59c PHONE 156 --- WE DELIVER. Watch Our Windows For Bargain Prices. PERSONAL INTEREST L, Y 11 1 1 THE STANDARD 1'liRSONAL INTEREST Mr, and Mrs, Bert Kcchnie nn"I fanlilty of Bright's Grove s:)c it S•1uu•- ady with the former's moth:r, Mrs, Jean Kechnie, Rev, C, J, Scout is spending; several days in Cincinnati, Ohio, where he is an accredited delegate of the United Cintreh of Chaeta at the annual meet- ings of the I)ivision of Chri tian Ed- ucation of the National Ch~aches" of Christ in America, Mrs. 1), 11CKenzie spent the mei:- end with her d;mllhter, Miss i\1,ce \IcKewrie of London, and her brother, Mr. Bert 11o;ic, who is a prtien: in \\'estminster Hospital, 1.on kn, Mr, and J1rs. Howard \Vallace spent the week -end in 'I'on,nto and hrunnp• ton, \'Ishii,, relatives, also attending the lee Follies al Maple Lead Gardens on Friday n';ght, 11r, and \1rs. Joseph \lark. • and family of \1 indsar s;leut the we:lc-cudwith the l,tter's parents, A1r. and Mrs. 1.. Scrii ngeour, and with Mr, and Mrs. \Ir, Glenn 1'nn;1llut of Kingsti n F., Scrintgeonr and family. spent the week -end w'th his Irtrens, .lir, and \irs, Stuart l.ob'uson of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Yungbl:;t, Glenn Goderich, Miss Edith Lockhart, of is a student at Queen's University, Sarnia, were Blyth visiWrs cn Salur- Mr. and \irs. Don 1'ungblut of 1.1on• day night. don spent the wcek•end with t'1(ir 11�>s \largaret 1• I'rC11S, Mrs, 1, Niue- parents, •\1r. and Airs, Harry 1'rng- .Wna!d v;si:cd 011 Friday in Loud:n Nut, and Mr, and Mrs, Frank \Iar- wit!t 11 rs, J. Davis who is a patient a: shall. Victoria hospital. They report find• ,l r. Bernard Hall has been able to int her much improved in hcal:h be aI><_ttt to.w,t the past ecuple of days which is good news to her many following an illness which con.ined friends in ]Myth, Wm to his home, • t-+-H-••••r++-•••-•-•+-•44+•-•++"-9 N4.4 H+r•-r++-f•+1+••*•+'►••'l 1,1. Y 1 eauty Shoppe. GET AN (Individually Patterned) PERMANENT AND HAIR CUT, to keep your hairdo neat dayin and day out at Olive McGill BEAUTY SHOPPE Telephone Blyth, 52. ris Currie, lfr. Currie, and fancily of (Toronto. \urs. 1.arl \1cKnight and' Miss Jean Cartwright of Stun 1, Garth vsited over the week -end with Falls is visiting her parents, Mr, and AIS, and utas, Jac• k McKnight of Kit - Mrs. E. J. Cartwright, chcncr, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Walsh, Mr.l Mr. Harvey Robinson spent last and Mrs. James 1Valsh, Mr, and Mrs. \MK with his daughter, Mrs. G. R. ; A Ben. Walsh and Marlene, and Mr, Mr. Augustine and fancily. is at and Mrs: Clare \'icrgarbh of Wing- E. S. Rcriuso nt and Mrs, 111g 1SRobinson, ham were in attendance at the Haugh- of Goderich, Haugh - Walsh wedding at Dashwood on Sat-. urday, January 31st. Mrs. Clarence Johnston visited with Mr. Earl McKnight visited over the Mrs. 13randon, Mr, and Mrs, Earl Bentley and ,Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd weekend with his daughter, Mrs. Mor- Raithby, all of London, last week. - WE OFFER THE FOLLOWING ITEMS AT A WORTI•I-WHILE DOLLAR- SAVING : 1 Coleman Heater (New) 1952 Model 50,000 B.T.U. Regular $134.95 $90.95 1 Coleman Heater (New) 1952 Model, 50,00013.T.U. Regular $116,95 $79.93 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 , $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 r••++4+•+. -•-•-N+44- ++44+*+• -H -N-•1+44++4+44+414-04444-• •-•-•7410-44-•-•-•-•7410-44-•-•++•-•-• H .I H+++..�r�• + 1+' Anniversary Sale Another year has rolled by, and once again we thank you for your patronage during the past year, RED BIRD MATCHES PURE LARD DOMESTIC SIIORTEN- 3 BOXES . , , , 25c. 2 LBS.... , 33c ING .... 2 LBS. 57c GET ONE PINT LIFEGUARD LIQUID WAX FOR 5 CENTS When you purchase a Pound Tini of Lifeguard Paste Wax. BOTH TINS FOR 69c The Wax that contains Antiseptic. Resists Water --- Non Slip. 4 -STRING BROOMS RED COHOE SALMON_KAM 3 TINS -$1.00 89c EACH. 25c TIN. , FRESH FRUITS SUNKIST ORANGES (344's) VEGETABLES 2 DOZEN 39c FLORIDA PINK GRAPEFRUIT .. , ,. 5 FOR 25c 10 LB. BAGS 50c COOKING ONIONS Club House Jelly Powders Corn. Peas, Pork & Beans Heinz Ketchup 3 Pkgs. 25e 2for 25c 2 Bottles 49c Robinhood Cake Mix per pkg. 31c Brunswick Sardines ..... , . Kellogg's Corn Flakes 2 pkgs. 29c Red Rose Coffee - 1 Ib. tin 90c Our Own Blend Tea . ................... 1 Lb. Bag 59e 3 for 25c Stewart's Grocery •BLYTH PHONE 9 WE DELIVER "THE BEST FOR LESS" Mr. and Mrs. George Radflcrd, Mr, and Nfrs, Drank Tyrcman, Mrs. A. R. Tasker, and Mrs, B. Hall were in +moi -44.4++ Chatham on pathy to the bereavetnent. 1 3 444-4.4•444-444.444444-444444+0,44 44 441 3444444 . Sunday, extending synt- Due to the I:Iness of her tuoth:r. Kyle family in their sal \loss Elia, Metcalf has been visiting at her home here, • !1 Wed tiesdt>ly, b.11, 100 TO HELP YOU TELL TIER ON VALENTINE'S DAY, She's someone Special, and you want to give her Special Gift: Smiles'N Chuckles Chocolates $1.15 to $2,50 Perfumes and Colognes 75c to $2,50 Ear Rings $1.00 to $2.50 Brooches and Pins $1,50 to $3,00 Cup and Saucer ........ . ........ 98c to $4.50 Fancy Soaps 50c to $1,50 . Teapots ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, . $1,00 to $5,75 RAY'S BEAUTY SALON Look Attractive -- with a NEW PERMANENT Shampoos, Finger Waves, Rinses and Hair Cuts. ` Please Phone, Blyth 53. • RAY McNALL R. U. P 11�P, Phm1 B 'moans. y77N11RIA:S, WALLPAPER—PHONE 20. ACNNOMMINNININN iodden's Home Bakery PIIONE 71 R 2, BLYTH, HERE'S THE BREAD --- HOME LOAF ENRICHED WHITE BREAD ---WITH EXTRA VITAMINS AND IRON. Now scientists have found a way to put back into white flour vital whole-wheat nutrients taken out by the milling process. The result is the same delicious "Home Loaf" White Bread you've always enjoyed -- but it's BETTER for you! For it's EN- RICHED with 3 important B Vitamins -- Thiamine, Niacin, and Riboflavin, plus Iron. See that the family gets this new aid to sound nutrition. Order Vodden's "Home Loaf" Enriched White Bread to- day, Eat plenty, it's BETTER for you, BELGRAVE The regular weekly euchre held in the Community Roc,ni was better at- tended \Vednesday night and the high scores were won by Mr, and Mrs, J. E, McCallum and low stores by 'Mrs. •Fred Cook and Jas. R, Coultcs, Mac Scott, Gordan Nethery, Janus McCallum, \Vcs. Cook and Ralph AIL- u - Crea are enjoyng a motors trip through . the Southern States, Aliss,h McCrea of 13yron is a vis- iles •witlh relatives here. Bcdnnin farm forum met at the . home of Mr, and Mrs. C, R; Coultes Gil Monday night with a good attn..- dance, tten•.dance, Clifford Kelly of Western Univer- sity, London, spent the• week -end at his home here, Mr. and Mrs, Ted l-Iunking of Au- burn were_ visitors on Sunday with Mr. and ,1Lrs. Clare NanCatnp, ]3odmin farm forum met at the Minute of Air, and Mrs, C. R. Coult.s on Monday night ,with a good atten- dance. Following the broadcast the questions were discussed and it was decided more motley should be invest- ed in livestock, farm hand, fertilizer, etc„ than a Targe amount invested in ivachinery which 15 only used a short time each year, 1 f a large antount is required, use a long terns cred't stt:11 as a mortgage and for small amounts use Credit Union or a bank loan. • Mrs. I-1, Wilkinson presided for the business when the minutes of the pre- vious meeting were adopted and a re:Volution from rbc,\Vhitcchurch farm forum re daylight saving time was en- dorsed and sent on to Wiegham Chain• ber of Commerce The next meeting will be held at the Kohne of Mr. and Mrs Mitchell Elliott, Progressive euchre was enjoyed .IWI.reNNN.IN I1.04.NN BEE HIVE CORN SYRUP ', $145 10 LBS. FOR NABOB COFFEE 95c PER LB. SCHNEIDER'S MINCED PORK 36c PER LB. LIIBBY'S TOMATO JUICE , 29C 48 OZ. ....:............ ... BLENDED JUICE 31c MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE TIN (10c COUPON) ... , .". , .. , ,$ Holland's Food Market AND LOCKER SERVICE. Telephone 39 04NMN.04,,,M0 -- WE DELIVER See Our Display 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 STETS, A GOOD ASSORTMENT OF DOMINION LUGGAGE. Lloyd E. "rasher 1 URNITURE — COACH • AMBULANCE — FUNERAL. SERVICE Phone 7 . Blyth with high scores going to Airs, Fred err," 13411 Rodger' of Windsor, Miss Cook and Bob Yuill and consolation -Betty:' Rodger cYf Goderich. spent the prizes were wan by Mr and Mrs., .yvsiek=end at their house here, and cn Clarence Vufll, - cFritlay evening attended the "At. C. R. Coultcs, Simon and Date Halt,lii oihc" at Stratford. lahau attended a co-operative meet�t,, ti��t; A. E. Cook of 131vwt1h, Miss Vitt- !iug in Guelph o11 Monday, cy�sr •,00k of G:derich, Mr, and Mrs, �..r. • ..-,•---• WESTFIELD Mrs, Fred Cook and Mr. ` Arnold Cook visited on Friday with'Mr, and Mrs. jjin1 Doak of Crewe, , Mr, and Mrs, Duncan McNichol and Phyllis s.,f \Walton visited- on Friday with Mr.' and Mrs, llauri:e Basmau. Alr. and Mrs, Harslet Sprung of 1-11111ctt Township spent Sunday with Mr,' and Mrs, Olarencc Cox. -Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bros, 4 ' and chit dren of 'fore nto visaed on Sunday with Afr, and Mrs. Jack Buchanan and other friends in the cotunuutity, Air, Jim Buchanan is suffering front l'he mumps. ;m 13oak and children 1af Crewe sjicnt the week -end with Mrs. Fred Cook, The Afisoion Band held their meet - ng on Sunday afternoon 111 the Church scly:ol room with a good attendance, The meeting was led by Doreen How- att. The meeting opened by repeat- 'ttg' the nienrivrs purpose, The Scrip- ture les.Son wan read iron 1st John 3: 1f1-21,. by h;:mall Snell, The Study book' Was given .by Mrs, Blair. Rea d- iil;is were" ,given by Lyle Snaith 811(1 .110 ,by fi ok, The story was told by Mrs. Not—limn M el)owell, '1'nc nteet'Ing 'closzd w.th prayer by Mrs, 1319i... Airs, Ernest Snell and babe returned home' on Fridiy from \\Ingham hospital. -