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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1953-06-24, Page 1THE VOLUME 59. NO. 36. • Post Office Department, Ottawa Authorized as second-class mail, Lyon - Lear Re -Union Top Tier of Wedding Cake On Saturday, June 20:h, one hun- dred end four member.; 'of the hyon- Lear families met for their nnnu I re- union at Lions Park, Seaforth. A pro- Memories of City years rgO we 0 re- gi'vmine of sports was carried out un- hawed during the p st f,w weeks by der the direction cf J. Lyon's and E. Mr. and Mrs. Georg: L.wrerce, for Gaunt's. The prize wingers were ns the asst number of yen's rcs'den's of YTH ST BLYTII, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 1953 Subscription Rates $2.00 in Advance; $3.00 in the U.S.A. --- WEDDINGS --- Sent to Blyth Residents iiiGGINS - NORMAN From England follows; Races 5 Sews and. under, 1st, Blyth, but who orig.nally c ma to this Joan Sir.cl:zir, 2nd,, Arthur flunking; country frcm I.ngland Girls G-8, Phyllis Lobb, Mare Riley; ; An event of fifty years ago, when Mr. Boys, 6-8, lfugh Lobb, D.caie Lohb;; and Mrs, Lawrence were 'still resh'c'hts Girls, 0-11, E'd h R• ley, Joan Roberton; l of England, was respons 1)1^ for run ex - Boys, 0.11, 'Murray L)bb, Carman Ri- ' change of greeting; r•nd g ft . Me. and • ley; Girls, 12-14, Ann Sinclair, Mari:;'n Mrs, Lawrence sent n g'ecting t•t Me. Riley; Boys, 12.14, Arnold Riley, Do •g. i anti Mrs. William 1Merriils Bu•t'n, of Riley; Young I,-cl:es• Ann Sinclair, 11- 60, Dancester Road, Cmiobrou):h, E^g• ene Webber; Young Mens, Arnold RI- lancl, on the occasion of their 50th wed - ley, IH:rrry Lear; Cloths pin co•tfc ,t, cling anniversary wh'ch th y e 1' b •at' The bride, who was given in mar- Dorothy Cornish; Bottle Rice, Harry ed on Coronation D iy, Jan: tad. Mr. ridge by her 1 ither, Was lovely In u Ler; Reay Race, I ene Webber mid and Mrs. Lawrence were the attendants floor-Ieng.h gown of nylon mardai3elI Bob Kerslake; P:sning water glass, at the weddng 50 years -ago. lily Addie IIunicing's team; Youngest neem- During this past week-cnd Mr. and over white silk, red bodice, long lalofashioned withint slea silly - Addle poeeves, ber, Gordon William Riley; O:ciest wo- Mrs. Lawrence receivers the top t'erof The full stci,1 hill dean e 1 s'de nor.• man, Mrs. Jennie Lyon; Oldest nmol, Mr, Fred Shobbrook; L:rgest family, Mr. end Mrs, Ben Riley. A bounteous supper Wes enjoyed by all, The vice-p:esidcnl, Lara^ Hunk - Ing, than conducted the business which resulted as follows; President, Larne Hunking; Vice Pres'iient, Frank Ro- berton; Secretary, Adiie Honking; Spnrts committee, IIarold' Kerslake's and Archie Webber's; Lunch commit- tee, Mrs. J. Riley, Mrs. J. Lyon and Fern Watson. IL was decided to hold the 1054 reunion at S:a:'orth L'ons Park. 90 YEARS OLI) Congratulations are extended this Baskets of beautiful pink and while week to Mrs. Mary McGaii•e, of Bel - peonies graced the altar of Wingham grave, who observed her 00th birthday Presbyterian Church, Saturday, June on•Mondty, Juni: 22id, Mrs. McGuire 20th, at 12:30 when Rev, Alexander is lit present vis 1 ng with' h_: daugh- Nimmo, minister of the church officlat- ter, Mrs. Cecil Mi0e3, 01 Niag u•a Fal!,., ed in a double -ring ceremony, uniting Nev. York, and although she snakes he: in m Triage Margaret Bernice laugh. home with her scat, IIarry McGuire of ter of Mr. and Mrs; J.mes dormnn, Belgrave, she is also enjoy.ng SU.fi• Queen street, Blyth, to Jahn .taymond eictttly gond health to visit periodically Higgins, son of Mr. and Mrs, Gordon within hu• targe firm ly circ e. Higgins, Brussels. Mrs. McGuire's m widen name was Mrs. Lois Kerr,' of Wingham, played Mary Sowler, and she was born near the bridal chorus and also accomp.an- ; Sl. Helens, but moved with her family ted the soloist, \Va1l�.ce 13allagh, of 'to the Westfield .d'itricl where she Tec: water as he s -ng "0 Perfect Love" spent her girlhood drys. 68 years Ireo and "The Lord is My Shepherd." she nuhrricdi Jchn McGuire, and the cotiple lived at Heiste.n for a dire he - fore settling in the Belgrave diitr'c.t, Mr. McGuire died in 1939. There is a family of nine children, one of whom is deceased—Nelson, of Holstein; Harry, Belgrave; Roy and Later, Port Arthur; Mrs, John (Lilly) Zimmerman, of Palgrave; Mrs, A. R (Violet) Taskcr,, Blyth; Mrs. Cecil (Ella) Mines, Niegara Falls, N.Y.; Mr.. Mervin ;Iola) Richmond, Morris town- ship; a son, Ehmr, cid while Over- seas during the first world war, ;n 1918. There are 30 grandchildren, and 40 great-grandchildren. Mrs. Lena -Crawford IIonor- ed By Former Neighbours Former neighbors 0 f Mrs, Lena Crawford gathered at the Home of Mr. and Mrs, Henry Hunk'ng, 13th conces- sion of Hullett on Friday night to ,ails/ their respects to a former neighbor, Mrs, Lena Crawford, now a resident of Blyth. During ;the evening games were en- joyed after which Mr. Henry Hunkin; rear, nn address and Mrs. McDougall and Mrs;' 'Tomlinson presented Mrs, Crawford with a farewell gift of u love- ly chair and night table. The follow- ing address was read by Mr. Bunking: Dear Lena—It was with deep re- gret that we learned of your leaving our communly, ly, where you were held in high esteem for many years. We your friends and neighbours, are g th- ered here this evening to honour you, with the presentation of a srnall a take(: Af-esleem, and in appreciation of the many kindnesses and neighbour- ly acts, shown by you whilst a mem- ber of our community. We wish you much happiness in your new home, and hope you will visit often with your old friends. On behalf,of all your neighbours, we present you with this gift, and with it goes our best wishes of many years of good health and happiness, THE 13th, Lunch was enjoyed before the gath- ering dispersed. Engagement Announced Mrs. Roy MacDonald, of Wingham, wishes to announce the engagement of her daughter, Donna Jean, to James Donald Scott, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ja- mes D,'Scott, of Blyth, The marriage to take place in Saint Andrews Pres- byterian Church, Wingham, on Wed- nesday, July 15, at 3 o'clock. AMONG TIIE CHURCHES ST. ANDREW'S :'R):SBYTERIAN CHURCH Services cancelled on Sunday in fav- our of the Auburn Anniversary .Ser- vices, R, G. AIcDIillan, Interim Moderator, Godcrich, THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Myth, Ontario. Rev. C. J, Scott, B.A., B.D., Minister. Sunday, June 28, 1953 10:15 a.m : Church School 11;15 a.m.: Morning Worship, "0 conte and let us worship God." ANGLICAN CHURCH , W. E. BRAMWELL, Rector, Blyth 10,30—Matins. 11.30—Sunday Sclhool, ,Auburn, 12 o'clock—Matins. Belgrave, 3 o'clock—Evensong, Tuesday,� 30111., Parochial meeting Blyth Rectory at 8 o'clock, All welcome. CHURCH. OF GOD McConnell Sb eel, Blyth, Rev: G. I. Beach, Minister. 11 a.m.: Morning Wbrship. 7;30 p.m.; Evening Service. Wednesday, 8;30 p.m,; Midweek Bi- ble Study and Prayer; meeting, Study: Friday, 8;00 p.m.: Youth Fellowship. THE KOOK NOOK ADVENTURES "IN TWO WORLDS —By Dr, A, J, Cronin— Here is a story by a man who felt called to abandon, his medical practice for the pen. He had been a successful physician but his time us a writer was equally us rewarding, This is really his au'ob'.ography Here the fuses his experience in the field of medicine and to literature. It Is done in a Very clever fashion and this exciting narrative form captivates the reader anti we can almost feel the pulse bent of this mail who tins con- tributed so much to a deeper under- standing of life_ and human nature, You will not want to miss ihls ex- citing, fast moving narrative of. A. J, Cronin's adventure into the realm of • faith end philosophy, the three-tier wedd'ng cake wh'eh w. Runs edged tv'ih d ccord'oit•iaeated the centre of attraction at the celeb-a- ruching, lipped in silver. ILr• rllk 11 - tion. The cake wes mode by Mr. Iter- fusion veil tvh'ch tvadd dotted with ton, and arrived here in excellent con - rhinestones, was held in place by a dition. matching pleated coronet. S:.e carried They oleo received a letter and nene-I,, shower bouquet of Sweetheart rasa paper aim* from an Ergl and parer with white silk nylon streamers ad - which carried a detailed story of the orned with liuy sweetheart rosebuds happy event as well as an excellent picture of Mr. and 1VIr. Burton stand - The bride's only ornament was a ing at the table which was acorn -d rhineaone ncciclt ca, with matching with the wedding cake,and' 111 pails , earrings, the gift of the bridegroom. reading the geeet'ng card resolved from;Mrs, ,Jean Press, o. Be,He , was Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence. •I her sisters matron of honor, He dress Mrs. Lawrence's thoughts were f nr tvrhs act over orchid taffeta, with away on Saturday light as she d's- I m auvernsgweetheaddress. Her yellow 'flowers were' roses Diane Dcycll of Wingham was 'a charming flower girl in a gown of yel- low taffeta. She carried a basket of mauve: sweetpers. The ring -bearer was the bride's nep- sew Russell Press, of Eelmore, Chester II gains, of Brus els, brother of the bridegroom, was best man, and the ushers were Mr. "Mee" Smith and Mr. Robert Kerr. Following the .ceremony a wedding ,inner was served in the spcciotu din- ing room at the home of the.. bride's parents where covers were laid for 37 guests, the immediate family a n d friends of the young couple, 'rhe bride's table was centred with a beautifully decorated wec'd'ng cake, flanked with pink candles 'in cryatal candelabra, White bowls of pansies en - played the wcddl"g cake tier she re- ceived, at the Standard Office, Time and d'stance may separat i gimlets for many years, but the heart clings to happy memories such as this event, and refuses to allow the dim- ming of such happy memories. v Rev. Father O'Rourke Going To Sarnia Parish ..Rev. Joseph J. O'Rourke, . pastor of St. Michael's Roman .Catholic Church, Blyth, and S'. Joseph's Church, Clin- ton, for the past 18 months, has re- ceived an appointment to St, Joseph's parish, Sarnia, to take effect on July 4. He is to be replaced here, and in Clin- ton, by Rev. John W. P. Graham, Rev. Fr. O'Rourke became fav- ourably known amongst his parishion- ers clawing his short stay. Among his many activities, he has been. instru- mental In forming the' C,mnutnity Credit Union, at Clition, and ess:sled in organizing• several other such un- ions indite district, • OBITUARY MISS .1. PEARL GRAINGER The death of Miss J. Pearl Grainger occurred in Clinton early Saturday, following an illness of two years, She was born in Brucefield, a daughter of the late Mr, and Mrs. Bruce Grainger. Miss Grainger was educr:ted at Bruce - field and trained as a nurse at Clinton Public Hospital; where she was super- intendent for 27 years, retiring to Sea - forth in 1046. She was a member of First Presbyterian Church at Seaforth. Surviving is one sister, Miss Char- lotte Jones, Victoria, B.C. The body rested at the G.• A, Whit- ney funeral home, ,Seaforth, where a funeral service was conducted nt 2;00 p.01,, Monday, by the Rev. D. G. Camp- bell. Burial was made in Baird's cemetery, near Brucefield. CROP REPORT. By G. W. Montgomery A very heavy rain in most sections of the County Tuesday evening hes% again delayed seeding of late sown crops. Many of the lewel',iying fields of corn and beans still have sections partly un- der water. The making cif grass silage is the order of the day with censider- able increase in the number of farinas putting tap seed in tills manner. A goodly ntunber of farmers attended the Provincial Dairy at Alma, from the County this wecic, and a bus load of County Fruit Growers spent an enjoy- able day tourini. the North American Cyanamid Company and the hlorticul- tural and Experimented Station" at Vineland, cn Friday. CONGRATIJLATIOi; S Congratulations to Roy • de Haas who celebrated' his birthday on Friday, June 12th. 0 Congrattutatlons to Mr. Edwardi John- ston who celebrates his birthday on Saturday, June 27tH. Congratulations to Mrs. Mary Taylor who celebrates her birthday on Wed- nesday, July 1st, WILL VISIT IN SCOTLAND t • .. Mrs. Thomas Elliott` is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Morley Kitely, of Mon- tr•eal,and on July 8111 will leave for Scotland where she" will visit her brother, Mr, James White, for three months. • Earl McKnight Suffering From Asphalt Burns Mr. Earl McKnight of Blyth. is a pa- tient in the Wingham Public hospital suffering from burns which resulted from an accident which occurred last Thursday while he was pursuing his usual duties as an employee of the Hu- ron County Goods Roads Commission, While attempting to reheat some as- phalt which was to be used; for road re- pairing in the Brussels arca. the as- phalt exploded, the flames setting flee to Mr. McKnight's trousers, Ile had the presence of mind to quickly remove the trousers, but the • hose connection to the truck caught fire, and in trying to beat out•Ihe flames in the hose and get the latter uncoupled Mr. McKnight received severe burns on his right arm and leg as well. as other minor burns, New Town Foreman A- special me..t.ng of Blyth Council was held In Memorial Hall June 17, at 8.30'o'clock„with Reeve Morritt, Coun- cillors, Howson, Radford, Wheeler and Whitfield, present, Meeting called for opening applica- tions for the position- c.t Village Fore- man, caretaker and part time police duty. There were four applications re- ceived. • Mot`.on by Howson and Wheeler, that we' accept the application of John A, Bailey, for the position of Village Fore- man, caretaker and part time police duty. Carried. • Motion by Whitfield 'and Dawson, that we do now adjourn. Carried. George Sloan, Clerk, New Fire Truck In Final '.Stages Of Preparation A meeting of the representatives of 131Y111.District Fire Area was held in hanced the beauty cd. the setting. •, Bly'h1 Memorial Hall Thursday even- • The decorations in the .home were'inglat 0 o'clock, with G. Drown, J. Dur - pink told white peonies, streamers and - nhn;- J.Kernahan, E. Mills, R. D. Mun- white wedding bells. - ro, :0. McGowan, 13, Parrott, and C. For her daughter's wedding, Mra. Wheeler present. Norman had chosen a navy blue shan- Motion by Brown and McGowan that tung silk ensemble, white accessories. ini»utes of last meeting be adopted. and a corsage of mauve and white sweet Ca>'iled:.. s••.-• - , peas. Higgins, mother of the bride- G. Brown and 13.E Parrott gave a re - groom, assisted in recei'ing the guests port'•of the committee inspection tour wearing a dress of navy sheer, and a of fire equipment in Mitchell, Strati - similar corsage. ford and Woodstock. For -a honeymoon trip the bride wore After •considcsable discussion on the n dress of gold printed silk'taffetta, different makes of trucks, the majority navy accessories, gold straw hat, with favoured the Bickle-Seagrave, of Wood navy trim, winter white topcoat and a stock at a price of $14,540.00. corsage of talisman roses, On their re- ' Motion by, Durnin and Brown that turn they will reside on the third con- the percentage of rate schedules for the cesslon Of ,Morris township. Municipalities involved be as follows— The groom's wedding gift to the Hullett, 34; East Wawnnosh, 22; Mor - bride was a necklace of matching ris, 19; ' West Wawanorh, 5; Colborne, pearls, and teethe best man a mono- 5; McKillop, 5; Auburn, 5, and Blyth, 5. grained tic clip. Carried. • . The bride's gift to the matron of Motion by Parrott and Kcrnahan that honor was a set of costume jewelry, to - R. D. Munro and G. Sloan draw 1111 the flower girl a gold locket, to the ring -bearer a ring, and to the bride- groom a Gladstone travelling bag. Prior to her marriage dile bride was honored at several showers in Wing - ham and Wednesday afternoon and ev- ening her mother entettaincd at her home, honoring her daughter with a trousseau tee. She was the recipient of many beau- tiful gifts, Plans Continuing To En- . large Belgrave School A, meeting of the East Wawanosh School Area Board- was held in the Belgrave Community Centre when the Board reviewed the problem of over- crowding at USS.No. 17, which has been under consideration s:ncc 1948. Temporary quarters were opened on January 1. 1949, where grades 1 to 3 have since been taught without proper ran'ta•y arrangements o r a play- ground. A recent survey reveals that the Board Is faced with the prospect of having to provide accommodation for 60 to 75 pupils in the near future. It was decided to proceed with the renovation of No. 17 school according to plan—raising the present floor and Installing u classroom in the basement, and building an annex to hold the fur- nace and washrooms, 10 by 20 feet, to the north of the present building. 'these plans have been approved by the Department of Education. Future Hurlers Wanted Lookiing to the future, Manager Bill Thompson of the Legionairres, has ask- ed The Standard to call attention to the youth of the community to grab a softball and start throwing, with, an eye to becoming one of the Legion- airres future pitching aces. • Manager Bill looks with concern on the fact that there is riot a junior softball hurler In our midst. So boys, if you -have a good throwing 'arm, get busy and de- velop 11. Any assistance that can be given from the Legionairre • manage nun[ and roster Is assured. Just ass: for it, agreement 'and send copy to Clerk of each Municipality. Carried. Motion to adjourn by E. Mills and J. Kernahan, Carried. G. Sloan, Clerk. The• new Fargo chassis, a 3 -ton spe- cial, which was ordered through Do- herty Bros., of Blyth, is now at the Bickle-Seagrave plant in Woodstock where it is being fitted up. Delivery to Blyth is expected some time during July. Accident Saturday Night A' three -car main street accident kept late shoppers on the street until one o'clock Sunday morning. The accident involved u car driven by a Blyth man, Gerald Augustine, a Clinton district farmer, John Flynn, and a local station wagon which was owned by Donald Howes. Flynn, coming south' on plain street. is said to have hit the bumper on the Augustine car and in so doing caromed off to the west sidle of the street mid smashed into the rear of the parked Howes' station wagon, which had been so parked in front of The Standard Of- fice throughout Ilse evening. Damage to the Howes and Flynn vehicles is extensive. The Augustine car• escaped, with minor damage. - Passengers in the Fiynn car were Lloydand Lois Dale. who were both badly shaken up and Miss Dale was taken for medical attention, Town Constable William Richt in- vestigated along with Provincial Con- stable Charles Salter of Wingham. Clarification Needed On Park Situation There seems to be scale clarification needed regarding the work to bo done around our Community Park, Every year there arc repercussions about who is responsible for what a- round the park, with the management of our local ball teams looking for some help in regards to preparing the dia- mond before balls games. If for no other reason, than for iiuf future welfare of the park these prob- SICI-I)UVK ALLEY MAY BE lems should be talked over between MUD ALLEYthe interested parties, and ironed out Ski -Dunk Alley received the treat- to the satisfaction of ti11, mei:: the first of this, week as the ma- chine;:! of Scott Bros„ laid the new water mains directly down the centre of the ;Ikea It is p -h ;ps only once in a life -"ale that resit'^nts rf the Alley see s-cll activity as was apparent• in our alley on Monday and Tuesday, BIRTHS PHELAN — At Dr, NIyer's Nursing Home, Brussels, on Monday, June 22, 1053, to Mr. and Mrs. Louis Phelan, of Morris Township, the gift of a son—Joseph Louis, Two Out Of Three For Legionairres; Even Break For Legionettes, In Week -End Games LEGIONETI'ES GAiN SPLIT IN WEEK -END GAMES Blyth's softball teams got clown to work in earnest over the week -end. The Legionettes played a home and 110010 series with Clifford Swingskirts, playing Saturday night on the Blyth diamond, and back on the Clifford dia- mond Monday night, and the fans who witnessed the games gut their money's worth in both instances. Saturday night the Legionettes took the measure of the Swingskirts, 16 to 10 behind the pitching of lMax'ne I-iun- king, who had as her battery mala• her twin sister, Delphine Fans wan hadn't seen the Hunking's play before thought they were seeing double as 'he twins [vent out to warm up. Never- theless, the twins' presence had a gu'.rl steadying effect on the temn, and v11 members played steady ball. Coupled with this was the un:•tendiness of the Clifford hurler, rand it nll added, tip to a neat win for. Blyth. Going in to the last half of the eighth Inning the Leg- ionettes were trailing 9. to 8. LOOS, on the mound for Clifford, lost control, nssucd six walks, and coupled- with a couple of timely hits, it all added up to,eight big runs for Blyth. In the top of the ninth Clifforci gained two of them back, but fell dismally short 0f a threatening rally. Back in Clifford Monday night, the Swingski►ts turned the tables, and defeated the Lcg'onettes 11 to 7 before a small crowd that shivered through the late innings as a brisk cold wind suddenly swept the d(omond and took much of the desire to play out of the competitors as they peered through dust storms that swept up from the in- field, Going in to the top half of the ninth inning Blyth was trailing by the respectable score of 11 to 7. and the way the girls were pounding tine Clif- ford pitching all night the difference of. four runs didn't look unsurmount- able by any means. It wasn't a case of smoke gets in your eyes; but the dust did, and our girls went down three straight, and shivered off the diamond. I-lelen Hamilton, worked on the mound for Blyth, and pitched a good sound game Iielen could not be blam- ed for the loss, Some fielding lapses and a few bad errors was the differ- ence between winning and losing this close contest, Bernice McNall worked behind the plate most of the game, but was relieved during the last part of the game by Lenora Hamilton, a 12 - year -old diminutive lass who bids fair to become one of Blyth's future stars. More practice and the plugging of a few weak spots by the management, and Blyth will hive a real contender in this years girls softball loop. There was a good crowd out on Saturday night for the game- here, and we fel sure the crowd will grow in numbers as the season advances. 'Blyth Line-up-- Yvonne McNall, ss: Lois Augustine, ib; Betty Tait, 31); Marjorie Knox, If; Bernice McNeil, c and cf; Helen Hamilton, p; June Mc - Nall, cf; Dorothy McVittie, 2b; Betty MncDonalc14 ]f; Lenora Hamilton, c. Clifford—McPhail, 2b; Paulin, ss; Seip, rf; Binkley, cf; Kruspe, c; Snider, ss; Loos, p; Wightman, lb; Dolmas, 11. Reg. Hessclwood umpired most of the game behind the plate, but had to retire In favour of Carman MacDon- ald in the eighth inning when lie took a foul tip flush on the nose. Reg. re- covered nicely from the incident, but decided to wear a mask during future encounters, The team management, Eddie Bell, and Ray Madill, are really steamed up and rightly so, about the prospects of this year's team, , The entire team is showing marked improvement every time out, but the effort at third base and ehort stop, by Betty Tait and Yvonne McNall, are par- ticularly commendable. LEGIONAIRRES SPLIT IN WEEK- END GAMES 1VITII IiENSALL, In week -end games with Hensall, Blyth Legionairres won at home • en Thursday night aid lost at Hensall on Saturday night. On the home dimnond Thursday night, before a _good opening -game crowd, the Legionairres, behind the tight pitching of Fred Vale, put .011 a crowd -pleasing• display, as they handily took the -measure of the Hensallites, 13 to' 4. It was Vale's first home start. and after Hensall had put together three runs in the first and second in- ning, the Legionairres got down to serious business behind. Vale, stepped Into a 5-3 lead at the end of the third, added 5 more runs In the bottom• half of the fourth, and never looked back as the best Hensall could do was add another lode tally to their score in the top half of the seventh, while the Leg- ionairres wound up the last of the eighth Inning with another brace of runs, sending their total to 13. Vale left a mighty good impression with local fans as Ile whiffed 13 Hen- sall batters, and proved that lie was u strong finisher by retiring the s`dc in both ,the ,eightit mid ninth innings via the strikeout route. On the ogler side o'f the ledger the Legionairres had little trouble getting to Baird, on the Hensall mound, for solid, timely hits, another feature that picased the hone -town crowd. They also played good sound• ball in the. field. On their night's play it would seem from this corner that the. Legionairres could be a definite threat for the group championship. • They have yet, howev- er, to prove their. mettle against the airforce teams which are always com- ing up with surprises, and Aliso Craig is another giant -size hurdle in which the locals must have thiir batting eye whetted to it's peak if they hope to win against that team. Ailsa Craig have an outstanding moundsman in Ifillier, and Blyth could only get to hint for twq safe hits in their only contest. Line-ups; Blyth—Johnston, ss; Whit- more, 11); Ilcsselwood, 2b; Fairservice, cf; Watson, If; Weber, rf; Taylor, 31a; Kosteniulc, c; Vale, p. Hensall—Lindsay, rf; Ktrght, ss; Cameron, 3b; Hess, 21); Gilfillan, Ib; Campbell, c; Baird, p; Mausseau, lf; Bell, cf. A former Blyth boy, Don. Cowan, now living in Hensall, appeared in the Hensnll line-up in the late inning as 0 pinch -hitter, and taking a turn in the centre field position for the bal- ance of the game. More than one fan was pulling for Don to connect, but Freddie Vale was just as stingy with hint as he was with the other Hensall- iles. To get down to the return game, played in Hensall Saturday night, the Legionairres dropped it in 11 innings by the close score of 8 to 7. Hensall jumped into an early 5-0 lead, from which Blyth recovered to the pont of beifag tied,at the end of the regulat'on nine innings. Hensall pushed the win- ning run over in the last of the 1lth inning for a heart -breaking win so far as the Legionairres were concerned. Carman MacDonald started on the mound for Blyth, and was relieved ;.y Vale in the second inning, Vale pitch- ed nine full innings, in which the op- position- racked/ up only three runs, but the Legionairres could not push enough runs across to take the decision. LEGIONAIRRES NIP CENTRALIA 10 TO 8 BEJIIND STEADY PITCH- ING OF CARMAN MacDONALD A strictly homebrew team of Legion- airres nipped Centralia Airforce 10 to 8 in a ding-dong battle played at Com- munity Park, under the lights, on Tuesday night. Behind the steady pitching of Carman "Wimp" MacDon- ald, the hone-towners came through for their second win of the season, and give indication of better things to come. The big bats of Fairservice, Kostenuik and Hesselwood boomed for extra bases and the crowd cheered happily.. Fairservice connected for a three -run homer in the third inning to pull the Legionairres within hal- ing distance. They were trailing at the time 4 to 0. In the next inning Blyth batted all the way 'round, and Reg. Hessclwood led off waive terrific smash to centre field; but was foiled of a sure homer when the ball hit the floodlight post and bounced back into . the fielder's reach, Reg did; make third base, Eli Kostenuik followed with' an- other terrific drive over the left field- er's head for a homer, scoring Reg a- head of him. This put the honlesters ahead and they stayed there for the balance of the game. Extra base knocks were scored up in favour of Bill Web- ' er, Donny Johnston, Eddie Watson,, and Doug, Whitmore. The catch 01111.6.''.. game must be credited to Dotig, Whitmore (pardon the old man's en- thusiasm) when lie tagged a line sizzler off the bat of Dawydoski, first man •up for Centralia in the top of the ninth, Any chance the Airforce had of stag- ing a ninth inning rally was squelched right there, as the next two men went down 111 order on a fly ball to deep centre ;field which Scott Fairservice would rather eat for breakfast than cereal, and a ground ball from short to first. Tho Airforce .collected nine hits off the offerings of MacDonald, while the Legionairres hit safely 13 times. The game was close in it's entirety and sent the fans honkie mighty pleas- ed with the brand of ball that is being dished up in time League. The 14egionairres play hosts to the Clinton RCAF at the Blyth diamond on Saturday night. Blyth will be out to erase that season -opener 19-5 squelch- ing the Airforce handed them on the Clinton diamond. Be in your seat by 8:30 pm, for this thriller. BALL DATES PRIOR 1'O NEXT ISSUE June 27—Clinton RCM' at Blyth Gane/time 8:30 pan. July 2—Blyth at Centralia. Men's Games; Girl's Games: July 1—Clifford at Blyth. ; GIVE THE BOYS ENCOURAGE- MENT—NOT CRITICISM From time to time, either at iia ga e,.or on the street, you will hear 'critical remarks about errors or bad plays someone has made in a current 'game. Critics and fans should remem- ber that with few exceptions, Blyth has a young man's team—a team that needs encouragement to go on to great- er heights — not a kick in the pants when they make a bad- play, We don't mean to -leave the impression that they should be molly -coddled, and if we know the present management and coaches. and we think we do—there'll be no molly -coddling from that quay• ter, but we hold to the belief that in- experience and youth responds better to encouragement than it does to tt- warranted criticism. The sane holds true for the Legion- ettes, who, without an exception, ARE a young ball team. S'i'OIIE FiRONTS BEING IMPROVED Elliott hhsurance Apency is adding n modernistic touch to plain street by having a new office front installed, Madill's Shoe Store is niso in the process of the same operation, anti Philp's Drug Store front received a new look last week with a paint. job, ��s.��ri � .J• _ : a{� �' ,� ,�.i i»ck'i�4 $` {`AFP" � »2 TASLE Jae Ancbews. "TEAS PROVIDED says the sign of the pasty (so that its owner on many a garden gate in Bri- may save a corner for another tain; and at 4 o'clock on a sum- meal and recognize it). Bake in mer holiday afternoon the sign a sound oven till done. is hard to resist." That's the way Note 1, The filling may be an article by Ivan Baker in The cooked before adding, If prefer - Christian Science Monitor be- red. gins — and the whole article is 2. Cooked potatoes, onions, Ito interesting, and gives rise to and grated cheese make a tnsty ro many nostalgic memories of alternative . filling, the "01d Country" that I'm dust Puff Pastry Slices going to "borrow" it, without benefit of quotation marks, hut This is a quick way with puff with a bow of thanks in the pastry, using less than the usual direction of Mr. Baker. , amount of shortening. The te + recipe is for a small amount exactly calculated to fit the 10 hi the West Country there in by 12 in. baking sheet of the will be Cornish pasties, and standard British gas cooker. - likely as not, a dish of Devon- 31/2 oz, self raising flour Aire cream so rich that is 2roz, butter of margarine spreads, but never pours, and 1 teaspoon sugar with a flavor all its own. Cream 4 tablespoons water is once more available for the Pass flour .through sieve, Cut Bummer months after its war butter or margarine (with the , time banishment f r o m British back of the knife) into cubes the tea tables. size of haze) nuts and mix gently With a South Coast straw- with• flour. Put sugar in center. berry tea there will be thin Gradually add the water, lightly bread and butter, and jugs of mixing into a dough with a fork. cream to pour over large, ripe, Do not knead. Rest dough three strawberries, minutes. On a lightly floured The cups and saucers, if we board roll the dough into an °b- are fortunate, will be the old long about 10 in. by 5 in., keep - fashioned k i n d with carefully ing the corners square. Fold painted little posies of daisies, oblong into three, Give pastry a forget - me -Hots and buttercups quarter turn, 'clockwise. Repeat showing under the glaze. this roll -fold -turn o p e r a t i o n In the Midlands and the more another four times making five northerly counties of Lancashire times in all, It is then ready for and Yorkshire, high teas are baking. more substantial and take the Roll the pastry out a quarter - place of supper. Veal and ham inch thick, cut in half, place pie is a favorite. Salmon in one both halves together again on f o r m or another is popular. the baking sheet, bake 18 min - There used to be plenty of York utes, top shelf, gas mark 7 or ham, pressed beef, and cold 450° roast chicken garnished with to- When cold, sandwich wit h cu, lettuce, cress, radishes thick vanilla custard, dust icing and cucumber. cumber, sugar over top (or ice with thin Here is a selection of Borne of water icing), and cut into 6 large the "specialties" served at heli- or 12 small slices. day or "high" teas. Note 1. There are no rests be - Cornish Pasties tween the roll -fold -turn opera - Break a pound of well -season- tions. and cd shortcrust pastry dough into 2. Roll pastry I i g h t 1 y balls, roll each ball out no thick- evenly. er than a quarter inch, and trim 3. The pastry is excellent for with six-inch plate into neat a large appleu well , Roll it drained rounds, The standard filling con- • out t h i n 1 y, p silts of fresh beef or mutton, apple puree in center, fold over small cubes of potato, onion to and secure edges, bake as direct - flavor, and seasoning to taste, ed.4 • Made cream or whipped Pile the filling on one-half of cream makes good fillings for the pastry round, wet edge, fold the slices. over in half, and secure. Bros}, * * the pasties with water or with milk and water. ' Put pastry initials on a corner Pie -Pretty — Apparently popping up out of the middle of 'this iant apple pie is Carolyn El- ls, Washington State Apple Blossom Festival queen. The pie is eight feet in diameter, A Lemon Curd 2 lemons rel lb. sugar 4 oz. butter or margarine 2 eggs Put •butter or mrlrgarine in a saucepan and gently melt. Stir in, lemon juice and sugar. Cook gently, stirring, 2 or 3 minutes. Take pan off fire and let cool a little. ' Beat eggs thoroughly, gradu- ally stir in the butter -lemon - sugar mixture. Cook in a double saucepan, stirring constantly, until the mixture thickens, this takes about 3 minutes. Put in jar when cool. This is good with b r o w n bread, crackers, or as a filling for small pastry shells (lemon cheese cakes) to be baked in a moderate oven. Salmon Creams 12 oz. cooked salmon Vs pint salad cream IA pint cream %4 oz. gelatin 2 tablespoons water %. tablespoon lemon juice Pitch of salt and pepper Flake the salmon then rub smooth through a sieve, Add seasoning and. lemon juice. Dis- solve gelatin in hot water, cool a little,, and add. to ' the salad dressing, Stir sieved salmon into cream Look Me Over, Kidsl—This comment might well be the remork of wedding page boy Timothy Dawson, 6, of London, England. Seen above, he gets a last-minute checkup before the ceremony while his three small friends look on admiringly. ..Plain Horse senses. by BOB ELLIS Now that the federal elections are called Ontario farmers will do well to head the advice of The Rural Co-operator, official organ of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, whose editor thinks that it is important to find out the ideas and plans for ag- riculture held by the different parties and candidates. This columnist would go one step farther and reverse the pfol cedure, by informing the pa and candidates of the wishes, of the farmers and have them com- mit themselves on all questions of importance. Now is the time to tell the story of the plight of Canadian agriculture and submit construc- tive ideas and suggestions to those who want to believe that -- if elected - they will go to Ottawa to represent the interests of the common people of Ontario, Consider Group Interest Keeping in mind the revela- tions made by Blair Fraser,in his article "Our Illegal Elections" in MacLean's Magazine, in which he declared that the two old par- ' ties were breaking the law of Hot Mutton—Raising radioactive sheep is one way of determin- ing effects of radiation on living things. These pure-bred Suf- folk sheep are part of a herd of 200 at the Hanford Pldltonium plant. Fed varying amounts of radioactive iodine, the animals will tell scientists what the results might be if radioactive mate- rials were suddenly released in great amounts into the atmos- phere. add the salad dressing, stir well, Turn the mixture into .4 to 6 small china containers. Chill well, serve when set, garnished with parsley and cucumber. ^ Lentil Sausage Rolls Simmer 2 oz. washed red len- tils in water to cover for 20 min- utes, when the water will be absorbed, Add r/z cup soft bread - crumbs, 1 grated clove garlic, / teaspoon salt, pinch grated nut- meg, 1 oz, grated cheese, Mix well. Roll into 12 little sticks and put one on each of 12 squares of pastry dough measur- ing about 4 in. by 4 in., wet edges and seal. Brush with beat- en egg. Bake in oven till brown. M * * Potted Meat Finely mince, then pound very smooth, 12 oz, cooked meat, add 1 oz. butter, salt to taste, a pinch each of ground mace, nutmeg, the country by the way they are running their campaigns, it Is of the utmost importance thnt the farmers scrutinize very carefully every word that will be said be- tween now and August 10th, Far too long have Ontario fnrmers looked at elections as a game in which .they have been taking sides according to fam- ily tradition and were plugging for the team their forefathers had plugged for, without taking into consideration the interests of their own occupational group. After the damage was done they expected their leaders cap in hand to go to the government of the day and ask for hand-outs. The result of this unsystematic system is that we have lost our overseas markets, got edible oil imitation of dairy products, that surpluses are aecumulating and farm prices are slipping. Farmers, Spcalt Up! 1f the farmers of Ontario see fit to vote for the men whose election campaigns are financed by the very same elevators, packers, canners and implement manufacturers whom they blame for the poor shape agriculture is in at present, they should at least make sure that not again they will be sold all ,the way down the river. The suggestion of The Rural Co-operator is sound, It is up to the farm organizations in the counties and townships to give their members the opportunity to hear all candidates in their respective ridings at the same time from the same platform, This is a sound and sensible way for every individual farmer to consider the ideas of all candi- dates and their parties, make up his own mind and vote Intelli- gently. But not only should they come to listen; they should also be heard, For many years now far- mers have been pleading with their governments for certain .measures to be taken. They al - days did so after elections. Would it notbe more sensible to do so • before elections? In every busi- • Hess the bargaining is done be - They Send Souls To Heaven -- By Rocket ! "Anywhere for a change 1" - poor sinner Is still coffering in Down through the years these purgntory and further payment& been tossed out by frustrated are exacted by the p' ist for words, vehemently at, times, have chanting prayers. The rockets men. The utter the hnve beend seldom e ld �nnd straight,observes Karl content do nothing. Others have been The headfrtiii author In -- more determined to pack up traps • diens provided mattheal ho dis- and set off. A new horizon, a new interesting outlook and -r who knows? -- proves theen. beads) elief that ane znbl as" a lucky break, hair are often brought out of When Karl l keldrnd, a Dane, said it, he meant it. 1 -le was the jungle, and attributes this e roma happy enough with his Chinese residents, h The ncingsof foreign wife, Chiyun, and small daughter, re not Mei-mei, in their straw -thatched the least bit interested ee write tbhe ''The Garden of Eden," heads of foreigners, es, set in picturesque Guatemala. blond or even red. White men's The cloud in Karl's heaven was headheadshare sot esteemed ink y that the his osher' if the souls of the white men are hey t Thea po�•d;l he had sent for con- as foolish as their Uehnviour sideration brought a polite re- jection slip: "The book is well they.. must be worthless. written , .. everybody has praised ' "No Such Animal" it , , , but the poor book Of another tribe, the Colorado market...." Karl wasn't used to Indian, Karl Eskelund states that, rejections. It hurt. Travel was when seen for the first time, ere one the only cure for his annoyance feels like exclaiming: and South America was decided ain't no such animal!" on, For safety's sake little Mei- This Indian paints his body mei was left behind in the care of with a strong red colour, His Karl's father, hair he plasters with clay and Dropping in at .Panama, the vivid red plant juices. His naked visitors were impressed by the torso and arms are ornamented way the Americans had trans- with dark horizontal strips. formed their tropical strip of Narrower strips adorn his face; territory, In this once -dreaded on his' wrists are broad silver pest -hole there wasn't a mosqui- bracelets. To complete the col - to to be seen. our scheme his legs, from the Like an eagle's -nest, Machu knees down, are dyed coal -black, lies atop a great, steep mountain, The two travellers visited writes Karl Eskelund in his ab- Chincha, the lnrgest of the string sorbing and admirably written , of rocky islands along the Peru - book, "Head -Hunting in Ecua- dor." viae coast. Four million Nab.; book, Around the foot of the ered inhabitants occupy the is - mountain a river foams in a laP ce according to the local corn - wide semi -circle, As the travel- ler stands on the bank of the mandant's census (and although the island was not visible from itissr justt'ubainba and looks up, the mainland, its guano fertili- thet possible to distinguish zee could 'be smelt when the outer wall of the dead city. wind blew from the west!) Grey, heavy clouds which come floating endlessly from the Ama- Counting the 13irrlsl zon valley give the illusion that The bird opouiatiop figure, the whole mountain is toppling however, must, be regarded with, down. a certain amount of scepticism, in, tine Dead City for the census taker's method of On the journey up to the dead counting was surprisingly simple.. city the author and Chi -yup were First, he estimated how ninny rewarded with a scene of breath- square yards the inhabitants oc- taking beauty, They beheld a cupied, mutiplied the figure by city which seemed to be part of five, and the result of his cnlcu- the very, mountain itself; _they lations was the "official" census! couldn't tell where the walls ober dealinge with ler lgrots �ing popu!wn way at ceased and the grey bu lion' on this island, and keeping hun. Among ther buildings lay it within limits. Chincha'A birder hundreds of terraces, as regu- lar as stairways, And above all, subsists on anchovies, and at even 'above the king's palace, five -yearly intervals the tem - towered the ancient Temple of perature, of the waters surround - the Sun, ing the island rises. The nnchov- Visiting the city of Arequipa, les swim away in search of cold - the travellers witnessed the busy er waters; and Chincha is snack - scene which takes place an- en with famine, nually at the church in the main Within a few months its popu- square on All Saints Day, when lation, which had grown to pos- religious leaders experience sibly 'six or seven million, is re - their busiest time of the year.eluded to two or three million. From early morning people It's a tough procedure, records stream to the gravelyards. Here, Eskelund, but survivors can corn - the earthly remains of the rich fort themselves with the thought rest in splendid marble vaults. that next year the water will The doors are opened and the become cool again and the an - bones carefully, cleaned with al- chovies will return, cohol or eau -de -Cologne. The SOME TYPES YOU SEEpoor lie buried another partTHROUGH A WINDSHIELD where there are no marrblele vaults, only modest little heaps -• of stones. As a mark of respect mourners whitewash the stones, The priest rushes about with a cross in one hand and a box of matches ill the other. lid stops at each grave and after receiving a cash payment lights a 'rocket. Up it shoots into the air. If it goes straight the soul of the de-. ceased is already in Heaven. If ., the rocket goes sideways the pepper, and ground cloves. Mix fore possession is given. And Government is the most impor- tant business of the country. Facts Known—Action Needed What we want is clear-cut plans and commitments, not vague promises to study our problems and to develop methods of remedy in a distant future. Farmers know what they need and have asked for it time and again, Now is the' time to get it. We want legislation giving us the power to enter inter-provin- Sift flour, rub in butter, stir in dial ancte export trade through sugar, add beaten egg, stir in our own marketing boards. • lemon rind, add milk to forma We want our over -seas mar - soft but workable slough. Be- kets back to get rid of our sur- tween lightly -floured hands roll • pluses which are being used to the dough into a dozen small depress home prices, balls and place on a greased We want the Canadian Wheat baking tin. Board to handle all grains. With a one -inch diameter box Wei want feed grain storage ehpress a little hollowwithrasp- into facilities established by the gov- ah ball, then fill with ernment at the Eastern Lake - berry jam. Bake 16 minutes or heads. until done, top shelf, gas mark We need relief of our school 5 or 3110°, well, press into small pots, cover with melted butter. For sand- wiches, aril as a garnish for sal- ads. • liaspberry Buns ti oz- self-raising flour 21/4 oz. butter 3 oz. sugar 1 egg 3 or 4 tablespoons milk Grated rind of iii lemon Raspberry jam taxes by federal aid. Potato Fish Cakes Last, but not least we need and Mix 2 cups flaked cooked fish have askedd for a National 'Health (two kinds of preference) with Insurance Plan, 2 cups mashed potato, 1 table- ThNo more • study is necessary, The facts are known. What is spoon finely chopped onion, 1 needed is ACTION, tablespoon d r y breadcrumbs, and salt and pepper to taste. Shape into rissoles, coat in fine. breadcrumbs, fry in hot fat on' both sides. Eat hot or cold with salad. (Note. A beaten egg may be added to the mixture, in which case add a little more dry- breadcrumb or it may be too soft to shape conveniently.) This column welcomes sug- gestions, wise or foolish, and all criticism, whether constructive or destructive and will try to answer any question, Address your letters to Bob Ellis, Box 1, 123 '- 111th Street, New Toronto, Ont. Smart Luggage—Only winner in the luggage field of This year's Design Award of Merit, sponsored .by the National Industrial Design Committee recently in Ottawa, this lightweight, women's luggage is covered • in vinyl plastic material simulating smooth rawhide leathd.,: and comes in a natural shade as well as travel - wise colours. Dizzy Liked Peacocks & Fancy Waistcoats Like so many people who are not wholly indigenous, Disraeli was founder of England and the English way of life than were the natives of the island. I-fis letters display a keen apprect- • tion of the scenery and the great country -houses, though the av- erage Englishman may have felt that his estimates were expressed too ornately, "Good-bye, my dear Lord," he once said after a visit to Lord Shaftesbury, "you have given me the privilege of seeing one of the most impressive of all .spectacles: a great English noble- man living in patriarchal state in his own hereditary halls," .. . Disraeli's home life was almost restricted to Hughenden, .. . One Asiatic touch was provided by the peacocks on the terrace. "My dear lady, you cannot have terraces without peacocks," said Dizzy to a guest; and certainly he could not. Perhaps the only other hint of the East came from the host himself, whose clothes were not those of a typical Brit- ish squire, The fancy waistcoats that had been abandoned in Lon- don reappeared in the country, looking even more remarkable by 'contrast with a black velve- teen jacket and a Tyrolese hat. A rumor reached his friend Beresford in December, 1850 that he was growing a fierce pair of moustaches. "Now this is very sad," wrote Beresford to Stanley, "for he is not the person' who ought to attrack attention by outre dress and appearance, but by his talents. I do trust that- • this style is only assumed while he is rusticating...." Apparently it was. • In spite of his, oddities, or be- cause of them, his tenants and workmen liked him, and he at- tended to their wants. He en- joyed talking to ' them, finding their conversation racy, their manners restful and agreeable. He particularly liked the society of woodmen, whose knowledge, speech, quick observation and common sense appealed strongly to him, , . . "Nature whispers to them many of her secrets," he noted, "A forest is like an ocean, monotonous only to the Ignorant, It is a life of ceaseless va- riety," .. . He loved his trees and was vonstantly planting new ones, es- pecially cedars, firs and pines: I have a passion for books and trees, I like to look at them, When I, come down to Hughen- den I pass the first week in sauntering about my park and INN Top Dog -"Master Sgt. Angel Face" steps outside his quarters to take a look around, The "ser- geant" was acquired by trainee members of "Dog" Company as a mascot and will become a member `of the company. CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1. Mournful I. Promontories S. Bun between 12. Uports nity 13, island In the nnhnnuts 14. Female ruff 10, Devoured 10 "tlsrepresen- tntions 18. 'rube used for measuring Infolds 20. Vagabond 21. Regret 22. Make slower 20, Croup of ],walls 28, Rllnlle 29. Front of the foot 30. Interweave 31. Young man 32, Greek letter 33, Cuckoo 34, Bang down 85. Upright part 3) of n stair 38, Required 38, Steep flax 30, Groove 40, Relies 44, Work out careful'¢ 47, Exist 48, Rodent 49, Water wheel 00.Old curd game 51, Forever 02. Rob 31, FemaleRheep DOWN 1, Wayhl,i necebuitV 2. Ono opiposed 8. Far down 4. Desert plan' 0. D11111111s 11 0, Pallid 7. Old L'rertch • Here Is a Double -Duffy Blanket and. Spread BY EDNA MILES C(1 ninny things are happening (hese days to simplify ") the bed -making task that keeping up With them re- quires real attention to the subject al hand. Fitted sheets, loft and bottom; lightweight blankcls in gay plaid and' pastels for summer, and fitted blankets are some of the many bonuses for the homemaker. Newest of these is a bed -covering bedspread developed by a firm of famous blanket makers. It's a handsome bedspread on one side and a fledcy, brush -nap blanket on the other. This eliminates the need for both a blanket and spread. This cuts down the entire bed -matting operation too, and coupled with fitted sheets, practically reduces the whole matter to a flip of the wrist, It keeps the bedrooms looking neat and pares expenses too. - Furthermore, you can choose this blanket -spread .in any ono of contrasting decorator colors and in twin or double sizes, You can treat it to a hand -laundering or pop it into your machine since it's guaranteed against shrinkage'and is color fast. Sides of this blanket -spread are handsomely fringed, The top, and foot have luxurious eighinch binding which make it a pleasure to own, This housewife is making up a bed with a new combination-* blanket -bedspread, woven as a single fabric. Site is able • to cut down on the bed -making operation and shave expenses. Bian!;rt-spread comes In a choice of contrasting decorator colors, .examining all the trees, and then I saunter in the library to Theol- ogy, the Classics, and. History," He" had a favorite beech walk at the bottom of his garden, and • what he called a German Forest up the hill behind the house, through which paths were cut and rustic bences placed where -_ lie could enjoy the views. There were trees wherever lie looked, and the woods of Wycombe Ab- bey could be seen from his ter- race. -From "Dizzy: The Life & Personality of Benjamin Disraeli, Earl of. Beaconsfield," by Hes- keth Pearson. Slave -Trade 'Is Still Boomin? A young girl, scarcely in her teens, steps fearfully o11 to the auction block. While she stands motionless, only her eyes betray- ing her fear and apprehension, the prospective buyers -shrewd, dusky -complexioned, hawk-eyed men -mill around her. Most of these buyers are pur- chasing the dusky damsels (sel- dom more than thirteen or four- teen years of age) for resale, at a handsome profit, to distant clients, It is all reminiscent of a savage, sordid scene from the,Middle Ages, before the tawdry trafiic in human bodies was condemned and outlawed by the civilized world. Yet It still takes place to -day. When the auctions are over the carefully guarded human cargo is smuggled north to the many rich markets on the southern shores ot the Mediterranean and the Le- vant. If the market in these areas happens to be at a low ebb at the time, then they may be sold as servants in middle-class homes. Missionaries' Difficult Task The latter method Is becoming an increasingly common practice in some quarters. Inflation is not u condition peculiar to Occidental countries. The rising cost of liv- ing has hit many previously wealthy men in the areas which provide the best market for this terrible traffic, Consequently many can no longer afford the considerable expense -invoived in the maintenance of a harem with a bevy of lovely but idle girls. So a houseful of pretty servants is often the highly satisfactory an- swer. This bartering of young natives is not confined to the more ob- scure and primitive areas of the country. Some time ago a scandal blew up in Brazzaville, the capital of' French- Equatorial Africa, on account of the open buying and selling of human merchandise, while in Tanganyika the brazen auctioning of young natives has become so widespread that mis- -3, Gloomy O. Higher .. Anitnals 10. Shelter 11, Affirmative 17, Bard -shelled fruit 19. (Melte 22, Beam of light 23. Repetition 24, Expensive 20. Tribe 20. Narrow road 27. Turn Into coin steel 3 13 16 19� 30 44 49 40 51 N 39 20. Busy galt 31, Naughty 32, Morsel 34. Surgical th readts 30, Revoke 37. Cali 38. Nervo notwolrke 40. Defy 41. Short sit•epn 42,'rlo game 48, Powdered 44. Age 40, Ballad 14 Deenmpnse 5 G 7 5 '...:.:::$1:•::'9 ••;.•:: 14 u : 20 22 a': 3f 31 A'40 10 II 29 3L ,33 41 4L, 43 Aaigwer Elsewhere on This Page Villainy on Hand -These hands, belorfging to Hubert Hunt, far. mer, hold a mess of the ugly worms that are currently ruining crops and grazing lands in Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, West Vir- ginia,, Maryland and New York. The destroyer is shown in the drawing below. It gets its name from its habit of "marching" in great numbers in search of food. After its destructive role is finished, it retires into a cocoon, later to emerge as a moth. sionaries recently took steps in an attempt to curb the scandal, A United Press- report some time ago said: "Missionaries have begun a slow but steady battle in the jungles of Central Africa against the selling of young girls into slavery and harems," The (Catholic) News Agency, Fides, reported in a despatch from Kitega that missionaries have re- established a mission on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, aban- doned in 1881 when two priests and a helper were massacred by natives, The report said: "It is the hope of the missionaries that their presence , will hasten the day when the scandalous practice of selling young Barundis, a prac- tice that still exists on a large scale, will- conte to• an end." But is is- highly probable that it will ,be many years before this disgraceful and degrading trade in human flesh is finally and com- pletely eradicted. Age-old customs die hard in what still is, in many ways, the dark continent. TIIFAM FONT Jok*ea • Hog raising records are due for a tumble, it is claimed down, Missouri way, where hogs occu- py a far more prominent place in the general farming economy, than they do here in Ontario. • • + For they're trimming one to two months off the market age of hogs at the University of Mis- souri, And in the process, a lot of old beliefs on hog raising are being heaved overboard. • a: * One crossbred pig (inbred Po- land China X inbred Landrace) in the Missouri tests has pushed the scales to 201' pounds at four months, Others of the same lot, -,fled under the supervision of Dr. • John Lesley, weren't far behind -two hit 193 pounds in the same period, Most hog .raisers do well to .make that much pork in six months, + +' 4' Lasley used no magic. --nothing but• simple breeding, feeding, and management methods, with antibiotics and vitamin B-12 added to the rations. He made sure that the 'pigs were never hungry. • * Tile tests exploded two theor- ies: (1) That fast -gaining pigs are always fatties; and (2) that antibiotics drag down carcass quality. That 201 -pound porker, for instance, graded No. 1, and had only 11 inches of backfat! + Lasley believes in feeding pigs before they are born. The mother sows got corn with pro- tein supplement and minerals, Ili the winter a stabilized Vita- min A and D mixture was ad- ded. While they were nursing the sows got a bonus of five )ng, aureomycin per pound of feed. • • + Shortly after farrowing, the baby pigs started getting aureo- mycin, mixed with clean sod, (The sod prevents anemia while the pigs are on concrete.) * * • a: + • In the creep feeder on pasture, the pigs had free choice of roll- • ed oats, shelled yellow corn, and a protein supplement made up of dry skim milk, fish meal, soy- bean oil meal, aureomycin, Vita- min 13-12, minerals and cod liver oil, * •. , After weaning at 50 days, pigs went on this ration( self -fed on a concrete floor: Ground yellow corn .... 1435 lbs. Tankage (60% protein) , 200 lbs. Soybean meal (44% , protein) 300 lbs. Wheat shorts or middlings 100 lbs. Minerals (equal parts limestone, steamed bone -meal, and salt) 10 lbs. Antibiotic supplement ., .10 lbs. 13 -Vitamin supplement 5 lbs. • • The whole lot put on 100 pounds of gain for every 330 pounds of feed, Good hog produ- cers usually use -400 pounds of feed for that much gain. + • • Lasley steamed the farrowing pens before putting sows into them, washed the sows' udders before farrowing, The pigs got a shot of bacterin at one, two, and three weeks to ward off disease. »•• Not ]Nally new ideas here, but it shows what we can do when we put to work all of the things that we really know, - What G es On In The Milky Way The Milky Way, one of the most striking sights in the hea- vens on a clear night, is in for a very thorough examination by astronomers during the next few months. A giant telescope has been erected near Bloemfontein, in South Africa, where conditions are ideal for studying this stu- pendous galaxy of stars. Observations and mathematic- al calculations are to be made over a period of years, and it Is hoped that many of the mysteries of starland will be solved. More than any other .celestial object, the Milky Way has affect- ed Man 'with a sense of mystery and unknown destiny. To the American Indians it was the "path of souls," In ancient myth- ology it was the highway of the gods to Olympus. Its very name commemorates an ancient legged that Juno, • when suckling 'Mercury, scatter- ed Milk across the skies, 131it this feeling of deep asso- • elation with the, stars, and the simple affection for. them which we find In Chaucer and other medieval poets, have been de- stroyed for us by astronomers who have measured their vast distances. These astronomers tell us that there are sone stars in the Milky Way whose light takes not hun- dreds, nor thousands ,of years to reach us, but hundreds of thou- sands. Twelve years ago a new type of star cloud was discovered in the Milky Way, consisting of an immense "crowd" of stars, 5,000 of which have been counted so far. The light from this star cloud takes 300,000 years to reach us, which means it is 18,000,000 billion miles away. NO CROWDING Gazing at the Milky Way o11 a clear night, about one million stars are visible to the naked eye. A 100 -inch telescope, how- ever, will reveal about 1,500 mil- lion, and there are many more, too numberless and too remote for any instrument to count. One night think this would cause overcrowding. But as one astronomer has remarked: "Set three wasps flying over Europe, and its skies would be more crowded with wasps than the Milky Way is with stars!" LOST IN SPACE • Sir James Jeans describes the Milky Way as the rinv of a great central hub, Our sun is one of the lesser stars of this cartwheel system or galaxy, and our proud earth is comparable to a speck of pollen floating in the Pacific Ocean, Yet in the Universe there are at least 100,000,000 stellar cartwheels similar to the Milky Way. Another brilliant star -gazer, Dr. Subrahnlanyan Chandraseli- har, predicts that the Milky Way will not always hold together in its vast cartwheel across the heavens. The cartwheel, he says. will eventually stop rotating, and the stars will "jump their tracks,' becoming wanderers lost in space, This calamity will not oc- cur, however, till about the year 9,997,000,000,000! Best times for seeing the Milky 'Way are in the evenings in autumn or winter, when the "cartwheel" effect can be ob- served, It Is then high in the heavens, and suffers • less from the interference of our atmo- sphere, Its appearance has been liken- ed to that of an old, gnarled tree - trunk, but even with a small telescope the detail becomes clear. At one point it may consist of thousands of separate start. scat- tered irregularly upon n back- grund of darkness; at another ot IIDAY SCllOOE LESSON fill Rev. R Barclay Warrar' B.A. B.D. Paul's Joy in Christ Philippians 1:13-27a. Memory Selection: The peacs of God, which passetll all under, standing, shall keep your hearti and minds through Christ Jesus Philippians 4:7 Paul's experience in the prison of Philippi Is one of the high- lights of Paul's second missionary journey. He and his compan- ion, Silas' had cast the evil spirit out of a so-called fortune-teller, The young woman's masters suc- ceeded in rousing the rabble against these good men and se- cured their imprisonent,• But at midnight Paul and Silas prayed, and sang praise unto God. Fol- lowing an earthquake the jailer was converted. (Acts 10). Now Paul is writing this Philippian church from the prison in Rome. He still has the spirit of joy, In fact the keyword of the letter is, "Rejoice." The spirit of triumph in spite Of grevious circumstances still persists in the world. Two years ago Bob Pierce went to speak in a church in South Korea at 0 a.m. It was below zero. The un- heated building was crowded with these suffering people seat- ed on the floor. Bob read the chapter which contains today's lesson. "I would ye should un- derstand, brethren, that the things which happened unto me have fallen obit rather unto` the furtherance of the gospel. -In nothing terrified by your adver- saries: which is to them an evi- dent token of perdition, but to you of salvation, and that of God." When he finished, the native pastor further emphasiz- ed upon the people, the lesson of joy in spite of suffering. Then. they rose and sang lustily: "I'must tell Jesus all of my trials; I cannot bear these burdens alone; 1 , In niy distress he kindly will - help me, He ever loves and cares for his own. I mutt tt 1J . gsus all of my troubbles, j He is a kind, compassionate friend; If I but ask him, he will deliver, Make of my troubles quickly an end." . Yes, God can still keep us re- joicing, in spite of trouble. Me For a Mig-Promising a date to the first MIG pilot who de- livers one of the Russian -built jets to United Nations' forces in Korea, the offer of pretty Kath- leen Hughes, Hollywoodite, will probably acid more incentive than $100,000. The prize money was promised by American authorities hoping to obtain ono of the planes for research pur- poses. Kathleen's offer depends on approval of General Mark Clark. star clusters following one tin -- other in a long procession; at an- other, the stars seem to collect in small soft clouds, like drittine foam. '!'hese dayn if a pian makek a better salary his relatives Will beat a path to his door. Upsidedown to Prevent P,eek;r.i; .9 4119 IVVd d1,19 -L V saN9d3,a �V'3,1 Vt'3'0 iii god., atV 8 9 A0 aav l tA3 S IN n7 3 "al 0 V h©d it S 3 s 3 A V J.1r'ar ,.G a9ap3N VS x NV £!'9JV1 SSV' tar V .1.9d lid 0 3 LV ncrs PAGE 4 11111111111111111t. I EAST WAWANOST-1 A good time was had on Friday night when the section gathered at the school and enjoyed a weiner roast, Mr. R. C. McGowan and Mrs. Charter visited friends at Lucknow on Sunday. The teacher end pupils enjoyed a bus trip to Toronto on 'Tuesday, WALTON A large crowd' attended a reception held in honor of Mr, and ]Vias. Wilfred Shortrced, newlyweds, The evening was spent in danchig to music by Wil - bee's orchestra, During the lunch per- iod, Mr, and Mrs. Shortrced were cal- led to the platform; an address was react by Gerald Watson, and a parse of money presented by Harvey M:Clure. They were also presented with an end table by Robert McICercher, president of Huron County Federation of Agri- culture, ' LONDESBORO THE STANDARD Weclnesdfy, Jude 24, 1958 � ...... E - _.. _—_ - week -end with Mrs, Lillie Wcbs!er and Jack, Mr. and Mrs. Scoffield, Detroit, Mrs, Mrs, Lillie Wik of Stratford agent Case, Seaforth, were visitors with 111r. the week -end With Mr. and Mrs. Fred and Mrs. Bert Allen, on Sunday. Pres). Mr. and Mrs. Ba'gment rip 1 l'am'ly, Ingersoll, Mr, and Mrs. Cliff Cooper, Clinton, were with Mr, and Mrs, T, Fah'serviee, Dr, Bear Lyon, Lnnd'on, w 's a caller oh his gra:dmothe•, Mrs. Wm, Lycn, Satin day, and also attended the Lyon and Lear p'ct:ie, Mrs, Margaret Manning, Mr, mid Mrs, Frank Tamblyn, tcok n four-dny trip to Alma, M'ebigan, where they visited their cous'ns, Mr. curd Mrs. Mark Spinney, and Mrs. Mary. A, Pat- ers, of Clio, Mich. On Sundry next, June 28;h, Rev. M. Candler, minister of the Landcs'ooro United Church and also Burns and Cons'nnee, will preach h's farewell sermon ns he is moving to Chatham to his new charge next week. Rev, Gan- dier.has made many friends dur'nq his pasierrte here and will be grcat'y • Store. 20 new chaste:field and duel - Mr, Howard Shobbrook and his sis- ter. Mrs, Laura Sundercock, spent Sun- day at Niagara Falls, Mr. Michael Lumsden, of Toronto, is holidaying at the home of Thomas Fairse•vice, Mr, and Mrs. Robert Youngblut and Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Wells and Douglas, were at Goderich on Stunt y. , Mr. and I'lrs. John Nott attended the Lyon and Lear Re -Union on Saturdny, They spent the Wghl at the hon of their daughter, Mr, and Mrs; Frank Roberton, on Sunday they visited with their daughter and family, I%1r, unit Mrs. E. Stevens, Walton,. NIr. rind Mrs. J. Cooper and James, were visitors with the Beacom's on Sunday, Mrs. Frank McGregor spent the Female HeIp Wanted Clerk -Typist for County Health Unit, Clinton. Interesting work. Shorthand desirable, but not es- senial. Apply in writing to A. H. Erskine, Court House, Goderich, 36-1, 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 CARL) 01' THANKS We wish to thunk all those who help- ed in any way to clean .up the damage after the :dorm, Spacial thanks to the County Engineer, the Reeve, Mr. T y- lor, the Prov;racial G.;vernment bull- dozers, and the carload that came from Newton. '30-1p. —tial and Margaret Caldwell, CARD OF THANKS Iioward C.mpbal, wife and family, wish to thunk all who helped to c e n up the debris and zebu Id the barn since the stoma on May 25th. May God bless everyone, 36.1 p. CARD 01'' 'THiANKS� I wish to express my s'nc'ere thnnks to the men of Ilutlell and Co borne Township, and nay neighbours and friends, who helped repair my b.n'n and drive shed, Thanks again. 30.1, William Walden BARGAINS await you al the Midis -lay Furn la'e missed. The best wishes of all go with him to his new charge at Chathrnh, On Friday evening, July 3rd, the in- duction of Rev, J, T. White, the new minister, will take place In Londesboro United Church, after which a social hour will be spent together. The W A. will serve hunch. Rev. J. •T. White, will be in the pulpit on' Sunday, Jul = 5th at 10 a.m. The W.M.S. mid theW.A. met to• gether on Thursday, June 18th, in. the - school room of the church, Mrs, F. Tamblyn was in the chnir for the W • M S. In the absence of the secretary , Mrs. N. Alexander octad as sec-etary 011(1 read the minutes and called the roll. A letter was read from the sh'p ping centre at Toron!o stating the Fafe a'rtvnl of the..W,M.S. bale which was sent recently. The treasurer's report was given by Mrs, Watson. It was de- cided to entertain the juniors , s:me time in July and n committee' was named as follows: Mrs. E. Wcod, Mrs. N. Alexander, Mrs, W. Howatt, Mrs, d' Shacidlck, to make arrangements for same. A letter was also, read from Mrs, Mary Grierson, Toronto, suggest- ing the donation of feeding b'bs and diapers for babies. The bringing in of thirst nrt!cler for the next roll 0011, An Invitation .was given from the M'ssion Circle to meet with them for their next meeting July 13th to be held at Mrs, Chas, Merrill's. ' Group No. 2 then took charge wllh Mrs, Fairscrvice as lead- er. Hymn 71 was sung, Mrs, Fair - service rend the Scripture. The Study Book was taken by Mrs, Watton. Mrs, Townsend and Mrs, Fairscrvice. Hymn 027 was sung and meeting closed with prayer•, after which the W.A. served lunch, • y A , ,,t+r.-.-....tar •-•-•-•••• rrr+r+r-•-••••rater• • • i r* r•-rr•••r•-rrrt+� STEWART JOHNSTON MASSEY-HARRIS SALES & SERVICE BLYTH, ONT. COME IN AND SEE THE NEW N0.33 MASSEY-HARRIS TRACTOR NOW ON DISPLAY. • i .♦44444444444444444444444 444444444444 444444 +44 4- 4 4 11. I . II •.111.111 Il11,11 II 1 1 ni. Clinton Monument ' Shop Open Every Friday and by Appointment Representative: T. Clinton - Phones : 103 J. J. Zapfe, Phone 103, Clinton, PRYDE .and SON - Exeter -- Seaforth 41 363J •••••••••••••••••IIY••IJIIvI, rl..•MIII+I.w FULL COURSE MEALS AT ALL HOURS. Excellent Service Satisfaction Guaranterd, HURON GRILL BLYTH - ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. 1.I KEEP COOL By Wearing SUMMER COTTONS WOMEN'S AND MISSES SUN DRESSES, • Many Styles To Choose From. LARGE ASSORTMENT OF COTTON DRESSES, All Sizes and Styles at $2.98 up COTTON SKIRTS at $1,98 up BLOUSES, in Shantung, Criskay, Cotton Plaid and Broadcloth, SHORTS FOR WOMEN, MISSES & CHILDREN. LEADING STYLES IN SWIM SUITS FOR ALL THE FAMILY. GIRLS DRESSES, IN •CItISKAY, SIZES 3 TO 11. Men's Cotton (Seersucker) Sport SHirts. MEN'S COTTON T SHIRTS BOY'S COTTON T SHIRTS. GIRLSSLACKS, JEANS & PEDDLE PUSHERS. THE ARCADE STORE STORES IN BLYTH AND BRUSSELS. • i • The Londesboro W, M, S, and W. A. held a joint meeting in the Sunday School room of the church on Thurs- day, June 18, The W, A, president, Mrs. B. Shobbrook opened the meeting with the Call to Worship. A hymn w:s sung and Mr.,. R, Fairscrvice read the Scripture and Mrs. Shobbrook led in prayer. The minutes of last mec t' ng 'port suites; 18 beautiful new bedroom suites; Frig'daire refrigerators and ranges; chrome Ifurni1u•e, Go_froy' Schuett, Mildmay.. Free delivery. 311.2. WESITIELD 9 Mr. and Mrs, Ray Hamra and Ramona of Belgrave visited on, Sunday with Mr, .'ind Mrs. Bert 'rcylor, Messrs. Arnold Cook and Graeme McDowell and Jim Buchnnnn visited on Sunday with Mr, A, E. Cook of Lon- don. Mr, and Mrs, D. G, Brown of Com - her visited the first of the week with Frank C mpbell mid Miss W,nii'r:d. Mr, and Mr.. Earl Fink and dtugh- ter, and Miss Ada Flook of Chatham, -visited' on Saturday with Mr. end Mrs, Douglas Campbell and other friend;, Mr, and Mrs, Jasper. McBrlen of Goderich spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Snell. Mr, Ilarold Bosman of Toronto spent the week -end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Maurice Bosman. Mrs, Alva McDowell, Mrs. Harvey McDowell ‘1sited on Thursday with Mrs. Bert Vodden of Clinton. Misses Evelyn and Mildred Cook of Belgrave, Miss Violet Cook ,of G:da- rich, spent Sunday with Mrs/ . Fred Cook. Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Spiegelberg and family were Kincardine visitors on Sunday, ' 4. Mr. and Mrs. Elwin Taylor, Mr. Ed, Taylor of Brussels, visaed. on Sundry with Mr, and Mrs. Maurice Bosman; Mr. mid Mrs. Chas. Smith and fam- Ily, Mrs. J. L. McDowell, Barbara Smith, attended the Snell re -union held of the Londesboro Commun'ty Hall on Saturday afternoon. A prograh1 con- sisting of sports, speeches, 'etc., and remeniscing. Between 140 and 150 sat dawn to a picnic supper. Guests at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Earl Wighiman on Sund;y were Mr. Pha•is Mathers and Carolyn, Mrs, 1-I. Mathers, Mies Hatie Gallagher, of Mrs. were rend and adopted. Cards of ap- andWesley Stadc- preelation were read, from Mrs. G Luclahow, Mr. house, Miss Eva of Bruceeld, Mrs. Wright, -Mr. and Mrs. D. Ewan, Mrs, H. Stan Neale and Patsy of Glencoe and flunking, and Mrs, R, Fairservico. The Mrs.aIvan Wightmmt of the 7th conees- trensurcr's report was g'.ven. A mo- Sion of East Wawanosh. tion was pissed to join the W. A. of Mr, and Mrs. Normnn Rodger of To - also Huron Presbyterial, also 10 ass'st ronto, Mr. and Mrs, Lesl'e Rodger end with n share of the finances for the parsonage ,fund. A committee teas named to plan a social evening follow- ing the Induction of the new minister, Joint meetings will be held during the summer, Mrs. D. Sprung gave a read- ing and Mrs. F. Tamblyn took charge over the W.M.S. meeting. Lunch was served by .the hostesses. The meeting of the Londesboro Wa- men's Institute will be held on July 2nd at the home of Mrs..Lloyd Pipe, The program is In charge of Mrs, Glenn Carter and M:ss Pztsy Peck'tt. Thu roll call to he answered 'by handing in n pot. holder do be sent to1hc at Toronto. The motto to be g'veo by Mrs, Clare Vincent. Please bring in your penny round -up hags. Tile lunch commit'ee is Mrs. Edwin Wood, Mrs, Jack Armstrong and Mrs. Harry Dur- nirl, Everyone bring a picnic lunch, Want to get TOP PROFITS? Here's the way to make those EXTRA DOLLARS! Good care – consistent culling – PLUS Blatchford's 70.30 Top Performance Egg Mash That's how you put extra money In your pocket. Increase your egg profits the modern, scientillc way – the proven Blatchford way. Get top profits, this year, by getting' top performance from your layers. You avoid waste, too, because 70.30 Is crumbled feed, Call In and learn more about this money -making product made by food specialists, Be sure to use Bkitchfords 70'30 Top 'Performance Egg Mash CRUMBLED SNELL'S FEED MIL BLYTH, ONT. babe of St. Catharines, visited on Sun- day at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Em- erson Rodger. Guests at the home of Mr, and Mrs Jack Buchanan on Sunday %vete Miss Lorna Buchanan of London, and Mr. and Mrs, Joe Brophy of Toronto, Mr, and Mr. Raymand Redmond, of Kingsville, who have just return:d from visiting Mr. Redmond's s's'er, Mrs, Jchn Bell, of Claresholme. Alber- ta, visited on Monday with Mr. and Mrs, John Buchanan, and also called on other friends. Mr, and Mrs, Victor Campl:c'1 and Larry, of Owen Sound, visited Friday with Mr, and Mrs, Howard Campbe 1. Mr, and Mrs, Ball, of Excel, Albertn. and Mr. and Mrs. Kremer, of Delburne, Alberta, visited on Tuesday %vith Mrs, I. L, McDowell. BELGRAVE The June meeting of the Women's Institute was held on Tuesday after- noon In the community room With the President, Mrs. W, H. Scott presiding, The meeting was opened in the usual manner, The minutes of previous meeting were adopted and treasurer's report given. Tribute was paid lo two former members, who had paned away during the Spring, Mrs. John VanCamp and Mrs. R. J. MocKenzie, One dollar was voted to the publishing of Home and Country, It is hoped to have a bus trip in October. The next meet- ing the young mothers of the commun- iity are to be guests and Mrs, Ross Anderson was given $2. to use as prizes for a sports program for the children, Mrs, C. Wade wns named press report- er, A committee, Mrs. Carl Procter, Mrs..Richard Procter and Mrs. C. Log- nn,•voluntcered to weed and plant the flower beds at the cemetery, Mrs, Jas, Smith -of Brussels kind prepared n pap- er on citizenship, but was unable 10 be present so Mrs, W. H. Scott read it. 'Many splendid points were given In which n11 have n part to play in' lite community and how each should recog- n'ze our responsibility and Vote Aug - list 10th. A piano duet by Eleanor and Marlene Walsh was enjoyed. A report of the district annual wns given by Mrs. J. S. Procter, Mrs, Albert Coul- tes gave a very interesting talk on the motto, Lunch was served by Mrs, Al- bert Creates rid Mrs, M. Taylor. Mrs. Ken. Wheeler and Ivan spent Frldlry with Mr. aid Mrs, Jas. Snt'th. Brussels, Mr, end Mrs. L. Hopper spent last week taking n boat trip on the Gr e: t; Lukes from Owen Sound Lorne Campbell has token n position in the Bank of Commerce, ant Wing. nam. Mrs. Albert Vincent spent last week with Mr, and Mrs, Les, Vincent and family of London, d Mr. James R. Coultes stent n few 1 days at the State College, Lansing, s Michigan, where he attended a course In the care and filling of cattle, i1' e was nccompanied by Mr, David An- c drew of Calgary rind George Kennedy of Lucknow. Canndinn Hereford breed- ers are guests of the American Here- c ford Assocfetlon. o Mrs. W. H. Scott Is a patient in the 11 .4'IIIIIMNMM •eMO IN.4N#N.~~~#N ~44NtN. lI.#,# .#, 4 , SISMAN SCAMPERS FORSTURDY WEAR AND COMFORT. Specially built with cork insulation insole MEN'S CREPE SOLE, 6 to 12 ............. $6.50 MEN'S COMPOSITION SOLE, 6 to 12 $5.95 BOYS' COMPOSITION SOLE 1 to 5 112 , , , , .$4.95 YOUTH'S COMPOSITION SOLE, 11 to 13 112 $3.95 CHILD'S COMPOSITION SOLE, 6 to, 10 112:13.45 WE HAVE A COMPLETE RANGE OF MEN'S WORK CLOTHES. Madill's Shoe 'Store Blyth "Be Kind to your feet. Wear Madill's Footwear." 1 N...IM.r:VM..++MM.+.,....•...�N.N..�.... +t...•.. M..•... « .i M/+ WIIII JIIIIJII+IIIMI,IIMIIIIIIIII♦ N ##NNINNMIN III•IINII MIMN EMIR THE BURNS NEW FORD CONTEST You can qualify with a;label from any of these /Burns' Products: SPORK PER TIN .35c BOLOGNA PER TIN 35c BEEF STEW PER TIN 33c MEAT BALLS ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, PER TIN 39c WEINERS AND BEANS ,,,,,,,,, PER TIN 33c CHILLI COCARNE PER TIN 23c CHUCKWAGON DINNER PER TIN 39c Arnold Berthot MEAT ••• FISH Free Delivery: 10' a.m. and After 4 p,m. Telephone 10 --- Blyth. ^/,•••• IIIIfIIIIMId►MMIMININIbMM/WJ°N•1•Nwl"IMJ NVNMI rdNIPI+rIM14�+� IIPIJJNINMaVvI I.... • U,I. wN rIMMM IrIIIIIn+IIIIII•N,N.• NeedlecraFt Shoppe • OUTFIT your CHILDREN for SUMMER TODAY `FOR GIRLS Dresses Skirts Blouses • Slacks Slips Panties SWeatersl MMINN4•44~ MMIMI FOR BOYS Shirts Ties Shorts Cotton Wash Sults Corduroy Jeans. FOR BOTH Socks Pyjamas T -Shirts Jeans Blazers Bathing Suits, STRAWBERRIES t FOR SALE. AT WHOLESALE PRICES. NOW AT THEIR BEST FOR CANNING. APPLY, F. W. ANDREWS, Clinton; Phone 33, • 36-1p. Wingham hospital, having had her ap- pendix removed on Friday, Miss ,Agnes Mason Is also a patient in tine hoepitel where she underwent an operation last week, We wish both ladles a speedy recovery, Lloyd Anderson :of Toronto .was home for the week -end, Mr, and Mrs. George Johnston and Douglasespent Sunday wllh relatives at Orangeville. They were accompnnied by Mr, Johnston's father who remained for u" longer visit, Mrs, Stanley Cook has returned honkie from Toronto 'where she visited her daughter. Anniversary services were he'd In Brick United Church int Sunday when there was a large nitcniatce at each service. The church was be:utifully' decorated with flowers with the cant 'e feature being a crown. A children's choir was. in ,attendance. The special speaker far the Cy was Miss Willows who with Miss Agatha Coultes were 7 and 8 years on the Home M'sslon Field nt Maynooth, Ont„ but are now nt Sea- grave, Ont. The speaker gave twovery impressive addres ,es, A progru•r was also held in 'the church on Mon- ey night. Mr. Cox was chairman and titroduced the program, cons'sting of eVeral musical numbers, rind the main feature was n showing of colour - slides by Miss Coultes, 'These show- s the churches and paop'e rmr.n- lvhom she had worked. The Velure were explained by Misr ,Willows, her o -worker on the M'sston Freida Same f the pictures were of the scenery o • tat part 'of Ontario, Mr, Gilbert Bee. -croft expressed the thanks of all for the cntertninment, Lunch was served to all at 'ihe close, when a social time was enjoyed. 'Mr. and Mrs. Hairy Goll and Me. and Mrs. Wel Mathers, spent the week- end in Detroit. Prime Minister. To Stop Briefly In Blyth Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent Is expected to make a brief whistle stop here this Wednesday afternoon, on .his Way through from Clinton to Wing - ham,; We understand that the school children will greet him in a body. Mr, St, Louring will be guest at the Winghnin Lions Club meeting Wedncs- 'day • night,. at which several Blyth 91ccs will be present, Saturday Wind Storm , .Causes Further Damage Between 11 and 12 o'clock on Satur- ttay another wind, storm 'swept . the irea between Blyth tlnd Belgrave, and Further damage to properly Is report• ed, The balance of the roof • of Sam ~car's barn was removed, just when repair Work from the May 25111 wind storm .was beginning, Shingles were 1tripped from W. J. llallohnn,s dwel- ling, - and savernl trees wore. blown. -town. In Belgrave d hydro pole was ;napped off by the wind. Srnail.•wonder that the people in this irea' look with concern at the sky ev- ery.',tihig a storm appears In the offing. Wednesday, June 24, 195 S16p ,kiW/N6 840 Let the r NARVIST•NANp&rR do your handling job Smooth operating with nal Thein and rurrli tubb v IIIshn. This lightweight farming aid eliminates those annoying, limo. consuming chores you formerly wasted hours performing. Makes moving grain, ear corn and other farm products simple' as WWII •04.4, 04,1 NIIINNIINNIN PLACE YOUR WINDSTORM INSURANCE W.lh THE STANDARD issairmatamlill LYCEUM THEATRE J IIOXY TREAT WINGHAM.-ONTARIO. CLINTON,L-_ ^-T_ a Shorn Each Night starting At _ NOW PLAYING- ' LOST IN ALAS - 7:15 _ ICA" Lou Abbott and Itud_Cusiclln, 'Tues„ W'rd-June 29, July lsl RAY BOL(IER, ALLYN McLEJ11E starring in INSURANCE AGENCY 'an . ..... .. -... __.___ _. Ray Bulger singing and d acing 1 "INSURANCE IN ALL BRANC11E. " Monday, 'ruesiny, June 29-33 BLYTH, ON'1'A[tl0 lir' '' gay'Technicoloredition of "The Turning Point" , Chctr1 y's Aunt: A -Tornado -Can -Happen Friday, Saturday, June 20-27 ELLIOTT "Sky Pull of Moon" IN• re*** IIIrNININNIt N/N I •I. STRAWBERRY SUPPER auspices Blyth United Church Choir SATURDAY, JUNE 27th in the church basement Supper served from 4to7pm. Admission: Adults 50c; .Children -35c, REPRESENTATIVE 1VANTED Avon Products will thoroughly train woman to serve cue:inners In Blyth. Car en asset, Write Mrs, M, Stocic, .A, B, C. Soo it today. 78 Duchess Ave„ Kitchener. 35-2. Point Ponding BELGRAVE CO OP ASSOCIATION • FEMALE HELP WANTED Avon Products will Irain woman to nerve customers In Blyth, Write Man- 11ger, Mrs. M. Stock, 78 Duchess Ave.„ Kitchener. 36.2, • FOR SALE Baby .,carriage, like new; baiinette; play pen. Apply, Mrs, Gordon E lluti, phone 140, Blyth. 36•,1 FOR SALE ' Buckwheat, suitable for seed. Apply to John Clark, phone 21-19, Blyth. 30-1p. FOR SALE 20 Iiamp Rock pullets, 3 months old. GUY IVES & SON Apply, Mrs, Russel Wilson, phone 149, .i 30.1. •I R R 2, Clinton -Phone Carlow, 1612 Blyth. . I+..-.. ♦ 41.11.4•Fr++4.11+4-s44-••-••i • .+.-.•...+• r..4...•.+. •-•-•-•••••••• SOMETHING NEW IN CHIMNEYS TI'IE NEW SELKIRK (all steel) CHIMNEYS QUICKLY INSTALLED -- Also -- BItiCK OR CEMENT BLOCK CHIMNEYS Built, or Material Supplied. All chimneys guaranteed to pas Insurance regulations, 1 _William Hoiden - Alexis Smith Wednesday, Thursday - July 1-2 "FIVE FINGERS Tours„ Fri„ Sat. -July 2 - 4 JUDY (JANOVA PAGE 5 ovaximmiciatingtvepaimcsibmovvotimmiigiogiemil THE PARK THEATRE CAPITAL THEATRE GODEJIICH -- PHONE 1150 GODERICH, • NO11'-"I1Y THE LIGIt'I' OF THE sm. NOLV-"OUTPOST IN MALAYA" with 1'EIty MOON" with DontIS IAy Claudette Colbert & Anthony Steel, and TECHNICOLOR. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday "AGAINST ALL FLAGS" IN '1'ECI-INICOLOR n a The salty tang of the sea whips througs this adventurous story of a pirate stronghold Maureen O'Ilura, Errol Flynn and Anthony Quinn " 1 51l:PilEN DI+NNE, in ' u Thursday', Feldny, S J;aturday nnes Mason_ . Danielle •Darrlcux %Vac F rom Walla Wailatt -ALSO- Friday, Sat'irday - July 3-4 PARAMOUNT NEWS SPECIAI "YOU, FUR ME" 'Coronation of Elizabeth Peter Lawford - Jane GreerCOMING, JULY 23--TIIE ONLY F LENGTH FILM OF THIS CORO ' ' ., TION OF ELIZABETH 11 IN TE •-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•••-•-•4-$1,••••-•-•-•••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•••-•-•4-$1,•••••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•••-•-•4-$1,••••-•-•-•••-•-••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•••-••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•••-••-•-•-•-•-•-••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•••-•-•4-$1,••••-•-•-•••-•-•4144.+'NICO LO R. Gordon Elliott J , hI, R. Elliott ELLIOTT Real Estate' Agency' BLYTH. Of rice Phone, 104. 'Pyrone Power, Penny Edwards and Richard Boone I A Technicolor tale of the Northwest II' Mounted and of a one man crus: d: against a tribe of Cress, 111.1; "PONY SOLDIER" 'I-IIE FOLLO\VIN(; PROPERTIES FOR SALE: 11i -stx)rey frame, asphalt shingle clad dwelling, hydio, water Pres - :sure, small s'able, 1 acre land, sit - anted on North street, in Village of Blyth, 11/2 - storey brick venter with , frame kitchen, situate on Morris" Street, Blyth. Half acre of land and , small stable. 100 -acre farm in Township of Morris, 1'A' and 1 storey instil brick ;; sided dwell:ng, full cellar, insulat- • • cd, Good well. Barn' 30x56. Sheds f ;,3hx50 and 16x22; colony house 24x ,.12 and 10x1 -i, 60 acres good work- ;' 6 able- land ; small orchard. ' 100 acre farm in 'township of, East \Vawanosh, 11/2 storey brick house, hydro and bath; barn 50x70• and 50.x20; Drilled well, Very desirable one -storey frame, ;; shingle and Insul brick -clad dwel- ling on Mill St., Blyth, Modern con- veniences, built -1n- cupboards, gar- ;; age. About. three-quarter acre of land. This property is ideally sit- - unted and can bo purchased at reas- onable price for quick sale. I .-.-.+..+•.44-..•.44.-.-.++4+.•.; FOR SALE FOIE SALE 6 -ft, Massey-I•larris hinder, in good 2 Hereford registered' bulls, 12 mos, running shape; also square timber and old. Apply to Earle Noble, phone 111, lumber from barn wreck. Phone 14 9, Blyth 35-2p Blyth. Leo J. Kelly, 33-9p. FOR SALE FOR SALE 25 acres of standing mixed hay. Ap- Strawberries,Apply Archie Young, ply to Mrs. E. Cummings, phone 36R:2, phone 40-8, Blyth, 'Young, Blyth, 301p, FOR SALE TENDERS WANTED - 300 Red Rock pullets, 12 weeks old. TENDERS will be received up • to Aptly' Geo. Dubs, Lon:tesboto, phone 27 5 Bl fh 35.1. July 1st, 1953, for the purchase of the ' - ' y ' stock scales at Belgrave,• FOR SALE For lfurlher particulars apply, Bel- Hay ,for sale, or on shores; about 10 grave Co -Operative, acres clover, alfalfa and timothy; about highest, or any Tender, not necessnr- 10 acres nlfafla and Umothy. Apply to fly accepted, Harry Gibbons, phone 15-15, Blyth. BELGRAVE CO-OPERATIVE ASSO• 36-1. CIATION. 36-1, __--._.._,..._^-. -- NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS ')'ENDERS WANTED TENDERS will be received for con - TENDERS will be received by the structing and repairing the Smith and undersigned for the work to be done on Pease Drains In Morris Township by the Storey Drain and Extension in tha the undersigned up until 2 p.m., July Township of'Grey. Tenders to be in 611, 1053, by 3 p,m, July 4th. Plan; and Speeifl- The Smith Drain consists of open cations may be seen at the Clerk's Of- drain and the Pease Drain consists of flee, Ethel.' partly open and partly tale drain. Al' Lowest or any te▪ ndo: notnecessarily work mud, be done 'accord•'ng to lir accepted) , Engineer's rpeclficiations, Pions, pro - 36.2, EDYTHE M. CARDIFF, Cleric. files, and specifications• may be seen at SEWAGE DISPOSAL the Clerk's office. A certified cheque for ten pencent of Have your Septic tanks, wells, and 1 the• contract price must accompany cisterns pumped out the sanitary way, each tender. Lowest or nny tender by Irvin Coxon, Milverton, phone 1 mol necessarily accepted, 254. 37-11,1 36-2. GEO. C. MARTIN, Clerk. r4 •P.PMe .+•elw.I.MIrN N•INeNWI. For Windstorm insurance Insure in The Western Farmers' Weather Insurance , Mutual CompanyOf Woodstock 1 Strawberry Festival The annual Londcsboro Sunday School Strawberry .Festival will be held hi the Londcsboro Community Hall on . Friday evening, June 20th. Supper from 0 to 8 o'clock, followed by a play entitled, "Finders Creepers," presented by the Kirkton A,Y,P,A. Ad- mission, Adults $1,00, Children, 50c. 35-2, Monday, Tuesday, Wednes 1l ay Judy Canova, Stephen Dunne and June Vincent There's comedy with music as a tom• boy ranchand becomes Involved with something to do with guided missiles, "Wac Prom Walla Walla" Thursday, Friday, Saturday "The Penny Princess" IN 'TECHNICOLOR A gay, light-hearted comedy with music, Yolande Donlan, Dirk Bogarde and Edwin Styles CII- I C011Ii'nIN"-CaryI)REAII Grant1VH and Deborah Kerr CO;N1N-Gloria Graham and Vittoria E," Gassman in-"'rlIE GLASS \PALL" ACICr<rerCre►441aw1c1eK1;re10a+41114 t(C4341era 41CK a le+C41(1(rctctcKKICKIe+ EICI Oet0ektffiCICCIS del:)tYn2:a,)22»,z14/1171D>rD,>n24 4'II4'.1,IN4.4`IINNN NNe•I e1IIINIe -. --- --. Start Planning Your Spring Decorating Now! The turn; of the year makes everyone look to the future, We would appreciate being consulted about your future decorating requirements. Our service is always at your disposal. F. C. PREST -• Wallpaper, Paints, Brush and Spray Painting, 6 Phone Blyth 37.26, Londesboro MIII+I.I NN•N II NJI N N I+I NV N M RADIO REPAIRS Prompt Service -Guaranteed Work. BOB WEEKS' RADIO & SOUND Clinton, R.R. 4, Phone 633R3 In Blyth Contact Spailing's Hardware. 21-1p. VARIETY ' CONCERT .The A.Y,P.A, of Blyth and Belgrnve Anglican Churches will present a Va- riety Concert in Blyth Memorial Hall Friday, June 20th at 8:30 p.m. This concert- consists of two -one-act plays with Musical numbers added. CAST OF 5111. SIMPSON; Mr. Simpson Tony Langrldge Mrs. Simpson Mrs, Jack VanCamp Their Daughters- Irene--...................................... Eileen Nesbitt TENDERS.WANTED Lil Ella Nethery Morris Township School Board is Annabelle Shirley Bradburn asking for Tenders for the following -'Torry Wilkens ...__.,.._........ David Nesbitt contracts, to be in the hands of the Charles Merriweather Murray Bradburn Secretary not later than June 27th. Nu A Stranger Tom Wade ender necessarily accepted. RALPH S. SHAW, Bluvelae, Ont. MURDER IN TIIE FAMILY: 1, Tender for ins:ailing toilets In Abigail Wentworth Shirley Marks SS., No. 3. Contract to include -pros- Gloria Wentworth ................ Joan Bridges sure pump, two• toilets, septic tnnk and Olive Powell ,,,.,,,.Mrs, Alex, Nethery necessary tile drainage, the same to Jennie Jones., ,,,,,,, Mary Isobel Nethery comply. with Board of Health regula- Dr, John Dane Alex, Nethery Lions. For particulars contact Reg, Terry Wentworth Harry Bridges Watson, Brussels, Kenneth Gray Jerry I•Iiggins 2. Contract for lowering ceiling in Walton School, Work to be done in early July. Particulars from Torrance Dundas, Walton. 3, Painting interior, class room, and halls of Walton School, two coats, and varnish furniture. For particulars see Torrance Dundas, Walton. 4, Painting SS. No. 1, interior of class room, two coats, and varnishing furniture, Contractor to fill cracks in plaster of walls before painting. Par- ticulars from George Michle, Brussels, 35 2, -'- LIVESTOCK WANTED Dead, disabled Horses or cows re- moved free of charge, For prompt and efficient service phone "STONES" collect Ingersoll '21, ur Wingham 561J. 20-1f, OPTOMET1 [ST JOHN E; LONGSTAFF Optometrist Eyes examined. Glasses Titled • Phone 791 MAIN ST. - SEAFORTH I -Tours : 9 - 6 Wed,' 9-12;30; Sat. 9 a,m. to 9 p.m. Thursday, Evenings, By' Appointment, G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETRIST. PATRICK ST, - WINGHAM, ONT. EVENINGS BY APPOI.N!TMENT, Phone; Office 770; Res, 5. Professional Eye Examination. Optical Services. McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE - SEAFORTH, ON'i Officers: John L, Malone, President, Seaford), Ont.; John 11, I tcEwing, Vice -Presi- dent, Blyth, Ont.; M. A. Reid, Secre- lary-'1'reasiirer and Manager, Sea - forth, Ontario, , , Directors: . J. L. Malone, Sea forth ; J.I-1, Mr,- Ewing, Blyth; \V. 5, Alexander, •\Val - ton; E. ,1. Ttev'artha, Clinton; J. F., Pepper, Bruccficld; C. W. Lcoihar,lt, Bornholm ; I-1, Fuller, Goderich ; R, Archibald, Seaford); S, II. Whitmore, Sca forth, Agents: - Win, Leipe,', Jr., Londcsboro; J. F. Pructer,• Brodhagen; Selwyn, Baker, Brussels ; Eric Munroe; Seaford', NOTICE "I am purchnsing boars at 10c to 13e- per Ib,, liveweight, Phone or write Leroy Acheson, Atwood; ' 37R12 col- lect." 33-4, FOR SALE`--, 1940 Chcv, Club Coupe, new motor, excellent running condition, reasonably priced, Apply, Doherty Bros. Garage, phone 25; Blyth, 35.41), ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION For artificial insemination at its best BERNARD HALL, AGENT - BLYTH, ONT. for all breeds, call the Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association between 7:30 and I"•IrI'NI'`rI''r'vell"M~% 10:00. a.m. on week days and 7:30 and 1 - 0;30 a,rn, on Sundays, Phone collect, Clinton 242, 30 -e -o -w. f ..r P.vr..P. HURON FARM SUPPLIES - OLIVER SALES& SERVICE II 1 -I.G.A. Weekly Specials - I. G. A. FANCY TOMATO JUICE, 20.0z. Tin ... . ............... . ... 2 FOR 25c I. G. A. CHOICE TOMATOES, 20Oz. Tin „ ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2 FOR 37c L G. A. CHOICE GOLDEN BANTAM' CORN, 20 Oz. Tin - 2 FOR 29c I. G. A. STRAWBERRY JAM 24 OZ. 41c I. G. A. CATSUP 22c HEREFORD CORN BEEF- 12 Oz. Tin 43c GOLD SEAL SOCKEYE SALMON ..HF. LB. '39c VELVET FLOUR .,.,,......,;....., 5 LBS. 37c Agents for Swift's & Pioneer Feeds, Chick.Starter, Growing Mash, Laying Mash, All Concentrates, Oyster Shell. 'LG.A,STORE LONDESBORO PHONES: Blyth, 24-17; Clinton, 803-12, Sundercock & Tyndall - Cold Storage Locker. Telephone 4 and 93, Blyth, ATTENTION FARMERS The following' for'. Sale: Air compressor, neW Side rakes, new & used Jeoffray Chisel plows Grain. Throwers Used rubber -tired Wag- •' 011 i CUSTOM FARM WORK - A SPECIALTY. Place your order Now ' for Weed Spraying. Telephone 4, Blyth. Reid's POOL ROOM. Smokers' Sundries Tobaccos. Cigarettes, Pop - Other Sundries, Farms Service Dept +.+IN+W I NN NNNNNNIINNIN. A.1. COLE R.O. OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Goderich. Ont'.rio • Telephone 3 Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted, , With 25 Years Experience rIINVN.I.I....nn... Renew your Subscription t9 RO LL Lent jU¢1 WQ o ti ..c Eetw'II O J- 'r"iV'>HY o • w H W N Z Z i 0wW u J Q3 da",Zl0- DO t 1 9 VOW ' Qaa&7iz S!`WAllK RaLESIE PZIEN AN€ I41PST —*tat, tagnay Couvatiot, "Dear Anne Hirst: I don't love Dove my husband any more. I'nm wondering whether to return to hhn on account of our children? d really think they are better off without him. But I 'want your opinion, "We have six children, and I'm expecting another in a few months, Since my husband sold Our home we have lived in many places and have been put out of them because of non-payment of rent. My husband drank and ;ambled. My mother has always bought clothes for the children, helped pay our bills, and even bought food for us. I have left tray husband half a dozen times, but on his promises to do bet- ter we would go' back. "In the past year I have work- ed as much as possible, trying to ;et bills paid—he doesn't believe in paying debts. Five weeks ago, he was so obnoxious that I quit my. job. That night he threat- ened to kill me. I left, and went Iron' -on Designs in Glorious Colors Int 5 No embroidery — just iron on! Luscious roses. in two shades of rich red with soft green leaves transferred onsheets, pillow- cases, scarves, spreads, towels and many, many other items! Easy to wash—the colors stay vivid and glowing. Quick, send now. Just iron on! Jiffy! Washable! Pattern 580 has 14 motifs, From 21/4 x 11/4 to 33/4 x 41/2 inches. Send TWENTY - FIVE CENTS in coins (stamps cannot be ac- cepted) for this pattern to Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and AD. DRESS. EXCITING VALUE! Ten, yes TEN popular, new designs to crochet, sew, embroider, knit — —printed in the new 1953 Laura Wheeler Needlecraft • Book. Plus many more patterns to send for —ideas for gifts, bazaar money- makers, fashions! Send 25 cents for your copy! to my mother's. Each day he comes here and says he's going to kill me—and in the presence of the children. "Do you `think I. should stay here, or go back to him when he finds some place to live? I don't know where to turn! He drinks heavily, and now he watches the house and bus line so I dare not leave the block, I can't sleep, or get any rest. "I know I have faults, but everyone around us knows I've tried to be a good wife and mother. Maybe I've failed, and caused all this? Please help me, "A WORRIED MOTHER." GET FREE * Why on earth do you think * of going back to your bus- * band because of the children? • Their young minds are al- * ready contaminated by his * evil ways, and his outspoken * threats against you must make * them hysterical. Your first * duty is to protect them from * such a father. Further, you • have not reason to believe his • protnises any, more. If he ever • should find another place for * you all, how long do you think • the landlord would put up with • his offensive cdnduct? * You are fortunate, indeed, in * having such an understanding * mother..Stay with her. Your * children have a home and sus- * tenance there, which their * father never provided for long. * After you arrange a separation • or divorce (which I hope you • will do immediately) you can * find another position when • you are able to take -it, and • this time, hold it without fear * of his intrusion. * From other information you • give, I do not believe any wo- * man could do more than you * have done; frankly, I don't • see how you have stood such * a life for so many years, Cease * questioning yourself, then, * take steps to get free of this • worthless man, and look for- * ward to a better life for you * all. * * It is almost beyond beim what cruelties some wives sub- mit to (and often mistakenly) for the sake of their children. If your husband is Impossible to live with, take action while you are young enough to go your way without him. Anne Hirst will advise you, Write het' at Box 1, 123 Eighteen St., New Toronto, Ont. BAG OF FLOUR SAVES • DIVER'S LIFE A bag of flour saved a maimed pearl diver from bleeding to death at Thursday Island. The ‘skin" diver, called Rix- on, had his leg seized by a Targe shark, He rammed his thumbs deep in the shark's eyes and forced it to let go. Then he struggled to the din- ghy and was hauled aboard, In the absence of anything that would make a satisfactory liga- ture, it seemed that he might bleed to death, Rixon's resources haft no lim- its. He yelled for a bag of flour. The maimed leg was thrust' in and the dough that formed staunched the blood effectively until the lugger reached Thurs- day Island, where doctors saved his life, Puff Hard --With an impish look, Jonatha Matthews, 8, seems to be starting Byron Lanahan, 8, off early as a smoker. The pipe is made of rare pink and white opaque glass and was used in a 19th century English tobacco shop only for display. Clot Soundings—Recording the speed with which a blood •clot is formed, an Ultra•Viscoson is demonstrated above by Dr, Ray- mond Yesner, at left, and Dr, Alfred Hurwitz, assisted by tech• nician Jean Ent(vhistle. A small ultra -sonic sensing element "feels" the blood. This machine offers new hope to. victims of diseases requiring exact knowledge of blood -clotting time. r''' � r\ .-7...........-�,,,l,i.�_ e•• 1. •'� .' t,,40,44. 4, HRONICILES 1NGERFARM '1'he weatherman, apparently, is in 'the dog -house. Very few of his forecasts of late have been accurate and the general public has become annoyed and distrust- ful. He promises a fine day and we get a downpour; cooler weath- er and it becomes hot and sticky; clearing skies and we waken to the steady rumble of thunder. Yes, it is most annoying when the forecasts and the actual weather ' are so contradictory, especially when farmers, gardners, fisher- men and just ordinary folk plan- ning an outing have come to de- pend so much upon the day by day forecasts. In the weather office, as we know, changes in 'atmospheric conditions are registered on sen- sitive instruments that have stood the test of years. By them the weatherman knows the type of weather that should normally fol- low according to the disturbances that have been recorded. Then why have these forecasts sudden= ly become so unreliable? Well, what about the atom bomb? Un- til the last few years did the weather bureau ever have to deal with the effect of atonic weap- ons? Imagine ordinary, everyday air currents floating around in the ether, just minding their own business, bringing good weather or bad according to normal pres- sure conditions, and then these same air currents suddenly find themselves_ blasted in every dir- ection by huge atomic explosions, without advance warning being registered by weather office baro- meters. And then the reputation of the weatherman is blasted as has been so unfortunate as to predict ... especially if he prom- ised the next day would be "waren and dry" and what came was wet and windy! Ah me, who would be a weatherman in this atomic age. Lying awake the other night, listening, unwillingly, to the crash of thunder, and trying not to watch the „lightning, a comforting thought suddenly came to me— never yet have I heard of a tor- nado, or "twister" unleashing its fury at night. As far as my knowledge goes it always happens in daylight, Am I right or wrong? Well, last week this column was written on the eve of one of the most memorable events of our time—the Coronation of El- izabeth Il, Now that, too, has become history, and time marches on. From .5 a.m. to 1 p.m. on June 2, and then again from 3 o'clock onwards our radio was never off, I don't think I missed a thing. Nor did Partner because he was milking the cows and fol- lowing the procession at the same time on his radio at the barn, It was such a wonderful broadcast but such an emotional strain that we were both tired out after- wards, Instead of going down town to enjoy our local celebra- tions that evening we were glad to finish tip our chores and get to bed a little earlier than usual. But if the broadcast was tiring to us what must the actual pro- ceedings have been to the thous- ands of participants , . , and to the Queen herself? It is beyond imagination. *Now, as I write, another im- portant“event is in the making— the long awaited Armistice in Korea, It has . hung fire for so long, one is almost afraid to hope, And if an armistice is signed— then what? Time will tell—but we can be very sure whatever happens in Korea will have some impact on the lives of each one of us, wherever we may live, We hope more attention will be given •to tt better -distribution of the Smile From Africa—Ingrid Rita Mills, 20, is the owner of an infectious smile that helped her win the title, "Miss South Af- rica." She will be in Long Beach to compete in the Miss Universe Beauty Pageant. In addition to a trip to London for the Corona- tion, Miss Mills also won $10,- 000 and chance at being Miss Universe. foods we grow so that all nations in the world may benefit.—pro- ducers and consumers alike— without graft or greed. From the look 'of • the fields in this district there is likely to be a shortage of cereal grain, but there should certainly be plenty of hay, although everything de- pends on the weather. The alfalfa is very heavy but at present there is no bloom. I foresee happy days ahead when we start haying! With so much sap in the stalk it will take a lot of curing before the balers can handle it. Good drying weather is . very necessary as hay has to dry quickly these days, Cut it down, call the baler, draw it to the barn—the quicker the better—that sems to be the idea now. Haying no longer interferes with what we women want to do. An extra meal or two perhaps but few women have to stay home now to drive the team on the hayfork. What a hot, dusty job that was, and how heavy the whiffle -trees as we lifted them when turning the horses back to the barn. And that 'awful fear that the rope might break, or the hay fork go slithering through the side of the barn! However, when you're young you take it all in your stride. It is only now, with those days behind you, you remember—and you thank the powers „that be, that no longer is such work required of you, You can get , on with your or- dinary work, go to your teas or meetings—the haying goes on whether you're at home 'or atiay. THE WORLD'S MOST LONELY HOUSEWIFE . Mrs. Margery Daulby is sitting by her shining black kitchen stove making out her shopping list. She writes: 20 tons coal. 300 lb. tea. 100 tins dried milk. 600 lbs. potatoes Yes, Mrs, Daulby docs her shopping in a big way. She has to, For this Lancashire lass, born at Preston, is the World's Lone- liest Houseivife, She is married to Burnley -born the Rev. Tom Daulby, who is the Church of Canada's missionary to the Es- kimos of Northern Baffin Land, and she shares with him the tiny wood -built ' mission -house at Pond Inlet, 400 miles inside the Arctic Circle, For five years at a time they are cut off from civilization, see no white man except the grizzled trader from the Hudson's Bay Company's trading post at the Inlet—save once a year when the supply ship from Canada comes crunching alongside their - tiny quay. • The ship will take Mrs. Daul- by's order back to Canada for her, It will deliver the goods at Pond Inlet—but not for another year. Accordingly, the World's Loneliest Housewife must not" forget anything, One of her pre- decessors in Baffin Land once forgot to put her sugar on the list. She had to radio for it and have it delivered by 'plane. An expensive omission! Ivlrs, Daulby ,drops a lump of ice in the kettle and while it melts and boils, goes on with her list: 30 cases of breakfast cereal. 35 dozen processed eggs. 75 tins of biscuits.... She will want candles, match- es, wool, cotton, aspirins, cook- ing utensils, books, clothes for herself and husband, clothes for barter with the Eskimos. It will be a week before she has finish- ed her stock -taking, checked her requirements against last year's list, pruned it where she can— for the missionaries do not earn much Money. Finally, she lays her task aside and climbs into her sleeping bag. There is no need for her to wait up for Tom to -night, He won't be home, not for a good many more nights either ... for two months, possibly three, For the Arctic winter has des- cended. The sun has sunk below the horizon with a last brilliant play of a hundred colours re- flected in the sky and on the surface of the ice -locked inlet. The temperature is down to something like 20 degs. below zero. The land is frozen to the hardness of iron, All of which means that ' tra- velling time has come for Tom Daulby. His sledge goes fastest over the frozen ground. More- over, the Eskimos are settled in, their winter encampments and are expecting Aryoksoeeye ("The Teacher"), as they call tee mis- sionary. Perpetual Twilight So, attended by his faithful Eskimo attendants Nasook and Jobe, with his sledge piled high with rations and bundles of Testaments, Tom Daulby has kissed his Margery good-bye, With a cry of "Mush," to the dogs he has 'vanished into the perpetual twilight'of the Arctic winter. "Doing. the rounds of my par- ish," as Tom Daulby laughingly calls it, will mean a journey of at least 1,000 miles, And all sorts of things can happen, The sledge may overturn, injuring one of the men, some of their dogs may vanish in pursuit of bear, a bliz- zard may overtake then, and im- prison them their rations dwind- ling, for a week or more in the fetid atmosphere of a hastily builtigloo. To preserve their lives they may have to go out with their rifles hunting Arctic hare and caribou bird, Roaring Polar GaIet All this Margery Daulby must think of as she lies listening to the polar gales roaring and the driven snow being piled up on the other side of the thin -wood- en wall of her frail little box of a home, But she has learned not to worry too much about her tough missionary husband. He can handle a kayak or a team of dogs as well as the Eskimos and fire a rifle better than any of them. In any case, she has plenty to do to keep her mind occupied as she deputizes for him among the Eskimos on the station, acts us nurse, midwife, schoolmist- ress, and hostess to visiting Es- kimos,. .who come to make the social call they love so dearly. When she • wakes it is dark, of course, and the temperature in the house is about 25 degs. (7 degs. below freezing), She lights the lamps, stokes up' the stove and gets the breakfast of cereal and fried eggs and bread. • Her midday meal may consist of Arctic hare, deer meat, ptar-, migan, fish or tinned meat and vegetables. In the afternoon the Eskimo children come in to school, to learn reading, writing, arithmetic and hand work. In the evening there is more school, for the adult Eskimos this time. Payment by Tea Then more chatting, more tea and more biscuits, more dealing — and the only payment/the Eskimos will take for the furs they have to sell is tea. You will understand now why the second item on Margery Daulby's once - a -year shopping list is• 300 lb. of tea. The Eskimo is very par- tial to a nice "cupper." But don't feel sorry tor the world's lonliest housewife. That is the last thing she would want. .She loves her work and the peo- ple whom she serves. Even the Arctic weather isn't half as bad as is popularily ima- gined. In the summer at Pond Inlet they can doff their furs and put on thin dresses. In the letter Margery Daulby sent home by the last ship out of the frozen north she told with de- light how she had collected forty different kinds of wild flowers, All the loneliest housewife had to complain about, in fact, was that her tomato plants, though they flowered, did not bear fruit, A ripe tomato would have made such a nice salad with the mus- tard and cress she grows quite easily by the light of the mid- night sun. LOGY, LISTLESS, OUT OF LOVE WITH 1IFE? 11rw wake up your liner bile .. jump out of bed mein' to ge Life not worth living? It may be the lived It's a fact, If your liver bllo is not flowing freely your food may not digest ... gels bloat' up your stomach ... you fool con- stipated and all the fun and sparkle go out of life, 'hat's when you need mild, gentle Carters Little Liver Pule. You see Carters help stimulate your liver bile till once agebe It to pouring out et a rate of up to two pinta �* day into your dtgeetive tract, This ahouIQ az you right up, make you fool that happy days are here again, 8o don't stay Bunk got '' Carters Littlp Livor Pills. Always have thous on band. ISSUE 26 — 1953 With A Lady Diplomat, Also Goes Wardrobe United States Ambassador so Italy, Clare Booth Luce, waves a greeting to a Roman .crowd and gives them a grateful smile. At left is her husband, publish. ex Henry Luce, tom• l' Via.;* Following the lady ambassador to Europe is her extensive ward- robe. Care and transportation of a wardrobe is a problem for any diplomat's aides. But in the case of a lady diplomat, the problem assumes astronomical proportions. Seen above, Roman workmen unload part of the trunks and chests containing the habiliments' of United Stales Ambassador Clare Boothe Luce. iNfCalVed SPORTS COLUMN 4 3em eti eteiu¢ok • When a tefun loses, whether it's in base- ball, football, or hockey, you know who Is first in line to get the blame, The coach. That's axiomatic of sport. And though Canada is reasonably tolerant in sports (natters, we've known of coaches chased nut ('f jobs because they didn't have a team that was good enough to win. And that occurred in all three of the sports named, But when a team wins, who gets the credit, The coach? Don't be silly, The players are heroes, wonderful guys, The coach is some unknown figure in the background who opened and shut the gate. Well, I'd like to pull a switch on that. For everything Canadiens accomplished in winning the Stanley Cup, I want to give a measure of credit to coach Dick Irvin, whose teams in Chicago, Toronto and Montreal have missed the playoffs only once in many years of leadership. I'm giving Irvin credit because of his skill, and his daring, in benching regulars who weren't producing in the early part of the Chicago series and gambling on four minor leaguers and a veteran who was considered "washed up." This was the gamble that placed the Canadiens in the Stanley Cup finals, which they won. Canadiens' "Unwanted Players" as Irvin called then* alter his team had whipped the Bruins, 7-3, at the Boston Gardens to sweep both games there, were Eddie Mazur, who wintered in Victoria in the Western League; Lorne Davis and Calum Mackay from Buffalo in the American League; and veteran Ken Mosdell, The fourth minor leaguer was goaler Jacques Plante who served the coach's purpose by helping to win 2 games, one a shutout. "Nobody wanted these players in Montreal," Irvin de- clared. "The press and the fans were against them, But my regulars weren't producing. Besides, they were small. So I put in that quartet, adding 574 pounds of beef to my team,, and it turned the tide," Irvin is not a fellow to stand pat. If thins aren't going right he's quick to make changes. He benched his •three regular left-wingers, Paul Meger, Dick Gamble and Bert Olmstead, In their places he put Mazur, Mackay and Dickie Moore, a promising youngster who missed most of the season with a knee injury. There was a little more to it than that, Irvin watched everything. He juggled the team. When a player looked hot, he shot the player into action. He made up lines as he went along. He gambled on freezing Gerry McNeil's injured ankle in the first game of the final series at Boston. Irvin proved a master strategist, and I'm very happy, In the midst of all the bouquets being tossed at the players, to hang one on the lapel of the forgotten man, the Coach. Your comments and suggestions for this column will be welcomed by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Calvert House, 431 Yonge St•, Toronto, Catve'rt DISTILLERS LIMITED AMHERSIOURG, ONTARIO Criminals Blame Influence of the Moon "He seems to go off the rails when the moon iA full," a bar- rister said recently, defending a man in court on a charge of housebreaking. "He gets this moon trouble," • his wife told the court. "He acts very strangely and goes off for a week at a time. It always happens at moon time." Life Giver—Afflicted since birth with an incurable stomach' dis- order, Jewel Penley, 9; lives on milk. When her cow died re- cently, her father was unable to buy another. The cow, seen above, is a prize Jersey which was awarded the little girl When shewrote to a national radio program, The ;ran concerned •had been to prison nine times and served a period of corrective training. But the Bench was obviously impressed by the possibility that under the influence of the moon he acted against his better nature,,for they put him on pro- bation, Is it possible for the full moon to have some strange unexplain- ed effect on some people, making them commit irresponsible acts? Bloodlust Scientists and most d o c t o'r s laugh at the idea as mere super- stition, Yet the word "lunatic," originating thou4ands of years ago and meaning "moon -struck", suggests men long ago noticed a connection between the moon and mental instability. The belief has persisted through the cen- turies. And if the scientists pooh-pooh the idea, the police know better. Whenever there is -senseless and motiveless, you will find them particularly alert at the time of the full moon. Again and again it has been found that attacks on girls in certain areas have taken place in "waves," coinciding with the phases of the moon. At one period before, the war, one area of Surrey was alarmed by a series of such attacks. In every case the police noted that the attack took place at the time of the full moon. "This, is because the attacker can see his victim better and escape more easily," said the scientists. But the police authori- ties expressed the view that the man had fits of bloodlust coin- ciding with different phases of the moon, 11 Maybe He's Part Monkey—This Puerto Rican. horse ,likes. to "eat bananas, which, according to the book, horses do not do, but maybe he didn't read the book. The horse, named "Coco," will go to almost any extreme to get .his favorite fruit, as shown In the picture. His owner is Victor Ortiz Perez, shown astride his pet. Sweet Sailing—Flying through the air with graceful gestures is pretty Shirley Cawey of London, England. Seen above, competing in a broad jump, she was one of the many contestants. at the Sward Trophy meet in London's Polytechnic Stadium, S'ORT ,ORT A SLY. ITCl' LC Evidently it isn't only on this side of the Atlantic that the sport of hockey—or "duck-on-the-r•ock- on-icen as some prefer to call the modern variety—is taking a bit of a kicking around. From dear on' Lur non comes a dispatch by Sydney Skilton which goes to show that all is not so hot in the Old Country for Conn Smythe's favorite pastime. And as any news from over there that is not embellished with upper -bracket portraits is something of a change, here is the dirt as dish- ed out by Brother Skilton. * • * Ice hockey that has flowered so colorfully as a spectacle in the English sporting scene now has a withered look. This has happened because, in spite of the gay bloom, it has no real roots in English soil. And even less likelihood of establishing them as a result of recent develop- ments. • • • At a meeting here in London of promoters of teams compris- ing the, National League it was agreed that English ice hockey cannot in future be conducted on methods prevailing in season 1952-53. Rising costs and falling attendances wrought a financial crisis. It ;leans that Canadians in large numbers are not likely to be transported across the At- lantic next season. 4 • • It also means that ice hockey will be relegated even further down the rink owners' scale be- cause the stuff served by English amateurs who are the only ones available to fill the vacancies, lures about as many watchers .to the ice stadia as village crick- eters would to Lord's or The Oval. r .r • English ice hockey as fur- nished by the aces from Canada who, as "Great Britain," won the world and Olympic champion- ships in 1936, has been a great success as a spectacle. But in the last couple of years or so it has been out -spectacled by the mam- moth "icecapades" from U.S.A. They have drawn cape city crowds for the ice rinks night after night and week after week, Summer shows now are increas- ingly fashionable, Thus ice hockey has had to fit in as best it could during intervals be- tween this glacial glamor, (Bor- rowers Note, Just like Madison Square .Garden, what?) And that it has not done 'so with a great deal of success .is reflected by the judgment of the rink owners and the attentions of the public. • • • For 'a number of. years there has 'been a gentlemen's agree- ment among the National. League rinks not to spend more • than in the region of .41250 a week on their imported Canadian play- ers. But in order to retrieve their fortunes and revive public ap- peal some of the rinks want greatly in excess of that Even so; one well known arena with a highly successful playing rec- . ord in the season recently ended, • reports,. being well 'in the red. • * * * At their get-together the pro - motor's are understood to have discussed future policy in, an agenda ranging from giving up the game entirely to a 20 per cent all-round cut In expenses. Claude Langlon of London's Em- press Hall rinit;.told one reporter, Canadian Envoy—Arnold D. P. Heeney, 51 -year-old Montreal lawyer, has been named new Canadian Ambassador to the U.S.;Heeney has served as Can- adian representative. to the North Atlantic Council. "Ice hockey players, drawing 3,000 people, are getting twice what footballers receive for pull- ing 50,000. (English professional footballers average •.£14 per week.) The danger. is that three or four rinks may give up the struggle, and that will be the end of ice hockey here. • * • "We have to find," went on Mr. Langdon, "a remedy before the season begins in September. Costs must be cut drastically, ex- pensive Canadians must go, and there must be more encourage- ment for English players " An- other meeting is to be held soon. • • • Encouraging home talent has been a policy diligently pursued by the British Ice Hockey Asso-. ciation ever since fellow mem- bers of the world federation suc- cessfully protested in 1938 against the use in world, Olympic and European championships of play- ers who although Englishborn had learned their game in Can- ada. But the policy although warm- ly approved everywhere in prin- ciple has been subject to the caprices of the rink owners who, not unnaturally, have put their biggest money -earning attrac- tions first. With all the good will in the world they have just been unable to help amateur talent to the extent they would like to nor even to the extent they did before rocketing costs and heavy taxation sliced their mar'gine, • • * Thus the young Englishman finds himself very small fry in the ice hockey world and only the utlra-enthusiastic ' persist, The youngster probably becomes a member of one of the junior teams operated by the local rink and usually .he performs on a Sunday afternoon Or • at some other time whehn the ice is not required for major play prac- tice or "lcecapade" rehearsals and. at a time when nobody could care less about watching hockey. • * * );n these far fromencouraging circumstances the youngsters at- tempt to emulate . their heroes from Canada. Usually they fail to stick. Of those.who do only a very few make ,the grade, the vast majority prove deficient, not through inexpert instruction, but through lack of skating ability required to make a high-grade he-man puck chaser. Ate 12 lbs. Of Sugar What does a champion weight- lifter eat? When the Spanish champion strong man Aguerre, lifted a granite block weighing 350 lb, 78 times in three ten- minute rounds recently, he ate 12 lb. of sugar while performing. Afterwards ho sat down to an enormous five -course lunch, in which figured large quantities of meat. The lunch was paid for by some of the fifteen thousand people who had watched his feat. His nearest rival was a strong man named Garachatal, who lift- ed it 00 times. Aguerre received $3,500 prize money and many of his fans who had backed him to win came away richer by hun- " dreds of dollars. The Spaniard's feats fall far short of that achieved by London - born Thomas Topham, who once lifted three barrels filled with water weighing in all 1,830 ib, They were slung together in the shape of a clover leaf, the end of the sling being passed over Top - ham's head to rest across the back of the neck. Topham once found a watch- man fast aslep in his box. Picking up box and sleeper, the strong man fast asleep in his box. Picking placed the box on the wall of a churchyard and left it there with the watchman still sleeping peacefully inside! Duckl—Chicago spectators scat- ter in the right -field bleacher section as a home run heads' their way. Hit by Ed Matthews of the Milwaukee Braves, the ball tops the wall as Chicago Cubs' player Preston Ward watches. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING I% 1%.41,11 OILS, GREASES, TIRES PAINTS end varnishes. electric motors, electrienl appliances. Hobbyshop Ma. chlpery Dealers wanted. write: Waren Grease and 011 Unified. Toronto 11,1111 CII HMS JUNE pullets. Choice of breed,, Prices right, Immediate shipment, Day-old and started. Order August broilers now too, Dray Hatchery, 120 John N, Hamilton. DON't miss out on the good egg and 'poultry market we aro sure to have this FaII and Winter, Prompt delivery on non - sexed, pullet or cockerel chicks, day old and started. Day old heavy breed pullets as low as $13.45 per hundred. Also tur- key nouns, older pullets, TOP NOTCH CIIICIC SALES GUELPH ONTARIO BARGAIN sale of day old and started pullets (egg breeds and dual purpose) at Rock Bottom prices made possible by big demand for cockerels, Standard Quality heavy breeds, all popular breeds, $14.95 per hundred. Assorted heavy breeds 013.05 per hundred. Money Maker Quality add 01.00, Extra Profit add 12 00, Special Slating add 13.00 per hundred, Started pullets 2 -week-old add 111.00; 3 -week-old' odd H7.00 per hundred. C.O.D. anywhere, Also non -sexed and cockerel chicks at competitive prices, Also Turkey poults and eller pullets. TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. FERCJUS . ONTARIO P1103IPT delivery on Canadian Approved turkey polls, Bronze, Nebraskan, White Holland, Beltsville white, non -sexed, hens, toms, Free turkey guide, Just off the Areas, TSVEDDLE CITTCK HATCHERIES LTD. FERGUS ONTARIO DYEING AND CLEANING IIAVE you anything needs dyeing or clean- ing? write to ua for Information. We are glad to answer your queetinne, Do- pnrtment 1f, arkor's Dye WPorks Limited, 01 Yong() St,, Toronto. FARM F41R SALE 1F YOU'RE Interested In farms, any ,Ize, enquire at J .1. McAnlnch, Realtor, 10 Arnold Street. Guelph. FOR SALE CIRESS CALLOUS SALVE—Now get re- lief, Your Druggist sells CRESS. REBUILT grain separators, all makes and sixes. New drive belt with each machine. Prices $600,00 to $1,000.00. Alio grain hinders, Ken G000,1(tiow, Noblelnn. Ont., Phone Dalton 1276, CORONATION school medallions made Into necklet, bracelet, or key chain charm, Ole; gold plated 50c, Make your own, chains 20o ea,. postage 05c, FL Co, 424 Churchill, Ottawa, tI EIIICA I NATURE'S HELP — Dixon's Remedy for Rheumatic Pains, Neuritis. Thousands praislkg it. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 Elgin Ottawa . $1.25 Express Prepaid • FEMINEX • Ono woman tells ;Hotbed. 'rake superior "FE3IINEN" to help alleviate pain, dis- tress and nervous tension associated with monthly periods, 55.00 1'antpahi In plain wrapper POST'S CHEMICALS 880 QUEE ST. LAST TORONTO POST'S ECZEMA SALVE DANISI1 the torment of dry eczema reshot' and wtoping skin troubles, Post's Eczema Salvo will not' disappoint you, Itching, scaling, burning eczema, acne, ringwortn, pitnplee and foot eczema, will reapond readily to tha stainless, odorless ointment regardless of how stubborn or hopoleae they seem, r'1IICL 82.80 1'Elt JAIL POST'S REMEDIES. 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FETHERSTONHAUGH & Company, Patent Attorneys. Entabliahed 1800, 166 Day Street, Toronto. Patcnta all countries, PERSONAL It desiroaa of ridding youreelt of CIGARETTE ADDICTION do It the easy way, Tobacco Eliminator carries a "satisfaction or money -back" guarantee. For tree booklet write C. King Pharmacal Corporation Ltd., fax 673, London, Ont, • • • 11,00 TIIIAL offer Twenty -live deluxe personal requirements, Latest Catalogue Included. The Stedlco .Agency, Box 124, Terminal A, Toronto, Ontario. FOOL YOUR FRIENDS! Lottery remelted 25o, Five for a dollar, Special Rate* to Honeymooners, Sleepy hollow Motel, Lit- tleton, New Hampshire, BUY Braided Nylon Fishing Linda direct from Manufacturer, *Resell at amazing Profits, ' to touriete and sportsmen. Free details Beaver Manufacturing, 782 Lnfnn• tnlne, Drummondville, Quebec. It (JOS NEW rugs made from your old rune and woollens Write for catalogue and price flet. Dominion Rug Weaving Company, 2477 Dundee Street west, Toronto, Ont, SALLY'S SALLIES .' 0 i ' MJ,MIC ...„..„., r ,,.„,..,..... hoLst. M. • 01 04........'•• - "Please don't accuse me of listen- , ung in and --I'l1 tell you every- thing verything she sold." Good Advice if You Suffer with Piles When your plies Itch and burn so fen can't sit, walk or stand without constant discomfort you should use Len -(tint, the relief that thousands have found so goad and so aulek. Seo how fast Len-Olnt takes out the Oro, relieves Itching and soothes pain. why In Just no flute at all you forget about your plies, One applleatIon elves hours of comfort, Don't suffer needlessly—go get Len -hint right now, Only 89e fit all drug storm ISSUE 26 — 1953, CIGARETTE TOBACCO Pio. 8 rrr i4 r, CASEY'S SELF SERVE FOOD MARKET fi COME • • =KELP US CELEBRATE OUR st ANNIVERSARY THREE BIG:DAYS OF SUPER VALUES ! ! ! THUR.' FRI. SAT. Yes.— It•will•certainly pay you to stock your pantry NOW, with these wonderful Food Buys - - - Every item a. top notch Bargain. WE ALL THE BEST FOR LESS. tA1V UL f�l'liL tRANULATED t SUGAR BAG 45c I+, • 1 NYNNN .~.... sm...mmipNNNNNti ELLMAR • PEANUT BUTTER 16 OZ. JAR ....32c t �nINNn..+r+..r.+�.r.�nr�.+vNN�• MAXWELL HOUSE 1LB. 93c COFFEEBAG, AYLMER TOMATO CATSUP : 11 Oz. Bottle , . • 20c NNNN~#~##. BURN'S JELL-O SPORK JELLY POWDERS Luncheon Meat OR PUDDINGS TIN 33c 3 PKGS. ' 29c NNN.~# ~#~4%*rNrNr, "Maple Leaf"'Fancy Red SOCKEYE 7'% Oz. 3 c 5 SALMON TIN 1I rI N rI NN MNI I rr Irrl rNN NO,444 r I N Ir Nri LIQUID CERT°. for making jam BOTTLE 25C GREEN GIANT NIBLETS CORN 214.OZ. TINS , . 37c ,....~#~~#4~~4~~I0##~1~4,0•4,0•0#####.~~~ ~01. SUN BRIT Margarine 3PKG5. 95c •. MNINN•II-WIr#WN•M#NNHt10••N.I•••NI4`N.I.v FRUITS and VEGETABLES STOP ! LOOK! SAVE! It will pay you to check our Fruit and Vegetable Counter Daily, OBITUARY I son. MRS, MARGARET R'LEY A funeral service for one of the old- est residents of Hullett township, Mrs. Margaret Riley, 01, who died Monday at the home of her son Frank Riley, Hullett, was held Wednesday rt the Ball and Mutch funeral home, Clinto'i. Rev, M. C. Gandier, Londzsboro Uni- ted Church, officiated and interment was made' in the Clinton cemetery. Pallbearers were Wlllialn Stephen- son, Malcolm StephensoSn, Gordan ns Stepheon, George I-Ioggart, Wes Hog- gart,..and. Bert Riley, Fi werbearers nvere Christine McF-trlane, Ann McFar- lane, ,Grace Riley, Douglas ,Riley, Shir- ley Stephenson and Kenneth Stephen-, • 1 Born in: Hullett Township, a daugh- ter of the late Mr. and Mr's, Henry. Freeman, the late Mrs. Riley was mar- ried about 66 years ago to George Al. exander Riley. who died 21 years ago She was a member of Cdnstance Uni- ted Church. Surviving are -three sons, Joseph and Frank, both of Hullett Township, Thu• mos, Clinton, and three daughters Mrs, Charles (Emma) Hoggart, • Kin - burn, Mrs, Fred (Margaret) Stephen- son, Bruso.ls, and Mrs, Ed.th McFar- lane, Toronto, Also surviving are two brothers, John 4 Freeman, Hullett Township, and Robert Freeman, Clinton, andyone sister; Mrs. Gertrude Glazier, Clinton, THE STANDARD x1 `Wednesday, June 24,.196 . PERSONAL INTEREST' Messrs, Harold Voddnt and Brock Vodden visited over the week -end with the former's brother, Mr. Lorna Vod- den, in Hamilton.• Miss Phyllis M:Cool, of Loncdosbo^n, i$ spcnciini; a few days with Mrs, Lena Crawft.:d. ` Mr. Jack Cole, of Kitchener, is vitt• iug his son, Mr. Tom Cole, 14Ics, Cole and Jerry. Mr. and Mrs. William Cook, of Lon- don, spent the week -end with, Mr, and Mrs, Borden_ Cook and faint y, and Mrs, Luella IVliGowan, Mr, T. Killor, n, Bridgeport, is visit- ing is t- ing hs sister-in-law, Mrs, J. T, Mc- Caughey, and IVIr. McCaughey. 11Ir, and Mrs. Jack Cameron, Elmira, spent Sunday with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Lorne Scrimgeour, Mr. Humphrey Grey, Mrs, JVIary Hugh, Niro, Ludwig, Miss Cinda Da- JIaven, of Benton Hhrbour, M.ch'g ►i vis]tcd with Mr, and Mrs. 'Loonard Me•' Nall and Mrs. Martha Grry ever lh•a week -end, also attending the Snell Re - Union In Londcsboro Community Hall on Saturday, June 20th, Mrs. M. R, Ferguson of St. Cathar- ines visited with Miss Josephine Wood- cock last week, Mr. Jack Cole, of Kitchener, called at the home of MI's, Lona Crawford on Tuesday. Mrs, S•d:e Cum!ng attend:d the fun- eral of her cousin, Miss Jassie Grain- ger, in Seaforth on Monday. Mr, and Mrs:13, Wall, Mrs, Wm. Mor- ritt, Rhea Hall and Janis Morritt mot• ored to Milford Bay on Saturday where the girls secured positions for the sum- mer holid-tys at Green Valley Lodge. 111r. and Mrs, S.n•to Mealy and chil- dren are occupying their new dwelling and gradually putting the finishing touchcv on it. 11Ir. and Mrs. G. H. Barr of Toronto is visiting with Mr, and Mrs. Howard \VIlkinson of Be!grave. Mr, Barr vis- ited in Blyth on Saturday evening. AUBURN Mrs. Gordon Wali of Holyrood, with Mrs, John Arthur. Mrs. T. S. John-1ton had her tonsils removed in Godcrich hospital last week, Mr. and Mrs, Kit Nesbit of Streets - vine will Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Nrs•ait Mr. and Mrs, Elnier Fisher and fam- ily of Benmiller, with Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Phillips. Mr. Geo. Lawlor and Arthur Yung- blut are rt present putting insul brie siding on Mr. Hiram Lindsay's house. Mr. and Mrs, Reg. Asquith and sun, George Asquith, of Isling.on, with Mr, and Mrs. C. E. Asquith. 'Mrs. Bonthron of I-Icnsall with NIr, and Mrs. F. 0. Mcllveene, W. S. Craig of Toronto, Mr, Castle of Bayfield, .George Wilkin of London, with Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Craig. Mrs. Brindley and f: m'ly of McGaw, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Baer. • Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Bradnock were. recent London visitors. A meeting of the Horticultural Su - FIT FOR A QUEEN ,.., , 5. I. SEE THE NEW CORONATION CHROME KITCHEN SUITE NOW ON DISPLAY IN OUR SHOW WINDOW. - 11 .1 .-11 11• lmda 11 ..1 J Beauty Shoppe GET AN. • (Individually Patterned) - PERMANENT AND HAIR CUT. - to keep your hairdo neat dayin and 'day out at Olive McGill BEAUTY SIIOPPE Telephone Blyth, 52. ,il•II .. f.111 L. Ir II ., „i Iiur •1 I. 111• III .II.II.I.Y i.. clety was held in the Forester's Hall with ;he president, Mrs. W. T, Rab:son, in charge. The cvtmi►;g opar,e.1 w.th a Gang -song led by Mrs. Gil don 11. Ta;•- lor with Mrs. R. J. Phill ps presid ng at the pienb. Tickets were drown far corsoges which were contributed I.•y Mrs. R. J. Phillips and Mrs, Will:pm Straughan. Those receiving corsages were Miss Olive Young, Mrs. F. 0, McIlvicen, Mrs. A:bart C. mpbcll ar.d Arthur Yungblut. Mrs, Haro'd Ent - whistle, of Guelph, who, is p, es'.dent of Guelph Township horticultural Society spoke of the work their society is cu- ing, A film wan shown. Mrs. Arthur Grange was the narrator and Mr. M Inc and Art Yungblut in charge of the pro• jector. An interesting demonstration on arranging' flowers was given. Miss Marion Taylor d.monstrai ed a break- fast table bouquet, Mrs. McLveen demonstrated a luncheon table mitre, Mrs. Herb, Mogr:dge a dinner centre, Mrs. Ed, Davies a hiving room bouquet, and bars. \V. T. Robinson and Mrs, R. J. - Phillips church bouquets. A 1 the i flowers were beautifully arranged. Re• freshmcnts were siirved by Mrs. Roy Easom, Mrs, Maurice Bean, Mrs, Frank Raithby, Mrs, Fres Plactzer, Mrs. Wes. Brndnock and . Miss Viola Thompson, _ Mrs. George I amiton moved a vote of thanks to everyone who had helped to arrunge the pleasant• evening.• Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Gow attend"d the 25th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Pc':t'grew in the Ratio Pres- byterian Church. A reception was held at the church with a dance following for the nieces and nephews at Bright Hall. Mrs. Pettigrew is Mr. Gow's youngest sister, Mr. and Mrs, W. Gow celebrated their 25th wedding anriiv- ersary the same day, Mr. and Mrs. W. Gow attended the Centennial of Innerkip Presbyterian Church on Sunday morning. Rev. ?Tim - mo, of Wingh'nm. was the guest speak- er. They spent the week -end with Mr. • end Mrs. Irvine Zinn, lnnerkip, and Mrs. Maude Locke, alio of Innorkip. Mrs, Jack Ladd has rel.urncd home !'rem Godcrich hospital, Mr. W. Gow and Mrs. J. L-dd went on the Holstein bus trip to Michigan a week ago Saturday. • Violet Gow has been confined to her hone with chicken pox. • • r I { Summer & Vacation NEEDS Suiii'er- Suti Tan Oil 35c • Gaby Sun Tan Lotion $1,00 and 35c Shandra Sun Tan Lotion $1,00 FOR THAT SUNBURN TRY:— Ta ngel RY:--- Tangel 75c Unquentine „ 63c Noxcina $1.69, 89z, 65c, and 21e INSECT REPELLANTS : Liquid (i9c Cream 50c Emergency First Aid Kits 75c and $1.35 R. U. PHIL?, Phth. B DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER—PHONE 20. • MMI NI•rI rMM*NIN.'•.•N+N'�IN•��N++M�N•MNN• I� 1i Y. - ,I li ., i1 -1.1 WALLACE'S Dry Goods --Phone 73-- Boots & Shoes WE HAVE A FULL STOCK OF BROADCLOTH AND PRINTS ALWAYS ON HAND. Dry Cleaning Service Twice a Week Tuesday morning and Friday morning at 9 o'clock. i 1 1 , LI 1 1 rl.l 1 1 •1 is 11 o•'-.: ,1 , 1 I 114, ..d II I • 1 1 4 . • .I iii I.W I,l1 . •••••••••"/,.1.1144-4.{., rINONOINrNIlIh sr NNONONrrrMlllrrNl/ Preierving Su plies GLASS JARS, ZINC RINGS, RUBBER RINGS, GLASS TOPS, CERTO, CERTO CRYSTALS, PAROWAX. FRUITS AND. VEGETABLES Watermelons (large size) each 99c California Muskmelons (Jumbo size) . each 19c B. C. Apples .7 4 for 25c G for 29c 2 dozen 43c 10 lbs. 49c per head 15c per lb. 43c California Grapefruit California Oranges New Potatoes New Cabbage Ilot House Tomatoes FRESH STRAWBERRIES • ' ' GROCERY SPECIALS FOR THE WEEK -END: `_F,ANC,Y,RED SOCKEYE SALMON , . 3 TINS $1.05 • .''I itNC`Y' REB COHOE SALMON 4 TINS 98c BLEACHED SUGAR BAGS 3 FOR $1.00. ' PURE LARD (1 LB. PKG.) * 2 FOR 31c M1At,XWE1;T .jTOUSE COFFEE .' 1 1 LB. BAG 97c. MOTHER PARKER'S TEA, 2 HF. LB. PKGS. 82c SE OT 1 ECLQ LS IN OUR WINDOW. t• YOU'LL AGREE, IT'S FIT FOR A QUEENt,. YET PRICED FOR EVERY HOMES Lloyd E. Tasker IURNITURE — COACH AMBULANCE — FUNERAL SERVICE 'Phone 7 r Blyth q BLO K SALT, , 9YSTER SHELL, R. P1 CALF -GAFF ME KING BUG: KILLER, GREEN CROSS' OMATO DUST. - STEWART'S GROCERY Blyth PHONE.- . We Deliver RA "THE BEST FOLESS" Vodden's Home Bakery PHONE 71 R 2, BLY.TJI. " ..4.1 HERE'S THE BREAD--. HOME LOAF ENRICHED WIIITEt EAD ---WITH EXTRA VITAMINS AND IRON. Now scientists have found a way to tput'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 i o sound nutrition. Order Voclden's "Home Loaf" Enriched White Bread to- day. Eat plenty, it's BETTER for you. N•fN. ,.poN,r-~4 lY•I•I ~Ard'AdMI•evrllNN`N'~1 f •~4 1 z Blue Ribbon Coffee. lb's 97c Blue Ribbon Instant Coffee 65c Mother Parker's Tea lb. 82c, 'A's 45c New Green Cabbage 2 for 25c Carnation Milk 2 for 27e Heinz Tomato Juice, 20 oz. 2 for 27c' Heinz Catsup 25c Grapefruit Juice, 20 oz. 2 for 25c Tip Top Corn 2 for 29c Jello or Jello Puddings 3 for 29c Rose Brand Chick Starter, Pd letts and Krumbles, Rose Brand Lay Mash and Lay Pelletts. . Peat Moss and Oyster Shell. Ho!Iand's Food Market AND LOCKER SERVICE. Telephone 39 WE DELIVER so mm,4v*I•II10'IrIJ•I•INN•PON-JO r •INrmtr.tr •INO�r.NNNON•1s tws•ews.r.**m rsrNN1••NN•.~.rrrr:rrii•rmms) Mr+NNrNrrrl 1 CLEARING THE FOLLOWING IIAND MOWERS AT 15 PERCENT. OFF. 3- 16" 4 -blade steel wheel "Eureka • 1, . Reg. $18.95 1- 14" 4 -blade steel wheel "Eureka" ,1. Reg. $17.75 2- 16" 5 -blade rubber -tired (English) . , Reg.' $18.05 . CLEARING OUR ENTIRE' STOCK OF • SUPREME DELUXE ALUMINUM WEAR TO MAKE ROOM FOR,,1fvEW LINE: ;2112 Pint Covered Sauce Pans ,'-1 Reg. $3.50 --- $2.25 4 Pint Covered Sauce Pans Reg. $3,75 --- $2.59 • 5112,Pint Covered Sauee. Pans 1 Reg. $3.95 --- $2.85 8 Pint Covered Sauce Pans ,1 Itpg. $4.50 ---3 5 Pint Tea Kettles Re $,19 g. $5,50 --- $3.85 '8 Pint.Te'a Kettles Reg. $6.50 --- $4.55 8 Cup Percolator Reg. $3.95 --- $2.45. 3 112 Pint Double Boiler Rclg. $5,50 --- $3.35 • USED RANGES: ' 1 FINDLAY 4 -BURNER GAS RANGt . t . $85.00 1 4 -Burner, Apt. Size, ELECTRIC RANGE $110,00 - 1 4 -Burner, Apt. Size, ELECTRIC RANGE $130,00 NUMEROUS COAL AND WOOD .RANGES IN d GOOD CONDITION AT REASONABLE PRICES.' S parings Hardw�re