HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1953-08-05, Page 1VOLUME 59 - NO, 42,
1011.100.
•/ ,
Post Office Department, Ottawa
Authorized as second-class mail, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 5,' 1953 Subscription Rates .$2.00 in Advance; $3.00 in the USA.
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PERSONAL INTEREST • -•• WEDDINGS --- ' BLYTH LIONS DONATE POLLS OPEN MONDAY EAST WAWANOSH DE -
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Davis nnd babe,IS $ A.M. TO h 1 ;M, LAYS ACTION ON
alto Mrs, W, Davis, of '1'oron'o, visited
for a few d tys with the lacer's siste
Mrs, Cockerlinc and • Mr, Cocked*Mr, and Mrs. William Tideswcll o
Camlachie culled in, Blyth on Stu
tiny night, They are vis:ting with M
and Mrs, Bert Bradburn of Senfortli.
Mr. and Mrs. Flury Gulley of Wing
ham, vlsitcd with Mr. and Mrs. G. Bis
back of Auburn,
Little Jean sad John Monlgomery,o
Winthrop, anti Greta France , of At
wood visited' with their grandparents
Mr, and Mrs, James R'chmond o
Maple Ridge Farm, this past week,
The R'chmond ,Fautily Picnic wa
held on Monday, July 27th, In •th
Seaforth Lions Park,.
Mrs, J. D. Elslcy and -daughter Lois
and son Ellis, of Listowel, Mrs.•I•i:uro!
Felker and son of Gowanstown, calle
on Blyth friends on Friday,
Mr, and Mrs, Riy M.dlll, Cheryl •
and Terry, spent the holiday week-
end in Detroit. '
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Whitmore of
Hamilton Fpent the wedc-end wi h
Mr. and Mrs, Kenneth Wh:tmore, und
with other relatives at Clinton and
folmesvllle,
Mr, and Mrs, Finley McGowan and
Marianne of' Kitchener visited with
Mr. •anct Mrs, Ot,val McGowan and
. Kenneth, on ,'Sunday,
Miss Ella *clerk 'spent 'the tveck-
end with friends in Lotidon.
Miss Doris Johnston of London spent
labt week with her parents, Mr. , and
Mr. Ed, Johnston,;,. .
Miss Josephine Woodcock was a
Stratford visi'.or on. Mgnday,
Misses Clare, oucl Ida McGowan, and
Alice Rogerson are holicrying at Mil-
ford Bay,
Miss Hazel Pett of London spent
the week -end wtih hermother; Mrs. ,T,
Pelts, , .
Mr. and Mr's. 11, D, Philp visited at
$200,90 TO WIND' DIS-
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WATSON - ARNIS'1'itONG
A double ring ceremony was solemn-
ized on Saturday, August 1st, at 2:30
p.m., in Knox Presbyterinn Church
'I'ce: trate+, when Margaret Jean,
(laughter of 111r, and Mrs, Robarl Cor-
mack Armstrong bee me the bride of
Jack Ashton Watson, son of Mr. mid
Mrs. .1. 13, Watson, Blyth,
Gwen in marriage by her father, the
bride wore n wh:te gown which had
nil the regal splendour persanif'.ec( in
the Elizabethan 'ern r of the royal dy-
nasty, Frain the tip of the .coronet
heaclaress to the fluunce of Jhe'bucit
panel of plcateri tiers, in forted galoon
lace predominated, The Empire Influ-
ence ended at the taut waistline where
layers of nylon net covered w:lh 1nr,:
fell gracefully. Royal paudange satin
glimmered through the lace and net,
The year of -elegance was ago:n depict-
ed in the elbow -length Ince gloves
and -1116 lace jacket, The Illu$'•on veil
was In 'finger t'p.length, She carried
a shower bouquet of whit carnat:ons
with white heather sent direct from
Scotland for the• occasion,
Nlrs, John A, Line, Wroxeter, sister
of the 'bride, was matron of honour,
wearing n gown of romance blue nylon
marquisette over skirts of net and taf-
feta, The strapless bodice was softly
draped and the cut -away bolero feat-
ured cap sleeves and a"Peter Pan' col-
lar. The flared skirt ' was offset' by.
panels pf inverted pleiits, Her head-
dress was a tiara of romance blue and
she carried a cascade bouquet of talis-
man roes
y
ASTER FUND; STANDARD .TIME WING HAM HOSPI-
TAL SHARE
At, an executive rnecting'nf .the Blyth
Lions Club held in 'the Memorial Lib-
' rary recently, the nneinbers' , voted p
two hundred dollar . donn><io,n to the
Huron County Tornado and Relief
Fund,
The local people are all well aware
of -the large amount of damage •whirls
was dune by the tornado.. in 'this area
recently, The gangs of nen are still at
work putting up'barns 'in some' parts,,
of the area as Well ns slaking repalra
to others, -
There is still;.time for local citizens
to contribute to this fttnrl and . it .•is,
hoped. that many who hay e•not already.
done so, will follow the,example of the
local L'ons Club'. and make their dona-
tion as soon as possible,, •
Niagara Falls"over the week -end.
Mrs. Wrny, Bryant, Donald and Shir-
ley, of Smith's Falls, are v'slting.with
the former•'s mother, Mrs, Fred' Rich-
ards, -
Mr. Armand Kertilck of Grand Bend
called on friends in Blyth on Tuesday.
Mr, and Mrs...T. F. Ray spent the
holiday weak -end 'With Miss' Marjorie
Stewart and Mr. and 'Mrs,. John Stew-
art and children, also visiting on ;Sun-
day with their••rnothcr,, Mrs, J. 13.. Stew-
art, who is it patient In St, Joseph's
hospital, London, 'where she was tak-
en last Thursday'
Mrs, W. 11, McLean,' Of Detroit,
Michigan, was a week -end guest at•
the home of Mr, and Mrs, J, B, Wat-
son. She attended the Watson -Arra
strong wedding in Teeswater• on Sit•
urday,
Mr, and Mrs, Wm, Knox' nnd family
visited over the wccit-end with rela-
tives at Delhi,
Rev, John Honeyman,of Finch, Glen-
garry County is spend.ng h's.holidays
at Bruce Beach, and will be the guest
speaker at St. AndreW's Presbyterian -
Church next Sunday morning, August
Otit at 11:15.' •
Mr,and Mrs, Ed, Lockyer, Mr, and
Mars. Fred Fawcett, Miss Gladys Faw-
cett, spent the week -end with their
mother, Mrs. A. Fawcett, Miss Gladys
Fawcett is remaining for her holidays,
Mr, and Mrs, Wni, Cook of London
spent the week -end with Mr. Luella
McGowan, and Mr, and. Mrs, Borden
Cook and family.
W.M.S•. To Entertain.
Friendship Circle
The regular meeting of the, W.M.S.
of the Stytli; United Church will be
held Monday, Augus; 10th. a t 8 p,m. at
the home of. Mrs, Keith Webster. The
Indies will entertain the nieiiibers of
the Friendship Circle. A good repre-
sentat•lon os members is 'requested, -All
members of the Friendship Circle are
cordially invited to this meeting, Mein-,
bcrs of 'the Circle will provide part of
the •program, .
AMONG THE CHURCHES
ST.' ANDREW'S 1'IIESBYTERIAN •
CIIURCiI
'Mr. Brown Milne' Student Minister.
Sunday School -10;45 a.m. '
Church Service-ll;?5 a,m,
THE ,UNITED. CHURCH
'OC CANADA
Blyth, Ontario,
Rev. C,• J, .gcott; B,A,, 13.D,, Minister.
Sunday, August 0'11, 1053:
10:15 am; ,Church School,
11:15 n,t•i.;• Morning Worship.. '.
Mr, Brock Vodden; in Charge:
"0 come nnd 'let: us,. w•oi!ship • God.',
'ANGLICAN CHURCH
Blyth -12 o'clock,. Matins.
Auburn -7:30 Pan:, Evensong,:'
Bclgrave-10 o'clock; Malitis,'
W. E..BRAMW.ELL, Rector,
CIIUItC1i OF GOD
McConnell Sti'eet,•Blyth, _
Rev., G. I. Beach, •. Minister,
Sunday Schoolf 10,
• Morning Worship: ° 11 :min; ,
Evening' Evangelistic' Service, • 7;30
pant, •
Wednesday, 8:30 p.m.!. In charge 'of
Women's Missionary Society,
Friday, 7:30. p.m,: Service at County
ome. •
The bridesmaids, Mrs, John A', Gum -
mow, Toronto, sister of the gromn,,and
Mrs. Harold Taylor, Wtngham, wore
gowns and head-dresses in the atm
style as the matron of honour, only in
a coral shrimp shade, They carried,
cascade bouquets of French blue carna-
tions,
Mr, Ec1 • I•W. Watson 1
SCRIMGEOUR. RE -UNION
HELD AT FORMOSA
The second annual gathering of the
Senimgeour...elan was held Wednesdny
at Palace Gardens, Formosa, when the
descendants of the late Alex and Wil-
liam( Scrimgeour spent a most enjoy-
able' reunion',,
'Alex acid• Willdan made the s`x-wceit
journey from their''''nativre' home Id
Stlrling�:hlrc, Scotland, in a sailing
vessel which Was' matling Its maiden
voyage to Canada 'more than 100 years
ago.
When only a'short way to sea, it
as' necessary to return to port of etn-
barkation to. secure pig -iron for,ballast,
but on the return voyage to Scotland
the vessel foundered and sank.
• Alex Scrimgeour was ,aiccompatled
by his wife, formerly Ann Miller, and
one daughter, the late Mrs. Henry Mc,
Causeland, ..,Prior to the• voyage, to
Canada, Alex had been pru'
ospecting for.
N f , $ yth, broth- gold near Ballarrat, Australia
er of the groom, was grogmsmun. The
ushers were Itir, John A. Gummow,
•Toronto, and Mr. Watson Armstrong,
'l'eeslvaler,, brother of the bride,
The soloist, Mr. ,Archie McCullough
of London, sang "When Song Is Sweet"
.B1)(1'111111 Walk Beside You." Mrs: 11,
H, King, 6f Tceswater, .Was organist.
Heading Lite receiving line• et the
Vendome Hotel, prior to the reception,.
the brides mother :wore an. afternoon
dress or navy Ince over taffeta, navy
and white accessories, and a corsage of
pink roses,' The groom's another wore
an afternoon dress of midnight blue,
slicer crepe with lace trim, navy acces-
sories and a corsage of pink roses,
For the wedding ' trip to Northern
Ontiirlo, the bride donned a beige lin-
en slot with .beige and black accessor-
ies and n corsage of red rotes,
On their. return, the young couple
will reside in London, Ontario, -
The bride is it '50 graduate of the
Stratford General Hosp tal and a for-,
mer Trans -Canada Airline stewardess.
The groom is a '49 graduate of ,the ,
Ontario AgrieUltural College, Guelph,
and now employed as Rural Electrical
Advisor by the H,E,P,C,' of Ontario. •
BELGRAVE
Miss Nora VanCumji spent the holi-
day with •Mr, and Mrs,..Ken Johnston
and family at Clinton.
Mr, and Mrs. Cecil Wheeler, - Blyth,
and.daughtcr, Miss Mary Wheeler; nnd
grandson, -Douglas Crellin,.; of London,
were Sunday visitors with relatives
here. '
Mr, and Mn.:,George' Jones and faun-
lly of 'Loncion with Mr, and Mrs. J. L.
McCallum,
Lloyd Andcrsop, Toronto, at :his
home here, .
Miss Agnes Mason' has returned
home from London where she was un-
dergbing treatment, --
Donald Hopkins spent 'Sunday -et 'his
home at I•Ianover. He was accompan-
ied- by Donaild• Coultes and George
Gregg, . ..
•
:Mr, and Mrs, John Woodley of Bel.
moot were visitors', with Mrs; J. S.
Scott on Sunday, • - • •'
"Club' 20" held their annual picnic
.at the Iake on Sunday, • All were pres-
ent, and enjoyed the outing,.
' Mr, and Mrs, Peter Scott 'rind fatnily,
of Barrie vlsitcd with his mother on
Sunday, - ''•
• Mr, and Mrs, Gibson Armstrong nnd
daughter of London with rclntives
here, '
• The first threshing of the season was
ai,week ago -In this'vicinity,
•
i,
FADE' CHILDREN'S 'TICKETS TO
CLINTON .TIIAUE FAIR' •
Any, pttriil from the Blyth , Public
School .who'wlshes to• attend .the' -Hu,.
root County:. Trade Fair,..1n- Clinton on
August 6,7 • and• 8, may obtain 'a 'free
ndmisaloti ticket from Principal
DIcUAhi,'S NEI:D,i,EIVORK :; •
10'.copies' of iVfeCall's Needlework,
Fall 8&'Wlnler edition, are.still'for sale
at The Standard Office, ''Fir'st.- ,comet
first served'.
•
Arriving in Crtnada, • they • took • up
farming in, West Wawanosh near Au-
burn, where Alex Scrimgeour's name
appears on the first communion roll
of the 'Auburn Presbyterian Church In
1860. '
At the gathering of the clan on
'Wednesday, It was decided to .meet n -
gain lti 1054 ,nt•.Pnlnce Gardens, Fors
morn, on July 25, The following offi-
cers were elected•: • - . -
Honorary. president, Lorne Scrinm-
•gcour; president, Mrs; -Lorne Sct'hni-
geour, Blyth; secretary -treasurer, Mrs,'
Jack Caneron; Elmira; refreshment
committee, Boli Chisholm, Godericii;'
lunch committee, Mrs, L, M. Scrim-
geour, Mrs, J. Scrlingeour, Milverton;
and Mrs, E. ' Csalg,'Goderlch; • sports
committee, 'Mr,•1and Mrs, C. Farquhar-
son,. Stratford; Mr, and, Mrs, Murray
Scrhngeour, Tilisonburg, '
Members were present ' from Pal-
merston,
Stratford,, Goderlch, Milver- t
ton,- Elmira, and Blyth,
Two Polls will be open to the vol-
ors ,of. Myth on Monday, August
10t11, when p'cctors ga to.ihe Polis
across Canada to e'ect members of
the; Federal Government.
All eligible voters north Of Dins
`- ley,' Street' will vote at at booth
which will be es:ab;ishcd for the
parjoise, in the Memorial 11 II.
Those .sor.th of 1)Insley, Street
',VIII rots. in a• similar booth to he
s(t'up In; Douglas Morrison's 'Shop
at 'the south end of the business
lection on Quceii Strcet,y •
T,Ime•of voting, according to i"e
Notlee' of Grant of Poll, which Is
poited:,h► Lhc Post Office, is from
8 a:m, .10''8 p,rn, (Standard Time),
T1,!, could be confusIi g, in view
• of the fact thnl Daylight Saving
• Vine Is In effect, For those of us
wino are; on Daylight Time, the
Polls will be open from 9 a,m,
111 ,7 p.m,
According to the Preliminary
Printed Lists for the . Village of
Blyth, there are 475 eligible vol-`
•era In the 'lunge, Regardless of
political leanings, you have a duty, •
• a very Important one, next Mon-
c1ay' _Be sure you get to the Poll,
and cast a ballot . Ina village .this
size: there 'Mar lil-b0 'very few wlio
cannot 'make ..11.some time during
the'. day; :and for those desiring
transportation, telephone :minders
• are .given Ir. n Goderlch Junior
Chiunber'.of Commerce 'advertise-' •
ment placed on page 7 of' this Issue;
Vole as you Tike -but. It is the
duty of'evei•y loyal Cnnad'an (ill -
zea to get_oint and vote next Mon-
, day, •
25;973 ELIGIBLE VOTERS
• IN HURON..
Thd votet•;s lists in Huron, county,
prepared for theFederal election of
next Monday, August 10111,,show a to-
tal of• -25,073 eligible voters. Tlio'vot-
ers' list for the town of Goderlch,• only
'urban; polling centre in the riding has
3,500 triunes„.an increase of 91 since the
• last election ,in '1049,
At ' Goderich, the voters lists have
been,closed, In rural polling divisions
1i• lluii]lfied elietor, Wllosc name- has
been omitted• front the •list, May vote
at 'his rural home poll on taking the
Oath of ,qualification and being vouch-
ed for;by a qualified elector whose
iiaine Is' listed at the same poll,
• An advance poll will be opened in
Goderlch on August 6, 7 and 8, orate
Office •of .the returning officer, J. K.
Hunter, Victoria street, Polling hourz
for the. advance poll will be from 2;00
),m, (00 10:00' pant„ E,S.T, (3;00 to 11:00
p,m, D.S,T,) Certificates for voting at
he advance. poll are procurable from
Ile Returning,Officen or election clerk
, This poll is for the convenience of
commercial travelers, fishermen, rnll-
woy, vessel, •airplane, and other trans,
port workers,'and members of•the arm-
ed forces 'rtable to vote at home on
August pub,.
CONGRATULATIONS
Congratulations to Kenneth McGow-
an who celebrates his 81h birthday on
Friday, August, 7t1. • •
Congratulations to Mn. Sydney Mc-
Cullough who celebrates his birthday
on 'Thursday, August 0th, • •
. Congratulations to Mr,. Thomas Ed- c
wards who will celebrate his birthday I
on Sunday, August 9'h,
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs, t
vine Bowes who celebrated their' 5th t
wedding anniversary on July 31s1,
Congratulations 'to Mr, and Mrs. R. '
D,; Philp who celebrated their wed-
ding anniversary on July 31st.
Congratulations to Aubrey McNichol n
who celebrated his birthday on July 30, 1{
Congratulations to 'Charles Brigham
who celebrated his birthday on Aug-
ust 1st, .0
Congratulations to Mr, Russell Cook j
who celebrated his birthday on Sntur- 1
day, August lst, •
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs,
Russell Cook who celebrated their
wedding a niversnry on Saturday, Aug-.
t
v
s
u
• NEWLY-WEDS HON-
OURE.D. .
On Friday evening, July 31st, friends
and neighbours gathered 'in the,Blylh
Memorial Hall- lo_honour Mr, and Mrs:
Wallace Bell, of Morris Township, nn
the occasion of their recent marriage.
Dancing was enjoyed to the music of
the Western Five (Jim Scott's orches-
tra), Following lunch the young cou-
ple were called to the front and , pre-
sented witli a purse of money after
which 1Vallnce made it suitable reply.
Louts Phelan rend the following ad-
dress, and Fred Martin made the pre-
sentation;
re-
senit do n;
Dear Wallace and Jean -We, your
friends and neighbours,', have gathered
here this evening to pay tribute to you
on your recent marriage and to ex-
press to you our very best wishes for
your future happiness,
To you Jean, you coin° to some of us
ns a stronger but we trust you will
soon feel at home In our midst.
To Wallnce, we are pleased that your
have elected to remain In our commun-
ity, We look forward to a continuance
of our friendship and association,
Now as n small token of our esteem
we will ask you,Id accept this purse of
money, •
-Signed on behalf of your neigh-
bours and friends,
19119 RESULTS IN HURON
POLLS ON. PAGE 7
Results of voting in the 1040 Federal
election in the nuunicipalities which
now comprise the Riding of Huron, w111
be found on page 7 of this issue,
The figures' should prove Interesting
to• the electors in view of the fact that
thls is tate first time that the Riding,
as If now stands, will go to the Polls,
The figures give the Progressive
Conservatives .q, majority of 324, in n
throe;party. roil, In ;which the C,C,F.
polled 760 votes, A' strnlgltt two-party
Liberal' - progressive, Conservnlivo
fight. bstween A. Y McLean, Liberal.
and L. 1, .C'rdlff, Progressive .Co'•ser
votive, is slated for next Monday', ,
The East Wawaiosh Council on 'Cue
day postponed the Wtngham haspil
building decision in which various 1
terested municipalities were to silo
the costs, until the Septemebr nlee
ing. At the same time the Counc
give approval to the building of a ne
Wingham District High School.
Culross township council studied tl
hospital„proposal, but also withheld
decision for a few da,•s owing to lh
proposal of the new high school.
1'urnbcrry township council approv
ed a motion to accept lire pro -rate.
percentage cost of building the , no
wing to the Wingham hospital wit
the maximum amount of the share no
to exceed $20,000, To. date four muni
cipalitics have agreed to their share o
the cost of the new 50 -bed, chronic ,)a
tlonta tying, They are Wingham, Tees
water, Mi,r�ris township, and Turnberr
with the $20,000 proviso,
TRINITY CHURCH LAD
IES' CLUB MET AT
MRS. K. TAYLOR'S
Trinity Church Ladies' Guild • met at
the home' of the President, Mrs, Ken
'Taylor, w:ht the Auburn Ladies' Guild
members as their guests. The rector
Rev. 1V, E, Bramwell, opened the
meeting with prayer and Scripture
reading, and the regular business tak-
en care of. 11 was decided to have
the town water put .In .the rectory,
This meeting .was in the form of a
picnic, so various sports were enjoyed
with the following results -Flower con-
.test, Mrs, Davies, Auburn; clothes pins,
itTrs, Rogerson, Blyth; kicking the slip
•per, Mrs. Robt, Phillips, Auburn; blow
ing up balloon, Mrs, George••Bnilie
Blyth; throwing the ball in pail, Mrs
Frank Nesbitt and Miss Collinson, Au
burn (tied). • -
'A delicious picnic 'supper' followed
served by the hostess, her daughter
Claire, and Miss Mains, of Brucefieid
A very pleasant 'afternoon was enjoy
ed; . - ..
• WESTFIELD
•Guests at the home of Mr, and Mrs,
Gordon Snell .on Saturday were Mr.
and Mrs, Elmer Horne and Susan of
Windsor,
s. Mr, and Mrs. Norman Wightman of
al Welland, Mrs. Ralph Hix and Mrs, M.
a- McCormick of Los Angeles, visited on
re Saturday with Mrs, Frank Campbell
t- and Mlss Wlnnlfrcd, and other friends,
11 Set•vdce will be held In the West -
w field Church on Sunday, August Oth.
Sunday School at 1 p.m. and Church
to Service at 2 p.m, with Rev, Will Tay-
• lor as guest speaker,
e Mr, and Mrs, Alva McDowell visit-
ed on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, Wm.
- Kelly, and Mrs. J, Killough of Sea -
d forth,
Ida Mr. and Mrs, Robert Bell 'and fam-
h fly visited on Sunday with Mr, and
( Mrs. Samuel Desch of Varna, Master
- 13i1ly Bell returned home with his pars,,
f cats.
Mr, and Mrs. Morley Johnston and
- tube of Donnybrook visited on Sun-,
y day with Mr. and Mrs, Howard Camp
bell,
Mr, and Mrs, Charles Smith and:
family visited on Sunday at the hone•
of Mr, and ,Mrs. Cliff Ritchie of Wal
• toff, and Mr..und Mrs. Harold Cardiff
of Brussels.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Campbell and
family visited on Sunday with Mr. and •
. Mrs. Harvey. Craig of Walton,
Mr, and Mrs. Don Clark of Ottawa
were guests over the week -end at the
home of the former's sister,. Mrs. Mar-.
vin McDowell, and Mr. McDowell.
Guests at the home .of Mrs,. Fred.
Cook on Sunday were .Mr. and Mrs,
George Cook, Misses Lois, Mildred and'
Annie Cook, of Sulgrave, Mr. Thos,
Cook, Mrs, I, Snell, of Wtngham, Mr,
and Mrs, John Fleming and family cf
•Hanover, Mr, and Mrs, Wm. MgVittie,
of Blyth, Mr, and Mrs. Jim.Boak and •
family of Crewe, Mr, anti! Mrs, Smaa,
of Trenton,
Mr, and Mrs, Bert Taylor, ,visited o11
Sunday with Mty and ;Mit.", ", . William
- Humphrey of St. Helens.. • -
Mrs, Margaret McLennan of Chi-
; (ago is visiting her. §Inter ":Mrs., Mar-
, vin McDiiW:ell and 'Mr; 14IcDoiyeil;:'
Mr, and Mrs, portend ,Glazier, of. To-
- ronto visited 'Sunday, evening, with Mr;•
and Mrs, Nojiman. McDowell,
Mr. and Mrs. Henr
Y. •.',Smith,, Miss
Sally Taylor •of 'Comber;'; spent the
week -end with Mrs, - Frank Campbell,
and Miss Winnifred, who,,tcttti•ned ''to
Comber with. them for ti. weeks' holt-
day, '
Mr. Wm: McDowell:'spent Sunday
with Mr, and Mrs.' Wesley Stackhouse' -
of Brucefleld,
Miss Lorna Buchanan of London
spent over the week -end with her
parents, Mr, and Mrs, John Buchanan,
Mr. and Mrs, Earl Wightman, ' Mr.
Harvey Wightman, visited 'on Sunday
with Mr.• and. Mrs. Leslie, Wightman
of the 101h concession Of East Wawa -
nosh.
Mr. and •Mrs, ,Dopald Snell and chil-
dren visited. ,u'n. Sunday witlf Mr. and
Mrs, Leslie Bolton of Walton, •
Miss Mihnie Snell, Mr, and Mrs. Ly-
man Jardin. and family of Toronto, vis-
ited 'last week with Mrs..J. L. McDow=
ell, Miss Snell remained for a longer
visit,
Miss Edna Smith of Kitchener' spent
the week -end with Mr, and Mrs. Gor-
don Smith, •
Mr, Leslie Rodger of St, Catharines
visited last week at the (home of Itis
brother, Mr. Emerson Rodger,
Mr, and Mrs, Frank Gowman, Mr,
and Mrs, Richard Gowman and son, of
St. George, Mrs, Annie Keating, Mr.
Harold Keating of Morris Township;
visited ori Sunday with Mn. and Mrs.
Gordon Snell.
Mr, and Mrs, Wm, McVlttie, Blyth,
visited Sunday with Mr, and Mrs. Wal-
ter Cook.
Mr, and Mrs, Eric Humphreys, 'Mrs.
R. Humphreys of Kirkton, Mrs, Harry
Paul, Kent County, England, visited on
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mills,
Mr, Ralph Rodger, Ottawa, is visit-
ing at the home of his brother, Mr.
Emerson Rodger.
` Mr, and Mrs, Norman McDowell;
Gerald and Gwendolyn, visited on
Sunday with Mr, and Mtn, Carl Deans
of Guelph, •
Mrs. J. L. McDowell, Mr, Gordon
McDowell, Miss Minnie Snell, visited
on Sunday at the home of Mr. and
Mrs, Elwin Taylor of Brussels.
Mr, and Mrs. Barry. and family. re-
turned Monday to their home at Days -
land and .Mr. Will Snell returned with
them to his home at Strome,
Mr. nnd Mrs. Hunte Clutton of God- •
Crich, Miss Edith Clutton'of India, vis-
ited on Thursday with Mr, and Mrs,
Norman McDowell, •
Around 35 relatives of Mr, and Mrs.
Gordon Snell held a, picnic on Satur-
day evening et the, river at Mr, Earl
\Vightnun's, among' whom were Mr.
and Mrs. George Cook, •Bclgrave, Mr.
Leslie Rodger, St, Catharines, Mr. and
Mrs, ,Barry 'and faintly of, -Daysland,
Mr, Will • Snell of Strome, Mr, and- •
Mrs. Alvin Snell and fanlly, Mi, and
Mt•s. -Ernest Snell and- family, Mr, nnd
Mrs, Donald Snell. ands :children, Mrs._
Emerson Rodger and chlldreti, 'Mr, and •
Mrs, • Gordon Snell,. Jasper, anti ,JQan-'"-"
.. etta. ,
•
TROPHY ON DISPLAY
The Andrew Y. McLean Trophy, pre-
sented by the donor for annual corl-
petitlon at Blyth Fair, to Huron Coun-
• fy 4-H Dairy Calf Club•.winner, has
been on display at The Standard •offlar
this week,
• The trophy is. most attractive, and
will be competed" for annually by all 4-
H Dairy Calf Club members from Hit.
ron County. The award is to be based
entirely on showmanship • and fitness
and condltion.of animal at time of the
show. The trophy will become the pro-
perty of the winner for a ,period of 1
year, at which Hine at replica trophy
:will be given id the winner to be kept
as his (or her) permanent• property.
The trophy is one of. ninny such
prizes and trophies le be . awarded to
winners of ev
his year's $lyth
Fall Fair,
OBITUARY
C. E. (TED) TURNER
�) Turner, 20,
Turn�l•,
Marineand
ch, curly Sun -
rt illness. He
school and
Institute, and for
employed by
Machinery Co„ of
member of Knox
and of Ilia
survived by
two orators,
home.
acral service
his parents
with Rev. H.
officiating. Bur -
Bennetts Holiday At
Municipti - Beach
The Sttuidard received the following
ote from Mr, Frank Bennett of St.
athnrines along with his subscrip-
on renewal. The 'Bennett's are en-
oying the Sutmner• vacation period at
Iuniclpal Beach:
"Enclosed plunk find $2.00 renewal
The Standard I sure look for it
very week -end, I not retired front
eneral Motors on pension, , We will •
e at Municipal Beach for the sum-
er, Pleased to see the old town still
oing strong, Expect to be up for the
all Fair. Wishing all my old friends
i0, best of luck. ,
Yours sincerely,
FRANK BENNETT.
Dfr, and Mrs, Bert. Marsh of Peters-
burg arc . visiting. their dnughter, Mrs,
Howard Wallncc, 'and Mr. Wallace,.
Mrs. Mort' Barr of West . Wawnnosh
visited on Wednesday whit Miss Jose.
pitae Wuud'cuelt, '
Clarence Edward (Ted)
son of Mr, and Mrs. Robert
Auburn, died In Alexandra
General Hospital, Goderich,
morning after a she
lad attended Auburn public
Godcrich Collegiate
Ile past year had been
Ile Dominion Road Macl
Goderlch, He was a ate
United Church, Auburn,
Orange Order,
Besides his parents, he' is
sister, Shirley, and
ennetbt and.Barry, till at
A largely attended fu
vas held at the home of
11 Tuesday at 2;30 p,m„
, Snell, of Exeter,
Bur-
et was made at Ball's cemetery,
ust lst,
Congratulations to Eileen Cook of n
Mitchell who celebrated her birthday C
on Wednesday, July 2O9h. ti
Congratulations . to 'Mrs, Carmnn j
Haines who. celcbrated•hcr birthday on 14
Tuesday, August 4111.
Congrntttlntions t o Mr, Charles to
South who celebrates his birthday on e
Thursday, August Gth, G
Congratulations to Lorna Buchanan b
who celebrates her. birthday on Sun- m
daty, August 91)1, , • g
,Congratulations, • t o Robert Bruce F
Bradley, of Meaford, who will celebrate. 11
his 10th birthday on Thursday, Aug-
ust 6th,
• WESTF•IELD
Rev, Will Taylor, and Mrs Taylor, of
Dorchester, Who are hoyidaying at
their cottage at Pott Albert, visited
on Thursday with the fornmer's broth -
Mr. Bert Taylor, and Mrs, Taylor,
Ro4aheD ' '
SALADA'
TEA & COFFEE
AN VE. I-URST
"Dear Anne Hirst: Fifteen
years ago our son married an
older girL She has always been
so jealous she doesn't allow him
to visit his family. She has never
attended church or let her chil-
dren go to Sunday school, and
those children don't know their
grandparents except on their
mother's side.
"She seems only to want our
son's money. She doesn't care
anything for hjm. She hasal-
ways gone to his office to collect
his check;• he has had several
good positions, but changed them
often because he grew ashamed
Of her behavior. She watches
him so closely that if she doesn't
know where he is, hour by hour,
she calls the police!
"We have helped her'in so
many ways, and got no thanks
for it. . . . She finally wrote me
a letter asking us to stay away
from her house; we have, and
shall continue to. But I am so
worried about what will happen
to our boy, living under such a
Glamour Cotton
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•u 4444
Dramatic way to show off your
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tering halter dress that has a
wedding -ring waist, a skirt that
makes a pretty spin when you
turns Smart for sunning, dating—
add the jacket for town. Dress is
back -zipped to fit beautifully.
. Pattern 4633: Misses' Sizes 12,
14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 dress 31/2
yards 35 -inch; jacket 11/e yards.
This pattern easy to use, sim-
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complete illustrated instructions.
Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(35d) in coins (stamps cannot be
accepted) for this pattern. Print
plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS.
STYLE NUMBER,
Send order to Box 1, 123 Eigh-
teenth St., New Toronto, Ont.
strain! Everyone that knows him
loves him.
"Your column is the very first
thing I turn to when my paper
comes. God bless you in your
work! Have you any advice for
us?
A Worried Mother."
His Problem
* The girl your son married
t has literally taken him away
• from his own people. Her hold
• on him is apparently too over-
* whelming for him to protest,
• or he would have had the
• gumption long ago to assert
• his independence. He would
• see his parents when he
• pleases, he would take his
• children to church, collect his
• own paycheck, and otherwise
• get the upper hand. What
• threats she makes to compel
• his subservience, you cannot
• know; but he is surely under
• her thumb.
* His marriage was obviously,
* a mistake. He must have been
• bewitched by her beauty or
• her charm — neither of which,
• I expect, can move him now,
• Perhaps he is staying with her
• only so his children can feel
• they have a father, however
* little authority he carries.
• All this is heartbreaking to
• you and your husband. Yet
• any move you might make to
• advise him would, through
• loyalty to his wife, be resent-
* ed. You two (like so many
• other lonely parents) can only
• stand silently by, grieving. —
• And praying that one day he
• will find a way to end his ser-.
• vitude, and once again know
• the parents he still loves and
• and misses,
• I might suggest that your
• husband try to lunch with his
• boy now and then, IF the lad
• will consent. That, too, may be
• a questionable gesture. Ask
• your husband's opinion; he
• may have a better idea
• For your own sake and your
• husband's, try not to dwell too
• long nor often on your son's
• troubles. Grieving alone. only
• weakens one's hope and faith.
• Employ your energies in
• wholesome living: Work in
• your church and your com-
• munity and be active with your
• husband in various endeavors.
• Rebuild your faith through
• prayer and meditation, and so
• strengthen your belief that
• your son will find the wisdom
• and courage to better his mis-
• erable life.
Bretano's book store in New
York has leased a concession to
a lady who specializes in sea-
shells, a collectors' fad that
seems to be enjoying a revival.
The best customer to date was a
lady who ran up a bill of $90.
"I'm moving to Hollywood," she
explained, "and I want these
shells to remind me of my old
home on the Atlantic coast," No-
body told her that every shell
she bought came straight from a
beach in the South Pacific.
Crushing Argument. Near Bax-
ley, Ga., distributing handbills
attacking a proposed law to curb
cattle on highways, R. C, Carter
changed his mind, became an
active suporter of the measure
after his car struck a stray bull
and was smashed.
• Mew Note—Plano students will welcome this new device, said
to make scale practice easy. When she hits the right note, a Tight
flashes, A wrong one produces a Ioud buzz, The player can
compare the position of the lights with the notes as a check.
"To Sleep, Perchance to Dream ..:"—If the' Little Woman is
dreaming of buying a bedtime outfit like this, there's darn little
perchance of Pappy getting any sleep when the bill 'comes in,•
The magnificent night ensemble, by Italian designer Cerri, was
modelled in Rome by Princess Zina Rachewsky, Russian -born
actrP«. The square -necked gown and robe are of white georgette
and Valenciennes lace.
;>11,"(;.?
Stumpy—Morning walks proved
disastrous for Ranger, 'a dog
belonging to Bill Rolen, One
morning Ranger, came limping
home with a broken.,leg, The
leg was set and Ranger took
his morning walk the next day
and—returned home with his
other leg broken.,
4,404,40
RONICLE.S
SING RFARM
eruettdoltr e D C1n Occz
With eggs selling at 85 cents
a dozen,'the only food Mitchie-
White will look at these clays is_
a beaten, raw egg! However,
it isn't as extravagant as it
sounds because in every day's
take there is usually at least one
egg that is very small, cracked
or misshappen, so Mitchie is
able to enjoy his convalescing
diet. The mower -cut -leg is heal-
ing beautifully and Mitchie
beginning to feel more like a
cat again: His main worry now
is that he still can't use his right
foot to scratch his right ear.
During the day he hides among
the rose bushes or sleeps under
the shrubs; at night he sleeps on
a corner of the chesterfield, over
which is spread an old folded
sheet.' He never moves all night.
Today he almost lost another
life, A car came up the lane,
Mitchie, crossing the roadway,
stood petrified, Fortunately the
driver saw the cat and gave him
time to limp his way home.
Oh dear, hasn't it been hot —
and how badly we need rain?
After all the rain we had a few
weeks ,ago it doesn't seem poss-
ible we should be suffering from
drought already. But so it is.
From the appearance of lawns.
and gardens now you would
hardly know we had ever had
any rain. My poor garden! I
have finally come to the con•
elusion that I must go back to
perennials or go without a gar-
den at all — except for shrubs
and spring flowers. Annual:. and'
I don't seem to get . along too
well. Three dozen sweet alyssum
plants that I set out so hope-
fully in the spring have com-
pletely disappeared, Bugs ate up
the asters; snapdragons grew tall
and spindly and the zinnias be-
came brown and shrivelled after
I sprinkled them with bug -death.
However, nasturtiums and spider
plants, also begonias, are doing
fine so we have a few ennuals
anyway to brighten out desert -
garden. There are also about a
dozen thrifty geraniums. gaily
blooming at the back of the
house.
These geraniums were given
to me last spring, already potted
but unknown and unmarked as
to variety. Among the more or-
dinary kind there is one, which
I believe, is a little unccinmon.
The small, double bloom is like
a rose, white in the centre, merg-
ing to pink. It is the prettiest,
daintiest one of them all out you
have to be close to it to appre-
'ciate its beauty — it is not a
showy, free bloomer . like the
deep pink ivy geranium,
The friend who gave me these
geraniums, gives away dozens of
unidentified slips each spring,
This year after her own plants
came into bloom she discovered
that not one of them was the
little double rose variety which
I have just mentioned, • and
which she specially liked. So
now my rose geranium u par-
ticularly valuable as it will pro-
vide slips• for its generous ori-
ginal donor. .
I often think that giving roots
and slips away is like spreading
bread upon the waters. Thi'yare
given without any thought of re-
turn and yet so often the parent
stock dies — it may get frost-
bitten or ringed by rabbits —
and then the loss ' is often re-
placed by someone to whom a
slip or rpot had been given when
the plant or shrub was in good
health. Amateur gardens are the
most generous' people always
ready to share what they have
with other. flower -loving en-
thusiasts, but they also like to
follow the progress of what they
give away, just as a benefactor
likes to follow the career of a
promising , protogee. Sometimes
the result is disappointing,
which generally happens if con-
fidence has been misplaced.
In the case of flowers. the
genuine . flower -lover cannot
imagine her friends to be less
enthusiastic than herself, so,
when Lizzie. Likeit come along,
exclaims with delight, "Oh; your •
beautiful begonia!" ' her friend
immediately says, "Do you like
it? I , have another like that,
you can have It if you want it.'
So Lizzie goes home with a nice,
healthy begonia, just coming in-
to bloom, which she puts in the
front room, and then only re-
members it when it begins to
droop. The plant gets toe little
sun and wilts for lack of water,
Asked a few weeks later how the
begonia is coming along Lizzie
answers carelessly — "Oh, I
don't know what happened to it
— it just wouldn't grow for me
and gradually died. I threw it
out last week."
Poor' Mrs. Flower-loVer " feels
as hurt and grieved as if she had
lost a friend as indeed sne had.
• Well, we have young Betty
t back with us again -= this time
without her arm in a cast. The
operation on her shoulder was
apparently a success. At this
minute she is busy. washing
dishes — she is already finding
out that having one's arm re-
lieved of its cast has its disad-
vantages .. , but of course the
arm needs exercise — and what
better excercise could it have
than washing dishes? Only she
doesn't always see it that way.
Yesterday, for instance, there
were after supper dishes for
seven,, but Betty disappeared
with a boy -friend — perhaps for
a different kind of arm exercise.,
Anyway Daughter and I man-
aged very well.
Rattletrap. In Petaluma, Calif.,
garage mechanics examined Da-
vid McClure's car after he com-
plained of a "strange rattle,"
traced it to the back seat, where
ther found a rattlesnake .poised
tostrike._ .. ,:..._.., ..' .__...._---
ISSUE 32 — 1952
Was He A Pirate
Or A Gentleman?
The revival of the old riddle as
to the character of Captain Kidd
reveals a common misunder-
standing. People, ask: Pirate or
gent? but seldom think there
may be a third alternative.
The real question is: Was he
a buccaneer? For buccaneers
were not pirates, though often
they behaved as cruelly.
They were mostly sailors who
had settled on the Mosquito
Coast, had been driven off by the
Spanish, and had thus drifted
into waging sea war on them,
William Kidd was born in
Dundee, the son of a parson, By
the time he was 35 he was a
citizen of the colony of New
York, a successful sailor of good
character.
About this time the Earl of
Bellamont was sent out to New
York by William III to put down
the piracy which had become a
scandal.
Kidd was in so high standing
that he was deputed to command
a specially equipped ship to put
the traffic down.
In this ship of 30 guns Kidd
sailed with authorisation to act
against ships of a named enemy,
and a general commission to
pursue and destroy all French
pirates.
For two years Kidd sailed
about the West Indies, and, bit
by bit, strange tales began to
leak through. It was said that,
having been sent to catch pirates,
he had become one himself, What
caused the rumpus was his action
against a British ship,
Kidd , had sighted a stranger
flying the French flag, He
boarded her and was told by the
captain that he was really
British, but had run up the
French flag in self-protection.
Despite the fact that he show-
ed Kidd his papers, he claimed
that Kidd took part of his gold
and cargo and thus played pirate
to one whom he was•commission-
ed to respect.
While Kidd, oblivious of the
storm brewing in England, sailed
the seas, his name became in-
famous as one little better than
a traitor.
What really happened?
Kidd's ship became scurvy -
ridden and his men mutinied
and cast him into his own state-
room, They released him weeks
later, and, at • the point of a
pistol, commanded him to lead
them against a Dutch ship.
Kidd resisted, • saying stoutly
that his comrnlssion was against
the French and the French only.
In the end Kidd won his way,
but he made a dangerous and
deadly enemy of the men's lead-
er, the notorious Gunner Moore,
Next day ,the captain and the
gunner came into conflict, Then
Kidd, with characteristic cour-
age, tackled the ringleader and
killed him with a steel -hooped
bucket.
After that, during the long
voyage, Kidd , certainly took.
prizes, but they were not always
French prizes, and sometimes the
kegs of gold that came aboard his
ship "Adventure" was English
gold.
After two years of this, Kidd
made for port. There he learned
that a warrant for his arrest
awaited him.
He was sent to England and
put on his trial at the.Old Bailey
for the murder of Gunner Moore.
How was Kidd •tried? The
answer is -without any fairness
whatever. Hewas railroaded to
his death, for whether he was
guilty of piracy on the high seas
or innocent was never proved,
one way or the other.,
Kidd was forced to stand his
trial without defending counsel
and prevented from getting his
Knights In Armor
Hold Picket Line
LONDON—(NEA)--What with
the high cost of living, a knight
can't put on enough beef to tote
around a suit of armor weighing
25 pounds—not on $6 a day, and
vitamin pills costing what they
do,
This is the argument put forth
by the "Knights of the Round
Table"—extras in the American
filen of the same name, who are
on strike today for $3 a day in
take-home pay.
More than 200 knights downed
their swords for extra pay in the
film starring Robert Taylor and
Ave Gardner. The walkout
spread to every studio in Eng-
land.
It's not just the weighty cos-
tumes they complain of, there's
the matter of beards. A knight
can't get a good beard trim for
under 50 cents these days.
And then there's the 6 A.M.
studio call—how can anyone ex-
pect a knight to show up for
work that early after a night of
wassailing?
It's not as though you could
send any old stumblebum to
King Arthur's court. A knight's
got to have class, and class comes
expensive,
While the union and movie of-
ficials argue it out, Guinevere
(Ave Gardner) sits around smok-
ing cigarets, wondering whether
her marriage with King Arthur
(Mel Ferrer) is ever going to
come off. A few doors down Sir
Lancelot (Robert Taylor) is bit-
ing his fingernails.
Work on two other American
films, "The Flame and the Flesh,"
starring Lana Turner, and "Crest
of the Wave," with Gene Kelly,
has been held up pending the
outcome of the strike;
The dispute was referred to
the Ministry of Labor for settle-
ment, which Would have caused
King Arthur to snort something
like:
"Welfare state coddling!"
documentary evidence. The jury,
browbeaten by the judge, return-
ed a verdict of guilty without
hesitation, and poor Kidd—for he
is to be pitied whatever his
crimes—passed to a vile and
ghastly sentence.
He was hanged, not as other
men were hanged, but within a
head cage of iron, his limbs kept
rigid by iron hoops.
Thus, • trussed •• like a chicken,
Captain Kidd •was' left ' toswing
in the • winds until starvation
brought death.
Was he' pirate or gallant sea-
man? The experts have often
debated the ' issue, Now Ameri-
cans of Long Island are seeking
to have the whole matter once
more thrashed out by a judicial
commission,
A Gal': Best Friend—Diamonds, baseball diamonds, that is, are
pretty Joan Crosby's source of joy and support. In her New York
office, she writes :the biographies that appear on the famous
' ballplayer cards tucked inside'' bubblegum wrappers, Here she
checks statistics so as not to mislead her -rabid readers,
Your Chances Of
Living To, Be 100
What are your chances of liv-
ing to blow out one hundred
candles on your birthday? Im-
proving, according to some med-
ical authorities, ,
When a vital organ, such as
the heart, wears out, life ends
—though the other organs may
be good for another 25 or 30
years,
Doctors are asking why old
age attacks different organs in
different people, and why some
families are long-lived and
others • short-lived,
Diet is believed by nutrition-
ists to offer some hope of pro-
longing life. Tests with rats have
shown that those on good diets
live a quarter as long again as
those on indifferent ones,
"I do not say that diet will
prevent old age creeping on," the
American Dr, J. S. McLester has
said. "But I do believe that, if
the result of dietetic experiments
with animals are correct and can
be applied to human beings, mod-
erate balanced diets will post-
pone senility and prolong, the
useful period of life,"
That diet has undoubtedly an
important bearing on life and
longevity is borne out by the re-
searches in India of a former
chief of the Indian Medical Ser-
vice, Major-General Sir. Robert
McCarrison.
Sir Robert was impressed by
the good health and long lives
of the Hunza tribes in the Him-
alayas, The Hunza are skilled
agriculturists, They eat coarse
unleavened bread, vegetables and
fruit, They like meat, but treat
it as a luxury,
In complete contrast to the
Hunza, Sir Robert found a south-
ern Indian tribe called the Mad-
rassi, who exist mainly on rice,
with little or no milk, cheese,
vegetables or fruit. They neither
live as long as the Hunza, nor
do they enjoy such good health,
Sir Robert fed two groups of
rats on the Hunza and Madrassi
diets, Rats fed on the Hunza
diet were like the people, free
from disease and long-lived;
those on the Madrassi food were
sickly and short-lived,
Dig That Chompin' Champl—This is the technique—efficient but
slightly messy—that won 12 -year-old Ralph Hoyne first prize in
a watermelon -eating contest. He put away ten slices like this.
Doctors believe that some-
thing can be learned from mak-
ing a study of very old people.
But the centenarians generally
have differing explanations of
their long life.
Three years ago a Hindu was
reputed to have reached 182, He
did not look more than 50, and
claimed that his secret lay in a
special rejuvenation treatment,
which included being shut up in
a sealed chamber for 40 years.
Some professions, notably
painting and the church, seem
to produce more long-lived
people than others, Titian was
painting steadily until his 99th
birthday. Until he died at 90,
Michelangelo never lost his in-
comparable skill, In England to-
day, Sir Frank Brangwyn has
reached 85,
SPORT
IT'S MUTINY, THAT'S WHAT
IT IS — THEY'RE FIRING ON
THE GUARDS! In other words
they've gone and'changed the
rules of the sacred "Wall Gayle
at Eton."
* * •
Now we never saw the Wall
Game at Eton played, and if we
never should do so we imagine
we'll manage to survive. Still,
ever since we, used to read those
books like "Tom Brown's School
Days" and the like, this peculiar
form of football has somehow
intrigued our imagination, if you
know what we mean. In fact,
we thought it was something like
the Laws of the Medes and Per-
sians, solid.a's a rock and by no
means to be tampered with.
* • *
And now, they're changing
the rules, Why?—you ask. Just
for the paltry reason that there
hasn't been a goal scored in the
annual contest since 1909. Next
thing you know they'll be short-
ening the right field wall at
Lords or the Oval so that there'll
be more four -baggers in cricket!
Mutiny, we calls it, Or even
worse. Here's the low-down as
reported, direct from London,
by Sydney Skilton.
Qld Etonians, former pupils
of England's most famous school •
and the delight of cartoonists
who caricature them in top hats
and monocles as symbolic of the
English race, are said to be shak-
ento their shirt-tails. The rules
of their old school football gams
are to be changed on the orders
of the Keepers of the Wall,
• •
*
It is a change described as ab-
solutely revolutionary and some-
thing like having an eight -oar
race , with seven men or playing
cricket with a soft ball. What is
happening is that with effect
from next St. Andrew's Day
(Nov. 30) when the 113th annual
match is due to be played, only
10 boys instead of the traditional
11 will line up. The idea behind
the dropping of one defensive
player from each of the two
opposing sides is to try and pro-
duce some action and possibly
some more goals.
* * •
Goals in Eton's Wall Game, an
exclusive brand from which pre-
sent-day soccer is saidto have
descended, are rare. One in every
38 years is the rate since records
were first kept, and so old .Et-
onians may justifiably be excus-
ed at their disquietude at this sud-
den prospect of speeding things
up and a glut of goals. Goals to
Glass -Jawed Entry—Abbasong, .a crack entry in the $100,000
, Hambletonian stake on August 12 is given a good chance of
winning, 'despite its twice -broken jaw., Raymond "Bud" Cotler,
26, is shown with the horse he hopes will beat the 18 -year-old
record set by "Doc" Parshall, who Was 34 when he won the
Hambletonian in 1934,
them are an almost sacred busi-
ness. And although the old school
can never be what it was in
their day, the idea of "cheapen-
ing" the Wall Game is not a mat-
ter to be discussed lightly.
4 *
Indeed the Wall Game itself
cannot be discussed lightly be-
cause its vocabulary Is just one
mass of weird and odd sounding
words and phrases that include
"calx," "shy," "bully," "rogue"
and "cools." All these have their
special place in a game that is
contested up against a brick wall
with an ancient elm free for a
goal at one end and a little old
door for a goal at the other. It
is a game that has been' going
on for a long time, a good two
centuries before the present. list
starts, This dates from 1841, prior
to which nobody seemed to
bother about keeping the records.
4 4 i
Traditional signal for the start
of the Eton battle which is al-
ways betwen the Collegers, who
are the boys residing in Eton
College proper, and the Oppi-
dans, who live in houses around
the town, is the striking of 12,30
by the old clock in Lupton's
Tower, The two teams which
until this year were each com-
posed of 11 players—three known
as "walls," two in support of the
"walls" known as seconds," three
known, as "outsides" and three
known us ''behinds" then quickly
becomd one seething mass of -
humanity. The "walls" who op-
erate in direct personal contact
with the Wall, which is a stretch
of brickwork 12 ft. high and sur-
mounted on the great day by as
many young Etonians as can
clamber on it, wear protective
clothing.
• i •
Mostly the play is "tight"
which means that the ball, rather
smaller than an ordinary soccer
ball, Is kept within the scrim-
mage as the two sides fight their
way along the all into each
other's territory. "Loose" play
consists largely in booting the
ball out of play as far as pos-
sible in the opponent's territory.
Half -way through the two teams
change ends, the side which be-
gan by kicking into "Good Calx"
takes its turn at "Bad Calx." The
latter is the ten -yard area at the
tree end and, as its name implies,
the more difficult to secure a
goal in,
4 4 4
A goal is scored when a player
hits the target—an arca marked
on a tree trunk at one end or a
small door at tlh( other—with a
"shy" he has earned in the scrim-
mage. When a player, despite the
interference of many pairs of
stout boots but, with the assist-
ance of the wall manages to hook
up the ball with his foot and
touch it with his hand he shouts
"Got itl" Providing he is in "calx"
and providing the umpire agrees
with him he has a "shy" at goal.
Ten unsuccessful shots at the
goals, which lire extremely diffi-
cult to bit from an angle or at
a distance, are counted as one
successful one,
The 'last time a goal was scor-
ed was in 1909. This move by
the Keepers of the Wall to try
and make goals easter to come
by is what has so' ruffled the
equanimity of Old Etonians. And
what has produced today's col-
umn,
..SMELLY STORY
• veil in the rush hours there's
af• ays'a..seal for Ascanio Spoli-
dbao, of New York, when he '
travels by subway train, He takes
his pet skunk with him, "It's
deodorised," he says, "but other
people don't know."
NMY SCIIOOL
LESSON
The Christian's War
(Temperance Lesson)
Ephesians 6:10-20, Romans
14:19-21,
Memory Selection: It is good
neither to eat flesh, nor to drink
wine, nor anything whereby
thy brother stumbleth, or is
offended, or is made weak.
Romans 14:21,
There is an eternal conflict on
between right and wrong. It be-
gan when Lucifier and his co-
horts were cast out of heaven
and will continue until the con-
quering Christ shall declare that
time shall be no more, If we are
going to win in our personal
conflict against evil we must
have the strength that God sup=
plies. There is no covering for
the back, There is no place for
the coward in this warfare, We
must face the foe,
The memory selection states
an important principle of this
temperance lesson, If it were to
be observedhow different would
be this world, J, Frank Hanley
former Governor of Indiana
says, "I bear no malice to those
engaged in the liquor business,
but I hate the traffic. I hate its
every phase. I hate it for its
utter disregard of law. I hate for
the human wrecks it has caused.
I hate it for the almshouses it
peoples; for the prisons it fills;
for the insanity it begets; for its
countless graves in potters'
fields. I hate it' for the crimes it
commits; for the homes it
destroys; for the hearts it
breaks, 1 hate it for the grief it
causes womanhood — the scald-
ing tears, the hopes deferred, its
burden of 'want and care, I hate
it as virtue hates error, as
righteousness hates sin, as jus-
tice hates wrong, as liberty hates
tyranny, as freedom hates op-
pression I"
In a highway accident in which
four young people were killed
the evidence that liquor was the
culprit was found in the broken
whiskey bottles among the debris
and mangled bodies of the youth-
ful victims, The father of one of
the girls ip frenzied anguish over
the untimely death of his beau-
tiful daughter threatened to 'kill
the one who had provided the
four young people with liquor,
but upon going to the cupboard
where he kept his supply of
choice beverages he found a note
in his daughter's handwriting,
"Dad, we're taking along some of
your good liquor—I :know- you
won't mind,"
. The only remedy is for men to
, • be born anew by the Spirit of
God by repentance from sin and
faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and
Saviour.
:Stole World's Most
• Famous Painting
Once more the woman with the
most famous smile in the world
is in the news. It is reported that
the number of people visiting
the Louvre, Paris, to view the
Mona Lisa, Da Vinci's master-
piece, is expected this year to be
greater than ever.
Her haunting face and enig-
matic, flickering smile has al-
ready intrigued millions of men
and women of all races. Why is
that smile so irresistible? Art
lovers have been probing the
problem for years and nobody
has given a really convincing
answer,
Look again at those ruby lips
that pout and senile so faintly.
It is said that the artist sur-
rounded his exquisitely beauti-
ful Neapolitan model with sing-
ers and comic dancers to keep
that smile always on those lips.
Some art experts say that the
model was one of the loveliest
women of the Renaissance, Isa-
bella Deste, Marchioness of Man -
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
BABY CHICKS
DON't MISS these low price Canadian
Approved Standard Quality day old heave
breed pullets 914.95 per hundred. Thede
low price. made poeetble by tremendous
demand for cockerel., Money Maker
Quality add $2,00; Extra Profit add 14,00,
Special Mating add =1,00 per hundred,
Alec non -sexed and cockerel chick. at
competitive prices, Turkey pewits, older
pullets, started chlcke, broiler chlcke.
TWEDDLE CiTICK HATCHERIES IJFD.
Forgue Ontario
Eggs are high In price and will go higher,
1t is not too late to buy pullet chlcke, We
offer Standard Quality Canadian Ap-
proved Iieavy Rroed pullets as low aa
$14.46 per hundred, also non -sexed and
cockerel chlcke. Turkey Pettit'', elder pul-
lets, started chicks, broiler chlcke.
TOP NOTCH CHICK BALES
Guelph Ontario
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CASII FOR SAWDUST! Turn sawdust
Into cash, Fifteen proven methods, Full
Instructions $1,00, JIolro. 262 Dunvlew,
Wlllowdale, Ontario.
DYEING AND CLEANING
HAVE you anything neede dyeing or clean•
Ing? Writs to us for Information, Ws
are glad to anewer your queetions. De.
uartment H. Parker's Dye Warks Limited,
701 Yongo 8t.. Tnrnnto.
't .ALB
CR155 CORN SALVE — For sure relief,
Your Druggist sells CRESS.
INDIAN motorcycle parts and parte for
Army Hailers and Whlzzern, Rae Wat-
eone Cycle Headquarter., 257 Wellington
Street, London. Ontario,
PAiNT DiRECT FROM FACTORY
Guaranteed. White primer 11.96. Flat
White $3.50. Exterior 02,60 and 13.50 gal,
interior glans 12,75 and 13.60 gal, Write
for free 1953 color card and price !let.
Service Paint Company. 1361 Laurier
East. Montreal 34,
AUGUST turkey points, Beltsville Whiten,
Broad Breasted Bronze at low prizes.
Order et epee.
TWISDDLE CRICK IIATCITERiES LTD.
Fergus Ontario
HESCO Septic Toilets, most modern pall-
a•dny toilet for summer cottages and
enmpe, available today, Guaranteed for
10 yearn. Lowest price on market. De-
livered to any etatlon In Ontario for 994,
complete, At 1i. Fl, Simpson Motor" Ltd•,
909 Lake Shore rd., New Toronto 14.
FOR SALE Dairy farm with fluid milk
contract. Situated In Algoma District
one half mile from TransCanada High-
way. Fbr more information write, Sod
Lino Farm, L. L, Mantoux and Sone,
Welford Sta., Ontario.
MINNF,APOLIS•Moilne pull behind motor
drive combine, bagger, ekour kleen, pick-
up, Used two seasons. A, C, Parker, Cale -
don Enid, Ont.
tua, Others maintain that she
was Madonna Lisa, wife of San -
obi or Francesco del Giocondo.
Nobody knows,
Forty-two years ago this sum-
mer an Italian house painter
named Vicenza Perugia perpet-
rated the most daring theft . in
the annals of art. He stole the
Mona Lisa!
Perugia was putting. a . new
coat of paint on the wall of the
Louvre Gallery when he sud-
denly found himself confronted
with . the great painting. Some-
thing about the Mona Lisa's in-
scrutable smile impelled him to
lift the 26in. by 20in. picture
from the wall and tuck it under
his commodious smock.
He looked round furtively,
Nobody had seen him. He left
the building, unsuspected by of-
ficials. who wished him "Good
afternoon" as he passed.
The theft electrified France
and the world of art. There were
hundreds of theories. One was
that the thief was a journalist
who wanted to prove how easy
it was to walk out with the
Louvre treasures. Another was
that it was the work of a fanatic
that it was the work of a lunatic.
Some said that a down-at-heel
artist whose own pictures would
not sell had stolen the master-
piece in a fit of pique.
Two years elapsed. By then the
hue and cry had died down and"
Perugia walked boldly into a
Florence art dealer's and tried
to sell the Mona Lisa. He was
arrested and imprisoned.
RELIEVED
IN A JIFFY
or money back
Very first use of soothing, cooling, liquid
D.D.D. Prescription positively relieves raw
.ed itch—caused by eczema, rashes, scalp
.rritation, chnting—other itch troubles, Grease-
ess, stainless. 43c trial bottle must satisfy or
money back. Ask your druggist for D.D.D.
PRESCRIPTION.
tt
No Handicap to Vacation—Ready to start their vacation in their
rolling home,are the Barlow family. Left to light, John, 8, Ellen,
6, Carol, 414, and their father Donald, help Mrs, Barlow, a polio
victim, check the converted bus in which •they will make a three-
month tour of southewestern U.S. Barlow, a contractor, fitted
the bus with all the comforts of home so his family could enjoy
a vacation together. -
SIEDICAI.
WE EXCELLENT. REAL RESULTS AFTER
TAKING DIXON'S REMEDY FOR RHEU-
MATIC PAINS AND NEURITIS,
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE,
335 Elgin Ottawa
$1,25 Exprsts Prepaid
• FEMINEX •
One woman tells another. Take superior
"PENINEX" to help alleviate pain, die -
trees and nervous tonalnn asenc;nted with
monthly periods,
56.00 Postpaid lo plain wrapper
POST'S CHEMICALS
159 QUEEN ST. BAST TORONTO
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes
and weeping skin troubles. Poet's Eczema
Salve will not disappoint you.
Itching, scaling, burning eczema, acne,
ringworm, pimples and toot eczema, will
respond readily to the stainless, Worker
ointment regardless of hew stubborn or
hopeless they seem,
PRiCE *2.50 PER .IAR
POST'S REMEDIES
Seal Post Free on Receipt, of Pelee
580 Queen Bt. E„ Corner of Logan
Toronto
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
50124 CANADA'S LEADING FI•III1DL
Great Opportunity Learn
Hairdreeelna
Pleasant, dignified profession, goon wages.
Tboussnds of successful Marvel graduate"
America's Greatest System
Illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING Bt1HOOLS
851 Moor Bt. W., Termite
Branches.
44 Ring 81., Hamilton
11 Rideau St., Ottawa
GIANT FUN AND 'NOVELTY BOOR
free to adults. 100 pages, crammed
full of laughs, Jokes, maglo, drug sundries,
exotic books, gifts etc„ etc. Don't be a
"boor," We only live once. Send for
your tree copy of this giant sled unusual
catalogue today, Adulte only. Roy Sales,
"The Friendly (]n„” Box 66T. WInrDlpeg,
Manitoba,
FOREIGN EMPLOYMENT. nig money
Jobe In all parte of world, List of firms
hiring. Sate"faction guaranteed. Mall 91,
Sterling, Dept, 67, Great Neck, N,Y„
U.S.A.
TYPEWRITER OWNFIIRS, Make 950
weekly at home, Easy, Interesting, Full
or part time, Complete information 11.
Satisfaction or rotund, NIELSEN, BOX
461, HAVERIIILL, MASS.
PATENTS
£N OFFER to 'veep inventor—Li.t of Io-
rotations and full Infnrmatlon sent tree,
The Ramsay Co., Registered Patent aHen
soya 271 Bank Street, Ottawa
TETHERsTONHAUGH 6 Comps n 7.
Patent Attorneys, Established 1890, 860
Bay Street. Tnrnnto, Patents all cnuntrles,
• PERSONAL
HOUSEWIVES I I
We will print your personally autograph-
ed favourite 'recipe In ou'r new book, Send
It to: Dean Distributors ,Rev'd.. 4005
W., Harvard; Montreal 28.
It deulroue. of , ridding yourself of
CIGARETTE ADDICTION
do It, the easy way., Tobacco Eliminator
carries a "satisfaction or money hack"
guarantee. • For free booklet, write C.
King Pharmacal Corporation Ltd., Box
303, Walkervllle, Ont.
11.00 TRIAL offer Twenty-five deluxe
personal requirements, Latest Catalogue
Included, The Medico Agency. Box 124,
Terminal A, Toronto. Ontario,
RUGS
NOW ruga made from four old rump and
woollens, Write for catalogue and mice
fist. Dominion Rug Weaving Company,
1477 Dundee Street West Tnrnnto, Ont.
TEACf1ERS WANTED
•
WANTED, qualified . Protestant teacher
• for 8,8. No, 9, Township School Area of
Kennebec In the County of Frontenao,
Post °Mee 1,009 yards from school, flood
locality. Single room school, 26 pupils,
Grades 1 to 8. State gnallflcationa, salary
expected and name of last Inspector.
Duties. to commence Sept. 1, 1963. Apply
J, .E, Ifughes, Sec,-Treae„ Arden, Ont.
LEFAOY, . Ont„ grade B continuation
school teacher, Protestant, male, to teach
mathematics, science, history to grade
XII and shop work, grades IX and, X.
Applications to bo In by Aug. 19, Apply
stating salary, qualifications and experi-
ence to L, A. Sawyer, eecrotnry, Lefroy,
Ont.
IT MAY BE
YOUR LIVER
If life's not worth living
it may be your liver!
It's a fact! It takes up to two pints of liver
bile a day to keep your digestive tract in top
shape! If your livor bile In not flowing freely
your food may not digest ... gas biotite up
your stomach,—. you feel constipated and
all the fun nntsparkle go out of life. That's
when you need mild gentle Carter's Little
Liver Pills. These famous vegetable pill:
help stimulate the flow of liver bile. Saco
your digestion starts functioning pr perry
and you feel that happy days aro hero nginl
Dont ever stay sunk.Ahtays keep Cnrter'e
Little Livor Palls on and,
ISSUE 32 — 1953
PAGE 4
r
4+44-N�FN+•+•44444444N-44 NN.4+. N-•
NOTICE - RE WEEDS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to owners of subdivided portions o• f the
Municipality of Huron that unless all noxious weeds thereon are
destroyed before the 8th day of August, 1953, in accordance with
the Weed Control Act, the Inspector under authority g:ven in
Section 3, 7, 10 and 12 of the Act, will cause the noxious weeds
or weed seeds to be destroyed, and the cost thereof will be plac-
ed on the collector's roll for collecl:ion in the same manner as
taxes under the Assessment Act.
1,14-•-•-•44441-104-•-•444-44 N • • • • 1 ►+t1 *444-.4 N -N • 4+4-0 4 • t4-• 11
W. R. DOUGALL, WEED INSPECTOR,
Municipality of Huron County, 42-1.
FULL COURSE MEALS AT ALL HOURS.Excellent Service -- Satisfaction Guaranterd.
HURON GRILL
BLYTH - ONTARIO
FRANK GONG, Proprietor.
Y NNMNNrMNNN .•~grwfre.44.
Clinton Monument Shop
Open Every Friday and by Appointment
Representative : J. J. Zapfe, Phone 103, Clinton.
T. PRYDE and SON
Clinton -- Exeter -- Seaforth
Phones: 103 41 363J
ENTER 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 33e
CHILLI CON CARNE 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.
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
Final Summer Clearancr for Thrifty Shoppers
32 CHILDREN'S CRISKAY DRESSES, all this
years, sizes 2 to OX and 7 to 12 years.
Reg. up to $3.95. OUT.THEY GO AT $1.98
EVERY SUMMER DRESS IN TIIE STORE, in-
cluding Sun Dresses, Cottons, and Better ,
Dresses. OUT THEY GO AT HALF PRICE.
MISSES' CRISKAY & SHANTUNG
BLOUSES AT 2 FOR $3.00
WOMEN'S KNEE LENGTH NYLONS, (first
quality) Reg. $1..50. OUT THEY GO AT $1.19
ALL WOMEN'S & CHILDREN'S LONG COATS,
SHORTIES and CHILDREN'S COAT SETS,
OUT THEY GO, LESS 40 PERCENT.
BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS,
Reg. $1.39. SPECIAL, 2 FOR $1.50
BOYS' ►LEER -SUCKER SPORT SHIRTS,
short sleeves, Reg. $1.98. SPECIAL, 2 FOR $3.00
MEN'S ZIMMER KNIT (Athletic Shorts)
Reg. 98c SPECIAL, 3 FOR $2.00
STILL BARGAINS GALORE 1N OUR SHOE
DEPARTMENT.
•
THE ARCADE STORE
STORES IN BLYTH AND BRUSSELS,
THE STANDARD
Vote I ` Special Clearance
1
Wednesday, August 5, 1953
;ill l.•.l i. i I..I .I 11 I+ I i, I.1I,I
1 „ nlui 1 n J
CARDIFF
And
ut
Taxei!
1
MIEN'S OXFORDS, in black and prawn, broken styes 0, IPA, 91,{, 10
• 10N, ONLY 52.95
MEN'S SOCKS, Horde by Lyonv, Super Sox, 3'1'AIR GUARANTEED
• FOR 3 MON'rIIS WE,Ut, 011 YOU RECEIVE 3 NEW I'AIlt Alt-
; , SOLUTELY TREE, Shcs 10! to 12 ONLY 51,00
Madill's Shoe Store Blyth,
"Be Kind to your feet. Wear Madill's Footwear,"
/ I 111 -i I4.il 111 i I hi 1 1 I •.,i
♦ ♦ ♦ 414 -4 -4.411 -1 -•••►-1-+4-• 11 *4 ► • 1-1 4-•-1 4.4-1 ► 1-• 1-1.1 14.4 •-•44-4-•-•-•44-•
1 We're Overloaded.',
SEE WHAT YOU'LL GAIN! That is right --- we have too many used cars.
Under A Progressive Conservative Government
Income Tax EXEMPTION NOW , After Aug. 10
MARRIED MAN $2,000. $3,000
SINGLE MAN $1,000 , $1,500
SALES TAX
On Clothes, Shoes 10 % None
And Other Necessities
Elect
Cardiff
r
1
1
AND END LOPSIDED GOVERNMENT!
Publish By Huron Progressive Conservative Ass'n.
ViiiiiiiiiiniMMUSatiMiair
Is
HERE ARE SOME
.. TAX SAVINGS ..
UNDER A CONSERVATIVE GOVERNMENT
INCOME TAX ►
Married Man Now , After August 10
Salary $3,000 $150,00 None
Single Man, . '
Salary $2,000 150.00 $75.00
Any one spending $300 Sales Tax
on clothing, shoes, etc. 30.00 None
VOTE CARDIFF AND SAVE MONEY
FOR LOWER MUNICIPAL TAXES. •
FOR HEALTH INSURANCE, PREPAID MEDI-
CAL and- HOSPITAL BILLS. rl
FOR FLOOR PRICES FOR FARM PRODUCTS,
FOR A RETURN OF BRITISH MARKETS.
VOTE CARDIFF -
A CONSERVATIVE GOVERNMENT BY SAV-
ING TAX DOLLARS CAN IMPROVE OLD AGE
SECURITY AND FAMILY ALLOWANCES.
VOTE CARDIFF
Your Subscription Paid' CELEBRITIES AT GODERICII
Godorich has enjoyed the company
of movie actress Rose Marie Clooney
this week. She and her husband are
staying at the Sunset Hotel, Canada's
own Barbara Ann Scott has been get-
ting in practice strokes at. the Gado -
rich urena during the past 'week or so.
You'll
smile, too!
If it's EXTRA PROFITS
you want .. .
Now's the time to give your pul-
lets Blatchford's Growing Mash
or Pellets. From now on they
need this grand fortified feed. It
builds up your profits by building
strong frames and sturdy bodies
in your pullets for future egg
production. And they actually
require less feed when fed on
Blatchford's Growing Mash or
Pellets. CaII in and learn more
about this real money-maker.
Blatchfords
Growing Mash.
(or Pettol►)
SNELL'S FEED MILL,
BLYTH, ONT,
IIULLErr
Recent visitors at the home of Mr.
41
1
So We are Offering
FREE SEATCOVERS
to every used car purchaser,
who (brings a copy of this advertisement
when he comes in and buys a used car.
Choose your next car from this list of. dependable
used cars, all thoroughly overhauled and with low
mileage.
1952 PREFECT SEDAN $%50- 00
6,000 MILES, LIKE NEW
1951 METEOR COACH $149,5- 00
BLUE CUSTOM — A BEAUTY
1951 FORD CUSTOM COACH $1485 00
TWO-TONE — A REAL BUY -
1951 FORD SEDAN $1485- 00
TWO-TONE—SMARTEST CAI( ON LOT
1951 FORD COACH $1525.00BLUE — LOIVMILEAGE
1950 FORD CUSTOM SEDAN $1345• 00
BLUE — HERE'S QUALITY
1950 Folio CUSTOM COACH $1295- 00
GREEN — A SMART BUY
1951 METEOR COACH $1,535-
00
BLUE — LACE NEW
$800.00
1946 MERCURY
118 -INCA — COACH — A SNAP
MANY OLDER CARS ON TIIE LOT TO
CHOOSE F11OM, ALL AT GIVE AWAY PRICES.
Hear CX NX Tuesday Through Friday, 10:10 P.M.
Huron Motors Ltd.
YOUR FORD & MONARCH DEALER
Open Wednesday, Friday and Saturday Evenings.
WING HAM 1x se. PHONE 2.37
•
1
jr
t6-•••-• -•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-••••••-•- -4.4.44 •-• • 444 +4-.4++-•-4-N4 •+4-•---•
incl Mrs. George Carter included, Mrs,
Jeff Burton of Matheson, Northern
Ontario; Mrs. G. Smith, Walton; Mr.
and Mrs. (Jack Kellar,. Seaforth; Mrs,
A. Mick, Mrs. Harold Winters, and son
Danny of Parkersburg, W. Va., and
Miss W. Hamric, Gassoway, W. Va.
W.M,S. and W.A. Meet
The Burns' W.M S. and W.A. met at
the -home of Mrs. Wm. Trewin on
Thursday, July 30th,
Mrs. E. Knox was in charge of the
worship service. A program based en
the work of the rural missionary -at -
large was used. Mrs. Roe, Mrs. W.
Rcid, Mrs, G. Watt, ancli Margaret. Tr,; -
win each represented a missionary,
and told' of her work In Canada.
Aug 10th, VOTE McLEAN,
Liberal in Huron.
During the .busines., session, it was
decickd to have the Mission Band
meeting on August 27 in No, 11 school,
with the school board's permission.
This will be Group l's meeting, but
Group 2 will bring tarts, Group 3, cook-
ies, and Group 1, the drink and sani-
wiches.
Anyone still having articles for the
bale to be sent to the Fred Victor
Mission, are asked to send. them to
Mrs, Jim Scott, who has been appoint- '
cd to ship the bale,
Members are asked to give tht;ir,
Bible Society donations to their group
leader, or to Miss Ida Leiper.
There were 10 ladies present.
Andrew Y. McLean
Liberal Candidate.in Huron
--- Born in Seaforth, 44 years ago
Married, father of three children
--- Member of First Presbyterian Church,
Seaforth
-- Editor and publisher of The Huron
Expositor
-- Veteran, R,C.A.F., World War II
--- Member for Huron -Perth 1949-53
---- Canadian delegate to:;7thl,General Assembly
of United Nations °
HEART HIM
CKNX, Fri., Aug. 7
8:30 p.m.
The local man who works for A L L sections of
the Huron electorate.
Issued by Huron Liberal Association.
Wednesday, 'August g, 1951 THE STANDARD -,
•
PAdt 5
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LLASIIMAR
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
CLINTON - ONTARIO,
(Next to the Communay Park)
First Show :,t Dusk.
Two Complaa Shaws N.ghtly.
T1IIiItSDAY,�FRIDAY - AU(1. 6 - 7
"Bandits Of Corsica"
Richard Greene, Paula Raymond
SATURDAY, MONDAY - AUG. 8-10
"TWO FLAGS WESrI"'
Linda Darnell, Joseph Cohen
TUES. - WED—AU(1, 11 - 12
"RAIDERS OF THE
SEVEN SEAS"
('f'eehn'.color)
Donna Recd, John Payne
THUR. - FRI.—AUGUST 13 - .11
"American Guerrilla
In The, Philipines"
(Technicolor) — Tyrone Power
SAT, - MON, — AUGUST 15 - .17
"THE REDHEAD AND
THE COWBOY"
Glenn -Ford, Rhonda Fleming
Children's Playground,
(Two Shows Nightly, rain or clear)
Children under 12 years in cars Free
rdrrrNNNrf NrrrrrrNPrlNr err N.
CON GRATI TLATIONS
Congratulations to Mrs, Ivan Wight -
man who celebrated her birthday on
Tuesday, August 4th,-
..•
Congratulations to Mrs. Geo.. Char.
ter who celebrated her birthday on
Wednesday, August 5th,
• . •
Congratulations to Miss Shirley Fal-
coner who celebrated her birthday on
Wednesday, August 5th,
PLACE YOUR
WINDSTORM
INSURANCE
wdh
ELLIO'IT •
INSURANCE AGENCY
"INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCIIE."
11141'TII, ,ONTARIO
A -Tornado -Can -Happen
#NJrrrrrN• #Nr#NN4 r# ..
CARD OF THANKS
I tvish to thank all thos2. who help-
ed in any way, and sent me cards,
flowers, and heats, while I was a pa-
tient in the Clinton Hospital. It was
greatly appreciated.
42-1p. Mrs, Ke'th Hesseltvood,
CARD -OF 'I'iIANKS
Appreciation is extended to all my
friends who remembered me tvit.h
card!; and flowers and other favours,
while I was patient a tient in Victoria t I Hos-
LYCEUM THEATRE
WINGHAM•—ONTARIO.
rwo Shows Each Night starting At
7:15
Wrdnesdal', 'fhurrd•i-Argust 5.6
"The Desperate Search"
Howard 1 col, — Jane Greer
-many, naturnny—August t -s
: "Confidentially Connie"
Van Johnson — Janet Leigh
Mon„ Tues., Wed. --August 10, 11, .'2
"SALOME"
_ Starring Rita Hayworth and
Stewart Grainger1
Admission; Adult; 75c; Children 55c
•Thurs,, Fri,, Sit—August 13, 14, 15 .
`Gold Town Ghost Riders'
Gene Autry
la
'1•••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•••-•-•-•-•••-• .44
Gordon Elilott 3 hI, R. Elliott
i,
ELLIOTT
,
; f
pital,Real•Estate gency
42 -Ili, —G. R. Vincent .
is A
FOR SALE
160 Leghorn X Hemp. Pullets, start •
-
ed to ley. Apply to Len. Archam-
bault, phone 38810, Blyth. 42-1p..:
•
Beauty Shoppe
CLOSED
FOR THE
MONTH •
OF
JULY, •
Olive McGill _
BEAUTY SHOIPPE
Telephone Blyth, 52.
I ,1 i .:I i.II II
..--..-..-r
•+++-+�.�•. .-r +•++•+•++•+-+ +++++++-+-.•+•r+-++. +-i , •••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•,
STEWART JOHNSTON
MASSEY-HARRIS SALES & SERVICE
BLYTH, ONT.
COME IN AND SEE THE NEW NO. 33
•
MASSEY-HARRIS TRACTOR
NOW ON DISPLAY.
.4 41+N•4-• 4,44-444-44-44-44-4-0-404-• 4-4-e-•-•-•-..4.4-4-40-44-44-• N +.N 4.4.44-4.
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Needlecraft Shoppe
1
CONTINUING OUR SALE OF SUMMER
DRESSES, AND ADDING TO THE
VALUES ---
Girls' Shorts each $1.00
Girl's Cotton Slips each $1.00 and $1.29
Boy's Shorts (2 to 10 yrs.) 69c to $1.49
Boys' and Girl's Sunsuits 69c to $1.69
Socks (all nylon) 61/2 to 10 49c and 59e
Boy's and Girl's Jeans $1.69 to $1.98
Boy's Cotton Wash Suits $1.79
Come in and see the Many Other Values Offered
Starting.Today, July 29th.
BLYTi{.
Office Phone, 104,
I
'l'I[E FOLLOWING
PROPER'T'IES FOR SALE:
1'fe -storey brick veneer with
frame kitchen, situate on Morris '
Street, Blyth. Half acre of land and
small stable.
100 -acre farm in Township of
Morris, 1'1a and 1 storey insul brick Wallpaper, Paints,
,sided dwclkng, 'cull cellar, insular Brush and Spray Painting,
cd. Good well. Barn 30x5(1, Sheds Phone Blyth 37-26, Londcsboro
36x50 and 16x21; colony hoose 24x, rrrrrNrJr.r.
;;12 and 10x14, 60 acres good work-
able land; small orchard.
ROXY THEATRE,
CLINTON.
NOW PLAYING (Aug, 6.8): "TIiE
PATHFINDER", starring George Mont-
gomery and Helena Carter.
. Mon., 'lues., Weil,—August 10, 12
GARY COOPER
5IARi AI,IION
"DISTANT DRUMS"
TECHNICOLOR
Thurs., Fri., Sat.—August 13-15
ERROL'FLYNN
MAUREEN O'iiARA •' •
"AGAINST ALL FLAGS"
'I'ECI[NICOL,OR
COMING (A (IT 17)—l1n nphrey Bogart,
June Allyson—' MIME CIRCUS".
THE PARK THEATRE CAPITAL THEATRE
GODERICH.
NOW—Alec Guinness In: "TIIE MAN
JN THE WRITE SUIT"
GODERICH •• PHONE 1150
NOW—"CAPTAIN PIRATE"—by Raf-
ael Sahatinl—Louis Ilayward, Patricia
Medina—in Color. Monday, Tuesday Wednesday
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
Esther Williams, Fernando L:unas,
Jack Carson
See Esther as n beauty from the Bronx
who swims the English Channel and
keeps a rendezvous with romance, in
Paris
"Dangerous When Wet"
IN TECHNICOLOR
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
— Joel McCrea, Barbara Hale and
Alex Nicol
A widower and his young son buy a
, farm, run afoul of a desperate group
and finish the tale with a surprising
climax
•-.•.-+•,•+•+•. + +••-+-+ +•.•.-.+.•. 4-+-+4 ++
.rrrrrrrrr+NrrNrrvNvrrN+�r+�1
If. You Live on a Back
Road
or in a Village---
,
You can have the. same
modern colour scheme
that your City Cousin
has.
Good material and an
experienced workman
go together.
To have them, phone
Blyth 37-26.
F. C. PREST
100 acre farm in • Township of;;
East \Vawanosh, Ph storey brick
--house, hydro and bath; barn 50x70;;
and 50x20; Drilled well
Very desirable one -storey frame,
shingle and insul brick -clad
''ling on Mill St„ Blyth, Modern con•
-
; venlences, built-in- cupboards, gar-'
• age. Ahout three-quarter acre et
land, This property is ideally sit-
, uated and can be purchased at reas-
onable price for quick' sale,
WNrJ+pNrrrNNNrN+rNrr+NN NNIr l
For Windstorm Insurance
Insure in
• The Western Farmers' Weather Insurance
' Mutual Company Of Woodstock
BERNARD HALL, AGENT - BLYTH, ONT.
11,41,1444~,*#•••••••141.0.14414'l
Harvesting Machines
_ For Sale
1- Allis Chalmers P.T.O. Combine (like new)
1- Case Combine with engine (used 1 season)
1- 32-50 Thresher with Cutter
1- 24-40 Bell Thresher with Cutter
1- New Holland Forage Harvester, complete with
unloading wagons -
1- Massey -Harris 7 ft. Binder
1- No. 66 New Holland Baler
1- No. 70 Oliver Tractor
1- BR John Deere Tractor
1- No. 40 Cockshutt Tractor
COMPLETE DINE OF NEW HOLLAND AND
COCKSHUTT MACHINES.
GORDON MCGAVIN
WALTON
Cockshutt Farm Equipment. Sales & Service.
Phones: Seaforth 832-33, Brussels 19-26
GOOD STOCK OF REPAIRS..
••••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•44 •-•r.
i
al 4
.+.+•++ $ •-++++.+.4..-
NOTICE
To the Party who Relieved us of
Dusting Two Ivory Clocks,
It would be nothing short of a pity
for you to have to pay for service on
these clocks after having obtained them
for nothing. If you call •' we will,
cheerfully present you with the guar-
unitee slips and the boxes the clocks
go In. • 42.1,
FOR SALE
200 Red 'Pullets, 6 months old, laying
good. Apply, Joseph Holmes, phone
15115, Brussels, 42-1,
r FOR SALE
0 weanling pigs. Apply to John
Clark, phone• 211110, Blyth. 42.1,
FOR SALE _
Registered Hereford hull, 3 years
old. 1\pply to Bernard Cummings,
phone 361112, Blyth`M-�^ 42-1p.
STRAYED -
Weanling pig strayed from the farm
of George Nesbitt, Finder please phone
151118, Blyth. 42-1,
FOR SALE
300 New Hamp X Wyandotte pullets,
5 months old, started to lay, Apply to
John Greidanus, Londesboro, phone
201133, Blyth, . 42-1p.
WE ARE AGENTS FOR
COUNTER CHECK
BOOKS
(printed or plain)
Give us your next order.
THE BLYTH STANDARD
` rN•rrrrrNw
HURON
• FARM SUPPLIES
OLIVER SALES & SERVICE
Telephone 4 and 93, Blyth.
ATTENTION FARMERS
r The, following
for Sale.:
Air compressor, new
Side rakes, new & used
Jeoffray Chisel plows
Grain Throwers
Used rubber -tired Wag -
On
CUSTOM FARM WORK
A SPECIALTY.
Place your order Now
for Weed Spraying:
Telephone 4, Blyth.
• .+rVW+•Nr AI "CP.
RADIO
REPAIRS
Prompt Service= Guaranteed Work.
11011 WEEKS' RADIO & SOUND
Clinton, 1.,R, 4, Phone 6331:3
In Blyth Contact
Sparling's Hardware.
21-1p.
TENDERS
TENDERS will be received f o r
shingling all, or part,iof the Memorial
Hall, Blyth,
Contractor to supply all materials.
Shingles to be • asphalt, weight per
square, 210 lbs, Color to match the
roof of Rest Room. Price complete, by
the square, including removal of old
shingles and laying of new shingles.
Work to be completed by September
30th, 1053. Tenders to be In -the hands
of the Secretary by Friday, August, '1,
1053.
Lowest, or may tender, not necessar-
Ily accepted.
• For further particulars contact the
chairman of the Hall Board,
William H. Morritt, Chairman.
Mrs. M. Luella Hall, Secretary.
40-3
FOR SALE
7 -room frame house, with full baa-
ment and small cellar, garage surd gar-
den, The house is very well decorated
and has new floor coverings, Apply,
W. J: Bakker, phone 152,- Blyth.
41-3p.
SEWAGE DISPOSAL
I•Iave your Septic tanks, wells, and
cisterns ptunped out the sanitary way,
by Irvin Coxon, Milverton, phone
254. 37-1f;
LIVESTOCK WANTED
Dead, disabled horses or cows re-
moved free of charge. For prompt
and efficient service phone "STONES"
collect Ingersoll 21, or \Ving'ham 561,1.
20-tf,
OPTOMETRIST
JOHN E. LONGSTA•FF
Optometrist.
Eyes examined. Glasses fitted
Phone 791
MAIN ST, - SEAFORTH
Hours; 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.NTMENT,
Phone; Office 770; Res, 1
Professional Eye Examination.
Optical Services,
McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO..
HEAD OFFICE - SEAFORTH, ON'I
Officers:
John L. Malone, President, Seaford',
Ont.; John N, McEwing, Vice -Presi-
dent, Myth, Ont.; M. A. Reit[, Secre-
tary -Treasurer and Manager, Sea -
forth, Ontario. .
Directors:
J. L. Malone, Seaforth; 5. 1-1, Mc -
Ewing, 13lyth; W. S, Alexander, Wal-
ton; E. j, Trettartha, Clinton; J. 13,
Pepper, Bracefieltl; C. \V. Leonhar.lt.
Bornholm; H. Fuller, Goderich; R.
Archibald, Seaforth; S. H. Whitmore,
Seaforth.
Agents:
\Vat. Leipe., Jr., Londesboro; J. F.
Prueter, Brotlhagen; Selwyn Baker.
Brussels' Eric Alunroc, Seaforth,
"LONE HAND"
Howard Keel,' Jane Greer and
Keenan Wynn
A plane crash in rugged Canadian tim-
berland starts a dramatic. story that
Will hold your interest throughout
"Deperate Search"
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Nancy Gates, Dick Denning and
Richard Loo
This soldier of fortune lines up with
Chiang Kai Shek and has a terrific
action story to tell you
"TARGET HONG KONG"
IN TECHNICOLOR COATING -Rud Cameron in:'�
COMING— "RUBY GENTRY"~ "BELLE STARK"
+4+4+*+-+•••++•4++N-4-•+-•-•+♦++N+•-+++++.-$+-+-++-4$4•.-..•N+N'
Reid's
POOL ROOM.
Smokers' Sundries
Tobaccos. Cigarettes,
Pop - Other Sundries.
-4
• *...::w'.4###• Or. .r..rrw
•
A. L. COLE
R.O.
OPTOMETRIST end OPTICIAN
Goderich. Onttr[o • Telephone V
Eyes.Examined and Glasses Fitted,
With 25 Years Experience
.NNNrrrrrlrNVN •
Renew your Subscription
•
OAorno
111 0 41— 7ct
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tTABLE TALKS
Jane Atuttlew5
In the big cities the old-
fashioned "family" picnic seems
to be pretty much a thing of the
past. -But in the smaller places,
thank Goodness, these outings
BIM play an important part in
warm -weather living. •
A family picnic is much more
pleasurable for the woman—or
women—involved if the "eats"
are of a sort that can be prepared
well in advance. The following
recipes might be a help in pre..
paring a bill -of -fare bound to
meet with the approval of all,
even those with the heartiest
out -door appetites.
v * $
MEAT LOAF
1% lbs. ground chuck,
pound pork from shoulder,
well trimmed and ground
twice,
1 brimming cup of milk,
1 egg,
2 handfuls of bread crumbs
(generous),
1 large onion, chopped fine, ,
2 teaspoons salt, or more, to
taste,
Pepper.
Mix thoroughly with silver
fork until perfectly blended.
Mold into loaf in' roasting pan.
Sprinkle with bread crumbs and
dot generously with butter or
margarine. Bake covered for one
hour and a half at 375° F.
BAKED BEANS
2 lbs. marrowfat beans,
2 medium sized onions sliced,
1 level tablespoon dry mustard,
2 teaspoons salt (test by tasting),
Pepper.
11A cups light brown sugar,
r4 lb. salt pork.
Soak beans over night. In the
morning boil them with a pinch
of soda and pour off the first
water. More than cover them
again with fresh water and add
other ingredients,
Cook until beans begin to
tenderize, about 20 minutes, The
skin should break and curl when
you blow upon them. Pour into
large bean crock or into two or
three smaller ones. Place piece
of scored salt pork in center of
each one. Bacon across the top
may be substituted.
Bake in even at 350° F. for
four or five hours. As beans ab-
sorb liquid, keep adding more
until the last 45 minutes. Do not
allow them to bake entirely dry
at any time. If you use all the
liquid they were cooked in, add
water. They will be deliciously
browned when done.
RED CABBAGE
1 fairly large solid head of
red cabbage,
2 heaping tablespoons of but-
ter or margarine,
134 cups of vinegar,
3/ cup sugar (more or less to
taste),
toe VW ♦
!Wo wonder I'm sore! There's no
seat In the darn things!"
1 teaspoon salt (to taste).
Cut cabbage fine as for slaw.
Saute thoroughly in hot melted
shortening. Add vinegar, salt, and
sugar, Simmer for one hour or
until tender. This may be stored
in refrigerator and will keep for
days or weeks, It is delicious hot
or cold. Some folks, before going
on a picnic, reheat and carry in
a covered casserole,
* * 4
APPLESAUCE CAKE
1 large cup light brown or
granulated Agar,
1 large cup of batter of mar-
garine,
egg,
cups of hot dry applesauce
(canned applesauce may be
substituted),
2 teaspoons baking soda,
1 teaspoon vanilla,
1 teaspoon cinnamon,
14 teaspoon cloves,
Cream all together and add
2 cups sifted flour,
I/ lb. raisins,
1 cup chopped walnut meats.
Bake in 8- by 12 -inch pan for
45 minutes at 375° F. Reduce the
temperature the last 15 minutes,
Cake may be frosted with an
icing made by combining con-
fectioner's sugar, one teaspoon
melted butter, and lemon juice.
If no frosting is desired, try
sprinkling with granulated sugar
before baking, This is truly deli-
cious and will keep for many
deys if the family doesn't disco-
ver it. If your picnic day is cool,
the beans, meat loaf and cabbage
may all be reheated in the same
oven before placing them in the
picnic baskets.
1
Uninvited Guests
Mrs, Cooper, who lives in
Ramsgate, changed in one mom-
ent from a normal housewife to,
the most surprised woman in
England.
She had been to the local
grocer's and bought a turnip,
When she got home she peeled
it, placed it on a board and sliced
it. Then she screamed!
Inside was a fully -grown spar-
row, complete with feathers,
Quite dead, of course, but how
did it get there? Mrs.. Cooper
was quite sure there was no hole
in the outside of the turnip. The
grocer who sold it said it was
a good specimen, measuring
about eight inches in diameter.
He had handled it and would
have noticed any flaw.
A plant expert .was called in
to see if he could solve the mys-
tery. He threw up his hands and
said it was impossible. "It is the
most extraordinary thing in my
whole experience," he declared,
"There is just no explanation"
There was an explanation for
the surprise which shook a do-
mestic servant in Colombo to
her very core a year or so ago.
She was dressing a fowl for her
master's dinner at the time.
As she cut it open, something
moved, and a snake glided out.
It had been swallowed by the
fowl just before it had been
killed.
Mr. W. D. Dunn, a greengrocer
of Grove Hill, had the biggest
shock of his life one day when
he unpacked some bananas. As
he cut a quantity from the first
stalk, there was a squeak and
a flurry, and twelve baby mon-
keys fell to the floor. They had
travelled and kept themselves
alive on bananas all the way
from Central America,
Plastic Tunes—Plastic has invaded the musical world. Molly
Blshay, left, tries out a tune on her new one-piece plastic bass -
clarinet, while Harry \tope strums his slick -looking plastic guitar,
Twins Just The Same—These twins made medical history when
they were born 56 days apart—in different years. Mrs. Alan
Goodwin, of Sydney, Australia, holds her sons, Denis (left),
who was born on December 16, 1952, and David (right), who
appeared on Feb. 10, 1953.
"Crosby vs Hope"
Long -Lasting Feud
Defying the laws of slander,
Bob Hope and Bing Crosby con-
tinue to crack away at each
other.
Says Hope: "Crosby is so lazy,
he makes Rip van Winkle look
like perpetual motion . ,
Says Crosby:: • "Hope used to
come over and play with my
kids until 1 stopped him. I found
he was using a pair of dice.
I made him give back the bicycle
he won , .."
And so it goes on. When they
make a film together they are
at once partners and rivals,
When Hope makes a film by him-
self, you can be sure that Crosby
will turn up at the crucial mom-
ent and spoil everything.
Crosby is at rather a disadvan-
tage in this battle of wits, be-
ing a crooner first and a comic
second. Hope, on the other hand,
is all comedian. Yet the former
manages to get in some very tell-
ing shots.
"Believe it or not," says Cros-
by, "it takes the combined efforts
of everyone on the set to foul
his uncontrollable passion to
ham up every scene.
"You thing I'm fooling? Well,
all I know is that he's the only
actor in town who has a big sign
over his house which lights up
at night and says 'Bob Hope, star
of radio and television, films and
night clubs, 'lives here.' "
Hope's gags are largely direct-
ed at his rivals age or supposed
meanness. When they were both
over in England last year., Hope
said: " Bing, hasn't announced
yet how he plans to get back
to the States, but he'll make an
interesting sight standing on the
pier at Southampton waving his
thumb.
"I hope someone will give him
a ride, because with his breast-
stroke he'll never make it back
in time for the apple -picking
season,"
When Hope called Crosby
"King of Groaners," the other
retaliated by calling him "Bugle
Beak."
Their widely -publicised ven-
detta was not planned. It was
a sort of habit they fell into.
After the first of their famous
"Road" pictures, the script
writers found it easier to write
abusive dialogue than any other
kind,
But most of their gags are im-
promptu. Crosby tells of the
time one of their script writers
visited the set during the film-
ing of "Road to Rio." Hope yell-
ed to him: "If you recognise
anything you've written, shout
'bingo; " and the writer de-
parted in a huff.
They are both extremely sharp
wits, and can produce material
out of the blue, When Hope was
over in England to play ir. the
British Amateur Golf Champion-
ship, he said in an interview:
Crosby played in the competi-
tion last year; I'm here to
apaligise. My handicap? Four.
Crosby's? His age,"
Is there really something be-
hind this feud? Show business
partnerships often breed very
real bitterness, but in this case
they are really the nest of
friends,
Hope, in more serious vein,
said recently: "In my book
Bing's still the world's greatest
songster.
"At Christmas our two fam-
ilies always get together for a
party, and Bing and I always
make a point of toasting each
other."
And there you have a hint of
the real sentiments between
them,
Getting Ready For
Trade With Mars
Students attending a college of
science, engineering and tech-
nology in Massachusetts daily
walk out of the world of 1953
into a fantastic, imaginary world
of 1,000 years hence when man
will be in constant communica-
tion with many parts of the
universe.
The stimulate their inventive
imagination, Professor John E.
Arnold asks them to project
themselves into life as it may be
lived in the year 2953.
Space travel will then be as
common as train journeys are
now. Our earth may be trading
with planets . countless millions
of miles away which would
mean cultural 'connections with
their strange inhabitants. We
may run excursions to and from
their worlds.
A bureau for inventing arti-
cles ranging from machinery to
hitherto unthought-of household
gadgets has been set up by the
students, The realism of the
bureau is enhanced by letters ad-
dressed to those unknown
planet -dwellers, letters about
trade agreements, letters to fic-
titious agencies far out 'in
space.
Even a file detailing "discov-
eries" of what life will be like
on the one of the planets in 1,000
year's time has been opened by
the enthusiastic students. The
planet's people will talk by
means of telepathy; they will
have amazingly acute hearing
arid be able to see great distan-
ces. And their bones will be
hollow!
They will be emotionally
stable, monogamous and gregari-
ous, They will use electricity for
light and power but know noth-
in of electronics'. This means that
opportunities for trade with the
earth will be limitless.
A document which purports to
give details of the planet's size,
density and temperature ex-
tremes has been solemnly filed
away, ready for use at any time.
Another shows that plant life
on the planet — "where the
gravity is . eleven times greater
than on the earth" — flourishes
upside down! Roots extend into
the air and the fruit -bearing
parts of plants grow below the
surface,
It all sounds odd to us in
earthbound 1953,but who's to say
that the students are wrong ih
their guesses about the world of
2953? Perhaps their imaginative
theory that some planet -dwell-
ers will evolve from birds may
prove accurate! •
At any rate, they are already
designing articles of a kind like-
ly to interest the people of Mars
and other planets 1,000 years
hence. They will be "built on
earth and shipped through space"
for interplanetary trade.
..Plain Horse Sense..
by BOB ELLIS
Among the brickbats and bou-
quets received lately is one
from (Mrs.) Marj, Alvin, West-
on, Ont,, who writes: "I see
where you say farmers shouldn't
get involved In party politics, I
don't see why not. Isn't it high
time they did? When are the
farmers ever going to get seine
sense and jump into politics with
both feet. If they want to know,
what politics to join they have
only got to look, at the record.
We need security in our prices
just like the working' man has
for his wages,"
Mrs, Alvin does not say
whether she wants farmers to
organize in unions like labour
did and to affiliate with a po-
litical party or whether farmers
should set up their own political
party as they 'have done before.
Check the Record
Looking back over the last ten
years we find that farmers have
done fairly well up to about
ten years ago when it became
evident that Canadian farmers
could not do without the Brit-
ish markets given up so light-
heartedly by Messieurs Howe
and Gardiner,
The Americans who are sup-
posed to be our "natural mar-
ket" are closing themselves off
against the imports of Canadian
food products. Our farm sur-
pluses are piling up and prices
are going down, There is really
not much to encourage farmers
to vote for a continuation of the
present agricultural policy. .
What Alternative?
if the farmers should come to
the conclusion that they had "a
raw deal" the last couple of
years, what have they to choose
from?
Of the three "splinterparties"
making up the opposition in the
last House, the Conservatives
have hopped along with the
Liberals in those questions
Which are closest to the farm-
er's . heart,
In March 1952 they helped to
vote down Mr. • Coldwell's mo-
tion for the establishment of a
Federal Agricultural Board to
control meat and dairy products,
In December they joined the
government to defeat a motion
for the introduction of a Nation-
al Health Ihsurance Plan,
Social Credit is an unknown
factor. Nobody seems to be able
to gauge how much regimenta-
tion it would need to put their
economic ideas into effect.
Last but not Least
That leaves the CCF , and its
little group of gallant men who
have been trying hard to put
some of their program through
parliament. As direct descend-
ants of the old Progressives,
they are mostly made up of
Western farmers with some
sprinkling of labour men amongst
them,
As they are free from any
financial ties they represent the
interests of all the people, Their
speeches read very much like
the reports in the late Farmer's
Sun, From them have originat-
ed practically all new ideas in
the last twenty years,
If farmers intend to take po-
litical action,, they would have
to link up with labour which
forms the largest group of con-
sumers for the farmer's prod-
ucts,
Time only will show whether
Mrs, Alvin's advice will be
heeded,
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 - 18th Street, New Toronto.
Ont.
This Strike Lasted
Fourteen Years
The longest strike on record —
and the friendliest—has ended, It
was In Ireland—it couldn't have
happened anywhere else.
Fourteen years ago, in March;
1939, Jim Downey, propietor of
Downey's Select 13 a r, at D u n
Laoghaire, near Dublin, sacked
a barman, He refused to rein-
, stake him, and the man's union
. called a strike and posted pickets.
Daily after that t h e pickets
came on, It cost the union about
£20,000. It may have put more
than that into Jim Downey's till.
For, as the strike. continued, it
brought a lot of trade to the bar
--"curiosity custom." Year after
year, tourists and seamen came
back to see if the pickets were
still at their posts,
Annual Party
Big Jim realized the value of
the dispute. Every year, on the
anniversary of the strike, he put
up bunting and threw a celebra-
tion party. The pickets were in-
cluded in it — there were "drinks
on the house" for them as well
as for the customers,
In winter there was also "a
drop of the ould stuff" for the
union men to keep out the cold,
And if a picket wasn't on his beat
at the proper time, Downey
would phone the union to ask
why.
So a good time was had by all
—except perhaps the union trea-
surer. Now it is all over. Mr.
Downey died the other clay and
the pickets have been called off.
The strike has ended.
But a world record has been
set up. So perhaps the curiosity
custom will continue. The pickets,
however, may be sorry.
It's Rigged—Lavergne Dorobiala demonstrates the Bell Telephone
Co. ticktacktoe machine which never loses, The best you can
hope for is a tie. Buttons light up the individual squares with
crosses and, as soon as one is pressed, the machine comes back
with a circle—always at the best place. If you try to cheat by
pressing two buttons a bright red Tight flashes.
•
NEW SHAPE CHAPEL—Soldiers file into the new SHAPE chapel at Camp Youlceau, France, Gen°
Matthew Ridgeway inaugurated the all -denominational chapel shortly before he left for Wash-
ington.
, WednesdLIy, August 5, 1953
1
1
.#######~•#.41#1.#######44444 •4•4`
TILE BLYTII STA'NDAitD . . page
LOOK
TO THE FUTU
IT'
GET OUT AN
Es..
So
•
Mon., August 10
TRIS ADVERTISEMENT SPONSORED AS. A PUBLIC SERVICE BY THE
GODERICH .JUNIOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
For Transportation to Polling Booth Phone---
Conservative Committee Rooms, 128 Liberal Committee Rooms, 62.
THE VOTE IN 1949
The figures shown below represent
the results of the 1040 election in each
of the municipalities which now maize
up the Riding of Htu'on. In view of
the fact that the Riding; as• it • now
stands, comes up for It's first political.
test In next Monday's Federal election
the figures should prove interesting
reading this time. Three candidates
were In the field In the 1040 election,
On Monday, Andrew Y. MeLean, Lib-
eral, and L. Elston Cardiff, Progressive
Conservative, will be the two candi-
dates contesting the Riding;
ASIIFiELD
Poil C.C.F. Conservatives Liberals
No, 1 ,,.,.,,, 0 94 53
No, 2 13 9.4 37
No.3...,,,, 2 85 '70
No, 4 5 60 44
No. 5 ..,0 18 104
No. 6 1 36 64
No, 7 1 43. 70
22 436 442
'BLYTII
No. 1 ......... 3 121 . G 6
No, 2 .•........ 1 118 65
4 239 131
No, 7 B 8
No. 8
No, 9 A....,8
No.OB 5
No. 10 A 6
No, 10B 5
No, 11 15
No. 12 A _ 10
No. 12 B,,, 12
15U
No, 1 -.,...... ' 1
No. 2..,.,.,.,,, 0
No.3 . 2
No. 4 0
No,5 17
No. 6 3
No.7 2
31
No, 1 3
No, 2 5
No, 4 3
No, 5 1
No,6 U
' 21
59
64
77
80
87
56
70
62
47
1,217
68
80
64
61
70
75
87
60
83
1,452
No. 1 ..._...
No. 3A....
No. 3 13
No. 4
No, 5
No, 6
No, 7
No, 8 ___
GREY .
20
60
79
53
60
110
61'
60
500
MORRIS
40
48
. 55
'71
90
• 68
. 60
440
80 61
09 55
01 55
107 36
85 47
U4 82
516 336
EAST WAWANOSU
BRUSSELS
No, 1 0 38
No, 1 1 106 92 No, 2 0 04
No, 2 5 ' 73 60 No, 3 -._,..,, 3 72
No. 3 5 104 .64 No, 4 1 48
11 283 210 ^ —
_ 4 305
WEST 1YAWANOSII
No. 1 A..,-, 2
No, 1 B.._ 3.
No, 2 A.._ 3
No. 2 B.... 7
No. 3 A _, 8
No, 3 B 3 '
No, 4 A 3
No. 4 B 12
•
CLINTON
04
86
114
.07
111
107
, 105
40
41 703
COLBOiINE
No, 1 ,_.� 5
No, 2 ,,,,,_,_ 11
No, 3 --„,,,-, 2
No, 4 _ 0
70
26.
70
40 '
64
68
70
87
66
88
77
87
613
No, 1 10 91
No, 2 0 01
No.3 0 50
No. 4_.. 1 38'
No. 5 2 62 •
No. 6 ,,, 0 16
13 348
IIIBBER'1r
No, 1 A,_,: 4 21
8 No, 1B 0 ` 37
No, 2 4 67
No. 3 -,....•83
No, 4 1 71
50
92
53
18 224 202
GODERIC I TWr,
No, 1 ., _ .. 15
No, 2 0
No.3 4
No. 4 ,,,,, 1
No, 6 „„„43
No, 6 .,._-1
32
100
86
97
65
85
60
499 270
GODERICII TOWN
4 260
US110UNE
58 No. 1 .,,,, 6 65
46 No.2 9 60
54 No, 3 ,,,,,,2 30
2D No, 4 0 08
' 50 No, 5 ,,..,.., 3 91
41 No. 0 7 53
No, 7 4 89
No, 1 „-,,
No. 2 A , 13
No, 2B_18
No. 3' A.,,, 5
No, 3 B .._5
No, 4. 17
No, 5 12
No, 6 4
No. 7 A ,,,,, 4
65
67
63
65
68
60
100
51
76
63
80
83
70'
91.
85
137
90
81
31
No, 1 A 13.
No, 1B_._13
No, 2 A ,,,,,, 12
No, 2 B .,,,-17
No. 3 A 12
No. 3 B „ 12
No, 4 ____ 7
446
EXETER
105
• 70
130
05
117
78
08
38
80
•G1
84
30
282
52
62
32
61
54
52
313
106
88
98
124
70
605
52
60
63
28
53
20
40
. 325
DO
05
100
1113
103
07
35
86
2
3
4
2
5
0
4
0
0
680
HAY
48
49
60
73 ,
106
26
106
32
22
522
, STEPHEN
No, 1 11'
No, 2 11
No, 3 D
No, 4 .....•, 19
No. 5 ......-4
No,6 12
No, 7 2
No.8 2
No, 9 A ,,,,,, 8
No. 9B..,,12
90
No, 1 ......., 3 .
No, 2 4
No, 3 ,,,_--, 0
No, 4 1
No, 5 0_„,„, 0
No, 6 ......,.,, 0
No, 7 ,,, 0
No.8 9
'17
No, 1 4
No, 2 20
No.3 24
No, 4 ,,...,,,., 22
70
104.
76
60
92
28
130
37
86
70
40
741 655
rka
584
50
66
111
65
135
88
98
40
03
761
76
26
102
100
80
81
70
1'1
51
55
STANLEY
57
45
46
101
85
78
23
124
649
IeKiLLO1'
49
70
42
18
13
63
43
61
359
23 202
114 78
87 108
08 76
322 404
IIULLET'I'
No. 1 ,,,,,..,., 22 05
No, 2 ... _... 2 ' 57
No, 3 ,,,,,_,„ 4. 37
No, 4 ,,,,,..... 11 04
No. 5 •.._,..., 3 32
No. 0 .,,,, „, 3 70
No, 7 4 68
0n
57
67
60
23
48
72
' 40 460 402
TUCKERSMITII
No, 1 0
No,2 3
No, 3 5
No, 4 ......_6
No, 5 ....,... , 1
No, 6 7
28
No, I A 1
No. 1 B „„, 2
3
SEAFOR 'lI
No, 1 .,._... 4 81
105 05
90 100
62 80
78 77
65 70
63
402 407
54
ALL
110 • 105
. 188 102
198 207
No,2 2
No, 8 1
No, 4 10
104
00
46
154
115
149
110
i
1111111ID1IllilO!11101IUIIUUlith111111111111111111111011111111100113T11111111111j11b!1111011M111111111lll0lUJII(1 mill1iwlllplulll!8111111U1i1t,!! ithiII!11i111101111111111111111111UII11111111I111111W8W1lUlIlO16111111111111111111101111111111111111(l11i11t4
'
Huron To Share In London. Tribute Paid Accident Vic- . CARDIFF RE -UNION
Relief Fund rim At Brussels Tattoo
Six municipalities in Western rn . Cln t
ns•
On Saturday afternoon, July 25th, to will receive cheques totalling more A special tribute was Raid to the one hundred members of the Cardiff
thin 344,000when the Landon 'Perna- memory of the late Kcnnelh Coleman family free bothered al the home of
Pipe Sergeant of the Brussels Legion
do Rr lief Fund i, officially closed Aug- concession of Grey township, for their
Mr, and Mrs, John Pennington, 12th
•
[tilos(
15th, Pipe Band, at the Brussels Lions Club
The money tv;il he dislri? ulvd on n annual band tattoo held last wee).. s
A pleasant afternoon was enjoyed 077[1001 rc-union,
•
percentage basis to f.ve counties and Bandmaster A, C, Robinson, of Lon -
'
the young folk participating in.
the City of S u•oia V, fin uuaally, help don, who had charge of ll+.e tattoo, a lively bull cane, followed b races
city dwellers and
farmers hard-hit by voiced his regret that he had been u.)' aril ,caput scramble.
May 21 twister that ripped across sent during the period of the tragedy. A hearty lunch was served after
Western Ontario, _ The massed bands played, "Abide With which Albert Cardiff, president, con-
Thb•lcen committee
to i co-or.
Me,” while members of the 13russedci ducicrt a short business meeting, Rus-
cdinal!ng committee Friday night unnni- Lcgion Pipe Band, drawn up in forms sell Shine, Monkton, was elected presi•
in
voted w Ine'ud : Huron Count lion in front of the bands, stood et b year, with Mrs,
County dent for the coming
in the benefit program, Originally on- attention, Stun Wolfe of Logan township, secre-
1 ly the counties of Oxford, Perth, Lamb- Seven bands parlicipalcd In the lal- taay; Mrs. Mark Buillic, convener o!
ton, Middlesex and the City of Sarnia too, which is an annual event, sponsor -
lunch and WallaceBaillie, convener of
01
tvcre Irr share ,contributions, ed by the Brussels Lions Club Band. spurts. These two to elect their help-
All monies in the L•nrion Tornad•, ; which is under the direction of Mr. cps.
Relict' Fund will be distributed on n Robinson. One of the feature bands' L.Elston Cardiff spot;; for the gath-
percentage bas's according to the find ! the 27th C. 0, D. Drum and Bugle Betel Bring in appreclution of the efforts of
amount, raised and the net Toss of each of Lnndun, was un'sble to be present, the committees In charge and f
municipality, It will be two weeks lel tt'11ich was disappolnlir'g' Mr. and Mrs. Pennington for the wel-
d
befure the size of the cheques are The parade of bands left the Library come to their home which lent itself
know', at 7:30 and the program was held at
1 well to the occasion,
County and oily officials, meeting In Victoria Park. Participating bands The eldest lady present was Mrs,
London City Iloilo learned that $38,• were from Seifnrlh, Wingham, Mit-
Richard Cardiff of Grey township; eld-
324.15 is on hand In the tornado fund ;hell, Brussels, London, and Gndericit' est gentleman, Mr, Nelson Cardiff, of
account at the Bank of Montreal, Lon- Brussels; youngest child, Wayne Bail-
cdon City Council has authorized an ad- r tic, son of Mr. and Mrs. Millard Balllle,
r ditionu1 $5,0(10 which is eligible for n OBITUARY Elmo township; most Millard
married
$2,500 is provincial grant on the bas's of
MRS. R'ihI,IABi TDR\'liULh couple, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cardiff, of
50 cents for every dollar raised by A funeral service was conducted on Molesworth, with Mr. and Mrs, Richard
funds sponsored by municipalities, . Thursday" afternoon for Mrs, William Adair of Monkton u close second,
Meantime, Mayor Rush, of London, Turnbull at the family home in Grey Guest from farthest away, Miss Kath -
was optimistic enlarged that. the London fund � Township where she died on Tuesday been Beveridge, Regina, Sask. Others
will be before the Aug. 15 at 75, She war, the former Mary Ann present were from Clinton, Listowel,
Kath -
deadline. He reported that "several McCartney, daughter of John and Jane Kitchener, Barrie, Camp Borden, Monk -
figure
industries" arc prepared to d�ua'e Wilson McCartney. She had been ill ton, Ethel, Molesworth, London, Moro,
to the fund when the final "net loss" for some months. She carts born in IlOrrislon, Hcnsall, Walton and Brus-
fig ha for the six areas d tabulated, Grcy township and, following her mini•- cels, The next re -union is to be held
That figure now stands unofficially r.iage to the late Mr. Turnbull, spent at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sam
al $I,80Coun
Two Counties—Oxford and Perth the rest of her life there, One son, Wolfe, Logan township, the dale to be
presented official net loss figures ie George, lives on the home farm; and left In the hands of the committee. •
the co-ordinating committee, These
daughters, Mrs. David (Mildred)
are $245,000 ;incl $104,450, respectively.
The County of Huron was listed for If(Laura) Parrish, Winbham, 011(1 aardy, Grey township, 1Mrs, Ephraim
benefits from the fund on motion by brother, William, in Milestone, Saslc.,
Aid, R. J. Edwards, also survive, She was a member of
Melville Presbyterian Church, Brus-
sels, and Rev. W, II, T. Fulton con-
ducted the funeral services, Pallbear-
ers were Harold and Gordon Turnbull,
Thomas Strachan, John Warwick, Mel-
ville Dennis, and Louis Frain, Burial
was made in Brussels cemetery.
V
EAST WAW.ANOS.H
Mr, William Carter spent the week-
end at Dellti,
Mr, and Mrs. E. McAdam of Clinton
also Miss Marion Roth!, R,N., of Lon-
don, spent Sunday with Mrs, Charter,
No. 5 .... 8
No. 6 ............ 3
28
Grand
Total ,..,,,,, 789 10,568 10,244
Conservative Majority — 324.
65 83
04 100
480 720
•
LONDESBORO
Lorne Dubs, sot of Mr, and Mrs.
George Dubs, Londesboro, joined t he
Royal Canadian Navy and has gone to
Nova Scotia for five months' basic
traii>;ng, '
— 'is....
Ileavy Rain On Tuesday,
But No Wind
Ileavy rains blanketed this commun-
ity on Tuesday, but no wind accom-
panied the rain, and the electrical
accompaniment was also light.
The rain may have clone damage to .
the standing grain crops , some of
which have reached 'the combining
stage.
At Sebringvillc, 5 miles west of Strat-
ford, a twister did considerable pro-
perty damage, aid a resident of Blyth
who was in the Grey township arca,
reported damage to crops, as severe
wind and rain twisted and flattened
fields,
IllIIVI
11111111111111111111111111111111111111D11111111u1111111111111111u1111 1111111111M 1110111 01111111111 111M1111111 Ii 111101111111111111101 01111111111111111011111M1111111111111111111111111111NIU
111111110111111111111111111111111111111 0111111111111
In HURON It's
Andrew Y.
'LEAN
"ALWAYS ON THE
JOB FOR YOU" •
Every, Day LIBERAL Action Works For
Y Prosperous Farmers =-- a'gricultural exports up V;
times; trading with more than 100 countries; farm cash
income more than doubled since 1948,
* Security For the Aged --- Old Age Pensions for all
• National Security --- full support for NATO and the
United Nations
• A Balanced Budget --- at a time when most nations are
running a deficit; Taxes reduced by more than
$500,000,000 in the past two years.
x National Health --- a new five-year plan.
FOR THE BEST YEARS OF YOUR LIFE - '�1
Mark the Second Name on the Ballot.—
McLEAN, ANDREW Y.
ON AUGUST I.Oth ELECT
McLEAN in Huron
11
•..
Keep Huron on the Government Side of the House
Issued by Huron Liberal Association
•
•
1Acit 8
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,
1u , u 11 i l ► iii .1 I. l i
I, u „ o l , I.
CASEY'S
SELF
SERVE
FOOD MARI{ET
FRESH FRUIT -- FRESH VEGETABLES
COOKED MEATS
LIFETERIA FEEDS -- OYSTER SHELL
Watch Our Windows For Bargain Prices.
PHONE 156 --- WE DELIVER.
PERSONAL INTEREST
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Riordan and
daughter, Ann, of Thorold, visited last
week with the former's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. II. Riordan and J:m.
G011ERICH BUSINESS
COLLEGE
'FALL TERM OPENS SEPTEMBER 24
DAY and EVENING CLASSES
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTION IN ALL COMMERCIAL SUBJECTS.
'Courses approved by the Canadian Business Schools Association.
Telephone 1272 or 428W
Goderich, Ontario,
111
d
!I,NtN.••• ///.INN.:
" THE STA14DAItry'l
PERSONAL INTEREST
Miss Vivian Cockwcll of Bri1'.on Is
visiting her sitter, Mrs. John Stewart,
Mr. Stewart and children, this week.
Mrs, Russell Shaw o[ Alliston visit•
ed on Sunday at the liomo of Mr. and
Mrs, Wm, Coc kerl' nc.
Mrs, Ida Burt of Windsor called on
friends in Blyth on Sunday.
MID SUMMER
Lara.} ice
We have a large stock of
REMNANTS
FLOOR COVERING
AT REDUCTIONS UP TO
40 Percent
BUY TODAY, WHILE THE SELECTION
IS AT ITS \BEST.
Lloyd E. Tasker
I URNITURE — COACH AMBULANCE — FUNERAL SERVICE
Phone 7 ,Myth
Wednesday, August 5, 1953
Summer & Vacation
NEED! S
Sunrex Sun Tan Oil 35c
Gaby Sun Tan Lotion $1,00 and 35c,
Shandra Sun Tan Lotion $1.00
FOR TIIAT SUNBURN TRY:---
Tangcl 75c Unquentine 63e
Noxema $1.69, 89e, 65c, and 26c
INSECT REPELLANT►S;
Liquid 69c
Emergency First Aid Kits 75c and $1.35
Cream 50c
1
P. D. RHILP, Phm, B.
MUGS. SUNDRIES. WALLPAPER --PHONE 10.
1
�/W.M�MN1NlII`IIrNNN.rINwN.'I�'w'�*NH'�'��"i�'�'�H�V
SPECIALS FOR THE WEEK - END
AT OUR STORE.
WATCH OUR WINDOW AND
STORE DISPLAY FOR BARGAINS.
A FULL LINE OF CANNING AND
PICKLING SUPPLIES.
FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES.
COOKED MEATS.
STEWART'S GROCERY.
Blyth PHONE 9 We Deliver
"'THE BEST FOR LESS"
frOW,M*/~///044.4^4//0//e//44 /0/4NOW4/./ f././44/4/4,/~~/4/,/~~04j
1
UNDER a Liberal government, Canadians have added every'year
to the national strength and national unity of Canada;
We have had the greatest expansion of social welfare in our
history;
We have increased our employment, our production and our
national income every year;
We have had the greatest expansion of our primary and secondary
industries — truly an industrial revolution;
Because of the outstanding contribution of the members of our
Navy, Army and Air Force, we have been able to do our full share
to prevent and to stop Communist aggression;
We have reduced the national debt every year, and, in the last
two years, reaped the reward in'lower tax rates.
Do we want all that to be continued?
Do you really think it's time for a change?
' For a chane to a Parliament of regional groups — a handful
of Social Crediters from the Far West, a few Socialists from the
Prairies, a few more Conservatives from Ontario or the Maritimes
and some so-called Independents from Quebec?
In such a Parliament without the leadership and responsibility
of a united national party, how could the government help being
weak and insecure?
1)o we want a weak and divided government to deal with the
formidable problems of the next few years? I ask you, IS it really
time for a change?
• We believe most Canadians want a government which encourages
enterprise, promotes trade and fosters the exploration and develop•
ment of our resources; and you know it as well as we do, that
requires balanced budgets, paying off debts in prosperous times
and a tax structure which, while fair to all, is adequate to meet
these demands,
dor a Greater Cunutlu-
+1
1 E
NATIONAL LIBERAL FEDERATION OF CANADA
Vodden's Home Bakery
PHONE 71 R 2, BLYTH,
HERE'S TIIE BREAD ---
HOME LOAF ENRICI.IED WIIITE BREAD
--WITH EXTRA VITAMINS AND IRON.
Now scientists have found a way to put back
into white flour vital whole-wheat nutrients taken
out by the.milling process. The result is the same
delicious "Home Loaf" White Bread you've always
enjoyed -- but it's BE'T'TER for you! For it's EN-
RICHED with 3 important B Vitamins -- Thiamine,
Niacin, and Riboflavin, plus Iron. See that the
family gets this new aid to sound nutrition, Order
Vodden's "Home Loaf" Enriched White Bread to-
day, Eat plenty, it's BETTER for you.
r
1
FROZEN CRANBERRIES ..PKG. 39c
BIRD'S EYE ORANGE JUICE 2 FOR 45c
BIRD'S EYE FROZEN PEAS PKG. 33c
WEEK -END SPECIALS ON DISPLAY .
IN THE STORE
Rose Brand Chick Starter, Pelletts and Krumbles,
Rose Brand Lay Mash and Lay Pelletts
Peat Moss and Oyster Shell.
Holland's Food Market
AND LOCKER SERVICE.
Telephone 39 -- „ '• , WE DELIVER
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Special Summer Offer
"121 SERIES" STYLE "B"
, ("C -P" Single -Oven Deluxe)
One oven. with window and automatic
light, automatic temperature control, and
clock .cortrol,automatic oven lighting, with
safety pilot. One broiler, warming corn-
partment and Stora e drawer,
Minute Minder and built n. ]amp in back
cresting.
UNTIL AUGUST 15th WE QF.F
ER THIS RANGE
COMPL 'TELY_INSTALLED,-
TOGET1:ER WITH 6 MONTHS' SUPPLY
OF GAS, FOR ONLY
$360.25
•
.,par ink s -Hardare
Blyth, Phone 24,
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