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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1955-05-25, Page 1VOLUME 61- NO, 27 Authorized as recond-class mail, Post Offlce Dcpartnient, Ottawa Trade Fair Site Slated For • In 1956 Thousands of people from all pver Western Ontarlo were present for tltc Second Annual, Western Ontario Trade Fair held t t the Community Centre - grounds, Blyth, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday of last week. So huge was the crowds, and so representative not only of this distrlct, but taking in a much wider scope, that It seem:i hardly necessary to enlarge an the success of the event. From the time of the industrial parade which herald- ed the event on'Tuesday evening, un- til late on Thursday ntght, the' park and iirena were "bcehtves of industry." The parade; comprisect of various vehicles belonging to local and district Industry, wended its way through tho streets headed by the Halliday sound truck. In the parade was a cavalcad4 from Wingham which arrived with suitable fanfare. Atop the sound truck was the Trade Fair promoter, A, H, Wilford and Mrs. Wilford, Reeve W. 1I, Morrltt of Blyth, and Mayor J. E. McKinney of Wingham, both of whom brought greetings from thelr respec• tive communities, The parade presented qutte a spec- tacle, from the fleet of huge transports operated by Campbell Bros, of Blyth, to a herd of turkey, dressed for the occasion in their best bib and tucker from the turkey farms of Robert Wal- lace, The latter brought up the rear of the parade and were missed by many spectators, but Mr, and Mrs, Wnllace and staff are to be congratulated for thelr efforts, Incidentally the turkeys wore their outfit throughout Ute show as they were on exhlbit, Winners At Mutt Show While the parade was going on, ac- tivity at the park had nlready com- menced wlth the Dr, Ballard Mult Show attracting considerable attention, There were blg dogs, little dogs, hun• gry dogs, and well dressed dogs, all out to win the cash prizes, Winners \vere as follows: Largest dog, Jim Henry and- Brian Spiegelberg; Smallest dog, Douglas Hamilton, Wingham, and Glenyce Balntan; .Dog with longest tat(, Jin} Henry; Dog with shortest tail, Glenyce Banton; Best dressed dog, Nancy Campbell, Douglas Hamilton and Diane Radford, Food eating contest Nancy Campbell's dog, Opening Ceromonles A Brief, but unique, 'opening cere- mony took place in front of the Arena immediately afterthe parade when the Bell Telephone mobile radio unit was used for a two-way conversation be- tween Blyth and Toronto when A, H, Wilford radio -telephoned the Hon, W K. Warrender, Minister of Planning' and Development, who opened the show front lits Toronto office, the conversa- tion being distinctly heard over the loud speakers, At tho same time ,dig= nitaries were lined up ready for the ribbon cutting ivhlch was done by W. T. Cruickshank, of Wingham, and the Fair was off to a most successful be- ginning as the large crowd jammed the arena' and poured over into the park for a look at the exhibits. Inside the arena and the agricultural hall were many booths of interest, and on the park were machines of almost every make, new cars, hotne 'building supplies, and just about everything one AMONG THE CIIURCHES ST, ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday School --1:30 p,m,, Church Seryicc--2:00 p,m, Sermon Subject -"The Old Mission," Student Minister: Joseph Montimar- ello, THE UNITED CHURCH OF.;CANADA lfyth, Ontario. Rev, A, W, Watson, Minister,. Sunday, May 211th, 1955 10:15 a,m,-Sunday School, 11:15 am. -Morning Worship, -"God 'Is Able," 7:30 p,nr, Evening Worship, --"Question Box;" -_ -,--- ANGLICAN CHURCH Sunday, May 29, 1055 Trinity, Blyth -10:15 a,m, Matins. 10:40, a,m,-Sunday School at Rectory, St, Mark's, Auburn -12 noon, Matin 11;30 a,m,-Sunday School, Trinity, Belgrave-2 p,m,, School, ., 2:30 p:m.-Evensong, tho s. i Sunday CHUItCIt Ol OOD McConnell Street•,'Btyth, Rev, G. L Beach; Pastor, 10 n,m,-Sunday School. 11 a,m,: Farewell Service, 7:30 p,m,--Evening Worship. Wednesday, , 6:30 p.tn:-Prayer Blble Study; : w Priddy,, 8 p.tn;--Youth Fellowshtp, and could hope to see anywhere, Visit From Minister nl ,l I , i- L- r S d1 BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1955 Subscription Rates $2,00 in Advance; $3.00 in the U'S.A; OBITUARY DR, W, ROY STACKIIOUSE 'Fite news of the passing of Dr, William Roy Stackhouse at his home at Ridg- way on Friday, May 20th, came as a .hock to many friends as It had not been known here he had suffered a The Fair continued on Wednesday, sllght coronery two weeks prevlousty and during the afternoon the Hon, W, but hadappeared to be inproving un- K, Warrender arrived in company with til the fatal attack Friday morning, John W. Hannn, 1'4,P,P„ and short nd. I He was born at Westfield on October dresses were heard from the speaking 5th, 1877, a on of the late Mary:Mc- plutform with John Cruickshank of Gowan and William Stackhouse, Fol- CKNX as master of ecremo les,lowing his- graduation from Queen's Mr. Warrendcr termed the Fair' a + Universlty, he enlisted and served as magnificent event and said it was • n n captain in'the first war, ' Returning wonderful inspiration to see such n dis- , from overseas he purchased a medical play of exhibits from all parts of On- I practice : in Ridgway.. I tanto, the United States and England, ' He married the former Mabel Joyce, R,N., of Grafton, on May 14th, 1023, The minister paid tribute the pro- She, whit a family of two daughters and mater of the Fair, AH, Wilford, ford, for one son s'irvives, Joyco, Mra, McDona'd. huntiring efforts a and the contrtbu- I of Rldgway, Lloyd, 'of Preston, and tion he has made to industry. Mary, Mrs, Mehar, of Fort Erie, One Mr,,, Warrender touched briefly on sister, Ada, of Welland, also survives. the rutabagd industry .and the vaet I Dr, Stackhouse took o keen interest shipments that, had been made from in church and club activities, or , any - this arca to other parts of Canada' and; thing for the betterment of the com- I Wilford that he would do his best'in nanity In which he livedand wherd he was beloved by ail, obtaining information as to the posst• The funeral service was held Sunday bllltics df setting up a canning indua- afternoon from' the clnurcin with inter- ment for rutabagas in Blyth, in Ridgway cemetery. Other speakers who brought greet- Many beautiful floral tributes, bore ings were Warden Earl Campbell, May. l witness to the esteem in which he or d. E, McKinney of Wingham, J. W. i was held, Hanna, M,P,P,, Thomas Pryde, M.P.P., Relatives from this vicinity attending Lewis Whitfield, Blyth, and Earl Ham- the funeral (included Mr. and Mrs, Nor- iltol, Wingham, Reeve W. H, Morrltt,1mun McDowell, Mrs, Wilson of Bruce - Blyth, Reeve Melvin Crich, Clinton, i field, Ednypod Stackhouse of Giencoe, and Earle M,. Grose, manager of th'3 agriculture chemical department, Uni- ted Co-operatives of Ontario, Mr, Grose also publicly intervlewed J. J. McGavin, of Walton, who at 99 is still active in his work as a livestock shipper. The Fair continued on through to Thursdny night with large crowds pat- ronizing the arena and grounds both afternoons and evening. Booth privil- eges, particulnriy those of a local and district nature, reported good patron- age. There was 'no admission charge to the grounds or arena, and genet'ally speaking exhibitors were more than satisfied with the results obtained for thelr efforts, Wi1S Return. Next Year .. On Thursday evening a group of the Board of Trade, the town council, and exhibitors, met with Mr. Wilford, and discussed future plans, An invitation was extended to the promoter to again hold the 1956 Fair at Blyth, which he accepted, at the same time announcing a five-year plan whlch lie had formul- ated for the Fair. Mr, Wilford pledged his undivided attention to the Fair's future, and asked for full local co-op- eration. The nieeting closed in good fellowship with the singling of "Auld Lang Syne," Described As Fine Effort Mr, Wilford was the redlpient of many complimentary remarks for his offort thls year, and one which he prizes most htghly, was an editorial In Friday's London Free Press, which rend as follows: "It is tribute to the Indefatigable industry and unconquerableoptim- ism of A, H. Wilford, promoter and direetor'of the tradd fair at Blyth that snore than. 300 exhibitors arc displaying products, that farm ntacliinery and display booths fill a 15 -acre lot, that the program has aroused #intense interest through- out the district, "To plan, promote and achieve a three-day trade fair of this sort is a very considerable achievement, and while the director has had full and generous co-operation from a great many interested people; the fair, like nil undertnkings, tends to be the shadow of one man, In this case P$omoter Wilford, wlio bikes now and then to be referred . to by leis friends as "The Ruta baga King,'" Locally too; our hats are off to Mr, Wilford, He did a tremendous pto- inotional job, with he very minimum ofassistance from' any quartor, and the Fair outdrew anything that has been held in this town for years, -We in Blyth are fortunate to have it cen- tred in thls village and from it we re- ceive a tremendous amount of good publicity at no cost to onyone, TRADE .FAIR DRAIY 11'1NNERS Among the draw winners "held in connection with the Trade ; Fair was a spray grill, raffled by Guy Ives & Sons, and won by Ray Beckberger, of Walkerton. An automatic furnace stoker whlch went to the highest bidder from ' the booth of A. Munning & Sons, was pttrchnsed by Mr, Leslie Rutledge, of Drumbo, and will eventually be Instal- led In a new dwelling which Mr, and Mrs. Rutledge are building at Streets- ville whero the Rutledge family will be moving, -' Mrs, George Charter, Blyth, 'Mr. and: Mrs, Fred Reid, and Mr, and Mrs, Geo. Cantolon, Clinton. v. - PERSONAL PERSONAL INTEREST' Mr, J, B, Tiernay and David of North Bay, and Mr. Terence Tiernay, of To- ronto, spent the week -end with M,y, Jack Tiernay and Mis3 Vera Tiernay, Mr, Tlernay• of North Bay, who keeps tab on local activities through The Standard, notes with pleasure the fae.b that the old home town is booming, He noted with pleasure the activity of the Western Ontario Trade Fair in our midst, and also the recent write-up don; Mrs, John Small, Detroit, Mich, on Blyth which occurred in a'. Satu%- and Mrs, Cecil Denniss, Strathroy, day issue of the Toronto „xelegrarn. 4 : (", Many: Blyth friends regret the com- Mr, and Mrs, Lloyd Miller of Lon- paruUvely early demise of Dr, don spent the week -end wth Mr, Jo- tyre, who had never lost touch septi Miller and Mr, and Mrs. Percy the town since he left in. 1028, Vincent, s Cpl. Harold C. Phillips` of Toronto spent the week -end with his parents, Mr, and Mrs, Harold Phillips, and Paige. Mr, and Mrs. Peter Brown of River- side, visited with the tatter's brother, Mr, Jim .Stalker on Saturciay. Mr, and Mrs, G. W. Hasson and daughter, Chnirmaine, of St. Thomas spent the holiday_ with Mrs, Hasson's father, Mr, Milton Bruce, and Mrs, Bruce. Mr. and Mrs. Bren deVries, Miss Josephino Woodcock and Mrs.' Martha Quinn nttended the Huron Deanery of tlne Anglican Fhurch in Wingham on Tuesday, Week -end visitors and holiday cal- lers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leon- ard Cook were, Mr, and Mrs, John Philips, of Toronto, Mr, and Mrs, Ken- neth Easterbrook and little son, David, and Miss Dianne Dennis, all of London, and Mr, and Mrs. • George Cook, Mr, and Mrs, Fred Cook, of Belgrave, Mrs, Alma Garner, Fort William, Mr. and Mrs. Howard •H, Garner, Elizabeth and Joanne, of Tororito, with Mr, and Mrs, Lorne Scrimgeour and Mr, , and Mrs. Everett Scrhngc Ur on Sunday, Mrs, Maud Woodall 'of Los Angeles, Cal., and her brother, Mr, Jared King, of Flint, Mich,, former residents here, called on Mr, and Mrs, Lorne Scrim- geour on Wednesday, also taking in the Western Ontario Trade Fair, of which Mr. King remarked, "They, couldn't put on a show like this in Flint. I never saw anything like it," Mr, and Mrs. W, McNall spent the week -end with Mr, and Mrs, Donald McNall and children • at their cottuge at Beaverton, Loke Sirincoe, .Mr. and Mrs, Ken Evans of Stratford, Mr, and Mrs. Lewis Armstrong, of Brussels, vislted Sunday with Mrs, George Cowan and Mr, and Mrs, Bill Cowan and family;: Miss Hazel Petts of London spent the week -end with her mother, Mrs. Ida Petis. Mr, and Mrs. G,'R, Augustine of Bur- lington vislted here last Wednesday, with their son, Gerald, and also taking In the, Western • Ontarlo Trade Fair, Mr; and Mrs, George Cowan, Ted, Gregory and Kenneth, of Cooksville, spent the week -end wain the former's ti}otlner, Mrs. George Cowan, and Mr, and Mrs,. Bill Cowan -1 DEATHS SOMERS-In Wingham General hos- pital, on Monday, May 23rd, 1955, Jessie Elizubeth Somers, in her 78th year, Resting' at tha Tasker mem- orial Chnpel, Blyth, where funernl service will be held on ; Thursday, May 26th, at 2;30 p,m, Rev, A, Nim - mo, of Wingham, will officiate, In terment will be made in Blyth Union Cemetery, MOSER-At Toronto, on May 21st, 1955, Louise Lovcrn Moser, 24 Joseph St., Weston, wife of the late William Franklin Moser, and mother of the late Dr, John E. Mosel', The funer- al Service was held on Tuesday at 1 ' p,m., with interment at Park Lawn Cemetery: She was the former Luty Jamieson, of Blyth, .Dr. H. A. McIntyre, Clinton Dentist, Buried On Tpesday Dr, Barry A, McIntyre, a former Blyth dentist, died in Victoria Hospital, London, on Sunday at the age of 56, Dr, McIntyre had undergone surget'y last Friday and failed to recover front his illness, . A funeral service was held from the Ball and Mutch funeral home, Clinton, at 2 p.m'„ on Tuesday, under auspicca of Clinton Lodge A,F, and A,M., with the Rev, D. J, Lane officiating, Bur• ial was made In Clinton cemetery, Follawing ltis graduation from the University of Toronto dental colleg'i, Dr, McIntyre practised in Blyth, but In 1028 he moved his business to Clin- ton where he opeyated a successful dental practice until the time of his operation,. He was born at Grand Valley and was a veteran of both wars. He also was prominent In the politioal life of the town of Clinton and was in his second term of office as town coun- cillor. He was prominent in Clinton Legion circles and in Masonry. Surviving are his wife, the former Edlth Jenkins of Grand Valley; a' son, Dr, John McIntyre, Cornwall; two daughters, Mrs, G. E. (Dorothy) Nel- son, Port Perry, and Mrs. John (Jean) Zilenuik, Clinton; a brother Edward, of Grand Valley also survives, and three sisters, Mrs. Charles Morris, Lon. LIIIRARY, BOOK EXCHANGE Huron County Library books on loan frons tine Blyth' Publlc Librnry shottld be In the hands of the librarian, Miss Ella Metcalf, by Saturday night, to be ready for the next exchange, of books,, Subscribers are asked to plcnsc eo-operate,' with Ladies' Auxiliary Service On Sunday, June 5th Blyth Ladies' Auxllinry annual D - Day Church Service is to be held Sun- day, June 5th, at Blyth United Church, Members meet at Legion Home at 10;45 a.m. Beret and plazers please, Also don't forget Zone Rally, May 31st, Meet at Legion Hone at 7 p.m, VANDALISM AT CEMETERY A beautiful tulip bulb was taken from a bed In the Union Cemetery one night last week, The bulb, which was radiant in double bloom was the prize of the bed,, BIRTHS ARCHAMBAULT - In Clintdn Public Hospital, on Friday, May 201h, 1955, to Mr. and Mrs, Leonard Archam- -bault, of Auburn, a son - a, brother for Douglas and Brenda, GEERTSMA - In Winghnm General Hospital, on Saturday, May 14th, 1955, to Mr, and Mrs, Eldred Geertsmo, R,R, 1, Belgrave, twin daughters, SELLERS -In Wingham General Hos- pital, on Monday, May pith, 1655, to Mr. and Mrs, Glenn Sellers, R,R, 1, Belgrave, a son, CALDWELL-In Brussels, at Dr, Myer's Nursing Howe, on Tuesday, May 24, 1955, to Mr, and Mrs, Gordon Cald- tvell, the gift of a daughter -a sis- ter for Linda, DONNYBROOK; Visitors with Mr, and Mrs, John R. Thompson during the week -end includ- ed, Miss Lucy Thompson of Onondago, Mr, apd;;Mrs, Harold Thompson nerd children of Tillsonburg, Mr; Clayton Martin of Clinton and Mr, and Mrs, Joe Thompson of Goderich, Recent visitors with Mr, and Mrs, R. Chamney included, Mr, and Mrs, El- liot Sandy of Lucknow, Miss Joan Doerr of Niagara Fails, and Gordon and Mrs. Chamney and Larry of Aub- urn, - Mr, and Mrs, Stuart Chamney and Dinne and Donna, were Sunday visitors with Mr, and Mr's, Wm, Webster, of Fordyce, Mr. Ton Armstrong of London was a weekend visitor with his brother, Mr, Mark Armstrong,. _ Mr, and Mrs, Melvin Cralg and daughters of Bluevale were Sunday visitors with"her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Mark Arnnstrong, Sunday visitors with Mr, and Mrs, Norman Thompson and .family includ- ed, Mr. and Mrs, Edwhr Thompsan and femily of Wingham, and Mr, and Mrs, Cectl Chamney .of Belgrave, ''" LONDESBORO -L1 New Service Stations Mr, Robert Gibbs, of Hamilton, cal' For Blyth • Auburn' led on Mr, and Mrs, Tom Miller on Announcement over the week -end Sunday. of expansion programs in Western On - Mr, and Mrs, Douglas Radford, of Nl • tario include the building of several agars, spent the week -end with Mr, super service station by the Canadian and -Mrs, Gordon Rndford, Petrofina Company, two of which will Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Shobbrook and I be built in this area, one in Blyth and 1 children, of Oshawa, Mr, and Mrs. Nor -lone on,the turn of the new road going into Auburn. According to Town Clerk -Treasurer George Sloan negotiations are in pro - Mr, and Mrs, Charles Small were in gress by the company to purchase the Port Elgln over the week -end visiting lot on Queen street, next to Huron with Mr. Small's son and family, 1 Farm Supplies building, for the Blyth Mrs, Nellie Watson returned to tine site, Tenders for the construction of village on Saturday after spending the past two months with her daughters. Mr, and Mrs, Peter Brown, of Wind• sor, were with Mr, David Ewan over the holiday, Misses Frances Lyon, of Toronto, Vera Lyon, of London, were home for the week -end, Mr, and Mrs. Sid Lansing, of Auhurn, Mr, -and Mrs. Jack Pipe and family, of Brussels, were Sunday visitors with Mr, and Mrs, Charles Godden, Mr, and Mrs. George Neal and Mari- lyn, of Kirkton, spent Sunday with Mr, and Mrs, Joe Lyon, Rev, and Mrs, ,White are spending ten days with their eldest son and fam- ily in Springfield, Illinois, The service in the United Church next Sunday will be in chargo of the Mission Circle. The service will be it the usual hour. The meeting of the Londesboro Wo- men's Institute will be held on Thurs- day, June 2, at 8 o'clock. The execu- tive will be in charge of the lunch. Program committee: Mrs, B. Shobbrook, Mrs, W. Tyndall, Mrs, G. Radford, Mrs, G, Pollard, Mrs, Tibbett, The May meeting of the W. A. was held on Thursday afternoon in the church, The president, Mrs, J, Lyon opened the meeting with the worship service. Minutes of last meeting were approved and correspondence read, An invitation was accepted to attend a baz. nar and tea at Constance on June 14th, The business period then followed, A discussion on forming the W. A. inti groups and a comanittee of Mrs. Town- send, Mrs, Durnin, Mrs. George Wright and Mrs, E, Wood were appointed to arrange groups if advisable, Mrs, Wrlght, Mrs, Robert Fairservice. and Mrs. Clark were named a,coinmittee.to. arrange for redecorating the church, Mrs, Robert Townsend and Mrs. Lloyd Pipe, delegates to the W.A, Presbytery held in Exeter, gave their reports, Meeting closed with a hymn and pray- er. Hostesses served lunch, There were 19 present, man Radford, of Collingwood, were holiday visitors with Mrs. J. H. Shob• brook, • EAST WAWANOSrd Mr, and Mrs. Hilliard McGowan spent the week -end with Mr, and Mrs. Orval McGowon and Kenneth. Mr, and Mrs, Jas, Coultes and girls of Belgrave visited Mr, R. C, McGowan on Sunday, Mrs,' George Charter attended the funeral of her cousin, Dr, Stackhouse at Ridgeway on Sunday. Mr, and Mrs, Norman Radford of Collingwood called on Mr, R, C, Mc- Gowan on Monday, (Too late for iast week) Mrs, George Potter visited Saturdny afternoon with Mr. R. C. McGowan and the Charter family, Master Gordon Charter entertained several of his young friends Saturday afternoon, it being his birthday, •-- WEDDINGS ••- IIUNTER - SCOTT A pretty wedding took place at Carlton Street Unitcd Church, Toronto, on Friday, May 20th, 1955, when Zekla Lucille Scott, Toronto, and James Hunter, of Toronto, exchanged mar- riage vows, The Rev, Dr, James M. Flnley performed the ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Mr, Richord Scott of Blyth. The bride was dressed in n navy blue dress with white accessories, Miss Kay Hume, bridesmaid, was dressed in a navy blue dress witll white acpessorfes, Mr, Walter Bond, of Toronto, was groomsman. Mr, and Mrs. Bunter visited with the batter's father, Mr, Richard Scott, no their wedding trip to Northern Ontar- io. Family Gathering Honored Mr. Hugh Campbell, 93 On Tuesday evening, May 17th, a fam- ily gathering met at the home of Mr, and Mrs, George W. Carter of Londes• boro to honour Mr, Hugh Campbell of Walton, on Itis 93rd birthday. Mr. Campbell is enjoying good health being able to take care of his hone and large garden, - Those present were: 'Mr, Cainpbeil, Mr, and Mrs. John McDonald, 'Mr, and Mrs. Alvin McDonald and Lynne, of Walton, Mr, and Mrs, Jack Kellar, of Seaforth, Mr, and Mrs. Watson Reid, Blyth, Mr. and Mrs, Charles Small, Mr, and Mrs, Glenn Cartcr and Cathy, of Londesboro, the service stations will be received until May 31st. The company is plan- ning a million dolior expansion pro- gram in the Western Ontario area. If the announcement bears fruit, Blyth may soon have its ninth garage and service station, 'Auburn Entry In Huron. Perth Creates Interest Sports fans in this district will be particularly interested in the Huron - Perth Baseball League this season be. cause of the intermediate entry placed in the League by the Village of Aub- urn which has been the mainstay of baseball in this distrlct for the past several years with their classy minor tdams, This year they are stepping up to the higher bracket, and we predict thet they will give a good account of themselves'in the Huron -Perth, On Monday at Clinton they weni 12 innings before losing out' to the Clinton juniors, 6 to 5. The seasor gets underway at the Auburn diamonc next Monday night, when Dashwooc will be the visiting team: Severa Blyth men are playing and trying ou' with the Auburn team, so the entr3 should attract the fans in Blyth. Schedule Of Games: The schedule of'games Is announces as follows, Save it for future refer once, ` MAY, 23 -Dashwood at Exeter -10:30 a:ir 23 -Auburn at Clinton -10.30 a,m, 23 -Exeter at Dashwood -2:30 p,m; 23 -Zurich at Mitchell -10:30 a.m. 30 -Mitchell' at Exeter -6,30 p,m.. , .30= -Dashwood at -Auburn=-6:30 p.n 31 -Clinton at Zurich -6:30 p,m. JUNE: 2 --Clinton at Mitchell -6:30 p.m, 3 -Exeter at Auburn -6:30 p.m, 3 -Zurich at Dashwood -6,30 p,m 6 -Dashwood at Mitchell -6,30 p.n 7 -Zurich at Exeter -6:30 p.m, 8 -Clinton at Auburn -6:30 p,m. . 10 -Auburn at Zurich -6:30 p,m, 10 -Mitchell at Clinton -6:30 p.m, 13 -Auburn at Mitchell -6:30 p.m, 13 -Exeter at Zurich -6:30 p,m, 14 -Clinton at Dashwood --6:30 p,m 17 -Auburn at Exeter -6:30 p,m. 17 -Dashwood at Clinton -6:30 p,m 17 -Mitchell at Zurich -6:30 p,m, 20 -Exeter at Mitchell -6:30 p,m, 20 -Auburn at Dashwood -6:30 p,m 20 -Zurich at Clinton -6.30 p ," 22 -Mitchell at Auburn -6:30 p,m, 22 -Zurich at Exeter -6:30 p,m, 24 -Exeter at Clinton -6:30 p,m, 24 -Dashwood at Zurich -6:30 p,m 27 -Mitchell at Dashwood -6:30 p,r 27 -Zurich at Auburn --6:3O p,m, 30 -Mitchell at Zurich -6:30 p,ni, 30 -Dashwood at Exeter -6:30 p,m, 30 -Clinton at Auburn -6:30 p.m, JULY:' 5 -Auburn at Dashwood -6:30 p:m, 5 -Zurich at Clinton -6:30' p,m. 5 -Exeter at Mitchell -6:30 p.m, 8 -Mitchell at Auburn -6:30 p.m, 8 -Clinton at Exeter -6:30 p,m. 8 -Dashwood at Zurich -6:30 p.m, 11 -Auburn at Clinton -6:30 p.m, 11 -Zurich at Mitchell -6:30 p,m, 11 -Exeter at Dashwood -6:30 p,m, 13 -All-Star Game at Zurich • -6:30 p.t 15 -Dashwood. at Auburn -6:30 p,t 15 -Clinton at Mitchell-6:30.p.m, 15 -Exeter at Zurich -6:30_ p,m, 18 -Mitchell at lrxeter-6:30 p.m, 18 -Zurich at Auburn -6:30 p.m, 19-Ciinfon at4Dashwood--6:30 p,n 22 -Auburn at Mitchell -6:30 p.m, 22 -Exeter at Clinton -6:30 p,m, 25 -Dashwood at Mitchell -6:30 p. 25 -Auburn at Exeter -6:30 p.m. 25 -Clinton at Zurich -8:30 p.m, 28 -Mitchell at Clinton -6:30 p,m, 29 -Auburn . at Zurich -6:30 p.m, AUGUST:.. 2 -Zurich at Exeter -8:30 p,m. 2 -Mitchell at Dashwood -6:30 p, 4 -Dashwood at Clinton --6:30, p;u CONGRATULATIONS Congratulations to Frank de Vrf who celebrates lnls 4th birthday' Saturdny, May 28th Congratulations_to Jimmj' Cwmh ham who celebrated his .birthday,. Sunday, •May; 22nd, , Congratulations to Garry Anent, v eelebrates'his birthday oft `Thursd May 26th, t•' :. s STABLE TALKS efaue This is the time of year when youngsters — grown-ups too — who have to carry lunch boxes are apt to start complaining about "sameness" in the con- tents. Well, here are some re- cipes that will help you to add variety. Of course you can ad- just the quantities given to suit the number of box lunches you have to prepare;,, Savory Ham -Vegetable Sandwich (8 sandwiches) 16 slices bread 34 cup softened butter 1 cup deviled ham 1 cup grated raw carrot 34 cup finely chopped green pepper 34 teaspoon salt 34 cup mayonnaise Spread slices of bread with butter. On eight of the slices spread deviled ham. Combine carrots, green peppers, salt, and mayonnaise. Spread carrot mix- ture on ham and place buttered slice of bread on top. Remove crusts and cut as desired, • Other fillings; for lunch sand- wiches are given below. Honey -Orange Filling 34 cup softened cream cheese 1 tablespoon honey 1 teaspoon grated orange rind Combine all ingredients. Fill- ing for 2 sandwiches. # • * Egg -Ripe Olive Filling fv cup chopped hard -cooked eggs 2 tablespoons chopped ripe olives 3 tablespoons mayonnaise or salad dressing 1Y2 tablespoons chopped green pepper 1 teaspoon salt Combine all ingredients. Fill- ing for 4 sandwiches. * * M • Snappy Cheese Spread 1 cup- (1/ pound) grated sharp cheese, firmly packed 34 cup chopped stuffed olives 2 tablespoons canned deviled ham 1 teaspoon prepared mustard • BARNYARD FOE — Phil Yazdik, 42, chomps through his ump- teenth chicken leg as he rounds the turn in; a fried -chicken gob= bling marathon, He ate 31 serv- - Ings, but he wasn't too hungry. 3 tablespoons mayonnaise or salad dressing Combine all ingredients, Fill- ing for 4 sandwiches. • * * Perhaps you'd like to make refrigerator cookies for the lunch box, slicing and baking them fresh every day or two. You may divide the dough in several parts, seasoning each differently for variety. Refrigerator Nut Cookies, 3/2 cup shortening 1 cup brown sugar, firmly packed 34 teaspoon salt 34 teaspoon vanilla. 1 egg, unbeaten 11/2 cups sifted flour 1/2 teaspoon soda 3� cup walnuts, chopped fine Combine first 5 ingredients in mixing bowl, ' beating until smooth, Sift flour with soda and add 'to first mixture; mix well. Stir in nuts, Press dough very firmly together into a 2 -inch roll. Wrap in double thickness of waxed paper, twisting ends, firmly. Chill several hours or overnight, Cut 3a . inch thick and bake on greased cooky sheet at 375° F. 8-10 minutes. Spice Crisps 1/2 cup butter 1/2 cup brown sugar 2/3 cups molasses 1 egg, well beaten 234 cups ,sifted flour 1 teaspoon soda 11/2 teaspoons each, cinnamon and ginger 1 teaspoon salt Cream butter; add brown sugar and blend, Stir in mo- lasses and well -beaten egg. Sift flour; measure; sift with soda, spices and salt. Add to mo- lasses mixture, stirring well.. Chill for 1 hour. Roll dough to about 36-1/4 inch thickness on floured pastry cloth. Cut with floured .cooky cutter, sprinkle top with sugar, Place on but- tered baking sheet and bake at 375° F. about 10 minutes, Makes 4 dozen cookies. * Perhaps everyone has her own favorite recipe for the syrup that makes chocolate milk. In case you haven't, here is one that makes 1 cup syrup. To make chocolate milk, use 2-3 tablespoons chocolate syrup for each cup milk, . Chocolate Syrup 1/2 cup .cocoa or 2 ounces bitter chocolate, grated 3/4 cup sugar Few grains salt 1 cup boiling water Mix cocoa or chocolate with sugar and salt. Add 'water, Bring to boil and boil 1 minute if 'cocoa is used, .5 minutes if chocolate'is used, Cool and store in covered jar In a cool place, THE IDOL RICH? Can an idol possess property rights? A judge in Delhi has ruled that it can. He gave judg- - ment=in a case brought by the temple idol of the Hindu god Krishna against a Kanpur law- yer for rent arrears on a house owned by the idol. The judge said that idols are ,_'juristic • persons" above the law—and he ordered the lawyer to pay. The numerous idols in India's Hindu temples own property valued at millions of rupees. The . idols' affairs are managed mainly by priests. • PETITE MISS — Twenty -two' -inch -tall Miss Anita is greeted in Glasgow, Scotland, by the city's lord provost, Tom Kerr. As might be expected, she's called "the smallest woman In the world," HAND -IN -GLOVE WITH DO-IT-YOURSELF — Kidskin briefies come In pastel fruit and flower tones, ,have,,matching," pearl -button closing, Flowers 'a`re imported,..artificial blossoms in matey ar- rangements, which the ladies may"sew on to match their hats or other accessories, Secret Romance Of Famous Author To the eighteen -year-old girl the stage costume was daringly, tormentingly brief, In her dress- ing -room at the Haymarket The- atre pretty blue-eyed Ellen Ter- nan wept with bitter shame, Alarmed at her sobs one of Britain's most" famous 'men tap- ped solicitously at the door -- end so began a blaze of passion that would have shocked the world had its secrets been known, Nearly ninety years later scholars and scientists are still probing the hidden love story of Charles Dickens and Ellen Ternan, When Charles Dickens died, his relatives hastily snip- ped tell-tale sentences out of his letters, Whole passages were censored and mutilated by being over -scored with heavy black ink. But to -day the blacked -out let- ters have yielded their secrets at last to the revealing• eye' of the infra -red camera, In the year 1858 Charles Dick- ens was at the height of his amazing fame. His latest, novel was selling an esimated copies in weekly parts and he had .only to spend a day or two writing a short story to earn $15,000—equivalent of ' to- day's $3,000. When he began his famous readings so many people jam- med the theatre that they smash- ed 'all the glass in the pay -boxes, When petals fell from his but-• tonhole, women madly scram- bled to collect them for keep- sakes. Queen Victoria herself attend- ed his theatrical performances- and swallowed a snub when he refused to see her 'between the acts In his farce costume, Never before,' never since, has Eng: land so idolized a public favour - it. .Yet avour-it..Yet all this was jeopardized when he fell in love with Ellen ` Ternan. Outspoken • critic of social.. abuses, Dickens headed the stern horality of the Victorian era, He Was- a` married man of twenty- two years' standing Wand the father of ten children. What a fierce outcry would have en- gulfed .his career if it had been known that he had lost his heart to a slip of a girl! Dickens was then forty-six, truly the dangerous age. At first. he was merely charmed • and amused by the young actress's innocent tears at "having to show'so much leg." Watching her o ; nthe stage, he felt the sway, of her glamorous and intelligent personality. But within a few months there name an irrestible opportunity. • Sasting the new . play, "The Frozen Deep," Dickens found parts both for Ellen and her sis- ter, Maria. Dickens was both producing and starring in the play and, as he coached his players, little fair-hnired Ellen - took up such a worchtpuing atti- tude and seemed so pathetically anxious to interpret every line. and gesture exactly- as he wish- ed that she cantivete+rt him utter- ly. He. felt a stranga new upsurge of youth, of bubbling humour and fun. The play was opening In Manchester and the eotnuany _whiled. away a hungry and ,te dious ,journey Inventing riddles. 'Why is the manager's stom- ach like a butler's panty?" Dick- - ens demanded. "Because there's a sinkin' there!" Once again, he was his ? sparkling. inimitable self, At the theatre. his nerfnr• ,y mance electrified the audiences, as Weil it might, for he poured into it his new-found passion. In letters to intimate friends, Dickens thought of himself as giving a shining and sanctifed devotion , and he imagined Ellen as a far-off princess on an unscaleable mountain. But this swirling romance came to earth with a bump. He purchased a bra eget for Ellen and the jewe]lelsent it to Dickens's wife in error. Inevit- ably, the incident flared into a scene and Dickens responded to his wife's anger with demoniac fury, _ Nothing would suit him but that his wife should call on Ellen and thus, despite her bitter sus- picions, demonstrate her belief in the young actress's innocence, Kate Dickens wept but yielded. But the way Dickens's mind was working' was demonstrated .by a momentous decision. He ordered, his bed to be moved into . the dressing -room alongside wife's bedroom and called in a carpenter to block up the inter- vening door. Nor was this enough. At two o'clock one morning, in his tor- ment of heart, he rose, dressed and tramped all the thirty miles to his summer home at Gad's Hill, fleeing from his marriage, from his wife and her relatives, from the shadowing past.` At all costs he knew he had to readjust his life, "My father was like 'a madman," said his daughter, long afterwards, "He- ' did not care what happened to any of us," No -matter what the price, Dickens felt that his world was lost for love, The first immediate catastro- phe was his separation from his wife, The second disaster came when one of Charles's personal letters was published In, a New York newspaper.. "Two Wicked people, he had written, "have coupled ; with the separation the name of a young lady, Upon my honour, . there is not on this earth, a more virtuous and spotless creature, , .." Now the world shook with`ru- mour. It was whispered .that . the author, of "David 'Copperfleld" had eloped to Boulogne, Millions of worshipping readers felt in- dignantly that their idol had feet of clay. For a time his career teetered on ruin, But the truth was hushed up. And the truth has -.been told since then . by Dickens's own daughter: "The . pretty actress came like a breath of spring into' the hard-working ,life of Charles _ Dickens .— and enslaved ,him.'„ Who 'could blame cher? He had, theworld at his feet. She' was a The Channel Cat "Old Whiskerface' The name catfish, to distort a phrase, `covers a mutitude of fins, There are actually more than 1,000 species in the catfish family, both fresh and salt water! So far as the sport Asherman Is concerned, however, "Old Whiskerface" can best be repre- sented by the scrappy channel catfish, Though most everyone' agrees all catfish are homely at best, the channel catfish comes closest to being the. Liberece of the outfit. Although it can't play a piano, the chanel catfish is quite adept at fiddling with its whis- kers! In fact, it is widely known as "fiddler". And while on the subject, when fiddling with v channel catfish, watch those nasty barbs on the dorsal and ventral fins, As the catfish squirms in your grasp, .these needle -pointed spines can inflict a painful wound. Until you become expert at handling a cat- flsjt,.hold it with a pair of pliers, gripping its lower jaw while working out the hook. Despite its menacing barbs and homely appearance, the channel catfish . rates ops ' In flavor and high ma sport fish: -If you would catch more of these fine fish here are some facts worth know- ing:..:. Biological Facts -- Many good 'catches' of channel catfish are made below dams in the spring, It is at this time of year these .flsh start their spawning runs, upstream, and swift wt ter. is their idea':of a honeymoon site. The young hatch out in about one week and grow to approximately , 4 inches .by the first summer's end. Throughout their lives, channel catfish prefer cleaner, swifter water than other cat- fishes. Identification -- Small channel catfish are very light in color, some so transparent that blood vessels are visible, As they grow older, the color. changes • to sil- very slate gray, with irregular spots on the body. Tail is forked head is comparatively small, there are no scales, back is slight- ly humped and barbels (whis- kers) are quite long. Range — These fish are found throughout the Mississippi Val- ley, .particularly - through the Great:Lakes area and adjacent waters. Also; from southern Canada, across to Minnesota, south.into Texas, and through the Gulf States into Florida. World Record --Although many channel catfish experts will' cock • an eyebrow 'at this one, the offi- cial world record it 55 pounds, taken by Roy Groves in the James River, South Dakota, in • May, 1949. There is one record which should endure for all time! Natural Foods—The diet of this fish, is ninazing-worms, clams, insect larvae, crayfish, flsh spawn, 'dead fish, pond weeds, algae, frogs, minnows, insects and refuse of various sorts! Suitable Tackle — Probably no 'fish is ,taken with a greater variety, of tackle and by more unusual methods. Ordinarily, a young girl elated and proud to be noticed, , Yet the startling fact is that for four years Dickens pleaded with her , . and for four years she was obrurate, Her surrender, say recent biographers, brought him little of that shining ecstasy. In recent times. too, investi- gators have 'probed suburban ratebooks and discovered the secret nest Dickens kept for Ellen - the house where he sec- retly visited Der when he seem- ed :to his friends to step out of his ordinary life for days at a time and disappear On the day Dickens died, a June day in 1870, Ellen was call- ed to his side Perhaps she sat quickly aside in Westminster Abbey as the sorrrwing crowds of London filed quietly through with their tributes. In the year 1914 a Mrs. Whar- ton Robinson, a schoolmaster's. wife,' died in Margate. No one knew that she had been Ellen Ternan medium action pal rod and pa) reed with 15 -pound test nylon line is ideal, From this as a starter you will find other chan- nel catfish enthusiasts who use a fly rod and reel, spinning out- fits, cane poles, set line's tied to tree limbs, trot lines. jug lines, and other devices not worthy of mention because of their un- sportsmanlike nature. Most chan= nel catfish, however, are taken by rod and reel fishermen using live bait such as shrimp, liver, chicken entrails, beef melt, etc. The lure is cast out and the an- ticipation period sets in while the 'fisherman wells for "Old Whiskerface" to swallow his temptingly covered hook, Fishing Tip — B i g channel catfish are sensitive to feeders and usually will "mouth" a bait before moving off with it. At this critical . point, if anything suspicious is felt, such as the weight of a sinker, you will lose _ a customer, So, instead of fas- tening the sinker securely on your line, ,run the line through. the eye of the sinker so that it will slide freely when the cat- fish moves off with your bait, Quite a Song -writer -Quite a Man, Too Some years ago Johnny Mer- cer, Hollywood song writer, wrote a hit tune entitled '`Sen- timental Journey," It would have provided perfect mood, 'music for the trip 112ercer made this _week to his old home in Savannah, Georgia. He deposited a check for $300,000 in a Savan- nah bank to pay off 500 persons who invested in a real estate and insurance firm owned by his late father, The . company failed- 28 years ago, Before his death, the elder Mercer cherished the hope of some day paying off the hold- ers' of certificates of deposit with the" defunct company. The hope was shared by his son. Johnny Mercer has been one of the country's most successful song writers. But amassing a fortune of $300,080 to.'pay off a • 20 -year-old 'debt takes• consid- erable doing, even for a man in the higher income brackets. ' A .bankruptcy' petition would have been an easy way out for the Mercers, father and' son. Many businessmen have done this. The investors would have been the losers, But the Mercers felt a moral obligation that is all too - often lacking in business trans- actions. Now the investors, 'who had faith in the Mercers' firm will have that faith justified, And in a world where many persons do not have a responsibility for their own debts, say nothing of the debts of their parents, John- ny Mercer stands out as a man apart.—Hartford Courant, e SEEN HER? — A broken-hearted ,McKeesport, Pa., dqd still uses every spare moment hunting his daughter, missing 11 years,' in 1944 Hole Szoko, then 27, never got home from her job in a war plant. Her father, Mike, has painfully collected $200 in sav- ings as a Treasury for. assisting .'. his unending search, Fashion Favors Air -Cooled Knees For Summer. Bermuda shorts in Oxford gray, left, team with white knee- length stockings.to give this en- semble a Tyrolean touch, Matching blazer" features white piping and buttons. At right, • Bermudo - length cotton sleep shorts team. with shrink -resistant batiste• shirt in 'this-. lazy -'days ensemble 'for the men. Shirt is. cut full for wear in or outside the • shorts. TIILFMN FRONT Seven your of tliorough Ing, selection, and a mod degree; of inbreeding, have auced a new breed of b hogs at the Canada Depart of Agrlcujture Experimental tign, Laeombe, Alta, Il i • white breed with flop which dlstingulsh It from Yorkshire, and contains bloocl of the Lnndrace, Che While and Berkshire breeds, not of the Yorkshire, 4 tr + Work on the new breed started as n result of recommendation by a committee appolnled by the Canndu Department of Agricul- ture 1n 1940, to study the swine breeding situation in Canada and the work of the Department In relation to swlne ,breeding problems,. After hivestlgating the work then in progress in Canada and visiting several leading swine research stations In the United Stales, the committee i'ecom- mendect extension of research and the Improvement of the Ca- nadlan Yorkshlre, and urged development of a white bacon breed, with no Yorkshire blood In its foundation, suitnble for crossbreeding with the 'York- shire, The latter approach was" suggested as an effort towards utilizing hybrid vigor which has been demonstrated in many crosses between breeds differing in genetic background, * * * In 1947 the Lacombe Station obtained ten high-quality Berk- shire. gllts from breeders in On- tario, These wei'e bred to two Landrace-Chester White boars. Offspring of these crosses were baekcrossed In 1949 and 1950 to three other Landrace- Chester White boars obtained from the Central Experlmental Arm, Ottawa, In 1051 two pure indrace boars were obtained from the United States Depart iilent of Agriculture to provide for the Inclusion of more Land- :~ :race breeding in the project, * 4 + The foundation of the new breed therefore consisted of 10 Berkshire sows, 5 Landrnce- . Chester boars, which carried be- tween 47 and 71 per cent Danish , Landraeo ' blood- and 2 pure Landrnce boars, All animals se lected we're of good bacon type + * * Slnce 1952 the herd has been closed and matings have been made from selections based on Utter, individual, and litter inate performance, Tests. following ,standard Record of Performance practlees were conducted with litter groups of 4 pigs fed in s piggery maintained at Lacombe for the purpose. These tests pro- vide records of feed used, -rate of gain and an appraisal and scoring of carcass quality of leanness based on measurement and welght. test. Anlmnl Husbandry Division at erute tho •Lacombe Statlon, who have pro- done most of the worlc on the atoll new breed its follows;-- ment * Sta- It appears that the litter size s a of the new breed, as measured ears, by number' of pigs Born alive the per litter, is about thc' same as the Yorkshire, ster The average birth weight of but pigs of the new breed is about one-half pound greater than for Yorkshires, Average weaning weight of pigs of the new breed is some five pounds greater than for Yorkshires, In rate of maturity the new breed has a decided advantage, Average carcass score is very similar for the two breeds with a slight advantage for the .York- shire, . The crgssbreds of the two breeds appear to be equal or superior to either breed In till important economic traits. Pigs of the new breed have good temperament, and the sows are good mothers, N * Addltional co-operative tests aro in progress with commer- cial breeders by supplying thein with boars to which • half of . thelr sows are bred, while their remaining sows are bred to their own boars, Results from these tests are not yet available, - + * * - Through the development of tha breed it has been compared under ldentical conditions .with a high quality strain" of inbred' Yorkshlres developed at La- combe, In .1953 the comparative testing 01 the Yorkshires and the•crossbreds'of the two breeds was extended to the Experimen- tal Statlon at Scott, Sask, In 1954 the , test was extended further by cstabllshing a" unit of the new breed at'the Experl- mental. Farm at Indian Head, Sask, r * * ' From an analysis of the tests made at all three stations; the present evaluation ofthe breed is, summarized by J. G. Stothart and; Dr, H. T. Freedeen of the CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS- d. Lose (ame,) .i. ijumber 4, Unit.or work - 9. Hend cook! 6, Sun god 13 Mean 6. Tropical 14 19ng1e'e nasi rodent 16 I' ptoui a 1, Depnrted nope 8 S•rmbol for • 16. Awn v caloluni - 18 e?rnw to. •9. Choi C108t 19. Alounn lndtun 1 2 3 90 "rlvnte , teachrr l 22, Ben god 62: F,xlt+t ..24. Ftrlke 25;Ta' 27, ^nntoase 19 point t9;Hnit.iprefte 29, Hxtt Si; Jewel 69, Rubber tree. - 44, i5xnloded • S7, Color 99. Aloft . 40, P9rmnnten1, 4l,Sentreee- - 49, Dad •44, Haul 48. troflow 46, Drone' 49. Dash bi, Cqrrode. 62. Kind of 'rubber 23 nntttiee 8, Antbneendore 8 t odppd nt htltr I" DOWN f, Rlch tone 4, Grape Dreeervl 4 'U Not So Dummy If it weren't for the fact, they looked so much alike, you'd never take 'Leland Love to be Leland Love's brother, to say nothing of his twin, - Leland Is a printer. wlio also farms and invents for himself, He Is friendly and talkative, But Zeland has never worked a day " In ' hfs�iife, He comes out . only after'd$ik and is the strong silent.' type j t puff's on his pipe and listenb.ut says nothing, e observer might think Zelun .. as a .dummy, And that's exactly what he is, But Zeland is no joke, He is the Iatest of Leland's inventions, the result of lonely night driving between his business and, his home. Every tune he lead to stop at a traffic light or a stop sign at some dark, deserted spot, he thought how easy. it would he for a thug to step out of the shadows, point a gun at him, robhim, and take his car. And- then he'd seen wo- men driving around . by 'them- selves at night, and thought how ylsky it was, So he made himself a twin brother—lts bend made of wood and tin — to serve as an after -dark guardian, Zeland sits on thr front seat pining away on n pipe that's kept going b,; machinery hi his Innards. Once when Leland stopped at a fllling statim, the attendant didn't 'notice the fellow on the front seat beside the driver was a dummy, He ot auite a shock when Leland tntroduced him, TWICE BLESSED A young husband did not like hash, His wife acquired a French , cookery book, giving many. re• clpes for using leftovers; The next evening one of the fancy mixtures in a covered dish ap- geared on the table. The husband reached over and raised tho cover, but the wife said: "Why don't you. ask the blessing first, dear?" Replled the husband: "I don't believe there's anything here that hasn't nlready been bless - 10 Ot an hletoricel porlod 11. Strategy 12, Prophetese 17. Uolfcr'e cry 20. Man'e ntci(ttnme E1.Outtlt 24 Aeslpt. 26, 'l'rin 28 Uwlortnitle 30 4ntlernd anllnat 91. nleh 82tn general favor 6 7. • ;' a It 36 Piece out 30. Unht of tor0e ' 97. Kind of olgeon 88, wrath 42. Thlcic sOUp 43. Aecumuinte 45; Pluck 47: ConUlment 48, MUllnory 511 13v birth 62.I)ano step 64. Doctor of Divinity tab,) 66, Symbol for rermnnlutn to ti l2 13 20 21 23 24 3- 33 30 38 33 39 - 4 4 49 Ft �3 �r 40 eo 46 r 41 2 43 47 a 51 5 5 3 y 54 56 ' 06 08 hate on this page. i "BREAKS"MAKE FAMOUS MALE SINGERS Ry Dick Klclner ! l A Staff Correspondent tt takes.iror'e than a voice to be a chanter — a blg-time male singer; In fact, a really great voice Is something of a hondi- cap, To reach the well -paying pinnacle of crooning' success takes an adequate, distinctive voice, a good press agent and mostly, the breaks, Breaks llke these; Bob Hope happened to wan- der into 'n Greenwlch Village FRANK SINATRA: Fate smiled on a singing headwaiter, nlght-club (and 'thus discovered Tony Bennett), A phone call from New York to Canonsburg, Pa,, came at just the rlght time (and not three hours later, by which time Perry Como would have slgned a long-term lease on a barber shop), Harry James, Benny Good - man's trumpet star, decided It . was time to form a new' band • (and happened 'to see a young singer named Frank Sinatra at the same time), Eddie Cantor needed a vaca- tion (and. picked a resort where a kid' named. Eddie Fisher' was appearing); * * 4 There are. dozens;.jf. great singers out of work,- htintireds clamoring for auditiofisi,-'thou- sands eking out a living' singing In roadhouses and cheap night- clubs. How' come Bennett, Como, Sinatra, Flsher iand the handful of top stars madeit and these others didn't? They got the breaks. This is .not to say the chan- ters on top today aren't talented, They have to be or the public wouldn't accept thein, But many of the others are just as talented —maybe more so. They just huven't been at the rlght place at the right time, Eddle Flsher got his good breaks, like most of the stars, after a long string of bad ones. Once, for example, he was sing- ing on a radio station in his home town, 'Philadelphia,' He got an audition wlth a barn- storming band led by Ray Be - duke, He was great, Beduke liked him, It was all set for Fisher to join the band ]n a few days, Eddie sat by the phone, wait- ing for the .call, The phone dldn't ring, It wasn't until weeks later — sad, depressed weeks — that he learned the reason. The band had broken up just before it reached Phllly again, • + * And then there was the time he got a record contract, He was only 18, and he'd just fin- ieshed a 13 -week stint at the Copacabana as a production - singer, People heard him and there he was where he'd always dreamed of being—making a record. It was just a small spot on Columbia record with the Marlin Sisters, but It was a re= cord, There was just one trouble— one bad break, It was during - the musicians' strike, and the record' just had a harmonica background and it went no- where, But then, one day, out of the clear blue Catskill sky, came the good break, Eddie Cantor came to .Grossinger's, a Catsklil Mountain resort, and heard Ed- die sing. He took him with him on a tour and helped him to his RCA cotnract, And that break paid off. It was the same sort of good break for Tony Bennett, when Bohr Hope heard him singing In a Greenwich Village night-club, He was just singing one number ber — the production number — but Hope liked him, And, like Cantor with Flsher, he was go- ing on tour and needed a young male singer, * * Bennett's break led to another one. On that Hope tour, Mitch Miller of ColumlIn records heard him and 'signed him to a record contract, Miller just "happened" to hear liim, Perry Como has had his good:,. Glad bad breaks; too, He wase: aking a pretty good living or Canonsburg, Pa,, anyhow - 1 barbering, He had his own hop and netted $125 a week; nd he sang at local affairs, hen, more or less on a dare, e auditioned for a spot with a leveland band, And he landed and decided to give singing a ing, He could always go back cutting hair. He sang with bands for nine ars, the last seven with Ted eems, When the Weems band m a s 'A h It fl to yeW broke up, in '42, he decided he'd had enough one-nighters and long bus rides, He was going to sign a lease on a new barber shop—when a call came from New York, They were offering him a CBS radio show. He' de- bated a while, then took It (he could always open up another shop), That wus his break, From then It's been onward and up- ward, And now he's one of the tops in the world. He can al- ways open up the barber shop, * r * Frank Sinatra is generally •1'ecognlzed as the hest chanter of them p11, But it took a great big break for him to get wide- spread public exposure without which a singer is just another unemployment check. He'd' been struggling for years. He'd won amateur hour contests, done countless radio shows, sung in nightclubs. In fact he was a $25 -a -week sing- ing headwaiter at a New Jersey club when the fates finally smiled. This was in June, 1938, and Harry James had decided to ]eave Benny Goodman and start his own band, While he was thinking about TONY BENNETT: Flrst Hope, and then record man Milier, ..the big move he just "happen- -.ed" to catch Sinatra's turn at that nightclub, He signed hlm. ' They toured the country, until the James outfit -ran Into book- ing trouble in Los Angeles, And • it "happened" that Tommy Dor- sey's band was there, too, with an opening for a singer. James let Sinatra out of hli contt'act. Frank went with Dor- sey, And he made the records that turned him, within a few years, into the man who made swooning a national pastime, Things have to "happen" be- • fore a chanter becomes a star, EDDIE FISHER AND'FANS:.Beforb the autograph stretch, a long stretch of waiting, Hog -calling Pitcher About fifteen year ago, there showed up in the- Brooklyn Dodgers' spring training camp at Clearwater, Florida, a large right-hancler by, the name of Pea Ridge Day, He said he was named after the little hill 'town - - of Pea Ridge, Arkansas, ad he claimed•to be a great pltcher, But he nlso claimed another great distinction, He . boasted thnt he was the champion hog - caller of Arkansas and several adjoining states, And,, without any encouragement, he pro- ceeded to give a demonstration of his art on the spot. He emit- ted a terrlfic and blood-curdligg hog -call, The guests dozing . in Lobby chairs tumbled to the floor in terror, while others, In their rooms, b e s i e g e d the switchboard' with a n x i o u s queries as -to whether' the fire siren jus: heard Indtcated a blaze in the neighborhood, But Pea Riclge Day was a pltcher after _ manager Wilbert Ropinson's own heart, The lo- vlal • Uncle Robbie was soft on blg pitchers particularly if thelr heads weren't as strong as their arms, And Pea 'Ridge Day stuck' with the team, bur•ing- ball games, Pc n Ridge was a sight to behold and listen to. Every time he struck out a man he would cup his hands and give fortli with one of his cele- brated hog -calls thnt' would ,al. - most lift the scalps of :the tans to thr' stance, - Amusing as he was to his fel- low -players, the end of Pea Ridge . Day was a tragic one. One night, with his'team mates fast asleep on a train that .was taking them from Chicago to Plttsburgh for an important series, Pea Ridge suddenly, in the dead of night, .let loose with one of his terrlfying hog -calls that awoke every man on the train, No one' could sleep the rest of that tight, Weary from lack of sleep, the team lost the game, the next day. The players blamed the loss on 'Pea Ridge ' Day. They- 'stopped laughing at his antics and ' began to avoid him, From an amusing clown he turned into an .annoying nuisance, Pea Rldge Day was ..hurt by the scorn of his team mates, Sotnething seemed to snap In-. side him, He turned' morose and sad and kept to hlmself. His pitching abillty fell off and 50011 completely vanished, The Dodgers let him out, And, not long after, Pen Ridge Day cotn- mitted suicide. - It was. a sad end for a screw- ball rookie tvho.had all the ear marks of becoming a great. pltcher, Hut the clown had had his day, When they 'stopped laughing at him, his life was no logger worth living, And so he stepped off the stage -forever, Who writes poetry imbibes honesty from the poisoned lips of life,--Willlam Rose Benet, a SHORT SNORTS Home pigeons, -hays been • known to carry messages over 800 miles, ... , despite the tact that they have been protected from hunters for many years, the quail in Ohio are at their lowest population point in his- tory . , , one pinch of snuff will kill a fish nr snake almost ln- stantly and will ancsthetlze a turtle for several hours'; , the humming bird snakes up to .200 wing strokes per second, while the wild duck snakes only eight , , male ants live but a short lime in adult ,state -the workers exist only a .fcw months —average life of a queen ant 13 twelve months-, . , the Iridescent color of a duck's wing patches is not due to pigmdut, but of sub- microscopic prisms breaking the light on the surface of the feathers, • . DIRTY SKUNKS ON . INCREASE - A group of gangsters entered - a country tatfer•n where several flshermen were telling stories and enjoyhig their beer, "We want privaeyl" the leader di- vulged, He .drew a pistol and fired twice, "All you, dirty skunks get out of hei'ei" The customers rushed out—aIl ex- - cept a Texas cowboy who stood calmly u'atchingthe scene, "Well?" snapped the gangster, waving his smoking gun, "Shore were n' lot of 'em, wasn't there, Podner?" the cow- boy drawled, 7hc GQkLN TIIU1IB 6,r4or SK Cultivation of the garden, even a large one, need not and should not be a back breaking chore, It is amazing how much .easier and quicker the job is done with tools that have long handles, Of course, for getting in close to tiny flowers or vegetables, for weeding and a few other dell- eate jobs, it may be necessary to get down on knees or knee pads but with a Ilttle care a great deal of the ordinary cultivating and planting jobs cnn be hand- led with a minilnum of stoop- ing, Spades, forks, dutch hoes, spudders and many 01 the hand cultivators can be purchased wlth good tong handles which` permit operation without any personal bending at all All of these, and other tools too, In eluding the lawn mower, should be remembered will wont easier and faster if their cutting edgett are kept sharp and any moving parts t'cgulnrly oiled, KEEP PI,ANTING . Too much emphasis cunnof� be laid on spinning out the plant- tng. It is much better to plant a little every week for a month or so than to try and get every- thing in at once,' There is no good reason why most vege- tables and a lot of flowers cnn• not be planted for many weeks yet and this gradual planting will produce far more satisfac- tory results than sowing or set- ting out all at once, The vege- table garden particularly; should • be planted gradually with only a portlon of the carrots, beets, beans, corn, etc., sown at one time. In the Bower line, experienced gardener aa will sow such thing, as zinnias, petunias, asters, cos- mos and other annuals in little plots here and there In the flow' er garden, When these' come up they, will leave only a few pante fn the original position and transplant the surplus to other parts of the garden. Handled carefully, these transplants will come along almost as quickly as those left untouched and thus a large garden can be planted at trivla] cost, NOT TOO DEEI' A]nlost everyone Is inclined to plant far too deeply. With tiny seed such as that of lettuce, car' - rots, cosmos, zinnlas, popplei► and alyssum, which are not much 1 iarger than the head of a pin or shingle nasi, it•ls not necessary to cover at all, 'We sow these in th.. finest soil and merely press in. Then, 11 possible we ,keep the soil dampened until germinatjOn starts, ,With larger seeds such e nasturtlums, peas, beans and corn, one should cover lightly, . say a quarter to halt inch, Wlth bulbs or corms of gladlolus, dah- lias, or potatoes, one plants four to elght inches deep. ' ' Upsidedown - to prevent Peekfng $BSS3bl 498J2t S9.Ly9B1 Qawd V21Vd lid Nb 9` Hf15 �©j -ot) - ©• c?iOGt1�' 4d 3J Jk ��o - N� ! e�n�a n S S a gHO. '1 BUTTER LUCK NEXT.TIME—Freckl- - -.ed Robert Maslen, 12, was diff quallflgqd when he tried: to enter his builfr'og in the buffer, churn. Ing contest at the third`annual' - Butter Day Celebration; Robert - wanted to drop the frog into'the bucket of cream and let the' croaker churn it by kkklnd . _.around, Might have worked, too, but the judges►_ thought th• boy should do the churning himself. ' i AG1,_4 COMPLETE Floor Service NEW FLOORS LAID, SANDED & FINISHED. OLD FLOORS SANDED AND FINISHED TO LOOK LIKE NEW, FLOOR FINISHING MATERIALS FOR SALE. With the finishing materials we use, your floor can be finished in one day. Rates on request. A. Manning & Sons BLYTH, ONTARIO Phone 207. 41111111111111, WNW' 1f1HH4H fH 4-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-• .�H4 Needlecraft Shoppe Stock up Today on "Warne Weather" Clothes for your Children while supply is still good. Shorts Sweaters Dresses Skirts Slacks Pyjamas Underwear Rompers Socks Sun Bonnets Pedal Pushers Hats. Jeans Sun Suits Shirts Coat Sets T Shirts Swim Suits Blouses Belts. • • • •+++++•++•++•+++++•••••+••N-4++++-•4 •••••••••••-•-•-••••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-i6 THE STAND/int) \'Vedic ay, gay i , MO ; If+�rN+N $•1 +++++++4 Waterloo' Cattle Breeding Association "WHERE P.ETTEI BULLS ,1111; USED" Home of the Waterloo Cattle Breeding Assoc'.atien, locr.ted just . north and cast of Waterloo, one-half anile off highway No. 85 on the old Airport Road, This is the place thea co-operative artificial breeding has built and it is composed of an office, board room, laboratory, and 30 box stalls in the barn which house as good a group of bulls as can be found un- der any roof, Visit the headquarters sometime. Besides the headquarters, we maintain branch off:ccs at: Guelph, 4 Eramosa Road,.Phone 237, Arthur, Ont., Phone 115. Palmerston, Ont„ Phone 66, , Clinton, Ont., Phone 242, Kincardine, Ont., Phone 461. Formosa, Ont„ (two numbers, Phone Walkerton 837W2, and 11111dmay, phone 1301112, Tara, Ont„ phone 138112. For Artificial Breeding Service Tice nearest you between 7:30 and and 9:30 a.m, Sundays and holidays this should be Inseminated the next or more information, call 4he of - 10:00 a,m, on week days. and 7:30 Cows noticed in Mat later than day, ,•,. ,../.IP.IP.I I..PP•IMIIIIIIPPPPPP4,~44-4•••~41•PPJ, BELGR AVE The May meeting of the Women's In- stitute was held in the Community room on Tuesday afternoon with a good attendance, Mrs, W, Scott, the president, was in charge and opened the meeting in the usual manner. The minutes of the previous meeting were read and adopted and treasurer's re• port given. Correspondence was read. $10 was voted to the Salvation Army. $100 dollars was also donated to help I+MI"~"..".."44 the Institutes of the Wingh<un district in the project of furnishing a room in the new wing of the h.spital. $25 was also given tope 'Huron County Wo - nun's Institute scholarship fund, The district annual meeting will be held in Auburn on My 3ist, and Mrs, Carl Procter and Mrs. Para McGill were named delegates, Eich member is asked to donate a cup and saucer at the next meeting, It was announcer) that the flowers and .hrubs had been planted at the cemetery and further plans made. The theme of the meeting was Canadian Industries. Cornet num- bers were played by Ruth Michie and Joyce Procter and much enjoyed, Mrs. Richard Procter gave a talk on the manufacture of pulp and paper. Mrs, Chas. Shields gave a talk on the mak- ing of and etching on aluminum trays and showed several different trays, The meeting was closed with the sing- ing of the Queen and lunch was serv- ed. Mr, and Mrs. Ross Procter and Cam- eron of Burlington with Mr, and Mrs. J. S. Procter, Miss Martha Armstrong and Mrs, Cora Messer of Windsor spent, the week -end with Mr. and Mrs, W. Arm- strong. Lloyd Anderson of Toronto and Don- na Anderson of London were home for the week -end, Mr, and Mrs, Leslie Vincent and family of, London with relatives here: Mr. and Mrs, Gcorga Martin, 11.11, 4, Brussels, with Mr, and Mrs. Ken Wheel- er on Sunday. Mr, and Mrs, Jas, R. Coupes and girls, with Mr, R. C. McGowan, Blyth; on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. C. Hanna and family spent the holiday at their cottage at Elliott's Grove, near Bayfield. BERNARD HALL Insurance Agency LIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE, LIABILITY, WIND AND ALL CLASSES OF INSURANCE. PHONE 122 - BLYTH, ONT. IIIPI•••m s—rMMN••."4.PINN•NNINMIMm.omNm& MINCED BEEF 3 LBS. 85c PIXIE PEAS (12 oz. pkg.) 2 FOR 45c WIENERS 3 LBS. $1.00 Arnold Berthot MEAT -•- FISH Free Delivery: 10 a.m. and After 4 p.m. Telephone 10 --- Blyth. ••t•h.•.++v•••IM+ 1 BE PREPARED FOR WARM WEATHER --- Our Summer Merchandise IS NOW COMPLETE. Boys' Gabardine Pants in charcoal, grey and blue, splash patterns, sizes 28 to 34 at $5.95 Boys' Nylon Gabardine Slacks, sizes 3 to 6X, $2.98 Boys' Nylon Plisse Sport Shirts, sizes 3 to 7 .. at $1.49 Sizes 8 to 14 at $1.98 Men's T Shirts, large selection •69c to $2.93 Men's Seersucker Work Shirts, short sleeves, (requires no ironing) Special $2.98 Men's Chambray Work Shirts, short sleeves, made by Kitchens (sanforised), sizes 14 112 to 17, Special at $2.29 Men's Olive Green Work Pants (sanforisetl), leath- ' erette trim on pockets, sizes 32 to 44, Special at $4.95 Men's Dress Socks Special, 2 pair $1.00 Children's Running Shoes, in blue and wine, sizes 6 to 2 Special, 98c per Pair. Large Selection of Women's and Misses' Sandals, in white, navy, beige, red, c to ee width, At $2.98 Up THE ARCADE STORE STORES IN BLYTH AND BRUSSELS. AUBURN Mrs. Margaret H. Russell of Toron- to • is visiting her sister, Mrs, Warner Andrews. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Anderson, Wil- liam and Nancy Jane, visited in To- ronto with his mother, Mrs, William Anderson, and his brother, Mr. Thomas Anderson, Mrs. Anderson and family, over the week -end, ' Mr. and Mrs, John Weir, Joan and Bobby, of London, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Duncan MncKny over the holiday, Dr. Weir who has been visiting in Lon- don for several weeks, returned with them, \ Mr, and Mrs. Clayton Robertson, Douglas and Karen, of Copper Cliff, with their parents, Mr, and Mrs, J. J. Robertson and Mr, and Mrs. William Straughan, Congratulations to Mr, and Mrs. Leonard Archambault on the birth of a baby boy in Clinton Hospital on May 20th, I. Mr, and Mrs, Larry Glasgow, Allan and Dennis, with her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Robertson and sister, at Port Per- ry, I Miss Joan Doerr of Niagara Falls spent the week -end with her uncle • and aunt, Mr, and Mrs. Gordon Cham- ney and Larry, I Mr, and Mrs, Wilfred Vesterfelt and Jerry visited friends in the village on Saturday. Mr, and Mrs. Gordon Taylor and Mrs. Jeremiah' Taylor were London visitors last Friday, Mr. and Mrs, George Coulter of Wingham visited Mr, and Mrs. Ezekial Phillips recently, Mr, Charles E. Asquith was a Toron- to visitor lately. Mr. Thomas Pryde of Exeter called on friends in the village last Wednes- day. Miss Laurie Bnechler of Goderich visited recently with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, Ralph D.' Munro. Be eU ressed WITH A IMA.I)E-TO.MEASURE SUIT FROI1'I OUR STORE. RANGE NO. - $15,60. NO. 2 - $5.95 ,NO. 3 - $66.95 NO. 4 - $76.50 NO. 5 - $86,95 IN STOCK SUITS AT ONLY - $23.95 Come in and Let Us Sell You A New SFO T COAT to wear with that odd hair of pants you have hanging in your clothes closet ONLY $2.1,00 - ALL SIZES. R. W. MADILL'S SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The' lime of Good Quality Merchandise'' •+••N+-•+• 4-4•1-•+1•••••••••• •••.• ♦ •+• • 4-464-+ •-•-• ♦-♦+• •-•-•4-•- "MIINMN••IIIPMPPIIPNJP" IPMNMIPNIININIMPP ~,P4VNPNNNN' NOTICE The June Session of Huron County Council will meet in the Court House, Goderich, on WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1.5, 1955, at 10. a.m. E.D.S.T. All 'accounts, notices of deputations or peti- tions should he in the hands of the County Clerk not later than noon, on Saturday, June 11th, 1955. A. II. ERSKINE, Clerk, 27-2. County of Huron. P4"#.4~INIP04,N•NPNNMINNI•#.44P IIINIPNPMYP'INNMPMINPPP+ .....,.._... •••••••••+,1 7// / �11%//ll �/ • r e /7///7/1 al// /?/ r t ti and the The man on 'the pole is typical of the many Hydro employees who stand ready, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, to respond to emergency calls for service. If trouble is of a minor nature service is restored promptly. Sometimes however, due to severe storms, sleet or hurricanes, trouble reaches major proportions. When this happens, crews work hard and fast, to repair wire, replace poles and burnt out distributing equipment. This work is carried out at any hour of the day or night until service is , restored, for these men appreciate that wherever wires run people ' depend upon electricity for most of the conveniences and comforts of modern living. The -great scope and flexibility of Ontario Ilydro's province -wide operation, its resources of manpower and equipment, make it possible to f cope with emergencies when t ey occur. • ~.1 eather Wt!diu sdny, May 25, 1955 ��i ui n.� Elliott Insurance Agency BLYTH -- ONTARIO. ,,.,._..,., �r..,�........ INSURANCE IN ALL T3RANCIIES Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickiwss, Accident, Windstorm, Tr'arm .Liability, = WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE. Office Phone 101, Re�ldence Phone 110 1.,. i I II 1. .,. ., I. Y a I. 11 , n ,, l u l L. I i i I 1 ' 1 , bi u 1 . �. +•••w+r-•$•++-+•-••+a• •+♦+++-•$.♦��+ FULL COURSE YIEALS AT ALL.HOURS. Excellent Service --- Satisfaction Guaranteed, HURON GRILL BLYTII - ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. H+-+-4-+-4+4$+--++i•i-+•e••�4+Gerr1++++-+•Hi+1 ++++1++•FH+++. {VANTEII Old horses, 3c per pound. Dead cattle and horses at value, Inn(nortnnl to phone at once, day or night, GTL• J3E11T B11OS. MINK RANCH, Goderlch, Pltonc efllcct 030832 or 0361121, 44t1. FOR RENT Floor polisher, vacuum cleaner; c menl mlxcr; rotary laver, mower; what barrow, Sparling's hardware, phone 24, Blyth, 25•tf, 11001' 1U I' %1IUNG We are uvnilnble for roof repair work, repairing or renewing, Apply, Leonard Cook, phone 177, Blyth. 26 -Up, .IMNNNNMJ • V N.. GUAItANTEEI) NURSERY STOCKS Beautify your property wllh high- est qunllty trees, sln'nbs, perennials, cic., from one of Canada's most re- liable Nurseries, The If, C. Down- ham Nursery Co., Ltd,, of Slralh- roy,_ We also have a full line of fruit trees, raspberry and strawbor- ry ;slants, ole, Contact the L' caI Salesman If youlive in Blyth Brock Vodden, Phonc 71 27.7„ �+J�NI•I•IN1Nw±r•N.YN�N NI•,", TENDERS WANTlal Tenders will be received by the undersigned untll 1 p.m„ Saturday, June 4, 1055, for the construction of the Fourteenth Concession Drain and the Stralychuk Dr•nirn in the Township of Grey, The Fourteenth Concesslan Drain consists o139,732 lineal feel of open drain. The Stt•atychuk Drain conslsls of 1,300 lineal (eel of open drain, Plans and rpeclficallons may 1e s:en at t•he :ff(c'e of James A. Howus O.L S„ Llstawcl, Ont,, or at the Clerk's office, Et'hel, Ont, Tenders to be uc- co:npanied .by ccitlfled ehequc for 10 per cent of amount of tender, Lowest or any tender not necessnrily accepted. MRS. E. M. CAItDIFF, Clcrk, Township of Grcy, Ethel, Ont, 272. FOR SALE 2 -year-old Poll-lleretord bull, to Donald Talbot, Blyth, RR. 1, 22110, App1y phone 27-2p. SAWS SITARPENEI) Band, band and c)reulnr saws, mn- chine sharpened, ulso luwn mowers, Apply, H, L, McGuire, Belgrnvc, phoma 631J2, Wingluurn„ 27.31 • 11 11 White Rose Servicc Station Pltonc 203 — Blylit Expert Itcpahing on All Makes of Tires Including Tubch'ss Tires, (ATI Work Guaranteed), We carry a full range of B.F, Goodrich Tlres and Tubcs, M0WI:It KNIVES SIIARI'l'NED, IIEV, 1{'tLi.ACE, 1'ItOPRiETOR, F1t0PERTY FOIL SALE 1 r storey brick house In Blyth, 8 rooms wllh 3 -pc. bath; large kitchen wllh 18 It, of cupboards, 111101(1 linol- eum and congowall, bullt-ln breakfu3t nook; hot and cold water; glassed -In laundry room; furnace, new roof 3 years ago; garago; small barn; fruit tu'ees, raspberry and black currant bushes; largo garden space; good well and cistern, Possession, Junc 1. Heavy duly 30" Friglduire eleclric stove, 3 years old, with eleetrie clock and au- tomatic oven control; General. Electric radio phonograph; rubber-llred wheel- barrow, Apply, Rev, Glegn;: Beach, phone 108112, Blyth, FOR SALE 100 Susscx Wyandotte pullets, • 4 monllis old, Apply; Frunk' Halluhnn, phone 11110. Blyth. 27-11), FOR SALE Large solid well -buil) brick home ht Blyth, wlth bathroom. Can enslly be convertecl pilo 2 ajits, Full price only $3700. Easy terms, One of ILic best 100 -acre farms in Huron County, bulld. ings all In A-1 shape, a real buy, We have many farms, 10 l0 500 acres; 5 summer cotinges along Lake Huron, Apply, John Bosveld, Real Estate Brok- er, 40 Wellesley St,, Goderlch, phone 1108. 26-2p, . ,I• .. , 1 , 1 til , 1 .1 I , Wingharn Memorial ,Shop Your G1larantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP, Opell Evea'y Week Day. CEMET1RY LETTERINIG. Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTTON. 11 I 1 ., 11 YOUR LIBERAL CANDIDATE HUGH HILL a a 1 � I HE S N� l cis w+NN�++N+NN�.N+NNNH�: LYCEUM THEATRE WINGHAM. Thurx,, FrL, lint„ DTay 20.27.213 "TRACK OF TIIE CAT" Starring; In this picture in Cinemn- Scope and Colour arc I( burl Mit- chum nncl 'rerea, Wright, Il Is the story of n family in rut isolutccl ranch In northern California, who live in terror because of the pr•es- QneO of a conn -killing panther. Mat_Snlnu'dny Afternoon nt 2 p,m^ Mon„ Tucs„ Wcd•, May 30, June 1 "YOUNG AT HEART" A wholesome and hcnrt-warming romnntic drama with music, pholo- graphed .1n colour and stnr•ring 1)orls Day and Frank Sinatra. �NrN�+Nrri.�rN�NNN•.�Nr+Nln •-++ $•• + +-•-+ tf ♦ 1+++ ♦ ♦+ 1t++ •-- LLASIIMAR --- ,�,, DRIVE•gN f% 1 THEATRE 1 I „ 1 —CLINTON— Next to Cllnton Contmunl:y Park) Open at 7:30 p.nr, —FIRST SHOW AT DUSK-- TIIUILSDAY and FRIDAY May 26 and 27 "FOREVER FEMALE" GINGER ROGERS WILLIAM ITOLDEN SATURDAY and MONDAY May 28 and 3 ) ?AE 5 '.4-• .+i �K!•, ,+.-.p-.++,+,.-.-.F�+t'+.,�+,�s+ +4-•d-1 'ROXY THEATRE, PARK TELEPnONE TIIE CAPITAL �BLErJw cI.1NTatr. 1160 4771oNy - .-- Top Screen Faro in Mr-Condilloned Adventure Slorles al Tlrelr 4esl. V• (Thurtidny, Friday, Snturdny)-- Comfort, NOW (Thursday, Friday, Saturday)-• NOW (7'horK I Friday, Snturdnyj -- John {Vaync, Peru Ralston and "Ma & Pa Kettle at Waikiki' Ouvcr Hardy "DRAGNET" Fet, tura fihn bnsecl on the popular TV shu .v, ,lack Webb stars stars in his 1-0 le of Sergeant ,lot; Frldny, with B en Alexnncler and Anu Robinson ALL NEXT WEEK "Mt! & Pa Kettle at Waikiki" Pn m a pineapple King—Mn ns a 1lula Quec;n, The grass skirls shake wil;i laughter, Mnr,Jorle Minh,, Pcrcy Kllbrldc raid Iiilo ilutlle COMI NG (Monday, Tucsday, Wednrs- day,, ,lune 0.8) --"MAGNIFICENT 0B- SE',S10N." Three days Icft t„ share the hilarity, Delalling the flight of French lmmi- T ee y Ie lurnv tycoon and r;uc- grunts to Kentucky following the de. as Pully mismanages a ,Inca t tic flan- feat of Napoleon, and of a rlfleman, I I I 1 who married u general's daughter, Tallon In Iionolulu. Mercy Klibrlde, Mnrlorle Main and "The Fighting Kentuckian" Lail Nelson ,AL1. NEX.'1' WEEK—Lloyd C, 1)ouglas' Mondny, Tucsday, Wednesday "i'Iagnificent Obsessioll" Clrarlto„ Iles'un, Llzubelh Scutt and A 111ue 1(Ibbun Winner—!n 'I'eclrnicolor Dhn,nc Foslcr The grentes( love story ever fllmed; I)y Iii which a young army doctor and his the author of "The Il3bc," Don't miss unethicai partner encounter a mine dls- this story of a blind wldoty and the aster and a final accounth)g young surgeon who restored her s(ght, lane lVyinai, - Roek ilorlson "Bad For Each Other" _llarbnra Rush & Otto Krugcr +rr,►t{�ir+H�N�+��+� wi+ N1+� Hi+•i• aH •NN NNNNNNNJNANN�I•►�IMNN I f�INMI - - Nr�N�11 NII � I ' '•NIN`NNNtN+1.. I.►NrI�1NMVW.�i.. SJ1EWOART JOHNSTON LPREST CUNNINGiIAM'S ,rnEl:snotto, ONT. MASSEY-JIAIUIJS SALES & Ynlerlor & Exterior Decorator SERVICE. Sunworthy Wallpaper POOL ROO11L BEATTY DARN CQUIP1tIENT, BrusPaints - Ennmcls - Varnlshes Phone 137 R 2, I31 th h &spray Pr,lnling y • Z Tcfephone 371126, Blyth, 44-60 ��•#WS# "�••�.�.....N.N Billiards &Snack Bar 9NNIIINIIrNMNJI'NN'NNN`NN - �"_--1 �- - FOR RENT Catlle clippers; floor polisher; vaclr• ELLIO'.I'T un) cleaner; cement mixer; wheel bar. row, Sparling's Hardwarr Real Estate / BLYTH. CEMENT WORK & CAI(PE,NTRY Office Plione, 104, Now is the (late to plan your Spring ,cement work and carpentry work -- TIIE FOLLOWING basements, walls, floors, stnbling, brick PROPERTIES FOR SALE; 11 and block Jaying, sidewalk Ilaor ic In all 'sizes, Al!rnaterinl su t li dif Onc-and-nnc-half storey frame, us• 1 p phalt shingle -clad dwelling, on 'desired. All lobs guaranteed, Drummond Street. Small stnblc and CIiRISTENSEN TIROS. 3¼ acres of laud. This is a well • Phones, Blyth, 11-7; Seaforth, 75, constructed dwelling and a very de- (nfler 7 p.m.) 12-tf, sirable property, One storey frame, instil brick -clad 1� SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL dwelling on Mill Street, This pro• ouSeptic tanks, cesspools, cellars, etc, perly is modern in every particular, pumped and cleaned, e bath, built-in cupboards, hot6 ' All work . Quick sca and cold water, oil furnace, small guaranteed, Apply, LLour garage. There is sig acres of land. Blake, phare 4286, Brussels, Ont, 17-14 One -and -a -half storey brick dwel- ;--- ling, coLner of Mill and Drummond FOR SALts Streets, 7 rooms, full basement, hyo dro, soft and hard water, 1½ and 1 storey metal -clad dwel- ling on Coombs Street, Blyth, G rooms and bath "SLAUG'kITER TRAIL" (Color) ; IIIUAN DONLEVY, VIRGINIA GREY .. TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY May 31 and .June 1 "FLIGHT TO TANG.ER" JOAN (Color FONTAINE „ JACK!ALAE CIIILDIIEN'S PLAYGROUND 2—SIIOWS NIGHTLY -2 Children Under 12 in Cars FIIEEI FOR SALT 100 Red Sussex pullets, 7 weeks old, Apply, Archie Young, phone 40118, Blyth NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Tenders will be received for the contract of digging, supplying and Jnyfng the and backfllling on the Saw- yer Drain f,, Morris Township, Tenders will nlso be recelvecl for the contract of cleaning and repalring the Robertscvt-Mnthcrs Drain Lt Mor- ris 'rownship, The pinns, profilos and specificatlans on these drains may be seen at the Clerk's office, All lenders must he Jun by 12 o'clock noon, June 611,, 1055, A cer'lified cheque for ten percent of the contract price .must accompany each tender, Lowest' or any tender not necessar- 11y accep«ed;' GEO. C. MARTIN, 27.2, Cleric, Morris Townshtp The Huron •Bruce Liberal Association i PROUDLY • S'PONSOILS gh Hill A MAN WHO rkIAS SHOWN THROUGHOUT THE YEARS, A SINGLE DESIRE --- TO GIVE TO THE PUBLIC DEVO'rED • SERVICE. , Sponsored by the Huron -Bruce Liberal Association r 150 Sussex X Red Pullets, ready for shelters, Apply, Jack Blake, phone 171114, Blyth, 27•lp, FOR SAi.1•l �•MNI'N�NNN.LNd 3 -gallons of green paint, Apply, Mrs, Leonarci Cook, phone 177, Blyth, 27.1p, WATERLOO CATTLE BREEDING ASSOCIATION "Where Better Bulls are Used." Ar- tificial Insemination scrvlce for nil breeds of cattle. For service or lnfor- mation Phone Clinton 242 collect, be. tween 7:30 and 10:00 a.nn, 01) week dnys and 7:30 and 0;30 a,m, on Sundays. 61-12 f � SEE: HEAR Jim Scott NOTICE The next regular meeting of Blyth Council will be held on Monday, June 8th at 8 p,rn, The change of date be- ing necessary on account of County Council meeting. 2T`1• 611011611 SLOAN, Clerk, I.,..I,, ON A NETWORK TELECAST CFPL • TV. CHANNEL 10 FRIDAY, MAY 27, 8:00 to 8:30 P.M. WITH A SPECIAL MESSAGE FOR HURON i CFPL TV CHANNEL 10 THURSDAY, JUNE 2nd, 6:08 P.11'I. AND LISTEN TO CKNX, WINGHAM MONDAY, MAY 30,,1'0:00 . 10:05 A.M. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 7:00.7:10 P.M. SEE AND HEAR FOR YOURSELF. A Liberal Vote Will Give IIurolt Outstanding'Representation. Vote Liberal: Vote Scott d by the Huron Liberal Associnllon) 1 41 1 Ice Cream- Hot Dogs Hamburjrs and Sandwiches. Sntokelrs' Sundries ww.nrw•► HURON FARM SUPPLIES OLIVER SALES & SERVICE Telephone 4 and 93, Blyth. INE HAVE '11111IE FOLLOWING MACIIINES —PRICED TO CLEAR 1- lU-ft. Pucker, In good condition. — 1- Gehl Forage harvester,. new, 1- 011vcr 641. Cornbine, with straw spreader, pickup attachment, scour cleaner; nlso a Grain Thrower Combine, only silghtly used, 1- Dobbin Spraycr, wltlt field boom and Spot Sprayer nozzle; Also about 5100,00 of Weed Spray, 1. 88 Tractor, In good' shape, and not using any ell, 1- 3 -furrow Olh'er plow, with 12 - incl) raydex bolloms,=almost new, 1- 8.11. Tandem diso, almost new. 1- 7 -ft, Fleury -Bisset Tandem disc, - i new, FOR SALE Milkers, more farmers are switching to the Surge Milker every month, Contact Lovell McGu,ire, Wingham. phone 503, collect. We specialize ir, good cow mllking, 14-14p, SEWAGE DISPOSAL Have your .'eptic tanks and cesspools pumped the sanitary way, Blocked drains opened without costly dlgging, For prompt service call Irvin Coxon, phone 254, Milvertoq. Ont, 43-13p. G. B. CLANCY OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN (Successor to the late A, L. Cole, Optomctrlst) FOR APPOINTMENT PIf0NE 33, GODERICII 26.61 RONALD G. McCANN Publle Accountant i Offlce: Royal Bank Budding ' Resldence: Rattenbury Street, Phones 561 and 455. CLINTON — ONTARIO, DR. R. W. STREET i Blyth, Ont, - OFFICE f70URS: - 1:30 p.m, - 4:00 p.m, (except Sundays).. 7 p,m, - 0 p.m. (=Eues., Thurs,, Sat.); Closed Monday, Wednesday and Friday Evenings, J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist Seaforth, Phone 701 — Cllnton 110 URS: Seaforth Daily Except Monday & Wod., 0:00 am, to 5:30 p.m. Wed. — 0:00 a,nn. to 12:30 p:m, Cllnton—MacLnren's Studio, Albert St, Monday Only, 0:00 a.m. to 5;30 p,m, G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETRIST PATRICK ST, WINGHAM, ONT, EVENINGS BY APPOINjrMENT. Phone: Office 770; )Rls, 5. Profeuional Eye Ex*mkudon. Optical Service. - McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO,. HEAD OFFICE - SEAFORTH, ONT, OFFICERS: President—J, H. McEwing, Blyth; vice -Pres,, R, Arehibnld, Seaforlh; Manager and Secy-Treas,, M. A, Reld, Seaforth, DIRECTORS: J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. H. McEw- ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton; E. J. Trewartlta, Clinton; J, E. Pepper, Brucelield; C. W. Leonhardt, Bornhohn; H, Fuller, Goderlch; R. Archibnld, Sen. forth; Allister Broadfoot, Seaforth, AGENTS: Wflllam Leiper, Jr,, Londesborn; ,T. 11'. Prueter, Brodhngen; Seltvyn Baker* Brussels: Eric Munroe, Seaforth, �_,� 4NNE I4JPST r� te, �,. "Dear Anne Hirst: For three years I've been going with this sailor. Each time he is home we plan to get married—and each time he lets me down, saying it is best to wait, always promis- ing it will be 'some day' or 'next time'. I do believe he he loves me; he writes regular- ly, he's always sending me gifts, and he dates me every night when he's on furlough. "He is 22 and very handsome, so lots of girls flirt with him, but he 'never pays attention to any except to rne. 1 am 18, and because I dated when young, 1 am very settled: he seems to be, too. I would rather die than give him up, for he is the only man I'll ever want. 1 trust him completely—but I don't. want to wait for ever for 'some day', "1 should add that he is re• sponsible in every other way . Is there any chance he may jilt m? Pm living in a dream• world planning our future, yet he still puts off- marriage.. . Each time we are together we have to say to a quick good- night because our emotion al- most run away with us.... He will soon be here again, and as usual I have high hopes of wed- ding bells, but I still dread be- ing disappointed. - B. J. W.' HE NEEDS PRODDING * 1 wish you have told ate * how your parents feel about * this lad's repeated postpone. * ment of marriage. If they tip- * prove of him as a husband, * tell him this time that they * are waiting to announce the * engagement and the wedding * date. If you have no parents, * indicate to him that you want * to set the day—or else. * If you have not started what * we old-timers called a hope * chest, do it now, and have a * little exhibit to show him. This * will please him or shock him, * and you had better find out * which it is to be. Ordinarily I * would not suggest' this, but * you have waited so patiently that you deserve to know where you stand. Many a young man is content with be - engaged, and does not realize what agonies a girl's pride and heart suffer through his re- luctance to getting married. * I wish you would write me * what happens. 1 shall be in- * terested, and no matter what * you report, perhaps I can help * through. * e a * * t 6 IGNORANT YOUTH "Dear Anne Hirst: [ had the bad luck to fall in love some months ago with a boy I thought was really nice. He is disap- Half-Size Myles 11/4A44444 Want to souk taller, smarter, slimmer/ Sew this attractive cas- ual see how tt-flatters the half- size figure! Favorite step-in style—no "overhead" muss or fuss. Sitnple . lutes. crisp details —eau sewing!, Pror;ortioned for per;ect fit—no alteration! Pattern 1808: Halt ,Sizes 14ti, 16,2,;1.8%, 201/2, 221/2, 241 Size 161/2 takes 4 yards'45'inch fabric. This pattern easyto use, sim- ple to sew, is tested for fit.Has complete Illustrated instructions Send THIRTY-FIVECENTS (35e l in coins (stamps cannot be • accepted) fbr this. pattern. Print _ plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to Box 1, 123 Eighteenth • St. New Toronto,' Ont. pointing. 1lc never takes me out, though he has bought a single ticket occasionally for movie I heard about; he has never gone with me. If I date anyone else, he throws a scene—yet I know he dates other girls. "Three times I broke with him, but I do love him, so I al- ways welcome him back, What is your opinion of all this? UNHAPPY" • What are you getting out of * this friendship except the • pleasure of being with -the * boy when he chooses to .see * you? Aren't you being fool- * hardy? + No girl will content him for * long, for he is self-centered * and has no conception• of tour- * tesy nor the social rules most * of us live by. If you keep on * seeing him you will find your- * self apologizing for his crude * manners to everyone who sees • you together. * Stop dating him, and you * don't have to give a reason. * Just say you'll be too busy • from now on to see him at all. * You must know plenty of * other young men who know * what is due a nice girl and * who Will be more generous * and obliging, This one is not * for you, and your dissatisfac- * tion will only increase and * keep you miserable_. * * When a young man keeps his fiancee • dangling too long, it is wise to act. Better to know the truth than to undergo emotional anxiety. In time of indecision, trust Anne Hirst for the best solution. Address her at Box 1, 123 -18th St., New Toronto,. Ont. LHRoNIcLEs 1N6ERFARM Mother's Day, Blossom Sun- day, and a comfortable fire in the furnace—allthree rolled in- to one. And right now I am get- ting more satisfaction out of the furnace than the other two, especially as 1 have an infected arm, a raised temperature and a feeling ' that someone with a sprinkling can is pouring ice- cold water up and down my spine. There is really quite a story to this bad. arm of mine which I may tell you about at a later date—when the sprinkling can has ceased to function. I was relating my tale of woe to Partner when he came into breakfast this morning but I stopped in a hurry when he said, "Well, I have trouble at . the barn now ... serious trouble," "For -heaven's sake, what is it?"—visions of a cow with colic, a still -born calf, or something �equa]ly unpleasant floated be- fore my eyes. Impgine my disgust when Partner said, "It's• my radio .. . not so much as a squeak out' of it. Now I won't be able to get my Sunday sermon while I do my chores." But to return to' this special day. 1 have never been too keen -. on this Mother's' Day idea, nor of Gars cluttering up the high- way on Blossom Sunday, Like most farm people we have plenty of blossom around here —no peach bloom of course, but plenty of cherry, apple, pear, japonica and hawthorn, It was very beautiful when I looked out this morning — greening trees, blossoms everywhere, and beyond it all a gorgeous sunrise. Most people in the 'country have all the beauty of the' earth vis- ible right from their own back door, if they would but see it. No need to drive for miles shut up in a car. Still, on the subject 61 blos- som 1 was amused at a remark I heard yesterday. A friend was telling me of a magnolia tree near her home. It was full of bloom. Then came the wind. the branches. were left completely bare and the ground beneath the tree; carpeted with fallen petals, "What a• shame," 1 ex- claimed, "the magnolia is such a beautiful tree," . "It deosn't appeal to me," my friend replied. "I always think It looks like- a brazen wanton ii 7l! .NlM,UU ' Vacation Arrangements In 4 it Jamaica Wand 6Seztco Bermuda • Bahamas • tiawatl AIR AND 'STEAMSHIP RESERVATIONS CRUISES & BUS TOURS . Hotel aesm•vattend Anywhere 0. K. JOHNSON A • CO., LTD." 697 Bay St.. Toronto 2, Ont. F.M. 64411 ISSUE 21 -- 1855 INDIAN INFLUENCE — Khalid Gomel Abdel Nasser, son of Egypt's premier, makes like an Indian during an Egyptian adaption of the gymkhana at the Khalifa EI Mammoun pre. paratory school in Cairo, Egypt. woman, with too much make-up, and almost naked!" Well, 1 have heard the mag- nolia described in various ways but never exactly like that. Good think we don't all • think alike—about magnolias 'and a lot of other things. For instance we know of some city people who bought a cheap farm in a hilly wooded section of -Ontario. They rented the land, fixed up the house a bit and there• they retire for weekends, To' Insure leaving business cares : behind they had the telephone removed and requested that there be no rural mail delivery. I didn't • in- quire if they had a radio' or television set. Probably not. Su for three days out of every sev- en they are in the world and not of it, And no doubt there are numbers of other folk who go rustle to the saute extent. wouldn't like its It would do something to me I ant sure. Surely one's neighbours, the party line, the rural mail, the party on the next place calling - the cows home at night, all are art integral part of rural living. Some people might tell you an isolated life such as 1 have men- tioned is the ideal setup for people who write, Don't ever believe it except in exceptional cases, The average writer may like the wide-open spaces but he needs them peopled with more than birds, rabbits, mos- quitoes and poison ivy..He needs the sympathetic knowledge of the comedy, pathos and tragedy of neighbours to give him the common touch. The lrnctors and seed drills have certainly been busy around here this last week, Funny' thing, a week ago it looked as it the land would never dry and yet there -'is quite a lot of seed- ing done.We always have a soft spot in our hearts for the trials of the praifie farmer, having survived four years of it our. selves. Of course we have our troubles down east but it is rarely all our eggs are in one basket. We have seen a tf'enther- beaten farmer out west looking over his hail-Itattened crops„ slow tears coursing unchecked down his lined, sunburnt face. We have seen his wife join him, put her hand gently on his shoulder and say with amazing simplicity, "Thomas—remember —there is always next year," No wonder the west is called "a next year country". The pity of it is "next year" sometitnes comes too late. But not thjs year, we hope. We pray that springtime and harvest will be better than the prairie farmer dares to hope for at present, . A great soul prefers. moderation S'E'N'C.A C 6 d.C.•.AI.D.65 1 the Pouse of Seagram . . . Men who think of tomorrow practice moderation_ today PERFORMANCE, NOT :PROMISES. IS STILL THE PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE MOTTO These are Performances e f • To give producers a voice in product marketing,: Ontario now has, the most advanced legislation of tiny province. • For the betterment of rural living, the province makes special' grants toward the building of community halls, arenas, skating rinks and swimming pools. 864 projects have been developed- under this policy. To lighten the farm load and brighten farm homes, the province pays half the cost of new rural hydro lines. Over 85,% of `all farm homes have hydro. For more.profitable returns, the Depart- ment of Agriculture; .through its `Livestock Branch finances a sire -testing program; milk - testing service -and provides assistance in the eradication of brucellosis and Warble Fly. For higher income from dairying, legis- lation allows producers by collective bargain- ing to obtain best possible returns. Ontario's fluid milk price formula has maintained price stability. To increase the productivity of the land, new seed varieties have been introduced and policies adopted providing for a sound land use program. To open up farm areas in Northern Ontario, the Ontario Department of Agricul;. ture gives special grants toward the 'clearing. and breaking of land; assistance in the par, chase of livestock; veterinary aid and farm water supply. To promote scientific, high -return farm- ing, constant studies are carried out by the Farm Economics Branch, with findings avail- able to till farmers to assist in the lowering of production costs, Under a farmer Minister, F. S. "Tommy" Thomas, • and with farmers like W. A. "Bill" Goodfellow of, Northumberland and. J. N. "Jim", Allan of Haldi- mand-Norfolk in the Cabinet, rural Ontario has' an important place in the Progressive .Conservative program. EN'ECa.tvP�t SPORTS COLUMN 4 4,tei 7e'944at • TItls column reJ�lces at the sudden anti surprising decision of the Canadian Rugby Union to transfer the Grey Cup game of 1955 from the traditional site in Toronto out to the British Empire Games 'statllum In Vancouver. It.may be a move toward an objec- tive this column has been advocating for the past three years, namely: a two -game series for the Grey Cup annually, in the cities represented by the eastern and western winners re- spectively, total points to count. Illtherto, the western champlons were obliged to travel oast, whether tiley liked it or not, meet the eastern champions In Toronto's Ane Varsity Stadium, We don't claim that thla one -day chis!( of east and west wasn't a great show, with colour, drama, background, everything. It was all of that — wonderful, Wonderful, that is, for those who could see it. But what about those who, for one reason or another, couldn't bet to Toronto to watch their heroes in the crowning football game of the season? Those are the fans who were getting the short end of the stick Iii this one -city deal. Taking the Grey Cup out td Vaneouver breaks this_one- city tradition, and also is a smart bit of promotion, Vancou- ver is new in professional football, Annis Stukus fought an uphill battle there last year and In the city's first venture into the game, his club got amazingly fine support, It was a throw -back to the long -ago days when pro- fessional hockey, as new to the west coast then as football tvas last year, invaded Vancouver, Victoria and New West- minster and became a tremendous game overnight But Vancouver, in football, can do wlth .the shot-iii-the-al'nl the Grey Cup will provide. We trust this isn't just a ono -year hove. Other citics, east and west, would Ilke to be hosts to tite Grey Cup tinais, And they deserve It. But we stili. bellcve, in our own- Idea, a two -city play-off between the two ehfampions. Baseball does it. Hockey does 11. It's good for them. So wlly not for football? Youi comments and eugdeatione for this column will be welcomed by Elmer ferguaon, c/o Cotrerl Nouse, 431 Yonpe SI„ Toronlo, CaLvttDISTILLERS LIMITED AMHERSTSURO, ONTARIO Oceanliner's Roll Eased By "Fins' The sailor has a saying that .no ship is too big to roll! Although this saw has come down from an earlier day—what was considered a huge ship then would now be thought a small craft — It holds true with the leviathans plying -the sea today," - This fact is emphasized by the Cunard Steumship Company's recent installation of an anti- rolling device in its 83,673 -ton liner Queen Elizabeth, The roll of a ship is the re- sult of a complex mixture of impulses, of which ,two are of particular importance, . These are the period of roll of the ship and. the frequency of the wave motion. Every class of ship has an in- herent period 01 roll, Fora com• plete oscillation the time of . a roll ranges frons 8 to 10 seconds for merchant vessels to approxi- mately 5 seconds for destroyers, Wave periods vary greatly de- pending on the height of waves and the rapidity of their. onward' movement, And the effect of any particular sequence of waves On a ship depends on the angle at which they strike . the vessel's hull. The eftect can also be. varied by changes of coursF ,or speed of the ship. The effect of waves on a ship can be likened to impulses given 10 child's swing. We all know how easy It is to make'a swing o higher and higher when little Ililips ,are applied at just the right period of the swing's sway, When the 'period of roll and the impinging waves synchro- l+tze, the angle of roll .becomes increasingly great, and the ship hight eventually roll over were Jt not that friction from the ves- sel's side going through the -water dampens Out the roll. Also as the ship's period bf roll changes, resulting in a cessation of the synchronism• . The" first antirolling device used, and which Is still to be sound .on practically every sea- going ship of any size, was, the • „ bilge keel, This Is a -.rib of metal secured to .a ship for somedis- tance,on each side nt about the turn; of the bilge. Its width de• pends on the sire and type of the ship, and It _reduces rolling by, the resistance , offered to Its passage through the water. Although e(tt±ctive to some degree, bilge keels-do'not pro- vide the stability, demanded in modern vessels, ''in merchant- men to ensure the comfort of passengers and abate damage to materiel, and in men-of-war to providesteady gun platfortns. Consequently the search for bet- ter methods continued, writes Captain Fdererlek L; Oliver in '.'The. Christlan..Science Monitor,', Some years •`ago, a Herr th'r'ahm, a noted f?erman naval architect, proposed .the use of antlrolling tanks, and a number of ships were so edutpped. There is conslderable theory involved in', his project, but easenttally It consists of a vertical tank on each side of a ship which is con. necte'd at the bottom by a hori- contal duct add at the top by an air pipe.. With the ttinks about half 1111 - ed with water,}a proper.,adjust-,_ nient'.of valves and baffles will so control ,the surge of water in the tank that its inertia can • be used to counteract the tendency - to roll. The scheme is fairly suc- cessful in coping' with heavy rolling, but it is not effective with moderato rolling, is noisy and uses valuable space, For these reasons it has not come into extensive use, • Accordingo accounts, a group of Stanford,' University;. techni- :cians is now working on an anti - roll ' device in which water is transferred between tanks on either . side .Of a strip by pumps controlled by an instrument call- ed "angular'aceeleronleter," _ This scheme ;may reduce the noisy rush of waterinherent in the• • Frahm ttink"riletliod,` but it in- volves the use of internal space in a ship which can be otherwise profitably utilized, ' •'Rotor Device Installed - A more generally known antl- • roll 'device is 5. gyroscopic con- • trlvance that has. been installed •In various ships. This scheme checks rolIIng by using the re- sistance that a heavy, rapidly spinning • motor exerts against being moved out of its plane of rotation, Such an installation was tried In U,S,S. Henderson about 40 years go. It had two heavy rotors revolving .ln opposite directions to eliminate. torque, and gave fair results.' However, it weigh- ed around 200.tonn,took up con- siderable space, arld required constant attention. It had the fur- ther disadvantage of possibly set- ting up malfunctions which could tend to roll fhe ship over. The installation Wvasremoved from the ship during World War I, In 1931, the huge liner Rex wtis provided with a gyroscopic stabilizer.: For some years con- siderabl& publicity attended this •installation; 'but 'it fipparently did not,eonle up to expectations, and the sister ship Conto di. Se- voia was riot similorly equipped, Both ships passed from ,the pic- turo during, World War II, And iiow"comes an anti -rolling device in the huge liner Queen Elizabeth ,a ship large enough not to , roll If such a ship were possibie. This scheme is a radi- cal departure from any previous- • ly tried' project, Known as the Denny -Brown stabilizer, it con- • slsts of two . fins on each side in the forward :three-quarters. of the. ship, Each tin Is quite .emali. as . compared with the size of the • ' ship, being approxlmately seven feet wlde and projecting 12 feet 6 inches from the side of the ship, The pairs of fins are' located 15 feet up from the keel line and THAT'S A NICE SMILE — Pos!ng;for: his portrait at Marineland, a porpoise smiles nicely for. the underwater photographer. . PIAIN HORSESENSES. By 1' (BOB) VON PiLIS Whnt Communism does to lands and people under its domination is best Illustrated by recent reports irons Germany,' The renewed and aggravated encirclement and isolation of the Western . sectors of Berlin by the surrounding Soviet domina- ted parts of Germany Is reach - Ing a point where the aim ap- pears to be to seal off Free Berlin 'hermetically under the slogan "a dofenslve ring around • Berlin".' The plans now adopted foresee 'an expansion • of • the area around Berlin that serves • as a "control belt" witli particu- lar regard to supervision sepa- rately 01 general travel in and Out of Berlin and of commuter services. • The local puppet authorities. had more extensive plans asso- ciated -. with sso-ciated"'with the introduction of conscription in West Germany and timed tocoinclde with that operation., These: plans aimed. at something like a new Berlin • blockade,- It appears, however,' that the 'supreme masters of theseauthorities, the' Soviets themselves, were not , prepared at this moment to allow mea- sures thatmight not be capable of political "localization" and, hence, might get out of control. Iiunger in Soviet Zone Ten years after the collapse . • of the Nazi regime and the mill- • tary triumph of the Allies the population of the Soviet occu- • . pied zone of Germany and of the East sector of Berlin . are' associating • the blessings ' of spring with the menace'01 hung- er and.'starvation because of the failure of the agricultural and economic policies of the Soviet dominated local regime. Spring- • time once • again brings .out :loxtg queues of ill-noprished and ill -clad subjects waiting pa- • tfently before- the varlous food outlets of the regime for what fraction of established rations existing supplies may vouchsafe them," • The butter ration is no longer available not even in, the privi- • leged HO shops and at- a raised price corresponding to $2,30 per pound. One third of the estab- lished monthly ration of fats is supposed to be allowable in but- ter but is not forthcoming. • The, sugar situation is similar. Sugar is not on sale even at free market prices and the ra- tions are not provided,' It' is • difficult for the normal con- • sumer to . find sources for the meat and sausage ration; There is a' shortage ,of bread aild the authorities are preparing to in- troduce a one -type loaf •of bread in order to master the situation, Soviets Llve Off The Land A contr'lbutory factor Is , the are 141 feet apart. 'they can be retracted into water -tight recess- es within the ship, when the ves- sel goes alongside a pier, or on other ' occasions when , exterior objectsmight cause.Oamage. Each fin is.moved by a'hy. draulically. operated ram which tllts it €o `it exerts a pull to counteract the roll, the rams be - Ing actuated at prec!sely the cor- rect instant by a small gyro- scopic gear, This system of antlroll control has heretofore been successfully • used in smaller vessels, but the Qucen 'Eilzabetll instatlatlon is • tthe first:to use` two sets of tins. A recent trlal of the Queen Elizabeth at sen is reported to have been successful in ironing ' •out rolls to a minimum, So it • may be -that the roll can be taken out of thlps and out of the sailors' epigram. • • foreign ti'ade policy of, or im- • posed upon, the local authorities, Heavy industry having been re- • turned to, its privileged position • In the zonal economy consumer, •needs are no .longer considered • primary, Forced exports .benefit the Soviet Union and the other countries in the Soviet bloc. In the Soviet occupied .part of Germany itself the occupation •forces continue to live off the land to 'the detriment of the in- habitants, A renewed wave of lniid collectivizatioi} does not help matters, but is embittering • the farmers, When Big Jim Smiled, It Wasn't Funny • When Jim Thorpe' played in the minor• leagues, one of his team-mates was Al Schacht,later famous as baseball's number one •clown and. comedian, Al, who Was .easy-going and a wise- cracker, struck up a friendship with the moody and. surly In- dian, But there was one thing Al forgot to observe about the Indian. When Jim Thorpe grin- ned he was mad; and the wider the grin, the madder he was. One day at a party of the ball- players of the club, comedian Al Schacht began ribbing the boys. Soon the crowd was. howling with laughter. Before long, Al tried a gag on big Jim Thorpe. The Indian growled—then smiled. Al thought the big fellow liked being ' kidding, He continued joshing and the 'Indian, smiled and ' grinnedwider and wider. Suddenly, Jim grabbed the com- edian -ballplayer by the scruff of the. neck,. crossed swiftly to the open window dragging the star- tled. ribber wlth him, lifted- the body into the air and dangled It outside a mere three stories above the ground, - "Let go l" screamed the fright- ened Schacht, "What are you doing, you crazy Indian i You'll drop me and I'll be killed l Pull me in out of here, I tell yout" "Take it easy, Al," grinned the big Indian. "Let's hear how your jokes sound in the fresh air(" Jim • dangled the squirming clown ,outside ' the window for several. , minutes, Whenhe brought' him in, Al Schacht al- most collapsed on the floor. It took him a long time to learn.to talk again. And the first thing he said when he could say anything at all was: ''Jim Thorpe is the strongest marl in the world— thank Godl". _ • LIONS We're sure_this is the height of something or other. Just, what, we dunno yet: Anyhow, seven men from the lion coun- try of Nigeria' were visiting in London recently, They are very anxious to go to the zoo and see a real; ' livo lion, Malam Yukuba Wapka, 30 year-old ac- countant explalned that lions ' "live in the bush in Nigeria, and only Engllshmen seek them there we leave them alone(" Deign on ,the passing world to turn thine eyes, And pause. ;nwhile from letters, ' to be wise. • --Samuel Johnson. Going. on Vacation? ' Florida? We arrange Hotel, • Mole!, rApartment r sccommodationsl • A FREE SERVICEI Wrile mentlon, accommodattona need- ed. ifumleer..lq party, children, .pets, etc. Beach 'or town — price range. ADVANCE RESERVATIONS BUREAU INC. 341' No. Federal Hlghway,'Danle, Florida • (2 mlles south Ft. Leuderdale— • 20 . Miles north Mlamq CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING BABY CHICKS FEWEII chicks started by "in and outer" wlU bring higher egg and meat prices , to buslnoae•minded poultry rateera who stick to thetr program, but you must ha'.e chlcke of htgb efflctency Inherltanco, We havo three ep3c101 egg broods: Shaver R0.P. Sired Whlto Leghorna, White Leghorn X lthodo teland Red, Pannenter Rhode Ieland lteda, Throe special broiler breeds: Indian river Cross Nlchols New Hampa, Arbor Actcr. Whlte Itocke. Turkey poulte, Send for 1955 catalogue, it teUe all about these apeciat chicka and poulle, - 'rWEDDLE CLUCK HATCHERIES LTD, FERGUS ONTARIO FOREMAN LEOHORNS Egg -famous throughout every State of the U,S. A 1955 neeeastty for the Canadlan egg•producer. Dayoida avaU• abte at $41,00 per 100, Started Pultete weekly: 5•weeke•old, 731; 8•weeks•old, 51.10; 12-weeke•otd, 51.40. May, June or July delivery, ARBOIt ACRES WiIITE ROCKS: tat generalton for tlta ,neat In Brotlera. Somo June July and Augual avatlable, 'l'IIE LAkEv1EW POUTRY FARM & HATCIIERY LTD, Exeter, Ont, S. D. Wein, Mgr. TURKEY is king again in 1955. LoOka Uko 1953 all ovor again. Wa expect good turkey prices thle Fall and Winter, Order at once 11 you do not wlah to be dlaappotnted. We have BroaJ Breasted Bronze, A. 0, -Smlth Broad Whltea, Whito Holland, Nebrae• kan Tltomaon Broad White Large and medium type; Wahkeen Whftee, F.mplre Whites; Beltavllle, nun•sexed, hens and toms, Send for 1056 Turkey Guide, TWEDDLE CLUCK IIATCiIERIES LTD, FERGUS ONTARIO YOUR July broilers should be ordered now to avoid dlsappotntrient, We have chicka, dayold, atarted putieta, tmme- dlate shipment. Summer•faU egg mar- kets will take eggs at advancing prtcee• — he prepared, Bray Hatchery, 120 John N., Hamilton, •r FOR SALE MARINE FLAX COMMEHCIAL .No, 1, $4.50 per bushel, l.o,b, Parkhlll, aacks Included, Waters Etevntors Ltd„ I'arkhtll, Ont, LARGE stock used Outboard Peter• bora Boats, Johnson Outboard Parte shlpped dally, Curroy Bulmer, 2719 Bathurat Street, TORONTO, PLOW POINTS Buy Better Plow Points Cheaper McCrae', quality points—for all makes of plows-•Itavo heen made in our own foundry for 45 years. Writo for prlcos, Buy direct or through agents who should contact us, Thi John McCrao Mnchtne & Foundry Company Ltd„ Box 20, Ltndsay, Ontarlo, HARDWARE and implement Buelneaa in 'Texas irrigated sectton, Dld $57,500 last yeor. Bulldings, ground and stock x25,000, ICASIIFINDER, Wlchlta, Kanaae, HOME PASTEURIZERS RAW milk can be dangerous. Safe• guard your family from milk borne diseases, Undulant, Typhold and Scar. let Fever, Dysentry, Septic Sore Throat, etc, by pasteurtzing all the milk your family drinks wlth a Wat- ers Conley Homo Health Mllk and Cream Pasteurizer. Operates from any electrical outlet, 50.60 cyclo, Two slaw, Prlcos 539,75 for 1 gallon, 849,50 for 2 gallon size, Enquirles eolicited. MacKelvles Llmlted, Canadlan Agents, Natlonnl Storngo Bldg., Wlnnlpeg, Manttoba, - FOR SALE: Used Power Chain Saws • priced • from 850 and up; Ploneer, Mo', Culloch CUnton & Preclston Saws 1n stock, it speclal dlscount on new saws. For further particulars' apply: R, W. Jenklns, Bancroft, Ontarlo, ICE Crcam Bustneas in Missouri county seat at corner of the square, 815,000, price includes bultding. KASHFINDER, Wlchita, Kansas, FOR SALE! WOOD PUZZLES, 51,00 P0S'rPAID, CARL JOHNSON, 610' Francis Street, Farlbault, MJnnesota, INDEPENDENT , Wholoealo Gasoline Busineaa' Selling farmer, dealer, com- mercinl accounts. Large Montana city, 18 years truck atop. Splendid two man . operation, Box 043, Great Falls, Mon. tans, LIVESTOCK SHOWY servlco age reglsterad 1101• steln Bull, Grandson of Fond Hop0 from an Ilonour List two•year•old. Mao several reglstered Yor1cah5•e boars neartng cervige age. J. OU• christ, Routo 6, Guelph, Ontarlo. MEDICAL NATURE'S HELP — DIXON'S REMEDY FOR RHEUMATIC PAINS, NEURITIS. • THOUSANDS PRAISING IT MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 333 ELGIN, OTTAWA $1.25 Express Prepaid POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISII the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping ckin troubles, Post'a Eczema Salvo will not elsap• point you. Itching scaling and burn- ing eczema, acne, ringworm, plmplea and foot eczema will respond readily to tho stainless, odorless olntment, ro- gardless of (tow atubborn or hopeleas they neem, POST'S REMEDIES PRICE 82.50 PER JAR Sent Post Free on Ret elpt of Price. 889 queen St, E., Corner of Logen, TORONTO ISSUE 21 — 1955 IT MAY BE YOUR LIVER if life's not worth living it nay' Ire your Uverl It's a hell 11 takes ep to two pteu of Uvm tale a da to keep your digestive tra�uuet in top ely yyouurr loodyour a aayUeot dlsese wt Tai blab tt2 your etoutaeh ... roa fol eonalippssted and as the tub sad sparkle {o out of ttfe. That'e wbie you need mad teaUe Carter's Little (Jnr I'llle. Tbw famous vegetable pita belp stimulate she cow of Uver bUa Rooa roux di tion stars luneUoalnproperly and yea Ieel that happy daps ars hen again) Don'I seer star suet. Aiwayy�s keep Carter's Usti. iher Pills on hand. 87, at roar dntn' t. ROLL YOUR OWN IETTER CICARETTE$ W/TI/ OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN DRUG Store doing 56 000 monthly. Mbaourl town of 0,500, complete pres. . criPUon department, Modern, fixtures, Price 531,000. KASHFiNDER, Wichita, Kanaae, GO INTO BUSINESS for youraelf, Sell exclualvo houseware eppllancea wanted by every householder. Those Items are not told to stores there Is no compeU• tion. Profit up to 600%, Write Immo dlately for Freo colour catalog, witb retell prices ahown. Separate conflden• tial wholesale price (tat will be tnclud- ed, Murray Sales, 5822 St. Lawrence, Montreal. BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Oppportunity Learn Halydreasing Pleasant, dlgnlfled' profeaalon, good wages. Thousands of aucceesful Marvel RraduMee, Amerlca'a Greateat Systom Dlustrated Catalogue Free Write ur Call MARVEL HAIRDIIESSING SCHOOLS - 368 Bloor St. W., Toronto Branchnc 44 King SL lfamllton 72 Rideau St., Ottawa TOURIST and Outllttera' Camp on Can. adlsn Lake of the Woods, 21 cabana, 4 sores, , Price 585,000, term,. KAS11r FINDER, Wlchita, Kansas, LIOHTNING '—' — LIGHTNING It you are constdertng protecting your home or farm property from Itghtning,• consult the manutacturera of llghtning. rode and save money. All work guaran• teed and supervised by the Fire Mar abal of Ontarlo. PHILLIPS LIGHTNING ROD CO LTD. 32 Osborne Ave„ Toronto OX. 4.0213 PATENTS FETHERSTONHAUGII .4 Company Patent Attorneys. Established 1890 BUtS• Unlveralty Ave. Toronto PUIPnt. 1,1) countrles, AN OFFER to 'every Inventor I.tst 01 Inventlons and full lnformatlun sent freo. The Ramaay Co,, Registered Putt ent Attorneys, 273 Bank St . Ottawa. PERSONAL 51.00 £RIAL offer. rwontyive deluxe Personal • requirements, I,uteat edIa• Logue Included. The Medico Agenrv, Boa 124, Termtnal "A" Toronto Ont. TEACHERS WANTED PUBLIC SCHOOL • CARAMAT, ONTARIO Aequlrea tencher for September. Ap• proximately 38.40 pupils, gradea 1 to 8. New achool fully equlpped. Starting salary 32,600 wlth annual tncteaso of 5200. 5100 per year auowanco for each year of teaching experience up to a maximum of 5 years Free housing avaliablo. Apply !n writing, slating quallflcatlons, experlence and name 01 last inspector to A. A. Mantyla, Caramat, Ontario, P.S,S, 1 Mlaaanable, Ont, Grades 1.9, 70 pupas, Male preferred, Minimum 52100 and house free. APPLY W. J. Comerford, Sec,•Treas„ Waaanabte, Ont. "WANTED WANTED — STEAM TRACTION EN- OINJ PREFERABLY WATERLOO. Box 128, 123 •Etghteenth . Street, New Toronto, Ontarlo: BEAR CUBS Wanted -1955 bear cubs, Send full particular, to DON McDONALD, 99 King Street E., Bowmanville, Ontarlo, MERCHANDISE WANTED ALL types of surplus merenandlse, for caah, SURPLUS JOBBERS, 157 McCaul street, Toronto:. DRESS UP AND PROTECT YOUR FLOWER BEDS AND SHRUl�S with ` OTAC Patent pendint FnI �pii E The only folding tense to provide oxtrs heavy aauge xah•nnl:ed eteel wire, hard baked enamel aui,h. Ton it. lengths fold Into parks for t•nar etoraee • insist oe OT4CO , , . the HER7' In Foldlna F.nee, CAN 8E ERECTED IN ANY SHAPE Ask for OTt1CO Folding Frnte at Tons hardware or vuriety atnre or order direc$ with thhu rounon tCun,da only). i 00 TU1D OTACO Wlll'rSD, Orliltn Ont, 0 Oonllement. Plenee send me pret+ald 1 to rt, lenathe or O'rACO h'oidlne 0 Bbnre at $1,95 pet 10 rt, longtbA Money Order tut $ to enclosed �• NAME .. r j AI)DRERS _.. 0 P o, L'», ' 0 lv t A 4 i C!6'ARETTE TOMCCO Moo g CASEY'S SELF SERVE FOOD MARKET FRESH FRUITS - FRESH VEGETABLES GROCERIES - COOKED MEATS BISSET'S ICE CREAM. PHONE 156 --- WE DELIVER. SEALY POSTUREPEDIC CONTEST $175,000 In Prizes WIN $100 A MONTH FOR LIFE or $20,000 CASA. 2nd Prize---All-Expense Paris Vacation for Two 3rd Prize ---1955 Packard Caribbean Convertible ONE WINNER OF A SEALY POSTUREPEDIC MATTRESS ASSURED IN THIS STORE. Contestants must supply the last line to a limerick. For entry forms and further information, call at our store. It costs nothing to enter. You can't if you don't try Lloyd E. Tasker Furniture Coach Ambulance - Funeral Service Phone 7 Blyth shill BIM STANDARD CARD OP THANKS I I wish to thank all those who helped In the arena booth during the Trade Fair, and also all those who donated food supplies, all of which added to the success of the booth project for the Agricultural Society. WM, II, GOW, President, 271p. Bl)th Agricultural Society. CARD OF THANKS I would like to say a very ,sincere thank you to my friends for cards, flowers, gifts, visi's, and enquiries, while I was In the hospital, 'and since my return home. Aleo 'to Dr, Street, Dr. Lackner, the nursing staff at the K. -W. hospital, who were all so very kind to me, find to the ladies who help- ed out in our home during my illness. Thank You. 27-1p, —Mrs. Chester Morrison, IN MEMORIAM DOERR—In loving memory of a Dear Husband and Father, Mr. Ernest liar- vey, Doerr, who passed away four years ago today, May 31, 1951 A silent thought, a secret tear, Keeps his memory ever clear; Time takes away the edge of grief, But memory turns buck every leaf. —Sadly missed by Wife and Children. 27-1, Nursery Plants • FLOWER 82 VEGETABLES. Leave Us Your Order To•Day: Stewart's Grocery - Blyth - Phone 9 - We Deliver "The Best For Less" camismat IN MEMORIAM HESSELWOOD—In loving memory of a Dear Husband and Father, John 1I, Hessclwood, who passed away May 27th, 1954. God saw the road was getting rough, And the hills were hard to climb, So he closed your weary eyes And whispered, "Peace be Thine." —Ever remembered by Wife, Mary, and 27-1p. Family BENEFIT DANCE Sponsored by Blyth Branch No, 420, Can. Legion LONDESBORO COMMUNITY HALL, ON Friday May 27th MUSIC•BY JIM PIERCE'S ORCHESTRA Lunch Counter --- Dancing 10 to 1:30 Entire proceeds for Benefit of JohnMiller, Lon- desboro, who lost his barn by fire Friday morning. Admission at Popular Prices, N fIIININNNNrI1�/ PURCHASED SANDERSON FARM Mr. and Mrs, Jim Scott, jr, have pur- chased the Henry Sanderson farin in Hullett township, and took possession last week. We are glad to have Jim and Mrs. Scott and family back in• our community, For the Future of Huron Bruce RE ELECT JOHN W. PROGRESSIVE.CONSERVATIVE Thursday, June 9 VOTING HOURS 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. D.S.T. Advance Poll, Wingham Town %H,all, on June 2, 3, and 4, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., and 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. daily, D.S.T. TIED FOR SCIHOLARSIHIP Janie Beecroft, of Wingham, a music student of Miss Lois Grasby, was a- warded 85 marks at the Goderich Mus- ic Festival, and tied for the $25 Wo- men's Institute Scholarship. TENDERS FOR COAL AND COKE . FEDERAL BUILDINGS — PRO- VINCE OF ONTARIO Sealed Tenders addressed to the un- dersigned and endorsed as above, will be received until 3.00 p.in, Thursday, June 9, 1955, for the supply of coal and coke for the Federal Build- ings throughout the Province of Ontar- io. . Forms of tender with specifications and conditions attached can be obtain- ed from the Chief of Purchasing and Stores, Department of Public.. Works, Ottawa, and the District Architect, 26 Adelaide Et, East, Toronto, Ontario. Tenders will not be considered un- less made on or according to the print- ed forms stnplied by the Department and in accordance with conditions 'set forth therein. The Department reserves the right to demandfrom any successful tenderer, before awarding the order, a security deposit in the form of a certified cheque drawn on a bank incorporated under the Bank Act or the Quebec Savings Bank Act payable to the order of the honourable the Minister of Pub- lic Works, equal to ten per cent of the amount of tender, in accordance with the Government Contracts Regulations now in force, or Bearer Bonds, with unmatured coupons attached, of the Government of Canada or of the Can- adian National. Railway Company and its constituent companies, uncondition- ally guaranteed, as to principal and In- terest by the Government of Canada. The lowest or any tender not neces- sarily accepted. ROBERT FORTIER, Chief of Administrative Services and Secretary. Department of Public Works, Ottawa, May 10, 1955. 27-2, Counter Check Books • at THE STANDARD OFFICE WOOL SAVE MONEY! --- Buy the LARGE Size at PHILP'S. Just looked at how much you can save on popular brands, Start to -day to buy the large size and SAVE. ABSORBINE JR, 4 oz, 51,19 ...12 az, $2.30 SAVE $1,13 BAYER ASPIRIN 12's 100..100's 70e SAVE 700 BRYLCREEM 1,8 oz, 43e. 4 oz, 69e SAVE, 26o CHASE'S NERVE FOOD do's 70e ..180's $1,03 SAVE 300 ENO'S FRUIT SALTS 4 oz, 69c._8 oz, $1,00 SAVE 29a JOHNSON'S' BABY POWDER, 4 oz. 35e.... 0 oz. 510 SAVE 190 LISTERINE 3 oz, 330. 14 oz, 98o SAVE 563 IPANA ToO'rH PASTE 1,3 oz, 333 ..4.3 oz. 85o SAVE 210 PALMOLIVE SHAVE CREAM.. 2 oz, 450 .3 15116* oz. 6:o SAVE 250 WHITE RAIN SHAMPOO .... 11/1 oz. 450.,.7 oz, 51.25 SAVE 85o R. D. PHILP, Phm. B OIUGB HUN AVEC WALLP AVEIL—PRONE -I •. S. .4 44+444 + +-4-$4+4-#+1+444-4 •.+••N•-.-•+•04114'44.004 L.-4444444 +4-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•444-.•-•-•-•••-•-••-•-• • 4-•-•-• •1, VODDEN ELECTRIC SHOP YOUR WESTINGHOUSE DEALER '- MOTOROLA CAR RADIOS, to help you enjoy those trips you are planning. The best long-range reception with no fade-out PRICED FROM $69.95 UP. For a limited time we will supply aerial free (Value $7.00). SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE OF PAINTS AND VARNISHES and marvel at the low price and quality. SACRIFICE - to Clear line: 1 Vacuum Cleaner $49.95 1 Used Rangette $24.95 1 Bicycle $10.00 PHONE 71R2 --- BLYTH, ONT. •-..1444-• N -•-N 1+1-14-N++F1-.+.4}1 ALWAYS AT YOUR SERVICE WITH GROCERIES, FRESH FRUITS --- FRESH VEGETABLES. WATT'S FEEDS. COLD STORAGE LOCKER SERVICE Holland's Food Market AND LOCKER SERVICE. • , Telephone 39 WE DELIVER See Us About Your Baler Twine Requirements BRANTFORD BALER at $7.45 PER BALE. DANISH BALER at $6.95 PER BALE. -Arnold PURINA CUSTOM SERVICE MICRO -MIXED JACKSON HOMES LTD. SEAFORTH\ is collecting wool for grading and sale on the co-operative plan. Ship- pers may obtain sacks and twine free of charge from the above or from their Licensed Operators. Canadian . Co -Operative Wool Growers Limited 217 Bay Street, Toronto IIYETT'S REMEDIES Eczema remedies; stomach medicine; asthma remedies, and,the rest' of the famous lines, are available at the store, Londesboro, 25.1.8p.