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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1955-11-23, Page 14 B STANDAR VOLUME 61 • NO, 52, T0441141•4114 umminswips....r1--..1 Post Off! a DepartmentaOt away BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 23, 1955 Subscription Rates- $2.00 in Advance; $3.00 in the U'S.A; Parish Confirmation Class Entertained At Rectory The members of the Confirmation Class of the Anglican Parish o[ Blyth, Auburn and Belgrave, who were con. firmed by Rt, Rev, G. N, Luxton, Lord Bishop of Huron, on Sunday, November lath, in Trinity Anglican Church, Blyth, attended Corporate Communion in St. Paul's Church, Clinton, on Sunday, November 20th at 8:30 a.m. Rev, R. M. P, Bulteel was Celebrant and the class was accompanied by their Rector, Rev, Bren deVries, who assisted. at the ser- vice, Following this service„ they were served breakfast at the Blyth Rectory by Mrs, deVries, assisted by Mrs. Ken- neth Taylor and Miss Alice Rogerson. Rev. Mr, deVries presented each member with a personal gift of a book containing prayers and instruction on '}What An Anglican Should Know." Mr. Anthony Langridge, on behalf of the Class, expressed sincere apprecia- tion to Rev. Mr, deVries for his very valued instruction during the past weeks, which they would earnestly en- deavour to follow during their lives. He also moved a vote of thanks to Mrs. deVries and her assistants for their hospitality, to which Mrs. deVries grac• lowly replied, Regret was also expressed at the ab- sence of one of the class members, Miss Kay Morrison, at present a patient in the Clinton Public Hospital, She was assured of their prayers and good wish- es for a speedy recovery. Members of the Class were as fol- lows; Auburn—Mr. and Mrs. John Dner, Mrs, A. Kirkconnell, Ellen Deer, Shir- ley Brown, William Brown, Kenneth IIaggitt, Blyth—Alice Nesbitt, Annie Nesbitt, Ross Gwynn, Arlyne Powell, Kay Mor- rison, George Ives, Mrs, John Nethery, Belgrave—Anthony Langridge, Y. P. U. MEETING The regular meeting of the Blyth Y.P.U. met in the basement of the United Church on Sunday evening at 8.30. The meeting opened with a sing song led by Ula Griffiths. Rev. A, Watson took charge of the bible study. David and George Web- ster were In charge of the worship service, Business period followed. We were informed that..the Huron,Presby- tery placed first in London Conference at the music festival. Taps closed the meeting. At the morning Church service Rev. Watson conducted the installation of officers which resulted as follows: Honourary President, Rev. A. Wat- son;. Past ,President, Joanne Hodgins; President, Wayne Jackson; Vice -Presi- dent, Jim Howson; Secretary, ,Gwen Campbell; Treasurer, David Webster; Faith and Evangelism, Ula Griffiths; Stewardship and Training, Nico Van den Asses; Citizenship and Commun- ity Service, Albert Wasson; Missions and World Out Reach, Bruce Richmond; Recreation and Culture, Willis Walpole; Publication Convenor, Frank Arm. strong; Pianist, Ian Griffiths, These officers commence with the new year, To Celebrate 50th Wedding Anniversary Mr. and Mrs, Robert Turvey will be at home to their friends on the occas- ion of their 50th Wedding Anniversary on Tuesday, November 20th, at their home, Mill Street, Blyth, from 3 to 5 o'clock in the afternoon, and from 7 to 9 o'clock in the evening, AMONG THE CHURCHES Sunday, November 27th ST, ANDREW'S eRESBYTERIAN CHURCII 3 p.m.—Sunday':So1ffoo1. 3:30 p.m.—Church Service. Rev. D. J. Lane, Minister. THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Blvth, Ontario. Rev. A. W. Watson, Minister. Spnday, November 27, 1955, 10:15 a.m.—Sunday School. 11:15 a.m.-Morning Worship. —"Herod or Christ", Sacrament of Holy Baptism. 7.30 p.m.—Evening Worship. —No, 1 in series on Apostles Creed. ANGLICAN CHURCH 10:30 .a.m.—Trinity, Blyth; Matins. Installation of A,Y.P.A, officers. 12 noon—St. Mark's, Auburn: Matins, 2:30 p.n.—Trinity, Bolgrave; Even- song. • ir+e CHURCH OF GOD McConnell Street, Blyth. Rev. II. Stewart, Pastor, 10 a.m.—Sunday School. 11. a.m.—Morning Worship, 7:30 p.m.—Evening Worship. Wednesday, 8 p.m.—Prayer and Bible Study, Friday, 8 pias,—Youth Fellowship. Rutabaga Production On Level With Last Year Production figures at the Rutabaga Plant of /At, Russell Dougherty are on a level with last year's high level, ac- cording to Mr. Dougherty, To date between 40 and 50,000 bush- els, mostly waxed, have been shipped from be plant to many places in the Unitdtl States. Mr. Dougherty also has in storage another 50,000 bushels, ready for processing, with a great potential still available in the district. The plant has been waxing and ship- ping an average of 5,000 bushels a week, Highest price paid early in the sea- son was 80c a bushel, wih the present price standing steady at 50c a bushel, The early planting could be almost considered a failure, but the late plant- ing is abundant, but slightly below average size, but of the usual high quality, Commenting on the failure of the ear- ly crop to develop, Mr. Dougherty said it was perhaps a :good thing, because otherwise the yield would have been such as to create a great surplus which could have been disastrous to the price of the rutabaga. BELGRAVE The November meeting of the Wo- men's Institute was held in the Com- munity Centre on Tuesday afternoon, with the president, Mrs, W. Scott, in charge. The meeting was opened in the usual manner and secretary and treasurer's reports given. -Donations of clothing -were received to be sent to the Unitarian committee for Koren. There was also a shower of articles for the, Children's Aid Society. A fur- ther donation of $25 was given to the Huron County Institute Scholarship, It was agreed to pay 10 cents a mile one way for cars taking members to con- ventions and rallies. Mrs. T, Clark, the District President, was present and gave some ideas from the Area Insti- tute Convention held in London and also highlights of the Women's meet- ing at the Ontario Federation of Ag- riculture annual meeting in Toronto, Community singing of Scotch and Irish songs was led by Mrs. George Michie. Mrs. Earl Anderson conducted a quiz, At the close of the meeting lunch was served by, Mrs, M: Taylor,' Mrs. W. Scott and •Mrs, Albert Coultes. Clifford Coultes, of Waterloo College, spent the week -end at his home here. The regular weekly euchre was held in the Community Centre on Wednes- day night, High scores were won by Mrs, Rae Crawford and J. E, McCallum and low counts by Mrs, Richard Proc ter and Abner Nethery. Mr. and Mrs, Ken Wheeler, Mary Anne, Mr, and Mrs, H. Wheeler, spent Wednesday in London, Mr. Lloyd Anderson, of London, spent the week -end at his home here. A very unfortunate accident happen- ed on Wednesday at the close of school when Mrs. John VanCanp stopped her car to lot her daughter, Brenda, out to go into the school for a forgotten ar• title and the ;mall girl ran •into the side of a truck driven by Mr. Edwards of Wingham. The victim suffered a severe skull fracture and other injur- ies and was removed to Wingham Hospital in an unconscious condition, On Thursday she was taken to the Hospital for Sick Children for further treatment, She had not regained con- sciousness Saturday but all hope for improvement In her condition soon. Bodmin Farm Forum mot at the home of Mr,' and Mrs. Leslie Bolt on Monday night, The radio program was listened to, Following this the business was dealt with by Howard Wilkinson in the chair. Clarence Yuill was elected chairman for the next term, It was decided to get more literature to aid In the discussion. George Bacon and James R, Coultes each gave impressions from their visit to the Royal Winter Fair, ' Progressive euchre was enjoyed with 6 tables in play, High scores were won by Mrs. McDonald and James R, Coultes and low by Mrs, James R, Coultes and_ George Bacon. Lunch of sandwiches and' tarts was served. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Richard Procter; CONGRATITLATIONS Congratulations to Miss Anne Jean- ette Watson who celebrated her birth- day on tWednesday, November 16th. Congratulatons to Mr, and Mrs. Mex Patterson of Blyth who observed their 25th Wedding Anniversary on Tuesday, November 22nd. Congratulations to Mr. Jack Gloush- er who celebrates his birthday on Thursday, November 24th, Congratulations to Miss Patricia Car- rick who celebrated her birthday on Monday, November 21st. . Congratulations to Johanne Hoogen- booni who celebrates her birthday on Friday, November 25th, WEDDING► FAITZ—CRAIG A quiet wedding was solemnized In Dundas Street United Church, London, Ontario, by Rev. 1I. Donald Joyce, when marriage vows were exchanged by Olive Elaine Craig and Stephan Joseph Feltz. The bride is the young- est daughter of Mrs. Robert Craig, of Blyth, and the late Mr. Craig, and the groom is the eldest son of Mrs, M. Zunac, of Hamilton, and the late Mr. Faitz. The bride wore a charcoal blue vi - dere dress with matching jacket and ballerina length skirt with winter white hatted plush hat and white accessories and a corsage of white mums and red rose buds. Her only attendant was her sist , Mrs. George `Pollard, of Brussels, -attired in acqua videra dress with pink level shell type hat sparkled with bugle beads and mother of Pearl, and matching accessories and a corsage of pink roses., Steve Sorsicic attended the groom. The reception was held at Hook's Restaurant, London, where the bride's mother received in a dress of navy crepe wih black accessories and a cor- sage of red roses. Mrs. Zunac, mother of the bridegroom, was dressed in a two-piece navy dress with black acces- sories and a corsage of pink roses. For travelling to the State of Michi- gan, the bride donned a blue gabardine suit. The happy couple will reside in Hamilton, V PERSONAL INTEREST Mr. Richard' S. Ewing, of Toronto, spent last Thursday with Mr. Archie Somers and Mrs. S, Curring. On his return home he was accompanied by his mother, Mrs. A. A. Ewing, who had spent the past two weeks with her sis- ter and brother, Mr, and Mrs. Al Cowie and Janice of London, Mr, and Mrs. James' Mas- son of Goderich, Mr. and Mrs, Albert Mason' of Dungannon, visited on Sun- day with Mr, and Mrs, Walter Mason, Miss Kay Morrison is a patient in the Clinton hospital having undergone an operation for the removal of her ap- pendix on Friday morning. Miss Virginia Oliver is a patient in the Clinton Hospital where she also had her appendix removed on Frigay f night;' Mr, and Mrs, Walter Buttell will be guests at the wedding of Mr, Currie Yorke and Miss Donna Lill in London on Saturday,' at Centennial United Church. Mr, and Mrs. John Vincent of Gode- r ich visited Tuesday with Mr, and Mrs. G, R. Vincent. , Mr. and Mrs. Robert Finlay of Luck - now, Mrs. Leonard Cook and grand- daughter, Heather Brown, spent a few days in Toronto last week with Mrs, Cook's daughter and son-in-law, Mr, and Mrs, John Phillips, They also at- tended the Santa Claus parade. Mr. R. H. Somers of London return- ed home–Monday from his annual two - weeks' hunting trip at Hollow Lake, Dorset, and was successful in bagging a deer. RECEIVES A.R,C,T, DIPLOMA Miss Lois Grasby received her A. R. C.T. diploma at the graduation exec= cites of the Royal Conservatory of Music of 'Throaty on Thursday, No- vember 17th,' DONNYBROOK The W. M. S. and W. A, met on Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Gordon Naylor, there were eleven members and seven children present. Mrs, Toni Armstrong was in charge of the meeting and was assisted in the devotional exercises by Mrs. N. Thomp- son and Mrs. H. Jefferson. Mrs. Wm. Hardy gave a report of the Sectional meeting at Holmesville and Mrs. San Thompson read the chapter in the Study book, The minutes of the last meeting were approved as read and the treas- urer's report given. Thank -You cards were received from Mrs. J. R. Thomp• I son and Mrs, R. Chamney. The De- cember meeting will be held one week I earlier, December 6th, at the home of t Mrs. Mark Armstrong, members are . asked to bring their mite boxes. Lunch i was served by the hostess assisted by Mrs. Wm. Hardy and Mrs. R. Chamney. During the' church service on Sunday morning, a baptimnal service was held for Susan Elizabeth, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Sam Thompson and Barbara Anne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Stuart Chamney,' Mr. ,Wes, Jefferson reurned from the West last week. • Miss Grace Thosmpson, of Simcoe, alas home for the Remembrance day holiday week -end. • Mr. Stuart Chimney spent a day at the Royal Winter Fair. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Thompson have purchased a home on Diagonal Road In Wingham and intend moving there In the near future, -- Mr. and Mrs. Robe, Turvey Tendered Surprise Party A surprise party of 19 old friends gathered at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Brown to honour Mr,, and Mrs. Robert Turvey, who will be celebrating their 50th Wedding Anniversary on November 29th. The first part of the evening was spent in playing progres- sive euchre. Tho lady winning first prize was Mrs. Turvey, and the high gent 'Bras Mr. Turvey. Low gent was Bailie Parrott and low lady was Mrs. Sam Bargee, The following address was read by Mrs, Jack McGee and the gift was pre- sented by Wm. Bowes and Wm. Brown. On behalf of Mrs, Turvey, Mr. 'Purvey thanked all present for their lovely gift, Following is a copy of the eddt'ess; Dear Bob and Mary; We have gather- ed here tonight to honour you both as it la, nearing your 50th Wedding Anni- versary, and we felt we couldn't let it go by without letting you know how much we appreciated the many enjoy- able hours and the good games of cards we have had at your home, We always received a warns welcome with a smile, So may God bless you both many more years together, with good health . and happiness. We now ask you to accept this menu master, from your old friends and card players, Brother Of James Phelan Killed In Highway Accident Mr. James Phelan received the sad news on Sunday morning that his brother, Thomas Phelan of Saginaw, Michigan, had been the victim of a highway traffic accident the previous night, November 10th. Deceased was born in Morris town- ship, a son of the late William Phelan. and Mary Ryan, About 40 years ago he went to Saginaw where he married Mamie Lapralrie of Cheyboygan, Mich, Surviving besides his widow are three sons, Thomas, Jr., William and James, and two daughters, Theressa and Mar- garet Ann, all of Saginaw, and four grandchildren, Also surviving are three brothers and two sisters: James, of Morris; Mrs, Wm, Lane (Laura) of Dublin; Sister St, Leonard, of St, Tho- mas; Rev, Win, Phelan, of Woodstock; and Rev. Louis Phelan, of Leamington. The funeral was held ' . Wednesday morning: -Mr. and, Mrs„James-Phelan, Mrs. Wm. Lane, Rev, Wm, Phelan and Rev, Louis Phelan and Sister St, Leon- ard, and Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Boyle of Auburn left Tuesday morning to at- tend the funeral. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Phelan, and Mr. and Mrs, Louis Lane of London, visited the family on Sun- day, LIONS RUMMAGE SALE ON SATURDAY Saturday is the date of the Lions Rummage Sale and it is hoped t'nit a large crowd will be in attendance at the Memorial Hurl for this feature ev- ent, A collection of all articles will be made by Club members Friday even- ing, and out-of-town contributors are reminded to get in touch by phone with either Lions Jack McDougall or Walter Buttell and arrangements will be made to pick up their articles. Escaping Steam Mistaken For Smoke Causes Alarm The fire siren aroused people about midnight Saturday when steam escap- ing from Franklin Bainton's Woollen Mill was mistaken for smoke, Firemen were on the job quickly, but fortunately their services were not needed. A large crowd of residents also made their way to the mill, some of them having not yet retired. Live Wire Farm Forum The Live Wire Farm Forum met on Monday night, Nov, 21st, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bunking, with 16 adults present. Broadcast was lis- tened to. This being review night there was no discussion. The chair- man conducted the business period. Names were drawn for the Christmas party, A $3 fee was collected. The next meeting will be held at the hone of Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Bunking. The meeting adjourned. Cards Were played and lunch served, DEER SEASSON OPEN THIS WEEK -END Local and' district hunters are hnv- Ing their outing this week -end as the open deer season began in the County Wednesday morning. INSTALLATION AT LONDESBORO Officers of Blyth and Hallett Mason- ic Lodges were installed for 1956, at the Hullett Lodge room on Tuesday night. A list of officers will appear next week. Local Bank Nite Draw Returns For Blyth Shoppers, First Draw On Saturday, November 26 WESTFIELD Mr:. Jack Chisholm, of Lucknow, vis- ited with Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Red- mond, on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey McDowell and David. spent a few days the last of the week with Mr. and Mrs, Lyman Jardin, of Toronto. Mrs, Elwin Taylor and Eddie, of Brussels, Mr. and Mrs, William Behrns of Wroxeter, visited with Mrs, J. L. McDowell and Gordon on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cook visited with Mrs. Jean Kechnie of Blyth on Monday. Messrs. Cecil Campbell and Ray Per- kins of Exeter spent Sunday at the for- mer's home here, Mr. Will McDowell and Mr. and Mrs, Norman McDowell visited with Mrs. Mabel Stackhouse and Mr. and Mrs, Mac Wilson of Brucefield on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith and fam- ily were recent visitors at Clinton and Brucefield, Mr, Gerald McDowell, of Ridgetown, spent the week -end at his home here. Rev, and Mrs. Stewart, of Blyth, vis• ,ited on Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Campbell. Mr, and Mrs, Norman McDowell, Gwen, and Lloyd McDowell, were Ridgetown visitors. Miss Edna Smith, of Kitchener, vis- ited with her brother, Mr, Gordon Smith, and Mrs. Smith, over the week- end. Mr, and Mrs, Douglas Campbell and family visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Everett Whitehead, Teeswater, The Auburnottes, Miss Rena and Gladys McCllnchey, Barbara Snaith, Donna Walden, took part in the concert at the Odd Fellows Banquet at Kincar- dine on Friday evening, and also sang at Auburn United Church Sunday morning. Mission Band Missfon•'Bana met on Sunday in the school room with Mrs, Hugh Blair and Mrs. Howard Campbell as leaders. Cull to Worship, 0, Come, let us sing unto the_:Lord, let us heartily•rejoice'in the. strength of our salvation. Members Purpose was repeated. Scripture was read by Lyle Smith. Prayer by Mrs, Blair, Reading by Dorothy Howatt, The story was told by ‘Mrs. Campbell. Election of officers were, held for the coming year; President, Ronald Snell; Vice -President, Donald McDowell; Se- cretary, John McDowell; Treasurer, Lyle Smith. Mrs. Campbell closed the meeting with prayer. Congratulations are extended to Miss Violet Cook who received her diploma with honours in the short hand course of Goderich Business College. Mr, and Mrs. 0. McCharles and John of Ripley, called on Mr. and Mrs, Nor- man McDowell on Sunday, Farm Forum Thirty attended the Farm Forum held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Nor- man Wightman on Monday evening. After the radio broadcast Franklin Campbell, the chairman, took charge of the business part, Progressive Lost Heir was played with Keith Rodger being the high player. Mr. and Mrs. John Buchanan invited the group to their home for next meeting, Mr. and Mrs. Smith and family and Mrs. Polypeiek, of St, Marys, visited over the week -end with Mr. and Mrs. Peter de Groot and family, Mrs. Poly- peiek remained for a week's visit. Mr. and Mrs. Jasper McBrien, of Goderich, returned home on Thursday after spending .some time visiting Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Snell and family. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd 1Walden attended the I.0.O.F. Banquet at Kincardine 'on Friday night. Mr, and Mrs. Frank Harburn and boys, of Hensall, spent Saturday with Mr, Win. Walden and other relatives. Mr. Wm. Walden and Mr: and Mrs. Lloyd Walden and family, spent Sun- day wih Mr. and Mrs. Sydney McClin- chey,. of Auburn. $2000 SCHOLARSHIP READY FOR COMPETITION Meeting at Grand Bend on Tuesday the Branches of the Huron County ;Wo- me's Institute announced the complet- ion of a $2000 Scholarship project, and a cheque for the amount was handed to Mrs. Gordon McPhatter, Provincial President of Women's Institutes. The Scholarship is to be used for girls who have completed six 4-H pro- jects. The amount is invested in Do- minion of Canada bonds the first pay- ment of which will be due hi Decem- ber, 1956. Only 4-11 girls of the above standing are eligible and the scholar- ship must be used • by the winner for - furthering some vocation such as nurs- ing or music. ” - 116 members of the lnsitute register- ed at the Grand Bend meeting. A decision among Blyth merchants to revive the popular shopping Bank Nite feature during the Christmas Shopping period will be welcome news to shoppers throughout this area. The feature needs little introduction to the shopping public, as during the past fifteen years it has operated very successfully at various times, Blyth merchants pioneered this feat- ure in Western Ontario away back as far as 1939 at which time it was copied from a small town down in Haldimand, County where large crowds were as- sembling every Saturday night during the summer to participate In the draws for cash prizes. It's simplicity of op- eration immediately appealed to the residents of this district and for several summers it was a regular Saturday night feature at the Memorial Hall, working out to the mutual benefit of the public and the participating busi- ness people. There are no strings attached to the feature. It is strictly a natter of test- ing your luck in the revolving barrel against hundreds of other shoppers who alt have the same chance to have their names pulled from the barrel. You must, however, have your tick- ets in the barrel In order to have a chance, and, the more tickets, the more chances you have. RULES OF DRAW: Every draw or contest must have rules and regulations to keep the event running smoothly, These rules have been found to apply without contro- versy or discord in the past, and they will apply again: 1. The winner MUST be present at the draw to claim his or her prize. 2. Only the person whose name is nn - the ticket drawn can claim the prize. 3. Any prize money not claimed will be reserved for a future draw. 4. Participating merchants end mem- bers oftheir families aro not ells gible for draw tickets, 5. Tickets may be deposited at any participating store, 6. Draws will be made at the Blyth Manorial Hall every Saturday afternoon at 3:30 p.ni, until Christ- mas. 7. Participating merchants reserve the right to add to or make changes in the foregoing rules should the need arise, 8. Prize winners must claim their prize within 10 minutes after the final draw is made, otherwise the prize is forfeited, (These rales must, of necessity, be strictly enforced.) SATURDAY'S PRIZE MONEY: Prizes for the draw on Saturday, November 26th, will be as follows: One Draw for $10.00 (Cash). Two Draws for $2.00 each (Cash). One Draw for $1.00 (Cash), All participating stores now have tickets which will gladly be given to purchasers in their stores, In these stores also are ticket deposit boxes. All the customer has to do is write his or her name on the blank side of the ticket and deposit it in the box. Pur- chasers need not deposit tickets at time of purchase but may keep them to de. posit at any particular draw. All tickets will be gathered intne- diately preceeding each draw and tak• en to the Memorial Hall where the draws will be made, The most important rule for shop. pers to remember is the fact that only the person whose name is drawn can claim the prize. PARTICIPATING MERCHANTS: Tickets are available from the fol- lowing participating merchants who in- vite the co-operation of the shopping public in making these draws a real bang-up success: Bev, Wallace's White Rose Station. Vodden Electric. The Arcade Store. Madill's Shoes, Men's & Boys' Wear, Berthot's Butcher Shop. Ladd's Barber Shop. "Casey's" Superior Food Market, Sparling's Hardware. . The Huron Grill, The Needlecraft Shoppe. Wendy's 5c To $1.00 Store,- Elliott tore;Elliott Insurance Agency. Philp's Drug Store. The Standard Office. Howson & Howson, Limited, Doherty Bros. Garage. Holland's Food Market. Stewart's Red & White Store, Hamm's Garage. _. BIII.THS HILBORN—In Stratford, General Hos+ pital, on Monday, , November 14th, 1955,4to Mr, and 1VIrs, Ivan Hilborn, 473 West Gore St„ Stratford, a son- bavid Leslie, a brother for Ann, L_. LAN uv I4IPST) (OU/L r� "Dear Anne Hirst: I am mer- ited to a man who cannot forget my past, I wasn't told the things a girl should icnow, so when I got engaged to a boy who was going overseas I did things I regret to this day, (He con- vinced me it was all right be- cause we were' planning to get married,) ... When he got home 1 found I didn't love him any more, and we broke off. 'Before I married my hus- band a year ago, I told him all this. He declared it didn't mat. ter, but now every time he thinks of it he gets mad and calls me ugly names: Always he is sorry afterward, but at the time it breaks my heart. He has even spoken of divorce in some of his rages — then tells me to forget it. "I am sure he loves me; in every other way he treats me wonderfully. He shows me off like he was proud of me. Also, I get along, well with his people, "If only he would trust me again! I have done everything a good wife is expected to, but still he can't seem to forget what happened. What can I do? I be- lieve my happiness depends on your answer. MISERABLE" * Your husband is a poor * sport. You did not have to 41-4014 4/Ais$ A "must" in. every wardrobe —the jumper to wear with its companion blouse — with all , your sweaters and blouses! A sew -easy step-in style — no "overhead" muss or fuss. Sim- ple, graceful lines — so flatter- ing to your figure! Pattern 4780: Misses' Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 30, 32, 36, 38, 40, 42. Size 16 jumper 4% yards 39 - inch fabric; blouse 17k yards, This pattern easy to use sim- ple to sew, is tested for tit. Has complete illustrated instructions. Send TIHIRTY-FIVE CENTS (354) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER, Send order to Box 1, 123 18th St., New Toronto, Ont, confess what happened before * he knew you, but you were * too honest to withhold it, Yet * now, after you trusted him * with your secret, he flings it * in your face as though you * were still a guilty woman. * This is hard to take, * The next time he loses self- * control, tell him you refuse to * listen and if he persists in it, * you will have to leave him. * Then put on your things and * walk out, By the time you * come back he will be over the * worst of his tantrum and, I * expect, ashamed. * You don't want a divorce, * of course; your husband loves * you and you love him, I do * not think you will ever have * to make your threat good. * On his part, try to realize * that having known your love, * he regards as an insult to his * ego, the fact that another man * once possessed you, He can- * notcontrol his fury, and pun- * ishing you is his only relief, * It is unfair and cowardly, but * his marriage is still new and * he cannot help himself, * As time passes he will over- * conte this wretched habit. Be- * lieve that, and relax, But * meanwhile don't submit to his * outbursts. • LIFE AT 'I'IIIRTEEN "Dear Anne Hirst: I am over 13 and very unhappy and con- fused. My family don't treat me right, Mother and Dad are par- tial to my.. sisters and brother, and all they do is fuss at me all the time; they never say a harsh word to the others, I "I am very nervous, that's. why I make so many mistakes. But I don't know half the time what I should say or do, so everything is . all wrong, Do you think you can help me? LONELY" • .I wouldn't be at all sur- * prised if your sisters and * brother felt just as you do * when they were your age. * Now they understand their * parents' attitude better be- * cause they are more mature. * They co-operate with , them and with each other, and so do not require the guidance nor deserve the reprimands which depress you so. Try not to resent this train- ing that annoys you, A girl can be pretty trying at 13, and your parents take so much trouble with you because they care so much and want to be proud of you. You will under- stand all this better as you grow. Perhaps you need to, have your health checked. Asyour mother what she thinks about that, You are apt to be moody and hard to get along with just now, and that is natural too. Don't exaggerate . every reproof; try to understand its * meaning and not make the * same mistake again. Brooding * over yesterday's troubles * doesn't get us anywhere, Live * one day at a time, learn to * control your temper, and * know that these growing * pains will disappear pretty * soon. * * * * * * Only a cad would taunt the girl he married with the past she confessed. As his wife she deserves his protection, even from himself, Anne Hirst can help you handle this situation as well as other painful ones, if you write her at Box 1, 123 Eigh- teenth St., New Toronto, Ont. • 'WHALE' OF A PICTURE -• Sheer d catch is expressed in toothy grin of off "Specs'" fish to the lad at right was captured near a lake in Hyde elight over a brother's first the lad, center, as he shows . Once•in-a•boyhood moment Park, London. 'Priceless' Is Word For Greeting Cards Christmas cards, above, are' al- most literally priceless, Mrs, Claude McFaddin, Long Beach, shows samples of some 220.000 she found on a city dump. She acquired the lot, junked by a card flrm to make room for new lines, for $25—about 10 cents per thousand, Below, designer Alice Daly displays a greeting that's almost priceless in a dif- ferent sense of the word, Tree, fashioned of snow-white mink, is studded and bordered with pearls and precious stones. It's valued 'at $25,000. She sells color reproductions of such glit- tering greetings to the Christ- mas trade. Legendary Ontario Patriarch Pictured Lake Erie Baron By Fred Coyne Hamil, Macmillan, 326 pages, Illustrated, notes, bibli- ography index, end -paper maps, $5. Canada's pioneer era was noted for its rugged individual- ists and none exceeded Colonel Thomas Talbot in achievement and eccentricity. A founder of Upper Canada, he became al- most a legendary figure in his lifetime, esteemed by few and execrated by many. A cadet of one of the most ancient Anglo- Irish baronial families, the Tal- bots of Malahide, he renounced a promising army career for the life of a pioneer and backwoods- man in what is now Southwest- ern' Ontario, He found the an- cient country of the Neutral In- dians a wilderness, When' he died, a half -century later, he had changed this vast stretch of swamp and forested land into prosperous settlements w i t h comfortable homes and thriving villages, all linked together with good roads. Dr. Fred Coyne Hamil pens a fascinating portrait and only modern complete biography of this patriarch of Southwestern Ontario leading his people, out of the wilderness into a prom- ised land of plenty. His avowed ambition to hew out a baronial estate from a generous land grant was further stimulated by his appointmerit as government agent to locate settlers on Crown "waste lands" and superintend their performance of settlement duties. He quickly took advan- tage of this extension of author- ity and, at one time, his rule from Long Point, on Lake Erie, to the Detroit River, a distance of 150 miles, was as despotic as that of his feudal ancestors. An aristocrat by birth and tradition, he was an autocrat by • nature. The surname Talbot was derived from: an ancient, if ex- Mid, breed of bloodhound, and the colonel was -keen to scent rebellious tendencies, Moreover, he had a temper as red as the lion "rampant gules" on his coat -of -arms and the courage bequeathed him by six centur- les of warrior ancestors. With an administrator of such a,back- ground almost anything might happen—and almost everything did happen, The author is to be congratul- ated upon his skilled selection of material, which presents 'a vivid portrait of the Colonel in his various moods and activi- ties. Implusive and aggressive, he fancied himself a "benevo- lent despot who was the father of his people and his settle- ment"; and he acted this -pater- nal role with, faultless exacti- tude. Settlers who worked hard and fulfilled their duties had little to fear; but the slothful and land speculators felt the flail of his wrath, His grants of land were as arbitrary as his rule, The settler ha dhis name pencilled on the record of his lot. If, he dealt . faithfully by the requirements he eventually received the deed; if he failed to meet his obliga- tions; his name was rubbed out and a new one inserted. Not in- frequently . the Colonel erased a half-dozen names from a spe. ciflc lot before a settler was found to meet his rigid require- ments, This policy of grant and erasure was frowned upon by the Government and the Colonel was more than once forced to visit England to plead his case. Dr, Fred Coyne Hamil, an as. sociate professor of history at Wayne University, Detroit, has written a magnificent biography. It is one of the new Macmillan series of Pioneer Books designed to revive interest in the archi- tects of our nation, and which should be made compulsory reading in our halls of educa- tion. Factory shipments of heating radiators increased,.to 15,006,506 square feet worth' $9,079,028 in 1953 from 13,253,513 square feet valued at $8,015,332 in 1952. HRONICLES %INGER rXRM W Garendoline P Cls e This is Sunday — and a wet, dull Sunday if ever there was one. We notice it more, I sup- pose, after the warm, sunny weather we have been enjoying just lately. Gardens around here are still bright with colour — geraniums, petunias, asters and chrysanthemums, and even nasturtiums, as we have not yet had even one killing frost, The weather thas been grand for all the geranium slips I planted about three weeks ago. They are still outside in their pots, doing far better in the rain than they would in the house, While I was at it I repotted two big ferns and a begonia and started a philodendron from the parent plant, Visitors came along last week and took away over a dozen geranium slips and yesterday I pulled up three big plants for a friend so she could take off ae many slips as she liked. In the house I have been hav- ing a .wonderful time ... "red - ding up", no less ... and keep- ing Partner busy burning all the stuff I have been throwing out. And it really took courage be- cause I hate to throw things, away. However, I was determin- ed that this time I would really make a clearance, Magazines and papers were tied up ready for the next paper drive — and tied up without being looked over first! That's the part that takes courage. Start sorting them out and you're lost, You 'know how it goes . . better save this magazine, there's a good article here on making use of your spare time! Well, that certainly. can be thrown out , , what' we really want to know is how to find spare. time. So . . it didn't take long to get the magazines together once I had decided not to look through them. Then I attacked cdds and ends of woollen and cotton goods leftover from dresses, drapes and pyjamas. . Small usable pieces went into one box for quilt tops; big pieces for rugs. The best part of old sheets was. reserved for pillow covers; the rest for dusters and floorcloths. Then I got into .my writing ma- terial . . , carbon copies of sto- ries and articles written years ago. Some of :them rejects, some published and forgotten, In fact I found enough scribbling paper to last me the rest of my life. Discarded wearing apparel was another problem, By the time things are not fit for us to wear they are not much good for any- thing else either. So . , off with the buttons; rip : up the seams, cut off the collars and cuffs . , . presto — more con- tributions for braided rugs. The same with old drapes — faded . but lots of wear in them yet. Mixed with brighterstrips faded. goods never show up in a rug. Then I got into a cupboard where Bob's treasures are hid - If You're TIRED ALLTHETIME Ever/body gds a bit run-down now and then, ttred•out, heavyheaded, and maybe bothered by backaches. Perhaps nothing seriously .wrong, just a temporary toxic condition caused by excess acids and wastes. That's the time to take Dodd'.e Kidney Pills, Dodd's stimulate the kidneys, and so help restore their normal action of removing excess acids and wastes, Then you feel better, sleep better, work better. Get Dodd's Kidney Pills now. Look for the hlue hot with the red band at all druggi*ts. You can depend on Dodd's, 52 LYS LIF. al. — 1955 den, 1 brought them into the tight of day. Later, Bob was here so I took him upstairs. "Look, this stuff of. yours — what can I throw out? Most of it army relics - duffel bag, canvas belts, service berets, radio earphones, water -bottle and canteen '- what's the good of it all?" Alas I came up against a brickwall. "Throw them out . what for? Put everything to- gether in one box and forget about it. Those canvas belts might come in darn handy some day, And I might want this , . . and this . . . and this!" "Well, why don't you take the. stuff home with you?" "Heck, you've got more stor- age room here than we have." So that's that. The things must be kept — but it is I who am stuck with them—plus a whole pile of aircraft magazines. Partner, also, has been bitten with the "redding up" bug, He has been spending his evenings the last two weeks making a braided doormat from baling twine. And I'm telling you, it's quite a mat. Just think of the yards and IT MAY BE YOUR LIVER 1f life's not worth living it may be your liver! It's a fact! It takes up to two pints of liver bile a day to keep your digestive tract in top shape! It your llver bile is not flowing freely your food may not digest . , , gas bloats up your stomach.. , you feel constipated and all the fun and sparkle go out of life. That's whenou need mild gentle Carter's Little Liver 1Yilla. These famous vegetable pills help stimulate the flow of liver bus. Boon your digestion starts functioning properly and you feel that happy days are here again! Don't ever stay sunk. Always keep Carter's Little Liver Pills on band. yards of baling twine that be been burnt or is still hanging up in scores of barns across the country. Some of it may have been made into halter` ropes or into mats as Partner has been doing - but 1 expect most of it is being wasted because no one has thne to deal with it, If you just stop to think it is almost criminal the amount of stuff that is being wasted year in and year out, In towns garbage collectors are paid to take away stuff that there should be a use for — cans, bottles, waste paper and so on, And then more money is spent on incineratons to get rid of the accumulated waste from thousands of homes where there isn't so much as a kitchen stove to burn a paper bag. And with everything wrap- ped and double -wrapped these days, waste paper, in some homes, becomes quite a problem. Unavoidably, we do our share of wasting too, but not with paper, 'All afternoon we have had a lovely fire burning in the living -room, using no other fuel than tightly rolled newspapers. Paper logs, 1 call them. "A duck just can't hold his liquor!" Officer Dugan Bresne- hen, of Vinita, Oklahoma, de- clares, The officer recently arrested a woman and her pet duck for being drunk. Both were drink- ing beer when arrested in a Vinita beer tavern, "The woman wasn't in such bad shape," Bres- nehen said, "but the duck could not stand up!" TWICE. AS MANY AS BEFORE WAR There were about 24 tela - phones for every 100 persons is Canada at the end of 1953, twice as many as in 1939, Bring your RELATIVES and FRIENDS from EUROPE Regular sailings'the year 'round from British and French ports to Canada. Reservations can be made for specific sailing. with ocean and railway fares payable in Canada, See your Local Agent— No One Can Serve You Reiter CUNARD LINT Corner Say & Wellington itiie„ Toronto, Ontarlo. Tel: EMplre 2-1481 Men who t%iit4 of tonjor,'owo practin moderation today M•t• 111 TO Calvert SPORTS COLUMN pity Ee�te ?eo#t • Mention of last year's Grey Cup game, in which the Edmonton Eskimos literally snatched the Grey Cup victory from the laws of defeat by Montreal's powerful Alouettes, always recalls the picture of ,m athlete who sat sobbing, inconsolably, on a ilressIng-room bench. That was Chuck Hunsinger, a hard-boiled, hard-bitten old pro, who for two seasons had battled gamely and well for the Montreal team; leader, the previous season. in touch• downs for his club. Suddenly, he was a broken man, who gat there sobbing, with tears seeping through his mud• grimed fingers. He paid no heed to team-mates who patted his heaving back and told him it was just luck of the game. With mere minutes to play, the ball had slipped from his hands, gone spinning off wildly, was caught up by Edmonton's fleet - tooted d'ackie Parker who raced 90 yards for the touch -down that won the Cup, for the west by a scant point, 26 25, It had been 25.20 for Alouettes after the desperately. fighting Eskimos had crashed through for a la19 touch -down, cutting down an adverse margin of 25.14. And even then, it seemed as though the east must triumph again. For the Alouettes were stung. They turned on their power, savagely smashed the ball back to the western 10 -yard line. A pass Was thrown to Hunsinger, he started to race, head -down, toward the Edmonton line, Big Rollie Prather dived at him, the ball flew loose from Hunsinger's hands. Whether it was an attempted pass, or just a fumble, doesn't matter much. The' ball rolled loosely. Parker swooped it in, sprinted over the Alouette line and so turned defeat into victory. That was tragedy for Hunsinger. A few, weeks later, over 20,000 Montreal fans signed a telegram urging him to return the next season. But we doubt even this overwhelming vote of confidence will. ever efface the memory of that tragic split-second in which he lost the hall and his team lost the coveted Grey Cup. 10 Your comments and suggestions for this column will be welcomed by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Calvert House, 431 Yonge St,, Toronto. CatvettDISTILLERS LIMITED AMHERSTBURG, ONTARIO PLAYED HOOKEY ,FOR A WEEK RIGHT UNDER TEACHER'S DESK! When three-year-old Johnny -Johnston returned, safely and unhurt, after disappearing from home and spending three nights On Salisbury Plain, it caused a national sensation in Britain. Understandable. Yet, as any parent will tell you, children do the most amazing things, run risks which would give their elders a heart attack, and yet somehow escape unscathed, Take the case of the kiddy who had a passion for trains. He would spend every spare moment watching what he ob- viously considered to be fasci- nating but harmless monsters, One day he became more ven- turesome. He wandered on to the track just as a train was about to leave Blackburn for $iouthport, Fortunately he was spotted by the engine - driver, Frantically, the man sprinted a couple of hundred yards along the line. It was a near thing. As he snatched the youngster to safety an ex- Dress train roared by -on the ries where 'the kiddy had been playing. An equally adventurous spirit was displayed by a couple of WOWI-That's what Mrs. Helena Vgrrar's visitors say when they coine-to her home in Southport, England. For greeting. them at the door is Mrs. Farrar and ilajah, a 250 -pound lion. Rajah was brought home by Mrs. Far- rcl,r, a zoo keeper, because' the Icon was ill and needed more. e,Itention. lads who played truant from a home in Croydon and took ref- uge in a school of all places, But they didn't go there to learn, Instead they hid beneath the platform used by a teacher, And, almost unbelievably, they stayed there for six days. Their refuge was a mere foot high, but it provided plenty of floor space. At any rate the boys, aged eleven.,and thirteen, made themselves comfortable. When everything was quiet, they "borrowed" an electric fire from the building and plugged it in. They did the same with a radio. Bedding didn't stump them, either, Odd clothes left about the school made a good substitute for blankets. How about exercise? Here again the answer was easy. After all, schools are open for only a certain number of hours a day. The lads slipped out at the appropriate moments during the morning and at nights. And, when the teachers and pupils had departed, they cooked themselves wonderful meals " of fried bread and eggs scrounged from the kitchen. Even more enterprising—,and on ,a very different plane—is the Swiss girl of seven who wrote a book for children. It was published recently and sold 15,000 copies in a fortnight. •Now she is writing another. And for courage, many chil- dren put grown-ups to shame. Imagine yourself, if you can, in the position of little Jean Daw- son. She was ten. Her bungalow in Kenya was attacked by Mau Mau terrorists. One of the de- fenders was wounded. Jean tended him while the crack of her father's rifle echoed in her ears. But the little girl did far more than that. She telephoned the police, listened carefully to'their instructions on the best method of holding off the gang, and lucidly and calmly passed on "Their lives depend on me, Fire, when it runs riot, pro- vides perhaps the most terrify. ing ordeal. Yet when a Clapham girl of seven awoke and found her bedroom full of smoke, she remained perfectly calm. "My father and ,mother, my sister, • my little brother," . she thought. "Their lives depend on me." And 'so she hastened to the bedrooms where the rest of the family were sleeping. Thanks to her coolness', they escaped in- jury, FELDSPAR & QUARTZ There were some 29 mines in Canada shipping .feldspar and quartz in 1953, five less than in 1952, but the gross value of Shipments was higher at $3,- 994,052 as compared with $3,- 696,085, BIG OKRA FROM LITTLE ACRES - In a plot 41/2 by 61 feet, 1. E. Slawson, has harvested more than 3500 pods of okra. And the vines were still sprouting okra when this picture was taken in Slawson's back yard, 'They refused to accept a penny in payment, A small boy was standing in the middle of a busy road in. Nottingham directing traffic. Held up by his admonitory hand, cars' and buses stretched in a long line. "I'm a Sea Scout," he proudly told a somewhat shaken police- man who rushed up to straighten out the muddle. "My scout- master says we should help people at zebra crossings," But there was no zebra cross- ing there 1 Children have a, sense of hu- mour, too, and it is not neces- sarily of the infantile variety. A traffic was erected in a New Mexico town. "School zone," it warned motorists. "Don't kill a Child." This was too good an oppor- tunity to miss by the local youngsters. One of them added in juvenile scrawl ; "Wait for a teacher I" Even the parents—and the teachers -smiled at that. Modern Etiquette ' By Roberta Lee Q. Isn't it improper for two persons who are Introduced at a dinner to reach across the table to shake hands? A, Although not exactly im- proper, it does create an awk- ward situation, and it is much better to refrain from shaking hands and merely nod your head in acknowledgment of a table introduction, If, however, the other person does reach across the table to you, you must not hesitate in accepting it. Q, After finishing a glass of sherbet at the dinner table, what . should one do with the spoon? A. Place it on the saucer which holds the glass. Q. When settting the dinner table, should the cutting edges of the knives be towards the plate or pointing away from the plate? A, Towards the plate. Q. Is it possible to correct someone's grammar without be- ing impolite? A, No one likes being cor- rected in group conversation, and efforts at improvement of grammar and diction had bet- ter be reserved for members of one's family or very close friends who may consider them as favors, andnot insults. Q. Should -a hostess take the men's coats when they arrive at her home, and there is no' servant? A, No. If the host is not pres- ent, she should provide a place for the men to leave their wraps as they arrive, Q, Should the napkin be held above the edge of ; the table when unfolding It? A. No; the napkin should be unfolded in the lap. Q. Is it preferable to write a business letter in short sen- tences.and short paragraphs? A. Yes. Brevity is' preferred in a business letter, though it takes real ability to "tell a story" in a few words. It is often more difficult to write a good short letter than a lengthy one. Q. Is it necessary, to mail en- , graved .wedding invitations to close friends who have already been invited verbally? A. It is always correct to send the engraved invitations — even to members of the immediate families, Princess Breaks AH The Rues In a flat in the heart of May- fair most mornings England's oldest princess spends an hour or two dictating her reminis- cences into a modern recording machine. Royal advisers were startled when they heard that Princess Marie Louise, Queen Victoria's. grand.daughter, was writing her memoirs. She has been behind the scenes at four coronations and forty royal weddings, Now in her eighty-fourth year, she can saltily recall all the royal family crises of, her amazing life. . time. Yet her secrets have never been told. Few people realized, for in- stance, through all the years that barred divorcees from the Royal Enclosure at Ascot, that there had been a divorce in the royal family itself. The divorced, both guilty and innocent, were rigidly excluded from Court. Yet Princess Marie Louise sometimes appeared smil- ing on the balcony at Bucking- ham Palace—and staid chamber- lains had to admit that Court rules need not apply to near relatives of the Blood, Though divorce meant social ostracism, they inevitably had to make Princess Marie Louise an exception, So she continued to go to Ascot and stroll in the Royal Enclosure whenever she felt like it. In 1891, when she was a girl of nineteen, Princess Marie 'Louise occupied much the same position in royal popularity as the nineteen -year-old Princess Alexandra does today. When her engagement was announced to Prince Joseph of Anhalt, one of the richest duchies in Germany, public opinion rejoiced. Royal guests from all nations flocked to the wedding in St. George's Chapel, Windsor. But the last echoes of the wedding bells had scarcely died away when the Princess endured deep humiliation. After nine years of unhappi- ness and heartbreak the mar- riage was dissolved. Quietly the Princess returned to England an'd began devoting her life to helping others. Even now, at eighty-three, she works with amazing vitality for dozens of organizations ranging . from dis• , trict nursing to the Docklands Settlement. Whether for a charity mati- nee, a ball or a fund-raising speech, good cause organizers know that the Princess will oblige. Almost alone among royal princess, Marie Louise has her telephone number in the 'phone book. No other royal princess lives in a flair, To be sure, it is a grace and favour residence, the lavish- ly equipped fourteen -room flat in Curzon Street which was in- tended as George VI's H.Q. if Buckingham Palace had been wrecked in war -time, But hide- bound aristocrats still frown at the thought of the daughter. of Queen Victoria's third daughter looking down on the cafes and oyster bars. But Princess Marie Louise is nothing if not unconventional. It was shocking when she danced the lancers with a pearly king at Hoxton Carnival thirty years ago—and just as 'shocking to some when she accepted an in- vitation to a Coronation tea with the same pearly king in 1937. She was the . first princess of the blood royal to smoke in pub- lic, the first to join a women's club, the first to fly in an air- craft. Early this year her doctor de- creed a rest cure. Whereupon the Princess murmured that a change was as good as a rest and went off on a startling ex- pedition through central Africa, travelling 2,500 miles, wearing breeches and living under canvas. It seemed to be something of a record when, at the age of eighty-two, she flew over Vic- toria Falls, But the Princess flew over the same Falls thirty years ago in 'planes that un. doubtedly looked — and felt — much more hazardous. All her expenses, incidentally, are always met from her own purse, for the Princess has never enjoyed any provision from the civil list, No doubt she owns a considerable fortune. (Her kins- woman, Princess Victoria, left a quarter million some years ago.) She is the fortunate possessor of the world's first pink mink coat. On gala occasions, when a dia- mond tiara glistens above her grey , curls and she wears her famous rope of pearls, no one Iooks more royal. By virtue of years, indeed, she is now Britain's senior prin- cess. She is also the oldest of Victoria's six surviving grand- daughters. Incessantly she works hard, at the tasks of royal tra- ditions, demanding homage not for herself but for the royal idea, It caused all the greater flurry in official dovecotes not long ago when she mentioned that one royal duty had never come her way, and added that she had never launched anything— "not even a dinghy." The First Lord of the Ad- miralty undertook to repair the omission. Within a short time the Princess travelled down to Portsmouth and launched a de- stroyer. Then, almost in the same week, there were dinners, a ball at Claridges, a calypso ball at the May Fair, speeches for the National Polio Research Fund. And besides this, the Princess gave a sherry party. "Blow in for a 'berry," she informally In- vlted her friends, "Don't you ever want to go to bed early?" a friend once asked this intrepid lady. "Never 1" she firmly replied. But in one of her straight- forward speeches she confessed, "I've lived a very long life. You all know my age. I have far ex- ceeded my span of three score years and ten. But present-day youth—so gallant, so valiant is the way they cope with the dif- ficulties and problems of every- day life. It makes me sad when I look back on my youth when we seemed so safe and secure. CROWNING GLORY — , Eye- catching is the word for this "crown" entered in an abstract hairdo contest in Berlin, Ger- many. The crazy coiffure was created by a hairdresser front the Soviet zone in just one hour. CIASSIFIED ADVERTISING • BABY CHICKS BOOK your order now for Winter and Spring chicks so that you will receive them when you want them. We have a tremendous demand for our three 'special strain cross egg breeds. - The reason — these birds lay more, eggs on less feed. Some dates booked up now. Write for full details. Special broiler breeds, turkey poults, ready to lav and laying ' pullets. Catalogue. TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. FERGUS ONTARIO YOU have a certain date that you want your turkey poults. Book now so that you will be sure to secure them on that particular date, 1Ve have the famous Nichols sbest large type Broad Breasted Bronze on the market today. the A.O. Smith Broad White Thompson Large Whites Beltsville White. Folder, TWEDI5LE CHiCK HATCHERIES LTD. FERGUS ONTARIO _— HELP WANTED FEMALE STUDIO Girl 'Hollywood offers you independent business, full or part-time, high commissions. Sell complete rango of quality cosmetics. Good Housekeep- ing American c Christmas Association repeat sales ahead. Write P.O. Box 174 Hamilton, Ont, FOR SALE LANDRACEWeanlings Boars and Sows, from our imported stock for Winter and Spring delivery. Also two Boars of serviceable age. Send for descriptive folder. FERGUS LANDRACE SWiON ARIO BARN BUILDINGS AVAILABLE FOR REMOVAL A NUMBER of barn buildings of varl• ons sizes In the Brampton -Toronto area for sale. It you need a barn building here is your opportunity, Write us and we will advise location and sizes. Apply Box No, 139, 123 Eighteenth St,. New Toronto. EXCELLENT garage business, all mod- ern eaui'nnent, agency one of the big gallonagTurnover u 100 000. $ living Oquartersltne to acc'immodate two families; large used car lot located to a thriving Ottawa Valley town, D. M. Campbell, Real Estate Broker, Almonte, DAIRY farm for sale, average or above In the district. Enquiries In- vited. Roger Weir, 11,11. 2, Prescott, Ont., .Grenville Co, NEW 1956 Ford and Monarch auto- wnito •forbtouradpricees sbefore ubuving, SCOPE EQUIPMENT CO,. Box 852. Ottawa Ont. - GIFTS COLOURFUL feather pictures. In hand carved cedar frames , from.. Mexico, Hand tooted leather wallets. Novelty earrings and dress buttons, etc. Price list, free, Don McDonald. 99 King St, E... Buwmat11411e. Ontario, READY to cut Christmas trees — Spruce. Balsam, Pine. 6 feet and up. Satisfaction guaranteed, NT Box 75 Station "E" Toronto, Ontario, MEDICAL IT'S EXCELLENT. REAL RESULTS AFTER TAKING DIXON'S REMEDY FOR RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 Elgin, Ottawa 51.25 Express Prepaid POST'S ECZEMA SALVE rashesH and torment weeping oskinry troubles Posts Eczema Salve will not disup• point you. Itching. scaling end burn Ing eczema, acne. ringworm, almpie' and foot eczema will respond readily to stainless, odorless tuhb rn oro hope less they seem. Sent, Post Free on Receipt at Price PRICE 82.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 889 Queen St. E., C rner of Logan TOR OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BUSINESS MEN1 Wo do your book keeping by mail. specialize In amal businesses. Information free. Writs W N Pratt, 1 (FI Wing. CAPO 5052 Montreal. BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant, dignified profession, good wages. Thousands of successful Marvel graduates. America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalog Free Write or Call, MARVEL HAIRDRESSiNG SCHOOLS 358 Bloor. St. W. Toronto Branches: 44 King St. Hamilton 72 Rideau Sat„ Ottawa PATENTS FETHERSTONHAUGH & Company Patent Attorneys. Established 1890 600 University Ave. Toronto. Palcntl all countries, AN OFFER to every Inventor List 01 Inventions and full information sent free The Ramsay Co. Registered Pat- - ent Attorneys. 273 Bank St. Ottawa. PERSONAL 81.00 l'RIAL offer. Twenty-five deluxe personal requirements. Latest cata- logue Included. The Medico Agency, Box 124 Terminal "A" Toronto Ont. Itchitch Very fret use of soothing, cooling liquid D. D. D. Prescription positively relieve*, raw red itch—caused by eczema, rashes. scalp irritation, chafing --other itch troubles. st satisfylor,moneyess. 39c back. Don't suffer, le Ask your druggist for D.11. D. PRESCRIPTION ,,,(Was Nearly Crazy ISSUE '47 — 1955 41 ROLL YOUR OWN BETTER CIGARETTES WITH CIGARETTE TOBACCO PAGE FRESH, SMOKED OR DRESSED PICNIC STYLE HAMS LB. 39c BONELESS TENDERIZED IIAM L13. 69c BOLOGNA LB. 25c COUNTRY STYLE SAUSAGE L13. 39c GREEN PEAS Pkg. 19e ORANGE JUICE (sealed sweet) 2 For 35c Arnold . Berthot Telephone 10 --- Blyth. FURNACES FOR SALE Hand fired, coal or wood; Oil fired; Stoker fired; Forced air units; Gravity units. Handling all name brand equipment. Free Estimates --- Repairs to all makes. , A. MANNING CI SONS Phones 207 or 234 --- Blyth, Ont. Vedlliesdayl N 23, 035 Londesboro News Mrs. Bert Shobbrook and Muriel, spent a few days in Trenton with Mr, and Mrs. Gordon Garrow and family. Mr. and Mrs, Neville Forbes with Mr. incl Airs. Ed, Younatttt on Sunday. Mrs, Mabel Riley- and Murray Lee, of kir.cardane, are spending a few days with her son, Mr. and Mrs, Jack Lee and family. • Mrs. Harold Sprung has returned of • ter spending a while with her son, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sprung and family, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Westerhout and family with Mr. and Mrs. John Nout at Briegepo•t. Mrs. Mary I,,ycn and Miss Bertha Brogden;'of London, with Mrs. Eleanor Throop. Mr. and. Mrs. Arthur Brunsdon, of Mtinaboine, Sask., spent a few days with his mother, Mrs. W. Brunsdon. Dr. Lester and Mrs. Allen, Barry and Sandra, of Watford, with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Allen. The ladies of the Londesboro W. I. had a very enjoyable bus trip to Tor- onto on Monday, November 21. They attended the "Happy Gang" rad'o broadcast, visited the Sick Children's Hospital and also attended the Ice Capades. Word was received of the death of Mr. George McCall, of Victoria, B. C. George was well known in this com- munity having farmed near Londes- boro and also lived in the village a few years. Sympathy is extended to his wife, the former Bessie Wells, and their daughter, Jean. The meeting of the Londesboro W. I will be held in the hall on Friday, 'De- cember 2. Topic "A Christmas Mes- suge", Roll call to be a donation for the sick and shut-ins, and a Christmas custom we follow at our house, Pro- gram, Mrs. B, Allen, Mrs. A. Colson, Mrs. Trewin, Mrs. Throop, Mrs. Wells, hostesses, Mrs. J. Armstrong, Mrs, E. Knox, Mrs. L. Pipe, Mrs. Saundercock, Mrs. H. Kennedy. Please note change of date. The November meeting of the W. A. was held in the school room of the wi SLIPS Cotton with Eyelet • trim, Crepe with lace trim and all nylon PRICED AT $1.98 TO $3.95 Ladies' SWEAT- ERS' of Orlon, nylon and all - wool in PULL- OVERS and CARDI- GANS. • WOMEN'S - HOUSE - SLIPPERS moccasin style with fur trim. MIEN'S PYJAMAS OF FLANNEL & BROADCLOTH. Ladies Night Gowns of FLANNELETTE and SNUGGLEDOWN with zipper and quilted linings AT REASON- ABLE PRICES. Men's Brown Overshoes with front -zip- per and warm lining. Women's Overshoes of rubber, orlon and nylon with fur. trim. THE ARCADE STORE Pjtone Blyth ; 211 STORES IN BLYTH & BRUSSELS Phone Brussels 61. Church on Thursday afternoon, Novem- ber 17, The President, Mrs, ,Joe Lyon, nresided. The meeting opened with the worship service, conducted by the, President, The Scripture lesson, John 14, 1-15 was read by Mrs, E. Wood, and the theme was read by Mrs, Lyon. Minutes were read and approved and the roll call wat onsweredi with a do• nation for the Children's Aid Society. Business period , then followed, Mrs, l.hu'nin, Mrs. Townsend, Mrs, Webster, were 'appointed a nominating commit- tee. Plans were made to cuter to a turkey banquet for the Athletic So- ciety on December 1st. Program con- sisted of an Instrumental by Mrs, El- gin Josling, and n reading by Mrs, Ro- bert Falrscrvice. Meeting closed with hp:nn 550 and benediotion, Hostesses, Mrs, C, Saundcrcock, Mrs. J. Shobbrook Mrs. R.. Fairservice and Mrs. Mureh served. Lunch, Kenneth Wood, of the O.A.C, Guelph, spent the week -end at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Edwin. Wood. Too late for last week) Mr. and Mrs. William Gooier are pending a few days visiting their daughters in Landon and Kitchener. Mrs, Beacom and Edythe spent Fri- day in Mitchell w'th Mr. and Mrs. Stu - +rt Bryans. Mr. and Mrs, Frank Potter' and Greg, with Mr, and Mrs. Tota Miller on Sun- day. Messrs. Cliff Saundercock, Tom Allen, ,Veldon Tyndall and Art Colson have cen spending a few days in the Brace - )ridge district. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Cudmore of Crumlin, Mrs, Grant ' Fraser, Mrs, Alex Lowrie of Seaforth, with Mr. And Mrs, Gordon Radford. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hooper and Bar- bara, Mrs, Eldred, Holmes, Mrs, Erwin: Holmes and Debbie, of Dresden, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. E. Hesk. Mrs, Bert Allen is spending the week in Toronto and will attend the Royal Winter Fair while there, Mr. and Mrs. Will Manning, Gall and June, spent the week -end at Niagara Gal's, N. Y., with their cousins, Mr. and' Mrs. Ernest Morris. They called on Mr, and Mrs. Jack Moroso, of Iiam- ilton, on their way home, Celebrated 25th Wedding Anniversary On Friday evening, November 11, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gaunt were given a ;urpris.e party by their son and daugh- ter, Kenneth and Faye, in honour of 'heir silver wedding anniversary on November 12th, The guests, numbering 33, were met It the door by Ken and Faye and the house was beautifully decorated with pink and white streamers and bells with touches of silver. The table was zentred by a three-tier. wedding cake with tall candles on each side. The evening was spent in contest:' and games. Later a reading was given by Mrs. Alva McDowell, and some beautiful gifts presented, The reading was as follows: I "A quiet but pretty . wedding took place on November 12th in the Lon- cle.:,boro Community Hall when Olive !Rosetta Lyon became the bride of James Earl Gaunt.' Given away by her broth- er, Stam, Lyon, ,the bride looked lovely in a dress made of burlap -and carried a spray of flowers which the groom had gathered during the summer along the roadside, They had not kept their ori- ginal beauty very we14 but a strong odour of catnip and skunk cabbage still remained, The bride entered the hall to the strains of "The Old Grey Mare Ain't What She Used To Be." She tripped at least three tines gracefully down the aisle and her slip showed slightly, Mrs. Emerson Hesk, twin sister ,of the bride, was the bride's on- ly attendant. Her gown closely resem- bled. that. worn by the .bride and she carried a beautiful head of withered -up cauliflower. Mr. Andy Gaunt, brother of the groom, was best man and quite ably supported his brother who at this Mae was needing some support. Dur- ing the signing of the register Mrs, Joe Lyon rendered two beautiful selections, "A-doln' What Comes Naturally" and "He's Too Old to Cut the Mustard Any Marc." The wedding dinner was serv- ed in• the basement of the hall and would have been a wonderful success if some stray dog hadn't run off »yith the one and only roust chicken. How- ever we wish them every happiness," Photos well° taken by Lloyd McDow- ell and lunch was served by Mrs, Jack Snell, Mrs. Alva McDowell, Marguerite Lyon. Each small table was centred with a white candle,: Mr, and Mrs. Gaunt have Wishes of the community on ver anniversary. the good their sil- AUCTION SALE A syndicate Bell Grain Separator, from- the farm of Elgin Josling, Lot 30, Con. 11,' Hallett Township, 1 mile west of Londesboro, oni' MONDAY, DECEMBER 5th, at 2• pm, Bell 24-40 grain separator with 10 ft, elevator, straw cutter, and mounted on steel wheels. For further particulars apply to the undersigned auctioneer, Sale condi•• tlons and terns will be read on sale date. Any claims against the above mentioned machine to be in the pos- session of the auctioneer before sale time of 2 p.m„ December 5th, 1055. Edward W. Elliott, Auetioneer 52-2, LOST IIEIR CARDS Lost Heir Curds are available at the Standard Office for those who may need a deck for winter amusement. 50c. SHOP EARLY For the Best Selection of MEN'S WOOL SWEATERS of many styles & colours $5.95 TO $7,95 Men's Gabardine Top Coat with zip -in lining IDEAL FOR WINTER WEAR, IN GREY & TAUPE "Why Pay More When You Can Buy for Less At Our Store" ALL SIZES Only $19.95 SHOP FOR YOUR RUBBER FOOTWEAR at the store with the biggest selection telekg GIVE AN "ARROW" SHIRT - OR TIE THIS CHRISTMAS. Bank Nite Tickets Given on Store Purchases. R. W. MADILL'S SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The 'Home of Good Quality Merchandise" r.4 Wingham Meinorial Shop Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP. Open Every Week Day. CEMETERY LETTERING. Phone 256, Wingliam R. A. SPOTTON. N♦ ♦ ♦-.-♦+♦++4•♦+♦+44 Needlecralt Shoppe Cardigans, nylon, wool and orlon, 1 to 14 $2.39 Up Girls' Pyjamas, 2 to 14 $1.98 Up Boys' Pyjamas, 2 to 8 $1.98 Up Boys' Viyella Trousers, 1 to 3X , $2.69. Long-sleeved T Shirts, 1 to 12 years ; ..... 98c Up Don't Forget to Get Your Bank Nite Tickets at our store. 1♦♦♦♦♦4444-4+♦ 4444444+ S++♦ ♦+r♦-♦+♦ + +F♦+♦ ♦ , i -•+4.4.4-♦+♦+4 4-444 4 FULL COURSE MEALS AT ALL HOURS. Excellent Service --- Satisfaction Guaranteed. HURON GRILL BLYTH - ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. #44-444444+444•444+4-4-4-44-4-4-... ♦-44-1-.444+44•444-4+41+4-4444-N Wednesday, Nov, 28,1°955 - TRE STANDARD Elliott Insurance Agency BLYTH -- ONTARIO, w+•Vyy�.yV.r.Mn.•.n/vw.r.w� ...ww....w.r...w..w.n INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident, Windstorm, Farm Liability. WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE, Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140 4001/11w. +• , I • • $ +•+r•-4+4- 4te DANCE Sponsored by Blyth Legion Branch No, 420, IN THE BLYTH MEMORIAL HALL, ori.Nov. 25 MUSIC BY NORM CARNEGIE'S ORCHESTliA. LUNCH COUNTER. Admission at Popular Prices. Come and Enjoy an Evening of Dancing. -•-•++•w 4-414-• •-% NN.,..N..N..r..•.•.*..Her ~***•..rv...•r~....,...... BERNARD HALL Insurance Agency LII1'E, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE, LIABILITY, WIND AND ALL CLASSES OF INSURANCE. PHONE 122 - BLYTH, ONT, NN.I.IINN. MN.+ 1 Nomination Meeting VILLAGE OF BLYTH. NOTICE is hereby given that a meeting of the Electors for the nomination of candidates for the • position of Reeve, Four Councillors, Three School Trustees and One P.U.C. Commissioner, will be held in the Blyth Memorial Hall, on MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28th, 1955, between the hours of 7 p.m. and 8 o'clock p.m. And if' necessary, an Election to fill the above named 'positions will bb held on MONDAY, DECEMBER 5th, 1955, in the Blyth Memorial Hall. with the Poll being open from 9:30 o'clock a.m. until 6:30 o'clock p.m. GEORGE SLOAN, Clerk. I 52-1. '+H++4 -*****-04-4-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-N-1 .-444-4++4.4+4+#4+ Wanted SUPERINTENDENT FOR HURON COUNTY HOME. The County of • Huron will receive applications for the position of Superintendent of the Huron County Home 4ituated two miles from Clinton, on Highway No. 4, until Monday, December 12, 1955, Preliminary applications should be made in writing stating experience, qualifications and sal- ary expected to A. H. ERSKINE, Clerk, County of Huron, Goderich, Ontario. Interviews will be arranged. 52-1 •-14444+44+-N+4 41114 44 4.44.* ♦ ♦ •44-•-•-•-•-•44444444.•-•4-•444-s +4 4**$.•.•. -.-4-4.-.-$- 4• Commercial Restaurant IS NOW OPEN UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT. Full Course Meals and Lunches We Specialize In SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN, STEAKS, AND CHIPS, AND ORDERS TO TAKE OUT, KEN STAPLES, Proprietor, EXECUTOR'S AUCTION SALE Auction Sale, of 00 acre farm, Lot 5, Concession 17, Grey Township, 1 mile most of Walton Church, on FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2nd at 2;30 p.m, 11/2 'storey brick house, modern bath; bank barn with pressure system, cem- ent stabling, litter carrier, excellent water supply, good clay loam land. Ml seeded at present. TERMS: 10 percent down,• balance in 30 days. Sold subject to reserve bid. Estate of Lute Mrs. Hugh Ramsay., Harold Jackson, Auctioneer. Solicitor, Robert Hetherington, Executors, George Williamson, Fred Smalldon. 51-3. FOR SALE New 100 and 150 gallon fuel tanks, .$22.00 and $28.00 delivered. Apply phone 1523 Carlow, 51-3p. CLEARING AUCTION SALE OF I'ARM STOCK & MACHINERY At Lot 24, Con, 14, Hullett Township, t/ mile west of Blyth on County Road, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3rd, at 1 p.m. CATTLE -1 part Ayreshire cow, due Fob. 24th; Durham cow, due March 8th, Durham and Guernsey cow, due April 6th; Ayresh(re cow, due May 15; Durham cow, due in June; 4 Polled Angus spring calves; 1 Hereford spring calf, HOGS --23 chunks of pigs. MACHINERY—Oliver 70 tractor, re- cently overhauled and equipped with excellent rubber; Oliver 3 -furrow plow; rubber -tired wagon and hay rack; Mc - McCormick mower; Massey - Harris side rake; M. -H. seed drill, 13 disc with fertllator; 1 trailer with racks; hay loader; 13 -tooth cultivator; double disc; 4 80-1b. milk cans, milk palls and strainer; forks, shovels, chains, oil bath pump jack, rotary pump; 11)37 11/2 -ton stake Chev, truck; 1936 Choy, coach. HAY AND GRAIN — 850 bales of choice mixed hay; quantity of loose hay; 500 bus, mixed grain; 25 bus. bar- ley, TERMS CASH No Reserve us the Farm is Sold, Harold Jackson, Auctioneer. John Creighton, Proprietor. 52-2. MUNICIPAL NOTICE TOWNSHIP OF MORRIS Nomination for a Reeve, four Coun- cillors and three School Trustees to serve the Township of Morris during the year 1050 will be held in the Township Hall from 1 p,m, to 2 p.m. on Friday, November 25, 1935, 51-2, GEORGE C. MARTIN, Clerk. APARTMENT FOR SALE FOR SALE 16 apartments for sale, excellent con- 4 year-old cattle, 4 calves, Durham, ditton and residential location, held by Hereford, Poll Angus, all tested. Apply an estate. Apply Box A, Blyth. 50-3p. R. I. Wilson, Blyth, 51.2p Huron County Health Unit IMMUNIZATION CLINIC The fourth in a series if immuniza- tion clinics for Blyth and district will be held in the Blyth Public School on Friday, November 25th, from 3:00 P,M. to 4:00 P,M, Children 3 months of age to school age may be brought to these clinics'to receive immunization for Diphtheria, Whooping Cough, Tetanus, and Small- pox, NOTICE VILLAGE OF BLYTH VOTERS' LIST POSTING TAKE NOTICE that the Voters' List for the Village of Blyth was posted in my office on October 31st, 1955, Parties entitled to vote are requested to take the necessary steps to have any omissions or errors corrected ac- cording to law. 50-3, GEORGE SLOAN, Clerk, • NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Estate of Edna Robertson Charter, late of the Township of East Wawanosh, in the County of Huron, Married Woman, Deceased. ALL persons having claims against the Estate of the above deceased are required to file the same with the un- dersigned Solicitor for the said Estate, on or before the 5th day of December, A.D. 1955, alter which date the assets will be distributed amongst the parties entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims of which notice shall have been given, DATED at Clinton, Ontario, this 10th day of November, A.D. 1955. E. B. MENZIES, Clinton, Ontario, So- Ileitor for the said Estate. 51.3. • FOR SALE Two pair of men's skates, size 7 and 11. Apply Wayne Jackson, Blyth. 52-1p. FOR SALE Two 3 -year-old heifers, due middle of December. Apply Millar Richmond, phone 13116, Blyth, 52-1p. FOR SALE Pair girl's skates, size 6, in good con-, ditton, Apply, Rhea Hall, phone 122, Blyth. 52-1u. • FOR SALE Boy's blue gabardine suit, size 10, Apply, Mrs, Bruce Smith, phone 13119, Blyth. 52-1p• FOR SALE , 2 pair ladles' skates, size 0, one pair tubes and 1 pair figure skates, both In good condition. Apply, phone 142, Blyth. • 52-1p. FOR SALE Men's skates, size 10, used 1 year. Apply, Jack Tyreman, phone 110, Blyth. 52 1p. UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE New and used; new dining and bed- room furniture. Select from 4 FLOORS of furniture, at the Mildmay Furniture Showrooms. Free delivery. 52-2. " PAGE 5 LYCEUM THEATRE WINGHAM. Thurs., Fri., Sat., Nov, 24725, 26 MARILYN MONROE, TOM EWELL in "THE SEVEN YEARS ITCH" (Adult Entertainment) A topnotch sophisticated comedy, based on the stage play of the same name. Admission: 60c, 35c, 25c. Matinee cancelled on this picture. Mon'l'ues„ Nov. 28, 29 CORNEL WILDE, ANNE FRANCIS in "THE SCARLET COAT" An historical melodrama concerning espionage during the Revolutionary War, .Y.1N0.*.....••• N....N.INNNM STEWART JOHNSTON 51ASSEY•IlARRIS SALES & ° SERVICE. BEATTY BARN i QUIPMENT, - Phone 137 R 2, Blyth. ."•4141.114101/1*****•••••••1***•NNN.NI FOR SALE 11/2 storey frame dwelling, water, hydro, small stable. Queen Street, Blyth. 171/1 acre farm, 2 apt. dwelling, complete seperate units, bath, fur- nace, built-in cupboards; small stab- le; on Highway near Clinton. 6 room dwelling, bath, hydro. hea- vy wiring, insulated, Coombs St., Blyth. 11/2 -storey brick dwelling, hydro, water, built-in cupboards; Mill St., Blyth. 112 -storey fru,ne dwelling, small stable, 34 acres land, fruit trees, hydro; McConnell St., Blyth. 50 acre farm, brick dwelling, small stable; 47 acres good work- able land. 91 acre farm on 13th concession of Hullett, Good 8 -room brick dwelling; barn 52x54, steel roof; drive shed 20x40; hen house and silo. Modern small dwelling and hen house; 55 acres land; Goderich Twp:, near Clinton, $5500, 84 acre farm, Goderich Twp, Brick dwelling, the floor. modern kitchen, bath, water pressure, hydro, Good barn 36x32 and 36x32; silo and drive shed, $12000, Half cash. Further listings on request. ELLIOTT Real Estate Agency BLYTH - Phone 104 Gordon Elliott, Broker, Victor Kennedy, Salesman Res, Phone -140 Res, Phone 78 NWN FOR SALE 2 pair men's C.C.M. skates, size 10; 1 pair boy's skates, size 3, and 1 pair girl's white figure skates, size 2, Ap- ply, Jim Howson, phone 136, Blyth. 5'2-1p. 1•44-• •+-4+4 ROXY THEATRE, CLINTON. NOW .:Thursday, Friday, Saturday) -- "'Me Brides of Toko-Ri" TECHNNICOLOR This fihn supplies an engrossing in- sight into the operation of a modern flatto•1 and the jet planes based upon it. From James A. Michener's best- selling novel. 'William Holden, Frederic March Grace Kelly Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday "Footsteps in the Fog" Technicolor — Adult Entertainment Tense tale of murder and blackmail. Terrifying as a scream in the night, Stewart Granger, Jean Simmons and Finlay Currie PARK TELEPHONE 1150 Top Screen Fare In Alr•Condltiened Comfort, NOIV (Thursday, riday, Saturday) -• I"The White Feather" In Cinemascopc and Technicolor Filmed in Mexico, and presenting on a spectacular scale, the historical frontier Indian Wars, Robert Wagner, Debra Paget and John Lurid, • Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Marion Brando, Jean Simmons, Merle Oberon, Michael Itennl9 From the novel by Annemarie Selinko his tells of the lust period in Napoleon's life, from Josephine to his exile at St• Helena, "DESIREE" In Cinemascope and Technicolor COMING —"MY SISTER EII.EEN" — COMING — "RIDING SHOTGUN" -- starring Janet Leigh — In Scope and Randilph Scott. Color, ��NL.1NN........NN..1.NN.Ni1 F. C. PREST LONDESBORO, ONT, Interior & Exterior Decorator Sunworthy Wallpaper Paicts • Enamels - Varnishes Brush & Spray Painting Telephone 371126, Blyth, 4400 ...NNN.IN+.~~4.4 NN..NI. M. CHRISTENSEN CONTRACTOR Home Building, Complete Concrete Work. Specializing in Steps and Floors. Free estimates on work gladly given, Phone Blyth' 11117. 27.11. HURON FARM SUPPLIES OLIVER SALES & SERVICE Telephone 4 and 93, Blyth, PRICED TO SELL GEIIL FORAGE IIARVESTER, NEW, OLIVER 6 FT. COMBINE, straw spreader, scour cleaner, pick- up attachment, grain thrower, only slightly used, 88 TRACTOR, IN GOOD SHAPE, TWO 2 -FURROW I'LOWS, almost new. ONE 3 -FURROW PLOW. ONE INTERNATIONAL 3 -TON TRUCK, In good repair, runs like new. • PAPER HANGING AND PAINTING Exterior and interior decorating. See our 1956 wallpaper samples. Free es- timates. Apply, Doug, Dalton, phone 48119, Brussels, 51-3. -1* **4•-444-6+644+64$6$$++++•+++-.+•4 4++++1+.+++4+4 4 PIANOS New and used; new TV sets, at the Mildmay Furniture Store. Also lurk selection of lamps, gift furniture. God -1 frey Schuett, Mildmay, 52-1.I BLYTH LIONS CLUB ANNUAL Rummage Collection & Sale MEMORIAL HALL, BLYTH, SAT., NOVEMBEI( 26 Sale to Start at 1:30 p.m, AN EXCELLENT ASSORTMENT OF MISCEL- LANEOUS ARTICLES WILL BE DISPOSED OK You are reminded that the Lions will call at your home Friday evening, Nov. 25 for your donations. Contributions of Home-made Baking and Preserves will be gratefully received. Rural contributors may phone Lions Jack McDou- gall or Walter Buttell, or any member of the Lions Club, andarrangements will be made to to pick up their contributions. , PLAN TO ATTEND ON SATURDAY. .+..•e-r~�+.. e+♦i+++. White Rose Service Station Phone 203 - Blyth. B.F. GOODRICH "Trailmaker" SNOW TIRES. NEW & GUARANTEED RE -TREADS, TRUCK TIRES AT LIST PRICE, WINTER THERMOSTATS FOR ALL MAKES OF CARS. RADIATOR & HEATER HOSE. PRESTONE BRAND ANTI -FREEZE. BEV. WALLACE, PROPRIETOR, ..,•••••••••***********************~ • CUNNINGHAM'S POOL ROOM. ,••••..,.- Billiards & Snack Bar Ice Cream - Hot Dogs Homburgs and Sandwiches. Smokers' Sundries FOR RENT Floor polisher, vacuum cleaner; es, ment mixer; rotary lawn mower; wheel barrow. Sparling's Hardware. phone 24, Blyth, 25-tf. WATERLOO CATTLE BREEDING ASSOCIATION "Where Better Bulls are Used." Ar- tificial Insemination service for all breeds of cattle, For service or infor- mation Phone Clinton 242 collect, be- tween 7:30 and 10:00 a.m, on week days and 7;30 and 0;30 a.m. on Sundays. 61-12 WANTED Old horses, 31/2c per pound. Dead cattle and horses at value. Important to phone at once, day or night. GIL- BERT BROS. MINK RANCH, Goderich, Phone collect 1483J1, or 148334. 44 tf. LIVESTOCK WANTED Highest cash prices paid for dead, old, sick, or disabled horses or cows. Phone promptly, Leroy Acheson, At- wood 153, Collect. 38-13, WANTED A barn or house, suitable for wrecking, Leave particulars at Stand- ard Office, Blyth, 52-1p. CRAWFORD & HETHERINGTON BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS J. H. Crawford, R. S. Hetherington, Q.C. Q.C. WVingham and Blyth. IN BLYTH EACH THURSDAY MORNING and by appointment. Located in Elliott Insurance Agency Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 48 ROY N. BENTLEY PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT Monthly Accounts Business & Farm tax Returns. BOX 478 • Telephone 1011 CODERICH, ONT, RONALD G. McCANN Public Accountant Office: Royal Bank Building Residence: Rattenbury Street. Phones 581 and 455. CLINTON -- ONTARIO, DR. R. W. STREET Blyth, Ont. OFFICE HOURS -1 P.M, TO 4,P.M. EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS. TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY, 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M. G. B. CLANCY OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN (Successor to the late A, L. Cole, i Optometrist) FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33, GODERICH 25.81 J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist_ Seaforth, Phone 791 Clinton HOURS: Seaforth Daily Except Monday & Wed, 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Wed. — 9:00 a,m, to 12:30 p:m. Clinton—MacLarcn's Studio, Albert St,,, Monday Only, 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. G. ALAN WILLIAMS, i OPTOMETRIST PATRICK ST. • WINGHAM, QNT, EVENINGS 13? APPOINTMENT. Phone: Office 770; Its. 5, Professional Eye Examination, Optical Services, McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE - SEAEORTH, ONT, , OFFICERS: President—J. H. McEwing, Blyth: Vice -Pres., R. Archibald, Seaforth;, Manager and Secy-Treas., M. A. 13eid, Seaforth. DIRECTORS: J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. H. McEw- Ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton; E. J. 'rrewartha, Clinton; J. E. Pepper, Brucefleld; C, W. Leophardt, Bornholm; H. Fuller, Goderich; 11 Archibald, Sea• forth; Allister Broadfoot, • Seaforth. AGENTS: William Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; J, F. Prueter, Brodhagen; Selwypitsks4 Brussels: Eric Munroe, Seaforth.�_� TABLE TALKS Y ��a�,a�Ws: Are your folks fond of pud- dings? Most families are — so here are recipes for some really delightful ones which I hope you'll try — and enjoy. • • * SPICY APPLE PUDDING TOPPING 11/ cups water 1 teaspoon salt % eup uncooked rice % cup of sugar 2 teaspoons cinnamon 3 cups firmly packed, coarsely chopped, peeled, cooking apples 2 tablespoons lemon juice 32 marshmallows OA pound) Put water, salt, and rice in 2. quart saucepan and bring to vigorous boil, Turn heat as low as possible. Cover saucepan; leave over low heat 15 minutes. Add sugar and cinnamon, Poui the lemon juice over apples and mix into rice mixture. Pour into a 11 -quart baking dish, Place marshmallows over pudding, completely covering top. Hake at 350° F. for 30 minutes, or until marshmallows are browned. * * • NUT BROWN PUDDING 3/4 cup butter 1 cup sugar 3/4 teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon each, nutmeg and cloves 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 egg i%s cups milk 2 cups dry bread crumbs . % cup each, seedless raisins and chopped nuts 1 teaspoon soda 2 tablespoons warm water Cream butter with sugar salt, and spices. Add egg. Beat until smooth. Pour milk over bread crumbs, raisins, and nuts. Com- bine with creamed mixture. Dis- solve soda in warm water and add to pudding. Pour into deep 11/4 -quart casserole which has been greased with butter, bake 800° F. for 1-11/4 hours, or until a deep dark brown. Serve with: IMPORTED YOGI — Yankee ver- elon of the Orient's men of mys- ticism — the yogi — strolls down the Ginza in Tokyo, Japan. Yogi !berm, wizard catcher of the Niw York Yankees, is playing with the "Bombers on their ex- hibition four of Japan. INN LEMON NUTMEG SAUCE % cup sugar 1 tablespoon cornstarch /4 teaspoon salt % teaspoon nutmeg 1 cup boiling water 2 tablespoons butter 1% tablespoons lemon juice Combine dry ingredients; add wated and cook until clear and slightly thickened, Add butter and stir until melted, Add lemon juice. Serve hot on pudding, * • * QUICK FUDGE DESERT 11/4 cups sifted flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 3 teaspoon salt eup sugar 1 egg, beaten % cup milk 3 tblsp, melted shortening Fudge tilling, Sift together dry ingredients. Combine eggs, milk, and short- ening. Add to flour mixture, stir- ring until smooth. Spread =h of batter in bottom of greased 8 -inch square baking pan. Pour fudge fiilling over batter. Drop remaining batter by spoonfuls over fudge filling, Bake at 400° F. 25 minutes. FUDGE FILLING 1 egg, beaten 1,4 cup sugar 1 •ounce square unsweetened chocolate, melted 3 cup chopped nuts 1 tablespoon melted butter Combine egg, sugar and melt- ed chocolate, mixing well. Add nuts and butter. Beat well, * • * PEACH ROLL -UPS % cup butter % cup orange juice 1/2 cup sugar 2 teaspoons grated rind 2 cups sifted flour 3 teaspoons baking 1 teaspoon salt % cup shortening 3/4 cup milk 1 can (No. 21/2) cling peach slices 3 tablespoons melted butter % cup brown sugar (packed) 1 teaspoon cinnamon Simmer first 4 ingredients to- gether for about 5 minutes to make. a sirup. Pour half this sirup in bottom of a 9 -inch square pan (or shallow oblong pan.) Sift flour, baking,powder, and salt into bowl. Cut in shorten- ing and add milk, mixing to a moderately stiff dough. Drain peaches thoroughly, Roll dough to an oblong about 10x14 inches (dough should be about 1/4 -inch thick). Brush with melted but- ter; sprinkle with brown sugar and cinnamon. Arrange drained peach slices oversurface and roll carefully, starting from the short side, as for jelly role. With a sharp knife cut into 9-10 slices about 1 inch thick. Arrange peach roll -ups over . sirup in pan, pressing them lightly until they barely touch each other. Bake at 425° F, for 15 minutes, Pour remaining warm sirup evenly over roll -ups and con- tinue baking 10 minutes longer, or until a rich brown. Serve warm, Top with whipped cream or ice cream if you wish, orange powder Fur Coats for Ladles: $1 Off Canadian fur goods manufaa turers shipped 220,717 ladies' Sur coats in 1953, some 1,260 fewer than in'1952. The average value was $228 or $1 less than in the preceding year, HORSE OPERA Only in Vienna, heartland of make -believe - come -true, coulda horse show be held in such sumptuous -sur; roundings. Members of the Hapsburg -founded Spanish Riding School para heir mounts in chandeliered hall of the Hofburg, onetime Imperial Castle of the Hapsburgs. Known the world around in equestrian circles, the renowned riding organization only recently returned to Vienna from its exile during the occu pation. i Fashion Hints .,; 1 Ito - I %•_ • • 1 / '!';♦ •1' CHAPEL -LENGTH WEDDING GOWN is of white terylene sheer. The straight front panel is beautifully appliqued and the sides and back of the skirt are permanently pleated and intricately draped. MY DAREDEVIL PLUNGE Six people have shot the Falls at Niagara and three have.come through alive. One of these died later of alcoholic poisoning and another was killed when he slipped on a banana -skin during a music -hall tour of Australia. Of those who made the trip, Jean Lussler, a French Canadian, is the only living survivor (and possibly the only one who was in a fit condition to be aware of what :happened). This is how he described his experiences to Gibson Cowan: I found some difficulty in get- ting into the rubber ball. Finally I worked my legs into the holes made for them and slid down in- side into a sitting position. I in- flated my rubber suit until it filled the remainder of the space, leaving only my head and hands tree. It wasn't as hot as I expected, but the July sun shone in on top of my head and sweat began to run down my neck. There didn't seem any point in delaying things. It was five minutes past three exactly. "O.K.," I said. . I switched on the electric light, If 4hey answered, I didn't hear them, but the manhole closed and the turnbuckle twisted. I waited for long time, and began . to think that something had gone wrong: I could just feel the lift of the waves and an occasional nudge which I took to be bumping against the side of the boat until one heavier than the rest told me that they were rocks and 1 had probably been adrift quite a while. I closed my eyes, relaxed, and let my head loll. It gave me the same sense of security that you have when you pull the sheets over your head in bed. I knew that all I could do had been done wh0n I had flnished the design of the ball, The weight at the bottom kept me upright, and when the move- ment started it was no worse than that of • a small boat in a fairly choppy sea, After the flrst few jolts I knew that I should come to no harm on the . rounded rocks even if I caught one full on, but everything seemed very, slow, I was wearing five wrist watches of different makes, for advertising purposes, but I didn't even think of looking them. We had estimated that I should be twenty-eight minutes coming down the upper rapids. I was five miles from the falls when I was released, but the current was running at about 17 miles per hour, I had confidence in the ball, an: I kept thinking of Annie Taylor and Bobby Leach, I'd never met Annie. She was the first person to go uver — in an ordinary barrel without paddling. She was a middle-aged school- mistress with a taste for liquor, and had done it out of sheer bravado after being thrown out of a saloon. They stuffed her in head first and just hammered down the lid. She came out all right. I was a stuntman and was in it for publicity and the money. Bobby Leach, from Bristol, in England, had gone over in a steel cylinder in 1911. Strapped in he would have been all right, but as it was he broke both arms and legs, and was in hospital for twenty-two months, Then the ball gave a little bob, like going down a lift for two or three feet, and they became ab- solutely still. I guessed it was the little trough just before the sill that could be seen distinctly from the shore. The day previously we had sent the empty ball over for the n.ovies which were already de- veloped and in New York, I had noticed the bobbing movement and the stretch of smooth water, and I knew that I' must be near the edge. I looked at the time. It was thirty-three minutes after three. There was no feeling of falling, What sensation there was was one of soaring, If i - was like c,.iything, it was like a ski jump, only cttt off abruptly in the middle, If the laws of physics are cor- rect, it took under four seconds to -fall the 148 feet. I think I be. aan to rnitnt, but it rltrin't seem as long as four seconds. There was always the faint chance that I should drop through the falls and I waited, with my head slightly ducked, wondering whether I should hit a rock. I didn't even : feel anything .when I hi. the water not until I realized the,ball was definitely at rest, rocking gently from side to side. The noise seemed duller, and yet bigger and heavier, ' 1 pressed my ears to make sure the plugs were in pino At the same time the ball be- an to press on me heavily, so that I had to hold my breath to relieve the pressure On my chest. I became aware that at some time the lights had gone out, At the trial the ball had bob- bed up within three seconds; but the falls are mysterious, Water coming down from all sides of the horseshoe will sometimes hold a log right under the fall for an hour, The pressure wasn't ton bad, but it was eerie. I felt that the electricity had escaped from the batteries and was crawling over my body. No- body has been able to explain it to me, but it was some sort of electricity. I sat in the darkness gently rocking frontside to side, Then the ball began to spin slowly up- ward I, 'ailed a moment and then cautiously opened an air valve AN. , A little water came in, but I decided that it was only spray' and that I was back on the surface. Now that I was over the worst, I could allow myself to think Of Charlie Stephen. He was also from Bristol, He was the third man who had tried it, but he had asked for trouble from the start. He hadn't even soaked his barrel, and it leaked like a sieve. We all told him he was commit- ting suicide, Two of the watches had lum- inous lials, but I couldn't make out either of them, Finally I concluded that somehow or other the boats had missed me and I had drifted into the whirlpool a couple of miles lower down, I told myself that even that wouldn't be too bad, for I. had examined it carefully and de- cided that it.had very little suck, A kid of eighteen swam through it a little while ago. What puzzled me was that the roar of the falls kept rising and falling with an almost regular beat. I pulled both plugs out of my ears and became completely confused by the noise. I didn't know then that I was drifting backwards and forwards in the surge between Canada and America. I pushed the light switch again, but it still would not work, and for quit: a time I fumbled about in the hope of putting my hand on a loose wire. I tried to relax, Unexpectedly the noise died away, and almost immediately I heard a scraping on the outside, It was as if someone were tying a rope on to the ball, I unfastened the manhole from the inside, but kept my hand on the bolts, For a few minutes I was jerked about all over the place, and then the sunlight streamed in, dazzling after the darkness which had gone before, Before anyone asked me I shouted that I was O.K. 1 looked at my wrist. All five watches had stopped. Everybody was shouting "O.K. O.K." to the shore. I stood up and put my head out, The boats were just where they said they would be. I asked the time, they couldn't tell me. Nobody had a watch, When we landed it was -five, Straw Hat Making By Hand in Sweden A path that was slippery with pine needles led to the glade in which the little old woman's little red cottage stood. It was like the beginning of a bedtime fairy tale. Round the cottage grew glaring red peonies, deep blue aquilegias and that grace- ful flower we call "lieutenant's heart"; the grass was still fresh with dew. . ' . It was, in fact, . just such a picture as you would expect to find on any wooded slope in Central Sweden. The little old woman who lived there was called Maja- Lena; her surname did not -mat- ter, for as Maja-Lena she was known throughout the parish and a good bit beyond as well. She had just one room, enough, she thought, for her rumple needs. The furniture was 'of the simplest, yet on the walls hung certain pictures which showed that she was not a complete stay-at-home, but had seen r little of the outside world. White hair, combed smooth, neatly parted in the center and fastened tight in a bun at the nape. . Otherwise, she was liveliness itself, . . Her fingers were fluttering as quickly as a lark's wings and it was all the eye could do to follow her movements. Beside her lay a bundle of straws, from ;which at regular intervals she would take two or three, and before you knew what was hap- pening they had been turned into part of a long plait that coiled out across the floor. When the plait was long enough, she would thread her needle, sew with frenzied concentration for a while, and there was a straw hat 'complete and ready to wear. "There's no more to it than that," she said. Perhaps not for her; but when others try their hand at it, they realize that to make the straw hats of Arte - mark is an art. The custom of wearing straw hats is .not an old one. It seems to have started here in Dalsland sometime at the beginning of last century .... And so They began making them all over the district; they were sold to Norway and elsewhere, even to China. In those days they used to take sacks of them by wagon to Fredrikshald in Norway. That was mostly in the sum- mer. Such hats are still worn today during harvest. They are plait- ed with different numbers of straws; four, five, six or seven, to give different widths to the plait, and are sewn up either by hand or with a sewing ma- chine. There are still plenty who plait straw in Artemark though few of Maja-Lena's cal- ibre. — From "Something of My Country," by PRINCE WIL- LIAM of SWEDEN, translated by M. A. Michael. EXPLANATION The president of the \Vallager Falls bridge club enjoys show- ing off her young son's store of scientific knowledge to her fel- low members.' One day she urged, "Go on •and tell them. Jerome, what it means when steam comes out of the spout of the kettle." "I means," said Jerome, "that you are about to open one of Father's letters." PASTA PUP -• No vino for Jack, This cosmopolitan Neapolitan is said to drink coffee to wash down his favorite dish, spa- ghetti. He's the mascot of the welding shop at NATO's south- ern European headquarters, Naples, Italy. DOWN IN THE MOUTH— This is the gaping mouth of Mons to the Whale, who swallowed Pinocchio and appears to be: about to do the same to George Sprunk. Monstro is one of dozers of tloats being prepared for the bill, parade sponsored by a local department store. Sprunk is painting the inside of the ,'hole's mouth. TIIHMN FRONT kilflaell From the number of hurting permits issued each year by vari- ous provincial game depart- ments, there are 1,000,000 hun- ters across Canada today, While these do most of the shooting during the year, there are thou- sands of men in the far north who depend on their rifle for their food supply. Other thou- sands are satisfied to do their. shooting indoors or outdoors at stationary targets or whirling clay "pigeons," • • « Farmers, apart from any hunt- ing for sport they may do, find . guns and ammunition important farm tools for controlling pests and predators, writes K. N. Mor- ris in the current issue of OVAL, Mr. Morris says that crows which are found in most parts of Canada and magpies in western Canada, are notorious for their activities in rural areas and it not controlled can play havoc with the farm economy. • • • Burrowing animals like the eastern groundhog and the wes- tern gopher dig holes in which livestock can break their legs, must be kept in check. In remote farming areas, livestock must be protected against the depreda- tion of marauding foxes, coyotes, wolves and bears. • • • Mr, Morris says that the hunt- ing instinct is satisfied by thou- sands of Canadians remote from the supply 'of game by trap and skeet shooting or firing station- ary targets, One advantage of indoor target shooting clubs is that they can find sate and satis- factory quarters in both large and small centres, The rifle and revolver section of the Canadian National Recreation Association has its range In a mid -town Montreal building. Business and industry is recognizing the re- creational benefits of shooting and one new head office building in Toronto has been equipped with a basement rifle range for its employees. ALMOST DONE -Last left on the tree is all that's keeping Joseph Manning from complet- ing his fall chores. Western Canadian farmers lust 140,000,000 bushels of grain last year due to the heavy infestation of weeds, H. W. Leggett of the Federal Dpartmnt of Agricul- ture, told delegates at the recent conference of the Canadian Agri- cultural Chemicals Association. Mr. Leggett who is superin- tendent of the government ex- perimental station at Regina, said..that of the 45,000,000 acres in the four western provinces planted in cereal crop s, about 12,000,000 were sprayed with 2, 4-D chemical weedkiller. This compares with 500,000 acres sprayed in 1947. "By breaking down a few prej- udices, we should be spraying 30,000,000' acres of weed infested grain annually," he said. • • 0 H, F, Stairs of the New Bruns- wick Department of Agriculture, stated that at one time register- ed seed growers in his province were non-existent because of the heavy weed infestations. Since the advent of 2, 4-D New Brunswick has hecome one of the largest growers of registered seed on; the continent. Chemical weed control has also resulted in the more economic production of potatoes in the Maritimes. • • • The use of chemical weed- killers' has greatly simplified brush clearance on Hydro rights- of-way, J. W. Suggitt, supervis- ing chemist of the Hydro Elec- tric Power Commission of On- tario, told the convention dele- gates. Cutting brush by hand at one time cost about $70 an acre every three years. With chemi- Y�.,.... ,. ... ., JEWELRY 'SUPERMARKET' IS GEM OF AN IDEA -Eric Weinberg, a wholesale jeweler of Cleve- land took a tip from the grocery chain super- markets and is cashing in an it. He turned his store into a self-service "market" with wa IIs lined with small bins, each stocking a diff- erent jewelry item. Just as housewives do, his customers (retail jewelers) trundle carts around, make their selections and have their their bills made up at a checkout counter. Clerks behind the walls keep the bins repleni shed and also- < fill orders from Weinberg's travelling salesmen. Large photo shows cus tourers making the rounds. Inset shows Mrs. Kay Adkins having her purchases checked by Mrs. Weinberg. cal brush control the cost has been reduced to $25 to $30 an acre, * * * As the result of experimental applications of insecticides, the hay yield. of six test fields in Indiana has been increased from 800 pounds to 2400 pounds (dry weight) per acre. The insecticides were applied by airplane during studies on the control of legume insects, particularly spittlebugs and clo- ver leaf weevil. * • • The experiments were con- ducted by entomologists of Pur- due University who also were successful in obtaining a 100 per cent kill of the European pine sawfly larvae , on 200 acres of infested pine by aerial spraying. • WE'RE GOING TO PUT THE SUN TO WORK A small puff of condensing . steam began to come from a rubber tube at one end of, a large plate of glass and black- ened metal, It was the Israeli solar water boiler, set up as part of an exhibit in connection with the first world symposium on applied solar energy. "Hey!" someone shouted. "It's working It won't pull a train, but it's working" This spontaneous comment from the onlooker just about summed, up the status of applied solar energy in general. In lim- ited practical applications and in a good many laboratory ex- periments, it is working. Any- thing.like large-scale solar pow- er plants are still a long series of research projects away. But, to some extent, the sun is ready to be put to work today,. That iswhy some 900 dele- gates came here from 36 coun- tries to talk over the possibil- ities of developing uses for this tremendous energy source, writes Robert L. Cowen from Phoenix, Arizona, to the Christian Science Monitor, • All this past week, Old Sol has been getting more attention in the sun -drenched A.m erica n Southwest than it has since the days of the Indian sun worship- pers. Sponsored by the Associa- • tion for Applied Solar Energy, the Stanford Research Institute, and the University of Arizona, the conference split neatly into two sessions. Two days at the university of Tucson 'covered the basic natural science of solar CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1. Entire amount 4, [talion secret society 1, City in Oklahoma 12. Pasture 18. Pertaining to the disciple, 15, Suburbs 17. Cttalr 18. Commence 18, lake In the Adirondack, 21, Knowledge • H. Organ of • hearing 24, do condition that 211, Copy 29, Horse It, Thick 30, in this place 35, Affirmative 37. [Marine gastropod, 31, Kind of Parrot 49, Thiok liquid 12,10nglieh letter 13. Palmetto ' State (ab,) 44, Upper limb 15, Aerltorm fluid 48, Church Iresttvai 11, Mountain ash 66, Citrus fruit '51, Measuring line 11, Catches up with . 80. Scatter seed 41. Shall tumor 81, Fragrant 8:1,Hilrems • DOWN 1. Malt liquors 2. Gave tempora illy 3, Volcanic matter 4, b`ur-bearing animal 6. Philippine 28. Epoch volcano 30, Become 6. Baptismal 32, 13y birth vessel 34. Rubber 7, Clive out • 80. Droop S. Near 29.,Knncic 9. Sheltered 41. Scarcest 10, Those who ' 46 Fusible record dally substance events 11, peed 14. Visit hawk'. 18. weary implement 20. Tablet 62. Sagacious 22. Negative vute 59. Soon 25. Heraldic 54. Tidings • bearing 5, Not high 26• Sunken 67, writing fences implement 27, ilndei'stand 69 As far as 47, Sun 49. Somay Itbe 60. Harden 1 2 3 7:yt4 5 6 7 8 :if 9 10 11 12 ::;13 ;!fir 14 15 16 {, 17 18 +?y ' 19 20 :.:0 :Y :v; 21 22 2`` 23 r.'•r 4 24 28 26 27 28 • Z9 3o • rya.::3I . 32. 33 34 ' 35 .AV 38 39 "•i 4o 41 ; '42 4.3 f?ti,44 4!3 {146 47 v . " c, 48 49 - 80 51 52 93 54 55 F.`;;:• 50 ' 57 53 • 60 , ..\60 61 : F; 62 , 63 Answer elsewhere on hts page, energy and prepared the ground for the three-day symposium in Phoenix. Taken together, these sessions seemed to generate as' much .en-. thusiasni en- thusiasm per delegate as the lo- cal Chamber of Commerce pack- , ed into the tourist literature it placed in neat piles at strategic junctions of the conference cor-• ridors. With an acre of Arizona sun- shine able to pile up the energy equivalent of 185,000 'gallons of oil in a year, the experts here have treated their present ac- complishments as only the first small practical steps in develop- ing a very large vision. As Dr, .Farrington Daniels of the University of Wisconsin, one of the leading solar -energy .sci- entists in the United States ex- plained it, this is a challenge to the intelligence of men to use the abundance that is in the sunlight around us. • The supply of this sunshine is enough to meet many of the en-_ ergy needs of mankind for mil- lenniums to , come, he said. But it will take a long, hard research effort to take' practical advantage of any really large amount of it. This, then, is the experts' es- timate of applied solar energy and. its prospects as sketched by the five days of meetings -some limited applications immediately and a challenging promise for the 'future. "There is no sudden era of solar prosperity just around the corner," Dr. Daniels said, brit • added that,.he expects solar en- ergy_eventually to tal-e its place beside atomic energy as an im- portant supplementary addition to ordinary forms of power. "Atomic energy will come in large, multi -million -dollar cen- tral erntral power stations," he explain- ed. By contrast, he said, "solar utilization will probably start with small units costing not mil - ions of dollars, but only thous- ands' of dollars. They will find their first. practical uses in Aral, nonindustfialized areas," He added that "unlike atomic energy; solar energy has no critical mass, no health hazards, and no waste products to dispose of; Anyone caro go out in his yard and run a' toy steam engine with free sunshine." • But, there is another difference between atomic power and solar power • that weighs heavily against the large scale use of sunshine, as was pointed out by Sir Edward Bullard, director 'of • Britain's National Physical La- boratory. Atomic, oil, gas or. coal power can all be generated within the relatively,small area of a power- •. •plant furnace, Sun power, in large .amounts comes only in correspondingly large areas. Sir Edward calcultited that a solar - power plant of 100,000 kilowatt capacity -enough to power a large town -would need about -a square kilometer (about two- . fifths of a square mile) of ex- posed sunlight -catching surface, ' Equipment of any kind, includ- ing solar -energy'` c o l l e c t o r s, "comes dear when bought by the square kilometer, he commented. This is the biggest disadvan- tage of solar power on the large scale. The energy of sunlight is spread so thinly that, for the foreseeable future, it would be too expensive to collect it for power purposes. But, despite this fundamental drawback, there are some labor- atory experiments aimed at pow- , er, These are the basis for the hope expressed here that sortie day the cost factor will be licked and the sun harnessed . directly for power, The Israeli water boiler is a case in point. It was developed by Israeli physicits manly to show that It is possible to reach boiling wa- ter temperatures with a flat- plate heat collector. Previously, only a focusing mirror or lens could bring water to a boil. The Israeli ' physicists found a way of improving the effective- ness of their heat collectors, which are made of metal pipes T attached to� •a blackened metal plate and protected from the wind by a single or double layer of glass. As a water heater, this is an effective device and,, if mass produced, would probably not cost too much more than con- ventional water -heating 'equip- ment, according to its designers. But, as a generator of high- temperature steam for indus- trial power, the heater again suffers from the need for large collecting areas to gather useful • amounts of power. In this di- rection, it is another research hope that is a long way from realization. But, close by the Israeli ex- hibit, there ' were other pieces of equipment that illustrated the more immediate prospects of using solar energy. • A row of solar cookers gleam- ed 'brilliantly in the midmorn- ing sun. These were mainly parabolic mirrors of cheap con- struction and about two to three• feet in diameter with a pot- holding stand at the focus. - An egg was .boiling merrily in the model shown by Dr, Ad- nan Tarcici from Lebanon. It took just three minutes to start it boiling in the hot Arizona sun, This was much faster, Dr. Tarcici observed, than the 20 minates a similar der ration had taken in the cooler climate of Central Park, New York, But, like the smoothly work- ing Italian solar water pump or the model -house heating and cooling: units in nearby exhibits, Dr. Tarcicis cooker, and others like it, willfind their biggest usefulness in lands where the sun is hottest, Sir Edward and other speak- • ens ranked such use of sun power as of prime importance for the underdeveloped areas that generally tic in hot cli- mates, Solar stoves, for exatnple, if reduced from .the $10 to $45 they now cost to under $5, could cut the fuelcosts that drain heavily on thesmall money in. comes of familiesin these areas. They could also eliminate . the use of animal refuse as a sup- plemental home -cooking fuel and release it for the more valu- able use as fertilizer for the food crops, House cooling using solar power ,can also be a big help to these ` countries,' Sir Edward pointed out that working 'effi- ciency in hot areas goes up 'when cooling is available, to say nothing of the advantage of re- frigeration for preserving food,' as more effective means for do- ing this with solar units are worked out, It takes only the area of a roof to collect enough solar power to cool a house during the hot daytime hours and to collect enough energy for stor- age to operate the cocling sys- tem during the night, Sir Ed- ward observed, Solar pumps, which could re- place the man -plus -bullock ir- rigation systems in these 'parts of the world, have their attrac- tions for underdeveloped areas, too. All of these functions and any others that could be performed by solar- devices, can be nerved more effe.,Ively by gasoline - or oil -powered motors. The ad- vantage of the solar units lies in the fact that they make no money drain on the country for their operation and can, in many cases, be built by native craftsmen, These the practical uses of applied solar energy that are already economical, or just one or two development stages from being so, Beyond them are the broad dreams of harnessing the sunlight for power. These dreams are based on such things as the Israeli water boiler or the experiments that have used sunlight:to break wa- ter into hydrogen and oxygen gases, thus turning this common liquid into a high-grade fuel. The Association for Applied Solar Energy told the Phoenix symposium that, with the co- operation of the Stanford , Re- search Institute, it plans to establish an international "lab- oratory of the sun" somewhere in Arizona for a co-ordinated research attack on applying the sun's nergy. This will be a place where such dreams can be followed, along with the more immedi- ately practical solar work, The important thing about the present stage of solar energy, commented Dr. Daniels, is that we have reached the point where it is working. Now it is time to "do something" sub- stantial about it. MERRY MENAGERIE "Gimme n banana and I'll go away!" R, Barclay Warren, (LA., S.D. Spreading the Good News Luke 8:1, 4-8; 9:1-6 Memory Selection: The bar. vest truly Is great, but the la- bourers are few: pray ye there- fore the Lord of the harvest, that he would send forth labour- ers into his harvest. Luke 102, Jesus Christ did not wait for the people to come to him, He went to the people -'throughout their towns and villages. Ono» he was teaching by the seashore. The throng so pressed forward to hear him that he entered a boat and taught the people. The lesson he taught on that occa- sion concerned the four types oR soil; the hard, the shallow, the thorny and the good. This was the first parable he used. Ar- nold's Commentary defines a parable as a short invented story which is true to life, trona which a spiritual lesson is drawn, Jesus explained thin first parable setting a pattern for their understanding, The hard soil of the wayside is rep- resentative of the people who hear but do not heed. It is et warning against being indiffer- ent to God's word, In Palestine the rock is often near the service. The thin layer of soil represents people who old the impulse of emotion decide to follow Christ, Especially aro they likely to make such a de- cision if others are doing it, But later when someone sneers at them they turn aside, The soil where the thorns Choked the seed represents the people who are burdened with the cares of this life or snared with its pleasures or deceived by riches, The wor'd is choked. It is encouraging that there is always some good soil. Some will follow Jesus all the way, though they may vary in their fruitfulness, Later Jesus sent out the twelve disciples to preach the kingdom of God and heal . the sick. Science is slowly realizing the close relation of a" pure mind and a healthy body. We would not detract from that miraculous power of healing exercised by • Jesus and that apostles: But" we do' point "out that the person who doesn't worry but prays with thankful- ness and has . God's peace has a special protection of heart and mind through Christ Jesus. (Seat Philippians 4:6,7), This is coe- ducive to good health. The Bible has the answers. TRUE BREVITY The housekeeper of a crusta/ old bachelor was given to writ- ing voluminous reports whoa her employer was away. As ho left for a vacation he told her, "I want all the news, but for the love of heaven, be brief!" Four days later he received thin note from her; "There has been a flood. Where your house was, the river is, Respectfully, Bridget Schinasi." Upsidedown to Prevent Peekinig ©©©':©©©WErMEM ©o© 00©0E300M ©©umono©' ©©Uk ©omen b©©©0© ©00 ©0O E© ©©© ?k© vOOTO ©©©©: ©M ©D©© ©©©©D EOM unci ©u E1L2© ©OM D©adi© BOOM B000 ©QooMME EMMCHOOMW 100W 0001 O$Mk© WED AND AWAY IT GOES - Looks like this"•man has caught: himself a flying horse, but he hasn't. Thehorse, a trained performer with the Spanish Riding School In Vienna, Austria, is merely being put through a galloping act. Note the fancily carved anal columned arena in which the horse' is performing. The school, which was founded by Hapsburg rulers, used the arena for Ite reopening after 10 years of exile in Western Vienna, PAGE 8 TM STANDAR" CASEY'S SELF SERVE News Of Auburn Rev, R, deVries Honoured At St, Marlys Anglican Church, Au- • )tnn, Ontario, on Sunday morning the congregation was privileged to honour .Heir Rector, Rav, 13, deVries, on the )ecasion of his recent Ordination, Mr. Fordyce Clark, People's War- den, on behalf of the congregation and The Ladies' Guild, expressed the love and affection held, for Mr, deVries and ails family and presented him with a cheque, Mr, Lawrence Nesbit, President of the A;.Y,P.A„ then rend a short' address and Miss Mary Clark presented him with the gift of a "Topical Bible" on behalf of her fellow members, Mr. deVries suitably replied, The November meeting of. the Aub- urn Women's Insltute was held last Tuesday in the Forrester's Hall with the President, Mrs. Wellington Good, in charge. The meeting was opened by The Lord's Prayer, Ode, Mary Stewart Collect and 0 Canada, with Mrs. R. J. Phillips presiding at the plane, The roll call vitas answered with "Your w4`#### IN~.P.M#4.0~ ~.# NNJVV i Favourite Flower." The Rose was the GROCERIES - FRESH FRUITS VEGETABLES - COOKED MEATS FROZEN FOODS. For the balance of our weekend features read the Superior Stores Ad. in Thursday's London Free Press. PIIONE 156 •-- WE DELIVER. WITH CHRISTMAS APPROACHING RAPIDLY 11'1:1Y 11'E SUGGEST THAT YOU INSPECT OUR. DISPLAY OF CHAIRS WHILE THE RANGE IS COMPLETE,, Lloyd E. Taslier• Furniture - Coach Ambulance - Funeral Service Phone 7 Blyth ,,NN,M #..m...# P ## + H'.'+►NN'...'� ISM CARD OF TIIANKS I wish to thank all those neighbours and friends for their kindness to Myr- Ile during her long illness, to Dr. R. W. Street and the nurses of Clinton Public Hospital, and to me in my be• reavement. 52-1p. —Lena Livingston. IN MEMORIAM KNOWLAND—In loving memory of Mabel Knowland, dearly beloved mother of Mrs. Harvey Carrick, and dear grandmother of Elinore, Wilson and Patricia, who pissed away at Toronto, November 21st, 1953. 52-lp post popular. Mrs.' Wes. Bradnock spoke on the Ifuron County Scholar- ship Funcl. The nminutes were read by the secretary, Mrs. Bert Craig, and ad- opted. A motion was made to have the next meethng in the Orange Hall a week earlier than usual which will be on December 13th. .There will be sale of Christmas gifts to be in charge of Mrs. Alvin Plunkett and Mrs. Ed. Davies, and also a shower fur the Children's Aid Society. Rev. D. J. Lane of Olhl- ton will bring the Christmas message. The 'correspondence was read re Short Course, held in January in Guelph. A hearty vote of thanks was given Mr. Medd and Mrs. Ross for their services to the Institute while they met in the Forrester's Hall. Several thank you notes were read. The delegates to go to Grand Bend on November 22nd to to the Huron County Rally were Mrs. Wellington Good and Mrs. Albert Campbell, A musical reading was given by Mrs, William J. Craig, The motto; "Homes are Greenhouses where the plants of citizenship are started" was given by Mrs. Gordon R. Taylor. A reading "Summer's Endr was given liy Mrs, Andrew Kirkconnell. The re- port of the Area Convention, which was held in London in October was given by the delegate, Mrs. George Million. The meeting closed with The Queen and Grace, after which lunch was serv- ed by the hostesses, Mrs, Worthy Young, Mrs, Robert Turner, Mrs, Tho- mas Haggitt, Mrs. George Hamilton, and Mrs. Andrew Kirkconnell. ossimsamovioasimminamssis SAVE $3.97 On Handsome, Lovable TuxedoTethly The ideal Christmas gift WHAT A PANDA! 22" Tall, Barking Ear, Full Dress Suit. Yellow, Black & White. NOW, ONLY WITH A. $7.00 PURCHASE $3.98 mmisimmar Aylmer Tomato Catsup, 11 Ozo Bottle 19c Clark's Pork C3 Beans, 20 Oz>,, 2 for 35c Green Giant Nibiet Corn, 14 Oz., 2 for 33c Country Kist Peas, 15 Oz., 2 for 21c Aylmer Deep Brown Beans, 20 Oz., 2 for 37c Miracle Whip, 32 Oz. Jar 69c Kraft Cheese Whiz 8 Oz. 35c .1:111511111. For Your Christmas Baking:' A Fresh Supply Of Dried Fruits, Shelled Nuts, Etc. Fresh Frulis & Vegetables FLORIDA MARSH SEEDLESS GRAPEFRUIT (size 96's) . ,10 FOR 49c P.E.I. POTATOES ..... 10 LB, BAG 29c TENDER CRISP HEAD LETTUCE , , 19c MILD, FLAVOURFUL CUKES .. . 2 FOR 25c CALIFORNIA GRAPES`'.. +' 2 LBS. 25c FLORIDA ORANGES (large) , DOZ: 45c CALIFORNIA ORANGES.. .5 LB. BAG 57c MacINTOSH ,APPLES, , —3 LB. cello bag 23c Libby's PINEAPPLE JUICE 48 OZ, TIN 31c SWIFT'S CLEANSER 2 TINS 25c CHEER, GIANT PKG. 65c AUNT MARY FRUIT CAKE 1 LB, 59c RED & WHITE MILK 2 TINS 25c TE1?ART' S Phone 9, Blyth - We Deliver. "The Best For Less - Values Unsurpassed." 6 Wedltcsddy, Nov. ga,1)5g ) , rri Mr, and Mrs. Roy Daer were Toron- to visitors lust week, attending thu Roytll Winter Fair, Mrs. Bert Craig, Mrs. Herb Mogridgc, Mrs. Wm. Straughan and Mrs. Alvin Plunkett attended the Icecapndes in Maple Leaf Gardens,'Toronto, on Mon- day. They accompanied the Londes- boro ladies, who hada bus chartered for the occasion, Mrs, Wm. Straughan visited with her daughter, Mrs. Thomas Jardin, Mr, Jar - din and fainly of Winghnm last week. Mr. unct Mrs, Alfred Nesbitt were Toronto visitors last week and attend- ed the Royal Winter Fair. Mrs. Nesbitt was ti guest of the Fair Board as a 4-H 'Club Leader, • At the morning service at Knox Unl• ted Church,' Rcv, C. C. Washington held bapti:inial services for Deborah June, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Wnt. Patterson; David Glen, son of Mr, and Mrs. Glenn Patterson, Goderlch; Rickey. Robert, On of Mr, and Mrs. Leonard Archambault, and Robert Wayne, son of Mr, and, Mrs. Robert McClinchey. Several people from this community attended the special church services In Winghmn last week, Mr, Charles Beadle of London spent last week end at his home here, We are sorry to report that Mrs. David Hamilton is on the sick list, Her many friends wish her a speedy recov- ery. Mr, and Mrs. F. 0. Mcllveen left last Friday for Niagara. In a week or so they will continue their trip to Flor- ida to enjoy the winter months. Mr, and Mrs. Ed. Davies have moved into their former home for the winter, The local L.O.L. held a successful card party and draw last Friday In their hall. Mr, Thomas Johnston was piaster of ceremonies, Ladies high score: Mrs. Alvin Plunkett; Gents high: Mr. Thomas Haggitt; Ladies low: Mrs. Herb. Govier; Gents low: Mr, Ernest Hickingbottom, Miss Cheryl Lynne Pat- terson drew the tickets for the lucky draw: Turkey was won by Mr. Carl Govier; Goose was won by Mr. Arthur Yungblut; Chicken was won by Mrs, Montgomery. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Patterson of Goderlch visited on Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Beadle. IMr. 0, E. Erratt who was a patient in Clinton Hospital, was taken to Lon- don Hospital on Tuesday. Mrs, C. M. Straughan is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Ryan of London this week. Mr and Mrs, Donald Ross of Oakville visited over the week -end with his mother, Mrs. F. Ross. Mr. Roy Pepper and Miss Smith of Exeter visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Wellington Good, Fireside Farm Forum On Nov, 21st, 26 members of the 1 lre_ida Farm Forum met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Don Buchanan. Af- ter listening to the broadcast, a contest was conducted by the president, Mr. Joe Babcock, and progressive euchre • was played. Most games: Mrs. Iiulley and George Carter; Lone hands: Mrs, Geo. Hoggart and Hugh Flynn; Con- solation: Mrs. Oliver Anderson and Douglas Riley. Mrs. Geo. Hoggart in- vited the group for next week. PROCLAMATION Township Of Hullett The annual meeting of the Ratepay- ers of the Township of Hullett will be held in the Community Hall, Londes- boro, on FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 251h, 1955, The Clerk will be in the 'Community Hall, Londe Uaro, from 1 to 2 p.m. to receive Nominations for Reeve and Councillors for to hold office for the year 1950. When proposed candidate is' not•pres- ent his Nomination Paper shall not be valid unless there .is attached thereto evidence satisfactory to the Returning Officer that he consents to be so Nom- inated. A meeting of the Electors will be held in the Community Hall, Londesboro, at 2 pm., Friday, November 25th, to hear proposed Candidates, and In case more than the required number ., of Candi- dates to fill the offices are -nominated, and a vote demanded, a Poll will be held on MONDAY, DECEMBER 5th, 1955, from 9 am•, until 5 p.m., at the following places; 1. Forester's Hall, Kinburn, Secord Me - Brien, D.R.O., Ephriam. Clark, Poll Clerk, 2. School House, S.S. No. 6, Bert Ben- comn, D.R.O., Leo Watt, Poll Clerk, 3. U. School House, U.S.S. No. 2, Jos- eph Flynn, D.R.O., Bernard Tighe, Poll Clerk, 4. Community Hall, Londesboro, Joseph Shaddiek, D.11;O,, Len' Shobbrook, Poll Clerk. •44.41.44,-,,v+•••44-4-444 .444444N4-0444444 •447•444-64444444-a NIXON PRODUCTS FOR ANIMAL HEALTH We carry n full line of the Fatuous Nixon Products for Animal Health. They promote health and growth of your farm stock; Pelingrex V,M.A, Mix for Pigs $2.75 and $12.50 I'ellagrcx Solution for Figs and Fowl $1.25 l'cllagrex faint for Suckling Ilgs $1,25 Phenothazine Powder for deworming $2,00 Calcium Phosphate with Vitamin D and Cobalt, For Pregnant Sows and Cows . Fevrex • ConOined Sulfa Solution $2.25 and 51.00 Gargetex Mastitis Ointment - regular 90e Gargetex Mastills Ointment double strength 51.25 $1,00 and 54,50 Froveutex Tablets, to prevent deficiency disease $1.25 and $2.25 Sconrex Tablets for Calf Scours $1.75 and $3,00 Scourex Liquid for Calf Scours 51,75 and $3.00 ...-..- _..,_r_.......-__ R. D. PHILP, P B altutiN. 611NDRCE8, WALLYANER--PHONE . to r• 1.1+1++F•-1.11+11+•••♦ t+1+1+M••1+•i41+1+t ♦•++-+♦ ••H11 t+14 v %-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-• t 111.1 t 1+ S+r$-F+N +++$+•-t+1-+.1-1-H-1•N+♦ IYOUR WESTINGHOUSE DEALER .4 VODDEN ELECTRIC SHOP "You can be sure, if it's Westinghouse" a OUR STORE IS FULL OF SUGGESTIONS FOR CHRISTMAS GIVING, with a special every week until Christmas. THURSDAY, NOV. 24th TO DEC, 1st: 1 WESTINGHOUSE WASHER WITH PUMP Regular $169.95 FOR $149.95 (SAVE $2000) BANK NITS TICKETS WITH EVERY NEW SALE, x11+1+1 •-•-•-•-•-•-•-•••••-•44-44-•-•-••••-•-•-•-•+•-•41 PHONE 71R2 -- BLYTH, ONT: 5. Community Hall, Summerhill, Eph- riam Snell, D.R.O., Orval Rapson, , Poll Clerk. 6, Community Hall, Londesboro, Bert Shobbroolc, D.R.O„ Lloyd Pipe, Poll • Clerk, 7, Forester's Hall, Auburn, Mrs, Wtl• Ilam Craig, D.R.O., Major Yungblut, Poll Clerk, GEO. W. COWAN, Township Clerk. • t x+11 N+1 + M+N•N 1+N+1 t► rl $ $++ ++I 1+rN1$-+•$4-N1 STOP f3 SHOP at Holland's Food Market This Week -End. SEE AND COMPARE OUR PRICES. THEY ARE COMPETITIVE. CHECK OUR STOCK ON MIXED PEEL, FRUIT PEEL, CHERRIES, ALMONDS, WALNUTS, COCOANUT, ANI) ALL, CHRISTMAS BAKING NEEDS. ROBIN HOOD CAKE MIX (white or chocolate) 2 FOR 41c KAM 35c JELLO OR JELLO PUDDING 3 FOR25c GREEN GIANT NIBLET CORN 2`FOR 33c SODAS (Christie's) LB. 29c Holland's Food Market AND LOCKER SERV ICE. Telephone 39 WE DELIVER r$-MH-$-I4+.--Nt-+1-NN_H N+i•N1 +/ 1 H 444-4 +4++4 -N -N+4 FREE, WHILE THEY LAST ! ! ! One Clothes Pin Bag to Each Customer with the purchase of a bag of HOWSON'S 20 PERCENT LAY MASH, or a bag of PURINA CHOWDER CONCENTRATE, or a bag of BOOSTER CHECKERS. For sustained top egg' production, pullets re- quire a feed properly balanced in proteins, miner- als and vitamins. These are supplied in Howson's 20 Percent. Lay Nash. If you have lots of grain let us add Poultry Concentrate to bring your ration up to a proper balance. HOWSON & HOWSON Ltd. BLYTH - WINGHAM. 'Better Feeds Mean Bigger Profits" . ANNA.#M.NM.~MI4,440~ M.11N�•••-* l SHOP .AT WALLACE'S FOR YOUR DRYGOODS- WOOLLENS - LINGERIE WORK CLOTHES. OVERSHOES - BOOTS RUBBER .BOOTS Phone 73.