HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1956-09-26, Page 14
VOLUME 62 - NO. 42.
IJ
STANDAR
Authorized as eecond-class mail, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WED NESDAY, SEPT. 26, 1956 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; , in $3 50 the U.S.A.
A.
Post Office Department, Ottawa
Attendance Suffers At Fair
1
WEDDINGS
SiERTSEMA—DYKSTRA
A pretf,v weddin4 was held In the
`. ourchClinton,
FarmersTo� usyarrest °nChrlst(an Frday,RefSet,rmed14th,1fl56, whets Dor
. , ren, daughter o1' Mr, and Mrs. U. Dyk•
stra, Clinton, became the bride ef. Mur•
The ' rural population of Ontario joy himself. Mr, Jewitt announced a I, ray Siertsema, Blyth, son of Mr. and
makes up the largest- percentage of forthcoming plowing match to be held- Local Men Among Winners Mrs. Albertus Siertsema of Blyth. The
crowds that attend the many Fall Fairs on the form .of Arthur Colson, in Hu;. Rev. G. J. Hoytemo, Clinton, officiated.
held during September and _ October lett on Friday, October 5th, sponsored In Black and White Show
throughout the Province, This has by the North Huron Plowmen's Assn- Local holstein breeders were premia' The bride wore n floor length gown
proven conclusively alniost with- elation, for which the Hullett Federa• of chantilly lace with full skirt of ny
out exception this fall as bad weather tion of Agriculture will offer a prize
nent among the large showing of thnt ton net over white brlc al satin, feat -
been
for harvesting has the field crops run• of $5.00 to the boy and girl with the dairy strain at the Blyth Fairlost uring panels of lace, peter pan collar
ping weeks behind schedule, and farm- most points i Saturday. : , and long pointed sleeves. Her fingertip
The Senior Grand Chamnion Female
•
ers"cannot take the time off to attend The Fair was officially opened by • - veil of net, edged with lace, was caught
their locel Fairs. 'Andrew Y. McLean, of Seaforth,
Blyth Pair tell prey to the Inevitable
last Saturday when attendanc.e figures
cut considerably by the fine weather
that' prevailed that day,
The Fair had been postponed from
its original date of Wednesday, Sept,
19th, because of the other factor that
w,euld also certainly have made at-
tendance figures even smaller. Wed.
nesdey was a typlcal dreary, wet mud-
dy fall dal, and the Fair W3S postponed
until Saterday. Fair officials admitted
they just couldn't hope to win as either
wet weather, or fine weather, was cer-
tain to keep people away.
The attendance on Saturday was
gratifying at that, and could have been
worse, District schools put on an ex-
cellent parade which got under way
about 1:30 pm., forming at the Public
School grounds and headed by the Bel..
grave Pipe Band, marched the length
of main street betcre proceeding ,cs
the show grounds. Eleven schools, la -
eluding Blyth Public School, partici-
pated in the parade and teachers and
pupils' deserve much credit for their
efforts to keep this feature of the Fair
up to standard. In fact it probably
was one of the best pirades In years
It is not necessary to say that the kids
were sdisappoirited because, the F.air
was postponed from , Wednesday. to
SaturdaY. Through the postponement •
they were,"cheated" of a, half holiday.
The youngsters won't soon forget that
At the- community park opening
ceremonies were under, the direction of
Mr. George Ne3bitt, who was the very
capable master of ceremonies through-
out the afternoon.
The speaking agenda included Mr.
Wm. Gow, President of the Blyth .A.Ag-
ricultural Society, L. E. Cardiff, M P.
for North Huron, John W. Hanna'M P.P.
for Huron -Bruce, John Fischer, War-
den of Huron County, Wan. R. Jewitt,
Reeve of Hullett Township, and An-
drew Y. McLean, of Seaforth, who of-
ficially opened the Fair.
Mr. Cardiff remarked that he was I
actually surprised to see so many pres•
ent in view of harvesting difficulties
He himself was hurrying home to get
at the harvest,
Mr. Hanna remarked about the fine
looking group of boys and girls, and I
teachers; that participated in the pa
rade. He extended best wishes from ,
the Hon. Mr. Goodfellow, Ontario Min. I
ister of Agriculture. He was glad of
the nice day for the Fair. "Never let
the old flag fall at Blyth Fair," con•
eluded Mr. Hanna, "I have been com-
ing to Blyth Fair for 50 years," ,
Warden John Fischer brought greet-
ings from the County, and remarked
that he believed about only 50 percent
et the current harvest was taken core
of.
Reeve Wm. R. Jewitt, of Hullett, also
spoke of his pleasure in attending, He
was through harvesting so could en -
believed the interest in small Fairs was
on the increase, and also that they
served a useful purpose in the commun•
Wes, in which they were held as they
give farmers nn oppoirtunity to compare
notes, see what their neighbour is do-
ing, and go home determined to do
n better job. It also affords people in
urban centres an opportunity to see
what is being done in rural areas. Mr.
McLean soid'he hoped Blyth Fair would
continue to prosper.
• The square dance competition for
public school children followed the
opening ceremonies. The results of
this competition and also other junior
activities will be found in the list of
prize winners.
The various 4-H clubs, the Black
and White Show, and the open classea
pr ze went to Mr, Harold Badley, RRi to a crown set with seed pearls. She
3, Walton, while the Reserve Senior. 'carried a bouquet of white carnations.
Champion Female Prize went .to Mr
Edward Bell, RR. '1, Blyth, , The young couple was. unattended
Othere winners were: Junior Cham• sJ. Roorda• was organist.
pion Female, R. Marshall. Kirkton;; Following the reception held in the
Reserve Junior Champion Female, Vern church, the bride donned a tweet suit
Hunter, Lucknow; Senior Champion with matching accessories, for a wed -
Male. R, Marshall, Kirkton; Reserve ding trip to Algonquin Park,
Senior Champion Male, Glen Walden,
Lucknow, It Marshall had the Junior Mr. and Mrs, Siertsema have since
Champion Male, Reserve Junior Cham• taken up residence on Dinsley Street
pion Male, Giand Champion' Male. and Blyth, and we welcome this young
Reserve Grand' Champion Male. .couple to our community,
Day Light Saving Time Ends
had excellent showings, although some The return to Standard Time will be
classes were not too well filled, made at 12:01 a.m. on Sunday, SeT�
Many of'the exhibits in the ngricul� 30th, as announced elsewhere in
tural building on Wednesday were re -
Proclamation signed by Reeve W. li.
turned to their pinces for Saturday, Merritt.
and the building presented a colourful
display, . Tiiat time figure may appear a bit
Two dances, held in conjunction with confusing, but to simplify the situation
the show, were well patronized, and all you need do is turn your clocks
provided the Society with a good bol• back an hour before retiring Saturday
ance of receipts over expenditures on night. You %yin find yourself in tune
that particular phase of activities. with the rest of the world when you
Iabout 8 o'clock, as Larry was coming
to the Scout meeting at Blyth.
As they approached the gateway of
Mr. John van den Assem a truck, driven
by Mr. Van Den Assem pulled out of
the laneway onto the road directly in
their path.
Mr, Badley was able to veer off so
that he only struck the front fender of
the truck, but in so doing hls own ve-
hicle took to the ditch, went out of
control, and after rolling over twice
landed on tap of the fence, upside down.
Mr. Badley and Larry were still in
the' car when It 'canoe to a halt, and
almost miraculously neither of them
were Injured, except that Mr. Badley
is muscle sore and still recovering
from the nerve-wracking experience,
The car was completely demolished
and is beyond repair. Father and son
found • themselves resting on the roof
They noticed both back doors open
and were able to quickly snake their
exit through the doors.
Provincial Constable Charles Salter
of Wingham was called to investigate.
ather & Son Miracu-
- Iously
Escape Injury
Lorne Badley and his son, Larry, of
the, ninth line of.Morris Township, es-
caped almost uninjured from a motor
accident last Thursday night.
Mr. Badley and Larry were conning
west towards Blyth on the ninth line
AMONG TIll CHURCHES
Sunday, September 30th, 1956
$T, ANDREW'S rItESIIYTERIAN
CHURCH '
3:30 p.m.—Church Service.
Rev. D. J. Lane, B.A., Minister,
THE UNITED CHURCH
OF CANADA
Blyth, Ontario.
Rev. A. W. Watson, Minister,
10;15 a.m. Sunday School,
11:15 a.m.—Morning Worship, -
7:30 p.m,—Evening Worship,
ANNIVERSARY SERVICES,
Rev. R, W. K. Elliott, Guest Speaker
ANGLICAN CHURCH
Trinity, Blyth -10:30 a,►n. Matins.
St, Mark's, Auburn -12 noon; Harvest
Thanksgiving Service. -
Trinity, Belgrave—No service,
St. Mark's, Auburn, 7:30 p,m,—Har.
vest Thanksgiving Service.
CHURCH 01, [IOD '
McConnel► 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 p.m. --Youth F'ellowabfp, ,
CONGRATULATIONS
C6ngratulatlons and Best Wishes to
1 Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Snell, Westfield,
: who celebrate their wedding anniver-
saryion Sunday, September 30th.
Best Wishes to Mrs. Lloyd Walden, of
Westfield, who celebrates her birthday
on Wednesday, October 3rd,
C3ngratt►Iattons to Mr, and Mrs. E..1,
Cartwright who will celebrate their
wedding anniversary on Sunday Sep-
tember 30th,
On Saturday Night
awaken Sunday morning. You will al.
so gain back • that hour's sleep lost last '
Aprll when fast time mine into effect.
• We have to keep reminding ourselves
that. the summer has passed and aut•
unln in all its glory is setting in. Even
now the trees in the woods are taking
on a golden hue. You owe it to your•
self to take a walk in the woods on one
Of these clear, crisp autumn days. Its
an experience that makes you realize
that there's something nice r?lout the
changing of the seasons.
The only thing we dislike thinking
about is the prospect of snow. That
stuff, especially when it gets thigh
deep, can get mighty tiring by next
May.
Incidentally. did you arise early
enough one morning last week to get
a preview of things to come. Between
7 and 8 o'clock a.m., this village had
as nice a little fall of snow as anyone
cduld wish for—large, fleecy, flakes—
the kind that pile up in a hurry if the
temperature is cold enough. Fortunate
ly it melted as quickly as it hit the wet
pavement. We'll have no more of that
nonsense until late in November, if -
you please, Mr, Weatherman.
ANNIVERSARY MINISTER AT BLYTJ I UNITED
CHURCH, SUNDAY, SEPT. 30th.
REV. R. W. K. ELLIOTT, B.A., B.D., D.D.
Dr. Elliott, born in Winnipeg, is a graduate of the University of Mani-
toba and of United College. He was ordained in 1936. He has served at Bissett,
Oak Lake and Hamiota in D2anit'aba and at Estevan and St. Thomas Wesley,
Saskatooh, in Snska.tchewan: In 1949 he• was appointed Superintendent of
Horne Mission for Southern Saskatchewan and Southern Alberts, In this large
and extensive field he gave proof of his ministry, The Saskatchewan Confer-
, ence honoured him with its presidency in 1953 and United CollP;e has confer-
red on •him the Degree of Doctor of Divinity. On January 1, 1955, the Church
recognized his qualities of leadership and appointed him Assistant Secretary of
the Board of Horne Missions.
ATTENDING WESTERN UNIVERSITY
Miss Glenyce Ilainton left on Tues-
day, Sept, 18th, for tendon where she
will attend the Univcr>'ty of Western
Ontario. Glen,vice is a graduate of the
Clinton District Collegiate ln^litute,
Dr. Elliott will be the guest minister at Blyth United Church Anniver-
sary Services on Sunday, September 30th.
Diplomas And Seals Awarded
At Rally Day Service
Rally Sunday was observed in the
Blyth United Church at the Sunday
morning service when parents and
children gathered for the occasion.
The service was in charge of Mr. Fre•1
Howson, assistant Sunday School Sup.
ertntendent. George Webster and
Gwenn Campbell read the scripture
lessons,
Seals and diplomas were presented
to members of the various classes by
Mr. Charles Johnston, Sunday School
Secretary.
Rev. A. W. Watson, minister, deliv-
ered the address.
Perfect attendance pins were awarded
to the' following:
Third Year—Jimmie Webster, Ronnie
Walsh, Larry Badley.
Second Year—Sharon Jackson, Larry
Walsh, Wan. Mountain.
First Year— Keith Webster, Bonnie
McVittie, Patsy Dougherty, Kenneth
McVittie, Ruth Warwick, Reggie Bad•
Legionairres Lead Tees , ater 3.1
Play Here Thursday Night
After dropping an 8.7 decision In the other two Blyth runs.
Teeswater 'on Friday night, the Leg- f The Legionairres have played sharp-
' ionairrea bounced back to win the 1 games, particularly at bat, but then
fourth game of the series on Monday you can't be on the brill all the time.
night, 7 to 4, and thus,tpok a coin• and Thursday night is another night.
minding 3. to 1 edge igames in the Considering the coolish weather, a re -
7 -game series, spectable showing of fiats were on
The fifth game will be played on the hand for the game. -
' Blyth diamond Th'itrsday night, and One thing that was suggested by
Petty Officer Bill Murray a win for the Legionairres could wind more than one fan on Monday night
it up, The winner reportedly meets was the calling of the games for nn
Visited Relatives Here either Baden or Wellesley in the next earlier hour, We think perhaps such
round. a move might entice more fans to the
Carman MacDonald pitched the nine Park. It gets chillier and chillier as
innings for the Legionairres, giving up 1 the night wears Qn and uy after 11 p.m,
8 hits for 4 runs, McKinnon started on most fans would prefer to be enjoying
the mound for Teeswater and was ro• I the comforts of their living room, or
lieved by Tunney in the 8th. The big better still, tacked away in bed for the
blow of the night came off the bat of night, An 8 o'clock starting time would
Ed Watson, n homer in the second in. get the games over shortly after 10, or
ning even a comproinise of 8:30 o'clock
The game was close until the final sharp, would- be appreciated by most
out was made. The Legionairres kept of the fans.
pecking away with a run in the open. Incidentally, the LegtonaIrres are
tier in the secondtwo sponsoring two dances in the immediate
more in the third, and again a single I future, with the first one this Friday
in the fourth, Teewater broke into the 'night, Crowds at the games have been
scoring to 1 t the fifth with one run but b g
Petty Offtcor Second Class Bill Mur•
ray of Victoria, B.C., spent the week.end with relatives in the community
before going on to Montreal where he
will attend the Naval Supply School
for the next three months,
Bill joined the navy 81/2 years ago
when he left this community. The
past 6 years he has been on the west
coast, He spent a year and a hnlf on
}IMCS Stettler but for a similar per.
rod has been on office duty,-
Mrs. Murray remained behind in
Victoria, 'and Bill hopes to be back
hone in December,
His relatives and many friends here
were very happy to renew his acquain-
tance once again,
Won At Clinton Bingo
Many local people were among the ►n
large crowd in attendance at the noun -
moth bingo held In Clinton last Friday
night.
Among the local winners who have
come to our attention were, Mrs, Char-
les St. Michael, who took $50 on a split.
and Mr, George Bailie, who came home
with $25, on a four-way split.
We understand the Clinton effort
will clear, a tidy sum on the venture
which will be used to further the
swimming pool being Installed In the
community park, at Clinton,
•
beret • lar c enough to meet expenses
series with Wellesley and Baden,
No matter who wins the series be-
tween Blyth and Teeswater, both teams
would have about an even travelling
distance. almost 60 miles, to play tw'
teams that me only ten miles apart,
and who, while Blyth and Teeswatcr
are playing, could just as easily be el-
iminating one or the other in a similar
series. Added to this is the fact that
both Baden and Wellesley got byes in-
to the WOAA—and right into the fin•
als—without having contributed any-
thing to the WOAA all season, while
both Blyth and Teeswater have been
faithful entrants in the WOAA almost
since i1 came into being. Now, who
do you think should get the break, if
there is one to be had. No wonder
Scott is on his high -horse. as we feel
sure officials of the Teeswater team
are too.
Very probably, on top of .the round'
robin, the two top teams would prob-
ably have to play a 5 or 7 game series
to declare a league champion.
Then after that cones a series with
some other team for the WOAA Grand
t3tyth got it back. in the last half of since the cold weather set in, .and your Championship. There could be bat
the inning, The Legionairres closed out :attendance at the dances will help off- until Christmas — but once the world
their half of the scoring in the last of set some of the lag in gate receipts. 'series is over fans have a habit of
the seventh with two runs. Teeswater 1 'Doug Thorndyke and Les Henderson. i losing interest in ball, and their
collected n single to the seventh and of Clinton, officiated at the game, Doug thoughts are trained on hockey.
two more in the eighth, ( on the bases, Les behind the plate, I It will be interesting to sec what de -
The game featured some errors on both •doing their work in their usual cision the WOAA will make.
' loth sides which was to be expected, In capable manner,
-•-•-•T. COUNTY PUIBLiC HEALTH
view of the chilly weather.
Ken and Bill Patterson led the wny LEGIONAIARES PROTESTING
for the Blyth butters. Ken had two , ROUND-ROBIN SERIES Miss Alice McKenzie has accepted 0
3 -baggers, and was on twice on errors! i position as Public Health Nurse for
as well and accounted for three of Scott h'airservice, manager of our !Kent County, stationed at Dresden, She
Blyth's seven runs. Bill delivered with Blyth Legionairres lodged a complaint completed. her Course at 'Toronto Unt•
a double and n single. Ed Wntson on Tuesday with the President 'of the' versity. which she attended last yenr
crossed the plate twice, once on n hone WOAA, Mr. Hugh Hnwkins, of Clinton, : with First Class Honours.
run, and later walking and scoring over the prospect of the winner of the' Alice spent the week -end in Blyta
'from second on a single by Whitmore current series between Blyth and Tees with her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Donald
Weber and Hesselwood accounted for wzter having to' play a round-robin McKenzie.
NURSE
lea•, Susan Wightman, Lena Dougherty,
Sharon Gray, Anne Howson, Sandra
Berthot, Nancy Johnston, Marilyn John-
ston, Graham Jackson, Wayne Jackson,
Donald Appleby
ROBERT RAIKES DIPLOMAS AND
SEALS
Diplomas—Glenda Gray, Dale Tasker,
Patsy Dougherty, Betsy Elliott, Lynn
Elliott, Valerie Holland, Donald Apple-
by, Kenneth McVittie, Ruth Warwick,
Terry Madill, Lena Dougherty, Gail
Cowing, Ivan Cook.
Second Year Seals—Mrs. Charles
• Johnston, Mrs. Keith Webster, Bonnie
McVittie, Ronald Henry, Ross Hodgins,
Vikki Fowler, Murray Govier,
Third Year Seals—Patsy Elliott, John
Henry, Reggie Badley, Sandra Berthot,
Paige Phillips.
Fourth Year Seals — Wm. Mountain.
Jimmy Webster, Bruce Elliott, Ann
Caldwell, Grant Elliott, Lawrence Wal-
pole, Larry Badley.
Fifth Year Seals—Mrs. Jas. Walpole,
Mrs, Wm. McVittie, Anne Howson, Ron-
nie Elliott, ' Douglas Hewson, Donnie
Elliott, Bill Howson, Jim Howson.
Sixth Year Seals — Clare McGowan,
John Elliott, Jim Henry.
Seventh Year Seals—Keith • Webster,
Sheila Henry, Sandra Henry.
Eighth Year Alumni Diploma—Nancy
,lohnston, Sharon Gray, Sharon Jackson,
Ronnie Walsh, Susan Wightman, Mar-
ilyn Johnston.
Ninth Year Seals—Jeanne Hodgins,
Graham Jackson, David Webster.
Tenth Year Seals—Shirley Jackson.
Eleventh Year Seals—Larry Walsh,
Wayne Jackson, Marjorie Knox.
SUNDAY CIiURCII SERVICES ON
• STANDARD TIME
Church service hours in Blyth will
revert to Standard Time on Sunday.
•
FINAL, YEAR AT QUEEN'S
Mr. John McDougall, Jr., lett on
Monday to continue 1115 studies in En-
gineering at Queen's University, Kin-
ston. This is John's second year.
John will have company from home
this year with two other local students
also attending the same University,
namely, Robert Galbraith and Nicolas!
Van Den Assent.
FINAL YEAR AT EI'IMANUAL
COLLEGE
Mr• D. A. McKenzie, who has been
employed at Lindburg Steel Co., Chi-
cago, for the summer, spent the past
week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs,
Donald McKenzie, before commencing
his final year of studies at Emmanuel
College, Toronto,
BEADS 11'INGiiAM STUDENT
COUNCIL
George Webster, of Blyth was last
week elected president of the Winghain
i District High School Students' Connell
for the 1956.57 term. George is a son
I of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Webster,
Wife A Good Cook? May Be Dangerous
An old romantic motto has
taken on a new but deadly
twist lately because scientists
have discovered "that the way
to a man's heart attack is
through his stomach!"
In examining the fact that
widows are three times as nu-
merous as widowers, the scien-
tists concluded that many wo-
men start committing culinary
murder early in marriage, but
that they are not alone to blame
because the big point with a
young swain is: Can she cook?
And when he asks himself this
question, he sees in his mind's
eye a dinner table piled high
with cakes, steaming puddings,
pies, rich gravies and dressings,
fat fowl and oil -soaked flap-
jacks and other delicacies that
mother used to make. And ima-
gining all these tasty concoc-
tions, he heads right for "the
gal, just like the gal that buried
dear old Dad."
Between her indulgence and
his fork, the slim young bride-
groom grows portlier and port-
lier, a prime candidate for many
diseases that shorten and com-
plicate life.
By the time he's forty, the
odds are astonishingly good that
be will fall prey to high blood
pressure, kidney disease, liver
and gall bladder disorders, dia-
betes, arthritis, hernia, perhaps
even cancer. Statistics show
that the fatter you are, the
harder it is to keep out of harm's
way. Whatever medical fate
awaits him, however, authori-
Ales agree solidly that if he lets
his wife overload him with
cookery,. he's flirting with arter-
iosclerosis. This is the type of
arterial hardening which is one
of the main widow -makers in
men under 65. It is so prevalent
that in World War II, US. sol-
diers of 19, 20, 21 were disco-
vered on nutopsy to be loaded
with arteriosclerosis, a condition
not found in Korean soldiers the
same age.
Arteriosclerosis is most com-
mon in overweight men, and
overweight men are so common :
that the American Public Health
Association recently branded ;
obesity "America's Number One
health problem." Dr. Norman
Jolliffe of New York City's De-
partment of Health asserted
that elimination of overweight
would 'do more to lengthen the
life span than wiping out can-
cer. Yet millions of wives still
insist on tickling their husband's
palates to death, and millions of
husbands actively submit to it.
Just how difficult it is to con-
vince patients of this can be seen
in this story of the case of Mr.
R., ah advertising executive in
his early forties, who complained
of dizziness and pain over the
beart.
The heart specialist found
high blood pressure, incipient
diabetes, coronary arterioscle-
rosis (hardening of the arteries
which supply blood to the
heart), and a cholesterol read-
ing of over 360 (normal is 180
to 200), The doctor ended his
report with the statement that
Mrs. R. was killing him with
food,
"How can that be?" Mr. R.
protested. "My wife loves me.
She buys the best. In fact, she
only makes what I like."
"That's it," the doctor replied,
"she's pampering you to death.
If she doesn't stop, you'll get
sicker!"
Mumbling something about
good food . , , kind mother made
never harmed anyone , ,
better than restaurants and
business troubles Mr, R. left.
Six months later, the patient
had a near -fatal coronary. The
Arst day the wife came up with
a box of cream -puffs, one of
hubby's favorite desserts. The
doctor barred her from further
• visits and explained to the in-
dignant son the general prob-
lem of diet and heart disease.
"Your f a t h e r s difficulties
come from a diet too 'rich in
fats," the doctor said. He de-
scribed what happened when
cholesterol, a fatty ' substance
needed by every cell in the body
is eaten in excess. The unburned
fat forms huge molecules that
are deposited on the walls of
arteries, especially the arteries
feeding blood to the heart itself.
These arterial pipes become so
narrow and rough that a clot
sometimes tears away from the
wall and plugs it up.
"Now," the doctor warned,
"the heart is the hardest work-
ing muscle in the body and
needs food constantly, When a
vessel supplying it with blood
clogs up, the result may be fa-
tal. At the very least, the part
of the heart served by the ves-
sel may be permanently scar-
red. Fortunately, in time new
arteries take the place of the
damaged ones and after a while
the patient usually can resume
normal activities, But the artery
hardening process picks up again
if he goes back to his old eating
habits."
The young man was obstin-
ate, "Dad is too young to have
to worry about cholesterol and
things."
"No, he's }not" the doctor
snapped. "Do you know that at
least one out of every ten men
in the late forties is so loaded
with arteriosclerosis he can suf-
fer a fatal thrombosis at any
time? Between 60 and 65 it's
three out of 10, and between 65
and 70, nine out of ten , , . al-
most all the result of faulty
nutrition."
Confronted with this evidence,
one wife asked:
"What am I supposed to do?
If I cut out all fatty foods, there
won't be anything left but
grass."
The answer is you don't have
to cut out all such foods. Fats
are vital nutritional substances
not only needed for the diges-
tion of other fats but for pro-
ducing adrenal and sex hormones
and vitamin D. Dr. William
Hoiden points out that the nor-
mal concentration of cholesterol
in the blood. won't .be affected
by the little cholesterol in dairy
products, meat and eggs, But
fat -soaked fried foods, greasy
fowl, bacon and pork, rich gra-
vies, dressings, puddings, pies
and cakes are a different story.
They can skyrocket the choles-
terol count and crowd the blood
with gangster molecules that
can kill you.
Men should eat sensibly! Go
easy on gravies, rich desserts,
cream, butter, dressings, fried
foods, greasy dishes and calories
in general! A man should get
used to feeling a little empty at
the meal's end, The wife should
let him know that she doesn't
like his bulging waist and bil-
lowing chin, After all, she mar-
ried a man not a cow! At the
same time, she should plan well-
rounded meals.
And no matter how he whee-
dles, cut down his waistline for
that's a good way to measure
your success.
Chances are the wife will
benefit emotionally as well as
physically. Instead of a torpid,
obese creature always on the
verge of sleep, he may windup
trotting her to a show some
night, or tatting her dancing,
walking or bowling—something
that never harmed any mar-
riage.
Modern child has longer life
expectancy, the health of most
North Americans has so improv-
ed during the present century
that a baby may be expected to
live over twenty years longer
than one born in 1900.
TEA KETTLE MAKES COFFEE—Coffee and tea will go together
in this new contraption, recently displayed at the annual trode
afar in Leipzig, In the Soviet zone of Germany. The tee kettle
has a percolator that fits on the end of the spout.
GOES TO MEETING—Puffing away on his familiar black cigar,
former British Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill heads for
an emergency, meeting of Parliament on the Suez Canal crisis
in London.
Tiny cream puffs are popular
for special, occasions and often
hide a sweet surprise of pudding
or cooked fruit,' a cold surprise
of ice cream, or a warm surprise
of creamed chicken or seafood.
If you want to make 12 large
cream puffs' from this recipe,
use 1 generous tablespoon of
the mixture when you drop it
on the cookie sheet. For small,
dainty puffs for parties, 1 tea-
spoon is the right amount,
CREAM PUFFS
3/4 cup water
3/4 cup butter
3/4 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup sifted flour
2 eggs, unbeaten
Bring water, butter, and salt
to boiling point in saucepan.
Add flour all at once and sti:
quickly until mixture leaves
sides of pan, forming a ball in
center of pan, Remove from
heat promptly,
Add eggs, one at a time, beat-
ing each thoroughly into flour
mixture. With addition of last
egg, beat until mixture is
glossy, smooth, and very thick,
Drop batter by spoonfuls on
baking sheet, Pick up, batter
with 1 spoon and scrape it onto
sheet with a second spoon, plac-
,ing abut 2 inches apart.
Bake at 450° F, for 15-20 min-
utes, then reduce heat to 325'
F. for 20-30 minutes (small
puffs require shorter baking
time), Remove to cake rack.
Cut a slit in each puff so that
the moisture can escape. Cool
throughly. Store uncovered if
not used promptly,
•* * *
Sweet pineapple filling be-
tween layers of coconut is at-
tractive for entertaining. This
recipe makes 24 bars,
PINEAPPLE FILLED
COCONUT BARS
Filling:
3/4 cups granulated sugar
3 tablespoons cornstarch
3/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup crushed pineapple, not
drained
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 tablespoon butter
Mix first four ingredients to-
gether in k small saucepan;
bring to, a boil, Continue cook-
ing' until thickened and clear,
about 5 minutes, stirring con-
stantly to prevent sticking. Re-
move from heat and blend in
lemon juice and butter. Cool
slightly while preparing crumb
mixture
CRUMB MIXTURE
1 cup frown • sugar, lirmly
packed
�a cup butter
1 cup sifted flour
%l teaspoon salt
11/2 cups shredded coconut
Cream butter and sugar to-
gether, Add flour, salt, and co-
conut; mix thoroughly until •
crumbly Press one-half crumb
mixture firmly into a greased
and floured 9 -inch square bak-
ing pan., Spread pineapple fill-
ing evenly over surface. Cover
with remaining crumbs and
press top layer down firmly.
Bake in preheated 350° F. oven
for 35 minutes or until golden
brown, Turn out on wire cake
rack to cool. Cut into 24 bars.
* . * *
It you're doing any of' the
lighter type of entertaining, the
orange, -in -toast -cups are easy
to fix. Top with whipped cream,
ORANGE TOAST CUPS
12 thin slices bread
6 oranges
Cut crusts off bread: butter
both sides of bread and work
Into muffin tins to make cups.
Bake at 3751 F. 5-10 minutes,
or •until brown. Peel Oranges
and cut into chunks; spoon into
cooled 'toast cups, Pour spicy
orange sauce over oranges. Gar-
nish and serve. Serves 12.
SPICY ORANGE SAUCE
1 cup brown sugar
3/ teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons cornstarch
11/4 cups water
3/4 cup orange juice
3/ cup lemon juice
2 tablespoons butter
3/4 teaspoon allspice
MIx sugar, salt, and corn-
starch together in saucepan.
Add water gradually, bring to
boil quickly, reduce heat and
boil 3 minutes, stirring con-
stantly. Remove from heat. Add
fruit juices, butter, and allspice;
blend well. Makes 21/2 cups.
Queen Of Sheba
No Glamour Girl ?
Was the ,Queen of Sheba the
glamour girl that legend would
have us belive? Did she rank
in good looks with those other
historic beauties, Cleopatra and
Helen !d Troy?
When the Queen first entered
King Solomon's gorgeous
throne -room with its highly
polished marble floor, -it was so
glossy that she thought it was
wet and involuntarily lifted her
long skirts — to 'display to the
whole of the distinguished
company gathered at the King's
court that she had hairy legs!
That, at least, is the story told
by the "scattered tribes which
still live in that part of the
desert that was once the realm
of the famous Queen, I lived
for some months with these
Arabs and was the first white
man many of them had seen.
Although none of these tribes -
en can read or write and they
have no written history, they
know the story of their people,
for many centuries back. It is
handed down from father to
son in :tory form and they have
astounding memories for facts,
names and even dates.
One fact they all relate is
that the Queen of Sheba had a
deformed foot. She concealed
this by always wearing her
skirts down to the ground, The
ways or women having changed
little, her female subjects fol-
lowed the royal fashion and
wore theirs to the ground too,
so the Queen was not conspicu-
ous in what- was then an un-
usual length for an Arab wo-
man's nkirt.
I was assured, however, that
apart from her legs and foot
she really was beautiful, hav-
ing an abundance of jet-black,
glossy hair and classical fea-
tures yet off by a smooth, coffee-
coloured skin, writes Gilbert'
Harris In "Tit -Bits."
Her figure the tribesmen
went into raptures about, judg-
ing by the .demonstrative des-
eriptl' is they gave me of it. 1
gathered that her vital statistics
must have been something like
40: 23! 38 *So proud was she
of her slender waist and splen-
did torso that she frequently
went shout unclothed from the
waist up. This fashion was also
quickly followed by the other
women.
I was told that shapely figures
have always been a feature of
the Sabaeans, The men' proudly
point to their own womenfolk
of to -day, who are the only
.Arab tribes I know who wear
no clothing but their veils above
the waist,
The Queen's name was Bil-
quis, Sheba was the name of
the country she ruled, Although
the tribesmen liked to talk
about the beatuy of Bilquis,
what they considered even
more worthy of mention was the
smart business methods by
which she amassed her fabu-
lous wealth, By to -day's stand-
ards she might qualify for the
title "Queen of Spivs."
In the Bible we are told she
gave King Solomon "a hundred
.and twenty talents of gold, and
of spices great abundance, and
precious stones." She made her
money out of frankincense by
cornering the market. Frankin-
cense is a sweet-smelling gum
resin, niuch used in those days
in religious rites and cere-
monies throughout the whole
Arab world. Practically the
only source of this much -
sought -after incense was the
trees grown at Cana, on the
south coats of Arabia, where
they still grow to -day,
Cana was only a small com-
munity, and to market the prod-'
uct to the great Arab countries
to the north the merchants had
to take it by camel caravan
over a narrow mountain pass.
It was the only route north.
Unfortunately for the mer-
chants, the other end of this
pass came out close by the city
gates of Shabwa, Queen Bil-
quis's capital city.
It.was here that the only wa-
ter supplies for many miles
were available, The next wells
ahead on the route were too
far for either man or camel to
make without replenishing at
the Shabwa wells. It was also
too far to go back without first
replenishing the water -skins.
Bilquis was able to make her
demands with ease with the
merchants so beautifully trap-
ped, They either sold the whole
of their frakincese to her at her
price or they were refused ac-
cess to the wells. Their only
alternative to selling to her was
to die of thirst.
By these harsh methods she
filled tier great storehouse with
frankincense, Then, as the Cana
merchants were not permitted
to travel north, merchants from
Egypt, Syria and many other
countries came south to buy.
They met the same treatment.
They either paid the price
Queen Bilquis asked — or no
water. There was no argument
about it and even the most
stubborn merchants could find
no other answer to the prob-
lem and eventually paid the
price asked. And what a price it
was! Bilquis was able to clear
a pleasant six hundred per cent
profit.
It's little wonder that his-
tory overlooked the well -con-
cealed fact that her legs were
not all that they might have
been when she had such a mag-
nificent figure and such a won-
derful business head to be re-
membered by.
Silent Jall Break
In Johannesburg last year, a
native was on trial for murder.
It was not an ordipary trial, for
the 'accused was completely
deaf and unable to understand
the usual sign language of the
deaf and dumb alphabet.
But the native had attended a
school for the deaf whero the
pupils had developed their own
sign language, And Father Er-
nest Green, the chaplain of the
school, had learned their pccur
liar sign language and now he
came forward as interpreter.
During the two-day trial he
translated every word of evi-
dence for the accused, and then
gave the court the fan's ans-
wers to the charge, The native
was acquitted.
But the deaf and dumb al-
phabet has other uses. In 1938,
a murderer serving "life" in a
Swiss jail escaped with the aid
of a woman prisoner with
whom he was in love.
The windows of their cells
faced each other across a court-
yard and for months they held
silent conversations by sign
language from the windows.
Messages mutual love led to an
exchange of ideas on how to es-
cape. So in complete silence,
and separated by the wide
courtyard, they finally agreed
on a plan.
The beauty of it was that no
other prisoners could find out
the details of the plan, so the
woman was able to get out of
the female prisoners' wing, go
over to the men's quarters and
free her lover without arousing
suspicion.
LONG WAY UP—There's a lot of
steps for tiny tomcat before he
reaches the top. Kitty's taking a
breather before he goes all the
way. The steps lead to Rome,
Italy's Altar of Heaven Church.
TONGUE-TEAD—"Beaucatre," a five -month-old bulldog, found
New York's heat too'much for.hlm after arriving from Landon.
As befits an English thoroughbred, he disdained water and
found relief in a glass' of Iced tea.
• To See Ourselves
Our earth seems so large, so
substantial and so much with
us, that we tend to forget the
minor position it occupies in
the solar family of planets,
Only by a small margin is it
the largest of the other similar
planets. True, It does possess
a moderately thick atmosphere
that overlies a thin patchy lay-
er of water and it does have a
noble satellite, about one fourth
its diameter, The pair, as view-
ed from a suitable position in
space, say from Venus . ,
would undoubtedly provide an
inspiring sight, , ,
Unfortunately there are no
large mirrors in space to em-
power us to see ourselves as
others might see us. .There is,
nevertheless, one very poor ap-
proximation to the mirror in
space - the dark side of the
new Won. 'At this phase of the
Moon, when It lies almost in a
line with the Sun, the light re -
fleeted from the Earth illumin-
ates the otherwise unlighted
black hemisphere, ; , . Measures
of the earth -shine on the Moon
indicate that the Earth is a good
reflector of light, as are the
other planets with atmospheres
The Earth, therefore, when
viewed from outer space must
be a bright planet, almost as
bright as Venus.
Whether an outside observer
could recognize the continents
is somewhat uncertain, but
surely in time, by carefully
plotting the positions of all the
surface features, he would find
that the _huge cloudhanks moved
end changed, while certain
areas remained fixed,
One peculiarity that we can-
not observe on any other planet
could be seen by our hypotheti-
cal,astronomer outside the
Eart, He would be able to ob-
serve the direct reflection of
the Sun from our oceans, when
the Earth was properly turned,
The phenomenon might be a
great surprise for a Martian
astronomer, who had never en-
countered Large bodies of wa-
ter, He might very well at-
tribute the bright pointlike re-
flection to a smooth crystalline
surface ,on. ,the Earth, as the
early astronomers visualized the
Moon to be a perfect crystal
sphere, - From "jarth, Moon
and Planets," by Fred L, Whip-
ple.
ROMANCE ESPANOL-Romantic
as an old Spanish love story,
Christian, Dior's dramatic even-
ing gown is a froth of delicately
etched black French chantilly
lace over layers and layers of
pink tulle. The strapless gown,
with a big bell skirt that just
grazes the ground, i -s worn with
a wide black velvet sash and
matching mantilla.
•
SHE'D RATHER ROLL THAN ROCK - Miss 011ie Robinson, 75,
pilots a tractor -sprayer rig through a cotton field on the Robin-
son farm, which is operated in its entirety by a quintet of sisters
who range in age from.61 to 80. Children, grandchildren and
great-grandchildren of Lillie, the only sister who ever married,
are learning farming under tutelage of the five self-sufficient
sisters.
TIILFMM FRONT
JokautueLi
Home vegetable storage may
be marked by extensive spoil-
age during the long winter
months, This problem is usually
traceable to a lack of knowledge
of specific storage requirements
for the several classes of vege-
tables.
In general, vegetables are
classified into four categories on
the basis of temperature and
moisture needs when kept over
an extended period. Onions,
pumpkins and squash must be
exposed to a dry atmosphere
and a temperature of 40 to 45
degrees F. Cabbage, cauliflow-
er, turnips and potatoes stored
in open bins or shelves require
damp air and a temperature of
38 to 40 degrees F. Carrots, beets
and parsnips keep best when
packed in a generous quantity
of dry sawdust at 38 degrees F.
Celery must be kept growing in
storage by re -planting it in sand
on the basement floor aft - 1,5 of
the foliage and some of '',e roots
have been trimmed oft with a
knife, A cellar temperature of
40 to 45 degrees F. is best for
celery.
• • •
Full maturity is essential In
all vegetables intended for stor-
age. This is indicated in onions
when the tops fall over volun-
tarily in the garden, in pumpkin
and squash when the rind is so
hard that it cannot be punctured
with the thumb nail and in
crops such as cabbage, carrots
and beets when the tops develop
• a paler color often associated
with a noticeably waxy leaf sur-
face,
All vegetables placed in stor-
age should be sound and free
from bruises. .Therefore much
. care is required in harvesting.
Boxes and pails are•preferred to
gunny sacks as containers for
conveying the produce from
garden to, slerage.
•
• •
Where facilities and time per-
mit much can be -done to assist
the curing. processes ot vegeta-
, bees prior to storage. The time
honored practice of braiding
binder twine and onioh tops,
with the bulbs attached, into
long ropes and hanging these on
the sunny .side of a •building to
cure is conducive to good keep-
ing when placed in storage. At
------ -- 8 Writing 30. Taste
CROSSWORD9.11tlstlytablets " 6tt�yrl;e,tlth
lu.I'wall Pertaining to 32.hurler
t PUZZLE a ser 34. hind the
11. Asserted position
Sit, Prised
34, Color:
37, bread
.39, Candle
42, Central part
43 l)nl)
44. Quantity
43. Animal's
stomach
ACI
1. heavenly
body
6. 1.;lup,s•
0. Ripe
I. Unclean
3. Ilartnot,y
4. I,ove apple
5. Dees)
0 Of the Sun
8 Large weight
9. Egyptian
sacred bull
21. !indent
22, Minus •
23, Abatement of
a disease
25, r)ellirone
27. And not
29. Period of
light
30. Agent
32. Parlety Of lily
87. Itun away
38. folly
40. I"ertlle moll
41, Spike of corn
42. small prattle
In a forest
44. Young bear
45 King ArthUr'e
abode
47. Bair ointment
48. Revolving
parts
60. Snapping
beetle
61. Nerve net-
work
52, Marry again
DOW N
1. CovAring
12. Puts on
2, Inflammation 37. Stripling
of the ens
8. Mouse genua 20, !Seca use
4. God of love 24.22. True
'Lnper
h. Singing roles 20. Moccasin
d. Needy • •23 Ilouk of the
7 Purpose 111bie
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Answer elsewhere on this oat
the Morden, Man., Experimental
Farm the onions with the tops
are harvested when the first se-
vere frost threatens and then
placed in a blast of hot air at 85
to 90 degrees F. for 8 to 10 days.
This is an excellent method of
curing the bulbs. Pumpkins,
squash and the root vegetables
keep well if they are placed in
small piles in the fleld and cov-
ered with vines or plant tops to
cure before they are transferred
to storage,
Plant breeders at the Canada
Department of Agriculture For-
age Plants Laboratory, Saska-
toon, have what they now be-
lieve to be a variety of sweet •
clover adapted to the area and
almost free from coumarin.
• • •
Livestock deaths from "sweet
clover poisoning" had been
traced over twenty years ago to
the presence in the plant of an
organic compound known as
coumarin, in itself not harmful
though it ,gives sweet clover x
bitter taste,' but under unfavor-
able conditions in the curing of
sweet clover hay or silage the
coumarin changes to dicumarol,
a substance which even in small
quantities is toxic to all war'n1
blooded animals, It acts through
changes in the blood that leng-
then the clotting time of the
blood to a point where the ani-
mal will bleed spontaneously in-
ternally or from any type of ex-
ternal wound, Death often re-
sults and several animals may
be stricken at the same time.
• * •
The new 'variety ot sweet clo-
ver is simply one that contains
very little coumarin, but retains
other good qualities of the stan-
dard varieties, but it has taken
20 years of careful research to
produce it. J. E. Greenshields of
the Forage Plants Laboratory,
Saskatoon, where the work was
done, says; "Some of the early
workers, such as Dr, T, M. Ste-
venson and Dr. W. J., White,
would have required special
courage had they known the
years of breeding and the
amount of work required before
a variety void of coumarin could
become a reality."
• •
In 1935 a method was devel-
oped by which coumarin was
extracted from plant' material
with alcohol and the amount of
coumarin determined by the use
of an indicator. On the basis of
'this lest the Forage Plants La-
boratory produced a variety
"Pioneer" in, 1940. 11 was soon
'discovered That alcohol will not
extract all the coumarin in a
sweet clover plant. What is
known as "bound" coumarin e-
mnined. When the total cou-
marin was extracted by the use
of sodium hydroxide (caustic
soda) pioneer proved to have as
much as the variety "AI'c'lk"
from which it was sniveled,
MOUTH FUl. t
In a recent contest to find the
longest word In the English lan-
guage a student won hands down
with this word, which is to be
found only in a medical diction.
ary: pneunonoultramicroscopic•
silicovolcanokoniosis, simply an•
other word for miners' T,13,
Second prize went to n word
found in most standard diction-
aries; floccinnucinihilipilification
whose meaning is "estimated as
being worthless," 'Third prize
went to a word in the English
language of nineteen letters of
the alphabet without a repeat•
e blavksnlitII- forged •pv:c
)DAY SCIIOOL
LESSON
BY REV R BARCLAY
WARREN, B.A.. B.D.
A Vision of the Church
Victorious, Revelation 1;9-17
God's people are sometimes
tempted to wonder it it is vain
to serve the Lord. In Malachite
day they said, "Now we call the
proud happy; yea, they that work
wickedness are set up; yea, they
that tempt God are even de-
livered." (3:14,15) David said,
"I was envious at, the foolish,
when I saw the prosperity of the
wicked,, For there are no bands
in their death; but their strength
Is firm. They are not in trouble
as other men; neither are they
plagued like other men, -Verily
I I•ave cleansed my heart in vain,
and washed my hands in inno-
cency, For all the day long have
I been plagued, and chastened
every morning." This thinking
was very painful to David until
he went into the sanctuary of
God, He writes, "Then under-
stood I their end. Surely thou
didst set them in slippery places:
thou castedst them down into de-
struction. -It is good for me to
draw -near to God." Psalm 73,
Malachi had a good answer for
his generation, too. (3:16-4:3)
"They that feared the Lord spake
often one to another: and the
Lord hearkened and heard it,
and a book of remembrance was
written before him. -They shall
be mine -in that day when I
make up my special treasure;
and I will spare them. -Unto you
that fear my name shall the Sun
of righteousness arise with heal-
ing in his wings," It is a most
heartening passage.
Today's lesson gives a preview
of the great triumph of the re-
deemed, They are a multitude
which no man can number. They
are clothed in white robes and
have palms in their hands. They
have come out of great tribula-
tion and have washed their
robes and made them white in
the blood of the Lamb. God
shall wipe away all tears from
their eyes.
Kingdoms come and go, Caes-
er,4 Napoleon Hitler and $talia
have had their day. Now Nassef
wants his place in the sun, but
his day will end. Sooner than
we expect the angel will sound
and great voices in heaven will
say the words of our memory
selection; "The kingdoms o! this
world are become the kingdoms
of our Lord, and of his Christ;
and he shall reign for ever and
eve." Revelation 11:15.
'Dangerous' Lion
Only A Model
011e Strandberg, the Swedish
travel -writer, has made some
scathing comments on the tour-
ist invasion of Africa.
In "Jambot"-a Swahili greet-
ing meaning "How are you?" -
he • says Nairobi has become the
centre of a tourist industry which
"sells" Africa to would-be specu-
lator's, and big safari firms com-
pete in providing extra -ordinary
facilities. The tourists -as dis-
tinct from the genuine hunters -
'fall into roughly four categories.
Type A, the "murderer" or
"sporting butcher," has an lin-
pressive ' equipment of rifles, en-
joys slaughter, and buys the
most expensive game licence en-
titling hint to four lions, two
elephants, two rhinos, and an
immense number of giraffe,.
buck, gazelles and other innocent
creatures.
He feels "red blood flowing in
his veins" when he has himself
photographed with one foot on a
slain lion or elephant. He does
not live as dangerously as may
appear, for he has a constant
bodyguard of white hunters and
t
gun -bearers who intervene if the
situation becomes critical.
At times he is seized by a sort
of Tarzan complex, runs round in
leopard - pants, bathes where
there are crocodiles and insists
on sleeping in a tree,
Type B is the "savanna snob"
who goes on safari for the same
reason that he has polo ponies
he can't ride, a sea -going yacht
he can't sail, He may be an
American playboy requiring to
bolster Up his self-esteem and
manly prestige or an English lord
who has taken to gin and big
game to forget his last divorce.
Type C is the fanatical spe-
cialist who means to shoot a rec-
ord specimen of the bongo an-
telope or track down some rare
kind of buck. He measures its
horns with a tape -measure, his
great aim being to get his name
on the list o! record hunting tro-
phies.
Type D is the appreciative, en-
thusiastic sportsman whose
greatest joy is not to kill, swank
or collect, but watch. He con-
siders his camera as valuable as
his rifle, and the safari com-
panies specialize in supplying
him with 'subjects.
For a relatively small fee he
can have a rhino placed in the
exact middle of the savanna with
Kilimanjaro's ice summit soaring
in the background, be piloted to
a convenient distance from the
camera -blase family of lions at
Serengeti, even photograph hippo
from below at Amboseli by get-
ting into a little glass -walled
"hide" specially built by Walt
Disney.
Strandberg adds; "It is true
that the camera hunter is the
cause of snapshots of lions and
rhinos having become appalling-
ly commonplace, but he has also
helped to bring about a more
sensible and less costly approach
to Africa's game,"
Round about Nairobi there are
specimens of lion and rhino
which have become photogra-
phers' models, and Strandberg
was himself there the day the
city's pet, an aged, magnificent
]Ion, was accidentally killed on
the Mombasa railway level -cross-
ing and has his obituary notice
reverently printed in the 'East
African Standard.'
He had long been a popular
model for many a picture repor-
tage or film "from darkest and
most dangerous Africa" -as w�l
also Molly, a tame rhino who will
sometimes even allow people to
ride on her,
Strandberg was south of Lu-
bero when a long caravan of
lorries belonging to a large sa-
fari firm came winding up the
road to Kabasha Gap. They
were loaded with tents, pneu-
matic mattresses, folding veran-
das, bales of mosquito -netting.
Separate vehicles carried bath-
tub, wash -hand basin, water
tanks, then came a gigantic lorry
with refrigerator, cases of whis-
ky, beer, champagne, and a
Danish chef.
Station -waggons conveyed the
staff -in white suits, red turbans
-including gun -bearers, trophy
preparers, bar -tenders, water -car-
riers, dealers in empty bottles. Iot
a truck equipped with wireless
transmitter sat two white hunters
in khaki, looking rather drowsy
after a night playing canasta
with their clients,
Last of all, in a sky-blue Amer-
ican car, sat two men and two
women, The two men wore Ha-
waiian shirts printed with pine-
apples or palms and hula-hula
girls; each chewed grimly a black
cigar. The women were in apri-
cot sharkskin coats and skirts,
with complexions like milk,
mouths like blood, -hoarse voices
that swore magnificent oaths is
quick succession.
They had come to select the
scenery for the next big Cinenja-
Scope film of the wilds, about a
white hunter who endangers his
reputation to save Ave Gardner
from (1) a rhino, (2) Frank Sin-
atra, but finally falls a victim to
one of Frank's dum-dum bullets
during a lion hunt,
After which Ava withdraws to
a nunnery on Mount Kenya and
has found peace when Frank
suddenly pops up, hotly pursued
by Jomo Kenyatta, the Flaming
Spear, and his Mau Mau terror-
ists. Ava hoists the Stars and
Stripes over the nunnery, Frank
fights at her side, and with his
last shot drops Jomo as he's
climbing the flagstaff to replace
it with the hammer and sickle.
But the nunnery is now on fire,
and the two, reconciled, sit side
by side on the organ bench, with
the flames licking at their feet,
playing with four hands "The
Bells of Mount Kenya" -and die.
In the final scene, Strandberg
was told, we would see Ave in
nun's habit walking in a cloud
across a savanna full of zebra,
rhino, 'leopards, Watutsi dancers
and lions,
"We have tried to utilize and
fuse the experience gained by
'King Solomon's Mines; 'Joan of
Arc,' and 'Mogambo,' " said the
man with the pineapple shirk
"If we can squeeze religion, gla-
mour, un-American activities and
a complete zoo into the same
film, it's bound to be a success -
but we must have a wide screen
it we're to have room for it all
at the same'time."
Strandberg's own safaris with
photographer Rune Hasner, co-
vering over 60,000 miles, are the
real Olin, brilliantly recorded,
vividly illustrated and very read-
able. 1'
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WHERE'D IT GO, WHERE'D IT GO? - Dog -gone difficult for this
canine caddy to find the stray golf ball, but he's trying hard,
The Great Dane, owned by Dominick Colucci, was entered in
the first National Dog Caddy contest.
THERE ARE 47 MORE -Volunteer carpenter, at left, has 20 of 67 children to watch him as h.
cuts lumber for dormitory in which to house th e huge brood at Bowmanvllle, Ontario. Riv
are children of Mr, and Mrs. Bert Whyte, who have taken in the other 62, all from bro
homes, because "we just can't say no" to nee dy children. Mrs. Whyte will take her 91
fammily to New York City where she'll make a TV appeal for funds to supplement 1p/
her factory•worker husband.-
1
PAGE 4 -• .
LOND ESBORO
Miss Anne Falrservlce, of Detroit,
spent the week -end with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs, R. Falrservlce,
Mr• and Mrs Bert Daer •and family '
of Auburn, visited with Mr. and Mrs
Charles Vodden on Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Cooper and Jim, of
Ethel, with Mrs, Joe Lyon and family.
Mr, 'and Mrs. Richard Dolene, of
Dayton, Ohio, visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Falrservlce.
Miss Frances Lyon left this week to
enter Toronto University where she is
starting her final year in Physical and
Occupational Therapy, She has been
interning at Westminster hospital, Lon•
dun, for the summer months.
The Londesimro W. I. will hold thein
meeting on Oct 4th. There will be a
demonstration on flower arranging. Al•
so one on Beauty Counselor Cosmetics.
The motto will be given by Mrs. Ed•
win Wood. Roll call: "Your Grand.
mother's Maiden Name." Program:
Mrs. J. Armstrong, Mrs. W. Reid, Mrs.
W. Howatt, Mrs, L. Bunking. Hostel•
TIM �!'�AL�TDA3tn •y editesday; Sepi, 26j 1956
mei
News Of Walton 41111111111111.11111111111111111111111111111111.1111161111111/111111111.1a'
74
C.G,i.T, GRADUATION
A very impressive Graduation ser
vice was held in the audltorlum of
Duff's United Church on Saturday when
the following six young Indies gradu-
ated from the Canadian Girls' In Train,
ing: Misses June Huckwoll, Ellzuboth
McGavin, Claire Hackwell, Mary Den.
nls, Doris Jphnston and Ruth Waters
Beautiful bouquets of gladioli formed v
lovely setting for the service. Miss Au
er's Meeting and the Grandmothers'
Club is being entertained.
Friends will be pleased to know that
Mr, Bert Allen is home from the hos•
pita' and is feeling much better,• I
drey Hackwell was organist for the
evening playing an organ prelude ut
- the girls took their places In the cholr
The graduating class entered from the
rear of the church down the centre
aisle wearing the usual C.G,LT, uni-
forms and corsages, The leader, Mrs
Ted McCreath and Mrs, Ernie Toll fol
lowed the girls as they took their plat
es at the front of the church. Th
assistant lender, Miss Edna Martin, pre
sided for the service, The call to wor
ship was followed with hymn 358 "Jesus
Calls Us O'er the Tumult," The Scrip.
I ture lesson was token from St, John 15
7-27 after which the girls choir sang the
anthem "Hilltop of Prayer." A very
touching Valedictory was ably given by
Miss June Hackwell, who has been e
very enthusibsiic member of thesC,G
LT, Miss Huclawell stressed the impor•
tante of the C.G,I.T. work and in clos•
Ing repeated the C.G.I.T, Purpose,
Mrs. McCreath spoke briefly and in.
troduced Mr's, E. Toll of Winthrop, who
made the presentations of certificates
Mrs. Toll is Counsellor for Girl's Work
, in Huron Presbytery. The Dedication
Prayer was .offered by; Rev. W. M.
• Thomas f:rllowed . by .the hymn "Take
My Life And Let It Be," Rev, Thomas
1introduced the guest speaker for the
. evening, Dr, J, Semple, of Egmondville,
who is a newcomer to this district. Dr
Semple gave a stirring address on "The
Search Fot' Happiness" challenging the
graduates to a rich life that led to
;' something instead of a empty life of
seeking fame, fortune, pleasure, etc.
Special emphasis was made on the need
of full-time workers In the church.
Miss Martin thanked Dr. Semple for
his very informative and inspiring ad•
dress after which a prayer was offered.
"I Need Thee Every Hour" was sung
by a double trio composed of Misses
Marion Turnbull, Marilyn Johnston ,Ka.
tharine Buchanan, Ruth. Anne Ennis
Norma Hoegy and Shirley Bosman, The
service closed with the singing of hymn,
376 "Blest Be The Tie That Binds"
followed with the Benediction by Dr.
Semple, At the close of the Service
lunch was served In the schoolroom by
the ladies of the church, Rev, Thomas
closed the evening with prayer,
•
•
e
•
Miss Gcodhue of Port Stanley visited
with Mrs, W. Lyon.
Church services will be held In Lon.'
deshoro United Church on Sunday, at
10 o'clock Standard Time,
ses: Mrs, E. Knox, Mrs. J, Howatt, Mrs, Mr, and Mrs. Thos. Millar, Mr, and a
Tebbutt, Mrs. L. Reid, Mrs, Thomason, Mrs. Frank Potter and Greg, spent'
Mi s. Fangrad. This is the Grandmoth• , Sundhv with friends In Chesley.
+o mo•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•••-*
FALL DRESSES
by "Pride & Joy", and Little
COATS
by `Pixie Togs", "Little Nugget",
Duchess."
'College Girls.'"
SPECIAL This Week •- GIRLSSTATION WAG-
ONS, sizes 8 to 11. Reg. $18.75 ,Salt; Price $11.95
Cherub Underwear - - • Beehive Wools.
"The Shoppe For Tots and Teens."
Needlecraft Sl1oppe
BLYTH, ONTARIO.
-w++++4-4-4-a+ +++o+o++o+4++4+-+. +-++-4-o.M • p - - -+•+s+
PICNIC HAM PER LB. 49c
VEAL CHOPETS PER LB, 69c
RED L FISH STICKS PKG. 29c
Imww
Arnold Berthot
Telephone 10 --- Blyth.
... WEEK END SPECIALS ...
Men's Suits (2 pair pants) Special $27.95
Men's Elmira Cotton Flannel Shirts (sanforized)
sizes 11 1 2 to 18 ... Special $2.79, or 2 for $5.50
Men's Cotton Flannel Shirts, sport style,
(sanforized) Special $1.98
Boys' Cotton Flannel Shirts, sizes 8 to 16 years,
Special ........................ ..... $1.29
Growing Girls' Patent Straps, low heel,
sizes 5 to 8 SPECIAL $2.98
Growing Girls' Black & Blue Suedine Pumps,
low heel, sizes 4 to 9 , , , , • , , , , , SPECIAL $1,98
Men's Denim ,)cans, 9 oz, per square yd., sanforiz-
ed,"good roomy make, sizes 30 to 44, Special $2.98
Full -Fashioned Nylons, plain or black heels
51 & 60 guage, 15 denier (subs) , , , , Special 69c
Men's Rubber Boots, 12 in. high, red soles, first
quality, (every pair guaranteed) INSOLES
FREE SPECIAL $3.75
New Shipment of Missal'. -Reversible Plaid Skirts
and Orlon Cardigans and Pullovers,
W.M.S, MEETING
Mss. Wilmer Cuthill, of Seaforth, a
former resident of Walton was hostess
for the Walton W.M.S. and W.A, Grout'
on Wednesday evening, September 19
with 31 members, 1 visitor. The presl•
dent Mrs. Torrance Dundas, opened the
meeting with a hymn. Mrs. Peter Me,
- Donald read the scripture lessee from
John 11:25-27, 40, Mrs. Dundas follow•
ed with conunents on 'T'he Resurrection
and the Life", and prayer. Mrs. Har•
Vey Brown gave a well rendered read
ing entitled "Mrs, Brown's Change and
Rest," A splendid topic on "God's
Wings of Protection" was given by Mrs,
Frank Kirkby. Mrs, Dundas thanked
Mrs. Cuthill for opening her home tc
the ladies of the group. The roll was
called and secretary's report given by
Mrs. D. Ennis owing to the absence of
the secretary. Mrs. Ferne Patterson.
Two "thank you" notes were read, also
an invitation extended to the grout:
from the 6th of •Grey and the 8th of
Morris to attend a bazaar In the church
basement. This invitation was grate- the guest speaker, Mrs. Harold Speirs
fully accepted. The treasurer's report of Brussels, who spoke on "Results-
' was given by Mrs. F. Kirkby. Duringtions," In opening, Mrs. Speirs stated
!the business session a request was made Ilial resolutions are an itnportanl part of
by the president for subscriptions 10 nswork defined
the "Missionary Monthly." Thank-' aims
followtitutes: Ar resolutionand is aa
stateresolutionment
offering envelopes were distributed. of something desired by a group of
Plans were made for CGI1 graduation rpeople wanting it made into a law. St
service Saturday evening In the church.' Is a weapon in the hands of women
when the ladies were requested to tnke We must know how to use them and
charge of the lunch. A lengthy discus- handle them. She described the pro•
Mon followed regarding the turkey sup• 1 cedure necessary from the time li
per to he held In the church in Ode- leaves an Institute meeting until 11
ber. The supper committee took reaches Parliament. Mrs. Fraser thanx•
charge of the meeting and deflations i ed Mrs. Speirs for hor splendid infor-
were accepted from the ladies. A very mative•address and presented her with
.1 appetizing lunch was served by the ' a gift on behalf of the Institute, The
hostess and her daughter, Mrs, E. Mit- I meeting closed with "0 Canada." The
shell, assisted by Mrs. Lloyd Porter, members retired to the basement where
IMrs Silas Johnston and Mrs. Wm. Ben• a delicious lunch was served by Mrs.
I nett. Donald Bennett, Mrs. Wm. Flood, Mr's.
Forrest McKay and Mrs. Andrew Coutts.
W. I. MEETING A sale -.of cosmetics consisting of hand DRY GOODS--•Blytlt•-- BOOTS & SHOES
The September meeting of the Walton lotion and boxes of fancy soap wits
MADILL'S
8th Anniversary Sale
Continues At Our Store Until
Saturday, Sept. '29
BUY YOUR WINTER NEEDS NOW AND SAVE HANDSOMELY!
WARM WORK SOCKS
.For Fall and Winter'
Here's a headline val.
ue In . Men's Work
Socks, Wool and ny-
Ion yarn blended to•
gather to give a lot of
wear as well as
warmth. Weighs 3
bs, to the dozen and
s oujstanding,
$1.00 value SALE PRICE
(Save 15c a Pair) 85c
During This Sale y
we are offering I
Our Entire Stock of
Men's & Boys'
'UNDERWEAR
AT 10 PERCENT
DISCOUNT
Here is a real chance
to sh.ve some money.
Here is a Low Anniver-
sary Sale Price
On Women's
glamorous
Fine Gauge
Full -
Fashioned
First -
Quality
NYLON
HOSE
51 gauge weave
sheer as cob•
web with darit
pencil seams la
the newest
shade
Sale Price.. Per Pair 79c
MEN'S BROWN SUEDE
JACKETS '
with zipper en-
closure, knitted
collar & cuffs.
Reg. price .in
most stores
$10,05
SALE SPECIAL , , , . $15,95
EN'S & BOYS' WINTER JACKETS AND COATS AT 10 PERCENT DIS-
COUNT WHILE OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE IS ON,
10% Discount On Our Entre
Stock Of G.W.G. Work Clothes
.*...v. wrwMtar,
BERNARD HALL
Insurance Agency
LIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE, LIABILITY, WIND
AND ALL CLASSES OF INSURANCE,
PHONE 122 - BLYTH, ONT.
Yl �til+t'IIMMi�+NI1�I�NI� pI.►�.MNVr�yN,�.µ,�,�l'�MMNr•/M
WALLACE's
Women's Institute was held in the tom• held.
munity Hall Monday evening with 3C st,. George's Anglican Guild Meeting
present. 7'he president, Mrs. Mar.
garet Humphries, was in charge of St. George's Guild, Walton, held their
•
the meeting which opened with the September meeting at the.Rclory in
htstitute Ode and Mary Stewart Collect Brussels Wednesday evening when
repealed In unison. Mrs. Wlibur Turn- k'Irs, Jewell entertained the ladies of the
ethe secretary, casted the rollnWalton Anglican Church. The meet-
bull,which was answered with anything but ing opned by hymn "Breathe On Me
"Present." A report of the July meet. Breath Of Cod," Rev, F, Jewell .read
Ing was given which took the form of the scripture and led in prayer. The
minutes of the last meeting were read
a picnic to ns am, Afrs. T. Dundee and adopted by Mrs. Stewart Hum.gave the financial report, Needle and phr'Ies. Plans were •nta8e for the buz•
thread charts were distributed to the oar to be betel In November, Further
members, An appeal Isom the Institute ' announement will appear later. Rev,
!that
the BIInd was read: it was agreed Jewell closed with prayer after which
$5. be sent to Mr. Cousins at Brus- I Mrs. Jewell served n delicious lunch.
sels,for this cause. A letter regarding i Mr, and Mrs. Wm, 7.oeger of Niagara•
4-I1 club work for girls was read. A i On -the -Lake visited at the lmme of Mr
I discussion followed about the forming and Mrs. Douglas Ennis for a few days
'of a sewing club for the girls but ne last week.
definite decision was reached. The 1 Mr. and Mrs, H. Rutledge and chll•
iOctober meeting will be "Family Night"'
and each member Is requested W bringdren of Toronto spent the week -end
1 their husbands and family, also a car : with Mrs. aAHumphries and Mr. and
Mrs, Roy Bennett.
table, lunch cloth and dishes. A pot 1 Mr. and Mrs. Sam Davidson of Port -
luck supper will be served, All rnem•.Inge, Manitoba, are visiting at the home
bers Assisting. An offering was recely • 'of Miss Bessie and Mr. Ed Davidson.
• ed by Mrs. Dundas following a decision i gats. and Mrs. Thomas Watson of
made to help defray expenses, A short London visited at the home u( Mr. and
sing -song, followed with Mrs. H. Travis `Mrs. Lloyd Porter and Mr. and Mrs
at the pinno. The joint conveners, Mrs Roy Bennett lust week.
Harvey Craig and Mrs, Doug Fraser Misses Barbara Patterson and June
took charge of the second part of th : ; Hackwell, rurses•ln • Wining were
• meeting. A duet, "Moonlight on the week -end visitors at their home In the motor trip to
:The Arcade Stores
STORES IN BLYTH & BRUSSELS.
LET US FILL YOUR SPRING SEWING NEEDS
with
PRINTS, BROODCLOTII, ' ZIPPERS, THREAD,
ETC.
Phone 73.
i#4•wrr###~4s.r+r
PLAY-dY-PLAY Coverage by KEN ELLIS
Sat., Sept. 20, 2:05 p.m.. (DST)
DETROIT at CLEVELAND
Sun„ Sept, 30, 2:00 p.m, (DST)
DETROIT at CLEVELAND
CFpiraftio
441-980_
Mr. and Mrs. Herb Travis are on n Mr. and Mrs. T. Dundas, Mrs, Ida
the United States. McKenzie. Vancouver, who has been
Mr, and Mrs• Armour Dundas • of visiting here, returned to London with
London spent Monday at the home of them to spend a few days.
Colorado" was sung by Mra. H. Travis village,
and Mrs, D. Fraser, accompanied by Herb Kirkby, Jr„ spent a few days
Mrs, J. Bryans, Airs, Craig introduced in Toronto last Week,
1
iirttiNestlat, got. 26, 1954 tilt sTXxnArin
1956 Fall Fair Prize List Winners
HORSES
Heavy Draft -Team in harness; Aub
rey •Toll, 1st and 2nd, Agricultural -
Team in harness; Aubrey Toll, 1st and
2nd, Perchercn or Belgian -Team in
harness: Elmo Pritchard, General
Purpose or Wagon Type -Team in har-
ness: Bert McBride, Zurich, John Fitch
Wroxeter, Glenn T. Johnston, Single
General Purpose or Wagon Type -Bert
MoBride, Glen Johnston, , John Fitch
For classes, 1, 2, 3 and 4 -Brood mare
acoompanled by foal: Aubrey Toll, tat
2nd and 3rd. Carriage horses or Hack.
ney Type - Single horse in harness.
Ross McKague, Roadsters - Single
driver, speed and style considered; Sam
Curley, Ist and 2nd. Team in harness:
Sam Curley,
Shetland pony -Elmer Johnston took
all prizes in tails class.
Hackney pony -Filmer Johnston took
all prizes in this class.
Specials -Best team in classes 1, 2
3 and 4 -Elmer Pritchard, Bert Mc•
Bride, Best team in Townships of Mor•
riga Hullett, East Wawanosh, Blyth -
Aubrey Toll, 1st and 2nd; Tandem hitch
4 In hand, classes 1, 2, 3 and 4, not ne-
cessarily owned by one exhibitor -Bert
McBride and Glenn F. Johnston, Elsner
Pritchard and John Fitch, Aubrey Toll
Beat horses, ,any age, shown on halter
in classes 6, 7, 8 and 9 -Elmer Johnston
Ross McKague, Sam Curley, Best horse
shown on line in classes 1, 2, 3 and 4-•
Bert McBride, Elmer Pritchard, Ross
McKague; Half mile race by single
roadster -Sam Curley, 1st and 2nd.
Lady driver -Elmer Johnston, Ross
McKague, Sam Curley, Best gentle-
man's turnout -Ross McKague, Sam
Curley, Elmer Johnston. Beat matched
team -Elmer Pritchard, Massey -Harris
Coupon, Beat exhibit of 4 horses.
owned by 1 exhibitor -- Aubrey Toll,
Best exhibit of 4 horses owned by 1
exhibitor in classes 6, 7, 8 and 9 -El-
mer Johnston.
CATTLE
Purebred Shorthorn - Junior heifer
calf- W. A. Culbert, 1st and 2nd, W. R.
Pepper; Senior heifer calf -W. R. Pep-
per, 1st and 2nd; Year old heifer, W. A.
Culbert, 1st and 2nd, Roy Pepper; 2.
year old heifer -IW. A. Culbert, lst and
2nd, W. R, Pepper, Aged cow -W. A
Culbert, 1st, 2nd, and 3rd. Junior bull
ealf-W. T. Culbert, W. R. Pepper. Sr.
bull calf -W. A. Culbert, W. R. Pepper.
Bull, 1 year and under 2-W. A. Cul•
bert, Edgar Howatt & Sons. Aged bull
-Edgar Howatt, W. R. Pepper. Cham
pion bull -W. A. Culbert. Herd, hull
and 3 females -W. A. Culbert, Roy
Pepper. Get -of Sire, 3 animals -W. A
Culbert, W. R. Pepper.
Purebred Herefords -Jr. heifer calf:
Ivan Howatt, Edgar Howatt & Son, Ron
Pullman. Sr. heifer calf; Ivan Howatt
Year old heifer: Edgar Howatt, 2 year
old heifer: Edgar Howatt. Champion
female: Edgar Howatt; Jr. calf, bull:
Edgar Howatt. Sr. calf, bull: Edgar
Howatt, 1st and 2nd. Aged bull: Ed.
gar Howatt. Champion bull: Edgar
Howatt. Herd, hull and 3 females: Ed•
gar Howatt. Get of Sire, 3 animals:
Edgar Howatt.
Purebred Aberdeen Angus - Gordon
Ribey won all prizes from section 1 t'
13 in this class. The T. Eaton Special
for best finished steer was won by Mar•
jorte Rlnn. Best beef calf not a 4•t1
calf, junior section: Ivan Howatt, Doug
las Howatt,
pen of 4 bacon hags, won by Edgar
Howatt & Sons, Bank of Commerce
Special for Best pair sof Bacon Gilts,
won by Ab Bacon & Sons,
Pair geese; large variety, 1956: Mrs
E, Howatt, Ivan Howatt, S.C.W. Leg-
horn pullett; Wm. Carter. S,C,W, Leg•
horn cockerel; Wm, Carter, Barred
Rock pullett; M. rich, 1st and 2nd, Iv-
nn
vnn Howatt, Barred Rock cockerel; M.
Crich, 1st•and 2nd. Rhode Island Rad
pullett; M. Crich, 1st, 2nd and 3rd
Rhode Island Red cockerel: M. Crich,
1st, 2nd and 3rd, Pen of 3 market cock.
erla: Ivan Howatt, Wm, Carter, Pen of
bred -to -lay pulletts, 3, any breed: Wm
Carter, Mrs, L, Phelan, Ivan Howatt,
GRAIN
Half bus, fall wheat; Wm, Carter.
Half bus. early oats: Gordon Carter.
Half bus, late oats; K. M. Taylor &
San, Arnold Cook, Wm, Carter. 6
stalks ensilage corn; Mrs. K, Wubstcr
in color, new; Mrs. Raithby, Mrs, Flag.'Howes, Nancy Johnston, Betty Jean
gift, Pillow slips, lace trim: Mrs Cook, Jimmy Webster, Living -room
Schultz, Mrs. Ruithby, Vanity set; Mrs bouquet: Betty Jean Cook, Nancy John ( .
Schultz, Mrs, L. Phelan. Bath towel Mon, Shirley MnCullough, Donald El. -1
end wash cloth; Mrs, Schultz, Pillow Hatt.
slips, knitted lace: Mrs, Ilaggltt, Mrs,
Schultz, Roots and Vegetables - 12 potatoes
lute: Sharon Benninger, Melvhl Riehl,
Personal Wear -Work apron, most Jimmy Gibbons, Shirley McCullough.
serviceable: Mrs, Phelan, Mrs. Haggitt. 12 potatoes, early: Doug Scrimgeour.
Olney apron: Mrs, Hoggitt, Mrs, L. Jimmy Gibbons. Collection of vege-
Stonehouse. Best mode over garment: tables, 2 each of carrots, beets, potatoes,
Mrs, Webster, Mrs, L. Phelan. Bed tomatoes, onions: Diane Scaling, Shat' ri
socks; Mrs. Haggitt, Men's work shirt: Benninger, Douglas Scrimgeour, Mar -
Mrs, L. Stonehouse. Boys' Sport shirt; garet McCullough.
Mrs, L. Stonehouse.
Fruit -5 pears, any variety: Donald
Knitting -Men's fine socks, one color; Appleby, James Oliver.
Mrs. Hoggltt, Men's fine socks, fancy:
Mrs. Haggitt, Mrs, Gibbons, Men's Pets -Cat; Tom Slertsema, Maryann
mitts; Mrs, Haggitt. Child's mitts; Mrs Phelan, Rabbits, one pair: Judy Tama.
Best dog in show:
Haggitt, Lady's knitted sweater, new:Melvin Crich, Ivan
Mrs. Huba, Baby's jacket; Mrs. J. Kel• Blake, Dog showing least resemblance;
ly. Baby's bonnet and bootees, Mrs, J 'Jim Carter, Peter de Vries. Milian:,
Kelly, Ankle socks: Mrs. Haggitt. Wool 1 pair: Melvin Crich, Melvin Crich.
Most unusual pet: Judy Taman, turtle.
Gordon Carter. Crop Competition cusni. n• Mrs, R. Schultz, Mrs, Haggitt Doug Bell, goat. Fancy fowl; Melvin
sponsored by Blyth Agr, Society, don. I Blyth Women's Institute Special for 'Crich, Mel Crich,
ated by Wm. Gow: K. M. Taylor & Sou, New Canadians -Best display of hand -
Arnold Cook, Field Crop Corn: K. M. work consisting of 5 articles - Mrs Specials- Blyth Women's htstitute,
Taylor, Gordon Carter, L. Archam• Huba, Boys, best article made from wood by
bauli, Jack Lockhart,Miscellaneous-'!'wu embroidered tea, boy between age 10 to 14 in manual
towels: Mrs, Raithby, Mrs, Kellar, Pot training: Donald Adams; Girls, 1,i; doz.
holders, 3 different: Mrs, Haggitt, Mrs, bran muffins; Sutdra Henry, Sheila
hos-' Rnithby, 3 hand trimmed handker• Henry, Margaret McCullough,
chiefs: Mrs, Haggitt, Mrs, Schultz. Tat -1 Square Dancing Competition -No. 10
ROOTS AND VEGETABLES
6 field turnips: L. Phelan. 11
ket late potatoes: Mrs, Benninger, Mrs.
Haggitt, 11 qt. basket early potatoes:
Mrs. Haggitt, Mrs, Benninger. 6 carrots
table use: Mrs. Haggitt, Mrs. Galbraith,
6 beets, table use; Mrs. Howatt, Mrs.
Haggitt. 6 parsnips: Mrs, Haggitt, 6 qt,
basket yellow onions: Mrs. Stonehouse,
Mrs. Iiaggitt, 2 citron; Wm. Carter, 2
muskmelons: Mrs, Benninger, Wm
Carter. 2 watermelons: Mrs. L, Phelan
Ivan Howatt. 2 squash, Green Hub.
hard: Mrs. L. Phelan, Mrs. Benninger,
qt,
PAGE 5
Proclamation
VILLAGE OF BLYTH
RETURN TO STANDARD TIME
At the request of citizens, and by Resolution of
Council, under date of March 12, 1956, I hereby
proclaim that
DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME SHALL END ON
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30th, AT 12:01 A.M.
42-1, W. H. MORRITT, Reeve
1
calves were entered. !grave, 374; Ivan Howatt, RR 1, Bel -
First place in the division for junior grave, E73; Garnet Wright, RR 1, Lon -
calves of the Jersey, Guernsey and desboro, 371; Billy Blacker, RR 1, Clin•
Ayrshire breeds went to Wayne Jack• 'ton, 369; Charlie Crawford, RR 1, Aub -
son, Bly1h. Others in the top group urn, 365,
were Sharon Jackson, l.;iyth; Graham I Showmanship placings - Gordon R.
ted defile; Mrs Chellew. 3 hand -made Hullett, Grade 7 Blyth School, Grade 1 Jackson, Blyth; Don Lobb. Bayfield and ;Smith, George Procter, John Rinn, Ed -
dollies: Mrs. Gibbons, Mrs. Raithby. and 2 Blyth School. I Jho Harrison, Bayfield. Eleven calvesy'he Rinn, James F. Coultes,; Doreen
Large dollle, crochet 15" or over: Mrs.I Schools In parade and teachers: S.S. were entered,
Schultz, Mrs. Raithby, Article from 1 3, East Wawanosh and Morris, Mrs. Au• There were five entries in the senior
bag, flour, sugar, etc.; Mrs, Phelan, group of calves of the Jersey, Guern-
trey Toll; S.S. 10, East Wawanosh, Mrs,
Mrs. Schultz. Article made from plan Scott; S.S, 13, East Wawanosh Airs, i sey and Holstein breeds, with top place
tic; Mrs. Haggitt. Specials -Simpson's Wightman; S.S. 16 East Wawanosh, Aira,' going to the calt shown by Don Carter
Ltd„ London: Best quilt: Chellew Seaforth, Others entered were Dor •
Sid Lansing; S.S. 11 East Wawanosh
and Hullett, Alrs, Yungblut; S.S. 7 Hui- I othy Howatt, Blyth; Ernest Hessels.
lett, Nancy Webster; S.S. 12 Morris.' Seaforth;t Ruth Howatt, Blyth. and
Mrs, W. Hackwell; S.S. 10 Hullett, Bet - Richard Harrison, Bayfield,
ty Campbell; S.S. 5 Hullett, D. McKay; I The showmanship competition was
S.S. 1 Morris, Mrs. Plunkett; Blyth won by Betty Storey, with Wayne
School, Bob Ferris, Mrs. Hall, Miss Jackson second, and Patsy Aiarkle, Exe-
Taylor, Mrs. Carroll. ter, third. The inter -club contest was
!won by Exeter, with Blyth second, and
Banners -SS. 10 Hullett, S.S. 7 Hui.' Seaforth third,
lett, S.S. 12 Morris, S.S. 13 East Wawa- I Beef Calf Show -Score for calves -
nosh, S.S. 3 East Wawanosh and Morris. Steer section, Kenneth Black, Belgrave,
390; John Rinn, RR 5, Brussels, 389:
Weed Display Bouquet; Jayne Poi• Bob Gibbings, RR 1, Clinton, 387; Geo.
lard, Ronnie Elliott, Ruth Warwick. Procter, RR 5, Brussels, 386; Gordon
The following received 25c -,Bruce El- R. Smith, RR 1, Belgrave, 385; Kenneth
liott Frances Kelly, Jimmy Webster,
Coultes, RR 5, Wingham, 383; James F
Ann Howson, Sandra Berthot, Jimmy I Coultes, RR 5, Wingham, 381; Marjorie
Phelan, Tom Riley, Wayne Riley, Doug Rinn, RR 5, Brussels, 380; Edythe Rinn
Warwick, Sharon Benninger, Judy '1'a- ' RR 5, Brussels, 379; Norman Cart-
man, Marsha Tobbutt, Margaret Mc- wright. RR 1, Londesboro, 377; Michael
Cullough, Patsy Elliott, Jim Pollard, Hallahan, RR 3, Blyth, 375; Gordon
Madeline Lawrence, Audrey Lawrence, Charter, RR 3, Blyth, 370.
Douglas Scrimgeour, Valerie Holland, Senior heifer section -Ruth Procter
Peter de Vries, Allan Howes, Donald RR 5', Brussels, 380; Doreen Howatt,
Appleby, There was one without a RR 1, Belgrave, 379; Barry Pipe, RR 1
name. Londesboro, 377; Frank Hallahan, RR 3.
Mrs.
Mrs.
Raithby.
ARTS AND CRAFTS
2 pie pumpkins; Mrs, S. Benninger, Iv• Drawing or sketch, local scene: W.
an Howatt. 2 head white cabbage; Gow, 4 tally cards: Mrs. Chellew,
Mrs, F. Benninger, Mrs, A. Haggitt. Crayon, any subject: Miss J. Woodcock.
2 head red cabbage; Mrs. Haggitt. h Water colors, animals, grouped or stn•
cars sweet corn: Wm. Gow, Mrs. Web I gle: W. Gow, Simpson -Sears, Ltd.stet, 6tomatoes: Mrs. Phelan, Airs, L I Special-Alost number of points from
Stonehouse. 2 cauliflowers; Mrs, F classes 25 to 33 Mrs, Haggitt, Blyth,
Benninger. 2 kolerabi: Mrs. A, Haggitt,
Largest pumpkin: Mrs. J. Kelly, Mrs
A. Haggitt, Best collection; Mrs. Hag-
gitt, Mrs. J. Kelly.
DOMESTIC SCIENCE
Specials -Gorman Eckert & Co.: Best
chili sauce, Mrs. A. Haggitt, Canada
Packers: Bost apple pie: Mrs, Stone.
house, Mrs. Haggitt, Mrs. Benninger.
Best white layer cake: Mrs. Stone-
house, Mrs. Archambault, Mrs. Irvine
Bowes. Magic Baking Powder: Single
layer white cake: Mrs. L. Stonehouse
Mrs. I. Bowes.
FLOWERS
Aster, 3 blooms: Mrs. Stonehouse
Mrs. Kellar, Marigold, large, 3 blooms:
Miss Woodcock, Mrs. Chellew, Culen-
dulas, 5 bloom; Mrs. Phelan, Mrs. Kat.
lar. Pansy display: Miss Woodcock
Mrs. Kellar, Zinnia, large, 3 blooms:
Miss Woodcock. Mrs, Gibbons. Zinnia,
fancy, 5 blooms: Mrs. Raithby, Mrs
Stonehouse. Collection 4 annuals, 3
sprigs each: Mrs. Stonehouse, Mrs.
Galbraith. Dahlia, bloom: Mrs. Kellar
Mrs. Stonehouse. Dahlia, 3 blooms'
Baking -Sponge cake, not Iced: Mrs Mrs. Kellar, Mrs. Chellew, Gladiolus
J. S. Chellew, Mrs. Irvin Bowes. Choc.1 spike: Mrs, Kellar, Miss Woodcock.
Gladioli, in basket: Mrs. Kellar, Mrs
elate loaf cake, Iced: Mrs. Stonehouse Raithby, Rose, 1 bloom; Mrs, Gibbons.
Mrs Edgar Howatt, Banana layer cake: I Roses, display: Miss Woodcock, Mu
Airs. E, Howatt, Mrs, Stonehouse. 6
Gibbons. Dining -room bouquej; not
cup cakes, 2 different kinds. decorated: I over 9": Mrs, Stonehouse, Mrs, Atcham-
Mrs, Howatt, Mrs, Stonehouse. Jellied •bault Living -room basket: Mrs. L.
fruit salad; Miss J. Woodcock, Mrs. Phelan, Mrs, Raithby. Salvia, best dig -
E, Howatt. Jellied vegetable salad: lay: Mrs. Phelan, Snapdragon
Miss J. Woodoxk, Mrs. Howatt. Can- display: Miss Woodcock, Mrs. Galbraith
dy, maple cream, Mrs. Howatt, Candy Best house plant in bloom: Mrs. Gib -
chocolate fudge: Mrs. Archambault bons. Cosmos display: Mrs. Galbraith.
, Pumpkin pie: Mrs. Bowes, Mrs. Stone. Mrs. Phelan. Mixed bouquet: Mrs. were as follows:
house. Cherry pie, lattice top: Mrs.Dairy Class Chan
;•'anship - Patsy
Benninger, Mrs, Stonehouse, RolaIn Stonehouse, Miss Woodcock. Marshall, Kirkton, had t"e best junior
Arnold Berthot Special, for most
pie, lattice top: Mrs. J. Kelly, Mrs. Holstein calf in the Huron County 4-11
points in flowers; won by Miss Jose-
Stonehouse, Tats, 3 butter, 3 jun Dairy Calf Club championship show,
Mrs. Howatt, Mrs. Haggitt. White phine Woodcock. Others whose calves went to t••e final
bread, 1 loaf: Mrs. Stonehouse, Mrs I Group Display --Group 1 of the W. A. round of judging for the county title
1 Benninger. Plain buns; Mrs. Stone- of Blyth United Church. were: Betty Storey, Seaforth; Joan
' house, Mrs. Kelly. 6 tea biscuits: Mrs. Johnston, Clinton; Robert Grey, Bay •
Howatt, Date loaf: Mrs. Howatt, Bran JUNIOR SECTION field; Jack Dunn, Bayfield; Edith Boyd,
muffins: Mrs Howatt Airs Archam• Seaforth; Cecil Bruinsma, Clinton.
Dairy .Cattle - Purebred Ayreshires:; Sandwiches, 4 varieties, afternoon tea:1 George Cowan, Allan Howes, Ian Wat• Holstein division of the championship
Juniors Prominent Among
Fair Competitors
Junior achievement days were among
the outstanding features at Blyth Fall
Fair last Saturday, and fine exhibits
and good showmanship was evident a
mong "-e young people of the county
who brow:* ' their stock to the Fair. t
Results of '• ^, Various club exhibits
bault, Plate 6 macaroons: Mrs. Howatt. Writing -Grade 1: Marion Younghlut, There were 19 entries in the junior
Jr. heifer calf: Mervin T.obb, Jim Har- .Mrs, Howatt. Childs, 2: birthday cake, son. GradePaul Deer, Bruce El- show.
lT l t' t is first
rison, M. Lobb. Sr. heifer calf: Edgar
Howatt & Son. Richard Harrison, Edgar
Howatt & Son. Year old heifer: Edgal
Howatt & Son, Beverley Nott, M. Lobh
2 year old heifer: M. Lobb, 1st and 2nd,
E. Howatt & Son, Aged cow, E. Howatt
& Sons, M. Lobb, 2nd and 3rd, Chain -
pion female: M. Lobb. Jr, bull calf:
E. Howatt & Sons, 1st and 2nd, Sr
bull calf: M. Lobb, Bull, 1 year and
under 2: E. Howatt & Sons. Champion
bull; M. Lobb, Herd, bull and 3 fe-
males, M. Lobb, E. Howatt & Sons
Get of Sire, 3 animals: M. Lobb,
Howatt & Sons,
Purebred Jerseys -Jr. heifer calf:
Wayne Jackson, Sharon Jackson, Lorne
Carter. Sr. heifer calf: Lorne Carter.
1st and 2nd. Year old heifer: Lorne
Carter, lst and 2nd, 2 year old heifer'
Lorne Carter. Bull, 1 year and under
2: L. Carter. Herd, bull and 3 females
L. Carter. Get of Sire, 3 animals; L.
Carter. Special = Best dairy heifer
calf, not 4-H Junior Section -Donald
Carter, Dorothy Howatt, Ronnie How.
att.
SHEEP
Ephriam Snell and Emka Bros. took
all prizes in the sheep classes.
HOGS
Yorkshires --Boar, 1 year or over: A
Bacon. Boar, over 6 months and under
1 year: Ron Pullman, A. Bacon. Boar
decorated for 8 year old boy: Mrs. Kel- Mott, Danny Campbell, James Henry. In the senior o s em ca f c as , .
ly, Mrs. Howatt. Grade 3: Betty Jean Cook. Sharon Cur• place went to Murray Hunter, Luck.
Ile, Anne Knapp, Johunne deVrics.' now, and others in the top group were
Canned Goods, Pickles Etc, -- Mrs Grade 4: Sandra Henry, Valerie Hol- Wayne Fear, Blyth; Joan Hunter, Luck.
Haggitt, Mrs. Stonehouse. Jar canned land, Peter deVries, Douglas Warwick, now; Tom Hern, Woodham; Edith Boyd.
corn: Mrs. Galbraith, bars. iIaggitt' Grade 5: Cheryl Madill, 1•ian Kimstra Seaforth; Gloria. Boyd, Seaforth, Twelve
Jar canned pests; Mrs. Haggitt Jnr Joe Heffron, Sandra Berthot, Grade 6:
canned beans: Mrs. Galbraith. Jar can. Lena Dougherty, Nancy Johnston, Dor.
red peaches: Mrs. Benninger, Mrs. othy Bailie, Sharon Jackson. Grade 7:
Bowes, Jar canned raspberries: Mrs. Ronnie Walsh, Elaine Johnston, Audrey
Benninger, Mrs. Galbraith, Jar canned Lawrence, Susan Wightman, Grade 8:
pears: Mrs. Stonehouse. Jar canned Helen Yungblut, Margo Grange, Diane
cherries, red: Mrs. Bowes, Jar sweet cu -
Radford, Charlie Knox,
cumber pickles: Mrs, Benninger, Mrs
Stonehouse. Jar dill pickles, Mrs. Ben- Art -Grade -1: James Webster, John
ninger. Mrs. Haggitt Martnadale, 2 va• Armstrong, Brenda Thuell, Ian Watson,
rieties: Mrs. J. Kelly, Jam, raspberry: Grade 2: Marianne deVrtes, James Gib -
Mrs. Phelan, Mrs. Bowes, Jam, straw- bons, Ruth Warwick, Bruce Elliott
berry: Mrs, Phelan, Mrs. Stonehouse, Grade 3: John Martin, Betty Oliver,
Apple sauce: Mrs. Stonehouse, Mrs. E. Gerald Murphy, Melvin Riehl, Grade
Howatt. 4: Douglas Warwick, Willie Dougherty
Needlework -Quilt, placed, cotton Peter deVries, Valerie Holland, Grad:
5: Sharon Gray, Allan Fairservice
Nits, A. Haggitt, Mrs, F. Raithby. Quilt Sandra Berthot, Lila Blnck, Grade 3'
pieced, cotton, mixed colors: Mrs. R Nancy Johnston, Betty Siertsema, Sitar.
Schultz, Mrs. J. ISelly, Quilt, applique: on Jackson, Henry Martin. Grade 7•
Mrs, Raithby, Mrs, R. Schultz, Quttt ,Betty Blair, Susan Wightman, John
any other; Mrs. Chellew, Mrs, Haggitt McDowell, Joanne Hoogenboom, Grade
Quilt, fancy quilting, Mrs, Schultz, Quilt 8: Jim Ko, Ernest McVittie.
crazy design: Mrs, Schultz, Mrs. Hag.
gitt. Crib quilt: Mrs. Haggitt. Mat, Specials -Grades 1, 2, 3 and 4: Col•
hooked with rags: Mrs. Ralthby, Airs. lection of Buttons: Allan Howes, Mar.
R. Schultz. Mat, braided: Mrs. Gibbons garet McCullough, Donuld Scrimgeour
Mrs, Haggitt, Mat any other; Mrs. Diane Selling, Grades 5 and 0, musle
Gibbons. scrap book: Cheryl Madill, Linda Coul-
tes, Lena Dougherty. Grades 7 and 8:
Living Room -Cushion, wool design poetry: Murray Scott. Girls' collet•
on velvet or satin; Mrs, lTuba, Mrs. R. tion of weeds, mounted and named.
Schultz. Table- centre, ruffled: Mrs. Nancy Johnston, Linda Coultes„ Lila
under 6 months: A. Bacon. Champion , Schultz, Mrs. Haggitt, Chesterfield set, Black, Margaret McCullough, Dorothy
male: A, Bacon. Mr. Bacon won tha 3 pieces: Mrs. 'loggiti, Mrs, Kellar, Howatt. Boys' collection, 12 kinds of
balance of the prizes with the exception Dining Room -Buffett set, 3 pieces; insects, mounted and named: Allan
of one third for sow, 6 months and un• Mrs. Haggitt, Mrs. Raithby. White tab. Howes, Peter deVries.
der 1 year, whloh was taken by Lornr le centrepiece, crochet flat; Mrs. Hog• Flowers -Dahlia, 6 blooms: Ronny
Carter. sow under 6 months. A. Bacon gilt. Runner, 4 place mats: Mrs. Hag-
James Lobb, A Bacon. Specials Walsh, Robbie Lawrie, Shirley Me-
- Haggitt, 1st and 2nd. Lace cloth: Mrs, Cullough, Ross nodgins. Gladioli, t?
T. Eaton Special for pen of 3
Huba, Mrs. Kellar.
bacon hogs, won by Boyd 'filer, spikes:
spikes: Diane Selling, Margaret AlcCul•
Watson Bros. Special of $10 for l Bedroom -Pillow slips, embroidered lough, Gordon Haggitt, Betty Jean
Cook. Dining -room bouquet: Allzn
Blyth, 375; Allan Scott, RR 1, Belgrave.
368.
Junior heifer section - Billy Craw-
ford, RR 1, Auburn, 378; Murray Scott,
RR 1, Belgrave, 377; Roy McLean, RR
1, Clinton, 375; Lyle Smith, RR 1, Bel-
1-Iowatt, Bob Gibbings, Kenneth Coultes.
Kenneth Black. Ruth Procter.
Dairy Calf Show - Showmanship
scores: Wayne Jackson, Blyth, 90; John
Siertsoma, Blyth, 88; Joanne Hunter,
RR 1, Lucknow. 86; Murray Hunter,
RR 1, Lucknow, 84; Dorothy Howatt,
RR 1, Belgrave, 82; Sharon Jackson,
Blyth, 80; Larry Fear, RR 4, Brussels,
78; Ruth Howatt, RR 1, Belgrave, 76;
Howard Cartwright, RR 3, Blyth, 71;
Wayne Fear, RR 4, Brussels, 72; Violet
Gow, RR 2, Auburn, 70; Keith Walpole,
RR 3, Walton, 68; Graham Jackson,
Blyth, 66; Bob Hunter, Lucknow, 64;
Brian Spiegelberg, RR 2, Auburn, 62.
Best senior Holstein calf: Murray
Hunter, Best Jersey calf: Wayne Jack.
S011, Blyth. Best Ayreshire calf, Dor-
othy Howatt.
ATTENDING CONVENTION
airs. B. Hall is in London this week
attending the Bi -Annual Convention of
the Ladies Auxiliary to the Canadian
Legion, being held at Hotel London.
During her absence, Mrs. Walter But -
i tell is relieving teacher at the Public
School. Mrs. L. McGowan, Mrs. Ed.
Bell and Mrs. Ann Sundercock attend-
ed the Convention on Tuesday.
GOOD
It's almost unbelievable but we've
had several, dry sunny days in succes-
sion, and farmers have made the best
of it to clean up the last of the har-
vesting.
WEATHER
NOW IS THE TIME
TO SOW FALL WHEAT & WINTER BARLEY
We have For Sale:
1. REG. GENESEE WHEAT
2. KENATE WINTER BARLEY grown on
our own farm.
R. N. ALEXANDER
LONDESBORO.
on Debentures
and Guaranteed 's
Trust Certificates
.for 3, 4; r
/and 5 years'
33/a% for 'one and two years;
�HURONar&t:ERIE
Head Office -London, Ontario.
Distri ;t Representative: Gordon B. Elliott, Blyth.
PAGE
THE HUTH STANDARD Wedhesday, Sept. 26, 1656
News Of Auburn & District
W. I. Annual Grandmother's DayAinchan, Miss Josephine McAllister Synodicn)s and the Presbyterials, She,'rare and valuable coins and bills were
land Mrs, Wes Bradnock, also gave a great dual of !atormatIon • shown; one collection of card money
The annual Grandmother's Day was W.M.S. ,11EET1NG concerning the various missionaries I shown by J. D. Ferguson, of Rock Is• A. H. Wilford, Trade Fair Specialist "
observed last Tuesday by the Woolen's; The September meeting of the Wo• both al home and abroad, of Miss Pel land, Quebec, is the only full set In the was in Blyth on Tuesday and reports
Institute when they met for their Sep- I men's liissionary Society was held last ion's to; 'erseas secretary+ work and of world, 1l consists of bills which wero excellent progress and c0 -operation in
tember meeting in the Orange Hall 'Thursday at the home of the President her place being now taken by A3is: made on playing cnrds and Issued tr his Infest string of Western Ontario
with a 'urge attendance. The Grand • A1rs, Wellington G: nd, who opened th; Whale, t'irnu'r editor of the Glad Tfd. the French soldiers In Quebec around Trade Fairs -•••this the third of the cur•
another's were welcomed by the Presl• tweeting. The Glad Tidings prayer tea: ings.l Alt's, Hamilton spoke especially 1757. Other rare hills now was the $7 rent season coming up at New Hamburg
dent, lits. Gaud, andalso Mrs. Fd, D:+•' read in unison. The hymn "Come 1.'t.of the need of work among the cin. the $3 and the SI bilis on display, October 1 to 5,
vies and Mrs, Lloyd C'rnig, who pinned
'thankful People Conic," was sung with nren of the churches, and said the focus Mrs, Alvin Leatherinnd was a Lon- Mr Wilford was distributing poster;
a ribbon c:'rsage with 1956 engraved Mrs. Duncan. MacKay presiding at the of the fall work would be nn Chdldren'E don visitor last 'Thursday, in support of the Fair, which he said
on the blue and itnld colours of the or- ori:,n The Devotional Service '.vas Misstep Bands and CG1'l' groups, She' Visitors with Mr. Arthur Youngblut had been printed in large volume by
gr.nization. They were ushered to their by nils, Aihutir 11'ngner, who stressed the need for stewardship that Sunday were, Mr, and Airs. Leonard the New Hamburg Chamber of Com -
taken
Beats by Airs. William Rudd and Mrs chose Psalm 96, gave meditation on the office eel tits grunt devotion to the • Younf;blut and family. of Windsor, Mr merce.
Thomas Ilaggitt, who were dressed in same and offered prayer. The roll call work of Christ. It means the business mad lits, Clarence Walden and lnmily The p engram at. Nev Hamburg will
the costume of the gay nineties. The was answered by a verse from the Buok of life itself. We must be obedient tr of Seaforlh, and A1fss Lila Youngblu! follow along the lines of his prev{au'
meeting was opened by the President ,;f Ruth. A reading was given by Mrs tate cununands of Jesus and follow ilio: R.N., of Goderich,, shows of the you, with a reception din
!Mrs, Wellington Good, with the pianist Ed Davies. The minutes of the Aug. ,bidding. We must have the uprenrh. Mrs. Gorden Miller entertained re ncr being given Monday, Oct. 1st, the
Mrs. Robert J. i'hilli;r,, at the piano. test meeting were read by Mrs. Ross, the' the dawnreach. and the outrench. 13e ,centlY in honour of her daughter opening day of the Fair. for Mr. John
with the Ode. 0 Canada, Mary Stewart secretary. Plans were made for the. ' honest, be generous, be prayerful, and Gail's 7th birthday. The little guests Fisher, famous CBC commentator.
C:llrct and the Lord's Prayer led by
Fall Thank -Offering meeting when ihr 'your stewardship will be a jay. Shc I were, Judy Arthur, Bonnie and Sharon A. II. reports arena space at New
1Irs, Bogert Chanmry. The Roll C,+l• guest ;pcaker will be Rev. 1)..1. Lane ' w••' thanked by Mrs, .1. F. Scott, of McKinnon, Betty Moss, Nancy Ander. 'Hamburg ah•endy taken up, and general
was anstrered by naming one of Grar.d• i and the ladies of Blyth Presbyteriir ' Sen forth for her address. After the I son, Mary and Margaret Sanderson 'enthusiasm mounting as the days draw
rnother's Cures, which were very num. Church and the Auburn Baptist Church busines:e report, the Rally closed with Brigefte S1itchling, Marie Plunkett, near. Ile invites al his Trade Fait
erous, frcnl cninn poultices to sonny will be the Guests. The chapter of the . prayer by Mrs. R. McLean, of Hensull :Carol Brown, Linda Andrews and Ting• I friends of this district to visit the New
tea. The minutes of the prcyiou`' Study Book "They Reach !en Life." w;,s ; Mi. and Mrs. H. Afogridgc are at the born Alai'Kay• hamburg show,
meeting were read by the secrtary. Mas. ;given by Mrs. John Graham. A mho. home of their daughter, Mrs. Geri While in town Mr. Wilford was else
Bcrt Craig and also the financial report' 1 he Beautiful Garden of Prayer," wasIARu'sIt r,nd A'Ir, itTarsh of Pctrrsbut•g,
MRS, ISABELLA ANDERSON
given. Delegates were appninted to g'1 sten, by Airs, Wes Bradnock. After the Mrs. Maudaud Frcmlin is visitingchecking on turnip production at the
her Well known throughout this district. plan' of Mr, Russell Dougherty, when:,
to the Area Convention next monthHi offering t'. as received and the hymn sister, Mrs. Chester Taylor, and fern -Mrs. Isabella Andersen, 94, riled las' shipping and processing of the 19J+:
1\11-1*. W. G:cd. and alternate, Mrs. Ger•,,•Follow• Me." was sung, Miss Minnie 'sly ;,t St. Helens. Thursday in a Brentford Nursing Iiontr crop is {n full swig. He reports an
don R. Taylor. It was decided to Wagner closed with prayer. I Mrs. Wm. '1', Robison. Miss Margaret 1 where she had been confined for 2 l exceedingly large volume with the qu:t:
change the date of the next meeting to i A Ladies' Aid mooting 1!111nwed, with IL Jackson and Mrs. Fred Ross, it- weeks. The funeral service teas car• Int suffering somewhat from inclement
Fr•day, Oct. 12. The fall project: the President, Mrs. }:d Davies, in ,fended the Huron County Library ducted by Rev. R. G.
11CAldllan at lodge tvc;ttlter condillons,
"Steeping Garments." will be sponsored charge, and the business was discussed I iiiietirlg in Goderich 1,st Friday. They funeral home last Monday at 2 p.m,
by the Instittute and Mrs. Ed Davies was The hostess served dainty refreshment: ale) attended the banquet in the ev- ;Internment was in Colborne cemetery.
repainted to see if she could get lead• told a social hour enj'yed. Mrs. Wel• ening, Born in West Watv;utosh township sh•.'
ers for the Oct.uhel meeting. The se'c' lington Good, Mrs. Fred Ross. M.'s.:\l• Nr, and Ails Douglas Youngblut of i was the. daughter of the lata George Crop Report
retary announced that the short yoursr vin Leothcrland, Mrs. John Graham Brantford visited over the week -end . Young and Isabella Clark Young. Shy
in millinery will be. here on April 1. 2 From Bandag, Sept, 111th to Friday
1rrs. Herb. Govier, Mrs, Ed Davies. Mrs.; with his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Percy Iresided in Colborne and Goderich tmwn• Sept, ?1st, l.bri Inches of rainfall fel!
a. :1n P,r;,ea1 f r .1 donation to the
Carrion Dobie, Airs. Hensel), Airs, Don 'inungblut and Betty (ship before moving to Goderich where
r'linn n ilosoi' i1 t':r,s left over for a , IIn the County, with the result that ltnr-
i,Id Haines rind Mrs, ii', Bradnock a Harvest Horne Services will be help she spent most of her life.Four year t'e,ting operations were again curtail
later nteetird Mrs. W. T. Rotended the Huron Presbyterial held re• Inext Sultrily, Sept. 30th, al St. Mark'.; ngu she moved to Brantford, Sirs. An
pre,dent rt the Library Br,lyd, asked.coal+ ort St. Andrew', Presby'teriatt 'ed. Approximately one-third of the
Anglian Church with the minister, the Verson was a member oI Knox }sresby' ' sprint; grnfn crop is stilt to be bravest -
en that everyn;c a 1st in the bake sale Church. Blyth. The theme for the Ret'. nren deVries, in c:nares. Special urian Church and the Goderich Octo-;'
for that nr uhirltinr.. The grandmoth•ed• Much of this crop Is rotting {n
!sally r as "Stewardship." The morn- . music will he supplied by the choir, tenarialh Club. Her late husbnmi, i the stook Some formers ore rotting
e' -s Itrrsertr'1 the prgram. Cummun ITh session opened at 10 o'Icock with Ser vies will be held et 12 'coon and Thomas Anderson, died in 1934. She is
sly sinking t': as lel by airs. Fred Plaut the Devotional period conducted by c ,• the sheaves as n last resort, The her -
'Ars,
7.:;,1 in the retain);. survived by two sons, R+lllam E., of vesting of the canning corn crop is In
xerReedit;>1. "Grandmnthern cHandsil the Clinton and Seafarth Auxiliaries 1 A special Pnll;; Daly servie.e was held Brantford, James A., of Dayton, Ohio, I
Berl, G•,vier. Al;nol c n \1rs. D. Glen Campbell. president of full swing, but has been sonu'tehnl
p ia�t Surldny in Knox Presbyterian and one daughter Mrs• Robert Cole' ham cord by•the twct cvenlher and mud
solo. "T':c Ol ! l'i!1' i;e Church was the }loran Presbyterial, spoke on the , p
I
Church. Ed;:,r Leather' nd anri Geral ] man, of Bow Island, Alberto, and also dy canditfnns of the fields, The white
rang by Mrs. Wm J Craig in old•tymo • theme of the rally. She compared Dobie read the scripture lessons dill 9 grandchildren tinct 19 great grand-
and
octume. !.its G' ur e Sturdy roes ca!• 1 bean crop 15 nearly all ripe, but herr
r,• • Mrs. Wes Brad• fife �or.leu'ss of our sacrifices in the ducts .:ung by Merle Lcatherland and children. Pallbearers for the funeral : teyt uperati have been slowed fav'
led to the f..,f tnh end ,1 great sacrifices of Jesus. She said Mahar Margaret Haines and Helen and Betty were Edgar Lawson, .loin Houston of
rock presenicd her with a small rc • 1'uunp Lhlt. Rev. D. J. Line :poke on Auburn, Fronk Young, William 13issr'+1 I because of poor weather, nncl a of
nota' that allocatinrs arc dune aw a'';this the crop o rusting hardy ccn pulled
me?nhr�r,ca. Ir. ter. =iota address `'h,c ,,; ith in the IV,MS Societies, that our " ;
stated that it : a: '^ ^'r ars ago this the theme And •Jesus Siod, •1 twill 1)11119 Scott Yount A, H. Erskine of Gndel'ich.' 1>cans arc rottir,f on the ground. 'I'h:
•aura l is a matter between an and try Church." Airs. Dcnald Haines twos I immature corn crop suffered severe
month that the first Grandmother's Da; o:ar elr ce, We err, living in age of organist and a children's choir led in
h,r! ^nr'1 hell at airs :i`•1^"1 :? ''n+•r'" • hi BE Gl; AVEi mnage. from heavy frosts during the
hie') wive:, but no matter how' high ill• Sltl°111 r of the hymns J J J x c J
week, this crop needed two or three
cveeks of fine weather to properly mat -
tare,
Attcnrdr•ncc at Fall Fairs has been
considerably below normal, one Fair
was rained out and another postponed
during the week. Fourteen 4-11 clubs
with good exhibits and excellent cntn•
}Actions were the main attractions al
the three Fairs held in the County dur-
ing the week.
New Hamburg Trade Fair
"Biggest Ever" Says A. H.
It ^'.:'r 1'oi;'.9 11;t sh!' n•- td he able the prices, we never pay the whole+ Mr. nncl Mrs Robert J. Phillips were
isd. cur meetings often. g1' . St'c ;The September meeting of the tin•
r'•' t} 111'•'"1 artery`)"" f"r lite gift. Each price. 11l'c pay for the good things of guests recently with 51rs, Mel Jewell, of''c Institute r held on the
• life e it t cash. Lot they hove been paid Goderich, also vdsiting her was her sis• I
;.r l/!'na then v.:il ,win had hull) the sur with blood. Every great hfghtc';ty I evening with a good attendance. Mrs
'- 'i'r•: li,'nri in !IOW :Inti how many titer, Mrs. Rlchnrd 1[ t, of Toronto. melts111,, Scott, tea presidcnl, was in the
every great bridge• ane many great, A1rs. John Arthur has returned from'
coon Tee had occupie d it dr it was buildings have cost the life -blond of chub' and opened the meeting in the
hula. S with selincccumpaninhent ; visiting her c[,uehter Mrs. Gorden 1
tonne .nr'. 'rite Inst of maintaining char• It ;MI and fim1Jy, it Hulyrrnd, usual manner, The minutes of the by aLs. Sirincy .lTrCline:ley. abut n c.h,:s, of keeping missionaries in for• previous meeting were rend and the
t0j �':!tn Lnrrewerl rvro'icll ing, twos Mr .and Mrs. Ray Farraw, of Mitchell treasurer's report given. rbc shore
r11' and home field;, of work among and Ms. and Mrs. Long, of Flint, 1Siich•
cnie,. 1 L:' everyone. Readutgs "Sc.•ds ,he young and old. tinct many other course date we asked to have
rofe Kindncs;" and "A Smile t':^i. siren, visited on S•titn•day with Mr. and changed will which enow of March
needs related to ourii 1i5 social m cost Mrs. 'Phomas Johnston,
re;rl by lits Robert GordonR y. Acmorayswe 28th. The October meeting will be held
giving The need is hgaat. Are tie Sir. and Mrs. Robert ,1. Craig, Carolyn!
cerdiun solo, Airs. rdon R. Llylor giving to God as Ile has given to u;. , on Ociobar tfith In the Forrester's Ha;1
Ars. Fol Davies took re charge of the 1 Vera Irnd Jeff, of Ilderton. visited rat 1
God wants us to be faithful stewards. the borne of his parents, Mr. and Mrs iwhen other Branches will be guests at
contests. Frites were presegtes to 11d , Are we rood of our sten;ardshi Shc i the meeting. Airs. A. E. Coultes and
p + p' l it ..l. Craig. Mrs. M. Taylar were named Vele ears
Alfred Nesbitt for the, youngest grand• told how' in the middle of the last yen- , 6+
child: lira 5:;,r,lry Johns;c,n f 1r t:rr 'Mr, and Mrs. Water Slitchling had l whh Mrs. W. Scutt ns an alternate, tr,
fury the Gurdon Brothers gave their
grandmother with the most teeth of her lives as ntis,irnlfcs in the Hebrides. Nr their h,ne moved to Its new lncatLop the Arca Convention in London to
own:: Mrs. Earl Wiehtmnn for the s;nal• lief Friday by ihr. Parson's Moving prier. even death, tray I{,r, gr pot October, it was cxpccU'rl the member_
lest irle tli1-d Air.. »i 1, •.d Phillips for Equipment, of Staffa. of the Junior ms exuee would be hers
` i them. f f they h old grin, the mus age
the airiest 1•d•: present. Pictures were alts, r1'Icc Wilson and 11 r. and Mrs ,
f Carist to the lhcatecn. iVhen we r ent but only n few were able to at•
•
taken by Mks Laurel Phillips. heal c1r• John Robinson rnec Ella May 1lilson) tend. •
` complain of giving, do the think of ter of Port Credit, visited tall
week
with A splendid paper was giyrn by Mrs.
re.ponricnt f'r T''. of oldest tamim+ noire our missi;naries p:+y, Mrs. wul•
Mrs. George Stittdy, Younrr,:ct ;ra::d. Mr. ail Mrs, Robert J. Phillips. Lcslle Bolt on the motto ivGaon a lik
ler Shorircecd, pres'dcnt of thin Blyth I
ml, Mrs. „Iwi'; l,c;,therl,nr.i. ne'. +hL\iS, welcomed the ladies of tic' 11 r, and Mrs. Lewis Holtby. Russel. tie, Mend a little less." Roll call waa
111'
grandchildren, dirt R her' Chamncv Marlene and Herbert, of Belmont, els- well responded In with miming a use
Pre. hyterhl to the Blyth church. Re• j
Theit meets e rinsed '.wi'h the M.ttienat tied near the week end with Mr, and for salt, Mrs. Charles ?bitters, Blue
ports of the different departments were'
r'•.nthem. Th^ hns',r�s:'. were: llrr Ed given 1lrs. Ed Davits. fore, lgave n aCharleunder the Bcue,
I)at'ie., air= L,i„;ri Cr.ur;. \ir . Keita ret and the roll call answered A1r, and Mrs. Gordon R. 'Taylor vis ,
ing of 'Memories." Joyce Procter
Greetings from Presbytery were c:n• ifr'd on Sunday with thele' daughter, �"
__.___.____ � vcyed in a letter written by Rev. D. •1 Mrs. linnrld Rothwell, Mr. itatlnveil conducted a gttfiz, l)o You Knr»v.
~�-
Line. moderator, and read by the sec• which brought forth much information
•and Al. ,,,i rl John, of Dresden, At the close of the meeting, lunch was
octant, Miss Celle Campbell. yet ; M 1 A] Coultes Mrs. 0
11r old Mrs noncan MacKay wereDinnvr was served by the ladies of the
NV
ennrninu easel„n „1.,�,..r ,,.err, .......... } , „ served by' Cs. , . •,
gueat singers al the Harvest Home
TEESWATER
FALL FAIR Blyth Church
I•Ilggins, Mrs. II. Proct9r, Mrs.
Services .et Port Albert Anglican Church' Scott and Mrs. A. E. Coultes,
i last Sunday', , � • the. F
A 1 tee number attended the annual 1'r'w hall on Friday night to honor of
OCTOBER 2 AND the singing of the hymn, "Fight 1ha Fall Fair held at Blyth last Saturday
Good fight.” The dccctdortul criod Mr, and Mrs. Leslie Shnw, Mrs. Shaw
was taken by the Arnald Circle` Her -
Felled teas postponed from \Vcdncsduywas the former Mss Donna Anderson
Outstanding Livestock Show
previous on account of wet weather, Dancing was enjoyed to the music of
1 -II Club Shocw, call, nr.d the "In Memoriam" was Gun•,
ducted by A1rs. 0. Anrlursnn, Bel' Mr. D, A. MacKay and his pitpflr Da ce•5 nrchoatra, At lunch time the
Bands--iiarnea Raeee--Vaudeville „rave. r
of IJ.S,S. No. ,, Bullet:, took part in
1,00!1 reserved seat.; for afternoon Musical numbers were: a solo. Mrs, young couple were addressed by Clif•
orandstard, 75c; Rush Seats, 50c, Win. lirnv: n, ilonsall. and the sextett, the. parade. Congratulations to hits' ford Coulter and presented with a purse
Frank Huithhy for her many exhibits e ,
rum Goderich. were muelt ,,,,, i of money by George Johnston,
d. Thr: guest sl,cakcr for the after. lit, lilutrn Scl.ter. of Rrgisia, yam Al r, and Mrs. John Armstrong of
"dnoMs nest Arthur Hamilton, At• h,15 here visiting his sister. Mrs. Edgar.Montrcnn were visitors with relative:
l,nw'son. for the past In weeks, left
wood, win was introduced by Mrs, D err<'•
.1. Lane. Clinton. Mrs. Hamilton it last week with Mr Richard 'Caylu►', +,f I Clifford Coulters has returned to w'nt
irtnnt of the tla:nino -London Syr- Chatham, 1 :r a short visit before con-
Mrs.
College where he commences hie
timing his journey west.
radical from which she brought grey', sernnd year w'trk.
Ines. Mrs. Hamilton gays an inform. .11rs. c cousinlielde,
o! Toronto, Grto, IS vis• Mr. and Mrs. Ross Procto and chil-
itmf her cousin, Mrs. John Graham lh)
Jive and inspiring address. She ex•dren of Burlington, were week -end
piained the relationship between the visitors with bar, and Mrs, J S. Proc•
• Exexutive aiureil in Toronto and the ter,
The afternson session opened ;'itis I A reception t•,es held ill t ores•
in the Arena, Oct. 3. R:30 pan.,
II0LII).1V RANCH
Cr•nada's ';`,1.0 Popular Tclev'isk,
Sh'.w. with Cliff McKay and Mur,•
ique Cadieux -2 hour Stige Show
i Dancing 1.1'I 1 a rra —Eight Musicians
1
Adrrti isir,n:
X125; Children ander 12, 5f)c
c.
week,
Mrs. Robert Coleman. of Bow Island,
Alberta, hos been visiting her rousins
In the; community lest week. Mrs Mr, and h1ra, Goldie Wheeler and
Coleman was formerly Nellie Anderson family of London, with relatives here
daughter ,af the late Mr, and Mrs. '1'Itos on Sunday.
Anderson and was born in the house Mr. and Mrs. Gurdon Hill and family
now occupied by Mrs. Wililam Stewart of Varna with Mr. and Mrs. K. H.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Asquith re• Wheeler, on Sunday.
turned home lest week after visiting Mr. Marlin Grasby spent the week•
their family In Toronto end at 'I'horndale,
Mr. and Mrs. William Straughnn vris• Miss Edith Procter is a patient in
Red over the week end with her sister, the Wingham General Hospital,
Mrs. William Mayhew and Mr. Mayhew.
at 'l'harnesville.
Mr. Charles Scott returned from
Windsor •Inst week -end where he was
attending the General Council of the
b5al,5UO."
(Cor'n,nity Chan e'd
R1�.^.r,,a:1 Grn�1t will
Pro./ de t4),m;
to trail, rehabilitate
and house the
475 BLIDID in
this dist:ice
4/
. TRI -COUNTY CAMPAIGN
IIURON • MIDDUSIX • PERTH
(t.dv•1•ng Ion'on ural Sirodo'd)
Sond Your Donation Today
to your local c'wirman or C,11.1.l., tendon, 0ntorte
IXMINIONNIIISMNINDIENNEXIMININSIMPIRIBI
UGALL, ILYTII, ONTARIO. LOCAL CiIAIIRMAN—J. G. Men()
Mr. David Armstrong, A'Ir. and Mrs
Robert Granby and Mary, attended the
Roberts -Mann wedding nt Atwood on
Sntw'clay.
United Church in Canada. The annual harvest Home service
Mrs. }!„ward Tuft visited c': ith het wren held in Trinity Anglican Church
sister, Mrs, Ross Nicholson, Mr. Nleh• on' Sunday afternoon. The church was
olson. Paul and Louise, of Seaforlh, last nicely decorated with grain. fruit and
',ccek. r vegetables. and several hnsketsful of
Mr. and Mrs. Wes Tlradnnek, Mrs, lovely flnwers. Rev, 13ren rleVries, the
reef's. gave n splendid rehiress, Mrs
!Gordon Miller and Mrs. Gnrdon Dobie, G. wane sang a too and the choir
were. London visitors last Friday. Mr
I sang an anthem.
land Mrs. Bradnock attended the 3rd
1 annual convention of the Canadian Nu A meeting was held In the Commun.
mtsmntic Association where coin collet• fay Centre. Monday night, when It was
tors were present from all over Canada decided to hold the annual fowl supper
r and United Stater. Many ditprlaye of In the arena in October.
Used Motor Vehidle Regula-
tion To Be Enforced
Provincinl Constable Charles Salter
of Winghnm was in town on Saturday
unci culled at 7'hc Standford Office with
si copy of the following regulation from
the Highway Traffic Act (Section 20b);
which reads as follows:
"When a used motor vehicle Is solei
by n dealer in used motor vehicles, the
dealer shall deliver to tho purchased
fit the time of the sale a certificate of
mechanlril fitness, signed by the deal-
er, indicating whether or not the mot-
or Vehicle is in a safe condition to be
operated upon the highway." •
Provincial COIIMabie Sailer said that
nil local garages had been informed
that tate regulation was to be enforced.
St, Michael's Sub -Division
Held Meeting
St. Michael's Sub -division held its
regular meeting at the home of • Mrs.
Louis Phelan, The president. Miss Nora
Kelly presided. Secretary and treasurer
reports were given by Mrs. Louis Phel-
an and Mrs, Joe Kelly. Blyth Catholic
Women's League are sponsoring a
euchre and dance in October, Tickets
are available on pt'lzes. Mrs. Bill Web-
er and Mrs. ]3, Gablocki, who are leav-
ing the parish were each presented with
remembrances, A social hour followed.
Lunch was served by the hostesss, as-
sisted by Mrs. S. Benninger end Mrs. T.
Cronin. Th next meeting will be held
in October at the home of Mrs. Leo
Cronyn.
Blyth - Wingham Highway
Resurfacing Completed
Resurfacing work on the 12 -mile
No. 4 Highway stretch between Blyth
and Wingham should be completed th:s
week, and motorists now pointing
their cars north, or south, of Blyth and
Winghant, will probably feel the urge
to step on the gas and see just what
the "old girl" is stili capable of. .
We strongly advise against this urge
There might be n traffic officer in bac
of you expecting you to do Just that
very thing. The old bus just floats
along on the velvety new surface --and
she floats best, and safest, al 50 milts
per ,.•
—G, W, Montgomery Renew your Subscription
'-l•-•-•-•44,11-4-4•44-4,14 41 4-4 e+++••• -•r•$•44 -4+4'G4+4.+
4
4
1
For Sale
Tenders will be received by the undersigned
for the building and scales togethr, or building or
scales separately.
The above items are situated at the C.P.R.
stock pens, in Village of Blyth.
Tenders to close October 6th, 1956.
Ilighest or any tender not necessarily accepted.
X12.1.
1
GEORGE SLOAN, Clerk.
•-•-•+•-e_u.-.+4-++-44i•Mho_♦++a++44++4+++a+4,4++4++444-
'
ars and Sense'
One of the best ways to
encourage good sound sleep
is to have a good sound bank balance. Regular
savings can make life a lot pleasanter in a hundred
and one other ways, You may want the down
payment on a home of your own, a TV set or a car . . .
perhaps the children's education is on your mind
or a leisurely retirement someday. Whatever it is
that you want or need, you have to learn the secret
of putting something by regularly. Pay by pay you
store away the money except in emergencies till
you reach your savings goal—then you start saving
for the next one. Why not open a Savings Account
with us today?
THE CANADIAN BANK OF COM M ERCEI
NW226
Blyth Branch -- J. G. B. McDougall, Manager.
Wed esdanSept, 26, UN
�, THE BLI'TI'I STANDARD PAGE y
Elliott Insurance Agency
BLYTH - ONTARIO.
INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES
Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident,
Windstorm, Farm Liability.
WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE,
Office Phone 104, Residence. Phone 140
SPECIAL EVERY DAY, INCLUDING SUNDAY;'
TURKEY DINNERS
Make up a family party and take advantage
of this special, '
HURON GRILL
BLYTH • ONTARIO
FRANK GONG, Proprietor.
Wingham Memorial Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP,
Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING.
Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTTON,
1
The Fishing Has Never Been The Same
Since The Dark Day Of 1881
Grand Isle, Vermont,
Saturday, Sept, 15, 195e
Dear Mr. Whitmore; ,
I read with Intense Interest a week
or so ago, a note in the Auburn news
'with renewed vigor, Watches were
unknown in our household prior to 1900.
Time was reckpned by the sun, or more
accurately by the shadow of the roof
overhang on the end of our barn, which
that two gentlemen of the Raithby � hY mos
fortune was visible from os
family remembered the Dark Day of places on our farm.
1881. That date preceded my natal day I On ,the Dark Day of 1881 the routine
by four years, But I have been reared described above was followed by my
on the exciting story of that awesome
event, . and for the benefit or possible father, then a young bachelor of 25. On
entertainment of the present generation the day in question father awoke with
of my family as well as the descendants a start of amazed 'concern, It was as
of our neighbours on concessions 4 dark as night time, With perturbed
through 9 in East 'Wawanosh, I yield anxiety father exclaimed; My gra`.-
to the urge of the aged to relate to the sous! (as near profanity as father ever
young the stories of bygone times. In got), I havd slept all afternoon! It
the words of the "Infirm old minstrel" must be past evening ohore timet
of Sir Walter Scop's "Lay of the Last! He hastily arose, gypped his way out
Minstrel": !of the stable to the house to get n
"I cannot tell what the truth may be; lantern and have a look at the clock
I say the tale as 'twas said to tae." I I 'have never heard 'him' say that he
Before proceeding with my story os noticed any red glare in the West or
The Dark Day, permit me to digress a tuns conscious of any smell of smoke
little to comment on bhe farm practice It Is logical to suppose he did not, for
es I carne to know it some fifteen years in those days the hush of huge maples
subsequent to the terrifying event in came right up to the barn on the west
1881. Alter an absence of 48 years from' and the house was east of the barn
East Wawanosh residence, I cannot. So, in his anxious haste he would have
speak with certainty of present farm
practice, but from the observation of
life In Vermont, I would say that in
these days of tractor power, very few
of the young men between the ages 20 , was only then that he discovered the
to 30 knew• a great deal about the care red glow 1n the west. I doubt if Itc
and feeding of sweat soaked horses,' smelled any smoke since the source of
after 5 to 6 hours of steady lull in- the fire was at least 100 miles distant
volved in dragging a plow through sod, In Michigan, Lake Huron due west of
or stubborn clay, or a grain binder i us scales about 90 miles in width and
through ripened grain. But for those: we were 15 to 20 miles east of the lake.
of us who toiled behind the horses, 11 So I imagine the smoke overhead was
was an invariable "MUST"► to let the 1 several thousand feel up, and well be -
horses cool off a bit before giving them I Yond the human sense of smell. It is
their generous ration of energy -giving I little wonder that the terrifying red
oats, -that far-off equivalent of tcday'a, glow in the wastern horizon convinced
hi -test gasoline. So, -when the mid. the settlers, especially' those In the vi•
day soprano Yoo-O.O-Hoo call of my cinity of Goderich .that judgment day
mother or my aunts was answered by a had come and that the world was
quavering Yo -o -o from father or me, ablaze and that the elements were a•
with often a soft whiskering neigh bout to dissolve "In fervent heat" as
from one or both of the tired; thirsty church goers and sinners were reminded
and hungry horses, a swift unhitching at least once a week In those days of
ensued if at the near side of the field fervent heat from the pulpit.
In fact I must confess with some em• What the Ralthby brothers reported
harrassment that I have been guilty of about the fall -out of ash has o/ten been
leaving the plough in the furrow at the confirmed to me by my uncles John
far side of the field. -having insuffl• and Robert McDowell, and also by my
clenl fortitude to endure the pengs of 1 uncle Robert Henry (Maitland Henry's
exhaustion to plod another 30 or 60 father). To give the readers of this
rods before heading for the burn and writing a notion of the fishing in We -
the comfort of the pump and the laden wanosh In the "Big Creek" that flows
table. I can still feel the quickened through Belgrave and on to the West
pace of the team as they neared ,the south of concession 9 and into tha
full hollow log watering trough on• Maitland river at concession 7 on the
tinually awash and overflowing with farm of Marvin McDowell, I will re -
water from a never -failing spring Thal count a fislbstory told me many a time
discharged day and nights winter and by Uncle Robert McDowell, In those
summer from a gravel morain In the pioneer days•of the 1860-1880 period
north-west corner of Lot 34, Conces• what is now open fields was heavily
sion 8, East ,Wawanosh, After stabling limbbred with maple, beach, elm and
the team with mangers crammed 'with hemlock, with -willows and cedar along
hay, one repaired to the house, •the :the water courses, In the fields to the
kitchen sink,,end the table, and for a :south of Melvin Taylor's present rest -
few ensuing, minutes conversation war deuce on Concession 6, lies even to title
at an exceedingly low ebb, gut little :day an undercut spot in the stream
by little energy perked up and after channel which in my boyhood was cal•
a few remarks as to woo drove by, or led Taylor's "Deep Hole," In the two
how stoney was the plowing, or how', decades mentioned above, this (tole war
the hay or oats or burley was coming hidden by n dense border of willow
on, it came time for to fill up the good brush, •To augment the 'food supply of
old team with oats for energy enough the large McDowell falmly,sUncle Johtl
to last till the next recess at 5;00 p.m. I McDowell (Alva's father) and his
Thls vas really the high spot of the day, brother Robert McDowell, along with
for it menet Hopping down on the his neighbour Jack Fells, decided to go
hay for 20 to 30 minutes of blissful and fishing. In those days a beaver darn
practically Instant sleep while the good existed In the flats on the easterly por•
old team of prince and Dolly or old lion of the 'Taylor farm and the dant-
Maud munched and drooled their prec• I med-up water was aawarm with trout
taus dessert of onts to the lnst grain. On this particular day the three men
Promptly at 1;00 p.m. give or take a decided to investigate downstream a bit
minute or two their aide, one's sub- and to get to the creek edge, they+ trim.
conscious mind which never sleeps, mcd out the willow border. The spot
would prod the Bleeper 'at4ake and the they chose was the "Deep Hole" men
toll of the forenoon would be resumed Cloned above. They commenced to fish
the red sky behind him. He has 'otter
described to me his complete amaze-
ment and bafflement to discover he had
slept only his usual twenty minutes. 11
r.........#4,............
Properties For Sale
100 acre farm, 6 -room dwelling,
bath,,hydro, water, barn 60x60, drive
shed 60x25, Twp. of Morris, •
100 acre farm, 11/2 storey, asphalt
shingle clad, hydro, cellar, Good
barn 36x56, hydro, water, drilled
well, Drive shed, 30x20 steel, Han
house 10x20. 75 acres workable,
Morris Township.
150 acre farm. 7-rnom stucco
house, Barn 90x40, Drive shed
30x50, Cement silo. Hydro, water
pressure, 130 acres workable, 1Vn-
wanosh Township.
97 'acre farm on binck-top county
road, good buildings, hydro, drilled
well, level, well drained, close to
school and village,
11/2 -storey frame dwelling in
illyth„ on Highway. Small stable.
Hydro, water,
11/2 -storey brick dwelling, 7 rooms,
full cellar, hydro, water pressure,
in Blyth (corner lot),
First-class brick dwelling on pav•
ed street, all conveniences, in Village
of Blyth,
Small country general store,
94 acre farm, good buildings, hy-
dro, water. Close to Village of Au-
burn.
200 acre farm, good buildings, hy-
dro, water, silo, close to village,
good land, well fenced. ,
Listings invited, Other proper-
ties on request..
100 -acre farm, 8 -room brick,dwel-
ling, water, pressure, hydro, etc.
Barn 6006 and 32x50, Drive shed
20x30, Buildings In good repair. A
good farm on Con 11, Twp, of Hui-
letL
50 acre form, Two, of Howlett,
good land,
ELLIOTT
REAL ESTATE 1
AGENCY
BLYTH, PHONE 104,
Gordon Elliott, Broker.
Victor Kennedy, Salesman,
Res, Phone 140, Res, Phone 78.
FOR SALE
Carrots for winter storage, by the
basket or bushel. Apply to Russell
Bentley, phone 204. Blyth. 42-1p
FOR RENT
3 -room apartment on Dinsley street
Apply to Mrs, Rae Shobbrook, phone
42, Blyth. - 42-1p
FOR SALE
I Renfrew Cook Rite Range; 1 solid •
oak dining room table; 1 small antique
table. Apply to George Wilson, phone
13117, Blyth. 42.1.
The story of their luck, even at this my
age of 71, fills me with the same feel
Ing of yearning to have been a member 1
of the party, with a slim maple pole
in hand with line and trout hook,-ta
feel the yank and tug and straining
fight of those famished trout. As I got
the story poor Jack Fells 'got small
chance to fish His chore appeared lc I
be to retrieve the catch of the other
two and secure them 'from flopping
back into the deep hole, When at
length they paused to assess their luck
each had a string that reached from
shoulder to heel and in addition an
Ioverflowing wooden tub, The fish were
so abundant and famished that a bare
hook was sufficient lure, The Maitland
River in those days was equally nbun-
kdont In trout supply, according to my
uncles, -
After the Dark Day the wood ash
fall -out over the Ontario Counties fan-
ning easterly from North Huron was
sufficient to raise the lye content of the
water to kill the fish therein, As a
result countless thousands of dead trout
and other species lined the stream edges
throughout the region, My uncle said
that decnying fish oonstituted a health
hazard, Many wagon loads of these
fish casultles were gathered and re-
turned to the soil as fertilizer, From
that day to this trout fishing in that
section of Ontario has been a mere to-
ken of its former abundance. Contri-
butory to this curtailment of course has
been the shrink age of the water table
with the removal of the forest cover
Not only has this r•onioval curtailed
the water supply, but the natural food
supply for the fish has vanidlted as well,
' To those of my school `nates of S,S
13 who are still alive, this story will
doubtless be familiar. If they know of
d.et.nils I have omitted, or, more likely.
never knew, I would appreciate hearing
from them, I can well appreciate the t b
terror engendered by the appearance of B
n blood red sky in the dend of n pitch a
dark windy night. I had one minor
experience of that sort in the middle
1890's in September, the annual time
for hurricanes spawned in the far f
away Carribeati. But this will have tc 0
wait for the inspit'ation for some tut- I
1
ROXY THEATRE, 1st Showing 2nd Showing
LYCEUM THEATRE_ CLINTON, 7:30 p.m• At The 9:30 pm.WINGHAM. Two Shows Nightly -Wide Screen Air -Conditioned
NOW (Thursday, Friday, Saturday) - PARK
GODERICII,
"OUTSIDE THE LAW"
Flrvt Show commences at 7;15 p.m,
Thurs„ Fri,, Sat,, Sept, 27-28-29
Van Heflin Wanda Hendrix Thrilling (cion story, in which U,S
in t Treasury agents truck down a ring of
counterfeiters,
Ray Denton, Lelgb Snowden, and
Grant Williams
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
"The Birds and the Bees"
"The Golden Mask"
The story of a group sof orcheaolog•
Ists who seek and find an ancient
tomb containing priceless treasure,
Mon., Tues., Wed., October 1-2-3
Bette Davis Debbie Reynolds
and Ernest Borgnine
In
1 "The Catered Affair"
+•+.4-.4 .'44,_+, .-.......÷•-•-•-•-• •-•-• .r..
NO PLAYING -"A STAR IN THE
DUST" -In Tru -color with John Agar
and Mamie Van Doren,
Mon,, Tues., Wed, -Adult Entertairurent
"BATTLE CRY"
In Clnemascope
A story of valiance, from bootcamp to
the blood baths of Saipan, relieved by
a sprinkling of romance and infectious
humor,
Van Heflin, Mona Freeman, Aldo Ray
TV's dead -pan comedian at his side• I _ and_Tab Hunter,_
splitting best A full-length feature-Thurs„Fri, Sal. -Two Features
that will give you a hilarious evening I "Rock Around the Clock"
George Gabel, Mitzi Gaynor, Featuring Bill Haley and his Comets,
with Johnny Johnson and a host of
ll
COMING -"COME NEXT,SPRING" - Also- "TILE rock OLD Dr o
ro►VESTtalent"
Steve Cochrane, Ann Sheridan and Starring GENE AUTREY and all the
Sherry Jackson, 1 gang from Whereslt.
BROWNIE'S
DRiVENIN I
THEATRE ,
CLINTON, ONTARIO,
THURSDAY and FRIDAY
September 27 and 28
The Bridges of Toko-Ri'
(Colour)
WILLIAM GRACE
HOLDEN KELLY
(Two Cartoons)
, SATURDAY and MONDAY
September 29 and October 1
"The Far Horizons"
FRED CHARLTON
MacMURRAY HESTON
(2 Cartoons)
SATURDAY NiGHT IS
PRIZE NIGHT:
VALUE $50.00
TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY
OCTOBER 2-3
"MAD ABOUT MEN"
In Color - Comedy
Glynis Jahns, Donald Linden,
(Two Cartoons)
• EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT
UNTIL END OF SEASON IS
DOLLAR NIGHT
One Dollar Admits a Carload.
THURSDAY, FRIDAY
OCTOBER 4-5 •
"The Seven Little Foys"
In Color
Bob Hope, MIIIy Vitale
(Two Cartoons)
F. C. PREST GROVER CLARE'S •
LONDESBORO, ONT. POOL ROOM.
;.1 Interior & Exterior Decorator
Sunworthy Wallpaper
Paints - Enamels - Varnishes
Brush & Spray Painting
HURON
FARM SUPPLIES
OLIVER SALES & SERVICE
Telephone 4 and 93, Blyth,
PRICED TO SELL
GEHL FORAGE HARVESTER,
NEW,
OLIVER 6 FT. COMBINE, straw
spreader, scour cleaner, pick-
ap attachment, grain thrower,
only slightly used,
88 TRACTOR, iN GOOD SHAPE,
TWO 2 -FURROW PLOWS, almost
new.
ONE 3•FURROW PLOW.
1
Billiards & Snack; Bar
Ice Cream • Hot Dogs
Homburgs and
Sandwiches.
Smokers' Sundries
I
LIVESTOCK WANTED
Cash paid for dead, old, sick or dis-
abled horses or cows. Phone Atwood
153 collect. 02-13.
AUCTIONEER
Experience, Courtesy and Satisfaction
Guaranteed.
Prompt Assistance Given in Arranging
Your Sale Problems,
Phone 151118, Blyth.
George Nesbitt, George Powell,
Auctioneer. Clerk,
62-22tf.
WATERLOO CATTLE BREEDING
ASSOCIATION
"For artificial insemination informa-
tion or service from all breeds of
cattle, phone the Waterloo Cattle
Breeding Association at: Clinton Hu -
2 -2441, between 7;30 and 0:30 a.m. We
have all breeds available -top quality
at low cost..
I FARM AIR COMPRESSOR. WANTED
Old horses, 31c per pound. Dead
cattle and horses at value. Important
to phone at once, day or night. GIL-
BERT BROS. MINK RANCH, Goderich,
+...v.w....; Phone collect 1483J1, or 1483J4.
3•FURRO1V FLEURY • BISSELL
PLOW, Used, In Good Condition,
SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Have your septic tanks pumped the
sanitary way. Schools and public
'; buildings given prompt attention,
Two Shows Nightly, Rain or Clear Rates reasonable. Tel. Irvin Comm,
Milverton, 75114, 62-18-tf.
Box Office open nt 7 p.m.
Standard Time October 1st.
Show at Dusk,
Cblldran Under 12 in Cars Free
.H.++.►. +•-•4444-1-4-4144-4+
FOR SALE
Allis Chalmers WC tractor and 2 -fur,
row plow. Must be sc! 1 as my farm
1s in grass, Apply, D. McKenzie, phone
189, Blyth, 42.1p.
BAKE SALE ;
At the home of Miss Margaret Hirnns
sponsored by Group 4 of the Blyth
United Church W.A., on Saturday. Sept
2901, at 3 o'clock. 42-1o,
FOR RENT
Apartment In Blyth, by Oct, 1st. Ap-
ply, Mrs. Roy Bonnett, Walton, 82114,
Brussels, 30-tf,
FOR SALE
t/ -ton Fargo panel truck.
Blyth Telephone Office.
NOTICE TO HOME BUILDERS
If you are planning a building pro-
ject this summer, we are in a position
to give you first-class service for your
cement work, House basements and
floor, barn walls and floors (complet•
ed in one pour, When you pour the
floor yourself, and need It finished, eall
us early for prompt and efficient ser-
vice, Our new cement floor finisher
assures fine workmanship, Contact
Mads Christensen, phone 11117, Blyth.
27-61-tf.
SANiTARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped
and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis
Blake, phone 42R6, Brussels, R.R. 2,
25.10p,
COUNTER CHECK BOOKS
Printed or' plain counter check books
Apply at are available at The Standard Offic^,
41.1, Orders for printed books require at
- least 6 weeks for delivery. Phone 89.
DR. N. W. HAYNES
DENTAL SURGEON.
lias.opened an office for the Practice
of Dentistry in Clinton, on Albert St.
FOR RENT
Power lawn mower, cement mixer, TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY.
and wheel barrow, garden tractor, floor
polisher and vacuum cleaner. Apply,
Sparling's Hardware, phone 24, Blyth
FOR SALE
' 10 ),enr1ing cattle, 14 spring calves,
OPPOSITE THE ROYAL BANK and 2 Purebred Angus bulls. Apply,
Gilbert Nethery, phone 16118, Blyth.
39 tf.
44 if.
CRAWFORD &
HETHERINGTON
BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS
J. H. Crawford, R. S. Hetherington,
Q.C., Q.C.
Wingham ad Blyth,
IN BLYTH
EACH THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment.
Located In Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 48
STEWART JOITNSTON
MASSEY-HARRIS SALES &
SERVICE.
BF,ATTY BARN EQUIPMENT, •
Phone 137 R 2, Blyth.
RONALD G. McCANN
Public Accountant
Office: Royal Eank Building
Residence; Rattenbury Street.
Phones 561 and 455.
CLINTON - ONTARIO.
DR. R. W. STREET
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE HOURS -1 P.M. TO 4 P.M.
EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS.
7 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
ON THE GROUND FLOOR
PHONE HU 2.9571, 62,•414. 1011 SALE
15 Angus (ceder steers. Apply to C.
FOR SALE ' L. Hollinger, Lot 15, Concession 8, Mor -
Princess Pat cook stove, in good can. ris, phone Brussels 45115,41 -if
ditien, with or without n Ketone oil FOR SALE
urner and waterfront. Apply, Harold Light blue single-brensted boy's suit,
esteem, Londesboro, phone 371113, size 16, in good condition. Apply, phone
lylh. 42.2p 208, Blyth. 42-1.
CHIMNEYS BUILT ANDREPAIRED'WANTED
Call us for chimney repairs. Agents 3 -piece girl's winter set, size 6 or 6X
or Fire Ohief Chimneys Also avail- Apply, Airs, A, Leathcrland, phone
ble for carpentry work. Apply, Geo 191126, Blytt
vas, phone 16118, Biyth 42.2p. - ._
ure writing.
Yours very truly,
GORDON E, WIGHTMAN
Grand Isle, Vermont,
F1011 SALE
Girls wine nylon gabardine for -
trimmed station wagon coat, size 12.
Excellent condition, Apply, Mrs. Chao,
Johnston, phone 30, Blyth. 42.1p,
FOR SALE
9 York plgs, 9 weeks old, Apply
Wnllnce Nicholson, phone 311111 Blyth.
42-1p
FOR SALE
Fall pears, limited quantity, Apply.
L Whitfield, phone 130, Blyth .12-1
•
PREVENT
CHIMNEY FIRES .
• Use Fire Chief Chemical'
Chimney Cleaners
To eliminate soot and scale
from your stoves and pipes.
The smaller the flame the more soot
and carbon.
, FOR SALE AT;
NOTICE OF/ COURT 01' REVISION
The Court of Revision on the 1957
Assessment Roll for Morris Township
will be held in the Township Hall on
Tuesday, October 9, 1956, at 1:30 p.m,
42-2. GEO. C, MARTIN, Clerk,
Blyth Community Sale
Community Sale Barn, Dinsley Street,
Blyth, on
WEDNESDAY NiGIHT, EVERY WEER
A good offering of farm stock is
anticipated. Those wishing to place
stock, machinery, or household effects
in the sale should contact the auc-
BLYTH FARMERS' CO-OP tiaras` and sales manager.
GEORGE NgtBTTT, 5nlds Manngcr,
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST - OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A, L. Cole,
Optometrist)
FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33,
GODIRICII 25-11
J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Senforth, Phone 791 - Clinton
HOURS:
Seaforth. Dally Except Monday & Wed,
9;00 a.m, to 5:30 p.m.
Wed. - 9:00 a.m. to 12;30 p:m.
Clinton Office - Monday, 9 • 5:30.
Phone HU 2-7010
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETRIST
PATRICK ST, - WINGHAM, ONT,
EVENINGS BY APPOI,NPTMENT.
Professional Eye Examination.
Optical Senkw,
McKILLOP MUTT TAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO.
HEAD OFFICE - SEAFORTH, ONT.
OFFICERS:
President -Wm. S. Alexander Wal-
ton; Vice -Pres„ Robt, Archibald, Sea -
forth; Manager and Secy-Treas„ Mer-
ton A. Reid, Seaforth,
DIRECTORS:
J. L.' Malone, Seaforth; J. H. Mcet-
ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton;
E. J, Trewnrtha, Clition; J. E, Pepper,
Brucefield; C. W. Leonhardt, Bornholm;
H. Fuller, Goderich; R. Archibald, Sea.
forth; Allister Brondfoot, Seaforth,
AGENTS:
William Lelper, Jr., Londesboro; J,
BELGRAVE CO.OP Picone 151118, Blyth, 16.1, b', Prueter, E-odhagen; Selwyn Boer
Brussels: Eric Munroe, Seafc+rt, ,
ANNA I4IPST
--Fam,aq Couift4 dot
''Dear Anne Hirst: I am 20,
ind deeply in love with a man
10 years old. He says he loves
me, and he has proven it in many
ways, Ile has all the qualities
)t being patient, generous and
understanding. I've been seeing
him for two years, and during
this time I've never taken any
real interest in anyone else.
"We get along perfectly toge-
ther as far as feelings and ideas
ire concerned; I am always so
contented in his company.
"I knew that such a thing
would not be socially accepted,
but I've been so much happier
In every way since I met him,
Do you think I am right in seeing
hint, and perhaps thinking of
marriage?
SLIGIITLY CONFUSED"
What Of The Future?
Whit
you have dated this man
since you were 18 and are so
contented with him, it is likely
you and he would have an ad-
mirable marriage at least for
a while. He seems to be genu-
ine and devoted to you, and
the fact you are so at home
with him is a valuable asset
in any permanent relationship.
The question is, would you
be satisfied with him as a hus-
band as the years accumulate?
When your letter came I re-
called one from a girl, 27, who
had married a man years older,
I looked it up, and quote her
dissatisfaction: "I do love my
husband," she claims, "but he
is too settled to like the things
I do, We never go anywhere
Dress -up Linens
What prettier way to dress
up linens! Embroider this
graceful old-fashioned gut and
her gay flower -arbor; add
frosty -white eyelet ruffling for
her skit,
Pattern 650: Embroidery plus
ready- made eyelet! Transfer of
2 motifs 51/2x13; one 8x10 inches,
Send 'TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal 'rote for safety) for this
pattern to Laura Wheeler, 123
Eighteenth St. New Toronto,
Ont. Print plainly PATTERN
NU3181:it, your NAME and
ADDRESS.
Our Rift to you — two won-
derful patterns for yourself,
your ttomc — printed in our
Laura Wheeler Needlecraft
book for 195(1; Dozens of other
new designs to order — crochet,
knitting ,embroidery, iron -ons,
novelties. Send 25 cents for
copy of this book NOW — with
gift patterns printed in it!
except to visit my mother, to
a movie every few months and
to church a few tines a year.
I used to ,love dancing, and I
haven't been on a dance floor
since I married... I am lone.
some for the good times I've
given up and would be glad
to have with him, but he isn't
interested. , , We have a nice
home, a g,ar, and money in the
bank, but what good are ma.
terial things when you are un-
happy?"
A man of 40 is not an old
man by any means and your
* friend's temperament may
* postpone the desire for a se-
* dentary life for years. When
* you become 40 and are still
* full of life, would you have to
• give up the good times this
• older girl already misses so
* much? Can you look down
* the stretch of years. that lie
* ahead and believe you will be
* entirely satisfied with him to
• the end? Can you tale the
* chance?
* Has the man proposed to
* you, or are you taking it for
A• granted that he will? I do not
+ wish to arouse doubt in your
* mind, but it seems rash to be
* considering marriage unless
• you are sure he is, too. Two
• years is a long time to date
* just one man and then discov-
* er you have wasted your time
* because he "isn't the marrying
* kind." If he has not spoken
* of the future, why not practice
* the usual methods of bringing
" that about?
" And what does your family
* think?
* It is not for me to say Yes
• or No to your question, Con-
* sider the situation as coldly
* as you can. You are in love,
• but you are too intelligent to
• follow your heart alone.
* * *
A Lad Worries
"Dear Anne Hirst: For a long
while I've liked a girl 14, three
years younger than myself. Her
friends tease us about each other
which embarrasses her, but I no-
tice she doesn't deny what they
say; they say she likes me, too,
but she's never said so, I date
other girls, too, so people won't
know how much I think of her
but I don't go with any one of
them too often.
"The girl doesn't let me know
how she feels about me; how can
I find out? (You've helped me
before this, but I'rn more wor-
ried than I was and I depend
en you.)
JiM"
" Date the other girls, loo, and
• observe them thoughtfully;
* each one can help you better
" understand the feminine sex,
" which is important. As the
• girl you like sees you with the
• others, she may grow more in-
" terested.
• Her age implies her shyness,
* so see her when you can but
• don't rush her. As for your
* fiends' teasing, show her you
* can laugh it off; then she
" won't be embarrassed.
• If her mother allows boys to
* call, do that. It would be
* smart, though, to stay with the
• group for a while until the girl
* matures a bit and has more
• self-confidence, Good luck!
Why.: is the girl who hesitates
before she accepts a man twice
her age. A safe guide Is a letter
to Anne ilirst, whose long ex-
perience is at your service. 1Vrite
her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St.,
New Toronto, Ont.
Modern child has longer life
expectancy, the health of most
North Americans has so improv-
ed during the present century
that a baby may he expected to
live over twenty years longer
Iran one born in 1900.
ISSUE 39 — 1950
DON'T ROLL OUT OF BED—Suspended by piano wire, "floating"
bed, above, was shown at the National Home Furnishings Show.
Model Ryna Kitman poses aboard the unusual slumber acces-
lory.
THEY MAJOR IN PULCHRITUDE—National College Queen Mari-
lyn K. Meyer, 18, center, poses with her ladies-in-waiting after
her t.- •rination. The ladies-in-waiting (they'll have to wait
for cm:. :ler chance to be queen) are Carol Jean Lewis, 18,
right, and Joan Schoenfield, 19.
HItONICLES
G1NGERFARM
We have come to the end of
a perfect week — weatherwise
— and a very busy one. I have
been trying to keep ahead of
the garden, and partner has
been busy cutting hay; all
among the stakes set out by the
Department of Highways, More
about that lateu.
Beans . . . We shall hardly
dare to look at a bean after
awhile. We have eaten them,
given them away and cooked
them for the dogs. And still
they keep growing — and the
second sowing ahnost ready.
Beets and carrots are growing
fast too but the peas are not
quite so rewarding. The apples
also keep. me busy although it
is a .:ort of race between the
twin heifers and myself to see
who gets the apples first. Early
in the morning the heifers are
around the harvest apple tree
gobbling up the windfalls. When
they retire to a shady spot to
chew their cud I sneak out and
get in my innings, shaking the
tree by the 'branches until I
have enough apples to • fill a
pail, Which gives me about five
quarts of applesauce when they
are canned, I cook the apples
with the peels on and then put
the pulp through a rotary col-
ander. That way we have ap-
plesauce all winter, whether we
have apples or not Some people
wonder why I bother with can-
ning at all when there are only
the two of us now, 1 wouldn't
if we had .a deep freeze, but we
haven't and 1 am not so sine
that it is really necessary. now.
It 1 cart fill a few dozen sealer's
we am sure of having enough
stuff for our own a:e and some-
thing on hand for weekend
homecomers..
tach day, when I ata through
with tanning and other work 1
like to get upstairs to my room.
And haw i am enjoying it. l am
away from everything and yet
not a'vay For three days last
week I was looking down on
the field where Partner was
cutting hay—which was quite an
advantage because I was afraid
. all the time he might run into
a slake and get thrown off the
mower If he had—Well, with a
power mower anything could
happen
The field where he was cut-
ting r, one where the highway
has expropriated land for High-
way 401. It has iron stake,
wooden stakes and steel fence
posts here and there across the
field. Partner didn't want lite
hay but the field was weedy so
he felt it had to be cut. ile
knew he would have quite a job
although he thought he knew
where every stake had been put.
He was wrong --there were 4
few, not properly marked, that
he didn't know anything about.
He knew where they were when
he ran into them,even buckling
one of the guards. Steel stakes
were not the only trouble in
that field, Earlier in the season
one of the heifers escaped from
the pasture. Partner couldn't
think how she got out until he
went along by the fences. At
one spot last winter the survey-
or's had been cutting brush and
made a hole in the fence. Part-
ner fixed it up by using the
brush to fill the gap. Some time
later, unknown to us, the sur-
veyors were back, evidently to
do some work at the same spot.
They pulled the brush away and
left the gap exposed. No wonder
the heifer got out! If Partner
had nut seen her the rest of the
cattle would no doubt have fol-
lowed
We have a notice from the
Department to the effect that
compensation will be paid for
any damage done. Fine — but
how can a farmer assess the
trouble he goes to in getting a
heifer back to pasture? Or how
can we put in dollars and cents
the worry it was to Inc having
Partner on a power mower
weaving his way in and out
among the stakes and finally'
having to finish the job by cut-
arounr' the stakes with a scythe.
The trouble is the fellows that
come around are not deliber-
ately careless; they just don't
understand the little things that
are important on a farm, When
the men were around driving in
the stakes Partner said to them:
"What's going to happen if 1
want to plough this field?" One
man .tnswered: "1 guess you
won't want to do much on this
land by the time we get
through!" How true—the' only
trenhle is surveying the land
doesn't keep the weeds from
growing, in spite of the fact
that there is plenty of agitation
from various quarters to keep
the field clean.
Well, it's Monday : now and
our nice weather seems to have
forsaken us. It is Try dull and
very humid. But if:the weather
is dull the news isn't. A confer-
ence regarding the crisis in the
Middle East—what will happen
afterwards is anyone's guess.
Political convention in the Un-
ited States; controversy still
active over Marilyn Bell's swim;
and an International convention
of Entomologists in Montreal --
in our language a discussion ab-
out insects. I wonder if it will
be brought to light that the in-
crease in insects is -probably due
.to the decrease In birds, And
the decrease in birds ... could
it be they are being destroyed
by chemical weed -killers now
so much in use? And now the
power has gone off—that doesn't
make typing any easier so I am
glad I have come to the end of
my copy,
'Bye until next week.
New Date Will
Beat Heartache
What should a teenage girl
do when she falls in love with
a boy and he turns her down in
favour of another girl? Get
madly jealous?
Not at all, says a leading
psychiatrist who Is an expert on
teenage love affairs. The girl
should deliberately set about
blotting the episode from her
mind.
She should at oncce burn the
boy's love letters, all of them,
however ardent they are, Then
LOST AND FOUND—"When in
trouble—SQUAWKI" Apparent-
ly that was the principle that
saved this rare palomino Shet-
land pony colt from who knows
what fate. It's shown with its
owner, Robert S. Gault, who
raises tiny Shetlands as a hob-
by. The pony was stolen, but
abandoned next day. Gault
believes the screams of the un-
weaned pony, uttered when i1
is hungry, frightened the thieves
so that they were afraid to
keep the animal longer.
she should calmly destroy all
photographs of him and get rid
of other souvenir's,
Having done these things she
should set about getting as
many dates with other boys as
possible. She will quickly dis-
cover that ,a new boy friend by
her side at least partially. ban- '
ishes ghosts of the past, By re-
peating the .process over suc-
cessive days, she is "helping
Father Time to free her from
the fetters of her past romance."
Frustrated love can be con-
quered like any other bad
habit, the expert points out. It
is utter, folly for a jilted girl
to plead with her former sweet-
heart or make a scene by burst-
ing Into tears when she sees
•him,
Wardrobe Wonder!
Make a wonderful new ward,-
robe
ard-robe —. from this ONE dress
pattern! Vary the neckline
from mandarin collar to a low
squarer! beauty; sleeves in three
smart versions. Easy to sew. a
joy to wear -- those sleek slim
lines are pure flattery for your
figure!
Pattern 4605: Misses' Sizes
10, 12, i4, 16,•18. Size 16 takes
31/4 yards 35 -inch fabric.
This pattern easy to use, sim-
ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has
complete illustrated instructions.
Send THIRTY-FIVE CEN'T'S
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern, Print plainly SIZE,
NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE
NUMBER,
Send order to ANNE ADAMS,
123 Eighteenth St,, New 'Toron-
to, On',
.....;:: ':'''., :.: c' '4,04.' 'a.:-:.::;.i:..[s>,< ..:aA
FIRST LESSON'S COMING UP—Determined expresion of teacher
Elizabeth Kohl should be a clue to Paul Hindes that gumchew-
ing in school is frowned upon as the blase, bubble -blowing
youngster registers for the fall term. ,.
'GREEN MONSTER' WITH PLENTY OF DRAG—Ar thur Arians eases his 1,200 -horsepower "Green
Monster" past a grader at the Timing Association's drag strip prier to, the running of the
seco.id annual National Championship Drag Races,
Mutiny ! On A
One Man Voyage
He was far out in the Pacific,
alone on a balsa raft, fishing,
Suddenly there was a gigantic
heave that threatened to snap
his line,
He hauled In as fast as he
could and found he had hooked
a shark. He dragged it half -way
up across the end of the logs,
with its tail in the water and
the hook, in the corner of its
mouth, thrashing fiercely with
Its tail.
He didn't want that shark,
but he had .to have the hook,
• so hoiding the ilne in his right
hand he reached for the gait be-
hind him with his left and
hooked the shark .through the
lower law with it,
Now began a terrific fight for
the hook, The logs were sea -
weedy and slimy. The raft roll-
ed. Bracing his knees hard
against the log, bending over
farther and farther, he stretch-
ed out his right hand to twist
the hook from the jaw. The
shark's mouth was open a foot
wide and its evil piggy eyes
watched him balefully.
With a last push, he got the
hook out. At that moment the
shark thrashed so fiercely that
the gaff jerked out of his hand,
he lost his balance and went
head first into the sea, Shooting
out his left hand to grasp some-
thing, he thrust it blindly into
the. shark's mouth, .and was se-
verely gashed, Struggling in the
foam and swirl of the wake,
with the raft sailing away from
him, he thought, this is the end.
It was certainly 61 -year-old
William Willis's most desperate
moment on his 7,700 -mile lone
voyage from Callao to Samoa,
with only a cat and a parrot for
company,
In "The Epic Voyage of the
Seven Little Sisters” he reveals
how he struck out desperately,
then checked himself, feeling
that the effort was useless. Then
be realized that the wire leader
of the fishing line was still
around his right arm, with the
other end tied to the raft's
crosslob.
He still had a chance — if the
line held. The raft was now 200
feet away. Hand over hand, he
began pulling himself along the
line towards It. His clothes were
leaden, his canvas slippers drag-
ging him down. His gashed hand
streamed with blood, crimson-
ing the water around him, , , .
The shark had made oft af-
ter the struggle, but what if the
blood drew the other big fel-
lows he'd seen yesterday? If a
shark got him anywhere it
would pull back at once with
its tremendous breastfin lever-
age and so break the line.
Willis decided that he'd have
to lash out with all his strength
the moment a shark came close,
and kick It on the nose. He'd
fought sharks before and knew
them to be cowardly — but tre-
mendously strong, cunning and
persistent.
Foot by foot, making double
turns with the line round his
rlghthandand resting at inter-
vals, he struggled on and on.
Until at last he could grip the
top of the iron rudder, then the
chain controlling it, and so pull
himself up on to the end of the
logs where he'd landed the
shark — to lie face down in the
sea -wash, all in, his head spin-
ning. He'd made it, made it.
lie was saved)
But he had to stop his gashed
hand spurting blood. _With a
„e:.;p; . SPLIT-SECOND TIMING — Byron
• asterson tiptoes the water: -
• during evolution of a double
somersault dive, during Nava.
lento (Havana -Atlantic . diving'
finals. Also exhibiting excellent
- form is the photographer who
caught this split•second picture
perfection.
DOG HERO OF THE YEAR—lassie, a Shetland sheepdog owned
by Gary Gustafson, seven, has been named the most heroic dog
of 1956. lassie summoned help for her master when the lat-
ter suffered a hemorrhage in the middle of the night—a week
following a tinsillectomy. Physicians said the boy would have
bled to death In another 15 minutes. Lassie received a $1,000
U.S. bond, a medal, a gold leash and collar, and a year's sup-
ply of dog food at a dinner in herh onor.
The Hill That's Quicker Than The Eye
Most people thought we were
crazy; but not all of them.
Some thought we were coming
home from a well -celebrated
all-night spree.
It was about 7 a.m. and at the
foot of each downgrade in the
highway our little roadster
chortled to a stop and waited
silently, as if it needed to get
it breath before attempting the
next rise.
It was understandable if far-
mers carrying pails of milk
from their barns suspected that
the three occupants of the car
were having a convival swig
every 200 yards,
One who sauntered over must
have been convinced of it.
"Having 'trouble?" he asked.
"Oh, no, thanks," was the
cheerfully earnest reply; "We
just wanted to see if we could
coast back up this hill."
We were on the Mountain
Road—once an Indian trail, later
piece of fishing line and a mar-
lin -spike he made a tourniquet
for his forearm, then sewed up
the gash with needle and white
thread, greased the wound, and
bandaged it. He mixed some
coffee, ate some sugar, freed
himself of his soggy clothing,
and felt in such good spirits af-
ter his escape that he began
roaring a song.
Constantly on the long voy-
age he sang lustily, shouting
against 'the elements. "It took
me about fifty minutes or so
to go through my songs," he
says. "They were songs from
everywhere, bits • from all cor-
ners of the earth .. , songs of
men thinking of home and
loved ones, songs of sailors
when their ships went down,
songs of the exiled."
"Every day brought some
crisis, With new decisions to
make about the sails and the
steering, new winds and a new
sea, and a new arrangement of
centreboards, I could take noth-
ing for granted, What worked
one day would wreck me the
next. It was a struggle for sur-
vival every day and moment."
Each day he wound his clocks
and watches, but his mind was
almost a blank, he lived in a
vacuum and didn't trouble to
look at his chart because it
would have been too much
effort to take it out. He had to
save every ounce of energy for
the tricky business of handl-
ing the raft.
Making sixty to dhlnety miles
a day, sometimes even more,
after 74 days at `sea he sighted
Raroia, where the Kon-Tiki ex-
pedition had ended, It had also
started from Callao, and had
taken 102 days to cover the 4,-
500 miles. But the Seven Lit-
tle Sisters was winter -sailing
with stronger winds and its
design gave greater speed,
Before he could land on Bri-
tish Samoa he had to coast
along the islands and find a
_
way through the perilous reefs
that would have wrecked him
right at the end of his great ad-
venture. He made harbour at
Pago Pago an hour after mid -
alight,' his epic journey over at
last,
" Willis has made afine story of
his daring adventure, with
'notes of others in his crowded,
'eventful life. Everyone who
was thrilled by Kon-Tiki Will
want to read it, well illustrated'
with vivid photographs, some
in colour,
a pioneer wagon route — which
leads from Moncton, N.B., to-
ward the gentle slope of Lutes
Mountain. It was a crisp June
morning in 1933 and three Saint
John newspapermen — John G.
Bruce, Jack Brayley and I—were
on an exploratory jaunt that was
to have a big impact on New
Brunswick's tourist trade.
Half an hour and 10 stops lat-
er, six miles from Moncton, at
the last dip before the dirt road
climbed up to meet an inter-
secting highway, we were ready
to give up hope.
"If this isn't it," philosophized
Bruce as he switched off the
ignitlon and put the gears in
neutral, "we'll have a .nice 250 -
mile round trip anyway."
Brayley and I were almost too
sleepy to answer. (We had left
Saint John after putting The
Telegraph -Journal to bed at 3.30
em shortly after which, we
would have rolled into bed too.)
Then slowly, eerily, startlingly,
we began to move—backwards—
up Ike hill we had just de-
cendled!
Gathering speed as we .went—
we coasted up what seemed to
be a gradual but distinct incline
about 200 yards long.
This, at last, was the "mag-
netic hill" we had heard about
from Alex Ellison, superinten-
dent of the newspaper press-
room, who we felt sure was pul-
ling our collective leg.
WIde-awake now, we tumbled
out of the car, Bruce, who had
brought engineering instruments,
checked the lay of the land. I
got busy taking pictures with
an old -type Graflex camera as
big as a woman's hat box. Bray -
ley scribbled notes.
Any idea that something mag-
netic in the soil' had actually
drawn the car up the slope was
washed out when we noticed the
water in the ditch was fiovling
"uphill" too. The whole thing
was an optical illusion, created
by the extraordinary and decep-
tive downsweep of the entire
landscape: this "upgrade" was
really a downgrade, a less steep
continuation of the downgrade
that faced it.
Oddly, no mention of the phe-
nomenon had ever appeared in
print, as far as we knew. Few
'farmers, even in the immediate
vicinity, had observed the pe-
culiar characteristics of the hill.
A girl who was selling home-
made ice cream at' a little stand
beside her parents' driveway,
and tending a gasoline pump at
ou can'E qo
ALLDUE
■
1/,
IF you Feel
ALL•IN'
These days meet people work under
pressure, worry more, deep leu. This
strain on body and brain makes physical
-61neu easier to lose—harder to regain.
Today's tense living, lowered resistance,
overwork, worry—any of these may affect
normal kidney action. When kidneys get
out el order, escesa acids and wastes
remain in the a stens. Then ' backache,
diishubed rest, that "tired -out" henry.
beided feeling often follow. 'That's the
time to take Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's
stimulate the kidneys to normal action.
'Then you feel better—sleep better—work
better. Ask for Dedd'e Kidney Pips at
any drag canter. 911
the same time, watched us in
puzzlement from the intersect-
ing highway above.
In giving us our tip Alex Elli-
had claimed he sought out the
hill and tried it himself after
hearing the tale from his broth-
er, who in turn had heard it from
a clergyman years before.
"It was the most astonishing
thing I ever experienced," the
minister was reported to have
said, "I was bringing some chil-
dren home from a picnic when a
thunderstorm broke. I stopped
my car at the bottom of a hill
to put up the side curtains —
and the automobile started to
run up the next hill!"
Even after, the pictures and
story appeared in the "The Tele-
graph -Journal" the next morn-
ing, people were skeptical. Some
of them, too, possibly doubted
our sanity. A Moncton paper
published a small item headed:
"Silly Story in Saint John Pa -
par," The .. following Sunday,
however, the "skeptical" flocked
by the hundreds to the hill.
Almost overnight, Cinderella -
like, Magnetic Hill was trans-
formed from another dip in the
road oto one of Canada's most
widely -publicized tourist at-
tractions — its magnetic quality
being evident in the !act it has
drawn a continuous stream -of
visitors ever since, Strangely,
more Americans than Canadians
seem to know. about it, In 23
years more than half a million
cars have followed Bruce's 1931
Ford roadster to sample the ex-
perience of apparently gliding
"uphill" with the clutch disen-
gaged.
The site has blossomed. Be-
side the hill today is a modern
gift shop. It contains a post office
which caters exclusively to the
itinerant public: outgoing mail is
stamped "Magnetic Hill, N.B.,
Canada" from May 1 to October
31,
Across the road is a provin-
cial park where orphan wild
animals picked up by game war-
dens — deer, bears, fishers, beav-
er, foxes — peer out curiously
through the wire fence at the
strange, chortling, shouting ant-
ics of human 'on wheels.
The provincial government
considerately sidetracked •Mag-
netic Hill and detoured the main
highway to let the coasters coast
undisturbed — also to avoid a
chronic traffic jam.
I visited the hill last sum-
mer for the first time since 1933,
and was surprised to find that
Mrs. Ludwig Sikorski, who runs
the tourist shop, is the former
Muriel Lutes who 22 years before
had sold us an ice-cream break-
fast. She remembered our event-
ful excursion.
"I moved down from the other
road in ' 1935," she explained,
"but I still specialize in home-
made ice cream, as well as New
Brunswick buckwheat -and -but-
termilk pancakes with our own
maple syrup, and I still sell Im-
perial Oil's gasoline," Ironically,
here the yisitor sees an Esso
gas pump at a location where
cars flock to travel uphill with-
out u3ing gasoline. "One Sun-
day in August more than 3,500
people came out to try the hill,"
she said. "We figure about 150,-
000 people visit us each year.
Almost everyone who visits
Moncton drops in — Princess
Alexandra, the daughter of the
Duchess of Kent, drove out
here even though the oyal train
was making only a short stop-
over in town."
By Stuart Truemen in Im-
perial Oil Review.
CLASSIFIED
AGENTS WANTED
REPAIR and save. LOXOL SEAL will
repair anything containing Rubber or
Leather. Guaranteed or money re.
funded, Sample set 11 post free, Pom•
eroy, 118 Nevlle Park, Toronto 8,
5005 PROFIr with Personalized "Blitz.
Shave". Created by a World -Renown.
ed German Scientist, Sell by mall to
friends, etc. Five million Canadian
shavers are prospects, Full year's sup.
ply only ;1.00. Free details, Aura.
Laboratory, 199 Bay St. Toronto.
GO INTO BUSINESS for yourself.
Sell exclusive houseware products and
appliances wanted by every house-
holder. These Items are not sold in
stores. There Is no competition.
Profit up to 500%. Witte Immediately
for free color catalog with retail prices
shown. Separate confidential whole-
sale price will be Included. Murray
Sales, 3822 St. Lawrence, Montreal.
ARTICLES FOR SALE
FEATURED
Wool•stretcn socks In array of exciting
new patterns and colors $i pair All.
nylon stretch In solid color rib offered
at b50 pair. Children's knee•hlgh heavy
nylon•: bbed socks 554 pair, Robby
Socks triple cuff plain white 450 pair'
colored toe•heel•cuff 600 pair. Special
discounts to merchants of volume.
buying proportion. Send Money Order
to BOW.NIT MILLS, 49 Slmcoe Street,
Toronto.
BABY CHICKS
IF you want pullets or broilers we may
have some on hand, suggest you ask
for list. }latching weekly, mostly to
order. Bray Hatchery, 129 John N.,
Hamilton.
BOOK your orders now for fail and
winter delivery. Ask about our new
Series 400, 401 and 402, They have
more than satisfied our 1056 .custom.
ers. They live better, lay more eggs
on less feed, In other words, make you
more money, Also other popular egg
breeds and dual purpose breeds, Spe-
chl Broiler Breeds, first generation
Indian River cross, (Lancaster x Nichols
No. 12 pullet, three way cross), first
teneration Arbor Acre white rocks,
urkey poults. All popular breeds, day
old and started for immediate deny.
ery. Catalogue, Also ask about our
Swedish Landrace Swine.
TWEDDT.E CHICK HATCHERIES LTD.
FERGUS ONTARIO.
BOOKS
SPECIAL Fall Offers on magazine sub.
ecriptlons. State your choices. Any pub-
lished magazine. Save and order nowt
Seszol's Service, Suite 28, 5 Douglas
Elgin, Illinois.
FOR SALE
BEAUTIFUL purebred Siamese kit.
tens. Sealpoint. James Harrison, 851
Garth St., Hamilton, Ont.
WiLD RICE for sale. Now Is the time
for planting. For further informa-
tion apply, J. 11. MacDonell, Box No.
155, Markstay, Ontario,
FOR SALE — ENTIRE BEEF HERD —
Cows and Calves. Apply P.O. Box 127,
Brantford, Ontario,
QUILTING Patches. Large blocks.
Print, milk or flannelette. 3 lbs. $1.00.
C.O.D. postage extra. Publex Sales,
1445 Gerrard East, Toronto.
KENATE Winter barley for sale, heavy
yielding grain. Sow winter barley,
avoid the unpredictable Spring seed-
ing Cleaned and treated. W. Banks,
14 Leggett Ave., Weston, Ont.
MACHINERY
NEW - Concrete Mixers Finishers,
Breakers. Pumps, Rotava{ors, Chain
Saws, Outboard Motors, Money Back
Guarantee. USED _ Ford Tractors
and equipment, Dominion Rent•Alla,
Unionville, Ontario.
MEDICAL
ARTHRITICS
FROM 111 health to financial security
through NUTRI•BAL, Use 1t, get re•
sults, and sell others, You receive
much needed relief from pain and
suffering, and money by helping
others. Write today to Nutri•Bal
Products, 13 Pinewood Avenue, Toronto
10.
WANTED EVERY SUFFERER OP
RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
TO TRY DIXON'S REMEDY
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 Elgin, Ottawa.
;1.25 Express Prepaid
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salve will not distil).
point you, Itching, scaling and burn.
Ing eczema; acne, ringworm, pimples
and foot eczema will respond readily
to the stainless, odorless ointment re.
tardiese of bow stubborn or bopelcae
hey seem
lent Post Free on Receipt of Price,
PRICE 32.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1145 St. Clair Avenue East,
TORONTO
•
ISSUE 39 — 1956
ADVERTISING
•
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
MAKE up to ;3.00 an hours are time.
Experience unnecessary. Write for
free details, C & K Sales P.O, Box 36,
Rego Park 74, New York.
ORIGINAL POEMS wanted for Bongs
and to revise for sale 'to nation
magazines, Laura Dickson, Morn1ng•
side Studios, 1804 Green Street, Colum.
bla, South Carolina.
DIPLOMAS Awarded 1" Resident a n d
Non • resident Courses, Naturopathy,
Swedish Massage, Herbal Therapy, Psy-
chology, many others, Institute of
Drugless Therapy, Box 177, Fruitland,
Idaho.
PERMANENT Representative wanted
to sell outstanding line of sanitary and
maintenance chemicals, paints, etc, to
Industry in this county. Also openings
In our Agricultural Chemical Division.
Appointments to be made not later
than October 15. State expperience in
selling field. All applications cont!.
dentlal and will receive a reply. Box
145, 123 Eighteenth St. New Toronto.
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:
M King St,. Hamilton
72 Rideau St., Ottawa
SPARE TIME
AMBITIOUS MEN AND WOMEN want.
ed for spare time work in own home.
For all the details on well paid jobs
now made available send today to:
BOB MASSOW
166 Kenilworth South
Hamilton, Ont,
PATENTS
THE RAMSAY COMPANY, Patent At•
torneys, 273 Bank Street. Ottawa of-
fers to every Inventor full Information
tree, on patent procedures.
FETHERSTONHAUGH & Company,
Patent Attorneys Established 1890,
600 University Ave. Toronto. Patents
all countries.
PERSONAL
HEARING AIDS, used, good condition,
30.95 and 119,95 complete, Acousticon,
146 Wellington West, Toronto.
31.00 TRiAL offer. Twentv•flve deluxe
Personal requirements. Latest cats.
ogue included The Medico Agency,
Box 22, Terminal "Q". Toronto, Ont.
SWINE
OFFER a limited number of guaranteed
In.plg sows bred to our imported boar
Chartwell Viking 3rd raised by Sir
Winston Churchill. Also weanling mows
and boars, four month old sows and
boars sired by this outstanding boar,
and other Imported boars. Also ser-
viceable boars. Don't order Landrace
anywhere until you receive our new
illustrated Folder and Price List. Fol.
der.
FERGUS LANDRACE SWI NEN ARIO FARM
WANTED
WANTED to huy — Hay — Apply
P.O. Box 127, Brantford, Ontario.
CUNARD TO EUROPE
LATE SUMMER AND FALL SAILINGS
TO BRITISH PORTS:
First Class from $192
Tourist Class from $145
VESSEL From MONTREAL
SCYTHIA
CARINTHIA
SAXONIA
• ASCANIA
IVERNIA
CARINTHIA
SCYTHIA
SAXONIA
IVERNIA
ASCANIA
CARINTMIA
SAXONIA
SCYTHIA
IVERNIA
CARINTHIA
ASCANIA
SAXON IA
IVERNI.1
CARINTHIA
IVERNIA
SCYTHIA.
SAXONIA
IVERNIA
CARINTHIA
SCYTHIA
shorn (Nebo
* Wad, SEPT.
Pri. SEPT,
Fri. OCT,
Wed. OCT. 10
Fri. OCT. 12
FrL OCT. 19
*Wed. OCT. 24
Pd. OCT. 16
Fri. NOV. 2
Wed. NOV. 7
Fr1 NOV. 9
frL NOV. 16
* Sol. NOV. 17
Sat. NOV. 34
Thurs. NOV. 29
Item HALIFAX
Sun, DEC.
Sat. DEC. 1S
Sol, JAN. 12
Fri. JAN. 11
San. FEI. 3
Sat. FES. 9
Fri. FEI. 15
Sal. FES. 23 •
Sot, MAR. 2
21
3
I;RUr �S�
Will INDIES
AND S0 ERICA
tllroln111.11
K9..1N1
WE GOAT WORLD -..'-3
Corner
At Thrift -Season Rates
ROUND TRIP FOR AS LITTLE AS
$290
To VESSEL
Havre, Southampton
Liverpool
Greenock, Liverpool
Havre, Southampton
Liverpool
Greenock, Liverpool
Havre, Southampton
Liverpool
Greenock, Liverpool
Harr*, Southampton
Uverpool
Gresnock, Liverpool
Haws, Southampton
Havre, Southampton
Greenock, Liverpool
Havre, Southampton
Cobb, Liverpool
Harr e, Southampton
Cobh, Liverpool
Havre, Southampton
Havre, Southampton
bh, Liverpool
*,Southampton
liverppooeel
,Soueromplon
QUEEN ELIZABETH
MAURETANIA
PARTHIA
QUEEN MARY
BRITANNIC
QUEEN ELIZABETH
MEDIA
MAURETANIA
QUEEN MARY
FRANCONIA
QUEEN ELIZABETH
PARTHIA
QUEEN MARY
BRITANNIC
MAURETANIA
QUEEN ELIZABETH
MEDIA
QUEEN MARY
FRANCONIA
QUEEN ELIZABETH
PARTHIA
BRITANNIC
QUEEN MARY
ASCANIA
MEDIA
QUEEN ELIZABETH
Tb FRENCH PORT&
First Class from $199.50
Tourist Class from $150
From NEW TORK 1e
Wed. SEPT.
Thurs. SEPT.
Fri. SEPT.
Wed. OCT.
Thurs. OCT,
Wed, OCT.
Frt. OCT.
Tues. OCT.
Wed. OCT.
Thurs. OCT,
Wed. OCT.
Fri. OCT.
Wed. OCT.
Thurs. NOV.
Sal, NOV,
Thurs. NOV,
Fri. NOV,
Thurs. NOV.
Thurs. NOV,
Fri. NOV.
Frl, NOV.
Thurs. NOV.
Fri. NOV.
Fri. DEC,
Fri. DEC.
Sal. DEC.
See your local agent—
No one can serve you better
CUNARD LINE
Tel. EMplro 11411
ley 9 Wellington Ste., Toronto.
•
26 Cherbourg, Southampton
27 Cobh, Havre, Southampton
28 Liverpool
3 Cherbourg, Southampton
4 Cobh, Liverpool
10 Cherbourg, Southampton
12 Liverpool
16 Cobh, Havre, Southampton
17 Cherbourg, Southampton
18 Cobh, Liverpool
24 Cherbourg, Southampton
26 Liverpool
31 Cherbourg, Southampton'
1 Cobh, Liverpool
3 Cobh, Havre, Southampton
8 Cherbourg, Southampton
9 Liverpool
15 Cherbourg, Southampton
15 Cobh, Liverpool
23 Cherbourg, Southampton
23 Liverpool
19 Cobh, Liverpool
30 Cherbourg, Southampton
7 Harr*, Southampton
7 Liverpool
$ Cherbourg, Southampton
SHj1 your relatives or friends
from Europe.
Prepay tr
lap,lnPe' ,' Is t
Aro ofent
met "mea Govern
'snip leer SrAe,ne
Omit.
PAWL 10
ii
FOOD MARKETS
EARLY FALL SPECIALS •-
QUICK QUAKER OATS... LGE. 3 -LB, BAG 37c
YORK PEANUT BUTTER. .16 OzMason Jar 37c
NESTLES QUIK 16 Oz. Tin 52c
WATCH NEXT WEEK'S AD FOR SATURDAY
HOURS.
Watch the Car Behind -the One in Front of You.
THE Wednesdfiy, Sept, 8,105
orand • 1
II RSONAL INTEREST
Mr, and Mrs. Wm, Chopp and son,
Billie, of Detroit; Mrs, Lydia Hall and
daughter, Bonnie, Miss Winnifred Croz.
Iler, and Mr. Stanley Andrews, all of
� Parente, attended the 40th wedding
anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Wm, Bell,
- held in the Blyth Memorial Hall,'Mon-
n day evening of last week.
Mr. George Cowan, of Tavistock, ac•
companled by Mr. Becker, were visitors
in Blyth last Saturday, Blyth Fair Day
taking in the Fair, and renewing old
acquaintances about town, Many
old friends were happy to see George
and renew his acquaintance.
Mrs. Edna Kneohtel of Clinton, whu
has been visiting her brother, Mr. Bert
I Ferris, of Provost, Alberta,' returned
home Wednesday night and visited her
sister, Mrs. Wm. Bell, and Mr, Bell,
over the week -end.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Brown of River•
side, and Mrs Maitland ARM, of Aub•
urn, were Blyth visitors on Wednesday.
Mrs, II, A. McIntyre of Clinton spent rich run where trucks are replacing
Saturday as the guest cf Miss Josephine'rail service for mall delivery.
The change will hardly effect Blyth
Woodcock.
Mrs. Sadie Cuming resumed her wont I andd other villages around us much, as
at the telephone office on Monday after 1 all have been served by truck since
spending a pleasant two weeks' vacation the Guelph-GoderlMi C.P.R. discontln•
with her son, Mr. Hugh S, Cutning tied mail service some months ago.
The lime eliment is about the only
' Mrs. Coming and family, of London. factor that will be noticed.
Mr. Bob Yungblut left on Monde
A mall truck has been bringing the
r Toronto were fo T t 1 Is attendingthe
STEWART'S
Red & White Food Store,
Phone 9 - We Deliver - Blyth
DOLLAR DAYS
r4-4-
AT WORK OR PLAY, HAVE PEP EACH DAY
To keep that :pep, try one of our vitamin products.
They are sure to help you retain vim,
vigor and vitality
One -a -Day Tablets (vitamin A & D) ... , , . ; $1,35
One -a -Day Multiple Tablets $1.40 and $2.50
THURS., FRI.,, SAT, Cod Liver Oil Capsules (100's) ' - $1.35
BIG BARGAINS -
BIG SAVINGS.
Change In Mail Delivery
Set -Up
Effective Sunday, Sept, 30th, a change
in mail delivery service throughout
Ns' district will take place
The change is on the Stratford-Gode-
College of Education. mail from London to Whtgham every
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Yungblut of 1 mo•nhtg, and returning in the nfter.
London, spent the week -end with the
1
nnd oon,back A t:wruicen tram Auburn to Blyth
1 former's mother, Mrs. M. Yungblut, and ad•afly, by Wcs Bradnock,
Bob, and latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs connects with the arrival here of the'
Frank Marshall, and Robert. London mail truck.
I ; 1 Word was received by Mrs. Edythe For some years now a mall truck
Sturgeon of the death on Tuesday oft operated by Bill Jervis, cf Clinton, has
Dr. J. E. Hort; formerly of Kitchenerbeen•running daily between Clinton and
and more recently of Windsor, Winghant. This is the run that Is being
' Mr. and Mrs, Jim Swan and daugh- replaced.
•-•.•••44-4-4-•-•-•-•rr••.-•-•.H+•.+•+•+•+•++•.•-•••+of! ter, Dianne, of St. Catharines, also Mrs, In its place will be a truck coming
1 Jim MacLean, of North Carolina, spent from Stratford and timing on through tc
the week -end with Mrs. Jim Gibson, I Kincardine. This truck will arrive :n
Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Philp were Sun- Blyth at 7:03 a.m., and return to 6:13
I day visitors in Owen Sound. - i p.m. daily. On the weekend the truce,
Mr. r, and Mrs. Ray Madill, Cheryl ane,' will not return Saturday nights, • but ,
Terry, were Hanover visitors on Sun -1 instead will come through Sunday night
at the regular hour of 6:13 p.m.
• day.
! Mrs, Morley Kiteley and daughter, of 1 Another branch run will meet this
' Montreal, are visiting the former's
mother, Mrs. Thomas Elliott.
r•.4.44•+•-•{4••.- 44+4-•-•-•-•-•-•-•.-.H .•.+N+N-•••-•'1•.-•1+H4 Mr. Robert Baird of Clinton was in
attendance at Blyth Fair on Saturday.
Mr. Lloyd Walsh of Burlington, spent
the week -end with his parents, Mr, and
Mrs. Albert Walsh.
Mr. Thomas Millar of Londcsboro
c made good his boast, and attended his
77th Blyth Fall Fair, and
enjoyed points.
Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Jaidin of Wing• 1 Mr. and Mrs. Goran Hanna and One thing is certain, the railway Com
ham visited with Mr. and Mrs, Harvey family, Mrs. Joseph Hanna, of Listowel, ponies cannot continue to operate emp-
McDo'vell, also Mrs. Fred Cook on I visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. ty trains. It people want the service
Sunday evening. I Ray Hanna. I they will have to change their mode of ,
Mr. Ralph Rodger of Aylmer spent Mrs. Henry M:+thers. of Lucknow, is travel, and generally speaking, we doubt
Sunday with his bather, Mr. Emmett.visiting with her daughter, Mrs, Earl flowers and treats, while I was a pat• if people in predominantly rural areas
son Rodger and Mrs. Rodger. �i�tghtmnn, and Air, Wightman. I tont in the Wingham hospital. Spec where eveeybady, has and needs a car
Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Phillips of Aub• Mr. and Mrs. Bert Vincent and R4rs. Spec-
ial thanks to neighbours who were so will do this. We visualize in the not
urn visited Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Ella Baer. of Belgrave, with Mr. and good to look after my home. Also too distant future, passenger 'service
Mrs. Marvin McDowell on Sunday. • thanks to Mrs. Morrey and the nursing between only the large urban centres,
Mr. and Mrs. Will McW visited on staff, and Dr. McKibbon. where there are enough daily commut-
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cook. 42-1p. Mrs. Pearl Walsh ers to make regular passenger service a
Miss Lorna Buchanan, London, and ._ ---- ------ --- paying proposition fur the railways.
her friend Miss Marion Madge and.blr. CARD OF THANKS How long Is it since you had your
Andy Chuga11, of Exeter, were week.
We wish to thank all these who help• last train ride? We took a jaunt from
end visitors with the Buchanans• ed in any way at the time of our sal Blyth to Goderich about 10 or 12 years
! There will be no service in the and when we moved. Special thanks tri ago, and then it was because the cat
church on Sunday owing t:, the anniver. Mr. and Mrs. Alf Nichol, Mr. and Mrs was at the other end, waiting for us
sary services at Donnybrook. ! Freeman Tunney and Mr. and Mrs. Incidentally, Junior went along with
Mr. and Mrs Stewart Ament and son George Hamm. it was greatly apps- us for the thrill of a train ride. W+:
Gary, of Auburn, visited on Sunday ciated and will not be forgotten. haven't had one since, and we bet you'
with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Snell am; 42-1. Mr, and Mrs. Jim Armstrong can hardly remember your last train
'Jeanette, also Mr, and Mrs. Donald ---•----••-•— - •ride. The railway companies have a
Snell and boys, and attended anniver. AUCTION SALE hard time showing a profit on that
sary services here. 1 At McLelland Sale Barn, Bervie, on kind of patronage.
' Mr, and Mrs. Jasper McBrian, Gade- Friday evening, Sept. 28th, at 8:30 p.m
One thing we will miss due to the
rich, were Saturday visitors with Mr, Choice offering of cows, heifers, and
new mail service—that is the cheery
and Mrs, Gordon Snell and Jeanette. calves. , 42.1 wave of the hand of Bill Jervis as he
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Walden, Mr. - -__ clashed north and south with his little
Alva McDowell. are accomnanvim; Mr!: Leg Broken In Fall Volkswrgon. Bill did yeoman service
Elia Baer of Milk River. Alberta, and F'xiends learned with regret of the on the run, come rain or snow, and we
Mr, Wm, Walden to Milton airport injury late last Friday night to Miss heard a rumor that he might engage
when the latter two are going West to t'•'^'en Turvey, when she fell at her,
Milk River by plane. Mrs. Baer is re- home and suffered a broken leg. his direction under the new setup, run•
turning to her home there and Me ; +e was taken to Clinton Public
Walden is going to spend a few week: Hospital where she remained over
there and also coming beck to Winni• night, having the leg set and placed in
peg to visit his brother, Mr. R. Walden+ !a cast, and returned to Blyth on Sat
and family, before returning home. urday. She is convalescing at the home
I of her sister, Mrs, Borden Cook.
ANNIVERSARY SERVICES
Anniversary services were held bat
Sunday in the Westfield Church with
large congregations at both service;
In the morning Rev. Rr.bt S. Hiitr
spoke on "Hort we would see ,)'esus."
taking his text frim the 21st verse of
the 12.h chapter of St. John's Gospel.
The choir was assisted by a young lad•
ies trio.
In the evening Rev. Mr. Blitz toots
charge of the first part of the service
with Dr. James Semple of Egmondvillc
as guest speaker. Dr. Semple spoke en
"The old folk of yesterday, and the
young folk of today," taking his text
from verses 4 and 5 of the 8th chapter
rf Zachariah. The brotherhood Choi:
was assisted by the men's quartette.
'rhe music ";as under the direction of
the choir leder. Mr. Arnold Cook, with
the organist, Mrs. Elaine McDo•.vell.
Mr. Wm. Carter, Rehert and Jimmie
of Blyth, with Mrs, Fred J. Cook on
Sunday.
Mrs J. L. itIcDo'.vell and Gordon
spent Thursday with Mrs. Elwin Taylor
cf Brussels and Mr. and Mrs. Will Be-
herna of Wroxeter.
Mr. and Itlrs. Wm. Hitesic of Gode-
rich, with her parents, Mr, and Mrs.
Emmerson Rodger.'
Mr. and Mrs. ?1e1 Cox and Beverly,
of Godesi"h visited S.nd•+.; with Ii',
and Mrs. Clarence Cox,
CARD OF THANKS
Would -like to thank all my friends
who visited mc, remembered me with
ANNOUNCEMENT
ring the route from Clinton to Gode•
rich.
Bill was nlwnys good for a good fish
story, or a chat on boats and motors.
as he stopped briefly at the local Post
Office, being run outdoorsnnan at heart
He always found many kindred heart:
IN CLINTON HOSPITAL at the local Post Office,
Mr. and Mrs. James Kelly, of Sea. Mrs, Thomas Colson Is a patient in MISS CLARE 1IcG0IVAN TO
forth, are happy to announce the ar. the Clinton Public Hospital, where she +ENTERTAIN FRiENI)SIiIII' CIRCLE
rival of their chosen daughter, Mary was taken on Tuesday of last week, I The October meeting of the Friend-
Margaret, age 6 months old, !suffering from a paralytic stroke. We
ship Circle will he held October 1st,
trust her condition will improve, nt the home of Miss Clare McGowan,
i+•N t-NF+H
-•-• i.-.+•.+
+44+4.+t •• • 4444 •-•N 4440 •-+►•••••+-•1 � _ I e:r nmencing at 8:15 p.m. This meeting
ABLE TO BE OUT
Friends are glad to sec Mr. Leslie will take the form of a social, A good
Johnston enjoying the bright, sunny attendance is requested.
days, as he is able to be out following
I a long illness which kept hint confined
to his led most of the summer,
ANNIVERSARY SERVICES
BLYTH UNITED CHURCH
SEPTI!MBER 30th, 1956
11.:15 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Guest Preacher:
Rev. T'. W .K. Elliott, B.A., B.D., D.D.
Assistant Secretary, Board of home Missions,
Toronto. -
Special Music by the Choir.
A Cordial Invitation to Everyone to Attend.
41-2.
Change Li Bank Staff
Mr. L. M. Ortelll, of Goderich, has
UNDERWENT OPERATION joined the local staff of The Canadian
Mr. Edward McMillan is a patient in Bank of Commerce, replacing Mr. Wil.
St. Joseph's Hospital, London, where he liam Weber, as accountant.
underwent n major operation last Sat., Mr. Weber has joined the staff of the
urdny. Friends throughout this dia-
1 branch in Chesley and over the week.
trict express the hope for his speedyend he and Mrs. Weber movd to that
and complete recovery.
. W. I. TO MEET here was active in local sports, being
The regular monthly meeting of the this year coach of the Legionairres
.1 Blyth Women's Institute will be held in , Blyth's softball representatives in the
; the Memorial Hall, Blyth, Thursday. WOAA. He and Mrs. Weber have made
October 4th
u1 2:30 p.m, Special guests many friends here who regret their de•
will be the members of Tiger Dunlop parture.
W. I. There will be a debate, Every- Mr. Ortelli is a married man and will
town. Bill was nn the local staff for
approximately 31/2 years, and while
1I
•i++••+•••++• 44 •-• ••+•+N+•-••1•••+• •-+N N+1-•-•-N+•4+1+•+.♦Ione welcome, be moving to town shortly.
DANCE
IN BLYT H MEMORIAL HALL
Music By NORM CARNEGIE >4
And His New Group
Sponsored By BLYTH LEGIONAIRRE'S SOFTBALL TEAM
1
Vi•Cal-Fer 12 Capsules $1.95 and $4,95
Vitasol M Capsules (high potency) $4.80
Geriplex Capsules (for folks 50 yrs. & older) $2.95
Bexel Capsules (for children) , .. , , $2.98
Wampole's Extract Cod Liver $1.35
Maltlevol (for extra vitamins) - $2.00
LR�.D.PHILP,Fhrn.B
h
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER -- PHONE 20, BLYTII
•-•-•-444 4-114- 44+ 4•+•44
STOP f3 SHOP
at Holland's Food Market This Week -End.
Crisco, 3 Ib. (in Kitchen Cannister) ... ... , $1.05
F
$1.29
3for25c
24 oz25c
25c
59c
King Size Tide (25c off) ,
Vogue Toilet Tissue
Breakfast Club Marmalade
Sweet Treat Pineapple, crushed or tidbit
Johnston's Hard Gloss Wax (pints)
Robin Hood Oats 5 lbs. 49c
Jello or Pudding 3 for 25c
Red Bird Matches 3 for 25c
Holland's Food Market
AND LOCKER SERVICE.
Telephone 39 - WE DELIVER
'•44- •+•••-.••• 4•.4++444++•4•4•4.4444444 _
4-444+•4+••4•4••4+444-•+0•4-••••N••4+++$4-•-$4• ♦•
• •
VODDEN ELECTRIC SHOP
YOUR WESTINGHOUSE DEALER
"You Can be sure, if it's Westinghouse"
NO OTHER LAUNDRY EQUIPMENT LIKE
THE NEW WAY, MTH WESTINGHOUSE
TWINS.
3 Sets and 3 Prices to choose from. Clothes are
gently "tumbled" clean, and rinsed by "Lift Away"
action, with a minimum of water.
Westinghouse Dryers use Direct Air Flow System
with Three -Way Dry Dial and Ringing Signal,
SEE THEM FIRST AT VODDEN ELECTRIC.
PHONE 71R2 •• BLYTH, ONT.
N+•N•+•• •+H+N-••+•+++-• •••+x+•+4+4+•4• $*++1444++44-+•4-• •
We Have a .Good Supply of
NO. 1 REGISTERED
GENNESEE SEED WHEAT
NO. 1 CERTIFIED
HUDSON FALL BARLEY
Howson St Howson .Ltd.
BLYTH - WINGHAM
'Better Feeds Mean Bigger Profits'
WILL MOST HURON PRESBYTERiAI,
The members of the Blyth WMS Aux.
diary are to he hostesses to the Huro,,
Presbyterial on Tuesday, October 2nd
Morning session at 0:30 a.tn, After-
noon session at 1:30 p.m,
Mrs, Childs, of London, will be guest
speaker, Dinner will be served at 12
noon by the Blyth ladles.
The co-operation of all members is
requested and wilt be very much ap-
preclated by the corrunittee and Presi-
dent,
In Aid Of Badly Needed Funds