The Blyth Standard, 1956-10-03, Page 1THE BLVTHSTANDAR
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VOLUME 62 - NO, 43.
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, I.a.. i..I RI iimorAr„Aw^•w1•11MIIM ., L 1 - -
Authorized as second -clash mail, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, OCt, 3, 1956). Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance • $3.50 in the U.S.A.
Post Office Department, Ottawa
Former Blyth Residents WEDDINGS BITUARY It;West Section 1�I.M.S. Huron Pres -
MRS.■ ; Rev, A. W. Watson conducted the ■
LEAR,•—MANNING
50thWedding Anniversary Baskets of pink and yellow gladioli funeral service of the late Airs. L. ,1 byterial filet At Blyth
and ferns at the altar of Londesboro Williams, formerly Rachel May (Min.
Se ember 26th marked the Fiftieth --- Hie) Golle , The sectional convention of West ing School for leaders,
Pt United Church made a`lovely fall set- Y who died In Clinton Hoo , .
Wedding Anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. , ting for the wedding of Gailya Woo pital following a lengthy illness. Section of the Women's Missionary So- I Children in Korea need sweaters {n
Wm, T. Jenkins, 182 Water Street 10 O'clock Closing On planning and Harry Edmund Lear,' • She was horn in Morris Township, a cieties of Huron Presbyterial was lisle ages 5, 6, or 7. Don't make odds and
North, Galt, Ontario, formerly of Blyth. Saturday Nights Hullett Township, The bride is the daughter of the late Joseph and Aanr. � in Blyth United Church with morning ends of yarn into afgans, but use them
The bride of fifty years ago was Maria daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. E. Mart- garet Colley. In 1002 she married the and afternoon sessions, Tuesday, Oct, 2 up in sweaters for these children who
According to an agreement between i lste Luther J. Williams who
B. McGowan, youngest daughter of the Hing, Londesboro, and the groom 1s the i peed•.• I Mrs. Tait Clark, of Carlow, vice• need them so badly,
late Gregor and Margaret McGowan, Blyth Businessmen, which was in el- son of Mr, and Mrs, Nelson Lear, Blyth , ceased her in 1930. They farmed in president of the Section, '.y Brown was organist
feet 13st year, steres will close at 10 Morels Townshipt presided and Mrs. Iinrt r
pioneers of East Wawanosh Township, i Rev, J, T. White performed the core- 7 years prior to con- the Worship Service was In charge of throughout the meeting. ,
• Huron County, The groom was the tem, on Saturday nights, from now mony on Saturdayafternoon, Seinen.. ducting a hardware store in Belgrave.
until the end of December, after which 6 Mrs. L. Young and Mrs, F. Clark, of RESOLUTIONS
only ,son of the late Giles and Annaber 29th at 3 and later in Blyth, IReport of the Resolution Committee
time 9 o'clock closingwill become of pan, the Smith's Hill Auxiliary, Mrs. W
Jenkins of the same County, Atten•' t Given in marriage by her father, the . Mrs, Williams was a member cf Blyth McVittie gave words of welcome, with was given by Mrs. C. Straughan, of
fective until next Spring, The chanb• United Church, the Women's Mission. - the reply g
d•ants at the wedding were Miss Mar- i bride wore a floor -length gown of I ,p , given by Mrs. T. Hunter of Auburn, and accepted, and will be pub-
es were made to co-lncide with the y lisped next week.
garet Fraser, R N„ Edmonton, Alger- Chantilly lace over taffeta styled with cry Society, and the Women's Associa• I the Lceburn Auxiliary.
return to Standard. Time in the Fall tion,
tae niece of the bride and the late Dr. a three -tiered bouffant skirt,long Stearal r
C. Wilford, who served China (or and the advent of Daylight time in the head -
pointed sleeves,pleated tulleyoke and appointments were tn,.dc
pMrs. Williams, though of a retiring Mrs, Charlie Smith was appointed re -
E.
• Sprung.
thirty years as a medical miss(onary. Wepresume that beginning this Sat- Chinese collar, From her beaded head• nature, was one of the few octogenar• cording secretary for the day. Mrs. C.
Miss Marjory Hedley of London was the dress was draped a finger tip veil of tans in the Township of Mortis where Ifigeins, Blyth, on the finernc commit -
bride's flower girl. The wedding core- urday night, stores will close at 10 p.m silk illusion, and she carried a whitsI she pent her entire lite.
Pres -
stony was performed by hie Rev. ,A. She was the sole survivor of one of tee, with reMn. J. Sutter, Clinton, Pres -
Bible with Talisman roses and whitehyterial Treasurer.
McLean, D.D., Presbyterian minister at THANKSGIVING DAY, MONDAY streamers, 1 the earliest settlers in the township. Appointment of a resolution commit.
Blyth for forty years. Mr. and Mr3, Her sister, Miss June Manning, maid Her father bought the land from the tee for 1957 was left with a committee
Jenkins farmed for a number of years Monday, October 8th, is Thanksgiving of honour, was gowned in a cocktail Crown over a century ago. of Victoria Church, Goderich, with the
in Huron County and moved to Galt Day, and a public holiday. Remember length dress of chromespun driftwood Pallbearers were the six grand nep. president of the Auxiliary, Mrs. Ern.
eleven years ago where Mr. Jenkins this when doing your week -end shops over burnt orange taffeta with match- hews: Reg Rintoul, Cameron Rintoul, est Pat:ersen. convener. Mrs. Ernest
was employed with the C.M.C. for see 1 ping, • ing picture hat and carried a colonial Murray Bradburn, Harry Brydges, Jim Prldlram, Goderich, was added to the
eral years. They are members of Wes- And don't forget to give tis your per- bouquet of bronze mums. As brides. and Clarence Colley. presbyterial nominating cntnntittee, and
ley United Church, Galt, sonal holiday items for ,next week. maid, Mrs. Lois Andrews, Toronto Interment was made in Blyth Union to the Finance Committee, Mrs. Arthur
Their family of four children and cousin of the bride, wore an identically Cemetery. Straughan, of Benrniller,
fourteen grandchildren, gathered at styled dress and picture hat of chrome- ”— Thirteen of the eighteen senior aux-
dinner party held at Fearn Lodge. FRIENDSHIP CIRCLE spun sea urchin over paddy green tar. •WON AT CNE iliarles comprising the Section, resparid
Legionairres Still Waiting
For WOAA Decision
Last Thursday night, behind some
excellent hurling by Eddie Watson, the
Blyth Legionairres disposed of Tees -
water to the tune of 9 to 5 and thus
wrapped up that victory, 4 games to 1,
Eddie pitched well throughout the
game and after a rather shaky start,
his team mates gave him good support.
Teeswater had again to call on relief
pitching and Freeman Tunney finished
the game for them, Both teams were
credited with some unearned runs be•
Galt, to celebrate the occasion les.- cause of errors. Watson aided his own
The October meeting of the Friend- feta and carried yellow mums, Competing in the egg grading com• ed to the roll call by giving splendid cause with a home run in the fourth
Wednesday evening. The bride and i ship Circle was held October 1st at I Misses Jay and Judy Scott, Baugh• petition at the Canadian National Ex- reports, They were Auburn, Benmiller, inning,
groom, wearing corsages from their t the home of Misses Clare 'and Ida Mc• t tars of Mr, and Airs, Jim Scott, were , hibition, Miss Marjorie Knox won two Blyth, Donnybrook, Dungannon, Gode- Since_then almost a week has gone'
grandchildren, sat at the head of a T• by—a week of good weather—and no
Gowan with a good attendane, tiny flower girls, dressed in yellow and first and three seconds out of the five rich North Street, Goderich Victoriafurther word of who the Legionairres
shaped table graciously appointed with j Mrs, Ben Walsh brought the meet- i blue nylon dresses and carried nose crates of eggs she had in the competl• Street, HolrnesvilleLeeburnNile, Port are to play in the next round has been
a wedding cake, golden flowers and ing to order with a short meditation, gays of pink french carnations. tion. Marjorie works for her father In Albert, Smith's Hi
ll, Westfield, announced u r to Tuesda night.
tall golden tapers. i followed by the hymn, "Count Your George Underwood, WIngham, broth- the local egggradingstation, and re -I Y
Yn � g Other reports heard were from Godes We understand that en Tuesday the
Among those present were Mr. and Blessings." Mrs. Donald Howes read er-in-law of the groom, was grooms cetved her returns only last Friday rich Evening Auxiliary, six CGIT Legionairres made a mighty sporting
Mrs. Harold S.. Jenkins, Barry, and the scripture which was taken from St, man. The ushers were Kenneth Wood 1 Her success is certainly a tribute ',c groups, ten Mission Bands, and ten' c ffer to the WOAA, that they would
Marilyn of Sunderland, Ontario, where Ltrkc, A short skit was presented by of Ricigetotvn, cousin of the bride, artd her, ability, and also that you are as- Baby Bands, I playa doubleheader away on the same
Harold is manager of the Canadian Miss Clare McGowan, Mrs. John Mc- Lawrence Plaetzer, of Auburn. sured of a good grade at the local sta• day, an afternoon game against ore
Berth of Commerce; Mr. and Mrs, Gor- Dougall and Mrs, Carman Hodgins,I The wedding music was played by Boit, Aliss Margaret Jackson, Presbyterial team, and an evening game against the
don Jenkins, Charles, Carol, Paul and This skit was written by Mrs. Charles Donald Johnston, of Hamilton, and the Secretary foro Missionocarrier,
had cn can other �.he two teams in question beinge
Kathy, of St. Catharines, where Gor- whom we were happy to have as a guest soloist, Miss June Lear, of Toronto, 1►ITSSION BAND 111[EETING Mit a school book carrier, which Wellesley and Baden. They are to get
Wed -
don is Co -Owner of J. & S. Refriger- at our meeting. The hymn, "Bringing sister of .the groom sang, "The Lord's be made and filled with school sent t: nane answer on this proposal today 1lon
anon Company; Mr. and' Mrs. George in the Sheaves," was sung, followed Prayer" and "Wedding Prayer:'
The members of the Blyth United , by Mission Band members, and sent tc ncuday. This would save two long
Hetherington (Margaret, R,N,), Bobby, by prayer by Mrs. Sid McCullough, _ For the reception held in the church Church Mission Band met in the school •Overseas missions. Mrs. Keith Webster trips for Blyth, as both Wellesley and
Billy, Batty, Clifford and Jim, of Blue. The meeting was then turned over tc 'parlours, the. bride's mother received in room of the church on Wednesday gave a brief synopsis of a few of the I Baden are in the same neighbourhood.
vale, where theyare farming, and Mrem dresscecces•Sep1
t, 26th, after school, •Mrs, •M. Hol• new worthwhile books on the WAq� The idea has merits and demerits. Ev-
and
letter our e vaseread nt, �from l LondesboroltMN soles. and rown jacket
aecorsage owithyeslow roses i land and Miss Marjorie Knox were in ,book shelf, which was supplemented by I through, but erything libfi would bene if oquit ur oasjolt it
Mrs, Donald M. Jenkins, Barbara, charge of the meeting which opened Mrs. H. Childs, of London, member of - they lost both ends of the doubleheader,
with the Call to Worship by the presi• the executive of London Conference
dent, Cheryl Madill, after which hymn and for many years, dean of the school
111:was sung, and the Members' Pur• for leaders, held at Alma College,
was Alan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon for the November meeting. The Mis all Hunting Stuart of Appin plaid with `ltosct repdated. The Scripture was read Miss Josie Saunders, Presbyterla)
Jenkins, who is serving as a Flyip
ng Or- Benediction cicsed this part of the raspberry accessories and a corsage of by Valerie Holland and prayer offered Supply Secretary for Supply Work Congratulations to Connie Dale Bowes
fiver with the R.C.A.F. in Moose Jaw clarified some of the m!gunderstand- who celebrates her 1st birthday on
fags regarding parcels for overseas Infs. Tuesday, October 9th.
Bions, and read several letters of appre• Congratulations to Mr. Stewart Am -
elation for parcels sent, particularly to ent who celebrates his birthday on
the Indian Missions. Adjournment was Tuesday, October 9th.
made for dinner in the school room of Congratulations to Mr, and Mrs, Sid
the church, provided by Blyth Auxil - McCullough who celebrate their 11th
larv, wedding anniversary on Saturday, Oct.
The Call to Worship for the after. Bill,
noon session was led by members of I Congratulations to Mrs, Robt. Riley of
Benmiller Auxiliary, followed by the Londesboro who celebrated her birth -
continuation of Presbyterial reports lefl day on Wednesday, Oct. 3rd.
o%'er from the morning session. Mrs Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Robt.
(Rev.) Moote, of Goderich, secretary Riley of Londesboro, who celebratere
of Christian Stewardship, gave mane their wedding anniversary on Weds•
practical suggestions for auxiliary sec. day, Oct. 10th.
rotary's, sating: "Those of is who Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Ro•
have•everything are thankful for noth- I bert Bulmer of London, who celebrate
ing, but those who have nothing arc ; their wedding anniversary on Wednes-
thankful for everything, Mrs. J. Sut•
Joanne and Jim, of London, where Don !ton Circle, inviting us to attend their' The groom's mother assisted in navy
aid is Chief Engineer at the G. M. Dies. October meeting on Monday evening crepe, white and pink accessories, and
el plant, of London, Ontario, The on. October 15th. a corsage of pink roses.
ly grandchild not. able to be present Mrs, A. W. Watson offered her hone The bride donned a wool suit of
CONGRATULATIONS
meeting. i Talisman roses, fora• wedding trip tc
Sank, and who sent greetings to his 1 A social time was enjoyed playing points east, On their return the couple
grandparents. progressive games, with Mrs: Fred will live on the groom's farm, R.R. 1.
To mark the memorable anniversary. Howson winning• first prize, and Mrs. Blyth, Ont.
Mr, and Mrs. Jenkins were recipients Jack Manning and Mrs. Keith Webster
of a television set from their family. the consolation prizes. Lunch was sere- Showers and Trousseau Tea Held
. I ed by hostess and the committee in Several showers have been given In
LIVING AT BRUCEFIELD charge of the meeting. the bride -elect's honour, Mrs. JimMr. and Mrs. Ray McNall and chit- i
dren have moved to Brucefteld where Snell, with Miss Lois Jones, Clinton, as
Mr. McNall is now manager of the Car Accident Damage Will erco-hostess, gave a miscellaneous shote -
1
trict Co -Op. Mr. McNall has rented
Brucefield Branch of the Hensall Dis- Run To $250,00 ( Mrs. Edwin Wood, Blyth, with Mrs,
his dwelling in Blyth to Mr. Hubert I Sat. Clarence Ball and Mrs. Frank Tamblyn
Huba. An accident about 1;30 a.m. last as co -hostesses, also entertained at a
The Standard alongwith many Blyth urday morning involved two cars at the miscellaneous shower,
intersection of Queen and DinsleyMembers of the Londesbroo United STUDENTS LAUNCHING
friends regret the departure of the Members
SALESMANSHIP
11I
HIP CA_'AIGN
McNalls from this community, and wish Church choir, for which the bride !s
good health and success in their new Mr., Wellington McNeil was coming organist, gathered at the home of Mrs The students of the Cintoa Die.-Ict
activities., west on Dinsley street and was pro - Clare Vincent, Londesboro, for a sec- Collegiate Institute are launching their
;by glenna Gowing, The offering wag
received by Barry Grant and Donald
Appleby, after which hymn 362 was
sung. The minutes were mod by the
secretary, Sheila Henry, Business in-
cluded discussion on Mission Band Tea
which will be -held sometime in Octo.
ber, and each member was asked to
have r•: -nothing ready for the bazaar
tablo, are.: "'^ girls requested to help
serve at the t:' -les. In the study per-
iod Mrs. Holland tiod the story to the
seniors and Miss Knox had charge of
the juniors,
ceeding across Queen street when his ial hour, and presented her with an own salesmanship campaign within the
vehicle, a 1952 Dodge, was struck by a1ter, of Clinton, Presbyterial treasure
engraved hymnary and vase. next few days throughout the entire
treasurer
1952 Studebaker, driven by Wesley The Sunday School class of boy. school district. This project sponsored reported the allocation for 1955 was
BFLGRAVE Jefferson, R.R. 1, Belgrave, who was by$21,600 and was more than met, but
Anniversary services were held In which she teaches, presented her with the Student's Council, under the she urged all treasurers to make their
the Presbyterian Church, Belgrave, on proceeding south of Queen, a lovely tea pot. supervision of the President, Neil Mc•
Sunday, Sept. 30th, in the afternoon. Damage to the McNall car has been The Huron Presbytery Y.P.U. Esse. Gregor, and with the ea•operation of quarterly offerings promptly.
'The church was nicely decorated with estimated at $250,00, while damage to cutive, of which both the bride and lite MacLean -Hunter Publishing Com•
the Jefferson car was reported as neg. groom are members, presented them pony, of Toronto, has proven 'successful
flowers, Rev. Kerr of Exeter, was the
guest minister, and Mrs. King of Brus• I ligible' with a clothes hamper and candle hold. In thousands of school ocross Canada,
sels, was organist, and the Brussels Provincial Constable Charles Salter ers, This catnpaign gives schonls the oppor-
choir led in the singing and sang two dent,
;Accord ngamtounds for my extr-
inTown atconstable ed the ciJohn desboro`wasahostess alt a� tr usseau tea curricular raAnon. tunny d fworthwhile tnacti ities
Saturday niternoon and evening, Sept. which are not always provided for in
22nd In honour of her daughter, Gailya .the annual school estimates, Many
Wood Manning, whose marriage to worthy objectives are assisted by fund.
Mr. and Mra, Glen VanCamp and ering a group of ladles to their homes ' Harry Edmund Lear took place on Sat• raised in this way,
family y spent the week -end aroundFortunately no one was Injured, ' urdny, In Londesboro United Church The students hope to raise money for
North Bay. . Mrs. Manning was assisted by Mrs. Nel- their school by obtaining new and re-
• son Lear, the bridegroom's mother, and newal subscriptions to leading Cana.
AMONG THE CHURCHES PERSONAL INTERESTthe bride -elect, dian and U.S. publications, and the ctti• Book of Revelations, "I know thy works
Mr, and Mrs. Chas, P. Davids of B471an Showing the guests to the rooms, was zeros of this community art urged to but I have set before you an • open
Sunday, October 7th, 1956 - and Akron, Ohio, are with their da•igh• Mrs, Edwin Wood. Displaying tit support and encourage the students in door," She stated, "More than one -
ter, Mrs, Clayton Ladd, and Mr. Ladd, `trousseau and gifts, were Marion Snell this endeavour, third of the world's people go to bed
ST, ANDREW'S PftCSBYTI:RIAN and hope to remain here for the Cana• Jay Ball, Ann Shaddick, of Clinton hungry each night, They never know
CHURCH dian "Thanksgiving week -end, Frances Lyon and Lois Andrews, of what it is to not Le hungry. This open
3:30 p.m.—Church Service, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Cook, and Mrs. Toronto, Delphine Bunking of London Anniversary Services Held door God has set before us is our psis -
Rev. D. J. Lane, B.A,, Minister, Robert Craig, of Blyth, attended the Helen Underwood of Wingham, Gene- Anniversary services were observed, {loge to serve these people."
THE UNITED CHURCH both morning and evening, at Blyth Afrs. 0. Risby, of Nile, favoured with
' Thornton -Cook wedding on Saturday, in vieve Allen and Ruth Vincent,of Lon. Mitchell the bride being a daughter of desboro a solo. Mrs, J. Tiffin, of Winghnnt,
antnems. 1 Ballo •, charges are pending.
Mr, and Mrs, Ross Anderson and Mr. McNeil was returning home from
family spent Saturday and Sunday with a meeting in Listowel, and was deify
relatives at Milt^^
Mrs. W, McVittle, Presbyterial presi•
dent, in her message, commended Lee•
burn and Smith's Hill auxiliaries for
carrying on despite the fact their chur-
ches were closed. She threw out a
challenge for leaders, especially for jun•
tor work,
A skit, portraying what Christian cit
izenship means, was presented by Mrs
J. McDougall, Mrs. C. Hodgins and Miss
Clare McGowan, of Blyth.
Mrs, II, Childs, the special speaker
based her address on the words in the
OF CANADA
• Blyth, Ontario, '
Rev. A. W. Watson, Minister.
10:15 a,m.—Sunday School,
11:15 a.m.—Morning Worship,
World-wide Communion.
7:30 p.m.—Evening Worship.
day, Oct. 10th.
Congratulations to Tom Heffron, who
celebrated his 9th birthday on Monday,
October 1st.
Congratulations to Mr. Elmer Pollard
who celebrated his birthday on Tues-
day, Oct. 2nd.
Congratulations to Mr. Bob Pollard,
who celebrated his birthday on Wed-
nesday, Oct. 3rd.
Congratulations to Mr, Walter Cook
of Westfield, who celebrates his birth-
day on Monday, Oct. 8th.
Congratulations to Mrs, Geo Potter
of Sarnia, who celebrated her birthday
on Tuesday, October 2nd.
AUBURN POST OFFICE MAIL
SCHEDULE
The following mail schedules are now
effective out of Auburn:
Mail leaves Auburn for Blyth at 8:25
a.m.; Mail arrives at Auburn from
Blyth at 9;00 a.m.; Mail leaves Auburn
for Blyth at 3:25 p.m.; Mail arrives at
Auburn from Blyth at 4:10 p.m.
Wicket open 8:15 a.m. to 12 noon;
Wicket closed 12 noon to 1 p.m. (lunch
Ory
Mr. and Mrs, al Cook, of Mitchell, The tea table was covered by a table United Church Sunday last, when the closed the afternoon with her report hour); Wicket open 1 p.m. to 4:45 pan.;
formerly of Oryyth. cloth crocheted by the late Mrs. Wtl• guest minister for the occasion was tit. as a delegate to Alma College Train- 1 Lobby open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m,
Rev, R. W, K, Elliott, II,A„ ll.D., of
Visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Leonard hast Gray, A silver bowl of roses ten• Toronto, Assistant Secretary of the
Cook on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. I tered the table flanked by tall candle: Board of Home Missions for the United ■ ■Jack Fhrroty, Galt, Mr, and Alrs, L, R. in silver holders. Church, kions Enjoy Overseas Trip Via Slides
Schroeter and daughter, Karen, Lon- In the afternoon, Mrs. A, Lyddiatt, ,
don, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Finlay, Blyth, great-aunt of the bride, and Dr. 1511ioe dellte of 'two ins i re-
ermorts the theme of w pith made re. -
'
CHURCH of Lucknow, Mrs. W. V, Roy, Clinton, poured tea, g xupulatlon of The regular meeting of the Blyth McDougall accompanying at the piano,
ference to the growing
Trinity, Blyth, 10;30 a.m,—Harvest Mr, and Mrs. George Fritzley, Donna In the evening, Mrs. Margaret Man• ge it presented Lions Club was held last Thursday; Lion President Ray thanked Lion
Canada and the ahallen
Thanksgiving Service. •I Lynne and Ron, and Mr. and Mrs. S,1 Hing, , grandmother of the bride, and to the Church, particularly in new see -
St
with a good attendance, and I Grover Clare for his fine work this
as ..�_ ,•,. Auburn ,� •• _. ,,r_u Alines of Burford, spent Sunday withrMrs. Eadie Sturdy, great aunt of the ,c^„� ,,r,t,^ .,„„c.,, ,,,t,^,^ tt,^ „„^a r^,• Liens President Ray Madill in charge year with the Lions Midget Hardball
of the meeting, I team, and in reply Lion Grover ro•
Members present enjoyed a very ht•' marked that competitively the team
g slides presented by hadn't done so well but he hoped their
a,. araaan AUUUL,,, .. araauu:• he former's mother, Mrs, M. Fritzley, !groom, presided. - �• country
1i ' is
Trinity, Belgrave, 2:30 p.in, —• Even- new churches and rrity�.�us facilities
I nd'Mr, E. Pollard. I Assisting in the tea room were Lair were becoming acutely necessary,
song, Mr. and AICs,, Harold McClinehey and Jones, Maxine Hunking Marguerite The choir rendered special anthems serest ng grot p
Trinity, Blyth, . 7:30 p.m. -- Harvest p
Dureen, and Miss Rena McClinchey, vis, Lyon and Jane McCool, Others as' }farad Linn Arthur Watson, talcen during pts experience would stand them in good
Thanksgiving Service. under ilio direction of Alrs.
g g hied last week with Mr, and Mrs. G. silting were Sondra Jean Collyer, June ^ s Hier stint as nnvy chaplain, when steed ice next season.
Special music by the Junior Choir, Phtlllps, w ith Miss Paige Pnillios a. or• sunt The ladies 0f Mrs. Audrey Walsh'
and soloist, Aliss Claire Taylor, R. Jennings and family of Detroit. Manning, Mrs, Frank Tamblyn, Mrs. ganist: Soloist in the morning was Mr I he visited several countries overseas 1 ,
Leanord NleNall and Mrs, Sidney Lan- Jack T,vreman. At the evenhi sere se Lion Art accompanied the showing with !group of the United Church it A eery-
'
nner—chicken and all
CHURCH OF.GdD sing a quartette, Mrs. G. Doherty, Mrs. II, a running commentary that was both
Mrs. Besslta McCall of Victoria, B.C., ..�—.-r the ted byngs for which they were
McConnell Sheet, Blyth. lett for her home on We inescley, after V udder, Messrs. Janes Lawrie nest{ ',Vel- rducatinnal and interesting,
ter Buttoll contributed a selection. The usual opening exercises terse thanked by Lion Bili l;mpey, with Mrs.
Rev, H. Stewart, Pastor, visiting friends In this vlclnity ins I ATTENDED Y. P. CONVENTION Walsh accepting.
conducted with Lion Grover Clore act-
10 a.m.—Suniiay Seboeh some weeks. Mrs. McCall came cast George Webster, Jim Howson, Wa 'ne . • • A .brief dl. .. I n tuns introduced by
11 a.m.—Mornin Worship. LIONS TO HOLD RUMMAGE SALE ing as talltwister, Lion Bill Empey Lion Walter Butlell regarding n rum -
7;30 p,m,—Evening Worship. Centennial which was held over the Johnston attended the Young People': t, mage sale, which with approval
Wednesday, 8 p.st,—Prayer and Bible Cab is to the effect that the Club will hislittle daughter. and announcement met a date will e
Lab ur Day week -end. She was the Convention or London Conference hold another popular rummage sale
be
Study, former Bessie Wells of Hullett Town- i of the United Church, held at Strat•Novena.A pleasing vocal duet was rendered advertised shortly.
Friday, d p.m,—Youth Fellowship, ship, jford on Sept, 20 and 30, l>ter gil tilts tnontlt op 0arly in by Misses Meta Alblas and Gwen The meeting closed with the Lions
pber, , 1�e,A-y Campbell, with Lion Pianist Mrs. Jack I Roar, _ .......-4
.r•.
RONICLES
° A
i1NGER RM
ateKsdoltt�s • Cldok,t
And still the weather makes
the news. Rain, thunderstorms,
rain and . still more rain. It
really makes your heart ache
to drive through the country
and see field after field of
spring crop standing in water,
the heads almost certainly
sprouting and matted together.
Our flats were flooded and
only a miracle kept the bridge
from floating away. Now the
weather appears to have clear -
although thunderstorms a r e
forecaet again for tonight. We
hope the weatherman is wrong
—not only on the farmers' ac-
count but for the Exhibition
too. This was the day we
should have gone but we just
couldn't face the trip with so
much humidity in the air. So
we regretfully stayed at home,
For ma it was not too great a
hardship as I had had a won-
derful outing over the week-
end—an outing that was most
unexpected . a trip to the
Lake Huron district where I
had never been before,
Some month ago friends of
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Ont. Print plainly PATTERN
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ours mentioned having been to
Kincardine for the weekend,
"Kincardine," I exclaimed, "I
have an old school friend in
Kincardine," B y comparing
notes we discovered that Mrs.
E. actually knew Nellie because
she lived almost exactly op-
posite Mrs. E's Kincardine
friends. Although it was quite a
coincidence I did not think
anything more about it until
last week when Mrs, E. phoned
me, said they were going to
Kincardine again and would I
like to go with them. Would I?
There was only one answer to
that question. I had looked at
the place so often on the map
and wished I could tackle the
125 mile trip but I knew my
eyes wouldn't appreciate driv-
ing that far. But with someone
else driving—that was another
story. We left here about seven
in the morning and got to Kin-
cardine about ten. The weather
was perfect—actually!—and there
was hardly any traffic at all
Kincardine is a very nice little
town, Clean, tidy, good stores
and a tine residential area. And
of course there is the lake and
a wonderful freshness in the
air. I noticed this particularly
on the Monday. Nellie and I
walked down town, leaving the
kitchen stove alight. When we
got back the house was stifling.
Had it been here the house
wouldn't have cooled off until
night, But there, with the doors
and windows thrown open the
the house was fresh and cool
in no time, It was wonderful.
One thing hampered our act-
ivities, neither Nellie nor I had
a car to get around with so we
couldn't go any'farther than our
two feet would take us. One
more instance of our dependence
upon four wheels to take us
around. During the night I even
toyed with the idea of hiring a
car next morning but it didn't
seem worthwhile as we were
leaving about one o'clock.
My friendship with Nellie
follows a rather unusual pattern.
We sat side by side during our
last year at school. We both
married Canadian service men
and we both came to Canada in
1919. For some years we were
out of touch with each other.
And then one day I was reading
the "Homemaker Page" in the
old "Globe". One letter was
signed "Little Mother" and by
its contents I had a hunch it was
written by my friend Nellie. I
wrote to "Little Mother"—care
of the Homemaker and found my
hunch was right. We correspon-
ded for several years but drop-
ped it again during the Depres-
sion of the '30's—probably be-
cause we and our families were
both going through a period
that we didn't want to write
about. I wonder how much other
correspondence was drolhped a-
round that time? Neither of us
knew what happened to the
other until we met at a W.I.
meeting in Guelph last year—
no, I guess it was early this
year. Nellie has never been back
to the Old Country but she
knew that I had as my visit was
mentioned in our home -town
paper to which she still sub-
scribes. So she had news of me
but I still had no idea what
had happened to her—not until
she inquired for me in Guelph.
All of which is a good illustrat-
ion of the far-reaching influ-
ence of a local paper, and also
of the Women's Institute as a
medium of renewing friendships
and acquaintances. Moral . .
keep up your subscription to
your home -town weekly and
never lose touch with the W.I!!
Never under -estimate the power
of either—their influence is ,
greater than you think. Haven't
I just proved it?
VACATIONING — Curious onlookers get a peak at Prince Rainier
and Princess Grace as the royal couple stand on the porch of
the former Miss Kelly's parents' surfside summer home.
French Act To Curb Fashion Thieves
The recent Paris fashion
openings marked the renewal of
fashion piracy, which -- ever
since the first mass advent of
foreign buyers after World War
I — has plagued the Paris cou-
ture.
The gravity of this problem
is, I find, little understood son
our side of the Atlantic, A col-
league remarked the other day:
"It's too bad the French can't be
more realistic about being cop-
ied," In her view the enormous
preponderance nowadays of
American fashions must have
rendered copying insignificant.
But actually a great number
of styles, which we think of as
100 per cent American designed,
first saw the light in some Paris
couture salon, A certain amount
of copying, of course, is legiti-
mate: the right to reproduce has
been paid for by the manufac-
turer, Copying however causes
considerable financial loss each
year to a large number of repu-
table American firms, as well
as to the French originators.
This being the case, a short
history of style piracy and some
ways to combat it efficaciously
may prove useful.
The pastel modernistic murals
of Madeleine Vionnet's salons on
the Avenue Montaigne—not fat%
from Dior's present premises --
were in the early 20's punctu-
ated with admonitory texts:
"The work of art is personal
property . , . '1'o copy is to steal
..." and others in similar vein.
M. 'Tr•ouyet, Vionnet's famous
and formidable director, was a
leader of the fight against copy-
ists, and the daily press was only
allowed to view a new Vionnet.•
collection several weeks after
the first showing (when inciden-:
tally it was no use to them) lest:
their cables describe the new
line too graphically.
"This, however, was literally,
"locking the stable door after
the horse has been stolen." In
those really bad old days, pirates
attended couture openings dis-
guised as private clients or as-
sistant buyers, armed with a
photographic eye and scissors to
snip a surreptitious sample from
an inattentive mannequin's dress
under pretext of examining the
fabric,
Paris was studded with mod-
erately priced dressmaker and
millinery shops in whose back
rooms one could get the latest
Paris originals at a fraction of
the cbuturier's figure. They even
bore the couturier's own "griffe"
(the claw mark, as the specially
woven and copyrighted label is
called), which copyist purveyors
counterfeited by the yard,
Buyers' arrivals at the various
Paris hotels were listed in the
daily papers, and the lobbies
were haunted by young men and
women carrying brief cases stuf-
fed with couture' sketches and
samples, They waited only for a
nod to follow an unscrupulous
prospective customer into some
secluded corner to display illicit
wares.
As the time went on, fashion
-bootleg gangs were organized,
Techniques were perfected. Il1-
paid workers on the couturier's
own staff were suborned.
Though personnel in "sensi-
tive" jobs were searched before
leaving the establishment dur-
ing the period in which the col-
lection was being prepared, a
cutter, for example, could take
out a design in his head. At
home he could make a detailed
working pattern with all indi-
cations as to execution, fabric,
and color. This could be re-
duced to microfilm by an ac-
complice, despatched to foreign
manufacturers by air mail, and
Paris innovations might appear
in a bargain basement — before
they made their bow in their
own designer's fashion parade.
Paris was periodically rocked
by some particularly flagrant
copy -scandal, which would
needle the couture into taking
,special action. Indignation meet-
ings were held, fashionable vigi-
lantes alerted, copy houses raid-
ed. But nothing much was ever
accomplished principally because
the only legal penalty Was a fine
—negligible beside the enormous
profits piracy nets the pirates.
The small fry, caught by the
raids, did not even know the
identity of the "Big Shots," who
so gladly paid their fines. So the
racket would start over again in
new headquarters, wtih new
agents and new faces.
There was just one period
when the Paris designers could,
and did, crack down effectively
on the style thieves That was
during World War 11 when the
Paris couture came under mili-
tary control.
As one of the luxury indus-
tries, the dress business was
'subject to regulations for con-
serving the national resources,
the division being headed by a
regular army major. And on
another front the designers were
protected by the fa med
"Deuxieme Bureau" (nearest
French equivalent to the FBI.)
'The bureau moved in because
many of the fa*;hion pirates,
who had gained a more or less
solid footing in the Paris pic-
ture, were German. And it was
found that secret information
was being conveyed to the en-
emy through codes disguised as
embroidery or print patterns.
A certain fashion photogra-
pher, for instance, had been in-
stalled in Paris for 17 years. He
spoke perfect French and was
generally believed to be from
Lorraine. He left Paris quietly
for a vacation shortly.before •
the declaration of war i 1939.
He returned in 1940 with the
then victorious German Army
of Occupation, as a lieutenant
rn a green uniform on a white
horse.
This lieutenant was placed at
the head of censorship of the
Paris fashion press. He had a
complete dossier on everyone in
fashion—with a big black mark
against the names of those who
had refused to use his photo-
graphs or had otherwise offend-
ed him through the years. I -Ie
took pleasure in refusing to
pass their articles, thus forcing
them out of jobs, or even shut-
ting down their publications.
But to return to the pirates
responsible for the loss to cou-
ture coffers of millions of francs
each season were the model -
renters, These• were not, strictly
speaking, copyists. They placed
big orders for Paris originals at
top prices, The catch was—they
then toured America showing
them on one-night stands.
Tickets of admission used to
be $100,00. Manufacturers not
only of garments, but of but-
tons, belts, zippers, accessories,
textiles, etc, could for that price
sketch, handle, and copy ' as
much as they could remember,
Even when the couturiers dis-
covered .what was happening,
they had .no redress; what
model renters did with their
property in the United States
was outside their jurisdiction.
All known model -renters were
barred forthwith from the top
Paris showings, Then they, too,
resorted to many subterfuges to
obtain their merchandise.
A model renter was the, cen-
tral character of a wartime
thriller—sort of a minor Mato
Hari of .the ruffle! This was
during the so-called "phony
war," when the French and
German troops exchanged an
occasional grenade across the
Maginot Line and life in Paris
was adventurous, but not yet
really hazardous,
One model renter—let us call
her Miss Borrowby—alone had
braved possible perils to come
to Paris by clipper and attend
couture showings being held for
private customers, She hoped.
no doubt to scoop the American
market with some unique Paris
designs for which she could ob-
viously command her own price.
Miss Borrowby, whom 1 knew
slightly but not as a model rent-
er, invited me to lunch. "Amer-
icans should stock together, these
days, there are so few of us
left in Paris," she said. "I am a
buyer, you know," she added,
"But I have no longer a single
assistant., You attend all the
openings anyway; It would be
a great favor if you would select
a few numbers for me -- get
them made up in your size."
I explained to her that as a
member of the working press,
I could buy nothing for resale.
She let the matter drop and I
forget all about her,
That is, until I received an
urgent call from Schiaparelli
letting me in on an exclusive
story. "Schiap", said Miss Bor-
rowby had tried to buy in all
the houses, but had been turned
down. Subsequently a young
American night - club singer,
performing in one of the war-
time "blued -out caves," had or-
dered several evening' gowns.
For her act, she said.
"Schiap" made and delivered
them. As a matter of routine,
she had checked with Lucien
Lelong, president of the Paris
couture syndicate. The girt had
got a number of things there
also.
Further investigation showed
that she had bought in every
leading couturier's establish-
ment more clothes, as Lelong
remarked, than she could wear
(or pay for nut of har salary)
for years. A companion had
acquired a suspicious selection
of daytime outfits.
Here's where the Deuxieme
Bureau went into action. The
trail led to Miss Borrowby's
hotel, They surrounded it, but
Miss Borrowby, mysteriously
tipped off, had flown. Literally
in a private, hired plane, head-
ed for Libson and the home-
bound clipper. Deuxieme '
Bu-
reau agents followed in a brace
of fighters. There was an ex-
citing (and close) chase over
the Pyrenees,
The alerted Lisbon police
had no authority to detain an
American citizen. While trying
to get it, they did manage suf-
ficient delaying tactics to pre-
vent Miss B's getting her dresses
cleared, The bureau men ar-
rived just in time to see the
clipper disappear in the clouds,
the lady on board. The loot was
piled up on the strand, They
took it back to Paris.
It is such goings-on that led
to the severe screening of per-
sons attending the first show-
ings of Paris couture today.
These must present their pass-
ports and each one a -special
identity card issued by the Paris
couture syndicate. One must
pay the "dedit," a deposit, be-
fore being allowed to view any
show. If a purchase is made, the
dedit is applied to it. 1f not, it
Is forfeited.
At Dior's the dedit is $1,000
to see the clothes, another $500
against the hats. The minimum
in some lesser houses is $600.
For years the Paris couturiers
have been agitating for tile
change of French law to include
a prison sentence for copying.
They have also been trying to
work out international agree-
ments, which would be in the
interest of respected Amerh:an
firms, as well, since It is obvi-
ous that the latter cannot sell,
for "ten grand," a number
which may be on bargain coun- •
ters before they can get it into
production,
Meanwhile the fashion thieves
have continued to come.up with
new tricks, A smart "tourist"
may watch a style parade with
a miscroscoplc camera conceal-
ed in the handle of her slim
umbrella. One girl even car-
ried hers in a purse -sized per-
fume bottle.
A designer for a Seventh
Avenue (New York) dress'
manufacturer recently got into
some Paris couture shows on
what appeared to be a bona fide
press card. The Frenchmen had
no way of knowing that the
paper she "represented" was a.
four-page, biweekly country
journal, which serves a com-
munity of 300 registered voters,
The now thoroughly aroused
Paris couture syndicate and in-
terested American opposite
numbers are considering meas-
ures to eliminate such incidents
—by establishing, . for instr',ee
one or more principled ,.res'
liaisons in Paris, who would be,
like Caesar's wife, absolutely
above reproach, absolutely fair .
in their dealings with both sides.
There may also be a committee
to screen applications for press
and buyers cards over in the
United States where extensive
and accurate information on 'ap-
plicants is easily available.
Thus, at long last, we may
look forward to the finis!, of
piracy in high fashion skies.
From the "Christian Science
Monitor," ' •
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1
A Plan To Mend
Broken Marriages
"Please tell me what to do.
I love him so much!" Tearfully,
the young woman told the vicar
what was worrying her, "After
five years of happiness, I have
just discovered my husband is
being unfaithful to me,"
The other woman, she ex-
plained, was his pretty blonde
secretary. "But I'm quite sure
he doesn't really love her," she
added. "He's only infatuated
with her,"
The vicar was a man of ac-
tion and he got busy. Twenty-
four hours later he had brought
the couple together again.
Then he told them: "I have
thought of a way whereby you
can start married life all over
again with all your vows un-
broken, I'm going to re -marry
you. Do you agree?" They did.
At a quiet little ceremony in
a village church the young
wife, trembling anew with
happiness and carrying a wed-
ding bouquet, promised "to take
afresh this man... ," And the
husband slipped a new ring on
her finger.
And the blonde secretary?
She is still mystified at her
young boss's changed attitude
to her, although _ she has left
the job and is now working for
someone else,
When that Swedish vicar
realized how Immenseley suc-
cessful his re -marriage idea
was, he decided to persuade
other unhappy couples to fol-
low the first pair's example.
To -day these kiss -and -make-
up ceremonies are famous
throughout Sweden. Scores of
couples whose marriages were
drifting on to the rocks have
re -married and are now bliss-
fully happy,
Says the vicar, the Rev. Erik
Arbin: "Four years have
elapsed since that first re -mar-
riage ceremony and I think I
have proved that it Is possible
to mend marriages which look
Ince breaking up. In only one
tnatance has the re -marriage
Idea failed to bring a couple
happily together again,"
He believes his plan could be
adopted successfully in other
European countries and also in
the United States which has a
high 'divorce rate.
It was in the United States
tome time ago that a good -
100 k i n g but tempermental
•couple in their middle twenties
decided of their own accord to
"re -wed in order to stay mar-
ried," as they put it.
They went to amazing
lengths, in planning their sec-
ond weddings, to wipe out me-
mories of the first. The husband
bought the wife a new $750 en-
gagement ring as well as a new
wedding ring. And the wife,
who was originally married in
white, chose for her second
wedding dress a dazzling pink
and gold model. "Pink and gold
are more lasting colours than
white," she said.
Although the husband's orig-
inal wedding suit was still as
new, he bought himself a fresh
one. This time, too, the brides-
maids were the wife's two
plainest friends, "I intended,"
rhe confided, "to be by far the
prettiest woman present at my
re -marriage."
She was, too!
TOWER OF GLASS—An Impres-
sive glass booth stands high
above an Intersection in the
British sector of Berlin. Sitting
In a comfortable swivel chair,
the policeman on duty has a
perfect view of traffic, while
being protected from rain, wind,
dust and other elements that
plague traffic cops.
41.
VINTAGE VICTORY — Donald G. Harter pilots the 1903 Model
A Ford which, won him the grand championship in the 1899-
1916 class of the sixth annual Old Car Festival held at Green-
field Village, Mich. A record 250 antique autos were entered
in the event.
One - Shot Heroes Of World Series
The handsome, strapping man
walked almost jauntily to the
mound, His gait was loose and
easy, and he casually scanned
the packed and roaring stands
at Boston's hostile Fenway Park
as if counting the house.
Big Gene Bearden figured to
be tense and tired; but he acted
with the nonchalance of a man
being dandled in the lap of des-
tiny.
One week earlier he had pitch-
ed the Cleveland Indians to vic-
tory in the American League's
only pennant playoff. Three
days earlier he had won the
third game of the World Series
with a sparkling 2 0 shutout tri-
umph over the Boston Braves,
But now, in the sixth game,
Bob Lemon had faltered as the
Indians stood only one and two-
thirds innings away from being
the champions of the world; and
with their lead down to one run,
with only, one out in the eighth,
they had called Bearden from
the bullpen.
There was an easy smile on
Big Gene's lips as he faced the
batter that sunny afternoon, of
October 11, .1948, with a stance
which seemed to say:
"Okay, fellows, I'll take it
from here!"
And take it he did, setting
the desperate Braves down
quickly to end the eighth, then
pitching faultlessly through the
ninth to give the Indians the
world championship.
Gene Bearden, who won the
American League's only penn-
ant playoff, captured one series
game and saved the finale of an-
other all in one week to cap a
20 -game season, was the stickout
hero of the 1948 classic.
But Bearden was a one-shot
hero, like so many others in the
history of baseball's annual blue
ribbon event!
Never since then has he had
a winning season. Five years
later he was peddled back to the
minor leagues, Last spring he
tried to make the big time once
again — and wound up back
in the Pacific Coast League as
just another shopworn hero with
one flaming memory.
He has a lot of company — fel-
lows like little Al Gionfriddo of
the Brooklyn Dodgers, Johnny
Beazley of the St. Louis Cardin-
als, Wilcey Moore of the New
York Yankees, George White-
man of the Boston Red Sox,
George Rohe of the "Hitless
Wonder" Chicago White Sox and
young Floyd Giebell, who was a
World Series hero while sitting
on the bench,
For each of them the aftermath
was the lonesome road,
Reardon, for one, at least
knows the reason.
"haven't had a drink in a
year and a half," he explained
last spring as he tried to make
it back to the big time. "Every-
one kept saying that alcohol
was the thing that was holding
me down, so I just quit."
But the old magic was gone,
and when the Milwaukee Braves
let him go, it was back to Sacra-
mento in the Pacific Coast
League. By mid-season, even in
that company, he was still a
loser with four wins against five
losses.
Gionfriddo never made it as
big as Bearden, but in the 1947
World Series the little man
pulled a play about which they
still speak. Within a period of
eleven months, he was respon-
sible for one of the funniest gags,
one of the most historic catches
and one of the most poignant
fadeouts in big league baseball.
Gionfriddo went to the Brook-
lyn Dodgers in May, 1947.
Brooklyn sold pitchers Kirby
Higbe and Cal McLish, catcher
Homer Howell and shortstop
Gene Mauch to the Pittsburg Pi-
rates for $300,000 — and the five
foot, six inch Gionfriddo,
"This must have been the mes-
senger boy thrown into the deal
so he could carry 'the money
from Pittsburgh to Brooklyn,"
one Dodger writer kidded. ,
But on October 5,1 947, "Little
Gi" was sent out to play left
field in the sixth inning of the
sixth game of the World Series
against the Yankees. There
were two out and two on when
the mighty Joe DiMaggio rifled
an apparent home run to left
field.
Gionfriddo started sprinting
back with the crack of the bat.
Suddenly, right at the bullpen
gate, he whirled and leaped into
the air. The ball landed in his
glove, and Gionfriddo, almost
falling over the fence, held it
for a dazzling one -hand stab
which brought a tremendous
roar of applause from the gog-
gle-eyed stands. It was the field-
ing gem of the Series.
But the following April, "Lit-
tle Gi" was released to Mont-
real. Despite his World Series
heroics, he had batted a puny 175
in 38 games for Brooklyn the
previous season. Nor could he
stick in Montreal. From there it
was St. Paul, Fort Worth, Drum-
mondville, Newport News, Ven-
tura, California, and finally re-
leased by lowly Vasalia, Cali-
fornia, in 1955.
Beazley, the handsome right
hander of the Cardinals, was an-
other who rocketed to World
Series fame, and faded just as
quickly into oblivion.
At the start of the 1942 cam-
paign, Johnny was a rookie
languishing in the bullpen. But
when he finally got his chance,
he was a ball of fire, and as the
Cardinals moved into the clas-
sic against the Yankees, young
Johnny was a 21 -game winner
with a bright future.
It looked even brighter as
twice in the Series he tamed a
tough team which included such
stalwarts as Di -Maggio, Charley
Keller, Bill Dickey, Joe Gordon,
Frankie Crosetti, Red Rolfe and
Phil Rizzuto, Beazley beat Ernie
Bonham in the second game, 4
to 3, and then won a 4 to 2
squeaker from Red Rutting to
wind. up the Series in the fifth
grime.
Then he marched off to service
for three years.
When he came back, Johnny
had lost the touch. In 1940 he
had a 7-5 mark. Arm trouble
followed, and for three seasons
he won a total of two games
against one defeat. The Braves
gave him a brief shot, and then
it was the long road down — St.
Petersberg, Hartford, Nashville,
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only helps promote rapid and
healthy healing to open sores and
wounds, but bolls and simple ul-
cers are also qutekly relieved. In
skin affections—the itching of F,c-
zetnn Is quickly en sed, I'Iniplee
skin eruptions dry up and scale off
In n very few days.
1t10N11'S HMEll AL1) 011. can
bu obtained at any drug store.
Milwaukee (when it still was in
the minors), Pallas, and, finally,
outright release by Oklahoma
City in 1952,
Whiteman, who was known as
"Lucky George from Peoria,"
was a weird hero in a weird
scasen, That was 1918, when
Secretary of War Newton Baker
granted permission for a cur-
tailed major league season, with
the World Series slated for early
September.
Ed Barrow, then manager of
the Red Sox, brought 38 -year-
old George up from Toronto just
for the war emergency, All sea-
son he saw only limited action
In left field against lefthanded
pitching, even though it was an
era in which two-platooning still
was a novelty.
But it was Whiteman who
ruined the Chicago Cubs in the
Series. In the first game, a 1 to
0 win for a southpaw named
George H. Ruth and called
"Babe", "Lucky George" put the
only run in scoring position, In
the third game, Whiteman start-
ed the decisive three -run rally
and then saved the contest with
a Gionfriddo catch. He scored
the winning run in the fourth
game, and then drove home both
winning runs in the fifth and
final contest, Pretty fancy base -
balling.
But the next spring as the
Red Sox "pros" returned from
service„ Whiteman drew a ticket
back to the minors.
Then there's the case of
Anthony Rohe. In three seasons
with the Chicago White Sox of
the young American League he
never batted more than .213.
Thus, as those "Hitless Won-
ders" went into the World Series
of 1906 it was regarded as strict-
ly "no contest"
The opposition was Frank
Chance's Cubs of Tinker -to -Ev-
ers -to -Chance fame. They had
won 116 games while losing only
36 for a .763 percentage, which
still stands as a record. The
"Hitless Wonders" were a team
with a combined batting aver-
age of only .228 and a club total
of nine home runs all season.
Yet the "Hitless Wonders"
beat them, four games to two.
And the upset can. be traced to an
injury to Sox shortstop George
Davis, which gave the .196 -hit-
ting Rohe his chance. All he did
was bat .333 for the classic and
win the first and third games
with resounding triples.
Still, it took practically all the
hits out of his anemic bat. One
year later he was back in the
minor leagues for good,
Young Johnny Podres, the
hero of Brooklyn's World Series
triumph last year, may have been
lucky that he was called into
service before this season started,
Or, as in Beazley's case, there is
a grim possibility that when he
does return, he will never be
the same.
Because the men who walk
the high road in baseball's an-
nual extravaganza are a risky
lot. Too many have had one
glorious hour — then heart-
break, And you never know
whether your October hero is
going to stay on the glory road
or wind up a one-shot stepchild
of fate. By Oscar Fraley in "The
Police Gazette."
HowCanl?
Q. flow can I remove discol-
orations from the Interior of a
bottle?
A. Fill nearly full with but-
termilk and potato parings.
Let it stand for several hours,
empty, and rinse thoroughly
with clean hot water.
Q. How can I wash linen
sults?
A. Wash them in hay -water,
prepared by scalding old dry hay
and letting it stand until the
water is colored. The linen will
look like new.
CLASSIFIED
AGENTS WANTED
5005 PItoFIr 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, Auro
Laboratory, 199 Bay St. 'Toronto.
GO INTO BUSINESS for yourself.
Sell exclusive housewaro products and
appliances wanted by every house-
holder. These Items are not sold In
stores. There Is no competition.
Profit up to 500%. Write immediately
for free color catalog with retail prices
shown. Separate confidential whole.
sale price wail bo included, Murray
Sales, 3822 Sl. Lawrence, Montreal,
ARTICLES FOR SALE
FEATURED
Wool sums) socks In array of exciting
new patterns and colors $1air All.
nylon stretch In solid color rib offered
at Of pair. Children's knee-high heavy
nylon -ribbed socks 55t pair, Bobby
Socks triple cull plain white 45 pair'
colored toe•hccl.cuff 605 pair. Special
discounts to merchants of volume -
buying proportion.- Send Money Order
to BOW -NIT MILLS, 49 Slmcoe Street,
Toronto. ___
BABY CHICKS
DAY old chicks and turkey poults for
immediate delivery, Non sexed, put•
lets and cockerels. All popular egg
breeds. Ask about our new Series 400,
401 and 402. Dual purpose breeds. Two
ton Broiler Bleeds. First Generation
Indian River cross (Lancaster x Nichols
No. 12 pullet). First generation Arbor
Acre White Rock, Turkey poutts. Broad
Breasted Bronze Thompson Large
white, A. 0. Smith Broad White, River
Rest, Beltsville. The best Beltsville for
turkey broilers, Also booking orders
for winter and spring delivery. Cata-
logue.
TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES Ltd.
FERGUS, ONTARIO
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - ENTIRE BEEF HERD -
Cows and Calves. Apply P.O. Box 127,
Brantford, Ontario.
QUILTING Patches. Large blocks.
Print, silk 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.
NEW guns and rifles at wholesale
prices; write for our wholesale prices
before buying. TransCanada Whole-
sale Co., Box 852, Ottawa, Ont.
MACHINERY
NEW - Concrete Mixers Finishers,
Breakers. Pumps, Rotava(ors, Chain
Saws, Outboard Motors. Money Back
Guarantee. USED _ Ford Tractors
and equipment. Dominion Rent•Alls,
Unionville, Ontario.
MEDICAL
FRUIT JUICES: THE PRINCIPAL INGRE-
DIENTS IN DIXON'S REMEDY FOR
RHEUMATIC PAINS, NEURITIS.
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 disap-
point you. Itching, scaling and burn-
ing eczema; acne, ringworm, pimples
and foot eczema will respond readily
to the stainless, odorless ointment re-
gardless of how stubborn or hopeless
they seem,
Sent Post Free on Receipt' of Price
PRICE $2.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
2865 St, Clair Avenue East.
TORONTO
OPPORTUNITIES FOk
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant dignified profession; good
wages. Thousands of successful
Marvel graduates.
America's Greatest System
illustrated Catalog Free
Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS
358 Bioor St. W., Toronto
Branches:
44 King SL. Hamilton
72 Rideau St., Ottawa
ADVERTISING
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
PERMANENT Representative wants
to sell outstanding lino of sanitary an
maintenance chemicals, paints, etc. t
industry In this county. Also apeningt
In our Agricultural Chemical Division.
Appointments to be made not later
than October 15. State experience la
selling field, All applications con$•
dentlai and will receive a reply. Box
1.45, 123 Eighteenth St. New Toronto,
APPLES have them fresh for pies
year 'round, no cooking, just pack in
cold water, Yes, it's hard to believe
but it's true. Cost Less than 1/20 pet
quart. Guaranteed Formula $1.00. .1. W.
Caudill, 1320 Factory Avenue, Marion,
Indiana, USA.
PATENTS
THE RAMSAY COMPANY, Patent At.
torneys, 273 Bank Street, Ottawa of.
fers to every Inventor full Information
free, on patent procedures.
FETHERSTONHAUGH & Com pan y,
Patent Attorneys. Established 1890,
600 University Ave., Toronto Patents
all countries,
PERSONAL
BEARING AIDS, used good condition,
$9.95 and $19,95 complete. Acousticon,
146 Wellington West, Toronto.
$1.00 TRIAL offer. Twenty five deluxe
personal requirements. Latest cats.
oguo included The Medico Agency,
Box 22, Terminal "Q", Toronto, Ont.
SWINE
Send for Folder showing the pedigrees
of 37 of our imported sows and boars
In our herd of outstanding imported
Landrace Swedish swine. Offering for
lmmedlate delivery, weanling sows and
boars, 4 month old sows and boars,
Guaranteed In pig females. Service.
able boars. Catalogue.
FERGUS LANDRACE SWINE FARM
FERGUS • ONTARIO
WANTED
WANTED to buy - Hay - Apply
P.O. Box 127, Brantford, Ontario.
MERRY MENAGERIE
o•tl '•e 43 1114Vea01.1
�y
"If I sound strange, tt's because
I have a dozen frogs in my
throat'"
"Just think," said the conceited
heavy -weight boxer, "thousands
of people will tune in to this
fight to -night."
"Yes," retorted his manager,
"and they'll know the result at
least ten seconds before you do."
SAFES
Protect your ROOKS and CASH from
FIRE and THIEVES, We have a size
and type of Safe or Cabinet for any
purpose. Visit us or write for price,
etc. to Dept. W.
J.&J.TAYLOR LIMITED
TORONTO SAFE WORKS"
145 Front St. E. Toronto
Established 1855
u2'e to please!
Easy to make,,. and sure to
please the fussiest appetite! You'll
make them often. , . these light
tender buns with a delicate orange
flavor. For finest results when you
bake at home, always depend on
Fleischmann's Active Dry Yeast!
ISSUE 40 — 1956
ell?)lge'.0/o s1ron1.bats
1. �Ud
Y2 cup milk
Stir in
Y2 cup granulated sugar
11/2 teaspoons salt
1/3 cup shortening
Cool to lukewarm.
12. Meantime, measure into bowl
Y2 cup lukewarm water
Sti in
2 teaspoons granulated
sugar
Sprinkle with contents of
2 envelopes
Fleischmann's Active
Dry Yeast
Let stand 10 minutes,THEN stir well.
Stir in lukewarm milk mixture and
2 well -beaten eggs
1 tablespoon grated
orange rind
Sift together and stir in
2 cups once -sifted all-
purpose flour
Ys teaspoon ground mace
and beat until smooth and elastic.
Work in an additional
2 cups (about) once -sifted
all-purpose flour
3. Turn out dough on lightly -
floured board. Knead until smooth
and elastic. Place in greased
bowl. Brush with melted butter or
margarine, Cover, let rise in worm
place, free from draft, until
doubled in bulk, about 1 hour.
4. Punch down dough. Halve the
dough: form each half into an
8 -Inch roll. Cut each roll Into 8
equal pieces: form into smooth
balls. Place In greased muffin
pans. Brush with melted butter or
margarine. Cover, let rise untP
doubled In bulk, about 1 hour,
Dip
16 cubes of sugar
one at a time, Into
a little orange juice
and press a cube into top of each
bun. Bake In a moderately hot
oven, 375°, about 25 minutes,
Yleld-16 buns,
Needs no
refrigeration
PACIE4 ',,-j
11 I
DONNYBROOK LONI)ESBORO
The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper
will be observed In Donnybrook Church
next Sunday.
The October meeting of the WMS and
WA will be held at the home of Mrs
J. C, Robinson In Wingham,
There was a fairly good attendance
at the anniversary services in Donny- t
brook church on Sunday. Rev, R, 5,1
Hiltz delivered inspiring messages at
both services. At the morning service
Fpecia1 music Included a number by
the choir, a quartette by Misses Marie
and Dorothy Noble, Mary and Sharun
Jefferson, and a duet by Mrs. H. Jeffer.
son and Mrs. Tom Armstrong. At the
evening service a trio of Auburn and
Westfield girls sang, two numbers which
were very much appreciated.
Among those attending anniversary
services and visiting friends here were;
Mrs. Richard Chamney, of Belgrave,
with Mr. and Mrs. John R. Thompson
and Howard; Mr. and Mrs, Mark Arm-
strong of Belgrave, with Mr. and Mrs,'
Wm. Armstrong; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Chamney, Belgrave, with Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. J. C
Robinson, Wingham, with Mr, and Mrs.
E. Robinson and boys, and Mr.. and
Mrs Elwin Chamney and girls, .oi
Wingham, with Mr. and Mrs, R. Cham -
n' y.
1-11-•-•-•+•-•-•-•-•-•-•++•••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-• • ••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-••••••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•
Mr
11-•-• ti-N-i•-•++H•+•-•-H-•-f fH•••4-N••-•-1+t•+t•+•+r14••ht`•N•+-
Mr, and Mrs. Howard Cowan and
Michael, of Clinton, Mr. and Mrs, Jack
Cowan and Patty; of Belmont, snent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, Geo, Cowan,
Dr, and AA's. Kirk Lyen of Leeming•
ten, spent part of. Monday with his
mother, Mrs, W, Lyon.
Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Hesk, Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Pipe, and Berry, spent the
week end with F. -O. Glen and Mrs.
Robinson, of North Bay,
Mr, and Mrs. Jack Morose, Vicki and
John, of Hamilton, spent the week -end
with Mrs, W. Lycn, end also tithe -idol
•
the Lear -Manning wedding.
Mr, and Mrs. Tom Mien, Mr, and
Mrs. Dave Anderson, spent the week-
end at Gravcnhurst.
Mr. and Mrs, Tom Jamieson of Wing -
ham spent Sunday with Mr. and Mr3
Earl Gaunt.
Jack Tamblyn, Beth McEwing, Jane
McCool, Marguerite Lyon, attended the
Young People's Convention in Stru.-
ford on Sunday.
Miss Frances Lyon of Toronto spent
the week -end at her hcunc.
OBITUARY
LOCKIE—In Clinton on Monday, Oct
1st, 1956, Mary Jane Lockie, in her
69th year, Funeral from Tasker
Memorial Chapel, Blyth, Wed., Oct. 3•
Interment in Blyth Union Cemetery.
SHOP NOW --- for the Cold Weather Ahead!
A small clown payment will hold any purchase until
needed.
SPECIAL CLEARANCE: Wool, 29c per Oz.
Limited Quantity.
Children's Winter Weight Vests and Panties ---
Lennard and Moodies Vests 69c Each
Panties 55c; 2 pair for $1.00
Station Wagon Coats, boys and girls, still selling
at Reduced Prices $9.95 and $11..95
"The Shop For Tots and Teens"
NeedlecraFt Shoppe
BLYTH, ONTARIO;
1
L IL
TOE STANDARD
News Of Walton
BRUSSELS FMR NOTES
iattended Teachers' Convention at Lon-
don last Friday.
Mrs. Margaret Humphries received
ten prizes for ladies work at the Brus- I
sels Fair, and Miss Ethel Dennis re•
ceived eight prizes in the baking class
Miss Marlon Turnbull showed the
first prize pee in the Brussels Swine
Club show Friday, and also took third
prize In the swine showmane'r'.p cow
test.
Rcm1d Smith took first prize in the
t;hownanship standing, 2nd, Derma Mae!
Smith, 3rd, Marion Turnbull, 6th, Alich-
ael Gultitzen and Dth Barry liocgy,
Mr. and Mr's, Earl Coutts and family,
of Toronto, were recent visitors at the
home of the former's parents. Mr. and
Mrs, Andrew Coutts.
Mr. and Mrs. James Johnston and
family of Essex were week -end guests
at the home of the former's purents,
',Mr. and Mrs. Silas Johnston,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Planke of Tocsnto
ispent the week -end at the hone of
Mrs. Ethel Ennis,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Gray and family
of Stratford were visitors tit the home'
of Mr. Joseph Hectowell.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bryans and Mr. and
Mrs. Stewart Aryans have returned
hcme after a fcur week trip to,Western
Canada.
Mr. and Mrs, Harvey McClure and
felinity spent the week -end with rola•
fives in Sarnia.
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Hamelin of or1111a
were week -end guests et the home of
the letter's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Jan
Van Vliet. -
Mr. Itarvey Ireland of Climax, Sask.
is visiting at the home of Mr, and Mrs
Ed Miller. Cpl. Earl Ireland of the
RCAF, who has been stationed at Sas-
katoon, accompanied his father east
and spent the week end with Mr. and
Mrs. Miller before leaving for Mon•
treat, where he will new be stationed,
Miss Joan Ryan, R.N., left last Fri-
day for Ottawa, where she will take a
course in Public Health Nursing.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Broadfoot are
visiting at the hcane of Mr.' and Mrs
Ivy Henderson, Egmondvillc.
World-wide Communion will be ob-
served in Duff's United Church next
Sunday morning, the service to com-
mence at 11 a.m. Standard Time,
Miss Ruth Walters is at present at
Mrs. Beta Orr of Goderich spent a
few days at Mrs. Margaret Iiumphries
WJ ST1' IELD
Mr. and Mill, Geo, Coos, Annie and
Lois, visited on Sunday with •Mrs; Fred
J, Cook and filially,
Mr. and Mm. Gordon Smith, Norma
and Douglas, were Sunday visitors with
his sister, Miss Edna Smith of Kit-
chener.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert McKellar .of
Freeland, Mich„ Mr, and Mrs. Harry
Booth7nnn and Rodger, of Sarnia, spent
a few days with Mr, and Mrs, Ebrl
W ightman,
Mr; Will McDowell was a Sunday
visitor with his sister, Mrs, Josie Cam -
Bron of Belgrave,
Mr, John Gear of Waterloo `with
Mrs, 4. S. McDowell and Gordon, 'on
Friday evening,
Mrs. Mabel Stackhouse and :het
daughter, Mrs. Mac Wilson, were re.
cent visitors with Mr. Will McDowell
and. Mr,, and Mrs, Norman McDowell.
Fine weather ee the past week gave
the farmers a chance to finish their
threshing on Saturday. Sunday night
(frost has hurried the corn harvesting,;
iWe still hope forthe fine days to las`
a while longer.
the hcme of her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Geo, Raper, of London. Mrs. Rap-
er is a patient in Victoria Hospital,
Miss Muriel Shade, who has corn.
t••HJ+N+H�NH-K+-•-•d-F•+• N#•444-•
pleted her- training at Stratford Gen
eral Hospital, has accepted a position
on the staff of Wingham-hospital..
Ronald Smith, Neil and John McGav-
in, of the OAC, Guelph, were week -end
visitors at their respective homes,
Extra Lean --- No Waste
BONELESS TENDERIZED HAM
(by the piece)
75c LB,
FRESH DRESSED CHICKEN FOR THE
HOLIDAY.
Arnold Berthot
Telephone 10 --- Blyth.
119■
*ft
WEEK END SPECIALS ...
WINTER COATS AND JACKETS.
3- Boys' Bomber Jackets, wool quilted lining,
Regular $11.95 SPECIAL $5.95
3- Boys' Nylon blend Stadium Coats, full zipper,
satin quilted lining, reg. $14.95. SPECIAL $7.95
1- Boys' all -wool Plaid Stadium Coat, quilted lining,
size 34. Reg. $14.95 SPECIAL $7.95
3- Boys' or Girl's Navy Blue Duffle Coats,
Reg. $12.95 SPECIAL $8.95
5- Girl's all -wool Winter Coats,
Reg. $24.95 SPECIAL $12.49
2- Misses' Duxkin Milium, insulated lining, 1 white,
black trim, size 16; 1 pink, size 12,
Reg. $12.95 SPECIAL $8.95
Men's Wool, Nylon Reinforced Work Socks,
SPECIAL 3 PAIR $2.00
The Arcade Stores
STORES IN BLYTH & BRUS5EL5.
YPU OFFICERS
The following are the newly -elected
officers for the Young People's linter
of Duff's United Church: President
Ronald Ennis; Vice -President, Audrey
IIackwcll; Secretary - Treasurer, Mac
Sholdice: Pianist, Shirley Bosnian; 'As-
sistant Pianist, Donna Smith; Mission-
ary convener, Don Achilles; Fellowship
convener, Reid Hackwell; Recreation
committee, David Hacktvell, Audrey
Hackwell, Katharine Buchanan, Norma
Hoegy.
Miss Mary Dennis is attending Strat-
ford Teachers' College,
Mrs, B. 9tehhenson of Seaforth spent
a few days at the home of Mr, and Mrs
John. Taylor,
Public Scheel teachers in this district
Mrs. Mabel Stackhouse and Mrs. Mac
Wilson of Brucefield, were visitors on
Saturday with Mr, and Mrs. Earl
Wight.man.
Mrs, Marvin McDowell, Mrs J. L
McDowell, Mrs, Chas. Smith, and Mrs
Howard Campbell, attended the Huron
Presbyterial held at Blyth, Ttiesdny.
Mr, and Mrs, Norman McDowell and
i Gwen were Hamilton visitors, Sunday.
Mr, and Mrs. Ray Hanna. and chil-
dren visited Sunday with Mr. wind Mrs
Lorne Edgar, also Mrs. Olive Hanna and
family of Atwood.
Mr. John Buchanan visited with his
brother, • Robert Leslie, on Thursday.
who is a patient in Westminster Hos-
pital, London,
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey McDowell, Judy
and Janis, were visitors with Mr. and
1Mrs, John Gear of Waterloo on Sunday
Miss. VIolet Cook of Godorich, :s
spending a weeks' holiday at her home
Communion service will be observed
in the church on Sunday, Oct, 7th.
Quite n number from here attended
Donnybrook Anntversary on Sunday.
Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Biggorstaff.
Phyllis and Bill, also Orval Tunney,
were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs
M. G. Bruce of Belgrave,
The regular WMS meeting will be
held in the church basement, Oct. 10th
with Mrs. Jasper Snell and her group
in charge.,
Mr and Mrs. Alva McDowell visited
with Mr. and Mrs, Bert Vodden of
Clinton on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Williams and
Anne Marie, of Virginiatown, visited
with Mr. and Mrs, Donald Snell and
boys at Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Snell's
on Saturday,
Mr, and Mrs, Drnald Snell and boys.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Snell and Jean-
ette, were Sunday visitors with Mrs
Annie Waiper of Auburn.
Several from this vicinity attended
anniversary services in Donnybrook o
Sunday.
Mrs. Albert Walsh, Blyth, and her
sisters, Mrs. Jack Campbell, Aylmer
and Mrs. Will Taylor, London, called
Young Man
with a Plan
One of these days, Fred's going to take
over the farm. Meanwhile, he's planning,
studying and working hard ... learning
right on the job.
Already he's learned a lot about modem
farm management, and how a• chartered
•bank can play its part in making farm
living more comfortable, more profitable.
He has found, for example, how useful
the bank can be as a place to build up
savings, to obtain credit, to seek financial
advice and market information. He knows
that the hank manager's door is open
to everyone.
When you sec a good-looking, well-run
farm, chances arc the farmer uses the
services the chartered banks have built
up for all Canadians,
,
Wedne dny; October ,1901
For The Lady With Sore Feet
If your feet are sore we would like to have the
opportunity of fitting you with a pair of
BROWN GOODYEAR WELT OXFORDS'
with low heel, made by MURRAY SELBY,
Here is a shoe that -will give you comfort as well
as wear at $11,95
R. W. MADILL'S
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The'llome of Goocl Quality Merchandise"
BERNARD HALL
Insurance Agency
LIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE, LIABILITY, WIND
AND ALL CLASSES OF INSURANCE.
PHONE 122 - BLYTH, ONT.
VMNiMf'MINNMNd ♦INJ.N/VMI •••NIIVN�II•I•IN•II�I•••••N••••••I M•M d
WALLACE'S
DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES
LET US FILL YOUR SPRING SEWING NEEDS
with
PRINTS, BROODCLOTI!, ZIPPERS, THREAD,
ETC.
Phone 73.
1
!*H
•-••-•-•-•-•-•-•••-•-•-••-•••-•-•-•-•-•-•-• • 4-•-•-•-•-• •-•-♦ •+4-•-•-•-•-44444-04-0
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.
N••++ *4-.444 •• •-••-•-•••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•• 4 • ••4-r• 1•+N+H+N++44444444i1
-' I I ' ,1 1 . . 11
•
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.
.11 . iA I. - I w I
on Mr. and Mrs, R. Redmond, Tuesday Tuesday with Mr, and Mrs, Jim Boak
Mrs. Fred Cook and Violet spent and family of Crewe,
THE CHARTERED BANKS SERVING YOUR COMMUNITY
a
,*
Wetinesdn1, October 3,1956;
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,
CLEARING DISPERSAL SALE
Of Registered Scotch Shorthorn Cattle
At the farm of M. C, Tyndall & Son
R,R. 5, Goderich, Ont„ on the 8th con-
cession of Colborne Township, 7 miles
northeast of Goderich, 11 miles west of
Blyth, 7 miles south of Dungannon, on
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17th,
at 2;00 o'clock p.m.
50 •— HEAD SELLING — 50
These cattle are all T13 tested and
calf vaccinated. The bulls that have
been used in this herd have the b1oad
of some of the top bulls that have been
used in Scotland and Canada, such as
Collinie Royal Barrage, Burford Bolide,
Corrimory Golden Sovereign, Millhilis
Festival by Ascreavie Dernocrate, As
we are not big breeders, we have top
blood lines in the herd. . These cattle
have not been fitted for sale and are
just In pasture condition. Anyone
wishing a list of the sale, phone Car.
low 1522, or write M. C. Tyndall, RM. 5,
Goderich, Ontario,
Residence Phone 140
FLAVOUR - FED
TURKEYS
'Order Your
THANKSGIVING
TURKEY
• NOW!
Delivered Fresh and Oven Dressed
When Required,
PRONE BLYTH:
Irvin Bowes, 149,
Ken MacDonald, 17815.
M.MMN.N•MN.•.•.J.•I..N.MNN
FOR RENT
Apartment In Blyth, by Oct. 1st, Ap-
ply, Mrs. Roy Bennett, Walton, 82R4.
Brussels, 30-tf,
M. C. Tyndall & Son, Proprietors,
Robert Amos, Guelph, Auctioneer. FOR SALE
43-2p 6 dining -room chairs. Apply,
148, Blyth.
Famous Trichologist Will
Demonstrate How To Grow Thicker
Hair . . . And Guarantees It !
phone
43-1p,
DEMONSTRATION TO BE. HELD IN CLINTON
This new method of home treatment pointment is necessary. After the ex..
for saving and growing thicker hair amination the person is told the requir-
will be demonstrated in Clinton, On- ed length of treatment and how much
tarso, on Wednesday, October 10th, it will cost.
These private Individual demonstra- After starting treatment the person
tions will be held at the Clinton hotel, makes regular reports.to the Keele firm
on Wednesday ONLY. in London to check the progress of the
LONDON, Ontario -- In an ' inter- home treatment,
view here today, William L. Keele, in- To spread the opportunity of normal,
ternationally famous trlehologist and healthy hair to the thousands who are
president of the Keele Hair and Scalp desperately looking for help, independ-
Speciallsts, Inc„ said, "There are 18 ent Trichologists are visiting various
different scalp disorders that cause cities throughout the United Stales and
most men and women to lose hair, Us Canada to conduct .examinations and
ing common sense, a person must start home treatment.
realize no one tonic or so•called cure•
all could correct all the disorders," he
explained, "LVe have no cure-all for slick, shiny
baldness," Keele emphasizes, "If there
1s fuzz, the root is still capnble of ere -
tiling hair and we can perform what
seems to be a miracle,"
There is one thing Keele wants to be
certain every man and women knows
If a recession nppenrs at the temples
or q spot begins to show up on the
Frown of the head, there is something
wrong and it should be given Immedl•
ate attention.
NO CURE-ALL
GUARANTEED
"The Keele firm, recognizing that
most people a're skeptical of claims
that hair can be grown on balding
heads, offer a guarantee," Keele said,
Once a person avails themselves to
the Keele treatment his skepticism im-
mediately disappears, To insure this
we offer this guhrantee: "If you are
not completely satisfied with your hair
progress at the end of 30 days, your
money will be refunded."
HOPELESS CASES
DISCOURAGED
First the Trichologist is gtttck to tell
hopeless cases . that they cannot be
helped. But the "hopeless cases are
few," Only if n man is completely,
shiny bald is he in the lost category,
1T there is fuzz, no matter how light,
thin, or colorless, the Keele treatment
can perform wonders.
A complete, private examination is
given by a Trichologist to determine
the condition of his scalp, and cause of
his hair trouble.
FREE EXAMINATIONS
HAIR FOR LIFETIME
"If clients follow our directions dur-
ing treatment and after they finish the
course, there is no reason'why they will
not have hair all the rest of their
lives," Keele said. "Our firm is de.
finitely behind this treatment, it all
depends on the individual client's faith-
ful observation of a few simple rules,'
IIOW'S YOUR HAIR
IF IT WORRIES YOU, CAL I
W. N. CRAWFORD, at the CLINTON
IIOTEL IN CLINTON, ONTARIO, on
WEDNESDAY ONLY, OCTOBER 10
from 12 Noon to 9 p.m. The public i
invited.
You do not need an appointment
This examination is very thorough The examinations are private and you
and highly technical, It requires 20 to will not be embarrassed or obliged in
30 minutes. The Trichologist makes no any way, Both men and women are
charge for this examination and no ap• I welcome,—ADV,
TttE BLYTH STANDARD
5
PAGE
014~1440114 \ 0.4441~41411;
,+w N" _ +++++1161,Y
++ R)XXTHEATRE,.,+
'Properties For Sale LYCEUM THEATRE CLINTON.
8 -room frame dwelling. Complete WINGHAM.
modern bath *upstairs, 2 -piece 1st I''irst Show,commences at 7;15 p.A ,1
floor, built-in cupboards, tile floor Tirana., Frl., Sal„ October 4-5-6
in kitchen, Priced to sell, in Town
of Wingham.
100 acre farm, 8 -room -dwelling,
Van ,Johnson Vera Mi cs
in
"23 PACES TO
bath, hydro, water, barn 80x60, drive BAKER STREET
shed 80x25. Twp. o! Morris. This is a taut and intriguing mur-
100 acre !arm, Ira storey, asphalt , der mystery centering around a
shingle elan, hydro, cellar. Goad blind American playwright who int -
barn 36x50, hydro, water, drilled advertently cverhears two people
well, Drive shed, 30x20 steel, Han , discussing what seems to him to be
house 10x20, 75 acres workable.} -•. _. a kidnapping plot, _-
Morris Township. -'lion., Tues„ We'd., Oct, 8-9-10
Ifumphrey Bogart, Jan Starling
in
"The Harder They Fall
(Adult) I
This story centers around a giant
but inept boxer who is made into
a leading contender for the heavy 1
weight title by ;neons of a phony
publicity build-up, ;
"
150 Hero farm. 7 -room stucco
house. Barn 00x40, Drive shed
30x50, Cement silo. Hydro, water
pressure. 130 acres workable, We-
wunosh Township,
97 acre farm on black -top county
rond, good buildings, hydro, drilled
well, level, well drained, close to
school and village,
11/2 -storey frame dwelling In 6
Blyth„ do 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 paw.
cd 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 60x66 and 32x50. Drive shed
20x30, Buildings in goad repair. A
good farm on Con. 11, Twp. of Hul-
lelt. _
50 acre farm, Twig, of Howick.
good land.
ELLIOTT
REAL ESTATE
AGENCY
BLYTH, PHONE 104.
Gordon Elliott, Broker.
Victor Kennedy, Salesman. .
Res, Plione 140. Res. Phone 78.
' .•..,. •,+wro#,"
1
AUCTION SALE
OF HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS
Including_ Many Antiques '
AND RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY
At the residence of Miss Ella Met.
calf, Wellington Street, Blyth, on
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13th,
at 1:30 p.m, consisting of:
1 walnut 3 -piece bedroom suite, hand
carved; 1 oak bedroom suite; 3- piece
walnut bedroom suite; 2 pair pillows:
3 -piece parlour suite, with 4 chairs to
mutch, antique walnut; hall tree; Morris
chair; music cabinet; 3 small oak tables;
studio couch; hall ruck; book case; 2
reeking chairs; 2 small tables; brass
jardinere; curtains and curtain poles.
1 rug 9x9; number of club bags and
• suit cases; number of mats; 1 stand and
2 mirrors; quilts; blankets; pillows,
sheets, etc.; 3 trunks; 2 chests; Coleman
oil stove with pipes; Spartan radie; 5
dining-roonm chairs and arm chair to
match; 1 oval table; antique pictures;
clock, dishes and table linens; 1 Prin-
cess Beth cook stove; 1 electric heater;
electric iron; electric toaster; quantity
of very good silverware; kitchen uten-
sils; kitchen table and 6 chairs; arm
chair; quantity of sealers; Beatty wash•
ing machine; 1 rangette; garden tools•
saws; scythe; long ladder, step ladder:
45 -gal, drum; cord of hard maple wood
tOther articles too numerous to men -
ion,
PROPERTY• OFFERED FOR SALE—
At approximately 3:30 p.m., the prop-
erty will be offered for sale, subject tc
a reserve bid; 11/2 storey brick dwel-
ling equipped with bathroom, on Wel.
lington street, near highway and busi-
ness section, 1/4 acre lot.
TERMS—On Chattels, Cash. On
Property, one-third down, balance in l'
months.
Miss Ella Metcalf, Proprietress.
George Nesbitt, Auctioneer, .
George Powell, Clerk, 43%2
AUCTION SALE
OF 11011SEIIOLD FURNISHINGS
At the residence of Mrs, Nellie Wnt•
son, Village of Londesboro, adjacent to
United Church, on
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13th,
At this sale will be offered the fol
lowing articles: Kelvinator refrigerat•
or; Beatty washing machine; cook
stove (Beach); 2 electric hot plates
electric ten kettle; 3 -piece wine ches-
terfield suite, excellent condition; P -
piece dining room sttlte; 5 rugs with
underpads, various sizes from 9x10' 1c
0x12; woollen mats; floor lamps; table
lamps; rockers, end tables and odd
chairs; 4 bedroom suites, spring and
mattresses. Many other articles toc
numerous to mention, including garden
tools, lawn mower, dishes, etc. Alsc
quantity of wood and coal. At this sale
•
will be offered a 0 -room cottage (ash•
phalt siding), hard and soft water in-
side, nlso Inside plumbing, equipped
with hydro and installed with oil burn
er, used only 5 months, oil piped in
froin outside tank containing 40 ga(a
of oil. On this property is a shed
18x30.
TERMS OF SALE are Cash on Chat-
' tels; on property 10 percent at time of
t'un'.hase; balance In 3A days.
Mrs, Nellie Watson, Proprietress.
Harold Jackson, Auctioneer, 43.2.
14-•••••-• 4-110-•-r•-•-+•4-.4-•+4•N
1
BROWNIE'S
DRIVE•1N
THEATRE I
CLINTON, ONTARIO.
THURSDAY, FRIDAY
OCTOBER 4-5
"The Seven Little'Foys"
In Color
Bob !lope, Milly Vitale
(Two Cartoons)
SAT, - MON. OCT. 6 - 8 ,
"Siege at Powder River"
(Colour)
RORY CALHOUN
CORRINE CALVET
(Two Cartoons)
SATURDAY NIGHT IS
PRIZE NIGHT:
VALUE $50.00
TUES. - WED. OCT. 9 - 10
"City of Bad Men"
(Colour)
DALE ROBERTSON
JEANNE Cf1AJN
(Two Cartoons) )
EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT
UNTIL END OF SEASON IS
DOLLAR NIGHT
One Dollar Admits a Carload.
TIIURS. - FRI, OCT, 11 - 12
"Mr. Scoutmaster"
CLIFTON WEBB
EDMON G\VYN.V
(Two Cartoons)
Two Shows Nightly, Rain or Clear -
Box Office Open at 7:30 p.m.
Standard Time October 1st,
First Show at 8:00 p.m.
Childr-n Under 12 in Cars Free
X4+1 -•-•s•' -. •4 • 4+4+4 -.*444444-.
1
FOR R?NT
3 -room apartment on Dinsley street,
Apply to Mrs. Rae Shobbrook, phone
42, Blyth. 42-2p.
FOR SALE
20 feeder steers, Hereford and Ar -ns
650 to 700 lbs. Apply, John McEwing
phone 231114, Blyth. 43-3p
AVAILABLE AT ONCE
Good Rawleigh business, Selling ex-
perience helpful but not required. Car
necessary, Write at once for particul-
ars. Rewleigh's Dept. J -136 -TT, Mon
treat, P.Q.
FOR SALE
Hard maple wood. Apply to Ivan
Bean, Auburn, 11,R. 1, phone 19115,
Blyth, 43-1p,
DR. N. W. HAYNES
DENTAL SURGEON.
Has opened an office for the Practice
of Dentistry in Clinton, on Albert St.
OPPOSITE THE ROYAL BANK
ON THE GROUND FLOOR
PHONE 1IU 2-9571, 62.41-U.
FOR SALE
Princess Pat cook stove, in good con-
dition, with or without a Kenutc oil
burner and waterfront. Apply, Harold
Beacom, Londesboro, phone 371113.
Blyth. 42-2p.
CHIMNEYS BUILT AND REPAIRED
Call us for chimney repairs. Agents
for Fire Chief Chimneys. Also avail•
able for carpentry work. Apply, Geo
Ives, phone 1(318, Blyth 42-2p.
PREVENT
CHIMNEY FIRES
Use Fire Chief Chemical
Chimney Cleaners
To eliminate soot and
from your stoves and
The smaller the flame the
and carbon.
FOR SALE AT:
scale
pipes,
more soot
BLYTH FARMERS' CO.O1'
BELGRAVE COOP
NOW (Thursday, Friday, Saturday) --
"COME NEXT SPRING"
A delightful movie, as good a yarn deal.
ing with rural life as Hollywood has
made in many a season,
Steve Cochran, Ann Sheridan, and
Sherry Jackson,
Monda y, Tuesday, Wednesday
"THE PRICE OF FEAR"
Exciting crime drama, a beautiful hero-
ine and maximum action and suspense
' Merle Oberon, Lex Barker and
--_^ —� LVarren Stevens
COMING—•"TIJI: MARAUDERS"-- Dan
Duryea, Jeff Richards, K"enan Wynn,
"O --4744747O4-44-4-`4.• 4♦+N $- - 64-.+1-.
`M.N.N.....YN ♦N.N..NJM.NJW
F. C. PREST
LONDESBOIIO, ONT.
Interior & Exterior Decorator
4 Sun worthy Wallpaper
IPaints - Enamels - Varnishes
Brush & Spray Painting iI
14V M.►.NN..N 4.#01..NN4N1J4^"rM..
4.44-41-44-4444 +1
let Showing 2nd Showing
7:30 p.m, At The 9:30 p,m,
Air -Conditioned
PARK
_ GODERICII.
NOW—Gene Autry in'TIIE-OLD WEST'
with "ROCII AROUND TIIE CLOCK"
Monday and Tuesday
Glenn Ford. Anne Francis, Louis Cal-
hern and Margaret Haynes
The year's most controversit; picture:
a challenge to courageous educators in
their battle with adolescen' delinatrenay
`BLACKBOARD JUNGLE'
Adult Entertainment
Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat
James Stewart, Doris Day and
Bernard Miles
By popular request we present one of
the outstanding suspense dramas of this
season: with all the excitements only
Alfred Hitchcock can give you:
"The Alan ,%\Tho Knew
Too D'Iuch"
Vistavision and DeLnxe Color
GROVER CLARE'S
I/
POOL ROOM.
HURON
FARM SUPPI TES 1
i
OLIVER SALES & SERVICE
Telephone 4 and 93, Blyth,
•
FARMERS,
ATTENTION !
Special Bargains For
Octber, 1956
We have for sale
ONE ALLIS CHIALMERS
FORAGE HARVESTER
with hay and corn
attachment.
This machine is in good
working condition, and we
are offering this week at
a Special Low Price.
SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Have your septic tanks pumped the
sanitary way. Schools and public
buildings given prompt attention,
Rates reasonable. Tel, Irvin Coxon,
Milverton, 75114. 62-18-tf,
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, call
us early for prompt and efficient ser-
vice. Our new cement floor finisher
assures fine workmnnship. Contact
Mads Christensen, phone 11R7, Blyth.
27-61-tf.
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped
and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis
Blake, phone 42R8, Brussels, R.R. 2.
25-10p.
COUNTER CHECK BOOKS
Printed or plain counter check books
are available at The Standard Office
Orders for printed books require at
least 6 weeks for delivery. Phone 89.
FOR RENT
Power lawn mower, cement mixer,
and wheel barrow, garden tractor, floor
polisher and vacuum cleaner. Apply,
Sparling's Hardware, phone 24, Blyth
FOR SALE
10 yearling cattle, 14 spring calves,
and 2 Purebred Angus bulls. Apply,
Gilbert Nethery, phone 16118, Blyth.
39 tf.
FOR SALE
15 Angus feeder steers, Apply to C.
L. Hollinger, Let 15, Concession 8, Mor-
ris, phone Brussels 4511.3. 41 •tf
HOUSE FOR RENT
On Dinsley Street, Blyth. Apply to
Cecil Wheeler, phone 88, Blyth. 43-1
FOIL SALE
Large coal circulating heater. Apply
to phone 185, Blyth. 43-1p
1.108 SALE
3 -niece girls winter coat set, size Gx
Apply, phone 190, Blyth, 43-1
NOTICE 011 COURT OF 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 NIGHT, EVERY WEER
A good offering of farm stock is
anticipated, 'Those wishing to place
stock, machinery, or household effects
in the sole should contact the auc-
tioneer and sales manager.
GEORGE NESBITT, Snits Manager,
Phone 15R18, Blyth, 18.1.
Billiards & Snack liar
Ice Cream - Hot Dogs
Hamburgs and
Sandwiches.
Smokers' Sundries
• NM.NMNN4.40441M441.11.4.04~".."
LIVESTOCK WANTED
Cash pald 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.
62-221f.
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 9:30 a.m. We
have all breeds available—top quality
at low cost.
WANTED
Old horses, 3'ic per pound, Dead
cattle and horses at value. Important
to phone at once, day or night. GIL-
BERT BROS. MINK RANCH, Goderich,
Phone collect 1483J1, or 1483J4.
44 tL
CRAWFORD &
HETHERINGTON
BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS
J. H. Crawford, R. S. Hetherington,
Q.C. Q.C.
LVingham and Blyth,
IN BLYTH
EACH THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment,
Located in Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 48
STEWART JOHNSTON
MASSEY-HARRIS SALES &
SERVICE.
BEATTY BARN rEQUIPMENT. •
Phone 137 R 2, Blyth.
YMN•.M.IvMN.N.,..
RONALD G. tIcCANN
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.
TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY.
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A, L. Cole, 1
Optometrist)
FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33,
GODERICH 25.61
J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Seaforth, Phone 791 -- Clinton
HOURS:
Seaforth Daily Except Monday & Wod,
9:00 a.m, to 5:30 p.m.
Wed, -- 9:00 D.M. to 12;30 p:m.
Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5:30.
Phone 14U 2-7010
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETR 1ST
PATRICK ST. • WINGHAM, ONT.
EVENINGS In' APPOI.NTMENT.
Professional Eye Examination.
Optical Services.
McKILLOP MUTITAL
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. McEw-
Ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton;
E. J. Trewarthn, Clinton; J. E. Pepper,
Brucefield; C, W. Lconhnrdt, Bornholm;
H. Fuller, Goderich; 11. Archibald, Sea,
forth; Allister Broadfoot, Seaforth,
• AGENTS:
William Lelper, Jr., Londe4ro; J,
N . Prueter, Brodhagen; SelwytT Bei;
Brussels: Eric Munroe, Seat:atit.
Waited 20 Years
FOr Revenge
Girls in Tunisian cabarets still
chant of lovely young Bianca.
She married an Italian camel
corps officer and for a time they.
lived happily, if tempestuously,
at a coastal station,
Then she became bored with
him. But he was still in love
with her, and passionately jeal-
ous.
After a quarrel one day, she
left him. Desperately he search-
ed for Bianca, and at last he
found her — at the house of her
lover. Stealing through the door-
way of an upper room, he caught
them together. Mad with rage,
he whipped out his service re-
volver and fired six shots at
point-blank range. The bullets
streamed into Bianca's body. She
should have died instantly, for
one bullet entered her neck, and
split her tongue.
Yet, three months later, Bian-
ca stood up in court and gave
evidence against her husband!
In a voice betraying not the
slightest vestige of the injury
she expressed feelings of hurt
that he had tried to kill her
for what she termed was a
"rather light-hearted escapade."
He must have known all the
time it was him she really loved,
she murmured. Not long after-
wards Bianca's husband died,
but from all accounts she did
not seem unduly heartbroken.
Many people, in trying to get
even with others, have fallen
into their own traps. A young
Austrian girl, twenty -four-year-
old Karin Sudbrack, was jilted
by a handsome Viennese dancing
master. She swore to level ac-
counts with the blonde named
Erika who had enticed him
away.
"I'll arrange a most beautiful
accident for her," whispered
Karin.
"It will be so lovely just a
little fall, a little splash and
good-bye, Erika! No one will
ever know. And then Karl, my
beloved Karl, will love me
again."
So, on a pretext of telling the
girl a secret or two about the
dancing master, she persuaded
Erika to go for a walk, She led
her to an old trestled wooden
bridge, a creaky structure, with
a torrent roaring over rocks be-
neath it.
"Now we'll talk," said Karin.
A few moments later, with the
blonde off her guard, Karin
stooped low, seized Erika's legs,
and tried to heave her over the
flimsy rails. But, reacting in-
stinctively, Erika hurled herself
backwardh. Then squirming
around, she waded into her ad-
versary and a bitter, hair -tug-
ging, clawing scene ensued.
'Finally Karin was overpower-
ed. Then, kneeling on her chest,
half choking her, Erika wrung
from her the reason for the as-
sault.
"Before 1 hand you over to the
police," said Erika, "let me help
you to your senses." She drag-
ged the object Karin down a
steep wooded path to t h e
stream's edge, and gleefully
dipped her head, again and again,
into the icy waters trying, she
claimed; to cleanse it of all
wickedness.
While living with a Berber
tribe beautiful Carmen Kalsinki,
a white Russian of noble birth,
revenged herself on an Arab
TVAhJ
LTi_
SALLY'S SALLIES
4.1
1-t• „ ............,,....--
"Slow clown? Why I don't do a
thing! My husband won't let
me."
boy, "He's insulted me!" she
cried. "I'll have him whipped!"
The boy had only whistled a
trifle shrilly under her window.
But for this she ordered her
black servants to strip and bind
Then, using a camel -hide whip,
she lashed him mercilessly,
Twenty years later Carmen,
still beautiful but not quite so
proud, called for shelter one
night at a palatial house in Tunis.
The servant told her to wait,
while he took her name and her
request for aid to his master.
Then he escorted Carmen to
his master. "Madame," said the
powerfully - buil t, handsome
Arab, rising from a chequered
silk dais, ''I have been expecting
you for twenty years. Now Allah
has delivered you to me — no
longer young, but not incapable,
I trust, of feeling pain." He
smiled cruelly. Seeing her be-
wildered look, he explained,
"You see, I am the boy you once
whipped. Now it is your turn!
"Strip!" he hissed, "and pre-
pare for the lash."
"Surely you wouldn't whip a
defenceless woman?" C a r m e n
cried. "The Gods will curse and
revile' you for such an outrage!"
"Had you any such noble
thoughts of pity for me when
I was a boy?" sneered the Arab.
"That was different", replied
Carmen. "You were insolent, and
deserved a lesson. I have only
knocked at your door and ask-
ed for charity."
"Daughter of a dog, it is char-
ity, sharper than serpent's fangs,
that now shall bite you, Strip!"
Again, the Arab rapped out his
command. But Carmen was not
beaten yet. "Since you insist on
humiliating me, I must offer you
my respects first," she said calm-
ly. Then with a sudden dart into
the folds of her dress, she pulled
out a revolver. It spat flame —
and the man who had waited
twenty years for vengeance
crumpled to the floor without a
sound.
From the desert to South Ken-
sington, but still with the same
theme — revenge. . . , A mother
and daughter thrived as profes-
sional shoplifters, but one day
they quarrelled violently over
the daughter's new boy -friend.
Shortly afterwards the mother
was caught shoplifting. She sus-
pected, though quite wrongly,
that her daughter had informed
on her to the police.
While in prison she brooded
night and day over this griev-
ance until, when she was re-
leased one overweening thought
possessed her — to punish her
daughter. "I'11 'frame' her!" she
vowed.
To do this she slipped an ar-
ticle into the girl's shopping bag
while they were in a South Ken-
sington store.
But, apparently, the mother's
shoplifting talent had gone rusty
during her spell in jail. The store
detective spotted her. "Step this
way, please madam," he said
with cold politeness. At that, she
collapsed, moaning with fear,
and self-pity.
The Rev. John Alington, patron
of a living at Letchworth, Herts,
Insisted on taking all services
himself, allowing his rector to
conduct only funerals. He could
not be denied this right; he was
an ordained priest, graduate of
a famous university, inheritor of
a vast fortune, but — a thorough
crackpot. The rector, so dis-
placed, reported Alington's con-
duct to the bishop and as a re-
sult of this Alington was un-
frocked.
Foaming with rage, the Rev.
John started gin -drinking serv-
ices at Letchworth Hall, the
stately resdence he owned. He
invited all the local riff-raff,
tramps, pick -pockets and good-
time girls. Then, well plied with
gin, he harangued them from
his pupit, wearing only Morocan
shoes, a red wig and a leopard
skin.
He continued this infamous
conduct, until the rector, Sam-
uel Knapp, resigned. But the
vengeful patron, if satisfied on
one score, was never satisfied
with his bottles. He drank on
and on, ever• more deeply, till
he drowned just one last bottle
of brandy too many and died.
LOVE'S SWEET LABOR — Chef Milani, TV's culinary king, had
promised his bride-to•be he'd bake the world's largest cake for
their nuptials, He made good on his promise, creating an Italian
rum beauty weighing a full ton. The mammoth confection,
baked in sections, was a week-long job for Milani, and required
40 crates of eggs alone. Above, happy Joe gives expert guid-
ance for cutting the cake to his new bride, the former June
Oblad Siriann.
PROCESSION IN VENICE — With a sea god sitting on the "ram"
of the bow piece, a large bissona — Venetian vessel — moves
along the Grand Canal. The waterway parade is part of
traditional festivities marking the "wedding of Venice with
the sea",
.TABLII TALKS
ekme Andew
rs.
1,40
Have you ever baked ham
for a crowd and had them eat
far less of it than you expected?
This happened recently to a
friend of. mine, After a success-
ful buffet party, she found her-
self with lots and' lots of ham
— tender, juicy, pink ham. She
served it to her family sliced
for two evenings — then de-
cided on a different plan. writes
Eleanor Richey Johnston in The
Christian Science Monitor.
"My family doesn't like too
many 'repeats,' " she told me.
"I decided not to push them
any further by giving them
ham as -is. I decided to dress it
up — to serve it with vege-
tables, in salads, on open -face
sandwiches, and in soup, It
really was fun — a sort of game
which the whole family entered
and enoyed!"
* *
If you'd like a casserole that
combines ham, tomatoes, and
cheese, try this one, It serves 6.
SURPRISE TOMATO
CASSEROLE
1 cup cooked diced Ilam
2 cups cooked or canned
tomatoes (solid)
1 egg, beaten
1 cup cracker crumbs
2 tablespoons prepared
mustard
2 teaspoons salt
i/s teaspoon pepper
'/e teaspoon onion salt
Y: cup grated cheese
2 tablespoons butter
Combine ham and tomatoes.
Blend beaten egg with 'h cup
cracker crumbs, mustard, and
seasoning, Add to ham and to-
matoes. Mix cheese, butter and
remaining cracker crumbs.
Sprinkle over top of mixture
which you have placed in but-
tered casserole. Bake at 350° F.
30 minutes or until browned,
* * *
Here is a skillet dish of ham
and rice that you will like,
AAM AND ORANGE
CURRIED) RICE
2 cups small cooked ham
pieces
2 tablespoons butler
2 tablespoons chopped green
pepper
1 tablespoon chopped onion
2 tablespoons brown sugar,
firmly packed
1 teaspoon salt
�fn teaspoon curry powder
% cup orange juice
1 tablespoon slivered orange
peel
2 cups cooked rice
Pan-fry green pepper and
onion in butter for 5 minutes,
Add brown suger and ham,
Stir and continue cooking for 5
minues. Add remaining ingre-
dients, Mix well, Cover and
cook for 10 minutes.
* * *
In grandmother's day, ham
scrapple was a regular part of
the menu when ham was
available. Ilere is a good mod-
ern version of that glorified
mush dish.
HAM SCRAPPLE
1 cup cornmeal
1 tablespoon sugar
>A teaspoon salt
2Ss cups boiling water
/ cup milk
2 cups ground, baked ham
11/i teaspoons prepared mustard
Shortening
Mix together cornmeal, sugar,
and salt. Add cornmeal mix-
ture slowly to boiling water and
milk. Cook slowly in heavy
covered pan, stirring occasion-
ally, about 20 minutes. Add ham
and mustard and mix well.
Pack into loaf pan. When cold
and firm, slice and fry in short-
ening until brown on each side.
* * *
HAM CHOWDER
When your ham is almost
gone and you have lots of lit-
tle pieces left, make a ham
chowder for lunch or as a first
course for dinner. All you do is
combine a can each of chicken
gumbo and chciken noodle soup
with an equal amount of water.
Mix until smooth. Add plenty of
ham bits and heat.
If you'd like to combine your
ham with sweet potatoes, try
this recipe for 4 servings.
* * *
HAM IIAWAIIAN
2 cups chopped cooked Ilam
21/4 cups cooked mashed sweet
potatoes•
2 ripe bananas, mashed
%a cup crushed pineapple
2 tablespoons brown sugar
1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
Divide potatoes in 4 mounds
and shape into nests on cookie
sheet. Fill nests with the
chopped ham, Combine bana-
nas, pineapple, brown sugar,
and cinnamon. Pile onto meat.
Broil 3 inches from heat source
for about 5 minutes. Serve
hot.
HIS EPITAI'II
A novelist was walking with .
a friend when they passed a
house on which a tablet had been
fixed to commemorate the fact
that a noted poet had once lived
there.
"I wonder what they'll put
over my door when I die,"
mused the novelist.
"House to let," replied the
friend.
Identical Twins
And Their Ways
Patients in a Suffolk hospital
used to rub their eyes in aston-
ishment and think they were
seeing double when pretty,
identical twins, eighteen -year-
old Fay and Hilary Woods, were
taking a prentu'sing training
course there,
Sometimes Fay would be seen
to, walk out at one end of a
ward seconds before her sister
appeared at the other, The girls
have dressed exactly alike since
babyhood, even to such details
as identical necklaces, and they
were made joint captains dur-
ing their last year at school.
Now the twins have gone to
another hospital as trainee
nurses and once more they are
puzzling doctors and staff who
constantly get them mixed up.
But if the problem of identifi-
cation becomes too acute, the
doctors will be able to enlist the
aid of the twins' elder sister,
Pat, who is also on the staff of
the hospital.
Identical twins have for some
years been the subject of fas-
cinating research in various
parts of the world, Extra-
ordinary instances of what ap-
pears to be telepathy between
some identical twins have been
discovered.
An eminent doctor reported
on twins who got the same ans-
wers in written examinations
so regularly that they were ac-
cused of cheating. They were
given a stiff test — and still
their answers were so alike that
even the wording of sentences
was identical.
About thirty years ago a
"twin matinee" attracted world-
wide attention when it was giv-
en in a New York theatre in
honour of a pair of lovely twin
actresses then starring in a
musical comedy called "Two Lit-
tle Girls in Blue."
The management extended
free invitations to twins .of
both sexes to attend the per-
formance. They turned up in
force and several scientists
were also present to see what
happened,
"The reactions of the audi-
ence were remarkable," re-
ported one scientist. "We no-
ticed that each pair of twins
laughed at the same time and
in the same way. If there was
anything in the play which they
found dull, they as§umed the
same bored expression simul-
taneously. It was uncanny to
watch them,"
Telepathic twin boys provid-
ed new evidence for scientists
last year when it was discov-
ered that two Sussex three-
year -olds both felt t he pain
when one was pinched in the
absence of the other,
Experts eager to prove how
close in affinity identical twins
can become, noted that Johnny,
out . of sight of his brother,
laughed when Jimmy was
tickled. Their mother said she
hesitated to slap one of the
boys for misbehaving because
she would be punishing his
brother, too,
When You Yawn
Satan Laughs!
When you yawn, Satan peeps
down your throat to catch a
glimpse of your soul. Then he
laughs because he recognizes it
as one of his own,
You don't believe it? We
have it on the authority of Mo-
hammed himself. In Traditions
Of The Prophet he says:—
"As for yawning, it is only
from Satan. Therefore, when
anyone of you yawns, let him
suppress it as far as he Is able,
For, verily, when anyone of you
yawns, Satan laughs at him,"
Strange that Mohammed
should have that idea, for in
England at the same time, it
was believed that evil spirits
peered though the jaws of s
yawner so that they could re-
cognize the person's spirit when
they met it again in the shades,
Have you ever wondered why
you place your hand in front
of your mouth when you yawn?
It Isn't out of politeness, to hide
the inside of your mouth from
view. If it was, then it would Ix
impolite for singers to sing with
their mouths open, giving the
world a full view of teeth, ton-
gue and tonsils,
Hiding a yawn behind a hand
is one of the oldest habits known
to man, It was old when we
were wearing woad and nothing
else.
There are other reasons apart
from Satan's sarcastic stare, for
covering the mouth with the
hand.
A yawn is automatic. It takes
an effort to suppress it, and
even thinking ar reading about
it is enough to set most people's
mouths gaping This fact made
primitive people believe it was
not they who yawned, but their
spirit trying to get out. Once
their spirit left them they were
dead, so they covered their
mouths to keep it in.
Some people believed that to
yawn openly was to invite in-
side them any evil spirit that
might be wandering around at
a loose end.
They believed that there
were far more spirits around
than human beings, all looking
for nice, warm homes. So a
hand to the mouth prevented
the entry of ' any of these evil
ghosts.
NEW WING BOAT — Tall, odd-looking thing, above, of Ham-
burg, Germany, is the latest in wing boats, as developed by
German engineer Friedrich Wendel, The boat, rests on three
legs, which feature short wings and propellers to drive the
vessel. The lower part of the rear leg is moveable and is used
to steer the boat. The front wings also have moveable fins to
eliminate rolling of the craft in rough seas.
NEW TWIST ON CHILD-REARING — As many human youngsters do, Michilino's young son got
too rambunctious charging at his mother hard enough to rip hey temper. So, with a simple twist
of her trunk on his tusk, she showed hire who was buss, The elephants are residents of the
Vincennes Zoo, near Paris, France,
Lightning Killed
Her 3 Husbands
, 'Beautiful Madame Matilda of
Sofia has been married three
times and must be nearing forty,
But she looks ten years younger,
and is 'also one of the richest
women in Bulgaria,
So there would seem to be no-
thing unusual about the recent
announcement of•her engagement
to be married for the fourth time,
After all, plenty of people marry •
four times, Yet the man who has
asked Martha Matikia to marry
him must be very, very brave,
In 1935 Martha was eighteen.
With masses of wavy, black hair,
flashing dark eyes and a figure
that Hollywood would have en-
vied„ she was the queen of the
local beauties. The daughter of
poor peasants, Martha worked in
the fields and farm boys were
her only admirers.
It was festival time in Sofia,
and, dressed in her best, she went
there for the day and caught the
eye of Randolph Eastman, an
•American on a grand tour of Eu-
rope. He fell in love with her,
and finding her as charming and
good natured as she was beauti-
ful, he proposed -via an interpre-
ter and was accepted.
In spite of the many difilcul-
ties they were deliriously happy,
and, after eight weeks of touring,
were making preparations to go
to America. Then, during a
storm; her husband was struck
by a flash of lightning, Martha
found herself tragically widowed
but richer by $60,000—the for-
tune left her by her husband.
She went to Paris and one day
attended a display at the fashion
house of Mataux et Cie. Her in-
terest was so obvious that the
owner, Charles Mataux, spoke to
her and asked if he could help.
A few minutes later she was
trying on the most expensive
models in tyle shop, She was ad-
miring herself in a very chic ere-
ation and inquired the cost. She
was rather surprised when Ma-
taux told her she could have it
free of charge, together with
every other gown in his shop
if only . she would marry him,
This was sudden, even for
France, Martha, still grieving for
her husband, took four months
to consider thin proposal; then ac-
cepted Mataux.
For eighteen months she was
one of the best dressed women
in Paris. Then her husband de-
cided to have a holiday. They
went to the south of Spain. One
day they were caught out in a
CHAMP AND A WOULD-BE —
Two contenders at the los An-
geles County Fair team up for
a photo, The lambie-pie is 19 -
year -old Virginia Rodgers who
seeks the title of queen of the
fele, She's showing off straw -
hatted Champion.Corbie, year-
old Southdown ram of many
blue ribbons, competing in the
livestock exhibit.
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
1. 011un
5. i4t1'Ilte
+Ill ll l'1 ly
9 ane In
rt &'i' o
12. I,nyal
1:t. 'i'itnld animal
11. L'o}
15, Fin end out
17. 1 'nn11nlasl(.o,l
19. I:}
20. (lugs
21. So he It
I:rrol
21. 11iseneninh,r
2:,.1'om.tell'tIlun
I .ra l h r l
fastener
in. Have being
311. Stein11 flurbe.•
32 ,trtlflcin1
language
33, 4!nntPd edge
35, Officrhnldtl'a
36. sea hlr'a
37. Away front
1hP coast
80. Ueseeeh
40. Throwing
missllr-
42, Swiss river
43. Slanting
44. 1'n,nposlllnnn
47.011 l's nnmo
41, !tubber freer
50, l,et It stnnd
51, L•gul nl.'tlnrl
it. Playing cards
51. Not dlfrlrtllt
DOWN
1. Old (poet.)
2. Confederate
general
3, Undermined
4. Girl's time
:,. iklshrltl
1:. Note of the
settle
7. noxlug ring
I'et'4eVl'r'e8
thunderstorm, Lightning flick-
ered. Martha was unhurt , , , but
her husband was killed,
The tragedy of losing by the
same means the two men she
' had loved shocked Martha so se-
verely that for weeks she hov-
' ered between life and death, A
German specialist was called in
and under his skill she recovered.
He looked after her so well that
when he proposed to her, she ac-
cepted him.
Only then did she discover that
Mataux had left her his entire
fortune: $300,000,
With her new husband, Ma-
dame Matikia, as she now was,
went to Berlin, War clouds were
gathering and the Nazis were
gaining strength in Germany.
Martha did not like them or
their methods, When site disco-
vered her husband was one, she
decided to leave him, and ran
away. He followed her, Near the
French frontier his car was
struck by lightning. He was
killed.. ,
She stayed in France. Then
came to England with her fortune
and returned to Sofia after the
war, Still attractive and only
thirty, she said she was scared
of marriage.
Who wouldn't be, after losing
three husbands in thunder-
storms?
One hopes her fourth marriage
will be as happyas the first two
—without any tragic ending.
Famous Sundials
Sundials are increasing in
popularity in Britain, probably
because some weather experts
nave predicted that they are go-
ing to experience e series of
sunny summers until at least the
year 1966,
You 'can still find a number
of centuries-old sundials in the
quiet churchyards and gardens
ot Britain, but many of those
familiar, to our forefathers have
crumbled away, being themselves
the victims of the time which
they recorded.
The new sundials are likely to
have mottoes similar' to those
at the old ones. The motto
chosen by Queen Alexandra for
the sundial on the wall of San-
dringham House was:
Let others tell of storms and
showers,
I'll count only your sunny
hours.
Among wedding gifts to the
Queen and the Duke of Edin-
burgh was a sundial designed
and executed by a man whose
family have been stonemasons
since 1706. In the days of the
first Queen Elizabeth men often
carried pocket sundials for the
purpose of time -telling, Not long
ago it was reported that a Ger-
man firm had begun to make
10,000 pocket sundials a month
because of the sudden revival in
their popularity.
In France is an ancient sun-
dial gun made in Paris in 1650
which fires a discharge at twelve
o'clock every day provided the
sun is not hidden by clouds.
It is a small brass cannon, the
touch -hole of which is elongat-
ed into a groove running in line
with the -north -south line on the
dial. A teaspoonful of powder
forms that charge, a little being
also sprinkled on the long touch-
hole,
If the burning -glass lens held
by .adjustable arms above the
cannon is set in the correct posi-
tion, the concentration of the
sun's rays makes the powder ex-
plode at midday.
WAST" **TOR T
A film acto. .. , disappointed
at not being called upon to
make a speech on the occasion
of his retirement from films,
And as he said to a friend,
"What snakes it worse, old man,
is that I spend three hours in
the make-updepartment having
It lump put in my throat,
9. (Irnvrl 27. Irish
containing expletive
gold 29. Small horse
20. Slew (musk)
'lt. Conolllde
3 t. ('ounLry
(louses
31i, ['tinting
mistaken
:IC, Anoint
:,A, nut of date
401, Couple
41. Anelent slave
42. While
41. English leo 1.r
ffirnlali.'
46. Pigpen
IJ, Type measure
10. Bombastic
tall:
11.Ilan:neap
allotvnnt e
10. Alternative
18. Reposes
20, Smoothing
21, Sli'eet urrhfn
22, lmltnte
2:;. Writing
Inthlemrnt
2,. 1 'ntlnl1V In
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Answer elsewhere on this page
HE HAS TOO MUCH MONEY - G. E. P, Alsem, of Amsterdam,
Holland, has monetary troubles — an abundance of money
of all different kinds. Alsem, an airlines flight engineer, some-
times has to carry' 25 varieties of money from all over the
world, The Dutchman, whose globe-trotting has extended over
27, years and'27,000 flying hours, often finds making change
difficult,
TI1PMN FRONT
JokilQuq�4.
When cows are housed In con-
ventional stables, the usual prac-
tice is to control the rate at
which silage is fed and provide
hay in accordance with the
cow's 'appetite for dry roughage,
V. S. Logan of the Central Ex-
perimental Farm, advises that
under these conditions the feed-
er can make reasonably accurate
estimates of his storage re-
quirements for both silage and
hay.' Taking into consideration
the rates at which 11e wishes to
feed the respective roughages
and the anticipated winter feed-
ing period, he should store suf-
ficient extra feed at harvest time
to allow for losses and wastage
of approximately 25 per cent for
silage and 30 per cent for hay,
* • *'
With the development of loose
housing barns and the adoption
of self-feeding devices both for
hay and silage, the question is
asked as to how much silage
and hay cattle will consume
when they are • allowed free ac-
cess to both of these roughages?
The variations that exist between
quality and palatability of hays
and silages make it impossible
to estimate accurately the pro-
portion of the individual rough -
ages that will be consumed . in
these circumstances.
* « •
With adverse weather condi;
tions during harvest time it may
be advantageous to store the
greater proportion of the grass
crop as silage. This would neces-
sitate a higher rate of silage
feeding, and with self-feeding
some arrangement would have
to be made' to limit the access
to the hay supply, Otherwise
three units of silage to one of
hay is a usual ratio to allow.
• $
Canadian agricultural scien-
tists are putting radio -active
materials from atomic energy
plants to use in many valuable
fields of research. Just as the
discovery of the microscope en-
abled the medical scientist to
identify and follow the move-
ment of living disease organ-
isms that could not be seen
with the eye, use of these radio-
active elements (known as iso-
topes to the scientists to distin-
guish then from the same ele-
ments when not radio -active)
has made it possible to identify
and follow the path of these ele-
ments through living tissues and
accurately measure the quanti-
ty present in any part of the
plant or animal at any period of
growth, Their use permits it to ,
by done far more rapidly than
by the old method of chemical
analysis and without injury to
the living plant or animal.
• •
Extremely minute quantities of
a number of elements such as
phosphorus, calcium, cobalt, car-
bon and others, used by plants
and animals in their growth,
when made radio -active, can be
mixed with much larger, non-
active, quantities of the elements
and makes the absorption and
movement of these elements
within plant and animal tissues
easily followed.
* • «
Instruments to measure these
movements have been adapted
from the familiar Geiger count-
er and are so sensitive that the
amount of carbon given off in an
animal's breath can be detected
and measured.
« •
Chemists engaged in animal
nutrition research at Science
Service, Department of Agricul-
ture, Ottawa, have used radio-
active carbon and calcium to
trace the movement of these
two elements in the animal's
system and determine the me-
thod by which the animal con-
verts them into bones, meat and
milk.
• * •
In western Canada wool grown
in an area deficient in sulphur
was a basis of study. Tracers of
radio -active sulphur mixed with
additional non-active sulphur
and fed to the ewes was dis-
covered not only in the wool of
the ewes themselves but i11 the
wool of lambs later born to those
ewes.
« •
Scientists at the University ot
Saskatchewan have used radio-
active phosphrous in numerous
experiments to determine the
form of phosphorus in fertilizers,
most readily used by plants.
Their tests indicate that for
Saskatchewan prairie soils am-
monium phosphate is the form
most readily available for grain
crops,
Measurements of the phospho-
rus taken up by plants at dif-
ferent stages of growth revealed
that most of the phosphorus
supplied through fertilizers is
taken up by wheat plants prior
« « •
MYtllOOL
LESSON
BY Rk:V R BARCLAY
WARREN B.A. B,D,
The Great Invitation
Revelation 22:1-5, 8-9, 16-21
Memory Selection — The Spirit
and the bride say, Come. And let
him that heareth say, Come. And
let him that is athirst, come.
And whosoever will, let him take
the water of lite freely. Revel-
ation 22:17
It is said that the invitation to
come is given by God some nine
hundred times in the Bible. Man
is a free moral agent. God can-
not coerce him to surrender. He
cannot and will not take from
him his right to make his own
moral choices, God will have no
conscripts. But God can and does
entreat.
Since the fall of Adam and
Eve God has been calling man to
come to him, He has called
through the law and the voice
of the prophets. His greatest
call —, the one which gives val-
idity to all others — came
through His Son Jesus Christ.
God, come in the flesh, is a
tangible manifestation that God
is really calling man. From the
lips of Jesus Christ came the
great invitation which is still
sounding out through the world.
"Come unto me, all ye that
labour and are heavy laden, and
1 will give you rest. Take my
yoke upon you, and learn of me;
for I am meek and lowly in heart:
and ye shall find rest unto your
souls. For my yoke is easy, and
my burden is light." Matthew
11:28-30.
The Holy Spirit is here to
press upon men the urgency of
God's call. He speaks through
the written word, the Bible. He
appeals to the heart and con-
science of the individual. He
convinces the world of sin, right-
eousness and judgment. . The
Church of Jesus Christ, His bride,
joins in presenting the call. Je-
to the heading out stage. After
heading the plants continue to
take up quite large quantities
but it is taken from phosphorus
from the soil rather than from
the fertilizers. In their experi-
n ent, approximately 22 per
cent of the fertilizer, phospho-
rus was recovered by the grow-
ing plants.
111141111.
sus in his revelation to John
says, "And let him that is athirst
come. And whosoever will, let
him take the water of life free-
ly," A little boy was asked who
was meant by 'whosoever'. He re-
plied, "That meants you and me
and everybody else."
' The greatest invitation you
will ever receive is to come to
Jesus Christ and find rest. What
will you with this Invitation? Do
not set it aside but bow your
heart and come to Jesus now.
Special Willows
Grown For Bats
One of East Anglia's "cricket
bat nurseries" is growing at
least 30,000 willow trees this
year. Cricket bat willows are
fast-growing trees and as many
as 400 blades have sometimes
been cut from a fully -developed
specimen.
Bat willows are sensitive
trees. They must be planted
with the greatest care, lest the
bark be bruised or torn. So de-
licate are they that even foreign
bodies in the soil will stain
them, giving them that queer,
reddish -brown mark which all
cricketers know and sometimes
attribute to knot.
The great W. G. Grace would
have his bats made only from
willow grown in a Hampshire
village. He well knew that the
average cricket willow takes
sixteen to twenty years to grow
to the right size for cutting—
about eighteen inches diameter.
From one of six willow cut-
tings sent from England to Aus-
tralia fifty-one years ago by
Archie Maclaren, the English
Test captain, there grew the big-
gest willow plantation of its
kind in Australia. From these
cuttings grew a cricket bat in-
dustry which produces many
thousands of bat every year.
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
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S 13,
PIPE THE "PEOPLE MACHINE" — In their efforts to remake the
world, the Communists haven't quite gotten to the point of turn-
ing out good Reds on the assembly line, But that's what this
scene looks like, The big machine is a turbine, and visitors to
the second Exhibition of Czechoslovak Engineering at Brno,
Czechoslovakia, are pouring out of the exhaust pipe after view-
ing the workings of the turbine from the inside.
FARM FAMILY ROBINSON — Ranging in age from 61 to 80, the Robinson sisters of Bethel
Springs find no trouble at all in manning a large farm. l'he work -sharing quintet manage
everything from plowing fields to butchering animals. Between heavier chores, they spend
time in the garden, above, hoeing peas and drying apples. left to right, the Robinsons are$
011ie, Maggie, Dinah, Eunice and Lillie, Lillie, the only one of the five to marry, is a widow,
and the sisters form a collective band of "mothers" for her children and grandchildren who
live on the farm with theq
IMP
i3
4
Y7
.45
A
`ti,.
Answer elsewhere on this page
HE HAS TOO MUCH MONEY - G. E. P, Alsem, of Amsterdam,
Holland, has monetary troubles — an abundance of money
of all different kinds. Alsem, an airlines flight engineer, some-
times has to carry' 25 varieties of money from all over the
world, The Dutchman, whose globe-trotting has extended over
27, years and'27,000 flying hours, often finds making change
difficult,
TI1PMN FRONT
JokilQuq�4.
When cows are housed In con-
ventional stables, the usual prac-
tice is to control the rate at
which silage is fed and provide
hay in accordance with the
cow's 'appetite for dry roughage,
V. S. Logan of the Central Ex-
perimental Farm, advises that
under these conditions the feed-
er can make reasonably accurate
estimates of his storage re-
quirements for both silage and
hay.' Taking into consideration
the rates at which 11e wishes to
feed the respective roughages
and the anticipated winter feed-
ing period, he should store suf-
ficient extra feed at harvest time
to allow for losses and wastage
of approximately 25 per cent for
silage and 30 per cent for hay,
* • *'
With the development of loose
housing barns and the adoption
of self-feeding devices both for
hay and silage, the question is
asked as to how much silage
and hay cattle will consume
when they are • allowed free ac-
cess to both of these roughages?
The variations that exist between
quality and palatability of hays
and silages make it impossible
to estimate accurately the pro-
portion of the individual rough -
ages that will be consumed . in
these circumstances.
* « •
With adverse weather condi;
tions during harvest time it may
be advantageous to store the
greater proportion of the grass
crop as silage. This would neces-
sitate a higher rate of silage
feeding, and with self-feeding
some arrangement would have
to be made' to limit the access
to the hay supply, Otherwise
three units of silage to one of
hay is a usual ratio to allow.
• $
Canadian agricultural scien-
tists are putting radio -active
materials from atomic energy
plants to use in many valuable
fields of research. Just as the
discovery of the microscope en-
abled the medical scientist to
identify and follow the move-
ment of living disease organ-
isms that could not be seen
with the eye, use of these radio-
active elements (known as iso-
topes to the scientists to distin-
guish then from the same ele-
ments when not radio -active)
has made it possible to identify
and follow the path of these ele-
ments through living tissues and
accurately measure the quanti-
ty present in any part of the
plant or animal at any period of
growth, Their use permits it to ,
by done far more rapidly than
by the old method of chemical
analysis and without injury to
the living plant or animal.
• •
Extremely minute quantities of
a number of elements such as
phosphorus, calcium, cobalt, car-
bon and others, used by plants
and animals in their growth,
when made radio -active, can be
mixed with much larger, non-
active, quantities of the elements
and makes the absorption and
movement of these elements
within plant and animal tissues
easily followed.
* • «
Instruments to measure these
movements have been adapted
from the familiar Geiger count-
er and are so sensitive that the
amount of carbon given off in an
animal's breath can be detected
and measured.
« •
Chemists engaged in animal
nutrition research at Science
Service, Department of Agricul-
ture, Ottawa, have used radio-
active carbon and calcium to
trace the movement of these
two elements in the animal's
system and determine the me-
thod by which the animal con-
verts them into bones, meat and
milk.
• * •
In western Canada wool grown
in an area deficient in sulphur
was a basis of study. Tracers of
radio -active sulphur mixed with
additional non-active sulphur
and fed to the ewes was dis-
covered not only in the wool of
the ewes themselves but i11 the
wool of lambs later born to those
ewes.
« •
Scientists at the University ot
Saskatchewan have used radio-
active phosphrous in numerous
experiments to determine the
form of phosphorus in fertilizers,
most readily used by plants.
Their tests indicate that for
Saskatchewan prairie soils am-
monium phosphate is the form
most readily available for grain
crops,
Measurements of the phospho-
rus taken up by plants at dif-
ferent stages of growth revealed
that most of the phosphorus
supplied through fertilizers is
taken up by wheat plants prior
« « •
MYtllOOL
LESSON
BY Rk:V R BARCLAY
WARREN B.A. B,D,
The Great Invitation
Revelation 22:1-5, 8-9, 16-21
Memory Selection — The Spirit
and the bride say, Come. And let
him that heareth say, Come. And
let him that is athirst, come.
And whosoever will, let him take
the water of lite freely. Revel-
ation 22:17
It is said that the invitation to
come is given by God some nine
hundred times in the Bible. Man
is a free moral agent. God can-
not coerce him to surrender. He
cannot and will not take from
him his right to make his own
moral choices, God will have no
conscripts. But God can and does
entreat.
Since the fall of Adam and
Eve God has been calling man to
come to him, He has called
through the law and the voice
of the prophets. His greatest
call —, the one which gives val-
idity to all others — came
through His Son Jesus Christ.
God, come in the flesh, is a
tangible manifestation that God
is really calling man. From the
lips of Jesus Christ came the
great invitation which is still
sounding out through the world.
"Come unto me, all ye that
labour and are heavy laden, and
1 will give you rest. Take my
yoke upon you, and learn of me;
for I am meek and lowly in heart:
and ye shall find rest unto your
souls. For my yoke is easy, and
my burden is light." Matthew
11:28-30.
The Holy Spirit is here to
press upon men the urgency of
God's call. He speaks through
the written word, the Bible. He
appeals to the heart and con-
science of the individual. He
convinces the world of sin, right-
eousness and judgment. . The
Church of Jesus Christ, His bride,
joins in presenting the call. Je-
to the heading out stage. After
heading the plants continue to
take up quite large quantities
but it is taken from phosphorus
from the soil rather than from
the fertilizers. In their experi-
n ent, approximately 22 per
cent of the fertilizer, phospho-
rus was recovered by the grow-
ing plants.
111141111.
sus in his revelation to John
says, "And let him that is athirst
come. And whosoever will, let
him take the water of life free-
ly," A little boy was asked who
was meant by 'whosoever'. He re-
plied, "That meants you and me
and everybody else."
' The greatest invitation you
will ever receive is to come to
Jesus Christ and find rest. What
will you with this Invitation? Do
not set it aside but bow your
heart and come to Jesus now.
Special Willows
Grown For Bats
One of East Anglia's "cricket
bat nurseries" is growing at
least 30,000 willow trees this
year. Cricket bat willows are
fast-growing trees and as many
as 400 blades have sometimes
been cut from a fully -developed
specimen.
Bat willows are sensitive
trees. They must be planted
with the greatest care, lest the
bark be bruised or torn. So de-
licate are they that even foreign
bodies in the soil will stain
them, giving them that queer,
reddish -brown mark which all
cricketers know and sometimes
attribute to knot.
The great W. G. Grace would
have his bats made only from
willow grown in a Hampshire
village. He well knew that the
average cricket willow takes
sixteen to twenty years to grow
to the right size for cutting—
about eighteen inches diameter.
From one of six willow cut-
tings sent from England to Aus-
tralia fifty-one years ago by
Archie Maclaren, the English
Test captain, there grew the big-
gest willow plantation of its
kind in Australia. From these
cuttings grew a cricket bat in-
dustry which produces many
thousands of bat every year.
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
Sd3 S
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1V311
S 13,
PIPE THE "PEOPLE MACHINE" — In their efforts to remake the
world, the Communists haven't quite gotten to the point of turn-
ing out good Reds on the assembly line, But that's what this
scene looks like, The big machine is a turbine, and visitors to
the second Exhibition of Czechoslovak Engineering at Brno,
Czechoslovakia, are pouring out of the exhaust pipe after view-
ing the workings of the turbine from the inside.
FARM FAMILY ROBINSON — Ranging in age from 61 to 80, the Robinson sisters of Bethel
Springs find no trouble at all in manning a large farm. l'he work -sharing quintet manage
everything from plowing fields to butchering animals. Between heavier chores, they spend
time in the garden, above, hoeing peas and drying apples. left to right, the Robinsons are$
011ie, Maggie, Dinah, Eunice and Lillie, Lillie, the only one of the five to marry, is a widow,
and the sisters form a collective band of "mothers" for her children and grandchildren who
live on the farm with theq
IMP
'At1E
SUPERIOR
FOOD MARKETS
THANKSGIVING FOOD SALE
AYLMER FANCY PUMPKIN . , 28 OZ. TIN 16c
GREEN GIANT NIBLET CORN, 2 14 -oz. tins 33c
CHEERY MORN FRESH GROUND COFFEE,
1 LB. BAG 99e
IHEINZ TOMATO KETCHUP 11 OZ. BOTTLE 23c
Since we have put our stamp deal into effect,
an agreement has been reached by the grocery
and butcher outlets, that no one will use Trad-
ing Stamps for sales prmotion. We regret
that we will have to discontinue our plan. We
thank you for your patronage and interest, and
we will still continue to give the same satisfy-
ing service and merchandise.
Chas. St. Michael.
PHONE 156 --- WE DELIVER.
Jb-,i 1 ►oi-L.i Nom ,l i.i1, i __ b i ,1
r#44+1111EXT+411 BEAUTY BAR
YOUR BEAUTY -- YOUR BUSINESS AND MINE
STOP AT THE
B B B
JTOMItitri► • "' •
STEWART'S
Red & White Food Store.
Phone 9 - We Deliver` - Blyt1
"The Best for Less"
PERSONAL INTEREST
Mr. and Mrs, Stewart Young of
Fort William spent the week -end with
Mr, and Mrs, John Young,
Mr, and Mrs, Clifford Walsh, Leyton
and Warren, spent the weekend at West
Lorne, visiting Mrs,' Walsh's mother,
• Mrs. May Lippeld.
Mrs, Walter Lyons of Toronto spent
the week -end with her father, Mr. W.
N. Watson, Ann Jeanette and Pauli '
Mr. Paul Watson of Chesley spent
the week -end at his home here.
Miss Anne Jeannette Watson visited
In Part Huron last week,
CARD OF TiANKS
To our many friends and neighbours
we wish to say a sincere thanks for the
!cards, flowers, visits, and many kind
enquiries during Alf's recent illness, al -
!so for the many kind expressions of
sympathy received when I received
' , word of the death of my father, Mr. J
Hutchins:rn, of Ycrk, England. It was
all deeply appreciated.
43-1p. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Nesbit.
CARD OF TIIANKS
We wish to .isms all those who vts-
- • ited our aunt, sent cards, who kindly
'enquired, and the staff of Clinton hos.
' pital; Dr. Street., Dr. Oakes, and fly:
special nurses; Also the neighbours
- , who contributed flowers, and their
many, many other kindnesses, .
'—The relatives of the late Mrs, Wil-
� Hams, 42.1
CARD OF TIIANKS
The officers' and directors of the
i Blyth Agricultural S•.ciety wish to
thank everyone for their co-operation
- 'and assietan'ce in staking the 195'6 Blyth
Fall Fair a success in spite of adverse
conda)tiona which reduced the gate re -
444+4+444 -.•+.+44+++4+44.43-•? ceipts. To all those who helped in any
1 way, our s',ncere thanks,
;Mrs. Chas, Johnston, Wm. Gow,
Secy: Treasurer, President
FOR APPOINTMENTS PIIONE 113.
4 .-.. 4-4+--9o-4-+4-+-0 4.4-4-s • -•-•-•-••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•4-4-44444-0-1-444-•
News Of Auburn
RARRIS—THOMPSON Mrs, Charles Hawthorne, of Goderich
sister of the bride, was matron of hon-
our, wearing a powder blue strapless
waltz -length gown of nylon net over
taffeta with m:.ching bolero and heal•
dress. She carried a basket of baby
mums, roses and tinted chrysanthc•
mums. The bridesmaid was Mrs, Don•
-ld Bean, of Colborne Township, wear-
ing a gold strapless waltz -length gown
of nylon net over taffeta with snatch
ing headdress and bolero, and carried
a basket of white baby and tinted mums
and rses. Mr. Donald Bean of Col-
borne Township, brother of the bride
was best man, and Mr. Charles Haw
thorne, of Goderich, was usher.
i A reception followed at Tiger Dunlop
Inn where the bride's mother received
the guests gowned in a cogen blue satin
dress with pink accessories and a col. -
sage of pink carnations. She was as•
slated by the groom's step -mother
wearing a sewn of navy blue nylon
over taffeta with pink accessories and
a corsage of pink carnations,
Cheltenham Baptist Church was beau-
tifully decorated with pink and white
gladioli when Helen Edith Harris
daughter cf AIr. and Mrs. Herbert Bar-
ris, Cheltenham, and Robert Gorden
Tho:npson, only son of Mr. and Mrs.. J
Gormerley Thompson, of Brampton
were united in marriage. Rev. Bright•
well and Rev. Luck, officiated for the
ceremony, which took place at 7 p.in
The wedding music was played by Mr
Kenneth Cuthbert, of Brampton. and
the soloist, Miss Anna Spitzer, who
wore a gown of rose crystalette, sang
"0 Perfect Love" and "Because."
The bride, given in marriage by her
father, looked charming in a white
gown of tulle with insets of lace, bol-
ero a :tyle with finger -length sleeves
Her floor -length veil wcs held with 3
hale of sequins and brilliants, and she
carried a bouquet of red roses. Mrs,
Norma Barrett, of Toronto, was matron
of honour, gowned in shrimp chystai•
lette in waltz -length and carried a bou-
quet of bronze mums.
The bridesm,ids were Miss Mary
Harris, niece of the bride, in a gown
at shrimp cryr'.allcte, and Misses Jean
\IcPherscn and Lois McDonald wore
green crystallc.tte, all gowns were
waltz -length, and their flowers, bou-
quets of bronze mums,
Other attend:i:ts were two little
flower girls, niece., of the bride, Shar-;
on Blakely and Margo Ruddell, dres• i
sed in gowns cif yellow nylon and net,
and carried baskets of blue and pink
pompon mums. Also the two ring -
hearers were twin nephews of the bride
Eddie and Bert Harris.
The groomsman was Mr. Kenneth
Lenten, of Brampton, and the ushers er entertained in her honour at a trout., f
seau tea last Wednesday, In the after -
many friends wish him a speedy recov-
cry.
Mr, and Mrs. Duncan MacKay and
family visited last Friday in London
with Mr. and Mrs, John R. Weir end
family,
Mr. Emmerson of Whitechurch visited
last Snturday with Mr. and Mrs, Ezekiel
Phillips,
Congratulations to Mr. End Mrs, Ro•
Bert Arthur on the birth of a baby
daughter, 1Csthryn Jane, in Clinton
Hospital on Sept. 30th.
Mr, Jelin Mnize has returned and will
socn take possession of the apartment
in Mrs, ,I. Taylor's home.
Visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
R. Taylor over the w ek-end were Mr.
and Mrs. Lionel Rothwell and William
of Port Elgin and Mr, and Mrs, Ron-
ald Rathwell and Michael John, of
Dresden.
Mrs. Blake and Mr. Wtn, Blake, of
Brussels, visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Redmond cf East We.;
wanosh. •
Mr. Larry Gles„ ow• received word
hast week of the appointment of man-
ager of The Canadian Bank of Com.
pierce Branch, at Brussels. He will
leave in the near future to assume hie
new duties.
All the public school teachers in this
ccanm,unity attended Teeeher's Conven•
tion in Landon last Friday,
Mrs. Gordon Miller, Mrs, Keith Ma-
chan, Mrs. Gordon Chamney and Mrs
Wes. Bradnock, attended the troussea
ea for Miss Shirley Bean of C'rlov:
For travelling io Eastern Canada, the 1
beige chose an ice blue tweed suit
with winter white picture hat and tat 1
accessories and a corsage of red roses
On their return they will take up rest-
dence at Strathroy. it
Following the ceremony the wedding ' e
party visited the groom's great aunt '
Miss Margaret King, who has been a
patient in hospital for months.
Guests were present from Niag4ra
Falls, Acton, Toronto, London, and
Auburn. g
Prior to her marriage Shirley was s
given a miscellaneous shower in Lon•
don where she has been employed, anJ ,
also another one at Carlow. Her moth -
last Wednesday. •
Pte. Allen Craig of Camp Borden,
who had been attending a military fun
eral at Niegara Falls for a comrade o
he same cc•mpsny, called on his par
nts, Mr. and Mrs, W, J. Craig, las
week-end.
Miss Edna Daer of Bayfield visited
with her- parents, Mr. anti Mrs. John
Daer and family on Sunday.
Mrs, Wm. T, Robison and Mrs. M ar-
uerite Chopin, of Wingham, were
tretford visitors last week -end for a
lay,.
Mr. Sandy Andrews was home last
week, owing to a sprained ankle, mit-
ered while working at Woodstock
A large crowd was on hand for tho
t
were William iiotchitis, Donald Harrl: i „Eton, riles. H. Hill, of Goderich, poured
con -
and Nelson Harris, sale fist week of thefarm and
;tea, and in the evening, Mrs. Russel tents of Mr. Barry L. Sturdy.
•The reception was held in the Che;• King, step -mother of the groom, pcur. ! Fritnda of Mr. Herbert Mogridge
tenham B_h'ist Church. Mr. and Mrs ed leo
T p 1
hem s.n will resins in Bram ptcn.
Guests were present from Toronto
Georgetown, Burlington, New York
Mamora and Auburn. The groom is a
grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Herb Moo•
ridge and is well known in this com•
munity,
BEAN—KING
A very pretty wedding was solemn-
ized at Knex Presbyterian Chapel,
Goderich, last Saturday, Sept, 29th, at
12 o'clock noon, when Shirley Selina
Bean became the bride of Mr. Donald
King, of Strathroy, formerly of Auburn,
Shirley is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Bean, of Colborne Town-
ship, and Donald is the son of Mr. Rus-
sel King, of Auburn, Rev. R. G. Mc-
Millan officiated and Mr. W. H. Bishop
of Goderich played the wedding music
Mr, Stewart King of Toronto, brother
of the groom, was soloist, and sang
"The Bride's Prayer," and "0 Promise
Me."
The brise entered the chapel on the
arm of her father, and looked charm-
ing in a floor -length gown of white
chantilly lece and nylon set over duch•
css satin, fashioned with -fitted bodice
and scalloped neckline, accented with
nylon tulle yoke and tiny collar trim -1
rued with seed pearls. The headdress
fashioned of lace and net, studded with
segiuns, held the linger -tip french il-
lusion veil In place, She carried a bou- I Mr. Leslie Buchanan is a patient in
Mr, and Mrs. Warren Mitchell, Ron-
dy and Cathy, of Niagnra Falls, and Mr
and Mrs, Harry Phelan, and Paul, of Ac•
ton, attended their brother's wedding.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Good, Miss Vera
Good, and Miss Vicki Sims, of Goderich
visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs
Wellingtcn Good.
Visitors on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs
Wrn. J. Craig were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Craig and family of Ilderton, and Mr,
and Mrs. John Lemon and John Jr., of
Chatsworth.
Mr, Bert Craig purchased the prop-
erty of the late Mr, 0. E. Erratt, •
The Auburnettee, Misses Rena and
Gladys McClinthey, Donna Walden
and Dsrhara Smith, were guest singers
at Benmiller United Church anniver-
sary at the morning service, and In the
evening sang at the Donnybrook anni-
versary,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Plaetzer were
guests at the Manning -Lear wedding et
Lrndesboro last Saturday,
Miss Lila Daer visited recently with
her cousin, Mrs. Lotus Blake, Mr
Blake, Faye and Mary, of Brussels.
Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Morrison and
Mrs. J. Lemon, of Toronto. visited on
Sunday with Miss Minnie Collinson,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davids, Ohio
and Mrs. Clayton Ladd, Blyth, visited
last week with Mr, and Mrs. George
Lawlor,
• will be pleased to know that he is im-
proving in health at the home of his
!daughter, Mrs. Bert ANA at Peters-
burg
Pillsbury Cake Mixes ' •
3 pkgs. ' . . 89
Green Giant Nibiet Corn
2 tins • - 33
Giant Rinso- 73
Aylmer Pumpkin (large)
2 tins .. .33
Monarch Pie Crust, pkg. 31
Cheez Whiz (lge.) 55
AT WORK OR PLAY, HAVE PEP bACH DAY
To keep that pep, try one of our vitamin products. .
` They are sure to help you retain vim,
1• vigor and vitality,
One -a -Day Tablets (vitamin A & D) $1,35
: ' One -a -Day Multiple Tablets , . , $1..40 and $2.50
Cod Liver Oil Capsules ,(100's)
c Vi-Cal-Fer 12 Capsules
c Vitasol M Capsules (high potency) - - $4,80
Geriplex Capsules (for folks 50 yrs. & older) $2,95
c Bexel Capsules (for children)
c ;; Wampole's Extract Cod Liver
c Maltlevol (for extra vitamins)
,.,,, $1.35
$1.95 and $4.95
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL:
Plasti-Foam TV Slippers,
$1.89 Pair.
Pla'sti-Foam Bath Mats,
$1.89 Each.
ONTARIO FARMERS'
UNION
A meeting will be held in the
Orange Hall, Auburn,
on
TUESDAY, OCT. 9th,
at 8:30 p.m., when
Mr. Walter Miller,
Vice -President of the
Ontario Farmers' Union
will be the guest 'speaker.
EVERYONE IS CORDIALLY INVITED
TO ATTEND. ! 43-1p,
CARD PARTY
and
DANCE!
IN BLYTH MEMORIAL BALL
on
FRIDAY, OCT. 12th,
Sponsored by St, Michael's
Church
PIERCE'S ORCHESTRA.
FREE LUNCH.
4+114I+4,44NN444+44/ MMNtIM,MIN
TIIE DIRECTORS, ASSCOCIATE
DIRECTORS AND MEN'S
COMMITTEE
of the
BLYTH AGRICUL-
TURAL SOCIETY
will meet in the Library on
THURSDAY, OCT 4th,
at 8:30 p.m.
Your Presence is Requested.
Wan, Gcav, Mrs. Chas, Johnston,
President, Secy -Treasurer.
6.04.1,441~1~4 • •••••40 I THINE•+I.
CARD OF TIIANKS
I wish to express my sincere thanks
to my relatives, neighbours, and friends
for flowers, treats and mail received
while I was a patient in Clinton Hos- !
vital, Special thanks to Dr. Street and
the nursing staff,
43-1p_ VViola Thompson,
IN MEMORIAM
BENTLEY—In loving memory of a dear
husband and father, Earl C. Bentley
who passed away October 7th, 1955,
Jesus called you Home to stay,
Just one year ago today;
Na -fine knows the silent heartaches,
Only those who have loved can tell,
The grief we bear in silence,
For the one we loved so well.
—Sadly missed by Wife and Family
and Granddaughters 43 -Ip
IN MEMORIAM
SCRIMGEOUR—In loving memory of
Frank, eldest son of Mr. and Mra,
Lorne Scrhngeour, Blyth, who was
drowned October 9'ah, I926,
We cannot say and we will not say,
That lie is dead, He is just away.
With a cheery smile and a wave of the
hand
ilAnyr:ST HOME CELEBRATIONS
Large congregations attended both
the morning and evening services ;it
St. Mark's Anglican Church at Auburn
for tate annual Thanksgiving Servicer:
The rector, Rev. Bren deVries, was in
charge of both services. For the morn•
Ing service, Miss Margaret Clot it pre-
sided at the organ and special music
was supplied by the choir and also a
duet by Lila and Ellen Daer, Rev,
, Mr. deVries •told his congregation in
his message that while man tills the
;lend, rows the seed, It is God who gives
the life, many cnly fulfills the condi-
tions, but God breathes the breath of
being. At the evening service, Mrs,
Frank Nesbitt presided at the organ.
Special mode was supplied by a guar -
tette of Misses Mary and Ma:garet
Clark and Lorraine and Norma Hcnreh
and an anthem by the chair, At the ev-
ensong service Mr. deVries baser, his
message on Proverbs 11:30: "The fruit
of the righteous is a tree of life and
he that w;nneth souls is wise," Ile re•
minded his congregation of Jesus' com-
mand. "Go yehnd
g the missing
people into the Fold."
Mt', and Mrs. Peter Brown of Wind-
sor visited recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Maitland Allen,
He has wandered Into an unknown
land,
But we think of him still the same and
say,
Iic is not dead! He is just away,
—Always remembered and sadly
mis-
sed by Ded and Mom, Brothers and
Sisters and son, Frank, Jr. 43 -Ip
IN 'dEMORiAM
DAER—In memory of the late Henry
Sumuel Dear, who passed away Oct
3rd, 1953,
The rolling stream of life goes on,
But still the empty chair,
Reminds us of the face, the Finite
Of one who once sat there,
—Ever remembered by his wife and
family and grandchildren. 44.1,
IN MEMORIAM
POLLARD—In loving memory of out
dear mother, Mrs, Elriebeth Pollard
who entered into rest Sept, 30, 1039
Tiine may heal the broken hearted,
Years may snake the wound less sore,
But it cannot fill the longing
For the Loved One gone before.
Who shall say the grief Is lessencxl,
Though the smile may hide the tears,
Memories keep the wound still open
Despite the• passing of the years.
—Lovingly remembered by Beryl.
quet of pink roses and tufted carnations Westminster Hospital, London, His George and Elmer. 43 -Ip•
$2.98
$1.35
$2.00
R. U. PH ILP Phm. B
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER — PHONE 20, BLYTH
t...4444 +4444 *444444404..- 41444..-.44-$44444444+4444++•4+4 •
1
'4%4-.4--0 4 4 +44 4+444444 4444444444.4+$4444 •44-.44444
STOP fi SHOP
at Holland's
Food Market This Week -End.
Bee Hive Corn Syrup 5 lbs. 69c -
- Tip Top Pumpkin 28 Oz. 15c
Lipton's Tea Bags (G0's) 59c
Clark's Pork & Beans (20 oz.) 2 for 35c
Old Dutch Bleach (32 oz.) (64 oz.) ... 22c and 39c
Sodas Ib. 29c Kam 35c
Canty - butterscotch, licorice allsorts, cocoanut
chews 8 oz. 19c
Holland's Food Market
AND LOCKER SERV ICE.
.Telephone 39
-- WE 'DELI1 ER
x4.444+•+-4 -44444444444.444.444-..+4-••.+.4.404- ++...44.44444.4....
%.4....4+•++.•44+44.4+4+4+++4 -++4•-++-0-•÷4-04-44•4+-•4-+444•+.•4.4-44.10,',
MYODDEN ELECTRIC SHOP
YOUR WESTINGHOUSE DEALER
"You can be sure, if it's Westinghouse"
NO OTHER LAUNDRY EQUIPMENT LIKE
THE NEW WAY, {WITH WESTINGHOUSE
TWINS. .1
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 • --- %BLYT'', ONT.
#1,-.44++44-4 444.4.4-04 •-‘ 4,.44.-.44444 44.4444-0 44444444 444-044
1
vw••w..r..+•..~•.•.....+•..•w..+w+..•. v.I 4+,N
1
We Have a Good Supply of
NO. 1 REGISTERED
GENNESEE SEED WHEAT
NO. 1 CERTIFIED
HUDSON,FALL BARLEY
Howson & Howson Ltd.
BLYTI-I - - WINGHAM
`Better Feeds Mean Bigger Profits'
NWM... ...3VA+•N*II•MI N MNNMM++
•• 4444+44 04+++4414 .14 +44+44 444444444444444444444444
it •+44+++.+0+1 +•++4-4.444+4.444-144 4+++-4
Clinton District Collegiate Institute
MAGAZINE CAMPAIGN
OCTOBER 4.18
' NEW AND RENEWAL SUBSCRIPTIONi
TO CANADA'S LEADING MAGAZINES.
You will rrcelvr -a personal call from One of the CDCi Students. •
Project to Obtain Funds for Benefit of CDCI.
Nell McGregor, President, Students' Council,