HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1956-10-10, Page 1VOLUME 62 • NO, 4,
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• Authorized as second-class mail, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WED NESDAY, OCT, 10, 1956 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A.
Post Office Department, Ottawa
Local Institute Branch Hosts
Blyth Women's Institute had as theirafternoon, October 8th, from the Blyth
guests Thursday atter000n in Memorial i Amalgamation bf Fall Fair United Church, at 2:30 p.m., conducted
Hall, Tiger Dunlop Institute, The pro - s by the Rev. A, W. Watson. Messrs,
gram took the form of a debate with the Trade Fair To Be Discussed Walter Buttoll and James Lawrie sand
subject -"Resolved that modern educe -1 The Blyth Agricultural Society are a beautiful duct selection during tla:e
tion is con:ribulini! mr;e to ci'vilfzilim: The
n meclhtg in the Library or, service, "The Old Rugged Cross," ac•
than the eduction of 50years ago," Friday, October 12th at 8;30 p.m. to dist companied at the church organ by Mrs.
Muoh hinged 'on the definition of the cuss the possibility. ofh.avirt; the Trade Harvey Brown. Interment followed in
word civilization and many dictlenirjcs Fair and Agricultural Fair combined. Blyth Union Cemetery,
had been consulted forenlightenment, ; and Would like all the business men of Prior to the service the remains rest-
Mrs. Arthur Straughan encl.-Mrs, ErnieBlyth, and members of tit Com►nunit;+ ed at the Tasker memorial chapel ut>-
Bogle, Tiger Dunlop members,ably .Centre Board to be present at this
til 1 p,tn• the day of the funeral.
supported the negative, while Ms. Jim meeting. Pallbearers were Messrs. Wm. Cartel+,
Walpole and Mrs. Kenneth Taylor, of , Russel Carter, Harold Carter, Ret;,
Blyth, upheld the affirmative. t t Carter, Charles Lockwood and Wm:
In upholding the negative, the debet-
LitSONAL IN I'LR�rS'1 Knox, Flowcrbcarers were Nelson
ers claimed "There hadn't been a good Mr, and Mrs, R. W. Madill, Cheryl Paterson, Gordon Carter, Ivan Curter; Blyth Agricultural Society sponsored Wellbanks, and Mrs. Grose. who was
'Canadian poet since the clays of 1311ss i and Terry, visited over Thanksgiving Kenneth Patterson, William Patterson. two field crop competitions this year, a passenger in her husband's •car.
Carman • The -language in the vocabu. with the former's parents, at Creemore, Robert Carter and Harold Knox,
t
OBITUARY •
FRANCIS JOHN HOLLYMAN
To Tiger Dunlop Branch Funeral services for the late Francis
John Hollyman were held on Monday
Softball Finals Start Tonight i w
�v�����,�y At Blyth -.eek-End Traffic Tragedy Claims
The first game of the Intermediate
(13) Softball Finals will be playell in
Blyth tonight (Thursday), The Leg•
ioneh•res received word on Wednesday
that Wellesley had defeated Baden it
the semi-final round and will now meet
Blyth in the finals, the first game be.
ing in Blyth tonight, Thursday, This
is the first time that Blyth has had a
ball team close to the championshii:
for a gond many years, and it is hoped
that there will be a good crowd on
hand to help cheer the boys to victory
G.3me time is 8:00 pan.
Results of Field Crop
Competition
Four Lives, Injures Three Others
A Saturdey night Highway accident John Adams, Fiowerbearers were
claimed the lives of four persons, three Frank Potter, Ross Hoggart, Bruce
of thein local and district residents, and Tyndall, Clifford Adams, Cecil Cart-
wright, Murray Roy, Bruce Roy, and
Douglas Farquhar,
Pallbearers for Stephen Wellbanks
sent three more to .hospital, with sen•
� ere injuries.
Killed in the crash wore Edmund
C'rirk Pollerd, drover and trucker, of were school churns, Peter Sprung;
Blyth; Donald Kennedy, farmer, of R.R Wayne Sprung, Frank Tares, Johnny
1, Londesboro, Stephen Wellbanks,' Saundercock, Jake DeRuyter, and Brian
Ken -
8 -year-old son of Mr. and Mrs, Stephen Bell. Flowerbearcrs were, Dale Ken-
\Vclllaanks also of R.R. 1, Londesboro
nedy, Wayne Kennedy, Bradley Ken•
ail passengers in the same car, and Phil- nedy, Larry Snell, Robbie Snell, Jim.
!p Grose, of 309 Wolfe St., London. ntie Johnston, Bob McCool, and Paul
McCool,
In hospital with serious injuries arc Donald Kennedy, a son of Mr. ami
Charles \Vellbanks, age 7, brother o!
the dead boy, and his father, Stephen Mrs, Victor Kennedy, of Blyth, was
in his 29th year, He was horn in Sas•
one in 0 its, which was judged, ,n' The accident occurred on No. 4 High.
wny about 7:30 p.m. on Saturday even-
ing, en a curve at Cia ndeboye. Earlier
in the evening Mr. Pollard had received
a call from his truck driver, Jack Mil-
lar, that he had tire trouble. In Mr
Wellbanks' car, a 1955 Plymouth, the
group comprising Ted Pollard, Donald
Kennedy, Stephen Vellbanks, and his
two children, Stephen Jr., and Charles
met out from Blyth with a new tire, is
find Millar. As they rounded a curve
at Clandeboye, going south, the Grose
car, coming north, is reported to •have
pulled out to pass cars in his line of
traffic, driving directly headon into
the Wellbanks' cars which was driven
at the time by Ted. The two cars mei
headon, with terrific force. It is re-
Ttventy-five points were deducted front �i°rtcd that neither are worth repair.
1 ,
lary of the modern youth is something! Mr. Robert Somers of the DepartmentAt the graveside, the Last il�tes �'f results given earlier, and the other in
to be deplored; The dress of 50 years of Highways, London, spent the week. the Masonic Order were concha ted by' corn.
ago was a tribute to the modesty and'' end with his sister, Mrs, Sadie Cunning the officers and members of Blyth A.F-, Mr. F. Hooper of St. Marys, judged
decency taught then, There are too and his brother, Mr. Archie Somers. l& A.M, No. 303 of which Mr. Ifollyman ithe standing corn crop of the compett•
many immature marriages today, lea•t• 1 Visitors at the home of M. and Mrs. i had been a member since • 1030• I tars last week, giving the following
ing to divorce. Too many children pass Cecil Wheeler over the thanksgiving; Following a lengthy period of ill paints:
up an education for a job. The law holiday were Mr, and Alrs. John KO- health Mr. Hollyman passed away mull Ralph Caldwell, 81, Gordon Carter
that a child must attend school until the I patrick and Marilyn, of Norwich, Mr, denly at his Home' Queen street, Blyth83, Gilbert A'ylhery 81, John van den
age of 16 is a good one if enforced, The Bernard Crelliit, Douglas and Michie! on Friday, October 5th. Ile was in his i Assem 791:,
J., R• Henry 781/2, Lorne
literature in the text books of 50 years of London 166th year. He was born in Wales, Eng•'{ B3dley 771/2, Lawrence Plaetzer 76
ago laid the background of good citizen•) Mr..and Mrs• Harry Gibbons, and land on November 30th, 1891, n son of (John Lockhart 74, Harold Badley 832
ship today. We have many discoveries Jim, attended the annual meeting of the , the late Robert Ifollytnan and Mary Walter Oster 8114 Kenneth Taylor 80144.
today but a lot of them are the result
of research 5'0 year ago."
Some of the points of the affirmative
were: "Crime is often blamed en edit- Ament and children, of Trenton, spent !tide, bringing with him his brother, Ed -1- . The leader; of this competition were
cation but it is not correct. Children the week -end with the fornter's sig- j gar Hollyman. A baker by trade, Mr €'.eorge Watt and Boyd Taylor.
idling on the street is not the fault of i ter and brothers, Margaret, Jim and Hollyman worked at Clinton for ': 'Ito connlcte this competition, 12 cobs
education, but home training, Educe- Hubert Iilrons. I years, a year at Lucknow, operated his t of Form must be exhibited at the fah
Boy Scouts Association, Huron District Elizabeth Mewton. In 1908 he came tc !Leonard Archambault 70, Bruce Falcon -
Committee, at Exeter, on Sunday, Oct. 7'Canada and after a year returned 'e ••er 79, Robert Charter 77, Peter lIoon•
Mrs. Scott Ament, Mr. and Mrs. Geo.: Fnglnnd, In 1910 he returned to Can• ' and 76 Robert Marshall 73
tion is not all taught in schools. Good. Mr. and Mrs, Fred Fawcett and Miss own business at Waterdonvn for four
Gladys Fawcettspentthe week -end' at i years, before setting •himself up in the the ccunpelltors not exhibiting the cobs
the latter's home here. , !baking business in Blyth in 1927, a bust- at the fair. Those entering an exhibit
Mrs• J. B. Watson returned home on ness he operated successfully until 1011 ' were: Gordon Carter, Kenneth Taylor
Sunday -niter spending a week with her ! when he sold out to Mr. Frank Vita Sirnon Hallahan &Son, Leonard Ar-
dao,ghter and son-in-law,, Mr. and Mrs man. Mr. and Mrs. Hollyman have ! ehambault, Robert Henry, Lawrence
Joint Guntmow'and family, Toronto. !lived retired since that time. `Pl telzer, .hick Lockhart and Robert
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Crawford and In 1913 he married Mary Ellen Car- Afarshaii. Special prizes were donatbd
daughter, ,Sandra, visited on Monday ter of East Wawanosh, daughter o[ 1 by George Watts First, 1 bushel corn;
with Mrs. Lena Crawford,
David Carter and the late Mrs. Carter Kenneth Taylor; 2nd, ?2 bushel corn
Mr. Lloyd Walsh of Burlington, spent He was a member of Blyth United ' Gordon Carter, Third, ti bushel corn
the weekend with his parents, Mr, anti Church, J eonard Archambault. All corn, the
Mrs. Albert Walsh. • ( Surviying are his wife, and jtvc Warwick variety.
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Neirgarth and daughters, Mrs. Douglas (Dorothy A fourth special prize .of X52,50 teas
donated by Boyd Taylor.
books are now available to the very
young child through our public librar-
ies. Manual training, as taught in nut
school today,•teaches boys to use their
hands, .Projectors and fihns are now
used so that in the matter of minutes
the pupil can learn through the eye
what would have token a long while to
learn •otherwise. School nurses today
quickly detect poor eyesight and de-
fective hearing in a pupil. They have
expert Musical training today and are
taught in our schools to appreciate
good music (not the Elvis Presley typa).
Blind children are taught today to
help themselves. 4-14 Clubs are ertend.
ing education in agriculture to our
farm boys and •girls. There Inc now
schools for handicapped and reterded
children -and byattending,spec1 l 'tour-
ses provided in Arts and Crafts, one
can continue their education long past
60 years, if they so desire."
The judges were the Rev. R. S. Ililtz.
Mrs, Hiltz, and Mrs. W. J. Craig, all of
Auburn. •
In summing up..the points, Mr. Hiltz
stated that the debate was well worded
and well defined, The system of edst-
dation of 50 years ago brought out the
best in the young person, such as re-
finement and modcaty, but there ars
ea many more opportunities today that
the affirmative had more points, but it
was hard to give n decision with four
such excellent debaters, however, in
points the affirmative received the de-
cision." 'mother, who was 86. There were over dant of pioneer stock being a daughter
Knapp's story and the East Wawanosh
50 grandchildren and great grandchll' of "Alexander Lockie and Elizabeth school board, had no objection. It was
1 dren called In the afternoon to greet Cluctt who emigrated from Scotland and
\4'.DLS, TO MEETmoved by Buchanan and sec sided by
•The regular meeting of the W.M.S, of their grandmother. England respectively. She was born in McGowan, that Mr. Knapp's request be
the Blyth United Church tell be held t Mrs. W. H. Gow Vent two days is t a loo house in Hullett township on ,ranted and the necessary By•Law be
1n the form of a Thank Offering meet- week with Mrs. Fred MacArthur, Brun- July 1lth, 1885 and had'.teen a resident granted
as early as possible. Carried.
ing, Wednesday afternoon, Oct, 17th, at mer. I c this community all her life. She 1 Moved by eatrtlon, seconded ey Hanna
2 p.m. when the \VMS Auxiliaries o' 1' Mrs. F. MacArthur, Colin and Oath- was a member of the Ur.Ucd Church I that the road and general accounts as Robert, of North flay, William, of
Belgrave, Westfield, Walton and Lon- urine, Brunner, spent the latter part of Blyth, and active in the W.inl S. tied !,resented be passed and paid, Cr,rrieri
desboro will bp guests, A good alien-
the, week with Mr. and Mrs. W. N.Gon:' the Mission Band. I T but nvas �
Mr. Bob Youngblut, of Toronto, spent IIy-Law Ao, e was raid the first and
sisters, Mrs. Wm, (,Tnnett Wlcitchou�r
dance is requested.• One of a family of eight children. teeond limes, Moved by McCowan, se• I of Saskatoon, Sask., and Beryl`ot Godo- Wednesday.
Y the week end with his mother, Mrs. H.
all are now deceased except one saner,.that 13y•1 tnv Nu• right
Susan E, Brodda, of Plymouth, Alien 1 cnnded by Buchanan, 1 1
HOME FKtOhI SANITORIUM Youngblut, Mr. Glenn Youngblut, rf 8 be read the third time, enc! passes [he remains have been resting at hi;
Friends "are happy to have Mr. Bill Calgary, Is wending two weeks holidays I Five brothers, \VliUam, James; John, Curried, late residency, Blyth, and at 1 pan• in•
Ross in their midst again, For the' with his mother. George and Alex, and one s(titcr, Janet.
Road Cheques - Stuart Me13urnt y. d;ty, 1Vednesday, Ort. 10th, they wi!l
past 11 weeks Bill lies been a patient I Visitors over the week end with Mrs. predeceased her. salary and bills paid, 175.50; Wm. T. I:- be taken to Blyth United Church for
In Beck Sanitorlum, London, but is now 'George. Cowan and Mr. and Mrs. 1Vm' win, wages, 65.40; Geo. 0'. Curti, wages
a public service at 2:30 p.m. The ser
able to be home and.much Improved in Cowan and family were: Mr. and Mrs. vice will be in charge of the Rau A.
Benson Cowan, Connie and James, of Ia , i11cARTHUR 26.25; Campbell's Garage, pedal pads Rev, health. ,.teff; Murray's Machine Shop, nveld!ng W Watson, minister of the church•
Stratford, Mr. and Mrs. George Cowan Funeral service for the late Fred 'l 25; Reavic's Service Station, broke During the service Messrs. ,!antes
AMONG TIIIt� CHURCHES Ted, Gregory and Kenneth, of Cooks- i t Arthur, Brunner, was held in the fluid and labour, 5.25; Stnhtton'i Had- Lawrie and Walter Bullet] will sing a
villa. 1 MacMane funeral home, Milverton, on ary, axe handle.and brush clippers favourite bynn, "The Old Rugged
Sunday, Octobor 14th, 1050 Mr, and Mrs. Merritt Fares of Port
Wednesday, Oct. 3rd, who died nt ' 12.52; Workmen's Compensation Board, Croe;." interment will follow in i31y ihl,unvlon, exchanged marriage vows. The
bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs,
Orval Cook, St. George Street, Mitchell
Jack Campbell, Harold Gross, Gordon and the bridegroom Is a son of Mr. and
nt 6 run gels. Nivens, Borden Cook, and Gerald Hoff• Alrs,' Clarence Thornton, of Lottdctt
h Fon. Rev. ,1. Robert Watt, minister of the
last week with Mrs, George Cowmt' (dtews of Hanover Presbyter Ian Church.. ucs- Workmen's Compensation Board A profusion of floral tributes, indi• ohne ch, performed the ceremony.
Mrs. It Childt4' visited with Misses Pallbearers were neighbours, Friends' assessment,- Robert Arbuckle. al- cativo of the esteem in which Ted was Given in marriage by her father, the
Barbara, of Winghnnt, visited on Wed-
nesday with the latter's parents, Mr
and Mrs, Albert Walsh.
Stewart, of Woodsy ack, and Mrs. Rob-
ert (Frances) McClinchey, of R.R.
Auburn; also one sister, Mrs. Dorothy
Mrs. Will Taylor, Dorchester, Mrs. Harrington, of Ottawa, a n d three
John Campbell of Aylmer, visited their grandchildren,
sister, Mrs., Albert Walsh, and Mr
•
Walsh, last week. DIARY JANE LOCKIE
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Radford of
Collingwood and Mrs, John Shobbrook Funeral services for the late Miss
of Londesboro, visited with Mr. ani
Mrs. Albert Walsh on Thursday,
Week -end visitors with Mr. and Mrs
Leonard Cook were Mr.•nnd Mrs, Ken- interment following in Blyth Union
neth Easterbrook and. son, David, ail. Cemetery. The service was conducted East W"-wanosh Council
London, on Sunday, and on Monday by the Rev. A. 'W. Watson, United The council m October 2nd, with :ill
Dr. L. A. and Mrs. Wardlaw and ttva . Church minister; of Bigth. Pallbear•' the members present. the Rcevc' presid
daughters, Susan and Carol Lee, of ors were Megsrs. Richard Scott, George }ng The minutes o[ t:i : meeting' held
Ancaster, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fin- Sloan, Stanley Chellew, R. D. Philp, September 4 were read and ening' 9 on
lay, of Lucknow. Gorden Elliott and Kenneth Whitemore. motion by Buchanan and if ;urn.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Gow, and Violet Miss Lockie passed away in the Clin- Mr. Norman Knapp was Inn-, ant tae•
of Auburn, Mr. J. Ladd, Patty and ton Public Hospital on Monday, Oda- questing that his property be ti'. t ' fer-
Wayne, Gaderich, attended the turkey icer 1st. a red from U.S.S. No. 11 East Wiwat: ••h
dinner held in honour of Mr, Gow s The late Miss Lockie was a deacon• to S•S. No, 8 IIullett. Atter hearing Mr
•
Mary Jane Lockie were held from the
'Tasker memorinl chapel, Blyth, on
Wednesday, October 3rd at 3 p.nm , with
NEWS OMITTED
ing,
Provincial Police from the Londor
detachment were the first on the scene
to investipate.
It was after 11 pan. the same even-
ing before news of the tragedy reached
the bereft families, and as the news
spread, it cast a gloom over the entire
community for the Thanksgiving week.
end. •
Edmund Clark Pollard, was horn or
the 13th concession of Itultett Town.
ship, (('ltd eldest son of Mr. and Mrs.
Last Friday night two local young
George Pollard, on July 4th, 1927. Ile men, Robert Williams and Jim How -
was in his 3'ith year. sin, miraculously escaped injury when
Ted has lived in this community all `t car in which they wore riding went
his life, working at home through its out of control on the Base Line near
We regret that several items of news Sumner all Thr car lyes driven b•
Have peen omitted from this issue due
to lack of space, These will be carried
next week, and we sinerely hope that
those interested in the omissions will
bear with us. Rush of job printing
does not permit tis to go for extra
pages, this week.
katehewan and came to the Hullett
district at the age of 11 years. He had
farmed in Hullett most of his adult life
and was a member of Londesboro Uni-
ted Church.
Surviving are his wife, the former
Annie (Fern) Youngblut, one daughter,
Sandra Elaine, cage 7, two sons, Ray-
mond
ay
mond Echvard, age 5, and Victor Brian
aged 2; also his parents, Mr, and Mrs.
Victor Kennedy, of Blyth, two broth-
ers, Chris., and Harvey, of Londes•
iioro and a sister, Mrs. Stephen Well -
banks, R.R. 1, Londesboro.
Stephen \Vellbanks is a sae of Mr.
and Mrs. Stephen Well).i3nks, of Lea.
desbnro. He was a student at S.S. �•;o
10, Hullett and attended Londesbcr•a
United Church and Sunday School.
Besides his parents he is survived by
four sisters, Linda, Vicky, Marilyn and
Marsha, and one brother, Charles, and
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Kennedy.
The sincere sympathy of a host of
relatives and friends throughout this
district is extended to the bereft fam•
!lies,
Minor Injuries As Young
Men Involved in Accidents
young manhood, In ,tenunry, 1916, he
married Mildred Jenn Cbrist.ie, n( Williams and as he approached'
bridge
going south on the Base Line, it went
Teeswaler and after their marriage- nut of control in loose gravel, shot up
they farmed for about 7 years on the the side of the bridge, and flopped over
13th of Hullett before coming to Bly`•1n on its top, The two boys climbed from
3 years ago when Ted purchased a
trucking business from Mr. Roy McVin the wreckage practically.. unhurt. The
tie, the business havingcar, owned by Mr. Grover Clave, of
previous been Blyth, is so badly damaged it is not
owned for many years by his uncle ,
Mr. Elmer Pollard. believed nvort.h repairing The entire
Inhis business he contacted many toll is crushed down badly, along with
people over a wide area• all of whom other frame and body damage.
Again on Tuesday, David Nesbit, who
were drawn to him by his amiably and is nn employee of the Brennan Con -
friendly nature, His sudden passing it struction Co., working at present out of
tn: "rned not only by his family and
relatives, but reaches into the homes `Dublin, was driving to work about 6:3C
of everyone in this community, i a.m. when his half -ton truck was struck
Ted was a member of Blyth United by the eastbound morning passenger
Church, also of Blyth 1.0.0F. No, 366 train as i1 was pulling into the Dublin
and last Spring joined 'the Mnsani1 station. Other workmen following in
Order. vehicles found David standing beside
Beside:: his sorrowing wife he is sura his truck, had been badly de -
agedvdved by two children, Robert James ttiic*ed and whichpushed a considerable b able d !-
aged 9, and Patricia Jayne, aged 6; else lance David the locomotive.
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Pol• nein taken to Scott Memorial
lard, Hullett Township': three brothers Hospital, Senforth, badly shaken up and
with facial cuts, and bruise,. He
was
Grimsby, John, of London, and two kept there over night for ooereaeon,
: • •n • ted to be released on
WEDDINGS
• TBORNTON-COOK
Main Street United Church, Mitchell
decorated with white chrysanthemums
pink gladi.tli. and ferns, was the scene
of a double -ring ceremony 'when Alias
Leona Velma Mac Cook, of London
and David Alfred Thornton, also of
MT. ANDREW 8 t°tt>;h131TER1AN • Colborne, spent last week with the let-
ters , ,
CHURCH ! Stratford hospital on Monday. He assessment, fifi•79; W. 5. Gibson, prem- Union Cemetery.
3:30 pan. -Church Service. sister, Mrs. George Cowan, leaves to mourn his pnssitlg his nvl[e, !tutus on policies. 130.06; D.R.M, Co., Pallbearers are: Ifnrotd Campbell
Rev, D. J, .Lane, B.A., Minister. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Haines and M: I Martha May Wilson, one son, Colin,
Prader repairs, 5.87; Treas. of Ont., tax
THE UNITED. CHURCH •
OF CANADA
' Blyth, Ontario. •
Rev. A. W. Watson, Minister:
1015 Sunday School
a.m.-Sunday
and Mrs, Robert Finnigan and Brenda td' n dau ghtcr Catharine, both at home ! ' '00 tis fuel nil, 22.00; Can. O!1 Co
all of Port Colborne, spent Wed •d The service was conducted by Rev. An• ;200 gals. fuel oil, 40.00, General eheq•
Clare and IdaM and relatives were presentft instances, Johnston
cGownn Inst week, and from 1' 0 Drain, 16.35; Chas, held, will he carried
by'J,tc.1c Tarnblyn bride \Yore a light blue suit with navy
was guest speaker at the W.Al,$. Huron urn, Shakespeare and the surrounding C,n>grnnn, allowances ,Johnston drahn,'_Donald MrNall, Norman Gonving, Jolin anti white accessories and a red rose
11:15 a.m.-Morning Worship, Presbyterial held in Blyth United
country.
7:30 p,m.-Evening Worship. Church, Tuesday, atom drain, 32.70; It. II, Thompson, IV- . Shnbbrook, Jack Taylor, Lloyd Taylor
-Guest minister at both Services -•-Mr. and Mrs, Norman Radford, of i SISTER•IN-LAW DIES IN WEST i laws and clerk tr es, Johnston drain , James Warwick, Jack Alillnr, Roy Mtn
Collingwood, spent a weeks vacation
Rev. J. T, White, of Londesboro. -- R with Mrs. Radford's mother, Mrs. J. Ih 1 Mrs. Leonard Cook received the sad 50.00; Court of Revision, Johnston drain VittIe and hurry Lear.
news of the death of • her sister -In-law i -0, E. Taylor,
4.00, 1. Buchanan, 4.00. . A largely attended funeral service
ANGLICAN CHURCH . IShobbrook, of Lottdesbot•o and with Mrs, Thomas J. Ford, of Wawota, Sask C. Benne, 1.00, 0, AlcGowan, 4.00, A. was held on Tuesday afternoon, Oct.
Trinity, Blyth, 10:30 atm, --Harvest' their daughter, Mrs, Dan Small, also
their sone Mr, tRbss
Co Redford and A4rs,
which occurred last Friday, Mrsora, Cook ; Carden, , 4. Township of Alcrris, Fust plh, from the Ball & Alutch funeral Ilillcryst Tea Rooms, where the brides
Than)csgzlving Service. mid two slaters had visited there la,t Wawanosh, share of Johnston drain'. home, Clinton, for Donald Kennedy and.nrtt1 received «oaring an afternoon
Radford, of Port Colborne. 9D 00• 'rhe Blyth Standard, printhig, Stephen Vellbanks, conducted by tate frock of brown figured silk w.h
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. l3axter, Chatham, summer.
spent the holiday week -end with Mrs 1,00 Albr t t C In
f ll She was assisted by
70.85 Harold Hatton, allowances John -
of
Manning, Lloyd Appleby, Douglas corsage. Her sister, Miss Eileen Cook
of London, as maid of honor, wore a
dusty rose suit with navy accessoriea
and a corsage of white carnations. Don.
ald James, London, was best man.
A reception and dinner were held at
St. Mark's, Auburn, 12 noon -Matin:,
Trinity, Belgrave, 2;30 p.m.-Even-
song.
.m. -- Even-
song, Baxter's parents, Mr, and Mrs, Lorne '• I3I T1 -IS o ; Vnc. H. Gow ,
Trinity, Blyth, 7:30 p.m. - Harvest NESBIT--In Clinton Hospital on Sun sprclnr (G6x20), 13 D \ large crowd was an indication of es.,the mother of the bridegroom who wore
is Inspector (24x20), 4.80 twin and sympathy on the part of a rose suit with navy accessories and n
-
.
54 34; Lloyd Montgomery, 1 fox bount.y. Rev. J. T. White, of Londesboro. Here =telling accessories and n corsage of
'oultes Brucellosis age n a profusion offlowers anda ve aw rosebuds .
Special
Scritngeout Btu" •llOS
Thanksgiving Service, day, Oct,
7th, 1056, to Mr, and Mrs
3, B. Nesbit, of Morris Township, the County et Huron, rent of shovel, 50.00. •,eighbours and friends.
' g claim u • � 1ft service
and soloist, Miss Claire Taylor.
Choir,
II rvey MiDon�r11 livestock During e Mr. Donald Mc.
ens 21.00. John F. McCallum Nall, of Blyth, sant n beautiful solo
CHURCH 01! 110D
McConneit Sheet, Blyth,
Rev. H. Stewart, Pastor, ,
10 a,m,•-Sunday School. •
It a.m.-Morning Worship,
7:30 p.m. -Evening Worship.
Wednesday, 8 p.m, -Prayer and Bible
Study,
Filthy, 8 p,m,--Youth Fellowship,
r
REI.GRAVE FOWL SUPPER TICKETS gift of a son.a
AVAILABLE AT STANDARD OFFICE chick
HOLLAND -In Ingersoll General Hos• livestock valuer and mileage, 3.OD. •"Beyond the Sunset," accompanied at
Tickets for the annual Belgrave Fowl pini, on Saturday, Sept. 15th, 19511 Moved by, Hanna end Purdon, that the organ by Mrs. Theo Fremlin, of
Supper, on Oct, 24111, are available for to Mr. and Airs. Charles Holland, the council adjourn to meet November lith Clinton. Rev, Mr. White spoke words
purchase at The Standard Office, for gift of a adughter, Joan Elizabeth -a int 1 o'clock, and Court of Revision on of confort and hope to the bereft,
the convenience of (Nose 111 this vicin' sister for Mary, Michael and Nora,
the asses;ntent roll be held et 3 o'clock The interment followed In the Clin•
Sty who usually attend this outstund• WALES - In St. Joseph's Hospital at the Belgrave Cumnu ttity Centre ton cemetery.
Ing event. Full information mny be London, on 'dived., Oct, 4, 1959, to Mr 'Carried. Pallbearers for Donald Kennedy were
obtained from an advertisement in this and Mrs. Glen Wales (tee Donna 10rva1 Taylor, R. H. Thompson, ;Ivan Carter, Percy Carter, Fred Mc -
issue, ole Evans, and
Gow), the gift of a son Rueve, Clerk j Cool, Norman Vincent, C
rorsnge of white carnations, The bride's
inhle was centred with a three-tier wed.
ding cake, pink and white lighted tape
ers, turd pink and white baby chrysan•
1hennrms. The rooms were decorated
with baskets Of pastel gladioli and pink
and white streamers and bells.
Atter a trip to the United States
they will reside in London, Guests,'
Members of the inmediole family, and
grnndpnrents of the bride, attended
. from London, Blyth, and Mitchell,
Beware Of The Short - Change Artists
By Irving Leiberman
Editor's Note: Sgt. Audley
Walsh, one of the leading police
authorities on swindles,. esti'.
mates that professional short -
changers gyp the public out of a
hundred million dollars a year.
And it happens to everybody.
To show how these cheap swin-
dlers cheat the public, the Police
Gazette has asked four typical
victims to tell their own stories.
Continued exposure of these
shortchange swindlers will stop
them from preying on unsuspec-
ting victims,
• • •
I'm a truck driver and there's
an all-night diner where I stop
for a spot of coffee and dough-
nuts on my run between Chicago
and Indianapolis. That is -where
I used to stop, until I got wise to
the shortchange gypping the lit-
tle redheaded waitress was pul-
ling off on. all us guys.
She's a wisecracking gal, al-
ways ready with a joke, and she
lIves you that big smile and a
ot of fast talk when you're get-
ting your change.
Then one night, just before I
got in my trailer, I just sort of
happened' to look at the change
the had given me and did some
quick figurin'. Two cups of cof-
fee and two doughnuts added up
to thirty cents, I'd given her a
buck and got forty cents back,
all In dimes and nickels,
"Hey," I said to myself, "I got
thirty cents corning to me."
I started to go back, but I
figured I'd look cheap and be-
tides, I could be wrong.
But the next time I stopped at
the diner that missing change
ilrtuck in my mind. When the
waitress pulled the jokes while
I was paying my check, I stop-
ped to count the money I got
back before I stuffed it in my
pocket.
This time I was missing two -
bits.
"Just a minute, Venus," I told
her, "you shortchanged me a
quarter."
She made a big fuss about
looking at my check and re-
counting my change.
"Sorry, Mac," she said, flashing
that big smile and handed me
the two -bits, 'those big, brown
eyes of yours take my mind off
nny business."
"Sure, sure," I says, 'but it's a
pretty good business -for you."
I passed the word on to the
other drivers I knew and they
Tfarted checking their chane.
he redhead was working the
same gyp on all of them.
So now we stop at another
diner down the road where the
waitress is honest and doesn't
think a gag is dumb just because
he drives a truck.
• • •
I'm a business man living ifs
a small town a hundred miles
TOPPER OF THE TABS -inspired
by the fur hats of Mongolian
warriors is this cap of mink
tails. A tassel of strung pearls
cascades from the crown over
the brow. The hat is typical of
the Far Eastern motif in the
winter collection of designer
Simone Mirman, o f London,
England.
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
ACROSS 3. 6th Sunday
After Easter
4, Single thing
6. Garden plot
6. Drowsy
1. Substitute
team
6. Pretends
11. Old woman
12. Interu'en Ong
14. Stift
16. Panaceas //
17. State (Fr.)
18. Contained
19, Soft drink
20. Humor
21. Bugle call
22. Son of Jacob
23. Views
26. Mark of �a
omission
Sr. Finis
17, Put on
18. Fled linen
21. Golf obstacles
16. Give for a
time
16. Dry
17. Ignited
H. Aged
39. Crush with
the teeth
40. Narrow road
41. Apparent
43. Thicket
from San Francisco, About once
a month I go into the city to
spend a day or two in the home
office of my company,
One night after a late confer-
ence I took a cab to my hotel. It
wasn't a long walk, but I was
tired. When we got to the hotel,
the meter read thirty-five cents,
so I hgpded the cabbie two quar-
ters and got out.
"Hey, mister," he hollered,
"You owe me some money,"
"I gave you half a buck."
He shook his head, "Here's
what you gave me," The cabbie
held out his hand. In it was a
quarter and a nickel.
I was positive I had given him
two quarters but I was tired and
didn't want to argue. So I handed
him another twenty-five cents.
The next night I took another
cab after having dinner with
friends. The fare was sixty cents.
Remembering the night before, I
counted my change carefully and
handed the cabbie three quarters.
I had walked about ten feet
toward the hotel when he hol-
lered:
"What's the idea, buddy? You
shortchanged me."
"I gave you seventy-five cents
-sixty cents for the fare and
fifteen cents tip."
"You made a mistake. Take a
look." •
He had two quarters and a
nickel in his hand,
This time I got mad, "I made
sure I gave you three quarters,"
I told the cabbie. "And that's
what I gave you. Don't pull your
racket on me."
He scrambled out of the cab
and headed for me belligerently,
"Don't call me a crook, you -
I called a cop nearby and ex-
. plained what had happened. He
nodded as I filled In the details,
"It's an old one the hackies
pull on tourists," he said. "I'll
take care of this guy and thanks
for telling me. This guy won't
be driving hack for awhile,"
The officer ordered the cab-
bie to get back in the car. "Come
on, bud," he said angrily, "we're
going down to the station house."
• • •
I work on the docks on New
York City's East River and
there's a bar where longshore-
men hang out after wrestling
tons of cargo all day,
The bartender's name is Harry.
He's not working at the bar now
and here's how it happened.
On payday we'd throw five,
ten or twenty dollar bills at
Harry to pay our tab. While we
picked up the silver, Harry neat-
ly stacked the bills and counted
them twice. Then he handed the
change across the bar.
What we didn't know for a
long time was that when Harry
tapped the bills on their edges
to make the stack neat, he let
the back bill drop behind the
bar.
Harry let the bill stay on the
floor until the customer left. If
the guy noticed he was short a
five or ten, Harry would pick it
up off t:1e floor and say:
"I'm sure gettin' clumsy in my
old ale. Sorry: Mac."
We tipped oft the racket squad
and they used marked bills to
catch Harry. When they counted
up the bills he had dropped back
of the bar and later picked up,
Harry had made S200 in three
hours working , what the cops
call "The Drop Racket."
• • •
• Best way to beat the short-
change gyp according to police
experts is: know the denomina-
tion of the bill you hand out for
payment; re-count your silver
and paver money before you
leave the scene; never accept
neatly folded bills without re-
checking the amount.
If you are sure that you have
been shortchanged and you are
refused the correct amount, say
that you are going to call a po-
Iiceman, If you're dealing with
a crook, he'll probably fork over
your right change in a hurry,
From ''The Police Gazette,"
7. Corridors 2r. Blackthorn
6, Sour I. Az handle
1. Mingle 30. Salad plant
10. Sharpshooter I:au-lie
13. Croup of trees .^,2. N's, Ile time
16. Roasting 33. t, naked
stake lightly '
11. Difficult 34. 1' lots
21. Encamp 36. F Inch
22, Gaunt 39. C ooked
24, Require 40• ' Alta,y
26. Tapering solid 42. C amor
27. Swindle 43. Cry o a crow
/ 2 3 4 5 fb 7 9 9 /0 �/
/4
44. hfanlfest
'45. Goose genus
46. Come in
47. unwanted
pinnts
DOWN
1. Fasteners
2, Review
it
e
9.19
Answer elsewhere on this page
SCORCHED SKi - JUMPERS - Skiing Was a mighty hot activity
for Tom Spencer, above. At the first Western Ski -Jumping
Championships at Mt. Baldy, competitors donned shorts and
doffed shirts to withstand the torrid 102 -degree heat. Coolly -
clad Spencer soared 64 feet in this particular jump to win the
class A title.
41
•.�' TALKS.
:: •- dam Andttews.
"Until I was a grown woman
and a grandmother, I neve
saw a cake that had less than
four layers," a great -grand
mother from the South told me
recently, "In my father's home
several cakes were baker every
Saturday, since we had a great
deal of weekend company.
Every one of thew had four
layers,"
This woman went on to des-
cibe the large colonial home
in which she grew up and the
kitchen which smelled so de-
liciously of coconut, chocolate,
caramel, nuts, and baking cakes
on Saturdays.
14 pounds raisins
r 1 teaspoon nutmeg
Roll nuts and raisins in flour.
Cream butter and sugar. Add
eggs slowly one at a time, beat-
ing well after each addition. Add
sifted flour and all other Ingre-
dients, Bake in 325°F, oven.'
* • *
"The kitchen, which had once
been across 'the yard Iron the
house, as the kitchens of many
Southern homes were, had been
moved close to the house and
was connected 'to it by a porch
which ran along the side of the
kitchen and pantry. Servants
who felt they belonged to the
family reigned supreme in the
kitchen, One old man who had
served the family for countless
years, sat by the stove and fed
it wood just at the right time; to
keep the temperature even for
cake baking. Once the batter
was in the oven, he never allow-
ed us children to come near for
fear a jolt would make the cakes
fall."
• • •
As the girls in the family grew
into young ladies, they were
taught cake baking and frosting
along with several other parts of
the culinary art considered nec-
essary to their education.
"Each week my sisters and I
would have what was to us an
exciting time deciding who
should make what kind of cake,"
this woman told me, "My special
favorite was chocolate cake with
icing. One sister liked coconut,
especially if we had fresh coco-
nuts to shred and use; another
sister was especially partial to
hickory nut cakes and would
start the night before, getting us
all to crack and pick out the
kernels si that she could mix
them in a white cake batter. The
unbroken kernels were saved for
cake decoration," states a writer
in The Christian Science Moni-
tor,
• • *
When the four or five cakes
were finished and arranged on
the pantry shelf reserved for
them, this woman and her sisters
would stand back and admire
their products much as an artist
might look at his paintings, she
said. Then, when the cakes were
cut and served, their parents and
friends would pass judgment on
the lightness, the thickness of the
icing, and the taste - and pride
to accomplishment would rise
high!
• • •
A nut cake, baked in a fruit
cake pan and made in this
woman's home at the time she
describes, was one favorite. Here
is the recipe:
PECAN CAKE
12 pound butter
2 cups sugar
2 cups flour
6 eggs
1f1 cup frult juice
34 teaspoon salt
1 quart broken pecan meats
* • • •
Times have changed in many
ways since, the days described
above, but cake baking is still
a time of sweet-smelling kitch-
ens and creative opportunity for
decorating favorite cases.
Here is a chocolate cake iced
with peppermint arid decorated
with peppermint candy.
DEEP DARK
,CHOCOLATE CAKE
2 cups sifted; cake flour
y teaspoon salt
4 squares unsweetened
chocolate
1/ cup butter
2 cups sugar
2 egg yolks, unbeaten
13/4 cups milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon soda
Sift flour once, measure, add
salt, and sift again, Melt choco-
late and shortening together over
hot water. Turn into mixing
bowl and cool to room tempera-
ture (this is important). Then
add sugar and mix well. Add
egg yolks and 1 cup of the milk;
blend. Add flour and mix. just
until all flour is dampened, Then
beat I minute at low speed of
electric mixer or about 150
strokes by hand. Add vanilla
and 1/2 cup more of the milk;
mix until smooth. Dissolve soda
in the remaining 1/1 cup milk.
Stir into batter quickly and
thoroughly. (Batter will be
thin,)
Pour batter into 2 round 9 -
inch pans, 11/2 inches deep,
which have been lined on bot-
tom with paper. Bake at 350°F,
30 minutes or until cake springs
back when touched lightly, Cake
also may be baked in a 13x9x2
pan about 45 minutes.
Note: This cake may be mixed
completely in a 2 -quart double
boiler. Melt chocolate and short-
ening in a double boiler and cool
to roopl tetmperature. Proceed
with mixing as directed above,
using double boiler instead of a
bowl. Bake as directed above.
Cool cake before frosting.
* * •
FLUFFY I'IPPERMINT
FROSTING
2 egg whites, unbeaten
11/ cups sugar
Dash of salt
1,6 cup water
; . , • i : 2 . teaspoons light corn syrup
14 teaspoon peppermint extract
peppermint candles
Combine first 5 ingredients in
top of double boiler, Beat about
1 minute or until thoroughly
mixed, Then place over boiling
water and beat constantly with
smerdy egg beater (or at high
ed of electric beater) 7 ,min-
utes, or until frosting will stand
in stiff peaks, (Stir frosting up
from bottom and sides of pan
occasionally with rubber spatula
or spoon.)
Remove from boiling water,
pour 'at once into large bowl,
add peppermint extract and beat
1 minute, or until thick enough
to spread. Decorate with candy,
Making Homework
Less Painful
Parents can't do a ' child's
studying for him - but they
can help. One important contri-
bution they can make to the
success of the school year is. in
arranging an ideal place for a
boy or girl to do his homework,
The bedroom is the best spot
since it is away from the dis-
traction of family activities, But
bedrooms are seldom bright
and cheerful enough for study
purposes and redecorating is
usually called for,
Because most homework must
be done at .night, the prime
consideration when decorating
a bedroom study is light re-
flection, according to .Wilfred
Sinclair, C -I -L color consultant.
The ceiling should receive
careful attention since it Is the
chief reflecting surface for arti-
ficial light. Paint it white, light
ivory, cream beige or lemon
yellow, the colors which toss
back the most ,light, Mr, Sin-
clair suggests.
In choosing colors for, walls,
take into consideration te size
of the room and the direction
it faces, If windows are on the
north or east, warmth will, be
added by using paint in yellow
or reddish hues, If the room has
a southern or western exposure,
the cooler blues and greens are
m ore suitable. Incidentally,
those blues and greens make a
small room appear larger,
.A high gloss on a painted
wall tends to reflect a harsh '
light, so flat paint with a vel-
vety surface or easily -washed
semi -gloss enamel is best for a
study room.
The best color scheme in the
world, however, won't save a
child's eyesight if the lighting
itself is Inadequate. The lamp
used for studying should have
a large enough bulb and the
desk should be low enough -or
the chair high enough -so that
little Johnny's nose isn't skim-
ming the page of his book,
Well - designed desks are
available in unfinished furni-
ture departments of Canadian
stores and can easily be painted
to suit the decor of the bed-
room, Even ar, old kitchen table
might be used, disguised with
a fresh coat of paint,
Pleasant study surroundings
aren't guaranteed to produce
straight A's on a report card,
But they're worth a try,
Modern Beauties
Have It Easy
Some of us aro skeptical
when we read the label on , a
jar of farce cream or a tube of
toothpaste. In this age of
science we aren't to be' taken'in
by old wives' remedies or cure-
all concoctions based on noth-
ing more solid than super-
stition.
But the fact is, beauty care
today is on a scieigific basis,
Once a laboratory d telops and
tests a promising formula, liv-
ing models try to prove its
worth. Medical records are
kept. Then it goes to the gov-
ernment, whose high standards
must be met before the product
sees a drug -store shelf, In-
gredients are checked to be sure
they are harmless and will
achieve the reults claimed. It
may take years for that little
jar of cream to reach you, but
when it does you may be sure
it can do what it says it can --
if you use it properly,
Helping Mother Nature is a
big business today. Chemistry,
medicine and industry all have
a hand in it,
' Those women who complain
about the time and trouble it
takes to apply modern beauty -
aids should try this special con-
coction which was popular in
the days of Marie Antoinette:
Pulverize the wings and claws
of a pigeon and mix well with
lily petals and fresh eggs, add
ground Mother - of - pearl and
camphor distilled with musk,
Apply liberally,
Today, we have public opinion
behind us in our quest for
glamor. In 18th century Eng-
land, a touch of rouge could
have sent us to jail! An in -
'credible statute was passed by
Parliament, reading in part:
"All women of whatsoever rank
or degree that shall sedut'e or
betray into matrimony any of
his majesty's subjects by scen,s,
paints, cosnietic washes, arti-
ficial teeth, false hair, Spanish
wool, iron stays, hoops, high -
heeled shoes and bolstered 'hips,
shall incur the penalty of the
law In force against witchcraft
and like demeanors, and the,
marriage upon conviction Miall
stand null and void."
Science has made it easy for
us to look our best. A chemist
with a formula has screened us
from the danger of sunburn,
Another has released us from
the shackles of the overhead
permanent -wave machine. Syn-
thetic detergents have given us
shampoos which leave hair
clean and shiny in the hardest
water. Our natural beauty has
a valuable partner in the
Upsidedown 'to Prevent Peeking
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,OFFICIAL'S TiME OUT - President Eisenhower downs a soft drink
during a time out frcm shaking 'hands and greeting guests.
:.i�': �"':: YV.': S�:.s'RR<r',Y•'ia,.'f y,wi Vit•
THE GODS ARE ALL PLAYED OUT -Two giant
on a stage at the famed Caracalla Baths in
ended, and the statues aro to be returned to
ancient gods were seen in the opera "Aida",
-sized Egyptian deities lie ready for dis-assembling
Rome, Italy. The open-air opera sepson had just
the dusty warehouse whence they came. The
by Verdi,
"What A Funny
Way To Die"
Some 18,800 feet up on the
desolate Barun glacier in the
Himalayas was the camp of the
New Zealand Alpine Club's 1954
expedition, a solitary speck in a .
vast snow waste of peaks. Jim
NeFarlane and Brian Wilkins
had been out surveying, Sir Ed-
mund Hillary, 1953 conqueror of
Everest, crawled out of his tent,
searched the glacier for them,
but saw nothing,
He'd told them to get back
early, but now the afternoon was
nearly gone, the weather was
dull and gloomy. What could
they be doing? At 5,30 Wilkins
staggered back alone, his face
covered with blood,
"Where's Jim?" Hillary asked,
"We fell clown a crevasse. 1
got out, but Jim is still down
there." They were nearing a
crest on the glacier, he explain-
ed, when they stepped on a thin
crust of snow and plunged Into
deep, loose snow, 60 feet down
in the narrow bottom of a cre-
vasse,
His snow glasses had cut his
forehead and he had trouble
keeping the blood out of his
eyes, McFarlane had difficulty
in moving at all, and would
need help.
Wilkins had worked his way
along the crevasse, wriggling •
through bmall ice passages,
scrambling along a snowy ledge,
cutting steps in the walls, and at
last, after two hours' nerve-
racking work, managed to claw
his way to the surface.
Realizing that the hole in the
glacier had to be found before
darkness fell, Hillary bundled
together ropes, food, water and
two sleeping bags and set out
with five Sherpas. It was almost
dark when he found the hole,
wriggled slowly over to it on
his stomach, and shouted: "Hel-
lo, Jiml"
McFarlane called back faint-
ly. He thought he'd broken a
finger, and felt thirsty, Hillary
lowered a rope, but McFarlane
didn't seem able to get it, So he
decided to have himself low-,
ered on two ropes and tie Mc-
Farlane to one. The Sherpas
cbuld haul them up in turn.
Sir Edmund describes the en-
suing ordeal in -an epic chron-
icle of high endeavour, "East of
Everest." As he dropped into the
hole he realized that he had mis-
takenly tied the ropes round his
waist instead of round his
thighs, The rope was crushing
his chest and restricting his
breathing,
Slowly, in a series of heavy
jerks, the Sherpas lowered him
until he could touch one of the
walls, then for some reason they
stopped, leaving him hanging,
gasping like a fish, Twisting
frantically to ease the strain, he
knew he couldn't last for long
like that and began thinking:
"What a funny way to die."
As the Sherpas still ignored
his shouts to lower him farther,
he called out for them to pull
him up. He gained height as the
Sherpas pulled with all their
strength, then jammed under
the crevasse's overhanging lip,
the rope, cutting into the edge,
holding him immovably .
Tugging like madmen, they
tried to wrench him free. He
could feel his ribs bending under
the rope pressure, and a sharp
pain in his side. The smooth,
slippery Ice gave no' purchase to
his clawing hands, but he mane
aged to 'get an. arm over the top,
then his other elbow, and they
pulled him out "like a cork
from a bottle."
When he had recovered he
shouted down: "We may have to
leave you down there for the
night, Jim. If we lower down a
couple of sleeping bags do you
think you will be all right?"
McFarlane replied weakly, yes,
so .the bags were lowered. This
time he got the rope; so Hillary
called dowt to him to tie it
•
round him, then signalled the
Sherpas to pull,
But again the rope stopped,
with McFarlane jammed under
the overhang as Hillary had,
been. Hillary tried jerking to
free it—in vain, Stretching down,
he just managed to touch M:-
Farlane's hand, Then dreadful
choking sounds told them that
they'd have to lower him down
again, quickly,
When he reached bottom Hil-
lary shouted to Jim to crawl into
the sleeping bags for the night,
then anchored the rope -end
solidly into the ice . and started
back to camp.
"I felt bruised and weak and
it was painful to breathe," Hil-
lary says, "but worse than this
was the awful sense of shame in
having to leave poor McFarlane
sixty feet down in the ice,"
At 4.30 a.m. he was up again
to retu t to the hole, this . time
with Wilkins as well. Now there
was a fall of driving snow which
could prove disastrous, He,shout-
ed down, and to his intense re-
lief heard McFarlane call out'
that he'd had a good night, but
was feeling cold and thirsty, As
there was now danger of dis-
lodging the corniced edge and
engulfing McFarlane, Wilkins
offered to descend again by the
route by which he'd escaped,
After making a sling for his
thighs and arranging a 'code of
signals ,they watched him climb
into the second jagged hole fifty
feet to the right, It seemed an
eternity before he signalled to
be pulled back, He'd reached
McFarlane, he said, but only at-
ter great difficulty, The route
was quite impossible for anyone
unable to help himself.
Instead of getting into his
sleeping bags, McFarlane had
just draped them over his knees.
He'd taken off his gloves, and
his hands were cold and stiff.
He was obviously suffering from
concussion. Wilkins had tied a
sling round him, and decided
that the only chance was to
lower a rope straight down the
other hole and hope that Jim
could clip it to the sling.
• This was done, but again Mc-
Farlane stuck under the over-
hang, again he had to be lowered
to the bottom. Now they decided
to take the risk of cutting the
edge away. Held on two ropes
Wilkins and a Sherpa chipped
away in small pieces, then they
had another go at hauling him
up. When yet again McFarlane
jammed, Hillary, leaning hard
out on the rope, stretched down,
got a hand on the slings around
his body, and with a mighty tug
pulled him to safety.
His battered hands were whit-
ish -blue, frozen stiff like claws,'
his feet hard and lifeless.
When the doctor was sum-
moned from base he diagnosed
mild concussion, badly bruised
back with the chance of a minor
fracture, very bruised ribs,
frostbite in hands and feet and
some fingers probably broken.
Shortly afterwards, Hillary him-
self was down with a sever`h
illness. It was a miracle both had
not died.
How Can I
Q.Ilow can I keep berries
fresh for a ionger time?
A: Always dump fresh berries
from the box into, a plate or
dish where the air can circulate
through them.
Q. How can 1 prevent,wtndow
screens from -.rusting• when they
are not • made of copper or
bronze?
A. Wipe ,them carefully with
machine oil, The odor of the oil
will also keep away mosquitoes
and flies.
Q. ' How can I remove tar
from linen?
A. Rub thoroughly with oil
of . turpentine, or --lard, let it
stand for .awhile, and then wash
in soap and hot water.
'TRAFFIC CASUALTY" — Minnie the Mannequin suffered mul-
tiple "fractures", including a broken back and was "scalped"
when a woman driver plowed her car into a dress shop. Mrs.
Ruby Warwick, the proprietor, found Minnie's "scalp"—a, bright
blonde_ wig—in the debris and promptly glued it back to place.
DON'T PASS THE BUCK — That'; the message concerning fire
prevention that this Kuck wants, to convey to you concerning
your conduct in the tinder -dry `autumn woods. A long-time
resident of Katandin Stream camp ground, he seems to be
studying one of the signs erected throughout the park system
as a reminder to "keep Maine green",
TIILFMM FRQT
Farmers are among the first
do-it-yourself experts — from
necessity. Many times in the
past they have had to improvise
to meet minor emergecles—but
today they find modern tools
and know-how ready to make
their do -it -themselves jobs easi-
er and farm living more pleas-
ant.
• • •
Bringing this good news to
farmers is the purpose of "Oper-
mral
DRESSY DENIM—Once banished
to heavy duty on farm and in
factory, blue denim is taking
a step up the ladder of fashion.
Casual coat, above, has straight
and narrow .cut, with huge
patch pockets.
ation Farni Improvement," e
program sponsored by the Thor
.Power Tool Company. Focus of
the program will be a "research
center for better farm living," a
$250,000 "farm shop" at Huntley,
Ill.. northwest of Chicago,
•
To open -De center to the
public the Thor company invit-
ed Secretary of Agriculture Ezra
Taft Benson to speak. In addi-
tion, more than 200 agricultural
authorities • from colleges and
universities across the country
have been asked to participate
in a seminar on "Power Farm-
ing—a Better Way of Life."
• • •
]e the Thor "model faun
shop," set up on 0 100 -acre farm,
more than 2,000 tools, machines,
and accessories made by 50 dif-
ferent manufacturers have been
assemuled for leisurely., inspec-
tion,
"Many farmers have not re-
alized that they now have
enough machinery around the
farm to warrant their owning
specialized tools for mainten-
ance," Neil C. Hurley, Jr., com-
mented here to newsmen, "To-
day, with fewer farmers work-
ing bigger farms and feeding
more and more people, it Is in-
creasingly important for them to
serve time — and make their
work easier where they can.
• • •
"Many of them, without city
worker factory experience, do not
know that there are power tools
that could help them," he said.
Still others, he added, do not
know that with some tools they
could attempt major repairs and
improvements to their ,homes,
• • •
Quoting Department of Com-
merce figures of 1950 that 4,319,-
000 farm homes out of 6,187,000
queried reported they do not
have home plumbing, Mr. Hur-
-ley explained: "We want - to show
farmers that with tools they can
cut three-inch holes through a
wall or ''a concrete foundation;
that they can go ahead with
home plumbing or other im-
provements with the same kind
of equipment they can use prof-
itably in the barn for repairs."
* • •
Many farmers are aware, he
acknowledged, that power equip-
ment — power mowers, belt lifts
for grain, grinders for forage,
and so on — are worth far more
than their cost in this period of
high hired -man wages, But few,
he argued, have realized that
maintenance of this incrersing
investment in equipment is as
vital as owning it, "The farmer
la still making bailing -wire re -
,airs in a jet -plane age," com•
parry representatives reiterated
from time to time,
•
* •
No one as yet is ready to set
down on paper a "minimum list"
of the tools the farmer presum-
ably needs around the home-
stead, for every farmland region
has its own specialized equip-
ment. No one ..rack of tools
could be expected to repair them
e11.
• • •
But the company nonetheless
feeis that several tools are ba-
sic. ,An electric drill is known
by almost everyone as a tool
almost as useful as a can open-
er. But fewer know, and this
company plans to tell the farm-
land family, that an "impact
wrench" may be even more prac-
tical, (Fitted with a drill, an
impact wrench docs not stall
What's A Garthman?
Or A Fang Manager?
Napoleon described the Eng-
lish as a nation of shopkeepers,
but that was because he never
had a look into the government's
new handbook called "Classifi-
cation of Occupations,"
Published by the Stationery
Office and available to the pub-
lic for 30 shillings, it lists the
thosuands of occupations by
Which Englishmen who are not
shopkeepers earn their steak
pies and Yorkshire puddings.
' The occupations are listed ac-
cording to industry but no de-
scription of the individual job
is given, leaving the reader to
make what he will of some
curious — and often rather
frightening—names.
What for example is a fang
manager, a bogie man, a back
stripper, a small bruiser, a
lyncher, a sticker -up, and a
head setter -out?
They are workers in the min-
ing, pottery, and leather dress-
ing industries.
A fang manager in coal min-
ing looks after ventilation; a
bogie man handles coal trucks;
and a back stripper breaks coal
underground.
A small bruiser in the metal
industry pulverizes samples of
ore with a hammer.
A lyncher fastens movable
limbs in the soft toy trade, A
sticker;up fixes pieces of pot-
tery such as spouts on teapots;
and a head setter -out stretches
leather. .
Then there are the gay sprites
who toll at being joy loaders
and bobby lads.
A joy loader loads coal onto
trucks, and bobby lads measure
work done by the miners.
Picture the thin miner, the
fat boy, the endless rope boy,
and the hip and valley maker.
' The thin miner works on thin
coal seams, the fat boy is a ju-
venile, unskilled general work-
er in the coal mines and the
endless rope boy attaches or de-
tach s. the truck to "end)Qgs"
ropes. Hip and valley in
names of curved roof tiles.
A pan doctor repairs convey-
ors in a coal mine and a pud-
dler lays bricks above or below
ground.
The mumbler is another name
for a glassblower.
Then there are the trolloper
and the whammeller. A trol-
loper catches shrimps on the
east English coast and a wham -
when it his rough going. Instead,
a clutch mechanism continues to
deliver pounding blows on the
cutter, pushing it, without a re-
action force on the operator,
through thick wood or concrete.)
• •
Electric sanders, pneumatic
spike drivers, auto and tractor
valve refacers, hoists, presses,
and electric grinders are among
the other items these experts
recommend for a farm shopping
list.
meller fishes for salmon or sea
trout in estuaries, using a spe-
cial drift net.
Here's a riddle: What's a rud-
dleman? A hwsmon? A garth-
man?
Answer: a ruddleman brands
sheep, a hwsmon 1s a headman
on a Welsh farm and a gartb-
man is a herdsman,
Tongue twisters are the stack
thatcher and thistle spuddler on
the farm.
No guesswork about the crow
scarer, the Colorado bettle op-
erator or the root grubber.
The warping worker clears
out ditches,
For the chap who is a, Brown-
er, no sympathy and flowers.
He just floods pasture and other
land,
Other occupations are listed
with what appears to be un-
called for editorial comment—
the pushover man, rat assistant,
thickset cutter, shoddy grinder,
sleeper pickier.
Then from out of the charm-
ing past there are the whale-
bone straightener and the corset
threader.
For further queries a "profes-
sion solutionist" is at your serv-
ice.
Paid The Rent
In Red Roses
A fine red rose, freshly pluc-
ked from the garden of the Port
of London Authority in historic
Seething Lane, was taken re-
cently to the Mansion House
and ceremonially handed to the
Lord Mayor of London. A sim-
ilar ceremony takes place every
year, but few people know the
origin of the custom and why
the gift must always be a rose.
It is because way back in the
fourteenth century a lo'ely
woman defied the building re-
gulations. She was the wife of
Sir Robert Knollys, a distin-
guished knight who fought with
the Black Prince at Crecy
While he was away fighting
in the wars, his wife decided
to carry out a little improve-
ment Scbenle ip their fan'd:r%
§he had a footbridge ;,uiit
across the public way to con-
nect two parts of the garden
which was very close to Seeth-
ing Lane.
. As a result, the City author-
ities took swift action. They
fined Sir Robert, ordering him
to surrender to them every year
a red rose, picked from his gar-
den,
Red roses were also used to
pay rents centuries ago in Eng-
land. In the reign of Edward 1
more than ten per cent of the
recorded tenures were held on
an annual rent of one red rose.
For this fall's bride who is
busy planning a color scheme
for her new home, here is a tip
that will make things easier;
choose the drapery material
first. Then you can take your
cue from the colors in the
fabric when painting walls and
selecting furnishings.
AWAY ALL SCOOTERS — Two adventurous ladies plan to cross
the English Channel the "easy" way—on a water scooter. The
show girls, Kay Harris, front, and Una Denton, will scoot from
Calais to Dover—they hope. The machine has a speed of 20
knots, and will automatically slow and circle back if the riders
fall off. The pair is shown, above, on practice run at Folkestone,
England.
FILED FOR THE DURATION — The old hospital Truism that more babies are born during
weather than on calm days got a big boost at Ryukyus Hospital on Okinawa durint as
recent Typhoon Emma, Some of the 14 new arrivals who blew in with the storm are shr wn
In an emergency evacuation shelter, sound asleep In their desk -and -file -drawer beds. Cribs
were brought from the hospital proper when the storm abated.
1
•
•1
1
PAttk4 n
11111•11511•11•1111, 'ma
Progressive Euchre
& DANCE
under the auspices of the C.W.L. of
St. Michael's Church, Blyth,
IN BLYTH MEMORIAL HALL
FRI., OCTOBER 12
Euchre from 8:30 to 10:30. Goocl Prizes.
DANCING TO JIM PIERCE'S ORCHESTRA,
Draw for prizs (9n display) immediately
after lunch.
ADMISSION 75c --- FREE LUNCH.
40044-4,44-41-414-414+++4114-411-4-4-4.4-•-•-.4-4 4 -►+•+-N •-• 0-• 4-4++«4+4++ •-•-•-.
••-••••-•-•-••-•-•-•-••-•-•-••-••••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•
SHOP NOW --- for the Cold Weather Ahead!
A small down payment will hold any purchase until
needed.
SPECIAL CLEARANCE: Wool, 29c per Oz,
Limited Quantity.
Children's Winter Wight 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
EI,PTA, ONTIRIO.
' • e-1 4+4 ++1 4-+++++4HS-4-4-+-41+-++..•+-•-4+44.4
STANDAR
• News Of Auburn
Mrs, Alfred Nesbitt received word Saturday;.
recently that her father, Mr, J. Hutch -1 Mr. Wm, J. Craig suffered a severe
inson, hod passed away in York, Eng. leg Injury while at his .work nt Clinton
land, He had lived all his life in Eng- Alr school and is confined to his home
land and was taken after n short illness. I The farmers In this district are busy
His wife predeceased him 4 years ago, cutting corn to illi their silos, the fine
Surviving besides his daughter, Mrs; weather of the past week has been won.
Nesbitt, are two other daughters and dertul to get the fall work done,
one son, all of England. Mrs, Nesbitt Mr, and Mrs, Roy Brydges of Sagi•
was in England 2 years ago to see her I naw, with Mr. and Mrs. Donald Fowler
family Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Jardin and fam•
Miss Donna Haggett , entertained in
honaur of her sister, Rose Marie's, 10th
birthday. Those present were, Gall
Miller, Bonnie and Sharon McKinnon,
Carol Brown, Linda Andrews, Randy
Aiachan, Larry Chamney, Barbara Mac-
Kny, Barbara Sanderson, Bergctta
Slitchlin„ Betty Moss, Marie Leather -
hind, and Johnny Carrick, Mrs, Jock
Carrick and babe, cf Goderich,, were
visitors too,
Mrs, R. D. Smith, of Peterboro, who
has been visiting her cousin, Mrs, Fred
Ross, returned home last week.
Mr, and Mrs. William Seers and Gail,
of Colborne Township, have moved: to
the village, ,
Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Walters and
family, of Goderich, . visited recently
with Mr, and 'Mrs. Larry Glasgow and
family.
Mrs. Jeremiah Taylor who has been WESTFI.ELD
visiting her daughter, Mrs. Lloyd Raith.
by, and Mr. Raithby, spent a few days
Mrand Mrs. Harold Head, and fam-
ily of London spent Sunday with Iter
!sister, Mrs. Douglas Campbell, and Mr.
Campbell,
it
of Waterloo visited over the week -end
with Mrs, J. L. McDowell and Mr. Ar•
mond McBurney..
Mr. and Mts. Keith Snell of l.ond mn
visited over the week -end with her
parents, Mr and Mrs. Howard Campbell
and called on Mrs, J. L. McDowell ane'
Gordon, on Monday,
Mr. and Mrs, Norman Radford of
Collingwcod visited on Wednesday with
Mrs. J. L. McDowell and Gordon, and
Mr, and Mrs. Waller Cook.
Mr, and Mrs, Bert Taylor, Auburn
Mr. Ronald Taylor, Toronto and Miss
Violet Cook, spent Thanksgiving with
Mr. and Mrs, Ray Hanna.
Mr. and Mrs, Bud Johnston, Tomkny'
and Robert, of 'Toronto, spent the
Thanksgiving week -end with Mrs. Fred Phone 73,
Cook and, Arnold.
A large number from this district took X1+1 ^''••+1++MINN++MNII+IN++NN.N�
in the Teeswater Fair last Wednesday.-'►+++•-•-•-•-•-•-•-••••••••••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-r•-•-•••••••••-•-• +4-* • •-t-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•- ++
Miss Chris McClintonr, Sharpe.
and Mr. and Mrs. Wap, Helesic, of Gode•
rich, visited Sunday with Mr; and Mrs
Emmerson Rodger.
Mrs, Chas Smith visited •with her
cousins, Mrs Mac Newton and Mrs.
Deigns of Wroxeter on' Tuesday,
Mrs• Fred Cook and Violet with Mrs.
Geo. Cook df Belgrave and took in the
Teeswater Fair on Wednesday, • Violet
plays In the Goderich • Girls Trumpet
Band Which partcpn ern the l i t i t th Fair.
Ily of Wlitgham, with Mr, and Mrs, W
J,• Straughan,
Mr. and. Mrs. Cal Straughan of God,
erich with Mrs. Fred Ross.
Mr. and Mrs, Mat Gross have pur•
.chased the Sturdy farm, '
Miss Joan Doerr of Niagara Faris
with Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Chamney.
Mr, and Mrs, Ben Hamilton and sot,
John .Hamilton, of Toronto, with Mr
end Mrs, David W. Hamilton.
Mr, George Timm of Gorrie, Witham
Timm, of Listowel, Miss Erna Bethkle
Of Gorrie, Mr. and Mrs, Cites, Roche, of
Gownstown, were guests with Mr. and
Mrs. Maitland Allen. •
Rev, and Mrs. Harold Currie ani
family of Carlisle, with Mr. and Mrs
Wm. T. Robison,
last week at her home.
Mr. William Anderson ha s been very1 at his home and is under the Doctor';
care. His friends wish him a speedy
recovery.
Mr, John Young,blut was a London
visitor last Thursday,
Mrs. Alfred Tebbutl, of Goderich, vis•
ited last week with her brother, Mr
Ezekiel Phillips, and Mrs. 'Phillips.
and Mrs. Donald Ross and daugh-
ter, Janet Elizabeth, of Oakville, spent
s the holiday with his mother, Mrs. Fred
' Ross,
Mr, and Mrs, Larry Glasgow, Allan
and Dennis, spent the week -end with
relatives at Port Perry and Havelock.
Mr. and Mrs• Ezekial Phillips, Mr's
• T. S. Johnston, Mrs. Tebbutt, and Miss
Laura Phillips, visited with Mr. and
' Mrs, W. J, Humphrey, of St. Helens, last
+ week.
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Crete of Windsor
visited with her uncle, Mr. Arthur
Yungblut over the holiday.
Mr. Frank Walters of Ingersoll, vis-
ited over the week -end with his sister,
Mrs. Arthur Grange and family,
The sympathy of this community is
extended to Mrs, Robert McClinchey in
the death of her father, the late Mr,
Frank Ilodlyrnan of Blyth.
Mr. and Mrs• Lloyd Miller of London
were visitors over the holiday with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Percy Vincent and
his brother, Mr, Gordon Miller and fam•
ily, and his father, Mr, Joseph Miller
Mrs. John Graham visited friends In
BONELESS TENDERIZED HA
11I,
75c LB.
PICNIC HAIL (Smoked)
SELECT SIDE BACON (Sliced)
110141 onnoo.
LB. 49c
LB. 69c
Arnold Berthot
'telephone 10 --- Blyth.
1L ,
Wearing Apparel For
chilly Fall Days
LADIES' WOOL JERSEY BIOUSES
REVERSIBLE WOOL, PLAID SKIRTS
LADIES' SWEATERS OF ORLON, ALL WOOL
AND NYLON
LINED JEANS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS
NEW PLAIDS IN (SANFORIZED) FLANNEL
SHIRTINGS
NYLON CREPE HOSE (Anti -Run) 42 GUAGE
LONG DRAWERS (Elastic Waist) For MEN
AND BOYS
70x90 IBEX BLANKETS; Reg. $6.50
SPECIAL
.....,.,,,. $5.95
The Arcade Stores
STORIES IN BLYTH & BRUSSELS,
of Blyth, ,
Mr, and Mrs. John Gear and fam y
Wednesday, Oethber 1U,1956
11NN1NMI
PREPARE FOR
WINTER NOW!
and buy your footwear
needs. We carry a com-
plete stock of Rubber
Footwear for the whole
family.
R. W. MADILL'S
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The 'home of Good Quality Merchandise"
14.NV+NIIMFIMNIINN.1.►Nl+++01 NMI"NNIN+NM4.MIV:MNd+•NMNI,
WIINMN+00#N++NNIP
IiP44I+NN+IY•MaVN~MI 4414,444.04WWW4,4**.e."
BERNARD HALL
Insurance Agency
LIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE, LIABILITY, WIND
AND ALL CLASSES OF INSURANCE.
PHONE 122 BLYTH, ONT,
1
rMfN+•/d #••sMI•iW.~,.. #414#444.####* t1NNNJNNNNJ.INNMI04~## #.4
VR►NNJ•1ININNNJNMI+N11•I
•1"P044 Nr•844,#4 M40
'WALLACE'S
DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES
LET US FILL YOUR SPRING SEWING NEEDS
with
PRINTS, BROODCLOTII,' ZIPPERS, THREAD,
ETC.
SPECIAL EVERY DAY, INCLUDING SUNDAY;
a TURKEY DINNERS hinny up hinny party and take advantage
of this special,
HURON GRILL
• Mrs, Jack Campbell, 'Aylmer, Mrs. • BLYTH - ONTARIO
Goderich last week. Will 'Taylor, Dorchester, Mrs. Albert , FRANK GONG, Proprietor.
Pie Allen Craig of C 7mp Borden
Walsh, dl Blyth, called on their unci
Spent the holiday with his parents; Mr. y c•
and Mrs. Wm. J. Craig. Mr. Will McDowell
and Mr. and Mra
Norman .McDowell on Tuesday.
Mrs. Caroline Seers left last Saturday Mr John Buchanan Mrs, Stanley Cook
to make her home with her daughter.
Mrs, Russel Keys and Mr. Keys and
family, of Mitchell. Prior to her rie.
parture she was presented with a Lift
!Irma Sl. Mark's Anglican Church, of
which she was a faithful member. Mrs
George Hamilton and Mrs, Sam Doer
•• made the presentation.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Davies visited friends
In New York State over the holiday.
The Area Convention of the Women's
Institute will be held in London' on
`Oct. 10.17, therefore the October meet-
ing of the local branch will be held on
Oct, 12th. -
Mr, Wm, L. Craig received a severe
cut on the hand off the saw while at a
cleaning operation in the sawmill and
was a patient in Clinton hospital for
- several days last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Eason celebrated
their 25th wedding anniversary last
'weekend, Sept. 30th, by taking a little
trip,
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Krete of Windsor
with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Enscm on Mon •
• day. -
Mrs. Gurdon Miller was operating the
express office at the CPR station last
week,
Mrs. Herb Mogridge and Miss Betty
Marsh of Petersburg visited friends hers
on Saturday.
, Mr. Joseph Carter and Miss Sadie
Carter are visiting with .his sons Mr.
Reg. Carter and family at Port Elgin,
Airs. Albert Campbell was n London
Ivisitor last week.
Those from here attending the West
Sectional WAIS Hurn Presbyterial at
: 131yth lost Tuesday were; Miss Marga-
• ret Jackson, Mrs;, Chas. Straugkan, Mrs.
1 Fred Toll, Mrs. W. J. Craig, Mrs. W, T.
Mrs. IRev.) Blitz, Mrs. Wm,
•
1Robison,
Strattghnn and Mrs, Earl Wightman,
Last Friday afternoon the Library
Board and members held a successful
hamar and tea, even though It was a
_ . very busy time for the farm ladies they
didn't let the library hoard -down. In
charge of the tea, Mrs. Duncan MacK s�
.- Iwill convener. Ladies presiding over
- the tea tables. were Mrs, Larry Gies.
- g;w, Mrs, Oliver Anderson, Mrs, Wm.
Dodds, Jr,, and Mrs. Fred Plnetzer. The
bake sale booths were as follows; cake
' and pie, Miss M. R. Jackson' and Mrs
Alfred Nesbitt; tarts, ccoktes and small
• cakea, Mrs. C. M. Straus/hen; home•
• made buns, muffins, etc., Mrs, E. Law•
son; candy and farm produce, Airs. W.
T. Robison and Mrs. Ross. Over $70
- was realized frcrn this sale. Chairman
of Librnry Board, Mrs. Wtm, T. Rohl -
son, Librarian, Miss Margaret 1t, Jack-
' son, Secy -Treasurer, Mrs. Fred Ross.
Mrs. Robert Arthur and baby Baugh.
to
Kathryn Jayne, '' r a rya arrived home last
and Mrs. Roland Vincent, visited with
their brother, Leslie, in London Weal•
minstor Hospital on Friday.
Visitors with their parents, Mr. aim
1 Mrs, Earl Wightman over the holiday
were Mr, and Mrs, John Hildebrand
Eldo and Raymond; Jordan Station, Mr.
, and Mrs, Harry Baothman and Rodger
of Sarnia, :Mr.• Harvey. Wightman, of
Waterloo. - ;
Mrs. Will Lemont, Miss Muriel La•
I mont, Mr, Wm. Lamont, Miss Alice
Reeve, of Toronto, spent the Thanks-
giving week -end with Mr. and- Airs.
Wniter Cook,
Mr.. John Campboll attended the
Church of God Youth Rally at Londan
on Sunday and Monday.
Miss Violet Cook visited Toronto
friends the latter part of the week.
t Mr, Jin Buchanan, Windsor, Miss
Lorna Buchanan, London, spent Thanks•
giving week -end at their home.
Mr. Cecil Campbell, Exeter, with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs, Howard Camp-
bell, also with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hanna
1
•
4+0-•-t••+1 ++H++-4•+++ •a-••14+•-++++•+•-N••4a44•4--4-444.44+4- -
Win hairs Memorialg Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of .
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP.
Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING,
Phone 256, Wingham
•
over the holiday.
Mr. Aldrlc Richard of London spent
the holiday week -end with his.brother•
Jerard,
Miss Ruth Cook, Landon,•.was home
over the week -end.
Miss Edna Sinitln, Kitchener, spent
the Thanksgiving holiday with her
brother, Mr. Gordon Smith and Mrs,
Smith.
Several families are laid up with the I
mumps, i
The Auburneltes, Gladys and Rena
McClinchey, Barbara Smith and Donna
Walden, sang at a young Peoples Rally
at Goderich on Monday evening.
R. A. SPOTTON.
TENDERS E{'ANTED
Tenders will be received by the un-
dersigned until 12 o'clock snoon, Satur•
day, October 20th, 1956, for the repair
of the Chester Baker Drain in the
Township of Grey, which consists )(
4,530 lineal feet of open Drain. Plans
and specifications may be seen at the
Clerk's Office, Ethel, Ontario. Tender
In be accompanied by certified cheque
for 10 percent of amount of tender
Lowest or any tender not necessarily
accepted,
MRS. E, M, CARDIFF, Clerk, Town-
ship of Grey, Ethel, Ontario, 44-2
on Debentures :.
and Guaranteed
Trust Certificates
33/a%
teI.
... for 3,4,
and 5 years
ar one and two years (�
hJRN
&' ERIE.
MaItTGAGE COtu'ORATtON
IUM 1 tilt • IMAM TIM
C1rIP
S1tE
CANADA TRUST
. - CUAII'ANY
Head Office--- London, Ontario.
Distri ;t Representative: Gordon B. Elliott, Blyth.
WodneHIoy, October 10,E 1950
Elliott Insurance Agency
BLYTH —ONTARIO.
INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES
Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident,
• Windstorm, Farm Liability,
WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE.
Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140
FOR SALE
10 yearling cattle, 14 spring calves,
and 2 Purebred Angus bulls, Apply,
Gilbert Nethery, phone 16R8, Blyth.
30 tf.
CHIMNEYS BUILT AND REPAIRED
Call us for chimney repairs. Agents
for Fire Chief Chimneys. Also avail-
able for carpentry work. Apply, Geo
Ives, phone 16118, Blyth 42-2p
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL,
Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped
and cleaned. Free estimates. Louts
Blake, phone 42116, Brussels, R.R, 2.
25.10p.
IIALLOWE'EN DANCE
Sponsored by the Blyth Fire Brigade,
in the Blyith Memorial Hall, Friday,
October 31st, 44.1.
1
KEEP OCT. 24 OPEN
for
BELGRAVE TURKEY
BANQUET
In the Community Centre.
Tickets may be had at
The Blyth Standard
44-2.
FOR RENT
Power lawn mower, cement mixer,
and wheel barrow, garden tractor, floor
polisher and vacuum cleaner, Apply,
Sparling's Hardware, phone 24, Blyth.
0-4-4-•-•-•-•-•-•44:•-•-•44-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-• 44-4++ •-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•••-•
Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association
"Where Better Bulls Are Used"
During the very trying harvest season farmers
have just experienced, there was not timle to think
about the livestock and breeding program. How-
ever with fall here, plans for the fall breeding pro-
gram must be made.
When making your fall breeding plans, consider the
advantages of artificially breeding your cows to the
sires in service in our Unit.
ECONOMY • DISEASE CONTROL
SAFETY QUALITY CALVES
CHOICE OF BULLS COURTEOUS SERVICE
For service or more information, write or phone
collect to: CLINTON HU 2-3441
between 7:30 and 10 a.m. on weeks days
7:30 & 9:30 a.m.' on Sundays or holidays
The excellent A. IB, Caya cow, Brittany Rag
Apple Lorene- a daughter of Aladdin, a former
Unit bull - sold at the Brubacher Anniversary Sale
for $2225.00.
14-40•4 +4444 +4-6444-4- •-•-• •++.4 •-H+ 04-444 N-•-•-•-•-t•-.-H•.-••• • • 044+1
1
Fire Prevention Week
OCTOBER 7 -a 13 ...
CHECK YOUR PIPES AND HEATING
EQUIPMENT NOW!
This request is issued at the request of the Fire
Marshal, W. J. Scott,
in co-operation with your local Fire Department
and Village Council. 44-1.
Mb MTh STANDARD PAGE
.w.NNN•••••
Properties For Sale
8 -room frame dwelling. Complete
odcrn bath upstairs, 2 -piece 1st
in kitchen. Priced to sell, in Town
of Wingham,
100 acre farm, 6 -room dwelling,
bath, hydro, water, barn 60x60, drive
shed 60x25, Twp, of Morris,
m
floor, built-in cupboards, tile floor
100 acre farm, 114 storey, asphalt
shingle clad, hydro, cellar. Good
barn 36x56, hydro, water, drilled
well. Drive shed, 30x20 steel. Hen
house 10x2•), 75 acres workable.
Morris Township.
150 acre farm. 7 -room stucco
house, Barn 00x40, Drive shed
30x50, Cement silo. Hydro, water
pressure, 130 acres workable, Wa-
wanosh Township.
•
97 acre farm on black top, county
road, good buildings, hydro, drilled
• well, level, well drained, close to
i school and village.
11/2. -storey frame dwellit,g In
Blyth„ on Highway, Small stable
Hydro, water.
1!i -storey brick dwelling, 7 rooms,
full cellar, hydro, water pressure,
In Blyth (corner lot),
First-class brick dwelling on pav•i
ed street, all conveniences, in Village
of Blyth.
Small country general store,
94 acre farm, good buildings, hy-
dro, water. Close to Village of Au-
burn,
200 acre farm, good buildings, hy-
dro, water, silo, close to village,
good land, well fenced. ,
Listings invited. Other proper-
ties on request.
100 -acre. farm, 8 -room brick dwel-
ling, water, pressure, hydro, etc.
Barn 60x66 and 32x5{). Drive shed
'0x30. Buildings in good repair. A
good farm on Con 11, Twp, of Hal-
lett. .
50 acre farm, Tv:':i. of • Howicic.
good land,
1s
ELLIOTT
REAL ESTATE
• AGENCY
1
BLYTH, PHONE 104,
Gordon Elliott, Broker.
Victor Kennedy, Salesman,
Res. Phone 140. Res. Phone 70,
FOR RENT
Apartment in Blyth, by Oct. 1st, Ap-
ply, Mrs, Roy Bennett. Walton, 82114,
Brussels,
LYCEUM THEATRE
WINGHAM.
First Show commences at 7:15 p.m,
'rims., Fri,, Sat., October 11-12-13
Burt Lancaster Jean Peters
"APACHE
This is ou.tstsnding entertainment
for action fans and deals with a
one-man war waged, by a rugged
and uncompromising Apache brave,
; r.'inst the U.S. army.
Mon,, Tues., Wed., Oct. 15-16-17
Gary Cooper Charles Bickford
in
"COURT MARTIAL OF
BILLY MITCHELL"
This is the dramatic account of the
stormy career of 13111y Mitchell, a
leading exponent of • air -power In
the early days of aviation, who de-
liberately risked disgrace and dis-
honour in a court-martial to bring
before the public the serious de-
fects' in the nation's small Ignored
air force in the 1920's.
..-•+.-•-.-.•.-.+• r 4-4
. . ..4++-. •-.-P•,
If
3
BROWNIE'S
DRIVE•1N
III THEATRE
oa
CLINTON, ONTARIO.
THURS. - FRI. OCT. 11 - 12
"Mr. Scoutmaster"
CLIFTON WEBB
EDMON G\VYN.1
(Two Cartoons)
SAT. - MON. OCT. 13 - 15
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
(Colour)
JANE RUSSELL
MARILYN MONROE
(Two Cartoons)
SATURDAY NIGIIT IS
PRIZE NIGHT:
VALUE $50.00
TUES, - WED. OCT. 16 - 17
"SABRINA"
WILLIAme HOLDEN,
AUDREY HEPBURN
HUMPHREY BOGART
(Two Cartoons)
EVERY TUESDAY NIGIIT
UNTIL END OF SEASON IS
DOLLAR NIGHT
One Dollar Admits a Carload,
30-t I. ,,,,,.
AUCTION SALE
OF HOUSEHOLD F.URNISIIINGS
Ah the residence of Mrs, Nellie Wat•
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; cools
Move (Beach); 2 electric hot platen'
electric tea kettle; 3 -piece wine ches-
terfield suite, excellent condition; 2 -
piece dining rcom suite; 5 rugs, with
underpads, various sizes from 0x101/2 tc
9x12; 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 6 -room cottage (ash•
phalt siding), hard and soft water in-
side, also inside plumbing, equipped
with hydro and installed with oil burn
er, used only 5 months, oil piped in
from outside tank containing 40 gala
of oil, On this property is a shed
18x30.
TERMS OF' SALE are Cash on Chat-
tels; on property 10 percent at time of
pure hose; balance in 39 days.
Mrs. N.'lice Wat4on, Proprietress.
Harold Jackson, Auctioneer. 43-2,
FOR SALE~���
One red snow suit and cap, size 2
and 1 pair white rubber fur -trimmed o'1•
,rN, .+.+•f••++441e+4++++~N''^ ershoes, size 6. Phone Blyth, 155. 44.1p.
BELGR AVE
Mr, and Mrs, Ed. Hardin and family;
of London, wih Mr, and Mrs, E. Ander-
son and Karen.
Mr. and Mrs. Georgd Jones and fam-
ily, of London, with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs, J. E. McCallum.
Mr. 'and Mrs, W. Picked and sons, of
St. Thomas, with Mr. and Mrs. H.
Wheeler.
Keith Anderson, of St. Thomas, with
Mr, and Mrs. E. Anderson.
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Nethery and fain-
tly, of Hamilton, with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. John Perdue and famil,V
of Toronto, with Mrs. A. Perdue and
Mr, and Mrs. L. Yunnan.
Mrs. Ken Wheeler taught for a couple
of days at S.S. No. 1 Morris due to the
illness of Mrs. Plunkett the teacher,
Mr. and Mrs, John Spivey and family,
of Ingersoll, with relatives here.
Charlie Procter, of Oakville, with his;
parents, Mr, and Mrs. J. S. Procter.
Mr, and Mrs, Farrier and family, of
Long Branch, with Mr, and Mrs. N,
Higgins.
Edith Procter returned home last
week from Wingham where she was a
patient' in -the Hospital. -
Mr, and Mrs. Bruce Marshall and
family, with Mr,' and Mrs, S. Cook.
Miss Annie McNicol spent the week-
end at her home at Walton.
Mr. Lennox, of Listowel, spent last
week with' his daughter,, Mrs. C. W.
Hanna, and family.
Mr. Rey McGee, of Kitchener, with
his brother, Gordon McGee.
Mr, and Mrs. 0. E, Taylor spent the
CARD OF THANKS
Mrs. Frank Hollyanan and family wish
to sincerely thank all the friends and
neighbours for their many kind act:
during their sad bereavement; also the
Rev. A. W. Watson, Dr. Street, and Mr.
Lloyd Tasker, end those who were sr:
eery kind and thoughtful in so many
ways. 44 -Ip
•
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to express appreciation to all
those who sent cards, treats, and vla-
ited me while I was a patient in Beck
S,nitorium, Special thanks to the
neighbours for their kind acts of com-
bining and harvesting, and to all oth-
ers who remembered me.
44.Ip. Bill Ros9.
FOR SALE
Grey all -wool coat, by Ayers, size
16-18, in excellent condition, hardly
worn, will sell cheap. Apply, Mrs
Clifford Walsh, Blyth, 44-19.
AUCTION SALE
OF FEEDER CATTLE
At Lot 29, Con. 9, McKillop Town-
ship, at Allan Campbell's farm, 1 mile
west of Winthrop, on
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18111
at 1 p.m,
. 30 Durham and Hereford steers, 6 to
7 hundred lbs.; 20 Durham and Here-•
ford heifers, 5 to 7 hundred lbs.; 2 Hol-
stein cows, springers, 2 Durham cows
bred,
, PIGS—A munber of York chunks
and weiners.
TERMS CASK
Harold Jackson, Auctioneer.
E. P. Chesney, Clerk,
CARD OF THANKS
We want to thank all the frirnda of
Miss Mnry J. Leckie, _who were so
kind to her during her long illness re-
membering her with cards sod letters
visits and prnyers. Also the. Blyth Uni-
ted Church for the floral remembrance,
and the Rev, A. W. Watson and Mrs.
Harvey Brown, also the pallbearers.,'
—Mrs; Susan E. Brodda, Olga E
Humphries, Hazel G. Laym.an. 44•lp
4.14
AUCTION SALE •
To be held on October 17th, for the.
Estate of the late Douglas Snaith of Lo'.
18, Concession 6, Morris Township, 11/4
smiles south and 3 miles west of Brus-
sels, consists of the Battle, 3 grade cows
milking and retired, 1 registered Short-
horn cow with calf at foot and retired.
HOUSE FOR RENT (1 heifer due time of sale, 5 young cattle,
On Dinsley Street, Blyth. Apply to 100 Red Rock pullets, 7 months old
Call Wheeler, phone 80, Blyth. 43-1 laying,
Ford tractor with plow and cultivator: i
week -end at Sarnia. Mrs, P. Scott has' Lubber -tired wagon with rack and box
spent the past few weeks with her son DeLaval electric cream seperato; Other
returned to Sarnia with them. I small nrticls; Quantity of hay and
Mr, and Mrs. Alvin Pengelly who grain.
have occupied an apartment here have' Harold Jackson, Auctioneer.
moved to Blyth, Mrs. Douglas Smith, Proprietor. 44-1
R.
, TRIMS, - FiRI, OCT, 18 - 19
"RUN FOR COVER"
(Colour)
JAMES CAGNEY
JOHN DEREK
VIVICA LINDFORS
(Two Cartoons)
Two Shows Nightly, Rain or Clear
Box Office Open at 7;30 p.m,
Standard Time October lst.
First Show at 8;00 p.m.
Childr-•n Under 12 in Cars Free
•
DR. N. W. I-IAYNES
DENTAL• SURGEON.
Has opened an office for the Practice
of Dentistry in Clinton, on Albert St.
•-• i+P• N+•+• N •+• $+4- +• •4-4+4++- •++•4 •• • .+,4-4 i+�
ROXY THEATRE, - 1st Showing 2nd Showing
CLINTON, 7:311 p.n}n. At The 9:30 p.m.
Air -Conditioned
NOW (Thursday, 14riday, Saturday) —
HE MARAUDERS" 1 _ GODERICJJ,
,"TThe screen blazes with violence as an .OW —"TIli. MAN WIIi KNF.1V TOl7
army of clerperatc men sweeps into MUCH"—Dh'ecled by Alfred Hitch.
peaceful range country. ! cock, with James Stewart and DarioDan Duryea, ,teff. Richards, and ( Day, in Vista Colour,
^^ _ Keenan WynnMon., Tues., Wed. Adult Entertainment
Monday, Tuesday, 11'ednesday "EAST OF EDEN"
Adult Entertainment ]n Chtemnscope
"BATTLE CItY"
PARK
The great emotional story that set the
critics raving about its cast and its
SSplendid film teased on a widely rend dramatic impact
war novel. Magnificent onion and James Dean, Julie Harris,
spectacle, 1 It nymond Massey and Burl Ives
Van Heflin,Mona Freeman, Aldo Ray Thurs., Fri., Sat, (Double Bill)
NOTE: Owing to the length of this i JOHNNY 11'EISSAIULLER
feature, the first showing will com- with a cast •,if favorites in a new ver-
menee at 7 p.m, instead of 7:30. ___ cion of the jungle adventures that mads
CIMiNG—°FRANCIS IN TILE HAUNT-
him famous
ED HOUSE"—Mickey Rooney, Virgin-
"TARZAN ESCAPES
la Welles—"Francis." A second feature will be shown to
complete this program.
V••-• • •• • .4 44 . • 4=•=i4 4-1.4-44.44:i1; 4-+-44 $+11 +-144-4-4.444' i:+47.7.74'
VNNIN.. NOVO. tI.ffNIN,•.N.NI
F. C. PREST
LONDESBORO, ONT,
Interior & Exterior Decorator
Sunworthy Wallpaper
Paints - Enamels • Varnishes
Brush & Spray Painting
• rN IN I.IIN.J~.0NI.
•f..•vf fNI.N#.044.40•WW1P4NNI.MN.
1
HURON
FARM SUPPLIES
OLIVER SALES & SERVICE
Telephone 4 and 93, Blyth.
FARMERS,
ATTENTION !
Special Bargains For
Octber, 1956
We have for sale
ONE ALLIS CIIALMERS
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.
fMI►MNlfN• M•44fN.f,NIN.. k
SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Have your sepllc tank{'• pumped: the
sanitary way. Schools' and public
buildings given prompt attention.
Rates reasonable. Tel. Irvin Coxon,
Milverton, 75114. 62-18-tf,
EUCHRE PARTY
in 0.E.S. Chapter Rooms,
Blyth, on
WED., OCTOBER 24th
at 8:15 o'clock
Sponsored by Regal Chapter
Order of the Eastern Star
EVERYONE WELCOME
OPPOSITE TIIE ROYAL BANK FOR SALE
ON THE GROUND FLOOR 7 young sows, due in week and a half
Apply, John Heyink, phone 23115, Blyth.
44-1;f,
PHONE HU 2-9571, 62-41-tr,
AUCTION SALE
OF iIOUSF;HOLD 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-plece bedroom suite, hand
carved; 1 oak bedroom suite; 3- piece
walnut bedroom suite; 2 pair pillows:
3 -piece parlour suite, with 4 chairs to
match, antique walnuc;,hall tree; Morris
chair; music cabinet; 3 small oak tables;
studio couch; hall rack; book case; 2
rocking chairs; 'l small tables; brass
jardinere; curtains and curtain poles -
1 rug 9x0; number of club bags and
suit eases; number of mots; 1 stand and
2 mirrors; quilts; blankets; pillows,
sheets, etc.; 3 trunks; 2 chests; Coleman
oil stove with pipes; Sparton radio; 5
dining -roost chairs and arum chair tc
match; 1 oval table; antique pictures;
clock, dishes and table linens; 1 Prin-
cess Beth cook stove; 1 electric heater:
FOR SALE
A 40 -acre highway farm, with all
modern conveniences in house; bank
barn; hydro throughout. Close to school
and town.
90 acres. with go.d buildings, hydro
Land. in excellent state of cultivation
21 miles from town, Price $6,000,
CECiL W'J1EEI,ER,
Realtor Phone 88 Blyth
44-3
FOR SALE
20 feeder steers, Hereford and Angus,
4151) to 700 lbs. Apply, John McEwing.
phone 231114, Blyth. ' 43-3p
CLEARING DISPERSAL SALE
Of Registered Scotch Shorthorn Cattle
At the farm of M. C. Tyndall & Soo
1.11. 5, Goderich, Ont., on the 8th con-
cession of Colborne Township, 7 miles
northeast of Goderich, 11 miles west of
Blyth, 7 miles north of Dungannon, 4
I miles west of Auburn near Carlow, lot
3, E.D., 8th concession, on
electric iron; electric toaster; guantily 11'EDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17th,,
of very good silverware; kitchen uten- at 2;00 o'clock p.m,
sits; kitchen table and 13 chairs; arm 50 — HEAD SELLING — 50
choir; quantity of sealers; Beitity vnsh_ These' cattle are all TB tested and
calf vaccinated. The bulls that have
been used in this herd have the blood
of some of the top bulls that have been
used in Scotland and Canada, such as
I Collinie Royal Barrage, Burford Bolide.
Corrinnory Golden Sovereign, Millhil!s
Festival by Ascreavie Democrate, As
we are not big breeders, we have lop
blood lines in the herd, 'These cattle
have not been fitted for sale and arc'
just in pasture• condition. Anyone
(wishing n list of the sale, phone CaC•
low 1522, or write M. C. Tyndall, MR, 5
Goderich, Ontario.
in case of wet day, sale will be held
Inside.
M. C. Tyndall & Son, Proprietors.
Robert Amos, Guelph, Auctioneer.
ing machine; 1 rangetle; garden toots'
saws; scythe; long ladder, step ladder:
45 -gal. drum; cord of hard maple wood•
Other articles too numerous to men-
tion.
PROPERTY OFFERED FOR SALE—
At approximately 3;30 p.m., the prop-
erty will be offered for sale, subject tc
u reserve bid; 11 storey brick dwel-
ling equipped with bathrocni, on Wel-
lington street, near highway and' busi-
ness section, 1 acre lot.
TERMS—On " Chattels, • Cash. On
Property, one-third down, balance in e
months.
Miss Ella Metcalf, Proprietress.
George Nesbitt, Auctioneer,
George Powell, Clerk. 43.2.
GROVER CLARE'S
POOL ROOM.
• Billiards & Snack Bar
Ice Cream - Hot Dogs
Hamburgs and
Sandwiches.
Smokers' Sundries
1
• MM/'N1NNl.Id.►N.►IWII/W{HI.rfI1
AUCTIONEER
Experience, Courtesy and Satisfaction
Guaranteed.
Prompt Assistance Given in Arranging
Your Sale Problems.
Phone 151118, Blyth.
George Nesbitt, George Powell,
Auctioneer, Clerk,
62-22tf.
WATERLOO CATTLE BREEDING
ASSOCIATION
"For artificial insemination informa-
tion or service from all breeds of
cattle, phone the Waterloo Cattle
Breeding Association at; Clinton Hu -
2.2441, between 7:30 and 9:30 a.m. Wo
• have all breeds available—top quality
at low cost.
1VANTED
Old horses, 31/2c per pound. Dead
rattle and horses at value. Important
to phone at once, day or night. GIL-
BERT BROS. MINK RANCIH, Goderich,
Phone collect 1483J1, or 1483J4.
44 tf.
CRAWFORD &
HETI-IERINGTON
BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS
J. If.. Crawford, R. S. Hetherington,
• Q.C. Q.C.
11'ingham and Blyth,
iN BLYTH
EACH 'THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment.
Located in Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone Blyth, 104 , Wingham, 48
•NN.NNNNN.A.N •I I.P.V..I•.J
STEWART JOHNSTON
MASSEY-HARRIS SALES &
SERVICE.
BEATTY BARN EQUIPMENT. •
Phone 137 R 2, Blyth.
ROY N. BENTLEY
Public Accountant
GODERICH, ONT.
Telpcphone 1011 — Box 478
RONALD G. McCANN
Public Accountant
Office: Royal' Bank Building
Residence; Rattenhury 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, '
Optometrist)
FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33,
GODERICiI 25-61
J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Seaforth, Phone 791 -- Clinton
HOURS:
Senforth Daily Except Monday & Wed,
9:00 a.m, to 5:30 p.tn.
Wed. — 0:00 a.tn. to 12;30 p:m.
Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5:30.
Phone IIU 2-7010
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETRIST
PATRICK ST. • WINGHAM, ONT.
EVENINGS IW APPOINTMENT.
- Professional Eye Examination.
• Optical Service.
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, Senforth.
DIRECTORS:
J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. H. McEw-
ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton;
E. J. Trewnrtha, Clinton; J. E. Pep,><'r,
Brucefield; C. Ws Leonhnrdt, Bornholm;
H. Fuller. Goderich; R. Archibald, Sea.
forth; Allister Broadfoot, Seaforth,
AGENTS:
William Leiper, Jr., Londesboro: J.
F. Prueter, E-odhagen; Selwyn Bslr3;
Brussels; Eric Munroe, Seaford;.
ANNE 'I4IPST
_yo,n rte, co�.,eiot—
"Dear Anne. Hirst: When my
wife died three years ago, her
parents offered to raise our
little two-year-old boy, and I
gladly consented, They have
done a fine job with him, but
now I am in a most uncomfort-
able predicament , . , I recently
became engaged to a wonderful
girl of 22, whom my wife knew,
and we are planning to marry
the first of the year. My
parents-in-law, however, have
violently and unexpectedly op-
posed the marriage, and for the
first time in our affectionate
relationship I am 111 at ease,
"If we get married, shall we
take the boy to live with us as,
One•A-Day- Doilies
Thrifty! Easy! Takes less than
a day to crochet each of these
little doilies! Make them for your
own home, for hostess gifts.
Pattern 765: Crochet directions
for three small doilies in No. 50
cotton. Oval 8 x 13; piricapple
el; round doily 72 inches.
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern to Laura Wheeler, 123
Eighteenth St., New Toronto,
Ont. Print plainly PATTERN
NUMBER, your NAME and AD-
DRESS.
Our gift to you — two wonder-
ful patterns for yourself, your
home — prited in our Laura
Wheeler Needlecraft book for
1956! Dozens of other new de-
signs to order — crochet, knit-
ting, embroidery, iron -ons, nov-
elties. Send 25 cents for your
copy of this book NOW — with
gift patterns printed in it!
WHO NEEDS INTELLECT? — Her
stay in New York "was an intel•
Ischia! phase 1 went through,"
flays •J a y n e Mansfield, who
#urns her back on the "egg-
iiead" life as she enters a sports
tar on the Hollywood, Calif.,
,list of the studio for which she
works.
naturally, I want to do? Or
shall I give up the girl and waft
until I can find someone who
pleases them, too? TERRY"
GO AHEAD
* You will have a hard time
finding anybody who will
* please your wife's parents, It
'* is not at all unusual that such
* a couple resent any. girl tak-
* ing their daughter's place;
* added to that, these two are
* naturally reluctant to give up
* their grandson, It is a two-
* way wrench that has caused
* much too much ill feeling in .
* this world; revolving in their
* own small circle, they forget
* that life moves on and a good
* man is lonesome for a wo-
* man's companionship and for
* his son's. I hope you will go
* ahead with your plans.
* Your first consideration
* should be to see that your
* fiance and your boy get to
* know and like each other,
* Take him to visit her on
* week - end afternoons a n d
* plan engaging programs, so
* he will see her as part of
* them. She should do her best
* to win his confidence, and
probably will succeed,
* As your parents-in-law 'see
* the child progressing happily
* in his new family life, I hope
* they will relax and accept
* her. This is the usual result
* in such a situation.
* * *
SHALL THEY MARRY?
"Dear Anne Hirst: I am a
widower in my late 30's, with
a young daughter, I have fallen
in love with a girt of 20, whom
I knew in college. She is di-
vorcing her husband; we are
not seeing each other until it is
final, but I am sure she loves
me,
"I have a comfortable home,
and can give her the security
she has not had. We are tem-
peramentally attuned —in fact,
everything seems so very right
that I am wondering about the
fUture! My marriage was not
happy, so perhaps I am a bit
fearful , .
"I have read your column for
a long time, and I would value
•your opinion. ROGER"
* Unless there is an obstacle
* to this marriage that you
* have not confided, I see no
* reason why you should not
* gladly go ahead with your
r plans.
" You and this girl both have
• h a d disillusioning expert-
* ences, which will make you
* appreciate each other all the
* more. She is fond of your
* little girl, and the child seems
* to welcome her friendship, If
* you are weighing the differ-
* once in your ages, to my
• mind they do not matter. You
* two are entirely compatible,
* with the sane ideals and
* sensibilities, and your mar-
* riage should bring a serenity
• to three nice people.
In any troubled situation,
consult Anne Iiirst before you
get too deeply involveu, Her .
wide experience and warm
sympathy are yours for the
asking, and her counsel is safe
to follow. Write her at Box 1,
123 Eighteenth Street, New
Toronto, Ontario,
.*
Magic Killed Him
Every day scores of human
beings lose their lives by accid-
ent. Most accidents are due to
commonplace causes but occas-
ionally there are unusaul mis-
haps such as the Frenchman
who dozed off in front of the
tire. His wooden leg caught
alight and he was fatally bur-
ned.
Consider the case of the man
who was walking along with a
bottle of acid in his pocket. Some
•boys were throwing stones and
one hit the man's pocket, It
didn't leave a mark on him, but
it killed him. The bottle was
broken, and the acid escaped
and soaked into his body and
in half an hour he was dead.
In Jamaica, a few month ago,
a magician was performing at
a social function. For one of
his tricks he required the help
of twelve strong men from the
audience, Ile produced a rope
which he placed round his neck
and told six men to take one
end of the rope while the other
six took the other end.
At a given signal they were
to start a tug o' war, with hirn
in the middle. But something
went wrong, . the men pulled
and the magician was strangled
under the eyes of the horrified
audience.
Not so long ago a man who
wished to make a romantic con-
quest gave a girl some sweets
which he had doctored with a
love potion, The girl gave a
piece to another girl. But the
man had blundered, for instead
of the love potion he had mis-
takenly used a powerful poison,
end both girls died in agony.
QUEEN FOR A YEAR — Newly
crowned Miss America of 1957
shows her regal trappings in
Atlantic City. She's Marian Ann
McKnight, who, unlike other
beauty contest winners,' does
not plan to be an actress. Says
the queen: "1 think home life is
more important than a movie
career."
NMY SCIIOOL
LESSON
11Y ttt:'v• R HAkci AY
WARREN BA BD
The Creation Story
Genesis 1: 1.5, 9-12, 26.28, 31
Memory Selection: And God
saw everything that he had
made, and, behold, it was very
. good. Genesis 1:31
For this last quarter of the
year we have ap unique series
on thirteen of the great passages
of the Bible ranging from Gene-
sis to Revelation. Six of them
are from the Old Testament and
seven from the New Testament.
Each has a unique message for
Christian life and thought,
For this lesson we have the
creation htory,\ A scientist once
said, "There is no more possibil-
ity of the world being here as
a result of chance than of Web-
ster's Unabridged Dictionary re-
sulting from an explosion in a
printing plant." But from where
did the world come? We read in
Hebrews 11.3: "Through faith we
understand that the worlds were
framed by the word of God, so
that things which are seen were
not made of things which do ap-
pear." The Bible begins with•the
words, "In the beginning Cod."
God was before matter.
When did God create the
heavens and the earth? The I
Scriptures are indefinite as to
the period of time covered by
the first three verses, The Chris -
Can Century of March 3, 1954,
contained a brief summary of an
address in Nov Orleans by Dr,
Edward McCrady, one of Ameri-
ca's top nuclear physicists, We
quote: "Science today is faced
with the stark fact that creation
occurred at a definite time, he
said; studies in radioactivity
measurements of time show that
all the atoms of the universe sud-
denly came into being 5,07 bil-
lion years ago. Dr. McCrady ex-
pressed concern over the discov-
ery that an atomic explosion does
not just disperse or break up
matter, but causes it to cease to
exist." This estimate is in agree-
ment with geological estimates.
Albert Einstein taught us that
the fundamental units of matter
are but pin points of energy —
power. Whose power? The an-
swer is in the Bible's first verse.
Man was the crowning work of
God's creation. He did not
evolve from a monkey. He was
made in the image of God. The
likeness is seen in the mental
and moral features, such as rea-
son, personality and free will.
God is our Creator.
Modern
Etiquette....
Q. Is it good form to state In
an introduction, "i want to
make you acquainted with,
ere."?
A. This is considered very
bad form, as is the other oft -
used expreJsion, "Shake hands
with." It i:; much better to say,
"Mr. Jones, Mr. Williams." or,
"Mr. Jona, may I present vTr,
Williams?"
Q.Should one always use the
napkin before drinking from a
glass of water at the dinner
table?
A. Yes; this prevents any
chance of leaving an unsightiy
smudge of food on the rim of
the glass.
Q, What rules should be ob-
served in typewritten social
letters?
A. Single sheets of paper
should be used, written on one
side only. And your signature
should always be written by
hand.
Maw
• `"4 -t.
, • �/✓yam ✓
• � I p t
evtf'}-e7-, 000 yam..
HRONICLE
i1NGERFAR
Gwmdoli%e P. CIa,rk.¢ •
My goodness, our , two wee
grandsons have been here quite
a bit lately — and I haven't
said a word about them, Isn't
that almost unbelievable —
coming from a grandmother?
Edward is only one week short
of four months old and 11e is
the happiest, most contented
little fellow I ever knew. And
that is not just the view of a
doting grandmother. Many other
people • have said the same
thing. Even his mother says he
is easier to look after than Dave
ever was in his baby days,
David, of course,• is no longer a
baby. He is quite the little boy
and very proud of his "brud-
der," Dee was quite worried be-
fore the baby arrived in case
David might be jealous. But
there isn't a sign of it, possibly
because his parents have always
been careful to give Dave a sense
of possession — Edward is
David's baby as well as mum-
rr.y's; David's brother and David
is given the privilege of helping
to carry the cot or carriage into
the house and to run around and
get this and that for baby .br•o-
thcr. So it is all working out
very nicely and everybody is
happy. It is very nice to have
two little boys come to visit in-
stead of one, One is better than
none at all but an only child
needs so much careful training
if he is to grow up unselfish and
unspoilt.
Well, I suppose there has been
plenty of complaining about the
unseasonably cold, wet weather.
Yesterday was miserable' and as
Partner and I drove along No.
6 Highway and across country
we noticed smoke coming from
a good many chimneys, includ-
ing the farmhouse belonging to
friends in the Hespeler district
whom we were visiting for the
first time for over a year. That
smoke curling upward from the
chimney was a very welcome
sign. The house was as warm as
the welcome we received. This
farm as one of the few where
the grain harvest had been com-
pleted but of course there is
still the silo to fill, I don't think
1 ever as in a country garden
where there were so many beau-
tiful flower's — almost every
kind you could think of — an-
nuals, perennials, shrubs — all
with a profusion of bloom. The
women -folk in that family cer-
tainly have a' green thumb —
but hoof they ever keep up with
the work I don't know. It
grieved me to look around and
think that so much of "the
glory of the .garden" will soon
be lost — it will take only one
killing frost to do it.
While the women' of the
party were admiring gardens,
turkeys,- dogs and new-born
calves the men were "walking"
the farm — over the ravine and
through the bush and. the back
fields, discussing the merits and
disadvantages of the farm as a
whole — as farmers always do.
when they get together.
Here, at Ginger Farm, there
was a little extra activity this
morning, ' The stock truck came
in to 'take a cow and calf to
market, Partner was anticipat-
ing a little trouble in loading
the cow. Bdt he needn't have
worried. Livestocktruckers are
better equipped to deal with -per-
verse animals than they used to
be. A ramp with sides is lower-
ed from the back of the truck
to fit..inside the stable door and
the cattle, with a little persua-
sion from the rear, have no op-
tion but to walk into the truck,
There is no excuse these days
for livestock to arrive at the
stockyards bruised and beaten.
Thank goodness we have finally
reached the stage when care is
usually exercised so. that our
dumb animals are not subjected
to needless suffering. Years ago
I used to dread seeing a drover
drive into the yard. I remember
one drover Partner refused to
do business with at all. He was
excellent at selling but terribly
rough with the cattle. We pre-
ferred a man — maybe not
quite so smart but certainly
more humane.
Our next worry will be sell-
ing the old hens — and that will
be another story. Always, as soon
as the first hen is caught the
birds get scared and fly all over
the place, Maybe the time will
come when a specially wired in
truck will be invented so that I
hens like cattle, could just be
driven into the truck. I can't
see any reason why some such '
contrivance couldn't be invent-
ed — with movable partitions
for use in going from 'one call
to another, .
Partner Is very busy these
days rounding up useless wood
lying around the place, such as
neckyokes and whiffle=trees.
They make excellent fuel for
the fireplace. Of course the end
pieces . are salvaged for ,scrap
iron. Like all, other farm folk
we have an aful accumulation
,of stuff, saved because ,"it might
come in handy sometime," But
ISSUE 41 — 1956
atter all what is the use Of
horse-drawn equipment after the
the team Is gone? Partner gave
all his harness away a few yearn
ago but there is still plenty of
other stuff around — enough to
keep the fireplace going for
quite awhile.
Coating the inside of silver
salt shakers with clear nail
polish prevents tarnish and cor-
rosion caused by the salt. When
the polish is dry, prick the
holes with a pin to allow, the
salt to flow freely.
NEW PRINTED' PATTERN
EASIER—FASTER
MORE ACCURATE
PRINTED PATTP" \T
It's our new PRINTED Pat.
tern! What a sewing buy for
you! ONE yard 54 -inch fabric
is all you need for each of these
styles; •short -sleeve blouse, jerk:
in, and skirt. Make them in
jiffy time!
Printed Pattern 97762: Misses'
Sizes 10, 12, 19, 16, 18. Blouse,
jerkin, skirt; each take 1 yard
54 -inch fabric in all given sizes.
Directions printed on each tis-
sue pattern part. .Easy-to-use,
accurate, assures perfect fit.
Send THIRTY • FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern. Print plainly SIZE,
NAME, ADDRESS, STYLI
NUMBER.
Send order to ANNE ADAMS,
123 Eighteenth St., New Toron.
to, Ont,
"Corn Starch Makes Tastier Entrees"
10100
BEEF PATTIESSAUCE
WITH ONION
IA cup MAZOLA Salad 011
3 cups peeled, sliced onions
2 bouillon cubes
2 cups boiling wafer
2 tablespoons BENSON'S or CANADA
Corn Starch
IA cup cold water
'A teaspoon salt
r/s teaspoon pepper
1 pound minced beet
s/4 teaspoon salt
'/s teaspoon pepper
HEAT MAZOLA in deep frying pan.
ADD onions; cook over medium heat until deep
DISSOLVE bouillon cubes In boiling
brown, stirring well. water; add
slowly to browned onions. Corn Starch with cold
MIX BENSON'S, or' CANADA
waters stir Into onion mixture. constantly.
COOK. until clear and thick, stirring conshot,
ADD salt and pepper; cover and keep
COMBINE minced beef, salt t and
pfrypp
orrbroil.
SHAPE into six thick potties; pour r sauce over patties and
ARRANGE on plotter;
serve immediately.
YIELDS 6 servinlrs•
NMI OWN..
For free folder of other
delicious recipes, write toe
Jane Ashley,
Home Service Department,
. THE CANADA STARCH COMPANY
LIMITED
P.0. sox 129 Montreal, C.Q.
Automation Began
Centuries Ago
There's nothing new! Wonder
a the twentieth century, Ruto-
ration, first appeared in Britain
*early 200 years ago, when a man
named Arkwrlght brought auto -
:nation Into .the cotton industry
Ind proved It would work for the
good of everyone.
Arkwrlght, who started life as
a barber, was run out of Preston
by the guilds for cutting his
price. For thirty years he lived.
on the edge of starvation, cutting
hair, making wigs and doing odd
jobs, His wife died of malnutri-
tion and his children never wore
boots,
His second wife had a bank
balance, but they squandered it
between them, And by the time
he was middle-aged he had only
one suit and that was so shabby
that he never went out until it
was dark.
He developed an idea for a
spinning jenny — a machine that
would spin carded cotton — and
took it to a Preston philanthrop-
ist named Smalley. Smalley
thought it was worth develop-
ing end paid Arkwright a week-
ly wage while he a worked on the
model,
In 1769 11 was put on the mar-
ket. Five years later Arkwrlght
was wealthy but the most detest-
ed man in Lancashire,
Then he invented a machine
that handled raw thread at one
end and gave out woven thread
at the other. This made him so
famous and to powerful that he
was able to persuade Parliament
to remove the excessive tax on
cotton. ,
The workers,- however, could
see nothing but poverty ahead of
them. His machines cut down
manpower by over one half, They
threatened his life. So Arkwright
tearlessly met them and promised
that, if only they would be pa-
tient, there would be work for
all of them, far more, than they
could cope with.
They didn't believe him. They
threw stones at him, broke the
windows of his home and even
tried to smash his machines,
Arkwrlght was right and the
workers were wrong. The tax
relief made cotton goods cheaper,
the new machines turned It out
faster than ever before, Orders
rolled in from ell parts of the
world — orders so huge that,
without his machines, the indus-
try could not have coped with
them. Factories doubled and
trebled their staffs, and Lance -
'hire rode on the crest of the
leave,
Ten years after inventing his
spinning jenny Arkwrlght own-
ed a string of mills In Chorley.
Then a distaatrous fire destroy-
ed them all. A few years earner
such a catastrophe would have
thrown hundreds of workers on
the scrap heap for years, but the
other mills were able to absorb
them, while Arkwright still had
sufficient money to build more
mills at Nottingham and bring
prosperity to that city too.
Before he died he was employ-
ing 5,000 people who, for the first
time in their lives, knew the com-
fort of regular employment,
"My wife says that if I die she
will remain a widow." .
"She must think there's not
another man like you,"
"No. She's afraid there is,"
CANT TOTEM- These kids
couldn't budge 'em, • no matter
how hard they tried. Totems
which make up this Alaska -style
totem pole were carved on the
spot. It brings good luck to a
novelty shop proprietor, who
finds 11 lures camera -toting
tourists.
DOUBLE PLAY BALL Bill Virdon of the Pirates is out at second
as Junior Gilliam throws to first base to complete the double
play in the first inning of the Brooklyn -Pirate game in Pittsburgh.
Candles And Honey
Go Together
Usually a business goes from
father or mother to son, In the
case of John and Beatrice Ross,
Proprietors of the Ross Candle
House on Bearskin Neck, in
Massachusetts, the parents are
following a path blazed by their
son — a path lined with bee-
hives, and flowing not with
milk and honey, but with bees-
wax and honey.
When the Rosses' son, Robert,
was about 12, he went from
their home In Lawrence, Mass,,
to North Andover on frequent
visits to an uncle and there be-
came Interested in bees. He had
hives in the orchard at his
uncle's home where the bees
had an abundance of fruit blos-
soms from which to•make their
honey. Later, he started hives
at home in Lawrence and at the
home of another uncle in Derry,
N.H., whe{'e he spent some of
his summers.
He extracted the honey and
his mother sought ways to use
the fragrant beeswax. She ex-
perimented with candlemaking
and, one at a time, made 32 for
disply at the Topsfleld (Mass.)
Fair. She worked till 3 o'clock
in the morning to finish the lot
before entering them in the
fair, Her reward was first prize.
" The trick in making hand- .
dipped candles` is to get them
smooth and perfectly shaped
without "wrinkles' in them,
Mrs, Ross explained.
At one time Robert had 300
hives in various places, includ-
ing a summer camp where the
family spent vacations. Bees-
wax accumulated and Mrs, Ross
continued her candlemaking,
She worked out a way of mak-
ing two at a time, then three,
and finally four, She exhibited
at the Topsfield Fair grain and
again and began selling candles•
there and gathering in blue
ribbons like .a honey crop each
season,
Then Mr. Ross devised for
her a "machine" at which she
can make 10 candles in an hour.
"See Beeswax Candles Being
Made Here" readsa sign in the
window of the Ross Candle
Shop which Mr. and Mrs, Ross
are now operating for the sec-
ond summer, On Saturdays
when the largest number of
visitors stroll along . Bearskin
Neck, lingering over the dis-
plays in the quaint little shops
that hug either -side of the lane„
the Candle House will be
crowded with eager watchers,
Mrs. Ross wprks over an elec-
trically heated double boiler -
which Mr, Ross rigged up for
her, Above it on a metal rod
which extends up from it, there
are supporting metal crossbars.
On each end of these •there is
a strip of wood to which 'four
candlewicks of equal length are
tied, each with a small weight
at the bottom. The crossbars
turn on the center rod,
As one set of strings comes
up from the liquid wax, drips,
'and dries, the bars are turned
so the next four can go down.
13y the time the rods revolve so
the first set of strings get an-
other turn, the wax on these
has dried sufficiently for the
next dippping,
DMOVERS HOME
SKIN REMEDY
This clean Stainless antiseptic,
known all over Canada as
! OONE'S EMERALD OIL, brings
sufferers prompt and effective re-
lief
akin trouble. e nItching Eczess e-
ma—Itching ma—Itching Scalp—Itching Toes
and Feet, etc,
1100NE'S• EMERALD OIL Is
pleasant to use and It is no nntl-
metitlo and penetrating that many
old stubborn cases of long atnndlbg
have yielded to Its Influence,
3100NE'S EMERALD OIL is
sold by druggists everywhere. A
real discovery for lhousnntle who
have found blessed relief,
- Thus the candles are made
by the hand -dipping process
with the aid of Mr, Ross' little
device which multiplies the
hourly production from one to
16. Each candle is dipped and
dripped 50 times before it is
completed.
The Rosses sell other candles
as well as their own beeswax
ones, Those of wax have the
special virtue of standing with-
out melting, through any kind
of summer heat,
Mr, and Mrs. Ross also sell
extracted wildflower honey and
honey spread, as well as comb
honey, wtih various accessories
for both honey and candles —
attractive honey pots, candle
holders, snuffers, and so forth,
Brass is a perfect holder for the
natural beeswax candle, says
Mrs. Ross, because of the
beautiful blending of the na-
tural colors,
Mr, Ross and his son set up
a solar extractor at their home
in Lawrence tp take the honey
from the comb and melt the
wax, In the melting process any
dirt In the wax drops to the
bottom, leaving the clear wax
above, The capping wax with
which the bees .cap each cell of
their comb is especially desir-
Able and makes a candle of a
richer nd unusual shade, The
wax is, of course, merelted as it
is needed for the candlemaking,
(By Jessie Ash Arndt In 'the
Christian Science Monitor,)
Tools Of The Trade
Crippled by an incurable dis-
ease a clever crook devised a
series of brilliant crimes and
fashioned the keys which made
them possible. Sentenced to
three years' imprisonment re-
cently he heard his fate im-
passively and then bequeathed
his collection of instruments to
Scotland Yard's Black Museum,
This museum contains a
unique and weird collection of
exhibits linked with violent
crimes of the past.
The folding ladder used by
Charles Peace for his burglaries
and the concertina case he hid
it in; knives and daggers used
in various crimes; false arms
and legs used in disguises; the
hat and gloves belonging to
Crippen and the boy's clothes
worn by Ethel Le Neve when
she fled with him to Canada--
' they are all there.
Among "tools of the trade"
are assorted safebreakers' in-
struments, jemmies and keys.
Other implements include ham-
mers and saws and the mallet '
which Rouse used on an un-
known man whose remains
were found in a burned -out car.
But Scotland Yard is not the
`
„..,CANADA'S FINEST
Ol.G AR E TT
only police headquarters to
have a crime museum. The
Paris police also have an odd
collection of curios, Here are
queer - looking . revolvers and
knives and apparently harmless
cane which contain a sword or
stilletto designed to come free
at a wrench.
Other walking sticks are
merely disguised guns or con-
traptions from which hidden
blades shoot out at the touch
of a secret button.
Among all these grim • weap-
ons is a woman's stocking, a
dainty thing but with one pe-
culiarity; it has no toe. It was
used by an enterprising French
womos shoplifter.
Having selected an article,
she dropped 11 on the floor,
then, her movements screened
by a long skirt, she slipped her
foot out of her shoe, picked up
the article with her toes and
transferred it to a large pocket
in her skirt!
There's an easy way and a
messy way of painting a chair,
You've probably been caught.
by the messy way — painting
the outside ,of the legs and
rungs first, then having to
reach through to paint the in-
side parts. The easy way is this;
Turn the chair upside down on
a table and paint the under-
neath parts first, Put it back on
its feet, then finish the legs,
Next do the back, When you
leave the top of the seat until
.the last, you can steady the
chair while dabbing Into diffi-
cult corners,
YOU CAN DEPEND ON
Wbes Wdeey, till to
nmors aces eotdh
pad meta, beak-
Mbe, and feeling,
disturbed cal often
follow, Dodd's
Richey Rile etimu•
late kidneys to
normal duty. You
fed better -deep
better, work better.Get dodd's at any
drug Nora You .o
&peed aa Dodd'a
CLASSIFIED
AGENTS WANTED
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friends etc, Five million Canadian
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Laboratory, 109 Bay St, Toronto.
GO INTO BUSINESS for yourself. Sell
exclusive houseware products and ap-
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These items are not sold In stores,
There is no competition, Profits up to
500%, Write Immediately for free color
catalogue with retail prices shown.
Separate confidential wholesale price
will he included Murray Sales, 3822 St,
Lawrence, Montreal.
BABY CHICKS
STARTED chick bargains, two three
and four weeks old, for Immediate de-
livery also day Old chicks, All. popular
breeds, non sexed pullets and cock-
erels, Also first generation. Indian
River cross First Generation Arbor
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Beltsville, Book now for fall, winter
and spring delivery, Catalogue,
TW' DDLE CIIICK HATCHERIES LTD.
FERGUS ONTARIO
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - ENTIRE BEEF HERD -
Cows and Calves. Apply P.O. Box 127,
• Brantford, Ontario.
NEW guns and rifles at wholesale
prices; write for our wholesale prices
before buying. TransCanada Whole-
sale Co„ Box 852, Ottawa, Ont.
MEDICAL
DONT DELAY! Every sufferer of
Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis should try
DIXON'S REMEDY,
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE,
33S Blain Ottawa
51.23 Express Prepaid
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping akin troubles,
Post's Eczema Salve will not disap-
point you. Itching, scaling and burn.
Ing eczema; acne, ringworm, pimple•
and foot eczema will respond readily
to the stainless, odorless ointment re-
gardless of how stubborn or hopeless
they seem.
lent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE $2.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
2145 SR Clair Avenue East,
TORONTO
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
100 NIGHTCLUB Jokes, 1l. 100 Race-
track Jokes 11, 100 Outer Space Jokes,
$1, Eddie Gray, 242 West 72nd Street,
ew York 23, N,Y,
ADVERTISING
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America's Greater. S Stem
Illustrated Catalog Free
Wilto or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS
338 Nloor St, W„ Toronto
Brancbe'
44 King SL ilamllton
72 Rideau • bit., Ottawa •
• OPPORTUNITIES
MEN and WOMEN
TELEGRAPHERS wanted, We traits and
secure position. Plan a future.
STENOGRAPHERS wanted. Ten' wecki
home course qualifies with ABC Sys
' tem, Free folder either course, Came
Systems, 7 Superior Ave., 'Toronto,
' PATENTS
THE RAMSAY COMPANY, Patent At.
torneya, 273 Bank Street, Ottawa of.
fere to every inventor full Information
free, on potent procedures,
FETHERSTONHA UGH & Comp an y,
Patent Attorneys, Established 1890,
600 University Arc., 'Toronto Patents
all countries,
PERSONAL
HEARING AIDS, used good condition,
119.95 and $18!J5 complete. Acousticon,
148 Wellington West, Toronto.
11.00 TRIAL offer. rwentydlve deluxe
personal requirements. Latest cats•
ogue Included The Medico Agency,
Bac 22, Terminal "Q". Toronto. Olt.
SALESMAN WANTED
WANTED; A real live salesman to take
orders for one of Canada's oldest este.
bushed Chick Hatcheries. Liberal com
mission paid Box 140, 123 Eighteenth
Street, New Toronto,
TWINE
WOULD you like a weanling wow or
boar from one of our outstanding sows
which had a litter of 17. Breeding
counts and It will pay you to buy Lan -
drone from Targe litters, We have them.
Also four month old sows and boars,
guaranteed In pig sows, and serviceable
boars. Prices you can afford to pay.
Catalogue.
FERGUS LANDRACE SWINE FARM
FERGUS ONTARIO
WANTED
WANTED to buy - Hey - Applp
P.O. Box 127, Brantford. Ontario.
ISSUE 41 — 1956
Don'tgnok¥ouriiookourl
Insist on the anti -freeze
that takes over
where others stop
RESTON
BRAND ANTI -FREEZE
RSS -
If you want your car to run smoothly anti
economically this winter, the cooling sys-►
tem has to work effibiently. Freeze-up
protection is Less than half the battle.
Almost any anti -freeze prevents freezing
-but "Preston" Anti -Freeze guards
against foaming, rust, clogging, ruinous
corrosion—and will end overheating
hazards which help cause low gas mileage
• and excessive piston wear.
So don't believe it if you hear that all
anti -freezes aro the same. Don't stick
• your neck way out. "Prestono" Brand
Anti -Freeze with Polar Film gives you
freeze-up protection PLUS ... the cool-
ing system conditioning you must have
to keep your engine running smooth and
easy all winter long.
Insist on "Prestono" Anti -Freeze ! Look
for tho 'Green Tag' attached to the
radiator, your assurance that "Preatone"
Brand Anti -Freeze has been installed.
PPr*uone," "Eveready"and "Prima" are resteterrd trade mark:.
NATIONAL CARBON COMPANY
pav,;ioN OP UNION CARBIDE CANADA LIMITED
toRoN o
'PAtdtsi A
SPECIALS FOR YOU
BREAKFAST CLUB 2 -FRUIT MARMALADE,
LARGE 24.OZ. JAR 25c
CATELLI 'COOKED SPAGHETTI,
2 15.OZ, TINS 25c
PILLSBURY WHITE CAKE MIX PKG. 29c
SATISFACTION GUARAN7UD,
•
PHONE 156 --- WE DELIVER.
-444-++4+4-44-44-444-44+44++41+444444-4+4+44f
i I
BLYTH BEAUTY BAR
YOUR BEAUTY — YOUR BUSINESS AND MINE
STOP AT THE
B B B
FOR API'OINTMIENTS I'IIONE 143,
N N +� . N •++�
4-44-444-444-4444-4-444444-4-44-4-44-44444-4.44-4 4-444
LONDF Sf3O110 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tamhlyn spent
I the holiday with their daughter, Mar.
The LJniesbcr. W. I. met in the garet, in Leamington.
C'o:nr.unity Hall on Thursday, Oct. 4 Mrs. Margaret Manning celebrated
vii:: th Fre:idcnt, Mrs. S. Lyon, pre- her 89th birthday on Saturday, October
:cling. Th' meeting opened as usual 1. •ijte Grandmothers of the village
e :ecrctary•lrcasurer, Mrs. A. C1arr, ' called on her In the evening and spent
reed the minutes of the last meeting an enj.yable tirne with her.
which were appp_ved. The correspon-
dence was dealt with and Mrs, Llu;d
Pipe was appointed to attend the Lan-
don Area Convention. Roll call wo!
cnswered by "giving your grandmoth-
'r's maiden name. Thr W.I. are cater-
ii:z to the }fullett Tewry,hip Federatioo
Banquet, Oct. 25th. Rev. J. T. \Vhitc
gave a very in-piring Thank living men
c_gc. Mrs. Stanley Lyon gave a read-
ing on "The life of Thomas Edison'
Mrs. Claire Vincent sang a solo. Mrs.
John Scott gave- a reading, visa Mrs
Jac:: ^,I^Ewing. Mrs, Thos. Allen gave
us two accordion solos. As it was the
;:rindmothers meeting the Grandmoth-
ers Club was entertained and Mrs.
Mrs. Margaret Manning, wiry is pres-
ident of the club, gave a humorous
reading. The meeting closed with the
ringing of the Queen and lunch war
tervcd.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Agnew of Chc•slry
I Miss Lovina Knox, of Toronto, with
her parents over the holiday.
Mr. and Mrs. \Vm. Chowen and dough '
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gibson and son
Mrs. Florence Chcwen, visited• on Su !-
day with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Knox.
Mr, and Mrs. Harry Lear returned or
Saturday fr_m their wedding trip and
are )lyse; on the farm ,an the 13th of
}fullett. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Lear
have moved to our village.
The snipathy of the village and com-
munity goes out to Mrs. Donald Ken• ,
nedy and family and Mr. and Mrs
Stephen \Vellhanks and family in their
recent sudden bereavement. .
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cardiff, Mrs.
Kate Bremner of Ethel, with Mrs. Bea.
com, Edythe and Harold. Mrs. Brem-
ner remained for a few days.
Mr. and Mrs W. Wells and DouglaJ
of Clinton, with Mrs. R. Youngblut.
!pent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. W EQ �p a
K. Govier and ?qrs. Lillie Webster, i Mission �Vlnd
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Radford and'
Joan, rpent the weekend v.'ith frienrii
in Niagara Falls.
Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Miller spent Sur.-
day and Monday with Mr. and Mr,
Frank Potter.
Miss Dorothy Little ._ f Toronto spent
the week -end at her home here.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Garrow, Valerie
Vicki and Jcan, of Trenton, with Mr
and Mrs. Bort Shobbrook.
Miss Frances Lynn or Toronh, and
Miss Phyllis Ohr, (-1 Edmonton, Alta,.
spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs
Stanley Lyon.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Andrews and Greg-
ory, of Toronto, with Mr. and Mrs, Ed-
win Wood,
Dr. and Mrs, Rnbt. Grierr:n, Mrs• J
Barker, of Toronto, spent the week -end
in the village.
•
•
Supper & Bazaar
IN •BLYTii UNITED CHURCH
BASEMENT ON
Sat., October 20th e
A fi wedriiatig ; Oad Ill.! 1i
W: A. MEETING ST i''VV'Ai T9s '' :-.....:14444
The September meeting of the Blyth . AT WORTCOR PLAY, IIAVE .PEP. EACH DAX ::
United Church W.A. was held on Tues- Reil & White Food, Store. " ,
day atter noon In the church hall at To keep that tryone of our vitamin' roducts,'.
2;30 o'clock,• Phone 9; We Deliver -Blyth pep, p..
Mrs, Franklin Batnton, the 1st . vice They are. sure to help you retain':vim,
president, presided over the meeting in "The Best for Less" vigor and vitality
the absence of the president, Mrs, Lu-
ella McGowxt. The mating was' epee)• _.___ One -a -Day Tablets (vitamin A & D) $1.35
ed by use of the theme hymn and by Quaker Corn Flakes ` .-
repeating the Lord's Prayer, Hymn 28C (lee)• 22c One -a -Day Multiple Tablets $1.40 and'$2.50.;
was sung and the scripture read by Mrs
Gnrlleld Doherty, rending the 23rd Hereford Corned Beef , Cod Liver Oil Capsules (100's) ; , , , , $1.35.
psalm. The theme, "The Lard is my ,
Shepherd," was read by Mrs. Dan Mc• Tin • 37e Vl-Cal-ser 12 Capsules $1.95 and $4.95 .,
Kenzie who also offered prayer. • Mrs.
1 Harald Vodden and Mrs. Doherty fav- Faeelle Tissue. . . 2 pkgs. 33c
Oared with a cruet number all enjoyed 1
Cum -
entitled, "How he must have loved me." .
The minutes of the June meeting were THIS WEEK'S PREMIUMS
read by the Secretary, Mrs. Sadie Cum• Bexel Capsules.(for children) , .. , , $2.93
ing. The date of the annual church Wedgewood Imported Eng
bazaar has been set for early In Nevem' , , + Wampole's, Extract Cod Liver , , , $1.35 •
.her. Business of the day moved and llsh Dinnerware, cdnsisting
carried. The reports of various commit- Maltlevol (for extra vitamins) $2,00
tees were given. Group 4 announced a Of : Cup and Saucer, Fruit ,i'
bake sale to be held at the home of Na ie Bread and Butter ImRMiss Margaret Hirons. Group 1 to pt•o- pp , R.D.. P1 -1P h ,l 1 1 B
vide flowers for the 79th church anni-
versary. The meeting closed with the ' Plate, Dinner Plate
Vitasol M Capsules (high. potency) , $4.80
Geriplex Capsules (for folks 50 yrs. & older) $2.95
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, 1VALLPAPER — PHONE 20, BLYTH
benediction. The Grace was sung andI,.4i..�.H44444•44-44- ,•,0•+�4+*•+a.+•+4444- H►+H4+444•+,►• +44
lunch was served by the ladies of group For Only $1.99 with $5.00
three.
RIPE BLACK BERRIES
1 Purchase
We have enjoyed during the pas' by,Mr. Russell Bentley, of Blyth, They
week a few ripe btaek berries, picked were of excellent taste and large size
News Of Walton
The Women's Association of Duff's' Sandwiches, cookies, chocolate milk and
United Church was held last Tuesday,! tea are' to be served. The following
Oct:-ber 2nd, in the church basement, i invitations were read and accepted: the
The president, Mrs. F, Walters, opened Autumn Thankoffering, Oct. 11 at 2:15
the, meeting with the singing of hymn to be held In Bethel church. Thankot-
254, "The Lord's my Shepherd I'll not 'tering, Oct, 9, at 8 p.m., to be held In
Want," followed by repeating the Mary' Union Church, guest speaker, Miss
Stewart Collect, In unison. The Bible Clare McGowan, of Blyth; Oct, 17 at :?
reading, taken from the 85111 psalm pan, to be held In Blyth Church; Oct.
was taken by , Mrs. Clarence Martin 24, nt 2:30 p.m. to be held et Duff's Me.
and Mrs. Walters gave meditation on Killop, with Mrs. Jas. Scott as guest
same and offered prayer. Mrs. B. John- ' speaker. The Walton Thank-offer-
ston, the secretary, read the minutes and in; service Is to be held November
' Holland's -Food Market
Mrs. N. Reid gave the financial state- 12th in Duff's church, comment-
ment In the absence of Mrs. Coutts, ' ing at 8 o'clock with Mass M. Pale -
having a balance icf $204.09 on hand. ! thorpe, Missionary from Korea, as guest
The date of the fowl supper, which had speaker. It_was decided to invite Beth- ,
been changed to the end of October !el, Duffs, Winthrop, Moncrief, Union,
It was decided to buy extra dishes In 1 and the Anglican ladies, Lunch will'
pink, also dinner plates, Mrs, Andrew , be served consisting of sandwiches and
Turnbull and Mrs. Wm. Bennett were squares or cup cakes. The Devotional
op:moined delegates to attend the semi- service. "Conversation on Korea," taken
annual meeting of the W.A. to be het'] j from "Destined to be Sons" wQs taken
at the Goshen Church, November 1 ; by Mrs, B. Kirkby, Mrs. J. Clarke, and
The November meeting to be held Nov i Mrs. E, Mitchell, The purpose being:
ember 6. The hymn 270 "We Praise 1 (1) To see the church in Korea in rela-
Thee 0 G:d Redeemer Creator" was tion to the explosive area where It Is
sung and closed with the Theme Pray-
er. witnessing, (2) 'Pa strengthen the bonds
of christian love between our people
• .. W. M. S. (3) To Challenge the interest and con-
The October meeting of the Women's , cern of our members thnt greater sitar -
Missionary Society followed with the . ing may result. Thp meeting closed ;'
president, Mrs. B. McMichael, in charge. ! with hymn 26, followed with prayer by
The hymn 277 "We Plough the Fields Mrs. McMichael.
and Scatter" was sung with Mrs. Jack SLIDES TO BE SHOWN- Agent for The
Bryans presiding at the piano. The
Theme
slides will be shown in the .
Theme of the meeting was "A Dwelling schoolr2om of the church Friday, Oct,1
Place of God." An introduction tie Eph' 19 at 8 pm, by Miss Flora Turnbull, . ' ! ,
esians was taken by Mrs..McMlcharl on her trip to Europe and the British ! :
choosing .as her bible readings, F.phes• I Isles under the auspices of the 8th ofwith automatic picture control 2
sans 1: 22, 23; 4; 4.8 and 11; 16, Ephes•
f
1 Morris and 16th of Grey Group.
ions 2; 19-22, Prayer was offered, The
I SUCCESSFUL BAZAAR HELD
roll call was answered by a Thanks•! Large bouquets of gladioli formed n
giving verse and minutes were read by beautiful setting for the bazaar held rn
he secretary, Mrs. F. Kirkhy, Mrs. N. 1 the school room of Duff's United Church '
Reid and Mrs. D. Wagon were appoint on Friday afternoon, sponsored by the
d delegates to attend the sectional 8th of Motels and 16th of Grey group.
meeting at BrucefIcld'on 'Thursday, Mr t.. I Rev, W, M. Thomas acted as chairman True Fidelity Sound in Every Model.
Achilles reported n balance 'an hand of Rev.
for the program which opened with r
67.24. In reporting for Christian Fel- • Devotional period. Mrs. Harald Small- owship Mrs, Watson rears an article •on, don sang n solo for the 17th of Grey ,
lcoholism. `The missionary monthly and Boundary group with Mrs. Jack
ecretary, Mrs. T. Dundas, would--
ould like., Bryans as accompanist. Mrs. Thomas
ny new or renewed subscriptions to be told a number of stories for Walton ;'r�+•444+444.4;4 44+, ••-•"++.44+.4.444.441,44.4.+444.444.4...
44+-•-•1+•* -•+4_e+••H♦, 444.444-4-•t
n as soon as possible int order to bei
ure of your first copy in January com• 1 group and representing the McKillop
ng on schedule, The WMS pjan to group was Mrs. R. McMichael, who gave vr....rN........,........•.....r........ w•IttNv...i
I Thomas declared the
4k•-•-• +444 ••+NA -•-•4+44+••• 444 l4444444444444444•+4•N+•
STOP 13 SHOP 4
, at Holland's Food Market This Week-Ei'id.
Marshmallow White Half Lb. '19c
Mixed Filled Cookies _ Lb. 29c
Lushus Jelly Powders 3 for 25c
Lushus (Shirriff's) Instant Pudding , , ,•, 2 for 19c
Cheez Whiz large 55c
Dole's Pineapple (crushed tidbits) 10 oz, 2 fork 29c
Johnston's Liquid Wax 59c
Old Dutch Bleach (64 oz.) 39c
AND LOCKER SERVICE.
jTelephone 39 -- WE DEADER tit++4 •+� • +•-�-4-•44 ha•.+-..-4+4�-•++•+++•-4 ,
VODHEN ELECTRIC SHOP
YOUR WESTINGHOUSE DEALER
"You can be sure, if it's Westinghouse"
NEW PHILIPS CHANNELOCK TELEVISION
SERIES "400"
with focalite tuning eye - a Philips exclusive.
FROM 5 TO 7 O'CLOCK $
Admission 60c and 35e. 1
'Will Be Remembered By Institute s
Barry Mailloux, who overturned hl! a
prix ate plane in Like Huron, Satu:dar I I
1
PHONE 71112 --- BI,YPR, ONT.
right, is the older brother of Frances
Mailloux, who Institute members will
remr�.nber, Frances singing with Carol
Marks at an Institute meeting 2 years
rigy in Blyth,
The Establishment of
entertain the baby Band at the Nov. F a reading. 11 r. oma c Now.
enter!commencing at 1:30
bazaar open and the busiest place for ' Now is the time to put your Pullets in the Laying
meetingmothers are invited to come at 3 pan p.m. The a time was the baktn r counter whish
was in charge of Mrs. Ken McDona'.'h, Pen, and put them on
Mrs, Andrew Turnbull, Mrs, Jack Bry-
ans and Mrs. C. Martin. Candy coun-
ter, Mrs. Wm. Turnbull, White elephant.
Mrs. Harold Bolger. Following the sale
of goods a very dainty tea was served
at tables decorated with bouquets of
fall flowers. Mrs. T. Dundas thanked
the ladies on behalf of all the groups
'for the very pleasant afternoon. About
$100 was realized at the bazaar,
World -aide Colnmu!alon was observed
in Duff's United Church on Sunday
lmorning with Rev. W M. Thomas con-
ducting the service. Miss Joyce Ham-
ilton, Miss Norma Hoegy and Mr, Bar-
ry Hoegy joined the church by Profes-
sion of Faith, and Mr, and Mrs, Jan
• Van Vilet, Miss Corrie deReuther, and
Mr. and Mrs. John Simpson, by cert!.
Reale. The choir rendered the an.
them, "I Exalt Thcec' and solo
"Lead MeWill Home", was sung bya Mrs,
Herb Travis. The service next Sunday
morning will be in charge of Rev. Cross
of Monkton.
' The Canadian Girls In Training will
meet In the church next Sunday after-
noon. -.
Mr. Wayne McMichael, Windsor, vis-
ited at the home of his parents, ]11r, by pis wife and family the end of last with`his parents, Mr, and Mrs. Leslie
and Mrs. Ti. McMichncl• !heikr..
weOliver. •
r. David Itackwell of Pieton spent anti Mrs, Geo. Kirkby, Ian, Bev I Miss Ione Watson of Etobicoke anti
several days with his parents, Mr. and erley and Patsy, of Burwash, spent the Miss Verde Watson, Stratford, seam
Mrs. W. C. llackwell. 1 week -end -Milt Mr, and Mrs, Herb 13 the wehk-end with their parents, Ms.
Mr. and Mrs. John Linton of Windsor Kirkby and Mr. Charles Murray, and Mrs. D. Watson.
and Mrs. Bob.Mowbray of Toronto were Mr, and Mrs, Nenle Reid, Dennis Mr. and Mrs. J. Lemont visited at
Sunday visitors with Miss Mary Ellen rind Eric, and Mrs. Reid, Sr., visited the home of Mr. and Mrs,, Lloyd Por -
Mowbray. over Thanksgiving with Mr, and Mrs ' ter for the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs, Wallace Shannon 'f Geo, Dundas. Mr, and Mrs Ilorace Rutledge and
Sarnia were weekend visitors with Miss Doreen Long of Brussels spent family, London, spent ' the weekend
Mr. and Mrs. John Shannon. n few days at the hone of Mr, and Mrs with Mrs Margaret Humphries and Mr,
Mr, Clarence and Lorne Stelss of Win, Coutts. and Mrs. Roy Bennett.
London spent Sunday in Walton. . I Mr. and Mrs, Frank Marshall of North
Mr. and Mrs. Eari Mills left Fridny Bay spent the weekend with 111r, and Mr. and Mrs. Ted McCreath visited
rnorning on a motor trip to Manitoba Mrs, M. Fraser and Mrs, Luella Mar-
ANEW KITCHENER-WATERLOO DISTRICT OFFICE
. is announced by
THE WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION BOARD
to provide
MORE AND SPEEDIER SERVICE
- in •
COMPENSATION MATTERS
for
Workmen, Employers, Labour Oiganizations, Representatives of the Medicpl Profession anJ
other interested groups in Waterloo, Wellington, Perth,and Huron Counties,
Now in operation, the new Kitchener•Watorloo-District office makes use of teletype and
other time•saving communication devices to provide speedier service in handling compensa-
tion claims and completing arrangements for the treatment and rehabilitation of injured
workmen,
The Kitchener -Waterloo -District office will also serve os a centre of information concerning
workmen's compensation for Waterloo, Wellington, Perth and Huron Counties, _. -
The Kitchener -Waterloo -District office address is: ,rP ' '
5 SCOTT STREET, KITCHENER, ONTARIO
Duncan Roycroft, Dist, Representative, R. McLeod Southgate, Assist, Dist. Representative.
THE WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION BOARD, ONTARIO
J, F, Cauley, Vice -Chairman
E. E. Sparrow, Chairman
Dr, E, C, Steele, Commissioner
Howsons 20 % Lay Mash
o1' —
HOWSON ►S17 Perot (High Energy) LAY MASH
for top production.
Do not -forget to worm your birds before putting
them in with our CIIEK-R-PON or Liquid
Poultry Wormer.
Howson & Howson Ltd.
BLYTH - - WINGHAM
`Better Feeds Mean Bigger Profits'
NNN~h4MW.M.NM.N
1
1
1
and Saskatchewan, shall and Barry. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Broadfoot are
Mr, J, Doherty agent at the CPR sta. Mr. „Glenn Oliver of Western Uni• visiting with Mr, and Mrs. John Hen -
tion, moved to Durham, accompanied versify, London, spent the holiday! derssn, Seaforth,
with Mr. and Mrs Earl Coutts, Toronto